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anaheim-gazette 1915-09-09

1915-09-09 · Anaheim Gazette · page 6 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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CONCRETE ROADS GROWING IN FAVOR RAPID INCREASE IN MILEAGE IN UNITED STATES DURING PAST FEW YEARS 19,200,000 SQUARE YARDS REPORTED IN THE COUNTRY AT CLOSE OF 1914 The mileage of concrete pavements in the United States has increased rapidly, and it is likely to continue to increase, according to a new bulletin of the United States department of agriculture. This bulletin gives the estimated amount of concrete pavement in the United States in 1914 as 19,200,000 square yards; in 1909 it was only 364,000 square yards. The principal advantages of concrete pavements which have led to this increase in popularity are said to be: (1) Durability under ordinary traffic conditions. (2) A smooth, even surface offering little resistance. (3) Absence of dust and east with which it may be cleaned. (4) Comparatively small cost of maintenance until renewals are necessary. (5) Availability as a mast for another type of surface if desirable. (6) Attractive appearance. In commenting upon these advantages the bulletin states that the durability of concrete roads has not yet been proved by actual practice, because there are no very old pavements as yet in existence, but from frequently results, it is said, in adding from 10 to 20 per cent to the cost of a concrete pavement. The most economical method is to have the work of mixing and placing the concrete as nearly continuous as possible. The work should be planned with a primary view of keeping the mixer going full time. The drainage structures, the grading, and the subgrade, should, therefore, be completed well in advance of the mixer and provision made for obtaining all of the necessary materials without delay. A common error is the failure to make adequate provision for delivering water on the work and the amount which a given stream is capable of supplying is frequently overestimated. RIGID QUARANTINE AGAINST FRUIT FLY Most Serious Pest of Citrus Industry Exists in Hawaii, and is Barred From California Warning given by Dr. L. O. Howard, chief entomologist of the United States department of agriculture, that a more rigid quarantine against Hawaiian horticultural products must be imposed to keep out the much-feared Mediterranean fly, has been heeded. While the federal and state quarantine laws have been strictly enforced at all California ports for several years, it is understood that the vigil is to be redoubled. It is possible also that the embargo that has been placed on certain Hawaiian fruits and plants may be extended to others with a view to keeping them out of the state altogether. The reason given for this vigilance is the fact that the Mediterranean fruit fly, scientifically known as the Ceratitis Capitata, is the most feared of pests that threaten citrus fruits. Through the efforts of the federal and state governments and the Citrus Protective League, the dangerous fruit frequently results, it is said, in adding from 10 to 20 per cent to the cost of a concrete pavement. SOLID SOIL HAVE RELIEGED REPRESENTATIVE YEAR'S REPUCEVENTION TO TAILI CALIFORNIA AND ERN STATES WORKFUL IN NAMING DATES When the next national convention meets there will be 995 or nine fewer than their convention. It is probable will be a still furrowed two delegates, because accurately determined York, under the new is entitled to the ninetimes gates are not entitled details of the new art just been made public. The majority need in 1916 will be 495, compared with 540 York's representation is not reduced, in the number of upon the solid South the South is likely factor in choosing nominee. The scheme of applied by the Republicvention provides for each Congressional additional delegate for which the vote for (4) Comparatively small cost of maintenance until renewals are necessary. (5) Availability as a mast for another type of surface if desirable. (6) Attractive appearance. In commenting upon these advantages the bulletin states that the durability of concrete roads has not yet been proved by actual practice, because there are no very old pavements as yet in existence, but from the condition of those which have undergone several years' service it seems probable that they will be found to wear well. The disadvantages of concrete as a road surface are: (1) Its noise under horse traffic. (2) The wearing of the necessary joints in the pavement, and the tendency to crack, with its consequent rapid deterioration. (3) The difficulty of repairs when these become necessary. In the past efforts have been made to overcome these objections to a certain degree by covering the concrete pavement with a bituminous wearing surface. At the present time, the specialist in the department hold that this can not be economically