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anaheim-gazette 1944-10-19

1944-10-19 · Anaheim Gazette · page 9 of 16 · OCR glm-ocr
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Thursday, October 19, 1944 ANAHEIM BUSINESS "Orange Capitol of the World" ADVERTISING — ANAHEIM GAZETTE Orange County's Oldest NEWSPAPER Established 1870 "Everybody Reads The Gazette" 259 E. Center — Ph. 2206-2207 ATTORNEYS — SAM L. COLLINS Attorney-at-Law Floor Leader Calif. Assembly Office: Chapman Bldg. Ph. 568 Fullerton, California BIRTH CERTIFICATES — BIRTH CERTIFICATES OBTAINED FROM ANY STATE PROMPT AND RELIABLE SERVICE REASONABLE CHARGE NORTHERN ORANGE COUNTY CREDIT BUREAU 408 Bank of America Bldg. Phone Anaheim 2248 250 E. Center, Cor. S. Philadelphia FUNERAL HOMES — BACKS, CAMPBELL & KAULBARS J BEN KAULBARS Resident Director Phone Anaheim 3209 251 North Lemon Street. ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA BUY US WAR BONDS MIMEOGRAPHING — FROM POST CARD TO LEGAL SIZE Reasonable Rates. Immediate Service NORTHERN ORANGE COUNTY CREDIT BUREAU 408 Bank of America Bldg. Phone 2248 MOVING - TRANSFER — STORAGE SUPERIOR SERVICE For Those Who APPRECIATE SPEED and REASONABLE RATES Our company aims to please ... and DOES with careful moving, insured shipments. PHYSICIANS & SURGEONS DR. J. W. TRUXAW PHYSICIAN Phone: office 3213; Res. 2610 Golden State Bank Bldg. Center & L. A. — Anaheim PRINTING THAT'S A CREDIT TO YOU The printed matter that goes out of your offices reflects your standards. We do a good job for you. Stock, ink and design in the modern manner — at moderate cost. ANAHEIM GAZETTE Theo B. Kuchel, Gen. Mgr. 259 E. Center — Ph. 2206-2207 SHOES — FUNERAL HOMES — BACKS, CAMPBELL & KAULBARS J BEN KAULBARS Resident Director Phone Anaheim 3209 251 North Lemon Street. ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA HILGENFELD MORTUARY Faithful, Courteous Service 120 E. Broadway Phone 4105 LOMA VISTA Cemetery and Mausoleum Fullerton, California Endowed for Perpetual Maintenance. Arthur G. Porter Secretary-Manager Office at Cemetery Office—Phone Fullerton 158 Residence—Ph. Anaheim 3811 INSURANCE BROKERS — A. P. M. BROWN "A Full House of Insurance Service" You Can't Afford To Be Under-Insured 501 N. Los Angeles — Ph. 2275 ALFRED H. HANSEN Agent State Farm Insurance Companies Writing every form of Insurance, Including Life 515 N. Los Angeles — Ph. 4423 FRANK TAUSCH INSURANCE Reputation — Service 275 E. Center, Anaheim Phones: Office 2401 Res. 3575 LEGAL PUBLICATIONS — The "Public Notice" is an important function of the American system of Government. The ANAHEIM GAZETTE is an authorized legal publication, established 1870. 259 E. Center — Ph. 2206-2207 SUPERIOR SERVICE For Those Who APPRECIATE SPEED and REASONABLE RATES Our company aims to please and DOES with careful moving, insured shipments, and packing. ANAHEIM TRUCK & TRANSFER B.A.I.S. 1873) 505 S. Los Angeles—Ph. 2123 Shipping, Crating. Storage Local and Long Distance. NEWSPAPERS — Everybody Reads The ANAHEIM GAZETTE Orange County's Newspaper "bible" since 1870. Only $2.00 Per Year 259 E. Center — Ph. 2206-2207 NOTARIES - PUBLIC — NOTARY PUBLIC always on duty to serve you at ANAHEIM BLDG. & LOAN ASS'N Center & Lemon — Ph. 4204 OPTICIANS - Optometrists — DR. HOMER A. NELSON OPTOMETRIST Phone 3104 114 N. Lemon — Anaheim PERSONAL SERVICE — PAY YOUR DEBTS Let Us Explain Our Plan. No Co-signers. Employer not Contacted NORTHERN ORANGE COUNTY CREDIT BUREAU 408 Bank of America Blog Phone 2248 PAINT - WALL PAPER — GOOD PAINT REFRIGERATION SPECIALTIES CO. Refrigeration SALES - SERVICE Quick Freeze Equipment Office and Shop 623 So. L.A. Street Anaheim LEGAL PUBLICATIONS — The "Public Notice" is an important function of the American system of Government. The ANAHEIM GAZETTE is an authorized legal publication, established 1870. 