anaheim-gazette 1913-11-06
Searchable text
The Weekly Gazette.
ESTABLISHED 1870
Henry Kuchel, Editor and Proprietor
SUBSCRIPTION.....$1.50 Per Year
Six Months.....$1.00
Three Months.....50 Cts.
Entered at the Anaheim Postoffice as second-class matter.
$25 WORTH OF LIQUOR, OR $25 WORTH OF GROCERIES?
In the show window of a Center street millinery store is a display labeled $25 worth of liquor on one side and $25 worth of groceries on the other, with the interrogation to passers-by "which will you take?" The display of groceries has been changed to a display of $25 worth of wearing apparel, and the same interrogation is made to passers-by, "which will you take?"
To a man possessed of only $25, whose family may be in need of food or clothing, we should say he should purchase the groceries or wearing apparel. To another whose family is already provided for in these lines, we should say that to deny him the privilege of purchasing a glass of California wine is tantamount to abridgment of his personal liberty. To deny him this right, and to extend him the privilege of taking home two gallons of whisky, is not, to our mind, a medium of bringing about temperance.
Few men, if any, purchase $25 worth of liquor at one time, unless they be of the wealthy class. Few men of ordinary intelligence with only $25 to expend, would hesitate long as between the sustenance which his family demands and the purchase of this largeically. In debate they stand among the highest, in athletics they are foremost and in morals none can claim superiority. Why then should these good people, our neighbors, gather around Anaheim and claim they come to snatch the rising generation from the pathway their fathers trod which is leading them to destruction?
The men who formed the Mother Colony half a century ago were men of indomitable courage and perseverance. The many hardships which they suffered in what was then a desert waste, will never be known by the outside world. They were the first men, after the mission fathers of a century and a half ago who dug ditches and brought water from the river many miles away for irrigation. They planted their lands to vines and fruit trees, alfalfa and other crops, and made the desert to blossom as a rose. They were a hardy band of stout-hearted pioneers, and to attempt to villify their names, now that they are in their graves, is an unspeakable atrocity, and a gratuitous insult to the men and women who came after them. We do not care to take council from these strangers who came here to besmirch and villify their good names. The sons and daughters of these pioneers are men and women of education and character. Their names appear upon the roll of graudates of the University of California, of Stanford University, and of other colleges and seats of learning. They are in the professional and mercantile business, and are working out their destiny as honorable and upright men and women. They are foremost among our progressive citizens, and stand for all manner of public improvements and betterments. To attempt to besmirch their character is an insult unspeakable.
almost a total failure in large growing district cannot do much with bers we can surely buy with winter cabbage; limit to the amount ww A few days ago it was Fremont, Ohio, that advanced to $17 per ton ers in that city, the American kraut industry getting material Winter cabbage grown into the situation and We can surely be re easterners fight their good, sharp anti-scrow is another world short us weep. Supplies oof which wooden leg pegging out; this coupealed to for a sub emergency the Pacific on deck, for our form Washington believe to find a substitute in cedar of the Pacific are now conducting that wood.
DISSERTATION CONSTRUCTION
Washington Expert Tome Present
This is a very strong we find in the declarationsington that hungry expect that the entropy from the outside wo pease their hunger. meat is a serious reg M. Pickens of the industry, "and it is the rise in prices in
ilege of purchasing a glass of California wine is tantamount to abridgment of his personal liberty. To deny him this right, and to extend him the privilege of taking home two gallons of whisky, is not, to our mind, a medium of bringing about temperance.
Few men, if any, purchase $25 worth of liquor at one time, unless they be of the wealthy class. Few men of ordinary intelligence with only $25 to expend, would hesitate long as between the sustenance which his family demands and the purchase of this large amount of liquor. A man's family comes first, and if he have only this amount to expend, and it be compulsary upon him to purchase either the groceries or the liquor he will not hesitate a moment what to do. He will purchase the groceries or the clothing and take them home to his family. He will subordinate his personal desires to the demands of his wife and children upon him.
