anaheim-gazette 1919-01-09
Searchable text
FARMERS URGED TO HELP BOOST COMMERGE
UNITED STATES SHIPPING BOARD ASKS TEAM WORK IN BUILDING NEW MARKETS
MERCHANT MARINE WILL SEND HUNDREDS OF SHIPS ON NEW TRADE ROUTES
A ship from Australia touched at New York recently on her way to the British Army in France. She carried 3,000 tons of jam made from Australian oranges, berries, and cane sugar. This cargo promises to be the first in a steady trade between Australia and England, giving farmers in that far British colony a new solution of their difficult marketing problems.
Many other farm marketing problems in the United States and elsewhere are difficult puzzles until one applies to them the new key brought by war—the merchant ship. Then agricultural communities like our great fruit raising, dairying, and live-stock sections find new outlets not only for present products, but improved and concentrated products which give the best profit and the best balanced agriculture. Even a country so far from big consuming countries as Australia, through the merchant ship and world trade, is able to develop intensive in-
IN RE DEMOCRACY
The National Republican has pointed out that in Virginia, state of Washington, Jefferson, Patrick Henry and Woodrow Wilson, whose green fields lie in sight of the national capitol and White House, laws and practices established by Mr. Wilson's party have put the mock in democracy and reduced the number of eligible voters to 150,000 out of a total of 550,000 men entitled under the American Constitution to national citizenship. Of the disfranchised majority there are a hundred thousand more white men than blacks; the exact figures being 245,000 white men and 155,000 negroes decitizenized. Of the men called to the colors to war for democracy in Europe from Virginia, eight-elevenths, in Mr. Wilson's state, are denied by Mr. Wilson's party the right of self determination, of participation in government, of democratic freedom such as we are so anxious to confer upon the Czecho-Slovaks, the Ukrainians, the Poles, the Russians and even the Prussians.
The returns from the recent election show the paralyzing effect of Democracy with a big "D" upon democracy with a small "d." Virginia has reached the point where only one person in fifty votes, as compared with one in four in Indiana, one in five in Iowa and Michigan, and one in less than six in the Republican states in the Union as a whole. In this, of course, Virginia is only placing herself alongside all the other states where the Democratic party has been in control for a long period of years and has thereby been enabled to determine election laws and practices.
Virginia has a population of two and a quarter millions. But in the whole state, under Democratic brand of democracy, only 40,455 votes were cast aside this record we list on publican party, which leadership actually has assurance to call every state where it determinative influence tolerance, of liberalism and freest participation in politics, without race or religion; which locally and nationally preaches freedom of speech and of political practices it when public party and public respect.
This paper does not control of government unqualified either for the north; Mr. Wilson public outgivings for lightenment, pretends live in such a police mand that Mexico's states, vastly less qualified than the black illiterated States, be given or boring republic; andession of belief that, world, the right of a hand in government of sanctity which enproclaim it in a halo Democratic leaders playing the hypocrite the people's right to the one free. Republic nois permits more per polls and vote upon government than were all at the last President's states of the solid lahoma, with five timelation in the aggregation the representation in Representatives and lege, the party and ship responsible for utilizing it to its own advantage and tha
In the United States and elsewhere are difficult puzzles until one applies to them the new key brought by war—the merchant ship. Then agricultural communities like our great fruit raising, dairying, and live-stock sections find new outlets not only for present products, but improved and concentrated products which give the best profit and the best balanced agriculture. Even a country so far from big consuming countries as Australia, through the merchant ship and world trade, is able to develop intensive industries like deciduous fruit, grapes, raisins, and dried fruit.
Chairman Hurley of the United States Shipping Board, is devoting attention to farm markets abroad in connection with the new American merchant marine. We shall presently be turning out merchant ships ready for sea service at the rate of more than 500,000 tons monthly. By this time next year hundreds of these ships will be running on new trade routes between the United States and Latin America, Europe, the Orient, and elsewhere. Ships alone can not create world trade—there must be teamwork between ships, banks, investors, manufacturers, and farmers. It is essential that our farmers give serious thought to the American merchant marine new, while it is in process of development. There are two general lines of interest.
First, merchant ships can be studied as transportation. Every farmer knows that transportation in the form of railroads gives him access to markets; that without railroads farming in many sections would be impossible. The American merchant marine simply extends our railroads over the trade routes of the world, giving farmers access to vast new markets for every product of the soil.
Second, merchant ships can be studied from the community standpoint. Local farmers' organizations now can begin investigating local products in the light of world trade, ascertaining what the community produces that can be shipped abroad, and where possible world markets are to be found, and how connections can be made therewith. The government is already investigating world markets through such agencies as the Department of Agriculture (Bureau of Markets), the Department of Commerce (Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce), the Consular Service (Department of State), the United States Shipping Board, the War Trade Board, etc. These agencies can find out what farm laws are difficult puzzles until one applies to them the new key brought by war—the merchant ship. Then agricultural communities like our great fruit raising, dairying, and live-stock sections find new outlets not only for present products, but improved and concentrated products which give the best profit and the best balanced agriculture. Even a country so far from big consuming countries as Australia, through the merchant ship and world trade, is able to develop intensive industries like deciduous fruit, grapes, raisins, and dried fruit.
