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anaheim-gazette 1944-09-07

1944-09-07 · Anaheim Gazette · page 6 of 12 · OCR glm-ocr
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Page Six ANAHEIM BUSINESS "Orange Capitol of the World" ADVERTISING — ANAHEIM GAZETTE Orange County's Oldest NEWSPAPER Established 1870 "Everybody Reads The Gazette" 259 E. Center — Ph. 2206-2207 ATTORNEYS — SAM L. COLLINS Attorney-at-Law Floor Leader Calif. Assembly Office: Chapman Bldg. Ph. 568 Fullerton, California BIRTH CERTIFICATES — BIRTH CERTIFICATES OBTAINED FROM ANY STATE PROMPT AND RELIABLE SERVICE REASONABLE CHARGE NORTHERN ORANGE COUNTY CREDIT BUREAU 408 Bank of America Bldg. Phone Anaheim 2248 250 E. Center, Cor. S. Philadelphia FUNERAL HOMES — BACKS, CAMPBELL & KAULBARS J BEN KAULBARS Resident Director, Phone Anaheim 3209 251 North Lemon Street. ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA BUY US WAR BONDS MIMEOGRAPHING — FROM POST CARD TO LEGAL SIZE Reasonable Rates. Immediate Service NORTHERN ORANGE COUNTY CREDIT BUREAU 408 Bank of America Bldg. Phone 2248 MOVING - TRANSFER — STORAGE SUPERIOR SERVICE For Those Who APPRECIATE SPEED and REASONABLE RATES Our company aims to please and DOES with careful PHYSICIANS & SURGEONS — DR. J. W. TRUXAW PHYSICIAN Phone: office 3213; Res. 261 Golden State Bank Bldg. Center & L. A. — Anahei PRINTING THAT'S A CREDIT TO YOU The printed matter that goes out of your offices reflects your standards. We do a good job for you. Stock, ink and design in the modern manner — a moderate cost. ANAHEIM GAZETTE Theo B. Kuchel, Gen. Mgr. 259 E. Center — Ph. 2206-2207 FUNERAL HOMES — BACKS, CAMPBELL & KAULBARS J BEN KAULBARS Resident Director Phone Anaheim 3209 251 North Lemon Street. ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA HILGENFELD MORTUARY Faithful, Courteous Service 120 E. Broadway Phone 410 LOMA VISTA Cemetery and Mausoleum Fullerton, California Endowed for Perpetual Maintenance. Arthur G. Porter Secretary-Manager Office at Cemetery Office—Phone Fullerton 158 Residence—Ph. Anaheim 3811 INSURANCE BROKERS — A. P. M. BROWN "A Full House of Insurance Service" You Can't Afford To Be Under-Insured 501 N. Los Angeles — Ph. 2275 ALFRED H. HANSEN Agent State Farm Insurance Companies Writing every form of Insurance, Including Life 515 N. Los Angeles — Ph. 4423 FRANK TAUSCH INSURANCE Reputation — Service 275 E. Center, Anaheim Phones: Office 2401 Res. 3575 LEGAL PUBLICATIONS — The "Public Notice" is an important function of the American system of Government. The ANAHEIM GAZETTE is an authorized legal publication, established 1870. 259 E. Center — Ph. 2206-2207 SUPERIOR SERVICE For Those Who APPRECIATE SPEED and REASONABLE RATES Our company aims to please and DOES with careful moving, insured shipments, and packing. ANAHEIM TRUCK & TRANSFER B.A.I.S. 1873) 505 S. Los Angeles—Ph. 2123 Shipping, Crating. Storage Local and Long Distance. NEWSPAPERS — Everybody Reads The ANAHEIM GAZETTE Orange County's Newspaper "bible" since 1870. Only $2.00 Per Year 259 E. Center — Ph. 2206-2207 NOTARIES - PUBLIC — NOTARY PUBLIC always on duty to serve you at ANAHEIM BLDG. & LOAN ASS'N Center & Lemon — Ph. 4204 OPTICIANS - Optometrists — DR. HOMER A. NELSON OPTOMETRIST Phone 3104 114 N. Lemon — Anaheim PERSONAL SERVICE — PAY YOUR DEBTS Let Us Explain Our Plan. No Co-signers Employer ...not Contacted NORTHERN ORANGE COUNTY CREDIT BUREAU Bank of America Blog Phone 2248 PAINT - WALL PAPER — GOOD PAINT LEGAL PUBLICATIONS — The "Public Notice" is an important function of the American system of Government. The ANAHEIM GAZETTE is an authorized legal publication, established 1870. 