YoreAnaheim the Anaheim newspaper archive
Publications Anaheim Gazette 1892 April

anaheim-gazette 1892-04-14

1892-04-14 · Anaheim Gazette · page 1 of 4 · OCR glm-ocr
Scanned page
Scan of anaheim-gazette 1892-04-14 page 1
Searchable text
VOLUME XXII. LODGE MEETINGS. ANAHEIM LODGE, NO. 207, F. & A. M., hold regular meetings on the Monday of or preceding the full moon in each month. Sojourning brethren in good standing are cordially invited to attend. W. M. McFADDEN, W. M. H. W. CHYNOWETH, Secretary. ANAHEIM LODGE, NO. 199, I. O. O. F. REGULAR meetings every Tuesday evening. Visiting other always welcome. E. A. CHAMPLIN, N. G. W. R. HARKER, Secretary. ANAHEIM LODGE, NO. 85, A. O. U. W. MEETINGS on the first and fourth Friday of every month. F. CRIST, M. W. T. S. GRIMSHAW, Secretary. ORDER CHOSEN FRIENDS MEETS THE FIRST and third Saturday evenings in each month at 8 o'clock. Old Fellows' Hall. MRS. EMMA SEARLE, Councilor. A. L. LEWIS, Secretary. EVERGREEN COUNCIL, AMERICAN LEGION of Honor. Meets first and last Wednesday of each month, at 8 P.M. H. A. McWILLIAMS, MRK L. G. BAYES, Secretary. PROFESSIONAL CARDS DR. J. H. BULLARD, A. B., M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office and Residence, corner Hermins and Chartres streets, near Planters' Hotel. OFFICE HOURS: 7 to 8:30 a.m.; 12 to 1:30, and 6 to 7:30 p.m. DR. HARDIN, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office with Judge Landell and Judge Pierce. Office hours—9 to 12 a.m.; 1 to 4 p.m., residence on Los Angeles street. H. W. CHYNOWETH, Attorney-At-Law. Metz Block, Corner Center and Los Angeles streets. Real Property Law a Specialty. MISCELLANEOUS. W. R. Harker. Harker & Brothers Real :: Estate :: B Dealers in all kinds of property--Improved and also Stock of all kinds sold on commissary property -of-all-DesignationFor Sale in any part of the State Information Furnished.-Correspondence Houses to Rent. Anaheim,-California WHITE & HANK SEEDSMITH ...CARRY A FULL LINE OF..... Eastern and Northern Seeds. Choice Utah Allies Barley, Rye, Oats and Corn. Northern Seeds DR. HARDIN, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office with Judge Landell and Judge Pierce. Office hours—9 to 12 a.m.; 1 to 4 p.m. Residence on Los Angeles street. H. W. CHYNOWETH, Attorney-At-Law. Metz Block, Cor. Center and Los Angeles streets. Real Property Law a Specialty. ANAHEIM, CAL. RICHARD MELROSE ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. AND NOTARY PUBLIC. Center street, Anaheim, Cal. Special attention given to PROBATE matters. L. NEMITZ, THE PAINTER, Shop on Center street, near the opera-house. I am ready to do first-class Carriage Painting & Trimming GENERAL JOBBING C. C. HAMILTON, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Rooms 1, 2 and 3. Savings Bank Building. SANTA ANA, CAL. H. P. LARSEN, CONTRACTOR & BUILDER. Estimates given, Contracts made and do a general Jobbing Business. CENTER STREET, Anaheim. 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 Adele and Los Angeles streets. FRANK FOX, City Barber Shop. FOR A FIRST-CLASS SHAVE! HOT AND COLD BATHS. H. A. McWILLIAMS. WHITE & HANK SEEDSMITH Eastern and Northern Seeds. Choice Utah Algae. Barley, Rye, Oats and Corn. Northern S Orange and Apple Boxes and a new loting Step Ladders for Fruit Pickers. B Choice Fruits and Produce. Oranges profor Growers. SEEDHOUSE—411 North Main Street. WAREHOUSE—Corner SANTA ANA. F. CRIST, MERCHANT Just received a complete asSPRING AND SUMMER Goods of L and fabrics, to which the attentiozens of Anaheim and vicinity is di Suits to order from Pants to order from An invitation is cordially o public to call and examine this st FRED Bentz & Stead Wholesale and Retail Anaheim, Cal. Dealers in Beef, Pork, Mutton, Veal, Sausa Of Our Own MakeHighest Market price Paid for Go To WM.BOY Groceries and Prov Confectionery, Cigars Tob Grain, Mill Feed, Etc. Highest Price P Goods Delivered Free! BACKS' BLOCK, LOS ANGELES STREET, Commercial H L. GUNTHER, PIONEER BOOT & SHOE MAKER. Corner Adele and Los Angeles streets. FRANK FOX, City Barber Shop. FOR A FIRST-CLASS SHAVE! HOT AND COLD BATHS. H. A. McWILLIAMS. CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER. Office and shop, first door south of Ferdinand Backs' Furniture Store. Los Angeles street, Anaheim. H. A. STOUGH. —BLACKSMITHING, Horse-Shoeing A Specially. First-Class Workmanship. Satisfaction Guaranteed IN EVERY CASE. Shop on Lemon Street, Rear of Lanqenberger' Store. "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 Bay Horse, 4 years old and showed a trial of 2:30 at 3 years old. He was sired by A. W. Richmond, No. 1677, Sir of Richmond Jr., 2:231. First dam by Ulster Chief, by Preylk's Hambletonian. Second dam-May Queen, 2:30, by May Day. Come early and secure your turn, as this favorable 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 CO., C. A. BAILEY, Manager. NOTICE! OWING TO THE GREAT DEMAND FOR PASTURAGE, we will after the last of April advance our present pasturage rate fifty (50) per cent. Groceries and Provisionery, Cigars Tobacco, Grain, Mill Feed, Etc. Highest Price Prices Goods Delivered Free! BACKS' BLOCK, LOS ANGELES STREET, Commercial Houses (Corner Center and Lemon Streets) J. J. EVERHARTY, - PROPRIETARY THE COMMERCIAL, FORMERLY KNOWN Theim Hotel, has been thoroughly renovated, and in first-class style. A share of the public patronage solicited. SAMPLE ROOMS ATTACHED The Finest of Wines, Liquors and Cigars DUBLIN STOUT, PALE ALE, HALF-AWK Fashion Livery Stables in connection with Hotel. furnished with or without drivers. Horses bovine T. J. F. BOEYS Wholesale and Retail Dealer Wines, Liquors and A COMPLETE STOCK Of the Finest Wines, Liquors and CIGARS WINES AND LIQUORS BY THE KEG, GALLON OR BOTTLE Orders by Mail Promptly Attended GOODS DELIVERED FREE OF CHARGE Opp. S. P. Depot, ANAHEIM ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 1892. SCELLANEOUS. F. D. Brown & Brown, State :: Brokers. Property---Improved and Unimproved. All kinds sold on commission. on Good Security ANY SUM. - all - Descriptions any part of the State. Correspondence Solicited. es to Rent. California. & HANKEY, DSMEN ERY A FULL LINE OF... dns. Choice Utah Alfalfa. Also Seed Corn. Northern Seed Potatoes. The Weekly Gazette. Established 1870. SBUSCRIPTION, $2 Per Year. Six months. 