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| author | nfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org> | 2025-02-03 17:56:03 -0800 |
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| committer | nfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org> | 2025-02-03 17:56:03 -0800 |
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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d7b82bc --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ +*.txt text eol=lf +*.htm text eol=lf +*.html text eol=lf +*.md text eol=lf diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6312041 --- /dev/null +++ b/LICENSE.txt @@ -0,0 +1,11 @@ +This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements, +metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be +in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES. + +Procedures for determining public domain status are described in +the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org. + +No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in +jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize +this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright +status under the laws that apply to them. diff --git a/README.md b/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..fb4bfab --- /dev/null +++ b/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ +Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for +eBook #63005 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/63005) diff --git a/old/63005-0.txt b/old/63005-0.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 65914d7..0000000 --- a/old/63005-0.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,2127 +0,0 @@ -Project Gutenberg's Motorland Magazine, September-October, 1955, by Anonymous - -This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with -almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or -re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included -with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license - - -Title: Motorland Magazine, September-October, 1955 - -Author: Anonymous - -Release Date: August 22, 2020 [EBook #63005] - -Language: English - -Character set encoding: UTF-8 - -*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MOTORLAND MAGAZINE *** - - - - -Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed -Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net - - - - - - - - - - MOTORLAND - - - AFEA WFEA - INFORMATION ON - MONTEREY PENINSULA - PLACE OF THE ANNUAL MEETING - AUGUST 26-29, 1956 - - [Illustration: Rocky headland, “The Pinnacle”, at Point Lobos State - Park, and the gaunt branches of a Monterey Cypress.] - - MOTORLAND - SEPTEMBER-OCTOBER, 1955 · Vol. LXXVI No. 5 - - [Illustration: CALIFORNIA STATE AUTOMOBILE ASSOCIATION (AAA)] - - _Published bi-monthly by_ - CALIFORNIA STATE AUTOMOBILE ASSOCIATION - - _Officers of the California State Automobile Association_ - - Edward H. Peterson President - A. E. Strong Vice-President - Fred J. Oehler Vice-President - Irving H. Kahn Treasurer - Edwin S. Moore - Secretary and General Manager - _Board of Directors_ - Reginald H. Biggs Walnut Creek - H. J. Brunnier San Francisco - S. V. Christierson Salinas - G. A. Filice Berkeley - Dr. Charles B. Griggs Oroville - Irving H. Kahn San Francisco - Joseph R. Knowland Oakland - J. J. Krohn Arcata - Harold J. McCurry Sacramento - Joseph F. McDonald Reno, Nevada - Fred J. Oehler San Jose - J. E. O’Neill Fresno - Obert Pedersen Santa Rosa - Edward H. Peterson San Francisco - Clyde W. Rann Redding - J. B. Rice San Rafael - Prentiss A. Rowe San Francisco - Porter Sesnon San Mateo - A. E. Strong Santa Cruz - Norman S. West Modesto - _Honorary Life Director_ - E. B. Degolia San Francisco - _Inter-Insurance Bureau_ - _Executive Committee_ - Reginald H. Biggs - H. J. Brunnier - Irving H. Kahn - Fred J. Oehler - J. E. O’Neill - Edward H. Peterson - Porter Sesnon - W. Foster Stewart Manager and Attorney-in-Fact - - Entered as second class matter at the Post Office at San Francisco, - California, under the act of March 3, 1879. Trade Mark registered - October 25, 1911. Subscription, $2.00 per year; single copy, 50 cents. - Office of Publication and Editorial Office: 150 Van Ness Avenue, San - Francisco 2, California. Editor and Manager, Wm. F. Kilcline; - Associate Editors, Fred Hamann, John G. Holmgren, Samuel B. Wylie; - Editorial Consultant, Arthur M. Johnson; Art Direction, Paul Q. - Forster. Copyright 1955 by the California State Automobile - Association. - - - - - Two Important Projects - - -The establishment of roadside rests and the construction of a bypass of -the state parks on the Redwood Highway are two vital and important -projects for California. Bills designed to accomplish these two -worthwhile developments were introduced and passed by both houses of the -Legislature, but they failed to receive executive approval. - -In rejecting the bills, the Governor felt that they represented only a -part of an over-all development of a future state parks program. As the -head of this greatest of touring and motoring states, he fully -recognizes the merit of roadside rests and the Redwood Highway bypass -and indicates that they will receive further consideration during the -budget session of the Legislature in 1956. - -The touring business is a billion dollar industry in California. It has -become an integral and even necessary part of our state’s economy. -Whatever money is spent to foster and develop our tourist trade is an -investment that will inevitably bring rich returns. - -If California wishes to maintain its lead in the touring world, roadside -rests are a “must.” All but five of the 48 states already have roadside -rest programs. These carefully-picked, off-highway spots are places -where motorists may make stops in safety. They also encourage motorists -to keep highways clean by providing free facilities for eating lunches -and disposing of litter. - -Building a bypass highway around the redwood groves in Humboldt County -is imperative. If a four-lane highway were plowed through them, along -the path of the present route, there would be a shameful destruction of -these beautiful and awe-inspiring marvels of the botanic kingdom. Some -groves would be virtually eliminated. However, a bypass development to -preserve these great trees can’t be put off much longer. The present -route carries an increasing burden of traffic and the need for an -improved highway grows more urgent each day. - -Undoubtedly these two important measures will receive favorable action -during the Legislature’s budget session next year. In fact, California -can’t afford to let them be delayed too long. - - - - - _AROUND MONTEREY BAY - Land of California’s Beginnings Offers Many a Charm for the Visitor_ - - -In few places do History and Tradition, Romance and the Wonders of -Nature combine to offer so much to the visitor as in the region -surrounding the Bay of Monterey. - -In the north is Santa Cruz, with its famous beach and lovely gardens, -and backed by the Santa Cruz Mountains with their redwoods. Southward -are historic old Monterey and Carmel, the art colony which has now -become a Mecca for sight-seers and vacationists. South, again, extends a -road between the mountains and the sea which is one of California’s -scenic marvels. - -And as if all this were not enough, Nature has endowed the inland -valleys with such soil and climate that agriculture flourishes on a -tremendous scale. - - [Illustration: {uncaptioned}] - -Santa Cruz grew from the mission of the same name, founded in 1791, and -the settlement of Branciforte, established six years later. It might -have been any other community in pastoral California until the Gold -Rush, but then the newcomers demanded vegetables, which the Santa Cruz -area was able to supply, and lumber, for which the redwood forests in -the nearby mountains were raided. - - [Illustration: _Surf and sea-fowl, cliffs and rocky islets, - characterize Monterey and Santa Cruz areas. View above is from - Lighthouse Point, Santa Cruz._] - -Even in the seventies, however, this was known as a resort region, where -the nabobs from San Francisco came to take their ease and recuperate -from the strains of their latest coups of high finance. It came into -full stature with the building of its first beach casino in 1906. Though -this promptly burned, it was as promptly replaced with the ornate -structure the public sees today. This has been further improved and -renovated in recent times, as has also the Coconut Grove dancing -pavilion which is an outstanding beach feature. Beside the mile-long -beach of white sand with its beautifully clear water there is an indoor -salt-water plunge and a boardwalk which runs eastward to the San Lorenzo -River. These, with a varied assortment of rides and concessions, drew -2,000,000 visitors last year and bid fair to excel that figure by a -fifth this season. - -The city has other claims to fame in that it is the scene of the annual -Miss California contest and the terminus of a yearly yacht race from San -Francisco. - -In the Santa Cruz Art League Galleries is a life-size waxwork, “The Last -Supper,” modeled on DaVinci’s famous painting of the same name. In four -years it has been visited by more than 260,000 persons. - - _Blue and Peaceful or Bleak and Storming, the Ocean Wields a - Never-Ending Influence Over the Region_ - - [Illustration: _Cormorants find Lone Sentinel Rock, off Seabright - Beach, a favored resting place._] - - [Illustration: _Pleasure craft by scores find anchorage beside Santa - Cruz’ Municipal Wharf, where also fishing vessels moor and many an - angler drops a line._] - -In the nearby mountains are the permanent convention sites of several -religious groups, one of which includes a building capable of seating -5,000 persons. These and other conventions rank virtually as an industry -in Santa Cruz’ economy. But Santa Cruz is more than a resort or -convention city. It is a city of flowers. The Spanish Garden at its city -hall is beautiful. The drive north along the ocean front takes the -visitor past bluffs which are ablaze with colorful succulents and -flowers. In season, whole hillsides south of the city flame with yellow -bush lupine. Some of these plants have trunks as thick through as a -man’s leg. - - _PACIFIC OCEAN_ - - [Illustration: _Pelicans may be seen on every wharf and pier, almost - every rock, from Santa Cruz to Carmel. Wise looking old birds, - aren’t they?_] - -Bulbs, cut flowers and nursery stock are the biggest crop in the Santa -Cruz area, though a vast quantity of strawberries is raised and the -loganberry was developed in a Santa Cruz garden by James H. Logan, -banker, attorney and superior judge, who crossed the wild blackberry -with the Lawton berry to produce the delectable result. Brussels sprouts -are another outstanding crop. - -Santa Cruz also raises mushrooms, in old caves once used for aging wine -and in newer concrete structures. - -The largest bulb farms are at Capitola, shipping 3,500,000 tulip, lily, -dahlia and begonia bulbs a year. As each of these in turn comes into -bloom these farms offer a sight to be seen nowhere else. Championing the -region’s claim to being the “Begonia Capital of the United States,” a -festival is held each year on the waters of Soquel Creek, with thousands -of blooms scattered over the water and colorful floating displays. - - [Illustration: _For more than 2,000,000 visitors a year, Santa Cruz - means FUN—fun in the indigo-dark water, fun on the fine white beach, - fun ashore._] - -San Lorenzo Canyon, which begins a bare stone’s throw from Santa Cruz, -is full of summer homes and resorts, including one famous inn where a -mountain stream runs through the dining room. - - [Illustration: _This ancient span, moved from original site to - DeLaveaga Park, in Santa Cruz, recalls times when horsepower was - really horses._] - - [Illustration: _Color beyond description decks bulb farms near - Capitola each autumn, well justifies the name “Begonia Capital of - the World.”_] - -Up this canyon, too, is the Henry Cowell Redwoods State Park, better -known as “The Santa Cruz Big Trees.” The park comprises nearly 20,000 -acres, but the “Big Trees” are a compact group, which may be seen in an -easy walk of about a mile. - -Farther north is Big Basin Redwoods Park, the oldest and largest of the -State Park system, with many virgin growth trees and an interesting -“Nature Lodge” which shows, besides flora and fauna of the park, the -methods used in early day redwood lumbering. - - [Illustration: _Wind and sea carve endlessly at the cliffs west of - Santa Cruz. This graceful arch in Natural Bridges State Park is one - of the results._] - -In the city of Santa Cruz itself is Natural Bridges State Park, a -notable example of erosion, and along the coast in Santa Cruz County are -six other state parks—Seacliff Beach, where a World War I concrete -freighter is used for a fishing pier and a fine road parallels the -cliffs; Sunset Beach, with a high lookout and picnic ground under -twisted cypresses; Capitola Beach, where there is a special pool for -small fry; New Brighton Beach, Manresa Beach and Zmudowski Beach. At -some of these campsites are available. - -All through the mountains are interesting roads: the Empire Grade route -from Santa Cruz through Bonnie Doon to Boulder Creek is particularly -pointed out to visitors. In spring, so are the mountain apple orchards -along the Valencia Creek route from Santa Cruz to Watsonville. - - [Illustration: _MONTEREY BAY - Some principal points of interest and routes around the bay_] - - REDWOODS - HENRY COWELL - REDWOODS - •SANTA CRUZ - Lorenzo River - Branciforte CO - CAPITOLA - •WATSONVILLE - Pajaro River - MOSS LANDING - CASTROVILLE - 17 Mile Drive - PACIFIC GROVE - MONTEREY - _MONTEREY PENINSULA_ - PEBBLE BEACH - CARMEL - POINT LOBOS - Carmel River - TO BIG SUR - Salinas River - FORD ORD MILITARY RESERVATION - •SALINAS - TO KING - • _Offices of the California State Automobile Association_ - -Highly scenic routes from the north to the Monterey Bay region are, -first, the Skyline Drive from San Francisco, then down to the San -Lorenzo Valley and on through its fine redwoods to Santa Cruz, and, -second, the beautiful highway which follows the shoreline from San -Francisco south. The main route over the mountains from Los Gatos to -Santa Cruz is spectacular. The highway from Santa Cruz to Watsonville is -a concrete ribbon between lovely rolling hills gay with color. On the -Hecker Pass route from the Santa Clara Valley to Watsonville you can see -redwoods, the whole coast of Monterey Bay, and four charming little -lakes. The Chittenden Pass route, used by railroad and highway, -traverses a gorge of real scenic interest. - - [Illustration: _Big Basin Redwoods State Park, oldest and most - popular of the state system, acts as host to more than 500,000 - visitors a year._] - - [Illustration: _Main avenue of approach to Santa Cruz is this fine - highway from Los Gatos. Curving gently through the Santa Cruz - Mountains, it brings to view a wealth of lovely scenes. Under - construction is a by-pass which will take its traffic off Los Gatos’ - streets._] - -Santa Cruz has its face to the future. Monterey, at the other end of -Monterey Bay, never forgets that it was the place where history began -for this region. - -It was in what is now the city of Monterey that Portola, first governor -of California, and Father Junipero Serra landed in 1770. Under an oak -tree near the shore the good father held a service and founded a -mission. A stone cross today marks the spot, though the mission was soon -removed to its present site at the mouth of the Carmel Valley to be away -from the presidio, or military post, which Portola set up. At this -mission Father Serra made his headquarters and from it he supervised the -building of the mission chain. - -Under Spanish rule, presidio and mission were almost all the settlement -but after Mexico had gained independence, adobe homes grew up in the -hills, stores were built along the crooked streets and the Mexican -government, less averse to foreign trade than the Spaniards, built a -customs house. This still stands and, restored, houses a museum. It is -one of five State Historical Monuments in the region, the others being -the Serra landing place already mentioned: the Casa del Oro, which -housed a store: the house where Robert Louis Stevenson lived for a few -months late in 1879, and California’s First Theater, originally a -sailors’ boarding house. - -There are also standing more than a score of other structures erected in -this Mexican era, including one built in 1835 by Thomas Oliver Larkin, -first United States consul at Monterey, and Colton Hall, meeting place -of the Constitutional Convention in 1849. This, like almost all the -other remaining buildings, has been restored. - -Monterey has laid out a scenic route leading directly to or near all of -these historic structures, and also including several historic sites. -Visitors may traverse this route merely by following an orange line -painted on the street paving. At many points on it, special parking is -reserved for them. - -Whichever way you turn, there is something to be seen in this region. -Just across from the Customs House is Fisherman’s Wharf, where the -restaurants would feel unhappy if they had to serve you today fish that -was caught as long ago as yesterday. Alongside it, the fishing fleet, -decked in all the colors of the rainbow, rides at anchor. Farther along -the beautiful ocean drive is the Hopkins Marine Institute, operated by -Stanford University, and beyond that is Pacific Grove, with its -beautiful marine park and beach at Lover’s Point and its famous -Butterfly Trees. - -Each October, thousands of Monarch butterflies migrate from Canada and -Alaska to cluster on these pine trees in a small reservation known as -Butterfly Park. - -How the butterflies know which trees are “home” no one can explain, for -they are hatched and pass through their chrysalis stage in the North. -Indeed, in recent years it appears they have become confused: the number -now visiting the original trees is greatly reduced and many of them are -frequenting other pines several blocks away. - - [Illustration: _Home ports for several hundred fishing vessels are - Monterey, Santa Cruz and Moss Landing. This is part of the fleet - which bases at Monterey._] - - _Santa Cruz Means Redwoods and Mountains, Fertile Fields and Fragrant - Orchards, Long White Beaches, Fishing, Festivals and Fun for All_ - - [Illustration: _Party boats on which the land-lubber may embark for - a day of deep-sea fishing are operated from Monterey and Santa - Cruz._] - -Also not to be overlooked in Pacific Grove is an excellent Museum of -Natural History. Its collection of Monterey County birds and its -displays of marine life found in nearby waters are exceptionally -complete. In Butterfly Park is another museum, though it is called a -gallery, in which are displayed hundreds upon hundreds of butterflies, -moths and other insects. - -If, like most visitors to Monterey, you continue to follow the bay -shore, where miles of wildflowers adorn the bluffs, you will come -eventually to the Seventeen Mile Drive, which runs through a tremendous -private preserve. On this, for most of the way, you travel with the -fantastically blue ocean on one hand and truly marvelous dark green -forest on the other. At times your route runs on low bluffs near the -ocean, and again you are on rocky cliffs high above. Back among the -trees, near the Pebble Beach area where the sports car races are held -every year, you frequently see homes that are almost palaces. - -On your way you pass Cypress Point, which is one of only two places in -the world where the Monterey cypress is indigenous, and Midway Point, a -rugged rocky spine jutting into the sea and bearing a single lone and -twisted cypress, probably the most photographed tree in the world. Not -far away is the Ghost Tree, another cypress whose whitened trunk and -limbs seem like the bones and shroud of a fleeing wraith. Then your -route leads past Del Monte Lodge, with its array of fashionable shops, -and on through Pebble Beach, and thence to Carmel. - -Carmel is unique, a “village” conceived by artists and now perhaps the -home of more well known writers, painters and other workers in the arts -than any other community in the state. Carmel has no street numbers, no -mail delivery, and you have to get permission from the town council -before you may even cut down a tree on your own property. - - [Illustration: _In spring the apple blossoms whiten thousands of - trees and spread their delicate fragrance over many a mile in the - Watsonville area._] - -In Carmel the trucks in which garbage is collected are adorned with -baskets of flowers. The street signs bear carved and painted -decorations—a pine cone, a squirrel, a ship under full sail, or -something else associated with the region. The shops are small but -legion, many of them hidden away in courts and arcades which the -non-resident is likely to pass unwittingly. Their stocks are -fabulous—and not all of it expensive, either. - -In between are quaint places to lodge, to lunch, to dine or take tea -after the English manner. Of course there are conventional -establishments, too, but somehow everything in Carmel seems to have just -a little different flavor. - -The town stands on an oak-and-pine-clad slope with a magnificent beach -fronting on Carmel Bay at its foot. Along the shore is a lovely drive, -on which are homes beyond the dreams of most folk. Back among the trees -are others. The comfortable domiciles built by the original artist -colony still exist, but they are a minority; Carmel has become a place -to which the wealthy, as well as the well-to-do and the merely -comfortable, come to spend their later years. - -Carmel has an outdoor theater, a Bach Festival and an art gallery -maintained by an artists’ co-operative. Its Church