259 E. Center — Ph. 2206-2207 LITHOGRAPHERS — A complete photographic and off-set printing plant is at your service. The ANAHEIM GAZETTE Plant is equipped to supply your every printing need. 259 E. Center — Ph. 2206-2207 TAXI SERVICE — PICKWICK CAB Fast But Careful "At Your Service" 182 W. Center — Ph. 4822 MACHINE SHOPS — ANAHEIM MACHINE WORKS REPAIR Work of All Kinds 125 S. Clementine — Ph. 2011 Please help make The Gazette a better newspaper by giving your local, society or personal news items. Phone 2206. PAINT - WALL PAPER — GOOD PAINT Saves & Preserves The Best Homes For "DUTCH BOY" Paints see us and be better pleased with the results. GIBBS LUMBER Three Retail Yards Anaheim-Fullerton-Placentia DELIVERY OF Building Materials ROBINS PAINT STORE 239 N. Los Angeles St., Anaheim REFRIGERATION— Anaheim, 4652 SODEN REFRIGERATION SPECIALTIES CO. Refrigeration SALES - SERVICE Quick Freeze Equipment Office and Shop 623 So. L.A. Street Anaheim PAINTING CONTRACTOR— Phone 4605 Box 461 A. J. (Jack) DRISKILL Color Harmony in Painting and Decorating Phone 3219 240 E. Center Anaheim MONUMENTS— EARLE G. WARNER Monuments - Markers Res. Pho. Residence: 428-408 602 So. Friends Whittier, Calif. SUBMACHINE GUN WEIGHS LESS THAN 9 POUNDS The Ninth Service Command Ordnance Officer says that the briefcase submachine gun is a .45 weapon which weighs less than nine pounds, is capable of firing 450 bullets a minute, and costs less than twenty dollars. Anaheim Gazette, since 1870. ANAHEIM GAZETTE Directory of Reliable BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL MEN AND FIRMS (FOR LISTING ON THIS PAGE CALL THE GAZETTE, PHONE 2206) CIANS & SURGEONS R. J. W. TRUXAW PHYSICIAN office 3213; Res. 2610 den State Bank Bldg. & L. A. — Anaheim Farm Bureau Joins C. of C. Groups In Fight on School Proposition No. 9 Among the organizations in California that recommended the defeat of Proposition No. 9 on the November ballot, which proposes to increase state support of elementary school districts by one-third, are the California Farm Bureau federation, the California State chamber of commerce, the Los Angeles chamber of commerce and the San Francisco chamber of commerce. Poll of the board of directors of California Taxpayers' association showed 25 members voting no and only one yes on this proposal. In recommending a No vote on Proposition No. 9 the California Farm Bureau says: The proposal is untimely and should wait completion of the current study of administration, organization, and financial support of the public schools that is now under way. It is unnecessary since the legislature can continue to appropriate such additional funds for elementary schools as are needed without it. It has serious objectionable provisions and would hinder a sound method of financing the public schools. It freezes the state's finances to a degree which should be approved only after careful study shows most extraordinary circumstances demand it. The State chamber of commerce, in its vote No recommendation on Proposition No. 9, hard-pressed to feed the cattle on the range, and are tremendously concerned over what will happen when the war ends—when market demands slump—has asked two things: First, the removal, or drastic slashing, of all beef ration points. Second, the assigning of more manpower to packing plants to help move some 10,000,000 excess cattle off the ranges. But as yet, the paradox still continues. Livestock men are haunted by the surplus of beer on the range—aggravated by a shortage of feed—while housewives continue to come home from the butcher shop without the meat their families need, and might just as well have. Livestock men are not alarmists, but they remember well that in 1921, after World War I, the livestock industry was prostrated by a crash that wiped out almost everyone in the industry. They are trying to escape such a debacle after World War II—and it would seem that the government, with the object lesson of World War I before it, would be aware of the danger, too. One of the basic shortcomings of a "controlled economy," however, is that the persons in control—the swivel-chair administrators in Washington and elsewhere—are neither familiar nor sympathetic with the problems of the producer. In the long run, of course, the consumer suffers with the rest, because a calamity to agriculture is soon reflected in a similar calamity to urban wage-earners. The