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anaheim-gazette 1911-04-20

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FAVORS THE SCHOOL BONDS Taxpayer Gives Reasons Why Voters Should Support Them Editor Gazette.—Vote for the school bonds. Become a booster for Anaheim. We are growing at the rate of fifty school children a year, and what are you going to do with them? What inducements are you holding out for people to come to Anaheim when you have not the proper schools? In regard to the burden of the additional taxes if the school bonds carry, it will fall very lightly on all small property owners. The man who has a piece of property assessed at $1000 will have to pay only $3 a year additional. And think what he gets in return for so small an outlay. See what the other cities of Southern California are doing in the way of building schools. Anaheim must not fall behind, but rather lead in the march of progress, thus attracting the most desirable class of people. In speaking for the school bonds for Pasadena, where $400,000 have been recently voted for school bonds, Dr. Burdette says among other things There is one man meaner than the thief who steals candy from a baby. That is the fellow who steals a primer from a little child in the kindergarten. The candy may be bad for the baby, anyhow. But the primer is all the learning of the world to the kindergartener. The man who doesn't believe in school houses is a type of the congressman of whom Tom Reed said that he never rose to his feet without subtracting something from the sum total of human knowledge. The man who votes against the school bonds, if he had been present at creation, would have protested, saying: "Chaos is good enough; what's CASCADE WATER POWERS Rivers Offer Magnificent Field for Development The perfection of methods for transmitting electric power over long distances—200 or even 300 miles—which has been attained during the last few years and the reported rapidity with which water-power properties all over the United States are being acquired by corporations and individuals have brought sharply to public attention the great asset which the people of the country have in the undeveloped water powers of the public domain. No area in the United States, it is believed by engineers, presents more favorable opportunities for the development of water power than that traversed by the Cascade Range, a large proportion of which is still owned by the government. The general elevation of the summit of this great plateau is from 6000 to 8000 feet, and many of its lofty peaks extend into the region of eternal snow. Among these peaks are Mount Baker, Mount Rainier, Mount Jefferson, and Mount Shasta, all over 10,000 ft. and two of them between 14,000 and 15,000 feet high. The streams draining the Cascade Range have steep slopes and are fed during the low-water period by the many snowbanks and glaciers that mantle the high peaks or by the liberal supplies of ground water that exist in this region. The precipitation on the area is abundant, although its distribution is by no means uniform. The streams possess the features requisite for water-power development—rapid fall, abundant water, and comparative uniformity of flow—and the almost unlimited resources of timber, mines, and soil, as yet hardly touched, afford a promising market for these water WAS TALKING TO Some Woman Suffrage Publicity When an anti-suffrage meeting in Los Angeles the school election which the women so ed, was a bogus affair, as we are inform from the woman's se bureau. The editor of News says that Mr. was talking "through she said that two women were herded men interested in the schoolhouse. The estates that the anti-suffrage mong the first at th a larger vote was co er been cast before, california women are a ballot when occasion are the women of W thus once more th were beaten by fact arena of undisputed Los Angeles society the exhibit of suffragette publicity bureau con ven under the auspices equality league on Aprfli 15th. The supervision of lef men who are identi with suffrage work ent campaign. A pings and songs and Mrs. George Barry add to the entertain ernoon. The poster the best will bring t will be used in mini tionery and literature Mrs. Berthold Barue Morning club board dall Hutchinson of t of the state federat IRRIGATION INVESTIGATIONS Progress Report on Work of Department of Agriculture The United States Department of Agriculture has just issued a progress report of cooperative irrigation investigations in California covering the ten-year period, 1900-1910, which is available for free distribution on application to United States Irrigation Investigations, Berkeley, Cal., or the Secretary of Agriculture at Washington, D. C. This report gives a summary of the irrigation work of the department of agriculture since 1900 in co-operation with the state of California, with a list and outline of all irrigation reports issued by the department or now in press. One