anaheim-gazette 1927-05-12
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Visitors Coming To Attend Show
Restaurants Report Increasing Business Because of Influx
In spite of the fact that a week will elapse before the gates are opened admitting visitors to the seventh annual Valencia Orange Show, to be held here May 19-28, already tourists and residents of California are flocking to Anaheim to visit the "Big Top," where Orange county's queen of crops, the Valencia orange, will be displayed in regal splendor. Restaurants located through the city report a large increase of business during the past week, and already the hotels are receiving scores of requests for reservations during the 10 days of the show.
While the California Valencia Orange Show, since its first inception, has been a festival of increasing beauty and merit, this year's display will far exceed any previously attempted and will without a doubt, broadcast the fame of California and Orange county throughout the width and breadth of the land. When the public is admitted on the nineteenth of this month, it will enter a veritable fairyland, for the interior decorations have been planned upon a lavish and artistic scale, exceeding anything ever thought of in previous years.
With an orange crop up to and ahead of the standard, Orange county is determined to pay full homage to the luscious fruit, which this year will add more than $25,000,000 to her wealth.
From its humble beginning of two carloads in 1883, the Valencia orange industry has jumped in 44 years to 15,000 carloads, the conservative estimate placed on this year's shipment.
AUCTION OF THREE REAL GOOD PROPERTIES ON Monday, May 16th
PROPERTY No. 1
at 420 East Adele Street, consisting of a 6-room house on lot 50x150. Will be sold at 1:30 sharp.
PROPERTY No. 2
at 1214 West Broadway; rear house on large lot, 50x170. Will be sold at 3 P. M.
PROPERTY No. 3
Next to above, on West Broadway. A vacant lot, 50x150, will be sold immediately after.
The house on Adele Street is a 6-room, with all built-in features; dandy lot with plums, apricots and walnut trees.
The property on West Broadway is a 3-room rear house on vacant lot; street already paved and next to it is a large vacant lot, all of which must be sold on above date.
In fact it might that the bulk of the ment has been done 10 years.
The orange in motive, motion pivot industrial endeavour radical and light days the orange groves and shipped sized, they are modern and up-to-date in huge motor washhed, graded and tissue wrappers boxes to the great.
In the old days just a box of oranges undersized fruit, in makeshift way in ordinary ware is shipped in and reach the w marred and unfit has happened in.
As the history or as it better bows those who read wonder that Oranges pays homage to not her, but also as the land of glorious sunshine.
PLEBISCO
President Coolio pino plebiscite ardor or mitigate and pacifist agitation of Philippe it will serve to confidence in the ments where greet There now our prospect for the turbing movement present than any government: cascades the islands, swining ditions through The President ally right. He of the interests but of people of the U vote under the would be unconvenient to interrupt; the and—almost certi
PROPERTY No. 2
at 1214 West Broadway; rear house on large lot,
50x170. Will be sold at 3 P. M.
PROPERTY No. 3
Next to above, on West Broadway. A vacant lot,
50x150, will be sold immediately after.
The house on Adele Street is a 6-room, with all built-in features; dandy lot with plums, apricots and walnut trees.
The property on West Broadway is a 3-room rear house on vacant lot; street already paved and next to it is a large vacant lot, all of which must be sold on above date.
PARTIES OWNING THESE PROPERTIES HAVE INSTRUCTED ME TO SELL REGARDLESS FOR SPOT CASH
Anyone contemplating buying any of these properties can make arrangements with Loan Company of Building and Loan to finance them.
SUCCESSFUL BIDDERS on the house at East Adele Street will pay $200 at Sale. Buyers of rear house on W. Broadway will pay $150 at Sale. BUYERS OF LOT on West Broadway will pay $100 at Sale. Here is a real opportunity to procure some good property.
F. A. and G. E. MURCH, Owners.
JACK MARTIN, Irish Auctioneer
PHONE 865, ANAHEIM
"SELLS IT"
Don’t Forget
Our big Auction every Saturday at our Auction House, 137 South Lemon St., Anaheim. The house is always full of bargains. We sell at private sale all the time.
JACK MARTIN, Proprietor.
A Word that Earns Millions for California Citrus Growers
VALUABLE beyond price is a trademark, or name, which people use in buying.
As a mark of identification it enables buyers to repeat a satisfactory purchase. Thus, the producer of meritorious merchandise, by giving his goods a name, may win a preference for his line and a premium for his care.
