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The Sacramento Bee du lieu suivant : Sacramento, California • 9

Lieu:
Sacramento, California
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9
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be be a a a a a McCLATCHY NEWSPAPERS SERVICE BEE'S SUPERIOR CALIFORNIA NEWS Monday, 1934 April 2, BOY, 12, MAN, 22, DROWN IN NAPA SLOUGH Attempted Rescue Of Youthful Angler Results In Dual Tragedy VALLEJO (Solano April 2. (P) 12-year-old boy, Bobby Barnes, and a man who attempted to rescue him, Homer Davidson, 22, drowned in a Napa slough about a mile north of here Satur- boy, son of William Barnes, Vallejo newspaper man, was believed to have been fishing from an island and to have slipped into the slough. Davidson, a resident of Vallejo, jumped from a barge on which he was working in an attempt to rescue the boy. Davidson's body was recovered by officers a short time after the tragedy. They continued dragging the slough for the boy.

Sprague River Logging Railroad Will Be Built KLAMATH FALLS April for construction of a loging railroad as soon as rights-ofpay can be acquired have been anhounced by the Chiloquin Lumber Company at Chiloquin, Ore. The line will be a short one, extending along the Sprague River. Operating news from mills throughout the Klamath district indicate moderate activity. Most box factories are operating two shifts daily but the mills are now employing only one shift. Several the companies have crews at work in the woods, and the of Spring is expected to see further timber activity starting.

M. E. Van Riper Dies In Placer AUBURN (Placer April 2. Martin E. Van Riper, 62, a well known fruit rancher of this district, died yesterday in his home in Long Valley.

Van Riper was president of the Placer County Mountain Fruit Company at Newcastle. a Last Friday afternoon was re-elected as a trustee of the Auburn Union Grammar School in Auburn. He is (survived by six children, Edwin in Riper of Newcastle, Allan aper of Berkeley, and Vernon Van Riper of Newcastle, Donald Van Riper of Sacramento, Mrs. Dorothy Fogarty of Berkeley and Martin Van Riper of Newcastle. Funeral services will be held at o'clock to-morrow afternoon in the Hislop home in Auburn.

Interment will follow in the family plot in Long Valley. SUSANVILLE: Probation Is De- nied-George Edward McGee, a resident of the Honey Lake Valley district near Standish, faces a term in San Quentin Prison. been denied probation by Superior Judge H. D. Burroughs.

McGee recently pleaded guilty to five counts of passing bogus checks. REALLY STUNNING AT DISTANCE Curse She thought she was just unlucky when he called her once- avoided her thereafter. But no one Panires pimply, blemished skin. More and more women are realizing that pimples and blotches afre often danger signals of clogged bowelspoisonous wastes ravaging the system. Let NR (Nature's Remedy) afford complete, thorough elimination and promptly case away beautyruining poisonous matter.

Fine for sick headache, bilious conditions, dizziness. Try this safe, dependable, alltive. vegetable At all correc- drug- AR gists'-only 25c. ALRIGHT "TUMS" Quick tion, relief heartburn. Only 10c.

for acid indiges- FOOT IRRITATIONS Blisters, cracked skin, itching or burning soon relieved and healing promoted with soothing Resinol Chico Sunrise Rites Are Marred By Petting Party CHICO (Butte April petting party marred the solemnity of Chico's sunrise Easter services in Bidwell First arrivals noted a truck parked on the hillside back of the cross which commands majestic view across Iron Canyon to the high Sierra. As the crowd increased a stir was noted in the vehicle. Heads of a boy and girl emerged from under a blanket over the driver's seat. Apparently unconcerned, they gazed over facing them from the other side of the cross, wrapped themselves in each others' arms and drew the blanket over their heads. Second Couple Appears.

Soon, from the bed of the truck, amid blankets, arose heads of another couple, They gazed their full and likewise again crawled under the blankets. Unmoved by the rendition of some of Christendom's most sacred songs and most inspiring rites, they repeated the performance several times during the services. Laughter Interrupts. onds was delivering the sermon, At one point, as Rev. R.

