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anaheim-gazette 1923-07-19

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U. S. POSTAL SERVICE "BEST IN THE WORLD" No other nation in the world gives to its citizens a mail service comparable to that of the United States. The citizens of no other country can communicate with each other or with the outside world at so small a cost as they can in this country. No other country even remotely approaches the United States in the amount of mail handled. In fact the American postal system handles one-third of the world's mail, equalling in number all the pieces handled by Great Britain, Germany, France and Russia combined. The mail of New York City alone is greater than that of the dominion of Canada. No mail service equals that of the United States in the speed with which letters are transported to great distances. In no other country may citizens mail such large and heavy packages by parcel post. No other country is so honey-combed with rural free delivery routes or approaches the service furnished by the United States to its rural inhabitants either in the rich farming regions or in the sparsely settled sections where the hermit of the mountain or desert dwells. For two cents the citizen of Miami, Florida, may send a letter to Point Barrow, Alaska, or to the Philippine islands by domestic mail. A still greater distance, however, may be reached for two cents by international mail. From Point Barrow a one-ounce letter may be sent to Tierra del Fuego, at the southern-most point of South America. For that matter the two-cent stamp will carry an ounce letter to any country in the western hemisphere with the exception of Chile, French and Dutch Guiana, Venezuela and the islands of Martinique and Guadeloupe. Two cents also carry an ounce letter time only very brief hearings will be necessary. In that event it might get through the house by Christmas. The senate finance committee then would rush it out without extended hearings or revision. Debate in the senate probably would not be protracted, making it possible to take final action there by the end of January. A conference action and ratification of the conference report by the two houses would require not more than another week, in all likelihood, thus sending it to the white house before the middle of February. Then, in the event of a veto, it would be voted upon in both houses with a minimum of discussion. The bonus by March 1, 1924, therefore, is looked for by the ex-service men's leaders. When President Harding vetoed the bonus bill last September the house voted overwhelmingly to over-ride his objection. The senate, however, sustained the president 44 to 28, which was four votes short of the two-thirds majority required under the constitution to over-ride. The vote was taken September 20. All except three of the absentees were paired, so that the result would have been the same had all of the senators been present. Eight senators who voted to uphold Mr. Harding's objection no longer are in the senate. They are: Calder, of New York; France, of Maryland; Myers, of Montana; Nelson, of Minnesota; New, of Indiana; Newberry, of Michigan; Williams, of Mississippi, and Dupont, of Delaware. Successors to at least six of these former members are understood to favor the bonus. They are: Copeland, of New York; Bruce, of Maryland; Wheeler, of Montana; Ralston, of Indiana; Stephens, of Mississippi, and Bayard, of Delaware. Senator Nelson's successor has not been elected. equally true that the chokes is strictly limited time. This is high price for which tail when they finally earn markets, and fact that the vast cans, outside of California acquainted with them. It has been of the artichokes she will spend $25,000 tising its product. ket for artichokes we next few years, but well for new or less to go slow on the de commercial plantings for crop disposals kets or roadside st continue to be, prof southern California. For many years, district has been a bay, just south of S there are about 450 In the last year o plantings have been the coast, particular Cruz and in the S coast sections have for artichokes, due climate. Those conduction in inland lo make sure that th tions are such th grow well and pro ketable size and qu crop can be brought at the right season artichokes is best in March. Another point t membered is that consistently come seed. The only re an artichoke plant suckers or off-sets a bearing plantation type of mother pla greater distance, however, may be reached for two cents by international mail. From Point Barrow a one-ounce letter may be sent to Tierra del Fuego, at the southern-most point of South America. For that matter the two-cent stamp will carry an ounce letter to any country in the western hemisphere with the exception of Chile, French and Dutch Guiana, Venezuela and the islands of Martinique and Guadelupe. Two cents also carry an ounce letter to Great Britain and to far-off New Zealand in the South seas, but an answer from either place requires a three-cent stamp. Spain and its African colonies may be reached for two cents, but the reply postage will cost five cents. Any other country in the world may be reached by the American citizen for five cents, although it was only sixty