anaheim-gazette 1937-04-15
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Anaheim, Calif., April 15, 1937
You simply can't beat it!
"EVERYBODY'S LIMITED" began daily operation in June, 1935.
Originated by UNION PACIFIC, this famous train has revolutionized travel with new comforts and conveniences, the newest of which is a beautiful air-conditioned LOUNGE CAR for the use of Pullman Tourist Sleeping Car passengers... introduced by UNION PACIFIC over two months ago.
On THE CHALLENGER you will find:
★ Air-Conditioned LOUNGE CAR for the use of Pullman Tourist Sleeping Car passengers.
★ De Luxe Coaches exclusively for women and children.
★ Air-conditioned throughout.
★ Registered Nurse-Stewardess service.
★ Soft blue night lights—free pillows.
★ Breakfast 25¢, Luncheon 30¢, Dinner 35¢.
★ Pullman Tourist Sleeping cars.
The MARCH
Prepared by the Editors of TI
IT—
TULSA, Oklahoma—Haled into a Tulsa court, Tom Bailey told Police Judge A. A. Hatch that he did not know whether or not he was intoxicated when picked up by the police. Asked Judge Hatch: "Did everything sort of wave up and down? . . . Did you feel mighty happy and grand, and love everyone in the whole world? And did you also feel like you could whip the pants off any mother's son alive?" "Yeah, that's it," replied Tom Bailey.
SPINSTER EMOTIONS—
DURHAM, North Carolina—To probe scientifically into the emotional susceptibilities of unmarried women, Brown university's Psychologist Raymond Royce Willoughby prepared a list of 40 questions, submitted them to more than 500 single women between the ages of 15 and 75, set forth his findings last week in Duke university's psychological quarterly "Character and Personality."
Incorporated in a graph, Psychologist Willoughby's findings showed that spinster emotionality went from a new level at the tender age of 15 to a peak at 25, dipped slightly at age 30, reached another peak at 35. Then came a dip of placidity, with its lowest point at age 45, then a climb reaching the highest peak of all at 60. Explained he: "We may perhaps think of the two rises in the curve as associated respectively with increasing tension from the life-problems of sexual ad-
On THE CHALLENGER you will find:
★ Air-Conditioned LOUNGE CAR for the use of Pullman Tourist Sleeping Car passengers.
★ De Luxe Coaches exclusively for women and children.
★ Air-conditioned throughout.
★ Registered Nurse-Stewardess service.
★ Soft blue night lights-free pillows.
★ Breakfast 25¢, Luncheon 30¢, Dinner 35¢.
★ Restful Pullman Tourist Sleeping cars.
Ask anyone who has ridden the thrifty way east on The Challenger about its enjoyable, friendly atmosphere—its many desirable features. Then ask us for travel advice and complete information on low one-way and round-trip SUMMER FARES.
EXAMPLE
One-way fare to Chicago . . . $34.50 $44.36
7 "Challenger" meals enroute . . . 2.05 2.05
Pullman-Tourist Lower Berth . . . $36.55 $54.91
For complete information
R. A. PARKER, Agbat, Anaheim.
Union Pacific Station, Phone 3519
THE PROGRESSIVE
UNION PACIFIC
KC Baking Powder Will Be Used by
NANCY BAKER
in the
Anaheim Gazette Cooking School
The lecturer uses the double-tested—double-action KC baking powder to demonstrate how you can produce delicious bakings of fine texture and large volume. Well-known domestic science lecturers and millions of housewives know from experience there is real satisfaction and economy in using
The lecturer uses the double-tested—double-action KC baking powder to demonstrate how you can produce delicious bakings of fine texture and large volume. Well-known domestic science lecturers and millions of housewives know from experience there is real satisfaction and economy in using
KC BAKING POWDER
Same Price Today as 45 Years Ago
25 OUNCES FOR 25¢
Manufactured by Baking Powder Specialists who make nothing but Baking Powder—under supervision of expert chemists of national reputation. The quality is always uniform—KC is dependable.
Use KC in your favorite recipes. Follow instructions given you by the demonstrator. It will produce the finest of baked goods at low cost. You will realize why KC Baking Powder is the choice of millions.
Guaranteed pure — economical — efficient
Use only one LEVEL teaspoonful of KC Baking Powder to a cup of slifted flour for most recipes.
MILLIONS OF POUNDS HAVE BEEN USED BY OUR GOVERNMENT
ANAHEIM GAZETTE
The MARCH OF TIME
Published by the Editors of TIME The Weekly Newsmagazine
Oklahoma—Haled into court, Tom Bailey told Judge A. A. Hatch that he knew whether or not he located when picked up police. Asked Judge said everything sort of down? . . . Did you love happy and grand, and one in the whole world? You also feel like you to the pants off any on alive?" "Yeah, that's Tom Bailey.
