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WEEKLY GAZETTE SATURDAY APRIL 2, 1886 SUBSCRIPTION, per year, $2. EDITORIAL CORRESPONDENCE [NO. IV.] CHICAGO, March 224. In the few days I have been in this town, I have seen more oranges than during a year in Los Angeles county. On every street corner, there are half a dozen wagons full of California oranges, and half a dozen hucksters are yelling the merits of the fruit in voices more loud than musical. Fruit stores, whose chief stock is oranges, abound all over the city, and the treacherous peel with which the pavements are strewed attest the popular appetite for the golden fruit. The low price at which it is sold is doubtless the greatest inducement to its consumption, for there is nothing tempting in oranges piled promiscuously in wagons, with the snow falling fast and furiously upon them, which was the case yesterday and to-day. But the general price of the fruit sold by hucksters is "15 for 25 cents," which is as cheap as the same kind of fruit can be had in California. In company with Dr. Crane of Santa Ana, and Messrs. Fredericks and Boren of Orange, I interviewed a number of fruit dealers on Saturday and conversed at length with them concerning fruit matters. Probably the most prominent retail fruit dealer in Chicicago is Gallagher, who supplies the fashionables who circle about the Palmer House. He is a most enthusiastic believer in the future of California fruits, and is painfully anxious that the foothold gained by these fruits shall be maintained. "Tell your people," said he, "to pack their fruit honestly, carefully and tastefully, and they will rule this market. California fruit growers have their future in their own keeping, and if, after arriving at perfection in passing, they filled the vast Armory last night. Old Chicageans tell me it was a gathering of a class of people that are seldom seen together in public, except on occasions of very great importance. It put one in mind of a "first night" at the opera, and the management feel greatly pleased and encouraged by the success of the opening night. To day, over 1200 single admission tickets were sold, and when it is remembered that there are several hundred season and complimentary tickets issued, the number of visitors can be imagined. And a more pleased people it would be difficult to find. Even to eyes accustomed to such displays the hall presents an appearance of great beauty, and visitors are not slow in expressing their admiration of what is to them a peculiarly unique and novel display. There is every reason to believe that as the Fair becomes more thoroughly talked about, the attendance will increase from day to day. The management have treated the Anaheim representative with great fairness, giving him his choice of location in the hall. Our locality has therefore secured a commanding position, and I hope not to be accused of egotism in adding that the Anaheim display is the most varied and attractive in the room. From the great masses of oranges, lemons and dried fruits which comprise about all to be seen on other tables, the visitors reach the Anaheim tables and find the varied exhibit contributed by our people arranged in a novel and striking way. For valuable assistance in the arrangement and decorations of the tables, I am indebted to Mrs. L. F. Lewis, who dropped in quite opportunely, and whose taste was of great service. W. J. Ree arrived on Tuesday afternoon, and went to work with a will in assisting me to get matters ship shape. He leaves to-day for Milwaukee. The Anaheim exhibit came through in very fine condition. There were no breakages, and the only box of oranges which did not stand shipment well were the big Kona, contributed by Mr. McFadden. Enough Saturday and conversed at length with them concerning fruit matters. Probably the most prominent retail fruit dealer in Chicago is Gallagher, who supplies the fashionables who circle about the Palmer House. He is a most enthusiastic believer in the future of California fruits, and is painfully anxious that the foothold gained by these fruits shall be maintained. "Tell your people," said he, "to pack their fruit honestly, carefully and tastefully, and they will rule this market. California fruit growers have their future in their own keeping, and if, after arriving at perfection in peeling, they maintain the reputation that will bring them, there will be no difficulty in marketing their fruits. But they have yet much to learn in this respect. Now, here is a box of excellent California oranges, wrapped clumsily with a coarse paper quite unfit for the purpose. Here is a box of Florida oranges, actually inferior