anaheim-gazette 1932-08-04
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Shaver Captains West’s Grid Team
Western and Eastern Teams To Clash at Stadium Monday Night
Gaius (Gus) Shaver, All-American quarterback of the Trojans last season, will captain the Southern California-Stanford-California team of seniors that will meet a similar group from Yale, Harvard and Princeton in the Olympic night football game next Monday. Manager Phil Ellsworth of the western squad announced recently.
Upon the suggestion of Glenn (Pop) Warner of Stanford, Shaver was appointed to head the western team by the coaching committee consisting of Chairman Howard Jones of Southern California, Warner and Bill Ingrain of California. In practice sessions Shaver has shown the same hard-running form that made him one of the country’s outstanding stars last fall. He is performing at fullback but is calling signals, carrying the ball on most of the plays and playing safety on defense.
Just as the eastern team, under the direction of Tad Jones, will have a hard time stopping Shaver, the western boys will find it tough to halt Eddie Mays, star Harvard back who has been providing the sensation of the Yale-Harvard-Prince of Queens workouts. Mays who is the light, shifty Mohler-type block scored on a 30-yard run behind the second team line in a game this week, and when Tad Jones sailed him to the first team he went 70 yards through a broken field for a score on the opening play.
20-30 Club In Tie Vote After Debate
With Vice President Joe Chambers presiding in the absence of President Joe Schulz, the 20-30 club of Anaheim Monday evening enjoyed an impromptu debate between Earl Jackson and Ray
20-30 Club In Tie Vote After Debate
With Vice President Joe Chambers presiding in the absence of President Joe Schulz, the 20-30 club of Anaheim Monday evening enjoyed an impromptu debate between Earl Jackson and Ray LaFont on "Resolved, That the 20-30 Club Should Increase Its Membership."
Members present attempted to vote a dedition but died. Program Chairman Gilbert Koehler presented a trio, Marion Maddison, pianist; Lauren Faust, saxophonist, and Elmer Rennie, vocalist, in several numbers.
City Officials to Meet In Santa Ana
First of a series of three regional meetings will be held August 13 at the Santa Ana city hall by the department of mayors and councilmen of the California League of Municipalities. Request for use of the city hall council chambers was made by Secretary-Manager Gordon Whithall, and granted Monday night by the Santa Ana council.
Vic Eimers Lauds Anaheim Workmen
Claims Artistry Proved By Excellence of Work On New Store
"Whenever local business men or residents need any exacting decorative or carpentry work done, they need look no further than the skilled workmen of their own city," Vic Eimers, owner of the Economy Enna-Jettick Shoe store stated this week, following numerous compliments upon the modern artistry at the store's new quarters at 177 West Center street.
After five years in the old location at Center and Lemon streets the Economy store moved to the new site August 1, opening with completely new modern motif for design. The windows are backed up by silver curtain effects, giving the store a very attractive appearance. Even the floor work was praised, while the modern tints of green and brown were pleasing.
"It has been a great pleasure to have so many people compliment us upon our improved service, and upon the improved looks of our store," Mr. Eimers said.
W.C.T.U. Plans Active Campaign
Club Will Hold Convention At Tustin On August 8 and 9
Members of the W.C.T.U. are preparing plans for getting out the precinct vote at the August primaries, as a result of action they took last week with the county president, Mrs. Cora Hale, in Fullerton. After a luncheon, the W.C.T.U. leaders of the county listened to reports and planned the organization's activities for the next few months.
August 8 to 9 the Tustin union will be host to members of the county convention, where detailed programs for the pre-election campaign will be announced.
Those attending the conference in Fullerton were: Mrs. Estella Harper, county vice president, of Garden Grove; Mrs. Elizabeth Warren, county recording secretary, of Santa Ana; Mrs. Alma Kellogg, county treasurer, Santa Ana; Mrs. Sarah Brown, county corresponding secretary, of Tustin; Miss Emily Cox, Santa Ana, state director of health; Mrs. Margaret Utt, state director of legislation, of Tustin; Mrs. Minnie Nevill, state director-of-social-morality, and president of Orange union; Mrs. Lucy Daugherty, Anaheim union president; Mrs. Kinney, Buena Park union president; Mrs. Grace Bowie, Erea union president; Mrs. Iram Kay, Placentia union president; Mrs. Ursa Zinke, Fullerton union president; Mrs. Lula Beardsley, Garden Grove union president; Mrs. Cora Chapman, Cypress union president; Mrs. Finley, Tustin union president; Mrs. Clara Hobson, El Madera union president; Mrs. Flora Beatty, Newport Beach union president; Mrs. Minnie Reid, Costa Mesa union president; Mrs. Rosa Rowley, Huntington Beach union president; Mrs. A.E.Farnsworth, Talbert union president; Mrs.Amy Evans, Santa Ana union president, and Mrs.Anna Garretson, La Habra union president.
