Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • 2

Location:
Los Angeles, California
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SEPTEMBER 12. 1031. fAKT II SATURDAY MORNING. GANDHI AIDE BAFFLES FRENCH i -1- Customs Meii Let Disciple Pass In TRUCE OFFERED IN CHURCH ROW Evangelist Urges Peace and Larger Collection Guiirds With Fixed Bayonets i ourrouna ent Governor Asked to Declare Martial Law Zo? flngclcCSsJirncsr Where Hurricane Took Huge Toll in Lives in ii ipn wmi ii mi mm r-n wiifni)! im tm tfr itr rr- I TO REVISE TAXESJCORED and Democratic Opposition Sounds Says Rise at This Time Mistake Takes Occasion Slur Hoover Reign GANDHI RUSHING ON WAYJY RAIL French Officials Ignore Him at Marseilles Landing Spinning Wheels and Dishes Comprise His Baggage He Predicts India Success at Round-Table Parley JONESBORO (Ark.) Sept. 11.

iff) Rev. Joe Jeffers, Baptist evangelist and center of dissention that has split the ranks of the First Baptist Church here, held out the olive branch of peace in opening hi sermon tonight, while National Mi I rvw i 1. A I 1 ii. ii -I cut? of v-Uv 1 Ji Mexico Vi "N-----. Mf BELIZE vsjf -'t MARSEILLES (France) Sept.

11. Gandhi rolled toward the round-table conference in London tonight in a modest second-class compartment aboard the Bombay-Paris Express. He arrived in Marseilles today and was acclaimed only by Indian students and their young French contemporaries. French officialdom sternly avoided him. The port officials were busy honoring Paul Raynaud, Minister of Colonies, who set sail today for Indp-China where the French have troubles of their own and were represented at the Mahatma's steamer only by police.

OFFICIAL GREETING Since Gandhi is going to England as a sort of government guest, the British Consul-General was present to greet him. He was the only functionary there. Rain fell all day, obliging the Mahatma to add a shawl to his loin cloth. But when he walked down the gangplank, Gandhi wore only the cloth and the French people who saw him were a bit surprised. They seemed to feel that even a saint should wear more.

The Indian Nationalist leader had with him a collection of pots and pans and his spinning wheels. He looked a bit haggard, for all last night he was unable to sleep. LISTS PROPERTY Asked by a customs inspector to declare the items he was bringing into the country, the Mahatma replied. "I am a poor mendicant. All my earthly possessions consist of these spinning wheels, some dishes, a can of goat's milk, six home-spun loin cloths, a towel and my reputation, which can't be worth much." "Have you any cigarettes, cigars, alcohol, firearms or narcotics?" the inspector asked.

"Oh, no, I neither smoke nor drink," the Mahatma replied. "Besides, being an advocate of nonviolence, I never carry firearms." HAS SACRED MUD With Gandhi was the 70-year-old Pandit Malaviya, whose baggage was principally sacred mud and water from the River Ganges, on which there is no duty. A British journalist asked Gandhi whether he would be ashamed to go about the streets of London and to appear before King George wearing only his loin cloth. PLAN Republican i Watson Mississippian to WASHINGTON, Sept. 11.

WV-' Both Republican and Democratic opposition roared forth today, against movement for tax revision-inaugurated by some administration Republicans. On the White House steps Sena-, tor Watson, Indiana, the Republican leader, pronounced the proposals for new and higher taxes at this time "a mistake." Through the Democratic National Committee, Senator Harrison of Mississippi, the ranking Democrat on the Finance Committee, tonight asserted "Of all times this is the worst- for men in high places to talk about Increasing burdens upon the American public." President Hoover was silent meanwhile on the recommendations of Senator Reed, Pennsylvania, for sales tax, and on the plan of Representative Bacharach, New Jersey, for higher rates on incomes over $100,000, as well as luxury HOOVER FOLI(IS SCORED With determined opposition against tax revision next session already apparent In both the Republican and Democratic ranks, the prospects for such legislation admittedly were dimmed. Senator Reed agreed that if Congress puts "Its foot down" on further Farm Board and bonus appropriations and keeps "strict economy," the necessity for tax revision might not be so great despite the $1,000,000,000 deficit. "The Federal finances," asserted Senator Harrison, "are not in any strained condition. We have a deficit, 'tis true, resulting from the narrow and selfish policies of the Hoover administration, which have lowed down business and deprived the government of reasonable revenues.

