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anaheim-gazette 1932-04-21

1932-04-21 · Anaheim Gazette · page 4 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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Lesson-Sermon Topic for Sunday Announced A Lesson-Sermon on "Probation after Death" will be presented on Sunday in all Churches of Christ, Scientist, branches of The Mother Church. The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass. Among the Scriptural selections will be the following verses from Mark: "Now when Jesus was risen early the first day of the week, he appeared first to Mary Magdalent, out of whom he had cast seven devils. And she went and told them that had been with him, as they mourned and wept. And they, when they had heard that he was alive, and had been seen of her, believed not... Afterward he appeared unto the eleven as they sat at meat, and upbraided them with their unbelief and hardness of heart, because they believed not them which had seen him after he was risen." A correlative passage from "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures," by Mary Baker Eddy, states: "Jesus' unchanged physical condition after what seemed to be death was followed by his exaltation above all material conditions; and this exaltation explained his ascension, and revealed unmistakably a probationary and progressive state beyond the grave. Jesus was 'the way'; that is, he marked the way for all men." The girls are blamed for calling up the boys and asking for dates, but anyway this habit swells the telephone company revenues. Tom and Tony Plan to Entertain the Texans Cowboy Tom Mix and his stage horse Tony, who have just completed several years in circus work, will be the main entertainment attraction at the Texas society picnic-reunion next Sunday at Sycamore Grove park, Los Angeles. Others on the program include William Gibbs McAdoo, war-time secretary of the treasury; Capt. Lyston S. Black, president of the Texas society; Deputy Police Chief James E. Davis, Deputy City Prosecutor Charles P. Johnson; motion picture stars and radio entertainers. Sunday is the anniversary of the day on which General Sam Houston defeated the Mexicans under General Santa Ana in 1836. Texas then became a republic, where its nickname of "Lone Star" originated, and then a state of the union. Jayhawkers Planning Reunion on April 30 Former residents of and visitors from Kansas this week were invited to attend the annual picnic reunion, all day Saturday. April 30 at Sycamore Grove park, Los Angeles, where county registers and headquarters will enable those attending to find old friends and neighbors. "Even with ten thousand present." A brief program will begin at 2 p.m., according to State Societies' Secretary C. H. Parsons. Jayhawkers are urged to go early and stay all day. REPOSSESED — Kelvinator Electric Refrigerators at Unpaid Balance FEARN — 273 E. Center — Phone 3111 — Easy Parking First Church of Christ, Scientist Anaheim, California ANNOUCES A REPOSSESED— Kelvinator Electric Refrigerators at Unpaid Balance FEARN — 273 E. Center — Phone 3111 — Easy Parking First Church of Christ, Scientist Anaheim, California ANNOUNCES A Free Lecture on Christian Science by WILLIAM DUNCAN KILPATRICK, C. S. B. of Detroit, Michigan Member of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist in Boston, Massachusetts in Anaheim Union High School Auditorium West Center and North Citron Streets Entrance on North Citron Monday, April 25, at 8 P. M. The Public Is Cordially Invited to Attend What does Proposition [STATE OIL CONTROL ACT] Mean to YOU? ...It will help to restore EMPLOYMENT and PROPERTY in CALIFORNIA in which YOU will share DO YOU WANT TO SEE—More jobs created? More money in circulation? Your own income more secure? DO YOU WANT TO SEE—More business? More buying? Fewer bankruptcies? Credit improved? Collections made easier? Better times for everybody in California? DO YOU WANT TO SEE—Our greatest natural resource—OIL—conserved through State control—favored by our Legislature, our civic leaders, our labor leaders, our government, and the owners of 90% of oil producing lands? If You Do, and Want to Help Realize these Benefits, VOTE YES PROPOSITION #1... MA DO YOU WANT TO SEE—More business? More buying? Fewer bankruptcies? Credit