of the main portions of the report is a review of the water-right situation in California and of the efforts heretofore made to obtain irrigation water. The United States Geological Survey recently published, as Water-supply Paper 253, a report on the water powers of the Cascade Range in southern Washington, by John C. Stevens. This is the first of a proposed series to be issued, one each year, and dealing with the water powers of the streams flowing from the Cascade range in Washington and Oregon. The evident interest in the subject of the report resulted in the almost immediate exhaustion of the edition, and it has just been reprinted and can now be obtained by application to the Director of the Survey at Washington. The streams considered in this report are Klickitat, White Salmon, Little White Salmon, Lewis, and Toutle rivers, and other streams in the drainage basins of these rivers, all of which were surveyed under the direction of Mr. Stevens by engineers employed by the United States Geological Survey and by the state of Washington, acting in cooperation. These streams are all tributaries of the Columbia. The most important of them, considered as a source of power, is Klickitat river, which will furnish 154,000 horsepower at low water. The survey of the Klickitat covered 73 miles and included a total fall of 3255 feet. The White Salmon, Lewis, Toutle, and Little White Salmon take rank as sources of water power in the order named. The entire system of streams surveyed will afford about 395,000 horsepower. The total water power available in the Columbia river basin has been estimated at 10,500,000 horsepower, so that the region covered by this first report will furnish only 4 per cent of the enormous aggregate, yet even this small percentage is five times the amount of water power already developed in the state of Washington. The report contains descriptions of the rivers named and of their important tributaries, with tables showing water period by the many snowmelt and glaciers that mantle the high peaks or by the liberal supplies of ground water that exist in this region. The precipitation on the area is abundant; although its distribution is by no means uniform. The streams possess the features requisite for water-power development—rapid fall, abundant water, and comparative uniformity of flow—and the almost unlimited resources of timber, mines, and soil, as yet hardly touched, afford a promising market for these water powers and fix for them a high potential value. The United States Geological Survey recently published, as Water-supply Paper 253, a report on the water powers of the Cascade Range in southern Washington, by John C. Stevens. This is the first of a proposed series to be issued, one each year, and dealing with the water powers of the streams flowing from the Cascade range in Washington and Oregon. The evident interest in the subject of the report resulted in the almost immediate exhaustion of the edition, and it has just been reprinted and can now be obtained by application to the Director of the Survey at Washington. The streams considered in this report are Klickitat, White Salmon, Little White Salmon, Lewis, and Toutle rivers, and other streams in the drainage basins of these rivers, all of which were surveyed under the direction of Mr. Stevens by engineers employed by the United States Geological Survey and by the state of Washington, acting in cooperation. These streams are all tributaries of the Columbia. The most important of them, considered as a source of power, is Klickitat river, which will furnish 154,000 horsepower at low water. The survey of the Klickitat covered 73 miles and included a total fall of 3255 feet. The White Salmon, Lewis, Toutle, and Little White Salmon take rank as sources of water power in the order named. The entire system of streams surveyed will afford about 395,000 horsepower. The total water power available in the Columbia river basin has been estimated at 10,500,000 horsepower, so that the region covered by this first report will furnish only 4 per cent of the enormous aggregate, yet even this small percentage is five times the amount of water power already developed in the state of Washington. The report contains descriptions of the rivers named and of their important tributaries, with tables showing water period by the many snowmelt and glaciers that mantle the high peaks or by the liberal supplies of ground water that exist in this region. The precipitation on the area is abundant; although its distribution is by no means uniform. The streams possess the features requisite for water-power development—rapid fall, abundant water, and comparative uniformity of flow—and the almost unlimited resources of timber, mines, and soil, as yet hardly touched, afford a promising market for these water powers and fix for them a high potential value. The United States Geological Survey recently published, as Water-supply Paper 253, a report on the