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Publications Anaheim Gazette 1927 September

anaheim-gazette 1927-09-22

1927-09-22 · Anaheim Gazette · page 4 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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Buena Park Notes (By W. C. MILLER) Two meetings of importance are scheduled for Buena Park in the near future. One is the Manchester Boulevard Improvement Association, to meet November 14, and the other is the Orange County Credit Men's Association, to meet some time in October. Mr. and Mrs. F. R. Wilson and Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Brown of Los Angeles were Friday guests of Mr. and Mrs. G. Frances Battelle. Floyd Dyer of St. Joseph, Mo., is visiting his aunt, Mrs. Robert Voorhies. Mrs. Frank Marsh and Mrs. George Warren of Glendale were over-night guests of Mrs. D. W. Hasson. The Ladies' Aid and Missionary Society had an all-day meeting Thursday. The forenoon was spent in cleaning the community hall and kitchen. A potluck dinner was enjoyed at noon, and a business meeting held in the afternoon. The Missionary Society will aid the cradle roll department in giving the annual cradle roll party September 29. All babies 3 years and under and their mothers are invited. Mrs. J. H. Spohn entertained with a dinner Friday night in honor of Buena Park's two newly wedded couples—Mr. and Mrs. Hershell Jones and Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Spohn. The contract for the Buena Park sewer system has been let to the Lane Construction Company of La Habra. Work will begin soon. The enrollment of the Buena Park school is still increasing; 363 were enrolled the first day. This is more than Anaheim had 25-years ago. The Sunday school met Friday evening in the Community hall, with the following present: Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bastady, Rev. B. Y. Neal, George Cole, Mrs. H. S. Horn, Mrs. L. P. Upshaw, Mrs. W. P. Strain, James Cole, Mrs. H. H. Haggarty, Mrs. J. B. Robinson, Mrs. G. S. Davis, Mrs. Rose Hartman, Mrs. E. Bastady, Mrs. Ralph Cummins, Miss Mildred Bacon, and Carl Bastady. Plans were made for three new classes. Wednesday evening the L. T. Wilsey New Outlet for Our Sunkist Fruit By Products Consume a Large Percentage of Crop Now During the 1916 crop year, 44,658 carloads of oranges, lemons, and grapefruit were produced and sold by California citrus growers. In 1926, this volume had risen to 63,640 carloads, an increase of nearly 43 per cent. In 1916, Florida shipped 20,925 cars of citrus fruits; in 1926, 36,750 carloads, an increase of over 75 per cent. But in spite of this ever increasing competition from both within and without, Sunkist growers had returned to them considerably more per car in 1926 than in 1916. The sales promotion efforts of the exchange have been largely responsible for this profit-making effort. In America, through continuous advertising by the exchange, "Sunkist" has become a household word. More people prefer it than all other brands of citrus fruits combined. Thus the word "Sunkist" alone will be a stimulus for future sales of exchange fruit. Sunkist advertising has educated the American public to a new appreciation of oranges and lemons—their healthfulness, their deliculousness and their multitude of uses, thus developing new consumers and persuading old users to consume more. Exchange investigators found that soda fountains did not push fresh fruit drinks because of the labor required to extract the juice by hand. So under the guidance of the exchange, approximately 41,000 electrical fruit juice extractors have been manufactured and sold at cost to soda fountains. Thus a new market for citrus fruit has been created. This year, it is estimated 2,500,000 boxes of oranges and lemons will be consumed through this one outlet. And in addition, more than a million glass hand reamers have been sold to increase the home consumption of orange and lemon drinks. People buy more fruit if it is displayed prominently and attractively. NOTICE Bae-Mar Law principal place Los Angeles County State Office Notice is here meeting of the 21st day of Session of Five was leaved up by the corporation day of October 20th. Advertised for unless pay be sold on the day to pay the debt together with expenses of sa Office 113 S. Los Anais Anaheim, NOTICE OF ERTY BY DEE WHEREAS Trust, dated January page 50 of D County, California her provisions there Mary M. Chan and convey described, being after describ Title Company Consumption of Fuel By Public Utilities More Than 73,000,000,000 Kilowatt-Hours Produced The total amount of electricity produced at public utility power plants in 1926 was 73,971,000,000 kilowatt-hours, according to a statement just made public by the geological survey of the department of the Interior. Of this total, 47.5 billion kilowatt-hours, or 64.5 per cent, was generated by the use of fuels and the remainder by the use of water power. Of the 47.5 billion kilo- drinks because of the labor required to extract the juice by hand. So under the guidance of the exchange, approximately 41,000 electrical fruit juice extractors have been manufactured and sold at cost to soda fountains. Thus a new market for citrus fruit has been created. This year, it is estimated 2,500,000 boxes of oranges and lemons will be consumed through this one outlet. And in addition, more than a million glass hand reamers have been sold to increase the home consumption of orange and lemon drinks. People buy more fruit if it is displayed prominently and attractively. So last year exchange promotion experts called on 59,082 leading retail grocers, fruit merchants, soda fountains, hotels and restaurants to arrange for window displays, introduce better fruit merchandising, methods and in other ways stimulate California citrus fruit sales. Foreign sales of exchange fruit for 1927 will be double as great as in