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anaheim-gazette 1926-02-04

1926-02-04 · Anaheim Gazette · page 7 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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Industrial Survey Of Edison Territory What Company Has Accomplished During Past Two Years In the twenty-four months comprising the years 1925-26 the Southern California Edison Company will have brought into the territory to which it renders electric service, and kept in circulation through its operations approximately one hundred and six million dollars. In round figures this is equal to $175 for each average family, and the average light bill for each family for the two years will be approximately $45, or $1.80 per month. The activities of this large financing working through all of the channels of trade, industry and development, is the key feature of the industrial survey of Edison territory which has just been completed by R. H. Ballard, executive vice president and general manager, and received today by District Manager W. L. Deimling. Several years ago Mr. Ballard organized an industrial survey of the counties of Los Angeles, Fresno, Kings, Kern, Tulare, Santa Barbara, Ventura, San Bernardino, Orange and Riverside through the agencies of the thirty-one geographical districts into which this territory is divided for service purposes, under the supervision of his statistical and information departments, for the purpose of making accurate estimates upon which to base the power developments of the Edison Company in order to provide for requirements of future demand. It is probably the only statistical grouping of data appurtenant to the territory of which Los Angeles and its port is the metropolitan center, and therefore becomes a very valuable standard for measuring growth in population, industry; agriculture and community wealth of Southern and Central California. Distribution of Enormous Sums by Local Purchases During 1925 and on the basis of estimates for 1926, the Southern California Edison Company will have kept in circulation $105,781,340. The annual ex- Distribution of Enormous Sums by Local Purchases During 1925 and on the basis of estimates for 1926, the Southern California Edison Company will have kept in circulation $105,781,340. The annual expenditures for 1925 for new plant additions and general system betterment amounted to $21,723,340. Compared with this expenditure the budget for 1926 of $32,568,000 makes a total expenditure for the two years of $54,281,340. In addition to these expenditures for new construction, the gross receipts of the Edison Company for 1925 amounted to $24,500,000 and the estimated gross revenue for 1926 is $27,000,000, making a total gross revenue of $51,500,000. All but a small reserve for surplus is paid out annually for wages, supplies, interest and dividends. Money Paid for Labor The company's payroll for the years 1925 and 1926 will total approximately $32,000,000. During 1925 the company bought food supplies within its own territory for construction forces on the Big Creek-San Joaquin River project amounting to $750,000, and $60,000 in supplies for construction camps on its third 225-mile transmission line between Los Angeles and the high Sierra in Fresno county. It purchased construction material very largely in California for its Big Creek-San Joaquin construction project amounting to $2,200,000 and for its transmission line $220,000. Estimates for 1926 indicate that for the years 1925-26 for these purposes about $5,000,000 will have been similarly expended and put into local circulation. Mr. Ballard set up his industrial survey only a year or two after the last federal census in 1920. It is therefore necessary to go back to that year for a basis of comparison which would indicate the results in population, agriculture and industrial development which to a reasonable extent must have accelerated by the $165,000,000 which the Southern California Edison Company expended in its own territory for labor materials, interest and taxes during the five years. From the text of Mr. Ballard's industrial survey, the following excerpts are illuminating: In the ten counties in which the Southern California Edison Company operates there was in 1920 a population of 1,456,033. At the close of 1925 there is a population of 2,627,000, an increase of over 80 per cent in five years. These 1925 figures are based on school enrollments cross checked by new meter connections made by the company. As over 98 per cent of all of the families in Edison tervied territory use electricity, the electric meter is now regarded as the best standard for computing population growth. was $1,498,000,000, and in 1925 it is $1,-800,000,000. Great Additional Generating Capacity Required In 1920 the generating capacity of the