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anaheim-gazette 1919-07-17

1919-07-17 · Anaheim Gazette · page 4 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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Anaheim Gazette ISSUED EVERY THURSDAY ESTABLISHED 1870 Henry Kuchel, Editor and Proprietor SUBSCRIPTION PER YEAR ... $1.50 SIX MONTHS ... $1.00 THREE MONTHS ... $ .50 Entered at the Anaheim Postoffice as second-class matter BUILDING MOVEMENT IN ORANGE COUNTY Unusual Activity Reported from All Sections. Orange county is now in the midst of a building movement which bids fair to increase as time goes on, for building is still behind the demand. Santa Ana's building permits during the first six months of this year totaled nearly a quarter of a million dollars, a 33 1-3 per cent increase over the same period of last year. June permits totaled $55,619, as compared with $32,035 for June of last year. Included in the permits for the past six months are six new business buildings, $12,000 brick store at Fourth and Broadway for Walter L. Moore; a $5,500 machine shop for the Kaufman spotlight factory, a $12,000 garage for O. L. Halsell; a $10,000 warehouse for the California Packing Corporation; a $9000 brick office building for Carden and Seaman, and a $5000 garage for Robert McFadden. Also were included eighteen new residences costing between $3000 and $7700 each. Not only included in this total is a $5000 garage building at 428 West Fifth being erected by E. D. Waffle, and a new garage to cost approxi- HOW INDIANS USED TO HUNT Had Separate Sections Set Apart for Families—Care was Taken to Conserve the Animal Life. Long before the first white man set foot in America, the conservation of certain natural resources was most carefully practiced among the Indian tribes of what is now the northeastern part of the United States, as Prof. Frank G. Speck of the University of Pennsylvania was first to show. To the Indian, Prof. Speck well says, there was no wilderness. Trackless to the whites, to him all the land was known, and within the limitations set by his knowledge of natural resources all of it was used, says the Christian Science Monitor. Among the Algonquin tribes each family—in our own sense of the term, a group of relatives—owned a hunting ground of its own, usually from 200 to 400 square miles in area, within which their right to kill game was exclusive and supreme. The boundaries of this hunting ground were determined by rivers, lakes, ridges, or other natural features. In some regions marked by signs blazed on the trees, or by cut-out figures in bark representing the animal emblem of the owner. At times the shape of the family hunting ground was determined by the local distribution of game animals. Thus it might extend from the lower lands, where moose were naturally abundant (in virgin forest districts) in a long, narrow strip to the higher regions denuded by forest fires where bears were to be found. HUNTING GROUNDS PROTECTED Pioneer Cause Al V. Smith drops at His Fullerton Resident Herberber of Anaheim. Al V. Smith, after this section, and o citizens in North dropped dead at 10 o'clock Mr was apparently in the time, having ber of friends on ton an hour or death. He return later went to the and while standing sank to the g instantly. Heart cause. Mr. Smith was father was W. coming here fifty a ranch on Oran deceased owned as well as consider He leaves a wide stepson, also th sisters. All of his service during them is still in member of the A his son Raymond lodge a month ago. He seemed to spirits and during before the he told Mrs. Ed felt and that he careful for a m would regain his dergone a medically and was trouble and was $12,000 garage for O. L. Halsell; a $10,000 warehouse for the California Packing Corporation; a $9000 brick office building for Carden and Seaman, and $5000 garage for Robert McFadden. Also were included eighteen new residences costing between $3000 and $7700 each. Not only included in this total is a $5000 garage building at 428 West Fifth being erected by E. D. Waffle, and a new garage to cost approximately $10,000, which will be erected at Sixth and Sycamore by the Orange County Garage Company. Assurance is given that the new $150,000 hotel will be started within a short time, the Christian Science Church plans a new church, and the First National Bank will soon start work on a new five- or six-story office building on the southwest corner of Fourth and Main streets. At least four new rural school buildings will be erected this summer, costing around $15,000 each. They will be built at Bolsa, Greenville, Olive, and Villa Park, and contracts for three of the structures have already been let. Several new residences are being erected around Placentia, including two for Frank Anderson and his father costing about $3500 each. Considerable building is also under way at Balboa, Newport, Laguna Beach, Huntington Beach, and Seal Beach. Mrs. Harriet McLaughlin and Miss Marian Crandall of Los Angeles are putting up a seven-room house at Laguna-Cliffs adjoining the new Tuniccliff home; D. E. Haynes is erecting a bachelor apartment near the Colman studio, and Miss Margaret M. Kerr of Pasadena has a four-room chalet under construction at Arch Beach. A number of small bungalows and some larger residences are being finished at Balboa including one for C. E. Leffingwell, Jr., of Whittier, and one for Elsberry Reynolds, son of Harold Bell Wright's publisher. Permits at Orange during June totaled $14,500, including a $6500 residence for H. W. Duker, a $1500 residence for W. F. Gillogly, and a $3000 residence for Henry Packert. Fullerton permits the past six months totaled $177,735, practically all the new structures being residences averaging $3000 each. Not included in this total is the new First National Bank building and a large apartment house, permits for which At times the shape of the family hunting ground