anaheim-gazette 1914-10-22
Searchable text
The Weekly Gazette.
ESTABLISHED 1870
Henry Kuchel, Editor and Proprietor
SUBSCRIPTION.....$1.50 Per Year
Six Months.....$1.00
Three Months.....$60 Cts.
Entered at the Anakeheim Postoffice as second-class matter.
AN ABSURD RUMOR
An absurd rumor has been current in Santa Ana to the effect that Hon. R.Y. Williams has entered into a political combination with three other candidates for the purpose of advancing his own political interests and of defeating one of the candidates for superior judge. The statement is wilfully false, and altogether without a shadow of foundation. Mr. Williams has been made the object of splenetic attacks personally in this campaign, notably before the primary election in August, when efforts were made in an underhanded manner to defeat him at that time. These statements made concerning him were altogether untrue, and it is probable that during the coming week full reparation will be made for the great injustice done him.
Mr. Williams is an upright, honorable and conscientious gentleman, altogether fitted to occupy the position of superior judge, to which he aspires. He is dean of the Orange county bar, and enjoys the largest and most lucrative law practice in the county. He will take the office of superior judge at a financial sacrifice to his own personal interest, and is only in the contest at the personal solicitation of his many friends throughout the county, who regard him as the best fitted man in the county to fill this high and important office. His record is clean and honorable, and he is entitled to the undivided support of all growing states of the south toward the rest of the country in the present pinch, which has taken form in the buy-a-bale movement, has its humorous side, although the humor may not appeal to the cotton men just now. It is these very states that may be always counted upon to line up solid with the free trade democrats, and now in their extremity brought on by the war and the unsettled condition of our own manufacturing industries which by the way, antedated the war, they are falling back on the balance of an afflicted people to save them from going under. Sugar men we know of are responding to the appeal, good naturedly overlooking the fact that these very cotton growers helped to upset their own applecart at the late lameted election.
All of which recalls an incident that happened in the House during President Cleveland's administration and which is going rounds again. The member from New York, pleading for a reduction in the duty on wool in the name of the people, incidentally got in a good word for more protection for the rice planters of his native state, South Carolina. It was such an exceedingly brilliant and plausible argument the New Yorker put up that there seemed nothing left for a protectionist to add that would line up at all, but it was left for the member from Illinois, afterward Senator Mason of Illinois, to rise to the occasion. He did so by striking an attitude in a characteristic fashion and reciting in a singlesong, "Little boy blue, come blow your horn nice; blow hell out of mutton, but don't touch my rice."
Now it is to the bow-wows with the rest of the country but "save us cotton" planters.
Why not buy a sugar beet.
THE CZAR AND THE WAR
the future of that it is the duty to support and resources. We temperance shows a great injustice and wine make vested their aid dusty at the end put them out as is proposed amendment w No. 2 on the ringing the responsible citizen and ve forceful appeal fornia to deal 000 growers sprinkled from to the other.
The appearance a member of the tural commission ening will affe him a good case handled in and wine make Stoll has been leaders "the b and wherever has created an cusion.
Mr. Stoll does but gets right handles it with treats the sub standpoint, but vanced by the grape ind out of existence.
One of the will also be a pictures entitlement of California," taken in wide extent and im-try.
He is dean of the Orange county bar,
and enjoys the largest and most lucrative law practice in the county. He will take the office of superior judge at a financial sacrifice to his own personal interest, and is only in the contest at the personal solicitation of his many friends throughout the county, who regard him as the best fitted man in the county to fill this high and important office. His record is clean and honorable, and he is entitled to the undivided support of all good people in the county.
He has entered into no political combination with any candidate and seeks merely the success of the republican ticket, gubernatorial, senatorial, congressional and county tickets. He is a consistent republican, has been such since attaining his majority, has never turned his political coat in his life, and should receive the support of good men and women everywhere throughout the county.
Vote for Hon. R. Y. Williams for superior judge, and place upon the bench the best equipped and ablest man in the county for the position.
HIRAM JOHNSON IN 1910 AND IN 1914
Four years ago Hiram Johnson was elected governor of California on the republican ticket. He was elected because the party whose nominee he was, was the dominant one, and because his opponent was a weak man, who had previously been defeated for the same office. Furthermore he had the support of Theodore Roosevelt, the most popular man in the United States at that time, the man whose wish was law to the American people. Today Governor Johnson is the candidate of a minority party, a party which cast 142,000 votes at the primary election against 273,000 for its chief opponent—a party which is dying and has fewer voters in its ranks today than it had on August 25. Does Hiram Johnson expect to be elected governor by this minority party?