In America "Sunkist" has become a household word. It has a value comparable to that of "Kodak," "Palmolive," "Quaker Oats," and "Old Dutch Cleanser." It is consumers willingly pay a premium this brand because of its known quality, and dealers, because it is easy to sell. Hence, "Sunkist" invariably ages a higher price, over any perishable unknown fruit of equal grade and quality.
The goodwill toward "Sunkist" asset that has required 20 years' time to a large advertising investment to Yet the minute you start marketing the Exchange your fruit shares in it.
The California Fruit Growers Earn
VALUABLE beyond price is a trademark, or name, which people use in buying.
As a mark of identification it enables buyers to repeat a satisfactory purchase. Thus, the producer of meritorious merchandise, by giving his goods a name, may win a preference for his line and a premium for his care.
In America "Sunkist" has become a household word. It has a value comparable to that of "Kodak," "Palmolive," "Quaker Oats," and "Old Dutch Cleanser." It is the world's best known brand of fresh fruit. More people prefer it than all other brands of citrus fruits combined. On oranges and lemons it has the significance of the word "sterling" on silver.
For 20 years grower members of the California Fruit Growers Exchange have been building this reputation and leadership by marketing only their better grades under the name "Sunkist." The uniformly good quality of Sunkist Oranges, Lemons and Grapefruit has been continuously advertised. To millions "Sunkist" is not merely a trade-mark, but a grade-mark that they invariably specify to get satisfactory fruit.
Thus "Sunkist" has won the confidence, not only of the trade, but of the public.
Oranges Sunkist Lemons Grapefruit
THE California Fruit Growers Exchange is a non-profit organization of 11,000 citrus fruit growers, producing about 75% of the California citrus crop, operated for them on a co-operative basis. Its object is to develop the national and international for California oranges, lemons and grapefruit by concerted effort, and to provide an organization that will sell the fruit of its members most advantageously and at the least Receipts from sales, less only the actual costs of operation, are returned to the growers.
Applications are received through all of the Exchange's 201 local packing associates at the central office in Los Angeles.
ANAHEIM GAZETTE
In fact it might be said in passing,
that the bulk of this enormous development has been distributed over the past
10 years.
The orange industry, like the automotive, motion picture and other huge industrial endeavors, has passed through radical and lightning changes during very recent years. Where in the old days the oranges were packed in the groves and shipped unwrapped and un-sized, they are now brought to the modern and up-to-date packing houses in huge motor trucks, where they are washed, graded and wrapped in printed tissue wrappers and shipped in standard boxes to the great markets of the world.
In the old days a box of oranges was just a box of oranges and nothing more. Undersized fruit, culls, etc., were heaped in makeshift boxes and sent on their way in ordinary freight cars. Now they are shipped in large refrigerator cars and reach the ultimate consumer unmarred and unblemished, and all this has happened in a very few years.
As the history of the orange industry, or as it better be termed, the romance of the orange industry, is broadcast, those who read and hear of it do not wonder that Orange county each year pays homage to the fruit that has made not her, but all of California famous as the land of the golden apple and glorious sunshine.
PLEBISCITE VETOED
President Coolidge's veto of the Filipino plebiscite bill will not cool the ardor or mitigate the efforts of political and pacifist agencies active in the agitation of Philippine independence, but it will serve to strengthen the public confidence in the wisdom of his judgments where great issues are at stake.
There now can be no immediate prospect for the success of this disturbing movement—more disturbing at present than at any time since the government: accused guardianship of the islands, owing to the gravity of conditions throughout the entire East.
The President in this action is eternally right. He was thinking not only of the interests of the Filipino people, but of them as well of the people of the United States. Such a vote under the circumstances not only would be unconvincing, but would serve to interrupt the progress of the islands—and almost certainly—would operate to
State Parks Are Given Impetus
State Parks Bond Act Paves Way for Expansion
Friends of the movement to Save the Calaveras Big Trees are highly pleased by the action of the California legislature in passing the State Park Bonds Act, which paves the way for state participation in the purchase of areas to be set aside for state park purposes. Under the terms of the act a $6,000,000 bond issue will be available for the purchase of areas approved by the state park commission and a state park survey. Every dollar of state funds so appropriated, however, must be matched by another dollar secured from private contributions or other outside sources.
The Save the Redwoods League, the Point Lobos State Park Association and other organizations promoting state projects likewise hall the passage of the State Park Bonds Act with pleasure and satisfaction.
