anaheim-gazette 1909-06-17
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SEASON OF FOREST FIRES
DANGER ON ACCOUNT OF ABUNDANT WILD GRASS
Misdemeanor to Start a Fire Without Permission of Fire Warden—Campers Must Fight Fires When Called Upon to Do So by Warden
The time is near when the danger from forest fires will be very great for several months. It will be unusually so this summer because of the abundant winter rains favoring the production of a heavy growth of wild grass and woody vegetation. When this becomes dry it will afford so much fuel that it will be almost impossible to check a chance fire. On this account the need of preventing the starting of fires is even greater this year than ever.
California has an excellent forest law as regards fire, and it is the desire of the Board of Forestry that its provisions shall be widely known and carefully followed.
A circular letter received from State Forester Lull contains the following seasonable information:
The attention of all persons who inhabit the forest or brush-covered areas of California is called to the following provisions of the State Forest Laws relating to forest fires:
Under Statutes 1907, Chapter 536, it is a misdemeanor, punishable by a fine of not less than $25 nor more than $500, or imprisonment not less than fifteen days or more than six months, or both, to commit any of the following acts:
1. To build a fire even on your pointed paragon
Never judge a man's life by the talk he lets out.
As a rule a smart boy grows its alleged smartness "Thank you" is more when accompanied by a $
Too many virtues in a make his friends long for
Even when a girl turns down he can't help admiration.
It is difficult to convince holdor that one bad ten serve another.
For more than a week a man will eat things he just because wife cooked.
It's hard for any man to raight and narrow path a good woman to guide him.
Many a city man boasts hood on the farm—but be a strenuous effort to get it.
If a man wants a word self that isn't at all flatterer arouse theire of a sharp man.
The average girl maycess as a stone tosser, comes to throwing a hint on-the-spot every time.
WOOD USED FOR
Statistics Showing Co
Paper Mills Last
Washington, June 11 red and fifty-one pulp United States used 3,344 wood, and made 2,118 pulp last year. Spruce been the leading pulp furnished sixty-four per total quantity used. The elapment of the wood in the last ten years ha
areas of California is called to the following provisions of the State Forest Laws relating to forest fires:
Under Statutes 1907, Chapter 536, it is a misdemeanor, punishable by a fine of not less than $25 nor more than $500, or imprisonment not less than fifteen days or more than six months, or both, to commit any of the following acts:
1. To build a fire even on your own land without first securing a written permit from a duly appointed firewarden, except camp fires, which may be built on unenclosed lands if the owner has not forbidden their building in any way, and provided the builder of a camp fire totally extinguishes it before leaving. Fires may also be built without permit to facilitate redwood logging and backfires may be set in a careful manner to stop the spread of a fire then actually burning.
2. To set fire on the lands of another excepting camp fires built under the conditions outlined above.
3. To allow a fire, unlawfully set, to escape from the control of the person having charge thereof, or to spread to the lands of another.
4. It is unlawful to use any engine or boiler, burning fuel other than oil, unless the engine or boiler is equipped with adequate devices to prevent the escape of fire from any part.
5. Also to refuse to obey the summons of any State Firewarden to fight fire.
The heavy rainfall of last winter stimulated a strong growth of grass and other vegetation. This has now become dry and highly inflammable. If a fire is started it will be almost impossible to check it owing to the great amount of fuel. For this reason it is doubly necessary to pay strict attention to the forest laws during this summer. The annual loss to the State from forest fires amounts into the hundreds of thousands of dollars, yet most of the fires are started carelessly. Make it a point to obey the Forest Laws yourself and to support your firewarden, whose name is here given. If you have evidence to show that the Forest Laws
Washington, June 11
red and fifty-one pulp wood used in United States used 3,344 wood, and made 2,118 pulp last year. Spruce been the leading pulp wood furnished sixty-four per total quantity used. The development of the wood in the last ten years had domestic supply of spruce to meet the demand and consequently imported Canada have been held our pulp mills consume and one-half million cubic spruce, and over 67% imported spruce, making of spruce forty-five per domestic supply.
Next to spruce, the ant pulp wood is her cords of it were converted last year. All the hemlands of domestic origin, and was produced in the Louisiana. Although less quantity than spruce lock, poplar has long hard pulp wood. A small poplar is imported, but larger portion of the nearly 1000 cords used last from domestic timber lock, and poplar made up cent of the total quantity used. The remains applied by many species, important of which were wood, and balsam.
