President Opens Speaking Tour in Cleveland Today Northcott ...

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VOLUME LV NUMBER 534 SANTA MONICA, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1930 PRICE TWO CENTS

GERMAN DEBTS ]£ jlj .U ;J;

MEETING DEMANDS e * * *

RAPIDLY GAINING

m ATHLETICS BEAT CARDS AGAIN, 6-1 W^_B_ifl 1 1 \ • ! m afk Ninrfpnhiirn 83 llmi _ • ._. i t s Rmt Flirf Dnun l l / i i . g% a " | _ . __ __,

CALVIN COOLIDGE Former President af the United StattB NORTHAMPTON, Mass.,

Oct. 2—Every true friend of Germany anil every supporter of sound human progress should hope for the success of President Von Hindenburg and Chancellor Bruening in their efforts to balance the budget and put the govern­ment finances on a stable foundation.

By a more rigid economy they are attempting to meet national obligations.

Not Intolerable So well Informed an author­

ity as S. Parker Gilbert was reported recently to be of the opinion that with firmness this could be done. Certainly the reparation payments, now running at less than $400,000,-ooo per year, cannot be an in­tolerable burden-for a country of about 65,000,000 inhabi­tants, having no great exter­nal debt and no large army nor navy.

Regains Ground Germany has been rapidly

regaining the confidence of world opinion. Outside super­vision of her internal affairs and military occupation of her territory have practical­ly ceased. Violent statements made for political purposes at home or for foreign con­sumption, need not be taken too seriously.

The responsible authorities of the republic are redeeming I their pledges. Through such action the future of Germany appears secure. Any other course would mean certain disaster for her people and thereby grave injury to most of the rest of the world.

President Opens Speaking Tour in Cleveland Today

American Bankers ' Assn. Will Hear. Hoover in

First Address

Hindenburg 83

CLEVELAND, Oct 2 (AP)— President Hoover arrived in Cleveland today, ready to pick up the business end of his 3,000-mile s p e a k i n g tour through the Middle West, East and South, after witnessing for the sec­ond time in successive years a World's Series baseball game.

Refreshed after his t r ip across Pennsylvania during tba night, the president prepared for the busy round of activity laid out for him today in Cleveland, where tonight he will make the first of four ad­dresses in the next five days before

Paul von Hind lburg

DIETRAMSZELL, Bavaria, Oct. 2 (A"-—Field Marshal Paul von Hln-

.. 5 _ , , _-_ , .. , denburg, president of the German the American Bankers association, republic, celebrated his eighty-third

. .Mrs-Hoover • Ds Husband birthday anniversary quietly today Mrs. Hoover joined the president ta this secluded village, surroundeo

in Bedford, O., owning from In­diana, where, as honorary president, she attended the annual meeting of the national Girl Scouts organiza­tion. A luncheon in her honor bas been planned in Cleveland at the Women's City club, while the presi­dent dines in the Cleveland hotel as the honor guest of Cleveland busi­ness men and delegates to the bank­ers' convention.

The president had an opportunity to talk over the current political situation on his way from Philadel- Q-_<-rtal F__-rlir_n M a v R_» phia last night and early today, a t l 3 P e c " « e l e c t i o n m a y D e least three of his guests being party leaders of tbe old school.

Burke Hoover's Guest

Northcott Dies On High Gallows Of San Quentin

Slayer Confesses Killing Two; Blames Father,

Clark for Others

Boy Flier Down

by mountains and forests.

Delay City Vote On Oil Ordinance

mr — *w

Held in January ; Fear Overlarge Ballot

SAN QUENTIN PRISON. Cal., Oct. 2 (UP)—Gordon Stewart Northcott, youthful murderer, died on the high gallows of San Quentin today, While in other parts of the prison I tears dampened the cheeks of three mothers.

Inside the walls when Northcott dropped to his death were Mrs. Christine Collins and Mrs. Nelson | H. Winslow, mothers of three of bis asserted victims. In a cell not far awcy from tbe execution chamber was Mrs. Louisa Northcott. the con­demned man's mother, herself a prisoner for complicity in the same crimes.

Evangelist Chants "Let not your heart be troubled,'

chanted Rev. Larry Newgent, evan­gelist, as the Riverside child slayer climbed the gallows steps.

Northcott was in a state of col­lapse. Three prison guards assisted him to the execution Chamber and half carried him up the steps. He was blindfolded and did not seem aware of what was occurring.

The trap dropped a t 10:10 a. m.J Pacific standard time.

Associated Press Photo, Robert Bock

AMARILLO, Tex.. Oct. 2 (.*»— Robert Buck, 16-year-old Elizabeth, N. J., aviator, was forced down by motor trouble at Glenrio, N. M. after taking off from Amarillo a t 6:45 a. m. (C.S.T.i today ln his effort to establish a new Junior transcontinental flight record.

Cbesl Campaign JEarnshaw Scores Great Victory Workers Press j As Mackmen Send Flint Rhem Back

Appealj To Showers in 4th Inning of Game Cochrane Leads Attack on Red Birds With

Homer in First; Foxx, Simmons Follow With Solid Hits Putting Contest in let; Teams Leave Philadelphia for St. Louis

SHIBE PARK. Philadelphia, Oct 2 (UP)—George Earn­shaw kept the unhappy St. Louis Cardinals popping up easy flies this afternoon and the Philadelphia Athletics won the second game of the world aeries, 6 to 1. The Athletics opened up early against Hint Rhem, driving him to the showers tn

the fourth after scoring all their runs

With Goal in Sight, Plan to Continue Until

Cash in Hand

James Francis Burke, general counsel of the republican national committee, who left the train in Pittsburgh; Postmaster General Brown and Jeremiah Milbank. of

Santa Monica's proposed special election, suggested originally as a means of determining whether

„ . „ „ «. w ,.«_„ „...„„..-., _-- further extensions of the oil drilling New York, eastern treasurer of the zone should be barred, will not be national committee in 1828, were ' held until next year. among his guests. Brown is an I _______ f__ least, was the opinion Ohioan. as is David S. Ingalls, sistant secretary of the navy in charge of aeronautics, a n o t h e r ! Morton guest

School Girls Hurt As Truck Hits Car

Neil O'Neil, 15, and Louise Wat­son, 16, Santa Monica high school girls, received minor injuries when a car driven by Howard Lee, 1118 Fourteenth street, in which they were passengers, Was struck by a truck at 12:10 p. m. on leaving the high school grounds.

Miss O'Neil was treated at Mar­tin's hospital for an injury to her knee, while Miss Watson had sev­eral stitches taken to close a cut Dn her leg on being brought to St. Catherine's hospital. Charles E. Byers, 328 South Sixth street, Al­hambra, driver of the truck going west on Pico, reported that Lee's car came out of the high school driveway directly in front of his truck.

j ^ . " J expressed today by Mayor Herman Michel and Commissioner John A. Morton. The commissioners voiced the belief that the much discussed

Henry M. Robinson. Los Angeles j election would probably be held banker and member of the Hoover s nort ly*«ter January 1. drought committee; George Aker-1 The thought of holding the elec-son, Hoover's secretary; Joel T. Boone, his personal physician, and [j two aides were the only others to I w u u ; " . , —, . accompany the party from Phila- months ago. has been given up be-delphia * cause the great number of amend-

* I ments and propositions on the bal-jy j j tm S lot at that time would hamper a KeCKleSS UriVer j serious consideration of local Issues.

/— m (.m rn i?i • Just what questions will go on the l*ei8 plot/ V ine j Santa Monica election ballot has

pot yet been determined by mem-

tion in November a t the same time the state election - is conducted.

John McDonald, 4139 Pico boule­vard, Los Angeles, was arrested on a reckles driving charge at 7:20 p. m. yesterday, after he had piloted his machine into the rear end of a car driven by Al Patino, 1709 Fourth street, while driving east on Pico a t Fourteenth.

Patino's car was pushed over the curb, McDonald's car being stopped ninety feet farther on by passim-motorists. No one was injured. McDonald was fined $150 and given

bers of the council.

League Signs Pact To Finance Wars

GENEVA, Oct. 2 (.1*)—Representa­tives of twenty-eight states today signed a convention guaranteeing financial assistance to a state which is the victim of attack by another nation. The ceremony took place in

a suspended county jail sentence by I • ^ 1 ™ ? ^ ! ? . assembly Judge John L. Webster in police I o f t h e L e a g u e Pl Nations.

dead

man, was

with

court today.

Seek to Regulate i Orange Juice Sale

LOS ANGELES, Oct. 2 (CNS)— Because certain venders of orange juice in Los Angeles county are im-pairing the health of Los Angeles school children by selling a liquid of inferior grade, a regulatory ordi-nance will be asked soon of the county board of supervisors, J. L. Pomeroy, county health officer, said today.

DELAY BANKRUPTCY DECISION LOS ANGELES, Oct. 2 (U.R)—Ru- I

pert B. Turnbull, federal referee in bankruptcy, will hand down a de­cision on the question of the bank­ruptcy of the Hollywood Dry Corp. next Tuesday, it was announced to­day on completion of a hearing be­fore him.

Church Basketball Schedule Planned

Letters advising all churches in the Santa Monica Bay district that the fourth season of the junior interchurch basketball league was scheduled to start October 14, at the Lincoln junior high school, were sent out by Santa Monica Y. M. C. A. headquarters today, with the re­quest that churches planning to enter teams register them before that date.

Last year, more than 2.000 persons attended the interchurch league games, and it is expected that a number of additional teams will enter the league this year.

Signatories were Australia. Lith­uania, Austria, Belgium, Bolivia, Great Britain, Bulgaria, Cuba, Den­mark, Spain, Estonia, Finland, Ethiopia, France, Greece, Latvia, Norway, Holland, Peru, Persia, Po­land, Portugal, Rumania, Jugo­slavia, Czecho-Slovakia, Sweden, Albania and Irish Free State.

Woman Fined $50 In Bad Check Case

Mrs. Ronald M. Scott, 30, Holly­wood matron, pled guilty to two counts of obtaining money under false pretenses when brought to trial h i Santa Monica police court today and was fined $50, one-half of this amount being suspended.

Mrs. Scott's arrest was brought about by J. M. Judson, Santa Mon­ica merchant, who alleged that he received two checks from her on a Long Beach bank, and that he failed to receive any money on them.

Mimic Air Warfare To Open October 8

• BURBANK. Oct. 2 (U.R)—Extensive army airplane maneuvers, in which the entire air corps of the coast of Southern California will participate, are to be carried on at the United Airport here for ten days, starting October 18, it was an­nounced today.

Complete equipment is to be brought here from the various army and coast guard bases in Southern California, officials of the airport said, and the mimic attack and defense of the Los Angeles metro­politan area will conform very closely to real warfare.

Ford Forecasts $27 Daily Wage tn 1950

Youth Accused of Looting 'Poor Box?

LOS ANGELES, Oct. 2 (CNS)— Accused of stealing $3.67 from the "poor box" of the Holy Spirit church, Pico boulevard and Duns-inuir avenue, Andred R. Fatjor, jr., 21, 24 West First street-, today was arraigned before Municipal Judge Wilbur C. Curtis on a petty theft charge.

REVIVE!. ENOUGH TO PROTEST AGAINST HOOD

SAN QUENTIN, Oct. 2 «.i*> —Al­though Gordon Stewart Northcott I was in a state of collapse as he was | assisted up the thirteen steps to the scaffold before his execution today, he revived enough while the black hood was being adjusted to exclaim:

"Don't, don't." These were his only words. The

Rev. Larry Newgent of Los Angeles, his spiritual advisor, read the first three verses of the fourteenth chap­ter of St. John, of which the theme is "Let not thy heart be troubled."

Drops Acting Mask Almost before thc famuos verses

were finished the troubled heart j which has brought so much sorrow to so many persons was stilled. On the scaffold Northcott dropped the mask of play-acting he had worn almost up to the time he entered the death room. Because of his collapse his fail was somewhat shortened I and his neck was not broken. Death apparently was due to strangula-tion.

Northcott was pronounced at 10:21 a. m.

One of the spectators, a fainted before the prisoner pronounced dead.

Blames Father Northcott's confession, left

the warden, with the request that It j not be opened until after the exe­cution, follows:

"Cyrus Northcott brought Collins boy to ranch, used him . . . for two ' days, then snot him, made Gordon j Northcott and son. Clark, bury him. First they tried to burn him, but gave up, then buried him in hol­low.

"Winslow boys came to ranch and were killed by Sanford Clark. He! killed the young one first, then the oldest one, the old one did not die, so Gordon Northcott shot him.

"Cyrus Northcott did not have nothing to do with Winslows. but knows all about their being burned and buried, also Mrs. Northcott.

Killed in House "All of them (4) were killed in the

house. "Were hid in hole in garage when !

anyone came. "March 10. Collins boy brought to

ranch, killed Saturday, April 16. "Winslow came to ranch, killed

May 29. "Jose' Gonzales, Mexican, tried to

stab Northcott in fight, Mexican boy killed on February 1, killed by Young Northcott, shot through heart by .22 automatic. Came from J Los Angeles.

"October 2, 1930. "Gordon Northcott."

Northcott also left two notes to his father, one to his mother, one to the Rev. Larry Newgent, his spir­itual advisor. The notes to his father read: | First note:

"Dear old daddy of mine: . "Your letter was wonderful

am your lonely frightened boy.

(Continued on Page 3, Column 1)

City Executives To Attend Confab

Morton, Michel to Take Par t in Sessions of

Municipal League Extensive participation in the

convention of the California League of Municipalities at Long Beach next week is planned by Santa Monica city officials. Mayor Her­man Michel announced today.

So that Mayor Michel and John A. Morton, commisioner of public works, may be on hand for the opening of the convention tomor­row's meeting of the council will be adjourned to 8 o'clock Monday morning, city business being trans­acted a t the earlier hour on thai day.

James E. Peasgood, superinten­dent of the building department; Howard B. Carter, city engineer; as well as members of his staff, J. W. Ellis, superintendent of the water department, an da number of other city employes, are expected to at­tend sessions of the convention which are of particular interest to them.

final the

with pre-

Deauville Club Sues 16 Members

Sixteen individuals were being sued in Los Angeles municipal court today by A. B. Clever, assignee of the claims of the Deauville Beach club, for asserted unpaid service charges amounting to approximately $1,250.

In the complaint the sixteen per­sons are alleged to have purchased life memberships in the beach club, each membership carrying with it an agreement to pay monthly serv­ice charges following the opening of the club in September, 1927. None of them complied with the agree­ment, the complaints alleged.

Realty Board Plans Foreclosure Study

A de' iled study of the prevail­ing method of enforcing foreclos- j ures, with a view of seeing whether the public trustee system may not better protect the rights of prop­erty owners was ordered by the San­ta Monica Bay District Realty board au its noon luncheon today, following a talk by Richard Gandy on this issue.

Ira L. Miller, president of the board, appointed .-. committee com­posed of J. Challen Smith, T. A. Johnson. Hilding Tegner. John Con-non and Gandy to conduct the In­vestigation.

Santa Monica Community Chest workers carried on to­day to obtain the additional $13,771.44 needed to complete this year's budget allocation:. of $50,000 for eight charitable and welfare agencies.

They are looking forward to ac­complishing as much as possible of their task by next Thursday night's "clean-up" dinner, but if necessary they will continue until January 1. when actual distribution of funds for 1931 will begin.

Spun Workers On Spurring them on is the grand

total of gifts and pledges to date of $36,228.96 reported at their scheduled report luncheon a t Miramar hotel yesterday.

Today the residence division. Mrs. C. W. Luther chairman, viously soliciting by individual pro.< pect cards of last year's donors, is laying out the entire city street by street, preparing for a house to house clean-up canvass.

Appeal headquarters, 1342 Fourth street, will be kept open through next Thursday. The cheat's perma­nent office is at 1210 Fourth street, Santa Monica Bav Womans club.

Urge All to Call 'Any person in Santa Monica who

has not yet given, but is willing, should telephone appeal headquar­ters a t 29365 or send a Check to its address, 1342 Fourth," is the mes­sage broadcast today by the chest. "Anyone not yet solicited by a worker, whether in residential, business or any other division, may-attend to the matter.

"We will follow up carefully those who were away when workers tried to see them, or were not able to give just then but can do so later, and will go right on from head­quarters," declared Mrs. Braun. who expressed her appreciation of the work of the chest officers, directors and workers. Miller, the Outlook and all organizations and individuals who hove assisted during the appeal.

Educational Value Mrs. Braun pointed out the edu­

cational value of this year's appeal to the school children, aside from their financial response, and this year's unusual local method of pro­viding workers' luncheons by dona­tion of four hotels, a club and Mrs. E. R. Maule, a system which Miller "never heard of before."

"We have every reason to believe that by January 1, when funds are needed for agencies on their year-round basis, our quota will be raised," stales Miller. "We will keep right on, seeing firms and Individ­uals overlooked in the rush; wait­ing for additional branch houses, in­cluding numerous btp oil ro in ponies. to secure authorization from their home offices for gifts; checking up on people absent on vacations; so­liciting those who, because of ill­ness, could not be seen before.".

Japanese Give Santa Monica Japanese Mutual

Friendship association, with S. Shi­kami, 2603 Santa Monica boulevard, as secretary, reported through Its attorney, Nelson D. Miller. $128.50 secured for the chest by fifteen workers who turned in seventy-four sinned gift or pledge cards. No Japanese has ever appealed to a chest agency for aid.

Approximately 90 per cent of ele­mentary school pupils of the city gave to the chest. Miss Elizabeth Hamlin, superintendent of elemen­tary instruction, reported today for Frederick F. Martin, superintendent of schools.

Wrecking Through l Jim Lindsey and Sylvester John-|aon finished for the Cards and were

effective, but too late. St. Louis' lone run came on a homer by George Watkins in the second in­ning.

Cochrane Homers Mickey Cochrane led the Ath­

letics' attack with a homer in the first inning, followed by solid bits by Simmons and Foxx, which added another run and put the game on ice.

The American league champions now are two games up on their National league rivals and are overwhelming favorites to sweep tt t t series, another one of those famous routs which have marked World Series ol the past three years.

The teams hurried from their dressing rooms after the game to board special trains for St. Louis, where the series will resume Sat­urday with Lefty Hallahan in the box for the Red Birds and Connie Mack smiling and saying nothing.

Earnshaw scor-s In George Earnshaw, Connie sent

a great pitcher to ba't le today. For thc first five innings not a Phila­delphia play •;• made an assist, as lone Cardinal batsman afc.r another

OFFICIAL FIGURES Attendance, 32.29S. Receipts, $152,735. Pla vers' share. $77,894.85.

Jimmy Foxx (above) and Al Simmons, big hit and run men for the Philadelphia Athletics, who. together with Mickey Cochrane, put the second game of the World's Series on ice for the Mackmen with their mas­terly clouting today.

The Box Score

i

Mendell, Reinhart Pass 43rd Hour

GLENDALE. Oct. 2 (U.R)—The "Pride of' Hollywood'' swung in a wide circle, above the Grand Cen­tral Air Terminal today, carrying Loren Mendell and Pete Reinhart on their third attempt to win back the world refueling endurance flight record.

The plane passed its forty-third hour in the air a t 12:36 p . m , today.

That the Los Angeles county sher- j Iffs office polices 4,159 square miles, j with 400,000 inhabitants, outside of Incorporated cities; has 900 em­ployes, exclusive of janitors and watchmen; is specialized into homi- j cide, burglary, auto theft, fugitive warrant, vice, farm produce theft and other squads, subdivided as to locals of crimes; maintains a labo­ratory for scientific investigation, six honor camps and an office fori getting jjobs for released prisoners.

That it is possible to stand at the intersection of Sixteenth and Sev­enteenth streets in Santa Monica.

That there are only two streets running without interruption from the north to tiie south city limits o t Santa Monica—Fourth street and Lincoln boulevard.

That William G. Rood of 1729 Ocean avenue has a clock in- his office that for the past two years has refused to run. even after sev-eral trips to the jeweler. Last sum­mer's mild earthquake started the) clock tn motion, and it has been kosping good time ever since.

NEW YORK, Oe t 2 (U.R) Ford, ia a new book to be published tomorrow, predicts tha t in 1950 Ameriean workingmen will .receive a minimum wage of $27 a day, tttt five-day week will be observed uni­versally and there will be no un­employment.

The wage prediction is based on the rise in hourly stipend since 1910. Twenty years ago Ford was paying an average of 25 cents hour­ly, and now he is paying $1.

Ed I Federal Judge Dice A t. Wheel of A uto

BOISE, Ida., Oct. 2 (U.R)—Judge Frank Dietrich of the U. S. circuit court of appeal, San Francisco, died at the wheel of his automobile early today, while enroute from Boise to San Francisco.

Death, which was due to heart disease, came at 9:30 a. m.

Late News Briefs

Telephone Hearing Date Set Ahead

Examiner William T. Satterwhite yesterday set November 13 and 14 us the dales for the continuation of the case being tried before the rail­road commission in which residents of Brentwood Heights are petition­ing that their phone service be transferred from the Santa Monica exchange to that of West Los An­geles.

The hearing has been in progres.. for the past two days at the west Los Angeles Women's clubhouse. Attorney H. W. Elliott representing the petitioners and Chester Coffin, city attorney of Santa Monica, the Santa Monica-Ocean Park Chamber of Commerce, Appearing with Cof­fin Is Cornelius Mclnerny, and for the city of Los Angeles D. M. Kitz-miller, deputy city attorney.

S t . Lou i s D o u t h i t , cf .. A d a m s , 3b ... F r i s c h , 2b . B o t t o m l e y , l b H a f e y , If W a t k i n s . rf . M a n c u s o , c ... G e l b e r t , s s ... R h e m . p L indsey , p x F i s h c r . J o h n s o n , p ...

T o t a l s .. ( x ) B a t t e d

s e v e n t h .

A B R 11 4 0 0 4 0 1 1 0 1

. 4 0 0 4 0 0 4 1 1 3 0 1

A E 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

3 0 1 0 0

I 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0

S3 1 «

,$ 0 0 0 0

24

0 0 0 0 0 0 i p

for L i n d s e y i n

A B B II O . 2 1 0 3

P h i l a d e l p h i a B i s h o p , 2b ....| D y k e s , 3b 3 0 1 C o c h r a n e , e 3 2 1 S i m m o n s , If 4 2 2 F o x x , l b 3 0 1 Mil le r , r f .... H a a s , cf .,, Boley, sa .. Earnshaw,

Totals .

0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0

30 6 1

A E 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 K 1

Former Aimee Pupil Tried for Insanity

LOS ANGELES, Oct. 2 (CNS) — Herman Louis Wilbur, former Bible student a t Angelus temple, today appeared before a jury in Superior Judge Edwin F. Hahn's court for an Insanity hearing. Wilbur was a l ­leged to have delusions of being per­secuted by "radio waves."

Soup King Leaves $100,000,000 to Kin

MOUNT HOLLY, N. J., Oct. 2 (spy—The will of Dr. John T. Dor-rance. president of the Campbell Soup Co., probated today, leaves the bulk of the estate estimated at more than $100,000,000, to members of the Dorrance family.

NORTHCOTT 'CONFESSION' WILL BE DISREGARDED RIVERSIDE, Oct. 2 (UP)—District Attorney Albert Ford

said today he intended to take no action on a "confession" of Gordon Northcott, in which the youth who was hanged this morning accused Cyrus Northcott, his father, and Sanford Clark, his nephew, of complicity in the Wineville ranch child murders.

U. S. Holds Hands Off in Haiti tote

WASHINGTON, Oct. 2 < T'~-A hands-off policy in the elections for the Haitian congress October 14 was

NAVY PILOT DIES IN PLANE CRASH WASHINGTON, Oct. 2 (AP)—The navy was informed

today Lieut. William A. Watson was killed when his airplane fell near Cape Charles, Va., this afternoon, and Chief Aviation Pilot Marion J. Simpson apparently escaped serious injury by jumping with a parachute.

Draft Ordinance for Sewer Line

An ordinance for the construction of the new trunk line sewer in Colo­rado avenue was being drafted to­day by the city engineer's office, Howard B. Carter announced, in preparation for early presentation to the city council.

The new sewer line will be run from Twentieth street to Second street, paralleling the present line.

| I t will be from 15' to 18 Inches in j diameter, large enough to relieve the present pipe from its 50 per cent

j overload.

S t . L o u i s 010 000 000—1] P h i l a d e l p h i a . 2 0 3 200 OOx—61

Runs batted: Dykes <2», Cochrane. Simmons, Foxx. Miller, Watkins. Two-base hits: Frisch. Foxx, Sim-] mons. Dykes. Home runs: Coch­rane, Watkins. Sacrifice hits: | Dykes. Stoken bases: Frisch. Left i on base: St. Louis, 6; Philadelphia, j 5. Struck out: by Rhem, 3; Earn-j shaw, 8; Lindsey, 2; Johnson, 2. Base on balls. Rhem, 2; Johnson. 2. Hits against: Rhem. 7 in 31-3) innings; Lindsey. none in 2 2-3 inn- j ings. Losing pitcher, Rhem. Double plays: Gelbert, Rhem, unassisted; I Dykes to Foxx. Umpires: a t plate, Rigler; first, Gelssl; second, rear-1 don: third, Moriarity. Time of game. 1:47.

popped ineffectually, the lone ex­ception being Watkins homer over the right field wall, a blow which for a uimiH'iit brought heart to tbe St. Louis rooters.

But Earnshaw bore dewn in the closing innings, allowed a total of six hits and struck out eight men. including the last to face him in the ninth. It was a mignificent ef­fort on the part of the big right­hander, who suffered from an in­jured foot through the last three innings.

Cards Get Breaks Aside from a ragged third inning,

in which both teams made two errors and threw the ball around like school boys, the game was packed with spectacular fielding plays. The Cardinals could not complain today that they did not get the breaks.

Rhem Careful Rhem then pitched carefully to

Millar, took him to the count of three and two. and got out of furth­er trouble when Blng rolled to Bot­tomley. who tagged out the batter about fifteen feet in front of first base.

Watkins put the Cardinals back in the ball game and saved them from a shutout in the second when he kept swinging at Earnshaw's offer­ings with all his might until he con­nected squarely for a homer which went on a line over the right field and bounced up from Twentieth street to the roof of a porch. This was a harder sock than Cochrane's homer.

Due For Beating Boley then made a nice stop of

(Continued on Page 15, Column 1)

Stafford to Go on Trial Again Nov. 8

LOS ANGELES. Oct. 2 (CNS)— C. C. Stafford, El Monte grain mer­chant, whose conviction on a charge of attacking Miss Kae Schade, btt secretary, recently was reversed by the appellate court, will go to trial for the second time on November 5, tbe date having been set today by Superior Judge Walton J. Wood-Kerr Warns Voters

To Register Now LOS ANGELES. Oct. 2 (CNS)—

County Registrar W. M. Kerr to ­day issued a warning tha t unless citizens have registered since J an ­uary 1, or since they last changed their residence, they will be unable to vote on November 4. Registra­tion closes at midnight Saturday.

$52,292,225 SURPLUS WASHINGTON, Oct. 2 (U.R) —In­

come ta> collections in September totaled 1498.520.385. enabling the treasury to end the first quarter of the new fiscal year with .a surplus [ announced by the state department of $52 292.255 today.

MUMMY OP 'OLD RIP.' FAMOUS TOAD, STOLEN EASTLAND, Texas, Oct. 2 (AP)—The mummified body of

"Old Rip," Eastland's horned toad that lived thirty-one years in the cornerstone of the county courthouse, has been stolen. County officials and others were to meet today to raise a reward for recovery of the toad.

French Filers Hop Off at San A ntonio

SAN ANTONIO. Tex.. Oct. 2 i.T— Dieudonne Coste and Maurice Bel­lonte. French fliers, who negotiated the east-west hop across t h e Atlan­tic, took off from Winburn field here a t :23 o'clock this mornint en route to Forth Worth on their good will tour of the country.

Oklahoma City and Kansas City were on the day's Itinerary.

Play-by-Play FIRST IXMVd

CAKDS-r-Douslut up. Str lice one, called. Foul. . t>'i>-c two: b.'.!l one, low. Ooughit I popped to JDvfcaa ott th. srjraaa. AdaVtts up. |

' Foul, strike one. -Foul, strike two. Ad.inii i tl.ed. to Sm;_->•-... who backed up a few i feel "to make the eateh, Frisr-i tip. Strike | one. called Bail oaa, outsid* Frisch drove j 8 long fly to left field for a double, which . was hi_ forty-third in six World's Sarttoi

(Continued on Pace 15, Column 1)

SAVE TIME AND MONEY

Turn now to the Classi­fied Section where you will find listed for your convenience a complete "Business and Profes-sionel Service Guide of the Bay district." De­pendable merchandise and service.

EVENING OUTLOOK CLASSIFIED ADS

PHONE 23285

mmmmmmmm^mmmmmmm*mmaamaW*\-mm

. v

PAGE TWO EVENING OUTLOOK, SA_NTA MONICA, CALIFORNIA THURSDAf, OCTOBER 2, 1930

Consolidation of i B a n k Approved Boards ef America, Italy

Institutions Formally Ratify Merger

Formal ratification of t l t t pro posed consolidation of t h e Bank ot Italy a n d t h a ' B a n k of America oi California was voted by tttt boards of directors of both banks today, following notification from Wash­ington that tttt comptroller of t b e currency formally had approved of tttt consolidation application.

T b a notification sets forth that tba necessary permits would provide for t b a consolidation being pro­claimed Priday, October 31.

l b a Bank of Italy and Bank e f America boards, which n e t in San Francisco, adopted a joint resolution setting October 31 a s the effective date of tbe consolidation and pro­viding that tba consolidated Insti­tutions shall open Monday. Novem­ber 8. under tba name of Bank of American National t r u s t and Sav- ; ings association.

I t also was jointly agreed that t h e board of directors of the consoli­dated Institutions shall meet alter­nately b l Los Angeles and San Mat-Cisco, tbe meetings t o be held j once a month.

Under tbe consolidation tt was i announoed that there would be 373 branches b l the system and the ad­ministrative offices would be lo ­cated tn Los Angeles s n d San Francisco.

Dooli-tle Again Cheats 'Reaper

Jimmy Brings Plane to Earth Safely After

Crash ia Midair KANSAS CITY, Oct. 2 (U.R)—One

more miraculous escape was record­e d today for J immy Doolittle aa the "charmed" stunt flier and former officer prepared to lead a squadron of Kansas City aviators tal a greet­ing to ttw French goodwill pilots, Dieudonne Coste and Maurice Bel ­lonte.

Doolittle, wbo flew a n airplane completely out of its wings a t tba national air races in 1929, and has experienced numerous e ther thrill­ing adventures, narrowly escaped death when bis speedy mystery ship clipped the tail off another ship 1800 feet above the municipal airport yesterday.

T h e pilot of t h s other plane, Lieut, J o h n M Cross, Wichita, Kans., was forced t o Jump, but was saved by his parachute. T h e pro­peller of Doollttle's sh ip was bent in the crash, bat ba landed tt safely after what observers said was a masterful exhibition of emergency flying.

Irigoyen Plans Fight for Release

BUENOS AIRES. O c t S UP>— POnner President Hipolito Irigoyen announced today from aboard tbe cruiser Buenos A b e s t h a t ba would undertake legal proceedings to s e ­cure his release. It was understood h i s action would take the form of a habeas corpus plea.

His announcement followed e x ­changes yesterday b l which the de­posed president asked to be allowed to go to Spain to reside.

Theater Guild to Read Play Monday

_ T h e Santa Monica Community Theater guild will have a reading and tryout for their October play ett Monday evening, October 6, at the home of Alan Moody, 1926 La Mesa drive, a t 7:30.

T h e guild will present one play each month, and the notice for the tryout for parts will always be posted, tt is announced.

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Children's Co!ds 1 mtb* Checked w i thout

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Scientific Massage MUSCLE TRAINING

Physical-Therapy Clinic Dept. Martin Hospital

Electro- and BtFdro-Therapy E RENFER

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AS last.—the perfect man! Harley Volkman, 18-year-old University of Kansas freshman, ts rated 100 par cent i n a l f things. Among his qualifications are good looks, wealth, athletic ability and physique He is 6 feet tall, weighs 200 pounds and blew off tba top of a spirometer, a a Instrument for measuring lung power.

GANG GETS $108,000 BUENOS JURES. Oct. t UB—A

paymaster was killed today and t t e e e persons were wounded by a gang which attacked a pay car and escaped with 300,000 pesos (about •108.000). l b a money was for tba sanitary department payroll.

Widow Identities ! Slayer Suspect Points Out Maa She Says

Killed Her Husband S3 Years Ago

LOS ANOELES, Oct. 3 (CNS)— Identified by a murdered man's widow aa ber husband's slayer, who escaped thirty-three years ago from the prison where b e was sentenced to life, Joseph R. Adklns, believed to be Robert Atchison, today was under court order t a be removed t o Okla­homa to answer to state authori­ties t h a n .

Adkins, who has lived bl Olendale for years a s a carpenter with a wife and two daughters, late yester-A y lost his f l a m before David B. Bead, United States commissioner, t o prevent removal to Oklahoma

Identifies Suspect Dramatically, Mrs. Leonette Dow-

den took tba stand at the hearing and pointed m t Adkins as the slayer of her first husband, August Coots, in a settler's war bl-Oklahoma, then an Indian territory.

"I was standing by tbe corral when Robert Atchison rode up be­hind t h e barn and shot my husband )a tttt back," she testified. "I could never forget him."

Plan Appeal Henry a Atchison testified that

Adklns was his toother, according to his "best Information a a d belief."

Adkins took tttt stand ln his own defense, declaring he was a cousin of t l t t man who broke prison after being convicted of tta murder thirty-three years ago.

Indicating a further fight to halt removal of Adklns, John 8. Copper add C. M. Mosslin, defense attor­neys, announced they would appeal the removal order.

Boy, 6. Shaves and Smokes

Attoclattd Pre** Photo

A-soclat. d Press Photu Clarence Kehr, Jr., 8-year-old Toledo, O , boy, has been refused

admission to Toledo public schools because of bis unusual develop­ment. He is 3 feet 5 inches tall, weighs 84 pounds, hiss a baritone voice, smokes cigars and shaves regularly. He has tttt strength of a 15-year-old boy.

KING 'DUNKS* BRUSSELS, O e t 3 (ff)—King Al­

bert dips bis bread in his morning coffee when te can. " T t e queen doesn't like tt a n d only lata me do it when there Is none present but the family,** ha explained t o his hosts on a visit to the Alps.

NOTED DOCTOR DIES FRESNO, Oct. 2 (U.R)—Dr. J. L.

Maupln, sr„ 63 year old, dean of Fresno nhysc ians , member of t t e state board of medical examiners and a leader in his profession in tbo state, died here late yesterday after a two weeks' Illness.

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JrOR THE NEXT 10 DAYS we are going to give tire buyers greater values than ever offered before. To balance our stocks we have reduced our prices —We have taken away the last excuse for not putting safe yew Firestone Tires on your car or truck at once. Now Is the time to replace your old Urea and have Firestone Sure-Footed traction during wet, slippery weather*

Trade U« Your Old Tires We have a repair department and can apply new treads and have a ready

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Balloons—Firestone Anchor Heavy Duty —Firestone Oldfield —Firestone Courier-—Firestone Heavy Duty Track Tires. Drive in today—-See what tttt can save you!

This is a Department Store for motorists. We sell and service the complete line of Firestone Tires, Tubes, Batteries, Brake lining, Accessories also (»aa, Oil and Lubrication.

We Sell Tires on Foots! N a t e t h e Comparisea a l lowing tho differ-once between a F ires tone Tire e n d ethers

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4.50-21 19.20 4.75-19 10.20 5.00-19 10.95 5_25-20.12.35 5.50-20.13.90 6.00-20_14.70 6.50-19.. 17.40 7.00-20..19.05

-*M-J10r_« Super Tin •9.75 10.25 11.75 13.65 15.15 17.19 18.95 23.45

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We Have YOUR SIZE Tiros Ready—Drive In TODAY —BRENTWOOD—

I. T. Ferbrache 11726 San Vicente—Brentwood

PHONE 52788

—WEST LOS ANGELES—

Robert Eldredge 10901 Wett Pico Blvd.

West Loa Angeles—Phone WLA-52100

—VENICE—

JOE HEFELE Cor. Lincoln & Washington Blvd.—Venice

PHONE 8485S

Lawrence Garage 11965 Santa Monica Blvd.

Weat Loa Angeles (Sawtelle) — Phone WLA-31263

'Reds' Repulsed By U. S. Gunboat

Return Fire Routs Rebel Chineae Along Banks

of Yangtse SHANOHAI, Oct. 2 <JP>—Red ma­

rauders attacked the U. S. 8. Luzon, flagship of tbe American Yangtse river patrol, wtth' field guns and machine guns, near Yochow, Hunan province, today, but were repulsed when t i ie Luzon opened up with her three-Inch guns.

Rear Adm. Thomas T . Craven, commander et tba American Yang­tse patrol, was aboard the Luzon, which was not hi t by l l t t rebel can­non f i n . T h e attack came from t h s shore—a hail of missiles from field pieces and machine guns.

The Americans a im brought m a ­chine guns into action t o supplement the f i n from the larger pieces. The Reds were silenced.

Red attacks upon river craft-were reported steadily Increasing. Amer­ican gunboats have been subjected t o nine such onslaughts in the past three months.

H t t communist menace to Nan-chang and Kiukiang, Important Kiangsi province cities, caused the nationalist government military headquarters at Hankow t o wi th­draw 10,000 soldiers from Hunan province for duty in the Kiangsi area. A Red army of 40,000 was reported ln Northern Kiangsi early this week.

HUSBAND PLAYQS HANGING JOKE;

PLAN FUNERAL MANDAN, M. D , Oet. 2 ta*)—Ed­

ward Loran waa a practical Joker. B e often had told h i s brother, Ted, ha planned to play a good one o n Ida wife—make her. believe h e had hanged himself.

Today funeral arrangements were being made f t e Edward after his body had been founding suspended from a noose In his basement. Ted Loran said his brother's body was about one-four of an inch off tbe floor. B e thought Edward had misjudged the length of the rope.

Thief Apologizes For $800 Holdup

Forces Cashier to Walk to Bank, Open Doors

and Hand Him Loot CONWAY, Kan., Oet. 3 (JPr— Kid­

naped and forced to walk fifteen miles by a bandit who wounded his wife, then apologized to h i m for the trouble h e bad caused. R. O. Webb, cashier ot the State bank here, was safe at home today.

The robber forced Webb to ac ­company h im t o the bank and hand over $800.

U.S. Keeping Eye On Cuban Crisis

Poller in Case of Revolt Still Undetermined

in Washington WASHINGTON, Oet. 3 <UJ&—The

United States government is watch­ing intently and carefully the de­velopment of tttt present political situation l a Cuba and haa n o desire t o minimize its importance, but Is not ready to announce a definite policy which would obtain l a ttw event of possible disorders, it was said a t the state department today.

NAVY PACT SIGNED TOKYO, Oct. 3 UPr—Emperor

Hirihito today signed t h e London naval treaty. The imperial seal waa affixed t o tbe document, thereby completing Japanese ratification.

Substitute Father iiNot Wanted You prefer your own. I l l like m a n ­ner, don't accept substitute f t e o ld-time, reliable remedy for biliousness, icrpid liver and constipation. Take O u t e r ' s Little l i v e r Pills. Starting tree flow of nearly two pounds of bile, they thoroughly cleanse sys ­tem. .S l l druggists. Red bottles. Substitutes are insults. Take Car­ter's.—Advertisement.

S p e c i a l s for Friday, Saturday and Monday SUGAR Packed in heavy paper sacks. Pure cane.

(Limit, 10 pounds.) 10 pounds ................ 41c

BUTTER De Luxe, churned fresh daily. Best creamery. Pound 41c

POT A TflFQ Extr* fanCy wa8hed Bin-banks. 10 pounds 25c

CAUUFIOWFR

Large and firm. Stone's best. %*W*p

' 1 * 5 pounds ............ S D C

• Snowball. Large, white heads. Each , ,..,. i n -

u U U A u l f Italian. 4pounds 1 5 C

CELERY Young and tender; extra fancy. Large stalks. • **" Each , ' , , , i miC

GREEN BEANS pounds ....... JL I C

Long, green and tender; extra fancy.

YAMS OR SWEET POTATOES Fine and sweet. 6 pounda 25c

APPLES Bellefleura. 10 pounda.

Large and fine. 25c

PEARS Mountain grown: extra fine. Bartlett eating. 6 pounds .„ „ _

rlne. /"'/ \ iTfcl_T Chlno; finest and sweetest.

25cllUKN YS:"""^ _J7e

APPLES Jonathans. Large size. Fancy eating. o f 5 pounds _ _ _ ™ . _ ^ _ _ „ . _ _ « 0 C I TOMATO SAUCE

Del Monte Limit, S cans

S cans 12c

Extra fancy. Pound Tf1 A'l AMD ' -Lamb.

POT ROAST 26c

A - l Steer Beef. Nice and tender, f / » Pound IOC

BACON Cudahy's Puritan. By piece. Pound. 35c

LAMB SHOULDER- i i . Fancy Milk-Fed Lamb.

ROAST Choicest Grain-Fed Beef. Fancy prime rib. Pound _ „ _ _ „ _ _ ............. 22c

Cudahy's Puritan Skinned. Whole ar half. «i n Pound AmOC HAMS

OYSTERS Fancy Eastern Selects. Baltimore; fresh. Q O _ » Dozen J " C

I J L R J V Fancy dry-picked; strictly fresh. '1-ui 1 0 3 to 4 pounds; choice. Pound .... 29c

LINK SAUSAGE Mauser's Pride; very fancy. '/2-lb. pkg H e

• / I f I i n P T P i 1 7 Fancy Steer Beef.

I CLUB STEAK issZLt. 25c Strictly fresh; finest quality. Fillet of Sea Bass, pound. 28c Barracuda sliced, pound SSe FISH PORK

Fancy shoulder Roast, pound 21c Fancy Shoulder Steaks, pound 23c Shoulder Ends f t e Belling, lb. 18c Shank Ends f w Boiling, -K Aft

BACON Sonny Boy's—Deliciously Different. Fancy sliced. Pound 39c

Ci^PQ De Luxe, U. S. Extras, guaranteed. JL^JuO Large siie. Dozen .............. 38c

SHREDDED WHEAT ICATSUP i mekatres ._. - ,_ — 19c I ^^_-^_-_a^a_-_---_ .19c • ^ ^ ^ ^ H B I

SOAP^KS&MMINCED CLAMS

Del Monte. 8-os. batt le i s * Large bottle „ .. ,,. I f f

Pioneer. No. 1 flat can. 19c

HI? A P O U C Melba Halves, Banquet Halves and Sliced. Del Monte. % £ r f c A U l I l j Ne, tYt cana IOC

MILK M & M Pet. (limit, 6 amall, 3 tali cana.) • amall O i . 3 tall cana ....«— nM«.n.»...._-4C cana „. 24c

Hills Red Can, 2-lb. caa. 72c Maxwell House, 2-lb. ean We Limit, 4 pounds.

Bed Htad. New paehl hand packed.\

edj

COFFEE GRAPEFRUIT

Dromedary. No. 2 aaa .......... 23c

Del Monte; solid: new pack No. 1 ean Ws No, a can.,,., i ,., Its No. 2' a sen 1ft TOMATOES

S No. 1 cans 19c S N a 2 cans..........__...28c

aJl No v/2 raaa 19c

SILVER CREAM POLISH Wright's. 8-o«. Jar _ tto

SUPER SUDS Suds "now." Small parka ga _...9c Large package ___18e

—SANTA MONICA—

Hu Ae BEMIBER 2323 Lincoln Blvd.—Venice

PHONE 84455

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.THURSDAY, 'OCTOBEK 2, 1930 EVENING OUTLOOK,, SANTA MONICA, CALIFORNIA PAGE THREE

Northcott Dies On High Gallows

Slayer Confesses Killing, Two; Blames Father,

Clark for Others (ConUnued From l a g s 1)

"I love you so. Dont leave my body be cot up or left behind prison walk.**

Denies Guilt The note to Newgent said: "Ss Ood above Is my judge I am

.not guilty. The police worry ma a m make me say things, but the truth ia X am innocent. Ood pity me and save my Ufa. Ton have been a real friend in need. May Ood bless you.

"(Signed). Lovingly. "Gordon Northcott."

The note to his mother: "Dear mother: "I see M. C. M. W. (Mrs. Collins

and Mrs. Winslow), and I talked to them, and X said that X was

Sillty, so that tt would clear you. ut Mrs. C. knows that I was lying,

because I couldn't tell her anything about Walter, for I hare never seen him. I guess X did wrong In lying.

Hopes for Forgiveness ' "X hope God will forgive me. Mr. Newgent baa been so kind to ma and told ma what to do. I know Jesus will save m a Don't worry, I love you. X got some poison from one ot the men in the roar and tried to kill myself thia morning, but X am sorry. X have prayed and ask that His will will be done, and X hope you and I know that you and daddy are both Innocent. Mrs. Near-gent brought me a lovely record when I was in the death house.

"Gordon Stewart Northcott." Xt was officially announced the

rancher's body would be cremated at Richmond and put ln a crypt ltt Oakland.

Pays Penalty

CONVICTED Of RIVERSIDE ON MURDER CHARGES

RIVERSIDE, Oct. 2 UP)—Gordon Stewart Northcott, who was hanged at San Quentin prison today, was convicted in Riverside county su­perior court February 8, 1929, on an Indictment charging him with the murder of three boys at his Wine-ville chicken ranch. Tltt three were Louis arid Nelson Winslow and an unidentified Mexican youth.

Tha first Inkling of Northcott's crimes were uncovered August 31, 1928, when his niece, Jessie Clark, asked immigration authorities to remove her 15-year-old brother, Sanford, from the chicken ranch. Northcott fled tha scene upon ar­rival of tbe officers, who took San­ford to Los Angeles. While pro­ceedings were under way for Clark's removal to his home In Canada, on September 15. he astounded officers With an amazing story of Northcott's treatment and murder of boys on tbe ranch.

Mantes Victims Young Clark named as victims the

three for whose slaying Northcott was tried, convicted and hanged. He was taken to the Wlneville ranch, where officers found the graves of three victims. No bodies were found, but the graves contained quicklime, which Clark said the slayer had iued to dispose of the bodies. A few bones, later identified as those of Juvenile human beings, were found ill Ott Slaves and about the chicken houses, in which Clark said tltt boys were kept and killed with an ax.

The decapitated body of the Mexi­can youth who Clark said was killed wtth a -22 caliber rifle near Puente, had bean found months previously. Fart of the skull, which Clark said Northcott brought to the ranch ami burned in a bonfire, was found 111 ashes of the fire.

The search for Northcott and his mother, Mln. Louisa Northcott, led to the interception of telegrams hs sent from Vancouver, B. C, to warn bla father, Cyrus, against talking.

Intensive Search Murder complaints were issued

here, and the bunt far Northcott intensified by Canadian authorities. He was run down September 19 at Okanagan Landing, near Vernon. B. C , while fleeing by lake boat ami Canadian trains. His mother was arrested in Calgary, Alta.

Returned to Vancouver, Northcott fought extradition for several weeks, with the order finally being made November 8. • Riverside officers brought him here November 30. Btt route to Los Angeles on the train. tbe accused youth made the first of several confessions, all of which he in turn repudiated. This one lad officers into the Mojave desert to find graves ot victims which North­cott said be could locate. He failed to do this, and sheriff's deputies dis­gustedly decided he had led them on a wild goose chase.

Chief Witness Sanford Clark was the chief wit­

ness at Northcott's trial, which opened here January 2. 1929. Boy Scout clothing, identified as that of the Wlnalow boys, numerous bones, a blood-stained ax which Clark identified as the one Northcott used ta the slayings, and other exhibits were entered in evidence.

At the opening of tttt trial Mrs.

m~*am$m&w&>mo\-w i

dmttiaird Pratt Plwio Gordon Stewart Northcott,

who paid the supreme penalty • on the gallows of San Quentin

prison this morning for the murder of several small boys on hia Wlneville chicken ranch.

Pa'T. A. Entertains Selby Ave. Classes

Two drives have been conducted by tttt p.-T. A. members and stu­dents of the Selby Avenue school during the past few days, one a membership drive and the other a paper drive. Aa . consequence, four classes in the school were enter­tained at parties this week by the P.-T. A.

In the membership drive, con­ducted by Mrs. Ralph Henderson, membership chairman, the sixth grade, of which Mrs. Mirrela Green-burg Is teacher, wen among the higher grades, and tttt third grade. ot which Mrs. Margaret White Is teacher, among the lower grades. Individual awards went to Helen Day and Dick Henderson.

Miss Ranees Hayes' second and third grades, and Mrs. Georgiana Brown's fifth grade, made tttt high­est records In the paper drive, which was conducted by Mra Arthur Peetz, ways and means chairman of the P.-T. A.

Plane Fires Barn In Mine Warfare

MADISONVILLE, Ky., Oct. 2 I.T' —Reports a barn had been fired near here by an airplane which dropped a fire bomb were received at the sheriffs office today.

The farm belonged to James Smith, employed at the No. 1 mine of the Ross Coal Ca He estimated his loss at $300.

Cardinal Cerretti Given Orange Post

, VATICAN CITY, Oct 2 Utt—Tb. pope today appointed Cardinal Bonaventura Cerretti aa protector Of tttt sisters of ftt. Joseph, with the mother houae ln Orange, Cal.. dio­cese of Los Angeles.

WRITER KILLED SELF HOLLYWOOD, Oet. S (U.R)—St.

Elmo Boyce, Sl, scenario writer, died from self-administered poison, tha coroner's office announced today after an investigation. An empty strychnine bottle was found at Boyce's bedside, ending a suspicion that he was a victim of poisoned liquor.

Northcott pleaded guilty of aiding in the murder of Walter Collins and was sentenced to life imprison­ment at San Quentin. I h e Collins case, although named tn Northcott's indictment, was not brought into his murder trial as tttt result of his mother's confession. Northcott, arm­ing himself with law books, took over the conduct of his own case. He was convicted and sentenced at the end of a five weeks' trial, after which he waged an unsuccessful battle of appeals.

The executed youth was born November 9, 1906. at Bladsworth, Canada.

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S a t u r d a y o n l y 2 15

©esmond'S W E S T W O O D V I L L A G E

Sophomores Beat Frosh in Drawl'

Second Year U. C. L. A. Men Capture Three Out

e l Five Events Grimy hands and faces and n d

and green paint WttS much in evi­dence yesterday afternoon among freshmen and sophomores at tttt University of California at Los An­geles, when the sophomore class won the annual Frosh-Sophomore brawl at U. C. L. A. field by a score of 3 to a

Apparently sustaining the con­tention that the sophomores are an* perior to tha freshmen physically, tbe second year men won three of the five events, the tie-up, pole rush, and the medicine ball relay. ltt the most spectacular event of ttw afternoon the freshmen pulled the sopohomores through tbe fire hose stream to win tltt tug-of-war by a decisive margin.

Push Ball Contest In only one event was there any

doubt as to ttw superior team. The pushball contest ended with bO score fer either team, but aa the ball was in sophomore - territory, the event was awarded to the other team.

Yesterday's contest eras colorful With the freshmen combatants wearing the green of their class, both in clothes and ttt paint. Red in bright daubs and a red "'33" ap­peared on ttw back and person of every sophomore contendant. Tan­gles and twists and human grape­vines that have never appeared in the wrestling role books were tn evidence yesterday, as ttw* two teams fought It out for supremacy of the lower classman.

The first event, the tie-up. went to the second-year men. In the second event the freshmen pulled the sophomores through the water and WOtt the tug-of-war. With the sophomores defending the flag in the third event, the freshmen fought for ten minutes to remove it from the top of a greased pole.

Win Relay The sophomores, fleet-footed run­

ners won the medicine ball relay by an easy margin, while in the last event the freshmen were declared winners.

The sophomores have won the an­nual brawl every year with the ex­ception of IMM, when ttw class of '27, than freshman, won the event from the sophomores by a 3-to-2 score.

Bankers to Hear Hoover Tonight

ns j *

Cuban Congress Called in Crisis

Machado Asks Suspenaion of All G u a r a n t e e s

Under Constitution

Rowan Rites Wait Arrival of Body

LOS ANGELES. Oet 2 .CNS>— Funeral arrangements for Philip D. Rowan. 46. Itta Angeles real estate b r o k e r and sportsman, today awaited return of htt body from Wasco, thirty miles from Bakers­field. where he died suddenly yes­terday of a heart attack while duck hunting.

Blast Razee Hornet Suicide Revealed

CHICAGO. Oct. 2 UP--An ejqpto-sion, which wracked hia home in

j suburban Oak Park, revealed tfaa suicide of Frank A. Purlock, 50, bn-

1 porter, early today. I Porlock's body was found ta tttt I ruins. His throat aad both arms had been slashed with a razor.

BUY SOMETHING NEW—NOW!

With more than 15,000 persons scheduled to hear him tonight, when he will make the first in a series of four addresses on his current speaking tour. President, Hoover was in Cleveland today preparing for his appearance' before the American Bankers' associa­tion. The president is pictured in the lower right inset, while at the left is shown John G. Lonsdale of St. Louis, retiring president of the bankers' organization and member of Hoover's "business cabinet." The Cleveland auditorium, where Hoover will speak, ia pictured above

Thomas Tells of Trip to Europe

City Auditor, Wife Back in Santa Monica After

6 Months Abroad

W. C. T. U. to Meet Monday Afternoon

The regular meeting of West Los' Angeles W. C. T. u., scheduled for Tuesday, will be held neat Monday instead, because of the state con­vention to be held at Santa Ana from October 7 to 10, inclusive.

The session here win ba held in the First Methodist church, on But­ler avenue, opening at 2 p. m. A special speaker will be presented. according to Mrs. Etta B. Taft, who will preside.

Among the speakers to be heard at Santa Ana are Dr. Rufus B. von KleinSmid, president of U. S. C; Chester Rowell, well known author and newspaper man, and Nathan Newby, LOB Angeles attorniy.

Delegates from West Los Angeles are: Mta. H. E. Lewis, Mrs. Ella R. DeMond. Mrs. Helena Rudisill, Mrs. J. H. Bergener, Mrs. Emma Stock­ing and Mrs. Jennie LaDuke.

Baptist Church t o Hold 'Ratty Day*

Sunday will be "rally day" at ttw First Baptist church, In the morn­ing there win be a home-coming communion roll call, when each member will respond to his or her name.

In the evening ttw B. Y. P. U. will hold a recognition service at 7:30 o'clock, and new officers of the four societies will be installed, each group giving a short program.

The annual Sunday school grad­uation exercises were held this week, more than 250 taking part. Mrs. O. E. Beck, the new superin­tendent, presided, and all depart­ments gave demonstrations of their work.

Ivor C. Thomas, auditor for the city department of finance, returned today after a six months' vacation, which he spent on a leisurely tour of England and ttw continent.

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas left Xes Angeles on an Italian steamer and were seven weeks on the water an route to their destination in Italy. After visiting places of interest in Europe, they spent two and a half months in England, driving 4,500 miles there in a car which they pur­chased for their convenience in see­ing the country.

Together w i t h relatives they visited twenty of the most famous cathedrals and abbeys, as well as other places of historic import. Their visit waa the occasion also for the first reunion of all members of the Thomas family in forty years, Thomas having come to the United States forty years ago, „ .

Thomas reported the roads In England to be much more winding than those to which California mo­torists are accustomed, but noted that a program now is being worked out to by-pass centers of population in the development of a better trunk highway system.

Rev. Weary and Wife on Vacation

The Rev. Edwin Weary, vicar of St. John's Episcopal church, and Mrs. Weary, are en route East, where they will visit with Weary's sister, Mrs. D. Horner of Detroit, and her family. From that city they will go to Baltimore, where they will be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wil­liam Roberts, a daughter and her husband and their small daughter, Mrs. Roberts formerly was Miss Marguerite Weary.

Mr. and Mrs. Weary, who arc en­joying a vacation trip, will be gone for about three weeks. Services at St. John's next Sunday will be in charge of the Rev. Byron Holley, and for the two following Sundays Canon J. D. H. Browne of Santa Monica, will officiate.

HAVANA. Oct. 3 i.V—-Suspension of all constitutional guarantees until after the national elections Novem­ber 1 will be asked tomorrow of the Cuban congress, convoked in spe­cial session.

President Manchado last night j announced his intention of calling congress together for thai, purpose.

Dr. Gunn Incan. speaker of the house, and Clement Vasquez Bello. president of the senate, promised him their support in putting through an authorizing measure.

The projected' suspension of the constitution would give the admin­istration almost carte blanche ln dealing with disorders during the pre-election campaign

S. M. Kepi in ger, 80, Summoned by Death Samuel M. Keplinger. 80 years

old, a resident of Santa Monica for I the past eight years, died last night in his home, 2360 Sixteenth street,

. after an illness of three months. He was born in Ohio, but spent

I most of his life in Franklin, Pa. I Surviving are hia widow. Mrs. Rachel A. Keplinger. and three sons, R. L. Keplinger and Raymond O.

I Keplinger of Santa Monica and S. M. I Keplinger, jr., of Long Beach.

Funeral services will be conduct- J I ed at 10:30 o'clock Saturday morn-I ing in the MendenhaU Funeral I j home, with interment in Inglewood cemetery.

BUY SOMETHING NEW—NOW!

Your Next Week-End Choose the NEW HOTEL ALESSANDRO, one of Southern Cali­fornia's most beautiful resort hotels. You- will enjoy a quiet, restful stay in the valley of perpetual sunshine. Elevation 1,700 feet.

I d e a l C l i m a t e : W a r m D a y s , Coo l N i g h t s Accessible to all outdoor sports-; golf far guests. On the grounds, nine-holr. all-grass putting greens, croquet and sun baths.

S u n d a y D i n n e r M e n u . O c t o b e r 8 t h

S e r v e d 1 2 0 0 N o o n t o 8 : 3 0 P . M at $ 1 . 2 8 California Fruit Cocktail

Celery Hearts Mixed Olives Cream of Fresh Tomatoes. Bellevue

Consomme Double Fried Half Spring Chicken, Maryland

Baked Spiced Ham, Sauce Chamberlain "'"1*11 Special Club Steak Santa Colbert

Roast Leg of Spring Lamb, Mint Jelly Sherbet

Snowflake Potatoes Fresh Lima Bears au Beurre Stuffed. Bartlett Pear, Surprise

Fresh Peacn Pie Chilled Japanese Melon Alessandro Special Nu. Sundae ' '"'•]

Coffee

Hotel Alessandro Midst t h o P a l m s

AU Rooms with Shower or Tub Bath European Plan- Rates $2.50 aad I p

HEAIET (Riverside County), CALIFORNIA Open tbe Year 'Round M. E. MOhRlsON. Operator

SCENARIST ARRAIGNED LOS ANOELES. Oct. 2 (CNS)— j

J. B. Kelley, 26. motion picture j I scenarist, charged with criminally

attacking Miss Gloria Wiley, 20. last Saturday night, was arraigned at noon today before Municipal Judge Dailey S. Stafford.

Mt. Vesuvius Puts On Eruption Show'

NAPLES, Italy, Oct. 2 (U.R)—Mt. Vesuvius was in eruption again to­day, but without apparent danger of an overflow of lava.

