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anaheim-gazette 1933-05-04

1933-05-04 · Anaheim Gazette · page 2 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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IN THE DAYS OF Extracts From Files of The Gazette Issued Half a Century and a Quarter of an Authentic History in Print of the Daily Doings of the Citizens of Anaheim and 25 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK MAY 14, 1908 Chester Spencer has completed the school census of Anaheim school district and finds a total of 739 children of school age in the district, between 5 and 17 years. Of this number 419 are boys and 320 girls. The increase over the census of a year ago is 100. The total number of all children in the district under 17 years of age is 1061. Mrs. Carrie Ford has completed the school census of Fullerton school district and finds 371 children of school age between 5 and 17 years of age, and the number of all children under 17 years of age 505. A. Pierotti leaves on Monday with his wife and two children for his old home in Lucca, Italy, which he has not visited in 34 years. He will be absent a year. He will visit Florence and other points of interest in his native land. He looks forward with particular anticipations of pleasure to meet his kinsfolk across the water. Mr. Pierotti is a self-made man, and is one of the most highly respected residents of Placentia. Coming here in 1874 he secured employment as zanjero for the Water company, and was subsequently elected superintendent. He was one of the most efficient men ever in the employ of the company. He was later elected a director of the company, and was again an able and clear-headed official. He owns one of the best orange and walnut plantations at Placentia and is a director in a Fullerton bank. His friends, and they are legion, extend best wishes for a happy voyage and safe return. The baby show at Odd Fellows hall on Tuesday afternoon under the auspices of the W. C. T. U. who wished to raise $5 for the purchase of a banner was a huge success. About $45 was realized. The hall was filled during the afternoon. The judges were Rev. A. B. Markle, Prof. A. A. Mills, J. W. Enfield. Of the elected a director of the company, and was again an able and clear-headed official. He owns one of the best orange and walnut plantations at Placentia and is a director in a Fullerton bank. His friends, and they are legion, extend best wishes for a happy voyage and safe return. The baby show at Odd Fellows hall on Tuesday afternoon under the auspices of the W. C. T. U. who wished to raise $5 for the purchase of a banner was a huge success. About $45 was realized. The hall was filled during the afternoon. The judges were Rev. A. B. Markle, Prof. A. A. Mills, J. W. Enfield. Of the fifty babies in the show twenty-two were awarded prizes. Under one year the finest boy was Burkhart H. Harrison, the finest girl, Margaret Keith, smallest baby, Roy W. Gans, largest girl Esther Theresa Powers, 2 months old, weight 20 pounds. Under two years, largest boy, George Williams, finest girl, Fern Flood, largest girl Roma Tedford, prettiest girl, Little Tot Mathewson, finest twins, Reba and Rea Williams of Buena Park. Prizes appropriate to the occasion were donated by city merchants and presented the prize winners by Rev. Markle. Samuel Kraemer was in town from Placentia on Tuesday. He reports farmers cutting hay, and states that while the crop will not be large, the quality will be superior. There was 14 feet of water in the reservoir on Monday. For seven weeks the entire Anaheim supply has been drawn from the reservoir, the canal supply being turned to north siders. The annual election of directors of the Anaheim Building and Loan association resulted in the selection of the following directorate: Fred Backs, Ferdinand Backs, Joseph Backs sr., August Backs, Henry Adams, C. F. Grim, Frank Baum, N. F. Steadman, August Schumacher, Herman Stern, H. A. Dickel. The election of officers will occur the first Monday in June. City Clerk Merritt has received word from James Bertram, secretary of Andrew Carnegie, that the fund for erecting the $10,000 Carnegie public library building is ready and at the disposal of the local library authorities. Plans for the building have already been accepted and work of construction will be commenced immediately after awarding the contract. Oliver Hill has been selected as Deputy District Grand Master for Odd Fellows with the district comprising Orange county and the lodge at Whittier. However, he has declined to accept the office owing to private business affairs consuming all of his time, and the appointment will probably go to George Riley of Orange, who has filled the office for years. The Epworth League of the German Methodist Episcopal church will give an ice-cream social for the benefit of their new parsonage at the home of the Misses Schwentker, corner of Broadway and Philadelphia streets, Friday evening, May 15. Tickets 15 cents. The Women’s Missionary society of the Presbyterian church will hold