anaheim-gazette 1928-06-07
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Final Date to File County Budgets
Must Be in Before July 15, Supervisors Declare
The board of supervisors set July 15 as the final date for the filing by various departments and districts of their budget requirements for the coming year. In keeping with the new county budget law passed by the last legislature, the board and W. C. Jerome, county auditor, are planning to have everything in readiness for a complete budget.
The county has been budgeting its funds for years, it was pointed out by Jerome, and only changes in forms and records will take place this year.
His office will assemble the figures and place them in readiness for the board's consideration on or before July 30. On or before July 10 the board will make additions, revisions or reductions, and by July 15 take final action on the budget. The tax rate is then to be fixed on the first Tuesday in September.
At its session next Tuesday, the board will fix a date on which a supervisor, with Jerome and a member of the district attorney's office, will confer on the operation of the budget scheme.
An application was received yesterday from the city of Tustin, requesting an appropriation for equipment in the offices of the constable and justice of the peace there, who are county officials. Dr. F. W. Slabaugh, county purchasing agent, was authorized to secure the needed furniture. It is estimated that approximately $150 will be spent.
The request led to a discussion of the correct amount to be appropriated in various communities for such purposes. Jerome pointed out the advantage of setting a standard for such expenditures whereby a community of a certain size would be entitled to receive for such purposes a scheduled sum. The establishment of such a basis, Jerome stated, would be of material assistance to the county officials in preparing its budget.
Must Control Ants In Mealybug Areas
Are Protectors of the Pest and Destroy Parasites
Ant control work in mealybug infested orchards should be started immediately. Several species of ants feed on the hony-dew exuded from the mealybug, certain scale pests, and aphids. These ants object to any decrease in their food supply and therefore they protect these pests from the intrads of the predators. Thus we often find severe infestations of mealybug, black scale, soft brown scale, cottony cushion scale and aphis on individual trees or in sections where ants are abundant. Most of these infestations would be reduced by natural enemies if the ants were exterminated, but are very difficult to control as long as the ants are numerous.
The most abundant species of ant in our mealybug area is the Argentine ant, which is satisfactorily controlled by placing syrup containing a weak arsenical poison in small containers bung on the trunk of each tree. This syrup will also kill the species known as fire ants, although these ants frequently imbibe too freely and never get out of the container to take poison to the queen as do the workers of the Argentine ant. The Formica species, of which in this district the large gray ant is the most important, are not usually satisfactorily controlled by this method of poisoning, and in certain instances banding the trunks of the trees with tanglefoot has been resorted to as a means of protecting the lady-bird beetles from these species.
The cups must be watched throughout the season to make sure that a supply of syrup is at all times before the ant. Some difficulty is encountered at times in getting the ants to feed on the syrup if they already have an abundant supply of natural food. For this reason much patience is required and every opportunity should be taken to have the material present at such times as the natural food supply runs.
Business In The High Prices Of California
New peaks for clearings, banks and stock exchange progress in May; the South released by the Commerce said.
Among the main motion picture to reach time will leased a seasonal cultural and fruit sunday reel.
Unusual late Southwest benefited corresponding to the better judge leaders; the chapel Citrus fruits level. Cantalope neared their peak satisfactory.
The price levens cranga remains many indicated from centralbury markets; would market from now.
During the average high on extra fancy county on the review said, o Fruit World.
The California described as 'no basis', with the p Deciduous crop promise to be with the except pots; too chanl Bearing accrue in the state wi than last season
Child Accidents On the Decrease
Safety Work in Schools Largely Held Responsible
The larger cities of California have made a notable record in the reduction of auto accident child fatalities, according to a comparison recently made by the public safety department of the Automobile Club of Southern California.
San Diego, San Francisco, and Los Angeles have the three lowest percentages of children killed in accidents during 1927 among 23 large cities of the country included in the comparison.
Of San Diego's total motor vehicle fatalities, only 6.4 per cent occurred to children 15 years and under. Children comprised only 11.2 per cent of the death toll in San Francisco for 1927, while Los Angeles had a percentage of 11.5 per cent. Fourteen per cent for New Orleans was the next lowest mark, and the majority of other cities had between 20 and 30 per cent of their deaths occurring to children.
