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anaheim-gazette 1919-07-10

1919-07-10 · Anaheim Gazette · page 7 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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ADVISE USE OF KNIFE SCALY BARK CONTROL Dr. Fawcett Gives Valuable Demonstration in Fighting Disease. Citrus growers were given opportunity at two farm bureau demonstrations recently at Fullerton and Tustin to see the application of control measures for scaly bark disease in orange and grapefruit trees. Dr. H. S. Fawcett, pathologist, citrus experiment station, Riverside, reviewed the research work that has been conducted by his department in investigating the cause of the disease. Although no proof has as yet been determined, present indications point to a bacterial and fungal cause. Inoculations have been made from artificial cultures taken from badly infected areas. The experiment has not continued long enough to show definite lesions resulting from these inoculations. The work of the disease is very slow. Dr. Fawcett has designated three arbitrary stages in the life of the scaly bark diseases. The first stage covers infections that are in their incipiency, spots that are just beginning to show discoloration and slight breaking of the bark but not much scaling. The second stage includes a further development of the spots, showing characteristic scaling of the bark generally two or three years or more old. The third stage exhibits the maximum development of the disease—the last stage completely gidling the trunk or limb, eventually cutting off sap flow and causing the death of the tree or section of the tree. Upon cutting into the diseased area at this stage, the entire thickness ofment in this locality, which has not heretofore produced oil. IRRIGATION BONDS SOLD AT GOOD FIGURE Newport Mesa District to Furnish Water for 700 Acres. The directors of the Newport Mesa Irrigation District have sold the district's $50,000 bonds and secured a premium of $1,578. The sale was made to the Lumberman's Trust Co. of San Francisco upon a bid submitted with bids from a number of buyers anxious to take the bonds. This district comprises nearly 700 acres on the Newport mesa between the boulevard and the bluffs overlooking the Santa Ana river. For a time, when a neighboring water system declared itself unable to furnish water longer, the mesa district faced a difficult situation, and the property owners feared that their trees would die. Stephen Townsend of Long Beach, who had owned the tract, came to the rescue. He entered into an agreement whereby the property owners were to form a district. He installed a complete water system with a well and a pump in the lowlands by the Santa Ana river, and piped it over the district in steel pipes. That system has been completed and water is now being delivered through the pipes. Now that the bonds are sold the district will take over the system and reimburse Townsend for the money he put into it. D. J. Dodge is president of the directors of the district and Dr. Gunning Butler is secretary. The district now has an ample supply of water, and it will go ahead faster than ever before. some butter-making ores in the State, and started places, but it is alleged disaffected members not gone far enough to be able to control terfat in the State. Of the complaint apprehended the association's office fit to carry out their establishment sufficient to bring concerns to afford product of all its merits. MILK GOAT INDUSTRIAL PRODUCT Milk is an Ideal Food Infant The breeding of goat production has come to try in Southern California are now regarded as utility animals and handled on that basis for the steadily quality of the milk goat age. Goat's milk has been numerable cases to be for infants and invaluable token, being a splendid young and alluring, it is the average individual by scientists and doctors milk is more easily dig milk of any other animal now keep goats to their families and they apparently come to stall. The average well will give from three day, from four to eight freshening. There are ber of milk goats that six to seven quarts per The second stage includes a further development of the spots, showing characteristic scaling of the bark generally two or three years or more old. The third stage exhibits the maximum development of the disease—the last stage completely gidling the trunk or limb, eventually cutting off sap flow and causing the death of the tree or section of the tree. Upon cutting into the diseased area at this stage, the entire thickness of bark and tissues of wood directly under the combined layer, will exhibit distinct discoloration. An infection that has reached this last stage is beyond practical remedy. The first two stages may be treated satisfactorily by scraping the outside bark not only over the apparent diseased area, but including a fair strip immediately surrounding that area in which the diease may not yet be evident. Having scraped thoroughly, not penetrating the bark too deeply, apply a disinfectant. The experiment station is now recommending the use of Bordeau paste, made as follows: 1 pound copper sulphate. 