anaheim-gazette 1892-08-18
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VOLUME XXII.
ANAHEIM
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. Chynowarth, Secretary.
ANAHEIM LODGE, NO. 109, I. O. O. F. REGULAR meetings every Tuesday evening. Visiting brother always welcome. H. A. McWILLIAMS, N. O. 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. Odd Follows Hall. Mrs. EMMA SEARLE, Councillor. A. L. Lewis, Secretary.
EVERGREEN COUNCIL, AMERICAN LEGION of Honor. Meet's second and last Wednesday of each month, at 8 p.m. H. CAHEN, Mrs. L. O. BAYZA, Secretary. Commander.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
DR. J. H. BULLARD,
A. B., M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Office and Residence, corner Herming 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 :: B
Dealers in all kinds of property—Improved and Also Stock of all kinds sold on commis
Money Loaned on Good
IN ANY SUM.
Property - of - all - Des
For Sale in any part of the State
Information Furnished.
Correspondence
Houses to Rent.
Anaheim,
Bentz & Steadt
Wholesale and Retail
Anaheim, Cal.
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.
365 North Main street, opposite Baker block, Los Angeles, Cal.
Prescriptions carefully compounded. The patronage of the public respectfully solicited.
H. W. CHYNOWETH,
Attorney-At-Law.
Metr 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 tention given to PROBATE matters.
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, CALIFORNIA.
GEORGE BAUER,
BOOT AND SHOE MAKER.
Center street... Anaheim.
Making and repairing at the lowest cash price. All orders promptly attended to.
Houses to Rent.
Anaheim, - - Cal
Bentz & Stead
Wholesale and Retail
Anaheim, Cal.
Dealers in Beef, Pork, Mutton, Veal, Sausage
Of Our Own Make
Highest Market price Paid for
O. R. LUEDKE
Watchmaker and J
A FINE ASSORTMENT OF
WATCHES
Clocks, Jewelry, Silverware and Optical Goods Always on Hand.
Center Street, Opp. Commerci
F. CRIST, MERCHANT
Just received a complete ass-
-- SUMMER GOOD
Of latest styles and fabrics, to w
tention of the citizens of Anaheim
is directed.
Suits to order from
Pants to order from
An invitation is cordially e
public to call and examine this st
Go To WM.BOY
Groceries and Prov
Confectionery, Cigars Tob
Grain, Mill Feed, Etc.
Highest Price P
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.
J. L. SCHUMACHER.
SODA WATER.
Celebrated Iron and Mineral Water.
Leave orders at residence on Center street. Jy7-1m
An invitation is cordially e
public to call and examine this sto
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
(Corner Center and Lemon Streets)
J. J. EVERHARTY, - PROP
First-class Accommodations for Famil
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-AN
Fashion Livery Stables in connection with Hotel. Furnished with or without drivers. Horses bound
Hello, What's the Ma
Informs his customers and the general public that to sell goods at the smallest margin possible. He therefore can sell for a very small profit, giving his effit of low prices. No charge for showing goods or tions. Come one, Come all!
All Kinds of Produce and Poultry Taken
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 18, 1892.
CELLANEOUS.
Marker & Co.
State Brokers.
Property—Improved and Unimproved.
Kinds sold on commission.
On Good Security
ANY SUM.
All - Descriptions
any part of the State.
Correspondence Solicited.
to Rent.
California.
Steadman,
d Retail Butchers.
heim, Cal.
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
4week
One square.....
$1 00
$1 25
$1 75
$2 00
Two squares.....
1 50
2 00
2 25
2 50
Three squares.....
2 00
2 50
3 00
3 50
Four squares.....
2 50
300
3 60
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.
Real Estate Transfers.
The following transfers of real estate have been recorded during week:
William Konig to W. W. Ross—Lots 30 and 31, block M, Center tract, Anaheim; $260.
P. James to Mary Krueger—Lots 51 and 55, Anaheim town lots; $1,000.
Lionel Brownning to Adole S. Browning—Lots 10, 11, 12, block 29; lots 24 and 25, block 27; lot 40, block 22, Fullerton; also north 50 acres of east 110 acres of SF‡, sec. 35, T 3, R 10; also west 18 feet of south 60 acres, same tract; gift.
