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anaheim-gazette 1913-03-20

1913-03-20 · Anaheim Gazette · page 1 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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NO NEW DISTRICT HERE FOR THE PRESENT WEEK OF STRENUOUS ACTIVITY COMES TO HAPPY TERMINATION AT MASS MEETING DISCUSSION BRINGS ABOUT MORE HARMONIOUS FEELING BETWEEN NORTH AND SOUTH Sweeping along with irresistable force until it was found last week that the northern part of the county was not sufficiently strong as to population to warrant formation of another supervisor district here, and that too great an incursion would be necessary into the second district to make up the deficiency, the discussion for such new district was dropped this week, to be taken up again at some future time when population shall be sufficient to justify that course. A movement for creation of a new district here was brought about some weeks ago when it was learned that too large an appropriation of public money had been made for the two coast districts in comparison to the sum allotted to the city exaggerated, although the visit of the committee to Orange and Santa Ana, at which time it was given out that the northern part of the county would demand another district, created resentment on the part of southern members of the board. It was pointed out that if this city should be thus attached to the two southern districts, a referendum election would be demanded, and similarly it was also shown that if a demand for creation of two districts in the northern end of the county were insisted upon, a referendum election would also have to be called. Conferences were held in this city attended by a number of delegations from outlying points and it was agreed that rather than to plunge the county into the expense of a referendum election, it were better to drop the matter for the sake of harmony between the northern and southern districts. A mass meeting of citizens was called for Saturday evening at which it was resolved to settle the entire matter by dropping discussion of the subject for creation of a new supervisor district. Supervisor Schumacher was present at the meeting and urged harmony between different sections of the county. He went to Santa Ana on Sunday and held a conference with Supervisors Talbert and Leck and County Clerk Williams at which the subject was amicably disposed of and the matter of a new supervisor district here was dropped. Mr. Schumacher was assured that no effort would be made to annex territory in this district to the second and fourth districts and that a more equitable adjustment of appropriating public money would be imme- northern part of the county was not sufficiently strong as to population to warrant formation of another supervisor district here, and that too great an incursion would be necessary into the second district to make up the deficiency, the discussion for such new district was dropped this week, to be taken up again at some future time when population shall be sufficient to justify that course. A movement for creation of a new district here was brought about some weeks ago when it was learned that too large an appropriation of public money had been made for the two coast districts in comparison to the sum allotted to the third district. This district, which polls more than a third of the vote of the county and contains 37 per cent of its assessed valuation, was allotted from the current expense fund last year the sum of $15,000. The second and fifth districts, representing a trifle more population, and 49 per cent of the county's assessed valuation, was allotted $40,000. Following this excessive allotment of public funds to those districts came an application for a further appropriation of $20,000 for a coast boulevard, which in the estimation of local residenters, would cost probably $200,000 before completed. A number of meetings and conferences were held in this city and Fullerton and expressions of opinion seemed unanimous throughout the third supervisor district that another supervisor should be demanded for the northern end of the county. Supervisor Schumacher was warmly commended for his action in defeating the $20,000 appropriation for the coast boulevard, the law requiring unanimous vote by the supervisors to apportion money from the current expense fund for such purpose. While citizens of every precinct in the third district were heartily in accord with the movement for a new district here, delegations of voters from Yorba and Garden Grove joined with them in expressed opposition to an appropriation of money for a coast boulevard and asking permission to affiliate with our people in a petition to the supervisors for creation of another district here. A committee was appointed to visit Santa Ana and Orange on Friday last, but when it was learned that differences of opinion existed as to the precise line of dividing the two proposed northern districts, Chairman Eygabroad of the meeting at which this committee had been appointed, directed that the committee defer its visit to Orange and Santa Ana until such time as satisfactory conclusions should be arrived at in respect to the dividing line. At this time it was learned that the Anaheim sugar factory had been placed in the northern district, whereas it was the opinion freely expressed at a conference held here on Thursday, that the sugar factory should be annexed to the Anaheim district, especially as the northern district had been allotted an assessed valuation of $11,000,000, while the Anaheim district was allotted only $7,000,000. At this conference it was also learned that too great incursion would have to be made into the second supervisor district in order to obtain sufficient population upon the basis