any previous year. The United Kingdom, Europe, the Orient, the Hawaiian and Philippine Islands, New Zealand and Australia are being developed for larger shipments each succeeding year. The products plants of the exchange absorb thousands of carloads of oranges and lemons annually. Here lemons are converted into citric acid, lemon oil and citrus pectin, and oranges are made into orange oil and concentrate. Thus Sunkist growers dispose of all their fruit. This constant expansion of old and new consumer and dealer outlets is one of the many services rendered by the California Fruit Growers' Exchange. Secretary Jardine On Farm Life A line of the once popular song, "How you going to keep 'em down on the farm?" takes on special significance today, according to Secretary of Agriculture Jardine. A little less than fifty years ago, or in 1880, more than 71 per cent of the population of the United States was rural and this was primarily an agricultural nation. The 1920 census showed more than 51 per cent of the American people living in cities and towns. Latest statistics show that the number of people actually living on farms has dropped from 32,000,000 in 1910 to fewer than 28,000,000 in 1927. Last year the farm population decreased 649,000, the greatest loss in any year since 1920. More than none-third, or 37.8 per cent of the farmers who moved to town between 1917 and 1926 did so for economic reasons; 25.2 per cent were actuated by old age and physical disabilities, while 10.9 per cent made the change in order to give their children better educational opportunities. Only 2.5 per cent of the farmers reported that they had left their farms because they had acquired a competency. A few farmers—1.8 per cent—moved into town in order to turn their farms over to their sons. Secretary Jardine inclines to the view that the farmer who has prospered should remain where he has found his prosperity." By remaining on the farm." More Than 73,000,000,000 Kilowatt-Hours Produced The total amount of electricity produced at public utility power plants in 1926 was 73,971,000,000 kilowatt-hours, according to a statement just made public by the geological survey of the department of the interior. Of this total, 47.5 billion kilowatt-hours, or 64.5 per cent, was generated by the use of fuels and the remainder by the use of water power. Of the 47.5 billion kilowatt-hours produced by the use of fuels, 42.6 billion, or 90 per cent, was generated by the use of coal alone; the remaining 10 per cent of fuel-power output was generated by the use of fuel oil, gas, and wood. Coal is thus by far the chief source of power generated at public utility power plants. In 1926 the power produced from coal was 57.7 per cent of all the power generated, from water power 35.5 per cent, from oil 3.1 per cent, from gas 3.3 per cent, and from wood 0.4 per cent. The use of fuel oil in generating electricity has declined since 1924, when it reached its maximum, and less fuel oil was used in 1926 for this purpose than in any other year since 1918. Instead, in 1926, the amount of fuel oil consumed by public utility power plants was only 57 per cent of that used in 1924. The average rates of consumption of the different kinds of fuel in generating electricity in the United States were as follows: Coal, 194 pounds per kilowatt-hour; oil, 243 kilowatt-hours per barrel; gas, 22 cubic feet per kilowatt-hour. The best fuel rates for these different fuels were about as follows: Coal, 0.9 pound per kilowatt-hour; oil, 450 kilowatt-hours per barrel; gas, 13 cubic feet per kilowatt-hour. As these are roughly one-half the average rates, the consumption of fuel by electric public utility power plants would be reduced one-half if all public utility power plants produced electricity at the best fuel rates, and the attainment of this degree of efficiency would have conserved more than 20,000,000 tons of coal in 1926, representing a value of about $75,000,000. CHURCH NOTICE First Church of Christ, Scientist—a branch of The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass.-Philadelphia street at Chartres Sunday service at 11 a.m. Subject "Reality." Sunday School at 9:30 a.m. Testimonial meeting every Wednesday at 5 p.m. The free reading room, 304 Bank of Italy building, is open daily from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., except Sunday and legal holidays. ANAHEIM GAZETTE NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT Bae-Mar Land Company. Location of principal place of business, 113 South Los Angeles Street, Anaheim, Orange County, State of California. Notice is hereby given, that at a meeting of the Directors, held on the 21st day of September, 1927, an assessment of Five Dollars ($5.00) per share was levied upon the capital stock of the corporation, payable on the 14th day of October, 1927, to the Secretary of said Bae-Mar Land Company, at his office, 113 South Los Angeles Street, Anaheim, Orange County, California. Any stock upon which this assessment shall remain unpaid on the 14th day of October, 1927, will be delinquent and advertised for sale at public auction, and unless payment is made before, will be sold on the 31st day of October, 1927, to pay the delinquent assessment, together with costs of advertising and expenses of sale. C. C. RANDALL, Secretary, Office at 113 S. Los Angeles St. Anaheim, Calif. 