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anaheim-gazette 1915-06-24

1915-06-24 · Anaheim Gazette · page 7 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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INTERNATIONAL VITICULTURAL CONGRESS DELEGATES FROM ALL GRAPE GROWING COUNTRIES OF THE WORLD TO ASSEMBLE AT SAN FRANCISCO MANY INTERESTING PAPERS TO BE READ ON THE CULTURE, DISEASES AND ENEMIES OF THE VINE Under the authority of the permanent international viticultural commission by resolution voted at Ghent, Belgian in 1913, the International Congress of Viticulture will hold its 1915 sessions July 12 and 13 in the Panama Pacific memorial auditorium, San Francisco. Meeting under the auspices of the great exposition, it is given further dignity through its patrons, the governor of California, the University of California, the Permanent Viticultural commission, the American Pomological society, the California State Board of Viticultural Commissioners, the California Grape Protective association and the American Wine Growers' association. A special train, bearing eastern and foreign delegates, will leave New York June 28, arriving at Riverside, California, July 6th, where the officials are to be welcomed to the coast by a committee of prominent California wine men. The farther proceedings at Riverside will include an automobile tour of Riverside and a visit to the Charles Stern & Sons Winery at Wineville, where the visitors will be entertained 2500 feet and overlooks Marin county, the bay of San Francisco, the Golden Gate, the Pacific ocean and the expoition. FORTY-FIVE HUNDRED STUDENTS EXPECTED AT SUMMER SESSION Seventy per cent more people than ever before in the history of the university have applied for admission to the 6-weeks summer session of the University of California, which began June 21. This means at least 4500 students, as compared with 3200 last summer. The chance of combining a visit to the university with study in the Summer session is one reason for this extraordinary expansion. Household Economics promises to enroll more students than any other department. The universities only recently waked up to the fact that women want higher professional training for their special careers in the home. Now a faculty of 16 people are to teach in the session such subjects as the science and art of cookery, home decoration, costume design, and housewifery, which includes modern labor saving methods, and how to buy what is really worth buying. It will take a faculty of 20 to give the courses in physical education, so great is the interest in playground management, gymnasium methods, folk and aesthetic dancing, community recreation facilities, and the whole great movement for healthy bodies as homes for healthy minds. Among other subjects for which demand proves great are the lectures on Nineteenth Century Poets; on Vocational Guidance; on public health and social hygiene; and on history. People of all ages and kinds are coming—from 16 to 70, from college graduates to the self taught, from doctor and merchant to farmer and teacher—for the fundamental purpose... Wine Growers' association. A special train, bearing eastern and foreign delegates, will leave New York June 28, arriving at Riverside, California, July 6th, where the officials are to be welcomed to the coast by a committee of prominent California wine men. The further proceedings at Riverside will include an automobile tour of Riverside and a visit to the Charles Stern & Sons Winery at Wineville, where the visitors will be entertained at a barbecue. July 7 the delegates inspect the San Diego fair, proceeding thence to Los Angeles. The special train will be side tracked at Guasti, where an excellent opportunity will be afforded for the thorough inspection of the 4,000 acre vineyard and modern plant of the Italian Vineyard company. On Friday, July 9, the delegates will be shown around Los Angeles, departing in the evening for Fresno, where they will arrive on Saturday morning, July 10th. Fresno county is the banner vineyard county of California, having over 100,000 acres in vines and the delegates will be shown not only the important sweet wine plants but also the raisin vineyards and the big packing houses. On Sunday morning, the delegates will reach the Exposition city of San Francisco at 10 A.M. The officers and chairmen of the various committees will meet with Prof. Alwood for a general conference, and after all details have been arranged, the guests will go on a sight seeing trip around San Francisco in the afternoon. On Monday at 9:30 the congress will be called to order, at the exposition civic center auditorium. The morning session will last until 12:30, and the afternoon sessions begin at 1:30 and continue until 4:30. Tuesday evening, at 6:30, a notable banquet will be given in honor of the visiting