3 quarts water. 3 pounds quick lime. 3 quarts water. Dissolve each separately and pour together. It is better to use as fresh as possible. After standing three or four days the solution deteriorates. Observations indicate that trees painted with Bordeaux every two years are more immune to scaly bark than untreated trees. Caution is given not to use Bordeaux at a time proximate to fumigation. The use of the two close together causes a chemical reaction resulting in a burning of the more tender tissues. Farm Advisor Wahlberg will give further demonstrations of the control of this disease in any orchard where an owner makes a request for it. KILLED IN ACTION Under the caption "Killed in Action," the casualty list received Tuesday from the War Department carries the name of Lieutenant Charles Leon Deaver of Riverside. Lieutenant Deaver was an instructor in Santa Ana high school when he entered the war service. Since last summer, when Lieutenant Deaver went into action with his district in steel pipes. That system has been completed and water is now being delivered through the pipes. Now that the bonds are sold the district will take over the system and reimburse Townsend for the money he put into it. D. J. Dodge is president of the directors of the district and Dr. Gunning Butler is secretary. The district now has an ample supply of water, and it will go ahead faster than ever before. DAIRY ASSOCIATION FLAYED AS OCTOPUS Imperial Man Brings Suit Against the State Organization. The life of the Associated Dairymen of California, Incorporated, a statewide co-operative association with a parent company and seven subsidiary associations, is threatened by a suit brought against the Imperial Valley Milk Producers' Association, a subsidiary concern, by A. Voorting, a dairy man of El Centro, and a member of the association. In the complaint filed in the Superior Court of Imperial County grave charges are made against the officers of the parent association. It is asserted this is to be made a test suit. District Attorney E. R. Simon of Imperial County is attorney for Voorting. The Imperial Valley Association has about three hundred members. There are more than ten thousand members of the various subsidiary associations throughout the State. In the complaint filed in Imperial County J. M. Henderson, Jr., a banker of Sacramento, and president of the Associated Dairymen of California, is painted as the designer of a gigantic commercial octopus, controlled by packing interests. He is alleged to have made himself inside of two years, the dictator of the dairying business in the State, and to have gained this control by promises of greatly increased prices to the producers of milk, and to have been aided and abetted in this plan by Col. Harris Weinstock, State Market Director of California, who is alleged to have assisted organizers of the various associations sent out by Henderson. Voorting, in his complaint, alleges that agents of Henderson made promises to him that the association would handle all of his product, and that he would receive at least $1 a pound for the average individual by scientists and doctors milk is more easily digged milk of any other animal now keep goats to their families and then apparently come to stall. The average well will give from three to five days, from four to eight freshening. There are berber of milk goats that six to seven quarts per have given eight quarters. The cost of keeping cording to those expiring handling, varies from cents a day, depending on amount of refuse feed clippings, tree twigs, which is available. On in their eating, in that sweet food, but their unlimited. They like brush, twigs, spineless and practically all grass. Where all hay and ed at retail in small looms will be, of course, high the cost of keeping a over 10 cents a day,cessful goat raisers. If a doe gives an quarts of milk a day it costs 10 cents a day days, she has given 90 at a cost of $36.50. Tof but 4 cents per quarter. The goat is particle disease. It is a universal goats cannot contract it is almost never found. Another element with the average family is goats will produce that of milk for the average nor too little. The average milk than can average family, and eight times as much care. Statistics show that goats can, under favourable conditions or forty-two pounds throughout the year, be produced at the production of