a reception at the church on Thursday, May 14 at 3 o'clock. All ladies of the church and congregation are cordially invited to attend. Alexander Henning F. J. J. Schmidt voise; W. Hetel voise; M. Oefing Malvoise and M. 28 acres Malvoise acres Sultanas a Mission; A. McN voise and Miss fandel; J. T. St. W. Rooch, 4 ac Parker, 2 acres D. Morton, 1 ac Dyer, 6 acres Be and Berger; D. Malvoise and Zi 13 acres Malvo Malvoise; Thom acres Muscat; H. Knapke, 17 6 acres Malvois 2 acres trees of J. B. Toombs, apricots and ap apples. The new Boarded by electing J committees were Ey; Public importance, Messrs.E received from Pleas upon the board Dreyfus as treasurer Attorney.After The ordinance o and have thorou will be pleased to to the ordinance The first Saturday.The possessed of a object within r most unhappy bile by fighting than ordinarily kicking as to br said that no inst ing its leg broke alone in his pad A veritable o abuse of the wa It has placed a animals a drinkly a week passes until the 20,000 trough ought e where it will be The Epworth League of the German Methodist Episcopal church will give an ice-cream social for the benefit of their new parsonage at the home of the Misses Schwentker, corner of Broadway and Philadelphia streets, Friday evening, May 15. Tickets 15 cents. The Women's Missionary society of the Presbyterian church will hold a reception at the church on Thursday, May 14 at 3 o'clock. All ladies of the church and congregation are cordially invited to attend. J. B. Rae visited the bean fields of El Modena on Tuesday, and found the plantations a veritable hive of industry. Beans and peas are being shipped to Los Angeles and San Francisco by carload daily. The crop this year is larger and better than ever. Miss Dora Click of this city and James Benedict of Hynes will be married at Santa Ana this morning at 11:30. The newly married couple will take up their residence on the groom's ranch at Hynes. Jas. Fiscus states that indications point to the heaviest crop of walnuts this year in the history of the industry. The crop is setting well, and if no unfavorable weather intervenes during the next sixty days, he looks for an exceptionally heavy yield. Mrs. Wm. Fithian died at her home in Fullerton on Tuesday. Deceased was aged 56. She had resided in California since 1866, and in this section since 1871. Her husband's father erected the first house north of the sandwash in the early 70's. John Hartung writes from San Francisco that the sight of Evans' battleships entering the harbor at San Francisco was magnificent beyond description. He saw the Admiral in the parade and is having a way up time in the northern metropolis. Miss Jean Adams, city librarian reports receipts of eighty new books, many volumes being the latest fiction. They are ready for perusal by patrons of the public library. Rev. F. A. Juny of the diocese of Springfield, Ill., has accepted the appointment as rector of St. Michael's Episcopal church and will arrive the latter part of May to take charge. Mrs. A. Rimpau entertained a few friends on Tuesday afternoon in honor of the birthday anniversary of Miss Marie Rimpau. 50 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK MAY 12, 1883 Surely, but not slowly, Los Angeles county is being transformed into one vast vineyard and orchard, but more especially vineyard. The mania for orange planting has, quite fortunately for all concerned, subsided, and the planting of either a wine or raisin vineyard is the first step of the settler in the county. The very excellent prices obtained by raisin and wine-makers for some years past, the adaptability of nearly the entire county for vine growing and the comparatively quick returns from young vineyards have stimulated this boom, and it will probably be checked only when the area in which vines can be grown is all under cultivation. In this immediate vicinity the acreage planted to vines and trees this year has been quite large, but not by any means so large as it would have been had the rainfall been greater. As it is, many who intended to plant vineyards have put the cuttings in nursery and will plant them next season. We have the word of nurserymen that their sales of trees though satisfactory would have been doubled had copious rainfall been accorded the county. The following list of new vineyards and orchards in this vicinity is presented as showing the activity prevailing in that line. It is not a complete list by any means, the information contained therein being gathered casually not systematically: Alexander Henry, 26 acres vines, Berger, Malvoise and Mission; F. J. J. Schmidt, 12 acres vines; Alexander Wright, 1 acre Malvoise; W. Hetebrink, 6 acres Malvoise; H. Burdorff, 2 acres Malvoise; M. Oefinger, 2 acres Malvoise; Dr. J. S. Gardiner, 25 acres Malvoise and Mission; W. S. Fish, 4 acres Zinfandel; J. P. Zeyn, 28 acres Malvoise and Zinfandel; Fred Hartung, 30 acres Mission and Charboneaux; Goodman & Rimpau (for J. R. Toberman) 45 acres Sultanas and Muscats; R. M. Gamble, 25 acres Malvoise and Mission; A. McDermont, 7 acres