was determined by the local distribution of game animals. Thus it might extend from the lower lands, where moose were naturally abundant (in virgin forest districts) in a long, narrow strip to the higher regions denuded by forest fires where bears were to be found. HUNTING GROUNDS PROTECTED Each hunting ground was known by its own name, and was handed down by inheritance in the male line from one generation to another. It was protected from trespass, the punishment for which sometimes was the extreme penalty, in certain cases supposed to be inflicted by conjuring against the trespasser's life or health. Indians passing through the hunting ground of another family usually sought permission, and if by necessity game had to be killed, the pelts were delivered or other compensation was made to the owners of the land. It was customary, in some cases, when a particular family had a poor season on its own hunting ground, for it to secure the temporary right to use a part of the hunting ground of some neighboring family until times improved. Within each family hunting ground the conservation of the game was looked to with the greatest care. The Indian family knew the approximate number of deer, bear, moose, caribou, otter or beaver in its own hunting ground, and in the case of some tribes regulated with strictness the number to be killed each year, so as not to encroach upon the necessary increase. If the season for large game had been bad the family would sometimes restrict itself to a fish diet for months on end rather than endanger the breeding stock. CONSERVED THE BEAVER Beaver, in particular, were most carefully conserved. The number of young and old beaver in each beaver house was known. Before the ear of European influence the Indians never destroyed all the members of a beaver family, but took such care of the beaver, as well as of the other food animals in his hunting ground, as the farmer does of his herds and flocks. Nowadays, however, the natives have realized the hopelessness of conserving their resources where they have to compete with the avarice of white his son Raymond lodge a month after he seemed to no spirits and during tion before the c he told Mrs. Ed felt and that he careful for a man would regain his dergone a medically cently and was th trouble and was ful of any overv ent. MORE TROUCH While peace has great joy and g world and he supposed to ha ficts forever. th under the directi is sending more where they are en vation and are th results. On Jun issued this order "Because of th late need for m Siberia, command depots and recr ing instructed th forts to procure voluntary appli c Siberia. Officers do inform recruir for Siberian seriarly expressing in Siberia will l b to the Siberian ment, Presidio. It is declared Senate that this should continual is ratified and th mitted to a police everywhere on in ing its boys to BIRCH OIL CO FIGHTT Wants Assessor $800,977 The annual f Company for a ment began bef tiing as a board day. The Birch O proximately tw othe Brea Canyo are eleven produc Permits at Orange during June totaled $14,500, including a $6500 residence for H. W. Duker, a $1500 residence for W. F. Gillogly, and a $3000 residence for Henry Packert. Fullerton permits the past six months totaled $177,735, practically all the new structures being residences averaging $3000 each. Not included in this total is the new First National Bank building and a large apartment house, permits for which were issued prior to January 1. Anaheim's active operations have included erection of several business buildings, a thirty-apartment building by Vic Lamont, and many residences. Permits in the past six months totaled $115,000, with nearly $400,000 worth of new building starting or about to be started, including the $75,000 Elks clubhouse, nearly $100,000 for new school buildings, a $54,000 Methodist Church, a $45,000 packing house for Anaheim Orange and Lemon Association, a $15,000 bungalow court by Anaheim Improvement Company, a $10,000 business block at Center and Los Angeles streets for Theo. Roberts, a $15,000 garage building for George West. The people generally knew that the war department had automobiles to burn, but was not prepared for the knowledge that vast quantities of automobiles used in the army in France actually were burned. George Creel writes in Leslie's Weekly: "The people of the United States are not the fools the politicians imagine." Evidently the last election taught even the administration's chief press agent something. The Timagami band of the Ojibways "even went so far as to divide their districts into quarters. Each year the family hunted in a different quarter in rotation, leaving a tract in the center as a sort of bank, not to be hunted over unless forced to do so by a shortage in the regular tract." Among certain Indians, like the Micmacs, these tracts were held together so long as there were sons, grandsons or nephews in the male line to inherit them, and they were sometimes increased by intermarriage or inheritance. The Indians of Kentucky, says Dr. Clark Wissler, "were in the habit of burning off forest areas regularly so as to provide pasturage for the buffalo, thus enticing him to remain in the country." Again, the Indians living in the regions where wild rice grows, were observed to take certain precautions to protect the rice beds, even to facilitating their growth. The conservation of game in the family hunting ground was the essential fact in the existence of these Indians, who lived mainly on game, for upon it their lives depended. Other uses of natural resources by young and old beaver in each beaver house was known. Before the ear of European influence the Indians never destroyed all the members of a beaver family, but took such care of the beaver, as well as of the other food animals in his hunting ground, as the farmer does of his herds and flocks. Nowadays, however, the natives have