anaheim-gazette 1916-09-21
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BOVINE TUBERCULOSIS SERIOUS INFECTION
CAUSE OF THE DISEASE IN CATTLE AND WHAT IT LOOKS LIKE
HOW A HERD IS INFECTED AND PRESENCE OF DISEASE MAY BE DEMONSTRATED
Cattle are the most susceptible of all animals to tuberculosis. Hogs also contract the disease easily when fed on infected milk or when running in fields with tuberculous cattle. Poultry are sometimes affected with a form of tuberculosis, as are also household pets. In fact, there is no kind of animal that will not develop the disease, although horses and sheep are seldom infected. Tuberculosis is the most serious, infectious disease of man. The bovine type of bacillus rarely causes the lung form of the disease in adult human beings but it is responsible for certain forms of tuberculosis in infancy and childhood. The percentage of cases of the bovine type occurring among children depends on local conditions, and is variously estimated. The maximum found in any locality has been 25 per cent. The cause of this disease in children is infection transmitted through raw milk and cream. It may also be present in other dairy products, such as butter, fresh cheese, skimmed milk and buttermilk, writes C. M. Haring of the agriculturist some time. Tuberculous cows do not appear to cough up anything. This may be because they cannot spit. Most of the material coughed up from the lungs is swallowed, but many tuberculosis germs escape from the mouth in the spray.
Nasal Discharge:—A slight discharge of pus from the nostrils may occur in cattle with advanced tuberculosis of the lungs. This discharge is often overlooked by the frequent licking of the nostrils and would be overlooked by any but a close observer.
Enlarged Glands:—Hard, painless swellings in cattle are apt to be due to tuberculosis. These are especially liable to occur in front of the shoulder, in the flank or groin, or in the region of the throat. Swellings under the jaw proper are more often due to actinomycosis or to the penetration of the tissues by foxtail beards. Tuberculous growths often develop in the throat or back of the jaws so as to produce a roughened sound in breathing.
Hard Lumps in the Udder—When tuberculosis attacks the udder no change can be detected at first, but after a time hard lumps can be felt in some parts of the organ after it is milked out. Milk from such an udder must not be saved.
Chronic Bloating:—Sometimes the diseased glands in the chest prevent the usual passage of gas from the paunch to the mouth by pressing on the gullet. The resulting bloat is recurrent or chronic and easily distinguishtable from the acute bloating caused by green alfalfa.
Diarrhoea—Looseness of the bowels or scouring is seen in advanced stages, particularly when the disease is generalized. This kind of scouring does not yield to treatment.
When the carcass of the cow affected with tuberculosis is opened the dissection of the body allows for examination of the lungs and other organs. An ordinance authorizes owners or drivers to own or drive coach, omnibus, oline or other vehicles if carrying any agent, employ any other represention owner or driver of omnibus, carriage other vehicle engages carrying passengers during circulation, and therefor by public tation on any purse City of Anaheim SECTION 2. Any late any of the princeance shall be deferred, and upon shall be punished ceeding One hundred by imprisonment period not exceeded or by both such SECTION 3. All ordinances, in visions of this order pealed.
SECTION 4. The City of Anaheim slage of this ordinance to be published Gazette week oral circulation, put in said City of Anaheim therefrom and take effect and be foregoing on proved and attested of September, A.J.
President of the B.City of Anaheim (SEAL)
Attest:
EDWARD B. MERCY
City Clerk of the STATE OF CALIFORNIA
COUNTY OF ANAHEM
I. Edward B. Mercy
City of Anaheim,
the foregoing Order at meeting of the City of Anaheim day of August, A.J.
The percentage of cases of the bovine type occurring among children depends on local conditions, and is variously estimated. The maximum found in any locality has been 25 per cent. The cause of this disease in children is infection transmitted through raw milk and cream. It may also be present in other dairy products, such as butter, fresh cheese, skimmed milk and buttermilk, writes C. M. Haring of the agricultural experiment station of the University of California.
The losses due to the prevalence of this disease in farm animals are not as apparent as they are important. It is no uncommon thing for a veterinarian to find 70 or 80 per cent of the cows in a herd diseased without much loss being evident to the owner. Losses from deaths due to tuberculosis seldom become serious in a herd until the disease has spread to a majority of the animals. Often the first intimation that anything is wrong comes to the owner through the report from the abattoir that cattle from his ranch have been condemned as unfit for food on account of tuberculosis.
Reports of meat inspectors in San Francisco show that the number of tuberculous cattle coming from certain sections increased from nine-tenths of one per cent to nine per cent in five years. Recently the proportion of hogs condemned by meat inspectors on account of tuberculosis has increased markedly. This is an added indication of the spread of infection in cattle, since the cow is the chief source of tuberculous infection in swine, the disease being transmitted to swine through milk or buttermilk from tuberculous cows, through infected cattle corrals or by feeding uncooked carcasses to the hogs. The enormous losses due to this disease are a tax upon every pint of milk and every pound of beef sold. That the aggregate loss to the state is enormous cannot be doubted, but, on the other hand, the loss to the individual owner is seldom so great as to make him ready to adopt measures involving a great deal of immediate trouble and expense in order to secure eventual complete freedom from the disease.
