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anaheim-gazette 1886-05-15

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WEEKLY GAZETTE SATURDAY...MAY 15, 1886 SUBSCRIPTION. per year, $2. C. R. GREATHOUSE, formerly editor of the San Francisco Examiner, and the protege of Senator Hearst, has been nominated as Consul at Kanagawa. Mrs. C. J. OYLER writes from Chicago, where she is visiting, to the Sacramento Bee, that an enterprising "dollar-store" man has purchased the remnants of the Citrus Fair, the unperishable parts, and is using the stuff as an advertisement at his place. J. CHINAMAN has scored a legal triumph, the U. S. Supreme Court having held that the ordinance passed by the San Francisco Supervisors, prohibiting the carrying on of laundries in frame buildings, is unconstitutional, because it in fact is a discrimination against Chinese. That Fourteenth Amendment is a wonderfully elastic bit of law. LOS ANGELES Democrats are disgruntled. The State Convention is to be held in San Francisco, notwithstanding the tacit agreement that Los Angeles would be selected. The Convention will be held on August 31st, and there will be 408 delegates in the Convention. The Republican Convention will meet in Los Angeles on August 25th, with 406 delegates. CONNECTICUT has apparently the same kind of amiable Governor. The Birmingham Transcript of that State pleads in this fashion: Please, Mr. Governor, after we have fasted on Good Friday, and heard the Easter anthems, and planted trees on Arbor Day, and scattered flowers on Memorial Day, do issue a proclamation for one day to be sacredly set apart and observed as a day of good honest work. We are getting demoralized with so many public holidays! And Fourth The island of Santa Catalina, to which Senator Fair has suggested the transportation of the untamable Apaches, is represented as being a natural prison, too good for the proposed occupants. The island is eighteen miles long and from three to seven miles broad, lying nineteen miles from San Pedro on the mainland. In topography the island is rough and mountainous, one peak rising to the altitude of 2,110 feet. The shores are rocky and precipitous, especially on the southern coast. A growth of thorny bushes covers the whole island. It, however, possesses an abundance of water, and its climate is said to excel the soft balminess of the mainland. Formerly it was the home of the Indians. Since the days of civilization, however, it has been utilized for sheep and goat ranges. A few years ago 20,000 sheep and 10,000 goats found sustenance upon it. Vegetation, partly owing to the abundance of water, keeps green all the year round. In some parts there are vast fields of wild oats. The waters about the island abound in fish, thousands of which can be seen swimming near the shore. The island is a portion of the James Lick estate, and negotiations were once commenced with a syndicate of English capitalists for its sale at the price of $2,-000,000. Lead has been discovered upon the mountains, and an attempt was made to develop the lead, but subsequently abandoned. A tunnel 1,000 feet long and a shaft 400 feet deep remain as relics of its mining era. A German wine-grower has produced an excellent quality of wine from the yield of a vineyard occupying a large tract of land near Cairo, Egypt, and his success has stimulated the Egyptian Government to give every encouragement to grape culture in Lower Egypt. A Fatal Cyclone. Between 11 and 12 oclock on Tuesday forenoon a storm of wind and rain swept over Kansas City. The darkness was almost like night, and people fled to the nearest shelter and awaited, with blanched faces. Superintendent Les and San Gabriel thority for the state hundred men will ing for the extension manda Park. As or fills, the work Rails and ties have Francisco. The pushed out to the another halt. Conto Baldwin, the new Anita.-Times. There are pretty mors to the effect Railroad managers tending their road les via the projecters & San Gabriel Valley latter corporation w awallowed up in th long before this r proved. The Los in it. SAN FRANCISCO, general passenger as Southern Pacific Co ing as the number carried over that ro 1886: East, 10,238 figures are the largest. It is a pretty we Santa Monica new Southern, the Los Valley or some other P. system, will buy nel places—70 acres —for their depot an San Bernardino Major D. A. Shaw sentative of San Beni Chicago Fair, has a g heim. He thus stat to the San Bernardino An omission in th the Chicago Inter-Ocean CONNECTICUT has apparently the same kind of amiable Governor. The Birmingham Transcript of that State pleads in this fashion: Please, Mr. Governor, after we have fasted on Good Friday, and heard the Easter anthems, and