realized the hopelessness of conserving their resources where they have to compete with the avarice of white frontiersmen, so in some regions they undertook to "get all they could before the white men cleaned it up." The Timagami band of the Ojibways "even went so far as to divide their districts into quarters. Each year the family hunted in a different quarter in rotation, leaving a tract in the center as a sort of bank, not to be hunted over unless forced to do so by a shortage in the regular tract." Among certain Indians, like the Micmacs, these tracts were held together so long as there were sons, grandsons or nephews in the male line to inherit them, and they were sometimes increased by intermarriage or inheritance. The Indians of Kentucky, says Dr. Clark Wissler, "were in the habit of burning off forest areas regularly so as to provide pasturage for the buffalo, thus enticing him to remain in the country." Again, the Indians living in the regions where wild rice grows, were observed to take certain precautions to protect the rice beds, even to facilitating their growth. The conservation of game in the family hunting ground was the essential fact in the existence of these Indians, who lived mainly on game, for upon it their lives depended. Other uses of natural resources by young and old beaver in each beaver house was known. Before the ear of European influence the Indians never destroyed all the members of a beaver family, but took such care of the beaver, as well as of the other food animals in his hunting ground, as the farmer does of his herds and flocks. Nowadays, however, the natives have realized the hopelessness of conserving their resources where they have to compete with the avarice of white frontiersmen, so in some regions they undertook to "get all they could before the white men cleaned it up." The Timagami band of the Ojibways "even went so far as to divide their districts into quarters. Each year the family hunted in a different quarter in rotation, leaving a tract in the center as a sort of bank, not to be hunted over unless forced to do so by a shortage in the regular tract." Among certain Indians, like the Micmacs, these tracts were held together so long as there were sons, grandsons or nephews in the male line to inherit them, and they were sometimes increased by intermarriage or inheritance. The Indians of Kentucky, says Dr. Clark Wissler, "were in the habit of burning off forest areas regularly so as to provide pasturage for the buffalo, thus enticing him to remain in the country." Again, the Indians living in the regions where wild rice grows, were observed to take certain precautions to protect the rice beds, even to facilitating their growth. The conservation of game in the family hunting ground was the essential fact in the existence of these Indians, who lived mainly on game, for upon it their lives depended. Other uses of natural resources by young and old beaver in each beaver house was known. Before the ear of European influence the Indians never destroyed all the members of a beaver family, but took such care of the beaver, as well as of the other food animals in his hunting ground, as the farmer does of his herds and flocks. Nowadays, however, the natives have realized the hopelessness of conserving their resources where they have to compete with the avarice of white frontiersmen, so in some regions they undertook to "get all they could before the white men cleaned it up." The Timagami band of the Ojibways "even went so far as to divide their districts into quarters. Each year the family hunted in a different quarter in rotation, leaving a tract in the center as a sort of bank, not to be hunted over unless forced to do so by a shortage in the regular tract." Among certain Indians, like the Micmacs, these tracts were held together so long as there were sons, grandsons or nephews in the male line to inherit them, and they were sometimes increased by intermarriage or inheritance. The Indians of Kentucky, says Dr. Clark Wissler, "were in the habit of burning off forest areas regularly so as to provide pasturage for the buffalo, thus enticing him to remain in the country." Again, the Indians living in the regions where wild rice grows, were observed to take certain precautions to protect the rice beds, even to facilitating their growth. The conservation of game in the family hunting ground was the essential fact in the existence of these Indians, who lived mainly on game, for upon it their lives depended. Other uses of natural resources by young and old beaver in each beaver house was known. Before the ear of European influence the Indians never destroyed all the members of a beaver family, but took such care of the beaver, as well as of other food animals in his hunting ground, as the farmer does of his herds and flocks. Nowadays, however, the natives have realized the hopelessness of conserving their resources where they have to compete with the avarice of white frontiersmen, so in some regions they undertook to "get all they could before the white men cleaned it up." The Timagami band of the Ojibways "even went so far as to divide their districts into quarters. Each year the family hunted in a different quarter in rotation, leaving a tract in the center as a sort of bank, not to be hunted over unless forced to do so by a shortage in the regular tract." Among certain Indians, like the Micmacs, these tracts were held together so long as there were sons,grandsons or nephews in the male line to inherit them,and they were sometimes increased by intermarriage or inheritance. The Indians of Kentucky says Dr. Clark Wissler,"were in the habit of burning off forest areas regularly so as to provide pasturage forthe buffalo thus enticing him to remaininthecountry."Again,theIndianslivingintherigionswherewildricegrowswereobservedtotakecertainprecautionstotoprotectthericebedseventoc facilitatingtheirgrowth. The conservation