anaheim-gazette 1933-06-08
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The Farmer's Corner
By Ralph H. Taylor
Secretary Agricultural Legislative Committee
Taxes and mortgages—two of the farmer's burdens which weigh most heavily during periods of reduced income—have been eased materially by enactments of the recently recessed state legislature, even through they are still far out of line with present conditions.
A substantial cut in the local tax burden, for instance, will result from the operation of the new highway act, which takes into the state system approximately 6600 miles of county roads, spread over all the counties of the state.
Local taxpayers will be relieved of approximately $3,000,000 annually in maintenance and reconstruction costs as a result of the inclusion of this additional mileage in the state highway system, according to the estimate of Earl Lee Kelley, state director of public works.
As the road tax is one of the most burdensome in rural districts, especially in areas of small population and low property valuations, the new highway deal should bring considerable direct relief to agriculture.
Grappling with the mortgage problem, made doubly acute by the fact that present debts were incurred during times of prosperity and fictitious property values, the legislature administered sedatives rather than curatives.
Eyes Examined — Glasses Fitted
HOMER A. NELSON, Opt. D.
Optometrist
Phone 8104 114 N. Lemon St.
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA
Unable to reduce the actual indebtedness, the lawmakers did find it possible, however, to give hard-pressed farmers a breathing spell by postponing the day of judgment.
The first bill of this nature—A. B. 2327, by Assemblymen Rawls and Dempster—provided a 60-day moratorium on the forced sale of farms.
This temporary "headache powder", which ran out before the legislature recessed, was continued by a subsequent bill, A. B. 90$, by Assemblyman Rawls, providing a mortgage and trust deed moratorium until the end of 1933. Already signed by Governor Rolph, this bill will permit hundreds of farmers to "hold on" until new crops bring new income and a chance to meet their obligations.
In this same general category of relief measures were several enactments reducing tax delinquency penalties.
Recognition of changed conditions, both with the farmer and government, came again in the legislature's action on the question of bovine tuberculosis indemnification.
With indemnification funds approximately $100,000 short of the amount needed to maintain the present areas, the legislators protected the farmer from forced slaughter of his animals without hope of indemnification by authorizing the department of agriculture to remove counties from tuberculosis eradication districts if such action becomes necessary.
Any eliminations of this nature from the tuberculosis eradication districts will probably affect the counties most recently included in such areas—notably Marln, San Joaquin or Alameda.
While much of the "relief legislation" is only temporary in effect, agriculture at least can render thanks for a brief respite. The vital need, however, still remains—an actual reduction in the farmer's tax burden to place it on a parity with the burden borne by other industries and taxpayers generally. Until that is accomplished, the "headache powders" may help, but they can't cure.
Barley Disease Now
Stripe Disease is applied because long-term exposure to barley stems becomes leaves shred and form, turn dark but seeming somewhat stripping of the leaf ease its name.
Stripe disease is blown from infected nels of healthy plant grain is planted untreated, the spores go into the sprouting plant results.
Owing to the seriation facing barley were started last night be done in the Ceresan dust and coarse applied in checked against plow treatment. On the true state where no percent of the
Eyes Examined — Glasses Fitted
HOMER A. NELSON, Opt. D.
Optometrist
Phone 3104 114 N. Lemon St.
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA
Announcing the opening of
GIBSON’S LOCK & KEY SHOP
119 S. Los Angeles St. Anaheim, Calif.
Washing Machines, Vacuum Cleaners — Bicycles and Wheel Goods Repaired — Keys fitted to any lock — Auto Keys by number — Combinations changed.
HANDY MAN — ANYWHERE, ANYTIME
PHONE 4919
HERE’S A NEW WAY TO KEEP COOL
in spite of the heat
FOR HOMES, STORES, OFFICES
Here's a new method of keeping your home or business cool and comfortable on the hottest day. It is a method that appeals to everyone because it is simple, economical, and it actually does the work.
The attic in every home or business building is like a fireless cooker. All day long it is absorbing the scorching heat of the sun... forming a blanket of hot, stagnant, motionless air that makes the rooms below unbearable day and night.