improved? Collections made easier? Better times for everybody in California? DO YOU WANT TO SEE—Our greatest natural resource—OIL—conserved through State control—favored by our Legislature, our civic leaders, our labor leaders, our governor, and the owners of 90% of oil producing lands? If You Do, and Want to Help Realize these Benefits, THE VOTE YES PROPOSITION #1...MAY SOME OF THE OIL COMPANIES ACTIVELY SUPPORTING PROPOSITIONS: ANCHOR OIL CO. ANDERSON, LAVERING, HARRIMAN & PIERS ARROWHEAD OIL CO. ASSOCIATED OIL CO. BALLAGH-PATTERSON LEASE BARNSDALL OIL CO. A. E. BELL CORP. BELRIDGE OIL CO. BERRY & EWING CO. BERRY HOLDING CO. F. C. BERRY BERRY OIL CO. BEVERLY OIL CO. B. H. OIL CO. BIG TEN OIL CO. BISHOP CORP. BOSTON PETROLEUM CO. BROOKSHIRE OIL CO. F. O. BURKET ESTATE CALEX OIL CO. CALIF. STAR OIL CO. CALIF. WESTERN OIL CARBO PETROLEUM CO. CHANSLOR-CANFIELD MIDWAY OIL CO. C. J. OIL CO. COLOMA OIL CO., LTD. COMMONWEALTH OIL CO. CRESENT PETROLEUM CO. DAVIS INVESTMENT CO. DELAND OIL CO. DEL REY OIL & REFINING CO. BIRNEY DONNELL DOYLE-CLUNE OIL CO. DOYLE PETROLEUM CORP. EAST PUENTE OIL CO. OF CALIF. ETHEL D. CO. FULLERTON OIL CO. GENERAL PETROLEUM CORP. GLOBE LEASE & ROYALTY CO. H. H. & F. OIL CO. HEARD & PAINTER CO. W. E. HEASLEY EDWARD HENNES HONDO OIL CO. HONOLULU OIL CORP. H. & P. OIL CO. HUNTINGTON SIGNAL OIL CO. ITALO PETROLEUM CORP. A. T. JERGINS TRUST JERGINS SYNDICATE JEWETT OIL CO. KERN RIVER OIL FIELDS OF CALIF., LTD. KERN SUNSET OIL CO. KNEEN-McPHerson O. D. KNIGHT, ET AL LILLY OIL CO. RALPH B. LLOYD LOMITA GASOLINE CO. LONG BEACH PETROLEUM CO. LOSCAL PETROLEUM CO. MANLEY & McGINN MARICOPA INVESTMENT CO. MARCOPA STAR OIL CO. MASCOT OIL CO. McMANUS OIL CO. D. K. McLENNAN MIDLAND PETROLEUM CO. MIDWAY PEERLESS OIL CO. C. S. MORRISON MURPHY OIL CO. NEVADA COUNTY OIL CO. NORDEN OIL CORPIN NO. AMER. OIL CONSOLIDATED CO. OBISPO OLI COMPANY OHIO OIL CO. PACIFIC STATES PETROLEUM CO. M. C. PARKER OIL CO. PATTON, CARL B. PATTON & CONWAY PRICEWELL OIL CO. PRINCETON OIL CO. RICHFIELD OIL CO. SAFE OIL CO. SELBY & ROOTSHELL OIL Co. SIGNAL Oil Co. SIMMS & GOLDMNS STANDARD Oil Co. ST. HELEN'S Petroleum Co., Ltd. ST. 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Many soil borings and examinations in Orange county orchards have been made by the agricultural extension service, under the direction of Farm Advisor Harold E. Wahlberg, to determine present moisture conditions. Mr. Wahlberg reports that owing to the copious rains of last winter, most of the loam soils and heavier soils still contain ample moisture for citrus and walnut trees. The light sandy soils and some of the gravel soils have shown some deficiency in moisture. In view of the variation of moisture in the orchard areas of the country, the farm advisor again emphasizes the value of using the soil auger or shovel to get down into the second and third foot depths of the root zone to actually learn what the moisture condition is. It is reported that many orchard operators are rushing their first application of irrigation water to the detriment of their trees. Much damage has been caused by premature an dearly irrigation in citrus orchards of Orange county during previous years. An appeal is being made to the orchardists by the extension service to carefully study the water requirements of their trees with a view to growing a healthier tree, improving production and at the same time conserve the supply of water available for irrigation purposes. A series of irrigation meetings will soon be announced by the farm advisor dealing with the use of water and better irrigation practice in Orange county. THIS WEEK IN WASHINGTON (Correspondence to The Gazette) Washington, D. C. April 14—The House of Representatives had to have first crack at the new tax bill, under the provision of the Federal Constitution that all bills for raising revenue must originate in the lower House. What the new tax bill will look like when the Senate gets through with it is something else again. There is no doubt whatever that the fight for the general sales tax will be resumed in the Senate; and the probability is that some of the estimates of revenue made by the House will be changed when the bill gets into conference. There is a difference of opinion between the Treasury Department and the lower House of Congress as to whether the tax