Chairman Hurley of the United States Shipping Board, is devoting attention to farm markets abroad in connection with the new American merchant marine. We shall presently be turning out merchant ships ready for sea service at the rate of more than 500,000 tons monthly. By this time next year hundreds of these ships will be running on new trade routes between the United States and Latin America, Europe, the Orient, and elsewhere. Ships alone can not create world trade—there must be teamwork between ships, banks, investors, manufacturers, and farmers. It is essential that our farmers give serious thought to the American merchant marine new, while it is in process of development. There are two general lines of interest.
First, merchant ships can be studied as transportation. Every farmer knows that transportation in the form of railroads gives him access to markets; that without railroads farming in many sections would be impossible. The American merchant marine simply extends our railroads over the trade routes of the world, giving farmers access to vast new markets for every product of the soil.
Second, merchant ships can be studied from the community standpoint. Local farmers' organizations now can begin investigating local products in the light of world trade, ascertaining what the community produces that can be shipped abroad, and where possible world markets are to be found, and how connections can be made therewith. The government is already investigating world markets through such agencies as the Department of Agriculture (Bureau of Markets), the Department of Commerce (Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce), the Consular Service (Department of State), the United States Shipping Board, the War Trade Board, etc. These agencies can find out what farm laws are difficult puzzles until one applies to them the new key brought by war—the merchant ship. Then agricultural communities like our great fruit raising, dairying, and live-stock sections find new outlets not only for present products, but improved and concentrated products which give the best profit and the best balanced agriculture. Even a country so far from big consuming countries as Australia, through the merchant ship and world trade, is able to develop intensive industries like deciduous fruit, grapes, raisins, and dried fruit.
Chairman Hurley of the United States Shipping Board, is devoting attention to farm markets abroad in connection with the new American merchant marine. We shall presently be turning out merchant ships ready for sea service at the rate of more than 500,000 tons monthly. By this time next year hundreds of these ships will be running on new trade routes between the United States and Latin America, Europe, the Orient, and elsewhere. Ships alone can not create world trade—there must be teamwork between ships, banks, investors, manufacturers, and farmers. It is essential that our farmers give serious thought to the American merchant marine new, while it is in process of development. There are two general lines of interest.
First, merchant ships can be studied as transportation. Every farmer knows that transportation in the form of railroads gives him access to markets; that without railroads farming in many sections would be impossible. The American merchant marine simply extends our railroads over the trade routes of the world, giving farmers access to vast new markets for every product of the soil.
Second, merchant ships can be studied from the community standpoint. Local farmers' organizations now can begin investigating local products in the light of world trade, ascertaining what the community produces that can be shipped abroad, and where possible world markets are to be found, and how connections can be made therewith. The government is already investigating world markets through such agencies as the Department of Agriculture (Bureau of Markets), the Department of Commerce (Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce), the Consular Service (Department of State), the United States Shipping Board, the War Trade Board, etc. These agencies can find out what farm laws are difficult puzzles until one applies to them the new key brought by war—the merchant ship. Then agricultural communities like our great fruit raising, dairying, and live-stock sections find new outlets not only for present products, but improved and concentrated products which give the best profit and the best balanced agriculture. Even a country so far from big consuming countries as Australia, through the merchant ship and world trade, is able to develop intensive industries like deciduous fruit, grapes, raisins, and dried fruit.
Chairman Hurley of the United States Shipping Board, is devoting attention to farm markets abroad in connection with the new American merchant marine new, while it is in process of development. There are two general lines of interest.
First, merchant ships can be studied as transportation. Every farmer knows that transportation in the form of railroads gives him access to markets; that without railroads farming in many sections would be impossible. The American merchant marine simply extends our railroads over the trade routes of the world, giving farmers access to vast new markets for every product of the soil.
Second, merchant ships can be studied from the community standpoint. Local farmers' organizations now can begin investigating local products in the light of world trade, ascertaining what the community produces that can be shipped abroad, and where possible world markets are to be found, and how connections can be made therewith. The government is already investigating world markets through such agencies as the Department of Agriculture (Bureau of Markets), the Department of Commerce (Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce), the Consular Service (Department of State), the United States Shipping Board, the War Trade Board, etc. These agencies can find out what farm laws are difficult puzzles until one applies to them the new key brought by war—the merchant ship. Then agricultural communities like our great fruit raising, dairying, and live-stock sections find new outlets not only for present products, but improved and concentrated products which give the best profit and the best balanced agriculture. Even a country so far from big consuming countries as Australia, through the merchant ship and world trade, is able to develop intensive industries like deciduous fruit, grapes, raisins, and dried fruit.
Chairman Hurley of the United States Shipping Board, is devoting attention to farm markets abroad in connection with the new American merchant marine new, while it is in process of development. There are two general lines of interest.
