anaheim-gazette 1930-09-18
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WANT ADS
RATE: Five cents the line (count five words to the line) for each insertion. Phone 72 for want ads that bring results.
Used Cars for Sale
BILL'S USED CAR MARKET
'29 Moon cab, 6-wire, trunk, a bargain.
'29 Viking, 4-door sedan, priced right.
'27 Model T Ford, with Ruxtel, like new.
'29 Model A Ford, 4-door.
'29 Whippet 6, coach.
'26 Bulck, 4-door sedan—Cheap.
Lots of good, cheap work cars, $35 and up. All makes.
Buy from Bill and save the difference.
W. M. GURON, Proprietor
325 S. Los Angeles St.—Anaheim
Miscellaneous—For Sale
$10 FREE! Send name of friend who wants piano and get $10 Free when we sell. Danz, Anaheim.
Miscellaneous
CITRUS PRUNING done by expert or contract or by hour, work guaranteed. Call after 6 o'clock. Anaheim 316-R.
Pianos For Sale
100 PIANOS to choose from; Knabe, Bechstein, Steinway, Chickering, Klimball, etc., new and used, $35 up. Danz, Anaheim.
Cleaning & Pressing
ALL KINDS of cleaning and pressing. Prompt service. Call and deliver; or cash and carry.
HARLOW'S CLEANERS
3-20-tf 124 E. Center—Phone 323-R
Situations
GENERAL repairing and odd jobs.
Gene Adams, 416 S. Olive. 1165-J. 7-10-tf
Dancing
ORANGE COUNTY SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS—Kate E. McCullah, director.
Music, dramatic art and dancing.
New department of whistling under instructor from Mable Woodward's School of Whistling, Los Angeles.
422 W. Center, Ph. 1188. 3-20-tf
Tailoring
ALL KINDS of suits altered and mended at reasonable cost. Expert tailoring, latest styles, newest materials
KUEHN & BREMER
3-20-tf 124 E. Center—Phone 323-P
Stationery, Magazines
SCHOOL DAYS
Everything in pencils, pens, notebooks, tads, crasers, etc., for students.
E. D. ABRAMS
116 W. Center St. Phone 162
Fences
CROWN FENCE CO. Free estimates.
206 N. Main St., Santa Ana—2560 3-22-tf
Poultry
WE PAY CASH for poultry: any quantity. Market or laying. Will call.
Phone 1401, R. D. Taylor. 3-20tf
MEXICAN Avocado seedling seeds.
Tanaka Citrus Nursery. 1025 N. Lemon. Phone 1057-W. 3-27-tf
KELVINATOR—
Prices:—$215 to $890.
FEARN—
THE FINEST ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR EVER BUILT
113 So. L. A. Anaheim
Cleaning & Pressing
ALL KINDS of cleaning and pressing.
Prompt service. Call and deliver; or cash and carry.
HARLOW'S CLEANERS
3-20-tf 124 E. Center—Phone 323-R
WE PAY CASH for poultry: any quantity. Market or laying. Will call. Phone 1404. R. D. Taylor. 3-20tfc
5000 MEXICAN Avocado seedling seeds.
Tanaka Citrus Nursery. 1025 N. Lemon. Phone 1057-W. 3-27-tf
KELVINATOR—
Prices:—$215 to $890.
FEARN—
113 So. L. A. Anaheim
It Pays To Advertise In The Gazette
WESTERN SHOE MARKET
220 W. CENTER I.D.
ANAHEIM
CHAIN STORE
39
YOUNG MEN'S OXFORDS
Tan and black; genuine Goodyear welt sewed soles;
new styles; very best models.
Special—
$3'95
Women's New Novelties
20 styles in strape, pumps and ties;
Cuban and high heels; real values up to $5.00—special...$
$2'95
Women's New Novelties
20 styles in straps,
pumps and ties;
Cuban and high heels; real values up to $5.00—special.....
Growing Girls' Shoes
Oxfords—center buckles and one-strap—dull black and patent leatherers—Junior heels. Special—
Girls' and Boys' Regulation GymShoes
Dandy for school wear; fresh, live rubber soles and ankle pads; all sizes, special—
98¢
Children's SHOES
Straps, Oxfords, High and Low Shoes, tan, patent, black and combination, all sizes up to 2; prices according to sizes. Special
98¢ to $1.95
Our Canadian Envoy in Gorgeous Garb
Col Hanford MacNider (right) new U.S. Minister to Canada, with the Governor General of Canada, Viscount Willingdon. Col. MacNider wears the full dress uniform of a Colonel of Artillery.
5 POINTS FEELS BUSINESS SPUR
Three New Structures Will Cost $13,500; Fourth Building Plans In Tentative State
Five Points, for many years an established business center just west of Anaheim's main trading center, is taking on a new dress and new business complexion.