But as we say, to deny a man who has his family adequately clothed and provisioned, the privilege of purchasing not $25 worth of liquor, but a nickel's worth of California wine, is to bring about abridgment of his personal liberties. While denying this man the privilege of so doing, and to give him the right of taking $10 worth of whisky home—this will not bring about temperance to a man who has never this amount of liquor in his home in his life.
The display is an artful and specious method adopted by prohibitionists to make a point in their favor. As between $25 worth of liquor and a similar amount of groceries or clothing a man with only this amount of money to expend would not hesitate long what to do, if intolerant laws compelled him to buy either one or the other. But to abridge his personal liberties is to set aside his freedom. And to permit him to take $10 worth of whisky home, while denying him the right of purchasing a glass of California wine is not to our mind the method of bringing about temperance. Let the voters of this city settle this question once and for all at the polls today, without interference of our prohibition friends from outlying communities.
AN INSULT TO THE PIONEERS
Chief among the arguments promlugated by the advocates of prohibition in the campaign which will end today, especially by the orators from our neighboring cities who have been good and generous enough to gather at the tent and point out to us the path to salvation in that the elimination of the saloons will remove temptation from the boys and permit them daughters of these pioneers are men and women of education and character. Their names appear upon the roll of graudates of the University of California, of Stanford University, and of other colleges and seats of learning. They are in the professional and mercantile business, and are working out their destiny as honorable and upright men and women. They are foremost among our progressive citizens, and stand for all manner of public improvements and betterments. To attempt to besmirch their character is an insult unspeakable, and merely reflects the character of the men making these absurd and ridiculous charges. May the good Lord protect us from following in the footsteps of this "better-than-thou" contingent who set themselves up to vilify the men and women in their graves and their children and children's children who are an honor to the community, and as far above their detractors as heaven is above hell.
WHY SHOULD OUR NEIGHBORS WANT ANAHEIM DRY?
Resolutions demanding that the city of Anaheim vote dry at today's election have been published in each issue of the Anaheim Herald and numerously signed by residents of various sections of Orange county. The names appended to it were from Santa Ana, Orange, Fullerton, Garden Grove, Westminster, Huntington Beach and Anaheim. The list of signatures has been added to each week, the last week's issue containing 676 names. Of this number 596 were citizens of neighboring towns and 80 residents of Anaheim. Why the good people of those cities should take such an interest in the welfare and moral up-lift of Anaheim is a mystery to our citizens. Only 80 Anaheim names are on the list demanding that the saloons of this city close. These 80 persons have an interest in the city as it is their home and a petition from them demands a respectful hearing whether it meets with our views or not, but wherefore the 596 petitioners from Santa Ana, Orange, Garden Grove, Westminster and even far-away Huntington Beach? How can the saloons of Anaheim have a deleterious effect upon the morals of those towns? Why should they train all their artillery upon the saloons of Anaheim and close their eyes to the blind pigs which they know exist in their own municipalities? Why should they rush into print and throw the weight of their names in the balance against men who are law-abiding and conduct respectable business establishments and permit men in the same line of business to flourish in violation of the law in their own communities?
A GREAT BAY
The costliest, speediest super-dreadnaught "Queen Elizabeth," was the royal dockyard England, Thursday, mony being performed wife of Admiral Sir commander-in-chief naval station.
The "Queen Elizabeth sister ships now use comprise the very best shipbuilding. Each completed $11,750, speed of 25 knots be provided with ten able of throwing at 15,600 pounds. The coal whatever, rely upon oil which tween othe
AN INSULT TO THE PIONEERS
Chief among the arguments promulgated by the advocates of prohibition in the campaign which will end today, especially by the orators from our neighboring cities who have been good and generous enough to gather at the tent and point out to us the path to salvation in that the elimination of the saloons will remove temptation from the boys and permit them to develop into good and useful men. One of the youthful speakers from some neighboring town made the statement Sunday that the object the advocates of temperance had in view was the rescue of the young men of Anaheim. They wanted to snatch temptation from their pathway and "save them from following in the footsteps of their fathers."
