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anaheim-gazette 1933-11-16

1933-11-16 · Anaheim Gazette · page 6 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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History of Anaheim Officially Recorded In Minutes of Anaheim Water Company, Which are Copyrighted, 1932, by Anaheim Gazette, and Printed In Weekly Installments April 21, 1874. Session of the board of trustees. All the members of the board being present, the meeting was called to order by the president. The minutes of the last meeting were read and approved. The treasurer reports $395.65 in cash on hand. The zanjero reports having repaired the ditch along East street so as to hold a good stream of water. H. Werder on the committee of building reports progress. A bill of $105.62 for work on ditches and monthly salary of zanjero was approved and ordered paid. Motion made and seconded to accept the amended agreement with the North Anaheim Canal, company and to instruct the secretary to make said agreement in duplicate. Carried. The committee on investigation of the books and accounts of the company handed in their reports which, on motion, was accepted. A motion was then made, seconded and carried to instruct the treasurer to keep a ledger for the purpose of keeping a correct account of all assessments collected from all outside parties connected with the Anaheim Water company. Brung and Joseph Bennerscheldt's petition to grant them the exclusive right-of-way to lay gas pipes under the streets of Anaheim was, after some discussion, amended, and a motion made and seconded to grant the exclusive right-of-way to Bruno and Joseph Bennerscheldt for a term of 15 years, provided that the gas pipes will be laid down within 100 days from date and that at no time they will interfere with the water ditches or sewers in use now, or which may be necessary hereafter. Carried. On motion, the communication of H. Richfer was laid over one week. On motion, it was resolved to hold the meetings at 4 p.m. instead of 2 p.m. Water sold $50. Adjourned. Twenty-six shares being represented, the meeting was called to order by the president, John P. Zeyn. The president stated that being appointed a committee of one by the last general meeting to apply for a patent to the school land warrants owned by this company, he had made inquiries about it, which resulted in the fact that the U.S. government does not grant any patent before said land is surveyed and put onto market, but that he had received an offer to sell the said school land warrants to Mr. James W. Shanklin of San Francisco for the sum of $1000. A motion was then made and seconded to accept the offer made by Mr. Shanklin which was unanimously carried and the secretary instructed to inform Mr. Shanklin of the acceptance of his offer, with the proviso that the company reserves for itself the right-of-way for cutting a ditch through said land at any future time. No other business being presented, the meeting adjourned. F. A. Korn, Secretary. May 30, 1874. A full board being present, the meeting was called to order by the president John P. Zeyn. The minutes of the last meeting were read and approved. The committee reports the best place for a waste water ditch to be West street, after the water has run down Also street, D. C. Cowan offered to take care of the water by digging a ditch along the line of his land along West street to the old river bed. On motion the report of the committee was accepted and H. Werder and D. Strodthoff appointed to inspect another locality for the same purpose, near the junction of the new main ditch with the old ditch. Carried. The treasurer reports $276.27 cash on hand. The zanjero reports the breaking of holders of the company. Law Become Most Authentic Before A bulletin of motor vehicle California it them to secure vehicles from on application made prior to While a new applicants for clearances will not effective fore, will not motorists during season. Registrar R rethe department renewal applicant ber 1 and w Sacramento ad January 2. Bevans exploded of motor vehicle and received before the new only ones like truck owners ordinarily Registration March 5 must posite side by side clearance or be clearance certified authorized for The tax close regardless of may be an old assessor places It will be re exemption of the reason no tax the vehicle. T made particular of war veteran tax exemption property in Ca- May 9, 1874. Session of the board of trustees. The meeting was called to order by the vice president, A. Bittner. The minutes of the last meeting were read and approved. The treasurer reports $417.02 in cash on hand. The zanjero reports all ditches in good order. A bill of zanjero for $48.75 for work on ditches and of $10.50 on the river ordered paid. Notary public acknowledgement, $1, also