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anaheim-gazette 1890-04-03

1890-04-03 · Anaheim Gazette · page 1 of 4 · OCR glm-ocr
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VOLUME XX. ANAHEIM, LODGE MEETINGS. ANAHEIM LODGE, NO. 287, F.B.A.M. regular meetings on the Monday day during the full moon in each month; journing breeches in good weather are cordially invited to attend. PHILIP DAVIS, W. M. ANAHEIM LODGE, NO. 199, I.O.O.F. REGUlings every Tuesday evening. Visiting always welcome. J. J. DYER, M. O. W. HAWKES, Secretary. ANAHEIM LODGE, NO. 25, A.O.C.W. MEET the first and fourth Fridays of every Saturday at 8 P.M. at Old Yellow Hall. ROBERT MENZEL, M. G. ANAHEIM LODGE, NO. 27, I.O.O.F. MEETS Thursday at 8 P.M. at Old Yellow Hall. ROBERT MENZEL, M. G. ANAHEIM MILL POST, NO. 131, G.A.R. ANAHEIM O.O.F. Hall, Los Angeles street, every fourth Saturday of each month. J.B. McCULLCUGH, P.C. ANAHEIM DOWELL, Adjutant. OVER CHOSEN FRIENDS MEETS THE FIRST Saturday evenings in each month at 8 OLD FALLows' Hall. WM. M McFADDEN, Counsellor. ANAHEIM COUNCIL, AMERICAN LEGION Meets second and fourth Wednesday at 8 P.M. P.C. SMYTHE, Secretary. Cammafinder. ANAHEIM COURT, I.O.O.F. MEET'S SECOND and Fridays of each month. S.O. WOOD, National Secretary Chief Ranger PROFESSIONAL CARDS. J.H. BULLARD, A.B., M.D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Residence, corner Hermine and Chartres street, near Planters' Hotel. OFFICE HOURS: 12 to 1:30, and 6 to 7:30 p.m. G.E.R.O.E. BAUER. BOOT AND SHOE MAKER. ANAHEIM Burying and repairing at the lowest cash price. All work guaranteed. MISCELLANEOUS. The New Era Washing Machine WITH WHICH YOU CAN DO YOUR WASHING IN ONE fourth the time used before with any other machine, and wh does not tear your clothes, is for sale on the Installment Plan—one lar per month or for cash. Machine given on trial, and if not satitory you can return it. It will pay for itself in a few months, throthe saving in labor and by not tearing the clothes. A child can wor Price, $10 For Cash. A CARLOAD OF A NO. 1 EARLY ROSE POTATOES Just in from the East. Farmers can now change their seed and h good potatoes for sale. CALL AT STORE OF A. LANGENBERGER A Rare Opportunity! CLOSING OUT DRESS GOODS, FANCY GOODS, LADIES' AND CHILDREN'S SHOES At 15 Per Cent Below Cost! Every Article Marked in Plain Figures CLOSING OUT DRESS GOODS, FANCY GOODS, LADIES' AND CHILDREN'S SHOES At 15 Per Cent Below Cost! Every Article Marked in Plain Figures HIPPOLYTE CAHEN F. CRIST, MERCHANT TAILOIR Just received a complete assortment of FALL Goods of latest styles and fabrics, 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 to public to call and examine this stock. FRED CRIST. Notice to the Public AVING ESTABLISHED MYSELF IN THE NURSEER Business in Fullerton, I respectfully invite the public to call and examine my large stock of Ornamental and Deciduous Trees, which offer at the LOWEST EASTERN PRICES. My trees, roses, etc., are free from all insect pests and are warranted. I have a large stock of BLUE GUM AND CYPRESS TREES Which will be sold at the Lowest Rates. Also a large stock of SEEDLING ORANGE TREES. AM NOW PROPAGATING FROM CUTTINGS OF THE Rarest and most Valuable ROSES and Shrubbery, and also from Seeds, both tropical and semi-tropical. SEND FOR ABRIDGED PRICE LIST. P. A. SCHUMACHER, Manage Orange County Nurseries. Fullerton. BEER. 25 Cts. Per... BOTTLE. 175 ... DOZEN. 25 ... CASE. 25 ... BARREL. will pay 25 cents per dozen for bottles returned. For Sale by N. HART At Fountain Saloon, Anaheim. STAR FEED MILL. I make a specialty of Molling Barley and Shelling Corn. Located at the old Drayfus winery. One block East of Santa Fe depot. The Mill will be running Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sundays. J.P. DES GRANGES. Richard Spoerl, GUNSMITH and MACHINIST Dealer in Guns, Rervolvers and AMMUNITION. Karachi 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. A. FRANTZ, Prop., opp. P. O., Cantar Sta. SAVAGE & STROBEL Blacksmithing, General Jobbing, Horse-Shoeing, Eto. FULLERTON, CAL. All work promptly attended to, and mathematician qualified. AM NOW PROPAGATING FROM CUTTINGS OF THE Rarest and most Valuable ROSES and Shrubbery, and also from Seeds, both tropical and semi-tropical. SEND FOR ABRIDGED PRICE LIST. P. A. SCHUMACHER, Manage Orange County Nurseries. Fullerton, T. J. F. BOEGE Wholesale and Retail Dealer in WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS KEEPS ALWAYS ON HAND A COMPLETE STOCK Of the Finest Wines, Liquors and Cigars. WINES AND LIQUORS BY THE KEG, GALLON OR BOTTLE. Orders by Mail Promptly Attended to. GOODS DELIVERED FREE OF CHARGE Opp. S. P. Depot, ANAHEIM, CAL. Blacksmithing and Wagon Work. Having purchased the property of A. Pfahler on Los Angeles street, the business will hereafter be carried on by me. All kinds Blacksmithing and Wagon Work. HORSE-SHOEING AND JOBBING Promptly Executed. I will also deal in AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS of all kind SATISFACTION GUARANTEED! Thanking the public for past favors, I respectfully solicit a continance of the same, John Schauman, At Pfahler's old stand, Los Angeles street, Anaheim. ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 1890. ing Machine R WASHING IN ONE other machine, and which installment Plan—one dollar trial, and if not satisfac in a few months, through clothes. A child can work it. Cash. EARLY ROSE OES! ange their seed and have OF ENBERGER. tunity ! OUT GOODS, N'S SHOES ! w Cost ! Plain Figures! The Weekly Gazette. Established 1870. Transcript: - No Per Year. Three months. Possible invariably in admonition. Brand: One square... Two square... Three square... Four square... Customary Reductions on above rates will be made on advertisements running for longer periods. Usual discount on large advertisements. The Gazette is handed every Thursday morning, and sent to subscriptions by the early mail. It is delivered by carrier in Anaheim on the morning of publication. Entered at the Anaheim Pugstoffe on second-class matter. 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. Perfiment Paragraphs. The Prince of Wales has learned to use a type-writing machine. A sister-in-law of Frank Stockton, the novelist, is a missionary in India. Julia Ward Hewe is the best Greek scholar of her sex in the country. Queen Victoria recently ordered her baker to make her an American apple pie. Senator Blair's irreverent colleagues have nicknamed him "the Phonograph." Congressman Bayne of Pennsylvania is said to be the best horseback rider in Washington. Sims Reeves, the famous tenor, is about to make a farewell tour of the English provinces. A dispatch from London tells the world that ex-Empress Engenie is writing poetry and making some very creditable notes. FARM NOTES. According to Hemlock, lettuce was cultivated on a vegetable farm before Christ. Minute of sale applied in small quantities will increase the yield and quality of tomatoes. It has been demonstrated that quinoa is one of the best manure for groups in lawns. Onions like malted wheat ash. Apply the onion beautifully and the onion wrap will respond. Some swill is one of the sources of dime in the hog. Mush of it is kept until it becomes too and for even a hog. Dr. Lister says that apple time bargains may be kept out of the trunk by applications of a mixture of carobbale acid and maple. In never pays to feed poor hay to corn. If the hay is very poor it will pay the dairy-man to use it for building and hay better. For family use it is advisable to plant six or eight pennants every year which will take the place of those that are coming to hear from age. It is suggested that the best way to protect both dogs and sheep is to compel all dogs to wear muzzles, dogs not married to be sheat whenever found running at large. A horse with a well-fitting harness, especially a well-fitting collar, feels just like a man whose clothes do not pinch him; and will, of course, do its work easier and better. Recent tests indicate that London purple may be more dangerous to foliage when used in spraying than Paris green, because it sometimes contains more soluble arsenic. Solid manure and dry dirt will hold the liquid manure well. The solid proportions absorb large quantities of moisture, and the mixture of solids and liquide improves the quality of both. Make the nests of setting home warm. A cool place for the nest is desirable for a broody hen in summer, but in winter it requires a large proportion of animal heat to warm the nest and eggs. Some people might make considerable money by feeding less grain to the house and grooming the animal more. Ordinarily allow paid to the members the proposed law for agriculture and thus also introduced pration for the bush by the flurry then mandatory for manufacture of horticulture free of duty. A haul the huts grown on being built at Ground. The following item contemporary: "Contently being bred producing country for establishment in expiry in he. We have subject time and age condition of things o a remedy, hot in humdid, possibly human two afish engraven substances to give autre practical importance that so long as these potatoes for sale in this persistently kept production. As no all gone the primates or several times to be, our enterprise ways ready, far larger people with water-points from the East feet within the hull that our home-runs and can be afforded imported articles. The farmers in tha less could easily produce enough potato, potato, and would prodeers did not unite these below a living quantity remarked that of potatoes more demand will "knock." The unfortunate precompiled to take the fired him, or also haul." GOODS, N'S SHOES! New Cost! Plain Figures! CAHEN. NT TAILOR. e assortment of and fabrics, to zens of Anaheim $25 up. $6 up. ally extended the stock. ED CRIST. Public. IN THE NURSERY be the public to call and eciduous Trees, which I all insect pests and ESS TREES! tes. Also a large ES. CUTTINGS OF THE arubbery, and also from CE LIST. Manager series. Cal novelist, is a missionary in India. Julia Ward Hewe is the best Greek scholar of her sex in the country. Queen Victoria recently ordered her baker to make her an American apple pie. Senator Blair's irreverent colleagues have nicknamed him "the Phonograph." Congressman Bayne of Pennsylvania is said to be the best horseback rider in Washington. Sims Reeves, the famous tenor, is about to make a farewell tour of the English provinces. A dispatch from London tells the world that ex-Empress Engenie is writing poetry and making some very creditable verses. Colonel Robert G. Ingersoll is a Shakespearean "crank," and never fails to attend a good production of any of Shakespeare's plays. Queen Victoria has written two books which have never been published. They recount her impressions of various places on the Continent. It is reported that Mrs. Grover Cleveland has accepted an invitation to visit Mrs. Geo. P. Wetmore at Newport during the coming season. Ex-Secretary Bayard has written a letter consenting to