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anaheim-gazette 1932-11-10

1932-11-10 · Anaheim Gazette · page 8 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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President McFadden of Farm Bureau Studies Problems, Appoints Chairmen Ways and Means Committee Named; Board of Directors Go On Record Against Diversion of Gas Tax Money for Other than Road Purposes; Officers Named at Large Last Week President Ralph J. McFadden of the Orange County Farm Bureau this week considered appointments for various committees and problems confronting the local organization of farmers, following his election recently. Conferring with the officers and directors, President McFadden named the four elective officers, and Directors A. F. Schroeder of West Orange, J. J. Denny of Cypress and A. R. Marshburn of Yorba Linda on the ways and means committee. The elective officers are: President McFadden, Vice President Felton Browning, Secretary Roland Flaherty and Treasurer C. W. Stanley. Browning again was named chairman of the tax committee and O. E. Steward succeeds McFadden as chairman of the water committee. Members of the board went on record against forming of a proposed state-wide citrus department because of delicate situations developing from the pro rata negotiations now in progress. They instructed delegates to the state convention to oppose diversion of gas tax funds. Officers and directors named at large last week were: O. E. Steward, Dr. D. D. Waynick, S. W. Stanley, C. A. Palmer, E. E. Campbell and C. E. Crumire, the bureau named the following directors of farm centers: Anaheim LeRoy Lyon; Cypress, J. J. Denny; Foothill, L. A. Bortz; Garden Grove, J. W. Crill; La Habra, John K. Knudson; Placentia, R. J. McFadden; Tustin, F. B. Brownling; West Orange, A. F. Schroeder; Yorba Linda, A. R. Marshburn. Directors of departments were named as follows: Beekeeping, C. E. Lush; citrus, Holmes Bishop; berry, R. F. Hazzard; forestry, Charles Logan; 4-H clubs, H. J. Hinrichs; poultry, E. L. Putney; Walnut, J. A. Smiley; beans Vernon Heil; avocado, none. Less Rain During Winter Predicted Scripps Institution Says the Precipitation to be Three Inches Less California and the Pacific coast area are due for less rain and snow during the coming winter months, than was recorded during last winter, according to the seasonal weather forecast, recently received by the farm advisor's office from the University of California's Scripps Institution of Oceanography, at La Jolla. At the same time the report predicts that the precipitation during the coming winter will be from two to three inches greater than the average precipitation for the past sixteen years. The forecast is based upon a study of sun-spots, and a study of the various cycles that apparently indicate the volume of precipitation. A total seasonal precipitation for the winter of 1922-33 is fixed at 14.5 inches for the south coast region, while the precipitation for the Santa Barbara region is placed at 20.8 inches. In 1931-32 the precipitation in the south coast region was 17.1 inches, and in the Santa Barbara region it was 22 inches. The average precipitation for the past sixteen years has been 12.5 inches in the California Plan Gets Recognition Nation-Wide Extension of New Plan Looms as Cooperatives Adopt It A nation wide extension of California's plan to reorganize and consolidate her agricultural industries appears to be definitely apparent, according to a statement by A. J. McGuire, general manager of the Land O'Lakes Creameries, Inc., of Minneapolis, the world's third largest agricultural cooperative organization. The statement was contained in a letter to C. B. Crandall, president of the Central Cooperative Livestock Shipping association of South St. Paul. A copy of the letter was sent by McGuire to Dudley Moulton, director of the state department of agriculture. The plan referred to was devised by groups of California growers in cooperation with the President of the United States, the Federal farm board and the division of markets of the state department of agriculture. The development of the plan has rested largely with Dr. Theodore Macklin, director of the state division of markets, whose work in this regard was referred to by McGuire in his letter to Moulton. McGuire's statement said in part: "This movement on the part of the State of California—in seeking to combine its cooperative marketing activities with the federal farm board—seems to me to be of great significance. It should lead to cooperation between all the states instead of the bitter and wasteful competition that now often