There is no symptom that can be relied upon with certainty. A herd may be badly infected and yet none of the cattle show symptoms of ill health. Tuberculosis may attack almost any organ of the body, but until it has progressed to an advanced stage there paunch to the mouth by pressing on the gullet. The resulting bloat is recurrent or chronic and easily distinguishable from the acute bloating caused by green alfalfa.
Diarrhoea—Looseness of the bowels or scouring is seen in advanced stages, particularly when the disease is generalized. This kind of scouring does not yield to treatment.
When the carcass of the cow affected with tuberculosis is opened the disease may be found in any port of the body, but it is usually located in the lymph glands of the chest, throat, or abdomen. The exterior of the tubercles often look like masses of pearls and on this account years ago the disease was called pearl disease of cattle. Tissues showing lesions of tuberculosis in cattle and hogs can be seen in the veterinary exhibits of the College of Agriculture at Berkeley.
Although there is much that is yet to be satisfactorily explained concerning the way in which cattle contract tuberculosis, it is definitely known that the disease results from the invasion of the tissues of the body by bacteria. The bacilli of bovine tuberculosis are believed to exist only in the tissues of diseased animals and in their excrections, or on substances contaminated by these excretions. Except under the most favorable conditions they do not multiply outside the body, although if not killed by sunlight or disinfectants they may survive in dirt for several months.
Tuberculosis may be introduced into a healthy herd in a number of ways:
By the purchase of a bull or other animal that is infected with the disease. This animal may be apparently healthy at the time of purchase, but if previously exposed the disease develop and spread to other cattle. Where a healthy herd is being maintained, animals should only be bought subject to the tuberculin test and even this precaution may fail if the herd from which they come is badly infected.
By feeding calves with milk, buttermilk, or whey that has come from tuberculous cows. A farmer may have a healthy herd, but, if he brings home skim milk from a creamery and feeds it to his calves, the disease, if present in the milk, may be transmitted to them. Such milk should be rendered safe by boiling or pasteurizing.
By showing cattle at fairs and exhibitions where proper care is not of a man or a city good.
Sticking to and of reasoning, we of the long and nasty at the other end humble prune bed tawdry boarding long had the taunnae," been eased that one to whom filled himself with that in him there muda high area all of these years and detraction, th ing its mighty woe that work has r dreamed of until, prune shortage m the leaders in th lass City people greatest prune es
In that statement the prune is co Kansas City a m and advancement be a calumniat sport, who would Kaw that award sible to recall y worth, Omaha s then all in the r tan leadership o were crying alou sprawling over with prunes, in i n the race. Wh vindicated Kansas
the loss to the individual owner is seldom so great as to make him ready to adopt measures involving a great deal of immediate trouble and expense in order to secure eventual complete freedom from the disease.
There is no symptom that can be relied upon with certainty. A herd may be badly infected and yet none of the cattle show symptoms of ill health. Tuberculosis may attack almost any organ of the body, but until it has progressed to an advanced stage there may be no visible signs. Following are some of the more important symptoms suggestive of the disease, but it should be understood that these may also be caused by other diseases:
Unthriftiness—In advanced stages of the disease the coat may become rough, the hair failing to shed readily with the change of seasons. The skin loses its suppleness and feels harsh and thick and is difficult to fold when grasped by the hands. This is especially noticeable in the neck or flanks. This condition is known as hide bound. The debilitated expression of the eyes and face, the bristling hair, arched back and tucked up abdomen are symptoms which may or may not be present in advanced tuberculosis.
Loss of Flesh—A gradual falling away should always be a cause for suspicion, but leanness is a common characteristic of good dairy cows; therefore a knowledge of the normal for each individual animal is necessary before judgment may be passed on this symptom. The owner or milker is often better qualified to decide these cases than a veterinarian who has never seen the animal before.
Cough:—This symptom is only present when the disease is attacking the lungs or some part of the breathing organs. It is usually rather subdued and infrequent and may occur only when the animal is driven or when she gets up after having lain down for
By feeding calves with milk, buttermilk, or whey that has come from tuberculous cows. A farmer may have a healthy herd, but, if he brings home skim milk from a creamery and feeds it to his calves, the disease, if present in the milk, may be transmitted to them. Such milk should be rendered safe by boiling or pasteurizing.
By showing cattle at fairs and exhibitions where proper care is not taken to keep out diseased stock, or to disinfect the stables.