delegates, at Tait's Pavo Real. There will be about 20 eminent city, state and foreign guests of honor and some excellent speeches are anticipated. Only California wines will be served. All storts of novelties are being planned for the banquet and at 10:30 the floor will be cleared and dancing will be in order. Wednesday will be Wine Day at the exposition, when wine punch and the wines of the world will be served at all the national pavilions of countries that produce wines, at the state buildings, in the California building and in the Grane Temple in the food products city recreation facilities, and the whole great movement for healthy bodies as homes for healthy minds. Among other subjects for which demand proves great are the lectures on Nineteenth Century Poets; on Vocational Guidance; on public health and social hygiene; and on history. People of all ages and kinds are coming—from 16 to 70, from college graduates to the self taught, from doctor and merchant to farmer and teacher—for the fundamental purpose of the summer session is to give everyone a chance to go to college for six weeks, and to fit himself better for success in his work usefulness to the community, happiness in daily life, and wealth of inner resources for getting the most possible out of existence. NOTED SCHOLAR INVITED FROM MADRID The man who has awakened Spain, the man to whom the whole Spanish speaking world looks as the leader of Spanish intellectual life, has just landed in New York on his way to spend six weeks lecturing at the summer school of the university. This is the famous Spanish scholar and critic, Adolfo Bonilla y San Martin, of the University of Madrid. An interpretation of the genius of the Spanish race is to be his work at Berkeley, for in a course of lectures he is to discuss with his students the chief masterpieces of Spanish literature, from the 16th Century to the present. Several evening lectures will be given by the distinguished Spaniard during his stay, on the trend of contemporary literature, the great modern artists of Spain, and on university life in Spain. Prof. Bonilla is to speak in Spanish. His students will be aided by the fact that in the last two or three years the Spanish library has been greatly enriched through the gift of Mr. Cebrian of a number of thousand volumes of Spanish literature, history, philosophy and art. EUGENICS FOR COWS, RACE SUICIDE FOR THE LAZY A thousand Yolo county cows have been asked the embarassing question: Do you earn your own keep? Here are the answers obtained by the cow-testing association organized on the initiative of the University of California farm advisors: some excellent speeches are anticipated. Only California wines will be served. All storts of novelties are being planned for the banquet and at 10:30 the floor will be cleared and dancing will be in order. Wednesday will be Wine Day at the exposition, when wine punch and the wines of the world will be served at all the national pavilions of countries that produce wines, at the state buildings, in the California building and in the Grape Temple in the food products palace. Wednesday the visitors will be taken on a trip around San Francisco bay to Winellaven, where they will inspect the great plant of the California Wine association. At 1 o'clock they will be landed at the exposition grounds, when they will be received by exposition officers at the ferry and accompanied to Old Faithful Inn by a military escort and band. During the luncheon a commemorative bronze medal will be presented by an official of the exposition to the California Viticultural Exhibit association. The wines of the world will be served on this occasion. The guests will later visit the Grape Temple of the winemen, where they will also inspect the foreign exhibits of wines. Thursday at 7:45 the delegates will leave for Asti in Sonoma county, where they will visit the great wine plant of the Italian Swiss Colony and be served an outdoor luncheon in the beautiful grounds of Cavalier Andrea Sbarboro's Villa Pompeii, returning to San Francisco in the evening. On Friday, the 16th, all thoughts of vineyards and wineries will be banished and the delegates will make a pilgrimage over the crookedest road in the world to the Tavern of Mr. Tamalpais, which nestles under the summit of the lofty sentinel that towers A thousand Yolo county cows have been asked the embarrassing question: Do you earn your own keep? Here are the answers obtained by the cow-testing association organized on the initiative of the University of California farm advisors: Three hundred cows were found to be parasites, eating more than they produced, punishment the butcher's block. Two hundred were barely paying their own way. Five hundred were really earning money for their owners. One Yolo county dairyman increased the average yield per cow in his heard by eleven pounds