anaheim-gazette 1934-10-25
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LOVE Lightly
by Margaret E. Sangster
SECOND INSTALLMENT
SYNOPSIS . . . "Prelude" . . . "Love Lightly." Mrs. Church warned gently, and Ellen wondered why? Posing for her talented mother, first as a new baby, then a bubbling child, then a charming young girl, Ellen had lived always in a make-believe land of beauty. Of the outside world her knowledge was meager. At 17 years of age, posing in the garden, Ellen at last is learning the story of her mother's broken life, the stolen kiss, marriage—then years of loneliness, waiting for the husband to return. Mrs. Church is now telling Ellen of the father...
A leaf fluttered down from one of the autumn trees. Her mother went on. "At first," she said, "we were ever so happy, your father and I. Although I had to give up my painting (your father didn't approve of women having careers). I was far too much in love to argue the matter. We lived in a little apartment, and your father went every day to his office. I didn't know what he did in that office—the resented my questioning somehow. But I did know that his income seemed to grow more and more inadequate—and that, at the same time, he seemed to grow more and more restless. I tried so hard," the steady voice broke, at last, "to hold his interest! But I suppose I was different than I had been in a pink gown, waltzing! Men, Ellen, like glamor...
"It's a long story. I won't tell it to you, all. Only, after ten years of scrimping and economizing, your father suddenly bought this place and brought me here to live... He didn't ever stay here, very much, himself... It seemed almost logical to me that he shouldn't panionship. They were pretty, too—but they had an emptiness about them. I guess that's why God sent you to me, child. He knew I needed something alive and cuddly to make my garden perfect!
"Oh, Ellen," the fingers that the girl held were returning her pressure fiercely, "I'd given up all idea of having a baby, ages before you came to me! I'd had ten lonely years in the city, and five lonelier years out here, before I knew that you were coming. I couldn't believe it, at first. It was just too utterly lovely. And the knowledge hold something else beside loveliness—it brought a new hope to me. I couldn't help feeling that it would make a difference in the relationship between your father and myself; a baby couldn't help but bring a sense of responsibility into his life. He always liked new things ... and there is nothing so new as a little baby...
"Your father was away when I made my discovery. He'd been away for several weeks on something that he called a 'big deal'. I was expecting him home the very night that I saw the doctor, and I planned to tell him all about you, at once. So I sat in the garden and waited for him and watched for his train. And finally I saw it—the train that should have brought him to me—sweep across the valley below the house. I saw it stop at the station, and I saw it go on again. And I waited, with my soul full of the news I had to tell—I waited to give him the tldings of his son (for I thought, darling, that you were going to be a boy!) but he didn't come, although I waited all of that night... And the next day, when I got the message that told me he
NOTICE OF SALE
ERTY BY TRUST
DEED OF
WHEREAS, ALBERT and GLADYS L. CLAY Deed of Trust, dated 1925, recorded October 611, Page 38 of De Orange County, Calif., and convey the prop hereinafter described. County Title Company secure, among other payment of one promo September 24th, 1925 SAVINGS, LOAN ASSOCIATION order, for the principals with interest at the cent per annum, printing being payable in month of $35.00 each on the month beginning October.
WHEREAS, default that the installment interest due on said no 1932, has not been paid.
WHEREAS, The S.S. Building Association or and holder of said demanded that said property and on July recorded in the office Recorder of said Courier
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Once in the garden and waited for him and watched for his train. And finally I saw it—the train that should have brought him to me—sweep across the valley below the house. I saw it stop at the station, and I saw it go on again. And I waited with my soul full of the news I had to tell—I waited to give him the tdiings of his son (for I thought, darling, that you were going to be a boy!) but he didn't come, although I waited all of that night. And the next day, when I got the message that told me he wasn't coming back, ever, I went upstairs, and into my room and locked the door. And I sat down and began to knit a blue sweater for you. And I whistled, hard, as I knitted. I haven't whistled since—and I certainly never whistled before," Ellen! That's why, I guess, you were a girl. A boy wouldn't have had any use for a mother who whistled so badly. a boy—"
All at once Ellen's mother had stopped talking. Her voice had dwindled away into a funny, tragic silence. And Ellen saw her face go oddly white, felt her hand go chill and limp.
It was then that Ellen, starting to her feet, saw her mother's head sag forward.
"I'm going for the doctor," she half sobbed. "Your chest. . . Is it your heart, darling? Is it—"
Ellen's mother had rallied. Her smile was less wan than it had been.
"My heart?" questioned Ellen's mother. "Oh—nonsense! Indigestion, nodoubt. Something I—" even then she managed a trifle of gayety, "something I ate as a child, no doubt! I'm quite well, now. . ."
