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anaheim-gazette 1889-01-31

1889-01-31 · Anaheim Gazette · page 1 of 4 · OCR glm-ocr
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ANAHEIM EVERGREEN NURSERIES! the oldest established in Los Angeles county Timothy Carroll, - Proprietor. From Three to Four Million Trees and Plants for Sale! NINA BARBARA SOFT SHELL AND ENGLISH WALNUTS, WHITE AND BROWN SMYRNA AND ADRIATIC FIGS, ANGES AND ALL VARIETIES OF FRUIT AND ORNAMENL TREES AND SHRUBS. press, Blue-Gum, Pine and Pepper Trees. All in thrifty and first-class condition. A cordial invitation is extended to all to visit the nurseries and sect stock and prices. RICE LISTS ON APPLICATION. A. T. WALLOP SHIES TO CALL THE ATTENTION OF THE LADIES OF PRICE LISTS ON APPLICATION. A. T. WALLOP SHIES TO CALL THE ATTENTION OF THE LADIES OF ANAHEIM AND SURROUNDING COUNTRY TO HIS Vell-Selected Stock OF: Ry Goods, Ladies' Ready-Made Underwear, (Lady Always in Attendance). All Line of Gents', Ladies' and Children's Shoes, FROM FINE FRENCH KID TO CANVAS. All Line of Choice Summer Silk, Satins, Etc. TO SELECT FROM. Orders for all Kinds of Goods Promptly Filled. H. D. POLHEMUS, REAL ESTATE AGENT. Postoffice Block, Anaheim, Cal. Walnut orchards and Orange Groves in full bearing. Also unimproved lands in irrigating district and artesian-water belt. From five acres upwards. Prices extremely low. Terms easy. Correspondence Solicited. HIPPOLYTE CAHEN, DEALER IN General Merchandise Keeps Always on Hand the Best of DES AND PROVISIONS, HARDWARE, WARE, STATIONERY, AGATEWARE, WOODENWARE, OILS, Boots and Shoes. Men's Furnishing Goods. My Stocks of Any Goods and Ladies', Mines' and Children's Shoes at Cost for Cash 63 Southwest Center and Lowest Sts., Anaheim, Cal. FEDRICIST, ERCHANT TAILOR, Center Street, Anahalm, Cal. YES ON HAND A FULL LINE OF THE FINEST IMPORTED GOODS. A Perfect Fit Guaranteed. Advance of the public respectfully solicited. I have now on hand a very large assortment of goods, from which every taste can be suited, and respectfully ask that those in want of my stylist use a call. FAIRVIEW STORE. SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT I take pleasure in announcing that I am pleased to meet the wants of the public with assortment of shoes, hats, clothing, dry goods, groceries and general merchandise. Every article on its merits. Call and see for yourself, at my STORE ON BROADWAY, 1 mile west Southern Pacific Railroad Depot, near Fairview St. M. H. CHEESEMAN. HEIM GAZETTE. AHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 31, 1829. The Weekly Gazette. Established 1870: Mime and some friends I expected to call and take me for a drive haven't arrived." "It is possible" you my nephew, and in two minutes we were the greatest friend in the world. We met in the American town of the Grand Caney Hotel for nearly an hour, shouting grylls of America and England and of your habit and of ourselves. At the end of that time she rose and said: "Well, it's a humiliating community, but we must out to keep alive, and if you'll excuse me I'll go down to lunch." I was also and answered: "You are quite right—and if there were no prey hide in life we should not appreciate the poverty of it—and then after someone's hesitation I added: 'I am a foreigner and don't quite understand your rules of conduct ever here, but would be very aware of me in question that I also must have with that object in view must also hear, we should lunch together, as you are alone!' "Why, of course—why shouldn't we?" and then she added, a look of perplexed laugh coming over her mouth. "I don't know quite who is going to introduce us to one another. Mr. —" "Neal," said I, "Renal Heal, at the service of Madamellella." "Trumhar—Peniline Trumhar," said she. "Let me give you a card." She fumbled for her card-man, and I for mine, and standing in the doorway of the hotel parlor, we gravelly exchanged words and hewed formally to see another. "I live in Nashville, Tennessee," she said, "and if you ever come there it will give page—Colonel Keilid Trumhar—very great pleasure if you will come and see us—you will come, wont you!" I assured her that I would, and we went down to lunch. The head waiter gave me a mime and a check, and I ordered a tiny little meal with some care, during which operation she watched me with a nervous perplexed look which I perfectly well understood, but which for the life of me I couldn't any way of softening—unless I told the head waiter to give me two checks and filled up ones for her and one or myself—which would have been foolish to my English ideas. As we finished our microscopic repaint, however, she said in the most matter-of-fact tone to the waiter: "The check, please." The obsequious Italian brought it to me naturally, and she looked up. FLORIDA ORANGES. A May Crowd. Most Remainants to Come to Keep Up Press. Complaints have been made by Florida orange planters that the orange shipped from that State may a long time in coming to New York either by mail or by steam, and that many arrive in your condition. Residents to whom the fruit is assigned, and who are often compelled to sell at whatever they can get also come in for a share of commons and sometimes alms. In Florida the workers allush up the orange tree, and cut the orange off with chinus, and then carefully place them in bags. If they are pulled off the stem in very likely to be pulled out, none of the