anaheim-gazette 1929-05-23
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PAGE FOUR
Orange Show Opens In World's Largest Tent
Daily R
Beginning on continuing tent rest to farmers will be given using May 27. the Agriculture operating Walb follows:
May 27—"Le clancy Studies W. DeTar, # county.
May 28—"Di potatoes," F. advisor, Los A.
May 29—"E rus Growers H. J. Ryan, b Los Angeles c
May 31—"W Campbell, assi Bernardino co
June 1—"P Developments ents, manager Los Angeles C
Sunkist Mo
The show tent that Barnum, Bailey and other circus executives dreamed about is an actuality at Anaheim, where it will house the ninth annual California Valencia Orange show from May 23 to June 2. Under one roof, without a quarter pole to mar the vision, it can accommodate 35,000 people. Dorothy Day (above), one of the queen's court, poses with a Robinson Crusoe decoration, this year's show motif.
Dam Proposed For Brea Creek
Large Amount of Lost Water Will Be Conserved
The entire northwestern section of Orange county is interested in eliminating the variable but ever-present flood menace from Brea creek, and the whole cocounty is interested in sinking its wasted assets into the general reasury of underground reservoirs, from which is pumped 80 per cent of the county's water supply.
At present no use is made of the flood run-off from the 1974 square miles of Brea Canyon watershed, because, while it might in extreme cases reach 6500 second feet of water, some season see none at all. The mean seasonal run-off is 2,900 acre feet, while there is an additional 20,000 acre feet per season from the territory adjacent to Fullerton. Because the creek channel narrows rapidly, even small floods overflow its banks and spread out, sometimes as far as Puena Park.
To end flood and conserve 2100 acre-feet per year, or 97 per cent of the total run-off, the county flood control district plans to construct three reservoirs and three diversion conduits in this area, that will store flood waters and then release them slowly so that they can be sunk underground.
The cost of the works would be $925,000, covering a dam $9 foot high on the north fork of Brea creek, with 1030 acre feet storage capacity; a dam of equal height on south fork, with 2400 acre feet capacity; a low dam of 370 acre feet storage, known as Fullerton reservoir, to serve 2.8 square Paul Page and Lola Lane, new to picture parrots but well known on the Roadway stage, are headed for sure success in the talking motion picture field. They have that certain grasp of expression which comes only from long experience behind the footlights. Their performances are a delight to watch and hear.
One of the greatest of them is Henry B. Waltbull, carries away stellar honors by his perfect portrayal of a down-and-out piano player. To veteran actor Fills his role to the brimning point with incompatible work and rich voice.
Sharon Jynn as the beautiful "Joint" entertainer captivates with her charm and voice. Warren Hymner, as the villain is excellent. Stuart Erwin, Erville Alderson, Helen Ware, Ivan Linnow, Marjorie Beebe, Helen Lynch, and a score of others are splendid in their roles. Benjamin Stoinoff directed the story from Frederick Hazlitt Branman's adaptation of the stage play of the same name.
"Speakacasy" will be shown Saturday afternoon, immediately following the junior matinee. Clark & McCulloch, the famous vaudeville comics, in a Fox Movietone act, and Fox Movietone news complete the bill.
Growers to Visit Experiment Station
Off for the Experiment Station at Riverside Tuesday, May 28, and a stop at the proposed site of the Brado day in the Santa Ana Canyon. That is the announcement just issued by the farm advisor's office, coming as a result of many requests from Orange county growers. This trip is planned to give citrus and walnut growers and
To end flood and conserve 2100 acre feet per year, or 97 per cent of the total run-off, the county flood control district plans to construct three reservoirs and three diversion conduits in this area, that will store flood waters and then release them slowly so that they can be sunk underground. The cost of the works would be $925,000, covering a dam $9 foot high on the north fork of Brea creek, with 1030 acre feet storage capacity; a dam of equal height on south fork, with 2400 acre feet capacity; a low dam of 370 acre feet storage, known as Fullerton reservoir, to serve 2.8 square miles northeast of Fullerton; a diversion conduit at Lofaus to each run-off from another small area and divert it to Fullerton reservoir; a diversion conduit north of Brea, to turn the slowly released water from Brea canyon reservoir into a ravine leading to Fullerton reservoir; and finally a conduit leading from Fullerton reservoir to the Carbon canyon conduit and through that to Santa Ana river. Through this system, all of the Brea canyon run-off that cannot be sunk along Brea creek, would be carried to Santa Ana river and sunk.
