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anaheim-gazette 1939-04-13

1939-04-13 · Anaheim Gazette · page 7 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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WASHINGTON SNAPSHOTS Congress may be asked to go home before it is ready. The adjournment drive has already started. There are many factors involved in the move for early adjournment. And the move is being made, not by the congressmen themselves, but by the Washington strategists. Here is why, as Washington sideline spectators see it: Congress to date has not been LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF HEARING OF PETITION TO EXECUTE A PROMISSORY NOTE SECURED BY CROP MORTGAGE. No. A-7080 IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE COUNTY OF ORANGE, STATE OF CALIFORNIA. In the Matter of the Estate of ) LILLIAN S. FEHLMAN, Deceased. Donald Fehlman, the administrator of the estate of Lillian S. Fehlman, deceased, having filed his verified petition, praying for an order authorizing him to execute a promissory note and chattel mortgage on the crop of valencia oranges produced on certain real estate described in said petition, and alleging that it is necessary to execute said note and said chattel mortgage on said crop to provide money for fertilizing, hire labor, purchase gas to operate a tractor, to pay electric bills for operating pumping plant, to irrigate said land and crop, for repairs etc., necessary to preserve and safeguard said crops and the real estate described in said petition: NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TO New Thrills in "Rail Play, Opening" In this connection, there is an interesting story making the rounds of the capitol corridors. It is being accepted as the "news behind the news" of the CIO-AF of L peace negotiations. The story being told is that agreement was reached several weeks ago between the CIO, the labor department and someone at the White House that there should be no amendments to the labor act. The problem, then, was to find a way to forestall the drive for careful diagnosis of the act in congress. A "peace conference" was finally decided upon. Announcement was made that the warring labor factions were being brought together for peace-pact talks. Then word was sent to the capitol that the prospects of peace would be dimmed if the labor act question was stirred up in congress. It is listed the dates and the exact quotations of officials' statements that an "emergency, crisis, disaster, serious situation, or period of increasing urgency" existed. "This is at the rate of one new emergency every six weeks for six years," declared the congressman. "Is it any wonder that the people are emotionally exhausted?" Washington Sidelights: The government has just placed an order for 8,584,704 inches of red tape. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to all persons interested in said estate to appear before the said Superior Court on Friday, the 21st day of April, 1939, in Department Two thereof, at the Court House in Santa Ana, County of Orange, State of California, to show cause, if any they have, why an order should not be granted to said administrator authorizing and directing him to borrow the sum of $2465.00 or such lessor amount as to the Court may seem meet, and to execute a promissory note and to mortgage the 1939 crop of valencia oranges, and subsequent crop, if said 1939 crop should be insufficient to repay said loan, said crop being the 1939 crop of valencia oranges, and subsequent crops of valencia oranges produced on that certain real estate of said estate, situated in the County of Orange, State of California, bounded and particularly described as follows, to-wit: Parcel 1. The South one-half (S½) of the South one-half (S½) of the South one-half (S½) of the Northwest quarter (NW¼), of the Northeast quarter (NE¼) of Section Twenty-three (23), Township Four (4) South Range Ten West. S. B. B. & M. Parcel 2. All that portion of the Southwest quarter (SW¼) of the Northeast quarter (NE¼) of Section Twenty-three (23), Township Four (4) South Range Ten (10) West, S. B. B. & M., lying and being Easterly of the right of way of the Atchison Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Company. Dated April 5th, 1939: B. J. SMITH, County Clerk. 4/6-13-20 A "peace conference" was finally decided upon. Announcement was made that the warring labor factions were being brought together for peace-pact talks. Then word was sent to the capitol that the prospects of peace would be dimmed if the labor act question was stirred up in congress. It is indeed, a sore question with both the labor organizations, with the A.F.L wanting amendments and the CIO demanding the act be left alone. True, it would dim the prospects for peace between the two groups, but— It was a foregone conclusion in Washington at the time the peace conference started that no peace agreement could possibly result. It's Happened Again: The secretary of a not-so-important government executive looked up from her desk a few days ago to see a gentleman walking toward the office door of the executive. She called the gentleman