last depression started, years before it was evident in the cities, in America's rural areas, but when it finally caught up with the Nation, the whole country paid the penalty for its failure to see the handwriting on the wall. Rationing, admittedly, may have been a war-born necessity, at least so far as many commodities were concerned, but in this writer's opinion that necessity has long The State chamber of commerce, in its vote No recommendation on Proposition No. 9 says, "The financial troubles of the poorer school districts cannot be satisfactorily corrected by granting a flat increase in state aid to all school districts. With additional state funds at their disposal the urban districts, with their concentration of school enrollment, would have still more money for teachers' salaries and the problem of rural teachers being attracted to city districts would still exist. The measure does not provide for equalization of financial support of elementary school districts... the present constitutional fixed charge for the support of schools is but a minimum, and there is no prohibition against the legislature granting supplementary aid to elementary schools within the limits of the state's current tax resources and in the light of actual needs." The California Real Estate association, in recommending a No vote points out that the measures would increase "the state's constitutional fixed charge for support of elementary schools from $60 to $80 annually per pupil in average daily attendance." The San Francisco chamber of commerce points out that the average teachers salary in California was $2,373 in 1940-41 and that present war-time bonuses have raised the amount considerably, with the annual bonus in San Francisco at $420, Oakland $360, Long Beach $211, and varying from $100 to $420 throughout the state. The Los Angeles chamber of commerce says, "Californians already spend more money per child for the education of children aged 5 to 17 years than do the taxpayers of any other state in the Union. The proposed increase cannot be justified on the basis of inadequate present support." California Taxpayers' association, presenting the results of a poll of its board of directors in which 25 voted no on Poposition No. 9 and only one voted yes, said, "present constitutionally-required state expenditures for public Not only are the American people being denied meat they would like to eat (a circumstance which might be excused on the ground of war-time emergency), but the livestock industry, which has gone all-out to increase production and aid the cause of the Allied Nations, is threatened with bankruptcy and total destruction during the post-war period unless the responsible authorities in Washington wake up to the fact that it is high time that meat rationing should end. The California Cattlemen's Association, through Dan McKinney, its secretary, has wired Food Administrator Marvin Jones and Stabilization Director Fred Vinson of the facts in the case, but as yet there has been no indication from Washington that the government is prepared to take any action to correct an impossible and inexcusable condition. The Cattlemen's Association, realizing that livestock men are new interest in their railroads. Perhaps it is because they are carrying. Perhaps because so many are riding trains for the first time. As the war in the Pacific steps up, you'll heavier and heavier war loads. In this advertisement though that may be. Winning the peace—for America—means ARMY HOSPITALS TO USE GRADUATE CADET NURSES United States Cadet Nurse Corps graduates, who have taken their senior cadet period in Army hospitals and who have applied for commissions in the Army Nurses Corps, may now be employed in military hospitals prior to receiving commissions, it was announced today at the Ninth Service Command surgeon's office, Fort Douglas, Utah. Appointments will be made only in states where graduates of recognized schools of nursing may be employed as trained nurses prior to state board examinations. WAR BONDS will guard against a post-war depression. Taxpayers Association Gives Argument