planted trees on Arbor Day, and scattered flowers on Memorial Day, do issue a proclamation for one day to be sacredly set apart and observed as a day of good, honest work. We are getting demoralized with so many public holidays! And Fourth of July is not very far off, either—O say nothing of the picnic season. The prohibitionists, in State Convention assembled at Sacramento, have resolved to ignore side issues and go in for prohibition, pure and simple. In pursuance of their purpose, they have refused to incorporate in their platform planks relating to the Sunday law and woman suffrage, and tabled by a large majority a plank antagonistic to riparian rights. If these prohibitionists were not such awfully good men and women, there would be a rank suspicion that the riparianists had got in their nefarious work. SPRING does not linger in the lap of winter in Canada, if we may believe the Montreal Gazette which says: "We have no spring in this part of Canada. There is a straight leap from winter to summer. On Tuesday afternoon the ice towered in the mountains before the city. On Thursday morning the grass showed green and tender in Place d'Armes. Within a fortnight, while traces of winter will still be seen in nooks and culverts, the snowball will be swinging from its stem, and its successor, the hilac, will not be far behind. HERR MOST, the ferocious Anarchist who breakfasts on dynamite, lunches on gore and dines on bombs, and who is in the main responsible for the late devilry in Chicago, was captured by detectives in New York on Tuesday. He was found hiding under the bed of a woman with whom he was living in true Anarchist fashion. "When the apostle of anarchy was pulled by the heels from under the bad," says the telegram, "he presented a sorry spectacle. His bullet head and puffy jowls were covered with dust and dirt, and his eyes were large with craven fear." The insect ought to be hanged first and then tried. FREDERICK DOUGLASS, discussing the Future of the Colored Race in the North American Review, reaches the conclusion that the negro "will not be expatriated nor annihilated, nor will be forever remain a separate and distinct race from the people around him, but he will be absorbed, assimilated, and will only appear finally, as the Phoenicians now appear, on the shores of the Sham. A Fatal Cyclone. Between 11 and 12 oclock on Tuesday fornoon a storm of wind and rain swept over Kansas City. The darkness was almost like night, and people fled to the nearest shelter and awaited, with blanched faces, the fury of the tempest. The clouds seemed to graze the roofs of the highest buildings, and poured out their torrents in apparently solid masses for a time. The storm struck the city in full force about twenty minutes past eleven, and raged for half and hour. The streets were running rivers of water, carrying boxes and signs, and other similar freight blown from buildings or swept by the flood. A number of vehicles were overturned, and, in numerous instances, the drivers abandoned their horses to their fate and sought refuge in houses. The large courthouse was destroyed above the second story. The Lathrop school building was partially wrecked. The building was surmounted by a tower, which had for some time been considered unsafe. It had been twice condemned, but no action had been taken in the matter. The tower which yielded with a crash carried down the heavy bell, which plunged through the intervening floors to the basement. The effect was awful. The falling floors precipitated the terrified children to the basement where masses of brick and beams crushed through them to the ground, and buried them from view. The fire department and police soon arrived and an organized search was commenced. The dead and wounded were taken out as quickly as possible. A dozen dead were taken out during the day, and their bodies sent to the houses of their sorrowing families. At No. 110 West Third street stood a three-story brick building in the middle of the block, the third floor of which was used as an overall factory conducted by Hoar Broos. The first and second floors were used by the Graham Paper Company. In the factory were about twenty-five employees, chiefly girls. When the storm broke out they started for the cellar. The building fell with a crash, being razed entirely to the ground, and most of the affirmented girls were caught in the ruins. Four have been taken out dead. A number of others are wounded, and some are still missing. A number of other large buildings were wrecked. The storm extended to Leavenworth and other parts of Kansas, doing immense damage to property but nobody was killed. XENIA, Ohio, May 12. — A terrible storm of wind and rain swept over this town, destroying