anaheim-gazette 1933-01-12
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FOX THEATRE
SUN.-MON. JAN. 15-16
Continuous Shows Sunday
2:30 to 11 P.M.
"STRANGE INTERLUDE"
with
Clark Gable
and
Norma Shearer
PHONEY EXPRESS CARTOON
MICROSCOPIC MYSTERY
TUES.-WED. JAN. 17-18
"HELLS HIGHWAY"
with
Richard Dix, Tom Brown,
and Rochelle Hudson
"CENTRAL PARK"
with
Joan Blondell, Wallace Ford
and Guy Kibbee
Ladies' Matinee Wednesday
2:30 P.M. Admission 15c
THURS.-FRI-SAT.-JAN. 19-20-21
6 Movie Dolls Given Away
Thursday Night
"SILVER DOLLAR"
with
Edward G. Robinson, Bebe
Daniels, Aline MacMahon
"HANDLE WITH CARE"
with
James Dunn, Boets Mallory
and El Brendel
Matinee Saturday at 2:30 P.M.
ADMISSION 10 — 20 — 25c
Anaheim Citrus In Annual Meet
(Continued from Page 1)
anges a year. But in 1931 we were confronted with a real surplus which, together with the depression, brought low prices. Again in 1932 we began to realize that while in previous years, with 75 per cent of the crop, we could control the market, especially the latter part of the market, thus reaping profitable returns, we could not do it with that percentage any more. It is unfair to ask three-fourths of the industry to shoulder the cost of developing consumer demand, developing a program of controlled-shipments, and then permit the rest of the growers to reap those benefits without paying. The burden became too great. Increased supply, lost purchasing power, and encroachments of other crops on the long valencia season have contributed. Now we come to the only alternative that promises success—we must consider control of supply, not by 70 per cent, or 85 per cent, but by 90 or 95 per cent. The prorate plan of last June did work. Figures on the prices we received for oranges cannot lie. Nobody can deny that the plan while in operation did not raise the price of oranges to a point where success seemed certain. The same plan has worked for seven years among lemon growers, returning them millions of dollars since they signed up in 1925. Last year 29 per cent of the lemon crop was not shipped, yet the growers are making money. They were forced into the controlled-shipment plan by several years of disasterously low prices. Are we going to wait for the surplus orange crops to force us into the same eleventh-hour plan?
"It is good business to expand our markets to keep up with increased production. But we must make a profit. We can increase to 6½ or 7 dozen the average amount of oranges taken by each consumer, we can sign up more jobbers, we have not even scratched the surface of the European markets," and
Adkinson Extension Program
Says School Share of School
If the people expenditures in the curtailments.
This is the following public school expenditure: the people should how much they and that educated grams to conform he does not believe cation program other kinds of services.
In discussing of school expenses kinson states:
"Governor Ro will curtail school ange county to $620,000. The valuation of Orga cut in school r 000. This represents which may be de 1934 budgets.
"Total school 1931 represented In 1931-1932 th $4,105,485 and oictures for the pre budget of $3,100.
"These figure boards and adn the seriousness they are definite costs."
"We are now of $2,325,000 to school population be greater than 25,000 average a several thousand."
Rolph Forgot, But Judge Frees Goetz
Santa Anna's J. A. Goetz, who was overlooked by Governor Rolph when pardons were handed out wholesale-like for Wright act violators recently, did not need the governor's kindness to be released from jail. Goetz was temporarily confined at Norwalk when he wrote the governor. Upon his release he was returned to Orange county jail where he was released on a writ of habeas corpus granted by Superior Judge George K. Scovel, who held that the five months Goetz was confined in the Norwalk hospital should have been counted on his sentence, which thus expired December 29, instead of holding over till May 29, as county authorities contended. Goetz had been sentenced to 14 months and a fine of $2,000.
W-A-N-T A-D-S
RATE: Five cents the line (count five words to the line) for each insertion. Phone 2414 for want ads that bring results.
