anaheim-gazette 1921-11-24
Searchable text
ARMENIANS ARE GIVEN
HOME BY AMERICANS
Near East Relief Provides Lands in Thrace and Caucasus
In line with the fixed policy of near east relief to assist the Armenians in regaining self-support, large tracts of Asia Minor land are being procured as home lands for destitute refugees.
The American flag flies over these broad acres and American machinery tilts them.
Such projects giving opportunity of self-help includes 600 acres in the historic region of Thrace, and 17,600 acres in Transcaucasian Russia.
"The time had come to start something," declared James Crutcher, the American relief worker in charge of the Thrace enterprise. "We were spending all our resources feeding the starving, sheltering the sick and clothing the naked. But people soon chafed at having to accept charity. They are hard-working, industrious people and they want to work for what they get."
"We sought a way for them to work. With the cordial co-operation of the Greek government, we rented 6000 acres of the richest farming land in the world right next door, in Thrace, brought machinery and seed from America, and then transplanted 1000 Armenians to the district. Now these refugees are self-supporting."
The 17,600-acre tract in Transcaucasian Russia will be devoted to raising vegetables, wheat, barley and cattle. Native Armenians, using American machinery, will do all the actual labor.
The use of modern cultivating machinery instead of wooden plows and threshing flails, or threshing by means of the trampling of oxen, will, relief officials say, mean a complete revolution in the economic life of the people.
at this time 60 per cent protein tankage is available on the market for 70 cents per 100 pounds less than 55 per cent meat scrap, conditions which justify the extensive use of tankage as a poultry feed. Tests in which only 15 per cent of meat scrap was fed in the mash have not resulted in as high production with pullets as where 20 or 25 per cent of meat scrap was used, but with yearling hens the 16 per cent meat scrap has given practically as good production as the higher. With the heavier breeds, it is advisable to decrease the amount of meat scrap during the second year as such feeding tends to keep the fowls in better breeding condition.
The best results obtain where about equal parts mash and scratch grains are fed. Feed considerable more scratch grain than mash in the fall and winter to pullets and about equal parts of each during the late winter and spring, and more mash than scratch feed during the summer and early fall. In order to get the fowls to consume the mash freely the recommended practice is to supply grain in small amounts during the morning and give a full feed of scratch grains in the evening where the hens are fed only twice daily. During the fall and winter, feed about three times as much scratch feed in the evening as in the morning and about twice as much during the spring and summer. Where moist mash is fed, it is a good practice to mix green feed in with the mash, as this keeps the hens from getting "off feed." Gree n feed always has proved of great value on the government poultry farm and the management recommends its use as freely as possible.
The use of semi-solid buttermilk or buttermilk, in any form, is particularly practical in pens not receiving any green feed, the milk apparently having an effect on the fowls similar to that produced b ythe green feed while it also is high in food value. 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There is no room for why the United States world war. The cause of war was congress; namely, the attack by the cessar America went to war in its earliest stages have ended the war sooner and prevented lions of lives was inflicted.
The principles involved war, other than their wars began when Belgium and the Lusitania waged a war against our going overthrow autocracy worldwide democracy.
The 17,000-acre tract in Transcaucasia Russia will be devoted to raising vegetables, wheat, barley and cattle. Native Armenians, using American machinery, will do all the actual labor.
The use of modern cultivating machinery instead of wooden plows and threshing flails, or threshing by means of the trampling of oxen, will, relief officials say, mean a complete revolution in the economic life of the people.
POULTRY PROFIT SECRET
LIES IN FEEDING HENS
Experiments Carried on for Years
Prove Mash of Bran, Middling,
Meat Scraps, Cornmeal Best
Valuable results of interest to poultrymen have been obtained by the United States department of agriculture in experimental tests at the government poultry farm, Beltsville, MD, where different rations have been fed to various groups of laying hens for a period of eight years. At this time, more than 1000 hens and pullets are used in feeding trials of this kind.