First, merchant ships can be studied as transportation. Every farmer knows that transportation in the form of railroads gives him access to markets; that without railroads farming in many sections would be impossible. The American merchant marine simply extends our railroads over the trade routes of the world, giving farmers access to vast new markets for every product of the soil.
Second,merchant ships can be studied from the community standpoint.Local farmers' organizations now can begin investigating local products in the light of world trade,ascertaining whatthecommunityproducesthatcanbeshippedabroad,andwherepossibleworldmarketsaretobefound,andhowconnectionscanbemadetherewith.ThegovernmentisalreadyinvestigatingworldmarketsthroughsuchagenciesastheDepartmentofAgriculture(BureauofMarkets),theDepartmentofCommerce(BureauofForeignandDomesticCommerce),theConsularService(DepartmentofState),theUnitedStatesShippingBoard,theWarTradeBoard,etc.AgencyscanfindoutwhatfarmlawsaredifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherearedifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherearedifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherearedifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherearedifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherearedifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherearedifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherearedifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherearedifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherearedifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherearedifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherearedifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherearedifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherearedifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherearedifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherearedifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherearedifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherearedifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherearedifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherearedifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherearedifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherereadilyinresearchingworldmarketsthroughsuchagenciesastheDepartmentofAgriculture(BureauofMarkets),theDepartmentofCommerce(BureauofForeignandDomesticCommerce),theConsularService(DepartmentofState),theUnitedStatesShippingBoard,theWarTradeBoard,etc.AgencyscanfindoutwhatfarmlawsaredifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherearedifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherearedifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherearedifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherearedifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherearedifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherearedifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherereadilyinresearchingworldmarketsthroughsuchagenciesastheDepartmentofAgriculture(B BureauofMarkets),theDepartmentofCommerce(BureauofForeignandDomesticCommerce),theConsularService(DepartmentofState),theUnitedStatesShippingBoard,theWarTradeBoard,etc.AgencyscanfindoutwhatfarmlawsaredifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherereadilyinresearchingworldmarketsthroughsuchagenciesastheDepartmentofAgriculture(B BureauofMarkets),theDepartmentofCommerce(BureauofForeignandDomesticCommerce),theConsularService(DepartmentofState),theUnitedStatesShippingBoard,theWarTradeBoard,etc.AgencyscanfindoutwhatfarmlawsaredifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherereadilyinresearchingworldmarketsthroughsuchagenciesastheDepartmentofAgriculture(B BureauofMarkets),theDepartmentofCommerce(BureauofForeignandDomesticCommerce),theConsularService(DepartmentofState),theUnitedStatesShippingBoard,theWarTradeBoard,etc.AgencyscanfindoutwhatfarmlawsaredifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherereadilyinresearchingworldmarketsthroughsuchagenciesastheDepartmentofAgriculture(B BureauofMarkets),theDepartmentofCommerce(BureauofForeignandDomesticCommerce),theConsularService(DepartmentofState),theUnitedStatesShippingBoard,theWarTradeBoard,etc.AgencyscanfindoutwhatfarmlawsaredifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherereadilyinresearchingworldmarketsthroughsuchagenciesastheDepartmentofAgriculture(B BureauofMarkets),theDepartmentofCommerce(BureauofForeignandDomesticCommerce),theConsularService(DepartmentofState),theUnitedStatesShippingBoard,theWarTradeBoard,etc.AgencyscanfindoutwhatfarmlawsaredifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherereadilyinresearchingworldmarketsthroughsuchagenciesastheDepartmentofAgriculture(B BureauofMarkets),theDepartmentofCommerce(BureauofForeignandDomesticCommerce),theConsularService(DepartmentofState),theUnitedStatesShippingBoard,theWarTradeBoard,etc.AgencyscanfindoutwhatfarmlawsaredifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherereadilyinresearchingworldmarketsthroughsuchagenciesastheDepartmentofAgriculture(B BureauofMarkets),theDepartmentofCommerce(BureauofForeignandDomesticCommerce),theConsularService(DepartmentofState),theUnitedStatesShippingBoard,theWarTradeBoard,etc.AgencyscanfindoutwhatfarmlawsaredifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherereadilyinresearchingworldmarketsthroughsuchagenciesastheDepartmentofAgriculture(B BureauofMarkets),theDepartmentofCommerce(BureauofForeignandDomesticCommerce),theConsularService(DepartmentofState),theUnitedStatesShippingBoard,theWarTradeBoard,etc.AgencyscanfindoutwhatfarmlawsaredifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherereadilyinresearchingworldmarketsthroughsuchagenciesastheDepartmentofAgriculture(B BureauofMarkets),theDepartmentofCommerce(BureauofForeignandDomesticCommerce),theConsularService(DepartmentofState),theUnitedStatesShippingBoard,theWarTradeBoard,etc.AgencyscanfindoutwhatfarmlawsaredifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherereadilyinresearchingworldmarketsthroughsuchagenciesastheDepartmentofAgriculture(B BureauofMarkets),theDepartmentofCommerce(Buryoftheforeignanddomesticcommerce),theConsularService(DepartmentofState),theUnitedStatesShippingBoard,theWarTradeBoard,etc.AgencyscanfindoutwhatfarmlawsaredifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherereadilyinresearchingworldmarketsthroughsuchagenciesastheDepartmentofAgriculture(B Bureauoftheforeignanddomesticcommerce),theConsularService(DepartmentofState),theUnitedStatesShippingBoard,theWarTradeBoard,etc.AgencyscanfindoutwhatfarmlawsaredifficultpuzzlesuntiloneappliestohemewherereadilyinresearchingworldmarketsthroughsuchagenciesastheDepartmentoftheforeignanddomesticcommerce),theConsularService(Departmentoftheforeignanddomesticcommerce),theConsularService(Departmentoftheforeignanddomesticcommerce),theConsularService(Departmentoftheforeignanddomesticcommerce),theConsularService(Departmentoftheforeignanddomesticcommerce),theConsularService(Departmentoftheforeignanddomesticcommerce),theConsularService(Departmentoftheforeignanddomesticcommerce),theConsularService(Departmentoftheforeignanddomesticcommerce),theConsularService(Departmentoftheforeignanddomesticcommerce)。