anaheim-gazette 1933-03-09
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Hunters Prove Careful In '32
Death Total of 60 In 1931 Cut Nearly In Half; Injuries Also Decline
Hunters in California were more careful last year than they have been for many years. The number of accidents during hunting trips in 1932 were 156 killed and wounded. In 1931 the number was 179, according to figures released by the state fish and game commission.
Last year 32 hunters were killed; the year previous 60 were fatally wounded. The non-fatal accidents in 1931 were 119 while last year 124 were injured.
Of the deaths last year 17 were self-inflicted, and 64 persons were treated for self-inflicted wounds.
Seventeen hunters were killed by other hunters; and 53 were victims of other himrods. The causes of three deaths and seven injuries were undetermined.
Ten deaths and 26 non-fatal accidents occurred while the victims were hunting large game. Eight deer hunters were killed and 25 injured; one hunter was killed while hunting wild boar; another while after wild goat, and one was shot while hunting bear.
Hunting small game resulted in 12 deaths and 57 accidents. Duck hunters to the number of 6 were killed and 13 more wounded. Two men were killed and 11 injured while hunting doves; one man was killed and 6 hurt while hunting quail, and one rabbit hunter was slain and 18 wounded.
In view of the fact that nearly a quarter of a million hunting licenses were sold last year, the list of accidents is remarkably small. Particularly is this true among deer hunters, when some 100,000 bought deer tags during 1932 and there were only 33 accidents among all this vast army.
Assure Success Of Prerate Plan
"I'm glad it was me and not President Roosvelt" said Mayor Cermak of Chicago, after his fatal injury from a bullet fired at a dentist by the "President Killer," Joe Zangara. Mayor Cermak died A small, brave and quick-thinking woman, Mrs. W. F. Gross Florida, has the thanks and the gratitude of President Roosvelt nation as a whole for her heroic act in grabbing the gun arm or as he fired at Roosvelt, woundnig five. Photos show Mayor top center; Mrs. Joseph H. Gill of Miami, top left; Miss Margaret Newark, N. J.; lower, Joe Zangara, New York anarchist; Mrs. W. F. Cross, who has been recommended for a Congressional Honor for her act."
Assure Success Of Prorate Plan
Adoption of an orderly marketing and stabilization program for the 1933 California citrus crop appeared certain this week.
Late last week the joint citrus stabilization committee meeting in Riverside resulted in adoption of an agreement which is being submitted to all packing house and marketing agencies for approval. Southland packing house owners meeting in San Bernardino Thursday announced that 95 per cent of the shipping agency contracts already were signed, thus virtually assuring success of the plan. However, efforts are under way to get the other five percent to sign.
Dr. D. D. Waynick of the Association Laboratories this week announced that separate agreements will be submitted to the valencia and pavel orange growers. The agreement drawn up contemplates a distribution committee of seven members selected to direct proring of shipments among members of the California Fruit Growers Exchange, the Mutual Orange Distributors, and independents. Three members would be from the exchange, two from the M. O. D., and two from independents. Jurisdiction of the committee would be for shipments in continental United States and Canada.
hurry! hurry!
Your Last Chance and Only a Few Days Left to See
“OLD IRONSIDES”
"I'm glad it was me and not President Roosvelt" said Mayor Cermak of Chicago, after his fatal injury from a bullet fired at him by the "President Killer," Joe Zangara. Mayor Cermak died A small, brave and quick-thinking woman, Mrs. W. F. Gross Florida, has the thanks and the gratitude of President Roosevelt nation as a whole for her heroic act in grabbing the gun arm or as he fired at Roosevelt, woundnig five. Photos show Mayor top center; Mrs. Joseph H. Gill of Miami, top left; Miss Margaret Newark, N. J.; lower, Joe Zangara, New York anarchist; Mrs. W. F. Cross, who has been recommended for a Congressional Honor for her act.