Stearns Ranchos Co. to B. F. Pritchard—Fractional NW‡ of NW‡, Sec. I, T 4, R 11; $10.
though heaving with the breath of love and hope. Columbus awakened Pedro Juan, and he in turn the child Diego, and the three repaired to the chapel in quest of heavenly aid and religious solace for the approaching pangs of separation and for the fateful voyage. As in the boundless other shine the stars so the lamps flickered in the little church, lighting with their rays alike the courses of the ocean and the pathway of the soul. The monk put on his priestly vestments and celebrated the Holy Sacrament at the high altar, before the taper-lighted Virgin. The hour was come and Columbus resolutely descended to the shore, plucking himself away from the embraces that held him to the land like some deep-rooted oak, for the sail-wings were ready to bear him to the realm of sea and sky. He soon reached the wharf, and as the dawn broke in the east the flag-ship majestically ran inshore to take the new Argonaut on board. The fluttering sails, the hurried maneuvers of the crew, the boatswain's whistle and the cries of the sailors as the ships got under way announced a speedy departure, and attracted the early villagers to the shore in their natural desire to witness the scene, and to bid farewell to departing friends and loved ones. When Columbus sprang from the skiff on board the caravel and the archors were weighed, a shudder ran alike through the departing sailors and the leave-takers on the strand. Where they were going they knew, but as their westward course, after leaving Cadiz and the Canaries, was to take them far beyond those lately won islands, none know whether they were bound or the duration of the voyage. The cross floated above the flag-ship, which bore seaward toward the unknown, seeking mysteries perchance impenetrable and inaccessible to the human mind and unconquerable by human will.
Market for California Frutt.
At the monthly meeting of the State Board of Trade in San Francisco last week, William H. Mills of the Southern Pacific Railroad outlined the plan for increasing the market for California fruit. He showed that
Steadman,
Retail Butchers.
heim, Cal.
Own Make.
Price Paid for Live Stock.
LUEDKE,
and Jeweler.
ALL WORK
CAREFULLY
Repaired
and
Warranted
App. Commercial Hotel.
MERCHANT TAILOR.
a complete assortment of
HER GOODS
all fabrics, to which the attoms of Anaheim and vicinity
is cordially extended the
amine this stock.
E. BOYD For
and Provisions.
ry, Cigars Tobacco.
Highest Price Paid for Produce.
The following transfers of real estate have been recorded during week:
William Konig to W. W. Ross—Lots 30 and 31, block M, Center tract, Anaheim; $260.
P. James to Mary Krueger—Lots 51 and 55, Anaheim town lots; $1,000.
Lionel Browning to Adole S. Browning—Lots 10, 11, 12, block 29; lots 24 and 25, block 27; lot 40, block 22, Fullerton; also north 50 acres of east 110 acres of SE; sec. 35, T 3, R 10; also west 18 feet of south 60 acres, same tract; gift.
Stearns Ranchos Co. to B. F. Pritchard—Fractional NW‡ of NW‡, Sec. I, T 4, R 11; $10.
C. B. Rawson and J. Brooks Fenno to Board of Supervisors of Orange county—60 foot strip for road purposes in section 13, T 7, R 8.
Stearns Ranchos Co to R. J. Northam—W‡ of SW‡ of NW‡, and NW‡ of NE‡, Sec. 22, T 4, R 10; $10.
Stearns Ranchos Co to P A. Stauton—10 acres in east part of NE‡, Sec. 16, T 4, R 10. agreement to convey; $475.
P. A. Stanton to J. A. Wenner—Assignment of above.
Patrick Ayres to Cristy Moran—One-third interest in lot 4, block D, Kraemer tract; $750.
Estates of C. E. Clacius, deceased—Certified copy of order confirming sale to William James Dickson and James Forbes, lot 7, Clacius tract.
Carl Laux and Mary Virginia Reed Clacius, executors of estate of C. E. Clacius, deceased, to same—Lot 7, Clacius tract; $1,500.
James A. Whitaker and Ella A. Whitaker to Mary V. Clacius—N‡ block 9, Whitaker’s addition, Buena Park; $750.
The Temptation
To go out of doors in rough weather is not strong, but we are, many of us, compelled to face rough weather frequently. Diseases which arise from a child are peculiar to no season of the year. This is true, therefore there should be in the closet of every household—what! Not an unmedicated stimulant, absolutely devoid of anything but an excite action, but a tonic combining, in the effective form of an invigorant and an alternative, the quality of defense against changes of weather. Hostetter’s Stomach bitters has three or four properties that no other article of its class possesses: it does not cause the complaints which eventually curse it fortifies the system against the bad effects of change of temperature, fatality and too often shown in the deadly form of “it gripper”. It produces a radical change in the weakened condition of a system peculiarly liable to be attacked by it, and it tends to provide against the danger resulting from an impoverished condition of the blood and a disordered state of the liver or bowels.
