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Publications Anaheim Gazette 1928 July

anaheim-gazette 1928-07-12

1928-07-12 · Anaheim Gazette · page 5 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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Poultry Laboratory Has a Busy Year During the past year the poultrymen of Southern California have made extensive use of the Poultry Pathological Laboratory in Los Angeles. About 2500 birds have been examined, representing approximately 1200 cases and outbreaks of disease. Birds have been received from 148 localities. Fifty-one different diseases and causes leading to loss have been found. The most serious are coccidiosis, mismanagement, colds, roup and canker, bacillary white diarrhea, intestinal worms, infectious bronchitis, and chicken pox. Nearly 30,000 blood tests for bacillary white diarrhea have been made in 171 flocks of breeding birds. The laboratory is supported by state and local agencies. There is no charge for services, except blood testing for bacillary white diarrhea, the cost of this work making it necessary to charge five cents a sample. Loss from disease is one of the great factors the poultryman has to deal with, and he is urged to use the laboratory in controlling this. The laboratory is located at the eastern limits of Los Angeles, at 1451 Mirasol street. If it is not possible to take birds to the laboratory, they may be sent by parcel post or express. The only live birds that can be sent by parcel post are baby chicks. At the time the birds are sent a brief letter should be mailed to the laboratory giving a history of the trouble, symptoms, loss, and anything that might aid in gaining a full understanding of the character of the disease. Care should be exercised to select cases that are typical of the disease causing loss. It is desirable to standpoint of satisfactory examination that birds reach the laboratory in as fresh a state as possible. Preferably, birds that have just died should be sent, and they should be gotten on the way as soon as possible. Sending by Special Delivery, particularly during hot weather, is advisable. Dead birds should never be sent on Saturday, and not late on Friday unless it is known that they can be delivered to the laboratory before 12:30 on Saturday. Old-Time Resident Called By Death Mrs. Louisa Syre, wife of Peter Syre, died at her home on North Claudina street Tuesday morning at the age of 71. She was born in Germany, but came to America 46 years ago, and to Anaheim 44 years ago. She was married to Peter Syre in 1896. She leaves no children, and is survived by her husband here, and four brothers and three sisters in Germany. Funeral services were held at 10 o'clock this morning at the chapel of Backs, Terry & Campbell, and burial was made in the Anaheim cemetery. QUAIL REAPPEAR Small coveys of quail are appearing in the orange orchards throughout this section, and the beautiful birds are objects of great interest to passersby. These birds have become almost extinct in Southern California, but are now protected under state enactments. It has been suggested that the reason for quail remain closed for a number of years. They do great good picking up bugs and insects, and their beauty is usch as to warrant the fullest protection. Spare the quail! LOCAL BRIDGE The Annual Mason Star Picnic of Anaheim July 18th at Orange Cemetery with a 6:30 plen your basket lunch and sugar, cream, butter furnished. A short p allow the dinner then furnished by Mas White Orchestra. All Mason ilies cordially invited. Mr. and Mrs. Roy tered at the new Mr Los Angeles during the lee" celebration of the Life Insurance comp enced on Monday and session until Friday. Only Orange county "Big Tree" club t be a member of this cler represent a business year. About 400 agents of the United States joying the festivities. Mr. and Mrs. Robert a few days ago from They motored to Seattle the party composed J. J. Dwyer of this Mrs. Joe Carroll of Alaska trip. The po north as Skagway by lited White Horse Ra many other interests for North. Mr. and Mrs. Kurt Clementine street, leave a two-weeks' vacation Springa. Mr. Epatelm Francisco, where he laying in new stocksa Department store. Mrs. Epstein at the middle of this week. Mrs. J. W. Truxan spending the summer port Beach cottage visit back and forth and Anaheim during Oscar Gibbs celebr first birthday anniversary NOW – 10% DISCOUNT on the New Colored Gas Ranges For a limited time only — you may select any new Roper or Tappan Gas Range, finished in the new, modern colors — at a saving of 10%, during this Sale — with an extra 