anaheim-gazette 1936-12-24
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The MARCH OF TIME
Prepared by the Editors of TIME The Weekly Nowsmagazine
(Continued from Page 1)
plan as follows: "The two will be as nearly alike as the 1937 and 1936 models of automobiles. We think we have perfected a new carburetor for the 1937 program." It will cost the same $500,000,000, would be basically the same as the apparatus whipped together last spring after the supreme court ruled against the AAA act.
As a reward for diverting their acres from "soil-depleting" crops (cotton, wheat, corn, tobacco) to "soil-building" crops (alfalfa, soybeans, grasses), farmers will get federal bounties averaging slightly less than $10 per acre, will be able (no matter how small the farm) to get at least $20 next year as compared with a $10 minimum during the current year. The "new carburetor" is an explanation of schedules enabling the farmer to figure out his bounty in advance. Thus, by the back door of soil conservation, the New Deal will achieve some production of cash crops forbidden by the supreme court.
While under the defunct AAA act farmer was bound by contract to reduce his cash crops by specified percentages, he may now reduce them voluntarily within department of agriculture specifications and be rewarded according to his co-operation. To control next year's corn crop, however, the department last week proposed to set definite acreage limits.
it necessary for a patient to more than 18 doses of lobelia any 24 hours. Usually three capsules a day have superseded some nausea, a metallic taste, an uncertain feeling of malaise but no more unpleasant tums."
$1000 PER PLANE—MADRID — Hilariously brating in the ship's bar on Normandie with their first vance pay cheeks from S radical government, six able ed States aviators were en last week for Madrid to join Acosta, pilot of Admiral H transatlantic flight, to b against Generalissimo Franco's rebel planes. Pay
While under the defunct AAA act farmer was bound by contract to reduce his cash crops by specified percentages, he may now reduce them voluntarily within department of agriculture specifications and be rewarded according to his co-operation. To control next year's corn crop, however, the department last week proposed to set definite acreage limits, enforced by an extra reward and penalty.
AAA legalities reluctantly concede that this production control is quite as direct as that achieved by the AAA act, expect to get away with it because a complainant would have difficulty getting into court for a test case. If it escapes the supreme court's interdiction, the new scheme can easily be extended to all the other cash crops which the AAA act was created to control.
"BRIDE OF THE LION"
PHILADELPHIA — At Fort Worth's Frontier Centennial exposition in Texas last summer Broadway Showman Billy Rose worked up an act called "Beauty and the Beast" in which shapely Lawrene Nevell, clad only in breech-cloth, brassiere and flow-emanated from backstage. A juggler rushed out, distracted the audience by beginning his act in front of the curtain, while behind it Dr. Hamiter tugged a lion named George off the prostrate form of Gladys Cote. Her lacerations were not fatal, but bacteria under the lion's claws were. Gangrene developed and in three days Bride Cote was dead.
Dr. Hamiter later testified at an inquest that Dancer Cote, vexed by newspaper criticism of the lions' lethargy, had sewed a large bolt on the hem of her veil and presumably thumped George's snout with it. The troupe's Manager Eddie Pierce announced that blameless George would continue to perform in the act, that three girls had already applied to replace Gladys Cote as his bride.
INDIAN TOBACCO—
BALTIMORE, Md.—So deeply fixed among mankind is the smoking habit that United States consumers alone last year bought 134,607,741,257 cigarettes, 4,763,-
for their services: $1,500 a plus $1,000 for each rebel brought down.
"As many as 50,000 Spa have perished since the S war began. By far the g number were non-comb who died at the hands of riv ing squads or were killed battle for Madrid," declared Admiral Cary Trevers Gr chairman of the American N
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INDIAN TOBACCO—
BALTIMORE, Md.—So deeply fixed among mankind is the smoking habit that United States consumers alone last year bought 134,607,741,257 cigarettes, 4,763,-883,047 cigars, 95,875 tons of pipe tobacco, and 18,030 tons of snuff. But while the fact that smoking is not injurious to most people is attested by the microscopic size of the anti-tobacco movement and the infrequency with which reputable physicians inveigh against tobacco, those who do smoke too much are doubly unfortunate because their "pleasant vice" is so extremely hard to break.
For weak-willed oversmokers, therefore, John Hopkins' Dr. John Lanahan Dorsey last week had good news. Writing in "Annals of Internal Medicine," he defined a "real addict" as one who smokes 20 to 50 cigarettes a day. Such a person, wishing to cut out smoking, may try nerve sedatives, hard candy astringent lozenges, gumchewing, but his task is still hard. "After a man has lit a cigar, cigaret or pipe after every meal for many years he will at first be at a loss what to do with his hands at such times. Likewise the confirmed cigarette wants a cigaret between fingers or lips when under any tension."
