anaheim-gazette 1952-10-08
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Increased Water and Sewer Use in County Traced to Kitchen Sink
By GEORGE E. HART
Science and invention are wonderful, but very tough on the water supply and the sewer system.
Orange county's water shortage isn't simply because more people are using the water. It is also because each person is using more water.
That is not an item to gladden the WCTU. The folks aren't drinking more water and less of the other stuff. Due to science and invention, they are pouring it down the pipes.
Water leaders of the county are discovering that science and invention have taken their place beside drought and growth as causes of depleted water supply below ground. The water shortage has been traced to the kitchen sink.
The housewife's delight, the garbage disposal unit and the dishwasher perhaps, use a lot more water than the dishpan and the garbage pail. At Laguna Beach, a recent survey disclosed that per capita use of water in that city has increased 40 per cent in the last 10 years. In 1942, water consumption there amounted to 110 gallons per day per person. This year, Laguna Beach used 155 gallons per day for each resident.
The kitchen sink, with its modern attachments, creates in fact a twin problem. It not only depletes water supply, it also overloads the sewers. That means heavy community expense in providing increased sewerage capacity.
The sewer problem is serious enough, but when that per capita increase in water use is multiplied by the heavy increase in number of users, there is really something to think about with respect to future water supply.
Maybe we'd better hold off awhile on inventing new gadgets. Or else somebody had better start pouring a lot more water into the now have hot and cold running water on the Moulton ranch, out El Toro way. Not only in the ranch house, however. This big rancho has the distinction of having hot and cold water wells.
C. Roy Browning, the Tustin engineer, describes them. The two wells, he states, are only about 3000 feet apart on the ranch. Both wells are flowing approximately the same volume of water, 20 inches. But one delivers cold water, the other hot water.
The hot well, down 720 feet, apparently is situated on a fault, and is heated by subterranean fires, Browning explained.
What makes Orange county the fourth richest agricultural county in the United States, although it is one of the smallest?
Soil, climate, to be sure. But the real upthrusting reason under Orange county's eminence, says Eric Eastman, the well known farm leader, is the progressive, forward-looking people of Orange county, who make so much of their natural resources.
Schutte Retained As Lutheran Home President
A. J. Schutte was reelected president of Good Shepherd Lutheran Home of the West when the reorganization meeting of the board of directors was held last night in the home of the secretary, Mrs. O. C. Ulrich, 206 E. Alberta st., Anaheim.
All other officers were returned to duty for another year. They are Paul Yorde, vice president; Mrs. Ulrich, secretary; Emmett Engstrom, treasurer; Yorde pre-
Orange County citizens will be a pre-election opportunity to hear Dwight D. Eisenhower person when the presiden nominee comes to Southern
Anaheimers Cited By Naval Reserve
At a recent meeting of the Naval Reserve Organized Surface Division 11-28, Santa Ana, Lt. Hal G. Polley, commanding officer, publicly cited over 30 officers and men of the unit who had received letters of recognition for outstanding performance of duty from Admiral J. W. Roper, commandant of the Eleventh Naval district.
Men commended had maintained a perfect record of attendance at scheduled drills during the past fiscal year and in addition had performed a period of active duty training.
Among officers receiving a letter of commendation was Lt. Ray A. Schriver of Anaheim.
Among enlisted men honored by the commandant was Chief Hospitalman Carl E. Granere and Chief Storekeeper Henry D. Polhemus, both of Anaheim.
Assoc. Chambers Phone Committee To Meet Oct. 8
The Associated Chambers of Commerce of Orange county's newly appointed telephone study committee will meet on the second floor of the Reliance Title Co. building, 825 N. Broadway, Santa Ana, tonight, 7:30 p.m.
All Orange county branch managers, the district manager, and the Los Angeles executives of the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Co. will be present.
Committee members should be prepared to ask questions and make observations. This is an executive meeting, designed to load the sewers. That means heavy community expense in providing increased sewerage capacity.
The sewer problem is serious enough, but when that per capita increase in water use is multiplied by the heavy increase in number of users, there is really something to think about with respect to future water supply.
Maybe we'd better hold off awhile on inventing new gadgets. Or else somebody had better start pouring a lot more water into the top end of the Colorado river.
Speaking of kitchen sinks, they
Anaheimers Cited By Naval Reserve
At a recent meeting of the Naval Reserve Organized Surface Division 11-28, Santa Ana, Lt. Hal G. Polley, commanding officer, publicly cited over 30 officers and men of the unit who had received letters of recognition for outstanding performance of duty from Admiral J. W. Roper, commandant of the Eleventh Naval district.
Men commended had maintained a perfect record of attendance at scheduled drills during the past fiscal year and in addition had performed a period of active duty training.
Among officers receiving a letter of commendation was Lt. Ray A. Schriver of Anaheim.