REV. COMMIE I. DAVIES
Ordained Medium — Reading Daily
621 E. 5th St., Phone 4066-W
Santa Ana, California
Painting & Paperhanging
Painting, paperhanging. J. E. Saylor,
$40 S. Los Angeles St., Phone 2761.
Situations
GENERAL repairing and odd jobs.
Gene Adams, 416 S. Olive. 3954.
Pianos For Sale
100 PIANOS to choose from: Knabe, Bachstein, Steinway, Chickering, Kimball, etc., new and used, $35 up.
Danz, Anaheim.
$10 FREE! Send name of friend who wants piano and get $10 Free when we sell. Danz Anaheim.
yet the growers are making money. They were forced into the controlled-shipment plan by several years of disasterously low prices. Are we going to wait for the surplus orange crops to force us into the same eleventh-hour plan?
"It is good business to expand our markets to keep up with increased production. But we must make a profit. We can increase to 6½ or 7 dozen the average amount of oranges taken by each consumer, we can sign up more jobbers, we have not even scratched the surface of the European markets, and we can easily find more uses for oranges."
But, until we prevent glutting of our markets, control our shipments and market through one channel, we cannot prevent heavy losses. We must share and share alike, but 75 per cent of us must not be made to carry the other fellows' load.
"We can keep going, throwing a large share of our fruit on the same markets at the same time and make our orange marketing degenerate to the apple crop basis. The only real distinction between profit from raising apples as compared with raising oranges is through co-operative marketing. We cannot let the high values of our citrus industry, the marvel of the world, shrink to the apple crop standard. Who ever heard of paying $5,000 an acre for apples?"
"We must recognize that the value of our crop protects the value of our investment. Unless our crop brings sufficient returns, the value of our investment must shrink proportionately. The answer is: Market the whole crop as a whole.
"That brings us to the program which we must take upon ourselves. You growers in Anaheim must talk with your fellow growers, with those outside and inside the Exchange, and develop the psychological atmosphere that will bring a cooperative marketing of the whole valencia crop. Your investment in your groves depends upon it. Your success as orange growers depends upon it. You are the right ones to go out and spread the message. Your hired man won't do. You must do it. That is the one way in which we can bring about a marketing plan for the whole valencia crop. When we get selfish enough to realize that such controlled marketing is the way to make money on our groves, and the same plan will make money for the other fellows' groves as well, then we will succeed in working out a common program."
In giving up the gavel as chairman, Louis Hoskins paid his respects to Manager Carl Monahan. Hoskins declared that Monahan had a tough job assigned him, and that he has successfully carried out the task, operating the plant with efficiency and getting maximum results for the member growers.
Leslie M. Masina insurance masters of Anaheim, is in the county jail wage claim of $Lyyke of Santa Ana formed as a sten hailed before Ju
GENERAL repairing and odd jobs.
Gene Adams, 416 S. Olive. 3954.
Pianos For Sale
100 PIANOS to choose from: Knabe, Bechstein, Steinway, Chickering, Kimball, etc., new and used, $35 up. Danz, Anaheim.
$10 FREE! Send name of friend who wants piano and get $10 Free when we sell. Danz, Anaheim.
Champ Gets Golf Birdie
Mickey Riley, U.S. Olympic diving champion, attired thusly, hit a whistling drive down a Florida golf course, the ball skimmed through a tree top and a chicken hawk fell dead to the ground. A new record in a new sport for Mickey.
In giving up the gavel as chairman, Louis Hoskins paid his respects to Manager Carl Monahan. Hoskins declared that Monahan had a tough job assigned him, and that he has successfully carried out the task, operating the plant with efficiency and getting maximum results for the member growers. The new board of directors, elected at the afternoon session, follows: John Neuschafer, O. E. Stewart, S. C. Hartranft, B. L. Chandler, D. D. Waynick, L. W. Eaton, J. J. Dwyer, L. H. Hoskins and F. H. Zeiser. In accordance with custom, the chairmanship is rotated, Hoskins being followed by L. W. Eaton.