By shipping animals in cars that have not been disinfected, as these may have recently carried diseased cattle.
By allowing the cattle to graze with diseased ones, or to come into contact with them over fences.
When the cattle are permitted access to small ponds, water holes, or troughs, these may become badly contaminated with infected manure from open cases. The rapid spread of the disease on certain ranges is believed to be due in part to infected water.
THE PRUNE ON THE KAW
Some epicurean philosopher of old has written "A man is what he eats," which has found a modern translation in the saying, "Tell me what you eat and I will tell you what your are." We know at least that Cassius asked "Upon what meat does this our Caesar feed that he is grown so great?" the question implying that a man is what his regular fare makes him. This truth should be considered with respect to communities as well as to individuals, and in all the applications that can be made of it, it should be remembered that, without reference to old prejudices and past reputations, anything contributing to the greatness
At the recent arrival of the Grand Army surgeon general of veterans' al advice in regimen who have received three simple ervation of a good as old age comes excessive use of stimulants and violent exercise. are widely applterse that they are The statistics of carefully kept criterion on this ginning of 1915 159,863. Deaths bered 11,856, a In the general pe are more than 100 sioners include survivors of all th States. Only a f ed in the Mexico 1848. Eight or to olutionary war lived to be more and possibly th
ORDINANCE NO. 308
AN ORDINANCE PROHIBITING ANY OWNER OR DRIVER OF ANY AUTOMOBILE, COACH, OMNIBUS, CARRIAGE, STAGE, STAGE-LINE, OR OTHER VEHICLE ENGAGED IN THE BUSINESS OF CARRYING PASSEGERS FOR HIRE, OR ANY AGENT, EMPLOYEE, SOLICITOR, RUNNER OR ANY OTHER REPRESENTATIVE OF ANY SUCH OWNER OR DRIVER OF ANY AUTOMOBILE, COACH, OMNIBUS, STAGE-LINE, OR OTHER VEHICLE ENGAGED IN THE BUSINESS OF CARRYING PASSEGERS FOR HIRE, FROM ADVERTISING SUCH BUSINESS OR SOLICITING PATRONAGE THEREFOR BY PUBLIC OUTCRY OR ORAL SOLICITATION ON ANY PUBLIC STREET OR ALLEY IN THE CITY OF ANAHEIM.
THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE CITY OF ANAHEIM DO ORDAIN AS FOLLOWS:
SECTION 1 It shall be unlawful for any owner or any driver of any automobile, coach, omnibus, carriage, stage, stage-line or other vehicle engaged in the business of carrying passengers for hire, or any agent, employee, solicitor, runner or any other representative of any such owner or driver of any automobile, coach, omnibus, carriage, stage, stage-line or other vehicle engaged in the business of carrying passengers for hire, to advertise such business or solicit patronage thereof by public outcry or oral solicitation on any public street or alley in the City of Anaheim.
SECTION 2 Any person who shall violate any of the provisions of this ordinance shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof, shall be punished by a fine of not exceeding One hundred dollars (100) or by imprisonment in the City Jail for a period not exceeding Thirty (30) days, or by both such fine and imprisonment.
SECTION 3 All ordinances or parts of ordinances, in conflict with the provisions of this ordinance are hereby repealed.
SECTION 4 The City Clerk of the City of Anaheim shall certify to the passage of this ordinance and cause the publication of a weekly newspaper of general circulation, published and circulated in said City of Anaheim, and thirty days therefrom and thereafter the same shall take effect and be in full force.
The foregoing ordinance is signed, approved and attested by me this 14th day of September, A.D. 1916.
J. J. SCHNEIDER
President of the Board of Trustees of the City of Anaheim.
Attest:
EDWARD B. MERRITT,
City Clerk of the City of Anaheim.
STATE OF CALIFORNIA)
COUNTY OF ORANGE)
CITY OF ANAHEIM
I. EDWARD B. Merritt, City Clerk of the City of Anaheim, do hereby certify that the foregoing ordinance was introduced to the Board of Trustees of the City of Anaheim held on the 24th day of August, A.D. 1916, and that it
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
NO. 8121
Estate of John Hanna, Deceased
Notice is hereby given by the undersigned, Administratrix of the estate of John Hanna, deceased, to the creditors of and all persons having claims against the said deceased to the them with the necessary vouchers in the office of the County of Orange, State of California, or to exhibit the same with the necessary vouchers to the said Administratrix at her place of residence, on Santa Ana Boulevard, about two miles south of Anaheim, in the County of Orange, within ten months after the first publication of this notice.
Dated this 8th day of September, 1916.
EMMA MAIRTH POLHEMUS,
Administratrix of the Estate of John Hanna, deceased,
GOUDGE: ROBINSON & HUGHES,
622 Investment Building,
Los Angeles, Calif.
Attorneys for said Administratrix.