ordered paid. Concerning the petition of H. Richter, a motion was made and seconded to rescind the resolution of the board of trustees of May 4, 1872, in regard to a ditch on South side, H No. 1. Carried. Motion made and seconded to instruct the zanjero to collect the remaining $8.50 of the North Anaheim Canal company, also to get articles of agreement signed of said company, to watch several that have a water privilege who sell water to other persons not interested. Carried. The zanjero was further instructed to repair the water gate on ditch F No. 1. Water sold, $10. Adjourned. F. A. Korn, Secretary. May 16, 1874. The meeting was called to order by the vice-president, A. Bittner. Absent: John P. Zeyn. The minutes of the last meeting were read and approved. H. Werder reports the completion of the building for the main on the river by the carpenter and a bill thereof of $30 which was ordered paid; also bill of zanjero for work on ditches, $41; and $6, for work on the river. A bill of $8 of Brown and Dyer for work on a water gate was, on motion, referred to a committee to report next meeting. H. Werder and D. Strodthoff appointed as such committee. The same committee was also appointed to inspect the ditches. Motion made and seconded to instruct the zanjero to make out correct bills for the distribution of the water. Water sold, $28. Adjourned. F. A. Korn, Secretary. May 23, 1874. On motion, the communication of H. Richfer was laid over one week. On motion, it was resolved to hold the meetings at 4 p.m. instead of 2 p.m. Water sold, $50. Adjourned. F. A. Korn, Secretary. May 9, 1874. Session of the board of trustees. The meeting was called to order by the vice president, A. Bittner. The minutes of the last meeting were read and approved. The treasurer reports $417.02 in cash on hand. The zanjero reports all ditches in good order. A bill of zanjero for $48.75 for work on ditches and of $10.50 on the river ordered paid. Notary public acknowledgement, $1, also ordered paid. Concerning the petition of H. Richter, a motion was made and seconded to rescind the resolution of the board of trustees of May 4, 1872, in regard to a ditch on South side, H No. 1. Carried. Motion made and seconded to instruct the zanjero to collect the remaining $8.50 of the North Anaheim Canal company, also to get articles of agreement signed of said company, to watch several that have a water privilege who sell water to other persons not interested. Carried. The zanjero was further instructed to repair the water gate on ditch F No. 1. Water sold, $10. Adjourned. F. A. Korn, Secretary. June 10, 1874. The meeting was called to order by the president. All members of the board being present. The minutes of the last meeting were read and approved. The committee reported that in its opinion the man on the head of the ditch who is employed there does not work in the interest of the company and that the sand separator was found in a neglected condition. On motion, the report of the committee was accepted and the committee discharged. The zanjero in his report defended the man on the river and declared it erroneous that the sand separator had ever been neglected. Bills approved and ordered paid: Committee services, $5; salary of zanjero and work on ditches, $77.50; two-month salary to board of trustees, $70; bill of John P. Zeyn for hauling done, $5. A motion was then made and seconded to appoint a committee of inquiry, which was carried. H. Werder and D. S. Strodthoff being appointed as committee, were instructed to make inquiries on the following charges: First, B. Dreyfus selling water to outside parties; second, parties cutting willow poles along the main ditch; fourth, complaint of the North Anaheim Canal company of finding a scantling across the flume which caused an accumulation of sand in their ditch. On motion the new agreement of the North Anaheim Canal company was laid on the table for one week. Carried. The zanjero was then instructed to ask the man on the river the reason why his house should not be moved higher up the ditch. After the water has run down Aliso street, D. C. Cowan offered to take care of the water by digging a ditch along the line of his land along West street to the old river bed. On motion the report of the committee was accepted and H. Werder and D. Strodthoff appointed to inspect another locality for the same purpose, near the junction of the new main ditch with the old ditch. Carried. The treasurer reports $276.27 cash on hand. The zanjero reports the breaking of the flume near the junction gates of the farmers. Bills approved and ordered to be paid-Work on ditches, $6; school tax receipt, $5; Southern Californian, $20. On motion, the secretary was instructed to make out the bill of the monthly expenses against the North Anaheim Canal company ($50.75). The zanjero was