As usual the erupting mountain provided a remarkable sight throughout the region and thou­sands of persons watched the cone throughout the night. Two lava streams were piling up inside the great crater, but the possibility that ttia streams would flow ever the sides was said by experts to ba re­mote.

Irwin Drug Stores (Tbe Rexall Stores)

3rd A Bway, 5th & 8. M. Ph. 21131 S. 1VL Ph. 25821

Relief From Curse Of Constipation

A Battle Creek physician says, I "Constipation is responsible for

more misery than any other cause." But immediate relief has been

found. A tablet called Rexall Or-[ derlies has been discovered. This

tablet attracts water from the sys­tem into the lazy, dry, evacuating bowel called the colon. The water loosens the dry food waste and causes a gentle, thorough, natural movement without forming a habit or increasing the dose.

Stop suffering from constipation. Chew a Rexall Orderlie at night. Next day bright. Get 24 for 25c at the nearest Rexall Drug Store, Irwin Drug Stores.—Advertisement.

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Install Wettern Giant, e r Wear-wellt today, and you too will know at thottmmtnd. upon thousand, ot other thrifty cor owners know, that GOOD TIRES CAN BE LOW PRICED . . . and a r e . . . at "Western Auto"... t

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Wear-well AtamAmrd

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8.25 9.45

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1180 12.90 13.10 14.68 17.45

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PAGE POUR EVENING OUTLOOK, SANTA MONTCA^CAUFORNIA THURSDAY, 6cTOBER 2, 1980

Santa Monica Evening Outlook — i ,41 .1 ••

SANTA MONICA PUBLISHING OO.. OWNER AND PUBLISHER. MMrSR_8 a. WHYTE. m i and Gen MB*. CHARLES S. WARREN. Editor

OPTICS. FOURTH AND IJROADWAY PHONE 23288 8ANTA MONICA. CAL. 8AWTE1XJ- BRANCH. 118(8 Satta Monica Boulevard. Phon* 33188

BHUW8 aa Mcond dam matter at aw Pos toff le*. San la Monica, under tba aot of Manell e a 1878. Published dally excent Sunday

MEMBEK OF CUM ASSOCIATED PR-SS The Associates Presa la exclusively entitled te tba MM lor pubUcatlon et all new*

Jtseted te a et not otherwise credited 18 tbta paper, aad site tte local new. pub llshed herein.

The Outlook's Program Develop u Civic Center — Illuminate the Street. Widen tho Beach Road — Reforest the Bay District

Development Always — Exploitation Never — Build a Pleasure Breakwater

A Song of Courage All the values that were In Santa Monica when real

estate was most ln demand and selling on a rising market are here today, Frank E. Bundy. with a background of fifty-four .years in Santa Monica, points out in a letter to the Outlook. In some respects the values are greater.

The city is more beautiful today than ever. The climate ls the same, the ocean is Just as large, the purple hills offer a prospect as full of charm and mystery as ever, and one could never tray to better advantage. We are on the way to days of far greater value.

In the words of Mr. Bundy: "You can't keep people away. More and more population is bound to come." And population is what makes values.

Supervisor Quinn Writes Supervisor John Quinn, on his way to Boston to attend

the national convention of the American Legion, of which he was once national commander, took time to write the Outlook a letter expressing his appreciation of the support this community gave him in the primary campaign. "My great hope ls that I shall so conduct myself in office," he wrote on board the Oolden State Limited, "that Santa Monica will never have cause to regret the vote it gave me."

While in Boston. Supervisor Quinn expects to learn something of the metropolitan beach park system by which the beaches in the vicinity of that city have become public property. Several cities united in the purchase.

LISTEN HERE By CHABLES a WARREN

J .

WHEN TO fcE NONCHALANT

Chest Is Gaining Santa Monica's Community Chest campaign is more

successful this year than in any previous season, first of all because the organization is on a better business basis, and. second, because giving the public a clearer understanding of what the chest is ambitious to do and what it is actually accomplishing is one of the main objectives.

With the employment of R. R. Miller as executive direc­tor of the chest, the directors decided to function throughout the year rather than to crowd all thought and energy into an aopeal lasting only a week or ten days.

The quota to maintain the seven agencies in the chest was placed at $50,000. Thus far a total of about $37,000 has been either paid in or subscribed. There are many prospec­tive givers yet to be seen. Director Miller, in a statement to chest workers, put the rest of the problem ln these words: "The funds we are soliciting are for the purpose of financing the social agencies through 1931. So we will quietly continue to take the subscriptions of those we were unable to reach during the more active part of the campaign, and I am con­vinced that by the first of the year we will have succeeded in raising the funds necessary to finance our social agencies.''

NON-ESSE-iTIALS AND ESSEN­TIALS

'JTiose sixty-nine men named as tile most powerful l e the U. S. A., ln tact as running tbe country may be great in the business world and Just art powerful aa claimed, but the Civic Buttermilk league herewith sets up the assertion that had they never been bora the world would not hsve been considerably differ­ent than tt ls today, and tbat bl another generation or two none of n a n will be more than a vague memory. Almost anybody who has money enough ean be Just ona more millionr.aire.

He Wasn't Necessary History ia cluttered up with non­

essential men. As emotional as we feel over military heroes we do-aot believe tbat we should burst Into tears if we were confronted with proof that Napoleon never existed. On the contrary we should exclaim* "There, I always insisted that Na­poleon wasn't necessary."

Pooh on Caaaar And the past would have been just

as glorious to us had there never been a Caesar to cross the Rubicon or say "Et tu Brute." Scores of others could have said it just as well. No doubt the Rubicon needed crossing, but there are Santa Mon­iea boys who could make Caesar's record look sick any day.

Nst Worth Mention We could go down through the

bit of men who have been adver­tised bl history and eliminate hun­dreds of them as wholly III) 118088 sary to the world's progress, but our space is too valuable to even mention their names.

Adam and Bob Publicity is not the best measure

to apply to men to determine their value to the world. For Instance, Bob Shuler Just now is getting a great deal more publicity in these parts than Adam. But who would go so far as to say that Bob is any­thing like as necessary as Adam? And it should be remembered that while the former gets his publicity louder Adam's will be longer and more broadcast.

Wa Prefer Adam The Rev. Shuler has many ad­

mirers in and around .Los Angeles find many others who are amazed at him. If we may be allowed to ex-

fffeARTBREAK ( M l *^-¥^ t_V~ GOB EDEN • • • W -**°1-W.

SYNOPSIS: OaU Stuart, picked ap by Hick Walther, wealthy young real estate man, while she waa bikini to Bollywood, faU» la a acreen teat ha arranges lor har Sat lands a job with Carla Crow, tte star. Oall ti en­raged te Rosa Hardy, an extra whom i t e baa met. and both have pledied themwlyea te Into each other get a break. Oall gets ter chance to tela Ron. by pretending to Max Brackett, Carla's director, that Carla wants him te we ROM. Carla returns home, elated 8*88 her handsome youm leading man —Ross has lot Ate Job. Te help Reel and protect Smell Oall Insists that be sey nettles to Carla of their *a>' gag. ment.

Midget golf course addict who appeared in die regulation garb.

HOW'S YOUR HEALTH? Edited by OR IAOO OALOSION

ffrtr the New York Academy at Medicine

SCIENCE AND CREDULITY All persona are credulous—even

the most learned. (tea of the greatest e t the Amer-

, lean philosophers recently wrote an press a personal preference we beg endorsing introduction to a book

CHAPTER FOURTEEN "Ross, this is my secretary. Miss

Stuart," Carla said as aba Intro­duced OaU.

Ross, his eyes twinkling, bowed. Carla had taken him by toe arm in a proprietary fashion as soon aa he had come in. .

OaU looked admiringly at Ross. She wished she could tell him just how nice be looked la his dinner clothes. So tall, ao straight, with Ms broad shoulders thrown back.

Carla looked her best, too. She had tried on three dresses before she had finally chosen the one she wore, a daffodil yellow frock of fluttering chiffon. She always was particular when she dressed, but tonight OaU thought she had been more than usually careful. A w floated through the rooms like a flower, bar silvery laugh every­where, dragging Ross after ber. Introducing him, making him feel at home.

Gail was conscious that she did not look her best. The dress she wore was an old one of Carla's, she did not bave an evening frock and the actress had lent bar this one. A demure taffeta thing of lavender, and lavender was not be­coming to tba girl. Carla bad told b v to go to. the wardrobe and pick out something. OaU had come! men

published by a zealot Who believed that be had a "cure-all" in a par­ticular system of breathing.

Credulity—"the disposition to be- llghtnlng. Such credulity is destruc-

leave to say. at this point, that of the two we admire the late Adam a great deal mora.

He Spoke Softlv Adam spoke in an ordinary tone

of voice—but we must hasten on; suffice it to say that Adam was a corking good scout, and it's a howl­ing shame that his birthday is not a national holiday, not even a state holiday, and, so far as we know. Mayor Michel has never Issued a proclamation saying "By virtue of the authority vested in me by the I become a practical acWevement."™' I into. He consulFs his "lawyer

But there is a credulity which runs contrary to understanding, and contrary to established scientific facta.

Thus, I may be credulous enough to believe that a horse-chestnut in the pocket will protect me against! do-sra'tte taMef-TdrV-s rheumatism, or guard me against Wjj] (j0 >•

of tt came to her ears sometimes. She wasn't interested in it. As far aa aba was concerned there e w e only Rosa and Carla at tha table. She had eyes for no one else. Not even Nick, whom occasionally she found staring Into ber eyes.

After dinner was over, Carla sent bar upstairs for a vanity case Mrs. Cross want up with her. She was leaving tha party, as she usu­ally did as soon as dinner was fin­ished, p

"Nice looking boy, this Ross Hardy," she murmured, panting as aba went op the stain. OaU ad­mitted he was.

"Carla seems to Ilka Mm very weU. They'll make a lovely pair on tba screen. He Is so dark and she so light."

"Is she—is she always so nice to ber leading man?" Oall asked. She wanted to take back the words after they were and. Vs give herself away lite this . . .

"Oh, yes. Carla's always nice to men. especially handsome ones. She was in love with Morman Frame for awhile, bat Of course she never con­sidered marrying—him. He wasn't making enough money."

"Was she ever in love with any other of liar leading men?"

"Tea, but bar affair with Nor­man was tba worst. That's why Mr. Brackett wouldn't have Nor­man bl this picture. At least that's what I heard. Too hard to manage him. Norman's still in love with Carla."

Oail found tba diamond studded vanity case, and slowly went down stairs. What Mrs. Cross had told bar bothered iter net a little, tte was stiU puzzling about lt when Sarah Morton came and sat at her slda

Stars Come and Oo "You look soft of glum, Miss

Stuart," aba announced, as she glanced at Carla surrounded by

Sarah, OaU remembered, bad back wltb a white gown, which Car-1 been a star herself once. Now she la vetoed at ones. did second leads. Something bad

"I don't want you to look too happened. Wbat tt waa she didn't conspicuous, my dear." she had said. | know. For Sarah was as lovely as "besides that's one of my best" ever, a vivid dark beauty, with Four other white gowns hung be- enormous brown eyes and a pert side it. Then the actress had taken smUing mouth. Two years ago this

Here, this | house had belonged to her. That Gail knew, too, from the servants.

Carla Triumphant | She had had to give it up, and ilf«H«? . $ B ™ I . ! ! M _ . ™.T„? £ . J : t l v £ m,-A u « . « . „ Tod Janson raised his eyebrows | was living now in a small apart-sential and valuable part of human i We are surrounded by so many so- significantly when he saw Gail, ment off the boulevard. The girl nature but credulity has two phases,. called scientific miracles that it is « T o o k m y a d v l c e > d i d n . t y o u ? S o thought it must be hard for her to a constructive one and a destructive difficult to differentiate these from y o u . r e Ca'r la'S secretary - Gall's face come here, to see this house which

° f «.— v - - , . w-.n~_ \tht tmai5e mi5lV:1.e^ oS , t h e charlatan, burned at bis wortfs. and she turned once she had owned. Much of the J L . M ? , « ^ t h T ^ ' J S i « « ' « . ? \ SU* '."* • H U J P * " ' l 8 ^ . i ^ L * P"™* V-WH*- H * s a l d -Mttbig else furniture she had bought herself, for S n H L t h ' ' ^ S . m / Z L F i e . . l n t 2 W . ; ^ i ? 0 ? 5 7 ™* to her all evening, even though he she had sold the place in entirety. &•»_"f_n. Z f0rr, e \ a T e l X may .take it upon himself to determine ^ b e - i d e h e r a t t h e dinner table. I Carla's present boudoir and bed-believe that some day television may the legality of a contract he enters ^.^ a l l s h e w a s o n i y C a r l a > 8 s e c . h a £ ^ h B t ^ h

people of the city of Santa Monica 1 hereby declare October 13, the anniversary of the birth of Adam, the husband of the most famous woman of all time, a municipal holi­day."

« PifJn'J Leak _ Another essential "'human **

was Noah. "Brudder Noah'biBIt ae ark." Cecil B. De Mille or Rudy Vallee might build an ark, but could they build one that would not leak? For our part we are glad that the ark contract was let to Noah, even if he did get drunk, We don't know!

Such credulity is the basis of And the intelligent person con- him. retary and that meant nothing to lived here it bad been furnished dif-much scientific speculation often leads to great results.

and j suits his physician when his advice 'is needed.

LOOKING RACK A QUARTER OP A CENTURY

tal the SANTA MONICA OUTLOOK

Carla, charming, beautiful be­tween Nidi and Ross, smiling first

j at ona and then at tba other. 1 Tapping Ross' arm now and then

feiently. Martin, who had once been bar tattler, bad aald it was

: done in lacquer, red and green— all Chinese.

Oail was embarrassed. She did wltb a white finger, leaning toward not quite know wbat to say.

Oet. 2, 1905

him. as If she were drinking in every word he said.

Ross' face was shining with hap­piness. He was so thrilled he forgot the cocktail in front of him. Oail.

__._ __ ___. I too. did not eat hers. She toyed Jasper Thomason ls today selling | with it, but that was all. There

'Obod looking chap — R o s s Hardy?" Sarah went on, letting her eyes linger on Ross for a time. OaU nodded. That's what everyone said. Even Mrs. Cross.

"Dont know where Carla found him. Much nicer than Norman

A delegation of Santa Monicans hb> ranch of twenty acres on Twen- Jutd been na chance vet to talk to Frame. More personality. The lad

or not, how.

She

Daylight Saving a Delusion In the pressure of more important matters, voters may

have forgotten that an effort is in progress to befool Cali-fornians into voting for daylight saving, a confusing and harmful scheme that has been tried in many places and rejected. Its adoption here would cause endless inconven­ience and loss. Very few seem to be in favor of it.

Farm and labor organizations, the industries generally, transportation lines, churches, theaters and picture produc­ers, all are against it, as a system that would disturb their routine, add to their work or lessen their profits.

Municipal Economies When a protest is raised against municipal expenditure

and the taxpayer demands a lightening of his burden the most useful departments of public service are the ones likely to suffer. The first act of the authorities is to lop off policemen and firemen, the chances being that the city has no more of either class than is consistent with safety.

Long Beach is going through this experience in the effort to cut down expenses, but its situation is by no means unique. Almost every city at some time has found itself in precisely this predicament.

About New York By RICHARD MASSOCK

NEW YORK. Oct. 2—Midget golf and peewee automobiles have made the town miniature conscious.

This pint-size vogue, however, has been growing on New York for some years

Take the apartments (unless you prefer suburban life). The buildings have become bigger and the rooms smaller until now the foyers of their Lilliputian homes are being used by a lot of people for dining rooms.

No fooling. It has been a com­mon practice for many city folk to eat their meals off a bridge table tn the living room. Even ihen they have been cramped for elbow room and so have taken to serving dinner in the tiny hallway just inside the apartment door, And kttchenets. of course, are nothing but cookery cup­boards set into the wall.

The small-scale influence already had been carried into the play life ot the Inhabitants of Manhattan be­fore the putting game broke out like chickenpox on the face of the coun­try- Ping pong long has been a fa­vorite sport. Outdoor tennis is only far those who have the time and means to seek the open spaces.

So it goes. Housewives buy but­ter in quarter pound sticks, oranges by the orange, instead of by the dozen, and concentrated coffee in little tins.

People ride in subways which al­low them barely space enough to stand In, dance on floors little larg­er than a traffic island, and acquire their sun tan from lamps scarcely large enough to cast a shadow.

The old expansiveness is definitely gone. And aU for the privilege of living in a perpendicular city.

Installment selling of art was bound to come. The first to apply that principle to paintings is the Jacques La Orange syndicate, a

( group of business men underwriting 1 Jacques La Grange. Franco-Ameri­can painter of industrial and marine scenes.

La Grange, descendant of Dupre. French marine artist, was born on

la South African sheep ranch. He i first came to America as a cabin

boy on a steamer. He returned in 1916, with a navigator's and mate's license, to remain.

For awhile he was a business i man. Investigating newspaper prop­erties for a large corporation that was buying them up.

He now has agreed to paint thir­ty-five pictures a year for the new

j syndicates, which will market them through retail dealers, on the

I monthly payment plan, like auto­mobiles are sold.

The painter, the syndicate and i the leaders are each to receive a third of the price.

About fifty of his paintings soon are to be sent on an exhibition tour of the United States and Canada.

j so that cities like Cleveland. St. Louis, Kansas City, Houston, Del-

I las, Los Angeles, Pasadena, San j Francisco and Spokane can look I them over.

whether he was the lowest bidder | spent Sunday in the saddle. . . .The | ^ » ! . j h . H^Sf 'mr^?^ ° L .2f,_%?" 15°. s s ^?"_e; Perhaps ' after dinner but he was the class, any-j

We're Appalled Tripping down through the cen

avenue (Santa Monica boulevard).! thev mieht set short rh»t scene of the festivities was Harter's T h e buyer is S. A. Howard, and the .'hoped so ______ C

ranch, where _a delectable spread | consideration is said to be $18,000. j was had.

will ao far." Gal smiled at her gratefully. "That is—he'll go far if Carla lets

what X mean. Carla knows. She always has known. It's inborn te har. Selfishness."

The radio was on, aad a alow waits droned through tbe warm room. Carla v a s •*-*-***tt With Ross, her arm on bla ahoulder, bar face turned up to bla Ross danced well, OaU thought. Long even steps. Nick came over to Gail and asked ber if she would dance with. him. She rose thankfuUy. Nice of him to ask ber. She appreciated tt, Tbey had taken no mare than a few turns when Carla broke away from Ross and claimed Nick She seemed annoyed, OaU thought, when she touched Nick's arm.

Ross was free. He was beckoning bar. tta left the room as unob­trusively as she could and went out into the garden. Ross followed bar In a few seconds.

"I've been waiting aU evening," he said, "to talk to you. Hall, dear

ff She was In his arms, half •fib­

bing wtth relief. He stiU loved her. He wanted to be with bar.

"Close your eyesi" She did and felt him fumbling with her left hand "Now open them!"

There was the ring he had prom­ised, sparkling in the darkness. A diamond ring.

"I told you it would be there some day, didn't I? Only really X didn't expect tt to ba there so quickly!" Ross grinned boyishly. "You mult have wanted tt badly to do what you did tot me——"

"You shouldn't have gotten It so soot, Ross. You haven't started working, and you haven't tbe money

"X drew advance salary. Brack­ett was tickled to death to give It to me. I ordered a MT, too.

"Bo soon?" QaU was breathless with astonishment.

Big Plans "Sura, why not? What would

everybody think If Carla Cross' leading man walked to work? Or rode tba all est cars. Everybody In HoUywood has a car. Mine is a Sua—a roadster. Gall, aad we'll bave a peach of a time ln lt. I bought It on time, of course. Couldn't afford to nay for tt out­right. Yellow, I ordered. Won't be bara tot a few days. I found an apartment too today, tn the Gaylor, three rooms, living room, bedroom, kitchen aad bath. Rented tt fur­nished, but as soon as I get time I'm going to get some furniture together. Pretty different than living at Mrs. Green's.

"And OaU, a girl from one of the movie magazines Interviewed me today and got a lot of pictures. I'm going to have a big spread. Got my life story. How I rose from an extra and all that rot. I've an ap­pointment with another tomorrow— also for an Interview. I was talking to Miss Cross tonight at dinner about my publicity, and aba thinks Tod Janson ls the best press agent here. Thinks I ought to hire him. It'll cost fifty bucks a week, but ttlt be worth it. A fellow has to have a lot of publicity t o get by nowadays. What do you think?" But he didn't wait tot her to an­swer. He went hurrying on with his chatter.

"Miss Cross is right about pub­licity. It means everything. The

Here she should be the happiest' him. She has a habit of stifling i fifty bucks won't be "wasted any-J?*Jl.'!p*i>o_.ti?f-.bvi-- I _K?e_.Il!_Sc?l«J.*- -.•i*1*I3?2"-8rro e " I ? - * 1 to t ! » *?...<•• • " * •be wasn't. | her leading men. Like she did | way. She says Tod Janson has turles we must name Aristotle, who o v e r t n e range and into Santa Ynez six acres under cultlvairon.

laid some of our scientific founda tions, and Plato, who piled in wisdom that we are still trying to digest. But right here we are appalled at the size of the job we face. Its worse a thousand limes worse, than an Austin car trying to haul Char­lotte Greenwood around. She says she hung out of everv window.

Sorry Wa Started We wish we had quit when we

got as far as Adam. Even Darwin would agree that Adam was essen­tial some time or another.

But we cannot quit today with­out saying that that wisest of Americans, Ralph Waldo Emerson, will wield more control over human life and thought through a long Oregon"* range of generations than sixty-nine | H.<_ _U_____ times sixty-nine men such as those named bv Gerard.

Take Their Hunches And don't forget that Emerson

was a great humorist, as well as a great philosopher. In his essay on woman he said the rule is "take their first advice, not the second." Coolidge was wont to apply to a lady for her judgment in questions of taste and accept it. but when she added. "I think so because " "Pardonme,nif.d.m." he said."leave me to find out the reasons for my­self."

canyon was an invigorating insplra tion. . . . Among those who enjoyed the day were: Messrs. P. S. and C. M. Lindsey, M. H. Gorham. T. H. Dudley, G. G. and Roy Bundy, W. T. Gillis. J. J. Davis, Pollock, Hill snd Brittner.

The Ocean Park schools opened today. . . . Mrs. Arthur Wilmot is visiting In Pomona . . . . Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Griffith of South Beach bave been spending a tew days in San Diego. . . . Miss Alice Baxter has re­turned fiom a pleasant outing at Matilija Springs.

H. M. Crane has let tbe contract for a one-story residence on Arte­sian tract. T. B. Wiseman Is tltt contractor. The house tt to cost $1,175.

AB members of the city council were present at t t e meeting last evening. . . . Superintendent Eckert Of the public schools, called atten­tion to the action of the Southern Pacific Co. In placing a barbed wire fence along its right-of-way, at Wbat would be Twentieth street, ami thus forcing children to cross at Fourteenth street on their way to

J. H. Wotton has a six room cot- and from Irwin Heights school. . . . tage weU under way at Tenth and | Mr. Gross applied for a permit to

She was a—little miserable. Silly I Frame. He started out wsU, but | done wonders with her. Gets her of her, when Ross couldn't help fell in love with Carla. Forgot his name in some paper every day, sitting beside Carla, talking to own ambitions, his own pride. You gives her loads and loads of clip-her. smiling at her. Jealous? Yes. can't do that in pictures. You've pings. He'll do the same for me. Foolish, when Ross cared for her always got to remember yourself. "Gosh, Tve never seen anyone only. When he loved her. They That's where X made my mistake, so pretty. And sweet, OaU. Won't were to be married. Carla didn't But I know now, and X never make know--that was the rub. the same mistake twice."

She barely heard the conversation during dinner. It was about the picture, she knew, for faint snatches

"I don't understand." OaU thought Sarah was talking ln riddles

tt be great working for her every day?"

Ross turned admiring eyes toward I t t e living room where Carla was

''You're too young to know yet I still dancing with Nick.

Tomorrow night Bell tbe wrestler, will put on t t e gloves with Reub Jeffries. . . . The citi­zens' water committee still Is In­vestigating the several water prop­erties in t t e vicinity. . . . James Whalen has returned from Arizona, turn under private contract, where he was for three months the guest of an old St. Vincent's college chum.

construct and operate his aerial railway from North Beach to t t e White Star pier. . . . Mr. Donohue and other property owners were given permission to pave Speedway south of Marine street, with asphal-

Little Benny By LEE PAPE

The Village Improvement society met yesterday afternoon at the home of Mrs. F. L. Stearns. . . , Plans were discussed whereby funds might be raised for the building of the Marine street drinking fountian. , . . It was decided to erect a water­ing trough for horses on South Sec­ond street. . . .

BY 1 ROY VICKERS HE ROSE

IN THE DARK One Page was blotted out when

a marriage license was granted to! John C. Page gad Clara A. Page.' both of Santa Monica.

Mr. and Mrs. George Felts of Eighth street, have gone East for a month. . . . T t e Messrs. Hicks of j South Dakota, who have spent tltt last sen winters here, are back, and I are located at the Wltherow on j South Ocean avenue.

Pop was smoking in his private chair and I sed. Hay pop.

I heer the hay berd cherping, pop sed, and I sed, I .went to see Sam Cross this afternoon, he's still in bed almost better, and G wizz pop he had boxes of candy and froot and jelly and everything alongside of him. He sed it was grate to be sick. I sed.

He was tawking through his pil­low case, pop sed. The greatest blessing in life is your health, and when you lose your helth the plea­sures of life tern to dust and ashes in your mouth. Many a millionaire would give half his fortune for an unobtrusive stummick that hit on all 6 silllnders. And many a suc­cessful business man with an unsuc­cessful liver would gladly change

A Washington Daybook By HERBERT PLUMMER

WASHINGTON, Oct. 2—Random | Senator Phelan edged his way notes In a Washington Day Book: over to "Colonel" Ed Halsey, see-

When Mrs. Frederick Dent Grant, retary to the democratic wing of the surviving daughter-in-law of the senate, and asked: t t e Civil war general, died at her "Ed, who 1* this Ty Cobb, any-beautiful old mansion in historic how?". Georgetown ir. the capital the other Halsey almost collapsed, but he day she left her son, Lieut. Col. U. managed to tell the senator that S. Grant III, director of public Cobb made his living playing base-buildings and parks in Washington, ball, probably one of he most interest-! Meanwhile Senator Johnson was

SYNOPSIS: Hail'c EUesmore, beau­tiful nurse ot mysterious parentage, coming to keep a rendezvous ln a shelter atop a cliff on Lone Island Sound, finds another man there. A strange affinity seems to draw them to each other, and they strike up an acquaintance. The man is Saxely Orannock and he ls suffering from partial blindness, for which he ls soon to undergo treatment that may cither restore his sight or ruin it altogether. He cannot see Hallie clearly, and refuses to have her tell her name, saying he prefers to re­member only her voice if he goes blind. He gives her a tiny ivory rose, and says if he is cured he will adver­tise, "To the Ivory Rose—come home." Then he goes, and Lester Br ft on. Hallie'.- fiance, arrives. It develops. that Grannock is the older half-brother of Lester whom the latter calls "Socks." To Inherit his share of the Broon family fortune, Lester must marry a girl approved by Gran­nock. For some reason Hallie finds herself less attracted toward Lester than previously.

for instance.' to teU her so. Only tf—if she seems

CHAPTER XXX FACING THB UNKNOWN

"Now there is nothing for you to worry about," said the doctor in

toes of General Grant, many of them secured on his 'round-the-world trip, and gifts of foreign na­tions. These mementoes are housed in a room in the Grant mansion,

places with a poor tramp who can which also becomes the property

that loud and cheerful voice which ing collections of Americana extant, having the time of his life with j doctors employ when they are them-

The collection consists of memen- j _b- two players. selves exceedingly worried. "Noth-_ . , ,, ———* , ing whatever. Dr. Russell's instruc-Capital glimpses: ! tions are simple, and there are three Secretary of War Hurley posing j o f u s t 0 s e e t h e m c a r r i e d o u t

Kansas has been accused of a lot Of tilings, but now lt can take credit

. for giving New York an art critic. For Murdock Pemberton, one of

the most outspoken of the local | commentators on art, is a former I Emporia boy.

He is a brother of Brock Pember­ton, the theatrical producer, and in

j addition to painting and writing he J looks after some of his brother's < business interests. His latest work, "M u r d o c k Pemberton's Picture Book," was sold out before publica-

j tion day. William Allen White's town, take

I a bow!

digest 5 cans of tomatoes at one ] of the son sitting, including the labels. Are you following me? pop sed.

Yes sir, I sed, and he sed. Then please try to look a trifle more In­telligent. Your helth is your best frend, it often sticks to you even though you are falls to it and be­tray It and stab it in the stummick But when it once Jeeves you it takes everything elts with it. A poet with a temperature of a hundred and one feels werse tasted of better at the site of the most bewtiful sunset, and If the poets Utile boy has a boil on the back of his little neck, a 5 pound bos of chocklits looks and taists like 5 pounds of mud. If you have your helth you have a perpetual candy

There is one piece ln the collec tion regarded as priceless—the orig , lnals of Abraham Lincoln's remarks holding his Panama hat behind

informally on the steps of the war. N u r s e u , s t eo ftnd „_. _ Y.r(,Str\ ~* department for a picture to accom-' K a> for a minute while the pany a story concerning celebrities; 11*1? ,„ t \ . , , * m i m u e w n i l e t n e

of his college fraternity. . . T , ™ h r r . ™ - * . „_.-,,, „ , „ Secretary of State Stimson. in white | E3Z *** flannel trousers, white shoes and

He nodded in the direction of an to think that blindness is no ob-oU painting of the late mistress of stacle to our further friendship t t e house bung upon t te near-by you'll persuade ter otherwise." wall, and ta silence the doctor "IU do my best, Grannock." switched on a lamp ami raised lt so After t t e doctor left, Orannock tbat its light slanted upward. lay with his eyes on the long panel

"Thanks," said Grannock. "Ex- of light that he knew to be the traordinaxy how Lester resembles' study window, her, isn't it?" He thought of the girl on t t e cliff

"Lester," said the doctor, "has' and tried to reconstruct the sound had to go in town on what te as- of har voice and failed. She was sured me was urgent business. He slender and fairly tall and moved may or may not be back tonight." slowly. Perhaps—perhaps she waa

"Ah! Well, he's better out of the; dark. Dark eyes. Dark hair. Dark, way, no doubt." Grannock's voice delicate brows, was expressionless. And then it seemed to Orannock

"There's something I want you to that he opened his eyes and saw at da for me, doc." tttt Window the girl whom his fancy

"Sure, anything In t t e world." { was painting. By some chance effect "If I go blind—and only if I go of light and shade he saw her quite

oltad—I want you to find a—a distinctly. . . . At his exclamation friend of mine. A lady. A lady 11 little Nurse Casey came trotting met a few days ago on the cliff-path."

"Certainly I'll go. What's her name?"

"X dent know give it to me."

from t te far end of the room. "There's a woman—a lady out­

side," he said with difficulty. "Prob­ably on her way to the front door.

I wouldn't let her i I particularly want to see ter be­fore I—go to—tc

Well—well, her address, then?" "Now you go off to sleep, Mr. "FTom something she said, die Is Orannock. There was no one there,

a visitor staying in rooms that over- honestly, or I should have seen look the Sound." them. The only person wbo passed

'TU do my best, old man. You ; was the new nurse. Dr. Lytton took can give me a description of her?" I her down to the road with him and

"She has a wonderful voice," said ! she's just back. She's coming on Grannock very quietly. "Husky and ' duty at midnight. Her name? Oh, low and—dark. I have an idea she i4's EUesmore—Nurse EUesmore, is dark, but, of course. I couldn't come over especially from New York, see. She's slender and fairly tall j Bhe's awfully nice." and young. She told me she was twenty-three. , . . Lytton, you'll find

to Grant and the general's response, in their own handwritings, on the occasion wher Grant received his

him, conversing with Mrs. Stimson while wa telling a recent sports event in the cap i ta l . . .

Katherine Lowman, daughter of of the '' the assistant secretary of the trees-commission as lieutenant

Umon C armi« d e r " i a " C h l e f ™ " * I ury, putt-putting on" T miniature! R work if the patient said ttf" What Lincoln read to Grant con- golf course . . . And Marian I : would not." grinned the doc

sists of etghtv-four words. What I Jardine. daughter of the newly ap-Grant read to Lincoln consists of g? t a t e a \ ,Yn , f cS2 States minister to eighty-two words. The story of ^-"P1- doing the same thing, why the two fitted together with ftm. rt_, ____ _ -_-._. dovetailed accuracy ts a cherished _ „ J ? N E O F MILLIONS story of the general's descendants. __• __• Penny, owner of a vast chain'

Saxely Grannock's twinkled through their weariness.

"And to think I've spent half a day trying to get rid of her for half I her, won't you—and give her a mes an hour without hurting her feel- sage from me?" ings." he murmured. " 'Go and get "I'll move heaven and earth. . . . a breath of fresh air'—I must re- You don't think she'll have left?" member that formula. Or would I "She said she was staying tm the

end of t t e month; then her holiday I ends. Apparently, she earns her I

tor "Nurse Casey bad her orders I living, but she didn't say how. We Hot to leave you. and she's a reliable met sort of casually in the cliff little woman. You mustn't be alone shelter and we talked. Oh. at any until—well, until things are settled rate, I talked." He forced a smile. one way or t t e other." , "I discovered afterward that we 11

She spoke sincerely, for she was a sincere and generous tittle souL She pulled another Blanket over t t e sleeping man and sat down again by the window.

'Copyright. 1930. by Rey Vlckers)

In a moment of weakness Hal­lie brings disaster to the man she loves in tomorrow's chapter.

Here's a favorite story of Sen­ator Hiram Johnson about his one-store, joolry shop and gymnazium Ji_ . -,_,.

eombinpd and I wunt von t_. nnn.o t i m e colleague from California, the : I late Senator Jim Phelan ciate it, Dont you think I am rite

he sed. Yes sir, but, I sed. But what for Peet sake? pop sed,

and I sed. But if I just had some­thing like a slitely broken leg I bet I could injoy candy and jelly and froot and stuff.

Yee gods, do your homewerk, pop sad.

Wich X did.

"And now you're going to give me were in the shelter for over three | of stores, has been telling the many} a sleeping draught?" hours. It didn't seem twenty min-1 Follow peace with aB men and

benefits of prohibition. He scouts > "Yes. The last eye injection can't utes. I told her about this eye busi-! holiness, without which no man' shaU the idea that the pubUc has any de- possibly take effect for eight hours | noes. It seemed quite natural to • see the Lord: sire to tolerate the liquor traffic, j So I want you to get some sleep teU her everything. When we Looking diligently lest any man or to compromise with it-. Penny j while you can. When you wake I parted we arranged that if I am j fail of the grace of God; lest any speaks as one of millions who en-1 you'll find the New York nurse— | cured I am to communicate with root of bitterness springing up trou-Senator Johnson is among the

most ardent baseball fans in the capital. Senator Phelan knew nothing of the game.

One day Walter Johnson, in hts I votes, day one of the greatest of pitchers — and now manager of the Washing- "PATHETIC FIGURES" • comfortable upstairs. Put off the] rangement was a ragged one. Easylgret the resolution of" ton basebaU club, and Ty Cobb paid|. Paris ls trying to bring back the sleeping draught for ten minutes enough for me, if I lose my sight, to not to appear in more pictures since

won't you—ahe have a cigaret? ; Ue low and say nothing for the rest)she had won admiration as t te best

tertain similar beliefs, but most of j what's her name? Nurse EUesmore whom have no way of making the —in charge. She knows what symp-bellefs known except through their | toms to look for, and at the right

I time she'll call me."' "Fine! I hope they'll make you

her. U not—silence." I K_ you. and«thereby many be de-"And what," asked Lytton gently, filed.—Hebrews. 12: 14, 15.

**tt ttw messaaa that I am to de- •• liver?" FAREWELL GISH

[ recognize that the ar- | Follower, of t t e screen wiU ra­

the senate a visit. T t e two were Introduced all around and were Htt objects of mt'ih hero worship.

hour-glass feminine figure. It e a s t be done. That figure has gone as completely as the hour glass. There are one or two things I want i of my life but too indefinite for her. actress of alf who" have"~h*cT Urn

to take a look at whUe I can. That, I If I do go blind, doc, I Just want you ! roles.

-itSflm.. _&ii-,-. i*.,'•---):,' fc;,Q.. i -

THURSDAY, QCTOBEK 2, UttU EVENING OUTLUUK, SANTA MONICA, CALIFORNIA PAGE FIVE

Samohi Has New Editorial Policy

Students of Journalism Compete Weekly for

Writing Honor A new policy tor the Samohi,

senior high school weekly publica­tion, ti being triad this year.

All students of the Journalism class, thirty In number, are given the same subject each week for a Sa­mohi editorial and the one judged best Is used ta that week's paper The subject for this week is "John Smith, Samohi er Jaysee?"

Point Out Differences In an essay type of editorial mem­

bers of t t e class pointed out dif­ferences between high school stu­dents and Junior college students. Editorials were Judged for original­ity, freshness of appeal and style which waa to be both compelling and colloquial.

Tbe editorial written by Marjorie Brand was adjudged the winner and given place in this week's paper.

Many striking comments were made in tltt various editorials. The cub observers and Journalists found that t t e jaysee student bas a more settled look and a more mature point of view than bis high achool con­temporary. .

College Girls Aren't Girls Junior college girls are not girls,

but co-eds or college women, while high school girls are high school girls. The "college women are put­ting op their hair and they do not wear uniform dress, it was pointed

- out. College students talk about "cuts"

and "profs" and "Docs" and "econ." High school boys and girls think about demerits and tardiness and absence. The high school student has not tltt high power concentra­tion ta htt studies that his older friends In t t e jaysee possess. A good many high school students long for t t e time when they can te en­rolled ia junior college.

SjefiFWaiii To Feature Sing

Installation of Officers uid Reception WUl Be \ Held Monday Night

A special program arranged for next Monday night's community sing, at which installation of offi­cers wiU be followed by a recep­tion tor all members, friends and visitors of tbe sing, was announced today by Mrs. W. O. Fletcher, gen­eral chairman.

Varied Program The program includes a group of

numbers by Eloise Roessler, 8, "girl wonder violinist": two whistling solos, "Grannina Mia" and "Invita­tion Waltz." by Alice Lloyd; a toe dance, "Minute Walts," by Dorothy Delmore, accompanied by Mrs. Roy Quitzow, contributed to the program by tba Beattie School at Dancing: two vocal duets by Miss Hazel Tay­lor and Miss Dorothy Moynahan. and "The Calm," a one-act play. by t t e Santa Monica Educational Little theater.

Tltt cast of t t e play includes Lewis Hall, as the captain; Mary Webb, captain's wife; Malcolm Mc-Taggart, first mate; Melvin Wixon. second mate; Eddie Bassett, cabin tag, and Ben Batchelor. t t e China­man.

Antonio Schuck, Director The play was selected by Miss

Florence Davies, president of tttt theater organization. It will te di­rected by Antonio Schuck. Lorenzo Miller is scenic director and Rob­ert Keenan is associate production director.

H t t stag meeting and program will open at t t e usual hour of 8 o'clock in the Ocean Park audi­torium. It is open, to tba public.

Mrs. Templeton Wood, president of the Santa Monica Bay Music as­sociation, which sponsors the com­munity sing, wUl Install t t e new officers.

BREATHES AGAIN AFTER 3 WEEKS

IN RESPIRATOR Toad Yarn Makes

Scientists Laugh Claims That Amphibians

Lived Underground 300 Years Hit

Physicians are now optimistic over the recovery of Frances McGann, student nurse of Al-toona, 111., who has been kept alive fay a drinker respirator in a Chicago hospital.

WASHINGTON, Oct. 3 (JPI — To the same category as "pick op a toad and youll get warts," or "step ea a toad and it's sure to rats. scientists of the museum of natural history today consigned t t e story Of three Oklahoma toads, said to have lived la a State of suspended animation ter three or four cen­turies.

"Just another of those old toad traditions." said Doris M. Cochran gad Or. Remington Kellogg, toad experts.

Borrowing Toads They agreed the three loads

found tn the Oklahoma Indian mound probably were a species ot "bufo compactilis," tltt burrowing toad, or "scaphiopus couchii." the spade foot toad, both occurring often la Oklahoma.

"They so down every year before tba frost hits," said Dr. Kellogg, "and lt doesn't take them 300 year, to get there."

He explained these toads burrow down backward to great depth, the dirt falling in over their heads aa they go. Once underground. ttay can suspend animation for sane time, te aald. mtt "not to the extent some archeologists, wbo can't all be experts on natural history, are willing to accept.

Careful Experiments "Soma careful experiments have

been conducted along this line," said Kellogg. "Toads ware con­fined in especially constructed cavi­ties in blocks of limestone and sand­stone, and these blocks were burled three feet deep in t t e garden.

"Tbe toads confined wltb sand­stone were found dead when the boxes were opened at the end of thirteen months. Those confined with limestone died before t t e end of two years. However, tt lias been experimentally shown a toad can live a year sealed up within a block of limestone."

CHICAOO, Oet. 2—For the first time ta three weeks, Frances Mc­Gann, Chicago's "respirator girl," yesterday felt herself breathe with­out the aid of tttt "robot r ng" or drinker respirator.

The atrl said she felt the rise and faU of her lung muscles for the first time since she was stricken with In­fantile paralysis when the machine was removed yesterday.

Fourteen Killed In Mine Blast

WALSALL, Staffs, Eng.. Oct. 2 Off. —Fourteen persons were killed last night in an explosion in the Grove colliery at Brown Hills, near here.

The explosion occurred deep la t t e pit, and government mine in­spectors who descended with colliery officials found t t e workings full of carbon monoxide gas. About 1.000 men were employed in the mines.

BEING RUN OVER BY TRAIN LOTS OF FUN FOR TOT

Safeway Announces Ctinned Goods Sale

All t t e humor written about t t e modern wife whose only kitchen Im­plement ls a can opener falls to budge t t e fact that t t e ean opener is. after all. t t e mast Important "culinary" tool. Cans now bring to one's teale. at any season of the year, both «fetaple and fancy foods which, only yesteryear, w o e avail­able daring only a portion of ttte vear or not at all.

Thus, to emphasize t t e impor­tance of canned goods in t t e mod­ern kitchen, whether such foods be served hot, chilled er as is, and to bring home to many housewives f t e tremendous variety of foods which may be purchased ln metal pack­ages. Safeway Stores this week are staging the greatest canned goods ssJe to all their history. . Twenty-tour carloads, or 36.ooo

eases of canned goods. Including many Southern California grown fruits and vegetables, are being of­fered the public.

SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 2 t Five-year-old Herbert Brandt, play­ing on t t e railroad tracks, failed to notice a train rushing down upon him. Tbe engineer jammed on t te brakes, but the train raced over the lad.

Trainmen ran back o pick up the body.

Little Herbert was sitting up laughing and scarcely scratched.

"I saw the wheels go round," be told the trainman.

Clarence O'Neil's Mother Seeks Him

Is Clarence O'Neil in Santa Monica?

His mother, a Mrs. Connoly of Hawthorne, is sick and unable to care for his children, according to a message from Hawthorne police, who asked Santa Monica authori­ties to make a search for him and give him this message. Mrs. Con­noly believes her son to be in Santa Monica.

AFFAIRS GROUP TO MEET A meeting of the Santa Monica

Public Affairs association was an­nounced by officers of this body for Friday night at 8 o'clock, in the Santa Monica city hall, in a bulletin sent out today. The meeting will be open to the public, and topics ol civic Interest are scheduled for dis­cussion.

Vital Statistics

3-INCH SHELF NEW YORK. Oct. 2 UB

Adm. Bradley A. Fiske has a scheme |

BIRTHS Born to: Mr. and Mrs. Edward R. Martini

I September 26, at the Wilshire hos- I Rear | pital, a daughter, Claire Susanna.

Mr. and Mrs. Merrill W. Ash. 426 Fitzgerald avenue. Tujunga. Sep­tember 28, at the Santa Monica hos­pital, a son, Lars Carlson.

Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Horton. 1117 Fourteenth street, Santa Monica. September 29, at the Santa Monica

whereby Dr. Charles W. EUot's five foot shelf would be cut to three Inches. It Is to reduce t t e ordinary printed page twenty-five times. print forty-five pages on a card and read through a magnifying lens. He believes his system minimizes eye j hospital, a son, Herbert Paul. strain, as only one eye is used at a . time, and reduces the cost of litera- DEATHS ture. In a test he read 200.000 September 27—William Isaac Mc-words at one sitting without tiring Call. 54 years old. an eye. MARRIAGES

Notices of intention to marry filed October X:

Floyd A. BaUgh.' 21. United States

TOADS DONT APPEAR TO BE VERT HUNGRY

OKLAHOMA CITY. Okie.. Oet t un—Three small toads apparently suffered no pangs of Indigestion to­day after partaking or what ar­chaeologists believed was their first meal in more than 300 years.

The toads, found near Gate, Okla., by J. B. Thoburn. state historical society curator, while excavating tn an Indian mound, were fed files yesterday.

Mat Eager fer Food They were not eager for tool, ap­

parently: after their fast of unde­termined length, but ate when food was placed in their mouths.

Dr. Frank Brooks, biologist tn Oklahoma City university, classified the toads as belonging to the pelo-batldae family and to the genus scaphiopus.

As ttw three toads do not con­form in description to the one spe­cies listed in scientific catalogs, Dr. Brooks said it was barely pos­sible they belong to a hitherto un­known branch.

Thoburn Defends Estimate No opinion was expressed by Dr.

Brooks as to how long the toads had been buried or as to whether they could live If buried 300 years. Thoburn, however, was vigorous in defense of his estimate.

"It would have been impossible for the toads to have been buried in recent years." he said, "rae ground was packed too tightly."

Baptists Report Growth of Church

Membership Now Total* 323, Elect Officers

at Gathering A steady growth was reported

last night at the annual meeting of t t e members of Trinity Baptist church, Tenth and California ave­nue.

Money raised ln the church for the year totalled $10,300. and of this amount $2,100 was given to missions, the financial report said The church school reported a bud­get of $893 spent in its work. The Women's Union raised $540. The building committee appointed by the church is working on the first sketch of plans for the new struc­ture.

With a present membership of 323, the church will celebrate its sixth year of life on November 30. the membership committee reported.

The elections were; Church clerk. George Ginrich: financial secre­tary. Mrs. Helen Swank; church treasurer, L. H. Doescher: treasurer of missions. Miss Sarah Bradford: deacons, Lee Jones. Adolph Selinger, T. E. Bryan; deaconesses, Mrs. Lake Brown, Mrs. G. B. Waters, Mrs. W. B. Thomas; trusees. J. P. Johnson B. C. Brunton, R C. Darby; board of education. Dr. E. B. Atwood. Miss Cora Eleanor Brown: board of mis­sions. i/Crs. D. C. Daggett, Mrs. E B. Atwood,

Dr. Frederick W. Hatch, the pas­tor, has been with the church since its organization nearly six years ago. The new advisory board will meet next Tuesday at ti - home of Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Howard, to dis­cuss the work of the coming year, and to adopt a program of activities for the year.

'Flying Wife9

"Insurance In Health"

DRAKE milfl l »nd D - » L -Intrstinal D a l l l S

Dr. C L. Alexander, D. C. Ph. D. 316 Wilshlre Blvd. Pb: 26077

navy; Marion T. Fuller. 16. Ocean Park.

Michael J. Moreiand, 40. Venice; Muriel M. Cober, 19, Venice.

Oliver William Taylor. 21, West Los Angeles; Margaret Alice North. 23, Beverly Hills.

"Spec ia l O f f e r F r i d a y a n d M o n d a y Only"

Fariss Beauty Shoppe

$5 a n d 9 C e n t r a l A r c a d e T e l . 2 4 5 3

P E R M A N E N T W A V E S C r o q u i g n o l e o r S p i r a l W i n d

o r C o m b i n a t i o n W a v e s Seal* Treatments. Si* far 88.88

Shampoo and Finger Wave, $1.00; Manicure, 50r MME. FARISS. MME. FAYETTE, FLORENCE PORTER

Venice Man Held For Embezzlement

Embezzlement of leased property was t t e charge preferred against H. H. Cooper, Sea Spray apartments. Ve'nce." following his arrest last night on a warrant sworn to by J. E. Throssel. Santa Monica radio dealer.

Cooper was charged with having concealed and disposed of a radio 'set belonging to the Radio Sales and Service Co. before he had completed his payments on the instrument. He waa released on $100 bail to in­sure appearance In Santa Monica police court tomorrow morning at 9 o'clock

Sleeping Infant Attacked by Rat

That 2-year-old Gloria Pagones was bitten by a rat on the thumb of the right hand while asleep in a cottage on Ocean Front was the re­port made to Santa Monica police by parents of t t e baby.

Police entered t t e child taken to the county welfare clinic, where at­tendants cauterized tear punctures of tba skin and ordered the child placed under close medical observa­tion ter t t e next week or ten days

Loan Association In Rapid Growth

$500,000 Mark Passed by Citizens' Guarantee

in 20 Months

Associated Press Photo Mrs. Francis B. Loomis, jr., is

tttt latest San Diego society woman to join the "Flying Wives of Flying Husbands club.' She received her license aftei taking instruction from ter husband.

Three Pittsburgh university stars of last year are coaching. Joe Dohchess and Ray Montgomery are at Pitt, and Luby DiMelolo is with New York university.

Passing t t e $500,000 mark in less t t en twenty months ef business ts the excellent record of t t e Citizens Guarantee-Building Loan associa­tion, 222 Santa Monica boulevard. Opening its doors for business on February X 1129. this institution now has total deposits of $503,057.37. as shown ta Its financial statement, published last night.

This growth has been made de­spite the so-called economic depres­sion, and officials of the association feel that it Is a demonstration of the soundness of this community. The Citizens' Guarantee Building-Loan association strictly is a Santa Monica institution, formed by business and professional men who take an active part in Its ad­ministration. With F. W. Kasl as manager and secretary, the associa­tion has maintained the same board of directors elected at the or­ganization of the institution.

With more than $500,000 in in­vestment, the association now pays out to investors more than $2,500 per month in interest. All money invested with this association Is used In the development and up­building of the Bay district

mm—mi^mmmmmmmtmmmmmmmmmm—mmmm—m.—, • . » _ - _ _ _ _ - — _ — — •

I Harry Manning, one of the great sea heroes of modern times, snapped In the cockpit of his plane at Roosevelt Field, L I., after passing all tests for his pilot's license. As chief officer of the S. S. America, Manning manned the lifeboat that rescued the crew of the ill-starred S. S. Florida.

FOOTBALL Bf WHISKERS i NEW BRUNSWICK. N. J.. Oct. 2

• .I**—Fifty bewhiskered youths are i to take part in a football game, con­stituting just two teams without subs. In a pageant celebrating the

city's 250th anniversary they are to depict the first intercollegiate foot­ball game, that between Rutgers and Princeton ln 1869. when there were twenty-five men on a side and shaving was not so popular.

Lutheran leader Plans Radio Talk

Dr. Walter A. Maier to Be Heard Tonight OB

Columbia System "There Is a God" lsto.be tbe sub­

ject of a nation-wide address to ba given this evening by tba Rev. Dr. Walter A. Maier, professor of the­ology at Concordia seminary, S t Louis. The message Is to be broad­cast over the Columbia network ot thirty-four stations from coast to coast. Including KHJ of Los An­geles.

The broadcast will begin at T p. m.. Pacific standard time, and will be a regular feature over B t t Columbia system every Thursday for a period of eight months. . To­night's program.will include selec­tions by the Bach chorus ol Cleve­land, under direction ef P. W. Strleter.

"The Lutheran hour." said t t e Rev. Walter F. Troeger, pastor of Pilgrim Lutheran church. Four­teenth street and Arizona avenue, "wiU give the American people, especially the shut-ins and members of the denomination, an opportunity to hear sound, constructive, helpful messages each week from leading clergymen ef the Lutheran church, as well as good organ and choral music."

THE NEW FORD

Everything you want or need

in a motor ear at an

unusually loir prlee NEW FORD

TUDOB SEDAN A splendid family car. Your choiea Ot a variety of beautiful colon. Rld-Jr upholstered aad appointed. Head lamp*, radiator shell, hob raps, ewwl finish •trip, aad other exterior metal parts are made af bright, enduring Rustles* SteeL

-495 t. o. *. Detroit, pimp freight and de-ivory.

Bumper* and tpare lira extra at low toot.

THE more yon see of the new Ford, the more you

realize that it brings you everything you want or

need in a motor ear at aa unusually low price..

Its substantial beauty of line and color is appar­

ent at a glance. Long, continuous service emphasizes

the value of its simplicity of design and the high

quality that has been built into every part.

The new Ford accelerates quickly Bad ft will do

5 5 to 6 5 miles an hour. It la an easy-riding car

because of ita specially designed springs and four

Houdaille double-acting hydraulic shock absorbers.

It has fully enclosed four-wheel brakes and the

added safety of a Triplex shatter-proof glass wind*

shield. Operation and up-keep costs are low aad if

has the stamina and reliability that mean thousands

of miles of dependable, uninterrupted service*

See the nearest dealer and have him give you a

demonstration ride in the new Ford. Check up every

point that goes to make a good automobile and you

will know that it is a value far above the priceyoupay*

F O R D M O T O R C O M P A N Y

*mJur!d'

'-• -_•"- '•'•-/•?'-..; v|_ h

POPPMPPl.lfW rjgpq/ptssx-m-* tap

PAGE S1A EVENING OUTLOOK; SANTA MONICA, pAUFORNIA. IHURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1930

Mrs. Willebrandt M i d s Wine Trade Acta for Grape Growers

in Expansion Under Dry Riding

{ WASHINGTON. Oct. 2 (0.13—Mrs. Mabel Walker Willebrandt, who as former assistant attorney general la Sharge of prohibition prosecutions was the unrelenting foa of dry law Violators, ls active here ta tbe inter­est of California grape growers, wbo n c seeking to expand their industry. '•r_*Mrs. Willebrandt, attorney and business woman, has maintained ber contacts since stepping down from ber position as assistant attorney general, where ste bad an' active

r ta prohibition enforcement. At same time she has enlarged the

field af associations, and as repre­sentative af California grape Inter­ests bas bad much to do wltb de­velopments permitting an expansion Ot that Industry.

Aids Industry The announcement of Prohibition

Director Woodcock that enforce­ment agents would not disturb noma wine makers has stimulated tbe vineyard Industry to such an extent that advertisements setting forth a policy of heightened activity already have appeared ta trade journals. Some wineries have an­nounced an Intention to advertise in newspapers as the California grape crop moves eastward.

Mrs. Willebrandt had conferred with Woodcock OB t t e wine subject before bis announcement. Shortly after bis arrival to take over the new post te was entertained, with prohibition administrators here for the school of enforcement methods, at Mrs. Willebrandt's home.

Nothing New Dry leaders say there la nothing

new tn Woodcock's stand. They refer to Dr. James G. Doran's some­what similar statement. But Dr. Doran was not as definite as Wood­cock. At any rate, the grape grow­ers never foUowed lt up so en­thusiastically as they have t t e new declaration.

In addition to arguing convinc­ingly here for a more liberal view­point on borne made wine, Mrs. Willebrandt has introduced an ap­plication tor a permit to manufac­ture wines for medicinal, flavoring and sacramental purposes. The ap-

ecation asks transfer of permits ld by Individual wineries to a

new corporation. Fruit Industries, tor which Mrs. Willebrandt ls counsel.

P.-T. A. to Greet McKinley Faculty

Reception Will Be Held After Business Meet

Next Tuesday Members of the faculty of McKin­

ley school will be guests Tuesday afternoon at an informal reception tn the school auditorium. The re­ception, beginning at 2:45 o'clock, will follow the first Parent-Teacher association meeting of the year.

P. P. Martin, superintendent of schools, will give a brief talk. Miss Alice Rogers will lead the commun­ity staging

"In keeping with the newer ideals of Parent-Teacher work, the Mc­Kinley association this year will stress the educational and character building," Mrs. Wesley Ewbank, president, said. "An effort will be made to unite child training and parent training in a practical way.

The child study circle will be con­tinued as usual this year. Mrs. Ralph D. Curtis ls captain of Girl Scout troop 6, which is sponsored by the McKinley association. This week the. troop meets in the scout house to make plaques for second class nature awards.

A Junior color guard is to be ap­pointed soon to replace members who have entered junior high school. New members registered last week were Eleanor Stevens, Margaret Stevens and Rosemary Hadlock.

Thrift Companies* Supervision Scored

A certain class of savings organi­zations in California is operating without the rigorous supervision such as is given to banks and to building and loan associations, ac­cording to a report submitted to Gov. C. C. Young through the de­partment of investment by Charles A. Whitmore, building and loan commissioner.

Thrift companies and other simi­lar organizations, issuing savings certificates of various types, up to date have been operating under per­mits issued by the division of cor­porations, which, under the law, does not have the power or duty to supervise the business of companies under its jurisdiction, but which merely is charged with the duty of supervising the sale of their securi­ties, it is pointed out.

Visiting in U.S. Madame Curie Hears New Discovery; p For Cancer Fight With Gift Radium

PARI8. Oct. 2 (U.R)—Madame Curie, using t t e gram of radium which women of ilia United States presented to her last year, Is near t t e eve of another scientific discovery which her followers believe will mark another epoch IB t t e treatment of cancer. She is experimenting with pitchblende ta an effort to unveil t t e secrets of polonium, uranium and other rare metals of the radium family. In

Dame Rachel Crowdy, who arrived in San Francisco from Honolulu on t 9 Dollar liner President Jefferson. On the same ship customs Inspectors seized 300 tins of opium, valued at $34,500. Dame Ciowdy is head of the department on opium traffic of the League of Nations. She was made dame commander of the British empire and a lady of grace of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem for her serv­ices ta the World war.

Field and Bride On Plane Jaunt

CAIRO, Oct. 2 cr. — Marshall Field III and his bride, the for­mer Mrs. Dudley Coats, left here today on a honeymoon trip ta their own amphibian plane. They ex­pect to halt for the night at Wadi-halfa and continue tomorrow to Khartoum.

Their scheduled route takes them from here by stages to Nairobi. They expect to arrive there by Oc­tober 6.

Singers Register For Opera School

Among those who have already registered for the school of opera being Inaugurated by the Santa Monica Bay Music association, un­der direction of Frank Rainger, are Rachel Boswell, May Massie Leven­good, Joseph Waugh, John Wester­velt, Mrs. John Brewster, Mrs. C. Louise Turnbull, Mrs. W. G. Fletcher, Harry L. St uver, Katrine Flore, Mrs. Freeman Lang, Dorothy Harington, Ray Harrington, Perry J, Meyer and others. Enrollmen will continue at the offices of the association. Hotel Miramar, Santa Monica, the rest of this week.

Parts in the initial production, the popular "Prince of Pilsen," will be assigned this week.

the tiny laboratory atop Saint Oen evieve mount In the Latin quarter of Paris, Madame Curie bas been working almost - 'tinuously far weeks on ter latest experiments.

She spends ten to twenty hours a day, alone In ber laboratory and even refuses to discuss ter work with her closest associates.

