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The Register from Santa Ana, California • Page 6

Publication:
The Registeri
Location:
Santa Ana, California
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE SIX SANTA ANA DAILY REGISTER. TUESDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER I. 1921 ELECTRIC NEED TARIFF TD Good Creamery Butter Butter to be good and sweet must be fresh. Butter comes from the churns of Tulare and we consider it to be the finest grade we can buy. Buy a half pound and if it does not more than satisfy, we will gladly re; fund your money.

Butter lb. Bread 61c 24-oz. 10c Dependable Stores Selling Dependable Foods FOR RAISING LIVE STOCK Besides fanning on the richest soil in the world, perpetually watered by the Colorado River, Palo Verde Valley offers ideal climatic conditions for stock raising. Stock is immune from disease in this valley country. Ask WILMAX LAND COMPANY 235 Spnrgeoc Bldg.

Phone 72 INDESTRUCTO Trunks Insured Guaranteed An insurance policy goes with each Inde- structo Trunk. Also the broadest and most thorough Guarantee you ever read. But, in spite of those two protective features, Indestructo Trunks cost no more than other trunks of similar quality. Our Enlarged Windows Window shopping is a pleasant pastime as well as a convenience, when windows are attractive. just enlarged our window fronts, and ask your special attention to them the next time you pass.

BRYDON BROS. HARNESS AND SADDLERY CO. 305 West Fourth N. Beisel, Mgr. WORLD CONDITIONS IN THE LIGHT OF PROPHECY Evangelist B.

F. Pritchett of Phoenix, who is now conducting a series of evangelistic meetings at the Chi rch of the Nazarene, corner of Fifth and Parton Streets, will deliver a series of sermons on prophecy as it relates to present world conditions, beginning Tuesday evening, November 1st, and continuing through the weeL Subjects as follows: Tuesday DEVIL, WHO MADE His work. How long will he continue? Where will he go? Wednesday ETERNITY TO Thursday WOMEN AFTER ONE The night of sin. Friday KINGDOM AND REIGN OF A THOUSAND Will millions now living never die? Or the present dead be resurrected and be offered life and salvation at this time? Don fail to hear these questions answered. Saturday FINAL OVERTHROW OF ALl EARTHLY GOVERNMENTS AND Foreshadowed by Daniel three-fold visions of present world conditions.

Sunday, 11 A. WILL THE END Answered by four social world. political world. financial world. religious world.

Sunday, 2:30 P. WATERS, OR STORM A startling and thrilling lecture for men and boys. A special invitation to all ladies to hear this lecture. Place of meeting announced later. Electric signs must be illuminated from one hour after sunset until 10 p.

an ordinance read at the city council meeting last night is finally adopted. The ordinance was given its first reading and referred back to the city attorney. will not be tolerated if the council has authority to prevent it. The question has been before tjie council in an informal way for many months. A recent investigation disclsed that a very large per- percentage of the signs are not lighted at night Electric signs are given preference as to position and permits are given for these that cannot be obtained for others.

Dead letter signs are not permitted to extend over the must be parallel with the building. Electric signs are permitted to project over the walk, and council members believe that streets should not be cluttered with signs that are not lighted at night. Brick Yard Bobs Up The brickyard at Hickey and Olive continues to be a live topic before the council. The subject bobbed up against last night, with a quqj-y from Mayor John G. Mitchell as to the status of the yard.

He said that residents in the vicinity of the yard had been calling on him for information as to what was being done to abate the asserted nuisance. City Attorney G. H. Scott was recently instructed to take up the matter with District Attorney A. P.

Nelson. Scott reported that he had presented the situation to the district attorney, and that the latter had referred the matter to Dr. A. H. Domann, county health officer, at Orange.

Dr. Domann had been asked to investigate and report as to whether the yard was a menace to health. The health officer has not yet made an investigation. If he declares the yard a menace to health steps will be taken to abate it. Leases Olive Property Councilman W.

A. Greenleaf, who is a member of the board of directors of the A. V. I. company, re ported that Harvey Garber, owner of the yard, had completed negotia tions with the company for a lease on property at Olive with a view of moving his yards to that place.

