anaheim-gazette 1919-10-23
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DELICIOUS EATS MADE WITH HONEY
NATURE'S OWN SWEETENER USED TO FLAVOR MANY APPETIZING DISHES
Can be Substituted in Equal Measure for Sugar in Baking.—Government Recipes for Pleasant and Wholesome Pastries.
In the days before trade with the Tropics introduced cane sugar into the temperate regions, honey was by far the most common sweet substance available for human food. In many localities it still is plentiful and cheap enough to allow of its liberal use in cooking, and better practices in beekeeping are increasing the supply. As honey retains enough of the perfume of the flowers from which it comes to impart a distinct flavor to the dish it forms a part of, it is much prized by good cooks.
Cakes made with honey keep soft for months, as does honey icing. Honey is slightly acid and better results are obtained by using baking soda rather than baking powder in recipes which contain it. It may be substituted for sugar in any favorite recipe, replacing cup for cup. As a cup of honey contains, besides the equivalent of a cup of teapoons powdered cardamom or aniseed.
Rub together the butter and the sugar and add alternately the milk and the flour sifted with the spices. Spread in a very thin layer on the bottom of an inverted dripping pan or on flat tins made for the purpose. Mark off into pieces about an inch wide and 4 inches long and put together in pairs with honey nougat filling made as follows:
...HONEY FILLING FOR NOUGAT... WATERS
1 cup sugar.
½ cup honey.
¼ cup water.
2 egg whites.
Boil the sugar, water and honey together until the syrup makes a thread when dropped from a spoon, or until drops of it hold their shape when poured into cold water. Beat the eggs to a stiff froth, pour the syrup over them, put the dish holding the mixture in a place where it will keep warm but not cook rapidly, beat until it will hold its shape.
FRUIT SALAD DRESSING
4 egg yolks.
2 tablespoons vinegar or lemon juice.
2 tablespoons butter.
2 tablespoons honey.
1 teaspoon mustard.
1 teaspoon salt.
Paprika to taste.
1 cup cream.
Heat the cream in a double boiler. Beat the eggs, and add to them all the other ingredients but the cream. Pour the cream slowly over the mixture, beating constantly. Pour it into the double boiler and cook until it thickens or mix all the ingredients but the cream and cook in a double boiler until the mixture thickens. As the dressing goes out, add more sugar and vanilla extract if desired.
IN THE OIL
Every day springs new development work in California oil fields; the matter is that there are doing things on scale, wildcatting is at its oldest and most conscientious commissioner of corporate exceedingly busy these into the merits and deep new concerns. South has entered into one development eras in this oil business. A glance at the southern fields of the great areas that have held under option found in localities that ago would not be given tion. And so it goes fresh oil is found here and that not be long before all formia will be regarded a field. It is indeed for industrial interests of so many new fields are up, as the production of oil fields of the state is ing off and very few any consequence have been.
On the Anaheim Uni Fullerton Oil Company hard conglomerate just grass roots. At 172 feet became so hard that dr
forms a part of, it is much prized by good cooks.
Cakes made with honey keep soft for months, as does honey icing. Honey is slightly acid and better results are obtained by using baking soda rather than baking powder in recipes which contain it. It may be substituted for sugar in any favorite recipe, replacing cup for cup. As a cup of honey contains, besides the equivalent of a cup of sugar, one-fourth cup of water, use that much less liquid than is called for in the original recipe.
Some excellent honey recipes tested by the home economics kitchen of the United States Department of Agriculture.
HONEY ICING
1 cup granulated sugar.
½ cup water.
¼ cup honey.
1 egg white.
Boll together the sugar and the water for a few moments and then add the honey, taking precautions to prevent the mixture from boiling over, as it is likely to do. Cook until drops of the syrup keep their form when poured into cold water, or to about 250° F. Beat the white of the egg until stiff, and when the syrup has cooled slightly pour over the egg, beating the mixture continuously until it will hold its shape. This frosting is suitable for use between layers of cake, but is rather too soft for the top. It remains in good condition and soft enough to be spread for many weeks and therefore can be made in large quantities for use as needed. After eight months, such icing has been found to be in good condition and soft enough to cut.
SAUCE FOR ICE CREAM
2 tablespoons butter.
2 teaspoons corn starch.
½ cup honey.
Cook together the cornstarch and butter thoroughly, being careful not to brown them. Add the honey and cook the mixture until it becomes hard when dropped into cold water and until all taste of raw corn starch has been removed.
