YoreAnaheim the Anaheim newspaper archive
Publications Anaheim Gazette 1917 July

anaheim-gazette 1917-07-12

1917-07-12 · Anaheim Gazette · page 3 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
Scanned page
Scan of anaheim-gazette 1917-07-12 page 3
Searchable text
DOCTORS CHOSEN TO EXAMINE THE MEN 129 SURGEONS APPOINTED TO PASS ON THOSE SELECTED BY CONSCRIPTION DR. A. H. JONES OF LOS ANGELES WILL HAVE CHARGE IN THIS DISTRICT Gov. Stephens has appointed an examining surgeon to each of the 129 exemption boards of California. These physicians have all agreed to serve the nation without compensation, and at considerable personal sacrifice, in the important work of determining whether the men about to be drafted are physically fit for the army. The careful selection of the examining surgeons is expected to enable California to make a record in the good condition of its troops and in the small number of men who will be turned back from the camps or from the front on account of tuberculosis and other diseases which should have been detected. The original plan of the government was to have a local physician, serving as a regular member of the exemption board, make all necessary physical examinations. This system, it is held, would subject the physician to the difficult and unpleasant task of passing judgment on his own patients, neighbors and friends, and in many instances would make it difficult to avoid being unconsciously influenced by years of age. In fact, he says, examining officers have been instructed to regard the ages of 25 to 30 as most suitable. Gen. McCain's statement was as follows: "The statement that mature men will be given preference for the second series of officers' training camps seems to have been misunderstood in some quarters. This preference will only apply where qualifications are equal. There is no intention to bar out applications by men under 31. In fact, examining officers have been instructed to regard the ages 25 to 30 as most suitable. There is also some misunderstanding about the necessity of previous military training. The government is looking primarily for intelligent and forceful men, and military experience, though desirable, is not strictly necessary." AMERICAN WILD LIFE DESTRUCTION Droves of Buffalo That Contained 30 Million Animals, With Countless Other Large Mammals That Have Been Exterminated Although the wild life of North America is more abundant than that of the other continents of the northern hemisphere, and has only Africa as a world rival, yet our present day richness in this respect is decidedly poor compared with the abundance and variety of mammalian life that roamed our plains before the advent of the white man, while the vast number of species which disappeared even before the Indians came to inhabit the land is even more astonishing. In a communication to the National Geographic society E. W. Nelson, chief of the geological survey, gives an discovered in the outer Angeles. These bones show the arrival of the present day of Southern California an astonishing wealth and beasts. The most rare saber toothed tiger larger than those of wolves, several kinds lingering the huge cave below Alaska, large wild hogson (unlike our buffalo), the size of a mammoths with tusks long, and giant ground-dition to many others and small. With these amazing equally strange birds, numerous birds of prey like species (far condor) peacocks and more is reason for primitive man occupying other parts of the least latter part when the fauna of still flourished. The locally restricted Californian contains detailed deserts which is unmissable probably the bison of The discovery in the bones of a gigantic type of prey of far greater condor, is even more the folklore of the Eurasians of most of the trails to California Mountain region, about the "thunder bird"—of prey like a mighty carrying away people. Two such coincident possibility that the bison and the "thunder" based on the origin phalt beds and have The original plan of the government was to have a local physician, serving as a regular member of the exemption board, make all necessary physical examinations. This system, it is held, would subject the physician to the difficult and unpleasant task of passing judgment on his own patients, neighbors and friends, and in many instances would make it difficult to avoid being unconsciously influenced by the incessant questions and statements of anxious parents and friends of the drafted men. For these reasons the governor has obtained approval from Washington for the appointment of examining surgeons whose duties will be limited to the professional services of making physical examinations and giving expert opinions to the exemption boards. Each examining surgeon is appointed to serve in an exemption district away from his place of practice and residence, usually in another county. The traveling expenses will be paid by the government. The list of nominations of men qualified and ready to serve as examining surgeons was prepared for the governor by the state board of health. Dr. W. A. Sawyer, secretary of the board, has been working quietly for several weeks on the list of surgeons. So far as is known, California is the only State to take the burden of examining drafted men from the physicians on the local exemption board. Dr. Sawyer has secured the consent of California physicians to serve in whatever locality they may be placed. The examining physician for this district, which comprises practically all of Orange county above the Santa Ana river, is Dr. A. H. Jones of Los Angeles. Dr. Gordon T. Courtenay of San Diego, will have charge of the southern district of this county. Dr. J. L. Beebe of this city has been appointed as one of the examiners, his district being No. 12 in the city of Los Angeles. Dr. Wehrly of Santa Ana, has charge of San Diego county, outside of the city; and Dr. C. D. Ball goes to District No. 9, of Los Angeles. ORANGE COUNTY MEN APPLY FOR TRAINING Seven Applicants for Officers' Camp At San Francisco Astonishing as was the number of buffalo which roamed the plains of old, even more numerous were the antelope, though the latter did not attract as much attention as the larger mammals. Besides these the chronicles of the colonial days give many interesting accounts of the incredible number of other wild animals, including bears, wapiti, white tailed deer and turkeys, on which wolves made fierce war. One writer narrates that during the winter of 1670-71 fully 2400 moore were snared on the Great Mantoulin Island at the head of Lake Huton. The wealth of animal life found by our forebears was one of the great natural resources of the New World. Although freely drawn upon from the hillsphere, and has only risen as a world rival, yet our present day richness in this respect is decidedly poor compared with the abundance and variety of mammalian life that roamed our plains before the advent of the white man, while the vast number of species which disappeared even before the Indians came to inhabit the land is even more astonishing. In a communication to the National Geographic society E. W. Nelson, chief of the geological survey, gives an amazing account of North American wild life in prehistoric times. A portion of the communication has been made public by the society in the following bulletin: The original buffalo herds have been estimated to have contained from 30 to 60 million animals, (the latter figure is 6,000,000 million greater than the total number