of the Wayfarer has a -garden containing, it is said, every tree, shrub, herb and flower -mentioned in the Bible. Other gardens, formal and informal, are -everywhere. Once a year a number of the finest are thrown open for -public inspection. - -And then there is the Mission San Carlos de Borromeo, where Father Serra -held sway. The present church is not the one he knew; it was not begun -until nine years after his death in 1784. But under its sanctuary floor -he, Padre Crespi, Padre Lasuen and another lie buried. The structure has -many features distinctive from the usual mission architecture, among -them its massive south tower, with outside staircase and Saracenic dome, -and a star window. It is of sandstone and has a vaulted roof as it did -originally but in restoration the roof angle was made less sharp. Some -of the original decoration may be seen in a small chapel to the left of -the entrance. In a side chapel is a magnificent sarcophagus in marble -and bronze, the work of Jo Mora. - -A few miles south of the old mission is one of Nature’s -wonderlands—Point Lobos Reserve State Park. Here stands the second -native grove of Monterey Cypress, and here the ocean batters ceaselessly -against spectacular rocky points which rise precipitously to make -fjord-like coves. In these deep, sharp, inlets the blue water boils into -furious bursts of white foam and spray, forming always-changing pictures -of incomparable beauty. - - _Lush Valleys of the Salinas and Pajaro Rivers Rich in Pastoral Charm, -Even Richer in Their Vast Yields of Lettuce, Apples, Berries, Livestock_ - - [Illustration: _Lettuce, famed “green gold” of the Salinas region, - stretches in row after row for miles along the highways through the - valley._] - - [Illustration: _Beef cattle fatten on green hills and pasture lands - in southern Monterey County, famed stock-raising area since mission - times._] - -Offshore is a group of rocks haunted by both California and Steller sea -lions, an island much used by seafowl and naturally named “Bird Island,” -and a roiling, turbulent channel appropriately called “The Devil’s -Cauldron” which is a favorite spot of the sea otter. These strange -creatures were long thought to have been hunted to extinction but about -30 of them appeared in 1938 off Bixby Creek, 12 miles south of Point -Lobos, and there are now believed to be almost 100 in the group. Some -ardent pursuers of wild life are already asserting that the otter have -now increased to such an extent that the “crop” should be “harvested”—a -policy which could easily result in extinguishing the species. - -A mile below Point Lobos is Carmel Highlands, an area of rich estates -and fine homes, some of them set on the very edge of the continent. The -James house, in this area, has been called the most beautiful residence -in the United States. And the gardens hereabout are a thing to marvel -at. - -Beyond “the Highlands” runs a real road of romance, a motor highway -carved from the seaward face of the Santa Lucia mountains. Most of the -distance to its junction with other routes at San Luis Obispo there is -nothing between this road and the blue, blue sea but the cliffs. Above -it, on the east, tower the mountains. It is no road for the man in a -hurry, but for one who loves Nature it is glorious. - - [Illustration: _South from Carmel, in the trees or on the - cliffs—sometimes almost built out over the ocean—are some of the - most beautiful homes in America._] - -This is wildflower country. Within a 20-mile stretch you may see, in -season, wild roses, primroses, California poppies, yellow lupine, wild -mustard spreading over fields like a froth of foamy yellow, great bushes -of blue lupine marching up rocky hillsides, almost cliffs: Queen Anne’s -lace, succulents of many colors, and sometimes succulents which are not -in bloom but whose foliage has turned a rich, dark red; Indian paint -brush—all these abundant, in masses easy to see and recognize as you -roll along. A naturalist could find many more. - -The Spaniards would have come by this route if they could, but the -mountains were too rugged, there was no path between sea and cliffs, and -so they were forced inland. That this road was ever constructed was -largely due to the efforts of Dr. John Roberts of Monterey, who used to -ride horseback on calls to remote and isolated ranches up the canyons. -It was almost 20 years in building. - -South along this road from Point Lobos, beyond Garrapata Creek and Rocky -Creek and Bixby Creek, past the light house at Point Sur and inland a -few miles, is Pfeiffer-Big Sur State Park, a redwood park which is the -entrance to 250,000 acres of wilderness area in the adjacent Los Padres -National Forest. These redwoods are almost the most southerly of all: -the actual southernmost ones are on Mill Creek, some 25 miles farther -along the road. - -And so to Watsonville. Watsonville exists because in 1852 one John H. -Watson decided that the location was suitable for a town and, with -another man, forthwith laid out one. Watsonville is strictly business. -Even before Watson’s time, the Amestis, Castros, Vallejos and other -Spanish pioneer families were busily raising grain and potatoes here. -California’s great lettuce industry got its start in the Watsonville -region and today it is a busy center for the raising and processing of -lettuce, berries, beans, brussels sprouts, and many, many apples. - -The traveler passing through Watsonville sees only a rather busy main -street, plaza and business section, but only a little way to one side is -an area where quick-freezing plants, ice plants, warehouses and -lettuce-chilling works cover block after block, with switch engines -busily shifting empty cars to be loaded and loaded cars to be made into -trains and headed east. - -Some eight miles south of Watsonville is Moss Landing, a port for -vessels of moderate draft, from which the grain crops of the region once -were shipped. Now it is the home of a picturesque fishing fleet and the -scene of one of the largest steam-electric plants in the West. This -giant, which the public may visit by obtaining a permit, produces -771,000 horsepower. Its eight boilers are each as high as a ten-story -building and, the better to withstand any possible earthquake, are -suspended in steel towers more massive than many bridge piers. Operators -in the control room use television to watch the leaping flames inside -the boilers and to supervise change-overs from natural gas to fuel oil -when required. Steam pressure is an incredible—except to engineers—1,405 -pounds per square inch in one section of the plant and 1,510 pounds in -another. - - _Scenes and Structures on Unique “Path of History” in Monterey Bring - Memories of the Days When California Was Young_ - - [Illustration: _The first building in California in which a stage - performance was given for an admission fee. Pacific and Scott Sts., - Monterey._] - - [Illustration: _The Casa Amesti, on Monterey’s Path of History. - Built early in Mexican era by Jose Amesti as a wedding gift to his - daughter._] - - [Illustration: _The old Customs House at Monterey. Here Commodore - John Drake Sloat, on July 7, 1846, raised the American flag and - claimed for the United States the entire West, all of which was then - known under the name of California._] - -Between here and Monterey you may drive for miles between fields laid -out in neat rows of thistly artichoke plants. Castroville calls itself -“The Artichoke Center of the World,” and with reason, for the annual -production from this area is more than 1,300,000 boxes. - - _Natural Wonders and the Works of Man Combine to Create a Region of - Tremendous Beauty and Wide Appeal to Students, Vacationers, and the - Motorist Seeking Something New_ - - [Illustration: _Wildflowers in vast profusion and a galaxy of colors - line the cliffs along the bayshore at picturesque old Pacific - Grove._] - - [Illustration: _High rocky spines, spare gnarled trees, an - ever-pounding surf and blue water are typical of shoreline at Point - Lobos State Park._] - - [Illustration: _This is Pebble Beach, asserted by many to be the - finest of all golf courses. Finals of the Bing Crosby Open are - played here._] - -It is inland, however, in the great valley of the Salinas, that -agriculture really hits its stride and while production in Watsonville’s -Pajaro Valley is tremendous, that which centers in the Salinas area is -even greater. - -In the beginning Salinas was a center for livestock raising. Then -overtones of agriculture were added as potatoes began to be raised -thereabout. Later, sugar beets came in and the largest beet sugar -refinery in the United States was built a few miles west of the city. -Today, lettuce is the big item—two to three crops a year, worth more -than $40,000,000. - -Production on most of the larger ranches is on virtually an assembly -line basis. Long machines, drawn by tractors, span 18 rows of the ripe -lettuce. On a platform ride the packers, usually eight. Ahead of the -machine walk cutters, one for each row, who cut the crisp green heads. -Behind the machines are other workers who place the heads on a table -before the packers. These packers place the heads in cartons which pass -on to a worker who closes them, and another who staples the closure -tight. The whole work proceeds so rapidly that a special worker is -required merely to unfold cartons. - -Trucks, each of which holds exactly half a carload, follow the picking -machine and as the pallets on each truck are piled to the proper height -with cartons of lettuce, that truck departs for a cooling plant where, -under intense vacuum, the lettuce is cooled from the temperature of the -hot field to a point just above freezing in a matter of only 18 to 20 -minutes. Then it goes into pre-iced refrigerator cars, with the cartons -still on the original pallets, and presently is on its way to market. - -The old methods, by which lettuce was hauled to packing sheds for -trimming, packing and icing, are now all but superseded and firms with -tremendous investments in ice plants are wondering what to do with them, -for when it was necessary to ice each crate of lettuce Salinas produced -more ice than New York City. - -Besides the lettuce which has given it the name “Salad Bowl of the -World,” the Salinas Valley also produces more than $6,000,000 worth of -dry beans, $12,000,000 worth of carrots, $5,500,000 worth of celery and -quantities of truck crops every year. The sugar beet crop runs to almost -$7,000,000 a year. - -In spite of its agricultural importance, however, Salinas still thinks -of itself in terms of the old stock-raising days. The annual Salinas -California Rodeo was started in 1911 to perpetuate the sports and -traditions of the Old West. Membership on the 50-man board which -controls this four-day event is a coveted honor. In this fast, dramatic, -colorful spectacle, competition is of world championship caliber, prizes -amount to approximately $50,000 and every effort is made to see that the -stock is capable of bringing out the best in each competitor. “Salinas,” -said one rodeo rider, “is where they separate the men from the boys.” - -Yet, while agriculture and stock raising overshadow them, this region, -too, has its recreation features. Paraiso Hot Springs and Tassajara Hot -Springs are well known resorts. The padres and, before them, the -Indians, made much use of the Paraiso Springs. - - [Illustration: _Mission San Carlos de Borromeo, at Carmel, is often - called the most beautiful of all the missions. Its Saracenic tower - is distinctive._] - -Like all the other sections traversed by the route of the padres, the -Salinas Valley had its missions—Mission de Nuestra Senora de la Soledad, -near the town of Soledad, and Mission San Antonio de Padua, near Jolon. -Both fell completely into ruins but now are being restored. Only a -beginning has been made at Soledad, but San Antonio has been largely -rebuilt by the Franciscan Fathers and is in use as a training school for -young brothers. It is a “working” mission—that is, not only a place for -worship but a place where industry is carried on, as it used to be at -the original mission, shoemaking, carpentry, book binding, the making of -adobe brick and tile for the rebuilding of the two wings which are still -to be reconstructed, and all the maintenance work. - -In addition to agriculture, food processing, and the activities -dependent upon the sight-seers and pleasure-seekers, the economy of this -region also derives considerable support from industry. It digs and -processes sand for making glass and for other purposes. Salt and -refractories are manufactured. Lumbering continues on privately-owned -lands in the Santa Cruz mountains, with processing at Santa Cruz. Near -Santa Cruz is one of the largest cement production plants in America, if -not the world. - -There are small-scale textile operations and a saddle leather plant in -Santa Cruz, which city is also intensely proud of its new chewing gum -plant. There are several seed farms producing flower seeds—a pretty -sight in summer—and more producing field crop seed. There are busy -commercial fishing fleets. - -Stock-raising, with King City as an important center, brings the region -more than $3,500,000 every year and dairying almost as much again. - -Oil was discovered near San Ardo about eight years ago and production -from this field, which has 480 active wells, holds steady at 30,000 -barrels a day. - - _Mountains Marching to the Sea, Red Tiles Amid the Green of Cypress, - White Clouds, Bare Cliffs and Crashing Surf—These Spell Enchantment_ - - [Illustration: _Highway One crosses this graceful span, whose arch - rises 260 feet above Bixby Creek, on its way southward beside the - ocean._] - - [Illustration: _The Monterey Peninsula’s Seventeen Mile Drive is - world-known for its beauty and variety. Above, a distant glimpse of - Monterey._] - -Also important economically are the many military installations. The -vast Hunter Liggett Military Reservation has headquarters near Jolon. At -Fort Ord, a few miles north of Monterey, 30,000 to 35,000 military -personnel and about 2,000 civilian employees are on duty. The once-famed -Del Monte Hotel at Monterey has become a postgraduate school for naval -engineering officers, with a faculty and student body totalling about -2,000. The Presidio of Monterey, established so long ago by Portola, is -now an army school where some 400 specialists instruct about 2,000 -students in one or another of 26 languages. - -Of late years the construction industry has been very important, for -cities all through Monterey and Santa Cruz Counties are growing so -rapidly they are fairly bursting at the seams. At Salinas, residential -development has extended far north of the Rodeo Grounds, which once were -out in the country. Outside the city limits to the east is another -development, called Alisal, almost equal in size to the residential area -of Salinas itself. And there are several smaller subdivisions. At -Monterey new subdivisions and communities, some very beautiful, extend -far to the north and many fine old trees are being taken from properties -along the Carmel Road to make room for more homes. Carmel has overflowed -into Carmel Valley. Santa Cruz is adding residential construction at a -rate of about $3,000,000 annually. Watsonville has grown more than 20 -per cent since 1950. - -Busy as it may be, however, it is all a friendly, hospitable country. -Nowhere will you find people too hurried to bid you welcome and to do -what they can to make your stay enjoyable. - - —Written for Motorland by D. R. Lane. - - [Illustration: _Along the coastline south of Carmel, the highway is - literally hewn from the cliffs. “Island” above is really Point Sur, - made famous by Robinson Jeffers in his “The Women of Point Sur.”_] - - - - - Personal Accident Insurance - - -You may go through life without being in a traffic accident, or you may -be involved in a traffic mishap and escape injury. But the statistics -are not in your favor. You may be unfortunate enough to become a -“statistic” in police or hospital records. - -In these days of heavy traffic, even the most careful driver may be -involved in an accident; and police and hospital records show that -traffic crashes today result in more serious personal injuries than ever -before. - -That is why the California State Automobile Association has added extra -value to CSAA membership, and is now issuing a Certificate of Personal -Accident Insurance providing greater protection to members than -heretofore. As in the past, this Personal Accident Insurance is included -in your membership without extra charge. Beginning July 1 last year, the -new certificates were issued to members as they renewed their -memberships, and to new members as they were enrolled. - - [Illustration: _Continuous membership of three years or more - maintains the maximum benefits provided by new Personal Accident - Insurance._] - -This new Personal Accident coverage increases in value over the first -three years of membership on condition that membership is continuous. -The increased benefits remain in effect contingent on continued prompt -renewal of membership over the years. For members with three or more -years of consecutive membership, maximum coverage became effective for -the current membership year upon issuance of the new insurance -certificate. - -The schedule of benefits in this added feature of continuous CSAA -membership follows: - -Payment to your beneficiary for accidental death involving an automobile -is based on consecutive years of membership; first year, $500; second -year, $1,000; third year and thereafter, $1,500. - -Direct payments to you for other specific losses are also increased -under this _accumulative_ coverage. - -Hospital benefits—$35 a week for a maximum of twelve consecutive -weeks—are retained and all indemnities are subject to the standard -provisions and limitations as specified in the Personal Accident -Certificate. - -Your membership must be continuous to make this new schedule of -increased benefits effective for you; and your membership must be -retained on a continuous basis to keep the increased benefits in effect. -If membership is allowed to lapse, the benefits under the policy revert -to the first year basis if membership is re-instated at a later date. - -This accumulative plan of Personal Accident Insurance based on -continuous membership was adopted by the Board of Directors, not only to -provide more adequate protection, but also to accord recognition to -continuous membership support. - - [Illustration: S. V. Christierson - _Salinas_] - - [Illustration: A. E. Strong - _Santa Cruz_] - - - Four CSAA Offices In Two Counties On Monterey Bay - -In the two counties “around Monterey Bay”—Santa Cruz and Monterey—there -are four offices of the California State Automobile Association. They -are strategically located in four main cities at focal points of the -area’s network of highways to provide best service to the large -membership in the two counties as well as the continuous flow of -visiting members into this noted vacation and tourist region. These -offices and their district managers are: - -_Santa Cruz_, with a branch office in _Watsonville_, C. E. White; -_Salinas_, J. E. Foust; and _Monterey_, Melvin R. Tuttle. - -Two members of the Association’s Board of Directors represent this -region. They are: - -A. E. Strong of Santa Cruz, a vice-president of the CSAA; and S. V. -Christierson of Salinas, civic leader and business executive. - - - Southern San Mateo County Office Moved - -The southern San Mateo County office of the California State Automobile -Association has been moved to new and larger quarters at 1500 Laurel -Avenue in San Carlos. This location is in the Laurel Theater Building, -corner of White Oak and Laurel avenues, one block west of El Camino -Real. The new office provides more adequate service facilities for the -growing membership in this district than was available at the former -location in Redwood City. - - - - - New Legislation Affecting Motorists - - - _IT’S THE LAW - Making Turns Properly On Red Traffic Light_ - - [Illustration: IT’S THE LAW] - - Right turns permitted against a red light must always be made after - stopping and under certain conditions. It is timely to review these - legal provisions in view of the new California law, effective - September 7, governing the procedure of making left turns on a red - light from a one-way street into another one-way street. - - To make a right turn on a red light, the driver should come to a halt - at the intersection as close as practicable to the right-hand curb. - yielding the right of way to pedestrians and other traffic proceeding - as directed by the stop-and-go signal. As soon as the way is clear, - then the right turn may be made. - - However, the law permits local authorities to prohibit such right - turns on a red light in central business districts. Also, local - officials may prohibit right turns on a red light outside the downtown - area at any intersection under their jurisdiction if a sign is erected - at the corner notifying the motorist to that effect. - - On making a left turn against a red light from a one-way street into - another one-way street, the driver should come to a halt at the - intersection as close as practicable to the left-hand curb. When - certain there will be no conflict with foot or vehicle traffic, the - driver may proceed to make the turn. - -Important new motor vehicle laws were passed by the 1955 California -Legislature. Equally important changes and clarifications were made in -many old laws. - -Knowledge of these new regulations and revisions of the Vehicle Code is -naturally vital to you as a motor vehicle owner and operator. - -Several centuries ago a wise thinker, Thomas More, wrote: - -“_All laws are promulgated for this end: that every man may know his -duty, and therefore the plainest and most obvious sense of the words is -that which must be put on them._” - -That advice is heeded in this article interpreting for you the new -regulations and code revisions. The interpretations are actually -summaries stated in everyday, non-legal language to make for easy -reading and quick understanding of the essential elements. - -September 7 is the effective date of these new laws, except for a few -urgency measures which were put into effect immediately upon approval by -the Governor. - - -The present California highway user tax rates will remain in effect -until December 31, 1959, thus assuring the continuation of the state’s -accelerated highway modernization program adopted in 1953. This new law -carried an urgency clause and became effective January 22. - - -It is now provided in the Vehicle Code as well as in the Health and -Safety Code that it is unlawful to dispose of any garbage, refuse or -litter upon any highway or its right of way. - - -Driving under the influence of liquor is a misdemeanor. The penalty for -a first conviction of such a misdemeanor shall be automatically -increased to that of a second conviction, if the driver already has been -previously convicted of a felony for driving while drunk. - - -Revocation of the driving privileges of juvenile offenders is mandatory -upon conviction of certain serious offenses. Revocation or suspension -shall also be imposed upon recommendation by the juvenile court judge -for convictions of less serious offenses. The length of the terms of -revocation or suspension shall be specified. - - -Local authorities, as well as the State Department of Public Works, may -restrict speed to 25 miles per hour because of snow conditions. Local -authorities may also determine the maximum speed allowable on any bridge -or structure, or in any tube or tunnel, constitutes part of a highway. - - -The speed limit on highways where persons are at work shall be a prima -facie limit of 25 miles per hour instead of a fixed limit of 25 miles -per hour. - - -The speed limit for heavy trucks and combinations is increased from 40 -to 45 miles per hour. - - -The Vehicle Code provides that the registered owner of a motor vehicle -is responsible for any parking violation involving the vehicle. That -presumption, however, does not mean that the registered owner is further -presumed to have violated any other provision of the law. - - -To pass a motor vehicle going less than 20 miles an hour on a grade, an -overtaking vehicle must go at least 10 miles an hour faster. In -addition, it must complete the passing movement within a quarter-mile -distance. - - -Heavy trucks shall use only the lane to the immediate left of the -right-hand lane when passing another vehicle on freeways and -multiple-lane highways. Where passing on the right is permitted, trucks -may do so. - - -A peace officer may remove an illegally parked motor vehicle to a garage -or other place of safety. - - -U-turns are prohibited on the approaches to or in front of any fire -station. - - -School Safety Patrol members may be stationed at intersections near as -well as adjacent to a school. The actual presence of a supervisory -school employee is not necessary at a street crossing where a patrol is -maintained. - - -Local authorities are authorized to close certain streets for use by -colleges as well as high schools in giving automobile driving -instructions. - - -School districts, under the Education Code, are allowed to conduct -driver training classes on Saturdays. - - -It is unlawful to refuse to obey the directions of a fireman, whether a -police officer is present or not, when he is protecting fire-fighting -personnel and equipment. - - -Stops at an arterial stop sign are to be made at the limit line, if -marked, even though there may be a crosswalk. - - -Emergency vehicles under certain conditions are permitted to go in a -direction opposed to moving traffic on a one-way street or roadway. - - -Authorities may erect traffic control devices at the intersection of a -highway and a private road or driveway if traffic conditions warrant. - - -License plates shall be mounted on a motor vehicle not less than 12 -inches or more than 60 inches from the ground. They are also not to be -covered with any material which decreases or impairs their legibility. - - -Registration and vehicle license fee reciprocity is granted to motor -vehicles registered in other states pending the establishment of a -California Reciprocity Commission. To prevent needless confusion and -disruption in the interstate movement of vehicles and trade, this law -carried an urgency clause and became effective April 14. - - -The program of quarterly registration of commercial vehicles is -continued indefinitely. - - -Additional summaries of new motor vehicle laws and revisions of the -Vehicle Code will be published in the next issue of Motorland. - - - - - HISTORICALLY SPEAKING - - - _Questions in endless variety are asked by members about California - and Nevada history. Here are a few selected for their general - interest, with answers from authoritative sources._ - - -_What was the background of Father Junipero Serra?_ He was a native of -Majorca, and held the chair of philosophy at the university there when -he was chosen to Christianize the Indians. Before coming to California -he spent several years in Mexico, teaching in the College of San -Fernando and attaining wide influence among the descendants of the -Aztecs as a spiritual leader. - - -_How many capitals has California had?_ Five—Monterey, San Jose, -Vallejo, Benicia and Sacramento. Vallejo was capital twice, the first -time in 1851-2 and again in 1853. - - -_For whom is Truckee named?_ For one of Fremont’s Indian guides. - - -_When was the old Bale Mill, near St. Helena, built?_ In 1846. However, -the present 40 foot wheel is a replacement for the original much smaller -one. - - -_When was the Butterfield stage line established?_ In 1858. It ran from -St. Louis to San Francisco, the longest stage line in the world. - - -_Did the United States make any effort to acquire California prior to -the war with Mexico?_ Yes. The United States offered to buy this -province from Mexico in 1835. - - -_Where was California’s first railroad?_ Between Sacramento and Folsom. -It was opened on February 22, 1856. - - -_What was the first American flag ship to sail into California waters?_ -The Otter, out of Boston, entered the Bay of Monterey in 1796. - - -_Was the hydraulic method of mining ever used outside the Mother Lode?_ -Yes. The largest of all hydraulic workings, the La Grange mine, is near -Weaverville, and the method has been used in many places outside of -California. - - -_Who first travelled the route across Nevada taken later by the Pony -Express?_ This route is credited to a party of scouts sent from Salt -Lake City in 1854 by Brigham Young. The route was followed later by the -stages and is approximately that of the Lincoln Highway. - - [Illustration: THE BABY PULLMAN, _recently placed on the market in - infant supply stores and some department stores, converts the back - seat space of an automobile into a sleep or play area for infants. - It is a padded platform suspended from the top of the front seat by - two rubber-covered hooks and extending over the entire back seat - when opened out. Two wings fold up to make a cozy padded crib, or - one wing up leaves space for an adult to sit. This information was - provided by The Herrmanns infant supply house, with stores in San - Francisco, Berkeley and San Jose, where the Baby Pullman with pad - retails for $15.93._] - - - - - AUTOMOBILE ANECDOTES - - -The California Division of Highways, says Assistant District Engineer H. -S. Miles, has often cautioned drivers about horseplay while operating a -motor vehicle. Recently a report was received by the Division on an -accident that left no doubt as to which category it belonged. In -response to the question, “_Who in your opinion was at fault?_” the -driver wrote: - -“_The horse. As I was passing a group of horses on the roadway at a slow -speed, two of them started to play and one backed up and sat down on the -right front fender, causing a large dent._” - - -In Helena, Mont., a motorist took a bite out of a ripe plum while -driving his car. Deciding he didn’t like it, he tossed it out of the car -window. - -Where do you think it landed? On the windshield of a Highway Patrolman. -The motorist was fined for dumping garbage on the highway. - - -Montreal police swear this story is true. They received a telephone -complaint from a man reporting the theft of his automobile’s steering -wheel, dashboard, and brake, gas and clutch pedals. Police promised an -immediate investigation. - -A few moments later, however, the phone rang again. The same man said -they needn’t bother. He had got into the back seat of his car by mistake -and thought it was the front seat. - - -In Monroe, Wis., motorists picketed the city hall after officials -decided to raise the fine for parking violations to one dollar. - -It formerly was 10 cents. - - -In Toronto, a motorist hit a hole in a road and his car careened into a -jewelry store window. - -City authorities approved out-of-court settlements of $2,084 to the -driver and $5,125 to the storekeeper. The hole was fixed for $7. - - -“_Did you get his license number?_” Oregon highway patrolmen asked a -motorist after his car was struck by a hit-and-run driver. - -“_I sure did_,” he replied. “_I grabbed it as he drove away._” - -He handed them the license plate. - - - - - SHAKESPEARE ON MOTOR TRAFFIC - - -_Traffic-strangled motorists who tend to long for the “good old days” -might well face the fact that things were no better then. In witness -whereof we give you this late report on early road conditions by that -peerless commentator, William Shakespeare, late of Stratford-on-Avon, -England, as recently recorded in the New York Times Magazine_: - - “The horn, the horn, the lusty horn - Is not a thing to laugh to scorn.” - —_As You Like It._ - - “These high wild hills and rough uneven ways - Draw out our miles and make them wearisome.” - —_Richard II._ - - “Give me that mattock and the wrenching iron.” - —_Romeo and Juliet._ - - “Oh, let him pass.” - —_King Lear._ - - “A very dangerous flat.” - —_The Merchant of Venice._ - - “He must needs go that the devil drives.” - —_All’s Well That Ends Well._ - - “What, will the line stretch out to the crack of doom?” - —_Macbeth._ - - “Traffic confound thee.” - —_Macbeth._ - - “Smile, once more: turn thy wheel.” - —_King Lear._ - - “Is this a holiday?” - —_Julius Caesar._ - - “I can no further crawl, no further go.” - —_A Midsummer Night’s Dream._ - - “I must shift.” - —_The Merry Wives of Windsor._ - - “With what strict patience have I sat.” - —_Love’s Labour’s Lost._ - - - - - Riders of the Andes At the Grand National - OCTOBER 28 TO NOVEMBER 6 - - - [Illustration: _Herdsman Arnold Leonard of Stockton Ranch, Morgan - Hill, leads Hereford heifers to the judging ring at Grand - National._] - -The famed “Riders of the Andes,” elite cavalry troop of the Army of -Chile, will be featured at the Grand National Livestock Exposition, -Horse Show and Rodeo to be held in the San Francisco Cow Palace October -28 to November 6. Termed the world’s most spectacular group of horsemen, -the 32 riders and horses will come to the Cow Palace as the result of -two years of negotiations and a special decree of the Chilean Congress. - -The National Hereford Show and Sale and the Pacific Coast Aberdeen-Angus -Association Show and Sale are part of the livestock exposition, one of -the nation’s “big six” shows. - -New classes have been added to the national full-division horse show. - -Top-ranking contestants of the United States and Canada will ride in the -championship rodeo. - -Regular performances will be held each of the ten evenings, starting at -8 o’clock, with matinees on the Saturdays and Sundays of October 29 and -30 and November 5 and 6, starting at 2 o’clock. Prices will range from -$1.25 to $3.50. - -An added performance this year will be a children’s matinee Friday, -November 4, with a universal admission price of 50 cents. - - - - - COMING EVENTS - - - [Illustration: COMING EVENTS] - -_Community Events in northern and central California and Nevada, -scheduled for September and October, are listed below. Dates and data -are subject to change. Information on events may be secured from any -office of the Association._ - - SEPTEMBER - - Sept. 1-11: _Sacramento_, California State Fair. - Sept. 2-4: _Lakeport_, Lake County Fair and Horse Show. - Sept. 3-4: _Concord_, Trail Ride and Show. - Sept. 3-5: _Weed_, Italian Carnival. - Sept. 3-5: _McArthur_, Inter-Mountain Fair, Horse Show and Rodeo. - Sept. 3-5: _Nevada City_, Pelton Wheel Diamond Jubilee. - Sept. 3-5: _Pebble Beach_, Labor Day Mercury Regatta, Stillwater Cove. - Sept. 3-5: _Mariposa_, Mariposa County Fair, Horse Show and Rodeo. - Sept. 3-5: _Fort Bragg_, Paul Bunyan Celebration. - Sept. 4-6: _Tulelake_, Tulelake-Butte Valley Fair. - Sept. 4-30: _Santa Cruz_, Statewide Watercolor Show. - Sept. 5: _Stockton_, Labor Day Parade. - Sept. 9: _Santa Cruz_, Admission Day Celebration. - Sept. 10-11: _Truckee_, Donner Lake Boat Races. - Sept. 12-18: _San Jose_, Santa Clara County Fair. - Sept. 14-18: _Orland_, Glenn County Fair and Rodeo. - Sept. 15: _Lodi_, Merchants Festival. - Sept. 15-18: _Reno_, Nevada, Washoe County Fair and Horse Show. - Sept. 15-18: _San Francisco_, Art Festival, Civic Auditorium. - Sept. 16-18: _Auburn_, District Fair and Horse Show. - Sept. 16-18: _Kerman_, Harvest Festival. - Sept. 16-18: _Lodi_, Grape Festival and National Wine Show. - Sept. 18: _Walnut Creek_, Folk Dance Festival, City Park. - Sept. 18: _Napa_, Junior Horse Show. - Sept. 18: _Grass Valley_, Barbecue and Gymkhana, Fair Grounds. - Sept. 18: _Santa Rosa_, Home Defense Day Parade. - Sept. 18-25: _Saratoga_, “Design at Home” Show, Villa Montalvo. - Sept. 22-24: _Sanger_, Grapebowl Festival. - Sept. 22-25: _Madera_, District Fair. - Sept. 22-25: _Watsonville_, Santa Cruz County Fair and Horse Show. - Sept. 22-25: _Walnut Creek_, Walnut Festival. - Sept. 23-25: _Boonville_, Mendocino County Fair and Apple Show. Horse - Show and Rodeo. - Sept. 24-25: _Sonoma_, Valley of the Moon Vintage Festival. - Sept. 30-Oct. 2: _Hollister_, San Benito County Fair, Bolado Park. - Sept. 30-Oct. 9: _Fresno_, District Fair. - - OCTOBER - - Oct. 1: _San Anselmo_, Grape Festival, Sunny Hills. - Oct. 2: _Chico_, Horse Show. - Oct. 6-9: _Pittsburg_, Columbus Day Celebration. - Oct. 6-9: _Turlock_, Blue Ribbon Horse Show. - Oct. 13-16: _Hanford_, Kings County Fair and Rodeo. - Oct. 15: _Woodland_, Kiddie Pet Parade. - Oct. 15: _Fowler_, Fowler Fall Festival. - Oct. 28-30: _Fresno_, Cotton Folk Dance Festival, Memorial Auditorium. - Oct. 28-Nov. 6: _San Francisco_, Grand National Livestock Exposition, - Horse Show and Rodeo. Cow Palace. - Oct. 29-30: _San Rafael_, Chrysanthemum Festival. - Oct. 29-Nov. 1: _Ross_, Chrysanthemum Festival. - Oct. 30: _Fresno_, Folk Dance. Memorial Auditorium. - - - STATE FAIR - _Sacramento, Sept. 1 to 11_ - - [Illustration: {uncaptioned}] - -All the best of the Golden State—in agricultural products, livestock, -industries, arts and crafts and entertainment features—will be on -display at California’s State Fair, September 1 through 11 at -Sacramento. There will be racing daily except Sundays, performances of -the West’s oldest horse show in the evenings, and outdoor evening shows -before the grandstand featuring the music of four outstanding American -composers. Jeanette MacDonald, Margaret Whiting, Gorden McRae and Paul -Whiteman will appear in these shows. Other entertainment features will -include a Gayway with shows and rides, fireworks displays each night. - - - Cities Receive Awards In AAA Pedestrian Protection Contest - -Berkeley has won a First Place Award in the 16th annual nationwide -Pedestrian Protection Contest conducted by the American Automobile -Association and sponsored in northern and central California and Nevada -by the California State Automobile Association. - -Berkeley received the award for its outstanding reduction in pedestrian -deaths. - -A Third Place Award went to San Leandro for its reduction of pedestrian -fatalities and excellent pedestrian protection program. - -Honorable Mention Awards were won by Sacramento and Richmond for the -over-all excellence of their pedestrian protection programs. - -Twenty cities were awarded Special Citations for various individual -phases of their programs. They were: - -Oakland, Alameda, Hayward, Stockton, Modesto, Monterey, Pacific Grove, -Hanford, Tracy, Grass Valley, Sausalito, Ross, Manteca, Sebastopol, -Fairfield, Red Bluff, Mount Shasta, Lakeport, Sutter Creek, and Reno, -Nevada. - -In addition to the above awards, 37 cities received Commendation -Certificates for no pedestrian deaths during the year. They were: - -Albany, Arcata, Belmont, Benicia, Burlingame, Carmel, Ceres, Chico, -Concord, Daly City, Dunsmuir, Fairfax, Fowler, Hillsborough, Livermore, -Lodi, Martinez, Menlo Park, Millbrae, Mill Valley, Oroville, Piedmont, -Pittsburg, Roseville, Salinas, San Bruno, Sanger, San Rafael, Santa -Clara, Susanville, Turlock, Ukiah, Vacaville, Willows, Yreka, and Elko -and Sparks, Nevada. - -The cities were judged in their respective population groups on the -basis of pedestrian safety activities and fatality and injury records. - -The nationwide contest spurs direct action in cities to insure greater -pedestrian safety. The results are obvious; fatalities are declining -despite growing motor vehicle registration. Before the contest began in -1939, as many as 15,500 pedestrians were killed a year, compared with -the 7,900 killed in 1954. - - - - - _SAFE DRIVING PRACTICES_ - - -Three-lane highways have a reputation as accident breeders—the middle -lane often being referred to as the no-man’s land of the open road. - -When using the middle lane of a three-lane highway for passing or -turning during daylight hours, a sound driving technique is to turn on -your _headlights_. - -The lights serve as a warning to oncoming motorists not only that the -middle lane is in use but also, and more important, that your car is -approaching them in the middle lane. - -Many motorists are confused by the general appearance of modern -automobiles; and instances have actually occurred where drivers thought -the other car in the middle lane was going in the same direction they -were, until it was too late to avoid an accident. - -There is no law requiring drivers to turn on their headlights under -these circumstances, so don’t depend upon other drivers to have their -lights on if they are in the middle lane. If yours are on, you are not -only being courteous to other drivers, but also protecting yourself by -alerting them to the fact that the middle lane is occupied by an -approaching car. Also, remember to turn off your lights as you pull out -of the middle lane. - - - _Curves AND Crossroads_ - -Sign at entrance to a crossroads town: “Gas killed 3,029 people in this -state last year—2 inhaled it; 27 put a match to it; 3,000 stepped on -it.” - - -_The difference between a straight-eight and the V-eight is just a -matter of whether you like your troubles strung out down the line or all -in one place._ - - -Mrs. Jones (on telephone): “This time you really got yourself out on a -limb!” - -Mr. Jones: “Yes, dear. I drove off a cliff and was hung up all night in -a tree.” - - -_Modern automobiles are getting so free and easy to drive that we need -power steering and power brakes to keep them under control._ - - -Traffic Officer: “Your honor, I followed this man and he drove clear -through town with an arm around this woman.” - -Judge: “Something’s wrong. It’s not logical for a man to drive through -town with his arm around his wife.” - - -_Parking conditions have improved in some localities—you only have to -climb over one car to get into your own._ - - [Illustration: “_With all the gadgets the automobile people put in - their cars, it’s a wonder they wouldn’t think of a garbage disposal - unit._” - —Courtesy George Lichty and the Chicago Sun-Times Syndicate.] - - - Emergency Road Service Contract Station Changes Are Listed for Members - -Recent changes in the list of Emergency Road Service contract stations -serving members of the California State Automobile Association are -reported below. Latest complete lists are available at all CSAA offices. -Always carry a list in your car. Please mark these changes on your copy -of current list. - -_Angels Camp_, change in station: Wilmshurst Chevrolet Company; -telephone, REdfield 6-2258. If no answer, call REdfield 6-2224. -Succeeding Godell Motor Company. - -_Centerville_, change in station: Central Chevrolet Company, 199 North -Main Street; telephone, 8-8346; night, Sundays and holidays, call -8-8395. Succeeding Joe Adams. - -_Chester_, new appointment: Chester Motors. State Route 36; telephone, -2654; night, Sundays and holidays, call 4693. - -_Cottonwood_, new appointment: Grigsby Service. Highway 99 at 4th -Street; telephone, Cottonwood 2161. After 10 p.m., call Anderson, -EMerson 5-8583. - -_Kerman_, change in station: Morgan’s Repair Shop, 360 South Madera -Street; telephone, 6411; night, Sundays and holidays, call 5548, 5953 or -5103. Succeeding Sims Motor Company. - -_Kings Beach_, Lake Tahoe, change in station: Ray & Mike’s Service, -State Route 28; telephone, LIberty 6-2717. If no answer, call LIberty -6-3392. Succeeding Bailey’s Tahoe Vista Garage, Tahoe Vista. - - - If You Are Moving, Send Old Address as Well as New - -If you move, please list your _old_ address, as well as the new one, in -the notice you send to the California State Automobile Association. With -a membership roster of over 330,000, the old address is essential for -any change. As for your copy of _Motorland_, it is not enough just to -tell the Post Office, because they will _not forward_ second class mail -unless you pay extra postage. Also, a change of address notice given to -the