A. loud laughter from the party broke into the services. Unable to longer countenance the interruption, Rev. Henry Alkire, in charge of the services, went to the truck, warned them to keep quiet took the license number. The services over, the four followed the worshipers back to town one couple still wrapped up in their blankets in the back of the car.

SUBWAY HALTS ASPHALT TANKS Hugh Containers Block Traffic At Rail Undercross. ing Near Roseville ROSEVILLE (Placer April Morgan Construction Company, which is paving the highway unit between Newcastle and Loomis, will have to wait for its asphalt tanks. This morning a truck and trailer carrying one large tank and a smaller waiting near the subway on onthe Lincoln-Roseville Highway is too high to pass through the 13-foot, 10-inch subway. The truck held up traffic last night when it reached the subway en route from Burney to Newcastle. Finally the hinges were taken from a locked double gate which leads to a highway spur that had been abandoned and the truck was parked there off the highway.

In addition to the routing problem, the truck driver have to wait until the state permit for moving the tank arrives from Burney. Permission has been wired there, but the driver neglected to bring a copy of the telegram. State traffic officers need to see the permit before the tank can proceed. MARYSVILLE: Officers Are Named -Oscar Odegaard of the Diamond Match Company here is the new president of the Marysville Merchants Association. The other officers are John Fuller, vice president; L.

F. Albrecht, secretary; Ross Miller, Ralph Robinson, Hugo Del Pero and Jack Taylor, directors. Johnson Is Told Special Law Is Needed To Adjust Boulder Dam Pay To Code WASHINGTON, April 2. (P) Dr. Elwood Mead, commissioner of the reclamation bureau, in a letter to Senator Johnson, Republican of California, said it will take special legislation to provide for the payof NRA code wages to the carpenters employed at Boulder Dam.

Johnson referred to Mead a protest from the Bay Counties Carpenters' Union which said 250 carpenters are being worked fifty-six hours a week and are being paid 70 cents an hour by Six Companies, builders of the dam, against code provisions for a thirty-hour week and $1.10 an hour, When the contract was let, Mead said, the contractor instituted a wage scale higher than that common to the territory. After the code was adopted, he said, the Six Companies agreed to comply if it was reimbursed. The comptroller general, however, ruled there was no authority law for adjusting existing government contracts to meet the code requirements. Mead said: is believed that Boulder Dam will be completed within eighteen months. PAINLESS Extractions "Dear, these Patients say, "It didn't cialists, bit use tested We are methods.

spe- are the dentists we want" True Expression Sta-tite PLATES Hundreds are finding out that guaranteed dentistry, need not he expensive. It costs no more here to have specialists do your work. Our low prices are making us MADY new friends daily, BRIDGEWORK $5.00 up TEETH CLEANED $2.00 SILVER FILLINGS $1.00 up One-Day Service to -Town Patients! DRS. DICKSON ORWITZ SACRAMENTO GROWERS IN STATE PLAN PACT CONTROL Ranchers And Canners Work On AAA Agreement To Benefit Industry SAN FRANCISCO, April prospects of an AAA marketing agreement to control the Pacific Coast pear crop in canned, fresh and dried marketing channels appear bright to-day following a meeting of California and Pacific Northwest growers and canners in Portland, Ore, The meeting's principal accomplishment was an agreement to allocate 46 per cent of the canned pear pack to California and 54 per a cent Washington, Oregon and the pear regions of Idaho. Will Set Pack Meximum.

California representatives, led by Philip Bancroft of Contra Costa County, chairman of the California Pear Industry Committee, report the maximum pack will be set shortly before the harvest season by a joint committee representing the entire Pacific Coast industry. The next step is to complete the local canning control plans in both sections. Growers and shippers also will be called together to discuss a similar method of control for the fresh branch of the industry. Their meeting is expected to be held in California within ten days. Growers Profit.