The pens range in size from 30 to 50 hens, all the fowls being trap-nested during the period under test. During the last three years, the mash which has given the most uniform and best production has consisted of a mixture of 4 per cent bran, 4 per cent middlings, 26 per cent meat scraps, and 66 per cent corn meal. This mash was the result of experiments where the hens were allowed to select their own mash ingredients. When given the free choice of these various feeds, the fowls consumed the various ingredients in the above proportions. Several pens, both of Leghorns and Rhode Island Reds, of 30 hens each have averaged from 140 to 155 eggs a piece where this mash has been fed. The feeding mixture seems to be especially adapted for Leghorns, although it has also given good results with the Reds. The Wyandottes and Plymouth Rocks are inclined to accumulate too much fat when fed this, and one somewhat lower in meat scrap content gives better results when fed to these two breeds.
The Wyandottes and Plymouth Rocks maintained on the Beltsville farm are large, standard-size fowls, and the tendency to take on fat on this mash probably did not occur in the case of smaller types of Plymouth Rocks, such as commonly found on agricultural farms.
ITALY TAKES LESSON FROM US
Italy is another country which has gone over definitely to the protective tariff policy and discarded the free trade policies of Cavour and his successors. The Italian protective tariff became effective July 1. Even though the rates in the present Italian tariff are not as high as the protectionists of that country desired, they are quite frankly adopted with the view to making the foreign producer pay a stiff customs tax before he can get into the Italian market. That greater revenue would probably come into the state treasury through the higher customs duties was expected, but the sine quin non of the tariff must be adequate protection.
As far back as 1913 a royal commission was appointed in Italy to bring in proposals for a new tariff to supersede the obsolete customs regime of 1887. The instructions to this commission were to frame its recommendations on the basis of protection (not revenue only) to Italian industries. The commission laid its 30-volume report before the ministry in 1918. Because it was based on the pre-war economic conditions of 1913, it was deemed expedient, before giving it legal sanction, to review the duties proposed by the commission for the purpose of harmonizing them with conditions as they had changed since 1918; not only in Italian industry and agriculture, but also in the economic life and tariff policy of other nations with which Italy was likely to trade.
The year in which this commission was appointed and instructed to formulate a bill on the basis of protection to mix green feed in with the mash, as this keeps the hens from getting "off feed." Gree n feed always has proved of great value on the government poultry farm and the management recommends its use as freely as possible.
The use of semi-solid buttermilk or buttermilk, in any form, is particularly practical in pens not receiving any green feed, the milk apparently having an effect on the fowls similar to that produced b ythe green feed while it also is high in food value. During the summer months the extensive feeding of buttermilk helps to shorten the moulting period. In the instance of fowls which did not eat the dry mash freely during the summer months, the feeding of a small amount of mash once daily mixed with buttermilk was helpful.
The principles involved war, other than their rights, were just the war began, when Belgium and the Lusitania wore April, 1917. The same which was later responded phrase about our going overthrow autocracy by world-wide democracyful political campaign boast that with these stakes, we had been hit It is too late to re-write.
The cause of nation is not ,as is so often temptable and unworthy only cause in which the right to summon its surrender that American sacrificed to any act as to forms of govern cause of liberty in far-globe, is one that would United States at war be the last century, for been a time in all that crusader for human life have found occasion for armor.
In his London speech Harvey told the exact purposes for which entered the European far enough away from war propaganda to touching in connection with of the world war. In substitute for a strict cause, the pretense that war to vindicate democracy form of government er than magnifies the in world war.
It is unfortunate that ta at the Kansas City American Legion through, over strong re-lution heralding the eed doctrine that wha Harvey said in his London in any wise discredit soldiers in the world w Harvey said was that for was the cause of it than the cause of interstate that statement is belie by a vast majority o served in the world war.