instructed to clean out the ditch on Aliso ditch between B and C No. 7, also of repairing all crossings in bad conditions. Water sold, $43. Adjourned. F. A. Korn, Secretary. May 16, 1874. The meeting was called to order by the vice-president, A. Bittner. Absent: John P. Zeyn. The minutes of the last meeting were read and approved. H. Werder reports the completion of the building for the main on the river by the carpenter and a bill thereof of $30 which was ordered paid; also bill of zanjero for work on ditches, $41; and $6, for work on the river. A bill of $8 of Brown and Dyer for work on a water gate was, on motion, referred to a committee to report next meeting. H. Werder and D. Strodthoff appointed as such committee. The same committee was also appointed to inspect the ditches. Motion made and seconded to instruct the zanjero to make out correct bills for the distribution of the water. Water sold, $28. Adjourned. F. A. Korn, Secretary. May 23, 1874. After the water has run down Aliso street, D. C. Cowan offered to take care of the water by digging a ditch along the line of his land along West street to the old river bed. On motion the report of the committee was accepted and H. Werder and D. Strodthoff appointed to inspect another locality for the same purpose, near the junction of the new main ditch with the old ditch. Carried. The treasurer reports $276.27 cash on hand. The zanjero reports the breaking of the flume near the junction gates of the farmers. Bills approved and ordered to be paid-Work on ditches, $6; school tax receipt, $5; Southern Californian, $20. On motion, the secretary was instructed to make out the bill of the monthly expenses against the North Anaheim Canal company ($50.75). The zanjero was instructed to clean out the ditch on Aliso ditch between B and C No. 7, also of repairing all crossings in bad conditions. Water sold, $43. Adjourned. F. A. Korn, Secretary. June 10, 1874. The meeting was called to order by the president. All members of the board being present. The minutes of the last meeting were read and approved. The committee reported that in its opinion the man on the head of the dutch who is employed there does not work in the interest of the company and that the sand separator was found in a neglected condition. On motion, the report of the committee was accepted and the committee discharged. The zanjero in his report defended the man on the river and declared it erroneous that the sand separator had ever been neglected. Bills approved and ordered paid: Committee services, $5; salary of zanjero and work on ditches, $77.50; two-month salary to board of trustees, $70; bill of John P. Zeyn for hauling done, $5. A motion was then made and seconded to appoint a committee of inquiry, which was carried: H. Werder and D. S. Strodthoff being appointed as committee, were instructed to make inquiries on the following charges: First, B. Dreyfus selling water to outside parties; second, parties cutting willow poles along the main dutch; fourth, complaint of the North Anaheim Canal company of finding a scantling across the flume which caused an accumulation of sand in their dutch. On motion this new agreement ofthe North Anaheim Canal company was laid onthe tablefor one week.Carried. The zanjero was then instructed to askthe manontheriverthereasonwhyhishouseshouldnotbemovedhigherupthedutch. "A Red Cross atmosphere poised thousands o'f Cross members continues until James L.F chargeofdom messageof-the "The spiritofin13 different just attendedcau few scattere numberwhichcde delegates drove'dAlenetotheL conferenceAtBoils asfarfromSacramentoandPhoenix,Arizona loyaltytotheLeceptional." "At oneofthe conferencesa raftof nothingwhich(duringthesul winter)ashep snowtoa farc comeuptoa rangeofwhichtheRisitwasframetomakeonserenectiontothelevel Five state governbeforeTheRedthefivegovernorthechairmanofbranches.Severemergencyrelieflethethousandsoontheregionalconcludes:" "TheRedCrossforGodandcoustofallfaithsanddictiontototh Beneficiary." A new battlebiosis soundvolunteerwho sai zanjero for work on ditches, $41; and $6, for work on the river. A bill of $8 of Brown and Dyer for work on a water gate was, on motion, referred to a committee to report next meeting. H. Werder and D. Strothoff appointed as such committee. The same committee was also appointed to inspect the ditches. Motion made and seconded to instruct the zanjero to make out correct bills for the distribution of the water. Water sold, $28. Adjourned. F. A. Korn, Secretary. May 23, 1874. The meeting was called to order by the vice president, A. Bittner. The minutes of the last meeting were read and approved. The committee reports the recommendations to pay the bill of Dyer and Brown, which, on motion, was accepted and committee discharged. The treasurer reports $335.77 cash on hand. The zanjero reports a great