Manager Monahan's report showed that 381,382 boxes of fruit were shipped during the past season to the United States, Canada and Europe. Average size was 242.98. He outlined the limited refrigerator plan under which the association saved approximately $14,000 during the year, and lauded the Central Citrus Fruit Exchange for its routing of cars, saving demurrage, and direct sales of fruit to the customer instead of handling it largely through the auction houses as has been done in the past.
Mrs. Holcomb Hurt In Auto Accident
Mrs. C. E. Holcomb of Fullerton sustained a fracture of both collar bones in an automobile collision at Buena Park early on Tuesday morning, while on her way with Mr. Holcomb from Fullerton to Long Beach. A heavy fog came up and their car was run into by a lighter machine. Had the car been a larger vehicle the result might have been fatality. Mrs. Holcomb was taken to the Fullerton hospital where an X-ray revealed the extent of her injuries. She was placed in a plaster cast and will be in the hospital for two or three weeks. Mr. Holcomb was uninjured.
Adkinson Believes People Should Know Extent of Curtailment In Educational Program Before Voting for Reductions
Says School Systems Should Not Bear More Than Proportionate Share of Cuts In Public Expenditures; Administrators of School Funds Realize Seriousness of Times
If the people of Orange county and California are going to cut down the expenditures in their school systems, they should do so with full knowledge of the curtailments such reduction of expenses would force.
This is the opinion of Orange County School Superintendent Ray Adkinson, following publication last week of Governor James Rolph's proposal to slash school expenditures 20 per cent. Superintendent Adkinson firmly believes that the people should have the right to say how much they will spend on schools, and that educators must plan their programs to conform to that amount, but he does not believe that the public education program should suffer more than other kinds of governmental or public services.
In discussing the proposed reduction of school expenses, Superintendent Adkinson states:
"Governor Rolph's economy program will curtail school expenditures in Orange county to an approximate total of $620,000. The decrease in assessed valuation of Orange county will affect a cut in school revenue of at least $155,-000. This represents a total of $775,000 which may be deducted from the 1933-1934 budgets."
"Total school expenditures in 1930-1931 represented a total of $5,365,794. In 1931-1932 the cost of schools was $4,105,485 and our estimated expenditures for the present year is based on a budget of $3,100,000."
"The figures show that school boards and administrators do realize the seriousness of the times and that they are definitely cutting operation costs."
"We are now faced with an income of $2,325,000 to meet the demands of a school population that will undoubtedly be greater than our present figure of 25,000 average attendance which means several thousand more actually on the"
29 of 200 Jurors From Anaheim
Four Panels Will Be Formed, With Each Panel Serving for Three Months
Twenty-nine of the 200 Orange county residents selected Saturday by three superior court judges as trial jurors for the ensuing year are residents of Anaheim. From the list of 200 names will be drawn the four panels for the year, each panel serving for three months. The first drawing is scheduled early this month.
Anaheim jurors for 1933 are:
C. R. Nelson, Anna Horwitz, Dorothy Yungbluth, John Mertz, Elizabeth Hansen, Mrs. Velma Pomeroy, Elizabeth Miller, Frank Borth, A. W. Franzen, C. J. Tremblay, Pauline Kroeger, R. C. Ewing, R. C. White, Anna Ryan, Mrs. Ray Fisher, F. C. Woodbury, C. W. Hedges, Sophie Stock, Ferdinand Heying, William Jackson, Kate Quarton, Mary Dwyer, Arthur B. Andrada, Thos Plant, Henry A. Mang, Cora I. Dugdale, Mrs. Emma M. Grimshaw, C. D. Harrison, H. H. Armburst.
Applicants Need Residence Proof
Those Seeking Jobs On the Metropolitan Aqueduct Must Show Proof of Residence
Warning was issued to all persons seeking to register for jobs on the Colorado river aqueduct project, to the effect that absolutely no application will be accepted without satisfactory proof of residence in the Metropolitan Water district from September 29, 1930.
Metropolitan water district officials emphasized the point that all persons desiring to apply must bring with them voters' registration slips, cancelled res bills, old automobile license cards, or some similar proof of residence in one of the thirteen member cities of the district.