Post Office is kept on file for only a limited time. - - - - - Offices of CALIFORNIA STATE AUTOMOBILE ASSOCIATION - - - MAIN OFFICE - - SAN FRANCISCO 150 Van Ness Ave. - Telephone MArket 1-2141 - - OTHER OFFICES - - AUBURN 750 High St. - Telephone TUrner 5-1506 - BERKELEY 1849 University Ave. - Telephone THornwall 3-9700 - CHICO 351 East 6th St. - Telephone FIreside 2-0176 - EUREKA 408 “A” St. - Telephone HIllside 2-5721 - FRESNO 1829 Van Ness Ave. - Telephone 6-9861 - HANFORD 316 North Irwin St. - Telephone LUdlow 4-4401 - HAYWARD 164 Castro St. - Telephone ELgin 1-3225 - HOLLISTER 459 San Benito St. - Telephone 403 - LODI 1 South Pleasant Ave. - Telephone 9-1802 - LOS GATOS 370 Village Lane - Telephone ELgato 4-3750 - MADERA 316 West Yosemite Ave. - Telephone ORchard 3-3586 - MARTINEZ 915 Escobar St. - Telephone 1020 - MARYSVILLE 715 Tenth St. - Telephone 2-2137 - MERCED 705 West Seventeenth St. - Telephone RAndolph 2-2711 - MODESTO 538 McHenry Ave. - Telephone 3-9171 - MONTEREY 520 Fremont St. - Telephone 5-3138 - MOUNTAIN VIEW 816 Castro St. - Telephone YOrkshire 7-5674 - NAPA 1405 Second St. - Telephone 6-2071 - OAKLAND 399 Grand Ave. - Telephone TEmplebar 6-1900 - OROVILLE 2811 Montgomery St. - Telephone 1515R - PALO ALTO 109 Florence St. - Telephone DAvenport 3-3138 - PETALUMA 110 Washington St. - Telephone 2-8288 - PLACERVILLE 266 Main St. - Telephone 276 - RED BLUFF 608 Main St. - Telephone 191 - REDDING 1525 Pine St. - Telephone 292 - RICHMOND 4113 Macdonald Ave. - Telephone BEacon 5-4324 - SACRAMENTO 2230 Stockton Blvd. - Telephone HUnter 6-2871 - SALINAS 201 John St. - Telephone 4828 - SAN JOSE 2145 The Alameda - Telephone CHerry 3-1313 - SAN MATEO 101 South Ellsworth Ave. - Telephone DIamond 3-4558 - SAN RAFAEL 1114 Fifth Ave. - Telephone GLenwood 4-9194 - SANTA CRUZ 1114 Water St. - Telephone GArden 3-2150 - SANTA ROSA 526 College Ave. - Telephone 2323 - SONORA 298 West Stockton Rd. - Telephone JEfferson 2-4363 - SO. SAN MATEO COUNTY (SAN CARLOS) 1500 Laurel Ave. - Telephone LYtell 1-0761 - STOCKTON 929 North El Dorado St. - Telephone HOward 4-4817 - SUSANVILLE 32 South Lassen St. - Telephone 2373 - TURLOCK 163 South Thor St. - Telephone 4-5149 - UKIAH 415 South State St. - Telephone HOmestead 2-3861 - VALLEJO 2015 Sonoma Blvd. - Telephone 3-1581 - WALNUT CREEK 2067 Mt. Diablo Blvd. - Telephone YEllowstone 4-9758 - WATSONVILLE 17 West Lake Ave. - Telephone 2-2421 - WESTLAKE (DALY CITY) 20 Park Plaza - Telephone PLaza 3-5576 - WILLOWS 258 North Butte St. - Telephone 12 - WOODLAND 818 Main St. - Telephone 2-2896 - YREKA Main near Miner St. - Telephone 182 - YOSEMITE VALLEY Yosemite Village - (Summer Season Touring Bureau) - - NEVADA DIVISION - - RENO 111 West First St. - Telephone 3-5169 - LAS VEGAS 204 East Charleston Blvd. - - - Offices of AUTOMOBILE CLUB OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA - -Members of the California State Automobile Association, when touring in -the thirteen southern counties of California, receive all services of -the Association, including insurance claim service, from the offices of -the Automobile Club of Southern California located in these cities: - - MAIN OFFICE - - LOS ANGELES 2601 S. Figueroa St. - - OTHER OFFICES - - ALHAMBRA 15 S. Chapel Ave. - ANAHEIM 132 N. Los Angeles St. - BAKERSFIELD Highway 99 at “M” St. - BELLFLOWER 16111 S. Clark Ave. - BEVERLY HILLS 8833 Olympic Blvd. - BISHOP 510 N. Main St. - BURBANK 1720 W. Magnolia Blvd. - COMPTON 110 N. Poinsettia Ave. - COVINA 208 W. Badillo St. - CULVER CITY 11168 Washington Blvd. - DOWNEY 12015 S. Paramount Blvd. - EAST LOS ANGELES 5350 E. Beverly Blvd. - EAST SAN DIEGO 3729 El Cajon Blvd. - EL CENTRO 1407 Main St. - EL MONTE 601 N. Tyler Ave. - ESCONDIDO 499 S. Escondido Blvd. - FULLERTON 623 N. Spadra Road - GLENDALE 801 S. Central Ave. - HIGHLAND PARK 5101 N. Figueroa St. - HOLLYWOOD 6902 Sunset Blvd. - HUNTINGTON PARK 2151 Gage Ave. - INDIO 44-967 Oasis Ave. - INGLEWOOD 1231 Centinela Ave. - LAGUNA BEACH 2891 Coast Blvd. South - LONG BEACH 757 Pacific Ave. - MONROVIA-ARCADIA 333 E. Foothill Blvd., Arcadia - NORTH HOLLYWOOD 11523 Burbank Blvd. - OCEANSIDE 302 S. Freeman St. - ONTARIO 525 West “A” St. - OXNARD 134 North “A” St. - PALM SPRINGS 128 S. Indian Ave. - PASADENA 130 N. Hill Ave. - PASO ROBLES 1113 Spring St. - POMONA 502 W. Holt Ave. - PORTERVILLE 915 N. Main St. - REDLANDS 430 E. State St. - REDONDO BEACH 303 Garnet St. - RIVERSIDE 6927 Magnolia Ave. - SAN BERNARDINO 998 “D” St. - SAN DIEGO 2100 Fourth Ave. - SAN FERNANDO 804 Celis St. - SAN LUIS OBISPO 1134 Monterey St. - SAN PEDRO 1616 S. Gaffey St. - SANTA ANA 1608 N. Main St. - SANTA BARBARA 1301 Santa Barbara St. - SANTA MARIA 725 S. Broadway - SANTA MONICA 2121 Wilshire Blvd. - SANTA PAULA 108 N. Tenth St. - SOUTH LOS ANGELES 9621 S. Vermont Ave. - TAFT 501 Kern St. - TULARE 200 North “M” St. - VAN NUYS 11131 Burbank Blvd. - VENTURA 1023 Thompson Blvd. - VISALIA 520 W. Mineral King Ave. - WESTWOOD VILLAGE 2000 Westwood Blvd. - WHITTIER 313 N. Greenleaf Ave. - - ILLUSTRATIONS—Photographs: Cover, pages 2 and 3, Art Malquel, Santa - Cruz. Inside front cover, pages 12, 13 (top and center), 16, Wynn - Bullock, Monterey. Pages 4 and 5, courtesy The Seaside Company, Santa - Cruz. Pages 6 (center and bottom), 8, 9 (bottom), Ed Webber, Santa - Cruz. Pages 6 (top), 10, 14 (center), Mike Roberts, Berkeley. Pages 9 - (top), 13 (bottom), Rey Ruppel, Monterey, courtesy Monterey Chamber of - Commerce. Page 11 (left), California Spray-Chemical Co. Page 11 - (right), Cal-Pictures Inc., San Francisco. Pages 14 (top), 15, Josef - Muench, Santa Barbara. Page 14 (bottom), Julian P. Graham, Pebble - Beach. Page 17, Ansel Adams, San Francisco, courtesy American Trust - Company. - - RECORDER-SUNSET PRESS, SAN FRANCISCO - - [Illustration: A 1914 model Locomobile, West Cliff Drive, Santa - Cruz] - -⇒ FORTY-ONE YEARS LATER Since issuing its first automobile insurance -policy in 1914, premium savings dividends amounting to $20,868,344 have -been paid to insured members by the - - CALIFORNIA STATE AUTOMOBILE ASSOCIATION INTER-INSURANCE BUREAU - - - _In SEPTEMBER Santa is busy._... - - [Illustration: {uncaptioned}] - -Santa, the jolly gentleman closely identified with fabulous activity -during late December, is busy at this time of year, too. He is reputed -to circle the globe in a single night at year’s end, all the while -busily popping up and down chimneys. - -He is able to do all of this because he planned ahead. And if you want -Santa to visit you in some foreign land, start your planning now, too. -Santa has to plan his trip alone, but you can get the expert help of the -Foreign and Domestic Travel Department of the California State -Automobile Association. - -There is a special tour leaving San Diego December 17, planned so you -visit Mexico to celebrate the Nativity during Posada time. Another -thrilling experience is to have Santa visit you at sea during a -shipboard Christmas party. Sail from San Francisco on December 21 and -enjoy the special hospitality of the _S.S. Lurline_ on Christmas day. Or -on the South America tour leaving San Francisco on November 13, make the -optional return by sea with special entertainment provided on the _S.S. -Del Sud_. For complete holiday travel information mail this coupon: - - Foreign and Domestic Travel Department - California State Automobile Association, 150 Van Ness Avenue, San - Francisco 2 - - Please send me information on - - [ ] Mexico Tour [ ] Hawaii Tour [ ] South America Tour - - Name ________________ Address ________________ - - [Illustration: Around Monterey Bay - _A view of the beach and boardwalk at Santa Cruz, thronged with - bathers and pleasure-seekers. The broad, safe beach and mild climate - have made this a popular fun center for young and old._] - - - - - Transcriber’s Notes - - -—Silently corrected a few typos. - -—Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook - is public-domain in the country of publication. - -—In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by - _underscores_. - - - - - - - -End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Motorland Magazine, September-October, -1955, by Anonymous - -*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MOTORLAND MAGAZINE *** - -***** This file should be named 63005-0.txt or 63005-0.zip ***** -This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: - http://www.gutenberg.org/6/3/0/0/63005/ - -Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed -Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net - - -Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions -will be renamed. - -Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no -one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation -(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without -permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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text-indent:-2em; font-size:80%; } -p.pcap { margin-left:0em; text-indent:0; text-align:center; margin-top:0; } -p.pcapc { margin-left:4.7em; text-indent:0em; text-align:justify; } -span.attr { font-size:80%; font-family:sans-serif; } -span.pn { display:inline-block; width:4.7em; text-align:left; margin-left:0; text-indent:0; } -</style> -</head> -<body> - - -<pre> - -Project Gutenberg's Motorland Magazine, September-October, 1955, by Anonymous - -This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with -almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or -re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included -with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license - - -Title: Motorland Magazine, September-October, 1955 - -Author: Anonymous - -Release Date: August 22, 2020 [EBook #63005] - -Language: English - -Character set encoding: UTF-8 - -*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MOTORLAND MAGAZINE *** - - - - -Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed -Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net - - - - - - -</pre> - -<div id="cover" class="img"> -<img id="coverpage" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Motorland Vol. LXXVI No. 5: September-October, 1955" width="800" height="1066" /> -</div> -<div class="box"> -<h1>MOTORLAND</h1> -<p class="center">AFEA <span class="hst">WFEA</span> -<br /><span class="smaller">INFORMATION ON</span> -<br /><span class="large">MONTEREY PENINSULA</span> -<br />PLACE OF THE ANNUAL MEETING -<br /><span class="smaller">AUGUST 26-29, 1956</span></p> -</div> -<div class="img" id="fig1"> -<img src="images/p01.jpg" alt="" width="598" height="800" /> -<p class="pcap">Rocky headland, “The Pinnacle”, at Point Lobos State -Park, and the gaunt branches of a Monterey Cypress.</p> -</div> -<div class="pb" id="Page_1">1</div> -<p class="center"><b><span class="large">MOTORLAND</span></b> -<br /><span class="smaller">SEPTEMBER-OCTOBER, 1955<span class="hst"> ·</span><span class="hst"> Vol. LXXVI No. 5</span></span></p> -<div class="img"> -<img src="images/p01a.jpg" alt="CALIFORNIA STATE AUTOMOBILE ASSOCIATION (AAA)" width="234" height="157" /> -</div> -<p class="center small"><i>Published bi-monthly by</i> -<br />CALIFORNIA STATE AUTOMOBILE ASSOCIATION</p> -<p class="center"><i>Officers of the California State Automobile Association</i></p> -<table class="center"> -<tr><td class="l"><span class="sc">Edward H. Peterson</span> </td><td class="r">President</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l"><span class="sc">A. E. Strong</span> </td><td class="r">Vice-President</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l"><span class="sc">Fred J. Oehler</span> </td><td class="r">Vice-President</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l"><span class="sc">Irving H. Kahn</span> </td><td class="r">Treasurer</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c"><span class="sc">Edwin S. Moore</span></td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Secretary and General Manager</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c"><hr /></td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c"><i>Board of Directors</i></td></tr> -<tr><td class="l"><span class="sc">Reginald H. Biggs</span> </td><td class="r">Walnut Creek</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l"><span class="sc">H. J. Brunnier</span> </td><td class="r">San Francisco</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l"><span class="sc">S. V. Christierson</span> </td><td class="r">Salinas</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l"><span class="sc">G. A. Filice</span> </td><td class="r">Berkeley</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l"><span class="sc">Dr. Charles B. Griggs</span> </td><td class="r">Oroville</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l"><span class="sc">Irving H. Kahn</span> </td><td class="r">San Francisco</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l"><span class="sc">Joseph R. Knowland</span> </td><td class="r">Oakland</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l"><span class="sc">J. J. Krohn</span> </td><td class="r">Arcata</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l"><span class="sc">Harold J. McCurry</span> </td><td class="r">Sacramento</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l"><span class="sc">Joseph F. McDonald</span> </td><td class="r">Reno, Nevada</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l"><span class="sc">Fred J. Oehler</span> </td><td class="r">San Jose</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l"><span class="sc">J. E. O’Neill</span> </td><td class="r">Fresno</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l"><span class="sc">Obert Pedersen</span> </td><td class="r">Santa Rosa</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l"><span class="sc">Edward H. Peterson</span> </td><td class="r">San Francisco</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l"><span class="sc">Clyde W. Rann</span> </td><td class="r">Redding</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l"><span class="sc">J. B. Rice</span> </td><td class="r">San Rafael</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l"><span class="sc">Prentiss A. Rowe</span> </td><td class="r">San Francisco</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l"><span class="sc">Porter Sesnon</span> </td><td class="r">San Mateo</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l"><span class="sc">A. E. Strong</span> </td><td class="r">Santa Cruz</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l"><span class="sc">Norman S. West</span> </td><td class="r">Modesto</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="s"><i>Honorary Life Director</i></td></tr> -<tr><td class="l"><span class="sc">E. B. Degolia</span> </td><td class="r">San Francisco</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c"><i>Inter-Insurance Bureau</i></td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c"><i>Executive Committee</i></td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c"><span class="sc">Reginald H. Biggs</span></td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c"><span class="sc">H. J. Brunnier</span></td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c"><span class="sc">Irving H. Kahn</span></td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c"><span class="sc">Fred J. Oehler</span></td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c"><span class="sc">J. E. O’Neill</span></td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c"><span class="sc">Edward H. Peterson</span></td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c"><span class="sc">Porter Sesnon</span></td></tr> -<tr><td class="l"><span class="sc">W. Foster Stewart</span> </td><td class="r">Manager and Attorney-in-Fact</td></tr> -</table> -<blockquote> -<p>Entered as second class matter at the Post Office -at San Francisco, California, under the act of March -3, 1879. Trade Mark registered October 25, 1911. -Subscription, $2.00 per year; single copy, 50 cents. -Office of Publication and Editorial Office: 150 Van -Ness Avenue, San Francisco 2, California. Editor -and Manager, Wm. F. Kilcline; Associate Editors, -Fred Hamann, John G. Holmgren, Samuel B. Wylie; -Editorial Consultant, Arthur M. Johnson; Art Direction, -Paul Q. Forster. Copyright 1955 by the California -State Automobile Association.</p> -</blockquote> -<h2 id="c1"><span class="small">Two Important Projects</span></h2> -<p>The establishment of roadside rests and the construction -of a bypass of the state parks on the Redwood Highway -are two vital and important projects for California. -Bills designed to accomplish these two worthwhile developments -were introduced and passed by both houses of the -Legislature, but they failed to receive executive approval.</p> -<p>In rejecting the bills, the Governor felt that they represented -only a part of an over-all development of a future -state parks program. As the head of this greatest of touring -and motoring states, he fully recognizes the merit of roadside -rests and the Redwood Highway bypass and indicates -that they will receive further consideration during the -budget session of the Legislature in 1956.</p> -<p>The touring business is a billion dollar industry in California. -It has become an integral and even necessary part -of our state’s economy. Whatever money is spent to foster -and develop our tourist trade is an investment that will -inevitably bring rich returns.</p> -<p>If California wishes to maintain its lead in the touring -world, roadside rests are a “must.” All but five of the 48 -states already have roadside rest programs. These carefully-picked, -off-highway spots are places where motorists -may make stops in safety. They also encourage motorists -to keep highways clean by providing free facilities for -eating lunches and disposing of litter.</p> -<p>Building a bypass highway around the redwood groves -in Humboldt County is imperative. If a four-lane highway -were plowed through them, along the path of the present -route, there would be a shameful destruction of these beautiful -and awe-inspiring marvels of the botanic kingdom. -Some groves would be virtually eliminated. However, a -bypass development to preserve these great trees can’t be -put off much longer. The present route carries an increasing -burden of traffic and the need for an improved highway -grows more urgent each day.</p> -<p>Undoubtedly these two important measures will receive -favorable action during the Legislature’s budget session -next year. In fact, California can’t afford to let them be -delayed too long.</p> -<div class="pb" id="Page_2">2</div> -<h2 id="c2"><span class="small"><i><span class="large">AROUND MONTEREY BAY</span></i></span> -<br /><i><span class="smaller">Land of California’s Beginnings Offers Many a Charm for the Visitor</span></i></h2> -<p>In few places do History and Tradition, Romance and -the Wonders of Nature combine to offer so much to the -visitor as in the region surrounding the Bay of Monterey.</p> -<p>In the north is Santa Cruz, with its famous beach and -lovely gardens, and backed by the Santa Cruz Mountains -with their redwoods. Southward are historic old Monterey -and Carmel, the art colony which has now become a -Mecca for sight-seers and vacationists. South, again, extends -a road between the mountains and the sea which is -one of California’s scenic marvels.</p> -<p>And as if all this were not enough, Nature has endowed -the inland valleys with such soil and climate that agriculture -flourishes on a tremendous scale.</p> -<div class="img"> -<img src="images/p02.jpg" alt="{uncaptioned}" width="500" height="168" /> -</div> -<p>Santa Cruz grew from the mission of the same name, -founded in 1791, and the settlement of Branciforte, established -six years later. It might have been any other community -in pastoral California until the Gold Rush, but -then the newcomers demanded vegetables, which the Santa -Cruz area was able to supply, and lumber, for which the -redwood forests in the nearby mountains were raided.</p> -<div class="pb" id="Page_3">3</div> -<div class="img" id="fig2"> -<img src="images/p02a.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="680" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>Surf and sea-fowl, cliffs and rocky islets, characterize Monterey and Santa Cruz areas. View above is from Lighthouse Point, Santa Cruz.</i></p> -</div> -<div class="pb" id="Page_4">4</div> -<p>Even in the seventies, however, this was known as a -resort region, where the nabobs from San Francisco came -to take their ease and recuperate from the strains of their -latest coups of high finance. It came into full stature with -the building of its first beach casino in 1906. Though this -promptly burned, it was as promptly replaced with the -ornate structure the public sees today. This has been -further improved and renovated in recent times, as has -also the Coconut Grove dancing pavilion which is an -outstanding beach feature. Beside the mile-long beach of -white sand with its beautifully clear water there is an -indoor salt-water plunge and a boardwalk which runs eastward -to the San Lorenzo River. These, with a varied -assortment of rides and concessions, drew 2,000,000 visitors -last year and bid fair to excel that figure by a fifth -this season.</p> -<p>The city has other claims to fame in that it is the scene -of the annual Miss California contest and the terminus of -a yearly yacht race from San Francisco.</p> -<p>In the Santa Cruz Art League Galleries is a life-size -waxwork, “The Last Supper,” modeled on DaVinci’s -famous painting of the same name. In four years it has -been visited by more than 260,000 persons.</p> -<p class="center"><i><b>Blue and Peaceful or Bleak and Storming, the Ocean Wields a Never-Ending Influence Over the Region</b></i></p> -<div class="img" id="fig3"> -<img src="images/p03.jpg" alt="" width="552" height="800" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>Cormorants find Lone Sentinel Rock, off -Seabright Beach, a favored resting place.