anaheim-gazette 1921-06-02
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COOPERATION IN CALIFORNIA
Closer cooperation between the agricultural and industrial interests of California will be brought about, it is believed, as a result of the conference on state-wide development held in Sacramento Saturday, May 20. The meeting, which was attended by delegates from almost every part of the state, is expected to bring about some very definite results, for the reason that it served to clear away much of the misunderstanding between the representatives of the agricultural and manufacturing interests and to promote a better relationship between the cities and the country districts.
The first step in this direction will be the amalgamation of the California development board and the California Industries association into an organization which will be, as it were, a clearing house for all efforts along the line of promoting California and developing its various industries. Resolutions adopted by the conference endorsed this plan to unite the two organizations and pledged support to the new body which will be thoroughly representative of all the interests of the country districts as well as of the cities. Under the direction of this new "boost" organization, it is expected that the producing and marketing interests will be brought into a close relationship which will have manifold results in developing California industries.
Every speaker at the conference urged the need of cooperation between all the varied interests of the state as a necessary step toward California's fullest development. Throughout the discussion there ran the theme of "get together" so that the farmers and the manufacturers, the producers and the distributors may all be working harmoniously. This thought was emphasized by Frederick J. Koster, chairman of the conference, who in the metropolis, he pointed out, there could be no crops in the interior, and conversely, if there were no crops in the valley and upon the farm lands of the state there would be less for the banks of the cities to do.
The importance of water power development as an essential aid to agriculture was laid before the conference by W. E. Creed, president of the Pacific Gas & Electric company, who showed that because of the fuel shortage the interests of agriculturists are vitally dependent upon an adequate supply of power from hydro-electric sources. Mr. Creed pointed out that California's future destiny can be attained only by rapid increase in the volume of hydro-electric power to serve the farming interests as well as those of the factories. He said:
"California is blessed with an immense volume of potential water power. We have more than our fair share and in addition to this we have very advantageous conditions for power development. We have the population to support industrial expansion, and we have a geographical situation on the Pacific which places us in a most favorable position for this development.
"How are we to reach our destiny? It has seemed to me for several years that as government reflects what the people demand our destiny will be reached only if our people are brought to understand the economics of the situation. The interdependence of all our industries upon one another must be recognized. Cooperation in the dairy industry is not enough. Cooperation in fruit industry is not enough. Cooperation in marketing is not enough. We must realize that no one thing is responsible for holding up our great social and economic structure which we are striving to expand. We must unite in one great effort as a whole to add to the structure upon which our future and our prosperity depend."
Other interesting conferences were given by Lynch, manager of Cisco Chamber of Commerce methods of distribution, and by Dr. President of the Californias Farm Bureau, who work accomplished legislation. Joseph H. King, Oakland Chamber of Commerce developers.
The conference ensuredposal made by R. B. H., Cisco, for enlarging field of state products including in San Francisco.
THE GENERAL GROUP
Signing of the deem bill by Governor Schmitz it possible for the fish mission to announce regulations that sportsmen after August.
The fish and game like the fish and game sportsmen now know were there any sweeter drastic changes in governing riflemen or afield.
In general, the all-game commission was fit the legal seasons when game is food. In the case came possible after interesting sportsmen the senate in deciding majority to defend demand of hunters their self-supportedests be kept separatealliances" with agriculture related and conflictive work. As regards o
Every speaker at the conference urged the need of cooperation between all the varied interests of the state as a necessary step toward California's fullest development. Throughout the discussion there ran the theme of "get together" so that the farmers and the manufacturers, the producers and the distributors may all be working harmoniously. This thought was emphasized by Frederick J. Koster, chairman of the conference, who in outlining the purpose of the meeting said:
"We hope to bring about a definite organized movement for closer cooperation between agriculture and industries in California. This should mark the beginning of a very definite step out of which should grow a great beneficial movement. We all realize that California has wonderful assets and we know that to make the most of these we must intelligently organize in the spirit of cooperation."
