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anaheim-gazette 1890-10-02

1890-10-02 · Anaheim Gazette · page 1 of 4 · OCR glm-ocr
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VOLUME XX. ANAHEIM, LODGE MEETINGS. ANAHEIM LODGE, NO. 87, P. & A. R. hold regular meetings on the Monday of proceeding the fall moon in each month. No learning hereborn in good standing are cordially invited to attend. PHILIP DAVIS, W. M. J. B GARBINN, Secretary. ANAHEIM LODGE, NO. 169, I. O. O. F. REQUIRING meetings every Tuesday evening. Visiting others always welcome. J. J. DYER, M. O. W. B HARKER, Secretary. ANAHEIM LODGE, NO. 85, A. O. U. W. MEETS on the first and fourth Friday of every month. B. A. DENXEL, M. W. B. ORINHAW, Secretary. OMPHEUS LODGE, NO. 237, I. O. O. F. MEETS every Thursday at 8 P.M. at Old Fellow's Hall. ROBERT MENZEL, M. O. MAX NEMLONE, Secretary. MALVERN HILL POST, NO. 181, O. A. R. meets at I. O. O. F. Hall, Los Angeles street, anaheim, every second and fourth Saturday of each month. J. B. McCULLCUOH, P. C. T. K. McDOWELL, Adjutant. ORDER CHOSEN FRIENDS MEETS THE FIRST and third Saturday evenings in each month at 8 clock. Old Fellow's Hall. WM. M. McFADDER, Commander. R. A. WHITE, Secretary. EVERGREEN COUNCIL, AMERICAN LEGION of Honor. Meets second and fourth Wednesday of each month at 8 P.M. F.C. SMYTHE, F.C. RIHPAU, Secretary. Commander. ANAHEIM COURT, I. O. F. MEETS SECOND and third Fridays of each month. D. V. HOAN, Financial Secretary. Chief Ranger. PROFESSIONAL CARDS DR. J: H. BULLARD, A. B., M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office and Residence, corner Hermins and Chartres streets, near Plantter' Hotel. OFFICE HOURS: 7 to 8:30 a.m.; 12 to 1:30, and 8 to 7:30 p.m. CHARLES PAMPERL ...Dealer in... HARDWARE, CROCKERY, and NOTICE! THE Stearns Ranchos CompaOFFER LANDS IN Artesia, Westminster, Norwalk, Consisting of 83,000 acres of Choice Lands in the RaSiena, Los Coyotes, Las Bolsas, La Habra, and San Juan Cajorta Ana IN QUANTITIES TO SUIT AT FROM $15 TO $75 PER ACRE R.J.NORTHAM, Agent; Or J.B.PIERCE at Anaheim, Califo Centralia Colony Lands for Sale at $40 to $60 Per Acre. Apply to J.B.PIERCE or R.J.NORTHAM, Anahe PROFESSIONAL CARDS DR. J. H. BULLARD, A. B., M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office and Residence, corner Hermine and Chartreuse streets, near Planters Hotel. OFFICE HOUSE: 7 to 8:30 a.m.; 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. H. CAHEN. DEALER IN General Merchandise. ANAHEIM, CAL. C. E. GROAT, Contractor and Builder. ANAHEIM, CAL. CHAS. SCHINDLER, CONTRACTOR and BUILDER. ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA. GEORGE BAUER, BOOT AND SHOE MAKER. Center street... Anaheim. Making and repairing at the lowest cash price. All orders promptly attended to. All work guaranteed. L. GUNTHER, PIONEER BOOT & SHOE MAKER. Corner Adale and Los Angeles streets. H. P. LARSEN. CONTRACTOR & BUILDER. Estimates given, Contracts made and do a general Jobbing Business. CENTER STREET, ANAHEIM. FOX & BUTLER, City Barber Shop. FOR A FIRST-CLASS SHAVE! HOT AND COLD BATHS. FRANTZ'S BARBER SHOP. First-Class Style. Or J. B. PIERCE at Anaheim, Calif. Centralia Colony Lands for Sale at $40 to $60 Per Acre. Apply to J. B. PIERCE or R. J. NORTIAM, Anaheim CABINETS---$3.50---CABINETS Full Figure $3 50 and Bust AME QUALITY WORK GUARANTEED AS OUR FO $5 WORK. 111 East Fourth Street, Santa Anita 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 Opp. S. P. Depot, ANAHEIM, CA F. CRIST, MERCHANT TAILOR Just received a complete assortment of Spring and Summer Goods of latest stitch 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. 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. Center Street. H. W. CHYNOWETH, Attorney-at-Law. Metal Block, Cor. Center and Los Angeles streets. Real Property Law a Specialty. ANAHEIM, CAL. RICHARD MELROSE ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. AND NOTARY PUBLIC. Center street, Anahaim, Cal. Special attention given to PROBATE matters. CHAS. S. McKELVEY, A. M. Attorney-at-Law. Rooms 13 and 14, First National Bank Building, Pascal of Santa Ana, Cal. VICTOR MONTGOMERY, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Santa Ana, Cal. Rooms No. 4, 5 and 6, Commercial Bank Building. S. O. WOOD, ARCHITECT AND ENGINEER, ANAHEIM, CAL. P. PELLEGRIN & SON, JEWELRY, ART AND MUSIC STORE, Post Office Block, Anaheim, Cal. Just received a complete assortment of Spring and Summer Goods of latest