of cattle in the United states, according to the census of 1910.) and in 1870 it was estimated that about 5,500,000 still survived—exceeding by about 1,400,000 the number of mules in the United States in 1910. A number of men now living were privileged to see some of the great herds of the West before they were finally destroyed. Dr. George Bird Grinnell writes: "In 1870 I happened to be on a train that was stopped for three hours to let a heard of buffalo past. We supposed they would soon pass by, but they kept coming . On a number of occasions in earlier days the engineers thought they could run through the herds and that, seeing the locomotive, the buffalo would stop to turn aside; but after a few locomotives had been ditched by the animals the engineers got in the way of respecting the buffaloes idosyncracies." BIGGEST MEET With more than 30 ing the total shipment for 1917, the melon out of Imperial Valley from 150 to 160 cars per car are much have been for years and size of the fruit better. Carload shipment Brawley until about Heber and Calexico lots until August 1. ORANGE COUNTY MEN APPLY FOR TRAINING Seven Applicants for Officers' Camp At San Francisco Seven Orange county men have filed their applications to attend the second officers' reserve training camp at the Presidio, San Francisco, beginning in August, and their applications have been passed upon by the local committee and forwarded to the National Training Camps Association. Five of the men were certified to attend the first camp but were not chosen, and have reapplied for the second camp. They are Frank L. Worden of Santa Ana, W. O. Hart and Lewis W. Thompson of Orange, Lewis Blodgett of Huntington Beach and Gerald R. Simpson of Anaheim. Those who did not apply for the first camp and are just now filing their applications for the second camp are Marshall Northcross, Jr., of Santa Ana and E. J. Marks of Fullerton. Several other applications are in or expected, but have not as yet been passed upon by the local committee. Applications for the second camp may be left with Secretary A. S. Ralph at the office of the Orange County Automobile Club, 111½ East Fourth street, Santa. Instructions previously received indicated that few men under 31 would be given opportunity to attend the second camp and this has kept some from applying, but Adj. Gen. McCain at Washington has issued a statement stating that "intelligent and forceful" men are wanted even if under 31 interesting accounts of the incredible number of other wild animals, including bears, wapiti, white tailed deer and turkeys, on which wolves made fierce war. One writer narrates that during the winter of 1670-71 fully 2400 moore were snared on the Great Manitoulin Island at the head of Lake Huton. The wealth of animal life found by our forebears was one of the great natural resources of the New World. Although freely drawn upon from the first, the stock was but little depleted up to within a century. During the last 100 years, however, the rapidly increasing occupation of the continent and other causes, together with a steadily increasing commercial demand for animal products, have had an appalling effect. The buffalo, elk and antelope are reduced to a pitiful fraction of their former countless numbers. Practically all other large game has alarmingly decreased, and its extermination has been partly stayed only by the recent enforcement of protective laws. The recent great abundance of large mammals in North America, both in individuals and species, is in striking contrast with their scarcity in South America, the difference evidently being due to the long isolation of the southern continent from other land masses, whence it might have been restocked after the loss of a formerly existing fauna. The fossil beds of the great plains of North America and other parts of the west contain eloquent proofs of the richness and variety of mammal life on this continent at different periods in the past. Perhaps the most wonderful of all these ancient faunas was that revealed by the bones of birds and mammals which had been trapped in the asphalt pits recently Anaheim Gazette discovered in the outskirts of Los Angeles. These bones show that prior to the arrival of the present fauna, the plains of Southern California swarmed with an astonishing wealth of strange birds and beasts. The most notable of these are saber toothed tigers, lions much larger than those of Africa, giant wolves, several kinds of bears, including the huge cave bears, even larger than the gigantic brown bears of Alaska, large wild horses, camels, bison (unlike our buffalo) tiny antelope, the size of a fox, mastodons, mammoths with tusks fifteen feet long, and giant ground sloths, in addition to many other species, large, and small. With these amazing mammals were equally strange birds, including among numerous birds of prey, a giant vulture like species (far larger than any condor) peacocks and many others. There is reason for believing that primitive man occupied California and other parts of the West during at least the latter part of the period when the fauna of the asphalt pits still flourished. The folklore of the locally restricted California Indians contains detailed descriptions of a beast which is unmistakably a bison, probably the bison of the asphalt pits. The discovery in these pits of the bones of a gigantic vulture like bird of prey of far greater size than the condor, is even more startling, since the folklore of the Eskimos and Indians of most of the tribes from Bering Straits to California and the Rocky Mountain region, abound in tales of the "thunderbird"—a gigantic bird of prey like a mighty eagle, capable of carrying away people in its talons. Two such coincidents suggest the possibility that the accounts of the bison and the "thunderbird" are really based on the originals of the asphalt beds and have been passed down Shortage of cars is responsible for the cutting down of the output at least 2000 cars. Because of the standardization of the fruit, none but the best is shipped out. Everyone in the valley who wishes can journey to the packing sheds and haul away a crate or two gratis. The Bureau of crop estimates, of the department of agriculture, issued a statement June 19, showing that the Imperial Valley was the largest, earliest and most productive cantaloupe raising section in the country. According to the bureau statisticians theyer were 9200 acres in cantaloupes last year, in the agricultural wonderland the yield being 1,987,200 crates. This year Imperial is credited with 13,800 acres and a yield of 2,608,200 crates. The forecast by the bureau for 1917 shows Georgia in second place in the growing and shipping of cantaloupes, with 1,170,400 crates, and an acreage of 7600 acres. The Turlock region of California was in second place in 1916 with 7100 acres, and 1,228,200 crates, but this year adverse conditions cut the yield down to 598,500 crates from 3600 acres. BEET SLICING SOON Between the 20th and 25th of this month, four of the five big sugar factories in this county expect to start slicing beets. The fifth factory, the Southern California Sugar company plant, will start the first of August. Its campaign will not last over 70 days while the others will run 100 days at least. The indications are that the season is going to be satisfactory. Since the farmers are to get some of the benefits of the high prices of sugar, the factories having voluntarily adopted a profit sharing contract. They are to