Two years ago Hiram Johnson deserted the republican party—the party that lifted him from private life to the highest office in the state—and assisted in the organization of a new party which was born in a spirit of hate and revenge against the party that had honored him. He followed the big Bull Moose in preference to the friends who elected him governor, but the Moose is not in a position to
The war spirit has changed all of that. The czar goes everywhere, and is followed everywhere by cheering multitudes. He rides on horseback instead of being in mall-enclosed and bomb-proof carriages. Very likely he can now eat with a genuine appetite, and without even the old preliminary of having each dish tasted by a kitchen lackey to find whether or not it was poisoned. In fact, it is easy to see that Nicholas must, by contrast, be thinking that war is not such a horrible thing as such writers as Tolstoy have declared it to be. Nicholas, in fact, would disagree with Gen. Sherman's opinion so far as to say, if pressed, that it is peace and not war which is hell. This thought is so far from exaggeration that it constitutes a fact added to many others proving that everything is in the point of view and everything is a matter of comparison, somewhere or under some conditions.
But the point of view must, in his case, be wider than that of any individual. The war spirit of the Russians, as hsown in his complete change, is undoubtedly such that, should the war end in glory and gain for Russia, the power of the Russian on Illinois, to rise to the occasion. He did so by striking an attitude in a characteristic fashion and reciting in a sing-song, "Little boy blue, come blow your horn nice; blow hell out of mutton, but don't touch my rice."
Now it is to the bow-wows with the rest of the country but "save us cotton" planters.
Why not buy a sugar beet.
THE CZAR AND THE WAR
That a successful war will give autocracy in Russia even a stronger grip on that country can not be doubted after reading of things as they are now and as they were before the war began. During years preceding the outbreak of hostilities it was impossible to read of the czar, or of any of the royal family, or of any of the Romanoffs, or, in fact, of any of the persons clearly identified with the bureaucracy, traveling anywhere without an armored train in front and another behind the one on which they travelled. When the czar went abroad he was accompanied by troops, and not infrequently it has been impossible for him to go abroad at all since the progress of invention for putting high explosives in small pocket packages.
The war spirit has changed all of that. The czar goes everywhere, and is followed everywhere by cheering multitudes. He rides on horseback instead of being in mall-enclosed and bomb-proof carriages. Very likely he can now eat with a genuine appetite, and without even the old preliminary of having each dish tasted by a kitchen lackey to find whether or not it was poisoned. In fact, it is easy to see that Nicholas must, by contrast, be thinking that war is not such a horrible thing as such writers as Tolstoy have declared it to be. Nicholas, in fact, would disagree with Gen. Sherman's opinion so far as to say, if pressed, that it is peace and not war which is hell. This thought is so far from exaggeration that it constitutes a fact added to many others proving that everything is in the point of view and everything is a matter of comparison, somewhere or under some conditions.
But the point of view must, in his case, be wider than that of any individual. The war spirit of the Russians, as hsown in his complete change, is undoubtedly such that, should the war end in glory and gain for Russia, the power of the Russian on Illinois, to rise to the occasion. He did so by striking an attitude in a characteristic fashion and reciting in a sing-song, "Little boy blue, come blow your horn nice; blow hell out of mutton, but don't touch my rice."
Now it is to the bow-wows with the rest of the country but "save us cotton" planters.
Why not buy a sugar beet.
THE CZAR AND THE WAR
That a successful war will give autocracy in Russia even a stronger grip on that country can not be doubted after reading of things as they are now and as they were before the war began. During years preceding the outbreak of hostilities it was impossible to read of the czar, or of any of the royal family, or of any of the Romanoffs, or, in fact, of any of the persons clearly identified with the bureaucracy, traveling anywhere without an armored train in front and another behind the one on which they travelled. When the czar went abroad he was accompanied by troops, and not infrequently it has been impossible for him to go abroad at all since the progress of invention for putting high explosives in small pocket packages.