Uncle Sam Finds Race Problem Does Not Exist In Hawaii; Interior Department Aide Tells Conception of Future
Ultimate Hawaiian-American One-Third Japanese, O Filinino, One-Ninth Portuguese, One-Tenth Hawaiian Twelfth Chinese, One-Fifteenth Anglo-Saxon, —Du
The government has made its own investigation of the race Hawaii and reports its findings in a book, “Hawaii and Its Race Pw. A. DuPuy.” The question of race in the islands, it says, has raised does not exist. Only the outsider or the continental newspaper mainland preachers flies the fame.
“If this outsider had an appreciation of the beauty of interracial relations of these Islands,” the book states, “he would hesitate long before taking any steps that would interfere with them Race prejudice is a mad, intense, unreasoning thing, and arousing it where it does not exist is an act as malicious as introduction of the plague.
“It is a part of the beautiful experiment, here in the mid-Pacific, that self-government is to be tried out under conditions and with human material that is new. There is nothing so far to indicate that the experiment will not turn out to be as successful as it is interesting. America, obviously, should have sufficient courage to see to a conclusion her most novel venture in that tpye of government which she originated."
The book is written by William Atherton DuPuy, executive assistant to the secretary of the interior, who is described, in an introduction by Ray Lyman Wilbur, as an experienced investigator and quite disinterested witness. Mr. DuPuy was an author before he went into government service and has 15 books to his credit. That he knows the game of popular publication is attested by the artistic beauty of his book as compared with the usual formal publications of the government.
“The ultimate American in the Hawaiian Islands,” the book says, “will be fact,” he points out, “already quite fully demonstrated than three decades of the sons and daughters of the cane-field workers to the in the American school. They are caution with a facility that if any, behind children of races. Almost none of the parents of these youngsters anything at all of education their own languages. Train the land of opportunity, how were anxious that their child take advantage of all the opportunities that presented themselves. Old story of downtrodden people denied such advantages offered, and therefore, when presented, more appreciations than the native born. The Chinese and Japanese never miss the opportunity in school, and spare no whinging application to master taught there.
“Among the psychologists have been two theories as to influence of intelligence. One considered that the individual their culture and the race from which he that his mental capacity is herited from those who hafore him. Race traits and would thus come down fro
"OLD IRONSIDES"
From March 10 to 20 at LONG BEACH
Convenient daily schedules from this city to Long Beach and the low Excursion Fares for Students under 22 years of age offer opportunity to see the famous old frigate before her final departure from Southern California.
Special Excursions
Roundtrip Fares STUDENTS . . 50¢ ADULTS . . 75¢ From this city
For Further Information, Tickets and Special Car Rates for Parties of 20 or More Inquire of Agent.
MOTOR TRANSIT LINES
217-50. LOS ANGELES ST.
Phone 8401—L. H. Harrington, Agent
Atherton DuPuy, executive assistant to the secretary of the interior, who is described, in an introduction by Ray Lyman Wilbur, as an experienced investigator and quite disinterested witness. Mr. DuPuy was an author before he went into government service and has 15 books to his credit. That he knows the game of popular publication is attested by the artistic beauty of his book as compared with the usual formal publications of the government.
"The ultimate American in the Hawaiian Islands," the book says, "will be something near one-third Japanese, one-fifth Filipino, one-tenth Portuguese, one-tenth Hawaiian, one-twelfth Chinese, one-fifteenth Anglo-Saxon, with a sprinkling of Korean, Puerto Rican, and what-not. This American will be some seven-tenths oriental, two-tenths occidental, and one-tenth Polynesia. He will be about as swarthy as a Sicilian, straight-haired, stocky, physically fit, industrious, efficient, athletic, vain, dressy, given to gambling. His women will be known around the world for a peculiar beauty found no place else."
In Hawaii," it continues, "It would seem that there ultimately must be a fusion, and that in the end the Hawaiian-American will be a composite of all the peoples who have settled here as permanent residents. Careful examinations of these fusions by specialists at the University of Hawaii have refuted the old theory that unions of these unlike races produce inferior individuals. Careful mental and physical tests have shown that the results of these racial crosses come very near approximating a mean that is halfway between the two parents. So it seems safe to conclude that the ultimate Hawaiian-American will come to rest at a point that represents the mean of the blood in his veins."