exists." "I wrote you recently in regard to the farm board for the reason that I felt that if the farm board or its usefulness should be destroyed at this time, it would delay for years the movement that now seems to be getting under way in California for a national plan and national cooperation, and which all the states should take up." The Land O'Lakes company is credited with being the largest distributor of milk and milk products in the world. California Plan Reunion on Nov. 12 Every Missourian is included in the call to the annual fall picnic reunion under the auspices of the Missouri State Society of Southern California. It will be held in Sycamore Grove Park, Los Angeles, all day, Saturday, November 12, with basket dinners at noon. The program of song and oratory will be in charge of President S. A. Selecman. IN LITTLE OLD NEW YORK By CARL H. GETZ Four of the five boroughs of New York City by themselves rank among the first ten cities of the country. Brooklyn alone is slightly smaller than Chicago. The richest suburbs in the world lie within Manhattan's fifty-mile trade zone—include eight cities of more than 100,000 population and 72 towns of more than 10,000 population. Never have New York women clanked about in bracelets as they are doing today. Three bangles on either sixteen years. The forecast is based upon a study of sun-spots, and a study of the various cycles that apparently indicate the volume of precipitation. A total seasonal precipitation for the winter of 1922-33 is fixed at 14.5 inches for the south coast region, while the precipitation for the Santa Barbara region is placed at 20.8 inches. In 1931-32 the precipitation in the south coast region was 17.1 inches, and in the Santa Barbara region it was 22 inches. The average precipitation for the past sixteen years has been 12.5 inches in the south coast region, and 17.8 inches in the Santa Barbara region. In explaining the forecast, Dr. Geo. F. McEwen and Dr. A. F. Gorton state: "In general, the available evidence points to considerably less precipitation than last season, but not far from the average. Fewer general storms and less snowfall in the higher altitudes may be expected. The runoff of important northern watersheds is estimated to be from 70 percent to 90 percent of the normal. "The trend of both precipitation and runoff in the northern area is still downward, contrary to indications for Southern California, but the reversal of the temperature trend last winter may have marked the end of the dry period in the north, and may mean a rapid rise during the next decade." the states instead of the bitter and wasteful competition that now often exists. "I wrote you recently in regard to the farm board for the reason that I felt that if the farm board or its usefulness should be destroyed at this time, it would delay for years the movement that now seems to be getting under way in California for a national plan and national cooperation, and which all the states should take up." The Land O'Lakes company is credited with being the largest distributor of milk and milk products in the world. It has 400 member creameries in more than six states and does a business of more than $50,000,000 a year. Some of its products are distributed in California. Add Five Counties For Bovine Tests Extension of the state's bovine tuberculin test program into five more counties of the state was announced in a report to Governor Rolph's Council by Director Dudley Moulton of the State Department of Agriculture. The new tests will mean that the program will now cover 25 counties, under the original appropriation of $415,000, whereas, when the program was first set up it had not been anticipated that more than eight counties could be covered. Rigid economies put into effect by the division of animal industry in the department, chief of which concerned the appraisal of reactor cattle, has now made it possible to extend the program into 25 counties, covering more than half of the bovine population of the state. The five new counties where the tests will be undertaken are Marin, Alameda, San Joaquin, Santa Barbara and Riverside. The counties in which previous tests have been conducted: Del Norte, Siskiyou, Modoc, Trinity, Shasta, Lassen, Mendocino, Tehama, Butte, Plumas, Lake, San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Cruz, Santa Clara, Kern, Ventura, Los Angeles. Orange and San Diego. Four of the five boroughs of New York City by themselves rank among the first ten cities of the country. Brooklyn alone is slightly smaller than Chicago. The richest suburbs in the world lie within Manhattan's fifty-mile trade zone—include eight cities