anaheim-gazette 1946-07-11
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FARM HEAD URGES VETS WRITE WASHINGTON FOR SALE LISTINGS
Veterans seeking purchase of surplus agricultural products were advised this week that all sales of such surpluses are handled directly out of Washington. Stephen Griset, chairman of the Orange county AAA committee, Monday urged veterans seeking such purchases to write direct to Washington.
He advised ex-servicemen or others who were desirous of being notified of sales of such surplus materials to address a letter to the Production and Marketing Administration, U. S. Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C., requesting their name be placed on the mailing list to receive listings announcing sales.
Sales of all surplus items such as canned goods, malted milk tablets and similar products, are handled directly out of Washington and are not handled by any agency or field office of the Department of Agriculture, he said.
Meanwhile Griset reported sugar allocated for civilian distribution from July 1 through September 30 will be 368,000 tons more than the April-June allocation.
The increased allocation, 1,753,000 tons, he said reflects seasonal increases for the home and commercial packing and canning season. Annual per capita rate of consumption is expected to be about the same as in 1945.
As a world commodity, sugar is expected to continue in short supply throughout 11946, probably 1947. 1945-46 production, now being marketed, is estimated at 27.2 million short tons,—750,000 tons less than the previous season, 7.3 million tons below the 1935-39 pre-war annual average.
World output of beet sugar is estimated at 7.1 millions short tons in 11945-46, the smallest since 1923 and 4.9 million tons less than the pre-war average, Griset pointed out.
As sugar allocations increased the 25 million housewives who put up more than 4 billion jars of food in one war year are being called back into action, and millions of new recruits urged to meet the world crisis in food.
To focus attention upon the world famine picture and help
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SAFEWAY
KEEP FIT ... Drink plenty
Lucerne Milk
during summer month
Lucerne Milk is rich and good-tasting comes from fine herds of inspected cows is pasteurized and homogenized in an maculately clean creamery, and is rushed to your neighborhood Safeway Store, f and at its best. Lucerne Milk unconditionally guaranteed please ... or your money be Buy several quarts today.
HOMOGENIZED MILK
Oil. 17¢
This price complies with milk prices fixed by State law.
CHECK THIS LIST OF SAFEWAY VALUES
Baby Foods
Strained 7¢
Heinz Brand. Junior Foods, can, 9c.
Canterbury Tea
1¼-oz. pkg. 8¢
¼-lb. pkg., 23c. ½-lb. pkg., 43c.
HOUSEHOLD CLEANING AIDS
Rich Suds 25¢
Washing Compound 20¢
Bleach 29¢
OTHER SAFEWAY VALUE
Grapefruit
Carrot Juice
Spinach
Shredded Wheat 12-oz. pkg.
CHECK THIS LIST OF SAFEWAY VALUES
Baby Foods 7¢
Heinz Brand. Junior Foods, can, 9c.
Canterbury Tea 8¢
¼-lb. pkg., 23c. ½-lb. pkg., 43c.
Tea Bags 36¢
Pkg. of 16 bags, 13c. Pkg. of 8 bags, 7c.
Canterbury Brand. Black Tea.
Tomato Sauce 4¢
Gardenside Brand.
Raviolis 16¢
Riviera Chicken
16-oz. jar, 13c.
Hot Muffin Mix 22¢
Duff's Brand.
Catsup 15¢
Del Monte Brand.
Chocolate 15¢
Ghirardelli's Premium Brand.
Light Globes 15¢
Sylvania Opal White. Easy on the eyes.
Mason Jars 60¢
12 quart jars, 73c. 12 half gallon jars, 1.15.
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TURN ON "TENNESSEE JED"
BILS P.M. DAILY MON. THUR FRI.
YOUR ABC STATION
PRESENTED BY BEVERLY PEANUT BUTTER
lb. 27¢
HOUSEHOLD CLEANING AIDS
Rich Suds 25¢
Washing Compound 20¢
Ora Brand. 20-ox. pkg.
Bleach 29¢
Half gallon, 17c. Quart, 9c.
Babo Cleaner 21¢
Satina Tablets 5¢
Dry Cleaner Aunt Sue Brand
OTHER SAFEWAY VALUE
Grapefruit Broken Sections
Carlton's Brand.