10% trade-in allowance for your old range. All Approved Gas Appliances Reduced During July and August Summer Saving Sale Prices are now reduced TEN PER CENT on all of our Modern Gas Ranges, Water Heaters, Space Heaters and Gas Refrigerators — and an additional 10% trade-in allowance for your old gas appliance — Free Installation — No Interest — Liberal Terms! Southern Counties Gas Company “Service With Courtesy” Write or call at your nearest Gas Office for a free copy of our latest booklet, “Getting the Best That Gas Can Give You.” NOW there are two Famous for fine interior work, Barreled Sunlight now also available in a new form for exterior painting. THOUSANDS of satisfied users of Interior Barreled Sunlight have asked for an exterior paint of the same superior quality. This insistent demand has now been met with the new Outside Barreled Sunlight. Like its famous companion product, Outside Barreled Sunlight remains white and new-looking long after ordinary paints have lost their beauty and freshness. It is intensely white, has remarkable “hiding power,” flows THOUSANDS of satisfied users of Interior Barreled Sunlight have asked for an exterior paint of the same superior quality. This insistent demand has now been met with the new Outside Barreled Sunlight. Like its famous companion product, Outside Barreled Sunlight remains white and new-looking long after ordinary paints have lost their beauty and freshness. It is intensely white, has remarkable "hiding power," flows freely and evenly, is durable and even-wearing. Both Interior and Outside Barreled Sunlight are extremely easy to tint. Dealers carry handy tubes of Barreled Sunlight Tinting Colors for tinting small quantities. Interior Barreled Sunlight for a richly lustrous enamel finish washable as tile...Outside Barreled Sunlight for the very finest exterior painting. Regardless of when or where you use it, good paint is the most inexpensive insurance you can buy against depreciation...good paint...you will note. BARRELED SUNLIGHT ...the entire line of fine BRININSTOOL PAINT PRODUCTS are good paints...they have that reputation with everyone who knows paint. And the only thing that will ever change them is our constant effort to make them better. Ask your architect, your painting contractor or dealer about them. BRININSTOOL PAINT COMPANY Makers of Fine Products Since 1895 908 SOUTH MAIN ST. LOS ANGELE LOCAL BREVITIES The Annual Masonic and Eastern Star Picnic of Anaheim will be held July 15th at Orange County Park. Opening with a 6:30 picnic dinner. Bring your basket lunch and dishes. Coffee, sugar, cream, butter and buns will be furnished. A short program will follow the dinner then dancing. Music furnished by Mae Whitacre Beach Girls' Orchestra. All Masons and their families cordially invited. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Easton are registered at the new Mayflower hotel in Los Angeles during the "Diamond Jubilee" celebration of the Pacific Mutual Life Insurance company, which convened on Monday and which will be in session until Friday. Mr. Easton is the only Orange county representative of the "Big Tree" club to be present. To be a member of this club an agent must represent a business of $200,000 per year. About 400 agents from all parts of the United States are present enjoying the festivities. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Easton returned a few days ago from a trip to Alaska. They motored to Seattle and then joined the party composed of Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Dwyer of this city and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Carroll of Seattle on the Alaska trip. The party went as far north as Skagway by boat. They visited White Horse Rapids, Juneau and many other interesting points in the far North. Mr. and Mrs. Kurt Epstein, 727 North Clementine street, left on Sunday for a two-weeks' vacation at San Juan Hot Springs. Mr. Epstein went first to San Francisco, where he spent several days laying in new stocks for Falkenstein's Department store. He planned to join Mrs. Epstein at the springs about the middle of this week. Mrs. J. W. Truxam and children are spending the summer at their Newport Beach cottage. Dr. Truxam will visit back and forth between Newport and Anaheim during the summer. Oscar Gibbs celebrated his twenty-first birthday anniversary at a dinner Cooling Incubator Eggs Not Necessary Cooling of the eggs placed in an incubator for hatching is intended to aid the eggs and it is said to strengthen the embryo. It corresponds, perhaps, to the opening of all of the windows by the housewife each morning