of game 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Smith, a pioneer resident of this section, and one of the best known citizens in Northern Orange county, dropped dead at his home in Fullerton at 10 o'clock Monday morning. He was apparently in his usual health at the time, having talked with a number of friends on the streets of Fullerton an hour or two previous to his death. He returned to his home and later went to the home of a neighbor, and while standing on the walk talking, sank to the ground and died almost instantly. Heart disease was the cause. Mr. Smith was 55 years of age. His father was W. J. Smith, the family coming here fifty years ago, settling on a ranch on Orangethorpe avenue. The deceased owned a ranch at Placentia as well as considerable other property. He leaves a widow, three sons and a stepson, also three brothers and six sisters. All of his sons were in the service during the war, and one of them is still in France. He was a member of the Anaheim Elks, he and his son Raymond having joined the lodge a month ago. He seemed to be in unusually good spirits and during the short conversation before the end came so suddenly he told Mrs. Edwards how well he felt and that he would be extremely careful for a month or so, when he would regain his health. He had undergone a medical examination recently and was told that he had heart trouble and was cautioned to be careful. NEW SECRETARY MERCHANTS' ASSOCIATION J. Lloyd Moore, who for many months has served as secretary of the merchants' association, has resigned his position owing to a press of private duties. The resignation was handed to the board of directors Tuesday evening and Walter Hodges was immediately elected to take his place. The contention of the oil company is that its property was discriminated against, and that its assessment was computed on a different basis than adjoining oil properties. Maps of the district were posted during the hearing, and much of the day was given to taking the testimony of Assessor Sleeper as to his figures on adjoining properties of the Union and other companies. The board wants to secure all the facts in the case and sprang something that has not been done in former hearings. A subpoena, prepared by District Attorney L. A. West, was served upon A. Otis Birch, directing that he appear before the board on Wednesday morning at 10 o'clock, with books and records of the company during the tax year from March 1, 1918, to March 1, 1919. From these books according to the subpoena, it is proposed to get figures showing the total oil production of the Birch property the past year, total cost of production and all incomes and revenue, both gross and net, during the period. With this information before it, the board will be qualified as never before to determine whether or not the assessment of the Birch company is just to all concerned. LIMA BEAN CROP SHORT Mill Creek, City Creek and Deep Creek are down. One strange situation, however, is that there is a flow of about 600 more inches than at this time last year in the Santa Ana river at the Salt Lake bridge. The water in the Santa Ana rises in this section, and the increase is undoubtedly due to heavier irrigation than usual, in the lands above the river. Reports of water shortages are being received from all sections of the state. The Southern California Edison Company here is now making an estimate of the additional power that will be necessary because of the greater lift in wells which are pumped. The hydro-electric plants of the company are suffering because of decreased water in streams and stream plants are being operated.—San Berdoo Sun. Local Notes Masons are putting a new front in the Boston bakery building this week. Arnold Enearl of the Gibbs Lumber Company, has been transferred to the company's yards at Fullerton. Mr. and Mrs. E. Zitzmann and daughter, Wilhelmine, and Mr. and Mrs. McCann motored down to San Diego the latter part of the week. L. E. Miller and son Edwin went down to San Diego last week. Mr. Miller is taking his summer vacation George Kemp is taking his place in the Nagel hardware store. John Ohm, who has been visiting at Trinity, Texas, for some months, writes that he is now at his old home at Ashland, Neb. Some day he will grow tired of visiting and return to THE FAMILY ENDED BY HOME ANIMALS FROM THE ORIGIN FOR NARROW DENUDED WIRES TECTED KNOWN HANDLED MALE ANOTHER, MISS, THE SOMETimes CERTAIN ACTIVITY BY SPASSER'S PASSING OF AN AMERICAN HOME IS WAS LAND. IT WHEN A SEason FOR IT TO USE A FOAM OF SOME IMAGES GROUND WAS LOOK-REAL. THE PROXIMATE CARIBOU-HUNTING TIME TRIBES NUMBER IS NOT TO INCREASE. HERE HAD SOMETIMES FOR MONTHS THE BREED. BIRCH OIL COMPANY FIGHTING FOR REDUCTI-N Wants Assessment Reduced from $800,973 to $150,000. The annual fight of the Birch Oil Company for a reduction in its assessment began before the supervisors sitting as a board of equalization Monday. The Birch Oil Company owns approximately twenty acres of land in the Brea Canyon, upon which there are eleven producing oil wells. This his son Raymond having joined the lodge a month ago. He seemed to be in unusually good spirits and during the short conversation before the end came so suddenly he told Mrs. Edwards how well he felt and that he would be extremely careful for a month or so, when he would regain his health. He had undergone a medical examination recently and was told that he had heart trouble and was cautioned to be careful of any overwork or undue excitement. MORE TROOPS FOR RUSSIA While peace has been signed with great joy and gladness around the world and the league of nations is supposed to have wound up all conflicts forever, the War Department under the direction of the President, is sending more troops to Siberia, where they are subjected to every privation and are too few to accomplish results. On June 28 the Department issued this order: "Because of the urgent