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Publications Anaheim Gazette 1928 November

anaheim-gazette 1928-11-29

1928-11-29 · Anaheim Gazette · page 10 of 10 · OCR glm-ocr
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Applications for New Licenses State to Begin Receiving Them Saturday The Division of Motor Vehicles will begin receiving applications for 1929 automobile license plates by mail Saturday. Elaborate preparations have been made at the Sacramento office to handle the flood of mail that is expected to come in. Division officials estimate that at least a half million applications will be received within the next two weeks. No plates will be delivered before December 15th. Early applications, however, will have the best chance for fast service and low numbers. The public distribution of plates over the counters at Sacramento and the various branch offices will begin on December 15th. Division officials anticipate a heavier "mail order" business this year than ever before. They declare this method of recurring plates is so much simpler and easier than making special trips to branch offices to stand in line sometimes for long periods, that the motoring public is rapidly becoming converted to the mail application. While it will probably never be possible to abandon the counter deliveries entirely, division officials are hopeful they can be reduced to the minimum by the universal acceptance of the mail order plan. The division urges every motorist in California to forward his application at once for the new plates. All that is necessary is to take the certificate of registration from the car enclose it in an envelope with the amount of the fee and mail the envelope to the Division of Motor Vehicles, Sacramento, Calif. If the applicant has changed his address since last year he should print the new address on the certificate to insure prompt and correct delivery of his plates. Certified checks, postal money orders and bank drafts are acceptable in payment of the fee. Applicants are urged not to send currency. The regular $3 fee for ordinary passenger care is unchanged. The fee schedules for commercial vehicles were changed, however, by adoption of the and return a good profit on the additional feed given, says the U. S. Department of Agriculture. Some cows may have a natural capacity for producing large quantities of milk and may not receive feed enough for maximum production. On the other hand, some cows have a limited capacity for milk production and are liable to be overfed. Study each cow and find the point beyond which any addition to her grain ration becomes unprofitable. Keeping records of production and feed consumed will aid in doing this. "INSIDE" INFORMATION Combinations of different vegetable lend variety to the daily bill of fare. The classic example of a vegetable mixture is of course succotash—corn and lima beans. Corn with tomatoes; corn with tomatoes and string beans; corn with tomatoes and okra, are all excellent combinations and may be made of either fresh or canned vegetables. Peas blend well with diced cooked carrots or chopped cooked celery. Equal parts of celery and white turnip cooked together make a palatable combination. Rutabaga turnips boiled with white potatoes and then mashed are liked by many people. Cooked cabbage and white potatoes friend together was an old-fashioned dish which used to be popular as "bubble and squeak." Combinations of various greens give good results. To spinach and chard may be added sorrel, mustard, kale, parsley, crass, or dandelion, according to what is available. Sliced boiled sweet potatoes baked in layers with apples, and carrots combined with apples, offer two flavors new to many people. Where rats are troublesome, set out a cafeteria meal of small portions of different kinds of foods—meats, vegetables or fruits, and cereals, each poisoned with powdered barium carbonate, which is odorless and tasteless. The poison should be thoroughly mixed and worked into soft baits in the proportion of 1 part of the mineral to 4 parts of the selected food. Add water when necessary to make the baits moist. Sift the powder over sliced baits and rub it into them. The slices should be thin and should be moistened if necessary. Expose a teaspoonful or its equivalent of each of the three or more kinds of baits, in places frequented by rays. They may be placed on strips of paper or on boards, or in paper bags. Unseten baits should be plotted up on the past month. Now that winter grass and barley furnish stock through spring. R grain cropting to the culture. Make excelsior treatment any sieve or reducted on the fleece count of to the plant continue ginning off and certain shoots. Value While C greater o fresh fruit plum price quantities market the fruits avail reached by ate agricul periment nia, in h pects of This publ ready for trained from Davis or advisor. Plums ra forma frui age. The that of