anaheim-gazette 1949-11-17
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Regard Irrigation Main Factor in Valencia Orange Size Survey
The total amount of water, the type of soil, and the number of irrigations per year were the main factors influencing citrus fruit size, said R. E. Puffer of the agricultural extension service at a recent meeting of over 400 citrus growers at the Willard Junior high school in Santa Ana.
Fertilizers, either commercial or organic, as well as other materials that were added to the soil, made no difference in fruit sizes, Puffer told the growers.
Other factors that were studied that did not influence size were yield of fruit, age of trees, and the use of oil versus fumigation.
Soil type was extremely important in comparing irrigation practices, Puffer said. Growers on yolo soil, which comprised 34 groves in the study, used 24.0 acre inches on groves producing large fruit and 13.6 acre inches on groves producing small fruit. The water was applied 4-6 times per year on the large fruit groves and 3-4 times on the small fruit groves. Growers on Hanford soil, which comprised 37 groves in the study, used 24.0 acre inches on groves producing large fruit and 15.7 acre inches on groves producing small fruit. The water was applied 5-7 times per year on the large fruit groves and 5-6 times on the small fruit groves.
Groves on Ramona soil showed an entirely different irrigation practice. There were 17 groves on Ramona in the study and only one grove was in the large size group. He had a deep soil and used 21 acre inches of water applying it 4-6 times a year. The groves with the small fruit, used 23 acre inches of water and applied the water 6-7 times. Puffer told the growers on
In his inspirational talk, the speaker lauded the club members for their progress in boys work. He described typical examples of improvements made by the service group which was organized on an international scale in 1919.
"Juvenile delinquency was so bad in Atlanta, Georgia, a few years ago, that the Salvation Army appealed to the Optimists there to give assistance. Within three years, crimes by juveniles were markedly less, and last year not one case was reported in the district," he said.
In cooperation with the Mexican government, a huge boys home and clubhouse is under direction of Optimists in Juarez, Mexico. The club and government supply 1500 pints of milk each day to underprivileged children, in addition.
Thirty-six officers and members of the local club, headed by Anaheim president Walt Gooden, were present at the banquet meeting. Also present were fourteenth district officers including Gov. R. P. Nall and Barney Koster of Santa Ana, lieutenant - governor. The speaker was introduced by Dr. Elton C. Spires of San Pedro, vice-president.
The Long Beach club was host
Lauds Optimist Club Progress
Tremendous progress made by the Optimist club in aiding the underprivileged boy, was cited by International President Frank Steinko of Washington, D. C., at the banquet given in honor of Optimist club week, last Thursday night at Knott's Berry Farm. Steinko spoke before more than 400 members and wives from Orange county and southern Los Angeles county clubs.
Make Appeal For Milk in CROP Drive
A statewide appeal to fifteen hundred milk producers and distributors to actively participate in the annual Milk Fund Drive of the Christian Rural Overseas Program (CROP), was made this week by Samuel H. Greene, nationally-known authority on food administration and consulting director of the California Dairy Council.
Greene, for 27 years director for the council, has accepted the chairmanship for the Milk Fund Drive in California, to be held during November and December. The drive is part of the regular harvest CROP campaign for the collection of food products to help feed the needy in Europe and Asia.
In communication to members of the dairy industry of California, Greene emphasized the importance of milk to the diet of undernourished children and the aged in war-devastated lands.
200 Carloads
He urged the dairymen to contribute dry or evaporated milk to help make up California's pledge of two hundred railroad carloads of fiber and exportable foodstuffs, including dairy products. For those unable to donate dried milk, Greene has appealed
Continuing the general impressions of the summer, I am inclined to come back to my own people and say, "Let us look to our own national household." Our European friends, whose salvation has been so close to our eyes that we have not seemed to see the spots wearing thin in our own economic and political salvation, are eating and working and pulling out.
A general statement would be that the well-to-do, in many of the countries, are getting along fairly well, although high taxes hit that bracket, there as here. The very poor, and the workers in the least skilled groups, are better off than before the war. The middle class, the white collar workers, feel the pinch, and in many instances actually suffer.
We look in a European store window, and see prices the same or lower, than here. We see big autos, and building or rebuilding and all sorts of things we would recognize as evidences of prosperity, if they were here at home. We do not search out the fact that a school teacher's pay is $60 a month, with certain requirements in expenditures, the non-professional or unskilled workers do not have to make. We do not realize that the bookkeeper in the hotel who makes out the bills, and before whom the thoughtless American travellers display great hands of the money of the country commenting loudly and critically on the money's size, appearance and probable value, is working for $50 a month, to eke out her husband's salary, because the two can hardly live, under present conditions there, without her working. This is the problem abroad, not the basic problem of food. In a way, it is increasingly the problem here.
