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Publications Orange County Plain Dealer 1922 January

oc-plain-dealer 1922-01-27

1922-01-27 · Orange County Plain Dealer · page 6 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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NO MORE PICKING BEFORE FEB. 6TH As the result of a meeting in Los Angeles lasting well into yesterday afternoon, associations affiliated with the California Citrus League agreed to do no more picking before Feb. 6. G. H. Hecke, Director of Agriculture of the State, who was the principal speaker, said the industry would be protected fully, but no hardships would be visited upon growers more than were necessary for protection. Shipping rules framed by Hecke were adopted. Some 200 representatives of associations in the California Fruit Growers Exchange and other organizations were present. G. W. Sandilands and W. H. Schureman, managers of the Anaheim Orange & Lemon and Anaheim Citrus Fruit associations attending from Anaheim. The new rules and regulations of Director Hecke, governing the quality of oranges that may be shipped, were adopted after a thorough discussion of the pros and cons. The rules are: Regulation 1. No oranges shall be shipped, delivered, for shipment, offered for sale or sold until further notice by the State Department of Agriculture, unless inspected and passed by the County Horticultural Commission in the county in which the fruit may be located, or by his deputies or inspectors. Regulation 2. It shall be unlawful to ship, deliver for shipment, offer for sale or sell oranges if the contents of any package or if the fruit in bulk contains fifteen per cent or more, of oranges showing marked evidence of frost injury. Regulation 3. "Marked evidence of frost injury," in any orange is hereby defined as a drying in 20 per cent or more of the exposed pulp as shown on a transverse section through the center, or a water-soaked appearance showing on two or more segments, or the presence of crystalline deposit on two or more segments. FOUR LODGES BANQUET HERE A gathering of more than one hundred and fifty members of the Fractional Brotherhood lodges from Olinda, Orange, Santa Ana and Anaheim, met last evening in Anaheim, I. O. O. F. hall for a banquet, installation of officers of Anaheim lodge No. 28, and to initiate three candidates. The gathering was also the occasion for a visit of the supreme officers secretary H. V. Davis, physician, Dr. Decker, and vice president Chas Post. These notables acted as installing officers and the following chairs were filled in ritualistic manner. President, E. B. Johnson, vice president, William Young; past president, Eva Boyd; chaplain, Currie Johnson; secretary, Elsa Borth; treasurer, F. C. Rimpau; M. at A., Julia Clabaugh; sargent, Edna Young; inner door keeper, Ardis Chambers; outer door keeper, Frank Borth. Initiatory degrees were conferred by the Santa Ana drill team, which won a reputation for itself by the excellent work. The team consists of sixteen well drilled young ladles. The banner for the greatest number of memberships secured during a period of six months was won by Anaheim. At the beginning of the half-year contest, Anaheim, Orange, Olinda and Santa Ana entered into a membership contest, the losers to serve a banquet to the other lodges. As Olinda secured the smallest number of new members it was their task, although a happy one, to serve the meal, and last night saw the payment of their obligation. USUAL ST. MICHAEL'S SERVICES Services at St. Michael's will be held as usual on Sunday. Mr. Malcolm Fraser will sing the offertory. The Woman's Guild will meet Thursday afternoon in the rectory, detailed announcement to be made later. DOES COMPETE MENACE OR Does foreign compete nut growing constituents to the growers in this was the question asked themselves at the tournai war museum here and view our foreign exhibits. Answering this question Harry W. Lewis, presiding co-walnut Grower "The way to meet this to produce a walnut suit to the foreign nuts be no hope of favor," said Lewis. Done this in the past and should continue to "While many of them particularly the French are of fair quality, it even the best crops far inferior to our own to a critical examination Grenoble and the It look well and taste for the crop is handled in and the Diamond brand here, are far superior best of the foreign gree." "We find, however, tailors, particularly in handle these foreign nuts make quick profits taken, of course, in this profit is desirable I found grocers handling nuts in large quantities asked them why they said they could make profit by so doing. "Now ninety per cent be all very well for in reality they are for success at all. housewife knows A-1 she buys and if you once, she will nevereign nuts that sell on market at prices range to 23 cents a pound compare with out prodoes not take the buy." POLICE RECOVER AUTO The Anaheim police today recovered a car which is supposed to have been stolen and which has been sitting on Ball-rd for more than 24 hours. It is not known to whom the car belongs. It carries an Arizona license No. 2414. The top is off, and apparently it had been freshly painted. The police took it to the Stanley garage on No. Lemon street. BAKE-RITE SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY Whipped Cream Cream Puffs French Pastries Tutti-Frutti Sunshine Cake Devil's Food Cake Angel Food Cake Mocha Cake Chocolate Layer Cake Assorted Line of Cookies Make Bake-Rite Bread a Habit Valencia Hotel Building Anaheim Phone 126 USUAL ST. MICHAEL'S SERVICES Services at St. Michael's will be held as usual on Sunday. Mr. Malcolm Fraser will sing the offertory. The