anaheim-gazette 1931-09-17
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SALE NOW ON ATH. C. Kier
201 N. Los Angeles St.
—Associate Member—
TIRE WAREHOUSE SYSTEM
Outlook Brighter
for Poultrymen
With the price of corn and wheat lower than it has been for several years and the price of eggs on the increase, the outlook for the poultry industry appears brighter, in the opinion of Dr. M. A. Jull, poultry specialist of the Department of Agriculture.
Another point in favor of the poultry man is that heavy culling of farm flocks during the past spring has reduced the number of laying hens by about 20,000. Ordinarily these hens would not be culled out until the fall, but last spring farmers were interested more than usually in saving feed bills.
Still another factor which makes the future look brighter for the poultry industry this winter is the fact that there were fewer chicks hatched last spring than usual. This is particularly true of early hatched chicks, so that the early fall production of eggs will likely fall short of last year's supply, with probable increases in prices.
Doctor Jull believes the immediate future of the poultry industry to be fairly good, particularly for those who produce high-quality chicks, and for farmers and commercial poultrymen who give their flocks the best management and who practice efficient culling.
Texas production seems to have broken the market in wheat, cotton and oil. Maybe that annexation business was a mistake after all.
Stamp Collectors Visit the President
Thousands are now collecting air-mail stamps and envelopes carried by famous flyers. President Hoover is shown greeting their national officers on the White House lawn.
John Marshall’s Record as Jurist
First Chief Justice's Birthday Was 176 Years Ago Today
(Correspondence to The Gazette)
Washington, D. C.—John Marshall's name must be linked with that of George Washington, even though the great jurist's most important services to his country were contributed after the death of the first President. This is the opinion of the George Washington Bicentennial Commission which recognizes the achievements of John Marshall, America's foremost jurist and one of the leading jurists the world has ever produced, on the 176th anniversary of his birth.
First Great Biography
John Marshall was a follower of General Washington in the Revolutionary War; John Marshall was Washington's most famous disciple in the theory that a nation which is to exist must be strongly centralized and law abiding.
Indiscreet Demand for Bribe
We were having difficulties with our former ally. The French directory was undoubtedly corrupt at this time; indirect demands were made for a huge bribe from America, before negotiations would even be considered. Marshall and Pinckney refused to deal in this fashion and left France. The country supported this refusal and Marshall, upon his return, was everywhere hailed as a hero, a defender of America's honor.
We must skip over some of Marshall's achievements and come down to 1801, when he became chief justice of the United States supreme court. Before that time the court was not held in high repute. It did not possess the dignity and power which it exercises today.
Leader of Supreme Court
But after Marshall took the reins the situation changed. Because of his marvelous power of analysis and logic, John Marshall became a leader of the supreme court in spirit as well as in name.
No more did more to centralize the government; no man did more to interpret the Constitution, and to establish the right of the judiciary to declare Federal and state acts unconstitutional. The forty-four decisions rendered by the chief justice are his living monument, still as potent today as when he
Affairs of Week at Nation's Capitol
(Washington, D. C.—That the Republican party is planning to fight a hard battle next year when the president's campaign is run off, is shown by the introduction of Dwight Morrow's name as a possible candidate for the second place on the ticket. Whether there is any weight back of the suggestion he not been divulged but it is known that many of the President's closest adviser believe that the former ambassador Mexico and Col. Lindbergh's father-law would add more strength to the ticket than any other Republican.
It is no secret that Administrative circles are convinced that Governor Roosevelt of New York will be the Democratic standard bearer and that it is gaining strength every day by official actions. His recent tilt with Tammany over the New York city great investigation has won him many friend outside of the state, who saw by actions that he will be no tool of wigwam if he wins the election. A parently the Tiger leaders have con
First Great Biography
John Marshall was a follower of General Washington in the Revolutionary War; John Marshall was Washington's most famous disciple in the theory that a nation which is to exist must be strongly centralized and law-abiding; John Marshall wrote the first great biography of General Washington.
