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anaheim-gazette 1890-02-20

1890-02-20 · Anaheim Gazette · page 1 of 4 · OCR glm-ocr
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VOLUME XX. ANAHEIM, C. LODGE MEETINGS. ANAHEIM LODGE, NO. 27, P. & A. M. Old regular meetings on the Monday preceding the full moon in such nojourning brethren in good standing are cordially invited to attend. PHILIP DAVIS, W. M. J. GARDNER, Secretary. EVERGREEN COUNCIL, AMERICAN LEGION Honor. Meets second and fourth Wednesday of month at 8 P.M. F. C. SMYTHK, C. KIRPAL, Secretary. Commander ANAHEIM COURT, I.O.F. MEETS SECOND and third Fridays of each month. Honka, B. O WOOD, Financial Secretary. Chief Manager MALVERN MILL POST, NO. 131, G. A. R. Meets at I.O.O F. Hall, Los Angeles street, every fourth Saturday of each month. J. B McCULLEIGH, P. C. R. McDOWELL, Adjutant. ORDER CHOSEN FRIENDS MEETS THE FIRST and third Saturday evenings in each month at 8 P.M. Old Fallows' Hall. WM M McFADDEN, Counsellor. L. A White, Secretary. ANAHEIM LODGE, NO. 190, I.O.O F. REGUments every Tuesday evening. Visiting are always welcome. J. J. DYER, N. O. K HARKAS, Secretary. ANAHEIM LODGE, NO. 25, A.O.U.W. MEETings on the first and fourth Friday of every S.A. DENNIS, M.W. GRINHAW, Secretary. OPPEUS LODGE, NO. 27, I.O.O F. MEETS Every Thursday at 8 P.M. at Old Fallows' Hall. ROBERT MENZEL, N. O. MAI NEALSON, Secretary. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. J. H BULLARD, A.B., M.D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. and Residence, corner Hermaine and Chartres strecthe, near Planters' Hotel. OFFICE HOURS: 4:20 a.m.; 12 to 1:30, and 6 to 7:30 p.m. RICHARD MELROSE, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. MISCELLANEOUS. The New Dry Goods Store WE ARE SELLING A FULL LINE OF Dress Goods, Domestics Ladies' and Gents' Furnishing Goods & Hostess NOTIONS, and other Articles too Numerous to Mention Prices Lower than Ever Known Before in ANAHEIM! Bring your money to us if you want extra value. TORREY & TOWN. Kroeger's Block, Anaheim, Removed--Backs' Buildi PROFESSIONAL CARDS. J. H BULLARD, A.B., M.D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. and Residence, corner Hermine and Chartres street, near Planters' Hotel. OFFICE HOURS: 12 to 1:30, and 8 to 7:30 p.m. RICHARD MELROSE, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. AND NOTARY PUBLIC. Anaheim, Cal. Special attention given to PROBATE matters. J. LEE BURTON, ARCHITECT, West Second Street, Los Angeles, Cal. Rooms 27 & 28 Newell Block. SO WOOD, ARCHITECT AND ENGINEER, NAHEIM, CAL. CHARLES PAMPERL, Dealer in... HARDWARE, CROCKERY, and HOUSE-FURNISHING GOODS Angeles street, Anaheim. L. OUNTHER, PIONEER BOOT & SHOE MAKER. Allele and Los Angeles streets. GEOKE BAUER, BOOT AND SHOE MAKER. Angleshire street, Anaheim. Mining and repairing at the lowest cash price. All work promptly attended to. All work guaranteed. SAVAGE & STROBEL Blacksmithing, General Jobbing, Horse-Shoeing, Eto. FULLERTON, CAL. All work promptly attended to, and satisfaction guaranteed. Richard Spoerl, GUNSMITH and MACHINIST Dealer in Guns, Revolvers and AMMUNITION. Heronsome Oil at Los Angeles prices. Repairing of SEWING MACHINES OF ANY KIND. FRANTZ'S BARBER SHOP. First-Class Style. BATHS, - 25 Cts. PLEASE GIVE ME A CALL. FRANTZ, Prop., opp. P. O., Center St GRIST MILL. I make a specialty of Rolling Barlow and Shelling. Bring your money to us if you want extra value. TORREY & TOWN. Kroeger's Block, Anaheim, Removed--Backs' Buildi SALE! SALE! SALE! — AT — A. T. WALLOP CLEARANCE SALE! I AM KEEPING UP WITH THE TIMES. SELLING OF MY LARGE STOCK OF DRY GOODS, NOTIONS FANCY ARTICLES, LADIES' UNDERWEAR, HATS, AND SHOES, ETC., TO DO ONLY AN Exclusive : Grocery : Tr — COME AND GET — GOOD BARGAINS REDUCED PRICE Times are hard and I will sell close for cash or A Rare Opportunity CLOSING OUT DRESS GOODS, FANCY GOODS LADIES' AND CHILDREN'S SHOE At 15 Per Cent Below Cost ! Every Article Marked in Plain Figu HIPPOLYTE CAHE FAIRVIEW STORE. SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT SEWING MACHINES OF ANY KIND. FRANTZ'S BARBER SHOP. First-Class Style. BATHS, - 25 Cts. PLEASE GIVE ME A CALL. FRANTZ, Prop., opp P. O., Center St. GRIST MILL. I make a specialty of Rolling Barley and Shelling Corn. Located at the old Drayfus winery. CENTER STREET, COR. OF EAST. The Mill will be running Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sundays. J.P. DES GRANGES. ANNUAL ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE ANAHEIM Pharmacy We are again able to present to you our Large Book of Fancy Stationery and Plush Goods, such as Toilet cases, mannequins sets, Shaving Sets, Euchre sets in pluhh, and a large variety of the Finest and most delicate Perfumes from the most popular manufacturers. We have also added a full line of Holiday books, both ornamental and useful. Our Drug Department is completely refitted and we keep constantly on hand Park Davis & Co. Fluid District and Wyath's celebrated Elixirs and Composed Tablets which for uniformity of dose and accuracy of strength are acknowledged by all medical men to be unexcelled. We intend to keep every thing our trade demands in patent medicines. Also make a Specialty of Sitting Shoulder Braces and Trusses, no extra charge. A full line on hand, Our prescription clerk is perfectly reliable and will set up prescriptions accurately. Having received a most generous patronage in the past we solicit its further conformance, and are determined to please Very truly years. D. W. HUNT, M. D. DR. G. H. BAILEY, Central Pharmacy. ANAHEIM, CAL. An Entire New Stock of Drugs and Medicines. MATERIAL DISPENSING OF PRESCRIPTIONS AT LOWEST PRICES. We Carry a Complete Stock of ... Fancy Soaps, Toilet Articles, and the Latest Fashionable