to task. When he said he wanted to see the said executive, the secretary chirped efficiently: "Well, you'll just have to wait. He's busy now." After several minutes of heel-cooling the gentleman informed the young lady secretary that he was in a hurry; that his mission was important. But this failed to influence her. After more minutes of waiting, the gentleman departed, but with this reminder to the secretary: "Just tell your boss that the attorney general of the United States was in to see him!" One of the congressmen has done a painstaking job of research and come up with some figures indicating that the U.S. has probably outdone Europe in the number of "emergencies and crisis periods" in the past six years. Since 1933, the congressman reports in the Congressional Record, there have been no less than 29 so-called "emergencies" proclaimed officially by federal officials. To prove his point the congressman THE POCKETBOOK of KNOWLEDGE by TOPPS PAPER MONEY IN THE DENOMINATION OF 10 CENTS WAS ONCE USED IN THE UNITED STATES... THE TEN-CENT BILL'S BORN A PORTrait of GEORGE WASHINGTON FEDERAL, STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS IN THE U.S. ARE ESTIMATED TO BE SPENDING AT THE RATE OF $402 A SECOND, OR $36,120 A MINUTE. IN SWEDEN MAILLOVES ARE CONVENTIONALLY LOCATED—ON THE STREET CARS! IN ENGLAND, PRIVATE SCHOOLS ARE CALLED PUBLIC SCHOOLS. Since 1933, the congressman reports in the Congressional Record, there have been no less than 29 so-called "emergencies" proclaimed officially by federal officials. To prove his point the congressman Thrills in "Ramona," Outdoor Play, Opening Saturday, April 23 —CNPA, Inc., Service. In the script of "Ramona," California's colorful outdoor play brought new thrills and romance to the drama. Seen in the roles will be Victor Jory as Alessandro and Jean Inness as a (upper left); upper right are some of the Spanish dancers in flesta scenes. Lower picture shows part of the dashing posse brings an exciting finish to the play which opens its sixteenth Saturday afternoon, April 22, in picturesque Ramona Bowl near towns of Hemet and San Jacinto in Riverside County. The dates and the exact terms of officials statements "emergency, crisis, disorientation situation, or period of urgency" existed. It is at the rate of one new story every six weeks for six declared the congressman. Any wonder that the people rationally exhausted? The MARCH OF TIME BY THE EDITORS OF TIME The Weekly Newsmagazine (Continued from page 4) into Czecho-Slovakia, British statesmen realized that he had France were negotiating with eastern European nations a tight system of military agreements to resist further nazi aggression. Said he: "... Recent happenings have rightly or wrongly, made every state which lies adjacent to Germany unhappy, anxious and uncertain about Germany's future intention. What we are concerned with is to preserve our independence. When I say our independence, I do not mean this country only. I mean the independence of all states which may be threatened by aggression ... We therefore welcome the cooperation of any country, whatever may be its internal system of government, not in aggression ... We cannot live forever in an atmosphere of surprise and alarm from which Europe has suffered in recent months. The common business of life cannot be carried on in a state of uncertainty." Chamberlain's words opened the way for Poland, Rumania, Turkey, the Soviet Union, Greece, Yugoslavia—all to join Britain and France in a pledge to aid one another in case of attack. The British government has flatly dropped all pretenses of continental neutrality. It was an event that went a long way toward restoring the balance of power that had lately swung heavily in favor of the dictators. If Chamberlain's words meant anything, they meant that from now on Fuhrer Hitler will have few if any more bloodless conquests. The world may now find the answers to two questions long debated: Can Fuhrer Hitler and his nazis remain in power long without their foreign "diversion"? When the fuhrer threatens invasion is he bluffing or prepared to wage war? Another question was assassinated at Mussolini's funeral." LAMP TRICKS— SCHENECTADY, New York The bland orange-yellow soot-vapor lamps now lights hundreds of miles of U.S. highway. Until recently it has been a tide-lish and costly job to get the soot into the highly evacuated lamps without contamination. Last week General Electric Laboratories at Schenectady announced a clever new way of firing the bulbs. The sodium Is packaged in thin frail glass capsules, a capsule placed inside each lamp, the lamp pumped out and sealed. The short radio waves are turned off the capsule. It heats up, explodes. The sodium is thus freed inside the lamp and the broken capsule is reduced to a harmless pinch powder. SOFTNESS FOR SAFETY—PHILADELPHIA—At Philadelphia's Franklin Institute last year a dummy named Oscar was captured headfirst against an automobile windshield. The pear cracked and some crumbs of grit fell outside the car. But Wes Oscar's head hit it, the pane bleed outward two or three inches. If the dummy had been a person involved in a motor crash