ODINANCE NO. 309
AN ORDINANCE FIXING AND LEVYING A PROPERTY TAX ON ALL PROPERTY WITHIN THE CORPORATE LIMITS OF THE CITY OF ANAHEIM FOR THE FISCAL YEAR 1916-1917.
THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE CITY OF ANAHEIM DO ORDAIN AS FOLLOWS:
SECTION 1 That there be and hereby is fixed and levied a property tax for the fiscal year 1916-1917, of Eighty-two and Eighty-Tenth (82.8-10) 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, the purpose of paying the annual interest of the indebtedness of said city incurred for the purpose of constructing a City Electric Light Plant, together with one-fortieth (1-40) of said indebtedness.
SECTION 2 That there be and hereby is fixed and levied a property tax for the fiscal year 1916-1917, of Four and Threenth (0.4-3-10) 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 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 1916-1917, of Twelve and Twelve-Tenth (12.7-10) 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 constructing a City Electric Light Plant, together with one-fortieth (1-40) of said indebtedness.
NO. 8103
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Estate of Levi Mann, Deceased.
Notice is hereby given by the undersigned, administratrix of the estate of Levi Mann, deceased, to the creditors of and all persons having claims against the said deceased to the them with the necessary vouchers in the office of the County of Orange, State of California, or to exhibit the same with the necessary vouchers to the said administratrix at her place of business, at the office of Roger C. Dutton, No. 104 East Center Street, in the City of Anaheim, County of Orange, State of California, within four months after the first publication of this notice.
Dated this 29th day of August, 1916.
Administratrix of the Estate of Levi Mann, Deceased.
ROGER C. DUTTON,
Attorney for Administrator.
NO. 8096
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Estate of Joseph Hollingworth, Deceased.
Notice is hereby given by the undersigned, administrator with the will annexed of the estate of Joseph Hollingworth, deceased, to the creditors of and all persons having claims against the said deceased to file them with the necessary vouchers in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, or to exhibit the same with the necessary vouchers to file them with the necessary vouchers in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, within four months after the first publication of this notice.
Dated this 29th day of August, 1916.
THOMAS H. HOLLINGWORTH,
Administrator with the Will annexed of the Estate of Joseph Hollingworth, Deceased.
ROGER C. DUTTON,
Attorney for Administrator
ESTATE OF L. D. TIMMONS,
DECEASED
No. 7994
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
NOTICE is hereby given by the undersigned, Louis M. Timmons, administrator of the estate of L. D. Timmons, deceased, to the creditors of and all persons having claims against the said deceased, to file them with the necessary vouchers within ten months after the first publication of this notice in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of the County of Orange, or to exhibit them with the necessary vouchers within ten months after the first publication of this notice in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, within four months after the first publication of this notice.
Dated this 29th day of August, 1916.
THOMAS H. HOLLINGWORTH,
Administrator with the Will annexed of the Estate Of Joseph Hollingworth Deceased.
ROGER C. DUTTON,
Attorney for Administrator
ESTATE OF L. D. TIMMONS,
DECEASED
No. 7994
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
NOTICE is hereby given by the undersigned, Louis M. Timmons, administrator of the estate of L. D. Timmons, deceased, to the creditors of and all persons having claims against the said deceased, to file them with the necessary vouchers within ten months after the first publication of this notice inthe officeoftheClerkoftheSuperiorCourtoftheCountyOfOrangeortoexhibitthemwithnecessaryvoucherswithtenmonthsafterthefirstpublicationofthesince Notice
Dated this 29th day of August, 1916.
THOMAS H. HOLLINGWORTH,
Administrator with The Will annexed Of The Estate Of Joseph Hollingworth Deceased.
ROGER C. DUTTON,
Attorney for Administrator
of a man or a city must be accounted good.
Sticking to and following that line of reasoning, we find the vindication of the long and much maligned prune at the other end. Too long had the humble prune been made the base of tawdry boarding house jokes. Too long had the taunt, "you're full of prunea," been equivalent to saying that one to whom it was addressed had filled himself with the east wind, and that in him there was always a Bermuda high area of hot air. Through all of these years of disparagement and detraction, the prune has been doing its mighty work. But how might that work has really been not dreamed of until, in announcing a great prune shortage now upon us, one of the leaders in the trade says, "Kansas City people ordinarily are the greatest prune eaters in the country."
In that statement the vindication of the prune is complete. For is not Kansas City a monument of progress and advancement? He would, indeed, be a calumniator, and a short-card sport, who would deny the town on the Kaw that award of merit. It is possible to recall years in which Leavenworth, Omaha and Atchison, being then all in the running for metropolitan leadership on the Upper Missouri, were crying aloud that Kansas City, sprawling over its hills, was filled with prunes, in imagining itself to be in the race. Wherefore the prune has vindicated Kansas City as much as Kansas City indicates the prune.
