anaheim-gazette 1911-07-27
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WHY WE VOTE IN OCTOBER
Brief of Amendments That Must Be Considered
Following are the constitutional amendments that are to be submitted to the electors of the state at a special election to be held in October. They are arranged as provided by law in the order they were introduced in the legislature:
1—Senate Constitutional Amendment No. 2 relating to the inspection measurement and graduation of merchandise, manufactured articles and commodities.
2—Senate Constitutional Amendment No. 5, relating to charters of counties and amendments to such charters and to the surrender thereof.
3—Senate Constitutional Amendment No. 6, relating to sessions of the legislature.
4—Senate Constitutional Amendment No. 8, relating to the rights of suffrage.
5—Senate Constitutional Amendment No. 17, relating to the rights of private property and to the law of eminent domain.
6—Senate Constitutional Amendment No. 20, relating to charters of cities and amendments thereto.
7—Senate Constitutional Amendment No. 22, relating to legislative powers, and reserving to the people of the State of California the power to propose laws, statutes and amendments to the Constitution, and to enact the same at the polls, independent of the legislature, and also reserving to the people of the State of California the power to approve or reject at the polls any act or section or part of any act of the legislature.
8—Senate Constitutional Amendment No. 23, providing for the recall by the electors of public officials.
The matter, however, has been laid before him. He replied that he considered his first duty to Governor Johnson, and that he would not give the matter consideration or make any reply whatever, without first having talked the matter over in Sacramento. This answer was given to E. J. Gilbert, who for years has been a leader in the fight against Southern Pacific politics in San Bernardino.
According to Mr. Gilbert, if the new district is not created Mr. Roberts will be urged to enter the fight in the old one, now represented by Congressman Smith of Bakersfield.
Mr. Roberts, who heads half a dozen banks in San Bernardino county, was Governor Johnson's choice for state treasurer and was appointed to that place when a vacancy occurred.
FIFTH SUGAR MILL
Contract Let for Co-operative Factory at Santa Ana
The Santa Ana Cooperative Sugar Co. has let a contract to the Dyer Co., of Cincinnati, O., for construction of a 600-ton sugar factory three miles south of Santa Ana. The factory will be completed by June 15, 1912, and will be in operation during the 1912 campaign.
The Dyer Co. is the best known and the largest firm of sugar factory builders in the United States, if not in the world. The plant will cost considerably over $500,000.
The factory is guaranteed to be new throughout and to cut an average of 600 tons of sugar beets a day, counting every day from the day the factory starts until the campaign ends.
The sewage disposal has been settled. James Irvine, one of the principal stockholders in the company, has contracted to take the sewage. It will be distributed on the vast area belonging to him south and east of the factory...
fruit, was made known the office of State Honorary missioner Jeffrey where received that all army refuse fruit at Honolulu Hawaiian islands whereists. This order applies going into the port o and means the gov which are not subject orders will not take whatever, fruit while lulu. This comes as to that issued at the horticultural commission ago refusing entry to the islands.
The danger of the foothold in California state and government exercise the most possible to keep out quarantine has been that the state horticulturist and his assist right to examine every baggage of passenger Honolulu.
WOMEN IN T
An Irishwoman,ress of forty fertile England,says in an Boston journal,that ers when attending an agriculturist and more suitable than
In conservative E without skirts probably herself to more or le ment, but in some in "pants" are uncr is a race whose work it is the Japanese,men discard their engaged in some form or, donning trousers ing and returning tthe end of the day' Taking the world
SENATE Constitutional Amendment No. 23, providing for the recall by the electors of public officials.
SENATE Constitutional Amendment No. 26, relating to the appeals in criminal cases.
SENATE Constitutional Amendment No. 32, relating to compensation for industrial accidents.
SENATE Constitutional Amendment No. 49, relating to public utilities.
SENATE Constitutional Amendment No. 47, conferring upon the Railroad Commission power and jurisdiction to regulate and control the business of furnishing certain commodities and performing certain service to or for the public.