of butterfat a month in a single year, just by discarding the boarders. One herd averaged a net profit of $86.84 per cow per annum. And one lazy cow was unmasked who cost her owner $48 more a year than she produced. The farm advisors are urging their neighbors to get up cooperative cow testing associations, and to have every dairy cow tested once a month as to how much butter fat she produces and whether she is really on asset or a liability, and whether her milk-giving capacity renders her worthy to have future offspring, or whether her bad heredity ought to be suppressed in the interests of dairy eugenics. Berry shipments are declining now, as the fruit is pretty well cleaned up. At the height of the season 3 or 4 hundred crates were shipped daily, going to Los Angeles and other points. Most of the berries were raised in the section east of town by Japanese. MONTHLY TRADE BALANCE In his address before the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, Secretary Redfield of the Department of Commerce, gave a brief review of our monthly trade balances, August 1914, to January 1915, and glossed over the subject with these words: "I beg of you, gentlemen, not to be pursued by the daily news columns of the press into the belief that our foreign trade lies chiefly in what one may call, for lack of a better name, war orders. That is not so." Since making that statement the department's campaign publicity bureau has given a tri-weekly proof of its existence by supplying to the press of the country columns of matter laudatory of the democratic administration, and figures on the expansion of our trade balances calculated to make gullible readers swell up like the fabled frog and burst with anticipated prosperity. The truth of the matter is that if Mr. Redfield would give the public the trade balances of the United States when international commerce was on a peace footing, the showing would be embarrassing to the administration, but up to date he has evaded these figures in his effort to "speak with frankness." Here is the record: The republican tariff law gave us a trade balance in our favor to the amount of $452,547,000 for the six months from October, 1911 to June, 1912, and a balance of $584,-740,000 in our favor from October, 1912, to June, 1913. The democratic tariff law went into effect in October, 1913, and the trade balance in our favor dropped to $351,311,000 for the nine months ending in June, 1914. This was $233,000,000 less than the balance in our favor for the nine months ending June 1913. There was a steady decline in our monthly trade balance following the any virtue in the thing went, for the engine never did, and I now very much regret the deal. This competition of interests, or if not that, then the temporary, but acute financial embarrassments of early youth, cause the dispersal of most juvenile collections long before their owners reach years of discretion, and account for the comparatively small number of grown-up people who are collectors of postage stamps. Taking into consideration now the attraction of stamp collecting to adults, there is no doubt the same instinct of acquisitiveness at work in their case, but it is coupled with the spirit of speculation and usually several other motives, which I propose to touch upon in due course, and the greater the number of these actuating the mind of the same individual, the more engrossed he becomes in his hobby. Where acquisitiveness and speculation are solely actuating a collector, he is rather to be considered a dealer, and is, as such, a pebble on a different beach. Dealers are mostly excellent people, and are very necessary to collectors. Their interests in stamps, however, must necessarily be really very widely separated from those of collectors, and I submit that the more the distinction is enforced the better for the future of the hobby. Also I venture to suggest that the greater the extent to which a collection can be maintained without recourse to the dealers, the greater the attraction it is likely to have to its owner. Amongst the other attractions making powerful appeal to most collectors are the beauty, or the curiosity of the color and design of their stamps, and the interesting study provided in making themselves acquainted with the manner in which they are made, and with the many minor distinctions between different issues. Then there is the historical and geographical interest of stamps, and for any virtue in the thing went, for the engine never did, and I now very much regret the deal. This competition of interests, or if not that, then the temporary, but acute financial embarrassments of early youth, cause the dispersal of most juvenile collections long before their owners reach years of discretion, and account for the comparatively small number of grown-up people who are collectors of postage stamps. Taking