these goats milk now sell cow's milk brings. Of goat's milk deliveries is 30 to 35 percent. The demand for goats raising of breeding s Under the caption "Killed in Action," the casualty list received Tuesday from the War Department carries the name of Lieutenant Charles Leon Deaver of Riverside. Lieutenant Deaver was an instructor in Santa Ana high school when he entered the war service. Since last summer, when Lieutenant Deaver went into action with his company, his comrades and superior officers have carried on a persistent but unavailing effort to find some trace of him, but in vain. Until this time Lieutenant Deaver has been listed as missing in action, but now it would seem the War Department has given up all hope of ever obtaining any further information regarding him and announces that this gallant man was "killed in action." New oil wells started during the first half of the year 1919 totaled 307, as compared with 406 and 577 for the same period in 1918 and 1917, according to reports filed with State Oil and Gas Inspector R. P. McLaughlin. The number for last week was 16, which is considerably above the average thus far. Nine were in Kern county, three in Ventura and three in the Los Angeles neighborhood. There were 18 wells ready for test of shut-off, 20 deepening or redrilling, and four abandonments. A notable development during the week was the striking of oil in the Meyers well of the Union Oil company, in Sec. 4, T. 3 S., R. 11 W. S. B. B. & M., about four miles northeast of the Coyote Hills field and three miles south of the Whittier field. The strike may be expected to be the prelude to active development prices to the producers of milk, and to have been aided and abetted in this plan by Col. Harris Weinstock, State Market Director of California, who is alleged to have assisted organizers of the various associations sent out by Henderson. Voorting, in his complaint, alleges that agents of Henderson made promises to him that the association would handle all of his product, and that he would receive at least $1 a pound for his butter-fat. He also alleges he was told that if he did not join the association he could not market his product. This was made as a threat, he alleges. Voorting charges, also, that he gave promissory notes to the Associated Dairymen of California to the amount of $4.50 for every milch cow he owned, and that he was promised these notes would not be collected. He asks the court to rescind the contract so he may sell his milk for a higher price offered by a concern not connected with the association. A member of the association stated that the agents sent out by Henderson two years ago tied up the dairymen in assessed each member in the sum of a hide-bound contract to deliver all of their product to the association, and $5 for each milch cow belonging to him. Fifty cents of this amount was demanded in cash, and went into the pockets of the agents, and the remaining $4.50 was obtained in the shape of promissory notes of the dairymen, and went to Henderson as president of the parent association. These notes bear 6 per cent interest and are negotiable paper. At the same time, it is said, the promise was made that the efforts of the association would raise the price of butterfat to at least $1 a pound. The association have purchased be kept on the same cow. Seven duce approximately two or forty-two pounds throughout the year, with the production of the goat's milk now selling cow's milk brings. The goat's milk delivers les is 30 to 35 cents. The demand for goats raising of breeding stable, and it promises so as the interest increases. There is a wonder for the expansion of farming in Southern California already more milk goes State in the Union than half as many milk forms, in fact, as in combined. The milk goats of gaining to attract the whole United States, ready a large demand bred goats coming from the United States and last week there were pure-bred bucks from breeders to breeders New York, Arizona, Columbia. As California is no milk-goat industry is safe to predict that will be scores of bulls for breeding stock, just breeders are now going and New York. The New York The twenty-five millions to be "an act of reparations would just show how getting with our more some butter-making establishments in the State, and started others in various places, but it is alleged by some of the disaffected members that they have not gone far enough in this direction to be able to control the price of butterfat in the State. In fact, the basis of the complaint appears to be that the association's officers have not seen fit to carry out their agreements to establish sufficient of these butter-making concerns to afford a market for the product of all its members. MILK GOAT INDUSTRY A