YoreAnaheim the Anaheim newspaper archive
Publications Anaheim Gazette 1892 July

anaheim-gazette 1892-07-21

1892-07-21 · Anaheim Gazette · page 1 of 4 · OCR glm-ocr
Scanned page
Scan of anaheim-gazette 1892-07-21 page 1
Searchable text
VOLUME XXII. LODGE MEETINGS. ANAHEIM LODGE, NO. 207, F. & A. M., hold regular meetings on the Monday of preceding the full moon in each month. Sojourning brethren in good tending are cordially invited to attend. W. M. McFADDEN, W. M. H. W. Chrysoweth, Secretary. ANAHEIM LODGE, NO. 199, I. O. O. F. REGULAR meetings every Tuesday evening. Visiting others 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. GRIMMHAW, Secretary. ORDER CHOSEN FRIENDS MEETS THE FIRST and third Saturday evenings in each month at 8 o'clock. Odd Fellow's Hall. MRS. EMMA SEARLE, Councillor. A. L. LEWIS, Secretary. EVERGREEN COUNCIL, AMERICAN LEGION of Honor. Meet's first and last Wednesday of each month, at 8 p.m. H. A. McWILLIAMS, MRS. L. G. HAYES, Secretary. PROFESSIONAL CARDS DR. J. H. BULLARD, A. B., M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office and Residence, corner Hermine 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. D. W. HUNT, M. D. Physician and Surgeon. Also U. S. Examining Surgeon. At my residence, 7 to 8 a.m.; at my office, 10:30 to 12 m.; at my residence, 8 to 9 p.m.; at my office 1 to 3 p.m. FRANK T. RIMPAU. DRUGGIST AND CHEMIST, Graduate of College of Pharmacy. MISCELLANEOUS. W. R. Harker Real :: Estate :: Real Dealers in all kinds of property—Improved and Also Stock of all kinds sold on commu Money Loaned on Good IN ANY SUM. Property - of - all - De For Sale in any part of the S Information Furnished. Corresp Houses to Rent Anaheim, O. R. LUEDKIE Watchmaker and OFFICE HOURS: 7 to 8:30 a.m.; 12 to 1:30, and 6 to 7:30 p.m. D. W. HUNT, M. D. Physician and Surgeon. Also U. S. Examining Surgeon. At my residence, 7 to 8 A.M., at my office, 10:30 to 12 A.M., at my residence, 8 to 9 P.M.; at my office 1 to 3 P.M. FRANK T. RIMPAU. DRUGGIST AND CHEMIST, Graduate of College of Pharmacy. 365 North Main street, opposite Baker block, Los Angeles, Cal. Prescriptions carefully compounded. The patronage of the public respectfully solicited. 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. 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. Jenter street, Anaheim, Cal. Specialtion given to PROBATEmatters. C. C. HAMILTON, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Rooms 1, 2 and 3, Savings Bank Building. SANTA ANA, CAL. L. NEMITZ, THE PAINTER, Shop on Center street, near the opera-house. I am ready to do first-class Carriage Painting & Trimming GENERAL JOBBING H. P. LARSEN, CONTRACTOR & BUILDER. Estimates given; Contracts made and do a general Jobbing Business. CENTER STREET, ANAHEIM. 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. CHAS. SCHINDLER, CONTRACTOR and BUILDER. Anaheim, O. R. LUEDKIE Watchmaker and A FINE ASSORTMENT OF WATCHES Clocks, Jewelry, Silverware and Optical Goods Always on Hand. Center Street, Opp. Commer F. CRIST, MERCHANT Just received a complete a -- SUMMER GOOD Of latest styles and fabrics, to tention of the citizens of Anaheim is directed. Suits to order from Pants to order from An invitation is cordially public to call and examine this s Go To WM.BOY Groceries and ProConfectionery, Cigars To Grain, Mill Feed, Etc. Highest Price Goods Delivered Free! BACKS' BLOCK, LOS ANGELES STREET, Commercial H (Corner Center and Lemon Street) J. J. EVERHARTY, - PRO First-class Accommodations for Families THE COMMERCIAL, FORMERLY KNOWN Heim Hotel, has been thoroughly renovated, an 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. 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. CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER. Office and shop, first door south of Ferdinand, Backs' Furniture Store. Los Angeles street... Anaheim. ALBERTSON & MIDDLEHAM House - Painters! Paper Hanging, Kalsomining. All work done with neatness and dispatch. A share of the public patronage solicited. Opposite Postoffice. ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, JULY 21, 1892. MISCELLANEOUS. Harker & Co. 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. ses to Rent. California. R. LUEDKE, er and Jeweler. The Weekly Gazette. Established 1870. SHSCRIPTION. - 62 Per Year. Six months. 1,00 Three months. 75 Payable invariably in advance. Transient Advertising. SPACE. 1 week 2 weeks 3 weeks 4 week One square..... $110 $125 $175 $200 Two squares... 140 200 225 250 Three squares... 290 250 300 350 Four squares... 