into consideration now the attraction of stamp collecting to adults, there is no doubt the same instinct of acquisitiveness at work in their case, but it is coupled with the spirit of speculation and usually several other motives, which I propose to touch upon in due course, and the greater the number of these actuating the mind of the same individual, the more engrossed he becomes in his hobby. Where acquisitiveness and speculation are solely actuating a collector, he is rather to be considered a dealer, and is, as such, a pebble on a different beach. Dealers are mostly excellent people, and are very necessary to collectors. Their interests in stamps, however, must necessarily be really very widely separated from those of collectors, and I submit that the more the distinction is enforced the better for the future of the hobby. Also I venture to suggest that the greater the extent to which a collection can be maintained without recourse to the dealers, the greater the attraction it is likely to have to its owner. Amongst the other attractions making powerful appeal to most collectors are the beauty, or the curiosity of the color and design of their stamps, and the interesting study provided in making themselves acquainted with the manner in which they are made, and with the many minor distinctions between different issues. Then there is the historical and geographical interest of stamps, and for any virtue in the thing went, for the engine never did, and I now very much regret the deal. This competition of interests, or if not that, then the temporary, but acute financial embarrassments of early youth, cause the dispersal of most juvenile collections long before their owners reach years of discretion, and account for the comparatively small number of grown-up people who are collectors of postage stamps. Taking into consideration now the attraction of stamp collecting to adults, there is no doubt the same instinct of acquisitiveness at work in their case, but it is coupled with the spirit of speculation and usually several other motives, which I propose to touch upon in due course, and the greater the number of these actuating the mind of the same individual, the more engrossed he becomes in his hobby. Where acquisitiveness and speculation are solely actuating a collector, he is rather to be considered a dealer, and is, as such, a pebble on a different beach. Dealers are mostly excellent people, and are very necessary to collectors. Their interests in stamps,...however, must necessarily be really very widely separated from those of collectors, and I submit that the more the distinction is enforced the better for the future of the hobby. Also I venture to suggest that the greater the extent to which a collection can be maintained without recourse to the dealers, the greater the attraction it is likely to have to its owner. Amongst the other attractions making powerful appeal to most collectors are the beauty, or the curiosity of the color and design of their stamps, and the interesting study provided in making themselves acquainted with the manner in which they are made, and with the many minor distinctions between different issues. Then there is the historical and geographical interest of stamps, and for any virtue in the thing went, for the engine never did, and I now very much regret the deal. This competition of interests, or if not that, then the temporary, but acute financial embarrassments of early youth, cause the dispersal of most juvenile collections long before their owners reach years of discretion, and account for the comparatively small number of grown-up people who are collectors of postage stamps. Taking into consideration now the attraction of stamp collecting to adults, there is no doubt the same instinct of acquisitiveness at work in their case, but it is coupled with the spirit of speculation and usually several other motives, which I propose to touch upon in due course, and the greater the number of these actuating the mind of the same individual, the more engrossed he becomes in his hobby. Where acquisitiveness and speculation are solely actuating a collector, he is rather to be considered a dealer, and is...as such,a pebble on a different beach. Dealers are mostly excellent people,and are very necessary to collectors. Their interests in stamps,...however,must necessarily be really very widely separated from those of collectors,and I submit thatthe morethe distinctionisenforcedthebetterforthefutureofthehobby. Also I venture to suggest thatthegreatertheextenttowhichacollectioncanbemaintainedwithoutrecoursetothedealers,thegreatertheattractionitislikelytohavetoitsowner. Amongsttheotherattractionsmakingpowerfulappealtotomostcollectorsarethebeauty.orther