anaheim-gazette 1938-02-10
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The MARCH OF TIME
Prepared by the Editors of TIME The Weekly Newsmagazine
SECOND TO NONE
WASHINGTON—"As commander in chief of the army and navy of the United States it is my constitutional duty to report to the congress that our national defense is, in the light of increasing arm-purposes of national security and requires increase for that reason. "With these words—the meat of his long-awaited rearmament message Franklin Delano Roosevelt last week asked congress for the greatest naval construction program since the days when he was Woodrow Wilson's assistant secretary of the navy.
To grease the way in congress for the launching of a huge naval program, the president shrewdly proposed to hand the army $17,000,000 over its regular appropriation — ammunition, anti-aircraft equipment, tools and dies; for building up the enlisted reserve to 75,000 men.
To the navy he proposed to give nearly $800,000,000 to boost the naval air force from 1,900 planes to a thundering 3,000; to increase personnel by 1,200 officers, 20,000 men; to build the most expensive and complicated machines ever devised, modern warships.
In his message the president urged that two more battleships be laid down this year—in addition to the two now building at a cost of $70,000,000 each; recommended that work be started immediately on two more light cruisers. To keep abreast of the mile-a-minute torpedo motor boats developed abroad, notably in Italy, he also asked for a special $15,000 appropriation for experimental construction of "small vessels."
The president's navy policy was summed up in a short recommendation for a flat 20 percent increase in the "existing authorized building program for increase and replacements"—a navy 20 percent bigger than allowed by the expired naval treaties and second to none of the big navies now building.
Well aware that a big navy is bound to arouse loud congressional opposition, President Roosevelt informed congress: "It is with the deepest regret that I report to you that armaments increase today at an unprecedented and alarming rate. It is an ominous fact that at least one-fourth of the world's population is involved in merciless, devastating conflict. . . Tension throughout the world is high." For support of his program he appealed to almost all apathetic or opposition groups except pacifists.
To the inland states, with dark hints of air raids: "Adequate defense means that for the protection not only of our coasts but also of our communities far removed from the coast we must keep any potential enemy many hundreds of miles from our continental limits."
To each seaboard: "We cannot assume that our defense would be limited to one ocean and one coast and that the other ocean and the other coast would with certainty be safe."
To liberals: "I believe that the time has come . . . to enact legislation aimed at the prevention of profiteering in time of war and the equalization of the burdens of possible war."
To isolationists: "It is our clear duty to further every effort toward peace but at the same time to protect our nation. . . Such protection is and will be based not on aggression but on defense."
One of the president's reasons was pretty well demolished last week by none other than Admiral William D. Leahy, chief of naval operations. Asked, in hearings on the regular navy bill, whether the Atlantic coast could be defended with almost the entire fleet in the Pacific, No. 1 Admiral Leahy replied frankly: "In the event of an attack being made on the United States coast on the Atlantic side the fleet could be brought to the Atlantic ocean in sufficient time to prevent any real success on the part of an enemy . . .." But he knew as well as the president that a big navy means a big navy in...
Southern California's Conquest of Drought
A huge steel cage which will be the reinforcing "core" in a concrete siphon on the Metropolitan Aqueduct.
(Note: While engineers were pioneering a way across the desert and scouting out a route over which to build the Colorado River Aqueduct, thirteen Southern California cities were working out a new type of legislation by which they could combine to solve their water problem and at the same time retain their identities as separate cities. The result of their work was an act passed by the State legislature making it possible for two or more non-contiguous cities to finance, build, and operate a domestic water supply system. Under this act The Metropolitan Water District of Southern California was organized in 1928 as a separate and independent, corporate political entity of the State of California. This is the seventh of a series of articles about the Colorado River Aqueduct.)
In 1930, under the direction of F. E. Weymouth, the Metropolitan Water District took over the work carried that far by the City of Los Angeles, and the City relinquished the construction of the Metropolitan Aqueduct—seven years before it was to carry the first drop of water. In 1923, when the project was set under way, there was no knowledge of a coming depression. In 1931, when the bonds were voted, the serious effects of the depression had begun to make themselves felt in Southern California. In the spring of 1933 the unemployment situation had reached its blackest hour. There was a ray of light, however, for the thirteen favored cities, because on December 23, 1932, the actual construction work on the project was started.
Strictly an act of Providence, the start of construction and its attendant employment benefits began at the time it was most secure needed. The machinery set in motion nearly ten years before had not been speeded up one day to meet the situation. This has not been a relief project—there was no uncertainty as to the plan of operations, this having worked out years before, so that on the black day in operations.