stil and fabrics, to which the attention of the zens 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 CRISTEN 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 on north; in the New Irrigation District, and contains a splendid boo the choiceest Agricultural Lands in the State. Now subdivided a 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 contignou closely settled colony. For full particulars call on or address J. B. PIERCE, Agent, Anahe ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1890. CE! os Company NDS IN Garden Grove, Fairview, 价 Lands in the Ranchos La ra, and San Juan Cajon de SanAT FROM PER ACRE. AM, Agent; anaheim, California. for Sale at from Per Acre. THAM, anaheim, Cal. The Weekly Gazette. Established 1870. SUBSCRIPTION - 90 Per Year. Six months. Three months. Transactions Adveni ting. SPACE 1 week 2 weeks 3 weeks 4 weeks One square..... $1.00 Two squares..... $1.50 Three squares..... $2.00 Four squares..... $2.50 Customary Reductions on above rates will be made on advertisements running for longer periods. Usual discounts on large advertisements. The OAKTOWN is limited every Thursday morning, and sent to subscribers by the early mail. It is delivered by carrier in Anaheim on the morning of publication. Entered at the Anaheim Postoffice as second-class matter. Items of news and correspondence on all live 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. Hardships of Genius. Homer was a bigger. Spencer died in want. Cervantes died of hunger. Dryden lived in poverty and distress. Terrace, the dramatist, was a slave. Sir Walter Baleigh died on the seafold. Bacon lived a life of meanness and distress. Plantus, the Roman comic poet, turned a mill. Butler lived a life of penny, and died poor. Paul Borghasse had fourteen trades, yet starved with all. Tasso, the Italian poet, was often distressed for five shillings. Steele, the humorist, lived a life of perfect warfare with ballads. Otway, the English dramatist, died prematurely. Wright Irrigation District. A "Turner and Tempest" written to the Los Angeles Times on February regarding the viability of forming irrigation district: The most articles which have appeared in the Times upon the subject of "Our Great Umstead Rainbow" lead to this question: Can anything be done to change the present condition of things? This subject is of equal importance in manufacturing batteries and the new transcontinental lines of railroad which are expected soon to much Los Angeles, and suggest the further inquiry, who is responsible? And in these any remedy. Perhaps comparatively few know that it lies within the power of a majority of freeholders near one of three great unsettled markets to organize an irrigation district which shall embrace mid rainfall, appropriate the water supply near to or on mild rainfall, build reservoirs to collect winter water, furnish pipe lines and dishin for distribution of name, together with cost of maintenance, the whole expense to be paid by the land embraced in mild district. In other words the man who owns 4,000 acres in said district has but one vote and must pay his proportion of the whole cost, and the man who owns but two acres (or even one acre) has see vote and only pays his proportion (according to his arrears) of the expense. In fact the Wright Irrigation bill was framed for the very purpose of preventing the great ranch-owners farming in the whole earth and appropriating its water supply to the injury of the public interests. There are four great markets containing over 40,000 acres, which control nearly all the lands along the foothills between Los Angeles and Santa Monica, which is the very obsolete fruit lard in Southern California. Frontiers in winter and having a delightful summer temperature, free from the excessive heat of the interior, all of which is occupied by small farms would add to the resources and wealth of this part of the country. Several irrigation districts could be formed which would place this whole section in a productive state, where now are pastured a few sheep and cattle. The mountains and foothills furnish numerous natural reservoirs. CABINETS. and Bust $4. NTEED AS OUR FORMER Santa Ana, Cal. OEGE, Dealer in AND CIGARS. ON HAND STOCK! ors and Cigars. LIQUORS OR BOTTLE. ly Attended to. EE OF CHARGE! AHEIM, CAL. ANT TAILOR. lete assortment of ids of latest styles attention of the citiy is directed. $25 up. $6 up. dially extended the this stock Homer was a bigger. Spencer