Governor William D. Stephens made a strong plea for state-wide union and cooperation. He said:
"This makes me think of the old-fashioned town meeting. It does me good to know that you can come together in this fashion to talk about doing things for the betterment of the state. It is a wonderful state and it is your duty as well as mine to encourage the development of the state and do all we can to build up its many industries. The way to boost is to build up and not tear down, to praise not to criticise. There is nothing to equal California in any part of the globe and I am for every part of it from San Diego to Siskiyou."
G. Harold Powell, of Los Angeles, general manager of the California Fruit Growers' Exchange, emphasized the benefits of organization by relating to the conference the wonderful results of the cooperative marketing of the citrus crops in southern California. He urged the organization of the agencies of distribution and marketing to take care of the rapidly developing industries of the state.
Charles K. McIntosh, of San Francisco, vice-president of the Bank of California, gave an interesting outline of the inter-relationship of the banks and the farmers. Without the bank in industries upon one another must be recognized. Cooperation in the dairy industry is not enough. Cooperation in marketing is not enough. We must realize that no one thing is responsible for holding up our great social and economic structure which we are striving to expand. We must unite in one great effort as a whole to add to the structure upon which our future and our prosperity depend.
"Our cooperation must not sail under the banner of selfish interest. We must adopt the banner of service, of understanding, of seeking to contribute to the destiny in which we are so much concerned. Then our cooperation will be effected and will succeed.
"Irrigation depends on a very large extent on power. Nearly one-half of the irrigation projects in the state are made possible only through pumping plants, and as the transformation of crops in California has come about through irrigation, the development of local manufacturing industries dependent on agriculture for raw materials has followed, so there is a very close relation between agriculture and manufacturing. As the buying power in the cities increases the market for agricultural products increase. The markets will depend on increased buying power in the centers of population and the buying power depends on the growth of manufacturing industries in those centers of population. So you can well afford as agriculturists to encourage manufacturing, to encourage industries, because nothing else can contribute so largely to the growth of markets.
"At the very foundation of the manufacturing industry lies power. The future of industry in this state is going to be circumscribed by the amount of development of hydro-electric power. Programs now proposed are enormous and yet I am afraid to say that these programs, large as they are, may not prove sufficient for industry in California after a few years. There will be new uses for power in the arts and industries as time goes on.
"Situated as we are, facing the possibilities of this great industrial development, we can look forward to achieving it by harnessing the waters..."
STUDENTS
Have you visited the Telephone office? If not so at once, and enter the contest. All High School students are eligible.
Write a story of your visit—what you see; how telephone service is not self contained, but is dependent on each of the 12,700,000 telephones connected to the Bell system in the United States.
Who will be the boy and girl in Orange county win the "free talk" to any place in the United States?
Ask your teacher about it. Additional information may be had from the manager of the Pacific phone Company.
and making California in truth the electrical paradise."
Other interesting addresses to the conference were given by Robert Newton Lynch, manager of the San Francisco Chamber of Commerce, who discussed methods of advertising rural districts, and by Dr. W. H. Walker, president of the California Federation of Farm Bureaus, who described the work accomplished by that organization. Joseph H. King, president of the Oakland Chamber of Commerce, spoke of Chambers of Commerce as industry developers.
The conference endorsed the proposal made by R. B. Hale, of San Francisco, for enlarging further the exhibit of state products in the Ferry building in San Francisco.
THE GENERAL GAME SEASONS
Signing of the deer and bird-seasons bills by Governor Stephens has made it possible for the fish and game commission to announce in a general way, the regulations that will govern sportsmen after August 1st.
The fish and game districts remain, like the fish and game commission, as sportsmen now know them. Neither were there any sweering, or needlessly drastic changes in the restrictions governing riflemen or scatter-gunners afield.
In general, the aim of the fish and game commission was to more closely fit the legal seasons to the natural season when game is best for sport and food. In the case of birds, this became possible after the main question interesting sportsmen was settled by the senate in deciding by overwhelming majority to defer to the state-wide demand of hunters and anglers that their self-supported conservation interests be kept separate from "entangling alliances" with agriculture or other unrelated and conflicting forms of public work. As regards deer, the necessity of curtailing hunters was somewhat open into closed districts, for which there never has been any specific warrant by law, similar to that mad for taking legally-killed deer under affidavit in Sec. 626-p of the penal code.