BUTTER-HONEY CAKE
1½ cups honey.
½ cup butter.
3 egg yolks.
5 cups flour.
Paprika to taste.
1 cup cream.
Heat the cream in a double boiler. Beat the eggs, and add to them all the other ingredients but the cream. Pour the cream slowly over the mixture, beating constantly. Pour it into the double boiler and cook until it thickens or mix all the ingredients but the cream and cook in a double boiler until the mixture thickens. As the dressing is needed combine this mixture with whipped cream. This dressing is particularly suitable for fruit salads.
THE HANDWRITING ON THE WALL
Senator Lawrence Y. Sherman of Illinois says that about ten days ago a lieutenant from his Congressional District, who had been home on a furlough, was notified by the War Department to report to his superior officer for service in Poland. Even before the League of Nations is a fact our troops are being called upon to perform police duty in all parts of the Old World. Republicans call attention to the recent landing of marines on the Dalmatian coast, the presence of several thousand of our soldiers in eastern Siberia, the freezing and shooting of our men in the bitter cold and snows of the Murmansk region of northern Russia, the landing of marines and soldiers in Schleswig-Holstein to supervise a plebiscite soon to be held there, and the rumor that some of our forces have been engaged with the Poles against the Lithuanians. This latter rumor appears to be confirmed by the statement of Senator Sherman. Opponents of the League of Nations point to these incidents as forerunners of what may be accepted as a permanent condition if once the League is adopted by the United States. If that shall take place they claim that our army will be dispersed throughout Europe and Asia, and our navy scattered upon the seven seas, in an attempt to carry out our obligations under the covenant, dictated by a council composed of eight foreigners to one American.
KINDLY AVOID ACCIDENTS
From October 18 until October 31 is so many new fields are up, as the production of oil fields of the state is ing off and very few any consequence have been observed.
On the Anaheim Univ. Fullerton Oil Company hard conglomerate just grass roots. At 172 feet became so hard that drilling process. The good show at Clark well gives the Company the necessary equipment in spite of the hard soil soon after the drilling took place.
On the Kraemer 2 lease has five drilling wells at Kraemer 2-3 building completed before the Kraemer 2-4 spudded in mining of the week and shaping hole. Kraemer 2-5 is done feet, 2-6 is rigging uy, and ing rig. Kraemer 2-2, the first producer, is giving trouble by constantly sapping 2-1, the second producer nicelfe and is making arrows a day.
The Union Oil Company is located for Chapman No. 2 on lumber on the ground Chapman No. 2 is hung upplicated fishing job at No. 4 rig building is weighed and No. 5 is drilling in erate at 1675. On the Coy property No. 1 is rigging No. 1 is rotating in the hole at 1500 feet. After fishing piece of months, drilling tracking on the Thompson new hole is about to be completed.
Cook together the cornstarch and butter thoroughly, being careful not to brown them. Add the honey and cook the mixture until it becomes hard when dropped into cold water and until all taste of raw corn starch has been removed.
BUTTER-HONEY CAKE
1½ cups honey.
½ cup butter.
3 egg yolks.
5 cups flour.
2 level teaspoons ground cinnamon.
½ teaspoon salt.
1½ teaspoons soda.
2 tablespoons orange-fluor water (water may be substituted).
Whites 3 eggs.
Rub together the honey and butter, add the unbeaten yolks and beat thoroughly. Add the flour sifted with the cinnamon and the salt; and the soda dissolved in the orange-fluor water. Beat the mixture thoroughly and add the well-beaten whites of the eggs. Bake in shallow tins and cover with frosting made as follows:
ORANGE FROSTING
Grated rind 1 orange.
1 teaspoon lemon juice.
1 egg yolk.
1 tablespoon orange juice.
Confectioners' sugar.
Mix all ingredients but the sugar and allow the mixture to stand for an hour. Strain and add confectioners' sugar until the frosting is sufficiently thick to be spread on the cake.
NOUGAT WAFERS
½ cup butter.
1 cup brown sugar.
½ cup milk.
7/8 cup bread flour.
4 teaspoons ginger or
States. If that shall take place they claim that our army will be dispersed throughout Europe and Asia, and our navy scattered upon the seven seas, in an attempt to carry out our obligations under the covenant, dictated by a council composed of eight foreigners to one American.
KINDLY AVOID ACCIDENTS
From October 18 until October 31 is the period set aside for the diminution of automobile accidents so far as the railroads are accomplices, and during that time it is expected that there will be no auto-railroad accidents.