lived in want. Carvantes died of hunger. Dryden lived in poverty and distress. Terrace, the dramatist, was a slave. Sir Walter Rakeigh died on the seafold. Bacon lived a life of meanness and distress. Plantus, the Roman comic poet, turned a mill. Butler lived a life of penny, and died poor. Paul Borghene had fourteen trades, yet starved with all. Tasso, the Italian poet, was often distressed for five shillings. Steele, the humorist, lived a life of perfect warfare with ballitsa. Otway, the English dramatist, died prematurely, and through hunger. Bentivoglio was refused admittance into a hospital he had arrested himself. The death of Collins was through neglect, first causing mental derangement. Chatterton, the child of genius and misfortune, destroyed himself at eighteen. Savage died in a prison at Bristol, where he was confined for a debt of $40. Goldsmith's "Vicar of Wakefield" was sold for a trifle to save him from the grip of the law. Fielding lies in the burying ground of the English factory at Liabon, without a stone to mark the spot. Milton sold his copyright of "Paradise Lost" for $72, at three payments, and finished his life in obscurity. Camens the celebrated writer of the "Lusaid," the great Portuguese epic; ended his life, it is said, in an almshouse, and at any rate, was supported by a faithful black servant, who begged in the streets of Liabon for him. Eupespy. 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 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 Eupespy. 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. SOUTHERN PACIFIC BAILWAY TIME TABLE. Trains pass Anaheim as follows: FROM ARRIVE AT ANAHEIM Tustin 7:58 A.M. Santa Ana to Los Angeles 8:03 A.M. Los Angeles to Santa Ana 10:25 A.M. Anahiem to Tustin 10:30 A.M. Tustin 2:00 P.M. Santa Ana to Los Angeles 3:00 P.M. Los Angeles to Santa Ana 5:58 P.M. Anahiem to Tustin 5:58 P.M. SANTA FE ROUTE. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA BAILWAY COMPANY TIME TABLE. Trains pass Anaheim as follows: NORTH BOUND. 7:50 A.M. Riverside Accom. (daily except Sunday). 9:25 A.M. San Diego Express, daily 11:24 A.M. Riverside and Overland (daily) 5:14 P.M. San Diego Express, daily 6:01 P.M. NORTH BOUND. 9:05 A.M. Riverside and Overland, daily 10:55 A.M. San Diego Express, daily 4:19 P.M. Riverside Accom. (daily except Sunday.) 4:51 P.M. San Diego Express, daily 6:02 P.M. L.A. DESMOND, Agent. Shaken Out of Gear. By malarial disease, the human machinery cannot half perform its office. Digestion, secretion, evacuation are disordered, the blood becomes watery, the earth and appropriating the water supply to the injury of the public interiors. There are four great machines containing over 40,000 acres, which control nearly all the lands along the foothills between Los Angeles and Santa Maria, which is the very chocolate fruit land in Southern California. Problems in winter and having a dalightful summer temperature, free from the excessive heat of the interior, all of which is occupied by small farms, would add to the resources and wealth of this part of the country. Several irrigation districts could be formed which would place this whole section in a productive state, where now are pastured a few sheep and cattle. The mountains and foothills furnish numerous natural reservoir sites, where billions of gallons of water could be stored in winter for summer use. San Diego brings water from the Sweetwater reservoir, a distance of over sixty miles. Here the reservoirs would be within the district. There are also several large streams of water yet unappropriated, within twenty miles of this land. It is not unlikely that strong efforts may be made by a few large ranch owners to have this law repealed at as early day as possible, but if this matter is taken hold of promptly and pushed within a very short time this section of the country will be covered with orchards. The part of scale bug is no comparison to that of men whose highest ambition is to control large land grants for sheep and cattle, who escape equal taxation, who neither improve the land themselves nor allow others to improve. A pamphlet copy of the Wright irrigation law can be obtained without cost by application (by letter) to the State Printer at Sacramento. Let each one interested in the development of this country send for a copy, get posted, and organize. It is within our own power to develop our resources. Let us not wait for something to turn up, let us turn