SHEEP AND GOATS EAST ORANOE, N. J.. Oat. S UPt

—A rope inside a theater next Sunday, is to show where East Orange gets off and Orange begins. They are different towns and quite individualistic. Orange permits Sunday movies. East Orange for­bids them. The theater straddles the border.

BUY SOMETHING NEW—NOW!

Georgia Bourbons *j

Nominate Russei? ATLANTA, Oet. 3 (__•-—A primary

landslide haa given t te democratic nomination tor governor, tanta­mount to election ln Georgia, to Richard B. Russell, jr., 32-year-old bachelor, son of the chief justice of the state supreme court. Russell, who has twelve living brothers and sisters, will be tta youngest gov­ernor tn t t e history of Georgia.

jjii*iHlmntftin,ttHMiffiiiiiMiiMiMHiim»m,Mft*H*mitt

(If Stomach Hurts Drink Hot Water!

—i— | ..entrallse Stomach Acidity. Pre­

vent Foot Fermentation. Stop Indigestion.

•fl

tmimiMMiimiiiiMti IIIMfHimNUmMIIIMlG "If those wh* suffer from inditesUon.

gas, wind, or flatulence, stomach acidity or sourness, fastrlc cnUrrh, heartburn, etc., would take a teaspoonfnl of r a n Bisurated Macnesla 18 ball • (Iaa* ol hot water Immediately after eating they would 88881 forget they were ever afflicted with stomach trouble, and doctors would have to look elsewhere 188 oatlenti." IB ex­planation pt these word! a well known New Vork physician stated that most forms of stomach troubles are due to stomach acidity and fermentation of the food contents St the stomach combined with an Insufficient blood supply to the stomach, not water Increase* the blood supply and Bisurated Magnesia, which can be readily obtained at any reliable drug store, la either tablets or powder, in­stantly neutral**** ttw excessive stomach acid and Stop* food fermentation, th* combination of the two, therefore, being marvelously successful and decidedly pr*-ftrahlg to the ua* of artificial digestants, stimulants or medicines ttP indigestion.— Advertisement.

W T SOMETHING NEW—NOWI

t

WILSON INTERVIEWS 136 A total of 136 Interviews in Sep­

tember were listed by Fred S. Wil­son, industrial agent for the city of Santa Monica, in his monthly re­port, filed with the council today.

THE WHOLE DOLSON FAMILY OF DRUGGISTS

Harry Dolson, Druggist, Bow at 101 Broadway, Santa Monica.

Harry D. Dolson, Dragglst. 11300 and 11317 S. M. Blvd., Sawtelle

John A. Dolson, Druggist, 1401 Washington Blvd., Venice.

FIVE DIE IN CRASH NEW YORK, Oct 2 (.TV-Fire per­

sons were killed, one or two persons are missing and six others were in­jured today in the collapse of a four-story tenement building at 15 Greenwich avenue, in Greenwich 1 Village.

FRESH FISH

22 years in the same location is an ex­cellent guarantee of the high quality of strictly fresh fish we sell.

WE NOW HAVE

EASTERN OYSTERS

AND SCALLOPS

PALACE FISH MARKET 1421 T h i r d St., P h o n e 2 1 3 7 5

Dr. EL U. Roberts Chiropractor

R E T U R N S Dr. E. U. Roberts announces resumption of his practice-in his offices at 13431/g Fourth Street, Santa Monica. Dr. Roberts has spent the last four weeks studying in The Basic Foods Laboratory.

Telephone 21670

OUR 57 TH

A & P became a leader among food merchants slowly and naturally.....ask yourself why A & P grew.....it grew because the public accepted and encouraged A&P's methods of doing business.....Friday we will open our 57th store in Southern California.

Potatoes Select Burbanks

12 i% 25c

ACE HI

Flour Insures Better Baking

lAi sack bye

CHOICE FRESH MEATS

SHANKLESS PICNICS W £ £ 2 £ LARGE HENS » » ROAST OF MILK LAMB shoulder BACON Sunny field Sliced BARRACUDA Frying or baking VEAL ROAST Fancy Milk Veal PORK ROAST Eastern Com Fed BREAST OF MILK LAMB •ttSRT YELLOWTAIL For Baking

No Rind No Wane

ib. 23c H». 29c H>. 15c ft. 38c lb. 19c lb. 17c lb. 19c ib. 10c lb. 15c

FANCY FRESH FRUITS df VEGETABLES

Pears _-_.'.£«. 5 u«. 13c

Seedless Grapes 6 .bs. 13c

Apples joLthans 5 ibs. 19c

Cucumbers 3 tor 5c

1421 Montana Ave.

THE GREAT AnjumcsPAonc^

Prices effective Thursday, Friday and mH-tmtrday

Crystal White Soap 10 bars28c Comet Rice ww* -tfs&_.2« 3 £ 19c Van Camps Beans 4 «•"«»» 29c Hills Bros. Coffee 1 ft. 35c

Limit. 2 lbs.

Cream of Wheat 14-oz. pkg. 14c Rainier Brew 3&S-" bottle Sc Heinz Ketchup .mail 17c Salad Dressing Rajah full ttt. 39c Rainier Lime Rickey bottle 17c Apple Butter Libby'* tan can 12c

Iona Crushed Corn 3"°».,2 29c Beechnut Spaghetti 3<£29c Ovaltine *WSgia* Free «**«—40c T u n a Fish ita, No. H can 19c Post Toasties -man 3 pkgs. 25c Tomato Juice Sun Ray '£? He Peaches lona Sliced No. 2. •• can 15c leOSt Fleischmann't ^ 3 calces 2 0 C

Matches Searchlight 3 boxes lQc Dr. Ross Dog Food can 10c

PINEAPPLE Solar IW

GINGER ALE <ST 8 O'CLOCK COFFEE "-TJCS* * 25c VINEGAR oidQoid Quart 15c oaium 49c

Pickles Yolo slZXim 6li-OK.iarl3c Minute Tapioca pkg. 13c I v o r y Soap Quest size 2 cakes 9c C o r n Qoidi\%lfuam. No. 2 can 18c Post Bran Flakes io***. pkg. 12c Peanut Butter Bishop's 1-lb. tin 20c ApricotS Del Monte No. 1 can 15c

No. 2% can f 7 c 4 full glasses in O 22-oz. O | *

every bottle O bot t les -M«_)C Largest selling coffee

in America

STORES SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE FRIDAY, SATURDAY, MONDAY, OCT. 3, 4, 6

\ntmiaatt(

49 Annual Blue Ribbon Malt Poods made with Bin* Rib­bon Malt Extract are tasty.

Can, 3 lbs. Net 49c

CANNED FRUITS Peaches, Pears, Fruits for Salad, Olives, Apricots, Royal toot Chrrries, Pineapple Tidbits.

8-oz. Cans. Your Choice. .5 for 49c

SALMON Happyvale Pink. Economical for use in Salmon Croquettes or Salmon Loaf.

1-Pound Tal! Cans 5 for 49c

DUNN'S JAMS Pure fruit and sugar. Raspberry,

Peach, Apricot.

2%-Pound Glass Jar 49c

LIMA BEANS Ventura County, 1930 crop.

4 Pounds 49c

PINK BEANS Kins City. New crop. Selected for quality.

6 Pounds 49c

TILLAMOOK CHEESE Full Cream. Serve golden slices in sandwiches; adds zest to creamed vegetables, macaroni or spaghetti.

Special 2 Pounds 49c

MacMarr Milk Pure, sweet milk evaporated to tbo consistency of cream. TALL CANS

7 for 49c

PEACHES Libby's or Del Monte. Sliced or Halves. Packed in heavy syrup.

No. 2% Cans 3 for 49c

TOMATO SOUP Campbell's

6 Cans ,~..«......«..49c

QUAKER OATS fast that sticks by you. (3 [*.)

Large Package 2 for 49c

A breakfast that sticks by you. (S LBS. 7 OZ. NET.)

KEN-L RATIONS A well balanced Dog Food.

1-Pound Cans 5 for 49c

Quaker Milk Macaroni, Milk Spaghetti or Egg Noodles

Quickly and easily prepared with cheese, tomato sauce or green chills.

Your Choice 6 Pkgs. 49c

Del Monte

Tomato Sauce

10 Cans 49c

RICE Extra fancy; new crop; Blue Rose. There are so many ways to prepare rice appetizingly.

7 Pounds *; 49c

WESSON OIL Economical for those who wish to make their own mayonnaise.

Quart Tin 49c

.SPECIAL OFFER. O V A L T I N E — A p a r t i c u l a r l y s t r e n g t h e n i n g food for c h i l d r e n a n d conva lescen t s .

• • O U N C E C A N — 1 UNCLE W I G G I L Y M U G

BOTH FOR 39c

Pineapple Libby's Sliced. New pack.

No. 2l/2 Cans

2 for i 49c

Fruit and Vegetable D e p t

Cauliflower ... Large, white heads.

Each 10c

Apples. .5 Lbs. 25c Jonathan; good color, Juicy and crisp. An excellent eating epple.

Sweet Potatoes .4 Lbs. 17c Jersey Variety. Medium size; smooth-skinned.

Apples .6 Lbs. 19c Beilefleurs. Bright stock; best for sauce ar baking.

^---------^-^-•--_^--_-M-______^---___M-H-B--Vaa-_W__V.^__M--^B__M-a___HMn-___n^

Beans 2 Lbs. 15c Kentucky Wonders. Tender and green. NO Strings.

Yams 4 Lbs. 15c Medium size. Pink, moist meat.

MacMarr Quality Meats

Legs Young Milk Lamb.

Veal Chuck Roasts, Milk-Fad Veal.

Pork Shoulders Young Corn-Fed Pork. (Center cuts 6c lb. extra.)

Fish Fresh Barracuda (half or whole).

Sliced, 25c lb.

Poultry 1 Fancy Fresh-Killed Bens. (Dry-picked.)

..Ib. 24V2c

. . . . lb . 15c

...lb.l7V2C

....lb.23c

....lb.33c

»>

__'' h'•'•'- > •-'•

•-- !<f._,_" vS-.1-.'!.-..* •-!•:._•."'-', I.;,"

Ford Persi THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 19S0 EVENING OUTLOOK, SANTA MONICA, CALIFORNIA

nally I Dediotes Plant Henry Removes Hia Coat

to "rates Cornerstone of Germany Factory

COLOGNE, Germany —The cornerstone of automobile factory this noon by Henry who amused tha as^er taries by removing order to seize the t the stone ln place like manner.

ManyjBests were present, includ­ing Mayor Adenauer.

Oct. 2 UP) tba a a * Ford

here was laid Ford himself,

digni-overcoat ln

and put a workman-l i i

CIGAR STAND That his cigar stand

street had been robt by burglars carried off a quantil gum, cigars and cigar* port made to Santa this morning by J. B^stine

BUY SOMETHING

ROBBED at 1927 Main

ed last night presumaily boys, who

y of chewing sts was tha re-Monica police

DONKEY RACE M HALTS TRAFFIC

IN PICCADILLY

NEW—NOW!

LONDON, Oct 3 UPr—K donkey race was held In Piccadilly Circus today.

Members Ot tha "Ye Old Hambone Clubbe" brought six donkeys from Hampstead Heath and raced them around the circus. They were rid­den by women to coster attire.

The races so tied ap traffic police called a halt after three heats had bam decided. The winner of the club's cup was Miss Phyllis Smith.

Builders' Exchange .Installs Tomorrow

Wives and Mends of Bay Build-as* exchange members are to be guests at a special meeting planned by tha exchange toe tomorrow night In the Castellammare inn, Roosevelt highway.

Dinner will ba served at 6:30 o'clock, followed by a program marking the installation of the new exchange officers, headed by E. T. Kallgren.

Joe Waugh, manager of the or­ganization, is making provisions for entertainment appropriate to the occasion.

Dirigible R-IN U Trial Tr.

CARDINGTON, England, Oet. a UPr—The dirigible R-101 returned io her base here thia morning, altar a night trial lasting about fifteen hours.

The airship Is expected to start on her flight to India during the weekend.

Western-TAT TeU Plans for Air Line

LOS ANGELES, Oet I (U.R)—All airplane mall and passenger service between New York. Los Angeles and San Francisco will be inaugurated October 15, lt waa announced today by Western Air Express aad Trans­continental Air Transport.

Tha new service, first of its kind la tha nation, will provide cross­country trips ln twenty-four hours.

A rumored merger of Western Air and T. A. T . which started when they submitted a joint bid for mall contracts on the route, was denied.

STRIP MASONIC EMBLEMS OFF GARIBALDI BUST

ROME, Oct. 2 l_P>—Romans living oa Janlculum hill awoke today to find' the equestrian monument of Garibaldi, Italian liberator, stripped of its Masonic emblems and wear­ing brand new Fascist ones. '

During the night workmen chipped oft ttte former and carved on the latter.

The monument has been the sub­ject of considerable controversy since atop tt the bronze statue of Garibaldi, who was instrumental in taking away the power of the popes, frowns down upon the Vati­can.

Minister Shin In Mystery Row

8EARCY, Alt., Oct. 2 (.T*t—The Rev. M. S. Mason, 50, Springfield, Mo., evangelist, was shot and killed last night by John Miller, 75-year-old farmer, who surrendered to of­ficers after the shooting. The slay­ing occurred at the home of Miller's son in the Bethel Grove community, in which the minister had been a guest while conducting a revival.

No motive was revealed.

Spanish Heir and Princess WUl Wed

PARIS, Oct. 2 <U.K>—Engagement of the Prince it tbe Austrlaa, heir, to the Spanish throne, and Princess Maria Esperanza is to be announced soon, tt was reported here today.

The prince is 23 years old, and the princess 16.

ROTARY MEETING The importance of various phases

of club work will ba discussed to-I morrow nobn by Earl Nittenger; Ti I Hart. Lee Symington, Jack Mau­rer. Robbie Roberts and .Ernest

I English tn five-minute talks to fea given before members of the Santa Monica Rotary dub.

Members will vote by secret bal­lot on the best talk.

CeeU De Mille to Undergo Operation

HOLLYWOOD, Oat. 2 (BB OSeS B. De Mille. noted film director, en­tered the Cedars of Lebanon boa-1

pital here today for a minor opera­tion.

BUY SOMETHING NEW—NOW I

Slayer Confesses In Triple Murder

WILLIAMSON, W. Va.. Oct. 2 UPt —Three women lay dead today, while state police, piecing together the story of a triple tragedy, aald William C. Adams, captured ia the mountains two miles from here, had

I confessed that he slew them, and that lie was "looking fte two men" when he was apprehended.

BUY SOMETHING NEW—NOW 1

HAIR DYE $1,000.00 REWARD

Thousands of women and men, all over tbe country now use and praise a mar­velous Hair Dye that works wonders, and which was discovered alter many years of scientific study, by a chemist and hair specialist of St. Paul, Minn, This hair dye re-tores Gray, Streaked or Faded hair to any color desired. Works perfectly; all at once.

A reward of tl,000.00 is offered If It colors the scalp or rubs off. It is simple, harmless and easily applied at home. Write today for Interesting booklet, "True Hair Dye Secrets." Sent FREE. Address TRU-HOE CO., 530 Dakota BldK., St. Faul, Minn.—Advertisement.

Filling Prescriptions Is tho Most Important

Part of Our Business

(QUgreenQy DRUGS WTTH A REPUTATION

8-Hour Service on

Tour Kodak Finishing.

In Before 9, Back at 8

3rd S t at Santa Monica Blvd, Santa Monica Sawtelle and Santa Monica Blvd., Sawtelle i f o r m e r l y B a r t h o l o m e w D r u g S t o r e

Phone 21004—Santa Monica Formerly Smith's Drug Store

Phone 32389—Sawtelle

25c Woodbury's

1 Soap

for 50c Ipc Bottle

J e r g e n s ' L o t i o n FREE with Each Bar

60c Bromo

$ 1 2 0 Bromo 75o GOLD MED OIL CAPSULES

Seltzer .....39c

Seltzer.. . 79c UL HARLEM 59c

III % Discount on lazda Lamps purchase of 6

m e r e l o m e Sizes,

Carton of 6

$108

30c Sal

60c Sal 1

Hepat

75c WAL CAMPHO

20c

a. .. . . .19c

epatica....... 38c

LYPTUS 1 I C

_!5c Ante.ita

Cold Cream Soap and SOc

Cream o. Almonds Lotion,

Both for

39c

FRIDAY and SATURDAY

SPECIALS! Extra Savings!

10c Carnation Milk 3 for 23c SOc Mentholatum 39c 30c Laxative Bromo Quinine 21c 75c Vick's Vapo Rub 49c 75c Analgesique Baume Bengue... ,49c 40c Castoria 24c SOc California Syrup of Figs 39c $1.00 Listerine 63c 50c Extract of Witch Hazel, pint.. . .35c SOc Dr. West Tooth Brush, special. 39c $1.00 Orlis All-Purpose Prophylactic 61c 1 Oc Crerae Oil Soap 4 for 21c 12 for 59c 10c Mission Bell Soap . . . 4 for 21c 12 for 59c 5c Crystal White Soap 8 for 25c 5c White King Laundry Bar . . . . 8 for 25c

Mra. Stover's Bungalow

Candies

Lb 80c Schramm-Johnson Drugs, Exclusive

Agents

SOc Sodiphene 39c

$1 .00 Sodiphene 73c

$1.25 Absorbine Jr 98c

75c Doan's PHU 49c

CANDY SPECIAL

English Toffee 1/2 pound 25c

Pound 49c

50c N. R. Tablets 39c

25c Cascarets 19c

$1.25 BAYER'S ASPIRIN TABLETS, 0{% 100's _~ ~ 0 * / C

C i g a r e t t e S p e c i a l t

Camrl, OM Oold. Larky Strike and

Chesterfield Cigarettes

12c; 2 for 23c $1.18 Carton

Ms HYGEIA NURSE 8-ounce, Complete 15c HYGEIA BRE Red or Black... 15c HYGEIA NUttS BOTTLE, 8-ounce

5c ANTI-COLIC NIPPLES

23c ASTS, n ***\

rn.tOTm.6C

2 for 2 3 c

6 for 2 5 C

$1.25 PARKE-DAVIS STAN­DARDIZED COD A A UVEA OIL VOC

$1.00 PARKE-DAVIS AMERICAN OIL 79c $1.25 PIERCE'S FA- Q Q VORITE PRESCRIPTION -1 O C

$1.50 LYDIA PINKIIAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND

FREE 50c

Peau Do ix Cream $1.00

10 genu] Gillette

'ube of Shaving

with each Pick age of

MBIT Type Blades

89c

10c Palmolive Samp

4 lor 25c 12 for 73c

10c LUX T0ILE*. 3 for 19c

Ma WALGREEN

4 far 28c Ms SAYMANS WONDER SOAP

89c $1.25 S . S. S. Tonic „....79c $2.00 S. S. S. T o n i c . $1.29

$1.00 OLAFSF.N'S PURE NORWE­GIAN COD LIVER (VA

OIL | 79c Me RUBBING ALCOHOL O __ COMPOUND iOC

WALGREEN IMPORTED I - A RUSSIAN OIL, Pint OUC

$1.00 Ovaltine ...

90c MELLIN'S FOOD -.

75c BORDEN'S MALTED MILK

$1.00 HORLICK'S MALTED MILK ..

$3.78 HORLICK'S MALTED MILK

m $2.79

28c BORDEN'S Q At. EAGLE BRAND MILK J for *KJC

Mo LYNDHURST A *\m TOILET TISSUE O f o r l D C

• fer 47c 12 far 89c

**-.•_?;

$1.80 KNIGHT HOT AQ__ WATER BOTTLE afOC $1.50 KNIGHT FOUNTAIN SYRINGE, with Com- Q O ^ plete aet Attachments v O v

KOTEX Z for 69C 60c Kotex Sanitary Belt Free

$1 .00 Nujol 56c

78c Bellana . 83c

40c Pluto W a t e r 29c

$1.25 Bisodol 89c

Two 25c Jtagea of

New Improve. Briargate Tobacco

Free with pur­chase of Mello

Fello Pipe at $1.00

i&LMOtlVE

SOAP 12 fer 74c

COCOA ALMOND SOAP

12 fer SSe VEGETABLE

3 for 29 c

$1.00 Ovof-wrin...........^ 89c

70c Sloan's Liniment ......49c

25c Hydrogen Peroxide.. . . . . . .19c

35c Hinkle Pills, 100's 23c

$1.00 VAPEX 7 Q for Head Colds " W

60c Scott's Emulsion ..................43c

$1.00 Scott'a Emulsion 89c

$1.50 Petrolagar 97c

25c Thoro *. 19c 35c JUSTRITE CLEANING 9 0 FLUID . b J C

35c Gold Dust. 25c

C A D r n M T W E N H - D A Y TREATMENT: 2 Bottlei Sargon # Q A A - > / \ I \ V l U n l and Bottle Sargon Soft Mass Pilla, $1.30 value W . l / U

gagBgggg1? • •) WH IH It. KIN!

10c Old Dutch C l e a n s e r . . . .

Se Lighthouse Cleanser—. —..

12c LUX FLAKES

50c White King Granu­

lated Soap

35c

SOMETHING SAVED ON EVERYTHING

A Fami ly Store! That's just tha way ta feel about Pay'n Takit—a store far Ike whole fan-fly. Drop In any time; bring hubby: ahow h i a this up-to-date method of retting his meal .—show him bow YOU help in making his pay-check go so much farther. And the children—they a n always welcome at Pay'n Takit. When they come ttf themselvee ow men gfao them special attention. Make Pay'n Takit your food Mere, today!

Price. Effective Friday and Saturday, Oet. $ and 4

Tuna, Mission, No. % c a n . . . . 14c Pink Salmon,

No. 1 tall cans 4 for 39c Jam, Marasca Loganberry,

3-lb. jar 59c Oleo, Holiday Brand lb. 12c Peanut Butter, Max-i-muM,

lb. can 17c

Milk M a x - i - m u M

An exceptionally low price.

Highway

5 oz. cans

cans

Flour Globe A-l

A Flour for All Purposes

lOlb.ac-39'

Ovaltine One Uncle Wiggily mug free with each 6-oz. can at

Delicatessen Salads, all kinds lb. 19c

Veal Loaf, home m a d e . . . . lb. 35c

Stuffed Bell Peppers 3 for 25c Chili Beans, home cooked. Ib. 19c

U. S. Extras Medium Size

Every Egg Guaranteed

doz. 35c Bakery Dept.

A-Y Bread 7c White and whole wheat, large 24-oz. loaf.

Apple Sauce Cake. . each 15c

Ginger Snaps ..,., Ib. 9c

Tobacco Dept. Philadelphia Cigars 3 for25c

Regular 10c valua.

Mail Poach and Beech­nut Tobacco -3 for 25c

Cigarettes Carton $1.10 Lucky Strike, Camel, Chesterfield, Old Gold.

Soda Fountain Hot Plate Luncheon 30c

Choice of Creamed Chicken on Toast. Roast Beef or Vegetable Plate—with Salad, Vegetable. Hot Rolls and Butter. Choice of 5c Drink.

Hot Beef Sandwich 20c With Potatoes. Gravy and Vegetable.

Giant Ice Cream Soda 10c

Candy Dept. After Dinner Mints

LiO. . . . . . . . . . . . . l v C

Honeycomb Chips Lb. 35c

Blanched Salted Peanuts lA lb. . . 15c

Meat Market Specials Legs of Lamb lb. 25c

Choice medium size legs of fancy spring lamb.

Pot Roast lb. 15c Shoulder chuck, choice steer beef.

Sirloin or Round Steaks lb. 25c Choice steer beef, tender and juicy.

Lamb Chops lb. 29c Small loin, genuine spring lamb.

Ham lb. 29c Swift's Premium. Known the world over for its fine flavor. Whole or half.

Barracuda lb. 22c Strictly fresh.

Fresh Fruits and Vegetables Sweet Potatoes, nice size .6 lbs. 25c Tomatoes, No. 1 grade 3 lbs. 9c Apples, fancy Bellflower 6 lbs. 17c Bananas, firm, yellow ... 6lbs,25c Cranberries, early Blacks lb. 19c Grapes, fancy Tokays • 3 lbs. 13c

1445 Fourth St. Santa Monica

_______________ ImtMai m _____• _•_-_-_-•

§&

__- ____________n_i-i-i-i-HH

LARGE MILITARY DISPLAY ef parading troops on General

IN MEXICO—President Ortiz Rubio of Mexico bestows the commandery Miguel Acosta, following one of tha largest military displays in tha history

of the country.

B E A L SHEIK I N V A D E S HOLLYWOOD—Abdeslam B a n Mohammed Khoubarik, of Mo­rocco, ia tha first real sheik in years to come to Hollywood studios. Ha ia to advise on the filming of a picture. He is de­scribed as having five wives and 18 children—and prefers bru­

nettes.

MARCONI'S NEW HONOR— Marquis Guglielmo Marconi, fa­ther of radio, has been named president of the Italian academy, which in turn makea him a mem-bar of the Fascist grand council, mort important executive body of

the Fascist government.

HONEYMOONING—U. S. Senator Robert M. La Follette of Wis­consin and hia bride, tha former Miss Rachel Wilson Young of Washington, hia secretary, are caught by the camera as they enjoy

honeymoon near Hayward, Wis.

MISS BARRYMORE—This por* trait study of littltf Dolores Ethel Barrymore, daughter of John Barrymore and Dolores Costello Barrymore, was made by them at

their Beverley Hills estate.

ASIA'S WEALTHIEST—Reput­ed to be the richest man in Asia, the Maharaja Manikya Behadur ef Tripur, India, is snapped in Prague, Czecho-Slovakia, en route

to Paris

WORLD'S TALLEST—This is a view of the Empire State building. New York's and the world's tallest, after the completion of the steel work, 1,048 feet (85 stories) above Thirty-fourth street and Fifth

avenue. HOPE THIS DOESN'T INVADE AMERICA—German office seekers begin use of loud speakers in

motor cam ta force Berlin crowds to hear them declaim.

AFTERMATH OP EXPLOSION—Property damage due to explo­sion of powder plant at Mukileto, Wash., ia placed at $500,000. Ona womaa was killed and 60 persons Injured, a score of them

aeriousiy.

THURSDAY, OCTOBER % 1930 EVENING OUTLOOK, SANTA MONICA, CALIFORNIA PAGE MINE

Girl Works and P Studies Business Willis Collage R e p o r t s

Many Students Placed in Positions

Semiweekly Luncheons for Faculty Provide Muck Valuable Experience For Youthful Cooks in Garfield School's Domestic Science Classes

Meals Prepared by Girls Prove Popular With

Instructors

Miss Mary Dodd, 241 Marine street, a Santa Monica high school student of 1830, la now taking a stenographic course at Willis Busi­ness college and working half-days at the Girl Scout headquarters.

Irene Kinslow, 413 Linnie canaf. Venice, a Venice high school grad­uate of 1930, waa placed frdm the stenographic department of Willis last week with Dickinson and Gil­lespie, real estate operators at Del Rey.

Miss Polly Swainbank, 144 Pacific street. Ocean Park, a graduate of Hollywood high school, 1929, was placed last week from the steno­graphic department with the Jewel Furniture Co.. Santa Monica.

Placed With Dairy Miss Dorothea Lyons, 409 Plf-

teenth street, a popular Samohi student of last year, completed s stenographic course at Willis- and accepted a position last week with the Life trust Bond Corp., West-wood. .Miss Ora McNally, 815 Fourteenth

street, .id special review work in the secretarial department at Willis during September, and was placed last week with the Brentwood Dairy Co., Venice.

Miss Beatrice Ball, 322 Tenth street, a graduate from the secre­tarial department, has accepted a position with the Purltas Water Co.

44 Position Calls Kermli, Burford, 2332 Twenty-

first atreet, a.Venice high school graduate of 1928 and former master councilor of the Bay District De­Molay, ia completing a course in higher accounting and auditing at Willis this week.

Miss Barbara Ward, secretary at Willis, reports employment heavy during the month of September. Forty-four position calls from busi­ness and profesional men In the Bay cities came to the employment de­partment this month.-

' In order to provide practical training and experience for girls in the cooking classes' ln Garfield school, tha teachers ln the school twice a weak become "lunch cus­tomers" aad am served In the home economics room.

As tba cost of the food must be kept under 20 cents a plate, plan­ning the lunch requirea serious con­sideration.

Plan Meal Day Before Planning ts done tha day before.

Careful consideration ts given to balanced diet, food values, cost of materials and attractive service. That the girls are successful as

P.-T. A. to Meet in Hot Springs in 1931

According to Patricia D'Este, press chairman for the Santa Monica council of parents and teachers, the thirty-fifth annual convention of the national congress of parents and teachers will be held in Hot Springs, Ark., tiie week of May t, 1931.

This was the message received re­cently from the state president, Mrs. W. A. Price, elm Is attending tha national board of managers meet­ing in Swampscott, Mass.

Mrs. Price said that the national president, Mrs. Hugh Bradford, has been asked to speak before the su­perintendent's section of the N. I , A., which will meat In Detroit in February.

Grant The B-4 and A-4 grades now will

have the privilege of hearing good radio programs during their music period. The radio has been con­nected ln tha auditorium and will be probably used at F.-T. A meet­ings also.

The children whom Mrs. Pauline Wright, principal, has had for three semesters, now are la B-2 grade. Their motto is "Avoid sickness by guarding health." Every child ln this grade entered the first day and has maintained 100 per oent in attend­ance for the first month of school.

Stupid Musical hattie Rapped

Supervisor Tells of Work Being Dona ia High

School Classes

BUSH TO SPEAK AT CONVENTION

IN BERKELEY

Roosevelt P.-TA Will Join Circle

Study Club Plan's Value Explained at Meeting

by Mrs. Pierson "The study circle will help you

mothers to understand and develop the child In his oam way Instead of according to your way. Aad tt will show you tha easiest way of ap­proaching him," said Mrs. George Pierson ia har talk before the P a r e a t - Teacher associatloa of Roosevelt school yesterday.

Mrs. Pierson told of tha valua of tha case problem method, where parents write ont their cases, aad they am discussed anonymously at the circle meetings. She also rec­ommended the course which Miss Barbara Greenwood is conducting In the high school. Mrs. Pierson is chairman of the Lincoln and Frank­lin study clubs.

The Roosevelt Parent-Teacher as­sociatloa voted to Join tha Lincoln study club.

Mrs. J. R. Tobin, president, eea in charge of yesterday's meeting. The members decided to put up drapes and curtains la the bunga­low.

Mrs. Fred Herman sang two se­lections, "Thank God for a Gar­den" aad "All For You." She was accompanied on tho piano by Miss Virginia Shoemaker.

The following chairmen have been appointed: Mrs. Harry Ash way, pro­gram; Mrs. F. W. Herman, ways and means; Mrs. Russell Hart, refresh­ments; Mrs. Roy Livingston, press; Mrs. C. C. Hatch, visual education; Mrs. E. a Brann. hospitality; Mra. W. R. Weber, philanthropy; Miss Josephine Hodgkins, advisory, ami Bin. F. B. Gabbert, membership.

P.-T. A. Body Meets At Bebhardt Home

The Nightingale Parent-Teacher association met recently with Mra. H. A. Gebhardt, president, presid­ing.

Two vocal numbers were given by Mrs. Ben Decker. A social hour fol­lowed the business meeting.

To Those Wbo Are Interested in tlfae Field oJ En slm ess

HE WILLIS SANTA MONICA BUSINESS COLLEGE offers standard, Accredited Courses, un­der the direction of efficient man­agement and capable teachers.

TO PARENTS, GUARDIANS, AND THE PUBLIC IN GEN­ERAL:

You are cordially invited to make a thorough inspection of our premises, observe our modern methods, and see an institution in operation which is properly train­ing young men and women to take their places in American business life.

W i l l i s MONICA B u s i n e s s College 1421 Fourth Street

Santa Monica, California R. E. PARKER, Owntr

Girls in the cooking classes in Garfield school are pictured above preparing ne of the luncheons which they serve twice a week to the teachers. Under the direction of Miss Sadie Long, home economics teacher, these girls plan, prepare and serve the lun cheons, for which the teachers pay 20 cents each.

Pupils Plan Gigantic Mural Art Work Showing California History

It plans now under consideration caa be worked out, Lincoln junior high school cafeteria Will have ona of the most attractive schemes of mural decoration la this section of the country, and pupils of the art department will ha furnished with an interesting and practical project. Plans involve covering tha middle section of the cafeteria walls with a

heavy canvas, which will be painted

Scholarship Race Gets Under Way

Honor Pupils' Names to Be Printed on Outlook

School Paga Work of the scholarship commit­

tee of the John Muir Junior Civic league Is now well under way.

The committee, which is under di­rection of Miss Helen Perkins, spon­sor teacher, and Ruth Rich, secre­tary, haa announced plans for the year.

All pupils making an average Of B in school work at the end of the first quarter are to have their names posted on the honor roll aad pub­lished oa the Outlook school page

In addition, each teacher, once each month, is to submit the name of the pupil who has done outstand­ing work la her department for that period.

Specimens of good work will be exhibited on the bulletin board and amy appear on the school page of the Outlook.

Members of tiie committee antici­pate keen competition for scholar' ship honors, mid tha same active interest accorded to this depart­ment that is given to other school activities.

John Adams John Adams junior high students

are getting more fun out of their English courses since revisions, rec­ommended bf Or. J. Martin Storz-mand, director Of curriculum, have been made.

The bugbear tar so many stu­dents, grammar, is being taught through correct usage rather than through formal rules aad defini­tions.

Ninth graders especially are en­joying Chapman's "Using English," a book cleverly illustrated with ear-toons by Fred G. Cooper, associate editor of "Life."

with scenes depicting epochal events ar movements ln the history of Southern California.

Tbe paintings, which would be done in chronological order, would include the period of the early In­dians in the Southwest, tbe Span­ish explorers, the establishment of tha missions aad a picturizatlon of mission Ufa with tne padres aad I neophytes, tha era of the Spanish rancheros with their vast land hold­ings, coming of the forty-niners, early American colonization aad later events bringing tha pictorial history down to the present age.

Work by Pupils All the work will be done by pupils

In Lincoln, under the direction of Miss Mary Whelan, art supervisor, and of the art teachers in tha school. It is estimated that the work would require all of this year for completion, with the possibility of its being made a two year project.

The plan, which was presented by J. G. McNeely. principal, to the board of education at Its last meet­ing, was enthusiastically approved by the board members, who advised McNeely to obtain aa estimate of the cost of materials, which, they said, would be provided If the ex­pense were not excessive.

Plan Landed Commenting oe the proposed

plan, Dr. George F. Harding, presi­dent of the board, said be consid­ered the project desirable from every standpoint.

"Th. more that academic instruc­tion oaa bo linked wtth practical. Interesting aad useful achievement," he declared, "the more efficient our system of education becomes. I hope that the teachers aad pupils will be able to work out plans which win result ln the completed i project. Every citizen in Santa Monica will enjoy seeing the work when It ia finished and will ba in-terested in Ita progress."

hostesses is evidenced by the fact that the teachers, after a year's trial of the plan, asked that the cook­ing project be continued.

A knowledge of sanitation, care of the kitchen and its various uten­sils, preparation of food, setting the table and serving of guests are In­cluded la the course planned by Miss Long.

A manager is chosen for each luncheon and she receives experi­ence ln the responsibility of pre­paring and serving a meal.

Valuable Training Girls who have had this training

la tile Garfield classes never will experience that panicky feeling at the "last minute" preceding the

] meal when all the "finishing touch­es" have to be applied at once.

The duties of preparation, cook­ing, serving and dish washing are divided among the girls, each hav­ing her turn at the different tasks.

One of the most important fea­tures of the project, according to Miss Long, is the fact that the girls are encouraged to carry into their own homes the benefits of theis school experience.

Typical Monu A typical menu of the lunches

served is the one which was being | prepared Tuesday when the pho­tographer "caught" the girls at work. It consisted of scalloped corn, salad, baked apples, graham wafers and tea.

Girls ia the Tuesday serving class were Helen Follette, Anna May Lyons, Jessie Guerrera, Teresa Mandez, Mary Blanco, Emma Va­lencia, Mary Ohmos, Josephine Mo­rales, Maria Valles, Magdallna Her-rara, Lupe Garcia and Yamaka Yamada.

Affected, stupid prattle about mu­sic can be the result of a course in appreciation if It is not properly taught. The appreciation courses at Santa Monica high school aim to stimulate intelligent, creative listening and not to give the student a high flown, artificial line of musi­cal talk.

This was the substance of an address given by Miss Alice Rogers, supervisor of music in Santa Mon­ica's schools, at the opening meet­ing of the Franklin Parent-Teacher association yesterday. More than 200 Franklin mothers heard Miss Rogers' talk and joined in the ten minutes of community singing in which she led. She outlined the work, given in vocal, Instrumental and appreciation, the three divisions of school instruction in her depart­ment. In closing, she reviewed the concerts that will be given for boys and girls this year by the Santa Monica Bay Music association and the two concerts by Los Angeles Philharmonic orchestra and urged parents to support them.

Mrs. H. B. Bagley, president of t h e association, presented Mrs. George Pierson, who Is to head the study circle work of Franklin this year. Mrs. Pierson discussed with the members the proposal to make Roosevelt school P.-T. A. a partici­pant fh the study circle work.

At the tea hour which followed, Mrs. Ernest Blenkhorn. president of the Santa Monica council, and Mrs Pierson presided.

McKinley Chorus Gets Good Start

The McKinley mixed chorus has started the new term with much enthusiasm.

Members were selected by test as to pitch and music reading ability. Rehearsals are held twice a week under the direction of Mrs. Virginia Stewart.

The chorus plans to appear at special assemblies and F.-T. A. meetings.

The following are members: Mil­dred Barry, Helen Mae Bassett, Betty Jermin, Dorothy McCall, Trinidad Vargas, Robert Francis, Russell Pruett, Movine EsIIck, Jean Fetherolf, Lavinla Lee, Norma Waffle, Jessie Kaatz, Amalla Soto. Mabel Shakami, May Cavalho, Ma­rlon Carlson, Geraldine Glascock, Edith Love, Louise Phillips, Marie Wilcox, Bob Wilkinson, Ned Rogers, Margaret Allen, Roberta Chambers, Josephine Tankard, Charles Dear­born, Jack Doman, Gordon Heinmfi­ler, Susan Mann, Edna Abbott, Alec Stephans, Theda Goforth. Helen Stephens, Shigiporl Kawa gove, Elena Smith, Caroline Razo, Jane Osborne, Dorothy Gaston, Louise Robinette, Dorothy Ware and Elean­or Koch.

Madison New equipment in a school ls

always welcome and interesting. We think our new radio ls just the thing and we are sure it will hold our in­terest a long time. The Multiplex display fixture, another new addi­tion, will be quite useful in our library.

Evening High

Venice High Kenny Lowe, school noise maker.

Three new classes met for the first time this week and frdm all in- | dications are going to prove very popular. They are the class in aerodynamics taught by John D. Weaver; the class ln fitting fabri­cation, taught by Raymond H. Schulz, and the class in drawing and

I blue print reading, taught by Rob-I art Anderson. All of these men are from the Douglas Aircraft Co. staff •

I and are able through their experi­ence to make these courses practical as well as interesting. Anyone ln-

I terested in any of these branches of | the aeronautics work should see the

Last May the opportunity room staged a very clever Marionette show. Costumes, scenery and pup­pets were all made by the students. The play, which was also written by the pupils, was taken from "The Wizard of Oz." Mrs. E. F. Kline took moving pictures of the play, which turned out very successfully. Last week the teachers, students and several members of the research de­partment were invited to the audi­torium to see the movie. Thomas A. Wood, principal, found the film so interesting that he purchased one for the school in order to have a permanent record of the project.

is organizing a Rooters' club for the instructors about the requirements

The course of study in literature fon the seventh and eighth grades also has become mora interesting under tba aaw plan. A part of each semester la devoted te OU Intensive study of a law classics and five weeks la devoted to "free" reading.

During tha five weeks pupils are permitted to read as many books aa they can from a library selected for their grades. The collection con­tains Interesting books of travel, biography and fiction.

purpose of making bigger and better noise at the games. His goal ls a membership of 150.

Parliamentary practice, panto­mime, character portrayal, story telling. Interpretative reading and dramatics are among tha features which make - tfaa oral expression courses popular.

The main purpose of oral expres­sion la to aid pupils to acquiring an easy and natural manner of af­fective speaking la private, social aBd business life.

Pupils work to overcome self-con­sciousness, to stand with ease before aa audience, to think clearly and to express their thoughta In effective speech. The plan is not to "show off" a few talented pupils, but to furnish practical training and ex­perience for all.

The Delphiqns, Venice's honor so­ciety, have elected their officers for the ensuing torn. They are: Sam Jaffe, president; Deborah Sharlip, vice president; Virginia Barr. secre­tary-treasurer; Mandeli Luskin, press representative.

The installing of more than $1,400 worth of equipment in the cafeteria has Just been completed. An elec­tric dish washer, aa electric egg beater, two loa water drinking foun­tains and an electric percolator are among the Improvements.

for entrance. The aerodynamics class and the fitting fabrication I classes meet on Wednesday evenings and the blue print reading class on Tuesday evenings from 6:30 to 9:30.

Classes in technical mechanics, which were organized two weeks ago, are proving very interesting, and the members of the classes are en-1 thusiastic about the work as they get farther into it. The advanced section meets on Tuesday evenings and the beginning section on Thurs­day evenings.

Senior pictures are being taken this week for the Venice annual. "The Gondolier."

Officers far the senior A been chosen. They are: Rate Olsen, president; Kenny Lowe, vice presi dent: Cecil Smith, secretary; Oil bert Cooper, treasurer.

A cleanup campaign has been

The beginning Spanish class was divided on Monday evening because of the overcrowded condition in Herbert J. Horton's room. W. O. Lund berg, from John Adams junior high school, ls taking one section while Horton continues with Mm other. The work in both sections

have I will be tfaa same, aad It is hoped that from this large beginning group there will be enough to start an advanced section next year. At the present time there is no advanced Spanish being given.

launched by the student body presi- Mi —l, O_._._._»# D *§. . -tat, Lucille Lynch, in an effort to{ itign SCtlOOl Jr.mM •___.•

To Meet Wednesday secure cooperation of the students for a clean campus.

October S. tfaa boys' league will hava the pleasure of hearing Tom Leib, coach of Loyola university, speak oa "Football."

ADDITIONAL SCHOOLS ON PAGE U

Interesting programs. With good I speakers and musical numbers, are j being planned by the high school and junior college Parent-Teacher j

I association, Mrs. Roland Valle, j ' president, announced yesterday at I the board meeting. The first regu- <

lar meeting of the association will I I faa held at 2:30 p. m. next Wednes-1 day in the school.

Several boys and girls living in Topanga canyon and Malibu beach would find it a long walk to school If transportation was not provided tet them. The Topanga bus calls for the pupils in the morning and returns them to their homes in the evening. Those using this bus are:

Peggy Barnes, Las Flores Inn; Cleo Bennett. Pacific Palisades; Con­stance Carre, David Carre and John Carre, Castle Rock Beach; Carl Kays, Topanga lane; Alen Longacre, 17925 Tramonto drive; Teddy Ran-berg. 33 Shady lane; Edna Mae Spence, Pacific Palisades: Fannie Wright, Topanga Beach; Allen Zip-kim, star route.

We are always pleased to have parents and friends visit the school to see what the pupils are doing and to meet tbe teachers. Among the visitors to our school the past month were:

F. F. Martin, superintendent of schools; Miss Elizabeth Hamlin, su­pervisor of elementary instruction; Mrs. Laura C. Crawford, assistant director of research; Dr. J. Harold Williams, director of research; Mrs. E. F. Kline and sons, Jack and John; Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Schoen-wetter, Mra E. S. Powers, Mrs. R. Carrington, Mrs. G. L. Stannard. Mrs. H. Schmidt.

Mrs. Billie Bryan, Mrs. Miriam P. Kirkbride, Mrs. John Lasley, Mrs. A. F. Shropshire, Mrs. George P. Cruickshank. Mrs. A. Jensen, Mrs. George Kalichman, Mrs. John S. Robson, Mrs. Francis Parti, Mrs. C. H. Robeson. Mrs. Albert Flavell, Mrs. E. M WeU, Miss Edith Stickles, M. C, Layton, Mrs. Thomas Bell, London. England; Mrs. James Yoes, Mrs. Edna R. Cook, Mrs. R. Mace Delp

hut. Lawrence Goldman, *Mrs. Irving Kirk Mra Walter Smith. Mrs. EaweU Davidson, Mrs. Phelip Stevens. Mrs. George R. Warrick Mrs. Hubbard. Mrs. John H. Mau­rer. Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Terrell, Mrs. Carl F. White. Mrs. Benjamin T. Remington, MlS C. W. Lyman, Mrs. E. V. Sturgeon. Mrs. R. L McLean, Miss Josephine Powers. Glendale teacher; W. B. Townseud. Stanford uni varsity.

Dr. Ralph II. Bush, director of Santa Monica junior college, who wili be one of the speakers at the eleventh annual conven­tion of the American Association of Junior Colleges.

Schools Present immodest

Employes, Students Give $55 Mora Than in '

1989 Campaign Surpassing last year's gifts to tfaa

Comunity Chest by $55, the pubUc schools of Santa Monica today re­ported contributions for this year to the total of $2,247.73.

Of this, $391.53 was contributed by the pupils and the remaining $1,-

1854.20 was from teachers. Janitors, clerks and other employes in the

I school system. Faculty contributions were 100 per

cent in all the elementary schools, ; and to Roosevelt school goes the I honor of being 100 per cent both la teacher and pupil contrib" oaa.

Adults to the Americ Wt tion j school gave a total of $13.50. -

Totals from the various schools, including gifts both from teachera and pupils, were as follows:

Washington, $104.51; Roosevelt, $96.75; McKinley. $195.33; Madison, $105.23; John Muir, $133.34: Jeffer­son, $60.48: Grant, $51.79; Garfield, $86.02; Franklin, $116.23; John Adams junior high, $170.62; Lin­coln Junior high. $248.38; high school, $556, of which $150 was con­tributed by the student body; ad­ministrative office, $250.50; janitors, gardeners and other employes, $59.50.

Dr. Ralph H. Bush, director of Junior college, will be one of the speakers at the eleventh annual convention of the American Associa­tion of Junior Colleges, which will be held November 18-20 ln Berke­ley.

The Berkeley meeting will be the first to be held on the Pacific coast, Texas having been the farthest west the convention previously has gath­ered.

Dr. Bush spoke at the last con­vention, which was held ln Atlantic City. His subject for the Berkeley meeting will be "Junior College Standards ln Terms of an Integrated Secondary Curriculum."

PUPILS WRITE OWN POEMS FOR PUPPET PLAY

School Body Aids Good Citizenship

The D. C. M. Is an organization for the encouragement of good citi­zenship among the children of the platoon system at McKinley school. The letters D. C. M. stand for de­sirable citizens of McKinley.

Pupils become eligible for one month upon the recommendation ef each one of their teachers. Home slips may be used if desired for extra points.

Officers will be elected at the first regular business meeting, next week.

The four points on which children are marked are reliability, coopera­tion, courtesy and self-control. Red and white badges are worn by the members; also special badges are worn by the 10 per cent of the mem­bership having highest honors.

The A-5 class at McKinley school has been busy, under Miss Elizabeth Garretson's direction, writing an original play for the school's first puppet show, "Hansel and Gretel."

Three verses were needed during the play, so several children volun­teered to write them, in addition to the scene on which they were work­ing.

The verses finally chosen were the following:

"THE CAT'S POEM" By ROBERT ALPERT

Follow, follow, I will lead Through the torest. across the mead

To thc house all in.ike of cake. There tho (oodles you may take.

"HANSEL'S CHARM By JANE TANKARD

Pretty kitty, hear our charm, Please to lead us from all harm Lead us home the safest way; We will do our best to repay.

"SANDMAN'S POEM" By REOINA ATWOOD

Sleep, sleep, sleep My children, s. inly sleep. Dream of the land where roofs are made

of cake And the sills are sweets that you may take. But do not dream of the poor old hut With no milk and bread, but dream Of what I say: Bleep, sleep, sleep. My children, gently sleep.

John Muir Pupils of John Muir enjoyed sn

I hour's program of song presented last Friday by sixteen boys and girls of the Alabama orphanage. The group ls making a tour with some of their teachers presenting programs throughout the country to raise money for the rebuilding of their school, which was washed away In the flood last year. Their con­cert sung without accompaniment was of typical Negro songs, includ­ing many spirituals.

The boys and girls of John Muir who bave not lost time due to ab­sence or tardiness for the first month have been awarded perfect attendance certificates. According to the system ln present use in the Santa Monica schools, a pink certifi­cate ls awarded for a month's per­fect record, a yeUow one for the semester and a blue slip to the regu­lar 0 o'clock scholar for a year.

Of the 590 pupils enrolled at John Muir, 317, or more than 53 per cent, received the pink certificates, thus showing that perfect attendance and punctuality is the rule rather than the exception.

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We are outfitters for boys from crown to toe. and here jtm will find what exactly Ma year boy*, requirements, aad what exactly fits your financial budget. Remember, we seO at just as high prices as yon would care to boy, aad as Inexpensively aa you should bay. Oar quality la quality—THE BEST FOR THE MONEY.

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SANTA MONICA, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1980

Art Association To Open Exhibit

71 Works Selected From Members to Be Shown

During October Fifty-eight paintings and nine

pieces ol sculpture bave been chosen from the works of tha artists of the Santa Monica Art association lor the fall exhibition, which will open tomorrow night in the gallery of Ut. library. The show will be open to tba public for tbe remainder of the month.

The following paintings will be seen: "Afterglow, "Petunias" and "Spirit of the Mountain," by Ef fie P. Harper; "Firelight," Portrait of Aa Artist," "Gateway," "Groote Kerk" and "Capistrano Mission Bells," by Stewart Robertson; "Boats" and "Morning at Fish Harbor," by Bertha T. Coler; "Portrait of Miss Janet Q." and "Portrait of Miss J. G.." iQr Ruth Cass Elliott; "Under Sail" aad "Awaiting Her Turn," by •J. Duncan Gleason; "Rainy Day," Mrs. Charles XL Turner; "Reflec­tion," William J. Wilson; "Cactus Garden," "Mexican Shacks" and "Yellow Hills," Paul Sample.

LauriU Showing: "Shimmering Sea," "Uttle Har­

bor" and "Sand Dunes," Cornelia de Haaf; "High Sierra," Paul Lauritz; "Tbe End of a Perfect Day," L a u r a W. Mathiesen; "Spring," "Sunset at tbe Canyon," "Sand Dunes" and "Trout Stream," George Barker; "in tbe Canyon," "Carson Peak" and "Blue Lake," Helen Wolhaupter; "The Frolic of the Surf" and "November's Mirror," George Henry Melcher; "Desert Si­lence," J. Lawrence O'Hagan; "The Last Rays" and "Spring Moods," Morrell Gage; "Purple Shadows," Harry C. Smith.

"Spirit Mountain" and "Mt. San Jacinto," Walter Barron Currier; "Gaviota Pass," George Schreiber; "Old Verdugo Homestead," Lillian Ferguson; "Sunday Afternoon" and "Aloha Oe," A n n i e Huntington Allen; "Humble Offering," Alice Weary; "Still Life" and "Baby's Head," Marjorie C. Murphy; "Can-nas," Edris E. Nevens; "A Fantasy." Dorothy Sklar; "Tbe Cove," A. R. Tremellen; "Garden of the Cluny," "Noon Siesta," "Las Pulgas Riding Academy" and "Youth," O l i v e Barker.

Shows Photos The following photography of

Fred William Carter: "Portrait Head," "Modern Williams," "Betty," "A Study" and "Eugene Morahan."

The following sculpture: "Spring," "Flame," "Portrait of an Artist" and "Bobby," Bertha T. Coler; "Flor­ence" and "Tanquitz Maiden," Mary

• D. Cassidy; "Anna Helolse Ara-™ besque," "Arabesque Line Rhythm"

and "Dance Position," Tess Razalle.

RECOVERS OWN CAR STOLEN ON

VENICE STREET VENICE, Oet 2—Although he en­

listed tbe aid of tba police ln search­ing tor his new sedan, which had been stolen from Its parking place in front of bla home, it remained for T. W. Parcel of 1366 Riviera avenue, to recover tbe automobile himself.

The theft was reported to bave occurred between the hours of 4:45 and 6:10 p. m. The machine was found two blocks away at 9:30 o'clock.

Venice Cleaners * Raided by Thief

VENICE, Oct. 2—Two suits of men's clothing, valued at $25 each, were stolen from a delivery wagon operated by the Classy Cleaners of Venice, according to a report to the police yesterday by M. Wilenske, 248 Horizon avenue.

Wilenske, operator of the estab­lishment, stated that he left his car parked oa Pacific avenue at Avenue 26, and that tbe theft occurred dur­ing his absence of ten minutes.

Speckled Band' To Open Tonight

Little T h e a t e r Play to Be Given 3 Nights in

Miles Playhouse Tonight will mark tbe opening of

the Educational Little theater's of­fering, "The Speckled Band." l b a play will be given tor three suc­cessive nights in tbe Miles Memorial playhouse.

Principal roles ln tbe mystery drama mil be played by Mary Webb, Fred Dodge, Malcolm McTaggart and Al Post.

Sixteen other players complete the cast.

P.-T A tO HonOT ! ^Ir' COttts ^ 6 ^P Varied Program of lifesaving. First Aid and i i i , m Dressmaking in Character Building Activities for Women of Future Members at lea

Ua Ca La Aa StlidentS On Radio Program

Appearing on a program of col­lege songs to be presented over KHJ this evening from 7:30 to 9, stu­dents and alumni of the University of California at Los Angeles will give a medley of university songs and hymns.

Other colleges and universities in Southern California will participate in the program, which will have as its opening numbers two California songs, "By the Old Pacific's Rolling Waters," and "Hail to the Hills of Westwood." Leon Errol, stage and screen star, also will be featured in this program.

U. C. L. A. Seniors to Hold Hop Saturday

Inaugurating the social season, the senior class of the University of California at Los 'Angeles will give Its fall informal dance la the Brentwood Country club Saturday night.

Although no outside entertain­ment has been scheduled, some­thing novel will be offered, accord­ing to Carl Schlicke, president Ot the class. Glen Edmunds' orches­tra will furnish music for the affair.

P a c i f i c Palisades Body Will Hold Its First

Meeting of Year Pacific Palisades Parent-Teacher

association will entertain wltb a tea next Thursday at the school in honor of new members. This will be the first association meeting of the year.

Mrs. George Pierson, president of the Lincoln Study circle, will speak on ehlld problems. Mra. Norma Bow-era, kindergarten Instructor, will not on a "stunt," bat has not revealed what It wUl be.

After visiting various associations of parents and teachers two months la the East, Mtt. Ford Pierson, vice president of the Pacific Pali­sades association aad chairman of the program committee, bas ob­tained some excellent ideas on many subjects and on the arrangement of programs, said Mrs. Peter Gadd, president.

The nursery school ln the Pacific Palisades was opened Monday with a reception at tba school in order to allow the mothers to n e the bun­galow and tbe methods of teaching that will to used, tin. Lillian An­glemyer, Instructor at tbe school, said.

"The children will study a project each week, such as birds for one week and squirrels another. Since the bungalow is in the woods, we have every opportunity to develop the natural tendency of the child to enjoy nature to the fullest de­gree," Mrs. Anglemyer concluded.

Workmen Escape in Venice Oil Blaze

VENICE, Oct. 2—Several men escaped uninjured yesterday after-noon when fire broke out in an oil pipe line being welded by a crew of workers at Avenue Thirty-nine and the Speedway, according to a report to the Venice police by H. C. Vicini, an employe of the American States Water Co. Slight damage was done to an electric motor by the blaze.

Vicini reported that a change was being made in the arrangement of several pipes owned by his com-

[ pany and the Del Rey OH and Re­fining Co. A joint was being welded, according to Vicini, when' someone released the oil into the line. The heat from the pipe ignited tbe oil.

Santa Monica Girl Scouts, one of I tta agencies supported bf Commu­nity Cbest funds, have underway an extensive program of character building activities, ranging from cooking and sewing ta camping, hiking,. lifesaving and first aid.

Under the supervision of Miss Marqua Kirkham, executive, and her corps of leaders, the organiza­tion carries on a continuous pro­gram the year 'round.

Some of the activities of the or­ganization were demonstrated re­cently in an exhibition held at the Santa Monica Bay Womans Club, the organization which originally sponsored the scout work in Santa Monica.

A feature of the work is the reg­ular Saturday camping and hiking event. :.*'.*¥-'•

Two Filipinos to Face High Court

Digno Brothers WiU Be Tried for Assault to

Commit Murder

Glider Meet to Be Held Oct. 4

P nzes Offered to Boys Making Best Models

as Shown in Test

Edith Warburton and Josephine The Girl Scouts in the lifesaving class, from left to right, are: Tankard; in the first aid. Patricia Fieldhouse. Virginia Wheeler, Mrs. Irene Fortune, Red Cross in­structor; Marian Kline, Ruth Mary Sanford and Barbara Williams in the bed. In the dressmaking group, the girls, from left to right, are: Fay Peterson, Lois Grant, Margaret Stannard and Helen Olraud.

Santa Monica Band WiU Play at Fair

The usual concerts played by the Santa Monica municipal band in the Ocean Park auditorium will to omitted tomorrow.

Francesco Ferullo, ' director, and his band will play at the Orange county fair, representing Santa Monica in the annual event of the neighboring county.

Crash Driver Gets BaU Pending Trial

Glenn Gotfredson. 1806 Corinth avenue, arrested yesterday morning on a reckless driving charge, is a t liberty today on $100 bail, with bis trial set by Judge John L. Webster for October 9 at 9 a. m. Gotfred­son la accused of having caused an accident at Pico boulevard and Twenty-eighth street by driving his car on the wrong side of the street.

Max Gardner, Los Angeles youth arrested Tuesday evening on a similar charge, following a collision at Fourteenth and Broadway, waa ordered released by Judge Webster after he posted a $500 surety bond for his appearance in police court on October 9.

Pictures Files in library Prove Both Entertaining and of Practical Value Do you want to see what a saucer-eyed porgy looks like? Or how

to design a Rumanian peasant's costume for a fancy dress ball? Would you like to see a picture of Blarney castle? Of an Eskimo igloo? Or pictures plates of American cacti, desert wild flowers, paintings of famous artists, Burmese batiks, African wild animals, period architecture or goldfish? All these are to be found in the picture files of the Santa Monica library.

Popular Feature The picture files, which were

started only a little more than a year ago by Miss Cornelia Helms, member of the library staff, are rap­idly becoming a popular feature of the library.

Art students are using them to obtain suggestions for design and decoration; gardeners refer to them when they wish to classify an un­familiar flower; prospective home owners pore over the house designs and library patrons with a half-hour to spare spend it at the files for the pleasure of looking at in­teresting pictures which have been

intelligently collected and systemati­cally classified.

2,500 Pictures in Files Of the 2,500 pictures now in­

cluded in the files, the most popular "set," according to library attaches, is the one of 400 costume designs.

Other "sets" frequently in demand are those showing illustrations of period architecture and furniture, while nature lovers enjoy the beau­tifully colored plates of flowers, fish, insects and animals.

