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anaheim-gazette 1931-10-22

1931-10-22 · Anaheim Gazette · page 8 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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FOX ANAHEIM 25c Kids a Dime Loges 35c Sunday, Monday (Continuous Shows Sunday 2:30 to 11) October 25, 26 “PALMY DAYS” with EDDIE CANTOR Tuesday, Wednesday October 27, 28 “TWENTY-FOUR HOURS” CLIVE BROOKS KAY FRANCIS MIRIAM HOPKINS Thursday, Friday October 29, 30 THURSDAY NIGHT IS “CHINA NIGHT” Bargain Matinee Thursday, 2:30. Any Seat 15c. “SUSAN LENOX” GRETA GARBO CLARK ABLE SATURDAY ONLY — JUNIOR MATINEE AT 2:80 October 31 “PENROD AND SAM” with LEON JANNEY EPISODES 3—“THE GALLOPING GHOST” THE “WHY” of lower prices on HART, SCHAFFNER & MARX "WHY" of lower prices on HART, SCHAFFNER & MARX CLOTHES! WHEN you see how much lower clothing prices are this season you are bound to ask "Why?" Part of the reduction is accounted for by lower prices on woolens and other materials. but the greater part is due to the resourcefulness of the makers of HART, SCHAFFNER & MARX Clothes who have used every economy of a vast organization,—every saving of large scale production to produce clothes of actually finer quality at amazingly lowered prices. Come in and see for yourself how well they have succeeded. $27.50 TO $47.50 "By All Means Get a Fit" F.A.YUNGBLUTH THE HOME OF HART SHAFFNER & MARX 145 W. Center Street ANAHEIM VINATOR $99.00 and up, $10.00 down. FRARN, 278 N. Center St., Anaheim REFRIGERATOR EVER BUILT Easy Parking Phone 8111 WANT ADS RATE: Five cents the line (count) Painting & Paperbanging WANT ADS RATE: Five cents the line (count five words to the line) for each insertion. Phone 2414 for want ads that bring results. Help Wanted Solicitors wanted for Dry Cleaning. Must have closed car. Good job for right men. Apply in person. California Cleaning Co., Mitchell's Place, 305 West Santa Fe Avenue, Placentia, California. Stationery SCHOOL SUPPLIES Everything you need—Pencils, Pens Paper, Books, Rulers, etc. M. D. ABRAMS 119 W. Center St., Anaheim—Ph. 2513 Financial LOANS TO INDIVIDUALS $100-$1200 GO-MAKERS OR COLLATERAL Autos Refinanced LOANS INVESTMENTS 119 N. Los Angeles St., Anaheim Tailoring ALL KINDS of suits akered and mended at reasonable cost. Expert tailoring, latest styles, newest materials. HENRY BREMER 2-20-tf 124 E. Center—Phone 3232 Painting & Paperhanging Painting, paperhanging. J. E. Taylor, 616 S Philadelphia St., Phone 2761. Miscellaneous—For Sale MATTRESSES renovated. Call for and deliver same day. Box springs and box couches remade. Pillows recovered. Phone Anahelm 2433. We Sell Bed Springs, bed stead, cribs, pillows, day beds, coll cots, camp cots, mattresses, box springs, box couches and wool comforts. 916-918 N. Los Angeles St., on the U. S. Highway 101. Anaheam Mattress Factory. Pianos For Sale 100 PIANOS to choose from; Knabe, Bechstein, Steinway, Chickering, Kimball, etc., new and used. $35 up. Danz Anaheim. Miscellaneous $10 FREE! Send name of friend who wants piano-and get $10 Free when we sell. Danz Anaheim. Poultry WE PAY CASH for poultry; any quantity. Market or buying. Will call. Phone 1491. R. D. Taylor. 3-20tc Situations GENERAL repairing and odal jobs. Gene Adams, 416 S Olive, 3954. 7-10-16 It Pays To Advertise In The Gazette California Gets Big Road Fund Uncle Sam Apportions $4,121,-029 for Fiscal Year Ending June 30, 1933 (Correspondence to The Gazette) Washington, D. C.—The Secretary of Agriculture has apportioned to the states a total of $125,000,000 for road construction for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1933. The amount had previously been authorized for federal aid in road building, but with the Secretary's announcement the new funds are available to the States for immediate obligation on projected construction. The apportionment has been made two and one-half months in advance of the usual date so that the States may get an early start on plans for next season's construction work. California Gets $4,121,029 Under the apportionment California gets the net sum of $4,121,029.40 and it is exceeded by only three States, Illinois, which gets a net of $4,476,553.80; Pennsylvania, which gets $4,640,667; and Texas, which leads the list with $6,770,221. The Bureau of Public Roads, through which Federal aid funds are administered, has indicated a desire to accept policies designed to increase employment and to protect labor. Among the acceptable policies are the fixing of a fair minimum scale for unskilled labor and restrictions giving preference to local unskilled labor and to citizens of the State in which work is being done. Local Labor Preferred If legal, the use of Federal aid will be allowed where labor is employed direct and where such projects can be carried on economically to provide local employment. Restrictions as to hours per day and days per week in order that workers may be continuously employed are also acceptable. The Bureau of Public Roads will not accept the discharge of a contractor from the Banker Talks on "The Changing World" The Kiwanis club heard a discussion of prevailing economic conditions at its Monday luncheon, the speaker being Orra Monnette, vice-chairman of the Bank of America board of directors whose subject was "The Changing World." He was introduced by Earl E. Smith, of the local branch of t he bank, who was luncheon chairman for the day. Mr. Monnette said