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$250.00...you deposit $5.00 a week for 50 weeks.
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MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
He urged the dairymen to contribute dry or evaporated milk to help make up California's pledge of two hundred railroad carloads of fiber and exportable foodstuffs, including dairy products. For those unable to donate dried milk, Greene has appealed for cash, which will then be converted by CROP into dried milk for easy shipment overseas.
Along with his work as consultant to the Dairy Council, Greene serves as chairman of the agriculture committee of Oakland's chamber of commerce and is an active member of the Commonwealth club.
CROP is sponsored nationally by Church World Service (22 Protestant Faiths), Catholic Rural Life and Lutheran World Relief.
Anaheim Men Participate in Operation Miki
Two Anaheim men, Charles F. McDougal, hospitalman, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Higgins of 932 Emily street, and Orville W. Wanholz, fireman apprentice, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Wanholz, of 543 South Dickel, are serving as crew members aboard the aircraft carrier USS Boxer, which is participating in "Operation Miki," a large-scale amphibious exercise in the Pacific.
The maneuvers, scheduled to continue through October and November, involve nearly 40,000 soldiers, sailors, and marines, and are designed to dislodge an imaginary aggressor force from the Hawaiian Islands. General Mark W. Clark, Commanding General of the Sixth Army, is overall commander.
In communication to members of the dairy industry of California, Greene emphasized the importance of milk to the diet of undernourished children and the aged in war-devastated lands.
200 Carloads
He urged the dairymen to contribute dry or evaporated milk to help make up California's pledge of two hundred railroad carloads of fiber and exportable foodstuffs, including dairy products. For those unable to donate dried milk, Greene has appealed for cash, which will then be converted by CROP into dried milk for easy shipment overseas.
Along with his work as consultant to the Dairy Council, Greene serves as chairman of the agriculture committee of Oakland's chamber of commerce and is an active member of the Commonwealth club.
CROP is sponsored nationally by Church World Service (22 Protestant Faiths), Catholic Rural Life and Lutheran World Relief.
Anaheim Men Participate in Operation Miki
Two Anaheim men, Charles F. McDougal, hospitalman, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Higgins of 932 Emily street, and Orville W. Wanholz, fireman apprentice, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Wanholz, of 543 South Dickel, are serving as crew members aboard the aircraft carrier USS Boxer, which is participating in "Operation Miki," a large-scale amphibious exercise in the Pacific.
The maneuvers, scheduled to continue through October and November, involve nearly 40,000 soldiers, sailors, and marines, and are designed to dislodge an imaginary aggressor force from the Hawaiian Islands. General Mark W. Clark, Commanding General of the Sixth Army, is overall commander.
In communication to members of the dairy industry of California, Greene emphasized the importance of milk to the diet of undernourished children and the aged in war-devastated lands.
200 Carloads
He urged the dairymen to contribute dry or evaporated milk to help make up California's pledge of two hundred railroad carloads of fiber and exportable foodstuffs, including dairy products. For those unable to donate dried milk, Greene has appealed for cash, which will then be converted by CROP into dried milk for easy shipment overseas.
Along with his work as consultant to the Dairy Council, Greene serves as chairman of the agriculture committee of Oakland's chamber of commerce and is an active member of the Commonwealth club.
CROP is sponsored nationally by Church World Service (22 Protestant Faiths), Catholic Rural Life and Lutheran World Relief.
Anaheim Men Participate in Operation Miki
Two Anaheim men, Charles F. McDougal, hospitalman, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Higgins of 932 Emily street, and Orville W. Wanholz, fireman apprentice, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Wanholz, of 543 South Dickel, are serving as crew members aboard the aircraft carrier USS Boxer, which is participating in "Operation Miki," a large-scale amphibious exercise in the Pacific.
The maneuvers, scheduled to continue through October and November, involve nearly 40,000 soldiers, sailors, and marines, and are designed to dislodge an imaginary aggressor force from the Hawaiian Islands. General Mark W. Clark, Commanding General of the Sixth Army, is overall commander.
Rule Servists Eligible For County Pay
Sacramento,(WNS)—A ruling made by attorney general Fred N. Howser held that a county employee who enters military training voluntarily for a thirty day period, is entitled to receive his county pay regardless of whether or not the federal pay equals or exceeds his regular salary.
Argentina to Detroit by Truck
and precipitous mountain passes, violent equaams and near impassible jungle trails were among
ocles overcome by Aldo Carloni and Antonio
young Argentines on a 15,000-mile trip driving
year-old Chevrolet truck from Cordova, Argenetroit, Michigan. Here Carloni (right) is reviewweek journey with J. W. Burke, manager of the
Chevrolet Truck Department in the Motor Capital. With
the exception of three short stretches where there are no
roads at all and the vehicle was transported, the entire
trip through 13 countries was accomplished in the truck
which contained provisions for sleeping and cooking meals
and carried extra gas and oil. Difficult journey as shown
on map by Carloni and his companion was one of the first
via the still incomplete Pan-American Highway.