Perfumes, SPONGES, CHAMOIS, & STATIONERY, PATENT MEDICINES, ETC. Every Article Marked in Plain Figures HIPPOLYTE CAHEL FAIRVIEW STORE. SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT I take pleasure in announcing that prepared to meet the wants of the public an assortment of Boots, Shoes, Hats, Clothing, Dry G GROCERIES AND GENERAL MERCHANDIS I sell every article on its merits. Call and see for yourself, STORE ON BROADWAY, One-half mile west Southern Pacific Railroad Depot, near Fair M. H. CHEESEMAN PLANTERS' HOTEL Center Street, Anaheim, Cal N. H. MITCHELL, PROP. Headquarters for Commercial Trav ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1890. Goods Store. FULL LINE OF Domestics, ing Goods & Hosiery, Numerous to Mention at Ever Known AHEIM! you want extra value. TOWN. Anaheim, Cal. ks' Building The Weekly Gazette. Established 1870. SUBSCRIPTION, - 63 Per Year. 15 months. 75 Parable in variably in advance. Transactions Advertising: SPACE 1 week 2 weeks 3 weeks 4 weeks One square ... $1.00 Two squares ... $2.00 Three squares ... $3.00 Four squares ... $4.00 Customary Reductions on above rates will be made on advertisements running for longer periods. Usual discounts on large advertisements. The Gazette is issued every Thursday morning, and sent to subscribers by the early mails. It is delivered by carrier in Anaheim on the morning of publication. Entered at the Anaheim Postoffice as second-class master. Items of news and correspondence on all line subjects are solicited by the editor. Be 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. CRITICISING A PICTURE. Suggestions to the Painter of George and the Cherry Tree. "Your charge against Mr. Barker,the artist here," said the judge, "is amount and battery, I believe." "Yes, sir." "And your name is——" "Potts; I am art critic of The Weekly Spy." "State your case." "I called at Mr. Barker's studio upon his invitation to see his great picture, just finished, of George Washington cutting down the ORANGE COUNTY PROTESTS. Expenditures of the Partition Commission Committed Excuse. The following correspondence between the Supervisors of Orange and Los Angeles counties in self-explanatory: SANTA ANA, January 28, 1890. To the Honorable Board of Supervisors of Los Angeles county, Cal. GENTLEMAN: By order of the Board of Supervisors of Orange county, California, I am directed to send you the following open letter, which was adopted by our board at their meeting on January 27th and made a part of our minutes. To the Honorable Board of Supervisors of Los Angeles, Cal: The Board of Supervisors of Orange county, Cal., beg leave to call your attention to the following points in reference to the joint commission: First—Our Chairman, W. H. Spargeon, earnestly urged before the joint session of the two Boards of Supervisors, December 4, 1889, that the settlement of partition be made as speedily as possible and with the least expense. Second—The motion made by our chairman at the same joint session was to the effect that the members of the commission be allowed compensation for time actually employed. Third—The Orange County bill expressly states that "the fall number of commissioners shall be necessary to constitute a quorum for the transaction of business." Fourth—The motion by Supervisor Davis, after the close of the joint session, that the Los Angeles county Board of Supervisors pay all expenses of the commission and then call upon Orange county for its half, does not bind the Board of Supervisors of Orange county to accept the bills without scrutiny, or to allow unjust damage. In the light of the foregoing facts and conclusions, the bills of the expenses incurred by this commission for the month of Decem- TOWN. Anaheim, Cal. k's' Building SALE! BLOP'S SALE! MERY: Trade. GET — DUCED PRICES close for cash or trade. fortunity! G OUT CY GOODS, REN'S SHOES! below Cost! in Plain Figures! CAHEN. STORE. CRITICISING A PICTURE. Suggestions to the Painter of George and the Cherry Tree. "Your charge against Mr. Barker, the artist here," said the judge, "is amault and battery, I believe." "Yes, air." "And your name is——" "Potts; I am art critic of The Weekly Spy." "State your case." "I called at Mr. Barker's studio upon his invitation to see his great picture, just finished, of George Washington cutting down the cherry tree with his hatchet. Mr. Barker was expecting to sell it for $10,000. He asked me what I thought of it; and after I had pointed out his mistake, in turning the head of the hatchet round so that George was cutting the tree down with the hammer end I asked him why he had foreshortened George's leg so as to make it look as if his left foot was upon the mountain on the other side of the river." "Did Mr. Barker take it kindly?" asked the Judge. "Well, he looked a little glum, that's all. And then when I asked him why he put the guinea pig up in the tree and why he painted the guinea pig with horns, he said that it was not a guinea pig, but a cow, and that it was not in the tree, but in the background. Then I said that if I had been painting George Washington I should not have given him the complexion of a new brick. I should not have given him two thumbs on each hand, and I should have tried not to slew his right eye round so that he could see round the back of his head to his left ear. And Barker said, 'Oh, wouldn't you Sarcastic, you know, sir; and I said, 'No, I wouldn't, and I wouldn't have painted oak leaves on a cherry tree, and I wouldn't have left the spectator in doubt as to whether the figure off by the woods was a factory chimney or a steamboat, or George Washington's father taking a smoke.'" "Which was it?" asked the Judge. "I don't know; nobody will ever know. So Barker asked me what I'd advise him to do, and I told him I