Bancroft predicts California growers will receive $1,000,000 more for their crops under the agreement than they would without control. California growers are expected to restrict their tonnage by the isa suance to the owner of each orchard certificates entitling him to market through one of the outlets, canning, shipping, or drying, a percentage of corresponding to the percentage of the entire state's crop to be marketed during that season. Growers, Canners Confer. R. F.

Roddan of El Dorado County, Douglas H. Sim of Santa Clara County, and Bancroft represented the California growers at the Portland meeting. California canners were represented by Preston McKinney of the Canners League of California, F. A. Wilder of the Pratt-Low Preserving Company, W.

A. Chick of the California Packing the Packing Association. Corporation, and P. N. Pfarr of Dr.

F. R. Wilcox of the University California, L. D. Mallory and Walter, Packard of the Agricultural Adjustment Administration, and Dean Schoenfeld of the Oregon Agricultural College were among the others at the meeting.

Olive Agreement May Be Given Amendment SAN FRANCISCO, April amendments to the 1933 canned olive agreement under the Agricultural Adjustment Administration will be considered here this month by Budd A. Holt, senior economist of the AAA special crop section, and Carlile Bolton-Smith, AAA attorney, who are in Berkeley following a hearing in Fresno on the proposed raisin industry agreement. The olive agreement is effective for 1934 well as 1933, but the industry seeks to amend it to impose more regulation on the intrastate marketing of canned olives. The visiting Washington officials also may be called upon to assist in the preparation of the proposed canning A peach meeting and of apricot the agree- statewide apricot committee has been called for Friday by Chairman thur McClay of Santa Clara County. CHICOAN IS ARRESTED CHICO (Butte April 2.

Enoch Pollard of Chico is held in the jail here to-day charged, with drunken driving. He arrested last night after driving over the sidewalk onto the lawn in front of the Chico State Teachers College. FIVE KILLERS ARE REFUSED PAROLES Old Murders In California Are Recalled In Study Of Applications Five murderers serving life terms at Folsom Prison were denied paroles by the state board of prison terms and paroles at a meeting Saturday. Among those refused liberty are the notorious Zollie Clements, the Stockton Sunday School teacher who turned bandit and killer, and Oscar Olsen, who was sentenced from Sacramento County twentynine years ago for killing a man in a box car and attempting to sell his body to the coroner. Padilla Case Is Coming Up.

The case of Fortuna Padilla, a Mexican youth who set fire to a Japanese school here, causing the deaths of ten children, was not considered, and will be taken up at a meeting two weeks hence. Clements' parole denial Saturday was his seventh since 1915. He also has made three attempts to escape from the prison and in 1926 walked away from a prison road camp in Mariposa County. Confessed Many Killings. He was convicted of the murder of William Newman, a Stockton salcon keeper.

he confessed to five other murders, including the killing of James Markham, a Sacramento carpenter, in a street carnival holdup here in 1902. Other murderers denied paroles include Arthur Johnson, who killed Ralph Werner in Yuba County. Johnson now is serving his fourth prison term. Police Killer Is Refused. Calvin Rowell, Los Angeles policeman-killer, likewise failed to win his freedom.

Rowell was a member of a gang of five burglars who fatally shot two officers December 6, 1921. Of the five, two were hanged, one died in insane asylum and one committed suicide. A $10,000 reward paid to policemen who arrested the murderers was turned over to the widows of the dead officers. The fifth parole denial went to Emmett Sole, who, when 18 years old. killed another man in Livermore.

Cole has been in prison for twenty years. Only one parole was granted out of sixty-four cases beardimit This went to Robert Clark County, who was serving a term for passing a fictitious check. Chico Indians Honor Pastor At Acorn Feed CHICO (Butte April Chico Indians on Saturday night gave an acorn dinner, with Rev. Harris Pillsbury, pastor of the Bidwell Memorial Presbyterian Church, as guest of honor. The dinner was given in appreciation of Pillsbury's efforts in restoring services the rancheria, church.