SENATE Constitutional Amendment No. 48, relating to the powers conferred on municipal corporations by freeholders' charters.
SENATE Constitutional Amendment No. 59, relating to public utilities.
Assembly Constitutional Amendment No. 2, in relation to the minimum period for the use of text books in the common schools throughout the state.
Assembly Constitutional Amendment No. 6, creating a Railroad Commission and defining its powers and duties.
Assembly Constitutional Amendment No. 25, relating to the manner of electing officers of cities, and the number of votes necessary to constitute a choice.
Assembly Constitutional Amendment No. 26, relating to the judiciary, and giving the Legislature power to establish inferior courts.
Assembly Constitutional Amendment No. 28, relating to the issuing of passes to public officials.
Assembly Constitutional Amendment No. 33, relating to the election and compensation of a clerk of the Supreme Court; also relating to county clerks being ex-officio clerks of courts of record; and also relating to the appointments by the Superior Courts of Court Commissioners, and also relating to the appointment by the Superior Court of a reporter and assistant reporters, and the appointment by the District Court of Appeal.
The factory is guaranteed to be new throughout and to cut an average of 600 tons of sugar beets a day, counting every day from the day the factory starts until the campaign ends.
The sewage disposal has been settled. James Irvine, one of the principal stockholders in the company, has contracted to take the sewage. It will be distributed on the vast acreage belonging to him south and east of the factory.
The plant is to be erected on the Southern Pacific branch running from Santa Ana to Newport Beach. The company bought a tract several months ago from B. E. Turner. Last week it closed a deal for an additional twenty acres just north of that bought from Turner. The new purchase is from Mrs. Esther N. McKenzie. The factory will be east of the railroad and north of Newport road and a mile almost due east of the Southern California Sugar Co. plant at Delhi.
The new factory will be on the steam road, and will have connection with the Pacific Electric road, which comes within three-fourths of a mile of the place where Dyer Co. will put up the plant.
This factory will make the fifth in Orange county and the third established in the last two years, since the Anaheim and Huntington Beach plants are starting up on their first season now.
Among the principal stockholders of the Santa Ana Co-operative Sugar Co. are James Irvine, James McFadden, A. J. Crookshank, R. T. Harris, Frank Monoghan and A. Getty.
ELOPED, RETURNED HOME
San Diego Girl Runs Away and Marries, Repents
Henry Foster took his runaway daughter back to San Diego with him, and left her husband of thirty hours at the home of his brother at Villa Park. The girl's name was Arletta A. Foster. She lived at Normal Heights, San Diego, and eloped to Santa Ana on Wednesday last wit Hurvey Gillogly of Villa Park. They got a marriage license there.
Word telephoned to Sheriff Rudock came too late to head off the issuance of the license, but that the couple were married did not interfere with the coming of the girl's father, Henry Foster.
He arrived in Santa Ana last week and asked for a warrant for the arrest of Gillogly on a charge of perjury. The deputy district attorney in siderably over $500,000.
The factory is guaranteed to be new throughout and to cut an average of 600 tons of sugar beets a day, counting every day from the day the factory starts until the campaign ends.
The sewage disposal has been settled. James Irvine, one of the principal stockholders in the company, has contracted to take the sewage. It will be distributed on the vast acreage belonging to him south and east of the factory...
The plant is to be erected on the Southern Pacific branch running from Santa Ana to Newport Beach. The company bought a tract several months ago from B. E. Turner. Last week it closed a deal for an additional twenty acres just north of that bought from Turner. The new purchase is from Mrs. Esther N. McKenzie. The factory will be east of the railroad and north of Newport road and a mile almost due east of the Southern California Sugar Co. plant at Delhi.
The new factory will be on the steam road, and will have connection with the Pacific Electric road, which comes within three-fourths of a mile of the place where Dyer Co. will put up the plant.
