anaheim-gazette 1917-07-12
Searchable text
QUAIL SEASON TO
OPEN NOVEMBER 15
Fish and Game Officials Give Out New Laws; Rabbit Season Deferred
Official announcement of the new laws was made yesterday by the fish and game commission after many days and nights of wrestling with the 202 bills introduced on these subjects before the late legislature.
There is a great increase in the number of forest reserve districts, which will be made plain upon issuance of the official charts later. The Southern California district, numbered four, has been changed by shifting Ventura and Santa Barbara into the coastal district three, and taking Inyo and Mono from district one. This has made it possible to give an earlier deer season up the coast, opening August 1 and closing September 15. The Owens valley season for Inyo and Mono counties goes back to the month of September, as the rest of Southern California. No change in the two-forked horn buck limit.
Quail and rabbit season is deferred one month, opening November 15 and closing January 31, limits remaining the same. This law governs desert, valley and mountain quail in Inyo, Mono San Bernardino, Los Angeles, Orange, San Diego, Riverside and Imperial counties. Limits remain 15 per day and 30 per week on desert and valley quail; 10 and 20 on mountain quail.
The duck season is delayed one day, opening October 16, to conform to the federal migratory bird regulations, closing January 31. Mudhens are added to the list of game birds, with the same season as ducks; jacksnipes also. Wood duck, wild pigeons and rail are protected at all times.
formed. If the experiment succeeds there will be a rattling of dry bones in neighboring states. Iowa, in particular, is ripe for a bit of housecleaning. And there are others.
TEN ACRES VALENCIAS SOLD
C. B. Berger Co., has sold the 10-acre Valencia orange grove owned by F. H. Meller and J. H. Keller of Orange. The grove is two and one-half miles south of Anaheim on the state boulevard and the buyer is Clarence U. Kelly of Gardena.
STATE HAS MANY JOBS OPEN
The California State Civil Service Commission announces the following examinations to be held in the near future. Requests for fuller information should be made at an early date: Assistant Sanitary Engineer, bureau of Sanitary Engineering, state board of health, $150 a month.
Deputy State Veterinarian, $150 a month.
Messenger (Applications will be received for examination in San Francisco, and Los Angeles, $25 to $50 per month).
Institutional positions: Nurse, graduate and surgical, $50 to $75 per month, with maintenance.
Attendant, state institutions:
Agnes state hospital, Mendocino state hospital, Napa state hospital, Norwalk state hospital, Sonoma state home, Southern California state hospital, Stockton state hospital, $40 to $500 per month with maintenance.
Veterans' home, $35 to $40 with maintenance.
Baker, $50-$70
Butcher, 30-60
Cook 40-90
Dairyman 50-75
GROUND SQUIRREL ALLY O
Destruction of These Defense. Cooperate For Quick R
The ravages of the land and gophers must be Horticultural Commune Hecke is cooperating board of health, the councils of defense, the of supervisors and other to enable the county commissioners to conduct action under the americultural commission 2322a of the Political control of rodent pest coming a national me.
The California stands first today ally of the country's day he is working more to destroy large quantities of the state that his efforts are causing material success will be farmer. Ask the man half of his grain field squirrels, or the man his almond crop destroys who has watched his disappear.
Every newspaper is day is laying stress onation of food produce food product comes from in this state nearly affected by the depress squirrels. Evidently plays a most important defenders of the to him to keep clear food line that is in important is to grow in importance is to is properly utilized.
The duck season is delayed one day, opening October 16, to conform to the federal migratory bird regulations, closing January 31. Mudhens are added to the list of game birds, with the same season as ducks; jacksnipes also. Wood duck, wild pigeons and rail are protected at all times.
Dove season remains as before, opening September 1 and closing November 30 all over the South. District one has an earlier opening, August 1, closing October 31. This includes the famous dove flights of the San Joaquin valley, so local sportsmen can avail themselves of this in August. No weekly limit is made on doves. Fifteen can be shot every day of the open season if desired.