The Wyandottes and Plymouth Rocks maintained on the Beltsville farm are large, standard-size fowls, and the tendency to take on fat on this mash probably did not occur in the case of smaller types of Plymouth Rocks, such as commonly found on commercial poultry farms. Experiments conducted during the current year in which this mash was modified by the addition of 15 per cent ground oats and the reduction of the meat scrap by 2 per cent and the corn meal by 12 per cent have not shown any advantage. The evidences are that ground oats added to the ration produces no beneficial results. It pays to vary the proportions of grains in the scratch mixture from an economical standpoint according to the market price of these farm crops. At present, a scratch mixture of 3 parts cracked corn, 2 parts oats, and 1 part wheat by weight is used with this mash.
In previous years fish meal has not proved a more profitable and practical source of protein in the mash than meat scrap, but during the present year the production has been very good where the fish refuse has been used, and as the price of this material has decreased, larger net incomes result from its use. Sixty per cent protein fish scrap now can be obtained for from $1 to $2 per hundred pounds cheaper than 55 per cent protein meat scrap. Innumerable varieties of fish scrap have been fed and no harmful effects have resulted from feeding even fish scrap of varied compositions, some being unusually rich in oil content. Tankage has been fed against meat scrap as a source of protein and pre-war economic conditions of 1918, it was deemed expedient, before giving it legal sanction, to review the duties proposed by the commission for the purpose of harmonizing them with conditions as they had changed since 1918; not only in Italian industry and agriculture, but also in the economic life and tariff policy of other nations with which Italy was likely to trade.
The year in which this commission was appointed and instructed to formulate a bill on the basis of protection should be carefully noted, for that was the year during which the indefatigable Italian tariff lobby was enjoying the hospitality of the Democratic members of the ways and means committee co-operating free trade or reduced duties on all products entering the United States. Mr. Wilson had just issued his bull of excommunication to those representatives of American industries who were seeking validly to secure some consideration for their own interests, and the steam of his outraged majesty was being expelled in hisses of "insidious lobby," behind the clouds of which the "lemon lobby" was sedulously at work with the Democrats to put California and Florida industry on the hummer.
And what had occasioned this codling of the "lemon lobby?" Three years later the news broke which suggested the reason. It was announced that $140,000 had been raised in '70 to lobby free lemons through congress, and one William C. Beer was employed by Italian interests to put it over. "I do not mind saying that beginning with 1910 we accomplished some mighty effective work," said Mr. Beer. "We organized the Italian Democratic League and had branches all over the country." We did nothing but preach Democracy to them. All the Italians voted for the Democrats.
A so-called "Philippines of independence," re-maintain political elements pine islands, and, common portions of the globe, bulletin." In the last publication the threat less the United States topples overboard to be of internal anarchy and gregation, it will be "a necessity in time of war if provocative of war." Of resistance to the attack United States in the Philippines aguinaldo could advise to the politicians the publication of materials in the name of Philippine sense." The "bulletin"
"The United States w piloned the principle of tion in the late war. Sn to fight and die for that whole world is with that she is not practic mination in the Philippines."
No more preposterous was ever uttered than States "sent her sons for the principle of station." This government thority and no dispositis sons to fight and die but that of defense o
ANAHEIM GAZETTE
and the Democrats realized it." Mr. Beer was suing in 1916 for a $75,090 balance due on his promotion contract. "We did raise a fund amounting in all to about $140,000 to have the duty on Sicilian lemons reduced," admitted S. S. Amarosa, vice-president of the Italian Importers' Union. "In the United States the importers by paying 5 cents a box on lemons imported, raised $105,000 and the Sicilian societies raised $35,000 more."
They did not get free lemons, as promised, in the tariff act of 1913, but they did get material reductions in the duties on lemons and other Italian products, and as soon as free trade was enacted in this country the Italians at home initiated their program for protection. The plain and simple truth of the matter is that the lowering of the duty on lemons was the paying of a campaign debt. But Italy learned her protective lessons from us.
WE WAGED WAR FOR NATIONAL DEFENSE
There is no room for dispute as to why the United States entered the world war. The cause was stated in the declaration of war adopted by the congress; namely, that we had been attacked by the central powers. If America went to war for any other purpose, failure to enter the struggle in its earliest stages, when we could have ended the war in many months sooner and prevented the loss of millions of lives was infamous.