in quality, but notice the difference in the quality of wrapper used and in the general appearance of the box. As a result, the inferior fruit will command the best price, not only because it appeals to the eye, but also because the purchaser knows when he buys a box of Florida oranges that the fruit is uniform in size all through the box, a guarantee he does not get with California oranges, though I admit that there is little cause for complaint of this kind this season. I remember the time when Michigan peaches were in great demand in the Chicago market, but the packing became so bad that dealers refused to handle them, and they had to seek another market." I enclose in this letter a specimen of the California wrapper to which Mr. Gallagher objected, and a specimen of the Florida wrapper which he commended, so that orange growers can inform themselves upon this important point by calling at the office. Referring to California lemons, Mr. Gallagher was quite emphatic. "They are vastly superior to Messina lemons," said he, "but the public have a prejudice against them for some inexplainable reason." [And I may here interpolate the observation that at another store I saw a box of California lemons placarded "Messina," and the proprietor said in exculsion that they were not salable unless so labeled, though he, too, admitted that the California lemons were superior to the Sicily fruit.] "The California lemon has a thinner skin and is much more juicy than the Messina, as I will demonstrate." [Here he cut the two varieties of lemons, and showed conclusively that what he stated was correct.] He showed us some Easter Beurre pears, picked in California in September, which had been preserved in a perfect condition in a refrigerator in which a temperature of 35° was continually maintained. It is the favorite summer pear, and the Winter Nellis is in greatest demand in winter. Malaga grapes, kept in perfect condition in the refrigerator, are selling now at 50 cents per pound, though they are tasteless and insipid. They resemble the Museat, but have thick, tough skins, to which peculiarity is people arranged in a novel and striking way. For valuable assistance in the arrangement and decorations of the tables, I am indebted to Mrs. L. F. Lewis, who dropped in quite opportunely, and whose taste was of great service. W. J. Ree arrived on Tuesday afternoon, and went to work with a will in assisting me to get matters ship shape. He leaves to-day for Milwaukee. The Anaheim exhibit came through in very fine condition. There were no breakages, and the only box of oranges which did not stand shipment well were the big Konaah, contributed by Mr. McFadden. Enough of them were saved, however, to fill half a dozen plates, which were duly labeled as the biggest oranges of the Fair. Lugonia had a box of 44—two more than the Anaheim box. The ostrich eggs are, of course, an overwhelming attraction, and the humming birds' eggs and nests divide the honor. The wine exhibit is also of great interest, and I have answered ten thousand questions concerning the industry. The banana trees (the only ones at the Fair) attract great attention. The people of this city are great consumers of bananas, but have evidently had very crude ideas of how the fruit was grown. Adjoining the Anaheim tables are those of Orange. They have a very excellent display of fruit, green and dried, and it was fortunate indeed, that so well-informed a representative was selected as Mr. J. H. Frederick. He is working hard and diligently, and has just that experience in fruit-growing which enables him to answer intelligently the questions asked of him concerning that industry. He is assisted by Mr. J. Purcell Boring, who is an invaluable aid. Adjoining Orange, are the Santa Ana tables also prettily arranged and showing some excellent fruit. The fruit of the Santa Ana Valley is apparently larger than that of Riverside, and also differs from it in having a more pronounced color. The latter characteristic is especially marked. In Dr. J. A. Crane Santa Ana has an energetic representative, whose enthusiasm in the cause has nearly brought him to a sick-bed. He was compelled to remain at his hotel yesterday, and Mr. C. F. Mansur had charge of the tables. Mr. Carey R. Smith is also representing Santa Ana, but he is suffering from a cold and cannot remain in the hall steadily. Following are some extracts from the leading Chicago papers. Their facts are rather mixed, but I shall enlighten the reporters as soon as I can find time: [Daily Inter-Ocean.] The delicious fragrance of tropical fruits and plants permeated and sweetened at the atmosphere of Battery D Armory, where