thought the best chance was to abandon the Washington idea and fix the thing up somehow to represent 'The boy who stood on the burning deck.' I told him he might paint the grass red to represent the names, and daub over the tree so it would look like the mast, and pull George's foot to this side of the river, so it's would rest somehow on the burning deck, and maybe he might reconstruct that factory chimney, or whatever it was, and make is the captain, while he could arrange the guinea pig to do for the captain's dog." "Did he agree?" "He said the idea didn't strike him. So then I suggested that he might turn it into Columbus discovering America. Let George stand for Columbus and the tree be turned into a native and the hatchet be turned into a flag, while the mountain in the background would answer for the rolling billows of the ocean. He said he'd be banged if he would. So I mentioned that it might perhaps pass for 'The Execution of Mary Queen of Scots.' Put George in black for the headsman, bend over the tree and put a frock on it for Mary; let the hatchet stand and work in the guinea pig and the factory chimney as mourners. Just as I had got the words out of my mouth Barker knocked me clean through the picture. My head tore out Washington's near leg and my right foot carried away about four miles of the river. We had it over and over on the floor for awhile, and finally Barker got the best of ma. I am taking the law of him allowed compensation for time actually employed. Third—The Orange County bill expressly states that "the fall number of commissioners shall be necessary to constitute a quorum for the transaction of business." Fourth—The motion by Supervisor Davis, after the close of the joint session, that the Los Angeles county Board of Supervisors pay all expenses of the commission and then call upon Orange county for its half, does not bind the Board of Supervisors of Orange county to accept the bills without scrutiny, or to allow unjust damage. In the light of the foregoing facts and conclusions, the bills of the expenses incurred by this commission for the month of December, 1889, and allowed by your honorable body, present some serious points, among which may be mentioned the following: The commission has utterly disregarded our wish, previously expressed, for an economical adjustment of affairs, as is evidenced by the bill for clerical service, $334, and the bill for furniture, etc., $411 90. Two members of the commission have charged for service not previously authorized by the full commission, and which, in our judgment, the commission has no power to authorize—viz.: for superintending work, $208. Three members have charged per diem for regular services when there was no lawful meeting, five days in all, $40. Any meeting held, or business transacted without a quorum, besides being illegal and entailing unnecessary expense, is an injustice to the county not represented wholly in each meeting or business. The whole amount of the expenses of the commission during one month, only five days of which were considered in regular session, $1,153 90 in all, may well arouse grave fears as to whether there will be anything to divide after the commission is through. For these reasons we respectfully refer back these claims and demands for your consideration. W. H. SPURGEON, Chairman Board of Supervisors of Orange County. The Los Angeles county board sends the following reply: Office of the Board of Supervisors of Los Angeles county, February 11, 1890. To The Honorable Board of Supervisors of Orange county, Cal.: Your communication of January 28, 1890, addressed to this board has been received and carefully considered. It is the earnest desire of the Board of Supervisors of Los Angeles county, equally with yourselves, that the settlement between the two counties should be made speedily and with the least possible expenditure. It is not believed, however, that economy in expenditure should be carried so far as to demand from the commissioners or from the clerical force employed under them service without proper and reasonable compensation thereof. For the latter reason, and in order to avoid litigation in the event of a difference of opinion between the commissioners and the Board of Supervisors of two counties relative to salary, this board requested you to meet with us in joint session in order that this question of compensation (said question being the only matter in which the act providing for the commission was silent) might be determined in advance of the commencement of work. This meeting was held, and as shown by our minutes of said joint session, it was determined that "$3 per diem and actual expenses while on duty" was in the opinion of the Boards of Supervisors of both counties a proper and reasonable compensation for the commission- What I sho forecast o established demonstration can long upon a sub of the people published b from a gen first fifty y the country last thirty y growing by ratio. The pr印by less than 2 gregates m the rest o f one threethis countr their 65,000 half the thirty yeas remainder. That is i Nationalize count for th great corporat dwarf States, and al legislata with snapie our PresiThere are i n and in ordine. The speci of great ric h methods b honesty. The wealth int into th e mea Industria. Our new o n tions deepe the means. We are w ill be no o n ting on their workers an d ent on th e coming o v The condition produced i n We have but one pla n in th e party. If you w u shut up yo ur home and mo ny powe fr om th e ri s stronger fo r be too late. The republic is still possi The Natio nal co-oper t o bring ba lly they propos e trial system o f th e peop le guarantee. Of citizen principles , plied in th e ultimately. We dema nt with th e p eritive