Among enlisted men honored by the commandant was Chief Hospitalman Carl E. Granere and Chief Storekeeper Henry D. Polhemus, both of Anaheim.
Assoc. Chambers Phone Committee To Meet Oct. 8
The Associated Chambers of Commerce of Orange county's newly appointed telephone study committee will meet on the second floor of the Reliance Title Co. building, 825 N. Broadway, Santa Ana, tonight, 7:30 p.m.
All Orange county branch managers, the district manager, and the Los Angeles executives of the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Co. will be present.
Committee members should be prepared to ask questions and make observations. This is an executive meeting, designed to load the sewers. That means heavy community expense in providing increased sewerage capacity.
The sewer problem is serious enough, but when that per capita increase in water use is multiplied by the heavy increase in number of users, there is really something to think about with respect to future water supply.
Maybe we'd better hold off awhile on inventing new gadgets. Or else somebody had better start pouring a lot more water into the top end of the Colorado river.
Speaking of kitchen sinks, they
Anaheimers Cited By Naval Reserve
At a recent meeting of the Naval Reserve Organized Surface Division 11-28, Santa Ana, Lt. Hal G. Polley, commanding officer, publicly cited over 30 officers and men of the unit who had received letters of recognition for outstanding performance of duty from Admiral J. W. Roper, commandant of the Eleventh Naval district.
Men commended had maintained a perfect record of attendance at scheduled drills during the past fiscal year and in addition had performed a period of active duty training.
Among officers receiving a letter of commendation was Lt. Ray A. Schriver of Anaheim.
Among enlisted men honored by the commandant was Chief Hospitalman Carl E. Granere and Chief Storekeeper Henry D. Polhemus, both of Anaheim.
Evanaelist at Church of Christ Revival Series
Subjects to be discussed during the remainder of this week by Evanaelist A. F. Waller at the Church of Christ revival series were announced today.
Tonight, Mr. Waller will speak on "The Two Families." The service begins at 7:30 p.m. in the church at 308 E. Sycamore st. Tomorrow night the subject will be "The Bed is Too Short"; Friday it will be "God Is Impartial" and on Saturday the subject will be "The Unbroken Chain."
Congregational services are led by Graden Slater of Santa Ana.
Orange County citizens will have a pre-election opportunity to vote and hear Dwight D. Eisenhower person when the president nominee comes to Southern California for a series rallies.
General Eisenhower is traveled by train through Northern California today, speaking on the dio and television from the Palace in San Francisco tonight.
After a halt at Fresno town morning, the nominee's schedule calls for an hour stop at Diego.
He will then fly to the D Beach Municipal Airport for half-hour program starting at p.m.
Highlight of General Eisenhower's Southland visit will come at 8:30 p.m., tomorrow evening when Ike will address a rally at the Pan-Paelfie Auditorium in Los Angeles. Doors open at 6:30 p.m., and a musical program will start at 6:30 p.m. This will be followed by an outstanding show presented by Hollywood stars headed by George Murphy.
Climax to the rally will be General Eisenhower's personal pearance and talk.
There will be no admissions charge and no tickets. It will first come, first served, accorded to officials in charge of the raid.
Eisenhower will make a trip outside the auditorium as well inside.
Hundreds of people from Orange county are expected to make a journey to the Eisenhower Reverence in Los Angeles, according to Roy E. Lyon Jr., chairman of Eisenhower-Nixon Campaign committee for Orange county.
"Orange counties are advised to make the trip to the Pine Ridge."
Two Workers Win Kwikset Parade Float Prize
Two Kwiksetters have shared the combined first and second prizes of $40 offered by Kwikset Locks for a design for the lockset manufacturing firm's Anaheim Hallowe'en Parade float.
The contest judges decided the float would be more enhanced by combining the designs of Mrs. Cecella McKenzie, 627 S. Lemon, of the Kwikset Dead Latch and Spindle department, and Mrs. Nellie Weaver, 225 E. Cypress, of the Production Control department.
The theme of the float is an Indian village people with Kwiksetters dressed as Indians.
A third prize of $10 was awarded to Herman Hoch, 128 Avalon Dr., Pullerton, of the Quality Control department, for his design incorporating an early California-Spanish theme.
Adolf Schoepe, president of Kwikset, is general chairman of Anaheim's Hallowe'en Festival. Albert Marcoux, Kwikset safety engineer, is captain of the "Hallowe'en of the Old West" division of the parade in which Kwikset's float will be placed.
Employment of Teen-Agers Not Bad, County School Head Disclosing Employment of teenagers if the job does not impair their health or interfere with school work, is beneficial and should be encouraged, it was stated today by Linton T. Simmons, county superintendent of schools, who said that school authorities are authorized under state law to issue work permits for minors under 18.
Local school superintendents issue these permits in Orange county, Simmons said.
