anaheim-gazette 1890-08-14
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The Weekly Gazette.
ISSUES EVERY THURSDAY.
Henry Kuehler, Charles Kuehler,
Editors and Producers.
THURSDAY
A DISPATCH to THE GAZETTE yesterday afternoon at 4:50 o'clock says that Col. Markham was nominated for Governor on the first ballot.
The report of the Grand Jury, in reference to the official acts of several of our city officers, is not yet received. The report was to have been submitted on Tuesday, and we had expected to be able to print it in this issue. Nothing definite is known as to the tenor of their report, but it is said that the old Board of Trustees and the various city officials will be censured by the Grand Jury, and possibly an indictment or two will be thrown in to make it interesting.
The probable report of this body has been a topic of absorbing interest to our citizens during the week. By next week, in all probability, we shall know what they say about our municipal affairs, and the affairs of our school district, which they are also investigating.
Our amusing contemporary, the Santa Ana Free Press, prints the following:
A newspaper of this county has intimated that a Santa Ana paper has been guilty of most detestable of newspaper sins—selling its editorial space to candidates without a charge ought not to have been made unless the man who made it knew the facts in the case, and then he should have published it far and wide and held the offender up to the acorn of the world. It is understood that every other portion of a paper is for sale, but the editorial columns are reserved for the opinions of the editor of the paper, and his constituency ought to desert him in a body of they know him to be guilty of such an offense against the dignity and decency of newspaper work.
Let us make ourselves plain in this matter. The "newspaper of this county" which made the "intimation" is THE GAZETTE; the paper referred to as the guilty one is THE FREE PRESS.
When the editor of this journal visited Santa Ana last week he was asked by one of the proprietors of the Free Press what editorial "pulls" for candidates were worth. The answer was that we had never taken a $2 (gross) to run a half-inch advertisement for a year. The ad "goes anywhere in the paper," says this checky advertising agent, who desires that we also send a copy of our paper to the hotel. Three dollars mean $2.25 to the publisher, and as a year's subscription amounts to $2, we should have twenty-five cents for the year's advertising. We set up all of one night debating whether we should accept the significant offer, and haven't decided yet. The position of the advertisement is what tickles us—the ad "goes anywhere in the paper." That advertising agent is exclusively accommodating. A little more of it on his part, and he might get the country publisher to do his work for nothing.
Yesterday's mail brought us an assigned letter from Buena Park, containing several verses headed "The Way They Kiss," and containing much the same matter as is printed in another column under the same title, with the exception that the names of the different towns are changed to suit the tastes of the Buena Park writer. Now, it so happened that the verses in question had been set up in this office on Saturday last. The verses have been flitting about the newspapers of Southern California for several weeks past, each editor designing to add a verse as to the way the girls kiss in his own locality. We followed the harmless rule set down by others, and after a rigid erosion-examination put to those who are alleged to know something about the way the Anaheim girls are reported to kiss, we added a verse, setting forth the data secured by us at "great trouble and expense."
Now comes our Buena Park friend, substituting the Anaheim girl for the Perris girl, as appears in the printed context, and ringing in several other changes in the names of places, but adding nothing original. In his opinion the Buena Park girl kisses like the Santa Ana girl is said in the lines to kiss, and the Fullerton girl's kiss is like that of the San Jacinto girl, and soon.
Altogether we consider our Buena Park correspondent guilty of the worst piece of plagiarism it was ever our misfortune to run across. But the fact that we had already got the verses proses conclusively how the "best laid plans of mice and men—and plagiarists too—gang oft agile." When he writes to us again he should sign his name.
paper, and its constituency ought to desert him in a body of they know him to be guilty of such an offense against the dignity and decency of newspaper work.
Let us make ourselves plain in this matter. The "newspaper of this county" which made the "intimation" is THE GAZETTE; the paper referred to as the guilty one is the Five Press.
When the editor of this journal visited Santa Ana last week he was asked by one of the proprietors of the Fire Press what editorial "puffs" for candidates were worth. The answer was that we had never taken a count for notices of the character referred to, or accepted pay for any matter that ever appeared in this journal other than advertisements, and local matter known and marked as advertisements. No reputable publisher will accept pay for a kindly reference hastened upon a friend, be he a candidate or not. Friendship based upon and cemented with coin will turn instanter to the drugs of hatred by the power of the same commodity. The man whose friendship is bought with gold is being so bereft of decency that words fail one in calling down litter imprecations upon his disreputable soul.