America's greatest jurist was born in Germantown (new Midland), Fauquier county, Virginia, on September 24, 1755, the son of Thomas Marshall, a friend and neighbor of George Washington. He received but little formal education, and before he had reached his majority his thoughts were taken up with the impending crisis which was soon to bring the Colonies into an eight year's struggle with the Mother Country.
Lieutenant of Minutemen
In the summer of 1775, a regiment of Minutemen was raised in Culpeper, Orange and Fauquer counties. Thomas Marshall was the major of this regiment, and his son, John, not quite 20 years of age, was a lieutenant. On their green hunting shirts, the mothers and sisters of these volunteers had inscribed the motto "Liberty or Death!" Their banner pictured a coiled rattle snake with the words, "Do not tread on me!" A green, untrained, poorly equipped regriment, with hunting rifles, knives and even tomahawks for weapon, the men nevertheless evidenced a determination which was to prove uncrushable.
John Marshall served at Brandywine, Germantown, Valley Forge, Monmouth, Stony Point, and Paulus Hook, and was one of the most popular men in the army. His athletic ability, his geniality and kindness won the affection of all men associated with him.
Began to Study Law
As the war drew to a close, Marshall began the study of law, and it was not very long before he was recognized as one of the leading lawyers of the state of Virginia.
When the Old Dominion State called a special convention in 1788 for the purpose of ratifying or rejecting the new Federal constitution, Marshall played an important part in the proceedings. There was a great deal of opposition to the new instrument of government, and the objects were led by none other than the famous orator, Patrick Henry.
It required a great deal of patience, reason and skill to batter down the arguments of Henry and his followers but the ratificationists, with James Madison and John Marshall at the helm, were able to accomplish this feat.
Nine years later, in 1797, President John Adams appointed Marshall, with Charles Cotesworth Pinckney and Eliza Lender of Supreme Court.
But after Marshall took the reins the situation changed. Because of his marvelous power of analysis and logic, John Marshall became a leader of the supreme court in spirit as well as in name.
No man did more to centralize the government; no man did more to interpellate the Constitution, and to establish the right of the judiciary to declare Federal and state acts-unconstitutional. The forty-four decisions rendered by the chief justice are his living monument, still as potent today as when he delivered them.
Biography in Five Volumes
During the first few years of office as chief justice, Marshall, with the assistance of Bushrod Washington, wrote the biography of his hero, George Washington. The work was completed, 1804-1807, in five volumes. While this biography has been superseded by more recent historical research, Marshall's recountal of George Washington's life and deeds is still of interest to the layman.
On Christmas day of 1881, his wife, the former Mary Willis Amber, died, thus breaking a union that was noted for its felicity, and which had lasted for forty-eight years. Marshall never recovered from this loss.
In June of 1835, he went to Philadelphia for medical attention, and died there, on July 6. One of the finest, most versatile and most influential Americans of our nation's history passed from the stage of life. His body was removed to Richmond, where it still remains.
STOP SIGNALS FOR FISH
Electricity has now been called on to guide fish up the rivers on the way from the sea to spawn and to prevent the denizens of our fresh-water lakes and rivers from getting into serious mischief. Frequently fish get to close to a hydraulic turbine and are killed. Electricity will keep them away. Sometimes they follow an irrigation canal and are carried onto the fields; electricity will spare them this fate. The devices which thus control the fish are stop signals and were perfected through experiments conducted by F. O. McMillan of the Oregon state college. He discovered that fish are sensitive to small electrical currents and that it took very little power to paralyze them; that it took less to stop long fish than short ones; that they recover from shocks according to their vitality; that when they get too much electricity they get stunned and change color; that high-frequency current had little effect. So by putting electrodes across the mouths of irrigation ditches, with 24 volts, he discovered that the fish avoided the vicinity. The signal was against them.