to air the bedroom. Data is steadily accumulating, however, to indicate that cooling is of no real value to the eggs in a well ventilated incubator; in a deficiently ventilated incubator it is undoubtedly of material aid to the hatching process in overcoming inadequate ventilation of the egg chamber. This and much other information regarding incubator hatching is given in Circular 19 of the University of California Agricultural Extension Service. The circular was written by Professor J. E. Dougherty yoyf the Poultry Husbandry Division of the College of Agriculture, and may be obtained free from the College of Agriculture at Berkeley or Davis, or from the farm advisor in any of the counties of the state. The circular entitled Artificial Incubation of Eggs discusses the subject fully, taking up the following topics: Selecting eggs for hatching, effect of temperature on eggs held for hatching, effect of age and method of handling on eggs for hatching, the incubator room, getting the incubator ready, operating the incubator, and turkey and other eggs. Under the subject of operation, Professor Dougherty discusses temperature, moisture, turning the eggs, testing and the hatch. At the beginning of the year 1926, there were 262 commercial hatcheries located in 37 different counties in California, says the circular, each of which had an incubating capacity of more than 1000 eggs. The total capacity at that time was estimated to be approximately 5,000,000 eggs and at the present time estimates place the total capacity of commercial hatcheries at more than 10,000,000. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCHES "Life" was the subject of the Lesson-Sermon Sunday, July 15, in all Churches of Christ Scientist, branches of The Mother Church. The First Church Southern California Poultry Institute The third annual Southern California Poultry Institute will be held on July 13 at Ganesha Park, Pomona. The meeting will be held outdoors and everybody is requested to bring a basket lunch and table service. The coffee will be served by the Pomona Chamber of Commerce. Following is the program: 9:30-0:45—Inspection of the Southern California Farm Bureau Egg-Laying contest at 7th and Garey, Pomona. 10:00—The meeting will convene at Ganesha Park Grounds, Robert P. Stephens, poultryman of Inglewood, acting as chairman. Dr. J. R. Beach of the Division of Veterinary Science, University of California will discuss the use of the new chickenpox vaccine. Dr. H. W. Graybill, director of the Poultry Pathological Laboratory, will discuss the work of the Laboratory. Burk Crichfield, Federal State Market Director, will talk on the work of the Market Director's Office. 12:15—The meeting will adjorn for lunch and will convene at 1:30. Howard Miller of the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce and W.M. Cory, Assistant Farm Advisor of Orange County, will discuss the lessons learned from recent poultry surveys. 2:15—A.B. Swarthout of the U.S. Bureau of Agricultural Economics will give an address on the poultry marketing situation on the Pacific Coast. All poultrymen are invited. Club Convention Dates Are Given Twenty-two hundred boys and girls are expected to attend the annual Agricultural Club Convention at the University of California Farm at Davies in October. In making this estimate, Prof. B.H. Crocheron, Director of Agricultural Extension, announces that the convention will be held in three sections to accommodate the large number expected to attend. The first section will be held October 11 to 13, Thursday to Saturday, and will be attended by the club winners in the valley counties north of Merced, in the a two-weeks' vacation at San Juan-Hot Springs. Mr. Epstein went first to San Francisco, where he spent several days laying in new stocks for Falkenstein's Department store. He planned to join Mrs. Epstein at the springs about the middle of this week. Mrs. J. W. Truxam and children are spending the summer at their Newport Beach cottage. Dr. Truxam will visit back and forth between Newport and Anaheim during the summer. Oscar Gibbs celebrated his twenty-first birthday anniversary at a dinner party given by his mother, Mrs. F. N. Gibbs, 929 E. Center street, on Saturday evening. Dinner was served at 7 o'clock and the party later motored to Balbon, where the remainder of the evening was pleasantly spent. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Neely and little daughter, Ellen Browning Neely of Venice are visiting friends in town the guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Jarrett at their home on North Lemon street. Mrs. Neely will be remembered as Miss Helen Browning, the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Browning, pioneer residents of the west section. A. A. Slaback, the North Los Angeles street grocer, was seriously injured in an automobile accident Tuesday morning. He was driving on Broadway and at the intersection of Kroeger street collided with a car driven by Earl Heffner. Mr. Slaback sustained a broken rib. Heffner and his sister, Miss Mabel, Heffner, who was riding with him, were uninjured. At Concord in 1775 the embattled farmers fired the shot heard round the world, but the question now is, What are they going to do at Kansas City and Houston? IF YOU WANT TO SELL OR EXCHANGE your orange grove for Long Beach income property, let me know. LEO BREITENBACH, 148 Howard St., Los Alamitos, Calif. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCHES "Life" was the subject of the Lesson-Sermon Sunday, July 15, in all Churches of Christ, Scientist, branches of The Mother Church. The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass. The citations which comprised the Lesson-Sermon included the following from the Bible: "Labour not for the meat which perisheth, but for that meat which endureth unto everlasting life, which the Son of man shall give unto you; for him hath God the Father sealed." It is the spirit that quickeneth; the flesh profiteeth nothing; the words that I speak unto you, they are spirit, and they are life." (John 6). The Lesson-Sermon also included the following passage from the Christian Science textbook, "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures," by Mary Baker Eddy: "Christian Science reveals a necessity for overcoming the world, the flesh, and evil, and thus destroying all error. "Seeking is not sufficient. It is striving that enables us to enter. Spiritual attainments open the door to a higher understanding of the divine Life." (p. 10). The railroad commission has approved the purchase of the Fullerton-Placentia motor stage line by the Motor Transit company and extension of the service to Yorba Linda by way of Atwood. It is expected that the Motor Transit service on this line will be started within the next week. Cory G. Hoff, who started the Fullerton-Placentia bus service several years ago, will continue to operate the Fullerton local bus for the present, but expects to sell the business as soon as possible. ST. MICHAEL'S CHURCH Rev. Charles E. Malmann, rector of St. Michael's Episcopal church, East Adele and Emily streets, announces the following program for Sunday, July 15: Holy Communion, 8 a.m. Church School, 9:45 a.m. Morning Prayer and Sermon, 11 a.m. Dates Are Given Twenty-two hundred boys and girls are expected to attend the annual Agricultural Club Convention at the University of California Farm at Davies in October. In making this estimate, Prof. B. H. Crocheron, Director of Agricultural Extension, announces that the convention will be held in three sections to accommodate the large number expected to attend. The first section will be held October 11 to 13, Thursday to Saturday, and will be attended by the club, winners in the valley counties north of Merced, in the territory supervised by Assistant State Club Leader F. M. Spurrier. The second section will be Monday to Wednesday, October 15 to 17, for the club members in the coast counties, the district supervised by W. G. Waterhouse. The third section will be held the last three days of the same week and includes the counties of the interior south of Merced, in the territory supervised by W. R. Ralston, which includes Orange county. The last convention, held two years ago was attended by 1554. Last year, due to an epidemic, there was no convention, and last year's winners are eligible to attend this year, if they are members of a 4-II club. HEAVY VOTE EXPECTED An army of more than 2,000,000 voters in California will march to the polls at the November election this year, the first time in history that the state will have gone over the million mark. This prediction was made by Secretary of State Frank C. Jordan following announcement that 1,057,000 booklets containing names of candidates, their declarations of candidacy and list of "sponsors," required under the primary law, will be mailed out to voters before the August primary. Estimated registration for the primary election is 2,050,000 according to Charles J. Hagerty, state election statistician. Land for Oranges and Avocados Forty acres best land in Elsinore valley, 45 miles from Anaheim. Oranges and avocados growing adjacent. Plenty of water. Price $600 per acre. Liberal terms. J. E. KNOTTS, Elsinore, Calif. Phone Elsinore 15. 