It didn't occur to Ellen in the weeks that passed, to ask her mother for the details of what had happened to her father. In her mind she had a vivid impression of some major calamity—of a train wreck or an automobile disaster. Only a calamity could have kept her father from her mother at such a time, she was sure!
And then, perhaps a month later, the special delivery letter arrived.
It was the boy from the postoffice who brought the letter. Because her mother was at work she had signed for it, and dismissed the boy, before she spoke to the woman who painted so absorbedly.
"It's a letter," she said, "a special delivery for you. I guess it's about the drawing you sent away last week. We were expecting some word."
With a start her mother came back from the land of her own creation to reality. With listless hands she took the envelope from her daughter, and slit it open. Ellen watched her mother
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mother was at work she had signed for it, and dismissed the boy, before she spoke to the woman who painted so absorbedly.
"It's a letter," she said, "a special delivery for you. I guess it's about the drawing you sent away last week. We were expecting some word."
With a start her mother came back from the land of her own creation to reality. With listless hands she took the envelope from her daughter, and slit it open. Ellen watched her mother idly — so idly that at first she could scarcely believe what her eyes were seeing! For, as she stood watching, she saw her mother change completely and dreadfully. More dreadfully than she had changed on that other day, weeks before. In a minute she saw a lovely, white-haired woman become a broken, shriveled, parchmont-cheeked figure.
"You're ill!" Ellen cried, as she started forward. "Was there bad news in the letter? You're upset—"
But when the answer came it wasn't an answer. For Ellen's mother, her hand again pressed to her breast, was rising. And as she rose to her feet, she was looking beyond Ellen. She swayed slightly—and then, as if she couldn't help it, she sat down again. But her voice was steady, though toneless, when she spoke.
"It's that indigestion, I guess," she said, gaspingly. And then—"Bring me my check book, dear..."
Ellen didn't speak. She sensed a desperation in that toneless voice, a need of hurry. Turning, she ran into the house, scampered to the desk where the check book lay. She brought it, and a fountain pen and stationery, to her mother, and watched as her mother's shaking hand wrote a check—wrote it to what, in Ellen's knowledge of the family finances, was an alarming amount. It was only after the check was carefully made out to a strange name, and as carefully blotted, that the woman spoke again.
Continued Next Week
ANAHEIM GAZETTE
Old Feed Supply Lowest on Record
Supplies of old feed on the ranges of California are practically exhausted throughout the southern half of the State and are short elsewhere, except in the north coastal, Sacramento Valley, and Delta areas where there is a fair amount of these feeds, according to a California range and livestock report, prepared by Statistician George A. Scott, released by the federal-state crop reporting service.
NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL PROPERTY BY TRUSTEE UNDER DEED OF TRUST
TRUST NO. 876
WHEREAS, ALBERT E. CLARK and GLADYS L. CLARK, his wife, by Deed of Trust, dated September 24th, 1925, recorded October 9th, 1925 in Book 611, Page 38 of Deeds, 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 September 24th, 1925 payable to THE SAVINGS, LOAN AND BUILDING ASSOCIATION OF ANAHEIM, or order, for the principal sum of $3000.00 with interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum, principal and interest being payable in monthly installments of $35.00 each on the 1st day of each month beginning October 1st, 1925; and
WHEREAS, default has occurred in that the installment of principal and interest due on said note on August 1st, 1932, has not been paid; and
WHEREAS, The Savings, Loan and Building Association of Anaheim, owner and holder of said note, heretofore demanded that said Trustee sell said property and on July 9th, 1934, duly recorded in the office of the County Recorder of said County, in Book 687,
University of Air is Given Daily by U.S.C. Professors
Variety of Subjects Will Be Discussed by Experts In Many Fields
Bringing the university classroom into the home by means of radio, the University of Southern California is to present outstanding members of its faculty over the air in cooperation with five Los Angeles stations during the 1934-1935 school year it was announced by Mulvey White, director of radio activities at U.S.C.
Through its "University of the Air," KHJ is releasing a U.S.C. program every afternoon from Monday to Friday inclusive at 4:15 to 4:30 p.m. over the Columbia Don Lee broadcasting system. A health clinic of the air, current world affairs, the drama of philosophy, contemporary literature, and inspirational talks by Dr. Bruce Baxter are among the series presented.
Over KNX on Mondays, Tuesdays Wednesdays, the Trojan institution is presenting the Mummy Club, comments on archaeological discoveries conducted by Dr. Carl S. Knopf; business trends by the college of commerce and business administration; "The World of Research" by the graduate school; curiosities of literature; and an English grammatical clinic.
