anaheim-gazette 1944-01-20
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ANNOUNCEMENTS ... 1
CARDS OF THANKS ... 2
HELP WANTED ... 3
SITUATIONS WANTED ... 4
PERSONALS ... 5
LOST & FOUND ... 6
WANTED MISC'L. ... 7
WANTED TO RENT ... 8
FOR RENT ... 9
BUSINESS CHANCES ... 10
FOR SALE MISC'L. ... 11
POULTRY, RABBITS, PETS ... 12
FOR SALE AUTOS ... 13
TRADES ... 14
WANTED REAL ESTATE ... 15
FOR SALE REAL ESTATE ... 16
LEGAL NOTICES ... 17
Last Rites Held For Citrus Grower
The death on Saturday, Jan. 15, of Thomas Plant at his home on Brookhurst road, removed one of the community's well known citrus growers, who had operated his orange ranch property there for the past quarter century.
Mr. Plant was born 71 years ago in Chicago, Ill. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Lulu Plant, and one son, Paul Plant, both of the home, and by a sister and a brother, Mrs. H. H. Bowers of Oakland, and Albert Plant of Chicago.
The Rev. Stanley Frederick George, pastor of Anaheim First Presbyterian church, officiated at funeral services held Tuesday afternoon in the chapel of Honold
With more than 2,000 Southern California residents expected to file federal income returns before the deadline March 15, at least 400,000 whom will be filling for the time, Collector of Internal Revenue Harry C. Westover today sued instructions designed to simplify for filing the filling our tax returns.
Taxpayers who use the optional simplified Form 1040-A are allowed to take any deduction from their gross income taxes calculated on this form ready take into consideration average allowance of 6 per dollar for deductions for each person Only those people whose 1943 come was derived from salaries, dividends, interest and nuities may use Form 1040-A, then, only if their total income was $3,000 or less.
Any taxpayer who so deserves may file the regular Form I but those whose income was $3,000 or was derived from business or income property must on this form and are allowed option.
Taxpayers who file on Form 1040 MAY DEDUCT: State tax, state unemployment insurance taken from their paycheck state income tax paid in 1943.
WANTED TO RENT ... 8
FOR RENT ... 9
BUSINESS CHANCES ... 10
FOR SALE MISC'L ... 11
POULTRY, RABBITS, PETS ... 12
FOR SALE AUTOS ... 13
TRADES ... 14
WANTED REAL ESTATE ... 15
FOR SALE REAL ESTATE ... 16
LEGAL NOTICES ... 17
Announcements 1
Read The Gazette, Anaheim's newspaper "bible" since 1870.
Help Wanted 3
WANTED—Man or woman, preferably with some selling experience, for pleasant house to house canvass work. Can earn big pay. Leave name and address at Gazette office, or write P. O. Box 151, Anaheim.
Personals 5
SEE NORTH ANAHEIM'S Spirella retailer for your fittings. Mrs. Ednice Smith, 224 W. North St.
For Sale Misc'l 11
FOR SALE—Scratch pads; various (small) sizes; made from new Bond scrap paper. 15c per pound. Anaheim Gazette. 259 E. Center.
FOR SALE—Large rocking chair. 315 S. Claudina.
FOR SALE—Air-propelled water Car Cooler, new; keeps car cool in desert heat. 271 E. Center St.
FOR SALE—Shipping Case and packing material for grand piano. 271 East Center St.
(Pub. Anaheim Gazette Jan. 13, 20, 27, '1944)
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF ORANGE
In the Matter of the Estate of Bertha Koesel, Deceased.
No. A-11459
NOTICE OF TIME SET FOR PROVING WILL AND HEARING APPLIICATION 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 the above named decedent, and for the issuance to Clara Maass of Letters Testamentary, has been filed in this Court, and that Friday, January 28, 1944, at 10 o'clock A. M. of said day, at the Court room of Department 3 of this Court, 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 orange ranch property there for the past quarter century.
