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anaheim-gazette 1890-07-10

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VOLUME XX. ANAHEIM LODGE MEETINGS. ANAHEIM LODGE, NO. 287, P. & A. M. Regular meetings on the Monday preceding the fall moon in each sojourning brethren in good standing are cordially invited to attend. PHILIP DAVIS, W. M. ANAHEIM LODGE, NO. 159, I. O. O. F. REGUmeetings every Tuesday evening. Visiting always welcome. J. J. DYER, N. O. R. HANKS, Secretary. ANAHEIM LODGE, NO. 85, A. O. C. W. MEETOn the first and fourth Friday of every S. A. DENNIS, M. W. GRIESHAW, Secretary. ANAHEIM LODGE, NO. 237, I. O. O. F. MEETS Thursday at 8 p.m. at Odd Fallows' Hall. ROBERT MENZEL, N. G. NARROW, Secretary. MODERN MILL POST, NO. 131, O. A. R. Meets second and fourth Saturday of each B. M.CULLCUGH, P. C. J. MIDOWELL, Adjutant. DR. CHOSEN FRIENDS MEETS THE FIRST Third Saturday evenings in each month at 8 Odd Fallows' Hall. WM. M. McFADDEN, Counsellor WHIRK, Secretary. E.GREEN COUNCIL, AMERICAN LEGION Meets second and fourth Wednesday month at 8 P.M. P.C. SMYTHE. RUMPAT, Secretary. Commander ANAHEIM COURT, I. O. F. MEETS SECOND Third Fridays of each month. B.O.WOOD, Financial Secretary Chief Ranger PROFESSIONAL CARDS. DR. J. H. BULLARD, A. B., M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Residence, corner Hermine and Chartres streets, near Planters' Hotel. OFFICE HOURS: 12 to 1:30, and 6 to 7:30 p.m. CHARLES PAMPERL ...Dealer in... NOTICE! THE Stearns Ranchos Company OFFER LANDS IN Artesia, Westminster, Norwalk, Consisting of $3,000 acres of Choice Lands in the Rancho Siena, Los Coyotes, Las Bolsas, La Habra, and San Juan Cajon ota Ana IN QUANTITIES TO SUIT AT FROM $15 TO $75 PER ACRE R. J. NORTHAM, Agent; Or J. B. PIERCE at Anaheim, Californi Centralia Colony Lands for Sale at f $40 to $60 Per Acre. Apply to J. B. PIERCE or R. J. NORTHAM, Anaheim F. CRIST, MERCHANT TAILOR PROFESSIONAL CAMDS. DR. J. H. BULLARD, A. B., M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Residence, corner Hermine and Chartres streets, near Planters' Hotel. OFFICE HOURS: 12 to 1:30, and 6 to 7:30 p.m. CHARLES PAMPERL ...Dealer in... HARDWARE, CROCKERY, and HOUSE-FURNISHING GOODS Los Angeles street, Anaheim. C. E. GROAT, Contractor and Builder. ANAHEIM, CAL. CHAS. SCHINDLER, CONTRACTOR and BUILDER. ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA. GEORGE BAUER BOOT AND SHOE MAKER. Anaheim Mining and repairing at the lowest cash price. All prices promptly attended to. All work guaranteed. L. GUNTHER, PIONEER BOOT & SHOE MAKER. Corner Adele and Los Angeles streets. H. P. LARSEN, CONTRACTOR & BUILDER. Estates given, Contracts made and do a general living business. CENTER STREET, ANAHEIM. DR. J. WARNER, DENTIST, Wilmington Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays. FOX & BUTLER, City Barber Shop. FOR A FIRST-CLASS SHAVE! HOT AND COLD BATHS. FRANTZ'S BARBER SHOP. Or J. B. PIERCE at Anaheim, Californi Centralia Colony Lands for Sale at f $40 to $60 Per Acre. Apply to J. B. PIERCE or R. J. NORTIAM, Anahei F. CRIST, MERCHANT TAILOR Just received a complete assortment of Spring and Summer Goods of latest st and fabrics, to which the attention of thezens of Anaheim and vicinity is directed. Suits to order from - $25 Pants to order from - $6 An invitation is cordially extended public to call and examine this stock. FRED CRIST Highest Cash Price Paid for POULTRY AND EGG Call and get prices before selling elsewhere. A. T. WALLO Metz Building, LOS ANGELES STREET. T. J. F. BOEG Wholesale and Retail Dealer in WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARETS 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 CHAR FOX & BUTLER, City Barber Shop. FOR A FIRST-CLASS SHAVE! HOT AND COLD BATHS. FRANTZ'S BARBER SHOP. First-Class Style. BATHS, - 25 Cts. PLEASE GIVE ME A CALL. W. A. FRANTZ, Prop., opp. P. O., Center St RICHARD MELROSE ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. AND NOTARY PUBLIC. Center street, Anaheim, Cal. Special attention given to PROBATE matters. CHAS. S. McKELVEY, A. M. Attorney-at-Law. Rooms 13 and 14, First National Bank Building, mayl-m Santa Ana, Cal. VICTOR MONTGOMERY, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. S. O. WOOD, ARCHITECT AND ENGINEER, ANAHEIM, CAL. STAR FEED MILL I make a specialty of Rolling Barley and Shelling Corn. Located at the old Dreyfus winery. One block West of Santa Fe depot. The Mill will be running Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays. J. P. DES GRANGES. 