The top lamps and all crossarm lamps in fhe North Main street ornamental lighting system will be burned until midnight and ail arm lamps on the street side will be burned all night when the system is ready for operation, the council decided. It will cost only $10 a month more to burn the street- side lamps all night as against light ing them until midnight, and the council thought all night operation would be worth the difference in cost. There are eightv-six 250-candlepower and 172 crossarm lamps. Steele Finley was given permission to circulate a contract for paving Highland street from Main street west as far as he can get a 100 per cent signed contract. He stated that residents had asked him to pave on that street between Sycamore and Broadway, assuring him that all would sign.

He believes that under the circumstances he can secure contract for paving other blocks. Four-inch asphaltic concrete is proposed. To Draw Warrant The city clerk was authorized to draw- a warrant for Finlef for the proportion of the of paving Main street from Fourth to Seventh, the amount being around $2.400. Street Superintendent Edward Dahl was directed to ascertain what contractor is responsible for breaks in the P. E.

right of way between Fourth and Fifth, said to have been the result of negligence in filling trenches when sewers were put in. The contractor responsible will have to make the repair at his own expense. A resolution adopting plans and specifications for paving Cypress i street and directing the clerk to ad; vertise for bids was adopted. Bids will be opened November 14. Perry O.

Wells was granted a permit to operate a wholesale produce market at 407 East Third street. Approval of plans of Ben Clapp to subdivide a three-acre tract on Or: ange avenue was asked by G. G. Lat: imer, who is to have the manage- I ment of the subdivision. The council agreed to meet at the tract this ernoon at 2 and decide ac- I tion.

Similar disposition was made of a request of F. E. Miles for peril mission to cut the curb on Spurgeon, near Third, for a driveway into his building on the corner of Spurgeon and Third. To Pave Alley Street Superintendent Dahl was authorized to start work on paving of the alley running from Broadway to BSreh, between Third and Fourth streets. He reported that all property owners had signed a contract for the work.

A long debated question as to whether both templet and roller should be used in compressing and levelling concrete base for pavement upon which a top surface is to be applied is settled. The decision was not to use the templet but to continue the roller process of compressing the mixture. Protest of property owners on the paving of East Seventeenth street from Santiago to Main will be disregarded and City Engineer W. W. Hoy was directed to prepare plans and specifications for paving between those streets and west of Main to Ross.

That a tariff is necessary in der to save the sugar beet industry of the United States from ruin, is declared in an interview by A. E. Carlton of Colorado Springs, president of the Holly Sugar company, which owns three beet sugar factories in Colorado and three in California. The three factories in this state are located in Orange county, one at Huntington Beach and two at Santa Ana. Present Sugar Situation The interview, given out through the Holly in Colorado, follows: "In the United States over a million acres of most intensively cultivated land is yearly devoted to beet culture.

million dollars a year is paid to beet growers with an equal amount expended in freight, coal, lime rock, supplies and labor at the factories. means that one-fourth of our annual bill for sugar is expended at home, increasing the purchasing power of our people. "With a normal sugar consumption in the United States of $4,000,000 tons, we are confronted with an available supply of over 8,000,000 tons. Philippine and Porto Rican sugars are admitted duty- free, due to our policy of adopting our little black brothers. doubled her sugar production during the war, and is now lustily demanding additional tariff preferential with a decrease in the present duty on sugar, while at the same time reducing the common labor daily wage scale of $4 cash, prevailing last year, to 40 cents a day paid in commissary supplies.

the war the beet sugar production did not increase, due ro the food price control under the Lever bill and the high war profit and other taxation. Threatens Beet Industry the Cuban price readjustment has not been completed, it has reached a point where the domestic beet sugar production must disappear unless the required protection afforded by an increased tariff is included in the new legislation. the present price of less than 5 cents factory net for refined sugar, the domestic beet producers are facing another year of losses rather than the almost vital profit required to re-establish bank credits. additional tariff of 3-4 cents per pound will show a small profit for the factory and the beet grower, and without this even our creditors, wTho will own the properties at 10 cents on the dollar, will not continue operations. the new Cuban crop increasing the visible supply, continued price declines are certain, and the additional tariff will only serve to lessen the losses of the domestic producer.

Our plea is not to increase our domestic production, but to protect what we have, and, incidentally, add $30,000,000 to the revenue. Even free trade England has 4 3-4 cents tariff on sugar and France about 5 ERROR CAUSES COURT TO DROP TITLE CASE A land case In which thirty county property owners petitioned the court to place the titles to their property under the jurisdiction of the county recorder, as provided in the Torrens land act, was thrown out by Judge R. Y. Williams of department two of the superior court, because of an error in the published notice of the petition. TEMPLE THEATER From January 1st to October 1st of this year, Studebaker sold 6054 automobiles in California.