1 00 Three months. 75 Payable invariably in advance. Transient Advertising. SPACE. 1 week 2 weeks 3 weeks 4 weeks One square..... $1.00 $1.25 $1.75 $2.00 Two squares..... 1.50 2.00 2.50 3.00 3.50 Three squares..... 2.50 300 3.50 4.00 Customary Reductions on above rates will be made on advertisements running for longer periods. Usual discounts on large advertisements. The Gazette is issued every Thursday morning, and sent to subscribers by the early mails. 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. The Heart of Great Guns. Here are two field batteries—12, 6 and 9 pounders in all—firing as rapidly as they can be loaded. The reports blend in a roar, and you must raise your voice as if a hurricane was howling about you. You are not impressed, but rather aggravated and annoyed. There's a snap to each report like the cracking of a great whip—a spiteful sound which reminds you of a dog following at your heels with his yelp! yelp! There is no more trying situation for a soldier than to be lying down in support of a battery. He is only a few feet front of shook, and smoke ponred out of the hole. Henry was ready to shoot the bear with a rifle, expecting that the noise would drive him out. In a moment the bear dashed out of another hole a few yards up the gorge ran along a shelving rock, and dived into a mass of brush just as Henry fired at him. He didn't hit the bear, and the frightened old brute made tracks over the hill toward the north. The boys followed him into High-riter's swamp, where they gave up the chase in an hour or so. That night the bear returned to his day and stayed in it for eight days. On the eighth night he came out walked around in the snow for a while, and went back. The brothers had visited the gorge every day and they came to the conclusion that the bear had devoured the sheep and was getting hungry again. He gave no chance to shoot him. That afternoon they nailed a calf liver to the trunk of a tree a few rods down the gorge and hung one of the anvils fifteen feet above it, fixing the rope in such a way that the anvil would drop to the ground the moment the bear began to yank at the bait. Jarvis went to the gorge the next morning and from a distance he saw that the anvil had fallen. He carried a rifle, and hurryng to the tree he found a wildcat lying under the anvil crushed to death. He got his brother as soon as he could, and the two pulled the anvil up again and reset it. On the third morning they found the bear lying dead with his nose against the tree. The point of the anvil had been driven three inches into the bear's skull. The bear's throat was pinned to the roots of the tree, and the bold sheep thief died in his tracks. He weighed 334 pounds. concerning Bees. Foreign bees without pedigrees may be admitted to the United States free of duty. The Secretary of the Treasury has so decided. Until the last tariff bill was passed bees from abroad came in free as "animals imported for breeding purposes." The McKinley law declared that that ruling should apply only to animals "regularly entered in recognized herd books." Accordingly, bees A new lot of Self-adjust-Fruit Pickers. Buy all Kinds of-Oranges packed and sold. WAREHOUSE—Corner Main and Third Streets. NTA ANA. MERCHANT TAILOR. A complete assortment of-ER Goods of latest styles which the attention of the citi-ed vicinity is directed. from $25 up. from $6 up. It is cordially extended the-examine this stock. FRED CRIST Steadman, Retail Butchers. Theheim, Cal. Mutton, Veal, Sausages and Lard Your Own Make. Price Paid for Live Stock. L. BOYD For and Provisions. Bry, Cigars Tobacco. Highest Price Paid for Produce. Delivered Free! GLEES STREET, ANAHEIM, CAL. The Heart of Great Guns. Here are two field batteries—12, 6 and 9 pounders in all—firing as rapidly as they can be loaded. The reports blend in a roar, and you must raise your voice as if a hurricane was howling about you. You are not impressed, but rather aggravated and annoyed. There's a snap to each report like the cracking of a great whip—a spiteful sound which reminds you of a dog following at your heels with his yelp! yelp! yelp! There is no more trying situation for a soldier than to be lying down in support of a battery. He is only a few yards in front of the guns, and he not only feels the full force of the concussion as communicated to the earth, from the "kick" of the gun, but the report itself seems to strike the spinal column and travel up to the back of the head. Then, too, there is the fear of shells exploding prematurely or of grape and canister "dribbling," to cause wounds or death, and it is a positive relief to see a column of the enemy break cover for a charge. The roar of the guns does not linger for hours after, as is the case with mortars and seize guns, but you find your nerves on edge and your temper spoiled for a day or two. The men who lay in lines with a battery firing over them probably endured more mental suffering than the enemy at whom the guns were pointed. The fire of great guns is terribly trying for the first few minutes, but this feeling gradually gives way to one awe and sublimity. There is something so terrific and appalling—you feel yourself so atomless in comparison that you would speak in whispers if the roar could suddenly cease. You are an onlooker; if assisting to work a gun, physical activity would take away from the mental strain. When Admiral Porter got his twenty mortar boats, each armed with an S-70 mortar and a 32-pound rifle cannon, at work against the forts below New Orleans, and the big guns in both forts had opened in reply, there was something skin to the sound of heaven and earth coming together. The mortar shells weighed over 200 pounds apiece, and the rush of them through the air made one's hair feel as if it crawled. The