At least that is what the Railway Administration at Washington is hoping, and the Automobile Club of Southern California, as the most powerful body of motorists in America, has been asked to co-operate.
So motorists throughout Southern California are asked by club representatives and officials to refrain from running into any railroads or railway trainees, whether stationary or moving and to avoid having any trains running into them.
Motorists are likewise asked to use unusual caution in crossing railroad tracks so as not to be hit by an engine or train of cars, and if hit, they are asked to be hit gently so that little or no damage shall be done either to the car or its occupants.
It is believed by the railways operating throughout the southern part of the State, that if motorists will get the habit of not benig run into so much, this habit will become permanent, and the "no accident" period will have become a success.
At 3220 feet the Amalgam Company's Ibbitson No. 1 in a sandy shale with no oil as yet. As all these producing have made good before reaching the 3000 Ibbitson well is being built with some doubt. However have to be drilled into the class before the oil is found.
On the Yorba lease the ed's No. 1 is drilling in brass 2800 feet and making good Amalgamated's Potter hash shift to cable tools and its hole at 1600. No. 1 on property is drilling in the erate and shows 80 feet for work in the hard formation.
For some little time early morning it looked as though Oil Company was going other gusher on the Chapman drilling at 2600 feet a gauge struck that held gas of someume and under such pressure fifteen-minute blowout could put all the fluid in the w crown block. Heavy connushed to the well and tha
IN THE OIL FIELD
(From Brea Progress)
Every day springs new surprises in the development work of the Southern California oil fields. The fact of the matter is that the oil operators are doing things on a tremendous scale, wildcattling is at fever heat, the oldest and most conservative of the oil companies are leading the work in the new fields, while new companies are being organized so fast that the commissioner of corporations is kept exceedingly busy these days looking into the merits and demerits of the new concerns. Southern California has entered into one of the greatest development eras in the history of the oil business. A glance at a map made of the southern fields shows at once the great areas that have been leased and held under option. Oil is being found in localities that a few months ago would not be given a consideration. And so it goes from day to day, oil is found here and there, and it will not be long before all Southern California will be regarded as one great oil field. It is indeed fortunate for the industrial interests of the state that so many new fields are being opened up, as the production of the northern oil fields of the state is gradually falling off and very few new fields of any consequence have been discovered.
On the Anaheim Union lease the Fullerton Oil Company struck the hard conglomerate just under the grass roots. At 172 feet the formation became so hard that drilling is a slow was shut in after some difficulty. The sudden outburst of gas is a good indication that the oil sand is near and that Chapman No. 3 will be a much shallower well than No. 1 or the Standard Oil Company's Kraemer wells by about 500 feet.
At a little over 2300 feet the Union Oil Company's McFadden No. 1 commenced showing some sand that looked good, and now at the present depth of 2380 feet the sand is looking still better and every indication is present for an oil well before 2500 feet is reached. The showing of the McFadden well makes the eastern end of the Richfield district look like a real oil field.
For the first time in three months the Union's Chapman gusher has fallen below the 4000 mark for its daily output. At the opening of the week the big well was making a little over 3700 barrels. It is believed that sand arresting the flow somewhat, and it may be necessary to clean the well before long. Sand has been a constant menace to every well that has been brought in in the Richfield district, and is one of the things that worries the operator as soon as his well is completed.
The Santa Ana Canyon Oil Company on Crowther property is down to 2000 feet. At this depth the only encouragement so far has been a little gas. The condition of the hole is good and some good drilling progress is being made under the direction of Ike Swingle, a veteran at the oil game.
After spending four weeks on a fish strength of the 14 cent home-made preparation.
Inspectors, commissioners, fruit growers and farmers should avoid giving too extravagant publicity to proprietary preparations. Hardly a month passes that the Federal Government does not, under the operation of the Food and Drugs Act, place under the ban companies manufacturing remedies, dips, insecticides, and weed exterminators that are so well known as to be "household words," yet they are selling at an exhorbitant price a commodity which may be adulterated, deleterious, or misbranded as to character and effects. Better to buy a postcard for a penny and address it to the State Department of Agriculture at Sacramento, the College at Berkeley, or the U.S. Department of Agriculture at Washington, D.C., which departments will gladly advise you free of charge as to your needs.
UNDEVELOPED ALASKA
Alaska has not yet found itself as the home of a permanent population, though it is a land of great native wealth. Seward bought it from Russia for seven millions, but it has returned us a total of eight hundred millions in different treasures. It sent to the American army a larger proportion of its men than any other unit of the country; and because of this, and because of other fortunes of war, it is today in a state of more or less suspended animation.