This factory will make the fifth in Orange county and the third established in the last two years, since the Anaheim and Huntington Beach plants are starting up on their first season now.
Among the principal stockholders of the Santa Ana Co-operative Sugar Co. are James Irvine, James McFadden, A. J. Crookshank, R. T. Harris, Frank Monoghan and A. Getty.
ELOPED, RETURNED HOME
San Diego Girl Runs Away and Marries, Repents
Henry Foster took his runaway daughter back to San Diego with him, and left her husband of thirty hours at the home of his brother at Villa Park. The girl's name was Arletta A. Foster. She lived at Normal Heights, San Diego, and eloped to Santa Ana on Wednesday last wit Hurvey Gillogly of Villa Park. They got a marriage license there.
Word telephoned to Sheriff Rudock came too late to head off the issuance of the license, but that the couple were married did not interfere with the coming of the girl's father, Henry Foster.
He arrived in Santa Ana last week and asked for a warrant for the arrest of Gillogly on a charge of perjury.The deputy district attorney in siderably over $500,000.
The factory is guaranteed to be new throughout and to cut an average of 600 tons of sugar beets a day, counting every day from the day the factory starts until the campaign ends.
The sewage disposal has been settled. James Irvine, one of the principal stockholders in the company, has contracted to take the sewage. It will be distributed on the vast acreage belonging to him south and east of the factory...
The plant is to be erected on the Southern Pacific branch running from Santa Ana to Newport Beach. The company bought a tract several months ago from B. E. Turner. Last week it closed a deal for an additional twenty acres just north of that bought from Turner. The new purchase is from Mrs. Esther N. McKenzie. The factory will be east of the railroad and north of Newport road and a mile almost due east of the Southern California Sugar Co. plant at Delhi.
The new factory will be on the steam road, and will have connection with the Pacific Electric road, which comes within three-fourths of a mile of the place where Dyer Co. will put up the plant.
This factory will make the fifth in Orange county and the third established in the last two years, since the Anaheim and Huntington Beach plants are starting up on their first season now.
Among the principal stockholders of the Santa Ana Co-operative Sugar Co. are James Irvine, James McFadden, A. J. Crookshank, R. T. Harris, Frank Monoghan and A. Getty.
AN EARLY
Presidential Primary Spring
California will no longer hold elections at any next spring; like her progressive stance that are tolerably wily state legislatures do this example set by Oregon in this regiments from this state conventions will be political machinery for another purpose dispatch gives these...
In five states no longer will be held presidential elections because depublican and democraptic convention selected will be the first so presidential primary in Oregon, but hard North Dakota, WI and New Jersey,...
20 Assembly Constitutional Amendment No. 33, relating to the election and compensation of a clerk of the Supreme Court; also relating to county clerks being ex-officio clerks of courts of record; and also relating to the appointments by the Superior Courts of Court Commissioners, and also relating to the appointment by the Superior Court of a reporter and assistant reporters, and the appointment by the District Court of Appeal of its clerks, and also relating to the duties and compensations of such officers.
21 Assembly Constitutional Amendment No. 46, in relation to the impeachment of State officers and judges.
22 Assembly Constitutional Amendment No. 48, relating to the exemption of property from taxation.
23 Assembly Constitutional Amendment No. 50, relating to railroads and other transportation companies.
ROBERTS FOR CONGRESS
San Benardino Man May Get Into Running
E. D. Roberts, state treasurer, may be a candidate for the republican nomination for congress for the new district that will probably comprise San Bernardino, Riverside, San Diego, Imperial and Orange counties, with either Inyo or that portion of Los Angeles in the vicinity of Pomona.
Although Roberts has given no authorization to his friends in San Bernardino county to advance his name as a possible candidate, he is being widely discussed by prominent progressive republicans, in both San Bernardino and Riverside.