venomous hiss of a big skyrocket was magnified thousands of times, to be followed by a crash which seemed to split the sky open into cracks and crevices. When the firing had continued until all reports had been merged into one steady roar there was little short of an earthquake on land or sea for ten miles around. The earth shook as if a great steam hammer was pounding it a few yards from your feet. If standing near a tree, you could feel the roots letting go of the soil with a sound like bugs crawling over dry leaves. On the water great mud spots rose up here and there to show where the earth forty feet below had been disturbed. In the Mississippi River itself huge catfish leaped above the surface in fright and pain or floated belly up and were carried along with the current, gasping for breath. Out on the blue water air bubbles as large as dining plates floated to the surface and bursted with a snap, and fish of all kinds exhibited the greatest confusion and alarm. Thirty miles away the roar was like that of a gale sweeping over a pine forest. Horses and cattle sought to hide away, birds flew about uttering cries of distress, and dogs pointed their noses toward the sky and howled diamally. Birds and fawns felt the air and earth waves long before human beings did, and their actions were so queer as to become alarming. The coming of the roar to those afar off was preceded by a jarring of the earth and a moaning in the air. Bear's skull. The bear's throat was pinned to the roots of the tree, and the bold sheep thief had died in his tracks. He weighed 334 pounds. Concerning Bees. Foreign bees without pedigrees may be admitted to the United States free of duty. The Secretary of the Treasury has so decided. Until the last tariff bill was passed bees from abroad came in free as "animals imported for breeding purposes." The McKinley law declared that that ruling should apply only to animals "regularly entered in recognized berd books." Accordingly, bees were assessed 20 per cent. ad valorem because they had no pedigrees. The bee keepers protested and carried their point. Some time ago the Post Office Department declared that bees were "unavailable," on the ground that they would be likely to sting people if they got loose. The bee keepers secured the recall of that regulation by proving that the packages employed could not be broken. Most of them use an ingenious wooden box with a sliding cover, invented by Dr. Bonnton, an expert attached to the Department of Agriculture. It is four inches long and is divided into three communicating compartments. The compartment at one end filled with soft candy for the insects to feed upon; the one at the other end has holes for ventilation, while the middle compartment is a dark chamber for the occupants to crawl into when it is cold. In such a receptacle bees can be sent around the world. Each box will hold a queen and from twelve to twenty workers. Before mailing it is secured with rubber bands or put in a strong envelope. The breeding of queen bees for market has grown to be an important industry, and agents nowadays travel around the world to seek new varieties of bees. A very excellent and popular stock of industrious honey getters has been introduced from Cyprus. When the Venetians owned the island 200,000 hives were kept there. People used honey for sugar in those days. Now there are only 30,000 hives, owing to the oppressive taxes levied on the industry by the Turks. The residents are usually unwilling to sell any of their bees, believing that those left behind will fly away after the ones which are disposed of. Accordingly the purchaser is obligated frequently to buy fifty hives in order to secure fifty queens. Now Try This. It will cost you nothing and will surely do you good, if you have a Cough, Cold, or any trouble with Throat, Chest or Lungs. Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds is guaranteed to give relief, or money will be paid back. Suppliers from La Gripe found it just the thing and under its use had a speedy and perfect recovery. Try a sample bottle at our expense and learn us just how good a thing it is. Trial bottles free at W.M. Higgins drug store. Large size 50 cents and $1. Strawberry Dumplings — Ever Eat Them? Make a paste from one pint of sifted flour, two tablespoonfuls of butter (half lard if you prefer), a tablespoonful of salt, and enough milk to moisten sufficiently toroll out—about half a teacupful. Mix very lightly with the tips of the fingers, and roll out about a quarter of an inch in thickness; cut in rounds with a cake cutter; put from three to six berries according to their size; in the center of each, and pinch shut. Steam twenty minutes. A nice sauce is made by beating to a and Provisions. Bury, Cigars Tobacco. Highest Price Paid for Produce. Delivered Free! ANGELES STREET, ANAHEIM, CAL Special Hotel. (ater and Lemon Streets) TY, - PROPRIETOR. ations for Families & Tourists MERELY KNOWN AS THE ANAoughly renovated, and will be conducted of the public patronage is respectfully BOOMS ATTACHED TO HOTEL. and Cigars ALE ALE, HALF-AND-HALF. section with Hotel. First-class turn-outs drivers. Horses bought and sold. BOEGE, and Retail Dealer in Cigars and Cigars. WAYS ON HAND — GETE STOCK! Lines, Liquors and Cigars. AND LIQUORS GALLON OR BOTTLE. Promptly Attended to. LED FREE OF CHARGE! t, ANAHEIM, CAL, The Anvil and the Bear. Henry and Jarvis Camp of Root Hollow, Wyoming county, over in Pennsylvania, missed a sheep one morning this month and found bear tracks and blood in the snow outside of the barnyard fence. They tracked the bear to a gorgo nearly two miles west of their place, where they lost the track in a hole in the rocks. There were bits of wool on the edges of the stones, and the young men, feeling certain that they had holed the sheep-killer, went home and drew a couple of anvils to the gorge in a sleigh. They loaded one of the anvils with powder, put the other anvil on top of it, placed them on a plank, and pushed them as far into the bear's den as they could. Then