PROMISING FIELD Milk is an Ideal Food for Invalids and Infants. The breeding of goats for milk production has come to be a real industry in Southern California. Milk goats are now regarded as in every sense utility animals and are being raised and handled on that basis. The reasons for the steadily growing popularity of the milk goat are numerous. Goat's milk has been proven in innumerable cases to be an ideal food for infants and invalids. By the same token, being a splendid food for the young and alling, it is also good for the average individual. It is claimed by scientists and doctors that goat's milk is more easily digested than the milk of any other animal. Many people now keep goats to supply milk for their families and the goat dairy has apparently come to stay. The average well-bred milk goat will give from three to five quarts a day, from four to eight months after freshening. There are a goodly number of milk goats that have given from six to seven quarts per day and a few PROPOSALS FOR SCHOOL BONDS Sealed proposals for the purchase of school bonds in the sum of One Hundred Sixteen Thousand ($116,000) Dollars of Anaheim School District of Orange County, California, will be received by the Board of Supervisors of Orange County up to 11 a.m. of Tuesday, July 15, 1919. Each of said bonds shall be dated September 1, 1919, and shall bear interest at the rate of five (5) per cent per annum, payable semi-annually; said principal and interest to be payable at the office of the Treasurer of Orange County, California. Said bonds are one hundred sixteen in number, of One Thousand ($1000.00) Dollars each, payable as follows, to-wit: Bond No. 1, $1000.00, payable September 1, 1920. Bond No. 2, $1000.00, payable September 1, 1920. Bond No. 3, $1000.00, payable September 1, 1920. Bond No. 4, $1000.00, payable September 1, 1920. Bond No. 5, $1000.00, payable September 1, 1920. Bond No. 6, $1000.00, payable September 1, 1921. Bond No. 7, $1000.00, payable September 1, 1921. Bond No. 8, $1000.00, payable September 1, 1921. Bond No. 9, $1000.00, payable September 1, 1921. Bond No. 10, $1000.00, payable September 1, 1921. Bond No. 11, $1000.00, payable September 1, 1922. Bond No. 12, $1000.00, payable September 1, 1922. Bond No. 13, $1000.00, payable September 1, 1922. Bond No. 14, $1000.00, payable September 1, 1922. Bond No. 15, $1000.00, payable September 1, 1922. Bond No. 16, $1000.00, payable September 1, 1923. Bond No. 17, $1000.00, payable September 1, 1923. Bond No. 18, $1000.00, payable September 1, 1923. Bond No. 19, $1000.00, payable September 1, 1923. Bond No. 20, $1000.00, payable September 1, 1923. Bond No. 21, $1000.00, payable September 1, 1924. Bond No. 22, $1000.00, payable September 1, 1924. Bond No. 23, $1000.00, payable September 1, 1924. Bond No. 24, $1000.00, payable September 1, 1924. Bond No. 25, $150.00, payable September 1, 1924. Bond No. 26, $150.00, payable September 1, 1925. Bond No. 27, $150.00, payable September 1, 1925. Bond No. 28, $150.00, payable September 1, 1925. Bond No. 29, $150.00, payable September 1, 1925. Bond No.30,$150.ooo,payable September Bond No. 103,$15OO.OO,payable September I.,I94O. Bond No. 1O4,$I5OO.OO,payable September I.,I94O. Bond No.IO5,$I5OO.OO,payable September I.,I94O. BondNo.IO6,$I5OO.OO,payable September I.,I94O. BondNo.IO7,$I5OO.OO,payable September I.,I94O. BondNo.IO8,$I5OO.OO,payable September I.,I94O. BondNo.IO9,$I5OO.OO,payable September I.,I94O. BondNo.IIO十,$I5OO.OO,payable September I.,I94O. BondNo.III十,$I5OO.OO,payable September I.,I94O. BondNo.III十二,$I5OO.OO,payable September I.,I94O. BondNo.III十三,$I5OO.OO,payable September I.,I94O. BondNo.III十四,$I5OO.OO,payable September I.,I94O. BondNo.III十五,$I5OO.OO,payable September I.,I94O. BondNo.III十六,$I5OO.OO,payable September I.,I94O. The bonds will be sold for cash only and at not less than par and accrued interest. The purposes for which said bonds were voted were and are for the purpose of raising money for purchasing school lots; for building or purchasing one or more school buildings; for insuring school buildings; for supplying school buildings with furniture or necessary apparatus; and for improving school grounds. A certified or cashier's check; payable to the order of the Chairman of the Board of Supervisors; in the sum of three percent of the amount of said bonds or of the portion thereof bid for; must accompany each bid. Said Board reserves the right to reject any and all bills. The total valuation of taxable property within the Anaheim School District; in said County; for the year 1918; is $2,B88,-525; exclusive of operative property; and the outstanding indebtedness is $3O,SOD. By order of the Board of Supervisors of Orange County, California; made June I2, (SEAL) J.M.BACKS County Clerk and ex-officio Clerk; of the Board of Supervisors. NOTICE The Board of Supervisors of the County of Orange will meet on the first Monday of July, 1919; as a Board of Equalization to examine the assessment books and equalize the assessment property in the County of Orange. Said Board of Equalization will continue in session daily; Sundays excepted; until the business of Equalization is disposed of; but not later than the third Monday in July, I949. Dated this十六th day of June I949. J.M.BACKS County Clerk and ex-officio Clerk; of the Board of Supervisors of the County of Orange; California. 