anaheim-gazette 1937-07-22
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NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL PROPERTY BY TRUSTEE UNDER DEED OF TRUST
TRUST NO. 1149
WHEREAS LULU D. BARBARI, a single woman, by Deed of Trust dated February 24th, 1931, registered March 23rd, 1931 as Document No. 224 on Certificate No. 6341 in the office of the Registrar of Titles of Orange County, California, and recorded March 23rd, 1931, in Book 469, page 105 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 February 24th, 1931, payable to JACOB E SCHUMACHER and BERTHA W. SCHUMACHER, husband and wife, as joint tenants, or order, for the principal sum of $3200.00 payable $1500.00 November 15th, 1931, and $1700.00 November 15th, 1932, with interest from February 24th, 1931, at the rate of seven per cent per annum, payable semi-annually. By written agreement the date of maturity of said note was extended to November 6th, 1936.
AND WHEREAS, default has occurred in that balance of the principal due on said note on November 6th, 1936, has not been paid; and
WHEREAS, J. V. HOGAN, RECEIVER, ANAHEIM FIRST NATIONAL BANK, then owner and holder of said note heretofore demanded that said Trustee sell said property and on February 10th, 1937, duly recorded in the office of the County Recorder of said County, in Book 872 page 118 of Official Records thereof, and registered in the office of the Registrar of Titles, a notice of said default and of his election to cause said property to be sold and more than three months have now elapsed since the recordation of said notice. The sum of $1659.50 principal and interest thereon
Mine Blast Victims Removed
SULLIVAN, Ind.—Photo shows a group of three coal miners as they prepare to descend the mine shaft to aid in the removal of 20 charred bodies of their fellow miners who were killed in mine explosion last week.
The MARCH OF TIME
REG. U. S. PAT. OFF.
Prepared by the Editors of TIME The Weekly Newsmagazine
DEBATE AND DEATH—
WASHINGTON — Long cues of curious citizens, four abreast and stretching far down the corridors outside the senate gallery, waited last week to witness one of the biggest and bitterest political fights in a generation: The supreme court battle, at last come into the open on the senate floor. Summoned by the president and given the job of finding a compromise for Franklin Roosevelt's original court enlargement plan now hopelessly bogged down. Senator Joseph T. Robinson was about to offer his substitute amendment: One new justice for every member of the court over 75, but not more than one appointment a year.
At this, Senator Wheeler shrilled: "Those of you who rode in on the coat tails of the president will ride out on the coat tails of the president if that is the only reason you are here."
To this rhetorical gall Senator Robinson added the wormwood of breaking an unwritten rule of the Senate: that its written rules are not rigidly enforced. Some opponents of the court bill had talked of filibustering to prevent its
manded that said Trustee sell said property and on February 10th, 1937, duly recorded in the office of the County Recorder of said County, in Book 872 page 118 of Official Records thereof, and registered in the office of the Registrar of Titles, a notice of said default and of his election to cause said property to be sold and more than three months have now elapsed since the recordation of said notice. The sum of $1659.50 principal and interest thereon from August 24th, 1935, is now due, owing and unpaid on said note and there is also secured by said Deed of Trust the Trustee's fee an expenses of sale, estimated at $200.00, together with any sums paid and advanced by the owner of said note in accordance with provisions of said Deed of Trust, with interest on said last mentioned sum.
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 6th day of August 1937, 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 County of Orange, State of California, described as follows, to-wit:
That portion of Lot One (1) of "Tract No. 71" as shown on a Map recorded in Book 10, page 22 of Miscellaneous Maps, records of Orange County, California, described as follows: Beginning at the point of intersection of the South line of said Lot One (1) extended Westerly and the center line of the California State Highway, as shown on said map; thence North 40° 49' 30" West along said center line 195.17 feet to the true point of beginning of the hereinafter described land; thence North 49° 10' 30" East 175 feet to a point; thence North 40° 49' 30" West on a line parallel with the center line of said California State Highway, 75 feet; thence South 49° 10' 30" West 175 feet to a point in the center line of the California State
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WORK WANTED—By painter. Young man. Experienced. By hour, 50 cents, or by contract. Phone Artesia 5115. 8-12p
FOR SALE—Churns for small quantity of cream. Make butter in three minutes. Just glass jar to clean. Bring cream for demonstration. H. D. McBride, 828 N. Pine St., Anaheim.