life and property. CINCINNATI, May 13. — Only the merest outlines of the great disaster at Xenia are yet obtainable from there. It appears that the rainfall last night was the worst ever known in that part of the State. From fifty to one hundred buildings were swept from their foundations, and the inmates suddenly found themselves helpless in the angry flood. How many lives were lost is not yet known, but at 12:30 the rescue parties had recovered twenty-four bodies. It is estimated that a number would yet be found. The storm is described as the most disastrous ever known. On the Little Miami Railroad P. system, will buy nel places—70 acres—for their depot and San Bernardino Major D. A. Shaw sentative of San Beni Chicago Fair, has a g heim. He thus states to the San Bernardino An omission in thie Chicago Inter Occ attract attention; an tion. I refer to thie San Bernardino, thie Albuquerque and Loond in population anern California. Wh indignant, not to say matter over which it I edge until it was put wholly in the hands of managers, Messrs H H Clark, appointed by Immigration Association responsible. If he al, it was simply cone I think those gentle act fairly. An expla is in order. In the lithograph does not appear upon as we complained last receive the credit for ton's residence. As explanation is in order. Cheap In Sunday's issue Chronicle there is a ver der caption. "Is o writer refers to the co from Eastern visitors land in California are proceeds to point out taching to a land tenu cannot be found elsewhere that this is a winterless preciated by our visit prices. "It is difficult to appreciate the s California farmer enjoy less one has spent a w fact that stock require rough shed, and this o seasons, and scarceely they can pick up farmer of one-half forced to give in thie some work of stable cl is unknown, while thie are not drained by four cattle, horses and shee exceptional winter in thie farmer is unable to woember almost as well are seldom cold rains more than two or thie Thus the farm work throughout the year, i ed into a few months which taxes the resource Eastern farmer to done in this State in a with little extra help on a large scale." FREDERICK DOUGLASS, discussing the Future of the Colored Race in the North American Review, reaches the conclusion that the negro "will not be expatriated nor annihilated, nor will be forever remain a separate and distinct race from the people around him, but he will be absorbed, assimilated, and will only appear finally, as the Phoenicians now appear, on the shores of the Shannon in the features of a blended race." Mr. Douglass adds that he would not be understood either as advocating or deprecating inter-marriage between the races, but only as pointing out the inevitable. "The California Democrat, of the stripe that we see nowadays, is no better than a beast." This extraordinarily vigorous sentiment was uttered by Attorney General Marshall, himself a Democrat from away back, and it occurred in the course of an interview had with him upon the decision of the U. S. Supreme Court on the tax cases. The trouble between Marshall on the one side, and Gov. Stoneman and Controller Dunn on the other side, arises from the fact that Marshall accepted from the railroads over $800,000 on account of taxes, the legality of which were disputed by the companies. Marshall reserved the right of appeal, but Dunn and Delmas (Dunn's legal adviser) protested against receiving the money, claiming that to do so barred the right of appeal and jeopardized the State's interest. Dunn refused to receive the money, and it has been for over a year deposited in bank to Marshall's personal credit. In the interview alluded to, Mr. Marshall said: Wonder how Delmas, Dunn and that gang feel to-night over this decision. If it had not been for the fact that I accepted the money for taxes from the railroad with the privilege of appealing, where would the State be to-night? I've got $805,000 in my possession, and the County Treasurers have $250,000 more which the State may have just as soon as the courts compel Dunn to take it. The railroad will probably pay me about $400,000 for the taxes of 1885. This will make about $1,500,000 that the State would have been clean out of pocket if I had listened to those yelping idiots." XENIA, Ohio, May 12.—A terrible storm of wind and rain swept over this town, destroying life and property. CINCINNATI, May 13.