anaheim-gazette 1918-10-31
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HOW THE YANKS DISCIPLINE THE HUN
"GANGWAY, DUTCH, WE'RE GOING THROUGH!" IS THEIR BATTLE CRY WHEN MAKING A CHARGE
LIEUT. DEAVER OF SANTA ANA GRAPHICALLY RELATES HIS EXPERIENCE AT THE FRONT
Six times over the top with the veterans of the First Division, Lieut. Charles L. Deaver says that the American soldier goes into battle without the slightest fear, and that his own personal feelings were akin to the feeling of a small boy at his first circus.
Lieutenant Deaver was an instructor in history at Santa Ana high school when he resigned to go to officers' training camp.
Letters from him are full of the enthusiasm over victory. One of these was written to his father, D. D. Deaver, at Riverside, and the other to A. J. Perkins, of Santa Ana, whose residence was Lieutenant Deaver's home while he was teaching in Santa Ana.
The letter to the lieutenant's father was the following:
"I have been moving, moving, moving since my last letter, with never a sight of a civil railroad, a civil store, a Y. M. C. A., a sheet of paper, a towel, a razor, a piece of soap, or even a toothbrush or a blanket. How long this will continue I have."
LUXEMBURG
Luxemburg, from which Germany is drawing iron for munitions, will cut itself free from German domination and join the Allies after the war. Military success may make this come earlier.
Information leading to this conclusion has been received in official quarters, it was stated.
1—An independent state under protection of the league of status, or
2—A province of Belgium adjoining Belgian Luxemburg.
Nominally an independent grand duchy, Luxemburg has been held vassal by Germany for years because of her extensive iron mines, which have fed the Krupp munitions factories and made possible Germany's super-preparedness program.
The people of Luxemburg have now appealed to President Wilson for protection and have demanded that the German armies evacuate their territory, which was overrun at the outbreak of the war in violation of a neutral treaty.
Popular resentment was long held in check by the grand duchess.
But dispatches here indicate the paranormal is striving to cut loose from Germany and join the Allies.
Luxemburg contains a percentage of French and Belgian population and French is spoken among the educated classes and dominates the peasant dialects, experts say.
Germany signed treaties in 1867 and 1902 guaranteeing neutrality of Luxemburg and promising not to use her railways for troop movements. But without a seaport, Luxemburg was forced into the German customs union and German tariffs were exacted on all goods coming into her borders. She was thus forced into economic dependence on Germany, having few manufactures and being obliged to take Ger-
was written to his father, D. D. Deaver, at Riverside, and the other to A. J. Perkins, of Santa Ana, whose residence was Lietenant Deaver's home while he was teaching in Santa Ana.
The letter to the lieutenant's father was the following:
"I have been moving, moving, moving since my last letter, with never a sight of a civil railroad, a civil store, a Y. M. C. A., a sheet of paper, a towel, a razor, a piece of soap, or even a tooth brush or a blanket. How long this will continue, I have no idea, but I am having the time of my life. I am in the oldest organization in the American Regular army, and am certainly proud to be here. They have had experience to burn, and I hope to get some more."
"Last night I had not had my clothes off for fourteen days. During that time I had been under shelter three nights and on one or two it had not rained. I waded streams as cold as water gets and stood where it was too deep for men to cross with their equipment, unaided, and helped them over one by one.
"I have six times 'over the top' to my credit without a scratch, except from barbed wire and after it is all over I never felt better in my life. There is not even a suggestion of a cold.
"If my bedding roll ever catches up with me I shall feel like a millionaire. At present I am billeted in a cozy little house, thoroughly dry, warm and clean. It has a real window and door, a writing desk, a chair with a back to it, a bunk on legs and a stove. John D. was never fixed like this.
"I have often wondered what my feelings would be on the field. It was just like a small boy at his first circus. That bunch of men of mine was about as excited as you are at lunch and my chief job was to keep them from wandering around looking at the nearest shell holes and deserted guns, instead of lying flat when we had to halt.