deal of water in the river, and all the ditches in order. Bills approved and ordered paid: For work on ditches, $22.50; for work on the river, $9; salary of man on the river, one month, $50; bill of Brown and Dyer of $8 for carpenter work. A motion was then made and seconded to instruct the zanjero to employ carpenters for no other work but carpenter work and that the setting of water gates ought to be done in the future by himself. Carried. It was then resolved and unanimously carried that the zanjero is hereby forbidden to sell any water during the week and in disregarding all the rules and regulations for the distributions of the water will be fined for each violation of this ordinance, in the sum of $10. On motion, a committee of the whole board was appointed with instructions to find out the most suitable place for a waste water ditch and to report next meeting. Water sold, $28. On motion, it was ordered that the water which has been sold today be distributed only in the day time. F. A. Korn, Secretary. May 30, 1874. Special general meeting of the stock-Bath House open to visitors. Visiting Hours At Palm Canyon Palm Springs Indians having jurisdiction over the Palm Canyon road have established visiting hours from 7:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. Arrangements have been made to keep the Indian bank open to visitors. Not Necessary To Get Tax Receipts For 1934 Licenses Law Becomes Legal In March; Most Auto Licenses Granted Before That Date A bulletin issued by the department of motor vehicles informs motorists of California it will not be necessary for them to secure tax clearances on their vehicles from city and county assessors on applications for 1934 license plates made prior to March 5, next. While a new state law requires applicants for registration to submit such clearances with the applications it is not effective until March 5 and, therefore, will not affect the bulk of the motorists during the coming renewal season, beginning January 2. Registrar Russell Bevans announces the department would begin accepting renewal applications by mail on December 1 and will open the counters at Sacramento and all branch offices on January 2. Bevans explained most of the owners of motor vehicles will have applied for and received their 1934 plates long before the new law is effective. The only ones likely to be affected are truck owners who do not seek registration ordinarily until later in the year. Registration cards received after March 5 must be endorsed on the opposite side by the city or county assessor or be accompanied by a tax clearance certificate submitted upon an authorized form. The tax clearance will be required regardless of the fact that the vehicle may be an old model upon which the assessor places no assessed valuation. It will be required also if because of exemption of the individual or any other reason no tax is assessed or paid upon the vehicle. The last explanation was made particularly for the information of war veterans who are entitled to a tax exemption on personal and real property in California up to $1,000. Is Dog Entitled To Just One Bite? The question of whether a dog is entitled to one bite may find its answer in a suit on file in superior court at Sacramento. William B. Phillips, building contractor, asks $15,555 damages from G. H. Slawson. He charges Slawson's dog attacked him several weeks ago. In his complaint, Phillips asserts the dog not only ripped his clothing but also tore a chunk of flesh from the plaintiff's leg. Success with Poultry by Fuller D. Baird FEED FOR LAYING HENS It is usual to classify feedstuffs as grain, grain by-products, and protein, mineral and vitamin supplements. Chickens are, primarily, grain eaters. In some localities corn is extensively used, while in others wheat is more economical. Wheat has more protein and ash than corn, while corn is considered to be more palatable and more easily digested. When it is considered to be desirable, from their relative prices, to use wheat in place of corn, it is possible to replace the corn, either the whole or the ground form, to the extent of 80%. Neither barley nor oats are as palatable as corn or wheat, but they can be substituted for either one of them to at least 50%. The principal grain by-products which are used in the poultry ration are wheat bran, wheat middlings, hominy feed, corn gluten meal and corn gluten feeds. Wheat bran is used in the ration to supply protein and ash and seems to have a value which is out of proportion to its chemical analysis. Wheat middlings are used extensively to sup- New Farm Credit Rule Gap Between Land Small Farm Properties In City: New Regulation, Although Installments During Presence The farm credit administration has of regulations concerning land bank between necessary qualifications for loans from federal