anaheim-gazette 1930-11-06
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KELVINATOR—
Prices: $215 to $890.
FEARN—
THE FINEST ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR EVER BUILT
113 So. L. A. Anaheim
DR. G. W. CLOSSON
VETERINARIAN
DOG AND CAT HOSPITAL
All Animals Treated
913 N. Los Angeles St.
Phone 3914
Anahlem, California
Christmas Portraits
14 Photos for the Price of One Dozen,
Any Size or Style of Work Until Nov. 1
An Inexpensive Way of Solving Your Gift Problems
Appointments Made to Suit Your Convenience
PITNEY STUDIO
222 East Center
Phone 4623
ARMISTICE DAY
1918 1930
ARMISTICE DAY
1918 1930
Come to ANAHEIM, NOVEMBER 11 and see a brilliant, colorful spectacular—
"PAGEANT of STATES"
Fifty Artistic Floats
Eighteen Bands, Drum Corps
Military School Corps
National Guard Division
Boy and Girl Scout Troops
The El Rodeo Riding Club
Auto Parking
Tennis Exhibitions
Drum Corps Contests
Open Air Vaudeville
Aerial Demonstration
Picnic Grounds. Coffee
Football Game, 2:30 p.m.
ANAHEIM HI vs. BREA-OLINDA HI
Admission 50c; Reserved Seats $1.00
Grand Ball, K. P. Hall. 9:30 o.m.
MIDNITE PREVIEW; SPECIAL IES
Fox Theater, 11 p.m.; Admission, Any Seat, 50c
Anaheim Post No. 72, American Legion, City Officials, Merchants' Association, Chamber of Commerce Invite You to Come!
THERE are two kinds of inter-city calls: person-to-person—when you ask the operator to summon a specific person to the telephone; and station-to-station—when you will talk with anyone who answers. The charge for station-to-station calls is usually lower by day, still lower in the evening.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA TELEPHONE COMPANY
Citrus Fruit Year Made Fine Record
Sunkist Advertising Caused More Demand for California Products, Says Manager
LARGER CROP IS PROMISED
Success Next Season Depends Upon Cooperation
The confidence of the fresh fruit trade in the United States in the stability of the orange market, coupled with increased consumer demand for California citrus, were given as the two principal factors in the outstanding citrus sales record for the year of 1929-30, by Paul S. Armstrong, assistant general manager of the California Fruit Growers Exchange, on his return from the yearly survey of United States markets.
"In the face of lowered buying power throughout the country and the heavy supplies of other fruits selling at low prices, the record made this year by California citrus growers has been remarkable," stated Mr. Armstrong. "Robbers and the trade generally informed me that they considered citrus fruits in a class by themselves and that they have confidence in the market due to the careful distribution plans of the Exchange. The public demand oranges because they know through the medium of Sunkist advertising of their necessary health qualities and the deliciousness of the fruit itself."
With the larger crop next year promised from citrus producing areas, we will have a much more difficult marketing task," continued Mr. Armstrong. "I believe, however, that Exchange members and other California growers can look to the 1930-31 season."
Election day is approaching in Poland so the Warsaw police are being outfitted with bullet-proof steel jackets and helmets.
America is 50; in India it is only 20. In Colonial days in America, in the 1600's, the average age in this country was only 20, because so many children died in infancy, and their elders succumbed early to the hardships of pioneer life.
The time will come when nobody will die, except from accident, under 70, and many will live, and be physically and mentally active, to 100.
The Way of Life
By BRUCE BARTON
ASH TRAYS AND BUZZERS
Years ago I had an appointment with a corporation president. The secretaries, door men, and general factotums in the great man's outer office made it clear that their boss was Some Pumpkins and that I was assuming a great deal in asking to see him.
When I finally worked my way through the last of them and stood in the president's private office, I saw in the corner a red-faced, bald-headed man seated at a plain wooden desk. His coat was off and his sleeves were rolled up to reveal a pair of solid, hairy arms.
"Ah, Mr. Barton," he said, "would you mind standing on guard beside that door?" My tailor has just sent me over a pair of cooler pants, and I want to put them on."
So I stood guard while he stepped out of one pair of pants and into another, chatting sociably all the time.
I was reminded of this incident by the remark of a friend who was recently transferred from the branch office to the New York headquarters of a certain business.
Some of the men in the organization were jealous of his promotion, and he has carefully watched his step. "The president gave me my choice of two offices" he told me. "One was a grand room on the executive floor. The other a queer little dump two floors below. I took the little office. It will be perfectly all right until I show that I need something better. I have enough problems at the beginning without the additional handicap of a luxurious office."
An office manager who has watched
Two Field Tours For Walnut Growers
What about walnuts?" is the theme of two walnut growers' field tours scheduled for Friday, November 7, at Tustin and Placentia. Scores of growers are asking what is to be done to get better returns. The Agricultural Extension Service will explain some factors that affect walnut income at these meetings. Many orchards are being removed. Others will remain for years to come. In either case the grower should learn the factors that will influence the future income from the trees, whether they remain walnuts or are replaced by citrus.