This new method, by forced ventilation, keeps attic air in motion, draws it off to the outside of the building. By placing a few inconspicuous vents in the ceilings or clothes closets, the hot air from the rooms below also is sucked up and exhausted to the outside by the silent, electrically driven fan.
It works, it is not difficult to install and costs but a few cents a day to operate. It gives you cool comfort day and night. It is worth looking into. Full details at your nearest Edison Office.
See How This New Cooling and Ventilating System Works
Pictured here is a miniature house, complete in every detail, which shows exactly how this system operates. You can see this interesting demonstration in operation by phoning or calling at your nearest Edison office. There is no obligation.
Southern California Edison Company Ltd.
Barley Disease Now Controlled
Stripe Disease Serious Enough to Justify Study; Treatment Methods Given
The barley stripe disease which made its appearance into California during the last ten years has finally become sufficiently serious to justify careful attention. It is now found in practically all barley gorning districts of the state. The number of infested plants in a field vary from a few to as many as 57 percent. In many cases from 10 to 40 percent of the plants in a field are infected, and the infected plants are a total loss. They may be completely killed at any stage of growth from seedling to a matured plant, but, at best, the plant will produce only very shriveled dark colored kernels.
You might wonder why the name stripe disease is applied. The name is given because long brownish stripes appear on the leaves, usually before the head emerges from the boot. In the latter stages of the disease, the barley stems become dark brown, the leaves shred and the heads, if any form, turn dark brown or black, resembling somewhat smut head. The stripping of the leaves gives the disease its name.
Stripe disease is spread by spores blown from infected plants to the kernels of healthy plants. When this grain is planted under favorable conditions, the spores germinate and grow into the sprouting seedling. The diseased plant results.
Owing to the seriousness of the situation facing barley growers, test plots were started last year to see what might be done in the way of control. Ceresan dust and copper carbonate dust were applied in different plots and checked against plots that received no treatment. On the plots throughout; the state where no treatment was given, 20 percent of the heads were infecte-
Unregistered Fish Meal Dealer Fined
The campaign being conducted by the state department of agriculture against unregistered dealers in commercial fertilizers has resulted in the conviction at San Pedro of Gilbert C. Van Camp, it is announced by Dr. Alvin J. Cox, chief of the department's division of chemistry. Van Camp pleaded guilty, and was fined by the court.
The complaint by L. W. Erb, inspector, division of chemistry, charged Van Camp with selling commercial fertilizer (fish meal) to the Highland Orange association without first obtaining a certificate of registration from the department of agriculture.
Under the law all commercial fertilizer sold in California must bear a statement of analysis which is guaranteed by the registered seller. All such materials sold or offered for sale are subject to examination by the division of chemistry and in this manner the department of agriculture is protecting the users of commercial fertilizers.
LEGAL NOTICE
CERTIFICATE OF INDIVIDUALS TRANSACTING BUSINESS UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME
We, PAUL POUPLIER and KATE POUPLIER, husband and wife, do hereby certify that we are conducting the business of dealing in and distributors and wholesalers of carbonated beverages, legal beer and wine and other beverages, at 402 and 404 South Claudina Street, Anaheim, California, under the fictitious firm name and style of "ANAHEIM BOTTLING WORKS"; that we are the sole owners of said business; that no other person is interested therein; and that we reside at 402 South Claudina Street, Anaheim, California.
PAUL POUPLIER
KATE POUPLIER
STATE OF CALIFORNIA,
COUNTY OF ORANGE
Norman H. Davis
Norman H. Davis, official European representative of the U.S. and President Roosevelt's Ambassador-at-large to the Geneva Disarmament Conference and the World Economic Conference, which opens at London June 12, is an American very much in the news today. Mr. Davis has held many important posts since the World War. He was a member of the Armistice Commission; Financial adviser to President Wilson, negotiating peace; Under secretary of State; U.S. member of International Economic Conference in 1927; and, is now a member of the Board of Trustees of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
Bondsmen Forced To Back Guarantee
Court Decision Important for Growers Dealing On Assignment Guarantee
The lower court judgment in the cases of state director of agriculture
grain is planted under favorable conditions, the spores germinate and grow into the sprouting seedling. The diseased plant results.