Most of the men who went to war have not yet returned. The white population of fifty-five thousand two years ago has dwindled to twenty-five thousands.
On the Anaheim Union lease the Fullerton Oil Company struck the hard conglomerate just under the grass roots. At 172 feet the formation became so hard that drilling is a slow process. The good showing found in the Clark well gives the Fullerton Oil Company the necessary encouragement in spite of the hard stuff struck so soon after the drilling started.
With 2000 feet of oil standing in the hole and looking like a regular oil well the Standard's Collins well refuses to produce and make a showing. This well was drilled to 3630 feet, had lots of oil sand and quite a good deal of gas. On being put on the beam the well sanded up and a continuous balling and cleaning out now for a month has failed to relieve this condition.
On the Kraemer 2 lease the Standard has five drilling wells under way. Kraemer 2-3 is building rig and will be completed before the end of the week. Kraemer 2-4 spudded in at the beginning of the week and shows 1200 feet of hole. Kraemer 2-5 is drilling at 1000 feet, 2-6 is rigging uy, and 2-7 is building rig. Kraemer 2-2, the Standard's first producer, is giving considerable trouble by constantly sanding up. No. 2-1, the second producer, is flowng nicely and is making around 2000 barrels a day.
The Union Oil Company has made a location for Chapman No. 6, and has the lumber on the ground for the rig. Chapman No. 2 is hung up with a complicated fishing job at 1175 feet. At No. 4 rig building is well under way and No. 5 is drilling in the conglomerate at 1675. On the Coyle and Bogue property No. 1 is rigging up. Dickson No. 1 is rotating in the conglomerate at 1500 feet. After fishing for a couple of months, drilling by, and side-tracking on the Thompson & Goodwin, new hole is about to be mde at 960.
The Santa Ana Canyon Oil Company on Crowther property is down to 2000 feet. At this depth the only encouragement so far has been a little gas. The condition of the hole is good and some good drilling progress is being made under the direction of Ike Swingle, a veteran at the oil game.
After spending four weeks on a fishing job and not making any headway, the Standard has moved the rig at Kraemer 1-6 and will spud in a new hole in a few days. Only 1600 feet of hole was lost in the original location. Kraemer 1-5 is drilling at 2630, and 1-4 is sidetracking some six inches at a depth of 2015 feet.
At 4700 feet the Standard Oil Company's deep test well is a dry hole. The formation is a hard sand with no oil indications whatever. The drilling is to continue as far as possible and a good and satisfactory test made.
At 3000 feet the Clark Oil Company has set a string of 10-inch pipe in the Hugo Wetzell No. 1. Great credit is due the Clark management for the successful carrying of the ten-inch string to this depth without getting a crooked hole or having any pipe trouble. The greater part of the hole was drilled with the Sharp & Hughes bit and at no time was the drilling forced. The condition of the hole is perfect, and with a good showing before the cementing, the Clark Oil Company can look forward to the continuation of the drilling with real pleasure.
The Liberty Petroleum's well at Newport is now cleaned out to the bottom and new hole is to be made at once. On account of the good showing made by the Interstate well, the Liberty officials have decided to drill deeper, and will make a search for a light oil sand.
"LET THE PURCHASER BEWARE!"
The farmer, stockman and fruit grower alike should exercise caution before investing in any of the so-called proprietary preparations, whether cattle-dips, insecticides, or weed-addition to their treasures. It sent to the American army a larger proportion of its men than any other unit of the country; and because of this, and because of other fortunes of war, it is today in a state of more or less suspended animation.
Most of the men who went to war have not yet returned. The white population of fifty-five thousand two years ago has dwindled to twenty-five thousand. The value of exports has dropped half. The products of gold, copper, tin, lumber, farm produce and canned salmon have all fallen off, and many towns that two years ago were booming are now almost deserted.
Dr. S. Hall Young, forty years a resident of Alaska, charges the war with being the cause of Alaska's present misfortune. Not only have the men gone, but the decline in the value of gold and copper and the high scale of wages, he says have stopped almost all prospecting, have caused the closing of hundreds of mines and the abandonment of many claims. The Kenncott copper mine, which last year produced more than forty million dollars' worth of copper, this year will produce scarcely one-third of that amount. The government appropriation for building the railroad inland from Anchorage is exhausted. The government demand for canned salmon has ceased; immigrants have not appeared to develop the farm lands; and the cost of food and supplies has risen to the point of virtual prohibition.