Church Announcements.
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, Anaheim, Cal.-Rev. Hiram Hill, pastor. Sunday school, 9:45 A.M.; preaching, all A.M.; Christian Endeavor, 7 p.m.; prayer meeting, Wednesdays, 7:30 P.M.
EVANGELICAL ASSOCIATION, on Center street—Preaching every Sunday afternoon at 2:30. Sunday school at 1:20.
C. BERRNER, pastor.
METHODIST EPHICOPAL CHURCH—On Philadelphia street. Serves lunch every Sunday at 3 o’clock p.m.
Rev. R. B. BARNUS, Pastor.
ST. BONIFAGE CATHOLIC CHURCH—Services every Sunday, morning and evening. Rev P. Snotters 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 after leaving Cadiz and the Canaries, was to take them far beyond those lately won islands, none know whither they were bound or the duration of the voyage. The cross floated above the flag-ship, which bore seaward toward the unknown, seeking mysteries perchance impenetrable and inaccessible to the human mind and unconquerable by human will.
Market for California Fruit.
At the monthly meeting of the State Board of Trade in San Francisco last week,
William H. Mills of the Southern Pacific Railroad outlined the plan for increasing the market for California fruit. He showed that in 1891 251,214 tons of fruit had been shipped from this State, by the Southern Pacific line, to such points of sale as made it possible to reach only about 5,000,000 people. Perhaps 15,000 tons had gone by sea.
At least 300,000 tons of California fruit had been sold last year. In 1892 the value of the fruit crop of the State, including all its forms—wine, rains, dried and fresh—would reach $50,000,000, and this when under the present methods only one-tenth of the population of America was accessible as a market. The whole of the dried fruit crop had gone from the State.
The measure of the market for early perishable products is the number of people to whom they can be conveyed in a sound eatable condition. We have sent thousands of tons of fruit right by the doors of persons in Iowa, Kansas Missouri and other States who would gladly have purchased it, simply because it has come to be the habit to consider Chicago the depot. To adjust the train service and so build your cars that we can send out many trains a day on fast time, that may stop at every hamlet and city, and leave such fruit as may be desired, and in a short time we can have 500,000 people customers, and can sell 3,000,000 tons of fruit every year, if so much can be raised.
Fruit growing is to be the basic industry of California. It is only just coming into use as food. The demand will rapidly increase when the certainty of the supply and reasonableness in price can be assured.
California fruit ships better than any other. The trade in it should be conducted precisely as that in oysters from Baltimore has been. Special cars and general distribution on quick time will put California fruit, ripened on the trees into every family in the country, and the demand will grow as the population grows. Then there can be no limit to the demand, and if the plan suggested can be put into operation every acre of land in the Stafe, capable of supporting trees, will soon have its prosperous occupant, and the brightest future under the sun will have been reached.
Mr. Mills will resume his subject the second Tuesday in September, when he will present a schedule under which the plan may at once be made operative.
Machines Do All But Think.
The most interesting exhibit to be at the World’s Fair will be the labor-saving machinery. Automatic mechanism in all the industrial arts will be shown in operation, and there is a spectacle of marvels in store for the visitors to the big show, for the last decade has been remarkably fertile in the production of ingenious devices which do everything but think. The inventor and mechanical engineer have evolved mechanism which certainly possesses one mind-phase—
E.BOYD For Grand Provisions.
By, Cigars Tobacco.
Highest Price Paid for Produce.
Delivered Free!
BEGELS STREET, ANAHEIM, CAL.
Special Hotel.
(ater and Lemon Streets)
CITY, - PROPRIETOR.
Mutations for Families & Tourists
MERLY KNOWN AS THE ANAroughly renovated, and will be conducted
of the public patronage is respectfully
DOOMS ATTACHED TO HOTEL.
and Cigars.
ALE ALE, HALF-AND-HALF.
Section with Hotel. First-class turn-outs
drivers. Horses bought and sold.
It's the Matter?
DAVIS
And Poultry Taken in Exchange
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.
The California Pioneers in Chicago met at
the Grand Pacific Hotel last Saturday to arrange the details of a picnic to be held on
Admission Day, September 9th, at Washington
Park. One interesting feature of the
gathering was the presentation to the President of a gavel made from two pieces of
wood to which a history is attached. One
piece comes from the root of a tree at a place
formerly known as Hangtown, but now
called Placerville. The tree is the one on
which the first two lynchings in this State
took place. The other piece comes from a
tree at the place where gold was first discovered in California.