Asked in hearings on the regular navy bill, whether the Atlantic coast could be defended with almost the entire fleet in the Pacific, No. 1 Admiral Leahy replied frankly: "In the event of any attack being made on the United States coast on the Atlantic side the fleet could be brought to the Atlantic ocean in sufficient time to prevent any real success on the part of an enemy..." But he knew as well as the president that a big navy means a big navy in the Pacific (Japan) and nowhere else.
As a recession measure to create employment, the construction program has little immediate significance because it will be spread over a period of years. When isolationists, who have dominated LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF ANAHEIM BUILDING AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
Notice is hereby given that the annual meeting of the stockholders of the Anaheim Building and Loan Association will be held at 187 West Center Street in the City of Anaheim, California, on Monday, the 21st day of February 1938, at the hour of 7:30 p.m. said day for the purpose of the election of a Board of Directors for the ensuing year and the transaction of such business may properly come before such meeting.
By order of the Board of Directors of the Anaheim Building and Loan Association.
FORREST F. FOWLER,
Secretary
Dated January 29, 1938.
2/3-10-
LEGAL NOTICE
SUMMONS
NO. 35663
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF ORANGE
RUTH N. STONER, Plaintiff,
vs.
ERROL STONER, Defendant.
Action brought in the Superior Court of the County of Orange and complaint filed in the Office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of said County.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA GENDER
In 1930, under the direction of F. E. Weymouth, the Metropolitan Water District took over the work carried that far by the City of Los Angeles, and the City relinquished leadership in the project to take its place as one member of the Water District.
At the same time the people of the 13 District cities joined hands to carry forward Southern California's biggest and most important job. Here was an undertaking in their own locality which would rate as one of the wonders of the world. An aqueduct which would have a length of 39 miles. A man-made river long enough to reach from New York City to Cleveland, Ohio—or better yet from the local point of view, from Los Angeles to a point fifty miles north of San Francisco. An aqueduct which would carry water or originating two thousand miles away. An aqueduct which would cross 250 miles of barren mountains and deserts never before mapped.
Staggering the imagination most of all was the capacity of this waterway. These cities were insuring for the future, and had no desire to repeat Los Angeles' problem of having to build a new system within ten years. This Metropolitan Aqueduct will have a capacity of a thousand million gallons of water a day. In engineering terminology, this equals 1,500 cubic feet of water per second.
In September, 1931, the electorate of the thirteen cities voted a $220,000,000 bond issue by a majority of five to one, to finance the construction of the aqueduct. These bonds run for fifty years, the first payment coming due fifteen years after date of sale, and the project is designed ultimately to be self-liquidating.
Then came the first benefit from thirteen favored cities, because on December 23, 1932, the actual construction work on the project was started.
Strictly an act of Providence, the start of construction and its attendant employment benefits began at the time it was most forely needed. The machinery set in motion nearly ten years before had not been speeded up one day to meet the situation. This has not been a relief project—the there was no uncertainty as to the plan of operations, this having been worked out years before, so that on the black day in March, 1933, when the bank holiday was announced, 1,200 men were already at work on the job. This number soon jumped to the average employment of 9,000 that the job has required. By January 1, 1938, more than sixty million dollars had been paid in direct employment benefits.
All those working on the aqueduct are required to have been residents of one of the member cities for at least a year prior to employment. Those working on the big job have earned their wages: there has been no "made" work. The latest types of labor-saving machinery and equipment have been used on the job, and still it has employed enough workmen to take the load off of the unemployment situation in the thirteen cities of the Water District.
This employment benefit also had its effect outside of the Metropolitan Water District. It is estimated that an average of 25,000 other workers have been annually employed throughout the nation manufacturing the supplies and equipment used on this project. Quantities used are in the same tremendous proportions as is the extent of the aqueduct. Seven and a half million barrels of cement are required to make the concrete for this man-made river; concrete enough to build a fourteen-foot highway from New York to Los Angeles. The tons of steel add up to 283,500, and 135 tons of copper, and 2,000 tons of aluminum go into the job of transporting water in this aqueduct. More than 45 million cubic yards of earth and rock are being moved in carving out the channel for this giant waterway.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF ORANGE
RUTH N. STONER, Plaintiff,
vs.
ERROL STONER, Defendant.
Action brought in the Superior Court of the County of Orange and complaint filed in the Office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of said County.
THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA SEND GREETINGS TO: ERROL STONER, Defendant.
You are directed to appear in action brought against you by the above named plaintiff in the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the County of Orange, and to answer the complaint therein within ten days after the service on you of the summons, if served within the county of Orange, or within thirty days if served elsewhere, you are notified that unless you appear and answer as 'absorbed', the plaintiff will take judgment for any money or damages demanded in the Complaint as arising upon contract, or you apply to the Court for any other relief demanded in the Complaint.
Given under my hand and sword of the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, this 29th day of Sept., 1931 (Seal Superior Court Orange County).
J. M. BACKS,
County Clerk and Chief of the Superior Court of the State of California, and for the County of Orange.