Four bills were enacted by the legislature which will have a very beneficial effect on the state park movement. The first, the governor's own administration measure, creates the department of natural resources as one of the important branches of state government under Governor Young's reorganization scheme.
While the state park bureau administered by a state park commission, will be under the jurisdiction of the department of natural resources, the scope of the department will be far broader. It will include such important bureaus as mines and mining, forestry, irrigation and fish and game. The governor has already signed the bill creating this department. The State Bond Act, being a constitutional amendment, does not require the governor's signature. This was one of three state park bills introduced by Senator Arthur H. Breed of Alameda. The two other bills are now before the governor for his signature. One provides for the appointment of a state park commission, and the other provides for a survey of state park properties and needs.
The Calaveras Grove Association, incorporated to promote the acquisition of North and South Groves of Calaveras
Annual Field Day For Grain Growers
The sixth annual grain growers' Field Day was held on Saturday, May 7. The growers who attended were taken on a tour of the grain growing sections of the southern part of the county, special attention being given to the grain variety plots and rod row tests which are being carried on by the extension service of Orange county in co-operation with the grain growers' department of the farm bureau.
The growers met on the Irvine ranch and, after looking at some plots of Hero barley, drove on to the El Toro district, where a wonderful lunch was served by the El Toro women. After lunch W. W. Mackle of the agronomy division, University of California, explained the methods used in developing varieties of grain for certain sections and conditions.
After lunch the tour went south, ending its trip near Capistrano, where rod rows of 37 different varieties of grain are being grown. Each variety was described and commented on by Mr. Mackle at this stop. In these plots Hero and Oregon Club Mariout barneys were doing unusually well, while Kanota oats is outstanding at this time.
The tour was in charge of John Osterman, vice-president of the farm bureau and chairman of the grain growers' department.
The good queen will never really get to understand American psychology unless she buys a couple of lots in Florida.
In these demonstrations are: John Knudson, La Habra; John W. Crill, Garden Grove; N. J. Stehly, Anahelm; P. H. Krick, Orangethorpe; G. C. Bradford, West Orange; Henry Lockett, Villa Park; E. E. Campbell, El Moderna; B. J. McReynolds, Tustin; Ed Lang, Placentia; Carl Hankey, San Juan Capistrano. Yorba Linda and Cypress not appointed yet.
All citrus growers are invited to attend these demonstrations.
There now can be no immediate prospect for the success of this disturbing movement—more disturbing at present than at any time since the government: accused guardianship of the islands, owing to the gravity of conditions throughout the entire East.
The President in this action is eternally right. He was thinking not only of the interests of the Filipino people, but of them as well of the people of the United States. Such a vote under the circumstances not only would be unconvincing, but would serve to interrupt the progress of the islands and—almost certainly—would operate to involve the government of the United States in grave trouble.
The Filipino politicians in the islands, their representatives in this country, and their friends, in and out of congress, cannot be taken to be reliable conservators of the interests either of this people, the people of the islands, or of the best interests of modern civilization.
There isn't a government in the world that does not recognize in the Philippines the most important strategic point in the Pacific area, and that the control of these islands means, perhaps, more to the United States and white civilization than any other one thing within the cognizance of modern diplomacy.
A Chicago educator predicts that we will return to the ethics of the Victorian era. This will be all right if we don't return to the Victorian fashions, too.
Control Season Now On for Scaly Bark
Twelve field demonstrations featuring the proper methods of scaly bark control on orange trees are being held by the agricultural extension service this week and next, according to announcement issued by H. E. Wahlberg, Orange county farm advisor.
He brings to the attention of citrus growers in all parts of the county, that the spring months are the best months for treating this bark disease of the irrigation and fish and game. The governor has already signed the bill creating this department. The State Bond Act, being a constitutional amendment, does not require the governor's signature. This was one of three state park bills introduced by Senator Arthur H. Breed of Alameda. The two other bills are now before the governor for his signature. One provides for the appointment of a state park commission, and the other provides for a survey of state park properties and needs.