SECTION 3. That there be and hereby is fixed and levied a property tax for the fiscal year 1916-1917, of Four and Threenth (.04 3-10) 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 extension and improvement of the City Water Works, and for the improvement of the Electric Light Plant, together with one-fortieth (1-40) of the said indebtedness.
SECTION 4. That there be and hereby is fixed and levied a property tax for the fiscal year 1916-1917, of Twelve and Seventeenth (.12 7-10) 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 extension and improvement of the City Water Works and for the extension and improvement of the City Electric Light Plant, together with one-fortieth (1-40) of the said indebtedness.
SECTION 5. That there be and hereby is fixed and levied a property tax for the fiscal year 1916-1917, of Three (.03) 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 extension and improvement of the City Water Works and for the extension and improvement of the City Electric Light Plant, together with one-fortieth (1-40) of the said indebtedness.
SECTION 6. That there be and hereby is fixed and levied a property tax for the fiscal year 1916-1917, of Two and Sixteenths (.02 6-10) 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 acquiring fire apparatus for said city, together with one fortieth (1-40) of said indebtedness.
SECTION 7. That there be, and hereby is fixed and levied a property tax for the fiscal year 1916-1917, of Twenty-eight and Four-tenth (.28 4-10) 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 acquiring fire apparatus for said city, together with one fortieth (1-40) of said indebtedness.
SECTION 8. That there be, and hereby is fixed and levied a property tax for the fiscal year 1916-1917, of Twenty-eight and Four-tenth (.28 4-10) 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 acquiring fire apparatus for said city, together with one fortieth (1-40) of said indebtedness.
SECTION 9. That there be, and hereby is fixed and levied a property tax for the fiscal year 1916-1917, of Twenty-eight and Four-tenth (.28 4-10) 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 acquiring fire apparatus for said city, together with one fortieth (1-40) 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 published in said City of Anaheim, and therefrom and thereafter she shall take effect and be in full force.
The foregoing ordinance is signed, approved and attested by me this 14th day of September, A. D. 1916.
J. J. SCHNEIDER
President of the Board of Trustees of the City of Anaheim
ATTEST:
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 held on the 24th day of August, A. D. 1916, and that it was daily passed and adopted at a meeting on the 14th day of September, A. D. 1916, by the following vote:
AYES, Trustees Schnelder, Stark,
Brunworth and Dwyer.
NOES, Trustees None.
ABSENT AND NOT VOTING, Trustee Cook.
And I further certify that the President of the Board of Trustees this Ordinance on the 14th day of September, A. D. 1916,
IN WITNESS WHEREOF I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the official seal of said City of Anaheim this 14th day of September, A. D. 1916.
EDWARD B. MERRITT.
City Clerk of the City of Anaheim.
of a man or a city must be accounted good.
Sticking to and following that line of reasoning, we find the vindication of the long and much maligned prune at the other end. Too long had the humble prune been made the base of tawdry boarding house jokes. Too long had the taunt, "you're full of prunea," been equivalent to saying that one to whom it was addressed had filled himself with the east wind, and that in him there was always a Bermuda high area of hot air. Through all of these years of disparagement and detraction, the prune has been doing its mighty work. But how might that work has really been was not dreamed of until, in announcing a great prune shortage now upon us, one of the leaders in the trade says, "Kansas City people ordinarily are the greatest prune eaters in the country."
In that statement the vindication of the prune is complete. For is not Kansas City a monument of progress and advancement? He would, indeed, be a calumniator, and a short-card sport, who would deny the town on the Kaw that award of merit. It is possible to recall years in which Leavenworth, Omaha and Atchison, being then all in the running for metropolitan leadership on the Upper Missouri, were crying aloud that Kansas City, sprawling over its hills, was filled with prunes, in imagining itself to be in the race. Wherefore the prune has vindicated Kansas City as much as Kansas City indicates she prune.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