There are many types of work which can be done safely, satisfactorily and legally by children in the 12 to 18 age group, but some employees are reluctant to hire them because of a misunderstanding of the laws regulating such employment. For the benefit of these employers, Simmons outlined legal regulations for employment of teenagers.
School authorities who issue work permits are familiar with the child labor law and with the school and health records of the teenager to be employed. Brief instructions to employers are printed on the work permits issued, and school authorities are always ready to assist the employer in any possible way, Simmons said.
Minors under 12 may not be employed except in their own homes or on farms controlled or operated by their parents; 12 and 13-year-olds may be employed only on Saturdays and days that schools are not in session; minors aged 14 through 17 may be employed on school days, but only for a number of hours which, when added to hours spent in school, equal eight in any day.
Hours during which minors under 18 may be employed under California law are generally between 5 a.m. and 10 p.m.; the maximum work day, including time in school, is eight hours; the maximum work week is 48 hours.
California work permits also are accepted by federal authorities as small, orange colored paper as the "Saturday and Sunday from School" permit serves as a permit to well as a permit to write certificate of age. A registration such permit may be used during school vacation Saturdays in any job those prohibited by law object to the limitation on ready mentioned, said The second type of permit thorizes employment of employer named on the list only type of permit thorizes employment after school.
All vacation permit cannot later than the last day mer vacation. All permit second type, issued for jobs, expire not later days after the opening of school term. Both types may be renewed unities that prevail d school term.
More complete information respect to employment agers may be obtained from fice, 1104 W. Eighth Ana (phone KI 2-6731), stated.
Orange Countians to Greet Dwight Eisenhower at Pan-Pacific Rally
General Eisenhower is traveling in today, speaking on the radio television from the Cowork in San Francisco tonight. He halt at Fresno tomorrow morning, the nominee's schedule for an hour stop at San Diego will then fly to the Long Island Municipal Airport for a hour program starting at 2:30.
Highlight of General Eisenhower's Southland visit will be at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow when Ike will address rally at the Pan-Pacific Auditorium in Los Angeles. Doors to auditorium will open at 6 and a musical program will at 6:30. This will be followed by an outstanding show preceded by Hollywood stars headline George Murphy.
Max to the rally will be Gen-Eisenhower's personal appearance and talk.
There will be no admission and no tickets. It will be home, first served, according to specials in charge of the rally. Eisenhower will make a talk at the auditorium as well as hundreds of people from Orange County are expected to make the way to the Eisenhower Rally in Angeles, according to Leo Lyon Jr., chairman of the Power-Nixon Campaign committee for Orange county.
Orange counties are advised take the trip to the Pan-
Pacific Auditorium," said Chairman Lyon. "This will be the best opportunity before the election that they will get to see and hear the nominee in person during a major campaign address. Present plans indicate that no television broadcast will be made of the event."
Many cities and communities throughout Southern California have chartered special buses in order that the voters may attend the rally in groups. Lyon said no such arrangements have been made for Orange county cities, due to the short distance.
Spencer R. Browning of Santa Ana, president of the Young Republican clubs of Orange county, said that many members of local clubs of his organization were planning to attend the Pan-Pacific rally.
Anaheimer Gets Job Promotion
R. B. Sheely, 1223 Cypress St., Anaheim, has been appointed supervisor in the productive material and tooling procurement department of Northrop Aircraft's Anaheim division, it has been announced.
Mr. Sheely, who has been with Northrop-Anaheim since November, 1951, will be in charge of procurement phases of an optical project at the plant.
He is a member of a team of 1200 persons now engaged in the production of T-41 optical range finders for medium tanks of the U.S. Army Ordnance Corps.
Oil Tool Firm Incorporated
SACRAMENTO (CNS) — Frank M. Jordan, secretary of state, today announced filing of articles of incorporation for Newlin-Peterson Oil Tool Corporation.
The firm, authorized capital of $30,000, will manufacture and sell oil well tools and supplies. Directors are George E. Newlin, 310 Mills Dr., Anaheim, Clark C. Peterson, 110 Huntington Ave., employed on school days, but only for a number of hours which, when added to hours spent in school, equal eight in any day.
Hours during which minors under 18 may be employed under California law are generally between 5 a.m. and 10 p.m.; the maximum work day, including time in school, is eight hours; the maximum work week is 48 hours.
California work permits also are accepted by federal authorities as proof of age of minors subject to the fair labor standards act (federal-wage and hour law). Employees of businesses engaged in production of goods for commerce, or in interstate commerce itself, come under this federal law.
General minimum age limit for employment of such minors is 16, or 18 for hazardous occupations. Provision also is made for limited employment of 14 and 15-year-olds in certain restricted occupations. Detailed information regarding federal requirements may be obtained from wage and hour field offices in San Diego or Los Angeles, Simmons stated.
