YoreAnaheim the Anaheim newspaper archive
Publications Anaheim Gazette 1934 October

anaheim-gazette 1934-10-25

1934-10-25 · Anaheim Gazette · page 2 of 6 · OCR glm-ocr
Scanned page
Scan of anaheim-gazette 1934-10-25 page 2
Searchable text
14 Women Working Under SERA Plan Mrs. Ethel G. Badger is directing the 14 women who started to work Tuesday morning under SERA making clothes for relief distribution. Workshops are located at 265 West Center street. Mrs. Badger reports that three bolts of material were received for the women to start making men's shirts, and that more material will be received regularly. The women will work varying hours, in accordance to number of dependents. The shop will be closed Thursday and Sundays. PENTECOSTAL CHURCH MOVES The Pentecostal Church of God, formerly located at 156 South Los Angeles street, now is in new quarters at 344 South Los Angeles street. TRIXY FOUNDATIONS By Georgene Pierce Insure Comfort, Fit and Style Wear our Exclusive Line of FOREASE HOISEY for COMFORT 181 W. Center Street Anaheim REPAIRING Vacuum Cleaners Washing Machines Electric Appliances "If It's electrical, We Repair It" Bohnet Radio & Electric Service Phone 3002 300 E. Center St., Anaheim Farm Advisor Is Recovering From Major Operation Farm Advisor Harold E. Wahlberg is making splendid recovery from his recent major operation, according to report coming from his office at the Court House Annex. Mr. Wahlberg returned last week from the hospital and is now convalescing at his home. He expects to be at his desk next Monday, October 29, but will not resume field work for another week or so, upon instruction of his doctor. California Wines In Brisk Demand In Recent Months California wines are in brisk demand, according to state board of equalization beverage tax assessments. Sales of local vintages subject to the state tax of 2 cents per gallon for the month of September amounted to 1,216,500 gallons, marking an increase of 126,694 gallons over similar sales for August. Comparative figures for September, 1933 are not available because the sale of wine except that of low alcoholic content was not legalized until last December. "Preference for California produced wines is established," the report says "by the circumstance that sales of imported wines have decreased during the same period. In August we taxed 27,291 gallons of wine produced outside of the State, whereas this month imported wines subject to tax amounted to only 20,674 gallons. Thus while the sales of California wine increased 11.6 per cent, the sales of imported wine decreased 24.2 per cent." Announcement the Opening "If it's electrical, We Repair It" Bohnet Radio & Electric Service Phone 3002 300 E. Center St., Anaheim Announceing the Opening — OF THE — WIGWAN BEER and WINE PARLOR AL UPDYKE and MABEL SHOUPE, Props. At 243 West Center Street 7 p. m., Friday, October 26 Featuring Budweiser Beer High Grade Wines, Sandwiches and Light Lunches MUSIC AND ENTERTAINMENT FRIDAY EVENING Come in and Get Acquainted MEET Your Friends at the WIGWAM BUY ELECTRIC DAIRY EQUIPMENT AT LOW COST DAIRY EQUIPMENT AT LOW COST with NATIONAL MODERNIZING LOAN Successful dairying under present-day conditions calls for electrical equipment. By means of loans available to you under the National Housing Act, you can purchase immediately such items as milking machines, separators, Pasteurizers, sterilizers, milk coolers and refrigerators on convenient and advantageous terms. GET THIS BOOKLET Write to the Edison Company for this booklet which explains in detail just how you may benefit by a National Housing Act Loan. Send for it today, and then get the electrical equipment which will help you increase your profits. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA EDISON COMPANY LTD. 10-24 Valencias Advance to 79 Per Cent of Full Crop In Estimates of Fruit and Nut Survey Completed by Government Navel and Miscellaneous Oranges Stand at 69 Per Cent of Indicated Full Crop, Federal-State Service Reports; Grapefruit Production of State, 1934-35, Estimated at 1,593,000 boxes California navel and miscellaneous oranges still stand at 69 per cent indicated full crop while valencias have advanced to 79 per cent, according to a fruit and nut crop estimate released by the federal-state crop reporting service. Although the orange crops are reported to have been injured somewhat in some localities by September heat, the entire state crop of both navels and valencias are making satisfactory progress, the