anaheim-gazette 1939-06-29
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FOX ANAHEIM
Now Playing
Matinee Saturday at 2 p.m.
"YOUNG
MR. LINCOLN"
HENRY FONDA
Alice Brady - Marjorie Weaver
— AND. —
"The Jones Family
In Hollywood"
FREE RANGE! SAT NITE!
Sun. Mon. Tues., July 2 - 3 - 4
Sun. & Tues. Continuous Shows
"TARZAN
FINDS A SON"
Johnny Weissmuller
Maureen O'Sullivan
— AND —
"MAISIE"
with
Robt. Young - Ann Sothern
COMING JULY 5 - 6 - 7 - 8
PAUL MUNI
BETTE DAVIS
in
"JUAREZ"
with—
Brian Aherne - Claude Rains
John Garfield
PLUS SELECTED FEATURES
PLAY "SUPER PAY-ME" Every Monday and Thursday
ANAHEIM Theatre
Ends Sunday
Mit. Saturday - Sunday Cont.
DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS, Jr.
BASIL RATHBONE
— in —
"THE SUN
NEVER SETS"
— AND —
JACK LONDON'S
"WOLF CALL"
FREE RANGE! SAT NITE!
MON. & TUES. JULY 3 - 4
Tuesday Continuous from 2
All 15¢ Children£
Seats 10¢ Anytime
"WINGS OF
THE NAVY"
George Brent
Ollivia De Havilland
John Payne
— AND —
"KING OF THE
UNDERWORLD"
Humphrey Bogart-Kay Francis
JULY 5 - 6 7 - 8 - 9
Gilbert & Sullivan's
"THE MIKADO"
— with—
Kenny Baker - Jean Colin
D'OYLY CARTE CHORUS
— AND —
ZANE GREY'S
"HERITAGE OF
THE DESERT"
Donald Woods
Evelyn Venable-Russell Hayden
R. G. KENYON
Newspaper advertising of Southern California Edison company, Ltd., has been awarded national honors in the annual Public Copy Contest of the Publicities Advertising Association. Southern California concern the award of merit for publications newspaper advertising the premier award for mere dise newspaper advertising electric companies in the competition with several hundred other utilities.
R. G. Kenyon, advertising manager of the Southern CaliforniEdison company, received the certificates of award for his company at the annual convention of the association in New York. The company's newspaper advertising, selected from 4,000 entries in the nation-wide contest, exhibited as one of the features of the convention.
In winning the awards, Southern California Edison company has received the highest possible recognition of its
BETTE DAVIS
in
"JUAREZ"
with—
Brian Aherne - Claude Rains
John Garfield
PLUS SELECTED FEATURES
PLAY "SUPER PAY-ME" Every Monday and Thursday
Dr. Seitter Retires as Active Minister
Bringing to a close 44 years of ministry; Dr. Charles F. Seitter, pastor of the First Methodist church of Garden Grove, preached his final services there last Sunday. Seitter is retiring from active work in ministry.
Dr. Seitter and his wife will live in Pasadena, where the minister plans to be active in teaching work.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF ORANGE.
HOME OWNERS' LOAN CORPORATION, a corporation,
Plaintiff,
vs.
JAMES L. SLOAN and CONSTANCE E. SLOAN, husband and wife,
RELIANCE TITLE COMPANY, a California corporation, as Trustee,
SAVINGS, LOAN AND BUILD-ASSOCIATION OF ANAHEIM, a California corporation,
Defendants,
NO. 37393
NOTICE OF COMMISSIONER'S SALE
Under and by virtue of an Order and Decree of Foreclosure and Writ for the Enforcement of Judgment Requiring Sale of Property issued out of the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the County of Orange, on the 28th day of June, 1939, in the above entitled action, wherein the above named plaintiff obtained a judgment and decree of foreclosure on the 23rd day of June, 1939, which judgment and decree was, on the 23rd day of June, 1939, entered and recorded in Judgment Book No. 37 of said Court at page 136 et seq., (to which Judgment and Decree reference is hereby made), I am commanded to sell at public auction in the manner prescribed by law, all that certain
MORE ABOUT Pioneer Picnic
(Continued from Page 1)
memory of early days in Anaheim.
Among those present were the following:
Annetta R. Tombes of Fullerton, Thomas H. Kuchel, Mrs. C. E. Holcomb of Fullerton, Mrs. Henry Kuchel, Mary I. Shaffer of Tujunga, Lillian C. Kennedy of Florence, Ariz., Ada Clabaugh Peery of San Diego, Eleanor Heitshusen Clabaugh, Mrs. H. Fesenfeld of West Los Angeles, Eva Merritt, Irving R. Gates.