of last BIRTHDAY CAKE AT S. Q. R. STORE Cutting Occurs on Saturday and All Hands Are Invited to Attend A mammoth birthday cake will be on exhibition in the front corner window of the S. Q. R. Store today and will be cut on Saturday, in commemoration of the sixth anniversary of that popular establishment. In the cake will be three tickets giving the lucky holders valuable prizes, which will be on display in the window alongside the cake. The cake and the six-day sale which is an annual event at the store, are in honor of the birthday of this popular firm which has won for itself the esteem and respect of all in the time since its organization. The store is one of the leading mercantile establishments of Orange county and has won for itself a place in the community by square dealing and courteous treatment to its customers in all its departments. Its stock is the largest ever carried in its history and embraces carefully selected articles in all branches. Its business has shown constant expansion until it now takes rank with the foremost establishments of its kind in the southland. Its proprietors, Gus Schumacher, W. P. Quarton and Oscar Renner, are young men who have risen from the ranks and who know the public taste to a nicety and have the ability to spread before buyers just the kind of goods which they are seeking for. Their object is to make square dealing a motto of the store and that they are succeeding in obtaining the confidence of the public is attested in the fact that their business shows a more remarkable growth in the past year than ever before. A cordial invitation is extended to public to attend the store during the anniversary sale and to participate in the cake cutting on Saturday. POPULAR COUPLE MARRIED Members of City's Younger Set Become Partners For Better or Worse Charles Alfred Virgoe and Miss Mary Pearl Barnes were married at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Mayhew at 1 o'clock Sunday afternoon, A. B. Markle retired pastor of the Christian church officiating at the care... POPULAR COUPLE MARRIED Members of City's Younger Set Become Partners For Better or Worse Charles Alfred Virgoe and Miss Mary Pearl Barnes were married at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Mayhew at 1 o'clock Sunday afternoon, A. B. Markle, retired pastor of the Christian church, officiating at the ceremony. Decorations of the rooms were elaborate and the scheme was carried out with roses and ferns. The ceremony was performed with the bride and groom standing under a canopy of roses and greenery in the spacious parlor of the Mayhew home. The newly married couple were recipients of many handsome and beautiful wedding presents, presented them by their friends in this city. After the ceremony a sumptuous wedding dinner was served to which the few invited guests did ample justice. In the afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Virgoe were taken for an automobile trip through the northern end of the county by Mr. Mayhew. Those present at the ceremony were Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Schumacher, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Ritchie and son Frank, Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Harling and family, E. Virgoe, father, and Ed and Elizabeth Virgoe, brother and sister of the groom. Mr. and Mrs. Virgoe have taken up housekeeping and will take their honeymoon trip at a more convenient period later in the year. They have the well wishes of a host of friends in this city for a long-continued and happy marriage life, and are the recipients of congratulations from all sides over the happy event. Herman Dickel has received a photograph of his grandson, who resides at Republic, Wash. The picture shows the lad attired in a natty white suit, and he stands surrounded by five feet of snow. He is the son of Ted Dickel, who is superintendent of a large mining corporation at that point, and bears a striking resemblance to his distinguished grandfather. The three men were some days after the Newport Beach bank $1,000 in money was a partner of Johnny ened by the explosion safe late at night. Street and began first who were then coming He is believed to have them. On being seen evening of the Dyckery, the three men the Newport Beach was felt that they would another job in this years before, Davis lions, after robbing the bank for the first time heim and robbed Naoon, getting away dred dollars. Davis robbed a bank in Coha this he and one of his sentenced to seven yin. They were librereafter on good mediately after release Los Angeles by Officer who had placed Da some years before charge in this county ported the fact that were in Los Angeles Flammer of the po him to be on the lo robbery. Two week Newport Beach bank the second time. Its police officers here repeat his exploit of this city and doing at the three men had been the evening of the robbery, there was following morning that been robbed. The red to Sheriff Ruddy Marshal Kellenberg AHEIM GAZET ANAHEIM CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, MARCH 20, 1913 BANK ROBBER SUSPECT HELD IN JAIL BOASTED OF PARTICIPATING IN JOB, PICKED UP IN LOS ANGELES THOUGHT TO HAVE BEEN ACCOMPLICE OF BILL DAVIS, NOTED DESPERADO Under-Sheriff Law picked up two men in Los Angeles at midnight on Saturday, who are now held in the county jail as suspects of being accomplices in a number of robberies perpetrated in this county by Bill Davis, the noted desperado who was arrested by Sheriff Ruddock and a posse of officers in a tent at El Modena a year ago last December, and who died in the county jail of consumption a week after his arrest. The men now in jail give the names of H. Carlisle and Harry Blue. The latter is thought to have participated in the Newport Beach bank robbery