Mr. DuPuy explains that there are some 360,000 present-day permanent residents of Hawaii and that of these 300,000 are of the blood of coolies or their equivalents—people of bare feet and calloused hands brought here by the planters—who had known only grueling labor and abject poverty.
"One very remarkable education
Among the psychologists have been two theories as the influence of intelligence. One considered that the individual heir to the culture and the race from which he inherited from those who had fore him. Race traits and would thus come down from son. Another school holds capacities are a result of ecology and that if a Fiji baby were birth and brought up in a Boston family its chance of scholastic record in Harvard as good as that of the child born of this same family.
The first of these theories offer much to the coolie's the laborer's cottage by the tests at the University tend to add weight to the tention. These children of laborers who had remained pressed, unbelievably poor centuries in their native land known only unremitting touch in the public schools of Hawaii through the high schools, university and meet the tests as well as do the bloody Nordics whose ancestors educated since Chaucer. Japanese, Hawaiian, and Anglo-Saxons show capacities for such acquisition of knowledge so near being on the same differences are of little..."
Water Bill Gets Tentative Okeh
(Continued from page 1)
leading citizens, but under the measure, would be forcefully halted by united action of the entire district which then would have legal action and means, for protecting itself from outside influences.
President H. H. Hale of the Anaheim Union Water company, Engineer Paul Bailey of Santa Ana who prepared the 1929 report on control of flood waters, Mayor W. L. Hale of Fullerton, and others expressed their views which, in the main, favored the bill, the flood control measure of which would supplant the present flood control district, but keep its records and findings to prevent duplicate expense in later years.
Tourist Crop Is Third Largest
Million Sightseers Spend 200 Millions During 1931-32 Season in California
How all business interests in this area shared approximately $200,000,000 spent here during the last travel year which covers the winter and summer seasons of 1931-32 by 1,015,188 out-of-state tourists is shown in a survey completed for the All-Year club and announced by President Addison B. Day.
"On the basis of Eberle economic surveys for the All-Year club the figures show that clothing and furnishing merchants in the 19 southern counties received $35,295,904," said Mr. Day.
"Next on the list is hotels, $30,215,-433; automobiles and accessories, $27,-"
Uniform Names Recommended
Planning Commission Takes Up Roads Transversing Orange County
When the Orange county planning commission approves two proposed uniform names for highways transversing passed on to the board of supervisors this county, the suggestions will be for confirmation, while the third name for a transversing highway will be recommended to the California state chamber of commerce. This was decided upon late last week at a meeting of the commission.
Highways discussed have form three to four names in various sections of the county they traverse. Further tudy in the effort to adopt uniform names for Seventeenth street as it traverses Santa Ana to Westminster, East First Street from Tustin to Seal Beach and Ocean avenue from Irvine park to Long Beach, will be given further consideration. It is planned to change the name of Ocean avenue to Memory Lane.
Subcommittees recommended that the highway extending from Placentia boulevard to Modjeska's Home in Santiago canyon be named Santiago boulevard.
The highway along the coast will, if the committee's suggestion is acted upon, be designated as the Pacific coast highway. This will have to be referred to the state chamber of commerce.
The committee also suggested that State Highway 01 have the additional designation El Camino Real to perpetuate the Mission highway. It is the proposal to include the name El Camino Real on sign boards and eventually add the Mission Bell sign to the regular highway markers.
Newspaper Day at S. C. On Saturday
Problem Does Not Prior Departmentation of Future Race
Third Japanese, One-Fifth One-Tenth Hawaiian, One-Nglo-Saxon. —DuPuy
Investigation of the race question in Hawaii and Its Race Problem," by the islands, it says, has never been or the continental newspaper, biased.