TV Ownership In L.A. Area Increases 167%
Television receiver ownership is growing faster in Los Angeles than in Chicago and Philadelphia, closest rivals in the TV sales race, according to nine-month comparisons of the three cities' records as compiled by the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce.
January-through-September figures showed Los Angeles sales of 133,633 sets let Philadelphia with 131,123 but lagged fractionally behind Chicago with 134,454.
The Los Angeles area's gain since January 1 was 167.7 per cent, however, compared with Chicago's relative growth in the same period of 150.8 per cent. Philadelphia showed a 129.4 per cent increase.
"With 37,768 sets reported sold in October, for a new Los Angeles total of 251,041 for 10 months, we may now be ahead of Chicago—unless the Windy City's October sales report, not yet received should show an exceptionally heavy sales volume," said Richard W. Millar, chairman of the Chamber's Television Committee.
October sales in Los Angeles were the heaviest on record, scoring a 17.7 per cent increase in the TV market in a single month. Southland video installations toped the quarter-million mark two months sooner than many authorities had expected, Millar said.
A sales survey conducted by the Southern California Radio and Electrical Appliance Association indicates there is one television set for each 5.3 families in Los Angeles county, which has 92 per cent precipitous mountain passes, violent equaams and near impassible jungle trails were among occles overcome by Aldo Carloni and Antonio young Argentines on a 15,000-mile trip driving year-old Chevrolet truck from Cordova, Argenetroit, Michigan. Here Carloni (right) is reviewweek journey with J. W. Burke, manager of the
Collection of Newspapers Again Resumed
Newspapers, neatly stacked or bundled, are again being picked
Announce Farm Radio Broadcast
The agricultural extension service announces the following sub-
WASHINGTON SEEN
BY Congressman JOHN PHILLIPS
Unging the general impress-ment the summer, I am inclined to back to my own people "Let us look to our own household." Our Euro-ends, whose salvation has close to our eyes that we seemed to see the spots thin in our own econom-olitical salvation, are eat-working and pulling out. General statement would be well-to-do, in many of entries, are getting along well, although high taxes on bracket, there as here. By poor, and the workers in skilled groups, are bet- than before the war. The class, the white collar feel the pinch, and in instances actually suffer.
Look in a European store and see prices the same, far, than here. We see big and building or rebuilding, sorts of things we would use as evidences of pros- they were here at home. Not search out the fact that all teacher's pay is $60 a with certain requirements, manditures, the non-professor unskilled workers do not make. We do not realize bookkeeper in the hotel, makes out the bills, and becomes the thoughtless Amer- wellers display great hand-the money of the country, sitting loudly and critically money's size, appearance probable value, is working a month, to eke out her's salary, because the two daily live, under present ones there, without her. This is the problem not the basic problem of a way, it is increasingly problem here.
Collection of Newspapers Again Resumed
Newspapers, neatly stacked or bundled, are again being picked up by Red Shield trucks from the Salvation Army social service center serving this area. This was announced today by Brigadies Fred Ohrn, manager of the center, who said that arrangements are being made with various mills to dispose of the papers.
Brig. Ohrn repeated requests for additional quantities of cast-off furniture, shoes, clothing, appliances, and household commodities to carry on the social service center's program of rehabilitation and aid to the needy and handicapped.
No longer-needed articles donated by housewives and businessmen are refinished in the center's workshops, and are sold in Salvation Army thrift stores. Funds from these sales are used to pay wages and maintain the entire program of aid and rehabilitation.
Red Shield trucks will pick up throwaway materials, Brig. Ohrn said, if residents will telephone Anaheim 4631 requesting a truck to stop at their home or office.
Makes your shopping pleasant when you trade in Anaheim.
Announce Farm Radio Broadcast
The agricultural extension service announces the following subjects and speakers to be featured next week on its daily broadcast over KVOE (1480 kc) at 12:15 p.m.
Monday, November 21—"Miscellaneous Topics for Homemakers"—Marian Prentiss, home demonstration agent.
Tuesday, November 22—"Alfalfa Varieties"—W. M. Corey ,farm advisor.
Wednesday, November 23—"Citrus Soils"—R. E. Puffer, farm advisor.
Thursday ,November 24—"4-H and Agricultural News Items" H. W. Longfellow, farm advisor.
Friday, November 25—"Citrus News"—Harold E. Wahlberg, farm advisor.
PINK RIBBONS
Mr. and Mrs. Mathew Manassero, Placentia, became the parents of a baby daughter who arrived Saturday at Fullerton General hospital.
The Baltimore family founded the colony of Maryland and served as its proprietors for seven generations.
