anaheim-gazette 1889-03-07
Searchable text
LUME XIX.
LODGE MEETINGS.
MIMM LODGE, NO 20, P.A.M.
Regular meetings on the Monday
stating the full hours in each
Nepenthong births in good
record annually invited to attend
PHILIP DAVIS, W. M.
SECRETARY.
MENHILL HILL, POST, NO 131, G. A.R.
GALLO O.F. Hall, Los Angeles street,
every fourth Saturday of each month.
E BARK, P.C.
McOWELL, Adjutant.
CHOSEN FRIENDS MEETS THE FIRST
Saturday evenings in each month at 8
fold Fallow's Hall
WM M. McFADDEN, Counsellor
Marik, Secretary.
MIMM LODGE, NO 129, I.O.O.F. REGUments every Friday evening. Visiting
always welcome.
J H. BULLARD, N. G.
HARRER, Secretary.
MIMM LODGE, NO 64, A.O.U.W. MEETing the first and fourth Fridays of every
R. F. PERKY, M. W.
CRAWSON, Secretary.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
B RELLARD, A.B., M.D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Office and Drug Store
Angeles street, east of Planters' Hotel.
OFFICE HOUSE.
50 min. to 1, and 6:30 to 7:50 p.m.
CHARD MELROSE,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
Book, Anaheim. Will be in his office at
the North Block, Los Angeles every
dnesday.
Provision given to Pilobate matters.
JANE E. PELTOM, J.K.
ARCHITECT.
UNTOLW, First Street, but Spring and
MONTLONG, CAL.
J.E. BURTON,
ARCHITECT.
MINCELLAREUS.
HIPPOLYTE CAHEN,
DEALER IN.
General Merchandise
Keeps Always on Hand the Best of
GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS,
HARDWARE,
TINWARE,
STATIONERY,
AGATEWARE,
WOODENWARE,
OILS,
Boots and Shoes. Men's Furnishing Goods.
ARTI sell my Stock of Dry Goods and Ladies', Mimes' and Children's Books at Cost for Cash by Southwest
Corner Center and Los Angeles St., Anaheim, Cal.
ANAHEIM
EVERGREEN NURSERIES!
The oldest established in Los Angeles county
Timothy Carroll, - Proprietor.
From Three to Four Million Trees and Plants for Sale!
SANTA BARBARA SOFT-SHELL AND ENGLISH WALNUTS;
WHITE AND BROWN SMYRNA AND ADRIATIC FIGS,
ORANGES AND ALL VARIETIES OF FRUIT AND ORNAMENTAL TREES AND SHRUBS.
Cypress, Blue-Gum, Pine and Pepper Trees.
All in thrifty and first-class condition
From Three to Four Million Trees and Plants for Sale!
SANTA BARBARA SOFT-SHELL AND ENGLISH WALNUTS;
WHITE AND BROWN SMYRNA AND ADRIATIC FIGS,
ORANGES AND ALL VARIETIES OF FRUIT AND ORNAMENTAL TREES AND SHRUBS.
Cypress, 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 inspect stock and prices.
PRICE LISTS ON APPLICATION.
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.
F. CRIST, MERCHANT TAILOR.
Just received a complete assortment of Spring Goods of latest styles and fabrics, to which the attention of the citizens of Anaheim and vicinity is directed.
Suits to order from - $25 up.
Pants to order from - $6 up.
An invitation is cordially extended the public to call and examine this stock.
FRED CRIST.
FAIRVIEW STORE.
SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT
I take pleasure in announcing that I am prepared to meet the wants of the public with
PLANTERS’ HOTEL
BARBERSHOP.
First-Class Style.
PLEASE GIVE ME A CALL.
HARTZ, POP.
opp. P. O., Center St.
HARRY REISBECK,
Boating.
House Movers.
N. L. GALBRAITH & CO.,
SANTA ANA, CAL.
P. O. Box 232.
FARMERS’ HEALING LINIMENT
WONDERFUL AND SURE IN ITS HEALING
Items. Sample bottles have been distributed in
Miami and possibly by D.W. Fish. Persons who
need them and desire more of the liniment will
be for sale at Dr. Higgin’s drugstore in Anaheim,
the simple bottles free to those wishing to try it.
D. W. FISH,
Cor. Byram and 11th St., Los Angeles.
CITY
MEAT MARKET
GO TO:
Bentz & Steadman,
Fresh Meats, Corned Beef, Pickled Pork, Chicken
Lard and Smoked Meat.
The Lily Ham and Bacon cut to
Order. Highest Market
Prices Paid for
Fat Stock, Eggs and Poultry
CENTER ST., ANAHFIM
Anaheim Bakery
P. MIRTLE, PROP.
Fresh Broad, Pies and Cakes Every
Day. Delivery Wagon Makes Daily
Trips.
The Patronage of the Public Responsibly solicited.
FAIRVIEW STORE.
SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT
I take pleasure in announcing that I am
prepared to meet the wants of the public with
an assortment of
Boots, Shoes, Hats, Clothing, Dry Goods,
GROCERIES AND GENERAL MERCHANDISE.
I sell every article on its merits. Call and see for yourself, at my
STORE ON BROADWAY,
One-half mile west Southern Pacific Railroad Depot, near Fairview St.
M. H. CHEESEMAN.
SALE! SALE! SALE!
AT
A. T. WALLOP'S
CLEARANCE SALE!
I AM KEEPING UP WITH THE TIMES. SELLING OFF ALL
MY LARGE STOCK OF DRY GOODS, NOTIONS AND
FANCY ARTICLES, LADIES' UNDERWEAR, HATS, BOOTS
AND SHOES, ETC., TO DO ONLY AN
Exclusive : Grocery : Trade.
— COME AND GET —
GOOD BARGAINS: REDUCED PRICES
Times are hard and I will sell close for cash or trade.
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 1880.
HEN,
andise
WARE,
AGATEWARE,
OILS,
hing Goods.
Dear for Cash, Southward
M SERIES!
Angeles county
proprietor.
Plants for Sale 1
BISH WALNUTS;
ADRIATIC FIGS,
AND ORNAMENpepper Trees.
The Weekly Gazette.
Established 1870.
Items of news and correspondence in all law subjects are solicited by the editor. Brief, and write directly to the point. All communications must be signed by the author, not for publication, but for the information of the editor.
A New Operation for Blindness.
As blindness is one of the several afflictions that can be fatal to a man or woman, any discovery that will lead to its cure or relief is of utmost importance. A new operation has been discovered by which the sheath of the optic nerve can be opened, and even total blindness in some cases caused. By the operation the brain is also relieved of the pressure caused by the field secretions in the sheath which runs from the brain to the eye. Four operations have been performed. One case failed, but in the other three the patient sight was restored, and themselves relieved of all pain arising from the pressure on the brain. Surgery is advancing while medicine appears to be at a standstill and as backward as it was a century ago. It is almost the only science thus has not kept pace with the discoveries of the times. Once a Week.
Fineness of Threads of Quartz.
C. V. Boys gives an account of some very interesting experiments in the production of the finest threads of glass and other materials. The most remarkable threads he has found are those of quartz. Of them he says:
MAJOR WAX FIGURES.
