anaheim-gazette 1931-12-17
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X ANAHEIM
25c
Kids a Dime
Loges 35c
SUN. MON. (Continuous Shows Sunday 2:30 to 11 P.M.) DEC. 20, 21
“FREIGHTERS OF DESTINY”
with TOM KEENE—BARBARA KENT
also “FLYING HIGH” with
CHARLOTTE GREENWOOD; BERT LAHR
TUES. WED. DEC. 22, 23
“SURRENDER”
with WARNER BAXTER
COMEDY SCENIC ACT NEWS
THURSDAY ONLY "CHINA NITE" DEC. 24
“RECKLESS LIVING” with
RICARDO CORTEZ, MAE CLARK, NORMAN FOSTER
COMEDY—SPORTLIGHT NOVELTY—NEWS
FRI. SAT. (Matinee Saturday at 2:30) DEC. 25, 26
CONTINUOUS SHOWS XMAS DAY 2:30 to 11 P.M.
“SUICIDE FLEET” with
Bill Boyd, Robert Armstrong, Ginger Rogers
COMEDY NOVELTY NEWS
Santa Claus
With His Reindeer and Sleigh
Is on His Way From
ANAHEIM
Boys! Girls!
With His Reindeer and Sleigh
Is on His Way From
ANAHEIM
Boys! Girls!
He Will Be in Your Town
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 18
Check Time Below
Leave Anaheim 9:30 a.m.
Arrive Garden Grove 9:50 a.m.
Leave Garden Grove 10:10 a.m.
Arrive Buena Park 10:30 a.m.
Leave Buena Park 10:45 a.m.
Arrive La Habra 11:15 a.m.
Leave La Habra 11:30 a.m.
Arrive Brea 12 M.
Lunch
Leave Brea 1 p.m.
Arrive Yorba Linda 1:30 p.m.
Leave Yorba Linda 1:45 p.m.
Arrive Placentia 2:10 p.m.
Leave Placentia 2:25 p.m.
Arrive Atwood 2:40 p.m.
Leave Atwood 3 p.m.
Arrive Olive 8:30 p.m.
Returns to Anaheim 4 p.m.
Grand Entrance into Anaheim, Saturday at 7:30 P.M.
Free Matinee Every Boy and Girl Invited 1:30 Next Monday FOX THEATRE ANAHEIM
LOOK!
Santa suggests you make it a WILLARD
Battery for Christmas
Choose a Willard and banish your battery troubles. Next best, let me repair your old battery at moderate cost.
WILLARD
Battery for Christmas
Choose a Willard and banish your battery troubles. Next best, let me repair your old battery at moderate cost.
GEO. J. POIRIER
243 N. Los Angeles St., Anaheim. Phone 3524
WANT ADS
Stationery
CHRISTMAS CARDS, GIFTS and novelties now on sale. Come in and see them.
E. D. ABRAMS
116 W. Center, Anaheim. Phone 2513
Financial
LOANS TO INDIVIDUALS
$100—$1200
MAKERS OR COLLATERAL Autos Refinanced
LOANS MORTIS INVESTMENTS
119 N. Los Angeles St., Anaheim
Situations
GENERAL repairing and odd jobs.
Gene Adams, 416 S. Olive, 3954.
7-10-tf
Tailoring
ALL KINDS of suits altered and mended at reasonable cost. Expert tailoring, latest styles, newest materials.
HENRY BREMER
3-20-tf
124 E. Center—Phone 3232
Painting & Paperhanging
Painting, paperhanging, J. E. Saylor,
016 S. Philadelphia St., Phone 2761.
$10 FREE! Send name of friend who wants piano and get $10 Free when we sell. Danz, Anaheim.
Pianos For Sale
100 PIANOS to choose from; Knabe, Bechstein, Steinway, Chickering, Kimball, etc., new and used, $35 up. Danz, Anaheim.
Poultry
WE PAY CASH for poultry; any quantity. Market or laying. Will call. Phone 1401, R. D. Taylor,
3-20tfo
Here Are Some of the 4-H Club National Champions for 1931
ROBERT E. OWENS
Guilford N.Y.
MARY TERESA RICOKoewatin Minn.
MARION DOLAN
Sun Prairie, Wis.