259 E. Center — Ph. 2206-2207 LITHOGRAPHERS — A complete photographic and off-set printing plant is at your service. The ANAHEIM GAZETTE Plant is equipped to supply your every printing need. 259 E. Center — Ph. 2206-2207 TAXI SERVICE — PICKWICK CAB Fast But Careful "At Your Service" 182 W. Center — Ph. 4822 MACHINE SHOPS — ANAHEIM MACHINE WORKS REPAIR Work of All Kinds 125 S. Clementine — Ph. 2011 Please help make The Gazette a better newspaper by giving your local, society or personal news items. Phone 2206. PAINT - WALL PAPER — GOOD PAINT Saves & Preserves The Best Homes For "DUTCH BOY" Paints see us and be better pleased with the results. GIBBS LUMBER Three Retail Yards Anaheim-Fullerton-Placentia DELIVERY OF Building Materials ROBINS PAINT STORE 239 N. Los Angeles St., Anaheim ANAHEIM GAZETTE Directory of Reliable BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL MEN AND FIRMS (FOR LISTING ON THIS PAGE CALL THE GAZETTE, PHONE 2206) SICIANS & SURGEONS DR. J. W. TRUXAW PHYSICIAN No: office 3213; Res. 2610 Golden State Bank Bldg. Ter & L. A. — Anaheim PRINTING THAT'S A CREDIT TO YOU The printed matter that goes out of your offices reflects your standards. We do a good job for you. Stock, ink and design in the modern manner — at moderate cost. ANAHEIM GAZETTE Theo B. Kuchel, Gen. Mgr. D E. Center — Ph. 2206-2207 policy, when the war ends, of selling its surplus real estate in family size parcels and to farm purchasers who will cultivate the land themselves. Mr. Clayton set forth other objectives of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, which will supervise the sale of surplus lands, as follows: 1. To sell as promptly as possible at current values without undue disruption of the market. 2. To sell outright, reserving the right of government recapture only if national defense requires. 3. To give former owners an opportunity to re-purchase their land at current market values. 4. To avoid sales to speculators or persons planning to combine small tracts into large ones for speculative purposes. Clayton added that "agricultural and other rural land may be replotted into economic units" before being sold. Presumably, this refers to breaking large acreages into small family-size farms, or joining small acreages together to make a self-sustaining unit. It is to be hoped, if this policy is followed, that the experts are really expert, so that some of the tragic failures of previous land colonization projects can be avoided, for what might constitute a self-sustaining unit in one area might fall short of even a subsistence farm in another. On the most important consideration of all—what proportion of government property is to be returned to private ownership—part to keep milk production high enough to meet all war needs. Griset advises. Surplus Truck Disposal Gives "Scattered" Relief Although the farm transportation problem which has become steadily more critical throughout the war has received scattered relief recently through the disposal program for surplus army trucks, the number of trucks released by the Army has not been sufficient to make any major improvement on the national problem. The U. S. Treasury Procurement Division has the responsibility for disposing of such surplus goods and a recent check-up revealed that 13,387 of these surplus army trucks have been sold since the beginning of the program around 9,000 moved in the past two months. Many of these trucks have gone to agriculture, chiefly mediums and lights. Most of the first 10,000 of these trucks sold were 1939 models and older but the last 3,000 are reported have included more 1941 and 1945 models. The Procurement Division reports that only 5,000 additional used trucks are now available and that many of these are in "junk" class. Due to the location of the truck which the Army has declared plus to date, there has been considerable variation in the numbers available to different areas. The disposal plan from the agricultural standpoint is handled through the cooperation of the Agricultural Adjustment Agency with Treasury Procurement. Role of the AAA as in its numerous other war-time assignments is one of service to farmers. Through the AAA, Treasury Procurement is furnished information on the numbers, types, conditions of trucks wanted by farmers within an area and farmers are assisted by the AAA and the County Farm Transmission Committee in obtaining... With all the discussion of government programs to limit the amount of land individual farmers may be allowed to own and operate no one seems to have