210 300 360 400 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 suburban邮局 the early mails. It is delivered by carrier in Anahilm on the morning of publication. Entered at the Anahilm 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. Items of Interest. The Tulare Irrigation District has voted a special assessment of $10,000. Governor Booth lied at his home at Sacramento on Thursday. A local wag remarked the other day that thin people seem unusually thick in Pomona this year. Whitelaw Reid is the third newspaper man nominated for the Vice-Presidenty. Schnyler Colfax and Henry Wilson preceded him in the honor. Electricity in its various forms of application is said to give employment to 5,000,000 people. Miss Harriet F. Monroe of Boston will receive in the style of the Middle Ages: "By no balldame, fair maid, say thou wilt be min and the holy friar shall unto us ere another sun glides the burrets of Windsor Castle!" Then he considered the theatrical style: "I have long loved you in secret, go ur-r-and, though I am not rich, I can offer you the true and unselfish devotion of me which ha-a-r-r-t!" He thought perhaps the easy conversational style might do: "Well, Alicia may call you 'Alicia,' mayn't it—every one thinks we are going to be married. Ha, suppose we do get married, just to please 'em." But after all he did it something like this: "Er—Miss Alicia—er—excuse the family; but—er—will you or—er—O by Jave!" And then she came to the rescue and said: "That'll do. Willie dear; it's all right, and know papa and mamma will be so pleased." Constitutional Amendments. The voters of California will have an opportunity this fall to pass upon several constitutional amendments and acts that have come vitalized only by vote of the people. As little is at present understood of these propositions we herewith give a brief summary of each, that a general understanding may be attained, leaving the discussion of their merits until later in the campaign. The first that will appear on the ballot is known as an assembly constitution amendment No. 5. This is amendatory section 34 of article 4 of the constitution and provides that no appropriation bill, save the general appropriation and deficiency bills, the latter being for the support of Government and State institutions, shall contain more than one item definitely expressed In the deficiency bill the Governor may order to any item. The next is assembly constitution amendment No. 7, providing that a two-thirds vote of qualified electors of a county city, town or township may incur a debt to run for forty years. Senate constitutional amendment No. 1 provides for extending a session of the Legislature. R. LUEDKE, 饰 and Jeweler. ALL WORK CAREFULLY Repaired AND Warranted Opp. Commercial Hotel. MERCHANT TAILOR. A complete assortment of MER GOODS and fabrics, to which the attoms of Anaheim and vicinity from $25 up. from $6 up. is cordially extended the examine this stock. M.BOYD For and Provisions, ery, Cigars Tobacco. Highest Price Paid for Produce. Is Delivered Free! ANGELES STREET, ANAHEIM, CAL. mercial Hotel. Center and Lemon Streets) KITY, - PROPRIETOR. dations for Families & Tourists ORMERLY KNOWN AS THE ANAbroroughly renovated, and will be conducted The Tulare Irrigation District has voted a special assessment of $10,000. Governor Booth lied at his home at Sacramento on Thursday. A local wag remarked the other day that thin people seem unusually thick in Pomona this year. Whitelaw Reid is the third newspaper man nominated for the Vice-Presidency, Schuyler Collax and Henry Wilson preceded him in the honor. Electricity in its various forms of application is said to give employment to 5,000,000 people. Miss Harriet F. Monroe of Boston will receive $1,000 for waiting the dedicatory ode that is to be read at Chicago next October, when the ExpoTin buildings will be dedicated. Cholera is rapidly spreading in parts of Russia and people are fleeing from the cities panic stricken. The military physician reports the disease beyond control and is asking for help. Governor Markham has issued a proclamation declaring Labor day a legal holiday. Labor day comes on the first Monday in September and this year it will fall on the 5th of the month. It takes 15,000,000 words of telegraphing to tell the story of a national convention to the different daily papers of the country. There are 4,000 acres in beets at Chino, and it is estimated that there will be 40,000 tons of beets which will yield 15 per cent of sugar. The yield will be over 12,000,000 lb. of sugar. The Government bounty alone will amount to nearly $300,000. The sugar industry of this county is no small affair, as easily seen. Monday evening of last week a man old and decrepit got off a train at Ontario and began to wander unlessly about town. He had come to visit a married daughter, but had forgotten her name, and could not be directed to her. His own name he did not remember, but after talking with him for some time an officer, succeeded in arousing the old man's memory, when it was learned that he was the father of Mrs. Martin Van Winkle, to whom he was sent. Dead Sea Fruits. They slay multitudes when they are the product of neglect of incident disease. A "alight" cold, a bit of indignation, bilefulness or constipation each or any of these "minor alliments" advance in many cases with "league-destroying strides." Give them a swift, defeat with Hostetter's Stomach Bitters and avert the danger. Aberneth administered an alarming rebuke to the man who informed him that he had "only a cold!" "Only a cold," repeated the doctor, "What would ye have—the plague?" Rheumatism and la gripe are easily extinguished at the start. Why then allow them to get up a full head of steam? Put on the brakes with the Bitters. The genial warmth which this superb medicine diffuses through the system, the impetus it gives to the circulation of the blood, its soothing and strengthening effect in the nervous, specially recommend it to the enfeebled and