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anaheim-gazette 1926-12-23

1926-12-23 · Anaheim Gazette · page 8 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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Noted Prize Fighter Held in County Jail Aurelio Herrera Incarcerated 30 Days on Vagrancy Charge Aurelio Herrera is languishing in the Orange county jail. Herrera the wildcat! One of the greatest fighters of his day. If not king of the lightweights, at least he-apparent to the title, the loast of every Mexican on either side of the border. All that was a quarter century ago. Now Aurelio Herrera, a slouchy, grubby little Mexican, 53 years of age, sits in a cell of the Orange county jail, a "vag." He is serving a sentence of 30 days for "roaming from place to place without visible means of support." Aurelio Herrera, shades of Bat Nelson and Terrible Terry McGovern, his old rivals. In his day, he was as famed and as feared as they, but now, now his glory isn't merely faded, it is gone. "I had been given a lift in an automobile and was headed for Tia Juana," he told a reporter. "but the driver stopped at Capistrano and said he wasn't going any further. They arrested me there for vagrancy." Herrera would not talk of his brilliant past. He lacks the garrulity of most has-beens. Maybe it hurts him too much. Perhaps it's a touch of pride still struggling in the gutter. But the records of the prize ring talk eloquently for him. And the memory of the old-timers still recall the flashing trail he blazed across the sport pages when this century was new. His was a glorious rainbow career that reached its zenith twenty years ago, when he knocked out Young Corbett in 1906. But the end of his rainbow rests on the floor of a cell. The wildcat has been thoroughly tamed, beaten down by the sledgehammer blows of time, fortune and foolishness. For Herrera, they say, fell like many of his ilk who couldn't stand prosperity. When he rode the tide of fortune he was a hard and reckless rider who finally lost his seat. Once he was the hero of his Latin fellows, might almost have displaced Diaz. He was a California from San Jose, and the east knew little of him, except by reputation, which was plenty. His fame was great—the average cost per foot, and then all we will have to do to check an extension will be to measure the distances and see if the price for the job corresponds with the footage, according to the service to be rendered. "This rule has been applied in electrical extensions with a great deal of satisfaction and seems about as fair as any method conceived when we consider the general overhead costs which enter into every extension indirectly." Mr. Wing and Mr. Stanley spent Saturday checking a number of complaints in regard to both electric and gas extensions, and other problems pertaining to public utility service. "A complaint in public utility matters does not necessarily mean a grievance. Every point of contest or notation in regard to service is called 'complaint' in the parlance of the railroad commission." Mr. King explained. Automobiles Notes Do your auto license shopping early! This is the warning being broadcast by the local office of the Automobile Club of Southern California, which, as usual, will co-operate with the motor vehicle department in issuing new license plates for 1927. Only one month is allowed for the issuance of the new plates. This is the month of January, 1927, and beginning Monday, January 3, the big motoring organization will start issuing licenses to its members. Motorists who do not obtain their licenses by midnight, January 30, will be penalized 100 per cent of the cost by state law. Briefly, the license situation is as follows: Dates for obtaining., January 3 to 30 inclusive. Cost for the ordinary car.$3. Method of obtaining, present white slip out of car with proper name address, etc., which must be legible. In spite of many warnings issued last year, there were tens of thousands of motorists who were compelled to pay $6 for their new license plates instead of the $3 regular fee, because they did not make application within the time allowed by law. It is pointed out by the legal department of the auto club that since the entire procedure is governed by state law, no agent can alter this application of January as forced to pay tha. The license plate will be spelled out from-the-Golden parts of the coat will tell the word the state rank per capita, and good roads. The only reason United States B in the high Sierra park, according by the department area of seven south as a complete p which the flora be left in their domestic animal will be excluded special permission for the purposes studies of in c administration of this. This classed as a t pointed out by focus the eyes parts of the wo When a motor headlights of a good business f cording to le rendered that department of clared that a duty bound to when he met blinded by tha slacken speed u constitutes negl law, it is decla In New York get an ordinar 3 a.m. Back just about tha Young Corbett in 1906. But the end of his rainbow rests on the floor of a cell. The wildcat has been thoroughly tamed, beaten down by the sledgehammer blows of time, fortune and foolishness. For Herrera, they say, fell like many of his ilk who couldn't stand prosperity. When he rode the tide