NOTICE is hereby biven by the undersigned, Louis M. Timmons, administrator to the estate of L.D. Timmons, deceased, tothe creditorsof,andallpermanentlyclaimsastheplaceforthetransactionofallbusinessconnectedwithsaidestateintheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitthemwiththenecessaryvoucherswithinthemonthsafterthefirstpublicationofthisnoticeintheofficeoftheClerkoftheSuperiorEvana,No.2,BenjaminDreyfusBuilding,Anaheim,California,或toexhibitthemwiththenecessaryvoucherswithinthemonthsafterthefirstpublicationofthisnoticeintheofficeoftheClerkoftheSuperiorEvana,No.2,BenjaminDreyfusBuilding,Anaheim,California,或toexhibitthemwiththenecessaryvoucherswithinthemonthsafterthefirstpublicationofthisnoticeintheofficeoftheClerkoftheSuperiorEvana,No.2,BenjaminDreyfusBuilding,Anaheim,California,或toexhibitthemwiththenecessaryvoucherswithinthemonthsafterthefirstpublicationofthisnoticeintheofficeoftheClerkoftheSuperiorEvana,No.2,BenjaminDreyfusBuilding,Anaheim,California,或toexhibitthemwiththenecessaryvoucherswithinthemonthsafterthefirstpublicationofthisnoticeintheofficeoftheClerkoftheSuperiorEvana,No.2,BenjaminDreyfusBuilding,Anaheim,California,或toexhibitthemwiththenecessaryvoucherswithinthemonthsafterthefirstpublicationofthisnoticeintheofficeoftheClerkoftheSuperiorEvana,No.2,BenjaminDreyfusBuilding,Anaheim,California,或toexhibitthemwiththenecessaryvoucherswithinthemonthsafterthefirstpublicationofthisnoticeintheofficeoftheClerkoftheSuperiorEvana,No.2,BenjaminDreyfusBuilding,Anaheim,California,或toexhibitthemwiththenecessaryvoucherswithinthemonthsafterthefirstpublicationofthisnoticeintheofficeoftheClerkoftheSuperiorEvana,No.2,BenjaminDreyfusBuilding,Anaheim,California,或toexhibitthemwiththenecessaryvoucherswithinthemonthsafterthefirstpublicationofthisnoticeintheofficeoftheClerkoftheSuperiorEvana,No.2,BenjaminDreyfusBuilding,Anaheim,California,或toexhibitthemwiththenecessaryvoucherswithinthemonthsafterthefirstpublicationofthisnoticeintheofficeoftheClerkoftheSuperiorEvana,No.2,BenjaminDreyfusBuilding,Anaheim,California,或toexhibitthemwiththenecessaryvoucherswithinthemonthsafterthefirstpublicationofthisnoticeintheofficeoftheClerkoftheSuperiorEvana,No.2,BenjaminDreyfusBuilding,Anaheim,California,或toexhibitthemwiththenecessaryvoucherswithinthemonthsafterthefirstpublicationofthisnoticeintheofficeoftheClerkoftheSuperiorEvana,No.2,BenjaminDreyfusBuilding,Anaheim,California,或toexhibitthemwiththenecessaryvoucherswithinthemonthsafterthefirstpublicationofthisnoticeinTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitthemwithTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOfOrange,或toexhibitTheCountyOFORANGE,或ToExhibitTHECOUNTYOFORANGE,或ToExhibitTHECOUNTYOFORANGE,或ToExhibitTHECOUNTYOFORANGE,或ToExhibitTHECOUNTYOFORANGE,或ToExhibitTHECOUNTYOFORANGE,或ToExhibitTHECOUNTYOFORANGE,或ToExhibitTHECOUNTYOFORANGE,或ToExhibitTHECOUNTYOFORANGE,或ToExhibitTHECOUNTYOFORANGE,或ToExhibitsHEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADER或LEADERSHEADER或LEadersHEADER或LeadersHEADER或LeadersHEADER或LeadersHEADER或LeadersHEader或LeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHeaderorLeadersHewaterorWaterwaterwaterwaterwaterwaterwaterwaterwaterwaterwaterwaterwaterwaterwaterwaterw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IN THE MATTER OF THE
Estate OF Carl Robertson, Deceased No.7908
NOTICE IS hereby given by under-signed executor Of last will and testament Of Carl Robertson, deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attorneys for Executor.
8-17-5t
HERLUF R.ROBERTSON,
Executer Of last will and testament Of Carl Robertson, deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attorneys for Executer.
HAERLUF R.ROBERTSON,
Executer Of last will and testament Of Carl Robertson, deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attorneys for Executer.
HAERLUF R.ROBERTSON,
Executer Of last will and testament Of Carl Robertson, deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attorneys for Executer.
HAERLUF R.ROBERTSON,
Executer Of last will and testament Of Carl Robertson, deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attorneys for Executer.
HAERLUF R.ROBERTSON,
Executer Of last will and testament Of Carl Robertson, deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attorneys for Executer.
HAERLUF R.ROBERTSON,
Executer Of last will and testament Of Carl Robertson, deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attorneys for Executer.
HAERLUF R.ROBERTSON,
Executer Of last will and testament Of Carl Robertson, deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attorneys for Executer.
HAERLUF R.ROBERTSON,
Executer Of last will and testament Of Carl Robertson, deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attorneys for Executer.
HAERLUF R.ROBERTSON,
Executer Of last will and testament Of Carl Robertson, deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attorneys for Executer.
HAERLUF R.ROBERTSON,
Executer Of last will and testament Of Carl Robertson, deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attorneys for Executer.
HAERLUF R.ROBERTSON,
Executer Of last will and testament Of Carl Robertson, deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attorneys for Executer.