th ing the hi acreage oc raisin-grain the larger. We used actress by necessary paint she The side congee A Home Building Home Owned Institution The Anaheim Building and Loan Association pledges all of its assets to the upbuilt homes in Anaheim. OUR COMBINED RESOURCES TOTAL $500,000.00 OUR COMBINED RESOURCES TOTAL $500,000.00 Officers and Directors WM. STARK, President WM. FALKENSTEIN, Vice-President F. A. YUNGBLUTH, Vice-President FORREST F. FOWLER, S FRED KOESEL, M DR. A. H. Anaheim Building & L Association 114 North Lemon St. Anaheim, Ca 6% AND SAFETY WINTER PASTURE Now that other pastures have failed, winter grains such as wheat, rye, oats, and barley can be depended upon to furnish considerable pasture for livestock through the winter and early spring. Rye is the best suited of all the grain crops for winter pasture, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Winter barley and oats also make excellent pasturing. More pasture can be available in humid areas than in dry areas. The soft winter wheats furnish more pasture than the hard wheats. Do not let the stock pasture any small grains too heavily, however, or the grain yield will be seriously reduced. Stock should not be allowed on the field when the soil is wet on account of possible injury they may do to the plants. Pasturing should not be continued much later than the beginning of active growth in the spring, and certainly not after the plants start to shoot. Value of Plums in State Is Revealed While California plums compete to a greater or lesser extent with other fresh fruits in the markets of the East, plum prices are affected more by the quantities of plums coming onto the market than by the quantities of other fruits available. This is the conclusion reached by Emil Rauchenstein, associate agricultural economist in the experiment station, University of California, in his bulletin, "Economic Aspects of the Fresh Plum Industry." This publication, Bulletin No. 459, is ready for distribution and may be obtained from the college of agriculture at Davis or Berkeley, or from any farm advisor. Plums rank 14th in value among California fruits and 13th in bearing acreage. Their value is three per cent of that of the orange crop—the crop having the highest value—and the bearing acreage occupied is 10 per cent of the raisin-grape acreage—the crop having the largest acreage. We used to be able to distinguish an actress by traces of the paint which was necessary for her acting; now by the paint she needs in her flapping. Advocate Survey Of State for Water Division of Water Rights Asked to Make Investigation Water requirements of Orange county, including its needs for agriculture, domestic and industrial development for many years to come, will be surveyed by the California division of water rights if recommendations made to the legislative water commission are carried out. The proposal came direct from the foothill counties of the state. "We don't propose to stand idly by," they said, "while our own water is being taken and used by agencies further downstream." At the 1927 legislature they introduced the Dillinger bill, which would give each county a flat reservation of 15 per cent of all its unappropriated water. This wouldn't work, legislators agreed, because some counties would need much more than that quantity, others would need much less, and some wouldn't need any at all. So the Dillinger bill was gently chloroformed in committee. After the legislature ended, the state department of finance made 18 filings on the principal Sierra streams to withdraw them from entry. This was to protect the water supply temporarily for the mountain counties, and incidentally for the proposed $58,000,000 co-ordinated development plan. Now the mountain interests are seeking to have the old legislative water commission acts of 1921 and 1925 carried out. These laws provide that "It shall be the duty of the division of engineering... to study the co-ordination of all possible uses of water and to determine a comprehensive plan for the accomplishment of these purposes with the maximum conservation, control storage, distribution and application of all the waters of the state." Money is required to do this, and that is precisely what the mountain counties want. Their spokesman were Fred G. Stevenot, state director of natural resources; D. Friedt, president of the Calaveras County Chamber of Commerce; Senator J. M. Inman, Sacramento, and Assemblyman H. E. Dillinger, Placerville, author of the "Dillinger bill." They propose now that the state hold its filings, for a period of 25 years. To safeguard the rights of these mountain counties, a certain amount of water should be withheld from every stream. To determine what amount shall be, a searching survey of the water requirements of every county in the state should be made, as intended by the 1921-25 acts. Governor Young, it was pointed out, is in sympathy with the mountain