that the panacea for present conditions rests with the individual, rather than with any government agency. "Work is the only way out," he said. "The cause of the trouble is a mental state which makes us want all the luxuries without wanting to pay for them. If we admit that civilization has failed, we but admit our own weaknesses. We created the condition we now are experiencing and we don't know what to do about it." "The crying need of the age is efficiency. No one seems to want to learn to do a thing well. When we buy the services of the ordinary artisan we have to pay for something we don't get." Mr. Monnett cited authorities as far back at 3000 years ago to show that man always has entertained some of the ideas we do not court, particularly with regard to the world being a sinful place and that the youth of the land is going to the dogs generally. He closed with an admonition to "get busy." Edward Grassbone gave two cello numbers, accompanied by Miss Katherine Steward on the piano. New Precinct Lines From Aerial Photos A new use of aerial photography is being made by County Clerk J. M. Backs and County Surveyor W. K. Hilyard, who are realigning precinct boundaries of Orange county cities. An airplane carrying a camera has been flying over the cities gathering pictures of the typography, and it is the intention of the two county officials to use the photos in establishing permanent boundaries. Many, Many Ways To Serve Potatoees Hold Enviable Place on Home Table and Deserve More Consideration (Correspondence to The Gazette) Washington, D. C.—Don't stop wishing baked, boiled, or fried potatoes. Serv them in other ways, the Bureau of Home Economics suggests to the home makers of the country. Potatoes probably are served more frequently than any other vegetable, so instead of being treated with little consideration, they deserve special attention, the bureau experts in food preparation say. Good Reason for Its Position The potato has every good reason for holding the enviable position it does said Dr. Florence B. King, chief of food utilization division of the bureau. "It is a good and satisfying food with flavor that is midway between delicacy and strong. The flavor is pronounced enough to permit of serving the potato without the addition of any outside flavoring, aside from seasoning, and yet it is not so decided as to cause anyone to dislike this inexpensive vegetation all of which make potatoes valuable in the low cost dietary. Numerous Food Values From the standpoint of food value potatoes have much to offer—vitamins mineral salts, and energy giving materials. Their mineral salts supply the necessary alkaline substances in the diet to balance the acid-forming substances of meat, cereals, and eggs. At not least of all, is the energy giving value potatoes possess." Many persons designate the potato as the "Irish potato," which would seem indicate its origin in the Emerald Isle Quite to the contrary, the potato native to the western plateau of South America. The invading Spaniards took to tuber back to Spain, whence it gradually was introduced to the world, un Local Labor Preferred If legal, the use of Federal aid will be allowed where labor is employed direct and where such projects can be carried on economically to provide local employment. Restrictions as to hours per day and days per week in order that workers may be continuously employed are also acceptable. The Bureau of Public Roads will not accept the disbarment of a contractor from the award of a contract because he is a non-resident of the State, provided he is the lowest responsible bidder, nor will it accept the limitation of materials to those produced within the State. Last season Federal-aid road work was greatly accelerated because the regular authorization of $125,000,000 was supplemented by an emergency authorization of a loan of $80,000,000. At the peak of the season more than 155,000 men were engaged on Federal-aid work. Christian Science Lesson-Sermon: "Probation after Death" will be the subject of the Lesson-Sermon on Sunday in all Churches of Christ, Scientist, branches of The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass. The Lesson-Sermon consists of citations from the Old and New Testaments, and correlative passages from "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures" by Mary Baker Eddy. One of the Bible selections presents Paul's words to the Corinthians: "Know ye not that they which run in a race run all, but one receiveth the prize? So run, that ye may obtain. And every man that striveth for the mastery is temperate in all things. Now they do it to obtain a corruptible crown; but we an incorruptible. I therefore so run, not as uncertainly; so fight I, not as one that beateth the air; but I keep under my body, and bring it into subjection; lest that by means, when I have preached to others, I myself should be a castaway." A passage from Science and Health states: "Progress is born of experience. It is the ripening of mortal man, through which the mortal is dropped for the immortal." Lecture by Radio Radio listeners will have an opportunity to hear an authorized lecture on Christian Science next Sunday at 3 p.m., when John Randall Dunn, of Boston, will lecture in Philharmonic auditorium, Los Angeles, under the auspices of the Ninth Church of Christ, Scientist, of that city. He will speak over KTM. New Precinct Lines From Aerial Photos A new use of