anaheim-gazette 1892-04-07
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The Weekly Gazette.
ISSUED EVERY THURSDAY.
Henry Kuchel, Charles Kuchel,
Editors and Proprinters.
THURSDAY...APRIL 7, 1892.
The charter of the Co-operative Beet Sugar Factory has arrived from Sacramento, where articles of incorporation have been filed with the Secretary of State. The name of the corporation will be the Anaheim Cooperative Beet Sugar Company of Orange county, and the capital stock is $500,000. The Directors are E. P. Fowler, Thomas J. Jones, S. Littlefield, Plez James, A. Rimpan, H. A. Pierce and F. J. Capitain. Thus the work of organizing moves on space, and while there is yet a great deal of work to do before the refinery becomes a living reality, we believe it will be created in time for the handling of next year's best crop. A meeting of Directors will be held shortly, at which reports of progress will be made. At present all that need be said is that matters are moving along satisfactorily, and that the outlook is good for the refinery to be up and running next year.
A well-known banker of Boston and Toldeo, Ohio, C.M. Spitzer, is now in San Francisco with a view of making some California investments. His views upon irrigation bonds, and their desirability from a capitalist's standpoint, will be found of interest.
He says:
"The weak point about these irrigation bonds is that there is no limit to the amount which can be issued by a district. For instance, I find that Fresno has already a bonded indebtedness of this character amounting to $400,000, and is about to issue $350,000 more. This will make a total of $750,000, or about 24 per cent of indebtedness on the assessed valuation of the property interested. I understand also that so much is allowed the contractors for constructing the ditches that the taxpayers receive only 60 per cent of the gross amount of the bonds. In the New England States bonds can be issued for only 5 per cent of the assessed property valuation—a wise precaution. The two defects I have indicated should be remedied by legislative enactments. Eastern capitalists will not invest in these irrigation bonds until some limit is imposed. Then the bonds should be sold at par, under the right kind of law, having property restrictions. With these precautions the bonds would not go a begging for Eastern capital."
has lately returned to this State from the East, having disposed of his Philadelphia refinery to the Sugar Trust. It is said that he will go deeply into the business of establishing factories in different portions of this State. Mr. Spreckels has been in Anaheim, and knows the adaptability of our soil to raising beets. We possess great advantages from the circumstance that our climate permits the extraction of sugar for a much longer period than where the season is short and frosts occur before the best matures.
ORANGE COUNTY has received $2,730 so far from the coyote bounty fund. This is doing quite well enough, but Ben Kraemer informs us that he has yet several coyotes on the string, and that he will pass in their scalps before the bounty law is repealed.
Another sensation was sprung upon the citizens of San Diego on Tuesday, in connection with the affairs of the defunct California National Bank in a report rendered by General Eli H. Marray, receiver of the savings bank run with the National bank, and which was compelled so close when the larger institution suspended. The report is voluminous and exhaustive, and throws more light upon the methods of conducting business at the institution than anything which has heretofore been made public. It shows that when the last sworn statement was published, only a few weeks before the suspension, the bank was alleged to have resources of $225,733, with liabilities of the same. At present there is only a trifle over six hundred dollars in cash in the vaults; $101,000 had been loaned to the California National. Many methods of doing business carried out by the bank officials are given in detail by the receiver and severely consured.
According to the report it is doubtful if the depositors will receive more than thirty-five or forty cents on the dollar.
The negotiations for the sale of Ellwood Cooper's ranch at Santa Barbara to an English company, which have been pending since January, have been perfected, the forfeit money having been paid. The syndicate moved on the grounds on Tuesday. This is the famous olive oil property. The purchase price is said to be $200,00C.
Taken for a Crank.