It has been said by one of the prohibition speakers at the tent that Anaheim was conceived in iniquity and grew up in filth. This statement is a gratuitous insult to the good people of this city. The men who founded this city half a century ago are all dead, but they left honored names behind them and also left sons, the present generation of men who, to a large extent, control the business of the town or, at least, have considerable interest in it. These men who were born and reared up amid the vineyards and had free access to the fruits of the wine press will compare favorably with the business men of our neighboring towns. Few of them, perhaps, ever taste whisky, but few of them occasionally drink a glass of California wine or a stein of beer, but this small dissipation does not stunt their manhood or interfere with their business ability.
The young people of Anaheim whom these outside reformers are so anxious to save from the evil influences surrounding them have also proven themselves capable and equal to any in the Southland morally, mentally and phys-
How can the saloons of Anaheim have a deleterious effect upon the morals of those towns? Why should they train all their artillery upon the saloons of Anaheim and close their eyes to the blind pigs which they know exist in their own municipalities? Why should they rush into print and throw the weight of their names in the balance against men who are law-abiding and conduct respectable business establishments and permit men in the same line of business to flourish in violation of the law in their own communities? Dr Chapman said on the platform at the tent that if a blind pig existed in a town it meant indifferent people in that town. Presuming that he told the truth why then should the good people of these towns be so indifferent to the sale of liquor within a stone's throw, perhaps of their own dooryards in violation of the law and take such a violent interest in suppressing its sale in Anaheim where it is regulated and sold in accordance with the law?
California and World Shortages
How much California will have to do with her winter-growing climate to help out other food-shortages beyond the mountains cannot be exactly stated, but there promises to be a lot of it. The eastern potato crop was cut down millions of bushels by unfavorable summer and autumn conditions, and if freight rates are favorable, we can help them out with new potatoes for several months before they can grow another crop. We cannot do so much in pickles, perhaps, because the winter cucumber requires glass even in California. Possibly, however, our local pickle makers may put down more of this year's crop for eastern use. It is announced from Chicago that from cucumber ranches all over the country comes the news that the crop will be only 40 to 50 per cent of normal, while around Chicago it will fall off to 25 per cent of the usual crop. "The cucumber crop is all in," said a report sent out by one house, "and has been...
ALMOST A TOTAL FAILURE IN SEVERAL OF THE LARGE GROWING DISTRICTS." But if we cannot do much with winter cucumbers we can surely alleviate distress with winter cabbage, for there is no limit to the amount we can grow of it. A few days ago it was announced from Fremont, Ohio, that cabbage had advanced to $17 per ton and kraut makers in that city, the center of the American kraut industry, had hard work getting material at that price. Winter cabbage growers should look into the situation and act accordingly. We can surely be ready to help the easterners fight their spring fever with good, sharp anti-scrobusties. But there is another world shortage which makes us weep. Supplies of English willow, of which wooden legs are made, are pegging out; this country has been appealed to for a substitute. In this emergency the Pacific Coast is again on deck, for our forestry officials in Washington believe they will be able to find a substitute in the Port Orford cedar of the Pacific Coast, and they are now conducting experiments with that wood.
DISSERTATION ON CONSTRUCTIVE BEEF
Washington Expert Tells How to Overcome Present Shortage
This is a very striking term which we find in the declarations from Washington that hungry people need not expect that the entrance of free beef from the outside world will fully appease their hunger. "The high cost of meat is a serious reality," said James M. Pickens of the bureau of animal industry, "and it is now obvious that the rise in prices in recent years is the
YOUNG TREES ARE BEARING FRUIT
OLD GROVES ARE RESTING, THE NEW ONES NOW DOING THE WORK FOR BOTH
DR. H. J. WEBBER TELLS OF CONDITIONS IN THE CITRUS BELT FOR COMING SEASON
"While disinclined to pose as a prophet, I am nevertheless of the opinion that the people of this state will be treated to a pleasant surprise when the returns from the 1913-1914 citrus crop comes in," said Dr. Herbert J. Webber, director of the citrus experiment station maintained at Riverside by the State University College of Agriculture, Saturday.