Through the milling Pt. on the field and thy Eye and Hair.
A swelling young lady moulded in a plane in a large clear window on this street attained smoothness and self-similarity dawned to hold the foundation. But, despite the constant motion of the over-damping record, the young lady changed her position. Her eyes did not change; her fingers raised on both sides of the plane, more than once—all for the best of reasons. She wasn't a young lady—though she looked in especially in the glitter—but only a wax. A young man cannot hurt himself in such a method of her manipulation climbed up to his story of the Minute Museum in company with the experimenter, emerging into a small room in the rear of the building. Two men were at work, one driving a steaming mixture in an iron oven on all stores, another doubling plant over a model. Hardware corps who query where they stood on platforms, under-mathtubs and in corners. In a small room a whole collection was piled up. The hands of none were contorted and bent through an airlug agency. The active young experimenter opened bones and appbords and drew out hands of men and women, old and young, beautiful and ugly, some without eyes or hair, others looking startlingly real. From another set of drawings he pulled downs of hands and held them behind the heads.
"There," said he, "are all the parts of an image which are made out of wax. There is no much thing as a wax figure. The figures—the torces—are made out of paper macha. A wax turn, even when it is lined with an iron framework, does not give a satisfactory effect. The process of making the paper macha bodies is precisely that of the braids and hands."
"And what is that?"
"A work that requires seven persons to complete. The first step is to make a miniature model in clay of the figure or group that is to be represented. From it we get some idea of the effect. When all details are decided upon the sculptor models the figure life size in clay, the same would be done if it were to be chilled in marble or cast in bronze. The hands are omitted. They are modeled from life always. Next the mold prepares a plaster cast in sections from the model, and into this wax is poured by the waxworker. If the result does not mat
Plants for Sale 1
BISH WALNUTS;
ADRIATIC FIGS,
AND ORNAMENcondition.
it the nurseries and
MILICATION.
HUS,
AGENT.
m. Cal.
bearing. Also munination-water belt. From
ferms easy.
tited.
TAILOR.
assortment of
and fabrics, to
s of Anaheim
extended the
stock.
O CRIST.
ORE.
CEMENT
ing that I am
the public with
Flameness of Threads of Quartz.
C. V. Boys gives an account of some very interesting experiments in the production of the finest threads of glass and other materials. The most remarkable threads he has found are those of quartz. Of these he says: "As torton threads, these fibers of quartz would seem to be more perfect in their elasticity than any known; they are as strong as steel, and can be made of any reasonable length, perfectly uniform in diameter, and, as already explained, exceedingly fine (i.e., beyond the power of any possible microscope). The tail ends of those that become invisible must have a moment of torsion of 100,000,000 times less than ordinary span glass; and, though it is impossible to manipulate with those, there is no difficulty with threads less than 0.00001 part of an inch in diameter."—Frank Lealle.
Talking to the Baby.
It is a wonder that brain fever and idiocy are not more common among infants when one remembers that 90 out of 100 babies are greeted with this speech, on which there is no copyright, soon after their arrival in the world:
"Well, well, well, it was a dear, sweet bessing, darling baby, so it does was! Does it want to ky? Well, it’s all ky des all it wants to; bess its own booliful ity heartness of it! What would it pucker up its itty moutok-ky some more! there—they booze it, so they do do, and they wont booze it, no they’t-ble-ble the little sweetness of it! Now, sall it have on its own pity dues! Yes, sall—its own bootful dreammus! Oh, would it ky some more! Well, well, ky weel hard if oo want to: There, there; there!"—Time.
A Book Publisher Outwitted.
It is told of a book publisher of Toronto that he wrote to an American author whoseook he proposed to republish, offering him a cent a copy if the author would furnish the stereotype plates. The author replied that he wanted 10 cents a copy, whereupon the Canadian wrote that he would rather make new plates, and that the book would be out about Sept. 8. The author kept quiet until Sept. 6 and then wrote to the Canadian publisher, saying that he ought, perhaps, to tell him that the book that he proposed to pirate had been copyrighted in England. As the English copyright holds in Canada the Toronto man has a set of plates that he will sell cheaply.—New York Sun.
Too Bad.
Mother—My dear, I wish you wouldn’t use your jump rope too much. It is very dangerous practice. I read the other day of a little girl who jumped 400 times and then dropped dead.
Chill—Wasn’t it too bad, mother?
Mother—It must, indeed, have been a and blow to her parents.
Chill—I am mother, it was too bad she couldn’t have lived long enough to jump the even 500.—Yankee Blade.
Not the Only Man Alive.
Husband (petitish)—Why, Nellie, do you spend so much time at the looking glass?
Wife—To make myself look as attractive as possible.
II. Pshaw! You are too vain. And what does it all amount to? I don’t admire you any more.
W—I know it, dear, but you are not the pressure caused by the fluid incurrences in the abach which runs from the brains. Four operations have been performed. One case failed, but in the other three the patient’s sight was restored, and themselves relieved of all pain arising from the pressure on the brain. Surgery is advancing while medicine appears to be at a standstill and as backward as it was a century ago. It is almost the only science that has not kept pace with the discoveries of the times.—Once a Week.
Flameness of Threads of Quartz.
C. V. Boys gives an account of some very interesting experiments in the production of the finest threads of glass and other materials. The most remarkable threads he has found are those of quartz. Of these he says: "As torton threads, these fibers of quartz would seem to be more perfect in their elasticity than any known; they are as strong as steel, and can be made of any reasonable length, perfectly uniform in diameter, and, as already explained, exceedingly fine (i.e., beyond the power of any possible microscope). The tail ends of those that become invisible must have a moment of torsion of 100,000,000 times less than ordinary span glass; and, though it is impossible to manipulate with those, there is no difficulty with threads less than 0.00001 part of an inch in diameter."—Frank Lealle.
Talking to the Baby.
It is a wonder that brain fever and idiocy are not more common among infants when one remembers that 90 out of 100 babies are greeted with this speech, on which there is no copyright, soon after their arrival in the world:
"Well, well, well, it was a dear, sweet bessing, darling baby, so it does was! Does it want to ky? Well, it’s all ky des all it wants to; bess its own booliful ity heartness of it! What would it pucker up its itty moutok-ky some more! there—they booze it, so they do do, and they wont booze it, no they’t-ble-ble the little sweetness of it! Now, sall it have on its own pity dues! Yes, sall—its own bootful dreammus! Oh, would it ky some more! Well, well, ky weel hard if oo want to: There, there; there!"—Time.
A Book Publisher Outwitted.
It is told of a book publisher of Toronto that he wrote to an American author whoseook he proposed to republish, offering him a cent a copy if the author would furnish the stereotype plates. The author replied that he wanted 10 cents a copy, whereupon the Canadian wrote that he would rather make new plates, and that the book would be out about Sept. 8. The author kept quiet until Sept. 6 and then wrote to the Canadian publisher, saying that he ought, perhaps, to tell him that the book that he proposed to pirate had been copyrighted in England. As the English copyright holds in Canada the Toronto man has a set of plates that he will sell cheaply.—New York Sun.