The war spirit has changed all of that. The czar goes everywhere, and is followed everywhere by cheering multitudes. He rides on horseback instead of being in mall-enclosed and bomb-proof carriages. Very likely he can now eat with a genuine appetite, and without even the old preliminary of having each dish tasted by a kitchen lackey to find whether or not it was poisoned. In fact, it is easy to see that Nicholas must, by contrast, be thinking that war is not such a horrible thing as such writers as Tolstoy have declared it to be. Nicholas, in fact, would disagree with Gen. Sherman's opinion so far as to say, if pressed, that it is peace and not war which is hell. This thought is so far from exaggeration that it constitutes a fact added to many others proving that everything is in the point of view and everything is a matter of comparison, somewhere or under some conditions.
But the point of view must, in his case, be wider than that of any individual. The war spirit of the Russians, as hsown in his complete change, is undoubtedly such that, should the war end in glory and gain for Russia, the power of the Russian on Illinois, to rise to the occasion. He did so by striking an attitude in a characteristic fashion and reciting in a sing-song, "Little boy blue, come blow your horn nice; blow hell out of mutton, but don't touch my rice."
Now it is to the bow-wows with the rest of the country but "save us cotton" planters.
Why not buy a sugar beet.
THE LAST
One difficulty found in their wild animals (which will result if it market) has been that great tribute exterminated by wiped out of one instance most striking. Years many Sailboat have a weird and strange spectacle whaler; Captain at Catalina has Island; a heard thieves animals live called the "fist them in his class Pacific." His men otter hunters kills and since 1860 have been seen sole solitary sus monsters return soon be shot by end of the race.
No more path agained than elephant; the laviathans hover home; the Island for a sea serpent doomed to exit
Two years ago Hiram Johnson deserted the republican party—the party that lifted him from private life to the highest office in the state—and assisted in the organization of a new party which was born in a spirit of hate and revenge against the party that had honored him. He followed the big Bull Moose in preference to the friends who elected him governor, but the Moose is not in a position to help him now. Four years ago the word of Roosevelt would have stood against the world; today there is none so poor as to do him reverence. Does Johnson hope to be elected by republican votes?
Senator John B. Curtin, democratic candidate for governor, has been delving into the archives at Sacramento, and has unearthed a long array of figures. Senator Curtin is not a brilliant orator like Governor Johnson is. He cannot juggle with words and carry his audience away with high-sounding sentences, but he has a head for figures, and hard, cold, indisputable facts. He shows that Governor Johnson's administration cost the people of California during the past fiscal year nearly fifteen million dollars, while under his predecessor for the same period the bills amounted to a little less than half that sum. Does Hiram Johnson expect to be re-elected on his record?
Four years ago, Hiram Johnson was running against a weak and time-worn candidate, and had the dominant party behind him. This year his opponent is one of the strongest men in the state and the majority party is a unit behind him. Does Hiram Johnson hope to win by his personality?
Verily, it is a rocky stream that the Johnson craft is navigating, and it is doomed to certain destruction.
"SAVE THE COTTON" DEMOCRATS
The attitude of certain of the cotton
The women of Anaheim will be especially interested in the meeting to be held at the Mason theatre on the evening of Friday, October 22 under the auspices of the California Grape Protective association, for it will furnish them an opportunity of hearing the earnest argument that is being put forth by Lillian Burkhardt Goldsmith of Los Angeles against the proposed prohibition amendment.
Mrs. Goldsmith has in common with every loyal Californian, great faith in from exaggeration that it constitutes a fact added to many others proving that everything I. In the point of view and everything is a matter of comparison, somewhere or under some conditions.
But the point of view must, in his case, be wider than that of any individual. The war spirit of the Russians, as hown in his complete change, is undoubtedly such that, should the war end in glory and gain for Russia, the power of the Russian autocracy and bureaucracy would be vastly increased, if it be possible to say of something almost complete that it is capable of an indefinite extension. What we may safely assume is that a victorious war would put the booted and spurred men more firmly in the Russian saddle. Autocracy would grow more intolerable in Russia, and in the rest of Europe, aspiring to larger democratic life, it would become a menace greater than ever before, bringing that continent nearer to the condition in which Napoleon said it would have to become either republican or Cossack. Should the result be disastrous to Russia, then, indeed, the czar would have to agree with Gen. Sherman as to the nature and essence of war. But a great Russian triumph would be almost certain to raise some new and threatening problems.