of more than 100,000 population and 72 towns of more than 10,000 population. Never have New York women clanked about in bracelets as they are doing today. Three bangles on either wrist are not excessive, according to style. If they are gilded they're a shade smarter than silvered. In 1931 New York real estate was valued for taxing purposes at a little less than $20,000,000,000—or about one-eighteenth of the total estimated wealth of the United States. Saw a woman the other night in a restaurant wearing a necklace made of what I learned was shark's teeth. New York jewelers say that if a man can be persuaded to buy a ring for himself with a stone in it, he will select a sapphire. It has been a custom in New York to have two ornamental lamps burn all night in front of the mayor's residence. New York's mayor lives in an apartment house. Hence, no lamps. It has been estimated that New Yorkers drop a million dollars a week in nickles, dimes and quarters, into slot machines. Although forty years old, Grant's Tonib in New York has never been completed as originally planned. New York does 18.7 per cent of the total national retail trade, buys 16.2 per cent of the country's food. New York Brewers, confident that the days of prohibition are numbered do not look for the return of the corner saloon. But they do predict beer will be sold at soda fountains in drug stores. Get Patrol To A Although it is lights of a car or an adjusting stale purpose, the Cars declared it posses just lights with A campaign is out the state by pose of ridding tights or lights improperly. Until November er with patrolm night. As a possible torists of trouble the patrol issue for those who own lights. M however, that illegal lights the ties by adjusting less such lights and approved by trol. Otherwise justified at an off and a certificate Two Champions 4H CLUB news Wins Highest Honor A New York 4-H club boy has won the highest honor which can come to a baby beef club member. He is Harold Hamilton of Millerton. The distinction was to win the championship in the baby beef show for club members at the Eastern States Exposition at Springfield, Mass., and on a calf which he bred as well as fitted. The Hamilton boy won the championship in competition with about 100 prize winners at local fairs which had come to the show. It was pronounced by the judge, W. J. Kennedy of St. Joseph, Mo., as one of the best calves he had seen in the many club shows he had judged. An interesting story is back of the champion calf and its owner. Back in 1927, young Hamilton fitted and showed a beef calf at the Springfield exposition. All of his year’s hopes came true when it was made a champion of that show. One of the prizes he received was a purebred beef heifer from the herd of Angus maintained at Briarcliff Farms, Pine Plans, New York. The calf was a fine specimen, as the owner of the farm, Mr. Oakleigh Thorne, a retired business man, is greatly interested in rebuilding the beef cattle industry of New England. Harold took the prize heferer home and raised it, also its calves as they came. They developed into fine animals because the prize heferer was “bred in the purple,” and blood will tell if you give it a chance. This year’s champion steer is a calf of the prize hefer. A granddaughter of the prize heferer which Harold showed also won a fifth prize. Harold is getting a fine start in cattle raising, and is on the way to sound system of farming, thanks to the practical interest of friends of club work and his club training. Biggest Team In Pacific No Interesting Afternoon; Tricks for Touchdowns as Giants Although the Trojan football team had one of its hardest fought battles the season Saturday with California Bears, no rest awaits the sons of Southern California as the Webfeeder, the University of Oregon will be having southward this week-end determined to avenge a bitter defeat of the season. Showing unusual spirit under the direction of their popular coach, Prink Callison the Oregonian revealed their strength early in the season by defeating Santa Clara holding the powerful Washington en to a 0 to 0 tie. Behind one of the biggest and strongest lines in the Pacific Coast conference, Coach Callison has a set of his running experienced backs with Southern California will find hard stop. Mark Temple and Leighton regular halfbacks of last season, Mike Mikulak, fullback who as a softer last year was one of the hard line plungers in the conference; are splendid ball packers and likewise Oregon plenty of kicking and pass power. Southern California and Oregon teams have met only three times football. In 1915 Oregon won the game, 34 to 0. Southern