the Southern California Citrus Fair is being held. The large hall is all aglow with color and the affect on the eye is pleasing in the extreme. Everywhere are pyramids of oranges, lemons and citrons, whose colors are relieved by bits of palm and pampas grass and evergreens. The most striking feature of the Fair is a tall pyramid of fruit which rises to a height of thirty feet. It is constructed after the style of the Washington Monument, and it is surmounted by waving people arranged in a novel and striking way. For valuable assistance in the arrangement and decorations of the tables, I am indebted to Mrs. L. F. Lewis, who dropped in quite opportunity, and whose taste was of great service. W. J. Ree arrived on Tuesday afternoon, and went to work with a will in assisting me to get matters ship shape. He leaves to-day for Milwaukee. The Anaheim exhibit came through in very fine condition. There were no breakages, and the only box of oranges which did not stand shipment well were the big Konaah, contributed by Mr. McFadden. Enough of them were saved, however, to fill half a dozen plates, which were duly labeled as the biggest oranges of the Fair. Lugonia had a box of 44—two more than the Anaheim box. The ostrich eggs are, of course, an overwhelming attraction, and the humming birds' eggs and nests divide the honor. The wine exhibit is also of great interest, and I have answered ten thousand questions concerning the industry. The banana trees (the only ones at the Fair) attract great attention. The people of this city are great consumers of bananas, but have evidently had very crude ideas of how the fruit was grown. Adjoining the Anaheim tables are those of Orange. They have a very excellent display of fruit, green and dried, and it was fortunate indeed, that so well-informed a representative was selected as Mr. J. H. Frederick. He is working hard and diligently, and has just that experience in fruit-growing which enables him to answer intelligently the questions asked of him concerning that industry. He is assisted by Mr. J. Purcell Boring, who is an invaluable aid. Adjoining Orange, are the Santa Ana tables also prettily arranged and showing some excellent fruit. The fruit of the Santa Ana Valley is apparently larger than that of Riverside, and also differs from it in having a more pronounced color. The latter characteristic is especially marked. In Dr. J. A. Crane Santa Ana has an energetic representative, whose enthusiasm in the cause has nearly brought him to a sick-bed. He was compelled to remain at his hotel yesterday, and Mr. C. F. Mansur had charge of the tables. Mr. Carey R. Smith is also representing Santa Ana, but he is suffering from a cold and cannot remain in the hall steadily. Following are some extracts from the leading Chicago papers. Their facts are rather mixed, but I shall enlighten the reporters as soon as I can find time: [Daily Inter-Ocean.] He showed us some Easter Beurre pears, picked in California in September, which had been preserved in a perfect condition in a refrigerator in which a temperature of 35° was continually maintained. It is the favorite summer pear, and the Winter Nellis is in greatest demand in winter. Malaga grapes, kept in perfect condition in the refrigerator, are selling now at 50 cents per pound, though they are tasteless and insipid. They resemble the Muscat, but have thick, tough skins, to which peculiarity is due their keeping qualities. Strawberries from Florida are selling at $3.50 per quart. Boquets of roses are quite cheap—only $4 for a dozen roses. A couple of months ago they were selling at $12 per dozen. Inquiries at another store brought out the information that the Navel was the favorite orange with consumers, and ranked with the Indian River orange of Florida. Navels sell at from 40 cents to 75 cents per dozen. The most popular size of orange runs 175 to the box, which is the average of Florida oranges. Mr. Mansur, who is here up the interest of the Santa Ana Valley Fruit Packing Company, tells me that he has just succeeded in unraveling a snarl which was brought about unwittingly by the agents of the Orange Growers' Protective Union. There is here a horde of commission merchants who control the fruit trade in a great measure, and they have relieved the Chicago market when glutted by sending the fruit to the hundreds of little towns within easy railroad reach of this city. It appears that the agents of the Protective Union, finding the Chicago market overstocked, shipped their fruit to the towns referred to, thus "treading on the toe" of the commission men, who retaliated by cutting down the price below the profitable figure. Their wrath