By E. SCHANIEL.
Deputy.
THOMAS H. KUCHEL.
Attorney for Plaintiff.
The least one-fourth of the population is involved in devastating conflict. Throughout the world is our support of his pro-poison groups exerts.
Near states, with dark air raids: "Adequate designs that for the protection of our coasts but our communities far resemble the coast we must be potential. enemy many miles from our commits."
On seaboard: "We cannot at our defense would be one ocean and one coast the other ocean and the last would with certainty arise: 'I believe that the come... to enact legislation at the prevention of injury in time of war and the invasion of the burdens of war.'"
Nationalists: "It is our clear every effort to force but at the same time our nation. Such it is and will be based not vision but on defense."
The president's reasons why well demolished last none other than Admiral D. Leahy, chief of naval affairs, asked, in hearings, whether the coast could be defended the entire fleet in the No. 1 Admiral Leahy remarkly: "In the event of an attack made on the United Coast on the Atlantic side could be brought to the ocean in sufficient time to any real success on the enemy." But he well as the president that navy means a big navy in U.S. foreign policy since the war, feared most was that the president wanted men and ships to carry out the collective security policy he enunciated in his Chicago speech last October.
NEW NICKEL—
WASHINGTON—Since the design of any U.S. coin may by law be changed after 25 years, and the buffalo-Indian head nickel will be 25 years old on February 21. Secretary of the Treasury Morgenthau last week announced that the mint would coin no more after that date. A jury composed of Mint Director Nellie Tayloe Ross and three sculptors — Sidney Waugh, Albert Stewart and Heinz Warneke—will pick a new design from those submitted by artists.
But the New Deal has already picked the subject of the winning design. It must bear a portrait of Thomas Jefferson on the obverse, of his home, Monticello, on the reverse. Struck by the coincidence that Democrat Jefferson will be commemorated in an election year, Republicans nevertheless held their peace upon reflection: only overdue design change is the penny, from which Republican Abraham Lincoln could have been removed in 1934.
"IFFY"—
WASHINGTON — Tossing his head from side to side, President Roosevelt last week read to reporters gathered in his office for a press conference a statement against reducing wages:
". I have said so often clearly and unequivocally ... that I am opposed to wage reductions. If we want to restore prosperity, we must increase, not decrease, that purchasing power."
"Now as to prices. A mass-production industry depends on lecting surpluses. But the president apparently agreed with at least one businessman, for in espousing high wages, low prices and volume production Franklin Roosevelt had taken his stand on the very platform occupied for over 20 years by Henry Ford.
Though Henry Ford can alter wages and prices at will, Franklin Roosevelt cannot. This made the president's whole statement rather iffy, especially his concluding sentiment: "If industries reduce wages this winter and spring they will be deliberately encouraging the withholding of buying—they will be fostering a downward spiral, and they will make it necessary for their government to consider other means of creating purchasing power."
The phrase "other means of creating purchasing power" could mean only one thing—spending. Washington observers therefore felt that unless business picked up in the spring the administration program for dealing with depression would finally emerge as pump priming. A shot of inflation had worked once, and the needle was still in the medicine chest.
SLAP—
WASHINGTON — The highest Japanese officer in China's former capital Nanking, His Highness Lieut. General Prince Yasuhiko Asaka, last week expressed his apologies to Third Secretary John M. Allison of the U.S. embassy.
In Nanking, where outrages by Japanese soldiers had continued for over a month, Third Secretary Allison and Charles Riggs of Nanking university, a U.S. citizen, went out last week with a Chinese woman who try to identify Japanese soldiers whom she accused of having raped her thrice. Since Japanese soldiers had taken the woman from the agricultural field's death of SAFETY FOR
Vera Westbrook is dead. A school bus rumbled to stop on the roadside near Westbrook home in the Chimont district of Los Angeles second machine rolled down highway—and did not stop. Westbrook died in the path this second machine just as she had alighted from a school bus.
Her gravestone will read: "Born, 1931—Died, 1937—6 years."
But Vera Westbrook is to cease a far greater tribute this. On the suggestion of Eernor Frank E. Merriam, with the consent of her parish 6-year-old traffic vice death is to stand as a symbol safety for all other children during 1938.
In a proclamation this year Governor Merriam asked every motorist remember Westbrook when they upon a school bus stopped or unload passengers.
Continuing, the proclamation said:
"To the end that Vera Wrook's fate stands as a symbol of safety for all children. In that all motorists remember fate under any circumstance."
Anaheim Concern Renovates D
One of the newest service fered to residents of Anaheim that rendered by the Doll and hospital recently established 910 N. Dickel street by Mrs Anaheim Concern Renovates D
Anaheim Concern Renovates Doll
One of the newest service fled to residents of Anaheim that rendered by the Doll and hospital recently established 910 N. Dickel street by Mrs.ora Swanson. The institution fills the two-fold function storing the damaged dolls to original condition and but joy to the hearts of your whose treasured plaything apparently been destroyed.