years ago when a letter to Australia cost $2.04. An idea of the firm foundation upon which the American postal service is built may be visualized by the fact that it was the only one in the world the personnel of which was not demoralized or seriously crippled during the recent war. In other countries de liveries were cut one-third and the service maintained only by the drafting of women to carry the mails. The United States is the only country of importance where pre-war postage rates are still maintained. For twenty months during the war letter rates were increased to three cents, but the extra cent was levied as a tax to assist in carrying on the war and no portion of it accrued to the postal revenues. The American railway mail service is the greatest in the world, principally, of course, on account of the immense railway systems in this country. Because of the great preponderance of mail in this country more mechanical contrivances and labor saving devices are utilized in its dispatch probably than all of the other countries combined. Another feature of which the American citizen may well be proud is the freedom of the United States mails from censorship. While other countries are noted for a propensity for "cracking seals," the American service stands out for its insistence in maintaining inviolate the contents of its citizen's mail. THE BONUS BILL Passage of a soldier bonus bill at the coming session of congress is decalder, of New York; France, of Maryland; Myers, of Montana; Nelson, of Minnesota; New Indiana; Newberry, of Michigan; Williams, of Mississippi, and Dupont, of Delaware. Successors to at least six of these former members are understood to favor the bonus. They are: Copeland, of New York; Bruce, of Maryland; Wheeler, of Montana; Ralston, of Indiana; Stephens, of Mississippi, and Bayard, of Delaware. Senator Nelson's successor has not been elected. A determined fight will be made by Senator Smoot and other advocates of the sales tax in the senate and house to provide this method of meeting the cost of the bonus. Chairman Green, of the ways and means committee, planned to go to Canada this summer to make a study of the operation of the sales tax there with a view to its adoption in this country if he found it satisfactory. He will make a report to the ways and means committee, and if convinced of its efficiency, as now operating in Canada, he may join the movement to enact it as a part of the bonus bill. Members of congress who went to Canada last year as the guests of William Randolph Hearst to study the Canadian sales tax have urged its adoption as a model for the United States. They will form an important nucleus for the new sales tax fight in connection with the bonus. Sales tax advocates like Senator Smoot and those who went to Canada are convinced, as a result of their studies of the question, that once this form of levy is tried out in connection with the bonus, or in any other way, it will prove so popular that it will be adopted generally in the end. MOUNT McKINLEY, ALASKA, U. S. SECOND LARGEST PARK The territory of Alaska has within its borders one national park and three national monuments, according to the interior department. Mount McKinley national park, created by congress in 1917, is the second largest national park in the United States. It comprises an area of 2645 square miles or 1,692,800 acres and is the outstanding scenic attraction of Alaska, having as its chief features Mount McKinley, the highest mountain in North America, and immense herds of caribou and bands of mountain sheep. Through the construction of Alaska railroad the park has been made accessible to tourists with a stop on the line at McKinley Park. Another transocean been planned by gineers and actuums pole line on Denver south and Paso to terminate well under way. On January 20th continental line was formally opened marked and vance is long district mission. It was and miles longer phone line in this pole line and six deserts and over tremendous underthe circuits fault human voice over than man had ever a problem that o source of the Bell staff and its engl were equal to tha The improvement incorporated in this line have revolution transmission so practically no line that speech can the wires of the distance transmit istfactory as cont ol local exchange. Four wires will new route. Wit tom" circuit, the additional long-transcontinental those now in use Sa nFrancisco li The completion Los Angeles vi THE BONUS BILL Passage of a soldier bonus bill at the coming session of congress is declared certain by congressional and American Legion leaders as the result of the switch of two of the most ardent foes of the legion in favor of it. Senator Reed Smoot, representative, Utah, slated for the chairmanship of the senate finance committee, declares there is no doubt of the bill's passage and that if President Harding should veto it again congress would override the veto. Senator Walter E. Edge, Republican, New Jersey, says the objection heretofore offered successfully to the proposed adjustment compensation, that it would place on the treasury a burden that could not be handled except by involving further debt, has been removed by the treasury surplus of more than $300,000,000 at the end of the past