anaheim-gazette 1934-11-15
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Collins Has Few U. S. Agriculture Yearbooks On Hand
The yearbook of agriculture for 1934, which was recently issued by the United States department of agriculture, may now be obtained upon request, from Sam L. Collins, representative in congress of this congressional district.
Collins states that he has a limited allotment of this publication which he will furnish without charge so long as his supply lasts. Requests should be directed to him at Santa Ana.
This issue carries the report of the department on what has been done recently toward adjusting production and promoting efficiency, as well as a number of articles by department specialists recounting progress in research, in law administration and in practical service to agriculture.
Auto Paint Job To Fit Any Pecketbook
Our 10th Season in Anaheim
LOUIS HENNIG
200 S. Los Angeles St.
Seniors Vie With Sophomores When S. C. Meets Oregon
Cottontop and Wotkyns Team Up as Dave Davis and Lynch Play Together
Seniors and sophomores will have their own private ball carrying combinations when the Trojans of Southern California meet the Webfoots of Oregon in Los Angeles Saturday in a Pacific Coast conference game. Coach Howard Jones announces that Quarterback Cotton Warburton and Fullback Inky Wotkyns will team together, while Dave Davis and Ford Lynch, driving little sophomore stars, will form the other ball-packing combine.
Despite a lame left leg that has handicapped him for more than a month and a right ankle sprain sustained in practice last week, the little cottontop showed flashes of his last year's All-American form in the Trojans' game with California last Saturday and Jones believes he is ready for regular duty with Wotkyns. Warburton was slated to be kept on the bench in the Bear game, but he insisted to the "Headman" that his injuries did not bother him and finally talked himself into a chance to play.
Davis continued the dynamic play that characterized his first big chance recently against Stanford and Trojan followers are confident that he is to become one of the best quarterbacks in S. C. football history. Adding to his qualities of driving ball carrying and good field generalship, he proved a splendid kicker against the Bears, twice putting the Berkeley eleven in bad holes by placing the ball out of bounds inside the five-yard line.
East and Meet A Tunnel
East may be west, but the two congratulations, at opposite end aqueduct celebrates an important establishment of Crews on Cottontop on the eastern turned in the rye They drove 274 rock in one wicket mately 13 feet or thirty-nine At the same seven-mile Valley aqueduct between shafts distance between 6,925 feet, or 1 mile Crews workdrove west to going east. The "missed" an ex-hundredths of The "holling two shafts consist solid piece of miles, long at Valverde bore, being that which No. 1 and west
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Davis continued the dynamic play that characterized his first big chance recently against Stanford and Trojan followers are confident that he is to become one of the best quarterbacks in S. C. football history. Adding to his qualities of driving ball carrying and good field generalship, he proved a splendid kicker against the Bears, twice putting the Berkeley eleven in bad holes by placing the ball out of bounds inside the five-yard line.
Undoubtedly the hardest driver in ball-toting in Trojan ranks is Lynch, the 155-pound sophomore from Long Beach. Lynch has shown power in scrimmage all season, but his big chance to prove his worth in a game did not come until the contest with the Bears and Jones is now satisfied that he packs a wallop against strong competition.
Jones' new quarter-fullback combinations are expected to prove versatile against Oregon Saturday. In the senior duo, Warburton and Wotkyns are both dangerous in wide plays, while the latter also has a punch through the middle and kicks and passes well. In the sophomore pair, Davis and Lynch both have speed for end runs and a driving ability for plays inside the wings. In this combination, Davis will do most of the kicking and passing.
Cliff Propst, the only ball carrier from the junior class, is out of Saturday's game with a broken hand. Lineup changes continued at Troy this week, with George Brown, good-looking youngster from George Washington high, Los Angeles, moving up to running guard, and Al Kidder, former Santa Ana high school captain, going in at left halfback.
CCC Man Lauded For Heroic Work In Fire
For his courageous and herloe action in the face of exploding gasoline drums when he averted serious property damage and possible loss of life, Robert Roberg, CCC enrollee of company 905 near Azusa, California, was last week highly commended by Major General Malin Craig, commander of the Ninth Corps Area.