Embarkation of Columbus.
On August 2, 1492, everything was ready,
and the crew was notified to embark, to
await the uncertain moment when a favorable wind should permit the little fleet to set
sail. Nothing so belittied so solemn hour
as a votive procession from the caravels to
monastery, to which the eyes of the
mariners turned as to a spiritual beacon,
brighter than any that flared along the headlands. This pious duty performed, the crew
returned on board the caravels, where they
patiently awaited the order to sail, while
Columbus retired to the monastery to
eagerly watch for a favoring wind.
Columbus kept all sail on his caravels
during the night of August 2d. The old
salts of the crew looked for a favoring wind
at starting, and Columbus' eager watchfulness was not to pass unrewarded. From the height on which La Rabida stood he scanned sea and sky with steadfast gaze, like one of those sea birds, presagers of changes of wind and weather, elonging to the scarred and weather-beaten cliff. About 3 in the morning, while the stars yet twinkled in the skies and all earth slumbered, the awaited breeze sprang up, bringing new life to the discoverer's veins and quickening the throbbing of his heart. The pines murmured as though bymning the dawn and the waters rippled as
Machines Do All But Think.
The most interesting exhibit to be at the World's Fair will be the labor-saving machinery. Automatic mechanism in all industrial arts will be shown in operation, and there is a spectacle of marvels in store for the visitors to the big show, for the last decade has been remarkably fertile in the production of ingenious devices which do everything but think. The inventor and mechanical engineer have evolved mechanism which certainly possesses one mind-phase—that of discrimination. There are machines in the watch-making business which not only make and count the delicate parts of a timekeeper, but sort them, placing the finished perfect pieces on one side and the imperfect ones on another. The machinery for weaving, lace-making, knitting, embroidering and other forms of textile manipulation are so intricate and yet so simple, so ponderous and yet so delicate, so wonderful in all their parts, that it is safe to assume that they will form a favorite center of observation. Perhaps no mechanical device will be more attractive to the sight-seer than the newspaper press—the machine which prints, folds, delivers and counts newspapers at the rate of 48,000 an hour. There is a certain fascination in watching the web of white paper peel off the huge roll to be carried through the press and cut up into daily papers, that holds the spectator's attention by the hour, and a large exhibit of such machines is promised. In short, the labor-saving, automatic machinery will be one of if not the great feature of the great Columbian Exposition.
Wellington's Famous Hall.
The Duke and Duchess of Richmond were living in a fine hotel on the Rue de la Blan-chissore, which stood on its own grounds and had a fruit and flower garden extending to the city ramparts. Their graces moved in all the society of Brussels, and entertained a great deal. The duchess, who had issued 220 invitations for the ball, proposed to recall them when she heard that Napoleon's army was advancing. But the Duke of Wellington, to prevent alarm, requested that the ball might take place. Nevertheless, many English families were frightened away from Brussels, and post horses were kept harnessed in the Duke of Richmond's stable, in case bad news from the scene of the conflict should make it advisable for his children to be sent to Antwerp. The majority of the people of Brussels were violent Bonapartists, and were prepared to entertain Napoleon in great style should he force the British army to retreat and enter their city
with the breath of love and was awakened Padre Juan,
the child Diego, and the chapel in quest of heaviligious solace for the apes of separation and for the As in the boundless other who the lampa flickered in the light with their rays alike the ocean and the pathway of monk put on his priestly celebrated the Holy Sacrament altar, before the taper. The hour was come and gently descended to the shore, away from the embraces and the land like some deep-snail-wings were ready to reach of sea and sky. He swore wharf, and as the dawn it the flagship majestically make the new Argonaut on entering sails, the hurried mawow, the boatswain's whistle the sailors as the ships got introduced a speedy departure, early villagers to the shore desire to witness the scene, well to departing friends and then Columbus sprang from the caravel and the airghed, a shudder ran alike arriving sailors and the leave-and. Where they were go out as their westward course, dizzy and the Canaries, was to beyond those lately won now whither they were bound of the voyage. The cross of flagship, which bore soe unknown, seeking my impenetrable and maccession mind and unconquerable
For California Fruit.