jute cords, and the fruit will soon begin to decay at that spot. The greatest move is required in handling orange. They are usually bound, but the bruise is not so perceptible as it is on the apple, and when packed the bruise also affects the other cranes against which it lies. There are three different kinds of orange in Florida, and there are again distinguished into various qualities: The Florida orange proper, the mandarin, and the hampstone. Rensels are the orange proper that have become partly owned with a rarity color. It is supposed by some than the russet is an insult that punches the skin of the fruit while it is yet small. The root is believed by many to improve the fruit, as some of the sweet juices are evaporated through the russet part. Vaccines preparations have been used to prevent the rust, it is believed with some degree of success; for fruits are source this year and are at a slight premium. Tangerines require to be kept in a dry, cool place. A box contains from $6 to 250 oranges according to size. Mandarins are worth $2 to $2.50 per box and tangerines $3 to $4 per box at wholesale. The crop has been a large one this year, and wholesale prices are low: This is the grocers' and other retailers' opportunity, and they hardly ever let it pass by. There seems to be some kind of understanding among grocers not to sell fruits and vegetables below a certain price, and some Hamilton, who was good enough on a step on Phyllis but none of which he knew at home old crop, and the old paint old, and finally threw on the 7 names of Miami in Miami Beach on third of February in Miami Beach on his place. Worth an award—— What Horticulture yielded anything winter foods to be still higher in its quality from killing frogs to there will do when the difference in the average of fruit that Linda where held in ordinary years for four years now your green remnants an ams of which $21 which $10 over the interest on gathering crop. You say $10 an ams cost of watering effluent mastic use and waste. These figures of fruit for most things, and traction. If your made $50 more on $10 make $100 on $10 make still another $10. But there is noference. Without having made the $150 So it is with the story of "My First"—there are features in it which you doubtless recognize as having formed of your day dream, gentle reader, but to turn the last leaf of the narrative, I see you will feel, with me, that none this old, pure, sweet phrase has any to head these lines. An Englishman, brought up in all traditions of an old Tory family by a dear mother—God rest her soul—of whom friends used to say: "Ah! but she is of old school." Very stiff and ceremonious, very polite, but every fraught with an Old World perity and easy that made one think of the pictures Godfrey and of the perfume of dried elder, Man, says Herbert Spencer, by his environment, and my environment was my mother, a woman of the world, you, aux bouts des ongles. You must think that I was brought up to man's in ignorance of the foul gases of the marsh while breathing the pure mountain top. The only effect of the tender influences which guarded till I was four and twenty was a reserve of manner and a more ordinary English" horror of anything approachable "bad form." I tell you all this to you once more how love laughs as praises and calmly ignores preconceived mother died with the tulips of 1866. Some of the fellows of the club perused come to America, and furthermore, view to a thorough distraction of my prevailed upon me to give a series in the States of my own and other I have coqueted a little with the mind, as would be the case with most peets—or rather rhyme-setters—the list of presenting my work viva voce to the United States canna a thrill of delight. I communicated, rare, with Major Pond, and in the early nineteen I sailed for the States, and niced a tour which, I am happy to say, it unsuccessful. Following June found me in Denver, and I put up at the Grand Canyon for a week, during which time I gave me readings and roasted amid the scenery of the State. The third arrival my arrival had come down on to take my matutinal coffee in the dining room, and was hardly sented lady, whom canlor compels me to be an old lady," came in to the room, named by a young girl. They took data directly opposite to me. A young I say—may, she was hardly more child—17 or 18 may be, and her face upon my soul in a manner which receivable. It was a round face, with that slight aquareness of jaw which had given to it a wonderful strength quality as the years went on—tar was perfect, famously flushed with the womanhood, with white temples and a high, pale forehead, the whole in a careless torment of hair like to gold. A pair of great, wandering fearless, blue eyes, affinely modelled, just the least bit tilted, and a takke those of the ochrebs in Raphael's nauna" in the Sistine Chapel. She was girl, and her figure was just taking self the sweet sinuous curves of woman. Am an Englishman, brought up in all traditions of an old Tory family by a dear mother—God rest her soul—of whom friends used to say: "Ah! but she is of old school." Very stiff and ceremonious, very polite, but every fraught with an Old World perity and easy that made one think of the pictures Godfrey and of the perfume of dried elder, Man, says Herbert Spencer, by his environment, and my environnement was my mother, a woman of the world, you, aux bouts des ongles. You