anaheim-gazette 1918-12-05
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CALIFORNIA BOYS RETURNING TO OLD JOBS
STATE COUNCIL OF DEFENSE TO NOTIFY EACH SOLDIER THAT HIS POSITION IS WAITING
CRIPPLED MEN WILL BE GIVEN WORK IN KEEPING WITH STRENGTH AND ABILITY
California is going to point the way for the re-employment of all her soldiers, sailors and war workers. C. C. Moore, president of the State Council of Defense, wired the Council of National Defense for the name, location and strength of every unit of California men in the army or in the navy. He asks that every man be notified that the California State Council of Defense insures him his old pre-war job back or will supply him with a better one.
The field section of the Council of National Defense has sent this message to every bureau and office in the war and navy departments and the list will be prepared and forwarded to the state council as soon as possible.
In the meantime every man from the Golden State is getting the message:
"Get in touch with California State Council of Defense. It has your old job or a better one ready for you."
Some of the California troops are at Camp Mcade, where they have just resumed their work problem, distribute prosperity and resume the great work of peace.
ANOTHER ACQUISITION TO OUR PRODUCTS
Get Some Seed and Give This New Bean a Trial
Periodically there comes a report of some new bean which is to revolutionize back door gardening, but most such stories, when traced down to their origin, fail to materialize. Considerable publicity has been given the Mammoth Bush lima bean at one time or other during the last year or two, but apparently this bean is breaking the rule by delivering the goods. At least such is the experience of J. L. Harrod, of No. 1443 Yale street, Santa Monica, who has been giving it a trial for two years.
One of the unique features of this bean is that in favorable localities it is a perennial, living and bearing for a number of years. Last year in May, Mr. Harrod planted two city lots 48x187 feet each to Mammoth Bush limas; the plants being set six feet apart. He received quite a crop last year and was well satisfied with its performance although he found some difficulty in introducing it into the markets on account of a certain prejudice, probably based more on its newness than anything else. The plants yielded well until after Christmas and came through the winter in good condition. This summer he had plenty of fine lima beans to sell in June, at least a month earlier than the regular limas come on. So far this season (and the plants are still bearing.) he says he has harvested 5814 pounds of first-class salable beans from his two lots. His returns from the beans, he reports, have been $260.82.
Mr. Harrod is employed in Los An-
sive training in welfare work, c/o from every sectile be graduated even this new national places in the industrial center as overseas and Service Club war-time organization of the war, the fare workers to position and demobilize be increased rate declared by lead Catholic War Co.
Domestic science, social well first aid, bookkeeper nursing, rhetoric inspiration structure activity the field and art and courtesies, jects in which it be constantly given women candidate school. The "s" and service and hard work checates of good health the only require didates between years, who receive lodging free. As has had the larva housing the new over to it in unused set to rights by selves.
Close co-operative department, then and other government concerned with of reconstruction munitions, is to National Catholic lecting its plans among women
National Defense has sent this message to every bureau and office in the war and navy departments and the list will be prepared and forwarded to the state council as soon as possible.
In the meantime every man from the Golden State is getting the message:
"Get in touch with California State Council of Defense. It has your old job or a better one ready for you."
Some of the California troops are at Camp Meade, where they have just returned from a round trip across the Atlantic without ever getting off the ship. They were en route when the armistice was signed and they were shipped back to prepare for demobilization at the earliest moment.
These men will get in touch with Mr. Moore at once and will arrange to return to California and their pre-war professions or work as soon as the military details can be arranged.
Several hundred thousand men will go back to civilian life in this country in the next sixty days and every Californian is wanted to doff his uniform in the State for which he enlisted and go back to the task he left to whip the Hun.
California has a great task of readjustment and much work to do, according to the officials of the Council of National Defense. It has its greatest opportunity and wants all Californians to share in this, particularly the men who joined the colors.
California wants no loss in population and she wants her own back—that is the way the case has been put up to Washington, and that is the reason the war and navy departments have orders to get out the California list ahead of everything else and help the land of the Argonauts replenish the field and forge with its own sons and adopted sons from every State in the Union.
California, as everyone knows, exceeded its quotas for everything—money, men and supplies—and depleted its industrial army by enlistments in the army and navy to such an extent that it would have had to supply no men on the later draft calls if the State could have received credit for its voluntary enlistments. Now to reward these men and to make the State of California safe for prosperity, every returning warrior is guaranteed a job, and a good one.
