/PUBLISHED EVERY. EVENING EXC^KPTlt;ksur, in advance. Sinfele Copies 5 CENTSCORONA, CALIFORNIA, MONDAY, AUGUST 16, 1920THE LONGEST WAY ROUND WAS “SWEATEST” WAY HOMEIsroron-ir-ridn-JyM;o-iid.eytonyil,u-y.kiLS-ir i . .Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Murphy and daughter and Mr. and Mrs. Ira Misenheimer and daughter, former a motor party to Redondo Beach yesterday. They were accompanied home by Mr. and Mrs. John Craig and family who have been at the cost for a week’s vacation.On the way home the party ' covered something like 160 miles and twice during the journey the autoists found themselves in Long Beach. We do not wish to infer that the local people lost their way. Nothing like that. The driver of the machine, whose name we hardly need publish, stated that in spite of the fact that they traveled twice as far as they intended to coming home all enjoyed the ride immensely. owing to the warm day.CAPT.SCENES OF FIFTYBATTLEYEARS AGOINCREASESDEERMan From Melbourne, Florida With Wife and Party, Visits Qld Butterfield Transcontinental Station House Site on J. W. Craig Ranch('apt. S. I . Noel and I . S. Circuit Judge Strowbridge. both of Melbourne, Florida, with their families passed thru Corona yesterday enroll t to San Diego and the party stopped at FI Cervnto Ranch, the home of do ini \V. Craig in the Tem-escal canyon, ('apt. Noe] asked Mr. Craig if his ranch wore not. the site of the station-house of the Transcontinental Butterfield stage. Whereupon^ Mr. ^Craiu took the party overPoles Are Putting Up Good Fight And Are Holding Warsaw Thus Far, But Morale Is Visibly WeakeningTWINPARIS Warsaw was still holding tonight as far as krtowii, butAthe bat th- raging hofon* the city \increasing in \ iob-nce. From tin-vague news, the Poles an* makinca good light, hut seemingly all they►can hope for is to delay the city s fall. Reds continue to advance andrare less than ten miles a\vy\TvmornReghnortlknowplaceMifew 1law liavii Mr. 1 In cider of firmg* 1OPEN; GENERALnRULEShe ! _____.; Well fortified with ammunition e“ and “eats” sufficient to last several3n ! weeks, if necessary. F.Is.A. Perkins.i Frank Redans, H. P. Redman and G.Ii P. Ross, left late Saturday afternoon ! for the big deer country in Kern county. The deer season officially ! opened yesterday and the local party 1 is understood to have some choice ! locations staked out with the nimbleij four-footed creatures all ready for i the telling shot. The season lastsi!just thirty days,, but all thisr, time will not be required by the local huntsmen. Tn fact they are 6*-ported back the latter part, of this week.1 Two bucks are the limit for the 30 days, and the horns and hides must I be refused for 10 days after the I ; close of the season and he produced k on demand.edires10fs.lilyshu-alto the old ruined adobe buildings on his ranch for a close inspection.('apt. Noel stated 4hat in the fall of 1867. he, with his company of To P. S. Cavalry quartered over night in the old Stage Mouse, and that, it was most interesting to him to revisit it among the old semes traveled by himself and his company in their 7cm mile “hike” thru California andtArizona fifty-three years ago.Me told of the establishing in1 858 of the Wells-Butt»*r field StageRoute with its first mail contract-■ .with the government of $5 00,000. which turned out a losing one for the brave promoters: and even , the jPoles Break LineW\RS\W Fast of Gholm thePoles broke Mum the enemy line 1 and pursued the Bolsheviki to theright hank of tin* Bug. says an official statement tonight.» Polish cavalry. strengthened by ! infantry, is fighting west of the Styr. with the Bolsheviki cavalry, : which outnumbers the Poles, the i statement says. The Polish eom-iid. to shorten i)ie line, has order;; ret *•':»t io the Bug, and Poles h; v«- again evacuated Brody. On the .-out hern wing, the statement clan-. Bolsheviki attacks wei pulsed.Line Is ’Shortening*AT THE FRONT The1 pentilargelargewhicputabouif* . iRivi » «» • i ;a rilt;hnPolisht I• *1-•!..-n*iki line i*o\ ei*s about 700 ki 1d i 'us e v f end i n u from tin* Rusecond one of $125,000 allowed them* nm'iian frontier northwest, to tl\to make very little money. The haz- j !1 ■ ards were terrific, requiring* liund- | ibitreds of horses, stages and drivers.and the building of numerous stagestations along 2000 miles route travelled. This service was, the first of the Transcontinental Routes, later giving place to the Northern Route, then the Pony express, and finally-sian border. When the Bolshev hi - an their offensive five* weeks j age tin* line was a pproxiinat cl v ' ’ \\ ilt; e ghat length.Th-e front stretches diagonally across Poland. it is slightly bowed in the renter with, a buckle in Urn Warsaw sector.- d rIniad a p1S« ’..w mild\vlt;•( la r\F;:iathe Centra! Pacific R. R.