aerial photography is being made by County Clerk J. M. Backs and County Surveyor W. K. Hilyard, who are realigning precinct boundaries of Orange county cities. An airplane carrying a camera has been flying over the cities gathering pictures of the typography, and it is the intention of the two county officials to use the photos in establishing permanent precinct boundary lines. A large increase in the number of precincts will result. The county officials are endeavoring to make precincts of a size that will ultimately accommodate a registration of about 200 voters each. The first city photographed from the sky was Anaheim, and pictures have since been made showing the typography of Fullerton, Santa Ana and Orange. These aerial maps are supplying the quickest and surest way of ascertainting the extent to which each precinct is built up and to locate the lines where the boundaries logically should run. The photographs are being taken from an elevation of 15,000 feet, and each series of pictures is later placed together. The number of precincts in each of the cities will be materially increased. The county officials think. Max Gantman Tells of Russia Max Gantman, of the Anaheim Army and Navy store, who recently returned from Russia, says that living conditions in the Soviet republic are terrible. His observations are based on what he saw in a small town where he visited his mother, and in Moscow, Leningrad and Liev. The Russians are very much dissatisfied with Soviet rule, he said, with the exception of the children who are taught that sovietism is far superior to any other form of government. While the general educational system of Russia is good, Mr. Gantman said, propaganda against capitalism is taught in the schools. There is considerable construction work going on in Russian cities. There is little unemployment, but laborers are not industrious because of the feeling that any effort at hard work is a waste of energy, since no advancement is possible. Wages are extremely low and prices for commodities are extremely high. The people subsist on little food, clothing is not good, and the people are so poor that they are able to buy few necessities of life. Mr. Gantman said that the usual tourist in Russia does not get to see the real conditions which exist, but sees only what the soviet authorities wish him to see. Many persons designate the potatoe for the Irish potatoe, which would seem indicative its origin in the Emerald Isle. Quite to the contrary, the potatoe native to the western plateau of South America. The invading Spaniards took to tuber back to Spain, whence it gradually was introduced to the world, until now it is one of the vegetables most universally grown. Not until the late century and a half, however, has been so important, Prejudice against a new food together with the first wave of cooking it retarded its adoption—the diet. Roast potatoes steeped wine, baked with marrow and spice or sweet preserves limited its use for a long time. Prevented Terrible Famines. One outstanding fact to the potato credit, after it achieved its notable position in agriculture, is that with one exception it prevented the terrible famines of former ages in Europe. In times of stress, particularly, potato has come to lead in the diet Since Ireland has used them so gracefully, the misnomer "Irish potatoe might easily be explained by the Irish preference for them in plenty and need. It is an old Irish custom to give a bowl of boiled potatoes to all wives and ask for food—much as a witch which is offered here in the United States. The name potatoe is also misapplied to other vegetables as in the case of Canada potatoe, which is not a potato at all, but the Jerusalem artichoke; tuber of a species of sunflower native North America. Similarly a Chinese potatoe is a yam. Germany Grows Most Germany is a great potato grower country, in fact the greatest of all. Oldly enough other foods are rarely associated with the German than are potatoes. This year potato crop in the United States estimated at 371,000,000 bushels, practically all of which will be used for Germany converts much of her corn into starch and alcohol. One can not always tell a good potato by the outside appearance, Doctor K points out. One which shows a green skin will taste bitter when cooked says, for it has grown too close to surface and has been sunburned. Wisest course for the homemaker is choose medium-sized potatoes that firm when pressed in the hand. Dietary potatoes are best for mash and baking, and the more waxy varieties are most suitable for salad creaming since they will hold their shape. Ways for Serving The bureau suggests many ways for serving potatoes in addition to the usual methods. Lecture by Radio Radio listeners will have an opportunity to hear an authorized lecture on Christian Science next Sunday at 3 p.m., when John Randall Dunn, of Boston, will lecture in Philharmonic auditorium, Los Angeles, under the auspices of the Ninth Church of Christ, Scientist, of that city. He will speak over KTM. DR. JOHNSTON APPOINTED Dr. H. A. Johnston of Anaheim has been appointed president of the St Joseph hospital, and seven other Orange county doctors have been placed on the executive board, including Claude Steen of Fulleton, A. H. Domain of Orange, J. M. Buriew, J. L. Maroon, D. A. Harwood and John Bail, all of Santa Ana. PACKING PLANT IMPROVEMENTS The Southern Pacific railroad has had plans drawn for alterations in its packing plant at 502 South Caludina street, and a building permit was issued for the work last Monday. The improvements will cost $500. Utah Star Hurtles Over Opponents for Touchdown Zachs scored the only touchdown for his team against Washington in the game at Seattle, which was won 7-6, by the home side. The camera man caught a splendid close-up of the interference that made it possible. Many Ways to Reserve Potatoes Table Place on Home and Deserve More Consideration Condence to The Gazette On, D. C.