deliver an oration before the Huguenot Society of South Carolina in Charleston on April 14th next. In a private letter Minister Fred Grant speaks of the delightful experiences he and his wife are having in Vienna. Mrs. Grant is contemplating another visit to them next summer. The Crown Prince of Sweden and Norway during his recent stay at Meran adopted two little Tyrolese boys, sons of a poor carpenter, and they are now members of his household at Stockholm. Two sons of Louis Komenth are civil engineers, and are naturalized Italian citizens. One is director of a great toundry near Naples, and the other is chief engineer of the Government Mediterranean railway lines. A numismatic suggests that a certain coin—say the fifty-cent pieces—issued during any Administration be stamped with the head of the President of that date. They will thus serve as an aid to history, as do the coins of ancient days. The crown of the late Sultan of Perak was sold recently at Singapore, by order of his estate, after having done service for a long line of Malay Sultana. It is of gold studded with 1,000 jewels and was valued at $37,000, but the price it fetched was not announced. Gladstone has written a series of articles on the Old Testament for a London periodical. The first, on "The Impremnable Rook of Holy Scripture," will appear in the April number, and will be followed by others, on "The Creation Story," "The Monastic Legislation," "The Psalm," "The Method of the Old Testament" and similar subjects. The following letter from M. Dumas, fila, addressed to a person who had written to him for his antograph, was sold the other day for ten francs at the Salle Silvestre, in Paris: "Dear Sir: Do me the favor to come and dine with me to-morrow. I shall be having several men of wit, and do not want to be the only donkey at table. You sincerely, A. Dumas, fila." The Czar of Russia has become such a confirmed slave to the habit of injecting morphia that he is now said to inject daily from twelve to fifteen grains of this seductive drug. When it is remembered that the dose of morphia usually administered by a doctor to a patient is from a half to one grain, it will be seen how the craving has increased in the novelist, is a missionary in India. Julia Ward Hewe is the best Greek scholar of her sex in the country. Queen Victoria recently ordered her baker to make her an American apple pie. Senator Blair's irreversible colleagues have nicknamed him "the Phonograph." Congressman Bayne of Pennsylvania is said to be the best horseback rider in Washington. Sims Reeves, the famous tenor, is about to make a farewell tour of the English provinces. A dispatch from London tells the world that ex-Empress Engenie is writing poetry and making some very creditable verses. Colonel Robert G. Ingersoll is a Shakespearean "crank," and never falls to attend a good production of any of Shakespeare's plays. Queen Victoria has written two books which have never been published. They recount her impressions of various places on the Continent. It is reported that Mrs. Grover Cleveland has accepted an invitation to visit Mrs. Geo. P. Wetmore at Newport during the coming season. Ex-Secretary Bayard has written a letter consenting to deliver an oration before the Huguenot Society of South Carolina in Charleston on April 14th next. In a private letter Minister Fred Grant speaks of the delightful experiences he and his wife are having in Vienna. Mrs. Grant is contemplating another visit to them next summer. The Crown Prince of Sweden and Norway during his recent stay at Meran adopted two little Tyrolese boys, sons of a poor carpenter, and they are now members of his household at Stockholm. Two sons of Louis Komenth are civil engineers, and are naturalized Italian citizens. One is director of a great toundry near Naples, and the other is chief engineer of the Government Mediterranean railway lines. A numismatic suggests that a certain coin—say the fifty-cent pieces—issued during any Administration be stamped with the head of the President of that date. They will thus serve as an aid to history, as do the coins of ancient days. The crown of the late Sultan of Perak was sold recently at Singapore, by order of his estate, after having done service for a long line of Malay Sultana. It is of gold studded with 1,000 jewels and was valued at $37,000, but the price it fetched was not announced. Gladstone has written a series of articles on the Old Testament for a London periodical. The first, on "The Impremnable Rook of Holy Scripture," will appear in the April number, and will be followed by others, on "The Creation Story," "The Monastic Legislation," "The Psalm," "The Method of the Old Testament" and similar subjects. The following letter from M. Dumas, fila, addressed to a person who had written to him for his antograph, was sold the other day for ten francs at the Salle Silvestre, in Paris: "Dear Sir: Do me the favor to come and dine with me to-morrow. I shall be having several men of wit, and do not want to be the only donkey at table. You sincerely, A. Dumas, fila." The Czar of Russia has become such a confirmed slave to the habit of injecting morphia that he is now said to inject daily from twelve to fifteen grains of this seductive drug. When it is remembered that the dose of morphia usually administered by a doctor to a patient is from a half to one grain, it will be seen how the craving has increased in the novelist, is a missionary in India. Julia Ward Hewe is the best Greek scholar of her sex in the