HAERLUF R.ROBERTSON,
Executer Of last will and testament Of Carl Robertson, deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attorneys for Executer.
HAERLUF R.ROBERTSON,
Executer Of last will and testament Of Carl Robertson, deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attorneys for Executer.
HAERLUF R.ROBERTSON,
Executer Of last will and testament Of Carl Robertson, deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attorneys for Executer.
HAERLUF R.ROBERTSON,
Executer Of last will和testament Of Carl Robertson, deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attorneys for Executer.
HAERLUF R.ROBERTSON,
Executer Of last will和testament Of Carl Robertson, deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attorneys for Executer.
HAERLUF R.ROBERTSON,
Executer Of last will和testament Of Carl Robertson, deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attorneys for Executer.
HAERLUF R.ROBERTSON,
Executer Of last will和testament OF Carl Robertson, deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attorneys for Executer.
HAERLUF R.ROBERTSON,
Executer Of last will和testament OF Carl Robertson, deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attorneys for Executer.
HAERLUF R.ROBERTSON,
Executer Of last will和testament OF Carl Robertson,,deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attorneys for Executer.
HAERLUF R.ROBERTSON,
Executer Of last will和testament OF Carl Robertson,,deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attancers for Executer.
HAERLUF R.ROBERTSON,
Executer Of last will和testament OF Carl Robertson,,deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attancers for Executer.
HAERLUF R.ROBERTSON,
Executer Of last will和testament OF Carl Robertson,,deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attancers for Executer.
HAERLUF R.ROBERTSON,
Executer Of last will和testament OF Carl Robertson,,deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attancersfor Executer.
HAERLUF R.ROBERTSON,
Executer Of last will和testament OF Carl Robertson,,deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attancersfor Executer.
HAERLUF R.ROBERTSON,
Executer Of last will和testament OF Carl Robertson,,deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attancersfor Executer.
HAERLUF R.ROBERTSON,
Executer Of last will和testament OF Carl Robertson,,deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attancersfor Executer.
HAERLUF R.ROBERTSON,
Executer Of last will和testament OF Carl Robertson,,deceased HAAS & DUNNIGAN,
L.A. LEWIS
Attancersfor Executer.
HAPRIL FURTHER EDITION
NOTICE IS hereby given by under-signed executor OF last will and testament OF further edition OF further edition OF furher edition OF furher edition OF furher edition OF furher edition OF furher edition OF furher edition OF furher edition OF furher edition OF furher edition OF furher edition OF furher edition OF furher edition OF furher edition OF furher edition OF furher edition OF furher edition OF furher edition OF furher edition OF furher edition OF furher edition OF furher edition OF furher edition OF furher edition OF furher edition_OF furher edition_OF furher edition_OF furher edition_OF furher edition_OF furher edition_OF furher edition_OF furher edition_OF furher edition_OF furher edition_OF furher edition_OF furher edition_OF furher edition_OF furher edition_OF furher edition_OF furher edition_OF furher edition_OF furher edition_OF furher edition_OF furher edition_OF furher edition_OF furher edition_OF furher edition_OF furher edition_OF furher edition_OF furherEdition_OF furheredition_OF furheredition_OF furheredition_OF furheredition_OF furheredition_OF furheredition_OF furheredition_OF furheredition_OF furheredition_OF furheredition_OF furheredition_OF furheredition_OF furheredition_OF furheredition_OF furheredition_OF furheredition_OF furheredition_OF furheredition_OF furheredition_OF furheredition_OF furheredition_OF furheredition_OF furheredition_OF furheredition_OF furrHEREdition_OF furrHEREdition_OF furrHEREdition_OF furrHEREdition_OF furrHEREdition_OF furrHEREdition_OF furrHEREdition_OF furrHEREdition_OF furrHEREdition_OF furrHEREdition_OF furrHEREdition_OF furrHEREdition_OF furrHEREdition_OF furrHEREdition_OF furrHEREdition_OF furrHEREdition_OF furrHEREdition_Of furrHEREdition_Of
HYGIENE OF OLD AGE
At the recent annual encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic the surgeon general of the great association of veterans offered some general advice in regard to the health of men who have reached 70 or more. He gave three simple rules for the preservation of a good physical condition as old age comes on. They are: Avoid excessive use of foods, excessive use of stimulants and excessive active or violent exercise. These safeguards are widely applicable, and are so terse that they are easily remembered. The statistics of the Grand Army are carefully kept and form a valuable criterion on this subject. At the beginning of 1915 the membership was 159,863. Deaths during the year numbered 11,856, a little over 7 per cent. In the general pension list the deaths are more than 100 a day, but the pensioners include soldiers' widows, and survivors of all the wars of the United States. Only a few are left who served in the Mexican war that ended in 1848. Eight or ten soldiers of the revolutionary war and the war of 1812 lived to be more than 100 years old, and possibly thirty or forty who were a calumniator, and a short-card sport, who would deny the town on the Kaw that award of merit. It is possible to recall years in which Leavenworth, Omaha and Atchison, being then all in the running for metropolitan leadership on the Upper Missouri, were crying aloud that Kansas City, sprawling over its hills, was filled with prunes, in imagining itself to be in the race. Wherefore the prune has vindicated Kansas City as much as Kansas City vindicates the prune. Cassius never paid Caesar's butcher a better compliment than the prune gets now from Kansas City.