—Only the merest outlines of the great disaster at Xenia are yet obtainable from there. It appears that the rainfall last night was the worst ever known in that part of the State. From fifty to one hundred buildings were swept from their foundations, and the inmates suddenly found themselves helpless in the angry flood. How many lives were lost is not yet known, but at 12:30 the rescue parties had recovered twenty-four bodies. It is estimated that a number would yet be found. The storm is described as the most disastrous ever known. On the Little Miami Railroad the nearest approach any train could make to the city was three miles. The bridges are all washed away. Trees were down, fences were destroyed and crops ruined. It will require some days to repair the railroad. In addition to the above two more bodies were found this evening, being children, and they are not identified. The complete number of deaths whose bodies have been found is twenty-five, with eleven still missing. Contesting Firemen SALINAS, May 12.—The hook and ladder teams ran is afternoon. Both sides of Main street were crowded with spectators, and there was not a window or available roof but had many eager observers. At 2:24 the Santa Cruz team started, making a run of 300 yards and climbing a ladder in 491.5 seconds. As they were nearing the goal the populace cheered the boys vigorously, and ladies showered them profusely with bouquets upon the announcement of the official time. At 3 o'clock the Alerts of Salinas started and finished in 1:17 4:5. This team had not practiced at all, but three teams only having entered the race, they were assured third money. At 3:30 a gun was fired off, and the Eagles of San Juan speeded away. They finished in 483.5 seconds, thus beating, by 21.5 seconds, last year's best record at San Jose. The climber was cheered enthusiastically, and was carried through the crowd on the shoulders of one of the firemen. The Santa Cruz team has entered a protest against the Eagles, upon the ground that the climber of the ladder is under 18 years of age, and that they commenced to pull off their ladder before reaching the goal. It is stated that the protest, not being founded on fact, will be overruled. Wells, Fargo & Co. There are packages for the following persons in Wells, Pargo & Co.'s Express Office: J Howard, W Morris, K T Dickens. B Wilson, A Hillsboro. My attention has been interesting variety of offers for sale in this market, from California. The offer of a medium orange swelling at the upper veins a small orange all closed in the skin of the runs from the stem to the fruit, and is of about it expands, and for half price is more than twice At this point is situated This is composed of froments arranged as in these seeds are found in the tree and juicy. This duplication observed not in one orange whole box, and perhaps the upper or flower ends does not wholly enclose pose the segments of this The above is from published at Crawfords fruit described with such common Washington extraordinary ignorance most common fruits is yet a stranger to a major marketa, and furnishes an element against the cry How can there be overprentelligent men in the East california fruit that they don mon variety of orange w Hallroad Remarks. Superintendent Jewett, of the Los Angeles and San Gabriel Valley railway, is authority for the statement that a force of one hundred men will begin to-morrow in grading for the extension of the road beyond Lamanda Park. As there are no heavy cuts or fills, the work will be pushed rapidly. Rails and ties have been ordered from San Francisco. The tract will probably be pushed out to the San Gabriel river without another halt. Communication will be given to Baldwin, the new settlement east of San, ta Anita.—Times. There are pretty well authenticated rumors to the effect that the Atlantic & Pacific Railroad managers are on the point of extending their road from Colton to Los Angeles via the projected line of the Los Angeles & San Gabriel Valley railway, and that the latter corporation will in all likelihood be awallowed up in the former. It will not be long before this rumor is verified or disproved. The Los Angeles Herald believes in it. SAN FRANCISCO, May 8.—T. H. Goodman, general passenger and ticket agent of the Southern Pacific Company, gives the following as the number of through passengers carried over that road in the month of April, 1886: East, 10,235; west, 16,992. These figures are the largest ever reported. It is a pretty well-assured fact that the Santa Monica new railroad, the California Southern, the Los Angeles & San Gabriel Valley or some other link of the A., T. & S. P. system, will buy the Wolfskill and Coronel places—70 acres in all, at $3,000 an acre—for their depot and yard. San Bernardino Complains. Major D. A. Shaw, of Lugonia, the representative of San Bernardino county at the Chicago Fair, has a grievance similar to Anaheim. He thus states it in a communication to the San Bernardino Times: An omission in the lithograph issued by the Chicago Inter-Ocean