anaheim-gazette 1934-03-29
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Receive Contract for Harbor Work
Orange county's board of supervisors Tuesday afternoon received the signed contract of the federal government, in which it agreed to purchase the $640,000 bond issue for Newport Harbor, thus completing another step toward development of the $1,800,000 project. Work is expected to begin about May 1, although county officers are without denote word as to when the money actually will be available.
The $640,000 loan comes from the public works administration under Secretary of Interior-Ickes. With this amount is another grant, or gift, of $235,000, representing the federal government's $20 per cent, and a rivers and harbors development fund of $918,000.
Tideland Oil Suit Delayed to April 9
State attorneys will present their defense against the suit brought by Mrs. Matilda Shallemiller at the adjourned hearing in Superior Judge H.G. Ames' court April 9. Judge Ames Monday, when the plaintiff's case was laid before him, indicated one of the principle issues to be decided is whether Former Surveyor General W. S. Kingsbury's cancelling of the permit is a subject for review of the court. If held judicial, the plaintiff cannot get further relief in court.
Mrs. Shallemiller claims that her agents were prevented from complying with the law's provision by an injunction suit; that equities of $120,000 demand consideration.
Radio Repairing
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Hudson Terraplanes
New Models Now On Display
In the air it's Aeroplaning!
On the water it's Aquaplaning!
On the land it's Terraplaning!
Barnhart’s Garage
336 S. Los Angeles St., Anaheim PHONE 3407
Wake Up Your Liver Bile
Wake Up Your Liver Bile
—Without Calomel
And You’ll Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Rarin’ to Go
If you feel sour and sunk and the world looks punk, don’t swallow a lot of salts, mineral water, oil, laxative candy or chewing gum and expect them to make you suddenly sweet and buoyant and full of sunshine.
For they can’t do it. They only move the bowels and a mere movement doesn’t get at the cause. The reason for your down-and-out feeling is your liver. It should pour out two pounds of liquid bile into your bowels daily.
If this bile is not flowing freely, your food doesn’t digest. It just decays in the bowels. Gas blots up your stomach. You have a thick, bad taste and your breath is foul, skin often breaks out in blemishes. Your headaches and you feel down and out. Your whole system is poisoned.
It takes those good, old CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS to get these two pounds of bile flowing freely and make you feel "up and up." They contain wonderful, harmless, gentle vegetable extracts, amazing when it comes to making the bile flow freely.
But don’t ask for liver pills. Ask for Carter’s Little Liver Pills. Look for the name Carter’s Little Liver Pills on the red label. Resent a substitute. 25¢ at drug stores.
©1931 C. M. Co.
OUCH
You’ll have a good case of "cauliflower toes" if you don't get a handy hall light put in!
It may be life's darkest moment to you, but all the sympathy (or maybe profanity) in the world won't stop the pain. And it's so unnecessary, too, in this day of low cost electricity.
New Outlets are Inexpensive
Convenient wall and base-board outlets can be installed at negligible cost, wherever you need quick light. A telephone call to your dealer right this very moment will put an end to such accidents.
Better Light Better Sight
ANAHEIM GAZETTE
Wahlberg Advises Walnut Spraying
Urges Immediate Action to Halt Blight Disease; Recommends Certain Tree Care
Walnut trees in this district are just entering the critical period of development when blight spores lodge in the new and tender growth and flowers and start the too well-known blight disease of the nut and foliage, according to Farm Advisor Harold E. Wahlberg. The experiment station has recently completed an exhaustive study of the cause and control of this common malady of the walnut and has recently issued a report that is available on request from the farm advisor's office.
Findings of the investigation indicate that the first application of bordeaux spray 8-4-50 should be given in the spring when the buds are expanding and some of the new growth has developed but when few or none of the nuts have appeared. This is the strategic period for securing the maximum results with any one application of spray. This spray, which has been given the name of "pre-bloom spray," is absolutely indispensable, and it must not be omitted under any conditions in any part of the state or in any year; if spraying is to be done at all for blight. It is a clean-up spray that disinfects the trees, covers over the lesions which have been exuding the living parasites during the rainy winter months, and destroys any great accumulation of the latter on the buds and in more protected parts of the trees. Subsequent sprays are valuable, but each must be regarded merely as an auxiliary or helper to the first one.