What California does the whole United States will do, for the plan to be used in the land of sunshine and gold will be used in all the other forty-seven States. California proposes as early as possible to put every returning fighter back in the town and countryside else. The plants yielded well until after Christmas and came through the winter in good condition. This summer he had plenty of fine lima beans to sell in June, at least a month earlier than the regular limas come on. So far this season (and the plants are still bearing) he says he has harvested 5814 pounds of first-class salable beans from his two lots. His returns from the beans, he reports, have been $260.82.
Mr. Harrod is employed in Los Angeles during the day and has found time to care for the beans mornings and evenings. He states that once established, practically all of the work consists in picking the beans, as the vines interlace, forming a solid mat, preventing cultivation. Mr. Harrod's beans have never been irrigated.
FISH MEAL FOR HOGS
To stimulate greater interest in the production of fish meal, which is a good substitute for tankage in the feeding of hogs, E. Z. Russell, in charge of swine investigations for the United States Department of Agriculture, recently visited a number of fisheries along the Gulf coast as well as a number of marketing centers in the South. Tests conducted by the department show that fish meal is equal in feeding value to tankage. It contains about 57 per cent protein. It is made by drying non-edible fish and grinding fine. This meal is being used at the government farm at Beltsville, Md., to replace tankage. The menhaden fisheries on the Atlantic coast can produce annually 10,000 tons of fish meal. Fisheries along the Gulf states and Mississippi river have been wasting or manufacturing as fertilizer large quantities of non-edible fish. Mr. Russell's visit to the Gulf states was to investigate the feasibility and to urge the fisheries to manufacture these non-edible fish into fish meal for swine feeding.
SWATTING THE CODLIN MOTH
* County Horticultural Commissioner Kells, of Los Angeles, spent the past week continuing the destruction of the colding moth.
Every sack containing walnut culls that can be located is carefully treated with a steaming process that exterminates the moth germ.
The commissioner believes the pest will not develop into a menace the coming season. This is absolutely the only way of efficiently handling the problem, which has become a grave one to anything else. The plants yielded well until after Christmas and came through the winter in good condition. This summer he had plenty of fine lima beans to sell in June, at least a month earlier than the regular limas come on. So far this season (and the plants are still bearing) he says he has harvested 5814 pounds of first-class salable beans from his two lots. His returns from the beans, he reports, have been $260.82.
Mr. Harrod is employed in Los Angeles during the day and has found time to care for the beans mornings and evenings. He states that once established, practically all of the work consists in picking the beans, as the vines interlace, forming a solid mat, preventing cultivation. Mr. Harrod's beans have never been irrigated.
While the peppers stand ever best interests of the betterment of coming thick sewer is one of day, and many venture with faction with land for park advocated by we further say two also heartily end.
One bond year, and possibly and may be people in the not fast projects are of people in the not fast projects are of people in the not fast projects are of people in the not fast projects are of people in the not fast projects are of people in the not fast projects are of people in the not fast projects are of people in the not fast projects are of people in the not fast projects are of people in the not fast projects are of people in the not fast projects are of people in the not fast projects are of people in the not fast projects are of people in
State could have received credit for its voluntary enlistments. Now to reward these men and to make the State of California safe for prosperity, every returning warrior is guaranteed a job, and a good one.
What California does the whole United States will do, for the plan to be used in the land of sunshine and gold will be used in all the other forty-seven States. California proposes as early as possible to put every returning fighter back in the town and county from which he enlisted. Every unit will be checked up—every wounded man will be located and when he is ready to take up his old life a job will be ready. If he has to change his line of work on account of his wounds or sickness he will be given new work that is in keeping with his strength and ability.
Director Moore has advised the Washington officials that the whole machinery of the council will be devoted to matching jobs with men and replacing the State as nearly as possible industrially as it was before the war. Labor officials and, in fact, all officers of the various departments of the Federal organization are watching California as never before, for the situation is regarded as critical.
Many employers of labor are planning to get on as best they can, feeling that they have a moral obligation to their employees to remain in operation that the employees may have work. In face of this many strikes are being called and in most instances the employers are relieved that the responsibility for closing down is being taken from them and placed by the men on their own shoulders.
In view of this condition the attitude of California and the State Council is attracting much interest and commendation as the correct way to readjust
County Horticultural Commissioner Kells, of Los Angeles, spent the past week continuing the destruction of the colding moth.
Every sack containing walnut culls that can be located is carefully treated with a steaming process that exterminates the moth germ.