In spite of all this misfortune, Dr. Young has the utmost faith in the future of Alaska. He pronounced its climate the most healthful and pleasant in America, its fertile lands as good and as extensive as those of Sweden, and capable of supplying the food requirements of the whole peninsula. Alaska is yet in the development stage; and it may well be believed that its present plight is only one of the diseases of childhood—Minneapolis Journal.
WHICH CLASS ARE YOU IN?
Senator Jones of Washington, who has been keeping tab on the President's speeches, stated in the Senate a day or two ago that Mr. Wilson had added us a total of eight hundred millions in different treasures. It sent to the American army a larger proportion of its men than any other unit of the country; and because of this, and because of other fortunes of war, it is today in a state of more or less suspended animation.
Most of the men who went to war have not yet returned. The white population of fifty-five thousand two years ago has dwindled to twenty-five thousand. The value of exports has dropped half. The products of gold, copper, tin, lumber, farm produce and canned salmon have all fallen off, and many towns that two years ago were booming are now almost deserted.
Dr. S. Hall Young, forty years a resident of Alaska, charges the war with being the cause of Alaska's present misfortune. Not only have the men gone, but the decline in the value of gold and copper and the high scale of wages, he says have stopped almost all prospecting, have caused the closing of hundreds of mines and the abandonment of many claims. The Kenncott copper mine, which last year produced more than forty million dollars' worth of copper, this year will produce scarcely one-third of that amount. The government appropriation for building the railroad inland from Anchorage is exhausted. The government demand for canned salmon has ceased; Immigrants have not appeared to develop the farm lands; and the cost of food and supplies has risen to the point of virtual prohibition.
In spite of all this misfortune, Dr. Young has the utmost faith in the future of Alaska. He pronounced its climate the most healthful and pleasant in America, its fertile lands as good and as extensive as those of Sweden, and capable of supplying the food requirements of the whole peninsula. Alaska is yet in the development stage; and it may well be believed that its present plight is only one of the diseases of childhood—Minneapolis Journal.
One of these formia fruit s tend with in has been del Eastern points body needed
At 3220 feet the Amalgamated Oil Company's Ibbitson No. 1 is drilling in a sandy shale with no indications of oil as yet. As all the wells now producing have made good showings before reaching the 3000 mark, the Ibbitson well is being looked upon with some doubt. However, it may have to be drilled into the deep well class before the oil is found.
On the Yorba lease the Amalgamated's No. 1 is drilling in brown shale at 2800 feet and making good time. The Amalgamated's Potter has made the shift to cable tools and is now making hole at 1600. No. 1 on the Breene property is drilling in the conglomerate and shows 80 feet for the week's work in the hard formation.
For some little time early Sunday morning it looked as though the Union Oil Company was going to have another gusher on the Chapman. While drilling at 2600 feet a gas pocket was struck that held gas of so much volume and under such pressure that a fifteen-minute blowout occurred that put all the fluid in the well over the crown block. Heavy connections were rushed to the well and the blow of gas
"LET THE PURCHASER BEWARE!"
The farmer, stockman and fruit grower alike should exercise due caution before investing in any of the so-called proprietary preparations, whether cattle-dips, insecticides, or weedkillers. Many cases have crep into public print, in which inspectors and horticultural commissioners, and even officials of the State Government, have been made the unwitting sponsors for certain combinations, and it is patent that a single expression of approval will be dilated to unheard-of proportions and spread broadcast by these clever advertising agents of the commercial house.
There are many excellent preparations covered by patent rights that properly administered, will correct certain unwelcome conditions—but at what cost? Let us cite one instance. Prof. Geo. P. Gray at Berkeley recently published and distributed a formula for making a "weed-killer." It cost 14 cents a gallon to prepare on the ranch and farm. Now you can buy a similar article, guaranteed to do the same work, under a fancy proprietary label at the cost of—$2.50 a gallon. A simple lesson in subtraction will convince the most hard-headed farmer or orchardist, who wishes to treat a farm or orchard involving 20 acres upward, that he can not afford to pay $2.50 for 14 cents worth of material, especially when an actual test proved the $2.50 patented article to be only one-eighth sula. Alaska is yet in the development stage; and it may well be believed that its present plight is only one of the diseases of childhood—Minneapolis Journal.
WHICH CLASS ARE YOU IN?