Too Bad.
Mother—My dear, I wish you wouldn’t use your jump rope too much. It is very dangerous practice. I read the other day of a little girl who jumped 400 times and then dropped dead.
Chill—Wasn’t it too bad, mother?
Mother—It must, indeed, have been a and blow to her parents.
Chill—I am mother, it was too bad she couldn’t have lived long enough to jump the even 500.—Yankee Blade.
Not the Only Man Alive.
Husband (petitish)—Why, Nellie, do you spend so much time at the looking glass?
Wife—To make myself look as attractive as possible.
II. Pshaw! You are too vain. And what does it all amount to? I don’t admire you any more.
W—I know it, dear, but you are not the pressure caused by the fluid incurrences in the abach which runs from the brains. Four operations have been performed. One case failed, but in the other three the patient’s sight was restored. In marble or cast in bronze. The hands are omitted. They are modeled from life always. Next the mold prepares a plaster paris cast in sections from the model, and into this wax is poured by the waxworker. If the result does not satisfy the sculptor the head is remelted. No attempt is ever made to change a head. The mold is simply broken up and a new model made. The head goes next to a woman who inserts the hair, eyebrows, eyelashes,and board. A little instrument with two or three sharp needle points is used for this. She works rapidly,more than any of the others. The sculptor,the after the glass eyes are put into the socket,the takes the head and finishes it. Its color is pale pink,and he gives it hue of the human face,and by various means makes its surface look like skin.Meanwhile the costumer has been at work dressing the torso and the carpenter fixing it upon a pedestal.The head and hands are joined to it and is ready for exhibition.
"How long does all this take?"
It depends upon the sculptor entirely.Figures nowadays are mostly portraits,and in modeling one,specially of contemporary individual,the sculptor is likely to make half a dozen models before the correct one is hit.The figure of Thurman,four instance required a great deal of preliminary study.The sculptor had to see him several times,tobserve most closely various details such as the expression of his face in varying moods.the size of his head,color of his eye=synn can any man tall the color of his nearest friend’s eye—the way his hair was arranged,his weight,carriage,stn.Little details,such as ear,copie occupy the artist a day sometimes.”He cannot be hurried.Sometimes two weeks is required to model a single figure.No sculptors rarely model direct from life.except in the case of the hands.allthough instances are known of their having done so.Pheres prefer a photograph and rely upon their memories for details in making a head.But they always mold hands from life.No artist in the world can exactly represent that wonderful human member.with all its thousand lines,creatives and expressions-for-the hands have expressions.Figures cost as high as $300.Hair on the head of the figure of Mrs.Langry cost $75.Hair is always an important and expensive item.So is the costume.”—Chicago Tribune.
"Give Away” Papers in Germany.
You Americans have not all the enterprise in the world,and I think we could show some of your most energetic advertising solicitors a few points that you know nothing about yet.In Belgium and Germany we have a great many class papers that are altogether different from anything you have here,and which are never seen off the continent.Each of the great hotels,fork instance has its own paper,based by the hotel management,and is its organ ofthe hotel.Is nothing like your Hotel Reporter,但它 is journal intended strictly for use.of the guests.Is contains statements of the amusements going on.of the sights to be seen,railroad time tables,cab fares,and.in a word.all of these things which a stranger wakeup in Berlin or Munich or Antwerp would want to knowThere is usually a story and a brief resume of the morning telegrams in these papers,但no attempt at editorial or the treatment of news.The copies are given away and the revenue comes altogether from the advertisements.The papers are prepared for different hotels in men,a word.all of these things which a stranger wakeup in Berlin or Munich or Antwerp would want to knowThere is usually a story and a brief resume of the morning telegrams in these papers,但no attempt at editorial or the treatment of news.The copies are given away and the revenue comes altogether from the advertisements.The papers are prepared for different hotels in men,a word.all of these things which a stranger wakeup in Berlin or Munich or Antwerp would want to knowThere is usually a story and a brief resume of the morning telegrams in these papers,但no attempt at editorial or the treatment of news.The copies are given away and the revenue comes altogether from the advertisements.The papers are prepared for different hotels in men,a word.all of these things which a stranger wakeup in Berlin or Munich or Antwerp would want to knowThere is usually a story and a brief resume of the morning telegrams in these papers,但no attempt at editorial or the treatment of news.The copies are given away and the revenue comes altogether from the advertisements.The papers are prepared for different hotels in men,a word.all of these things which a stranger wakeup in Berlin or Munich or Antwerp would want to knowThere is usually a story and a brief resume ofthe morning telegrams in these papers,但no attempt at编辑或the treatmentofnews.The copies are given away和the revenue comes altogetherfromtheadvertising solicitor,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicitor,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicitor,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicitor,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicitor,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicitor,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicitor,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicitor,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicitor,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicitor,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicitor,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicitor,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicitor,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicitor,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicitor,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicitor,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicitor,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicitor,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicitor,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicitor,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicitor,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicitor,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicitor,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicitor,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicitor,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicitor,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicator,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicator,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicator,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicator,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicator,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicator,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicator,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicator,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicator,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationfortheadvertising