anaheim-gazette 1887-09-29
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WEEKLY GAZETTE
THURSDAY...SEPTEMBER 29, 1887
SUBSCRIPTION, per year, $2.
All is pleasant now at Pleasant Valley, Arizona. The Sheriff has killed all the inhabitants.
The international yacht race between the Thistle and Volunteer on Tuesday was won by the Yankee Volunteer by two miles. Our cousins across the water might as well give up trying; the yacht cup is destined to remain in America.
The climate of St. Louis is too moist for public parades, as the G.A.R. have discovered. The telegrams say that on Tuesday "rain, mud and gloom played havoc with the Grand Army arrangements to-day, and when the grand parade was given up the boys had nothing to do but hunt, up places of amusement. The Exposition building consequently was the harbor of thousands."
If the statements of the Santa Cruz Sentinel are correct, there ought to be a goodly number of courts-martial in some of the companies of the National Guard that were en-camped in Santa Cruz recently. Several citizens of that place, through the columns of the Sentinel, accuse militiamen of having robbed them on the highway at night, of having despoiled orchards and gardens, insulted ladies and generally acting like hooligans instead of the gentlemen they claim to be.
The fair sex are certainly receiving political recognition in Kansas. In the town election at Syracuse, recently the horrid men were defeated, every female candidate being elected. If they don't have laws in that town to prevent husbands from going to the Lodge eight nights in the week, and commit another treasonable act, it will be
BEET SUGAR.
BOOMING A NEW INDUSTRY IN CALIFORNIA.
Some Facts of Great Interest to Our Farmers.
A number of years ago the project of converting beets into sugar attracted a great deal of attention among the farmers of Los Angeles county. It was well known that beets grew luxuriantly here and that if a market could be found for them at the prices which it was said sugar makers could afford to pay, the crop would be fully as profitable as grapes. The agitation of this matter was kept up by an alleged scientist who claimed to be familiar with a method of making sugar from dried beets; and he found little difficulty in inducing the late Remi Nadeau to erect buildings near Florence and put in a costly plant. The result was a disastrous failure, and the scientist disappeared from public view long before the stench from the product of his dried beets ceased to offend the olfactoryes of those passing the sugarie.
But this catastrophe did not alter the undeniable fact that sufficient beets could be grown in this county to keep a number of factories in operation all the time, if the beets would retain their sugar-making properties after being dried. Because this bogus scientist made a failure of it, is no reason to suppose that the feat is impossible, and we are one of those who yet believe that the process is entirely feasible and that whatever difficulties there are in the way of its successful accomplishment will be overcome by research and ingenuity.
These reminiscences are induced by the recent report made by the so-called sugar king, Claus Spreckles, on his return from Germany where he has been studying the culture of the sugar beet and the manufacture thereof of sugar. He returns from his field of study with a strong purpose to introduce what he considers the greatest and machinery based on profit in Oregon been discover salts from the beet sugar wine cultural pursuit.
OUR MARKET
BUENA PARCLE sales lively at at to see the new pleted over bus Place; and that been advertised Anabeim paper in the Park, 72 in the Park, bedtion, and that been resold at new store is o and everything times and programs asks is to have town appreciat was being done made there.
SANTA ANA: so many rumors progress that we see the evidence S.F. company their line from of the S.F. road work, and it lends earnest. We have done these and failed. Of isht to every one to build a tractor line; but sometime this case. So With two good pays your money Mrs. Prescott few days ago an
ORANGE: - To over the location Junction at that tion is located j been for the pass branch for Los will begin at Orany pany have not s of boa photos
The fair sex are certainly receiving political recognition in Kansas. In the town election at Syracuse, recently the horrid men were defeated, every female candidate being elected. If they don't have laws in that town to prevent husbands from going to the Lodge eight nights in the week, and committing other treasonable acts, it will be the fault of these same Councilwomen. A hegira of men from Syracuse will be next in order.
