anaheim-gazette 1951-03-26
Searchable text
8 Anaheim Gazette MONDAY, MARCH ANAHEIM, CALIF
MECHANICAL HANDS—Charles Perkins is shown a cove, supervising the milking of the goats at Up Dairy with one of the two milking machines. He says the goats prefer the machines to 'milking.'
HI. BUDDY!—All the goats at Park-Up Dairy are pets to Mrs. Perkins, including Radar, the billy-goat. His long ears, Roman nose, and dark coat, coupled with his size, mark him as a North Asian Nubian.
How to make good telephone service even better...
Co. Traffic
(Continued from Page 1)
pital in a serious condition injuries received when a had borrowed from his Sulev Sepp, 8761 Placentia Anaheim, was involved in a fic crash near Brea, Sunday.
Half a dozen cars were ed Saturday afternoon in ilision on Coast highway Morro cove, north of L Beach, but only one person injured.
Rawleigh Smith, 21, Los geles, who was riding a n cycle received minor inj when five cars piled up be an unknown woman driver
A tip you can give
a talkative 'teenager
Wonder how many people have been trying to call this telephone since Ann began doing her algebra lesson with a friend who lives just down the block. And, you know, incoming calls are often more important than the ones you make. This is just a suggestion, of course, but if you have a problem like this around your house, you might point out to your particular Ann that if she spaces her calls...and talks only as long as really necessary...she won't run the risk of missing a date because the boy who was trying to call could get nothing but a busy signal.
to speed service
on Long Distance calls, give the operator the information like this: First, the name of the town you're calling. Then the telephone number. (It's a good idea to keep a list of the out-of-town numbers you call.)
Next, if it's a person call, give her the name of the one you want to reach. It will help her complete your call quicker.
Pacific Telephone
MONDAY, MARCH 26, 1951
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA
Goats
(Continued from Page 1)
out of them again. They leave nothing to be desired in the matter of personal sanitation."
The Perkins family has the distinction of being the only goat dairy operators in Orange county, but it wasn't easy to establish themselves. It all began about four years ago after Perkins had been discharged from the Marine Corps. A friend suggested keeping a goat for the extra quality of the milk.
Perkins scoffed at the idea at first, but was finally invigilated into trying it. From the first goat grew the present herd of 90, some obtained through purchase, others through breeding. Four breeds, two of them Swiss, are kept at the Perkins' dairy, Toggenbergs and Saanens, the first of which are various shades of brown and the second white, are Swiss goats which have been bred for milk production through hundreds of years by the Swiss. Nublans, from North Africa and Asia, are not as good as Toggenbergs or Saanens for milk production, but, according to Mrs. Patins, they make wonderful pets. They are distinguished by Roman noses and long ears. A fourth variety, French Alpine, are good milk producers.
Perkins explained that he is attempting to breed a goat with a long milk-producing period. In the wild state, a goat will give milk for about seven months. After four years of breeding, the Perkins goats will milk for about 19 months on the average.
Operating any sort of dairy takes hard work and long hours, and the Perk-Up is no exception, according to Perkins. When they first started the dairy...
Perkins explained that he is attempting to breed a goat with a long milk-producing period. In the wild state, a goat will give milk for about seven months. After four years of breeding, the Perkins goats will milk for about 19 months on the average.
Operating any sort of dairy takes hard work and long hours, and the Perk-Up is no exception, according to Perkins. When they first started the dairy, he and his wife were working 15 to 18 hours per day to get the work done. Now, thanks to the fact that their son, Eddie, has achieved an age where they will allow him to work, they only put in about 12 hours per day.
The goats are milked, mechanically, twice daily at 4 p.m. and 4 a.m. They average 3 to 3½ quarts daily aplce, but some go as high as 8½ quarts. Perkins says the goats prefer mechanical milking to hand variety because the machines milk with a steadier, unvarying action.
Following the milking, the milk is sent through a cooler to reduce its temperature below 50 degrees Fahrenheit, thus reducing the bacteria count and producing better-tasting milk. All phases of the dairy work are subject to the same regulations and inspection undergone by all cow dairies.
While goats are not tough enough to chew cans and digest them, a la the comic strips, they are hardy and easy to keep healthy as long as they are kept clean and dry, Perkins said.