"In the entire two-days' drive, I never saw a Hun under 2000 yards who was not either dead or had both hands up. Most of them are tickled to death to get captured."
The letter to A. J. Perkins, dated September 23, has the following:
"For over three weeks now I have been on the long ramble, sleeping once in a while, eating once in a while, but rambling always. I have been over the top six times without a scratch, except from wire, and the rest of the line I have been ploughing through grassland and eating on"
Germany signed treaties in 1867 and 1902 guaranteeing neutrality of Luxemburg and promising not to use her railways for troop movements. But without a seaport, Luxemburg was forced into the German customs union and German tariffs were exacted on all goods coming into her borders. She was thus forced into economic dependence on Germany, having few manufactories and being obliged to take German goods in exchange for iron, coal and farm products.
Allied military successes have encouraged parliamentary leaders in Luxemburg to protest against German usurpation. The tiny country is without large military force and will be helpless to defend herself against Germany until Allied successes push the Kaiser's hordes from her borders.
Her vast mineral resources and agricultural products will be of great aid to Allied peoples near by and she in turn would have better access to the sea by obtaining free passage through Belgium and France, diplomatic point out.
FALL GOOD TIME TO START. FLOCK
Sheep husbandry on farms can do much to relieve the threatened inadequacy of the wool production in the United States. The farmer who will start and care for a new flock this fall will have a patriotic part in meeting the country's need for more wool to equip our soldiers and sailors.
Late summer or early fall is the most favorable time to make a start in sheep raising. Ewes can be procured more readily at this time, and when purchased can be kept on meadows, grain-stublbe fields, or late-sown forage crops, to get them in good condition for breeding. Experience with the ewes through fall and winter also render a beginner more capable of attending to them at lambing time. It is seldom possible to buy any considerable number of bred ewes at reasonable prices.
The inexperienced sheep raiser should begin with ewes of the best class available and a pure-bred ram. The raising of pure-bred stock and the selling of breeding rams can best be undertaken by persons experienced in sheep raising. The selection of the type and breed of sheep should be made by considering the class of pasture and feed available and the genetics classes and dominates the peasant dialects, experts say.
Germany signed treaties in 1867 and 1902 guaranteeing neutrality of Luxemburg and promising not to use her railways for troop movements. But without a seaport, Luxemburg was forced into the German customs union and German tariffs were exacted on all goods coming into her borders. She was thus forced into economic dependence on Germany, having few manufacturers and being obliged to take German goods in exchange for iron, coal and farm products.
Allied military successes have encouraged parliamentary leaders in Luxemburg to protest against German usurpation. The tiny country is without large military force and will be helpless to defend herself against Germany until Allied successes push the Kaiser's hordes from her borders.
Her vast mineral resources and agricultural products will be of great aid to Allied peoples near by and she in turn would have better access to the sea by obtaining free passage through Belgium and France, diplomatic point out.
FALL GOOD TIME TO START. FLOCK
Sheep husbandry on farms can do much to relieve the threatened inadequacy of the wool production in the United States. The farmer who will start and care for a new flock this fall will have a patriotic part in meeting the country's need for more wool to equip our soldiers and sailors.
Late summer or early fall is the most favorable time to make a start in sheep raising. Ewes can be procured more readily at this time, and when purchased can be kept on meadows, grain-stublbe fields, or late-sown forage crops, to get them in good condition for breeding. Experience with the ewes through fall and winter also render a beginner more capable of attending to them at lambing time. It is seldom possible to buy any considerable number of bred ewes at reasonable prices.
The inexperienced sheep raiser should begin with ewes of the best class available and a pure-bred ram. The raising of pure-bred stock and the selling of breeding rams can best be undertaken by persons experienced in sheep raising. The selection of the type and breed of sheep should be made by considering the class of pasture and feed available and the genetics classes and dominates the peasant dialects, experts say.
This leaves alone and rumpledtegration of the already. The course of course, the Lorraine are all detecting wing operation the Socialists, gaining courage government. The Prussian and Government, for the murmur. Once great military force into a disorganize.