must think that I was brought up to man's in ignorance of the foul gases of the marsh while breathing the pure mountain top. The only effect of the tender influences which guarded till I was four and twenty was a reserve of manner and a more ordinary English" horror of anything approachable "bad form." I tell you all this to you once more how love laughs as praises and calmly ignores preconceived mother died with the tulips of 1866. Some of the fallows of the club perused come to America, and furthermore, view to a thorough distraction of my prevailed upon me to give a series in the States of my own and other I have coqueted a little with the mind, as would be the case with most peets—or rather rhyme-setters—the list of presenting my work viva voce to the United States canna a thrill of delight. I communicated, rare, with Major Pond, and in the early nineteen I sailed for the States, and niced a tour which, I am happy to say, it unsuccessful. Following June found me in Denver, and I put up at the Grand Canyon for a week, during which time I gave me readings and rosted amid the scenery of the State. The third arrival my arrival had come down on to take my matutinal coffee in the dining room, and was hardly sented lady, whom canlor compels me to be an old lady," came in to the room, named by a young girl. They took data directly opposite to me. A young I say—may, she was hardly more child—17 or 18 may be, and her face upon my soul in a manner which receivable. It was a round face, with that slight aquareness of jaw which had given to it a wonderful strength quality as the years went on—tar was perfect, famously flushed with the womanhood, with white temples and a high, pale forehead, the whole in a careless torment of hair like to gold. A pair of great, wandering fearless, blue eyes, affinely modelled, just the least bit tilted, and a takke those of the ochrebs in Raphael's nauna" in the Sistine Chapel. She was girl, and her figure was just taking self the sweet sinuous curves of woman. Am an Englishman, brought up in all traditions of an old Tory family by a dear mother—God rest her soul—of whom friends used to say: "Ah! but she is of old school." Very stiff and ceremonious, very polite, but every fraught with an Old World perity and easy that made one think of the pictures Godfrey and of the perfume of dried elder, Man says Herbert Spencer, by his environment, and my environnement was my mother,a woman of the world,you,aux bouts des ongles. You must think that I was brought up to man's in ignorance of the foul gases of the marsh while breathing the pure mountain top. The only effect of the tender influences which guarded till I was four and twenty was a reserve of manner and a more ordinary English" horror of anything approachable "bad form." I tell you all this to you once more how love laughs as praises and calmly ignores preconceived mother died with the tulips of 1866. Some of the fallows of the club perused come to America,and furthermore,view to a thorough distraction of my prevailed upon me to give a series in the States of my own and other I have coqueted a little with the mind,as would be the case with most peets—or rather rhyme-setters—the list of presenting my work viva voce to the United States canna a thrill of delight. I communicated,rare,with Major Pond,and in the early nineteen I sailed for the States,and niced a tour which,I am happy to say,it unsuccessful. Following June found me in Denver,and I put up at the Grand Canyon for a week,during which time I gave me readings and rosted amid the scenery of the State. The third arrival my arrival had come down on to take my matutinal coffee in the dining room,and was hardly sented lady,whom canlor compels me to be an old lady," came in to the room,named by a young girl. They took data directly opposite to me. A young I say—may,she was hardly more child—17 or 18 may be,and her face upon my soul in a manner which receivable. It was a round face,with that slight aquareness of jaw which had given to it a wonderful strength quality as the years went on—tar was perfect, famously flushed with the womanhood,with white temples和a high,pale forehead,the whole in a careless torment of hair like to gold. A pair of great,wandering fearless,blue eyes,affinely modelled,just the least bit tilted,and a takke those of the ochrebs in Raphael's nauna" in the Sistine Chapel. She was girl,and her figure was just taking self the sweet sinuous curves of woman. Am an Englishman, brought up in all traditions of an old Tory family by a dear mother—God rest her soul—of whom friends used to say: "Ah! but she is of old school." Very stiff and ceremonious,very polite,but every fraught with an Old World perity and easy that made one think of the pictures Godfrey and of the perfume of dried elder,Man says Herbert Spencer,by his environment,and my environnement was my mother,a woman of the world,you,aux bouts des ongles. You must think that I was brought up to man's in ignorance of the foul gases of the marsh while breathing the pure mountain top. The only effect of the tender influences which guarded till I was four and twenty was a reserve of manner and a more ordinary English" horror of anything approachable "bad form." I tell you all this to you once more how love laughs as praises and calmly ignores preconceived mother died with the tulips of 1866. Some of the fallows of the club perused come to America,and