Owing to the seriousness of the situation facing barley growers, test plots were started last year to see what might be done in the way of control. Ceresan dust and copper carbonate dust were applied in different plots and checked against plots that received no treatment. On the plots throughout, the state where no treatment was given, 20 percent of the heads were infected in the field. On the copper carbonate plots 4.4 percent of the heads were affected, but on the ceresan dust plots only 0.6 percent, of all heads were affected. Here in Orange county 6.5 percent of the heads were infected in the field where no treatment was given, a trace present in the copper carbonate treated plots, and none in the plot treated with Ceresan. That experience indicated that ceresan dust is highly efficient in controlling barley strip disease.
On the basis of the results of the tests carried on and observations of commercial seed tests in the state, the following recommendations are offered by W. M. Cory, assistant farm advisor.
1. If a heavy infestation of stripe disease occurs, and it is necessary to use seed from this field, the seed should be thoroughly dusted with a mercuric compound, ceresan, at the rate of 5 ounces of dust to 100 pounds of seed.
2. If infestation of stripe disease is light, the seed should be thoroughly dusted with copper carbonate, 5 ounces of dust to 100 pounds of seed.
3. To keep stripe disease out of barley, and incidentally to keep down the percentage of smut, barley seed should be treated each year with fungicide. As the present price of copper carbonate is lower than the price of mercuric compounds, the more general use of cooper carbonate is recommended.
The presence of stripe disease should be determined before the crop is harvested, if treatment is to be practiced. Each grower should examine his barley now to see of stripe disease is present.
Economic Council Endorses 4 Bills
Members of the economic council of Southern California, who met at the local Elks clubhouse Saturday at the call of Chairman Lotus H. Loudon of Anaheim, endorsed proposition Nos. 1, 5, 7 and 8, following discussion relative to methods of taxation in which Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce Representative James L. Beebe exposed a fear of "mail order" competition with California merchants should the sales tax proposal win.
Anaheim's Phil A. Stanton, state highway commissioner, successfully argued against the council taking any grain is planted under favorable conditions, the spores germinate and grow into the sprouting seedling. The diseased plant results.
Owing to the seriousness of the situation facing barley growers, test plots were started last year to see what might be done in the way of control. Ceresan dust and copper carbonate dust were applied in different plots and checked against plots that received no treatment. On the plots throughout, the state where no treatment was given, 20 percent of the heads were infected in the field. On the copper carbonate plots 4.4 percent of the heads were affected, but on the ceresan dust plots only 0.6 percent, of all heads were affected. Here in Orange county 6.5 percent of the heads were infected in the field where no treatment was given, a trace present in the copper carbonate treated plots, and none in the plot treated with Ceresan. That experience indicated that ceresan dust is highly efficient in controlling barley strip disease.
On the basis of the results of the tests carried on and observations of commercial seed tests in the state, the following recommendations are offered by W. M. Cory, assistant farm advisor.
1. If a heavy infestation of stripe disease occurs, and it is necessary to use seed from this field, the seed should be thoroughly dusted with a mercuric compound, ceresan, at the rate of 5 ounces of dust to 100 pounds of seed.
2. If infestation of stripe disease is light, the seed should be thoroughly dusted with copper carbonate, 5 ounces of dust to 100 pounds of seed.
3. To keep stripe disease out of barley, and incidentally to keep down the percentage of smut, barley seed should be treated each year with fungicide. As the present price of copper carbonate is lower than the price of mercuric compounds, the more general use of cooper carbonate is recommended.
The presence of stripe disease should be determined before the crop is harvested, if treatment is to be practiced. Each grower should examine his barley now to see of stripe disease is present.