He points out, "already has been fully demonstrated through more than three decades of the exposure of sons and daughters of these oriental one-field workers to the influences of American school. They acquire education with a facility that lags little, many, behind children of the white ones. Almost none of the barefooted parents of these youngsters had known anything at all of education, even in their own languages. Transplanted to the land of opportunity, however, they are anxious that their children should take advantage of all the opportunities presented themselves. It was the story of downtrodden peoples, long lived such advantages as America erred, and, therefore, when they were presented, more appreciative of them than the native born. The children of Chinese and Japanese, particularly, ever miser the opportunity of an hour school, and spare no whit of drudging application to master whatever is right there.
Among the psychologists there long have been two theories as to the inheritance of intelligence. One school has considered that the individual is the arbor to the culture and the capacity of the race from which he comes, and that his mental capacity is directly inherited from those who have gone before him. Race traits and peculiarities would thus come down from father to mother shared approximately $200,000,000 spent here during the last travel year which covers the winter and summer seasons of 1931-32 by 1,015,188 out-of-state tourists is shown in a survey completed for the All-Year club and announced by President Addison B. Day.
"On the basis of Eberle economic surveys for the All-Year club the figures show that clothing and furnishing merchants in the 10 southern counties received $35,295,904," said Mr. Day.
"Next on the list is hotels, $30,215,-433; automobiles and accessories, $27,-541,501; restaurants, $25,937,141; amusements, $25,669,748; real estate and rentals, $23,797,996.
-"Public utilities ran close behind real estate and rentals with $23,263,209; food products, $22,728,423; gasoline and oil, $13,369,661; professional and personal services, $9,358,762; laundry and dry cleaning, $8,021,796; drugs and sundries, $4,010,898, and miscellaneous, $18,182,738.
"Tourists each year pay directly into the state treasury more than $2,000,000 in gasoline taxes and of this amount directly attributable to out-of-state tourists more than $350,000 is annually refunded to Los Angeles county and this one item is far more than the county invests in advertising each year through the All-Year club's national campaigns which appeal to well-financed tourists and at the same time warn jobless against migrating here.
"Tourist expenditures today constitute Southern California's third largest source of new income and is responsible for the employment of more than 70,000 families in this area."
S. C. Publishes Volume On China
The University of Southern California announces the publication of its first non-textbook volume, "Sun Yat-Sen His Political and Social Ideals," a source book compiled, translated, and annotated by Dr. Leonard Shihien Hsu of Yenching University, former senior secretary of the ministry of foreign affairs, Republic of China.
Because the storm center of the world has gradually shifted to China, and according to the late John Hay, American statesman and diplomat, "Whoever understands that mighty empire socially, politically, economically, and religiously has a key to world politics for the next five hundred years," the University of Southern California, in keeping with its policy of disseminating information toward better world understanding, presents this authentic history of the Chinese nationalists, detailing the political philosophy of the greatest of modern Chinese, Dr. Sun Yat-Sen (1866-1925). The Nationalist government of the Republic of China was established in 1928.
Newspaper Day at S. C. On Saturday
Eleventh annual newspaper day is to be held at the University of Southern California Saturday, March 18, according to announcement of Prof. Roy L. French, director of the school of journalism at U. S. C.
Hundreds of student journalists will represent high schools and junior colleges of the Southwest, and will witness the awarding of the Cromble Allen plaque and the two Trojan Trophy plaques to the best school papers in southern California at a midday lunchcon session to be held in the Student union.
Publishers and editors of metropolitan dailies and weeklies in the southwest will be guest speakers at morning noon, and afternoon programs.
Conferences for student editors and managers of dailies, weeklies monthlies,and yearbooks will be held,and discussion sessions are scheduled to deal with news editorials features sports society.advertisingandmakeup.
California Holds Gold Mining Lead
Value of gold recovered from lode and placer mining in California for the year 1932 was $11,648,580 ,as compared with $10,814,162 in 1931 ,according to the U.S.bureauofmines. This record maintains the state's lead as the largest gold-producing state of the union.