Jarvis applied a slow match to the powder, and he and his brother ran to a safe distance. Presently the anvils beome the rocks in right and paid of heated berry up and were carried along with the current, gasping for breath. Out on the blue water air bubbles as large as dining plates floated to the surface and bursted with a snap, and fish of all kinds exhibited the greatest confusion and alarm. Thirty miles away the roar was like that of a gale sweeping over a pine forest. Horses and cattle sought to hide away, birds flew about uttering cries of distress, and dogs pointed their noses toward the sky and howled dismay. Birds and fews felt the air and earth waves long before human beings did, and their actions were so queer as to become alarming. The coming of the roar to those afar off was preceded by a jarring of the earth and a moaning in the air. Springs overflowed, and the water in wells circled around as in a whirlpool. The wildest species of birds left the woods and thickets and came flying about the houses, and rabbits deserted their burrows and sought the companionship of domestic animals. The thunder storms of a score of years combined could not have rent the heavens nor disturbed the solid earth as that cannonade did. If the beginning was painful and exasperating the ending was something to be remembered for its grandeur. One mortar after another, one great gun after another, was silenced by order. The reverberations had travelled through air and earth and water a distance of fifty miles. They now seemed to return back to the guns. The rent and riven skies had kept up a constant moaning and complaining. These sounds gradually died away, as a man in pain finally drops off to sleep. The earth resumed its solidity again, the sun shone forth in its old familiar way, the bank of clouds piled up in the west and tinged with gold all along their lower edges seemed proof to the eye that the world still stood as we had lived in it the day before those monsters awoke and demanded human blood and wreck and destruction as the price of their silence. The Anvil and the Bear. Henry and Jarvis Camp of Root Hollow, Wyoming county, over in Pennsylvania, missed a sheep one morning this month and found bear tracks and blood in the snow outside of the barnyard fence. They tracked the bear to a gorgo nearly two miles west of their place, where they lost the track in a hole in the rocks. There were bits of wool on the edges of the stones, and the young men, feeling certain that they had holed the sheep-killer, went home and drew a couple of anvils to the gorge in a sleigh. They loaded one of the anvils with powder, put the other anvil on top of it, placed them on a plank, and pushed them as far into the bear's den as they could. Then Jarvis applied a slow match to the powder, and he and his brother ran to a safe distance. Presently the anvils beomes the rocks in right and paid of heated berry up and were carried along with the current, gasping for breath. Out on the blue water air bubbles as large as dining plates floated to the surface and bursted with a snap, and fish of all kinds exhibited the greatest confusion and alarm. Thirty miles away the roar was like that of a gale sweeping over a pine forest. Horses and cattle sought to hide away, birds flew about uttering cries of distress, and dogs pointed their noses toward the sky and howled dismay. Birds and fews felt the air and earth waves long before human beings did, and their actions were so queer as to become alarming. The coming of the roar to those afar off was preceded by a jarring of the earth and a moaning in the air. Springs overflowed, and the water in wells circled around as in a whirlpool. The wildest species of birds left the woods and thickets and came flying about the houses, and rabbits deserted their burrows and sought the companionship of domestic animals. The thunder storms of a score of years combined could not have rent the heavens nor disturbed the solid earth as that cannonade did. If the beginning was painful and exasperating the ending was something to be remembered for its grandeur. One mortar after another, one great gun after another, was silenced by order. The reverberations had travelled through air and earth and water a distance of fifty miles. They now seemed to return back to the guns. The rent and riven skies had kept up a constant moaning and complaining. These sounds gradually died away, as a man in pain finally drops off to sleep. The earth resumed its solidity again, the sun shone forth in its old familiar way, the bank of clouds piled up in the west and tinged with gold all along their lower edges seemed proof to the eye that the world still stood as we had lived in it the day before those monsters awoke and demanded human blood and wreck and destruction as the price of their silence. The Anvil and the Bear. Henry and Jarvis Camp of Root Hollow, Wyoming county, over in Pennsylvania, missed a sheep one morning this month and found bear tracks和 blood in the snow outside of the barnyard fence. They tracked the bear to a gorgo nearly two miles west of their place, where they lost the track in a hole in the rocks. There were bits of wool on the edges of the stones, and the young men, feeling certain that they had holed the sheep-killer, went home and drew a couple of anvils to the gorge in a sleigh. They loaded one of the anvils with powder, put the other anvil on top of it, placed them on a plank, and pushed them as far into the bear's den as they could. Then Jarvis applied a slow match to the powder, and he and his brother ran to a safe distance. Presently the anvils beomes the rocks in right and paid of heated berry up和 were carried along with the current, gasping for breath. Out on the blue water air bubbles as large as dining plates floated to the surface and bursted with a snap, and fish of all kinds exhibited the greatest confusion and alarm. Thirty miles away the roar was like that of a gale sweeping over a pine forest. Horses and cattle sought to hide away, birds flew about