Economic Council Endorses 4 Bills
Members of the economic council of Southern California, who met at the local Elks clubhouse Saturday at the call of Chairman Lotus H. Loudon of Anaheim, endorsed proposition Nos. 1, 5, 7 and 8, following discussion relative to methods of taxation in which Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce Representative James L. Beebe exposed a fear of "mail order" competition with California merchants should the sales tax proposal win.
Anaheim's Phil A. Stanton, state highway commissioner, successfully argued against the council taking any grain is planted under favorable conditions, the spores germinate and grow into the sprouting seedling. The diseased plant results.
Owing to the seriousness of the situation facing barley growers, test plots were started last year to see what might be done in the way of control. Ceresan dust and copper carbonate dust were applied in different plots and checked against plots that received no treatment. On the plots throughout, the state where no treatment was given, 20 percent of the heads were infected in the field. On the copper carbonate plots 4.4 percent of the heads were affected, but on the ceresan dust plots only 0.6 percent, of all heads were affected. Here in Orange county 6.5 percent of the heads were infected in the field where no treatment was given, a trace present in the copper carbonate treated plots, and none in the plot treated with Ceresan. That experience indicated that ceresan dust is highly efficient in controlling barley strip disease.
On the basis of the results of the tests carried on and observations of commercial seed tests in the state, the following recommendations are offered by W. M. Cory, assistant farm advisor.
1. If a heavy infestation of stripe disease occurs, and it is necessary to use seed from this field, the seed should be thoroughly dusted with a mercuric compound, ceresan, at the rate of 5 ounces of dust to 100 pounds of seed.
2. If infestation of stripe disease is light, the seed should be thoroughly dusted with copper carbonate, 5 ounces of dust to 100 pounds of seed.
3. To keep stripe disease out of barley, and incidentally to keep down the percentage of smut, barley seed should be treated each year with fungicide. As the present price of copper carbonate is lower than the price of mercuric compounds, the more general use of cooper carbonate is recommended.
The presence of stripe disease should be determined before the crop is harvested, if treatment is to be practiced. Each grower should examine his barley now to see of stripe disease is present.
Economic Council Endorses 4 Bills
Members of the economic council of Southern California, who met at the local Elks clubhouse Saturday at the call of Chairman Lotus H. Loudon of Anaheim, endorsed proposition Nos. 1, 5, 7 and 8, following discussion relative to methods of taxation in which Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce Representative James L. Beebe exposed a fear of "mail order" competition with California merchants should the sales tax proposal win.
Anaheim's Phil A. Stanton, state highway commissioner, successfully argued against the council taking any grain is planted under favorable conditions, the spores germinate and grow into the sprouting seedling. The diseased plant results.
Owing to the seriousness of the situation facing barley growers, test plots were started last year to see what might be done in the way of control. Ceresan dust and copper carbonate dust were applied in different plots and checked against plots that received no treatment. On the plots throughout, the state where no treatment was given, 20 percent of the heads were infected in the field. On the copper carbonate plots 4.4 percent of the heads were affected, but on the ceresan dust plots only 0.6 percent, of all heads were affected. Here in Orange county 6.5 percent of the heads were infected in the field where no treatment was given, a trace present in the copper carbonate treated plots, and none in the plot treated with Ceresan. That experience indicated that ceresan dust is highly efficient in controlling barley strip disease.
On the basis of the results of the tests carried on and observations of commercial seed tests in the state, the following recommendations are offered by W. M. Cory, assistant farm advisor.
1. If a heavy infestation of stripe disease occurs, and it is necessary to use seed from this field, the seed should be thoroughly dusted with a mercuric compound, ceresan, at the rate of 5 ounces of dust to 100 pounds of seed.
2. If infestation of stripe disease is light, the seed should be thoroughly dusted with copper carbonate, 5 ounces of dust to 100 pounds of seed.
3. To keep stripe disease out of barley, and incidentally to keep down the percentage of smut, barley seed should be treated each year with fungicide. As the present price of copper carbonate is lower than the price of mercuric compounds, the more general use of cooper carbonate is recommended.