party; counter-reveal. We prop en ceelessless in all of th e p eri cti ng. In propo into a native and the hatchet be turned into a flag, while the mountain in the background would answer for the rolling billows of the ocean. He said he'd be hanged if he would. So I mentioned that it might perhaps pass for 'The Execution of Mary Queen of Scotland.' Put George in black for the headman, bend over the tree and put a frock on it for Mary; let the hatchet stand and work in the guinea pig and the factory chimney as mourners. Just as I had got the words out of my mouth Barker knocked me clean through the picture. My head tore out Washington's near log and my right foot carried away about four miles of the river. We had it over and over on the floor for awhile, and finally Barker got the best of me. I am taking the law of him in the interests of justice and high art." So Barker was bound over to keep the peace and Mr. Potts went down to the office of The Spy to write up his criticism.—New York Mercury. Wedded to His Half Sister. Jacob Wells, a farmer living in Payette county, Ala., discovered, after four years of happy wedded life, that his wife is his half sister. Wells' father, who lived at Sparta, Ga., was killed in the war. About twenty-five years ago Mrs. Wells married a man named Hogue. Young Wells, then about 12 years old, did not like his stepfather and ran away from home. He finally drifted to Payette county, Ala., worked a number of years as a farmer's laborer and in time bought a small farm of his own. Mrs. Hogue's mother died soon after the birth of a child by her second husband, and the child, a girl, was cared for by relations of the father's family named Smith. Two years later Hogue died, and his daughter grew up in the Smith family, and was always known as Dora Smith. Five years ago the family moved to Payette county, and there the young lady met her half brother Wells. Even Wells most intimate friends knew nothing of his early history, and he had never communicated with his relatives in Georgia. Wells and Miss Smith, as she was known, fell in love at first sight and were soon married. They have one child, a year old, and only discovered their relationship a few days ago by a chance word dropped by the wife. They were in a quandary for a time, but have decided to continue to live as man and wife. Go to A. T. Wallop for best Mocha and Java coffee. Bents & Steadman, of the City Meat Market, do all of their killing at their new slaughter house. Avery and Everhardy's Lard comes in plain tin cans. Bay no Lard, represented as ourn that is sold in stamped package. April 18th Attention is called to the advertisement of A. T. Wallop. His store is stocked with a comprehensive line of goods. Penance therefor. For the latter reason, and in order to avoid litigation in the event of a difference of opinion between the commissioners and the Board of Supervisors of the two counties relative to salary, this board requested you to meet with us in joint session in order that this question of compensation (said question being the only matter in which the act providing for the commission was silent) might be determined in advance of the commencement of work. This meeting was held, and as shown by our minutes of said joint session, it was determined that "$3 per diem and actual expenses while on duty" was in the opinion of the Boards of Supervisors of both counties a proper and reasonable compensation for the commissioners, and it was further determined that for such etheral force as it was necessary for the commission to employ there should be paid such amounts as were paid by this board for similar service. According to the understanding of the law creating the commission of the Boards of Supervisors of the two counties have no control over the action of the commission other than the general authority belonging to a Board of Supervisors—viz.: that of impeaching and removing corrupt or incompetent officials. This Board of Supervisors has no charges to present against the present commission. Its work has been done, thus far, expeditionally and well, and we believe that the commission is actuated by the same desire as has been expressed by yourselves, that settlement between the two counties should be made expediently and with the least possible expense consistent with a wise business judgment. The bills for work during December and for miscellaneous items, presented to your board, and which have been paid by this board were approved, in writing: by the president and secretary of the Board of Commissioners, and we are informed that they were passed and approved by a full board, at one of its "legal" sessions. We must assume, therefore, unless the converse can be more clearly shown than appears in your communication, that their accounts are just and true. We notice in your communication a statement which might be construed as intended to mollest the public. The expression "The bill for furniture, etc., $111 $0," might be considered without a more perfect knowledge of the items, as exaggeration. Your board however, was furnished with an itemized statement, and in said statement the bill for furniture comprised only two items, as follows: Los Angeles Furniture Company.....