counties' problem. He has virtually promised them legislation assuring them of a "square deal" in water matters at the 1929 session. CHURCH NOTICE First Church of Christ, Scientist—a Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass—Philadelphia street at Chartres Sunday service at 11 a.m. Subject: Acient and Modern Neocromany, Alias Mesmerism and Hypnotism Denounced. The 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. Western Auto's First Plums rank 14th in value among California fruits and 13th in bearing acreage. Their value is three per cent of that of the orange crop—the crop having the highest value—and the bearing acreage occupied is 10 per cent of the raisin-grape acreage—the crop having the largest acreage. We used to be able to distinguish an actress by traces of the paint which was necessary for her acting; now by the paint she needs in her hauling. The sidewalks of New York are more congested than the sidewalks along Main street, but there aren't so many of them. That sigh of relief you hear may come from the old-fashioned politician who vowed he would let his whiskers grow until Virginia went Republican. The boys in Chicago must be losing their pep. According to news dispatches the election there actually was peaceful. Lindy came out for Hoover some time ago and the result of the election proves that he still knows where to pick a safe landing. "Western Auto's First offer of the means Big Extra Sale for Motorists throughout the West know they always save on guaranteed "Western Auto" tire...so the double savings presented by our offer tube to fit, FREE of charge, with every "Western Auto" tire makes this an economy opportunity to means buy right now...for present and for future tires and tubes are all new and fresh...from our plastic stock, and carry our well-known Iron-Clad Guarana that is backed by our CUSTOMER IS ALWAYS RIGHT!...so, your absolute and lasting satisfaction is assured. Purchasers of Wear-well tires will receive Free a guarantee. Blu-Ribbon tube to fit. Those who buy Western Giant will receive a Jumbo extra heavy tube of the same size." TIRES Mounted FREE free Tube ALSO with The New-Improved "WESTERN GIANT BALLOON" with CENTER TRACTION Tre "Western Auto's" finest tire—specially designed for safety, easy steering, extra traction, and SOURCES TOTAL OVER $0.00 Directors Vice-President YUTH, Vice-President F. FOWLER, Sec'y. ED KOESEL, Mgr. DR. A. H. DOMANN Blding & Loan ation Anaheim, California SAFETY Free Tube ALSO with The New-Improved WESTERN GIANT BALLOON with CENTER TRACTION Tire "Western Auto's" finest tire—specially designed for safety, easy steering, extra traction, and mileage. Note the Tread—it has continuous titer and side running strips that give long life, easy steering, also, the deep, all-around groove and cross slots that hold the road in any direction. Jumbo Tube FREE, during this sale, with every tire. Guaranteed 16,000 Miles Size Our Low Price Size Our Low Price 29x4.40 $ 7.85 31x5.25 $ 13 30x4.50 8.85 30x5.77 14 29x4.75 10.45 32x6.00 17 30x5.00 11.45 33x6.00 18 31x5.00 11.95 32x6.20 20 30x5.25 12.95 33x6.75 24 Make Your Savings Even Greater TRADE IN YOUR OLD TIRES they are as good as cash at any "Western Auto" store in partment for new, fully guaranteed Western Giant or Wear-well tires. "Western Auto" Service A feature that saves you money. Service connections are maintained in all cities where we have stores, so that goods purchased from us may be properly and promptly installed at a very low flat rate... in many instances... free of all cost! More than 150 Stores Western Supply 133 SOUTH LOS ANGELES Aquil Se Habla Business Houses All Closed Today Everybody Giving Thanks for the Past Year's Prosperity Business in Anaheim is paralyzed today. All merchants have closed their houses, and the proprietors and employees are attending church, going to the beach or spending the day at home in recreation. There has been a great slaughter in the family circle of the great American bird, and dealers who handle poultry report heavy buying. Everybody is obeying the proclamation of President Coolidge, which requested the people to lay aside the cares of business and spend the day in giving thanks. He said: "The season again approaches when it has been the custom for generations to set apart a day for thanksgiving for the blessings which the giver of all good and perfect gifts has bestowed upon us during the year. It is most becoming that we should do this, for the goodness and mercy of God which have followed us through the year deserve our grateful recognition and acknowledgment. "Through His divine favor peace and tranquility have reigned throughout the land; He has protected our country as a whole against pestilence and disaster and has directed us to the ways of national prosperity. Our fields have been abundantly productive; our industries have flourished; our commerce has increased; wages have been