justified, although it is possible that future investigation may change the situation in this respect. In the present state of road science, however, it seems that where traffic conditions are such that a bituminous surface on a concrete road is practicable a bituminous surface macadam road would be equally practicable and certainly cheaper. Where traffic is too heavy for macadam road the bituminous surface is likely to giv way and the uneven manner in which it fails tends to produce excessive wear on portions of the concrete. For a successful concrete road, hardness, toughness, and uniformity are the most essential qualities. These can be secured to a great extent by care in the selection of the constituent materials and the proportions in which they are mixed. Sample specifications are included in the bulletin, No. 249, Portland Cement Concrete Pavements for Country Roads. These specifications are believed to typify the best engineering practice as it has been developed up to this time. They cover such points as materials, grading, subgrade, and construction. The cement, it is said, should always conform to some standard specifications for Portland cement such as It is possible also that the embargo that has been placed on certain Hawaiian fruits and plants may be extended to others with a view to keeping them out of the state altogether. The reason given for this vigilance is the fact that the Mediterranean fruit fly, scientifically known as the Ceratitis Capitata, is the most feared of pests that threaten citrus fruits. Through the efforts of the federal and state governments and the Citrus Protective league, the dangerous fruit fly has been kept clear of California citrus groves. Every possible source of danger, and particularly exports from Hawaii, where the fly is known to exist, have been watched with the greatest of care. In speaking of the work done to keep the fly from this state, F. O. Wallschlaeger, secretary of the Protective league, said: "The quarantine now in force absolutely prohibits the importation of the hosts of the Mediterranean fruit fly. As for plants or fruits that may be shipped from Hawaii they are admitted only after being carefully inspected." As a double guard against an invasion by the pest, horticultural experts visit every ship that arrives in Los Anegles, San Francisco, or San Diego from Hawaii, and inspect even the hand baggage of passengers. So far as is known, there have been no artificial means devised for combating the fly, once it gains a foothold in any territory. The fly itself works from the inside of the fruit and products that may have every outward appearance of being firm and good may have the interior structure almost entirely destroyed. Being free of the files and having the barriers up, California citrus fruit growers have little to fear, but nevertheless will not relax their vigil to keep their groves free from the enemy. Your ship may never come in, but if you save the pennies and place them in a term account with the Anaheim National bank, it may become a ferry boat to take you across some dangerous stream when you need to get across. TWO SONS OF 1776 VETERANS Claiming a distinction which few, of any, sociites, of the Sons of the Revolution in the United States can claim is also that the embargo that has been placed on certain Hawaiian fruits and plants may be extended to others with a view to keeping them out of the state altogether. The reason given for this vigilance is the fact that the Mediterranean fruit fly, scientifically known as the Ceratitis Capitata, is the most feared of pests that threaten citrus fruits. Through the efforts of the federal and state governments and the Citrus Protective league, the dangerous fruit fly has been kept clear of California citrus groves. Every possible source of danger, and particularly exports from Hawaii, where the fly is known to exist, have been watched with the greatest of care. In speaking of the work done to keep the fly from this state, F. O. Wallschlaeger, secretary of the Protective league, said: "The quarantine now in force absolutely prohibits the importation of the hosts of the Mediterranean fruit fly. As for plants or fruits that may be shipped from Hawaii they are admitted only after being carefully inspected." As a double guard against an invasion by the pest, horticultural experts visit every ship that arrives in Los Anegles, San Francisco, or San Diego from Hawaii, and inspect even the hand baggage of passengers. So far as is known, there have been no artificial means devised for combating the fly, once it gains a foothold in any territory. The fly itself works from the inside of the fruit and products that may have every outward appearance of being firm and good may have the interior structure almost entirely destroyed. Being free of the files and having the barriers up, California citrus fruit growers have little to fear, but nevertheless