We were informed, the same day on which the conversation referred to above occurred, that the Five Press had been publishing complimentary sketches of various candidates at such per line that it was selling itself in short, for pay. If this is true, its "puffs" are valueless, and its criticisms worse.
It is understood, as stated by our contemporary, that every portion of a newspaper, other than its editorial columns, are for sale? By the representative editors of the country, by the men of sense and brains and decency who honor the profession, that is understood to be decidedly of the case. A man would be reverent to his duty as a journalist, not to denounce the infamous practice in severest terms. A wise journalist has said that the reputation of a newspaper should be held as sacred as a woman's. How a journal may consistently comport itself to that tenet of the profession, and sell seven-eighths of its space to the highest bolder, reserving the other eighth for the "opinions of the editor," who in the very nature of things must be the very last person on earth to whom to turn for an unbased and imbought opinion, is something which we cannot for the life of us see.
If the wrath of our contemporary were called down upon this infamous practice in like measure to its terms denouncing the practice of selling "the editorial columns," it would be more worthy of occupying a place among the fraternity of newspapers that honor and build up the commonwealth.
If the paper understand that seven-eighths or more of its space is for sale, let the people know it, and judge its utterances accordingly. Out of its own mouth, therefore, is it convicted. In the very protestation of its indefensible and absurd position it held up in several other changes in the names of places, but adding nothing original. In his opinion the Bu... Park girl kisses like the Santa Ana girl is said in the lines to kiss, and the Fullerton girl's kiss is like that of the San Jacinto girl, and so on.
Altogether we consider our Buena Park correspondent guilty of the worst piece of plagiarism it was ever our misfortune to run across. But the fact that we had already got the verses prose conclusively how the "best laid plans of mice and men—and plagiarists too—gang oft agile." When he writes to us again he should sign his name, and if he plagiarizes again we'll say nothing about it.
Candidates for county offices are still bobbing up serenely. As yet there are no Democrats to announce themselves. It is about settled, however, that W. B. Tedford, spoken of last week as a probable candidate for Clerk, will be the party's choice for Assessor. Mr. Tedford is recognized as one of the most popular men in the county, and will if nominated make a very strong race. Of the other probable candidates on the Democratic ticket little can be said as yet, as no announcements will be made for a week or two. Captain Keith is in the fight for Treasurer, and will probably make a formal announcement of the fact in a few days.
At a point meeting of the Molesto and Turlock irrigation directors on Saturday it was decided to build a joint dam 90 feet high in the Tuolumne river, 1,800 feet above the Wheaton dam for use of both districts. The litigation with M. A. Wheaton, referred to in these columns some weeks ago, was compromised by the payment of $35,000. Turlock district paying $32,500 and Modesto district $2,500.
Mogues In Every Walk of Life.
San Diego
It is understood that a Santa Ana newspaper is giving candidates editorial "puffs" at each per minute. This is one of the most disgruntled practices that an editor can lead his efforts to. A reputable editor never sells his opinions for coins. A newspaper that reports to the meticulous practice for facts the esteem of the people, and will feel the benaming effects of it sooner or later. Anahima Garrett
The sentiments expressed by our esteemed contemporary are eminently proper, and it is to be pitted that in so many instances true individuality sinks into a base servility. Rogues, however, are found in all the walks of life.
Republican State Convention.
Sacramento, August 12. At 1:30 this afternoon there was little evidence in the Assembly chambers at the State Capitol that the Republican State Convention had been called to meet there at 2 o'clock. The doors of the chamber had not been opened, and hardly more than fifty persons waited in the corridors outside. All excitement attending the convention was around the hotels where the various candidates have their headquarters.
At 2:10 Chairman Dumond rapped the Assembly to order and addressed them in a few minutes before terming terminally covered to be half an hour after service in Park vice and the village time-and-brutal battle.
In 1857 sentence of West Hangover up in another ship, but through would be up and it was.
When and number leave-murdered.
