Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archiveArchive Home
Santa Maria Times from Santa Maria, California • 6
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Santa Maria Times from Santa Maria, California • 6

Publication:
Santa Maria Timesi
Location:
Santa Maria, California
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE DAILY TIMES, SANTA MARIA, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, APRIL 28, 1938 PAGE SIX President Suspends Purchase of Silver Cava, film director, must pay for the support of his divorced wife and two sons from $125 to $500 a month. ALIMONY RAISED HOLLYWOOD, April 28 (UR) Judge Leslie Still today increased the amount which Gregory La NEW OUTPOST Theyll Make Beautiful Splash Libel Suit Is Fought on New Political Angle LOS ANGELES, April 23 fU.R) Senator W. G. McAdoo is a public official and his former lav partner, William II. Neblett, is a candidate for public office and as such they cannot be libeled, two defendants in Nebletts libel suit claimed in their answers filed today.

The answers, filed by John B. Elliott, prominent Democrat, and Asa V. Call, attorney, were similar to one filed yesterday by Pcirson M. Hall, senatorial candidate and another defendant. All three defendants based their answers on the contention that the matter on which Neblett brought his libel suit is priviliged as comment of citizens on the conduct of a public official.

Neblett, they said, surrendered his status as a private citizen when he announced his candidacy for governor. Neblett brought suit as a result of a statement by Carl Pustau, political lobbyist, in a bankruptcy case in which Pustau accused Neblett of various political activities for pay. To Further Supplement Our ACCOUNTING and TAX SERVICE We Are Now Able to Offer A Complete Line of Office Supplies and Stationery Commercial eva waters Phone Service Supply alt sLCb1Tway 1230 HOUGHTONS MARKET C. E. Felmlee GROCERIES FRESH VEGETABLES Los Angeles major contribution to good form and pulchritude in the ranks of feminine divers are these four misses who wear the silks of L.

A. A. C. From left, Bessie Boos, Kutli Nurmi, Ruth Jump and Marjorie Gestring. They compete in the A.

A. IT. senior diving championships at San Francisco April 20. 4jF' 2:: Dependable ALWAYS lb- 27c lb; 20c ll- 16c 25c Lamb Patties each 5c Mock Chicken Legs each 5c -Barbecue Steaks Our Specialty- BAKERY DEPARTMENT-COOKIES 8 VARIETIES LAMB LEGS MILK FEED LAMB VEAL ROASTS MILK FEED VEAL SHORT RIBS VERY LEAN AND PORK STEAKS 3 DOZEN 25c ROLLS I 15c -Dozen -15c PARKER HOUSE NAPKIN ROLLS POPPY SEED SESAME SEED BUTTER ROLLS BUNS, Long or Round DRIFTED SNOW Flow? 24 lb. HILLS RED Petition to Bring It Out Of Committee Is Considered WASHINGTON, April 28 Ot.Rt The administration, it was under: stood today, is prepared to attempt to force the new wage-hour bill to the floor of the house by petition.

The bill is in the House Rules committee whose members either are opposed to the measure or not enthusiastic about bringing it to a showdown. A petition bearing signatures of 218 representatives can force the measure out of the committee and this strategy, it vas learned, is favored by Chairman Mary Norton of the House Labor committee. Mrs. Norton said that unless some wage-hour bill is enacted, wage cuts will follow the business decline and force a vicious cycle of deflation. The wage-hour bill thus appeared to be the next point of conflict in congress and, while events shaped up to this end, President Roosevelt completed I the framework of his Nirthcom- i ing message on business mono poly.

There were indications that he may ask congress to enact antitrust legislation this; session. President Roosevelt today call-1 od to the White House a number of aides for discussion of re- -covery questions and his mono- poly message. Secretary of Treasury Henry Morgenthau one of those summoned, said he saw no signs that the depression had touched bottom. Business conditions, he said, have grown progretsively worse since last November. Flying Escalator A fast-moving aerial staircase was formed by these Curtiss SBC-3 planes of the navy as they flew in a unique step" formation during recent maneuvers.

Generally based on aircraft carriers, they are combination scouting and bombing planes. Subscribe for the Daily Times LOCATION: 7th and Broadway, the center ot shops and shows For you in furnishings, atmosphere and service One or two guests in room. Same price. No double rate. Rooms with bath Choice Double Bed Double or Twins $2.50 $3.00 $3.50 "No Bargaining No Worry FRANK R.

WISHON President COMFORT: POLICY: RATES: i i WASHINGTON, April 28. U.R) President Roosevelt today suspended the administrations silver nationalization program, in effect since late in 1933. The domestic silver-buying program of the Treasury is not affected. Subscribe for the Daily Times ADVANCE NOTICE! Summer Session Begins Monday, June 20 STENOGRAPHY ACCOUNTING SECRETARIAL Registrations are Now Being Accepted Write for FREE CATALOG FOUNDED 1867 enta Bariafe Bui'mM 400 GRANADA BLDG. J.