"Within recent weeks I have had a look at a great many groves in various parts of the state," Dr. Webber continued, "and it would seem reasonable to suppose that I ought to be able to estimate the crop, but I would hesitate to set down the probable figure for the reason that the frost injury struck the country in such a peculiar manner that a reasonably close estimate looks impossible. While calculating the crop in a grove that hasn't more than a 20 per cent yield in evidence, one is apt to see, on a hillside near by, a grove that will run probably 85 per cent of a normal crop of sound fruit.
The heater of today is not what the heater of ten years from now will be, but we reach perfection by various stages of improvement. We now have what is the best heater that human ingenuity can evolve, and it is serving its purpose, but I look forward to the day when we will have a heater which will give the groves a maximum of heat, held in a stratum between the frost and the tree, at the same time exuding a minimum of smudge. Speed the day when there will be no smudge on our citrus fruits.
"This year the experiment station here and at Whittier have been making a careful study of diseases. The mottled-leaf blight is claiming our attention just now. Curious thing that. You'll find it in nearly every district this year, and nobody knows what causes it. We know that alkali will cause it, but trees in soil free from alkali are full of it, too. The solution of the problem is going to call for some dark brown study, but we hope to deal the blight a death blow ultimately.
"Another thing which is a great menace just now is the root-knot worm. We haven't decided what to do about it for it was only recently discovered by one of the young fellows in our ranks. He deserves great credit. Up to now we know that the root-knot worm infects the ground as well as the roots of the tree, and we have not yet worked out a formula that we can successfully apply to the worm without injuring the tree. Be of good cheer though. If we have a young chap who can discover the enemy we surely have another who can do him to death.
"There are some mighty interesting experiments in our eight-acre plot here. They deal with the problem of..."
CONSTRUCTIVE BEEF
Washington Expert Tells How to Overcome Present Shortage
This is a very striking term which we find in the declarations from Washington that hungry people need not expect that the entrance of free beef from the outside world will fully appease their hunger. "The high cost of meat is a serious reality," said James M. Pickens of the bureau of animal industry, "and it is now obvious that the rise in prices in recent years is the natural result of an actual shortage in production. It is evident, also, that the country is experiencing an era of short production of meat, and that constructive means must be adopted if the American appetite for this class of food is to be supplied." From this comes the conclusion that to get more meat we must make it for ourselves, which is just what we ought to do for many reasons. Prices will continue to be high, therefore more land and capital should go into the growing and feeding of live stock. We can make much more meat from a given acreage than we have done in the past—probably as much more as Prof. Hopkins did by grinding up the stones to feed the wheat plant. We can make it by more irrigation water and more alfalfa and better breeding and feeding of the animals on the farm plan than was ever possible on the range plan. Much of the land which is now being made into checker boards by the subdividers should go into real farms—each large enough to carry a band of cattle, a herd of swine and a flock of sheep, and there would be money and comfort in it for those who know how to farm, instead of so much disappointment for near-farmers by the checker-board route. The world has too little meat and must construct more. There is little danger of lower prices through the competition of meats from Argentina, Australia and other beef producing countries, for the experts declare that with the free markets of England and other countries open to it "meat can hardly be more plentiful and cheap in this country."
A GREAT BATTLESHIP
The costliest, speediest, most powerful super-dreadnaught in the world, the "Queen Elizabeth," was launched at the royal dockyard at Portsmouth, England, Thursday, the naming ceremony being performed by Lady Meux, wife of Admiral Sir Hodworth Meux, commander-in-chief of the Portsmouth naval station.
The "Queen Elizabeth" and her four sister ships now under construction comprise the very latest word in battleship building. Each will cost when completed $11,750,000, will have a speed of 25 knots an hour, and will be provided with ten 15-inch guns capable of throwing a broadside fire of 15,600 pounds. They will burn no coal whatever, relying for fuel entirely upon oil which will be stored between the outer and inner skins. Each part of the state, Dr. Webber will tinued, "and it would seem reasonable to suppose that I ought to be able to estimate the crop, but I would hesitate to set down the probable figure for the reason that the frost injury struck the country in such a peculiar manner that a reasonably close estimate looks impossible. While calculating the crop in a grove that hasn't more than a 20 per cent yield in evidence, one apt to see, on a hillside near by, a grove that will run probably 85 per cent of a normal crop of sound fruit.