WILL SWAT FRUIT FLY
Uncle Sam to Give a Hand in Keeping Out Pest
That the United States government will co-operate with California in its fight to keep out the Mediterranean fruit fly, the greatest pest and most dangerous insect known to prey upon Heights, San Diego, and eloped to Santa Ana on Wednesday last wit Hurvey Gillogly of Villa Park. They got a marriage license there.
Word telephoned to Sheriff Rudock came too late to head off the issuance of the license, but that the couple were married did not interfere with the coming of the girl's father, Henry Foster.
He arrived in Santa Ana last week and asked for a warrant for the arrest of Gillogly on a charge of perjury. The deputy district attorney investigated the case and learned that the girl was the only one who gave her age to the county clerk. She said she was 19, and looked it. Her father says she is but sixteen. The attorney was convinced that a case of perjury did not lie against young Gillogly because of the fact that the girl was responsible for the placing of the age at 19. She signed the board of health certificate.
Unable to get a warrant for the man's arrest, the father went out in search of the girl. He was accompanied by a constable. The couple were found at the home of Gillogly's brother at Villa Park, and after a talk of a couple of hours, the father persuaded the girl to return with him to San Diego.
The girl ran away from home while her parents were down town witnessing a parade.
MILLIONS TO
Standard Preparingment of Orcad
An oil expert in the plans and punderd Oil company statement that they use $15,000,000 in ten new Whittier fields, particularly fory in the La Hacienda Coyote Hills field.
There are two dard's extensive
ANAHEIM GAZETTE
fruit, was made known this week at the office of State Horticultural Commissioner Jeffrey when an order was received that all army transports shall refuse fruit at Honolulu or any of the Hawaiian islands where the pest exists. This order applies to transports going into the port of San Francisco and means the government vessels which are not subject to quarantine orders will not take on for any use whatever, fruit while lying at Honolulu. This comes as a follow order to that issued at the office of the horticultural commissioner some time ago refusing entry to all fruit from the islands.
The danger of the pest securing a foothold in California has aroused the state and government authorities to exercise the most stringent means possible to keep out the fly. The quarantine has been made so tight that the state horticultural commissioner and his assistants have the right to examine even the personal baggage of passengers arriving from Honolulu.
WOMEN IN TROUSERS
An Irishwoman, now the proprietress of forty fertile acres in Sussex, England, says in an interview for a Boston journal, that she wears trousers when attending to her duties as an agriculturist and finds them much more suitable than skirts.
In conservative England a woman without skirts probably attracts a good deal of attention and subjects herself to more or less invidious comment, but in some countries women in "pants" are uncriticised. If there is a race whose women are womanly it is the Japanese, yet Japanese women discard their kimonas when engaged in some forms of manual labor, donning trousers for the time being and returning to the kimono at the end of the day's work.
Taking the world over, quite a large proportion of women wear trousers in the fields in that vicinity; first, because the company wants to get the high gravity oil which is found in these fields by deep drilling; secondly, because the supply of oil seems inexhaustible, as the old wells are still producing about as much as when they were brought in, while the northern fields are destined to lose in their productivity.
This second cause is the chief among the many factors which are making the fields in this vicinity so prominent today and which many oil experts claim will make them in due time the greatest oil producing fields in the state.
Wells brought in years ago are still producing on the pump as much as ever in their history. There has been no gusher fame to throw the fields before the public and dazzle for the time, only to fade. The development has been steady and sure and the productivity of the fields for more than half a century seems assured, as the ground has hardly been tapped.
The development in the past fifteen years, when the fields in the Olinda district were first brought into the limelight by the discovery of oil, has been fairly rapid but no activity in the past can compare with the present extensive development which is being pushed ahead by the many operative companies in Whittier, Brea Canyon, Olinda, Coyote Hills and much of the land in the La Habra valley lying between these field, and it s predicted by many that the fields in those localities are on the verge of a boom, one that will not break but will grow greater and greater.