The principles involved in the world war, other than the invasion of our rights, were just the same the day the war began, when Belgium was invaded and the Lusitania was sunk, as in April, 1917. The same administration which was later responsible for the big phrase about our going into the war to overthrow autocracy and establish worldwide democracy ran a success.
flag against those who are attacking it. There was no application of the principle of self determination in the disposition of Germany's possessions at the close of the war, nor was such a plan even proposed by the American president who talked so much of the theory of "self determination."
What evidence is there that on a vote of all the people of the Philippine islands, after a thorough, intelligent discussion of the question, there would be a popular decision in favor of separation from the United States? We know what the professional politicians think. We also know, or can know when the Forbes report on conditions in the islands is made public, if it ever is, just what these politicians have been doing to the islands since the hand of American authority was relaxed, and, from that, what they would probably like to do if given an opportunity to do more.
The "press bulletin" declares that the course of the United States in retaining the Philippines is as much of an affront to Japan as if Japan were to seize and occupy Lower California, "no matter what Japanese diplomats may say openly." The authors of this attack upon the good faith of America are perhaps sufficiently familiar with the inside workings of Japanese diplomacy to be able to make such a statement with confidence. But what greater affront to Japan is the American flag in the Philippines than the British and other European ages in sundry oriental possessions? Does Japan contemplate an attack upon these governments because of their possessions in the far east?
The cause of Philippine independence will not be well served by attacks of this kind upon the American government and people or threats of rebillion or Japanese aggression in case the United States does not adopt a "scuttle" policy in the Philippines.
at 6 o'clock P.M., 10 per cent will be added to the amount thereof.
Said taxes are payable to the undersigned at his office in the City Hall, in said City of Anaheim, between the hours of 8 A. M. and 12 M., and between the hours of 1 P. M. and 5 P. M.
N. F. STEADMAN,
Marshal and Ex-Officio Tax Collector
of the City of Anaheim.
SHERIFF'S SALE
In the Superior Court in and for the County of Orange, State of California.
Jennie Pomeroy, Plaintiff, vs. Irma S. Strubb, J. Talamanets, John Doe and Richard Roe, Defendants. Sale under foreclosure of mortgage.
Under and by virtue of a decree of foreclosure and order of sale duly made and entered in the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, on the 28th day of October, A. D. 1921, and a writ of execution for the enforcement of judgment requiring sale of property under foreclosure of mortgage issued out of the said Superior Court on the 29th day of October A. D., 1921, in the above entitled action, in favor of Jennie Pomeroy, Plaintiff, and Against Irma S. Strubb and J. Talamanets, Defendants, a copy of which said decree of foreclosure duly attested under the seal of the said Superior Court on the 29th day of October, A. D., 1921, and to be delivered on the same day, together with the said wirt annexed thereto, whereby I am commanded to sell at public auction for cash, Gold Colon of the United States, following and in said decrees described real estate: Situated, lying and being in the town of Los Alamitos, County of Orange, State of California, and bounded and particularly described as follows, to-wit:
Lots Nine (9), Ten (10), Eleven (11) and Twelve (12) in Block Twenty-four
have ended the war in many months sooner and prevented the loss of millions of lives was infamous.
The principles involved in the world war, other than the invasion of our rights, were just the same the day the war began, when Belgium was invaded and the Lusitania was sunk, as in April, 1917. The same administration which was later responsible for the big phrase about our going into the war to overthrow autocracy and establish world-wide democracy, ran a successful political campaign in 1916 on the boast that with these same issues at stake, we had been kept out of war. It is too late to re-write this history.
The cause of national self defense is not, as is so often assumed, a contemptible and unworthy one. It is the only cause in which this nation has a right to summon its sons to war. The theory that American lives should be sacrificed to any academic doctrine as to forms of government or in the cause of liberty in far portions of the globe, is one that would have kept the United States at war continuously for the last century, for there has never been a time in all that period when a crusader for human liberty might not have found occasion for putting on his armor.