Young Boberg was cited for his "heroic devotion to duty" in the letter from General Craig read to him at a meeting of his mates at Camp Rincon by Lt. Colonel H. R. Oldfield, Fort MacArthur district commander. The enrollee had just returned from spending a month at the district hospital recovering from his injuries.
Wahlberg Walnut Plant
Farm Experiment for Bee Wall
Preparations crop are now orchards of Orchard Advisor Harold ment made this of walnut grazing the soil usually gotten in the great bulldy they may be t ground furrow.
The cover creant purposes matter; secondture penetration erosion control tilth.
The cover crew soil tend to open due to cultivation. As a result water is obtai more uniform fertilizer material crop also controls soil that is not application or the ordinary coo.
Soil erosion caused by heat sloping ground troiled and stop cover crop. Incorporated by the crop as well system that in lower depth plished by mea humus condition proves the work soil.
The most po crop now used mustard, malv mellilotus indic commonly plant stand is as for mustard, two pounds of vetches lotus per acre.
A sufficient germinating seedlings is pa good vigorous s
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ANAHEIM GAZETTE
East and West Do Meet As Record In Tunneling Is Made
East may be east, and west may be west, but the twain did meet in mutual congratulation, as tunnel crews located at opposite ends of the Colorado river aqueduct celebrated the finishing of an important tunnel section and the establishment of a new progress record.
Crews on Copper Basin tunnel No. 2 on the eastern end of the aqueduct, turned in the record breaking progress. They drove 274 feet of tunnel through rock in one week, averaging approximately 13 feet per shift for 21 shifts, or thirty-nine feet per day.
At the same time, crews driving the seven-mile Valverde tunnel, most westerly aqueduct bore, "holed through" between shafts No. 1 and No. 2. The distance between the two shafts was 6,925 feet, or 1.3 miles.
Crews working from Shaft No. 1 drove west to meet those from No. 2, going east. The two sections of tunnel "missed" an exact meeting by five one-hundredths of an inch.
The "holing through" between the two shafts completes excavation on a solid piece of tunnel 14,422 feet, or 2.7 miles, long at the eastern end of the Valverde bore, the additional footage being that which was driven east from No. 1 and west from No. 2.
Wahlberg Advises Walnut Growers to Plant Cover Crop
Farm Expert Reviews Routine for Benefit of Local Walnut Growers
Sugar Beet Meets Slated Next Week
Growers Urged To Attend One of Two Gatherings To Learn of Plans
ERIC E. EASTMAN,
Assistant Farm Advisor
Two meetings of sugar beet growers, which includes all landlords and tenants, are scheduled to be held in Orange county, as follows: 9:00 a.m. Monday, November 19, in the auditorium of the Fremont school, 711 North Artesia St., Santa Ana; 1:00 p.m., Tuesday, November 20, in the Laurel school kindergarten building, Los Alamitos. All persons who are intending to grow beets should attend one of these meetings. Growers and landlords whose properties lie east and south of the Santa Ana river, including San Diego county, are expected at the Santa Ana meeting, and those from the western part of the county at the Los Alamitos meeting.
The purposes of the meetings are first, to explain the sugar beet adjustment program of the agricultural adjustment administration, of which the farm advisor's office is the Orange county and south Southern California headquarters. Secondly, to present the sugar beet adjustment production contracts for signing by those eligible and desiring to do so. Finally, to organize the local sugar beet production control association for the Orange county district. Landlords who own sugar beet land, and tenants who rent land in other districts as well as in Orange county, should attend the meetings in the other districts, as well as the assigned meeting in Orange county.
After growers with sugar beet ageage history have signed allotment contracts, unallotted acreage may be available. This acreage will be allotted to
A modified state income tax, designed to equalize distribution of the tax load as well as to bolster state revenues, is almost certain of enactment at the forthcoming session of the state legislation.
Such, at any rate, is the judgment of many of the state's leading fiscal officers and tax authorities who are casting about for ways and means of balancing the state budget.
Several income tax proposals, with varying rates, will undoubtedly be introduced when the lawmakers convene at Sacramento in January, but it generally anticipated that the tax finally agreed upon will yield in the neighborhood of $12,000,000 biennially.
An income tax embodying excessive rates, according to the financial experts is impracticable, inasmuch as it would drive capital from the state and defraud its own purpose. But a modified tax on personal incomes, patterned after the levies adopted in several other states in recent years, will have the backing this year of many groups which formerly opposed all forms of income tax due to seriousness of the financial dilemma confronting the state.