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, CA ATTENTION Homes for Everybody. Investments for Every O THE ANAHEIM HOMESTEAD TRANSACTION Containing 2,500 Acres! ONE-HALF MILE WEST OF ANAHEIM STATION, joins the magnificent orange groves of Ryan and Browning north; in the New Irrigation District, and contains a splendid the choiceat Agricultural Lands in the State. Now subdivided the market at Prices ranging from $30 to $60 per Acre ON EASY TERMS. Within a short distance of Condensed Factory at Buena Park. Good schools, churches and contiguous settled colony. For full particulars call on or address J. B. PIERCE, Agent, - Anaheim ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, JULY 10, 1890. CE! Company DS IN Garden Grove, airview, Lands in the Ranchos La and San Juan Cajon de SanFROM PER ACRE. M, Agent; Anaheim, California. For Sale at from Acre. IAM, Anaheim, Cal. ANT TAILOR. The Weekly Gazette. Established 1870. Items of news and correspondence on all live subjects are solicited by the editor. Brief, and write directly to the point. All communications must be signed by the author, not for publication, but for the information of the editor. Legal Technicality. Legal technicality has never been exceeded by that in the case of Holts against Holmes, one of the oldest recorded cases. It means that one Holmes had been telling his neighbors tales on Sir Thomas Holt and making public one of the latter's little peccadillo. Sir Thomas commenced an action for slander, alleging in his written declaration that Holmes had publicly stated that he [Sir Thomas] had "taken a cleaver and stricken his cook upon the head so that one side of the head fell upon one shoulder and the other side upon the other shoulder." Now, it was a rule of law in cases of this character that it was no slander unless the words falsely spoken imputed to another commission of a crime, and the learned judge, in applying this rule to the case before him, dismissed the support of Orange County Municipal Commission. To the Hancock Board of Supervisors of Orange county, California. The law makes it the duty of the Board of Municipal Commissioners to report their findings and details to you and also to the State Board of Horticulture. At the organization of this board the county was divided into three districts: The northern to F. H. Keith, including Anaheim, Fallerton, Garden Grove and Westminster; the central to Hiram Hamilton, including Orange, Olive Height, Villa Park, El Madena, and a part of Santa Ana; the southern to T. W. Preble, including Tulsa, Newport, San Jean Capistrane, and a part of Santa Ana. These Commissioners have served as their own inspectors, each in his own district, each having received a commission from the State Board of Horticulture as Quantitative Guardian, with instructions to guard our own territory against the introduction of new parts. Your Commissioners posted notice in various parts of the county, quoting the law and warning all persons against the importation into this county of pests injurious to horticulture. At a late meeting the board resolved to make a thorough inspection of all fruit and nut bearing trees in the county. That work is now in progress. We have already inspected groves containing 15,000 trees. As yet we have found but two kinds of scale not known to have been here before; lecanium prunus and icerya purchasi, or white cottony scale. The latter has only been found in one tree. We have traced its tracks from another county, whence it was brought on ornamental shrubs two years ago and "healed in" under the infected tree. So far as we could find the scale had not spread to any surrounding tree, but we found eggs not hatched, which if left a little while, would have furnished sustenance for a small colony of vedolia cardinalia, and this would give us the ability to introduce to our county that queen of parasites. The NEWS The apricot crop 700 tons this year. The total yield Bidwell's ranch a 000 pounds. Thirty carloads dered from South In Serramento be John Ball was by that in the case of Holts against Holmes, one of the oldest recorded cases. It means that one Holmes had been telling his neighbors tales on Sir Thomas Holt and making public one of the latter's little peccadillo. Sir Thomas commenced an action for slander, alleging in his written declaration that Holmes had publicly stated that he [Sir Thomas] had "taken a cleaver and stricken his cook upon the head so that one side of the head fell upon one shoulder and the other side upon the other shoulder." Now, it was a rule of law in cases of this character that it was no alander unless the words falsely spoken imputed to another commission of a crime, and the learned judge, in applying this rule to the case before him, dismissed the action because, as he stated in his opinion, the words alleged to have been spoken by Holmes did not constitute a slander on Sir Thomas, as it was not stated in the pleading that the cook died from the stroke—thus leaving it to be inferred that a man had a legal right to split open his cook's head so that each half thereof rested upon a shoulder, provided that he did not kill the owner of the divided head!