will very properly PACIFIC COAST ITEMS. A fire at Benson, A. T., on Sunday destroyed $40,000 worth of property. Ames Troyer, aged 26, was caught in a fly wheel at a mill in Pescadero and killed. Monday afternoon the 2-year-old child of P. E. Van Allen, while crossing a creek near Dougherty's mill, Santa Cruz, fell in and was drowned. Elko county, Nevada, is paying from $1,-000 to $1,200 annually for scalps of noxious animals, and the Times-Review asks for a repeal of the law allowing such bounty. The Supervisors of Tulare have voted $3,-000 toward making an exhibition of the agricultural products of that county in San Francisco during the Grand Encampment of the G. A. R. Mrs. Hatch, the wife of Superior Judge Hatch of Santa Barbara county, is an applicant for admission to practice in the courts of this State. Judge Hatch is soon to become a resident of Los Angeles. There is a curiosity at the pen at Santa Pea in the shape of a colored man who stands six feet six inches high and weighs only 140 pounds. When he walks his knees wobble in and out as if they were jointed atilta—he is a veritable "daddy longlegs." Last Friday several college students of Santa Rosa engaged in a fight with persons whom they met in a hotel in that town. A student named Rosenburger was knocked down with a poker and his nose broken. It is feared he has also suffered a fracture of the skull. Michael Keefe, who murdered his wife, spoke nearly two hours yesterday in the Superior Court at Vallejo on a motion for a new trial, he having been condemned to death. The motion was overruled and notice of an appeal to the Supreme Court was given. Joseph Adams, who shot himself on the flat of May, died at Chico on Monday. He was getting along finely until Sunday morning, when he tore the bandage from the wound, and opened the hole in the skull, allowing the brain to ooze out. Fever set in and death ensued. Sunday afternoon five boys were in a boat on Stockton Channel, and one of them, Lewis Fox, aged fifteen years, was fatally shot by a man who was practicing with a rifle. The young man was sitting in the bow of the boat. The person who did the shooting was not known, but his identity, it thought can be easily ascertained. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. NOTICE. SEALED PROPOSALS WILL BE RECEIVED BY THE Towness of Anaheim School District for the redemption of one Bond (No. 7) of Anaheim School District, County of Los Angeles, State of California, of the value of $100. Proposals will be received until Saturday, May 26th, 1886, at 2 o'clock m., at which time said proposals will be opened at the office of the Clerk of the Board of School Trustees on Center street, Anaheim. No bid for more than par value will be accepted, nor any bid unless the bond to be surrendered accompanies such bid. By order of the Board of Trustees of Anaheim School District. D.W.C.COWAN, Clerk. A PETITION. To the Honorable Board of Supervisors of Los Angeles county, State of California. Greeting: The underigned your petitioners, respectfully represent that they are inhabitants of and taxpayers in the county of Los Angeles, in the State of California. That the Anaheim Union Water Company is a corporation organized and operating under the laws of said State, for the sale, rental and distribution of water, for irrigation within the bounds of the district described in the Articles of Incorporation of said company on file and record in the office of the County Clerk of said Los Angeles county. That said district embraces land in said county of Los Angeles, to which water is supplied by said company outside of any city, city and county or town. That said water company has appropriated water in this State for sale, rental and distribution for irrigation in said county of Los Angeles, other than in any city, city and county or town. That the rates to be collected for the sale, rental or distribution of water supplied by said water company in a old county as soares had not been fixed or regulated by your honorable Board under, or since the passage of, the Act of the Legislature of said State, entitled "An Act to regulate and control the sale, rental and distribution of appropriated water in this State, other than in any city, city and county or towntherein, and to secure the right of way for the conreyane e of such water to the place of use." Approved March 12, 1885. Wherefore your petitioners pray that this petition be immediately published together with a copy of the notice of the time and place of hearing thereof in one or more newspapers published in said county in all respects as provided in said Act, and that at hearing of this petition your honorable Board fix the rates to be charged and collected by said Anaheim Union