Canada is tiring of the odium that its colony of refugees has flung about it, and is growing daily more willing to surrender to the United States authorities its erring sons who seek refuge north of the St. Lawrence. The two latest victims to this spirit are Charles E. Clindist and G. M. Bodel, who were carriage manufacturers in Staunton, Va., under the firm name of Clindist & Bodel. In March last they fled to Canada, leaving liabilities of from $50,000 to $60,000, besides a large amount of forged paper. Detectives were sent out in pursuit and traced them throughout Canada, till Clindist was run down at Brantford and arrested. Bodel was arrested at Orilla, where he was working at his trade. The dominion authorities aided the American officers as much as possible in the search, and will offer little or no opposition to their extradition.
The New York Herald gives space to a long account of California's land boom, the correspondent taking the ground that it is a land craze. Editorially it comments as follows: "Our correspondent tells elsewhere a merry tale of the California land boom, or, as it should be called, land craze. It is just now under headway and sweeping all before it, including the common sense of the people. But, after all, the boom has some foundation. California is one of the best States in the Union. It has a magnificent climate, and the crowds of people who are flocking there take with them not only their money, but their brain and muscle. They go, many of them, to stay and to fight it out on that hue. They know that California is full of opportunities and that a stalwart man with eyes in his head may corral two or three and make his fortune. There will be a reaction in this craze and great numbers will lose by it undoubtedly, still, a great many will better themselves, and California is big enough and rich enough to provide bountifully for all who mean business and stick to it."
Tuesday twenty-five hundred people came into our city by trains from all parts of the Union. The coming winter is expected to bring one hundred thousand from first to last. New towns are growing with a mush-
suppose that the feat is impossible, and we are one of those who yet believe that the process is entirely feasible and that whatever difficulties there are in the way of its successful accomplishment will be overcome by research and ingenuity.
These reminiscences are induced by the recent report made by the so-called sugar king, Claus Spreckles, on his return from Germany where he has been studying the culture of the sugar beet and the manufacture thereof of sugar. He returns from his field of study with a strong purpose to introduce what he considers the greatest and most profitable industry which this country has yet known.
He said to the interviewer "that the beet-sugar farmers about Magdeburg, Germany, are capitalists and bankers. They have raised the value of their land to $1000 per acre, and he had known a lot of sugar land in Germany sold for $1500 per acre. The owner of twenty acres of land in sugar beets there is rich. The grower is also a manufacturer, the farmers being banded together and all owning shares in a manufacturing plant.
"I see no reason why our American farmers should not be capitalists and bankers if they will devote themselves to raising sugar beets and making raw sugar strictly in accordance with the plan successfully pursued so many years in Germany. This applies not only to California but to many parts of the United States.
"The soil in Germany has been worked over a thousand years and has been improved greatly by the beet sugar. I have not seen such wheat and other crops in California even as I saw in Germany.
"I am about to try the beet-sugar experiment on a large scale. The machinery is under contract, a great quantity of seed has been bought, and by this time next year it will be seen whether I am right or not. One season will be sufficient to test the matter thoroughly. I am sure of that. I have sufficient confidence in the experiment to put my own money in it, the plant costing $300,000, and I don't ask any one else for money.
"Beet-sugar raising, I am aware, has been a failure in the United States whenever attempted. Of course there are reasons for this. There are special processes in use in Germany which have been unknown in this country. Some are patented and some are secret. I have secured the secret of the process which produces wonderful results and which the owner gives me the privilege of patenting if I wish. There also is special machinery in use in sugar manufacture in Germany which has never been used in this country. It can be manufactured and used in this country hereafter. I have always held that sugar growers could not possibly make raw sugar and refine it. The raw sugar plant is adapted for its own use.
"In the California beet-sugar experiments the attempt was made to make raw and refined sugar. The experiment failed, as you know. In Germany the same opinion that I have had has been reached. Expensive plants have been abandoned that one branch of the business might be exclusively followed. New things cannot be well done at once. If I am successful, and I am confident I shall be, it can be easily demonstrated how the beet-sugar farmer will become rich. Indeed he cannot help it if he follows out the German idea and is a manufacturer as well as a beet-grower. All German beet-sugar..."