get better prices for the product this mistaken idea that when men are not fighting physically, the gates of the temple of Janus are shut. That is the sort of victory for which autocracy intrigues, and to which democracy, when it is sufficiently mesmerized, falls a victim. A peace which would leave autocracy uncrushed would be, as the president has clearly indicated, a victory for autocracy, and the peace societies which promoted it would rapidly see the evaporation of their hopes in the firmer riviting of the fetters of national armaments upon nations, and the gradual conversion of the world into armed camps, with an inevitable future of worse war. With the exception of the convinced militarist, who regards fighting as the old chirurgeon regarded blood letting, and as the modern physician regards a tonic, everybody wants peace, and everybody hates war. But it is no good crying peace, peace, when there is no peace, and it is no good democracy weakening in the struggle with autocracy, in order to give autocracy breathing space to deal a blow which would bring it to a period for recuperation, and an opportunity for renewing the conflict. Sooner or later democracy will have to realize the fact that it must fight out the battle with autocracy on Grant's basis of attrition, no matter if it lasts not one, but many summers. Neither can one make terms with the other, for the simple and obvious fact, to which Mr. Root drew attention the other day, that there is not room for both of them to live at peace in the same world. Nor need anybody hug the idea that all that is to be fought out is a political struggle between this nation and that nation. Behind the question of national flags lies the right of the individual to personal liberty, not a personal liberty settled for him by the majority, but a personal liberty in every respect that does not endanger the safety of the nation nor transgresses... the folklore of the Eskimos and Indians of most of the tribes from Bering Straits to California and the Rocky Mountain region, abound in tales of the "thunder bird"—a gigantic bird of prey like a mighty eagle, capable of carrying away people in its talons. Two such coincidents suggest the possibility that the accounts of the bison and the "thunder bird" are really based on the originals of the asphalt beds and have been passed down in legendary history through many thousands of years. Among other marvels our fossil beds reveal the fact that both camels and horses originated in North America. The remains of many widely different species of both animals have been found in numerous localities extending from coast to coast in the United States. Camels and horses, with many species of antelope closely related to still existing forms in Africa, abounded over a large part of the country up to the end of the geological age immediately preceding the present era. At the time of its discovery by Columbus, this continent had only one domesticated animal—the dog. In most instances the ancestors of the Indian dogs appear to have been the native coyotes or gray wolves, but the description of some dogs found by the early explorers indicate very different and unknown ancestry. Unfortunately these strange dogs became extinct at an early period and thus left unsolved the riddle of their origin. Before the discovery of America the people of the Old World, had domesticated cattle, horses, pigs, sheep, goats and cats, but none of these domesticated animals except the dog existed in America until brought from Europe by the invaders of the New World. BIGGEST MELON CROP With more than 300 cars representing the total shipments of cantaloupes for 1917, the melons continue to roll out of Imperial Valley at the rate of from 150 to 160 cars per day. Returns per car are much better than they have been for years, and the quality and size of the fruit has never been better. Carload shipments will continue at Brawley until about the 22nd inst. Heber and Calexico will ship carload lots until August 1. It is believed that Southern California Sugar company plant, will start the first of August. Its campaign will not last over 70 days while the others will run 100 days at least. The indications are that the season is going to be satisfactory. Since the farmers are to get some of the benefits of the high prices of sugar, the factories having voluntarily adopted a profit sharing contract. They are to get better prices for the product this year than ever before. C. A. Johnson, manager of the three factories now owned in this county by the Holly Sugar company, says that the beets so far tested as of good quality. The yield will run from eight to twenty tons an acre, with an average of ten or eleven tons. He states that the labor situation is in fairly good shape. Most all of the work in the fields will be done by Mexicans. Ranchers state that they have contracted for nearly all the help they will need. LOS ANGELES ATTORNEY CHARGED WITH FRAUD Induced Alien Enemies to Transfer, Property to Him, it Is Alleged Adolph Danziger, a Los Angeles attorney, has been arrested charged with perpetrating a fraud on German citizens resident in that city. He is to have a hearing this week. The arrest of Danziger, which was authorized by Assistant District Attorney George E. Cryer, after certain German residents had consulted with the officers in the district attorney's office, may be the beginning of a series of prosecutions to be taken up by the federal authorities. He is charged in the state courts with representing, through advertisements placed in German peridicals printed in Los Angeles and through subsequent statements made by him to prospective clients, that it was the program of the government in dealing with the German situation, to confiscate all property of alien enemies within the United States. The adertisement, which was exhibited to deputies of the district attorney's office, was as follows: "Notice—If you are not citizens and wish to protect your property, see the undersigned. 912 Higgins Building." It is declared by deputies in the district attorney's office that this advertised company will start the first of August. Its campaign will not last over 70 days while the others will run 100 days at least. The indications are that the season is going to be satisfactory. Since the farmers are to get some of the benefits of the high prices of sugar, the factories having voluntarily adopted a profit sharing contract. They are to get better prices for the product this year than ever before. C. A. Johnson, manager of the three factories now owned in this county by the Holly Sugar company, says that the beets so far tested as of good quality. The yield will run from eight to twenty tons an acre, with an average of ten or eleven tons. He states that the labor situation is in fairly good shape. Most all of the work in the fields will be done by Mexicans. Ranchers state that they have contracted for nearly all the help they will need. MORPHINE USER IS AGAIN ON PROBATION Burglarized Doctor's Officers in Order To Secure Drug As a result of an earnest promise that he would leave dope alone, and would report to Judge West whenever he wanted it, Fred W. Keene, arrested Thursday for entering Dr. West's office in search of cocaine and morphine, was given another chance to make good, with the stern injunction that it would be "the penitentiary next time if you fail again." According to the testimony of Dr. J. W. Truxaw of this city, Keene had been coming to him once or