But even with chine held intact people aroused by the shrewd being played, "Defend the fate and the nation for enemy bent up German race," hold out forever experts declare most time a dewaged upon German inability of the fett to replace the munitions and the manpower.
The position Turkey, Bulgaria are unable to save by "contain of troops on the land and in Palestine and Serbian Forces on her last stand ed with the follo Germany, 70 France, 40,000,000 tons, 61,000,000; Portugal, 6,000,000; Totals: This takes no 000 in France's Things have First, the balance risen three to four second, there is concentrated frontier.
Turkey and A collapse shortly. longation of th
never saw a run under 2000 yards who was not either dead or had both hands up. Most of them are tickled to death to get captured."
The letter to A. J. Perkins, dated September 23, has the following:
"For over three weeks now I have been on the long ramble, sleeping once in a while, eating once in a while, but rambling always. I have been over the top six times without a scratch, except from wire, and the rest of the line I have been ploughing through, sleeping in and eating on mud.
'Just at present we have paused at a place where our company (the only one in the battallon) is under shelter. As a consequence I have a dry place to write in and at a Y. M. C. A. hut in the woods I found three stray envelopes to match the three sheets of paper that I have been carting around in my bedding roll for some days. If ever I get back to civilization, I am going to get me a dry bed and a heated room and not move for six months.
'The American soldier goes into battle like an Apache Indian with a 'Gangway Dutch! We're going through!' and a machine gun opening up is a signal for every doughboy in the vicinity to rush in, in the hope of getting a shot at the boche. The French cannot understand us, but they always say, 'Tres bon, Americain,'"
"I was told of one private being officially credited with killing 200 huns with his rifle and bayonet, and being sent to the rear on account of exhaustion. It is a great game and has football backed off the map.
'Aside from my feet not being quite toughened to the heavy shoes necessary to stand up in this mud, I am in perfect health and fine spirits.'"
The inexperienced sheep raiser should begin with ewes of the best class available and a pure-bred ram. The raising of pure-bred stock and the selling of breeding rams can best be undertaken by persons experienced in sheep raising. The selection of the type and breed of sheep should be made by considering the class of pasture and feeds available, and the general system of farming to be followed, along with the peculiarities of the breeds, and the conditions and kind of feeding and management for which each has been especially developed.
Persons wholly inexperienced with sheep will do well to limit the size of the flock at the start. A beginner can acquire experience quite rapidly with eight or ten ewes. It is very doubtful, however, whether anyone should make a start with sheep unless the arrangement of the farm and the plan of its operation allow the keeping of as many as thirty ewes, and in most cases sixty or more will be handled better and more economically than a very small flock.
The economical disadvantage of a very small flock lies in the fact that the hours of labor are practically the same for a dozen or twenty ewes as for the larger flock. The fencing to allow desirable change of pastures or to give protection against dogs is about the same in either case, so that the overhead charges per ewe are much smaller in the case of the larger flock. Furthermore, the small flock on a farm having large numbers of other animals is unlikely to receive the study and attention really needed or that would be given to one of the chief sources of the farm income."
COMPARISONS OF STRENGTH OF NATIONS
ALLIES HAVE TWELVE MILLION MEN IN WAR, CENTRAL POWERS FOUR MILLION
COMBINED WEALTH OF TEUTONIC POWERS ONLY ONE-FIFTH AS GREAT AS THEIR OPPONENTS
Germany as a great military power is done. Never will the Prussian king be able to attempt to dictate to the remainder of Europe with authority. His great military machine is broken upon the wheel of the Allies. It may be able for a time to fight with its back to the wall, but sooner or later it must bow to the superior force and organization of its enemy.
The allies upon which Germany had leaned for additional manpower are out of the war for good. Bulgaria has quit. Turkey is willing to surrender and Austria-Hungary is fast breaking up as its various nationalities withdraw from the imperial government. In fact, Emperor Charles is willing to end the war on the best obtainable terms from the Allies, and is only awaiting the psychological moment to make the offer.