country. Queen Victoria recently ordered her baker to make her an American apple pie. Senator Blair's irreversible colleagues have made some very creditable verses. Colonel Robert G. Ingersoll is a Shakespearean "crank," and never falls to attend a good production of any of Shakespeare's plays. Queen Victoria has written two books which have never been published. They recount her impressions of various places on the Continent. It is reported that Mrs. Grover Cleveland has accepted an invitation to visit Mrs. Geo. P. Wetmore at Newport during the coming season. Ex-Secretary Bayard has written a letter consenting to deliver an oration before the Huguenot Society of South Carolina in Charleston on April 14th next. In a private letter Minister Fred Grant speaks of the delightful experiences he and his wife are having in Vienna. Mrs. Grant is contemplating another visit to them next summer. The Crown Prince of Sweden and Norway during his recent stay at Meran adopted two little Tyrolese boys, sons of a poor carpenter, and they are now members of his household at Stockholm. Two sons of Louis Komenth are civil engineers, and are naturalized Italian citizens. One is director of a great toundry near Naples, and the other is chief engineer of the Government Mediterranean railway lines. A numismatic suggests that a certain coin—say the fifty-cent pieces—issued during any Administration be stamped with the head of the President of that date. They will thus serve as an aid to history, as do the coins of ancient days. The crown of the late Sultan of Perak was sold recently at Singapore, by order of his estate, after having done service for a long line of Malay Sultana. It is of gold studded with 1,000 jewels and was valued at $37,000, but the price it fetched was not announced. Gladstone has written a series of articles on the Old Testament for a London periodical. The first, on "The Impremnable Rook of Holy Scripture," will appear in the April number, and will be followed by others, on "The Creation Story," "The Monastic Legislation," "The Psalm," "The Method of the Old Testament" and similar subjects. The following letter from M. Dumas, fila, addressed to a person who had written to him for his antograph, was sold the other day for ten francs at the Salle Silvestre, in Paris: "Dear Sir: Do me the favor to come and dine with me to-morrow. I shall be having several men of wit, and do not want to be the only donkey at table. You sincerely, A. Dumas, fila." The Czar of Russia has become such a confirmed slave to the habit of injecting morphia that he is now said to inject daily from twelve to fifteen grains of this seductive drug. When it is remembered that the dose of morphia usually administered by a doctor to a patient is from a half to one grain, it will be seen how the craving has increased in the novelist, is a missionary in India. Julia Ward Hewe is the best Greek scholar of her sex in the country. Queen Victoria recently ordered her baker to make her an American apple pie. Senator Blair's irreversible colleagues have made some very creditable verses. Colonel Robert G. Ingersoll is a Shakespearean "crank," and never falls to add a little shipstuff or bran to make a better balanced ration." If you grow vegetables for market profit will depend upon getting them into the market early; and if you grow them only for home consumption you do not care to wait all summer before you have a "means." So the hot bed or cold frame is useful for the early startning of plants in either case. The Southern Cultivator says: "Any land that will produce corn will produce oats. Oats require a highly ammoniated fertilizer; hence cotton seed or cotton seed meal in the best home fertilizer that can be need. But a mixture of cotton seed meal and acid phosphate—equal parts—will give better results." The plot intended for colony should be well manured now, and if soap-ands are thrown on the plot so as to soak into the soil, it will be all the better for the growing plants when they are put out to grow. Asparagus is one of the early vegetables, and it is also benefited by frequent applications of soap-ands. In fact, too much soap-ands and wall-rotted manure cannot be applied to asparagus. Many orchards are seriously injured by allowing too heavy a growth of grass around the stem of the trees. In the majority of cases better health and thrift will be secured if the soil for two or three feet around each tree is kept loose and mellow, stirring frequently if necessary to secure this. At least this will be better than allow the weeds and grass to use the plant food needed by the tree. The habit of dumping manure from the wagon in small piles is wasteful both of time and manure. Comparatively few men can spread manure from piles so as te cover all ground, much less to cover it evenly. The matter is made still worse by leaving manure piles to lie several days or weeks before being spread. The soluble parts of manure garrow washed into the ground, and if every particle of the visible manure is removed the spot will yet be richer than the space surrounding it. By separating States into groups, the six New England States are eroded with a forest area of 19,123,028 acres; the four Middle States with 17,630,000; the four Southern States including Maryland and leaving out Missouri with 222,800,000; the nine Western States with 80,358,788; the four Pacific States with 52,630,000 and seven Territories with 63,034,000. 