it up ourselves. Oyster Farming. It is perhaps not generally known that oysters are planted and cultivated like the vegetable product of a land farm. The majority of people no doubt believe that they come into existence and grow naturally to maturity like other fish or shellfish, and have no knowledge whatever of the cost, labor and care necessary to produce the oysters they find so palatable. Yet the work necessary it very similar to that required in the cultivation of a farm and is of course much more difficult and costly. The following is the ordinary method of procedure: A large tract of land is occupied in some bay or sound, the bottom is stirred up and cleaned, and the thousands of bushels of shells and a few hundred bushels of seed oysters are planted. This planting should be done in the late spring, as the oysters spawn in July and August and even earlier. As each female oyster, it is estimated, contains from 10,000,000 to 60,000,000 eggs, a small proportion of seed-oysters to shallows is only needed. The egg, released for the female and foundated by the milft from the male, strikes the clean surface of the shell and adheres, making what is technically termed a set. In some places gravel is used for catching the spawn, and it is frequently found set on the little particles of sand at the bottom or on rocks. In France, where oysters are extensively cultivated, tiles are used with great success. In fact oyster spawn will set upon almost any smooth, clean surface. The secondity of the oyster is so great that the net having struck, if it were not for earth and appropriating the water supply to the injury of the public interiors. There are four great machines containing over 40,000 acres, which control nearly all the lands along the foothills between Los Angeles and Santa Maria, which is very chocolate fruit land in Southern California. Problems in winter and having a dalightful summer temperature, free from the excessive heat of the interior, all of which is occupied by small farms would add to the resources and wealth of this part of the country. Several irrigation districts could be formed which would place this whole section in a productive state, where now are pastured a few sheep and cattle. The mountains and foothills furnish numerous natural reservoir sites, where billions of gallons of water could be stored in winter for summer use. San Diego brings water from the Sweetwater reservoir, a distance of over sixty miles. Here the reservoirs would be within the district. There are also several large streams of water yet unappropriated, within twenty miles of this land. It is not unlikely that strong efforts may be made by a few large ranch owners to have this law repealed at as early day as possible, but if this matter is taken hold of promptly and pushed within a very short time this section of the country will be covered with orchards. The part of scale bug is no comparison to that of men whose highest ambition is to control large land grants for sheep and cattle, who escape equal taxation, who neither improve the land themselves nor allow others to improve. A pamphlet copy of the Wright irrigation law can be obtained without cost by application (by letter) to the State Printer at Sacramento. Let each one interested in the development of this country send for a copy, get posted, and organize. It is within our own power to develop our resources. Let us not wait for something to turn up, let us turn it up ourselves. James Lintott All lot 7, Anahiem G. T. Woolley 7. Anahiem Exhibition Fullerton Law Cone—Lots 1 to Fullerton; $2 Geo. D. Carlie Lets 5, 6, 7, 17 elusive block 23, 35 and 38, 5 all in Summer vision; Spoarl t G. L Marvin 29 acres of lot 7 Kreismatt tract; G. J. Griffith tis Mitchell—$22,000. Cartoonists: A legless burgeu; A pair of shoes four pounds anumbered 15. A boy in Peak booked in an enclosed length waist; A Chester; P dren in their bbe on them em; It is claimed to lose a round $50 shape to carry it; An unfortunate Penn., is so hide meeting her afte- TIME TABLE Trains pass Anaheim as follows: NORTH BOUND. Santa Ana Accom. (daily) 7:50 A.M. Riverside Accom. (daily except Sunday) 9:25 A.M. San Diego Express, daily 11:24 A.M. Riverside and Overland (daily) 5:14 P.M. San Diego Express, daily 8:01 P.M. NORTH BOUND. San Diego Express, daily 9:05 A.M. Riverside and Overland, daily 10:55 A.M. San Diego Express, daily 4:19 P.M. Riverside Accom. (daily except Sunday) 4:51 P.M. Santa Ana