This is over 1700 more than their next nearest competitor in the 6-cylinder class. COURT ON CALUMET W. R. Siewart, of the International Bible Students, lectured at the Temple theater Sunday morning, with large attendance. He said in part: Christians believe that the Bible is Word of truth.

All Christians, Catholic and Protestant, agree that the Bible teaches that God created the first man perfect; that this man sinned and was sentenced to death before he begot any children; that he was driven from Eden, and later exercised his divinely given functions to beget children, and that his children were all in sin and shapen in (Psalm and That for this reason every one of the human race has been born imperfect, inheriting this imperfection from the first man Romans 5:12. Christians further agree that God made a promise to redeem man from death (Hosea that he promised Abraham: thy seed shall all the families of the earth be (Genesis that later Jesus came to earth; that Jesus was baptized in the Jordan; that he was afterwards crucified upon the cross and arose from the dead and ascended on high. one of the prophets of old foretold that it was purpose to grant restoration blessings to the human race. (Acts 3:24.) Only a few persons will go to heaven. Jesus said that there would be but a little flock.

(Luke 12:32) What, then, will become of the other millions of population? The answer is, God will give them an opportunity to be restored to perfect human conditions. If restoration of the human race is not true, then the promise made to Abraham must be void; the promise to redeem the human race from death could not be true, and the death and resurrection of Jesus would be wholly useless. being true, then, all must admit that a time will come wrhen this opportunity for life everlasting will be offered to the people. The question is, When is that time? Uppermost in the minds of the disciples was this question. did not answer this question by telling them that wrhen the due time arrived God would bring forth some strange phenomenon in the skies; but his answer shows that the evidence would be such that when the time does arrive every thinking person could understand.

Hence he answered that the end of the social and political order existing then, and still existing in a measure, wpuld begin with a world war, followed by famine and pestilence and revolutions in various parts of the earth. (Matthew 24:7) These things had the beginning of their fulfillment in 1914. According to Bible, chronology, the gentile times ended there, and Christians expected the trouble to begin, as indeed it did; The famine has come; the pestilence! has afflicted the earth; revolution! has upset many governments and is now threatening all the social fabric of the world. a doubt that is the time Jesus referred to when he said: that liveth and believeth in me shall never PARTS IN Meeting last night at the high school auditorium, members of the casting committee for to be the second of the offerings by the Santa Ana Community players, were greeted by an unusually large crowd, from which they selected many of the characters for the play. This committee, with Miss Verna Peterson as chairman, assisted by Mrs.

Mary Bruner, Miss Mary Har-! ris and Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Carrier, found in Mrs.

O. M. Robbins exactly the needed type for Mrs. March, the adored center of the household, who he able to play the part of to perfection, according to the belief of all who saw her last night. The part of Aunt March was assigned Mrs I.

W. Van Cleave, while Meg, the gentle elder sister, was, given Mrs. Charles C. Brisco. Miss Margaret Stump will take the part of Amy, and the final character assigned was that of John Brooks, which will be played by Rudolph Richards.

Success Pleases Players Last success in fitting so many of the characters was pleasing to the committee, the members of which hope in the near future to find a suitable person to take each. of the remaining parts. These include the most Important of all, that of Jo, who should be seventeen, tall, thin, brown and full of spirits. Her tomboyish qualities must be marked, although this manner is modified toward the end of the play. Beth, with1 her shyness and del -1 icacy, is also to be chosen, as is! Mr.

March, Mr. Professor Frederich Bbaer and Han-! nah Mullett. Ernest Crozier Phillips, I director of the Community players, i confident that the proper types for the different parts will soon ap- pear. Interest Grows Interest in the forthcoming pro-1 duction of and is not confined to local enthusiasts, Phillips stated today in discussing the first Community play, to be given November 10 and 11, for yesterday H. H.

Hines of Pasadena, who appeared in the part of in the Pasadena Community production of the famous comedy, telephoned a reservation of ten seats for the opening night, and plans a theater party of a group of Pasadena friends. The Union Pacific System Having taken over the Los Angeles and Salt Lake R. Has established, for your convenience, a Freight and Passenger Agency at 419 BUSH STREET Santa Ana Where all freight and passenger matters will be handled with convenience to the public. Let us help you with your transportation problems. TICKET AND PULLMAN RESERVATIONS TO ALL POINTS C.