home loan agencies vault by Governor Henry Morgenthau of the land bank at Berkeley. Under this modification small farm properties particularly those in city suburbs worked but part time by their owners, which hitherto have been excluded from participation in either form of credit relief may qualify to borrow from the land bank commissioner's fund of $200,000-000 established by the last congress. This decision, so Ellis was informed, was reached in an effort to extend credit on small farm properties which are not of sufficient area to produce an income of themselves that will maintain the family of the applicant and pay installments on the loans. The new regulation issued from Morgenthau's Washington office points out that to qualify for a commissioner's loan the farm offered as security does not necessarily have to be a complete farm unit competent to pay cost of operation, taxes, depreciation and interest. "If the land has agricultural value," says the regulation, "and the owner would be able to support his family and pay installments in normal times, although part of his income would be obtained from work outside the farm property, for instance, in neighboring factories or by day labor of any kind, such loans may be made within 75 per cent of the normal agricultural value of the farm property if the individual is honestly striving to hold his property and could do so, meeting taxes and installments under normal conditions." The land bank commissioner's fund is being handled by the federal land banks but constitutes no part of such banks' assets. Loans from that fund Thousands Enroll To Aid Red Cross "Reunion" Spirit Prevalent As Annual Drive Stirs Enthusiasm Throughout America "A Red Cross reunion." That's the atmosphere pervading the nation as thousands of volunteers enroll Red Cross members in a campaign that continues until Thanksgiving Day. James L. Fieser, vice chairman in charge of domestic operations, in a message of the Pacific slope: "The spirit of 16 regional conferences in 13 different states which I have just attended can best be illustrated by a few scattered instances in a great number which came to my notice. Five delegates drove 500 miles from Coeur d'Alene to the Idaho state regional conference at Boise. Others drove almost as far from northern California to Sacramento and from Apache county to Phoenix, Arizona. These evidences of loyalty to the Red Cross were not exceptional. "At one of the northwestern regional conferences a man said that he knew of nothing which so warmed his heart (during the subzero nights of a long winter) as he pushed his way over the snow to a far off destination, as to come up to a ranch house in the window of which the Red Cross emblem shone as it was framed in the yellow glow from a kerosene lamp. It was a benediction to the lonely traveler." Five state governors made addresses before the Red Cross gatherings. Of the five governors, three had served as the chairman of Red Cross chapters or branches. Seven state directors of emergency relief also participated with the thousands of Red Cross delegates in the regional conferences. Mr. Fieser concludes: "The Red Cross is an Army of mercy, for God and country. It unites people of all faiths and beliefs and is a bene-dition to both the participant and the beneficiary." A new battle cry for Red Cross membership is sounded by a Louisiana volunteer who says: "Ask them all." The principal grain by-products which are used in the poultry ration are wheat bran, wheat middlings, hominy feed, corn gluten meal and corn gluten feeds. Wheat bran is used in the ration to supply protein and ash and seems to have a value which is out of proportion to its chemical analysis. Wheat middlings are used extensively to supply heat and energy in poultry laying rations. Gluten meal and gluten feed are rich in protein and fat and can be used to as high as 10% of the mash when corn meal does not make up a high proportion of the ration. Hominy feed can be used as a substitute for corn meal in supplying heat and energy. With whole grain, such as corn, ground forms of wheat oats and barley are extensively used to supply the requirements of the laying birds. The usual protein supplement in the laying ration includes milk and milk by-products, meat meal, meat and bone meal, fish scrap and soya bean meal. The protein from a milk source seems to have a special value for poultry feeding. Vegetable protein feeds, when properly supplemented by minerals, will give equally good results with feeds of animal origin such as meat meal, meat and bone meal or fish meal. Vegetable protein feeds are not, at the present time, considered to be equal to milk protein feeds, even if they are supplemented by minerals. A ration in which the protein comes from various sources usually gives better results than one in which the