With more than $100,000,000 in new revenues required to close the present gap between income and outgo and wipe out the state deficit, the estimate $12,000,000 in returns under an income tax becomes an important factor.
But even more important, according to some of the fiscal officials, is the
Wahlberg Advises Walnut Growers to Plant Cover Crop
Farm Expert Reviews Routine for Benefit of Local Walnut Growers
Preparations for the winter cover crop are now in order for the walnut orchards of Orange county, said Farm Advisor Harold E. Wahlberg in a statement made this week to a local group of walnut growers. Preliminary planting the seed, the job of pruning is usually gotten out of the way and after the great bulk of leaves have fallen they may be turned under and the ground furrowed out for the winter.
The cover crop serves several important purposes. First, supplying organic matter; second, improvement of moisture penetration in the soil; third, erosion control; and fourth, better tillth.
The cover crop roots penetrating the soil tend to open up compacted layers due to cultivation and irrigation packing. As a result a better penetration of water is obtained, accompanied by a more uniform distribution of soluble fertilizer materials. The growing cover crop also contributes a vitality to the soil that is not supplied in the artificial application or organic matter through the ordinary commercial sources.
Soil erosion and the washing of soil caused by heavy storms especially on sloping ground may be practically controlled and stopped by a good growth of cover crop. The succulent vegetation incorporated by the turning under of the crop as well as the decomposed root system that introduces organic matter to lower depths than can be accomplished by mechanical means, provide a humus condition that materially improves the workability or tilth of the soil.
The most popular varieties of cover crop now used by walnut growers are mustard, malva, purple vetch and mellilotus indica. The amount of seed commonly planted to obtain a good stand is as follows: Eight pounds of mustard, two pounds of Malva, 50 pounds of vetch or 16 pounds of mellilotus per acre.
A sufficient supply of moisture for the germinating of seed and young seedlings is particularly essential to a good vigorous stand. The lack of mois-
Colonial Ice Cream Shop to Hold Formal Opening on Saturday
Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Storey, formerly of Maywood, will hold the formal opening of the Colonial Ice Cream Shop of 161 West Center street on Saturday, when special features are planned to attract the public.
The store opened for business on Armistice day. Mr. Storey has installed sanitary and modern electric ice cream manufacturing machinery in his display window and invites the public to watch him make ice cream. Inside the store is a large counter where malts, ice cream, sandwiches and coffee are served.
The Storeys announce that they intend to make Anaheim their permanent home, and have taken up residence at the Biltmore apartments.
Mrs. Cookson Wins Divorce Last Week
Notice of Virginia Lee Cookson's divorce, which she obtained in Superior Judge G. K. Scovel's court last week, brought to attention of Orange county residents the notoriety she obtained nine years ago when she claimed she was kidnapped and sold to a Chinese dive across the Mexican border.
The incident created quite a stir in Southern California. She was living with her husband, Walter M. Cookson, in the Forest of Arden in Modjeska canyon. After being sold like a slave, according to her story, she made friends with a Chinese boy who was assigned to feed her. He agreed to smuggle her back across the border in recent years, will have the backing this year of many groups which formerly opposed all forms of income tax due to seriousness of the financial dilemma confronting the state.
With more than $100,000,000 in new revenues required to close the present gap between income and outgo and wipe out the state deficit, the estimate $12,000,000 in returns under an income tax becomes an important factor.
But even more important, according to some of the fiscal officials, is the imperative need for further tax equalization to eliminate injustices and discrimination.
It is admitted, for example, that the ½ per cent state sales tax falls m or heavily on the man or woman of small income than on the wealthy. Yet, the state's financial officers maintain, the sales tax revenues are absolutely essential to permit adequate support of the state school system during a period when general fund revenues are far below and insufficient to meet the regular expenditures of government.
The income tax, it is claimed by its sponsors, will offset some of the inequalities of the sales tax, as it will chiefly a tax on the wealthy and men and women in the higher salary brackets.
And various business and industrial groups which have previously fought the income tax, recognizing the vital need of tax equalization if the sales tax is to survive, are expected to withdraw their opposition to the income levy at the next session of the legislature.