The cities of the district are: Anaheim, Beverly Hills, Burbank, Compton Fullerton, Glendale, Long Beach, Los Angeles, Pasadena, San Marino, Santa Ana, Santa Monica, and Torrance.
"This regulation is in accordance with a ruling passed by the board of directors of the Metropolitan Water district and is one which will be rigidly enforced," declare Chief Engineer F. H. Weymouth.
"The District is determined," Weymouth said, "that jobs on this project shall be given so far as possible to bond fide citizens of the cities that are going to pay for and use the aqueduct."
"We are again emphasizing this we established policy so that there will be no misunderstanding and no unnecessary disappointments."
"Registrants in all registration offices throughout the district have been definitively instructed to take no application that are not accompanied with satisfactory proof of residence. These residence proofs will be rechecked and verified again by district officers when ever men are selected to fill jobs on the aqueduct project."
In 1931-1932 the cost of schools was $4,105,485 and our estimated expenditures for the present year is based on a budget of $3,100,000.
"These figures show that school boards and administrators do realize the seriousness of the times and that they are definitely cutting operation costs.
"We are now faced with an income of $2,325,000 to meet the demands of a school population that will undoubtedly be greater than our present figure of 25,000 average attendance which means several thousand more actually on the books.
“If we must face an increased reduction as represented above, we shall be obliged to eliminate many of the services now given and also to cut down on the program.
“Looking at the situation from the inside, I am of the opinion that the schools belong to the people and that the parents and the people of the community must determine what they desire in schools of the future. The absence of courses and facilities that must be taken from the school program under the proposed reduction in income will seriously cripple education in the belief of school people.
“However, should the program of Governor Rolph place the proposition upon the ballot proposing a cut of 20 per cent from all school revenues, the school people will immediately be presented with the obligation of presenting facts.
“These facts of necessity will present a set up of the new program, showing as well the services that will have to be eliminated. The curtailment will vary accordingly to the wealth of the district. Transportation, kindergartens, upkeep of grounds, insurance, as well as many subjects in the curriculum will be seriously affected.
“These facts should be presented to the people before the election if such is called, so that they may vote intelligently upon a very important social institution.
“The educational leaders will then have to organize according to the dictates of the people even though it appears that education has very definitely lost ground.
“Educators feel that any part the schools must play in the reduction of public expenditures should not exceed a proportionate share of such entrenchment.”
Fails to Pay Wages Goes to County Jail
Leslie M. Masters, formerly a Santa Ana insurance man but lately a resident of Anaheim, is spending six months in the county jail for failure to pay a wage claim of $200 filed by Mrs. Ruth Lyyke of Santa Ana, for work performed as a stenographer. Masters was hailed before Justice Kenneth Morrison for 1933 are:
C. R. Nelson, Anna Horwitz, Dorothy Yungbluth, John Mertz, Elizabeth Hansen, Mrs. Velma Pomeroy, Elizabeth Miller, Frank Borth, A. W. Franzen, C. J. Tremblay, Pauline Kroeger, R. C. Ewing, R. C. White, Anna Ryan, Mrs. Ray Fisher, F. C. Woodbury, C. W. Hedges, Sophie Stock, Ferdinand Heyling, William Jackson, Kate Quarton, Mary Dwyer, Arthur B. Andrada, Thos Plant, Henry A. Mang, Cora I. Dugdale, Mrs. Enna M. Grimshaw, C. D. Harrison, H. H. Armburst.
Fullerton—Margaret C. Evans, Lillian Menges, Georgia McFarland, Ella D. Rivers, F. B. Callan, Frank E. Bissitt, Earl Fuller, Chester M. Wolfe, Agnes Sutherland, Helen Bemis, C. A. Lane, H. W. Robinson, J. L. Duncan.
Yorba Linda—Katherine Selover, J. C. Carter, J. A. Small, Effle N. Walker, Clara L. Holland, Mrs. C. H. Eichler.
Buena Park—Carl W. Brenner, John F. Parker, George McNeil, Edna N. Dow, Kate Thompson.
