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anaheim-gazette 1935-10-17

1935-10-17 · Anaheim Gazette · page 6 of 6 · OCR glm-ocr
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Don't Guess But Know Whether the "Pain" Remedy You Use is SAFE? Don’t Entrust Your Own or Your Family’s Well - Being to Unknown Preparations THE person to ask whether the preparation you or your family are taking for the relief of headaches is SAFE to use regularly is your family doctor. Ask him particularly about Genuine BAYER ASPIRIN. He will tell you that before the discovery of Bayer Aspirin most "pain" remedies were advised against by physicians as bad for the stomach and, often, for the heart. Which is food for thought if you seek quick, safe relief. Scientists rate Bayer Aspirin among the fastest methods yet discovered for the relief of headaches and the pains of rheumatism, neuritis and neuralgia. And the experience of millions of users has proved it safe for the average person to use regularly. In your own interest remember this. You can get Genuine Bayer Aspirin at any drug store — simply by asking for it by its full name, BAYER ASPIRIN. Make it a point to do this — and see that you get what you want. SOCIAL EVENTS D. A. R. Meeting Here Tomorrow The Daughters of the American Revolution will hold a regular meeting in the Pioneer House tomorrow (Friday, October 18) at which time the Guest Day will be observed. Arthur Corey of Santa Ana will be the speaker of the day and has chosen as his subject “The Merchant of Death.” The musical program for the occasion will be furnished by Mrs. F. H. Clabaugh of Santa Ana. Hostesses for the day will be Mrs. L. J. Sheridan, Mrs. J. S. Sheridan, and Mrs. L. S. Deming. Dance Planned by Auxiliary at Placentia Plans were completed yesterday by the members of the American Legion Auxiliary in Placentia to hold a dance in the American Legion hall there in October 26, a week from next Saturday. The committee in immediate charge of the affair is made up of the chairmen of the rehabilitation and child welfare committees and the funds will be used for the post's welfare work. Fullerton Ebell Meets Friday Buena Park Women’s Club Meeting Today With Rolland Upton, superintendent of the Buena Park school as the scheduled speaker, "Constitution of the United States of America" was the program theme at the meeting of the Buena Park Women's club this afternoon at the clubhouse. Election of a new treasurer continued plans for the convention of October 31 features of the business session. Announcement was made benefit theatre party planned November 19 at the local house. Tickets may be obtained from any member of the fin committee. Surprise Program and Tea at Fullerton A surprise program is scheduled for the public tea to be held afternoon of October 22 in Fullerton Methodist church labs. The Westside Circle of Women's Aid is sponsoring affair. Tea hours are from 2:00 to 4:00 are to invite guests. To Organize To Conserve S Scientists Rate Bayer Aspirin among the fastest methods get discovered for the relief of headaches and the pains of rheumatism, neuritis and neuralgia. And the experience of millions of users has proved it safe for the average person to use regularly. In your own interest remember this. You can get Genuine Bayer Aspirin at any drug store — simply by asking for it by its full name, BAYER ASPIRIN. Make it a point to do this — and see that you get what you want. Bayer Aspirin DAN O'HANLON Auto Insurance—All Cars, $14.30 a year 309-11 N. Spadra, Fullerton Established 1920 COMMON CAUSE OF BALDNESS One of the chief causes of premature grayness, falling hair and ultimate baldness is lack of circulation in the scalp. To overcome this and bring an abundant supply of blood to nourish the hair roots, massage scalp at night with Japanese Oil, the antiseptic counter-irritant. Thousands of men and women report amazing results in stopping falling hair, growing new hair on bald areas and in eliminating dandruff and itching scalp. Japanese Oil costs but 60c at any drugst. Economy size, $1. FREE "The Truth About the Hair." Write Dept. 36. NATIONAL REMEDY CO. 50 West 43th Street, New York THE CORN IS GONE A drop or two of Corn-Fix stops the palm almost instantly—10 minutes after the corn is GONE—roots and all. Recommended by your drugtist for the safe removal of hard and soft corn, callouss, bumps. Money back if it