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However,when right consistOf这些processes varying instrumentalityhaveNotBeatenMillionStateswith17630000and80358788and12328000and2028000and2528000and3238000and4238000and5238000and6238000and7238000and8238000and9238000and10238000and11238000and12238000and13238000and14238000and15238000and16238000and17238000and18238000and19238000and20238000and21238000and22238000and23238000and24238000and25238000and26238000and27238000and28238000and29238 CUTTINGS OF THE rubbery, and also from CE LIST. Manager series. Cal. E G E, taler in AND CIGARS. BOTTLE. Attended to. OF CHARGE! EIM, CAL. gon Work. fahler on Los Angeles by me. All kinds of JOBBING ! PLEMENTS of all kinds. fectfully solicit a continuhuman, Angles street, Anaheim. The following letter from St. Dumas, til, addressed to a person who had written to him for his autograph, was sold the other day for ten francs at The Salle Silvestre, in Paris: "Dear Sir: Do me the favor to come and dine with me to-morrow. I shall be having several men of wit, and do not want to be the only donkey at table. Yours sincerely, A. Dumas, til." The Caar of Russia has become such a confirmed slave to the habit of injecting morphia that he is now said to inject daily from twelve to fifteen grains of this seductive drug. When it is remembered that the dose of morphia usually administered by a doctor to a patient is from a half to one grain, it will be seen how the craving has increased in the case of the Emperor Alexander. Justice Lamar, who never accepts a pass or present of any kind, tells of himself this one: "Down in the locality I call my home lives old John Dillard. Some years ago John presented me with a very fine Alderney cow. I said: 'John, I never receive presents.' Well,' he replied, 'Lamar, just give me your note and, as you will never pay it anyway, you will be nothing out and a cow ahead." Orchard Bullying. Mr. Miller of Highlands, San Bernardino county, writes as follows regarding his plan for preventing orchards from washing or gelling during heavy rains: "I have noticed a great many people in cultivating their orchards for the winter; more especially on the side-hills, running little farrows from one to two feet apart on the water grade, or near the level, thinking to protect the orchards from washing by so doing. New that is all a mistake. If they would head the ground after the irrigating season is ever and new grain of some kind on it before rain sets in, in the fall of the winter, I will guarantee they will have no trouble about their hands washing each. Beside it will move quite an expense in making ditches to carry off the water that would accumulate. The grain then moved would not only prevent the hand from washing, to a great extent, but make a splendid crop of moisture in the spring after the rainy season. Now if this advice is followed they will not be heightened with water washing their own hands nor hands of their neighbors before them. One show orchards cultivated and around aristated, that look well and have engaged all damage by washing, while other orchards adjusting with the same kind of land, and the same character of soil, were almost ruined by washing, and requiring, at the same time, two or three men to prevent them washing away, while the grain on that which was properly cultivated would be all right, and no water running from it at all." The matter is made still worse by leaving the manure piles to lie several days or weeks before being spread. The soluble parts of the manure jar washed into the ground, and if every particle of the visible manure is removed the spot will yet be richer than the space surrounding it. By separating the States into groups, the six New England States are eroded with a forest area of 19,123,028 acres; the four Middle States with 17,630,000; the fourteen Southern States, including Maryland and leaving out Missouri, with 222,800,000; the nine Western States with 80,358,768; the four Pacific States, 52,630,000 and the seven Territories with 63,034,000. It will thus be seen that of the entire 485,645,895 acres of forest included in this estimate the fourteen Southern States possesses fully one-half. Temple Leaves in the Orchard. A French fruit-grower says: "The trees of my orchard were covered with insects just when commencing to bud. Having out some tomatoes, the idea occurred to me that by placing some of the leaves around the trunks and branches of the peach tree, I might preserve them from the rays of the sun, which are very powerful. My surprise was great upon the following day to find the trees entirely free from their enemies; not one remaining except here and there where a curled leaf prevented the tomato from exerting its influence. These leaves I carefully arranged, placing upon them fresh corn from the bimale vine, with the result of honishing that last intact and enabling the tree to grow with luxuriance. Wishing to carry still further my experiment, I stepped in water; some leaves of the tomato, and sprinkled with this infusion other plants, roses. In two days these were also free from the innumerable insects which covered them." Mose-Sugar. The persistent agitation of cultures of sugar-bases and the concentration of sugar from them on a large scale in this country is at least hearing frust. The United States Department of Agriculture is completing an exhaustive investigation of all that has been done from time to time; the first experiments in hard-sugar culture were made at the Minnesota Agricultural College down this year's experience in the two large hard-sugar