$112 50 Waltown & Washkalton.....160 00 The balance of the amount quoted, nearly $200, being for stationery, maps, abstract or records, and several smaller items absolutely necessary for the use of the commissioners. This board will not object to a segregation of the amounts expanded for furnishings; viz.: $213, and if desired by you, will assume this debt in fall, provided Orange county will pennance therefor. For the latter reason, and in order to avoid litigation in the event of a difference of opinion between the commissioners and the Board of Supervisors of the two counties relative to salary, this board requested you to meet with us in joint session in order that this question of compensation (said question being the only matter in which the act providing for the commission was silent) might be determined in advance of the commencement of work. This meeting was held, and as shown by our minutes of said joint session, it was determined that "$3 per diem and actual expenses while on duty" was in the opinion of the Boards of Supervisors of both counties a proper and reasonable compensation for the commissioners, and it was further determined that for such etheral force as it was necessary for the commission to employ there should be paid such amounts as were paid by this board for similar service. According to the understanding of the law creating the commission of the Boards of Supervisors of the two counties have no control over the action of the commission other than the general authority belonging to a Board of Supervisors—viz.: that of impeaching and removing corrupt or incompetent officials. This Board of Supervisors has no charges to present against the present commission. Its work has been done, thus far, expeditionally and well, and we believe that the commission is actuated by the same desire as has been expressed by yourselves, that settlement between the two counties should be made expediently and with the least possible expense consistent with a wise business judgment. The bills for work during December and for miscellaneous items, presented to your board, and which have been paid by this board were approved, in writing: by the president and secretary of the Board of Commissioners, and we are informed that they were passed and approved by a full board, at one of its "legal" sessions. We must assume, therefore, unless the converse can be more clearly shown than appears in your communication, that their accounts are just and true. We notice in your communication a statement which might be construed as intended to mollest the public. The expression "The bill for furniture, etc., $111 $0," might be considered without a more perfect knowledge of the items, as exaggeration. Your board however, was furnished with an itemized statement, and in said statement the bill for furniture comprised only two items, as follows: Los Angeles Furniture Company.....$112 50 Waltown & Washkalton.....160 00 The balance of the amount quoted, nearly $200, being for stationery, maps, abstract or records, and several smaller items absolutely necessary for the use of the commissioners, This board will not object to a segregation of the amounts expanded for furnishings; viz.: $213, and if desired by you, will assume this debt in fall, provided Orange county will pennance therefor. For the latter reason, and in order to avoid litigation in the event of a difference of opinion between the commissioners and the Board of Supervisors of the two counties relative to salary, this board requested you to meet with us in joint session in order that this question of compensation (said question being the only matter in which the act providing for the commission was silent) might be determined in advance of the commencement of work. This meeting was held, and as shown by our minutes of said joint session, it was determined that "$3 per diem and actual expenses while on duty" was in the opinion of the Boards of Supervisors of both counties a proper and reasonable compensation for the commissioners, and it was further determined that for such etheral force as it was necessary for the commission to employ there should be paid such amounts as were paid by this board for similar service. According to the understanding of the law creating the commission of the Boards of Supervisors of the two counties have no control over the action of the commission other than the general authority belonging to a Board of Supervisors—viz.: that of impeaching and removing corrupt or incompetent officials. This Board of Supervisors has no charges to present against the present commission. Its work has been done, thus far, expeditionally and well, and we believe that the commission is actuated by the same desire as has been expressed by yourselves, that settlement between the two counties should be made expediently and with the least possible expense consistent with a wise business judgment. The people shall understand all given to them readers thier pendence, withtheppe employees, tisedandthesimiliedandthegovernment. First,the nationalist realism. The people shall understand all given to them readers thier pendence, withtheppe employees, tisedandthesimiliedandthegovernment. First,the nationalist realism. The people shall understand all given to them readers thier pendence, withtheppe employees, tisedandthesimiliedandthegovernment. First,the nationalist realism. The people shall understand all given to them readers thier pendence, withtheppe employees, tisedandthesimiliedandthegovernment. Meanwhile wait we may be more poor to att PROTECTS. Supervisors of the Board of Supervisors of Los Angeles county, I follow opening by our board at 7th and made a point session on December 4, of partition be and with the bill expressly of commission institute a quorum supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Supervisor Davis, question that the Superrior Davis, question that the Superrior Davis, question that the Superrior Davis, question that the Superrior Davis, question that the Superrior Davis, question that the Superrior Davis, question that the Superrior Davis, question that the Superrior Davis, question that the Superrior Davis, question that the Superrior Davis, question that the Superrior Davis, question that the Superrior Davis, question that the Superrior Davis, question that the