twice a week for morphine. The first time he came, Dr. Truxaw gave him an injection of the drug as he though Keene had heart trouble. Later, when he discovered that Keene was a dope fiend, he gave him a drug which had somewhat the same effect as morphine. Dr. Truxaw also stated that Keene had the morphine case, found on his person when arrested, with him at one time when he visited the doctor's office, and that Keene asked Truxaw to exchange a viol of atrophine for morphine, which he refused to do. Truxaw said he was interested in Keene, who is only about thirty years of age, and believed he could be cured, as he had been using the drug for only three years. Keene was instructed to report to the probation officer once monthly, and to abstain from the use of morphine, cocaine and all drugs containing these. He was also ordered to report at once to County Physician Domman, and to use whatever cure the doctor prescribed. Mrs. Keene reported to Judge West that she had not touched the drug since the two were released from the upon its new status. SOCIAL The main erosive pubic war sage approved J.D. Pierce was issued peal to K.Girard, Knight Among more issues red by Tom Watson The Fourman's Pearl American Blast, Alec periodical Goldman's Almost ing to any some ant publication treasury The person have not it is reported Burelsse vost Marne decided w it is reported Burelsse vost Marne decided w it is reported Burelsse vost Marne decided w it is reported Burelsse vost Marne decided w it is reported Burelsse vost Marne decided w it is reported Burelsse vost Marne decided w it is reported Burelsse vost Marne decided w it is reported Burelsse vost Marne decided w it is reported Burelsse vost Marne decided w it is reported Burelsse vost Marne decided w it is reported Burelsse vost Marne decided w it is reported Burelsse vost Marne decided w it is reported Burelsse vost Marne decided w it is reported Burelsse vost Marne decided w it is reported Burelsse vost Marne decided w it is reported Burelsse vost Marne decided w it is reported BureLSSE vost Marne decided w it is reported BureLSSE vost Marne decided w it is reported BureLSSE vost Marne decided w it is reported BureLSSE vost Marne decided w it is reported BureLSSE vost Marne decided w it is reported BureLSSE vost Marne decided w it is reported BureLSSE vost Marne decided w it is reported BURELSSE vOST MARNE DECIDED WITHOUT THE REFERENCE OF THE AUTHORITY OF THE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OF THE AUTHORITY OF THE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OF THE AUTHORITY OF THE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OF THE AUTHORITY OF THE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OF THE AUTHORITY OF THE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OF THE AUTHORITY OF THE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OF THE AUTHORITY OF THE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OF THE AUTHORITY OF THE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OF THE AUTHORITY OF THE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OF THE AUTHORITY OF THE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OF THE AUTHORITY OF THE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OF THE AUTHORITY OFTHE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OF THE AUTHORITY OFTHE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OF THE AUTHORITY OFTHE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OF THE AUTHORITY OFTHE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OF THE AUTHORITY OFTHE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OF THE AUTHORITY OFTHE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OFTHE AUTHORITY OFTHE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OFTHE AUTHORITY OFTHE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OFTHE AUTHORITY OFTHE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OFTHE AUTHORITY OFTHE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OFTHE AUTHORITY OFTHE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OFTHE AUTHORITYOFTHE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OFTHE AUTHORITYOFTHE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OFTHE AUTHORITYOFTHE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OFTHE AUTHORITYOFTHE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OFTHE AUTHORITYOFTHE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OFTHE AUTHORITYOFTHE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OFTHE AUTHORITYOFTHE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OFTHE AUTHORITYOFTHE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTION OFTHE AUTHORITYOFTHE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTIONOFTHE AUTHORITYOFTHE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTIONOFTHE AUTHORITYOFTHE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTIONOFTHE AUTHORITYOFTHE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTIONOFTHE AUTHORITYOFTHE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTIONOFTHE AUTHORITYOFTHE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTIONOFTHE AUTHORITYOFTHE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTIONOFTHE AUTHORITYOFTHE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTIONOFTHE AUTHORITYOFTHE UNION ORDER TO EXECUTE THE ACTIONOFTHENEUTHENTICATED INTERNATIONAL TRIANGLE IN NAMIBIA NEW TALE Santa Ana entered a referendum it is theirs in this coalfarm law from it to a vehement establishment upon some Santa Ana forward; money tailed to quired t NOW IS THE TIME To have your auto top rebuilt and recovered And your slip cover made for your car We are the people who can do it, and do it RIGHT We can rebuild the top into a Victoria, French, or any style you wish. We can put plate-glass in your side and back curtains and do your upholstering. A.J. BACKS Phone Pac. 335W 112 W. Chartres Street Anaheim, Cal. It is no good calling peace, peace, when there is no peace, and imagining that such a peace can be brought about by diplomatic intrigues, by political filibustering, or through any government in dealing with the German situation, to confiscate all property of alien enemies within the United States. The adertisement, which was exhibited to deputies of the district attorney's office, was as follows: "Notice—If you are not citizens and wish to protect your property, see the undersigned. 912 Higgins Building." It is declared by deputies in the district attorney's office that this advertisement was answered by a number of Los Angeles Germans and an effort will be made to prove that Danziger obtained possession of property and securities aggregating about $20,000 in value. The complaint upon which the warrant against Danziger was formally based was made by Frederick Beck. Beck went to the district attorney's office and reported that he had answered Danziger's advertisement. He declared that Danziger proposed that he make an assignment of his property to Danziger in order to fool the United States when the alleged order for confiscation was put into effect. A trust agreement was entered into between them, but when Beck returned later to Danziger's office to repudiate the agreement, Danziger refused to re-assign the property. Deputies in the district attorney's office are of the opinion that Beck may have difficulty in prosecuting a suit for recovery of the property owing to the fact that his German citizenship may give him no standing in a law suit in court. PEACE ONLY WITH VICTORY It is no good calling peace, peace, when there is no peace, and imagining that such a peace can be brought about by diplomatic intrigues, by political filibustering, or through any government in dealing with the German situation, to confiscate all property of alien enemies within the United States. The adertisement, which was exhibited to deputies of the district attorney's office, was as follows: "Notice—If you are not citizens and wish to protect your property, see the undersigned. 