sick. "Tis the great specific for malaria." Extract From a Modern Novel. "WHAT!" thundered the beautiful girl as sparks of fire flashed from her magnificent eyes. "Would you insult a nineteenth century maiden by asking her for a kiss? Begone, base varlet, ore I summon the aid of the gods and crush you beneath the tremendous weight of my terrible wrath and indignation, and leave nothing but a smear to mark the spot where once stood the form of a presumptuous man." The young man quailed before this avalanche of anger. He tried to speak, but his face refused its office, and he had been known as an assembly constitutionally amendment No. 5. This is amendatory section 34 of article 4 of the constitution and provides that no appropriation bill, save the general appropriation and deficiency bills, the latter being for the support of Government and State institutions, shall contain more than one item definitely expressed. In the deficiency bill the Governor may object to any item. The next is assembly constitutionally amendment No. 7, providing that a twelfth vote of qualified electors of a county, city, town or township may incur a debt run for forty years. Senate constitutional amendment No. 1 provides for extending a session of the Legislature to one hundred days, and no bill shall be introduced after sixty days without two-thirds of the members consent. Senate constitutional amendment No. 1 provides for giving the Lieutenant Governor something to do, making it his duty to visit State institutions when the Legislature is not in session, and to make reports to that body and the Governor. Senate constitutional amendment No. 1 provides for cities of more than 3,500 population framing and adopting charter. The next is an act submitted to the vote of the people, to fund the debt of the State, and if ratified takes effect sixty days after election. By this act the Governor, Controller and Treasurer are authorized to issue bonds not to exceed $3,528,200 bearing per cent interest payable in twenty years. These bonds take the place of the present debt, or of bonds issued under act of 1870. To pay these bonds, principal and interest 7 per cent is to be raised the first five years 12 per cent for the next ten years and thereafter 15 per cent. The act requiring an educational qualification for voters is also to be ratified or rejected. This provides that voter must be able to write his own name and read any section of the constitution printed in the English language. Electors will also be called upon to express themselves upon the matter of electing a United States Senator by popular vote. Real Estate Transfers. The following transfers of real estate have been recorded during the week: Plez James to Minna Bayha, 36 acres in Yorba District; $1. Plez James to Minna Bayha, 33 acres in Yorba District; $1. Mary E. Steele to Charles A. Steele, loot 22, block K, Kremer tract; $1. B. F. Pritchard to Nicholas Leiman et al NW J NW of sec. 1, T 4 S R 11 W 27 acres; $1,000. Tustin L. and I. Co. to Skerman Steven lot 5 and 6, block 46, Tustin L. and I. Co sub.; $100. John McCloughan et al to Martin H Weight, lot 2 in sub. of secs. 14 and 15, T 4 S R 10 W; $10. Martin H. Weight to Mina M. Weight his wife, same property; $10. John McCloughan et al to Otto Freeman-Lot 3, same sub.; $10. John McCloughan and wife to Otto Freeman-Lot 4, same sub.; $10. Anheim Irrigation District to Randall K King—Lots 5 and 6, block M, Center tract Anheim. Stearns Ro. Co. to C.B.Hewitt—SEQ of Sec. 23, T 4 S R 11 W 40 acres; $10.A.E. White and wife to John Goodale—Part of lots 9 and 10, block F, Fisher's add.A.E. White and wife to John Goodale—Part of lots 9 and 10, block F, Fisher's add.A.E. White and wife to John Goodale—Part of lots 9 and 10, block F, Fisher's add.A.E. White and wife to John Goodale—Part of lots 9 and 10, block F, Fisher's add.A.E. White and wife to John Goodale—Part of lots 9 and 10, block F, Fisher's add.A.E. White and wife to John Goodale—Part of lots 9 and 10 Special Hotel. Center and Lemon Streets) TY, - PROPRIETOR Dations for Families & Tourists FORMERLY KNOWN AS THE ANAboroughly renovated, and will be conducted one of the public patronage is respectfully ROOMS ATTACHED TO HOTEL. Bars and Cigars PALE ALE, HALF-AND-HALF. Connection with Hotel. First-class turn-outs at drivers. Horses bought and sold: What's the Matter? DAVIS and the general public that he is prepared margin possible. He buys for cash and small profit, giving his customers the beneef for showing goods or answering questions. and Poultry Taken in Exchange Steadman, and Retail Butchers. Aheim, Cal. Mutton, Veal, Sausages and Lard Your Own Make. price Paid for Live Stock. Extract From a Modern Novel. "WHAT!" thundered the beautiful girl as sparks of fire flashed from her magnificent eyes. "Would you insult a nineteenth century maden by asking her for a kiss? Begone, base varlet, ere I summon the aid of the gods and crush you beneath the tremendous weight of my terrible wrath and indignation, and leave nothing but a smear to mark the spot where once stood the form of a presumptuous man." The young man quailed before this availance of anger. He tried to speak, but his tongue refused its office; and he who had bravely dashed through blood and fire, faced shot and