NOTICE OF ABANDONMENT OF HIGHWAY
Notice is hereby given to all freeholders in the Third road district that the hearing of the petition of LEONARD EVANS et al. filed on the 17th day of October, 1934, to vacate, discon-
the North one-half (N½) of the Southeast quarter (SE¼) of the Southwest quarter (SW¼) of Section 16, Township 4 South, Range 10 West, S. B. B. & M., and Lots 15 and 16 of said Tract to the East line of said Garden Grove Road; thence South 58.8 feet to the point of beginning.
Excepting therefrom that part thereof included within West Anaheim Road now known as Loara Street.
By order of the Board of Supervisors of Orange County, California.
Dated this 23rd day of October, 1934.
J. M. BACKS,
County Clerk of Orange County, and ex-officio Clerk of the Board of Supervisors of said County.
10/25, 11/1-8, 1934.
NOTICE TO TAX PAYERS
Notice is hereby given that the taxes on all personal property secured by real property, and one-half the taxes on all real property will be due on the first day of November, 1934, and will be delinquent on the 5th day of December next thereafter, at Five o'Clock P.M. and that unless paid prior thereto eight percent will be added to the amount thereof, and that if said one-half be not paid before the Twentieth day in April, next, at Five o'Clock P.M. an additional three percent will be added thereto. That remaining one-half of the taxes on all real property will be payable on and after the Twentieth day of January next and will be delinquent on the Twentieth day in April next thereafter, at five o'Clock P.M., and that unless paid prior thereto, three percent will be added to the amount thereof.
All taxes may be paid at the time the first installment, as herein provided, is due and payable.
Said taxes are payable to the undersigned, in the City Hall, in said City of Anaheim between the hours
NOTICE OF ABANDONMENT OF HIGHWAY
Notice is hereby given to all freeholders in the Third road district that the hearing of the petition of LEONARD EVANS et al. filed on the 17th day of October, 1934, to vacate, discontinue, abandon and abolish a certain private road in the Third Road District, in Orange County, California, has been set for Tuesday the 20th day of November, 1934, at 10 o'clock A.M., at the room of the Board of Supervisors in the Court House at Santa Ana, California.
Said private road is described as follows:
All that certain real property situated in the County of Orange, State of California, being a portion of "Anaheim Investment Company's Tract," as shown on a Map recorded in Book 7, pages 33 and 34 of Miscellaneous Maps, records of Orange County, California, particularly described as follows:
Beginning at the point of intersection of the East line of Garden Grove Road with the South line of the private road along the North side of Lot 23 of said Tract; thence Easterly along the South line of said strip shown as private road upon said map along the Northerly side of Lots 23, 22, 21 and 20, to the Westerly line of the Right of Way of the Southern Pacific Railroad Company; thence, Northerly, along said right of way line, 58.8 feet to the North line of said strip shown as private road; thence, West along said strip shown as private road along the Southerly side of
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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 the 5th 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:—
The Westerly 104 feet of Lot Ninety-one (91) in Block "G" of Heimann and George's Addition Building-Lots, as shown on a Map recorded in Book 2, page 249 of Miscellaneous Records of Los Angeles County, California.
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 11th day of October, 1934.
ORANGE COUNTY
TITLE COMPANY,
(Corporate By H. A. GARDNER,
Seal)
President.
By GEO. A. PARKER,
Secretary,
10/11-18-25, 1934
NOW! GENUINE BAYER ASPIRIN AT DRASTICALLY REDUCED PRICES!
Big Price Cut on Bayer Aspirin!
POCKET TINS OF 12 NOW
15¢
PAY
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Now—Pay Less and Get Real BAYER Aspirin!
So as to put the reliability and quick action of Genuine Bayer Aspirin within the reach of everyone, the price you pay has been drastically cut. Cut so low that nobody need ever again accept an unknown preparation in place of real BAYER Aspirin.
15¢ Now For 12
25¢ Now For 24
For instance, the pocket tins of 12 real Bayer Tablets have been cut to 15¢.
The popular 24 tablet bottles have been cut to 25¢.
And the big, family size, 100 tablet bottles have again been reduced.
So—Always Say “Bayer” When You Buy
These new low prices make it a folly to accept unknown brands in order to save a few cents.
So—never ask for Bayer Aspirin by the name "aspirin" alone when you buy, but always say B-A-Y-E-R ASPIRIN and see that you get it.
ALWAYS SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” NOW WHEN YOU BUY
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ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA
Phone 3212 Open Evenings
Sunday by Appointment
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ANAHBIM, CALIFORNIA
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Residence Phone 2610
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Golden State Bank Bldg.
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South Lemon at Broadway
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ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA
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