$5,000 need to finance a proven money making project. Investment adequately protected, and will yield a large return within a short time. Write Advertiser, Box No. 7, care of Gazette.
10 More nice Uprights; $29-$37-$48—and up; fine to start children; great buy for only 50c a week or more. Danz-Schmidt, 112-116 E. Center, Anaheim.
MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE
Trade — Frigidaires, Appliances, Radios, Furniture; want Planos; come make your selection; we pay highest prices. Danz-Schmidt, 112-116 E. Center, Anaheim.
WASHINGTON — Although he has drafted most of his oldtime friends and political advisers for government service, Franklin Roosevelt had up to last week never called upon Friend Samuel I.
magnificent leadership.
At this, Senator Wheeler shrilled: "Those of you who rode in on the coat tails of the president will ride out on the coat tails of the president if that is the only reason you are here."
To this rhetorical gall Senator Robinson added the wormwood of breaking an unwritten rule of the senate: that its written rules are not rigidly enforced. Some opponents of the court bill had talked of filibustering to prevent its passage, but Senator Robinson began to use anti-filibuster tactics long before any real filibuster had begun. One negelected rule which he undertook suddenly to enforce was that no senator shall be permitted to speak more than twice on the same day on any one measure. Senator Pittman took this to mean twice in one "legislative day," and since the "legislative day" is a fiction which can if necessary be carried on for weeks at a time, this would prevent an extended filibuster.
When Postmaster Farley asked newspapermen whether such senators as Nevada's Pat McCarran and Wyoming's Joseph O'Mahoney could afford to vote against the court bill if they ever again expected to come to him for patronage, Senator McCarran dramatically uprose from a sickbed against his doctor's orders to cry: "I thing this cause is worthy of any man's life."
Not Senator McCarran, however, but Arkansas' Joe Robinson, main spring in the court fight and ranking candidate for the supreme court vacancy left by retired Justice Van Devanter, gave his life for the cause. Only a few days later, at 8:15 one morning, Joe Robinson's lifeless body was found beside his bed on the floor of his apartment. He had apparently risen during the night and been stricken with a heart attack.
Stunned senators promptly forgot their differences and adjourned, thus ending the "legislative day of July 6" which Mr. Robinson himself had set, and prepared for a state funeral in the senate chamber.
FRIEND DRAFTED—
WASHINGTON — Although he has drafted most of his oldtime friends and political advisers for government service, Franklin Roosevelt had up to last week never called upon Friend Samuel I.
said map; thence North 40° 49' 30" West along said center line 195.17 feet to the true point of beginning of the hereinafter described land; thence North 49° 10' 30" East 175 feet to a point; thence North 40° 49' 30" West on a line parallel with the center line of said California State Highway, 75 feet; thence South 49° 10' 30" West 175 feet to a point in the center line of the California State Highway as shown on said map of Tract 71; thence South 40° 49' 30" East along said center line 75 feet to the true point of beginning.
Subject to reservations and rights 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 8th day of July, 1937.
ORANGE COUNTY
TITLE COMPANY,
By H. A. GARDNER,
(Corporate Seal) By GEO. A. PARKER,
Secretary.
FINE PRINTING...NO JOB...TOO SMALL
ANAHEIM GAZETTE
Reasonable Prices
Phone 2414 259 E. Center
10 More nice Uprights; $29-$37-$48—and up; fine to start children; great buy for only 50c a week or more. Danz-Schmidt, 112-116 E. Center, Anaheim.
MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE
Trade — Frigidaires, Appliances, Radios, Furniture; want Pianos; come make your selection; we pay highest prices. Danz-Schmidt, 112-116 E. Center, Anaheim.
PAINTING & PAPERHANGING
Painting and paper hanging. J. E. Saylor, 131 W. Chartres, Ph. 2761.
PIANOS FOR SALE
Bungalow Pianos, repossessed, pay out small balance like rent. Danz-Schmidt, 112 E. Center, Anaheim.
Beautiful little Baby Grand; finish like new for small balance of only $269; can be paid out less than rent. Danz-Schmidt, Anaheim.
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ROOMS FOR RENT
Single room, private entrance, suitable for gentleman. Inquire at 205 So. Claudina St., Phone 4240.
THE GAZETTE has been doing the finest in job printing for 67 years. Let us do your next job. Phone 2414.
FRIEND DRAFTED—
WASHINGTON — Although he has drafted most of his oldtime friends and political advisers for government service, Franklin Roosevelt had up to last week never called upon Friend Samuel I. Rosenman, his counsel as governor whom he named to the New York supreme court. But roly-poly Justice Rosenman, who is credited with having assembled the brain trust in 1932, last year accompanied the president on two of his three major campaign trips, goes on many a Roosevelt fishing junket, is a frequent White House visitor.
After one White House visit last week, Judge Rosenman found himself among other drafted Roosevelt friends, hurriedly packed off for a ten-week stay near Blue Mountain lake in the Adirondacks, his baggage loaded with the presidential assignment of preparing the Roosevelt state papers: one volume telescoping four years as governor, one volume for each of the first four years in the White House—the set to be published by Random House (New York) at $3 a volume so that hereafter when people write to the White House for copies of speeches that are out of print, there will be a standard work to which they can be referred. After the set is published, one volume a
ANAHEIM GAZETTE
moved
three coal miners died in the removal of were killed in mine
TIME NOWS magazine
hary committee's re-president's bill, Senused the seven demanded it of ingratiation of them, perhaps, but ship of the president will ride at tails of the presi- the only reason you historical gall Senator led the wormwood of unwritten rule of the its written rules are enforced. Some op- court bill had talk-ing to prevent its year through 1949 will continue to be issued to provide for Franklin Roosevelt's continuing output.
REPLY—
HYDE PARK, New York—Asked at a session of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Home Town club in Hyde Park whether the president would run for a third term, Mrs. Roosevelt replied: "I hope not."
FRESH TYPHOON?—
NANKING, China — An exchange of diplomatic warnings over the bloody skirmishes between Soviet and Japanese troops on the Siberian frontier had scarcely ended when Japanese forces engaged in maneuvers near Peiping. Suddenly savage shooting began one night last week, leaving 16 Japanese and some 200 Chinese dead, and an official Chinese communique said: "The Japanese fired first after certain persons had fired on Japanese emerging from Fengtal barracks for night maneuvers."
Increasingly sharp fighting made it no clearer who were the "certain persons" who opened fire before the Japanese "fired first," but the Chinese government at Nanking for the first time acted as if it were ready for war with Japan. Never before had Chinese Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek been reported sending his German-trained army of crack troops (Chiang's own) in the direction of Japanese forces; never had Japanese officials been handed a Chinese note vigorously demanding that the Japanese government "formally apologize for the 'hostilities' in North China, then 'punish the officers responsible and pay an indemnity for the Chinese casualties.'" Said a high Nanking official. "We are preparing for war."
The Nanking government this year had been quietly settling its differences with the Chinese communist armies it had been battling for a decade, and today under Popular Front banners patriotic Chinese are raising in all parts of their vast homeland the slogan reluctant to discuss his stand on labor issues, President Roosevelt nevertheless was specific in answering a question by newspapermen about his attitude toward the formation of unions of federal employees: May they unionize? Certainly. May they strike? No. May they bargain collectively with the government? No.