912 Higgins Building." It is declared by deputies in the district attorney's office that this advertisement was answered by a number of Los Angeles Germans and an effort will be made to prove that Danziger obtained possession of property and securities aggregating about $20,000 in value. The complaint upon which the warrant against Danziger was formally based was made by Frederick Beck. Beck went to the district attorney's office and reported that he had answered Danziger's advertisement. He declared that Danziger proposed that he make an assignment of his property to Danziger in order to fool the United States when the alleged order for confiscation was put into effect. A trust agreement was entered into between them, but when Beck returned later to Danziger's office to repudiate the agreement, Danziger refused to re-assign the property. Deputies in the district attorney's office are of the opinion that Beck may have difficulty in prosecuting a suit for recovery of the property owing to the fact that his German citizenship may give him no standing in a law suit in court. PEACE ONLY WITH VICTORY It is no good calling peace, peace, when there is no peace, and imagining that such a peace can be brought about by diplomatic intrigues, by political filibustering, or through any government in dealing with the German situation, to confiscate all property of alien enemies within the United States. The adertisement, which was exhibited to deputies of the district attorney's office, was as follows: "Notice—If you are not citizens and wish to protect your property, see the undersigned. 912 Higgins Building." It is declared by deputies in the district attorney's office that this advertisement was answered by a number of Los Angeles Germans and an effort will be made to prove that Danziger obtained possession of property and securities aggregating about $20,000 in value. The complaint upon which the warrant against Danziger was formally based was made by Frederick Beck. Beck went to the district attorney's office and reported that he had answered Danziger's advertisement. He declared that Danziger proposed that he make an assignment of his property to Danziger in order to fool the United States when the alleged order for confiscation was put into effect. A trust agreement was entered into between them, but when Beck returned later to Danziger's office to repudiate the agreement, Danziger refused to re-assign the property. Deputies in the district attorney's office are of the opinion that Beck may have difficulty in prosecuting a suit for recovery of the property owing to the fact that his German citizenship may give him no standing in a law suit in court. PEACE ONLY WITH VICTORY It is no good calling peace, peace, when there is no peace, and imagining that such a peace can be brought about by diplomatic intrigues, by political filibustering, or through any government in dealing with the German situation, to confiscate all property of alien enemies within the United States. The adertisement, which was exhibited to deputies of the district attorney's office, was as follows: "Notice—If you are not citizens and wish to protect your property, see the undersigned. 912 Higgins Building." It is declared by deputies in the district attorney's office that this advertisement was answered by a number of Los Angeles Germans and an effort will be made to prove that Danziger obtained possession of property and securities aggregating about $20,000 in value. The complaint upon which the warrant against Danziger was formally based was made by Frederick Beck. Beck went to the district attorney's office and reported that he had answered Danziger's advertisement. He declared that Danziger proposed that he make an assignment of his property to Danziger in order to fool the United States when the alleged order for confiscation was put into effect. A trust agreement was entered into between them, but when Beck returned later to Danziger's office to repudiate the agreement, Danziger refused to re-assign the property. Deputies in the district attorney's office are of the opinion that Beck may have difficulty in prosecuting a suit for recovery of the property owing to the fact that his German citizenship may give him no standing in a law suit in court. PEACE ONLY WITH VICTORY It is no good calling peace, peace, when there is no peace, and imagining that such a peace can be brought about by diplomatic intrigues, by political filibustering, or through any government in dealing with the German situation, to confiscate all property of alien enemies within the United States. The adertisement, which was exhibited to deputies of the district attorney's office, was as follows: "Notice—If you are not citizens and wish to protect your property, see the undersigned. 912 Higgins Building." It is declared by deputies in the district attorney's office that this advertisement was answered by a number of Los Angeles Germans and an effort will be made to prove that Danziger obtained possession of property and securities aggregating about $20,000 in value. The complaint upon which the warrant against Danziger was formally based was made by Frederick Beck. Beck went to the district attorney's office and reported that he had answered Danziger's advertisement. He declared that Danziger proposed that he make an assignment of his property to Danziger in order to fool the United States when the alleged order for confiscation was put into effect. A trust agreement was entered into between them, but when Beck returned later to Danziger's office to repudiate the agreement, Danziger refused to re-assign the property. Deputies in the district attorney's office are of the opinion that Beck may have difficulty in prosecuting a suit for recovery of the property owing to the fact that his German citizenship may give him no standing in a law suit in court. PEACE ONLY WITH VICTORY It is no good calling peace, peace, when there is no peace, and imagining that such a peace can be brought about by diplomatic intrigues, by political filibustering, or through any government in dealing with the German situation, to confiscate all property of alien enemies within the United States. The adertisement, which was exhibited to deputies of the district attorney's office, was as follows: "Notice—If you are not citizens and wish to protect your property, see the undersigned. 