Today the application of the first spray beyond the general period described may result in a severe loss, particularly if many of the young nuts have become visible. The young nuts
State Tax on Beer and Wine Increases
The state tax on beer and wine still continues to show an increase over previous months, the total of $92,515 in revenue being collected from this source for the month of February, R. E. Collins, chairman of the board of equalization announces. This is the largest revenue collected in any one month since the tax became effective. January collections were $75,975.
Of the total receipts for February, 70% represents beer distribution and 30% is for wine; 94% of the beer was distributed by California brewers.
CCC Program Set For This Summer
California Will Have Total of 76 as Compared with High Mark of 176 Last Year
The distribution of CCC camps for the summer of 1934 in California will be national forests 39, national parks 13, state parks 14, state forestry on private lands 10, a total of 76 according to S. B. Show, regional forester and coordinator for California.
There were 167 operating in this state last summer and 150 for the enrollment period ending March 31. There will be no changes this year in the total number of CCC camps for the entire country nor in the number of enrollees and facilitating personnel. Many Conservation Corps companies will be moved from California and the west coast to middle west and eastern states.
According to a report of director Robert Fechner, the CCC at maximum strength is divided into 250,000 enrollees, 27,600 veterans, 14,400 Indians and 35,000 forestry foremen. The total number of camps will be 1540 including those in Porto Rico and Alaska.
Conclave Report Is Made To Local Chapter, D. A. R.
Nominating Committee to be Named at April 20 Meeting; One Talk Illustrated
Complete report of the state conference held in Los Angeles March 14, 15 and 16, by Delegate Mrs. Victor Loly, a report on "History in the Making" by Mrs. Edna Fisk, and an exposition on "Shrines in America," illustrated, by Mrs. Nellie D. Seltz, marked the Mother Colony chapter, D.A.R. meeting held at the Pioneer house Friday afternoon. Mrs. Stephen Gallagher, regent, presided. Mrs. O. P. Rust was the other delegate to the state convention.
Mrs. Loly's report stressed the important speeches at the convention dealt with material of particular interest to local members of the organization, and was filed for reference at the Pioneer house.
The next meeting will be held April 20, at which time a nominating committee will be appointed. The session will be of a business nature.
RE-ROOFS RESIDENCE
H. G. Archibald last week obtained a permit to re-roof his residence at 900 North Zeyn, at an estimated cost of $75.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
In and For the County of Orange State of California
PETROLEUM SECURITIES COMPANY,
a California corporation,
Plaintiff
vs.
H. S. NUTT and IDA V. NUTT,
his wife; LAURA COLEBANK, et al.
Defendants.
SALE UNDER FORECLOSURE OF
which have been exuding the living parasites during the rainy winter months, and destroys any great accumulation of the latter on the buds and in more protected parts of the trees. Subsequent sprays are valuable, but each must be regarded merely as an auxiliary or helper to the first one.
Today the application of the first spray beyond the general period described may result in a severe loss, particularly if many of the young nuts have become visible. The young nuts are exceedingly susceptible and may become infected as soon as they appear if climatic conditions are favorable. Incidentally the time it takes the nuts to develop to a point where they are ready for fertilization after their first appearance is very brief indeed. In some varieties the flower lobes actually are already expanded and receptive to pollination when the nuts are first exposed. Spray residue on exposed flowers may easily prevent fertilization and result in loss of the nuts. Hence the urgent need of a sufficiently early cleanup spray in the trees so that the nuts may be produced under conditions as disease-free as possible and without the risk of interference with their fertilization.
If the orchard consists of seedling trees, which characteristically do not start growth activities in spring as a unit, the first application should be made when a few of the earliest trees have reached the pre-bloom stage. Poor control will result in most years if spraying is delayed until the latest trees have reached this stage; the crop on the earliest ones may become badly infected while the grower is waiting for all of them to reach the proper stage for spraying. Best results will be obtained if the owners of seedling groves can apply the pre-bloom spray at intervals as the trees reach the proper condition for spraying. This will entail the expenditure of extra time and money, however.
Specific information on local orchard conditions may be secured from the agricultural commissioner's office at Santa Ana or their field deputies.