CHARLES L. BROWN-Battle Ground Ind.
CARL Charlottesville Ind-OLDHAM
Roscoe Owens won the Moses trophy for having the most outstanding leadership record in 4-H Club work. Charlie Brown, who is a Freshman at Purdue, gets the Lipton trophy as the "most outstanding". 4-H boy, Mary Rico made the best achievement record for 4-H girls and also gets a Sir Thomas Lipton trophy. She is a Freshman in Minnesota Agricultural College. Marion Dolan gets the Moses trophy for girls, for rural leadership. Carl Oldham, star 4-H animal husbandman, won a $300 agricultural college scholarship, awarded by Thomas E. Wilson.
face in using the funds raised for unemployment relief is finding or making jobs for the class often called "white collar workers."
It is comparatively easy to make work for the manual laborer, New York is doing this by all sorts of street, park and waterfront improvements. A good many white collar workers are being provided work in collecting information which various public and semi-public institutions need but in ordinary times have felt they could not afford to collect. One New include all forward speeds, with a different control operated from the dash board and marked clearly on the instrument panel, is the most advanced feature of this widely-adopted co-trivance, permitting the driver to sit in an instant whether or not the car is operating in free-wheeling, or conventional gear. It eliminates practically all clutch peddle pushing. But appreciate the car, one must see it, and for that reason we are anxious to come every interested person in the district.
CANADA—
Canada's census of 1931 has just been completed and it shows the total population of the Dominion to be almost exactly ten million persons. This is an increase of about fourteen percent in ten years, which is a fairly rapid rate of growth—a faster rate, in fact, than the United States showed between 1920 and 1930. It is not very many people, however, to populate Canada's enormous area. The Dominion has 3,690,000 square miles, which is 660,000 square miles larger than the United States. Our population is about thirty-eight persons to the square mile, and Canada's is fewer than three persons to the square mile.
This vast and largely undeveloped area to the north of us still holds immense possibilities for the pioneer and the explorer.
VITAMINES—
We hear a lot about vitamins and the necessity of eating foods containing them, but few people are able to keep the list in mind. Here is a simple concise list of the common foods which contain the vitasaines essential to health:
Vitamine A—milk, butter, fresh cheese, eggs, green vegetables (spinach, lettuce, etc.), yellow vegetables (carrots, yellow corn), Vitamine B—Geras of cereals; liver, yeast, lettuce, raw peanuts, Vitamine C—Lemons, oranges, grapefruit, raw cabbage and sauerkraut, sprouted grain or peas, tomatoes, lettuce, watercress, raw spinach, turnips or green peppers, Vitamine B—Liver and cod liver oil, egg yolk, snails, sunshine (that is, sunshine on the body actually causes vitamin D to appear in the body, which aids bone growth, prevents rickets, prevents tooth decay). Vitamine E—Germ oil of wheat or other grain, other vegetable oils, fresh meat and animal fat, fresh lettuce. Vitamine F—Same foods as vitamine B. Vitamine G—Fresh or evaporated milk, liver, green vegetables, fresh or canned bananas and yeast.
GAS—
Enough natural gas is being produced in the United States today to pro-
face in using the funds raised for unemployment relief is finding or making jobs for the class often called "white collar workers."
It is comparatively easy to make work for the manual laborer. New York is doing this by all sorts of street, park and waterfront improvements. A good many white collar workers are beg provided work in collecting information which various public and semi-public institutions need but in ordinary times have felt they could not afford to collect. One New York business house suggest d a house-to-house canvass of the city to find out how many domestic electrical appliances of all kinds were in use, and on condition that this information should be available to every distributor of electric appliances. One of the unemployment relief agencies put a thousand men and women at work on salary, ringing doorbells and gathering these statistics.
There is no community so small that some work of that general nature cannot be found for unemployed who are not able to do manual labor, and who are unwilling to take charity.
Gantman’s Army and Navy Store Enlarged
Remodeling of the corner quarters for Gantman's Army and Navy store was completed last week. The partition between the corner and the store next to the corner was torn out. Of all over the cement, and other improvements made for the enlargement of the quarters.
"With the store newly enlarged we are in a position to increase our stock and display it better," Max Gantman said.