The presence of stripe disease should be determined before the crop is harvested, if treatment is to be practiced. Each grower should examine his barley now to see of stripe disease is present.
Economic Council Endorses 4 Bills
Members of the economic council of Southern California, who met at the local Elks clubhouse Saturday at the call of Chairman Lotus H. Loudon of Anaheim, endorsed proposition Nos. 1, 5, 7 and 8, following discussion relative to methods of taxation in which Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce Representative James L. Beebe exposed a fear of "mail order" competition with California merchants should the sales tax proposal win.
Anaheim's Phil A. Stanton, state highway commissioner, successfully argued against the council taking any grain is planted under favorable conditions, the spores germinate and grow into the sprouting seedling. The diseased plant results.
Owing to the seriousness of the situation facing barley growers, test plots were started last year to see what might be done in the way of control. Ceresan dust and copper carbonate dust were applied in different plots and checked against plots that received no treatment. On the plots throughout, the state where no treatment was given, 20 percent ofthe heads were infected inthe field.Onthecopcarbonatetreatedplotsonlywereaffectedintherein;andthatweresideat402SouthClaudinaStreet,AnaheimCalifornia.
PAUL POUPLIER
KATE POUPLIER
STATE OF CALIFORNIA,
COUNTY OF ORANGE.
SSG
On this 7th day of June, 1933,before me,GEO.F.HOLDEN,aNotaryPublicinandforsaidCountyandState.
residingtherein,dulycommissionedandsworn,personalisedopermaintenance,andacknowledgedtome that theyexecutedthesame.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF,我 haveuntosetmyhandandaffixedmyofficialsealthedayandyearinthiscertificatefirstabovewritten.(SEAL)
GEO.F.HOLDEN.
NotaryPublicinandforsaidCountyandState.
6-S-4t
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ESTATE UNDER EXECUTION
IntheSuperior Courtofthe CountyofOrange,theStateofCaliforniawhereinHouser&Houser,a co-partnership,consistingofJOHNT.HouserandJ.EVERETTHOUSER,
Plaintiff
vs.
WILLIAML.SCHRANDT,
Defendant
UnderandbyvirtueofanExecutionissuedoutoftheSuperiorCourtoftheCountyofOrange,theStateofCaliforniawhereinhouser&Houser,aco-partnership,consistingofJohnT.HouserandJ.EverettHouser.isPlaintiff,andWilliamL.SchrandtisDefendant.upona Judgmentrenderedthe20thdayofDecember,1932.forthesumofSevenHundredSeventy-twoand50-100($772.50)Dollars,LawfulMoneyoftheUnitedStates,bidescostsandinterest;andthesumof$797.70withinterestfromthe20thdayofDecember,1932.isnow(atthedateofthiswrit)actuallydueoncash judgment.
I have.onthe7thdayofJune,1933 levieduponalltheright,title claim,andinterestofsaid defendantinandtofollowingdescribedreal estate,tow-wit:
SituatedintheCountyofOrange,
StateofCalifornia,andmoreparticularlydescribedasfollows,
BondsmenForcedToBackGuarantee
Court Decision Important for Growers DealingOnAssignmentGuarantee
The lower court judgmentinthecasesofstate directorofagricultureagainsttheWilliamsFruit corporationwhichheldthata commissionmerchantwhoaffixesaguaranteewhenaffixedtoaconsignment.ByreasonofthisdecisionCaliforniagrowersmaynowbeassuredthatsuchguaranteehas beengivendefinitelegalrecognitionandcanfigureinanyactiontorecoveradvancesduefromthemerchant.