Among the accomplishment of the hospital are the men broken arms, legs and head can provide toupees and wodels that have lost their vivie features and comp of the doll, and replace lost through accidents.
All employees of the institute have had at least four years persistence in the work. Cently restored to excellent dition a doll many years of age chimney by a policeman swung himself up on the Finally the Widow Corneen sons dashed for the stables as they went.
In the stableyard a policeman was killed when angry crowd chanted: "Kill Burn them out!" When g was tossed on the brown stair the stable roof, the Co stumbled out, black st against the crackling flame Widow Corneil and one so instantly killed. The second escaped to the shadows woods behind the house, captured next day, the 200 still unpaid, two charges under against him.
WANT ADDS
FOR RENT—Store building unfurnished bungalows, to furnished upstairs apart Newly decorated. Prices $27. Inquire 431½ S. street.
HOUSE for Rent. Telephone
PIANO—See in Anaheim. Dance customers contract. Monthly payments or discernance measure to create event, the construction pro- little immediate significac- cause it will be spread period of years. When is- sers who have dominated
LEGAL NOTICE
OF ANNUAL MEETING Anaheim Building and Association is hereby given that the meeting of the stockhold- on Anaheim Building and association will be held at Center Street in the Anaheim, California, on the 21st day of February, the hour of 7:30 p.m. of day for the purpose of the of a Board of Directors ensuing year and the son of such business as properly come before such order of the Board of Di- fect of the Anaheim Building on Association.
FORREST F. FOWLER, Secretary. January 29, 1938. 2/3-10-17
LEGAL NOTICE
SUMMONS NO. 35663
SUPERIOR COURT OF STATE OF CALIFORNIA AND FOR THE COUNTY OF ORANGE
N. STONER, Plaintiff, vs.
STONER, Defendant.
Brought in the Superior of the County of Orange, implaint filed in the Office clerk of the Superior Court County.
PEOPLE OF THE STATE
POLICEMAN GENDER
LEGAL NOTICE
CERTIFICATE OF DOING BUSINESS Under Fictitious Name
The Undersigned do hereby certify that they are conducting a RESTAURANT Business at 250 East Center Street in the city of Anaheim, County of Orange, State of California under the fictitious name of ANAHEIM CAFE and WASHINGTON last week read to reporters gathered in his office for a press conference a statement against reducing wages:
"I have said so often clearly and unequivocally... that I am opposed to wage reductions. If we want to restore prosperity, we must increase, not decrease, that purchasing power."
"Now as to prices. A mass-production industry depends on volume for profits. ... The only way to get volume up is to produce goods for a price the public will pay. ... But that does not mean that such price reductions can come out of wages. Those who believe in the profit system must recognize that those who get the profits when business is good must bear the losses when business temporarily is slack. Those who get the profits when industry gets the volume are the ones to bear the risk of such price reductions as may be necessary to stimulate and restore volume.
"Those in charge of a well-managed and solvent industry should no more consider casting the burden of a temporary business recession upon their workers than upon their bondholders. ... Industrialists kill the goose which lays the golden egg when they keep prices up at the expense of employment and purchasing power. Industrialists kill the goose which lays the golden egg when they cut wages and thereby reduce purchasing power. Either policy is selfdefeating and suicidal."
When reporters then asked the president if he meant to do something about prices, he said with a wave of his long cigaret holder that the conversation was getting too "iffy".
Businessmen muttered that it was strange they should be asked to assume the burden of high wages in depression after the undistributed profits tax had been imposed to keep them from col-
LEGAL NOTICE
WASHINGTON—Nominated by President Roosevelt and confirmed by the senate, former Solicitor General Stanley Reed was last week sworn in by Chief Justice Hughes as the 77th justice of the U.S. supreme court.
DEATHS AND TAXES—LA FLECHE, France — French taxes are high, but Frenchmen are apologies to Third Secretary John M. Allison of the U.S. embassy.
In Nanking, where outrages by Japanese soldiers had continued for over a month, Third Secretary Allison and Charles Riggs of Nanking university, a U.S. citizen, went out last week with a Chinese woman to try to identify Japanese soldiers whom she accused of having raped her thrice. Since Japanese soldiers had taken the woman from the agricultural implement shop of Nanking university, Riggs had applied to Third Secretary Allison for help.
Allison, according to his official report, was escorted by Japanese gendarmes who advised him not to enter a building into which they had agreed to take the Chinese woman so that she might point out the rapists. Then they pushed her roughly through the gate, and as Allison and Riggs impulsively moved to follow, a Japanese sentry shouted in English "Back! Back!""