Superrior Davis, question that the Superrior Davis, question that the superiority in questions. We have in this past protested against division of Los Angeles county believing it to be unwise and detrimental to the great interest of its citizens. Our county has had these expenditures foregone upon it; and it is our believe that in equity, the entire amount necessary to make this settlement should be paid by Orange county. But we have agreed with your board perhaps unwisely to advance money from month to month and to pay one-half of the expenditure; this board still offers to perform its part of the agreement; but will insist upon a prompt complaint by your board with the covenant made by you. We therefore expect that the money advanced by Los Angeles county to Orange county during the month of December for expenses of the Commissioners in Partition will be paid. By order of the Board of Supervisors of Los Angeles county. S.M.Parry, Chairman of the Board. Bellamy's speech. Following is a report of Edward Bellamy's speech delivered in Boston on the 18th ultimo. The speaker was frequently interrupted with applause. Ladies and gentlemen: The Nationalists of the United States may at some future time make a formal statement of purpose. What I shall say to-night is the opinion and forecast of an individual. No fact is better established by experience or more easily demonstrable by reason than no republic can long exist unless a substantial equality in the condition of citizens prevails. One hundred years ago this Republic was founded upon a substantial equality in the condition of people. It was not on equality established by law. But a condition resulting from a general state of poverty. For the first fifty years increase in wealth of the country was gradual. But within last thirty years it has multiplied; no longer growing by arithmetical, but by geometrical limit, be provided under proper guard by the State, and with this provision employment of children should be unconditionally forbidden. The immigration of the ignorant and criminal clauses should be prevented. Men now past middle age are likely to see in Europe last throne fall, and in America first complete republic arise—a republic at once political, industrial and social. What we propose is but the fuller development of the same experiment which our fathers undertook. The Nationalist movement in the legitimate heir of the spirit of '76. Guided by that spirit, we cannot fail. FARM NOTES. The gathering of robins in Livermore valley is unparalleled. They are present everywhere by thousands, and robin pot-pies is becoming a common article of diet among people. A great many peanuts will be planted on the Chino ranch this year. Experiments made last season by Mansa Powers Kimble and others were encouraging. Mansa Hines and Abplenalp recently from Santa Ana; instead to plant ten acres of peanuts on a tract joining the town on the south. The largest single crop grown on one acre in 1889 were: Corn; 253 bushels of shallied corn; green weight; which shrank to 239 bushels when kiln-dried; potatoes; 738 bushels; oats; 135 bushels; wheat; 80 bushels. These crops are the largest ever secured from one acre under circumstances that guarantee their accuracy. There were grown in a prizecrop competition. It is becoming evident that the luck of this wine people has changed for the better. This is indicated by the announcement of the Pacific Mail Steamship Company of a reduction on the transportation rate via Panama for wine in wood to 5 cents. The original figure was 8 cents per gallon; and a cut of 3 cents per gallon represents so much added value to our wines in New York. by bill expressly of commission institute a quorum. Supervisor Davis, discussion that the Supervisors division and then its half, does monitors of Orange without scrutiny, facts and concessions incurred death of Decemour your honorable points, among following: early disregarded within an ecuair, as is ecuair service, $334, $411 90. Commission have seriously authorised which, in has no power attending work, per no diem for was no lawful transactions illegal and, is an injurious wholly in expenses of the death, only five treated in regular well arouse will be any commission is perfectly referenda for your re-Supervisor, monitors of Orange Board sends the Supervisors of Los 1890. Supervisors of January 28, 1890, been received the Board of county, equally settlement be made possible expend however, that had carried so commissioners or used under them reasonable complaint reason, in the event the com- Supervisors to salary, this with us in joint motion of comp. the only mat for the com-determined in work. This turn by our min- determined expenses while of the Boards of a proper and the commissiontime make a formal statement of purpose. What I shall say to-night is the opinion and forecast of an individual. No fact is better established by experience or more easily demonstrable by reason than that no republic can long exist unless a substantial equality in the condition of citizens prevails. One hundred years ago this Republic was founded upon a substantial equality in the condition of the people. It was not on equality established by law. But a condition resulting from a general state of poverty. For the first fifty years the increase in the wealth of the country was gradual. But within the last thirty years it has multiplied, no longer growing by arithmetical, but by geometrical ratio. This wealth has been mainly appropriated by a small class. The property of less than 2,000 men in the United States aggregates more than the total possession of the rest of the people. Within 100 years one three-hundredth part of the people of this country have succeeded in freezing out their 65,000,000 partners as