The commissioner believes the pest will not develop into a menace the coming season. This is absolutely the only way of efficiently handling the problem, which has become a grave one to the walnut growers in California.
Mr. Ralph Davis, entomologist of the California University, has arrived and is doing the field work of the service in this part of the State. No details, however small, remain unperformed in battling the destructive pest.
It is learned that to wait until the coming season to continue the fight will be ineffective. The moth enters the flower when the trees are in bloom. In process of time the moth develops into the destructive agency and the nut is attacked from within.
Every grove in Southern California has been visited within the past few days by some expert of the government or state, or their duly accredited agent. The millions of dollars involved in the coming crop prompted the authorities to speedy and effective action. The crop this year was a record-breaker in point of quality and profit. The coming yield promises to be even better.
CATHOLIC WAR WORK
To turn out trained women workers to battle with reconstruction problems at home and overseas, the National Catholic Service School was opened on Georgetown Heights, near Washington, Monday, as the latest link in the chain of war work institutions of the National Catholic War Council. After inten-
PROSPER-WORK OF
PRODUCTS
This New
report of revolution-post such to their consideration the Mamtime or two, but taking the At least Harrod, Monica, for two of this series it is being for a in May, lots 48x with limas; heart. He dear and perform-missility tickets on, probacess than ended well through it. This same lima a month come on. Grants are harvest-salable returns have been Los Ansive training in social, military and welfare work, classes of forty women from every section of this country will be graduated every six weeks from this new national school to take their places in the army of reconstruction workers that is to be thrown into the industrial centers of America, as well as overseas and in the Visitors Houses and Service Clubs maintained by this war-time organization. With the end of the war, the need for trained welfare workers to cope with reconstruction and demobilization conditions will be increased rather than lessened, it is declared by leaders of the National Catholic War Council.
Domestic science, military organization, social welfare and recreation, first aid, bookkeeping and statistics, home nursing, religious, social and patriotic inspiration of war and reconstruction activities with a survey of the field and agencies, law, customs and courtesies, are some of the subjects in which intensive training is to be constantly given by experts to the women candidates at this service school. The "spirit of self-sacrifice and service and the willingness to do hard work cheerfully," with certificates of good health and character are the only requirements for women candidates between the ages of 20 and 50 years, who receive tuition, board and lodging free. As a test, the first class has had the large "Clifton" mansion, housing the new service school, turned over to it in unsettled condition, to be set to rights by the students themselves.
Close co-operation with the ordnance department, the department of labor and other government departments concerned with the pressing problems of reconstruction in industrial communities, is to be maintained by the National Catholic War Council in projecting its plans for mobilizing its new army of women welfare workers.
AFTER THE PACKERS
The Federal Trade Commission, in a supplemental report, submitted to Congress, charged the five big meat packing companies of the country with a combination in restraint of trade.
Swift & Co., Armour & Co., Morris & Co., Wilson & Co., Inns., and the Cuuahy Packing Company are named.
The principal conclusion to be drawn from this mass of evidence, the report says, is:
That the five companies exchange confidential information which is not made available to their competitors and employ jointly paid agents to secure information which is used to control and manipulate livestock markets.
Denials that the packing companies named in the report of the Federal Trade Commission are guilty of restraining trade or of conspiracy to control the prices of livestock or fresh treats, were made by officials of the accused concerns.
FOOD AND GOVERNMENT
In a larger sense, perhaps, than anyone but a Herbert Hoover could possibly realize the American farmer is bound during the next year or two to shape the destinies of the world. Upon his efforts in food production will actually depend in a great measure the political future of a large part of Europe. Food and government may not appear at first thought to bear much relation to one another, but any student of history and of the present momentou events overseas will upon consideration appreciate what a potent influence hunger can be in the affairs of nations. The French Revolution showed to what extremes of fanaticism men could go when driven by famine and suffering, and the same tragic drama is being re-enacted before our
They Say
While the present board of trustees stand ever ready to promote the best interests of the city, projects for the betterment of the community are coming thick and fast. An outfall sewer is one of the essentials of the day, and many people look upon the venture with favor. The acquisition of land for park purposes is also being advocated by well known citizens, who further say two-thirds of the voters also heartily endorse the project.
One bond issue within the next year, and possibly two, are in the making and may be submitted to the people in the not far distant future. Both projects are of utmost importance to the people, and already a campaign of education has been inaugurated by the wide-awake citizens of the community.