fails. CORN FIX FIXES CORNS FULLERTON EBELL MEETS FRIDAY "Jewels" will be the program theme at the meeting of the Fullerton Ebell club tomorrow afternoon at the clubhouse. Members until 4 p.m. JOHNS-MANVILLE Roofing & Coatings None Better—Many Inferior PATTEN-BLINN 1133 Lincoln Phone 2319 BELMONT CAFE Now Open Under New Management COMPLETE CAFE SERVICE STEAK 50c DINNER 243 WEST CENTER STREET Save Your Eyes Dr. C. Oliver Patterson Optometrist 109 So. Los Angeles Street Phone 3607—Anaheim FREE! One Dollar's worth of Beauty work ABSOLUTELY FREE! Inquire about it at our shop Our $5.00 Croquignole Permanents for a limited time $3.50 Property owners and operators of lands within the recently tablished 25,000 acre soil erosion control demonstration area in environs of El Toro will meet Wednesday, October 30, to coed and perfect an association; purpose of the organization; cording to Farm Advisor H.E. Wahlberg, is to have a representative group of property owners through which the Fe agencies may negotiate matters general or specific interest to community involved in the conservation program that has been started in that district. FOX ANAHEIM 229 W. Center Phone Sunday, Monday, Tuesda October 20-21-22 Sun. Continuous from 2 p. "BARBARY COAST" with Miriam Hopkins Edw. G. Robinson Joel McCrea AND "HERE COMES COOKIE" with George Burns-Grable All Wednesday Only Oct. "EVERY NIGHT AT EIGHT" with George, Raft-Alice Faye Thursday, Friday, Saturday October 24-25-26 CLAUDETTE COLBERT in "SHE MARRIED HER BOSS" AND "ANNAPOLIS FAREWELL" One Dollar's worth of Beauty work ABSOLUTELY FREE! Inquire about it at our shop Our $5.00 Croquignole Permanents for a limited time $3.50 RUBY'S CURLY TOP SHOP 125 East Center Phone 3433 WE HAVE THEM NOW HEAR THE NEW ZENITH THE ALL-FEATURE Radio of 1936 Zenith No. 6-S-27 ... 6 tubes, Tunes American and Foreign Stations; police, amateur, aviation conversations, ships at sea. Black Magnavision Dial. Split-Second Tuning. The new 1936 Zeniths are here! Every worth-while feature. Zenith's new Black Magnavision Dial—Overtone Amplifier—and many other features that give the new Zeniths excellent tone quality—better all 'round performance. Ask for the radio with the black dial. SUPERIOR RADIO SERVICE PAUL DAVIDSON, Prop. 308 West Center Street, Anaheim Phone 4304 VENTS of the WEEK Bona Park Women's Club Meeting Today In Rolland Upton, superintendent of the Bona Park schools, scheduled speaker, "The institution of the United States America" was the program at the meeting of the Bona Women's club this afternoon in clubhouse. Action of a new treasurer and budget plans for the county extension of October 31 were ones of the business session. Encouancement was made of a theatre party planned for November 19 at the local playhouse. Tickets may be obtained any member of the finance committee. prise Program L Tea Fullerton prise program is scheduled the public tea to be held the moon of October 22 in the Methodist church parish. The Westside Circle of the men's Aid is sponsoring the Tea hours are from 2 p.m. to invite guests. Organize To Conserve Soil property owners and operators Church Class To Hold Benefit Dinner Sponsored by the Loyal Women's class of the Fullerton Christian church, a benefit ham dinner will be held tomorrow in the church recreation hall. Dinner service will begin at 6:30 p.m. A program is also planned. Reservations may be made by calling Mrs. W. H. Wickett. Telephone Co. To Make Line Changes Anticipating changes to be made by the state highway department in the Santa Ana Canyon Road where important long distance telephone lines are located, the Southern California Telephone Company has commenced a construction project involving an expenditure of more than $35,000 to relocate a section of its circuits between Anaheim and Corona. This line is a major route between Los Angeles, Anaheim, Corona, Escondido and San Diego. The work, to be completed about December of this year, includes placing more than 200 poles, 1,800 crossarms and stringing a total of 291 miles of copper wire together with the removal of 143 poles, 1,300 crossarms, and 300 miles of wire along a 3½-mile section. Extensive changes to be made in the highway will make this area unsafe for the telephone lines. How some automobile drivers have the gall to call the animals they see enclosed in pastures along the road dumb, is more than I can understand... Coming