The case involveda suitbythedirectorofagricultureagainstbothWilliamsFruitcorporationacceptedfromvariousgrowersconsignmentsofgraps,affixingaguaranteeof$15a ten.Thecorporationbecameinsolventleavingmanygrowersinthepositionbehindconsignmentcreditors.Thetotaloftheclaimsofgrowersamounttedto$5225.21,slightlyin excessofthe bond.ThebondingcompanyrefusedtomakepaymentafterdemandhadbeenmadebythedirectorofagriculturethroughC.J.Carey chiefofthedivisionmarket enforcement.Suitwastheninstitutedthroughtheattorneygeneral'soffice,andjudgmentwassecuredinthesuperiorcourtinSanFrancisco.Thedefendants.WilliamsFruitcorporationandAmericanSuretycompanyofNew York.prosecutedan appeal,basing theirappealonthegroundthattheaffixingofaguaranteedpricechangedthetransactionfromaconsignmenttoa sale,and thereby tooknegotiationoutsdueofthejurisdictionoftheproducedealersact.Inthecase.WilliamsFruitcorporationacceptedfromvariousgrowersconsignmentsofgraps,affixingaguaranteeof$15a ten.Thecorporationbecameinsolventleavingmanygrowersinthepositionbehindconsignmentcreditors.Thetotaloftheclaimsofgrowersamounttedto$5225.21,slightlyin excessofthe bond.ThebondingcompanyrefusedtomakepaymentafterdemandhadbeenmadebythedirectorofagriculturethroughC.J.Carey chiefofthedivisionmarket enforcement.Suitwastheninstitutedthroughtheattorneygeneral'soffice,andjudgmentwassecuredinthesuperiorcourtinSanFrancisco.Thedefendants.WilliamsFruitcorporationandAmericanSuretycompanyofNew York.prosecutedan appeal,basing theirappealonthegroundthattheaffixingofaguaranteedpricechangedthetransactionfromaconsignmenttoa sale,and thereby tooknegotiationoutsdueofthejurisdictionoftheproducedealersact.Inthecase.WilliamsFruitcorporationacceptedfromvariousgrowersconsignmentsofgraps,affixingaguaranteeof$15a ten.The corporatereffectsownerexceptionandcanfigureinanyactiontorecoveradvancesduefromthemerchant.
Supreme County Judges Preston,Langdon,Curtis Shenk,Searwell,andChief Justice Wasteconcurredinadecisionthatifthetransactionstarted
Members of the economic council of Southern California, who met at the local Elks clubhouse Saturday at the call of Chairman Lotus H. Loudon of Anaheim, endorsed proposition Nos. 1, 5, 7 and 8, following discussion relative to methods of taxation in which Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce Representative James L. Beebe exposed a fear of "mail order" competition with California merchants should the sales tax proposal win.
Anaheim's Phil A. Stanton, state highway commissioner, successfully argued against the council taking any action on propositions Nos. 9 and 10, to permit diversion of enough highway funds to relieve the state of paying for highway bonds voted in 1870.
W-A-N-T A-D-S
RATE: Five cents the line (count five words to the line) for each insertion. Phone 2414 for want ads that bring results.
ELECTRIC REFRIGERATORS
FOR SALE—5-cubic foot used Holbrook electric refrigerator; recondition, works like new. $75. Terms. Superior Radio Service, 308 W. Center. Phone 4304.
REV. COMMIE I. DAVIES
Ordained Medium — Reading Dally
621 E. 5th St., Phone 4066-W
Santa Ana, California
Painting & Paperhanging
Painting; paperhanging. J. E. Saylor,
840 S. Los Angeles St., Phone 2761.
Pianos For Sale
100 PIANOS to choose from; Knabe, Bechstein, Steinway, Chickering, Kimball, etc., new and used, $35 up. Danz, Anaheim.
$10 FREE! Send name of friend who wants piano and get $10-Free when we sell. Danz, Anaheim.
I have, on the 7th day of June, 1933, levied upon all the right, title, claim and interest of said defendant in and to the following described real estate, to-wit:
Situated in the County of Orange, State of California, and more particularly described as follows, to-wit:
The West 5 acres of the following described property: Anaheim Ranch, ten acres, 528 x 825 feet in Orange Sounty, California, Rancho San Juan Cajon de Santa Ana, commencing at a point 211.2 feet N. 74½° E. of SW corner of Lot Eight (8) Anaheim Extension, as shown on Map made by Wm. Hammel on file in the Recorder's office of Los Angeles County, California, running thence N. 74½° E. 528 feet, thence N. 14½° W. 825 feet, thence South 74½° W. 528 feet, thence S. 14½° E. 825 feet to the point of beginning, containing ten acres, more or less, reserving one-half of Santa Ana St., on the south side of said land.
