Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

Casa Grande Dispatch from Casa Grande, Arizona • Page 6

Location:
Casa Grande, Arizona
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE CAS A GRANDE DESPATCH dkistt Published Weekly By CASA GRANDE PUBLJSHTNG INVESTMENT POMP ANY E. H. BOTD AL WILKE Editor and Manager News Editor NEWSPAPER FOB FINAL COCNTY Entered at the Post Office at Casa Grande, Ariaona, a. second clan matter, September 6th, 19z4 Subscription, Subscriptien, ne Year bc Months liss Advertising Rates 40c per inch. ClasMfied loTper line.

Count five and one-half werde to hne aad seiri caah with THE RECORD OF Y. C. WHITE The finest piece of public service on record since we have been in the state of Arizona is revealed in the recent report of Y. C. White, state bank superintendent, to Gov.

B. B. Moeur. Approximately one and one-half millions of "tars haVbeen salvaged to the people fe rtate fttjn delinquent financial institutions by Mr. Whites ef- foTin the past year.

Since he took office January, 1933, his department has returned almdst three millions to the public from defunct banks and building and loan companies. One of these has to date paid depositors 57y 2 per cent, and the other has paid 62y 2 This difference in dividends is no doubt a reflec- of the difference in methods Say 1 Wolf Tkat Comes to Door Does Good Turn The following is a reply to a letter asking for a "Dear friend: In reply to your request to send a wish to inform you that the present of my bank account makes it almost impossible. shattered financial condition is due federal laws, state laws, colinty laws, city laws, corporation laws, liquor laws, mother-bi-law4, brother-in- laws, sister-in-laws, and outlaws. "Through these laws, I.am.com- pelled to pay business tax, amusement tax, head tax, gas tax, light tax, carpet tax, food tax, furniture tax and excise tax. am required get a business license, truck li- ense, not to mention a marriage cense and dog license.

"I am also required to contribute 6 every society and organization the genius of a man is capable of bringing to ijfe, to the women's relief, the unemployed re- ief- and the gold-diggers' relief. "Also to every hospital and char- table institution in the city, in- luding the Red the black iross, the purple cross, and louble cress. "For my own safety! I am re- luired to carry life insurance, jroperty insurance, burglary in- He could have passed out a number tf IheJ an- administration. He is the only ot "VtoriPdt done bv the attorney 0 which not a cenfis charged to the unfortunate de- of tile-defunct banks! All the assets go to pay off this Arizona needs more of this kind of honest, intelligent and efficient administration. When it has become evident that Gov.

Moeur intends to stick by his last campaign statement and retire his present term, we expect to see the shouldered form of Y. C. White loom above the field of the common herd of gubernatorial possibilities, His record puts him in a class by himself. CITY TAXES Everything is not what it seems when it comes to city taxes, says Mayor Charles Gof f. For instance tax reductions in Nogales and Saffofd do not really represent a saving to the public, but are due to the substitution of very high occupation taxes for a portion of the city property tax.

Mayor Goff does not really need to defend his administration. People in Casa; Grande seem pretty well satisfied with the way things are being run, ana are well aware that many important improvements have been made in the city during the past few years even while the budget was being drastically cut. The increase in the budget this year has received BO criticism in the hearing of the writer. The informed taxpayer knows the greater amount being expended on the fire department will be more than offset by savings, in insurance rates based on the department efficiency; affd to set up a reasonable contingent fund to make it possible to participate some degree in the public works program is only common sense. Of course we would all like to see a reduction in the city tax but we are not expecting the; impossible.

With even the greatest of economy administration, an increase in valuations will be necessary before the city rate can be reduced unless we are to dispense with services necessary to any progressive city. HOOEY We are in receipt of an amusing letter from Hon. Huey P. Long who, in case the reader doesn't know it, is the Senator from Louisiana. Mr.