6- the average individual. It is claimed by scientists and doctors that goat's milk is more easily digested than the milk of any other animal. Many people now keep goats to supply milk for their families and the goat dairy has apparently come to stay. The average well-bred milk goat will give from three to five quarts a day, from four to eight months after freshening. There are a goodly number of milk goats that have given from six to seven quarts per day and a few have given eight quarts and over. The cost of keeping a milk goat, according to those experienced in the handling, varies from 3 cents to 15 cents a day, depending partly on the amount of refuse feed, such as lawn clippings, tree twigs, table refuse, etc., which is available. Goats are dainty in their eating, in that they want clean, sweet food, but their diet is almost unlimited. They like green leaves, brush, twigs, spineless cactus, silage and practically all grains and grasses. Where all hay and grain is purchased at retail in small lots, the feed cost will be, of course, highest. However, the cost of keeping a goat need not be over 10 cents a day, according to successful goat raisers. If a doe gives an average of three quarts of milk a day for 300 days and it costs 10 cents a day for feed for 365 days, she has given 900 quarts of milk at a cost of $36.50. This is a feed cost of but 4 cents per quart. The goat is particularly free from disease. It is a universal belief that goats cannot contract tuberculosis, as it is almost never found among them. Another element which appeals to the average family is that one or two goats will produce the right quantity of milk for the average—not too much nor too little. The average cow gives more milk than can be used by the average family, and costs seven or eight times as much for feed, housing and care. Statistics show that seven to nine goats can, under favorable conditions, be kept on the same feed required to keep one cow. Seven goats will produce approximately twenty-one quarts or forty-two pounds of milk per day throughout the year, which is equal to the production of the average cow. Goat's milk now sells for twice what cow's milk brings. The present price of goat's milk delivered in Los Angeles is 30 to 35 cents per quart. The demand for goats has made the raising of breeding stock very profitable. be kept on the same feed required to keep one cow. Seven goats will produce approximately twenty-one quarts or forty-two pounds of milk per day throughout the year, which is equal to the production of the average cow. Goat's milk now sells for twice what cow's milk brings. The present price of goat's milk delivered in Los Angeles is 30 to 35 cents per quart. The demand for goats has made the raising of breeding stock very profitable, and it promises to be even more so as the interest in the industry increases. There is a wonderful opportunity for the expansion of milk-goat breeding in Southern California. There are already more milk goats in any other State in the Union. There are more than half as many milk goats in California, in fact, as in all other States combined. The milk goats of California are beginning to attract the attention of the whole United States, and there is already a large demand for California-bred goats coming from all parts of the United States and Canada. Only last week there were shipments of pure-bred buckets from Los Angeles breeders to breeders in Minnesota, New York, Arizona, Texas and British Columbia. As California is now the center of the milk-goat industry in America, it is safe to predict that very soon there will be scores of buyers coming here for breeding stock, just as dairy cattle breeders are now going to Wisconsin and New York. The New York Times says paying twenty-five millions to Columbia would be "an act of reparation." Oh, no, it would just show how careless we are getting with our money. The equipment which the Secretary of War has been requested to return from France includes about 1,500 caterpillar tractors; about 400 road rollers, steam and gas driven; and a large number of concrete mixers, road graders, elevating graders, rock crushers, industrial locomotives, industrial