HYGIENE OF OLD AGE
EDWARD B. MERRITT.
City Clerk of the City of Anaheim.
STATE OF CALIFORNIA.)
COUNTY OF ORANGE)
CITY OF ANAHEIM.
I. Edward B. Merritt, City Clark 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 held on the 24th day of August, A.D. 1916, and that it was duly passed and adopted at a regular meeting of said Board of Trustees held on the 14th day of September, 1916, by the following vote:
AYES, Trustees, Schneider, Stark,
Burnworth and Dwyer.
NOES, Trustees None.
ABSENT AND NOT VOTING, Trustee Cook.
And I further certify that the President of the Board of Trustees signed this Ordinance on the 14th day of September, A.D. 1916.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of said City of Anaheim this 14th day of September, A.D. 1916.
EDWARD B. MERRITT.
City Clerk of the City of Anaheim.
In the civil war will live to be cen-tenarians.
It is probable that the rate of mortality among the veterans is higher than the general average. They went through a trying ordeal in camps and bivouacs, as well as in battle. On occasion they made long marches, slept on the roads and in fields and at times rations were scant. The deaths from disease outnumbered those from bullets. Over 2,500,000 men were enlisted in the Union forces. At the latest report the membership of the Grand Army had declined to 149,074. It em- braces nearly all survivors who were in the service of the United States between 1861 and 1865. The surgeon general gives good counsel on the best way to maintain good health to men of three-score and ten. His recommendations are valuable to men of any age. Avoid excess of any kind, is the tenor of his advice. The best rules of hygiene are not complicated. If all individuals observed them health re-
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Because: Cost of installation is less; labor for operating is saved; less floor space is required; friction and wear and tear are reduced to a minimum; repair bills are obviated; injury to building by vibration is eliminated; there is no loss in the shafting and pulleys; no energy lost in getting started; always ready; always reliable; service is always perfect.
Southern California Edison Co.
Griffith Lumber Co.
SEE US FOR YOUR BUILDING MATERIAL
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South Los Angeles St. H.M. ADAMS, Mgr.
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
There is nothing so refreshing as a glass of Anaheim Beer
"Once Tried, Never Denied"
Delivered to all parts of the city
128 West Center St. Anaheim, Cal.
BOTH PHONES
There is nothing so refreshing as a glass of
Anaheim Beer
"Once Tried, Never Denied"
Delivered to all parts of the city
Home 1264 Phones: Pacific 30
Union Brewing Company
A SAFE HIT
The whiskey that makes a hit with the exacting man is our
T. W. SAMUEL'S Whiskey
which is a genuinely six year old whiskey with a delicious, exquisite flavor all its own.
You can't appreciate it's pure quality until you have tried it—why not try it today?
$1.00 the Quart
Orange Co. Wine Co.
"The HOUSE OF HOSPITALITY"
H. P. Noll, Mgr.
PACIFIC 124 PHONES HOME 2084
Hotel Valencia
BAR
Everything First-Class
Favorite Saloon
L. Wisser, Mgr.
Choice of Wines
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H. P. Noll, Mgr.
PACIFIC 124 PHONES HOME 2084
Hotel Valencia BAR
Everything First-Class
Finest of wines, liquors and cigars. Anaheim beer on draught.
JOHN ZIEGLER, Manager
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.
Choice of Wines
Liquors and Cigars
SCHLITZ BEER On Draught
Exchange Bar
WM. STARK, Prep.
Choice of Wines
Liquors and Cigars
Anaheim Unipa Brewing
Beer on Draught
COURTEOUS TREATMENT
120 W. Center St. ANAHEIM
ports would quickly take a more favorable turn. The injunction not to use food excessively is the one most needed. Conservation of the vital forces is evidently the best method of living long and comfortably. To say so may be a truism, but it is not one of the self-evident facts that require no repetition.
Many important battles have occurred in which the combatants were fewer than the deaths in the Grand Army.
FOR SALE—Wood, $5 for 4 tiers at ranch. Mrs. F. F. Smith. Last house on Placentia Ave.
Eagle Bar
HESSEL & HESSEL, Prep.
The Best In Wet Goods
117 E. Center St. ANAHEIM
WANTED—A ranch hand, familiar with all kinds of orchard work. Twombly Ranch, Fullerton. Phone 158-J 3.