Accom. (daily) 6:02 P.M. L.A. DESMOND, Agent. Shahen Out of Gear. By malarial disease, the human machinery cannot half perform its office. Digestion, secretion, evacuation are disordered, the blood becomes watery, the nerves feeble, the countenance ghastly, sleep disturbed and appetite capricious. T terrible is this disease, fall in consequence. There is, however, a known antidote to the malaria poison, and a certain malnourishment against it. In malarious regions of our South and West, in South America, Guatemala and on the Isthmus of Panama, as well as in transmarine countries where the scourge exists, the infirmable preventive and remedy, Hustetter's Stomach Bitters, has, during the last thirty-five years, been constantly widening the area of its usefulness, and demonstrating its sovereign value. Liver complaint, dyspepsia, constipation, kidney trouble, rheumatism and debility are all remedied by it. CHURCH Announcements. METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH—On Philadelphia street. Sunday school at 19 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 9:25 A.M.; preaching at 11 A.M. and 7 P.M. Prayer meeting Wednesday evening at 7. Song service Friday at 7 P.M. Presching at Palmerton Sundays at 2 P.M. GERMAN EVANGELICAL CHURCH—Services every Sunday morning and evening. Rev. P. Streeter, pastor. ST. BONIPACK CATHOLIC CHURCH—Services every Sunday morning and evening. Rev. P. Streeter, pastor. A Serge 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 phytosin that she was incapable 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 money; bought another and grew better fast; continued its use and is now strong, healthy, rosy, plump, weighing 140 pounds. For further information and stamp to W. H. Oale, Dengue Fork Smith. Trial Settles of this wonderful Discovery Free at Wm. H. Higgins' Dengue Fork Smith. Bushman's Anaconda Sales. The heat Salve in the world for Cats, Bruises, Sarms, Ulcers, Salt Rashes, Power Sarss, Teether, Chapped Hands, Childhairs, Corns, and all Skin Diseases, and positively causes Film or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction on any rebound. From Mtain per hour for sale by Wm. M. Higgins. As each female oyster, it is estimated, contains from 10,000,000 to 60,000,000 eggs, a small proportion of seed-oysters to shells is only needed. The egg, released for the female and foundated by the milt from the male, strike the clean surface of the shell and adhere, making what is technically termed a set. In some places gravel is used for catching the spawn, and it is frequently found set on the little particles of sand at the bottom or on rocks. In France, where oysters are extensively cultivated, tiles are used with great success. In fact oystar spawn will set upon almost any smooth, clean surface. The fecundity of the oyster is so great that the set having struck, if it were not for its powerful enemies, the products of one small oyster farm might supply the world. But oysters are beset from birth with difficulties and dangers. The bottom shifts and overwhalms them, or they are destroyed by drills, winkles, drumfish or starfish, so that when the seed are old enough to be shifted or transplanted but a small proportion of the original set remains. The seed are transplanted usually to ground lying within a harbor or bay, where they are allowed to remain from three to five years, as the food supply is ample or abundant. They are then brought to market, although usually they are given a fresh water "drink" of from one to three days. Three-year old oysters are shipped in large quantities to Europe, but oysters for American markets are normally allowed to remain until they attain their full growth. The best oysters come from the north side of Long Island. The Bond Letter Office. Mrs. Bohne has received a circular letter from the Postoffice Department at Washington giving in detail the operations of the Dead Letter Office during the past year, from which we extract the following: Over six million pieces of mail mother are sent annually to the dead letter office by means of insurance hungages; an diligent addendum insufficient proofs; insinuations where mother may be separated from the savings or swaps; or the failure in he called for on delivered to the person addressed. This is a daily average of over twenty thousand persons. Of these greater portions either are called for at the postoffice for which they are received or in case of free delivery