S. BROWNE, General Agent 419 Bush Street Phone 1877 SANTA ANA Santa Ana Art Glass Works Announce the Opening of Their New Office and Shops BETTER EQUIPMENT Same Location 1204 E. 4th BETTER SERVICE Same Telephone No. 591-W NO LOCAL AUTHORITY Two men who had over-indulged were arguing as to whether a certain luminary they saw was the sun or the moon. Finally they appealed to a passerby who happened to be in the same condition, to settle their dispute.

After gazing long and earnestly at the object under discussion, the drafter referee shook his head and went on his way, remarking: have to ask somebody else. a stranger here Register Office Open Until 8 P. M. In order that we may give service to those who are unable to make use of the regular business hours, the Register office will be open until 8 p. m.

each week day evening. Subscribers who do not receive their papers from the carrier, will receive a paper by special messenger by calling the office before 7 p. m. Classified advertising may be phoned in or brought to the office until 8 p. m.

Brown Bowles Service Department, 509 North Bush street, repair any make of car REGISTER WANT ADS BRING BIG RESULTS COST LITTLE ACCOMPLISH MUCH MOTOR TRUCK EXPRESS FOUR trucks daily. Get our low rate on return of Farm products and all merchandise cheaper than railroad. Triangle Orange County Expr ess SANTA ANA OFFICE, 3rd and Broadway JACK JOHNTONE, Agent Phone 302 Los Angeles Office, 619 E. 3rd. 13405 and Broadway 6512 BRICE COWAN TF you want every 1 bake-day to be a you want positive results at an economical and depend on CALUMET BAKING POWDER Bakings are always uniform in the millions of homes where it is used.

Everything served is just right tender, light, perfectly raised and thoroughly wholesome. Failures are unknown. Guard the purity of your Calumet It's pure in the can pure in the baking. Contains only such ingredients as have been officially approved by the United States Pure Food Authorities. Order Calumet today will pay.

poind can of Calumet coa tains fuij 16 ox. Some baking powders come in 12 or. instead of 16 ox. cans. Be you seta pound when you want it.

The of the Reo organization today were without identity, so far as the register at St. Inn discloses. They are registered as according to the model of the Reo each is handling in the display here this week. Bach member of the Reo sextette introduces himself by a card that reads "I am one of the They are travelling in style, for the caravan represents every type of passenger car, from the open variety to the luxurious sedan. One of the cars is a five-seven senger touring model.

An extra footboard for the tonneau is provided. It has two auxiliary seats, making it possible to convert the five passenger into a seven passenger by exchanging footboards in the neau. The extra seats can be left at home or folded out of the way in a compartment in the front seat. The display is being made at the show room of the Wass Auto company, imi East Fifth street. A parade at noon was one of the features of activities of the salesmen.

Tomorrow a nickel-plated chassis of a touring car will be shown. The sextette carries films showing the construction of Reo products at the factory and street, scenes in Los Angeles with eighty Reos in line. RED hog auction sale held at the Red Bluff stockyards proved to be a greater success than expected by the Tehama county bureau which sponsored it. The sale aggregated $4,075.29 for 251 head of fat hogs. The top price received was $9.25 per hundred.

There were seventeen consignors. Ord Leachman of Sacramento graded and sold the hogs. The entire shipment, consisting of three carloads, left for the Virden Packing company of San Francisco. Watch Register for announcement of big aluminum sale. Phone 237 for good dairy products.

cXCELSIOR CREAMERY CO. GREAT BLANKET SALE This Week Only Entire stock of high grade Wool Blankets of the Santa Ana Woolen Mills will be placed-on sale here at 9 Wednesday morning at Less Than Factory Cost 5-pound all wool single blanket, size R-pound wool double blanket, size 8-pound all wool double blanket, size 10-pound all wool double blanket, size 4.75 4.75 7.65 9.45 Army Surplus Property Stores Fourth Street, Santa 0 Note the Number and Be Sure to Get in the Right Place 140 W. CENTER ANAHEIM IMPORTANT! 161 S. GLASSELL ORANGE These Blankets Are on Sale Only at Our Santa Ana Store.

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About The Register Archive

Pages Available:
644,837
Years Available:
1906-1977