SOMETHING WORTH SEEING
The conductors practically all railways in California vote against the eight-hour law wired to the voter election. They organize numbers and men in their declare that they a snare and that cost every one a daily loss of pay a week of six days.
The men on the erage of ten hours by the hour. To the fact that of the day it is no of them employee...
ANAHEIM GAZETTE
the future of our state and believes that it is the duty of every Californian to support and encourage our natural resources. While an advocate of true temperance she believes it would be a great injustice to the grape growers and wine makers, after they have invested their all in the wine grape industry at the invitation of the state to put them out of business over night as is proposed by the prohibition amendment which will be proposition No. 2 on the November ballot. Feeling the responsibility of an American citizen and voter, she makes a very forceful appeal to the voters of California to deal squarely with the 15,000 growers whose vineyards are sprinkled from one end of the state to the other.
The appearance of Horatio F. Stoll, a member of the state board of viticultural commissioners, on the same evening will afford the voters of Anaheim a good opportunity to hear the case handled from the grape growers and wine makers standpoint. Mr. Stoll has been dubbed by the Dry leaders "the brains of the opposition" and wherever he has spoken his talk has created an endless amount of discussion.
Mr. Stoll does not mince matters, but gets right down to his subject and handles it without gloves. He not only treats the subject from a viticultural standpoint, but riddles every point advanced by the Dry leaders as to why the grape industry should be wiped out of existence.
One of the features of the evening will also be a 1000 foot reel of moving pictures entitled "The Grape Industry of California." It consists of scenes taken in widely different sections of the state, shows the grape growers at work and at play and emphasizes the extent and importance of the industry.
the shifts are so arranged that each is able to make fair wages.
Under the drastic provisions of the eight hour law no one of them would be permitted to work more than eight hours a day, which would so interfere with the arrangement of shifts that some of the men working in rush hours would not secure more than three or four hours work a day.
"They tell us," said a prominent carman, "that if the eight hour law passes conditions that would change in consequence would adjust themselves and that everything would run along just the same. The only adjustment that we can see in it is an adjustment of our pocket books that would not be at all satisfactory. There are none of us who can afford the loss of $3.60 a week and that is just what the eight hour law would cost us. We have not listened to the beautiful things they have been telling about the bill, but quietly went about figuring it out for ourselves. We are not going to fight with our bread and butter. We are going to vote against it, and every wage earner in the state who is looking after his own interests first will do the same thing thing."
BOLD BURGLARY IN BROAD DAYLIGHT
Thief Enters Gates' Store and Carries Off Two Watches
One of the boldest burglaries ever committed in Anaheim was successfully pulled off Tuesday morning when a thief got away with two gold watches from the store of J. L. Gates on East Center street. The robber occurred between eight and nine o'clock. Mr. Gates was in the rear working with an automobile leaving no one in the
THE LAST SEA ELEPHANT
One difficulty conversationists have found in their campaign to save the wild animals of California from extinction (which the government says will result if they are sold on the market) has been to convince people that great tribes of animals can be exterminated by man, and have been wiped out of existence by the score. One instance within fifty years is most striking. During the past two years many Santa Catalina Island boatmen have reported to the writer a weird and strange sea monster which they had seen in the San Clemente channel. It stood ten feet out of the water and was seen by many men, and alarmed not a few by its hideous visage. In 1914 Mr. Wm. Boschen of New York, a member of the Tuna Club saw the sea monster near Santa Catalina Island and recognized it as a gigantic sea elephant at least 30 feet long, which would have weighed a ton or more. The men were trying to kill it but Mr. Boschen prevented it, and it is still seen at times by boatmen, a strange, menacing and pathetic spectacle. In 1852 the famous whaler, Captain Scammon, discovered at Catalina harbor, Santa Catalina Island, a heard of 160 of these gigantic animals living at what is now called the "Iathmus". He described them in his classics on whaling in the Pacific. His men and the Russian sea otter hunters killed them off for oil, and since 1860, or 54 years ago, none have been seen until 1913 when the sole solitary survivor of this race of monsters returned, and will, of course, soon be shot by some vandal, and the end of the race will come.