Together with all and singular the tenements, hereditaments and appurtenances thereunto belonging or in any wise appertaining.
Notice is hereby given, that on Friday, the 30th day of June, 1933, at ten o'clock A.M., of said day, I will proceed to sell in front of the court house door. South Entrance, in the City of Santa Ana, at public auction to the highest bidder for cash in Lawful Money of the United States, all the right, title, claim and interest of said defendant, of, in and to the above described property, or so much thereof as may be necessary to raise sufficient to satisfy said judgment with interest and costs.
GIVEN, under my hand this 7th day of June, 1933.
LOGAN JACKSON, Sheriff.
Houser & Houser,
402 Security Bldg.
Long Beach, Cal.
Attorneys for Plaintiff.
6-9-16-23
Poultrymen Plan Picnic on June 15
At a joint committee meeting of representatives from the Poultrymen's Cooperative association and the poultry department of the farm bureau, the date of Thursday, June 15, was set for a country-wide poultrymen's picnic at Orange county park.
For those who can arrive by 5:00 p.m., a baseball game has been arranged, with competitive sports for the youngsters. At 6:30 all will sit down to a basket dinner, with coffee and ice cream provided. Following dinner there will be a short speaking program of prominent leaders in the industry. The program is being arranged to offer recreation and a chance to get acquainted.
Invitations are being sent to neighboring counties to join in. The tables north of the tennis courts have been designated the location for the picnic.
Building Permits For May Increase
Although total valuation of building permits issued for May were more than twice what they were for the same month a year ago, the total for the first five months of 1933 was slightly more than half what it was for the same period in 1932.
This was revealed when Building Inspector R. Nyboe announced that permits for May were $7,668 as compared with $2,978 in May, 1932, while total permits till June 1 were $38,477 as compared with $70,548 for the same period in 1932. April building permits totaled $12,872.
Saving of $1.50 Costs State $50
Here's high finance for you.
The legislature spent $50 to get a $1.50 fund transferred from one fund to another. This particular fund receives a share of the kelp tax money and, occasionally, bas as much as $50 it it. But when the proposal to transfer it from the University of California administration to the general fund came up, it contained only $1.50.
Although it costs $50 to put a bill through the legislature that entails the bare cost of printing and the like—the legislature approved the fund transfer.
Burglar Alarms Give Real Thrill
The clerk who accidentally stepped on a burglar alarm control in the Southern County bank late last week received as big a scarce as Anaheim police who rushed with sawed-off shotguns to apprehend the looked-for robbers. Citizens near East Center street, hearing the burglar alarm, looked on apprehensively as police bolted for the bank doors.
Chief of Police James Bouldin personally urged all bank employees to use greater care when working around burglar alarm controls.
NOT A BAD IDEA,'EH1
Some folks say this is the machine age, but yet again in all those sections where they have excessive winds they ought to build windmills to use up the wind and run the mills with the power.
FOR GRADUATION
Young Men's SUITS
Oxford Greys, Blue Cheviots or Brown
$18.50 $20.00
$22.50
Strictly pure wool and hand tailored—long, soft roll, peak lapels.
You will be correctly dressed in one of these suits.
Strictly pure wool and hand tailored—long, soft roll, peak lapels.
You will be correctly dressed in one of these suits.
W. L. Douglas Shoes
New Style, Wing Toes—They, Too, Are Right
Black & White, Brown & White $3.75
White Flannel Sport Pants $5 and $6
F. A. Yungbluth
“THE HOME OF HART SCHAFFNER & MARX”
145 West Center Street
IF.. you aren’t reading the “Awakened Woman” from the pen of Elinore Barry, you are missing one of the best serial stories of the year. Turn to Page 7