OXNARD FACTORY OPENS
Beet Sugar Concern to Treat 200,000 Tons; $1,000,000 for Farmers
OXNARD, Cal., July 22.—The local factory of the American beet sugar
in the suit that lay dormant in the Superior Court of this county.
A month ago Attorneys Scarborough and Forgy gave notice of a motion to dismiss the case for want of prosecution. The notice was served on Koyer, a plaintiff. Koyer went to Attorney Jones and announced that neither he nor Sherwood had any interest in the suit for $1000, that all their interest was assigned to Will A. Harris some seven years ago.
Attorney Jones immediately prepared to keep the case in court, and this week he presented Judge West with the affidavit of Mrs. Harris, setting forth the sudden death of the elder Harris and the unhappy end of the younger, her son Lamar, showing that by those unfortunate circumstances she was in ignorance of her rights, hence the lack of prosecution.
Judge West ruled with Mrs. Harris, denying the motion to dismiss. "It is a most remarkable case," replied the judge in making his ruling. "It is different from any I ever heard of."
COUNTY SCHOOL FUNDS
Superintendent Mitchell Makes Quarterly Apportionment
County School Superintendent R. P. Mitchell has just made the fourth quarterly apportionment of the school funds for the year ending June 30th and the amounts follow:
Alamitos ... $138
Anaheim ... 2,688
Bay City ... 42
Bolsa ... 324
Buena Park ... 228
Centralia ... 402
Cypress ... 108
Delhi ... 144
Diamond ... 150
El Modena ... 756
El Toro ... 162
Fairview ... 216
Fountain Valley ... 324
Fullerton ... 1458
without skirts probably attracts a good deal of attention and subjects herself to more or less invidious comment, but in some countries women in "pants" are uncriticised. If there is a race whose women are womanly it is the Japanese, yet Japanese women discard their kimonas when engaged in some forms of manual labor, donning trousers for the time being and returning to the kimono at the end of the day's work.
Taking the world over, quite a large proportion of women wear trousers habitually without bringing their dignity or discretion into question. The Chinese are certainly as decorous as any women in the world. Their demureness is rather depressing, to the westerner, accustomed to the more or less emancipated and confident woman of the Occident. Their trousers neither make nor proclaim them "mannish." But custom is more inviolable than law and the pioneers who assail it orally or defy it by their actions incur penalties that are exacted automatically and without the delays that intervene between infractions of law and convictions of court. Trousers are certainly as modest as any kinds of skirts, even when there is not a breath of air stirring. Upon windy days there's no comparing the two kinds of nether garment.
AN EARLY CAMPAIGN
Presidential Primaries to Occur in Spring
California will not have the privilege of voting at a presidential primary next spring, like some of the other progressive states. For reasons that are tolerably well understood the state legislature declined to follow the example set by Wisconsin and Oregon in this regard, and the delegations from this state to the national conventions will be selected by the political machinery created last year for another purpose. A Washington dispatch gives these particulars:
In five states next spring there will be held presidential primary elections to choose delegates to the republican and democratic national conventions, and to declare the preference of the voters of both parties for candidates for the presidency. These presidential primaries will be the first ever held in the United States, and the delegates to the national convention selected under them will be the first so chosen. The presidential primary idea had its origin in Oregon, but has been adopted in North Dakota, Wisconsin, Nebraska, and New Jersey, all of which have
OXNARD FACTORY OPENS
Beet Sugar Concern to Treat 200,000 Tons; $1,000,000 for Farmers
OXNARD, Cal., July 22.—The local factory of the American beet sugar company began grinding sugar beets today.
Eight hundred men are employed. H. R. Duval of New York, president; E. G. Howe of Denver, general manager; Robert Oxnard, vice president, witnessed the opening of the campaign.
Sixteen thousand acres of beets will be treated during the session of three months. The total tonnage will exceed 200,000 tons. In the past year a 400-ton ice plant was installed.
Farmers will receive in excess of $1,000,000 for their beets.