No more pathetic sight can be imagined than this single gigantic sea elephant, the last of a race of Leviathanans, hovering about its ancient home, the Island of Catalina, taken for a sea serpent, shot at, feared, doomed to extinction, the last of the ocean monsters of the tribe. The Thief Enters Gates' Store and Carries Off Two Watches
One of the boldest burglaries ever committed in Anaheim was successfully pulled off Tuesday morning when a thief got away with two gold watches from the store of J. L. Gates on East Center street. The robber occurred between eight and nine o'clock. Mr. Gates was in the rear working with an automobile leaving no one in the store for a few minutes. On returning he noticed the door of a glass case where watches were kept hanging open, and soon discovered the loss. Two silver watches were also in the case but these the thief left.
The man was seen to enter the store by Will Walop of the Union Water company. He was also coming down Olive street from the north shortly before and was also observed shortly afterward returning northward and turning east on Scycam street. He carried a small bundle and was easily identified. He stopped at Hille's store and attempted to sell some costly glassware but was turned down. The alarm was given and the police were shortly on his trail but he had disappeared. Two men were arrested near the Santa Fe tracks but proved to be innocent.
Architect Durfee has completed plans and specifications for the new City Hall to be erected in this city. It will be a two-story brick structure and the work will include the remodeling of the present structure. It will contain offices for the city officials and a jail and fire hall. The cost is estimated at about $30,000. Some changes are to be made in the plans, after which bids will be advertised for.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC WORK
Notice is hereby given: That on the 8th day of October, 1914, the Board of Trustees of the City of Anaheim passed a bill requiring all officers in the county to wear uniforms according to a map curried in Book I, at page 550 of Miscellaneous records of Los Angeles County, California, to the Westerly line of said Block C5. That the lands necessary and purpose are described as follows, to-will.
Beginning at a point in the Northerly line of Vineyard lot C5 of the Langenberg Tract as shown on a map recorded in Los Angeles County Records of Los Angeles County, California, said point of beginning being six and five-tenths (6.5) feet Westerly from the Easterly line of said lot; thence Westerly along the Northern lines of five-tenths (5.1) feet more or less.
In this Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the County of Orange.
In the Matter of the Estate of Walter S. Matthews, deceased.
Notice is hereby given that in pursuance of the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the County of Orange, made and entered on the 25th day of September, 1914, in the matter of the estate of Walter S. Matthews, deceased, Walter S. Matthews, deceased, will sell at private sale in one parcel or in subdivisions as the Executor shall judge most beneficial to said estate, to the highest court contained, subject to the confirmation of the said Court on or after the 9th day of November, 1914, all right, title, interest and estate of said estate and all rights to it; death and all right, title, interest that said estate has acquired other than or in addition to that of said deceased at the time; place; parcel of land autate; tying and being in the County of Orange, State of California, described as follows:
The first one-half (W%) of the Southmost half of the Southeast quarter (SE%) of the Northeast quarter (NE%) of Section Twenty-seven (27) Township Four (4) South, Range Ten (10) West, S.B. B. & M., estimated to contain Ten miles wide and each side of roads, railroads and patches, a strip of land thirty (30) feet wide, along, joining and each side of the Township and Section lines and a stripe Fifteen (15) feet wide, along, adopting and each side using the use and control of cleangas and natural streams of water if any naturally upon flowing across, into or by said land and a right of way for and to continue through saudt tract to irrigate or drain the adjacent land; also an undivided one- (1-5) interest in a piece of land forty (40) feet square, lying on the Northwest corner of the Northwest quarter (NE%) of Section Twenty-seven (27) Township Four (4) South, Range Ten (10) West S.B. B. & M., and an undivided one-fifth (N/5%) of the Northeast quarter (SE%) of Section Twenty-seven (27) Township Four (4) South, Range Ten (10) West S.B. B. & M., and an undivided one-fifth (N/5%) of the Northeast quarter (SE%) of Section Twenty-seven (27) Township Four (4) South, Range Ten (10) West S.B. B. & M., and an undivided one-fifth (N/5%) of the Northeast quarter (SE%) of Section Twenty-seven (27) Township Four (4) South, Range Ten (10) West S.B. B. & M., and an undivided one-fifth (N/5%)
No more pathetic sight can be imagined than this single gigantic sea elephant, the last of a race of Leviathans, hovering about its ancient home, the Island of Catalina, taken for a sea serpent, shot at, feared, doomed to extinction, the last of the oceanic monsters of the tribe. The sea elephant is but one of the doomed animals. Others are the great auk, the California otter, the great sea cow of Alaska, the Right whale, the antelope, elk, a dozen species of ducks, and many more, all exterminated by man or soon to be.