water powers of the Cascade Range in southern Washington, by John C. Stevens. This is the first of a proposed series to be issued, one each year, and dealing with the water powers of the streams flowing from the Cascade range in Washington and Oregon. The evident interest in the subject of the report resulted in the almost immediate exhaustion of the edition, and it has just been reprinted and can now be obtained by application to the Director of the Survey at Washington. The streams considered in this report are Klickitat, White Salmon, Little White Salmon, Lewis, and Toutle rivers, and other streams in the drainage basins of these rivers, all of which were surveyed under the direction of Mr. Stevens by engineers employed by the United States Geological Survey and by the state of Washington, acting in cooperation. These streams are all tributaries of the Columbia. The most important of them, considered as a source of power, is Klickitat river, which will furnish 154,000 horsepower at low water. The survey of the Klickitat covered 73 miles and included a total fall of 3255 feet. The White Salmon, Lewis, Toutle, and Little White Salmon take rank as sources of water power in the order named. The entire system of streams surveyed will afford about 395,000 horsepower. The total water power available in the Columbia river basin has been estimated at 10,500,000 horsepower, so that the region covered by this first report will furnish only 4 per cent of the enormous aggregate, yet even this small percentage is five times the amount of water power already developed in the state of Washington. The report contains descriptions of the rivers named and of their important tributaries, with tables showing water period by the many snowmelt and glaciers that mantle the high peaks or by the liberal supplies of ground water that exist in this region. The precipitation on the area is abundant; although its distribution is by no means uniform. The streams possess the features requisite for water-power development—rapid fall, abundant water, and comparative uniformity of flow—and the almost unlimited resources of timber, mines, and soil, as yet hardly touched, afford a promising market for these water powers and fix for them a high potential value. The United States Geological Survey recently published, as Water-supply Paper 253, a report on the water powers of the Cascade Range in southern Washington, by John C. Stevens. This is the first of a proposed series to be issued, one each year, and dealing with the water powers of the streams flowing from the Cascade range in Washington and Oregon. The evident interest in the subject of the report resulted in the almost immediate exhaustion of the edition, and it has just been reprinted and can now be obtained by application to the Director of the Survey at Washington. The streams considered in this report are Klickitat, White Salmon, Little White Salmon, Lewis, and Toutle rivers, and other streams in the drainage basins of these rivers, all of which were surveyed under the direction of Mr. Stevens by engineers employed by the United States Geological Survey and by the state of Washington, acting in cooperation. These streams are all tributaries of the Columbia. The most important of them, considered as a source of power, is Klickitat river, which will furnish 154,000 horsepower at low water. The survey of the Klickitat covered 73 miles and included a total fall of 3255 feet. The White Salmon, Lewis, Toutle, and Little White Salmon take rank as sources of water power in the order named. The entire system of streams surveyed will afford about 395,000 horsepower. The total water power available in the Columbia river basin has been estimated at 10,500,000 horsepower, so that the region covered by this first report will furnish only 4 per cent of the enormous aggregate,yet even this small percentage is five times the amount of water power already developed in the state of Washington. The report contains descriptions of the rivers named and of their important tributaries,with tables showing water period by the many snowmelt and glaciers that mantle the high peaks or bythe liberal suppliesof groundwater that existinthisregion.Theprecipitationontheareaisabundant;althoughitsdistributionisbyno meansuniform.Thestreamspossshefaturesrequisiteforwaters-powerdevelopment—rapidfall,aubundantwater,andcomparativemagnitudeofflow—andthealmostlimitedresourcesoftimber,mines,andsoil.asyethardlytouched affordapromisingmarketforthesewaterpowersandfixforthemahighpotentialvalue. The United States Geological Survey recently published,as Water-supply Paper 253,a report onthewaterpowersoftheCascadeRangeinSouthernWashington,bysuppressagemarketingcampaign.AprietaryingsandsongsandMrs.GeorgeBarryaddtootheentertainernoon.ThepostermostbestwillbringthewillbeusedinminitationeryandliteratureMrs.BertholdBaruchMorningclubboarddallHutchinsonoftheofthestate federatiohibitincharge.Five