Dr. Dorsey's simple "cure" requires the smoker to cease abruptly and completely, swallow instead a capsule containing one-eighth grain of lobeline (from the blue flower of the Indian tobacco plant), a drug which smells, tastes and affects the human system almost exactly as nicotine does—but it is not habit-forming as is nicotine. Dr. Dorsey has never found
ANAHEIM GAZETTE
necessary for a patient to take
more than 18 doses of lobeline in
24 hours. Usually three or
capsules a day have sufficed.
On a day or two there may be
nausea, a metallic taste, and
uncertain feeling of malaise,
no more unpleasant symptoms."
0 PER PLANE—
ADRID — Hilariously celeling in the ship's bar of the
mandie with their first addee pay checks from Spain's
local government, six able UnitStates aviators were en route
week for Madrid to join Bert
esta, pilot of Admiral Byrd's
satlantic flight, to battle
inst Generalissimo Francisco
Nico's rebel planes. Payment
al Red Cross, back in Manhattan
from an International Red Cross
meeting in Paris.
GEORGE VI—
LONDON — As Edward VIII was preparing last week to address his people throughout the world by radio after closing his 325-day reign by abdicating in favor of his next younger brother, the Duke of York, Britain's new King George VI dropped immediately into a quiet routine of receiving British home and dominion statesmen at his home.
No. 145 Piceadilly. Then, with 300-odd Privy Councillors assembled in the Throne room of St. James's palace, His Majesty read his accession address: "...I take up the heavy task ... My first day of each; commanded that his own birthday only a few days away be not celebrated; that May 12, 1937, the day on which the Duke of Windsor was to have been crowned, be allowed to stand for himself. On Sunday he went to church.
Meanwhile, after dining for a last time with his Queen Mother, the new King, and his brothers the Dukes of Gloucester and Kent, former King Edward drove through the night and fog to Portsmouth, boarded the British destroyer "Fury," sailed to Boulogne, and entrained for Baron Eugene Rothschild's Castle Enzesfeld in the Austrian Tyrol, 25 miles from Vienna, where he planned to remain "until after Christmas."
In Cannes on the French Riviera, Mrs. Ernest Simpson, for whom Edward abdicated and to whom he referred as "the woman I love" in his radio address, was still secluded in the villa of her host and hostess, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Rogers, was still harassed by newshawks and photographers. With bagfuls of threatening letters arriving daily, Mrs. Simpson urgently asked, as the last Scotland Yard officer cleared out of Cannes five French governmen servicemen be not wipe Meanwhile from Downtown Marie of Rumania's daughter Princess Ileana a Habsburg archduke wife less than 25 miles far Rothschild's Castle Enzesfeld invited Mrs. Simpson to visit Austria.
AUTOGIRO'S CIERVAL
CROYDON, England
Juan de la Cierva built Spanish airplane with no wreckage of a French $60, a knowledge of it and the help of two men about his own age (18) when he built the world's first trimotor plane and accidentally it by flying too slow, de la Cierva did two prime weakness planes were that they dependent upon their need lots of rooftops or take off. After many autogiro before he got the flew the English in 1928, thus won recognition English capital to f
their services: $1,500 a month
is $1,000 for each rebel plane
ought down.
As many as 50,000 Spaniards
are perished since the Spanish
began. By far the greater
number were non-combatants
who died at the hands of rival firsquads or were killed in the
tale for Madrid," declared Rear
General Cary Trevers Grayson,
chairman of the American Nation-
act ... to confer on (Edward) a
dukedom ... He will henceforth
be known as His Royal Highness,
the Duke of Windsor ... I declare
to you my adherence to the strict
principles of constitutional government and my resolve to work."
King George VI, a quiet "family man" like his father, the late
George V, at once set to work
signing messages of congratulation to British near-centarians to
be delivered on the 100th birth-
Special Announcement
Special Announcement
REDUCED
LONG DISTANCE RATES
ON
YOUR CHRISTMAS
AND NEW YEAR'S CALLS
The Southern California Telephone Company announces that the night and Sunday reduced rates for Long Distance calls* will apply from 7 p.m. December 24 to 4:30 a.m. December 26 and from 7 p.m. December 31 to 4:30 a.m. January 2.
This year make your greetings personal by Long Distance.
*Certain foreign points excluded. Ask the Long Distance operator for information.
Just Call
BUSINESS OFFICE
17 N. LEMON ST., ANAHEIM
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA TELEPHONE COMPANY
Anaheim 2101
All Purchases
May Be
GIFT
WRAPPED
A Small Deposit will hold any item until Christmas
YUNG
145 W. Center St.
last Scotland Yard detectives cleared out of Cannes, that her five French government secret servicemen be not withdrawn. Meanwhile from Dowager Queen Marie of Rumania's favorite daughter Princess Ileana, wife of a Habsburg archduke with a castle less than 25 miles from Baron Rothschild's Castle Enzesfeld, invited Mrs. Simpson to visit her in Austria.