These low percentages can be credited largely to the extensive work that is being conducted in the schools of California, according to civic authorities. In the south, the Automobile Club of Southern California is cooperating with all of the school systems in promoting safety teaching, and the motoring organization of the north is doing the same in its section. That this work has been effective is indicated in the fact that the percentage of children among auto accident victims was 25.2 per cent for San Francisco for 1926 and 12.2 per cent for Los Angeles in that year. San Diego, however, had no child victims that year and furthermore achieved a reduction of 10 in the fatality figures for the two years. It had 31 deaths from motor vehicle accidents last year.
The heavy demand that the motor vehicle makes upon human life is evident in a few of the fatality totals for 1927. Chicago had a total of 824 deaths; Cleveland had 218; Los Angeles had 338; Philadelphia, 285; Baltimore, 188; Pittsburgh, 174; San Francisco.
Smoking Prohibited In National Forests
Beginning June 10, smoking will be prohibited, except in camps and at places of habitation, in all of the 18 national forests of California and southwestern Nevada. On this same date, the shovel and ax order, which provides that all motorists and pack train parties camping in the government forests shall be provided with these fire fighting tools, also goes into effect. These regulations have been issued by S. B. Show, chief of the California district, United States Forest Service, under authority of the secretary of agriculture and in accordance with the laws of congress.
Because of the fire danger, no smoking and shovel and ax orders have already been put into effect in a number of the national forests throughout the state. The present order extends these regulations to all government forests.
Failure to comply with these regulations is punishable under federal laws with fine and imprisonment, or both, government law officers state.
Public attention is also called by forest officers to the state law which prohibits the throwing-of-burning matches, tobacco or other inflammable methods of poisoning, and in certain instances banding the trunks of the trees with tanglefoot has been resorted to as a means of protecting the lady-bird beetles from these species.
The cups must be watched through-out the season to make sure that a supply of syrup is at all times before the ant. Some difficulty is encountered at times in getting the ants to feed on the syrup if they already have an abundant supply of natural food. For this reason much patience is required and every opportunity should be taken so have the material present at such times as the natural food supply runs short, notably immediately after spraying or fumigating, or when the mealybug or aphis is at a low ebb. Caution should be taken to place the ant cups on the trunk in such a position that if the material should drip, it will not hit the bark of the tree, as the arsenal poison will kill the bark and cause smuggling. Poisoned syrup mixed according to the government formula for Argentine ants, and containers and brackets for attaching to trees, may be obtained from the packing houses, the seed and seed stores, or from the county yards, in one gallon or five gallon lots.
To summarize, the control of ants is the first essential in preparing a grove for mealybug control. A continuous supply of clean, attractive material must be kept before the ants at all times. If this form of treatment is patiently adhered to, the ants will eventually be decreased and in some instances can be practically eradicated. In the control of mealybug by means of Cryptolaemmus, the co-o-peration-of growers in controlling the ants on their premises is of the greatest importance. Since Cryptolaemmus liberated in heavy infestations are doomed to give less satisfactory results.
LEGIO
AIDING THE FARMER
Among the many schemes which have been projected in the past few years by politicians and others in real or pretended efforts to aid the farmers of the country, very few have been of any practical benefit. In fact, some of them have been productive of more harm than good.
But there is one species of government aid, at least, which has on the whole been really helpful. It is the agricultural extension service, whereby farm and home demonstration agents, trained for their important duties, have gone among the farmers, their wives and daughters, and taught them how to help themselves.
The various field and home projects and demonstrations carried on by these faithful workers, often under the most discouraging circumstances, have materially raised the efficiency of farming and rural homemaking.
Especially effective work has been done with the boys' and girls' clubs; work which will exert a tremendous influence upon the rural life of the future. This training of farm boys and girls for community leadership is perhaps the most important activity for the betterment of agriculture today.
Up in New York they are interested in something that will be more than one-half of one per cent, but down in Houston it will have to get sixty-six and two-thirds per cent.
Orange County Gets $115,000 From Gas Tax
Orange county will receive $115,996.14 of the $15,020,407.50 collected during the six months ended March 31, through operation of the 3-cent tax on gasoline, according to an announcement by State Controller Ray L. Riley.
Of the total collected, $18,988,593.90 is to be divided among the counties and state, two parts going to the state for highway maintenance and construction, and one part to the counties. The share of the counties amounts to $4,682,002.26.