protein is obtained from a single source. The nature and amount of the mineral supplement to a ration will depend upon the kind and quantity of other ingredients in the ration. Common mineral supplements to the average poultry laying ration are calcium carbonate from ground limestone or oyster shells, bone meal and salt. With the exception of vitamin D, the other vitamins are usually obtained from the common ingredients in the ration. Vitamin D is supplied by the ultra violet rays of sunlight and by cod liver oil. Cod liver oil is the surest and most economical source of Vitamin D. It is believed by some that grit is necessary to furnish a means of grinding the food in the gizzard. When grit is fed, shary granite grit is best. Bulldogs Retire As Rabbit Wins Bout All rabbits apparently aren't as timid as most people believe. For instance, a rabbit owned by G. J. Savage of Woodland, was declared the Bank of America Payroll Boosted Bank of America announces increases in pay for 1,000 employees, to become effective December 1, as a Christmas present to the employees affected. In making the announcement, L. M. Giannini, senior vice president, pointed out that the present salary adjustment is the second of its kind in recent months, and is in line with the bank's previously announced policy of restoring salaries to a normal basis as general conditions and earnings continue to improve, and the bank's desire to cooperate with the national administration's program of increasing the volume of business by increasing purchasing power. The full amount of the increase for the month of December will be paid on December 15, in order to provide employees with the extra funds for Christmas shopping to stimulate the volume of holiday trade. The present revision, placing the salaries of 77 percent of the institution's personnel on the normal pre-depression basis of pay, is made possible by the substantial and sustained improvement in the bank's earning record. Between the call dates of December 30, 1932, and October 25, 1933, a period of approximately a year, the combined banks earned $8,078,356, from which $1,550,000 were paid in dividends. During the same period, total deposits increased $35,799,275 and 364,416 new accounts were opened. Bulldogs Retire As Rabbit Wins Bout All rabbits apparently aren't as timid as most people believe. For instance, a rabbit owned by G. J. Savage of Woodland, was declared the winner after a backyard free-for-all with two bulldogs. At the end of but a few minutes combat the dogs retired, somewhat chewed up, leaving bunny in full possession of the yard. Possibility the rabbit would challenge greyhounds for its next bout was discounted. Fire Smoulders 42 Years In Wheat Pit A fire said to have been smouldering in buried wheat for 42 years is blamed for a grass fire near Moscow, Idaho. In 1891 the Farmers Alliance grain warehouse burned, partially destroying hundreds of sacks of wheat. What remained was covered with earth. Graes sprouted on top, but the fire smouldering on. Ground squirrels shunned the underground "oven." The fire finally became hot enough to set fire to dried grass above. Chain Stores May File One Inventory Commissioner of Internal Revenue Guy T. Helvering announces that chain store operators will be permitted to file one inventory and return covering stocks on hand in their several places of business without the necessity of attaching thereto a separate inventory for each location where goods are held. This permission is granted with the understanding that complete data on which the consolidated inventory and return is based shall be maintained at the principal office of the company, and a copy of the individual inventory of each separate store is retained on the premises. Farm Credit Ruling Permits Bridging the Between Land Bank and Home Loan Properties In City Suburbs Will Be Aided Through Regulation, Although Land Itself May Not Pay Full Installments During Present Times; Attempts Factor bank at Berkeley. Under onion small farm properties, those in city suburbs workome by their owners, which have been excluded from parish form of credit relief, to borrow from the land owner's fund of $200,000. By the last congress, so Ellis was informed, in an effort to extend all farm properties which efficient area to produce an themselves that will mainly of the applicant and installs on the loans. regulation issued from Washington office points qualify for a commissioner's offer as security does have to be a complete competent to pay cost of taxes, depreciation and in-the land has agricultural regulation, "and the able to support his may installments in normal part of his income claimed from work outside property, for instance, in factories or by day labor such loans may be made cent of the normal agrifolio of the farm property if is honestly striving