in November, 1911, and in the hold-up of the Belmont saloon in this city some weeks thereafter. Carlisle is held as a man who might be able to give the officers valuable pictures of convicts, one of which was that of Bill Davis. The led picked out his photograph without hesitation as the man he saw on the sidewalk in front of the Southern County Bank. Some months thereafter when Davis was placed under arrest at El Modena, he again identified the robber, who eyed him suspiciously from his couch where he lay in the last stages of consumption. Davis returned to his father's home in Westminster several months after perpetrating the robbery of the saloon here. He told his aged father that he wished to look upon his face once again before he died. Officers were looking for Davis throughout the state, but he braved arrest simply to enter his old home again and see his father. Some days thereafter he was taken by Mr. and Mrs. House in a wagon to their ranch at El Modena. They drove through Santa Ana, and stopped before a clothing store to procure a suit of underclothing for the desperado, who was in rags. Davis was taken to El Modena and placed in a tent. Here he was located in a day or two by Sheriff Ruddock. On a Sunday evening about 9 o'clock in December, 1911, Ruddock and a posse of officers drove to the ranch and placed Davis under arrest. He was taken to the county hospital where he died a week later. Ruddock recovered from Davis a gold watch which he took from the Dyckman saloon. This watch Davis had inserted in a slit made in a quilt covering him as he lay in a tent at El Modena. As Ruddock and other officers were examining the watch by the light of the auto's headlamp, Davis was seen to pass a bunch of letters from under AFTERMERRYWAR DOVE OF PEACE HOVERS MASS MEETING OF CITIZENS ON SATURADY NIGHT PROTEST AGAINST GERRYMANDER CONFERENCE SUNDAY BETWEEN NORTH AND SOUTH-SIDERS BRINGS PEACE TO CAMP An intimation that the board of supervisors would this week redistrict the county into supervisorial districts, taking from the third district a number of precincts and attaching them to the second and fourth districts, resulted in a call for a mass meeting of citizens of northern Orange county in Knights of Columbus hall on Saturday evening, at which emphatic protest to such action was voiced by those present. The inciting cause for the call of the meeting was a report persistently circulated that this city would be split in two at Los Angeles street, the west half and West Anaheim to be added to the second district, and the east half and East Anaheim to the fourth district. While there seems to have been little foundation for the report, never In a number of robberies perpetrated in this county by Bill Davis, the noted desperado who was arrested by Sheriff Ruddock and a posse of officers in a tent at El Modena a year ago last December, and who died in the county jail of consumption a week after his arrest. The men now in jail give the names of H. Carlisle and Harry Blue. The latter is thought to have participated in the Newport Beach bank robbery in November, 1911, and in the hold-up of the Belmont saloon in this city some weeks thereafter. Carlisle is held as a man who might be able to give the officers valuable information regarding his companion. Both men were in a Los Angeles dive late on Saturday evening, and Blue is said to have boasted of complicity in both jobs. He is said to have declared that he robbed a man in this city of $10, while the latter was in bed. This may refer to the robbery of Jacob Kroeger, who was awakened one night at his residence on West Broadway a year and a half ago, by two men who took $10 from him. Sheriff Ruddock and his deputies have been closely on the trail of Davis' accomplices and he has never given up hope that he would eventually land them in jail. He was notified on Saturday evening of the presence of the two men in Los Angeles, and the boast which Blue had made that he had participated in the local robery. Under Sheriff Law was despatched to Los Angeles and placed the two men under arrest. They were lodged in the county jail some time after midnight on Sunday morning. On Sunday afternoon Fred Dyckman and Teddy Kuchel were summoned to the county jail by Sheriff Ruddock for the purpose of identifying Blue. The latter is suspected of being in Bill Davis' party at the time Dyckman was held up at the point of sawed-off shots-guns and robbed of $400, a gold watch and a diamond ring. The men wore masks, and while Dyckman was unable positively to identify Blue, he feels certain that he is the man who robbed him. The lad, while on his way home, early in the evening on which the Dyckman saloon was robbed, saw three men on the sidewalk where the Southern County Bank is now located. One of these men he afterwards identified as Bill Davis as the desperado lay in a tent at the farm of Mr. House at El Modena. He was unable to recognize Blue as one of the men who was in town with Davis, but says he believes he is the man whom he saw here with the desperado. Davis and two of his companions were seen in Anaheim by Johnny Walls the afternoon of the Dyckman saloon robbery. Walls took Davis to state prison some years before. As Davi and his companions walked past Walls' place of business, Davis turned and looked at Walls but made no sign of recognition. Davis had a friendly feeling for Walls, for as the latter turned him over to the warden at San Quentin, he gave him a small purse of money to purchase tobacco, and other things that he might desire while in prison. The three men were in this city some days after the robbery of the Newport Beach bank, at which about $1,000 in money was taken. Billy Hall, Modena and placed in a tent. Here he was located in a day or two by Sheriff Ruddock. On