Olive—August Lemke, Carl O. Heim.
Placentia—H. J. Van Pattan, Emily E. Wagner, Amella C. Peck, M. M. Sutton.
Cypress—O. P. Bunyard, Jennie Barnett, Leon White.
Los Alamitos—Della Kelley, Etta S Howard.
Brea—Margaret Linebarger, D. W. Davis, Martha E. Remp.
1442 Contractors Face Registrar
A total of 1,442 contractors were hailed before the registrar of contractors during the past three years on charges of misappropriation of funds abandoning uncompleted building projects and other unethical and illegal practices.
This was disclosed recently in a report filed with Governor James Rolph Jr., by Registrar Carlos W. Huntington showing that the licenses of 273 contractors were suspended following investigation and hearings while the licenses of 39 other builders were unditionally revoked.
In addition, 232 contractors were found to be illegally operating without state license as a result of investigation of formal complaints, and were arreed from obtaining a license until the complaints are satisfactorily settled.
A total of 301 cases were adjudicated by arbitration after complaints were filed but prior to formal hearing; the registrar reported.
The charges filed against 373 contractors were necessarily dismissed because of lack of evidence; while 222 contractors were found not guilty of charges following a formal hearing.
Many New York advertising men are trying to anticipate the influence of television upon American home life; it is said television will keep families more at home. Oil men interpret that mean that less gasoline will be consumed. Theatre owners think it means decreased attendance.
Libby's Corn Beef No. 1 Can 15c Maxwell Tomatoes CORN PEAS SPINACH PEAS We
Fails to Pay Wages Goes to County Jail
Leslie M. Masters, formerly a Santa Ana insurance man but lately a resident of Anaheim, is spending six months in the county jail for failure to pay a wage claim of $200 filed by Mrs. Ruth Lyyke of Santa Ana, for work performed as a stenographer. Masters was hailed before Justice Kenneth Morrison, charged with violation of the state wage law. On seven previous occasions he had been brought before the court on the same charge, but obtained leniency each time on promise to pay.
You can buy steamship tickets to Europe here in New York on the deferred payment plan.
You can't sell bean shooters in New York. It's against the law.
New York is a great city for sandwiches. It is said that sandwich shops and restaurants here sell 946 different kinds of sandwiches. They sell for 5 cents to $2.
In addition, 232 contractors were found to be illegally operating without state license as a result of investigation of formal complaints, and were arreed from obtaining a license until the complaints are satisfactorily settled. A total of 301 cases were adjudicated by arbitration after complaints were filed but prior to formal hearing, the registrar reported.
The charges filed against 373 contractors were necessarily dismissed because of lack of evidence, while 222 contractors were found not guilty of charges following a formal hearing.
Huntington, who is also director of professional and vocational standards, asserted that hundreds of additional complaints were filed with his office and were investigated by inspectors and satisfactorily settled without the necessity of the contractor being cited to face formal charges.
"These formal complaints," director Huntington said, "involve a total of $641,251, adding that the contractors' act, passed by the 1929 legislature has proved an effective means of raising the ethics and standards within the industry and at the same time protecting the gullible public from being swindled by the irresponsible operations of fly-by-night contractors."
LAUNDRY SERVICE
TO MEET EVERY POCKETBOOK
YOU CANNOT OBTAIN BETTER WORK ANYWHERE
Valencia Laundry
Of Anaheim
808 North Los Angeles Street Phone 2512
Business College Is Opened Monday
Professor A. N. Symmes and Mrs. Grace McFarland In Charge of New School
Anaheim Business College, located on the second floor of the Masonic Temple building at Emily and Center streets, opened Monday morning, with Professor A. N. Symmes of Santa Ana in charge, and Mrs. Grace McFarland, a graduate of Ohio State University, in charge of shorthand, typing and business English classes.
Professor Symmes for several years owned a prominent business college in Santa Ana and later was associated with another. For several months he has been contemplating opening a business college in Anaheim.