Grouse may be shot wherever found between September 15 and October 14, inclusive. Tree squirrels from September 1 to the end of the year; 12 per season. The limit is four per day and eight per week, same as on sage hens.
Trout season remains the same in district four, including the mountain lakes, but the placing of Ventura and Santa Ynez rivers. Golden trout season will open June 30 and close October 1, with a limit of five inches 123456 with a limit of 20 per day and a size of five inches minimum.
A change in the measurement of Pismo clams is made, the minimum being 4-3-4 inches in place of a circumference limit, daily bag limit remaining as before.
Those who count gatherng abalones sport can play their favorite game except in February, Marsh and April for all but the red, and except in February for those, with size limits on red seven inches, green six and a half, pink six, black five inches in diameter, and daily limits of ten; no spears or diving allowed.
THE ILLINOIS EXPERIMENT
Students of government, politicians and tarpayers will watch with interAgnes state hospital, Mendocino state hospital, Napa state hospital Norwalk state hospital, Sonoma state home, Southern California state hospital, Stockton state hospital, $40 to $500 per month with maintenance.
Veterans' home, $35 to $40 with maintenance.
Baker, $50-$70
Butcher, 30-60
Cook, 40-90
Dairyman, 50-75
Farmer, 50-70
Farmhand, 35-45
Kitchen help, 30-45
Landscape Gardner, 50-9p
Laundress, 45-55
Laundry help, 35-45
Laundryman, 45-75
Milker, 40Poultryman, 40-70
Vegetable Gardner, 40-60
All the above situations include maintenance.
Application blanks and further information regarding the above examinations may be secured from the state civil service commission at any of the following offices: Room 733, Forum Building, Sacramento; Room 10, Ferry Building, San Francisco, and the Los Angeles county civil service commission, Room 1007, Hall of Records, Los Angeles.
STANDARD APPLE ACT OF 1917
The Standard apple act of 1917 provides for standards of packing and marketing apples when contained in closed packages. Three grades are established, viz., the California Fancy, the "B" grade and the "C" grade.
Every closed package of apples, packed, shipped, delivered for shipment, offered for sale or sold in California must bear a label giving the grade, number of apples contained in package (variation of five allowed) or net weight, variety, name and address of fruit packer and date of packing.
The selling or offering for sale of apples represented to be California Fancy, "B" grade or "C" grade, but which in fact do not conform to the standard of the law, is forbidden, excepting that Gravenstein apples may be packed with the stems not retained in the apples.
It is made unlawful to import, sell or offer for sale, or to possess apples infested with any pests or infected with disease, excepting that apples so infested in grown in Caliday is laying stression of food produce in this state nearly affected by the depresssquirrels. Evidently these a most important defenders of the city to him to keep clear food line that is in its important is to grow in importance is to so is properly utilized. An act of defense to violation of large quail from the mouth of the greedy jaws and shag ground squirrel.
Various estimates of the destructive squirrels. Probably however, are the fig Surgeon J. D. Long State Public Health carefully investigate farmers who figured crops and land value had been killed on the statistics show that the cost of killing sixty eleven cents per acre was 34 cents per acre 22.8 cents per acre and seventy person their land had increased per acre as a direct destruction. There are millions of acres cultivated and pastured above figures a deserts on all these lands saving of $228,000 acres.
These figures are show the gain from average squirrel in the squirrel is a color averages do not prop destructiveness. That which a colony is mightly little grain long as the colony it occupies and that land,a most unnereus waste in thery foot counts. Vestation is heavy areas,and there are ties,their destruc all too plainly visible instances where entire two or three hundred have been ruined to being worth harve quite as many cases.
THE ILLINOIS EXPERIMENT
Students of government, politicians and tarpayers will watch with interest the experiment of Illinois in consolidating the work of the various state boards. Instead of the 126 separate bodies, each administering some particular branch of the state government, and each acting independently of the other, all will be merged into nine general state departments. The change took place July 1.