called attention to the ironic circumstance that the government itself will become the most dangerous and monopolist in the Nation. As a matter of fact, the most stated land baron this country has known is Uncle Sam himself—and determined steps must be taken to compel the government to disgorge a major part of its holdings when the war ends, the people of the United States to have any hope of achieving sound economy. Approximately 46 percent of all land in California is owned by our landed bureaucracy, the government. And in the Nation at large roughly 25 percent of all the land is under government ownership or lease. The government, too, is a tough competitor, for government holdings, with few exceptions, are tax-exempt, and the farmer or business man with adjoining parcels of land must not only pay his own taxes, but must also help pack the land formerly carried by the land taken over by the government. In many instances the individual must sell his goods or services in competition with the taxee goods or services of the government operation. The gravity of the situation in California is evidenced by the fact that many of our cities and counties, which have been stripped of a large share of their taxable wealth by continued government microchment, are now having serious difficulty in raising suffici- High Milk Production Patriotic, Profitable Two good reasons why Orange county farmers should make a determined effort to keep their milk production just as high as possible are the increasing military requirements for milk products and the increase in dairy production payments which went in effect the first of September, Stephen Griset, chairman of the County AAA committee, suggests. The armed forces get more than just food value out their huge milk products requirements such as the morale "lift" for the men in the front lines at Bougainville of two servings of ice cream a week. Production of evaporated milk and whole milk powder is lagging behind needs and butter procurement for the armed forces must continue through October instead of "signing off" in September due to the sharp drop in butter production so far this year. In the first seven months of this year, total milk produced on farms was only one-tenth of one per cent below last year and 12 per cent above the 10-year average. Dairy production payments will be increased 25 cents a hundred-weight for milk and 4 cents a pound for butterfat beginning September 1. This payment is made to help farmers hold up milk production at a season when feed and other costs of dairying increase. "There's both profit and patriotism involved in doing our MACHINE TAKES FUZZ OFF EXHAUST FAN PULLS FUZZ FROM BRUSHES AND CARRIES IT AWAY Only a dream when comedians first thought of it, the "gooferfeather machine", which was supposed to take the fuzz off peaches, is now a reality. Produced by Food Machinery Corporation, the "defuzzer" as it is known to the fruit trade, aids peach growers to command a higher market for their product. Cost of defuzzing a box of peaches is estimated at 1 mill. LINDSAY, CALIF.—That machine to take the fuzz off peaches is now in widespread use—successfully. Food Machinery Corporation, which produces the machine, known to the trade as a "defuzzer", announced that it enables the growers in this area to take that prickly down off the peaches. They are shipped East and command premium prices. Actually the machine which takes off the "gooferfeathers" is very simple. It is only five by six feet and is powered with a three-quarter to one horsepower motor. Yet it has a capacity of 15 tons per hour. In the machine are soft horsehair brushes. Every brush runs at a different speed and is at a different elevation. Thus one brush acts slightly as a brake holding fruit while the other cleans it, yet turning it so every spot is reached and all fuzz brushed off. The fuzz is drawn off by an exhaust fan. Only known use for the fuzz is to make people sneeze. Thursday, September 7, 1944 Grant H. Smart Is New Member Of AAA War Board Eric Eastman, secretary of the AAA War Board of Orange county, announces