In his London speech Ambassador Harvey told the exact truth as to the purposes for which the United States entered the European war, and we are far enough away from the necessity of war propaganda to tolerate truth telling in connection with the happenings of the world war. In fact the effort to substitute for a strictly American cause, the pretense that we went to war to vindicate democracy or any other form of government, belittles rather than magnifies the glory of service in the world war.
It is unfortunate that a political junta at the Kansas City convention of the American Legion was able to put through, over strong resistance, a resolution heralding the entirely unfounded doctrine that what Ambassador Harvey said in his London speech was in any wise discreditable to American soldiers in the world war. What Mr. Harvey said was that what we fought for was the cause of America rather than the cause of internationalism, and that statement is believed to be true by a vast majority of the men who served in the world war...
THE PHILIPPINES AND "SELF DETERMINATION"
A high official of a prominent railroad estimates that the reduction in freight rates on grain recently ordered by the interstate commerce commission will mean a loss to the roads of between $32,000,000 and $38,000,000. He believes that the farmer will get but little of that money, and that most of it will be absorbed by middlemen and grain elevators, both of which agencies are declared to be already in better financial position than the railroads.
NOTICE.
In the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the County of Orange.
In the Matter of the Estate of John Lemke, Deceased. Order to Show Cause.
Upon reading and filing the petition of Anne Lemke, Executrix of the last will and testament of John Lemke, Deceased, praying for an order authorizing and permitting her as such executrix, ti lease certain real property belonging to said estate, and which is hereinafter more particularly described, and good cause appearing therefor.
IT IS ORDERED that all persons interested in the said estate be, and they are hereby required to appear before Department One of said Superior Court, in the Court Room of said Department One, in the Court House in the City of Santa Ana, in the County of Orange, State of California, on Friday, the 9th day of November, 1921, then and there to show cause, if any they have, why said real property belonging to the estate of said John Lemke, Deceased, should not be leased for the period of five years beginning on the 1st day of November, 1921, and ending on the 31st day of October, 1926, at the rental of Seventy-five Dollar than the British and other Europeanags in sundry oriental possessions? Does Japan contemplate an attack upon these governments because of their possessions in the far east?
The cause of Philippine independence will not be well served by attacks of this kind upon the American government and people or threats of rebillion or Japanese aggression in case the United States does not adopt a "scuttle" policy in the Philippines.
NEVER REACH FARMER
A high official of a prominent railroad estimates that the reduction in freight rates on grain recently ordered by the interstate commerce commission will mean a loss to the roads of between $32,000,000 and $38,000,000. He believes that the farmer will get but little of that money, and that most of it will be absorbed by middlemen and grain elevators, both of which agencies are declared to be already in better financial position than the railroads.
NOTICE.
In the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the County of Orange.
In the Matter of the Estate of John Lemke, Deceased. Order to Show Cause.
Upon reading and filing the petition of Anne Lemke, Executrix of the last will and testament of John Lemke, Deceased, praying for an order authorizing and permitting her as such executrix, ti lease certain real property belonging to said estate, and which is hereinafter more particularly described, and good cause appearing therefor.
IT IS ORDERED that all persons interested in the said estate be, and they are hereby required to appear before Department One of said Superior Court, in the Court Room of said Department One, in the Court House in the City of Santa Ana, in the County of Orange, State of California, on Friday, the 9th day of November, 1921, then and there to show cause, if any they have, why said real property belonging to said John Lemke, Deceased, should not be leased for the period of five years beginning on the 1st day of November, 1921, and ending on the 31st day of October, 1926 at the rental of Seventy-five Dollar than the British and other Europeanags in sundry oriental possessions? Does Japan contemplate an attack upon these governments because of their possessions in the far east?
The cause of Philippine independence will not be well served by attacks of this kind upon the American government and people or threats of rebillion or Japanese aggression in case the United States does not adopt a "scuttle" policy in the Philippines.