Illinois is the first state to undertake the consolidation of its various governmental departments. New Jersey has discussed such a scheme for several years, but has never taken definite action. Kansas has considered adopting the commission plan of state government, but political influences have thus far thwarted what appears to be sound economy.
There is no question that the cost of state government in every state in the union is too high. The tendency among politicians is to create jobs for politicians or appointees of politicians. One party is just as keen for pork and patronage as the other. The rule holds true from federal officialdom down to the ward and township organizations.
If Illinois can prove that the cost of administration can be reduced without decreasing efficiency, or if the quality of public service can be increased without added cost, by means of consolidating the various departments, a really important piece of political pioneering will have been per-
The selling or offering for sale of apples represented to be California Fancy, "B" grade or "C" grade, but which in fact do not conform to the standard of the law, is forbidden, excepting that Gravenstein apples may be packed with the stems not retained in the apples.
It is made unlawful to import, sell or offer for sale, or to possess apples infested with any pests or infected with disease, excepting that apples so infested or infected, grown in California, may be sold as part of the crop to a packer, or may be sold for manufacture into by products. It is provided however that this provision regarding any pests and diseases shall be limited by the variations allowed ni the different grades.
It is made unlawful to use any label on apple containers which is false or misleading, and it is forbidden to use the word "fancy" with reference to any apples which do not conform to the standard defined for California Fancy.
The state commissioner of horticulture is charged with the enforcement of this act and is authorized to sell uniform stamps to be used to designate the grades of apples within the container, same to be sold at the rate of 1-2c for each container, the funds from such sale to be expended in the enforcement of the act.
He is authorized to seize and demn any apples packed, shipped, offered for sale or sold in violation of this act, as a public nuisance.
A penalty is provided for the wilful violation of the provisions of this act.
Your home is not complete without instant hot water service. The Gas Company has a new stock of Automatic Gas Water Heaters on hand for your inspection.
It occupies and threatens land, a most uneasy usable waste in the very foot counts. Festation is heavy areas, and there are ties, their destruction all too plainly visible instances where entwined two or three hundred have been ruined to being worth harve quite as many cose particularly almond completely destroy United States Public the California State and the State Commune are constantly plains of excessive many widely separate.
Now is the time squirrels. Right now getting big prices and right now they eating up more meore. Right now they of food while they keeps righ on eating without making an he takes except to stock of fleas and ground squirrel care It is ont a hard aniline are at hand numerous of extermination of tle work and a c outlay of money to landowner is urged addition to each what is needed is squirrels are a wide quires widespread usually deal with tha kills the ground soil land will undoubtte fit, but he will read the same time his squirrels on their l
GROUND SQUIRRELS AN
ALLY OF THE ENEMY
Destruction of These Pests an Act of
Defense. Cooperation Needed
For Quick Results
The ravages of the ground squirrels and gophers must be checked. State Horticultural Commissioner G. H. Hecke is cooperating with the state board of health, the state and county councils of defense, the county boards of supervisors and other organizations to enable the county horticultural commissioners to commence decisive action under the amended county horticultural commissioner law (Section 2322a of the Political Code) to enforce control of rodent pests which are becoming a national menace.
The California ground squirrel stands first today as an undisputed ally of the country's enemies. Every day he is working most industriously to destroy large quantities of the food products of the state of California and that his efforts are crowned with material success will be told by any farmer. Ask the man who has had half of his grain field eaten by the squirrels, or the man who has seen his almond crop destroyed, or the man who has watched his vineyard slowly disappear.
Every newspaper in the country today is laying stress on the conservation of food products. Nearly every food product comes from the farm and in this state nearly all of them are affected by the depredations of ground squirrels. Evidently the farmer occupies a most important position among the defenders of the country. It is up to him to keep clear that part of the food line that is in his hands. Most important is to grow the food. Next in importance is to see that the food is properly utilized. Certainly it is a more lasting benefit since there will not be left a colony of squirrels to replenish the fields at the next breeding season. Certainly when a man kills the squirrels on his land and so rids his neighbor of a menace to his crops he might expect reciprocity; and usually he will get it. What is needed is simultaneous action. If your neighbor does not understand the necessity of helping you to control this pest, apply to your county horticultural commissioner who, in cooperation with your county council of defense will take measures to enforce the horticultural law than now places the control of rodents into his hands.