furthermore,view to a thorough distraction of my prevailed upon me to give a series in the States of my own and other I have coqueted a little with the mind,as would be the case with most peets—or rather rhyme-setters—the list of presenting my work viva voce to the United States canna a thrill of delight. I communicated,rare,with Major Pond,and in the early nineteen I sailed for the States,and niced a tour which,I am happy to say,it unsuccessful. Following June found me in Denver,and I put up at the Grand Canyon for a week,during which time I gave me readings and rosted amid the scenery of the State. The third arrival my arrival had come down on to take my matutinal coffee in the dining room,and was hardly sented lady,whom canlor compels me to be an old lady," came in to the room,named by a young girl. They took data directly opposite to me. A young I say—may,she was hardly more child—17 or 18 may be,and her face upon my soul in a manner which receivable. It was a round face,with that slight aquareness of jaw which had given to it a wonderful strength quality as the years went on—tar was perfect, famously flushed with the womanhood,with white temples和a high,pale forehead,the whole in a careless torment of hair like to gold. A pair of great,wandering fearless,blue eyes,affinitely modelled,just the least bit tilted,and a takke those of the ochrebs in Raphael's nauna" in the Sistine Chapel. She was girl,and her figure was just taking self the sweet sinuous curves of woman. Am an Englishman, brought up in all traditions of an old Tory family by a dear mother—God rest her soul—of whom friends used to say: "Ah! but she is of old school." Very stiff and ceremonious,very polite,but every fraught with an Old World perity and easy that made one think of the pictures Godfrey and of the perfume of dried elder,Man says Herbert Spencer,by his environment,and my environnement was my mother,a woman of the world,you,aux bouts des ongles. You must think that I was brought up to man's in ignorance of the foul gases of the marsh while breathing the pure mountain top. The only effect of the tender influences which guarded till I was four and twenty was a reserve of manner and a more ordinary English" horror of anything approachable "bad form." I tell you all this to you once more how love laughs as praises and calmly ignores preconceived mother died with the tulips of 1866. Some of the fallows of the club perused come to America,and furthermore,view to a thorough distraction of my prevailed upon me to give a series in the States of my own and other I have coqueted a little with the mind,as would be the case with most peets—or rather rhyme-setters—the list of presenting my work viva voce to the United States canna a thrill of delight. I communicated,rare,用 some parts for her pride,而 also long at last,我 now takes care even sell customized for England an Amber under iridescence —San Diego. SHOES IN Chaist with an Dealer on stores on Madison Court sold on something where part sort philosophy or above ordinary American," he tended to their foot. This beingthe case,the studyofthe samewere boysboughtcame outtoright againsttheemountorourfatherdid,nolaterinthemanydid,nolaterinthecustomizedeasilymadecustomisedappliedwithFloridaoranges.这isfashionablebusinessdevelopedwithaveryfewyears,andtheyoungtreeyetcomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearntheygettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearntheygettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearntheygettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearntheygettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearntheygettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearntheygettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearntheygettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearntheygettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearn they gettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearn they gettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearn they gettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearn they gettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearn they gettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearn they gettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearn they gettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearn they gettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearn they gettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearn they gettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearn they gettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearn they gettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearn they gettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearn they gettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearn they gettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearn they gettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearn they gettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearn they gettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearn they gettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearn they gettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearn they gettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearn they gettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearn they gettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearn they gettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearn they gettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearn they gettocomeinbearingpromiseflatfallyear.totheylearn they gettocomeinbearingpromiseflat fall year." The crop is estimated to be fully 3,000,000 boxes; more than double that of any previous year. Each box holds an average.ofat least 150 boxes. So movethe crop will require five trains.of twenty cars each day for 100 days,and 450,000 orange will allow nearly ten to every inhabitant.inTheUnitedStates. To such amazing proportions has this fascinating business developed within a very few years yet come into bearing promise in a few years yet come into bearing promise in a few years yet come into bearing promise in a few years yet come into bearing promise in a few years yet come into bearing promise in a few years yet come into bearing promise in a few years yet come into bearing promise in a few years yet come into bearing promise in a few years yet come into bearing promise in a few years yet come into bearing promise in a few years yet come into bearing promise in a few years yet come into bearing promise in A young man is asked to stay in the city and join down on a scrap of money to support his family. He has written a friend in Baltimore who has taken him down. He finds himself on the street, where there is a piano and a room apparently used as an accompaniment to a song he had written for a friend in Baltimore. The man is distressed by the news that his wife is not with him. He is wearing a white shirt and dark pants, and looking at the window with a sad expression. He is running away from the house. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is asking for help from someone else to support his family. He has written a letter to his sister-in-law, asking her to take care of him when she is away from home. The man is requesting assistance in finding the location of the person mentioned in the article. I will provide the information as accurately as possible based on the available data. Please note that this response may not be exhaustive or complete due to limitations in the image's resolution and the availability of additional sources. If you have any further questions or need more information about the content or context of the image, please feel free to ask. Thank you! AGRICULTURAL NOTES. Regentia, Sugar Beans. The German who came over in land of the Watsonville district in the method of planting sugar beets, not malting the great fertility of the soil of California over the old wall-worn soil of Germany, instead them to plant twenty pounds of the seed to the ear, which they did. The result was they were compelled to go over the ground after the heats were up and pull out of five. This returned the growth of these hard standing, and the crop was not an unattainable mi is might have been, although from $110 to $120 per acre in most rural land. Six pounds to the acre will be planted here. Mr. Smith of Santa Ana, who recently went to Watsonville in Virginia, says bank are wanted which weigh not less than five pounds, and none are wanted that are grown on generally soil. The question of the amount of water required to operate the factory, said by Mr. Smith's report, seems to be the most important obstacle to be overcome. It will require 2,000 gallons per minute—about 20 inches. As the Watsonville factory the water from six artesian wells is used, holding which they are digging a well forty feet square, which will be walled with brick, and an surface water is abundant at four feet. It is supposed that this will supply all that is needed. The machinery for the factory is very expensive, and is all imported from Germany, therefore it would be impossible to import and set it up within twelve months. It is suggested that if the people of Southern California wish to engage in this enterprise, and it is Mr. Sprenkel's current desire that they should, they send to Watsonville, procure seed, plant in April, and in September send the seeds to Watsonville to be tested, for it was stated that Mr. Sprenkel would not lay a brick until that test has been made. If satisfactory, then the factory will be forthcoming at once thereafter if the requisite amount of water can be had. The people of Watsonville point with pride to the fact that since last September the town has gained seven hundred in population, and that there is not a house in town to keep off the fruits of the industry there. Let us be up and doing with renewed assurance of success. about four years out of ten. Suppose now, your grass permits without irrigation are $75 an acre, of which $0 or more are clear profit over the interest cost of land and expenses, gathering crop etc. Your irrigation costs you any $10 an acre, including interest on cost of water, effect by convenience for domestic use and watering stock. These figures of expense are much too high for most things, and are given only in illustration. If your crop is doubled you have made $50 more on an extra investment of $10, as against $80 an acre; if tripled you make $100 on $10, and if quadrupled you make still another $50, or $180 a year upon $10. But there is this very important difference. Without irrigation you could not have made the $150 or the $100, or the second $50 at all; best, on the other hand, you might have had your first $50 reduced to $40 by an unusually dry season. If you