A section devoted to artists and their famous paintings, recently started by Miss Helms, promises to

(Continued on Pane 19)

'Rush' Meadows Gets Term Cut

LOS ANGELES, Oct. 2 (CNS)— Good news, in the form of a court order reducing his sentence of from 70 to 200 years down to seven to twenty years, today reached George "Rush" Meadows, former University of Southern California football star, convicted of ten counts of grand theft.

Superior Judge Charles Fricke late yesterday ruled that Meadows' sentences should run concurrently. Daniel Beecher. chief trial deputy district attorney, had informed the court that bis office had no desire to keep the former grid hero in prison for life.

Meadows was convicted of swin­dling the family of John R. Os­borne, federal prisoner, out of nearly $35,000 on tbe promise that he would obtain a presidential pardon for the prisoner.

The first miniature glider meet to be held by the Santa Monica school playground will to next Sat­urday afternoon at 4 o'clock.

Boys of tbe Lincoln and John Adams junior high schools in Santa Monica and a number from, the Venice district are preparing gild­ers for entry, according to Leon Fletcher, shop instructor at John Adams, who will have charge of the meet, and who introduced the mak­ing of aircraft models in the shop courses of the Santa Monica schools.

Three prizes have been offered by Paul D. Chamberlain of the Cham­berlain Radiator works. The first Is a complete ground course, in­cluding two flights; second is two hours in ground work training; third is one hour in ground train­ing.

Place of the meet is on the bluff east of Clover field at the intersec­tion of Twenty-fifth street and Dewey avenue.

Chorus Work Class Opens in Venice

A class in chorus work under di­rection of Ralph Jennings Peterson is open at the Venice evening high school to all persons interested in chorus singing.

The class will meet each Wednes­day evening from 7 to 9 in Choral hall of the high school.

Of the four Filiplnoes held by the Santa Monica police following the shooting of Meleclo Andrion on tbe. afternoon of September 15. two were held to answer to the superior court 'on charges of assault with intent to

| commit murder. _ and two were re-I leased for want of sufficient evi-! dence when the quartet was given • j preliminary. hearing yesterday aft* I ernoon before Judge John L. Web-J ster.

Those held are Cyril Digno. 28, and Gregorio Digno, 20, brothers identified by Andrion as the men

I who shot, stabbed and clubbed him. Vincent Obsensa, driver of the car in which the Digno brothers at-

I tempted to escape, and Alipio Agnus, I who admitted to police that he had [ attempted to hide out the gun used in the assault, were both ordered

I freed by Judge Webster for want of I sufficient evidence to link them di­

rectly with the attack. Judge Webster fixed bail at $2,500

I for each of the Digno brothers, in default of which they were re­manded to the county jail last night.

Hearing of the case started shortly after noon and continued until early last evening, with almost half the city's Filipino population crowding the little courtroom, and batteries of attorneys on hand to act for each of the defendants. George Penny, deputy district attorney, prosecuted.

Venice Man Injured In Auto Accident

VENICE, Oct. 2—James B. Brum-field of 15 Clubhouse avenue, Ven­ice, sustained injuries to his head, shoulders and back In an accident which occurred at the intersection of Lincoln boulevard and Vernon avenue last night when the automo­bile he was driving was struck by a machine driven by Everett E. Stoner of the Zephyr hotel. Stoner was arrested on suspicion of driving an automobile while intoxicated.

Gordon Furst, 58 Market street, Venice, reported to the police that a woman driving a sedan automo­bile collided with his machine at the intersection of Brooks avenue and the Speedway, and that she failed to stop to ascertain tbe damage done. The hit-and-run driver ia al-leged to have swung into the Speed­way from Brooks avenue and to have continued south on the Speed­way following the accident.

MAHATMA GHANDI 61 POONA. Bombay Presidency. In­

dia. Oct. 2 (U.PJ—Mahatma Ghandi, leader of the Indian nationalist movement, passed his sixty-first birthday today in bla cell behind the massive walls of Yeravda Jail.

Matrons WUl Vie In Bible Contest

Judge Dailey S. Stafford win award the gold medal tonight to to given in the Scripture reading con­test for matrons at the First Con­gregational church, Venice.

In the contest, which is under auspices of the W. C, T. U., each entrant will give one reading and will be judged on memory, voice, enunciation and expression.

Mrs. May Hopkins, county direc­tor of the medal contests, will pre­side. Tho contest is open to all matrons In the Bay district.

DRAMATIC PRODUCTIONS TO BE GIVEN BY SCHOOL ORGANIZATION Collegiate Songs

To Be Plentiful J a y s e e Committee Will

Select Best Work of Student Composers

Jaysee will suffer no shortage of college songs this year.

Already the Women's Glee club has accepted eight songs from stu­dent composers to to submitted to a judging committee with the un­derstanding that all rated as "good" win te presented later to tbe stu­dent body for approval.

Members of the glee club have said that tte offerings are general­ly good and that tta college may find itself the possessor of a dozen oar more stirring compositions.

Secret • Committee The committee charged with the

judging wfll be made up of three students and /our faculty members but will remain incognito.

The secret measure is being adopted by the committee, some of the Jayseers suggest, in order to protect its members from reproaches rendered la the form of serenades by disappointed composers.

Other evidence of a successful vo­calizing season is seen In the coop­eration between the Men's and Women's Glee clubs.

Hold Joint Rehearsals The two clubs have been rehears- I

Ing Jointly and win present a special i program before tte assembly on I October 16. Numbers will include songs bv each club, songs by tbe combined clubs and solos by Oilman Rankin and Howard Andrews.

Officers of tte Women's Glee club which organized formally last week, j are Winifred Andrews, president; Adele Winn, vice president; Shirley Martin, secretary-treasurer, and Lu-cile Williams, business manager.

Jaysee Engineers i* . May Visit Dam Site

Plans for a trip to Boulder dam • district are under consideration by

tte newly organized engineering club of Jaysee.

W. R. B. Osterholt of tbe mathe-«t matics department, wiU present tta

plans at tta club's next meeting. Two tripe each year, one during tbe Christmas holidays and one during Easter vacation, will be suggested.

The club will deal only with prac­tical work during these trips, Oster­holt said, although theoretical prob­lems wiU be considered and studied at tta regular meetings of tbe club.

SENIORS WILL PRESENT PLAY

NOV. 22 AND 23 "Who's Boss?" tte annual senior

play In the high school, will be pre­sented November 22 and 23 ln tbe high school auditorium.

Paul G. Kepner. drama instructor, has announced that the cast will include Russell Munro, Jane Sach-rison, Ruth Hannon, Lois Elkins, Roma Burton, Florence Waddell, Marguerite Reif, Frank Coleman. Frank Thatcher, David Vaile and Barbara Cleland.

The executive staff is made up of Margaret McCoy, properties; Jane Sachrison. publicity; Betty Seery, assistant director.

The stage sets will be designed by the stage design class, under tta supervision of Miss Mildred Hart-zig of the art department.

21 Admitted to 'RaOspKtters'

L i n c o l n Junior High's Honor Society Picks

Officers for Year

Garfield Mrs. Eva May Zuck's Americani­

zation pupils are "good savers." T to bank banner has been in that room for two successive weeks.

The women's Americanization class carried on without their teach­er for two days during the past week. In the absence of Mrs. Mar­garet Levitt, Mlts Mary Olmos, one of the pupils, assisted the women wltt their lessons.

Mrs. A. Carpelow. mother of two children attending W a shington school, ls a faithful member of the morning class, and la making ex­cellent progress. Mia J. Patino, wbo has four young children, bas missed ! only two sessions of the afternoon class. Mrs. Ida Gersh of the Gersh restaurant, Ocean Park, is reported by Mrs. Levitt as making exceptional | progress.

Tbe pupils of Mrs. Florence Hen­derson's room were first in reach­ing 100 per cent for tta Community Chest.

Twenty-one students of Lincoln Junior high school have attained tbe signal honor of being admitted to membership ln "The Railsplltters," honor scholarship society of this school, it is announced by "•'ss Florence Newell, faculty sponsor

A minimum of ten points, based on grades received in English, math­ematics, social science, general sci­ence and. foreign languages and a good citizenship record, are required for membership. A semester grade of "A" counts three points, "B" one point and a "D" or "E" disqualifies a pupil.

Following la the honor scholarship roll together with tbe number of honor points earned during the term ending June 30, 1930:

Viola Bunker, 10; Carol Crum, 12; Phillip Morse, 10; John Rothwell, 10; .Helen Austin, 15; Betty Baum, IS; Jean Campbell, 13; Jeanne Carabln. 11; Kathleen Cannon, 11; Josepnine Crawford. 10; J e a n Evans, 12; Gordon Hewes, 10; Mar­garet Hinman, 10; Barbara Mur­dock. 15; Lloyd Veen, 12; James Johnson. iO; Nathalie Hoffman, 16; Myra Jo, 16: Kazuko Yoshida, 16, Lee Bigler. 10, and Lucy Warwick, 12.

The following officers were elected Monday: John Rothwell, president; Barbara Murdock, idee president, Viola Bunker, secretary, and Mar­garet Hinman, reporter. >

A student council consisting of two pupils from each of tha upper grades has been selected. The coun­cil members are Isabella Castillo. Edmond Andrade, Emma Valencia. Josephine Morales. Lucio Casillas, Orturo Garcia, Rafaela Rodriguez, Jose Garcia, Louise Smith, Yama-ko Yamada and David Mireles.

The following pupils ln Miss Mar­guerite Hanley's class ware 100 per cent in spelling tte past week: Maria Phillips, Lillian Linly, Selma Raines, Esther Corla, Elvira Orosco, Elsie Liader, Samuel Hayashi, Bu­lla Ushijima. Edward Liner, Aubrey Stewart, Louise Smith and Mary Chares.

P.-T, A. to Sponsor Living Xmos Trees

Living Christmas trees, made fa­mous In Southern California, will Increase many fold this year. Mrs. W. E. Sheppard. art chairman cf tbe tenth district P.-T. A., announces. Mot only wis each of tbe 223 asso­ciations sponsor trees, but tte sixty thousand members will to asked to spread tta word ta make this year's tte greatest Christmas display ever held in California.

THE WAVES By Helen Robertson, S

Jefferson School I wish I were a wave so blue, I'd sweep the pebbles up to you. I'd even bring a Uttle fish To put upon your diver dish.

University of Air Plans Announced

Movement Under Way to Educate Mountaineers

by Means of Radio WASHINGTON, Oct. 2—Radio is

looked upon as the magic which can lift from the mire of ignorance and illiteracy some 4,000,000 "benighted native Americans" who live in the mountains and the foothills of the Alleghenies.

Outstanding Individuals In public and private life are sponsoring a movement to make available to these folk, who might as well belong to another world, the benefits of education and culture. And radio Is the means to this end.

Explained to Commission The federal radio commission was

told of this project Of Dr. John Wesley Hill, chancellor of Lincoln Memorial university, ln Cumberland Gap, Tenn. Eventually it la hoped to build a high-power station, sit­uated on top of a mountain 32.000 feet above sea level, to broadcast to these mountain people lessons of in­spiration, education and uplift. Dr. Hill said.

At present the university and itt sponsors are experimenting in col­laboration wttt the office of educa­tion of the interior department. Fifty receiving sets have been do­nated by the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, through the education office, for distribution among these folk, and fifty others are promised. These are being placed at strategic locations as com­munity receivers.

Pima SmaU Station First Dr. Hill appeared before the com­

mission on behalf of Interests at Middleboro, Ky., which are seeking authority to establish a new 100-watt broadcasting station there. This station would be employed "to bring light to these people now sit­ting in the darkness," he said.

Such a station, Dr. Hill said, will be an Instrument in the develop­ment of good citizenship among these mountain folk, many of whom never have seen an automobile or a train. Although tba coverage of a 100-watt station necessarily is limited, It is proposed as the fore­runner of the great "national** aba* tion. which is to te established in Cumberland Gap, should these ini­tial experiments prove successful.'

William G. McAdoo, former sec­retary of the treasury; Frank O

(Continued on P a n 19) Noted Men on Board

Millinery Class Nay Be Closed

Will Continue Study If Enrollment Picks Up

at Next Meeting "Last call for millinery" is being

sounded in the evening high school. Insufficient enrollment has led,

several times, to a decision to dis­continue the class, but each time a few women have come in at the next meeting asking for millinery and assuring Miss Mabel N. Smith, in­structor, that there are other wo­men in the community who would be glad to enter if they understood the type of work being offered.

In order to give all an opportu­nity to enroll, it has been decided to hold another meeting, next Mon­day. Then, if the required enroll­ment has not been met, the class will be discontinued.

The work offered in the class is practical and does not require pre­vious experience in hat making. Each student provides her own ma­terial and, with the aid of the in­structor, designs and makes the hats.

High School Sixty-six students of the midwin­

ter graduating class were unofficial­ly questionnalred ln their English classes this week relative to their plans for the future.

More than half the class which contains twenty-two girls and forty-four boys, a notably larger propor­tion of boys than la commonly found in high school classes, reported that they have chosen life careers. Among the vocations desired were: medi­cine, engineering, business, teaching and interior decoration.

A total of twenty-one Indicated a desire to enter college. Of these nine thought they would enter the local junior college; a few Intend to enter colleges or universities out­side of California.

WHITTLERS AT EVENING HIGH SHOW ARTISTRY

Thomas Kelly, president of the midwinter graduating class, has ap­pointed the following to assist him as an advisory class committee: Robert King, Naomi Granger, Scott Wlscomb, Betty Atkins, Virginia Hammack. The class appeared in assembly today wearing their new Imperial blue sweaters with the gold numerals "1931," edged with black.

Judging from the interest dis­played by members of the woodcarv-ing class in the evening high school, Santa Monica may some day be­come a center of the ancient art, with a woodcarvers' guild and wood-carvers* fairs as features of the community.

The class, which ls under instruc­tion of Frank Sprengcr, includes both men and women, who give promise of becoming enthusiasts in their new undertaking.

Picture frames, book ends, vanity boxes, bric-a-brac and even articles of furniture are among the articles chosen by the "whittlers" for their Individual projects. *

The class, at present, is small, but It is believed the enthusiasm will prove contagious and that in a short time, new members will enroll and become interested in the hobby.

P.-T. A. Planning Series of Plays

Caste Will Be Selected From Various Groups

in 10th District

Lincoln Junior High

Madison School . Forms Orchestra

Rehearsals Begun Under D i r e c t i o n of Mrs.

Joseph Giampaolo Madison school is to have an or­

chestra this year, and already the! organization is formed and re-1 hearsals have begun.

Directed by Mrs. Joseph Giam-1 paolo, the orchestra meets every I Thursday from 2:10 ta 4 o'clock.

Faculty and pupils are looking forward to having the orchestra play in assembly.

Following are the players: Kath­ryn Mohnlke, Esther Flores, John T h a n e s , Libby DeLongpre and George Dobler. violin; Ellis Taylor, I baritone horn; Bruce Parr, flute; I Kimball Getterman, clarinet; Dick Rostine,, trombone; Dorothy Huf-ford. Martha Borden and Frances Stumpf, piano.

According to a ruling of the ex­ecutive board of the associated stu­dent body, Santa Monica high school season tickets admitting to games and other school events will be punched this year at gates and doors. No ticket is transferable and no lost ticket will be replaced. Any attempt to pass through gates on a wrong ticket will result in cancel­lation of the ticket.

According to Jack Millard, mana­ger, the soda fountain recently in­stalled In the book store of the Santa Monica higb school, promises to be a success. The three girl "soda jerks" are kept busy making malts, milk shakes, sodas and sun­daes. "Cokes" win not be served at the fountain for the same reason that coffee is prohibited in the cafe­teria.

166 Pupils Get Perfect Records

Washington pupils have started tta year right with 166 records of perfect attendance, for the first month.

te an enrollment of 360, this rec­ord includes more than 44 per cent of the school, and la a' record of punctuality as well as of every-day attendance.

The grade making the best record was the B-2 wltb twenty-six chil­dren neither absent nor tardy dur­ing the month.

Free reading in some of the Eng­lish classes at the Lincoln and John Adams Junior high schools during the next five weeks will to another step gained by the Santa Monica public schools ln the world-wide trend of progressive education

At some time during the semester each English class will have the unusual opportunity of browsing and reading freely as many books as be chooses from a selected library set aside for this particular purpose.

This special project library at Lin­coln numbers 290 books, fiction and nonfiction, classic, modern and current all attractively bound and many beautifully illustrated. Vir­tually all the authors, both old and modern, who are favorites among young readers are included la the library.

The first of a series of dramatic productions, promising to to the most eventful la the history of Parent-Teacher work in the South­west, will to presented October 17 In the John Muir junior high school. Sixtieth street and Vermont avenue, Los Angeles, it is announced by Mra. H. A. Glass of tenth district Parent-Teacher drama department.

Two one-act plays have been se­lected for the Initial performance. Francis Jeffries will direct the pro­ductions.

Mrs. Glass Is conducting a survey of talent in the 223 associations, all of which have, at one time etc an­other, been presented In plays. Each production this year win to representative of the district, as Mrs. Glass plans to select casts from the outstanding players ln the various associations.

Jefferson The Jefferson faculty was tte

first to report 100 per cent for the Community Chest.

Jefferson pupils also are working enthusiastically for the chest.

The faculty of the Lincoln junior high school entertained the teachers of John Adams junior high school j at their annual autumn picnic held in the Pacific Palisades picnic grove Monday afternoon. Place cards bear­ing original Jingles about each one present proved a source of much amusement as well as a novel means I of introducing the guests, hosts and hostesses. Covers were laid for ninety-six. The committee in charge of arrangements included Miss Es-1 ther Johnson, Miss Lillian Grub,' Miss Anne Kentzel and William 8. Morten.

On the morning that the Chest drive was announced a number of pupils in several of the rooms came forward at once with their dona­tions, having been ready with their gifts and awaiting announcement that the chest was open. They ap­parently regarded being among the first to respond.,as a privilege.

Interest in the chest becomes j significant when it is understood that Jefferson school consists ot small children, the third grade be­ing the highest.

Pupils in the A-3 class who have scored 100 per cent in arithmetic: each week since school started are: Harry Neal. Dick Neal, Frank!, Farmer. Junior Dunn. Velum lily Matsuraoto, Billy Dean Glnley and Biruemae WUIa