this elastic yield of the grit might have saved him a fracture. A nine-ounce steel ball dropped on a pane of the glass from a height of 28 feet the glass bulged and cracked did not break. A young woman stood behind another pane with Chief Bender, famed old pitcher wound up and let off baseball at it. The glass stop the ball. Thus with great fanfare The MARCH OF TIME BY THE EDITORS OF TIME The Weekly Newsmagazine (Continued from page 4) into Czecho-Slovakia, British statesmen realized that he had embarked on a policy of conquest aimed at nothing less than domination of Europe, if not the world. Flush from the Czech seizure, the fuhrer began to threaten Poland. The German army was already partly mobilized. Troops were moved toward the Polish Corridor and Danzig, where Poland has large interests and investments. East Prussia had become an armed camp. Finally the naval government submitted its demands: German absorption of Danzig, a German auto road across the Polish Corridor, a Polish signature on the German-Italian-Japanese anti-Comintern pact. Poland's hour of unequal struggle with the nazi giant seemed at hand. Poland, with a bigger population (34,000,000), bigger area (150,000 sq. mi.), bigger standing army (285,000) than Czecho-Slovakia was too big a nation to let fall into Germany's hands. Last week Poland got what Czecho-Slovakia had pleaded for in vain. Before a hushed, crowded house of commons 70-year-old Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain announced that Britain and of the dictators. If Chamberlain's words meant anything, they meant that from now on Fuhrer Hitler will have few if any more bloodless conquests. The world may now find the answers to two questions long debated: Can Fuhrer Hitler and his nazis remain in power long without their foreign "diversion"? When the fuhrer threatens invasion is he bluffing or prepared to wage war? Another question was virtually settled in the affirmative: If war does come, Germany will again have to fight both on eastern and western fronts. Major Vernon Bartlett, M. P., offered a "peace formula" to the house of commons: "We shall not be able to enjoy ourselves until Franco's widow tells Stalin on his deathbed that Hitler has been announced cost of $6,000,000." Safety glass is a double sided with a transparent filler or bending layer between. In the glass the filler was cell acetate. In the new it is polyvinyl chloride. No. of Bank 571 COMBINED REPORT OF CONDITION OF The Southern County Bank LOCATED AT ANAHEIM, CALIF., AS OF THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS ON THE 28th DAY OF MARCH, 1939 ASSETS Commercial Savings Combined Cash, balances with other banks and cash items in process of collection, including exchanges for clearing house $426,232.78 $244,676.96 $670,995 U. S. Government obligations, direct and fully guaranteed 24,500.00 24,500.00 State, county and municipal Bonds 20,512.25 100,335.93 120,881 All other bonds and securities 47,562.97 1,614.89 49,171 Loans and discounts 362,521.67 12,955.00 375,441 Real estate loans 39,943.18 394,627.92 434,551 Overdrafts 216.39 216.39 Bank premises, furniture and fixtures and equipment 11,515.29 11,515.29 Other real estate owned 36,266.67 91,926.95 128,171 Items in transit between head office and branches—net 671.97 671.97 Total $945,443.17 $870,637.65 $1,816.0 LIABILITIES Commercial deposits—demand, including demand certificates, dividend checks, certified checks, cashiers and expense checks, and outstanding letters of credit sold for cash $749,744.52 749,744.52 Savings deposits, including time accounts—open, time certificates, school savings deposits, savings club deposits, etc. 729,544.03 729,544.03 State, county and municipal Deposits 64,425.00 64,425.00 Other liabilities 745.51 745.51 PRINTING--- of every Description At a Reasonable Price Phone 2414 At a Reasonable Price Phone 2414 for Quick Service Announcements Contracts Programs Walls of Sale Employees Record Forms Purchase Orders Wall Heads Packing House Forms Slotters Envelopes Booklets Invoices Receipts Books Ledger Sheets Signs Bookkeeping Forms Legal Forms Social Stationery Business Cards Labels Sales Books Catalogues Letterheads Social Security Forms Planning Factory Forms Menus Cards Payroll Sheets Statements Cash Slips Posters Time Cards ANAHEIM GAZETTE 259 East Center Street ANAHEIM CALIFORNIA Savings deposits, including time accounts—open, time certificates, school savings deposits, savings club deposits, etc. State, county and municipal Deposits Other liabilities 745.51 Capital Paid in: a. Class A preferred stock, 500 shares, Par $100 50,000.00 50,000.00 c. Common stock, 1250 shares, Par $100 125,000.00 125,000.00 Surplus 30,000.00 22,000.00 52,286.62 Undivided profits—net 34,249.70 4,668.62 38,828.62 Reserve for contingencies 5,703.44 5,703.44 5,703.44 Total $945,443.17 $870,687.65 $1,816,881.65 Loans and Investments Pledged to Secure Liabilities MEMORANDUM: Other bonds, stocks, and securities $72,745.32 $72,745.32 Total Pledged (excluding rediscounts) $72,745.32 $72,745.32 Pledged: b. Against public funds of states, counties, school districts, or other subdivisions or municipalities $72,745.32 $72,745.32 Total Pledged $72,745.32 $72,745.32 STATE OF CALIFORNIA. COUNTY OF ORANGE Wm. Schumacher, vice-president, and Wilson W. Phelps, secretary of The Southern County Bank being duly sworn, each for he says he has a personal knowledge of the matters contained foregoing report of condition and schedules pertaining therein that every allegation, statement, matter and thing therein con is true to the best of his knowledge and belief. WM. SCHUMACHER, Vice-President WILSON W. PHELPS, Secretary. Severally subscribed and sworn to before me by both dept this 11th day of April, 1939. KATHERINE W. TULL, Notary Public in and for the said of Orange, State of California. My Commission expires March 3, 1949. at Mussolini's funTRICKS— ENECTADY, New York— and orange-yellow of sodipor lamps now lights hunof miles of U. S. highway. recently it has been a tickled costly job to get the sodiinto the highly evacuated without contamination. But week General Electric Co.'s stories at Schenectady and a clever new way of fillbulbs. The sodium Is packaged in tiny, glass capsules, a capsule inside each lamp, the lamp lensed out and sealed. Then radio waves are turned on capsule. It heats up, explodes. Sodium is thus freed inside lamp and the broken capsule succeded to a harmless pinch of car. NESS FOR SAFETY— ILADELPHIA—At PhiladelFranklin Institute last week fanny named Oscar was cataheadfirst against an autowindshield. The pane pined and some crumbs of glass outside the car. But when its head hit it, the pane blugtward two or three inches. The dummy had been a real involved in a motor crash, elastic yield of the glass have saved him a skull ure. nine-ounce steel ball was used on a pane of the same from a height of 28 feet. Glass bulged and cracked but not break. A young woman behind another pane while Bender, famed oldtime er wound up and let fly a ball at it. The glass stopped ball. acetal resin a synthetic plastic made from acetylene. In an automobile this flexible yielding pane is something like a transparent, moistureproof, windproof curtain. It is expected to cut down the number and seriousness of highway injuries due to sudden stops. The idea of shatterproof glass was born in 1903 when a French chemist, Edouard Benedictus, knocked a bottle containing dried collodion from a shelf. The bottle cracked but the fragments did not spatter. Benedictus concluded that they were held together by the collodion film. He got a patent in 1914 but the first shatterproof glass did not appear in automobiles until 1924. Cellulose nitrate was the first binder used; but actinic rays in sunshine turned this disagreeably brown. Cellulose acetate as a binder and actinic-filtering glass stopped the discoloration. But the glass was hard and, tough it did not fly into lacerating fragments, a human head striking it fared State Job Service Will Add to Staff Orange county office of the California State Employment service soon will have three additional workers, according to Manager Roy Ferguson. Included will be an assistant claim agent, a junior interviewer and a stenographer. All will be transferred from other offices. Cooperation with citrus houses of the county and the enlarged program for farm placement were said by Ferguson to be the main reasons for the staff increase. Addition of the three employees will give the office a total of 18 workers. badly. Moreover, it became brittle in cold weather. The new glass is not only soft for safety but keeps its effectiveness at temperatures around zero. Buy now and Buy in Anaheim! GUARANTEED-- UPHOLSTERING 2 Piece Suite Recovered $2750 and up (including Material) 2 Piece Suite Recovered $2750 and up (including Material) Six Experienced Craftsmen to Serve You S. T. HAMMOND CO. PHONE 3931 142 South Los Angeles Street Anaheim California Business and Professional DIRECTORY Howard E. Tews DENTIST 503 N. Los Angeles St. Phones Office 3435 Residence 3986 Anaheim, California D. C. Brown, M. D. Eye, Far, Nose and Throat Phone 2417 Residence Phone 1073 206 West 4th Street Santa Ana California C. O. PATTerson, Opt. D. Optometrist FOR CORRECT EYEWEAR Phone Of. 3607 109 South Los Angeles Street You'll find Quality Merchandise at a reasonable price at Anaheim Stores. When You Need a TAXI CALL JESS The Old Reliable PICKWICK CAB PHONE JESS 225 So. Los Angeles 4822 206 West 4th Street Santa Ana California Homer A. Nelson, Opt. D.. OPTOMETRIST Phone 3104 114 N. Lemon St. Anaheim, California A. L. CARY ELECTRICIAN Light & Power Installations 130 W. Chartres — Phone 2836 Ambulance Service Day or Night Phone 3209 Backs, Terry & Campbell H. P. CAMPBELL Resident Director 251 N. Lemon Street Anaheim, California MILK ---- Delivered to your Door each morning ACACIA DAIRY ANAHEIM 2078 When You Need a TAXI CALL JESS The Old Reliable PICKWICK CAB PHONE JESS 225 So. Los Angeles 4822 Out of Town Trips for Shopping Parties Open Evenings Sunday by Appointment DR. OSHER PHYSICIAN & SURGEON Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Dentist Oculist—Glasses Fitted Phone 3212 1224 West Center Street Anaheim, California Buy Now and Buy in Anaheim! 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