Among the counties mentioned by the controller, the following will receive the sums designated:
Imperial, $50,608.93; Kings, $24,771.11; Madera, $14,738.48; Orange, $115,996.14; Riverside, $74,191.34; San Bernardino, $110,117.82; San Diego, $179,504.47; San Luis Obispo, $27,018.37
State Commissary Legion has deserved a regiment post in the rehabilitated area of Oakland western champions and then decided in the Eagles.
Legion posts have been not long James K. Flisk time for filling "bonus" under the action Act to Janu mitting about dependents to run from the governors visions of legislation grass and the tree.
Originally the further bonus was 1.1928. Thousands too late, accord will also allow ficiary to be na tificate and all tain payment o veterans has been from for seven
Business Is Good In the Southland
High Prices Prevail for All of California's Products
New peaks for the month in bank clearings, bank debits, postal receipts and stock exchange transactions featured progress in Southern California in May, the Southwest Business Review, released by the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce said.
Among the major industries, oil and mollusk production continued to rank time while employment experienced a seasonal demand in the agricultural and fruit harvesting industries, life summary revealed.
Unusual late rains throughout the Southwest benefitted greatly, without corroding damage, various crops, the review showed. Livestock continued in steady demand at good prices.
The national trend continued to mark time and the "presidential year" bugaboo is having its inning in spite of the better judgment of most business leaders, the chamber survey reported.
Citrus fruits continued on a high level. Cantaloupe shipments fast neared their peak with the price range satisfactory.
The price level on California Valencia orange remained high, but the summary indicated increasing competition from cantaloupe and deciduous fruit markets would create a fluctuating market from now on.
During the third week in May, an average as high as $10.15 was realized on extra fancy Valencias from Orange county on the New York market, the review said, quoting the California Fruit World.
The California lemon market was described as "on a strong and active basis, with the price at a high average."
Deciduous crops throughout the state promise to be larger than last year, with the exception of prunes and apricots, the chamber reported.
Bearing average of deciduous fruits in the state will be 4 per cent larger than last season, although table and crispness average has lessened.
CAMPAIGN COSTS
The Philadelphia Public Ledger, which has been making a study of political campaign funds and expenditures, has recently printed a dispatch from its bureau in Washington calling attention to the fact that the 1924 Coolidge campaign cost only two million instead of three million dollars, and intimates that Chairman William M. Butler believes that a successful campaign could be run on close to a million dollars.
In his article the writer says:
"The Republican campaign which elected President Coolidge in 1924 ended with a surplus of $354,264. The Democratic national committee that year had a deficit of nearly $265,000. The chairman of the Democratic committee recently announced that this deficit had been cleared and that the Democrats had a nest egg of $225,000 with which to start the 1928 campaign. He made public at the same time a list of these who had contributed to the wiping out of the 1921 deficit. The largest contributor was Thomas Fortune Kyan, who gave $50,000 despite the fact he had been read out of the Democratic party by the late William Jennings Bryan.
"The sins of the Republican party in presidential campaign-hat passing are eight years back as the conduct of the 1924 Coolidge campaign heralded an era of decided reform.
"Although $240,800 of the $3,063,592 expended by the Republicans in 1924 went in grants to state committees, the congressional committee and the senatorial committee, thus reducing the actual presidential expenditure slightly more than $2,000,000, the present national chairman. William M. Butler holds that considerable of the money was wasted and that an equally effective campaign for Mr. Coolidge could have been conducted for a smaller amount.
"It If Mr. Butler directs the campaign for the nominee of the Kansas City convention, the expenditure directly in the candidate's interest will be nearer $1,000,000 than $2,000,000."
It costs money to run a national political campaign. The items that cannot be put aside and must be considered 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 February 2nd, 1928, record in the office of the County Recorder of Orange County, California, a notice of the above mentioned breach and default and 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 131, page 5 of Official Records of said Orange County; and
WHEREAS, more than three months have now clapped since the recording of said notice and all of the eums 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 $185.50 and the re-payment of said sum is secured by said Deed of Trust.
NOW THEREFORE, pursuant to said notice recorded February 2nd, 1928, 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 26th day of May, 1928, at the hour of eleven thirty o'clock A.M., of said day, at the South door of the Orange County California, by virtue of the authority Court House in the City of Santa Ana, 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 following described property situated in the County of Orange, State of California, described as follows:
Lot Six (6) in Block "A" of Tract 479, as shown on a Map recorded in Book 17, page 37 of Miscellaneous Maps, records of Orange County, California.