This leaves Germany standing alone and rumors of internal disintegration of the empire are extant already. The Poles, the Danes, and course, the inhabitants of Alsace months for these forces to be put in battle shape after they arrive across the Danube.
In all, Germany can hardly produce 200 divisions in fighting trim. At the best rate this would mean 3,000,000 men trained and the old men and boys would bring the full force not above 4,000,000, thus giving the Allies a preponderance of four to one to wage the decisive conflict.
All this the Kaiser and his advisers know, and they are now muddying the waters like cuttlefish to screen their mortal wounds from the Allies, if possible. Latest diplomatic incidents, however, indicate that the muddy water is taken for what it really is and the autocrat of Germany must surrender now or next year. It remains with the German people to say when.
The national wealth of the leading Allied nations follow: United States, $250,000,000,000; United Kingdom, $90,000,000,000; France, $65,000,000,-000; Italy, $30,000,000,000; Russia's national wealth equals $65,000,000,000.
The per capita wealth of these nations follows. United States, $2273; United Kingdom, $1915; France, $1625; Italy, $833. Russia's per capita wealth amounts to $343.
Including the smaller Allied nations and Russia the total national wealth of the alliance amounts to $601,000,-000,000, against $129,000,000,000 for the Central Powers; population, 1,296,-000,000, against 148,000,000; per capita wealth, $462, against $872. Total debts approximately $111,227,000,000.
Since entering the great war the United States raised $21,915,283,000 in excess of the normal government income.
Great Britain's debt is approximately $27,700,000,000, or $589 per capita. The debt charges approximate $1,-385,000,000, or $29.50 per capita.
France's present per capita debt is only $675. Her aggregate debt now is
They Say
— A leaf from history was revealed at a recent meeting of the trustees when a report from the engineer established the fact that all water alleys, which had been established by the old Anaheim Water Company, when the town was founded, still remain on record as belonging to that corporation, which in the evolution of time has been absorbed by the Anaheim Union Water Company. Many of these original water alleys are now streets, but have no doubt lost their original identity as such by long disuse.
— A well known townsman avers contractors did not bid on repairing the old city hall because perhaps they did not know bids had been asked for. Fact is they all knew about it, but since no concrete specifications had been provided, and as the repairs would call for work ranging all the way from $2000 to $20,000, the local builders passed the job up.
— The rumor is persistent that the municipal ax is going to fall on some heads in the not far distant future, as some of the departments are said to be too numerously manned. The city fathers are going to cut down expenses and a man will have to team up well to hold on. And it is further said that some officials who have recently received raises in their salaries may experience paroxysms of grief by having them pared a bit.
— It behooves city employees to be up and doing, early and late, if they want to hold onto their jobs. The city dads are out for efficiency.
— A knocker is the worst thing that can be harbored in a community,and
GARDEN GROVE CLAIMS
RECORD PRICE FOR NUTS
Three Cars Shipped by Sister City
Sold for $42,960
Garden Grove's new walnut crop is bringing record breaking values for carload shipments.
Manager C. K. Lee of the Garden Grove Walnut Association announces that Garden Grove holds the record for a carload of walnuts shipped out this season. While other sections in Orange county have been quoting prices on carload shipments ranging from $10,000 to $12,000, the local association last week shipped a carload to Buffalo, that is valued at $15,070. The shipment consisted of 535 sacks of mixed nuts.
Last Thursday a second carload was shipped to Pittsburg, consisting of 405 sacks of budded walnuts valued at $12,7575.
Wednesday last week a third carload of 450 sacks was shipped to Tacoma, Wash., worth $15,140.
Because the Walnut crop all over the state is surpassing expectations, the California Walnut Growers' Association is now confident that it will have enough nuts above the total contracted for to bring sufficient money above the contract prices to pay all expenses of selling.
Reports from growers are to the effect that the crop is showing up from 15 to 50 per cent better than early estimates.
Growers who sold to independents at more than half a cent below the price for No. 1's, or even less are out of luck, as the way nuts are grading this year assures a fine average to growers shipping through the packing house.—News.
up well on hold on. And it is further said that some officials who have recently received raises in their salaries may experience paroxysms of grief by having them pared a bit.