curiosityofthecoloranddesignoftheirstamps,andtheinterestingstudyprovidedinmakingthemselvesacquaintedwiththemannerinwhichtheyaremade,andwiththemanyminordistinctionsbetweendifferentissues. Thenthereisthehistoricalandgeographicalinterestofstamps,andforanyvirtueinthichthethingwent,forkinetheengineneverdid,andInowverymuchregretthedeal.Thiscompetitionofinterests,或ifnotthat,thetemporary,但acutefinancialembarrassmentsofearlyyouth,causethedispersalofmostjuvenilecollectionslongbeforetheownersreachyearsofdiscretion,andaccountforthecomparativelysmallnumberofgrown-uppeoplewhoarecollectorsofpostagestamps. Takingintoconsiderationnowtheattractionofstampcollectingtoadults,theseisno doubtthesameinstinctofacquisitivenessatworkintheircase,butitiscoupledwiththespiritofspeculationandusuallyseveralothermotives,thei proposeto touchuponinduecourse,and-thegreaterthenumberofthesecountingthemindofthesameindividual,themoreengrossedhebecomesinhishobby.Wheretheacquisitivenessandspeculationaresolelyactuatingacollector,thei proposeto touchuponinduecourse,andthegreaterthenumberofthesecountingthemindofthesameindividual,themoreengrossedhebecomesinhishobby.Wheretheacquisitivenessandspeculationaresolelyactuatingacollector,thei proposeto touchuponinduecourse,andthegreaterthenumberofthesecountingthemindofthesameindividual,themoreengrossedhebecomesinhishobby.Wheretheacquisitivenessandspeculationaresolelyactuatingacollector,thei proposeto touchuponinduecourse,andthegreaterthenumberofthesecountingthemindofthesameindividual,themoreengrossedhebecomesinhishobby.Wheretheacquisitivenessandspeculationaresolelyactuatingacollector,thei proposeto touchuponinduecourse,andthegreaterthenumberofthesecountingthemindofthesameindividual,themoreengrossedhebecomesinhishobby.Wheretheacquisitivenessandspeculationaresolelyactuatingacollector,thei proposeto touchuponinduecourse,andthegreaterthenumberofthesecountingthemindofthesameindividual,themoreengrossedhebecomesinhishobby.Wheretheacquisitivenessandspeculationaresolelyactuatingacollector,thei proposeto touchuponinduecourse,andthegreaterthenumberofthesecountingthemindofthesameindividual,themoreengrossedhebecomesinhishobby.Wheretheacquisitivenessandspeculationaresolelyactuatingacollector,thei proposeto touchuponinduecourse,andthegreaterthenumberofthesecountingthemind ofthesameindividual,themoreengrossedhebecomesinhishobby.Wheretheacquisitivenessandspeculationaresolelyactuatingacollector,thei proposeto touchuponinduecourse,andthegreaterthenumberofthesecountingthemind ofthesameindividual,themoreengrossedhebecomesinhishobby.Wheretheacquisitivenessandspeculationaresolelyactuatingacollector,thei proposeto touchuponinduecourse,andthegreaterthenumberofthesecountingthemind ofthesameindividual,themoreengrossedhebecomesinhishobby.Wheretheacquisitivenessandspeculationaresolelyactuatingacollector,thei proposeto touchuponinduecourse,andthegreaterthenumberofthesecountingthemind ofthesameindividual,themoreengrossedhebecomesinhishobby.Wheretheacquisitivenessandspeculationaresolelyactuatingacollector,thei proposeto touchuponinduecourse,andthegreaterthenumberofthesecountingthemind ofthesameindividual,themoreengrossedhebecomesinhishobby.Wheretheacquisitivenessandspeculationaresolelyactuatingacollector,thei proposeto touchuponinduecourse,andthegreaterthenumberofthesecountingthemind ofthesameindividual,themoreengrossedhebecomesinhishobby.Wheretheacquisitivenessandspeculationaresolelyactuatingacollector,thei proposeto touchuponinduecourse,andthegreaterthenumberofthesecountingthemind ofthesameindividual,themoreengrossedhebecomesinhishobby.Wheretheacquisitivenessandspeculationaresolelyactuatingacollector,thei proposeto touchuponinduecourse,andthegreaterthenumberofthesecountingthemind ofthesameindividual,themoreengrossedhebecomesinhishobby.Wheretheacquisitivenessandspeculationaresolelyactuatingacollector,thei proposeto touchuponinduecourse,andthegreaterthenumberofthesecountingthemind ofthesameindividual,themoreengrossedhebecomesinhishobby.Wheretheacquisitivenessandspeculationaresolelyactuatingacollector,thei proposeto touchuponinduecourse,andthegreaterthenumberofthesecountingthemind ofthesameindividual,themoreengrossedhebecomesinhishobby.Wheretheacquisitivenessandspeculationaresolelyactuatingacollector,thei proposeto touchuponinduecourse,andthegreaterthenumberofthesecountingthemind ofthesameindividual,themoreengrossedhebecomesinhishobby.Wheretheacquisitivenessandspeculationaresolelyactuatingacollector,thei proposeto touchuponinduecourse,andthegreaterthenumberofthesecountingthemind ofthesameindividual,themoreengrossedhebecomesinhishobby.Wheretheacquisitivenessandspeculationaresolelyactuatingacollector,thei proposeto touchuponinduecourse,andthegreaterthenumberofthesecountingthemind ofthesameindividual,themoreengrossedhebecomesinhishobby.Wheretheacquisitivenessandspeculationaresolelyactuatingacollector,thei proposeto touchuponinduecourse,andthegreaterthenumberofthesecountingthemind