"Speakeasy" Stellar All-Talking Thriller Of Roaring Forties
When George M. Cohan stated for the press that dialogue pictures were confined to four walls, he certainly did not include the Fox-Movietone production. "Speakeasy," which is the feature attraction at the California theatre today and tomorrow. The scenes in this seasational talking picture are staged in the Madison Square Garden. New York, at the Belmont race track, in subway tunnels, on main streets of the great metropolis and, in fact, all over the big city. More than that they are not the usual news real shots because the players are right there acting their parts.
The dramatic thread of the interesting story is woven in these locations and the result is astonishing beyond description.
The dialogue is brilliant and, due to the thoroughly experienced cast of stage players who appear in the principal roles, sounds convincing.
Growers to Visit Experiment Station
Off for the Experiment Station at Riverside Tuesday, May 28, and a stop at the proposed site of the Brado daun in the Santa Ana Canyon. That is the announcement just issued by the farm advisor's office, coming as a result of many requests from Orange county growers. This trip is planned to give citrus and walnut growers and other interestte in the work of the Experiment Station an opportunity of meeting the staff of investigators and making contact with the actual experiments. Dr. H. J. Webber, director of the station, has arranged to show the Orange county growers some of the more important plots and problems under way, including fertilizers, mottle leaf, boron injury, and biological pest control, and the pruning plots.
The latest information on the Mediterranean fruit fly will be presented by the entomologists.
An added feature will be the first stop to inspect the proposed Prado dam site in the Santa Ana Canyon at 8:45 a.m. Paul Bailey, flood control engineer, will explain the project right on the site. The auto caravan will form at the junction of the Yorba bridge and Canyon road and leave for the dam site at 8:30 a.m. Participants are invited to bring their picnic lunch. Coffee will be furnished by the Experiment Station. Three hundred Orange county people took the trip last year, according to Farm Advisor M. E. Wahillberg.
Orange County Farm Delegates Return
The Farm Bureau delegates who attended the travelling conference from Berkeley to Santa Ana recently, are back to work on their farms, after eight days of intensely interesting and valuable demonstration and rural educational activities. The representatives from Orange county were: Dr. S. S. Twombly, Fullerton; Andrey Smiley, Anaheim; Joseph Ritter, Cypress; John Grill, Garden Grove, and Eric E. Eastman, Santa Ana.
They are now reporting their trip to
the thirteen form centers in the county. The "conference" visited all the coast counties south of Berkeley and the Southern California counties, except San Diego and Imperial.
The Orange county delegates report that the Farm Bureau organization is training in all counties visited. The farmers are appreciating more and more the value of cooperation in the solution of their cultural and economic problems. All phases of agriculture were studied along the way—horticulture, animal industry, fish crops, home improvement, economics and marketing.
Daily Radio Program
Beginning each day at 12 p.m., and continuing ten minutes, tallie of interest to farmers, growers and producers will be given during the week beginning May 27, under the auspices of the Agricultural Extension Service, cooperating with radio station KEL, as follows:
May 27—"Lessons from Dairy Efficiency Studies in Imperial County." V. W. DeTar, farm advisor of Imperial county.
May 28—"Diseases of Irish and Sweet Potatoes." F. H Ernst, assistant farm advisor, Los Angeles county.
May 29—"Economic Losses to Citrus Growers Caused by Insect Pests," H. J. Ryan, horticultural commissioner Los Angeles county.
May 31—"What Price Turkey?" A. L. Campbell, assistant far madvisor, San Bernardino county.
June 1—"Problems in Desert Land Developments," by Dr. Geo. P. Clements, manager agricultural department Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce.
Sunkist Awarded Most of the Prizes
Four firsts and one second award out of five entries was the score for Sunkist advertising in Los Angeles' Advertising Achievement Week competition, in which the best advertising was all of the other Pacific Coast co-operative marketing campaigns and those of all large western advertisers. Last year the exchange won five firsts and one second on a total of six classifications entered and has won the major trophy for the best advertising by a co-operative for the past two years, a record hard to beat and not easy to equal.
Egg Laying Contest
The sixth month of the egg laying contest at Pomona, with entries from Wisconsin, Missouri, Arkansas, Washington, British Columbia and Arizona, besides the many from California, shows George C. England of Inglewood in the lead with 1278 eggs credited to his entry. The Katella Leghorn farm Anaheine is fifth, with 1121 eggs.