Dove season remains as now, but rabbits have been given the same season and bag-limit as quail, the ranchers being protected by re-enactment of the "landowner's privileges" to kill them whenever damaging crops.
Earlier opening on ducks will automatically dispose of numerous complaints of ducks damaging crops in early October, and will give sportsmen access to the "first flight" of young springs, the best that visit the south. As the normal October hot spell is as apt to come after as before the middle of the month, once duck-hunters become adjusted to it, they will approve the change, particularly as it curtails shooting at lean mating birds in the spring. Stopping spring shooting in which California set the pace for the nation, has proved the best thing ever done for the water fowl.
Other seasons remain as sportsmen already are familiar with them.
MAKE CUSTARDS AND WHIPS WHEN EGGS ARE PLENTIFUL
Simple Dishes of This Type Are Nutritious and Easily Digested
In the early spring and summer, when eggs are plentiful and cheap, the thrifty among the housekeepers utilize plenty of them for desserts. When this is done, the rest of the meal does not need to be quite so "hearty."
The following recipes are recommended by food specialists of the United States department of agriculture:
Soft Custard.
1 cup milk.
1-4 teaspoon vanilla.
1 egg.
2 tablespoons sugar.
1-16 teaspoon salt.
Heat the milk in a double boiler.
SCISSORS IN THE KITCHEN USEFUL FOR MANY THINGS
Medium-sized scissors hanging in a convenient place in the kitchen are a valuable help. Here are some of the purposes for which they will be found useful, according to workers in the experiment kitchen in the United States department of agriculture:
For cutting cold meat into cubes.
For cutting celery or green peppers into small pieces for pickles or salads.
For shredding cabbage or lettuce.
For cutting up raising or dates.
For cutting out the center membrane of a grapefruit in preparing it for the table.
For cutting out the woody core and eyes of fresh pineapples.
For trimming the rind from breakfast bacon.
After the scissors are used each time they should be carefully washed and dried.
IF WOMEN ONLY KNEW
What a Heap of Happiness It Would Bring to Anaheim Homes
Hard to do housework with an aching back.
Brings you hours of misery at leisure or at work.
If women only knew the cause—that Backache pains often come from weak kidneys.
Twould save much needless woe.
Doan's Kidney Pills are for weak kidneys.
Read what an Anaheim citizen says:
Mrs. S. B. Kramer, 238 N. Lemon St., says: "An operation weakened my kidneys and about two years ago I began to suffer from pains across the small of my back. My right kidney felt a though it was swollen and ached dreadfully. I often had dull dizzy
when game is best for sport and food. In the cas of birds, this became possible after the main question interesting sportsmen was settled by the senate in deciding by overwhelming majority to defer to the state-wide demand of hunters and anglers that their self-supported conservation interests be kept separate from "entangling alliances" with agriculture or other unrelated and conflicting forms of public work. As regards deer, the necessity of curtailing hunters was somewhat corralled, or rather, stampeded by a "drive" of the forestry and lumbering interests to delay the hunting-season until after the vacation-season to minimize the fire hazard in the mountains. The result was to favor those sections wanting an extremely late dear-season. For example, the hunters of southern California will henceforth open the season on the day they have closed it the last two years, namely, Sept. 15th. The south and the Sierra will close the same day, Oct. 16th.
Attempts to enact a "one buck" limit, considered as essential to the preserving of deer in the south, were unsuccessful, and the limit remains two bucks or forked-horns or better.
In the bird-seasons, the best set of regulations ever attained, was secured by the fish and game commission, the main changes being the moving forward of duck season two weeks to open Oct. 1 and close Jan. 15th; and the delaying of quail-season two weeks to open Nov. 1st and close with ducks Jan. 15th. These seasons hold all over the state, and show deference to the desire of up-coast sportsmen for the same season as the cities, whatever it might be, excepting in the case of deer, wherein earlier opened was wanted. It has been secured by re-enactment of the present Aug. 1st opening in Ventura and counties beyond.