shell, now stood pale and trembling before this proud, imperious beauty as she stood, beautiful even in her anger, like an ayenging goddess ponring out her torrent of concentrated fury upon a rebellious nation. He glanced around the gymnasium for a means of escape, but divining his intention, she flow to the door with lightning rapidity, and having placed a thousand-pound weight against it, said in a voice ringing with withering contempt: "Listen to me, young man! Ever since the commencement of the world, woman has been the slave of dominering man; but thanks to dumb-bells and Indian clubs, the time has at last arrived when she can assert herself. No longer need she take a second place in the world! No longer need she spend weary hours alone while her husband goes to the club, or for a short (?) run on his bicycle! No longer need she beg with tears in her eyes for a new bonnet! Do you understand me?" she said, "but——" "What! dare you contradict me," she stormed, the flame of her anger bursting forth again. But the w—w—woman w—w was made for the——" He did not finish the sentence, for with a look that would have set fire to a load of hay, she took his measure, and with a strength born of desperation, she seized a fifty-six-pound shot and throw it with such terrific force that it penetrated the six-inch iron door and was lost in space. The young man, feeling very small, crept through the hole the shot had made and was lost to view. His Proposal. He was about to pop the question to the girl of his choice, and was trying to decide how he should do it. First he thought of the knightly proposal, John McCloughan et al to Otto FreemanLot 3, same sub.; $10. John McCloughan and wife to Otto FreemanMant 4, same sub.; $10. Anaheim Irrigation District to Randall L. King—Lots 5 and 6, block M, Center tract. Anaheim. Stearus Ro. Co. to C.B. Hewitt—SE of Sec. 23, T 4 S, R 11 W, 40 acres; $10. A. E. White and wife to John Goodale—Part of lots 9 and 10, block F, Fisher's add. Anaheim; $500. F. C. Smyth to Joseph Bauer—N 15 feet of W₂ city lot 14, Anaheim; $13 70. F. C. Smyth to Joseph Bauer—W₂ city lot 10, Anaheim; $13 70. Joseph Bauer to City of Anaheim—Part of lot 14, City of Anaheim; $77 25. J. S. Pilman to Themas Thompson—L8, Mabury tract; $59. Tax Collector of Anaheim to F. C. Smyth W₂ city lot 10, Anaheim; $98. Tax Collector of Anaheim to F. C. Smyth Front 115 feet of lot 14, Anaheim; $2 73. A Bridge of Salt. The natural wonders of Death Valley have probably been more minutely and extensively described by professional writers than any other spot they never saw, but one wonder there has in some way escaped these untraveled sorbes. In 1883 some bora works were built on the east side of the valley, a couple of miles or so above the mount of Furnace Creek canyon. The road thence to the railroad led down the east side of the valley for several miles, and then had to cross over to the west side because no drinking water can be had on the east side below Furnace Creek. Moreover, the land on the west side lies much better for a road. But how to get the wagons across the valley was a problem. From end to end the center of the valley is one long salt marsh, and if most places it is so soft and wet that even man would need show shoes to insure his safety. Elsewhore, however, the ooze has been erupted over. This crust is in place very thin and treacherous, and only in one locality does it seem to be firm. Where ever the crust has been cut through a thin slimy salt mud has been found to be of unmeasurable depth—unmeasurable with any line or pole. Dr. C. Hart Merriam corps of scientists cut through in one place and easily shoved a pole down fifteen feet. There is no guessing how much deeper the slime was. However, a road must be bad, and so the workmen went about over the marsh whose they thought the crust seemed to be thickest and sounded it with sledge-hammers. The found the crust was a mixture of salt an sand, and eventually a route was decided up on. The road was then to be graded, and probably for the first time in the world a road of the length of this one was graded or olivatively with sledge-hammers. Here was a solid stretch of salt some eight of the Middle Ages: "By my maid, say thou wilt be mine, orriar shall unite us ere another currete of Windsor Castlet" considered the theatrical style: loved you in secret, go-ur-l, am not rich, I can offer you unselfish devotion of me whole perhaps the easy conversa-night do: "Well, Alcia—I 'Alicia,' mayn't it?