editions indicating every hour notice is required in order for the purpose of obtaining them and if the name and address match burg. A pair of shoes four pounds numbered 15. A boy in Peak booked in another bin bined length waist. A Chester, dren in their back hoes on them enamel. It is claimed to lose a round $50 shape to carry it. An unfortunate Penn., is so hide meeting her after J. Price of San in the shape of tirely white.Pa nage trapper. An owl, short days age, manned tip to tip of the trap on one of its The birth of a reported from Mighty eight miles south Pulford being thinned. An electric bell wall's tumble nail coony,M.J., dressed and exploded,hit. An enormous Isla of Skye long,eight feet m and weighted over The fall manner Kansas City runs mollies Anna Sarah Geary Railroad on a legacy to promenade as a signal Miss Bannerman rendition in Chumbers girl of arrows she had an attachment in him but right foot gave him right foot gave him right foot gave him right foot gave him right foot gave him right foot gave him right foot gave him right foot gave him right foot gave him right foot gave him right foot gave him right foot gave him right foot gave him right foot gave him right foot gave him right foot gave him right foot gave him right foot gave him right foot gave him right foot gave him right foot gave him right foot gave him right foot gave him right foot gave him right foot gives me NUMBER 47 FARM NOTES. Of all grains one stands first as the hand for all purposes of feeding. If the time spent for grubbling about the deprivations of insects pests was devoted to the study of entomology, the results would be more instructive. In southern France valids are always grown under the deep shade of the olive grove, to preserve and develop the peculiar delicacy of their eder. One mode of dispensing of sorghum poultry is to use it. This country produces enormous quantities of poultry, and we should be able to export a portion. Salt is an excellent fertilizer for some crops, as it adds lime in decomposing organic matter in the soil, and supplies sodium wherever it may be required. Rose bushes thrive better by being well cut out and the old wool removed. For flowering plants wood and mold makes an excellent fertilizer, but it should be used freely. Numerous experiments have shown that a new calving in September or October will give more milk and make more butter in the course of a year than will one calving in April or May. The cost of a farm is not the heaviest expense to the beginner. The outlay for horses, cattle, machinery, utensils and extra labor the first year is often more than the cost of farm. Clever and a feed of bran at night is better than too much grain or clover exclusively. Bran for pigs, cows and growing stock of all kinds provides phosphates and largely aids in developing the bone. It is claimed that Japan buckwheat has a larger kernel, ripens earlier and endures drought better than the well-known silver-hall variation. It should be given a trial by those interested during the summer. Look over the vegetable seeds that are stored away. They should be kept dry, and as mice may destroy them the seeds should be protected by suspending the bags or by Real Estate Transfers. The following transfers of real estate have been recorded during the week: Walter Kone to W. H. Shinn—Lot 4, block K, Krammer tract; $12,000. Mrs. Sophie Handholt to G. T. Wooley—Lot 7, Anaheim Extension, except 8.7 acres in NW corner, 1 acre in SW corner, and two acres on W line; $5. August J. Stamm to same—Same property; $5. James Lintott to James H. W. Pattison—All lot 7, Anaheim Extension; $125. G. T. Wooley to Mary L. Pattison—Lot 7, Anaheim Extension; $5. Fullerton Land & Trust Co. to Thomas E. Cone—Lots 1 to 9 inclusive, block 15, town of Fullerton; $225. Geo. D. Carlston to Eugene S. Hadley—Lets 5, 6, 7, 17 and 18, block 1; 15 to 18, inclusive, block 2; 21 to 26, block 3; 22, 23, 31, 32, 35 and 36, block 4; 29, 30 and 31, block 5, all in Summerfield & Oppenheimer subdivision, Spoerl tract; $1. G. L. Marvin to John Cadman—Northerly 20 acres of lot 9, and westwardly $\frac{1}{4}$ of northwestern $\frac{1}{4}$ of northerly $\frac{1}{4}$, lot 8, block K, Krammer tract; $1. G. J. Griffith to N. H. Mitchell and Hatts Mitchell—House lot 29, Anaheim; $22,000. Cartographies of the News. A legless burglar has been caught in Pittsburgh. A pair of shoes for a Georgia negro weighed four pounds and five ounces. They are