"But It must not be forgotten that for the last ten years, under the leadership of Mr. Mellon, as Secretary of the" Treasury, from $250,000,000 to $750,000,000 annually was collected by the government in taxes in excess of governmental requirements. These excess collections built up large surpluses at the expense of the taxpayers. They went toward the payment of the national debt, and today we are more than five years ahead of the scheduled time in which the government believed the national debt should be retired. WATSON STATEMENT "If in flush times we exacted from the American taxpayer these I A.

P. photo Miss Madeline Slade With Gandhi I Vie' Scenes at Belize, MARSEILLES (France) Sept. 11. The following conversation ensued today as Miss Madeline Slade, daughter of an English admiral, was questioned by French customs inspectors. "Are you Miss Slade?" "No, Miss Slade died six years The water front at Belize, British Honduras, which was leveled by the hurricane and subsequent tidal wave, is shown in the upper picture.

Below is a view of the principal street of the city, leading toward Government House. The map shows the location of the stricken city. GIRL INDUSTRIAL WORKER ALSO HAS 'ROVING FOOT HURRICANE IN PORTO RICO LEAVES DEATH AND DEBRIS uuaiusmeii wiui mamme guiis fixed bayonets surrounded his tent tabernacle, occupied by some 000 persons. Mr. Jeffers asserted: "We are gathered here to worship God and we JJpnt to tell the people ot JoneSboro, the State of Arkansas and the people of the United States that we are peaceful, law-abiding citizens." After the preliminary talk the collection baskets wer passed and Mr.

Jeffers exhorted the people ta give liberally, explaining that last night only $79 was taken in. He also announced that Rev. J. Frank Norris, Baptist minister ol Fort Worth, will come hem on the 22nd inst. Norris editor of the Fundamentalist, Baptist publication, which is said to have pub lished an article regarding Rev.

D. H. Heard, pastor of the First Baptist Church here, whom Jeffers has vowed to have ousted, thereby lead, ing to the present trouble. Guardsmen were on duty around the tent tablernacle to take up visible guns, but no guns were seen. No one was searched.

National Guard officers on duty here sent a request to the Governor for martial law today, saying the situation cannot be solved under present measures. Gov. Parnell said, however, that he will not declare martial law unless the situation gets out of control. BADEN PRESIDENT DIES KARLSRUHE (Germany) Sept. 11.

(JPy Joseph Wittemann, 65 years of age, president of the Republic, of Baden since November, 1930, died last night. When You Travel East visit MARC ELL'S new restaurant. 10 East S2nd New York City, which maintains best traditions. While at home don't forget MARCELL-INN in Altadena Where you can also dine of the best the market affords Ph. Sterling 2262 NOTICE! Col.

Thomas A. Davis will at Alexandria Hotel all wrek to meet Interested a a parent. Fall Term Opens Sept. 17, 1931 located at Pacltls Beach. California, a suburb 01 bean, tifnl San Diego.

Prepare! lor eolleiea. West Point and An. napolia. Fully aeeredlted at the leadlnt universities. Land and water aporta alt ar.

Christian Influences. Class rating War Department. Junior ROIO Unit. Separate school (or younger bora. Junior biS school, hlab school and Junior college.

For brautlfullr Illustrated catalogue, address COL. THOMAS A. DAVIS, PRESIDENT Boi T. Pacific Beach. Callt.

PPI1 ago. I am Mlrabehn, disciple of Mahatma Gandhi." "Are you a British subject." "No. I am nobody's subject except Mahatma Gandhi's, whom I regard as my father." The inspectors looked puzzled, but after eyeing her white, nun-like garb, shaved head and sandaled feet, passed her through the gates. hosiery looper, candy packer, powder maker in a munitions factory and street car conductorette. The see-the-world work-woman is described as flapperlsh and.

"likely to be fairly independent and to move on if she does not like the boss or the work. "She will 'try anything commented Dr. Palmer. The woman textile worker is described as "less restless, more patient than the worker on radio parts, less intense emotionally than the garment worker." The 609 women, Dr. Palmer found, had held 2700 jobs.

In 1988 cases of quitting those jobs they were able to give the reason why they did it. Only forty -one were called discharges. Only seven were due to introduction of machinery and one of those was a motion-picture ot- ganist supplanted by sound films." Arguments with the boss accounted for loss of sixty-four jobs; plant burnings and business failures for 110, changes of residence for 122, union activities for sixty-six, strikes or lockouts for ninety, illness for eighty. The chief complaint was low wages and long hours. Bank's Currency and Head Vanish CHICAGO, Sept.