A general discussion of the present problems and also tree management at this time of the year will be featured during the two field trips.
The morning tour will start at 9:30 A.M. at the Mabury orchard near the corner of East Fourth Street and Tuscan Avenue. The afternoon tour will start at the M.L. Hall orchard, two miles Northeast of Placentia, near the corner of Kraemer Avenue and Walnut Place, not far from the J.P.O'Brien place.
HELP
Out of a fund of $30,000 established by former Senator Joseph Frelinghuysen of New Jersey, more than $77,000 has been loaned to boys and girls on New Jersey farms to enable them to purchase purebred cows, swine or poultry. More than 1,000 boys and girls have been helped in this way to get a start in producing better dairy products, pork and poultry, and the effect upon farmers generally in showing them the advantages of pure-bred stock have been incalculable.
That sort of help for the farmer is decidedly practical. There is always a market for first-grade products of the sort which New Jersey thus encourages, especially in the vicinity of great terminal markets like New York and Philadelphia.
SPEED
Thirty-five minutes from the time he lost the William Penn Airport in Philadelphia with photographs of the World's series baseball game, Captain Frank Hawks delivered the pictures in a New York newspaper office at 270 miles an hour, to cover the 90 miles between Philadelphia and the Queens Borough Airport in New York. Then fifteen minutes in a speedboat took him to Manhattan.
BLIND
The most terrible affliction which can come to a human being, in all probability, is blindness. The problem of helping the blind to become self-supporting is finding new solutions constantly. Theatest is the discovery that blind girls, because of their keen sense of touch, are very useful in offices where there is a large amount of mailing to be done.
The Brooklyn Bureau of Charities has set up a mailing business employing only blind girls for this sort of work. All sorts of quantity mailing is done for business houses. These girls formerly had no other occupation than weaving coarse rugs, at which they could earn only from $6 to $8 a week. In the mailing work they earn from $15 to $20 a week. And for addressing mail, crippled girls, who cannot work at occupations requiring physical transfer from the branch office to the New York headquarters of a certain business.
Some of the men in the organization were jealous of his promotion, and he has carefully watched his step. "The president gave me my choice of two offices" he told me. "One was a grand room on the executive floor. The other a queer little dump two floors below. I took the little office. It will be perfectly all right until I show that I need something better. I have enough problems at the beginning without the additional handicap of a luxurious office."
An office manager who has watched men come and go in big corporation tells me that he can predict just about how long a man will last. "If his first requisition is for a lead pencil and a blotter and some ink, I put him down as permanent. But when a man sends me an initial requisition for an ash tray and electric buzzer I notice he never stays over a year."
Napoleon was quite a trial to his courtiers because he did not pay more attention to the trappings of his office. When Bourrienne was telling him that he must do so and so or the older reigning families in Europe would not recognize him, he had the sure answer of a man who knows his strength.
"If it comes to that I will destroy them all," he exclaimed. "Then I shall be the oldest sovereign among them."
Generally speaking, those who like lots of fuss are lightweights. The surer man is of his own capacity—the less he cares for externals—including all fancy trappings and the criticism of the uninformed.
Death Calls H.H. Hunt, Anaheim Business Man
Anaheim lost one of its highly esteemed business men when Harry H. Hunt was stricken with a sudden attack of heart trouble, his funeral being held Saturday morning at the Backs, Terry and Campbell chapel. Burial was at the Angeles Abbey Mausoleum, Compton.
Mr. Hunt was active both as a citizen and as a business man and had been a merchant hero for about seven or eight years, coming to California about 13 years ago. He was a native of Rockville, Indiana, and was 46 years old. He is survived by Mrs. Hunt and a son and a daughter.
It's all right to call the fellow who spends most of his time reading books a book-worm but you had better not call the fellow who spends his time around the stock ticker a tape worm.
Ford Model A Car Makes New Record
A Ford model A car, for which the speed record between Phoenix and Los Angeles is claimed, has been on exhibition at the local Ford agency of M. P. Thompson and has been attracting much attention. There were many visitors to the agency last night when the car and motion pictures were shown.
The car is a tudor sedan and on its trip from Phoenix it cut two hours from the best previous record, setting a speed mark of 58.26 miles an hour for the distance.
CONCERT BY RUSSIAN CHORUS
The Ebell club is sponsoring a concert by the Royal Russian chorus, to be held on the evening of Friday, Nov. 14, at the Anaheim Union High school. There will also be a matinee for children on that afternoon. Reserved seats will go on sale next Monday, according to announcement by Mrs. Robert E. Hainlin, first vice-president of the club. The Russian chorus dates back to 1840, when it was organized at the direction of the czar to sing at the palace and for royal church services. The chorus now has 24 members, many of them descendants of original members, and it has been touring eastern cities of the United States, giving 50 concerts in New York, before beginning its tour to the Pacific coast.
COTTON
More than 45,000,000 acres of land was devoted to growing cotton in the United States this year. That is five million acres too much, in the opinion of Carl Williams, the cotton expert of the Federal Farm Board.