facilities in California. The United States Finance has discussed its Committee on Agriculture to report a bill for the promotion of industry, and founded Minneapolis has a handy institution that a beauty shall be paid for every ten of apples raised in the United States; delivered at a fairly and commensurately high sugar and also providing a beauty of 85 cents per hundred pounds of sugar as predefined. In his study on sweetening up and conditioning for good apples standing all these factors... NUMBER 21 paid to the mandates. The operation of the proposed law is left to the Government of Agriculture and the Treasury. Mr. Muhlenberg also introduced a bill making an appropriation for the importation of sugar-bread made by the Secretary of Agriculture, and this machinery for its cultivation and for the manufacture of bread-men, all to be admitted free of duty. A large history to work up the hints given on five thousand acres in being built at Grand Island, Hall county, Nebraska. The following item of news appears in a contemporary: "On behalf of potatoe are constantly being brought into this potato-producing country from the East," and some attainment is expressed at this, as well it may be. We have called attention to this subject time and again, and shown why this condition of things exists. We have proposed a remedy, but in has not as yet been adopted, possibly because our city fathers are too much engrained in speculative newer schemes to give attention to matters of prime practical importance. It is a immutable fact that as long as there is a market for sale in this market the price is persistently kept down below the cost of production. As more as the home product is all gone the price goes up to importation rates, or several times above what it ought to be, our enterprising merchants being always ready, for large profits, to supply the people with water-sanked or frost-bitten potatoes from the East by the carload. It is a fact within the knowledge of everybody that our home-raised tabers are much better and can be afforded much cheaper than the imported article. The farmers in the vicinity of Los Angeles could easily produce enough, and more than enough, potatoes for home consumption, and would produce them if the city dealers did not uniformly reduce the price of them below a living rate. It has been frequently remarked that a single wagonload of potatoes more than the immediate demand will "knock the market otherwise." The unfortunate producer of them will be compelled to take the pittance of a price offered him, or else haul his load back home here from the outside moth, the greatest enemy of the apple, very little plumbing in belly done. We must remember that when the milieu with shipping facilities comes, it will be impossible to grow an apple standard in two or three years. Then the apple plant choice variation and good burgundy. "It will be a paying investment."—Humboldt Standard. Signs of Charisma. There is much amusement written of the man. Contrary to popular belief, there is no such nose as a humeral, social or literary one, unfailingly representative of any of these characteristies. Rightfully considered, its size and texture indicate only physiological and hereditary facts; its outline alone expressing mental traits. Its shape, size, angle, texture and relation to other features must be noted to get its true character value. As a fair rule, bigger the nose and finer the mental organization, greater the force of character. The reason is the brain works through the physical vitality to get effective results in any profession except literature, and they cannot be attained in any eminent degree with weak stomachs, bad liver, narrow cheeks or sterile blood. A big nose usually is found in a strong physical make-up, but either brain or body is more the question of fine organic quality than avoirdupois. Those famous lawyers, physicians, inventors and business kings who have beat down all opposition and allowed out all rivals have universally exaggerated physical features. ALL ABOUT NOSES. There are four principal kinds of noses with their varieties. The Greek nose, straight, narrow, finally chiseled, in a line with the forehead, is the ideal nose, indicating refinement, love of art and the ideal. The Roman nose is gruserer, larger, bridged, general course straight, forming an obtuse angle with the forehead. It expresses force, ambition, leadership and governing power. The commercial or aquiline nose has in some degrees the shape of the eagle's beak, denoting tenacity, shrewdness, cruelty and love of gain. Some of our most eminent philanthropists have this sort of nose. Then there is the negro nose, indicating animality. There is, among the many varieties the Yan- The farmers in the vicinity of Los Angeles would easily produce enough, and more than enough, potatoes for home consumption, and would produce them if the city dealers did not uniformly reduce the price of those below a living rate. It has been frequently remarked that a single wagonload of potatoes more than the immediate demand will "knock the market otherwise." The unfortunate producer of them will be compelled to take the pittance of a price offered him, or else hand his load back home again, there to rot. We have shown that last fall most excellent sweet potatoes, raised here, were offered at the doors of our dealers at 25 cents a sack of 125 pounds, and that, only a couple of months later, an inferior article, imported, was selling at $2.75 a hundred. "Irish" potatoes