\Other interesting reminiscencesu,10 int,isv-)ed, ile3S I 1-?s i“011! General Requirements .Tlo- license fee for i he residents*•and non-residents is $1 and for the declarant and other aliens, $10; li-. cense year from .Tidy 1 to June 30. The fishing license is $1 for resi-r•dents, $3 for non-residents and ! aliens, year January 1 to December 31. Boys under 18 years, need no li-[ cense. The trapping license for eiti-| aens is $1. for aliens $2, year July 1 to June :u. All commercial fisher-i; men must pay a fee of $10. License must be miown upon demand.Neither is it permissible to net or.trap anV protected game or to holdf; their nest or eggs. Predatory maraolswere related by ('apt. Noel, who tookwith him a Souvenir. a fragment o’‘ tin- rid adobe wall, and expressed his satisfaction over the pleasant visit, which discovered to him,, in place of the dusty, lonely desert trails o! fifty years ago this unique and beautiful Circle City of Corona with its splendid paved street. NI*Mr. Craig promised to have the old landmarks photographed so that ('apt:. Noel could show his grand-children some of the old-time placeshe visited when California was young and Cordna not vet. born.CALIFORNIA STATE BAND CONCERT TONIGHT, 7:3.0 EIGHTH AND MAIN STS.are wolves, coyotes, foxes, ring-tailed cats, raccoons, martens, fishers.n ; wolverines, minks, skunks, weasels,13„ j badgers, congers, wild cats, rats, lt;] j mice, gophers, black-tailed jack rab-f j bits,*it 'Phe limit are twenty-five dtucks,I«eight geeseper day or, fifty a week;| eight linkers or black-—s^abrajil ,.at-jd:iy or twenty-four a week; twenty-y five pack-snipes a day or fifty a week, il the open season being October 15 toFebruary ].Non-game birds roust not be killedeofdRETURNS FROM STATE SANTA ROSA REDMEN'S CONVENTION• Jaws 'Pay; nr retnrivd Siindiiy. ^from Santa Rosa where he went as a delegate from the local tribe oi j Red Men to attend the Great Council) j of California. Me reports a most in-! teresthig session.Having been a former resident of Santa Rosa he found a number of hisold f^kmds still living there. He spent a couple of days with his daughter and husband, Mr. and Mrs. James Ceremony a? Sail Leandro, a suburb of Oakland. Mr. Ceremony i* in the meat business with his brother Charlie, and is doing- exceptionally well. The bovs are sons ofAgreeable to previous arrange-i; ents. ih«* lt;aliforina Slate Baud oiI•Oakland airixed on tlu* cilyN ’streets 11; i .- mlt; oil i us and mam-! known Mieir presem-i by three or lour lively seloci ions.The hand is cou.posrd of young . men in ;he main. and come in their own motor iruck. i il; e piipped for camping. Tiie fn; auto camping : grounds in the nm ])ark.,are heiurI utilized, and they may decide toiit stay in the* city o\di■night, instead of ! going to Elsinore as Ho y had plan ' ned.The coJiccrt will commence ilt;seven-thirty and will range from iIn-classi oa I to the more popular selee-. •1 lions. As soon as one piece is finished the leader starts his musicians i on another, so that there are nowaits between selections, making if. ^f possible to crowd a great deal of music into an hour and a half of playing.Seven-* hirn is tin-■and the ia hernuch* igli t h a nd M a in -t i 't ion.lt; r!pn t k i g t ,iI I'D pilla cl a i iicent (i ycjn d! .intountAt ml ! t i 1I I 11! I\ OS I 't' r' d (i Ii- ioii lt;r --f;i! iii'.' i !id pin l’t il ! hI■ i ionir« C« • kRd\V- D re 11the tatSa in) »so!o* a I MI - * j n I a nge.opmiing lime.u roll nds at i.; is the IodjiMrs. (lavs inrox.opt bluojay. butt-her bi.vLs. Enp- AIr. aml AS„. P. (Vrlt;.„JOUV ()f ibisetes1)lish sparrow, sharp shinned hawk, ('coper's hawk, great horned owl or California I inn egWild pheasants, swan, bob-white, quail, imported quail, partridge or- *...... ^,.U. „ ,fc, , .1—.. ......... .... ». . ^ . ..., I -y -M I »•»,. • ./-■• ' • -I .wild turkey may not be killed, thelimit being 15 per day, 3d a week,from October 15 to December 31, in this district. Mountain quail limit is 10 a day and 20 a week. Doves may killed in September and October only, t\\e limit being fifteen •1 day. thirty a week.mi y.Manager Lamplicrc has invitedthe players to his show house Io! lowing i hi- hand program. llv also advertises that Mu* complete MaryBickford program will In* run at I In* Mali for nia after i he-• concert.If 1Would I«!• i ArMr. and Mrs. Stephen Bfird were I’piand gu est £ yesterday of Mr. Kro-hoBieyer who formerly- was in (le-*meat business heVc*. Mr. Bird learn-ted that owing to the continued heat wave the orange crop in that section 1 will he only about fifty per cent ofnormal.Mr. ami’Mrs. D. R. Vanderhoot nttondf*(l a delightful reunion yes terdav at Sycamore Grove, Los An_ . ., , . ..... .. . .... .. - .• • . .. . M w . . ..-4. _ . .. w .lt;i. i .*.ugelos, of folks from thejr home town. Newt oh, Illinois.Clias. Maug of the Teinescal canyon is enjoying a vacation at the beaches.Mr. and Mrs. Herman Frohm ofMr$250.00Mr$150.00Mis$50.00Laura ($35.00 ;Lcr $25.00 I .MrsFirst GoL( itSecondJessThird Glt;1 Cl