</i></p> -</div> -<div class="img" id="fig4"> -<img src="images/p03a.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="486" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>Pleasure craft by scores find anchorage beside Santa Cruz’ Municipal Wharf, where also fishing vessels moor and many an angler drops a line.</i></p> -</div> -<p>In the nearby mountains are the permanent convention -sites of several religious groups, one of which includes -<span class="pb" id="Page_5">5</span> -a building capable of seating 5,000 persons. These and -other conventions rank virtually as an industry in Santa -Cruz’ economy. But Santa Cruz is more than a resort or -convention city. It is a city of flowers. The Spanish Garden -at its city hall is beautiful. The drive north along the -ocean front takes the visitor past bluffs which are ablaze -with colorful succulents and flowers. In season, whole hillsides -south of the city flame with yellow bush lupine. -Some of these plants have trunks as thick through as a -man’s leg.</p> -<p class="center"><i>PACIFIC OCEAN</i></p> -<div class="img" id="fig5"> -<img src="images/p03c.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="549" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>Pelicans may be seen on every wharf and pier, almost every rock, -from Santa Cruz to Carmel. Wise looking old birds, aren’t they?</i></p> -</div> -<p>Bulbs, cut flowers and nursery stock are the biggest -crop in the Santa Cruz area, though a vast quantity of -strawberries is raised and the loganberry was developed -in a Santa Cruz garden by James H. Logan, banker, -attorney and superior judge, who crossed the wild blackberry -with the Lawton berry to produce the delectable -result. Brussels sprouts are another outstanding crop.</p> -<p>Santa Cruz also raises mushrooms, in old caves once -used for aging wine and in newer concrete structures.</p> -<p>The largest bulb farms are at Capitola, shipping 3,500,000 -tulip, lily, dahlia and begonia bulbs a year. As each -of these in turn comes into bloom these farms offer a sight -to be seen nowhere else. Championing the region’s claim -to being the “Begonia Capital of the United States,” a -festival is held each year on the waters of Soquel Creek, -with thousands of blooms scattered over the water and -colorful floating displays.</p> -<div class="img" id="fig6"> -<img src="images/p03d.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="566" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>For more than 2,000,000 visitors a year, Santa Cruz means FUN—fun in the indigo-dark water, fun on the fine white beach, fun ashore.</i></p> -</div> -<p>San Lorenzo Canyon, which begins a bare stone’s throw -from Santa Cruz, is full of summer homes and resorts, -<span class="pb" id="Page_6">6</span> -including one famous inn where a mountain stream runs -through the dining room.</p> -<div class="img" id="fig7"> -<img src="images/p04.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="437" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>This ancient span, moved from original site to DeLaveaga Park, -in Santa Cruz, recalls times when horsepower was really horses.</i></p> -</div> -<div class="img" id="fig8"> -<img src="images/p04a.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="408" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>Color beyond description decks bulb farms near Capitola each -autumn, well justifies the name “Begonia Capital of the World.”</i></p> -</div> -<p>Up this canyon, too, is the Henry Cowell Redwoods -State Park, better known as “The Santa Cruz Big Trees.” -The park comprises nearly 20,000 acres, but the “Big -Trees” are a compact group, which may be seen in an -easy walk of about a mile.</p> -<p>Farther north is Big Basin Redwoods Park, the oldest -and largest of the State Park system, with many virgin -growth trees and an interesting “Nature Lodge” which -shows, besides flora and fauna of the park, the methods -used in early day redwood lumbering.</p> -<div class="img" id="fig9"> -<img src="images/p04d.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="491" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>Wind and sea carve endlessly at the cliffs west of Santa Cruz. This graceful arch in Natural Bridges State Park is one of the results.</i></p> -</div> -<p>In the city of Santa Cruz itself is Natural Bridges State -Park, a notable example of erosion, and along the coast -in Santa Cruz County are six other state parks—Seacliff -Beach, where a World War I concrete freighter is used -for a fishing pier and a fine road parallels the cliffs; -Sunset Beach, with a high lookout and picnic ground -under twisted cypresses; Capitola Beach, where there is a -<span class="pb" id="Page_7">7</span> -special pool for small fry; New Brighton Beach, Manresa -Beach and Zmudowski Beach. At some of these campsites -are available.</p> -<p>All through the mountains are interesting roads: the -Empire Grade route from Santa Cruz through Bonnie -Doon to Boulder Creek is particularly pointed out to -visitors. In spring, so are the mountain apple orchards -along the Valencia Creek route from Santa Cruz to -Watsonville.</p> -<div class="img" id="fig10"> -<img src="images/p04e.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="838" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>MONTEREY BAY -<br /><span class="smaller">Some principal points of interest and routes around the bay</span></i></p> -</div> -<dl class="undent pcap"><dt>REDWOODS</dt> -<dt>HENRY COWELL</dt> -<dt>REDWOODS</dt> -<dt>•SANTA CRUZ</dt> -<dt>Lorenzo River</dt> -<dt>Branciforte CO</dt> -<dt>CAPITOLA</dt> -<dt>•WATSONVILLE</dt> -<dt>Pajaro River</dt> -<dt>MOSS LANDING</dt> -<dt>CASTROVILLE</dt> -<dt>17 Mile Drive</dt> -<dt>PACIFIC GROVE</dt> -<dt>MONTEREY</dt> -<dt><i>MONTEREY PENINSULA</i></dt> -<dt>PEBBLE BEACH</dt> -<dt>CARMEL</dt> -<dt>POINT LOBOS</dt> -<dt>Carmel River</dt> -<dt>TO BIG SUR</dt> -<dt>Salinas River</dt> -<dt>FORD ORD MILITARY RESERVATION</dt> -<dt>•SALINAS</dt> -<dt>TO KING</dt> -<dt>• <i>Offices of the California State Automobile Association</i></dt></dl> -<p>Highly scenic routes from the north to the Monterey -Bay region are, first, the Skyline Drive from San Francisco, -then down to the San Lorenzo Valley and on -through its fine redwoods to Santa Cruz, and, second, the -beautiful highway which follows the shoreline from San -Francisco south. The main route over the mountains from -Los Gatos to Santa Cruz is spectacular. The highway from -Santa Cruz to Watsonville is a concrete ribbon between -lovely rolling hills gay with color. On the Hecker Pass -route from the Santa Clara Valley to Watsonville you can -<span class="pb" id="Page_8">8</span> -see redwoods, the whole coast of Monterey Bay, and four -charming little lakes. The Chittenden Pass route, used by -railroad and highway, traverses a gorge of real scenic -interest.</p> -<div class="img" id="fig11"> -<img src="images/p05.jpg" alt="" width="526" height="599" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>Big Basin Redwoods State Park, oldest and most popular of the -state system, acts as host to more than 500,000 visitors a year.</i></p> -</div> -<div class="img" id="fig12"> -<img src="images/p05a.jpg" alt="" width="451" height="599" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>Main avenue of approach to Santa Cruz is this fine highway from -Los Gatos. Curving gently through the Santa Cruz Mountains, it -brings to view a wealth of lovely scenes. Under construction is -a by-pass which will take its traffic off Los Gatos’ streets.</i></p> -</div> -<p>Santa Cruz has its face to the future. Monterey, at the -other end of Monterey Bay, never forgets that it was the -place where history began for this region.</p> -<p>It was in what is now the city of Monterey that Portola, -first governor of California, and Father Junipero Serra -landed in 1770. Under an oak tree near the shore the good -father held a service and founded a mission. A stone cross -today marks the spot, though the mission was soon removed -to its present site at the mouth of the Carmel Valley -to be away from the presidio, or military post, which -Portola set up. At this mission Father Serra made his -headquarters and from it he supervised the building of -the mission chain.</p> -<p>Under Spanish rule, presidio and mission were almost -all the settlement but after Mexico had gained independence, -adobe homes grew up in the hills, stores were built -along the crooked streets and the Mexican government, -less averse to foreign trade than the Spaniards, built a -customs house. This still stands and, restored, houses a -museum. It is one of five State Historical Monuments in -the region, the others being the Serra landing place -already mentioned: the Casa del Oro, which housed a -store: the house where Robert Louis Stevenson lived for -a few months late in 1879, and California’s First Theater, -originally a sailors’ boarding house.</p> -<p>There are also standing more than a score of other -structures erected in this Mexican era, including one built -in 1835 by Thomas Oliver Larkin, first United States -consul at Monterey, and Colton Hall, meeting place of the -Constitutional Convention in 1849. This, like almost all -the other remaining buildings, has been restored.</p> -<p>Monterey has laid out a scenic route leading directly -to or near all of these historic structures, and also including -several historic sites. Visitors may traverse this route -merely by following an orange line painted on the street -paving. At many points on it, special parking is reserved -for them.</p> -<p>Whichever way you turn, there is something to be seen -in this region. Just across from the Customs House is -Fisherman’s Wharf, where the restaurants would feel -unhappy if they had to serve you today fish that was -caught as long ago as yesterday. Alongside it, the fishing -fleet, decked in all the colors of the rainbow, rides at -anchor. Farther along the beautiful ocean drive is the -Hopkins Marine Institute, operated by Stanford University, -and beyond that is Pacific Grove, with its beautiful -marine park and beach at Lover’s Point and its famous -Butterfly Trees.</p> -<p>Each October, thousands of Monarch butterflies migrate -from Canada and Alaska to cluster on these pine trees in -a small reservation known as Butterfly Park.</p> -<p>How the butterflies know which trees are “home” no -one can explain, for they are hatched and pass through -their chrysalis stage in the North. Indeed, in recent years -<span class="pb" id="Page_9">9</span> -it appears they have become confused: the number now -visiting the original trees is greatly reduced and many of -them are frequenting other pines several blocks away.</p> -<div class="img" id="fig13"> -<img src="images/p05c.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="435" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>Home ports for several hundred fishing vessels are Monterey, Santa Cruz and Moss Landing. This is part of the fleet which bases at Monterey.</i></p> -</div> -<p class="center"><b><i><span class="large">Santa Cruz Means Redwoods and Mountains, Fertile Fields and Fragrant Orchards, Long White Beaches, Fishing, Festivals and Fun for All</span></i></b></p> -<div class="img" id="fig14"> -<img src="images/p05e.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="573" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>Party boats on which the land-lubber may embark for a day of -deep-sea fishing are operated from Monterey and Santa Cruz.</i></p> -</div> -<p>Also not to be overlooked in Pacific Grove is an excellent -Museum of Natural History. Its collection of -Monterey County birds and its displays of marine life -found in nearby waters are exceptionally complete. In -Butterfly Park is another museum, though it is called a -gallery, in which are displayed hundreds upon hundreds -of butterflies, moths and other insects.</p> -<p>If, like most visitors to Monterey, you continue to -follow the bay shore, where miles of wildflowers adorn the -bluffs, you will come eventually to the Seventeen Mile -Drive, which runs through a tremendous private preserve. -On this, for most of the way, you travel with the fantastically -blue ocean on one hand and truly marvelous dark -green forest on the other. At times your route runs on -low bluffs near the ocean, and again you are on rocky -cliffs high above. Back among the trees, near the Pebble -Beach area where the sports car races are held every year, -you frequently see homes that are almost palaces.</p> -<p>On your way you pass Cypress Point, which is one of -only two places in the world where the Monterey cypress -is indigenous, and Midway Point, a rugged rocky spine -jutting into the sea and bearing a single lone and twisted -cypress, probably the most photographed tree in the -world. Not far away is the Ghost Tree, another cypress -whose whitened trunk and limbs seem like the bones and -shroud of a fleeing wraith. Then your route leads past -Del Monte Lodge, with its array of fashionable shops, and -on through Pebble Beach, and thence to Carmel.</p> -<p>Carmel is unique, a “village” conceived by artists and -now perhaps the home of more well known writers, -<span class="pb" id="Page_10">10</span> -painters and other workers in the arts than any other -community in the state. Carmel has no street numbers, -no mail delivery, and you have to get permission from -the town council before you may even cut down a tree -on your own property.</p> -<div class="img" id="fig15"> -<img src="images/p06.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="538" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>In spring the apple blossoms whiten thousands of trees and spread their delicate fragrance over many a mile in the Watsonville area.</i></p> -</div> -<p>In Carmel the trucks in which garbage is collected are -adorned with baskets of flowers. The street signs bear -carved and painted decorations—a pine cone, a squirrel, -a ship under full sail, or something else associated with the -region. The shops are small but legion, many of them -hidden away in courts and arcades which the non-resident -is likely to pass unwittingly. Their stocks are fabulous—and -not all of it expensive, either.</p> -<p>In between are quaint places to lodge, to lunch, to dine -or take tea after the English manner. Of course there -are conventional establishments, too, but somehow everything -in Carmel seems to have just a little different flavor.</p> -<p>The town stands on an oak-and-pine-clad slope with a -magnificent beach fronting on Carmel Bay at its foot. -Along the shore is a lovely drive, on which are homes -beyond the dreams of most folk. Back among the trees -are others. The comfortable domiciles built by the original -artist colony still exist, but they are a minority; -Carmel has become a place to which the wealthy, as well -as the well-to-do and the merely comfortable, come to -spend their later years.</p> -<p>Carmel has an outdoor theater, a Bach Festival and an -art gallery maintained by an artists’ co-operative. Its -Church of the Wayfarer has a garden containing, it is -said, every tree, shrub, herb and flower mentioned in the -Bible. Other gardens, formal and informal, are everywhere. -Once a year a number of the finest are thrown -open for public inspection.</p> -<p>And then there is the Mission San Carlos de Borromeo, -where Father Serra held sway. The present church is not -the one he knew; it was not begun until nine years after -his death in 1784. But under its sanctuary floor he, -Padre Crespi, Padre Lasuen and another lie buried. The -structure has many features distinctive from the usual -mission architecture, among them its massive south tower, -with outside staircase and Saracenic dome, and a star -window. It is of sandstone and has a vaulted roof as it -<span class="pb" id="Page_11">11</span> -did originally but in restoration the roof angle was made -less sharp. Some of the original decoration may be seen in -a small chapel to the left of the entrance. In a side chapel -is a magnificent sarcophagus in marble and bronze, the -work of Jo Mora.</p> -<p>A few miles south of the old mission is one of Nature’s -wonderlands—Point Lobos Reserve State Park. Here -stands the second native grove of Monterey Cypress, and -here the ocean batters ceaselessly against spectacular rocky -points which rise precipitously to make fjord-like coves. -In these deep, sharp, inlets the blue water boils into -furious bursts of white foam and spray, forming always-changing -pictures of incomparable beauty.</p> -<p class="center"><b><i>Lush Valleys of the Salinas and Pajaro Rivers Rich in Pastoral Charm, Even Richer in Their Vast Yields of Lettuce, Apples, Berries, Livestock</i></b></p> -<div class="img" id="fig16"> -<img src="images/p06a.jpg" alt="" width="265" height="799" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>Lettuce, famed “green gold” of the Salinas region, stretches in -row after row for miles along the highways through the valley.</i></p> -</div> -<div class="img" id="fig17"> -<img src="images/p06c.jpg" alt="" width="596" height="476" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>Beef cattle fatten on green hills and pasture lands in southern -Monterey County, famed stock-raising area since mission times.</i></p> -</div> -<p>Offshore is a group of rocks haunted by both California -and Steller sea lions, an island much used by seafowl and -naturally named “Bird Island,” and a roiling, turbulent -channel appropriately called “The Devil’s Cauldron” -which is a favorite spot of the sea otter. These strange -creatures were long thought to have been hunted to extinction -but about 30 of them appeared in 1938 off Bixby -Creek, 12 miles south of Point Lobos, and there are now -believed to be almost 100 in the group. Some ardent -pursuers of wild life are already asserting that the otter -have now increased to such an extent that the “crop” -should be “harvested”—a policy which could easily result -in extinguishing the species.</p> -<p>A mile below Point Lobos is Carmel Highlands, an -area of rich estates and fine homes, some of them set on -the very edge of the continent. The James house, in this -area, has been called the most beautiful residence in the -United States. And the gardens hereabout are a thing to -marvel at.</p> -<p>Beyond “the Highlands” runs a real road of romance, a -motor highway carved from the seaward face of the -Santa Lucia mountains. Most of the distance to its junction -<span class="pb" id="Page_12">12</span> -with other routes at San Luis Obispo there is nothing -between this road and the blue, blue sea but the -cliffs. Above it, on the east, tower the mountains. It is no -road for the man in a hurry, but for one who loves Nature -it is glorious.</p> -<div class="img" id="fig18"> -<img src="images/p07.jpg" alt="" width="799" height="610" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>South from Carmel, in the trees or on the cliffs—sometimes almost built out over the ocean—are some of the most beautiful homes in America.</i></p> -</div> -<p>This is wildflower country. Within a 20-mile stretch -you may see, in season, wild roses, primroses, California -poppies, yellow lupine, wild mustard spreading over -fields like a froth of foamy yellow, great bushes of blue -lupine marching up rocky hillsides, almost cliffs: Queen -Anne’s lace, succulents of many colors, and sometimes -succulents which are not in bloom but whose foliage has -turned a rich, dark red; Indian paint brush—all these -abundant, in masses easy to see and recognize as you roll -along. A naturalist could find many more.</p> -<p>The Spaniards would have come by this route if they -could, but the mountains were too rugged, there was no -path between sea and cliffs, and so they were forced -inland. That this road was ever constructed was largely -due to the efforts of Dr. John Roberts of Monterey, who -used to ride horseback on calls to remote and isolated -ranches up the canyons. It was almost 20 years in building.</p> -<p>South along this road from Point Lobos, beyond Garrapata -Creek and Rocky Creek and Bixby Creek, past the -light house at Point Sur and inland a few miles, is Pfeiffer-Big -Sur State Park, a redwood park which is the entrance -to 250,000 acres of wilderness area in the adjacent Los -Padres National Forest. These redwoods are almost the -most southerly of all: the actual southernmost ones are -on Mill Creek, some 25 miles farther along the road.</p> -<p>And so to Watsonville. Watsonville exists because in -1852 one John H. Watson decided that the location was -suitable for a town and, with another man, forthwith -laid out one. Watsonville is strictly business. Even before -Watson’s time, the Amestis, Castros, Vallejos and other -Spanish pioneer families were busily raising grain and -potatoes here. California’s great lettuce industry got its -start in the Watsonville region and today it is a busy -center for the raising and processing of lettuce, berries, -beans, brussels sprouts, and many, many apples.</p> -<div class="pb" id="Page_13">13</div> -<p>The traveler passing through Watsonville sees only a -rather busy main street, plaza and business section, but -only a little way to one side is an area where quick-freezing -plants, ice plants, warehouses and lettuce-chilling -works cover block after block, with switch engines busily -shifting empty cars to be loaded and loaded cars to be -made into trains and headed east.</p> -<p>Some eight miles south of Watsonville is Moss Landing, -a port for vessels of moderate draft, from which the -grain crops of the region once were shipped. Now it is -the home of a picturesque fishing fleet and the scene of -one of the largest steam-electric plants in the West. This -giant, which the public may visit by obtaining a permit, -produces 771,000 horsepower. Its eight boilers are -each as high as a ten-story building and, the better to -withstand any possible earthquake, are suspended in steel -towers more massive than many bridge piers. Operators -in the control room use television to watch the leaping -flames inside the boilers and to supervise change-overs -from natural gas to fuel oil when required. Steam pressure -is an incredible—except to engineers—1,405 pounds per -square inch in one section of the plant and 1,510 pounds -in another.