NEVER REACH FARMER
A high official of a prominent railroad estimates that the reduction in freight rates on grain recently ordered by the interstate commerce commission will mean a loss to the roads of between $32,000,000 and $38,000,000. He believes that the farmer will get but little of that money, and that most of it will be absorbed by middlemen and grain elevators, both of which agencies are declared to be already in better financial position than the railroads.
NOTICE.
In the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the County of Orange.
In the Matter of the Estate of John Lemke, Deceased. Order to Show Cause.
Upon reading and filing the petition of Anne Lemke, Executrix of the last will and testament of John Lemke, Deceased, praying for an order authorizing and permitting her as such executrix, ti lease certain real property belonging to said estate, and which is hereinafter more particularly described, and good cause appearing therefor.
IT IS ORDERED that all persons interested in the said estate be, and they are hereby required to appear before Department One of said Superior Court, in the Court Room of said Department One, in the Court House in the City of Santa Ana, in the County of Orange, State of California on Friday, the 9th day of November, 1921 then and there to show cause, if any they have, why said real property belonging to said John Lemke, Deceased should not be leased for the period of five years beginning on the 1st day of November, 1921,and ending on the 31st day of October,1926 atthe rentalofSeventy-fiveDollar thantheBritishandotherEuropeanagsin sundryorientalpossessions?DoesJapancontemplatetheattackuponthegeorgiangovernmentandpeopleorthreatsfrebillionorJapaneseaggressionincasetheUnitedStatesdoesnotadopta"scuttle"policyinthePhilippines.
NEVER REACH FARMER
A high official of a prominent railroad estimates that the reduction in freight rates on grain recently ordered by the interstate commerce commission will mean a loss to the roads of between $32,000,000and$38,000,000.Hebelievesthatthefarmerwillgetbutlittleofthatmoney,andthatmostofitwillbeabsorbedbymiddlemenandgrainelevators,bothofwhichagenciesaredeclaredtobealreadyinbetterfinancialpositionthantherailroads.
NOTICE.
IntheSuperiorCourtoftheStateOfCalifornia,andfortheCountyOfOrange.
IntheMatteroftheEstateOfJohnLemke,Decreased.OrdertoShowCause.
UponreadingandfilingthepetitionofAnneLemke.ExecutrixofthelastwillandtestamentofJohnLemke.Decreased,prayingforanorderauthorizingandpermittingherassuchexecutrix,tileasecertainrealpropertybelongingtosaidestate,andwhichishereinaftermoreparticularlydescribed,andgoodcauseappearingtherefor.
NOTICE.INVITINGSEALEDPROPOSALSORBIDS.
NoticeisheregiventhatsealedproposalsorbidswillbereceivedattheofficeoftheCityClerkoftheCityofAnaheimupto8:00o'clockP.M.ofThursday,the24thdayofNovember,1921,forkn furnishingtotheCityofAnaheimofonefour-cylindermotortruckinaccordancewiththespecificationstherefor,thewereadoptedbyresolutionbytheBoardOfTrustees-ofTheCityOfAnaheimonthe27thdayofOctober,1921,andareonfileintheofficeoftheCityClerkofsaidcity.
Each proposalorbidmustbeaccompaniedbay BondtoTheCityOfAnaheimexecutedbyatleasttwogoodandsufficientsuretieswhoshalljustifyindoubletheamountofsaidbond,theamountofsaidbondshallbeequaltoatleasttenpercentoftheamountofsaidbond shallbeconditionedupontheexecutionofa
THE PHILIPPINES AND
"SELF DETERMINATION"
A so-called "Philippine commission of independence," representing certain political elements in the Philippine islands, and conceivably, other portions of the globe, issues a "press bulletin." In the last issue of the publication the threat is made that unless the United States throws the Philippines overboard to become the prey of internal anarchy and external aggression, it will be "a source of weakness in time of war if not actually provocative of war." On the subject of resistance to the authority of the United States in the Philippines, one Emile Aguinaldo could give some good advice to the politicos responsible for the publication of material of this kind in the name of Philippine "independence." The "bulletin" continues:
"The United States wrote and championed the principle of self determination in the late war. She sent her sons to fight and die for that principle. Yet the whole world is witness to the fact that she is not practicing self determination in the Philippines."