Two types of work permits are available in California. One is a
New Camping Hazard: Malaria
SACRAMENTO (CNS) — The first outbreak of malaria in California in seven years has been reported by Wilton L. Halverson, state director of public health.
Halverson said 10 girl Scouts came down with the disease after attending a summer camp in a remote area of Nevada county last summer.
Investigation disclosed the source of the outbreak was a Korean war veteran who suffered a malaria relapse while camping in the area, and that large numbers of the type of mosquito which transmits the disease were present in the vicinity of the Scout camp, the director stated.
NOTARY COMMISSION
SACRAMENTO (CNS) — The secretary of state has announced issuance of a notary public commission to Virginia J. Newkirk, 7132 E. Monroe st., Rte. 5, Anaheim.
ANAHEIM RADIATOR REPAIR
Rear Crowell Olds
252 North
USES ISSUED
SACRAMENTO (CNS) — The
factors state license board to
announced that Ray C.
1135 W. North st., Anaheim
qualified for a general
contractors license, and
Mattoon Landscaping and
by, 701 S. Dickel, Anaheim,
landscaping contractors lilicenses will be issued in
unless written protest is
INcorporated
SACRAMENTO (CNS) — Frank M. Jordan, secretary of state, today announced filing of articles of incorporation for Newlin-Peterson Oil Tool Corporation.
The firm, authorized capital of $30,000, will manufacture and sell oil well tools and supplies. Directors are George E. Newlin,
310 Mills Dr., Anaheim, Clark C.
Peterson, 110 Huntington Ave.,
Huntington Beach and George M.
Osborn, 4090 Van Buren St.,
Arlington.
ANAHEIM
RADIATOR
REPAIR
Rear Crowell Olda
252 North
Los Angeles St.
Anaheim, Calif.
PHONE 212
Everything is up except your electric rates...
and they’re down!
Production of electricity is up. The business-managed electric companies have doubled the supply available six years ago. Your use of electricity is up. The average family uses far more electricity than ever before. Our costs are up. Like everyone else, Edison is paying more in wages and taxes, and more for material and supplies...but Edison rates for domestic electric service are little more than half what they were twenty-five years ago.
"Edison electricity is your best buy—you can depend on it!"
Edison
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA EDISON COMPANY
Seen-Agers Not All Head Discloses
small, orange colored card known as the "Saturday and Regular Vacation from School" permit, which serves as a permit to employ, as well as a permit to work, and a certificate of age. A minor holding such permit may be employed during school vacations or on Saturdays in any job not among those prohibited by law, and subject to the limitation on hours already mentioned, said Simmons.
The second type of permit authorizes employment only by the employer named on the permit, and only on the days and hours listed on the form. It is the only type of permit which authorizes employment before or after school.
All vacation permit cards expire not later than the last day of summer vacation. All permits of the second type, issued for particular Jobs, expire not later than five days after the opening of the new school term. Both types of permits may be renewed under conditions that prevail during the school term.
More complete information with respect to employment of teenagers may be obtained at his office, 1104 W. Eighth st., Santa Ana (phone KI 2-6731), Simmons stated.
Anahelmer Sued For $105,000
Another suit for damages of a goodly amount—only $105,000 this time—was on file in superior court at Santa Ana as result of a crash near Garden Grove.
Mr. and Mrs. LaVerne W. Shryer of Orange sued John W. Stanley, 26, Anaheim, for the balm by blaming him for the mishap. Stanley was booked on a felony drunk driving count after the crash and will be in court Friday for arraignment.
Stanton Lions View Colored Film of Amazon
Supt. Wayne L. Butterbaugh of the Savanna school district entertained the Stanton Lions at their dinner meet Monday night with a colored film of the Amazon taken by the Ford company.
William W. Dudley, Bob Eiksen and Donald L. Davis reported as host committee that they had welcomed 40 guests at card party Saturday night at the Chestnut st. clubhouse. President Royal Marten announced that open house
School Tax Notes Sold by Supers
A bond issue for Katella school district and three tax-anticipation notes for as many other school districts were sold by the board of supervisors Tuesday.
Katella's issue of $50,000 in bonds was sold to Bank of America on bid of 3¼ per cent.
Anahelm union high school district borrowed $100,000 on a short loan from Commercial National bank of Santa Ana, and will pay 2.20 per cent interest. The same bank will loan $160,000 to Santa Ana high school district for 1.95 per cent interest. Newport Harbor bank will charge 1.65 per cent interest for a $65,000 loan to Santa Ana schools system, operating elementary schools.
would be held monthly on last Saturday night at 7:30 for Lions and guests.
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INFORMATION, RESERVATIONS: See or phone your nearby S. P. Agent.
GROVER ROHER, Agent, Anaheim
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E. B. SHARPLEY District Passenger Agent
1030 E. 4th St., Santa Ana, Kimberly, S-8267
Next time—try S·P