lucrative, and comfort and contentment have followed the undisturbed pursuit of honest toll as we have prospered in material things so have we also grown and enriched. In fitting a spiritual Through divine inspiration we have enlarged our charities and our mission; we have been imbued with high ideals which operated for the benefits of the world and promotion of the brotherhood of man to peace and good will. "Wherefore, I. Calvin Co-olidge, President of the United States, do hereby sit apart Thursday, the 29th day of November, as a day of general thanksgiving and prayer, and I recommend that on that day the people shall cease from their daily work and in their homes, and in devotion give thanks to the Almighty for the many and great blessings they have received, and their accustomed places of worship, seek His guidance that they may deserve a continuance of His favor." BANK RESOURCES Comptroller of Currency John W. Pole announces the aggregate resources of 7676 national banks in the United States totaled $28,925,400,000 October 3, or $1,-711,656,000 more than a year ago. Loans and discounts including red-counts amounted to $15,116,569,000, a decrease of $28,126,000 since June 30, but an increase in the year of $749,-943,000. Paid in capital stocks of national banks October 3 totaled $1,615,744,000. Liabilities for circulating notes outstanding totaled $648,548,000. Total deposit liabilities were $23,005,-311,000. The Austrian republic has just celebrated its tenth birthday. And even at this tender age it is talking about getting married—to the German Reich. First and Only Tube of the year Extra Savings for you! Best know "Western Auto" tires presented by our offer of a with every "Western economy opportunity that present and for future use! and fresh...from our reg-known Iron-Clad Guarantee IS ALWAYS RIGHT Poling satisfaction is assured. I receive Free a guaranteed who buy Western Giant tires tube of the same size. Standard Tread Western Giant Balloon Guaranteed 16,000 Miles The same dependable Western Giant Balloon that "Western Auto" has sold for years, and from which thousands of motorists receive service and satisfaction. Now offered at the lowest price in history...and during this sale you get a Jumbo Tube FREE with every tire! Size Our Low Price Size Our Low Price 29x4.40 $ 6.85 30x5.25 $11.45 30x4.50 7.65 31x5.25 11.85 29x4.75 9.35 30x5.77 13.90 30x5.00 10.45 32x6.00 15.65 31x5.00 10.95 33x6.00 16.35 Wear-well Cord High Pressure Type Our Low Prices on these full standard weight tires, with thick, tough, road-gripping treads, offer tremendous savings. Blue Ribbon Tube to fit, FREE with every tire, tool Guaranteed 10,000 Miles Size Our Low Price 30x3 Cl. Reg. Size $ 5.45 30x31 Cl. Reg. Size $ 5.65 LSO with Low-Improved BURN GIANT" BALLOON WIR TRACTION Tread finest tire—specially designed steering, extra traction, and extra Tread—it has continuous centing strips that give long life and so, the deep, all-around grooves that hold the road in any going. with every tire. 10,000 Miles Our Low Price 1x5.25 $13.45 10x5.77 14.45 12x6.00 17.95 13x6.00 18.75 12x6.20 20.75 13x6.75 24.65 Even Greater OLD TIRES Western Auto" store in part payGiant or Wear-well tires. More than 150 Stores in the WestWestern Auto Supply Co. 133 SOUTH LOS ANGELES ST. April Se Habla Espanol Wear-well Balloon Guaranteed 10,000 Miles Extraordinary savings are offered in these full balloons with broad ribbed, non-skid treads... and remember, you get a Blue Ribbon tube to fit with every tire! Our Low Price 29x4.40 Balloon $6.25 30x4.50 Balloon 6.90 30x5.00 Balloon 9.25 31x5.00 Balloon 9.55 30x5.25 Balloon 10.15 31x5.25 Balloon 10.95 30x5.77 Balloon 11.95 33x6.00 Balloon 13.90 Open Saturdays to 9:00 P.M. Wear-well Cord High Pressure Type Our Low Prices on these full standard welgat tires, with thick, tough, road-gripping treads, offer tremendous savings. Blue Ribbon Tube to fit, FREE with every tire, tool. Guaranteed 10,000 Miles Size Our Low Price 30x3 Cl. Reg. Size.$ 5.45 30x3½ Cl. Reg. Size. 5.65 30x3½ Cl. Oversize . 5.95 30x3½ S.S.O.S.... 7.40 31x4 S.S.O.S.... 8.95 32x4 S.S.O.S.... 9.40 33x4 S.S.O.S.... 9.95 34x4 S.S.O.S.... 11.40 32x4½ S.S.O.S.... 13.90 33x4½ S.S.O.S.... 14.95 Western Giant Cord High Pressure Type These massive, extra heavy duty oversize super cord tires are extra heavy throughout—extra tread and sidewall thickness and extra heavy carcass. We invite comparison with any other standard make tire. Jumbo Tube to fit, FREE with every tire! Guaranteed 16,000 Miles Size Our Low Price 30x3½ Reg. Size Cl..$ 6.45 30x3½ Ex.O.S.Cl. 6.97 30x3½ S.S.O.S.... 7.90 31x4 S.S.O.S.... 10.95 32x4 S.S.O.S.... 11.85 33x4 S.S.O.S.... 12.45 32x4½ S.S.O.S.... 16.25 33x4½ S.S.O.S.... 16.75 34x4½ S.S.O.S.... 17.90 33x5 S.S.O.S.... 23.35 35x5 S.S.O.S.... 23.85 The World's largest retailers of Auto Supplies ... Serving the motorist with guaranteed accessories, Tires, Camp Goods, Golf Equipment, Radio.