Only meeting of the State in San Francisco last week, calls of the Southern Pacific and the plan for increasing the California fruit. He showed that in triumph. So it was that the Duke of Wallington and many of his officers went to the ball after the business of the day had been attended to. While the merry couples were flying around a dispatch from the front was handed to Wellington. He asked the Duke of Richmond for a private room where he might consult with some of his generals who were present. The duchess' dressing room was the only convenient room safe from intrusion. Candles were hastily lighted on the dressing table, at which Wellington sat with a map before him, and having explained certain points to his staff they all rejoined the company. They left the house before 10 o'clock and succeeded in doing so without attracting any attention. Very few, if any, of the dancers guessed how near at hand was the crisis which was to decide the fate of Europe, and it never entered the heads of the young girls that some of their partners were dancing the "dance of death."
Prof. Koebele's Return.
Albert Koeble of Alameda, the student in economic entomology, whose return home from Australia after a year of research and investigation on behalf of the State Horticultural bureau was noted in these columns last week, has in his possession a large number of bugs and insects that he hopes to successfully colonize in California, and if his expectations are realized the scale pests will have enemies so formidable as to reduce their ravages to the minimum, and save to the California fruitgrowers many thousands of dollars annually. Koebele is a bug enthusiast. In appearance he is a small, palid-faced, energetic German, who is known to fame as the discoverer of the vodalia, a beneficial insect that has done much good in the destruction of the white scale. He watches over his bugs as if they were the most precious of earthly possessions, and his friends familiarly speak of him as the "Alameda bugologist." The gentleman thinks that in the orcus Australasia and the orcas California have withstood love and awakened Padre Juan, the child Diego, and the chapel in quest of heaviligious solace for the apes of separation and for the As in the boundless other who the lampa flickered in the light with their rays alike the ocean and the pathway of monk put on his priestly celebrated the Holy Sacrament altar, before the taper. The hour was come and gently descended to the shore, away from the embraces and to the land like some deep-snail-wings were ready to reach of sea and sky. He swore wharf, and as the dawn it the flagship majestically make the new Argonaut on entering sails, the hurried mawow, the boatswain's whistle the sailors as the ships got introduced a speedy departure, early villagers to the shore desire to witness the scene, well to departing friends and then Columbus sprang from the caravel and the airghed, a shudder ran alike arriving sailors and the leave-and. Where they were go out as their westward course, dizzy and the Canaries, was to beyond those lately won now whither they were bound of the voyage. The cross of flagship, which bore soe unknown, seeking my impenetrable and maccession mind and unconquerable
Dried Fruit Exhibit.
The State Horticultural Society at its last meeting decided to make an exhibition of dried fruits, etc., at the Manufacturers', Dealers' and Consumers' Food Exposition, to be held at Madison Square Garden, New York, in October next.
The objects of the Exposition are to promote manufacture, sale and consumption of pure food products, to establish close cordial and confidential relations between the manufacturer, distributor and consumer, and to enlighten and educate the public as to the importance of using the best quality of food. It is not intended to establish a food inspec-
The State Horticultural Society at its last meeting decided to make an exhibition of dried fruits, etc., at the Manufacturers' Dealers and Consumers' Food Exposition, to be held at Madison Square Garden, New York, in October next.
The objects of the Exposition are to promote the manufacture, sale and consumption of pure food products, to establish close cordial and confidential relations between the manufacturer, distributor and consumer, and to enlighten and educate the public as to the importance of using the best quality of food. It is not intended to establish a food inspection or analysis but simply to stimulate the production of higher grades of food products by appeals to the public, who, we believe, are judge and jury in such matters.
Madison Square Garden is the largest and handsome structure of the kind on the American continent, occupying the entire block fronting on Madison Square Avenue and in the center of the fashionable and populous section of New York.
The advantage to be derived by an exhibition of our fruit is, to establish in the largest consuming market and distributing center of the continent the fact of the absolutely purity and superiority of California products. The suspicion of adulteration attaches unfortunately to them. Adultery is not practiced in California, but that fact must become known, and once known, the market for all that we may produce will be permanently established.
Those desiring to be represented are requested at once to let the State board know what they wish to exhibit and in what manner put up. The expense to be incurred will be the cost of space and care of the exhibit while on exhibition, which will be nominal, the expenses to be met by assessment, each exhibitor paying his pro rata. Freight charges must be paid by the exhibitor.
During the last week there has been announced a notable concentration of flour milling interests in the central part of the State. A few years ago there was a combination formed to control the chief mills in San Mateo, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz, San Benito, Monterey and San Louis Obispo counties, which seemed to work well for those inside although it created hardships outside. The present combination includes a far greater group of milling interests. It is stated that the mills owned by the new concern have an aggregate capacity of 6,000 barrels of flour daily, and 12 of them are now running, giving daily employment to 1,000 men in different cities of the State. The combination is capitalized at $10,000,000 in paid-up stock.