Southern California Edison Company was 311,800 horsepower. In 1925 it is 681,600 horsepower, an increase of 118 per cent. In 1925 the company's sales in kilowatt hours totaled 1,567,000,000, as compared with 750,310,000 in 1920, an increase of 109 per cent. During the five-year period the number of consumers served by the company direct has increased from 131,000 to 327,-000, an increase of 150 per cent. In addition to these there are more than 250-ooo consumers who are served indirectly through energy sold wholesale for resale. Basis of Big Financial Investments One of the principal reasons for Mr. Ballard's industrial survey is to gauge the capacity of the ten counties served by the Edison Company for assimilating and employing in agricultural and industrial work the large population continually coming to the southwest. The population of the ten counties in which the Edison Company operates is only forty-six per square mile, comparable to England's density of seven hundred and twenty-five per square mile. The use of which Edison electricity is being applied by the residents of its territory is illustrated by the following extract from the survey: In 1920 the connected load of the company for lighting was 115,000 horsepower. In 1925 it is 317,000 horsepower, an increase of 175 per cent. Nine years ago connected load for electric cooking was less than 5,000 horsepower; five years ago it was 19,000 horsepower and in 1925 it is 71,000 horsepower, an increase of over 1,300 per cent in nine years. Agricultural power connected load has increased from 136,000 horsepower to 197,000 horsepower. In a five-year period, an increase of 45 per cent. During this length of time railway power has increased from 99,000 horsepower to 135,000 horsepower, an increase of 36 per cent. The connected load for manufacturing and industry increased from 159,900 horsepower to 470,900 horsepower, or 196 per cent. The total connected load in 1920 was $28,8OO horsepower. In 1925 it is 1,19OOO horsepower, an increase of 125 per cent. FOUR CANDIDATES FOR DEMOCRATIC NOMINATION Although the next presidential election is more than two years and a half away, and there is a senatorial and congressional election intervening, Democratic politicians are already beginning to talk compensation from some of their members. ORDINANCE AN ORDINANCE OF ANAHEIM AMENDED OF ORDINANCE AN ORDINANCE FIXED AND DEPUTY MARSHAL OF ANAHEIM THE BOARD OF THE CITY OF ANAHEIM AS FOLLOWS: SECTION 2 OF ORDINANCE "An Ordinance Fixing of the Marshal and Depty Marshal of the City of Anaheim" to read as follows: SECTION 2. The Board point subject to the Board of Trustees of more Deputy Marshal hereby created. The such Deputy Marshal Hundred Thirty-Five per month for the first they are continually Deputy Marshalhs. One ($14.OO) Dollars per month six months of comment One Hundred Dollars per month four months of continuous employment one or more Deputy Marshal pointed shall subject said Board of Trustee officer for said City,afic officer shall supply own expense with a sale for said services,and of each such Deputy such traffic officer shaded Eighty-Five ($11 month for all service rendered by him.Inc.of said motorcycle,the Marshal and subject to the applion of Trustees of said City more Deputy Marshal hereby created,and w direction and control said City,serve with compensation from some In the ten counties in which the Southern California Edison Company operates there was in 1920 a population of 1,456,033. At the close of 1925 there is a population of 2,627,000, an increase of over 80 per cent in five years. These 1925 figures are based on school enrollments cross checked by new meter connections made by the company. As over 98 per cent of all of the families in Edison terved territory use electricity, the electric meter is now regarded as the best standard for computing population growth. In this territory in 1920 there were 47,000 farms, and in 1926, 54,000, an increase of 15 per cent in the number of farms. The average size of these farms in 1920 was 169 acres, and in 1925 this is reduced to 148 acres, which seems to indicate that electric irrigation has tended to reduce the size of the farm and bring into more intensive cultivation the farm lands of Southern and Central California. The number of farms using electricity for irrigation in 1920 was 6,327. In 1925 it is 14,237, an increase of 125 per cent, which shows the efficiency of the electric motor in reolaiming the semi-arid lands of this region. In 1920 only 13 per cent of the total farms used electric motors for irrigation. In 1925, 26 per cent irrigate their crops by electricity. Five Years of Wonderful Growth There is within the counties served by the Edison Company in excess of 36,000,000 acres. Of this amount 8,000,000 acres or 22 per cent is farm land. There