uttering cries of distress, and dogs pointed their noses toward the sky and howled dismay. Birds and fews felt the air and earth waves long before human beings did, and their actions were so queer as to become alarming. The coming of the roar to those afar off was preceded by a jarring of the earth and a moaning in the air. Springs overflowed, and the water in wells circled around as in a whirlpool. The wildest species of birds left the woods and thickets和 came flying about the houses,and rabbits deserted their burrows和 sought the companionship of domestic animals. The thunder storms of a score of years combined could not have rent the heavens nor disturbed the solid earth as that cannonade did. If the beginning was painful and exasperating the ending was something to be remembered for its grandeur. One mortar after another, one great gun after another, was silenced by order. The reverberations had travelled through air和 earth和 water a distance of fifty miles. They now seemed to return back to the guns. The rent和 riven skies had kept up a constant moaning和 complaining. These sounds gradually died away, as a man in pain finally drops off to sleep. The earth resumed its solidity again,the sun shone forth in its old familiar way,the bank of clouds piled up in west and tinged with gold all along their lower edges seemed proof to eye that world still stood as we had lived in it day before those monsters awoke and demanded human blood和 wreck和 destruction as the price of their silence. The Anvil and the Bear. Henry和Jarvis Camp of Root Hollow, Wyoming county,over in Pennsylvania, missed a sheep one morning this month和 found bear tracks和 blood in snow outside of barnyard fence.他们 tracked the bear to a gorgo nearly two miles west of their place,where they lost track in a hole in rocks.他们 tracked the bear to a gorgo nearly two miles west of their place,where they lost track in a hole in rocks.他们 tracked the bear to a gorgo nearly two miles west of their place,where they lost track in a hole in rocks.他们 tracked the bear to a gorgo nearly two miles west of their place,where they lost track in a hole in rocks.他们 tracked the bear to a gorgo nearly two miles west of their place,where they lost track in a hole in rocks.他们 tracked the bear to a gorgo nearly two miles west of their place,where they lost track in a hole in rocks.他们 tracked the bear to a gorgo nearly two miles west of their place,where they lost track in a hole in rocks.他们 tracked the bear to a gorgo nearly two miles west of their place,where they lost track in a hole in rocks.他们 tracked the bear to a gorgo nearly two miles west of their place,where they lost track in a hole in rocks.他们 tracked the bear to a gorgo nearly two miles west of their place,where they lost track in a hole in rocks.他们 tracked the bear to a gorgo nearly two miles west of their place,where they lost track in a hole in rocks.他们 tracked the bear to a gorgo nearly two miles west of their place,where they lost track in a hole in rocks.他们 tracked the bear to a gorgo nearly two miles west of their place,where they lost track in a hole in rocks.他们 tracked the bear to a gorgo nearly two miles west of their place,where they lost track in a hole in rocks.他们 tracked the bear to a gorgo nearly two miles west of their place,where they lost track in a hole in rocks.他们 tracked the bear to a gorgo nearly two miles west of their place,where they lost track in a hole in rocks.他们 tracked the bear to a gorgo nearly two miles west of their place,where they lost track in a hole in rocks.他们 tracked the bear to a gorgo nearly two miles west of their place,where they lost track in a hole in rocks.他们 tracked the bear to a gorgo nearly two miles west of their place,where they lost track in a hole in rocks.他们 tracked the bear to a gorgo nearly two miles west of their place,where they lost track in A hole IN A HOLLOW. Specimen Cases. S.H. Clifford,新Cassel,Wis., was troubled with Neuralgia和 Rheumatism, his stomach was disordered,his liver was taken to an alarming degree,appetite fell away,and he was terribly reduced in flesh和 strength。三 bottles of Electric Bitters cured him. Edward Shephard,Harrisburg,Ill., hada running store on his leg if eight years' standing.His used three bottles of Electric Bitters 和 seven boxes of Buckle's Arnica Salve,and his leg is sound well.Doctors said he was incurable.On one bottle of Electric Bitters he unintely.Sold at W.M. Higgins' drug store. The Sky is April. The planets which figureinhe roleof evening starsin April are Mercury,Venus holdsthe postof honor amongthe planets.She maybe seenat her best at any time between sunsetand 10 o'clock at night.Saturn may be seenin east high abovethe horizonnow atthe closeof evening twilight.The planet,tooo.in its brightest phaseofthe year,andinwell situated for observation.Saturn is almostas readilyrecognizedasVenusis.theQueenofPlanetsshineswitha brilliantwhite light,andisbrighterthananyotherorbintheheavenswhilethelusteroftheringledplanetisdark yellow.Saturnorbwhichisinmotheositesideoftheskyfrom Venus.isthebrightestobjectinthenviacinity,andliketheotherfour或五planetwhichcanbeseenwiththenakedeye,hasa steadylight.Uranusrisesabouttwoandone-halfhoursaftersunset,andisinthepenthesast.Like-thethreeotherplanets take ponred out of the hole. by to shoot the bear with a that the noise would drive moment the bear dashed out a few yards up the gorgo, living rock, and dived into a ast as Henry fired at him. He ear, and the frightened old skins over the hill toward the days followed him into Highwhere they gave up the chase. The bear returned to his den for eight days. On the eighth out walked around in the vile, and went back. The cutted the gorge every day and the conclusion that the bear sheep and was getting hungays them no chance to shoot atternoon they nailed a calf's skin of a tree a few rods down lung one of the anvils fifteen going the rope in such a way should drop to the ground the bear began to yank at the bait. So the gorge the next morning ance he saw that the anvil had cried a rifle, and hurryng