A semi-freddish delight often seems to possess people of strong nerves in acclering at those with weak ones. The irritability of the nervous hypochondriac is ridiculed as natural ill temperament. The very genuine and distressing symptoms from which he suffers are made light of. "He" or "she is a crank" is the cheerful sort o sympathy with which the nervous invalid meets from the unfeeling and the thoughtless. At the same time no complaint is more defined and real, none has a more easily explainable origin when
The gentleman has evidently a very imperfect understanding of the situation. It is absolutely certain that no district will attempt to overbond itself, first because the burden upon the people would become unbearable, and second because the bonds would have to be sacrificed to be sold. The people themselves are the best judges in the premises. Their interests are quite as much at stake as are those of the money lender. The presumption that they would overbond themselves is absurd. The reverse is shown in the case of the Fresno district. The amount of the first issue of bonds is found to be insufficient to carry on the work of developing the district, yet it is safe to presume the amount was considered an outside figure at the outset. Now that the district should desire to issue a second series of bonds is not so startling as Mr. Speitzer would have it seem. Even at his own figures—and it is safe to say he has placed himself on the safe side of the calculation—bonds covering 24 per cent of the assessed valuation of a district have ample security. The people themselves are the best judges of the limit of their indebtedness. Some districts may stand a higher degree of indebtedness, but the taxpayers must say just what that degree shall be. To limit the expenditure to 5 per cent of the assessed property valuation, as this Eastern banker would evidently have us do, would no doubt meet with the ready approval of the money-lending classes, but it would stop the wheels of progress in the work of developing the latent resources of this State. If he be looking around for that class of California security, he had better cease his search and return to his New England home. The bonds will sell in despite of him.
His second objection, that contractors are paid so much for constructing works and ditches that the taxpayers receive only 60 per cent of the gross amount of the bonds, is more palpably abused than the first. Here again the people are the best judges as to the amount to be paid for improvements, and they will see to it that the affairs of the district are carried on in striotly business-like economy.
The examination of districts by the Bankers' Association, and their favorable report upon the conditions of the same, ought to be a sufficient guarantee of the soundness of the districts to suit the average money-lender.
In the New England States bonds can be issued for only 5 per cent of the assessed property valuation—a wise precaution. The two defects I have indicated should be remedied by legislative enactments. Eastern capitalists will not invest in these irrigation bonds until some limit is imposed. Then the bonds should be sold at par, under the right kind of law, having property restrictions. With these precautions the bonds would not go a begging for Eastern capital."
Taken for a Crank
A semi-friendish delight often seems to possess people of strong nerves in attending at those with weak ones. The irritability of the nervous hypochondriac is ridiculed as natural ill temper. The very genuine and distressing symptoms from which he suffers are made light of. "No" or "she is a crank" is the cheerful sort o sympathy with which the nervous insults from mistaking and the thoughtlessness. At the same time no complaint is more defended real, none has a more easily explainable origin when it chronic. Imperfect digestion and assimilation are always accompanied by nervous debility and anxiety. Build up the powers of assimilation and digestion with Hoste tera's Stomach Bitters, and nervous symptoms, sick headaches and a generally feeble sensation as system are remedied. Remember that fearful ravages a productivity griefing weakly, nervous people. Hoste tera's Stomach Bitters cures it, and prevents malaria, rheumatism and kidney complaint.
For chafing, itching, poison oak, sunburn scalds, burns, etc., use Farmers' Healing Liniment. For sale by W. M. Higgins, druggist, Anaheim, Cal.
NEW ADVERTINEMENTS.
NOTICE.
TO MY Patrons and Public Generally.
ON ACCOUNT OF CLOSING ON SUNDAYS I respectfully inform my patrons and the public generally that my Store will be kept open on Saturday evenings until 9 o'clock.
ISAAC LYONS.