Herre's Health Brand
Carrot Juice Emerald Boy Brand
Spinach Nabisco
Shredded Wheat
TOASTED WHEAT
6-oz. cello 7¢
Delicious breakfast cereal.
Nu-Vita brand. "Twice toasted." Toasted Rice
6-oz. cello, 9c.
Farm-Fresh PRODUCE
Top-quality fruits and vegetables are plentiful at Safeway.
Enjoy your favorites often. Satisfaction guaranteed at Safeway.
Apricots Blendheims. Rice for canning.
(lby the lug, lb., llsr).
Carrots Local grown. Sweet, tender,
and crisp. Serve strips, iced.
Peaches Freestone variety. Delicious,
sweet and juicy Nectars.
Onions Red Italian sweet variety.
Excellent for slicing.
Lemons Thin-skinned and very juicy.
Serve lots of lemonade.
Bell Peppers Glossy, crisp.
SAFEWAY
These prices lowered product effectiveness through
Saturday, July 18. No other
discounts. Right to buy reserved.
Produce prices subject to change
after Wednesday of this week.
free more shippable foods abroad by utilizing and conserving domestic supplies, July 15-22 has been designated "National Home Food Preservation Week."
With the world food stockpile at low ebb, housewives are asked to duplicate, or top, past records to meet the post-war emergency.
Nationally, record crops of home grown and commercially produced fruit and vegetables are in prospect, while bumper crops are expected in many California commercial or home gardens, Griset said.
Home preservation, it is being stressed, in addition to the added help America will be enabled to give abroad, will help the home larder, raise national dietary standards.
Cooperating with the Department of Agriculture in the food preservation campaign are the President's Famine Emergency committee, the National Garden Institute, National Red Cross, and other consumer, trade, public and private groups, Griset announced.
Levier Services Held Saturday
Funeral services for John M. Levier, 82, former chief pumper for the Yorba Linda Water company, who died at St. Joseph’s Hospital after an extended illness last Thursday, were held last Saturday at the Hilgenfeld chapel.
The Rev. Clarence W. Mayo, pastor of Calvary church officiated. Burial was in Fullerton cemetery.
A native of Pennsylvania, Mr. Levier had been a resident in the Yorba Linda area for more than a quarter century. Until illness compelled him to retire some time ago, he had been chief
Orange County War Casualties Total 334
Official but still incomplete report of World War II dead and missing, released late last week by the War Department, revealed Orange county incurred a total of 334 army casualties. This figure, it was pointed out, does not include navy, marine or coast guard personnel.
The report, first consolidated listing of army dead and missing, is a compilation of the names of nearly 310,000 men and women who died while in service.
The overall death and missing rate was set at 2.98 per cent. Of more than 10 million men and women mobilized into the army from May 1941 until January 1946, a total of 307,554 had been killed in action, died of other causes or were listed as missing.
No breakdown of figures showing casualties incurred by each community in the county were available.
School Amendment Heads Parents-Teachers Confab
Final consideration is now being given to basic information, plans of work for the coming year’s activities and a proposed constitutional amendment in the regular two-day session of the California Congress of Parents and Teachers which began yesterday and will conclude this evening at Hotel Clark in Los Angeles. It marks the first regular meeting in the administration of Mrs. Rollin Brown, president of Jesus Barron, Wife, Here Now
Jesus Barron, 403 South Clementine street, is home again as a civilian after serving in the army for more than three years in the Headquarters and Service company, 288th Engineer Combat Battalion. He received his discharge at Ft. Sam Houston, Texas, June 25, as a private first class.
Since his entrance in the service, March 29, 1943, Barron participated in the battle of the Rhineland in central Europe. He was a special vehicle operator with the 288th Engineering company, driving six-ton semi-trailers in transporting heavy construction machinery from job to job. He traveled on trips of 600 miles through all types of weather, locating and reaching objectives by map, serving and making emergency repairs, and keeping records of each shipment.
A graduate of Anaheim Union high school, Barron attended Fullerton Junior college for one year where he was enrolled in a pre-engineering course. He was also a member of the basket ball team. He spent six months at Utah State Agricultural college; Logan, Utah, under the army specialized training program, furthering his pre-engineering course.
Now residing here with Barron is his Brazilian wife whom he married in Freising, Germany, February of this year.