ISSUES INJUNCTION
Judge West Restrains Sunset Beachers from Hunting on Their Own Land
During the open season for ducks, no person connected with the Sunset Land & Water Co., can lawfully use or carry a gun within the boundaries of the tract known as Sunset Beach. To do so would be in violation of an injunction issued from the superior court by Judge West.
On December 10 of last year the Lomita Land & Water Co. brought suit against the Sunset Land & Water Co., and others. The lands of the gun club adjoin Sunset Beach.
The club asserted that it received its deed from a man who owned the land now comprising the gun club pre serves at Sunset Beach, and there is a clause that gave the gun club the lease for gaming purposes of the land since sold to the Sunset Beach company. The club declared that those hunting at Sunset Beach disturbed the club's shooting, and an order was asked under the old lease restraining the Sunset Beach tract owners from hunting.
REMARKABLE CASE
Action in Superior Court Brings Back Memories of Harris Family
One of the most remarkable cases in the history of the Superior Court of this county came to light this
Total $27,936
Anaheim High School 43,334
Fullerton Union High School 55,478
Huntington Beach High School 35,330
Orange Union High School 62,378
Santa Ana High School 114,818
Total $311,338
LEAVES HIS HAPPY HOME
Tustin Rancher Mistreats Mexican Girl, Disappears
Charles E. Torry, a Tustin rancher, has hit the trail for parts unknown, and a felony charge has been filed against him. The charge lodged in Justice Cox's court at Santa Ana, charges that on April 18th Torrey following threats, mistreated Jennie Ruiz, who was then employed as a domestic at Torrey's home. On March 31, the girl married Frank O'Campo. Since she told O'Campo and her
REMARKABLE CASE
Action in Superior Court Brings Back Memories of Harris Family
One of the most remarkable cases in the history of the Superior Court of this county came to light this week when Attorney Mattison B. Jones of Los Angeles appeared in behalf of Mrs. Nettie Harris, widow of Will A. Harris, at one time a leading attorney, orator and politician of Los Angeles, to contest a motion to dismiss a suit in which Mrs. Harris did not know until a month ago that she was interested. In fact, she did not know the case existed. The action is for a real estate commission of $1000 and is entitled W. L. Sherwood and A. S. Koyer against Henry Hoskins.
All the interest of the plaintiffs was assigned to Will A. Harris before his death. Harris died suddenly and left no record of his interest. His son, Lamar A. Harris, in his first years at the bar a brilliant attorney, was unable to attend to business because of his enslavement to opium, and his suicide near Chicago on October 12th, 1909, after he had held up a bank, forms one of the most sensational incidents in the histories of the prominent families of Los Angeles. Because of the sudden death of Will A. Harris at Arrowhead Hot Springs on August 7, 1906, and the neglect of Lamar, Mrs. Harris, the sole devisee under the will of the elder Harris, never knew she was in truth a litigant.
Tustin Rancher Mistreats Mexican Girl, Disappears
Charles E. Torry, a Tustin rancher, has hit the trail for parts unknown, and a felony charge has been filed against him. The charge lodged in Justice Cox's court at Santa Ana, charges that on April 18th Torrey following threats, mistreated Jennie Ruiz, who was then employed as a domestic at Torrey's home. On March 31, the girl married Frank O'Campo. Since then she told O'Campo and her father, Gus Ruiz, of Tustin, of the occurrence on April 18. According to information received by the officers, Torrey admitted to the two men that the story told by the girl was true, and he promised to pay her $3000 by July 1. He did not pay the money, and two or three days before July 1 he dropped out of sight, leaving his wife at Tustin.
Years ago Torrey ran a packing-house at McPherson. His former wife got a divorce from him on the ground of cruelty. For a number of years he has been growing oranges and lemons at Tustin.
Waldo O'Kelly and John McIntosh of Redlands were in town the past week, guests of W. A. Franz.
Charley Bauer was in town from Cucamonga on Friday settling up his father's estate, of which he is administrator. He was accompanied by his wife and child. He is building a $2,-500 residence on his grape and orange farm in the upper valley.