EMOTIONS—
M, North Carolina—To statistically into the emo-tributions of unmarried, Brown university's first Raymond Royce prepared a list of 40 submitted them to more single women between ages of 15 and 75, set forth last week in Duke University's psychological quarterster and Personality." Created in a graph, Psy-Willoughby's findings that spinster emotionality is a new level at the age of 15 to a peak at 25, nightly at age 30, reached peak at 35. Then came a acidity, with its lowest age 45, then a climb to the highest peak of all explained he: "We may think of the two rises in association respective-increasing tension from problems of sexual ad-
plane in after Bohnet. But Pilot Wilkins studied Pilot Bohnet's plane attentively when he noticed that it was wallowing, losing speed. Suddenly it rolled over as if about to bank, went completely out of control, dived 500 feet straight down, smashed into the ground killing all thirteen abroad—10 passengers, two pilots, one hostess.
Ground witnesses at once began spinning their usual inaccurate stories, but in this third major air disaster of 1937 investigators had an expert witness to rely on—Captain Wilkins, who radioed the alarm. Reaching the scene in a few minutes with his story fresh in their minds, TWA's experts noted that although the wing deers had worked, a long ridge of ice on the leading edges of the ailerons had not been dislodged even by the crash, was still an inch and a half thick. Other transports in the vicinity of the crash had reported icing conditions, but apparently Bohnet's plane passed through a particularly saturated cloud, a spot of "bird-walking weather" (weather so bad that even birds walk the ground) just as he dropped through the overcast. That night TWA officially blamed the crash on iced ailerons, and although the bureau of air commerce said nothing, the fact that they allowed the wrecked ship to be burned was taken as tacit agreement.
ROSEBUD ROW
OKLAHOMA CITY—To the account of Judas Iscariot's hanging last week that congress make the CCC a permanent U. S. agency with an enrollment of 300,000 young men and veterans, 10,000 Indians, 5,000 workers in U. S. territories and islands. Wrote he: "There is still need for providing useful and healthful employment for a large number of our youthful citizens."
But Franklin Roosevelt still refused to say or do anything about the sit-down epidemic, left it to new dealers in senate and house to take the initiative without involving him, thus appeasing those who wanted action without losing favor with labor.
CONGRESS—
WASHINGTON — The senate last week passed and sent to the house for action on minor amendments the Guffey-Vinson coal control bill. Aimed to stabilize the sick coal industry, the bill lacks the labor provisions which caused the supreme court invalidation of the original Guffey Coal act, creates a National Bituminous Coal commission to fix minimum prices, enforce a code of fair practices.
The senate also passed without a roll call and sent to the house the wheat crop insurance bill to provide a $100,000,000 appropriation to establish the Federal Crop Insurance Corp. through which wheat farmers, paying premiums in grain or cash, can insure their crops against natural hazards. If this pioneer legislation, which is concerned with the 1938 crop only, prove efficacious, the new deal hopes to extend it to other staples, make general crop insurance a permanent government policy.
The senate also passed and sent to the house the Wheeler ammunitions to the Federal Trade Commission act to empower the mission to proceed against individuals an decorporations exploiting or deceiving the general public whether their practices are used to their competitors or not.
Meanwhile the house virtuously scuttled new deal plans for proving the lot of tenant farm and sharecroppers, killed in mittee (13 to 11) the section the Farm Tenancy bill proves for an annual $50,000,000 apriation (for 10 years) to find farmers seeking to purchase farms they now operate for absentees.
SQUIRES VS. FARMERS—
ROLLING ROCK, Pennsylvania—Where sporting courts squires ride to hounds over ferrers' fields, farmers perennials growl that their fences are broken down, their crops tram while squires reply that privates and increased property values for the damage they do.
One such place is Rolling Rock in Pennsylvania's Ligonier valley 50 miles outside of Pittsburg where one President Rick Mellon of the $340,000,000 M.National bank turned his inheritance 12,000 acres into a loosely organized country club, those men share the expenses of maintaining one of the best U. S. pack English fox hounds, raising pigs, and running the Golden steepelechase.
Rolling Rock Country hunts over 75,000 acres, owned by 240 neighboring farmers to whom Rolling Rockantees extra work at $3 a day—the privilege of hunting on
ROSEBUD ROW
OKLAHOMA CITY—To the account of Judas Iscariot's hanging himself after betraying Jesus Christ, according to the Gospel of St. Matthew, there later was added the famed, odd detail that Judas hanged himself on a flowering tree whose blossoms turned red in shame. The Judas or redbud tree, which flourishes in the south of the U.S., made news last week when at the behest of Oklahoma clubwomen the state legislature passed a bill declaring the redbud the state's official tree.