report said. The 1933-34 valencia crop is not yet all harvested while the new navel crop is approaching maturity in the earlier sections. California navel and miscellaneous oranges as well as California grapefruit are competitive from the standpoint of harvest period with oranges and grapefruit from other states. The 1934-35 California navel and miscellaneous orange crop is forecast at 13,455,000 boxes. The Florida crop for 1934-35 has been estimated at 21,-000,000 boxes compared with 18,100,000 boxes produced in 1933-34, and the Texas crop for 1934-35 has been set at 535,000 boxes compared with 390,000 boxes last year. The Arizona production also indicates an increase, the estimate for 1934-35 being 160,000 boxes compared with 143,000 boxes last year. Grapefruit production in California for 1934-35 season has been estimated at 1,593,000, compared with 1,713,000 boxes for 1933-34. Grapefruit production increases are estimated for Florida, Texas, and Arizona in 1934-35. Orange production in the four principal citrus states last year was 46,-859,000 boxes, compared with an estimated production for 1934-35 of 56,600,-000 boxes. Grapefruit production in the same Peace Problems To Be Discussed At Friday Meet Experts To Tell First-Hand Observations About World Affairs Peace problems of the world will be discussed from first-hand observation Friday evening, October 19, at the first dinner of the fourth annual series of World Affairs assemblies to be held in the Hotel Vista del Arroyo, Pasadena, under the auspices of the Los Angeles University of International Relations, affiliated with the University of Southern California. Featured speaker of the evening, President-elect Bruce Baxter of Williamette University, Oregon, will describe present conditions in South Africa, from personal observations made this summer. Dr. Baxter, is leaving his post of Dean of the School of Religion at U. S. C. to accept his new office. NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL PROPERTY BY TRUSTEE UNDER DEED OF TRUST TRUST NO. 649 WHEREAS, JAMES E. STEWART, and DORA P. STEWART, husband and wife, by Deed of Trust, dated October 6th, 1928, recorded October 13th, 1928, in Book 206, Page 239 of Official Records of Orange County, California, did grant and convey the property therein and hereinafter described, to the Orange County Title Company, as Trustee, to secure among other obligations, the payment of one promissory note dated October 6th, 1928, payable to Home Mutual Building and Loan Association of Santa Ana, or order, for the principal sum of $11,000.00, with interest at the rate of 7.8% per annum, principal and interest due in monthly installments of $137.50 each on the 1st day of each month beginning December 1st, 1928; and WHEREAS, default has occurred in that the installment of principal and interest due on said note on January 1st, 1933 has not been paid; and WHEREAS, PACIFIC STATES SAVINGS AND LOAN COMPANY, then owner and holder of said note, heretofore demanded that said Trustee sell said property and on July 21st, 1933 duly recorded in the office of the County Recorder of said County, in Book 622, Page 364 of Official Records thereof,a notice of said default and of its election to cause said property to be sold and more than three months have now elapsed since the recordation of said notice. The amount of $7560.93 principal and interest thereon from December 5th, 1932 is now due, owing and unpaid on said note and there is also secured by said Deed of Trust the Trustee's fee and expenses of sale, estimated at $309.00. NOW THEREFORE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the said Orange County Title Company by virtue of the Higher Feed Prices Induce More Growing With the higher prices for dairy feed prevailing, dairymen will now find it profitable to produce more of their own feed, according to W. M. Cory, assistant farm advisor. Prices for alfalfa hay and other roughages have been such that there was little to gain in the production of these feeds. In fact they could often be purchased for less than it cost to produce. Prices for such roughages will probably range higher this fall and winter, which will give a wider margin in favor of home production. Hay crops which could be safely planted now and which will yield considerable pasture before being allowed to mature for hay include barley, oats, or purple vetch. It would be preferable to sow oats or barley with the vetch. Barley might be sown in the alfalfa to give a