solicator,theaftertheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya storyandabbreviationforTheadvertising solicator,theafterTheglassworterswanttoknowThereis usuallya故事和ABREVATION OFTHE ADVERTISING SOLICITOR IN THE WORLD AND I THINK WE COULD SHOW SOME OF YOUR MOST ENERGY ADVERTISING SOLICITORS TO YOU KNOW NOTHING ABOUT YET.IN BELGIUM AND GERMANY WE HAVE A GREAT MAN CLASS PAPERS THAT ARE ALTERNATE DIFERENT FROM ANYTHING YOU HAVE HERE AND WHICH ARE NEVER SEEN OFF THE CONTIENT.EACH OF THE GREAT HOTELS FOR INSTANCES,HAS IT NOWNESS LIKE YOUR HOTEL REPORTER,BUT IT IS JOURNAL INTENDED STRICTLY FOR THE USE OF THE GUESTS.I CONTAINS STATEMENTS OF THE AMUSEMENTS GOING ON OF THE SIGHTS TO BE SINN,RAILTRAIN TIME TABLES,CAB FARES,and IN A WORD ALL OF THESE THINGS WHICH A STRANGER WAKEUP UP IN BERLIN OR MUNICH OR ANTWERP WANT TO KNOWTHERE IS ALWAYS A STORY AND A BRIEFLOWER WILL BE DONE BY THE HOTEL REPORTER,BUT IT IS JOURNAL INTENDED STRICTLY FOR THE USE OF THE GUESTS.I CONTAINS STATEMENTS OF THE AMUSEMENTS GOING ON OF THE SIGHTS TO BE SINN,RAILTRAIN TIME TABLES,CAB FARES,and IN A WORD ALL OF THESE THINGS WHICH A STRANGER WAKEUP UP IN BERLIN OR MUNICH OR ANTWERP WANT TO KNOWTHERE IS ALWAYS A STORY AND A BRIEFLOWER WILL BE DONE BY THE HOTEL REPORTER,BUT IT IS JOURNAL INTENDED STRICTLY FOR THE USE OF THE GUESTS.I CONTAINS STATEMENTS OF THE AMUSEMENTS GOING ON OF THE SIGHTS TO BE SINN,RAILTRAIN TIME TABLES,CAB FARES,and IN A WORD ALL OF THESE THINGS WHICH A STRANGER WAKEUP UP IN BERLIN OR MUNICH OR ANTWERP WANT TO KNOWTHERE IS ALWAYS A STORY AND A BRIEFLOWER WILL BE DONE BY THE HOTEL REPORTER,BUT IT IS JOURNAL INTENDED STRICTLY FOR THE USE OF THE GUESTS.I CONTAINS STATEMENTS OF THE AMUSEMENTS GOING ON OF THE SIGHTS TO BE SINN,RAILTRAIN TIME TABLES,CAB FARES,and IN A WORD ALL OF THESE THINGS WHICH A STRANGER WAKEUP UP IN BERLIN OR MUNICH OR ANTWERP WANT TO KNOWTHERE IS ALWAYS A STORY AND A BRIEFLOWER WILL BE DONE BY THE HOTEL REPORTER,BUT IT IS JOURNAL INTENDED STRICTLY FOR THE USE OF THE GUESTS.I CONTAINS STATEMENTS OF THE AMUSEMENTS GOING ON OF THE SIGHTS TO BE SINN,RAILTRAIN TIME TABLES,CAB FARES,and IN A WORD ALL OF THESE THINGS WHICH A STRANGER WAKEUP UP IN BERLIN OR MUNICH OR ANTWERP WANT TO KNOWTHERE IS ALWAYS A STORY AND A BRIEFLOWER WILL BE DONE BY THE HOTEL REPORTER,BUT IT IS JOURNAL INTENDED STRICTLY FOR THE USE OF THE GUESTS.I CONTAINS STATEMENTS OF THE AMUSEMENTS GOING ON OF THE SIGHTS TO BE SINN,RAILTRAIN TIME TABLES,CAB FARES,and IN A WORD ALL OF THESE THINGS WHICH A STRANGER WAKEUP UP IN BERLIN OR MUNICH OR ANTWERP WANT TO KNOWTHERE IS ALWAYS A STORY AND A BRIEFLOWER WILL BE DONE BY THE HOTEL REPORTER,BUT IT IS JOURNAL INTENDED STRICTLY FOR THE USE OF THE GUESTS.I CONTAINS STATEMENTS OF THE AMUSEMENTS GOING ON OF THE SIGHTS TO BE SINN,RAILTRAIN TIME TABLES,CAB FARES,and IN A WORD ALL OF THESE THINGS WHICH A STRANGER WAKEUP UP IN BERLIN OR MUNICH OR ANTWERP WANT TO KNOWTHERE IS ALWAYS A STORY AND A BRIEFLOWER WILL BE DONE BY THE HOTEL REPORTER,BUT IT IS JOURNAL INTENDED STRICTLY FOR THE USE OF THE GUESTS.I CONTAINS STATEMENTS OF THE AMUSEMENTS GOING ON OF THE SIGHTS TO BE SINN,RAILTRAIN TIME TABLES,CAB FARES,and IN A WORD ALL OF THESE THINGS WHICH A STRANGER WAKEUP UP IN BERLIN OR MUNICH OR ANTWERP WANT TO KNOWTHERE IS ALWAYS A STORY AND A BRIEFLOWER WILL BE DONE BY THE HOTEL REPORTER,BUT IT IS JOURNAL INTENDED STRICTLY FOR THE USE OF THE GUESTS.I CONTAINS STATEMENTS OF THE AMUSEMENTS GOING ON OF THE SIGHTS TO BE SINN,RAILTRAIN TIME TABLES,CAB FARES,and IN A WORD ALL OF THESE THINGS WHICH A STRANGER WAKEUP UP IN BERLIN OR MUNICH OR ANTWERP WANT TO KNOWTHERE IS ALWAYS A STORY AND A BRIEFLOWER WILL BE DONE BY THE HOTEL REPORTER,BUT IT IS JOURNAL INTENDED STRICTLY FOR THE USE OF THE GUESTS.I CONTAINS STATEMENTS OF THE AMUSEMENTS GOING ON OF THE SIGHTS TO BE SINN,RAILTRAIN TIME TABLES,CAB FARES,and IN A WORD ALL OF THESE THINGS WHICH A STRANGER WAKEUP UP IN BERLIN OR MUNICH OR ANTWERP WANT TO KNOWTHERE IS ALWAYS A STORY AND A BRIEFLOWER WILL BE DONE BY THE HOTEL REPORTER,BUT IT IS JOURNAL INTENDED STRICTLY FOR THE USE OF THE GUESTS.I CONTAINS STATEMENTS OF THE AMUSEMENTS GOING ON OF THE SIGHTS TO BE SINN,RAILTRAIN TIME TABLES,CAB FARES,and IN A WORD ALL OF THESE THINGS WHICH A STRANGer WAKEUP UP IN BERLIN OR MUNICH OR ANTWERP WANT TO KNOWTHERE IS ALWAYS A STORY AND A BRIEFLOWER WILL BE DONE BY THE HOTEL REPORTER,BUT IT IS JOURNAL INTENDED STRICTLY FOR THE USE OF THE GUESTS.I CONTAINS STATEMENTS OF THE AMUSEMENTS GOING ON OF THE SIGHTS TO BE SINN,RAILTRAIN TIME TABLEs,CAB FAREs,and IN A WORD ALL OF THESE THINGS WHICH A STRANGer WAKEUP UP IN BERLIN OR MUNICH OR ANTWERP WANT TO KNOWTHERE IS ALWAYS A STORY AND A BRIEFLOWER WILL BE DONE BY THE HOTEL REPORTER,BUT IT IS JOURNAL INTENDED STRICTLY FOR THE USE OF THE GUESTS.I CONTAINS STATEMENTS OFTHE AMUSEMENTS GOING ON OFTHE SIGHTS TO BE SINN,RAILTRAIN TIME TABLEs,CAB FAREs,and IN A WORD ALL OFTHESE THINGS WHICH A STRANGer WAKEUP UP IN BERLIN OR MUNICH OR ANTWERP WANT TO KNOWTHERE IS ALWAYS A STORY AND A BRIEFLOWER WILL BE DONE BYTHE HOTEL REPORTER,BUT IT IS JOURNAL INTENDED STRICTLY FOR THE USE OFTHE GUESTSW.I CONTAINS STATEMENTS OFTHE AMUSEMENTS GOING ONOFTHE SIGHTS TO BE SINN,RAILTRAIN TIME TABLEs,CAB FAREs,and IN A WORD ALL OFTHESE THINGS WHICH A STRANGer WAKEUP UP IN BERLIN OR MUNICH OR ANTWERP WANT TO KNOWTHERE IS ALWAYS A STORY AND A BRIEFLOWER WILL BE DONEBYTHE HOTEL REPORTER,BUT IT IS JOURNAL INTENDED STRICTLY FORTHE USEOFTHE GUESTSW.I CONTAINS STATEMENTSOFTHE AMUSEMENTSG.OVERONOFTHE SIGHTSM.ACTIONOFTHE GUESTSW.I CONTAINS STATEMENTSOFTHE AMUSEMENTSG.OVERONOFTHE SIGHTSM.ACTIONOFTHE GUESTSW.I CONTAINS STATEMENTSOFTHE AMUSEMENTSG.OVERONOFTHE SIGHTSM.ACTIONOFTHE GUESTSW.I CONTAINS STATEMENTSOFTHE AMUSEMENTSG.OVERONOFTHE SIGHTSM.ACTIONOFTHE GUESTSW.I CONTAINS STATEMENTSOFTHE AMUSEMENTSG.OVERONOFTHE SIGHTSM.ACTIONOFTHE GUESTSW.I CONTAINS STATEMENTSOFTHE AMUSEMENTSG.OVERONOFTHE SIGHTSM.ACTIONOFTHE GUESTSW.I CONTAINS STATEMENTSOFTHE AMUSEMENTSG.OVERONOFTHE SIGHTSM.ACTIONOFTHE GUESTSW.I CONTAINS STATEMENTSOFTHE AMUSEMENTSG.OVERONOFTHE SIGHTSM.A
DECEMBER 18TH
MORE.