But one clubwoman, Mrs. Roberta Lawson of Tulsa, first vice president of the General Federation of Women's clubs, believed the tree on which Judas hanged himself was no tree for Oklahoma, telegraphed her opinion to Governor Ernest Whitworth Marland, who had as yet not signed the bill. Meanwhile, to the defense of the redbud rallied two determined clubwomen. One declared the redbud and Judas tree "aren't technically the same," cited an Oklahoma City clergyman as authority for the fact that Holy Writ does not specify where Judas hanged himself. The other deductively asserted that if anyone wanted to kill himself he'd "pick out something sturdier than our pretty little redbud."
Governor Marland, fearful of political pitfalls in the redbud bill, said he was giving it his "mature judgment."
WORDS—
LOS ANGELES—Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ewins of Los Angeles last week mailed printed postcards to announce the birth of a daughter — "Another Social Security Prospect (Class of 2002 A. D.):
"Name: Elizabeth Theresa Ewins...."
"Weight: 7 lbs. 6 oz...."
"First Words: 'Don't Let Roosevelt Pack the Supreme Court'."
PRESIDENCY—
WASHINGTON — President Roosevelt was last week visited
WASHINGTON — President Roosevelt was last week visited by New York's Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia, spokesman for other U.S. mayors protesting a new PWA rule that requires all federal grants for public works projects to be spent on relief labor. Next came a delegation of the house of representatives who wanted to appropriate $300,000,000 more for PWA, which now has only $155,-000,000 left to spend.
Answering "no" to both, the President at his press conference next day delivered an economic dissertation to explain why he was in favor of tapering off PWA activities, pointed out that the heavy industries such as steel no longer lagged behind the consumer goods industries as they did in the early stages of recovery, that it was therefore no longer necessary to prime the pump by public works. He intimated that the prices of steel, copper, etc., were too high, much more than enough to cover increased labor costs and indicating that a larger share of the national income was going into building factories and machines than into wages and the purchase of food and clothing. Thus, the President served notice that pump-priming was at an end, that the business of getting out of the last depression is now subordinate to the business of avoiding the next.
The President also recommended...
the house the Wheeler amendments to the Federal Trade Common act to empower the commons to proceed against individual corporations exploiting
receiving the general public
other their practices are unfair
to their competitors or not.
Meanwhile the house virtually
added new deal plans for impacting the lot of tenant farmers
sharecroppers, killed in commance (13 to 11) the section of
Farm Tenancy bill providing
an annual $50,000,000 approvision (for 10 years) to finance
ers seeking to purchase farms
now operate for absentee
ers.
MIRES VS. FARMERS—
ROLLING ROCK, Pennsylvania
wherever sporting country
ties ride to hounds over farmfields, farmers perennially
all that their fences are brokown, their crops trampled,
squires reply that privileges
increased property values pay
the damage they do.
The such place is Rolling Rock,
Pennsylvania's Ligonier valley,
eniles outside of Pittsburgh,
the onetime President Richard
Brown of the $340,000,000 Mellon
bank turned his inherited
20 acres into a loosely organcountry club, those members
are the expenses of maintaining
of the best U. S. packs of
fish fox hounds, raising phcastics and running the Gold Cup
lechase.
Rolling Rock Country club
is over 75,000 acres, mostly
used by 240 neighboring farmers whom Rolling Rock guaries extra work at $3 a day for
privilege of hunting on their
acres. But 49 of these farmers,
doing extra work at Rolling Rock last week, suddenly left their
plows, went on strike, sent four
representatives to the Pittsburgh
office of Rolling Rock's Master of
Fox Hounds "Dick" Mellon, son
of founder R. B. Mellon, to present their demands: 10c an hour
more pay, wider privileges.
Promptly rendered was a Mellon decision to close $2,500,000
Rolling Rock entirely, ship its horses elsewhere, sell its machinery, deprive Ligonier valley of its $120,000 annual revenue. Said M.
F. H. "Dick" Mellon: "We have done everything we possibly could do. Why, once we were selling eggs. The natives complained and we stopped. I have even gone so far as to ask my
(Continued on page 4)
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Compared with other foods, Acme Beer is relatively non-fattening.
DISTRIBUTOR
H. R. BRINKERHOFF
310 E. Third St.
Santa Ana, California
the Ostrich
IS AN INTERESTING BIRD
but he misses a lot of things
TAKE A LESSON from the ostrich.
Keep alert so you won't miss anything!
TAKE A LESSON from the ostrich.
Keep alert so you won't miss anything!
Right now, the newest thing in cooking circles is Electric Cookery.
Do you know, for instance, that you can throw away your double boiler when you cook on an Electric Range?
And that you can cook vegetables with so little water it's practically "waterless cooking"? And that electric heat keeps pans so clean that they and scouring powder become perfect strangers?
These and other latest discoveries in easier cooking highlight the new All-Electric Cooking School. There will be new entertainment features, and many free prizes.
Mark the dates on your calendar now!
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
EDISON COMPANY LTD.