No more preposterous piece of bunk was ever uttered than that the United States "sent her sons to fight and die for the principle of self determination." This government has no authority and no disposition to send its sons to fight and die for any cause but that of defense of the American Court, in the Court Room of said Department One, in the Court House in the City of Santa Ana, in the County of Orange, State of California, on Friday, the 9th day of November, 1921, then and there to show cause, if any they have, why said real property belonging to the estate of said John Lemke, Deceased, should not be leased for the period of five years beginning on the 1st day of November, 1921, and ending on the 31st day of October, 1926, at the rental of Seventy-five Dollars ($75.00) per month for and during the said term of five years, and reference is hereby made to said petition for further particulars.
Said real property herein referred to is located near the business district of the town or village of Placentia, County of Orange, State of California, and is particularly described as follows, to wit: That certain real property situate, lying, and being in the Rancho San Juan Cajon de Santa Ana, in the County of Orange, State of California, being Lot Seven (7) in Block "F" of the "Townsite of Placentia," as per map thereof recorded in Book 6, page 38, of Miscellaneous Maps, Records of Orange County, California.
Dated this 18th day of November, A.D. 1921.
R. Y. WILLJAMS,
Judge of the Superior Court.
NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS
Notice is hereby given that the city taxes on all personal property secured by real property, and on all real property in the City of Anaheim, will be due and payable on the third Monday in October, 1921, and will be delinquent on the first Monday in December, next thereafter, at 6 o'clock P.M.
Unless said taxes are paid prior to the first Monday in December, 1921,
Each proposal or bid must be accompanied by ya bond to the City of Anaheim, executed by at least two good and sufficient sureties, who shall justify in double the amount of said bond, the amount of which said bond shall be equal to at least ten per cent of the amount of said bid, and shall be conditioned upon the execution of a contract for the delivery of said motor truck and the furnishing of the bond required within ten days after the acceptance of said bid or in lieu of said bond, each bidder may accompany his bid by a certified check or cashier's check in like amount.
The successful bidder must, within ten days after the acceptance of his bid, enter into a contract with the City of Anaheim, for the delivery of said motor truck, in accordance with said specifications, and must furnish a bond in a sum equal to twice the amount of his said bid, which bond shall be executed by two sureties, who shall justify in the amount of said bond in the manner required by law, which said bond shall be subject to the approval of the Board of Trustees of the City of Anaheim, and shall be conditioned upon the faithful performance of said contract for the delivery of said truck as herein required.
The Board of Trustees of the City of Anaheim reserves the right to reject any and all bids.
By Order of the Board of Trustees of the City of Anaheim.
EDWARD B. MERRITT,
City Clerk of the City of Anaheim.
Dated at the office of the City Clerk of the City of Anaheim this 8th day of November, A.D. 1921.
Nov. 10-St.
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SUMMONS
In the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California.
Say It With
FLOWERS
SUMMONS
In the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California.
Josie Kamstra, Plaintiff, vs. William H. Kamstra, Defendant. Action brought in the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, and the Complaint filed in the office of the Clerk of said County of Orange. Ames & McFadden, Attorneys for Plaintiff.
The People of the State of California Send Greeting to William H. Kamstra, Defendant.
You Are Hereby Directed to Appear and answer the Complaint in an action entitled as above, brought against you in the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, within ten days after the service on you of this Summons, if served within this County, or within thirty days if served elsewhere. And you are hereby notified that unless you appear and answer as above required, the said plaintiff will take judgment for any money or damages demanded in the complaint, as arising upon contract, as she will apply to the Court for any other relief demanded in the complaint.
Given under my hand and the seal of the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, this 8th day of September, A. D. 1921.
(SEAL OF SUPERIOR COURT)
J. M. BACKS, Clerk.
By A. L. Hitchcock,
Security Clerk.
Say It With
FLOWERS
Howard E. Gates
FLORIST
Phone 121
Cor. W. Center and Illinois
Phone 368-M
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