The Calaveras Grove Association, incorporated to promote the acquisition of North and South Groves of Calaveras for state park purposes, will join with other organizations interested in the development of a comprehensive state park program in California, in endeavoring to secure ratification of the State Bond Act next November. It will also center effort on the securing of private contributions toward the purchase of the Calaveras Big Trees, the largest and most important groves of the Sequoia gigantea now remaining in private control, so that when the state park bonds are voted the association will be in a position to have funds allotted from the bond sale toward their purchase. In this respect the association hopes to follow the same plan contemplated by the Save the Redwoods League, which is interested in the preservation of some of the finest of the coast redwoods, the Sequoia sempervirens of Humboldt and Del Norte counties. J. D. Grant of San Francisco, chairman of the board of directors of the Save the Redwoods League, makes this statement:
"It is the desire and intention of the Save the Redwoods League to raise sufficient funds from private gift and other outside sources to make possible the matching of these funds with monies from the state park bond issue, and establish a great redwood forest reservation of national significance. The response of the people of California to the cry 'Save the Redwoods' has been remarkable in its unanimity. Already the league has been able to accomplish the saving of a 15-mile strip of primeval redwood forest along the Redwood highway, as well as a number of isolated groves of remarkable beauty and grandeur. With the possibility of further financial aid under the state park bond issue, we are confident that our efforts will prove even more successful than in the past. Private contributors, particularly in the East, will be moved to do much more now that they know the state of California has definitely signified interest."
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Control Season Now On for Scaly Bark
Twelve field demonstrations featuring the proper methods of scaly bark control on orange trees are being held by the agricultural extension service this week and next, according to announcement issued by H. E. Wahlberg, Orange county farm advisor.
He brings to the attention of citrus growers in all parts of the county, that the spring months are the best months for treating this bark disease of the orange, while the tree is in active sap condition and the scaling processes take place more readily.
A new feature of the demonstrations this year is the work by community project leaders who will assist the farm advisor in conducting the details of the field demonstration.
The following schedule of demonstrations has been arranged:
Tuesday, May 10
10 a. m.—La Habra, place of John Knudson, Central avenue, corner Walnut street.
2 p. m.—Garden Grove, place of J. W. Crill, South Palm avenue,¼ mile north of Chapman avenue.
Wednesday, May 11
10 a. m.—Anaheim, place of N. J. Stehly, Brookhurst road,¼ mile south of Ball road.
10 a. m.—West Orange, place of Fred Schlueter, West La Veta avenue, corner Flower street.
2 p. m.—Tustin, Mabury ranch, corner Fruit street and Mabury street, one mile east of Santa Ana.
Thursday, May 12
10 a. m.—Villa Park, place of Henry Lockett, Santiago boulevard, half way between Olive and Villa Park.
10 a. m.—Orange thorpe-Fullerton, place of J. A. Shulte, Orangethorpe avenue, between Garden Grove road and Brookhurst road.
2 p. m.—El Modena, place of J. M. Brubaker, Prospect avenue,¼ mile north of Chapman.
Other demonstrations will be announced later for Placentia, Yorba Linda, Capistrano and Cypress.
The project leaders who will assist
New Invention to Aid Walnut Men
Apparatus Will Prevent Cracking in Drying Process
Losses due to walnuts cracking while in the process of drying cause many red marks in the books of Orange county and Southern California growers each year. Dehydration has been the problem.
Now George I. Bauer of Santa Ana, rancher-inventor, has perfected and patented a dehydrator, for which he claims success. Other dehydrators, attempting also to provide a means of drying walnuts, are on the market, but Bauer points out new principles embodied in his invention.
The new improvements are: first, the dehydrator is weather proof; second, it is insulated from heat loss; and, third, it is economical because of its simplicity in construction and operation.
Bauer has been working on his dehydrator for four years. For two years he has been making tests with a working model at 2600 North Flower street, Santa Ana. From the start the dehydrator worked satisfactorily, demonstrating the correctness of the principles involved, it is said.
The dehydrator, from outward appearance, is like a small silo. It is circular, standing about 9 feet high, and with a diameter of 8 feet. Heated air from a burner, either gas or electric, is blown in a circulating motion through the walnuts from the outer walls of the bins in towards the center, drying the walnuts, held in screen bins. A portion of the air may pass out through the adjustable outlet and new air drawn in to regulate the humidity, according to descriptions of the dehydrator.
Any amount, from a sack of walnuts to two and one-half tons, may be dried.
The blower circulating the air has a capacity of 4500 cubic feet a minute. Walnuts can be dried from 12 to 16 hours' time.
A decree of foreclosure against property at Anahel mhas been granted by Superior Judge E. J. Marks to Laura E. Fenstermacher, who sued John B. Christensen in connection with a $3300 mortgage.
Stehly, Anaheim; Thorpe; G. C. Bradett; Henry Lockett; Campbell, El Modena; Tustin; Ed Lang; Key, San Juan Capilla and Cypress not are invited to attributions.
ADM. 50¢
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