of fortune he was a hard and reckless rider who finally lost his seat. Once he was the hero of his Latin fellows, might almost have displaced Diaz. He was a Californian from San Jose, and the east knew little of him, except by reputation, which was plenty. His fame was greatest west of the Rockies from Los Angeles to Butte. In the old days, the gold days of the Montant mining camps, the name of Herrera was one to conjure with. He whipped Young Corbett, Eddie Santry, Kid Brown, Young Erne and Benny Yanger, all king pins of the lightweights. Many lesser lights were laid waste by his rapier left and his crushing right. His three greatest battles were lost and by a small margin, Herrera missed the crown. He lost, but only the three masters could beat him. Abe Attel, Terry McGovern and Battling Nelson were his only conquerors. And their victories were won at terrible cost, for Herrera could fight, no mistake about that. The ringsiders at that affair in Butte, nearly twenty years ago, when Herrera fought his hardest fight with Bat Nelson, still carry the thrill. But Herrera with his vanished laurels now sits in his cell a broken-hearted man. All Dairy Cattle Require Minerals By W. M. CORY, Asst. Farm Advisor It has been generally conceded that when a dairy cow was fed a balanced ration containing plenty of protein and a liberal amount of alfalfa hay, there could be no deficiency in lime or phosphorus. Alfalfa hay is quite high in calcium and protein—rich grains are generally high in phosphorus. Alfalfa analyzes 1.95 pounds calcium in 100 pounds of good quality hay, it being higher than any of the hays or grains in calcium content. Wheat bran analyzes 2.95 pounds of phosphorus to 100 pounds. Cottonseed meal is good in both calcium and phosphorus content, analyzing 1.35 pounds of calcium and 2.65 pounds of phosphorus to 100 pounds of the feed. Even though good dairymen have been cognizant of this fact and endeavored to feed a well balanced ration, embodying all of the necessary factors, surprising results have been attained at the Ohio and Wisconsin experiment stations by the addition of steamed bone meal or calcium carbonate and sodium phosphate to the ration. Meigs of the United States department of agriculture found that the animals were better able to assimilate the calcium when green feed was given. Later it was determined that green feed contains vitamins which aid in the assimilation of bone forming material. The minerals which heavy producing cows are most apt to be deficient in car, $3. Method of obtaining, present white slip out of car with proper name, address, etc., which must be legible. In spite of many warnings issued last year, there were tens of thousands of motorists who were compelled to pay $6 for their new license plates instead of the $3 regular fee, because they did not make application within the time allowed by law. It is pointed out by the legal department of the auto club that since the entire procedure is governed by state Use Your Chri money to buy this Radio- A small deposit will bring a Western Air Patrol into your home...and open a new field of enjoyment to you and your family. 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A liberal supply of green food should be available through a good share of the growing season if continued high production, year after year, is to be expected. Salt should be available at all times. The minerals need not comprise more than 2 per cent of the total ration and should be thoroughly mixed in the grain. Checking Up on Utility Complaints The cost of making gas extensions in rural sections will be on footage basis in the near future if the recommendations of the law and utility department of the California Farm Bureau Federation are adopted by the railroad commission and the gas companies, so stated L. S. Wing, engineer for the department, who was in Orange county Saturday, checking up on extension complaints with A. M. Stanley, secretary of the Orange County Farm Bureau. "In the past," stated Mr. Wing, "whenever we have had a complaint on a gas extension, we have had to go out on the job and check all the costs of the extension, consider highway and railroad crossings, and even estimate how hard the ground was to dig. The new rule will do away with this procedure, as the cost will be based on..." ANAHEIM GAZETTE TOO MUCH FOR BRITONS One of the most foolish revenue schemes ever tried by a government has come to a total loss with the abandonment of the British postmark advertising plan. The British postoffice had the curious idea of selling advertising space on the outside of all envelopes passing through the mails. For a fixed sum any purchaser of publicity could have an advertisement of his wares stamped on the envelopes of a certain number of letters daily. The scheme got by almost without notice until it was put into operation. Then what a roar went up! Lady Clara Vere de Vere's wedding bids reached her intended guests adorned with the chaste designs of a manufacturer of plumbing fixtures. The correspondence of the Hon. Lady Brocklethorpe with Miss Lowthian Sykes was an exchange of a shifting series of corset ads, dog biscuit puffs, liver pill testimonials and halitons homilies. Apple's soap found its letters reaching its customers plastered with the perfidious advertising of Quince's