anaheim-gazette 1931-06-18
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A few of the 600 flying machines which flew down the Hudson River to the "defense" of the mare shown just after they passed West Point. Ten years ago the highlands shown above were considered dangerous, because of air pockets, by fliers.
Daily Agricultural Radio Program
Beginning each day at 12 p.m. and continuing 10 minutes, talks of interest to farmers, growers and producers will be given during the week beginning, June 22, under the auspices of the Agricultural Extension Service, co-operating with Radio Station KFI, as follows:
June 22—"How to Cull Poultry." L. D. Sanborn, Assistant Farm Advisor.
Bottel, Agricultural Commissioner, Riverside.
June 25—"California Trees and Forests." Woodbridge Metcalf, Extension Forester, University of California.
June 26—"Turkey Production in San Bernardino County." A. L. Campbell, Assistant Farm Advisor, San Bernardino County.
Fremont Graduates Class of 163 Pupils
the letters "FJHS"
High school—the girls in a background. The Rev. the Church of Christ, gation. The address was George A. Warmer, of M. E. church. A scholar by the Anaheim Union was presented to Nancy for her scholarship and Fremont school life.
Music was a feature, the girls' and the boys' the school orchestra.
Daily Agricultural Radio Program
Beginning each day at 12 p.m. and continuing 10 minutes, talks of interest to farmers, growers and producers will be given during the week beginning, June 22, under the auspices of the Agricultural Extension Service, co-operating with Radio Station KFI, as follows:
June 22—"How to Cull Poultry." L. D. Sanborn, Assistant Farm Advisor, Los Angeles County.
June 23—"Avocado Question Box." M. B. Rounds; Farm Advisor, Los Angeles County.
June24—"The Southern Counties Commissioners' Organization." A. E.
Bottel, Agricultural Commissioner, Riverside.
June 25—"California Trees and Forests." Woodbridge Metcalf, Extension Forester, University of California.
June 26—"Turkey Production in San Bernardino County." A. L. Campbell, Assistant Farm Advisor, San Bernardino County.
Fremont Graduates Class of 163 Pupils
Boys and girls to the number of 163 were graduated from Fremont school, Friday evening, the ceremonies being held in the Greek theatre in City Park. The boys, in dark coats and light trousers, were seated on the stage to form the letters "FJHS."
High school—the girls in a background. The Rev. the Church of Christ, gtion. The address was George A. Warmer, of M. E. church. A scholar by the Anaheim Union was presented to Nancy for her scholarship and Fremont school life.
Music was a feature, the girls' and the boys' the school orchestra.
Exercises, a reception for by the graduates was given garden of Angeline hotel.
Nearly 32 million per National Forests last year.
F. A. Yungbluth's Great Clearance Sale
The wonderful and amazing values offered in this sale have attracted many purchasers, but there are still many fine money-saving opportunities still available.
Come in Tomorrow! Take Full Advantage of This Sale
Men's Fine Suits
There is wonderful value in this group. Many of these suits have two pairs of pants.
$1285
All wool suit mostly one or of a kind only many selling oinally as high $30.00.
About 50 Left in This Group
Look at This for a Great Buy
Another Group of Men's Suits
About 50 Left in This Group
Look at This for a Great Buy
Another Group of Men's Suits
Values
High as
$35.00
$19.75
Some With
Two Pairs
of Trouser
Neck Band
Shirts
Our entire stock of fine
shirts — regularly selling at
$2.00 to $12.00
—now at half
price! Neckband styles ...
1/2
Athletic Union
Suits
Broadcloth,
rayon and silk
union suits,
regular prices
up to $5.00 reduced ...
20%
Caps Values to
$2.00
Tweed caps of
pure wool fabrics,
rubber
visors, all rayon lined — reduced for clearance ...
$1.00
STRAW
HATS
With the exception of
Panama hats,
our entire stock
of straw hats
is included in
this sale.....1/3 OFF
Slip-On
Sweaters
Silk and wool
mixed sweaters
in plain and
novelty weaves,
good assortments to select
from—$5 values
$3.95
Felt Hats
Values to $5.00
New pastel coloors in light
weight felt
hats—all sizes
and many styles ...