Mr. Plant was born 71 years ago in Chicago, Ill. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Lulu Plant, and one son, Paul Plant, both of the home, and by a sister and a brother, Mrs. H. H. Bowers of Oakland, and Albert Plant of Chicago.
The Rev. Stanley Frederick George, pastor of Anaheim First Presbyterian church, officiated at funeral services held Tuesday afternoon in the chapel of Honold Bros. Mortuary, Garden Grove. Interment followed in Fairhaven cemetery.
Everybody reads The Gazette.
CARPENTER
Repair — Remodel or New Construction
INTERIOR
EXTERIOR
No Job Too Small
PHONE ANAHEIM 3860
TELEPHONE OPERATORS NEEDED
Service men and war workers are all depending upon our girls at the switchboards.
Good pay while learning and regular increases.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA TELEPHONE CO.
Apply 217 N. Lemon St., Anaheim or, 514½ N. Main St., Santa Ana.
(Availability Certificate Required)
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 the above named decedent, and for the issuance to Clara Maass of Letters Testamentary, has been filed in this Court, and that Friday, January 28, 1944, at 10 o'clock A.M. of said day, at the Court room of Department 3 of this Court, 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 January 7, 1944.
B. J. SMITH, County Clerk
WM. P. WEBB,
Attorney for Petitioner.
(Pub. Anaheim Gazette Jan. 13, 20, 27, 1944)
NOTICE TO THE STOCKHOLDERS OF THE ANAHEIM UNION WATER COMPANY
Notice is hereby given that the annual meeting of the stockholders of the Anaheim Union Water Company will be held at the office of the Company at Anaheim, Orange County, California, on the 29th day of January, 1944, at the hour of 10 o'clock a.m. of said day, for the purpose of electing Directors to serve for the ensuing year, and to transact such other business as may properly come before the meeting.
By order of the Board of Directors.
L. J. SHERIDAN, Secretary.
SCANT INJURIES
IN MINOR ACCIDENTS
Two automobile accidents occurring in Anaheim this week were listed on the daily record at the police station. The latest, occurring yesterday, resulted in only minor cuts and bruises for Benito C. Ormelas of Cuçamonga, when the Ford truck he was driving, overturned at the intersection of Lemon and Los Angeles streets.
The earlier accident involved a collision between cars driven by Cora P. Coyner, 312 Kroeger street, and Lt. John Walker of the Victorville Air Base. This occurred at Center and Los Angeles streets, but no one was injured.
IMMEDIATELY!
All of us must help to win Victory. Douglas needs men and women to help keep production levels high. No special skill or training is necessary. If you can't devote full time to War Production work, the Douglas Anaheim Feeder Shop offers you interesting work on convenient 4 hour victory shifts Talk to the Douglas interviewer at:
Anaheim Feeder Shop
406 South Los Angeles Street Anahiem, California
Daily Except Sundays 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Call or write for free job information booklet.
Availability Certificate Necessary!
MONEY
READ AND USE
GAZETTE
WANT ADS
Berry C. Westover Gives Information of Due To Small Income Tax Payers
more than 2,000,000 California residents ex- to file federal income tax before the deadline of 15, at least 400,000 will be filing for the first Collector of Internal Revenue Marry C. Westover today is- instructions designed to sim- for filing the filling out of returns.
Payers who use the option- plified Form 1040-A are not- need to take any deductions in their gross income. The calculated on this form al- take into consideration an allowance of 6 per cent reductions for each person. Those people whose 1943 in- was derived from salaries, dividends, interest and an- may use Form 1040-A, and only if their total income is 3,000 or less.
Taxpayer who so desires file the regular Form 1040, whose income was over or was derived from busi- or income property must file this form and are allowed no.