Mission; John Kerr, 13 acres Malvoise and Mission; Mrs. Henderson, 6 acres Malvoise and Zinfandel; J. T. Stewart, 20 acres-Zinfandel and Queen Victoria; J. W. Rooch, 4 acres Malvoise; Wm. Konig, 2 acres Berger; Wm. TODAY AND TOMORROW By Frank Parker Stockbridge TAXES easlest to pay There is only one easy way to pay taxes. That is to pay them as a part of the purchase price of something the taxpayer wants. Uncle Sam's latest tax, that on beer, is an example. Nobody pays it who doesn't want beer, and nobody who wants beer objects to paying a price which includes the tax, amounting to about one cent for an ordinary-sized glass. The cigarette tax is another that is not painful. It comes to six cents on each package of twenty cigarettes. Last year the Government's income from cigarette taxes was over three hundred million dollars. In Italy last Fall I learned that every sign, poster or public notice of any kind has to pay a tax. Even the card over the bell-button in my hotel bedroom telling me to ring once for the porter, twice for the chambermaid and three times for a waiter, had a revenue stamp stuck on it. Stamp taxes have never been used in America as freely as elsewhere. They are the easiest taxes to collect as well as to pay. CHANGE mlighty slow Miss Frances Perkins, Secretary of Labor, said the other day that more than two thousand persons had written with elaborate schemes to change the whole social system. Probably never before have so many folk all over the world been busy making plans to remodel the world. Nothing is easier than to make an ideal plan; nothing is harder than to induce human beings to follow a plan. It takes from three to a thousand generations to change the habits of a people. What is needed now is some- Alexander Henry, 26 acres vines, Berger, Malvoise and Mission; F. J. J. Schmidt, 12 acres vines; Alexander Wright, 1 acre Malvoise; W. Hetebrink, 6 acres Malvoise; H. Burdorff, 2 acres Malvoise; M. Oefinger, 2 acres Malvoise; Dr. J. S. Gardiner, 25 acres Malvoise and Mission; W. S. Fish, 4 acres Zinfandel; J. P. Zeyn, 28 acres Malvoise and Zinfandel; Fred Hartung, 30 acres Mission and Charboneaux; Goodman & Rimpau (for J. R. Toberman) 45 acres Sultanas and Muscats; R. M. Gamble, 25 acres Malvoise and Mission; A. McDermont, 7 acres Mission; John Kerr, 13 acres Malvoise and Mission; Mrs. Henderson, 6 acres Malvoise and Zinfandel; J. T. Stewart, 20 acres-Zinfandel and Queen Victoria; J. W. Rooch, 4 acres Malvoise; Wm. Konig, 2 acres Berger; Wm. Parker, 2 acres Muscat; H. L. Paty, 3 acres Malvoise and Muscat; D. Morton, 1 acre Berger; F. A. Korn, 3 acres Zinfandel; J. J. Dyer, 6 acres Berger and Zinfandel; C. O. Rust, 15 acres Zinfandel and Berger; D. Strodthoff, 6 acres Berger; W. M. Bailey, 22 acres Malvoise and Zinfandel; J. Seeman, 3 acres Berger; J. Mauerhan, 13 acres Malvoise and Black Hamburg; Jos. Helmsen, 14 acres Malvoise; Thomas Strain, 13 acres Muscal; Miss McFadden, 5 acres Muscat; R. J. Northam, 40 acres Zinfandel and Mission; H. Knapke, 17 acres Berger and Black Hamburg; B. F. Coquillet, 6 acres Malvoise; Wesley Alms, 7 acres Malvoise; A. E. White, 2 acres trees of different kinds; R. H. Gilman, 15 acres apricots; J. B. Toombs, 10 acres deciduous trees; Louis Schorn, 20 acres apricots and apples; C. D. Brown, 8 acres pears, apricots and apples. The new Board of Town Trustees met on Monday and organized by electing J. P. Zeyn president of the board. The following committees were appointed: Finance, Messrs. Saxton, Backs and Ey; Public improvements, Messrs. Konig, Backs and Zeyn; Ordinance, Messrs. Ey, Saxton and Backs. A communication was received from Plez James declining to qualify as treasurer, whereupon the board filled the vacancy by unanimously electing Mr. B. Dreyfus as treasurer. Theo. Lynill, Esq., was appointed Town Attorney. After discussing various matters the board adjourned. The ordinance committee held several meetings during the week and have thoroughly revised the ordinances now in force. They will be pleased to receive from citizens any suggestions relative to the ordinances. The first serious accident at the ostrich farm happened last Saturday. The largest and finest looking of the male birds is possessed of a most ferocious temper, and as the only animate object within reach is his female companion, her lot has been a most unhappy one, as the male has worked off his superfluous bile by fighting her viciously. On the day mentioned he was more than ordinarily ill tempered, and he gave his mate such a severe kicking as to break her leg and she shortly afterward died. It is said that no instance is known of an ostrich recovering after having its leg broken. Hereafter the belligerent bird will be kept alone in his paddock. The value of the bird killed was $1500. A veritable case of riding a free horse to death is given in the abuse of the water privileges afforded by the town of Anaheim. It has placed a watering trough where everyone can give his animals a drink, and the reward of its philanthropy is that scarcely a week passes that the water is not