A member of one of the wholesale liquor firms in town has his affairs so arranged as to allow for his removal from town after the closing of the wet goods emporiums the first of the year, and he says it will be many a long day before he returns. He says he is going to board up the front entrance of his building upon which will be placed a large sign, bearing the inscription, "Closed by Prohibition."
The Hun systematically robbed the peoples he conquered of all the food he could lay his hands on, seizing the crops in the fields and warehouses and driving off the live stock. When the food situation at the battle front became desperate he did the same thing with his own civilian producers. Everywhere he has left starving men, women and children to shift for themselves, since the Allied nations brought him to his knees.
Today the peoples, crushed and outraged by the Kaiser’s armies, stand amid the ruins of their homes and governments afcing famine. The inevitable is happening. Because their disorganized governments cannot supply them with food, they are turning with the frenzy of beasts to rend everyone who stands for authority and social restraint. As long as the oppressor stood over them they suffered in mute agony. Now they turn to red revolution and anarchy. And food in nourishing and sustaining quantity is the only thing that will bring them back to their senses.
America alone at this juncture can preserve or establish sane government for these people that have been driven insane by war and its horrors, for only America has the food to send to them. And the whole responsibility comes back to the American farmer. The comment is not made in the spirit of urging the farmer to rise to a realization of the big emergency and his own responsibility. There has been too much o that kind of thing, for the farmer hasn’t required and doesn’t require any particular urging to do his part, and has quite obviously understood his responsibilities quite as well as have his innumerable advisers. The statement is set forth simply as a fact, as fact so significant and noteworthy and withal so extraordinary that it commands attention.
Much of Europe is today in a chaos of social disorganization and the situation seems fraught with tragic possibilities (there are 44 republicans), 30 represent the so-called “solid South” and eight others were born in the South, so that in the senate there are 38 democrats who are sympathetic with and responsive to Southern interests.
Of the 75 committees of the senate about one-third are useless and practically do not function at all. Of the 21 chairmanships assigned to republicans all of them belong to this list. None of them are of any importance.
Nearly every important committee in the senate has a Southern democrat for its chairman. Among these are the committees on appropriations, commerce, District of Columbia, finance, immigration, inter-oceanic canals, interstate commerce, judiciary, manufactures, naval affairs, post offices and post roads, as well as another committee which is at any crisis in the parliamentary affairs of the senate the most important of all—the committee on rules, of which Lee Overman, a democrat of North Carolina, is chairman.
Analysis of these chairmanship assignments shows that for the most part senators from Southern States are holding a monopoly of the direction of practically all important national policies and all legislation affecting the activities of the nation. They direct the raising of revenues, appropriation of money, control of finance and banking, shipping, education and labor, agriculture and immigration, canals, railroads and other forms of transportation, army, navy, public health and other national affairs.
When Northern and Western democratic senators have been given chairmanships, with only two notable exceptions, the business has been peculiarly local to their sections. For instance, Senator Ashurst of Arizona has been given Indian affairs, Senator Phelan of California, irrigation and reclamation, a peculiarly Western affair, and Senator Henderson of Nevada has mines and mining, also largely political future of a large part of Europe. Food and government may not appear at first thought to bear much relation to one another, but any student of history and of the present momentou events overseas will upon consideration appreciate what a potent influence hunger can be in the affairs of nations. The French Revolution showed to what extremes of fanaticism men could go when driven by famine and suffering, and the same tragic drama is being re-enacted before our very eyes today n Central and Eastern Europe.
The Hun systematically robbed the peoples he conquered of all the food he could lay his hands on, seizing the crops in the fields and warehouses and driving off the live stock. When the food situation at the battle front became desperate he did the same thing with his own civilian producers. Everywhere he has left starving men, women and children to shift for themselves, since the Allied nations brought him to his knees.
Today the peoples, crushed and outraged by the Kaiser’s armies, stand amid the ruins of their homes and governments afcing famine. The inevitable is happening. Because their disorganized governments cannot supply them with food, they are turning with the frenzy of beasts to rend everyone who stands for authority and social restraint. As long as the oppressor stood over them they suffered in mute agony. Now they turn to red revolution and anarchy. And food in nourishing and sustaining quantity is the only thing that will bring them back to their senses.