The 1932 record represents an increase of about 40,365 ounces in quantity and $834,418 in value over the yield in 1931. During the year placer mining was actively carried on throughout the state with many people panning for gold on every gravel bar ,old gravel pit ,stream,gulch and canyon throughout the foothill counties of the Sierra and other gold producing counties,north and south.
Speaker Declares For Taxation Cut
Members of the Anaheim and Garden Grove farm centers were told Tuesday night by John J. Duell of the law and utilities department of the State Farm Bureau that taxes in California could be reduced in amount more than the total power bill for the state.
He showed the tremendous growth of
"Among the psychologists there long have been two theories as to the inheritance of intelligence. One school has considered that the individual is the air to the culture and the capacity of race from which he comes, and that his mental capacity is directly inherited from those who have gone before him. Race traits and peculiarities would thus come down from father to son. Another school holds that these capacities are a result of environment, and that if a Fiji baby were taken at birth and brought up in a Back Bay垦堡 family its chance of making a sociolastic record in Harvard would be good as that of the child honestly born of this same family.
"The first of these theories would not ever much to the coolie's son, born in the laborer's cottage by the sugar mill. The tests at the University of Hawaii and to add weight to the latter condition. These children of contract workers who had remained beaten, suppressed, unbelievably poor, through the centuries in their native lands, who had grown only unremitting toil, bloom out of the public schools of Hawaii, breeze through the high schools, go on to the university and meet the psychologicalists as well as do the blonde sons of orphics whose ancestors have been educated since Chaucer. Japanese, Chinese, Hawaiian, and Anglo-Saxon youngers show capacities for study and the acquisition of knowledge that come near being on the same level that differences are of little importance."
02 Attend Bible Class Discussion
Dr. H. A. Johnston, leader, discussed the ninth chapter of Matthew, dealing with the healing by Jesus, at the Monday evening gathering of the Young People's Bible class at the Y. M. C. A. Building. President Earl J. Walthall, resided, and announced that 102 were present for the weekly discussion.
Blanche Waddell, co-ed at the University of Illinois, has been made "sweetheart of the Big-Ten". She was crowned queen at the charity ball held at Northern University Blanche is 5 ft 7 in. a ravishing brunette and weighs 125 pounds.
Speaker Declares For Taxation Cut
Members of the Anaheim and Garden Grove farm centers were told Tuesday night by John J. Duell of the law and utilities department of the State Farm Bureau that taxes in California could be reduced in amount more than the total power bill for the state.
He showed the tremendous growth of governmental functions since 1911, increasing as much as 2,000 per cent, while the population of the state had a little more than doubled and the assessed values, the real measure of wealth, had trebled in this period. The speaker deplored the extravagence of government and of public officials.
"Certain of our control as local unit securing satisfactory try and for each brought about by
Private Citizen Again
Private Citizen Herbert Clark Hoover this week was resting in New York, following four years of strenuous and man-killing work in the White House. His entrance into the presidency was in the prosperous days of 1929, although he had not been in office many months before the first signs of the depression became apparent, growing acute late in October, when the stock crash precipitated the four-year depression which followed. Ex-President Hoover relinquished control of the nation's chief executive office.
Private Citizen Herbert Clark Hoover this week was resting in New York, following four years of strenuous and man-killing work in the White House. His entrance into the presidency was in the prosperous days of 1929, although he had not been in office many months before the first signs of the depression became apparent, growing acute late in October, when the stock crash precipitated the four-year depression which followed. Ex-President Hoover relinquished control of the nation's chief executive office on March 4 at noon. When President Franklin Delano Roosevelt assumed control just when every bank in the country either was operating under restricted cash outlay, or closed entirely by banking holidays declared by governors of 48 states. Private Citizen Hoover will return to the West Coast in the near future. Early this week he violated his rule of saying nothing about national affairs for publication, when he urged the American people to support their new president.
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SUNKIST
certain of our costs and problems we can conrol as local units, but the larger problem of
accuring satisfactory returns for the citrus industry and for each individual grower can only be
brought about by the cooperation of all growers."
—Dr. D. D. Waynick, Orange Grower and Manager
Association Laboratories, Anaheim