Woman's Guild will meet Thursday afternoon in the rectory, detailed announcement to be made later. EVANS ENTERTAIN Mr. and Mrs. Dale Hamilton Evans entertained with a dinner party Tuesday evening complimentary to Mrs. Ella T. Hitchcock, of Bellingham, Wash., and Miss Etta Evans, Muncle, Ind. The event also commemorated the birthday anniversaries of Mrs. Hitchcock and her son, James Marvin Hitchcock. Table decorations included a center piece of narcissus blossoms and ferns and there were yellow tapers in glass holders. The dinner was served in three courses and included a large birthday cake with candles. Besides the complimented guests, there were present Mr. and Mrs. M. Eugene Durfee and Mrs. James Marvin Hitchcock. PASTOR CONTINUES SERIES OF LECTURES Dr. J. A. Geissinger will begin a series of lectures at the White Temple Wednesday night, of an expository and devotional character and continue them each week until including Wednesday evening, March 22nd. He has just concluded ten addresses on Dr. Bett's book, "How to Teach Religion." Dr. Geissinger is author of a book on Revelation entitled "Heart Problems and World Issues" and is preparing for publication at the present time a series of popular expositions on this interesting book, which he considers both one of the most sublime books ever written and at the same time one of the most helpful for the Christian. The present world situation is very similar to the one which called forth this utterance of the great Christian seer. Each Wednesday evening the address preceded by a supper to which the public is invited and the addresses will be brief and popular and open to the public. Plain Dealer Want Ads get results. ORANGE BLOSSOM COFFEE "It's always fresh." ORANGE BLOSSOM COFFEE "It's always fresh" Put up in Airtight GLASSIN-LINED BAGS - Costs You Less Fragrant, finest-quality, freshly-roasted coffee is always assured when you buy "ORANGE BLOSSOM". Your dealer receives it same day it is roasted—in quantities sufficient only for a few days' sales, so that his stock is always fresh. And the GLASSIN-LINED BAGS eliminate paying for expensive tins, giving you highest-quality coffee at a real saving in cost. ASK YOUR GROCER REO MOVING PICTURE We will show seven reels of educational films on the production of Reo motor cars and speed wagons FREE at our show rooms tomorrow night Saturday, January 28th at 7:30 Everybody welcome. DALE & COMPANY 318 W. Center Street Anaheim DOES COMPETITION MENACE GROWER? Does foreign competition in walnut growing constitute a serious menace to the growers in Orange-co? This was the question many growers asked themselves after attending the fourth annual warnut growers' institute here and viewing the numerous foreign exhibits. Answering this question today, Harry W. Lewis, president of the Orange-co Walnut Growers says: "The way to meet this competition is to produce a walnut so vastly superior to the foreign nuts that there can be no hope of favorable comparison as far as the foreign nuts is concerned," said Lewis. "California has done this in the past and she can and should continue to do it." While many of the foreign nuts, particularly the French and Italian, are of fair quality, it is a fact that even the best crops from abroad are inferior to our own when subjected to a critical examination. The French Grenoble and the Italian Sorrento look well and taste fairly well, but the crop is handled in a loose manner and the Diamond brand nuts, grown here, are far superior to even the best of the foreign grades. "We find, however, that many retailers, particularly in the east will handle these foreign nuts in order to make quick profits. They are mistaken, of course, in their belief that this profit is desirable. In Pitsburgh I found grocers handling the foreign nuts in large quantities. When I asked them why they did so, they said they could make 90 per cent profit by so doing. "Now, ninety per cent profit may be all very well for those dealers, but in reality they are not building for success at all. The American housewife knows A-1 goods when she buys and if you deceive her once, she will never return. Foreign nuts that sell on the American market at prices ranging from 11 to 23 cents a pound cannot begin to compare with out product. And it does not take the buyer long to deCOMBINED PHONOGRAPH AND MOVIE MACHINE The days of mere phonographic music are gone; thanks to a California inventor who has perfected a phonograph which also contains a motion picture projector. The picture is projected from inside the machine onto a tiny screen that fits in the opening of the phonograph. Appropriate musical records are played as the film is shown. ACQUITTAL LIKELY SUPPER EACH WEEK AT WHITE TEMPLE The days of mere phonographic music are gone; thanks to a California inventor who has perfected a phonograph which also contains a motion picture projector. The picture is projected from inside the machine onto a tiny screen that fits in the opening of the phonograph. Appropriate musical records are played as the film is shown. ACQUITTAL LIKELY IN ARBUCKLE CASE SAN FRANCISCO, Jan 27.