will not relax their vigil to keep their groves free from the enemy. Your ship may never come in, but if you save the pennies and place them in a term account with the Anaheim National bank, it may become a ferry boat to take you across some dangerous stream when you need to get across. TWO SONS OF 1776 VETERANS Claiming a distinction which few, of any, sociites, of the Sons of the Revolution in the United States can claim is also that the embargo that has been placed on certain Hawaiian fruits and plants may be extended to others with a view to keeping them out of the state altogether. The reason given for this vigilance is the fact that the Mediterranean fruit fly, scientifically known as the Ceratitis Capitata, is the most feared of pests that threaten citrus fruits. Through the efforts of the federal and state governments and the Citrus Protective league, the dangerous fruit fly has been kept clear of California citrus groves. Every possible source of danger, and particularly exports from Hawaii, where the fly is known to exist, have been watched with the greatest of care. In speaking of the work done to keep the fly from this state, F. O. Wallschlaeger, secretary of the Protective league, said: "The quarantine now in force absolutely prohibits the importation of the hosts of the Mediterranean fruit fly. As for plants or fruits that may be shipped from Hawaii they are admitted only after being carefully inspected." As a double guard against an invasion by the pest, horticultural experts visit every ship that arrives in Los Anegles, San Francisco, or San Diego from Hawaii, and inspect even the hand baggage of passengers. So far as is known, there have been no artificial means devised for combating the fly, once it gains a foothold in any territory. The fly itself works from the inside of the fruit and products that may have every outward appearance of being firm and good may have the interior structure almost entirely destroyed. Being free of the files and having the barriers up, California citrus fruit growers have little to fear, but nevertheless will not relax their vigil to keep their groves free from the enemy. Your ship may never come in, but if you save the pennies and place them in a term account with the Anaheim National bank, it may become a ferry boat to take you across some dangerous stream when you need to get across. TWO SONS OF 1776 VETERANS Claiming a distinction which few, of any, sociites, of the Sons of the Revolution in the United States can claim is also that the embargo that has been placed on certain Hawaiian fruits and plants may be extended to others with a view to keeping them out of the state altogether. The reason given for this vigilance is the fact that the Mediterranean fruit fly, scientifically known as the Ceratitis Capitata, is the most feared of pests that threaten citrus fruits. Through the efforts of the federal and state governments and the Citrus Protective league, the dangerous fruit fly has been kept clear of California citrus groves. Every possible source of danger, and particularly exports from Hawaii, where the fly is known to exist, have been watched with the greatest of care. In speaking of the work done to keep the fly from this state, F. O. Wallschlaeger, secretary of the Protective league, said: "The quarantine now in force absolutely prohibits the importation ofthe hosts ofthe Mediterranean fruit fly.As for plants or fruits that may be shipped from Hawaii they are admitted only after being carefully inspected." As a double guard against an invasion by the pest, horticultural experts visit every ship that arrives in Los Anegles, San Francisco, or San Diego from Hawaii, and inspect even the hand baggage of passengers. So far as is known, there have been no artificial means devised for combating the fly once it gains a foothold in any territory. The fly itself works from the inside of the fruit and products that may have every outward appearance of being firm and good may have the interior structure almost entirely destroyed. Being free of the files and having the barriers up, California citrus fruit growers have little to fear, but nevertheless will not relax their vigil to keep their groves free from the enemy. Your ship may never come in, but if you save the pennies and place them in a term account with the Anaheim National bank, it may become a ferry boat to take you across some dangerous stream when you need to get across. TWO SONS OF 1776 VETERANS Claiming a distinction which few, of any, sociites, ofthe Sons ofthe Revolution in the United States can claim is also thatthe embargothathasbeenplacedon certainHawaiianfruitsandplantsmaybeextendedtootherswithaviewtokeepingthemoutofthestatealtogether. The reason given for this vigilance is not reduced; ituponthesolidSouththeSouthislikelytotherifactorinchoosingnominee. The schemeofappliedbytheRepublicventionprovidesforeachCongressionaldelegationforwhichthevotefor1912orthevotefor7500ormore. Thosestateswhichthe