Tuesday twenty-five hundred people came into our city by trains from all parts of the Union. The coming winter is expected to bring one hundred thousand from first to last. New towns are growing with a mushroom rapidity, but with a rock-like stability. In each time hotels are built or being built, and still all the houses in the land are full of people. Bad climate and poor health, as the result of extremes of weather in the East, compared with our matchless temperature, beight skies and dry weather are the reasons for this bigera from all sections of the Union to this. It has but begun. It will grow and increase to a tremendous head and it will host its own for a generation, for a cycle, to come. We have not enough towns yet, nor enough hotels yet, and we will have to be content to go on building more for a long time before the point of rest is reached.—Herald.
C. A. Crosby, treasurer of the Lasters' National Protective Society of New Hampshire, the most powerful labor organization in the State, has rebed the order of $5000 in money subscribed for cash prizes at the grand annual fair of the order, to be held at Dover, and, deserting his family, fled to Canada, accompanied by Mrs. Eluna S. Lond, the wife of the manufacturer in whose mill Crosby worked.
The steamship Australia brought to New York 52,000 boxes of Valencia raisins. Shipments of Spanish raisins to the United States on the 6th instant amounted to 41,-674 cwt. as against 34,370 cwt. to a corresponding date last year. Advices still are of damage to the Spanish crop by rains.
Three children while playing on an island near Quebec where an artillery competition was recently held, found a shell and lit the fuse. The bomb exploded and killed them all.
In the California beet-sugar experiments the attempt was made to make raw and refined sugar. The experiment failed, as you know. In Germany the same opinion that I have had has been reached. Expensive plants have been abandoned that one branch of the business might be exclusively followed. New things cannot be well done at once. If I am successful, and I am confident I shall be, it can be easily demonstrated how the beet-sugar farmer will become rich. Indeed he cannot help it if he follows out the German idea and is a manufacturer as well as a beet-grower. All German beet sugar raisers are manufacturers. It is this way: If the season is wet the farmer has a large tonnage, while the percentage of saccharine matter is small. If the season is dry and the beets are small the percentage of saccharine matter is larger. So the farmer if also interested in a manufacturing plant is sure to win and make money either way. He can't very well lose.
In Germany, where they have raised the saccharine matter from 21 to 14 per cent in the last seventeen years, they have made as high as 80 per cent profit by the use of a certain process. I want our farmers to do the same as the Germans have done, and that they may live in as big houses as the sugar-raisers of Magdeburg do and be rich. The conditions are more favorable for me to try the experiment than they would be for a corporation. They would have to send an agent to Germany, and he must cable back for instructions concerning what to buy. Now, I have money enough and could buy the best machinery to be had.
In selecting a site for the beet sugar plant in California three things are to be secured as essential. These are, first, of course, a place where beets will grow, and then where there is cheap and abundant fuel and limestone. In the lime kiln gas is provided which, being drawn off by an air pump and purified through water, is introduced to a tank, where lime is added.
I have about twenty five tons of beet seed on the way from Magdeburg and about five hundred pounds on the way from Paris. The machinery is under contract to be delivered December 15th next, at either Holland or Belgium. It is being made at or near Cologne and Prague. It will be in California in January or February. Meanwhile I will have selected a site for the plant, and the machinery will be all ready for use by the time the beets have ripened, which will be by the last of next August. The seed will not all be used in California; some will be sent to Illinois and Ohio, and I shall expect beets to be sent from there to me, that I may ascertain the percentage of saccharine matter.
I have bought abroad special cutting machinery, a special fusion tank, a special carbonization tank, etc., machinery such as has never been used in the United States. This
OUR NEAR NEIGHBORS.