"I am of the belief, though, that folks are going to open their eyes when the fruit exchange makes its financial returns this next season, for it seems to me that there is apt to be more than a normal crop." That may sound absurd, but it seems logical for this reason:
"There are thousands of acres of young groves which will come into bearing this winter for the first time. The old trees will not give up such a big crop this year, but the thousands of acres of young groves that are just fruiting for the first time ought to make up that shortage that has been anticipated, and raise the normal crop figure considerable. I base these conclusions on observations made in Florida the year following the last disastrous frost there. A terribly small crop was expected and an above-normal crop was gathered, as a result of the fruit from the young groves that had just come into bearing. So be ready for a surprise this year. I believe it is coming to us."
Dr. Webber is a man who ought to know whereof he speaks in matters pertaining to citrus culture, inasmuch as he has been chumming with citrus for nearly a decade. For sixteen years he was connected with the United States Department of Agriculture during which time he did citrus research work. Five years of that time he studied the orange in its native haunts, making his home in Florida for that purpose. Then he went to Cornell, and he was a director of the university when Jack Frost laid his feverish finger on the leaf of the California orange last winter.
After the freeze had come and gone, the University of California asked Dr. Webber to come out to the land of sunshine for a month and study the effects of the unusual weather. The eminent citrus physician came. The month stretched into four months, during which time Dr. Webber traversed nearly every foot of highway in the citrus belt of the Southwest, looking in on each grove and jotting down profuse notes. At the end of four months he was just getting nicely started at the job, so the college of agriculture lowls in our ranks. He deserves great credit. Up to now we know that the root-knot worm infects the ground as well as the roots of the tree, and we have not yet worked out a formula that we can successfully apply to the worm without injuring the tree. Be of good cheer though. If we have a young chap who can discover the enemy we surely have another who can do him to death.
"There are some mighty interesting experiments in our eight-acre plot here. They deal with the problem of fertilization. Distinguished specialists who have come here to see the plot declare that it is the best example of experimenting with perennial tree fertilization that they have ever seen. The trees are seven years old and are laid off into plots of six, each of which is being treated different in the matter of fertilization. Just at present the plot treated with nitrate of soda shows more mottled-leaf than the ones treated with bone, blood, stable manure or other kinds of fertilizer. Some have therefore jumped at the conclusion that the nitrate of soda causes the blight. Maybe it does. We shall see, after a while. Personally I am inclined to think that a great many things may cause the blight, for the reason that I find it almost everywhere I go.
"Ultimately the work of the staff at Riverside and the one at Whittier will merge into a new experiment station, the location of which the university has under advisement at present. This does not mean that the Riverside station will be abandoned. Its lease runs 13 years longer, and the plots will be operated to the end of that time, at least.
"When the new station is established we hope to bring in closer touch the plant chemists, soil physicists and plant biologists together with all the state and government men, and by the interchange of ideas, work out some of the problems that are today unsolved. Citrus culture has not made the progress desirable in the past for the reason that the college and government experimentalists were formerly at outs with each other. With a view to casting aside this obstacle we have been holding here at the station monthly meetings which have been attended by as many as 30 men at a time, including county and state horticultural inspectors, department of agriculture, and state university experimentalists. Harmony prevails at the present, and some of our most valuable data has been furnished this year by men outside our staff.
"At present the station has a very able set of workers. To the force that has been here for years has been added."
The "Queen Elizabeth" and her four sister ships now under construction comprise the very latest word in battleship building. Each will cost when completed $11,750,000, will have a speed of 25 knots an hour, and will be provided with ten 15-inch guns capable of throwing a broadside fire of 15,600 pounds. They will burn no coal whatever, relying for fuel entirely upon oil which will be stored between the outer and inner skins. Each will carry more than a million gallons of oil. The guns will have an extreme range of 22 miles, and experts say they will be able to penetrate the thickest armor yet made at a range of 50 per cent greater than at that at which any naval action is likely to be fought.
The enormous advance in warship construction as represented by these vessels is indicated by the fact that the original dreadnaught, completed only seven years ago, had a broadside limit of only 6,800 pounds. The big increase in both offensive and defensive armament was made possible by the substitution of oil for coal, which thus provided great economy in both weight and space.