RIDING THUNDERHEADS—
ELMIRA, New York — During the eighth annual meet of the Soaring Society of America at Elmira one day last week, the air was heavy with a threat of squally weather and lightning glimmered occasionally in the distance. On the hilltop, where the meet was in progress, Soaring Pilot Richard Chichester du Pont eagerly appraised the mountainous dark storm-clouds or "thunder-heads," with flat bottoms and bulging domes, moving in on Harris Hill. Then he took off in his big sleek sailplane after an automobile tow.
Up, up, up he circled on rising air currents, while hundreds of faces turned up at him on the ground. Pilots of motored planes swing far off their courses to avoid thunderheads but motorless Pilot du Pont guided his ship directly into a thunderhead, rode along inside it for an hour, during which he was lost to view. Coming out several miles away, he turned back to the hill, entered another thunderhead, rode it for 21 miles, landed in Pennsylvania. Although a few daring pilots had tried it in previous years, this was the first successful demonstration of riding thunderheads at a Soaring society meet.
Thunderheads are cumulus clouds which mark the top of a rising column of air. The top of the cloud is charged with negative electricity, the bottom with positive. When this difference of potential becomes high enough a stroke of lightning cancels it and although a direct hit by lightning has never been definitely shown to be the cause of an airplane wreck, Vice President A. Felix du Pont de Pont de Nemours & Co.
RUMORS—
FLORENCE, Italy — The president's mother, Mrs. Sara Delauro Roosevelt, arrived in Florence last week with Grandson John Roosevelt to spend a week at the village of Myron Charles Taylor, who formed economic royalist and board-chairman of U. S. Steel about whom it was rumored: That he would soon retire; that he was a candidate for United States and bassador to England.
HOPPER HORDE—
HUGO, Colorado — Within two hours, a dusty-grey, endless horde of grasshoppers last week drove 50 acres of three-inch green shoots on which Farmers Huchins of Hugo had anticipated a 20,000-lb. yield-of-beans. Plodding inexorably onward were dozens and scores of 'hoppers' to the square foot, millions to the acer trillions to the county. In Washington, department of agriculture entomologists declared this worst grasshopper year since 1888.
In Colorado, Iowa, Nebraska Kansas, Montana, Wyoming, the Dakotas, Missouri, Oklahoma Texas, Arkansas and Illinois the damage seemed likely to run close to $100,000,000. To combat these the United States government was laying out about $350,000 and contributions to the war chest by state and local governments brought the total some $3,000,000.
Most effective method of combatting the 'hopper horde is spread poison bait (bran, sawdust sodium arsenite), and Colorado Entomologist S. C. McCampbell has designed a mechanical spreader which manned by three men does the work of 25 men with shovels. Some farmers put their faith in the "hopper dozer," shallow 2-foot tank filled with kerosene, mounted on wheels or runners and pulled along by a horse at each end. Rising from the back edge of the tank is a screen of tin or oilcloth
Historical gall Senator and the wormwood of unwritten rule of the its written rules are reinforced. Some op-portunity bill had talking to prevent its senator Robinson beanti-filibuster tactics by real filibuster had neglected rule that took suddenly to that no senator shall speak more than same day on any Senator Pittman mean twice in one day," and since the "y" is a fiction which may be carried on for some, this would pre-dated filibuster.
Master Farley asked whether such senda's Pat McCarran so vote against the they ever again exect to him for patron-McCarran dramatifrom a sickbed doctor's orders to cry: because is worthy of
McCarren, howansas' Joe Robinson, the court fight and state for the supreme left by retired Jusanter, gave his life. Only a few days one morning, Joe less body was found on the floor of his he had apparently the night and been a heart attack.
Attorneys promptly forences and adjourn-ing the "legislative which Mr. Robinson it, and prepared for in the senate chamFTED—
ON — Although he most of his oldtime political advisers for service, Franklin up to last week nevFriend Samuel I.