Pupil Gives His Teacher Lesson
Van Osdel Beats In Practice.
After five years in the old location at Center and Lemon streets the Economy store moved to the new site August 1, opening with completely new modern motif for design. The windows are backed up by silver curtain effects, giving the store a very attractive appearance. Even the floor work was praised, while the modern tints of green and brown were pleasing.
"It has been a great pleasure to have so many people compliment us upon our improved service, and upon the improved looks of our store," Mr. Elmers said. "All the work was done by local folk, and we feel that their display of workmanship and artistry on this occasion proves that nowhere else can better workmen be had."
Orange City Council Names Elijah Clerk
Orange city council Tuesday afternoon named T. H. Elijah, former secretary of the Elks club of that city, as city clerk following the resignation of Paul E. Clark, who was arrested late last week on charges of grand theft involving $2,800 of city funds.
Has Slept Six Months
Patricia Maguire, Oak Park, Ill., 27 years old, who has been in a coma of sleeping sickness for more than six months. For more than four months she was unable to open her eyes. It is believed to be the longest case on record.
Talbert union president; Mrs. Amy Evans, Santa Ana union president, and Mrs. Anna Garretson, La Habra union president.
Pupil Gives His Teacher Lesson
Van Osdel Beats In Practice. But McNaughton Wins
Ducan McNaughton, University of Southern California youth who won the Olympic high jump championship for Canada by defeating his own teammate, Bob Van Osdel, in the jump-off. May turn out to be the youngest Olympic champion of the track and field games. The tall, modest Trojan, was born just 20 years ago in Cornwall, Ontario.
McNaughton's best jump as a student in King Edward high school, Vancouver, was five feet, ten inches. He started his college work at the University of British Columbia in September, 1929, completing a semester's-work there in December of that year and transferring to Southern California where he came to major in geology.
Although ineligible for freshman competition at S. C. because of the transfer rule, McNaughton studied the high jump event in the spring of 1930 under Coach Dean Cromwell who switched him over from the reverse scissors form to the modified western roll that he now uses. As a sophomore last year, "Dunc" cleared 6:2¼ twice, but this season with Bob Van Osdel, an expert with the modified western roll, to help him at all times he increased his best height to 6:4¼.
Clearing 6:6 to tie for first and making it again in the jump-off, McNaughton reached his peak in the Olympic games. Since his surprising victory, McNaughton has been giving the credit to Coach Cromwell and Van Osdel, his constant high jumping companion during the entire season. The latter had been beating McNaughton regularly until the big show when the pupil slipped one over on the teacher.
NE FOR THE BOOK
Miss Betty Gierke, who keeps Governor James Rolph’s date book, is entering the important date of the California State Fair, not only for the governor but for all California to be present at the great exposition in Sacramento, September 3rd-10th. The State Fair combines fifteen big shows in one and every year attracts hundreds of thousands of visitors from all parts of the West.
When Is Cutting Rate Economy?
The trend of buying at the present is with the idea of getting the article for the least amount. Price is paramount with little consideration given to quality. However, quality, whether in a suit of clothes or a bottle of milk, represents the actual value. If quality is to be sacrificed for price, that of course is optional with the purchaser. However in food products and in fact most of the things purchased, quality represents its food value or wearing qualities which is the true basis of staple commodities.
In the production of milk, probably the most essential and most universally used of food products, prices to producers and distributors have been lowered commensurate with the articles which have to be bought to produce milk of the quality the public is entitled to. According to the California dairy council, a quart of milk will provide 55 per cent of the daily food requirements of an adult. At its present price it can hardly be expected to obtain any other food source of equivalent food value at a lower price.
However, owing to the trend of mind of the purchaser, even lower prices are solicited. If this becomes too insistent it is quite probable that the lower prices will be granted. It can be done only with danger of sacrificing in quality. Milk producers generally buy the milk from the producer on the basis of its butterfat content. Lowering of the prices results in a lowering of price to be paid the producer, narrowing of the distributors operating margin and usually a lessening of the butterfat put out in the milk to the consumer.
Here again is a case of lowering the quality of the product which only goes to further prove that we only get what we pay for. Prices paid producers are now generally under the cost of production even with the lower feed prices.