a Sunday evening about 9 o'clock in December, 1911, Ruddock and a posse of officers drove to the ranch and placed Davis under arrest. He was taken to the county hospital where he died a week later. Ruddock recovered from Davis a gold watch which he took from the Dyckman saloon. This watch Davis had inserted in a slit made in a quilt covering him as he lay in a tent at El Modena. As Ruddock and other officers were examining the watch by the light of the auto's headlamp, Davis was seen to pass a bunch of letters from under the bed-clothing to Mrs. House. These were recovered by Ruddock and gave him important information. Davis made a partial confession of his participation in the robbery of the Dyckman saloon as he lay in the tent, and it is believed that had not death intervened he would have told the entire story of his many robberies in Orange county. A number of years before, Davis was shot at twice by Marshal Steadman of this city. He had been placed under arrest for fighting at a picnic west of town. He started to run, when Steadman fired at him twice. One ball clipped off the lobe of the ear, the other made a flesh wound in the leg. These marks served later to further identify the desperado. Jacob Kroeger, a Civil War veteran, was called to the front door of his residence on West Broadway one night shortly before midnight a year and a half ago by a knock at the door. He was informed by the men on the outside that his horse was loose and was straying about the streets. He opened the door and found a revolver thrust into his face, with a demand that he yield up his money. He gave the two men who were his late callers all he had, about $10. Two weeks thereafter he was again awakened by a knock at the door late at night. This time he refused to open the door. He called to the men outside that unless they went away he would fire at them through the door. They left his place and he was not again molested. Marshal Kellenberger holds the view that the men who robbed Kroeger are local people, one of them being a son of West Anaheim pioneer. He does not think that Davis had anything to do with this robbery. Later reports from the sheriff's office are that Blue's reference to a robbery here indicated a job in a two-story house. Blue said in Los Angeles while under the influence of liquor on Saturday night that while he guarded the front door of the residence, Bill Davis climbed up the front porch and robbed a sleeping man upstairs. Officers here are not next to this story. A man at the McFarlane apartments on South Lemon street complained of being robbed of $10, and a Mexican in the Palmyra lodgings near the old gas house made similar complaint a year and a half ago. Whether these jobs were pulled off by Blue and Davis is not known here. Blue is suspected of being Pat Conway, who helped Davis in his many robberies here, and letters from whom were found in Davis' possession when taken into custody at El Modena. Condections from Garden Grove and Yorba expressed a desire to be annexed to the new district to be formed in the northern end of the county and went on record as being irrevocably opposed to an appropriation of money from the current expense fund for construction of a coast highway. Chas. Eygabroad of this city was elected chairman of the meeting, and A. A. Mills was made secretary. The report of the committee appointed by the chamber of commerce of northern Orange county some days ago to investigate the matter of redistricting, was given by Chairman Mills. He said that he and other members of the committee had canvassed the second The three men were in this city some days after the robbery of the Newport Beach bank, at which about $1,000 in money was taken. Billy Hall, a partner of Johnny Walls, was awakened by the explosion of the bank's safe late at night. He ran into the street and began firing at the robbers who were then coming out of the bank. He is believed to have wounded one of them. On being seen in Anaheim the evening of the Dyckman saloon robbery, the three men were sized up as the Newport Beach bank robbers. It was felt that they would pull off another job in this city, because five years before, Davis and two companions, after robbing the Newport Beach bank for the first time, came to Anaheim and robbed Napoleon Hart's saloon, getting away with several hundred dollars. Davis went north and robbed a bank in Colusa county. For this he and one of his companions was sentenced to seven years in San Quentin. They were liberated five years thereafter on good behavior and immediately after release were seen in Los Angeles by Officer Sid Smithwick, who had placed Davis under arrest some years before for his first felony charge in this county. Smithwick reported the fact that Davis and his pal were in Los Angeles to Detective Flammer of the police force, telling him to be on the lookout for another robbery. Two weeks thereafter the Newport Beach bank was robbed for the second time. It was believed by police officers here that Davis would repeat his exploit of coming again to this city and doing another job. After the three men had been seen in town the evening of the Dyckman saloon robbery, there was little surprise the following morning that the saloon had been robbed. The matter was referred to Sheriff Ruddock, who sent to Marshal Kellenberger a number of Blue is suspected of being Pat Conway, who helped Davis in his many robberies here, and letters from whom were found in Davis' possession when taken into custody at El Modena. Conway is the man who drove Davis in a buggy from the Garden Grove electric depot to Davis' home the night Davis returned thither. The two are believed to have been implicated in many jobs, were convicts in state's prison together, and the closest intimacy subsisted