5 ASSOCIATIONS IN NEW FRUIT EXCHANGE AT FULLERTON
Oil City Selected at Headquarters for Important Organization
Fullerton has been selected as headquarters for one of the most important fruit exchanges in Southern California, consisting of five associations.
The Placentia Orange Growers' Association, with packing houses in Fullerton and Placentia, the Yorba Linda Association, the Placentia Mutual association, the La Habra association, and the Anaheim Association, are withdrawing from the Semit-Tropic Fruit Exchange with headquarters in Los Angeles and are forming what will be known as the Northern Orange County Citrus Exchange with headquarters in Fullerton.
The new organization will have an uptown office there, which will be kept open all the time under the direction of a general manager to be named at once.
The output of the new exchange will be about 3000 cars of fruit annually and when there is a full crop it will run up to 4000 cars.
The newly-formed Northern Orange deputy are named as ex officio inspectors in chief.
It is the duty of all inspectors of fresh fruits and deputy inspectors of fresh fruits to carry out the provisions of the act. The inspectors in chief of fresh fruits are settle disputes between inspectors of fresh fruits, interpret inspection standards and to fix standards when they have material differences.
In counties where there is no horticultural commissioner it shall be the duty of county boards of supervisors to appoint inspectors of fresh fruits and deputy inspectors of fresh fruits as needed. Failure to appoint such officials within thirty days after written request from the state commissioner of horticulture will necessitate action on the part of said commissioner who is empowered to appoint one or more deputy state commissioners of horticulture whose duties shall be the same as inspectors of fresh fruits.
Any one violating the provisions of the act shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor.
RESUME OF CHANGES IN HORTICULTURAL LAWS OF STATE
The following communication has just been received from the state horticultural commissioner:
The present horticultural statutes of California are the result of many years of labor. They may be considered to have had their inception in 1881, when the legislature of California passed a law providing for the appointment of county boards of horticultural commissioners. This law was soon followed by the creation of a state board of horticultural commissioners. Certain provisions in the state horticultural law were however considered to be unconstitutional and two years later the state board of horticulture was created with more definite legal power.
day is laying stress on the conservation of food products. Nearly every food product comes from the farm and in this state nearly all of them are affected by the depredations of ground squirrels. Evidently the farmer occupies a most important position among the defenders of the country. It is up to him to keep clear that part of the food line that is in his hands. Most important is to grow the food. Next in importance is to see that the food is properly utilized. Certainly it is an act of defense to prevent the deviation of large quantities of food from the mouth of the soldier to the greedy jaws and sharp teeth of the ground squirrel.
Various estimates have been made of the destructiveness of ground squirrels. Probably the most accurate however, are the figures compiled by Surgeon J. D. Long of the United States Public Health Service from carefully investigated reports of 497 farmers who figured the increase in crops and land value after squirrels had been killed on their farms. These statistics show that on 321,233 acres the cost of killing squirrels averaged 11.2 cents per acre, while the value of the increase in crops, pasture, etc., was 34 cents per acre, a net saving of 22.8 cents per acre. Three hundred and seventy persons estimated that their land had increased in value $2.70 per acre as a direct result of squirrel destruction. There are in California millions of acres of squirrel infested, cultivated and pasture lands. At the above figures a destruction of squirrels on all these lands would not a saving of $228,000 on every million acres.
These figures are an average and show the gain from eliminating the average squirrel infestation. But the squirrel is a colonizing animal and averages do not properly represent his destructiveness. The acre or two on which a colony is located will grow mightly little grain or pasturage. As long as the colony is there the land it occupies and that nearby is waste land, a most unnecessary and inexcusable waste in these days when every foot counts. Where squirrel infestation is heavy over considerable areas, and there are many such localities, their destructiveness becomes all too plainly visible. There are many instances where entire fields of grain two or three hundred acres in extent have been ruined to the extent of not being worth harvesting; there are quite as many cases where fruit and be known as the Northern Orange County Citrus Exchange with headquarters in Fullerton.