JAPS FORM ASSOCIATION
Five Japanese, resident in this vicinity, on Friday filed articles of incorporation with the county clerk, of the Anaheim Business Men's Association. It is purely a commercial corporation. The articles, filed by Los Angeles attorneys, show the corporation entitled to hold land and transact almost any kind of business. The company is incorporated for $20,000, of which there is issued stock as follows: To Mantaro Tamada, $500; K. Kishimoto, $400; W. Debashi, $400; K. Yamachika, $400; K. Shiotani, $500.
Eight carloads of walnuts were shipped to the middle west by the Anaheim Walnut Association last week.
After the freeze had come and gone, the University of California asked Dr. Webber to come out to the land of sunshine for a month and study the effects of the unusual weather. The eminent citrus physician came. The month stretched into four months, during which time Dr. Webber traversed nearly every foot of highway in the citrus belt of the Southwest, looking in on each grove and jotting down profuse notes. At the end of four months he was just getting nicely started at the job, so the college of agriculture signed him up on a long lease and placed him in control of the experiment station at Riverside.
"In the four months I traveled about the state I was assisted in the matter of making observations by a great many state, county and government as well as university experts, the reports from whom have been of inestimable value in the compilation of a bulletin covering the result of the frost. The bulletin of which I speak will shortly be issued and I believe that it will be of great value to the citrus men of the state.
"The bulletin will not attempt to tell teh growers just how much of their fruit was damaged by the cold weather, but it will give some ideas as to why certain orchards were hurt more than others. We are told that frost seeks the lowest places and it does, but Pomona, right down in the bottom of that little valley, saved more citrus fruit last winter than many higher districts that I could mention. It may be that certain kinds of fertilizer tend to make the trees less susceptible to cold weather. Windbreaks may have a great deal to do with saving a crop, or any one of a dozen or 20 things might be said in the bulletin to the everlasting good of the orchardist.
"Our experimentalists have been making a study of smudge pots and heaters this year, and many excellent tests have been made. Something along this line we hope to give the monthly meetings which have been attended by as many as 30 men at a time, including county and state horticultural inspectors, department of agriculture, and state university experimentalists. Harmony prevails at the present, and some of our most valuable data has been furnished this year by men outside our staff.
"At present the station has a very able set of workers. To the force that has been here for years has been added J. T. Barrett, a pomologist obtained from the University of Illinois; W. W. Bonns, an assistant professor of poryology; and H. S. Fawcett, formerly on the staff of the state commissioner of horticulture. With the force of men that is now in the field I cannot see other than great citrus cultural improvements ahead."
FOREST NOTES
Slam exports about nine million dollars' worth of teak a year.
Oils distilled from the needles of spruce and fir trees are being used to scent petroleum floor oils which are sometimes objectionable on account of their odor.
The governor of Iowa has set aside a fire-prevention day, urging that the citizens discuss conditions and create a sentiment against forest fires and other conflagrations.
The average area administered by a ranger on the federal forests of the United States is about 100,000 acres. In Germany the area administered by a man of equivalent rank is about 700 acres.
The Republic of Colombia is said to have excellent regulations for its national forests. Lumbermen who take cedar and mahogany are required to plant young trees of the same species in the cut-over spaces.
Frank Dyer and family were taking in the sights by the automobile route at the beach Sunday.
WHEN IS AN ORANGE CONSIDERED RIPE
Chemist of Pure Food Department Making Investigations
E.M. Chace, chemist of the Pure Food Bureau of the Department of Agriculture, has established headquarters in Porterville and will begin next week a series of exhaustive tests in an attempt to determine the vexed question: "What is a ripe orange?"
Chace's assistants will arrive there next week and upon their arrival samples of oranges will be taken from all portions of the foothills, and of these oranges analyses will be made to determine the content of sugar and acid and the change in relation between acid and sugar from day to day.
At the same time frequent consultations will be held with packers of oranges to secure their ideas as to commercially fit fruit.