During the third week in May, an average of high as 10.15 was realized on extra fancy Valencias from Orange county on the New York market, the review said, quoting the California Fruit World.
The California lemon market was described as "on a strong and active basis, with the price at a high average."
Deciduous crops throughout the state promise to be larger than last year, with the exception of prunes and apricots, the chamber reported.
Bearing a degree of deciduous fruits in the state will be 4 per cent larger than last season, although table andaisin grape acreage has lessened. Juice varieties will have an increased bearing acreage of 4 per cent.
Delayed foliation, especially with peaches, became increasingly apparent in May. The review said the Ontario crop is placed at 50 per cent of normal. Ventura county's apricot crop will be light, but in Riverside county prospects are normal. It was said.
Carlyle Thorpe, general manager of the California Walnut Growers' Association, was quoted as saying that walnut crop prospects are between 55 and 60 per cent of last year's figure.
California daily oil production was recorded as slightly increased in May, running as high as 636,500 barrels per day as against 617,000 barrels per day in April. Increases were most noticeable in Ventura and Long Beach.
It was estimated that final tabulation for the month will show $100,000-400 in transactions on the Los Angeles stock exchange and set a new all-time record.
Bank clearings went to a new peak with $955,672,154, compared with $767-258,293 in May, 1927.
LEGION NOTES
As an additional incentive to the boys' teams of California to enter the big junior baseball championship tournament now being staged throughout the United States under the auspices of the American Legion; the winning team will be given a trip to the championship series between the American and National leagues next October.
"A real prize is at stake for the winning team," Bert C. Mann, California chairman of the American Legion's baseball tourney states. "The winning team will be taken in a special car, attached to the big league baseball train; see all the world series games in the East; receive a pennant from Judge Kensaw Mountain Landis, high commissioner of baseball; win the beautiful cup from Babe Ruth; and travel and with the big league players as Junior World's series champions."
Fifteen thousand California boys are expected to participate in the tourney as far as this state is concerned. Winners in the various districts will play off their games and the stat champion will be decided at Los Angeles. The inter-regional championship involving California, Nevada, and Arizona, will be held in Oakland during July. The western champions will meet at Denver, and then the championship will be decided at California Fruit World.
During the third week in May, an average of high as 10.15 was realized on extra fancy Valencias from Orange county on the New York market, the review said, quoting the California Fruit World.
The California lemon market was described as "on a strong and active basis, with the price at a high average."
Deciduous crops throughout the state promise to be larger than last year, with the exception of prunes and apricots, the chamber reported.
Bearing a degree of deciduous fruits in the state will be 4 per cent larger than last season, although table andaisin grape acreage has lessened. Juice varieties will have an increased bearing acreage of 4 per cent.
Delayed foliation, especially with peaches, became increasingly apparent in May. The review said the Ontario crop is placed at 50 per cent of normal. Ventura county's apricot crop will be light, but in Riverside county prospects are normal. It was said.
Carlyle Thorpe, general manager of the California Walnut Growers' Association, was quoted as saying that walnut crop prospects are between 55 and 60 per cent of last year's figure.
California daily oil production was recorded as slightly increased in May, running as high as 636,500 barrels per day as against 617,000 barrels per day in April. Increases were most noticeable in Ventura and Long Beach.
It was estimated that final tabulation for the month will show $100,000-400 in transactions on the Los Angeles stock exchange and set a new all-time record.
Bank clearings went to a new peak with $955,672,154, compared with $767-258,293 in May, 1927.
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: "God, the Preserver of Man." Sunday school will be held at 9:30 a.m. Testimonial meeting every Wednesday, at 8 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.
NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL PROPERTY BY TRUSTEE UNDER DEED OF TRUST
WHEREAS, by a certain Deed of Trust, dated June 27th, 1925, recorded July 7th, 1925, in Book 594, page 68 of Deeds, records of Orange County, California, to which record reference is hereby made for all of the provisions thereof, W. A. Bobo and Sue Bobo, bureand 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 June 27th, 1925, made by said W. A. Bobo and Sue Bobo to The Savings Loan and Building Association of Anahelm, a Corporation, or order, for the principal sum of $1400.00, with interest at the California by virtue of the authority Court House in the City of Santa Ana, 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 following described property situated in the County of Orange. State of California, described as follows:
Lot Six (6) in Block "A" of Tract 479., as shown on a Map recorded in Book 17, page 37 of Miscellaneous Maps, records of Orange County, California.