11. (Exclusive) Currency totaling $151,000 was discovered to be missing from the vault of the First Italian State Bank, which closed on Wednesday. Sava-rlo Arlani, president, and his wife Mariana, the cashier, disappeared on Tuesday. The records show the bank had $160,000 in cash on Tuesday. Arlani was found by the police tonight.

She had taken up residence in a hotel. OIL MAN DIES IN OKLAHOMA TULSA (Okla.) Sept. 11. (P) Richard Tabor Bennett, president of the American Royalty Petroleum Company, died today. UTS British Honduras of Gov.

Theodore Roosevelt, who had sailed for New York -n the steamer Cosmo in the afternoon. Motorcycle police searched the territory adjacent to San Juan and reported to Insular Chief R. R. Lutz that several persons had drowned during the storm, but the number was undetermined. San Juan was in darkness tonight as all electric service is down.

The Spanish steamer Juan Se bastian Elcano was torn from herl moorings during the night of the storm. All stern and midship lines parted, but the bow lines held. The vessel shifted about 200 yards, smashed into a bulkhead and two small holes were broken through her plates. TROPICAL DISTURBANCE HEADED FOR CUBA HAVANA, Sept 11. (flV-Fathcr Gutierrez Lanza, of Belen Observatory, today reported a tropical disturbance sixty to seventy miles west of Puerto, Haiti, moving almost directly westward at fifteen miles an hour.

The disturbance should touch Oriente Province, Cuba, early tomorrow, he said, although its force probably will be diminished. HYPHEN II CONTINUES ON FLIGHT Airplane Seels to Break Record as Question Mark Lands in Germany PARIS, Sept. 11. The airplane Hyphen II, which took off from Le Bourget Airdrome at dawn today in the direction of Tokio, seeking to establish a new nonstop distance record, was last reported over Moscow and headed for Kazan. The plane Question Mark, which took off from the same field six minutes after the Hyphen II.

was forced down at Nieukerk, near Dus-seldorf, Germany. The Question Mark, with Paul Codos and Henry Robida aboard, had to land because of a gasoline leak and motor difficulty. Joseph Lebrix, Marcel Doret and Rene Mesmin are the crew of the Hyphen II. They crashed in Siberia some time ago, when they attempted a nonstop distance flight in the first Hyphen. HUSBAND CAPTURED AFTER WIFE SHOOTING STOCKTON, Sept.

11. M1) Gro-ver Cleveland Hearn, sought for As-sertcdly shooting his wile 'and her companion Wednesday night in San Francisco, was taken into custody at Columbia this afternoon, according to advices from Sonora, Hearn, a Columbia resident, separated. from his wife Seven months ago. VALLEJO SUSPECT CONFESSES MURDER VALLEJO. Sept.

11. (P) Frank McDowell, 32 years of age, a suspect arrested. In connection with the slaying of Ray Reisen, 20, on a lonely road near here early Sunday, tonight confessed to officers, they said, that he had slain the youth. EVERT MOKNING IN THE VEAE I Los angelcs HURRICANE TOLL PLACED AT 400 (Continued from First Page) prepared to" supplement it if necessary. The Governor of British Honduras in an early cable to London advised that fifty persons were known dead then and "he feared the total number will be larger." He said considerable damage had been done by the sea which swept in to flood the town under five to nine feet of water.

He estimated property damage at above $1,000,000. IMPORTANT TRADE TOWN Belize is the most Important trading center on the Caribbean coast of Central America, dealing particularly in mahogany, logwood and chicle gum. Reports were meager from the interior of the island, but it is believed the heaviest force of the wind was felt in San Juan. There the steamer Cerrito was swept on a reef. Information as to the situation at Belize, received at the State Department, was immediately conveyed to the British Embassy and an offer by the United States government of any assistance it could render was accepted by the embassy.

Acting in the emergency, Minister P. G. Osborne, Charge D'Affaires in the absence of Ambassador Sir Ronald communicated the information to London. EIGHT AMERICAN PRIESTS AMONG 150 BELIZE DEAD (Copyright, 1931, the Associated Press) BELIZE (British Honduras) Sept. 11.

(P) A hurricane which struck Belize with devastating results yesterday is known to have killed about 150 persons and bodies still are being unearthed from the debris late today. No house in the city was undamaged. The hurricane started at about 2:30 p.m. and lasted until 5:30, with a calm period of about half an-hour. Wireless communication was broken and this message is being sent out through the courtesy of the Pan-American Airways radio.