</p> -<p class="center"><b><i>Scenes and Structures on Unique “Path of History” in Monterey Bring Memories of the Days When California Was Young</i></b></p> -<div class="img" id="fig19"> -<img src="images/p07a.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="468" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>The first building in California in which a stage performance -was given for an admission fee. Pacific and Scott Sts., Monterey.</i></p> -</div> -<div class="img" id="fig20"> -<img src="images/p07d.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="466" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>The Casa Amesti, on Monterey’s Path of History. Built early in -Mexican era by Jose Amesti as a wedding gift to his daughter.</i></p> -</div> -<div class="img" id="fig21"> -<img src="images/p07e.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="438" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>The old Customs House at Monterey. Here Commodore -John Drake Sloat, on July 7, 1846, raised the American -flag and claimed for the United States the entire West, all -of which was then known under the name of California.</i></p> -</div> -<p>Between here and Monterey you may drive for miles -between fields laid out in neat rows of thistly artichoke -<span class="pb" id="Page_14">14</span> -plants. Castroville calls itself “The Artichoke Center of -the World,” and with reason, for the annual production -from this area is more than 1,300,000 boxes.</p> -<p class="center"><b><i>Natural Wonders and the Works of Man Combine to Create a Region of Tremendous Beauty and Wide Appeal to Students, Vacationers, and the Motorist Seeking Something New</i></b></p> -<div class="img" id="fig22"> -<img src="images/p08.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="431" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>Wildflowers in vast profusion and a galaxy of colors line the -cliffs along the bayshore at picturesque old Pacific Grove.</i></p> -</div> -<div class="img" id="fig23"> -<img src="images/p08a.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="417" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>High rocky spines, spare gnarled trees, an ever-pounding surf -and blue water are typical of shoreline at Point Lobos State Park.</i></p> -</div> -<div class="img" id="fig24"> -<img src="images/p08b.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="498" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>This is Pebble Beach, asserted by many to be the finest of all -golf courses. Finals of the Bing Crosby Open are played here.</i></p> -</div> -<p>It is inland, however, in the great valley of the Salinas, -that agriculture really hits its stride and while production -in Watsonville’s Pajaro Valley is tremendous, that which -centers in the Salinas area is even greater.</p> -<p>In the beginning Salinas was a center for livestock -raising. Then overtones of agriculture were added as -potatoes began to be raised thereabout. Later, sugar -beets came in and the largest beet sugar refinery in the -United States was built a few miles west of the city. Today, -lettuce is the big item—two to three crops a year, worth -more than $40,000,000.</p> -<p>Production on most of the larger ranches is on virtually -an assembly line basis. Long machines, drawn by tractors, -span 18 rows of the ripe lettuce. On a platform ride -the packers, usually eight. Ahead of the machine walk -cutters, one for each row, who cut the crisp green heads. -Behind the machines are other workers who place the -heads on a table before the packers. These packers place -the heads in cartons which pass on to a worker who -closes them, and another who staples the closure tight. -The whole work proceeds so rapidly that a special worker -is required merely to unfold cartons.</p> -<p>Trucks, each of which holds exactly half a carload, -follow the picking machine and as the pallets on each -truck are piled to the proper height with cartons of lettuce, -that truck departs for a cooling plant where, under -intense vacuum, the lettuce is cooled from the temperature -of the hot field to a point just above freezing in a -matter of only 18 to 20 minutes. Then it goes into -pre-iced refrigerator cars, with the cartons still on the -original pallets, and presently is on its way to market.</p> -<p>The old methods, by which lettuce was hauled to packing -sheds for trimming, packing and icing, are now all -but superseded and firms with tremendous investments in -ice plants are wondering what to do with them, for when -it was necessary to ice each crate of lettuce Salinas produced -more ice than New York City.</p> -<p>Besides the lettuce which has given it the name “Salad -Bowl of the World,” the Salinas Valley also produces -more than $6,000,000 worth of dry beans, $12,000,000 -worth of carrots, $5,500,000 worth of celery and quantities -<span class="pb" id="Page_15">15</span> -of truck crops every year. The sugar beet crop runs to -almost $7,000,000 a year.</p> -<p>In spite of its agricultural importance, however, Salinas -still thinks of itself in terms of the old stock-raising days. -The annual Salinas California Rodeo was started in 1911 -to perpetuate the sports and traditions of the Old West. -Membership on the 50-man board which controls this four-day -event is a coveted honor. In this fast, dramatic, colorful -spectacle, competition is of world championship caliber, -prizes amount to approximately $50,000 and every -effort is made to see that the stock is capable of bringing -out the best in each competitor. “Salinas,” said one rodeo -rider, “is where they separate the men from the boys.”</p> -<p>Yet, while agriculture and stock raising overshadow -them, this region, too, has its recreation features. Paraiso -Hot Springs and Tassajara Hot Springs are well known -resorts. The padres and, before them, the Indians, made -much use of the Paraiso Springs.</p> -<div class="img" id="fig25"> -<img src="images/p08d.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="638" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>Mission San Carlos de Borromeo, at Carmel, is often called the most beautiful of all the missions. Its Saracenic tower is distinctive.</i></p> -</div> -<p>Like all the other sections traversed by the route of the -padres, the Salinas Valley had its missions—Mission de -Nuestra Senora de la Soledad, near the town of Soledad, -and Mission San Antonio de Padua, near Jolon. Both fell -completely into ruins but now are being restored. Only -a beginning has been made at Soledad, but San Antonio -has been largely rebuilt by the Franciscan Fathers and is -in use as a training school for young brothers. It is a -“working” mission—that is, not only a place for worship -but a place where industry is carried on, as it used to be -at the original mission, shoemaking, carpentry, book -binding, the making of adobe brick and tile for the -<span class="pb" id="Page_16">16</span> -rebuilding of the two wings which are still to be reconstructed, -and all the maintenance work.</p> -<p>In addition to agriculture, food processing, and the -activities dependent upon the sight-seers and pleasure-seekers, -the economy of this region also derives considerable -support from industry. It digs and processes sand for -making glass and for other purposes. Salt and refractories -are manufactured. Lumbering continues on privately-owned -lands in the Santa Cruz mountains, with processing -at Santa Cruz. Near Santa Cruz is one of the largest -cement production plants in America, if not the world.</p> -<p>There are small-scale textile operations and a saddle -leather plant in Santa Cruz, which city is also intensely -proud of its new chewing gum plant. There are several -seed farms producing flower seeds—a pretty sight in -summer—and more producing field crop seed. There are -busy commercial fishing fleets.</p> -<p>Stock-raising, with King City as an important center, -brings the region more than $3,500,000 every year and -dairying almost as much again.</p> -<p>Oil was discovered near San Ardo about eight years ago -and production from this field, which has 480 active wells, -holds steady at 30,000 barrels a day.</p> -<p class="center"><b><i>Mountains Marching to the Sea, Red Tiles Amid the Green of Cypress, White Clouds, Bare Cliffs and Crashing Surf—These Spell Enchantment</i></b></p> -<div class="img" id="fig26"> -<img src="images/p09.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="506" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>Highway One crosses this graceful span, whose arch rises 260 -feet above Bixby Creek, on its way southward beside the ocean.</i></p> -</div> -<div class="img" id="fig27"> -<img src="images/p09a.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="518" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>The Monterey Peninsula’s Seventeen Mile Drive is world-known -for its beauty and variety. Above, a distant glimpse of Monterey.</i></p> -</div> -<p>Also important economically are the many military -installations. The vast Hunter Liggett Military Reservation -has headquarters near Jolon. At Fort Ord, a few miles -north of Monterey, 30,000 to 35,000 military personnel -and about 2,000 civilian employees are on duty. The once-famed -Del Monte Hotel at Monterey has become a postgraduate -school for naval engineering officers, with a -faculty and student body totalling about 2,000. The Presidio -of Monterey, established so long ago by Portola, is -now an army school where some 400 specialists instruct -about 2,000 students in one or another of 26 languages.</p> -<p>Of late years the construction industry has been very -important, for cities all through Monterey and Santa -Cruz Counties are growing so rapidly they are fairly -bursting at the seams. At Salinas, residential development -has extended far north of the Rodeo Grounds, which -once were out in the country. Outside the city limits to the -east is another development, called Alisal, almost equal -in size to the residential area of Salinas itself. And there -are several smaller subdivisions. At Monterey new subdivisions -and communities, some very beautiful, extend -far to the north and many fine old trees are being taken -from properties along the Carmel Road to make room for -more homes. Carmel has overflowed into Carmel Valley. -Santa Cruz is adding residential construction at a rate of -about $3,000,000 annually. Watsonville has grown more -than 20 per cent since 1950.</p> -<p>Busy as it may be, however, it is all a friendly, hospitable -country. Nowhere will you find people too hurried -to bid you welcome and to do what they can to make your -stay enjoyable.</p> -<p><span class="lr">—Written for <span class="sc">Motorland</span> by D. R. Lane.</span></p> -<div class="pb" id="Page_17">17</div> -<div class="img" id="fig28"> -<img src="images/p09b.jpg" alt="" width="595" height="800" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>Along the coastline south of Carmel, the highway is literally -hewn from the cliffs. “Island” above is really Point Sur, made -famous by Robinson Jeffers in his “The Women of Point Sur.”</i></p> -</div> -<div class="pb" id="Page_18">18</div> -<h2 id="c3"><span class="small">Personal Accident Insurance</span></h2> -<p>You may go through life without -being in a traffic accident, or you may -be involved in a traffic mishap and -escape injury. But the statistics are -not in your favor. You may be unfortunate -enough to become a “statistic” -in police or hospital records.</p> -<p>In these days of heavy traffic, even -the most careful driver may be involved -in an accident; and police and -hospital records show that traffic -crashes today result in more serious -personal injuries than ever before.</p> -<p>That is why the California State -Automobile Association has added -extra value to CSAA membership, -and is now issuing a Certificate of -Personal Accident Insurance providing -greater protection to members -than heretofore. As in the past, this -Personal Accident Insurance is included -in your membership without -extra charge. Beginning July 1 last -year, the new certificates were issued -to members as they renewed their -memberships, and to new members as -they were enrolled.</p> -<div class="img" id="fig29"> -<img src="images/p10.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="234" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>Continuous membership of three years or more maintains the maximum -benefits provided by new Personal Accident Insurance.</i></p> -</div> -<p>This new Personal Accident coverage -increases in value over the first -three years of membership on condition -that membership is continuous. -The increased benefits remain in -effect contingent on continued prompt -renewal of membership over the years. -For members with three or more years -of consecutive membership, maximum -coverage became effective for the current -membership year upon issuance -of the new insurance certificate.</p> -<p>The schedule of benefits in this -added feature of continuous CSAA -membership follows:</p> -<p>Payment to your beneficiary for -accidental death involving an automobile -is based on consecutive years -of membership; first year, $500; second -year, $1,000; third year and -thereafter, $1,500.</p> -<p>Direct payments to you for other -specific losses are also increased -under this <i>accumulative</i> coverage.</p> -<p>Hospital benefits—$35 a week for -a maximum of twelve consecutive -weeks—are retained and all indemnities -are subject to the standard provisions -and limitations as specified in -the Personal Accident Certificate.</p> -<p>Your membership must be continuous -to make this new schedule of increased -benefits effective for you; -and your membership must be retained -on a continuous basis to keep -the increased benefits in effect. If -membership is allowed to lapse, the -benefits under the policy revert to the -first year basis if membership is re-instated -at a later date.</p> -<p>This accumulative plan of Personal -Accident Insurance based on continuous -membership was adopted by the -Board of Directors, not only to provide -more adequate protection, but -also to accord recognition to continuous -membership support.</p> -<div class="img" id="fig30"> -<img src="images/p10a.jpg" alt="" width="234" height="300" /> -<p class="pcap">S. V. Christierson -<br /><i>Salinas</i></p> -</div> -<div class="img" id="fig31"> -<img src="images/p10b.jpg" alt="" width="235" height="300" /> -<p class="pcap">A. E. Strong -<br /><i>Santa Cruz</i></p> -</div> -<h3 id="c4">Four CSAA Offices In Two Counties On Monterey Bay</h3> -<p>In the two counties “around Monterey -Bay”—Santa Cruz and Monterey—there -are four offices of the -California State Automobile Association. -They are strategically located -in four main cities at focal points of -the area’s network of highways to -provide best service to the large membership -in the two counties as well as -the continuous flow of visiting members -into this noted vacation and tourist -region. These offices and their district -managers are:</p> -<p><i>Santa Cruz</i>, with a branch office in -<i>Watsonville</i>, C. E. White; <i>Salinas</i>, -J. E. Foust; and <i>Monterey</i>, Melvin R. -Tuttle.</p> -<p>Two members of the Association’s -Board of Directors represent this region. -They are:</p> -<p>A. E. Strong of Santa Cruz, a vice-president -of the CSAA; and S. V. -Christierson of Salinas, civic leader -and business executive.</p> -<h3 id="c5">Southern San Mateo County Office Moved</h3> -<p>The southern San Mateo County -office of the California State Automobile -Association has been moved -to new and larger quarters at 1500 -Laurel Avenue in San Carlos. This -location is in the Laurel Theater -Building, corner of White Oak and -Laurel avenues, one block west of -El Camino Real. The new office provides -more adequate service facilities -for the growing membership in this -district than was available at the former -location in Redwood City.</p> -<div class="pb" id="Page_19">19</div> -<h2 id="c6"><span class="small">New Legislation Affecting Motorists</span></h2> -<blockquote> -<h3 id="c7"><i>IT’S THE LAW -<br />Making Turns Properly On Red Traffic Light</i></h3> -<div class="img"> -<img src="images/p10d.jpg" alt="IT’S THE LAW" width="500" height="241" /> -</div> -<p>Right turns permitted against a red light must always be made after stopping -and under certain conditions. It is timely to review these legal provisions in -view of the new California law, effective September 7, governing the procedure -of making left turns on a red light from a one-way street into another one-way -street.</p> -<p>To make a right turn on a red light, the driver should come to a halt at -the intersection as close as practicable to the right-hand curb. yielding the right -of way to pedestrians and other traffic proceeding as directed by the stop-and-go -signal. As soon as the way is clear, then the right turn may be made.</p> -<p>However, the law permits local authorities to prohibit such right turns on -a red light in central business districts. Also, local officials may prohibit right -turns on a red light outside the downtown area at any intersection under their -jurisdiction if a sign is erected at the corner notifying the motorist to that effect.</p> -<p>On making a left turn against a red light from a one-way street into another -one-way street, the driver should come to a halt at the intersection as close as -practicable to the left-hand curb. When certain there will be no conflict with -foot or vehicle traffic, the driver may proceed to make the turn.</p> -</blockquote> -<p>Important new motor vehicle laws -were passed by the 1955 California -Legislature. Equally important -changes and clarifications were made -in many old laws.</p> -<p>Knowledge of these new regulations -and revisions of the Vehicle Code is -naturally vital to you as a motor vehicle -owner and operator.</p> -<p>Several centuries ago a wise thinker, -Thomas More, wrote:</p> -<p>“<i>All laws are promulgated for this -end: that every man may know his -duty, and therefore the plainest and -most obvious sense of the words is -that which must be put on them.</i>”</p> -<p>That advice is heeded in this article -interpreting for you the new regulations -and code revisions. The interpretations -are actually summaries stated -in everyday, non-legal language to -make for easy reading and quick -understanding of the essential elements.</p> -<p>September 7 is the effective date of -these new laws, except for a few urgency -measures which were put into -effect immediately upon approval by -the Governor.</p> -<p class="tb">The present California highway user -tax rates will remain in effect until -December 31, 1959, thus assuring the -continuation of the state’s accelerated -highway modernization program -adopted in 1953. This new law carried -an urgency clause and became effective -January 22.</p> -<p class="tb">It is now provided in the Vehicle -Code as well as in the Health and -Safety Code that it is unlawful to dispose -of any garbage, refuse or litter -upon any highway or its right of way.</p> -<p class="tb">Driving under the influence of -liquor is a misdemeanor. The penalty -for a first conviction of such a misdemeanor -shall be automatically increased -to that of a second conviction, -if the driver already has been previously -convicted of a felony for driving -while drunk.</p> -<p class="tb">Revocation of the driving privileges -of juvenile offenders is mandatory -upon conviction of certain serious offenses. -Revocation or suspension shall -also be imposed upon recommendation -by the juvenile court judge for -convictions of less serious offenses. -The length of the terms of revocation -or suspension shall be specified.</p> -<p class="tb">Local authorities, as well as the -State Department of Public Works, -may restrict speed to 25 miles per -hour because of snow conditions. -Local authorities may also determine -the maximum speed allowable on any -bridge or structure, or in any tube or -tunnel, constitutes part of a highway.</p> -<p class="tb">The speed limit on highways where -persons are at work shall be a prima -facie limit of 25 miles per hour instead -of a fixed limit of 25 miles per -hour.</p> -<p class="tb">The speed limit for heavy trucks -and combinations is increased from -40 to 45 miles per hour.</p> -<p class="tb">The Vehicle Code provides that the -registered owner of a motor vehicle is -responsible for any parking violation -involving the vehicle. That presumption, -however, does not mean that the -registered owner is further presumed -to have violated any other provision -of the law.</p> -<p class="tb">To pass a motor vehicle going less -than 20 miles an hour on a grade, an -overtaking vehicle must go at least 10 -miles an hour faster. In addition, it -must complete the passing movement -within a quarter-mile distance.</p> -<p class="tb">Heavy trucks shall use only the lane -to the immediate left of the right-hand -lane when passing another vehicle on -freeways and multiple-lane highways. -Where passing on the right is permitted, -trucks may do so.</p> -<p class="tb">A peace officer may remove an illegally -parked motor vehicle to a -garage or other place of safety.</p> -<p class="tb">U-turns are prohibited on the approaches -to or in front of any fire -station.</p> -<p class="tb">School Safety Patrol members may -be stationed at intersections near as -<span class="pb" id="Page_20">20</span> -well as adjacent to a school. The actual -presence of a supervisory school -employee is not necessary at a street -crossing where a patrol is maintained.