—every one going to be married. Ha, ha! got married, just to please he did it something like this: 'Alicia—er—excuse the famil-ier—er—will you—er'... Oh, came to the rescue and said, Willie dear; it's all right, and I had mamma will be so pleased!" National Amendments of California will have an op-portunity to pass upon several con-nditions and acts that be-come understood of these herewith give a brief synth-that a general understanding need, leaving the discussion of till later in the campaign. It will appear on the ballots an assembly constitutional lo. 5. This is amendatory of article 4 of the constitution that no appropriation bill, save appropriation and deficiency being for the support of Gov'tate institutions, shall contain its item definitely expressed, by bill the Governor may obassembly constitutional lo. 7, providing that a two-qualified electors of a county, township may incur a debt toears. institutional amendment No. 10 attending a session of the Leg. miles across. In a sense it was level—there were no bills or valleys. In another sense there was scarce a level square inch on the whole bed, for the salt crust had probably, through the influence of heat from above and of moisture from below, been torn and twisted and thrown up into the most jagged peaks, pyramids and criss-crossed ridges imaginable. They were not high, none more than four feet—but there was not level space even for a man's foot between them. Every step made was on a ragged point or edge of some kind. The nearest approach to anything like that I have ever seen was on the ice on Lake Erie, where two fields had been jammed together by the winds and held so by the frost. The ragged ice masses were somewhat like these salt masses. They were larger, but not so sharp nor in any way so difficult to cross. Judging that the crust would sustain the weight of the wagons, the workmen swung their sledge-bammers day after day until they had beaten down these pinnacles into a smooth pathway six feet wide. It was, perhaps, the most laborious engineering work ever done in the country, for the climate and the location, far from civilized habitations, combined to retard the efforts of the workmen. The roadway, when completed, led over what may be properly called a naturally formed bridge of salt eight miles long—the only bridge of the kind in the world. As one enters the easterly end of this road two unmarked graves are seen in the salt crust near the track. They are graves of unknown men who died there from the beat, and after the fashion of the country, were buried where they fell. They were covered over with pieces of salt broken from the pinnacle near by. The crust was too hard to warrant digging into it. One must travel a long time to find two more graves like those, if indeed, two more can be found in the world. Up Goes the Price of Fruit. A dispatch from San Jose says that prices of fruit are on the jump. Orchardists who have not sold their fruit are figuring up how much they gained by holding on, while those who sold early in the season are disconsobased upon the testimony of John J. Inick, a mining engineer of long experience in the Cornish tin mines, and who worked for a considerable time in the San Jacinto mines, and who was engaged by the paper to examine and report on the condition of those mines. Engineer Inick, in his report to the paper, gives a detailed statement of the condition of all parts of the mines, and declares they are not producing sufficient tin to keep the mill going, and that the little ore in sight will soon be exhausted. He further declares that no large body of ore, the working of which would pay, has ever been found in any part of the district. These Temescal mines commenced operation in April, 1891, and it is stated that not-withstanding the expectations that they would produce from one hundred to two hundred tons of ingot tin monthly, the average production for the past twelve months has been less than twelve tons—worth about $5,500 in the San Francisco market, and that during all that time the English shareholders have been sending out upwards of $8,000 per month to meet deficits. The paper states further that the production for the past three months has averaged between nine and ten tons, and that it was produced by scraping out the leaves in the old stores, the new workings not revealing any pay ore. It is said that $2,000,000 has been expended in the purchase of the mines and in their improvement and development, and that the monthly pay-roll has been between $7,000 and $8,000. The English stockholders have summoned to London Captain Harris, late Superintendent of the mines, who resigned his position because he was convinced the property would not pay; Harris left San Jacinto last Wednesday for London, and within a few days there will be a meeting of the stockholders of the San Jacinto Tin Company, at which the facts in connection with the mines will be made public. [The story that the Temescal tin mines have potered out is flatly denied by the moni- charge of the mines. The Examiner's article is said to be entirely without foundation.] assembly constitutional No. 5. This is amendatory of article 4 of the constitution that no appropriation bill, save appropriation and deficiency being for the support of Gov't institutions, shall contain an item definitely expressed, by bill the Governor may observe assembly constitutional No. 7, providing that a two-qualified electors of a county,OWNship may incur a debt to years. institutional amendment No. 10 extending a session of the Legislature hundred days, and no bill need after sixty days without the members consent. institutional amendment No. 11 giving the Lieutenant Governor his duty to visit ones when the Legislature is and to make reports to that Governor. institutional amendment No. 14 issuing of more than 3,500 popuand adopting charters. an act submitted to the vote of fund the debt of the State, and effect suity days after next this act the Governor, Conseverer are authorized to issue exceed $3,528,200 bearing 