heavier first cutting than from the alfalfa alone. The weeks while he waited for them to come to him were a period in which Paul was very near to nervous prostration. If it had not been for Priscilla's good cooking and the companionship which he found with her and her husband he might have broken down entirely. His whole work since coming to Europe seemed a total failure; it had brought only hardship and humiliation. He was afraid Timothy and Silas would never come. He was afraid they cause said property to be sold and more than three months have now elapsed since the recordation of said notice. The amount of $7560.93 principal and interest thereon from December 5th, 1932 is now due, owing and unpaid on said note and there is also secured by said Deed of Trust the Trustee's fee and expenses of sale, estimated at $309.00. NOW THEREFORE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the said Orange County Title Company, by virtue of the authority vested in it as Trustee under said Deed of Trust, will sell at public auction, to the highest bidder for cash, lawful money of the United States, on A PRECIOUS BOATLOAD We have already considered the writing of the four gospels. The date of the first of them, Mark, is about 61, and Paul reached Corinth ten years earlier, in 51. Up to that time the story of the life of Jesus had been told orally. No one felt the need of a written biography; no one felt qualified to write it. So it was not with the gospels that the actual writing of the New Testament began, but with the letter which Paul in Corinth wrote to his old master. STOP FORGETTING Use Magazine sealed blades. Entire clip slips into razor handle. Then forget new blades for a long time. Nothing else like it. 20 blades in a clip for 75c. That's economy! Ask to see the Schick Repeating Razor. At all dealers & (includes chip of 20 sealed blades). CENTRAL 131 West Center Street QUALITY MEATS Don't let these low prices mislead you. PORK SAUSS MONTEREY JACK STEAKS SIRLOOK VEAL STEAKS CHOPS ROASTS ARM CHUCK VEAL ROAS A PRECIOUS BOATLOAD We have already considered the writing of the four gospels. The date of the first of them, Mark, is about 61, and Paul reached Corinth ten years earlier, in 51. Up to that time the story of the life of Jesus had been told orally. No one felt the need of a written biography; no one felt qualified to write it. So it was not with the gospels that the actual writing of the New Testament began, but with the letter which Paul in Corinth wrote to his old church in Thessalonica, the Epistle to the Thessalonians. You will be interested in the story. Go back to the period before Paul's arrival in Corinth, to his crossing from old Troy to Europe. He had seen a vision of a man of Macedonia inviting him into Europe, and he went. The boat that carried him and his three companions, Timothy, Silas and Luke, bore the most precious freight that ever landed on the western shore of the Mediterranean. But Paul did not meet the man of Macedonia. For a good while he had a hard time. As we have already noted, he was beaten and imprisoned in Philippi, mobbed in Thessalonica, driven out of town from Berea, and flouted in Athens. "Our flesh had no rest," he wrote about those days. "Without were sightings and within were fears." When he arrived in Corinth he was alone, having left Silas at Berea, and Timothy at Thessalonica. The weeks while he waited for them to come to him were a period in which Paul was very near to nervous prostration. If it had not been for Priscilla's good cooking and the companionship which he found with her and her husband he might have broken down entirely. His whole work since coming to Europe seemed a total failure; it had brought only hardship and humiliation. He was afraid Timothy and Silas would never come. He was afraid they would be mobbed to death. And if they came he feared they would say: "It's no use. These people just will not hear the good news. In Philippi they say that if they had us back in jail we would never get out. In Berea they are ready to quote the Jewish law against us and say that Jesus did not measure up to the prophecies. In Thessalonica we dared not go on the streets in daylight. In Athens your sermon is a joke." So in his lonesomeness he conjectured and was tortured by his imagination. But one day two dusty travelers arrived in Corinth, found the Ghetto, and there inquired if a man was boarding somewhere in town, a small, wiry, nervous man of defective sight, named Paul. To