Thunderheads are cumulus clouds which mark the top of a rising column of air. The top of the cloud is charged with negative electricity, the bottom with positive. When this difference of potential becomes high enough a stroke of lightning cancels it and although a direct hit by lightning has never been definitely shown to be the cause of an airplane wreck, there is little doubt that the concussion of a nearby lightning stroke would send a comparatively frail glider down out of control or in splinters.
At week's end Soarer du Pont, 27-year-old seion of the Wilmington du Ponts and president of the Soaring society, was declared United States champion for 1937. For a climb of 5,890 feet he was awarded a gold trophy of $500 offered by his airminded father,
QUIET TRADE—
WASHINGTON — As guns and troops massed near Peiping, into the office of Secretary of the Treasury Morganthau last week stalked China's Finance Minister H. H. Kung, quietly seeking gold to help China stabilize her once all-silver currency in relation to the currencies of those great nations adhering to gold as a medium for settling trade balances.
To prevent the normal inflationary effect of an influx of gold from abroad, Morganthau has since last December diligently bought and stored all gold imported into the United States. But with a sterile nest egg of $1,145,-000,000 on hand and recent imports totaling $5,000,000 a day, Secretary Morganthau has had to borrow increasingly to buy more and more gold. Yet, under the Silver Purchase act of 1934, he is supposed to buy silver.
For this reason, Morganthau was delighted to see Kung, since now he could put some of his useless gold back into use and at the same time get back some of the money he had spent for it, (silver certificates must be issued against the silver acquired.) To avoid convulsions in Shanghai's speculative gold market, no announcement of the size of this trade was made beyond the indefinite revelation that it would be for a "substantial amount" of gold.
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ADVERTISING BIDS FOR NEW AQUEDUCT LINE
Protection of 13 Southern California cities against the menace of drought is scheduled to draw a step nearer this week, when F. E. Weymouth, general manager of the Metropolitan Water district, calls for bids on the construction of 18 additional miles in the Metropolitan aqueduct distributing system.
Connecting to the distribution "upper feeder," now under construction from the Cajalco reservoir to Glendale, at a point in Eagle Rock canyon, the new work will constitute the western "cross-feeder" of the system. Bids will be opened on September 1, on the first 18 miles of this lateral which will serve the cities of Los Angeles, Torrance, Compton, and Long Beach.
great eaters of grasshoppers, the department of agriculture declares that even if all the turkeys in the United States were concentrated in North and South Dakota they could do little to stem the grasshopper tide there.
Entomologist Orlando S. Bare of Nebraska Agricultural college last week warned farmers in his state not to relax their poison campaign, or they would suffer a double penalty: continued heavy damage to this year's corn crop, and a heavy deposit of eggs to menace next year's. But most of the 462 carloads of federal poison shipped in had been used up, and many desperate farmers were paying from their own pockets for bait bought from private dealers.
In Colorado, an anti-grasshopper council was organized by the state agriculture extension director. In Arizona, a state entomologist predicted that the pests would this year consume much more than the 25% of range grass which they eat in normal years.
Shriners Prepare for 1938 Session
Having secured for Los Angeles the 1938 Imperial council session of the Ancient Arabic Order of Nibles of the Mystic Shrine, which means that 100,000 fez-wearers and their families will visit Southern California next summer, June 7, 8, 9, officials of Al Malaikah temple are already beginning organization plans to make it the outstanding conclave of all time.
Upon the shoulders of Potentate Lawrence Cobb, who serves as "head man" until January 1938, and Chief Rabban Joseph Pengilly, scheduled for next year's potentate will fall major responsibilities for the success of the event. Los Angeles last played host to the Shriners in 1929, and sought the honor again for 1938 to celebrate the golden jubilee of the founding of Al Malaikah temple, 50 years ago in 1888.
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