was appeased, however, by the representation that the poaching on their preserves was unintentional, and would not be repeated. Commission men are apparently a necessary evil, and they must be deferred to. [No. V.] Chicago, March 24. It is perilously near midnight, and, worn with three days' incassant tail, I do not feel it the vein for a long letter. But I feel so elated at the successful opening of the Fair last night, that I banish weariness to tell you briefly of our triumph. It was a large and brilliant throng that rather mixed, but I shall enlighten the reporters as soon as I can find time: The delicious fragrance of tropical fruits and plants permeated and sweetened the atmosphere of Battery D Armory, where the Southern California Citrus Fair is being held. The large hall is all aglow with color and the affect on the eye is pleasing in the extreme. Everywhere are pyramids of oranges, lemons and citrons, whose colors are relieved by bits of palm and pampas grass and evergreens. The most striking feature of the Fair is a tall pyramid of fruit which rises to a height of thirty feet. It is constructed after the style of the Washington Monument, and it is surmounted by waving plumes of pampas grass and bits of ribbon palm. Oranges, lemons and citrons of every variety and shade of color, of every size, from the miniature tongaline to the mammoth Washington Navel and the pumpkin-like citron are to be found in this pyramid. The base is fully ten feet square, and it, too, is covered with a most tempting array of fruit. It is a marvelous thing in its way, and the gentlemen who planned and erected it are very proud of their achievement. The stand displays are gorgeous in the extreme. The Santa Ana Valley producers occupy about a quarter of the whole space of the hall. Their apricots, raisins, oranges, lemons, citrons and other varieties of fruits are arranged with artistic taste. The fruits of this valley, while they are similar to the fruits of other portions of Southern California, have richer colors than any others. Los Angeles, San Gabriel, Orange, Santa Ana, Alhambra, Riveraide, Anaheim and other fruit growing centers are all well represented. The center aisle, which runs the full length of the hall, is arranged to represent a path through an orange grove. Orange trees bearing fruit, olive trees and palms are arranged on either side of the aisle, and as one passes through it a sense of tropical warmth succeeds the chill which was felt upon first entering the hall. Native wines are displayed in bottles and cases, catrich eggs, cactus, pampas plant and a hundred other rare growths of the Golden State are scattered everywhere in marvelous profusion. The decoration of the room is very complete and very artistic. Hanging on the south wall of the building is a very large map showing a bird's-eye view of California. It is a most interesting piece of work, as it shows distinctly all the physical features of that great State. Under this map is a large platform for band and lecture purposes. A pretty feature of the Anaheim exhibit is a display of pressed sea-moss work by Mrs. Lewis. Some of her work is really artistic and handsome. The primary object of the Citrus Fair is to introduce the native fruits of California into the East, to give the people this side of the Rocky Mountains an opportunity to know the resources of their own country. At New Orleans their display was very successful, and several varieties of their fruits were awarded medals. The fair was formally thrown open to the public last evening, at 7:30 o'clock. Battery Old Chicago was thronged from the opening to the closing hour, and everybody seemed to be well satisfied with the first fruit exhibit ever held in Chicago. The latter looked even prettier under the rays of the electric light than it did in daylight. Mayor Harrison was present by invitation and he made a speech welcoming the fair and its managers to the city. He referred in complimentary terms to the fruit-growing resources of California, and the high quality of its products. The exhibition he considered the finest he had ever seen, and certainly the finest that had ever been held east of San Francisco. The visitors seemed to be thoroughly interested in the fruit display. In fact, it is so varied in its character that it furnishes enough sightseeing for a single evening for any person. The San Bernardino Valley display in the south-east corner of the building, the Riverside display on the south side, and the Santa Ana and Los Angeles displays on the north side, and the wonderful fruit monument kept everybody's eyes busy. The San Bernardino and Riverside tables were thronged all