and immediate need for replacement troops in Siberia, commanding officers of recruit depots and recruit depot posts are being instructed to make organized efforts to procure from men enlisting voluntary applications for service in Siberia. Officers will be designated to inform recruits of the opportunity for Siberian service. Recruits voluntarily expressing the desire for service in Siberia will be transferred at once to the Siberian Replacement Detachment, Presidio, San Francisco." It is declared by members of the Senate that this is what the country should continually expect if the league is ratified and the United States is committed to a policy of maintaining peace everywhere on the globe and to sending its boys to fight for it. BIRCH OIL COMPANY FIGHTING FOR REDUCTI-N Wants Assessment Reduced from $800,973 to $150,000. The annual fight of the Birch Oil Company for a reduction in its assessment began before the supervisors sitting as a board of equalization Monday. The Birch Oil Company owns approximately twenty acres of land in the Brea Canyon, upon which there are eleven producing oil wells. This his son Raymond having joined the lodge a month ago. He seemed to be in unusually good spirits and during the short conversation before the end came so suddenly he told Mrs. Edwards how well he felt and that he would be extremely careful for a month or so, when he would regain his health. He had undergone a medical examination recently and was told that he had heart trouble and was cautioned to be careful of any overwork or undue excitement. MORE TROOPS FOR RUSSIA While peace has been signed with great joy and gladness around the world and the league of nations is supposed to have wound up all conflicts forever, the War Department, under the direction of the President, is sending more troops to Siberia, where they are subjected to every privation and are too few to accomplish results. On June 28 the Department issued this order: "Because of the urgent and immediate need for replacement troops in Siberia, commanding officers of recruit depots and recruit depot posts are being instructed to make organized efforts to procure from men enlisting voluntary applications for service in Siberia. Officers will be designated to inform recruits of the opportunity for Siberian service. Recruits voluntarily expressing the desire for service in Siberia will be transferred at once to the Siberian Replacement Detachment, Presidio, San Francisco." It is declared by members of the Senate that this is what the country should continually expect if the league is ratified and the United States is committed to a policy of maintaining peace everywhere on the globe and to sending its boys to fight for it. BIRCH OIL COMPANY FIGHTING FOR REDUCTI-N Wants Assessment Reduced from $800,973 to $150,000. The annual fight of the Birch Oil Company for a reduction in its assessment began before the supervisors sitting as a board of equalization Monday. The Birch Oil Company owns approximately twenty acres of land in the Brea Canyon, upon which there are eleven producing oil wells. This his son Raymond having joined the lodge a month ago. He seemed to be in unusually good spirits and during the short conversation before the end came so suddenly he told Mrs. Edwards how well he felt and that he would be extremely careful for a month or so, when he would regain his health. He had undergone a medical examination recently and was told that he had heart trouble and was cautioned to be careful of any overwork or undue excitement. MORE TROOPS FOR RUSSIA While peace has been signed with great joy and gladness around the world and the league of nations is supposed to have wound up all conflicts forever, the War Department, under the direction of the President, is sending more troops to Siberia, where they are subjected to every privation and are too few to accomplish results. On June 28 the Department issued this order: "Because of the urgent and immediate need for replacement troops in Siberia, commanding officers of recruit depots and recruit depot posts are being instructed to make organized efforts to procure from men enlisting voluntary applications for service in Siberia. Officers will be designated to inform recruits of the opportunity for Siberian service. Recruits voluntarily expressing the desire for service in Siberia will be transferred at once to the Siberian Replacement Detachment, Presidio, San Francisco." It is declared by members of the Senate that this is what the country should continually expect if the league is ratified and the United States is committed to a policy of maintaining peace everywhere on the globe and to sending its boys to fight for it. CLASSIFIED FOR SALE—Eight and a half acres of 4-year-old Valencias, two miles west of Fullerton, close to boulevard. Five room house with bathroom, gas and water fixtures. New garage, barn, good well and windmill. Will sell cheap if sale is made at once. J. D. Heitsheusen. Phone 593-J Anaheim. DIEGO THE LATER PART OF THE WEEK. L. E. Miller and son Edwin went down to San Diego last week. Mr. Miller is taking his summer vacation George Kemp is taking his place in the Nagel hardware store. John Ohm, who has been visiting at Trinity, Texas, for some months, writes that he is now at his old home at Ashland, Neb. Some day he will grow tired of visiting and return to Anaheim. The big guns at Fort McArthur were plainly heard in Anaheim Tuesday. Twelve shots were fired at an advancing fleet of derelicts at a distance of five and a half miles, nine of them being hits. Some shooting. First Church of Christ, Scientist, corner Philadelphia and Chartres streets. Sunday service 11 a.m. Sunday School 9:45 a.m. A meeting Wednesday at 7:45 p.m. at which testimonials of healing are given. Free reading room at the Church, open daily except Sundays and legal holidays, from 2 to 5 p.m. The public is cordially welcome. Hogs recently sold