The new organization will have an uptown office there, which will be kept open all the time under the direction of a general manager to be named at once.
The output of the new exchange will be about 3000 cars of fruit annually and when there is a full crop it will run up to 4000 cars.
The newly-formed Northern Orange County organization will be affiliated with the California Fruit Exchange and will also have a member on the executive board of the state exchange.
This is one of the most important organizations that has been formed in this section during the past five years, and will mean much for Fullerton.
FRUIT STANDARDIZATION LAW
This law which was supported by the fruit growers of the entire state and passed by the legislature of 1917, establishes standard packages and standard packs of fresh fruits both for intrastate and interstate shipment. It provides that all such fruits when packed shall be practically free from insect pests and from fungous diseases. The terms pack, packing or packed in bulk, or loose in the box without packing, fresh fruit, maturity, county, container, and subcontainer, are each defined. Cherries, peaches, apricots, pears, quinces, tomatoes, plums, and prunes must be of practically uniform size, quality and maturity, and the containers must bear the name of the variety, orchard where produced, name and post office address of the person packing same, and the minimum weight of contents must be stamped on the outside of the containers. In the case of these fruits being sold in lug boxes, these provisions pertaining to marking do not apply.
Table grapes must in addition to compliance with regulations similar to those for other deciduous fruits, show a sugar content of not less than 17% Balling scale, except Emperor, Gros Coleman and Cornichon which must test 16%. Eight containers for grapes are provided for. The ordinary, standard crate must not after packing, measure more than five inches between the top and bottom at the ends or more than 5-3-4 inches in the center. The tight packing which has been of labor. They may be considered to have had their inception in 1881, when the legislature of California passed a law providing for the appointment of county boards of horticultural commissioners. This law was soon followed by the creation of a state board of horticultural commissioners. Certain provisions in the state horticultural law were however considered to be unconstitutional and two years later the state board of horticulture was created with more definite legal powers. As the horticultural industry developed and new situations arose requiring legislative action this law gradually underwent a process of evolution, and in accord with the general drift of the times toward centralization of authority by the powers of the state board of horticulture were finally lodged in a single executive officer, the state commissioner of horticulture.
California has often been said to have best horticultural laws in the United States. At the last session of the legislature, however, a number of important changes were made in our statutes. Some of these changes affect in a very direct way every commercial fruit grower in California and it is with the idea of promoting a better understanding of and greater familiarity with our horticultural laws that we have prepared a survey of the statutes which were revised by the 1917 legislature. The state quarantine law is not reviewed here, since no amendments were made to it.
Naturally it has been necessary to be brief and all technical language has been omitted. We are not attempting to interpret (the laws), but simply to call attention to their general features for the benefit of those who have not time to study the statutes in detail.
ANALYSIS OF COUNTY FINANCES
The Taxpayers association of California announces that the total receipts of California counties in the last fiscal year were $75,092,681.45.
What portion of this vast sum came from courts, fines and penalties? The answer is $207,570$, which was the total yield in 57 counties.
Contrary to popular belief, perhaps, the superior courts did not take lead in producing this revenue. The Justice courts of the state at large produced nearly five times as much as the superior courts, the figures be-
it occupies and that nearby is waste land, a most unnecessary and inexcusable waste in these days when every foot counts. Where squirrel infestation is heavy over considerable areas, and there are many sucn localities, their destructiveness becomes all too plainly visible. There are many instances where entire fields of grain two or three hundred acres in extent have been ruined to the extent of not being worth harvesting; there are quite as many coses where fruit and particularly almond crops have been completely destroyed and today the United States Public Health Service, the California State Board of Health and the State Commission of Horticulture are constantly in receipt of complaints of excessive destruction in many widely separated localities.