evening. Dr. Crane, who has charge of the Santa Ana display, has the stump of a tree of the species known as the blue gum, which was planted only twelve years ago. The stump on exhibition is nearly eight feet in circumference. Mr. Richard Melrose, who has charge of the beautiful Anaheim department, has among other things a platter of catrich eggs, which had failed to hatch. The eggs are very large, perhaps as large as three goose eggs, and the shells are about an eighth of an inch thick, and are exceedingly hard. These eggs, when fresh, Mr. Melrose says, are worth $50 each. The Anaheim people have a fine assortment of native wines and brandies, also. The mammoth oranges and citrons which surmounted every pyramid of fruit, and which were everywhere on plates, were objects of much wonderment to the visitors. They looked mellow and toothsome, and the hundreds of visitors gazed upon them with illly-concealed, covetous looks. It was estimated last night that upward of one thousand persons attended the opening. It is anticipated that the attendance will increase every day during the session. The exhibition last night was by no means complete, however, fully ten carloads of fruit and trees having been delayed at Kansas City by the strikers on the Gould railways, and will not arrive until Thursday. Nor were the tables arranged to the satisfaction of the managers; and the work of re arranging them will be kept up all week as opportunity presents itself. When the trees and delayed fruit ar- NEWS ITEMS. Senator Sherman succeeds the late Senator Miller of California as Chairman of the Committee on Foreign Relations. In the Calebra section of the Panama canal on March 30, fifteen thousand kilograms of powder exploded, killing ten men and seriously wounding forty others. At New Orleans, on Monday, a steamer collided with a bridge and sunk, and another steamer engaged in saving the cargo, exploded her boiler. Four men were blown overboard and drowned, and five others badly wounded. A cyclone swept across a portion of Bullock county, Alabama, on Sunday, and in its path struck a negro church in which a funeral was going on. The church was blown down, and four persons killed and ten badly wounded. George Q. Cannon, indicted on two counts, wherein he was held for unlawful cohabitation in $10,000 bail each, was called in court, Monday, at Salt Lake, and, failing to respond, both bonds were declared forfeited. A very extensive rupture at the southwest base of the North Lassen Butte is claimed to have been discovered. It is so large that steam can be seen from fifty miles distant. Hot springs exist at other points above the mountains. It is stated on Wall street that the Northern Pacific Road, in order to prevent the forfeiture of the company's land grants, distributed $500,000 among members of Congress, and an investigation of the charges will probably be made. A terrible accident occurred at a theatre in Heromal, a Japanese town, on February 18th. The roof of the theatre gave way from the weight of the snow and fell upon the spectators. A hundred and fifty were seriously injured or killed. An old woman in North Carolina fled a few days ago at her first sight of a low-tive and railway train. The sight of a ionable woman's train would probably driven her crazy. Barbed Were. Mr. Matteson, of Wallace, Cal., says have had abundant experience in the wire business. I have had my best frightfully cut with, but I can cure the quickly with the National Horse Line that it ceases to scare me when they fresh cut. I consider it the best Horseiment in the market." W. M. Higgins agent. Insure against fire in the first-class panies for which Richard Melrose is a Policies written and delivered at once. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. Cahn, Nickelsburg & Co. 129 & 131 SANSOME ST., SAN FRANCISCO. Make the best and most durable BOOTS and SHOES on the Pacific NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. Cahn, Nickelsburg & Co. 129 & 131 SANSOME ST., SAN FRANCISCO. Make the best and most durable BOOTS and SHOES on the Pacific Coast. Buy no other. NO CHINESE EMPLOYED. To Let. THE STORE LATELY OCCUPIED BY LUEDKE. Inquire at the office of Melrose & Knapp. Land To Rent. THREE HUNDRED AND TWENTY ACRES Irritable land for rent on shankill's ranch. Anaheim, at one dollar and fifty cents per suitable for harlet or corn. Water can be had the land on the same terms as stockholders pay. Wm. M. McFADDE. EDWARD JAEGER, Attorney and Counsellor — AT LAW. — (Opposite the Postoffice.) Anaheim, - C - DEUTSCHER ADVOKAT. G. D. FIELD, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW ANAHEIM. Elementary PIANO LESSON Given with care by FRANZ NEBELUNG, COMPOSER. Anaheim COOPERAGE. Puncheons, Barrels, Half Barrels, Small Keg Made and Repaired. Cooperage in all Branche WILLIAM FISCHER, M. J. BUNDY, OFSANTA ANA. Has just received from the East a large stock of... The Latest from the Fair. Chicago, April 1.