:i:S-ti. -l- ; . .A_ffl iSj'V:** ifes.

~~~ ~~ 'mmm PAGE TWELVE EVENING OUTLOOK, SANTA MONICA, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, OCTOBER *% 1930

of &OC/AZ A 5 B T W — i CHILD&BN CLUJB -A.CTmfVmB& /*ASHTOmNS fiOmMB- m&CGaVOMICO JB&IEX3& *- OF INTEREST * WOMEN i ESTELLB LAWTON UNDSEY- ---M**. f ^ S &

mJAMES SAMUEL LACY AUZTO-VG rVDSft %

Auction and Contract Bridge

She's Game ar rat WORLDS LEAD-MO

AUTHORITT BOLTON C WORK

(This article la Intended for the Auction and Contract Bridge begin-

rJ A WELL PLAYED HAND

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ers In tta above hand, which was

played at Auction Bridge, South bid one Heart on his five-card suit beaded by King-Queen and a side Aaa much ta the surprise of West, who bad five Hearts beaded by the Aee. Wbat could see nothing tet­ter to da than to bid No Trump, and North was glad to pass. East araa satisfied wtth tbe declaration, and South had nothing more to say.

If It had been played at Contract, South would have bid tta same one Heart, but West's declaration would not have been so obvious. One No Trump would not adequately por­tray the strength of his hand, and two No Trumps would te somewhat dangerous. A double would not be apt te produce any advantageous result as East probebly Y-.uld bid Spades or Diamonds; and over either West would have to bid No Trump. As a matter of fact. East would bave bid la a trying situa­tion; pad he decided Clubs and then West would have been to bid two No Trumps, East would bid three.

Against West's Auction No Trump, North bad not a card of his part­ner's suit ta lead and consequently opened with bis fourth best Dia­mond. Dummy played small. South tte Seven, and West won with tta Diamond Queen, being careful ta keep tbe Ten so as to be sure of two more tricks In the suit. Declarer now had one trick la band, four as­sured Clubs, two more Diamonds and tbe Ace of Hearts; right tricks were In sight, but what about tta ninth, which he needed for game.

Souths Heart-bid OB a King-Queen ault bad marked him with the Ace of Spades, so Declarer un­hesitatingly led four rounds of Clubs and then tha Tta of Diamonds won with dummy's Jack, and lad the Diamond Ace on which a Heart was discarded. Then East lad a Spade. It made no difference what South did, If be played small, West won with the King and cashed his Ace of Hearts for game, if South played the Ace of Spades and then led a Heart, West's Ace of Hearts and King of Spades were good for two tricks; so tte Declarer was able to make bis game, helped by the infor­mation obtained from the bidding.

(Copyright, 1930. John P. Dllle Co.)

By Julian Ollendorff

NANCY PAGE Bt FLORINCE LS QANKB

CANDY HAS A PLACE IN NEW DESSERTS

^

pd2& I

2 SIMPLE DE./7ER17

IVE BEEN SEARCHING f ff* SO GLAD it) SEE RJR MX), EVE13Y- S MbJUL-tDM^gm1 IVE WWERE/-OW, / GOT It) HURRY. OR WE1_L EXCUSB ME; / s e LATE FOR -ME SHOW.

I S E E >GOME ON,Hff-,-Ct.ARI_ES; MXTRE

ALONE/

Log of the Good Ship Life By ESTELLE LAWTON UNDSEY

Communications Relative to This Department Should Be Addressed to Estelle Lawton Lindsey ln Care of This Paper

Some mothers ought to be sent ta a psychiatrist; others to Jail. Thia indictment la not general. I am speaking of specific instances and I shall give one as I go to that you may get my meaning. You caa decide for yourself where the mother, whose "training" produced the young woman whom we use for an example, ought ta te sent. The mother, as you see, has had a father hard life. The

Mrt. Lindsey

Lois was looking for easy des­serts. Thank goodness, Roger did not insist on heavy puddings or pie every day la the week. He was quite content with fresh fruit served with simple pound cake or witb cookies. Or J u t weU chilled melon.

But stUl, even these palled when served day In and day out. There­fore Lois hailed with joy a dessert calling for fresh or canned apricots, cream cheese and stick candy.

If she used tbe canned apricots she drained them well. The fresh ones were washed and carefully cut Into halves. Then tbe pit was re­moved. Cream cheese was fitted Into the cavity formerly occupied by the stone. The two halves were put together and held wtth a three-Inch stick of candy—the kind which ls no larger than a lead pencil ln diameter.

a wife of a house painter, often out of work, she decided that b a pre­

cious daughter s h o u l d never learn housework; tf A a did she'd have to do lt. So tbe mother did family washing, took in boarders and canvassed ln har "spare" mo­ments, to protect the girl and keep har "tender and desirable."

T h e g i r l claimed a "weak back" and so her mother did bar

laundry. She said she could not use bar left hand; so the mother paid for a manicurist The mother never ta her hard life darkened the door of a beauty parlor. By heroic pri­vations and the aid of an over­worked brother tte girl got a col­lege education. She came home aad became a private secretary. But aha spends every cant ot har earnings on herself, having been taught that she herself ls all that matters.

Then suddenly this ornament arises and marries a poor boy, of sterling character but no back­ground, aa profession, no connec­tions tbat will enable him to earn or contact big money, still be has a good Job la the middle west She, however, refuseses to go to htm, aa aha has refused to keep home ar even stay home and look after their baby. Instead she hires a house­keeper who looks after the baby and finds bitter fault with bar hus­band for not making a fortune at once. Naturally, ha ls crushed and unhappy. She, too, ia unhappy. Tha baby is neglected, for Its mother knows nothing about how to care tot I t Xt is consequently 111 aad fretful, a condition aggravated by the selfish and silly habit that Its mother has developed of baring It kept awake late at night so she can ttf tt awake when she finally de­cides to come home.

Add to tta young husband's troubles the fact that his wife takes frequent and extended trips without him and never goes on bis vacations with him, and you can see what a foolish mother's training has done to an innocent baby and a well meaning young man. The final drop of poison in the husband's eup is that his wife openly boasts of her superior earning ability and her contempt for housekeeping. The end

| win be divorce, inevitably. Still, that girl's mother thinks she did a good job bringing up what she con­siders a "lady." May the Lord de­liver us from the breed.

Q. My dad ls 43 and a carpenter. Before I married seven years ago I was a teacher and liked the profes­sion. My dad finds it hard to get work and I would like to help him. I cannot economize more than I do and I want to give tte chUdren a good start. If we can finance the venture would you think it advisable to get back to teaching here or

A. The "venture" as you call lt what could I do? C. B. won't require much financing, but the- requirements for teachers are very high in California and you would have to take some university extension work in order to qualify. After all 43 is pretty young and you need not be frantic about helping your dad yet. He should be able

j to help himself quite a number of i years.

Q. I have been married a Uttle i over five years, have two dear kid­dies and love my husband a great

; deal. But he does not care for me. 11 believe that is where all our trouble lies. Up until we were mar­ried he treated me wonderfully, but it did not take ate long to learn

] that what he said was just talk, I ' am never

Parent Teachers Plan Discussion

Of Environs Comparative study of environment

and heredity wiU constitute the opening work ot tte study circle of the Pranklin Parent-Teacher as­sociation. The new circle, under the chairmanship Ot Mrs. George Pier­son, wiU meet in tbe school every third Thursday of tba month with the circle Ot tte Roosevelt school.

The problems that beset t t o par­ents of small children will te con­sidered ln detail, from tta theoreti­cal as well aa BM practical stand­point, individual problems of moth-era will be written out and hendRl in unsigned to te discussed at round table gatherings.

Mrs. Mark Allen, membership chairman ot the Lincoln P.-T. A., win launch her campaign for mem­bers next Wednesday at a tea la nat home, 2324 Idaho avenua. The room mothers are to serve as Mrs. Allen's committeemen, wtth tte president I H a H. B. Bagley.

These room mothers are: Mrs. H. E. Riley, Mrs. Walter C. Durst, Mrs. Robert Grey, Mra Dick Cum­mings, Mil, W. S. Wyatt, Mrs. Ray­mond C. Hoyt Mra S. E. Scragg, Mrs. R. S. Miesse, Mrs. Beverly Laldlaw, Mrs. E. 8. Hanna.

Mra Allen announced today that twenty-five new members were taken IB at yesterday's meeting.

"A 100 per cent membership of all Pranklin parents tt our aim this year," Mrs. Allen said today.

Santa Monicans To Attend B. P. W.

Meeting in L. A. To learn what business and pro­

fessional women are doing through­out tte United States and Europe, tha members of the Los Angeles Business Woman's City club will en­tertain tonight la the Women's Athletic club, Los Angelas, witb a dinner meeting.

A number of distinguished speak­ers will review the fields of en­deavor la which women are en­gaged.

Mrs. Lucy M. Pirotte, president of the Business and Professional Wom­en's club of Santa Monica, and Mra Leona M. Hines aad Mrs. Helen P. Mougey, alto of tte Santa Monica organization, win attend the meeting.

Miss Ethel Carroll, president of the southern district of the Cali­fornia Federation of Business and Professional women, and Maxine E. Robertson, president of tte seventh district of Zonta clubs, win be speakers.

Berean Class Entertained at Home of Craigs

The Berean class of the Christian church school was entertained at t t o home of Mr. aad Mra T. J. Craig. 1114 Eleventh street, recently. Twenty-two members were present.

Mrs. Blanche Preston's division ol tta class conducted tte program Arrangements were made for aa en­tertainment which tha class will give October 9.

An invitation was extended to all women who care to Join tte class.

make him an attractive home you consulted or considered. I may find that he win change toward

Another dessert called for whip­ped cream, peanut brittle and cake such as sponge, angel food or pound cake.

Tbe peanut brittle was crushed fine. A rolling pin does this well on the pastry board.

About one-half cup brittle powder was folded into one cup of whipped cream. The cream must be stiff. Then this mixture is set in the refrigerator to keep well chilled. Xt stays there for tan or twelve home. In that time the brittle melt* and makes the cream buttery, salty and rich.

! Two years ago he left me. When I asked him to return he said he

i would tf X would give up my mother. I did and for a time we got along

• nicely, but now we cant get along at all. I was never taught to keep

! house because my mother wanted me to have it easier than she had it. I tried hard to learn housekeep­ing but it was slow. My husband

I does not take me out at aU. but he I goes out alone and I have no idea where he goes Now be thinks It

; Would be a good idea ta split up. Says he will care for tte kiddies until X find a Job. What is your

'advlcet Distressed.

A. My advice is learn to heap house if it kills you. Your mother

I did a great injury to you, first in not teaching you, then in leading

tt was a hard-Your husband

you. His resentment against your mother ls probably because of bar attitude—the attitude that made you a slattern.

Q. Is there any law against builders' noises at 5 and 6:30 ln the morning and all day Sunday? They are gradually driving me crazy.

Afflicted. A. Building Is a necessary activ­

ity and unhappily there tt BO way to make It a quiet oaa X dislike noises as much as you, but X have to grin and endure them or else move to the backwoods.

My Favorite Recipe - B y -

MRS. PAUL C. DODGE

TARTAR SAUCE When you wish to make tartar sauce quickly and easily, chop

fine half an onion and half a dill pickle; squeeze away tte Juice and add thee hopped Ingredients to a cupful of mayonnaise. Ada the Juice of halt a lemon and a dash of cayenna This is a "tasty" sauce and improves almost any variety of fish.

Readers of tte Evening Outlook are invited to send their recipes to "My Favorite Recipe" Editor.

Home Economics Housewife Aids By FLORENCE AUSTIN CHASE

Communications Relative te This Department Should Be Addressed to Florence Austin Chase In Care ot This Paper

Tuning in With Our Children By JAMES SAMUEL LACY

DEEP FAT FRYING Food correctly fried Is every bit as wholesome for tte normal person

as though It were boiled or broiled or baked. Everything that comes out of the frying pan ls not fried, you know, although lt may be so regarded popularly. When one slices a few cold tolled potatoes Into a spoonful or two of drippings, or butter, and stirs them about over the fire, this tt not frying; tt Is saute'lng. and while saute'lng ls a division of that proc­ess of cookery known as frying lt ls

not actually the

Mrs. Chase

process itself. T t o first ne­

cessity for frying tt a proper ket­tle; o n e that wiU stand stead-Mi and securely on the .range, that is heavy enough to with­stand jars and knocks and that will keep tbe fat uniformly hot ls tta only kind tbat should re­ceive considera­tion. A heavy

kettle ls advis­able also because lt will keep the fat at the proper temperature for a longer period than will a light ttl saucepan or otter less substantial utensil. A frying basket Is also very useful and should form a part of the kitchen equipment If croquettes, crullers and similar dishes are popu­lar in the household. However, tf ona haa aot such aa Implement a large coarse meshed strainer win answer tor croquettes, t l t t , eta, but doughnuts and fritters will to better tf allowed to float In the tat.

Next in Important in correct fry­ing la the fat itself. Lard, oU ar drippings, or any at tte commercial fats may be used satisfactorily, Int tt tt necessary that tte kettle be at least two-thirds filled with lt, and this does aat entail wastefulness, tor if it ls properly managed the fat may ba used for frying again and again with entirely satisfactory resulta

The temperature utmost importance, for It must be remembered that (here are degrees of heat, wren when the fat ls emit­ting that bluish haze which we term smoke, and that not all dishes or foods which are to be tried may be cooked in fat of the same tempera­ture.

Frying Temperatures Here Is a little rule which may

make this plain and more easily un­derstood and remembered: Foods which hava been previously cooked —like croquettes or rissoles, or sim­ilar dishes—may be placed la a fat ot very high temperature for they require only surface browning, and heating to be ready to serve. On tbe attar head, raw foods—like dough­nuts or fritters, chops, oysters, scal­lops and tbe like—must to cooked to the center, and a fat hat enough to brown them Immediately on the surface would burn them to a crisp before they were sufficiently cooked throughout

Twenty seconds is long enough to cook a croquette or any article made of previously cooked material, and to make this possible the fat must be vary, very hot, Ita temperature registering many degrees higher than that at which water boils. which tt SU degrees; l t must, In fact, be from 345 to 400 degrees.

With a cooking thermometer <lt tt an easy matter to know Just when this point is reached; without one lt is more difficult but may be man-

Style Glimpses By AILEEN LAMONT

Special Correspondent ot tte Con­solidated n e t s Association

'Copyrltht. 1930. Consolidated Press A sn ) NEW TORK, Oct. 2 (CPA)—Paris

designers, at any rate, have adopted the stagger system for one type of daytime dress. In jersey, tt has a zigzag pattern of a darker shade— Brown or beige, for instance—whUe both tbe V-neck and tbe hem are surrounded by points.

Victorian Brides In London, several of tbe smart

brides are gowned ln white tuUe with a plan, close bodice and a skirt composed from tbe waist to hem of tiny flounces. The bouquet is a demure nosegay in a frilled paper holder.

India's Coral Strand Once again tte East Indian bed­

spread brightens the living room or boudoir wan. Somehow India bas contrived to make newer spreads in fashionable tints, occasionally with a coral strand thrown in amid the temples and giddy beasties. Some red lions with awords in their right front paws, parading around a fountain ln a garden, have a cheery effect on the dullest ot rooms.

CIRCLE TO MEET Neighbors at Woodcraft Circle No.

W0 will hold a dance and card party tonight at 8 p. m. in the Masonic toll on Washington boulevard, Van-Ice. Everyone tt cordially Invited.

aged by resorting to the bread test Cut small cubes of white bread and drop than into tbe fat when lt ap-

of the fat Is of [ pears to have reached tte proper temperature. The bread should color nicely almost as soon at tt touches t to Hot grease, if for croquettes aad previously cooked mixtures; tor oys­ters, doughnuts, outlets ami other raw products the fat should bubble merrily about tta little cubes of bread, bat they should not brown too soon; ln fact they may remain ia the fat while yon county twenty-five, rather deliberately, before they take on that tint which one asso­ciates with perfectly fried foods.

Never attempt to try too many ar­ticles at OBa time, as this will tend to cool t to fat, aad tte food win be­come grease soaked and indigestible.

Draining t t o foods after frying is finished is also a matter for con­sideration; bl tact correct draining is as important as correct frying, aad for this purpose one should be provided wltt soft brown er white paper of a kind which Will quickly i a a readily absorb superfluous grease.

BUY 30METHINO NEW—NOWI

T a n D a y s ' C o m p l e t e H o s p i t a l C a r e D u r i n g C o n f i n e m e n t . $ 6 5 . 0 0 1'his includes everything _or a noimai case. Doctor. anaestne-'lc care of mother aad oi_b)

Pbone Havta Monica 63072 for Appointment and

Furtbei Detalls W e s t C o a s t M a t e r n i t y

H o s p i t a l 1425 Venice Blvd Veniee

At serving time a large spoonful of it is placed lightly pn the slice . of cake and served at once. Some- y ° u to suppose that times Lois put the brittle and cream I ____? to keep house. Into sherbet glasses and passed the cake separately. This dessert was a favorite with Roger since it was not overly sweet.

. la probably all fed up on sloppv 1 housekeeping and bad cooking. If

you learn to feed him properly and

Write to Nancy Page, care of this paper for a new leaflet called "Des- I sens Men Like." Enclose a stamped,! aelf-addressed envelope with your request (Copyright, 1030, Publishers Syndicate)

BUY SOMETHING NEW—NOW!

STATIONERY A N D OFFICE EQUIPMENT

FRED A. DENISON 1344 Fourth Street, Santo Monica Pbone 22101 for Quick Delivery

WE BREAK UP HOMES BY

STORING HOUSEHOLD GOODS Visit Oar Warehouse—Obtain Our Estimate

Wb> Net Hav* tbe Best When 11 Cull Ne Mere? 2428 SANTA MONICA BOULEVARD PHONE 23104

HELP JULIA MAKE GOOD SCORE IN CLEANLINESS A mother who signs herself "Another DaUy Tunner-Xn" needs help.

She "follows" tttt column dally and enjoys reading tte suggestions made here. Her problem Is with tte older of her two daughters, age 7 and 5, respectively, wbo has lately become very sulky and irritable If she can't have tor own way. Julia Is also careless ln washing her hands and face. Has a great deal to say when hAi* mother reminds her about it. Whip­ping seems to to the only thing she

minds. But moth­er doesn't Uke ta 3. holding a ruler over har all t to time.

The girl likes to look nice and yet she makes no ef­fort to keep neat. Mother says that sometimes she is glad har t l r l seems so carefree tad haa no wor-

li-'ies, but ahe is a m i d that, as daughter g r o w s

J. samucl Lacy o l d e r , s h e win form slovenly habits. Mother wants to know what X would do in such a case.

Julia Talks Back What would X do with a 7-year-

old who tt slovenly, who sulks, who talks back when corrected? I would discover the cause and begin to re­move tt bv changing conditions. Do yon think, mother, the fact tbat Julia is so near the age of ber young sister, she may have felt pushed aside for her?

if tta sulks she must have a sensitive nature, and lt tt making you both unhappy. Sometimes brag­ging on a child wbo has a alee dis­position and making comparisons is the cause.

For bar slovenliness X should make some allowance Jar day dreaming at her age, and tten be­gin by complimenting every attempt at cleanliness or orderliness which she expresses. She probably would respond to a cleanliness score card.

Cleanliness Twins Could you help the two girls eat

some pretty paper dolls called the cleanliness twins? If you are not adept magazine pictures will prove attractive aad suitable, and every time they hang up their dresses or brush their teeth, wash so carefully that they are spick aad spaa, let them check their record for that Item.

The competitive report might help Julia If you remind ner kindly that

she has a good chance to make a favorable score because she tt the older and larger. Then allow them a party for a certain number of credit points. • Let tha obUdren plant prepare aad serve Uttle ginger bread girls to a few friends tf they caa earn t t o privilege by keeping themselves aad their room la order every day for a week.

ChUdren Love Party Spirit Uttle children love t to party

spirit It encourages them by pro­viding a motive for tta habits that are so essential for them to learn.

ChUdren are fall Ot Ideas of ac­tivity. They rarely respond weU to matter of fact telling which we busy adults often feel should to suffic­ient. But they wUl take responsibil­ity It they see a beloved childish re­ward awaiting their effort.

I am.convinced she told you the story you mentioned to hurt yon. hoping to gain some attention and make some trouble tor you. Treat that part ot tt lightly unless it is too often repeated.

Try Daily Checking System If she persists try a daily check­

ing system on telling the truth and playing fair. Exhibit calmness, frankness and a sense of humor la Improving her, aad see to tt that aba tt made responsible for her own improvement.

Rewards, Uttle surprises, a word of commendation will go farther than punishment. Win her confi­dence by showing her that you ex­pect the finest kind of conduct from her as well as her sister.

Vacation League Holds Luncheon And Card Party

The October luncheon, business meeting and card party of tbe Ven­ice Vacation league waa held yes­terday to the home, 503 Grand boulevard. Mrs. Charles L. Bea­gle, president, presided at the busi­ness meeting. Reports were given by Mrs. Murray J. Murchlson, treasurer, and Mra Tracy C. Few-eU, secretary.

Miss Ella Duffield, matron ot the home, announced that daring the summer (beginning May 1) nearly 100 girls had been given two weeks' vacation trips.

Mrs. Eva Weatherby was hostess at t t o card party which foUowed luncheon. High scores ware made by Mta Margaret Allen and Mrs. Mary Earle O'Brien.

Ouests were Mesdames Byron Palmer, A. G. Mahan, sr., Eugene Andrleu, Fred W. Solomon, Nellie D. Tyler, Murchlson, J. Guard Flsk, O. C. Blakely, Bruce Wiscomb, John G. Awenius, L. Virginia Wa­ters, OUa Olguere. Cecelia Waktor, Beagle, Fewell, O'Brien, Allen.

Mesdames Helen Dischert, Frank Lloyd, James W. Fleming, A. I* Acheson, Clara Worcester, Ruth E. Hayes, Emma Satterfleld, E. M. Wyckoff, George I. McCoy, W. H. Metzdorf, W. E. Wilson, Louise Rob­inson, Ben Bolton, Frank A. Big-ford, EUen H. Willumson, May J. Knapp,

The Misses Mary Cleland, Oola Beagle, Ella Duffield and Jean Magee.

TO CONVENTION Mra Peter Gadd, Mrs. Walter

Clausen, Mrs. Ford Pierson, Mrs. Herbert Ford and Mra Telford Work ot tta Pacific Palisades Par­ent-Teacher association, motored to San Pedro today to attend tha tenth district convention of tba Parent-Teacher association.

IVAH BERGH WHITEN

The COLOR ANALYST ot NEW YORK

Ar*lst. Writer, Lecturer Will Speak at the

UNIVERSAL TRUTH LIBRARY

1S37 Ocean Ave. Santa Monica

Friday, Oct. 3, 8 P. M. "YOUR AURA"

Color Class Forming, 4:30 P. M.

H\}t WilmtmU logs* H-ifop 518 Santa Monica Blvd.

Santa Monica "BrerytMntf a boy wear*,"

Two Year* to twenty

Plain Curtains, Drapes MADE FREE

Russell Drapery Shoppe

1416 4th St Ph. 23332

Dr. H. H. Rhodes X-ray Chiropractor. Palmer Gradwtt* If you are unable to Mt rr Htt. present thia Ad for a Pree Radlonlc Dlagno»i« and X-ray reports.

28 Security Bank Pbone

Building 28438

WINTER RATES 25c Any Time

SANTA MONICA MINIATI'RE OOLF COURSE OB LUXE

LINCOLN and ARIZONA Bet Wilshire and Santa Monica

DECIDE all Questions Before you CLOSE the DEAL

f l U R trained and experienced Escrow officers males sure that each party to the

transaction understands clearly what he or she ia to convey or to pay, or to receive. A

well-conducted Escrow leaves no room for subsequent misunderstanding.

You should Escrow not only all real estate transactions but also all deals in*

volving the payment of considerable sums of money, or incurring heavy obligations...sales of personal property, of leases and business good will, many contracts...any deal in

which every party needa to have a clear under­standing. T h e fees are moderate, the satisfaction is enduring.

SANTA MONICA BRANCH

401 Santa Monica Blvd.

14th and WILSHIRE BRANCH

OCEAN PARK BRANCH

168 Pier Avenue

C J E C U R I T Y - F I R S T N A T I O H A I * C3 BmANIS. OF L o s A N G E I _ E S

Santa Monica Grocery The Store of Complete Sendee in Fine Foodt

Wilshire Blvd. at Fourteenth

Early Arrivals in Holiday Delicacies

New California Deglet Nor Dates Pulled and Layer Figs in all size pkgs.

Imported Dried Currants o

Glace Fruits—all varieties—in bulk Ward*s Pure Bitter Sweet Marmalade

I-lb. Jars Tea Garden and Heinz*8 Mince Meat

in all sizes Heinz*s Fig and Plum Pudding

Magic Dessert Dressing—A new rum' flavored dressing for pies and puddings

Cresta Blanco Brandy and Rum-Flavored Syrups

Picklettes—a delightful new cucumber pickle from Germany

Richelieu Mushroom Broth Diet pack Fruits and Vegetables aU

varieties prepared without sugar or salt

Salt Mackerel—Kippered Cod Smoked White fish—Sea Spray Kippers

Boneless Smoked Herring

Young Idaho Turkeys—8 to 14 lbs. Fryers—Capons—Soft Bone Roasters

Kansas Cornfed Baby Beef

Three Deliveries Everywhere Daily Phone 2322S

m

.' 1 J^."':_".Vl**- '-.'• '•"••?••-**"*"

jiMUaSDAY, OCTOBER *% 1930 EVENING OUTLOOK, SANTA MONICA, CALIFORNIA PAGE THIRTEEN

$

<SOC/*AL AS&VyrtS --*- T Cf/ILmDmQBN-CL UJ3 A.crivrrijs& jeA$HroNSl UOISSJ5- m&CGMD.MlCm9 J5RIDG2B +~ OF INTEREST * WOMENS ESTELLE LAW77W UMD6EY NANCY PAQB [=p_

FLORENCE JUSTIN CHASE - -AJLEEN LA MONT,: WM> *<7AMBS SAMUEL LJAJSY A f l E T Q / C r V D ^ xm^

P.-T. A. Member Drive in Venice

To Close Oct. 9 The annual drive for members te

tha Parent-Teacher associations of Venice, which started September 25, wfll and October 9. Prizes are to be awarded by tha Veniee council to tha school bringing l a the largest membership, and each school ls awarding a prise to tha room aad to tha ebikl bringing in tbe largest number.

The chUdren of Venice are man­aging the drive this week, and next week 1{ will be l a t t i e charge ot the parents. Bach membership chair­man wUl make, wtth har commit­tee, personal calls to the homes of aQ parents, hoping to interest them in P.-T. A. work. A e membership committee said today that members are not limited to parents aad teachers—anyone may Join.

Mrs. Arthur C. Dingle, councUor, says that Venice, though one of the smaUest councils la the tenth dis­trict, always has been one of the strongest in numbers.

History Section Chairman

Child's Training Hinges on Poise

H Parents Display It la much easier aad mine pleas­

ant to discipline someone else than one's self; which la the reason I that children are so over-disciplined and parents not at all.

Tills was the conclusion reached tar the Richland avenue Study cir­cle, meeting hi tit. home of Mrs. J. O. Doolittle. Mrs. H. A. Cobb was leader ot the circle, and she for­warded the theory that a self-dis­ciplined parent has an easy time of it, " t e children are perfect mimics. and the child ef an emotionally un­controlled mother is almost bound to be naughty.—Poise breeds poise.''

Potluck luncheon was served at 1 o'clock.

The circle meets the second and fourth Wednesdays of each month, and everyone Interested in child study ls invited.

ART CLASS TO GIVE CHILDREN

STUDY CHANCE

Vets' Auxiliary Aids Ticket Sale

For Legion Play Santa Monica unit of the Amer­

ican Legion auxiliary held a busi­ness meeting IB tha clubrooms OB Ocean avenue, Tuesday evening. Thia took the place of the meeting planned for October 7. which would come on the sam i night of the first performance ef tha legion show, "Pardon Me."

The following members of the unit aaa la the east: Mesdames Dorian Brlggs. William Burt, H. T. Carrick. Lulu Hooper, Daniel Kem­per. F. D. Ma com ber. J. H. Nichols, Mary O'Brien, Russell Pinkerfon. w. D. Ripley, Thurlow Taft, Helen Vincent and Bertha Waines... and Misses Aura Gray aad Stella May. Tha auxiliary Is assisting in the sale of tickets and is managing the ex­change of tickets for- reserved seats at the salvage shop In the old Out-loo building every afternoon from 1:15 to 5. with Mrs. Burt hi charge, assisted by Mrs. Hubert Stansbury, Mrs. OUve May, Mrs. Pinkerton and others.

Installation of officers will be held Jointly with tiie post at the club­house Tuesday evening, October 21. Mrs. D. O. Smith presiding, as past area president Mrs. J. E. Hogan. elected president at the annual met­ing, was unable to accept the of­fice, and Mrs. Dorian Brlggs waa chosen to take her place. All others will be Installed as previously an­nounced.

Group Parliamentarian

Bay Clubwomen At Los Angeles

Federation Tea

Mrs. Ira D. Millar, chairman of the history and landmarks section of the Santa Monica Bay Womans Club.

City Briefs Mrs. Bertha Zonker, 822 Twenty-

first street, has as her house'guest her mother from Whittier.

Venice P.-T. A. Plans Children's *

Hour Air Revue

Clubwomen of Santa Monica, Ven­ice and West Los Angeles attended the first bridge tea of the season

i given by the Los Angeles district federation, today, in the federation headquarters. 2103 South Hobarl. boulevard, Los Angeles.

The affair is of special interest I to Bay district women as Mrs. Thornton Kinney, formerly of Vaa-ice, and a member of Santa Mon­ica Bay Womans Club and Women's City club, of Venice, is to be in charge.

Members of every federated club in Southern California are invited.

The parties are sponsored by the ways and means committee of the district.

mtmS-Mrs. George Tullock. parliamentarian of the Pranklin Parent-

Teacher association, which met yesterday with 200 parents present.

Mrs. C. E. Burke Complimented at

Bridge, Shower

Miss Gracyn Wheeler, daughter of Mr. and Mra. Ira Wheeler. 609 Tenth street, bas gone north to participate IB the Pacific coast championship '•Radio station tennis matches for girls under 18. The matches will be held in San Francisco.

Mrs. Marta Golden Gussie, pro­gram chairman of the Westminster Avenue Parent-Teacher association in Venice, has arranged a review to be called "Children's Hour in a

which will be pre-

Miss Pauline Wright entertained I rcently in her home, 1418 Eleventh

street. Santa Monica, with a bridge and shower, complimenting Mrs. Charles Edwin Burke, a recent bride. Mrs., Burke was Miss Mar­jorie Howard before her marriage. She now is living at 235 Seven­teenth street.

Guests at Miss Wright's affair I were Mrs. Graham Howard, Mrs. 8. Harold Shoud. Mrs. Paul Robin­son, the Misses Cornelia Verplank.

In Jenkins Home SThSSS.M L8Ughton-R,ld

Visitors Honored At Dinner Party

Mrs. Harry C. Hubbs. of Bur­lingame, is the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. Hoit C. Vicini, 447 Seven­teenth street.

Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Horton, HIT Fourteenth street, announce the birth of a son whom they have named Herbert Paul.

sented on the afternoon of October 14 at 2:30 o'clock in the school auditorium. This is the open­ing meeting of the organization and a membership drive wUl be launched.

The children who are to be pre­sented at this time are: Betty Crawford, harpist; Eva Pearlberg, Gwendolyn Copeland, Jack Miller, Dickie Huston, J&cquelyn Gibson.

At the Santa Monica hospital, re­cently, a son was born to Mr. and Mrs. M. W. Ash, of Tujunga. The child has been named Lars Carlson.

Miss Digur Bader announced today the formation of an art class for children under her instruction at 1223 Third street.

After spending the summer in Santa Monica as guests of Mrs. E. C. Wilkinson, 607 Palisades avenue; Mrs. William Halliday, jr., and her son, Billy, have returned to their home in Memphis, Tenn. Mrs. Halliday is the daughter of Mrs. Wilkinson.

Mrs. Gretta Hatch, 724 Twenty-first street, recently visited relatives in Nebraska, Iowa and Kansas.

Opening of an art class for chil­dren by Miss Digur Bader was an­nounced today.

Instruction will be given in de­sign, costume, modeling and land­scape. Color theory will be studied, as well as such principles as light and dark distribution, mass, line and composition. Together with the elementals of art the course encour­ages the students' individual ex­pression. Besides this class Miss Bader is interested in the art edu­cation of the younger children, and a class for those of preschool age may be arranged. The Rev. Wallace N. Pierson of

The classes will be held at 1223 st . Augustine's church is attending Second street every Saturday morn- the two day meeting of the Eplsco-tng from 9 until 12, beginning Oc- p a i clergy of the diocese of Los An-tober 4. geles in Mount Lowe tavern. About

Miss Bader received her education seventy ministers are attending the at the Chouinard School of Art, sessions, directed by Bishops W. B. Los Angeles, and has taught the Stevens and Robert B. Gooden. children's class there for the past The meeting is an annual affair, at vear and a half. She is continuing | which the business of the diocese is her advanced work at Chouinard. I discussed.

Mr. and Mrs. C. Grafton Deutsch, of Los Angeles, announce the birth of a daughter, Ellen Dorothea. The baby was born at the Santa Monica hospital recently.

A baby was born recently to Mr. and Mrs. A. Dewey Clark, 1538'j Stoner avenue, West Los Angeles. Her name is Donna Marie.

Mrs. Inez Owens, of Sawtelle. vis­ited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Preston, 1344 Eighteenth street, this week.

T. Thomas Home Scene of Dinner And Bridge Party

Mr. and Mrs. Thackston Thomas. 611 Montana avenue, entertained recently 'with a bridge and venison dinner party. Thomas has just re­turned from a successful hunting trip in the mountains near Idyllwild.

The table was centered with roses. Covers were laid for Capt. and

Mrs. Andrew Toland. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Juergens. Dr. and Mrs. Pren­tiss A. Anderson. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Monohon and Mr. and Mrs. Mark Allen.

High scores were made by Mrs. Juergens and Dr. Anderson.

Mr. and Mrs. James Jenkins. 524 Eleventh street, gave a dinner in honor of Ollie and Orin Dearborn, of Lone Pine. Cal.. last night.

Present were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gaston. Mr. and Mrs. Wes­ley Oast on. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Starkens, Mr. and Mrs. William Po-tillo, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Koontz, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Dearborn, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Gun ter, Mr. and Mrs. O. P. Dearborn. Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Ruben Jenkins. Miss Mildred Jen­kins, Herbert Dearborn, the hon­ored guests and the hosts.

and the hostess.

Welfare Section Of Womans Club Examines Babies

The child welfare section of Santa Monica Bay Womans club met yes­terday in the clubhouse. Mrs. E. B. Heldmau. chairman, presided.

The following babies were weighed and examined: Bennie Hines, Patricia Woods. Billy Smith, Diana Nelson. Roy Nelson. Jean Devorak, Cora Lepair. Ronald Ritchie. Patricia Louise Front... Betty Jane Miller. Melva Way. Richard Lind ley. Frederick Raster, Harold Drake, Charles Anderson. Vivian Campbell. Joan Muddock. Richard Thompson, Doris Edwards. Caroline Singer. Virginia Peterson and Dickie Rhodes.

BUY SOMETHING NEW—NOW!

Mrs. H. C. Hubbs Honor Guest at Bridge Luncheon

Complimenting Mrs. Harry C. Hubbs, who is the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. Holt Vicini. 440 Sev-

I enteenth street. Mrs. Vicini enter­tained yesterday with a luncheon and bridge party. Mrs. Hubbs' home is in Burlingame, Cal.

Covers were laid at luncheon for Mrs. Leo J. Madsen, Mrs. George Hines. Mrs. Harry Middle! on, Mrs.

I Jack Connor, Mrs. Louis B. Polk. - Mrs. William B. Gilroy. Mrs. Lee Dayton, Mrs. C. H. Richmond, Mrs. William Hollen, Mrs. Carleton Kin­ney, Mrs. A. G. Mahan. sr.. Mrs. L. B. Leepy. Mrs. William Heinickle, Mrs. Morgan M. Pattison, Mrs. Don­ald Douglas and Mrs. L. La Pfada.

Rotes and gladioli were used in I decoration.

Mr. and Mrs. Jack Conner enter-tained recently with a dinner party

[ for Mr. and Mrs. Hubbs. The Con-ner home in Los Angeles was the scene of the affair.

Ouests were Or. and Mrs. c . H. Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. Theodore McGahan. Miss Margaret Carpen­ter. Henry Rivers and the honorees.

Mr. and Mrs. Donald Douglas. I 1148 Tenth street, will give a dinner party tonight for the visitors.

Council of Gjrl Scouts Discusses

Future Program _______

•ante Monica Girl Scout council mat recently to discuss plans for tba coming months. These members! were present: Mesdames E. R. I Maule. Morton Anderson, W. A.I Galantine, Irene Fortune. T. V.j Grant, F. A. Manaugh. Herman Michel, M. C. Rice. Howard Mills and John RoU.

Ttt. members planned an insptc-! tion aa well as a pleasure trip to Big Pines on October 9 to see what changes are to be made In the sum­mer camp for the Scouts te next year. Members are to leave thai Scout house at 6 in the morning with their camping outfits and have breakfast in San Fernando and from there go to Big Pines to spend the night, returning after lunch on j Friday.

Mrs. J. 3. Land told of plans made by the leaders for a play night for the Girl Scouts and their friends to be held on October 16. the girls bringing their lunches and the eve­ning to be spent in games and other entertainment.

Miss Marqua Kirkham, secretary, announced that on October 16. from 3 to 4 o'clock, a leaders' trainer's course wili be started, the purpose being to train women who are will­ing to take up this work to fit themselves for leaders in this or-1 ganizatlon.

On the next afternoon. October 17. at the same time a class for ad­vanced leaders will be started in troop management and technique.

Mrs. Horatio Seymour, chairman of awards, said a speaker from the national organization possibly could j be gotten for the next court of awards, and also that a play would be given by the Scouts at that time.

Club Literature Section to Hear

College Teacher} Edwin Coulson. head of the Eng-1

llsh department of the Santa Mont- j ea junior college, will be tba first speaker to address members of the literature section of Santa Monica Bay Womans Club this year.

Coulson, who has taught, in the Santa Monica college for a year, has made a thorough study of modern poetry, and the subject of his ad­dress before the literature section, at 2:30 p. m.. October 27. will be, "Is FTee Verse Here to Stay?"

Mrs. H. O. Jensen, chairman the section, will present Coulson.

Ills of Children Laid to Parents By Mrs. Pierson

"The failure of parents to under, stand their chUdren Is the begin­ning of all the mental and emo­tional difficulties those chUdren suffer when they are grown," ac­cording to Mrs. George M Pierson, chairman of the Lincoln Study club, which held its first meeting thia morning, October 2, in the Lincoln junior high school.

This year the high school P.-T. A. members interested in study circle work will Join the Lincoln group.

Mrs. Pierson gave a brief sum­mary of last year's work and of tba aims for the coming year. Also aa opportunity was given members of the class to hand ln any problem that they would like to have dis­cussed in the class this year. These were unsigned and the discussion was kept aa impersonal as possible.

Templeton Woods Will Entertain Bay Music Body

Mr. and Mrs. Templeton Wood. 603 Alta avenue, will entertain Sun­day with a tea for the members and friends of Santa Monica Bay MBsto association. Mrs. Wood Is president of the organization.

The new members of the associa­tion will be honored on this occa­sion.

Receiving with Mr. and Mrs, Wood will be the members of the board: Mrs. Delia Williams. Mrs. E. J. Eddlngton. Mrs. Arthur Bacon, Mrs. Edla Tegner Swinney, Mrs. Jo­seph Zuckerman. Mrs. W. W. Ben­nett, Mrs. Charles Carr, Mrs. Alma Renner, Mrs. Edwin Johnson, Leon Raines. W. R. Alexander, Thomas Stone and Worth Hathaway.

i M C 0 R l SOFT Gone In 4 Days Roots and All

Callouses, Too

of

ANALYST TO SPKAK Ivah Bergh Whitten, color analyst

of New York, will speak at the Universal Truth Library. 1337 Ocean avenue. Friday. October 3, at 8 p. m.

Thc subject of her talk will be "Your Aura."

W a s h i n g — P o l i s h i n g C r e a s i n g

Conveniently Located

Carr & Cummins Fourth and Broadway

Pbone 27193

Out to stay out—selling like hot cakes in Great Britain and now In America the pleasant, easy way to get rid of corns—a Joyous, refresh­ing, invigorating foot bath for 3 er 4 nights and then lift out the corn —roots and all.

They call this miracle worker Radox Bath Salts and since it has been working wonders with the bad feet of the right little Isles—plasters and acids, cutting and skin destroy­ing liquid belong to the dark ages.

It's the modern way—the sensible way to take out corns—to abolish callouses—to dissolve the hard skin from heels and toes and to put your feet in good vigorous condition to that you can walk and run and jump and dance with ease and pleasure.

Just ask for a box of Radox Bath Salts at Criterion Drug Co., Santa Monica Drug Co. or any modern drug store—you'll be delighted. Ad vertisement.

Phone 14187

STARTING SATURDAY

ART CLASS FOR CHILDREN Design, i oslume. Modeling and Landscape

MISS DTGUR BADER ' ,1 Second Street

A six inch ruler will be found handy for measuring hems by the j woman who does much sewing.

ARENE CLUB TO MEET Arene club. Order of Eastern

Star, will meet tomorrow noon in the Venice Masonic club, 1629 Wash­ington avenue. Mrs. Albert Bischoff is president. Mrs. Ellen Mcintosh will be hostess.

CASA DE REPOSO A high class rest horn* for women n»i. the Sierra Madre Mountains. Every comfort and convenience for KU*M Unexcelled cul-ine.

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PHONE 26329

Little children look old beyond their years from mal­nutrition. COD LIVER OIL is an honest builder of little bodies.

Diebold's Pharmacy Telephone 26329

Medical Bldg., Fourth and Wilshire, Santa Monica

YALE MARKET Corner Santa Monica Blv<|. and Y a k St.

I

Meat Department Grocery Dept. Swift's Silverleaf

Pure Lard 2 lbs. 35c

S Swift's Jewel Compound 2 lbs. 2 5 c Swift's Bacon

V^-lb. pkg. 25c Other Quality Meat*

YALE SERVICE STATION

These low prices in effect every day until further notice. High-Grade Gasoline Best Western Oil 5 gallons tor Eastern Oil, 5 gallons for Beat Western Oil by the

Quart, 18c 2841 Santa Monica Blvd.

Phone 29315

SPECIAL for FRIDAY SATURDAY

Brookfleld

Eggs

Oleomargarine Golden Wast or Silver-Nut

Watch for Our Specials Every

Thursday

Announcement

Bay Cities Pharmacists

W to announce the establishing of a modern pharmacy to the medical profession of the Bay District of Santa Monica, under the management of Mr. W, S. Price, who has placed his order for drugs through Mr. M. S. McPhee, representative of E. R. Squibb & Son, Manufacturing Chemists to the medical profession since 1858.

Some of Your Neighbors Will Be Bay Cities Guaranty Building--

- Loan Association G. I.. Brand

. cigaaa , Lc Roy Cordon Beauty Parlor

.Santa Monica Dental Laboratory

Eugene M. Durfee Architect

Or. A. E. O Flaherty Blight & Wheeler

Accountants Tanner. Odell & Taft

Attorneys Telephone Santa Monica 29955 er ?lad to give you complete detail*. insistence on our..

Miss Marguerite L. Murphy General Insurance

Dr. Edw. J. Standi, e Dentist

Malibu Furniture Company Ernest English

Attorney L C . McCray Practitioner

Raymond E. Nefziger Author

Rer man Bros. Real Estate C. Wrigiey Practitioner

Thro. K. Bidlingmaier and Associates

Advertising Counsellors Or. I t . R • s oi ii h

Dentist Christian Science Reading

Room Drs. Silvernale and Adkins

Dentists Drs. Kosky and Williams

Physicians X-Ray Laboratory Henry C. Moeller

Insurance kee Mr. C. R. Vaughn, Building Superintendent. He will be An inquiry will involve no obligation on your part or unpleasant

Juat a few of the many desirable featuret thit building possesses: Two high-speed Otis elevators. Courteous attendants la charge. Sixteen-hour daily service. Including Sundays. Soundproof and fireproof partitions.

Soft water ta every office throughout the entire building.

Light and phone outlet connections ht various convenient locations.

BAY CITIES BUILDING HOME o r THE

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Thea K. Bidlingmaier & Associates

YOUR HUSBAND NEEDS WATCHING

UNDER the weight of serious responsibilities he forgets . . . yet In busi­ness good personal ap­pearance is an asset. Your job is to make it an asset hv having his clothes reg­ularly cleaned and pressed at Lloyd's.

Don't Overlook Your Own Garments

Free Delivery Service

Men'j Suits 75c m

Top Expertly Cleaned and

Pressed

Ladies'. Plain Coats and Woolen Dresses

85c Lloyd's

Garment Cleaning Serviee\

Corner Twentieth St, and S. M. Blvd. '

Phone 2418S 11 • • • -. '

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PAGE FOURTEEN EVENING OUTLOOK, SANTA MONICA, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY,' OCTOBER f, 1930

SPORTC HORT-3

ar nun* FINCH SLAPPING THE MOIST. RE

F WERE not mistaken, we read a treaty on the probabilities tit the World's Seri­ous, explaining in detail the trouble tha A t h l e t i c s would hava tn touching B u r ­l e i g h G r i m e s ' m o i s t delivery. S o m e • wayward scribe had read

saliva

FREMONT TEAM MEETS VIKINGS IN WRST HOME GAME Polish Offense

At Norse lair W r o n g Idea of Plays

Cause of Fa i lure , Says Grid Coach

up on saliva ana had come to the conclusion that the old apple, properly lubricated, would be an elusive object.

wfrt^ . . . a a It was—to the Cardinal fielders.

• • • • • Those slashing Mackmen didnt

touch Grimes' spit ball very often. t i s true, but weren't they sincere when they did locate the whizzing sphere! Mickey Cochrane and Al Simmons gather homers; Jimmv Foxx and Mule Haas collect triple* and Jimmy Dykes comes up with a double. Slamming out ail theh hits into the extra-base orchard, the Athletics e s t a b l i s h e d anotner World's Series record.

• • • • • And the Cardinals were supposed

to do the slugging. They garnered nine bingles, but they came along like a transcontinental train—in­jections. Orove was scattering the tilts like bird shot.

A TOUGH BREAK Marger Asplt, Howard Jones'

landy man at halfback, pulls up with an injured kicker, and tan-mediately Trojanites start to wail. They have the weep-weeps early, those Troy supporters.

• • • * . Here Commander Jones only has

sixty or sixty-five artists oo hit squad, and when ona halfback gets hurt predictions start pouring In that U. S. C. will lose every game this season.

a • . . . ' tt Bead Man Jones cant produce a powerful team with the wealth of material that greets him every sea­son, he ought to be teaching sewing In the old ladies' home. But the fact is, he does produce a powerful squad, and aB this wailing from behind the front line trenches la silly—and childish.

Duffy Suffers ! Sprained Wrist Santa Monica Blond Has

Bad Flipper, But Will Play Saturday

By \TCTOR SIDLER Sports Editor, City News Service LOS ANGELES, Oct. 2 (CNS) —

If any football coach has cause to be pessimistic about his 1930 outlook that one is Howard Jones of South­ern California

To tba troubles that have been raining about the shoulders of the Trojan mentor of late was added today the prospect that ha may have to do without the passing services of Marshall Duffield, first string quarterback, in the confer­ence game with Oregon State at the coliseum Saturday.

Sprained Wrist The

By FRANK FINCH "There's something amiss in good

old Denmark," spake Coach Joe Buckmaster, Samohi varsity grid

m e n t o r , as he watched hit pet p l a y s go f a r naught a g a i n s t Santa B a r b a r a and Fairfax high schools

Putting it in a c o c o n u t shell.! B u c k m a s t e r I sensed that some­thing was wrong with hia Viking' machine.

He found o a t [what lt was at last

J night's scrimmage I Joe Buckmaster as the Norsemen

; were prepplng for their fracas with j | tha Fremont Milltoppers tomorrow

afternoon on Samohi field. Kasl ta Blame

The young, promising Dale Kasl, sophomore end, was "taking his man," Buckmaster found out, but Kasl was taking the wrong man! In one play he was scheduled to take out the fullback, but he was nudging | the tackle. And in another play Kasl should have gone after the halfback and left the tackle for an Interference runner.

After this mishap had been straightened, the offense worked much smoother, and for the first time this season the Vike mentor was satisfied with his outfit.

Buckmaster told me yesterday morning that everything he had taught his charges during the train­ing season would be reviewed. The team started reviewing yesterday afternoon such Important phases of play as timing, pass defense, line play and fundamentals. "We didn't change the plays—we changed the boys' Ideas of them," was the coach's apt remark.

Tough Game In two games the Norsemen have

scored but one touchdown and on both occasions have come out on the short end of the score. Tomor­row's battle with Fremont isn't a s -nected to be quite as tough as the first two games, but the Hilltoppers always put a strong team on the field.

San Pedro took them Into camp. 20 to 0, last Friday, but San Pedro has a heavy, seasoned aggregation that will fee In the running for the Bav league gonfalon.

It will be the first home game of the season for the Vikings. Next week a game at Burbank is sched­uled, with Inglewood coming here on October 17 for the opening of the league competition. The Sentinel team has been coached by Buckmas­ter for the last five or six years, and much Interest shpuld generate when he sends his new charges against his old stars.

No changes are contemplated in the Blue and Gold starting lineup. This will send Franks (Sugar) Shu­t-rue to the auarterbtck post, with Woods and Lonez al halves, and' Hopkins at fullback. The line will line up with Corbridge and Kasl, ends: Pullman and Hatch, tackles:

Corsair Outfit In Better Form

Fundamentals Improved as Bucs Prepare for

Frosh Fracas

Lett to right are Lowell R., Lester L., and Maurice E. Buerge, brothers, and the results of their recent hunting trip Into tba H' h Sierras. The two deer shown hanging are said to be the two largest taken In that particular about 180 pounds dressed.

district so far this season. They weigh

Gondoliers Tret To Poly Citadel

Tinkham's O u t f i t Vies With Mechanics; Bee

Teams at Venice By GUS VIGNOLLE

Slated to meet the Los Angeles Polytechnic eleven tomorrow In tha third practice contest of the season I formarice between Santa Monica'and

The annual hunting trip of tha Buerge Brothers was even more suc­cessful than ever before. They suc­ceeded in returning to Santa Monica with the two largest bucks yet brought ont of the mountains where they were hunting.

They drove a model A Ford, owned fey tba Coast Hardwood Floor Co., a hundred miles into tba moun­tains from Fresno and then packed by animals another fifteen miles Into the high mountains. In spite Ot ttt. heavy overload imposed on the model A Ford it carried Its cargo and three passengers over the steep, ratio, narrow road without once exceeding normal driving heat. Equally remarkable was the par-

er at center.

WILL ROGERS TO

LEAD POLOISTS

IN HOT BATTLE

youth s u f f e r t d ^ s p r a S v r S S I ] ^ " . a n d Clark, guard., and Web three sprained fingers on his right I hand during last Tuesday's scrim­mage. Yesterday he was unable to hea\a the r '"kin w**-"* the injured member.

Duffield undoubtedly will plav Saturday, but if his hand isn't in shape there is very little likelihood that he will do any passing. The aerial work of the other quarterback candidates hasn't been up to scratch, so the prospects of a strong passing attack were anything but roseate today.

Bob Hall, 215-pound tackle, was back at Ins post yesterday after an absence of two days due to an in­jured knee. George Kirkwood was at left half, taking the place of Marger Aspit, who was injured last ! Saturday.

on the Mechanics' field of combat Venice high's football squad prom­ises to show up better than it did against the Fremont gridders last week.

During the past week Coach Frank Tinkham has had his men go through several tough workouts and has been working and improv­ing the Venice passing attack, the Gondoliers' most stalwart and pow­erful mode of attack.

There is'no doubt but what Voyle Brennan's men are a formidable aggregation this year, and the Vene­tians will have to be keyed up to a high degree of perfection in order to topple their opponents. This, however, remains to be seen.

Attack Smoother The r u n n i n g attack seems

smoother and is clicking wltb more precision than heretofore, and the passing attack is also strengthened considerably. Against Fremont the Venetians showed themselves to be weak bl the defensive department of the game, and unless their tac­tics are better than they were it is an almost certainty that the speedy Poly backs will be in for a good afternoon.

Coach Tinkham has not yet hit upon a perfect combination of gridders, and several positions may be filled with hard-working re­cruits before the first league tiff is under way.

Juggling The daily juggling of men serves

the dual purpose of keeping en-Lending a bit of true western at- thuslasm at fever heat and enabling

mosphere to the occasion, the polo I Tinkham to view a large number of game at the Uplifters field next athletes under conditions resem-Suriday will bring out Will Rogers b l l n 8 those of an actual game. and his cowboys against the Up-1 While the Venetian varsity en

Fresno, where most of the distance waa traveled at sixty miles an hour with no ill effects from overload. \

Even on the return nip, with the additional load of three large bucks tba car held tba road perfectly at i high speeds, around curves and on

By JACK MENKE Great Improvement In funda­

mental work waa shown by Coach Floyd Mishler's Santa Monica jay­see Corsairs ta a stiff scrimmage last night as they prepared to meet tba Santa Barbara Teachers' col­lege frosh on Samohi field Satur­day.

Tba Corsair line ls learning to charge lower. None of the gaping holes that were so much ln evidence last Saturday were noticeable yes­terday The work ot "Pop'' O'Rourke and Fredericks at tba and berths seems to be on the upgrade, especially O'Rourke. Fredericks started off tba aeason with a bang, but seem to slow up the last two weeks, and If ba again shakes sot of lt ona of Mishler's headaches may be lessened.

Weak Against Passes That old weakness against

passes is still there, hut should be Ironed eat before Saturday. When the opposition starts hurling tbe pig's epidermis through the air th. Corsalr backfield seems to be root ed to the spot and petrified. Thet­is no reason for this, and the Oar sairs should soon be over thi weakness.

The invading frosh from Sant Barbara will find a much improver team ready to battle with them, anc tba contest will no doubt ba much closer, than the affair last Satufda•, wltb Compton.

Last night Art Vallone, Hogston Gall, Rankin and Fox looked good In the Una In fact, tba whole bunch looked much better, and they played like they got a kick out oi the game itself. This was as i should have been. Lawton Fox although he doesn't weigh so much is making a strong bid for a first string guard berth. Fox was han­dicapped St the start of the season by the fact that he could not prac­tice with his mates because nt work, Init BOW that he can report at tba regular time he lt demon­strating some good football.

Federson also looked good last

tha level. Maurice Buerge, salesman for

R. M. Hufford, Inc., Ford dealer, says that anyone seeing the steady performance of bla brother's model A on this trip would certainly know why Ford sales are Steadily climbing.

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While M i c k e y Cochrane, Jimmy Foxx and Al Simmons were getting all the glory yes­terday, there was a pair of Mackmen who played bang-up ball. Joe Boley, top, made sev­eral circus catches at shortstop while Mule Haas, below, swatted a triple.

night and should he keep up tbe good work will cause some regular a lot of worry.

Mack Jubilant Over Brainwork

S q u e e z e Play Baffles Cards; Hoover. Signs Program for Newtie

PHILADELPHIA. Oct. 2 UPr— Up In bla tower office after tba first game Connie Mack expressed sur­prise tbe Cardinals were caught flat-footed when Haas and Boley pulled off their brilliant "squeeze" play In the seventh. "We used it j e a n ago," Mack said, "so we Just dusted it of f to try on the Cardinals if the opportunity offered."

Mound Duel

One of tba happiest Philadel­phia-is today was "Izzy" Epstein, blind newsboy, who la exhibiting a score card of tba' first series game signed fey President Hoover. While the shouting waa going on, Babe O'Rourke, tha A's announcer, slipped into the president's box and whispered to Mr. Hoover's secre­tary tbat a blind newsboy had asked for the executive's autograph. A moment later a score card was handed back, sigr>-1 by the presi­dent.

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Tba bleacher line began forming for today's game before tha players! had ' 't tbe field after the opener i yesterd* Sam Warwick, 17-year-old newspaper .ar.ier of Cumber­land, Mft, beaded tba line at the i doll* window. Be left yesterday's game in t^e ninth so ba would be first ta Una when the ticket windows open at 9 a. m.

Connie Mack said Boley's head­long dive and stop of Douthit's sir.-sh gave him the biggest thrill of his baseball .-.reer—bigger than wi*- ~»t but year's series f-om the i % "If he hadn't nade that stop and tossed oat Grimes at sec­ond," he said, "there's no telline what might have happened "

"Fair and continued cool,' was the weat ner man's offering to base-tall f >>ns today at tba world cham­pion Athletics and tha St. Louis j Cardinals prepared to battle ta tbe | second game of tbe World Series.

A temperature of 54 at 7 a. m. j Indicated tba same low temperature' of yesterday will mark today's game A bright sun, however, somewhat offset the .nappy autumn breezes that swept around Shibe park, '