bill as adopted by the House will raise as much revenue as House leaders claim it will. The House says that it has cut $200,000,000 off from the appropriations for the next fiscal year, which begins July 1. The Treasury says the cuts amount to only $125,000,000, so there is a difference of $75,000,000 between them right there. And the Secretary of the Treasury says that the House is at least $35,000,000 out of the way in its estimate of what the new taxes will produce. All of those things will be ironed out, if not in the Senate, then in the conference on the bill between committees of the two Houses. One certain thing is that when they are all through we will have a Federal tax bill which will raise enough money to keep the Government running for another year without a deficit. The biggest single item of revenue in the new tax bill is the individual income tax, which has been raised to a point where anybody whose income is Christian Science Lecture April 25 A free lecture on Christian Science by William Ducan Kilpatrick, C. S. B. of Detroit, Michigan, will be given in the Anaheim union high school auditorium under the auspices of First Church of Christ Scientist, Anaheim, Monday, April 25, at 8 p.m. Mr. Kilpatrick is a member of the board of lectureship of The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts. Herbert Hoover, Cleveland, probably banking a little on his name, is out for the Republican nomination for secretary of state of Ohio. All of those things will be ironed out, if not in the Senate, then in the conference on the bill between committees of the two Houses. One certain thing is that when they are all through we will have a Federal tax bill which will raise enough money to keep the Government running for another year without a deficit. The biggest single item of revenue in the new tax bill is the individual income tax, which has been raised to a point where anybody whose income is over $100,000 a year will have to pay $40,000 out of each $100,000 to the Federal government, as a surtax above the normal tax. But even when we add State income taxes, which are in effect in most of the states where the people with an income of less than $3,000,000 a year will pay in income taxes less than similar incomes are taxed in Great Britlan. In England the income taxes begin on incomes of $2,000, on which the tax is $160. Anyone earning $5,000 a year in England pays $703 in taxes, while in the United States the highest combination of Federal and State taxes on a $5,000 net income is only $52. The individual with an income of a quarter of a million dollars in England pays more than half of it, or $141,000 in income tax; under the new Federal law he would pay $110,000 in income tax on a $250,-000 income. The House did leave a lot of sales taxes in the revenue bill. They are taxes on sales of produce, admissions to places of amusement, on lubricating oil, telegraph and telephone messages, cosmetics, furs, jewelry, sporting goods and cameras, beverages, matches, chewing gum, radios and phonographs, mechanical refrigerators, automobiles and accessories, candy, motor boats, firearms and shells, and numerous other items. This list may be increased by the Senate, but there is one point upon which there seems to be a little difference of opinion. That point is letter postage. It is on the cards very definitely that the two-cent stamp will be retired to the shelf and the three-cent stamp substituted, as in war times. Letter postage was reduced forty-nine years ago from three cents to two, and it has been increased only twice since then, once during the Spanish American War for a short time, and then during the World War. Politically speaking, only two men have gained any prestige out of the rows and discussions in Congress so far. One of these is Representative LaGuardia, Republican, of New York, who demonstrated an unsuspected ability at leadership in organizing and conducting the revolt against the sales tax; the other is Speaker John N. Garner. Democrat, of Texas, who pulled his shattered forces together and Politically speaking, only two men have gained any prestige out of the rows and discussions in Congress so far. One of these is Representative LaGuardia, Republican, of New York, who demonstrated an unsuspected ability at leadership in organizing and