On November 3rd, the people of California are asked to vote "Yes" to sustain the non-sale of game law, number 18 on the list, not to protect game for the rich man, but to save beautiful birds from extinction, the wild ducks of many tribes, which if sold on the market will be swept away by an army of market hunters.
The men on the care work on an average of ten hours a day and are paid by the hour. Their shifts are split due to the fact that during the rush hours of the day it is necessary to keep more of them employed than at others, but
All AGAINST IT
The conductors and motormen on practically all of the street electric railways in California have decided to vote against the proposed universal eight-hour law which is to be submitted to the voters at the November election. They form a very strong organization numbering many thousands and men in their membership. They declare that the law is a delusion and a snare and that its adoption would cost every one of them an average daily loss of pay of 60 cents or $3.60 a week of six days.
The men on the care work on an average of ten hours a day and are paid by the hour. Their shifts are split due to the fact that during the rush hours of the day it is necessary to keep more of them employed than at others, but
Reserving such portions as are already dedicated for public streets.
All of the hereditary proposed work shall be done in pursuance to an act of the Laws of the state of California, entitled "A Act of Provisions on Opening, Extending, Widening, Straightening, or Closing up, in Whole or in Part any Square, Lane, Alley, Court or Place within Municipalities, and in All Land and Property or Corridor for that purpose," approved March 6th, 1859 and all acts amendatory thereof or supplementary thereto.
Further particulars, reference is hereby made to the City Clerk of the City Anaheim, in the City Hall in said City.
Dated at Anaheim, California, October 15, 1914.
J. W. SACKETT,
Superintendent of Streets of the City of Anaheim.
B. K. & M., and an undivided one-fifth (1-5) interest in the pumping plant located at Anaheim from a point six and five-tenths (6.5) feet Westerly from the Easterly line of Block C5 of the Langenberger Tract as shown on a map recorded in Book I at page 550. Miscellaneous records of Los Angeles County, to the Westerly line of said Block C5. That the lands necessary and convenient to be taken for sale purpose are assigned to begin building six and five-tenths (6.5) feet Westerly from the Easterly line of said Block C5. That the lands necessary and convenient to be taken for sale purpose are assigned to begin building six and five-tenths (6.5) feet Westerly from the Easterly line of said Block C5. That the lands necessary and convenient to be taken for sale purpose are assigned to begin building six and five-tenths (6.5) feet Westerly from the Easterly line of said Block C5.
One horse, 12 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old; one horse 15 years old;
one horse 12 years old; one horse 12 years old; one horse 12 years old; one horse 12 years old; one horse 12 years old; one horse 12 years old; one horse 12 years old; one horse 12 years old; one horse 12 years old; one horse 12 years old; one horse 12 years old; one horse 12 years old; one horse 12 years Old;
one horse 12 years Old;
one horse 12 Years Old;
one Horse 12 Years Old;
one Horse 12 Years Old;
one Horse 12 Years Old;
one Horse 12 Years Old;
one Horse 12 Years Old;
one Horse 12 Years Old;
one Horse 12 Years Old;
one Horse 12 Years Old;
one Horse 12 Years Old;
one Horse 12 Years Old;
one Horse 12 Years Old;
one Horse
one Horse
one Horse
one Horse
one Horse
one Horse
one Horse
one Horse
one Horse
one Horse
one Horse
one Horse
one Horse
one Horse
one Horse
one Horse
one Horse
one Horse
one Horse
one Horse
one Horse
one Horse
one Horse
one Horse
one Horse
one Horse
ONE HORSE
ONE HORSE
ONE HORSE
ONE HORSE
ONE HORSE
ONE HORSE
ONE HORSE
ONE HORSE
ONE HORSE
ONE HORSE
ONE HORSE
ONE HORSE
ONE HORSE
ONE HORSE
ONE HORSE
ONE HORSE
ONE HORSE
ONE HORSE
ONE HORSE
ONE HORSE
ONE HORSE
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Estate of Napoleon Hart, deceased.