BURNA PARK.—Mr. Whitaker reports sales lively at the Park and invites us out to see the new fountain he has just completed over his artesian well in Lincoln Place; and that although the Park has only been advertised to a small extent in our Anaheim papers, he has sold 130 town lots in the Park, 72 acres of acre property also in the Park, besides 113 acres in his addition, and that some of this property has been resold at 100 per cent advance. His new store is doing an increasing business and everything is keeping pace with the times and progress of the country. All he asks is to have the natural advantages of the town appreciated, which we should judge was being done by the amount of sales being made there.
SANTA ANA:—Standard There have been so many rumors and reports about railroad progress that we seldom believe any tilt we see the evidence. This week the A., T. & S. F. company have begun work building their line from here to Anaheim alongside of the S. P. road. A pretty good force is at work, and it looks as though they are in earnest. We learn that the A., T. & S. F. have done their best to buy the S. P. road and failed. Of course it looks a little foolish to every one for a great railroad company to build a track alongside of a competing line; but sometimes it is necessary, as in this case. So we say, on to Los Angeles. With two good roads running there "you pays your money and takes your choice."
Mrs. Prescott's little boy was run over a few days ago and very seriously injured.
ORANGE:—Tribune Santa Ana is jubilant over the location by the Santa Fe of the Junction at that place Reckon that junction is located just about as much as it has been for the past fifty years, and when the branch for Los Angeles commences the work will begin at Orange. The Santa Fe Company have not so far shown any strong signs of home photos, and we imagine they will
Board of Supervisors
September 21st.
The County Auditor was allowed ten deputies at $160 per month.
The following sealed bids for building the courthouse were opened:
Stone and Brick, All Stone.
David Perry...$380,000 $417,500
W. M. Fletcher...385,000 419,500
John Hanlon...386,000 421,600
A. W. Barrill...390,000 422,000
A. T. Mackey...381,000 416,000
O. E. Brady...375,000 410,000
C. E. Terrell...385,750 422,275
F. E. Green...387,200 430,090
September 22nd.
The Board accepted the bid of O. E. Brady of San Francisco for building the courthouse.
The time for nearing the matter of a special tax in the La Dow school district was set for 10 A.M., October 1st.
The time for hearing petitions for the formation of three school districts of Rowland, Santa Ana, Orange, Tustin and Santiago, was set for 10 A.M., October 7th.
Useful and Hurtful Medicines.
There is a certain class of remedies for constipation absolutely useless. These are boluses and potions made in great part of podophyllin, aloes, rhubarb, gamboge and other worthless ingredients. The damage they do to the stomachs of those who use them is incalculable. They evacuate the bowels, it is true, but always do so violently and profusely, and besides gripe the bowels. Their effect is to weaken both them and the stomach. Butter far to use the agreeable and salutary aperient, Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, the laxative effect of which is never preceded by pain, or accompanied by a convulsive, violent action of the bowels. On the contrary, it invigorates those organs, the stomach and the entire system.
As a means of curing and preventing malarial fevers, no medicine can compare with it, and it remedies nervous disability, rheumatism, kidney and bladder activity, and other inorganic ailments.
I MAKE A SPECIALTY
Of BOOTS AND SHOES,
STATE OF CALIFORNIA,
COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TO THE QUARTETED electors of Centraita School District, that if accordance with the provisions of Sections 1880 to 1888, Political Code, an election will be held on the 15th day of October, A.D., 1887, at which will be submitted the question of issuing Bonds of the district for the purse owe of purchasing site, building new school house and furnishing same.
The polls will be open at the public school house from 9 o'clock A.M. until 4 o'clock P.M.
Jas. A. Whittaker, E. B. Foster and J. C. Hill will serve as judges of election.
The amount of Bonds to be issued is four thousand dollars ($4,000), of the denomination of $1,000 each and to bear interest at the rate of 7 per cent per annum.
The number of years which said Bonds are to run are as follows: One for five years, one for six years, one for seven years, one for eight years.