America alone at this juncture can preserve or establish sane government for these people that have been driven insane by war and its horrors, for only America has the food to send to them. And the whole responsibility comes back to the American farmer. The comment is not made in the spirit of urging the farmer to rise to a realization of the big emergency and his own responsibility. There has been too much o that kind of thing, for the farmer hasn't required and doesn't require any particular urging to do his part, and has quite obviously understood his responsibilities quite as well as have his innumerable advisers. The statement is set forth simply as a fact, as fact so significant and noteworthy and withal so extraordinary that it commands attention.
Much of Europe is today in a chaos of social disorganization and the situation seems fraught with tragic possibilities (there are 44 republicans), 30 represent the so-called “solid South” and eight others were born in the South, so that in the senate there are 38 democrats who are sympathetic with and responsive to Southern interests.
Of the 75 committees of the senate about one-third are useless and practically do not function at all. Of the 21 chairmanships assigned to republicans all of them belong to this list. None of them are of any importance.
Nearly every important committee in the senate has a Southern democrat for its chairman. Among these are the committees on appropriations, commerce, District of Columbia, finance, immigration, inter-oceanic canals, interstate commerce, judiciary, manufactures, naval affairs, post offices and post roads, as well as another committee which is at any crisis in the parliamentary affairs of the senate the most important of all—the committee on rules, of which Lee Overman, a democrat of North Carolina, is chairman.
Analysis of these chairmanship assignments shows that for the most part senators from Southern States are holding a monopoly of the direction of practically all important national policies and all legislation affecting the activities of the nation. They direct the raising of revenues, appropriation of money, control of finance and banking, shipping, education and labor, agriculture and immigration, canals, railroads and other forms of transportation, army, navy, public health and other national affairs.
When Northern and Western democratic senators have been given chairmanships, with only two notable exceptions, the business has been peculiarly local to their sections. For instance, Senator Ashurst of Arizona has been given Indian affairs, Senator Phelan of California, irrigation and reclamation, a peculiarly Western affair, and Senator Henderson of Nevada has mines and mining, also largely political future of a large part of Europe. Food and government may not appear at first thought to bear much relation to one another, but any student of history and of the present momentou events overseas will upon consideration appreciate what a potent influence hunger can be in the affairs of nations. The French Revolution showed to what extremes of fanaticism men could go when driven by famine and suffering, and the same tragic drama is being re-enacted before our very eyes today n Central and Eastern Europe.
The Hun systematically robbed the peoples he conquered of all the food he could lay his hands on, seizing the crops in the fields and warehouses and driving off the live stock. When the food situation at the battlefront became desperate he did the same thing with his own civilian producers. Everywhere he has left starving men, women and children to shift for themselves, since the Allied nations brought him to his knees.
Today the peoples, crushed and outraged by the Kaiser’s armies, stand amid the ruins of their homes和goverments afcing famine. The inevitable is happening. Because their disorganized governments cannot supply them with food, they are turning with the frenzy of beasts to rend everyone who stands for authority and social restraint. As long asthe oppressor stood over them they suffered in mute agony. Now they turn to red revolution and anarchy. And food in nourishing and sustaining quantity isthe only thing that will bring them back to their senses.
America alone at this juncture can preserve or establish sane government for these people that have been driven insane by war and its horrors,for only America has the food to send to them.Andthe whole responsibility comes back tothe American farmer.The comment is not made inthe spiritof urgingthe farmerto risetoarealizationofthebigemergencyandhisownresponsibilityTherehasbeentomuchothatkindofthing,forkothefarmerhasn'trequiredanddoesn'trequireanyparticularurgingtodohispart,andhasquiteobviouslyunderstoodhisresponsibilitiesquiteaswellashavehisinnumerableadvisers.Thestatementissetforthsimplyasfactfassosignificantandnoteworthyandwithalsoextraordinarythatitcommandsattention.
MuchofEuropeis todayinchaosofsocialdisorganizationandthe Situationseemsfraugiwithtragicpossi
the senate(thereare44republicans),30representtheso-called"solidSouth"andeightotherswerebornintheSouth,sоthatinthesenatethereare38democratswhoaresympatheticwithandresponsivetoSoutherninterests.
Ofthe75committeesofthesenateaboutone-thirdareuselessandpracticallydofunctionatall.Ofthe21chairmanshipsassignedtorepublicansallofthemenbelongtothislist.Noneofthemenareofanyimportance.