Notice of Sale of Real Estate.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT IN PURSUANCE of an order of the Superior Court of county of Los Angeles, State of California, made on the third day of December, 1889, in the matter of the taxation of Vonda Kelley, who was assigned, the administrator, with the will annuated of salute, will sell at private sale, to the highest bidder, for cash, in gold coin of the United States, and subject to confirmation by said Superior Court, on or after the 30th day of April, 1892, all the right, title, interest and estate of said Louise Keller at the time of her death, and all the right, title and interest by any operation of law or otherwise, acquired other than or in addition to that of said Louise Keller at the time of her death, in and to all those lots of land, situate in the city of Anaheim, county of Orange, State of California, and described as follows:
Lots numbers 54 and 55 in Block "E" of a subdivision toward Lot U 8, according to a map of a town called Drochs No. 4, at page 620 and 630. Also that lot beginning at a point west line of Los Angeles street; 45 feet southerly from northeast corner of said original Town Lot No. 9, and running thence south along said line of Los Angeles street; 45 feet thence at right angles west-eastly 140 feet to the wartine line of Said Lot No. 9; thence along same at right angles northerly 45 feet; thence easterly to point commencement.
Terms and Conditions of Sale: Cash, gold coin of the United States; ten per cent of the purchase money to be paid to the undersigned on day of sale; balance on confirmation of sale by said court.
Bids or offers must be written, and may be de-
ditches that the taxpayers receive only 60 per cent of the gross amount of the bonds, is more pallably abused than the first. Here again the people are the best judges to the amount to be paid for improvements, and they will see to it that the affairs of the district are carried on in strictly business-like economy.
The examination of districts by the Bankers' Association, and their favorable report upon the conditions of the same, ought to be a sufficient guarantee of the soundness of the districts to suit the average money-lender. The indorsement of any district by the Bankers' Association should serve to throw a sufficient safeguard about its bonds to satisfy the most exacting bondbuyer. That indorsement ought, and we believe is to day, tantamount to the sale of the bonds.
Our district has been thus endorsed by the Bankers' Association, and at the next meeting of the local Board of Directors we expect to see the securities sold.
The Seventh Regiment, N.G.C., to which our Company G is attached, is in rather a bad way, and all on account of the recent reinstitution of Colonel Russell, vice Colonel Schreiber, the duly elected Colonel. Russell was ousted by Governor Waterman, but sued for his office in the civil courts, and after Schreiber's election won his suit and was recently reinstated by Governor Markham. The three Los Angeles companies, A, C and F, have forwarded petitions to the Adjutant General asking that they be mustered out of the service, declaring they cannot serve under Russell without loss of self-respect as soldiers and gentlemen. Thus it is that the regiment is upon the point of disruption. Russell's reinstatement was a great mistake.
Meanwhile our local militiamen are "saying nothing and sawing wood." They are going right ahead and perfecting themselves as the best company in Southern California.
The production of sugar has been wonderfully successful in California since the introduction of improved machinery. To Claus Spreckels more than any other gentleman is due the success which has attended the development of this industry. Mr. Spreckels
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
ESTATE OF SARAH A. GATES, DECEASED.
Notice is hereby given by the undersigned, administrator of the estate of Sarah A. Gates, deceased, to the creditors of, and all persons having claims against the said deceased, to exhibit the same with the necessary vouchers, within four months after the first publication of this notice to the said administrator at the office of Richard Melrose, attorney-at-law, Krogerer's Block, Center street, Anaheim,has sent her place for the transaction of the business of said estate in the county of Ortega.
Dated this 29th day of March A. D. 1892.
FRANCIS A. GATES,
Administrator of the estate of Sarah A. Gates, deceased.
Richard Melrose, attorney for administrator. 3-31-54
"Olinda Richmond."
Will stand for a limited number of mares during April and May, 1892, at Olinda Ranch.
Terms $15 to insure, including one month pasturage of mare.
Due care will be taken to prevent accident, but no risk assumed.
"Olinda Richmond" is a beautiful Mahogany Day Horse, 4 years old and showed a trial of 2:30 at 3 years old. He was sired by A. W. Richmond, No. 1637, Sire of Richmond Jr., 2:241. First dam by Uniter Chief by Pysyky's Hambletonian. Second dam May Queen 2nd by May Day. Come early and secure your turn, as this favourable offer is made to introduce "Olinda Richmond" to the lovers of first-class horses, and positively will not be made at above low rates next year.