solidSouthbecleardocumentofalwaysreferredtoofficewillhavealreadyintheconvention.Narkansas,Florida,Mississippi,NorthCarolina,TexasandThestatesofKentuckyandWestVirginia;thanonce slippedcraticcolumn;wilde delegates,bringingSouthernStatesup. ComparedwiththeWesternStates;coCalifornia,ColoradoMissouri,Nebraska,New Mexico,NorthMaine.Oregon,SouthWashingtonandWisconsintogetheratotalof2voteswillmorethansolidSouth,andWestWesternStatesthereinstructehowvegetarieshowprimaries. Thesystemofcheckingthe southhasnotbetheold conventionnervail. Fromstatisticaldiseaseofthe1914 CongressionalCongresshasperparedsomeonontheclosenessoff districts. Itwasshownforkherearethirty-twotrictsinwhichachlar voteoffromtwoweouldhaveelectednationalrepublicanspoliticalcomplexionentirely.Therepublichaveshadapacificvotes. The republican WashingtoniscomparabletoFloridawhichwent3309inthelastyear. ent materials and the proportions in which they are mixed. Sample specifications are included in the bulletin, No. 249, Portland Cement. Concrete Pavements for Country Roads. These specifications are believed to typify the best engineering practice as it has been developed up to this time. They cover such points as materials, grading, subgrade, and construction. The cement, it is said, should always conform to some standard specifications for Portland cement, such as those issued by the United States Bureau of Standards or the American Society for Testing Materials. The sand should not contain more than 3 per cent of foreign material, and sand with more coarse than fine grains is to be preferred. The course aggregate may consist of either crushed stone or gravel. In either case it is very resirable that the coarse aggregate be well graded in size between proper limits. The proportion of cement to the sand and coarse aggregate combined should not be less than about 1 to 5, and the proportion of sand to coarse aggregate not less than 1½ to 3, nor greater than 2 to 3. A useful formula when gravel is used as coarse aggregate s 1 part of cement to 1½ parts of sand to 3 parts of gravel. When crushed stone is used, 1 3-4 parts of sand may be substituted in place of 1½ parts. In addition to discussing the engineering details of construction, the bulletin already mentioned calls attention to the fact that ordinarily from one-third to one-half of the total cost of constructing a concrete pavement is for labor after the materials are delivered. This emphasizes the importance of efficient organization and proper equipment. Failure to take these factors into consideration fre TWO SONS OF 1776 VETERANS Claiming a distinction which few, of any, societies, of the Sons of the Revolution in the United States can equal, the California chapter of this order boasts as members the sons of two men who fought in the Continental army over 125 years ago. The two honored members are Lewis Patrick Phillips and Francis Marion Lemmon. A third son of a soldier who served in Washington's army, George Washington Peachy, also was a member of the California society, which has its headquarters in Los Angeles, until his death five years ago. Phillips is living now at Downey, where he has resided since he came to this state in 1887. He now is 84 years of age. His father, John Phillips, served under different commanders and saw most of his service during the Revolutionary war in the south. Lemmon lives in Lordsburg whence he came in 1887 from Illinois. His father, James Lemmon, was born in 1763 and when 12 years old was a messenger for General Washington. Later in the Revolution he served as a soldier with a Virginia regiment. FOR SALE—10 acres, 1½ miles east of Anaheim. 8½ acres set to two-year Valencias. 10 shares water stock. Domestic pumping plant. 4-room house. 2-room tank house. The biggest bargain in Orange county. J. R. AGEE, Santa Fe Springs, Cal. There are thirty-two tricts in which a clerar vote of from three thousand would have elected national republicans political complexion entirely. The republican have had a maorite votes. The republican Washington is comrade, which went down in 3309 in the last eighteen which went Democrat eight votes, and W carried by the democrats 917votes will come out publican column in SOLID SOUTH TO HAVE FEWER DELEGATES REPRESENTATION IN NEXT YEAR'S REPUBLICAN CONVENTION TO BE CURTAILED CALIFORNIA AND OTHER WESTERN STATES WILL EXERT POWERFUL INFLUENCE IN NAMING CADI-DATES When the next republican national convention meets in June, 1916, there will be 995 delegates, seventy-nine fewer than there were in the 1912 convention. It is possible that there will be a still further reduction of two delegates, because it has not been accurately determined whether New York, under the new apportionment, is entitled to the ninety which it had in 1912 or to eighty-eight. Six delegates are not entitled to vote. The details of the new apportionment