turned on and left running until the 20,000 gallon tank is drained. The public watering trough ought either to be abolished or moved to some locality where it will be under continual inspection. Miss Frances Perkins, Secretary of Labor, said the other day that more than two thousand persons had written with elaborate selfemes to change the whole social system. Probably never before have so many folk all over the world been busy making plans to remodel the world. Nothing is easier than to make an ideal plan; nothing is harder than to induce human beings to follow a plan. It takes from three to a thousand generations to change the habits of a people. What is needed now is something that will work next month, not next century. It would be a good plan for example, if the relations of industry and agriculture could be readjusted so that every factory worker would have a piece of land to fall back on, but the present generation of factory workers doesn't know how to live on the land. The last thing Americans want, it seems to me, is to be compelled by law to do anything to which they are not naturally inclined. I don't think highly of any scheme of social reform which is not the product of the evolutionary interplay of natural forces. CURTISS late honor Glenn Curtiss died three years ago but the War Department has just awarded him the Distinguished Service Cross, which was given to his mother as a memento always to be cherished of her brilliant and beloved son. I knew Glenn Curtiss intimately from the days when he was a bicycle-racing kid trying to ride faster than anybody else. When he was beaten at the New York State Fair he resolved to make a bicycle which would go faster than anybody has ever gone. The first motorcycle grew out of that determination, and Glenn Curtiss was the first man ever to travel at a speed of more than 150 miles an hour. His most famous achievement, however, was making the airplane practical. The Wright brothers were the first to fly, but Curtiss was the first to build a plane that anybody could fly. He did more for the development of aviation and taught more men to fly than anybody else ever did. I'm glad his mother has his Distinguished Service Cross. HORSES man's medicine When the wild Mongols from the high plateaus of Asia swept around the Black Sea, a thousand or more years before Christ, they introduced the horse to Europe. The Greeks had never seen men on horses, and believed, many of them, that man and horse were one. Hence the myth of the Centaur, half horse, half man. In another thousand years the horse had become the indispensable reliance of travelers and explorers all over the world. A couple of thousand years later the automobile was invented and A veritable case of riding a free horse to death is given in the abuse of the water privileges afforded by the town of Anaheim. It has placed a watering trough where everyone can give his animals a drink, and the reward of its philanthropy is that scarcely a week passes that the water is not turned on and left running until the 20,000 gallon tank is drained. The public watering trough ought either to be abolished or moved to some locality where it will be under continual inspection. Rt. Rev. Wm. Ingraham Kip, D. D., L. L. D., Bishop of this diocese, has been appointed one of the examiners at West Point and will leave to discharge the duty early in June. A few years ago the Bishop received a similar appointment at the Naval Academy. It is a high tribute to his learning and reputation that two such appointments should be received within so brief a space of time. On Friday, May 18th, the Episcopal church at Tustin City, will be consecrated, the Rev. Mr. Birdsall of Los Angeles preaching the sermon, and the Revs. Trew and Linsley assisting the Rector in the services. The hour 3 P. M. The following Sunday there will be an ordination to the Priesthood in St. Paul's church, Tustin City, being the first time such a service has ever been held in Southern California. Rev. Trew, will present the candidate and together with Rev. G. G. Lines and others unite in laying on of hands. This service will begin at 11 A.M. In the afternoon at 4 P. M., the apostolic rite of confirmation will be administered by the Bishop at St. Michael's church the candidates from the various parts of the Mission coming here for that purpose. The new German church is so far constructed as to give an idea of what it will look like when finished. It promises to be a neat and cozy edifice. The celebrated hog man of Southern California, Mr. Kuffel of Gospel Swamp, was looking around this week for pork and offered 6 cents a pound on foot. Why don't the farmers of this section pay more attention to hog raising. Chas. Hilmei has taken his sheep to Texas by rail. Seventeen carloads of them went through on Tuesday. Our friend John Lowe has recommenced the blacksmithing business in Santa Ana again. When the wild Mongols from the high plateaus of Asia swept around the Black Sea, a thousand or more years before Christ, they introduced the horse to Europe. The Greeks had