— It behooves city employees to be up and doing, early and late, if they want to hold onto their jobs. The city dads are out for efficiency.
— A knocker is the worst thing that can be harbored in a community, and is several shades darker than a slacker, and why the species are allowed to exist and propagate and spread their propaganda is a poser. A disordered liver sometimes is attributable as a cause, and in some communities a fine antidote is a ride on a rail.
— One or two of the thirst garages intented closing up shop on November 1st, in anticipation of having to pay the extra $8 federal tax per gallon on whiskey; but as the collector did not come around, the liquor dealers may stick it out for another 30 days. The tax on hard liquor is so high now that a fellow of ordinary means cannot buy it.
— That a local candidate, of the wet persuasion, is wondering why his political card was refused entry as an adv. in a publication proclaiming bonedryness, but was boldly flashed in the deadly parallel to show up the inconsistency of the other fellow.
— There has been quite a scandal in darktown society the past week. Looka heah, you nigger, you'd bettah be careful.
MILLIONS NEEDED FOR THE BOYS IN KHAKI
170 Millions to be Raised by the Nation During United War Work Campaign
To finance the great welfare work among our boys in Khaki vast sums are needed. To make it possible for this work to continue, and to expand as the rapidly growing numbers of our soldiers boys and their correspondingly large requirements for welfare work make necessary, $170,500,000 is to be raised by the nation during the coming United War Work Campaign.
This vast sum is to be used by seven large welfare organizations, which are now unceasing in their efforts to provide well on hold on. And it is further said that some officials who have recently received raises in their salaries may experience paroxysms of grief by having them pared a bit.
— It behooves city employees to be up and doing, early and late, if they want to hold onto their jobs. The city dads are out for efficiency.
— A knocker is the worst thing that can be harbored in a community, and is several shades darker than a slacker, and why the species are allowed to exist and propagate and spread their propaganda is a poser. A disordered liver sometimes is attributable as a cause, and in some communities a fine antidote is a ride on a rail.
— There has been quite a scandal in darktown society the past week. Looka heah, you nigger, you'd bettah be careful.
This takes no account of the 45,000,000 in France's colonial possessions. Things have therefore happened: First, the balance of man power has risen three to one against Germany, and second, the balance to reckoned is concentrated on the actual German frontier.
Turkey and Austria-Hungaria will collapse shortly. So that in any prolongation of the war the tendency would be for Italian and other troops to be released for use against the fathomland, striking her on the western front, or after passage through Austria-Hungary.
With the advance of the armies commanded by Foch, it is also possible that the insurrection in Poland, Bohemia and the Baltic provinces may cause embarassment to Russia.
The size of the armies now available for the western front, may be set forth thus: France, 3,500,000; Britain, 4,500,000; United States, 4,000,000; Belgium and Portugal, 500,000. Total, 12,500,000.
We do not suggest that all these men will be fighting at the same time. And we are still assuming that Italy is oc uplied elsewhere. But here you have evidence of unlimited reserves—what President Wilson calls military suppremacy—and the American item is put at a minimum.
Against these Allied forces Germany has at this time, so far known, about 160 divisions on the west front, of which thirty-five are in reserve and being rebuilt to efficiency. She also has a number of divisions of inferior troops in Russia and some retreating from Macedonia towards Austria.
Part of those may get through unscathed, but the Serbians and Allies are pushing them hard, inflicting heavy losses, so that it will take Reports from growers are to the effect that the crop is showing up from 15 to 50 per cent better than early estimates.
Growers who sold to independents at more than half a cent below the price for No. 1's, or even less are out of luck, as the way nuts are grading this year assures a fine average to growers shipping through the packing house.—News.
Time after time, together with the rest of the city of Moscow, the Kremlin has been burned, the last occasion being in 1812, when it was occupied by Napoleon, and the inhabitants of the city themselves started the conflagrations in all parts of the city. It was these fires which forced the "little corporal" to commence his disastrous retreat across the snowbound steppes of Russia. Napoleon has had his headquarters in the Kremlin and while the flames were not so destructive there as in other parts of the city, yet they forced evacuation.