Anaheim Union Water Company.
Location of principal place of business, Anaheim Los Angeles County, California.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TO AT A MEETING OF THE DIRECTORS, held on the 17th day of September, 1887, an assessment (No. 11) of $81.00 per share was levied upon the capital stock of the corporation payable on or before October 18th, 1887; to the Secretary of the corporation at his office in the Town of Anaheim, California.
Any stock upon which this assessment shall remain unpaid on the 17th day of October, 1887, will be delinquent, and advertisement for sale at public auction and unless payment is made before will be sold on the 5th day of November, 1887; to pay the delinquent assessment, together with costs of advertising and expenses of sale.
J.S.GARDINER, Secretary
Office at the Postoffice in the Town of Anaheim County of Los Angeles, State of California.
ORANGE TREES
to build a track alongside of a competing line; but sometimes it is necessary, as in this case. So we say, on to Los Angeles. With two good roads running there "you pay your money and take your choice."
Mr. Pressott's little boy was run over a few days ago and very seriously injured.
ORANGE:—Tribune Santa Ana is jubilant over the location by the Santa Fe of the Junction at that place Reckon that junction is located just about as much as it has been for the past fifty years, and when the branch for Los Angeles commences the work will begin at Orange. The Santa Fe Company have not so far shown any strong signs of being idiots, and we imagine they will not blossom out that way very soon.
C. Vissiere has closed out the last of his "preserved eggs." They brought full prices and were evidently considered first-class fresh eggs. He sold three hundred dozen, which he preserved some four or five months ago. Chas. has taken in a partner, and will go into the business extensively another year. It is a bonanza, sure.
ST. JAMES:—The contract for the new hotel has been let to Messell and Geible for $10,000. It will be a three-story frame building and will have twenty-two rooms on the second and third floors. The work will begin soon.
SANTA MONICA:—A thimble rig swindler named McAvoy was shot on Sunday by a Santa Ana man whom he had robbed at the shell game. The shooter escaped, and his identity is unknown. McAvoy is not seriously wounded.
SAN GABRIEL:—For some unexplained reason the market for grapes is very unsatisfactory. The L. J. Rose Company has not received any grapes for several days past, and the Los Angeles parties who were getting grapes from here have shut down.
AZUSA:—The troubles over the possession of the water of the San Gabriel river seems to have become quite serious, if the reports which reach this city are true, says the Herald. The Azusa Water Development Company owns nine miles of cement ditch, and the directors claim that they have acquired a right to 130 inches for the town of Covina, to which their ditch leads. The people of Duarte and Azusa dispute this claim, and recently they turned the water out of the Development Company's ditch. On Wednesday last a writ of injunction was issued by Judge Cheyne, and on Wednesday night about twenty men in the employ of the Development Company turned the water into the ditch and canned in the canyon. About dark on Thursday nearly seventy-five citizens of Azusa and Duarte went to the canyon and attempted to take possession of the water. There was a quarrel, and for a time the trouble was apparently about to become serious. Several shots were fired and some stones were rolled down the hill, but the Development Company's men being in the minority gave way and left the water in the hands of their opponents, who turned it back into the river. The end of the matter has not been reached, and it is almost certain that the hearing in the Court will be very interesting.
The present rain will cause a great deal of damage throughout the valley. Hay has been very scarce, and our farmers have not yet housed their present crop, as they expected to sell out before the rains came on. How great the damage will be will depend on the stomach. Better far to use the agreeable and salutary aperient, Hostetter's Stomach Bitterty, the laxative effect of which is never preceded by pain, or accompanied by a convulsive, violent action of the bowels. On the contrary, it invigorates those organs, the stomach and the entire system.
As a means of curing and preventing malarial fevers, no medicine can compare with it, and it remedies nervous debility, rheumatism, kidney and bladder activity, and other inorganic ailments.