to more half the assets of the concern, and within thirty years they will have secured the remainder. That is the situation which has created Nationalism. Those are the facts which account for the rapidity of its spread. The great corporations and combinations of capital dwarf our municipalities, overstop our States, and are able to dictate to our national legislature. Our elections are tainted with suspicions of frauds, and the titles of our Presidents are no longer indisputable. There are inhuman contrasts of cruel want and inordinate luxury. The spectacle presented in many instances of great riches notoriously won by corrupt methods has undermined the foundation of honesty. It is justly believed that much of the wealth of to-day could not stand inquiry into the means of its getting. Industrially the condition is deplorable. Our new order of nobility is laying foundations deep by obtaining absolute mastery of the means of support of the people. We are approaching a time when there will be no class between the very rich, living on their capital, and the mass of wage-workers and salaried men absolutely dependent on the former. The professions are becoming overcrowded to the starvation point. The condition of Ireland bids fair to be reproduced in the far West. We have reached the time where there is but one place for the young man, and that is in the party of radical social form. If you would learn how republics perish, shut up your insult histories of Greece and Rome and look about you. In time the money power is bound to seek protection from the rising discontent of the masses in a stronger form of Government. Then it will be too late to resist. Now it is not too late. The republic is being taken from us, but it is still possible to bring it back. The Nationalists of the United States ask the co-operation of their fellow-countrymen to bring back the republic. To that end they propose a reorganization of the industrial system which shall restore the equality of the people and secure it by a perpetual guarantee. To secure the economic equality of citizens we propose no new or strange principles, but the exercise of a power implied in the very idea of republicanism as ultimately necessary to its preservation. We demand that the republic keep faith with the people. We are the true conservative party; we are not revolutionists, but counter-revolutionists. We propose to substitute for the present ceaseless industrial civil war a partnership of all the people, a joint stock company. In proposing this course we are not ani- in 1889 were: Corn, 255 bushels of shallown corn, green weight, which shrank to 239 bushels when kiln-dried; potatoes, 738 bushels; oats, 135 bushels; wheat, 80 bushels. These crops are the largest ever secured from one acre under circumstances that guarantee their accuracy. There were grown in a prize-crop competition. It is becoming evident that the luck of the wine people has changed for the better. This is indicated by the announcement of the Pacific Mail Steamship Company of a reduction on the transportation rates via Panama for wine in wood to 5 cents. The original figure was 8 cents per gallon, and a cut of 3 cents per gallon represents so much added value to our wines in New York. The good news comes that the mysterious vine disease which has baffled all the experts in their efforts to stay its ravages, apparently now of its own notion, is disappearing from the southern counties. It may eventually be decoded that, like teething with babies, it was one of the diseases of vine childhood, to disappear when the land has been longer tillled and the vine has grown more mature.—Kern county paper. In passing through some of the smaller towns one occasionally observes new noticees, one Ranch Butter for Sale," "California Poultry and Eggs for Sale," where here-tofore is Iowa and Kansas butter, eggs and poultry, etc. We take this as meaning that the country is producing better than it did, and that dealers are now endeavoring to encourage our people to supply local markets with kind of articles which have bitherto been brought into the country from east of the Rocky Mountains. A student, who failed to graduate at the University of California, and is now employed both on an evening journal and a trade paper in San Francisco, has lately been revenging himself for fancied grievance by attacking Professor Hilgard and the Agricultural Department of the University. He tells of over $30,000 being spent by the State for the education of five students in the Agricultural Department. If he had looked into the matter he would have found over fifty students registered in the department named, and also that the United States pays $15,000 of the stated expenses of the department for the purpose of maintaining special experiment stations. The strawsonizer, named from the inventor, is a new English farm machine for distributing insectides, seeds and manures. In a trial of its powers held at the Queen's Flemish farm at Windsor, after sewing grain, lime, salt and other substances, the machine sprayed two gallons of kerosene over one acre of land so perfectly that every inch appeared to be covered. It then sent a fine dense spray twenty feet high on each side of it, so that if the machine had been passing down the alleys of a hop garden or orchard the vines or trees would have been completely covered. It is believed that the codlin moth trouble may be entirely swept away by this latest addition to agricultural machinery. An excellent treatise on the smut of wheat and oats is published in Bulletin 11 of The Nebraska Station. The disease does not spread from plant to plant, or from field to field, but the infection always takes place at the time seed sprouts. No remedy can be applied after the grain is