Goats' milk is no richer than that of a cow, according to Perkins, but it is more digestible since the globules of fat are much smaller and are naturally homogenized. In addition, he said, there are some minerals present in goats' milk which cows' milk does not have.
The Perkins family doesn't spend much time arguing the respective merits of cows' and goats' milk, but on one thing they do agree—it's a healthful occupation operating a dairy.
When they first began dairying in earnest in 1946, Eddie was suffering from asthma. Now he has no sign of it, and, in spite of long hours of hard work, all three are in excellent physical shape.
MILK CALL—Goats at the Perk-Up Dairy don't need protection into the miniature dairy, which is kept spotlessly clean the evidently tedious milking time, much in the manner of
Easter Fatalities Hit 226 in Nation
By The Associated Press
Traffic and a variety of other accidents caused 226 deaths over the week-end as the nation celebrated Easter.
Between 6 p.m., (local Friday and last midnight known traffic fatalities had led to 160, and deaths from cellane causes to 66).
The latter group includes brothers and a sister whoently died of suffocation fire in their four-room
Half a dozen cars were involved Saturday afternoon in a collision on Coast highway at El Morro cove, north of Laguna Beach, but only one person was injured.
Rawleigh Smith, 21, Los Angeles, who was riding a motorcycle received minor injuries when five cars piled up because unknown woman driver made a turn on the highway in front of the approaching line of traffic. With was hospitalized in Santa Ana.
Three others were injured as well: Miss Dorothy Scheve, 23, Rita Ana; Claudette Black, 4, Rita Ana; Guy L. Noltie, 58, Donna Del Mar.
Calendar
Monday, March 26
USA Club—6:30 p.m., Elks club.
Patt Exalted Rulers and IncomExalted Rulers—7 p.m., Elks club.
Club—7 p.m.
Rights of Columbus—8 p.m., at K.C. hall.
Internal Order of Eagles—8 p.m., at M.I.W. Center.
Sigma Phi-Tau Chapter—7:45 p.m., under direction of Eloise Smith.
Arms of Foreign Ware Auxiliary—p.m., at 104 N. Philadelphia.
Tuesday, March 27
Council Meeting—8 p.m., at the hall.
Beautification Committee Meet—3:30 p.m., at the Chamber of Commerce.
Elks Club—12:10 p.m., Elks club.
Elim Lodge No. 199, IOOF—8 p.m., at IOOF hall.
Ebel Under direction of Mrs.
Ebel Eastern Star, Chispa Chapter—8 p.m., at Masonic Temple.
Y—7 p.m., at White Temple.
Wednesday, March 28
Regular Meeting—8 p.m., election of officers and initiation of members, at Elks club.
Elim Chapter of Royal Arch MaNo. 125—7:30 p.m., at Masonic temple.
—12:30 p.m., under direction of Mrs. Harry Peterson.
The Perkins family doesn't spend much time arguing the respective merits of cows' and goats' milk, but on one thing they do agree—it's a healthful occupation operating a dairy.
When they first began dairying in earnest in 1946, Eddie was suffering from asthma. Now he has no sign of it, and, in spite of long hours of hard work, all three are in excellent physical shape.
Rita Reported Heading for US
LE HAVRE, France (LP)—Rita Hayworth is on her way to the United States.
The American movie star, wife of Prince Aly Khan, sailed from here Saturday aboard the De-Grasse. She was accompanied by her two children, Rebecca and Yasmin. Rebecca is the daughter of Orson Welles, Yasmin the daughter of Prince Aly.
An American business acquaintance of Miss Hayworth's said she had been approached to appear in a new American movie and he presumed she would discuss this offer with studios while in the USA.
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to thank our friends for their many kindnesses during the recent illness and death of our beloved wife and mother, Mrs. Zurle Vary McKelvey, and for the beautiful flowers.
Mr. and Mrs. Gall Vary and Donald
Mr. Henry O. McKelvey
Mrs. Pearl Howard
KOREAN WAR
(Continued from Page 1)
ington anything he says involving broad foreign policy issues.
This may or may not prove acceptable to MacArthur, but State Department officials as well as some others with great influence at the White House privately say something must be done to prevent a repetition of last week's exchange of shocks and harsh words between Tokyo and Washington.
Friday night, Washington time, MacArthur left Tokyo for the 38th Parallel area of Korea to order United Nations forces to cross into North Korea as tactical requirements made necessary. Before leaving Tokyo he issued a statement to the press.