The wood used by last year cost them than $28,000,000, or about $8.38 per cord, against $8.21 in 1907. The most used was imported spruce average value of $1. The average for domestics $8.76 per cord and for cord. The cheapest wood used in large quantity the cost being $6.02 per unit to the uncertain business the total consumption of 1908 was nearly 16 percent in 1907, but this did not considerable increase
great amount of risk. For this person it is doubly necessary to pay strict attention to the forest laws during this summer. The annual loss to the State from forest fires amounts into the hundreds of thousands of dollars, yet most of the fires are started carelessly. Make it a point to obey the Forest Laws yourself and to support your firewarden, whose name is here given. If you have evidence to show that the Forest Laws have been violated, place it in the hands of your District Attorney or notify the State Forester at Sacramento. All violators of the Forest Laws will be prosecuted vigorously.
Following are the regularly appointed fire wardens for Orange county:
T. F. Doyle, Laguna Park.
E. Forster, Capistrano.
Carl Meader, Sierra Madre.
E. S. Morales, Capistrano.
E. Rodgers, El Toro.
H. L. Thomson, Orange.
W. A. Zimmerman, Capistrano.
"You say you met the defendant on a street car, and that he had been drinking and gambling," said the attorney for the defense during the cross-examination.
"Yes," replied the witness.
"Did you see him take a drink?"
"No."
"Did you see him gambling?"
"No."
"Then how do you know," demanded the attorney, "that the defendant had been drinking and gambling?"
"Well," explained the witness, "he gave the conductor a blue chip for his car fare and told him to keep the change."
POINTED PARAGRAPHS
A judge a man's line of thought
talk he lets out.
A rule a smart baby soon outits alleged smartness.
Thank you" is more appreciated
accompanied by a $5 bill.
Many virtues in a man are apt to
his friends long for a few vices.
When a girl turns a young man
she can't help admiring her judgdure difficult to convince the office
that one bad term doesn't descoother.
More than a week after marriage
he will eat things he doesn't like
because wife cooked them.
Hard for any man to keep in the
right and narrow path unless he has
a woman to guide his footsteps.
A city man boasts of his boyson the farm—but he doesn't make
a nuous effort to get back to it.
A man wants a word picture of himhat isn't at all flattering, he should
be the ire of a sharp-tongued wone average girl may not be a success as a stone tosser, but when it
is to throwing a hint she is Susiese-spot every time.
WOOD USED FOR PULP
Statistics Showing Consumption by
Paper Mills Last Year
Washington, June 11.—Two hundand fifty-one pulp mills in the
United States used 3,346,106 cords of
and made 2,118,947 tons of
last year. Spruce has always
the leading pulp wood, and it
has shed sixty-four per cent of the
quantity used. The rapid deventment of the wood pulp industry
the last ten years has rendered the
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS
Brayton A Bemis to Mary A Stanlee
—Lots 1 and 2, blk 3, Fullerton townsite; $10.
J J Feagan to Irving S Watson—Lots
and blocks in South Side add to Cypress; $10.
Lena Kemper to L A Evans—Und 1-5
int in lots 35 and 36, blk 4, Summerfield & Oppenheimer's sub of Spoerl
tct; $10.
L A Evans to Dominga M Marques—Lts 35 and 36, blk 4, Summerfield &
Oppenheimer's sub of Spoerl tct; $10.
John M Halo to James H Pickett—Lot 11, blk 46, townsite of Fullerton;
$10.
Alexander J Christlieb to B G Balcom—Und ½ int in net¾ of sw¼, sec 28;
t3, r10, and 21.9 acs in nw¼ of sec 5, t4,
r10; $10.
Henry W Pharo to F P Jayne—Lot
at cor of Broad and Citron sts, Anaheim: $10.
Anaheim Land Syndicate to Randall
McFarland—S½ of lot 3, Golden State
tct No 2; $10.
Fred Dyckman to William Dyckman
—W 4 acs of 4 10 acs set¾, sec 8, t4, r10;
$10.
Stearns Ranchos co to W J Hole—
63 7 acs in secs 11 and 14, t3, r 10; $10.
Sallie Bray Holman Ketcham et conj
to Harry Ray—NE½ of nw¼ of sec 11,
t1s, r11; $10.
Harry Ray to Jacob Stern—NE½ of
nw¼ o' sec 11, t4s, r11: $10.
V L Stewart to Bowman Merritt—Lot 23, blk B, Center tct, Anaheim;
$10.
Frank Baum to Levi Mann—S'ly ÷ of
lots 14, 15 and 16 of re-sub blk E, Vin
Lot D3, Anaheim; $10.