have just been made public. The majority necessary to nominate in 1916 will be 495, or possibly 494, as compared with 540 in 1912. If New York's representation in the convention is not reduced, the entire decrease in the number of delegates will fall upon the solid South. Nevertheless, the South is likely to be an important factor in choosing the Presidential nominee. The scheme of apportionment adopted by the Republican National Convention provides for one delegate for each Congressional District and an additional delegate for each district in which the vote for Congressman on an average only about 7 per cent sugar, or less than many other fruit juices, the ease with which the juice can be pressed out partly offsets the low sugar content. The method described below calls for only utensils found in every household. Remove bee pink flesh and seeds from the rind of sweet, fully ripe melons. Crush the flesh with a potato masher or by running it through a meat chopper. Place the crushed pulp and seed in cloth bags and squeeze out the juice, which flows out readily. About five-sixths of the pulp will squeeze out as juice. About 13 gallons of the juice will make 1 gallon of sirup. This amount of juice can ordinarily be secured from 10 watermelons weighing from 22 to 25 pounds each. The juice is then boiled down into ORDINANCE NO. 292 AN ORDINANCE FIXING AND LEVYING A PROPERTY TAX ON ALL PROPERTY WITHIN THE CORPORATE LIMITS OF THE CITY OF ANAHEIM FOR THE FISCAL YEAR, 1915-1916. The Board of Trustees of the City of Anaheim do ordain aa follows: SECTION 1. That there be and hereby is fixed and levied a property tax for the fiscal year 1915-1916 of Ninety-four and 8-10 (.948) cents on each one hundred dollars of the assessed valuation of real property and personal property within the corporate limits of the City of Anaheim, for the ordinary annual expenditures of said city. SECTION 2. That there be and hereby is fixed and levied a property tax for the fiscal year 1915-1916 of One and 6-10 (.016) cents on each one hundred dollars of the assessed valuation of all real and personal property within the corporate limits of the City of Anaheim, for the purpose of paying the annual interest of the indebtedness of said city for the purposes of constructing a City Electric Light Plant, together with one-fortieth (1-40) of said indebtedness. SECTION 3. That there be and hereby is fixed and levied a property tax for the fiscal year 1915-1916 of Four and 4-10 (.044) cents on each one hundred York's representation in the convention is not reduced, the entire decree in the number of delegates will fall upon the solid South. Nevertheless, the South is likely to be an important factor in choosing the Presidential nominee. The scheme of apportionment adopted by the Republican National Convention provides for one delegate for each Congressional District and an additional delegate for each district in which the vote for Congressman in 1912 or the vote for Taft in 1908 was 7500 or more. Those states which are known as the solid South because of their long record of always returning Democrats to office will have a total of 151 votes in the convention. They are Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Texas and Virginia. The states of Kentucky, Tennessee and West Virginia, which have more than once slipped out of the Democratic column, will have sixty-three delegates, bringing the total of the Southern States up to 214. Compared with this, however, the Western States; comprising Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Washington and Wyoming, will have together a total of 222 delegates. Their vote will more than offset that of the solid South, and in most of those Western States the delegates will be instructed how to vote by Presidential primaries. The system of choosing delegates in the south has not been changed, and the old convention methods will prevail. From statistical data obtained from the 1914 Congressional elections the Republican Congressional Committee has prepared some interesting tables on the closeness of the vote in some districts. It was shown for instance that there are thirty-two Congressional districts in which a change in the popular vote of from thirty-three to 969 would have elected thirty-two additional republicans and changed the political complexion of the next House entirely. The republicans then would have had a majority of twenty-eight votes. The republican organization at Washington is confident that Colorado, which went democratic by only 3309 in the last election; Nevada Crush the flesh with a potato masher or by running it through a meat chopper. Place the crushed pulp and seed. In cloth bags and squeeze out the juice, which flows out readily. About five-sixths of the pulp will squeeze out as juice. About 13 gallons of the juice will make 1 gallon of sirup. This amount of juice can ordinarily be secured from 10 