numbered 15. A boy in Peaksville, N. Y., is said to have hooked in succession two cells whose combined length was seventeen feet. A Chester, Penn., lady dances her children in their bathing suits and turns the house on her front lawn. It is claimed that Tulare county, Cal., will lose a round $508,000 this year for want of shape to carry its grain to Liverpool. An unfortunate woman at Lancaster, Penn., is so hideously formed that persons meeting her after dark run away in fright. Clever and a feed of bran at night is better than too much grain or elever exclusively. Bran for pig, calves and growing stock of all kinds provides phosphates and largely aids in developing the home. It is claimed that Japan buckwheat has a larger kernel, ripens earlier and drowshes better than the well-known silver-hall variation. It should be given a trial by those interspersed during the summer. Look over the vegetable seeds that are stored away. They should be kept dry, and as mice may destroy them the seeds should be protected by masticating the bags or by increasing them in a tin box. Though not considered a rare remedy, the free use of lime around cabbage plants will assist greatly in keeping the maggot away. Scattered liberally over onions, lime checks the ravages of the onion fly. Kowing just what everything costs its value, and it price in market, can only be determined by the farmer keeping an account of all his transactions, and by comparison with accounts of each year. With the beginning of the new year every farmer should commence keeping a strict account. During the year ending June 30, 1889, 65,250 gallons of cotton seed oil were sent to Italy for the presumed purpose of adulterating the olive oil, which was exported to us in fancy-labeled bottles. Whitewash should be used in order to render the stable cheerful. A light stable is more comfortable than a dark one, and as the lime partially serves to disinfect the building, its application should be frequent. Work between the rows of the strawberries keeps the weeds down and the soil loose. Plant raspberry early, so as to give them a good start. If the canes are to make good growth, give them manure on the hill. Rules may be made for governing the dairy work, but there can be no rule made for feeding the cows in regard to quantity and quality of food. Each cow will have her special demands, and they must be complied with. Mulch around the young trees as soon as the ground is frozen. This will prevent the ground from thawing too early in the spring, thus leaving the flow of the map, thereby lessening the liability of injury from the late frosts. A correspondent of the Massachusetts Plowman says that a quart of vinegar in half a pail of water, if thoroughly sprinkled over the interior of a hen-house, will free it from lice when whitewashing and other remedies have failed. Every bull on the farm should be broken to the yoke when he is young and be made to work. There is nothing as affinacious as work for tempting a savage disposition. The bull is dangerous because he is idle and has nothing to do. When milk is unfit for the farmer to drink, it is also unfit for the young calf. Scours frequently result from the calf not receiving milk that is fresh and sweet. The natural conditions in feeding young calves should be observed as closely as possible. The farmer should endeavor to learn something of the classification of insects and their habits. Many of them are aids to the farmer, though a majority of them are enemies. Parasites kill more injurious insects than other known cannies. Some insects live by preying upon other kinds. It is not economical to attempt to fatten very lean hogs by feeding them corn exelu- A pair of shores for a Georgia negro weighed four pounds and five ounces. They are numbered 15. A boy in Peakville, N.Y., is said to have hooked in succession two eels whose combined length was seventeen feet. A Chester, Penn., lady drames her children in their bathing suits and turns the home on them on her front lawn. It is claimed that Tulare county, Cal., will lose a round $600,000 this year for want of ships to carry its grain to Liverpool. An unfortunate woman at Lancaster, Penn., is so hideously formed that persons meeting her after dark run away in fright. J. Price of Savannah, Ga., has a curiosity in the shape of a young mocking bird entirely white. Price purchased the bird from a negro trapper. An owl, shot near Jackson, Ga., a few days ago, manured five