4 post, payable in twenty years. like the place of the present issued under act of 1870. bounds, principal and interest, be raised the first five years, the next ten years and thereafter. The act requiring an edification for voters is also rejected. This provides that a able to write his own name section of the constitution English language. be called upon to express upon the matter of elevates Senator by popular vote. Estate Transfer big transfers of real estate have during the week: to Minna Bayha, 36 acres in; $1, to Minna Bayha, 33 acres in; $1, to Charles A. Steele, lot resmer tract; $1, to Nicholas Leinan et al., sec. 1, T 4 S, R 11 W, 27 79 I Co. to Sherman Stevens, book 46, Tustin L. and I. Cos. ughan et al to Martin H. sub. of secs. 14 and 15, T 4, Weight to Mina M. Weight, property; $10, ughan et al to Otto Freeman—b; $10, ughan and wife to Otto Freeman sub.; $10, District Station to Randall & and 6, block M. Center tract, Co. to C. B. Hewitt—SEI of T 4 S, R 11 W, 40 acres; $10, and wife to John Goodale—and 10, block F. Fisher's add., to Joseph Bauer—N 15 feat 14, Anaheim; $13 70, to Joseph Bauer—W city; $13 70. to City of Anaheim—Part of Anaheim. Life Is What We Make It. ESSAY BY MENTLE STALYX. It is an old saying, yet in its truthfulness is ever new, that man reaps as he sows. A youth spent in idleness has its result in an old age of ignorance and vice, while a sowing of earnest endeavor toward the beautiful and true is crowned with a bountious reaping of wisdom and usefulness. Thus it is within our own power to make our life a blessing or a burden and a course. Trials and cares may come and will some, when everything is dark and foreboding, but like the sun when obscured by the cloud of the storming, he will come forth again in all his beauty and grandeur. So with life, when we realize that we mould our own destiny, the cloud passes away, and all is sunshine again. Failure in life is a result of want of confidence in ourselves, a too great dependence upon other's help and influence, upon circumstances and surroundings for our prosperity and happiness. "God helps those who help themselves," is a true angst. Some gain temporary crust near the track. They are graves of unknown men who died there from the heat, and after the fashion of the country, were buried where they fell. They were covered over with pieces of salt broken from the pinnacle near by. The crust was too hard to warrant digging into it. One must travel a long time to find two more graves like those, if indeed, two more can be found in the world. Up Goes the Price of Fruit. A dispatch from San Jose says that prices of fruit are on the jump. Orchardists who have not sold their fruit are figuring up how much they gained by holding on, while those who sold early in the season are disconsolately wishing they had not and mournfully assuring themselves that they will not be so foolish next time. Canneries and private individuals who lackly made big contracts early in the year are smiling feeling their inside pockets and congratulating themselves. The cause of the commotion is the sudden rise in the price of fruit during the past few days and the situation was disclosed by an interview with H. L. Warren, manager of the Warren Fruit Company, incorporated a few months ago. "The fruit men are on the jump," said Warren, "and price prices are engaged in similar athletics. Apricots a few days ago were selling for 14 cents per pound, or $30 per ton. Now you can't get them for less than $60 per ton, just double the former figure. Prunes have also felt the upward tendency markedly. They sold for $35 per ton a week ago, and at the present time it takes $50 in cold cash to get the same amount of this highly merchantable commodity. These prices have never been duplicated except two years ago, which was an exceptional season. The cause is shortness of the crop. Much of the fruit has fallen off the trees, especially the apricots crop is far below what it was expected to be. The rate has made it fortunate for some firms in this valley, and especially canning companies will come out away ahead. The Los Gatos Company had contracted at the lowest prices for some 300 tons of apricots. The advance in price will not it about $9,000. I don't know how much the Golden Gate Company had contracted for, but I would not be at all surprised to know that the rise would be worth $20,000 to it. Eastern buyers are just beginning to realize the shortage. All old fruit is off and used up, and everybody is scrambling for all the fruit there is in sight." Life Is What We Make It. ESSAY BY MENTLE STALYX. It is an old saying, yet in its truthfulness is ever new, that man reaps as he sows. A youth spent in idleness has its result in an old age of ignorance and vice, while a sowing of earnest endeavor toward the beautiful and true is crowned with a bountious reaping of wisdom and usefulness. Thus it is within our own power to make our life a blessing or a burden and a course. Trials and cares may come and will some, when every thing is dark and foreboding, but like the sun when obscured by the cloud of the storming, he will come forth again in all his beauty and grandeur. So with life, when we realize that we mould our own destiny, the cloud passes away, and all is