—That Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle will be acquitted of the manslaughter charge on which he is now being tried for the second time is taken as almost a foregone conclusion in San Francisco. Outside of Dist. Attorney Brady's staff it is almost impossible to find anyone, even Hall of Justice attaches and police officials, who thinks there is any chance of a conviction being obtained against the comedian. In the opinion of most observers the bottom fell out of the state's case when its three most important witnesses, Zey Provost and Alice Blake, show girls, and Al Semnacher, manager for Miss Rappe, "failed to remember" many important details of Fatty's "gin jollification," despite the fact that they gave such testimony at the time of the first trial. LAYES TAKES TUMBLE Prof. J. A. Clayes of the Anaheim Union High school in a large man, and the larger the man the heavier the fall. He is nursing some painful Good Turns at Home What One Boy Did in a Year by Carrying Out the Scout Motto A Boy Scout is expected to do at least one good turn daily. The good turns reported for one Scout for the year, the record probably having been kept by some kindly, watchful aunt, said that he got 174 buckets of coal and 129 buckets of water, carried out the ashes 124 times and the dishwater 125 times, and did other miscellaneous good turns amounting to 1,824 distinct efforts of cheerfulness during the year. He brought in corncobs or the fire, went after the washing, fixed up the mail, cleaned up the waste paper, picked up glass from the sidewalk, replaced a brick in the pavement, stopped a dog fight, loaned his knife, wound the clock and set the alarm innumerable times, fixed the fire and made his bed, telephoned messages, changed a five-dollar bill, fed the dog and cleaned up some ink, baked the pancakes for breakfast, fried some bacon, put on the coffee, washed the potatoes and fixed the fire, fed the chickens, also watered the clover tougher than younger boy his les- Fordson He brought in corncobs or the fire, went after the washing, fixed up the mail, cleaned up the waste paper, picked up glass from the sidewalk, replaced a brick in the pavement, stopped a dog fight, loaned his knife, wound the clock and set the alarm innumerable times, fixed the fire and made his bed, telephoned messages, changed a five-dollar bill, fed the dog and cleaned up some ink, baked the pancakes for breakfast, fried some bacon, put on the coffee, washed the potatoes and fixed the fire, fed the chickens, also watered the flowers, taugh a younger boy his lessons in school picked up needles and pins from the floor, lit the lamps and darned his own sweater, mopped up some water, and swept off the back porch, mailed letters and put up curtains, fixed a pair of scissors, got the fruit cans for his mother, opened cans of salmon, tomatoes, and beans, dug out a rat and set a mouse frap, turned the washing machine many times and hung pictures. Reduced S Effective T New P $505 Delivered at Y Place Your O George D Ford and Fordson Phone 263 High School News The girls' glee is practicing weekly on their operetta "Pocahontas" which is to be presented the latter part of March in the new auditorium building. The cast is all chosen and those taking leading parts are working diligently. The operetta is progressing under the able direction of Mrs. Marion Higgins. Upward of 100 teachers of the schools of Buena Park, Garden Grove, Loara, Placentia, and local grammar, Junior high and the high school attended the meeting at the Junior high last evening when N. M. Palmer was the chief speaker. Palmer dealt chiefly along the lines of penmanship, stating that it was a bad mistake for a mother to let her child continue to use the left hand method of writing when he could use his right hand and he also said that it was not impossible for a child to be corrected of this habit. Mr. Palmer gave several instances how he had taught soldier boys to write after the war, as some had one arm off and others were armless. Mr. Palmer is the recognized authority on the art of penmanship throughout the U. S. Following his talk, the teachers were given a penmanship test. OVER 300 KIWANIANS ENJOY BIG BANQUET LAST EVENING (Continued from page One) Dale King, of Fullerton, said his club was the "baby club" of the county. Fullerton has various clubs, orders, churches, etc.; at first couldn't see that a Kiwanis Club was necessary. The town in fact already had a club meeting for every one of the seven days of the week. Now it had eight clubs and still only seven days. Fullerton Kiwanians numbered seventy-four. The club had backed various movements in the town, including the Y. M. C. A. and the project for a new hotel. Fullerton hoped within a year to welcome Anaheimers and Santa Anans to the new hostelry. The toastmaster said he had no doubt Fullerton would be a wonderful place to live in as soon as the Kiwanis club there took complete charge of things. We've been somewhat neglecting Wickett's part in this story, it might be said. Wickett made half a dozen speeches during the evening, including the address of welcome. Toward the close he took upon himself to define Kiwanianism, and submitted these original lines: "K stands for Kindness shown our fellows. I is Interest found in one and all. W is for the Work accomplished. A stands large for Aid on which we call. N is for the Need we see about us. I is Industry that's shown by all. S stands out for Service given each other. Kiwanis Club rings true to all. Music by the Anaheim Club's quartet closed the speaking part of the program, so to speak. The night's merrymaking closed with dancing, which lasted until a late hour. The committee consisted of Charles A. Eygabroad, A. B. McCord, George Dunton, C. C. Smith, F. T. Edniston, W. T. Grafton, E. H. Ahlswede, H. U. White, J. P. Taggart, and E. H. Metcalf. Dunton was acting chairman. J. P. Ahlswede arranged for the seating of the guests. FAIRYLAND THEATRE COMING MONDAY FAIRYLAND THEATRE COMING MONDAY SOUTHLANDS FAMOUS FUNNY FELLOWS J.M.BUSBY'S WORLD'S GREATEST COLORED MINSTRELS JAZZ BAND AND ORCHESTRA. WATCH FOR THE PARADE. BEST SEATS $1.00 NO HIGHER cured $230.00 fective Today New Price 505.71 red at Your Ranch Your Order Now! rge Dunton Sales and Service Anaheim