fiscal year, June 30. Both of these senators voted to sustain the president's veto before. Senator Smoot's announcement in favor of the bonus gives it the support of the chairman of both the committees which must report it out. Representative William R. Green, Republican, Iowa, has been a staunch supporter of the bonus bill from the outset. He probably will reintroduce it as the first measure on the calendar when the session is convened in December. If the same bill that was vetoed in the last congress is reintroduced this dated by congress in 1917, is the second largest national park in the United States. It comprises an area of 2645 square miles or 1,692,800 acres and is the outstanding scenic attraction of Alaska, having as its chief features Mount McKinley, the highest mountain in North America, and immense herds of caribou and bands of mountain sheep. Through the construction of the Alaska railroad the park has been made accessible to tourists with a stop on the line at McKinley Park station. No hotel facilities are as yea available at the railroad station or within the park. Roads have not been developed within the park, but one costing $250,000 has been proposed. One trail crosses the park to the Kanishna mining district. The Sitka national monument, established in 1910, contains 57 acres. It was the scene of a massacre of Russians by Indians in 1802. Within its limits are 16 totem poles of best native workmanship. It is situated near the port of Sitka. Katmal national monument was created in 1918 and contains 1,088,000 acres. It is a wonderland of volcanic action, having within it the "valley of Ten Thousand Smokes." It is inaccessible to ordinary tourist travel. Old Kasaan national monument, established in 1916, embraces 38 acres of land on the east coast of Prince of Wales island and covers the abandoned Indian village called "Old Kasaan." ARTICHOKE INDUSTRY LIMITED AT PRESENT The rather high prices for Globe artichokes that have prevailed in recent months is apparently attracting the attention of many prospective artichoke growers. It is true that California has a virtual monopoly on the production of this vegetable, but it is ANAHEIM GAZETTE equally true that the market for artichokes is strictly limited at the present time. This is partly due to the high price for which artichokes retail when they finally reach the eastern markets, and still more to the fact that the vast majority of Americans, outside of California, are not yet acquainted with this delicious vegetable. It has been reported that one of the artichokes shipping associations will spend $25,000 this year on advertising its product. No doubt the market for artichokes will expand in the next few years, but it will perhaps be well for new or inexperienced growers to go slow on the development of large commercial plantings. Small plantings for crop disposal on the local markets or roadside stands are, and will continue to be, profitable, especially in southern California. For many years, the chief artichoke district has been around Half Moon Bay, just south of San Francisco, where there are about 4500 acres of chokes. In the last year or two, commercial plantings have been extended down the coast, particularly around Santa Cruz and in the Salinas valley. The coast sections have many advantages for artichokes, due to the mild, humid climate. Those considering their production in inland locations should first make sure that their climatic conditions are such that artichokes will grow well and produce buds of marketable size and quality, and that the crop can be brought into production at the right season. The demand for artichokes is best from November to March. Another point that should be remembered is that artichokes do not consistently come true to type from seed. The only reliable way to start an artichoke plantation is to obtain suckers or off-sets from old plants in a bearing plantation, selecting the best type of mother plants. The best time equally true that the market for artichokes is strictly limited at the present time. This is partly due to the high price for which artichokes retail when they finally reach the eastern markets, and still more to the fact that the vast majority of Americans, outside of California, are not yet acquainted with this delicious vegetable. It has been reported that one of the artichokes shipping associations will spend $25,000 this year on advertising its product. No doubt the market for artichokes will expand in the next few years, but it will perhaps be well for new or inexperienced growers to go slow on the development of large commercial plantings. Small plantings for crop disposal on the local markets or roadside stands are, and will continue to be, profitable, especially in southern California. For many years, the chief artichoke district has been around Half Moon Bay, just south of San Francisco, where there are about 4500 acres of chokes. In the last year or two, commercial plantings have been extended down the coast, particularly around Santa Cruz and in the Salinas valley. The coast sections have many advantages for artichokes, due to the mild, humid climate. Those considering their production in inland locations should first make sure that their climatic conditions are