watermelons weighing from 22 to 25 pounds each. The juice is then boiled down into a sirup in an ordinary preserving kettle. The juice boils without much foaming until it begins to thicken, when the fire should be slackened to prevent foaming and burning. The red color matter in the juice conglutes during boiling, and part of it rises to the surface, where it can be removed by skimming. The remainder floats about in the juice, forming red particles which gather near the top. Toward the last of the boiling the sirup must be watched constantly. If the housewife has a candy thermometer, she should take the sirup from the fire as soon as it reaches a temperature of 220 deg F., otherwise she should let it cook until a small sample on cooling is about as thick as maple sirup. When the boiling has finished, the sirup can be set aside to cool in covered vessels or can be poured while hot into cans or glass containers and sealed. Where a cider press is available the melons can be cut into pieces and arranged on the press so that the pressure will extract the juice of the pulp before it presses the rind. The juice of the rind is not so rich in sugar and experiments with rind juice alone indicate that it is not suitable for sirup. If it is desired to make sirup free from red particles, start the sirup to boiling, and when some of the coagulated matter has been removed by skimming, transfer the juice to tall glass jars or other tall containers and allow it to settle and cool for a few hours. This allows the red particles to settle to the bottom. The upper part of the juice can then be poured off and boiled into sirup. DIGGING IN In hands entirely great the spade appears to have become mightier than the sword. Along the western scene of hostilities, for hundreds of miles, and at the Dardanelles, the opposing there are thirty-two Congressional districts in which a change in the popular vote of from thirty-three to 969 would have elected thirty-two additional republicans and changed the political complexion of the next House entirely. The republicans then would have had a majority of twenty-eight votes. The republican organization at Washington is confident that Colorado, which went democratic by only 3309 in the last election; Nevada which went Democratic by thirty-eight votes, and Wisconsin, which carried by the democrats by a bare 917 votes will come back into the republican column in 1916. WATERMELON SIRUP A delicious sirup can be made from watermelons, and it affords to the farmer, according to the fruit juice experts of the department o'agriculture, a convenient means of using the surplus watermelons which otherwise are allowed to spoil in the field. Such sirup has been made by farmers in a small way in various points of the South, and the department endeavored to work out exact methods of making it as a possible by product from surplus melons. This sirup can be used immediately or can be bottled hot in sterilized jars and kept just as is done in the canning of fruit. It is reddish brown in color, very sweet and well flavored and will serve most of the purposes for which sirup is used in the home. It has been tried with satisfactory results in making ginger cake, homemade candy, and as a sweetening and flavoring in ice cream. As the specialists point out, while the juice of commercial watermelons, such as the "Tom Watson," contain hours. This allows the red particles to settle to the bottom. The upper part of the juice can then be poured off and boiled into sirup. DIGGING IN In hands entirely great the spade appears to have become mightier than the sword. Along the western scene of hostilities, for hundreds of miles, and at the Dardanelles, the opposing armies confront each other in deep trenches, with entanglements at the approaches more complex than were ever known before. On taking a trench, which happens seldom, the captors dig in with the greatest energy for their own purposes, and then watch for the enemy through periscope. The best burrowers have advantage. Pictorial war, as painted by many eminent artists, and described by Othello, has been sent to the background in the present conflict, which smells of asphyxiating gases, and other grim agents of mortality. Middle-aged British citizens, who have joined the home guard militia, are handed a pick and shovel, and their first instruction relates to the right side of a parapet, and how to heap it up with muscles unused to the functions of a navy. After a day of such hard labor, a shopkeeper realizes that patriotism in an emergency is different from singing the national anthem and cheerfully paying more taxes. John Bull himself, in the role of Tommy Atkins, is mopping his brow, and making the dirt fly as fast as his respiratory machinery will permit. During the last two years of the civil war the armies in the field learned to throw up at least rifle pits whenever they halted where an attack might be