At San Francisco John Snyder returned from a drunken spree Sunday morning to his home. In an altercation with his wife he shot her in the face. His son, a young man about 20; interfering, was also shot. Both were taken to the receiving hospital. Snyder was a carrier on the Call and Guide.
Fred Luhgold, aged 22, single, and native of Germany, was run over and killed by the cars near Merced.
The thermometer registered 100 at Sonoma on Monday, and about the same at Petaluma.
General Closely, the Adjunct-General, has handed in his resignation to Governor Wasterman, to take effect on the 1st of November.
The Salvation Army was mobilized by citizens, at San Bernardino, Sunday night.
Get your Job Printing done in your Own Town.
By a liberal use of money in procuring the latest styles of type, and by first class workmanship, the Gazette hopes to deserve the patronage of all its readers who need any kind of job printing. Neither in style nor cheapness of printing can this office be surpassed. Get your printing done in your own town.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
Of the county of Los Angeles, State of California.
In the matter of the estate and guardianship of Martin Ruiz Jr., a minor Order to show cause why order of sale of real estate should not be made.
Leonardo Katz, the guardian of the estate of Martin Ruiz Jr., a minor, having filed his petition herein praying for an order of sale of the real estate, said mine for the purge as though set forth.
It therefore ordered by the said Court, that all persons interested in the estate of said minor appear before the said Superior court on Thursday the 27th day of October, 1857, at 10 o'clock in the afternoon of sand day, at the court room of said Superior Court, Department Two thereof, in the Jones Block, in the city and county of Los Angeles, Cal., to show cause why an order should not be granted to the said guardian to sell so much of the real estate of said minor as shall be necessary.
And that a copy of this order be published at least once a week for four successive weeks in the Axanus Gazette, a newspaper printed and published in said county.
Judge of the Superior Court,
Dated Sept 23, 1857
The present rain will cause a great deal of damage throughout the valley. Hay has been very scarce, and our farmers have not yet housed their present crop, as they expected to sell out before the rains came on. How great the damage will be will depend entirely on the duration of the present shower. The brick yards will also suffer, especially the one situated on Raymond avenue. We learn that over 400,000 green brick are exposed in that one yard alone. However, there are always two sides to a question. The good the rain will do cannot be overestimated. Our whole country will don its winter garb—grass will spring up; trees present a brighter green—the dust will be laid and all nature rejoice. Thus to our Eastern visitors we can present a smiling countenance.
Fifty persons, principally Jews, have just been tried at Riga, Russia, on thirteen distinct cases of arson. The evidence showed that an extensive conspiracy had been formed to defraud the insurance companies. Sixteen persons were sentenced to Sioberia for life, nineteen were acquitted, and the others were sentenced to various terms of imprisonment.
G. W. Gordon, manager of the Waterous Cattle Company, was shot and killed Sunday night at Winslow, Arizona, by a cowboy named Brown. In the fight eight or ten shots were fired, and a saloon keeper, looking on, was accidentally shot through the hand. Brown escaped on horseback. Officers are after him.
At Modesto on Monday a bridge builder, named Dolan, a resident of Turlock, Cal., was almost instantly killed at the Stanislaus river railroad bridge by having his temples squeezed between two heavy timbers, caused by the backing of a construction train too far.
Vice-President Smith, of the A., T. and S. F., was expected in Los Angeles last night.
18—BEAUTIFUL HOMES—18
IN THE
-:- Anaheim Homestead Tract -:-
Four to nine acres in each lot, and all level and fine soil!
To be sold on the Distribution Homestead Plan.
Covered with fine Orchards and Vineyards.
ONLY $3000 A SHARE!
On one five-acre lot is a 10-foot brick house, walls 16 inches, two stories, finely finished, cost $7000, elegantly furnished—all goes $1000 cash; $100 in one year; $1000 in two years; interest 8 per cent. At all Real Estate Agents Remember, there are only eighteen shares to be sold. Several sold before the maps are out. TALK QUICK! Agents will send to the Herald Office for maps and contracts. The least valuable share is nine acres of level land; plenty of water; with $500 rebate—or 9 acres for $2500.