$2.45
F. A. Yungbluth
The Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx
145 West Center Street
Show Visitors See Subtropical Exhibit
Great Display by Farm Bureau Shown Crowds at Orange Exposition
By HAROLD E. WAHLBERG
International interest was displayed in the extensive subtropical exhibit featured at the recent Orange County Valencia Show and Fair by the Avocado department of the Orange County Farm Bureau. Visitors from Morocco, Algeria, Spain, France, Italy, Mexico, Hawaii, Canada, Philippines, Japan, India, Palestine and Central American countries came to study the collection of almost 500 plates of avocado and miscellaneous subtropical fruits during the ten days of display at Anaheim. The visitors were generally surprised to see the large number of subtropical and tropical fruits that have been adopted in the home of Orange county and Southern California agriculture.
Ninety Different Varieties
Besides the ninety different varieties of avocados shown ranging in size from a peanut to a cantaloupe, miscellaneous fruit list included papayas, bananas, monstera deliciosa, kumpuats, passion fruit, sapotas, carobs, chinese lemons, tangelos, sweet limes, mandarins, Rangpoor limes, Macadamias, citrons, cherimoyas, and many others.
Seventy-three growers exhibited their products in this section. Sam Thompson of Carlsbad took first prize for the largest number of varieties displayed, taking into consideration also quality; the Irine Ranch, Tustin, took second honors; and George Beck of La Habra, third.
An Educational Exhibit
An educational exhibit showing all phases of propagation and growing from the seed to the mature tree was shown. Carl Nichols of Garden Grove had charge of this phase. Through the courtesy of the Calavo growers, boxed
the letters "FJHS" Fremont Junior High school—the girls in white forming a background. The Rev. C. C. Root, of the Church of Christ, gave the invocation. The address was by the Rev. Dr. George A. Warmer, of the Santa Ana M. E. church. A scholarship cup given by the Anaheim Union Honor society was presented to Nancy Lou Hargrave, for her scholarship and leadership in Fremont school life.
Music was a feature, with songs by the girls' and the boys' glee clubs and the school orchestra. Following the exercises, a reception for the teachers by the graduates was given on the roof garden of Angelline hotel.
Nearly 32 million persons visited the National Forests last year.
An Educational Exhibit
An educational exhibit showing all phases of propagation and growing from the seed to the mature tree was shown. Carl Nichols, of Garden Grove, had charge of this phase. Through the courtesy of the Calavo growers, boxed fruit was shown featuring various packs, sizes, and varieties. Judge F. D. Halm, La Habra, chairman of the Orange County Avocado Growers department of the Farm Bureau, and his committees were busy all week explaining uses and the growing of the avocado in answer to hundreds of quilces.
In connection with the show this year, an Avocado Growers' Institute, attended by 175 growers, was held on June 9. The session honored Mr. C. P. Taft of Orange, a pioneer horticulturist of Southern California who introduced and developed several commercial fruits—avocados, sapotas, loquats, guavas, and felioas.
Affairs of Week at Nation's Capital
(Correspondence to The Gazette)
Washington, D. C.—President Hoover's frank appeal to all citizens of the country to aid him in his efforts to restore normalcy is considered by political observers here to be one of his greatest speeches. It was delivered at Valley Forge, and the President used General Washington's troubles in Revolutionary days as a background against which to picture present difficulties.
Mr. Hoover's greatest drawback has been the way the general public has pictured him as a cold, calculating machine, undemocratic in the extreme. At Valley Forge he touched everyone's heart by the short expression, "I have my troubles also." That phrase, following his assertion that there could be no hope for a change in the financial or employment situation through governmental agencies alone, formed a plea for help that will do more to win him support than anything else he could have said or done, it is thought here.