California won, 21-0, in 1920 and last year over a demoralized Webfoot eleven a 53-0 count. Last year’s wallow is expected to have the visitors fight mad here Saturday, and unless Southern California can make a quick recovery from its tough one with California the Trojans stand a good chance seeing their rivals taste sweet revenge. TROY PLAYS HEADS-UP GAME IN 27-7 VICTORY Hawking the ball in approved Hard Jones manner, the University Front In the Days of '49, when the mud flats of San Francisco bay extended to Montgomery street and Los Angeles was a pueblo, the pine forests of the Sierra Nevada and the Douglas fir forests of the Coast range clothed the mountains and foothills in a much wider belt than they do today, according to a report by A. E. Wieslander of the California Forest Experiment Station of the U.S. Forest Service. Logging, grazing and particularly forest fires are the chief factors which have converted the old commercial forests to what are now comparatively worthless land and have created a land management problem of large proportions in California. In Eldorado county alone, according to Wieslander, the ponderosa pine forests have retreated 10 miles up the mountain slopes from an elevation of 1,000 feet to the 2,500 foot contour on a 30-mile front, leaving a strip of 162,000 acres entirely deforested and an even larger area thinly stocked with second growth trees. This land, which is capable of producing a forest stand of 37,000 board feet of lumber per acre, more than is usually found today on the average commercial logging areas, is now mostly covered with half scrub woodland, worthless for timber and too dense or too brushy for good grazing. Isolated survivors of the original forest, scattered groups of second growth and such names as Sawmill Flat, Sawmill Creek and Shingle Springs, occurring in what are now treeless areas, indicate that they were once in forested territory. This theory is confirmed by old records which prove that from 1850 to 1870 many sawmills supplied lumber to the placer mines in the central Sierra region. 46 Veniremen Drawn On New Trial Jury Thirty-two men and 14 women were drawn on the new trial jury panel in superior court Monday to serve for the next three months. Veniremen drawn were: Herman Allgeyer, Lee Barnett, Thos. S. McColum, J. L. Clayton, John A. Boegman, Victor W. La Mont, Mrs. E. L. Nelson, Claud Z. Wasson, H. L. McKinley, R. R. Smith, J. T. Dilley, William F. Peterson, Glen A. Short, J. W. Watkins, Stella O. Hitterdale, Olive S. Guptill, George E. Lewis, H. H. Quille, Frank W. Morris, Mrs. Nora M. Chapman, W. E. Gates, Mrs. Tress N. Johns, Sarah J. Taber, Clara B. Daughenbaugh, Mrs. Alice Eastman, Alex Grant, Chris N. Unemployed Will Meet Here Nov. 22 Anaheim Man Elected Head of County Council of Jobless; Districts Defined Because of election Tuesday evening, the cooperative council of the unemployed of Orange county, recently organized at Santa Ana in an effort to district the county and prevent duplication to effort and work in securing food and clothing for their own members, will meet in Anaheim at 7:30 p.m. November 22 at the headquarters of the Unemployed Legion on Adele Street. When the council was formed delegates attended from Anaheim, Buena Park, Costa Mesa, Fullerton, Garden Grove, La Habra, Newport Beach, Ocean View, Orange, Santa Ana and Westminister, H. Axup, head of the Anaheim unemployed, was elected president; J. W. Daly of Westminster, vice-president; E. E. Peck of Santa Ana, secretary; and P. D. Kenney of Fullerton, treasurer. The county was distributed with the following appointments being made: District No. 1—Brea, Fullerton and L Habra, Garret Cypher. District No. 2—Anaheim, Buena Park, and Garden Grove, J. W. Brunnick of Anaheim... District No. 3—Costa Mesa, Huntington Beach and Newport Beach, M. Mitchell Costa Mesa. District No. 4—Ocean View, Stanton and Westminster, A. K. Lawton of Ocean View. District No. 5—Comprising Santa Ana and Orange, William Ruddiman of Santa Ana. California Honey Week Is Designated To encourage greater consumption of a home industry, November 7 to 12 has been designated as "California Honey Week," according to statement... Get Patrol's O.K. To Adjust Lights Although it is better to have the headlights of a car checked and adjusted at an adjusting station equipped for that purpose, the California highway patrol declared it possible for anyone to adjust lights with a little practice. A campaign is being waged throughout the state by the patrol for the purpose of ridding the highways of glaring lights or lights that are functioning improperly. This campaign will last until November 19th