"I backed up slowly," cabled Third Secretary Allison in his report, "but before I had time to get out of the gate he slapped me across the face and then turned and did the same to Riggs." Allison, who speaks Japanese, diplomatically confined himself to adding that the sentry "lived with rage... shouted at us in a most offensive manner," grabbed Riggs, tore the collar and some buttons from his shirt.
President Roosevelt spent two hours conferring with state department officials, then U.S. Ambassador Joseph Clark Grew at Tokyo was ordered to obtain an expression of regret from Japanese Vice-Minister of Foreign Affairs Kensuke Horinouchi. This Washington officially accepted as "satisfactory," closed the case. Whether the Chinese woman identified any rapists, what happened to her or them remained unknown to the state department.
77TH—WASHINGTON—Nominated by President Roosevelt and confirmed by the senate, former Solicitor General Stanley Reed was last week sworn in by Chief Justice Hughes as the 77th justice of the U.S. supreme court.
DEATHS AND TAXES—LA FLECHE, France — French taxes are high, but Frenchmen are apologies to Third Secretary John M. Allison of the U.S. embassy.
In Nanking, where outrages by Japanese soldiers had continued for over a month, Third Secretary Allison and Charles Riggs of Nanking university, a U.S. citizen, went out last week with a Chinese woman to try to identify Japanese soldiers whom she accused of having raped her thrice. Since Japanese soldiers had taken the woman from the agricultural implement shop of Nanking university, Riggs had applied to Third Secretary Allison for help.
Allison, according to his official report, was escorted by Japanese gendarmes who advised him not to enter a building into which they had agreed to take the Chinese woman so that she might point out the rapists. Then they pushed her roughly through the gate, and as Allison and Riggs impulsively moved to follow, a Japanese sentry shouted in English "Back! Back!""
"I backed up slowly," cabled Third Secretary Allison in his report, "but before I had time to get out of the gate he slapped me across the face and then turned and did the same to Riggs." Allison, who speaks Japanese, diplomatically confined himself to adding that the sentry "lived with rage... shouted at us in a most offensive manner," grabbed Riggs, tore the collar and some buttons from his shirt.
President Roosevelt spent two hours conferring with state department officials, then U.S. Ambassador Joseph Clark Grew at Tokyo was ordered to obtain an expression of regret from Japanese Vice-Minister of Foreign Affairs Kensuke Horinouchi. This Washington officially accepted as "satisfactory," closed the case. Whether the Chinese woman identified any rapists, what happened to her or them remained unknown to the state department.
77TH—WASHINGTON—Nominated by President Roosevelt and confirmed by the senate, former Solicitor General Stanley Reed was last week sworn in by Chief Justice Hughes as the 77th justice of the U.S. supreme court.
DEATHS AND TAXES—LA FLECHE, France — French taxes are high, but Frenchmen are apologies to Third Secretary John M. Allison of the U.S. embassy.
In Nanking, where outrages by Japanese soldiers had continued for over a month, Third Secretary Allison and Charles Riggs of Nanking university, a U.S. citizen, went out last week with a Chinese woman to try to identify Japanese soldiers whom she accused of having raped her thrice. Since Japanese soldiers had taken the woman from the agricultural implement shop of Nanking university, Riggs had applied to Third Secretary Allison for help.
Allison, according to his official report, was escorted by Japanese gendarmes who advised him not to enter a building into which they had agreed to take the Chinese woman so that she might point out the rapists. Then they pushed her roughly through the gate, and as Allison and Riggs impulsively moved to follow, a Japanese sentry shouted in English "Back! Back!""
"I backed up slowly," cabled Third Secretary Allison in his report, "but before I had time to get out of the gate he slapped me across the face and then turned and did the same to Riggs." Allison, who speaks Japanese, diplomatically confined himself to adding that the sentry "lived with rage... shouted at us in a most offensive manner," grabbed Riggs, tore the collar and some buttons from his shirt.
President Roosevelt spent two hours conferring with state department officials, then U.S. Ambassador Joseph Clark Grew at Tokyo was ordered to obtain an expression of regret from Japanese Vice-Minister of Foreign Affairs Kensuke Horinouchi. This Washington officially accepted as "satisfactory," closed the case. Whether the Chinese woman identified any rapists, what happened to her or them remained unknown to the state department.
77TH—WASHINGTON—Nominated by President Roosevelt and confirmed by the senate, former Solicitor General Stanley Reed was last week sworn in by Chief Justice Hughes as the 77th justice of the U.S. supreme court.
DEATHS AND TAXES—LA FLECHE, France — French taxes are high, but Frenchmen are apologies to Third Secretary John M. Allison of the U.S. embassy.