Margaret Hoag, Edna Selinger of Fullerton, Violet Allen Schaller of Long Beach, Rose Kraemer of Olive, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Dean of Fullerton, W. L. Dunlap, Frank J. Memetz, Eleanor R. Smith of Long Beach, F. A. Borth and Mrs. Borth, W. A. Gardiner, Lilian Bennerscheidt.
Grace Allen Peres, Charles S. Knowlton of Fullerton, John R. Gardiner of Fullerton, Mrs. D. J. Donnelly, Adele M. Mosseman of Los Angeles, Mrs. Joseph Carroll, Clara F. Mosseman of Los Angeles, Martha O. Wallop, Louise Berrow, Emma Backs Jackson, Mrs. A. Nagel, Oscar Bayha of Santa Ana, Mrs. Dora L. Pearson, Mrs. Charles E.Pearson, Mrs. Amanda Hill, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Scott, A. Nagel, Miss Alice Grimshaw, Mr. ad Mrs. Arthur Lewis, Mrs. Ernst Borchert, Mrs. Leo Sheridan, L. E. Miller; Ted Kuchel, C. E. Holcomb, Otto des Granges, Mr. and Mrs. Chas Jacobson and others.
Experts estimate management costs of running small businesses to be 16 times greater than those of large businesses.
LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA IN AND FOR THE COUNTY
LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
IN AND FOR THE COUNTY
OF ORANGE.
In the Matter of the Estate of
EUNICE G. SHERIDAN,
Deceased.
NO. A. 7346
NOTICE OF TIME SET FOR
PROVING WILL AND HEARING APPLICATION FOR LETTERS TESTAMENTARY.
Notice is hereby given, that a petition for the probate of a document now on file in the office of the Clerk of this Court purporting to be the last will of said Eunice G. Sheridan, deceased, and for the issuance to Leo J. Sheridan of Letters Testamentary, has been filed in this Court, and that Friday, July 14, 1939, at 10 o'clock A. M. of said day, at the Court room of this Court in the Department of the Presiding Judge thereof, in the Court House in the City of Santa Ana, County of Orange, State of California, have been set as the time and place for the hearing of said petition, when and where all persons interested may appear and contest the same, and show cause, if any they have, why said petition should not be granted. For further particulars reference is hereby made to said petition on file in my office.
Dated June 19, 1939.
B. J. SMITH,
County Clerk.
L. A. LEWIS,
Atty. for Petitioner.
6-22-29, 7-1
Best Advertiser
R. G. KENYON
Newspaper advertising of the Northern California Edison company, Ltd., has been awarded national honors in the annual Better Business Contest of the Public Utilities Advertising Association. The Northern California concern won award of merit for public relations newspaper advertising and premier award for merchandise newspaper advertising for electric companies in the 1938 competition with several hundred utilities.
G. Kenyon, advertising man of the Southern California Edison company, received the two certificates of award for his com-mit at the annual convention of association in New York City. Company's newspaper adver-ging, selected from 4,000 entries nationwide contest, was bited as one of the features of convention.
Winning the awards, the Northern California Edison com-mit has received the highest visible recognition of its ad-
Quality and pack are the essen-tials for dominance of fruits in the markets in the United Kingdom and Continental Europe. This was the high point brought out in the talk of F. A. Motz at a dinner meeting of Mutual Orange Distributors executives, and managers and presidents of affiliated packing associations, at Redlands last week.
Motz is fruit specialist, foreign agricultural service, bureau of agricultural economics, United States department of agriculture, London, and covers the British Isles, and continental Europe.
"Europe today, and especially the "Europe today," and especially the British Isles, are the most cosmopolitan as well as the most competitive markets in the world for fruits and vegetables." He said. "Nothing ever is out of season, and countries 'virtually unknown' as producers ten years ago are active now so far as European markets are concerned."
He spoke highly of the California packs and grades of citrus, and stressed the point that with competition becoming more intensified there must be no let-up in the quality standards of these packs.
"The quickest way to lose the overseas markets today," he said, "is to ship inferior products."
His talk was accompanied by the showing of six reels of colored motion pictures which depict the journey of fruit from the arrival of the boat through its distribution to the consumer.
One of the most interesting features of this film were the pictures of the specialty fruit shops or gasoline sales gain in May Largest in Year
The highest monthly gasoline sales for more than a year was recorded last month state board of equalization ed recently.
Gasoline distributors r-eal the sale of $56,751,696 gallon gasoline on which a tax of $550.88 was levied. This rep- ed a gain of $406,239.33 on over the same month of la- The May income also was stantially higher than the $313.03 collected in gasoline during April.
Anaheim Man Given Six Months in Jail
A vagrancy charge of common drunkenness was admitted by Clarence Lightner of Anaheim before City Judge Frank Tausch last Saturday morning, resulting in a six-months sentence in the county jail.