H R Wiseman to James P O'Brien—Lot 101, blk H, Heimann & George's
add to Anaheim; $10.
Delbert Bobst to James P O'Brien—W'ly ÷ of lot 102, blk H, Heimann &
George's add to Anaheim; $10.
Paper Mills Last Year
Washington, June 11.—Two hundred and fifty-one pulp mills in the United States used 3,346,106 cords of wood, and made 2,118,947 tons of last year. Spruce has always been the leading pulp wood, and it has shed sixty-four per cent of the quantity used. The rapid development of the wood pulp industry over the last ten years has rendered the basic supply of spruce insufficient to meet the demands upon it, consequently importations from India have been heavy. In 1908, pulp mills consumed nearly one one-half million cords of domestically grown spruce, and over 670,000 cords of imported spruce, making the imports spruce forty-five per cent of the domestic supply.
Next to spruce, the most important pulp wood is hemlock; 569,173 tons of it were converted into pulp wood. All the hemlock used was domestic origin, and most of it produced in the Lake States and Pennsylvania. Although now used in quantity than spruce and hemlock poplar has long been a stand-alone pulp wood. A small quantity of ear is imported, but by far the portion of the more than 300-cords used last year was cut domestic timber. Spruce, hemlock and poplar made up ninety per cent of the total quantity of pulp used. The remainder was supplied by many species, the most important of which were pine, cotton, and balsam.
The wood used by the pulp mills year cost them a little more $28,000,000, or an average of per cord, against an average of in 1907. The most costly wood was imported spruce, with an average value of $10.60 per cord. Average for domestic spruce was per cord and for poplar $8.04 per cord. The cheapest wood which was in large quantity was hemlock, cost being $6.02 per cord. Owing to uncertain business conditions, total consumption of pulp wood in was nearly 16 per cent less than 1907, but this did not prevent a considerable increase in the price of V L Stewart to Bowman Merritt—Lot 23, blk B, Center tct, Anaheim; $10.
Frank Baum to Levi Mann—S'ly½ of lots 14, 15 and 16 of re-sub blk E, Vin Lot D3, Anaheim; $10.
H R Wiseman to James P O'Brien—Lot 101, blk H, Heimann & George's add to Anaheim; $10.
Delbert Bobst to James P O'Brien—W'ly½ of lot 102, blk H, Heimann & George's add to Anaheim; $10.
F W Allen to Augustus Seeley—Part of blk 5, Baldwin's add to Santa Ana; $10.
Lloyd L Hill to James Marshall—Und½ int in e 25 ft lot 31 and w 25 ft of lot 33, Park tct, add to Santa Ana; $10.
Fred Peter to Rubidoux Building co.—Lots 14 and 15, blk 10, East Newport; $10.
J T Clark to J D Carter—Lot 15, blk 1, Artesia et tct; $10.
G J Mosbaugh to J D Thomas, et al., trustees of Lodge No. 794, B P O E—S½ of lot S, blk 20, town of Santa Ana; $10.
William C Jerome et al., to Willis G Mitchell—SE'ly½ of 40-ac lot 29, blk 12, Irvin's sub; $10.
John O Forster and Frank A Forster to Lewis F Moulton—Und½ int in lot 4, sec 9 t8 r8; $1.
Lewis F Knowlton to Domingo Oyharzabal et al—About 2000 acs near Capistrano; $10.
Lucia Silvas to Domingo Oyharzabal—N½ lot 4, blk 9, town of San Juan Capistrano; $50.
Mrs Nancy Pancoast to Henry Herrick—E'ly 374 ft of Vineyard lot A1; $10.
East Newport Town Co to Rubidoux Building Co—Lots 20 and 21, blk 8, East Newport; $10.
Moses C Cuddeback to Arthur Benjamin—Lots 21 and 22, blk C, Achison sub; also lot on French street, Santa Ana; $10.
Ella J Brewer to Matilda A Zimmerman—Lot 9, blk 911, Wesley Park sec, Huntington Beach; $10.
F & W Thum co to Sidney Twombly et al—17 acs in set¹ of sec 28 t3 r10; $10.
John J Hunter to Roswell Bottum—20 acs in net¹ of sec 3, t4, r10; $10.
C W Hawk to Milo H Hannas—56.38 acs in net¹ of sec 15 t5 r10; $10.
A L Selig to Charles Potter—Lot 1, blk C, Walgrove tct; $10.