Three new business structures and the moving of a residence in contemplation of a fourth this week marked the construction activity at Five Points.
The first of the buildings to be completed will be a one-story, brick front structure which is costing in the neighborhood of $4,000. It will house Wallace's grocery, and is expected to be finished late this week or first part of next.
Fourth Building Planned
CHANEY
The death of Lon Chaney is a genuine loss to the world. He was an entertainer of the first order, alike, in his proper person, in which he appeared in "Tell it to the Marines," and in the marvelous disguises and contorted make-ups which he used in other films.
Chaney's career was a demonstration of the American belief that opportunity awaits every boy and girl who is able to seize it. His youthful handicaps were tremendous. His parents were deaf-mutes, his father a barber on small wages. Whatever he was to accomplish he had to do for himself. He struggled for years on the stage and won his first great success in pictures when he was nearly forty. But he brought to pictures a knowledge of stagecraft and the art of acting, learned by years of poorly paid apprentice ship. No man or woman ever became a great artist in any field without such a background of uninteresting drudgery.
FILM UNITES STELLAR PALS
Oakie, Hall, Gallagher and Miss MacDonald in "Let's Go Native"
There is something akin to a family reunion in "Lets Go Native," the laughing-singing-dancing extravaganza which comes to the Fox Theatre for three days beginning on Monday next.
Of Jack Oakie, Jeanette MacDonald, Skeets Gallagher and James Hall it can be said that "they knew each other when—." For the paths of this quartet of singing and dancing stars crossed or ran parallel along the musical stages of New York's one and only Broadway before they led to Hollywood.
While Miss MacDonald was working her way up from a chorus role in a Ned Wayburn show to stardom in "Yes, Yes, Yvette," "Angela" and "Boom Boom," the other three were blazing similar trails to the top.
Oakie, Hall and Gallagher started in Phil Song and dance acts on the "two-a-day" circuits led them to must-
Anaheim's main trading center is taking on a new dress and new business complexion.
Three new business structures and the moving of a residence in contemplation of a fourth this week marked the construction activity at Five Points.
The first of the buildings to be completed will be a one-story, brick front structure which is costing in the neighborhood of $4,000. It will house Wallace's grocery, and is expected to be finished late this week or first part of next.
Fourth Building Planned
V. Koehler, who has operated a grocery in that district since 1918, plans to begin construction soon of a $6,000 one-story, brick building.
Mrs. Nettie Eygabroad plans immediate construction of a $3,500 mission-style service station to be erected for lease by C. A. Knapp, who for six years has operated a service station at Lincoln and West street.
Tentative plans for a business structure on the north side of Lincoln avenue at the location of Cantractor Felix Graski's two-story residence are under way. The contractor has moved his residence in preparation for the contemplated building.
Forest fire was started out in Oklahoma by a fellow spitting out a mouthful of moonshine.
Rugs
Thoroughly Cleaned
Every trace of soil removed from the back and fringe as well as the nap.
Our "Thru and Thru" cleaning renews color and lustre.
Cost for 9x12 Domestic $4.50
Cost for 8.3x10.6 Domestic $3.50
FLIES
Motoring through Connecticut the other day I stopped for a bite in a good-sized town. To my amazement, the principal restaurant of the place was swarming with files, which were crawling unrestrained over the food. I did not eat there.
The danger of flies seems not yet to have penetrated everywhere. It has been said by someone that it takes three generations for any new fact to filter down through all levels of intelligence to the lowest. It is less than forty years since the discovery was made that flies are the chief carriers of typhoid fever.
In the big cities and in most progressive small towns, public health authorities now compel the covering of garbage and other filth in which flies breed. The automobile has done a great deal, practically eliminating the horse stable, once the flies' chief breeding ground. In the general clean-up of Europe since the war long steps have been taken, until there is at least one town in Italy, Montecatini, which boasts that it has not a single fly.
HELIOPHOBES
Are you a heliophile or a heliophobe? Everybody is one or the other. Heliophiles love the sunshine and thrive under exposure to sunlight. Heliophobes are the unfortunate blondes who do not tan but burn and blister and sometimes become seriously ill in the effort to acquire the golden-brown skins of the more fortunate heliophiles.
A skin specialist in a New York hospital estimates that more than 200,000 working days are lost in that city every year from illness due to sunburn. These hellaphobe sufferers are usually of the blonde North European and Scandinavian type, coming from a stock bred for countless generations in the high latitudes where sunlight is scanty and indirect. The perfect heliophile, on the other hand, usually has a strain of Mediterranean blood, Italian, Creek, Spanish or Semitic.