Lightner was arrested Friday evening for being drunk. His numerous other charges on the same complaint brought the charge-of being a common drunkard.
New Superintendent Selected at Tustin
George N. Hale, for the past five years superintendent of schools at Azusa, will serve as superintendent of the Tustin grammar school
of the Southern California company, received the two certificates of award for his company at the annual convention of association in New York City. company's newspaper advergement from 4,000 entries the nation-wide contest, was dubbed as one of the features of convention.
winning the awards, the Southern California Edison company has received the highest visible recognition of its advertising efforts. The contest is oldest organized advertising petition in existence today. Public Utilities Advertising Association is a part of the Adverging Federation of America. Among the judges of the 1938 petition were a number of outgoing public relations and advertising authorities. This group ledges included Verne Brunett, President, General Foods corporation; Paul Garrett, director of public relations, General Motors corporation; William A. Hart, director of advertising of E. I. du company; Paul B. West, president of Association of Nationalertisers; Merryle S. Rukeyser, comic commentator. International News Service and others.
The Southern California Edison company Ltd. has used newspaper advertising as its principal medium for many years and each year since 1934 has been awarded prizes for the excellence of its advertising.
New Superintendent Selected at Tustin
George N. Hale, for the past five years superintendent of schools at Azusa, will serve as superintendent of the Tustin grammar school for the ensuing year, it has been announced. He succeeds E. E. Harwood.
Obituaries
ARTHUR HURLEY
Funeral services for Arthur Hurley, 72, were conducted Monday afternoon from Backs, Terry & Campbell chapel with Rev. R. Kells Swenerton officiating. Burial was in Loma Vista cemetery.
Hurley died Friday after a short illness. A native of England, he came to the United States in 1888 and had resided in California for the past 32 years. He is survived only by his widow, Jessie E. Hurley.
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The sooner you get a gas refrigerator, the sooner you enjoy the conveniences and savings it provides! Whether you now own an automatic refrigerator or not, Servel Electrolux can save you money.
It's the only refrigerator that operates with the low-cost fuel, natural gas. But that's not all. It's the only "automatic" that freezes without moving parts! It's the only automatic refrigerator that does not decrease in efficiency through the years, that does not wear out or make noise!
SEE THAT TINY FLAME? That's the only "motor" in Servel Electrolux, the gas refrigerator.
PERMANENTLY LOW OPERATING COST! No moving parts—nothing to decrease in efficiency.
SILENT—ALWAYS SILENT! Absence of moving parts means absence of noise.
Today! See this refrigerator (you'll never hear it!) at a dealer's or SOUTHERN COUNTIES GAS COMPANY
Enjoy Natural Gas Service
FOR THE 4 BIG JOBS...Refrigeration Cooking-Water Heating-House Heating.
Gasoline Sales
Gain in May
Largest in Year
The highest monthly gain in gasoline sales for more than a year was recorded last month, the state board of equalization reported recently.
Gasoline distributors reported the sale of $56,751,696 gallons of gasoline on which a tax of $4,702,-0.88 was levied. This represent- al a gain of $406,239.33 or 9.46% over the same month of last year. The May income also was sub- tentially higher than the $4,406,-3.03 collected in gasoline taxes during April.
Aerial Photographs
of Forests Planned
The California region of the U. S. forest service is now preparing to make aerial photographs of the entire Tahoe National forest—first of California's 18 national forests to be completely covered. A forest service photographic plane and crew just arrived at Sacramento from headquarters of the Rocky Mountain region in Denver, Colo., to fly the project.
About 4,000 square miles will be photographed. The elevation varies from 300 feet to 10,000 feet. The plane will therefore have to fly at nearly 24,000 feet over the higher parts of the Range.
Arkansas Picnic to
be Held on July 4
Former Arkansas reside throughout southern California will hold their fourth annual picnic reunion on July 4 at Ameri- park in Fullerton.
Program details have not yet been completed, but the reunion will be an all-day affair with basket luncheon at noon. Specia- music and singing will be features.
In the "Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes," Alaska, Dacon can be fried over high temperature fun- roles, and steam pressure lifts the skillet into the air.
EAST CENTER
AT EMILY
WEST CENTER
AT PALM
ALPHA BETA
Free Samples
Deneyne Gum
This Week!
This Store Will Be Open Monday
Bulk Peanut Butter 2 lbs. 19¢
Crick or Amer. 2 lb. 43¢
HEESE 2 bo 43¢
Oda or Graham 1-lb. box 6¢
& M Baked EANS 2 No. 2 cans 25¢
& M Kidney EANS 3 No. 2 cans 25¢
& M Lima EANS 3 No. 2 cans 25¢
POTATO CHIPS 2 gal. 25¢ size 13¢
FANCY COOKIES 2 1-lb. bags 27¢
SALAD OR DRESSING qt. 14¢
DILL OR PICKLES Large Jars 14¢
SUN RICH OLEOMARGARINE 2 lbs. 23¢
GOOD WAX PAPER 2 40-ft. Rolls 9¢
PURE FRESH DRESERVES 2-lb.