In this statement he made a bid for peace talks with his opposite number on the communist side, said the Chinese reds were licked and incapable of waging modern war and warned that if the United Nations launched attacks on Chinese bases and coastal area the red nation would probably suffer military collapse.
This statement, a check showed, caught the State Department completely unawares. It apparently also caught President Truman without advance notice. After several hours of parleying, including a talk between Secretary Acheson and Mr. Truman, a rather meaningless statement was issued, designed to say on Saturday that Washington had had nothing to do with what MacArthur declared on Friday night.
The statement said MacArthur had authority to conduct military operations but that political issues which "he has stated are be-
Up Dairy don't need prodding at milking time. Ten at a time, they which is kept spotlessly clean, and begin munching on lunch to pass me, much in the manner of a cow. Mrs. Perkins is in the background.
Milk-house is complete, modern and spotless. The only thing it is a homogenize. The goats perform that function naturally. Ed-Mrs. Perkins is filling the bottles. The milk cooler is shown in op-(Gazetto photos by Bradley)
Between 6 p.m., (local time) Friday and last midnight, the known traffic fatalities had climbed to 160, and deaths from miscellaneous causes to 66.
The latter group included three brothers and a sister who apparently died of suffocation during a fire in their four-room cottage home in Toledo, O.
Over the 1950 Easter weekend the nation reported 253 accidental deaths, including 187 in traffic mishaps. Easter last year fell on April 9.
California contributed nine traffic deaths and six miscellaneous deaths.
After several hours of parlaying, including a talk between Secretary Acheson and Mr. Truman, a rather meaningless statement was issued, designed to say on Saturday that Washington had had nothing to do with what MacArthur declared on Friday night.
The statement said MacArthur had authority to conduct military operations but that political issues which "he has stated are beyond his responsibilities" are being dealt with in the U.N. and by the governments having troops in Korea.
The key MacArthur clause which set off the alarm here was that the United Nations could probably succeed in forcing a military collapse of red China by a limited coastal attack and base-bombing war. A Tokyo dispatch yesterday suggested MacArthur probably was trying to divert the Chinese reds' attention from Korea to the danger of a coastal attack.
Lengthy Illness Takes Frank Borth
Frank A. Borth, 707 W. Broadway, died Saturday, March 24, after a long illness. He was born July 20, 1875, in Illinois.
Mr. Borth came to California over 50 years ago and has lived most of that time in Anaheim. He was a member of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows for over 50 years.
He is survived by his daughter, Mrs. Robert F. Gibbs of 230 "B" W. Sola st., Santa Barbara; three sisters. Rose Inhofe of San Diego, Lena Gottsche of Spirit Lake, Ia., and Mary Pelzer of Marne, Ia., and one nephew, Stanford H. Weaver of Fullerton.
...average of 32 cars in Mobilgas Economy Run
HIGHLIGHTS OF THE RUGGED 840-MILE TEST —
• 23.9 miles per gallon with Mobilgas was the average of 32 different makes and models of American cars in
...average of 32 cars in Mobilgas Economy Run
HIGHLIGHTS OF THE RUGGED 840-MILE TEST—
• 23.9 miles per gallon with Mobilgas was the average of 32 different makes and models of American cars, in the 840-mile Mobilgas Economy Run, sanctioned by American Automobile Association.
• The 840-mile course provides every extreme in driving conditions that the motorist encounters in a full year's touring.
• Temperatures ranged from near freezing to summer heat. Attitudes varied from 280 feet below sea level to over 7000 feet. Cars were driven under supervision of AAA observers and at maximum legal speeds.
The results prove the economy and performance potential built into today's cars. To get the maximum mileage from your car, adhere to these simple rules:
BE A GOOD DRIVER—Avoid jack-rabbit starts, maintain constant speeds, anticipate stops.
MAINTAIN A WELL-CONDITIONED CAR—Have your car lubricated with quality products, keep the car in good repair.
USE MOBILGAS or Mobilgas Special (premium), whichever is best for your car. If your car operates knock-free on Mobilgas, then save the difference. But, use Mobilgas Special (premium) if your car requires it.
Free! AT YOUR MOBILGAS DEALER
To help yourself to more mileage, read this booklet. It contains rules that reflect the experience of drivers, mechanics and fuel engineers on the Road.
GENERAL PETROLEUM CORPORATION
converting nature's gift to better living