such that artichokes will grow well and produce buds of marketable size and quality, and that the crop can be brought into production at the right season. The demand for artichokes is best from November to March. Another point that should be remembered is that artichokes do not consistently come true to type from seed. The only reliable way to start an artichoke plantation is to obtain suckers or off-sets from old plants in a bearing plantation, selecting the best type of mother plants. The best time equally true that the market for artichokes is strictly limited at the present time. This is partly due to the high price for which artichokes retail when they finally reach the eastern markets, and still more to the fact that the vast majority of Americans, outside of California, are not yet acquainted with this delicious vegetable. It has been reported that one of the artichokes shipping associations will spend $25,000 this year on advertising its product. No doubt the market for artichokes will expand in the next few years, but it will perhaps be well for new or inexperienced growers to go slow on the development of large commercial plantings. Small plantings for crop disposal on the local markets or roadside stands are, and will continue to be, profitable, especially in southern California. For many years, the chief artichoke district has been around Half Moon Bay, just south of San Francisco, where there are about 4500 acres of chokes. In the last year or two, commercial plantings have been extended down the coast, particularly around Santa Cruz and in the Salinas valley. The coast sections have many advantages for artichokes, due to the mild, humid climate. Those considering their production in inland locations should first make sure that their climatic conditions are such that artichokes will grow well and produce buds of marketable size and quality, and that the crop can be brought into production at the right season. The demand for artichokes is best from November to March. Another point that should be remembered is that artichokes do not consistently come true to type from seed. The only reliable way to start an artichoke plantation is to obtain suckers or off-sets from old plants in a bearing plantation, selecting the best type of mother plants. The best time equally true that the market for artichokes is strictly limited at the present time. This is partly due to the high price for which artichokes retail when they finally reach the eastern markets, and still more to the fact that the vast majority of Americans, outside of California, are not yet acquainted with this delicious vegetable. It has been reported that one of the artichokes shipping associations will spend $25,000 this year on advertising its product. No doubt the market for artichokes will expand in the next few years, but it will perhaps be well for new or inexperienced growers to go slow on the development of large commercial plantings. Small plantings for crop disposal on the local markets or roadside stands are, and will continue to be, profitable, especially in southern California. For many years, the chief artichoke district has been around Half Moon Bay, just south of San Francisco, where there are about 4500 acres of chokes. In the last year or two, commercial plantings have been extended down the coast, particularly around Santa Cruz and in the Salinas valley. The coast sections have many advantages for artichokes, due to the mild, humid climate. Those considering their production in inland locations should first make sure that their climatic conditions are such that artichokes will grow well and produce buds of marketable size and quality, and that the crop can be brought into production at the right season. The demand for artichokes is best from November to March. Another point that should be remembered is that artichokes do not consistently come true to type from seed. The only reliable way to start an artichoke plantation is to obtain suckers or off-sets from old plants in a bearing plantation, selecting the best type of mother plants. The best time equally true that the market for artichokes is strictly limited at the present time. This is partly due to the high price for which artichokes retail when they finally reach the eastern markets, and still more to the fact that the vast majority of Americans, outside of California, are not yet acquainted with this delicious vegetable. It has been reported that one of the artichokes shipping associations will spend $25,000 this year on advertising its product. No doubt the market for artichokes will expand in the next few years, but it will perhaps be well for new or inexperienced growers to go slow on the development of large commercial plantings. Small plantings for crop disposal on the local markets or roadside stands are, and will continue to be, profitable, especially in southern California. For many years, the chief artichoke district has been around Half Moon Bay, just south of San Francisco, where there are about 4500 acres of chokes. In the last year or two, commercial plantings have been extended down the coast, particularly around Santa Cruz and in the Salinas valley. The coast sections have many advantages for artichocks, due to the mild, humid