Taxes paid in California, Victory taxes or federal social security or railroad retirement taxes or civil service deductions taken from their paychecks, federal incomes taxes for prior years, hunting or fishing licenses, passport fees, special assessments, personal living or family expenses, cost of personal insurance or annuity premiums, expenses or depreciation of automobiles operated for personal use, losses on personal residences sold, or the purchase price or cleaning cost of ordinary uniforms.
Edison Company Executive Elected Head of L. A. C of C
LOS ANGELES. — W. C. Mullendore, executive vice president of the Southern California Edison company, was elected 51st presi- dent of the Los Angeles County
(NOTE: If you have a son in any branch of the armed forces, or a daughter in any of the women’s army services, The Anaheim Gazette would like to have news notes about them. If they are home on leave, if they write of interesting incidents of army life, or if they should be taken prisoner of war, etc, etc; please call The Gazette, phone 2206, and give an item for this column. Their friends will appreciate it too. Clip this column and enclose it with your letter when you write them.)
Nine from Anaheim Are Selectees On Fullerton List
Of nine Anaheim youths induct-
Head of L. A. C of C
LOS ANGELES. — W. C. Mullendore, executive vice president of the Southern California Edison company, was elected 51st president of the Los Angeles County
Nine from Anaheim Are Selectees On Fullerton List
Of nine Anaheim youths inducted on January 3 from Fullerton Selective Service board No. 174, five chose the Navy, Clifford A. Kahlen, Felix R. Guerrero, Alfred J. Castilla, Harold Wade Houts and Donald Roy Betszold. Inducted into the Army were Everett H. Trindel, Felix G. Savala, John Horton Wise and John G. Laborde.
Other North Orange county selectees were Charles Lee Logue, Buena Park; Pablo S. Corral, Val Sherman Smith, Clarence O. Aldrich, Mike Juarez and Ernest Glenn Hunt, La Habra; Joe Henry Diharce and William Garcia, Brea; Clemente R. Rodrigiez, Placentia; Edward Roy Burke, Yorba Linda.
Fullerton selectees included Carl R. Griggs, Aaron V. Hudson, Donald D. Wranosky, Army; George E. Battisfore, Ralph W. Blakesley, James F. Forbes, Sefernio R. Nieto, Tony R. Herrera and Robert L. Bacon, Navy. Also on the Fullerton list were Joseph A. Sanford of Long Beach and Joe Islas Gonzalez, Los Angeles.
FLYER COMPLETES BASIC TRAINING AT PECOS
PECOS ARMY AIR FIELD,
Jan. 19—Aviation Cadet James D. Buchanan, husband of the former Juanita L. Davis, Anaheim, Calif., has completed his basic flying training at the Pecos Army Air Field, and will now go into advanced training at this field.
Cadet Buchanan is a graduate of Roosevelt high school at Los Angeles. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Buchanan, 312 6th St., Navy Housing, Honolulu, T. H.
GLEN EDWARD BLOOM JOINS U. S. MARINES
Glen Edward Bloom, Jr., 17, of 709A North Lemon street, joined the U. S. Marine corps last week. Following an indefinite period of inactive status he will go to the Marine Corps base, San Diego, to begin recruit training.
Private Bloom is a native of Kansas City, Kansas. He has been
"Our chamber of commerce must continue the fine work in community service which it has been carrying on under the great leadership of Frank Doherty. This means that the chamber should continue its assistance in community war problems, its emphasis upon sound local business growth, and its national leadership in education of business men on free enterprise principles.
"We must give attention to emergency post-war problems, while insisting that until the war is won, everything else, including postwar planning, must take a secondary place in our efforts.
“If any one policy is to be emphasized above others this war year, it should be that of realism. We cannot afford the luxury of self-deception to hide unpleasant facts or hard tasks. We must and will face the facts, not gloomily nor fearfully but, I hope, cheerfully and with confidence — yet face them. We can no more afford to underrate the formidable disruptive forces which must be overcome on the home front than can the soldier afford to underrate the enemy on the battlefront.
“Above all, as we fight on toward a dearly-won victory, we must not forget that it is individual freedom and not increased government guardianship for which America fights.”