Now is the time to kill the ground squirrels. Right now the farmer is getting big prices for his products and right now the ground squirrel is eating up more money than ever before. Right now the country has need of food while the ground squirrel keeps righ on eating up a large share without making any return for what he takes except to keep alive a large stock of fleas and other vermin. The ground squirrel can be readily killed. It is ont a hard animal to get at. There are at hand numerous, proved methods of extermination only requiring a little work and a comparatively small outlay of money to apply them. Every landowner is urged to do his bit. In addition to each one doing his bit what is needed is cooperation. Since squirrels are a widespread pest it requires widespread measures to effectively deal with them. The man who kills the ground squirrels on his own land will undoubtedly reap the benefit, but he will reap more benefit if at the same time his neighbors kill the squirrels on their lands, and it will be
Table grapes must in addition to compliance with regulations similar to those for other deciduous fruits, show a sugar content of not less than 17% Balling scale, except Emperor, Gros Coleman and Cornichon which must test 16%. Eight containers for grapes are provided for. The ordinary, standard crate must not after packing, measure more than five inches between the top and bottom at the ends or more than 5-3-4 inches in the center. The tight packing which has been so injurious to grape packs in the past is thus made impossible.
Six containers for berries are provided and all that are packed shall be practically uniform in quality, color and maturity.
Cantaloupes may be packed in five standard containers and shall be fully netted, of uniform size, firm and mature, free from bruises and practically free from aphis honey dew.
Compulsory use of standard containers is not provided for in the law. Any other container however, must be marked "irregular," thus designating the fact that it does not conform to the standards. All standard packages on the other hand are to be marked "standard."
Immature or frozen oranges cannot be sold except to by-product factories. An orange shall be deemed properly mature either when the juice contains soluble solids equal to or in excess of eight parts to every part of acid, or when substantially colored on the tree.
The horticultural commissioner of each county and all deputies are designated as ex-officio inspectors of fresh fruits. The board of supervisors in any county may appoint additional deputy inspectors of fresh fruits. The offices of inspectors in chief of fresh fruits are created and the state commissioner of horticulture and his chief
The interest realized by these 19 counties from their invested funds footed up to $317,560.02 or 11 3-4 cents per capita for the counties as a whole, while the interest received by 52 counties from current deposits to
Zion Canyon
FOR
YOUR VACATION
In Southwestern Utah is a new resort with a "Wyle Way" Camp, the same kind that for years was so popular with Yellowstone National Park tourists. 'Tis located in Zion Canyon, a scenic region of inspiring beauty, another American wonderland, comfortably and quickly reached via Salt Lake Route and automobile line.
Let us tell you more about it, and also about the wonderful
YELLOWSTONE AND GLACIER NATIONAL PARKS
which every American citizen who can possibly afford it should visit. Truly Wonderlands of Geysers, Waterfalls, Glaciers and Mountain-Scenery.
Then there are the reduced round-trip fares to EASTERN CITIES, which may be attractive to you on certain dates during July, August and September.
Full particulars of all of these, together with illustrated folders, at all offices of the
SALT LAKE ROUTE
J. J. TAVIS, C. P. Agent, 201 W. 4th St., Santa Ana
Phone: Home 211
The Best Meats of All Kinds always in stock
City Cash Market
J. J. TAVIS, C. P. Agent, 201 W. 4th St., Santa Ana
Phone: Home 211
The Best Meats of All
Kinds always in stock
City Cash Market
Schneider Bros., Props.
Sunset 20 and 362
Home 1058
IN ANYTHING YOU COOK
requiring milk you'll get much better results if you use ours. It is far richer than the ordinary article and the extreme care with which it is handled from cow to bottle will give added satisfaction in the knowledge of its absolute cleanliness.
Anaheim
Sanitary Dairy
Anaheim Ice Company Building on Chartress Street
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF ORANGE.
NOTICE OF HEARING
GUARANTY TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK, ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF A. S. ZIMMERMAN, (usually known as Gustav Zimmerman), Deceased.
PLAINTIFF,
VS.
ANAHEIM, SUGAR COMPANY, A CORPORATION.