H. LONG PKKJ. H. G. Houghton FRESH VEGETABLES MEAT Old Golds Carton $1 25 Cocktail Lounge and Restaurant at Beacon Sets Public Dedication Social life of Santa Maria and vicinity is expected to center tomorrow evening in the new Outpost cocktail lounge and restaurant at the Beacon.

Marking the completion of improvements and additions totaling $12,000 and bringing the total investment of the real estate com- i pany and restaurant operating company to above $30,000, the new cocktail lounge and enlarged restaurant will feature music from five oclock tomorrow afternoon throughout the evening by the Hernandez Mexican orchestra of San Bernardino. The musicians are singers as well as instru-, mentalists and feature Spanish and Mexican songs as well as music in the quick tempo of the 1 Latins. Violin, guitar and accor-dian specialties will alternate 1 with orchestral and vocal numbers. The new construction has added a dining room 25 40 feet to the accommodations of the form-! er coffee shop and a cocktail lounge 18 40 feet as well as tile-finished retiring rooms for women and men and additional storage rooms. In the rear, a Spanish-type bungalow dormitory has beer added for the accommodation of the help, which, with the former space available for this purpose, enables the operating company to house 17 persons.

1 Handsome Lounge The cocktail lounge, with an inviting door in DuPont Vermillion lacquer, ornamented with large chromium plates, and the I new restaurant are both lighted with indirect lighting systems from which three gradations of light may be obtained. The ground-glass globes are set in chromium. The cocktail bar is of mahog- any, the front in quilted maple paneled in mahogany, with an i oblique footrest between the con- ventional brass rail and the bar front something entirely new in bar arrangement. Behind the bar are four plate-glass mirrors and four cubicle lights in ground glass held in place with chrom-ium fixtures. Facing the bar are two luxuriously upholstered lounges with three tables in each, two circular and one square in each lounge.

Each lounge will seat a party of ten. The tables have black marbelite tops and i black bases. The finish of the 1 lounge upholstery is in orange, 1 trimmed in black, as are the stools in front of the bar. The material is one of the latest de- velopments in DuPont fabrics. 1 The charm of the lounge is very striking.

Can Seat 100 The dining room tables are of mahogany, the tops of mcrcolite. The floors of both the new rooms i are of moultile, a patented composition laid on concrete in a manner similar to other tile, but, being soft, it is said to be ideal for dancing. The additions have enlarged the seating capacity of the place to 100 persons. i Burt A. Heinly is head of Highway Communities, owner of the buildings.

Ilis company also owns the hotel at Darstow and the property in which the Beacon Coffee Shop and cocktail lounge operates at Caslaic junction. Otto Henscl is head of the Beacon Coffee Shops, operating in the three places. B. J. Leihy is manager of the local plant.

Jimmy Bryant is manager of the local cocktail lounge-. In the construction of the local additions, everything was purchased locally except the indirect lighting fixtures, Mr. Ileinly said today. These, being of special design, were ordered direct from the factory. Local labor and local materials were used in the construction.

Company Dormitories The new- bungalow for is as worthy of mention as the new buildings, because of its high type of construction. Divided into dormitories for men and women, the interior of each dormitory is finished with the same indirect lighting system as the cocktail lounge and restaurant and the same moultile floor tiling. The bathrooms in each dormitory are finished in tile, the same as is used in the rest rooms in the main building, and there is a large closet space and built-in wardrobes for each employe, in each of the dormitories. The men have a shower bath; the women, a full-floor tub. We believe, said President Heinly, in making comfortable those who work for us.

The result is that we are not always looking for help. Our employes seldom quit, for we do not believe they can find as comfortable accommodations anyw-here else. i help Union Has Taken No Leases Since Spudding in Well (Continued From Page One) mittee that figures on the well had not been given out previously because they had experienced some difficulty with sand at first and that they had desired to make a thorough test before announcing anything definite. They denied that the company had delayed announcement in order to obtain additional leases, asserting that no additional leases had been taken up since the well came in. No new leases or transfers have been recorded in that area.

Union expected to have its Stinson No. 1 on a production test tomorrow. The tubing and pump rods had to be pulled late yesterday for an inspection of the pump and the hole was put back on production today. The well is west of Lower Orcutt road and north of Detteravia lateral in the lower valley. Yelkin Well Ready Another well expected to go on production tonight or early tomorrow is Signal Oil's Henry Yelkin No.

1, at the Beacon south of town. The liner was in today and the crew expected to be pumping sonic time tonight. The crew will move east to the new derrick offsetting on the west, California Lands Gallison-Jones No. 1. Formerly designated Yelkin No.