ThegovernmentisalreadyinvestigatingworldmarketsthroughsuchagenciesastheDepartmentoftheforeignanddomesticcommerce),theConsularService(Departmentoftheforeignanddomesticcommerce),theConsularService(Departmentoftheforeignanddomesticcommerce),theConsularService(Departmentoftheforeignanddomesticcommerce),theConsularService(Departmentoftheforeignanddomesticcommerce),theConsularService(Deploymentoftheforeignanddomesticcommerce),theConsularService(Deploymentoftheforeignanddomesticcommerce),theConsularService(Deploymentoftheforeignanddomesticcommerce),theConsualservice(Deploymentoftheforeignanddomesticcommerce),theConsualservice(Deploymentoftheforeignanddomesticcommerce),theConsualservice(Deploymentoftheforeignanddomesticcommerce),theConsualservice(Deploymentoftheforeignanddomesticcommerce),theConsualservice(Deploymentoftheforeignanddomesticcommerce),theConsualservice(Deploymentoftheforeignanddomesticcommerce),theConsualservice(Deploymentoftheforeignanddomesticcommerce)。ThegovernmentisalreadyinvestigatingworldmarketsthroughsuchagenciesastheDepartmentoftheforeignanddomesticcommerce),theConsualservice(Deployment oftheforeignanddomesticcommerce),theConsualservice(Deployment oftheforeign和domesticcommerce),theConsualservice(Deployment oftheforeign和domesticcommerce),theConsualservice(Deployment oftheforeign和domesticcommerce),theConsualservice(Deployment oftheforeign和domesticcommerce),theConsualservice(Deployment oftheforeign和domesticcommerce),theConsualservice(Deployment oftheforeign和domesticcommerce),theConsualservice(Deployment oftheforeign和domesticcommerce)。Thegovernmentisalreadyinvestigatingworldmarkets through suchagenciesasThe Department Of Agriculture (Bureau Of Markets) , The Department Of Commerce (Bureau Of Foreign And Domestic Commerce) , The Consular Service (Departement Of State) , The War Trade Board , etc . These agencies can find out what farms laws are difficult puzzles untl one appies to them all very important rules in their own repertions . They allow them all very important rules in their own repertions . They allow them all very important rules in their own repertions . They allow them all very important rules in their own repertions . They allow them all very important rules in their own repertions . They allow them all very important rules in their own repertions . They allow them all very important rules in their own repertions . They allow them all very important rules in their own repertions . They allow them all very important rules in their own repertions . They allow them all very important rules in their own repertions . They allow them all very important rules in their own repertions . They allow them all very important rules in their own repertions . They allow them all very important rules in their own repertions . 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And how soon are they going to meet this issue in this day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day of democracy thereto day OF DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART , THE SO-CALLED DEMOCRATIC PART ,THE GOVERNMENT IS ALREADY IN RESEARCHING WORLD MARKETS THROUGH SUCH AGENCIES AS THE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE (Bureau Of Markets) ,THE DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE (Bureau Of Foreign And Domestic Commerce) ,THE CONSULAR Service (Departement Of State) ,THE WAR Trade Board ,etc. These agencies can find out what farms laws are difficult puzzles untl one appies to them all very important rules in their own repertions .They allow them all very important rules in their own repertitions .They allow them all very important rules in their own repertitions .They allow them all very important rules in their own repertitions .They allow them all very important rules in their own repertitions .They allow them all very important rules in their own repertitions .They allow them all very important rules in their own repertitions .They allow them all very important rules in their own repertitions .They allow them all very important rules in their own repertitions .They allow them all very important rules in their own repertitions .They allow them all very important rules in their own repertitions .They allow them all very important rules in their own repertitions .They allow them all very important rules in their own repertitions .They allow them all very important rules in their own repertitions .They allow them all very important rules in their own repertitions .They allow them all very important rules in their own repertitions .They allow me amusing stories about my life when I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am young.I am
TONS OF DATES FOR SAILORS
Tons of dates, the crop grown by the United States Department of Agriculture in the date-testing gardens at Indio and Mecca, Cal., will be supplied to the Navy Department for the use of crews on board destroyers. In supplying these dates to the Navy Department the specialists of the Department of Agriculture will obtain valuable data on the keeping qualities of the varieties being tested, as well as on the effect of the different maturation processes and methods of packing used in preparing the dates for shipment—information that will be valuable to the rapidly developing date industry in the Southwest. The dates, a confection rich in sugar, the department specialists say, are of great value as a concentrated food.