0-7-21 WANTED—Hear from owner ranch for sale. State cash price, particular. D. F. Bush, Minneapolis, Minn. 5-18-4t Long Beach Steam Plant of the Southern California Edison Company with the structure housing the first of the eight new 125,000 horsepower units in the foreground. This unit is now complete and the generator has just been turned on to the lines. Inset, S. L. Shuffleton, Vice-president of Stone & Webster, Inc., who is directly responsible for the engineering and supervisory service on this construction project. CHARTER NO. 10228 RESERVE DISTRICT NO. 12 REPORT OF CONDITION OF THE Anaheim National Bank AT ANAHEIM, IN THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA, AT THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS ON JUNE 30, 1928 RESOURCES 1. a Loans and discounts, including rediscounts, acceptances of other banks and foreign bills of exchange or drafts sold with indorsement of this bank $438,167.40 Total loans $438,167.40 2. Overdrafts, secured, none; unsecured $503.70 3. U.S. Government securities owned: a Deposited to secure circulation (U.S. bonds par value) 50,000.00 b All other United States Government securities (including premiums, if any) 1,215.00 Total 51,215.00 4. Other bonds, stocks, securities, etc., owned 276,861.70 5. Banking House, none; Furniture and fixtures $44,663.67 6. Real estate owned other than banking house 30,759.69 7. Lawful reserve with Federal Reserve Bank 48,946.69 9. Items with Federal Reserve Bank in process of collection 27,085.13 10. Cash in vault and amount due from national banks 34,178.23 11. Amount due from State banks, bankers, and trust companies in the United States (other than included in Items 8, 9, and 10) 14,077.49 12. Exchanges for clearing house 8,769.63 15. Redemption fund with U.S. Treasurer and due from U.S. Treasurer 2,500.00 18. Other assets, if any 5,281.88 Total $983,010.21 LIABILITIES 19. Capital stock paid in $75,600.00 20. Surplus fund 15,000.00 21. a Undivided profits 7,831.91 7,831.91 22. Circulating notes outstanding 50,000.00 23. Certified checks outstanding 756.80 24. Cashier's checks outstanding 4,741.02 25. Dividend checks outstanding 604.00 Demand deposits (other than bank deposits) subject to Reserve (deposits payable within 30 days): 30. Individual deposits subject to check 486,564.69 31. Certificates of deposit due in less than 30 days (other than borrowed) 76,821.98 Total of demand deposits (other than bank deposits) subject to Reserve, Items 30, and 31 563,386.67 Time deposits subject to Reserve (payable after 30 days, or subject to 30 days or more notice, and postal savings): 35. Savings deposits (including time certificates of deposit other than for money borrowed) 190,689.81 36. State, county, or other municipal deposits secured by Can the Farmer afford to ELECTRIFY? Can the California farmer afford to electrify his farm? This question has been asked many men who are well informed on farming conditions and the answer has always been... where electric service is available to the farmer at a reasonable cost per kilowatt-hour he cannot afford to get along without it. It has been found in California that electricity when available is used almost to the exclusion of all other power sources in pumping water for irrigation, drainage and domestic purposes. Why has it so completely replaced competitive power sources? Because it has been found to be as cheap or cheaper than they are and because it is considered more dependable and more convenient. It has been found in California that electricity when available is used almost to the exclusion of all other power sources in pumping water for irrigation, drainage and domestic purposes. Why has it so completely replaced competitive power sources? Because it has been found to be as cheap or cheaper than they are and because it is considered more dependable and more convenient. Mr. T. A. Wood, writing in "Electricity on the Farm" states, "I have yet to meet a farmer who, when his farm is once electrified, has anything but praise for electricity and its wonderful powers. When once installed, it never comes out. It is the one fixture on the farm." If you have any job on your farm which you are interested in having done by electricity, a call or letter to any of our thirty-two district offices will be all that is necessary to bring an Edison representative to you. You will find him competent and ready to help you. Ask about the Low Cost of Electricity for Your Particular Problem SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA EDISON COMPANY Owned by Those it Serves