2. Signal has renumbered it as Yelkin 12, to bring the wells it proposes to sink into geographical order on the tract. On other other hand. E. IT.

Moore has abandoned his geographical numbering of Union Sugar wells in the lower valley and has renumbered them numerically. Hereafter, instead of being Union Sugar D-13, the well offsetting Union's Leroy 2 discovery well will bo known as Union Sugar No. 3, its original designation. Moore's discovery" well two locations west of Black road, is changed back to Uni'-n Sugar No. 2, instead of II-2; G-3 is now No.

7. If-1 is No. 8 and F-l, now drilling, is No. Intervening numbers go to Moore wells abandoned or of minor importance? in the field. Ohio Hits Monterey Early completion of Ohio Oil's Morrison No.

1, south of McCoy lane and west of Orcutt road, a southern offset of Signal's malls. 2, hit the Monterey shal-at 4880 and was drilling ahead 1o-da v. Union pulled its crew from Mc-Cov-Cooney No. 1, west of 1'nis well and south of Pacific Westerns Samarin 2. to pull the pumo on its Stinson yesterday, after setting the casing for the rat-hole, but expected to have the men back at work today.

ofeei b.canJc2lb 53 ROLLS Made of Coffee Cake Dough 20c Dozen -20c BUTTERFLY ROLLS FINEAPPLE ROLLS CINNAMON ROLLS Danish Coffee Cake Regulars 1 PC 4 for 15 bag lb. 29c it. tall cans 2 lbs. 2 3 cans no. i 0 qC cans Goering Decree Indicates Rout Of Jew Business (Continued From Page One) impossible to tell wnether any sort of confiscatory measure was planned or whether foreign Jews would be made to give up property they owned in Germany.

The question was raised at once whether the United States-German treaty of 1933 was applicable insofar as the decree might affect American citizens of Jewish origin who own property in Germany, whether they reside here or not. Diplomats Worried Both foreign diplomats and foreign banking interests were surprised by Goerings decree, and they were uncertain still as to its exact implications. But they expressed belief that it prepared I lie way to complete elimination of Jewish business interests in Germany probably at sacrifice prices. It was estimated that if utilization" were resorted to, a mailer of several billions of marks might be involved. (A mark is worth about 40 cents).

Commenting on the decree, today's issue of the newspaper Voelkiseher Ecobachtcr, officii: organ of the Nazi party, said: Foreign Jewry has so vehemently attacked National Socialist (Nazi) Germany that it must be feared that foreign Jews will transfer property abroad and use it in combating Germany. The decree prevented this. The new Nazi attention to Jews was reflected in an official order issued by the superintendent of Vienna municipal schools, instructing school principals that Jewish pupils must be separated immediately from Aryans ano put into special schools. Loyalists Fail in Halting i he Rebel (Continued From Page One) in Central Spain was concentrated between Teruel and the sea in an attempt to cheek the Nationalist drive south of Valencia. Loyalist communiques admitted that a severe bombardment of their lines on the coast by Nationalist warships and airplanes had forced the loyalists to retreat.

STREAMLINE PLANTS LONDON (U.R) British farmers are streamlining plants to produce finer fruits and vegetables and more beautiful flowers, the Agricultural Research council reveals. HELP KIDNEYS PASS 3 LBS. A DAY Io'tor pitiy your kidnoyn contain 15 miles of tiuy til or filters which Help to purify the M'd nod kp you healthy. Most people paM itbout plots a luy or about 3 pounds of want. I ie ii or n' linly puttUK with ninarting nrid hurtling hhovM there limy something wrong wit ft yotir kidneys or bluddrr.

An fri'i of finds fir poisons in your blood, when dun to fnn'tioinl kidney disorders, may he Hi of iruodi'K hiicki.o!., rheumatio pains, pains, nf pep and energy, got-tiiu up night-, vi ell i ny, puffinchs under th 'vs, hi fidu hen and di7.inem. Don't wait! your druyicmt for Doans DHm, used sueressfully by million for over 40 years. They givo happy relief find will help thq miles of kidney tube! flush out poisonous wasta from your blood Ciet Doun' nlla. DAISY BRAND FIRST GRADE Butter LONGHORN Cheese Milk 3 SILVER NUT Oleo SERRA Bflot Sauce FOR SALAD Vegetables a2 Fancy Mission Peas 2N0. 2 cans )c Amita Pears 2 ige.

vk cans HAIR OIL Camels, Chesters, Luckies, CIGARETS WITH 2 PKGS. Morton salt.

Get access to Newspapers.com

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

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Santa Maria Times
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Santa Maria Times Archive

Pages Available:
705,841
Years Available:
1882-2024