—The attendance at the citrus fair in this city, composing an exhibit of California fruit, is growing larger daily, and the projectors express themselves greatly pleased at the interest exhibited. Yesterday and to-day the crowd attending has been very large. The display, in many ways, is unique. In the building are five long rows of fruit trees laden with ripe fruit, while at each side of them are rows of tables loaded up to their utmost capacity with fruit. An examination of the trees shows that there are among them orange trees bearing fruit in every stage of development. On the same tree are large, ripe, juicy fruits, just ready to drop at the slightest touch, fruit just changing its dark-green hue for a gold-en orange, fruit of diminutive size hardly distinguishable from the unburst bed, blossoms which clothe the trees in bloom or are just bursting from their coverings, and buds which have not yet burst into bloom. There are also specimens of lemon trees, olive trees, ribbon palm, fan palm and bananas. At the end of these rows of trees a large pyramid of fruit, oranges and lemons, has been constructed after the pattern of the Washington monument in Washington. It reaches clear to the roof of the building, and is toped with plumes of pampas grass, and is itself an important and attractive feature of the Pair. Embraced in the exhibit from the valley is that of Anaheim. On the table are to be seen a number of ostrich eggs. Alongside these monster eggs, and in wonderful contents have been reported and twenty-one deaths occurred to noon to day. Greatest consternation exists among the people. The N.Y. Herald's Paris correspondent says that De Lesseps in a speech at Nassaire, said: "I say that nearly half of the canal is finished. Workmen are at work along the route and our machinery represents the labor of 300,000 men. We promised that the canal should be ready in 1889. I will keep my promise. The mortality just now is insignificant. All obstacles are broken down. Thanks to the savings of the French people, we have been enabled to execute our scheme. The men work the Central America earth like bees in a hive." The North Buffalo Flour Mills were burned at noon Sunday. The fire spread to the Gilbert Starch Works and they were also destroyed. The building was a new one, having been erected but a few months ago and coast $100,000. The fire spread to some buildings on Thompson street and several others on Dearborn street, which at last accounts were burning fiercely. The total loss is roughly estimated at $500,000. The N.Y. Sun's London cable of the 23d says: Many American ladies vied with each other at the Queen's drawing-room today in the beauty of their toiletts and the splendor of their jewels, but the blaze of Mrs. John W. Mackay's gems was dazzling beyond description. Among the most conspicuous of her adornments were a riwiere of diamonds, the pendant diamonds and sapphires, a coronet of sapphires and diamonds and four strings of pearls. Nothing to equal Mrs. Mackay's display of rare and costly jewels has been witnessed at court since the reign of the Empress Eugenie at the Tuileries. The New York Parks will be beautiful this spring, to an extent never before equalled. The arbors, walks and drives are to be put in first-class condition and $350,000 expended in the work. No less than 250,000 plants have been contracted for, a large portion of which will be set in Central Park. The fountains in all the squares and parks are to be transformed into flower beds with the exception of the Betheeda at the head of the terrace in Central Park, which will accommodate several hundred gold fish. The Commissioners have a special appropriation of $20,000 for music this summer, commencing in the latter part of May. Concerts will be held in Central Park every Saturday and Sunday afternoon and Friday evenings. A Reliable Article. For enterprise, push and a desire to get such goods as will give the trade satisfaction. A. Krug, the druggist, leads all competition. He sells Dr. Bosanko's Cough and Lang Syrup, because it's the best medicine on the market for coughs, colds, group and primary consumption. Price $6ets and $1.00. Samples free. Puncheons, Barrels, Half Barrels, Small Keg Made and Repaired. Cooperage in all Branche WILLIAM FISCHER, M.J.BUNDY, SANTA ANA, Has Just received from the East a large stock of General Hardware And is giving