Sage-hens have been given a closed-season in Inyo and Mono, where almost gone, but an earlier season is made in northeastern California, where plentiful, so they can be shot while still prime.
All quail are alike under the law: valley, desert or mountain, except the low limit on the latter. Uniform seasons all over the state eliminate the difficulty over transporting them from plenty of them for desserts. When this is done, the rest of the meal does not need to be quite so "hearty."
The following recipes are recommended by food specialists of the United States department of agriculture:
Soft Custard.
1 cup milk.
1-4 teaspoon vapilla.
1 egg.
2 tablespoons sugar.
1-16 teaspoon salt.
Heat the milk in a double boiler. Mix the eggs in a bowl with the sugar and salt. Add hot milk slowly, stirring, and return mixture to the double boiler. Cook until custard will coat a silver spoon. Strain and serve. If the custard curdles, set the pan into cold water and beat the custard until smooth.
Steamed or Baked Custard
1 pint milk.
2 eggs.
1-8 teaspoon nutmeg or cinnamon.
1-4 cup sugar.
1-8 teaspoon salt.
Mix eggs as for soft custard. Strain into custard cups and steam until firm over hot water, which is boiling gently. To bake, strain the custard into cups and place in a pan of warm water. Bake in a moderate oven until the custard is firm. To test a steamed or baked custard, slip a knife blade to the bottom of the cup in the center of the custard and draw out without turning. If the knife is not coated the custard has cooked enough. Grate the nutmeg over the surface and cool before serving.
1 quart milk.
1-4 teaspoon salt.
1-2 cup sugar.
5 eggs (yolks).
1-4 teaspoon vanilla.
Prepare as a soft custard. The whites should be beaten light and 2 tablespoons powdered sugar added for the meringue. When the custard is cool it may be poured into sauce dishes and the meringue dropped in large spoonfuls into it.
Custard Pudding.
1-2 cup pearl tapioca or rice.
2 eggs (yolks).
1-2 teaspoon vanilla.
1-2 cup sugar.
2 eggs (whites).
1-8 teaspoon salt.
Soak the tapioca in enough cold water to cover it until it absorbs the water. Add the milk and cook in a double boiler until the tapioca is soft and transparent. Combine the yolks of eggs with sugar and salt and add to the mixture in the double boiler. Cook
Backache pain often come from weak kidneys.
Twould save much needless woe.
Doan's Kidney Pills are for weak kidneys.
Read what an Anaheim citizen says:
Mrs. S. B. Kramer, 238 N. Lemon St., says: "An operation weakened my kidneys and about two years ago I began to suffer from pains across the small of my back. My right kidney felt as though it was swollen and ached dreadfully. I often had dull dizzy headaches too. My housework was often neglected, I was so run down. My kidneys didn't act right, either. I read of Doan's Kidney Pills and used them as directed, getting them at Heylings' Pharmacy. They soon cured me of all signs of the trouble. The backaches left and my kidneys were regulated."
Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan's Kidney Pills—the same that Mrs. Kramer had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N.Y.
Eva Lyons Smith
Plano
Classical-Thilo Bocker Method
Orange County Representative
CHRISTENSEN SCHOOL
OF POPULAR MUSIC.
Studio, 211 W. Chartr's,
Anaheim
Phone 549-J
Res. Fullerton, Phone 452-M
All quail are alike under the law; valley, desert or mountain, except the low limit on the latter. Uniform seasons all over the state eliminate the difficulty over transporting them from
1-2 cup pearl tapioca or rice.
2 eggs (yolks).
1-2 teaspoon vanilla.
1-2 cup sugar.
2 eggs (whites).
1-8 teaspoon salt.
Soak the tapioca in enough cold water to cover it until it absorbs the water. Add the milk and cook in a double boiler until the tapioca is soft and transparent. Combine the yolks of eggs with sugar and salt and add to the mixture in the double boiler. Cook until it thickens. Add sifly beaten whites and flavoring, and when cold serve. Rice must be cooked in boiling water until soft.
Apple Whip.
2 cups apple sauce.
3 eggs (whites).
Cream for serving.