AUTOGIRO'S CIERVA—
CROYDON, England—In 1912, Juan de la Cierva built the first Spanish airplane with nothing but the wreckage of a French biplane, $60, a knowledge of arithmetic, and the help of two other boys about his own age (17). Later, when he built the world's second trimotor plane and a test pilot crashed it by flying too low and too slow, de la Cierva decided that two prime weaknesses of airplanes were that they are utterly dependent upon their motors, that they need lots of room to land or take off. After making three autogiro before he got one to fly, he flew the English channel in 1928, thus won recognition, enough English capital to finance the LIBRARY TO CLOSE
The galleries and reading rooms of the Henry E. Huntington library and art gallery will be closed on the day before Christmas and on Christmas day. This schedule will be effective hereafter.
Production of better sugar in the Dominion of Canada totaled 119,857,000 pounds in 1935, an increase of 5 per cent over the preceding year.
Cierva Autogiro Co. and further development of his original autogiro design, culminating this year in the perfection of the jump take-off enabling the giro to rise straight up into the air.
Setting forth the continent one morning last week, Juan de la Cierva boarded a twin-motored Douglas DC-2 monoplane of the Royal Dutch Airlines at Croydon. With visibility limited to 25 yards, the transport headed down the field, veered off-course, clipped a chimney, crashed, exploded, burned for two hours. Among the 14 charred bodies was that of Inventor de la Cierva, victim at 41 of the airplane weaknesses he was the first to solve.
Lectures on Bible To Start Tuesday
A series of lectures on the Bible to be given by J. E. Hardmond, a resident of Anaheim for 12 years, will start this evening at 7:30 o'clock at the K. P. hall, W. Center street.
The lectures, which are no sectarian and non-partisan, will be given each week for an indebted inite period. There will be charge, Hammond said.
All-Year Club Wins Additional Award
Within a month after receiving grand prize from "Advertising and Selling," the tourist promotions campaigns of the All-Year club have been awarded similar claims by "Printers' Ink," to ranking advertising journal of the nation.
"With no idea of flattery, I may say that there is no other travel advertising that 'gets me' as do that of the All-Year club," said R. W. Palmer, associate editor Printers' Ink publications.
A Suit or Topcoat for Him
Will Gladly Exchange Any Item
A Suit or Topcoat for Him
Will Gladly Exchange Any Item
Suits and Topcoats
By Hart-Schaffner and Marx
OTHER GIFT SUGGESTIONS
Why be prudish about it? Maybe he really NEEDS a suit! Come in and select one that pleases YOU! If it shouldn't happen to please him, we will gladly exchange it for one that will.
SHIRTS: Palmdayl, Henden and Manhattan. The world's most famous makes in brocaded silk broadcloths. $1.65 $1.95, $2.50
Trubenized collars ..... $2.50 to $5.00
PURE SILK SHIRTS ..... $2.50 to $5.00
TIES: Hand made, pure silk ..... 55¢ 2 for $1.00
Cheney silks ..... $1.00 $1.50 $2.00
SOCKS: Interwoven silk and wool—All new shades ..... 50¢ 75¢ $1.00
SUSPENDERS—BELTS: Famous Hickok brand ..... 50¢ to $2.50
GLOVES: Capes and pigskins ..... $1.00 to $3.00
MUFFLERS: Imported wool, oblong styles. New ..... $1 and $1.95
HANDKERCHIEFS: Colored borders. Guaranteed fast colors. Packed three to box.
A sure-fire welcome gift ..... 50¢ and 65¢ Box
PAJAMAS: Broadcloths and madras or pure silk. Slip-on, middy or coat style. Novel new styles. What man wouldn't welcome a pair? ..... $1.65 to $6
JACKETS: Suedes or calfskins or pig grains. Plain or sport backs. All the newest styles ..... $6.95 to $10.95
ROBES: All wool flannel in gorgeous checks, plaids or plain colors for the conservative man ..... $5.95 to $12
A sure-fire welcome gift ... and Box
PAJAMAS: Broadcloths and madras or pure silk. Slip-on, middy or coat style. Novel new styles. What man wouldn't welcome a pair? $1.65 to $6
JACKETS: Suedes or calfskins or pig grains. Plain or sport backs. All the newest styles $6.95 to $10.95
ROBES: All wool flannel in gorgeous checks, plaids or plain colors for the conservative man $5.95 to $12
HOUSE SLIPPERS: Made by Evans. Solid kid leather with hard or soft sole. Black, brown or red or combination of black and blue ... $2.50 to $4
HATS
Stetson ... $7.50
Kensington ... $5.00
Penn-Craft ... $3.85
Newest snap brims in warm fall shades.
NGBLUTH'S
Phone 4130