Long, in franked envelope, stoutly avers that he does not make practice of sending out his propaganda at the expense of the taxpayer, as some evil minded people have alleged. The most astounding thing Mr. Long says is that he is a pauper. "If I could sell everything I own," he says, "I could not pay half my debts." It seems to us he must owe a mighty lot of money, or the state of Louisiana is a very poor piece of land. the FRIDAY, AUGUST 16, IMS "THAT LITTLE CAffiE'' B.

Link I THREE HAVE Two Aces No. 56431 SHERIFF'S NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ESTATE ON SPECIAL EXECUTION. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE COUNTY OF FINAL, STATE OF ARIZONA. I Frederick A. Fickert, Plaintiff, vs.

Greenback Mining Company, a corporation, John Doe, and JBlack Corporation, Defendants. I business insurance, insur- surance, accident insurance, ance and fire insuran My business is so governed that is no easy matter me to find out who owns it I am expected, nspected, suspected, disrespected, examined, informed, required, fined, commanded and compelled until I provide an inexhaustible supply of money for every known need, desire or hope of the human race. "And simply because refuse to donate to something or other, I am boycotted, talked about, lied about, held up, held down and robbed until I am almost "I can tell you honestly that only the miracle that happened I could not this check. The doors wolf that comes to many nowadays just had pups in my kitchen. I sold tljem and is the money.) 1 and Condon bulletin.

Roosevelt or a Return to Practices Which Caused the JMisery of the Past Five Tears Never in the history of the American Republic, not even in the ntensity and bitterness iof the fight against the policies of Woodrow Wilson, have the forces of privil- edge and financial piracy arrayed themselves -for the destruction of a President as they arej now being marshalled to defeat Franklin Roosevelt Less than three years ago the interests were calling on the government to save them, and now when they are saved and restored by the wise policies of the President they are bent 1 on destroying him. They claim that the policies of the President will destroy them but know better. It is not destruction they fear bufe regulation. They desire to return to the free and easy days when wealth was required to give no account of its doings and those so disposed could plunder the helpless with impunity. President Roosevelt is trying to save them from! themselves to prevent a reoc- curance of the practices which caused the misery and suffering of the past five years.

-But once possessed of tremendous power the great financial interests will fight to the end to regain that power, and they can only regain it by defeating the Presi'dent for re-election. I The battle is being waged on many fronts but the main encounter just now is over the new administration tax bill, examination of the proposed measure does not bear 'out the charge, wailingly and groaningly made by the ultar- rich and their little brothers that the tax will destroy industry, increase unemployment and generally play the devil with the industrial and financial fabric of the nation. Weeklyi The- Weather It was Hark Twain who said that. everybody talks about; the weather, but nobody does anything about it. Had Samuel Clemans lived until today and were it his good fortune to visit 'the i Salt River valley of Arizona, he would soon see that his philosophy of 1874 does not apply in 1935.

Somebody is vdoing something about the weather. A local family returned recently from a motor tour of Missouri, Wisconsin and other northern points. They found Old Sol beating down with all his fury in communities unprepared to cope with hot weather. The found hotels and homes without electric fans and air-conditioning Mid-winter bedding remained on beds and nowh'ere was there scientific evidence that anyone was trying to do anything about the weather. How different that family found conditions upon their return to Arizona where it is popularly supposed that only a doo rseparates us from hell and that is a screen door.

Mark Twain, in your grave overlooking the murRy waters of the Mississippi, your lament has been answered. Out here we are doing something about the Mesa Journal-Tribune. SUMMER bananas make delicious Spiced meat boll cop cider vinegar, cup sugar, 34 whole cloves, and 1 small stick of cinnamon until sugar is dissolved and bubbles begin to look thick. Peel 3 bananas, drop into hot syrup and boil hard for 2 minutes; remove from fire and cooL Use whipped irradiated evaporated milk to "eke out" your cream in making summer desserts. Muffin Crisps, dainty, toasted Swedish-type wafers, make perfect accompaniments for summer salads.