climate. Those considering their production in inland locations should first make sure that their climatic conditions are such that artichocks will grow well and produce buds of marketable size and quality, and that the crop can be brought into production at the right season. The demand for artichokes is best from November to March. Another point that should be remembered is that artichokes do not consistently come true to type from seed. The only reliable way to start an artichoke plantation is to obtain suckers or off-sets from old plants in a bearing plantation, selecting the best type of mother plants. The best time equally true that the market for artichoks is strictly limited at the present time. This is partly due to the high price for which artichoks retail when they finally reach the eastern markets, and still more to the fact that the vast majority of Americans, outside of California, are not yet acquainted with this delicious vegetable. It has been reported that one of the artichokes shipping associations will spend $25,000 this year on advertising its product. No doubt the market for artichoks will expand in the next few years, but it will perhaps be well for new or inexperienced growers to go slow on the development of large commercial plantings. Small plantings for crop disposal on the local markets or roadside stands are, and will continue to be, profitable, especially in southern California. For many years, the chief artichoke district has been around Half Moon Bay, just south of San Francisco, where there are about 4500 acres of chocks. In the last year or two, commercial plantings have been extended down the coast, particularly around Santa Cruz and in the Salinas valley. The coast sections have many advantages for artichocks, due to the mild, humid climate. Those considering their production in inland locations should first make sure that their climatic conditions are such that artichocks will grow well and produce buds of marketable size and quality, and that the crop can be brought into production at the right season. The demand for artichokes is best from November to March. Another point that should be remembered is that artichocks do not consistently come true to type from seed. The only reliable way to start an artichoke plantation is to obtain suckers or off-sets from old plants in a bearing plantation, selecting the best type of mother plants. The best time equally true that the market for artichoks is strictly limited at the present time. This is partly due to the high price for which artICHOKES WERE RELEASED BY THE BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION OF THE NATIONAL BANK BUILDING IN AHAHIM CALIFORNIA HOWE'S 1913. DURING THE FIRST YEAR 2994600 PARCELS WERE MAILED C.O.D.FROM WHICH THE GOVERNMENT COLLECTED $2994600 DURING THE LAST FISCAL YEAR 30941570 PARCELS WERE MAILED C.O.D.FROM WHICH THE GOVERNMENT COLLECTED $3162150. NO EXUCSE FOR IT A man out of work these days is open to questioning. J.M.SCHUMACHER CO. Opp.S.P.Depot.W.Anaheim. Phone 794. HAY AND GRAIN. From Farm To Consumer DR.CHAS S.O'TOOLE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Reoma 306-307 First National Bank Building Anaheim California Hours: 10-11; 1-4; 7-8 Office 338-J Residence 333-M Orange County Business College 626 North Main Street,Santa Ana, California Enroll now for our summer term Day School Secretarial Accountancy,Business Administration,Bookkeeping Posting Machine and Shorthand courses. Every graduate placed in a good position. You can enter any school day or school evening.Call or write WILL BUILD COAST-TO-COAST TELEPHONE LINE Recalls Problems Solved in Stringing First Wires Across Continent Another transcontinental line has been planned by the Bell system engineers and actual construction of a new pole line on the section from Denver south and west by way of El Paso to terminate at Los Angeles is well under way. On January 25, 1914, the transcontinental line of the Bell system was formally opened. That achievement marked an epoch-making advance in long distance telephone transmission. It was more than a thousand miles longer than any other telephone line in the world. To run a pole line and string wires across deserts and over mountains, was a tremendous undertaking, but to make the circuits faithfully transmit the human voice over a greater distance than man had ever talked before was a problem that called for all the resource of the Bell system engineering staff and its engineers and scientists were equal to the task. The improvements and inventions incorporated in the transcontinental line have revolutionized long distance transmission so that today there are practically no limits to the distance that speech can be transmitted over the wires of the Bell system and long distance transmission is just as satisfactory as conversation over a pair of local exchange wires. Four wires will be available on the new route. With the so-called "phantom" circuit, these will provide three additional long-haul circuits for transcontinental service, similar to those now in use over the New York-San Francisco line. The completion of the Denger to Los Angeles via El Paso trunk line bed or its archaic form of expression and rendered more in keeping with modern journalese. Forty-two