Howard S. Killian of El Monte has the high hen with 161 eggs to her credit. Her closest competitor is one owned by George C. England, with 151 eggs to date.
All the light birds at the contest averaged 22.01 eggs and the heavy birds averaged 18.66 eggs.
In food consumption the light birds averaged 7.3 pounds of grain and mash and the heavy birds 7.1 pounds.
Start cooking green peas in boiling, unsalted water. Then, as soon as they come to the boil, lower the heat and simmer them. Peas actually cook more quickly at the simmering point, are more tender and keep their fresh, sweet flavor and bright green color better than when boiled. Use no more water than necessary so that the valuable liquid need not be drained off. Add salt when the peas are about half cooked. Young peas will simmer tender in about 15 minutes. Season with melted butter or cream.
Liver Trouble and Constipation
June 1—"Problems in Desert Land Developments," by Dr. Geo. P. Clements, manager agricultural department Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce.
Sunkist Awarded Most of the Prizes
Four prizes and one second award out of five entries was the score for Sunkist advertising in Los Angeles' Advertising Achievement Week competition, in which the best advertising was selected for entry in the larger contest to be conducted at the Pacific Coast Advertising Club's convention in Oakland, June 16 to 20.
The prize winners were selected from 259 separate exhibits, of which the Sunkist orange, lemon and grapefruit campaign by the California Fruit Growers' Exchange was by far the largest and most complete ever seen in a local advertising display.
The principal award was won by Sunkist for "the most effective campaign, for a family of products." The exchange street car advertising campaign won first prize in that classification; Sunkist direct mail advertising, consisting of booklets, folders, broadsides and other printed matter, also took a blue ribbon. The dealer helps, judged from the standpoint of the most complete and most effective dealer helps campaign, won first place and the Sunkist window and store display material won second prize in that field.
There were no special classifications in the Los Angeles contest for magazine or newspaper advertising except that those important mediums were included in the exhibit material for the principal award won by Sunkist on its complete campaign.
At the Oakland convention the Sunkis exhibit will be in competition with
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DON'T FAIL
—to see the all-steel electric refrigeration exhibit at the Orange Show!
Now presenting six ALL-STEEL MODELS
INTRODUCING STILL HIGHER STANDARDS OF EFFICIENCY
INTRODUCING STILL HIGHER
STANDARDS OF EFFICIENCY
AN outstanding achievement... the first all-steel refrigerators. New low prices. The greatest values ever offered by General Electric.
Now you can buy a refrigerator with a cabinet built like a safe. One with doors that will always fit perfectly. One which will operate on the least amount of current. One which shuts out the heat.
The General Electric, too, was the first to provide an easily accessible temperature control—it speeds up the freezing of ice cubes when the user desires.
Because of mass production economies prices now start at only $227 delivered. There are six sizes. See them at our display rooms — examine them thoroughly — let us explain our plan of conveniently spaced time payments.
Already 15,000 California users enjoy the convenience and health-guarding service of the General Electric Refrigerator. Not one of these owners has ever spent a penny for service.
GENERAL ELECTRIC
ALL-STEEL REFRIGERATOR
The Wm. LeVecke Co.
Orange County Dealer
103 E. Center Street
SANTA ANA ANAHEIM FULLERTON
Phone 530
Anaheim, Calif., May 23, 1929
Be sure to attend the Orange Show, May 23 to June 2.
Copyright 1928 Hart Schaffner & Marx
Authentic University Styles in Suits by
HART SCHAFFNER & MARX
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HART SCHAFFNER & MARX
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THE HOME OF HART, SCHAFFNER & MARX
Horsheim Shoes
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Stetson Hats
Is there Something Missing in your home?
Today's modern home is not complete without an electric refrigerator. Modern living demands it, just as it demands the electric range, vacuum cleaner and radio. Like them it takes its place as a necessary household fixture be-
TODAY'S MODERN HOME is not complete without an electric refrigerator. Modern living demands it, just as it demands the electric range, vacuum cleaner and radio. Like them it takes its place as a necessary household fixture because it lightens routine tasks, gives you more leisure and more time for the things you like to do.
The electric refrigerator serves you the year 'round with no more attention than the lamp on your library table. It permits the perfect preservation of food...makes entertaining a never-ending delight. And, most important of all, it safeguards the health of your family.
There is a model to fit the requirements of your family. See it at the nearest Edison office. Then let us tell you how easy it is to own.