ACEMENT
ing that I am the public with
Dry Goods,
ARCHANDISE.
for yourself, at my
WAY,
got, near Fairview St
EMAN.
SALE!
LOP'S
LE!
WELLING OFF ALL
NOTIONS AND
EAR, HATS, BOOTS
: Trade.
ED PRICES
or cash or trade.
CHILD—Wasn't it too bad, mother?
Mother—It must, indeed, have been a and blow to her parents.
Child—I mean, mother, it was too bad she couldn't live long enough to jump the even 500.-Yankee Blade.
Not the Only Man Alive.
Husband (petitishly)-Why, Nellie, do you spend so much time at the looking glass?
Wife—To make myself look as attractive as possible.
Shaw! You are too vain. And what does it all amount to? I don't admire you any more.
W—I know it, dear, but you are not the only man in the world.
H. puts on his thinking cap—Boston Courier.
The Prince as a Markman.
England is bemoaning the fact that the Prince of Wales has lost his skill as a markman. At the imperial hunt in Austria he missed four stages, much to the surprise and disgust of Francis Joseph. The reason for this decadence in his ability as a hunter is not hard to discover. He smokes too much to retain a steady hand and his nerves are not in a healthy condition. It is said that he smokes ten cigars a day and a large number of cigarettes besides. New York World.
Common sense Applied.
He (reading)—Now, that's what I call common sense.
She—What's that, John!
He—a prominent physician says that if man would walk up and down stairs more they would be healthier.
He—That's a sensible doctor. By the way, I wish you'd go down in the cellar and bring up a load of wood and some coal before you go to bed, John.—Lowell Citizen.
Female Population of India.
According to the census of 1890-91, the last one taken, there were at that time 690,035 widows in India, of whom 690,035 were under 19 years of age and 690,035 under 14 years. According to the native population, none of these widows are at liberty to marry again. The same women gave the most female population at 200,000 were able to read. Chicago Herald.
He Married the Hunt.
Visitor no courting—I suppose you find your life here very thinning, my friend.
Curvick—Oh, no, sir. I have been a bugger for a good many years, and have studied hard and consistently at the business, and as I'm only up for three years I had that run in doing the job—New York Times.
As He Should Have Known.
It Capt. Child had bid me his business as he sought to have it done in the world where he could afford it without having to deal with business in those hours—James Ward.
Profitable Business for Women.
"One of the most profitable forms of business in New York," remarked an uptown real estate dealer the other day, "is that of running furnished fish. Nearly all of the principals in the business are women. Some have started in a small way, and some have deliberately started in the enterprise backed by capital. The women nearly always have some connection, either through relationship or marriage, with furniture manufacturers, and that is where they reap the greatest portion of their profits. I can tell you any one of a dozen women who will hire a completely furnished flat for you within three days. Their profits are large. A flat which will unburdened for $70 a month, will easily rent for $100 a month when furnished. That is a house of $800 a year. That will be 10 per cent, on $800, and as the furniture costs may almost half of them, as a rule, they usually average more than 25 per cent. The wear and tear is to be considered, of course, great furniture is usually bought at the market, and it never much more durably than the agent willing to admit. There are many ways of making money in this big town, and this is one of the best of them."—New York Times.
Senator's Announcement.
The best sales in the world for Cubs, Boston Suns, UConn, Salt River, Fever Seas, Tulane, Charged Hands, Chillblains, Crew, and All State Breads, and positively some Films, or no pay required. It is assumed to give perfect satisfaction or energy needed. Price 25 cents per box per mile by Win M. Hughes.
The City Market keeps the best market affairs. Lease your online with them.
A Serap of Paper Seven Her Life.
It was just an ordinary scrap of wrapping paper, but it saved her life. She was last stages of consumption; told by physic that she was incurable and could live on short time; she weighed less than pounds. On a piece of wrapping paper of Dr. King's New Discovery, and sample bottle; it helped her she bought another and grew better fast; tinned its use and was strong; humour; jumpless; weighing 140 pounds; fallen particianders and stamp to W. H. Draggant; Fort Smith. Trial Bottle of wonderful Discovery Free at Wm. M. gin's Drugstore.
Senator Jones of Nevada, is another tortured alien.
He has fallen in with her Kentucky sparrows as a hometown; and dinner he has a great fun for biques of lobster. Potomac white and deviled crabs, with a cannibal salad to close with.
Consumption Survey Corred.
TO THE EDITOR—Please inform your ears that I have a positive remedy for above named diseases. By his thumb thousands of hospice patients have been summarily cured. I shall be glad to free battles of my nemy rans to your readers who have consumption if will send me their expenses and post address. Responsibility.
T.A.S.Locusta,M.C.,M.I.Purd at.New York
Coal Mining Cash.
Coal has not been this week; bales will be for each. Loreen M.C.Gada.
AGRICULTURAL NOTES.
The Experts in the Vineyard and Dustard.
One of the speakers at the recent meeting of the Viticultural Association in San Francisco said that there were $10,000,000 invested in this state in viticulture. That estimate, presumably includes all the land, buildings, apples, including wineries and cooperages. It includes a great many vineyards where, from lack of experience or other reasons, the husband has never been put on a paying foundation. If that amount has been actually invested, the net profit ought to be 10 per cent, or $1,000,000 annually. It is not probable anything like that man has yet been rented in the way of annual profits from this industry. And yet, 10 per cent on the business is not too large a gain to expect. As in mining, so in viticulture, there is a great deal of "died work." It requires years to bring a vineyard into good housing condition, and even then, it may not pay the owner any profit. He may not have selected the most valuable variation. Or he may have undertaken to do what he cannot well accomplish. His table grapes may be slow of malt, and his wine grapes may not be those in most demand. He may find the market headed up with the kinds of grapes he has spent years in cultivating.