It was but Past O'Reilly America O'Reillyly he dived away from forts in a red flame him.
At the open picked did that with folly, and lay in M discover him his upon him.
Mean had hapless of the G船 ship sailed rendezvous to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabe successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabei successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors wished his "Sonnies" and of Californiabei successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors willed his "Sonnies" and of Californiabei successible to London while attic O'Reilly months, sailors willed his "Sonnies" and of Californiabei successIBLE TO LONDON WHILE ATTIC OF THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS AFternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS AT THE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS AT THE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS AT THE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS AT THE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS AT THE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS AT THE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS AT THE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS AT THE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS AT THE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS AT THE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS AT THE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS AT THE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS AT THE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS AT THE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS AT THE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS AT THE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS AT THE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS AT THE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS ATTHE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS ATTHE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS ATTHE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS ATTHE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS ATTHE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS ATTHE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS ATTHE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS ATTHE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS ATTHE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMPMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS ATTHE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMPMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS ATTHE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMPMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS ATTHE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMPMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS ATTHE STATE CAPITOL THAT THE REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMPMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in THE ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS ATTHE STATE CAPITOL THAT The REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMPMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in The ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS ATTHE StATERCAPILOT THAT The REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMPMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in The ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS ATTHE StATERCAPILOT THAT The REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMPMENTO ON AUGUST 12 — AT 1:30 THIS Afternoon there was little evidence in The ASSEMBLY CHAMBERS ATTHE StATERCAPILOT THAT The REPUBLICAN STATE CONFERENCE IN SACRAMPMENTO ON AUGUST
If the wrath of our contemporary were called down upon this infamous practice in like measure to its terms denouncing the practice of selling "the editorial columns," it would be more worthy of occupying a place among the fraternity of newspapers that honor and build up the commonwealth.
If the paper understands that seven eighths or more of its space is for sale, let the people know it, and judge its utterances accordingly. Out of its own mouth, therefore, is it convicted. In the very protestation of its indemnite and absurd position is it held up to the "sporn of the world."
But we are charitable. We cannot believe our contemporary was acting altogether in its right senses when it printed the radical item. We hope it will make haste to rectify its transgression—to explain away its undeniable understanding of that part of the profession which makes it incumbent upon an editor to hold aloof only a mottoum of his space from the abyss of shame to which seventeenthhs of his paper is subjected.
Seven-eighths of the paper for sale? Gadzocks! But we pause for an explanation.
As will be seen by the official brigade orders, published elsewhere, our local military company is now a part of the Ninth Regiment. Captain Wood has received a letter from Colonel Spileman of San Diego, welcoming our company into the new regiment. It is probable that Company G will be retransferred to the Seventh Regiment before the middle of next month. A petition asking for the retransfer will shortly be circulated among the members of our company.
The printers' strike in Los Angeles still continues on the Herald and Times. The Express and Tribune have settled their differences with the union men, and are being issued in their regular form. The two first-named papers appear in crippled condition. It is to be hoped that the proprietors and printers may arrive at some amicable understanding regarding their differences, and the strike settled satisfactorily to both sides.
We have received a proposition from a San Francisco advertising agent, offering us
Republican State Convention.
Sacramento, August 12.—At 1:30 this afternoon there was little evidence in the Assembly chambers at the State Capitol that the Republican State Convention had been called to meet there at 2 o'clock. The doors of the chamber had not been opened, and hardly more than fifty persons waited in the corridors outside. All excitement attending the convention was around the hotels where the various candidates have their headquarters.
At 2:10 Chairman Dumond rapped the Assembly to order and addressed them in a few words. J. C. Campbell, of San Joaquin, was nominated for temporary chairman by Blanchard, of El Dorado, and there being no opposition he was declared elected.
Following are the members of the Committee on Credentials: D. M. Burra, M. H. Smith of San Francisco, C. G. Labenson of Tulare, B. C. Dresher of Butte, T. C. Boland of Ivyo, M. A. Luse of San Diego, W. A. Anderson of Sacramento, J. F. Kidder of Nevada, T. Harris of Merced, C. R. Briggs of Shasta, Jos. Brown of San Bernardino, T. J. Wilson of Solano, Gao. E. Heasey of Santa Clara, W. E. Green of San Joaquin and W. R. Radcliffe of Santa Cruz.