between them for many years. When Davis was placed under arrest in his tent at El Modena he began a partial confession of his misdeeds, but paused momentarily to see "what there was in it for him." "Twenty years in San Quentin." "Does not look good to me," he said. "These men would kill me if I snitched on them, and I do not want to do it. They fed me when I was hungry and they gave me shelter when I had no place to lay my head. You fellows were looking for my life, they were the only friends I ever had." Little by little Davis continued his confession, and it is believed had not death intervened he would have told the whole story. A movement has been inaugurated in Anaheim by the Pacific Mausoleum Company of Los Angeles, whereby some of our local citizens have become interested in the erection of a community mausoleum in the Anaheim cemetery. A representative of the company spent several days in our city explaining the proposition and the fact that they have acquired a plot of ground in a prominent location as a site, and are receiving the support and hearty endorsement of our professional and business men is assurance of the success of the enterprise. On another page of this issue of the Gazette will be found an advertisement by the company. He said that it was certain that redistricting would come sooner or later, and as it was understood the supervisors would redistrict in the near future, he thought it advisable that taxpayers in the northern end of the county should get to work immediately and prevent the gerrymander as contemplated by the board of supervisors. "Unless we do the redistricting," he said, "the supervisors will do it for us." Chairman Eygabroad called upon several members of the Anaheim board of trade for an expression upon the subject, asking them to state their view of the matter and what they ZETTE 0, 1913 NUMBER 22 GERRYWAR OF PEACE RIVERS OF CITIZENS ON NIGHT PROTEST GERRYMANDER SUNDAY BETWEEN SOUTH-SIDERS ACE TO CAMP what the board of suh this week redistrict supervisorial districts, third district a num- ad attaching them to north districts, result- mass meeting of citi- Orange county in ous hall on Saturday emphatic protest to policed by those pres- cause for the call of a report persistently is city would be spliteles street, the west heim to be added to it, and the east half to the fourth dis- seems to have been for the report, never- thought should be done in regard to it. Henry Adams said that he was not in favor of the committee's report, as he, for one, did not want to be connected up with the ocean, and did not care to have the Bay City precinct in with Anaheim in a supervisorial district. He also did not like the idea of a long shoestring strip down to the ocean and preferred to keep the district more compact than such a method would allow. Judge Howard was the next speaker and said he was unalterably opposed to a redistrict, believing that if the people in the present third district could get their just proportion of the money in the county treasury, he saw no benefit to be gained by creating a new district. He said the agitation for a redistricting of the county had originated in this city and he was profoundly sorry for that, for he thought the outcome would not be beneficial to this section. H. G. Ames said that he was not particularly in favor of a redistrict, but that he was opposed to a division of this city as reported contemplated by the supervisors and thought such a step obnoxious to all here, and very high-handed of the members of the board of supervisors. If such a step were taken, he continued, the people in this section would be justified in invoking the referendum and preventing the division. P. H. Krick said the division of this city was not fair nor just and he thought no such step ought to be taken, and would be in favor of the committee's plan for redistricting if such a course would help matters. Further discussion was had by SANTA ANA RIVER IN GOVERNMENT REPORT WATERS OF STREAM MADE BASIS OF REVIEW BY DEPARTMENT OF INTERIOR USED FOR DEVELOPING ENERGY AND FOR IRRIGATION IN ANAHEIM AND VICINITY The Gazette is in receipt of a copy of a report upon the water resources of California issued by the Department of the Interior at Washington, which has been co-operating with the State Water Commission and the Conservation Commission of California. The report is entitled "Water Resources of California," and is one of the most voluminous ever issued by the department. An interesting chapter deals with the Santa Ana river, and shows the number of times water of the stream is used from its mountain sources to the lower valley. The water plays a prominent part in developing electrical energy in the upper valley and is latterly used for irrigation of a wide area about Anaheim and other but that he was opposed to a division of this city as reported contemplated by the supervisors and thought such a step obnoxious to all here, and very high-handed of the members of the board of supervisors. If such a step were taken, he continued, the people in this section would be justified in invoking the referendum and preventing the division. P. H. Krick said the division of this city was not fair nor just and he thought no such step ought to be taken, and would be in favor of the committee's plan for redistricting if such a course would help matters. Further discussion was had by Mills, Adams, Porter, Simpson and others, each stating their position in the matter. In answer to a question by F. C. Krause, Mills stated that the appropriation of $20,000 for the coast boulevard would build only the first bridge, and before the matter was finished, $200,000 would have to be spent, in building bridges, running a ferry over Newport Bay and building the road along the rocky coast