years ago the old King James edition of the Bible was revised by a coterie of scholars and churchmen and the result of their earnest labors has been generally accepted by ministers and their congregations wherever the English language is spoken. There was no attempt to change the form or expression that has made the Bible not only the best-loved of books, by both the erudite and the simple, but also the noblest example of perfect literature the world has ever known. At most, words that were obviously out of date or had lost their original meaning in the course of time were replaced with words or expressions that today more accurately translated the original Greek and Hebrew. The men who revised the Testament in 1881 never presumed to re-write its divine message or tell the story in the style of the modern paragrapher. Even with the slight changes thus affected, there are thousands of devout worshipers and scholars and poets who still prefer the King James edition—to some there is an indescribable essence, an elusive spirit in the phrasing of the old Elizabethan version that can never be modernized without being lost. How will the American people accept a new book; told in the vernacular, story of today's street happenings, in lieu of the old Bible of religion, poetry and tradition? Because, of course, there is no such thing as re-writing the Bible. Mr. Hendrik Van Loon may produce something different and many will be curious to discover how different it will be. It may be a text-book, it may be a travesty; to many people it won't be the Bible. Yet his work may be valuable in bringing home to the hearts of religious Americans what an unchangeable treasure was handed down to them in the old Bible of their forefathers—if there should be many who cared to compare the Van Loon interpretation with either the King James or the revised version. And there is always a comforting thought about all such radical innovations—there is no way of forcing them on old-fashioned folk who have no taste for them. And when their religion is touched the most progressive citizens are apt to prove adamantly conservative. The Bible is in any case greater than the language it is told in. Only the most carefully selected words and the most majestic diction can interOrange County Business College 626 North Main Street, Santa Ana, California. Enroll now for our summer term Day School Secretarial, Accountancy, Business Administration, Bookkeeping Posting Machine and Shorthand courses. Every graduate placed in a good position. You can enter any school day or school evening. Call or write for our free catalogue explaining everything. J.W.McCORMAC, Pres. PUBLIC SALES We have purchased 122,000 pair U.S. Army Munson last shoes, sizes 5 1-2 to 12 which was the entire surplus stock of one of the largest U.S. Government shoe contractors. This snoe is guaranteed one hundred per cent solid leather, color dark tan, bellows tongue, dirt and water proof. The actual value of this shoe is $8.00. Owing to this tremendous buy we can offer same to the public at $2.95. Send correct size. Pay postman on delivery or send money order. If shoes are not as represented we will cheerfully refund your money promptly upon request. NationalBay State Shoe company 296 Broadway, New York JOHNSTON-WICKETT CLINIC ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA HOURS 8:00 A.M. 5:00 P.M. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Edward W. Jenkins, Deceased. Notice is Hereby Given, by the undersigned, administrator of the estate of Edward W. Jenkins, deceased, to the creditors of and all persons having claims against the said deceased to file them with the necessary vouchers in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, or to exhibit the same with the necessary vouchers to the said administrator at his place of business,the office of H.V. Weisel, Room 3, Golden State National Bank building, Anaheim, Orange County, California, within four months after the first publication of this no- the wires of the Bell system and long distance transmission is just as satisfactory as conversation over a pair of local exchange wires. Four wires will be available on the new route. With the so-called "phantom" circuit, these will provide three additional long-haul circuits for transcontinental service, similar to those now in use over the New York-Sa'nFrancisco line. The completion of the Denger to Los Angeles via El Paso trunk line is in line with plans for permanent extensions of trunk lines of the Bell system for nation-wide service providing for at least three main transcontinental routes with suitable north and south tie lines. One of the new routes planned will extend from New Orleans and Dallas via El Paso to Los Angeles and the other from Minneapolis via Fargo and Billings to Seattle. The work undertaken this year fits in with the plans for the southern route. UNIVERSITY AND SOFT DRINKS With the adoption of the prohibition amendment millions of dollars were invested in the soft drink business, and the belief was naturally fostered that a larger market would be created for the fruits and berries which can be used in the manufacture of healthful and delicious beverages. The thing has not worked out in quite that manner and probably will