Newfoundlanders are said to have the finest physiques of any English-speaking people.
Sugar cane, after the juice has been crushed from it, has been found suitable for manufacturing into paper.
CARD OF THANKS
We, the undersigned, desire to express our heartfelt thanks to the friends and neighbors, for the sympathy and kindness shown us during our resent bereavement, also for the many beautiful floral remembrances sent in by friends.
H. F. KEALIHER
MR. AND MRS. F. B. KEALIHER
To finance the great welfare work among our boys in Khaki vast sums are needed. To make it possible for this work to continue, and to expand as the rapidly growing numbers of our soldiers boys and their correspondingly large requirements for welfare work make necessary, $170,500,000 is to be raised by the nation during the coming United War Work Campaign.
This vast sum is to be used by seven large welfare organizations, which are now unceasing in their efforts to provide our boys at the front, in cantonments, or wherever they may be, with these things which are necessary for their bodily and morale welfare.
The organizations, which are accomplishing this splendid work, and through whom our dollars will go to the boys as helping hands, are The Young Men's Christian Association, The Young Women's Christian Association, Knights of Columbus, National Catholic's War Council, Jewish Welfare Board, American Library Association and its War Camp Community Service, and The Salvation Army.
Who of us have not heard of the great good resulting from the work which is now carried on by those organizations and the wonderful stories told by the soldier boys of what has been done for them by those faithful workers who are ever among them, no matter where they are. Marshall Foch, General Pershing, President Wilson and other great leaders of the Allied Nations, praise the welfare work highly, and state that its moral effect on the boys is wonderful and indispensable.
Salvation Army doughnuts in the front-line trenches are possible only if the people respond to the appeal which will be made to them during the coming campaign for funds. The value of this work by the Salvation Army
A HALF-CENTURY CREED
NOW
A War Time Necessity
VALUE FIRST
NOW THAT ECONOMY HAS BEOME A DUTY, WE ARE DETERMINED, MORE THAN EVER, TO USE ALL OUR RESOURCES
IN MAINTAINING THE HIGH STANDARD WHICH FOR MORE
THAN FIFTY YEARS HAS DISTINGUISHED MICHAELS-STERN
"VALUE-FIRST" CLOTHES.
JACKSON'S MEN'S WEAR SHOP
YOUR MONEY'S WORTH ALWAYS
ANAHEIM
ANAHEIM FEED and FUEL CO.
DEALERS IN
Wood, Coal, Hay, Grain
Seeds and Flour
PUBLIC WEIGHING SCALES
Phones: Pacific 317, Home 294
R. W. McClellan, W. D. Grafton, Props.
Wood, Coal, Hay, Grain Seeds and Flour
PUBLIC WEIGHING SCALES
Phones: Pacific 317, Home 294
R. W. McClellan, W. D. Grafton, Props.
lassies has been spoken of again and again in war dispatches.
Of the $170,500,000 to be raised nationally, $3,500,000 will be spent by the American Library Association, who supplies books to the soldiers.
To establish its war camp community service for the soldiers and sailors, in cities adjacent to camps, $15,000,000 of this fund is required.
Woman are playing an important part in war work, and of this big sum, $15,000,000 will be used by the Y. W. C. A.; among the women munition workers and extending the work in hostess houses in the camps.
With its work already established in England, France and Italy, with 150 buildings serving soldiers in American camps, the $30,000,000 to be raised in the drive for the Knights of the Columbus will be used by them to extend its work at home and overseas. A total of $3,000,000 will be used by the Jewish Welfare Board among Jewish soldiers of the nation.
Since the Y. M. C. A. instituted its war work aboard the transports carrying American troops across the Atlantic, it has served more than 1,000,000 men. It has distributed 2,000,000 song books and sheets of music, given 2000 motion picture entertainments, delivered 5000 educational lectures and distributed more than 200,000 books to the soldiers.