The probable mound selec­tions tar today's game were Flint Rhem, top, for the Cards, and George Earnshaw, bottom, for the Philadelphia team. Earnshaw won twenty - two games during the season.

chilling the long line wait ing for bleac' . tickets.

T H I R T Y thousand welcoming shouts as he steps to bat . . . the idol of them all. Ball one! Ball two! . . . and cr-r-ack! he's done it again. Popularity to be lasting must be deserved.

MAJOR BOWLING LEAGUE STARTS

MONDAY NIGHT

lifters squad. Rogers will have his son, Will, Jr.,

riding with him tri the forward po­sitions on the cowboy lineup. Snowy Baker will fill the pivot No. 3 post. The back position is yet to fee filled.

On the Uplifters team will be T. Lyell Puckett of Alhambra, Hal Roach, southpaw star; Lionel Ped­ley and Clair Brunson, comprising a quartet that should give the cow­boys plenty of opposition.

gages the heavyweight Mechanics at the lat ter's gridiron, the powerful Venice high lightweight brigade squares off with the Poly Bees on Clark field.

The major bowling league of Southern California opens next Monday night with one Santa Mon­ica team entered—Bobsene's West­lnghouse Radios.

At Al Setser's recreation center on the same night the second round of the Santa Monica Commercial league will be held, with the fol­lowing matches tabbed: A. O. U. W. Insurance Society vs. Grant Whale; George's Fountain vs. Jadic's Men's Shop; Art's Chile vs. Funfar Jew­elers and Corey's Barbers vs. Smith-Robinson Shoes.

Art's Chile, 1929-30 champion, is tied with the insurance societv team for first honors.

Wes Kasl Star of Frosh-Varsity War

LOS ANGELES. Oct. 2 (U.R)—The varsity and frosh squads field scrimmage today at the University of California at Los Angeles. The Frosh. who defeated Glendale Jun­ior college, 9 to 7 last week, showed up well against the bigger team. Wesley Kasl of Santa Monica snagged a thirty-yard pass and raced to a touchdown, which was at least embarrassing to Bill Spauld­ing's first stringers.

Five Californians In Coast Net War

BERKELEY, Oct. . tu.R)—Fivc-Oaliforniana and three easterners advanced today to the quarter final round of the men's singles in the Pacific coast tennis championships being held here at the Berkeley Tennis club.

The survivors from the eight eastern stars entered were George Lott, fourth ranking plaver; Clifford Sutter and Sydney Wood. John Van Ryn, Berkeley Bell, J. Gilbert Hall and Bruce Barnes were all swept from the play in a series ol upsets yesterday.

Mrs. Helen Wills Moody advanced to the semi-final round of the women's singles by defeating Ethel Burkhardt 6-0, 8-1.

Oregon, N. Y, U. in Football Agreement CHICAGO. Oct. 2 (U.R)—Arrange­

ments were completed today for an intersectional football game be­tween New York University and the University of Oregon, to be played at Yankee stadium, October 31, 1931. The game was arranged by A. B. Nixon of New York, and Hugh Rosson of Oregon, who is here assisting with the details for the Drake-Oregon night game at Sol­diers field tomorrow night.

Gallant Fox Turns Up With Bab Cough

NEW YORK, Oct. 2 UPl—Gallant Fox, champion three-year-old, will not run in the Hawthorne gold cup at Chicago on, October 11. The Fox has developed a cough, according to Trainer Sunny Jim Fitzsimmons, and is in no condition to be put in shape this week.

•OOD VS. MACK PASADENA, Oct. 2 (U.R)—Ernie

Hood, local favorite, and Jimmy Mack will meet heme tonight in the feature bout of a six-fight program.

Substitutions Did you see the parade last

night? —THE PARADE OF SUBSTITUTIONS. At the Ocean Park boxing arena Trench King SUBSTI­TUTED for Young Freddy Welsh and was knocked stiff tn forty seconds by Battling Shaw. Leroy Haynes, Negro heavy, beat Jack Dunseth. Vearl W h i t e h e a d pasted Frankie Burnell. Ben Mozelle, SUBSTITUTING for Johnny Todd, who was SUBSTITUT­ING for Hank Gatton, drew with Joe Arciniega. Jess Avala fought a draw, with Vernon Lavent. who was SUBSTITUT­ING for Justin Pacua. That's a record—seventeen rounds of boxing and four SUBSTITU­TIONS.

Warriors Meet Valley Hunters By EDDIE GILBERT

In preparation for tomorrow's fracas with the Owensmouth Hunt­ers, Coach Bob Triggs' University high Warriors have been going through tough scrimmage sessions for the past few nights. The boys have been improving rapidly, and still remain favorites for the open­ing Valley league encounter.

Latest reports from the Green and White institution show that but nineteen men have reported for the pigskin sport this year. The team is composed mostly of new men, and is having a bard time getting started.

Good Defense Tuesday's game with Samohi

showed that the defensive work of the Warrior band is improving, al­though the second team still has' a lot to learn in this department. The first stringers held the Vikings to one touchdown during the three periods they performed. The offen­sive work could be improved, but this is being ironed out rapidly.

The ends are still being fooled on end runs and reverses, continually being sucked in on these plays, but are gradually overcoming this fault. The backfield is beginning to work out its pass defense as it should be done, and this should be of great benefit to the team against the light Owensmouth squad.

No changes bave been announced in the lineup of Andrade and Mor-rab, ends; Taylor and Scott tac­kles; Baird and Cox. guards; How­ard, center; Ludwig, fullback; Rob­inson and Priday, halfbacks, and Potter, quarterback.

Housing Plan Well In Hand for Games \

LOS ANGELES, Oct. 2—Plans for j tba Olympic village for housing and feeding athletes during the games of the tenth Olympiad in 1932 are en­gaging the attention of the organ-

I izing committee, which is complet­ing all of the details of this very big and Important feature of the

• preparations for tba coming world event.

will always stand out/

HOME RUNS are made at the plate — not on the bench!

likewise what counts in a ciga­rette is what a»smoker gets from it — not what is said about it.

Chesterfield has a policy—give smokers what they want:

MILDNESS— the wholly nat-ural mildness of tobaccos that am without harshness or bitterness.

BETTER TASTE—such as oniy ^ a cigarette of wholesome purity

and better tobaccos can have.

Chesterfield Cigarettes on manufactured by LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO Ca

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THURSDAY, CKJTOBEfc £, i y d v EVENING OUTLOOK, SANTA MONICA, CALIFORNIA PAGE FIFTEEN

W*

EARNSHAW PITCHES GREAT BALL AS ATHLETICS TRIM CARDINALS Cochrane Again

Scores on Amer Teams Leave for Third

Game of Series in St. Louis

(Continued From Page 1)

Mancuso's single between Third and abort and Oelbert bounced a single over Bishop's head to send the Card­inal catcher to third.

Manager Street of tba Cards, dis­regarded the fact that Rhem seemed in for a beating and also Is a weak hitter, and lat him btt .for himself ta this spot, where another hit might have driven Earnshaw to cover.

Athletics Bold Edge The Athletics bad a tremendous

edge on toe current series when they took ths field today. Not only did they lead the Cardinals, one game to n«5ne, but they were able to look forward to having Orove pitch for them ta one of the games ln St. Louis. .;,*-,. ' tt was slightly warmer in Shibe

park this afternoon, with the sky a cloudless Maa, ana the northeast breeze did not whistle quite ao shrilly through tba ball park as on the occasion of tba opening game.

The same heavy hitters In tba Philadelphia lineup who broke op yesterday's pastime and ruined Bur­leigh Orimes' dreams of triumph with resounding extra base hits, were slugging hard ta batting prac­tice when, the white-clad A's took tba field an hour or so before game time.

Rush Seats Filled Mickey Cochrane, who punched

ant a homer ln the first game, drove several balls over the right field fence, while Al Simmons sent one Into bla own left field crowd in the bleachers.

Once more these rush seats were filled and the gates were shut ta the face of aome 2.500 disappointed fans for whom there was no room.

The Cardinals did not put ta an early appearance today. "Sergeant" Gabby Street, still confident that bla club could come through after hitting Grover father freely yester­day, puffed at bla briar pipe in the club's dressing room and read tba boys a Uttle lecture, which is known as "skull practice."

There is no denying that the breaks went against the Cardinals yesterday, bat the plays by Boley and Bishop around second base were tba kind that makes the breaks go with a winning ball club.

As Connie Mack's Athletics Trampled on St. Louis Cards

Mickey Cochrane of the Athletics safe at first after a narrow esca pe. He was playing off first base ln the first inning of the initial World's Series tilt yesterday, and Pitcher Orimes tried to nab him.

Play-by-Play Continued From Page 1)

and Ml • Bt* record. Bottomley up. Otrlk* oat, ewunr: ball one. low an. inside. Strike two, awuna: ball two, inside: foul; ball three, outside Bottomley filed to Haas, Who mad* a nice running catch. No runs, one hit, no errors, one left.

ATHLETICS—Bishop up. Bishop filed to Douthit. Dykes up. Strike oaa, swung; foul

' strike tee; ball one, outside. Dykes out, Adam. to Bottomley. t t t IBt made a splen­did. Play oa t ball which was very hard IM over near third. Cochrane up. Strike one. called. Ball oat, outside. Ball two. outside; strike two. called. Cochrane kit • homa run Afar MM rltht field fence, n t ball cleared the fence by a good margin aaa vat longer than the ma In hit yes­terday. Simmons UP. Ball oaa. Inside. Foul strike one. Foul strike two. Simmons sin­gled sharply ta center. Foxx up. Foxx hit MM first ball pitched ta left center fw t double, scoring Simmons. Miller up. BaU one, high. Lindsey went to tba bull pen fW ihe Cards. Foul strike oaa. Foul strike two; ball two. outside; ball three, outside. Miller eat to Bottomley una. sisted oa a roller down first base line. Two runs, three hits, no errors, one left.

SECOND INNING CARDS—Hafey up. Foul strike ona.

Hafey popped to Bishop who went 'back Into short center to make the catch. Wat­kins w . Ball aaa, outside; strike one, swung; ball two, inside; strike two, swung. PMd. Watkins htt a homa ma over tta rltht field fence. It was hit first time at bat ln the World Series as he did not play yesterday. Mancuso up. Strike one, called; ball one, Inside. Mancuso beat out an In­field hit ta deep ahort. Boley reached the ball but could not recover it in time to make tilt play. fWllMirt up. Strike aat, swung. Strike tea, called. Gelbert hit a bounder through the feea which hopped 01 tl Bishop's head and tt went for aa in­field single. Mancuso going to third. Rhem P.. Ball oat, outside. Strike aaa awunt; foal strike two. Rhem fanned swinging. Douthit up. Douthit popped to Bishop. Oat ran. three hits, no errors, two left.

ATHLETICS—Haas up. Foul strike one: strike tea, called, ball aat, ttw. Haas fanned swinging. Mancuso dropped tilt ball and tagged Mai out. Boley up. Boley popped to Frisch back ea the Rata Earn­shaw up. Earnshaw filed to Hafay la left canter. No runs, aa hits, aa errors, none left. Rhem went better ln the aecond and made Boley aad Earnshaw hit the first baU pitched after fanning Haas.

THIRD INNING CARDS—Adams up. Strike one, called;

foul strike tea, ban one, high, ball two, lo*. Adamg flied te Miller. Mia SaS aa easy catch. Frisch up. Ball one, outside Frisch grounded to Boley, Vat fumbled the teU .aad te vat safe at brat. It was an error for Baler aad tte first error of t t e series. Bottomley up. Foul strike WM; baU ona. outside. Bottomley ratted a high foul which Bishop got aader but could not hold. Ht did aat receive aa error. St tt strike two. Bottomley fanned, swinging. Ratal* up. Ball eat, high; ball two. in­side. Frisch stole second aad vent to third when Cochrane threw mft. aad the ball went to center field. BaU three, out-aide. Strike ona, called. Hafey raised a nlth fool which Dykes could easily hava handled, but te slipped down lust at he started to match tte catch. It ls 3 and J. Hafey called oat on strikes, tta rant, no hits, two errors, one left.

ATHLETICS—Bishop up. Foul strike one. Bishop out to Bottomley, unassisted. Dykes up. Strike oae, called; strike two, called: ball aaa, hith; foul; ball tea* outside. Dykes was called aat ea atrlkes. Cochrane up. The crowd cava him a big band. Bali one. Inside. Rhem uncorked a wild pitch and almost btt Cochrane Strike one called. Cochrane grounded to Frisch, who fum­bled the ball, for an error, and Cochrane was safe at flit-. Simmons up. Strike eat, called. Simmons drove a liner to right, soorlng Cochrane. Watkins tried ta make a thoestrint catch aad failed, t te ball rolllnt ta the fence. Foxx UP. Ball aaa, taalda: ball two. outside; ball three, out-aida. Strike one, called. Foxx walked. Mil-Mr ap. Miller drove a sharp grounder ta left field, scoring Simmons. Foxx went to third and Miller to second when Rhem missed Hafey's return throw from tha out­field. Rhem wag given an error and inner 0 single- Haaa up. Ball oaa. Inside. Fsul strike ona. Haas lined ta Douthit la cen­ter, who made a nice catch. Two runs. two hits, two errors, two left.

FOURTH INNING CARDS—Watkins up. BaU oaa, inside.

Strike one. called. BaU two, hith. Watkins Hied ta Simmons, who almost dropped the

Flood McCarthy With Contracts

Pirates, Robins, Sox Make Offers; Yanks Sign

Him, Rumor PHILADELPHIA. Oct. 2 (U.R)—The

fact that Joe McCarthy, former manager of the Chicago Cubs, has turned down offers from the Boston Red Sox, Pittsburgh Pirates and Brooklyn Robins, tended to indicate today that he soon will be officially announced as the new manager of the New York' Yankees.

Although officials of the Yankees have made half-hearted denials. It is reported that the completion of the deal will take place when Mc­Carthy reaches New York on Fri­day;

Offered Contract Bob Quinn, president of the Bos­

ton Red Sox, offered McCarthy a two-year contract, with an option on an additional two years, to man­age his team. McCarthy turned it down.

Brooklyn offered McCarthy a po­sition with the Robins as scout and assistant manager for. 1931. with the provision that he was to become manager in 1932. but this was turned down also. Another offer was made McCarthy by Pittsburgh.

McCarthy is said to have made $310,000 in his last three years with the Cubs from his salary, bonus, stock and various other sources, and is not anxious to take any job that is not exactly to his liking.

Yale-Maryland. Pitt-West Virginia j f Feature Easts Football Contests

, . By OROtO ROBERTSON Associated Press Sports Writer

NEW YORK. Oct. 2 UPr—Saturday's football games are expected to be just another series of practice tilts for the majority of the Eastern teams, but up at New Haven, where Maryland meets Yale, and down at Morgan-town, where Pittsburgh clashes With West Virginia, a couple of real grid­iron battles are In the making. It was net quite a year ago when Mazy-land stepped Into the Yale bowl and i

CONGER LEADS MASON IN 3-

CUSHION TILT

Al Simmons, slugging A outfielder, crosses home plate after making the first home run of the series. It came in the fifth inning.

Frankie Frisch ls safe at second, but he had to slide to do it.

The Cardinal player stretched a line drive into a two-base clout,

ball. Mancuso up. Strike one, called. Strike shaw fanned, swinging. No runs, no hits, two, called. Strike three. Mancuso fanned no errors, swinging. Gelbert up. Ball one. high; strike one, swung; Gelbert flung his bat almost to the stand as be missed tha ball en| tirely. Strike two, swung. Oelbert was called out on strikes. It was Earnshaw s fifth strikeout. No runs, no nits, no errors. none left.

ATHLETICS—Boley up. Ball aaa, outside Boley hit a sharp liner which bounded through Gelbert's glove and he reached first base and was credited with a single. Earnshaw up. Foul strike one: lt was an attempted bunt. Strike two. anatiiar at­tempt to bant. Earnshaw fanned, swing­ing. Bishop up. BaU one. outside. Ball two, outside; ball three, outside. Bishop walked oa four straight balls Dykes up. Dykes drove a terrific liner ta taft field scoring Boley and Blthop. It was a two-base hit for Dykes. The ball bounded off MM left field wall. Frankie Frisch came Ut to talk ta Rhem and Lindsey was called to tte bte ta pitch for tha Cardinals. Cochrane

SEVENTH INNING CARDS—Mancuso up. Ball one, inside

Ball two, outside. Ball three, hith. Man­cuso walked on four straight balls. It was Karnshaw's first pass. Gelbert up. Strike one. called; ball one, inside. Foul strike two; Gelbert grounded to Foxx, and Man­cuso was forced at second, Foxx to Boley. Fisher batted for Lindsey. Fisher up. Ball one, outside. Strike one. called. Ball two. Inside. Strike two. swung. Fisher fanned swinging. It was Earn, haw's sixth strike­out. Douthit up. Ball one. Inside; foul strike one. Strike two. called. Ball two, low. Douthit filed to Simmons. No runs, no hits, no errors, one left.

ATHLETICS—Johnson went to the mound for the Cards. Bishop up. Strike one, called; ball one, outside: ball two, outside; ball three. Inside. Bishop walked. Dykes up. Dykes sacrificed and was out to Bot­tomley unassisted. Cochrane' up. Ball one, outside: ball two, outside. Strike one

up. Ball one, hith. Cochrane lined to Gel- called. Strike two, called: ball three, out-bert and Dykes was doubgled off second. Cochrane did not make a complete swing 1 for the ball, half bunting it, and Gelbert raced ta ta make the catch aad then take I a few more steps ta force Pfbaa. Two I runs, two hits, no errors.

FIFTH INNING CARDS—Lindsey UP. Strike one, called.

Lindsey singled to right center. Douthit up. BaU one, inside Ball two, high; ball three, inside. Strike one, caUed; strike two, caUed. Douthit popped to Cochrane half- . way down tte first bate line. Adams up. I Foul strike one; ball one. low; ball two, Inside. Adams raised a high fly to Haas, who came la back of second to make the catch. Frisch up. Ball one. outside. Strike one. called; ball two, inside. Frisch popped I to Dykes, wbo caught the baU on the grass. No runs, one hit, no errors, one left i

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on base ATHLETICS—Simmons up. BaU one. out­

side. Strike one. swung: ball two, outside. Strike two, called. BaU three, low. Sim mon* flied to Douthit. Foxx up. Foxx out. Gelbert to Bottomley on the first baU pitched. Miller up. Strike one, called. Ball one. inside. Foul strike two. Ball two. high. Miller lined to Douthit, who caught tte aaB at his knees, then rolled over, l l was a good catch, although he did not have ta run ttr to make it lie runs, no hits, aa errara

SIXTH INNING CARDS—Bottomley UP. BaU one. Inside.

Strike one, called. Ball two, inside. Bot­tomley popped to Bishop behind second. Hafey up. Foul strike one. Ball one. hith. BaU two, low; foul strike two. Hater out. Dykes to Foxx- Watkins up. BaU one, low; strike one. swung. Watkins grounded out to Foxx. No runs, no hits, no errors.

ATHLETICS—Haaa up. BaU one. low. Foul strike one. Foul strike two; ball two. high. Haas was called out on strikes. Boley up. Strike one, called. Foley fouled to Bet

side. Cochrane walked Simmons up. Her­man Bell went to the bull pen for the .Cards. Simmons up. Simmons out. Frisch to Bottomley. Bishop taking third and Cochrane second. Foxx up. Strike one,' called. Mancuso attempted to catch Coch­rane off second, but was unsuccessful. Strike two, swung. Ball two, high. Foxx fanned swinging. No runs, no hits, no er­rors, two left.

EIGHTH INNING CARDS—Adams up. Strike one, called.

BaU one, outside; ball two, low. Adams singled to right. Frisch up Frisch lined to Dykes and Adams waa doubled off first. Dykes to Foxx. Bottomley up. Strike one. palled; ball one, inside; ball two, outside; ball three, outside; strike two, called Foul. Bottomley fouled to Dykes near the stand. No runs, one hit, no errors, none left.

ATHLETICS—Miller up. Strike one. called. Strike two, called: ball one. out.

I side. Miller fanned, swinging. Haas up. I Haas popped to Gelbert ln short left near I the foul line. Boley up.Strike one, called. I BaU one, outside. Strike two. called: foul. I BaU two. outside: foul: foul; ball three. I outside Boley tiled to Hafey. wbo made a I nice* running catch. No runs, no hits, no I errors

NINTH INNING CARDS—Hafey up. Strike one. called.

I Hafey out, Boley to Foxx. Watkins up. I Strike one, called. Ball one, outside: foul I strike two; ball two. outside. Watkins I fanned swinging It was Earnshavt sev-I entn strike out. Mancuso up. Strike one. I swung- Foul strike two; bail one, outside; I foul; ball two, low. Mancuso fanned swing-I ing. IM runs, ao hits, ao error*.

Score— R R B 1st Louie ; I 1 3 ! Philadlephla . t 7 2

Loyola Lions in Seasons D e b '

Meet S t o c k t o n O u t f i t at Wrigiey Field;

Revenge Sought Loyola university, another outpost

of the Notre Dame style of football. will swing into the 1930 gridiron campaign at Wrigiey field Saturday afternoon in a game with the Col­lege of the Pacific eleven from Stockton.

The Loyola grid destinies have been placed in the hands of Coach Tom Lieb, former assistant to Knute Rockne. When Loyola's gridders take the field Saturday Rockne'.. style will be very much in evidence.

Lions Seek Revenge The Lions met defeat at the

hands of the college of the Pacific last season, and Lieb, although he is in his first year at Loyola, .ex­pects to gain revenge.

Lieb not only brought the Notre Dante system to Loyola, but he also is introducing one of Rockne's out­standing characteristics, that of scheduling the toughest opposition available. The Lions' schedule in­cludes games with Santa Clara, the Olympic club and St. Ignatius.

The Stockton team, thirty strong, will arrive in Los Angeles Friday.

SOPH STARS WHITTIER, Oct. 2 <_pv-Whittier

college, which meets tbe Arizona State Teachers college from Flag­staff here next Saturday, probably will present a team built around a nucleus of sophomore stars.

Gus Takes Two From Marshall

First and T h i r d Falls Go to Champ; Match

Proves Exciting .

LOS ANGELES. Oct. 2 UP) —Gus-tavus Sonnenberg's claim to the

I heavyweight wrestling champion-1 I ship still is intact today following his exhibition last night with Ev­erett Marshall La Junta, Colo. The j

| Boston grappler, although appar-ently out-wrestled through most of the evening, got two of the three falls, the first with a head scissors and double wrist lock, and the third with his flying tackle. Marshall got his lone fall with a backward trip and a double wrist lock.

The first fall came in 30 minutes, 30 seconds. Sonnenberg tried a couple of flying tackles, but Mar-1 shall spoiled them very nicely with jolting stiff-arms. With the going

j all in favor of the challenger. Son-nenberg suddenly switched tactics

I and clamped on a punishing head I scissors. Marshall broke the hold j

I after considerable squirming., but was an easy victim for a double

I wristlock, and was pinned to the mat.

Ev Works Fast Coming out for the second fall,

Marshall worked rapidly and effec­tively, pinning the title claimant in 9 minutes, 50 seconds, with a double wristlock, after he had tripped him backward. Sonnenberg fell heavily when tripped and appeared groggy when he walked to his corner.

Marshall again took the offensive in the third period, apparently put­ting Sonnenberg on the run. After about 16 minutes of helter-skelter work, Sonnenberg got entangled with an airplane spin and was thrown heavily. Marshall's pet hold didn't work quite right, however, and the Boston boy rolled to his feet and charged him with his fa­mous flying tackle. Marshall jack-knifed without further ado, and Sonnenberg was given the fall.

Both Slug The contest took on the aspect of

a boxing match near the end when Sonnenberg put over a neat back­handed slap to the nose that started a flow of blood. Marshall attempted to retaliate, but was short. Both contestants were thrown or fell from the ring.

In the semi-windup Bob "Bibber" McCoy, formerly Holy Cross football player, wrestled about with Nick Velcoff, Los Angeles, for 20 minutes and 55 seconds, and then ended things with a crushing flying tackle. Velcoff subbed for Nick Lutre, Ten­iae. Cal., lifeguard, who reported with a bad knee. ^Ad Herman and Steve Strelich drew in the opener.

Forbes Gets Kayo From Joe Cordoza

WILMINGTON, Oct. 2 (U.R)—Joe C a r d o z a , veteran welterweight, ..pored a two-round knockout over Frankie Forbes in a scheduled ten-round main event here last night. Forbes subbed for Wild Man Ma­cias, who allegedly hurt his hand. Bud Baker and Herb Coogan, rival motorcycle policeman, put on a fast fight, with Baker rising from the floor to win by a technical knock­out in the sixth. Swede Olson put Marion Pratt out of the running ln round five of the special.

surprised the football world by hold-ing the famed Bulldogs — Albie Booth and the rest of 'em—to a I 13-to-13 tie.

Maryland returns to the bowl Sat-1 urday with that same team, save

I two men. Woods and Poppelman, a couple of powerful sophomores, will be in the backfield, the former

I calling signals from quarterback and the latter at halfback. Both

I teams probably will take to the air if their ground game fails.

Ancient Rival-In the Morgantown struggle, two

ancient rivals will be facing each other, and as the result anything may. happen. Pittsburgh lost five members of its great 1929 combina­tion, but early season reports say: j

! "Look out for another powerful I Panther eleven." Ira Rodgers haa I always managed, however, to put to-,

I get her a strong team when the Mountaineers face Pitt in their an- I nual game.

With the exception of these two games and possibly the Princeton- j Amherst affair in the former's stadium, all should be rosy for the I "big" teams of the East. The Tigers just managed to nose out Amherst, 7 to 0, last year, and that was one of their two 1929 victories, the other being over Lehigh.

Western Maryland, one of the East's strong teams last season, faces the University of Baltimore on Friday instead of Saturday. The |

| game will be played at night.

Otto Conger, local billiard champ. defeated Billy Mason. 50 to 39, in the first block of a 100-point, three-cushion billiard match at the Ven­ice bowling and billiard parlor last night.

The match was closely contested, with Conger having a high run of six to his opponent's five; many runs of three were also registered. At one stage of the game it looked like a walkaway for Conger, who had 42 points chalked up to his adversary's 21 total, but Mason set­tled down and clicked off 18 points wltb many spectacular shots, while Conger was completing his string of fifty.

The match proved to be of great interest to the billiard fans of the Bay district, and a capacity crowd. estimated at 300, turned out to wit­ness the contest. The final block of 50 points will be played tonight, starting at 8 o'clock.

Clover Field Team Has Bye This Week

Capt. Red Kerr's league-leading Santa Monica municipal golf team has a bye this week, while West-wood goes to Pasadena and Monte­bello meets Long Beach at the ocean tide course. With 22 digits the Clover Field mashie masters have a comfortable lead, and they now rate as favorites to cop the league title. Next week they tangle with Long Beach at Clover Field course.

Fish, Game .Moguls Enforce State Law

SAN FRANCISCO. Oct. 2—No other problem has created as much discussion and confusion for sports­men during the past several years as the present duck-limit con­troversy. Although the division of fish and game has made a ruling on this important subject there seems to be a great deal of misunder­standing in hunting circles as to what law will be upheld, the fed­eral or the state regulations.

The division of fish and game will enforce the state law, which de­clares that the lawful limit on ducks will be 25 per day per hunter, 25 ln possession and 50 ducks per week. The state law could not be changed for the coming season.

Grid Gossip STANFORD UNIVERSITY. Oct.

2— Stanford's two intersectional op-ponents for the season did quite

[ nicely, thank you, ln their opening • encounters last Saturday. Dart-: mouth college, which team the Car-j dinals meet here November 28 ; swamped Norwich. 79-0. The Min­nesota Gophers ran roughshod over South Dakota State, winning 48-0.

| Stanford and Minnesota meet at : Minneapolis October 11.

LOS ANGELES, Oct. 2—Having successfully opened their season by

i defeating the strong Santa Ana junior college eleven, 7 to 0, last

, Saturday at Santa Ana, the Uni­versity of Southern California freshmen will make their first coliseum appearance Saturday when they play the Compton Jaysees. The game will ba a preliminary contest to the Trojan varsity-Oregon State

i affair and will start at 12 30 p. m.

SLUGGERS MIX NEW YORK, Oct. 2 <_P>—Justo

tomler.JMrnahaw up. The game was held | Suarez, the Argentine lightweight, meets Ray Miller, the slugging up momentarily while they waited for

Earnshaw to come to bat. He hurt hia foot «_, , .»,_-„ *,_ »w_ w _ j i - _ _ of , , - .^ ta the lut inning strike one. awunt. I southpaw, in the Madison Square strike tve. called. Bali one. hlsb. Barn-Garden arena Friday night.

BIG RACE NEWMARKET. England, Oct. 2

UPt—The earl of Derby's Pyramid, by Papyrus, from Trestle, won the jockey club stakes here today from a field of seven. The Aga Khan's Levoleur was second, wtth M. O. Boussac's Bara coming third.

BERKELEY. Oet. 2—The Univer­sity of California football team, now completing preparations to receive Washington State at California Me-mortal stadium next Saturday, will enter tbe game with new confidence bred by the knowledge that the Bear reserve material is adequate.

The anxious question of reserve strength was answered to the satis­faction of Bear followers last Sat urday after the California eleven had convincingly defeated Santa Clara. 19 to 7, la the "opener."

CHICAGO, Oct. 2 (JI'--Four of the ten teams in the Western con-

! ferenee are without football cap-< tains this fall.

Ohlc State and Minnesota have i abolished the election of captains, j |Hlir-v__ far 2d to name a gridiron j leader, and two selected by Iowa i were declared Ineligible.

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PAGE SIXTEEN EVENING OUTLOOK, SANTA MONICA, CALIFORNIA •THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1930

' O v lX)CA,TlOM- M U S E M E N Forep Legion

Picture at Nuart 'Women Everywhere' Will

Open Tomorrow; T o p Speed* Eads Today

The Foreign Legion, that daring and desperate body of men whose martial qualities do much toward preserving peace In France's vast African colonies, plays a big part in "Women Everywhere* to show to­morrow and Saturday in the Nuart theater. J. Harold Murray and Fifi Dorsay have the leading roles.

In the picture Murray portrays the commander of a rum-running vessel, who accepts a cargo of arms a m ammunition destined far the rebellious natives of Morocco. S i is captured ky the French, saved from death by a cafe entertainer. serves on the desert front with the Legion aad returns covered wtth wounds and glory to claim the girl.

Well known players Ln the sup­porting cast include Oeorge Gros-smith, Rose Dione. Clyde Cook and Ralph Kellard. Alexander Korda directed the production from the1

original story of Oeorge Grossmlth and Zolton Korda. William Kernell contributed the words and music of the songs.

Joe E. Brown, te "Top Speed," [will show tonight te the Nuart theater.

UNA MERKEL STARS IN FILM

AT FOX-DOME

Una Merkel, featured ln "Tbe Eyes of the World."

BRUSSELS STAR TO MAKE DEBUT IN La A. TONIGHT

The first story ever sold on roy­alty basis for motion picture pro­duction was "The Spoilers." accord­ing to Information brought to light by Paramount during the recording of this famous thriller as an all-talking picture, which closes tonight at the Fox Dome theater.

It was tn 1913 that Selig was first approached by Rex Beach with an offer to sell the story for the screen. Negotiations between the two were conducted by John Pribyl, literary agent for Selig, who was somewhat astounded when Beach demanded $2,500 for the screen rights. The figure was unprecedented in tbe in­dustry.

An agreement was finally reached whereby Beach was to receive a cer­tain royalty of the gross returns. He subsequently realized a fortune from the deal, receiving many times the amount he had first demanded.

Beautiful r o m a n c e , powerful drama and natural scenic effects have been combined In a picture by Henry King whose "Eyes of the World" opens a three days' engage­ment at Fox Dome theater Friday at 1 p. m., in conjunction with the ladles' revival matinee of Norma Shearer in "The Last of Mrs. Cheney," with Una Merkel, John Holland, Nance O'Neil and Brandon Hurst in the featured cast.

In this dramatization of the popular book by Harold Bell Wright, Director King has achieved an out­door romance that compares fa­vorably with his classical "Tol'able David" and "The Winning of Bar­bara Worth."

Putt! Putt!!

John Charles Thomas, as he appeared in the role of Jochanaan in t h e o p e r a "Salome," which was presented by the Los Angeles Grand Opera association last night. His other roles are in "La Traviata" and "Tannhauser."

Madam Clare Clairbert, Brussels soprano, whom critics have called the most distinguished singer of Eu­rope, will make her Los Angeles op­eratic debut tomorrow night. Clair­bert will sing the role of "Violetta." te Verdi's "La Traviata," third of the ten operas which the Los Ange­les Grand Opera association is pre­senting in the Shrine auditorium. ' Clairbert, who started her career by singing to wounded soldiers in Belgian hospitals during the war, made her American debut in San Francisco recently. Opera officials predict she will prove equally sensa­tional in Los Angeles.

Tickets on Sale Other leading roles will be taken

by Beniamino Gigli, Metropolitan tenor, who sang in "La Boheme" the opening night, and John Charles Thomas. American baritone, who sang last night in "Salome."

For the past four years Thomas has sung with Clairbert in the The­atre Royale de la Monnaie. in Brus­sels. Tickets are on sale at the Die-bold Pharmacy, Fourth and Wil­shire, and at the Irwin Drag stores. Fifth and Santa Monica and Third and Broadway.

Morula to Direct Gaetano Merola, director-general

of the Los Angeles and San Fran­cisco associations, will conduct. The Serge Oukrainsky ballet, with the noted dance master and Edris Milar, premiere danseuse featured, will make the first of its three appear­ances.

Saturday night a double bill of "Hansel and Gretel" and "Caval-leria Rusticana" will be presented, with the former given first for the benefit of the children.

SANTA MONICA MINIATURE COURSE

Mrs. Addle Beebe's Sunday school class at the Nazarene church en­tertained with a farewell party for Miss Stella Knight, who is going to Europe. The party was in the form of a tourney at this course, and was won by Miss Knight with a 56. Miss Movine Eslick was sec­ond with 60.

. . . . • Quite a few hole-in-ones have

been registered on this rancho de la golfa of late. Clifford Morris, 1453 Lincoln boulevard, had an ace on the eleventh hole; J. R. Ander­son, 1229 Stanford street, holed his first putt on the course; Mrs. G. T. Duggan, 1453 Lincoln boulevard, had one on the eleventh green; Vesta Morris, 1453 Lincoln boulevard, on the fourteenth; John Rothwell, 613 Wilshlre boulevard, on the second hole, and Howard Haddick of Los Angeles on the last hole.

SUNKEN GARDENS About the best miniature golf

player in the Bay district is Mrs. Yvonne Gibbs, 11744% Kiowa ave., West Los Angeles. She is the only player ever to break par on this par-45 course. She was three under. Mrs. Gibbs has won two course tour­naments, was women's course win­ner in the Examiner tournament staged at the Santa Monica minia­ture course, and she was district winner in this same tournament. Her record-breaking card:

I Par 322 332 332 323 232 332—45 ! Score 322 322 331 324 231 312—12

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MroflM Smokes' • Film

Fox Criterion Will Show Pictures of Alaskan

Volcano Land One hundred square miles of ac­

tive volcano. The Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes!

Alaska is a land of many won­ders, but none of them ls the equal of this region In ttta shadow of Mount Katmai.

ln his talking picture of Alaskan adventure, "The Break-Up," whlcl comes to the Fox Criterion today in conjunction with "Man Trouble,' O u t , Jack Robertson shows motion pictures of the famous volcanic valley which came Into being In 1912 and has given science more In­formation about volcanoes than any other region in the world.

Until 1912, Katmai was a Uttle known peak surrounded by peace­ful valleys and with heavily wooded slopes below the timber una. In June of that year than occurred ona of the greatest physical cata­clysms since the dawn of history. Four aad one-half cubic miles of earth and lava were blown from its top.

A atrip five miles wide and twenty miles long, marked by thousands upon thousands of smoking craters, some of them comparable in size to tha celebrated volcanoes of tha world and others small enough for explorers and scientists to use them for cooking, appeared at the base of Katmai and form the "Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes."

At California

Film Bares Real Story of Prisons

The real facts about peniten­tiaries, and the causes of outbreaks and riots such as those that have startled the world recently, are set forth as the background of a dra­matic picture coming tonight to the Tivoli theater.

"Numbered Men" to the title of the picture, and its featured players are Conrad Nagel, Bernice Claire and Raymond Hackett. Mervyn La-Roy directed the picture, which was based on the prison drama of the stage by Dwight Taylor.

Primarily an unusual romance, physical thrills and high drama as well as much comedy are supplied by the prison background in "Num­bered Men." In both senses of the word, it is an "Inside" story on prison life.

Tully Marshall, Ralph' ince, Ivhn Llnow, Blanche Frederic., Maurice Black. William Holden, George Cooper and other favorites have im­portant roles ln the picture. The action takes place inside the prison walls and outside at road work camps. High drama is evolved by the sacrifice of ten years of freedom on the part of one honor-convict ter the sake of a young couple who love each other and cannot marry until the man is freed.

Ramon Novarro as he to seen ba "Call of tiie Flesh," now being shown in the Fox Califor­nia theater.

Bruin Bombarders Silenced by Lyons

CHICAGO, Oct. 2 UPt—The sev­enth place White Sox of tbe Ameri­can league today were one up on the National League Cuba te tiie Chicago city championship series.

The big reason why the Southside club were one up following a 5-to-l victory yesterday in the series opener was Ted Lyons.

The Cub sluggers. Hack Wilson, Kiki Cuyler and Riggs Stephenson, failed to make any sort of impres­sion oa the Box right-hander. He gave only seven hits, well spread over nine Innings.

Dorothy Mackaill and Sharon Lynn Have Leads in Fox Criterion Film

Sharon Lynn, tba vivacious titian-haired screen beauty, who plays a featured role la "Man Trouble," tha I t e Movietone drama which opens its engagement la the f t e Criterion theater today, to one actress who believes you can go quite a distance on "bluff." When Miss Lynn's father died several years ago, she was compelled to think about earning her own

• • i II i living, and being In Hollywood' at the time, A a turned har attention to tha screen. At the Pathe lot, a director, who learned she was a Texas girl, gave her har first part te a Wild and wooly "western."

Miss Lynn sever admitted that sta knew little if anything about horses or roping, but put or a con­vincing bluff, and by the time she finished har tenth "western" pic­ture she could ride and rope with the best of them.

Since signing with Fox Film Corp.. Miss Lynn has played featured roles j ln "Sunny Side Up,** "Happy Daya," I "Crazy That Way" and "Wild Com­pany."

In Man Trouble" the portrays the role OI. cabaret entertainer, who stands high IB the favor of the night club owner, until the other woman, portrayed by Dorothy Mackaill, makes her appearance.

Dawn Patrol' At New Majestic

STAR SUFFERS INJURY CLAREMONT, Oct. S UPt—Oeorge

Warmer, star end ter the Pomona Sagehens, haa Injured his knee and will be unable to play against San Diego state here Friday night. The loss is considered a heavy blow by Coach Eugene Nixon, who haa no regular end substitute tor Warmer. George Stancer, a halfback, will be shifted to end and Hal Hager and urday's double-header, te which the old position.

GRID TWIN BILL SAN PEDRO. Oat. S (U.R)—Four

battleship football teams are prac­ticing dally at Pt. Firmln ter Sat­urday's doubleheader, in which the Maryland and Mississippi will meet on field No. 1 and the Nevada and New York on No. 1.

Fa CALIFORNIA RAMON NOVARRO

—in— "CALL OF THE

FLESH"

Last Times Today

Coming Friday - Saturday T H E LAST OF

THE LONE WOLF"

Richard Barthelmess, First Na-tional-Vitaphone star, makes his first appearance la an air story te "The Dawn Patrol," aaw playing at the New Majestic theater.

John Monk Saunders wrote the original acraen story of "The Dawn Patrol," which was adapted and dia­logued by Seton Miller and Dan Totheroh. It ia a highly dramatic mirror of those early years of tht World war "schoolboy" filers te the British air service compelled to face highly organized German aces, when their ami mediocre equipment was forced to fight against the more modern enemy planes.

Douglas Fairbanks, jr.. plays a supporting role, while other parts are te the hands of Nell Hamilton, Gardner James, Clyde Cook, James

Southland Open on Border Golf Links

AGUA CALIENTE, Baja Califor­nia, Mexico, Oct t (CNS) —This Mexican pleasure retreat was the gathering place today of a colorful club swinging army that will march tomorrow upon the ramparts of par of the Agua Caliente Oolf club in the first rounds of play of the South­ern California open championship.

Fish exported from Norway te a recent month weighed 25,300 tons.

Final Yacht Race Of Season Slated

t h e last race of tha Topanga Yacht club's first competitive tea-son will ba bald Sunday off tiie mouth of Topanga canyon, with seven boats entered ln tho five-mile dash for starboard sloops. Among the entries will be the GulL owned by Rob Wilson of Santa Monica; Dr. Pred P. Ott's Goat, the Elf aad Vagabond.

BUY SOMETHING NEW—NOW I

Fox DOME

Finlayson, Frank McHugh, William Janney, Edmund Breon and others. Howard Hawks directed "The Dawn Patrol" and brought to use his many years of flying and directorial ex­perience.

i r w e wai l l aaa «•»«•»<

HEALTH

t f L l i 1

an In t a t arte S o i l l inks* EXERCISE—AMUSEMENT

FRESH AIR SAN VICENTE AT BURLINGAME

Tennis Court

Now! Richard

| New M A J E S T I C

KK I l l l d l t l _ • • •«• i • • —

T^DAWN n PATROL W i t h D o u g l a s

FAIRBANKS, JR. NEIL HAMILTON C l y d e C o o k , G a r d n e r J a m e s , F r a n k M c H u g h

Fn^ST^sTl Stirring Epic af

the Air!

M O U N T W I L S O N ABOVE THE POO

World's Lartaat telescope open tn public daily 1...0 to 2:15. Free public

observation through 00-Inch telescope, snd _-t.cmonu.al lecture every Friday nicht. Electrically heated ra t tans and decant euislne at Hotel. Information at all Bureaus or phone Sterlinx 9U31-F- or Stare Line. Terrace M i a A. C. Chllds. ittl.

NUART THEATRE Phone WLA 33706

1 1 2 7 2 S a n t o M o n i e a B l v d . , W e r t Los A n g e l e t

ENDS TONIGHT

JOE E. BROWN —IN—

"TOP SPEED"

TOMORROW and SATURDAY

FIFI DORSAY J. HAROLD MURRAY CLYDE COOK

-IN—

"WOMEN EVERYWHERE"

T I V O I I VITAPHONE • ' • ^ ^ A t * * THEATRE

Santa Monica Blvd. fat Weat Lee Angeles

TONIGHT and FRIDAY

CONRAD NAGEL BERNICE CLAIRE RAYMOND HACKETT

—IN—

"NUMBERED MEN" ALSO—LLOYD HAMILTON COMEDY

Radio Programs You Should Hear TONIGHT

5:30 P. M.—KHJ. KECA—President Hoover (Cleveland). 7:00 P. M.—KHJ—Cleveland Bach choir (Chain). 7:30 P. M.—KHJ—"Comic Opera of the Atr." 8:45 P. M.—KFI—Symphony Hour (S. ¥.).

TOMORROW 7:30 A. M.—KHJ—Hallelujah Bear.

11:30 A. M.—KHJ—ArtisU's Recital (N. Y.I. 12:30 P. ML—KFI—Southern California Travelers.

1:00 P. M.—KHJ—Light Opera Gems (N. Y.).

COURTESY ED ENGLE Telephone 65944 for Radio Service

Enda Tonight

•^atat stag*-

^jotmuaxmoi

They live train . . . these Spoilers ot the Northland . . the fascination of their

fighting days and lusting nights win never fade . . . theirs is a story that will never grow old • . •

3 DAYS STAR11NG FRIDAY AT 1 9. IL—WITH THE LADIES' 25c REVIVAL MATINEE

R O S E M A R Y »-*« SHOWING

"All Quiet on the Western Fron t" * »

WAR DRUMS ON THE'

LE BIG HORN The hoofs of a hundred ponies are thundering

across tfre plains—anxious friends eagerly await word

of the lost flyer——a bewildered cavalry troop gives "boots and sad­

dles" to head off the irate red-skins—a thrilling climax in the story of

SCORCHY SMITH He is held prisoner by a band of outlaws but his friends are on the trail.

Can they reach him before "Scorchy" is harmed?

WATCH THESE BREATH-TAKING DEVELOPMENTS DAILY

SANTAMONKA EVENING OUTLOOK —t i A " Mttmrr-rr—_-*- *^HejTt _~ffTT7mTTejnr-_-_r-g-g—y

ASji-alflv;,-- •••• •• • .' ,.•:-..'•'•. . : ••• • • v y . l . - .

' . : ' - . ' . . • • •

THURSDAY, OCTOBE R 2.1930 SANTA MONICA OUTLOOK

CLOSING N. Y. EXCHANGE STOCKS BONDS N. Y. CURB STOCKS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE STOCKS

NEW YORK, Oct. 2. </F>-Fol-lowing Is the complete closing list of today'a transactions on the New York Stock exchange, figures in­dicating the number ol shares sold represent hundreds:

Key ta Symbols: XD—Ex-divi­dend, XR—Ex-rights. AS—Actual tales, A—Plus extras, B—Including extras, D—Partly stock. P—Paid last year, H—Paid ao tar this year, J—Payable In stoat, K—Cash or stock, L—Payable when earned, tr— Unit Of trading 10 shares.

STOCKS H i g h Low C l o s t

"ft 33*% 31

. 19

1 1 3 * . l M t t 109% 13

. 1 9 ' .

. 9 2 %

. t t

.att

. 48 %

. 2 3 %

. 25%

. 3 %

. 30

. 23%

• 4| .123 . 14% .123 V. .150'! a . 42% . 90 . t l t t . 99'j . 41% . 15% . 11% . 35% . 57% . 98% . 10% . 56 . 3 2 % . 3 2 % . 37% . 3 9 % . 6% • 23

.tot • 62

12

% 1 1 % 92 Va 86

232 45% at 24 i 2 9 % 2 3 % 4 1 %

tat 13%

120% 150 Vt

4 2 % • 0 4 8 % 9 9 % 40% 1 4 ' . 1 1 % 3 5 % 5 3 % 9 8 % 10 % 56 3 2 % 30% 3 6 % 38%

6 22%

101 5 1 % 72 Va

105% 86 8 1 % 22 48 4 2 % 6 2 %

1% 5 4 %

IM -39%

111 5 %

35 V( 112% t t 41

t Abltibl P * P 16% a t Adams Exp 1 4 1 . . . . 34%

1 Addressog 1% . . . . . . . 31 t Advance Rume . . . . . . 7% A do pf . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 1 Ahumada I> . . . . . . . . . %

91 Air Kedue | Air Way E As . . . . • AJax Rub

t t Alaska Jun . . . . . . . . 1 APW Pap

•4 Alleghany . . . . . . . . . 1 d o pf »30 w w 5 % .

lOat A l l i a n c e R e a l t y . . 53 Al Chem tc Dye 6. 54 AUls Ch Mfg 3

2 A l p h a P C e m 2 . . . 36 Amerada 2 3 Am Agrl Chem . . . . a do pt . . „ . | Am Bosch Mat •••• 2 A m B r S h o e 3 . 4 0 . . .

SOas d o Bt 7 . . . . . . . 31 A m B r o w n B El . .

453 A m C a n 4 14 d o pf 7 u

3 Am Oar & Fdy 6 . . . I do pf 7

10 Am Chain t I dO Pf f . . . . 7 Am Chicle t B

11 Am Coml Al . . . . . . . 1 Am Encaus Til 1 . . 1 Amer Europ

J33 Am Se For P o w . . . 60as dO 6pc pt . . . . . 5 Am Hawaii S3 10B . 1 Am Home Prod 4.20 1 Am Ice 3

39 Am Internat t . . . . 8 A m L o c o 4

17 A m M a c h Sc P 33 A m M a c h & M e t . .

6 A m M e t a l l % , . . . . 1 do 6s pf 6

lOOaa Am News 4A . . . . 17 Am Pow Sc L IA I t do 6s pf 6 106 Vi 4 do pt *A* 3% 86% 3 do pf 'A' Stp 5 . . . . 88%

f l Am Rad St San 1 % . . . i t lOOas do pf 7 46

55 A m RoU Mil l 2A . . . . 4 3 % 4 Am Safety Raz 5 63% 2 Am Ship ft Com 1%

43 Am Smelt Sc R 4 57 1 do pf 7s 136 2 Am Snuff U 39%

I t do Pt t s as . . . . . . 1 1 1 2 Am Solv Se Oil 5% 1 Am Steel Pdrs 3s . . . 35%

10 do pf 7s as 113% 3 A m S t o r e s 2s 4 2 % 6 A m S u g a r Ref 5s . . . 4 3 % 5 A m S u m a t r a T o b . . . 8%

30 Am T e l Se C 5s a s . . 20 16 Am Tel Se Tel 9s . . .207 l t Am Tobacco n H t 53 do B n ,.120*4 1172!

352 Am Wat Wks IA . . . 96% 92% 1 Am W W 1st pf 6s ..107% 107% 6 A m W o o l p f 23%

105 A n a c o n d a 2.50 3 9 % 1 A n a c o n W & C l s . . SIM t A n c h o r C a p 2.40 . . 1 D o pf 6%s 4 A n d e s C o p l l . . . . 4 A r c h e r - D a n M 2s 1 A r m o u r D e l p t 7s

38 A - m of 111 A . . . . . 5 Do B 1 Do pf 7s 1 Arnold Const 1 Artloom . . . . . . . . . 1 Art Metal Don 2s .

; U Asso APP Ind 4s . 4 Asso Dry Gds 2 Vis 1 As Dry O 1st Pt t t 1 Do 2nd pf Tt . . .

W Atch T & S F 10s 13 Atchison pf 5s . . .

1 Atl Q & W I pf 5s 46 Atlantic B t t X> ••

1 Atlas Pow 4s •••• i Atlas Stores IA . .

54 Auburn Auto 4A . 60 Austin Nichols pf A 5 AUto St Raz A Ss

ta Aviation Corp . IS

94 Baldwin Loc VA • ••• Sl Tt Do pf 7s »S IW 17 Bait Se Ohio 7s 93

100 Bamberger pf 6%s asl09 37 Barnsdall A 2s xd . . . 20

150 Bayuk Cigar at 49 4 Beatrice C pf Tt 108 1 Belt N Ry ptc pf t . t t 7

58 Bendlx Avla 2s . . . 10 Best & Co 28 58 Bethlehem St 6s . T DO Tpct pf 7s

30 Bloomlngdale . as 3 Bohn Alum 1.50 . 1 Bon Ami 5B

65 Borden 3s 37 Borg-Wamer St . 36 Brlggs Mfg

f Brockway Mot . . . I t Bklyn-Man Tr 4s 8 Do pf t s 1 Bklyn & Ou Tr . . . 8 Bklyn Un Oas 5s 7 Brunswick B t l ••• 3 Brans T Se Ry 1 Bucyrus-Erle I t •• 4 Do cvt Pt 3%s .

10 Do Tptt Pt 7 as 6 Budd Mft l t T

16 Budd Wheel 11 10 15 Bullard Ot a n I t Bulova Watch 3s . . . . 2 9 !

1 Burns Bros A 8s . . . . 95 1 Do B 20 3 Burr Ad Mach l l . . . UV 2 B u s h T e r m 2%s 33

10 D o Bl pf 7s a s . . . 1 1 4 % 3 B u t t e Cop tc Z • 1

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JL 19

%

Sales High tow Last

43 Corn Prod 3% B . . . -3% 11 Coty 15% 1 Crown Zeller 1 8% 8 Crucible Stl t tfl

10 do pf 7 M 110

as

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ta %

5% 9%

19 9 2 % 86

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to 4 8 % 99% t l 14% 1 1 % 3 5 % 66% 88% 10r

56 33 31 36 38 f

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106 86 88% 2 2 % 46 43 6 2 %

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303% 206 115 115

118% 94%

107% 22 SS 3 3 % 36

105% 16% tt 7 3 %

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55 6% 6%

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108% 108%

5 4 % 2 7 % tt 26%

100 tt TO

4%

18 Cuba Cane Pr . . . 8 Cuba CO . . . . . . . . .

100 Cuba R R pf 6 as 1 Cuban Am Sue . . .

50 Cuban Am a Pt 1 Cudahy Pack 4 . 3 Curtis Ub t t t B.

99 Curtlss Wright a do A 4 Cutler Bom 3% 56

o 19 Davison Chem . . . . 4 Del 6c'Hud t 3 Del Lack Sc W 1 Den ROftW P 1 Devoe Sc Ray A 120

60 do pf 7 as . . . . 6 Diamond Mat t 3 Dome Mines 1 • 9% 3 Dominion St 1.30 . . . M i l

15 Drug Ine a . 7 8 % 3 Dunhill Int 4A U t t

30 Duplan 8 p 8 as ..106% 137 du Po de Nem 4 . . .101%

8 do deb t 133% 1 DUO L g t 1s t P 5 . . 1 0 5 %

E 7 Eastern RoU 1% . . . 13%

39 Eastman Kod I B .303% 10 do p 6 as 130

8 E a t o n Ax & 6 3 . . . . 3 0 % 2 Eitingon Sch 3%

44 Elec Auto L 6 60 3 Elec Boot 3%

244 El ow & Lt 1 64% 4 Elec Stor B 6 16% 1 Emerson Br A 1 % 1 Endloott John 5 . . . 4 3

11% 18% l *

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t t t M

3% 30 40%

. . .110% 110% n o stt i_ L. t f t t Ttt

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83% 15%

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108

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2 3 % 33 22% 167% 165% I M 113% 113% 113' Of 49 18 18

. .103 105% 310% 207%

22 ST 2 3 % 36

105% l t t t tt 7 3 %

4 St t

55 6% 6%

22 27 30% 00% 90

208 108% M t t 36% tt 2 5 % M 23 Vs 68

ttt

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19% 48

107% TTtt 2 1 % 44% 80%

138% tt 25% 67 7 2 % 19% 15% 10% 7 0 % 01 IS

118 It fit

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129 26 2 5 % 67 7 3 % 2 0 % 16% 1 0 % Tttt 93 Va 13

133 It att

20% ss%

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40 Byers CO . . .

1% 13% Mtt

1 Calif Pack 4 - . » . M 7 Calumet Sc A r i z . . . . . . 45

l t Calumet Sc Hec Mtt 5 Campbell Wy I . . . . . . . Mtt 8 C a n a d a D O Ale 5 . . . 5 6 ' . 6 Canadian Pac 10 ISO

41 do n 45V!

? Canon Mills l . W . . . . W Cap Admin A . . . • • • • M

lOas Caro C&O stp 5 . . . M t t t 146 Case J I 6 135%

23 Caterpll It 47''. lOas Cavan Dob pf t t t . . STtt 4 Celanese 13 t Celotex Ot 10%

lOas do pf T 31 T Cerro a Pas 6 t n t 1 Certain-teed l t t

S3 Checker Cab 4 . 3 0 . . . . . 23% 41 Chl l ft Ohio H t 46% 5 Ches Oorp 3 M 3 Ohio Ot W e s t . . . . . . . . I t t

ttl do pf 52 10 Chi M St PftP 11% 10 do pf 18 11 Ohio ft N W I . . . . . . . SStt 3 Chle Pneu T 13% 7 Chi Rk Is Sc P 7 90

tOas Chic Yell Cab 3 . . l l t t I t Chllds Co M 0 44% M Chrysler t 31%

9 City Ice ft P 3.60A.. f f t t ISOas do pf 1% 13%

16 City Stores % I t t Mas do A M b . . M

1 Cluett Pea S . 3 1 t Coca Cola 6. M0 S do A 3 . . ; M 1 Cole Pal P'd a. 103 8 Coll ft Alk 16% 1 Col Beacon . . . . . . . . . . 11%

11 Col Puel ft Ir 3 . . . . . . 37% 165 Colum O & E I. 55%

t do a t A t 109% IM Colum Graph .75H..» Mtt l i t Colum Carb 6B 118 II Coml Credit 3 M 8 At A I Mtt

20a- do t t t l Pf W 6% 94 7 Com tor Tr l . tOA. . . . 31%

100 Coml 80l» UK tt 136 Cmwlth 80 .60 12%

13 do pf 8 . . . - 102% 33 Contoleum Na Mtt 3 Congress OM 4 tt I Consol Cltar 5. 35

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Ml Consol OM 4 . . . . . . . . 1 0 :

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114% v* tf*

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58

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178

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81 37 ftt

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31 31

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M l M 12% 33% • l t t

109% 14%

117% 23% 38

M 10% 31 Va 11%

102% 10% 88 34% 77 68 l t t t

100

30% 109 tttt

l t t l l t t 48

107'/a TTtt tttt 45% 81%

128% 26 25% IT Tltt 30% 16 10% 70% 91 11

118 I t

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l l l t t T •tt

25% 387 a 95 M Mtt H t t

—4% 1% l t t

l l t t 59%

M M t t Mtt 14% 56%

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104% l l l t t

46 aitt 13% l l t t it ar itt M % 4 6 % M •tt

H 11% 17% 31% 13% M 35% Mtt l l t t 38 82% *-It

31

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103%

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10 Eureka Vac 01 8' , 11 Evans Auto L 5% 10 EXchan Buff l t t a s . M

P 1 Fairbanks Mor 3 . . . 33Vi

10 Fairbanks M pf 7 M . l M t t 40 Fash Park pf M . . . 38 3 Federal Mot .80 . . . . Ttt 1 Ptd Screw 3 17% 6 Fed W a t 8 2.40 K . . . 3 1 % 4 Fid P Fire Ins 2 60. . 60%

50 Filenes pf as Mtt 4 Firestone T ft II 1.60 1*""

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13 Foster Wheel 8 13 Fourth N Inv

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44 G e n F o o d s 3 22 G e n G ft El A

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2 G o o d r i c h p f 7 . . . . 19 O o o d y e a r T 5 . . . .

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14 O t Mo R y pf S — 4 Ot Norlr Ore ctf ' 3 Ot Wttt Sug l . M . . .

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H 15 Hahn Dept at 4 Hall Print 3 1 Hamilton Watch l .M

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64 Houston OU IM J . 1 Howe Sound 4s . . . . 1 Hudson ft Man 3%

43 Hudson Mot 3s . . . 15 Hupp Motor M 8 Illinois Cent 7s

66% l l t t ITS 4 %

41 18%

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21 6 5 % 9 1 % 96 Mtt

6 66% 61% M 45% 34% 11

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12 197% IM

20 2%

48 3%

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40% 16 Va TS 29% 43 39% M

4% • l t t 76% 36% 17% 34% 78 41% 81% 11% H t t

7% TO M t t M t t

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M t t 19 M 45% 90 10% 70 70

4% 16% Utt Mtt M 31 71 20% 16%

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l l t t 87 t l t t l l t t 18% 43 92 Ttt

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Stt 66 58% 26 45% 23% 10 Va

49 18

105% 8 1 0 %

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105% 106 133% 105%

U 203% IM

20% ttt

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M l 44% 38% H t t 51 8% Stt

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17% 30% 59 H t t IT M 50% I ' . j t t t

41 Utt 74% 29% 44 Mtt

Sales High Low 4 Marine Midi l .M . . . 28% 28% 1 Mark S R pr pf . . . . Mtt U t t

14 Marlln Rock 4%B . . 2 9 % 31% 4 M a r m o n M M 8% 7% 5 Marsh Field t t t a . . . t f t t 37%

13 Math Alkali I t . . . . . 38 35% 5 M a y D e p t S t SA . . . 40 M 3 Maytag ls Mt t t t 1 do pf ww 3 | , 20 30 1 Mclntyre Pore Is . . . H t t 18%

21 McXeesport T 4%B.. 78% 77 8 McKess 6c Rob l s . . . 15% IS 1 Melville Shoe St . . . . 28% 38% 6 Menge l S l 9 % I 1 M e t r o - G o l d p f 1.89 . . 2 5 % 2 5 %

84 Mex S e a b OU 19 17% 4 Miami COP I t t l l l t t M% 3 Mich Steel SttA . . . . H U t t I Mld-Cont Pet 2s . . . . 31% 31 3 Midland Steel 3s . . . M% 25% 8 do 1st pf Ss 87% 85

36 Minn Mol l a p . . . . . . f t t >tt p 10 Mo Kan T 3H 31 30

5 do pf 7s 93% 92% 4 Mo Pae 62% I t 1 do pf 5s 110% IMtt 1 Mohawk Cpt 16 18 8 Monsanto Ch I t tA . . 32% 31%

165 Montgom Ward 3s . . f l tttt 10 Morris ft Es 3%s as. 17 17 32 Mother Lode .20 . . . . 1 tt 21 Moto Met Ga'u 2% 2 10 Motor Wheel 3s . . . . l l t t 17% t Mulling Mfg 9 % 9 3 Munsingwear t l . . . . 35 IS

71 Murray Corp 2pcJ . . l l t t U t t 3 Myers ft Bro M . . . . Mtt My*

N 11 Nash Motors 4s t l t t 30% 10 N a t l A c m e l % s 10Vs IS

4 Nat Bell Hess T 6% 58 Nat Biscuit l .M 81% 80% 11 Nat Cash R A M . . t l 38% 71 Nat Dairy Pr IA . . . . 50 Mtt 13 Nat Distill 3s 27% 28

U t Nat Pow ft Lt l l . . . . M t t M t MM ttp Mex 3 Pf . . . % % 8 Nat Steel 2s Mtt 50% 1 Mtt Suoply M 97 . 97

M Do pt 7s as 10814 108 1 Nat Surety 5s TO TO I M M TM l s Mtt 20Vi

17 Nev Con Cop l i U t t U t t 1 Newton Stall 2s 39% 29% 4 N T Air Br 3.60 M t t 38%

26 N Y Central 81 184 U l t t 3 N Y Ch & St L pf 6sl03% 103%

60 M Y ft Barlem 6s as. 190 187 S M T Investors 1.30 . . 17% 17%

17 N Y N H & H 6s . . .100% 99% 1 Do Pf 7l 118Va 118% I N Y Ryi pf l t t 1% 8 Norfo lk ft W I M 320% 220

48 N o r t h A m e r lOpctJ . 96 9 3 % 4 Do pf 3s 55 65 9 No Am Avlat .Ttt t t t 1 No Am Ed pf 6s 106 105 8 North ac 5s H t t 62

10 Northwest Ttl Ss os . . 48 48 1 Norwalk T ft R % tt

Last Mtt 19% 28%

7% 37% S l t t M

8% 88 U t t 78 15 H t t -''

3 5 % 18% 11 5 2 % 21 2 5 % 86

9 3 0 % 9 3 % 51

Uttt 16 32% 28'a

1 I 2 % !

iftt 35 14% 38%

STOCK MARKET AGAIN ON DOWNWARD COURSE

SAN FRANCISCO FINANCE BRIEFS

30% 10

6% 81 39 41 21% 39%

MV* 97

108 70 30% 11% 29% Mtt

U S 103% 190

17% IMtt 118%

1% t t t

M M

6% I M

62

NEW YORK, Oet 2. (JP)—The stock market once more took the familiar downward course today that lt often finds leading down from the tops of such abrupt rises as that of yesterday. Alter further exten­sion of the advance In-and-out traders rushed to take profits, and a large portion of the ground gained during the one-day advance was lost. Selling was in moderate volume. <$>-

Stocks declining 2 points or more Included O. S. Steel, General Elec­tric, Anaconda. Consolidated Oas, American Telephone, Paramount, American Can, North American and Loews. Stocks closing 4 to 6 included International Harvester, New York Central, United Aircraft, Macy, Case and Baltimore dt Ohio. United Fruit tumbled 7 points.