sunshine again. Failure in life is a result of want of confidence in ourselves, a too great dependence upon others' help and influence, upon circumstances and surroundings for our prosperity and happiness. "God helps those who help themselves," is a true angst. Some gain temporary crust near the track. They are graves of unknown men who died there from the heat, and after the fashion of the country, were buried where they fell. They were covered over with pieces of salt broken from the pinnacle near by. The crust was too hard to warrant digging into it. One must travel a long time to find two more graves like those, if indeed, two more can be found in the world. Up Goes the Price of Fruit. A dispatch from San Jose says that prices of fruit are on the jump. Orchardists who have not sold their fruit are figuring up how much they gained by holding on, while those who sold early in the season are disconsolately wishing they had not and mournfully assuring themselves that they will not be so foolish next time. Canneries and private individuals who lackly made big contracts early in the year are smiling feeling their inside pockets and congratulating themselves. The cause of the commotion is the sudden rise in the price of fruit during the past few days and the situation was disclosed by an interview with H. L. Warren, manager of the Warren Fruit Company, incorporated a few months ago. "The fruit men are on the jump," said Warren, "and price prices are engaged in similar athletics. Apricots a few days ago were selling for 14 cents per pound, or $30 per ton. Now you can't get them for less than $60 per ton, just double the former figure. Prunes have also felt the upward tendency markedly. They sold for $35 per ton a week ago, and at the present time it takes $50 in cold cash to get the same amount of this highly merchantable commodity. These prices have never been duplicated except two years ago, which was an exceptional season. The cause is shortness of the crop.Much of the fruit has fallen off the trees, especially the apricots crop is far below what it was expected to be. The rate has made it fortunate for some firms in this valley,and especially canning companies will come out away ahead. The Los Gatos Company had contracted at the lowest prices for some 300 tons of apricots.$9,000.I don't know how much the Golden Gate Company had contracted for,但 I would not be at all surprised to know that the rise would be worth $20,000 to it.Eastern buyers are just beginning to realize the shortage.All old fruit is off and used up,and everybody is scrambling for all the fruit there is in sight." Life Is What We Make It. ESSAY BY MENTLE STALYX. It is an old saying,yet in its truthfulness is ever new,m that man reaps as he sows.A youth spent in idleness has its result in an old age of ignorance and vice while a sowing of earnest endeavor towardthe beautiful and true is crowned with a bountious reaping of wisdom and usefulnessThus it is within our own power to make our life a blessing or a burden and a course.Trials and cares may come and will some,when every thing is dark and foreboding,b but like the sun when obscured bythe cloudofthe storminghewillcomefortogainallhisbeautyandgrandeur.Sowithlife,whenwerealizethatwemouldourowndestiny,thecloudpassesaway,andallisunshineagain.Failureinlifeisasresultofwantofconfidenceinourselves,atogreatdependenceuponothershelpandinfluenceuponcircumstancesandsurroundingsforourprosperityandhappiness. "Godhelpsthosewhohipthemselves,"isatrueangt.SomegaintempertraincrustnearthetrackTheyaregravesofunknownmenwho diedtherefromtheheat,andafterthefashionofthecountrybeaminthemonthpayrollhasbeenbetween$700and$800.Withthecostofadministrationaddeditcalledfor$146,737,350.Mr.Westart.inexplainingitattainedatthepresentrateoturningtownewpensionstherewouldbeadeficiencyof$10,000,andor$15,000,andevenwiththisenormousappropriation.Inotherwords Our pensionexpendituresmustalreadyhavereachedabout$160,000,andayear.Mr.GermanpointoutthatCommissionerRaismhadsometimeagoacknowledgedbeforetheSenatecommitteehathehadnodataforanexact estimateoftheexistenceofthefinalyearjustbegan,andinhadalreadydiscoveredthathispreviouscalculationswere$7,000,andtosmallAndnowaddedMr.Germansevenwithanadditionof nearly$12,000,andtotheHousebill,thepresenceofaheavydeficiency.Accordinglyherenewedpredictionoftwoyearsage,whichatthetimewasscouredaspreposteros.thanthepensionexpensesby1895wouldreach$200,000,andper annuum.Onthe14thofMaylast.asappearsbytheCommissioner'stestimonybeforetheSenatecommittee,therewere838,525claimspendinginthePensionBureau,and350,077oftheseoriginalinvalidcasesofthe Soldiersthemselves.Thewerealsoaclawsandclaimsforincrease,andaltogethertheofficehadthenhandofforiginalwork525,714claims.TheCommissionerexpectedthat"215,00newpeoplewouldgoonther rollsthis fiscalyear."He further estimatedthat"onthelstofJuly,1892wewillhaveontherroll860,000penisoners,"whileastotheclaimsstillpendinghemadethiscalculation: "Youunderstandthatintheadjudicationofthosecausesthereisabout25percent—23istheexactpercentage.Ibelieve—ofclaimsthatarerejectedbecausetheclaimantsarenotentitledtopensions.Sothat,having525,000clamionsif25percentofthemwererejecteditwouldtakeoffabout106,000,andthatwouldleaveabout418,000Thatistheworkthatisintheofficeto-day." It further appeared