Mrs. Pillsbury, their daughter Harriet and a house guest, Dean Stallings, were also guests at the banquet. There were about forty members of the Indian Colony present. They were of all ages from the very oldest inhabitants to babies in arms. The gathering was a very picturesque one, colorful in dress, and in the table decorations.

Varied Menu Is Offered. The menu was of a varied nature but the piece de resistance was the acorn fruit. It wag made from acorns gathered 'by Mrs. Armanda to Wilson with her own hands, ground a powder by herself, and prepared according to the ancient Indian custom. It was served in a closely woven Indian basket of ample dimensions made by herself FIVE ARE HURT IN CAR WRECK: Brother-In-Law Of Earl Lee Kelly Is Among Those InJured In Shasta Caroline Hospital.

Crash Is Investigated. REDDING (Shasta April persons are in Redding on collision 3:30 o'clock yesterhospitals as the, result of a headday morning near the Cottonwood Subway. Andrew T. Jessen, 27, of Anderson, brother-in-law of State Director of Public Works Earl Kelly, was the most seriously injured. He received a broken right leg above the knee and a broken left ankle.

He is a patient in the Dozier Sanatorium. Miss Anna Scholfield, an empioye of the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company here, and Captain C. N. Terry of San Francisco received broken noses and bruises; Elmer Junkans of Redding received a severe scalp wound, Bennie Cassel of Spokane, suffered cuts on his nose and bruises. The four are in the St.

Junkans, accompanied by Jessen, Miss Scholfield and B. Hart of Iron Mountain, who escaped unscathed, was driving to Redding after attending a dance near Red Bluff. Cassel was driving the othowned by Captain Terry. Cassel' is reported to be a hitchhiker picked up by Captain Terry, who then permitted him to drive part of the time. They were bound for San Francisco.

Children Are Injured As Cars Collide In Lodi LODI (San Joaquin April Martin, 8, and his sister, Dorothy, 5, are the only victims of a collision between an automobile driven by their father, Charles Martin, and Harry Stroh, 501 Hilborn Street, at Sacramento and Elm Streets Saturday night. The impact of the crash threw Harvey Martin part way through the windshield and inflicted cuts on his head and fact. His sister received minor cuts and bruises injured right knee. Child Is Struck By Car On Grass Valley Street GRASS VALLEY (Nevada Co.) April Alice Thomas, 14, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

William Thomas, is in the Jones Memorial Hospital suffering from a broken nose and several broken teeth, received yesterday when struck by an automobile while playing on Bennett Street. The car was driven by J. Meservey of Nevada City. Frank Ward, a prospector, is in the Nevada County Hospital at Nevada City with a severe scalp wound and a possible leg fracture received yesterday when his automobile overturned on a curve near the Yuba County line, A companion, LeRoy Ramsey, is uninjured, Grass Valley Youth Is Injured In Car Crash GRASS VALLEY (Nevada April Howard, 21, a Grass Valley youth, is in a critical condition in the Jones Memorial Hospital suffering from a sprained back and a fractured skull received early yesterday when the automo- Don't Fear Motherhood THither who expectant has nausea and other disagreeable symptoms, or the woman who suffers from catarrhal drains, should take Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription.

Read this: "I was so weak I couldn't do my housework and dreaded motherhood." said Mrs. Bertha Snider of 4257 Chestnut Riverside, Calif. "I took Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription and was soon feeling like a different woman, my fear of not being able to carry on left me and I gave birth to a very healthy baby." Sold by druggists everywhere. Write to Dr.

Pierce's Clinic, Buffalo, N. for free medical advice. New size, tablets 50 liquid $1.00. Large size, tabs, or liquid, $1.35, "We Do Our Part." Help Kidneys Don't Take Drastic Drugs You have nine million tiny tubes 01 filters in your Kidneys which may be endangered by using drastic, irritating drugs. Be careful.

If poorly functioning Kidneys or Bladder make you suffer from Getting Up Nights, Leg Pains, Nervousness. Stiffness, Burning, SmartPains, Lumbago of Loss of Vitality, ing. Acidity, Neuralgia or Rheumatic don't waste minute. Try the Doctor's prescription called Cystex (pronounced Siss-tex), Formula in every package. Starts work in 15 minutes.