back from Los Angeles last Sunday afternoon I saw a man drive out onto the highway, stop with the front wheels on one side of the center stripe and the rear wheels on the other, and then get out to read the direction sign he had just passed on the cross road. Wonder why he calls the poor innocent animals dumb... but then they say the world looks drunk to the inebriated man. And now, look at this... here I come to work this morning (it shouldn't be necessary to say which morning... the boss knows... and after all that's all that matters) but here I come in and find a black hand note threatening my whiskers... Have turned the matter over to the authorities, and they said there was only one person in Anaheim whose hieroglyphics (whatever that means, but Leo 'Frisi is authority for spelling and I've forgotten who told me about that disease) matched up with the... now what the heck was that thing... o, yes, a note telling me that I was hiding behind... or was it that I was ashamed of my face... or maybe Ray Smith just can't raise a heard Organize To Conserve Soil property owners and operators ends within the recently escheduled 25,000 acre soil erosion control demonstration area in the town of El Toro will meet on Tuesday, October 30, to consider perfect an association. The use of the organization, acting to Farm Advisor Harold Wahlberg, is to have a reprehensive group of property own-through which the Federal laws may negotiate matters of real or specific interest to theunity involved in the soil erosion program that has started in that district. Los Angeles, Anaheim, Corona, Escondido and San Diego. The work, to be completed about December of this year, includes placing more than 200 poles, 1,800 crossarms and stringing a total of 291 miles of copper wire together with the removal of 143 poles, 1,300 crossarms, and 300 miles of wire along a 3½-mile section. Extensive changes to be made in the highway will make this area unsafe for the telephone lines during blasting and grading operations, and the company will move the 80-wire line to private property where it is unlikely to be affected by future changes. A large crew of men with motor equipment has been assigned to the task. The move is made at the suggestion of the Washington office of the Soil Conservation Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, as a more direct means of contacting the people in the project, in the dissemination of information concerning the nature and effects of soil erosion and methods of controlling it; also to encourage all farmers to adopt preventive erosion practices and control measures. The meeting will be held at 7:30 P.M., at the Soil Conservation Camp at El Toro. The local committee in charge of the meeting is Ben Osterman, Harvey Bennett and Raymond Prothero of El Toro; C.R.Browning, Tustin and Harold E.Wahlberg, County Farm Advisor. To Conduct Corn, Hog Referendum A referendum on the question of whether there will be a corn and hog adjustment program in 1936 will be conducted among all corn and hog producers on Saturday, October 26, the Secretary of Agriculture announced. In the referendum, corn and hog producers will vote on the question: "Do you favor a corn-hog adjustment program to follow the 1935 program, which expires November 30, 1935" Here in Orange County a meeting is called for 10:00 A.M., October 25, at 622 N. Main Street, Santa Ana, to explain the corn-hog outlook, according to W.M.Gray Assistant Farm Advisor At my whiskers... Have turned the matter over to the authorities, and they said there was only one person in Anaheim whose hieroglyphics (whatever that means, but Leo Friis is authority for spelling and I've forgotten who told me about that disease) matched up with the... now what the heck was that thing... o, yes, a note telling me that I was hiding behind... or was it that I was ashamed of my face... or maybe Ray Smith just can't raise a beard and consequently there might be just a little sour grapes connected with it... Anyway who cares... Have spent most of this week—so far—acting as a body guard for a cop... yes sir... the Anaheim Cops don't take any chances when they go out of town... even Jimmy has to have a body guard when visiting Placentia. There's a lota bewhiskered gentlemen in Anaheim that don't know cooperation when they see it. They've all been trying to raise an hirsute decoration that will look good... bad