railway track, dump cars, steam shovels, hoisting engines, electric motors, and quantities of smaller equipment. In his letter requesting the return of this equipment the Secretary of Agriculture said: "The highway construction program which the Federal Government and the States propose to begin immediately is the largest public undertaking contemplated in the near future. It offers an immediate field for the employment of labor and the use of materials that will help to stabilize business along a number of lines. The work has been expanded so suddenly that it has not been possible to make adequate provision for furnishing the necessary equipment, and previously all the available supply was absorbed by the demands of the War Department." "I am sending you this list as a result of a conference which I have just held with the executive committee of the American Association of State Highway Officials, at which it was represented that the various States are very anxious to secure additional equipment of the kinds indicated. "I am thoroughly in sympathy with the efforts that are being made by the War Department to aid returning soldiers in securing employment, and I am convinced that if the equipment and supplies listed are made available it will facilitate highway construction, and thereby stimulate the employment of labor." WHY Everybody Eats at the Exchange Grill Excellent Service and Good Eating A. KLUEWER, Prop. Crystal Ice Crystal Ice Manufactured by The Anaheim Crystal Ice and Cold Storage Co. The only ice from pure distilled water manufactured in Anaheim. Delivered to all parts of the city and surrounding country. Phone 590 Anaheim, Cal. SEEGER Siphon Refrigerators. QUICK MEAL Stoves—Oil, Gas, or Gasoline. Shipped Everywhere. Write for Catalogue. Anglo-Range and Refrigerator Co. 803 So. Hill St. Los Angeles CERTIFICATE OF CO-PARTNERSHIP We, the undersigned, do hereby certify that we are co-partners, transacting business in Anaheim, Orange County, California, under the firm name and style of Walter & Day. That the names in full of all of the members of said co-partnership are as follows: Joe E. Walter, whose place of residence is No. 306 East Center Street, Anaheim, California; Charles Omer Day, whose place of residence is No. 218 North Olive Street Anaheim, California. IN WITNESS WHEREOF we have hereunto set our hands this 29th day of May, 1919. CHARLES OMER DAY JOE E WALTER State of California,) See Ranger and Its Oil Fields From a sleepy town to the seething center of the World's Greatest Oil Field in less than a year is Ranger's history. Millionaires made over night. Opportunities for every one. Continuous drilling and greater preparations for drilling for more of the liquid gold. Scenes like no other place in the country. Twenty-four of these, carefully selected and described have been prepared in a folder which will be sent you for twenty-five cents in stamps. Shows the city and the world famous That the names in full of all the members of said co-partnership are as follows: Joe E. Walter, whose place of residence is No. 306 East Center Street, Anaheim, California; Charles Omer Day, whose place of residence is No. 218 North Olive Street Anaheim, California. IN WITNESS WHEREOF we have hereunto set our hands this 29th day of May, 1919. CHARLES OMER DAY JOE E WALTER State of California,) County of Orange ) On this 29th day of May, 1919, before me, Homer G. Ames, a Notary Public in and for said county, personally appeared Joe E. Walter and Charles Omer Day, known to me to be the persons whose names are subscribed to the annexed instrument and acknowledged to me that they executed the same. WITNESS my hand and official seal. (Notarial) (Seal) HOMER G. AMES Notary Public in and for the County of Orange, State of California. 6-5-5t RE-CODE MILITARY JUSTICE Complete reorganization of the system of dispensing military justice in the army is provided in a bill introduced in the House by Representative Royal C. Johnson, of South Dakota, after having been drawn by Lieut. Col. S. T. Ansell, whose recent attacks upon injustice in the army were resented by Secretary Baker. Among basic principles of the bill are the following: It proceeds in furtherance of the fundamental theory that courts-martial are inherently courts, their functions inherently judicial, and that their powers must be judicially exercised. It requires that the fundamental principles of right and justice declared to be such by our law and established as necessary to a full, fair and impartial trial, shall be recognized and observed throughout the courts-martial proceedings from accusation to execution. It provides that military punishment be based upon enlightened justice, so that the results may be accepted everywhere as justice.