NearlyeveryimportantcommitteeinthesenatehasaSoutherndemocratforitschairman.Amongthecommitteesonappropriations.commerce,DistrictofColumbia Financeimmigration,interoceaniccanals.interstatecommerce,judiciary,mufactures,navalaffairs,postofficesandpostroads.aswellasanothercommitteewhichisatanycrisisintheparliamentaryaffairsofthesenatethemostimportantoftheall-thecommitteeonrules.ofwhichLeeOverman,ademocratofNorthCarolina.ischairman.
AnalysisofthechairmanshipassignmentsshowsthatforthemostpartsenatorsfromSouthernStatesareholdingamonopolyofthedirectionofpracticallyallimportantnationalpoliciesandalllegislationaffectingtheactivitiesofthenation.Thedirectreducingofrevenues.appropriationofmoney.controloffinanceandbanking.shipping,educationandlabor.cultureandimmigration,canals,railroadsandotherformsoftransportation Army,navy,publichealthandothernationalaffairs.
WhenNorthernandWesterndemocraticsenatorshavebeengivenchairmanshipswithonlytwonotableexceptions,thebusinesshasbeenpeculiarlylocaltothiersections.Forsinstance,SenatorAshurstofArizonahasbeengivenIndianaffairs,SenatorPhelanofCalifornia,irrigationandreclamation,apeculiarlyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevadahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevadahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevadahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevadahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevadahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevadahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevadahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevadahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevadahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevadahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevadahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevadahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevadahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevadahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevadahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevadahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevadahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevdahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevdahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevdahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevdahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevdahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevdahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevdahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevdahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevdahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevdahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevdahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevdahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevdahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevdahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevdahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevdahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevdahasminesandminingalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevdahasmininesandministriesofthenation.Thedirectreducingofrevenues.appropriationofmoney.controloffinance和banking.shipping,education和labor.culture和immigration,canals,railroads和otherformsoftransportation Army,navy,publichealth和othernationalaffairs.
WhenNorthern和Westerndemocraticsenatorshavebeengivenchairmanshipswithonlytwonotableexceptions,thebusinesshasbeenpeculiarlylocaltothiersections.Forsinstance,SenatorAshurstofArizonahasbeengivenIndianaffairs,SenatorPhelanofCalifornia,irrigation和reclamation,apeculiarlyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevdahasmines和miningsalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevdahasminines和miningsalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevdahasminines和miningsalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevdahasminines和miningsalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevdahasminines和miningsalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffair,SenatorHendersonofNevdahasminines和miningsalso largeliespeciallyWesternaffir
A member of one of the wholesale liquor firms in town has his affairs so arranged as to allow for his removal from town after the closing of the wet goods emporiums the first of the year, and he says it will be many a long day before he returns. He says he is going to board up the front entrance of his building upon which will be placed a large sign, bearing the inscription, "Closed by Prohibition."
A native of Gospel Swamp came to town Thursday to see the sights and as he marvelled at the wonderful progress made here since his former visit, he felt overjoyed and began to celebrate in bibulous fashion. The ballast taken on was too weighty for convenient passage and an unfeeling cop escorted the visitor to the cooler. After being placed behind the bars he became imbued with a feeling of resentful hate and wanted to get out. His voice was raised to a high key and could be plainly heard for several city blocks. Repeated admonitions to resist met with no avail. He didn't like the interior frescoes of his unwelcome abode, and yelled for his liberation. His language was unrefined, and he wanted to fight. Finally the officer in charge got the hose in working order and a premature bath had a soothing effect, and the native decided to be calm while he waited for the time to arrive to get his sentence.
Suit over possession of property at Anaheim has been brought by Ernest Froman against Hattie Richards. It is alleged that under a lease agreement there is rent due from the defendant since October 1. For failure to give up the place $300 damages is asked.
The South controls the democratic party. The democratic party controls congress, therefore, the South controls the nation in practically all of its important legislation, as it also controls the nation in practically all of its administration in the present war. These facts receive renewed attention now at the end of the congressional elections. They seem to be worth reiteration and a little detailed study.
To understand the sectionalism that prevails in the assignment of the chairmanship of committees of both houses of congress under a democratic administration, the basic facts must be first considered. Of the 52 democrats in
When Northern and Western democratic senators have been given chairmanships, with only two notable exceptions, the business has been peculiarly local to their sections. For instance, Senator Ashurst of Arizona has been given Indian affairs, Senator Phelan of California, irrigation and reclamation, a peculiarly Western affair, and Senator Henderson of Nevada has mines and mining, also largely a Western affair.
In the house of representatives sectionalism and Southern domination is even more pronounced than in the senate.