In Nanking, where outrages by Japanese soldiers had continued for over a month, Third Secretary Allison and Charles Riggs of Nanking university, a U.S. citizen, went out last week with a Chinese woman to try to identify Japanese soldiers whom she accused of having raped her thrice. Since Japanese soldiers had taken the woman from the agricultural implement shop of Nanking university, Riggs had applied to Third Secretary Allison for help.
Allison, according to his official report, was escorted by Japanese gendarmes who advised him not to enter a building into which they had agreed to take the Chinese woman so that she might point out the rapists. Then they pushed her roughly through the gate, and as Allison and Riggs impulsively moved to follow, a Japanese sentry shouted in English "Back! Back!""
"I backed up slowly," cabled Third Secretary Allison in his report, "but before I had time to get out of the gate he slapped me across the face and then turned and did the same to Riggs." Allison, who speaks Japanese, diplomatically confined himself to adding that the sentry "lived with rage... shouted at us in a most offensive manner," grabbed Riggs, tore the collar and some buttons from his shirt.
President Roosevelt spent two hours conferring with state department officials, then U.S. Ambassador Joseph Clark Grew at Tokyo was ordered to obtain an expression of regret from Japanese Vice-Minister of Foreign Affairs Kensuke Horinouchi. This Washington officially accepted as "satisfactory," closed the case. Whether the Chinese woman identified any rapists, what happened to her or them remained unknown to the state department.
77TH—WASHINGTON—Nominated by President Roosevelt and confirmed by the senate, former Solicitor General Stanley Reed was last week sworn in by Chief Justice Hughes as the 77th justice of the U.S. supreme court.
DEATHS AND TAXES—LA FLECHE, France — French taxes are high, but Frenchmen are apologies to Third Secretary John M. Allison of the U.S. embassy.
In Nanking, where outrages by Japanese soldiers had continued for over a month, Third Secretary Allison and Charles Riggs of Nanking university, a U.S. citizen, went out last week with a Chinese woman to try to identify Japanese soldiers whom she accused of having raped her thrice. Since Japanese soldiers had taken the woman from the agricultural implement shop of Nanking university, Riggs had applied to Third Secretary Allison for help.
Allison, according to his official report, was escorted by Japanese gendarmes who advised him not to enter a building into which they had agreed to take the Chinese woman so that she might point out the rapists. Then they pushed her roughly through the gate, and as Allison and Riggs impulsively moved to follow, a Japanese sentry shouted in English "Back! Back!""
"I backed up slowly," cabled Third Secretary Allison in his report, "but before I had time to get out of the gate he slapped me across the face and then turned and did the same to Riggs." Allison, who speaks Japanese, diplomatically confined himself to adding that the sentry "lived with rage... shouted at us in a most offensive manner," grabbed Riggs, tore the collar and some buttons from his shirt.
President Roosevelt spent two hours conferring with state department officials, then U.S. Ambassador Joseph Clark Grew at Tokyo was ordered to obtain an expression of regret from Japanese Vice-Minister of Foreign Affairs Kensuke Horinouchi. This Washington officially accepted as "satisfactory," closed the case. Whetherthe Chinese woman identified any rapists,what happenedtoheror 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LEGAL NOTICE
CERTIFICATE OF DOING BUSINESS
Under Fictitious Name
The Undersigned do hereby certify that they are conducting a RESTAURANT Business at 250 East Center Street in the city of Anaheim, County of Orange, State of California under the fictitious name of ANAHEIM CAFE and that said firm is composed of the following persons, whose names and addresses are as follows to wit: Henry J. Keil, 127 South Philadelphia St., Anaheim; Minnie Thram, 127 South Philadelphia St., Anaheim.
Witness our Hands this the First day of February, 1938.
Signed
HENRY J. KEIL,
MINNIE THRAM.
State of California, )
County of Orange, )
On this First day of February A.D., 1938, before me E.E. Smith, a Notary Public in and for said county and state, residing therein, duly commissioned and sworn, personally appeared Henry J. Keil, and Minnie Thram known to me to be the persons whose names are subscribed to the within instrument and acknowledged to me that they executed the same.
In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed my official seal the day and year in this certificate first above written. (SEAL)
E.E.SMITH,
Notary public in and for Said County and State,
My Commission Expires 7-28, 1941.
2/5/10-17-24
77TH—
WASHINGTON—Nominated by President Roosevelt and confirmed by the senate, former Solicitor General Stanley Reed was last week sworn in by Chief Justice Hughes as the 77th justice of the U.S. supreme court.
DEATHS AND TAXES—
LA FLECHE, France — French taxes are high, but Frenchmen are more expert at evasion than their government is at collection. Shocked last week were the Widow Corneuil and her two strapping sons when a tax collector came to their farm near the village of La Fleche, 165 miles southeast of Paris, and insisted on the payment of 200 francs ($6.40) of long overdue taxes. They slammed and locked the door in the impudent man's face. Back to town went the tax collector and returned with a locksmith. The locksmith had no sooner set down his bag of tools than a shot from a window wounded him severely.