DREAMS
"One must have some daring if one is to live one's dreams," said Captain Wolfgang Von Gronau as he landed his flying boat in New York harbor after flying over from Germany by way of Iceland, Greenland and Labrador. This pioneer of a new trans-Atlantic air route dared to try to realize a dream which he had had for years.
All have dreams of things we would like to do; few of us have the daring to attempt to make the dreams come true.
"Many loved truth, and lavished Life's best oil."
Amid the rust of books to find her,
So wrote James Russell Lowell in his great Commemoration Ode. But the poet saw the truth clearly:
"They love her best who to themselves are true.
And what they dare to dream of, dare to do."
lustre.
Cost for 9x12 Domestic $4.50
Cost for 8.3x10.6 Domestic $3.50
Phone 48
Acme Cleaners
Eldo R. West, Prop.
DOWNTOWN OFFICE
105 South Palm
PLANT
920 North Los Angeles St.
route dared to try to realize a dream which he had bad for years.
All have dreams of things we would like to do; few of us have the darling to attempt to make the dreams come true.
"Many loved truth, and lavished Life's best oil"
Amid the rust of books to find her."
So wrote James Russell Lowell in his great Commemoration Ode. But the poet saw the truth clearly:
"They love her best who to themselves are true
And what they dare to dream of, dare to do."
BANKING
One of the things which is certain to change greatly in the course of the next few years is the banking business in the smaller communities.
The small local bank has not facilities, in most instances, to take care of the legitimate business needs of its community. Some system which will distribute credit equally over the whole nation at all seasons will be worked out.
In Congress, where the final answer will be given, the contest is between "chain" banking and branch banking, with branch banking in the lead.
One member of Congress has suggested that branch banks on wheels—armored cars—may eventually travel between banking centers and the smallest villages, transacting banking business for an hour or two on certain days of the week in each community. Something like that may come about.
Barnum, with his "There's a sucker born every minute," gives us a picture of the stock market.
Order Your Bean Straw Now
See us for prices on
COVER CROP SEED
Hay, Grain, Feed, Seed and Fertilizer
EXTRA CHOICE RABBIT HAY
The Best fly spray—in bulk—bring your container
Karcher Feed & Seed Co.
124 N. Los Angeles Street
Buena Park Youth
Guilty, Fined $50
Claude Barnes of Buena Park Saturday had his choice of paying a $50 fine or spending 25 days in jail as a result of being convicted of reckless driving in Judge Charles Kuchel's court. A 90-day sentence to jail was suspended.
Officer L. C. Wahlen, of the night fruit patrol testified that, after being warned, the Buena Park youth continued to cut in front of motorists and stopping his car suddenly, thus endangering other motorists.
Mr. and Mrs. Wright Motoring to Big Basin
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Wright of $80 North Paulina street this week motored up the coast to Monterey and the Big Basin, and were scheduled to leave Friday for San Francisco. Before returning from a two-week vacation they plan to drive to Yosemite.
Mr. Wright, an ardent golfer, admitted before he left that the driving schedule might be altered anytime he saw a good-looking golf course. He is manager of the Smith Lumber company on Lincoln avenue.
THE FOOTBALL CAR:
Three Down
and One to Go
King Football, which garners all our enthusiasm and attention about this time of the year, has unwittingly brought forward one of the most perplexing problems facing motorists today.
If you own a football car—three down and one to go—you're sure to have more DOWNS than UPS, and your score on the milage basis will be near the dreaded goose-egg.
If you want team-work from your tires—consistent performance that makes for champions—come in and see our new Federal Double Blue Pennants. They're the Red Granges of tiredom, because they are there not only for speed but for fun.
If you own a football car—three down and one to go—you're sure to have more DOWNS than UPS, and your score on the milage basis will be near the dreaded goose-egg.
If you want team-work from your tires—consistent performance that makes for champions—come in and see our new Federal Double Blue Pennants. They're the Red Granges of tiredom, because they are there not only for speed but for distance as well.
You'll like 'em and the prices that go with 'em. And our tire service will put you on "easy street" of motordom.
H. C. KIER
Los Angeles at Chartres, Anaheim
There's one big idea in this store for fall --- and we are going to hammer it into men's minds
HERE IT IS
You want more for your money—everybody does—and because we have done such a good job here of making a dollar buy more clothes value, we're going to hammer away on that subject until we make a good deep indent in people's minds.
Mart Schaffner & Marx have created new suit values at $30.00 to $50.00. They've taken advantage of every market condition to put more fabric value, more fine tailoring, richer linings into every garment they make. And the extra values and money savings stand out impressively.
You'll see it all—when you see the clothes.
"By All Means Get a Fit"
F. A. YUNGBLUTH
THE HOME OF HART, SCHAFFNER & MARX
Horsheim Shoes Manhattan Shirts
Butchess Trousers Stetson Hats