are 2,400,000 acres of irrigated farm land, or 30 per cent of the total farm land. Of the irrigated land, 1,100,000 acres are now irrigated by the use of electricity, is compared with less than 300,000 acres in 1920. The value of agricultural products in the ten counties in the year 1920 was $266,000,000. In 1925 it is $341,000,000, an increase of 20 per cent. The value of manufactured products in the ten counties in the year 1920 was $1,088,000,000 and in 1925 it is $1,539,000,-000, an increase of over 50 per cent. The total value of all property was $3,998,000,000, an average per capita of $2,730. In 1925 the total value of all property is $7,894,000,000, an increase of approximately 100 per cent over 1920, which raises the per capita value of this to $3,000. Total value of farm properties FOUR CANDIDATES FOR DEMOCRATIC NOMINATION Although the next presidential election is more than two years and a half away, and there is a senatorial and congressional election intervening, Democratic politicians are already beginning to talk about the leader who will carry the banner for the party in 1928. Up to this time four Democrats who are said to have the bee seriously are being talked about in national political circles. They are Governor Al Smith of New York; William G. McAdoo, now of California; Governor Donahey of Ohio, and Governor Ritchie of Maryland. Although Governor Al Smith has announced that he will retire from politics his friends take this to mean state, and not national politics. They are certain he will be a candidate for president in 1928 and profess to believe that he has a fine chance to land the nomination. McAdoo, of course, has been a candidate for the 1928 nomination since the close of the 1924 convention—at least his friends have been active for him. Governor Ritchie was also a candidate in the 1924 convention and got the votes of his home state consistently. He has become an ardent advocate of states' rights and hopes to get delegates from the states which agree with him in this particular. And it is generally admitted that sentiment is growing in favor of states' rights, or at least in favor of curtailing the activities of the federal government. The fourth candidate mentioned, Governor Donahey, has developed since the 1924 convention. It is expected that he will run for Governor of Ohio again, and that if successful, his hat will be in the ring in 1928. There are all indications at present that it will be the field against McAdoo again when the Democratic convention is called to order in 1928. The Clevenger grade in San Diego County, an outlet for Oceanside, Escondido, Fallbrook, etc., to the Imperial Valley, is nearly completed. OF Trustees of said City more Deputy Marshal hereby created, and w direction and control said City serve with compensation from said City. The period of Trustees shall have employed prior to the Ordinance shall be citing the amount of paid such Deputy Mayor employed by said City dinance. SECTION 3. All one of ordinances in conventions of this ordining pealed. SECTION 4. The City of Anaheim shall stage of this ordinance same to be published heim Gazette, a general circulation,and circulated in tha and from and after shall take effect and The foregoing ordinance proved and attested of January, 1926.(SEAL) PERRI President of the Boe City of Anaheim Attest: EDWARD B. MERRE Clerk of the City of STATE OF CALIFORN COUNTY OF ORANGE CITY OF ANAHEIM I. Edward B. Merre City of Anaheim, do the foregoing Ordin at a meeting of tha City of Anahe day of January, 1928 was passed and ado said Board of Trust day of January, 192 vote: AYES: Trustees ton,Franzen and S NOES: Trustees Absent and None. And I further ce ANAHEIM GAZETTE HE'S GOT HIS BUNDLES ON THE EXTRA SEAT. I WON'T DIS- TURB HIM. MADAH, IS THAT SEAT TAKEN? SURE CAN'T YOU SEE MY DOG IS OCCUPYING IT! I GUESS HE'S CRATTY. NO BUNNET ALLOWED ON SEATS. THAT SIGN IS A BOLONEY! ORDINANCE NO. 483 AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF ANAHEIM, AMENDING SECTION 2 IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have dent of the Board of Trustees signed and approved said Ordinance on the 28th day of January, 1926. BUSINESS AND DIRECTION About Your Health Things You Should Know by John Joseph Galnea, M.D. DOUGHY FOODS Our people as a rule, are quick to resent what is tarned "An old fogy notion." One of the oldest that I know of, is the mandate that we should avoid warm bread, and many otherwise intelligent folks are still sticking tight by that ancient dictum. I have tried faithfully, for many years, to discover harm in a nicely-browned hot roll or graham muffin, or a comfortably warm slice of cornbread with milk—or even in the breakfast of hot griddle-cakes; and I have yet to treat any form of indigestion that could be traced to such causes. I have naught