—San Francisco Argonaut. Bogna Coffee. Look out for a new kind of coffee that is not coffee. Some clever Frenchmen at the island of Reunion have discovered that the fruit of the wild orange that grows there has the aroma of the coffee berry. As it costs less to raise the wild orange than regular coffee, naturally the planters are substituting the former for the latter, and the government even has ordered that a great part of the highlands on the islands be reserved for the cultivation of the new bogus coffee. One bright gleam on the coffee horizon is in the fact that the new berry will be so cheap that it will, if its culture succeeds, drive out chicory, and as an adulterant it is said to be much less vile than that staple coffee cheapener.—New York Sun. A Scrap of Paper Saves Her Life. It was just an ordinary scrap of wrapping paper, but it saved her life. She was in the last stages of consumption, old by physicians that she was incurable and could live only a short time; she weighed less than seventy pounds. On a piece of wrapping paper she read of Dr. King's New Discovery, and got a sample bottle; it helped her, she bought a large bottle, it help her more, bought another and grew better fast, continued its use and is now strong, healthy, rosy, plump, weighing 140 pounds. For fuller partitions send stamp to W. H. Cole, Druggist, Fort Smith. Trial Bottles of this wonderful Discovery Free at Wm. H. Higgins' Drugstore. Church Announcements. METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH—On Philadelphia street. Sunday school at 10 A.M. Services at 11 A.M. and 7:30 P.M. Prayer meeting Wednesday at 3 P.M. D.O. CHAMBERLAYNE, Pastor. GERMAN METHODIST CHURCH—John G. Vogel, pastor. Sunday school at 9:45 A.M.; presching at 11 A.M. and 7 P.M. Prayer meeting Wednesday evening at 7. Song service Friday at 7 P.M. GERMAN EVANGELICAL CHURCH—Services every Sunday at 3 P.M. Rev. C. BERKER, Pastor. ST. BONIFACE CATHOLIC CHURCH—Services every Sunday, morning and evening. Rev. P STRETTERS, pastor. Espayey. This is what you ought to have, in fact, you must have it, to fully enjoy life. Thousands are searching for it daily, and mourning because they find it not. Thousands upon thousands of dollars are spent annually by our people in the hope that they may attain this boon. And yet it may be had by all. We guarantee that Electriot Bitters, if used according to directions and the use pernow in progress. We have already inspected groves containing 15,000 trees. As yet we have found but two kinds of scale not known to have been here before; lecanium pruinosa and icerynis purchase, or white cottony scale. The lather has only been found in one tree. We have traced its tracks from another county, whence it was brought on ornamental shrubs two years ago and "healed in" under the infested tree. So far as we could find the scale had not spread to any surrounding tree, but we found eggs not hatched, which, if left a little while, would have furnished sustenance for a small colony of vedolia cardinalia, and this would give us the ability to introduce to our county that queen of parasites. The white cottony oushion scale has no terrar for the horticulturist. Your Commissioners have observed that some of the pioneer planters of orange trees have made grave mistakes, both as to the choice of trees to plant and the soil on which they have planted. Orange trees grow best on their own roots. Lima, lemon or China lemon grow well for a while but fail soon. The time for theorizing and guessing is past. Facta are present, face to face. A deep rich soil is required for the orange tree. It will grow almost anywhere in California but cannot be made profitable on a poor shallow soil—too much fertilizing will be required for profit. Orange county has a large quantity of the best orange land, and plants of water to ensure success in orange growing. The elevated irrigable means with deep, soft loam, are the orange lands of Orange county. Other lands are good for other purposes. The poorest and dryest are first-class for lemon culture, and the gravelly soils are best for the vine. The low, flat lands, with water near the surface, are best for alfalfa and corn. The roots of an orange tree should not reach down into standing water. The only scale that has ever done orange growing in this county any serious harm is the red scale, aspiliotus aurantiifl. It has taken us a long time to learn how to overcome it. The work of spraying last season with the rosin wash furnishes a lemon wall worth reading. Some made a grand success while others made a partial failure. We have endeavored to inquire into the causes of the varied successes. Some partial failures are accounted for on account of the time of season in which the work was done, and others by the condition of the trees as to irrigation; cultivation and fertilization. The trees were in such a bad condition that the leaves were just ready to fall and the spraying knocked them off. The fruit was already covered with scales and the wash failed to kill them. If the spraying had been done earlier in the season the scale would have been killed before getting on the fruit. If the trees had been fertilized, irrigated and cultivated, the leaves would endure the wash. But the main cause of failure was the want of