and possibly longer with patrolmen working on it every night. As a possible means of relieving motorists of trouble and possible expense, the patrol issued a set of instructions for those who desire to adjust their own lights. Motorists are warned, however, that in case of arrest for illegal lights they cannot avoid penalties by adjusting their own lights unless such lights afterwards are checked and approved by a member of the patrol. Otherwise lights must be adjusted at an official adjusting station and a certificate secured. California Honey Week Is Designated To encourage greater consumption of a home industry, November 7 to 12 has been designated as "California Honey Week," according to statement made by Farm Advisor Harold E. Wahlberg. "California consumers," says the farm advisor, "can encourage and aid California producers in this live-at-home campaign now being waged. Today, honey is selling at relatively low prices, and within the price limit set in many family budgets. "Years ago, honey was used more extensively than it is now, largely because it was a home product, and package sugars were not secured so easily. Honey, however, is truly an excellent food, and the type of sweetening which all ancient people used. "California honey production represents a farm industry of merit. California honeys are known everywhere. In a normal year, California honey producers have more than 5,000,000 pounds to sell. Excellent recipes are now available for using honey in cooking and candy making." California Leads In Use of Wood California uses more softwoods (pine, fir, redwood, cedar, etc.) than any other state in the union, the estimate by the bureau of census, based on the 1930 lumber cut, being 2,372,828,000 feet. New York is second with nearly two billion feet, followed by Washington, Illinois and Pennsylvania with more than a billion feet each. Unemployment among actual residents of New York is well below the national average. In the Trojan football team its hardest fought battles of Saturday with California's rest awaits the sons of California as the Webfeet of city of Oregon will be headyard this week-end determine a bitter defeat of last showing unusual spirit under son of their popular new bank Callison the Oregonians their strength early in the defeating Santa Clara and the powerful Washington elevator to tie. One of the biggest and strongest in the Pacific Coast confer Callison has a set of hard-experienced backs whom California will find hard to kick Temple and Leighton Gee, halfbacks of last season, andlak, fullback who as a sopho-year was one of the hardesters in the conference; are all packers and likewise giveenty of kicking and passing California and Oregon met only three times in 1915 Oregon won the first to 0. Southern California in 1920 and last year ran memorized Webfoot eleven by count. Last year's walloping to have the visitors fighting Saturday, and unless Southnia can make a quick recovits tough one with California stand a good chance of our rivals taste sweet revenge. Secures Permit to Alter for Restaurant The Conrad Stueckle estate Tuesday secured a building permit to remodel the building at 601 South Los Angeles street to equip it for a small cafe. Estimated work will cost $300. WILL BUILD GARAGE John F. Fotchman this week secured a permit for building a $75 garage at 205 East Adele street. When looking for Silverware Visit the AUTHORIZED DEALER of HOLMES & EDWARDS INLAID Something More Than Plate KENDRICK'S 155 West Center Anaheim To My Friends, Election Workers and Voters of the Third Supervisorial District: I sincerely appreciate the confidence you expressed in me at the polls Tuesday I especially wish to thank the election workers who spent their efforts in my behalf during the campaign. Voters of the Third Supervisorial District: I sincerely appreciate the confidence you expressed in me at the polls Tuesday I especially wish to thank the election workers who spent their efforts in my behalf during the campaign. I assure all residents of the district that I will do my best to give you honest, fearless and diligent representation. LeRoy B. Lyon QUICK QUAKER OATS Small Pkg. 10c Large Pkg. 22c SOAP CAMAY 3 bars for 15c IVORY 6 oz 3 bars for 15c Crisco ... 1 lb. 18c 3 lbs. 49c Coffee SCHILLING'S 1 pound can ... 34c With 10c can PEPPER FREE Flour SPERRY'S DRIFTED SNOW ... 24½ lbs. 54c Peas DEL MONTE EARLY GARDEN ... No. 2 can 12c Pineapple DEL MONTE or LIBBY SLICED ... 2 FOR 15c Coffee 1 pound can ... 34c With 10c can PEPPER FREE Flour SPERRY'S DRIFTED SNOW ... 24½ lbs. 54c Peas DEL MONTE EARLY GARDEN ... 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