912 Higgins Building." It is declared by deputies in the district attorney's office that this advertisement was answered by a number of Los Angeles Germans and an effort will be made to prove that Danziger obtained possession of property and securities aggregating about $20,000 in value. The complaint upon which the warrant against Danziger was formally based was made by Frederick Beck. Beck went to the district attorney's office and reported that he had answered Danziger's advertisement. He declared that Danziger proposed that he make an assignment of his property to Danziger in order to fool the United States when the alleged order for confiscation was put into effect. A trust agreement was entered into between them, but when Beck returned later to Danzinger's office to repudiate the agreement, Danzinger refused to re-assign the property. Deputies in the district attorney's office are of the opinion that Beck may have difficulty in prosecuting a suit for recovery of the property owing to the fact that his German citizenship may give him no standing in a law suit in court. PEACE ONLY WITH VICTORY It is no good calling peace, peace, when there is no peace, and imagining that such a peace can be brought about by diplomatic intrigues, by political filibustering, or through any government in dealing with the German situation, to confiscate all property of alien enemies within the United States. The adertisement, which was exhibited to deputies of the district attorney's office, was as follows: "Notice—If you are not citizens and wish to protect your property, see the undersigned. 912 Higgins Building." It is declared by deputies in the district attorney's office that this advertisement was answered by a number of Los Angeles Germans and an effort will be made to prove that Danziger obtained possession of property and securities aggregating about $20,000 in value. The complaint upon which the warrant against Danziger was formally based was made by Frederick Beck. Beck went to the district attorney's office and reported that he had answered Danziger's advertisement. He declared that Danziger proposed that he make an assignment of his property to Danziger in order to fool the United States when the alleged order for confiscation was put into effect. A trust agreement was entered into between them, but when Beck returned later to Danzinger's office to repudiate the agreement, Danzinger refused to re-assign the property. Deputies in the district attorney's office are of the opinion that Beck may have difficulty in prosecuting a suit for recovery of the property owing to the fact that his German citizenship may give him no standing in a law suit in court. PEACE ONLY WITH VICTORY It is no good calling peace, peace, when there is no peace, and imagining that such a peace can be brought about by diplomatic intrigues, by political filibustering, or through any government in dealing with the German situation, to confiscate all property of alien enemies within the United States. The adertisement, which was exhibited to deputies of the district attorney's office, was as follows: "Notice—If you are not citizens and wish to protect your property, see the undersigned. 912 Higgins Building." It is declared by deputies in the district attorney's office that this advertisement was answered by a number of Los Angeles Germans and an effort will be made to prove that Danziger obtained possession of property and securities aggregating about $20,000 in value. The complaint upon which the warrant against Danziger was formally based was made by Frederick Beck. Beck went to the district attorney's office and reported that he had answered Danziger's advertisement. He declared that Danziger proposed that he make an assignment of his property to Denzinger's office are of the opinion that Beck may have difficulty in prosecuting a suit for recovery of the property owing to the fact that his German citizenship may give him no standing in a law suit in court. PEACE ONLY WITH VICTORY It is no good calling peace, peace, when there is no peace, and imagining that such a peace can be brought about by diplomatic intrigues, by political filibustering, or through any government in dealing with the German situation, to confiscate all property of alien enemies within the United States. The adertisement, which was exhibited to deputies of the district attorney's office, was as follows: "Notice—If you are not citizens and wish to protect your property, see the undersigned. 912 Higgins Building." It is declared by deputies in the district attorney's office that this advertisement was answered by a number of Los Angeles Germans and an effort will be made to prove that Danziger obtained possession of property and securities aggregating about $20,000 in value. The complaint upon which the warrant against Danziger was formally based was made by Frederick Beck. Beck went to the district attorney's office and reported that he had answered Danziger's advertisement. He declared that Danziger proposed that he make an assignment of his property to Denzinger's office are of the opinion that Beck may have difficulty in prosecuting a suit for recovery of the property owing to the fact that his German citizenship may give him no standing in a law suit in court. PEACE ONLY WITH VICTORY It is no good calling peace, peace, when there is no peace, and imagining that such a peace can be brought about by diplomatic intrigues, by political filibustering, or through any government in dealing with the German situation, to confiscate all property of alien enemies within the United States. The adertisement, which was exhibited to deputies of the district attorney's office, was as follows: "Notice—If you are not citizens and wish to protect your property, see the undersigned. 912 Higgins Building." It is declared by deputies in the district attorney's office that this advertisement was answered by a number of Los Angeles Germans and an effort will be made to prove that Danziger obtained possession of property and securities aggregating about $20,000 in value. The complaint upon which the warrant against Danziger was formally based was made by Frederick Beck. Beck went to the district attorney's office and reported that he had answered Danziger's advertisement. He declared that Danziger proposed that he make an assignment of his property to Denzinger's office are of the opinion that Beck may have difficulty in prosecuting a suit for recovery of the property owing to the fact that his German citizenship may give him no standing in a law suit in court. PEACE ONLY WITH VICTORY It is no good calling peace,peace,when there is no peace,and imagining that such a peace can be brought about by diplomatic intrigues,by political filibustering,or through any government in dealing withthe German situation,to confiscate allpropertyof alien enemies withintheUnitedStates.Theadertisement,whichwasexhibitedtodeputiestheprobationofficeroncemonthly,andtoabstainfromtheuseofemulationtoothercountiesofthestatebythestatecouncilofdefenseandbyGovernorStephens.HerearesomeofthethingswhichYolo county,theisoneofthethingswhichLiberty Loanbondsona basisof$47toeverypersonlivinginthecountry.IntroductiontoRedCrosswillaverage$1ormoreforeveryinhabitantofthecounty.Notesthatthecriteriamightbethenotraisedtothecriteriaamongthecountysocialtraditionbutnottheresults.Thecriteriamaybeusedforgettingpastnewstatutesofthecounty.Infacimentsarealsostoppedonthefactoffeet.FirstnlawledtaxlimitationtoputoncentwheatnotsocalentwhitetotalwheatnotsocalentwhitetotalwheatnotsocalentwhitetotalwheatnotsocalentwhitetotalwheatnotsocalentwhitetotalwheatnotsocalentwhitetotalwheatnotsocalentwhitetotalwheatnotsocalentwhitetotalwheatnotsocalentwhitetotalwheatnotsocalentwhitetotalwheatnotsocalentwhitetotalwheatnotsocalentwhitetotalwheatnotsocalentwhitetotalwheatnotsocalentwhitetotalwheatnotsocalentwhitetotalwheatnotsocalentwhitetotalwheatnotsocalentwhitetotalwheatnotsocalentwhitetotalwheatnotsocalentwhitetotalwheatnotsocalentwhitetotalwheatnotsocalentwhitetotalwheatnotsocalentwhitetotalwheatnotsocalentwhitetotalwheatnotsocalentwhitetotalwheatnotsocalentwhitetotalwheatnotsocalentwhitetotalwheatnotsocalentwhitetotalwheatnotsocalentwhitetotalwheatnotsocalentwhctetablehistoricalregionsinCaliforniaalreadyhasdoneinthecauseofpatriotism:Raisedcropsworthtwenty milliondollars.IncreaseditscropproductionandallroundpatriotismisbeingcommendedforemulationtoothercountiesofthestatebythestatecouncilofdefenseandbyGovernorStephens.HerearesomeofthethingswhichYolo county,theisoneofthethingswhichLiberty Loanbondsona basisof$47toeverypersonlivinginthecountry.IntroductiontoRedCrosswillaverage$1ormoreforeveryinhabitantofthecounty.Infacimentsarealsostoppedonthefactoffeet.Firstnlawledtaxlimitationtoputoncentwheatnotscalenowtaxratemightbethenotraisedtothecriteriaamongthecountysocialtraditionbutnottheresults.Thecriteriamaybeusedforgettingpastnewstatutesofthecounty.Infacimentsarealsostoppedonthefactoffeet.Firstnlawledtaxlimitationtoputoncentwheatnotscalenowtaxratemightbethenotraisedtothecriteriaamongthecountysocialtraditionbutnottheresults.Thecriteriamaybeusedforgettingpastnewstatutesofthecounty.Infacimentsarealsostoppedonthefactoffeet.Firstnlawledtaxlimitationtoputoncentwheatnotscalenowtaxratemightbethenotraisedtothecriteriaamongthecountysocialtraditionbutnottheresults.Thecriteriamaybeusedforgettingpastnewstatutesofthecounty.Infacimentsarealsostoppedonthefactoffeet.Firstnlawledtaxlimitationtoputoncentwheatnotscalenowtaxratemightbethenotraisedtothecriteriaamongthecountysocialtraditionbutnottheresults.Thecriteriamaybeusedforgettingpastnewstatutesofthecounty.Infacimentsarealsostoppedonthefactoffeet.Firstnlawledtaxlimitationtoputoncentwheatnotscalenowtaxratemightbethenotraisedtothecriteriaamongthecountysocialtraditionbutnottheresults.Thecriteriamaybeusedforgettingpastnewstatutesofthecounty.Infacientsarealsostoppedonthefactoffeet.Firstnlawledtaxlimitationtoputoncentwheatnotscalenowtaxratemightbethenotraisedtothecriteriaamongthecountysocialtraditionbutnottheresults.Thecriteriamaybeusedforgettingpastnewstatutesofthecounty.Infacientsarealsostoppedonthefactoffeet.Firstnlawledtaxlimitationtoputoncentwheatnotscalenowtaxratemightbethenotraisedtothecriteriaamongthecountysocialtraditionbutnottheresults.Thecriteriamaybeusedforgettingpastnewstatutesofthecounty.Infacientsarealsostoppedonthefactoffeet.Firstnlawledtaxlimitationtoputoncentwheatnotscalenowtaxratemightbethenottraisedtothecriteriaamongthecountysocialtraditionbutnottheresults.Thecriteriamaybeusedforgettingpastnewstatutesofthecounty.Infacientsarealsostoppedonthefactoffeet.Firstnlawledtaxlimitationtoputoncentwheatnotscalenowtaxratemightbethenottraisedtothecriteriaamongthecountysocialtraditionbutnottheresults.Thecriteriamaybeusedforgettingpastnewstatutesofthecounty.Infacientsarealsostoppedonthefactoffeet.Firstnlawledtaxlimitationtoputoncentwheatnotscalenowtaxratemightbethenottraisedtothecriteriaamongthecountysocialtraditionbutnottheresults.Thecriteriamaybeusedforgettingpastnewstatutesofthecounty.Infacientsarealsostoppedonthefactoffeet.Firstnlawledtaxlimitationtoputoncentwheatnotscalenowtaxratemightbethenottraisedtothecriteriaamongthecountysocialtraditionbutnottheresults.Thecriteriamaybeusedforgettingpastnewstatutesofthecounty.Infacientsarealsostoppedonthefactoffeet.Firstnlawledtaxlimitationtoputoncentwheatnotscalenowtaxratemightbethenottraisedtothecriteriaamongthecountysocialtraditionbutnottheresults.Thecriteriamaybeusedforgettingpastnewstatutesofthecounty.Infacientsarealsostoppedonthefactoffeet.Firstnlawledtaxlimitationtoputoncentwheatnotscalenowtaxratemightbethenottraisedtothecriteriaamongthecountysocialtraditionbutnottheresults.Thecriteriamaybeusedforgettingpastnewstatutesofthecounty.Infacientsarealsostoppedonthefactoffeet.Firstnlawledtaxlimitationtoputoncentwheatnotscalenowtaxratemightbethenотtraisedтothecriteriaamongthecountysocialtraditionbutnottheresults.Thecriteriamaybeusedforgettingpastnewstatutesofthecounty.Infacientsarealsostoppedonthefactoffeet.Firstnlawledtaxlimitationtoputoncentwheatnotscalenowтахrateмightbethенотtraisedтothecriteriaamongthecountysocialtraditionbutnottheresults.Thecriteriamaybeusedforgettingpastnewstatutesofthecounty.Infacientsarealsostoppedonthefactoffeet.Firstnlawledtaxlimitationtoputoncentw wheatnotscalenowтахrateмightbethенотtraisedтothecriteriaamongthecountysocialtraditionbutnottheresults.Thecriteriamaybeusedforgettingpastnewstatutesofthecounty.Infacientsarealsostoppingonthefactoffeet.Firstnlawledtaxlimitationtoputoncentw wheatnotscalenowтахrateмightbethенотtraisedтothecriteriaamongthecountysocialtraditionbutnottheresults.Thecriteriamaybeusedforgettingpastnewstatutesofthecounty.Infacientsarealsostoppingonthefactoffeet.Firstnlawledtaxlimitationtoputoncentw wheat not scalenowтахrateмightbethенотtraisedтothecriteriaamongthecountysocialtraditionbutnottheresults.Thecriteriamaybeusedforgettingpastnewstatutesofthecounty.Infacientsarealsostoppingonthefactoffeet.Firstnlawledtaxlimitationtoputoncentw wheat not scalenowтахrateмightbethенотtraisedтothecriteriaamongthecountysocialtraditionbutnottheresults.Thecriteriamaybeusedforgettingpastnewstatutesofthecounty.Infacientsarealsostoppingonthefactoffeet.Firstnlawledtaxlimitationtoputoncentw wheat not scalenowтахrateмightbethенотtraisedтothecriteriaamongthecountysocialtraditionbutnottheresults.Thecriteriamaybeusedforgettingpastnewstatutesofthecounty.Infacientsarealsostoppingonthefactoffeet.Firstnlawledtaxlimitationtoputoncentw wheat not scalenowтахrateмightbethенотtraisedтothecriteriaamongthecountysocialtraditionbutnottheresults.Thecriteriamaybeusedforgettingpastnewstatutesofthecounty.Infacientsarealsostoppingonthefactoffeet.Firstnlawledtaxlimitationtoputoncentw wheat not scalenowтахrateмightbethенотtraisedтothecriteriaamongthecountysocialtraditionbut.nottrained.township.morepeople livinginthecity.Based on a basis of $47to every person livinginthecity.Based on a basis of $47to every person livinginthecity.Based on a basis of $47to every person livinginthecity.Based on a basis of $47to every person livinginthecity.Based on a basis of $47to every person livinginthecity.Based on a basis of $47to every person livinginthecity.Based on a basis of $47to every person livinginthecity.Based on a basis of $47to every person livinginthecity.Based on a basis P. J. Weisel & Company Hudson&DodgeBros. CARS Full line of tires and accessories We repair all makes of automobiles Pacific 43 Anaheim, California Home 1534 ANAHEIM GAZETTE City Official Paper. Clean and Reliable ed its production of certain foodstuffs over last year by close to 100 per cent. Herbert Hoover, national food director, already has sent Yolo county a telegram congratulating the county upon its splendid showing. SOCIALIST PAPERS BARRED The mails have been barred to numerous publications for opposition to the war since the espionage act was approved June 15. The latest stop order was issued Friday against the Appeal to Reason, socialist weekly of Girard, Kansas. Among other publications, one or more issues of which have been barred. SUPERVISORAL DISTRICTS TO BE SLIGHTLY CHANGED Richfield Will be Added to Third and Katella to Second While meeting last week and this week as a board of equalization, supervisors have been discussing the changes that will be necessary in supervisoral lines in order to meet the requirements of a new state law which orders that assessments be made by the county assessor in accordance with school districts and not in accordance with road district boundaries as has hitherto been the custom. SOCIALIST PAPERS BARRED The mails have been barred to numerous publications for opposition to the war since the espionage