conducting the revolt against the sales tax; the other is Speaker John N. Garner. Democrat, of Texas, who pulled his shattered forces together and rallied them to the battle-cry of "balance the budget," at a moment when it looked as if party discipline in the House had been completely wrecked. Garner is going to have a lot of votes in the Democratic National Convention, for the President nomination. While Governor Roosevelt of New York is still in the lead and gaining, he has no stranglehold on the nomination as yet. There is a considerable revival of the talk of a Roosevelt-and-Garner ticket. That is all interesting speculation, but nobody is in a position to make any definite predictions up to now. The proposed tax on beer, accompanied by the proposal to permit the selling and brewing of beer with a content of 4 per cent, died a-borning. But unless the Senate changes it, the new tax bill will provide for a 35 per cent tax on malt and other items used in the manufacture of homebrew, and on grape concentrate. Maybe those taxes will raise a lot of revenue, maybe not. At any rate, they will give a key to the actual consumption of home-brewed beer and ale, and home-made wines in the United States. The wets think there is an awful lot of those commodities being manufactured; the drys think that the volume is greatly exaggerated. Putting a tax on those things will furnish some exact statistics, for the first time since prohibition went into effect. B. & P. W. ENJOYS BAKE Members of the Anaheim Business and Professional Women's club and their husbands were invited to attend a weiner bake at Balboa Thursday evening, President Retta Schweiss announced. Mrs. Albert Frahm was hostess. Anaheim, Calif., April 21, 1932 Against the purchase of tickets from persons purporting to be representatives of the organizing committee. Tickets for the games can be purchased through but one agency, the ticket department, Olympic games committee, at Eighth and Spring streets, Los Angeles, said Mackenzie. WESTINGHOUSE RADIO - $37.50 and up FEARN Easy Parking Phone 3111 273 E. Center St., Anaheim 4 YUNGBLUTH tests 1. IS IT STYLE? — YES. 2. IS IT WELL MADE? — YES 3. WILL IT WEAR? — YES 4. WILL IT SELL FAST AT A SMALL PROFIT? — YES HARDEST “EXAMS” CLOTHES HAVE EVER TAKEN GORDIAN WORSTED SUITS $4250 Seven times tested for weight, wear, tensile strength, fast dye, thread count, cleaning fluids, pure worsted. Two years ago it was the fastest selling $50 suit made. Now it is $42.50—a price of 16 years ago—and still the greatest suit value at the price. Hart Schaffner & Marx put their finest quality into this suit. GORDIAN WORSTED SUITS $4250 MOTOR TWIST SUITS $3500 A long wearing worsted twist, developed by Hart Schaffner & Marx to stand all the hard usage a motor car gives a suit. They're just as good looking as they are long wearing—and at the price of 16 years ago. F. A. YUNGBLUTH "The Home of Hart Shaffner & Marx" 145 WEST CENTER STREET ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA Southern County Bank Capitalized at $170,000 ANAHEIM - CYPRESS - BUENA PARK - EL MONTE RS: PHELPS, ident AM SCHUMACHER, Executive Vice-President GEL, MOUNTAIN, Presidents April 21, 1932 ORS: PHELPS, President TEAM SCHUMACHER, Executive Vice-President GEL, MOUNTAIN, Presidents AWLEY, Mier PHELPS, Secretary MILLER, Insurer ORS: STEWARD R T E. LODGE THIENES TOMMEY ED NEWMARK APPINGTON WARREN AM ABPLANALP April 21, 1932 TO OUR DEPOSITORS AND FRIENDS: Your loyalty and confidence in the Southern County Bank and its officers and directors are responsible for the successful re-opening this week. We want to take this opportunity of publicity expressing our appreciation for the confidence you have placed in us, and to pledge our constant effort to honestly and fearlessly serve you in the future. The scores of compliments from officials and bankers of the state, all expressing amazement at the tremendous success of our re-opening when deposits greatly exceeded the amount of money withdrawn, really should be directed of our courageous and true friends and the communities who stood by us in time of emergency. To these friends and depositors we respectfully express our sincere appreciation on behalf of the stockholders and directors. (Signed) WILLIAM SCHUMACHER, Executive Vice-President A. W. PHELPS, Secretary