that these new names could at,thepresentratetofwork.beputontherollinabouttwoyears.Accordinglyiftothe860,000pensionersoftodaywouldotheotherhundredsfoundwardsthatareexpectedwemayassertpositivelythatinspiteofdeaththerewillbeovera millionpensionersontherollbeforetheendoftheyear1892. Whata record!A million pensioners, --- within our own power to make our life a blessing or a burden and acurs. Trials and cares may come and will some when everything is dark and foreboding, but like the sun when obscured by the cloud of the storming he will come forth again in all his beauty and grandeur. So with life, when we realize that we mould our own destiny, the cloud passes away, and all is sunshine again. Failure in life is a result of want of confidence in ourselves, a too great dependence upon other's help and influence, upon circumstances and surroundings for our prosperity and happiness. "God helps those who help themselves," is a true axiom. Some gain temporary happiness from the help of others, but when reverses come, they find their lives a failure, that the world has gained nothing by being in it, and of all creatures they are the most miserable. The poet has truly said, "It is not just as we take it, This mystical life of ours, Life's field will yield as we make it, A harvest of thorns or flowers." The great question with us is, How to make this life one of both pleasure and profit. He begins his life by striving to fit himself for some useful place in the world, by obtaining a thorough and practical education, by forming good habits, cultivating his moral nature, so he may always have the approval of a good conscience and the confidence of his friends, by studying and obeying the laws of health, wherein has one great secret of a happy life and sunny disposition; by living for the good we may do, rather than the good we may get, and by looking upon the bright side of life, will surely live happily if not in every respect successfully. Washington and Lincoln are examples of men who were born in humble circumstances, yet, by self-reliance, have gone into history among the world's greatest benefactors, who made the world better by their life. "The busy world shores angrily aside The man who stands with arms akimbo set Until occasion tells him what to do, And be who write to have his task marked out Shall die, and leave his errand unfilled." On lives may not be what the world would call a success, yet if we are conscious of filling our places fearlessly and heroically, by relying upon our resources, we shall in some measure lift the burden of the world and have a right to the full enjoyment of life. Thorns and flowers grow by the pathway of every one, and each is at liberty to choose for himself what the harvest will be, remembering always that, as Whittier expresses it, "The tissue of life to be We weave in colors all our own And in the field of destiny We reap as we have sown." The Temecula Tin Mines. The San Francisco Examiner publishes a long article devoted to the Temecal tin mines, in which it declares that the mines are an utter failure. This declaration is with these cases there is about 20 per cent—25 is the exact percentage. I believe—of claims that are rejected because the claimants are not entitled to pensions. So that, having 525,000 claims, if 25 per cent of them were rejected it would take off about 106,000, and that would leave about 418,009. That is the work that is in the office to-day." It further appeared that these new names could, at the present rate of work, be put on the roll in about two years. Accordingly, if to the 860,000 panemans of to day we add the other hundreds of thousands that are expected, we may assert positively that in spite of deaths there will be over a million pensioners on the roll before the end of the year 1892. What a record! A million pensioners, more than a quarter of a century after the close of the civil war, besides the hundreds of thousands that were pensioned until death removed them from the roll! Exceditures, too, aggregating much more than one thousand since the end of the war, and now amounting to the monstrous figure of $160,000,000 or $200,000,000 a year in near prospect! Huckleen's Arnica Salve. The Beat Salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, FeverSores, FeverSores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, 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. Church Announcements. FIRST PRESENTERIAN CHURCH-Anakeheim Cal.-Rev. Hiram Hill pastor. Sunday school: 9:45 AM.; preaching: 11 AM.; Christian Endeavor: 7 PM.; prayer meeting: Wednesday: 7:30 PM.EVANGELICAL ASSOCIATION; on Center street—Preschool every Sunday afternoon at 2:30. Sunday school at 1:30.C. BERRNER; pastor. METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH-on Philadelphia street. Services held every Sunday at 3 o'clock P.M.Rav. R.S.Baozera.Pastor. ST. BONIFACE CATHOLIC CHURCH-Services every Sunday morning and evening.Rav P.Strontess pastor. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss she clung to Castoria. When she had Children she gave them Castoria. Poultry raisers complain of their chickens and turkeys dying of swelled head or roup.Farmers' Healing Liniment is guaranteed to cure this. For sale by W. M. Higgins,druggist,AnaheimCal.