delivered against them. SECTION 9. That there be, and hereby is, fixed and levied a property tax for the fiscal year 1915-1916 of Two and 8-10 (0.28) cents on each one hundred dollars of the assessed valuation of all real and personal property within the corporate limits of the City of Anaheim for the purpose of paying the annual interest of the indebtedness of said city, incurred for the purpose of the acquisition and construction of additions to the Electric Light Plant, together with one twentieth (1-20) of said indebtedness. SECTION 10. The City Clerk of the City of Anaheim shall certify to the passage of this ordinance and cause the same to be published once in the Anaheim Gazette, a weekly newspaper of general circulation, printed and circulated in said City of Anaheim, and thirty days therefrom, after the same shall take effect and be in full force. The foregoing ordinance is signed, approved and attested by me this 1st day of September, A. D. 1915. J. H. COOK, President of the Board of Trustees of the City of Anaheim. STATE OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF ORANGE) SS. CITY OF ANAHEIM. I. Edward B. Merritt, City Clerk of the City of Anaheim, do hereby certify that the foregoing Ordinance was introduced at a meeting of the Board of Trustees of the City of Anaheim on the 26th day of August, A. D. 1915, and that is was duly passed and adopted at a regular meeting of the said Board of Trustees held on the 1st day of September, 1915, by the following vote: AYES, Trustees Cook, Stark, Hammer Brunorth. NOES Trustees, None. ABSENT AND NOT VOTING, Trustee Schneider. And I further certify that the President of the Board of Trustees signed this Ordinance on the 1st day of September, A. D. 1915. IN WITNESS WHEREOF I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of said City of Anaheim this 1st day of September, A. D. 1915. EDWARD B. MERRITT, City Clerk of the City of Anaheim. The trenches of that period were slight indeed compared with those of the present time: That was a period when muzzle-loaders and black powder were still in use, and riffles had less than a fourth of their present range. Trench warfare, especially in California Wine Co. Finest Brands of Wines and Liquors Always In Stock. We Can Suit Your Palate Give us a trial; be convinced. We Appreciate Your Business 128 West Center St. Anaheim, Cal. BOTH PHONES THE Peerless Saloon JOHN CASSOU. Prop. Fine Wines and Liquors ANAHEIM BEER ON DRAUGHT C. & D. BELMONT BAR We are always here to serve you with the best of Wines, Liquors, Beer and Cigars The Seal of Public Approval Has been placed on all our Wines and Liquors DRAUGHT C. & D. BELMONT BAR We are always here to serve you with the best of Wines, Liquors, Beer and Cigars 115 N.Los Angeles St. ANAHEIM Favorite Saloon L. Wisser, Mgr. Choicest of Wines Liquors and Cigars SCHLITZ BEER On Draught Exchange Bar WM. STARK, Prop. Choicest of Wines Liquors and Cigars Anaheim Union Brewing Beer on Draught Courteous Treatment 120 W. Center St. ANAHEIM ANAHEIM AERIE, No. 947, P. O. E. Meets every Wednesday at 8 p.m., at Eagle Hall on Lemon street. Visitors always welcome. EARL DUTTON, W. P. Frank H. Fox, Secretary. SANTA FE TIME TABLE Effective May 12, 1915 —NORTH BOUND Leave Anaheim Arrive Los Angeles 6:05 A.M. 7:15 A.M. 7:35 A.M. 9:35 A.M. 11:58 A.M. 3:57 P.M. 4:50 P.M. 5:40 P.M. 6:30 P.M. 9:04 P.M. SOUTH BOUND Lv. Los Angeles Ar. Anaheim 11:59 P.M. 1:08 A.M. 7:00 A.M. 7:50 A.M. 8:10 A.M. 9:06 A.M. 1:15 P.M. 2:02 P.M. 8:00 P.M. 3:42 P.M. DIRECTORY OF LODGES XX X ANAHEIM LODGE, 207, F. A. M. Regular meetings, third Monday in each month. M. W. MARTENET, W. M. Wm. H. Chambers, Secretary. XX X ODD FELLOWS LODGE Meets every Tuesday evening at 8 p.m. in Odd Fellows Hall. N. G., CONRAD MAUERHAN. C. W. Hedges, Secretary. XX X ROYAL NEIGHBORS, ROSEWOOD CAMP—meet, 2nd and 4th Monday afternoons, at 2:30 p.m., at Odd Fellows Hall. The Seal of Public Approval Has been placed on all our Wines and Liquors and Bottled Beers Fisher Wine Co. 119 North Los Angeles Street. Free City Delivery. Home 182. S 198 Germania Halle A SRLENDID LUNCH EVERY DAY. BEST BRANDS OF WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS FOR THOSE DESIRING THEM. COLD BEER ALWAYS ON TAP. YOUR PA TRONAGE SOLICITED. WE MAKE A SPECIALTY OF KENTUCKY DEW WHISKEY. Famous San Diego Beer J. D. Heitshusen Eagle Bar HESSEL & HESSEL, Props. The Best in Wet Goods 117 E. Center St. ANAHEIM winter, is about as hideous a thing as could be devised, but it is clearly a necessity of the existing crisis. If this mode of fighting is modern glory the word has become a synonym for an inferno. There is real glory in building a Panama Canal, in great irrigation projects and in making the track of a long government railroad in Alaska. Uncle sam is infinitely the best exponent of the epoch of digging. Expert Plano Tuning by F. W. Schmidt, 222 East Center street. Sunset 202, Home 64.