"We will offer the best standard courses in typewriting, shorthand and bookkeeping," Professor Symmes said.
"Mrs. McFarland is a teacher of more than 10 years experience, a graduate of the Jacobs' Business College of Dayton, Ohio, and of Ohio State University. She will have charge of the three departments in which will be offered complete accounting courses, commercial courses, general stenographic classes and secretarial courses."
Prayer Week Series Closed Friday Night
The Union prayer week series of four meetings, held under the sponsorship of the Anaheim Ministerial Union, closed Friday evening with Rev. S. E. Schrader, of the Salem Evangelical church leading on the subject "First Things First." The series of meetings were held at the Salem church.
Stabbert Resident
History Group Picks Directors
Newly-elected Directors C. D. Ball, Mrs. Anita Alexander, Terry E. Stephenson, Mrs. J. E. Pleasants, J. J. Dwyer, William McPherson and S. M. Davis will meet within the next few weeks to elect officers of the Orange County Historical Society. The directors were named Friday evening, at a meeting held in Santa Ana.
Miss Colesia Straub gave a paper in which she outlined the racial relations between Mexicans and citizens of the United States. She treated the relations between Mexican residents of this country with citizens, and spoke also of the attitude of the Mexicans in Mexico towards United States citizens. She asserted the local Mexicans suffer hardships at the hands of Americans, and said she believed Mexicans are as intelligent as Americans.
Miss B. Pearl Nicholson, teacher in the Lathrop Junior High school, said Mexican students are good in music but that she did not believe they are as intelligent as Americans.
Eyes Examined — Glasses Fitted
HOMER A. NELSON, Opt. D.
Optometrist
TEUTONOPHONE FOR THE HARD OF HEARING
Phone 3104 111 N. Lemon St.
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA
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Prayer Week Series
Closed Friday Night
The Union prayer week series of four meetings, held under the sponsorship of the Anaheim Ministerial Union, closed Friday evening with Rev. S. E. Schradler, of the Salem Evangelical church leading on the subject "First Things First." The series of meetings were held at the Salem church.
Stabbert Resident Insurance Manager
H. H. Stabbert, for several years an insurance man of Los Angeles, has taken the northern Orange county agency for the Farmers' Automobile Inter-Insurance Exchange, with offices at 245 West Center street. Mr. Stabbert and family have moved to 120 North Palm street.
Libby's Corn Beef
No. 1 Can
15c
Ovaltine
6 oz. can
39c
Maxwell House Coffee . lb. 27c
Tomatoes STANDARD No. 1 can... 4 for 25¢ No. 2½ CAN 3 for 25c
CORN Elnora ... No. 2 can 3 for 23c
PEAS DEL MONTE EARLY GARDEN—No. 2 can ... 2 for 29c
SPINACH LIBBY or DEL MONTE—No. 2 can 2 for 25c
PEAS Weber Valley .. No. 2 can 2 for 23c
CORN Elnora No. 2 can 3 for 23c
PEAS DEL MONTE EARLY GARDEN—No. 2 can 2 for 29c
SPINACH LIBBY or DEL MONTE—No. 2 can 2 for 25c
PEAS Weber Valley .. No. 2 can 2 for 23c
PEACHES LIBBY or DEL MONTE No. 2½ can 2 for 29c
SALMON DEL MONTE No. 1 TALL 2 for 29c
JELLO - ALL FLAVORS 2 for 13c
CHILLING'S CREAM OF TARTAR Baking Powder 12 oz can 35c
SOAP
ALM-LIVE... 2 bars for 11c
UPPER 9 oz pkg 2 for 15c
EET'S GRANULATED... large 18c
CRYSTAL WHITE... 10 for 25c
SWANSDOWN
FLOUR—package... 24c
SALT
DIAMOND CRYSTAL
2 for 15c
POP CORN T N T... 2 cans for 19c
specials for Friday and Saturday, January 13 and 14
ANAHEIM DRIVE-IN MARKET
0 No. Los Angeles St.
J. W. EBERHARD, Prop.
PHONE 4411 ANAHEIM