What is needed in the South, says Mr. Williams, is the production of more food which the South itself consumes. He says there are single cities in the South where the consumption of wheat and dairy products is more than the production of those commodities in the entire state. The cotton farmer who cuts down his cotton acreage and uses the land thereby released for livestock and dairying or the growing of other foodstuffs will be serving himself, his community, the cotton industry and the entire South.
It will take time, but eventually a high percentage of the land now devoted to staple crops all over the country will be used for other purposes.
LIFE
Our bodies live longer than those of our grandparents did. Dr. Charles H. Mayo, famous physician of Rochester, Minn., tells us, but our brains die just as young. What is the use, Dr. Mayo asks, of living 90 if the brain begins to decay at 70? He is optimistic about it, however; he thinks that medical research will find means of prolonging mental life as well as physical life.
In the matter of length of life we have made great progress in a short time. The normal age to which each newborn child can expect to live is...
MARY MARSHALL'S
Very Latest
Dr. Henry C. Vogt
Chiropractic Health Specialist
Licensed Palmer Graduate—19 Years' Experience
Phone 4223 317 N. Los Angeles
Anaheim, Calif.
NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT
Anaheim Union Water Company, location of principal place of business, 303 East Center Street, Anaheim, California.
Notice is hereby given that at a meeting of the Board of Directors, held on the 3rd day of Nov., 1930, assessment No. 71 of $3.00 per share was levied on the capital stock of the corporation, payable at once to the Secretary of the company at Anaheim, Orange County, California. Any stock upon which this assessment shall remain unpaid on the 6th day of Dec., 1930, will be delinquent and advertised for sale at public auction and unless payment is made before, will be sold on the 29th day of December, 1930, at one o'clock P.M., to pay for delinquent assessments together with cost of advertising and expense of sale.
L. J. SHERIDAN, Secretary,
Anaheim Union Water Company,
303 East Center Street,
Anaheim, California.
CERTIFICATE OF BUSINESS
FICTITIOUS FIRM NAME
The undersigned does hereby certify that she is conducting a music store business at 245 West Center St., Anaheim, Orange County, California, under the fictitious firm name of Llewellyn Harmony Shop and that said firm is composed of the following persons, whose names in full and places of residence are as follows: to-wit: Gladys S. Llewellyn, R. F. D. No. 3, Anaheim, California.
Witness my hand this 19th day of September, 1930.
Blue, green and brown are the popular colors this autumn. There are navy blue, "darker than navy," and a tone a little brighter than navy for street wear with pale shades for evening. Very dark, as well as bright tones of green for the street with jade, pastel tones and olive green are chosen for dresses. Brownies for street wear are all of a rich rusty tone while for evening there is a new cinnamon tone that has already come into importance.
Black and white, navy and white, navy blue with a lighter tone called linen blue, brown and yellow, brown and white, black and gray, olive green and beige, red and white, wine red with cream, introduced by way of lace, green and white—these are among two-colored combinations that are especially important.
Pink enters into a number of the three-color combinations chosen for evening. Patou pink, light blue and white; yellow, green and pink on a white background; rose, white and green; rose, gray and cream; rose and green on black; peach, green and red are all seen in the new dresses.
The smart combination of pink, brown and rose is shown in this sports dress of pink jersey with brown and rose jersey appliques.
Tax Payers In Rush To Pay Over Money
Some of the taxpayers of Orange county were so anxious to make settlement with the county that they stood in a waiting line at the office of J. C. Lamb, county tax collector last Saturday waiting for the office to open. The first installment goes delinquent on December 5, so there was no occasion for the rush, but a rush there was. The collector expects to garner $7,000,000 from property owners, of whom there are now perhaps 60,000.
There is $6,887,275.63 on the main tax roll, with an additional tax of $45,883.55 to be collected in six sanitary districts.
The second installment of taxes comes due next January 20.
OCTOBER BUILDING PERMITS
Building permits for October took a drop in Anaheim, totaling $44,602 for...
New Low Cash and Carry
PRICES
this week and continuing until further
following cleaning and pressing prices on
will be in effect:
Silk 75c
65c
$1.00
School 40c
work receives prompt, careful and
expert attention
EWAY CLEANERS
St., Anaheim Phone 4413
OCTOBER BUILDING PERMITS
Building permits for October took a
drop in Anaheim, totaling $44,602 for
ONE WAY FARES
For speed...coolness...
smooth-riding...and
on-time arrival...service unequalled by any
other form of travel...
go East on a famous Union Pacific flyer.
THESE BARGAIN REDUCTIONS
are good on delightfully comfortable coaches and reclining chair cars.
One way from Los Angeles
Chicago . $47.50
Des Moines . 42.60
St. Paul . 47.50
Detroit . 57.31
Butte . 43.69
Denver . 30.00
Salt Lake City . 17.50
And Many Others
IN EFFECT UNTIL NOV. 30 ONLY!
UNION PACIFIC
R. A. PARKER, Agent
Union Pacific Station, Anaheim-Tel. 3519
EAST LOS ANGELES STATION
Atlantic Ave. and Telegraph Road
Telephone ANgeios 6509 or Montabello 811