anaheim-gazette 1952-05-05
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21 Anaheim Gazette
MONDAY, MAY 8, 1952
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA
MORE ABOUT ...
Earthquakes
(Continued from Page 19)
Schultz Tool, Machine Manufacturing Company Is Growing Local Enterprise
Evidence that a young fellow with the know-how and the will to do it can start up in business for himself in Anaheim is demonstrated by Oscar Schultz and his Schultz Tool and Machine Manufacturing Co.
The thriving plant on E. La Palma Ave. turns out aircraft component parts, parts for oil drilling and refining equipment, small machine tool attachments, hand tools, hydraulic valves, cylinders, and controls, and a variety of other products.
The Schultz company had its beginnings in Orange in 1944, when Mr. Schultz set up a shop with one automatic screw machine. Three years later, Mr. Schultz says, the Anaheim Chamber of Commerce and the city government made a move to Anaheim so attractive that he packed his shop and moved to Anaheim.
From the one automatic screw machine, the firm has grown to some 50 machines, including turret lathes, milling machines, honing machines, drill presses, screw machines, and a variety of other machinery and equipment.
The company started out in Anaheim with a 4000 square foot building. In the past year 3000 more square feet of floor space have been added to this growing firm.
Today they are manufacturing several military items as well as a standard line of commercial products.
At 37, Mr. Schultz had had 27
OSCAR SCHULTZ
he decided to venture out on his own.
Mr. Schultz has nothing but praise for Anaheim's constant wooing of industrial concerns:
"Anaheim was one of the first cities in the county to realize that something had been missed by some other Orange county cities—that non-seasonal industries help support a stable base for prosperity and, along with the citrus industry, are necessary to insure a steady market for the goods and services of Anaheim businessmen," Mr. Schultz points out.
Mr. Schultz is a member of the Anaheim Rotary club, a director of the Anaheim Chamber of Com-
The company started out in Anaheim with a 4000 square foot building. In the past year 3000 more square feet of floor space have been added to this growing firm.
Today they are manufacturing several military items as well as a standard line of commercial products.
At 37, Mr. Schultz has had 27 years of mechanical experience. He was 10 years old when he began scraping babbit metal in motor bearings for an outfit in Madison, Wis. Later he worked in appliance repairing and automotive work, followed by mechanical engineering studies at the University of Wisconsin.
After leaving the university he became interested in machine shop work when he began to work as a machinist. After working as a tool and die maker in several large and small shops and learning the trade from top to bottom,
UNDERGROUND GARAGE
The Pershing Square underground garage in downtown Los Angeles has opened. Only the three levels on the south side of the new garage were put into use, with a capacity of 800 cars. The rest of the structure will be opened later, including gasoline pumps, wash and grease racks, all underground.
Shop Friday Night Til 9
THE CURRENT is sufficient to move a pinpoint searchlight beam. This beam is aimed at a revolving recording drum a couple of feet from the light source. A tiny movement of the light source makes a much larger movement where the pinpoint of light hits the drum. The light thus traces an enormously magnified graph of the rock squeezing or stretching movement. This graph is a series of sharp, wavy lines, a representation of the great slow motion that produced the minute squeezing and stretching.
The instrument is so sensitive that it performs wildly from the amount of strain put on the foundation rock by a person walking in the building above. Because
EVERY PROGRESSIVE INDUSTRIAL ADDITION TO THE COMMUNITY MAKES USE OF OUR SERVICES...MATERIALS FOR NEW BUILDINGS...MACHINERY...SUPPLIES...and EVEN THE PERSONAL BELONGINGS of NEW FAMILIES...must be HAULED to LOCATION.
OUR FACILITIES WERE RECENTLY EXPANDED TO COPE WITH PRESENT and FUTURE DEMANDS
...for...
● MOVING ● STORAGE ● HAULING
● TRUCKING ● PACKING ● CRATING
● SHIPPING ● WAREHOUSING
● INTERSTATE FREIGHT SERVICE
ANAHEIM TRUCK & TRANSFE
Dependable Through the Years
Corner South Los Angeles and Santa Ana Streets
SERVING ORANGE COUNTY — METROPOLITAN LOS ANGELES and LOS
ABOUT ...
quakes
continued from Page 19)
compresses the foundation building too, but a few of an inch is not enough damage or even draw at. Also it stretches back when the wave cycle ended.
Dr. Benioff's existing tits is delicate enough to detect this ultra-creeping and stretching in length of rock. Given that of change he can compute the total earth movement.
Instrument sits in a small panel under the building. Noticeable feature is a 60 feet long. One end tube is set rigidly in the wall that closes the next tunnel.