Newport Beach co to Louis Vilelle—Lot 15, blk 218, sec B, Newport Beach;
The cheapest wood which was in large quantity was hemlock, cost being $6.02 per cord. Owing to uncertain business conditions, total consumption of pulp wood in the area was nearly 16 per cent less than 1907, but this did not prevent a considerable increase in the price of wood. The high price of wood is being the manufacturers be constant in the lookout for cheaper raw material, and one of the most encouraging developments has been the increased use of slab wood and other mill waste. This drift in industry is clearly indicated by the fact that 193,234 cords of mill waste were reported as consumed in pulp manufacture during 1907, while 252,896 cords, an increase of thirty per cent, were used in 1908.
These statements are based upon preliminary report of the consumption of pulp wood in the United States just issued by the Bureau of Census. The Bureau of the Census and the Forest Service cooperate on the collection of annual statistics forest products, and this preliminary report will be followed soon by bulletin, which will give detailed information upon the use of pulp last year in the various states, cost per cord, the amount reduced by mechanical, sulphite, and soda presses, and other facts of interest to the industry.
R Sale: One team of horses. Appat St. Catherine's orphanage.
Letters Uncalled for at Post Office.
Anaheim, June 7, 1909.
Mrs. Anna Stone, Mr. and Mrs. C. Stone, Louis Kruger, Chas Ross, Mr. Ira Stone, A. Yoshomusa, Miss Sarah E. Boher, Miss Mary Phelps, John Gustofsan, Selso Murello, Mr. Norton N. Baning, Adam Crowford, Ester Ortesse.
Sir Jesus Pinsentel, Mr. D. Lorge, H. W. Walker, E. C. Lyons, Josephine Bowen, Miss Maise Dick, Miss Lena Wise, E. T. Eash, H. Kodama, Peter Morris, Miss M. A. S. Godran, Margris Range, A. F. Cortes, Mrs. Y. Seko, Mrs. E. Adams.
High-class Barred Plymouth Rocks. Eggs for hatching and grand Cockerels for sale. JAS. FULLERTON, Orange, Cal.
HENSHAW, BULKLEY & CO.
262-64 So. Los Angeles St.
Los Angeles
IRRIGATION PLANTS
INSTALLED COMPLETE
MACHINERY of all kinds,
including road making machinery,
levelers, scrapers, hardpan ploughs, etc.
Full stock always on hand.
GASOLINE ENGINES
CENTRIFUGAL PUMPS
Palace Meat Market
Schumacher & Schneider
Proprietors
DEALEPS IN
Choice Fresh and Salted Meats
Telephone Main 51
Meats Delivered to all parts of city
NOTICE
TO ALL WHO HAVE OCCASION TO USE POWER
THE EDISON ELECTRIC COMPANY
has an Abundance of Power and are extending their lines to furnish same to those who may have occasion to use power for any purpose. Let Us Quote YOU Rates
Sunset-Main 46 THE EDISON ELECTRIC CO. SANTA ANA
THE EDISON ELECTRIC COMPANY has an Abundance of Power and are extending their lines to furnish same to those who may have occasion to use power for any purpose. Let Us Quote YOU Rates
Sunset-Main 46 THE EDISON ELECTRIC CO. SANTA ANA
California Wine Co.
F. Conrad & Son, Props.
Center Street - Anaheim
Wholesale Wine and Liquor Merchants
Best Brands of Bottled Beer.
Delivery Made Everywhere
Peter Stoffel
HEADQUARTERS FOR
FRESH VEGETABLES
Kansas Hard-wheat Flour
Consignments of Staple and Fancy Groceries
Received Daily.
Phones Sunset 237
Home 1103 PETER STOFFEL, Prop.
DRINK
PRIME BEER
It makes you healthy. Keg and bottled Beer delivered to all parts of the city.
UNION BREWING CO.
Phone Sunset 301
Home 1246
It makes you healthy. Keg and bottled Beer delivered to all parts of the city.
UNION BREWING CO.
Phone Sunset 301
Home 1246
Talking about ICE
you ought to know that we supply it in any quantity. We furnish small pieces for families, or large quantities for restaurants, butchers saloons, etc. Our prices are right, our delivery is prompt.
Phones—Home 1542, Sunset 91
Get our prices on Hay, Grain, Seeds and Poultry Supplies before buying. It will pay you.
H. H. Gardner Co.
C. B. HOLLEY, Manager
HEALD'S
Southern California Business College
614 South Grand Avenue, Los Angeles, California,
The greatest business training institution in the south. Open during the entire year. Write for particulars.
J. W. LACKEY, Manager.