or indifferent... and just because I shaved off a week's growth to let them catch up to me now they're wondering... well, look me over a week from now and I'll be right up with them again. They say that it used to be easy to tell father and son, but now that they're all raising a beard you have to guess sometimes... however, it's easy in most cases... the one with the most beard is the son. They tell me some of the cops have been seen sneaking into the various beauty parlors in town... hard to determine just why... the beards are not long enough for a permanent... however, understand Jim Bouldin (chief to you) and Sergeant Pifer admitted they had had their General Arthur's dyed... (I believe that should be spelled died). Teed Wilder says when he gets through his beard will match the paint job on his automobile... and won't that be a mess.) Wonder how many mustaches will survive the ordeal of Hallowe'en? West Virginiaans and hog producers on Saturday, October 26, the Secretary of Agriculture announced. In the referendum, corn and hog producers will vote on the question: "Do you favor a corn-hog adjustment program to follow the 1935 program, which expires November 30, 1935" Here in Orange County a meeting is called for 10:00 A.M., October 25, at 622 N. Main Street, Santa Ana, to explain the corn-hog outlook, according to W. M. Cory, Assistant Farm Advisor. At this time growers will be given an opportunity to vote using the absent voters privilege. On Saturday, October 26, the polling place will be at C. E. Price's residence, 1001 Hickory Street, Santa Ana. The polling place will be open from 8:00 a.m. to 10 p.m. The referendum will be by secret ballot. All operators and owners of farms which produced field corn or hogs in 1935 are eligible to vote. The decision as to whether or not another program will be developed rests with the producers themselves. The referendum is intended to provide opportunity for full and free expression, both for and against a voluntary adjustment program on the part of all corn and hog producers. Vars may come and Vars may go, but We Continue To Serve That Excellent Daily 25c Merchants' Lunch and that Saturday and Sunday Dinner 35c AL'S CAFE 3 East Center Anaheim Where Your Appetite Meets Its Equal HAROLD'S AUTO SERVICE AUTO ELECTRICIANS Willard Batteries and Delco Waterproof Mallory COIL AND IGNITION 419 West Center — Phone 3503 ALPHA BETA FOOD MARKET THE BEST FOR LESS EAST CENTER AT EMILY WEST CENTER AT PALM PEACHES Sliced or Halves Yellow Clings No. 2½ cans 3 for 35¢ PEANUT BUTTER 1c for container 2 lbs. 25¢ FIG BARS Fresh 2 lbs. 22¢ PINEAPPLE No. 1½ size, 4 large slices 10¢ SPICES 4 OZ. CANS Pepper Cinnamon Nutmeg. Sage. Ginger Cloves All Spice 10¢ CORNSTARCH, Kingsford, 1 lb. pkgs. 2 for 15¢ SALAD DRESSING, Brookfield, qt. jar 32¢ PINEAPPLE, Match Slices, No. 2½ 2 for 29¢ GLOBE A-1 FLOUR 24½ lb. Bag 99¢ COFFEE, Coffee Cup ... ground fresh ... lb. 15¢ MATCHES, Ohio Blue Tip ... 6 large boxes 23¢ GLOBE A-1 FLOUR 24½ lb. Bag 99¢ COFFEE, Coffee Cup ... ground fresh ... lb. 15¢ MATCHES, Ohio Blue Tip ... 6 large boxes 23¢ RITZ CRACKERS, ... 1 lb. pkg. ... 22¢ TOMATO JUICE MASTERPIECE No. 1 Tall Can 5¢ CORN FLAKES, Miller's fresh and crispy, pkg. 6¢ FORMAY SHORTENING ... 3 lbs. 55¢ SNOWDRIFT SHORTENING ... 3 lbs. 56¢ SWANSDOWN CAKE FLOUR Large Pkg. 26¢ SALMON, Fancy pink, tall cans ... 10¢ CHOCOLATES, Old Fashion, fresh made lb. 10¢ TOMATO SAUCE, Best grade ... 5 for 15¢ MAYONNAISE BOOKFIELD Gallon Jar $1 18 10c Jar Deposit QUALITY MEATS Alpha Beta's Imperial Valley Select Cut Imperial Valley Steer SIRLOIN STEAKS ... lb. 25¢ SMALL RIB OR LOIN Pork CHOPS ... lb. 35¢ OTHER CUTS CHEAPER CARROTS - TURNIPS BEETS - RADISHES 3 Bunches 5¢ FANCY NANCY HALL YAMS Select Cut Imperial Valley Steer SIRLOIN STEAKS ... lb. 25¢ SMALL RIB OR LOIN Pork CHOPS ... lb. 35¢ OTHER CUTS CHEAPER HERE IS A TREAT Tender Juicy Fresh Ham PORK ROAST ... lb. 25¢ EITHER END Ground Steak ... lb. 20¢ Stewing Beef ... lb. 15¢ SHOULDER STEER BEEF ROAST ... lb. 18¢ These are not neck cuts Short Ribs ... lb. 10¢ Beef Roast, round bone, lb. 20¢ Round Steak ... lb. 25¢ SHORTENING 2 ... lbs. ... 25¢ SHOULDER LAMB ... lb. 18¢ Swiss Steak ... lb. 25¢ 3 Bunches 5¢ FANCY NANCY HALL YAMS 4 ... lbs. ... 10¢ CAULIFLOWERS Each 7¢ FANCY DELICIOUS APPLES 8 ... lbs. ... 25¢ FANCY K. Y'S STRING BEANS 4 ... lbs. ... 15¢ FANCY BURRANK POTATOES 10 ... lbs. ... 15¢