For Your Thanksgiving Dinner Table
We Have a Fine Selection of Dinner Wines for Your Holiday Pleasure
Rhine Wine Concannon
Zenfandal Italian Swiss
Sauterne Cresta Blanca
Claret Roma
Burgundy Gallo
Virginia Dare, Red & White Santa Fe Petri
Christian Bros Vent Bros.
and Many Other Brands
Dinner Wines for Your Holiday Pleasure
Rhine Wine Concannon
Zenfandal Italian Swiss
Sauterne Cresta Blanca
Claret Roma
Burgundy Gallo
Virginia Dare, Red & White Santa Fe
Christian Bros Petri
Vent Bros.
and Many Other Brands
Tom & Jerry Batter . . . 65¢ Old Colonial GINS . . . 2.93
MAROCA RUM, 5th . . . 2.99
Cucamonga Wine
Muscatel Tokay
Sherry Port
Fifths - - - - - 49¢
½ Gal. - - - - - 1.15
Gallons - - - - - 2.15
Pluma Wine
Muscatel Port
Tokay Sherry
Fifths - - - - - 54¢
½ Gal. - - - - - 1.29
Gallons - - - - - 2.49
POPULAR BRANDS
IMPERIAL BEER
One-Way Bottle
2 for 25¢
Case 24 Bottles
2.89
Eastern-Western
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ICE COLD BEER
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FIVE LIQUOR STORE
W CENTER N WEST
1119 Lincoln Anaheim
Ownership in L.A. Area Increases 167%
vision receiver ownership is faster in Los Angeles than Chicago and Philadelphia, rivals in the TV sales race, due to nine-month comparative three cities' records as by the Los Angeles office of Commerce.
Through September figured Los Angeles sales of sets let Philadelphia with out lagged fractionally be芝加哥 with 134,454.
Los Angeles area's gain January 1 was 167.7 per cent, compared with Chicago's relative growth in the same period of 150.8 per cent. Philadelwood a 129.4 per cent increase.
37,768 sets reported sold over for a new Los Angeles of 251,041 for 10 months, we now be ahead of Chicago—the Windy City's October report, not yet received, shows an exceptionally sales volume," said Richard Carr, chairman of the Chamtelevision Committee.
Sales in Los Angeles are heaviest on record, scoring 7.7 per cent increase in the market in a single month. And video installations top quarter-million mark two sooner than many authori-expected, Millar said.
Survey conducted by the California Radio and Telephone Association there is one television each 5.3 families in Los county, which has 92 per city in the first instance.
The advisory committee said the governor should insist that adequate notice be given neighboring cities and the county government by all cities contemplating rent decontrol hearings in a metropolitan area.
If no action is taken by any of the neighboring cities or by the county, it should be taken as evidence that no adverse effects would result from decontrol.
Cities which fail to get hearings from neighboring cities should have opportunity to present their case to the governor if they oppose decontrol, the advisory committee said.
Pending resolutions involve the cities of Beverly Hills, Pasadena, South Pasadena, Huntington Park, Bell, Maywood, Coronado, Glendale, Alhambra and Long Beach, all in the metropolitan Los Angeles area.
Don't be too rough with a pessimist. Some of them are that way because they backed an optimist.
Veterans Board Meets Friday
Sacramento, (WNS)—The state veterans board will meet in San Francisco, November 18, according to announcement made by Lawrence C. Stevens, director of the department of veterans affairs.
BOUNCING BOY
An eight pound, six ounce baby son was born to Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mora, Garden Grove, Saturday at St. Joseph hospital.
The Pierce Plan pays Funeral Expenses for your family
J. F. EBLEN
13434 Lefflingwell Norwalk
Keep One Step Ahead of the Weather!
Take advantage of these pleasant days by replacing your worn-out roof with time-proven JOHNS-MANVILLE ASBESTOS SHINGLES. Economical, easily applied, they're GUARANTEED not to rot, corrode, split or burn . . . will give you a weathertight, attractive roof AS PERMANENT AS STONE! Stop in and order YOURS this week!
Over 38 Years of Faithful Service to the Community
Anaheim 2271 Placentia 317
Fullerton 232
Pre Christmas Clearance
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Reduced for Your Pre-Holiday Buying
TOP COATS
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SAVE UP TO $15
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... Reduced for Your Pre-Holiday
Buying
TOP COATS
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SAVE UP TO $15
SUITS
Famous Donigal
Tweeds and Cheviots $34.95
Single or Double Breasted Worsteds $47.50
SPORT COATS
Tweeds, Gabardines and Cheviots AS LOW AS $21.50
We Have Our Own
Tailoring & Alteration Department
to Better Fit Your Clothes
LAKE'S
MENS WEAR
225 WEST CENTER STREET
(Next to Fox Theatre)