Soothes and raw, irritated tissues. It is helping millions of sufferers and in guaranteed to fix you up to your satisfaction or money back on return of empty package. Cystex is only 75c at all druggists. insect bites and stings. Money back if it fails.

Ask your druggist. SpurlockNeal Nashville, Tenn. (adv.) SORES Quickly Instantly Healed Eased Danger lurks in sores, boils. Don't delay! CARBOIL, the great American Salve, soothes pain immediately, produces healing in a few days. Nothing better for Wallace Refuses To Change Stand On Rice Control WASHINGTON, Agriculture plied to day to California rice rice production discriminatory "no rule is The plan, ter to Senator was adopted eration of all volved." The letter answer to a terson Ranch son, Calif.

Is Fundamental The protest, into question tal features of trol program. parity to the for his product, ily provides for production units out regard to owners. This as as land produced rice ments in history as rice base period." Wallace said terson company ant and was the crop as rent. It will be other tenant if The finding should not prove THREE SEEK AS IONE (Amador There are three race for seph Sibole, candidate. Two nounced Leverone and REMOVAL festival PRICES.

All on all white tubs, $34.20 SINKS of on board. Moddrain board. colors. HEADS 35c size and all for sprinkler VALVES years ago, and kept as an in the family. the conclusion of the dinner, special request of the Indian of the village, the guest evening, Rev.

Harris Pillsconducted an Easter service, being the first Easter service this year in the Chico district, the sunrise service by hours. Services Are Planned. church built by Mrs. Bidwell years ago has been unused about ten years, having fallen considerable disrepair. By conmade recently by memof the Chico Presbyterian a sum of money was raised rehabilitation of the 1 intethe church, by which ar have been made to conreligious services in the every Sunday afternoon at in accordance with the of Mrs.

Bidwell. The only in so doing is in the event as the shingle roof is in condisrepair. The Indians, disregard such slight inas a leaky roof in extheir wish to hold weekly The first of these servbe conducted next Sunday. was driving sideswiped a the Marysville Highway Rough and Ready, skidded feet and crashed into antree. youth owned was driving an autoby his brother, RonHoward of Sacramento, an of the Shell Oil Company.

accident occurred about 6 when Howard was driving Rough and Ready, alone. J. Blake of the state patrol investigated the SACRAMENTO continues. A bargain at SACRIFICE BUILT-IN PATTERN BATHTUBS Prices greatly reduced and colored built in bath Extra special $69.20 values reduced to ONE-PIECE We have a large assortment sinks with backs and drain els include single and double Various sizes. White and SAVE TO SPRINKLER All Brass Sprinkler Heads, Special We can supply pipe cut to necessary fittings and valves systems.

FAUCETS and OF ALL KINDS Garden Valves, and 33c Hose Bibbs 45c Sink Faucets 80c Shower Heads 45c Bath Faucets $1.45 Space will not permit listing cial price bargains. All items ly marked with special price and look over our UNUSUAL April 2. (P) Secretary Wallace rea protest from a producer that the control plan is with the assertion satisfactory to every Wallace said in a letHiram W. Johnson, "after careful considthe interests in- from Wallace was in protest from the PatCompany at Patter- Feature. Wallace said, "calls one of the fundamen the rice crop conDesigned to secure actual rice producer the plan necessarthe distribution of to producers withtheir status as land means that tenants owners, who have will receive allotaccordance with farmers during the apparently the Pathad a share tenreceiving one-third of Wallace said: necessary to obtain anthe old one has left.

of a suitable tenant difficult. ELECTION CONSTABLE IN IONE April candidates in the constable in Ione. Joincumbent, will be a others have anthemselves, namely, Gus Jack Kelley. PLUMBING in Plumbing of it must be YUBANS WILL DEPICT EARLY DAY SOLDIERS MARYSVILLE (Yuba April contribution of Marysville Parlor of the Native Sons of the Golden West to Army Day parade, April 8th, will uniforming of several soldiers to represent a detachment of defenders, regular army men in the days when the president ordered troops to Camp Far West, near Wheatland, to protect white settlers. Uniforms used as early as 1850 have been procured from the Presidio quartermaster sergeant.