OLINDA RANCH COMPANY.
OWING TO THE GREAT DEMAND FOR PASTURAGE, we will after the 1st of April advance our present pasturage rates fifty (50) per cent.
OLINDA RANCH COMPANY.
SPRING OPENING.
S. S. FEDERMAN
Would respectfully announce to his Friends and the Public generally, that he is now prepared to show them the FINEST Assortment of
Dry Goods, Clothing,
Ladies' & Gents' Furnishing Goods
AND
LADIES', GENTS' AND CHILDREN'S SHOES
Which Is My Specialty,
Ever Exhibited in Orange County. I have spared no pains in procuring the FINEST and most FASHIONABLE Lines of Goods in my various Departments, of which an early call will convince you.
RESPECTFULLY: YOURS.
S. S. FEDERMAN.
EVER EXHIBITED in Orange County. I have spared no pains in procuring the FINEST and most FASHIONABLE Lines of Goods in my various Departments, of which an early call will convince you.
RESPECTFULLY: YOURS,
S. S. FEDE RMAN.
NOTICE.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE ANAheim Savings, Loan and Building Association will open a New Series on the first of May, 1892. All parties desiring to take stock in the association may learn particulars by calling on the underigned at the bank.
GEO. V. HORR, Secretary.
Notice of Election.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, THAT PURSUANT to law, there will be held in the City of Anaheim, county of Orange, State of California, on Monday, the eleventh day of April, 1892; a general Municipal Election, for the purpose of electing two members of the Board of Trustees for the term of four years, and one member of the Board of Trustees serve for the remainder of the unexpired term of Joseph Bennerchedit.
One City Clerk, who shall be ex-officio Asessor.
One City Treasurer.
One City Marshal, who shall be ex-officio Tax and License Collector.
The entire city shall constitute a single precinct one polling place, and the polling place for said election shall be as follows. At the builder on Los Angeles street now occupied by the fire department and the Board of Trustees of the city of Anaheim.
The following named persons, qualified electors of the city of Anaheim, are appointed a Board of Electors to act respectively as Inspectors, Judges, Clerks and Ballot Clerks, that is to say: Inspectors Theo. Impan, P. D. Brown; Judges, F. A. Korn, O. V. Newton; Glarke, Helph Blair; Joe. Des Granges; Ballot Clerks, A. L. Lewis, F. G. Smythe.
The polls at said election shall be opened at sunrise of the said eleventh day of April, 1892, and must be kept open until five o'clock on the afternoon of midday, when the same shall be closed.
The following is a list of nominations filed with the Dealer in the City of Anaheim in the manner required by law, and are arranged substantially in the order and form in which they will be printed upon the ballot:
MUNICIPAL TICKET.
City of Anaheim, State of California.
To vote for a person stamp a cross (X) in the square right of the name.
BUSTEE, LONG TERM.
Vote for two.
CHAS, Otto Rust...Independent.
E. J. Pellegrin...Independent.
BUSTEE, SHORT TERM.
Vote for one.
Sheldon Littlefield...Independent.
Plez James...Independent.
Two Weeks Free....
FRANKEL'S HALL, DOWNEY:
From April 4 to April 20.
Pawnee Medicine Co.
In a Series of Fine Entertainments.
Funny, Interesting, Refined, Music,
Ventriloloism, Acts, Horozontal Bars.
Aerobatio Sports, Ringes, Trapeze, Rifle Shooting.
Indian Scenes, Irish Specialties, Etc.
15-People-15
DR. BURGESS holds Free Consultation at hall every day.
C. A. BURGESS & Co.
Headquarters 937 Howard St., S. F.
H. CAHEN.
DEALER IN
General :: Merchandise.