It is said that two million women in America are getting alimony, and yet there are some people who want Uncle Sam to take on the dole too.
Late reports indicate that Roosevelt will command 802 votes when the Democratic convention is called to order next summer. This is vastly more than two-thirds necessary to choose a Democrat candidate, or 666 votes. With such a foregone conclusion the Democrats are beginning to stir around look over the list of available candidates for vice-president. Such a man is almost certain to be chosen from the Solid South or from the Southwest. The condition lends significance to the recent activities of "Alfalfa Bill" Murray, Governor of Oklahoma, and Governor Huey Long of Louisiana. Murray spectacular challenge to the oil industry and Long's utterances on cotton have put both men in the public eye. Either man would be more than satish factory to the Old South and satisfy the ticket-makers from a geographic standpoint.
Roosevelt has not only emerged from his contest with Tammany with add prestige but his more recent activity in demanding a heavier income tax. New York state to meet the unemployment crisis has met with warm approval. He wants to raise $20,000,000 for the distress fund and figures that wealthy can well afford to pay more to combat the winter distress. It is like that increased taxes for those who can best afford to pay them will be adopted. All these actions have made him a popular figure and a man who will be haunted for the Republicans to beat.
Morrow is one of the most populous men in the entire Republican party. His success in Mexico, which was on the verge of a business war with United States at the time he was seen there, showed him to be a man of high caliber. As a Morgan partner, his weakest point with many voters of a radial tendency, he has never been connected with any movement that has been against the working man. In addition he is known to be in sympathy with the wets, particularly the "light wind and beer" contingent, and would corrall many Republican voters who might be tempted to stray to the Democratic foliage standpoint.
Texas Rangers Padlock State's Oil Wells
In order to keep the price of oil up the Lone Star State has chained up the pumps on hundreds of oil wells and set its famous rangers to guard them.
where liquor has its strongest adherents.
Whether Lindbergh, his famous son-in-law, would turn his hand to aid Morrow's candidacy is not known. A speaking campaign by Lindbergh would win many thousands of votes, as he is still the most popular individual in the country and many women would vote as he says. That Lindbergh is not insensitive to political influences is more than likely, his own father having been a Representative of more than ordinary influence and ability. In any event, Morrow would add immensely to the strength of the Republican ticket as a running mate to Mr. Hoover, the politicians here assert.
While a lot of gossip is going the rounds about what the Administration plans in regard to wheat and cotton, particularly as to whether it intends to flood the market with its present holdings, the most accurate picture appears to be that a policy of letting nature take its course would best describe its present attitude. From now on it is likely that the soft pedal will be placed on all official actions in regard to the two big crops.
There is a growing belief that China's need for wheat, which will probably reach nearer fifty million bushels instead of the fifteen which has been promised it on long term credits, will be supplied from the government surplus, whether the bill is ever collected or not. Cotton is a harder problem and the Farm Board, which recently said it would make no decision as to whether it might dump it or not, can be expected to announce it will hang on to it for
a time anyhow, chiefly because it cannot sell it now at anywhere near a price that would save its face. The Administration feels there is no cure for the situation and that everybody knows it and therefore there is no use in trying to announce plans which it knows cannot be carried out.
GROWTH OF WHITE POPULATION
An analysis of the growth of the white population of the United States for the decade 1920-1930 has recently been made public by the Bureau of the Census. It was shown that native-born and foreign-born parents led all other groups with an increase of 20.8 percent. Next came the all-native parents with an increase of 20.1 percent. Native offspring having alien fathers and mothers stood third, with an increase of 9.5 percent. Foreign-born-white population came last with an increase of only 8-10 of 1 percent. Increase of the total white population, on an adjusted basis, stood at 15.7 percent.
FUMIGATING DUSTING AND SPRAYING
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R. DELEON
Coffman Avenue, Anaheim
Telephone 4586
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