At the conclusion of the season, all this data will be submitted to the Department of Agriculture in the hope that it will suggest some means by which an arbitrary standard can be established.
At the present time the only guide which the orchardists have to follow during the early shipments is decision 133, made by Judge Landis, which, robbed of legal verbiage, says that the orange growers must use common sense in selection of fruit.
Porterville associations have adopted a ruling which will be followed, pending the government decision, and this is that only such fruits as show a distinct orange tint will be accepted at the packing houses for eastern distribution.
Headquarters for the research work of the United States officials will be established in Porterville, and work for the entire district will be done from that point.
Railway Time Table
SANTA FE—GOING NORTH
Leave Anaheim Ar. Los Angeles
6:18 a.m. 7:15 a.m.
7:30 a.m. 8:23 a.m.
12:02 p.m. 1:00 p.m.
3:27 p.m. 4:20 p.m.
4:05 p.m. 5:07 p.m.
5:10 p.m. 6:30 p.m.
9:38 p.m. (Sunday) 10:30 p.m.
GOING SOUTH
Lv. Los Angeles Ar. Anaheim
7:15 a.m. 8:00 a.m.
9:10 a.m. 10:02 a.m.
1:15 p.m. 1:58 p.m.
3:00 p.m. 3:42 p.m.
5:25 p.m. 6:17 p.m.
11:59 p.m. 12:50 a.m.
S. P.—GOING NORTH
Leave Anaheim Ar. Los Angeles
7:15 a.m. 8:30 a.m.
12:44 p.m. 1:50 p.m.
3:35 p.m. 4:50 p.m.
GOING SOUTH
Lv. Los Angeles Ar. Anaheim
8:55 a.m. 9:57 a.m.
10:00 a.m. 11:02 a.m.
5:20 p.m. 6:30 p.m.
ORANGE COUNTY WINE CO. ORANGE COUNTY WINE COMPANY
Orange County
Wine Company
JOHN BARLEYCORN
THERE were three kings into the East,
Three kings both great and high,
And they hae sworn a solemn oath
John Barleycorn should die.
THEY took a plow and plowed him down,
Put clods upon his head,
And they hae sworn a solemn oath
John Barleycorn was dead.
BUT the cheerful spring came kindly on
And showers began to fall;
John Barleycorn got up again,
And sore surprised them all.
—Robert Burns.
ORANGE COUNTY WINE CO. ORANGE COUNTY WINE COMPANY
widespread reputation of Orange county oranges and lemons is going to be maintained, and in the citrus fruit business a reputation means better prices for the product.
Notice to Contractors
The Pacific Mausoleum Company at 202% West Center street, Anaheim, Cal., invite contractors to bid on a reinforced concrete Mausoleum building to be erected at Anaheim, California. Plans and specifications can be secured at the above address or at the office of the architect, C. E. Shattuck, 318 Mason building, Los Angeles, Calif., on Thursday, October 16. Bids must be in the hands of the secretary of the company at its offices, 202% West Center street, Anaheim, Cal., by Saturday, November 1. All bids must be accompanied by a certified check to the amount of 10 per cent of bid submitted. The Mausoleum Company reserves the right of reject any or all bids.
L. O. CULP, Secretary.
The National Market
The National Market
The best of everything in the meat line and prices always reasonable.
If you will give me a trial I will guarantee to give you satisfaction.
HERMAN RINKLIEB,
Proprietor.
G. H. JORNS
CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER
All kinds of repair work a specialty. Plans drawn and estimates cheerfully given.
Shop and residence at
544 West Center St.
ANAHEIM, CAL.
SUGAR BEET PULP
$1.50 per ton in silo, 75 cents per ton fresh from chute, wagon haul only. Price reduced to beet growers as usual.
LOS ALAMITOS SUGAR FACTORY.
In San Diego beer, we are producing a brand that is unexcelled, even by the most widely advertised brands manufactured in Europe or America. It is as near perfect as human agency can produce, and we believe justly popular.
All Anaheim wholesale dealers sell it in bottles and Germania Hall saloon sells it from the wood.
San Diego Consolidated Brewing Co.
J. H. ZIITT, Pres't.
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