After the convention adjourned this afternoon the same scenes were enacted around the hotels as during the past two days. All kinds of rumors were in the air to night, but the general belief seems to be that Markham's chances for securing the gubernatorial nomination had improved during the day. His friends now express as much confidence as ever that he will be nominated, and the practically solid delegations from the Southern California counties show no indication whatever of abandoning their champion. It is not generally believed the Markham delegates will develop their strength on the first ballot. A conservative estimate gives Markham 275 to 300 votes, while Morrow's present strength is placed at 225 to 277 votes.
It seems to be generally conceded that the temporary organization which was effected today will be made permanent. The fears of some of Markham's friends were allayed to-night by the announcement that the Committee on Order of Business had agreed to recommend that the gubernatorial nomination should be, the first one taken up.
Redlands Boomed With Annheims Fruit.
Pomona Program.
More than 400,000 pounds of dried apricots have been shipped from Redlands this season. At 14 cents, which was about the average price paid, this puts $56,000 into the pockets of our growers. — Circograph.
It is too bad that figures should be so juggled with as in the above. Whether the
Lahish advertisement goes anywhere in the city advertising agent,
need a copy of our Three dollars green publisher, and as a
pants to $2, we should for the year's midfall of one night debatcept the munificent ad yet. The position
what tickles us—the
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That
commensely accomodatit on his part, and be
publisher to do his
bought us an unsigned
k, containing several
way They Kiss," and
name matter as is
uma under the same
that the names of
are changed to suit
Park writer. Now,
veres in question
in office on Saturday
been flitting about
nthern California for
editor designing to
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followed the harmless
and, after a rigid
to those who are alabout the way the
called to kiss, we added
data secured by us
penense.
Park friend, subfor the Perris girl,
context, and ringages in the names of
original. In his
girl kisses like the
in the lines to kiss,
kisses is like that of
so on.
Our Buena Park
worst piece of plamfortune to run
that we had already
conclusively how the
and men—and plangles." When he
should sign his name,
there are written to denounce by any other know me butter, two small undertail.
Now in this book, Tons and tons of green apricots once shipped to Redlands from Whitman, Anaheim, Santa Ana, Tustin and Orange during July. Mr. Langley, of the farm of Cook & Langley, tells us that his firm shopped 750 tons of green apricots to Redlands for drying because the heat and weather are better there for fruit drying. The Southern California Packing Company shipped thirty tons of green apricots to Redlands in one day. Out of the 1,200 tons of apricots dried there, less than 200 tons were grown in Redlands. New as to the money that the fruit growers them selvet put. They, as a rule, sold their apricot crops for a cent and one quarter a pound, while the drying and preserving firms sold the dried product for fourteen or fifteen cents a pound. Only a few growers, who dried their trait, got such prices. We are surprised that such a usually reliable journal as the Citrograph should publish such a delusive—almost untruthful—statement of its local fruit interests. The feet in the Redlands fruit growers have got not even $6,000 for their croprot crop this season, so Mr. Langley says, and the crops of the Anaheim, Santa Ana and other fruit growers have been used by the Citrograph to boom Redlands.
John Boyle O'Reilly.
John Boyle O'Reilly, the noted poet and "hero-conspirator," who died in Boston on Sunday, was born in June, 1844, on the banks of the River Boyne, Ireland. He learned to set type while yet a child, and before he was twenty had made his mark as a reporter. His heart was with his native land; and embracing the cause of Irish freedom with all the earnestness of his patriotic nature, he joined the young men of Ireland in their struggle for liberty. It was at this juncture that the American civil war closed, and 100,000 veteran Irish soldiers were thinking of transporting themselves to the Green Isle to burst the chains which held it subject to Britain.
O'Reilly conceived a bold plan to strike for freedom. He suddenly left for England, joined the Tenth Hussars and donned the uniform of the British army. He had determined to learn the art of war in the enemy's camp that he might use his knowledge against hereditary foe.