to a wildest lying under the death. He got his brother uld, and the two pulled the and reset it. On the third round the bear lying dead with the tree. The point of the driven three inches into the bear's throat was pinned the tree, and the bold sheep in his tracks. He weighed occurring Bees. without pedigrees may be adUnited States free of duty. of the Treasury has so decidlast tariff bill was passed and came in free as "animals needling purposes." The Mesared that that ruling should animals "regularly entered in books." Accordingly, bees named, this remote member of the sun's family is now near its brightest phase, and may be seen when the atmosphere is clear. Its great distance, though, makes it appear like a faint star to the unaided vision. It will be in the field of view all night. The planets which take the part of morning stars in April are Jupiter and Mars. There will be interesting conjunctions in April between the moon and some of the planets. In the earliest of these Saturn figures. This took place last Saturday evening, the 9th. The moon passed on the north side of the planet, and, a little before sunset, they were only a degree and three-quarters apart. This distance was increased to about two degrees when they came fairly into view at the close of evening twilight. At this time both orbs were in the southeast and the moon was a little over half way between its half and full stage. About midnight on the 12th of April, or three days later than the Saturn conjunction, the moon, in traveling along its course to the east, occulted Uranus, passing between us and that planet, and hiding it from view for nearly two hours. Then the waning moon, still moving toward the east, passed near the morning stars Mars and Jupiter. On the evening of the 30th, when the next moon is only about four days old, it will sweep by Venus. This will be the most striking and beautiful of the April conjunctions. Why the Best Sugar Industry Will Grow. Professor Kedzie of Michigan gives the following as his conclusions about the beet sugar industry: It is a crop promising large returns, outstripping wheat as a cash crop. It promises a reliable market at home. The finished product, sugar, is in a concentrated form, costing little for transportation, and it is wanted at home. The glut in transporting a big wheat crop to foreign lands will not be realized in sugar. The transportation to market therefore is brought down to a low figure. Best raising properly conducted does not exhaust the soil. The chemical materials removed in the finished product are only carbon and water, mindless water. The hitched up in front of him. He was not as much skilled as he was ambitions, and, like other unlearned men, he read painfully and half aloud, keeping at the same time an eye on the floors. "Flossie," he muttered, "turned upon the baffled inventor her eyes, flashing with indignasunbun, and stamped her foot on the"—second floor, gents, Quackenbus, Dohoney & Casey—"on the marble pavement, while her voylet eyes flashed fire, and her shapely bosom heaved with"—third floor, massage parlor, 309, to your right—"with wrats. 'Oh, sir,' she said, 'you little recked with whom'—fourth—'you had to deal. I am but a porc —Billinge, 708—pore country girl, little skilled in the ways of"—Dr. Williams—the ways of the world, but I know you, catiff, an I defy you.' 'Ah,' eried the baffled fiend, 'you'—ninth—shall not thus escape me.' He drew a murderous revolver from his ten-tenth—and pointed it at the fair creature. At this moment—eleventh—'far's we go. Who do you want to find, air?' "I wanted to get off at the sixth," said the fat passenger. "But that does not make any difference. Does the feller kill her?" "I'll see," said the elevator booster, reversing the lever for the down trip. "At this moment the door burst open, and a little active form tore into the room. The girl gave a scream of delight, and with a wild cry of 'Thank God, I am saved!' she fell into into the protecting arms of honest John Souther. Here's the sixth." "Thank you," said the fat man. More Infected Trees. The District Attorney of Los Angeles has entered suit and secured a preliminary injunction against James Colgrove, Edward G. Durant, F.M. Durant and the Fairmount Land and Water Company, preventing them from distributing 48,000 peach, plum and apicot trees which are now deposited on their land near Lancaster. These trees are alleged to be infected with fruit pests. The petition alleges that the particular pests with which the trees are infected are the peach-borer and black aphis, both of which have been berefted been unknown in this State: without pedigrees may be admitted United States free of duty. If the Treasury has so decided last tariff bill was passed and came in free as "animals feeding purposes." The McCarthy that ruling should animals "regularly entered in books." Accordingly, bees 20 per cent, ad valorem be no pedigrees. The bee kept carried their point. Some at Office Department declared "unavailable," on the ground be freely to sting people if the bee keepers secured the regulation by proving that the boyed could not be broken. Use an ingenious wooden box cover, invented by Dr. Bennett to the Department. It is four inches long and is keen communicating compartment at one end is filled for the insects to feed upon; other end has holes for ventilation middle compartment is a for the occupants to crawl in. In such a receptacle bees bound the world. Each box and from twelve to twenty are mailing it is secured with part in a strong envelope. Of queen bees for market has an important industry, and its travel around the world to eat of bees. A very excellent risk of industrious honey get-produced from Cyprus. When owned the island 200,000 there. People used honey these days. Now there are only going to the oppressive taxes industry by the Turks. The really unwilling to sell any of giving that those left behind after the ones which are disorderly the purchaser is likely to buy fifty hives in order to acquire. Dumplings—Ever Eat