9-22-4t NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL PROPERTY BY TRUSTEE UNDER DEED OF TRUST WHEREAS, by a certain Deed of Trust, dated December 12th, 1923, recorded January 24th, 1924, in Book 509, page 50 of Deeds, records of Orange County, California, to which record reference is hereby made for all of the provisions thereof, John E. Chaffee and Mary M. Chaffee, his wife, did grant and convey the real property therein described, being the real property hereinafter described, to the Orange County Title Company, a Corporation of Santa 1926, was not paid when due and has not since been paid, in whole or in part, and in that each of the installments due on said note subsequent to said November 1st, 1926, has not been paid in whole or in part, and that there was on March 14th, 1927, the sum of $2647.95, and interest thereon from November 1st, 1926, together with the sum of $41.50 advanced under the terms of said Deed of Trust in payment of taxes on the property covered thereby; with interest on said last mentioned sum at the rate of eight per cent per annum from October 30th, 1925, and WHEREAS, the Board of Directors of said Savings, Loan and Building Association of Anaheim on March 14th, 1927, exercised the option contained in said note and adopted a resolution on said day that the whole sum of the unpaid amount on said note on said date, to-wit: $2847.95, and interest on said sum from November 1st, 1926, and said sum of $41.50 and interest as aforesaid, was then immediately due, and that the withdrawal value on said date of the shares of said Association pledged as collateral security for the payment of said note was $610.75, and that said Board of Directors by said resolution did thereupon apply said sum of $610.75 to the payment of said note; and WHEREAS, said Savings, Loan and Building Association of Anaheim, owner and holder of said note, has declared that default was made as aforesaid, and has declared the whole amount of the unpaid principal sum together with the interest thereon as aforesaid, and the said sum of $41.50, and all other sums secured by said Deed of Trust, now due and payable, and has demanded that said Trustee shall sell the premises granted by said Deed of Trust to accomplish the objects of the trusts therein expressed; and WHEREAS, said Savings, Loan and Building Association of Anaheim did on April 29th, 1927, record in the office of the County Recorder of Orange County, California, a notice of the above mentioned breach and default notice of its election to cause the property described in said Deed of Trust to be sold by said Orange County Title Company, in accordance with the provisions of said Deed of Trust to satisfy the obligations secured by said Deed of Trust, which notice of default and of election to sell was duly recorded in Book 43, page 188 of Official Records of said Orange County; and WHEREAS more than three months have now elapsed since the recordation of said notice and all of the sums and obligations secured by said Deed of Trust remain unpaid; and The Trustee's fees and expenses of sale incurred and to be incurred necessary to the execution of the trusts contained in said Deed of Trust are estimated at $158.00, and the re-payment of said sum is secured by said Deed of Trust. NOW THEREFORE, pursuant to said notice recorded April 29th, 1927, and to the above mentioned demand, and in accordance with the terms and under the authority of the hereinabove mentioned Deed of Trust, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the said Orange County Title Company will, on the 27th day of August, 1927, at the hour of eleven o'clock A.M., of said day, at the South front door of the Court House in the City of Santa Anna, County Of Orange, State Of California, by virtue of the authority vested in it as Trustee under said Deed of Trust, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, lawful money of the United States, all of the interest conveyed to it by said Deed of Trust in and to all the following described property situated in the City of Anaheim, County Of Orange State Of California, described as follows; to-wit: Lot Five (5) of "Tract No. 596," Clementine St. Tract," as shown on a Map recorded in Book 18, page 46 of Miscellaneous Maps records of WHEREAS, by a certain Deed of Trust, dated December 12th, 1923, recorded January 24th, 1924, in Book 509, page 50 of Deeds, records of Orange County, California, to which record reference is hereby made for all of the provisions thereof, John E. Chaffee and Mary M. Chaffee, his wife, did grant and convey the real property therein described, being the real property hereinafter described, to the Orange County Title Company, a Corporation of Santa Ana, California, as Trustee, to secure, among other obligations, the payment of one certain promissory note dated December 12th, 1923, made by said John E. Chaffee and Mary M. Chaffee to Savings, Loan and Building Association of Anaheim, a Corporation, or order, for the principal sum of $2500.00, with interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum, principal and interest due in monthly installments of $29.20 each, on the 1st day of each month, beginning on the 1st day of January, 1924, and continuing until fully paid; and WHEREAS, a breach and default in the performance of said obligations for which said Deed of Trust is a security has occurred in that the installment DRESS WELL AND The right shade for your color for your figure and a perfect specialit Copyright 1927 Hart Schaffner & Marx Many university men like th Business men lik with plenty of Excursion tickets September 30th final Sale date for reduced round trip fares to Eastern points Start any day this month-return limit Oct 31st LET our transportation experts outline your route and furnish suggested itinerary covering your trip. 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IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the Orange County Title Company has hereunto caused its Corporate name to be signed and its Corporate seal to be affixed by its Vice-President and Secretary thereunto duly authorized by its Board of Directors, this 1st day of August, 1927. ORANGE COUNTY TITLE COMPANY, By H. A. GARDNER, (Corporate Vice-President, Seal) By R. C. MIZE, Secretary. TRY THE Dew Drop Inn YOU'LL LIKE IT Home Cooking, Homemade Pies Full Meals 50c 407 East Center St, Anaheim, Calif. 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