There is one fact that ought always to be taken into account when estimates are made of the capital invested and the profits returned. A great deal of the land now covered with vineyards was bought at very low prices. In many instances the value of the land has doubled four or five times. In some instances the increase has been much greater. Land bought at $10 mn acre is now held, with the improvements, at not less than $100 mn acre. A considerable part of this increase in the last ten years properly belongs to the profit and loss account. If a 100-acre tract has increased ten-fold in value in the last ten years, it would go some way to make up for small annual profits on the produce.
No depression has overtaken the viticultural industry that was not foreseen by many. It is a business requiring extraordinary skill. The experts have made money and will make handsome gains in the future. Those who are not experts will make small gains, if any, until they have acquired greater skill in the business. How many men, for instance, have made or could make olive oil profitably in it. A pint or half of the exhibition may be used in a pool of water, taking only as warmth. A farm pump is here to do the churning, and may be used in applying the dilution. To further aid them, another measure is the use of young growing shoots, we carry a basis of the dilution in one hand and hand the shoots into it with the other, shaking them to secure complete wetting.
Pursue Food.
One of the Persian Kings named the celebrated Attie fig to be set before him whenever he dipped, for one reason, to remind him that the land where they grow was not yet his, and that, instead of receiving the fruit as a tribute, he was obliged to buy it from abroad; and for another, that it was not only the emblem of health, but the most wholesome fruit grown. The fig is now pretty well known to be, especially as certain members, almost the common food of the Italian people; and for months they may be told to live entirely upon them. It is not the superfluous, the luxurious, and thus, as Dr. Nichola says, it is not only possible for a man to live on figs, but that sitting under his own vine and fig tree, a man would have plenty of food and no landlord. When often fresh, it is a medicine as well as food; and they who eat them freely need no potions and no aperients. Full of nutrition and all these properties that make it valuable as an article of diet, we are confident that the fig will take a prominent position in the estimation of all who work for and believe in food reform. For myself I would simply add that again and again, without liquid of any kind, the juicy green fig, eaten with whole meal bread, formed a dish at once simple but rich, and, like the Spaniard's salad, fit for a king. The fig is not only very popular, but is the most ancient fruit we cultivate. In many countries the failure of this crop also means starvation and famine. Travelers in Asia Minor and Southern Europe provide themselves with figs and olives as provisions for long journeys, and not only live but grow fat on the diet. The fig has more medicinal properties and more nutritive than any other kind of fruit, with the exception of the olive.
Young Fruit Trees.
My experience would dictate the planting of my young fruit trees, the younger better. Dormant buds are the best. I see large quantities of trees ablured in bare from
The Cooking Dried Fruit
A peculiar prejudice which exists against
ales is not without foundation in
the leathery, flavorless compound
appeared formerly on our tables in
or apple pie, its worst elements
by flavoring of lemon, had no existence. The method which mourndish this must have been invented
old-country maid who was anxious
to cut around the right method,
it rapid ways of cooking, this method
frequently supervised the proper way
dried fruit. Prunes are barely
cooked rapidly, but delicious by the
food. The modern evaporated apple
treatment a little better than the
dried apple; but it is better cooked
old-wild. Ap icots, dried by a vaper especially dalicious, and are
expensive, retailing considerably
than peaches. Peaches are delicious
for puddings, or for preserves, cooked
Wash the dried or evaporated fruit
and put it in soak over night in a
marcelain dish. In the morning set
in a broad, shallow, earthen pador preserving kettle at the back of
let it rise slowly to the boiling
there should be just water enough to
over them. Let them cook in this
air or eight hours, then add sugar—
if a cupful to half a pound is enough
or for peaches. Tart apples need
not be the dried fruit cook about half
after adding the sugar. Then remove
fire pearl in an earthen dish and if prune, peaches, or apricots,
with cream.
Kupayay
What you ought to have, in fact,
have it, to fully enjoy life. Thouse searching for it daily, and mourise they find it not. Thousands upon
of dollars are spent annually by
bake in the hope that they may attain
and yet it may be bad by all.
I am sure that Electric Bitters, if used
to directions and the use permitted
during You Good Digestion and oust
onion Dyspepsia and all diseases of
comach and Kidneys. Sold at 50.
100 per bottle by Wm. M. Higgin's
Home Noted Epilemia.
The Cookling was very particular as to
ate and drank. He was feud of a
two of very dry champagne, a little
and now and then a bottle of beer.
James B. Beck thinks Kentucky
mutton the finest on earth, and
declared that a saddle of it can't be
anywhere else so well as at his own
Mr George Vest has a weakness for
sauce. He was born in Kansas,
heaver recovered from a taste acquired
yellow. He is also asked for being
aware as to brandy.
Edmunds is a discriminating eater,
who goes away from home to dine,
he has one of the best supplied
in Washington and a cook who knows how to please his appetite.
Don Cameron is another stateman.
The increase has been much greater. Land bought at $10 an acre is now held with the improvements, at not less than $100 an acre. A considerable part of this increase in the last ten years properly belongs to the profit and loss account. If a 100-acre tract has increased ten-fold in value in the last ten years, it would go some way to make up for small animal probes on the produces.
No depression has overtaken the viticultural industry that was not foreseen by many. It is a business requiring extraordinary skill. The experts have made money and will make handmade gains in the future. Those who are not experts will make small gains, if any, until they have acquired greater skill in the business. How many men, for instance, have made or could make olive oil profitably in this State? There are fewer experts in the State in that business than could be counted on the fingers of both hands. But among these experts there are perhaps two or three who have gained a national reputation for their product. So great is the reputation that every bottle of the oil is generally engaged before it is ready for the market.
The experts in the fruit canning business have been successful. But many canneries have lost money. Why this difference? The expert knows the market. He puts up nothing but the best of fruit. He selects it. His breed becomes known. It is not necessary to inspect his goods for the detection of any interior article. It will never be found under his brand. Californiaans are proverbial for demanding the best, when they buy in the market. The open secret of success is to sell the best. More than one canning establishment could be named in this State where every can of fruit is sold as soon as put up. It pays to be an expert as the business, and to turn that knowledge to the production of the best goods.
The rasp-makers do not need to be told that there is little or no money in putting up an inferior quality for sale in distant markets. In some respects the viticultural industry has passed beyond the experimental stage. In others it probably has not. A great many people went into the business having everything to learn. A small minority of these have become experts, others will reach that standard at some future day. In a few years a great change has been brought in the agricultural industry of the State. Thousands of vineyards are now covering what were a short time ago cattle ranges and neglected hillsides. France has the benefit of two centuries of viticultural experience. California has the advantage of hardly more than twenty years' experience.
Distressed Fruit Trees
In your last letter Mr Collins, the inspector, advises thorough disinfection of all trees and shrubs introduced into this colony. With this I cordially agree and wish to give emphasis to his advice. After some years of hard labor many of us now see some return for our labor, and would feel it very hard were that return taken from us by our enemy, the scale. In this matter we have our fortunes in our own hands, and if we are careful to exclude all infested trees, we can keep our orange and lemon groves bright, clean and productive. If any of us should be criminally caramelise and introduce on trees or shrubs she dread white scale, it would be severe, though not unbearable blow to the fruit industry of this section.