Mary Washington's gingerbread mix makes delectable cup cakes yon add Just 94 cup Of water to the mix and bake in muffin tins. Egg Nogs are nutritious a weQ as delicious if yon add 1 tablespoon of white tauro each serving, befit companiments for summer New Technique The inquisition of compulsion stands in acute need of a new technique, as all of the old aides become shop-worn and threats of the recall, "marches" on Washington, the telegraphing of bleats signed by city directories. As to the first, the senate has been advised by one of its. authorities, the chairman of the cpmmit- i'iees on privileges and elections, flBkt the hook made of rubber; "marchers" are shooed like pigeons off the capitol steps and no pat- rioteer bleeds even prespiration while anguishing over the spectacle; and the transmission of directories oyer the telegraph wires is regarded: only -as a sharp bit of thrift by the wire companies. There is, however, a presumption a cause which must rely upon such skullduggery as the invention of appeals and the burning of the documentary evidence thereof lacks something of being ninety- nine and ninety-nine one-hundredths pure, as it claims to Review.

"Now Mr. proposes that the government 'shall take more money from the very rich and less from the poor to reduce the national debt "He follows a theory that has been recognized: as sound since the earliest days of our Timesi which of course simply in the raw! Easy and cool! Bananas served right in their owi skins are especially attractive. Just sit tl skin and roll a section back toward stem end. Slice the banana, allowing all therslices to remain in in the skin. Serve with on a fresh green plact fork, fresh green leaf for colon.

PERTINENT PARAGRAPHS Cardinal Dressing is made, by adding a fourth-cup currant jelly, fourth-cup whipped cream and a fourtn-cup of chopped salted almonds to mayonnaise. Looks pretty good! some pasteurized dates your vanilla ice cream, for a salads. I Rice served with cheese sauce makes a tempting gnpper dish: Be sure to "fluff the rice" and then pour over It 1 cup white sauce to which cup of mild cheese has been added. Heat until cheese is melted. APPLE SAUCE EN PEE! Apple sauce and custard on a boiled rice-shell makeb a pie you haven't tasted but will like! Prets 2H cups cold boiled rice, through a sieve, add 2 tablespoons melted ln CU tms butter and 2 tablespoons, of sugar and mix well, and press into an Sli over hast; sundae the children will prais Red raspberries ifind a- perfect partner in golden ripe bananas.

The economical banana makes the raspberries farther" too! A five-minute pie filling that beats your own "lemon meringue" is made with the new lemon kremel takes only a minute and "conies out! right" every single timei Fried ham, fluffy boiled rice and brown gravy combine with tomato salad and followed by fruit is a summer-time meal that "goes over." New Englanders like -blueberries in their -gingerbread! Make the gingerbread as usual using the UNDER AND BY VIRTUE OF A SPECIAL EXECUTION, issued-eui-- of and" seal of the i Superior Court of Final County, State of Arizona, on the 6th day of Aug- ust, A. D. 1935, and to me asj sheriff of the said county duly directed and delivered in the above entitled action. i WHEREAS on the 30th day of July, A. D.

1935, the-plaintiff Fred- erick A. Fickert, recovered a judgment and decree in the Superior Court of Final County, State of Arizona, against Greenback Mining Company, in the sum of Two Thousand Seven Hundred Eighty One and dollars which included principal, taxes, ex- penses, attorney fees, cpsts, i with interest "thereon at thje rate of Six per cent per annum until paid; together with the fore- closure of plaintiffs mortgage lien against said defendant and property situated in the County of Final and the State of Arizona and described as follows to-wit: the following lode mining claims Green- back Number Four (No. Silver Queen Number One (No. Oxide, Final Grande Number One (No. 1).