Them? from one pint of sifted flour, puls of butter (half lard if you poisonful of salt, and enough sufficiently to roll out—about Mix very lightly with the rinses and roll out about a quarreln thickness; cut in rounds put from three to six big to their size, in the center chubut. Steam twenty minutes is made by beating to a Professor Kedzie of Michigan gives the following as his conclusions about the beet sugar industry: It is a crop promising large returns, outstripping wheat as a cash crop. It promises a reliable market at home. The finished product, sugar, is in a concentrated form, costing little for transportation, and it is wanted at home. The glut in transporting a big wheat crop to foreign lands will not be realized in sugar. The transportation to market therefore is brought down to a low figure. Beet raising properly conducted does not exhaust the soil. The chemical materials removed in the finished product are only carbon and water—wind and water. The nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, etc., permanently carried off in wheat and other grains, are not found in sugar. The skillful culture of beets is found to be the best preparation for a grain crop, and has improved the capacity for soil production in Germany and France. Beet raising will compel high farming and thorough cultivation. To keep the soil from exhaustion the waste pests of the beets must directly or indirectly be returned to the soil. The tops and crowns not used in manufacturing, and the beet pulp from which the sugar has been extracted, make most excellent feed for fattening cattle. Thus stock-feeding becomes a necessary part of routine on a sugar beet farm. Beet raising compels good farming—a strong point in its favor. Safety in the Midst of Danger. This would seem a contradiction—is so, in fact, to the eye. But experience has proved its possibility. Take the case of the individual who dwells in a marvellous region. A robust constitution is no certain defence against the dreaded chills. What if Recorded testimony, covering a period little short of half a century, proves that Hostetter's Stomach Bitterna is precisely this. This continent does not limit the field where the medicine has proved its efficacy. In South America, the Isthmus of Panama, Mexico, everywhere in fact where misma-born disease takes on its most formidable types, the Bitterna is organized specific in illuminable demand, and prescribed by physicians of repute. Potent, too, is it in disorders of the stomach, liver and bowels, and against that destroyer, la gripe. It improves appetite and sleep, neutralizes rheumatism and kidney complaints. Interesting World's Fair Notes. Alameda county has appropriated $3,000 for its county exhibit, and will make further appropriations as required. The total expense connected with the exposition buildings and grounds at Chicago is now averaging a trifle over $1,000,000 a month, or about $38,000 for every working day. The accepted design for the California exhibition building will have some 60,000 square feet of ground space. Including the gallery, there will be about 100,000 square feet of floor space. Under the law passed by the last Legislature San Francisco county may appropriate $50,000 for World's Fair purposes; Alameda, Los Angeles and Santa Clara, each $40,000, and each of the other counties $7,500, making in all $545,000. The exposition buildings at Chicago will be dedicated with appropriate ceremonies on October 12, 1892, the 400th anniversary of the discovery of America by Columbus. The exposition will be open to visitors May 1, 1893, and continue six months, closing October 30, 1893. The Board of Trade of Humboldt county has petitioned the Board of Supervisors for an appropriation of $2,000, for the purpose of making a creditable exhibit at the World's Fair. It is understood that almost the entire thank you, said the latter man. More Infected Trees. The District Attorney of Los Angeles has entered suit and secured a preliminary injunction against James Colgrove, Edward G. Durant, F.M. Durant and the Fairmount Land and Water Company, preventing them from distributing 48,000 peach, plum and apicot trees which are now deposited on their land near Lancaster. These trees are alleged to be infected with fruit pests. The petition alleges that the particular pests with which the trees are infected are the peach-borer and black aphis, both of which have buretofore been unknown in this State; that the borer cannot be destroyed by any known process, and that it is impracticable to disinfect trees with black aphis, as aphis are liable to fly to and infect other trees before the original lot of trees can be disinfected. The trees came from Delaware and it was known to the Horticultural Commissioners that they were coming, but it was thought they would be taken to Los Angeles. Instead of this they were carried up Antelope valley near Lancaster, and dumped. A deputy inspector examined the lot, and not being familiar with the pest with which they were infected pronounced them "clean"; but the Commissioner knowing they had come from an infected district in the East, examined them and found numbers of the trees diseased as described. The Fairmount Land Company is a concern which is just now selling land in Antelope valley in small lots to settlers. The company plants the land with fruit trees and so sells it. Fruit trees can be purchased in the East for about five cents spicee, whereas here they cost about twenty cents each. The county authorities declare that great efforts have been made on the part of the defenders to elude them in getting trees into the county. After the Santa Fe. The San Diego railroad executive committee of one hundred, of which Mayor Sherman is ex-officio chairman, has written a letter to George C. Magoun, chairman of the board of directors of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad Company, in which it recited the facts that the Temecula Canyon route of that line to San Diego has been abandoned since the flood of the winter of 