thousandmenWomen'buttonsharebythevotesforwomAngeles.Thesupplierdemandforthetonswhichalreadydarkcoatlapelofmewhichkeepsamestantlyintheforeign.ThepoliticalequitiesgettingSouthernCaliforniaconcertedsuffragecouncilCharlesFarwellEdithhersuffragistsdidnotlegislature,andoftheorganizationliticalqualityleagueitingtownsouthmakingaddressesandsentimentinregardment.InLosAngelesorganizationsarenrearing,fearlessbattlemerimonths.BaronD'EstournerwhoisinAmericaofpeace,maintainstheranceofuniversesofwomenareinthefollowingringsesthecause: "Not a few peoplearebecomingattheprogressofthement;theyseeinitorder;itistothen shocking innovationwiththe samescoreersspokefortyyearreforms.ofmodernballoons.Lettheerswill soonchangetodefendthecauseservethecauseofactofvoluntarycoervergivingwaybeforegrowsandbecomesinproportionashetotaltaletalanddomineering." California suffragesrespectforthewomenandtheirworkforlot.Asthecampaestatewaxeswarmer." Secretary of Agriculture at Washington, D.C. This report gives a summary of the irrigation work of the department of agriculture since 1900 in co-operation with the state of California, with a list and outline of all irrigation reports issued by the department or now in press. One of the main portions of the report is a review of the water-right situation in California and of the efforts heretofore made to obtain irrigation legislation for California along the lines of that in force in the other irrigated states. A state commission for the preparation of irrigation law for California is suggested. The report is known as Circular 108 of the office of Experiment Stations and is entitled, "Second Progress Report of Co-operative Irrigation Investigations in California." WORSE YET An absent-minded professor came home one evening triumphantly waving his umbrella to his wife. "Well, my dear," he said, "you see I didn't leave it anywhere today." "I see, dear," said his wife, "the only trouble is that you didn't take one from home this morning." The professor of a certain medical college asked a student how much of a certain medicine should be administered to the sufferer. "A tablespoonful," answered the young man. In about a minute, however, he raised his hand and said: "Professor, I would like to change my answer to that question." The doctor took out his watch. "My young friend," he remarked, "your patient has been dead forty seconds." ACCORDING TO HOLY WRIT A college professor was one day nearing the close of a history lecture and was indulging in one of those rhetorical climaxes in which he delighted when the hour struck. The students immediately began to slam down the movable arms of their lecture chair and to prepare to leave. The professor, annoyed at the interruption of his flow of eloquence, held up his hand: "Wait just one minute, gentlemen. I have a few more pearls to cast." Take your watch and jewelry repairing to Theo. Roberts. He does only first-class work. 2-9-tf WAS TALKING THROUGH HAT Some Woman Suffrage Notes from Publicity Bureau When an anti-suffragist at a public meeting in Los Angeles stated that the school election in Monrovia, at which the women so successfully voted, was a bogus affair, she got a reply, as we are informed in a letter from the woman's suffrage publicity bureau. The editor of the Monrovia News says that Mrs. Anti-Suffragist was talking "through her hat" when she said that two hundred Mexican women were herded to the polls by men interested in the location of the schoolhouse. The editor further states that the anti-suffragists were among the first at the polls and that a larger vote was cast than had ever been cast before, proving that California women are as active with the ballot when occasion demands, as are the women of Washington. And thus once more the anti-suffragists were beaten by facts back from the arena of undisputed facts. Los Angeles society is invited to the exhibit of suffrage posters, the publicity bureau continues, to be given under the auspices of the political equality league at Choral hall, on April 15th. The display is under the supervision of leading society women who are identifying themselves with suffrage work during the present campaign. A program of readings and songs and an address by Mrs. George Barry of Monrovia will add to the entertainment of the afternoon. The poster that is deemed the best will bring the artist $50, and will be used in miniature on the stationery and literature of the league. Mrs. Berthold Baruch, of the Friday Morning club board, and Mrs. Randall Hutchinson of the art committee of the state federation, have the ex- with suffrage work during the present campaign. A program of readings and songs and an address by Mrs. George Barry of Monrovia will add to the entertainment of the afternoon. The poster that is deemed the best will bring the artist $50, and will be used in miniature on the stationery and literature of the league. Mrs. Berthold Baruch, of the Friday Morning club board, and Mrs. Randall Hutchinson of the art committee of the state