—Don't stop with oil, or fried potatoes. Serve other ways, the Bureau of Agriculture suggests to the home-country. Potatoes preserved more frequently than vegetable, so instead of being little consideration, they special attention, the bureau's food preparation say. Reason for Its Position He has every good reason for enviable position it does." Reference B. King, chief of the Division of the bureau, and satisfying food with a midway between delicate flavor is pronounced permit of serving the potato addition of any outside side from seasoning, and yet decided as to cause anyone his inexpensive vegetable, make potatoes valuable in dietary. Numerous Food Values The standpoint of food value is much to offer—vitamins, and energy giving material salts supply the alkaline substances in the juice the acid-forming substance, cereals, and eggs. And of all, is the energy giving possess." Consignate the potato as potato," which would seem to origin in the Emerald Isle. Contrary, the potato is the western plateau of South Spain. Whence it graduated to the world, until Spain, whence it graduated to the world, until His Fortune Already Told John McCormack, world-famous tenor, is not crystal gazing but posing on his estate near Hollywood. cake, and doughnuts. Many potato recipes are included in the bureau's cook book, "Aunt Sammy's Radio Recipes Revised," which is available free of charge, on request to the Bureau of Home Economics, U. S. Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C. Battleship 'Levens Benefit Game Two football teams from the Pacific Battlefleet are to play a charity benefit game under the auspices of the Anaheim Legion Post, at 2 o'clock next Saturday. The game will be on the Union high school field and the teams will be from U.S. S. Colorado and Daily Agricultural Radio Program Beginning each day at 12 mi. and continuing 10 minutes, talks of interest to farmers, growers and producers will be given during the week beginning October 26 under the auspices of the Agricultural Extension Service, cooperating with radio station KFI, as follows: October 26—"A New Circular on Fertilization by P. L. Hibbard." A. G. Salter, Assistant Farm Advisor, Los Angeles County. October 27—"Truck Crop Question Box." F. A. Ernst, Assistant Farm Advisor, Los Angeles County. October 28—"The National Orange Show." John P. Coy, Agricultural Commissioner, San Bernardino County. October 29—"Does Your Automobile Start Fires." J. P. Fairbank, Division of Agricultural Engineering, University of California. October 30—"What Kind of Manure Shall I Buy?" M. B. Rounds, Farm Advisor, Los Angeles County. The early trappers in the Rocky mountain country said that the grizzly bear was the most ferocious animal they had to contend with. But the grizzly didn't have anything on the modern Wall Street bear. Expert Watch Reporting EYES EXAMINED—GLASSES FITTED HOMER A. NELSON, Opt. D. Optometrists TEUTONOPHONE FOR THE HARD OF HEARING Phone 3104. 114 N. Leemon St, Anaheim, Calif. Battleship 'Levens Benefit Game Two football teams from the Pacific Battlefleet are to play a charity benefit game under the auspices of the Anaheim Legion Post, at 2 o'clock next Saturday. The game will be on the Union high school field and the teams will be from the U. S. S. Colorado and the U. S. S. Saratoga, anchored at San Pedro. It is not only in colleges and high schools that football enthusiasm runs high. It prevails to a very marked degree in the Pacific Battlefleet, where each ship has a team, and each team fights like the Trojans for the fleet championship. It is expected that Saturday's game will bubble with thrills for the spectators, for the sailors will "scrap for all there is in it." High School Teams "Scrap" Tomorrow The high school football teams of Garden Grove and Orange are drawing up their forces in battle array and will "have it out" at the Orange field tomorrow. Coach Ward of the Garden Grove 'loven is not so sure that his team is going to carry off the honors of the day, so he predicts his team may lose by three touch downs, owing to injuries some of the players received in the game lasts Friday. TWELVE NEW ARRIVALS And still the new-comers arrive in Anaheim for permanent residence. Since October 16 twelve arrivals have been listed by the public service department of the city and reported to the Chamber of Commerce. With all of these European nations going off the gold standard isn't it too bad that William J. Bryan isn't here to have the satisfaction of saying, "I told you so." The First and Most Important Necessity in the Business Revival is The First and Most Important Necessity in the Business Revival is PRINTING Stationery, Announcements, Cards, Catalogues are all important items in any line of business or industry THE GAZETTE'S PRINTING PLANT is fully equipped to supply your needs. Phone us for estimates—2414 THE GAZETTE Established 1870 108 North Emily