During the five weeks ending December 4th, Florida orange shipments broke all volume records, exceeding 13,000 carloads. As a result, prices for Florida oranges dropped sharply, in the following week the price average for Florida oranges in the auction markets was 75 cents below ceiling.
The latest estimate on the coming navel orange crop is 40,108 cars, compared to last winter's light crop of 30,825 cars."
GLEN EDWARD BLOOM JOINS U. S. MARINES
Glen Edward Bloom, Jr., 17, of 709A North Lemon street, joined the U. S. Marine corps last week. Following an indefinite period of inactive status he will go to the Marine Corps base, San Diego, to begin recruit training.
Private Bloom is a native of Kansas City, Kansas. He has been attending the Anaheim Union high school and taking part in football and swimming.
His parents are Mr. and Mrs. Glen Edward Bloom, Sr.
PLACENTIA CADET ENDS BASIC TRAINING
Aviation Cadet William A. Solesbee of the neighboring community, is now starting his advanced flying training at the Pecos Army Air field, Texas, where he completed basic training last week. Calet Solesbee’s wife is the former Miss Betty Corn, of Santa Ana.
AIR HERO'S MEDALS WILL GO TO WIDOW
In special ceremonies to be held at SAAAB Sunday afternoon, Mrs. Margaret Porter, civilian employee in the Quartermaster department, will be presented with the Distinguished Flying Cross and Purple Heart, for her hero husband, recently killed in action.
FLYING CROSS COMES TO LIEUT. RIMPAU
First Lieut. Adolph Rimpau, son of Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Rimpau, Route 2, Box 171, Anaheim, was one of Three Orange county airmen and 39 Californians awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross this week, for outstanding service with the 12th Air Force in North African and European theaters of action.
Gazette “want” ads bring quick and sure results.
Anaheim Gazette — Thursday, January 20, 1944 Page Nine
This is Your "Battle Flag"
HERE AT HOME
WE BOUGHT EXTRA WAR BONDS
Every patriotic American will want to display this emblem at home—on his front door or in his window. It is the red, white and blue sticker that says you have done your part in the 4th War Loan.
Display your colors now!
Display your colors now!
During this 4th War Loan Drive you are again asked to do something extra to help smash the Axis. Your part is to invest in at least one extra hundred dollar Bond. But don't stop there if you can do more. For remember—no matter how many Bonds you buy—no matter what denominations they are—you get back on maturity $4 for every $3 you invest. And that's on the word of Uncle Sam, creator of the safest investment the world has ever known.
So before you look into your wallet—LOOK INTO YOUR HEART. Your company, the place where you work, has been given a quota to meet in this 4th War Loan Drive. Do your part to help meet this quota. And remember, millions of America's fighters are waiting for your answer, your pledge that you are backing them to the limit.
Let's All BACK THE ATTACK!
CLARICE SPORTSWEAR
219 West Center Street, Anaheim
Come On, America!
It's 1944!
This is what we've been working for all along. This is the year to hit and hurt the enemy. This is the time when everything you do counts double. If we all get together and do all we can, we'll be over this hurdle and well on our way to complete and crushing victory.
No question about the men in uniform—they'll go "all out." But can we count on you to back them all the way? Your quota is where you work—you've got to buy your War Bonds and then buy more, until every last loose cent you have is fighting. Tough? Of course, it's tough—unless it is a sacrifice you're simply not doing your share!
Make the sacrifice now—buy more than the extra $100 Bond your country counts on you for—winning the war is worth any sacrifice you make. Besides, you aren't giving, you're lending to America! You'll get back every dollar you invest in War Bonds, with interest.
An extra $100 War Bond now is the minimum for everybody—can't we count on you for more?
This sticker in your window means you have bought 4th War Loan securities.
Let's All BACK THE ATTACK!
LAKE'S MEN'S STORE
225 West Center Street, Anaheim