and a half feet from tip to tip of the wings, and had a small steel trap on one of its feet. The birth of a baby without a tongue is reported from Martinville, Ind., as occurring eight miles south of that city, Mrs. John Paulford being the mother. An electric ball dropped into Henry Elwell's tomato patch in Lower Creek, Salem county, N.J., during a recent thunderstorm and exploded, killing fifty tomato plants. An enormous manfish has been caught near the Isle of Skye. It was eight feet ten inches long, eight feet nine inches in circumference and weighed over one thousand pounds. The fall name of a woman who died in Kannan City recently was Joey Jane Perrinia Ann Sarah Elizabeth Douglas Carr-Greshy Hallard. She has left a great name as a legacy to progeny. She had no many names on a royal princeen. Miss Benedictum, twenty-one years of age, resident in Cromer, Norfolk. When she was a little girl she equified a piece of windowpane shall hold an inch long. It contained her own dampness until a few days ago when her right fist gave her considerable pain in the hands. A physisure corn culled and at times freed than there was a foreign body of some inch in size of the large worm. Making an incision he gutted out the individual piece of glass swallowed when Miss Benedice was a girl. A Dragonfly A self-bursted bird from the sea. Poll in love with a high-flying fish; this is what made the turtle on his abutting wing; fleshheaded and skinless from here all night; but could not swim from the sandiest light. But the dragonfly had heart artery. A sun-shining fish and swimming water; it breathed and bathed in sunlight; it could not swim from the sandiest light. But the dragonfly had heart artery. A sun-shining fish and swimming water; it breathed and bathed in sunlight; it could not swim from the sandiest light. When milk is unfit for the farmer to drink, it is also unfit for the young calf. Scours frequently result from the call not receiving milk that is fresh and sweet. The natural conditions in feeding young calves should be observed as closely as possible. The farmer should endeavor to learn something of the classification of insects and their habits. Many of them are nids to the farmer, though a majority of them are enemies. Parasites kill more injurious insects than other known cannies. Some insects live by preying upon other kinds. It is not economical to attempt to fatten very lean hogs by feeding them corn exclusively. They will not thrive on such a diet, and will fatten only slowly. But if corn is fed with skim milk, buttermilk, cooked turnips and scalded or steamed cut hay, the hogs will increase rapidly and at less cost than on corn alone. Never make an expenditure on the farm without having an object in view and a knowledge of what may be the result. All experiments should be made on a small plot, and the cost noted carefully. While some are successful in producing extra large crops, yet they fail to secure profits because of expenditures indiscriminately made. Wagons should be kept well grassed. Grasses is cheaper than horsehay, and as the roads in the winter season do not always permit of the use of light wagons the draught on the horses should be kept at the minimum point, and grooming the axles will largely contribute to lauren the wear and tear of the wagons as well as as the labor of the horse. Manuro will not cause the plants to grow until it is reduced to the condition necessary for that purpose when applied to the soil. The rain will extract the valuable matter, but the solid must undergo a complete chemical process before they will become soluble. Hanoe to ensure the heat remains from the moisture it should be well decomposed in the manure heap. All field crops should be as planned as to allow plenty of room for cultivation between the rows. Some crops do not require proper cultivation late in the summer because the horns cannot poke between the rows after the pieces are well grown, the consequence being that grass gain possession and lance the yield. Cultivation is necessary for some crops until they begin to need. Rabbit almonds are at this time one of the favorite delicacies. To prepare them from shells the nuts and blanch the almonds. But then in a baking pan with a temperature of about ten per cent of almonds. Make the nuts smooth thoroughly dry and a light brown color. But frequently will vary depending on which shells have been used in a mix with almonds in a mild dry powdered form.