but praise too, for the old-fashioned buttermilk biscuit! So there! On the other hand, if there is anything that appears more indifferent to digestion, or is less nourishing than a slab of cold, tough, ORDINANCE NO. 483 AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF ANAHEIM, AMENDING SECTION 2 OF ORDINANCE 340. AN ORDINANCE FIXING THE COMPENSATION OF THE MARSHAL AND DEPUTY MARSHALS OF THE CITY OF ANAHEIM. THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE CITY OF ANAHEIM DO ORDAIN AS FOLLOWS: SECTION 2 of Ordinance 340, entitled "An Ordinance Fixing the Compensation of the Marshal and Deputy Marshals of the City of Anaheim" is hereby amended to read as follows: SECTION 2. The Marshal shall appoint, subject to the approval of said Board of Trustees of said City, one or more Deputy Marshals, which offices are hereby created. The compensation of such Deputy Marshals shall be One Hundred Thirty-Five ($135.03) Dollars per month for the first six months that they are continually employed as such Deputy Marshals, One Hundred Forty ($140.00) Dollars per month for the second six months of continuous employment, One Hundred Forty-Five ($145.00) Dollars per month for the third six months of continuous employment, and thereafter, One Hundred Fifty ($150.00) Dollars per month for each month of continuous employment; provided that one or more Deputy Marshals so appointed shall, subject to the approval or said Board of Trustees, serve as traffic officer for said City, and each such traffic officer shall supply himself, at his own expense, with a suitable motorcycle for said services, and the compensation of each such Deputy Marshal acting as such traffic officer shall be One Hundred Eighty-Five ($158.00) Dollars per month for all services to be hereafter rendered by him, including the upkeep of said motorcycle, and in addition thereto, the Marshal may, at any time, and subject to the approval of the Board of Trustees of said City, appoint one or more Deputy Marshals, which offices are hereby created, and who shall, under the direction and control of the Marshal of said City, serve without receiving any compensation from said City. The period of time any Deputy Marshal shall have been continuously employed prior to the enactment of this Ordinance shall be computed in determining the amount of compensation to be paid such Deputy Marshals as are now employed by said City, under this Ordinance. SECTION 3. All ordinances and parts udent of the Board of Trustees signed and approved said Ordinance on the 28th day of January, 1926. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of the said City, this the 28th day of January, 1926. EDWARD B. MERRITT, Clerk of the City of Anaheim. f4-1t NOTICE INVITING SEALED PROPOSALS FOR ONE ADDING MACHINE FOR THE CITY OF ANAHEIM. Notice is hereby given that sealed proposals or bids will be received by the Board of Trustees of the City of Anaheim at the office of the City Clerk of the said city on or before Thursday the 11th day of February, 1926, at eight o'clock P.M. for furnishing one adding machine to the City of Anaheim in accordance with specifications thereof adopted by the Board of Trustees of the City of Anaheim by resolution on the 29th day of December, 1925, which are on file in the office of the City Clerk of the City of Anaheim and which are hereby referred to and made a part of this notice. Price quoted in bids must be for said adding machine delivered to the City of Anaheim, California. Each proposal or bid must be accompanied by a check certified by a responsible bank, for not less than ten percent of said bid, which check shall be made payable to the City of Anaheim, and same shall be forfeited to said city as liquidated damages, if within ten days after the acceptance of any such bid, the bidder fails to enter into a contract with the City of Anaheim for the furnishing of said adding machine. The successful bidder must, within ten days after the contract is awarded to him, enter into a contract with the City of Anaheim, providing for the sale of said adding machine in accordance with specifications. Full detailed specifications shall accompany each bid. 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. Dated this 14th day of January 1926. EDWARD B. MERRITT, City Clerk of the City of Anaheim. 