The gay trooper became the hero and idol of one of the crack calvary regiments of England. It was not long before he had enrolled every Irishman in the regiment as an thumatic Fenians. His conspiracy was discovered, and a court martial sentenced him to be shot. His youth pleaded in his behalf, and his sentence was commuted to penal servitude for life. He spent sixteen months in Dartmoor penitentiary, dressed as a convict and often linked in the chaining with the vilest scum and oncasts of society, and time and again he was subjected to the most brutal treatment to break his spirit.
Hall and split her important wine and wine percent are able to tell this difference.
A dispatch from Montreal, dated Monday morning. Twenty-five hundred General Army men, with their wives and children, half Chicago for Boston, via King Falls, St. Lawrence river and Montreal on Friday. Yesterday morning five big steamers laid left Kingdom to go through the rapids of the St. Lawrence. The Behemian, the largest of the boats, had between six hundred and seven hundred pennengers ahead. About 7 o'clock in the evening great thunder clouds began to gather in the wind, and a big storm was predicted. There was yet one series of rapids to go through, the Creation, as dangerous as any on the river, when there was a brilliant flash of lightning and rain happen to fall in sheets. Suddenly the sound of cracking timbers was heard, and women dranked and fainted. The upper deck booms of the Bohemian had crumbled, and the floor, in minking, had jammed the tiller chains, and the steamer, in the midst of the brewing rapida, was entirely beyond control. A panic ensued, but the veterans ahead kept their wits about them, and fought the crowds away from the life preservers, while as quickly as possible they strapped as many as they could find onto the women and children. They were not enough by half to go round.
The boat meantime, turned entirely around and was now going down. The rapid start first. Suddenly their was a terrible jar; the steamer had struck a rock. The steamer then slowly began to turn around again, and then came another shock; followed by another each one heavier than the first. Finally the steamer gave a mighty heave and plunged as if she were going down head first, and then slowly turned her head to the rapids. There was still another shock as another rock was touched, and a plunge followed which was the last jump through the rapids out into open clear waters. The head of the vessel was then turned shoreward, and within twenty minutes the party were disembarking at the Beauharnais canal pier.
Cardinal Newman.
Cardinal John Henry Newman, one of the greatest theologians of the world, died in London on Monday. Following is a brief biography:
"Oh my mother, whence is this unto you that thou hast good things poured upon theo and canast not keep them, and bearest children, yet dreadst not own them? Why hast thou not the skill to use their services? nor the heart to rejoice in their love?"
So spoke John Henry Newman from the pulpit of St Mary's, Littlemore, when in September, 1843, he bade farewell to the Church of England. He had said bitter things against the Church of Rome; though he recognized Antichrist in the Pope. But he had now made a formal retraction of all he had uttered against the Vatican, and had resigned his livery.
W.A. Harber keeps a full book being found by a kindhearted Whipie. Butei Mischke. Call me and imprint his goods.
Lock in Anabeth Pharmacy at hain's Rheumatistic Syrup, a mere annuity for rheumatism.
Barbed wire is always kept in Parment's Healing Liniment on parvise proud flesh, keeps firm at rapidly well and W.M.Higgin.
First clean work at Schuman's shop. Satisfaction guaranteed.
For clean and pure Lard go Hillmer's Market Center street.
Veterinary carbolic salve, pure salt at the Anabeth Pharmacy, 50 pts.
Fly times are upon us. Farmer Liniment is guaranteed to keep from any sort. For sale by W.M.Higgin.
-Wm.A. Hilmer sells all of his cents to his customers.
NEW ADVERTISEMENT
Scrofula
In Its Worst Form—"Whiting". Cured.
The remarkable effect of Howard's Sarma following case illustrates the poor medicine over all blood diseases.
"My son, 7 years old, had a white come on his right leg below his knee treated the muscles so that his legs at right angles. Physicians lanced it which discharged freely; but did not materially I consider him.
A Confirmed Cripple
I was about to take him to Cinema eration, expecting his log would leave up and begin giving him little order to get up his strength. Tried up his strength; soon pieces of discharge from the sore. We could Hood's Sarma pirilla; as it seemed to be so much good, and the disk size decreased. The swelling went straightened out; and in a few month perfect use of his leg. He is now improved well as ever."
Hood's Sarsapar
Sold by druggists.$1; six for N., Prod.