F. H. KEITH has charge at Anaheim, and
G. W. BURTON,
Herald Office, in Los Angeles.
J E. KARNES.
MILTON G. MILLER
Karnes & Miller,
No. 10 West Second Street, Los Angeles, Cal
Information Given Free en—
The Water Supply of Southern California.
Have had seven years' experience in handling and developing water in Southern California.
REAL ESTATE handled in all its branches.
CITY AND COUNTRY PROPERTY. List your property with us.
NEW GOODS,
NEW GOODS!
LOWER-PRICES
Than Ever.
RIMPAU BROS.
OF THE
DRY GOODS PALACE
CENTER STREET,
Have received a large invoice of all kinds of Summer Goods, consisting of Summer Silks, Lawns, Batiste and Organdies, and other goods too numerous to mention. RIMPAU BROS. also have on hand a very large assortment of Ladies', Gents' and Children's
STRAW :- HATS.
ALSO, Summer Suits at BEDROCK PRICES. Call and examine our stock before buying elsewhere and you will save your hard-earned money.
Come one. Come all.
HANDSOME AND USEFUL
WEDDING
OTHER
AND
PRESENTS!
Come one. Come all.
HANDSOME AND USEFUL
WEDDING
AND PRESENTS!
AT THE
JEWELRY, ART AND MUSIC STORE,
ANAHEIM, CAL.
If any purchaser of goods at our store finds that the NAME QUALITY of goods can be had cheaper in Los Angeles or San Francisco, we hereby promise to make the difference good.
P. PELLFORN & CO.
220 The best SEWING MACHINE and MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS for sale on easy monthly installments and to rent.
Northam, Cahen & Nebelung,
STORES—SW Cor. of Center and Los Angeles Sts. and Center street, next to Kroeger's Hall.
DEALERS IN — O—
GENERAL MERCHANDISE,
FANCY GROCERIES,
California Wines and Brandy and Imported Liquors and Cigars.
AGRICULTURAL -- IMPLEMENTS OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS.
BUENA PARK----The new Railroad Town and Commercial Center.
Buena Park
Buena Park
Buena Park
Buena Park
Buena Park
Buena Park
Situated 29 miles SE of Los Angeles on the two great transcontinental railways.
The Southern Pacific runs through it. Almond Station being only half a mile from the tract.
The Santa Fe will build a fine station house opposite the Park, which will be ornamented with a perpetual fountain supplied by artesian water.
Flowing artesian wells obtained at 100 feet.
Being located 10 miles from the Pacific ocean, the breezes from the coast make it the finest summer as well as winter climatic resort on the coast.
The many natural advantages of this large tract of land, such as having aristocratic flowing wells for irrigation, good rich vegetable and sandy loam for its soil, make it especially desirable for parties wanting 5, 10 or 20 acre tracts for fruit or gardening purposes.
A beautiful avenue is being laid out through the entire tract; 105 feet in width and ornamented with pepper and other trees.
Churches, school houses, stores, etc., will be built at once and many conveniences provided to make Buena Park a desirable place for a home.
Address all inquiries to the
Pacific Land Improvement Co.,
RIVERSIDE, CAL., or
James A. Whitaker,
ANAHEIM, CAL.
Buena Park
Buena Park
Buena Park
GERMAN WINE PUMP.
JUST RECEIVED A NEW LOT OF THESE CELEBRATED PUMPS,
SEVERAL STYLES AND SIZES, WHICH HAVE BEEN PRONOUNCED BY WINE MAKERS THE BEST PUMP MADE FOR
THEIR BUSINESS. FOR SALE CHEAP BY
THEO. BEISER, ANAHEIM, CAL.
FOR GILT EDGE
BARGAINS
IN
CORNER LOTS
AND
ACREAGE PROPERTY
CALL ON
D. W. HUDSON
ANAHEIM, LOS ANGELES CO., CAL.