for $23.10 per hundred, but no doubt the pig growers were hoggish enough to want more. Many wheat growers are dissatisfied with a price of $2.30 per bushel, although they used to claim a guarantee of one dollar would make them supremely happy. RECORD WALNUT CROP The five Southern California counties raising walnuts have prospects of a record crop of 25,000 tons, worth $13,.000,000. As a result of the "clean orchard" campaign last fall and the general application of dust which has killed the codling worm and other pests, the crop is in excellent condition. BIRCH OIL COMPANY FIGHTING FOR REDUCTI-N WANTS Assessment Reduced from $800,973 to $150,000. The annual fight of the Birch Oil Company for a reduction in its assessment began before the supervisors sitting as a board of equalization Monday. The Birch Oil Company owns approximately twenty acres of land in the Brea Canyon, upon which there are eleven producing oil wells. This his son Raymond having joined the lodge a month ago. He seemed to be in unusually good spirits and during the short conversation before the end came so suddenly he told Mrs. Edwards how well he felt and that he would be extremely careful for a month or so, when he would regain his health. He had undergone a medical examination recently and was told that he had heart trouble and was cautioned to be careful of any overwork or undue excitation. MORE TROOPS FOR RUSSIA While peace has been signed with great joy and gladness around the world and the league of nations is supposed to have wound up all conflicts forever, the War Department, under the direction of the President, is sending more troops to Siberia, where they are subjected to every privation and are too few to accomplish results. On June 28 the Department issued this order: "Because of the urgent and immediate need for replacement troops in Siberia, commanding officers of recruitment depots and recruitment posts are being instructed to make organized efforts to procure from men enlisting voluntary applications for service in Siberia. Officers will be designated to inform recruits of the opportunity for Siberian service. Recruits voluntarily expressing the desire for service in Siberia will be transferred at once to the Siberian Replacement Detachment, Presidio, San Francisco." It is declared by members of the Senate that this is what the country should continually expect if the league is ratified and the United States is committed to a policy of maintaining peace everywhere on the globe and to sending its boys to fight for it. CLASSIFIED FOR SALE—Eight and a half acres of 4-year-old Valencias, two miles west of Fullerton, close to boulevard. Five room house with bathroom, gas and water fixtures. New garage, barn, good well and windmill. Will sell cheap if sale is made at once. J. D. Heitsheusen. Phone 593-J Anaheim. DIEGO THE LATER PART OF THE WEEK. L. E. Miller and son Edwin went down to San Diego last week. Mr. Miller is taking his summer vacation George Kemp is taking his place in the Nagel hardware store. John Ohm, who has been visiting at Trinity, Texas, for some months, writes that he is now at his old home at Ashland, Neb. Some day he will grow tired of visiting and return to Anaheim. The big guns at Fort McArthur were plainly heard in Anaheim Tuesday. Twelve shots were fired at an advancing fleet of derelicts at a distance of five and a half miles, nine of them being hits. Some shooting. RECORD WALNUT CROP The five Southern California counties raising walnuts have prospects of a record crop of 25,000 tons, worth $13,.000,000. As a result of the "clean orchard" campaign last fall and the general application of dust which has killed the codling worm and other pests, the crop is in excellent condition. BIRCH OIL COMPANY FIGHTING FOR REDUCTI-N WANTS Assessment Reduced from $800,973 to $150,000. The annual fight of the Birch Oil Company for a reduction in its assessment began before the supervisors sitting as a board of equalization Monday. The Birch Oil Company owns approximately twenty acres of land in the Brea Canyon, upon which there are eleven producing oil wells. This his son Raymond having joined the lodge a month ago. He seemed to be in unusually good spirits and during the short conversation before the end came so suddenly he told Mrs. Edwards how well he felt and that he would be extremely careful for a month or so, when he would regain his health. He had undergone a medical examination recently and was told that he had heart trouble and was cautioned to be careful of any overwork or undue excitation. MORE TROOPS FOR RUSSIA While peace has been signed with great joy and gladness around the world and the league of nations is supposed to have wound up all conflicts forever, the War Department, under the direction of the President, is sending more troops to Siberia, where they are subjected to every privation and are too few to accomplish results. On June 28 the Department issued this order: "Because of the urgent and immediate need for replacement troops in Siberia, commanding officers of recruitment depots and recruitment posts are being instructed to make organized efforts to procure from men enlisting voluntary applications for service in Siberia." Wants Assessment Reduced from $800,973 to $150,000. The annual fight of the Birch Oil Company for a reduction in its assessment began before the supervisors sitting as a board of equalization Monday. The Birch Oil Company owns approximately twenty acres of land in the Brea Canyon, upon which there are eleven producing oil wells. This property, upon an oil production basis which Sleeper uses in fixing his oil assessments, is assessed at $800,973. Of this total assessment, $27,500 is for personal property on the lands, and $773,973 is for the surface and oil-bearing values of the property. Declaring that the present assessment is "unfair, unjust, excessive, illegal, erroneous, and discriminatory," the