Hood's Sarsapar
In 1867 the Government commuted his sentence to twenty years in the penal colony of West Australia. He was shipped on the Hangomint and for three months was cooped up in that floating torture-house. With other prisoners he formed a plan to seize the ship, but a political companion in misfortune, through fear of the villainous convicts who would escape, threatened to reveal the plot and it was abandoned.
When he reached Perth he was labeled and numbered and hired out to a ticket-off-leave-man, who worked him like a beast of burden.
It was death to help a prisoner to escape, but Father McCabe interested himself in O'Reilly's behalf and paid the Captain of an American whaler $30 to pick him up. O'Reilly pushed off shore in a skiff. Suddenly he discovered that the whaler was bearing away from him. He exhausted all his efforts in pulling toward her, and then waved a red flag, but the ship sailed away and left him. At first he determined to row out into the open ocean and trust to chance to being picked up, but his reason convinced him that without provisions this would be insane folly, and he rowed back to shore, where he lay in hiding. A convict named Rowman discovered him, and he was obliged to make him his confidante to prevent his informing upon him.
Meanwhile Father McCabe learned of what had happened, and induced Captain Gifford of the Gazelle to rescue the fugitive. The ship sailed out of Perth, and at the appointed rendezvous picked up O'Reilly and Rowman.
Subsequently the ship put into the island of Roderique for water. Rowman was recognized and arrested. To ingratiate himself with his captors he informed them that O'Reilly was on board the Gazelle. The marines returned to the whaler, but the sailors were equal to the emergency, and throwing his hat and a grindatone over the ship's side shouted, "Man overboard." The ruse succeeded, and the British commander wired to London that O'Reilly had been drowned while attempting to escape.
O'Reilly remained with the Gazelle seven months, and there learned the legends of the sailors which he afterwards immortalized in his "Songs of Southern Seas." Through the aid of Captain Gifford, who loaned him $150, he succeeded in reaching Liverpool, and there took passage for Philadelphia, whence he went to Boston. It was in the latter part of 1869 that he reached America, and he was then in his twenty-sixth year.
In Boston he first met P. A. Collins, an exile himself and a warm friendship sprang up between the two men. Through Collins' influence he secured a position on the Boston Pilot, and subsequently became editor-in-chief and part proprietor of that journal. Fortune smiled upon him and he became wealthy.
O'Reilly's reputation as journalist and literaturer soon became world wide. In politics he never was an active partisan, but preferred to see honest and fearless men at the head of State newspapers.
London on Monday. Following is a brief biography:
"Oh my mother, whence is this unto thee, that thou hast good things poured upon thee and canst not keep them, and bearest children, yet darest not own them? Why hast thou not the skill to use their services? nor the heart to rejoice in their love."
So spoke John Henry Newman from the pulpit of St. Mary's, Littlemore, when, in September, 1843, he bade farwell to the Church of England. He had said bitter things against the Church of Rome; though he recognized Antichrist in the Pope. But he had now made a formal retraction of all he had uttered against the Vatican, and had resigned his living. By October, 1845, his difficulties of faith were so cleared away that, as he says in his "Apologia," he ceased to speak of the "Roman" Catholics and boldly called them Catholica. "I am this night expecting Father Dominic, the Passionist," he writes to his friends from Littlemore on October 8, 1845. "He does not know of my intention; but I mean to ask of him admission into the One Fold of Christ." Newman's desertion pained many of his friends, but he retained all his old acquaintances except two clergymen—their names he does not mention—who refused to recognize their old "chum," the new "vert." And Newman's friends were men worth knowing, for the list included such men as Keble, Whately, Gladatone, Pasey, Manning, the two Froudes, Tennyson and Arthur Hallam. Newman was born in London on February 21, 1801. His mother, who belonged to the Evangelical and most bigoted branch of the Church of England, taught him his catechism and the Westminster confession, and it is to her that he owes that marvelous knowledge of the Bible which strikes the readers of his sermons so forcibly. Very early Newman mastered music and became proficient on the violin. At 12 he had composed opera. Before he was 14 he had studied Paine, Gibbon and Hume, and at 15 was deep in Voltaire. In 1816 he went up to Oxford and graduated as a B.A. four years after.