ALL CHURCHES DEMOLISHED All churches in the city were demolished. St. John's College was destroyed and eight American Roman Catholic priests were killed. Eighteen boys also lost their lives in the college The government has organized special police to fruard against the looting of stores and to conserve the food supply. A tidal wave hit the city after the lull in the hurricane and most Of those killed, lost their lives by The loss to American companies is roughly estimated, at $250,000.

Estimates placed the total damage well $2,000,000. Drugs were ruined by rain and waves and physicians are working under very difficult conditions. PRISONERS BURY DEAD A prison gang has been at work since daybreak digging trenches to receive the dead and the road to the cemetery has been cleared for vehicular traffic. Bodies were taken to the burial ground by motor truck. First-aid stations presented terrible sights as the injured hobbled in or were carried on roughly constructed stretchers.

Government House was practically undamaged though the servants' quarters and the kitchen were demolished. The office of the Belize Clarion was ruinedi TWO CYCLONES NEARING COAST OF MEXICO MEXICO CITY, Sept. 11. (TV-The government meteorological observatory today issued a warning that two cyclones are approaching Mexico and probably will penetrate the country. One is nearing the southeastern coast of the Gulf of Mexico.

The other, in the Pacific, is expected to strike between Guerrero and Sina-loa. The disturbances are described as of great force and capable of causing heavy damage. BELIZE LITTLE KNOWN BEFORE HURRICANE NEW YORK, Sept, 11. MV-Belize, capital of British Honduras, had to be almost blown off the map to become known to the world. The Caribbean hurricane, which yesterday demolished half its houses and killed an estimated 400 inhabitants, is believed the second great event in the trading' post's 300 years, of existence.

The first was when Col. Charles A. Lindbergh landed there during his first flight to South America WASHINGTON. Sept', 11. (m A study showing the roving foot to be a feminine as well as a masculine attribute has just been completed by Dr.

Gladys L. Palmer for the woman's bureau. Surveying 609 women workers at four industrial summer schools, Southern School in North Carolina, Bryn Mawr, Barnard, and Wisconsin universities, Dr. Palmer found as a "typical worker" the "restless, American-born girl seeking variety of location or occupation." One girl had nine jobs in thirteen years in as many industries and localities: another thirty jobs in thirty different trades in all parts of the country in more than twenty years. "If you are a girl who likes to see the world you will, not 'join the but pick a job in the miscellaneous trades," said Dr.

Palmer. She described how one odd job leads to another, from pretzel-making to painting lamp shades. "Speed or dexterity is to some extent transferable," she said. "If you can assemble automobile parts you probably can assemble radio parts or pack candy." Her thirty-job woman had been, among other things, errand girl. OIL PRORATION ACTI0NS0UGHT (Continued from First Tage) tire country to 2,376,000 barrels daily sought to cut under the market demand, and force withdrawal of about 200,000 barrels daily from stor.

age to conserve oil underground. A committee will confer with Secretary of Commerce Lamont and oil importers to urge a curb in imports. Gov. Sterling of Texas and the Railroad Commission of that State first will be asked to give approval to the curtailment plan, as Texas is looked on as the keystone State in the oil situation. That State's production would be reduced.

barrels a day under the proposed plan. QUICK ACTION HOPED FOR Thurman Hill, member of the Kansas Public Service Commission, predicted an interstate agreement can be made effective about October 1, if Texas approves the plan. Representatives of the Kansas Public Service Commission, the Oklahoma Corporation Commission, the Texas Railroad Commission and the States of California, Wyoming, Colorado and New Mexico attended the meeting. Daily production recommended by the executive committee is: Texas, 900,000 barrels; California, Oklahoma, Kansas, Louisiana and Arkansas, Eastern States, New Mexico, 50,000, and the, rest of the Rocky Mountain 55,000. Governor May Save Angeleno From Gallows SACRAMENTO, Sept.

11. (Ex-clusive)-rRumors were current at the Capitol today that Gov. Rolph will commute to life imprisonment the death sentence hovering over Augustus Gingell, convicted in Los Angeles, of a double murder. He Is under sentence to be hanged on the 25th inst Gingell shot his wife and her sweetheart when he discovered them together in a hotel room shortly after Gingell says he had paid the room rent for his wife. Daniel O'Brien, director of penology, Just completed an investigation of Gin gell's case for Gov.