sown, but the disease can be prevented by sowing clean seed in a clean soil and covering well. If a farm is already infested, seed known to be purified by thoroughly wetting with a solution of blue vitrial, using one pound, or to bring back the republic. To that end they propose a reorganization of the industrial system which shall restore the equality of the people and secure it by a perpetual guarantee. To secure the economic equality of citizens we propose no new or strange principles, but the exercise of a power implied in the very idea of republicanism as ultimately necessary to its preservation. We demand that the republic keep faith with the people. We are the true conservative party; we are not revolutionists, but counter-revolutionists. We propose to substitute for the present ceaseless industrial civil war a partnership of all the people, a joint stock company. In proposing this course we are not animated by any sentiment of bitterness towards individuals or classes. In antagonizing the money power we antagonize not men, but a system. We advocate no rash or violent measures, or such as will produce any derangement of business or hardships to individuals. We aim to change the law by law, and constitution, if necessary, by constitutional methods. As to the order in which industry should be nationalized, priority should naturally be given to those the great wealth of which renders them perilous to legislature independence, to those which deal extortionately with the public, or oppressively with their employees, to those which are highly centralized and to those which can be readily assimilated by the existing department of the government. First, the railroads; and other than Nationalist reasons can be given for their nationalism. The people are quite ready for the nationalization of the telegraph and telephone services, at their addition to the Postoffice. We propose that the express business be assumed by the Postoffice, according to the successful practice of other countries. We propose that coal-mining shall be nationalized, to the end that the mines be continually worked to their full capacity, coal furnished to commuters at cost, and the miners humanly dealt with. We propose that municipalities generally shall undertake the lighting, heating and street car services, to the end that such services be more cheaply rendered, that a fruitful source of political corruption be cut off and a large body of laborers be brought under better conditions. It is a distinct condition of Nationalism that as soon as any branch of business is nationalized the condition of the workers shall be improved. The heavy of labor will be shortened, the wages increased, the conditions of labor made safer and more humane. The work will be set free from wearing anxiety for the future by being made sure of employment while young and strong, and a pension when superannuated. Meanwhile, as a measure which cannot wait, we urge that such partial support as may be necessary to enable all children of the poor to attend school to the age of 17, at completely covered. It is believed that the codlin moth trouble may be entirely swept away by this latest addition to agricultural machinery. An excellent treatise on the smut of wheat and oats is published in "Bulletin 11 of the Nebraska Station." The disease does not spread from plant to plant, or from held to held, but the infection always takes place at the time the seed sprouts. No remedy can be applied after the grain is sown, but the disease can be prevented by sowing clean seed in a clean soil and covering well. If a farm is already infested, seed known to be purified by thoroughly wetting with a solution of blue vitriol, using one pound, or more, to a gallon of water, and either sow damp or first dry with plaster or slaked lime. Governor Brackett of Massachusetts, in his inaugural message to the Legislature the other day, was emphatic in warning the farmers of the old Bay State of the necessity for taking prompt and effective measures for the extermination of a new imported insect pest, which is feared, may prove as disastrous to the agricultural interests of the country as the Colorado beetle has been. It it the gypse moth, which, it is charged, has done a world of mischief in Europe. At present it is confined to the neighborhood of Medford, Mass., where last fall, millions of the moths appeared suddenly and attacked shade and fruit trees, as well as all kinds of shrubbery, leaving only twigs and trunks behind them. The Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce has lately rented a hall and will proceed at once to fit up a permanent exhibit of all products of Southern California. The exhibits will be placed around the walls and on long tables. All the Southern California counties outside of Los Angeles will have an equal space, while Los Angeles will have space for each section of the county that desires to come into the arrangement. Citrus fruits can be kept on exhibition sight months in the year, while canned fruits, wines, brandies, dried fruits and numerous other products can be kept there all the time. It is believed by the Board of Directors that one of the finest permanent exhibits ever established can be kept up. "Under the Maid and Seal of the Largest Orange in the State." Many favorable reports having been made, this Grange does not hesitate in pronouncing Farmers' Healing Liniment to be the best general healing preparation now in the market. It is a sure and speedy cure for barbed wire cuts, and all sores requiring healing; also for burns; it keeps flies away from any nose. Signed, J. D. Huffman, Secretary San Joaquin County Pemona Grange, No. 3, P. of M. Large bottles, $1; small, 50 cents. For sale by Wm. M. Higgins, druggist, Anaheim, Cal.