Water Company in said county other than in any city; city and county or town,and proceed in all respects as provided in the Act entitled and approved as soaresaid. W.M.McFadden, J.B.McCullough, John Wagner, G.R.Hinde, J.K.Tuffree, A.H.Basten, A.Pieotti, Thao Staley, B.Dreses, J.B.Toubes, H.Hetebrink, D.Hetebrink, T.K.McDowell, P.Hansen, Wm.Crowther, C.Hansen, J.P.desGranges, His Martin X Holtz, Mark Witness J.W.Shanklin Arnold Staub, G.W.Sponable, Lionel Brownning, Louis Hamm, S.B.Smith. San Bernardino Complains. Major D. A. Shaw, of Lugonia, the representative of San Bernardino county at the Chicago Fair, has a grievance similar to Anaheim. He thus states it in a communication to the San Bernardino Times: An omission in the lithograph issued by the Chicago Inter Ocean will very properly attract attention, and require an explanation. I refer to the leaving out the name of San Bernardino, the largest city between Albuquerque and Los Angeles, and the second in population and importance in Southern California. When I noticed it, I was indignant, not to say mad. But it was a matter over which I could have no knowledge until it was put in circulation. It was wholly in the hands of the four principal managers, Messrs Holt, Rust, Culver and Clark, appointed by the Southern California Immigration Association, and they alone are responsible. If the omission was intentional, it was simply contemptible. As a rule, I think those gentlemen were disposed to act fairly. An explanation of this matter is an order. In the lithograph referred to, Anaheim does not appear upon the railroad map; nor, as we complained last week, did Anaheim receive the credit for the view of Mr. Saxton’s residence. As Major Shaw says, "an explanation is in order." Cheap Homes. In Sunday's issue of the San Francisco Chronicle there is a very sensible article under the caption, "Is our land too dear?" The writer refers to the complaint so often heard from Eastern visitors that the prices of good land in California are extortionate, and then proceeds to point out certain advantages attaching to a land tenure in our State which cannot be found elsewhere. The great fact that this is a winterless land is scarcely appreciated by our visitors who talk of high prices. "It is difficult," says the writer, "to appreciate the advantages which the California farmer enjoys in this respect, unless one has spent a winter here. The mere fact that stock require little shelter save a rough shed, and this only in extraordinary seasons, and scarcely any other feed than they can pick up, frees the California farmer of one-half the labor he is forced to give in the East. The irksome work of stable cleaning and foddering is unknown, while the resources of the farm are not drained by four months' feeding of cattle, horses and sheep. Then, too, it is an exceptional winter in California when the farmer is unable to work out of doors in December almost as well as in June. The rains are seldom cold rains, and they seldom last more than two or three days at a time. Thus the farm work is evenly distributed throughout the year, instead of being crowded into a few months, while harvesting, which taxes the resources and the energy of the Eastern farmer to the utmost, may be done in this State in a leisurely way, and with little extra help, unless one is farming on a large scale." Hoosier Ignorance. My attention has been lately called to an interesting variety of orange which has been for sale in this market, said to have come from California. The fruit is about the size of a medium orange, with a slight swelling at the upper end. Dissection reveals a small orange almost completely enclosed in the skin of the large one. The core runs from the stem to about the center of the fruit, and is of about normal size. Then it expands, and for half of the remaining distance is more than twice its previous size. At this point is situated the small orange. This is composed of from seven to eight segments arranged as in the main orange. No seeds are found in the first, and it is sweet and juicy. This duplication of fruits was observed not in one orange alone, but in a whole box, and perhaps exists in more. At the upper or flower end of the fruit the skin does not wholly enclose the pulp, but expose the segments of the smaller orange. The above is from the Botanical Gazette, published at Crawfordsville, Indiana. The fruit described with such minuteness is the common Washington Navel orange. This extraordinary ignorance of one of California's most common fruits is an evidence that it is yet a stranger to a majority of the Eastern markets, and furnishes an irrefutable argument against the cry of overproduction. How can there be overproduction when intelligent