He holds three overseas service bars, the Army of Occupation medal, Victory ribbon, one service stripe, American Theater ribbon, EAMME ribbon with two bronze stars, and good conduct medal.
pany, who died at St. Joseph's Hospital after an extended illness last Thursday, were held last Saturday at the Hilgenfeld chapel.
The Rev. Clarence W. Mayo, pastor of Calvary church officiated. Burial was in Fullerton cemetery.
A native of Pennsylvania, Mr. Levier had been a resident in the Yorba Linda area for more than a quarter century. Until illness compelled him to retire some time ago, he had been chief pumper of the Yorba Linda Water company.
He was a charter member of the Placentia Calvary church.
He is survived by one son, Oscar H. Levier of Palm Springs; three daughters, Mrs. Ethel C. York of Yorba Linda, Mrs. Grace Russell of Clarion, Pa., and Mrs. Margaret Crooks of La Habra and four grandchildren.
The knitting machine was invented by William Lee of England, in 1589.
The first kindergarten established was one of Brandenburg, Prussia, in 1840.
Final consideration is now being given to basic information, plans of work for the coming year's activities and a proposed constitutional amendment in the regular two-day session of the California Congress of Parents and Teachers which began yesterday and will conclude this evening at Hotel Clark in Los Angeles. It marks the first regular meeting in the administration of Mrs. Rollin Brown, president of the congress board of managers.
Results of the conference which will affect the projects of the 532,894 members in 1904 units throughout the California Congress, will feature a discussion of coming initiative constitutional amendment which recently qualified for the November ballot. It directly pertains to the welfare of the state's school population.
This amendment, which has been endorsed by the congress guarantees a salary of not less than $2400 per year to every teacher in the California public schools.
It would also re-define the public school system to include all levels from kindergarten through state college, providing from the state general funds $120 per unit of average daily attendance for each child through the 14th, junior college level year.
Each school district would receive not less than $90 for each pupil in the A.D.A. and no district regardless of A.D.A. would receive less than $2400 for the salary for one teacher, under the proposed amendment.
With the funds so secured for every district it would make provision for necessary supervision, the excess cost of educating handicapped children and for equalization of the different levels in a district and among the various districts throughout the state.
Regional OPA Head Warns Public To Keep Ration Book
A warning to retain ration book number 4 despite the uncertainty of OPA status, was issued here this week as Paul Barksdale D'Orr, southern California price control director, warned "sugar rationing will definitely be continued."
The warning was voiced, d'Orr said, to protect inadequate sugar supplies now in the country.
"President Truman has assured us sugar rationing will continue."
A warning to retain ration book number 4 despite the uncertainty of OPA status, was issued here this week as Paul Barksdale D'Orr, southern California price control director, warned "sugar rationing will definitely be continued."
The warning was voiced, d'Orr said, to protect inadequate sugar supplies now in the country.
"President Truman has assured us sugar rationing will continue to be necessary for some time," o'Orr said and added, "any sugar application should continue to be directed to the district OPA office which will handle them until notice of change."
Meanwhile, Edwin Poehlman, sugar ration chief for this area, scored trafficking in loose sugar ration coupons and asked merchants not to accept loose coupons unless torn from the ration books in their presence.
less torn from the ration book in their presence.
Poehlman pointed out the abuse was centered on the five pound stamps attached to ration book number 4 and was not to be confused with the loose restaurant 10 pound stamp or the one pound loose stamp issued servicemen on furlough.
He warned that though the OPA does not have control over prices and rent, it still maintains jurisdiction over the sugar rationing program under the Second War Powers Act.
ATC OFFICER, ANAHEIM MAN, WINS PROMOTION
Promotion of Armand L. Monteverde of Anaheim from captain to major, was announced this week by headquarters of the West Coast wing of the Air Transport Command's Pacific coast division.
Monteverde is a check pilot for the wing, hub of the military airlines' widespread west coast operations.
Read The Gazette, Anaheim's newspaper "bible" since 1870.
The first use of gas for illuminating purposes in the United States was in 1879, at Baltimore, Md.
Texas proclaimed its independence from Mexico in 1838, when it was recognized by the United States.
Although a slave-holding state from the United States until after North Carolina did not secede Lincoln's first call for troops.
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