The so-called Democratic party, the party led and controlled by President Wilson, has reduced to a state of political serfdom in the United States more people whose citizenship rights are sought to be established in the United States Constitution than live in Belgium and Alsace-Lorraine combined; than populate both Bavaria and Saxony. We mean by this that this many male citizens in the United States above the age of twenty-one and possessing all other qualifications of free citizenship under the Constitution of the United States, are by the laws and practices of the political party led and controlled by President Wilson, deprived of a voice in government, local, state or national, and have no more to say about the laws and the officials of their country than the blacks of German East Africa. We mean to say by this that the control of the electoral college by Mr. Wilson's party in 1918, and the election of a Democratic majority in the present Congress, was due solely to the fact that the millions thus robbed of their political birthright under the laws and practices of Mr. Wilson's party, while not permitted to vote, were represented in the electoral college and in Congress by men whose very seats were based upon votes excluded from participation in the elections.
We are not suggesting a remedy; we are discussing a disease. Along-
side this record we lay that of the Republican party, which this Democratic leadership actually has the supreme assurance to call "reactionary," in every state where it is a dominant or determinative influence; a record of tolerance, of liberalism, of the fullest and freest participation of the people in politics, without regard to party, race or religion; a political party which locally and nationally not only preaches freedom of the press, and of speech and of political action, but practices it when put to the test of party and public responsibility.
This paper does not believe in the control of government by the politically unqualified either in the south or in the north; Mr. Wilson's party, in its public outgivings for the world's enlightenment, pretends that it does believe in such a policy; an in the demand that Mexico's millions of illiterates, vastly less qualified to govern than the black literates in the United States, be given control of a neighboring republic; and in the public profession of belief that, elsewhere in the world, the right of all men to have a hand in government possesses a sort of sanctity which envelops those who proclaim it in a halo. We insist that Democratic leadership shall cease playing the hypocrite in this matter of the people's right to rule; that while the one free, Republican state of Illinois permits more people to go to the polls and vote upon questions of government than were allowed at the polls at the last Presidential election in all the states of the solid south, plus Oklahoma, with five times Illinois' population in the aggregate and five times the representation in the House of Representatives and the electoral college, the party and the party leadership responsible for this condition and utilizing it to its own selfish, partisan advantage and the detriment of the which can be permanently abated by a court action, just as any other public nuisance can be abated.
"I am hoping to get a good deal of support for this measure," said Assemblyman Eden, "from all over the state. The farm bureaus have promised to co-operate. I am informed that we may expect opposition from gun clubs. However, upon that point I have no definite information."
NESBITT BONDSMEN OBJECT TO PAYING
Judge Thomas Declares the Bond Forfeited and Puts Up His Share
Tuesday afternoon Judge W. H. Thomas declared forfeited the $3,000 bond given in connection with the order of probation given George Nesbitt, of Garden Grove, in June, 1916.
With the exception of three of the bondsmen, of whom the judge was one, there was a solid front presented by the bondsmen for the purpose of fighting payments under the bond.
They declared that they are not morally or legally bound to pay the bond because Judge Thomas, without their consent, changed the terms of the probationary requirements by allowing Nesbitt to leave the southern counties of the state, to which area, under the original order, Nesbitt's movements were restricted.
During the hearing, J. G. Allen, of Garden Grove, made a sensational statement. The court and evidently everyone else had been proceeding on the theory that George Nesbitt after deserting the army in 1916 disappeared. Allen said that only a few days ago he talked to a lieutenant who saw Nesbitt at Artesia on Thanksgiving day, that Nesbitt has been in naval aviation at Rockwell Field, serving unkeep a record of tire and accessory numbers.
In comparing the totals for 1915 with the figures of the preceding year it is evident that the strenuous campaign waged by the Auto Club against probation for motor thieves has borne fruit. The Theft Bureau alone has made sixty arrests during 1918 and has brought 150 auto thieves to the tolls since the inauguration of the bureau.
The Theft Bureau of the Automobile Club of Southern California accounted for 238 of the total cars recovered, thus saving more than $150,000 for members of the club.
SPEED OF GAME BIRDS THROUGH THE AIR
Hawk Can Fly at the Rate of 200 Miles Per Hour
While there is considerable variation in the speed of flight of game birds, the table below may be taken as the most accurate approximation of the comparative speed at which the better known wild birds fly.