ofthesameindividual,themoreengrossedhebecomesinhishobby.Wheretheacquisitivenessandspeculationaresolelyactuatingacollector,thei proposeto touchuponinduecourse,andthegreaterthenumberofthesecountingthemind ofthesameindividual,themoreengrossedhebecomesinhishobby.Wheretheacquisitivenessandspeculationaresolelyactuatingacollector,thei proposeto touchuponinduecourse,andthreeregreatestintroductionofnewproductsfromthiscompany.The new products from this company will sell on sale at publication time. COMMERCIAL HOTEL FIRST-CLASS DINING ROOM AND BAR Handsomey Furnished Rooms Everything neat and clean A home for The Traveling Public A trial will convince JOHN ZIEGLER.Manage NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT PACIFIC Mausoleum Company: —Citation of principal place of business Anaheim California. Notice is hereby given that at a particular Meeting of The Board Of Directors held on 5th day of June,D.1915,n an assessment Five Cents per share,r or five per cent on each dollar was levied upon The subscriber capital stock of this corporation,p able immediately In United States gold coin,t o The Secretary.of.S.A. Company.at is office,Masonic Building.State California. Any stock upon which this assignment shall remain unpaid on this day July 1915will be delivered and advertised for sale at public auction,t or unless payment made. Will be sold on Thursday for the six months from October, 1911 to June, 1912, and a balance of $584,740,000 in our favor from October, 1912, to June, 1913. The democratic tariff law went into effect in October, 1913, and the trade balance in our favor dropped to $351,311,000 for nine months ending in June, 1914. This was $233,000,000 less than the balance in our favor for the nine months ending June 1913. There was a steady decline in our monthly trade balance following the enactment of the Democratic law, and in April, 1914 the balance turned $11,209,544 against us and remained against us every month thereafter until September, 1914, when war orders placed us on the right side of the ledger to the amount of $61,341,000. The following tabulation will give same idea of the effect of these orders: Month Balance September 1912 $54,858,569 October 1912 76,645,518 November 1912 125,149,293 December 1912 96,220,460 January 1913 63,969,450 February 1913 44,081,424 March 1913 32,025,713 April 1913 53,618,974 September 1914 $16,341,722 October, 1914 56,630,650 November 1914 79,411,271 December 1914 130,976,013 January 1915 145,730,996 February 1915 174,682,478 March 1915 138,479,836 April 1915 133,900,000 For the whole period of the operation of the democratic tariff law, October, 1913 to April 1915, the trade balance in our favor was $1,201,496,084 compared with a favorable trade balance under republican law October, 1911 to April 1913 of $1,012,423.19. The difference of $189,000,000 in favor of the former is accounted for by the increases for the months of March and April, 1915. In other words, after the war had given us a favorable balance, it took from October, 1914, to February, 1915 with the war orders giving us large and in some instances, astounding monthly trade balances, to even up with the favorable trade balances under republican law for October, 1911 to April, 1913; in times of peace. That these heavy exports are due to war orders, an analysis of the export tables conclusively shows. In every instance where our trade with a neutral country has not been seriously attraction it is likely to have to its owner. Amongst the other attractions making powerful appeal to most collectors are the beauty, or the curiosity of the color and design of their stamps, and the interesting study provided in making themselves acquainted with the manner in which they are made, and with the many minor distinctions between different issues. Then there is the historical and geographical interest of stamps, and of their postmarks, which form a separate and most attractive study in themselves. Few stamps can be said to be entirely lacking in historical interest, and it must suffice to specify here a few only of the more prominent examples under this heading. Who can deny the intense historical appeal of the stamps of France, and fail to think of the tragedy, or comedy, according to his point of view, of the translation of the small-head lines on those stamps from Republic to Empire and then again to Republic. We are, I think, too much accustomed as a nation to take events in a foreign country as a matter of course, and to miss their human significance, but even apart from sentiment, this circumstance is without parallel in the history of stamps, end is likely to remain so. The stamps of Finland have a pathetic interest peculiar to themselves, in that they illustrate very clearly the deliberate policy of the Russian government for forcibly suppressing the separate nationality of the Finnish people, and violating their constitution. The first indication