his customers the benefit of the great cut in freights. Steel Piows Glidden Hog Wire at Los Angeles prices. He has a Tin Shop fitted up with a complete set of new tools of the latest and best improved patterns and has the best tinsn in Southern California. HONEY CANS, CASES, and BEE MEN'S SUPPLIES Furnished at Los Angeles Prices Call and get Prices. ELECTION PROCLAMATION NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TO THE Q. fled voters of the Town of Anaheim that he cordance with the provisions of an Act of the Legislature approved March 18th, 1878, and entitled as to incorporate the Town of Anaheim, an election be held on Monday, April 26th, 1886, At the Town Hall of the Town of Anaheim, for the election of the following officers: Five Trustees, One Arsenor, One Clark, One Marshal, One Treasurer, One Justice of the Peace To serve for the entire year and until their successors are elected and qualified. At which time the question of a Sunday closing ordinance will be submitted to a vote of the electors by order of the present Board of Town Trustees. A.E.W白色 is hereby appointed Inspector and D.W.Hushen and J.W.Hartman Judges of said election. The election shall be conducted as far as possible in accordance with the general election laws of the State. By order of the Board of Trustees. J.M.PIERCE, Town Clerk. Ananen, March 27, 1886. RIMPAU BROS. Are now receiving their Spring Consignment OF NEW GOODS Purehased During the late Cut in Rates. An Elegant Assortment of Clothing, Dress Goods, Fancy Goods, Straw Hats, Etc. Etc. Etc. IS NOW OPEN FOR INSPECTION. KELLOGG BROS. One Price Cash Store! AT THE DEPOT. ATTENTION---All who desire choice fresh Groceries come and examine our new and complete stock. KELLOGG BROS. One Price Cash Store! AT THE DEPOT. ATTENTION---All who desire choice fresh Groceries come and examine our new and complete stock. HARDWARE, CROCKERY, GLASS-WARE, etc., kept constantly on hand. Just arrived a fine lot of Boots and Shoes, including a choice selection from Hecht Bros. Manufactory. Closing out at cost a fine line of Dry Goods, Dress Goods, Hosery, Clothing, etc., to make room for our new stock of goods now on the way from the East. Having purchased the commodious warehouse formerly owned by D. E. Miles, we are prepared to store all kinds of grain and general merchandise. All kinds of produce will be shipped to best markets and highest price guaranteed. ALL GOODS SOLD FOR LOWEST CASH PRICES AND HIGHEST MARKET PRICE PAID FOR PRODUCE. P. PELLEGRIN, Practical Watchmaker. E. J. PELLEGRIN, A. L. PELLEGRIN, Portrait & Landscape Photographer. P. PELLEGRIN & SONS' ART AND MUSIC ROOMS! P. O. BLOCK, CENTER ST.. Anaheim, California. AGENCY FOR NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE. Anaheim Immigration Association. This association has been called into existence by, and is under the direct management of, the citizens of Anaheim and vicinity. Its object is the collection, publication and free distribution of reliable information concerning the ADVANTAGES, RESOURCES CLIMATE, FERTILITY OF SOIL, etc., of Anaheim and vicinity for the purpose of encouragement of immigration thereto; also, to assist immigrants in finding employment and permanent homes in this vicinity. All parties in need of help will please leave word with the Secretary at the office of the Association. Office in the Anaheim Hotel Building. H. KROEGER President. W.M. McFadden, A. Rimpan, T. J. F. Boege, P. James, W. A. WITTE, Secretary F. A. Korn, E.A.Saxton Executive Committee J. P. Zeyn, the purpose of encouragement of immigration thereto; also, to assist immigrants in finding employment and permanent homes in this vicinity. All parties in need of help will please leave word with the Secretary at the office of the Association. Office in the Anaheim Hotel Building. H. KROEGER - President. W. M. McFadden, A. Rimpau, T. J. F. Boege, P. James, Vice-Presidents W. A. WITTE, - Secretary F. A. Korn, E.A. Saxton Executive Committee J. P. Zeyn, Parmelee's Bazar, Successor to the C. W. GIBSON CO., 108, 110, 112 North Main St., Los Angeles. Headquarters For Crockery, Glass, Stone, China and Silver Plated Ware, Lamps, Chandeliers, Library Lamps, Bird Cages, Flower Pots, Water Filters, Water Coolers, Ollas, Lawn Ornaments, Oil Stoves, House Furnishing Goods, Table Cutlery, Looking Glasses, Clocks, etc. etc. We are receiving new invoices of FRANCY GLASSWARE, All Shades, Styles and Patterns, Burmese, Bohemian, Etc. Also Plain and Decorated FRENCH and CHINA DINNER, TEA and TOILET SETS In Plain White and Decorated. —Call and see our— Beautiful Display. Z. L. PARMELEE, Proprietor. 108, 112 North Main St., LOS ANGELES.