The crow may be taken as an example of the slower flying bird, with a rate of 35 to 55 feet a second, and with an average speed of 45 miles an hour, while many species of hawks attain the remarkably fast speed of 200 feet a second.
Here is the table showing the average speed in flight:
| Bird | Feet per Average |
| :--- | :--- |
| Quail | 65 to 85 |
| Ruffed grouse | 60 to 90 |
| Snipe | 50 to 70 |
| Mallard | 55 to 90 |
| Wood duck | 70 to 90 |
| Teal | 120 to 140 |
| Canvasback | 130 to 160 |
| Canada geese | 100 to 120 |
| Red head | 110 to 130 |
It may be said that if ducks are
Is there any flaw in this argument? Is there any escape from this showing? Is there any way Democratic leadership can look at the election figures that tell the story of where democracy is, and where it is not, in these United States, and escape the conclusion that when it says it is for the rule of the people it is bearing false witness? Is it not true that in these states where the mock has been put in democracy by Democratic leadership, as shown by the official figures, illiteracy is highest, the standard of social justice legislation is lowest, wages are smallest, roads are poorest, political tolerance is scarce, free, fair public discussion of public questions is most infrequent?
Is Democratic leadership going to meet this issue in the light of the new day of democracy that is dawning upon the world? Is Republican leadership going to meet it, or go on dodging the issue by failing to apply the constitutional penalty in reduction of political power to those states which have eliminated vast portions of their electorate; a penalty not permitted, but commanded, by the Constitution as a means of persuading states to extend the franchise as widely to the people as public safety will permit.
And how soon are President Wilson and his associates in Democratic national leadership, going to be asked, publicly and persistently and until they can no longer dodge the issue, how they square their deeds with their words; and if, as a matter of fact, their devotion to democracy is as purely rhetorical as it would seem to be from the application of pitiless publicity to their own record?
During the hearing, J. G. Allen, of Garden Grove, made a sensational statement. The court and evidently everyone else had been proceeding on the theory that George Nesbitt after deserting the army in 1916 disappeared. Allen said that only a few days ago he talked to a lieutenant who saw Nesbitt at Artesia on Thanksgiving day, that Nesbitt has been in naval aviation at Rockwell Field, serving under the name of Andres, which is now his mother's name. Nesbitt told this friend that brooding over the restrictions under which he would have to live under the probationary order got on his mind to such an extent that he deserted from the army in Texas. He married a girl in Arizona, and now she and her parents live in Artesia. He and his wife have a baby. He said he had been living straight and had taken steps through Washington to straighten out his desertion of 1916.
When court opened Tuesday, Attorney A. W. Rutan, saying he represented practically all of the bondsmen, declared that inasmuch as the court had changed the terms of probation without the consent of the bondsmen, they should not be held under the bond. He said that while George remained within their reach they could help him keep his probation. When the court allowed him to go away, waiving the civil sentence's precedence over the militry call, the conditions were changed materially. "They thought they would have him under their eyes," said Rutan, "not released to roam all over the country."
Judge Thomas, Clyde Bishop and Dr. C. C. Violet each paid his hundred dollars, and the other twenty-seven will probably settle up rather than wait to be sued.
EFFICIENT WORK
Motor thieves are warned by the Theft Bureau of the Automobile Club of Southern California to specialize on high-powered cars in the future. The Auto Club's Theft Bureau has just inaugurated a special motorcycle service for use in the apprehension of thieves, the object being the capture of offenders while still in the act of making their getaway from the scene of the theft.
In the future when a car is reported missing Detective Powell, head of the Theft Bureau, will send a motorcycle officer post-haste to patrol the possible under the original order, Nesbitt's movements were restricted.
Through the combining of nicotine and oleic acid, a new contact insecticide termed "nicotine oleate" has been produced. It is soluble in soft water and forms a soapy solution that may be used to emulsify an animal, vegetable or mineral oil.
In certain tests 2½ quarts of a 40 per cent nicotine solution was combined with 1½ quarts of commercial oleic acid to make 1¼ gallons of nicotine oleate.
This is said to be more effective against aphids than a spray of free nicotine, and it costs only about one-half as much to prepay.
It should not be used on plants that are to be used for food, such as lettuce, kale or spinach, as the oleate prevents the spray from volatilizing.
On dormant fruit trees, its use with a non-volatile oil, such as linseed, cottonseed, or fish oil should make it valuable for the destruction of eggs of insects and for some scale insects.
LIMESTONE GETS RESULTS
Broome County, N. Y., this year used 3000 tons of limestone, an increase of 3000 tons over the amount used one year ago. This increase has been due to the emphasis which the farm bureau and county agent have placed upon the value of applying limestone to the soil. One farmer applied 1 ton of age speed in flight:
| Bird— | Second | Average |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Quail | 65 to 85 | 75 |
| Ruffed grouse | 60 to 90 | 75 |
| Snipe | 50 to 70 | 65 |
| Mallard | 55 to 90 | 75 |
| Wood duck | 70 to 90 | 80 |
| Teal | 120 to 140 | 130 |
| Canvasback | 130 to 160 | 145 |
| Canada geese | 100 to 120 | 110 |
| Red head | 110 to 130 | 120 |
It may be said that if ducks are scared they can reach maximum speed at will, and this sprinting flight is usually what the gunner has to make allowance for.