In the same division of the parade will be Days of '49 features, of which Yuba County has many, An early day stage, carrying Wells Fargo treasure and passengers, guarded by a shotgun messenger, will be a number. Chicoan, Near 90, Tells Of Candidacy For Justice Post many heirloom At at the residents of the bury, this held preceding seven The many for into tributions bers Church, for the rior of rangements duct church o'clock wishes obstacle of rain siderable however, conveniences pressing services. ices will bile he tree on near ninety other The mobile ald employe The A. M. toward Captain highway accident.

CHICO (Butte April John Nelson gives as a qualification as a candidate for justice of the peace of Chico Township next August that he will be 90 years of age before the election takes place, and during the last ten years he has had three thorough physical examinations 'and have been pronounced sound and healthy in every, said: respect." "I am to-day in perfect health." The incumbent in the office is L. E. Newton, who will seek reelection. ADVERTISEMENTS. Now give your stomach hot bath in morning; Washes away poisons and acids that cause stomach in shape so you won't suffer distress all day NOW trouble all of you who have to try stomach are urged this faster relieve--and prevent -the suffering that comes after eating, drinking or smoking.

To those of you who are used to taking mint tablets, magnesias and ordinary antacids like bicarbonate of soda it will give life a new richness. It is exactly what most doctors now tell their patients to do. When you wake up in the morning drink a glass of hot water with a spoonful of BiSoDoL in it. That's all you have to do to get rid of poisonous matter and excess acids and the put your stomach in good shape for day. You will discover results at once.

BiSoDoL--which is prescribed by more doctors than any other preparation contains bicarbonate of soda FORTIFIED by four important ingredients that stomach speclalists say should be added to give you FASTER, MORE LASTING RELIEF-reliet impossible to obtain by less scientific methods. Start giving your stomach a hot BiSoDoL bath in the morning. See yourself how it relieves-and prevents heartburn, gas pains, acidity and other distressing troubles that follow eating, smoking and drinking. YOU'LL SAY IT'S MARVELOUS. Any druggist will sell you a can of BiSoDoL for only 25c.

SUPPLY COMPANY SALE Supplies. sold before PAINTS Certainteed Kalsomine, 5-lb. pkg. 8c in gallons gal. Guard Quality Paint, 98c Lindseed Oil, (your own can) gal.

89c Weathershield' Paint, made by Certain- gal. $1.65, qt. 49c High enamel class inside gal. $1.89 Brushes Of All Kinds SINKS White Enamel Steel, Size 14x20 $2.40 Other Sizes Also Reduced STEEL PIPE -and malleable fittings. Black and galvanized.

Our stock is complete. Sizes to 12-in. WATER HEATERS Full Automatic Storage Heaters 20-Gallon Size $36.00 15-Gallon Size $33.50 Copper Coil Heaters. $5.95 Our stock is of all the spe- fonia. We can in stock plain- pair parts, soil pipe and tags.

Come in Everything stock. special sale. SACRAMENTO SUPPLY 515-517 Street Our high grade stock going moving into new store. COMPLETE BATHROOM OUTFITS Our large stock.of high grade bathroom outfits in white and colored fixtures must be sold. All floor samples greatly reduced.

We also have a few slightly damaged sets at enormous savings. LAUNDRY TRAYS GARDEN 2 compartment, reinforced cement; best $7.75 quality, Single trays also reduced. CLOSET SEATS Oak or Mahogany $2.15 up Finish GARDEN HOSE All rubber Garden hose with coup50 lings $1.99 the most complete in Northern Calisupply all kinds of washers and reirrigation pipe, steel pipe and fittings; fittings, sewer pipe, drain pipe. greatly reduced during this gigantic PLUMBING CO. Cap.

1717.

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