Mayhem is more serious in France than tax evasion. By evening the Corneuil house was surrounded by khaki-coated gendarmes with rifles, searchlights, tear bombs. All through the night they besieged it. Every time a policeman's blue cap appeared, the Widow Corneuil or one of her sons took a shot at it... Next morning one brave gendarme volunteered to make a last effort to persuade the Widow Corneuil to surrender. Again a shot. He twisted on his heel and dropped dead. The siege continued.
At dusk, the second evening, police attacked. Melinite charges shattered the door, tear bombs were tossed through the windows, tear bombs dropped down the
CHILD'S DEATH WILL BE SYMBOL OF SAFETY FOR OTHER CHILDREN
Vera Westbrook is dead. A school bus rumbled to a stop on the roadside near the Westbrook home in the Claremont district of Los Angeles. A second machine rolled down the way—and did not stop. Vera Westbrook died in the path of a second machine just after she had alighted from the school bus.
Her gravestone will read: Born, 1931—Died, 1937—Age years.
But Vera Westbrook is to receive a far greater tribute than her. On the suggestion of Gov. Frank E. Merriam, and with the consent of her parents, 6-year-old traffic victim's death is to stand as a symbol of safety for all other children. In 1938, on a proclamation this week, Governor Merriam asked that every motorist remember Vera Westbrook when they come on a school bus stopped to load or unload passengers.
Continuing, the proclamation said:
"To the end that Vera Westbrook's fate stands as a symbol of safety for all children, I urge all motorists remember her under any circumstances."
Anaheim Concern Renovates Dolls
One of the newest services offered to residents of Anaheim is rendered by the Doll and Toy Capital recently established at N. Dickel street by Mrs. Len-
which might involve injuries to any child.
"The law of the state explicitly requires that motorists stop for all school buses but the law of humanity requires that we remain ever watchful of children in the vicinity of schools, playgrounds or other places where the danger of injuring a child is increased.
"The pupils of the Claremont public school remember Vera.
"I urge that every motorist in California remember her name and her fate.
"I am hopeful that such memories will protect other children and that a memory of the accident which befell Vera Westbrook may serve as a lesson to other motorists that the tragedy in the Westbrook family be not repeated."
Former Resident Called by Death
Friends residing in the Anaheim district have been advised of the death of Mrs. Olive J. Snyder, wife of George W. Snyder, at Van Nuys, February 6. Mr. and Mrs. Snyder owned a ranch on Euclid avenue for some 15 years. In the 34 years since their removal and residence in Los Angeles, Brawley and Van Nuys, the friendships and interests acquired here have been kept alive.
Mrs. Snyder was 63 years of age. The couple had only recently celebrated their 65th wedding anniversary and the death of Mrs. MWD Builds Huge Fence Along Line
Work is now under way on one of the largest fence construction jobs in the nation, according to reports received this week in the office of General Manager F. E. Weymouth of the Metropolitan Water district.
Involving the erection of 154 miles of 6-foot fence, the work will protect open canal sections and reservoirs along the line of the 392-mile Metropolitan aqueduct. Fences will be set on both sides of the 64 miles of concrete lined canals on desert sections of the aqueduct and will also enclose various reservoirs along the water system.
Three large fencing companies have been awarded contracts for doing the work, and according to these manufacturers it is the largest single fence construction job that has ever been done in this country. The fence will be constructed of galvanized chain link fabric supported by steel posts set in concrete. It will be six feet high, the upper two feet being constructed of strands of barbed wire, which in themselves total more than 750 miles in length.
Constructed over relatively flat sections of the desert, the canals on the Metropolitan aqueduct are the only sections that are exposed. All other sections of the aqueduct are constructed in tunnels or in conduits, siphons, and pipe lines which are buried beneath the ground surface.
Anaheim Concern Renovates Dolls
One of the newest services offered to residents of Anaheim is rent rendered by the Doll and Toy Hospital recently established at N. Dickel street by Mrs. Lennie Swanson. The institution fulfills the two-fold function of restoring the damaged dolls to their original condition and bringing them to the hearts of youngsters whose treasured playthings had apparently been destroyed.
Among the accomplishments of the hospital are the mending of broken arms, legs and heads. It provides toupees and wigs for those that have lost their hair, reeves the features and complexions of the doll, and replace fingers through accidents.
All employees of the institution have had at least four years experience in the work. They recently restored to excellent condition a doll many years of age.
Mammy by a policeman who young himself up on the caves, finally the Widow Corneuil and was dashed for the stable, firing they went.