COOKIES 2 bags 27¢
SALAD OR DRESSING qt. 14¢
DILL OR PICKLES Large Jars 14¢
SUN OLEOMARGARINE 2 lbs. 23¢
GOOD WAX 40-ft. Rolls 9¢
PURE, FRESH PRESERVES 2-lb. Jar 22¢
PURE, FRESH PRESERVES 2-lb. Jar 25¢
BEN MUSTARD Hot or Salad 2 6-oz. Jar 11¢
BOIVAR OLIVES Qt. 29¢ Pt. 16¢
TUNA 9¢
Callif. Salad ...½ cans
COFFEE 13¢
COFFEE CUP lb.
COFFEE 25¢
VOLGER'S 1-lb. can
D DOG FOOD 4 For 15¢
DIXIE No. 1 tall
Tang Salad Dressing 29¢
Quart Jars each
F Fruit Cocktail 10¢
Dainty Mix No. 1 tall
GEMS, Pineapple 25¢
Dole 14-oz. can 3 for
FLOUR, 24½ lb. bag 80¢
GLOBE "A-1"
TUNA, No. ½ 2 For 25¢
GOLDEN STRAND
C LA M S - 11¢
BABY NAMCO can
M Corned Beef 16½¢
Libby's ... 12-oz. can
CORNED BEEF 14½¢
Highgrade Imported Meat
SPREADS Libby's Cocktail 2 Cans 19¢
DEV. MEAT Number ¼ cans 3 For 10¢
SPAM, Hormel's 12 ounce can 29¢
MEAT, Hormel's Spiced Luncheon 12-oz. can
O JEWEL OIL Half gallon Jug 53¢
OLIVES, large 2 Cans 19¢
RIPE No. 1 tail
P PICKLES SWEET NIPS 29-oz. Jar 15¢
S FORMAY SHORTENING 3-lb. can 45¢
CLEANSER HOLLY per can 3£
LA FRANCE Makes Ironing Easy 2 Pkgs. 15£
GRAPEFRUIT JUICE 5¢
No. 2 cans each
PEACHES 2 Cans 19¢
F SARDINES 2 For 27¢
Tiny Tot—¼ cans
J JAM or JELLY CRYSTAL 12-oz. glass
FREEZING MIX JELLO can 7½¢
ICE CREAM PWD.JELLO pkg. 7£
SURE JELL FOR JELLIES pkg. 10£
JUICE, Tomato LIBBY'S 8-oz. can 4¢
M TAMALES 2 Cans 25£pop 2-Gall. CORN can 19£pop FINER FLAVER can 11£pop MAYONNAISE HOME-AID Qt. Jar 35£pop MUSHROOMS JACOBS-Hotel 4-oz. can 15£pop O OLIVE OIL POMPEIIAN ¼ pts. 25£pop VEG-ALL LARSFEN'S 17-oz. can 10£pop
S FELS NAPTHA SOAP CHIPS pkg. 19½£pop TOILET TISSUE SCOTT — ROLL caa. 7£pop Toilet Tissue 5 rolls WALDORF caa. 20£pop Paper Towels 3 Rolls SCOTT BRAND caa. 25£pop V CORN Golden Bantam caa. 10£pop VEG-ALL LARSFEN'S caa. 17-oz. can
JUICE, Tomato 4¢ 0 OLIVE OIL POMPEIIAN 1½ pts. 25¢ VEG-ALL LARSEN'S 17-oz. can 10¢
CHOICE MEATS
RABBITS Frying Size Each 44¢
HAMS End Cuts lb. 19½¢--Whole of half lb. 25½¢
PORK CHOPS lb. 19½¢
SIRLOIN STEAK lb. 21½¢
PURE LARD lb. 6½¢ BEEF ROAST lb. 17½¢
We have the finest home grown grain fed frying chickens
FRUITS and VEGETABLES
FANCY JUMBO THICK MEAT
CANTALOUPES 4 for 10¢
FANCY VINE RIPENED
TOMATOES 3 lbs. 10¢
LARGE FANCY SANTA ROSA
PLUMS 6 lbs. 10¢
FANCY NEW CROP
BELL PEPPERS Each 1¢
FANCY LOCAL FRESH
SWEET CORN 7 for 10¢
FANCY NEW CROP
CUCUMBERS Each 1¢
WATERMELONS Guaranteed...lb. 1¢
4TH OF JULY SPECIALS
CANADA DRY GINGER ALE 15¢