attempt to dodge this difficulty by windmill you gain nothing over the cost of water from a ditch. If you try to avoid it by going upon damp lands, which in any quantity can be found only in low valleys, then you run the risk of not only heavy winter frosts, which prevent the growing of vegetables in winter and check hard alfalfa, etc., but spring frosts, which may rip your trees in bloom. You run the risk, too, of having water stand upon the land in unusually wet winters and your trees injured by change from year to year in the level of the water about their roots. Many of the most valuable products, too, as oranges and lemons, cannot be grown where the roots reach standing water, but must be planted upon high ground and irrigated. —San Diego Union. SHOES IN CHICAGO. Chat with a Dealer—Getting a Fit—Shoes of Today. I walked into one of the principal shoe stores on Madison street where shoes are sold on something like scientific ideas, and where the proprietor talked with a sort of philosophy on feet and shoes far above the ordinary merchant. "Americans," he said, "pay more attention to their feet than they used to. This being the case, the man who caters to the comfort of the feet must make a study of the same. When you and I were boys we bought shoes in which our toes came out to the end of the shoe—right against the end. We also bought, or our fathers did, according to the price. No intelligent dealer in shoes today will ever sell a customer a pair of shoes against the end of which the toes will be forced. The shoe of today—that is, the common some shoe—is always longer than the foot... The stylish shoe is long and narrow. No lady who has any rugard for her comfort, to say nothing about her pride, will ever wear anything else than a long and narrow shoe. We are now making a cheap shoe on the same principle. I suppose you know that in England an American is generally known by the kind of shoe we wear. The English wear wide shoes—men and women alike. Some folks think this is done because the English do so much more walking than we Americans. That is not it. It is habit. They don't take the same pain with their feet in the old country that we do over here. I do not know of information that does. Some naked me the other day what sizes we mostly worn in Chicago. My answer rather surprised him. I said 8' and 4', and more 4' than 3'. He got off the idiotic talk about Chicago women's feet that you find in newspapers of rival cities. The same thing is true of every American city in this age of the world. In some sections of the country children used to run in their bare feet more than they do now. I should say that with ladies a No. 4 is the most generally worn—I won't say called for shoes in the market. No. 2s, ladies' shoes, you understand, are not much worn although California and the Irrigation Surveys Governor Wakerman keeps a good lookout on matters affecting the industrial interests of the State. It seems that important correspondence has been in progress between the Governor's office and the Interior Department at Washington relative to irrigating the arid lands of California. On December 10th Governor Wakerman wrote to Villa asking that California might have the benefit of the Congressional appropriation for the surveys relative to the storage of water for irrigation. He described the scarcity of rain over a large area of California and showed how 9,000,000 acres of arid lands might be made prolific and immensely valuable. A letter was received from the U.S. Geological Survey last week informing Gov. Waterman that California need have no fear that she would be neglected. The necessary topographical surveys will be made as quickly as possible, and with proper Congressional aid the Governor's idea of the irrigation of the arid lands of California will be made practicable. This will be important information to many who have been recently tilting on Government lands in anticipation of the Government irrigation work, and to the public generally. Now, if the Geological Survey will take hold energetically of its legal duty to classify public lands according to agricultural adaptations, we shall have some public scientific work of direct and immediate practical value, not that its work has not been valuable but it needs rounding out as is contemplated by law. Penalty in Orchard. While it is undisputed that an orchard is one of the best places in the world to establish a poultry yard, we have also found that poultry is good for trees. We have sixteen Shockley apple trees, seven years old, standing in and around the poultry-yard. Some of them standing directly in the runs of the fewls have as many apples on them as any live on the outside. This is conclusive evidence that one is beneficial to the other. The chickens destroy all bugs and insects that prey upon the trees and fruit; at the same time they keep down all grass and weeds and keep the surface of the ground well scratched up and in a mallow condition, thus promoting the health and vigor of the trees, causing them to bear larger and better fruit. Some of the trees are literally hanging with nice apples, and so heavily laden that we are compelled to keep the trees well propped to keep the trees from breaking down. Shade is one of the indispensables about a poultry yard: it is summer months, and it is certainly better and more profitable to have some good variety of fruit. We at the same time