Weakness In United Fruit re­flected a sharp slump in third-quar­ter earnings, attributed to an over-supply of fruit and vegetables dur­ing the summer.

International Harvester broke be­low 66, last November's minimum.

Only for a short time after an­nouncement of the failure of a curb

I market house did large-scale selling appear In this market. This fail­ure, however, was regarded as of a minor nature, presumably an after-

I ninth of the Sisto failure yesterday. Call money held unchanged at 2

per cent.

Wall Street Briefs

o 26 >. M

.1081

. U l t t 110%

13 Indep O&G 2s . . . . IIV* 3 Ind Motocry 3Vis

67 Indian Refln 9% 3 Indust Ray 5s J . . . . 7 8 5 inner Rand 102%

10 Insplrat Cop 10% t Insuransh ct Md .60. U t t

11 I n t e r b B a p T r . . . . 3 4 % 3 Interlake t t 1st . . . . 16% 4 Internat Atrl 4

10 Int Bus Mach . . . I M t t 8 Int Carrier Ltd % . . U t t l lut Cement 4s . . . . I f t t

36 Int Comb E 5 5 do pf 63%

IM Int Harvert t t t l . . . . 67% 13 Int Hydro El A 2K. . M t t 3 Int Match ptc pf 4s. 73 8 do ctfs U t t

M l Int Nick Can tM . 33% 1 Int PftP As 8 . M . . . . 14

11 do B T% 5 do C I 1 Int Print Ink M

70 do pf 6s as 83% 30 Int RyCAm pf St as. 55% 5 Int Salt 3s 37% 1 Inter Shoe 3s Mtt 1 Inter Silver SB . . . . . 65

354 Int TftT M , Sl 17 l a t e n t Dept 6t 2 s . . 25% 7 Invest Equity 2s . . . . 12%

18% Stt

3 Jewel TM . . • M Johns Manvllle SO do pf 18 as . .

100 Jones &L8 pf 7s 4 J o r d a n M o t o r . .

3s. . M t t . 78

. . I M t t as.121

l t t

I do pf 5 104% 104% 104% » Cons R R Cu P 6 . . . 44 « to 1 Consol Text . . . . . . . . % % tt 1 Container A U l . . . 16% 16% 16% i "mP'tt 4% 4% 4%

It Cont Baking A 88 84 84% It do B •% Stt 1% j 5 d o p f S . . . . . . . Mtt 75% 75 %

19 Contl Can 2% 54% 13% 53% J • Cont Dlam Fib 1 . . . 11% 13% 13% 1 Contl Ins 2.40 64 54 54 8 ConU MM_t t_. L ! „

(. cSStl OU Dal H i t | t t t IMS 46 ConU s t o m a I .... mt% tttt 11%

K 1 Karstadt Rud l.M . . 8% 5 Kaysar J Stt 20% 1 eKitb A Otp pf Tt ..100 3 Kelly Spring: 3%

M do 8s pf as 31 I Kelsey May Wh 3s . . tt

54 Kelvlnator 10% 164 Kennecott 30%

1 Kimberly Ol Stt . . . . 48 10 Kinney pt l i as . . . . 75 5 Kolster Rad . . . . . . . 3%

U Kresge SS 1.60 . . . . 38% 1 Kresge Dept St . . . . 8%

10 do pf as 45% 73 Kreug ft Toll 1.60 . . 35% 40 Kroger O t t t IA . . . . tt

L 12 Lamber t 8s 8 8 %

8 L e h i g h P o r t O . . . . 19% TO d o pf 7s M 103 14 L e h l s h Val R R 3 % 55%

3 Lehlth Val O 8% 4 Lehman Corp Ss . . . v 6 6 % I Lehn ft Fink 3s . . . 34

14 Libbey O Ford Gl IM 17% 13% 94 ff 73% 3% 7%

57% l l t t 7%

35 V. U t t 70

IM 10% 10 SStt 16V* 4

158 ta 5 7 % t t t

Mtt 63% 3 3 % 72 19% 20% 14 T B

2d 83 55% 3 6 % 5_>% 65 28% 23%

u 47 Mtt

1M% 180%

l t t

8% tt 100

I t t M 24% 10% 28% 46 TB

3 37%

8% Mtt 35% 37%

2 Ligg ft Myers 81 do B 20 Liquid Carb M . . . .

376 Loew's 3l s Lon 3 Long BeU A

11 Loose Wil Bis 3.80B . 54 Lorlllard p

3 L o u i s i a n a OU . . . . . . . 4 Louis O ft K A I t t l . 8 Ludlum Steel . . . . . . . 3 do p f t % i

M 1 HacAnd ft Forb 2.M. 7 Mack Trucks 6s

10 Macy R H 3s 3 Mad So Oar

to Mafma Cop A* ...... 1 Mallinson

30 Mental Sue M . . . . . 20 Manh E Ry gtd 7s at 33 Oo mod ftd SL . . .

3 Manh Shirt l l . . . . .

25 51

120% T%

af 4%

J*» ta 40%

u

M 19%

I M 54

» ' • » Mtt 33% 17 H 03 61 68 3% 7%

14% 17% 7%

14% 17% 68

35 50

US Ttt

36% 4% '% tt

37%

I

M t • l t t TTtt 36% 17% Mtt 78 42 Mtt 11% 53% Ttt

70 Mtt M t t ttH 99% I I

t l t t Tltt Ttt

75% 69 tttt 55% 10 70 14 t t t

S7% 19 80 Mtt 90 10% 70 7» I I 15% 13% 40% M 31 71 Mtt 11%

110% Ttt

13% 87 • l t t

14 30 43 92

T 21 65 Va 91 96 3 3 %

6 66 6 0 % 26 45% 2 3 % 10 V*

U O t t

tttt I t t 8%

76 190 U t t 10 34% 16% 4

162 10% M t t t t t

62% Mtt Mtt 72 ltV'a 31% 14 7% S

M 83' . 55% If 53% M Mtt Mtt

u 47 74%

130% 121

l t t

8% 30

ua i *

f l 24% 10% 2 9 % 48 78

2 28%

8% 45%

' M t t 27% 88% 19%

103 55 •%

68% M U t t H t t 93 61 70 V:

« I Stt 7%

54% U

7% 15% 18% 70

M 50%

US Ttt

SStt *% 1 %

•» 38%

03 O h i o Oil 3s 6 Oil WeU Sup . . .

SM Do pf 7s . . . . 33 Oliver Farm BV 5 Do cvt par 13? 1 D o p r pf 6s 45V)

TO O r p h e u m p f 8s a s . . . 76 5 O t i s E lev 3 % l 61 2 Otis Steel S t t l 20. I Owens IU Ol 3s 407

P 10 Pac Ott Ind pf a i , . 12 IT Pac O ft B 2s 55'.| I Pac Light 3s TMf

80 Pae Mills as 20V1 50 Pac T ft T 7s as . . . 10 Do pf 6s as

123 Packard Mot ls • Pan Am Pet B . . . . . 1 Panhand P & R . . .

127 Param Publix 4s . . 3 P a r k ft TU 2 Park Utah 4 P a r m e l e e T r .60 . . . 2 Pathe Exch

11 Patlno Min . . . . ' 1 Peerless Mot

128 Penlek ft Ford l s . . 7 Penney J O 3s 1 Penny pf 6s 6 Penn Dix Cem

11 Penn R R 4s 1 Pere Mart 6s

10 D o pr pf 51 3 Pet Milk I t t l

17 Petro Corp l t t t . . . . I t Phelps Dodge 3s . . . 1 Phila Co tpet pf 3s 3 Do tpet pf MW . .

l t Phila R O ft I 1 Philip Morris 1 s d .

99 Phillips PM I . . . . . 6 Pierce Ar A 2 do pf 6 1 Pierce Oil 1 do pf

14 Pierce Pet 3 Pills Flour 3 3 Pirelli 3.14H 5 Pitts Coal 1 do pf 3 Pitt Ser A- B l.M . 1 Pittston Oo .37% . 4 Poor ft Oo t I P e r t R A m T A 1 % . 4 do B

13 Post T ftC 7 Pf . . . 9 Pralr Oil ft G 2 . . .

36 Pralr Pipe L SB . . . 3 Pressed St Car 1 d o pf T 0 Procter ft Oam 3.40 5 P r o d ft Ref

IBM d o p t 44 P u b S e r MJ 3.40 . . .

9 d o T p f 8 do 6 pf 8 de i pf

12 Pub Ser E&G pf 8 . II Pullman 4 3 Punt a Al Sug 8 Pure OU l t t . . . .

UOas do pf 8 HPurlty Bak 4

B 1334 R a d i o

16 do pf B 6 | Ml Medio Keith O

2 Railroad Sec 4 18 Raybestos Man S.M.

6 R e a d i n g Co 4 3 R e a l Bilk 5

49 Rent ing R a n d 1.60 . 14 R e o Motor .80 . . . 32 Repub Steel 4 3 Rep St cv pf 8 . . . . S Revere O ft Br . . . 9 Reynolds Met S . . . .

lOas Reynolds Tob 8 . . IM Rey Tob B 3 S04 Rich Oil Oai S 38 Rlo Brand Oil . . . . . io Ritter Dent t t t . . . 3 Roesia Ins 3.20 . . . .

17 Royal Dut sh 1 Rutland pf

I 9 Safeway St 5K

60as do 7 pf 7 . . . . . . . 20as do 6 pf 17 St L San Fr 8 . . . 2 Savage Arms 8 . . . . 3 Schulte Ret

lOas Boott Paper 1.40 . 61 Sears Roebuck 2.80 . 3 Second Nat Inv . . . . 1 tm pt •

I Seneca Cop 60 8»rvel Inc

1 Sharp ft Dohme . . . . M Shatuck PO 1 . . . . 28 Shell Onion • do pf t% 9 Shubert Theater . . . . 61 Simmons 7 Slmms Pet 1.60 . . . .

125 Sinclair Con 3 . . . . I do pf 8 8 Skelly Oil I . . . . . 1 Bloss SS ftl 3 Snider Pack 3 do pf 3 Solv A In pf ww 3 5 So Cal Ed 5 So Dair A l t t . . 1 do B . . t

16 So Pac 6 7 Bo P R Sug 1.40

M do pf 8 a s 11 Southern Rail I . . . . 78*•. 4 So Ry pf 5 88%

10 Spald 1st pf T a t .114% 1 Spang Chal f l 8 S p a r k s W i t h 1 . . . . 18% 3 Spicer Mfg . . . . . . . . I t 2 Spiegel May tern . . 10%

IM Stand Brands l t t . 18% 1 St Oom Tob t t t

33 St O ft El 3% SB 3 S t a n d G Sc E pf 4 . 6 6 % 1 S t O ft E 7 PCt Pf T.112

27 S t OU Oai 2 % 66% 4 tt Oil Kan 3 35

369 t Oil N J 3B 60% 199 St Oil N T l .M . . . . 28%

4 Starrett L 8 8 25 9 Sterl See A 8 4 Sterl 8 cv pf t 36'_

13 Stewart Warn 3 . . . . . 32% 25 Stone ft Web 4 71 9 Studebaker 3 28 % 3 8ubmar Boat . . . . 1 Sun OU 1 . . . . . . .

80 Sun OU pf 6 a* . , 7 Superheater 3% 3 Superior OH . . . . . . 1 Superior Btl . . . . . . 1 Symington A . . . . .

T I Telautoeraph 1 40 , I Tenn Oop ft Ch 1

IM Texas Corp 8 . . . 30 Tes Oulf Sul 4 . 30 Tex Pas L Tr . . . . 0 Thatcher M l e Thermold . . . . . . . . . 3 Third NaU Inv S 8 Thompson Prod 1 Thompson B u t

34% M

IMV* 8

13% 45% 75 58% 30% 40%

12 SStt 73 30%

.136% IMtt 136'

. 11 . 52 . 4 . M t t . U t t . 1% . 6% . 8% . 13 . Stt . 37% . 49 .100% . 6 . Tltt .127 . l l t t . 19 . 15% . Mtt . 4 6 % . 1 - 4 . 15% . . 1 0 % . 2 7 % . tS . Tt . 1 . 21 . 4% . II I 39% . 37% . 80 . 17% . tttt I* 24 I 1 1 % . 7 . 79% . 2 9 % . 38 . S%

• at . 70

5 1 , ; 26% I 90 134 116% I Ottt .UOtt

63% . 1% , Utt .lie [ IB I 30% [ M . 26% . 72% , M t t . 98 . 43% . 26% . 13 V* . M t t . 78 . 10 . 17% . 74% . 48% . 9% . 10% . II . M . 45% . M

. Mtt • IM . 94 . 73% . 18% . 6% . 50 . 62% . 7% . 62% . l t t . 5% . 20% . 33% . 13% . 87 . U t t . 20% . 15 . 18% .110% . M t t . Mtt . 3% . 17% . I M S . Mtt . 55% . 5 .113% . 13%

126' 10% 51%

4 Sl t t

u l t t 8 3%

11 Stt

36% 48%

100% Btt

70% UT

IB U t t IS

IM 14% 10% 26% 2S 72 1

a* Stt

31 38% 37% 80 17% 20 Va 23 17% • tt

78 37% 36%

5% 50 69%

5 "a 2 6 % 87

134 116%

8 8 % 110%

6 1 % 1%

17% 109% Mtt

27% IT 24%

32% 96 43 24 11% 35% TS 10 17% 74% Mtt

Ttt 10 H 29% 44% tt

48

tt tttt 30

108% 8

UH 45 Va 71 58% 20% 40%

13 53% 73 Mtt

134% 126%

11 • l t t 4

53% 12

1% 6 3%

u I t t 36%

Business failures during Septem­ber Increased In number over August, but showed a decrease in total liabilities, R. G. Dun and Com­pany reports. There were 1963 fail­ures last month compared with 1913 ln August. Liabilities in Sep­tember totaled 146,947,021, compared jwith $49,180,653 in August. Liabili­ties have shown a decline by quarters, the total for the first quarter this year being $169,357,351, for the second, il67.73l.532, and for the third quarter, $135,954,091.

SAN FRANCISCO. Oct. 3. UP)— [Rail traffic is expected by the Pacific Coast Transportation Ad­visory board to improve in volume

j In the fourth quarter of this year over the rate of the previous three quarters. The August rate was 10.6 per cent below the figures of Aug­ust, 1929, which was slightly better by comparison than the first eiaht months' average, the year up to the end of August was 10.9 per cent lower than the same period of 1929. The fourth quarter Is pxnected to

; run only about 2 per rent below the fourth quarter of 1929, Indicating a probable rapid return of business to "normal" conditions.

Ice cream companies of Califor­nia are expected to report curtailed earnings this year on account of the "unusual climate." Lack of ex­cessively hot dava has materially cut into sales this year.

NEW YORK CURB STOCKS NEW YORK, Oct. 2. (/P)—Fol­

lowing is the complete Uat ol trans­actions on the New York-Curb mat-ket giving all stocks traded:

-Ley to symbols: AS—Actual sales -vl>— Ex-dividend. XR— Kx-rigbis. A — Pius extra in stock, B—Plus 10 per cent in stock, F— Payaoie in atocK, U—Partly extra, H—Plus 6 per cent in stock, J—Partly stock. R—Cash ot stock, UK—Under rate.

STOCKS High Low Last

NEW YORK, Oct. 2. (JP) — C. H. Carlyle, president ot the Ooodyear Tire & Rubber Co., of Canada, said that the annual report for the £_•» cal year ended September 30 will disclose that after writing down in­ventories to the current market value, which he described as the "lowest of the rubber Industry," the company will be in a position to add to its surplus account.

Oliver United Filers Company has declared the regular quarterly cash dividend of 50 cents on a stock. Checks will be mailed No­vember 1 on record of October 20.

Rumors Flint-Koto Intended to enter into competition with Paraf-fine companies in the Bay region were scouted today by Lelb, Key­stone & Co., after an investigation.

100 Stt

TOtt 127

15 19 IB 28% Mtt

IM 15% 10% 28%

i t n I

21 I t t

11 39% 37% I 80 17% 3?% 23 17% I

6% tt 37% 36%

5% 50 69%

6% 36% 87% !

134 116% |

98% I 110% | • l t t

1% lTttl

109% | Mtt I

Directors of the Bank of Italy and the Bank of America have rati­fied consolidation of the banks fol­lowing notiticatlon from Washing-

[ ton that the comptroller a i the cur­rency had approved Informally the application for the merger.

New construction undertaken ln the metropolitan area of New York in September totaled $81,572,900, an increase of 6 per cent over 176,708.-900 ln August, F. W. Dodge Corpora­tion reports. The September fig­ures also showed an Increase of 41 per cent over $57,768,100 reported In September last year. Residential building contracts amounted to $38,-520,100 in September, or 47 per cent of the total valuation of all con­struction contracts.

Caterpillar Tractor Company is expected to complete production In connection with its second large Russian order by the end of the year.

Appointment of Oliver P. Wheeler as assistant Federal reserve agent of the San Francisco Federal Re-serve bank waa announced today by Isaac B, Newton, chairman.

Richfield Oil of California broke sharply on tbe stock exchange yes­terday as nearly 10.000 shares were dumped on the market, following the release of an unfavorable bal­ance sheet bt New York after thc close of the stock exchange there. The common stock tu mated 2'i points to set a new low record for the year at 8, rallying faintly at tho close. The preferred dropped 2 points to 10%.

New York Bond Averages

28% 57 3 3 % 72 2 3 % 98 43 24%

Utt 35% TS 10 17% 74% Mtt

7% 10% 35 M Mtt H

63% 63% 69% IMtt 94 70% 16%

2% 50 59%

7 62%

l t t 4%

86% 31% 11% 87 11% U t t 14% 17V*

110% 33% 30%

3% IT

110% 54 54% 5

IM 12

94 70% 18%

3% SO tt

7% 6 2 % l t t ftt

30% 3 3 % Utt 87 11% I

aft I 17%

110% 33% 30%

3 % 17

110%

f# 54%

109%

u 114%

81 16% 14 10% 17%

4% 89% 66%

113

Utt 8tt

46% 55'i 18% 18% l t t t 37%

2.40 17% . . . . 8%

.105 105V* 105% 76% tttt

114% 11 16% 14 16% 18%

4% tttt 6 6 %

ut 15% 24V. 6 0 % 2 8 % 24%

7% M tt% 70% 17%

tt tttt

IMtt •Ttt

iL •% v u

9% M % 55

a 17% 10% 27% 17% •tt

5 5 ' . 3 4 % 5 8 % 37% 3 4 %

7% 36 30% 68% 37

Sales High Low 3 do pf 3 % 40 39%

3B T i d e W a t A l M . . . 11 10% 27 dO Pf 6 11 10% 4 Timk Det AS .80 . . . . 10% Mtt

34 Timk Roll B I 58% M 6 Tob Prod 3% 3% 1 do A .80 Wi U t t

IM Tramamerlra . . . . . . . 30% Mtt a Transne ft WIU 1 . . . 11 10

l t Tri Cont Corn M% 10 7 Tri Cont p 6 , 95% 95 3 T r i c o Prod 3 % . . . . 3 2 % 32% T T r u a x T r u e r 1.60 . . . . IS 13 1 T r u s c o n Bt 1.20 A . 25 25

0 T U n d e r w o o d Ell S . . . . 85 83 4 Union Bae ft P 17 17

161 Union Carbide 8.M . . 70 67% I Union Oil Cal IA . . 33% 14% 4 Union Pae 10 209% 208 3 d opf 4 . . . . . . . . . 87% 87%

IIS Unit Aircraft 44 30% 1 Unit Aircr pf S 59% 59% 1 Unit Blsc pf 7 121 131

H Unit Carbon 3 42% 40% 6 Unit Clear t t t t 1 Unit Clear pf Mtt Mtt

302 Unit Corp ttt Mtt M t t 35 Unit Corp pf 3s 50% 49 %

100 Unit Dyewood as . . . 4 4 50 Un O t t pf 7s as . . . 44% 44% 10 Un Elec Coal 5% 4% M Unit Fruit 4s 78% 73 89 Unit G ft Im I M . . . Mtt 33% 1 do prl pf f l 103% 103% T Un Pteea Dye 2s . . . . 26 Mtt 2 U S Distrib 9% 9% 5 U S ft Por See 14% 12% 3 do pf Gs 94 93 1 U 8 I n d Al 84% 83 4 U 8 Leather 8 7% 4 U 8 Leath A 10% 10%

54 U 8 Pipe 2s . . . . . . . . . tt% 29 t U B Real ft Im M . . . 42% 40%

31 u 3 Rubber 16% l t t t 8 do 1st pf 11% 31

994 U S Steel 78 159% 156% 11 U S Steel pf 7s . . .150% IMtt 8 United St A 9 7% 4 Univ Leaf Tob Ss . . . 27% 87

20 Univ Plct l t t Pf Is . H 61 t Univ Pipe ft B 3% 3%

12 U t l l P ft IA A 2 K . . . 33 31%

V 1 Vadsco 1%

789 Vanadium M tttt 4 Vlrg Car Oh 3%

10 Va El ft P I pet pf.107% 120 Va Ir C * C pf as. 70 80 Vulcan Detin 4s a s . . 66'.

w 2 Wabash Ry 17

Last 39% 10% 10% 10% 58

3% 11% MV* 10 10

ts 32% I t 25

88 IT 66% 34%

208% 17% 42% 59%

111 41

6 Mtt 27% M

4 44%

4% 76% 13%

1031, Mtt

9% U t t 93 t t

Ttt Mtt 29% Mtt 16 31

157% 150%

Ttt 27% 62 I t t

t l

A v e r a g e s i

(CopvriEht, 1930. Standard Statistics Co I NEW YORK, Oct 2. (A1)—The

closing average price of 30 repre­sentative bonds on the New York Stock exchange today ls as follows:

10 10 18 I 30 Indris. RRs- Utlls Ttt

94.0 109.6 04 1 109 5 943 109.8 94.4 IM.T 91 9 101 0 949 105.0

Today Previous day . . . . Week aso Month ago Year a so 2 years ago . . . . 3 years ago, weekly

average BIfh (1930) . . . . Lew (19301 . , . . High (1929) Low (19291

96.2 94.9 91 9 M.I 90.4

106 2 109.8 104.5 10S.0 100 8

100.9 101 0 101.1 100 7 96 7 M t 90.8

101.4 97.8 90S 96.0

101.5 101 6 101 7 101.3 96 5 09.9

101 4 101.9 88 4 99 _ 06 3

1 Affiliated Prod xd . . . 16% l Ainsworth SttA 16

50 A in Paw tpct pf 6s as 103% 1 Alleghany Corp war • 3% 3 Allegheny Gas . . . . . . 3% 3 Allied Mills .60 Ttt 1 Alum Oo Am pf t s . . . 109% 1 Alum Ltd 102 3 Am Arch 3s 37 Va 1 Am ilr Bov Pd . . . . . . Ttt 1 Am Capital B 6 3 A m Cl t P Se L A 311. H %

15 Do B MpctP 14 l t Am Oom P A lopclP i«% M Am l i an B 137a t Am icuultlas i l

37 Am ft _• Pow war . . . Sftt 14 Am Oaa ft Kl IA . . .116% 1 Am Invest B 71" 1 A m I n v e s t U 7V«

73 A m L a u n M a c h 4s a s 51 10 Am L i g h t ft T 3%a . 5 5 %

4 Am M a t h l s B . . . . 3 A m M a r a c a l b o • . . . 5 Am Nat Oas . . . . .

323 Am Sup Power ls 3 Am Sup Pow pf 6a

1750 Am Ut * O B vtc i s 3 Am Yvetle »., 1 Aneh Post P lOpctP. 1 A n g l o Chi C N t t . . 3 Apex Flee . . . . . . . .

11 Appalach Oas 7 A r i l O l o b e 0 Ark N a t O a s

1720 Do A as 8 D o p t SO 9 Asso B tnd Ltd .30 2 Also Oas ft El

10 Do pf Ss a l . . . . . . 2'i Do ctfs la as

1132 Do A 2 4«R as . , 8 Do deb i t s 8 Asso Rayon . . . . . . . 3 Atlai Ply Sl

•9 Atlaa UtU 1 D o w a r 4 Aut V Maeh ev pr pt io 1 Aria Corp Am . . . . 37% 1 Axton Pish Tob A 3 30 43

B 1 Bithln C o r p I 8 B a n c o m C o r p l . M . . . 4 4 %

35 Bel l T e l C a n Se 153 4 Black ft Pecker 33% 4 Bliss E W ls 17 2 Blue Rldse .40 6%

22 Blue Ridge cvt pt . . 37% 3 Blumenthe! S 20

16 Bras Tr ft Lt IA . . 3 5 1 Buf Nlat Sc EV pf . 26%

l t t t 18% l t 16

103% 103% 3% 3% 3% I t t 7 7

109% 109% IM 102

35% 3o% Ttt 6

Mtt 13.* 18 la 13! . 11 34%

115

Sales High Low Last

M

6 38% 13% 18 12% 10% 33

113

.16% 1% 9%

19% 91

1% 6%

31 13 8%

1-16 8% 8% 7 n 1 %

M % Htt M S O ' ;

3 % 1%

IB Ttt 8

Mtt 55 16

1 % 8

18 ta 91

1 % 6%

21 12% 8%

1-10 8 ' . 7% 7% 5

M% » 3 % 95 30 S t t 1%

14%

7%%! * 7%

Bl 55 16%

1% 8

19 91

TH 1% 6 ' ,

81 13*-S%

1-18 8% S% 7% 5

39% 9 3 % M 30

3 % IV*

IB

S 3 8>a 10

8 7 % 37'.'i 43 43

3 Mtt

152 33% 17

36% 20 34 26%

4 CAM Co vet 38 Can Mare Wireless 3 Carib Syn 3 Carnation Co IttA . .

35RI Celanese 1st pf Ttt. 31 Cent Pub Ber A . . . . Kins Cen States Kl . . . . 3 Chain Str Bt 3 Chit th P h Al n v . , 1 Ch i Corp

M a s Chl lds pf 7 . 353 Ci t i e s Ser .MA

5 do pf 6 1 Cleve Elee Inn 1 60 . 4 Cleve Tract 1.60 6 D o l o m b S y n 5 Colum Oil ft Ovtc . . 3 Colum Plct vtc . . . .

67 Comwlth f t 8 t war . 5 Odmmun Wat Wks . ,

10 Cons Cop Mln icons Dairy

7 Cons Oai Utll A . . . 3 Cons Royalty %

35ai Cont O ft B pr pf] 1 Cooper B e n 3 . . . . j 1 Cope land A

13 Cord Corp 43 Co.sdpn OU 3 Oourtauldi .43

3450ns Creole Pet 7 Crocker ft Wheel . . 3 Crown Cent Pct . . . .

125ns Crown C ft Seal pf. 1 Crown O Intl A 1 . . T CuneO Press l t t I Curt Ins Alrp etf . . . , t Curtlss Wright war . .

6 Mavis Bott % 1345 M e m p h i s N O a i as 14% 78 M e t a l ft M l n 1.30 . . 0% 1 do ur ^ S 2 Mexico Ohio Otl . . . I t t 3 Mid' N O M A 1.30 . . 1 3 % 1 Mid West S t U t 1%8 3 1 % 8 d o 8 P C P ; 23 3 Midva le C o 4s 60

13 Mo K a n Pipe L lOpcP 15% 50 M o n o n e W P P S pf a s . 3 t

1 Monteea t deb rt . . . . tt I M o u n t a i n G u l f .08 . . % 7 M o u n t a i n Prod 1 .60 . . 8

N 34 National A a Oo . . . . 8H

9 Nat Avia .- 6% 8 N a t B o n d ft S h %l . M 3 N at F a r m Strs 3 % p e P 8% 1 d o pf 3s 18%

14 Nat Investors l t t t 50 Nat PftL tpe pf 6 as. 103% 35 Nat Rub Mach Is . . . 7

1 Mat Sh T Seo A %xd. 15% 8 Nst Sug Ref NJ 2s. 38%

50 Nev Cal Elec as . . . . '130 10ns New Kns pow pt t . 92%

' 1 New MexftArii Ld 3 M Newmont Mm 4 . . . . . . . TB 5 Newport Co 2 20 1 N L Rlo ft B Alts*. . Btt

7aus NY Tel t%e pf 6%.116 M Nias Itud Pow 4 0 . . . . 14% II do A war 3%

1 do B war 6 t do O war 5 1 Nlag Shri Md .40 MV* 3 Miles Bern P o n d 2 % 0 25% 1 N t p i s s i n t M i n e s 3 0 . . 1% 5 N o r a n d a M i n e s 2 10% 1 Numa lee .10 , 6

10 Nordon C o r p Ltd % t Nor A m Avia A w a r . 1%

13 Nor E u r o p e a n O i l . . . 1% ion . Nor t n d P S t s pf 1 .103 4 North Stales P A I . . 147%

35 do 6s pf 6. 33% 310as Novndel Agcne 3%0 35%

% 13%

3 % 2 % 2 %

13% 3 1 % 34 tt 14% 36

% tt

. 7 %

13% 3 % 3 % 3%

13% 3 1 % 3 4 % 60 14% tt

%

T 6

34% 8>.

Mtt •%

103% 5

l t t t 27

I M M t t

3 68% 30

5% 116

13% 3 8 8

10% 35 S Itt

18%

u

t% 1 %

si 68% 3 1 % 20% 13 18% I

108% Mtt 91% 11 11

% 1 %

13% 3%

U t t 3

M 2 0 %

1 % 106% 11

4 ttt t t t

10 1 %

13% %

34% 0%

M I 1

3 % ltt

tt 50% 21 19 13 11 8

1M% Mtt • 1 % 11 • tt %

8'i, 35% 3

U t t l t t

10 19% 3%

IMtt 31

4 6% 8%

10 4%

13% %

34% Btt

33% I

3 M%

l i t 23% IT _%'

IT 30 34 36%

tt 1 % '

n . l 31 59% 2 1 % 10 11 11

I 108%

26% 9 1 % 51 U

tt 8 ' -

33% 3

13% 3

10 19%

3 % 1 M %

31 t 6% I S%

'5° " J * 34%

9% ! M 3

O 1 Ohio Cop . , * , , . . . . , . , I O h i o Oil pf • |

10« . Ohio PuHS*r A pf 7 8 Outboard M o t B

P 3 Pac OftB 1 pf !%.- . 5 Pacific Pub Ser 1 30.. 3 Pacific West Oil

12 Pandem OU I Pnntepec Oil 1 Paramount Cab 3 Parke Davis l . M O . . .

41 Peninsular Tel 1.40. 1 Pa Wit ft Pow 3 1 Petroleum Corp war., 3 Phila El Oo pf I 1 Philip Morris t Pierce Clovernor 1%, I Pitney Bowers . 2 0 . . . .

Ofla - Pitts LakeBrRy l tO, I Plymouth Oil I

ISai Polymet Mfs I s P . . . I Premier Oold .34 I Prince ft Whttely %.. T do pf I 1 Prosperity Co B

27 Prudential Invest . . . . 35 Pub Util Hold.. t do wsr

Mai Pub Ser No III pf.. II

1 Railroad Bh % 5 Relter Poster . . . . . 1 Reliable Btorei 5S p 4 P'Uanre I n n B 9 Rich OU Cal p f l * f c . . t Rock I L ft P tr etf M 1 Rolls Royce Ltd % 0 . 3 Roosevelt Field , , , . . . I Root. Ref rv pr pf . . 1 R o s s l a Int l 3 R n y a l t v Corp p f 2 Ryan Cons

1% I S

103 146% 34 7-33%

Ttt 6

34% ' 8%

18% M

103 tt 5

15% M

l t t 92%

3 66% M

6% 116

14% 3 8 5

Mtt 25%

1% 11%

IM 1 M %

35% 33%

Sales High 2 Com Larabee tt t l . 53

14 Cons G B i s r 66..105% 10 Com Pub t t t t 3 6 . . . 39% 5 Consum P 4%8 38.IQ2

10 conxum P 4 t t e H . . . l t l t t 88 Cont O * El 5s A. 93% 14 Cont Oil 5%i 37 . . . p.,Z 2 Cont H ft s t Pdry. t t% 1 Crucible St 5s 40 . . . 101% 1 Cudahy P Stt f 37. . 81

14 Det C O 5s B 50...104% • Det Int B 7s 53 . . 17

25 do 5%s f t 42 I Div o O 8%| A 37 98 7 DuQuesne Gai 6s 45. f i

. ! _ * • *%t tt . . . . : . 83% 16 E.st Utll I M A 54 74% 4 Ed Elee 111 Sa 33 . . .102%

, 5 | Pai N O a e l H i 38.109% 121 Elec P ft Lt 3s 2030. 92% U do Is 30 new 92% 4 Empire OAR 5%l 42 17% 2 Fed W a t e r 3%i 54 8 1 % 1 F i r e s t o n e Cot M 5s 48 83% 3 P . r e s t o n e T i r e 5s 42 9 3 ' . l Pisk Rubber l % s 3 1 . . t l * 7

6 Pl _ P * L t 5s .14 . . . 4 Oatlneau Pow 5s 58 t do 6s 41

M do t l B 41 3 G e n B r o n z e t l 40 4 Gen Pub Serv Ss S3 I Oeo Pow 5i 67

83% 98 99% 08% 9 1 % 87

M l . 5 O l i d d e n Co 5 % | 3 5 ' \! 1)5 u

11 O o o d r l c h 6s 45

105% I M

2%

20 28% 1 1 %

% 2 % 4%

M % 10 to

2 % I M 13-16

5% 8%

no 24 s% %

S 36

8 17% 13 3%

IM

106% 1 M % 109 I M

3 % 2 %

28% 27 13% 5-18 Itt 4%

30% 9%

69 t 3%

101% 13-16

3% B

107 33%

3% tt

I Mtt

6 Mtt 13 3

130

• % Itt 9 IH

10% 22%

•". 2 % 7 4 % 8%

9 1% 9%

20 9% ttt T 4% 8

38 >; 28 11%

% 3 % 4 %

3 0 % 10 9 3%

I M t t 1 3 - I t

1 % I

107 14

3% %

8 M

8 17% l l t t 3% |

IM

•% 1% 9 1%

Mtt M •% 3 % 7 4% • 2%

3 D a y t o n Airpl

New York Stock j Exchange Averages j l--m,mm—m-m - - i (Coprrlaht. 1930. Standard Statistics Co.)

NEW YORK. Oct. 2. i/l-'i—The closing average price of 90 repre­sentative stocks on tha New York Stock exchange today is as follows:

DU 20 20 90 Indris. RRs" Utlli Tot 147.B 113 8 150.1 115.1 152.5 118 9 107.1 121.1 227.3 151.2 182 4 123.4

Today Previous day . . . . Week ago Month ago Yenr ago . . . . . . 3 years ago . . . . 3 years ago. weekly

average . . . . . . . 141.5 High (MM) . . . . 302 4 Low (1930) 142.9 Hith (1929) . , , 252.8 Low (1820) . . . . 141.3

203.2 304.8 308 3 322.2 313 1 1M.B

1 5 2 3 154.3 156.7 If. I 8 329 9 168.8

18 DeerrA'Co n l . M A aa 6 8 % 10 -

1 B

M 22

1 1 1 4 I 1

122.7 141 8 112.0 1878 117.7

1275 281.3 197 4 353 1 156 6

136.1 305.8 147.8 353 3 1403

1% 1 % f l t t

3% t t t 107% 107%

Mtt . . M . . 1 0 6 . 4 106 . . 37% H • • L i . . 8% 8 . . f I

IB 8

tf M % 17% 17% 10 26% IT • tt

8 do pf A 53 68 1 Waldorf OH l t t t . . . U t t 6 Walworth 2s H t t

20 Ward Bak A sa 23% 10 Ward Bak B 7% 1 Ward Bak pf 7 61

337 Warner Plct 22% 6 Warner Bum 9%

IS Warren Bros 3 44% 3 Warren Pd ft P I . . . 36% 1 Wesson Oil ft 8 3 24% 1 do pf 4 66%

lOas W Penn El 7s pf 8 . . | U 1 SOas do 6s pf 6 103 lOas W Penn P TS pf 7..117

loess do 6-S pf 6 .110% 3 W Dairy A 4 ' 88 I do B 7%

19 Western Mary U 1 do Snd pf tttt 1 Weet Pac pf 33% 8 W Un Tel 8 160

39 Wrstlngh Air 2 36% 504 West El ft Mfg 5 131%

40ns do 1st pf 6 IM 4 We. ton El Ini 1 . . . . 26% 1 Westvaco Chi 3 34% 1 Whig ft L Erie . . . . . 1 0 0 % 1 White Rk M Sp « % 1 White Sew M 4%

l t Willys Over 6% 71 VBMlworth 2.40 64% 68 worth P ft M . . . . . . 99 2 do pf B 88

14 Wrigiey Jr 4 60%

171 Ten Tr ft C . 1 Young S ft W

15% 36%

10 Zenith Radio Stt

TC M

26 6 . 35% n H t t

61 31 9

42% 26% 34% 66% 111%

101 117 110% 31

Ttt IT 3 0 % 3 3 %

153% Utt

138% IM Mtt 34%

100% 4 4 %

4 % 6

63% 9 1 % 67% 67%

14% 36%

5%

TC M

37 88 35% tttt 23%

Ttt 61 21% 9

43% 26% 24% 56% 11%

103 117 110% 81

Ttt U t t 20% 13%

154% 36

131% 136

36% 34%

100% 44% i " 3

6 3 % M 8 7 % 69%

'*'• 3 6 %

( CHICAGO GRAIN j CHICAGO BOA-tO OT TRADE"' CHICAGO, Oct. 2. (AV-Helped by

decidedly broader export demand for North American wheat includ­ing some from tbe United States, wheat prices here advanced today, and held considerable gains. A statement from Chairman Legge of the Federal Farm board commodi­ties were down to an investment level was given sharp attention especially a mention foreigners in­tended to purchase 100.000,000 bushels more wheat this winter.

Wheat closed firm l - l \ c a bushel higher than yesterday'a finish. Corn closed lH-8e up: oats H-**C advanced, and provisions un­changed to a rise of tte.

CHICAOO CASH GRAIN CHICAOO. Oct. 2. (JP\—Wheat

No. 2 red 17%-88; No. 1 hard 81. Corn No. 1 mixed 89: No. 1 yellow

89*_-89(_F); No. t white .95; sample grade 84.

Oats No. 1 white 38: No. 2 white 37%-38; rye no Bales. Barley 48-68. Tlmothv seed 7.75-800. Clover seed 16.75-24.25.

Bf Aasarlatee Freo* CHICAOO, Oct. 1—Following are the

quotations on the Chicago Board of Trade today:

WHEAT— Dec. March . . . . May

CORN— Dec. . . . . . . March . . . . . May

OATS— Dec. March May

RYE— Dec. ! March . . . . . May

Blah 83%

.85% .88%

.84 .85% .87%

-tttt . 4 1 % .43%

.53% Mtt .50

Low .80%

.84% .87%

.82% .84% .85 %

.38%

.40%

.41%

.51%

.55%

.57%

Close 81 •'

.M 88

. H % » M % « 87 %U

39 .41% .42%

.51%

.55%

.87%

.81 ' . .85% M t t

.81% . M S .87%

5%

Total Sales- -3.469.700 Previous Day- 23,155,305 Week Ago—3.067.710 Year Aio—4.747.330 Two Tears Aso—4.331.5M Jan 1 M Date—648.403.670 Tear Aso—833.671.340 T o o Tears Ago—632,897,700

V. 8. GOVERNMENT BONDS Sales (In 31000) Hlsb Low Close

18 Lib.rty 8%l 32-47.101.7 101.3 101.4 100 do 3%! re« 33-47 101.3 101.1 101-1

t do 1st 4'iS 11-47.102.12 102.10 102.10 124 do 4th 4%s 33-38.103 14 103.11 103.13

10 do 4th 4 Vis r 33-38 103.7 10S.7 103 7 30 Tress 4%s 47-53 . .113 6 113.38 U3.B < 14 do 4s 44-54 . . . .10323 108.29 108.39 51 do Sttt tm-mt 106.19 1M.17 1M.17 8 do Stts 40-43 ..103 4 103 l t t I Oa St t l 41-47 . . . . 1 W . I I 103.11 102.15

3 1

10 5 1 I 3

O* 1

7 M 69

4 I

197 1

tt

1 100

1 3 I 1

M 4 8 I

14

Oe Forest D t Haviiand n % Detroit Aircraft . plain Match n . .

do n pf Doehler Die-Cast Douglas Aire % Draper Corp SO Dresser Mfg A I

do B Driver Harris . . . Dubilier Cond . . . . Duquesne Oaa . . Durant Mot

3 TH 3%

U t t 35%

» 16 60 43 11 48

3 % 8% 3

3 %

Ttt I

Utt 34%

9 It 60 42% t i M ltt 8

East Oas ft Puel . . . . t l East States Pow B . . 35* Eastern Util A . . . 6" i Eisler Klec at 61

El Bond ft Bh 6 pc P . M* do pf 6 108'J do 5 pet Pf 5 97-.

El Pow Assoc 1 . . . . 23% do A 1 31%

El P ft L opt w a r . . . . 40% Electric Share IA . 1 6

do nf fili 91% Empire Oorp 8 Empire Fire Ins . . . 7 Emp G ft T T p pf 7. Mtt Empire ow 4 04 O . . IT Evans Wallo Lead . 1%

F Fabrics Finish 2% Pairchlld Avia A . . . 2% Fa trey Avlat .18 . . . 2% Fnjardo Sus as . . . . . 43 Plat rets l t t . . . . . . . 12%

do debt rta . . . . . . . U t t Pokker Aircraft . . . . 13% Pollla Fischer 3% Ford M Can A 1%C 34 Fort Mot Ltd .37% . 17% Fox Theater A 8% Franklin Mfg 3 . . . 6%

G Oalenn Oil 4% Oarlock Pack l .M . U t t Oen Bak 2%

do p 3 34% Gen Cap Corp . . . . 39% Oen Elec Ltd ret %. 11% Gen Empire 1 17% n Gas A E cv pf B 8 70 Oen Ldy Maeh 2% Globe Underwrtt .11 10 Oold Seal Elec 1% Oolden Center Mln . . 1% Goldman Sachi . . . . 15% Ootham Knltbao . . . % Oraymur I I Ot Atl ft Pae nv l l .107 Orler Stores S Oa Oil Corp Pa l t t l . M l

H HaU Lamp 69 7 Hartford Elec 3%s aa Mtt HaxeltlBO 3s M t t Hecla Mln Is 9% Hlr Walker O ft W. 7% Horn ft Hard IttB. M Houston Otl 14 Hudson Bay M ft S. 5% Humble • Oi! tt 79% Hydro El Serv 2s . 35% Hygrade Pood . . . . . 5%

23 25% | 5%

65% 108%

97% 23% 19 40 U t t 91% ttt 5

00% 37

ltt

3% 2% 2%

43 13% Mtt U t t

3% H t t 1 8 %

7% •tt

4% Utt ttt

3 3 % 19% 1 1 % 18% tt iH

10 i% l t t

15 %

tt M S %

8 98%

16% B% 7%

M Utt

5% 7 6 % 35%

3 %

Imp oi l Can tti Ind Ter III A

19% 37%

Indust Pin etf 10 pct 15% Insull Utll • pct P . M Insurance S-C l .M . . 9% Intercon Petrol . . . . . tt ttt Hydro Elec war . . 4% Internat Pet Is 17% Inter Util A t t t t . . . 40% Inter Utll B 10% Inter Otl! war I Inters Eq cv pf 3 s . . . 38 Irvine Air Oh l l . . . . 11 Ita] Buperpow A . . . 3%

K 3 Klein D E Co I s . . . . U t t I 1 Lake. M y .*. 4 3 Lane Bryant tt . 1 Lefcourt Realty L t t . V 1 Leonard 0 0 8 U b McN ft Lib . . . I Lily Tulip Cup I t t l . j

31 Lion OH Si 4 Lone Star Oai l t . . . 1 Long Is Light .55 . . .

70 do pf Tl as 4 Louil L ft E .*•-

M 1 Matdalena Syn 3 Marconi Int MM M .

8 M a n UtU A n o

27 Utt 49

9% %

4 % t l Mtt 10 «

M Utt Itt

u

I ai I 7% 3 %

U % tt •

16 60 M % 31 t i t% 8 ttt

23 25% 8 Stt

67 108%

97% 33% 19% 40 U t t 91S t t t fw

9 0 ' . ST

1 ' ,

8% 3% ttt

43 M>-13% 12 t t t

23% 17%

8 •tt

4 t t 1 8 ' . t t t

f t 39 % 1 1 % ' 18% tt 8%

10 1 % 1%

1 3 % %

28 IMtt

8 89%

7 TB% 16% ftt Ttt

36 13%

Btt TC%

**v 4 '

19% 37 U t t 50

9 . ' : I 4%

IT 40% 10 4

38 10% 5%

S0*s Safety Cr H ft L S 30 a.Safeway Bt 2 war 13 Bt Regis Paper 1 8 Salt-Crk Prod 3 . . . . 2 Saxet Co , , . . . , 2 S c h u l Dn Bc-Sl S t . . . 5 Seaboard Utll % 1 Sec Corp Gen .40 . . .

27 Segal Lock % 4 Bel Ind allot ctf 4% 1 Selert Ind pr pf Btt. I Sentry Snf Control ., 6 Shattuck Denn

33f>as Shcaffer Pen SO .. 4 Shenandoah 3 do pf 3R 3 Sil ica Oel ct f . . . , . . , 5 S o Cal Ed II pf 1 % . . 5 d o O pf 1 3 7 % . . . . 1 Bo Colo Pow A 3

10 So Penn Oil 2%a 3 Bout hid Royalty . . . .

10 Span ft Oen rets . . . 0 Stand Mot

78 Stan Oil Ind 1% 16 Stan OH Ky 1.60 33a* St Pub Sv A

B Starrett Corp T do pt 8 2 Strauss Roth 3 Stuti Mot Am . . . . . . 6 Sunday oi l .40

11 Swift ft Co I 6 Swlt Int 3%

T 1 Tampa El 3 1 Technicolor tne . . . .

13 Tech Hush Oold 60 . I Texon oil ft Land 4. 1 Thatcher Sec 1 Tlshman Realty .".- C. 1 Tob Prod Bsport 1 Todd Shipyards 4 ..

13 Transcont Air Tr . . 1 Trent Lux D Pic A. . 3 Tri Cont Corp war . 1 Triplex Saf Olasa . . 1 Truns Pork Stor l .M. 3 Twin Sta Nat Oai A.

D 1 Union Am Inve.t . . 1 Union Oil Cal deb rt. 8 Union Tobacco . . . . . . 3 Unit Chem ptc pf 3 . 8 United Dry Dock

tM Unit Pounders 3-13P. l U United Oas new

8 do war 3 United Gas pf T . . . .

113 Un Lt ft Pow A 1 .. I do ev pf 6 . . . . 1 Unit Milk Prod 1 Unit Molasses Ltd . J 8 US ft Int See

US ft Overseas .06% B do cod T U 8 Elec Pow 3 US Poll B 1 1 OB Ovpsum 1 60 . . . 6 US Lines pf 1 S United Stores vtc . .

200:is United Verde Ext . . 3 Utility Equities

I t Utll Pow ft Lt IR . . 1 ft I e l l IR 1 Utility ft Indus

V 48 Vacuum Oil 4 4 Van Camp Parkins . .

U Venezuelan Pet 1 lVck Finance 40

w 8 W a l g r e e n O o 3 do war 8 Weat Air Express .60. 1 Whcatsnorth IVi, . . . .

M WU Low Cafet 3 do pf 4

z 3 Zonite Prod Is

IM 10 V* 1»% 10 15% l t t 1%

H t t 6%

65% 81 ttt 4

5 0 ' i 8%

3 9 % 13 38% 36% n

i% Ttt % 1%

M % 28%

111 15% 3 4 % •% l t t 4%

29%

tttt 61% 14%

6% 11%

41 a

49 t% 1% 4 Tt t

IT 1 2 %

Mtt ltt

»» 28%

3% 15% 1 3 %

5% 96 14%

108*'. 4% 4% 2

14% 14 11% U t t i i

. itt i t t 9

10% U t t 36% 10%

Tt T H 3% T

M •tt

31% 33%

5% 30%

110 10% 18% Btt

Mtt • 3%

B 33%

6% Mtt 81

3% 4

Mtt 8%

38% IS 37% 35% 31

1% 7% %

ttt _4% 37%

U l 14 33%

8 % 1 % 4%

Mtt tt

81% 14%

6% Utt ttt

41 tt

49 s% Stt 3% 7%

IT l l t t

24% 1% tt

It-* ttt

14 13<4 I t t

MVa H t t

IM 4% 4% 2

14% 13 9%

13% 38

M 3 7% 9%

15% 36% 10%

118 10% I t I t t

13% 3% 1 %

3 3 % 6%

65% 61 Stt t

5 0 ' . t%

3 9 % 11 37% 3 5 % 33

1% 7% tt

1% M % 28

Ut 14 3 2 %

9% 1% 4%

28% 12%

• l t t 14% •tt

1 1 % ttt

41 %

40 | 9% • tt 4 Tt t

IT M t t

3 Ooodyr T & R 3%e 31 .100 15 O r a n d F W 6s 48 . . . s o 3 Oul f Ol! Pa 5s 37 , . . 1 0 3 % I O u l f Bt U t 3s A 56 . . 1 0 1 %

30 H a n n a t e 38 ii)0 32 Hood R u b 7a M . . . . B 3 Hous Ou O t%s43ww 95% • do t i A M 06

II Hygrade Food 6s A 48 51% 7 111 P ft Lt 3%s 57 . . 96% 8 Ind S W O A U t 8SA40. 98% I In . lnap l s P f t L SsAST. 101%

10 Inland Utll M M . . . 98% 13 Insul l u t l a v 6s B 40 99%

1 I n t e r c o m P w evt 6s48 85 1 d o t s A 48 w w . . . 71 8 rater! P w S e c Ts I 57 98% 5 Inter l Bee Am Be 47. 8 0 % 4 Inter! S a l t Oo S l 5 1 . 86%

14 Inters Pow Ss 37 t t % 11 Interstate PS 4%i 58 94%

1 Invest E Be A 4T xw. 80% 7 lowa.Keb IftP Ss 57 98% I JerOmt PAL 5sB47..I01

10 do S%( A M . . . .103% 1 Kan Oft* ta A 1033.106% 7 Kop Oai ft O 1% 50.103% I Lehigh PS t l A 1026 105% 9 Libby M c N ft L St 43 9 5 % 5 Lone Star Oas M 43.100 6 Louis P * l. Ss 57 . 1 0 1 %

15 Mass Oas 5%i t t . . .104% 41 do l l 55 ..101

3 Mead Corp 6sA4Sww. »7 7 Mid West Utll 5 | 33.M0

do 3s 34 98 l i do 5s 33 ' 97H 3 Midland N Gas t i t s . 98% I Milk o ..- F: r . s 67.103

11 Minn P*L 4%i TS . . 88tt t Miss P ft Lt Co I 57. H 3 Montreal I.HftP SAS1.M4 J Narrasansett 31 IT . . IM% 1 Nathan Strauss 6s I t 55 I Nat P f t L 63.42026.107%

54 do Bl B 2030 94% 18 Nat Pub Serv S« 78. 78% 9 Nelsner Bros 8s 48 t l t t 7 New Eng O f t E 5*46 92%

68 do 5s 50 . . 81 M do Se 47 . .* 92 M NY Por Sttt 48 ww. . 85 H N T PftLt. t t t e 67 . . . 9 3 ' .

1 Nor W Pow 6s 60 161% 3 O h i o (son t e 60 . . . . 101%

36 O h i o P o w 4 % i D 56 . !)-i 4 Ontario Pow l t t t 50. 95% 1 Osgood Co to 38 63 I Pac O.sf t t t t t t l P 60 98% I Pac Inv Sl 48 SW A. . 78% 3 Pac P ft L l l M 100% 8 P a s W OU t % M t w w . . »4%

13 P e n n Ct P f t L 4 % i 77 . 06% 1 P e n n D k f t W a r e 6s 49 . 9 3 % 3 P e n n Oh Bd ! % s B S O . t t t

67 Peop I t f t P Ss 78 WW. 8 3 % 3 P h l l a EI P SV.s 7 3 . . . 106% 7 Pitts Clnn Stl 4%s77.102% I Pitta Coal Oo t i 49 . . 991-4

20 Portland O I .',.; to. J J * . 10 Pow Corp Canl%iB3t 9 " ,

6 Pow Oorp N T S t t a 47. 9 % 3 Pub Ber N IU 4 % e M . 93

10 P u d Bd P f t L 8 t t B 43 .104 8 do 8a C 30 181 % 8 Queens B Oas5%sA52.104% 3 Roch Cent Pow Be 53. 77V. 1 Ryerson ft Son M 43. 96% I St L OftCoke t t 47. . 60% 6 Saxet Corp t* A 45. 99 1 Schulte R to 35xw.. U t t

15 Scrlpps SHl 43 t o 5 S h a w l n g W f t P 5s C 7 0 . 1 0 4 % 4 do 4%s A 67 . . . 1 do 4%i B 68 . . . 1 Shawsheen Tt 11.

Low -*• M ~

104% 104ft Mtt M t t

Mltt 102 101% 18188

92% 93% 97% 87% 98% SStt

101% l l f t t ' H 88

103% 103% H If 41% 41tt 96 . M 90 S3 M M 74% T t % !-

102% 103% 109 IOt

93% M t t 93% 9 3 $ 34% 86% 92% 92% 86% SStt 82% 31% 89% 98 98 9 t % 9 1 % 87

102% 103% 95 SStt 82% S3

100 100 BS M

102% 103% 101% 101% 100 100 tt 84 95% 95% 96 f i 50 50 96% 96% 98% 98%

101% Mlt t M% 98% 99% 85 79 98% 80% 83 92% 93%

II M M 9 8 %

»*

4 4 % 35 70

sttt Mtt 86% 92% 93%

80% 80% M M

101 101 103% 103% 106% 106% 103% IMtt 105% 105% Mtt 95%

100 108 101% M l t t 104% 104% 100% 100% 96% 97 99% 99% 99 90 97% 97% 98% 98%

103 10S 96% 96% H t t 98%

Mf 104 103% 103% 54 54

107% 107% 94% 84% 78% 78% 00 81% 81% 89 90% S3 M

Ml

H t t 81 88 88 08%

- 1 0 1 % M l % 1 0 1 %

98% • " 95 95% M M 98% 98% T8% 78%

100% 100% 04 04% 05% t t t t M t t 83%

102% 103% 80 H t t

106% 106% 103% 103% 89% 99% 03% 93% 1 1 % 8 1 % 9 9 % 98% St M

104 M t 101 ioi 104% IMtt TTtt 96% 60%

99 83% 89

1» 6 0 -

97 08

100% 3 S i l i ca O e l 6%s 33ww!lOO 7 S E P f t L M A 25 x w . 7 Bo Cal Oas 8'_s 35.

31 So Nat Gas «* 44 3 So Lt ft Pow Ss A57

15 s w Dairy I t t l 38 ww 1* SW Nat Gas fe 4 i . . 5 Staley Mfe to 4 2 . . . 5 Stand OftE 6* 33 . ., 8 do to t l I 1 do to M , .

17 Std Inv 5%s 39...".j 1 do to 17 xw . . . . . .

l t Std PftLt to 87 . . . . 36 Swift Co Se 33 . . . J 36 do to 40 . . . . , —

106 Tenn Pub Serv 51

107% IM 93 tttt

I 71 i 93

07% 103% l t t t t 102% I 91

90 IM 100% IM

'0 98%

83% 89

Mttt 104% 97% 97% t t 98

100% 100% IM IM 107% 107% l i t 120

93% S3 98* 69% tt 07%

W8 ttl 03 07%

34% 1% %

2 6 % 3%

14% 13%

Btt 95% 33%

1 0 8 ' , 4% 4% 3

1 4 % 13 10% 13% H

9% 3 9 9%

15% 36% 10%

11 Tes El Serv Sl 80 100 1 Tex Gas UtU 6s 45 . . H%

34 TM P * U to M 103 48 Tri Utll to 78 . . . . . »•> STwin St.it NatO to 33 98% S Ulen ft Co 6s 4 4 . . . . Mtt 5 Utah Pow 4 % | 44 . 97tf,

28 Van Swerlng fe 39 . 17% 3 Vlrg EI P to A 55.104%

10 Wash Wat Po 5« 60 104% 1 Webster Mil 6%s S3 97 B W Pa Gold Sa 203O 93

13 W Tex Util 3s A 57. 8»%

IMtt 103% 103% 103% 103% 103%

83% ta 90 M

101% 103 100% 100% 100% 100% Mtt 08% 99% M l 11 a* 91%

IMtt 103 81 83 98% 93% M M 97% 97% 97% 87%

104% 104% 104% 104% 97 97 02% n M t t Mtt

70% 8

7

to f t t

30% 33% t t t

20

71 V«

Ttt ttt 7

M •tt 31%

33% 4%

30%

S% Btt

FOREIGN BONDS Brisbane 6s 50 . . . . 98-• Buen Aires Prov 7s 47 97 Cauca Val 7s 48 . . . 67 Cent Bk Oer 6a A 53 83% Cent Bk Oer fe 81 77 Chile MM Bk to I I . 98 Com Priv Bk t%e 37 M Dan Con 5 Vis 55 . . . 100% Danzig ert l%s 83 80 Den Mtg tt I 73 IX 99 Ere M E 6% A 53 ww 78 Erop E! 1% 66 xw . . 80 Fin Ind Bk Tb M 100% Finland R sr nk 6 at. f t Oer Cons Mun 7s 47 89 Oer Cons Mun to 47. . 78 Hanover St t% 49 . . i l Huns Ital B 7% 63 AC 80% Isarco Hyd Bl 7s 32. 03% Isotta Prai Tb 42 ww 82% tt Sup P 8s A 83 xw Lima eru 6%s 58. Mrdellta Col Ts tt. tt Nlpp El Pow t'-ji 53. 91% Parana Bras 7s 581 Prussia PS t t t e 11. , Prussia FS to 62 Ruhr Oas 6%s A 53 Russ 6%s ctf N C

66%

63 17 81% 77%

m t a 1 Saarbr.-eck 7s 35 . . .101% Saxon Pub Wka I *M 95% Stlnnei Ti 36 x w . . . so Sydney NSW 5% 55. M Tornl Elec t%s 53. 83% Unit Elec Serv Tl M. 90

do Ts 56 xw . . . . . . 86 UB Indus 6%s 41 . . 83%

95% 97 67 M Tf 97% 85%

tea 80 98% 7t 78%

MOV* M M 7 5 % 90 8 0 % 83% 8 3 % 7 0 % 66% 79

9 1 % 65 86 M 76%

-JL Ultt Mtt 79 8t H M 85 83

Mtt 07 67 M I f 07% 88%

t t t M 98% Tf M

100% 81 U 75%

i i 80% 93% 83% 70% 6 4 « 78 81% M M M % 77%

3 -1 0 1 %

9 4 % tt 86 63 tt M Mtt

41 Am t Am

20 Am 1 Am

4 33% 11

1% 13 33% 11 n% 36

110% l t t

% s% . Mb

4 33 V* 11

1% Utt tttt Utt a 31

1 0 9 ' . 1%

% I t t %

l i

4 3 3 % 11

1% 1 3 % tttt 10%

n

aa 109%

l t t 8%

8 %

DOMESTIC BON 1 Ala Pow M 18 103** 3 Ala Pow t t t t 87 . . . 99* 3 Alumln OO ta U. . . I04* . 1 Alumln LM ta 4 3 . . . 102 4 Am Cmwlth P to 40 93

G ft E 3s 2028.101 O ft P 6s 3 9 . . . 94 P ft L to H M . . I M Rad 4 Vis 47

11 Am Roll M Ss 48 40 Appalach G to 45 I Appalach P l e 58 i Ark P ft L 3s 58

13 Armstrong O Se 27 A S M El t t t s H . . . 16 Also OAE 5Vis 38 42 do 5s 50 4 Also O&B It ta

TS do Ss 88 . . . 43 Asso G&E t t t t

4 Asso B H l t t t 22 A S M S T Ut l t t t C 44

5 do 5tts 55

M.

100 100%

96% 103% 101 97 92' . 88 M% 97% tttt

C 49 33 1 3 . . . 86

84% 87

TT

1 A t l a s P l y w o o d 5 V i s . . 78 8 B e l l T C a n ta A 55 I M

35 Bell T C 5s B 57. 103 I t Bell T O la O t t . . . IMtt

1 Birmlnsh O ta 59 . . . 93% 7 Calif Pack Ss 40.. .101% 5 C N W Ind S3 5s 55.104%

11 Can N Rp 4%s tt.. IM • do Equip 7l 8 35. .109% 1 Ot pAd ta A S3 xw. . M%

37 Caterp Trio 5* 3 8 . . . I M t t t Cent Ml El I t t l 54 . . 81% B Cent St 83 5s 48. . 79 1 C St P ft L S t t t . . . . 93

36 Chle D EI O Corp 96% 1 Cisar Strs R Stts A 49 83% 3 Cities Mr to 66 . . . tt%

307 Cltlea Ser ta 50 . . . 98% 17 do Gas 5%s 8 i . . . mtt. r- Aa Pipe to M . . . . f f

31 cf> I t ta 53 .m*m 3 Cleve B B l ta A. - IM I Cleve T Bids tt 41 Mtt

DS 103%

99% 104% Ml 93

100% 94

108% IM IMtt

04% IH Ml Mtt • 3 % 85% 88 96% 88 t l t t M 94% 97 TC

IM IM 105%

99% M l 104% 103% 109%

80% IMtt Mtt tt 93 96% 83% • t t 97% 8 1 % tttt M

1 « M t t

103% 99%

IMtt 102 93

1M% 94

108% IM lon% 96 ua

ut 97 92% 8 5 % 88% 96% tttt 83 M Mtt 97 TS

105 105 1 » ' -99%

ttltt 104% 102% 109%

80% 188%

^ 92 M t t 83% 84% 97% 87% M% M

IM Mtt

Total stock tnles today- 667,000. Tea. aaa. 1.933.000. Total bond sales today, 1S.678.0M. Year ago. 11,700.000.

Power Company Wants Lint in National Forest WASHINGTON, Oct. 2. (*>—The

federal power commission anr nounced today the Southern Sierras Power Company ot Riverside, CSL, has made application for a license for two constructed power trans-mission lines, each eight miles long, In San Bernardino county. Call-fornia. affecting public lands in the San Bernardino National Forest The lines would furnish power fear general purposes to consumers near the forest home resort in Stm Ber-dino National Forest.

Jantzen Mitts Dividend . Increased lor Quarter

PORTLAND, Ore.. Ot t 3. (M— Jantzen Knitting Mills, Portland. announces a quarterly dividend In­crease from 50 to 75 cents a atere effective in tta November 1 distribo-tion to approximately" 1000 sharer holders as of OctoSer IS an Hi 10fc-000 common shares.

1l?i Hin &ra^P"^rmhr,. . ... • • • -

PAGE EIGHTEEN EVENING flUTLOOK, SANTA MONICA, CAUFOKN1A THURSftMT, OCTOBER t. 1930

12 People Each Week Get j _ y f * • g • tFTll f

FR/?.? TICKETS TC- t OX ( ./v»>i f w i {.71 \ I N Pd TPV* U Your Ntune in tha CLseAd Columns Today? SANTA \mmS I C/. 1/ V-/ / 1/ \-/ I U JL. I V \J \AJ \J\J I

MILTON SILLS in

"MAN TROUBLE" Alee Capt Jack •aiertaoii in "TBI BREAK UP"

An Adventure of Alaska I MONICA

EVENIN OUTLOOK

CLASSIFIED

ADVERTISING HEADQUARTERS

MAIN ittnoa MiaiM at Broadway, -ianta donna

TELEPHONE

23285 WEST LOS ANGELES BRAN SB

t t t to Boat* Monica Blvd.. eawtoUt mjEPHONB

WLA 82163 SUBSCRIPTION RATES

Delivered oy carrier in Santa Monica Soean Park. Venice. Sawtelle. Brentwor.o tad Pacific Palisades. SOc per month

Regular a d v u m Rate Rat*

One year M.M $50i • I I month! .13.00 13 M Three months ., , M M Sl.M

... On streets aad newt stands, pei copy. ir. . -Mal l per month 65c, payable ID advanc.

These rates apply also io the West U>-

Aneele. Tribune

Represented Nationally by It. O. MOGENSEN ft COMPANY. INC Ban Francisco. 664 Market Street. Los Anteles. 433 South Sprint Street Seattle. 603 Stewart Street Portland. M Broadway

• -Detroit. 3044 West Grand Blvd t Chicago. 360 No. Michigan Avenue. ' NEW YORK- 133 Gait 42nd Street

Copies of the Banta Monica Evenint Outlook may be secured at any of these offices, where full data regarding the Santa Monica market may also be had

Tho Santa Monica Publishing Compaiu reserves tbe right to correctly classify or revise advertisement.", or reject and re-fund amount paid, and win not be respon­sible for more than one incorrect in-sertion of any ad ordered for more than one time

All transient or telephoned advertise-meats are payable and will be collected for. Immediately after tbe first insertion, unless patron has already aatablsihed a retular account on our credit books

INDIA rhe following u thi order in which the

eight major groups of classification.

BAY D I S T R I C T BUSINESS AND Q | ? D 1/ I f P PROFESSIONAL O L I I V I L L Listed below for the convenience of Evening Out­look readers are representative business aad pro­fessional concerns offering dependable services and merchandise. If the service or merchandise desired is not listed here, a phone call will quicjcly plaea you in touch with a responsible firm that will serve you Quickly.

PHONE 28285—DIRECTORY DEPARTMENT POR INFORMATION

BUSINESS SERVICE BUSINESS SERVICE

25A AUTO LAl'NDRY 48 MATTRESSES

AN OUNCEMENTS Classifies tions _

BUSINESS SERVICE Classification* _

EMPLOYMENT CUnitlcationi _

MNANCIAL Classtflcitiom _

ACT .OilVE Classifications —.

mKCBANOISB Classifications _

RENTALS Classifications _

EEAL ESTATE GaiaUlcatlon* _

- to to at

JK tO !>!>

. loo to l i s

.130 to 13V

.140 to 16K

Rile* Per Line Per Dar

30 or more consecutive times I "to M consecutive times 3 to 6 consecutive times 8-to 3 timet . Minimum charge ... .

Dany — At

-13c J f t .Mt _6Cc

Minimum space two lines (10 aver*.. words).

BOTE—"Consecutive times" does nc: mean consecutive Mondays, e t c . but eou-aeeutive days. For 30 time orders tbe rate per line

arttt be 13.40 SITUATIONS WANTED

One-half above rates—cash wltb order

ANNOUNCEMENTS 1 DEATH * FUNERAL NOTICES

KEPLINGER—Samuel M. Keplinger, at 33M 16th st. Aged 80 years. De­voted husband of Rachel A. Keplinger. and father of R. L. and Raymond O. Keplinger of Santa Monica, and 6. M. Keplinger. Jr. of Long Beach. Funeral eel i ices Saturday morning at 10 30 a. m. from the MendenhaU Funera! kaa_e.

McCreery—John McCreery. Aged M years. Busband of Mis Theresa J. Mc­Creery aad brother of Mrs. Frank Hor-ton of Venice. Services Saturday al 10 a. m at the Memorial chapel ot Todd ft Leslie.

MYERS—Mrs. Mary Foster Myers, of Miami, Okla. Died at Miami Baptist hos­pital, Sept. 30. Aged 36 years. Be­loved wife of Orville J. Myers, and mother of Ruth Myers. Daughter of Mr. and Mrs- W. A Foster, sister of Nellie M. Foster. Loren J. Foster, and Jim W. Foster, of Banta Monica. Cal.

WILLIAMS—John A. Williams. Aged 83 yrs. Brother of Walter Williams of Han-Over, Kan. Remains at the parlors of Todd ft Leslie.

WILSON—Robert J. Wilson. Aged 43 yrs. Brother of Mrs. Sophia Cobb and Oeor alna Wilson. Services under the auspices Pt Ocean View lodge No. 15, Knights of Pythias. Saturday at 3 p. m . at the Memorial chapel of Todd ft Leslie.

4 FUNERAL DIRECTORS

WILSHIRE Funeral Home, Inc.

Phoaa 33027. 1518 Wilshire Blvd. JOHN C. BOGGS

STANLEY J. STRAW

Todd & Leslie Phone 21042

7th and Arizona» Santa Monica

MENDENHAU. Funeral H o m e

UU Fourth at. Ph. 322s_

Klrkelie, Bernard & Peek FUNERAL DIRECTORS

ML 81103—303 Main St., Ocean Park, gt- Fh . 81888— 30 Ave. IT. Venice.

Price-Daniel Co., Inc 11567 Santa Monica blvd

Weat Im» Angeles. Phone WLA 32573

• FLORISTS

SHADDOCK'S—Flowers for an occasions Funeral designs a specialty. Free deliv­ery. 1513 Pico blvd Ph 62599

• MOUNMENTS

CRAVE MARKERS 315 and up.

A. E. MCCARTHY 5837 8- SC blvd.. Hollywood.

I CEMETERIES. MAUSOLEUMS

POR THOSE WHO CARE

Woodlawn Mausoleum BY THE PEACEFUL PACIFIO

UTH AND PICO BLVD. Office Phone 33478 Res Phone 287lj

LOST AND FOUND

NEWSBOY lost, brown leather money baa containing I M or 113, on route between Raymond and Fraser, Ocesn Front and •fTolleyway. Return to Harold Beau-

bt, Outlook Circulation Dept.

LOOT—Tuesday evening, probably near Mth and Carlyle, boy's tan wool sweat­er. Scwatd. Box 1007 Outlook.

LOST Black fox fur. Return to 18 Breeze Ave* Venice, or phone 63488.

KLEAN RITE AUTO LAUNDRY—Efficient , MATT, reno., furn. uphl. O. Olty Mattress expert service. 1115 B. M blvd 23241 & Furn Uphol. Co 8790 Wash, blvd. 5484

2S BEAUTY AIDS 51 NURSERY SCHOOL

OPEN Mon.. Thurs.. Sat. eves. Plngei waves, manicures, marcels. 35c. Me Thomas Beauty College. 130 Pier 65640

Key Play School FOR UTTLE TOTS. DAY OR HOUR,

INDOOR AND OUTDOOR AMUSEMENTS 844 TTH ST. 36001.

EMPLOYMEN1 72 HELP WANTED

Male and Female EFFICIENT Help for all occasion!. Ba*

District Employment Aiency Ut 8 M blvd Phoaa 31174

WESTERN EMPLOY. Ph. 34608 Oldest e»-teb. agency Mary Scotsnus. 331 Arliona

73 HELP WANTED Ian*. Required

REPINED ladP a t gentleman able to as­sist M financing high class stage pro­duction. Prefer those wishing to take active part. An exceptional opportunity. Manager, Box 176. Ocean Park.

It EMPLOY MEM /•GENCIES

JAPANESE A. B. DAV WORK CO MB have exper, boys Mt housecleaning ana

gardening work, al! or half day. SMS Main st.. O- P. Phone SUM

28A BATHS

DRAKE MINERAL BATH!}. Wonderful for reducing. Open 8 a.m to 10 p. m. Dr. C. L. Alexander, D C . 316 Wilshlre 26077

51-A PAINTING

PAINTINO, roofing * day or contract, rata.

carpenter work. M m . Ph S4M3

29A WHERE TO DINF PIANO LESSONS S2-A I - _ - M - - - - - . ^ _ _ .

Sovereign Apt. Dining Rm., 308 Washing- ! COLLEOE graduate, teacher ol piano. 50c ton. Plate Luncheon. U to 1:30, 50c. Din a lesson Beginners a specialty. 65010 ner. 5:30 to 7:30. t l . Sundays. 11.-5. •

J_J BEDD1NO

BLST made mattteeeaa, all i l i e i . all pricei •prings. bedsteads, pulowi; motb-proo! mg. sterilising, renovate iiialliaete* witt. atW cover M Saoia Monica Mattre.. snd Pillow Paetcrr laM l l t t et U604

53 PIANO TUNING

30A BRIDGE LESSONS

HOLLAND DUTCH piano technician. Tun­ing, voicing, repairing of pianos Petei Jansen. 1183 Ocean ave. 35340.

R M ROBINSON. PIANO TECHNICIAN Tuning, repairing and refinlshlng pianos.

Phone 61749 or 33882.

A L. CUMMINGS. piano tuner with Jark-son-Stltt Mus. Co. Pb. 31116 Res. 39340

CONTRACT bridge taught. Les..ons 11.0. each. Mrs. F B Coulter. 060 16th. 8383k 53A KINDLING WOOD

33A CLOCK SHOP KINDLING WOOD. M load. Santa Monca Bay Wrecking Oo. SUM. 16M l l t t M

THIS ls the place to have your clock! re­paired by experts: work called for aad delivered; only clock shop In -lay DU trict. 720 B. M. blvd. Ph. 21321.

31 CONTRACTORS, BUILDERS

CHIMNEYS and fireplaces rebuilt. Ches Loveloy. 1410 84th st. Ph. 24253.

ib PHOTOGRAPHERS

SPECIAL — Your photo free. 6x10 hand-colored, this week al Bunnell's Photo Studio, 8 M . 1418'. 3rd st. Val. IL

59 ROOF CONTRACTOR

3b CORSET BUSINESS ROOFS rep., wk. guar. Burkhart Roof. Co

3614 Overland, Palms. C. C. 3544.

SPIRELLA corsets, combined garment* Mrs. Glbb, 1311 Sth st. Ph. ;669S 60A 'SERVICE"

DAY NU SERIES

THE BEACH NURSERY, KINDERGARTEN B a t or board. At es 3 to % 1309 Ocean ' Front, 8. IL Phone 34303

40 DETECTIVE AGENCIES

Brackett a Merchants Patrol BAY AMD NIOHT SERVICE PH. SMM.

Washing Mach. Serv. Sta. For parts and service, all makes.

Call 34190—25373

41 DRESSMAKING. *__1__-1M-RY ___•——————————.•*—_———— — — — ^ ^

SMART dresses, old ones cleverly remod., coats, ensembles 26241 1666 Euclid at

FURS, dressmaking and remodeling. Santa Monica blvd- W.L.A

11J10

GOWNS, tailored suits, coats, relined. al­terations. 1415 Euclid. 38647. Mrs. Meyer

42 EDUCATIONAL

LADY, 17 years teacher In Paris, gives French and German lessons. Ph. 37M4.

62 SPECIAL NOTICES

SPECIAL attention taken on men's aad tidies' alterations Tailoring.

SANFORD J MOSK- 1411 3rd »t

64 TRAVEL OPPORTUNITIES

WANTED—Transportation from Bantt Monica to U. S. C. Call 36736

64A TILING

GENTLEMAN and niece returning to Win­nipeg. Manitoba, by automobile, October 0. would like two. or three traveling companions. Expenses to be shared. Refs. given and required. Phono Banta Monica 65011

64B TYPEWRITERS

44A

WEBBERS TYPEWRITER EXCHANGE-AU mikes sold, rented, tepalred, adding machines, 6 Fourth St. Arcade. Ph. 39373

HAT WORKS

SANTA MONICA BAT WORKS—Ladles' ft Gent's hats renovated and cleaned ano reblocked. also remod. 1507 t th 286"9

65 TRANSFER. STORAGE

48A MASSEUSE

SHEAR WAREHOUSE CO. Storage Household Goods. Daily trips to

Lot Angeles. 10th and Pico. Ph. 33494.

IF F. W. Beeker. 315 Hill St., Ocean Park, will call at the office of the Evening Outlook with clipping of this notice he will receive t o o tickets to Fox Criterion theater, Santa Monica.

MILADY'S masseuse, hava time for sev­eral more clients. 35673 or 34759

REAL Swedish massage, Scandinavian masseuse. 915'.s Wilshire. Ph. 30351.

W. L. A. Transfer ft Express; daily trips to city, trunks, baggage. W. L. A. 33178

TRANSFER and eenrrsl trucking. Call Sellers. 128 Broadway. Phone 31333.

SSA WATCH REPAIRING

WATCH repairing. guaranteed work, prompt service, clocks called tor and de­livered. BASSETT JEWELRY CO.. 1330 3rd st. Phone 38311.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

12 SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENTS

WHEN you have any salvage materials, such as old clothes, books, magazines, newspapers, lying around ln the way at

tie, call the SALVATION ARMY INDUS­TRIAL WAGON, Ph. S. M.

38750—32621.

TAKE a tour through romantic Alaska for only 40 cents. See "Tho Break-Up" at the Fox Criterion tonight—also

"Man Trouble," with Milton Sills.

SPIRIT ST Healing Center, 11629 Msyfield. Brtwd. Hts. Hetty E. Connor. WLA. SUM

UNIQUE ENTERTAINMENT At your home, clubs, socials. WLA. 34381

EMPLOYMENT 70 HELP WANTED

Mate

O B MORRIS EMPLOY AGENCY Serving Employer aad Employ*

6th and Broadway. S M 3t700 I to u

1. S I T U A T I O N S W A N T E D Male

MAN, t e a l a work of aap kind, excellent refs , chauffeur-gardener, cook-house­man, also mechanical. Lee Nelson. Ph. 23928. er Bee U f t Outlook

JUNIOR COLLEOE student Wants part time employment. Box 1992 Outlook.

ELEC FLOOR POLISHING. OLD PI RS REPINISHED PH 26029 OR 64284

HOUSE painting. Inside aad outside, H dap a t contract. Licensed, refs Pbom evenings or batata 7:18 a m. 22691

JAPANESE. best work for landscape, wants steady position. Box 1990, Saw­telle Tribune

PAINTINO, carpentering, roofing, repair work a specialty. Ph. 31M2. after 4 P m

CARPENTER builder, repairing, palatini Price reas Phone 33367 '253 l l th M

GARDENING—Spading. Lawns t t B f t e Oood wk. Low atlaa. Peui Mta. Ph. 6452a

MALI nurse. 15 years' exp.. take any case Doctor's refs. Phone 33698.

INGLES HOUSE CLEANERS. WINDOW CLNO. FLOOR WAXING. 64 .4

CARPENTER work, dap, ar contriet. Eiti malat famished. Phone 34847.

CARPENTER—Repairing or new work. Es-tlmate given: prices r t t lon ib l i . Ph. 38786

PAINTINO or tinting I I day. experienced Oerrard. Phone 26493.

LAWN, gardener, tree trimming. Residence 1010 Ashland Phone MSM.

MALI stenographer, aap.. refs., anything considered. Ph. W.L.A. 31630.

HOLLAND DUTCH haa. ft window cln'g.. lanltor service, floor waxing. Ph. 34046.

76 SITUATION WANTED Female

COOKING, serving, dinners, parties, dey or night, white .omen, caprble, exp.: hava car; aa any place: rata. Other day work. S M. 82107. Apt. 8

JW i a Bead ef nurse pad c m thoroughly rely upon to ease for invalid, elderly or children, eall 38378. Beat refer­ences.

MOTHER end daughter will take care of farnished homa er cottage at beach for free rent. References exchanged. Box 1991 Outlook.

COMPANION-HOUSEKEEPER by widow of refinement, reasonable Wages. 14M Col­by ave. Phone W L.A. SUM.

COLORED girl wmta housework by Vi day, week o t month. WiU tike eare of child. M378. . -

CAPABLE white woman, housework by boar a t day Phone 32530.

GERMAN child a u n t er tnd maid, wants poaitjaa. Ph. 33868.

WIDOW w i n t i ironing at your home. Ph 34337 before 9

E D U C A T E D , middle aaad auri i i l i s y e a n 00 one caaa. Phone 33630.

WHITS woman wishes hour work tp tta day. Phone 38687.

EMPLOYMENT 71 8ITIJATION n/WTEV

Female PART TIME work, light hskpg . bus home

Beit refi. Phone SMH. A a t No. 7.

COLORED woman wants half day. day wk. or beadle laundry. Phone 3M31.

FINISHED laundry wanted lo do 830 S M Mvd. Phone 33064.

PRACTICAL nursing aad general house­work. Ph. 34398, evenings.

EDUCATED, middle aged nurse; six years on oaa earn. Phone 33630.

TYPINO. manuscript work done. Phone 33557 tW SUM.

GIRL wants to learn soda fountain. OaU 33729

SEAMSTRESS—$3 per day. Mend while caring far children. 1244 Mat St.

78 PAINTING. PAPKKHANG.NG AND CARPENTERING

RELIABLE paperhanging and painting TM J. Harries 1050 t t t M Ph. 24409

O . a HEYWORTH. painter, lobbing i specialty. M a day. W.L.A. 32806—32580

FINANCIAL

80 BUSINESS OPPORTUNTIES

LEAVING TOWN Established market doing nice business, oo

good Mvd. in Sants Monica. Reasonable offer. Box 1990 outlook. '

FOR SALE—Small transfer business: two track! and all equipment. Doing seed business. 1307'i 1Mb st. Fhone 33375.

.2 MONET TO LOAN Reai Eatate

6% MONEY Immediately available ia practically un­

limited amounts on Improved propertied. M approved localities. M Interest rates as low at 8V. aad 6% par annum. F a e incur aa obligations la discusstni the matter witn e a

Federal Bond & Mtge. Go. Suite 1-5. Security Bldt. Pbone 23363

We Handle All Forms of Real Estate Financing.

CITIZENS MORTGAGE AND SECURITIES CO. 222 Santa Monica Blvd.

FIRST MORTGAGE real estate loans, va­cant or Improved. Lowest rates. No delay.

Gandy Investment Co. 1510 3rd st. Phone 21660

7ft PRIVATE loins. Bldt. loans M B , payable 15 par Bio. par ll.oon on princi­pal. 1% br'ker'e A. B. OUphlnt. 1158 Sth.

83 MONEY TO LOAN Automobiles

"Auto Loans" -UTOMOBILE8 REFINAKC tDENTIAU BANKLIKE 8

H. BL Singleton vtL

AUTOMOBILES REFINANCED CONFIDENTIAL. BANKLIKE SERVICE

1113 Santa Monica blvd Phone 38885

Henry Finance Co., Ltd. "BORROW ON YOUR CAR"

"BAID POR OR NOT." COURTEOUS—CONFTOENTIAL.

721 Santa Monica Blvd. PHONE 31170

AUTO LOANS FURNITURE AND DIAMOND LOANS

EAST WAT TO LOAN.

SUPER FINANCE GO. 8M Santa Monica blvd. Phoaa 35688

MONEY WANTED

11,188. 8%, value 110,000. $3,000. lit. 100 bonus for immediate action. Val. 16,000 Call 1018 Wilshlre. M L 31333.

16 LEGAL NOTICES

AFTER this date will not be responsible for debts contracted by any one other than myself.

GAIL E. PLUNKETT.

AFTER this date I will not he responsible far debts contracted by any other than myself.

MRS. ALBERT JONES GRIFFITH.

WANTED—3 men wi t t cars, for sales de­partment of corporation, throughout the West; not real estate, insurance, stocks or bonds; advances and bonus to right man. Apply 8 to 10 a. m , 733 Santa Monica blvd.

WB can use and have an Interesting proposition for TWO GOOD salesmen. Call MR. MILLER, with ALBERT LEON­ARD. 601 Wilshlre.

WANTED — Experienced furn. sales­man, Santa Monica man preferred. Mongomery Ward A Co.. 1318-30 rd St., Santa Monica.

AT ONCE—S. A. or I' S Perma. posi . fieri , median . salesman., exp. unnec. Sal 335-1100 weekly, transportation fur­nished. Box 1175, Chicago, HI.

YOUNO men (31, publicity dept. Apply 8 to 11. 11376 8. M. Mvd.

71 HELP WANTED Female

ADDRES. er.vel . work home spare time. Substan. weekly pay: exp. unnec. Digni­fied employ, honest, sincere ambi. per­sons. Workers League. Naperville, 111.

AFTER this date I will not be respon­sible for debts contracted by other than myself. GLENN A. RAY.

ZZl . _ . j WANTED—Competent white woman for

D i v o r c e s in Mex ico Courts; s??kl»g ,and **wn6taira work, cau at Free Information. International Law office * " ?o? i m e ? . i e w " "

443 First Natl. Bank Bldg.. Ei Paso. Tex. ! m ' **' , n , « r v ' « * -

EMPLOYMENT HELP WANTED

Male

LOST—Yellow Persian cat. Reward. Phone 31388. Ray* Strong, 1333 Armapost.

LOOT Settee cushion on Pico or Bundy drive, a M. Reward. Phone 333SS.

LOOT reiaal l Pekingese, red. Ph. SIMS et. Reward.

UOttt

A CHAIN STORE organization can use 1 man in the city a t outside salesman, on special work. Sales experience not necessary, as we tram the man we se . lect. Must have car. 9 to 12 a. m . 606 Santa Monica blvd. Ask for Mr. Cronan.

YOUNG girl, light work half day, no Sundays, 130. 10305 Mississippi, near I Fox Hills drive, below S M blvd.

-____ I I WANTED—A woman to help care for an I

invalid; experience unnecessary, stay nights. 710 Milwood ave., Venice.

SALESMAN of refined personality. You can secure permanent position that should pay you at least 115 dollars a day. See me. 7:30 p m . at Hotel Broadmoor

MOTHER'S helper, go home nights. Must Aa M yeirs a t over. 339 Medio drive. Brentwood Height!.

WOMAN for housework and assist with child. In Los Angeles, good home to right party. Apply 1341 4th st.