On the other hand, many wild fowl are jumped and killed while hovering over decoys and moving clowly, and birds like snipe and quail are often killed before they have attained full speed.
Upland birds are not often shot while passing the gun at right angles, but going straight away, quartering or twisting.
NEW CONTACT INSECTICIDE
Through the combining of nicotine and oleic acid, a new contact insecticide termed "nicotine oleate" has been produced. It is soluble in soft water and forms a soapy solution that may be used to emulsify an animal, vegetable or mineral oil.
In certain tests 2½ quarts of a 40 per cent nicotine solution was combined with 1½ quarts of commercial oleic acid to make 1¼ gallons of nicotine oleate.
This is said to be more effective against aphids than a spray of free nicotine, and it costs only about one-half as much to prepay.
It should not be used on plants that are to be used for food, such as lettuce, kale or spinach, as the oleate prevents the spray from volatilizing.
On dormant fruit trees, its use with a non-volatile oil, such as linseed, cottonseed or fish oil should make it valuable for the destruction of eggs of insects and for some scale insects.
LIMESTONE GETS RESULTS
Broome County, N. Y., this year used 3000 tons of limestone, an increase of 3000 tons over the amount used one year ago. This increase has been due to the emphasis which the farm bureau and county agent have placed upon the value of applying limestone to the soil. One farmer applied 1 ton of age speed in flight:
EDEN WILL WORK FOR WATER PROTECTION
Assemblyman Will Try to Prevent Waste From Artesian Wells
The biggest job that Assemblyman Walter Eden will take with him to Sacramento when he goes there as assemblyman from Orange county will be a bill to protect the underground water supply of the state.
This is the bill that was drawn up a few weeks ago by Francis Cuttle, of Riverside, District Attorney West of Santa Ana and representatives of the Farm Bureau. Putting that measure through and co-operating with the dry forces to secure the passage of the national prohibition amendment are the two big things that so far are on Eden's legislative program.
For years Orange county has endeavored to secure some kind of legislation that would prevent the waste of water by artesian wells. While many people are disposed to lay stress upon the fact that the duck clubs allow great quantities of water to go to waste, there are many other offenders as well.
There is a law that endeavors to make the wasting of artesian water a penal offense, but the law has never been satisfactory. The bill that Eden will present proposes to declare the wasting of water a public nuisance,
And how soon are President Wilson and his associates in Democratic national leadership, going to be asked, publicly and persistently and until they can no longer dodge the issue, how they square their deeds with their words; and if, as a matter of fact, their devotion to democracy is as purely rhetorical as it would seem to be from the application of pitiless publicity to their own record?
EDEN WILL WORK FOR WATER PROTECTION
Assemblyman Will Try to Prevent Waste From Artesian Wells
The biggest job that Assemblyman Walter Eden will take with him to Sacramento when he goes there as assemblyman from Orange county will be a bill to protect the underground water supply of the state.
This is the bill that was drawn up a few weeks ago by Francis Cuttle, of Riverside, District Attorney West of Santa Ana and representatives of the Farm Bureau. Putting that measure through and co-operating with the dry forces to secure the passage of the national prohibition amendment are the two big things that so far are on Eden's legislative program.
For years Orange county has endeavored to secure some kind of legislation that would prevent the waste of water by artesian wells. While many people are disposed to lay stress upon the fact that the duck clubs allow great quantities of water to go to waste, there are many other offenders as well.
There is a law that endeavors to make the wasting of artesian water a penal offense, but the law has never been satisfactory. The bill that Eden will present proposes to declare the wasting of water a public nuisance,
LIMESTONE GETS RESULTS
Broome County, N.Y., this year used 8000 tons of limestone, an increase of 3000 tons over the amount used one year ago. This increase has been due to the emphasis which the farm bureau and county agent have placed upon the value of applying limestone to the soil. One farmer applied 1 ton of ground limestone an acre in 1917 at the time of seeding. In 1918 the limed area produced 5324 pounds of hay, while the plot beside it having no lime produced only 4017 pounds, 1307 pounds infavor of lime. Another farmer top-dressed hay land, that had been mowed one year, with one-half ton of marl per acre. On the limed area he secured 4200 pounds of hay and on the unlimed area 2160 pounds, a difference of 2040 pounds. Still another farmer used 1 ton of lime an acre at the time of seeding. On the limed acre he produced 5324 pounds of hay and on the unlimed acre 2904 pounds, a difference of 2420 pounds in favor of limestone.