Alex Humblot, a former resident of this city, now of Los Angeles, where he is in the commission business, was in town the first of the week visiting old-time friends.
July August September
Excursions
Back East
via Santa Fe
Sample Rates
Chicago $72.50
Kansas City 60.00
*Denver 55.00
St. Louis 70.00
St. Paul 73.50
New York 108.50
Boston 110.50
And other points
July 6, 19, 20, 26, 27, 28.
August 3, 4, 5, 14, 15, 16, 17, 21, 22, 23, 28, 29, 30.
September 1, 2, 3, 4, 6.7.
*To destinations marked tickets will also be sold on October 12, 13 and 14.
Stopover privilege at Grand Canyon.
J. H. CLABAUGH, Agent.
go Santa Fe
SOUTHERN PACIFIC
The Scenic, Quick and Safe Way
EAST
Through standard and tourist cars to all points East via San Francisco and Ogden or Portland and via the South over the famous
Sunset Route
via El Paso, San Antonio, or New Orleans.
For further particulars write or call upon
all points East via San Francisco and Ogden or Portland and via the South over the famous
Sunset Route
via El Paso, San Antonio, or New Orleans.
For further particulars write or call upon
L. B. Valla, Com. Agt.
J. M. Pickering, Agt.
Santa Ana
PHONES: HOME 1724
PACIFIC 1231
THE ANAHEIM GAZETTE
Costs Only $1.50 Per Year.
Mergenthaler Type-casting Machine
Casts Type Daily
Bring in your Jobs, or Telephone, and our Solicitor will call. Have your jobs printed on Newly Cast Type
Notice to Creditors.
Estate of Benjamin J. Snodgrass, deceased.
Notice is hereby given by the undersigned Administrator of the estate of Benjamin J. Snodgrass, 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 July, 1911) to the said Administrator of said estate at his place of business at Room 14 in the First National Bank Building in the City of Santa Ana, in the County of Orange.
Dated this 11th day of July, A. D., 1911.
ALEXANDER J. SNODGRASS,
Administrator of the Estate of Benjamin J. Snodgrass, Deceased.
VICTOR MONTGOMERY & B. E. TARVER,
Attorneys for Administrator of said Estate.
7-1345
In the Superior Court
Of the County of Orange, State of California.
A. V. Smith, Plaintiff,
vs.
S. H. Watson, and Edgar N. Snook, as administrator of the estate of Charles W. Snook, deceased, 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.
RICHARD MELROSE,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
The People of the State of California Send Greeting to: S. H. Watson, and Edgar N. Snook, as administrator of the estate of Charles W. Snook, deceased, Defendants.
You Are Hereby Directed to Appear and answer the Complaint in an action entitled as
Of the County of Orange, State of California.
A. V. Smith, Plaintiff,
vs.
S. H. Watson, and Edgar N. Snook, as admin
istrator of the estate of Charles W. Snook, deceased, 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.
RICHARD MELROSE,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
The People of the State of California Send
Greeting to: S. H. Watson, and Edgar N. Snook,
as administrator of the estate of Charles W.
Snook, deceased, 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 6th day of June, A. D., 1911.
Seal of Superior Court of
Orange County, California.
W. B. WILLIAMS, Clerk.
By G. D. WILLIAMSON,
Deputy Clerk.
Business College
SANTA ANA CALIFORNIA
Free tuition during July and August to
all who enter now and enroll for next year's course.
Open all summer. Catalogue Free.
J. W. McCormac, Pres't,
117½ E. 4th st., SANTA ANA, CALIFORNIA
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MILL WORK
Beveled Well Curbing
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Patronize home industry, especially when you get just a little bit better service here than you can get anywhere else.
ANAHEIM STEAM LAUNDRY
HINEMAN BROS., Props.
SOUTH LEMON STREET Anaheim, Cal.