This appeal is made to the consumers to question the advisability of patronizing or tolerating further price cuts.
Farm Advisor Warns of Mushroom Schemes
Reports have come through the reau of plant industry that un-priced promoters have been selling spices to people who know little or nothing about how to produce mushrooms how or where to market them, if they can be sold at all. This is for the benefit of people approached on the subject.
These promoters have been designing mushroom growing as a new unexploited business requiring small capital and not much experience and saying that the prospects for profits were almost certain because alleged scarcity and high prices for mushrooms. The claims made for the most part, been misleading, the last few years the price of mushrooms in the large markets has about 25 cents a pound, instead of much higher prices indicated by promoters. Some of the advertisements were so worded as to imply that the promoters guaranteed that original expenses could be recovered from sales, and even to indicate that the promoting company would not take to buy all the crop grown from spawn it sold.
Mushroom growing is not a new unexplored industry. More than 400,000 pounds have been grown in United States annually in recent years. In many localities in the last few growers have had to sell their profit below cost of production because of favorable market conditions.
“Spirit” Is Subject for Lesson-Sermon
“Spirit” is the subject of the Lesson Sermon on Sunday in all branches: The Mother Church. The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass.
Among the Scriptural citations in Lesson-Sermon are these words from Paul to the Galatians: “This would I learn of you. Received ye Spirit by the works of the law, or the hearing of faith? Are ye so ash? having begun in the Spirit.”
Yosemite Fishing Is Reported Good
Yosemite valley, enjoying one of its most successful seasons, has offered visitors this year, in addition to many other natural attractions, the best fishing recorded in years. Three to five pound trout are being caught with pleasing regularity. During the past week the largest trout ever reported to park authorities was hooked in the Merced river, on the floor of the valley, opposite Camp Curry. L. Hatch of Paso Robles was the lucky angler who brought the speckled beauty into camp. It weighed 12 pounds, nine ounces.
A few days before another fisherman captured a 12 pounder, and last Friday Richard Noall, Stockton contractor weighed in one at five pounds, 14 ounces.
The state fish and game commission's hatchery at Happy Island is turning out a record hatch this season. Peter Topp, fish cultist in charge of the hatchery, reports 1,200,000 fingerlings for the lakes and streams of the Yosemite area. Already over 800,000 have been planted in the Merced and Tuolumne rivers and 80 streams tributary to these rivers, together with some 60 lakes in the park region.
Placentia Seeking Insignia for Itself
Anaheim's neighbor, the city of Placentia, is seeking a distinctive insignia, some sore of a coat-of-arms, or something—its chamber of commerce hasn't exactly decided just what would be the best thing to have; but in an effort to get the best thing it is staging a contest for the best design suitable to Placentia's needs.
Designs must be mailed to or left at the office of the chamber of commerce. They may be submitted by anyone, whether a resident of Placentia or not. In all cases an actual design must be presented, although finished art work is not necessary. The judges will attach importance to the idea, rather than art work. Designs must contain the words "City of Placentia, Incorporated Dec. 2, 1926." Entries will be judged by Mrs. Nellie M. Cline for the city council, Louis Jacobsen for the chamber, and LeRoy Lyon as a representative from the grammar school. The contest closes at midnight, Oct 31.
Avocado Growers to Seek Station's Aid
Judge F. D. Halm, La Habra, chairman of the avocado growers department of the Orange county farm bureau, will head a delegation of avocado growers from all southern counties next Wednesday to wait on Dr. L. D. Batcher, director of the Riverside experiment station, to urge continued investigation of pest control problems facing the industry.
Latania and dictyospermum scale are making inroads into the orchards of southern California and will take an appreciable toll if satisfactory and economical control measures are not discovered.
Prof. H. J. Quayle, entomologist of the experiment station, has done some preliminary investigations. The growers are urging that the work will not be discontinued in face of the reduced budget of the experiment station.
"Spirit" is the subject of the Lesson Sermon on Sunday in all branches. The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass.
Among the Scriptural citations in Lesson-Sermon are these words from Paul to the Galatians: "This would I learn of you. Received ye Spirit by the works of the law, on the hearing of faith? Are ye so to ish? having begun in the Spirit, ye now made perfect by the flesh?
For brethern, ye have been caught unto liberty; only use not liberty; an occasion to the flesh, but by serve one another... This I say to Walk in the Spirit, and ye shall fulfill the last of the flesh. For flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and Spirit against the flesh."