Feed for grazing cattle on the Mojave desert is a complete failure and thousands of cattle are dying for the want of feed. All previous years a desert bunch grass has grown which has furnished food for the roaming stock, but owing to the dry season the whole country is absolutely barren and devoid of a living thing. A number of wells were put down in the desert and run by horse power to supply the stock with water, and a man in this solitude has been stationed to run the pumps, sixty miles from any house or inhabitant. From the present outlook in that locality it is said that one individual cattle-owner will lose 5,000 head of cattle.
The Chino beet-sugar factory is running day and night with eighty-seven operatives. The raw beet sugar is manufactured so fast that thousands of pounds of it are sent to San Francisco every day, because the refinery is...
Do All But Think.
creating exhibit to be at the
labor-saving management mechanism in all
will be shown in operation,
rectacle of marvels in store
to the big show, for the last
remarkably fertile in the
ingenious devices which do
think. The inventor and
coer have evolved mechanism
possesses one mind-phaseation. There are machines
making business which not only
the delicate parts of a timethem, placing the finished
one side and the imperfect
The machinery for weavknitting, embroidering and
textile manipulation are so
not so simple, so ponderous
state, so wonderful in all their
safe to assume that they will
enter of observation. Percal device will be more attight-seer than the newspaper
in which prints, folds, denewspapers at the rate of
There is a certain fascination
the web of white paper peel
up into daily papers, that
storer attention by the hour,
exhibit of such machines is
short, the labor-saving, autowill be one of if not the
great Columbian Expo.
Duchess of Richmond were hotel on the Rue du la Blanwood on its own grounds
and flower garden extending
parts. Their graces moved
city of Brussels, and enteral. The duchess, who had
rations for the ball, proposed
she heard that Napoadvancing. But the Duke
do prevent alarm, requested
right take place. Nevertheless,
families were frightened
assels, and post horses were
in the Duke of Richmond's
ad news from the scene of
old make it advisable for his
sent to Antwerp. The mangle of Brussels were violent
and were prepared to entertain
at style should he force the retreat and enter their city
Naturalization Laws.
The process by which an alien may become a citizen of the United States, and thereby under the laws of California, a voter, seems to be somewhat confusing, and it will be useful to explain the law as clearly and briefly as possible.
The general rule is that an alien must first declare his intention to become a citizen before some court of record, which is generally known as getting his first papers. Not less than two years after that he may apply to the same or some other court for his final papers, provided, however, that on this second application he shall prove that he has resided within the United States five years, and in the State or Territory where he applies for the second papers one year, and that he is a person of good moral character, attached to the principles of the Constitution and well disposed to the good order and happiness of the country. It will be seen, then,
The Chino beet-sugar factory is running day and night with eighty-seven operatives. The raw beet sugar is manufactured so fast that thousands of pounds of it are sent to San Francisco every day, because the refinery is insufficient to handle all the factory makes. Richard Gird feels very happy at the prosperity his sugar industry and ranch are having this season. It is reported that he individually will clear from $75,000 to $100,000 from beet sugar this year. His most sanguine expectations for the crop have been more than realized.
The members of the Los Angeles chain gang who struck for cream in their coffee and a shady place to cat a few days ago and who were placed in dark cells on bread and water, have given in, and are willing to take their coffee straight now and to eat wherever noon overtakes them.
San Diego fishermen are sending a great deal of their catch to the Sandwich Islands. On the last steamer from that port to San Francisco were 13,000 pounds of "albicore," a very gamy denizen of the deep averaging about fifty pounds each and found in schools only a few miles off the coast at that point.
Charles A. Maul owns a peach orchard which is a showy place at Bakersfield. He had some fruit which would have taken first premium anywhere, and he made up his mind to exhibit it at the World's Fair. Vandals entered the orchard during his absence and stole every specimen of the fruit a few days ago.
Marble Work.
Harry Jessenu of the Santa Ana marble works will be engaged in doing ornamental cement coping and placing monuments at the cemetery during the week. Those wishing this class of work done may leave orders for the same with Fred Backs, or apply to the undersigned at the cemetery.
HARRY JESSEN.
Wm. R. Harker.
Keeps at his Harness Store the very best of Horse Medicines, such as Willard's Seed Meal, Stewart's Healing Powders, Stewart's Stock Remedy, Stewart's Hoof Oil, Abysinian Desert Companion—a sure cure for Colic, Fits and Mad Staggers; also Marshall's Scratch Cure.