not until the public demands in its "fruit" drinks some proportion of fruit juices. The University of California, through its college of agriculture, and the research of W. V. Cruess and J. H. Irish, has studied the situation with a view of encouraging the use of fruits in soft drinks. It has found that most of the so-called fruit beverages now on with either the King James or the revised version. And there is always a comforting thought about all such radical innovations—there is no way of forcing them on old-fashioned folk who have no taste for them. And when their religion is touched the most progressive citizens are apt to prove adamantly conservative. The Bible is in any case greater than the language it is told in. Only the most carefully selected words and the most majestic diction can interpret to humanity thoughts inspired by influence beyond the reach of the most zealous students and devoted archeologists. THE NORTHERN LIGHTS When light was born, not all the speeding rays Divine, invisible, returned in pure Ecstatic beauty form that now endure Where once black chaos reigned; their pacan'd praise Is uttered not in glorious sights that daze While sunlight fills the scene; the magic lure, Of northern lands in thrsldom holds secure Those errant beams whose brilliances amaze. The northern sky is purple black, fit stage For wonder dancing lights—the music slow, Mysterious, unheard on earth—that go In solemn stately march; anon they rage In hasty ware against night's dark'ning page And anger's swiftly changing shades they show. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Lucy Ortega, Deceased. Notion is hereby given, by the undersigned, John E. Wagner, executor of the last will and testament of Lucy Ortega, deceased, to the creditors of and all persons having claims against the said deceased to file them with the necessary vouchers in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California, or to exhibit the same with the necessary vouchers to the said executor at his place of business, at Suite No. 2, Odd Fellows' building, at No. 133 West Center street, in the city of Anaheim, Orange county, California, within ten months after the first publication of this notice. Dated this 11th day of May, 1923. JOHN E. WAGNER, Executor of the last will and testament of Lucy Ortega, Deceased. AMES & McFADDEN. Attorneys for Executor. 5-17-6t DODGE BROTHERS MOTOR CAR As Spring days approach, the demand for Dodge Brothers Touring Car mounts swiftly. Dodge Brothers one problem, at present, is not how many Touring Cars they can sell, but how many they can build. Never was public approval of Dodge Brothers product more obvious, and never was it more richly deserved. Improvements, rarely spoken of but constantly being made, have brought the car to a state of perfection which can only be described as remarkable, even for Dodge Brothers. Every part which takes a major strain is built of chrome vanadium steel. Many more pieces of alloy steel are used in vital parts than normal wear requires. CHAS. H. MANN Dodge Brothers Motor Cars 210 S. Los Angeles St. Anaheim, Cal. Dodge Brothers Motor Cars 210 S. Los Angeles St. Anaheim, Cal. Stroup’s Market 115 North Los Angeles St. We guarantee every article sold to be absolutely first class. Money back if not satisfactory. You can find anything in the meat line that you want at our market, and our low prices will surprise you. Call and ask us about it. First Class Job Work at Gazette OFFICE PHONES HOME 753-1 SUNSET 341-J Residence, 887 S. Los Angeles St. RESIDE PHONES PACIFIC 341-M HOME 753-2 J. W. TRUXAW, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON HOURS 11-12: 2-4; 7-8 GOLDEN STATE BANK BLDG. Cor. Center and Los Angeles St. ANAHEIM, CAL. WEST BROADWAY M. E. CHURCH Sunday school, 9:45 a.m. Preaching, 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. Epworth League, 6:45 p.m. Prayer meeting, Wednesday evening Bible study, Friday eaening. Sunday evening and Friday evening M. Eugene Durfee ARCHITECT Room 5, Cassou Bldg. Phone 692 Anaheim J. H. COLE, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Diseases of the Eye and Fitting of Glasses a Specialty 312-313 First National Bank Bldg. Tel. Office Home Phone 644-J 644-M Anaheim, California BUILDING AND LOAN Fire and Compensation Insurance WEST BROADWAY M. E. CHURCH Sunday school, 9:45 a.m. Preaching, 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. Epworth League, 6:45 p.m. Prayer meeting, Wednesday evening Bible study, Friday eaening. Sunday evening and Friday evening services are in the English language Pastor. H. C. JACOBY, Dr. W. W. Adams Pure Osteopathy Office: No. 220 N. Olive St. Telephone 731-W. J. E. SCHUMACHER CO. Opp. S. P. Depot, W. Anaheim. Phone 794. HAY AND GRAIN From Farm to Consumer BUILDING AND LOAN Fire and Compensation Insurance FRANK TAUSCH 111 N. Los Angeles St. Office Phone 46 Res. 342-W J.C. Osher, D.D.S., M.D PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT—ORAL SURGERY—GLASSES FITTED SUITE 1 CENTRAL BLDG PHONE SUNSET 337 SCHNEIDER'S MARKET 131 West Center Street We buy and sell only A-No. 1 Steer Beef, Milk Lamb, Milk Veal, Young Pork. All No. 1 meats have ono-third more food value than cheaper grades. Watch for our Saturday Specials. Phone 20 We Deliver