of this is afforded by the issue of 1891 when we find the former issues comprising the arms of Finland, and a different currency, replaced by stamps similar in all respects to those of the Russia empire, with no exception of some dots in small irons introduced into the designs. It is notable too that for the first time Russian characters alone appear in the inscriptions. The new currency being designed in Russian alone appears to have caused difficulties since in 1895 there is a temporary return in the case of the lower values to the former Finnish design and currency. WILL FIGHT MOSQUITOS The state board of health has planned an active campaign against malaria and the malaria mosquito in California this summer. At a recent THE ATTRACTION OF COLLECTING POSTAGE STAMPS By Penny Black To deal with the question from the beginning of things, the collections of boys are, I think, for the most part due to the spirit of acquisitiveness which is present to a greater or lesser degree in nearly all human beings, or to the instinct, which persists, contrary to Scriptural admonition, to hoard up belongings. This instinct being usually in the case of boys extended to very various interests such as mlice, marbles, butterflies, bulls eyes, coins, crests, curios and many other things, is not in most cases a very strong influence so far as stamps alone are concerned, and their collections necessarily suffer from the competition. As an instance of the disastrous effect of this clashing of interests, I may mention an experience of my own. I was, I believe, a most enthusiastic and careful boy collector, yet I distinctly remember exchanging a rare early Natal stamp from my collection for a model engine, the virtue of which was that the other party to the transaction had made it himself out of a treacle tin, that was as far new currency, being designed in Russian alone, appears to have caused difficulties, since in 1895 there is a temporary return in the case of the lower values to the former Finnish design and currency. WILL FIGHT MOSQUITOS The state board of health has planned an active campaign against malaria and the malaria mosquito in California this summer. At a recent meeting of the board it was announced that the Hooper foundation for medical research of San Francisco had taken hold of the problem with a view to lending active cooperation. Much information has already been collected and an onslaught on the disease, conducted by mosquito brigades will probably be begun in the near future. Prof. Charles Gilman Hyde, sanitary engineer of the board is at present engaged in perfecting regulations for the disposal of sewage in the various communities of the state with a view of establishing standards for such disposal and for the maintenance of the purity of water supplies. This contemplates regulations for the prevention of contamination of mountain streams and other drinking water by summer camps, hotels, etc. The board is engaged at present in investigating the various camps, summer resorts and hotels of the state with a view of improving their sanitary conditions. Stringent regulations will be enforced. The organization of the new department of sanitary engineering is progressing. It will busy itself at once with the suppression of typhoid. Sewage disposal in all parts of the state will be investigated. The state epidemiologist is to continue the investigation of the hookworm situation in certain localities of Ice Cream Season Will SoonbeHere "White Mountain" Freezers, "Star" and "Chrystal" Refrigerators--Positively the best on earth. AT DICKEL'S DICKEL'S ORANGE COUNTY WINE COMPANY COMPLETE STOCK OF Wholesale Choice Wines and Liquors, Cordials and Bottled Beers Home and Eastern Brews Family Trade Especially Solicited Best of Goods Courteous Attendants There is nothing so refreshing as a glass of DE FROM ONE TREE Baptist church of Santa California, is the only church built from the timber of a great redwood giant. Evws and the hundred-foot spire from the tree. After the was in place, one-third of as still left unused. Huff, secretary of the Organy Fruit Exchange, stated May pool of Valencias had 135,000 for the growers of it covered by the exchange. ange is composed of co-opociations south and east of Ana river, there being asin Olive, Villa Park, Orange, El Modena and Tustin. es that the orange market now than it has been at any g the season, and that there reason to believe that the e Valencia crop is also gove at good prices. There is nothing so refreshing as a glass of Anaheim Beer Seldom Equalled; Never Excelled Delivered to all parts of the city Home 1264 Phones: Pacific 30 UNION BREWING CO. Anaheim Laundry Co. First-Class Work—Up-to-date Machinery Send your LAUNDRY to us and we will do your work perfectly and return it to you in good condition. Patronize Home Industry South Lemon St. BothPhones