</p> -<p class="tb">Local authorities are authorized to -close certain streets for use by colleges -as well as high schools in giving -automobile driving instructions.</p> -<p class="tb">School districts, under the Education -Code, are allowed to conduct -driver training classes on Saturdays.</p> -<p class="tb">It is unlawful to refuse to obey the -directions of a fireman, whether a -police officer is present or not, when -he is protecting fire-fighting personnel -and equipment.</p> -<p class="tb">Stops at an arterial stop sign are -to be made at the limit line, if -marked, even though there may be a -crosswalk.</p> -<p class="tb">Emergency vehicles under certain -conditions are permitted to go in a -direction opposed to moving traffic -on a one-way street or roadway.</p> -<p class="tb">Authorities may erect traffic control -devices at the intersection of a highway -and a private road or driveway -if traffic conditions warrant.</p> -<p class="tb">License plates shall be mounted on -a motor vehicle not less than 12 inches -or more than 60 inches from the -ground. They are also not to be covered -with any material which decreases -or impairs their legibility.</p> -<p class="tb">Registration and vehicle license fee -reciprocity is granted to motor vehicles -registered in other states pending -the establishment of a California -Reciprocity Commission. To prevent -needless confusion and disruption in -the interstate movement of vehicles -and trade, this law carried an urgency -clause and became effective April 14.</p> -<p class="tb">The program of quarterly registration -of commercial vehicles is continued -indefinitely.</p> -<p class="tb">Additional summaries of new motor -vehicle laws and revisions of the -Vehicle Code will be published in the -next issue of Motorland.</p> -<h2 id="c8"><span class="small">HISTORICALLY SPEAKING</span></h2> -<blockquote> -<p><i>Questions in endless variety are asked by members about California and -Nevada history. Here are a few selected for their general interest, with answers -from authoritative sources.</i></p> -</blockquote> -<p class="tb"><i>What was the background of Father -Junipero Serra?</i> He was a native of -Majorca, and held the chair of philosophy -at the university there when -he was chosen to Christianize the -Indians. Before coming to California -he spent several years in Mexico, -teaching in the College of San Fernando -and attaining wide influence -among the descendants of the Aztecs -as a spiritual leader.</p> -<p class="tb"><i>How many capitals has California -had?</i> Five—Monterey, San Jose, Vallejo, -Benicia and Sacramento. Vallejo -was capital twice, the first time in -1851-2 and again in 1853.</p> -<p class="tb"><i>For whom is Truckee named?</i> For -one of Fremont’s Indian guides.</p> -<p class="tb"><i>When was the old Bale Mill, near -St. Helena, built?</i> In 1846. However, -the present 40 foot wheel is a replacement -for the original much smaller -one.</p> -<p class="tb"><i>When was the Butterfield stage line -established?</i> In 1858. It ran from St. -Louis to San Francisco, the longest -stage line in the world.</p> -<p class="tb"><i>Did the United States make any -effort to acquire California prior to -the war with Mexico?</i> Yes. The -United States offered to buy this province -from Mexico in 1835.</p> -<p class="tb"><i>Where was California’s first railroad?</i> -Between Sacramento and Folsom. -It was opened on February 22, -1856.</p> -<p class="tb"><i>What was the first American flag -ship to sail into California waters?</i> -The Otter, out of Boston, entered the -Bay of Monterey in 1796.</p> -<p class="tb"><i>Was the hydraulic method of mining -ever used outside the Mother -Lode?</i> Yes. The largest of all hydraulic -workings, the La Grange mine, -is near Weaverville, and the method -has been used in many places outside -of California.</p> -<p class="tb"><i>Who first travelled the route across -Nevada taken later by the Pony Express?</i> -This route is credited to a -party of scouts sent from Salt Lake -City in 1854 by Brigham Young. The -route was followed later by the stages -and is approximately that of the Lincoln -Highway.</p> -<div class="img" id="fig32"> -<img src="images/p11.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="377" /> -<p class="pcap"><b>THE BABY PULLMAN</b>, <i>recently placed on the market in infant supply stores and some -department stores, converts the back seat space of an automobile into a sleep or play -area for infants. It is a padded platform suspended from the top of the front seat by two -rubber-covered hooks and extending over the entire back seat when opened out. Two wings -fold up to make a cozy padded crib, or one wing up leaves space for an adult to sit. This -information was provided by The Herrmanns infant supply house, with stores in San -Francisco, Berkeley and San Jose, where the Baby Pullman with pad retails for $15.93.</i></p> -</div> -<div class="pb" id="Page_21">21</div> -<h2 id="c9"><span class="small">AUTOMOBILE ANECDOTES</span></h2> -<p>The California Division of Highways, -says Assistant District Engineer -H. S. Miles, has often cautioned drivers -about horseplay while operating a -motor vehicle. Recently a report was -received by the Division on an accident -that left no doubt as to which -category it belonged. In response to -the question, “<i>Who in your opinion -was at fault?</i>” the driver wrote:</p> -<p>“<i>The horse. As I was passing a -group of horses on the roadway at a -slow speed, two of them started to -play and one backed up and sat down -on the right front fender, causing a -large dent.</i>”</p> -<p class="tb">In Helena, Mont., a motorist took -a bite out of a ripe plum while driving -his car. Deciding he didn’t like -it, he tossed it out of the car window.</p> -<p>Where do you think it landed? On -the windshield of a Highway Patrolman. -The motorist was fined for -dumping garbage on the highway.</p> -<p class="tb">Montreal police swear this story is -true. They received a telephone complaint -from a man reporting the theft -of his automobile’s steering wheel, -dashboard, and brake, gas and clutch -pedals. Police promised an immediate -investigation.</p> -<p>A few moments later, however, the -phone rang again. The same man said -they needn’t bother. He had got into -the back seat of his car by mistake -and thought it was the front seat.</p> -<p class="tb">In Monroe, Wis., motorists picketed -the city hall after officials decided to -raise the fine for parking violations -to one dollar.</p> -<p>It formerly was 10 cents.</p> -<p class="tb">In Toronto, a motorist hit a hole in -a road and his car careened into a -jewelry store window.</p> -<p>City authorities approved out-of-court -settlements of $2,084 to the -driver and $5,125 to the storekeeper. -The hole was fixed for $7.</p> -<p class="tb">“<i>Did you get his license number?</i>” -Oregon highway patrolmen asked a -motorist after his car was struck by -a hit-and-run driver.</p> -<p>“<i>I sure did</i>,” he replied. “<i>I grabbed -it as he drove away.</i>”</p> -<p>He handed them the license plate.</p> -<h2 id="c10"><span class="small">SHAKESPEARE ON MOTOR TRAFFIC</span></h2> -<p><i>Traffic-strangled motorists who tend to long for the “good old days” might -well face the fact that things were no better then. In witness whereof we give -you this late report on early road conditions by that peerless commentator, -William Shakespeare, late of Stratford-on-Avon, England, as recently recorded -in the New York Times Magazine</i>:</p> -<div class="verse"> -<p class="t0">“The horn, the horn, the lusty horn</p> -<p class="t0">Is not a thing to laugh to scorn.”</p> -<p class="lr">—<i>As You Like It.</i></p> -</div> -<div class="verse"> -<p class="t0">“These high wild hills and rough uneven ways</p> -<p class="t0">Draw out our miles and make them wearisome.”</p> -<p class="lr">—<i>Richard II.</i></p> -</div> -<div class="verse"> -<p class="t0">“Give me that mattock and the wrenching iron.”</p> -<p class="lr">—<i>Romeo and Juliet.</i></p> -</div> -<div class="verse"> -<p class="t0">“Oh, let him pass.”</p> -<p class="lr">—<i>King Lear.</i></p> -</div> -<div class="verse"> -<p class="t0">“A very dangerous flat.”</p> -<p class="lr">—<i>The Merchant of Venice.</i></p> -</div> -<div class="verse"> -<p class="t0">“He must needs go that the devil drives.”</p> -<p class="lr">—<i>All’s Well That Ends Well.</i></p> -</div> -<div class="verse"> -<p class="t0">“What, will the line stretch out to the crack of doom?”</p> -<p class="lr">—<i>Macbeth.</i></p> -</div> -<div class="verse"> -<p class="t0">“Traffic confound thee.”</p> -<p class="lr">—<i>Macbeth.</i></p> -</div> -<div class="verse"> -<p class="t0">“Smile, once more: turn thy wheel.”</p> -<p class="lr">—<i>King Lear.</i></p> -</div> -<div class="verse"> -<p class="t0">“Is this a holiday?”</p> -<p class="lr">—<i>Julius Caesar.</i></p> -</div> -<div class="verse"> -<p class="t0">“I can no further crawl, no further go.”</p> -<p class="lr">—<i>A Midsummer Night’s Dream.</i></p> -</div> -<div class="verse"> -<p class="t0">“I must shift.”</p> -<p class="lr">—<i>The Merry Wives of Windsor.</i></p> -</div> -<div class="verse"> -<p class="t0">“With what strict patience have I sat.”</p> -<p class="lr">—<i>Love’s Labour’s Lost.</i></p> -</div> -<h2 id="c11"><span class="small">Riders of the Andes At the Grand National</span> -<br /><span class="smaller">OCTOBER 28 TO NOVEMBER 6</span></h2> -<div class="img" id="fig33"> -<img src="images/p11a.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="396" /> -<p class="pcap"><i>Herdsman Arnold Leonard of Stockton -Ranch, Morgan Hill, leads Hereford heifers -to the judging ring at Grand National.</i></p> -</div> -<p>The famed “Riders of the Andes,” -elite cavalry troop of the Army of -Chile, will be featured at the Grand -National Livestock Exposition, Horse -Show and Rodeo to be held in the San -Francisco Cow Palace October 28 to -November 6. Termed the world’s most -spectacular group of horsemen, the -32 riders and horses will come to the -Cow Palace as the result of two years -of negotiations and a special decree -of the Chilean Congress.</p> -<p>The National Hereford Show and -Sale and the Pacific Coast Aberdeen-Angus -Association Show and Sale are -part of the livestock exposition, one -of the nation’s “big six” shows.</p> -<p>New classes have been added to the -national full-division horse show.</p> -<p>Top-ranking contestants of the -United States and Canada will ride in -the championship rodeo.</p> -<p>Regular performances will be held -each of the ten evenings, starting at -8 o’clock, with matinees on the Saturdays -and Sundays of October 29 and -30 and November 5 and 6, starting at -2 o’clock. Prices will range from -$1.25 to $3.50.</p> -<p>An added performance this year -will be a children’s matinee Friday, -November 4, with a universal admission -price of 50 cents.</p> -<div class="pb" id="Page_22">22</div> -<h2 id="c12"><span class="small">COMING EVENTS</span></h2> -<div class="img"> -<img src="images/p12.jpg" alt="COMING EVENTS" width="363" height="472" /> -</div> -<p><i>Community Events in northern and -central California and Nevada, scheduled -for September and October, are -listed below. Dates and data are subject -to change. Information on events -may be secured from any office of the -Association.</i></p> -<div class="verse"> -<p class="t0">SEPTEMBER</p> -</div> -<div class="verse"> -<p class="t0">Sept. 1-11: <i>Sacramento</i>, California State Fair.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 2-4: <i>Lakeport</i>, Lake County Fair and Horse Show.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 3-4: <i>Concord</i>, Trail Ride and Show.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 3-5: <i>Weed</i>, Italian Carnival.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 3-5: <i>McArthur</i>, Inter-Mountain Fair, Horse Show and Rodeo.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 3-5: <i>Nevada City</i>, Pelton Wheel Diamond Jubilee.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 3-5: <i>Pebble Beach</i>, Labor Day Mercury Regatta, Stillwater Cove.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 3-5: <i>Mariposa</i>, Mariposa County Fair, Horse Show and Rodeo.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 3-5: <i>Fort Bragg</i>, Paul Bunyan Celebration.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 4-6: <i>Tulelake</i>, Tulelake-Butte Valley Fair.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 4-30: <i>Santa Cruz</i>, Statewide Watercolor Show.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 5: <i>Stockton</i>, Labor Day Parade.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 9: <i>Santa Cruz</i>, Admission Day Celebration.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 10-11: <i>Truckee</i>, Donner Lake Boat Races.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 12-18: <i>San Jose</i>, Santa Clara County Fair.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 14-18: <i>Orland</i>, Glenn County Fair and Rodeo.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 15: <i>Lodi</i>, Merchants Festival.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 15-18: <i>Reno</i>, Nevada, Washoe County Fair and Horse Show.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 15-18: <i>San Francisco</i>, Art Festival, Civic Auditorium.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 16-18: <i>Auburn</i>, District Fair and Horse Show.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 16-18: <i>Kerman</i>, Harvest Festival.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 16-18: <i>Lodi</i>, Grape Festival and National Wine Show.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 18: <i>Walnut Creek</i>, Folk Dance Festival, City Park.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 18: <i>Napa</i>, Junior Horse Show.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 18: <i>Grass Valley</i>, Barbecue and Gymkhana, Fair Grounds.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 18: <i>Santa Rosa</i>, Home Defense Day Parade.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 18-25: <i>Saratoga</i>, “Design at Home” Show, Villa Montalvo.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 22-24: <i>Sanger</i>, Grapebowl Festival.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 22-25: <i>Madera</i>, District Fair.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 22-25: <i>Watsonville</i>, Santa Cruz County Fair and Horse Show.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 22-25: <i>Walnut Creek</i>, Walnut Festival.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 23-25: <i>Boonville</i>, Mendocino County Fair and Apple Show. Horse Show and Rodeo.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 24-25: <i>Sonoma</i>, Valley of the Moon Vintage Festival.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 30-Oct. 2: <i>Hollister</i>, San Benito County Fair, Bolado Park.</p> -<p class="t0">Sept. 30-Oct. 9: <i>Fresno</i>, District Fair.</p> -</div> -<div class="verse"> -<p class="t0">OCTOBER</p> -</div> -<div class="verse"> -<p class="t0">Oct. 1: <i>San Anselmo</i>, Grape Festival, Sunny Hills.</p> -<p class="t0">Oct. 2: <i>Chico</i>, Horse Show.</p> -<p class="t0">Oct. 6-9: <i>Pittsburg</i>, Columbus Day Celebration.</p> -<p class="t0">Oct. 6-9: <i>Turlock</i>, Blue Ribbon Horse Show.</p> -<p class="t0">Oct. 13-16: <i>Hanford</i>, Kings County Fair and Rodeo.</p> -<p class="t0">Oct. 15: <i>Woodland</i>, Kiddie Pet Parade.</p> -<p class="t0">Oct. 15: <i>Fowler</i>, Fowler Fall Festival.</p> -<p class="t0">Oct. 28-30: <i>Fresno</i>, Cotton Folk Dance Festival, Memorial Auditorium.</p> -<p class="t0">Oct. 28-Nov. 6: <i>San Francisco</i>, Grand National Livestock Exposition, Horse Show and Rodeo. Cow Palace.</p> -<p class="t0">Oct. 29-30: <i>San Rafael</i>, Chrysanthemum Festival.</p> -<p class="t0">Oct. 29-Nov. 1: <i>Ross</i>, Chrysanthemum Festival.</p> -<p class="t0">Oct. 30: <i>Fresno</i>, Folk Dance. Memorial Auditorium.</p> -</div> -<h3 id="c13">STATE FAIR -<br /><i>Sacramento, Sept. 1 to 11</i></h3> -<div class="img"> -<img src="images/p12a.jpg" alt="{uncaptioned}" width="600" height="256" /> -</div> -<p>All the best of the Golden State—in -agricultural products, livestock, industries, -arts and crafts and entertainment -features—will be on display -at California’s State Fair, September -1 through 11 at Sacramento. There -will be racing daily except Sundays, -performances of the West’s oldest -horse show in the evenings, and outdoor -evening shows before the grandstand -featuring the music of four outstanding -American composers. Jeanette -MacDonald, Margaret Whiting, -Gorden McRae and Paul Whiteman -will appear in these shows. Other entertainment -features will include a -Gayway with shows and rides, fireworks -displays each night.</p> -<div class="pb" id="Page_23">23</div> -<h3 id="c14">Cities Receive Awards In AAA Pedestrian Protection Contest</h3> -<p>Berkeley has won a First Place -Award in the 16th annual nationwide -Pedestrian Protection Contest conducted -by the American Automobile -Association and sponsored in northern -and central California and Nevada -by the California State Automobile -Association.</p> -<p>Berkeley received the award for its -outstanding reduction in pedestrian -deaths.</p> -<p>A Third Place Award went to San -Leandro for its reduction of pedestrian -fatalities and excellent pedestrian -protection program.</p> -<p>Honorable Mention Awards were -won by Sacramento and Richmond -for the over-all excellence of their -pedestrian protection programs.</p> -<p>Twenty cities were awarded Special -Citations for various individual -phases of their programs. They were:</p> -<p>Oakland, Alameda, Hayward, -Stockton, Modesto, Monterey, Pacific -Grove, Hanford, Tracy, Grass Valley, -Sausalito, Ross, Manteca, Sebastopol, -Fairfield, Red Bluff, Mount Shasta, -Lakeport, Sutter Creek, and Reno, -Nevada.</p> -<p>In addition to the above awards, -37 cities received Commendation Certificates -for no pedestrian deaths during -the year. They were:</p> -<p>Albany, Arcata, Belmont, Benicia, -Burlingame, Carmel, Ceres, Chico, -Concord, Daly City, Dunsmuir, Fairfax, -Fowler, Hillsborough, Livermore, -Lodi, Martinez, Menlo Park, Millbrae, -Mill Valley, Oroville, Piedmont, Pittsburg, -Roseville, Salinas, San Bruno, -Sanger, San Rafael, Santa Clara, -Susanville, Turlock, Ukiah, Vacaville, -Willows, Yreka, and Elko and Sparks, -Nevada.</p> -<p>The cities were judged in their respective -population groups on the -basis of pedestrian safety activities -and fatality and injury records.</p> -<p>The nationwide contest spurs direct -action in cities to insure greater -pedestrian safety. The results are -obvious; fatalities are declining despite -growing motor vehicle registration. -Before the contest began in -1939, as many as 15,500 pedestrians -were killed a year, compared with the -7,900 killed in 1954.</p> -<h2 id="c15"><span class="small"><i>SAFE DRIVING PRACTICES</i></span></h2> -<p>Three-lane highways have a reputation as accident breeders—the middle lane -often being referred to as the no-man’s land of the open road.</p> -<p>When using the middle lane of a three-lane highway for passing or turning -during daylight hours, a sound driving technique is to turn on your <i>headlights</i>.</p> -<p>The lights serve as a warning to oncoming motorists not only that the -middle lane is in use but also, and more important, that your car is approaching -them in the middle lane.</p> -<p>Many motorists are confused by the general appearance of modern automobiles; -and instances have actually occurred where drivers thought the other -car in the middle lane was going in the same direction they were, until it was -too late to avoid an accident.</p> -<p>There is no law requiring drivers to turn on their headlights under these -circumstances, so don’t depend upon other drivers to have their lights on if -they are in the middle lane. If yours are on, you are not only being courteous -to other drivers, but also protecting yourself by alerting them to the fact that -the middle lane is occupied by an approaching car. Also, remember to turn -off your lights as you pull out of the middle lane.</p> -<h3 id="c16"><span class="large"><i>Curves <span class="smallest">AND</span> Crossroads</i></span></h3> -<p>Sign at entrance to a crossroads -town: “Gas killed 3,029 people in this -state last year—2 inhaled it; 27 put a -match to it; 3,000 stepped on it.”</p> -<p class="tb"><i>The difference between a straight-eight -and the V-eight is just a matter -of whether you like your troubles -strung out down the line or all in one -place.</i></p> -<p class="tb">Mrs. Jones (on telephone): “This -time you really got yourself out on -a limb!”</p> -<p>Mr. Jones: “Yes, dear. I drove off -a cliff and was hung up all night in -a tree.”</p> -<p class="tb"><i>Modern automobiles are getting so -free and easy to drive that we need -power steering and power brakes to -keep them under control.</i></p> -<p class="tb">Traffic Officer: “Your honor, I followed -this man and he drove clear -through town with an arm around this -woman.”</p> -<p>Judge: “Something’s wrong. It’s -not logical for a man to drive through -town with his arm around his wife.”</p> -<p class="tb"><i>Parking conditions have improved -in some localities—you only have to -climb over one car to get into your -own.</i></p> -<div class="img" id="fig34"> -<img src="images/p12b.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="307" /> -<p class="pcap">“<i>With all the gadgets the automobile people put in their cars, it’s a wonder they wouldn’t -think of a garbage disposal unit.</i>” -<br /><span class="jr smaller">—Courtesy George Lichty and the Chicago Sun-Times Syndicate.</span></p> -</div> -<div class="pb" id="Page_24">24</div> -<h3 id="c17">Emergency Road Service Contract Station Changes Are Listed for Members</h3> -<p>Recent changes in the list of Emergency Road -Service contract stations serving members of the -California State Automobile Association are reported -below. Latest complete lists are available -at all CSAA offices. Always carry a list in your -car. Please mark these changes on your copy -of current list.