Senator Jones of Washington, who has been keeping tab on the President's speeches, stated in the Senate a day or two ago that Mr. Wilson had denounced those unfortunate people who do not believe the English-Japanese League of Nations should be adopted by the Senate are "pygmy-minded," "bolshevik," "lovers of war," "haters of truth," "ignorant fumblers of English," "blind, perverted fools," "deserving of hanging on the highest gibbet," "contemptible quitters," "jaundice-eyed zealots," "pro-German," "disloyal," "dishonest," "cowards," "traitors," "unpatriotic," and "un-American."
Can you identify yourself with one of these classes? If you don't believe in the League of Nations you belong to one of them, according to Mr. Wilson.
TO RELIEVE CAR SHORTAGE
Relief for California fruit shippers and lumber men is seen in the announcement of District Director William Sproule in behalf of the United States Railroad Administration that effective, October 20, all roads under Federal control would levy storage charges of ten dollars per day on refrigerator cars not unloaded after five days from which free time begins, and a similar charge on cars of lumber held for reconsignment after forty-eight hours free them. Both charges are in
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addition to the present demurrage rates.
The new tariff has been filed by J.E. Fairbanks, general secretary and treasurer of the American Railroad Association, in behalf of all roads and under authority of the Interstate Commerce Commission.
Following close upon the appointment of Terminal Car Service Committees at all important centers, this latest step to secure prompt release of equipment and speed up car supply is expected to greatly facilitate the administration's efforts to supply the needs of the shipping public.
One of the main difficulties the California fruit shippers have had to contend with in the present car shortage has been delay in unloading cars at Eastern points. Hundreds of cars, badly needed in the West have beenings of Bolshevism into the current of American life, the sturdy, patriotic devotion to the ideal of government within the law and the square deal to rich and poor as exemplified by Colonel Roosevelt in public life is of tremendous value and importance.
In every county and community throughout Southern California committees are at work to provide the means whereby all who desire to make a practical testimonial of their regard and admiration for Colonel Roosevelt may do so.
The campaign for subscriptions will close on Oct. 27, Colonel Roosevelt's birthday, which has been proclaimed in the State of California as "Americanization Day." It will be observed in every county by appropriate public meetings and by exercises in the public schools.
tees at all important centers, this latest step to secure prompt release of equipment and speed up car supply is expected to greatly facilitate the administration's efforts to supply the needs of the shipping public.
One of the main difficulties the California fruit shippers have had to contend with in the present car shortage has been delay in unloading cars at Eastern points. Hundreds of cars, badly needed in the West, have been held in storage by brokers and receivers. The same thing to a lesser extent has handicapped Western lumbermen.
The newly-levied penalties on using cars for storage purposes constitute a drastic effort to release the car supply and meet conditions brought about by abnormal crops.
ROOSEVELT MEMORIAL
The Roosevelt Memorial Association will give during the week of Oct. 20 to Oct. 27 to the friends and admirers of Colonel Theodore Roosevelt an opportunity to subscribe to a fund of $5,000,000, which is to be haised for the purpose of—
First: Of erecting a suitable monument in Washington.
Second: Of purchasing a memorial park at Oyster Bay.
Third: Of creating an endowment fund by means of which the doctrines and teachings of Colonel Roosevelt on the subject of Americanism and the duties of citizenship can be perpetuated and kept continually in the minds of his countrymen.
In these times when the attempt is made to inject the disintegrating teach-
means whereby all who desire to make a practical testimonial of their regard and admiration for Colonel Roosevelt may do so.
The campaign for subscriptions will close on Oct. 27, Colonel Roosevelt's birthday, which has been proclaimed in the State of California as "Americanization Day." It will be observed in every county by appropriate public meetings and by exercises in the public schools.
A FEMALE SWINDLER
A number of women of Newport Beach are believed to have "fallen" for a smooth woman trickster operating there Wednesday. It is the same "game" that was worked on Garden Grove women a few months ago.
A woman posing as a representative of a pattern company offered patterns for sale and agreed to teach women who joined her class the art of making patterns for $10. That she collecte from one woman is known, and efforts are being made to ascertain others who are alleged to have been duped.
Making the sale to the Newport woman, the agent collected $10 from her and said that she would be back with a class of five the following afternoon, when instruction would be given as a class. She did not appear.
At the time of making the payment the Newport woman said that she would pay the agent the $10 when she gave the lesson. This wouldn't do. The operator had to report to the pattern company every day, according to her story. She got the money and has not been seen since.