The Y. M. C. A. hut is the enlisted man's home, and it is to keep these homes at his service night and day as long as he wants it that a portion of his fund is to go to the Y. M. C. A. work.
Anaheim's quota has not been determined, nor the exact date for the opening of its campaign, but under the direction of F. N. Gibbs, chairman of the local United War Work Campaign Committee, the committee is being formed and the plans made for the campaign, which will again show that Anaheim and her patriotic citizens realize their obligations to the boys in Khaki and navy blue and to the
NEW REGULATION
The exemption board has received new physical regulations which provide for a number of changes. Registrants heretofore placed in deferred remediable group B by their physical examinations in most instances will be transferred to limited service group C, and will be called for service as their order numbers are reached. The local board has about 50 men in remediable group B at the present time.
The local exemption board has placed Wm. Geo. Hill of Garden Grove in Class 5, Division G, following physical examination. The transfer is from Class 1. Raymond Hinchey, Placentia, is given the same classification and for the same reason.
The local board has called registrants for physical examination as follows:
Monday, Oct. 28—Frederick M. Aannons, Brea; Frederick R. Aldrich, Seal Beach; Wayne W. Amack, Anaheim; Alfred L. Allen, Garden Grove; George G. Allen, Anaheim; Melville D. Allen, Garden Grove; Webb A. Andrews, Buena Park; Joseph M. Arguelo, Anaheim; Walter T. Baudy, Anaheim; Denis V. Basseke, Los Alamitos; Fred C. Pentzla, Anaheim; William M. Bigelow, Anaheim; John W. Bleeker, Anaheim; Henry J. Braneschi, Anaheim; Lawrence C. Broady, Anaheim; Perley B. Brown, Fullerton; Oscar J. Bryant, La Habra; Harry R. Bullock, Huntington Beach; Ellsworth Burrier, Anaheim; Arthur W. Byers, Fullerton.
Tuesday, Oct. 29—Luther M. Carker, Brea; Andrew Carlson, Anaheim; John E. Carrier, Fullerton; Timothy J. Carroll, Seal Beach; Ralph H. Carvajal, Anaheim; Frederick M. Caughill, Brea; John C. Cawthor, Anaheim; Edwin W. Clark, Brea; Henry E. Coffman, Brea; Albert R. Collins, Brea; Arthur L. Cone, Brea; Joseph N. Conger, Placentia; John Contreras, Brea; Robert E. Corcoran, Fullerton; Clinton Creamer, Huntington Beach;
ROOSEVELT'S OPINION
Commenting on President Wilson's appeal to the people to return a Democratic Congress in the November election if they approve of his course, Col. Theodore Roosevelt said:
"The President's statement is an announcement that he is a partisan leader first and President of all the people second.
"It is, of course, the repudation of one of his former statements to the effect that politics was adjourned—a statement which, of course, he has already repudiated by his action.
"I have no comment just at this moment, but I will deal with the matter after I have had time to read the document which all good Americans will regard as the most lamentable appeal to politics ever made by a President during a great war which has been heartily supported by all good citizens without regard to party, but which so far as there have been party differences at all has been more heartily supported by his political opponents than by his political friends."
FOR SALE—Ford Touring car, new rubber, electric lights, shock absorber, speedometer, gas saver, good mileage. Extras. J. C. HEEREN, Placentia Ave., between Syracuse and North sts.
Oct. 31—3t
Authorized Publicity
NOTICE TO ORANGE COUNTY VOTERS
Write my name on blank line under name of WALTER EDEN printed on ballot for Nov. 5, for Member of the Assembly, 76th district. If elected, I will vote at Sacramento against adoption of prohibition amendment to the Constitution of the United States. Vote NO on Propositions 1 and 2 on ballot; and vote for Theodore Bell for governor, and for Frank C. Jordan for Secretary of State.
Very truly yours,
GEORGE BAUER,
Orange and Lemon Grower in East Anaheim Precinct; Residence, 233 S. Philadelphia street, Anaheim, Cal.