In the stableyard a second policeman was killed while an angry crowd chanted: "Kill them! Burn them out!" When gasoline was tossed on the brown straw of the stable roof, the Corneuilsumbled out, black shadows against the crackling flames. The Widow Corneuil and one son were instantly killed. The second son escaped to the shadows of the woods behind the house, to be featured next day, the 200 frances unpaid, two charges of murder against him.
WANT ADS
DR RENT—Store building, five furnished bungalows, two unmanned upstairs apartments. Newly decorated. Prices $10 to $7. Inquire 431½ S. Lemon Street. -1tp
DOUSE for Rent. Telephone 4908.-tf
ANO—See in Anaheim. Pay balance customers contract, $68.00. Monthly payments or discount for all motorists remember her under any circumstances.
wife of George W. Snyder, at Van Nuys, February 6. Mr. and Mrs. Snyder owned a ranch on Euclid avenue for some 15 years. In the 34 years since their removal and residence in Los Angeles, Brawley and Van Nuys, the friendships and interests acquired here have been kept alive.
Mrs. Snyder was 63 years of age. The couple had only recently celebrated their 65th wedding anniversary and the death of Mrs. Snyder is the first in the immediate family. The family came to southern California 50 years ago, after residence in Iowa and Kansas. Children were members of the first graduating class of Anaheim high school.
Surviving Mrs. Snyder, besides her husband, are two daughters, Mrs. Gertrude E. Kellogg of Van Nuys, and Mrs. Dora B. Schulz of Chino, and two sons, Blanchard M. of Los Angeles and Earl Bernard of Van Nuys.
Business and Professional DIRECTORY
FLOWERS—For All Occasions
Anaheim Flower Shop
Mrs. E. T. Abbott
Telephone 3224
Anaheim Manchester at 101 Highway
Howard E. Tews
DENTIST
503 N. Los Angeles St.
-PhonesOffice 3435
Anaheim,
Residence 3936
California
Homer A. Nelson, Opt. D.
OPTOMETRIST
Phone 3104 114 N. Lemon St.
Anaheim., California
CAB
24-Hour Service
NEW CARS
PICKWICK CAB PHONE
Jess
225 So. Los Angeles 4822
Out of Town Trips for Shopping Parties
Sash and Doors
Nagel-Gohres & Co.
418 S. Lemon St.
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA
A. L. CARY
ELECTRICIAN
Open Evenings
Sunday by Appointment
DR. OSHER
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Dentist
Ocullist—Glasses Fitted
Phone 3212
1224 W. Center Street
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA
RENT—Store building, five furnished bungalows, two unfurnished upstairs apartments. Newly decorated. Prices $10 to 37. Inquire 431½ S. Lemon Street.
DOUSE for Rent. Telephone 4908.
ANO—See in Anaheim. Pay balance customers contract. $68.00 monthly payments or discount for wash. Write Pacific Piano Co., 55 Ponce Ave., No. Hollywood, Calif. 2/3-10-17-24p
More nice Uprights; $29-$37-8—and up; fine to start children; great buy for only 50c a week or more. Danz-Schmidt, 12-116 E. Center, Anaheim.
MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE
Trade — Frigidaires, Appliances, Rodios, Furniture; want Pianos; some make your selection; we pay highest prices. Danz-Schmidt, 12-116 E. Center, Anaheim.
PAINTING & PAPERHANGING
Painting and paperhanging. J. E. Taylor, 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.
PIANOS FOR RENT
1 month up; full credit when you buy. Danz-Schmidt, Anaheim.
ROOMS FOR RENT
Single room, private entrance, suitable for gentleman. Inquire at 205 So. Claudina St., Phone 4240.
Sash and Doors
Nagel-Gohres & Co.
418 S. Lemon St.
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA
A. L. CARY
ELECTRICIAN
Light & Power Installations
130 W. Chartres — Phone 2336
Ambulance Service
Day or Night—Phone 3209
Backs,
Terry & Campbell
H P. CAMPBELL
Resident Director
251 No. Lemon Street
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA
QUALITY PRINTING SERVICE
ANAHEIM GAZETTE
"67 Years in Printing Business"
Phone 2414 259 E. Center
Sunday by Appointment
DR. OSHER
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
Eye. Ear, Nose and Throat Dentist
Oeullist—Glasses Fitted
Phone 3212
1224 W. Center Street
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA
Office Phone 3213
Residence 887 So. Los Angeles
Residence Phone 2610
Hours:—11 - 12; 2 - 4; 7 - 8
J. W. Truxaw, M.D.
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
Golden State Bank Bldg.
Cor. Center and Los Angeles
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA
CAMPBELL
DRY CLEANERS
Phone 2318
Our policy is to please you
147 S. Los Angeles Anaheim
MILK -----
Delivered to your Door each morning
ACACIA DAIRY
ANAHEIM
2078