get the needed shade and a bountiful supply of delicious fruit, if of the same kind. We should certainly advise all to have orchards for poultry and poultry for orchards, for the one will be greatly benefited by the other. Three Crops in Tom Mammon. The Hall Borders, under Ethemprine embalm, have secured three crops from one piece of land since the 1st of last Mayh, ten months. At the time mentioned they broke up and sowed to wheat and barley for hay a is not it. It is habit. They don't take the same pain with their feet in the old country that we do over here. I do not know of nation that does. "Some asked me the other day what sizes we mostly worn in Chicago. My answer rather surprised him. I said 3'6 and 4'4, and more 4'5 than 3'. He got off the idiotic talk about Chicago women's feet that you find in newspapers of rival cities. The same thing is true of every American city in this age of the world. In some sections of the country children used to run in their bare feet more than they do now. I should say that with ladies No. 4 is the most generally worn—I won't say called for—whose in the market. No. 2, ladies' shoes, you understand, are not much worn although called for frequently. That is another thing you hear a great deal about in a funny way. I never discover a customer about his or her number if the question is asked. But when a lady comes in and says she wants to be fitted, at the same time putting up one foot to the midman. We don't go as much on numbers as we did twenty years ago. We fit the shoe to the foot, and when we have done that it makes precious little difference to the wearer what the number is or whether the last is 'double A' or 'double E.' You know, of course, that 'double A' is a narrow last and 'double E' a very wide last. The widest become wider as the letters run down. The French heel is not worn as much as was. It is a good thing it is not. No woman's foot ever looked so well in a shoe with a French heel. The half French heel is a popular one. "The slight of today," he continued, "one smaller than they were twenty years ago. That is saying that the fast are smaller, of course. That is no, especially with Americans. I don't mean by that fact are becoming actually smaller. But they are becoming educated, as to speak. Better case is given them in every way. An intelligent detail fits the first to the show. "I told you that the tendency is to keep them. This does not apply to shoes on the stage, which are always short. There is more time displayed in the show for the performers than there need to be. The lady of them, if she can afford it, comes, but a pair of shoes to match each dress. One of the president shows for coming in the matrimonial kit, orange shades, especially if the dress is of black silk or white. One of the most stylish things we know of in this line is a hairstyle. It is increasingly rich and dense." Three Crops in Ten Months. The Hall Barniere, under the Enterprise mans, have secured three crops from one peace of land since the list of late March, ten months. At the time mentioned they broke up and sowed to wheat and barley for hay a quarter section of land. The grain grew quite ripe before they could harvest it, and much of it was thrashed out, which needed the ground a second time with wheat and barley. The ground was again broken up and sowed to corn for feed, and as soon as it was large enough for good feed this was harvested, when the wheat and barley which was coming up among it proceeded to mature and on the first and second days of this month, January, 1880, they were making it and making hay of it at the rate of two tons per year. It sounds queer to talk of making hay on the list of January and it is surely remarkable to cut three crops from the same land in ten months, but these are nevertheless facts that cannot be ignored. In alfalfa raising usually five crops are set per year, but December, January and February are generally months in which alfalfa roots from its lakes. A Strange Night. At Carrington, (D. T.) on New Year's night, between 9 and 11 o'clock the singular spartacle was witnessed of a mirage at night. The day had been very warm, the thermometer reaching 60 in the shade, and the condition of the atmosphere was certainly unusual. The sky was more or less clouded, particularly on the horizon, and patheal prairie fires were visible at all points of the campground. To the north, south and west there was nothing in their appearance to attract attention, but two masses of fire to the northeast of Carrington were milled there in another direction. The fires were with wonderful distractions raised into the very clouds just as in the brilliancy of the sunlight the closest smoke made to assume the dimensions of a safety tower. There was a perfect reflection of the fire in the clouds. Individual programs of flame were pictured in the superbent strain. At another time the reflected flame seemed to waver in the air like the rainless shimmer of the most brilliant snowfall. The spectacle lasted until the fire died out. Altogether the sight was most singular and beautiful. Sanders's Service Station. The best salve in the world Lur Cute, Bevera Sense Ulcens Salt Rhume, Fever Sera, Tetter Chappard Hands, Childrens Curse, and all Skin Regurgitation, and possibly Flesh or no gas expired. It is maintained in some particular location or many locations. From Mt Washoe may be purchased by Wm M. Higgins