Rolph, but he declined to reveal the nature of his recommendation. It was learned from authoritative sources, however, that' Gov. Rolph believes there are mitigating- SAN JUAN (Porto Rico,) Sept. 11. (P) San Juan counted two dead, another injured slightly and considerable minor property damage today as a result of a 100-mile-an-hour hurricane that struck last night.

Although buildings were wrecked, trees uprooted and public utility services paralyzed the city escaped a major disaster such as occurred three years ago when a hurricane caused $100,000,000 damage, A woman was electrocuted by a fallen wire and a water-front watchman crushed under a roof dropped on him by the storm that lashed San Juan for two hours. The disturbance was limited to an area thirty miles in diameter. F. Eugene Hartwell, head of the Weather Bureau, fell from an anemometer tower and was injured slightly. He was repairing the instrument after having Issued a warning Just before the hurricane struck.

Police estimated 100 homes have been unroofed. Many windows were smashed and small craft were driven aground in the harbor. Communication lines were cut. The rainfall, although less than two inches, soaked valuable paintings and tapestry in the residence and showed to the natives the first airplane they ever had seen, W. R.

Van Deusen, an official of the Pan-American Airways, who accompanied Lindbergh and made several other trips to Belize, today described the place as: "A picturesque, sleepy little village, the essence of peace, quiet and contentment, in which nothing ever happened." He said it was a typical British' colony and trading post, and that heretofore the inhabitants believed themselves secure Just outside the belt of Caribbean hurricanes. HOUSES ON STILTS Houses, he said, were of white frame construction and built mostly on stilts, -the city being not more than two inches above the level of the sea. The village extended either side of the mouth of the Belize River and formed a narrow strip of civilization cramped between the edge of the jungle and the sea. Trade was with the jungle, he said, from which came hardwood and chicle, the base of chewing gum. About a third of the colony lived in Belize, the number being close to 45,000, mostly Jamaica Negroes and descendants of slaves.

There is no harbor, Van Deusen said, but a breakwater permits ships an anchor. Steamers call about every three weeks. It is two weeks by ship from New York and one day by air from Miami, Fla. WASHINGTONLiiTS RECENT-YEAR STORMS WASHINGTON, Sept. 11.

(TV-Following are listed some of the previous hurricanes of recent years which have swept over the Caribbean with heavy loss of life: September, 1026 Florida, 400 dead, 2500 injured. October 1926 Cuba, 600 dead, 9000 injured. September, 1928 Porto Rico, 300 dead, 4180 Injured. September, 1928 Florida, 1180 dead, 1849 injured. September, 1930 Santo Domingo, 200 dead, 6000 injured.

FRANCE ACCEPTS BID TO YORKTOWN FETE WASHINGTON, Sept. 11. CP) Acceptance by France of an American invitation to send representatives to the Yorktown Sesqulcenten-nial was announced today by the State Department. The French delegation will be headed by Marshal Henri Petain. "Well, in England you wear plus-fours, while I prefer to wear minus fours," the Mahatma replied.

VISIONS SUCCESS He told the Associated Press that he believed the British government is faced with such staggering domestic problems that it is not likely to refuse India's demands for self-government. Refusal would mean the renewal of the civil-disobedience campaign, he said, and the boycott of British goods on a scale greater than ever before. He promised that he would not take such a step until every possibility for arbitration had been exhausted. "If the fight should be renewed, which God forbid," he said, "the consequences will be infinitely more terrible than the last struggle. It will mean, I fear, that only Indians would be shot down, but Britishers will be killed.

You cannot hold 360,000,000 people without liberty in the leashes of nonviolence forever. SHOULD NOT DENY "If England is wise she will weigh carefully the present strength and potentiality of the Nationalist movement and hearken to the appeal of that vast sub-continent for independence. She should not deny others the gift which she cherishes most herself." He emphasized that any safeguard proposed by England must be demonstrably in the interests of India as well, saying "we mutt have complete financial and fiscal autonomy. We must have an effective dominion status, but that does not exclude India's partnership or alliance with the empire." SERMON ON WAR Sitting in a chair on top of a table so that everyone could see him, the Mahatma delivered a sermon on the evils of war. "To kill and to be killed in the act of killing may be an act of bravery," he said, "but to withstand all the blows of the adversary and not to retaliate is surely a greater form of bravery.