never seen men on horses, and believed, many of them, that man and horse were one. Hence the myth of the Centaur, half horse, half man. In another thousand years the horse had become the indispensable reliance of travelers and explorers all over the world. A couple of thousand years later the automobile was invented and folk who thought they were wise said the day of the horse was over. More people are riding horses today than ever before. Good horses bring higher prices than for many years. City folk are learning anew the old/truth that "the best medicine for the inside of a man is the outside of a horse," and the parks are filled with riders daily, rain or shine. The best riders in the world today are still the Mongols, but the best horses are bred in America and Western Europe. The wild mustangs and bronchos of our Western plains are descendants of the horses brought by the Spanish Conquistadores; America never had horses until after 1492. FINGERPRINTS - very practical "Practical" people laughed at Joe Faurot when thirty years ago, he insisted that the fingerprints of every captured crook should be recorded. Today identification by fingerprints is relied upon in every police department in the world, and the Department of Justice in Washington maintains an international clearing-house of fingerprints with more than two million records. No two persons have ever been found whose fingerprints were alike. Joe Faurot retired from the police department seven years ago and is trying to extend the use of fingerprint identification in other fields. He has lately invented a method of fingerprinting which does not soil the fingers, as the old printers' ink system did. He thinks the time will come when everybody's fingerprints will be recorded from birth, so nobody can ever pose as somebody else and there will be no doubt of anybody's identity. United California Citrus Industry Seen As Important Recovery Factor Problems Regarded as Incapable of Individual Solution, With Individual Action in Cooperation Hailed as Best Way to Throw Influence Toward Market Stabilization. "There never was a time when a united California citrus industry was more important than now," said Paul S. Armstrong, general manager of the California Fruit Growers Exchange, to the members of the Riverside-Arlington Heights Exchange meeting at Riverside last week. Harvey Lynn, manager of the River-side district exchange, presided, and T. H. Powell, general sales manager of the Exchange, also spoke. "Every problem that faces us is incapable of individual solution and will respond to group action," said Mr. Armstrong. "For example, the market price for oranges depends on two factors—supply and demand. The individual grower is powerless to influence either one, but working in cooperation with other growers in the Exchange, which is owned and operated by growers, he can have a decided effect on both. "It would be strange indeed if the citrus industry did not share in our present serious and precedented business situation, and we assuredly have," the Exchange manager said, "but in contemplating our own distress we often do not fully appreciate the extent of deflation in other industries. Comparing 1929 peak sales with 1932 automobile sales have fallen off 74% in volume, radio 44%, railroad passenger travel 71%, textiles 29%. By comparison, California oranges sales inclined only 9% in volume and 29% in price." So in spite of our present distress and difficulty there are some bright spots about the orange business, which should be a source of confidence to those who have investments in this industry, according to Mr. Armstrong. He spoke of the volume of business maintained through the depression, which promises a rapid recovery for oranges as soon as the general business situation improves. Costs in the citrus industry have been and are still being satisfactory results, besides establishing the general market for their fruit. Last season the Exchange shipped over 370,000 boxes by water to New York and saved growers $185,000, said the sales manager, adding that all available space is being used this year. Exports to Europe during the month of April exceed 200,000 boxes. License Plates Carrying Symbols Symbols or state slogans are carried on the 1933 automobile license plates of at least five states. The more outstanding symbols and slogans are as follows: Louisiana—the outline of a pelican symbolic of this southernmost state is carried in the center of the plate. Montana—an outline of the state is shown on the tag. Pennsylvania—the 1933 plate carries the familiar keystone designating tho Keystone state. South Carolina—has a line at the bottom of the plate reading "The Iodine Products State." Texas—the lone star of Texas stands out on the current tags. Twenty-seven states and the District of Columbia carrying the full name of the state, while in 21 the name of the state is abbreviated. North Dakota Has In spite of our present distress and difficulty there are some bright spots about the orange business, which should be a source of confidence to