A correlative selection fromience and Health with Key to Scriptures," by Mary Baker Eddy, cludes these statements: "Strange enough, we ask for material theory support of spiritual and eternal truth when the two are so antagonistic to the material thought must become spiritualized before the spiritual is attained... Jesus knew. It is spirit that quickeneth; the flesh proeth nothing."
See Bonus Marchers During 7-Week Tr
While in Washington, D. C., Mr. Mrs. Lloyd Ross had occasion to witness the bonus marchers lay seige in the city when demanding congressional vote additional monies for their reeveMr. and Mrs. Ross returned Monday their home at 217 East Adele street from a seven-week motor tour through the South, Middle West and East where they visited relatives and friends.
The Anaheim union high school instructor and his wife first visited relatives of Mrs. Ross in Texas, then proceeded to Virginia and other points visit friends and relatives. They continued on to Washington, then to New York and returned via Detroit to points of interest. Altogether, they motored $500 miles.
Speaking of speed and distance—
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Olympic visitors can give a real thrill to those at home by calling them by telephone. Call up and down the Coast, or eastward across plains and mountains, or homeward across the ocean.
Call home today!
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA TELEPHONE COMPANY
Anaheim, Calif., August 7, 1932
Advisor Warns Mushroom Scheme
have come through the buildup industry that un-principiators have been selling spawn who know little or nothing how to produce mushrooms, or where to market them, if they did at all. This is for the benevolent approach on the subject. Promoters have been describebroom growing as a new and vital business requiring only material and not much experience, so that the prospects for large are almost certain because of scarce and high prices paid by rooms. The claims made have most part, been misleading. In new years the price of mushroom the large markets has been recents a pound, instead of the other prices indicated by these. Some of the advertisements so worded as to imply that customers guaranteed that the expenses could be recouped, and even to indicate thatoting company would underlay all the crop grown from the cold.
Sun growing is not a new and old industry. More than 15,000 have been grown in the states annually in recent years. Localities in the last year have had to sell their product of production because of unmarket conditions.
It Is Subject for Lesson-Sermor
is the subject of the Lesson Sunday in all branches of Our Church. The First Church Scientist, in Boston, Mass. The Scriptural citations in the common are these words from the Galatians: "This only earn of you. Received ye the works of the law, or by ing of faith? Are ye so fooling beginnin in the Spirit."
ENJOYING OUTING
Major Frank F. Ey, Jr., of Santa Ana decompanied by his wife and two daughters, has returned from a three-week automobile trip into the northern county, going as far as Victoria, where he had tea with a number of friends. He says everyone who visits Victoria takes tea, and enjoys it. He traveled over British Columbia and coming south spent some time in Seattle which he found to be a progressive and prosperous city having skyscrapers of forty stories. He travelled extensively through Washington, Oregon and Northern California and met many old time friends who were rejoiced to see him and his family. He visited many places of interest on his homeward journey and is very happy to be home again.
Major Ey was born in Anaheim 54 years ago. The sun going into an eclipse on the day of his arrival. He is the son of Pioneer residents, his father having been major here and later on his removal to Santa Ana, major of that city also. He is doing a prosperous legal business at Santa Ana and is held in high esteem by all who know him.
Your Automobile Insurance
need not be a "bugaboo". Auto insurance laws were designed to protect you and the general public. In the Exchange you secure protection for less money than in any other company we know of. It is owned and governed by its members, maintains over 200 district offices in nine western states with over 2000 agents to serve you.
FARMERS' AUTOMOBILE INTER-INSURANCE EXCHANGE
Orange County Mutual Fire Insurance Building
Main at Eleventh Street
SANTA ANA, CALIFORNIA
Office Telephone 3860
H. G. AMES Incumbent
Candidate for Re-Election for the Office of JUDGE OF THE SUPERIOR COURT Office No. 1
Resident of Orange county 44 years. Deputy district attorney four years, city attorney eleven years six years incumbent as judge of superior court, emphasizing juvenile court administration.
SUMNER CROSBY
SUMNER CROSBY
Candidate for Representative in Congress
Primaries August 30, 1932.
VOTE FOR
WILLIAM SCHUMACHER
VOTE FOR
WILLIAM SCHUMACHER
FOR
Third District
Supervisor
KEEP in office a man who has shown his independence from outside political leaders.
KLTAIN for our district a man who has revealed his ability to get from the state its share of tax money for pest control and highways.
PRESERVE for our district the experience Mr. Schumacher has gained in 20 years' service in this office.
(Schumachen for Supervisor Committee)
PRIMARIES AUGUST 30