Subject to reservations of record being the property described in said Deed of Trust, or so much of said property as shall be necessary to be sold to provide a sum sufficient to pay the total amount secured by said Deed of Trust.
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 3rd day of May. 1928.
ORANGE COUNTY TITLE COMPANY,
By H. A. GARDNER,
Vice-President.
By GEO. A. PARKER,
Secretary.
(Corporate Seal)
State Commander Phil Dodson, of the Legion has designated World war veterans, working through the various legion posts, to devote themselves to the rehabilitation and hospital work among their disabled comrades in the several institutions in this state. Maney Sahlberg is chairman of the Legion's rehabilitation commission and the others designated by Commander Dodson are: E. W. Dutton, Ukiah, for Mendocino State Hospital; Hugh Ball, Napa, for the Veterans' Home at Yountville; William Ryan, Vallejo, for the Mare Island Marine Hospital; Alvin Gerlack, for Letterman General Hospital, San Francisco; Jack Shepard, San Francisco, Veterans' Hospital, Palo Alto; Lawrence Gross, Oakland, for Veterans' Home at Livermore and Stockton State Hospital; B. F. Donnelly, San Diego.
Legion posts throughout California have been notified by State Adjutant James K. Fisk of the extension of the time for filing applications for the "bonus" under the Adjusted Compensation Act to January 2, 1930, thus permitting about 30,000 beneficiaries and dependents to receive about $20,000,000 from the government under the provisions of legislation approved by congress and the President recently.
Originally the doors were closed for further bonus applications on January 1, 1928. Thousands of claims arrived too late, according to Fisk. The bill will also allow more than one beneficiary to be named in the bonus certificate and allows dependents to obtain payment on certificates when the veterans has been absent and unheard from for seven years or longer.
California, to which record reference is hereby made for all of the provisions thereof, W. A. Bobo and Sue Bobo, burband and 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 June 27th, 1925, made by said W. A. Bobo and Sue Bobo to The Savings Loan and Building Association of Anaheim, a Corporation, or order, for the principal sum of $1400.00, with interest at the rate of 8% per annum, principal and interest due in monthly installments of $16.36 each on the 1st day of each month beginning on the 1st day of June, 1926, and continuing until fully paid; and
WHEREAS, a breach and default in the performance of certain obligations for which said Deed of Trust is a security has occurred in that default was made under the terms of said note and Deed of Trust is that the said borrowers are more than three months in arrears in the payment of their dues, interest and loan installments under the terms of said note, the total sum of principal, interest and fines unpaid on said note on December 12th, 1927, being $1519.60; and
WHEREAS, the Board of Directors of said Savings Loan and Building Association of Anaheim on December 12th, 1927, exercised the option contained in said note and adopted a resolution on said day that the whole of said loan was then immediately due and that the withdrawal value on said date of all shares of said Association pledged as collateral security for the payment of said note was $156.80 and that said Board of Directors by said resolution did thereupon apply said sum of $156.80 to the payment of said note; and
WHEREAS, said Savings Loan and Building Association of Anaheim has declared the whole of the unpaid principal sum of said note, and interest thereon as aforesaid, and all other sums secured by said Deed of Trust, now due and payable, has demanded that said Trustee shall sell the
Constipation!
How to Keep Bowels Regular
DR. W. B. CALDWELL
AT THE AGE OF 63
To Dr. W. B. Caldwell, of Monticello, Ill., a practicing physician for 47 years, it seemed cruel that so many constipated men, women, children, and particularly old folks had to be kept constantly "stirred up" and half sick by taking cathartic pills, tablets, salts, calomel and berry oils.
While he knew that constipation was the cause nearly all headaches, billiousness, indigestion and stomach misery, he did not believe that a sickening "purge" or "physic" was necessary.
In Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin he discovered a laxative which helps to establish natural bowel regularity even for those chronically constipated. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin not only causes a gentle easy bowel movement but, best of all, it never gripes, sickens or upsets the system. Besides, it is absolutely harmless, and so pleasant that even a cross, feverish, billious, sick child gladly takes it.
Buy a large 60-count bottle at any store that sells medicine or write "Syrup Pepsin," Monticello, Illinois, for a FREE SAMPLE BOTTLE and just see for yourself.
Dr. Caldwell's SYRUP PEPSIN
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