line. The first appropriation of $20,000 was but the entering wedge for more appropriations later on, and if the matter were started, it would prove very costly to the county. W. T. Brown, of Fullerton, stated that the associated chambers of commerce had indorsed the proposition for a county coast boulevard and appointed the committee to appear before the board of supervisors upon condition that the coast people should cease their agitation against the state interior road. As this had not been done, and the coast people had been agitating the matter recently, he considered that the supervisors would be justified in not keeping their promise, for the coast people had broken their part of the contract. After other discussion by F. R. Aldrich of La Habra, B. F. Porter, J. F. Ahlborn, Wm. Schumacher, John Cook, W. T. Brown and others, J. S. Howard made a motion that a committee of the chamber of commerce represented at the meeting meet with the board of supervisors at their special meeting called for Monday, at the regular meeting Tuesday and any other meeting of the board at which redistricting was to be brought up, with instructions to leave the matter as it now stands, unless the supervisors should attempt to redistrict, and if this were attempted the committee should push their own scheme and try to redistrict the northern end of the county to suit the taxpayers in that section. The committee was composed of A. A. Mills of this city, Ralph J. McFadden of Placentia, W. T. Brown of Fullerton, F. R. Aldrich of La Habra, George Wilcox of Buena Park and H. H. Lane of Garden Grove. The motion was unanimously carried and the meeting adjourned. The consensus of opinion as expressed was that the matter should rest as it is at present unless steps were taken by the board of supervisors to redistrict. At the conference between Supervisors Schumacher, Talbert and Leck and County Clerk Williams at Santa Ana on Sunday, an agreement was arrived at that the supervisors' districts out present formed shall be continue of California issued by the Department of the Interior at Washington, which has been co-operating with the State Water Commission and the Conservation Commission of California. The report is entitled "Water Resources of California," and is one of the most voluminous ever issued by the department. An interesting chapter deals with the Santa Ana river, and shows the number of times water of the stream is used from its mountain sources to the lower valley. The water plays a prominent part in developing electrical energy in the upper valley and is latterly used for irrigation of a wide area about Anaheim and other parts of Orange county. The water resources of California have played an important part in the development of the State. Repairs to a mill race near Georgetown, Eldorado county, in 1848, led to the discovery of gold, and the development of the gold-mining industry was due largely to the location of the deposits near the water necessary for hydraulicking. The water available for irrigation and domestic supply has been the chief factor in the development of Southern California, which now has a population of more than 1,000,000 people. The growth of irrigation systems in the great interior valley is bringing about its subdivision into small ranches devoted to the intensive farming which affords almost limitless opportunities to the agriculturist. An increased water supply for the city of Sran Francisco is one of its greatest necessities, and more water for Los Angeles is to be brought from Owens Valley—a distance of more than 200 miles—at a cost of $23,000,000. The many mountain streams of California afford abundant hydro-electric power, the utilization of which in manufacturing enterprises and in transportation has been made possible by the progress of electric-power transmission during the last decade. Today California probably leads the country in the number and length of her power transmission lines. Information concerning the quantity of water carried by the streams has been and will continue to be an important factor in the development of these resources, for that fundamental importance of stream-flow data is now so thoroughly recognized that it is almost impossible to finance any project depending on stream flow without presenting authentic records of flow covering a period of years. The measurements of the flow of streams in California was begun by the California State engineer in 1878, in accordance with the law requiring him "to investigate the problems of the irrigation of the plains, the condition and capacity of the great drainage lines of the State," and the improvement of the navigation of rivers." The work was restricted to a few localities in the Sacramento and San Joaquin River basins, the principal station being on the Sacramento at Collinsville. The State engineer's office was discontinued in 1884, and practically no further stream studies were made until 1894, when engineers of the United States Geological Survey were sent into California and made a few measu- new district to be northern end of the county some days ago matter of redistricting Chairman Mills. He other members of the avassed the second districts, having gone to change the day preferences with Super citizens of the fourth district. He reported that he had said that his for the appropriation current expense for construction of was that he had upon the occasion ruling of the board of committee from the years of commerce of requesting such a said that at that need to vote for such and would stick by Mills further stated voters who should advisor district was the plan of the coming number for and the new district formed in the county by taking Talbert's district contemplated new that it was certain would come sooner was understood