men in the East see so little of California fruit that they do not know a common variety of orange when they see it? In a suit that terminated at Washington the other day, it was shown that from the shock received by the plaintiff, in a railroad collision, his head was so affected that, though able after the accident to perform the duties of a mail clerk on a single road, mechanically, the accident so affected his brain that he has been unable to learn a new route. Among the effects of a man who died recently in Canterbury, N. H., was a book showing that he made a deposit, some forty years ago, of $21 in a saving bank in Concord, but of which matter his family knew nothing. A son presented the book and received $280. Dr. Frederick A. Palmer, 73 years old and one of the best-known physicians in Boston, while on his way to Portland, jumped from the steamer into the ocean with his four year-old grandson, of whom he was very fond. Both were lost. The affair is an entire mystery. The Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals in Philadelphia has been making an effort to have the present made by which cattle for Hebrew residents are slaughtered abolished, and have had a conference with some of the rabbis. The objection of the society to the method pursued is that the tying of the legs of the animals is cruel, but this is said to be unavoidable. They suggested the Chicago plan of shooting, but the rabbis declined either to agree to that or spearing, as neither would fill the injunction of the Jewish law concerning the blood of slaughtered animals. A London cable says: The Indian Colonial Exhibition continues to attract thousands of visitors daily. The Australian government officials are using strenuous efforts to cope with American fruit traders for the English trade. They have a magnificent display of all kinds of fruit from the antipodes. The fruit is in a remarkably good state of preservation, and retains its freshness and flavor. It was packed in cork dust. The Australian officials are receiving orders daily for large quantities of fruit, and are endeavoring to establish a permanent fruit trade with Great Britain. I. O. O. F. Grand Officers Elected SAN FRANCISCO. May 13.-The following officers were elected to-day at the session of the Grand Lodge of Odd Fellows; Grand Master, C. T. McEachan, St. Helena; Deputy Grand Master, Etwood Bruner, Sacramento; Grand Warden, Reuben H. Lloyd, San Francisco; Grand Secretary, W. B. Lyon, San Francisco. Re-elected—Grand Treasurer, George W. Leon, of San Francisco. Re-elected three Trastees: J. E. Benton, Oakland; E. White, Sacramento and Luman Wailham, San Francisco; Grand Representative to the Sovereign Grand Lodge of the United States, Judge Leon D. Freer, of Oroville. Rates of Fare FROM LOS ANGELES CARIN STEERAGE To San Francisco.....$15 00 FROM SAN PEDRO WHARF To Monterey and Santa Cruz.....14 00 To San Simone.....12 00 To Cayucos.....11 50 To Port Harford.....10 50 To Gaviota.....9 00 To Santa Barbara.....6 00 To San Buenaventura.....5 00 To San Diego.....5 00 Plans of steamers' cabins at agent's office, where berths may be secured. For Newport Landing, via Santa Cruz, etc., freight steamers leave San Francisco about every two weeks as tides serve on the Newport bar. The Company reserve the right to change thie steamers, or their days of sailing. For passage or freight as above, or for Ticket to and from All Important Points in Europe, Apply to H. McLELLAN, Agent OFFICE-No. 2 Commercial Street, Los Angeles 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. Have now got most of their SPRING GOODS consisting of Straw Hats, Chambrays, Victoria Lawns, Cross Barred Muslins Figured Lawns, Gingnams, Muslins and Sheetings Etc. Etc. Etc. OPEN FOR INSPECTION. KELLOGG BROS. Have now got most of their SPRING GOODS consisting of Straw Hats, Chambrays, Victoria Lawns, Cross Barred Muslins Figured Lawns, Gingnams, Muslins and Sheetings Etc. Etc. Etc. OPEN FOR INSPECTION. Call early and secure some of the bargains offered and don't forget that we carry a full line of GROCERIES, PROVISIONS, HARDWARE, CROCKERY and GLASSWARE. Cheap Freights Make Cheap Goods And we give the Consumer this Advantage. Goods Delivered Free of Charge Away where in Anaheim and Vicinity. A LINE OF Men's and Boys' Clothing Will be sold for less than wholesale prices for CASH. P. PELLEGRIN, Practical Watchmaker 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. Rimpau, T. J. F. Boege, P. James, W. A. WITTE, Secretary F.A. Korn, E.A. Saxton, Executive Committee J. P. Zeyn, 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, 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 FANCY GLASSWARE, In 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.