federation, have the exhibit in charge. Five thousand more "Votes for Women" buttons have been ordered by the votes for women club of Los Angeles. The supply will not meet the demand for the little yellow buttons which already brighten the dark coat lapel of many a voter, and which keeps amendment eight constantly in the foreground. The political equality league is getting Southern California in line for concerted suffrage campaigning. Mrs. Charles Farwell Edson, who with other suffragists did notable work at the legislature, and who has charge of the organization work of the political equality league, has been visiting towns south of Los Angeles, making addresses and ascertaining the sentiment in regard to the amendment. In Los Angeles, both suffrage organizations are ready for a telling, fearless battle during the summer months. Baron D'Estournelles de Constant, who is in America in the cause of peace, maintains that for the furtherance of universal peace, the votes of women are indispensable. In the following ringing words he espouses the cause: "Not a few people of a certain type are becoming greatly alarmed at the progress of the feminist movement; they see in it nothing but disorder; it is to them but one more shocking innovation; they speak of it with the same scorn that their fathers spoke forty years ago of social reforms, of modern music, of dirigible balloons. Let them talk; the scoffers will soon change their attitude; to defend the cause of woman is to serve the cause of peace. It is an act of voluntary control, the stronger giving way before the weaker; man grows and becomes a civilized being in proportion as he becomes less brutal and domineering." California suffragists have limitless respect for the women of Washington and their work for and with the ballot. As the campaign in the golden state waves warmer and warmer, the four successive weeks in the Anaheim Gazette, a newspaper printed and published in said County. Dated April 14th, 1911. Z B. WEST, Judge of said Superior Court. Ap20-5t Notice of Assessment BENEDICT WATER COMPANY. Location of Principal Place of Business, Anaheim, California. Notice is hereby given that at a meeting of the Directors held on the 16th day of March, 1911, an assessment of $1.50 per share was levied upon the capital stock of the corporation payable immediately to the Secretary of said corporation at his office, at the office of Richard Melrose, 315 Hedwig street, Anaheim, California. Any stock upon which this assessment shall remain unpaid on the 21st day of April, 1911, will be delinquent and advertised for sale at public auction, and unless payment is made before, will be sold on the 13th day of May, 1911, to pay the delinquent assessment, together with costs of advertising and expenses of sale. J. P. TRANSUE, Secretary Benedict Water Company. Location of office: 315 Hedwig street, Anaheim, Orange county, California. Notice to Creditors. Estate of Alice E. Susmil, deceased. Notice is hereby given by the undersigned administrator of the estate of Alice E. Susmil, deceased, to the creditors of, and all persons having claims against the said deceased, to exhibit the same with the necessary vouchers, within four months after the first publication of this notice (which publication was first made on the 13th day of April, 1911), to the said administrator at the office of Tipton & Cailor, 118 West Center street, Anaheim, California, the place of business of said estate in the County of Orange. Dated this 4th day of April, A.D., 1911, FLETCHER J. SUSMIL, Administrator of the Estate of Alice E. Susmil, Deceased. Tipton & Cailor, Attorneys for the Administrator. PROPOSALS FOR GENERATING SET. Sealed bids will be received by the Trustees of the City of Anaheim, at the office of the City Clerk, up to 8 o'clock p.m. on Thursday, May 11th, 1911, for furnishing the following apparatus and performing certain work for the municipal Light and Water Works. One Compound Automatic Steam Engine. One 150 K.V.A., 2200 volts, 3 phase, 60 cycle, alternating current Generator. One Exciter for Generator. One Generator Switchboard Panel. Building foundation and erecting engine and generator. Specifications may be had by applying to the City Clerk, or to A. L. Lewis Superintendent Municipal Light and Water Works. A certified check for $250.00 must accompany each bid. The Board reserves the right to reject any or all bids. EDWARD B. MERRITT, City Clerk of the City of Anaheim. Notice of Public Work Notice is hereby given that on Thursday, the 23d day of March, 1911, the Board of Trustees of the City of Anaheim, State of California, did, at its meeting on said day, pass a resolution number 96, declaring its intention to order the following street work to be done; to-wit: To open and extend South Lemon Street in said City of Anaheim. That the land which was by said Board of Trustees deemed to be, and by its said resolution was declared to be necessary to be taken for said work or