ROOM rent In exchange for care of child few nights a week.. 133 Hart avenue. Santa Monica.

MARY SAYS: THB TIMELY SUGGESTIONS OFFERED HERB

ARE WORTr* YOUR CONSIDERATION.

Remember: "It pays to read advertisements."

WHY not arrange to take your guests to luncheon at the besutlful Miramar Hotel, at tte corner of Ocean avecue aad Wilshlre blvd.

Delightful dinner dances every Sat­urday night, dancing 8:00 to 12.00. dinner t o o to 9:00. t l 50 per plate.

BO COVER CHAROE. Dally luncheons only 11. served irotn

12 00 M 3 00 p. m

FOR auality aad individuality in halt , ao to tta V O G U E M I L L I N E R Y

SHOPPE. 427 3 a a t t Monica blvd. They specialize ln molding to tta head, hltb class auality* and personal individ­uality.

Their selection M co lon enables m a r t dressers to mateh e a r town or ensemble.

THROW away your corset and buy CHAR1S, the light-weight figure con­trolling garment which provides the stylish graceful figure lines that pre­sent styles demand. Charts offers beauty, grace, comiort aad health, all tn one. Phone 38334. 523 Wilshire blvd.. for free demonstration ln your home.

M-LADY'S dainty lingerie and tine linens are laundered with the utmost care at the FRENCH HAND LAUNDRY 1531 t th st. Shirts are their specialty, and are dona ap beautifully. Ton can also take your cleaning and ti reins there, too

BY i l l meani, If you hava any re-modeling, fancy dressmiklng. a t t i t -lorlng a e e t t t done go to Miss Roche 1454-C 10th Mil for perfect fit i n d ex­act, tallorlne aha B unexcelled. Pbone 38788.

A REAL l iv ing At over 40% mat be realized now oa awnings. Maap IMV and colorful designs to telect from. Estl-atatoa gladly furnished, a M. AWNING AND SHADE CO., IM Ssnta Monica boulevard. Phone 34018.

TB AFT NEEDLEWORK SHOPPE. Pt t t . Wilshlre blvd., conduct! knitting cl isses every afternoon between 3 and a B e aate to aaa lba beautiful needlepoint Mates aad tapeitrtei fait received thl i week fat Christmas.

YOU can eat Glassee within tte scope of everyone'! pockeibook. yet the finest Optieil Science caa produte, M Dr. B. L. Cooper, Optometrist. 4th St Arcade. Hours: 8 30 to 1130 p. m Phoaa 35778.

THE famous dollar books, latest fic­tion and sll tte best reprints, as well i s greeting csrds ead complete line M stationery and school supplies are sold i t Bl lvee' Book t* Stitlonery Co.. 410 S i n t i Monica blvd.

IP you call at the Woman's Exchange, 431 wilshire blvd.. at 11:30 every day. you ean t e t a loaf ot hot, home-made broad; also t t f e a t At their - delicious suet puddlms. Wttt hard sauce The individual matt Pies are so good, and only 10c apiece.

"A STITCH in Time" - If* run or snag appears in your s i l t hosiery lt can oe fixed Invisibly at a very small cost. Thus enabling women to wear Better Hosiery Room A fi l l St. Arcade.

LET Mrs. Carlisle assist you, by appointment, ta selecting your per­sonal Chriitmai greeting cards Order non*. while the selection is best, dor later delivery. Phone 21933 or 33433.

YOU can spend a delightful aft­ernoon at Ye Pond Willow Inn. U M Ith st. After having en.iored the delicious food eerved t h e n , yon cen hive a loading by Madame Cecilia, from Hollywood, an expert card reader

The very last word In smart fall spbrt coats are Ike "Town Talk Top­pers." M tto Lee-Smilh Shop. 1438 Fourth M They MB black aad white tweed, eravrnetted. aad are feat the thing for thia changeable fall weather.

MODERN Jewelry can be purchases on the deferred payment Maa M TUB fer'g, 1437 S-d st. This meani rash prices, unburdened by Interest ae service c h i n e s

DO you know that on Wednesdat you caa eat a marcel a t P finger wive, aith shampoo, for 1183 at Hall'' Beauty Parlor. 134 & M. blvd Phono 33137 tat your appointment.

AUTOMOTIVE

M AUTOMOBILES FOB SALE

Repossessed RDe Soto t. 1930, Ba Luxe Sedan. Chrysler 8. 19M. M Royal Sedan. Chrysler t. 1929 65 Sport Roadster. Chrysler 8. 1928 73 Coupe. Plerce-Arrow 8. 1036 33 Ohtt sedan. Peerless a 1926 69 7-pass. Sedan.

Assume balance owing on contract and take them. Will take in high grade grand piano.

E. K. Burchiel Wilshire Blvd. at 3rd

Phone 21148 Santa Monica

AUTOMOTIVE AUTOMOTIVE

9* AUTOMOBILES—For Sale M \UTOMOBILES FOB SALE

, 3-Day Sale? 1 Price Is No Object

Bargains Only - - Better Hurry! LOOK AT THESE!

1928 Buick standard 8 sport coupe, lew mileage, Just like new. Only »Ma

1927 Buick master 6 sp. rt roadster, n e v aar appearance, rebuilt. Only f l i t

1927 Paige sport coupe. New tires, la perfect condition. Only oaaa

'28 Chevrolet Sedan POUR-DOOR

f TIRES—PERFECT CONDI

$385 Full Price

POUR-DOOR NEW TIRES—PERFECT CONDITION

'29 615 Graham-Paige Sedan

Six wire wheels. 4 speeds forward AU original equipment.

$350 Down W. A. Stillwell

Eleventh and Santa Monica blvd.

'29 Packard De Luxe 5-Pass. Sedan

Perfect mechanical condition, upholstery like new; tires very good. This car w i s sold new by our si ies ferae aad aaa been consistently serviced by our serv­ice mta . ind we sincerely recommend lt as a a exceptional hep.

$500 Down Will Handle Carl R. Henderson

Packard Dealer.

Wilshire at 17th '29 Ford Sport Copue

Model A Losded with extras, including Marvel ear*

buretor, Bsldwla oiler, step plites, wind­wings, etc.

Brakes lust relined; in wonderful me­chanical condition.

$465 on Easy Terms

Brown Chev. Co. HIM SANTA MONICA BLVD . SAWTELLE

Model A Ford Standard Roadster

Has only 9.000 miles. S-ply Oeneral tires aB around, windwings.

bumpers, ato. Csrrles new car til t f t a tee.

•171 Full Price.

JR. M. Hufford, Inc. AUTHORIZED FORD DEALER

3nd MM Colorado. Santa Moniea.

1927 Finer 78 Chrysler mott roaditir. Completely rebuilt, haa aew motor, f lair I At.

1928 Essex (.port, coupe. Raw tires. Original throughout. Only IttA

1927 Essex coach. LUt* aaw. A marvflous buy for only j f

AND MANY OTHERS. AIL SOLD Off THE EASY O. M. A. O. TERMS. WITH LIBERAL TRADES ACCEPTED FOR T B I NEXT.8 DATS.

Buick Used Car Dept. 10TH AND SANTA MONICA BLVD. Opening Evenings THI 9 P. M. Phone 25212

"Genuine Reduction Sale" A rare opportunity to get tiie car of your choice at a

considerably reduced price. '30 Chevrolet Club Sed«n, aew rubber aad reducoed — '29 Chevrolet Sport Coupe, new rubber and reducoed '29 Chevrolet Landau Sedan, new rubber and reducoed '39 Chevrolet coach, new rubber and reducoed '38 Chevrolet Coach, new rubber and reducoed . '38 Chevrolet Coupe, new rubber and reducoed • '36 Chevrolet Coach, a dandy •'

Brown Chevrolet Co. 11752 Santa Monica Boulevard

_»S60 -$53* . M M _I4M -ISM -MM -1116

Sawtelle

MERCHANDISE

MERCHANDISE

Mt FOB SALE—Miscellaneona

TODAY'S BARGAINS Ol OUR WAREHOUSE

3-PC. O- s . aew Jaq. velour. hdw. frame. 143.75

3-pc. O. 8. new Jaq. velour. hdw. frame „ ... , ,_ -.

3-pc. Msh. reversible cushions 3-pe. Mah. reversible cushions I pa. Wal. bedrm. aat. new.

vanity, bench and chiffonier

.13376 -149.78 -138.75

Large 149.75

Worth 17.25

102 FUBNITUBE FOB SALS

THIS being ttt time to start aar Inven­tory and not wanting to have so much work tit is your time) come tp aad Bit the bargain! m d help us reduce our stock. M Vlekery'i. 3ioe sawtelle bird. Open evenings.

BEAUTIFUL dining rm. set. bedrm. att, piano, rug, gas range, almost new, rea­sonable. Phone 28430. l i s Idaho.

GREAT demand for 2nd-hand furniture. Beat prices paid. Pbone 63609 T. i Stewart Ml Holiist-r ave.. C P.

FURNITURE, rugi, springs, mattresses, gas store and aas beaten . 1337 1Mb St.

RENTALS 122 FOR REN1

Rooms. Furnished

USED Bldg,

ind new furniture 2426 S. M. Blvd

sale. Storag'

UNFINISHED FURNITURE 938 PICO PHONE 62133

SIMMONS metal bad. full else, small aai heater, a e dealers. 1127 l l t h i t .

104 SEWING MACHINE!.

SEWING m a c h i n e rented and repaired.

Hawley's 3736 Main St.. O. P. Phona 61346

105 MUSICAL 1NSTKJR-ENT8

BUNOALOW PIANOS FOR RENT. I I per month aad up.

Union Storage, 716 Colorado.

146 00 -M.35 148 00

New satin tick M lb. mattress

OL S. bad. daven. .new. cost fM — Naw congoleum rug, A-l _ _ _ _ _ 1760 piano, a good ona _ —

Aad many attar bargains. BARAKS FURNITURE WAREHOUSE

1619 3rd st., S. M.

LINCOLN RANCH FEED STORE Headquarters fae Aaa HI poultry feed; Aaa

XI scratch. 13 50 M8| Aee Bl lsylng mash, w t t t buttermilk. 13.60; AM V pigeon feed, 13.35; Aee Hi rabbit barley, II.tO sack; standard scrstch ead liying mish . 13.40 100. Some tlPP R. I. Red pullet! 11.80 each. Oolden Bea Bright Bantimi. 11.00 each. Open Sundays till noon. MM Lincoln b ird Ph. MUS.

WALLPAPER bankrupt stock 5c. 10c, 15c roll; p i l o t 11.95 gal. Flat 11.65. Enamel 13 50. Linoleum 35c yard. DeGregory'i. 959 South Main St. Los Angeles.

GROW i v or ados la your yard. Budded i stock, 11 to 13. 11773 Chemult. it. . Brentwood Heights W L A . 11483.

SAXOPHONE, perfect condition, aaw um­brella tent, both very reasonable. Phone 88488.

AUTO HOUSE CARr-Cadlllac. 2 rms.. run-nlna water, toilet, a bargain. Will trade. Phone 23486. Colors do a a d l t d St.

FINEST pulverized dairy fertiliser, r l io b o n a manure. Buy from eld reliable Oliver Park. Phone 646M. .

TWO-TONE WALNUT console phonograph with records, t t t . RAY E. SCHAFER. f t t and Broadway.

CHICKERINO piano 175, and mary oth­ers, easy terms. Storage Sldg., 3433 a M. b ird

UPRIGHT walnut cabinet grand HAM­MOND Piano. 1135. RAY E. SCHAFER. t t t aad Broadway.

PIANOS rented, M and up. Storage Bldt.. 3436 Santa Monica blvd.

BAND, suing lnsts.. new. used, repairs QaP O- Goodman. Violin Mtt. 602 Bdw.

106 KAOIO Supplies. Accessaries

WHAT IS A BARGAIN? Do yea know?

If you do not—bewarei If yea da drop M and see bow wp live up to our name

RADIO BARGAIN HOUSE Cor. l t t t and Broadway Phone 28632

NICE furnished rooma with kitchen. Na radios allowed. 1126'.j t th St.,

ROOM wttt private bath. 130 month. U M 5th st.

123 F O R — N T H o u s e k e e p i n g R o o m s — F a m i s h e d

FURNISHED, 3 small housekeeping rms., with bath, separate entrance; reasonably priced. 843 Lincoln blvd. .

IM BOOMS ANO BOARD

14 HORIZON AVE —Just, opened now serv­ing strictly home-cooked mesls.

ROOMS and board, chicken and rabbit dinners. 1525 Brockton ave. W.L.A. 84508.

ROOM and board for men; good home cooking, M aad t i l weak, ttss sth at.

BUNNY rooma, eats, aad! dble. Meals fam-ily style, excellent location, lott 3rd at

125 ROOMS AND BOARD Pat Children

CHILDREN cared for, under school est. BV home. 606 Venice blvd. Ph. S. M. 84SM.

126 HOTELS

S. M. Breakers Hotel dob Excellent outside ocean view rooms, with

bath, II aad up. weekly rates. 1736 Ocean Front.

127 FOR RENT Flats. Unfurnished

BRAND aaw 3 screen arid dynamic speaker Midget, radio. Tone control, phono, pick-up, beautiful cabinet, fac­tory gusrantee. 139.50 essh. 911 IStt St.

4 TUBE ALL-ELECTRIC RADIO. Complete 119 50.

10600 Weat Maa. at Parnell.

FOR SALE—L. C. Smith double-barreled hammerleu shotgun. 117 50. 1M0 14th at* f t M .

LAWN fertiliser, eeit on market .well cured Shaver Dairy. M070.

FERTILIZER — Sett for lawna. Delivered P f a r d i . M Prlcketts Dairy. 71345

L A D I E S ' aew e a d aaad b i t class cloth­ing, l t t t Broadway. S. M. 24957.

WOOD M Id ; alto eucalyptus, cedar; kind. fMa. lowest prices. Fh. 25923 till 9 p. m

F I R S T C L A S S alfalfa hay. far rabbits, 11 50 par 188. 300 Rose ave.

———_•——-_—^_——••. .mm—mmm.mmm^rnm.* THREE 8 ft. show cases. Pallsadea Glass

t* Mirror Shop. I l l Broadway.

OARAGE for ssle. to be moved. Darlington. Brentwood Heights.

11948

BOX t-t. tailored suit. coat, dress, new. other articleq Phone 35103

101 W A N T E D — M i s c e U r i e o O B

A FEW R I Red pullets or yearling hens. 11929 Mayfleld ave. Phone 32327.

108 FURNITURE FOB SALE

VAUGHAN 8 ENDLESS STREAM OF FURNITURE BARGAINS

Bed. s p r u e and mattrees, complete—18 Oc Velour bed duofold ^ t ian» 3-pc. velour dav sev 137.10 5. new card to Maa only Girl'i Bicycle 15; bucgy -9 breikfast sets from _ _

.51.00 aa M M

_»3 oo un -.18.00 up

f — -18.0-

SLIOHTLY used Echophone radio. 149.50. Ray E. 8chafer, t t t and Broadwar

Wl OFFICE AND STORE SUPPLIES

Bay Cities Cabinet Shop BANK. OPPICB AND STORE FIXTURES

938 PICO BLVD PHONE 6313!)

110 DOGS. BIRDS. CATS

WHITE KINO pigeons far sale, 8M per pair. 633 Marine st. Ph. 81818.

MALE Scotch terrier, i IT. old, thorough­bred. Phona 26433.

RENTALS 120 WASTE I TO RENT

Miscellaneous WE HAVE CLIENTS FOR BOTH

Burnished and Unfurnished Separate Houses

Around $40 to 188. Give Your Listings to

Mrs. Lowe L M- FORD aad L. K SMALL. INC.

107 Santa Monica blvd Phone 334M.

PRIVATE party want! S room unfurnished house, 8 adults. Must be reasonable Box 1959 Outlook.

FOUR rms.. Genersl Electric, 18 minutes' walk University. Sepulveda. 6 blocks no. of Wilshlre, I55-S60. 11134 Bolas. Ph. OR. 9307.

LOVELY flat, tile features, shower, tar., near Wilshlre. 1141 •£ 17th st .

129 F O R K E N T A p a r t m e n t s . U n f u r n i s h e d

COMFORTABLE four rm. apt., ocean view, garage. Available Oct. L 137.50. SM Rad­cliffe ave.. Pacific Palisades or Phone 33230. betw. 8 a. m. and 5 p. ta.

130 FOB RENT Apartments, Farnished

ORAY OABLES BY THE SEA. under new, management. Kitchenette apt., private bath, rooms single, double. IS up. Spe­cial rates for steady or winter tenant!. Home surroundings. 1411 Ocean ave. Pbone 27234.

FOR RENT in new bulldlna on tta ocean front, furnished' single apta., hot and cold water. Hot showers. Radiator heat in all apts. 132.50 and up. l i s t Ocean Front. Phone 34359.

BRAND new, beautifully furnished s p t s . Kelvlnator, colored tiled bathrms., show­er, cedar wardrobes. Steam heat. Bent reasonable, Bernice Apartments. MM ttth M . near Wilshlre blvd.

SINOLE a p t . beautifully tuttL. aai, lights, steam heat. Frigidaire and maid service Included la rent MS aad up. Buena Vista Apts.. Ttt aad Idaho.

FOR RENT—Hew s p t s , single, double aad larte units, soft water, l e v rentals CH school term. Kensington Apta. Phone 37397. 1733-1746 Ocean ave.

NEW, m o d apta. 8 rms. and bath, large overstuffed furniture, electric refriger­ator, hot water, gas. lights furnished, t a ­rage. 140. 1138 Yale. at. Phone 35490.

3 RM. duplex, dinette, serv. prch , garage. Also cottage, 3 rms., dinette, serv. porch, tar. ttt. 922 16th st. Phone 249M er 24282.

REX ARMS APTS. See these. Beaut, tales Overstuffed, private phonee to each ant 1434 S M. olvd.

MAN who can furnish refs., to share furnished apt., for 111 a month. Inquire of Jimmy Collins, Tribune office.

GREENE APTS.. 160 Ocean Park blvd. Ocean Park. Modern, block from beach; overstuffed furniture. Ml mo. aad up.

STEAM BBAT. Frigidaire. soft wster. dbles. available a. 150. 155. 160 and ITS Paloma ave., 15. Venice. S. M. 61173.

WANTED to rent, house, with sood chicken M ? f ? . * ^t:™3? i***"" ***•?'• ****** equipment Box 1961 Outlook. of Grand. Furnished apartments, etenm

122 FOB RENT Rooma. Furnished

RENT room with light housekeeping to one or two girls. Call afternoon and evening. 1131 tttt M

RM. for business woman Use At kitchen r e n . 3308 California ave. Telephone

PARTLY or fully furn. ran. and .uitee 13.50 to 19. aM Washington ave. 8t8M

ROOMS in private home, professional wo­man, near M-G.M. Ph. C. O. 3357

heated. IM and up.

125—FOUR new 3 na . and bath apts., m t . light and wster paid, tttl l l t h tt. Ph. 23739.

NEARLY new two rms. and kitchenette, bath and shower, garage. 888. Oas. lights, water free. 1834 30th st.

RES. AFT, or room far business lady; Fourth ind Wilshire. Inquire 1M7 3rd SC

Let pt hith oven rentes _ _ Cedar chest IT; day bad — M rugs. aB sizes; all ariose. Electric radio MS; dressers . _ Electric Hew ttbraa sewing machine— $35 oo Portable Victrola, toto I f records 8.8' IM Radiant heaters, very aheap. Vauthan's. 1M1 Lincoln blvd.. S. M.. oetw. I Wilshlre f t Anions Open till t p. m 3600K >

VACUUMS, rebuilt. Eureka. Royal. Hoover. ROOM la private home to refined woman. SINGLE a p t , close ln, HIT tth. Apply 818 8elL root. repr. Ph. 818M ISM A M bid. ' privileses, near boa. SAM. California. Phone 35530.

3030 6TH ST.—Lower part duplex, 8 bed­rooms. 8 rooms and bath, garate.

• . . . . *

THREE rm. furn. apts., 1 block from boa 135 Ida Swarthmore. Pacific Pshaides.

RM. in private home to young man. one VERY attractive Spanish type double, twin block from San Vicente blvd- Ph. 34351.1 beds. Adults. MM 6th. Ph. 33801.

__________!___-

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1930 EVENING OUTLOOK, SANTA MONICA, CAUFORNIA PAGE NINETEEN

Here You Will Easily Find Short Cuts to Economy and Pointers to Thrift REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE

140 HOUSES FOB SALE l i t HOUSES—FOB SALE

Two Beauties o a a ta e Millionaire*! View, two lovely lots, a e bettor view la all Banta M o n i c a -

each lot 65x160, ae ISO loo: front o a the weet ilde ef l t t . Olivet" er "Brentwood Knoll," facing on Berkeley it . , e a d looking rlaht down Washington aaa., over-lookine tta ocean aad tha whole Bap District, including Catalina Island, W E S T FRONT.

Owner needs lome cash tnd will sell these lota for less than they ate worth. They '-• are free e a d clear M everythlnt except a tl.000 first, so make me e a offer for hia

equity, er e a terms or all cash, as first oaa be paid eft. The other beauty la a eeven t e e n home oa Oeorsina aad weat at Seventh, having

over I H feet front on Georgina; A regular estate with beautiful grounds, lawn, ale. A Millionaire's Home, but lt doesn't take a million to own lt by a "LONO SHOT," for .yea »1U ba surprised M the prlee I can deliver either one of these properties!

ARE TOO INTERESTED IH A BUSINESS LOT ON PICO BLVD., NEAR 10TH AT A SACRIFICE? If co, see me before the Sth of ttta month—MUST BE SOLDI

E. T. YATES, REALTOR INSURANCE FOP. LESS.

521 Santa Monica boulevard. RENT. ALS. LOANS.

Fhone 35S18 or 81711

RENTALS 130 FOB RENT

Apartments, Furnished DOUBLE APTS.. STEAM HEAT. 'DEAL

LOCATION. PHONE 31647.

SINGLES In nice location. S3! Euclid It.

135. Adults.

I BUS. , at 225 San Vicente. OenL L-O-tarage, reasonatle. Phone 24923.

BEAUTIFUL furn. apts.. Frigidaire, rea-sonable rates. 937 Ocean ave. Ph. 3738b.

8 BMS. and sun parlor, overstuffed, clean, quiet. 1041 U t t a t

LARGE double apt!., 114 month. IM Raymond ave., Ocean Balk.

S RM., breakfast nook. bath. Located on boa line. 136. 556 Radcllff. Pacific Fall

APT. 118—3 rms., kitchen, bath, 1715 Ocean ave., light, water pa id 31367.

FIVE RMS., 3 BEDRMS.. MODERN. OAR OLOBE IN. ADULTS. 1139-A STH ST.

QUIET duplex apt., aerate. 130; available Oet, 8. U t t 19th St.

i a a — N E W single, includ aaa, water debt, cosy court. 3234 Sawtelle blvd., W.L A

SINOLES and doublet, refrlt., i team heat. tar. Adults. 83C 14th st. Phone 35911.

LAROE living room, overstaffed, bedrm., extra bed. earaea. Adults. 8B4 20th St.

NICE 3 room apt., 130. Oarage. 1448 16th street.

Newly dec. single; overstuffed; InittTl, hot water; 8-10 a.m.. soon, eves. Mt Lincoln.

BEAUTIFUL new Spanish studio apt., fur­nished. Pullman beds. Two adults. 31699.

F U R N I S H E D double apt., aarrae. Adulti. $36. 910 6th St. Ph. 26805. 1353 l t t t St.

U l FOR RENT Houses Unfurnished

BOUTH 4 OF NEW DUPLEX, 3 BEDRMS . OAR.. WATER PAID, ALSO REAR COT­TAGE, 4 RMS., OAR. REAS. PH. S. M. 3491S OB ISM 19TH ST.. S. M.

TWO houses, ona At S rms., aaa Pt I rms.. suitable for boarding house, tttt Saw­telle Mvd Inquire OL S. Wilkin: on. M7 Palisades ave.. S. M. Phone 31735.

SPLENDID 4 bedrm.. mod., corner home, Bleat M school. ISM Euclid. Yard; fruit; Phone 218M. 1118 Ttt st.

4 RM., newly renovated, 3 bedrms., btth, fereae lawn aad shrubs, gardener's care, very leas. 516 Indians ave., Venice.

4 RM. modern. 130, 1144 U t t at. Rooming house a t flats. 1137 15th s t , IbtoP Phone 25760.

2629 SANTA MONICA BLVD., house, new paper and paint. Ph. Mrs. Dunn, 22927 Pt M251.

ATTRACTIVE new large 5 home, ISO. Phone 28804.

rm. Spanish

130—4 RMS., gar., 3314 Shader dr., block off S. M. blvd. Ke: MIT. School close.

8 BM. mod. bunga., h. w. floors, garage; eae range; IM mo. 1333 l t t t . Ph. 33830.

1353 14TH ST.—Unfurnished house, newly decorated, garage.

VERY desirable home, choice location. In­quire 404 Ninth st.

138—FRONT house. 4 rms., garage extra if wanted. Phone 21395.

BEAUTIFUL 8 rm. bungalow, 3 garages, MS a month. TM U t t st. Phone 33348.

FOUR rooms, one bedroom; alto wall bad! tarae t 1118 Seventeenth St.

THREE rmt. and bath. 8 bedrms.. nlc ly f a m . 3229 t th St. Ph. M8C»

6 RMS., 3 bedrms., nook, newly decorat­ed inside and eat. 1245 80th St.

NEW B rm. stucco, garage, 850 Embury It., Pacific Palisades.

4 RM8.. 3 bedrms.. modern. Mra Kisner. 1430V4 Ttt At Fhone 22874.

HIOH CLASS English house, 8 bedrms. Oil lette's Reg. Sq. Pbone Owner, HIM.

BEAUT, bunga., 4 larse rms.. water paid, garden kept. No. 1 Hollister terrace, O. P.

IM MO—5 rms. and bath, gar., Ita. yard. IBM High place. Phone 84099.

MS—MODERN 4 rm. house, newly decor­a t e d Oar. Phone 62132.

8 RM. stucco, brkfast. nook, garage, near achool and aterea. 1248 24th i t .

d BM. m o d cottage, 3 bedrms., garage, Reas. to perma. tenants. 1718 Euclid

4 RMS., just decorated, fireplace, 4 blocks from ocean. Two adults. 519 Idaho.

132 FOR BENT Houses Furnished

137.50 FURNISHED FIVE ROOMS Overstuffed, etc., completely modern, tile

sink and shower, garage, 11533 Roches­ter, corner Colby, near schools. Be fare to U. C. L. A. Owner. Fh. 62877, a t Gold-ring's Shoe Btore; also have 8 room apt. above garage, 120. Phone 25541.

E. T. Yates, Realtor FREE Rental Service

See U M PauL

Insurance for Less MONEY TO LOAN

M l B M blvd. Ph. 25518 Pt M i l l

BBACH cottate at Topanga, new, 3 rms.. mod., elec. rente. 138 per mo. on leise. Apply 1538 U t t i t .

$35—6 RMS.. 3 BEDRMS., BATH. OAR., CHICKEN RUNS. 1519 STH ST. OB PHONE 29263.

110—S RMS., completely furnished, clean, garate. Adults. M34 Euclid.

RENTALS 132 FOB RENT

Houses Furnished 3 RM. furn. house, enclosed porch, tar.,

MB a month, tttt Euclid. Ph. 16870.

140—6 RMS., 3 bedrms., close business and beach. Adults, t i l l Md st.

MODERN 8 RMS., 3 BATHS. ELEGANTLY FURN. OAR. SM SND ST. PH. 36851.

130—COSY t rms., bath, only bouse on lot. 1531 14th I t

5 RM. bungalow, newly decorated, near stores aad transp- tatlon. U M t t t M

3 RMS. and bath, overstuffed. Adults only. 1444 10th st.

S RMS., real home, w l t t beautiful garden. In best locstton. 433 15th st. Ph. 33874.

5 RMS., bath, newly decorated. Garage. TM 33nd it.

NEATLY furnished cottate and garage. Reasonable rent. Adults. 1M4 14th i t .

NEAR park and ocean. S rms., enclosed porch, t a w . 937 V4 3rd St.

4 RMS., nice raid and chicken runs, to perma. tenants, 143. 1333 30th St.

5-ROOM, la court, 3330-B 3rd. B-room. 403 W. Channel Rd. 65697 for appointment.

136—ATTRACTIVE 8 rm. cottage, tarate, water paid. 3003 Arizona ave. 38435.

THREE or 4 room imttt t t t with garage. Adults, $25. IMS 30th. Ph. M t t t .

NEWLY federated 4-room itucco; 8 bed­rooms; overstuffed, nook; ear. 1630 Pico

FOR RENTALS. INSURANCE AND REA1 ESTATE call 33511. IM Wilshlre blvd.

ELEC refrlt.. double, t i le . , furn., "Pacific View" Seaside Terr., also 33T V Pacific.

REAL ESTATE

M l HOUSES FOB SALE

To Be Moved 3 house* furnished. 114T 8th i t .

B-ROOM house, turn.; imall payment. tM a month. W. Channel Road. Phone 15197.

141 LOTS FOB SALE

- FORECLOSURE! Act Quickly For This

8ome wise person will certainly tet a bargain by paying up Int. and taxes and assuming present mtge.. a choice M 8 or ell; perfectly level, well located Iota ia beautiful Pacific Palisades. FUll amount M handle $150 to MM. Phone 31331 M see thea .

Gillette Square Oae At tte Mah lata in the tract. For a

abort time at a bargain.

$2,375 Ha phone Information. Bee Charles Ashford,

1633 Montana ave.

ONE or more ACRB tracts la highly de­veloped community, some with bides., ready to occupy. Termi aaa be ar­ranged aad will consider trades.

BURT O. HUNNICUTT. 3033 Wilshire Mvd

Santa Monica. Phone 38831.

BEAUTIFUL 60 ft. corner tt Gillette's Regent Square 11.500. Mr. Deebank with M. B. Rapp. MIS Montana ave.

$5.750—SACRIFICE—5 rm. English stucco, dble. gar., large garden. 933 33rd st. Apply Caesar, U M t t h st.

LOT 50x150, north At Carlyle. best resi­dential district, very cheap. Phone 24093. W. R. Alexander.

75 FEET oa Moreno it . , one block from Brentwood Country Club, a l ea l bar-tain. See owner, 603 35th. Ph. 36339.

LOT 60x130 on 81st and Washington, aac-rlflced, 13,500 cash. 955 Hat st.

t t t INCOME PRO PERM

WELL turn., I rms.. Frigid., iteam beat. real, to perma. temnt . 1108 sth M

134 FOR RENT Storea. business Sites

IF L. C. Maten. 1841 Ird at., will eall at the off tea of the Evening Outlook with clipping pt thlg notice ha will receive two tickets to I t e Criterion theater, Santa Moniea.

BEAUTIFUL store with balcony. IM feet from Third St. Suitable coffee ihop or specialty, t t t Arizona Ave.

LAROE new Spanish house CA prominent business st. Suitable any high class businesses. Lease reasonable. Ph. 26804

TIRE shop at Caloa oil station. 4th anu Colorado. Owner. 1546H Fourth St.

REAL ESTATE 140 HOUSES FOR SALE

Splendid 8-Room House Price $9,500

This house is complete in every detail, in beautiful Brentwood; splendid sur­roundings: cost me $14,500. You can buy it for $9,500. Pay $2,000 cash, bal­ance terms. Phone Mr. Lesch, Santa Monica 22927, or eall at office, Brent­wood Estates, 12533 Baa Vicente blvd

Beautiful Bungalow 509 21st Place (not Street) Just completed, never occupied. Has en­

closed patio. 3 tiled baths, furnace, tiled entry, 3 large bedrms., elec. refrlg., sprinkling system, ate. Price $10,500. Open fee Inspection, 8 to 8 p. m„ ae l a appointment. O. A. Hogan, Home Builder. Bhone 24384 Of 38173.

FORECLOSURES. New five room stucco bungalows in west side of Culver City near Washington blvd., 11,750. Alto stucco duplex. 16.000. Small down pay­ment and balance like real, bum year choice. Also some good hornet la Tea* ice. 1100 down and small monthly pay­ments. Robert Jarvis with M. B. Rapp, U U Montane ave. fbone M l t t . .

FORCED TO SELL An Exceptional Income

Bargain 75 ft. of close 'ia frontage, between Santa

Monica e a d wilshire blvdt., ISO feet deep.

This la an Ideal location for an apart­ment house or a bungalow court.

AT A REDUCED PRICE OF

$6,500 Offers will ta considered.

Chas. A. Tegner Established e a d Active since 1903

314 SANTA MONICA BLVD. PH. 31716

LEGAL NOTICE

Boulevard, ttt the city of Los An­geles, aU the right, title and In­terest of said deceased at the time of his death. BBd all tha right, title and interest, that the estate of said deceased has acquired by opera­tion of law er otherwise, to and in tha following described property, to-wit:

Aa undivided ooo -half interest ln tha following described real property situate In tho city of Compton, County of Los Angeles, State of California:

Lot Thirteen (13), la Block Four (4) of Tract 6207 as per Map re­corded ta Book 66, Pages 57 and 68 of Maps, in tho office of the Countv Recorder of said County.

Subject to restrictions now of record.

Also the following described real estate, situate in tha City of Los Angeles, County of Los Angeles and State of California, described as follows, to-wit:

All of Lot Twenty (20), tn Block Fifty-eight (58) of th* Artesian Tract ln the City of Los Angeles. County of Los Angeles, State of California as per Map recorded ln Book 4, Page 90 of Maps, records of said Los Angeles County, California.

Terms of sale are cash in law­ful money of the United States upon confirmation thereof. Ten per cent of sale to be deposited with bid.

The first above described Tract was appraised at the sum of Five Hundred Dollars (1500.00).

The second above described tract was appraised at the sum at Four Thousand Dollars (84000.00), Mid consists of a court, a front house limiting on Federal Avenue, North, and several amall houses in the rear.

Bids or offers must be in writ­ing, and will be received at the aforesaid office Of W. H. Bowers, 11422 Santa Monica Boulevard, West Los Angeles, California, at any time after thereof, and

First publication September 25 1930.

Last publication October 23, 1030 W. W. Haskell,

Executor of the estate of James R La La Cheur, deceased.

W. H. Bowers

ROY RANDOLPH WILL OPEN NEW

DANCE STUDIO Additional Financial - Markets - Oil News

OU NEWS Another producer WM added to the Ust

in the Venice-Del Rey field shortly before noon today when the Bishop Corp. Pinkie No. 1 located at tta southeast corner of Avenue 35 and Trolleyway. was swabbed In for aa estimated initial production ot l.soo barrels dally. At noon time the hole

Coast Finance SAN FRANCISCO, Oel. . <***>—Rail

traffic tt tepee ted by tte Pacific coast transportation advisory board to Improve In volume ln tta fourth quarter ef this tear ever the rate ot tte previous three euarten. The August rate waa 10.8 per cent below the tlcurea of August, ItM, which waa slightly better by comparison than the t i n t eight months' average, the year up M tta end of August waa 108 per cent lower than tte same period et 1939. The fourth quarter ls expected to run

had apparently cleaned Itself out and the o n l y „i,out 3 per cent below the fourth flow was directed into tbe itorage tanks, quarter of 1939, indicating e probable rapid No gauge had been taken at press time to- return ot business to "normal .conditions."

I day. however, nor had tta oil been tested i for gravity or cut, but observers stated i c e ' cream companies of California are that the product appeared to be clean. A I expected to report curtailed earnings this feature of the well is Ita heavy gas pro- I T e , r o n account of the "unusual climate." duction, which" li estimated to be several r.«ck of excessively hot days has mater-milllon cubic feet. This Is a deep lone I l n u y e u t into salei thli year. hole, with bottom of 6.301 feet.

The Seashore Pet. No. 1 was swabbing I Oliver United Filters Co. has declared from bottom of 6.143 feet, and at noon to- t j l e regular quarterly cash dividend of M dar had developed a gas pressure which cents on A stock. Checks will be mailed made it almost certain the well would ! November 1 on record of October M. be brought ln sometime this afternoon. Other wells which were swabbing today, [ Rumors Flint-Kote Intended to enter all with every Indication of early comple- | | „ t 0 competition with paraffins companies tion. were the Deuel No. 3, the J. L. Clark , n the bay region were scouted today by No. 1. the Imperial Gypsum No. 1 and the LeH,, Key-ton A* Co., after an Investlga-

Koy Randolph, Santa Monica dancing instructor, who will open a new studio soon to Beverly Hills.

Venice Pacific Oil No. 1 Baby Joe No. 1. which was completed

some time ago. but which has not been a consistent ylelder. was betas rigged up for compressor this morning, and may be put back on production in a day or two.

Elmer No. 3 ls reported to have swabbed water and mud. and.was Idle this morning.

tion.

Ir. A. Produce U M ANOELES, Oet. 8 (AP>—Artichokee Per box, Salinas, Davenport, CaitrovfOa.

Monterey. dfa-tOe. 13.38143 M: Ttt. 11.Mtt Ll t t few 113.00: Arroyo Grande, Ma- S I M • M t t

Asparagus—Local. Ib.. guaranteed fancy, 17if30c, common 13ft:20c; poor, low aa Ite. Imperial Valley, crates, fancy mostly 14.50: extra choice 13.50: choice 12.30.

Beans Per lb., local, Kentucky Wonder, mostly 364c. few 5c: poor low as 3c. Ken­tucky Wax. mostly 5c; Limns 3@3e, meetly 2V-C

Broccoli—Per lb., Ouadalupe, Lompoc San Luis Obispo, CastroviUe, beat SQTc poor low as 4c.

Brussels Sprouts—Davenport 7*?9c fear best 10 folic.

Bunched Vegetables—Local doe. bunehee Beets, Mir30c: Carrots, 35T/30c: radishes, small red 10'« 15c; Spinach 15«$20e; Parsley 12'-.fi 15c; Dikon 30c: Turnips 3541350.

Cantaloupes—Local standard crates H. B . 16s- 124s Sl@)1.35; 37s. 11(91-18: Mtt 50«75c. 45s, 25050c; Paul Rose, 246-271. sseesi

Cauliflower—Field crates, Lompoc Santa Maria, Ouadalupe 90c*% 11: local B0O7M

Celery—Venice 4-4 'i doz., II M a t J f t Hearts ln lettuce crates. 7 5 c « l l .

Corn—Per lug. local Chlno SOQTSe. Cucumbers—Lompoc Santa Maria.

GRAIN MARKET

Caterpillar Tractor Co. Is expected t o . -complete production ln connection with its 40®50c. Orange Co., 40@50c JawttPi second large Russian order by the end Figs—Local, lb.. Brunswick. Spanish.

dotas 7fE9c: poor 3«(5c. of the year. Lettuce—Crates Iceberg, Salinas iced *-8 doi., 12 751-3.00: fair quality and condi­tion. 12Q3.50: poor, slimy, low as 11. DTP pack. Lompoc, 4 doz., beat l3.50tt3.7S. few 13. Santa Maria. Ouadalupe, ordinary 11.58

Roy Randolph, Santa Monica

ture celebrities already have en-

Bt'ILDINO PERMITS 626 Grant street—Nicholas Caruso, 610

CHICAo6;~Oet. V f A P I - H e l p e d by de- Bar street, owner; Charles Earlo. 719 Sev- I » **enta s t a r . . . u u . n . ^ __ade_ export demand for North enth street, builder. Five room house and % ™ i _ ! j £ _ %\ ^ m p i e " mostly 7 <*te, tow

^ V V u r t e e n t t s t ree t - l ty . aad Mra. * I •»• °«** n 0 - "•**» Alderman* beet 1 1 «

dedly American wheat. Including some from the United States, wheat prices here advanced

d a n c i n g i n s t r u c t o r . With s c h o o l s a t today, aad hold considerable gains. A O. Young. Ml Superbe avenue, Venice t h . . x r _ „ i ^ i „ n w « m . » - ! »K_. »*.,._ statement from Chairman Lease of the ' owners; J. W. Howland. 121 Nowtta place, t i i e V e n i c e b a l l r o o m a n d t h e M i r a - federal farm board that commodities were Venice, builder. Seven room house and m a r h o t e l . Will o p e n h i s n e w Studio down to an Investment level ra given | earaee. 15.000 n „ „ „ . , . . . at thi- nmn-r lv Wil l i v,nf„i i n T.OVP.1V sharp attention, especially a mention for- 343 Sixteenth street—Oeorge Oussner. 334 ?__,, . . e r l y „ , S n 0 t e l "I B e v e r l y ; e l f n e r , intended to purchase 100.000.000 Sixteenth street, owner; O. A. Hogan. IMS Hi l l s . M a n y w e l l k n o w n m o t i o n plC- | buahels more wheat this winter, i Montaaa avenue, builder. Eight room house

and garase. 16.150. [""""" I 711 Tenth street—Edward Saxby, 711 t h e - [ Tenth itreet, owntr: Warren M. Miller, a n d 668 Flower ttreet, Venice, builder. Addi­

tion, It.BM. 649 Tale street—Agnes M. Conner.

Sparks. Nevada, owner; J. B. Wood, 3314 Glyndon avenue, Venice, builder. Six-room bouse, 14,800.

the' first publl«tton ^ l e d ' S ^ & S R * ^ ^ : P^ure opening at tho Chinese before d_atePof sale. „ » « Mwy . E t f ^ i ^ E E ? ater tonight Jackie Cooper Baby Star 19277* Barbara Kent.

"Wampas Baby Star 1927." and leading lady for Harold Lloyd, Ann Christie, "Wampas Baby star 1928," Gloria Lloyd and Peggy Lloyd, daughters of Mildred Davis Lloyd and Harold Lloyd, Helen Pariah,

Attorney for Estate, baby star of "The Big Trail," aaw

Mary Ann Jackson of "Our Gang' comedy fame, and Joyce Coad young child star.

• * r \ i ' '"* H'I

HAM) PR06KRMS

BITTER AND EGGS LOS ANOELES. O H 8 ' UP I - B u t t e r -

Extra 40c. Ems Extra 15c: fresh firsts Sle: ease

count 33c: medium 36fte: small 23c. Poultry pricei unchanied.

PAID 112.ooo, will sell for 15.000. Income 195 month. Write owner. P. O. Box 337. Banta Moniea.

143-A OIL ROYALTIES

Venice Oil Bargains I have several carefully selected oil units

la tta Teniae field, ts ken In pt rt psy-ment on new Packards. Aai offering these for sole at considerably below present market prlcee.

Carl R. Henderson 17th and Wilshlre.

Phone 33311.

i ff COUNTRY PROPERTY

30 ACRES Irrigated land la Merced coun­ty. Will sell or trade. Ph. 34438.

149 WANTED TO PURCHASE Real Estate

452 20TH ST.—On one of the most attrac­t ive streets In Banta Monica Spanish bungalow, I bedrms., 3 baths, extra lav­atory and toilet, extra large bedrms., aB closets cedar lined. LM 88x149, beautiful shrubs. Price 113.500. Open dally, 3 to 8 P- m.

BARGAIN—Two splendid bouses. 8 rooms and bath tt each. Bee. MM and MM Bundy drive. Just about a blk. oft Pico blvd. Will sell for 13.600 each, on rea­sonable terms. This ta about $2,000 under | tta market. Look these over and phone owner, LAfayette 8652.

WANTED—Lot tt Brentwood. WUl pay cash. Must be r ia l C. George. Phone West Los Antelet 31360.

SMALL home, clear, anywhere, for equity • In close In business property. Ph. 35959.

150 F O R E X C H A N G E R e a l E s t a t e

OUTSTANDING bargain in 8 room home, priced tew for quick sale. Owner ei l ttd East. Terms.

BURT C HUNNICUTT 3033 Wilshlre blvd.

Santa Monica. fhone 38821.

BRAND NEW 7 ROOMS. 3 BEDROOMS. 3 BATHS

•Ufa Most beautifully arranged aad finished

bungalow la Its class. Bait heat. aba. refrlg. Double garage. Breakfast room furnished. Close to Westwood Village and schools. Call W.L.A. 31105.

364 30TH ST.—Charming 2-story, 9 room home ln Oillette'i Regent Square, no. of Carlyle. la offered at a greatly reduced price. Four bedrooms, three bsths. small down payment. M. B. Rapp, own 8tt MIS Montana avenue.

FORECLOSURE CORNER awe , small bouse end garage,

equipment for BM chickens. Easy terms. BURT O. HUNNICUTT.

3033 Wilshlre blvd., B M. Phone 28821

AKINS REALTY CO. Real Estate—Rentals—Insurance.

OCR NEW OFFICES 118 PIER AVE., OCEAN PARK

Just upstairs from former location. Pbone 63163.

ATTENTION BROKERS Make a uuick commission. I have reduced the price to 114,350 OB 331 31st place (not Itreet). T a e atoll Spanish house. 4 bedrms., 3 baths. Owner, Hudson. 508 N. Bedford drive. Beverly Hills. OX. 5137.

FOR EXCHANGE—40 acre ranch; almonds, apricots and grapes; fully equipped; six-room house, outbuildings, and mules and agricultural implements go with the ranch. For court or apartment house In Santa Monica district. Address 739 In­diana Ave., or eall tt tta evenings.

Also for exchange—Duplex In West Los Angeles. Wanted, chicken ranch.

FOR EXCHANGE OR SALE—7 room mod. home, close to Beverly Hills, In L A. 3 bedrms . 3 baths, double garage, elec. re­frigeration, unit heat. Prlee 114.000. View of city, mts and Beverly Bills. Will take small home, 8 or 6 rms.. la ex­change, balance easy. Address 3S30 Hill street, Walnut Park. Ph. J.E. 8712.

5 RM. Spanish bungalow near Brentwood golf course, clear. Want similar or small­er bungalow. Orange county or Northern California. Must be clear. Box 1994 Outlook.

4 BEDRMS., 3 baths, beautiful two-story Spanish home, 60 ft. corner lot. Consider smaller home, lot or what have you? Ph. PRENTICE, 334M.

TEN acres improved. Ban Fernando volley, clear. Want 4-famlly flat, small court, duplex. Santa Monica. H. B. Allen, Box 313. No. Bollywood.

NEW modern bungalow court,, latest Im­provements, splendid Income. Will con­sider clear lot income zone Santa Mon­ica. Box 1960 Outlook.

i-OR SALE OR EXCHANGE for beach vi­cinity, 8 rm. house. La Crescents, above fog line, excellent tat asthma. No agents. Owner, Box 1987 Outlook.

WANT Income property for I bedroom home In Gillette's Regent Square. Own­er. Box 1993 Outlook.

s 1.000 IN a lot to Long Beach. Will trade far 8 eood used cat. TM Hartzell at* Pa­cific Palisades.

POUR sunny rmt., overituft., conven. loco. Water pd., aar., couple only. 1418 15th.

COTTAGES, llghta. etc.. gir. . thewtl. phone, tt to M par wk. M36 Na i l bl-n

130—TWO rooms. Book and bath, quiet, clean. M l Bay M

NICELY furnished B ras. house, glassed | SALE OR TRADE - Free and clear. porch, 145. 30 Osone ave.. Oeean Park. I W50 Berkeley. Santa Monica, luit com-

- • plctcd. 4 bedrm., one-story stucco, two 3 RM house and bath, furnished, like new. baths. 2-car garage, wonderful floors

CaU 3335 Ith St. Phone M791. See owner. Rm. 3. Security Bldg 33363 WILL build aad finance tf yea have clear

lot. J. J. Verolank. 1525 Oeorgtna ave. Phone 247M Will also modernise your home and make It saleable

8 BUS- and garage at 1037 6th i t . Pbone mornings. 84319.

4 B U B and sua porch, overstuffed turn.. gsraae. 1MI A 8. M. blvd. Ph. 34967.

8 BMS.. front cottage, good loca.. bath and gar., teas. Adults. 1430 Birrtngton. WLA.

152 REAL ESTATE FIRMS

J. J. Barrett 3615 Santa Monica Blvd. Phone 31466

SACRIFICE—7 rms.. 8 baths, dble. tarage. large lot, 13,300 cash. bal. arranged. Phone 25371 for appointment.

LEGAL NOTICE

NOTICE OT SALE OF SEAL PROPERTY AT PRIVATE SALE

Nc. 111,211. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF

THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA, IN I AND FOR THE COUNTY OF LOS I ANGELES.

IN THE MATTER OF THE ES-TATE OF J A M B S R. LE LA! CHEUR Deceased.

Notice is uereby given that under and pursuant to the law made and provided, tha undersigned, W. W. Haskell, executor dt the estate cf| James R. Le La Cheur, deceased, j will sell at private sale to the high­est and beat binder subject to con-; firmation of said Superior Court.; on or after tbe 1st day ef Novem­ber. 1930. a i the office of W. H.1

Bowers, NO 11132 Santa Monica

TONIGHT 5:00 P. M.

KPI—Baron Keyes, the Story Maa. KMPC—"Just Kids" club. KELW—Swanee River Serenaders. KHJ—Organ concert. KFWB—Revelers; Virginia Miller. KNX—Travelog. KGFJ—Hawaiian quartet. KFOX—Hollywood Girls' trio. KGER—James' orchestra and organ. KECA—Rudy Vallee's orchestra. (BT).

B: 15 P. M. KMTR—Harold Curtis, organist. KNX—"Bla Brother Ken's Kiddie Hour.

5:30 P. M. KPI—Will E. Wing, Hollywood gossip. KHJ—President Hoover. (Cleveland). KECA—President Hoover. • (Cleveland).

6:0(1 P. M. KMTR—Bsnio Boya and Del. KFI—Leonard Van Berg, ballads. KMPC—Leo Mannes, organist. KELW—Collins and Brown. KHJ—Charles Frederick Lindsley. KFWB—Harry Jackson's entertainers. KNX—Oene Byrnes, organist KOPJ—Glenn Edmonds' orchestra. KFOX—"Em and Clem." KECA—Birthday Party. (NY).

6:15 P. SI. KPI—Jack Miller's trio. KNX—Frank Watauabe. KFOX—Percy Prunes and Daisy Mae

6:30 P. M. KMTR—Collegians snd Esther Kahm. KELW—Yodeling Colonels. KHJ—Musical program. KFWB—8trlng orchestra. KNX—Bill Hatch's orchestrs. KMIC-"Radio Roundup." KOER—Hoagland's orchestrs KECA—Willard Roblson't orchestra. (BT).

6:45 P. M. KFI—Slavick string trio. KFWB—Cecil and Sally. KFOX—Three Vagabonds.

7:00 P. M. KPI—Radio hour. (NY). KHJ—Cleveland Bach choir. (Chain). KFWB—Salon orchestra: Johnny Murray. KNX—Dr. Mars Baumgardt. KGFJ—Lucky Seven orchestra. KFOX—Sunset Harmony Boys. KECA—Rounds' string ensemble.

7:15 P. M. KMTR—Oriy'l Singing Collegians. KNX—"Sunburnt Jim." Bert Butterworlh. KFOX—"Proggie and Burrhead."

7:30 P. M. KFI-Symphony hour. (6F>. KHJ—Concert from San Francisco. KFWB—"Rubberneck revue." KNX—Thc Blunt Family. KFOX—Hawai tans. KGER—Long Beach band.

7:45 P. M. KMTR—Jack Boas, fishing news. KFOX—Doris and Clarence.

' 8 4 8 P. M. KMTR—Nat Wlnecoff, Esther Kahm. KTM—Ranch hour. KHJ—Music Box. (SF). KFWB—Serenaders orchestra. KNX—Calmon Luboviskl. violinist. KGFJ—Bob Holman's Freshmen. KFOX—Ted and Anna. KGER—Billy Van. KECA—Arthur Lang, ballads.

61.1 P. M. KMTR—Hollywood vs. Oakland baseball. KECA—Monterey trio.

8:30 P. M. KPI—Felipe Delgado, songs of Spain. KHJ—Park concert program. KFWB- Johnny Johnson's orchestra. KNX—Theater Premiere. KMIC Mann Brothers' orchestra. KGFJ—String quintet, soloist. KFOX—Bill and Coo. KOER—Three Co eds. KECA—Amos 'n Andy.

1:1.' r . IL KPI—Quartet. (SF). KECA—Lee Roberts, pianist. 'SF).

9:00 f. M. KFI—'Two-piano" Jazz. KMPC—Hollywood Harmony Boys. KTM—Dorothy Dee. organist. KHJ—"Comic Opera of the Air." KFWB—Strtaea and Bows; soloist. KFOX—Lamplit hour. KGER—Hoagland's orchestra. • KECA—R. A. Rolfe's orchestra. (NY).

0:15 P. Bf. KPI—"Emperor of Crime." serial.

9:30 P. M. KPI—Moore's orchestra. KMPC—Happy Chappies. KHJ—"Sports Edition of the Air." KGFJ—Mosby's Blue Blowers. KFOX—Len Nash's Country Boys. KGER—Mariners' concert orchestra.

10:00 p. M. KMPC—Beverly Hill Billies. KTM—"Frankie and Johnnie.' KFWB—Johnny Johnsons orchestra. KFVD—J. Newton Yates, organist. KNX—Gus Arnheim's orchestra. KECA—Harold Spaulding. tenor.

10:03 P. M. KHJ—Earl Burtnett's orchestra.

10:30 P. M. KFI—Symphonette. KTM—Santaella's orchestra. KPWB—Oeorge Olsen's orcheitra. KMIC—Mann Brother!' orchestra. KOFJ—Organ melodies. KOER—Senorltas string trio. KECA—Louis Rueb. health exercises.

11:00 P. M. KFI—Laushner-Hsrris orchestra. (SP). KPWB—George Freeman's orchestra. KFVD—Louie Armstrong's orchestra. KGFJ • Morey Paul's orchestra. KFOX -Dance orchestra. KGER—Everett Hoagland's Troubadors.

11:30 P. M. KGER—Dick Dixon, ereanlat.

Midnight -KMTR—"Eight Ball" and Charlie Luna. KHJ—Wesley Tourtellotte. organist. KFVD—J. Newton Yates, oraanlst KNX—Dance orchestra. KMIC—Louie Armstrong's orchestra.

TOMOEROW'S BADIO PROGRAM l i t .

KFVD—Spanish program. KMIC—Andy aad Jack KFOX—Spanish program. KTM—Bert's Eyeopener

•i 7 A M . KMTR—Harold Curtis, organist. KTM—BiU Sharpies' gang.

KFVD—Happy-Go-Lucky trio. 7:30 A. M.

KHJ—Hallelujah Hour. 7:15 A. M.

KPI—"Dobblle." 8 A. M.

KFI—"Happy Time" i s P.), 8:30 A. M.

KFWB—Dorothy Burnham: Rae and pals. KGER—Musical clock; Judy and O Berg

A A. M. KMTR—Mildred Kitchen. KFI—Bess Kilmer. KMPC—Dan Maxwell, Scotch comedian. KNX—Kate Brew Vaughn.

0:15 A. M. KHJ—Maude Hush's, pianist.

8:80 A. M. KMTR—Herbert Scharlln. ballads. KFI—Betty Crocker IS F.l. KMPC—Inspirational poetry. KHJ—Feminine Fancies IS. P.). KTM—Request proeram.

9:45 A. M. KFI—Bally and Russell Hill.

10 A. M. KMTR—Louise Howatt KELW—Troubadours' orchestra. KFWB—Prudence Penny. Kr-X—Eddie Albright's 10 o'clock family KOFJ—Studio ensemble: soloists. KGER—Chick, Chet and Chuck.

10:15 A. M. KFI—Josephine Gibson (S. P.).

10:80 A. M. KMTR—Galloping Gophers. KFI Maeaslne of the Air i s F.) KFWB- -Cliff and Lolly; Nip and Tuck KNX—Arizona Wranglers. KFOX—Vera Graham, organist.

Ill: 15 A. M. KHJ—Agnes White.

11 A. M. KMTR—Mar caret McDonald. KMPC—Radiollers hour. KELW—Frank and Eddie. KFWB—Jean Cowan. Hollywood quartet. KFOX—Beatrice Smith, ballads. KGER—Concert orchestra.

11:10 A. M. KHJ—Homer Griffith: poems. KFOX—Cline and Gene.

11:30 A. M. JKH Artists recital (N. Y.I. KGFJ—Spanish program

11:45 A. Af. KMTR—City hall broadcast. KNX—"Musical Contrasts." KFOX—Hollywood Olrls' tola,

NOON KPI—Agricultural talk. KELW—"Children's Matinee." KHJ—Taacha Borowsky's orchestra. KFWB—Tom and Wash. KNX—Ensemble.

11:1s P. M. KMTR—"Prosperity hour." KMPC—Happy Chappies. KFWB—Louise Lynch, ballads.

11:30 P. M. KFI Southern California travelog. KELW—"Lasses and Waffles." KFWB—Rose Valerie's ensemble. KNX—Dance music. KGFJ—Bob Holman's Freshmen KGER—Peggy and Jerry.

13:45 P. M. KFOX—Musical Moments. KGER—Billy Van

1 P. M. KMPC—Gene Taylor, pianist. KHJ—Light Opera Gems (N. Y.). KFVD—G. Allison Phelps.

1:15 P. M. KMTR—Andy and his Lumberjacks. KGER—Helene Smith, requests.

1:30 P. M. KNX—Eddie Albright, readings. KGFJ—Arch Fritz, organist. KFOX—Cheerio Boys.

1:50 P. M. KFOX—"Dr. Harbottlc."

a P. M . KTM—Nell Cleary, "Over the Teacup." KHJ—Happy-Go-Lucky hour. KFWB—"Friday's Follies." KGFJ—Morey Paul's orchestra. KGER—Dick Dixon, organist.

3:15 P. M. KMTR—Spanish program.

2:20 P. M. KFOX—Roily Wray.

2:30 P. M. KPI—Winnie Fields Moore, trarelot. KFOX—Len Nash's orchestra. KGER—Long Beach band.

2:45 P. M. KFI—Leonard Van Berg, ballads. KTM—Sams inspirational poetry.

3 P. M. KFI—Carol Johnson, ballads. KTM—Dot and Don. request program. KHJ—Clella and Collins. KOFJ—Murray and Harris.

3:13 P. M. KFI—Two-piano jazz. KHJ—Dr. Hert-os's school proaramq KNX—Joyce Coad.

3.30 P M KFI—Wedgwood Nowell. KHJ—Walter Brown Murray. KNX—Women's clubs program. KPOX—Vera Oraham, organist.

3:45 P. M. KHJ—International Relations council.

4 P. M. KMTR—HI Hatters from Harlem. KHJ—Mountaineers (N. Y.). KFWB—Dance band; soloists. KNX—Oene Bytpee. organist. KGPJ—Arch Fritz, organist.

4:15 P. M. v KHJ—Ted Florlto's orchestra (N. Y.). KFOX—Roily Wray.

4:30 P. M. KPI—"Big Brother Don." KTM—Spanish • program. KFOX—Bill and Coo

4:43 P. M. KPOX—Cheerio Boys.

5 P. M. KFI—Baron Keyes. the Story Mae, KELW—Swanee River Serenaderi. KMPC— "Just SMB."

Coast League W L Pct. 3B 43 AM 17 45 .451 34 45 .430 t t t t .403

W L Pct.l Hollywood 86 36 .683 Seattle L. Anseles 45 33 AM Oakland S. Frisco 40 40 MO Portland Sacrmento 40 41 4941 Mission

Yesterday's Results Hollywood 6; Oakland 5; 10 innings. Mission 8; Saciamento 7; 10 Innings. Los Angelet 8: Portland 3. Seattle 7; San Francisco 8.

BOW Series Stand Hollywood Sl Oakland 0. Los Anseles 1; Portland 1. Seattle 3; San Francisco 0. Mission 1; Sacramento 1.

Picture Files in Library Popular

All Manner of Unusual Things Illustrated

for Research (Continued From Pare 11)

become useful to art lovers and stu­dents.

The "picture library" has been made at virtually no expense, the illustrations having been taken principally from magazines and rotogravure sections of newspapers.

From the latter have come some of the most beautiful pictures of famous buildings, scenery, bridges arid ships, while the National Geo­graphic magazine, old number of which have "been contributed by li­brary patrons, have supplied a number of colored "sets" of nature study. Even advertisements have furnished some of the library plates.

In addition to the large picture plates. Miss Hels has added en­velopes containing smaller pictures to supplement the larger illustra­tions.

Simple Filing System The system employed for filing

the pictures is simple, so that a library patron, wishing to browse through the illustrations, can find all those of a given subject with the minimum of effort.

As rapidly as more pictures can be procured, the picture library will be enlarged. Persons who have magazines containing well printed illustrations, either in color or in black and white, may "pass on* these pictures for the use of the f C " c

v X £ n . « win i J5fff i? I wUl let them off wtth a light signal norary wnere tney win be classified, j „ m , _ H „ „ C-.,,.IW tn t i» >_»._ ih» mounted and filed. ' d r l ' t o d a y

13'jc, poor Sc. Salinas, Guadalupe 4i8fc. Peachei—Per lb., Yucalpa. Krummel 3(8

Ms Curry Seedlings, large Sc; Salway, I «*3<ic: Placer Co., Salway 3'_«?4c. San Jose. Salway 3"j.f4c Washington, easae Krummels 33s-6Ss, 11.35-$1.40.

Pears Bartletts. lb.. Placerville 1^1'M, poorer 3^3We. Antelope Valley 3HfJ3c few best 3'j if4c: smaller l ' j « 3 . Owena Valley 3 ' i t . 3 ; Victorvllle 3c: Lake Co., 8to 0 M ; Placer Co.. Seckel 3@3Hc.

Pumpkins—Local per ton 118^130.00. Pomegranates—San Joaquin Valley, lb*

SOSV&c. Prunes—Idaho, Italian, W bushel bas­

ket., mostly 11.35: loose, per lb., 4 0 4 1-ta. Yucalpa. French l f tQSc. From cold Mor­a le 3-t3Wc.

Raspberries—Watsonvllle 13 eup traya tk pint I1.7IB3 M.

Squash—Local. lugs White Summer MO 65c: Italian 60@75c: YeUow H O l.M.

Sweet Potatoes—Local, lugs Jersey TBO 90c; Nancy Hall. Porto Rtcsn 7S@90c. B a ­kersfield. lugs 80090c. Turlock 750180.

Tomatoes—Lugs 5x8 and larger, local Orange. Ventura Co., Stones 60Q1MS Olobes BScif'll. Oxford. Ponderosa 85cOH.

Potatoes—Closing Wednesday, opening on Thursday, brokers' sales, sacked cwt.. Stockton, Burbanki waahed 13 t0@3JS. Idaho, lacked cwt.. Russets, O. S. N a 1. 13.33 0 3 30. mostly 13.35.

Meeting Notice

BANK CLEARINGS Santa Monica bank clearings for today

1383.386.03: same day last year 1448,936.73; total for month to date 1685,843.17. Loa Anseles. 149.989,905. San Francisco, 137,-000,000.

Santa Monica Elks lodge No. 906, meeting at Elks club. Main street and Marine avenue, 8 p m .

Meeting, Rotary club. Friday noon. Miramar hotel

LOS ANGELES STOCKS Furnihfd M Bank!. Huntley Se Co., 1339

Third St., Santa Monica, as of 1:30 p. ra. High Loa

Asso G Ss a 'A' 1 Barnsdall OU 'A' XD-j Bolsa Chlca Oil 'A* —| Byron Jackson Co — California Bank , Central Invest 1 Citizen Nat Bk Cl Neon El Prod — DOUR Aircraft Inc —. Emsco Dr Co com — V «: M Nat Bk Gilmore OU Co Olobe O 4b M com . — Ooodyear T & R ptd — —. Hancock Otl com 'A'

Meeting. Pyramid Luncheon club, J Home ser 1st pfd Carmel hotel, Friday noon.

Meeting, Bay Builders exchange, Castellammare inn, 6:30 p. m., Fri­day.

Breakfast. Santa Monica Bay Radio Trades association, Carmel hotel, Friday, 7:30 a. BL

LIGHT WORKOUT LOS ANGELES. Oct. 2 (AV-The

California Institute of Technology football eleven was given only a light workout yesterday in preparation for its game tomorrow with the University of Arizona

IntrntI Re-Ins Corp _ L A O ft E pfd L A Invest Co . . MacMUlan Petro No Amer Invest com Pac Clay Prod Pao Finance com — Pac O A E com Pac Lighting com _ Pae Mutual Life Ins Pacific Nat Co Pac Pub Sr 'A' com Pac Western OH Pickwick Corp com — Republic Pete CO — Richfield OU

do pfd Rlo Grande OU .

Coach "Fox" I s j L * P pfd Stanton pronounced his charges to sec First Nat Bk L A be near the peak of condition and «y»B,"»««. «^a.A; -

The Federation of

State Societies V. II. Parsons, Secretary

Office, Headquarters, Regiatcra Hotel Rosslyn

Fifth and Main Sta., Loa Angeles Telephone FAber 3311

Cal-Tech players were sent through several hard scrimmages.

University of Air Plans Announced

Sun So OBI Edison com _

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Meetings

LOS ANGELES CURB EXCHANGE Furnished by Banks. Huntley S* Co., ISM

Third St., Santa Monica, as ot 1:30 p. at, Allan Refne Co com ,,, *A% 3 S \ 81% Aviation Corp Del - Mf Bandinl Pet Co , _ 4 * Bid

Movement Under Way to *?** ?l,'car?u- '5* JL £2

* I Chap 1 C Co com . , —- 10& Bid

Educate Mountaineera 'omm B*rvlc'* Co by Means of Radio (Continued From Pace 11)

Pennsylvania Society — Tuesday Lowden, Coleman Dupont, Brig night, October 7. in Moose hall. G e n F r a n k T . Hines. director of the 1024 South Grand avenue, Los An- | veterans* office: Governor Cooper

Cl Neon China Co Con Steel Corp com

do pfd -Continental Oil. Dela Cord Corp com _____ Detroit Air Corp Diamond Elec Co Exeter Oil , Fokker Airplane J Fox Theater Corp "A*

geles. Program will be presented o f Ohio and John Hays Hammond General Motors by the Nations School of Music a r e m e m b e r 3 ol the board of trus- oiaddina. McBean _ . and Dancing. Old-time and modern i t e e s ot uncoln university and spoil- j ?n

rt'"

bJ_£rr dancing and cards will follow the L, . . - o f t h e n e w movement. The of- uTo Peta program.

run Co Corp

Italo Pete com flee of education has a definite | Lockheed Air project for education by radio and j Mascot on co

Caledonian club—S p. m.. second and f r n i i I - h f - r „ t i 1 , t , i„ t h » Pxrv-rimpnK Mea Seaboard Oil Co fourth Thursday nights each month in u COlldDorating in t n e e x p e r i m e n t s | M o n U . . m e r , ward Fraternal Brotherhood building. 845 Soutr a m o n g t h e m o u n t a i n IOIK Ol K e n - occidental Pet com Flgueroa.

Colorsdo—I p. m , first Priday nlsht •>! each month. Moose ball, 1034 South Orand avenue.

Kansas—6 p. m . second Thursday nlibt of each month. Veteran! h i l l Mt Sou.n HU1 street.

tucky, Tennessee, Virginia, West p u ASSO inc Virginia and the Carolina*. Or. Hill Petkard Motors . declared Pet corp Amer com

President Hoover has evinced a a-maon*?"* B"Z_ genuine interest in the general Sinclair oil plan, Dr. Hill said. He pointed out so cai oaa M that the president himself is en- I Tidewater Asso com

Univ Cons Otl Tom Reed

gaged in a "cross-section" of the I movement, through his personal

Missouri—s p. m. third Tuesday night, donation of 110.000 for the estab-Moote hall. 1034 South Grand avenue. Hshment of a grammar school in

Rapidan, Va.. where his summer Minnesota, Including Minneapolis—6 i camp is located

I ,?'*__in_-_-!L<Uf n l * n t •* **• ______! * n (Copyright, 1930. Consolidated Press Assn hall. 333 South Broadway

Pennsylvania—I p. m., third Tuesday night, fraternal Brotherhood building. 846 | South Fliueroa.

Texas—8 p. m. 1137 South Hope.

Picnics, Reunions

Bob Shuler Must PayFmeofSlOO

SAN FRANCISCO. Oet 3 (UJ0— The Rev. R. P. "Fighting Bob" Shuler, pastor of Trinity MethodM

tion of Miss Gladys Chitwood and I church, South, of Loa Angeles, to* Glen Van Noy. Both contests will I day faced the necessity of paying B be open to everyone, there being j $100 fine, imposed on him for con-classes- for all ages, boys and girls, tempt of court, according to a de-men and women. The playground cision handed down here last night

I day sycamore | Is open from 1 until 5 every Satur-1 by the state supreme court.

tecood Friday night. A croquet contest and a sand-modeling contest will be the features

New Jersey--! 30 p. m. fourth Frida*|of the McKinley playground next night. Leighton'? cafeteria, sis Souto j Saturday afternoon, under the direc-Broadway.

Illinois—October 4. _ Orove park. Los Anseles County registers d a y . b u t t h e c o n t e s t s t a r t s a t 2 open all day; program will follow lunch: bot coffee and souvenir bade** provided

o'clock. A large crowd is expected this week.

Oregon—October 11, all day Sycamore Grove pork. Los Anteles Basket lunches a' noon: county registers open all day.

Washington—October 11. all day. Syca­more Orove park, Los Angeles. Tourists especially invited: hot coflee and souvenir badaei provided: county registers open all day.

The remaining five days of a twenty day jail sentence, given htm after his radio attack an judges ln charge of the Julian Petroleum

Much curiosity "Was aroused last j Corp. collapse case, were remitted.

KNX—Travelog. KGFJ—Hawaiian quartet. KFOX—Hollywood Olrls' trio.

5:15 P. M. KMTR—Harold- Curtis oraanlst KNX—"Bia Brother Ken's Kiddle hour.'

a__a P. M. K P I - B B. Bust, gardening talk.

week when the students at McKinley noticed small orange feathers being worn by their teachers. Many amus­ing guesses were .made by the* chil­dren as to their meaning. W waa not long, however, before they dis­covered that tbe feathers ware worn by those who had contributed to the Community Chest. Tha average for the McKinley teachers this year is one-third higher than It OO. last year.

BUY SOMETHING NEW—NOW!

The court, in rejecting the pastor's plea for exoneration, ufrtield six Ot the seven counts on which he ttX-T sentenced by Judge Clair S. Tapi-paan.

The one count an which tbe court disagreed with Judge Tappaan con­cerned remarks made about Judge Marshall F. McComb. in the Bar­man-Getzoff case. Tbe court ruled that, aa long as tbe speeches were made after tbe trial bad bean closed, Shuler was not guilty off < tempt In publicly crtticiting I t

• • - . .

i l l

f EVENINCTDt TLOOK, SANTA MONICA; CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1930

F

Third Street Department Store Thronged All Day by

Busy Shoppers Unmistakable demonstration that Santa

Monica stores lead in value-giving merchandise was evidenced yesterday by the multitude of shoppers who attended the opening of Spon­berg's Department Store Anniversary Sale,

Prom the moment doors were opened until closing time at night clerks in all departments were kept on the jump waiting on trade. In a letter, reproduced below, Mr. Sponberg ex­presses himself on the success of the event.

*«•"_?:;•*• •

Photograph' taken at an early Hour yesterday showing both entrances of Sponberg's crowded with customers waiting for the doors to open. An enormous volume of business was done throughout the day to make new records for tbe store.

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First Day of Great Anniversary Sale

Ushers in Month of Record Bargains!

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"Yesterday was just a beginning," said

Sponberg last night. "We expect to carry extra

special values throughout the month of October.

Our buyers have been busy for weeks taking

advantage of very favorable market conditions

and we are in a position to maintain the present

pace all through October."

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