thoroughness of the work: The man who did his own work, and did it well, was successful, but the man that hired his work done and left the hiring to do as he pleased, got left. The spraying was done too cheaply, in many cases not more than one-third enough was put on. An example of thoroughness may now be seen one-half mile north of the Santa Fe depot in Orange. This is a ten-acre grove belonging to Travis & Crowder. It was sprayed last year with satisfactory results, but was a little too late to make the fruit clean, being in August. The early part of the season is the time to use this wash, before the fruit is infected. Mr. Tavia handles one of the nozzles himself and thoroughly drones each tree three times before leaving it on its train faster than testimony for this carriage on the Santa Fe. NEWS. The apricot orchard 700 tons this year. The total yield 800 pounds. Thirty carloads derived from South Africa in Serrationto be handled giant pots. A lecture comceived a note for will speak one night. A well-known says the census calls their names uncle cents to $1 for cash. Two preschools field, have been set up settling a dispute The latter was pulled a knife took to his heal. Says the Fairmore homely edited *Ontario* in this ably accounts papers of any State less time in front avoid unpleasant. The Selma Irritant say that so far thai pleasant harvest section. Many forty acres per teames. This is superior quality will greatly aid Every rancher bills and have a chance. The Seventy-pany of Frames rights to form formed for these capable of being The purchase price is mostly in the county. Conrad Wittkko-to-do Rocklin quarrels Fortier, the most and Saturday Juas as nearly as possible by drawing up an ad by the newly-married signed. Cannes exhibited at thte Santa Fe torious in this sum $60,000 for run members of thie two years ago. Judge Brunsom testimony on Wm non-titil, and Ju ing among others had violated thie train faster testimony for thie two years ago. BOGNA COFFEE. Look out for a new kind of coffee that is not coffee. Some clever Frenchmen at the island of Reunion have discovered that the fruit of the wild orange that grows there has the aroma of the coffee berry. As it costs less to raise the wild orange than regular coffee, naturally the planters are substituting the former for the latter, and the government even has ordered that a great part of the highlands on the islands be reserved for the cultivation of new bogus coffee. One bright gleam on the coffee horizon is in fact that the new berry will be so cheap that it will, if its culture succeeds, drive out chicory, and as an adulterant it is said to be much less vile than that staple coffee cheapener.-New York Sun. A Scrap of Paper Saves Her Life. It was jus an ordinary scrap of wrapping paper, but it saved her life. She was in the last stages of consumption, old by physicians that she was incurable and could live only a short time; she weighed less than seventy pounds. On a piece of wrapping paper she read of Dr.King's New Discovery, and got a sample bottle; it helped her, she bought a large bottle; it help her more,bought another and grew better fast, continued its use and is now strong,健康,rosy,plump,weighing 140 pounds. For fuller partiolar send stamp to W.H.Cole,Druggist,Fort Smith.Trial Bottles of this wonderful Discovery Free at Wm.Higgins' Drugstore. CHurch Announcements. METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH—On Philadelphia street.Sunday school at 10 A.M.Services at 11 A.M.mand 7:30 P.M.Prayer meeting Wednesdays at 7.Song service Friday at 7 P.M.Presaching at Fullerton Sundays at 2 P.M.German EVANGELICAL CHURCH--Services every Sunday at 3 P.M.Rev.C.Berkner,Pastor. ST.BONIFACE CATHOLIC CHURCH--Services every Sunday,morning and evening.Rev.P Stretters,pastor. Espayey. This is what you ought to have, in fact,you must have it,tos fully enjoy life.Thousands are searching for it daily,and mourning because they find it not.Thousands upon thousands of dollars are spent annually by our people in the hope that they may attain this boon.And yet it may be had by all.We guarantee that Electriot Bitters,fused according to directions and use pernowin progressWe have already inspected groves containing 15,000 trees.A yet we have found but two kinds of scale not known to have been here before; lecanium pruinosa and icerynis purchase.or white cottony scale.The lather has only been found in one tree.We have traced its tracks from another county,these it was brought on ornamental shrubs two years agoand "healed in" under the infested tree.So far as we could find the scale had not spread to any surrounding tree,但we found eggs not hatchedwhich,iif left a little while,the would have furnished sustenancefor a small colonyof vedolia cardinalia,and this would give usthe abilityto introduceto our county that queenof parasitis.Thewhitecottonynishouldremainwithnoterritory.intheonlyscalethathaseverdoneorangegrowinginthiscountyanyseriousharmistheredscale.aspiliotusaurantiifl.ithas