improvement, is described as follows. California suffragists have limitless respect for the women of Washington and their work for and with the ballot. As the campaign in the golden state waxes warmer and warmer, the campaign methods of the Washington women are being taken under serious consideration by California women and applied wherever they are consistent with conditions. One of the results of women's suffrage in Washington is the Quiz congress. It is under supervision of men and women and was organized in Seattle where Mayor Gill was pushed off the scene of ignominious action by the woman vote. The purpose of the congress is to ascertain the views of candidates for public office, upon public questions, by means of public questioning. The questions are pertinent and uncompromising. Among them are the following: What would you do about a restricted district? What would you do to prevent the third degree? Do you favor the recall principle? Do you favor the initiative and referendum? The questions and answers are on record and are open to the public at all times. Lice kill your profits quickly and surely. Don't tolerate the pest in your chicken yard. Get Conkey's Lice Powder 25c. You can have a trial package and a valuable poultry book no charge, by calling at H. H. Gardner & Co. Notice is hereby given that on Thursday, the 23d day of March, 1911, the Board of Trustees of the City of Anaheim, State of California, did, at its meeting on said day, pass a resolution, number 96, declaring its intention to order the following street work to be done, to-wit: To open and extend South Lemon Street in said City of Anaheim. That the land which was by said Board of Trustees deemed to be, and by its said resolution was declared to be necessary to be taken for said work or improvement, is described as follows, to-wit: All that certain land situate, lying and being in the said City of Anaheim, particularly described as follows, to-wit: Beginning at a point 24.75 feet South 15½ deg. East from the Southwesterly corner of Vineyard Lot "H4" as shown on a map recorded in Book 4 of Deeds, pages 629 and 630, Records of Los Angeles County, California, and running thence South 15½ deg. East parallel to the center line of Lemon Street extended 1320 feet to the Northerly line of Broad Street; thence South 74½ deg. West along the Northerly line of Broad Street 56 feet; thence North 15½ deg. West parallel to the center line of Lemon Street extended 1320 feet, and thence North 74½ deg. East 56 feet to the point of beginning. The said land so proposed to be taken for said work or improvement is shown on a map adopted by said Board of Trustees at its meeting held on March 23d, 1911, and now on file in the office of the City Clerk of said City. That the exterior boundaries of the district of lands established, and declared by said resolution to be affected and benefitted by said work or improvement, and to be assessed to pay the damages, cost and expenses thereof, are described as follows: Beginning at the Northeasterly corner of Original Building Lot No. 36, in said City of Anaheim as shown on a map recorded in Book 4 of Deeds, pages 629 and 630, Records of Los Angeles county California, and running thence South 15½ deg. East parallel to the center line of Lemon Street and the center line of Lemon Street extended 4601.92 feet to the Northerly line of Broad Street; thence South 74½ deg. West along the Northerly line of Broad Street 336.50 feet; thence North 15½ deg. West 4591.67 feet to the Northerly line of the Langenberger Tract, as shown on a map recorded in Book 32 page 23 of Miscellaneous Records of Los Angeles County California; thence North 74½ deg. East 171.50 feet to the center line of Lemon Street; thence North 15½ deg. West along the center line of Lemon Street 10.25 feet; thence North 74½ deg. East 165 feet to the place of beginning; excepting therefrom the land hereinbefore described as the land to be taken for opening and extending said South Lemon Street, and excepting also any land within said boundaries contained which is now part of a public street or alley. Reference is hereby made to said resolution of intention for further particulars. JOHN KELLENBERGER, Superintendent of Streets of the City of Anaheim. Thursday, April 20 "with strength and ease they always please" TWO HORSE OVERALLS MADE BY LEVI STRAUSS & CO. In the Superior Court Of the County of Orange, State of California. In the Matter of the Estate of William Konig, deceased. Notice for Publication of Time for Proving Will, Etc. Notice is hereby given that Friday, the 28th day of April, 1911, at 10 o'clock A.M. of said day, at the court room of this Court, in the City of Santa Ana, County of Orange, State of California, has been appointed as the time and place for hearing the application of Adelheid Konig, praying that a document now on file in this Court, purporting to be the last Will and Testament of the said deceased, be admitted to probate, that Letters