the redistrict in the thought it advisable the northern end of get to work imme-that the gerrymander of the board of super-do the redistricting supervisors will do broad called upon of the Anaheim expression upon them to state their and what they committee appointor of commerce of county some days ago matter of redistricting Chairman Mills. He other members of the avassed the second districts, having gone to change the day preferences with Super citizens of the fourth district. He reported that he had said that his for the appropriation current expense for construction of was that he had upon the occasion ruling of the board of committee from the years of commerce of requesting such a said that at that need to vote for such and would stick by Mills further stated voters who should advisor district was the plan of the coming number for and the new district formed in the county by taking Talbert's district contemplated new that it was certain would come sooner was understood the redistrict in the thought it advisable the northern end of get to work imme-that the gerrymander of the board of super-do the redistricting supervisors will do broad called upon of the Anaheim expression upon them to state their and what they committee appointor of commerce of county some days ago matter of redistricting Chairman Mills. He other members of the avassed the second districts, having gone to change the day preferences with Super citizens of the fourth district. He reported that he had said that his for the appropriation current expense for construction of was that he had upon the occasion ruling of the board of committee from the years of commerce of requesting such a said that at that need to vote for such and would stick by Mills further stated voters who should advisor district was the plan of the coming number for and the new district formed in the county by taking Talbert's district contemplated new that it was certain would come sooner was understood the redistrict in the thought it advisable the northern end of get to work imme-that the gerrymander of the board of super-do the redistricting supervisors will do broad called upon of the Anaheim expression upon them to state their and what they committee appointor of commerce of county some days ago matter of redistricting Chairman Mills. He other members of the avassed the second districts, having gone to change the day preferences with Super citizens of the fourth district. He reported that he had said that his for the appropriation current expense for construction of was that he had upon the occasion ruling of the board of committee from the years of commerce of requesting such a said that at that need to vote for such and would stick by Mills further stated voters who should advisor district was the plan of the coming number for and the new district formed in the county by taking Talbert's district contemplated new that it was certain would come sooner was understood the redistrict in the thought it advisable the northern end of get to work imme-that the gerrymander of the board of super-do the redistricting supervisors will do broad called upon of the Anaheim expression upon them to state their and what they committee appointor of commerce of county some days ago matter of redistricting Chairman Mills. He other members of the avassed the second districts, having gone to change the day preferences with Super citizens of the fourth district. He reported that he had said that his for the appropriation current expense for construction of was that he had upon the occasion ruling of the board of committee from the years of commerce of requesting such a said that at that need to vote for such and would stick by Mills further stated voters who should advisor district was the plan of the coming number for and the new district formed in the county by taking Talbert's district contemplated new that it was certain would come sooner was understood the redistrict in the thought it advisable the northern end of get to work imme-that the gerrymander of the board of super-do the redistricting supervisors will do broad called upon of the Anaheim expression upon them to state their and what they committee appointor of commerce of county some days ago matter of redistricting Chairman Mills. He other members of the avassed the second districts, having gone to change the day preferences with Super citizens of the fourth district. He reported that he had said that his for the appropriation current expense for construction of was that he had upon the occasion ruling of the board of committee from the years of commerce of requesting such a said that at that need to vote for such and would stick by Mills further stated voters who should advisor district was the plan of the coming number for and the new district formed in the county by taking Talbert's district contemplated new that it was certain would come sooner was understood the redistrict in the thought it advisable the northern end of get to work imme-that the gerrymander of the board of super-do the redistricting supervisors will do broad called upon ofthe Anaheim expression upon them to state their and what they committee appointor of commerce of county some days ago matter of redistricting Chairman Mills. He other members of the avassed the second districts, having gone to change the day preferences with Super citizens of the fourth district. He reported that he had said that his for the appropriation current expense for construction of was that he had upon the occasion ruling of the board of committee from the years of commerce of requesting such a said that at that need to vote for such and would stick by Mills further stated voters who should advisor district wasthe