There are 61 house committees and the chairman of 43 of them is a Southern democrat. Democrats from the North and West, representing 31 different states, have been allotted only 21 chairmanships—and these are of a minor character. In other words, Northern democrats representing two-thirds of the states in the union and even a much greater proportion of the population, wealth, industrial, agricultural and business interests, are cut off with only one-third of the chairmanships in the house of representatives.
Even the chairmanships allotted to the Southern democrats are a very "close corporation." Out of 61 house chairmanships, 34, or over half of them, are kept within the democratic membership from nine Southern states.
Never in the history of this republic has the power of determining national policies ever been concentrated in the hands of so few men or so monopolized by a handful of states. It unpleasantly reminds one of the manner in which, by similar methods, the state of Prussia is able to dictate to the entire German empire, regardless of the will or
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Royal Baking Powder Co., New York
are 44 republicans), so-called "solid South" were born in the Senate there are sympathetic love to Southern influence. Members of the senate use useless and practice at all. Of the assigned to republican belong to this list of any importance. Important committee among these are the appropriations, commission Columbia, finance, oceanic canals, insurance, judiciary, manuaries, post offices and another committee crisis in the part of the senate the all—the committee Lee Overman, a Carolina, is chair.
The chairmanship as that for the most Southern States are by the direction of important national pollution affecting the nation. They direct venues, appropriation of finance and bank-ization and labor, agitation, canals, railforms of transportation/public health and affairs.
And Western demos have been given chairly two notable express has been peculiar sections. For in-hurst of Arizona has affairs, Senator Phe irrigation and relatively Western af Henderson of Nevada, also largely wishes or interests of the other states of Germany.
The feeling and attitude on this subject of the Southern democrats was expressed by Representative Whit Martin of Louisiana on April 25 last when Speaker Clark was considering being appointed to the vacant Missouri senatorship. In the New Orleans "Item" on that date Representative Martin declared that Speaker Clark should not resign his place in the lower house. He said: "I would virtually disorganize the house. Clark's probable successor as speaker would be Claude Kitchin, and while Kitchin of North Carolina is chairman of ways and means we have a Southern man in charge of the Tariff. Then if Kitchin succeeds Champ Clark as speaker, Kitchin's probable successor as chairman of ways and means would be Henry T. Rainey of Illinois. I am not reflecting on Representative Rainey, but that means a Northern man controlling the Tariff."
Speaker Clark did not resign, although the republicans in the house had assured him that no attempt would be made to displace the democratic organization or to elect in his stead a republican speaker. The fear existing at that time, and which is evidently an ever present fear, was not only and chiefly concerning republican control, but was more especially directed at the possibility of Northern control, either democratic or republican.
HOKE AT BAT
Senator Hokus Smith, of Georgia, has shown the war trade board the political expediency of taking off the export restriction on cotton, probably with a view to loading up Germany with this commodity as soon as little matters with regard to the late unpleasantness in Europe are smoothed over to the satisfaction of both groups of belligerents. Hoke is the best ambassador King Cotton ever sent to the National Capitol. He is the one, it will before this government was urged into the war against the Hun. But Hoke had no particular comment to make when the Huns blew the Lusitania to Kingdom Come. His attitude, as we remember, was that Americans who traveled on the seas while the war was on were to blame for any consequences of their foolhardiness, but that every bale of Dixie down was sacrosanct. Incidentally let it be remarked that government regulation of wheat and other Western and Northern products will continue, both as to price and as to destination.
H. W. Mallory, of 1411 Devisadero street, San Francisco, was almost instantly killed Sunday when his motorcycle collided with an automobile driven by John Lee, a Brea rancher. A companion named Anderson, also from San Francisco, who was riding in the motorcycle's side car, escaped uninjured. Mallory was thrown under Lee's car and his neck broken. He died at the Fullerton hospital within a few minutes after the accident. The collision occurred at Ashley corner, a dangerous spot on the state highway east of La Habra. Nothing is known of the two San Franciscans here. They were apparently traveling through when the collision occurred.
NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT
Providential Oil Company, a corporation having its principal place of business at San Diego, California, with location of works at Orange County, California.