Mr. Hoover's words carried conviction, both from what he said and the way he said it. Radio listeners, who must have numbered millions, heard a warm, logical, sympathetic voice speaking to them, a voice vastly different from that heard in the few campaign talks he made, which many campaign workers at that time asserted were of little benefit in winning votes because of their mechanical delivery and precise
Mr. Hoover's words carried conviction, both from what he said and the way he said it. Radio listeners, who must have numbered millions, heard a warm, logical, sympathetic voice speaking to them, a voice vastly different from that heard in the few campaign talks he made, which many campaign workers at that time asserted were of little benefit in winning votes because of their mechanical delivery and precise phraseology.
The President unquestionably won many warm supporters by his Valley Forge speech and it will probably be translated into much helpful activity on the part of those who had felt that Hoover's voice was more the voice of big business than a fellow-citizen, sorely tried by the mishaps of drought and financial unsteadiness that overcame the country in the first two years of his administration.
Wheat corners have intrigued the imagination of growers for three generations, in which time Jim Patten, J. Ogden Armour and others have headed purchases of wheat that staggered the country. The Federal Government has just successfully managed the greatest corner of wheat in history, not even being able to make the front pages of newspapers with it because the element of uncertainty was lacking.
Carrying 250,000,000 million bushels, as it did, at a price varying from around 84 to 81 cents, there has never been a question that the bottom of the nation's pocketbook would ever be reached, forcing the "pool" to dump its holdings with a consequent terrific drop in price. The pool was engineered by the Grain Stabilization Corporation, the Farmers' National Board and the Federal Farm Board, all government institutions.
While the pool has cost the country money, yet the loss to individual farmers would have been enormous had the corner not been run and the country would ultimately have been carried through. Due to the government's trading, all operations have been accomplished in an orderly manner and deliveries have been prompt at all times.
Retirement of Charles C. Teague,
"I have just put our insignia in a safety deposit I KNOW they will be proclaimed there."
"Yes, and I have just put out ceries for the week-end new natural gas rearranger KNOW that it will keep safely cold — constantly 50°, the danger point for this administration."
man of the Farm
effective on the
co-operatives fosment during his
institution of the
Teague's work
able producers to
of lowered prices,
of systems for more
farm produce.
In his letter made
ident, that governsaved many of the
perishing in their
that as the beneral Marketing Act,
the growers will
most constructive
ment administration.
Convinced that
been made in marketting food products in the past two
years than in any previous ten-year
period in the country's history.
A curious finding was uncovered by
the Department of Agriculture this
month. It is that wheat ranks sixth in
importance in all crops and not first,
as many believe. It is exceeded by coton,
milk, hogs, cattle and calves, and
eggs and chickens. Cotton accounts for
14.59 per cent' of the average farmer's
income, milk being a fraction less.
Wheat averaged only 7.89 of the total
income from farm products.
Spray Demonstrations
for Citrus Growers
A series of three field demonstrations featuring the use of tank mix oil sprays
will be held on June 30, July 1 and 2,
in Orange county, according to Farm
Advisor H. E. Wahlberg. The demonstrations will be held near Placentia,
Anaheim and Orange. The definite locations will be announced later.
Considerable interest has been manifiest by the citrus industry in the new
process of tank mix sprays developed
by the entomologists of the Citrus Experiment Station. The new process
which has given satisfactory results in
Orange county as observed by the agricultural commissioner and his inspectors offers a means of pest control that
will be considerably cheaper in material costs.
All growers and spray operators are
invited to attend the demonstrations
and learn of its economical merits as well as effectiveness for scale control.
AUTOS REFINANCED
THE MORRIS PLAN
AUTO LOANS
SALARY LOANS
AUTO LOANS
SALARY LOANS
Morris Plan Co.
of Orange County
h Los Angeles Street, Anaheim. Phone 2216.
DEPENDABLE
as your
SAFETY DEPOSIT
have just put our insurance policies in a safety deposit box. NOW they will be protected here."
and, remember
With ELECTROLUX
the GAS Refrigerator
The "UPKEEP" Is Only About 3 Cents Per Day in the average home
SPECIAL 5% DISCOUNT UNTIL JUNE 27
TITLE AS $10.00
1. BALANCE
MALL AMOUNTS
MONTHLY
SOUTHERN COUNTIES
GAS COMPANY
Liberal allowance for your old refrigerator