At end of the tube is not to anything, but it gadget that converts the motion into a feeble elecnt.
This gadget is on the other half is set the rock that forms the tunnel. The two of the gadget rae only 60 feet of an inch apart.
Any earth force squeezes the rock it does not length of the tube the gadget end of it is does, however, move one of the gadget in relation to half, and this motion the electric current.
CURRENT is sufficient to enpoint searchlight beam. It is aimed at a revolving drum a couple of feet above the foundation.
ON A BIG SCALE — Marjorie Sweazey plays music on "cloud-chamber bowls," at Millis College, Oakland, Cal. Instrument, designed by Harry Partch, is made of laboratory boilies.
of this the graphs ar scientifically useless while the building is occupied.
The weight oft three men standing at one end of the instrument causes enough strain on the rock to throw the light beam far off the drum.
THE PALOMAR instruments are even more sensitive. Here is the way Dr. Benioff illustrates their abilities:
If a giant 3000 miles tall grasped the Atlantic coast in one hand and the Pacific coast in the other and squeezed them together until he reducter the width of the continent to one inch, the tube of a strain seismograph set some ordinary seismographs. They are much shorter than the strain waves. These direct waves have frequencies ranging from a few seconds up to 50 seconds. Thus an ordinary seismograph is as useless on these long, slow strain movements as a short wave radio receiver trying to pick up a long wave broadcast.
ANY LIVING thing big enough to feel the long waves would need a reach of at least 300 miles. Benioff's giant, standing with one foot in Kansas City and the other in Cincinnati, might feel them slightly.
CURRENT is sufficient to pinpoint searchlight beam. It is aimed at a revolving drum a couple of feet half, and this motion the electric current.
THE PALOMAR instruments are even more sensitive. Here is the way Dr. Benioff illustrates their abilities:
If a giant 3000 miles tall grasped the Atlantic coast in one hand and the Pacific coast in the other and squeezed them together until he reducether the width of the continent to one inch, the tube of a strain seismograph set somewhere near Omaha would move about five millionths of an inch and would swing its light beam nearly half an inch.
These great slow motions have wave lengths far too long for ordinary earth movement detectors. They are about 620 miles from peak to peak in cycles of about five minutes each, which means a speed upwards of 120 miles a minute.
Earthquake waves which travel more or less directly through the earth instead of along its surface are the principal ones recorded
ANY LIVING thing big enough to feel the long waves would need a reach of at least 300 miles. Benioff's giant, standing with one foot in Kansas City and the other in Cincinnati, might feel them slightly.
There may be other waves even longer than the five-minute ones, possibly with frequencies or hours or days. They may be writing the pattern of growth of mountains or even changest in whole continents.
So important are these great waves that the government is taking a hand in the research. Dr. Benioff's project is supported by the geophysical section of the U.S. Air Force laboratories at Cambridge, Mass.
The new instruments on Palomar Mountain have tubes 150 feet long.
MOVE
of Anaheim
SCHULTZ T
MANUFACTURE
495 East La Palma Avenue
NOW SERVES THE EXPANSION WITH COMPLETE FACILITIES
ANAHEIM TRUCK & TRANSFER CO.
PHONES...
ANAHEIM
2123
ZENITH
2123
TRANSFER CO.
Years
Anaheim, Calif.
ANGELES and LOS ANGELES HARBOR
Manufacturers of
HYDRAULIC
• CYLINDERS
• VALVES
• CONTROLS
California Hosiery Mill Celebrates Third Birthday
Another Anaheim firm is celebrating its anniversary this month in addition to the Anaheim Mill Company was established in this city at its present location, 808 N. Los Angeles St.
Producing its own brand of hosiery, Cal-Sheer, the California Hosiery Co. took its place with Anaheim's other model industries and has been quietly making and marketing its product. Incidentally, Cal-Sheer hose are distributed directly to retail outlets, doing away with the services of wholesalers.
President and general manager of the firm is Emil Mittman, 629 N. Helena st. Gus Kasischke is vice-president, and Louis Ingram is secretary-treasurer.
Thirty workers are employed by California Hosiery Co.
Lihya has an area of 679.368 square miles.
SERVING ANAHEIM SINCE 1871
BACKS, CAMPBELL and KAULBARS MORTUARY
251 N. Lemon St., Anaheim Phone 3209
ULTZ TOOL & MACHINE
MANUFACTURING COMPANY
Avenue Anaheim Phone Anaheim 2286
IS THE EXPANDING ANAHEIM INDUSTRIAL AREA
LETE FACILITIES FOR MACHINED METAL PRODUCTS.
• DUPLICATE PARTS
• AUTOMATIC SCREW MACHINE PRODUCTS
• MACHINE TOOLS