those who have investments in this industry, according to Mr. Armstrong. He spoke of the volume of business maintained through the depression, which promises a rapid recovery for oranges as soon as the general business situation improves. Costs in the citrus industry have been and are still being substantially reduced—orchard, packing house and sales costs. Transportation, taxation and utility costs still remain high, with freight rates 47 per cent above pre-war. Citrus league negotiations have recently resulted in a freight reduction of 12 cents per hundred, or 9 cents per box. This cut has been approved by the interstate commerce commission, to become effective May 5, and will save 2 million dollars a year to Exchange growers. "Evidences are showing, though still faint," said Mr. Armstrong, "of an upturn in general business which points the way to better times." The Exchange signed the farm bureau stabilization agreement over four weeks ago and other shippers are signing, so that the Exchange head expects that it will soon become effective. The Exchange will do everything it can to make this plan work, because therein lies the best opportunity to improve the growers return per acre for the balance of the season. "Controlling volume of shipments is not the only essential factor in distribution and sale, however, and we must not forget the big job of increasing consumer demand by advertising, if we are ever going to profitably market the large crops of future years. We must also reduce marketing costs, distribute our fruit intelligently and avoid unnecessary competition and price cutting in the markets," he said. T. H. Powell, general sales manager of the Exchange, told the growers of the Exchange sales organization and its present high state of efficiency. He described the private sale and auction sale methods used by the Exchange. In private sale, carloads of fruit are sold in 700 markets to over 1,400 distributors. In eleven of the largest eastern cities, cars are unloaded, the fruit displayed and sold at auction in large or small lots to thousands of buyers. This permits sale of large quantities of fruit to many buyers all brought to one point of sale. Some shippers use auction only as a last resort, said Mr. Powell. Their results are unsatisfactory and they convince themselves that private sale is better. Others ship direct to auction markets their best fruit and get very Pennsylvania—the 1933 plate carries the familiar keystone designating the Keystone state. South Carolina—has a line at the bottom of the plate reading "The Iodine Products State." Texas—the lone star of Texas stands out on the current tags. Twenty-seven states and the District of Columbia carrying the full name of the state, while in 21 the name of the state is abbreviated. North Dakota Has Fewest Fatalities North Dakota had the lowest motor vehicle death rate for 1932-8.8 per 100,000 population; Nevada had the highest rate — 56.7. How to regulate a child The healthiest child's stomach, liver and bowels need stimulation at times. Many specialists believe this. Dr. Caldwell, with a wonderful record in treating babies and children, was always a firm believer in this. Follow the advice of this famous family physician, and give your children this help. His prescription of fresh herbs, active senna, and pure pepsin keeps any system from clogging — or even growing sluggish. Have you a youngster who is lagging at school, or listless at play, doesn't eat enough, and isn't gaining? Start this evening with Syrup Pepsin! Watch the quick improvement—the real "pep" and the better regularity. This gentle stimulant is felt first and most directly in the bowels. Syrup Pepsin has the same action at any age. While mild enough for babies, adult doses of this same Syrup Pepsin keep older people in condition. It will protect your whole household from bilious days, sick headaches. You can get Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin at any drugstore. Santa Fe Chicago WORLD'S FAIR ... Opens June 1. Exceptionally low round trips "back east" begin May 15. In addition to the regular Summer Excursions "back east," NEW ROUND TRIP fares with a shorter return limit set a "new low." They are ideal for the vacationist with limited time and offer a Santa Fe fare and service for every taste and pocketbook. For example: to Chicago, STANDARD ROUND TRIP, $80.50; TOURIST ROUND TRIP, $70.50; COACH ROUND TRIP, $60.50; also to many other destinations. Another new and surprising reduction in Santa Fe transportation is a ROUND TRIP STANDARD PULLMAN fare which will save you 25 per cent! At such low fares you can't afford to miss "The Fair." • CARILLON TOWER Hall of Science, a pillar of fire against the night! It is exemplary of the World's Fair architecture. MAIL COUPON • FREE Santa Fe FOLDERS ON REQUEST Mr. Jas. B. Duffy, Assistant Passenger Traffic Manager, 331 Kerckhoff Blvd., Los Angeles, CA. 1-85 • Please send me illustrated World's Fair folder giving details of the Fair, hotel rates in Chicago, etc. Also new rate folder when completed. NAME ADDRESS