Against Old Age Pension Plan Bill Proposition No. 11, the Townsend-sponsored $60 at 60 pension measure on the November ballot, proposes an expenditure by the state of California which will cost the people of the state about a billion dollars a year in a gross income or transactions tax, according to California Taxpayers association. "Do you know how much a billion is? To live a billion minutes one would have to out-Methuselah the oldest man on record. With 60 minutes to an hour, 24 hours to a day, and 365 days to a year, you'd have to live 1,903 years to be a billion minutes old. At $1 an hour, 4,000,000 Californians would have to work eight hours a day, six days a week, more than five weeks out of each year and turn their entire earnings into the state treasury to pay the pensions which Proposition No. 11 would freeze into the state constitution. Specifically, Proposition No. 11 provides that the state of California shall pay a minimum of $60 a month, regardless of any need for it, to people in California past 60 years of age who would agree not winning the war against depression and unemployment. And to do that, we have to employ common-sense methods, observe natural laws—and enable our people to work out their own salvation." August shipments of fresh grapefruit throughout the nation were all from Southern California. When cream is scarce, serve orange juice in place of cream on summer fruits, suggests the Sunkist Kitchen. $53.00 Allowance for any hearing instrument DEAD OR ALIVE to apply on the purchase of any Western Electric HEARING AID THIS ULTRA-SENSITIVE ELECTRONIC TYPE of Western Electric hearing Aid combines a frequency range and quality of sound which comes surprisingly close to natural hearing. Audiphone Co. 401 First National Bank Bldg. Santa Ana Phone 1736 VOTE NO ON PROPOSITION NO. 12 This proposition has been condemned as vicious and disruptive by our Governor. VOTE NO ON PROPOSITION NO. 12 This proposition has been condemned as vicious and disruptive by our Governor, by our Senator, by Farm Groups and Civic Bodies. It would create chaotic conditions throughout California industry. VOTE NO ON PROPOSITION NO. 12 ORANGE COUNTY DISTRICT COUNCIL OF CARPENTERS The war seems to have given the American people a roads. Perhaps it is because they have seen the enormous war load Perhaps because so many people, including thousands in uniform, first time. Pacific steps up, you'll see more and more S.P. locomotives pulling roads. In this advertisement, Southern Pacific shows you: To tell Locomotives apart 4-8-8-2 "of locomotives—Southern Pacific's giant Articulated Consolidation. Lines pull trains over the High Sierra and other western mountain example of the universal "shorthand" used for designating types of United States. It means that there are 4 small wheels under the leading driving wheels, and 2 small wheels under the trailing truck. To tell less apply count the wheels, separating the smaller wheels in the front and wheels that drive the locomotive. The Articulated Consolidation, or "AC", tons, with tender, is 125 feet long, and develops 6,000 horsepower." of locomotives—Southern Pacific's giant Articulated Consolidation. lines pull trains over the High Sierra and other western mountain example of the universal "shorthand" used for designating types of United States. It means that there are 4 small wheels under the leading wing wheels, and 2 small wheels under the trailing truck. To tell loply count the wheels, separating the smaller wheels in the front and wheels that drive the locomotive. The Articulated Consolidation, or "AC", tons, with tender, is 125 feet long, and develops 6,000 horsepower. 4-8-2 These powerful and faithful engines are universally known as the "Mountain" type (designated by "MT" on the cab), used in both freight and passenger service. Length of engine and tender, 97 feet. Weight, 330 tons. 4-6-2 This is another faithful locomotive known through-out the United States as the "Pacific" type (designated by the letter "P" on the cab). Engine and tender are 91 feet long and weigh about 285 tons. S·P The friendly Southern Pacific