their joy they learned that he was staying with Aquila and Priscilla; they hunted him up, and there was a glad reunion. Timothy and Silas had rejoined Paul. Copyright, Bobbs-Merrill Co. DR. CARL SCHULTZ will answer your questions on subjects of, DIET, PHYSICAL DISORDERS, AND HEALTH free of all charge or obligation, if you will enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope for a reply. Write about your problem today, to, Dr. Carl Schultz, President NATUROPATHIC INSTITUTE AND SANITORIUM 644-50 St. Paul Ave. Los Angeles A LE OF REAL PROPRIETE UNDER THE TRUST OF TRUST NO. 649 JAMES E. STEWART, STEWART, husband and Trust, dated October October 13th, 1928. Page 239 of Official George County, California, convey the property after described, to the Tittle Company, as a member of one promissory due in October 6th, 1928, payable to Building and Loan Santa Ana, or order, for sum of $11,000.00, with rate of 7.8% per annum, interest due in monthly 137.50 each on the 1st month beginning December default has occurred inment of principal and said note on January been paid; and ACIFIC STATES SAVANCOMPANY, then of said note, heretothat said Trustee sell and on July 21st, 1933 the office of the County County, in Book 622, special Records thereof, a default and of its election property to be sold and the months have now recorded of said count of $7560.93 printthereon from Decemnow due, owing and note and there is also Deed of Trust the and expenses of sale. BEFORE, NOTICE IS that the said Orange company by virtue of the the 20th day of November, 1934, at the hour of eleven o'clock A.M., of said day at the North entrance of the Hall of Records in the City of Santa Ana, California, all of the interest conveyed to it by said Deed of Trust in and to all the following described property situated in the City of Anaheim, County of Orange, State of California, described as follows, to-wit: Lot Eight (8) in Block "G" of the "Subdivision of Vineyard Lot 'D3' Anaheim", as shown on a Map recorded in Book 34, page 592 of Deeds, records of Los Angeles County, California. Subject to a right of way of record. or so much of said property as shall be necessary to be sold to provide a sum sufficient to pay the total amount secured by said Deed of Trust. Dated this 25th day of October, 1934. ORANGE COUNTY TITLE COMPANY By H. A. GARDNER, (Corporate President). Seal) By GEO. A. PARKER, Secretary. 10/25, 11/1-8, 1934 Homer A. Nelson, Opt. D. OPTOMETRUST Phone 310T 114 N. Lemon St. Anneheim, Calif. Rev. I. N. Demy says: I have found nothing in the past 20 years that can take the place of Dr. Miles Anti-Pain Pills. They are a sure relief for my headache." Sufferers from Headache, Neuralgia, Toothache, Backache, Sciatica, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis, Muscular Pains, Periodic Pains, write that they have used Dr. Miles Anti-Pain Pills with better results than they had even hoped for. Countless American housewives would no more think of keeping house without Dr. Miles Anti-Pain Pills than without flour or sugar. Keep a package in your medicine cabinet and save yourself needless suffering. At Drug Stores—25c and $1.00 DR. MILES' ANTI-PAIN PILLS HOMER A. NELSON, OPT. D. OPTOMETRIST Phone 310T 114 N. Lemon St. Aunhelm, Calif. DR. MILES' ANTI-PAIN PILLS A COMPARISON OF TWO RECORDERS OFFICES THIS LAST YEAR IN ORANGE COUNTY IT COST MORE THAN $30,900 TO FILE LESS THAN 28,500 DOCUMENTS WITH ANET RETURN TO ORANGE CO., OF LESS THAN $6,200 THIS LAST YEAR IN RIVERSIDE COUNTY IT COST LESS THAN $17,000 TO FILE MORE THAN 21,000 DOCUMENTS WITH ANET RETURN TO RIVERSIDE CO., OF OVER HAROLD YOST will correct this condition when he is elected Recorder — Hear him Friday night on KREG at 7:00 P.M. — ENTRAL MARKET At Center Street Formerly Ed Schneider 131 West Center Street QUALITY MEATS — WHOLESALE AND RETAIL — PHONE 4055 these low prices mislead you — This is QUALITY MERCHANDISE ARK SAUSAGE . lb. 15c REY CHEESE . lb. 16½c MEKS RIB SIRLOIN . lb. 14½c AL STEAKS CHOPS . lb. 15c ASTS ARM CHUCK 12½c Pot 7½c lb. AL ROAST . lb. 9½c AL STEAKS CHOPS 1b. 15c ASTS ARM CHUCK 12½c Pot 7½c lb. AL ROAST 1b. 9½c GS LARGE EXTRAS Doz. 31c TTER QUARTERS 1b. 31½c FRESH GROUND BEEF 2 lbs. 19c RS — BOLONEY — MINCED HAM. lb. 11½c SAUSAGE — SALAMI Lb. 15c SH SALMON, Lb. 17c YELLOWTAIL, Lb. 13½c ACUDA, Lb. 10c OYSTERS, Dozen 23c oe's Home Grown Vegetables WEET 2 lbs. 14c NORTHERN LETTUCE, 2 for 5c MA S, 4 lbs. 10c SUMMER SQUASH, 3 lbs. 9c TOES, 10 lbs. 14c SPANISH ONIONS, 3 lbs. 5c