NOMINEES FOR PUBLIC OFFICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the following persons have been nominated for the offices herein- after mentioned to be filled at the general municipal election to be held in the City of Anaheim on Monday, the 3rd day of April, 1934.
THREE MEMBERS OF CITY COUNCIL FOR FULL TERM:
Arrange Program of Beekeepers' Field Day, April Fourth
A hundred or more beekeepers of Orange county are planning to attend the annual field day, Wednesday, April 4, which is held by the beekeepers department of the farm bureau, according to C. E. Lush, chairman of the department. The location of the field day demonstrations and program will be at Roy Bell apiaries on East Cerritos avenue. A sign will be erected on 101 Highway about one-half mile North of the Edison Substation to direct the beekeepers to the apiary.
The program committee invites the beekeepers to bring their basket lunches for a social hour under the eucalyptus at noon. The business session and program will start at 1:30 p.m.
Demonstrations will be given featuring different phases of apiary management and special invitation is extended to amateur beekeepers.
Dr. J. E. Eckert, apiculturist, has accepted the invitation of the department to talk to the Orange county beemen.
The following program is announced by the farm advisor's office: "Various Methods of Introducing Queens," L. B. Bell, Orange; "Proper Methods of Supering Colonies," B. M. Crawford, Santa Ana; "Influence of Length of Tongue on the Honey Crop and Choosing Breeding Queens," Dr. J. E. Eckert, apiculturist; "What Amateur Beekeepers Want to Know," Henry Perkins, Apiary Inspector, Los Angeles county; Domestication of Doble Hives, Roy Bell, Orange; Question Box.
LEGAL NOTICE
In compliance with Section 1, Chapter 183, Statutes of 1923, the undersigned, whose principal place of business is
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the following persons have been nominated for the offices hereinafter mentioned to be filled at the general municipal election to be held in the City of Anaheim on Monday, the 3rd day of April, 1934.
THREE MEMBERS OF CITY COUNCIL FOR FULL TERM:
J. E. Eger
Frederick W. Jefferay
Edward E. Long
Morris W. Martenet, Jr.
Carl Pressel
Leo J. Sheridan
F. A. Yungbluth
CITY CLERK FOR UNEXPIRED TERM OF TWO YEARS:
Evan S. Alsip
Charles E. Griffith
Herbert H. Oelke
R. A. Patrick
John W. Price
Dated: March 27, 1934.
J. W. PRICE,
City Clerk of the City of Anaheim.
LEGAL NOTICE
In compliance with Section 1, Chapter 183, Statutes of 1920, the undersigned, whose principal place of business is at 217 No. Olive St., Anaheim, California, hereby gives notice that application has been made to the State Mineralogist for a license to carry on within the State of California for the year ending December 31, 1934, the business of mining, sampling, concentrating, reducing, refining, purchasing, and receiving for sale ores, concentrates, and amalgams bearing gold or silver, gold dust, gold and silver bullion, nuggets and specimens.
Protest may be made by any person to the issuing of such license at the office of the State Mineralogist, Ferry Building, San Francisco.
L. A. BIRCHLEY
STATE THEATRE
LONG BEACH, CALIFORNIA
THE 4 MILLS BROS
IN PERSON ON THE STAGE
FOR FIVE DAYS
Starting SATURDAY MAR 31st
Anaheim, Calif., March 29, 1934
Report To Local Letter, D. A. R.
Committee to be April 20 Meeting; Illustrated
of the state confer- Angeles March 14, 15 State Mrs. Victor Loly, Story in the Making" by and an exposition on America," illustrated, by Seltz, marked the chapter, D.A.R. meeting or house Friday after- mien Gallagher, regent, P. Rust was the other state convention. Port stressed the im- at the convention, of particular inter- bers of the organiza- d for reference at the ng will be held April a nominating com- pointed. The session success nature.
RESIDENCE last week obtained a his residence at 900 estimated cost of $75.
PERIOR COURT County of Orange of California
SECURITIESoration, Plaintiff vs.
IDA V. NUTT,
A COLEBANK, et al.
Defendants.
(Political Advertisement)
ELECT John W. Price
INCUMBENT
FOR THE OFFICE OF City
INCUMBENT
FOR THE OFFICE OF
City Clerk
Solicits your support on his record of thirteen years' experience as a city employee.
ELECTION
APRIL 9, 1934
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