Cook 6 or 8 medium-sized tart apples until soft in just enough water to keep them from burning. Add sirup to sweeten sufficiently and one-eighth teaspoon grated nutmeg. Press the apple sauce through a strainer and add to it the stiffly beaten whites of eggs. Beat until light and foamy. Pile onto saucers and serve with fresh cream or a custard sauce made of the egg yolks. This sauce may be prepared by the same method as for soft custard, omitting the whites of eggs. Canned fruit, such as peaches, figs, cherries, or guava may be substituted in the same proportion for apples.
PIPE AND FITTINGS
Slightly Used. At Saving
Prices. Quality Guaranteed.
S. H. GERSON
Phone Boyle 1724
549 Mission Road, Los Angeles, Cal.
FREE—FREE—FREE Examination by Specialist. IF YOU ARE SICK,
Take Special Treatments, Adjustments, Massage, Electric Vibration,
NOW. All for Only $1.00. Write or Come in Soon because offer is limited.
DR. HEGGE, Office, 901 Wright & Callender Bldg., Cor. 4th & Hill Sts Los Angeles.
NOTICE OF DOG TAX
The annual dog tax for 1921-22 is now due and payable at the marshal's office, 206 East Center street. If not paid on or before July 1 tax will be delinquent and dog will be killed.
N. F. STEADMAN,
City Marshal.
JUNE
Brunswick Records
—ON SALE TODAY—
This comprehensive list of June records is before the public; selected, orchestrated and recorded with thought for variety, freshness and finish. We are confident that it will meet with the appreciation of every class of music-lovers.
Come in. You'll surely want to hear these records
CONCERT
10030 Santa Lucia (Neapolitan Folk Song) Tenor, in Italian Mario Chamlee
30006 Elli, Elli (Viddish Song of Lourning) (Schulitt-Fisher) Seprane Dorothy Jardon
15020 Babismian Girl—Heart Boo'd Down (Act II) (Balle) Baritone For All Eternity (Mascheroni Baritone) Richard Bonelli
15021 I'll Take You Home Again, Kathleen (Westendorf) Tenor Thao Karl and Crescent Male Trio Lasa of Killman (Stickles) Tenor Theo Karla
9041 Ressary (Neptun) Contralto Elizabeth Lennox Creala Song (MacFadyen) Contralto Elizabeth Lennox
VIOLIN
10032 Maxurka, in A Minor (Chopin-Krautler) Viola Solo Max Rosea
INSTRUMENTAL
5091 Spring Zephyr—Waltz Intermezzo (Vessella)
Victory Festival March (Vessella) Vessella's Italian Band Vessella's Italian Band
POPULAR
2090 Little Cotton Dolly (Buck-Gelbel) Criterion Male Quartet Kentucky Bake (Buck-Gelbel) Criterion Male Quartet
2080 Whip-Peon Will From "Sally" (De Sylvo Kern) Seprane and Tenor Irna Audrey and Sam Ash Look for the Silver Lining From "Sally" (De Sylvo Kern) Seprane and Tenor Irene Audrey and Sam Ash
2071 Don't Leave Me, Mother Mino (Costello-Goodman-Stept) Baritone Ernest Hare Wyoming—Lullaby (Williams) Tenor and Baritone Chas Hart and Ellott Shaw
"IT'S A GIFT"
really is, this art of looking cool and nifty, these hot sumdays. But it's easily acquired.
It's quite likely that if you ask one of these spick-andfellows how he does it you'll find that he's wearing
arts and collars which we have professionally laundered
not merely washed and ironed.
really is, this art of looking cool and nifty, these hot summers days. But it’s easily acquired.
It’s quite likely that if you ask one of these spick-and-lick fellows how he does it you’ll find that he’s wearing shirts and collars which we have professionally laundered not merely washed and ironed.
His linen has had the benefit of a process of ours which uses the pores of the fabric, strengthens the fibres, and protects from grit and grime.
And with shirts and collars such as these you’ll find it easy matter to always look your best.
Just send us your bundle and we’ll gladly show you. One, and our driver will call.
Anaheim Laundry Company
Phone Pacific 18
12 South Lemon St. Anaheim, Cal.