the appointment of Mr. Grant H. Smart as administrative assistant in the office, and who assumed his duties on Friday of last week. The office of the Orange county board is located at 622 North Main street in Santa Ana. The duties of the board is to handle the war board activities which during this time is the administration of the ration problems of the farmers, to allow the purchase of farm machinery and equipment and of building construction. Mr. Smart is fully familiar with the problems of the farmers, having been born and reared on a farm in the midwest. He is a graduate of the A. and M. college in Stillwater, Oklahoma, and for the past fifteen years, has been associated with the Aetna Life Insurance Company in the farm loan department. He understands the farmer and the many problems they encounter. Mr. Smart with his family have established their home in Santa Ana and he expects to visit all sections of Orange county in his capacity as administrative assistant. RATION POINTERS Choice steaks and roasts of beef, choice cuts of lamb, ham, pork loins, canned fish, butter, margarine, cheese and evaporated milk: Red Stamps A8 to Z8 and A5 to G 5, inclusive in Book 4 worth 10 points. Red stamps E5, F5 and G5 in book four became valid September 3, and are worth 10 points. Red point bonus: Two points for every pound of salvaged kitchen fat. Canned and dehydrated foods: Blue Stamps A8 to Z8 and A5 to L5, inclusive, in Book 4, worth 10 points. Sugar: Stamps No. 30, 31, 32 and natural standpoint is handled through the cooperation of the Cultural Adjustment Agency and Treasury Procurement. The AAA as in its numeral other war-time assignments one of service to farmers. Through the AAA, Treasury Procedure is furnished information on the numbers, types, and tions of trucks wanted by users within an area and the users are assisted by the AAA the County Farm Transportation Committee in obtaining the ks when they do become available. and Pieces The War Food Administration decreased the set-aside of but-for government war need being in September to 20 per cent of monthly production. The side during August is 30 per cent Federally-inspectedighterers are now required to side for government pro-ment half of the quantities of meeting Army specifications allowing WFA's advancement of set-aside percentage from 45 loins, canned fish, butter, margarine, cheese and evaporated milk: Red Stamps A8 to Z8 and A5 to G 5, inclusive in Book 4 worth 10 points. Red stamps E5, F5 and G5 in book four became valid September 3, and are worth 10 points. Red point bonus: Two points for every pound of salvaged kitchen fat. Canned and dehydrated foods: Blue Stamps A8 to Z8 and A5 to L5, inclusive, in Book 4, worth 10 points. Sugar: Stamps No. 30, 31, 32 and 33 in Book 4 each valid for five pounds, expiration date not set. Stamp No. 40, five pounds sugar for canning, valid through Feb. 28, 1945. Send Spare Stamp No. 37 with application for additional canning sugar certificate to your local ration board. Shoes: Stamps No. 1 and 2 on airplane sheet. Book No. 3, expiration date not set, each valid for one pair of rationed shoes. Gasoline: Coupon 12 in "A" book, valid through Sept. 21. WAR BONDS . . . buy them and "Let's Win This War." Protect their eyes with Good Light" ★ Use large enough bulbs ★ Have enough lamps ★ Shade all bulbs to avoid glare ★ Use light-colored shades ★ Sit close to the light ★ Keep bulbs and fixtures clean The Anaheim Gazette wants all the local NEWS PLEASE phone, bring or send local, personal, or social items. Call 2206 IF Anyone — Gets Married — Elopes — Dies — Has Guests — Goes Away — Comes Back — Gets a Degree — Has a Party — Has a Baby — Has a Fire — Has an Operation — Is Ill — Gets Well — Buys a Home — Sells Property Has an Accident —Has a Baby —Has a Fire —Has an Operation —Is Ill —Gets Well —Buys a Home —Sells Property —Has an Accident —Wins a Prize —Builds a House —Makes a Speech —Holds a Meeting —Becomes a Nudist —Shoots His Employer —Or Takes Part in Any Other Usual or Unusual Event That's News! We WANT IT! Anaheim Gazette 259 East Center Phone 2206