</p> -<p><i>Angels Camp</i>, change in station: Wilmshurst -Chevrolet Company; telephone, REdfield 6-2258. -If no answer, call REdfield 6-2224. Succeeding -Godell Motor Company.</p> -<p><i>Centerville</i>, change in station: Central Chevrolet -Company, 199 North Main Street; telephone, -8-8346; night, Sundays and holidays, call 8-8395. -Succeeding Joe Adams.</p> -<p><i>Chester</i>, new appointment: Chester Motors. -State Route 36; telephone, 2654; night, Sundays -and holidays, call 4693.</p> -<p><i>Cottonwood</i>, new appointment: Grigsby Service. -Highway 99 at 4th Street; telephone, Cottonwood -2161. After 10 p.m., call Anderson, EMerson -5-8583.</p> -<p><i>Kerman</i>, change in station: Morgan’s Repair -Shop, 360 South Madera Street; telephone, 6411; -night, Sundays and holidays, call 5548, 5953 or -5103. Succeeding Sims Motor Company.</p> -<p><i>Kings Beach</i>, Lake Tahoe, change in station: -Ray & Mike’s Service, State Route 28; telephone, -LIberty 6-2717. If no answer, call LIberty -6-3392. Succeeding Bailey’s Tahoe Vista Garage, -Tahoe Vista.</p> -<h3 id="c18">If You Are Moving, Send Old Address as Well as New</h3> -<p>If you move, please list your <i>old</i> address, as -well as the new one, in the notice you send to -the California State Automobile Association. -With a membership roster of over 330,000, the -old address is essential for any change. As for -your copy of <i>Motorland</i>, it is not enough just to -tell the Post Office, because they will <i>not forward</i> -second class mail unless you pay extra postage. -Also, a change of address notice given to the -Post Office is kept on file for only a limited time.</p> -<h2 id="c19"><span class="small">Offices of CALIFORNIA STATE AUTOMOBILE ASSOCIATION</span></h2> -<table class="center"> -<tr class="th"><th colspan="2">MAIN OFFICE</th></tr> -<tr><td class="l">SAN FRANCISCO </td><td class="r">150 Van Ness Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone MArket 1-2141</td></tr> -<tr class="th"><th colspan="2">OTHER OFFICES</th></tr> -<tr><td class="l">AUBURN </td><td class="r">750 High St.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone TUrner 5-1506</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">BERKELEY </td><td class="r">1849 University Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone THornwall 3-9700</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">CHICO </td><td class="r">351 East 6th St.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone FIreside 2-0176</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">EUREKA </td><td class="r">408 “A” St.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone HIllside 2-5721</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">FRESNO </td><td class="r">1829 Van Ness Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone 6-9861</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">HANFORD </td><td class="r">316 North Irwin St.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone LUdlow 4-4401</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">HAYWARD </td><td class="r">164 Castro St.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone ELgin 1-3225</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">HOLLISTER </td><td class="r">459 San Benito St.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone 403</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">LODI </td><td class="r">1 South Pleasant Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone 9-1802</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">LOS GATOS </td><td class="r">370 Village Lane</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone ELgato 4-3750</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">MADERA </td><td class="r">316 West Yosemite Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone ORchard 3-3586</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">MARTINEZ </td><td class="r">915 Escobar St.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone 1020</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">MARYSVILLE </td><td class="r">715 Tenth St.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone 2-2137</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">MERCED </td><td class="r">705 West Seventeenth St.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone RAndolph 2-2711</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">MODESTO </td><td class="r">538 McHenry Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone 3-9171</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">MONTEREY </td><td class="r">520 Fremont St.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone 5-3138</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">MOUNTAIN VIEW </td><td class="r">816 Castro St.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone YOrkshire 7-5674</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">NAPA </td><td class="r">1405 Second St.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone 6-2071</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">OAKLAND </td><td class="r">399 Grand Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone TEmplebar 6-1900</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">OROVILLE </td><td class="r">2811 Montgomery St.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone 1515R</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">PALO ALTO </td><td class="r">109 Florence St.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone DAvenport 3-3138</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">PETALUMA </td><td class="r">110 Washington St.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone 2-8288</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">PLACERVILLE </td><td class="r">266 Main St.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone 276</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">RED BLUFF </td><td class="r">608 Main St.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone 191</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">REDDING </td><td class="r">1525 Pine St.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone 292</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">RICHMOND </td><td class="r">4113 Macdonald Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone BEacon 5-4324</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">SACRAMENTO </td><td class="r">2230 Stockton Blvd.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone HUnter 6-2871</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">SALINAS </td><td class="r">201 John St.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone 4828</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">SAN JOSE </td><td class="r">2145 The Alameda</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone CHerry 3-1313</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">SAN MATEO </td><td class="r">101 South Ellsworth Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone DIamond 3-4558</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">SAN RAFAEL </td><td class="r">1114 Fifth Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone GLenwood 4-9194</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">SANTA CRUZ </td><td class="r">1114 Water St.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone GArden 3-2150</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">SANTA ROSA </td><td class="r">526 College Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone 2323</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">SONORA </td><td class="r">298 West Stockton Rd.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone JEfferson 2-4363</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">SO. SAN MATEO COUNTY (SAN CARLOS) </td><td class="r">1500 Laurel Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone LYtell 1-0761</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">STOCKTON </td><td class="r">929 North El Dorado St.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone HOward 4-4817</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">SUSANVILLE </td><td class="r">32 South Lassen St.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone 2373</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">TURLOCK </td><td class="r">163 South Thor St.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone 4-5149</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">UKIAH </td><td class="r">415 South State St.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone HOmestead 2-3861</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">VALLEJO </td><td class="r">2015 Sonoma Blvd.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone 3-1581</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">WALNUT CREEK </td><td class="r">2067 Mt. Diablo Blvd.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone YEllowstone 4-9758</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">WATSONVILLE </td><td class="r">17 West Lake Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone 2-2421</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">WESTLAKE (DALY CITY) </td><td class="r">20 Park Plaza</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone PLaza 3-5576</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">WILLOWS </td><td class="r">258 North Butte St.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone 12</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">WOODLAND </td><td class="r">818 Main St.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone 2-2896</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">YREKA </td><td class="r">Main near Miner St.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone 182</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">YOSEMITE VALLEY </td><td class="r">Yosemite Village</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">(Summer Season Touring Bureau)</td></tr> -<tr class="th"><th colspan="2">NEVADA DIVISION</th></tr> -<tr><td class="l">RENO </td><td class="r">111 West First St.</td></tr> -<tr><td colspan="2" class="c">Telephone 3-5169</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">LAS VEGAS </td><td class="r">204 East Charleston Blvd.</td></tr> -</table> -<h3 id="c20">Offices of AUTOMOBILE CLUB OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA</h3> -<p>Members of the California State Automobile Association, when touring in the thirteen southern -counties of California, receive all services of the Association, including insurance claim -service, from the offices of the Automobile Club of Southern California located in these cities:</p> -<table class="center"> -<tr class="th"><th colspan="2">MAIN OFFICE</th></tr> -<tr><td class="l">LOS ANGELES </td><td class="r">2601 S. Figueroa St.</td></tr> -<tr class="th"><th colspan="2">OTHER OFFICES</th></tr> -<tr><td class="l">ALHAMBRA </td><td class="r">15 S. Chapel Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">ANAHEIM </td><td class="r">132 N. Los Angeles St.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">BAKERSFIELD </td><td class="r">Highway 99 at “M” St.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">BELLFLOWER </td><td class="r">16111 S. Clark Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">BEVERLY HILLS </td><td class="r">8833 Olympic Blvd.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">BISHOP </td><td class="r">510 N. Main St.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">BURBANK </td><td class="r">1720 W. Magnolia Blvd.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">COMPTON </td><td class="r">110 N. Poinsettia Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">COVINA </td><td class="r">208 W. Badillo St.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">CULVER CITY </td><td class="r">11168 Washington Blvd.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">DOWNEY </td><td class="r">12015 S. Paramount Blvd.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">EAST LOS ANGELES </td><td class="r">5350 E. Beverly Blvd.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">EAST SAN DIEGO </td><td class="r">3729 El Cajon Blvd.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">EL CENTRO </td><td class="r">1407 Main St.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">EL MONTE </td><td class="r">601 N. Tyler Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">ESCONDIDO </td><td class="r">499 S. Escondido Blvd.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">FULLERTON </td><td class="r">623 N. Spadra Road</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">GLENDALE </td><td class="r">801 S. Central Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">HIGHLAND PARK </td><td class="r">5101 N. Figueroa St.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">HOLLYWOOD </td><td class="r">6902 Sunset Blvd.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">HUNTINGTON PARK </td><td class="r">2151 Gage Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">INDIO </td><td class="r">44-967 Oasis Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">INGLEWOOD </td><td class="r">1231 Centinela Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">LAGUNA BEACH </td><td class="r">2891 Coast Blvd. South</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">LONG BEACH </td><td class="r">757 Pacific Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">MONROVIA-ARCADIA </td><td class="r">333 E. Foothill Blvd., Arcadia</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">NORTH HOLLYWOOD </td><td class="r">11523 Burbank Blvd.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">OCEANSIDE </td><td class="r">302 S. Freeman St.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">ONTARIO </td><td class="r">525 West “A” St.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">OXNARD </td><td class="r">134 North “A” St.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">PALM SPRINGS </td><td class="r">128 S. Indian Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">PASADENA </td><td class="r">130 N. Hill Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">PASO ROBLES </td><td class="r">1113 Spring St.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">POMONA </td><td class="r">502 W. Holt Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">PORTERVILLE </td><td class="r">915 N. Main St.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">REDLANDS </td><td class="r">430 E. State St.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">REDONDO BEACH </td><td class="r">303 Garnet St.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">RIVERSIDE </td><td class="r">6927 Magnolia Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">SAN BERNARDINO </td><td class="r">998 “D” St.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">SAN DIEGO </td><td class="r">2100 Fourth Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">SAN FERNANDO </td><td class="r">804 Celis St.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">SAN LUIS OBISPO </td><td class="r">1134 Monterey St.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">SAN PEDRO </td><td class="r">1616 S. Gaffey St.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">SANTA ANA </td><td class="r">1608 N. Main St.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">SANTA BARBARA </td><td class="r">1301 Santa Barbara St.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">SANTA MARIA </td><td class="r">725 S. Broadway</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">SANTA MONICA </td><td class="r">2121 Wilshire Blvd.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">SANTA PAULA </td><td class="r">108 N. Tenth St.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">SOUTH LOS ANGELES </td><td class="r">9621 S. Vermont Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">TAFT </td><td class="r">501 Kern St.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">TULARE </td><td class="r">200 North “M” St.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">VAN NUYS </td><td class="r">11131 Burbank Blvd.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">VENTURA </td><td class="r">1023 Thompson Blvd.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">VISALIA </td><td class="r">520 W. Mineral King Ave.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">WESTWOOD VILLAGE </td><td class="r">2000 Westwood Blvd.</td></tr> -<tr><td class="l">WHITTIER </td><td class="r">313 N. Greenleaf Ave.</td></tr> -</table> -<blockquote> -<p><b>ILLUSTRATIONS</b>—Photographs: Cover, pages <a href="#Page_2">2</a> and <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, Art Malquel, -Santa Cruz. Inside front cover, pages <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a> (top and center), <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, -Wynn Bullock, Monterey. Pages <a href="#Page_4">4</a> and <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, courtesy The Seaside Company, -Santa Cruz. Pages <a href="#Page_6">6</a> (center and bottom), <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a> (bottom), Ed -Webber, Santa Cruz. Pages <a href="#Page_6">6</a> (top), <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a> (center), Mike Roberts, -Berkeley. Pages <a href="#Page_9">9</a> (top), <a href="#Page_13">13</a> (bottom), Rey Ruppel, Monterey, -courtesy Monterey Chamber of Commerce. Page <a href="#Page_11">11</a> (left), California -Spray-Chemical Co. Page <a href="#Page_11">11</a> (right), Cal-Pictures Inc., San -Francisco. Pages <a href="#Page_14">14</a> (top), <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, Josef Muench, Santa Barbara. Page -<a href="#Page_14">14</a> (bottom), Julian P. Graham, Pebble Beach. Page <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, Ansel Adams, -San Francisco, courtesy American Trust Company.</p> -<p class="center smaller">RECORDER-SUNSET PRESS, SAN FRANCISCO</p> -</blockquote> -<div class="pb" id="Page_25">25</div> -<div class="img" id="fig35"> -<img src="images/p13.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="333" /> -<p class="pcap">A 1914 model Locomobile, West Cliff Drive, Santa Cruz</p> -</div> -<p>⇒ <span class="ss">FORTY-ONE YEARS LATER</span><span class="hst"> Since</span> issuing its first automobile insurance policy in 1914, premium -savings dividends amounting to $20,868,344 have been paid to insured members by the</p> -<p class="center smaller">CALIFORNIA STATE AUTOMOBILE ASSOCIATION INTER-INSURANCE BUREAU</p> -<hr class="dwide" /> -<h3 id="c21"><i><span class="larger">In SEPTEMBER Santa is busy.</span></i>...</h3> -<div class="img"> -<img src="images/p13a.jpg" alt="{uncaptioned}" width="309" height="500" /> -</div> -<p>Santa, the jolly gentleman closely identified with fabulous activity during late -December, is busy at this time of year, too. He is reputed to circle the globe in a single -night at year’s end, all the while busily popping up and down chimneys.</p> -<p>He is able to do all of this because he planned ahead. And if you want Santa to visit -you in some foreign land, start your planning now, too. Santa has to plan his trip -alone, but you can get the expert help of the Foreign and Domestic Travel Department -of the California State Automobile Association.</p> -<p>There is a special tour leaving San Diego December 17, planned so you visit Mexico -to celebrate the Nativity during Posada time. Another thrilling experience is to have -Santa visit you at sea during a shipboard Christmas party. Sail from San Francisco -on December 21 and enjoy the special hospitality of the <i>S.S. Lurline</i> on Christmas -day. Or on the South America tour leaving San Francisco on November 13, make -the optional return by sea with special entertainment provided on the <i>S.S. Del Sud</i>. -For complete holiday travel information mail this coupon:</p> -<div class="box2"> -<div class="verse"> -<p class="t0">Foreign and Domestic Travel Department</p> -<p class="t0">California State Automobile Association, 150 Van Ness Avenue, San Francisco 2</p> -</div> -<div class="verse"> -<p class="t0">Please send me information on</p> -</div> -<div class="verse"> -<p class="t0">[ ] Mexico Tour<span class="hst"> [ ] Hawaii Tour</span><span class="hst"> [ ] South America Tour</span></p> -</div> -<div class="verse"> -<p class="t0">Name ________________ Address ________________</p> -</div> -</div> -<div class="img" id="fig36"> -<img src="images/p20.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="575" /> -<p class="pcap">Around Monterey Bay -<br /><i>A view of the beach and boardwalk at Santa Cruz, thronged with -bathers and pleasure-seekers. The broad, safe beach and mild -climate have made this a popular fun center for young and old.</i></p> -</div> -<h2>Transcriber’s Notes</h2> -<ul> -<li>Silently corrected a few typos.</li> -<li>Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook is public-domain in the country of publication.</li> -<li>In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by _underscores_.</li> -</ul> - - - - - - - -<pre> - - - - - -End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Motorland Magazine, September-October, -1955, by Anonymous - -*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MOTORLAND MAGAZINE *** - -***** This file should be named 63005-h.htm or 63005-h.zip ***** -This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: - http://www.gutenberg.org/6/3/0/0/63005/ - -Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed -Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net - - -Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions -will be renamed. - -Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no -one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation -(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without -permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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