Birch company has officially filed a demand that its assessment be reduced to $150,000, and with Geo. H. Woodruff and Clyde Shoemaker of Los Angeles as its attorneys, opened its fight before the board. The them were relatively small, although the hunting Indians of Pennsylvania used nearly all of the edible wild plants, and cultivated Indian corn, beans and pumpkins, and even maintained considerable orchards of fruit. With his slight knowledge of the earth and what it can provide for the uses of man, these Indians, naked savages to our ancesters and mere bushmen to far too many present-day Americans, had yet mastered the essential fundamental of a continuous prosperity. They knew how to use the natural resources without exhausting them. WATER SHORTAGE Water shortage throughout California's agricultural regions, which will become serious before the end of the next two months, is becoming manifest through San Bernardino county. The mountain streams are lower than for many years at this period of the season, and water company officials and farmers and orchardists are becoming apprehensive of the situation. While the situation in San Bernardino is not as serious as other sections of the state, it is admitted that unless there are early rain in the fall there will be a water shortage. Every source of the city's water supply is being used to furnish the requirements of this city, but William Starke, water superintendent, said last night he did not believe the situation here would become sufficiently acute to demand a restriction on the use of domestic water. At the city's Antil wells a total of 408 inches was flowing yesterday, the lowest in their history. At the end of last year's summer season the wells were flowing 510 inches. At the Lytle Creek well owned by the city, the water level has dropped to 115 to 117 feet, the lowest in the history of that well, which was drilled in 1908. Water experts say the Lytle Creek basin is the lowest in this section. So heavy has been the draw on Big Bear lake, which serves the orchards of Redlands and surrounding country, that it is at its lowest level for this time of the summer in five years. CLASSIFIED FOR SALE—Eight and a half acres of 4-year-old Valencias, two miles west of Fullerton, close to boulevard. Five room house with bathroom, gas and water fixtures. New garage, barn, good well and windmill. Will sell cheap if sale is made at once. J. D. Heitsheusen. Phone 593-J Anaheim. 7-17tf FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE—8 acre orange grove, 2 miles west of Colton, grove in fine condition, large nice house, flowers, large barn, chicken corrals, 7½ shares of water, would prefer walnut grove. Address owner N. J. Sanders, Balboa, Calif. FOR SALE.—If you want good orange honey, get it now. Call or write Alois Katzer, Placentia or Anaheim. Calif. FOR SALE—Big snap; only bicycle shop in town; owner must leave city to take care of other business; good trade. C. A. Benzel, Downey, Calif. FOR SALE—Modern 5-room bungalow. Bath and hot water. Street improvement paid for. Garage. Price $3000; $1500 cash. Phone 791-W, Anaheim. 1-t FOR SALE—Iron Wagon, Bed and Rack, 2 Row Ventura Bean Planter, Sled Bean Cutter, Disk Harrow, Single Cultivators, etc. Dr. Zimmerman Ranch, Phone Fullerton 300-J. Concrete pipe and cement contractor. All work guaranteed. D. Degryse, 241 Kroeger street, Anaheim. 4-t RUN NO. 3 Starts July 25,1919 Fifty inches one hour per share. All rented stock must be transferred in office before run starts Anaheim Union Water Company A NEW MANGO A. D. Shamel of the United States department of agriculture, has received at Riverside by express a mango of the variety called the manga de Rosa. This is the first fruit of this variety ever grown in America, and this specimen weighs a pound. The buds and seeds were brought into this country from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, by Mr. Shamel in 1914. They were collected in the vicinity of the Brazilian capital, in a private garden were propagated at Miami, Fla., at the plant introduction garden maintained there by the department of agriculture. It is the most beautiful and valuable mango with which any of the experts of the department of agriculture are familiar. The mango is the most popular single fruit grown in tropical countries. Up to the present time no suitable variety of this fruit has been grown in California, but it is believed that in the foothills of Southern California, chased economically, and the value of the products, will have much to do in determining how closely the feeder can afford to adhere to the standard. But such standards or formulas, used in connection with the feeder's observation of his animals and the markets, are very useful, and have served a good purpose in improving the practice of feeding. It is in their abuse that the chief danger lies. To supply food in the right proportion to meet the various requirements of the animal, without a waste of food nutrients, constitutes scientific feeding. It is by carefully studying the composition of feeding stuffs, the proportion in which they are digested by different animals and under different conditions, and the requirement of animals for the various food nutrients when at rest, at work, giving milk, producing wool, mutton, beef, pork, etc., that the principles of feeding have been worked out. In applying these principles in practice the cost and special adaptations of different feeding stuffs must, of course, be taken plant introduction garden maintained there by the department of agriculture. It is the most beautiful and valuable mango with which any of the experts of the department of agriculture are familiar. The mango is the most popular single fruit grown in tropical countries. Up to the present time no suitable variety of this fruit has been grown in California, but it is believed that in the foothills of Southern California, where the