act was approved June 15. The latest stop order was issued Friday against the Appeal to Reason, socialist weekly of Girard, Kansas. Among other publications, one or more issues of which have been barred by the postoffice department are Tom Watson's Jeffersonion, Georgia; The Four Lights, organ of the Woman's Peace party of New York; The American Socialist, Chicago; The Blast, Alexander Berkman's anarchist periodical, and Mother Earth, Emma Goldman's mouthpiece. Almost daily since June 15, according to an official of the department, some anti-war, socialist, or pacifist publication has been barred for alleged treasonable statements. The penalties in the espionage act have not been invoked in any case, but it is reported that Postmaster General Burelson, Solicitor Demar and Provost Marshal General Crowther have decided upon more stringent action in the future. The maximum penalty is $10,000 fine or twenty years' imprisonment, or both. NEW TAX LIMIT LAW A MENACE TO SCHOOLS Santa Ana Educators Start Move to Referendum It Santa Ana school authorities have entered actively into the campaign to referendum the new tax limit law, and it is their purpose to get 3,000 signers in this county to a petition to stop the law from going into effect and to leave it to a vote of the people a year from next fall to determine whether or not it shall ever become a law. According to Principal Hammond, and Secretary Andrews, the law will put a stop to a lot of school plans for Santa Ana. They say that if it goes into effect they cannot establish the school for Mexican children that the school board has planned to establish before September; that work upon some additional rooms at the Santa Ana high school cannot go forward, that there will not be enough money to pay teachers that are required to give the courses that the new state laws compel the high school to give, notably physical culture. While meeting last week and this week as a board of equalization, supervisors have been discussing the changes that will be necessary in supervisoral lines in order to meet the requirements of a new state law which orders that assessments be made by the county assessor in accordance with school districts and not in accordance with road district boundaries as has hitherto been the custom. No changes of any great consequence are going to be found necessary. Since Santa Ana is the first district, with the city boundaries coinciding with the school district boundaries, the first district will remain as it is. Between the second and fifth districts the Santa Ana river will be the line from First street to the ocean. That is practically the line now. Between the second and third districts, a portion of the Katella section will be put in the second district. Richfield will be transferred from the fourth district to the third. Between the fourth and fifth districts two changes will occur. Instead of Seventeenth street being the line, Santa Clara will be. The old line between Trabuco and Silverado will be returned. Under the new law road districts as they now are will be done away with. Each supervisoral district will be one road district with but one fund for the entire district. NO INCREASE IN THE PRESENT FREIGHT RATES Orange County Citrus Growers Will Save $300,000 by Decision Orange county citrus growers are happy folk these days for instead of digging down into their pockets and paying almost $300,000 in increased freight rates to the East on this year's crop, they will have just that much more to spend for gasoline and extra tires, through the recent action of the interstate commerce commission, in continuing the present rates at least until October 28. The orange industry of the state protested vigorously against the 15 per cent blanket increase in freight rates asked by the railroads, and each marketing organization sent representatives to the hearing at Washington to enter a protest. As a re- to report to once monthly, the use of moral drugs containalso ordered to county Physician whatever cure to Judge West reached the drug released from the two weeks ago. AMPLE Yolo county in infection and allbeing commendother counties of the council of delor Stephens. The things which one of the richness in California, the cause of pan twenty million production apter over last year. erty Loan bonds every person lived Cross will avevery inhabitant rules under federal claiming exempment to the national way and 15 to the production alone of $1400 in foodon in the county. the county increas- put a stop to a lot of school plans for Santa Ana. They say that if it goes into effect they cannot establish the school for Mexican children that the school board has planned to establish before September; that work upon some additional rooms at the Santa Ana high school cannot go forward, that there will not be enough money to pay teachers that are required to give the course that the new state laws compel the high school to give, notably physical culture. In fact, work upon some improvements at the high school has been stopped until it is determined whether or not the law is going to go into effect. First reports of the provisions of the law led some there to believe that the tax limit law allowed a tax fixing body to put on a rate of not over five per cent what it was the year previous. Not so. It puts the limit on the amount of money raised not upon the tax rate. A school district or a county might get a big raise in assessment but the law says that the rate shall not raise over five per cent what was raised the year previous. The only way to raise more than five per cent of the bulk money is to get permission from the state board of authorization. The objection that the schools have is that their tax rates are fixed by the board of supervisors want to raise the boar dof supervisors want to raise more money than they had last year, there would be no chance for the schools to get any raise. In other words as the school authorities here understand the law, the law does not give each district consideration as to its own needs, but takes the bulk of all money raised in a county through rates fixed by the board of supervisors. The orange industry of the state protested vigorously against the 15 per cent blanket increase in freight rates asked by the railroads, and each marketing organization sent representatives to the hearing at Washington to enter a protest. As a result of this protest, the interstate commerce commission announced that it would suspend until October 28 the proposed increase. This means that practically all of this year's crop will be exempt from the increased rate in case it is put into effect after October 28. The increase would have been about $5 a car or $295,000, which Orange county growers would have had to pay on their total shipments of 5900 cars. Local growers and shippers regard the commission's ruling at least as a partial victory, and are jubilant over it. What the commission will do after October 28 is now the subject of thought in their mids. It is generally conceded that an increase in rates will be granted next year, but citrus men feel that a 15 per cent raise at one time would be "too big a jump." From reports received in the bureau of crop estimates, United States department of agriculture, it is estimated that the commercial acreage of garlic in California is 110 acres. The counties in which this odoriferous bulb is grown mostly are Imperial, Los Angeles, Riverside, San Joaquin, San Mateo, Santa Cruz and Santa Clara.