Notice is hereby given by the undersigned executrix of the will of Napoleon Hart, deceased, to the creditors of, and all persons having claims against the said county or Orange State of California at any time after the first publication of this notice (which publication was first made on the 22nd day of October, 1914) to the said executrix of the will of said county or Orange State of California at any time after the first publication of this notice (which publication was first made on the 22nd day of October, 1914) to the said executrix of the will of said county or Orange State of California at any time after the first publication of this notice (which publication was first made on the
ATTENTION, FORD OWNERS
We offer Now the Lowest Priced
Absolutely High Grade Tire in America
Ford Special Price Standard Price
30x3 $9.60 $11.70
30x3½ $12.60 $15.75
Made in California
Guaranteed 3500 Miles
Sold and Warranted by
ICKERSHEIM IMPLEMENT CO.
Autors of Hendrie Tires.
ILLERTON, CAL.
Automobile Supplies and Accessories
a Specialty
EXECUTOR'S SALE OF PERSONAL PROPER PRIVATE SALE
Court of the State of and for the County of of the Estate of Walter S. deceased.
by given that in pursuance of the Superior Court California, in and for the estate, made and entered on September, 1914, in the estate of Walter S. Matter, the undergirded Exec. Will and Testament of heirs, deceased, will sell in one parcel or in the Executor shall judge to said estate, to the support the terms and conduct contained, subject to the said Court on or day of November, 1914, all interest and estate of said heirs at the time of his right, title, and interest estate has by operation of acquired other than or that of said deceased at death, in and to all that be or parcel of land attaching in the County of California, described as half (W%) of the South of the Southeast quarter northeast quarter (NB%) city-seven (27) Township Range Ten (10) West, estimated to contain ten preserving therefrom for and ditches as a strip of feet wide, along, south side of the Township and a strip Fifteen (15) adjoining and each side section lines, also reserve control of clenegas and of water if any, natural-across, into or by said way for and to construct or drain ditches; also an undivided one-fifth the pumping plant lo- be made upon the folded conditions: Cash, gold and States, the purchaser payment of, and take the by hints taken to and municipal taxes and assessments of whatever name or which may heregeable as a lien against purchased by him.
then that salt Executor time and place, sell at the highest bidder for being described personal years old; one horse 15 of new double harness; sole harness; one single
You Are Not a Spoke in the Wheel of Time Unless You Save Part of What You Earn!
Never mind how little you earn—Save some of it—put it in the bank.
We Pay 4 Per Cent on Term Deposits
Anaheim National Bank
Try the Gazette for NEAT JOB PRINTING
FALL MILLINERY
SMART HATS
at the right prices. See our regular line of $3.50 Trimmed Hats
CABLE MILLINERY
Los Angeles St., next to S. Q. R. Store
Anaheim
There is a wide difference in the figures of contractors who want to build Sunset 20 Home—503
SMART HATS
at the right prices. See our regular line of $3.50 Trimmed Hats
CABLE MILLINERY
Los Angeles St., next to S. Q. R. Store
Anaheim
There is a wide difference in the figures of contractors who want to build for the city of Fullerton a storm protection wall in front of the water works site. Ten bids were in the lo-when the matter was taken up by the trustees at their Monday afternoon meeting. The lowest offer was $2,700, and the highest $5,300, with others ranging between these extremes. An award is to be made at a special meeting Friday, after the bids are gone over carefully and comparisons made by the committee.
Mrs. E. B. Merritt went up to Los Angeles Sunday on a visit to friends.
HE GOT THE BOOZE
The day was hot and the patient ice man had taken his usual care in getting the ice in the box just right and then mopping up the little water that got spilled on the floor in the operation. He really was a good ice man and deserved to be rewarded.
"Here is a bottle of beer; you need it on a hot day like this," said the housewife.
"I can't accept anything from patrons, lady," the ice man said, as he eyed the bottle lovingly.
"Well, if that is orders, all right," the customer said.
Still the iceman pondered. "But," he added, as an afterthought, "if you put it on the back porch I'll steal it. There isn't any rule against stealing things."
John Holverson, for many years a well known and highly esteemed resident of Fullerton, father of Mrs. O. M. Skinner, celebrated his 88th birthday at his home in Long Beach Sunday. The families of O. M. Merton and Horace Skinner spent the day at the Holverson home and report a pleasant visit. Mr. Holverson is enjoying good health and hundreds of his friends hope he will have many more happy birthdays.
Robt. Wilson has returned from Murletta Springs improved in health.
FOR SALE—250,000 Cabbage plants for sale. 50 cents per thousand.
Frank Baxter, phone, Sunset 263-J 1 Fullerton.