Fancy and Family Groceries
ALWAYS ON HAND.
CORNER CENTER AND LOS ANGELES STS.
Fancy and Family Groceries
ALWAYS ON HAND.
CORNER CENTER AND LOS ANGELES STS.
H. CAHEN.
COLLECTION AGENCY.
BEG TO INFORM THE PUBLIC THAT I HAVE opened a General Collection Agency here. All business placed in my hands will receive prompt attention.
Office at Clark Minor's nursery, Anaheim.
FRANK T. RIMPAU.
DRUGGIST AND CHEMIST,
Graduate of College of Pharmacy.
305 North Main street, opposite Baker block, Los Angeles, Cal.
Prescriptions carefully compounded, Patronage solicited.
RICHARD SPOERL,
...Dealer in...
GUNS, REVOLVERS AND RELIABLE AMMUNITION.
Fishing Tackle, Pocket Cutlery, Needles, Oil and Sewing Machine Supplies on hand.
Orders taken for Pontry Fencing, Wrought Iron, Etc. Sole Agent for NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE.
GUNSMITHING and Repairing of Small Machinery.
M. A. MENGES, D. D. S.
DENTIST.
New Opera-House, Santa Ana, Cal.
If in need of Dental operations call any see me. I will endeavor to make it to your interest.
R. BOETTCHER,
WAGONMAKING
AND
BLACKSMITHING!
HORSE-SHOEING
A SPECIALTY.
Satisfaction Guaranteed,
GIVE ME A CALL
Don't Pay
BOOM :: PRICES
FOR LUMBER
But apply to the...
Willamette Steam Mill and Lumber Company
AT...
Redondo Beach
FOR LOW PRICES.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
H. A. DICKEL,
Successor to A. Langentberger.
Groceries, Hardware, Crockery,
Stationery, Paints, Oils, Etc.
Fresh Roasted Coffee . .
TEA A SPECIALTY, 35C. TO $1.25 PER LB.
FOR THE LENTEN SEASON,
I RECOMMEND MY
LILY WHITE CODFISH.
Extra Fine French Sardines in Oil.
Truffles, Mushrooms.
...Fresh Smoked Salmon
STERN & GOODMAN.
Fullerton.
THE LEADING.....
GENERAL MERCHANTS
OF ORANGE COUNTY
Wish to announce to the public in gen-
THE LEADING....
GENERAL MERCHANTS
OF ORANGE COUNTY
Wish to announce to the public in general, that their SPRING STOCK has arrived and is now open for inspection. Do not miss calling on us before purchasing elsewhere.
Our immense well-selected stock, low prices and fair trading has been our aim and will be in the future.
Straw Hats Almost Given Away,
Grain, Stock, Eggs and Poultry always taken in Exchange for the Highest Market Price. Respectfully,
STERN & GOODMAN.
COFFEES AND TEAS.
Specially Selected.
When You want to Buy the Best in the Market Get
CHEESEMAN'S
Blended Coffee.
One Time Will Convince.
ALSO TRY THE TEAS.
Carefully Put Up for Him in Japan.
They have a Delightful Flavor.
CHEESEMAN'S
BLENDED COFFEE.
One Time Will Convince.
ALSO TRY THE TEAS.
Carefully Put Up for Him in Japan.
They have a Delightful Flavor.
Like the Coffee.
TRY BOTH, AND SHOUT FOR
COFFEES AND TEAS.
LET US GO TO
Cheeseman's.
STORE ON BROADWAY.
West of S. P. depot. Near Public Schoolhouse.
BARGAINS - IN - GROCERIES.
I Beg to Inform the Public that I have just received a Large and Complete Stock of
Groceries and Provisions!
AT A GREAT SACRIFICE AND AM THEREFORE ABLE TO GIVE
THE PUBLIC
Great Bargains in these Goods.
GIVE ME A TRIAL.
M. H. CHEESEMAN.