takenusalongtimetolearnhowtoovercomeit. The workofsprayinglastseasonwiththeroinswashfurnishedlaemonwellworthreading.Somemadeagrandsuccesswhileothersmadeapartialfailure.Wewenhaseddeavowedinquirementintothecausesofthevariedsuccess.Somepartialfailuresareaccountedforonaccountofthetimeofseasoninwhichtheworkwasdone,andothersbytheconditionofthetreesasitirrigation,cultivationandfertilization.Thetreeswereinsuchbadconditionthattheleaveswerejustreadytofallandthesprayingknockedthemoffront.Fruitwasalreadycoveredwithscaleandthewashfailedtokillthem.Intheearlystageofseasonthescalewouldhavebeenkilledbeforegettingonthefruit.Ifthetreeshadbeenfittedirrigatedandcultivated,theleaveswouldendurethewash.Butthemaincauseoffailurewasthewantofthoroughnessofthework.Themanwhididhisownwork,anddiditwellwassuccessful,butthemanthatbiredhisworkdoneandleftthehiringtoloadbe pleased,gotleft.Thesprayingwasdonetocheaplyinmanycasesnotmorethanone-thirdenoughwasputon.Anexampleofthoroughnessmaynowbeseenone-halfmilenorthoftheSantaFedepotinOrangeThisisanacregrovebelongingtoTravis&CrowderItwassprayedlastyearwithsatisfactoryresultsbutwasa littleto LatetomakethefruitcleanbeinginAugust.TheearlypartoftheseeventsisthetimetousethiswashbeforethefruitisinflectedMr.Taviahandiestheseeventstraitemyforthetrainfastertestimonyforthiemonthsovereignmentofthetwoyearsago.JudgeBrunsomtestimonyonWmnon-titil,andJu ing amongotherhadviolatedthietrainfastertestimmyforthiemonthsovereignmentofthetwoyearsago.JudgeBrunsomtestimonyonWmnon-titil,andJu ing 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Thousands are searching for it daily, and mourning because they find it not. Thousands upon thousands of dollars are spent annually by our people in the hope that they may attain this boon. And yet it may be had by all. We guarantee that Electric Bitters, if used according to directions and the use persisted in, will bring you good digestion and onset the demon dyspepsia and install instead Eupesy. We recommend Electric Bitters for Dyspepsia and all disease of Liver, Stomach and Kidneys. Sold at 50c. and $1 per bottle at Wm. M. Higgins' Drugstore. A Michigan Central Railroad Employees Wife His Case, after Seven Years' Content. While employed as agent of the Michigan Central Railroad Company, at Augusta, Mich., my kidnays became diseased, and from an impoverished and impure state of the blood, my general health was entirely undermined. I consulted the leading physicians of this city and Ann Arbor, and all pronounced my case Bright's disease. In October last, I began taking Hibbard's Rheumatic Syrup, and am to-day a well man. It affords me pleasure to render suffering humanity any good that I can, and I wish to say that I think if the greatest blood, kidney and liver medicine in the world. E. Larsilera, Agent M. C. R. R., Albion, Mich. Sold by D. W. Hunk. Prepared only by the Charles Wright Medicine Co., Detroit, Mich. For Diseases of Horses: There is nothing that compares with Cole's Veterinary-Carolinae. It nurses Cats, Wounds, Bruises, Collar and Saddle Galls, Sores, Mangas, Scrubbies, Thrush, Infestations and all skin and hand diseases quicker than any other remedy. It is the only preparation that will immortally ruin the hair to its original color. Edwin D. Bither, driver of Jay Eye Sea haws: "Having given Veterinary Carolininae a thorough trial, I can fully endorse it, and take pleasure in recommending it to all owners of horses in the best remedy that I ever saw for gums stable use." Large sum $1.00; Small one 50 cents. Sold at the Anaheim Pharmacy. If you want the finest flour made in the State try the O. M. Co. "Standard." jal9f Avery & Bradley pay the highest cash market price for eggs. The man who did his own work, and did it well, was successful, but the man that bired his work done and left the hirailing to do as he pleased, got left. The spraying was done too cheaply, in many cases not more than one-third enough was put on. An example of thoroughness may now be seen half mile north of the Santa Fe depot in Orange. This is a ten-acre grove belonging to Travis & Crowder. It was sprayed last year with satisfactory results, but was a little too late to make the fruit clean, being in August. The early part of the season is the time to use this wash, before the fruit is infected. Mr. Travis handles one of the nozzles himself and thoroughly drains each tree three times before leaving it. He treats about forty-five trees per day, with two nozzles, using 900 gallons, or 20 gallons per tree. The strength of the wash is 5 pounds of canister soda at 60 per cent, 15 pounds rosin and 2 quarts whale oil. These trees show the good results of last year's work, having doubled the amount of fruit and three times the amount of foliage. His trees will be clean and his crop of fruit large. We are glad to report that the earnest cooperation of the Supervisors of this county with the board has contributed its share to render ordinations very plausible and agreeable. We have met with no serious opposition, except