best avocados succeed, this variety may prove to be a success. The fruits of this variety sell in the markets in Brazil at from 66 to 99 cents each. This is an indication of how this fruit is regarded by people who have an unlimited number of mangos to draw from. The average mango is selling there from two to five cents a dozen. It is a juicy fruit with a flavor unlike that of any other fruit grown anywhere. It is eaten fresh like a plum or apple and is, apparently, refreshing on a hot day. Most mangos have a large seed and the flesh is somewhat stringy, but this variety has a small seed and practically no fiber. GOOD JUDGMENT IN FEEDING IS ESSENTIAL Good judgment and intelligent observation on the part of the feeder are necessary in the application of feeding standards, as the calculation of economic rations is not merely a matter of applied mathematics. The local conditions as regards the feeding stuffs which can be grown and purified. NOTES FROM ST. MICHAEL'S CHURCH The Parish and Sunday School picnic held at Anaheim Landing on the 8th of July was great success this year and everyone felt that it was a day well spent. It is never possible to get every member of a Parish or Sunday School to go to a picnic because no day can be set which will suit every one but we think that there was as good a representation at the Landing this year as we have ever had. We are very grateful also to those who contributed toward making the day so pleasant and agreeable. After many delays due to the present rush of building going on in Anaheim the building committee succeeded in having the repairs on the church done. We trust that the interest in these services will continue to grow. This is the vacation season when everyone goes somewhere on Sunday for a period of relaxation and recreation if possible. Our congregations are consequently never large at this time though we have no cause to complain of the attendance. Unfortunately for some of our good church people the vacation habit has taken such a hold on them that most of the Sundays in the year are vacation days and very few are days of worship. We believe that everybody should have some means of recreation at the end of the week, and, thank God, we in Southern California have not far to go to get to the water's edge and enjoy the refreshing and tonic sea air of the great plant introduction garden maintained there by the department of agriculture. It is by carefully studying the composition of feeding stuffs, the proportion in which they are digested by different animals and under different conditions, and the requirement of animals for the various food nutrients when at rest, at work, giving milk, producing wool, mutton, beef, pork, etc., that the principles of feeding have been worked out. In applying these principles in practice the cost and special adaptations of different feeding stuffs must, of course, be taken into account. 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 wells. Is almost as good as a visit to this boom city and its oil fields. Send for this today and receive them by return mail. RANGER VIEW CO., Ranger, Texas. Adv. Anaheim Gazette, per year. $1.50, payable in advance. It and a half acres of acres, two miles west of boulevard. Five bathroom, gas and New garage, barn, windmill. Will sell is made at once. J. Phone 593-J Ana7-17tf EXCHANGE—8 acre miles west of Colton, condition, large nice large barn, chicken fles of water, would love. Address owner Alboa, Calif. you want good orange now. Call or write alacentia or Anaheim. snap; only bicycle owner must leave care of other business; A. Benzel, Downey, 5-room bungahot water. Street imfor. Garage. Price cash. Phone 791-W, 1-t Wagon, Bed and mentura Bean Planter, mer, Disk Harrow, Sins, etc. Dr. Zimmerone Fullerton 300-J. and cement contractgranteed. D. Dogryse, et. Anaheim. to get every member of a Parish or Sunday School to go to a picnic because no day can be set which will suit every one but we think that there was as good a representation at the Landing this year as we have ever had. We are very grateful also to those who contributed toward making the day so pleasant and agreeable. After many delays due to the present rush of building going on in Anaheim the building committee succeeded in having the repairs on the church done last week, and it is expected that the shinglers will immediately go to work. As soon as they are through we hope the painters will be at liberty to do their part and so bring to completion our plans for the present. We have certainly had to learn the lesson of patience in connection with the contemplated repairs of the church. The first of the series of Union Sunday Evening Services during the months of July and August was held at St. Michael's Church on the 6th of July. It was a great surprise and a great pleasure to us to see that the attendance at this service taxed the seating capacity of the church testifying to the appreciation of the Christian people in Anaheim of the effort which the ministers are making to promote the spirit of fellowship and co-operation among the churches. The Rev. Mr. Humphreys delivered a very interesting and convincing sermon on the question "Who is He?" On Sunday evening the 13th, the service was held at the Christian Church when the Rev. Mr. Hatch preached a most impressive and instructive sermon that deserved to be heard by the entire Christian element in the community. The meetings of the Woman's Auxiliary for the months of August and September will be abandoned so as to give the organization a summer vacation. The last meeting was well attended, there being about eighteen members present. The paper read by Mrs. Easton on the Litany was a great treat and everyone thoroughly enjoyed it. Mrs. Lamhofer who was our hostess for the day delighted the members with very delicious refreshments, and the spirit of the meeting was well up to the mark of all our former meetings.