have undergone similar fluctuations of price. While the home product lasted they were worth almost nothing, now the imported ones, though inferior, command 3 cents per pound. It goes without saying that our farmers cannot live with such a market. They cannot afford to raise potatoes year after year and lose upon them all the time, and they must not be expected to do so. Los Angeles practice is a very good one for the farmers of Kansas and the East; it is good for the railroads and good for the importers, whose profits are large, but it is a very bad practice for the farmer here who raises and the people who consume potatoes. The remedy for this evil, for evil it is, would be an open public market place, similar to those to be found in all cities east of the Rocky Mountains. With such a market place the producer and the consumer would be brought face to face, the former would obtain a fair price for his marketable products, and the latter would get them at a much lower rate than he now pays for Eastern-raised inferior stuff. A public market-place would be of still further advantage to the public at large in preventing the sending abroad of hundreds of thousands of dollars each year for what could better be raised at home. These considerations, and the additional consideration of healthfulness of food, ought to incite our authorities to action in this master. It is a subject of more than passing importance, since it seriously concerns every resident of the city as well as the suburban population. This is a master of so much public concern that further delay in considering it by our city authorities is hardly excusable.—L.A. Times. Right Methods of Teaching. Education can have no more important aim than to equip pupils with the best-known methods for the recognition of truth. Every day of their lives they will have to decide as to the truth or falsity of some statement; and what is to prevent their going astray, if they have not been practiced in searching out all modifying circumstances of a problem, if they have not been accustomed to finding the balance of evidence and taught the great lesson that judgment is not to be given rashly, but must be suspended when sufficient data to warrant a decision are not obtainable. The old studies of our schools do nothing toward training the young in examining evidence and forming judgments. The study of science, however, when rightly conducted, mainly consists of the process of investigation, the very instrument which pupils must be able to use handily in after life to save themselves from becoming the victims of imposters and swindlers. Aside from the material advantages involved, the habit of making truth for its own sake is one which can not fail to There are four principal kinds of noses with their varieties. The Greek nose, straight, narrow, finally chisaled, in a line with the forehead, is the ideal nose, indicating refinement, love of art and the ideal. The Roman nose is grosser, larger, bridged, general course straight, forming an obtuse angle with the forehead. It expresses force, ambition, leadership and governing power. The commercial or aquiline nose has in some degree the shape of the eagle's beak, denoting tenacity, shrewdness, cruelty and love of gain. Some of our most eminent philanthropists have this sort of nose. Then there is the negro nose, indicating animality. There is, among many varieties the Yankee nose, have the ambition and force signs of the Roman, the tenacity and love of gain of the commercial. So in shape we have the combination of the Roman in the long, high bridged nose with the tendency to hookedness of the aquiline. The bellicose or fighting nose presents a broad base and a rather "beefy" appearance. Pug noses express lack of mental force. The short, high, bony, hooked nose means cruelty. The Romo-dish nose, round pointed, points out the tattler and the intrusively curious. Among the uneducated the prominently rounded nose of almost any outline indicates the gossip and meddler. The tip titled, bluntish nose is usually found in girls of a fun making, fun loving disposition. The secretive or shrewd have an wide-nootril base; the money making a nose thick in the middle. The nervous, impressive, artistic nearly always have large, thin walled nootrils. First class proof readers and eminent draughtsmen have the root of the nose wide and flat. Heredity has much to do with the nose. The nose is frequently a stock trait and breeds true. Look at the Jews, the Indians, the negro, and behold the Puritan nose of some of our New England families! Sometimes this family trait of a peculiar nose will be bred out; then it will rather freakishly appear over several generations, showing more of some ancestor's trait rather than the possessor's own. The nose to some extent is formative, the pug nose of the 10-year old girl becoming the dish nose of the matron of 45, or the Roman of 20 change to the Yankee form at a later age. Levi P. Morton has a peculiar nose. It has enough of the Roman to express ambition or governing power. It has principally the Jewish outline, denoting tenacity and love of gain. We fine the wide nootrills, indicating shrewdness, a name for another kind of secretiveness; the wide, bulligent base, expressing a pugnacity that will overcome position; a huge nose that shows with reading assistance of other features, much force of character and a man who would be a leader in a business enterprise. WHAT THE MOUTH SAYS. Of all the features the mouth is the most