from non-residents, who will probably require a little permission on our part. We have found that the red scale is not seriously affected by the extremes of heat and cold, but is by frequent and excessive rains. If the rain of the past season had continued a month longer, it is quite probable that few if any had survived, but much a minus as the one just passed may not be expanded again soon. The most investigation still progresses, and we may well hope from its grand results. A few guineas are obligating a Mule for the bleak months to health and thus buds may be diminished together. All of which do responsibly submitted. Ninna Manitou, S. W. Prentice, K. H. Kerr. Mansha Ann, June 14, 1883. In order to meet the fall demand for manhouses, the beds should be cut out the latter part of July. It takes a bad about a month to come up, and as a rule it will remain continuously productive for these or four weeks. If several beds are made one about four weeks after the other, a continuous supply of the plants one to bed during the entire height of the season. The first bed should be made in the open air, but as the second they should be made under shade, to protect them from the cold weather. In England beds under shades are very common. By drawing up at the newly-married signed. Canada exhibited at the The Santa Fe torious in the annual $40,000 for run members of the two years ago. Judge Brunson testimony on Woman non-smitten and Jujing among others had violated their train faster testimony for their parties on the sight to ten miles of the same then defended Bartleys were also granted. Three days being meeny. There comes of the case... NUMBER 35 ANNAHEDIN IMPORTANT. Los Angeles Harbor. A Herald man went down to Anahedin yesterday on a little spin. The streets were neatly, a great many people being in to buy oakmats and flags for the "Glorious Fourth." A large number of them are well known to the reporter, and they all said business was looking up in the old colony. It is the universal opinion that the vine district is at an end, and that next year there will be a great many small vineyards set out as a beginning of the great industry for which Anahedin was celebrated for. The prosperity of the Herald is well illustrated in the prosperity of its agent, Joe Helmsen. Joe has for some time had a big rush in North Anahedin, and now he has bought one of the best blocks in the city. It is where the post offices was for years and where the GAKETTE is published. It is 40 feet front by about 150 deep, a two-story brick building. Joseph paid a round price for the property, but that is kept on the q.t. Frank Ry negotiated the sale in fine shape. Perhaps the best index of the prosperity of that district is found in the nursery of Tim Carroll. He has sold 300,000 orange trees and 100,000 walnut trees this season. All these have been set in orchard near Anahedin. Tim is a restler. He has now 360 acres of land, of which more than 100 acres are devoted to nursery. He has of orange and walnut stock 1,000,000 young trees. Of all sorts he has a multitude of young trees in nursery. Mr. Carroll has 10,000 orange and walnut trees set in orchard of his own. West of Anahedin he has a sixty-acre tract all set with trees. There is a fine artesian well on this, and a lakeset will be made there, with boats and bathing houses attached. The use of the lake will be free to all citizens. More power to Mr. Carroll! He is the true improver of the section. Another fine improvement is the new brewery of F. Conrad, near the Southern Pacific depot. It has a capacity equal to 1,400 gallons a day. The first brew was made four months ago, and the beer is now being sold. It is a remarkably light, sound, wholesome and refreshing beverage. Mr. NEWS IN BRIEF. The apricot crop at Pomona will be about 700 tons this year. The total yield of the cherry crop on John Badwell's ranch at Chico this year was 248,000 pounds. Thirty carloads of potatoes have been ordered from Southern California for delivery in Sarnamento before July 1st. John Ball was bottling soda water in Virginia City on Friday when a bottle broke and put out his right eye. A sedar tree on J. M. Hookett's ranch, in the Kalama valley, Waah., is eighteen feet in diameter and stands 350 feet high. Peter Burnett was blown to pieces at South Prairia, Waah., on Friday, while handling giant powder. A lecture committee of Stockton has received a note from H. M. Stanley that he will speak one night for $1,200 guaranteed. A well-known Chinese of Virginia City says the census enumerators refused to take their names unless they were paid from 75 cents to $1 for each name. Two preschere, named Perahall and Cutchfield, have been tried in Sprague, Waah., for settling a dispute about land by gunning. The latter was severely wounded, when he pulled a knife and attacked Perahall, who took to his heels. Says the Fairhaven Herald: There are more homely editors in Washington than any other State in the Union, but that fact probably