1890-91, and that the people of the bay country gave the line a magnificent land and money subsidy to insure the construction of the line together with franchises on the bay valued at $5,000,000 equal to, if not in excess of, the total cost of the entire line. The letter resists that these gifts were contingent upon the building and maintenance of the road, and declares that the company has no right legally or equitably to abandon any portion of the line. The letter ends: "We do not believe that another instance of such gross neglect to restore railroad communication can be found in the whole country, and we are fully authorized to say to you that the people of this county have borne this neglect as long as they propose to. They are unanimously resolved to take such steps as will secure either an early construction of the railroad, either through the Temecula canyon or via Fallbrook, or a return of the lands and money donated and the forfeiture of the franchise granted as a foreseeal." The letter is signed by the Mayor of the city, as chairman of the committee, and the secretary. Another letter was also written by the committee to C.P.Huntington president of the Southern Pacific, asking him to come to San Diego at his earliest convenience and confer with the citizens relative to ex- Dumplings — Ever Ent Them? from one pint of sifted flour, rule of butter (half lard if you poisonful of salt, and enough sufficiently toroll out—about Mix very lightly with the sauce, and roll out about a quaron thickness; cut in rounds taper; put from three to six egg to their size, in the center shut. Steam twenty minuces is made by beating to a powdered sugar with two butter and adding, a conough berries to give it a pink ash and beat while adding them place them in a cold ced. New Cassel, Wis., was Neuralgia and Rheumatism, is disordered, his liver was warming degree, appertice fell terribly reduced in flesh Three bottles of Electric Bitboxes of Bucklen's Arnica gins sound and well. John O., had five large-Fever doctors said he was incurable of Electric Buttons and one Arnica Salve cured him en W. M. Higgins' drug store. Harrisburg, Ill., had a thus leg of eight years' standboxes of Bucklen's Arnica gins sound and well. John O., had five large-Fever doctors said he was incurable of Electric Buttons and one Arnica Salve cured him en W. M. Higgins' drug store. Sky in April. which figure in the role of evenpil are Mercury, Venus, Venus holds the post of its planets. She may be seen by time between sunset and night. Saturn may be seen in love the horizon now at the twilight. This planet, too, is phase of the year, and is observation. Saturn is alrecognized as Venus is. The earth shines with a brilliant brighter than any other sun, while the luster of the dark yellow. The latter the opposite side of the sky the brightest object in the other four or five planets seen with the naked eye, has Uranus rises about two and later sunset, and is in the three other planets Buckten's Arnica Salve. The Best Salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chillblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by W. M. Higgins. Saved! A fat man rode in the elevator car of a big downtown building in an Eastern city the other day. The boy who boasted the car was ambitious in letters, and had a novel $50,000 for World's Fair purposes; Alameda, Los Angeles and Santa Clara, each $40,000, and each of the other counties $7,500, making in all $545,000. The exposition buildings at Chicago will be dedicated with appropriate ceremonies on October 12, 1892, the 460th anniversary of the discovery of America by Columbus. The exposition will be open to visitors May 1, 1893, and continue six months, closing October 30, 1893. The Board of Trade of Humboldt county has petitioned the Board of Supervisors for an appropriation of $2,000, for the purpose of making a creditable exhibit at the World's Fair. It is understood that almost the entire amount, if granted, will be used in making a display of native woods and timber. The counties of Los Angeles, San Bernadino, San Diego, Orange, Santa Barbara and Ventura, composing the Southern California World's Fair Association, are decidedly farther advanced in the matter of collecting exhibits than any equal number of counties in the State. Each county will appropriate the full limit authorized by law, which will give a total of $77,500. The headquarters of the association are in Los Angeles. A thorough canvass of each county is being made and a large number of exhibits have already been secured. Trifty orange trees have been transplanted into boxes. These trees will be taken to Chicago, the purpose being to show an orange grove in full bearing. The California World's Fair Commission has called a World's Fair Convention, to be held in San Francisco April 20th, at 2 p.m., in the Academy of Sciences, consisting of delegates as follows: Two to be appointed by each Board of Supervisors, two by each District World's Fair Association and two by each County Association. The object of this convention will be to create closer and more intelligent relations between various counties and associations and the State Commission relative to the exhibits now in process of preparation, and to learn what is being done throughout the State, and have a general exchange of ideas as to the best methods of securing an unequaled display of the State's products at Chicago. Buckten's Arnica Salve. The Best Salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chillblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by W. M. Higgins. French Tansy Wafers. Ladice will find these wafers just what they need, and can be depended upon every time to give relief. Safe and Sure. Can be sent by mail sealed securely. Price $2 per box. Emerson Drug Co., manufacturers San Jose, Cal., and for sale only by D. W. Hunt, M. D., Anaheim. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child she cried for Castoria. When he became Miss she clung to Castoria. When he had Children she gave them Castoria.