In 1825 he became Whately's vice principal at St. Alban's Hall, and in 1828 accepted the incumbency of St. Mary's, Oxford, with the chaplaincy of Littlemore. When he left church it was to Littlemore he retired, and there formed an acetic community over which he presided for three years. He took a leading part with his friend Pasey in the Tractarian movement, and contributed No. 90, the last of the famous "Tracts of the Times." It was severely censured by the university authorities, as it practically annulled the lines of demarkation between the Church of England and the Church of Rome. Some think that the way in which the tract was received drove Newman into the arms of the Roman church, but it is doubtful, even had No. 90 been accepted quietly by the Church of England, if he would have remained within its pale. Newman was not the man to be driven to any act but did not thoroughly approve by the clamor of a lot of bisonops. After hiscession Newman was appointed head of the Oratory of St. Philip and Neri Birmingham, and in its chapel last Whit-Monday the feeble priest conducted services, while relics of the patron saint were exposed for veneration at the bottom of the chancel stape. From 1854 to 1858 he was rector of the Catholic University in Dublin. Since then he has been conducting a Catholic school at Edgaton, where she sons of all the old Engle Irish Catholic families are educated. Pope Leo created him a cardinal in 1879.
"From the time that I became a Catholic I have been in perfect peace and contentment," he writes in his "Apologia." Not
NEWS IN BRIEF.
Miss Lillie Young, aged seventeen, the daughter of a poor man at Seattle, died and the father was too poor to hire a carriage. He engaged Rev. Mr. Anderson to accompany him to the graveyard and he and the reverend gentleman occupied seats on the hearse. While on the way the horses became frightened and ran away. Mr. Young and the minister fell under the horrors' feet and were seriously injured, while the coffin was thrown to the ground and broken open, exposing the remains of the dead girl.
"California wines," said H. L. Holder, a well-known Chicago dealer, a few days ago, "are very decidedly growing in public favor and as far as Chicago is concerned, the trade in California is in its infancy. There now are not less than 150 carloads of California wines including brands sold in Chicago every year. Of these, twenty-five carloads are disposed of to the family trade; twenty-five carloads are probably reshipped to points in Wisconsin, Michigan and Illinois; the remaining hundred carloads are consumed in the hotels, restaurants and saloons of Chicago. Not one bottle out of fifty of California wine offered for sale at any place of public resort bears the proper label. The great majority is labeled with a foreign name."
From the time that I became a Catholic I have been in perfect peace and contentment, he writes in his "Apologia." Nothing can be more peaceful than his life at Edgaton. He hated the busy haunts of men and was rarely to be seen in London. His later life he devoted to his young charges and to production of works which are read by comparatively few people, but are sparkling drops from the pure well of English undefield.
Farmers and ranchers, bring in your eggs to Avery & Everhardy. They pay the highest market price.
Avery and Everhardy's Lard comes in plain tin cans. Buy no Lard, represented as ours, hat is solid in stamped packages. Apl18t
Build up home industries by using Olive Milling Co. Flour.
Avery & Everhardy's Home-made Lard is the best in the market. Ask your butcher and grocers for it.
Avery & Everhardy pay the highest price for poultry and eggs.
Anaheim Pharmacy now has a fine line of quadruple extracts. Call and see them. jy31
Get your wagons and buggies made at J. Schauman's establishment.
Ask your butcher and grocers for Avery & Everhardy's Home-made Lard.
The Olive Milling Co. pay out more money in this county than any other single industry.
W. A. Hilmer's market is supplied with fine lambs for his customers.
Go to W. M. Higgins' Drugstore and get a sample bottle of Farmers' Healing Linens. It is a sure cure for poison oak and is a splendid healing preparation. May22 tf
Avery and Everhardy's Lard comes in plain tin cans. Buy no Lard, represented as ours, that is sold in stamped packages. Apl18t
Also constantly on hand a french of Havana Cigars and Tobacco.
That only honest and reliable medicine should be placed upon the market. If not, therefore, be stated too emphatically nor repeated too often, that all who need of a genuine Blood-purifier should be sure and ask for Ayer's Sarsaparilla.