accounts for them having the best papers of any State in the Union. They waste less time in front of the looking-glasses and avoid unpleasant reflections. The Selma Irrigator says: Old rancherers say that so far this has been one of the most pleasant harvests ever experienced in this section. Many header crews are averaging forty acres per day with ease to men and teams. This saving in expense, with the superior quality of wheat and the good yield, will greatly aid the oppressed rancher. Every rancher will be enabled to meet all bills and have a few twenties left. The Seventy-six Land and Water Company of Freno has sold its canal and water rights to the irrigation district recently formed for the purpose of taking all lands capable of being watered by this canal system. The purchase price is $410,000. The district is mostly in the southern portion of Freno county. Conrad Wittke, an industrious and well-do Rocklin quarrier, 63 years of age, on Friday married a widow named Mrs. Ann Fortier, the mother of eighteen children; and Saturday Justice Henry of Saaramento as nearly as possible untied the nuptial knot by drawing up articles of separation, which the newly-married couple of but a few hours signed. Cause, drunkenness of the bride exhibited at the wedding banquet! The Santa Fe Company is thus far victorious in the suit of damages against it for $40,000 for running over and killing four members of the Bartley family at Santa Ana two years ago. A motion was made by Judge Brunson at the close of plaintiff's testimony on Wednesday of last week for a non-violent, and Judge Towner denied it, holding, among other things, that the railroad had violated the city ordinance in running its train faster than six miles an hour. The testimony for the defense proved that the court on the team were driving at from Of all sorts he has a multitude of young trees in nursery. Mr. Carroll has 10,000 orange and walnut trees set in orchard of his own. West of Anaheim he has a sixty-acre tract all set with trees. There is a fine artesian well on this, and a lakelet will be made there, with boats and barring houses attached. The use of the lake will be free to all citizens. More power to Mr. Carroll! He is the true improver of the section. Another fine improvement is the new brewery of F. Conrad, near the Southern Pacific depot. It has a capacity equal to 1,400 gallons a day. The first brew was made four months ago, and the beer is now being sold. It is a remarkably light, sound, wholesome and refreshing beverage. Mr. Conrad has all the newest machinery, two fine ice houses and all the necessary appliances to make fine beer. The barley is all grown near Anaheim, and the hope are of California growth. The whole place is kept in order. Louis Boltz is an old stand by Anaheim. His resort, just where the street car stops near the Southern Pacific depot, is well managed and very popular. The latest movement at Anaheim is to get a cannery put up at once to take care of the fruit crop. Some of the leading citizens were at work yesterday with a will getting subscriptions for the enterprise. They were being encouraged in a substantial manner, and no doubt in a few days the Herald will be able to say to the people that the work is actually under way. Modesto Irrigation District The following are further particulars concerning the case of Turlock Irrigation District vs. Wheaton, mentioned in these columns last week: The Board of Directors of the Modesto Irrigation District filed the deed for the dam, land and water rights belonging to W. A. Wheaton, located near La Grange, thirty miles east of Modesto, in the County Recorder's office on Saturday last. The deed grants the district a full license and privilege of entering upon said premises, removing the present dam and flumes therefrom, and erecting a new dam of such character and kind and in such place upon the premises as it may choose, provided that the top of the dam shall not be more than fifty feet in elevation higher than the present dam, which is about forty feet. The deed also conveys a strip of land 400 feet wide across any part of the land lying on the northern side of the Tuolumne river which the Modesto Irrigation District may choose to locate its proposed canal upon. It also provides that the district may use, free of charge, all material needed in the construction of the canal and headworks. Wheaton also conveys all the lands which may be overflowed by the backing of the water. The only restriction placed upon the Modesto district is that they shall not be permitted to join or share any of their rights and privileges with the Turlock Navigation District, who propose to take water from the river on the opposite side of the river until the present litigation with Wheaton is settled. The Turlock Irrigation District, which comprises 176,000 acres of land, attempted to purchase the land and water rights of Wheaton, but a price could not be agreed upon, the district offering $25,000, while Wheaton asked over $100,000. A condemnation suit followed for a right of way over his land for a dam located half a mile above the present dam site. The land needed was but five acres. Wheaton claimed $300,000 damages but a jury recently awarded him but $95, the verdict fixing the value of the land allowed $20 for The Santa Fe Company is thus far victorious in the suit of damages against it for $40,000 for running over and killing four members of the Bartley family at Santa Ana two years ago. A motion was made by Judge Brunson at the close of plaintiff's testimony on Wednesday of last week for a non-suit, and Judge Towner denied it, holding among other things, that the railroad had violated the city ordinance in running its train faster than six miles an hour. The testimony for the defense proved that the parties on the team were driving at from eight to ten miles an hour, and at the close of the case the motion of non-suit was renewed, defendant's counsel arguing that the Bartleys were alike culpable. The motion was granted. The case has been a hot one, three days being occupied in taking testimony. There is much surprise at the outcome of the case. Real Estate Transactions. The following transfers of real estate have been recorded during the week: Pedro Lopez and Alfredo Lanfranco to Justo Morillo—Portion of lot 29, Anahaim Extension; $8. Justo Morillo to F. C. Smythe—3½ acres in lot 29, Anahaim Extension. Peter Skorup to H. P. Larsen—Undivided interest in lot 16, block B, Center tract, Anahaim; $200. John Fleminger to Philipena Pfeninger—W. of NW; of Sec. 3, T. 4, R. 10, 54.80 acres; $15,600. B. F. Prithhard to P. James—N; of SW; of NE; and S; of NW; of NE; of Sec. 9, T. 4, R. 11; $10. Stanhope Renault Company to B. F. Prithhard—NE; of NE; of Sec. 9, T. 4, R. 11, 40.17 acres; $10. A. T. Wallop to B. T. Harris — Assignment by County Clerk. Anomalous Impairment. Could recently derive more exacerbating tortures than those of which you see the evidence in the face of a rhamnole or neonigle spider. The agonies are the consequence of not checking a rhamnole or neonigle spider at the contact. Montauer's stomach blisters has been found by stitched medical practitioners to present no only remediable, but defensive affinity, where these dilapidate spots, or a tendency to in addition. Suspect this poisonous but humane magpie, hurling too many high specifics, but much smaller, not only in condition, but in kindness from the rhamnole wrist, and that murray-dilapidated wren moved from whiteness and distended by the boggy, moving muddles, which Murray-addicted manchet for mullets, kidney compassible, dysentery, constipation and liver complaint. Barbed wire is the cheapest fencing known. To make it an always keep a bottle of Farmers' Healing Dilimant on hand. It prevents pumkin kings from fleeing rapidly and well. W. M. Higgins, Druggist, The Turlock Irrigation District, which comprises 176,000 acres of land, attempted to purchase the land and water rights of Wheaton, but a price could not be agreed upon, the district offering $25,000, while Wheaton asked over $100,000. A condemnation suit followed for a right of way over his land for a dam located half a mile above the present dam site. The land needed was but five acres. Wheaton claimed $300,000 damages but a jury recently awarded him but $95, the verdict fixing the value of the land at but $1 per acre and allowed $20 for the division of the land. The case will be appealed. The dam, which is what is know as a "crib-dam," was constructed by Wheaton nineteen years ago, and has withstood the torrents of water which have poured over it since that time. It is located in the river between two gorges of rock at a place where the channel is narrow. Engineer Wagner of the Modesto District pronounces the site as almost invaluable to the district, as it is the lowest possible point upon the river on which a permanent dam can be constructed without an enormous outlay of money. The purchase price paid by the Modesto district was $10,000 in coin and $11,000 in bonds of the district. The Modesto district comprises 80,000 acres of land and $800,000 in bonds have been voted for for the construction of the irrigating canal. Secretary Minimes Story. It was alter dinner that Secretary Blaine is said to have told the story about the relative prominence of wine and water in Scriptures. "Wine," said See'y. Blaine, "is frequently mentioned with favor in the Scriptures. When our Sarior came upon the earth one of the first things He did to prove His divinity was to turn water into wine, and when about to take His departure one of the last things He did to show His love for his disciples was to give them wine and to tell them to drink it often in remembrance of Him." "On the other hand," said the Secretary, "you may search the whole length and breadth of Scriptures and you will find only one man who ever mentioned water. He only asked for a single drop of water and he was in hall, which is all probability was the best place for him."