soap. The bishop of Wapping's appeals for funds carried also a blurb for Joseph Hergesheimer's "Cytherea." It was too much, even for the practical-minded Briton. The postmaster-general has informed the House of Commons that he is through trying. England feels more dignified. NO. 21542 NOTICE TO CREDITORS The Estate of MARTHA SCHOELLER, also known as MARTHA SCHALLER, deceased. Notice is hereby given by the under-signed executor of the Will of Martha Schoeller, also known as Martha Schaller, 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, the office of Eldon W. Stark, Room 2, Bank of America Building, Anaheim, in the County of Orange, within ten (10) months after the first publication of this notice. Dated this 15th day of December, 1928. HENRY SCHALLER, Executor of the Will of Martha Schoeller, also known as Martha Schaller, deceased. ELDON W. STARK, Attorney for Executor. NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT Pacific Mausoleum Company, principal place of business, 211 W. Chartres Street, Anaheim, California. Notice is hereby given that at a meeting this month on November ten cents upon its tion, p. Nebeluuration, at City of formla. assessment 28th day liquenque public made be ten of Jannequent costs ocal sale. Secretaria 211 W. Councils ORDINARY IN THE STATE FOR In the JEWEL It is Men appreciate sensible gifts. Good practical and useful. Something he would needs—is the ideal man's gift. Our store has everything a man's head our label guarantees his appreciation—no may be. He knows that it is of finest quality. Our Christmas stocks are the most commercialise we have ever offered. We are an inducement in themselves to all thrifty Headwear We have the finest stock of hats and caps in town. Stetson hats are noted for their wonderful quality and style—and for sensible prices. We carry all sizes in a wide variety of styles and colors—CAPS AND HATS $2.00 to $10.00 Shirts Give one or more of our quality shirts handsomely packed in a gay Xmas box. 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South Los Angeles Street Se Habla Español" Shirts Give one or more of our quality shirts handsomely packed in a gay Xmas box. We have them in silks, broadcloths and finest percales and flannels, as well as other new materials. All sizes and patterns— Silk Shirts...$5.00 to $12.50 Broadcloths $2.50 to $5.00 Percales ...$1.50 to $2.50 Flannels ...$3.00 to $5.00 He can use a scarf protection or for fast both—see ours! Gar silks and others on Scotch plaid— $2.00 to $5.00 —and a hundred other hand F. A. YUNG "The Home of Hart Schaar" Manhattan Shirts Florsheim Shoes meeting of the Board of Directors of this corporation, held on the 22nd day of November, 1926, an assessment of ten cents (10c) per share was levied upon its capital stock of this corporation, payable immediately to R. E. Nebelung, secretary of said corporation, at 211 W. Chartres Street, in the City of Anaheim, Orange County, California. Any stock upon which this assessment shall remain unpaid on the 28th day of December, 1926, will be delinquent and advertised for sale at public auction, and, unless payment is made before, will be sold at the hour of ten o'clock A.M. on the 18th day of January, 1927, to pay the delinquent assessment, together with the costs of advertising and expenses of sale. R. E. NEBELUNG, Secretary Pacific Mausoleum Company, 211 West Chartres Street, Anaheim, County of Orange, State of California. ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE ON PETITION TO MORTGAGE IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA IN, AND FOR THE COUNTY OF ORANGE In the Matter of the Estate of JENNIE DES GRANGES, Deceased, It is ordered by the Court that all persons interested in the estate of Jennie des Granges, Deceased, to appear before the Superior Court of Orange County, State of California, in Department Two thereof, on the 7th day of January, 1927, at 10 o'clock, A.M. of said day, then and there, to show cause, if any they have, why the real estate described below should not be mortgaged for the sum of Thirty-five Hundred Dollars ($3,500.00), as prayed for in the petition of Otto des Granges, the executor of the Last Will and Testament of Jennie des Granges, Deceased, this day filed herein, or such lesser amount as the Court may deem proper. Reference is hereby made to said petition for further particulars and it is further ordered that a copy of this order be published at least four successive weeks in a newspaper of general circulation, published in said County of Orange, State of California. Said real property is situated in the County of Orange, State of California, and described as follows: to-wit: An undivided one-third interest in the East 17.09 acres of the South thirty acres of the East 100 acres of the Southeast one-quarter (SE¼) of Section Thirty-two (32). Township Three (3) South, Range Ten (10) West, S. B. B. & M. Dated this 7th day of December, 1926. E. J. MARKS, Judge of the Superior Court. 12-9-5t ble gifts. Good-looking gifts, yes, but something thing he would buy for himself. Something he ift. ing a man's heart can desire. If you buy it here preciation—no matter how large or small the gift is of finest quality and the newest style. are the most complete and boast of the best gift offered. 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