Testamentary be issued thereon to Adelheid Konig, at which time and place all persons interested therein may appear and contest the same. Dated April 3, 1911. W. B. WILLIAMS, County Clerk. Hatch, Lloyd & Hunt, Attorneys for Petitioner. PROPOSALS. Sealed proposals will be received by the Clerk of the City of Anaheim, at his office in the City Hall, Center street, Anaheim, up to Thursday April 27, 1911, at 8 o'clock p.m., for doing all the city printing and advertising for the fiscal year ending April 30, 1912. The following is an estimate of the printing needed: One dozen License Receipt Books, of 100 receipts each perforated and numbered. One dozen Water-rate Receipt Books, of 100 receipts each, printed on both sides, perforated and numbered. One dozen Electric Light Receipt Books, of 100 receipts each, perforated and numbered. One-quarter dozen Tax Collector Receipt books, of 200 receipts each, perforated and numbered consecutively. One thousand (1000) Postal Cards relative to Board of Equalization meet. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT Of the County of Orange, State of California. Guy W. Holman, Plaintiff, vs. H. E. Wana-maker, Defendant. Action brought in the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, and the Complaint filed in the office of the Clerk of the said County of Orange. Melrose & Ames and Wellborn & Wellborn, Attorneys for Plaintiff. The People of the State of California send Greeting to H. E. Wana-maker, Defendant: You are Hereby Directed to Appear, and answer the Complaint in an action entitled as above, brought against you in the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, within ten days after the service on you of this summons—if served within this County; or with in thirty days if served elsewhere. And you are hereby notified that unless you appear and answer as above required, the said plaintiff will take judgment for any money or damages demanded in the complaint, as arising upon contract, or he will apply to the Court for any other relief demanded in the complaint. Given under my hand and seal of the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, this 22nd day of December, A.D. 1910. W. B. WILLIAMS, SUPERIOR COURT. feb16-2mo IN THE SUPERIOR COURT Of the County of Orange, State of California. Conrad Stueckle, Plaintiff, vs. Emil A. Sanger and A. H. Ricketts, Trustees, and Casper M. Sanger Defendants. Action brought in the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, and the Complaint filed in the office of the Clerk of said County of Orange. Tipton & Callor, Attorneys for Plaintiff. The People of the State of California send Greeting to Emil A. Sanger and IN THE SUPERIOR COURT Of the County of Orange, State of California. Conrad Stueckle, Plaintiff, vs. Emil A. Sanger and A. H. Ricketts, Trustees, and Casper M. Sanger, Defendants. Action brought in the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, and the Complaint filed in the office of the Clerk of said County of Orange. Tipton & Callor, Attorneys for Plaintiff. The People of the State of California send Greeting to Emil A. Sanger and A. H. Ricketts Trustees, and Casper M. Sanger, Defendants. You are Hereby Directed to Appear, and answer the Complaint in an action entitled as above, brought against you in the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, within ten days after the service on you of this summons—if served within this County; or within thirty days if served elsewhere. And you are hereby notified that unless you appear and answer as above required the said plaintiff will take judgment for any money or damages demanded in the complaint as arising upon contract, or he will apply to the Court for any other relief demanded in the complaint. Given under my hand and the seal of the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, this 12th day of April, A.D. 1911. W. B. WILLIAMS, Clerk. By J. C. Burke, Deputy Clerk. (Seal) Boston Bakery and Confectionery STEPHEN KISTLER, Proprietor Fresh Bread, Cakes and Pies daily. Chris topher's Chocolates and Bonbons always fresh, on hand. E. Center st., opposite City Hall Anaheim F. BACKS Undertaker Dealer in Furniture, Wall Paper Cornices, Window Shades, Picture Frames Upholstery Goods, Paints, Oils, and Glass Sewing Machine Supplies Corner Los Angeles and Charres St Gazette Liners Are without question a feature of this newspaper that is bringing Great Returns to the Advertiser, and profit to the Reading Public. If you have something to Sell, to Trade or to Rent a Gazette Liner will Turn the Trick. If you want Help or if you want a Situation a Gazette Liner will not fail to bring Results. In fact Anything you may wish to tell the people can be told to a Larger number through the Gazette's Liner columns and the cost is but a Trifle. If you have never tried a Gazette Liner do it Now. During the past month the Lost, Found, For Sale, for Rent, Wants, etc., in the Gazette's Liner Columns were nearly...