Mr Collins advises dipping the trees imported in some disinfecting solution, and adds "do not dip the roots," or words to that effect.
In this I believe he has made a grave mistake. It has long been known that deciduous trees when dormant may be safely dipped roots and all, in strong solutions of concentrated lye. I have lactely conducted several experiments which go to prove that orange trees may also be dipped, root and branch, in a solution of the best insecticide known with any damage to the tree. I refer to corrosive sublimate mercury—which I have used in the proportion of one ounce.
My experience would dictate the planting of very young fruit trees, the younger the better. Dormant buds are the best. I see large quantities of trees shipped in here from the nurseries of the upper country, that are two or three years old even older. Trees like these have too large a top to support for the amount of fibrous roots they contain, and in order to be made to live must necessarily be cut back very much to the detriment of the tree. It may look like a slow way to get fruit, to plant the dormant buds, but in a few years the dormant buds will be far ahead of the two and three year old trees. I have tested the dormant buds, and I know what I am talking about.
In Marsh, 1886, I put out a small orchard, I need all dormant buds except eight trees. These were one and two year old trees. Some of my trees from the buds are now three times the size of the older areas, and by far the best shaped and thriftiest trees, and bear more and larger fruit. I have peach trees planted as above from dormant buds, over twelve feet high. The idea is just this. The roost gets a good start before the tree is any drain on them from the top. If you get a good root you will get a good tree, but without it you never will. If any person doubt this theory let them come to say places, three and one-half miles east of Pano Rabble, on the Hearn Heuro, and I will try and convince them not charge a cent for the trouble.
Young Fruit Trees
Boone Brothers of Tulare have sold 1,200 young Adriatic fig trees, to be set out on the Clarka ranch near Traver, and on lands near Salma.
So far but about one thousand acres of beets have been contracted for around Watsonville, but better qualities of land will be put in cultivation.
The farmers around Mountain View believe in fruit prospects, 600,000 trees being set out this year in that vicinity. One nursery alone furnished 300,000.
The Tulare County Board of Horticulture has ordered all orchards in the county sprayed before April 1st and Commissioner Moralai says the order will be enforced.
Grapes this year will command a good figure. Everything points to the fact that both the orange and grape will be sources of greater profit in the future than they have ever been in past.
There is no doubt in my mind, says Claus Sprackels, that this country can raise not only the material, and manufacture all the sugar it can consume, but will in a few years be able to export 1,000,000 or more tonnes a year.
W.B.Fudge and J.W.Woolsey, who are farming 900 acres of land owned by M.J.Waile at Bone Cannon, brought to Tulare a sample of grain that was dry sown in November last. This bunch of wheat is all of twenty inches in height and has a bright healthy appearance.
The directors of the Poso Irrigation district have appointed March 9th as the time for holding an election to vote bounties of $500,-000.
Different amounts were estimated by the directors, some estimating $400,000 as sufficient to complete the work while others thought $600,000 necessary.
Germany claims the honor of having the oldest rose bush in the world. It is said that in 1679 Bishop Hapilo caused a trellis to be erected to support the rose bush now climbing over old church at Halderaheim-
Mr George Vest has a weakness for soy sauce. He was born in Kentucky, never recovered from a taste acquired by childhood. He is also noted for being known to please his appetite.
Mr Don Cameron is another statesman who goes away from home to dine. He has one of the best restaurants in Washington and a cook who knows how to please his appetite.
Mr Blackburn is also an excellent gardener. A dilemma ever which he never shows eloquence consists of Lynn straw, bisque of crabs, fried smelt star snoon, stawed terrapin, canvassick, a lettuce salad, brie cheese and a scrap of Paper Seven Her Life.
Just an ordinary scrap of wrapping it has saved her life. She was in the midst of consumption, told by physicians was incurable and could live only a month; she weighed less than seventy pounds on a piece of wrapping paper she Dr. King's New Discovery, and got a bottle; it helped her, she bought another and grew better fast, consumes tea and is now strong, healthy, crisp, weighing 140 pounds. For artillerymen and marshal W. H. Cole, Port Smith, Trial Bottle of this final Discovery Free at Wm. M. Higginsport.
Mr Jones, of Nevada, is another manumaker. He has fallen in with Mind-Kentucky sparrows as a bromide and dinner he has a great lamb of lobster. Potamus white pearl crab, with a canvassick and close with.
Consumption Summary Covered.
**ER EDITOR—Please inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for the named disease. By its timely use of hospice nurses here have been partly cured. I shall be glad to send them my monthly report in any of these who have consumed if they are their expense and post office receipts.**
Louisa, M.C., 1813 Pearl at, New York.
Cool mistletoe. It has not gone up this week, but all will be for such. Leaves mallows with shade.
One of the things that a gardener can get ready during his busy time for the busy summer there is the small oil butter, or karone cream, that is no available against many millets and so easily applied. Professor Troutman recommends milk, and sour milk in perfume, as does not ferment lactation but soap in preferred by some. About twice an hour oil is milk in need, and they are allowed visibly together for fifteen or forty-five minutes, or until the liquid suddenly thickens into a glistening butter quite homogeneous, mixing completely and slowly with water. If applied a little while stirring, and keeping any length of time in a closed one, no fire oil appearing productive. If any us should be criminally careless and introduce on trees or shrubs the dread white scale, it would be severe, though not unbearable blow to the fruit industry of this section.
Mr Collins advises dipping the trees imported in some disinfecting solution, and adds "do not dip the roots," or words to that effect. In this I believe he has made a grave mistake. It has long been known that deciduous trees when dormant may be safely dipped roots and all, in strong solutions of concentrated lysine. I have lately conducted several experiments which go to prove that orange trees may also be dipped, root and branch, in a solution of the best insecticide known with out any damage to the tree. I refer to corrosive sublimate mercury — which I have used in the proportion of one ounce to five gallons of water, or about 1 to 600, and have left the trees in the solution about two minutes. They have shown no tendency to drop their leaves, although it is a fortnight since they were treated.
For growing trees that has scale I prefer to use pasta in which the corrosive sublimate has been dissolved, and spray that on the affected tree. It is very certain in its effect, killing every scale with which it comes in contact. It is not necessary to trim back the tree before spraying, though the leaves may fall after the application, which should be repeated in five or six weeks to make assurance doubly sure.
I have had no experience with white scale, though I believe experiments will be made once with this remedy; but on the red and brown varieties it acts like a charm. It has also marked advantage inasmuch as the ground under the tree becomes saturated with the solution, so that no scale can live in it, and thus out of their spread by crawling from tree to tree, the method which I believe they must practice in their travels.
As this remedy is exceedingly poisonous and is not easily dissolved in water alone, it would be well to have a 25 per cent solution prepared by a dragnet, who will use mixtures of ammonia for the purpose.
Mr Rose of this place prepare such a solution for me at a cost of about 20 cents for enough to make five gallons of the solution. For this strong solution can then be added to five gallons of water or pasta, as may be derived via Exchange.
Insult Knowledge.