That is precisely what Indian has been training herself for and I make bold to say that the experiment has been a success. "I do not suggest that there is no school of violence in India, but I do say tha: there are tens" of thousands there who believe in a policy of nonviolence and who are offering nonviolent resistance in vindication of their liberty." DOCTRINE TO SPREAD Nonviolence is the weapon of the strong, he asserted, expressing the belief that the doctrine will spread throughout the world, "even to martial France." "No people on earth can be subjugated without its co-operation," he said. "A people loses its liberty through its own weakness. In India we round that when we shed our weaknesses we regained our liberty." 1459 MORE Rental Ads in The Times last week than in any other Los Angeles DAILY FOUNDED DEC. 4.

181 r-bon. MAdlion (349 Bind Copies, Datlr. 6 Cent Sunday 10 Cents large surpluses and our debt retirement program is sound, then why I not give the American taxpayers a rest in these exceptional and hard times from increased tax exactions when they are unable to meet them?" Senator Harrison scored the sales-tax proposal of Senator Reed and stated that if increased taxes are necessary they should be on the higher incomes. Senator Watson declared unequivocally against going into a revision of the revenue system next session, asserting its unsettling influence upon business generally would be worse than having an empty Treasury for another year. Expressing faith in the ability of Secretary Mellon to obtain funds to tide over the depression, the Republican leader said "Let us find where we standi before going into the revision, If it is necessary.

Senator Hatfield, Republican, West Virginia, joined in the view of Senator Watson and said he against revision at this time, fear. ful of. its consequences on conditions generally. There was little support apparent at the Capitol to the sales-tax proposal of. Senator Reed, although it is believed that if Secretary Mellon makes any recommendations for tax revision, it will be along this GAIN IN POLICY HOLDERS NOTED (Continued from First Page) Marie S.

Smith, Kansas City, $1,113,000. Carl Weeks, Des Moines, James Rolph, Ran Francisco, $1,084,000. Eugena J. Curtis, Clinton, Iowa, $1,040,000. Jesse II.

Jones, $1,035,000. William II. Crocker, San Francisco, $1,000,000. Douglas Fairbanks, Los Angeles, $1,000,000. Irving II.

Hillman, Los Angeles, $1,000,000. -Al Johnson, Los Angeles, George Machris, Los Angeles $1,000,000. Elmer II. Maytag, Newton, Iowa, $1,000,000. C.

II. McCormick, San Francisco, Sl.000,000. T. I. Maytag, Newton, Iowa, Mary Tlckford, Los Angeles, $1,000,000.

Will Rogers, Beverly Hills, Constance Talmadge, Los Angeles, $1,000,000. II. D. Thomas, Los Angeles, $1,000,000. Eric Von Stroheim, Los Angeles, $1,000,000.

Gloria Swanson, Los Angeles, $1,000,000. W. W. Watson, Salina, $1,000,000. Watzek Brothers, Portland, $1,000,000.

H. F. Wilcox, Tulsa, $1,000,000. J. G.

Bullock, Los Angeles, (about) tl.000,000. EMERY EXPERT DIES CHESTER (Mass.) Sept. 11. '(tfV-Mrs, Hulda Gibbs Burdick, 83 years cf age, considered one of the country's best authorities on emery and orundum mining, died today. 4 OR 5 CALLS A DAY HOUSE RENTED EASILY THROUGH THIS TIMES CLASSIFIED AD $20 3 ROOMS rear, ouiet, clean, real bed-room.

sun room. Oas. light Iree. 117 S. KENMORE.

DRexel 1B4B. Adults. Wishing to find a tenant quickly, Mrs. E. A.

Olney, 1127 South Ken-more, ran the. foregoing advertisement last week in the rental columns of Times Classified Ads. "The response was most satisfactory," Mrs. Olney reports. "An average of four or five people called each day the advertisement ran, and as a result I was abld to find just the sort of tenants I wanted." Cimcs Th Timet BulldlBf.

First and Broadway 90c per month DEMVEBED BY CABBIES Times Classified Ads MAdison 2345 Br mall to Postal Zones 1 to 4. Inrlaaire. Ihcludirif California, Arliona. Nevada, Utah rnrT 1 1 mnnthlr I.O."! In Zone 5, Including r.olorado, Idaho. Montana, New Mrtlro.

tron, Washington, rearly Hid. IK), monthly tt.GOi in Zones 7 and balance of Statu, Can.da and Mesiro. yearly I.imi. monihlv POTAr.F. Entered as rrsnd-elaw matter Dee.

4. IftHI. at the Mifflti at Los Anteies, under the 4-t of March X. 1 SATURDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 12, 1031. VOL.

L. NO. 28J.

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

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Los Angeles Times
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Los Angeles Times Archive

Pages Available:
7,612,743
Years Available:
1881-2024