Final Grande Number Two j(No and Final Grande Number Ten (No. 10), and the following described personal property situated! thereon to-wit: i One Chicago pneumatic 14 by 14 inch compressor and air receiver 12 by 4 inch 'complete No. 13285; one Chicajgo matic portable compressor complete No. 16132, size by one Fairbanks-Morse 25 horse-power type Hoisting cable No. 473440 style RRJP.

one Fairbank-Morse .6 HJP. engine and hoist -atjtach- ed, style No. 450 RFM; 2 No. 5 Chicago pneumatic air (stoper); one complete assay equipment three tenant houses, one six-room guest house. NOW, THEREFORE, PJUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that on the 7tfi day of September, A.

D. 1935i at the hour of o'clock a. m. at tte Court Home of Final County ,1 will seU the- above described real estate, and tne personal property at Greenback Mine the same being the location of the claims of the Greenback Mining Company above described and the personal property located thereon, in the County of Final, State 'in obedience to said special execution, and for the purpose of satisfying: the same, sell the above described property both personal and real, at public auction, to the highest bid- prepared Washington mix; add of August, A. D.

1935. floured berries to batter; bake oiled pie dish. Beat 2 eggs slightly, add 3 tablespoons sugar, salt and stir until sugar is Add apple sauce, mix well, and pour onto rice, bust top with nutmeg and bake in moderate oven (350 degrees until custard is set. EVER TRY "LAZY LOAF" Sliced bananas and crisp- crunchy corn Hakes are the perfect August breakfast! "TOMATO SOUP; CAKE" i REQUESTS POUR EN For some reason editors throughout the country report a deluge of requests for "tomato soup It sounds weird to the uninitiated, but try some and. understand that such der for cash, hi lawful money of the United States of America, and apply the proceeds thereof to the payment and satisfaction of said judgment, with the interest due thereon, and all costs of suit and accruing costs.

Done this I popularity must be deserved! You have to be lazy to en- Tomato Soup Cream joy the luncheon loaf of that name. Put 2 cups leftover or canned baked beans, four ounces cream cheese and 3 minced pimientoes through the food chopper; mix thoroughly and ad3 enough bread crumbs (about 1 cup) to make mixture into a roll. Season to taste and bake in moderate oven (350 degrees or shape into cutlets and panfry in hot mazola for about 25 Serve with tomato saute. SERVE THEM The smartest hotels are serving their first or last course fruits "au I Tomato Soup Cream cup butter and 1 cup sugar until smooth, then add 1 beaten egg and I mix thoroughJy. Dissolve 1 teaspoon soda in 1 can tomato soup, and alternate with cups flour which has been sifted with 2 teaspoons cloves, 1 teaspoon cinna- 'mon, teaspoon teaspoon salt.

Mix thoroughly and stir in If cup sliced pasteurized dates and 1 cup chopped walnut meats. Place in greased and floured shallow loaf pas and bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees Cool and "frost" with frosting. a cream cheese WALTER E. LAVEEN, Sheriff of Final County. W.

W. COCHRAN, Under Sheriff. First pub. Aug. 16, 1935.

Last pub. Sept 6, 1935. 'The average American has just enough resentment in his soul to wish the President success in his effort to break up these big estates through inheritance, taxes and force the sons of the rich to work and make money themselves, which they delight in spending so favish- ly while millions of Americans are going (Rep.) hungry." Topeka Capital. Mrs. Margaret Brent has purchased the Smackover, Journal from Floyd W.

Barnes. Mrs. Brent for the past five, years has been employed by the Journal an'd the Union County Progress.at El Dorado. A fool may know all the ques- tions, but- only the wise ones know the answers. AFTER THE HONEYMOON By Geoff Hayes SAT YOU MIND TAKING THAT ORANGrE TIE WITH THE RED DOTS OOT Of THE WINDOW FOR ME GOOD' THAT DARN THING- HAS BEEN BOTHER1N' MY EYES EVERY TIME I HERE.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About Casa Grande Dispatch Archive

Pages Available:
66,275
Years Available:
1912-1978