One of the things that a gardener can get ready during his busy time for the busy summer there is the small oil butter, or karone cream, that is no available against many millets and so easily applied. Professor Troutman recommends milk, and sour milk in perfume, as does not ferment lactation but soap in preferred by some. About twice an hour oil is milk in need, and they are allowed visibly together for fifteen or forty-five minutes, or until the liquid suddenly thickens into a glistening butter quite homogeneous, mixing completely and slowly with water. If applied a little while stirring, and keeping any length of time in a closed one, no fire oil appears productive.
If any us should be criminally careless and introduce on trees or shrubs the dread white scale, it would be severe, though not unbearable blow to the fruit industry of this section.
Mr Collins advises dipping the trees imported in some disinfecting solution, and adds "do not dip the roots," or words to that effect. In this I believe he has made a grave mistake. It has long been known that deciduous trees when dormant may be safely dipped roots and all, in strong solutions of concentrated lysine known with out any damage to the tree. I refer to corrosive sublimate mercury — which I have used in the proportion of one ounce to five gallons of water, or about 1 to 600, and have left the trees in the solution about two minutes. They have shown no tendency to drop their leaves, although it is a fortnight since they were treated.
For growing trees that has scale I prefer to use pasta in which the corrosive sublimate has been dissolved, and spray that on the affected tree. It is not necessary to trim back the tree before spraying, though the leaves may fall after the application, which should be repeated in five or six weeks to make assurance doubly sure.
I have had no experience with white scale, though I believe experiments will be made once with this remedy; but on the red and brown varieties it acts like a charm. It has also marked advantage inasmuch as the ground under the tree becomes saturated with the solution, so that no scale can live in it, and thus out of their spread by crawling from tree to tree, the method which I believe they must practice in their travels.
As this remedy is exceedingly poisonous and is not easily dissolved in water alone, it would be well to have a 25 per cent solution prepared by a dragnet, who will use mixtures of ammonia for the purpose.
Mr Rose of this place prepare such a solution for me at a cost of about 20 cents for enough to make five gallons of the solution. For this strong solution can then be added to five gallons of water or pasta, as may be deemed validable — Exchange.
Insult Knowledge.
One of the things that a gardener can get ready during his busy time for the busy summer there is the small oil butter, or karone cream, that is no available against many millets and so easily applied. Professor Troutman recommends milk, and sour milk in perfume, as does not ferment lactation but soap in preferred by some. About twice an hour oil is milk in need, and they are allowed visibly together for fifteen or forty-five minutes, or until the liquid suddenly thickens into a glistening butter quite homogeneous, mixing completely and slowly with water. If applied a little while stirring, and keeping any length of time in a closed one, no fire oil appears productive.
If any us should be criminally careless and introduce on trees or shrubs the dread white scale, it would be severe, though not unbearable blow to the fruit industry of this section.
Mr Collins advises dipping the trees imported in some disinfecting solution, and adds "do not dip the roots," or words to that effect. In this I believe he has made a grave mistake. It has long been known that deciduous trees when dormant may be safely dipped roots and all, in strong solutions of concentrated lysine known with out any damage to the tree. I refer to corrosive sublimate mercury — which I have used in the proportion of one ounce to five gallons of water, or about 1 to 600, and have left the trees in the solution about two minutes. They have shown no tendency to drop their leaves, although it is a fortnight since they were treated.
For growing trees that has scale I prefer to use pasta in which the corrosive sublimate has been dissolved, and spray that on the affected tree. It is not necessary to trim back the tree before spraying, though the leaves may fall after the application, which should be repeated in five or six weeks to make assurance doubly sure.
I have had no experience with white scale, though I believe experiments will be made once with this remedy; but on the red and brown varieties it acts like a charm. It has also marked advantage inasmuch as the ground under the tree becomes saturated with the solution, so that no scale can live in it, and thus out of their spread by crawling from tree to tree, the method which I believe they must practice in their travels.
As this remedy is exceedingly poisonous and is not easily dissolved in water alone, it would be well to have a 25 per cent solution prepared by a dragnet, who will use mixtures of ammonia for the purpose.
Mr Rose of this place prepare such a solution for me at a cost of about 20 cents for enough to make five gallons of the solution. For this strong solution can then be added to five gallons of water or pasta, as may be deemed validable — Exchange.
Insult Knowledge.
One of the things that a gardener can get ready during his busy time for the busy summer there is the small oil butter, or karone cream, that is no available against many millets and so easily applied. Professor Troutman recommends milk, and sour milk in perfume, as does not ferment lactation but soap in preferred by some. About twice an hour oil is milk in need, and they are allowed visibly together for fifteen or forty-five minutes, or until the liquid suddenly thickens into a glistening butter quite homogeneous, mixing completely and slowly with water. If applied a little while stirring, and keeping any length of time in a closed one, no fire oil appears productive.
If any us should be criminally careless and introduce on trees or shrubs the dread white scale, it would be severe, though not unbearable blow to the fruit industry of this section.
Mr Collins advises dipping the trees imported in some disinfecting solution, and adds "do not dip the roots," or words to that effect. In this I believe he has made a grave mistake. It has long been known that deciduous trees when dormant may be safely dipped roots and all, in strong solutions of concentrated lysine known with out any damage to the tree. I refer to corrosive sublimate mercury — which I have used in the proportion of one ounce to five gallons of water, or about 1 to 600, and have left the trees in the solution about two minutes. They have shown no tendency to drop their leaves, although it is a fortnight since they were treated.
For growing trees that has scale I prefer to use pasta in which the corrosive sublimate has been dissolved, and spray that on the affected tree. It is not necessary to trim back the tree before spraying through its branches over all church buildings. The only certain thing it that media branch of this rose bush is now larger than a man's body.
Another artesian wall has been struck at Sonoma. The water flows over 8-16 inch pipe at the rate of 36-000 gallons per twenty-four hours. This is the fourth artesian wall that has been struck inside the incorporated limits within past year.
A Terrible Misfortune.
It is a calamity of the dirtiest kind to admit that one's physical energies are failing in the prime of life — to feel more nervous; more dispirited; weaker over day. Yet this is the unhappy lot of hundreds who surround us. A source of renewed strength which science approves; in behalf of which multitudes of the debilitated have and are every day tasting; and which in countless instances sapped weakness and infirmity and long unbenefited by our means; surely commends itself to all who need a tonic.
Hostetter's Stomach Bittern is such a medicine — pure botanical nothing to the nerves; promote of digestion and a fertilizer of the blood.
Dysphepia and nervinemen—the first cause—a second consequence lack of stamina —depart when a course-of-the-Bitters tried is tried. All forms of malaria diseases,rheumatism,kidney and bladder trouble,costimipati-nand biliousness are annihilated by this standard family medicine.
M.J.BUNDY,Santa Ana is sellingthe best Seren Wife Cloth by the holt at 2% per square foot; cut into any length at 2½ feet Other Hardware in proportion Do not fail to get his prices before buying.a12-t
Epiphanieble Millinery and Hats
Miss Charla Monemann desires to callthe attentionofthe ladiesof Ambalam and vicinitytothe factthatshehas hardly receiveda superscriptionofHatsandlatestMillinery.Callandexaminebeforepurchasingwherehere.