expressive, not excepting the eye. As the eye more especially represents the intellectual, the nose and chin will power, energy and tenacity, so the mouth expresses sentiment, purity and passion. The teeth wide apart do not indicate a roving disposition, or when overcrowded anything more than lack of proper dental attention in the process of growth. Large eye teeth show a currish propensity, and small squirred like incisors in the lower jaw deceit. Grief or melancholy droops the corners of the lips while amiability and jollity raise them. There are always curved lines about the mouths of the gentle and affectionate and angular hard lines there in the morose selfish and mean. The vulgar and vain have a short, uprolling upper lip, the affectionate, trustful and tender a full thin skinned under one; and in those especially noted for the Apple-Planting Advice When fine apples sell at the fruit stand of San Francisco at 25 cents per dozen and bananas go burgling on the street, it should convince every man that a good apple is one of the most profitable products of the orchard. We know that the apple is almost the only fruit that is in the one fruit of which people never tire. We know that more than any other fruit affords a diversity of flavor and quality. We know that it is the least perishable of fruits, and in the case of whiter variation has at least four months in which to seek a market. We know that less any other fruit on the earth, and that its planting, culture and marketing has not even been systemized here. We know that the count is rapidly growing up and consequently an immense demand for good apples is ensured. Notwithstanding all these facts, and that we are not yet experienced in examining evidence and forming judgments, the study of science, however, when rightly conducted, mainly consists of the process of investigation, the very instrument which pupils must be able to use handily in after life to save themselves from becoming the victims of imposters and swindlers. Aside from the material advantage involved, the habit of making truth for its own sake is one which can not fail to have an elevating influence on his character. Science should have, therefore, an important place in every school programme; it should be introduced in the lowest grades, in order to give the child's unfolding faculties the proper bent; and it should be continued throughout the school course in order to save the half-formed habit of intelligent inquiry from being lost by an interruption of its exercise. Our children could well afford to grow up in ignorance of the hight of Mount Chaguibamba and the length of the Brahmanopetra; they might dispense with a sensitizing French, or without the Latin declamations and conjugations, if the time thus saved enabled them to gain some facility in naming truth from falsehood. In encouraging improvement in our educational ideas has been shown of late, and it seems as if the time could not be far distant when all who have any value in the training of the young will clearly what knowledge and what requirements are of most worth—Popular Science Monthly for March. Grief or melancholy droops the corners of the lips, while ambiability and jollity raise them. There are always curved lines about the mouths of the gentle and affectionate and angular hard lines there in the mosee, selfish and mean. The vulgar and vain have a short, uprolling upper lip, the affectionate, trustful and tender a fall thin skinned under one; and in those especially noted for the strength of their friendship the lower lip is filled with transverse wrinkles. A thin, pale under lip means just the opposite of this. A long thin upper lip unfailingly indicates self esteem, dignity and sometimes hauteur. The ideal lips are like the form of Apollo's bow. The upper lip when stiff and short expresses love of praise and obstinacy. Unformed, caterpillarish lips show vice and sensuality. The transcendently pure mind have at maturity unimplied faces, uninflamed eyelids, nearly always pure complexions, bright eyes and beautiful lips. People of great ambition, will power and energy have rather large to very large and close set jaws. They seldom whistle and rather infrequently laugh. The chatterboxes and the gay usually have light jaws. Disproportionately small mouths generally indicate lack of steadfastness in sentiment or depth of passion. Combativeness, decision and coarseness are usually manifested by a big chin. A double chin the world over means delight in the opposite sex. What a double chin is indicated by the artist's pencil. A sharp pointed chin frequently means sincerity or organization, while if flat and sharp horizontally, unfailingly indicates flickerless paranite. A man with a recording chin seldom encounts in any vocation demanding decision, great energy and leadership. Sometimes there are combinations that offset or modify the meaning of the sign: value of other features. It is this that permits the face reader and it is a fact also to which physiognomists have paid little attention. A big Roman nose indicating will, force or leadership is belled by an insignificant reading chin, showing lack of combination and tenacity. Sometimes we see a mouth indicating affection less its sign value because we find a hawk nose, expressing severity, as a flat pointed chin, denoting a lack of steadfastness in affection. Often a dish nose pointing, expressing obtrusive curiosity, is unusual in its true meaning by an amiable month and culture indicated by fine brown.