Auto Fans Like New Studebaker
Hundreds of people interested in what Studebaker's newest automotive creations featured, have visited the showrooms of Glen A. Peck, dealer, at 113 South Palm street, within the past week.
The new model wins the approval of the visitors with its eye-compelling air-curve craft, longer wheelbase than in previous models, larger engine, sturdier construction with a doubledrop frame and steel body, according to Mr. Peck.
"Automotive fans seem particularly enthusiased over the appearance as well as the performance of the new models." Mr. Peck said. "Enlargement of the free-wheeling principal, which Studebaker was first to introduce, to include all forward speeds, with a different control operated from the dashboard and marked clearly on the instrument panel, is the most advanced feature of this widely-adopted contrivance, permitting the driver to sit in an instant whether or not the car is operating in free-wheeling, or conventional gear. It eliminates practically all clutchpeddle pushing. But appreciate the car one must see it, and for that reason we are anxious to welcome every interested person in the district."
G. W. ALEXANDER DIES
George W. Alexander died at home on West Center street, Sunday evening, and the funeral service was held at the Church of Christ on Tuesday afternoon. The Rev. C. C. Root of融ating. Burial was in Loma Va-cementery. Mr. Alexander was 70 years old, a native of Indiana, and had lived in Anakeim for 25 years. He was a active member of the Church of Christ for many years. He is survived by Mr. Alexander and a son, J. R. Alexander.
egg yolk, snails, sunshine (that is, sunshine on the body actually causes vitamine D to appear in the body, which aids bone growth, prevents rickets, prevents tooth decay). Vitamine E—Germ oil of wheat or other grain, other vegetable oils, fresh meat and animal fat, fresh lettuce. Vitamine F—Same foods as vitamine B. Vitamine G—Fresh or evaporated milk, liver, green vegetables, fresh or canned, bananas and yeast.
GAS—
Enough natural gas is being produced in the United States today to provide six times as much energy as all of the electric power stations put together.
New natural gas fields of enormous volume have been discovered and developed in the past two years in southern New York and northern Pennsylvania, and in many other sections of the United States. I know some counties in which almost every farmer has his own gas well.
Probably enough natural gas has been allowed to go to waste in the past fifty years to supply the whole nation with fuel for a hundred years. A great many gas fields "petered" out, but new ones are constantly being brought in. Eventually natural gas seems likely to be our chief source of power.
INSURANCE—
The life insurance companies of the United States paid more than two thousand million dollars to their policy holders and beneficiaries last year. There is about three times as much life insurance in force today as there was ten years ago. There are literally millions of men who are providing estates for their dependents after they die, and comfort for themselves in old age, by no other means than setting aside a fixed percentage of their incomes for life insurance premiums.
A good rule for anybody buying life insurance is to take as large a policy as can be paid out of ten percent of the individual's fixed annual income, and increase the insurance as the income increases.
JOBS—
The hardest problem that community committees on unemployment have to
Mis Simplicity
makes your clothes
fit like a Paris
Mannequin's!
Leading dressmakers everywhere say, "It's no trick to achieve smart lines, when the frock is fitted over a correct moulding foundation." MisSimplicity, designed by Gossard, skillfully moulds the figure to slim curves. The diagonal "cross-pull" of the waistline straps flattens the diaphragm and abdomen, uplifts the bust, slenderizes the waistline and holds the figure to correct posture. Side panels of pliant elastic taper the hips to perfection.
The GOSSARD Line of Beauty
ORMSBY'S
Formerly Falkenstein's—We Give S-H Stamps
—THE STORE OF A THOUSAND AND ONE GIFTS—
Perfectly at Home in Kitchenettes
Perfectly at Home in Kitchenettes
Westinghouse Electric Tableware
Convenient and efficient electrical appliances fit into the scheme of kitchenette apartment. Their handiness, their beauty and their utility makes them the ideal gift for Christmas—
Seven-cup China Electric Percolator, reg. price $11.50, special till Christmas ... $9.95
Automatic Waffle Iron with heat indicator and Chromium finish, reg. $13.95 special at ... $9.95
World-famous Adjust-o-matic Iron, reg price $8.75, now priced at ... $6.75
FEARN RADIO ELECTRIC SHOP
273 E. Center St., Anaheim. Easy Parking.