Notice is hereby given that at a meeting of the Directors held on the 2nd day of December, 1918, an assessment of five cents per share was levied upon the capital stock of the corporation, payable December 3rd, 1918, to the Secretary of this Corporation at the Southern Trust & Commerce Bank, Trustee for this Corporation, the address of the Southern Trust & Commerce Bank being Third and Broadway, City of San Diego, County of San Diego, State of California, (the post office address of said bank being Third & Broadway, San Diego, California); that any stock upon which this assessment shall remain unpaid on the 15th day of January, 1918, shall be delinquent; said last mentioned date being hereby fixed as the date on which unpaid assessments shall be delinquent; that February 15th
Senator Hokus Smith, of Georgia, has shown the war trade board the political expediency of taking off the export restriction on cotton, probably with a view to loading up Germany with this commodity as soon as little matters with regard to the late unpleasantness in Europe are smoothed over to the satisfaction of both groups of belligerents. Hoke is the best ambassador King Cotton ever sent to the National Capitol. He is the one, it will be remembered, who raised such a fog when the English were holding up shipments of cotton to Germany, being in the superior court.
Of the State of California, in and for the County of Orange.
In the Matter of the Application of Thomas Crawford, (Inc.), a Corporation, to change its Corporate name to Exchange Orange Products Company.
Order.
The petition of Thomas Crawford, (Inc.), a corporation made in its behalf by its President and Secretary, and which petition is also signed by a majority of the Directors thereof, praying that the name of said Thomas Crawford, (Inc.), be changed to "Exchange Orange Products Company," having been filed in this Court, and good cause appearing therefor.
It is Ordered and Directed that all persons interested in said corporation or in said matter be and appear in said Superior Court of the State of California, in Department One thereof, at the Court House in the City of Santa Ana, said County and State, on Friday, the 10th day of January, 1919, at the hour of 10 o'clock A.M. of said day, then and there to show cause, if any they have, why said application, as stated in said petition filed herein by said corporation, and its directors, as aforesaid, praying and proposing to change the name of said corporation from "Thomas Crawford, (Inc.)" to "Exchange Orange Products Company," should not be granted.
It is Further Ordered that a copy of this order be published once a week for successive weeks in The Anaheim Gazette, a newspaper of general circulation printed and published in said County of Orange, State of California.
Done in open Court this 3rd day of December, 1918.
Z. B. WEST,
Judge of said Superior Court.
Dec. 5-5t
Notice is hereby given that at a meeting of the Directors held on the 2nd day of December, 1918, an assessment of five cents per share was levied upon the capital stock of the corporation, payable December 3rd, 1918, to the Secretary of this Corporation at the Southern Trust & Commerce Bank, Trustee for this Corporation, the address of the Southern Trust & Commerce Bank being Third and Broadway, City of San Diego, County of San Diego, State of California, (the post office address of said bank being Third & Broadway, San Diego, California); that any stock upon which this assessment shall remain unpaid on the 18th day of January, 1918, shall be delinquent, said last mentioned date being hereby fixed as the date on which unpaid assessments shall be delinquent; that February 18th, 1919, at 10 o'clock A.M. of said day, and said office of this corporation at 325 Timken Building, are hereby fixed as the day, time and place of the sale of delinquent stock that unless the Board of Directors of this corporation pursuant to law otherwise order said delinquent stock to be advertised for sale at public auction at said time of sale aforesaid, and, unless payment is made before so many shares of each parcel of such stock as may be necessary be so sold by the Secretary of this corporation to pay delinquent assessments thereon, together with costs of advertising and expenses of sale.
Secretary of Providential Oil Company,
325 Timken Building, San Diego,
California.
Dec. 5-6t
NOTICE
Before the Board of Trustees of the City of Anaheim, in the County of Orange, State of California.
Application for Permit to Operate Automobile Passenger Bus Line into and through the City of Anaheim.
Notice is hereby given by the "Olinda Bus Line," that it has this day filed with the Board of Trustees of the City of Anaheim in Orange County, California, an application for a permit authorizing it to operate automobile passenger service for compensation on the public highways of the City of Anaheim while traveling over its proposed route on North Los Angeles street between the City of Anaheim and Drea van Pascetia and Olinda.
And that said Board of Trustees has fixed a time and place for a hearing on said application, to-wait: on Thursday, December 12, 1918, at 8 o'clock, at the rooms of said Board, in the City Hall, in the City of Anaheim, Orange County, Californii when and where all parties interested may be heard. Reference is hereby made to the application on file in the office of the City Clerk of said City of Anaheim fog further particulars.
Dated this 19th day of November, 1918.
OLINDA BUS LINE,
By W. B. KOLB, Manager.
Dec. 5-1t