1-21-3t. NOTICE INVITING SEALED PROPOSALS FOR ONE ADDING MACHINE FOR THE CITY OF ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA. I have tried faithfully for many years to discover harm in a nicely-browned hot roll or graham muffin, or a comfortably warm slice of cornbread with milk—or even in the breakfast of hot griddle-cakes; and I have yet to treat any form of indigestion that could be traced to such causes. I have naught but praise too, for the old-fashioned buttermilk biscuit! So there! On the other hand, if there is anything that appears more indifferent to digestion, or is less nourishing than a slab of cold, tough, tasteless, stringy,"light-bread" of commercial ancestry, I have failed to find it. The sick man demands diet suitable to his condition course, and a tough, woolly, asbestos-like piece of white bread is about the last thing I would prescribe for him, and even then, when there is nothing else in the house to eat. It is human weakness that we indulge too freely in things that entice the appetite, and right there lies the objection to warm, nourishing, digestible breads. It is the quantity eaten—and not the temperature that does harm. If two biscuits are all we need, why eat six? Overeating is to be condemned, no matter what the article of diet. A natural appetite is a pretty good guide to what the system needs. A depraved appetite is a dangerous possession. The natural appetite may be sated—the depraved never! A careful study of our appetites might be better recreation than writing manifestos opposed to good nourishment. ADOPT SPIRIT OF LOCARNO The new spirit pervading Europe, so happily present at Locarno, has touched the Scandinavian countries, and Norway, Sweden and Denmark have entered into solemn agreements to outlaw war and to place their reliance on reason and mutual understanding. To be sure, there have been no war clouds hovering over these countries. They were not drawn into the last great conflict, and there are no bitternesses growing out of that struggle to be conflated. Nevertheless the old machinery for making war remained, and the same temptation existed for the making of alliances and the establishment of a balance of power. And in these were the seeds of strife. At Locarno, Austen Chamberlain stated it as his belief that the hope of the world lies in regional compacts, bringing potential enemies into accord rather than in reliance on a general formula that shall apply to all peoples. He advocated the treatment of local irritations rather than attempting to find a panacea for all the ills of mankind. His practical view has little patience with theory. The Scandinavian peoples have set up just such a regional compact. It is a of Trustees of said City, appoint one or more Deputy Marshals, which offices are hereby created, and who shall, under the direction and control of the Marshal of said City, serve without receiving any compensation from said City. a. The period of time any Deputy Marshal shall have been continuously employed prior to the enactment of this Ordinance shall be computed in determining the amount of compensation to be paid such Deputy Marshals as are now employed by said City, under this Ordinance. SECTION 3. All ordinances and parts of ordinances in conflict with the provisions of this ordinance are hereby repealed. SECTION 4. The City Clerk of the City of Anaheim shall certify to the passage of this ordinance, and cause the same to be published once in the Anaheim Gazette, a weekly newspaper of general circulation, printed, published and circulated in the City of Anaheim, and from and after its final passage, it shall take effect and be in full force. The foregoing ordinance is signed, approved and attested by me this 28th day of January, 1926. (PERRY W. MATHIS, President of the Board of Trustees of the City of Anaheim. Attest: EDWARD B. MERRITT, Clerk of the City of Anaheim. STATE OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF ORANGE, ) SS. CITY OF ANAHEIM. I, Edward B. Merritt, City Clerk of the City of Anaheim, do hereby certify that the foregoing Ordinance was introduced at a meeting of the Board of Trustees of the City of Anaheim, held on the 14th day of January, 1926, and that the same was passed and adopted at a meeting of said Board of Trustees held on the 28th day of January, 1926, by the following vote: AYES: Trustees Mathis, Miller, Grafton, Franzen and Stock. NOES: Trustees None. Absent and not voting: Trustees None. And I further certify that the Presi- Full detailed specifications and company each bid. 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. Dated this 14th day of January 1926. EDWARD B. MERRITT, City Clerk of the City of Anaheim. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that sealed proposals or bids will be received by the Board of Trustees of the City of Anaheim, at the office of the City Clerk of the said city on or before Thursday the 14th day of January, 1926, at eight o'clock P.M. for furnishing of one adding machine to the City of Anaheim in accordance with specifications thereof adopted by the Board of Trustees of the City of Anaheim by resolution on the 29th day of December 1925, which are on file in the office of the City Clerk of the City of Anaheim and which are hereby referred to and made a part of this notice. Price quoted in bids must be for said adding machine delivered in the City of Anaheim, California. Each proposal or bid must be accompanied by a check certified by a responsible bank, for not less than ten percent of said bid, which check shall be made payable to said City of Anaheim and same shall be forfeited to said City as liquidated damages, if within ten days after the acceptance of any such bid, the bidder fails to enter into a contract with the City of Anaheim for the furnishing of said adding machine. The successful bidder must, within ten days after the contract is awarded to him, enter into a contract with the City of Anaheim, providing for the sale of said adding machine in accordance with specifications. Full detailed specifications shall accompany each bid. 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. Dated this 29th day of December, 1925. EDWARD B. MERRITT, City Clerk of the City of Anaheim. At Locarno, Austen Chamberlain stated it as his belief that the hope of the world lies in regional compacts, bringing potential enemies into accord rather than in reliance on a general formula that shall apply to all peoples. He advocated the treatment of local irritations rather than attempting to find a panacea for all the ills of mankind. His practical view has little patience with theory. The Scandinavian peoples have set up just such a regional compact. It is a neighborly agreement. So far as they themselves are concerned Norway Sweden and Denmark acknowledge that no international question can possibly arise that will not admit friendly discussion and settlement. What cause for rejoicing would Europe have if this same spirit of faith and understanding could be made to apply to the Balkans! DON'T BE A MISER The Treasury Department estimates that there are 8,000 misers in America who keep their hoardings merely to gloat over them. The estimate is that $400,000,000 in cash is hidden away in mattresses, holes in the wall, in socks, in various clever or foolish places, instead of being deposited in safe banks. Money Phone 311-310 W. A. HOOD Water Well Contractor LARGE AND DEEP WELLS A SPECIALTY Three Big Drilling Rigs ONE AVAILABLE NOW First Class Work Guaranteed Ave. Long Beach ANAHEIM'S ESS AND PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY Willys-Overland FINE MOTOR CARS Geo. N. Nolan Jr. 306 N. Los Angeles Street Dependable Used Cars Painless Terms J. W. Truxaw, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Office Phone 341-J Res., 887 S. Los Angeles St. Residence Phone, 341-M Hours: 11-12; 2-4; 7-8 Golden State Bank Bldg. Cor. Center and L. A. Sts. ANAHEIM, CALIF. Dr. Minnie H. Pintler Dr. Bertha M. Pintler The Pintlers CHIROPRACTORS Palmer School Graduates FREE X-RAY Phone 578 Hours: 10-12 A.M., 2-5 P.M. Mon., Wed., Fri., 7-8 P.M. 250 East Center Street ANAHEIM, CALIF. Johnston-Wickett Clinic ANAHEIM, CALIF. Hours: 8:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. Mary L. Johnson MARCELLING AND SHAMPOOING Hours: Except Sundays 8 to 12—1 to 5:30 PHONES: Office 207 Residence 1169-J Dr. Walter R. Blakely OPTOMETRIST-OPTICIAN Mary L. Johnson MARCELLING AND SHAMPOOING 525 WEST CENTER PHONE 1054 ANAHEIM Hours: Except Sundays 8 to 12—1 to 5:30 PHONES: Office 207 Residence 1169-J Dr. Walter R. Blakely OPTOMETRIST-OPTICIAN We Do Our Own Lens Grinding 185 W. Center St., Anaheim. Valencia Barber Shop ALL HAIR CUTTING 25c 226 E. Center Street Buy Radio Tubes DIRCET—C. O. D. by Parcel Post, If Desired 201 A-TYPE GUARANTEED Amp. ¼-Volts 5—Standard Base, Price $1.65 FRANCES CO. 1528 San Lorenzo Avenue Berkeley, Calif. J. C. Osher, D.D.S. Physician and Surgeon Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Oral Surgery—Glasses Winter Enclosures Seat Covers Earl Farris AUTO TOPS Phone 661 314 North Los Angeles Street ANAHEIM, CALIF. Hidden away and not used is essentially dead. Much of it is destroyed in fires, by rats, by the death and forgetfulness of the hiders. It's an utterly foolish thing to do—to slave away to earn money, putting one's lifeblood into it, and then lay it away to mould or to be stolen or lost. The only money worth having is the money at work. Telephone 1250 Chamberlain at the hope of normal compacts, sees into accord a general for all peoples. He of local irritation to find a mankind. His patience with les have set up impact. It is so far as they Norway, Swed knowledge that no possibly arise directly discussion would Eur-rit of faith and made to apply Telephone 1250 E. C. KENDRICK JEWELER-OPTOMETRIST 155 W. Center St. Anaheim, Calif. University Type Poultry House We have a complete set of plans and specifications, together with suggested prices. Ganahl-Grim Lumber Company 501 E. Center St. Phone 35 Anaheim, Calif. ANAHEIM FEED AND FUEL CO. Dealers in GRAIN FLOUR SEEDS WOOD COAL HAY Phone 317 W. D. GRAFTON, Prop. Public Weighing Scales