Your life, or that of some near and dear to you, may depend on use of this well-approved remedy in preference to any other preparation of sarsaparilla (the variety most rich in curcumin properties), stillingia, mandrake, yucca dock, and the iodides. The process of manufacture is original, skilful, scrubulous clean, and such as to secure the very medicinal qualities of each ingredient. Medicine is not boiled nor heated, therefore, not a decoction; but it is a pound extract, obtained by a method closely our own, of the best and most powerful alternatives, tonics, and diuretics known to pharmacy. For the last years, Ayer's Sarsaparilla has been the standard blood-purifier world—no other approaching it in good confidence or universal demand. Itsula is approved by the leading physician and druggists. Being pure and highly concentrated, it is the most economical of possible blood medicine. Every pouch of Sarsaparilla should insist upon this preparation and see that each berry the well-known name of J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass.
In every quarter of the globe Ayer's sarsaparilla is proved to be the best remedy all diseases of the blood. Lowell drugs unite in testifying to the superior excellence of this medicine and to its great popularity in the city of its manufacture.
Ayer's Sarsaparilla PREPARED BY
MR. J. C. Ayer & CO., Lowell, MA
SARSAPARILLA
PREPARED BY
MR. J.C.AYER&CO.,LOWELL,MASS
REMOVED.
TO
DAYLIGHT STORE!
New Store! New Goods! New Prices!
Groceries, Stationery,
CONFECTIONERY, TOBACCOS,
CIGARS
And Fresh... Fruit of the Season Always on Hand.
Having moved to the building formerly occupied by the Postoffice (next door to Bank of Anaheim), I should be pleased to have my patrons, friends and the general public give me a call.
Joseph Helmsen,
The only System of Property Abstract Books in Orange County.
The owner of any lot furnished on application
T. D. HUFF, President
ATTORNEY, Z. B. WEST
R. E. HEWITT, Treasurer
GEORGE TAYLOR, Secretary
Santa Ana Abstract Comp'y
Incorporated July 9, 1889.
Capital Stock - $100,000.
Abstracts and Certificates of Title to all lands in Orange County.
113 West Fourth Street, Huff Block.
P. O. Box 340.
WE ARE NOW PREPARED TO OFFER THE PUBLIC A first class line of
LADIES' $2 50 SHOES.
ABSTRACTS and Certificates of Title to all lands in Orange County.
113 West Fourth Street, Huff Block.
P. O. Box 340.
WE ARE NOW PREPARED TO OFFER THE PUBLIC A first-class line of
LADIES' $2 50 SHOES.
AND
Men's $3 and $4 Shoes!
Which cannot be had elsewhere for the same price.
RIMPAU BROS.
I BEG TO ANNOUNCE TO THE Public that I am carrying a Full Line of
Men's, Boys' and Youths'
SHOES!
ALSO
Ladies' and Misses'
- - SHOES -
AND
SLIPPERS.
WISH TO CALL ESPECIAL ATTENTION TO OUR
$3 Line of Men's Shoes, all Styles, in CONGRESS AND LACE
SLIPPERS.
WISH TO CALL ESPECIAL ATTENTION TO OUR
$3 Line of Men's Shoes, all Styles, in CONGRESS AND LACE,
Which is the Best in the Market for the Money.
II. CAHIEN.
J.M. Griffith Company
(A Corporation)
LUMBER DEALERS
(Near Railroad Depot)
ANAHEIM.
Keep constantly on hand
Doors, Blinds, Windows,
MOULDINGS.
Posts, Shakes, Shingies.
LATH, HAIR, PLASTER OF PARIS.
ANAHEIM GRIST MILLS OPERATING ON Wednesdays and Saturdays of each week.
Grain, Fecal, Meal, Ete., of all varieties. Corn sheed and shipped.
P. PELLEGRIN & SON,
JEWELRY, ART AND MUSIC STORE,
Postoffice Block, : Anaheim, Cal.
ANAHEIM HOTEL.
Carl F. Erdmann, Proprietor.
Board by the Day and Week.
A choice line of wines, liquors and cigars.
A share of the public patronage respectfully solicited. Guests are assured of courteous treatment.
ORANGE COUNTY
Collegiate Institute,
Orange, Cal.,
WILL OPEN
Monday, Sept. 8,
1500, at 9 A.M.
For particulars apply to Rev. J. H. Harwood,
D. D., Principal.