Out of the welter of the depression in the opinion of many of the leader in state affairs, has come a new willingness on the part of various taxpaying groups to seek a greater measure of fairness and equality in taxation — a new appreciation of the other man's problems.
And in that spirit, they contend, in real hope of reaching an equitable solution of the tax problem, regardless of the various tax proposals finally selected to balance the state budget.
Tioga Pass Road Realignment Work
Highway realignment has raised the summit of the Tioga Pass road 41 feet from 9941 to 9982 feet above sea level.
The most popular varieties of cover crop now used by walnut growers are mustard, malva, purple vetch and mellilot indica. The amount of seed commonly planted to obtain a good stand is as follows: Eight pounds of mustard, two pounds of Malva, 50 pounds of vetch or 16 pounds of mellilot per acre.
A sufficient supply of moisture for the germinating of seed and young seedlings is particularly essential to a good vigorous stand. The lack of moisture during the early growth and start of the cover crop is generally responsible for spotted or weak stands.
"Mortals" Is Topic For Lesson-Sermon
"The creature itself also shall be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the children of God." These words of Paul's to the Romans are the Golden Text in the Lession-Sermon on "Mortals and Immortals" in Sunday in all branches of The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass.
The Lession-Sermon includes these Bible verses from Luke: "And, behold, there was a woman which had a spirit of infirmity eighteen years, and was bowed to gether, and could in no wise lift up herself. And when Jesus saw her, he called her to him, and said unto her, Woman, thou art loosed from thine infirmity. And he laid his hands on her; and immediately she was made straight, and glorified God."
One of the passages from "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures," by Mary Baker Eddy, states: "When the illusion of sickness or sin tempts you, cling steadfastly to God and His Idea. Allow nothing but His likeness to abide in your thought. Let neither fear nor doubt overshadow your clear sense and calm trust, that the recognition of life harmonious—as Life eternally is—can destroy any painful sense of, or belief in, that which Life is not."
Postmasters To Pay Farm Mortgage Bonds
Postmasters everywhere throughout the United States will cash interest bearing coupons of the federal farm mortgage corporation, according to word received by President Charles Parker of the federal land bank from Governor W. I. Myers of the farm credit administration. Such bonds, guaranteed by the government as to principal and interest, have been disbursed by the bank on closed loans since last March.
For many years, according to Governor Myers' statement to the land bank executive, postmasters have been authorized to cash Government paper of all kinds, including interest coupons of United States bonds. This service will be extended to federal farm mortgage corporation coupons if presented by the holders in limited quantities. Holders of such coupons who do not have a banking connection or who find the local postoffice more available may receive cash for them from their postmaster, so Myers' information carried.
ISSUES PERMIT
Inspector R. Nyboe Friday granted a permit for re-roofing of A. A. Kemper's residence at 845 South Clementine street, at a cost of $108.
The dose of a liquid laxative can be measured. The action can thus be regulated to suit individual need. It forms no habit; you need not take a "double dose" a day or two later. Nor will a mild liquid laxative irritate the kidneys.
The right liquid laxative will bring a more natural movement, and with no discomfort at the time, or afterward.
The wrong cathartic may often do more harm than good.
An approved liquid laxative (one which is most widely used for both adults and children) is Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, a prescription. It is perfectly safe. Its laxative action is based on senna—a natural laxative. The bowels will not become dependent on this form of help, as they may do in the case of cathartics containing mineral drugs. Ask your druggist for Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin.
Anaheim, Calif., Nov. 15, 1934
Motorcyclist Dies
In Crash With Auto
Failure to make a boulevard stop on his motorcycle where Central avenue, La Habra, crosses 101 highway, cost Warren Youngren, 21, of 155 East 82nd street, Los Angeles, his life on Sunday. His motorbike crashed into an automobile registered to Paul Krachl of Los Angeles, injuring three occupants. Youngren was taken to the Fullerton hospital where he died that afternoon. He leaves a widowed mother.
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Saturday, November 17
WATCH US MAKE ICE CREAM
We make our own quality ice cream, with modern, sanitary machinery, in our display window.
Quarts 35c — Pints 20c
Giant Malts 10c
Sandwiches 10c Coffee 5c
Colonial Ice Cream Shop
161 West Center St., Anaheim Open till 11 P.M.
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