toerty and could do so, and installments under loans." bank commissioner's fund filled by the federal land institutes no part of such Loans from that fund "Soul and Body” Is Lesson-Sermon Topic "Yeah, in the way of thy judgments, O Lord, have we waited for thee; the desire of our soul is to thy name, and to the remembrance of thee." These words of Isaiah are the Golden Text in the Lesson-Sermon on "Soul and Body" on Sunday in all branches of The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass. One of the Scriptural citations includes other words of Isaiah, "Wherefore do ye spend money for that which is not bread? and your labour for that which satisfies not? hearken diligently unto me, and eat ye that which is good, and let your soul delight itself in fatness." Another selection gives Paul's words to the Galatians, "If we live in the Spirit, let us also walk in the Spirit." A passage from "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures," by Mary Baker Eddy, states: "Man understands spiritual existence in proportion as his treasures of Truth and Love are enlarged. . . . This scientific sense of being, forsaking matter for Spirit, by no means suggests man's absorption into Deity and the loss of his identity, but confers upon man enlarged individuality, a wider sphere of thought and action, a more expansive love, a higher and more permanent peace." San Joaquin Leads Potato Production California Lands. Yield 326.2 Bushels Per Acre; Maine Other Over 300 Mark San Joaquin county, California, yields more bushels of Irish potatoes per acre in the United States although it ranks twenty-sixth in the nation's counties in potato production, a report of the bureau of census received by the federal-state crop reporting service, state department of agriculture, show. The average yield of potatoes from an acre of San Joaquin county land is 326.2, the report reveals. The U.S. summary also shows that only one other county in the United States has soil that yields more than 300 bushels an acre, Aroostook county, Maine, first in total acreage, where the average yield is 314.8, considerably under the record of San Joaquin. Here are the figures of Aroostook county, Maine, and San Joaquin county, California, as contained in the federal report: Aroostook county, Maine, number of farms reporting, 5,925; percentage of all farms, 91.7; acreage, 132,887; production in bushels, 41,834,545; value,$49,109,727; average yield per acre, 314.8. San Joaquin county, California, number of farms reporting, 146; percentage of all farms, 2.5; acreage, 11,702; production in bushels, 3,816,849; value,$5,113,068; average yield per acre, 325.2. Club Issues 212,000 School Posters More than 212,000 school classrooms have received the November safety poster of the Automobile Club of Southern California bearing the slogan "please be careful on streets and highways." On the display sheet, traffic accident hazards to children are color- Wake Up Your Liver Bile —Without Calomel And You'll Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Rarin' to Go If you feel sour and sunk and the world looks punk, don't swallow a lot of salts, mineral water, oil, laxative candy or chewing gum and expect them to make you suddenly sweet and buoyant and full of sunshine. For they can't do it. They only move the bowels and a mere movement doesn't get at the cause. The reason for your down-and-out feeling is your liver. It should pour out two pounds of liquid bile into your bowels daily. If this bile is not flowing freely, your food doesn't digest. It just decays in the bowels. Gas bloats up your stomach. You have a thick, bad taste and your breath is foul, skin often breaks out in blemishes. Your head aches and you feel down and out. Your whole system is poisoned. It takes those good, old CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS to get these two pounds of bile flowing freely and make you feel "up and up." They contain wonderful, harmless, gentle vegetable extracts, amazing when it comes to making the bile flow freely. But don't ask for liver pills. Ask for Carter's Little Liver Pills. Look for the name Carter's Little Liver Pills on the red label. Resent a substitute. 25¢ at drug stores. ©1931 G. M. Co. Resourceful Men--- Consult GAZETTE Advertisements The up-and-coming citizens who gets things done know where to turn when they want something. . . They consult the advertising columns of the Gazette. . . If they do not find it listed there they then turn to their phone, tell the Gazette to insert an ad . . . and get results. . . If you want a job, a house, an automobile, a garage, a room, some work done, furniture repaired or sell a house, automobile, horse, cow, radio, etc., etc. . . Use Gazette Classified Ads. . . They are wonder workers. . . To place a Classified AD, dial, 2414 and ask for Adtaker