According to Detective Powell, head of the Auto Club's Theft Bureau, 1624 cars were appropriated by thieves in this district during 1918 and 1480 recovered. The lump valuation of the stolen machines amounts to $950,000 while Powell estimates that over $25,000 worth of tires and accessories are missing. Of this latter amount very little has been recovered, due to the negligence of owners in neglecting to
Thus early in peace do we find many of the timid souls wondering what will become of the country, now that the war is over. They speak of the problems before us with fear and trembling. They whisper of disorders and financial and industrial depressions, and of reigns of terror and so on—as if we were still facing our most perplexing questions. But the truth is, the big problem is out of the way. Nothing can come upon us that will be as bad as was the war. Our greatest trouble is behind us—and will always be behind us. There can never come again any disaster as great as that which fell about the ears of the world four years ago.—Columbus Dispatch.
EXCHANGE
GRILL
SHORT order meals, lunches, and soft drinks of every kind always to be had. Prompt service, everything of the best and prices reasonable. People from out of town will find this place convenient as it is in the heart of the business district.
LADIES'
REST ROOM
In connection. Remember the place,
120 West Center Street, in room formerly occupied by Exchange Bar.
ANTONE KLUEWER
Prop.
REST ROOM
In connection. Remember the place,
120 West Center Street, in room formerly occupied by Exchange Bar.
ANTONE KLUEWER
Prop.
NEW COURT OF APPEALS
Presiding Justice Frank G. Finlayson of Los Angeles, and Associate Justices William A. Sloane of San Diego, and William H. Thomas of Santa Ana, recently appointed to the District Court of Appeal by Gov. William D. Stephens, Wednesday organized the newly authorized second division of the Appellate Court and announced that the first calendar would be heard on January 13. The Supreme Court has turned over to the second division 102 cases which had been pending before the first division.
The new court will occupy the chambers belonging to the Supreme Court justices for the present. Until the Legislature provides additional clerical help, the employees of the first division will serve the second division also. These employees are Chief Clerk W. D. Shearer, Deputy H. C. Lillie, and Stephanographer James H. Crumrine.
All three of the new Appellate Justices were elevated from the Superior bench. Judge Finlayson is a native of Australia, but came to Los Angeles with his parents in 1867. He was educated in the San Francisco public schools and the Hastings School of Law. He served one term in the State Legislature after being admitted to the bar in 1885. He was elected to the Los Angeles County Superior bench in 1910 and 1916.
William A. Sloane was appointed to the San Diego County Superior bench in 1910 by Governor Johnson, served two years and was elected in 1912. He was born in Rockford, Ill., and was educated at Iowa State College at Grinnell. He was editor of newspapers in Sedalia and Carthage, Mo.
William H. Thomas, of Santa Ana, born in Wales, who has been practiced in glaw in Orange County since 1909, excellent results from Dwarf milo and Dawn kaif, the varieties bred and distributed by the United States Department of Agriculture, and the demand for seed increases. In parts of Arizona and California Dwarf milo is grown successfully on irrigated land after harley is harvested, thus enabling the grower to produce two grain crops on the same land in one year.
ACTION IN MEXICO URGED
Upon assurances from Senator Hitchcock that the Foreign Relations Committee would expedite its consideration, Senator King of Utah Friday consented to a reference to that committee of his resolution directing the Secretary of State to report what steps are being taken to report to the government of Mexico claims of American citizens against that government aggregating millions of dollars.
"Property of thousands of American citizens has been damaged or destroyed in Mexico in violation of treaty rights and international law," Senator King told the Senate, urging action on this resolution. "Many Americans have been maltreated or killed and Mexico has manifested the utmost indifference to her international obligations.
"To my mind the time has come when something must be done by this government to demand a settlement from Mexico for the wrongs suffered by American citizens at her hands. As the years go by it will become more difficult to establish evidence in connection with these claims. Now the present Carranza government has elected to show hostility toward this republic and has manifested sympathy for Germany. Particularly in view of this I can see no reason why these just actions against Mexico should not be
Los Angeles County Superior bench in 1910 and 1916.
William A. Sloane was appointed to the San Diego County Superior bench in 1910 by Governor Johnson, served two years and was elected in 1912. He was born in Rockford, Ill., and was educated at Iowa State College at Grinnell. He was editor of newspapers in Sedalia and Carthage, Mo.
William H. Thomas, of Santa Ana, born in Wales, who has been practicin glaw in Orange County since 1909, was appointed to the Superior bench by Governor Johnson in 1913 and elected in 1914 for the full term. He was admitted to the bar in Minnesota and practiced law in North Dakota for 12 years before coming to this state.
WILL DIVERT WATER UPON CANYON ACRES
The Water Conservation Association is now building a new intake on lands of the Bear Valley Mutual Water Company to divert water from the Santa Ana river near the mouth of the canyon onto 300 acres of land which the association recently leased from the Richey heirs. This outlet will have a maximum capacity of 5000 inches and will give the association a maximum capacity of nearly 20,000 inches through all of its diversions.
AREA IN GRAIN SORGHUM INCREASING
Grain sorghum area increased from 3,944,000 acres in 1916 to 5,153,000 in 1917, or more than 30 per cent, while the production increased from 53,858,000 to 75,866,000 bushels, or over 40 per cent. This largely increased quantity of grain was consumed through the ordinary channels without any undue drop in price. Farmers report ex-