NOTICE TO CRÉDITORS -
Estate of Frank Ricoute', Deceased
Notice is hereby given by the undersigned, Executor of the last Will and Testament of Frank Ricoute' 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 the said Executor at his place of business, at Suite No. 1, Odd Fellows' Building, in the City of Anaheim, in the County of Orange, within four months after the first publication of this notice.
Dated this 9th day of May, 1917.
AUGUSTE TOUSSAU,
Executor of the last Will and Testament of Frank Ricoute' Deceased.
SANTA FE TIME TABLE
Effective October 15th, 1916
NORTHBOUND
Leave Anaheim Arrive Los Angeles
6:05 A. M. 7:15 A. M.
7:35 A. M. 8:30 A. M.
10:10 A. M. 11:00 A. M.
11:58 A. M. 12:50 P. M.
8:57 P. M. 4:50 P. M.
5:48 P. M. 6:30 P. M.
9:04 P. M. 10:00 P. M.
SOUTHBOUND
Leave Los Angeles Arrive Anaheim
7:30 A. M. 8:26 A. M.
10:45 A. M. 11:35 A. M.
1:15 P. M. 2:02 P. M.
3:00 P. M. 3:42 P. M.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF ORANGE.
NOTICE OF HEARING
GUARANTY TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK, ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF A. S. ZIMMERMAN, (usually known as Gustav Zimmerman), Deceased.
PLAINTIFF,
vs.
ANAHEIM SUGAR COMPANY, A CORPORATION,
DEFENDANT.
NOTICE IS HEREBY given that an action has been commenced by the GUARANTY TRUST & SAVINGS BANK, Administrator of the Estate of A. S. Zimmerman, etc., deceased, Plaintiff, against the ANAHEIM SUGAR COMPANY, a Corporation, defendant, in the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the County of Orange, said action being case No. 8747, in which in the Complaint on file herein, it is alleged that the Anaheim Sugar Company, a Corporation, issued a Certificate of Stock of said Corporation, No. 282, for Five shares of the Capital Stock of said Corporation.
That the name of the person mentioned as Stockholder in said Certificate of said shares, was Gustav Zimmerman and that said Certificate was lost or destroyed, and the Plaintiff herein as Administrator of the Estate of said Stockholder, is now the legal holder of said shares.
AND all persons claiming said Certificate or said shares, or any of them, or interest or lein therein or thereupon, are hereby notified to be and appear before the same Superior Court, In Department 2 thereof, of the County Court House, at Santa Ana, California, on the 27th day of July 1917 at 10 a.m., and then and there to show cause why a new Certificate for Five Shares of said Capital Stock should not be directed to be issued to the Plaintiff herein, and to set forth their rights in or claims to said shares and said Certificates, lost or stolen as aforesaid.
(Seal)
W. B. WILLIAMS,
County Clerk of the Superior Court of Orange County, California.
By MYRTLE MEYER, Deputy.
taled $219,444.57 or a little over 8 cents per capita for the population of all counties.
Twenty-nine counties received in rents from real property, $71,690.41, or 2.65 cents per capita for the population of all counties and 13 counties received other rents amounting to $25,325.17,
or a little over 9 mills per capita for the general population.
For Orange county the figures in connection with the sources of receipt under discussion are as follows:
Interest Receipts:
From current deposits, $2,613.90; per capita, $.050.
From invested funds, none.
Rent Receipts:
From real property, $884.75; per capita $.016.
Other rents, none.
Six hundred acres are being put into late beans in the Buena Park section. The growers have taken a big potato and cabbage crop from the land and it is now being planted to beans, which will be in by the middle of the month. There is a total of 5000 acres in beans in that section, and the outlook for a big crop is excellent.
If you want steaming hot water in your home, all over the house, any time—night or day, install an Automatic Gas Water Heater. Demonstrations daily at the Gas Office.
A marriage license has been issued to Otto Carl Rohrs, 25, Santa Ana, and Annie H. Bentjen, 21 of this city.