planofthecomingnumberforandthenewdistrictformedinthecountybytakingMalbert'sdistrictcontemplatednewthatitwascertainwouldcomesoonerwasunderstoodtheredistrictintheoughtilitadviseditadvisablethenorthernendofgettoworkimmeatethegerrymanderoftheboardofsuperdo_theredistrictsupervisorswilldobroadcalleduponoftheAnaheimexpressionuponthemtostatetheirandwhattheycommitteeappointorofcommerceofcountysomedaysago matterof Redistricting Chairman Mills. He other members oftheavassedtheseconddistricts,havinggonetochangethedaypreferenceswithSupercitizensofthefourthdistrictHe reportedthathatatthatneedtovoteforsuchandwouldstickbyMillsfurtherstatedvoterswhoshouldvisordistrictwastheplanofthecomingnumberforandthenewdistrictformedinthecountybytakingMalbert'sdistrictcontemplatednewthatitwascertainwouldcomesoonerwasunderstoodtheredistrictintheoughtilitadviseditadvisablethenorthernendofgettoworkimmeatethegerrymanderoftheboardofsuperdo_theredistrictsupervisorswilldobroadcalleduponoftheAnaheimexpressionuponthemtostatetheirandwhattheycommittee appointorofcommerceofcountysomedaysago matterof Redistricting Chairman Mills. He other members.oftheavassedtheseconddistricts,havinggonetochangethedaypreferenceswithSupercitizensofthefourthdistrictHe reportedthathatatthatneedtovoteforsuchandwouldstickbyMillsfurtherstatedvoterswhoshouldvisordistrictwastheplanofthecomingnumberforandthenewdistrictformedinthecountybytakingMalbert'sdistrictcontemplatednewthatitwascertainwouldcomesoonerwasunderstoodtheredistrictintheoughtilitadviseditadvisablethenorthernendofgettoworkimmeatethegerrymanderoftheboardofsuperdo_theredistrictsupervisorswilldobroadcalleduponoftheAnaheimexpressionuponthemtostatetheirandwhattheycommittee appointorofcommerceofcountysomedaysago matterof Redistricting Chairman Mills. He other members.oftheavassedtheseconddistrics,havinggonetochangethedaypreferenceswithSupercitizensofthefourthdistrictHe reportedthathatatthatneedtovoteforsuchandwouldstickbyMillsfurtherstatedvoterswhoshouldvisordistrictwastheplanofthecomingnumberforandthenewdistrictformedinthecountybytakingMalbert'sdistrictcontemplatednewthatitwascertainwouldcomesoonerwasunderstoodtheredistrictinTheoughtilitadviseditadvisablethenorthernendofgettoworkimmeatethegerrymanderoftheboardofsuperdo_theredistrictsupervisorswilldobroadcalleduponoftheAnaheimexpressionuponthemtostatetheirandwhattheycommittee appointorofcommerceofcountysomedaysago matterof Redistricting Chairman Mills. He other members.oftheavassedtheseconddistrics,havinggonetochangethedaypreferenceswithSupercitizensofthefourthdistrictHe reportedthathatatthatneedtovoteforsuchandwouldstickbyMillsfurtherstatedvoterswhoshouldvisordistrictwastheplanofthecomingnumberforandthenewdistrictformedinTheoughtilitadviseditadvisablethenorthernendofgettoworkimmeatethegerrymanderoftheboardofsuperdo_theredistrictsupervisorswilldobroadcalleduponoftheAnaheimexpressionuponthemtostate-theirandwhattheycommittee appointorofcommerceofcountysomedaysago matterof Redistricting Chairman Mills. He other members.oftheavassedtheseconddistrics,havinggonetochange.thedaypreferences.withSupercitizens.of.the.fourth.districtHe reportedthathatatthatneedtovoteforsuchandwouldstickbyMillsfurtherstatedvoterswhoshouldvisordistrictwastheplanofthecomingnumberforandthenewdistrictformedinTheoughtilitadviseditadvisablethenorthernendOfgettoWorkImmeatetheGerrymanderOfTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndTheBoardOfSuperiorityAndThe Board Of Superiority 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Neff went to Riverside on Monday afternoon and is holding a number of farmers' institutes in that section this week. ( J.B. Neff went to Riverside on Monday afternoon and is holding a number of farmers' institutes in that section this week. ( J.B. Neff went to Riverside on Monday afternoon and is holding a number of farmers' institutes in that section this week. ( J.B. Neff went to Riverside on Monday afternoon and is holding a number of farmers' institutes in that section this week. ( J.B. Neff went to Riverside on Monday afternoon and is holding a number of farmers' institutes in that section this week. ( J.B. Neff went to Riverside on Monday afternoon and is holding a number of farmers' institutes in that section this week. ( J.B. Neff went to Riverside on Monday afternoon and is holding a number of farmers' institutes in that section this week. ( J.B. Neff went to Riverside on Monday afternoon and is holding a number of farmers' institutes in that section this week. ( J.B. Neff went to Riverside on Monday afternoon and is holding a number of farmers' institutes in that section this week. ( J.B. Neff went to Riverside on Monday afternoon and is holding a number of farmers' institutes in that section this week. ( J.B. Neff went to Riverside on Monday afternoon and is holding a number of farmers' institutes in that section this week. ( J.B. Neff went to Riverside on Monday afternoon and is holding a number of farmers' institutes in that section this week. ( J.B. Neff went to Riverside on Monday afternoon and is holding a number of farmers' institutes in that section this week. ( J.B. Neff went to Riverside on Monday afternoon and is holding a number of farmers' institutes in that section this week. ( J.B. Neff went to Riverside on Monday afternoon and is holding a number of farmers' institutes in that section this week. ( J.B. Neff went to Riverside on Monday afternoon and is holding a number of farmers' institutes in that section this week. ( J.B. Neff went to Riverside on Monday afternoon and is holding a number of farmers' institutes in that section this week. ( J.B. Neff went to Riverside on Monday afternoon and is holding a number of farmers' institutes in that section this week. ( J.B. Neff went to Riverside on Monday afternoon and is holding a number of farmers' institutes in that section this week. ( J