anaheim-gazette 1901-06-27
Searchable text
CONCERNING NEWBERRY'S PECULIAR MANIA
Facts Show There Is No Water at Rincon Except Such as Is Already Appropriated.
In the prehistoric ages the mountains were undoubtedly higher than at present, and the intervening basins deeper—in some cases forming lakes or parts of the sea. The disintegration of exposed portions of the mountain peaks or sides by the changes of temperature, the growth of vegetation or other cause, and the transportation of such loosened materials to the basins below, by the wind and rain, have been the factors in producing the wide plains and broad valleys of arable land. In some instances, when the mountains were formed, intervening depressions were left, which have served as passageways for the run-off of the surplus rainfall; in other instances, the water had evidently collected in the interior basins, overflowing the rims and cutting channels back to the basins. Thus, streams were started to carry off the surplus water from the rainfall, the amount being dependent on the area of the drainage basin of each stream.
The original source of the waters of the Santa Ana river is the rainfall within the watershed of that stream. Just what proportion escapes through evaporation and surface drainage is an open question, the proportion varying with the conditions. High temperature, with a dry atmosphere, will produce rapid evaporation, especially if the water is spread over much surface. Steep slopes, with a hard, bare surface and a sudden rainfall, will cause a large run-off; and, conversely, a comparatively level surface, with loose, porous soil, or covered with vegetation, and with a slow rain, will permit but little run-off. So important is vegetation in retarding the surface drainage that the United States government has set apart 737,289 acres of the San Bernardino mountains, covering the headwaters of the Santa Ana river.
scarcely supply steam for the engine. The third example experienced different conditions from the two preceding ones. The water companies, getting their supply from the Santiago creek, undertook, over a year ago, to increase that supply by "developing" more water. They dug a well or pit near the mouth of the canyon, going down through the boulders and coarse gravel until stopped by the inrushing water. A steam pump was secured and put into operation, with precisely the same results as in the second example given above. After the gravel for some distance about was drained out any old hand pump could keep the water down in the well.
Other examples might be given, but the foregoing are sufficient to prove that little water can be "developed" near the surface, where there is no pressure, and where there is practically but one season's rainfall to draw from. Even in the deeper strata, where the most successful "developments" have been made, there are not lacking indications that point to a limit in the water supply, the opening of a new well quite often diminishing the supply of others near by. Then, too, only a few of those needing water from such sources have been provided with wells; and the wells that now seem to be inexhaustible have been in operation but a short time in comparison with the ages during which the water was being stored. The late W.J.Fay frequently predicted the early exhaustion of the underground water supply from the rapid withdrawal of what it took years to accumulate. His conclusion to that effect was based on his observations in Scotland, Colorado and elsewhere. There is, however, a reasonably sure test in the figures of the rainfall. It is impossible to continue for any great length of time to take more water out of the ground each year than is put into it during the same period.
Thus far this article has considered the source and quantity of water within the drainage basin of the whole surface flow of the river has long been put to a beneficial use within the limits prescribed by law. Any imperfect methods or appliances that may entail loss in the handling, can best be corrected by the present users, who need all that might thus be saved. Enough investigations have been made in different localities to establish the fact that the subsurface water in any one place is totally inadequate to supply an irrigating system of any magnitude. Even the successful experiments, though comparatively few and of short duration, demonstrate the supply at greater depths to be limited. The figures of the rainfall for a long period of time prove absolutely the impossibility of getting sufficient water, from all sources within the watershed of the river, to supply another irrigating system, without infringing on the rights of others. It is impossible to take out more than is put in. Even if the underground supply were ever so abundant—which it is not—the cost of pumping would preclude its profitable use for horticulture and general farming.
In view of these indisputable facts, there is manifestly no room in the basin of the Santa Ana river for the exercise of Newberry's peculiar mania for—“the development of the country.” It would undoubtedly be money in his pocket and spare him the mortification of defeat, if he would confine his energies to driving sharp bargains in groceries, delivering per automobile, instead of trying to defraud our peepee of their water rights.—Orange Post.
Saves Two From Death.
“Our little daughter had an almost fatal attack of whooping cough and bronchitis,” writes Mrs. W.K.Haviland, of Armonk, N.Y., “but, when all other remedies failed, we saved her life with Dr.King’s New Discovery. Our niece, who had consumption in an advanced stage, also used this wonderful medicine and today she is perfectly well.” Desperate throat and lung diseases yield to Dr.King’s New Discovery as to no other medicine on earth. Infallible for coughs and colds. 50c and $1 bottles guaranteed by W.P.Turner. Trial bottles free.
evaporation, especially if the water is spread over much surface. Steep slopes, with a hard, bare surface and a sudden rainfall, will cause a large run-off; and, conversely, a comparatively level surface, with loose, porous soil, or covered with vegetation, and with a slow rain, will permit but little run-off. So important is vegetation in retarding the surface drainage that the United States government has set apart 737,289 acres of the San Bernardino mountains, covering the headwaters of the Santa Ana river, as a forest reserve. The effect of forest growth on the mountain slopes is clearly stated by the Redlands Citrograph, as follows:
"It has been estimated that a well-wooded watershed absorbs and retains, through the agency of the roots and leaves of the trees and shrubs, and the humus formed by their decay, four-fifths of the ordinary rain or snowstorm. This water slowly percolates through the soil, and is given out through perennial springs, thus making perennial streams for man's pleasure and profit. On the other hand, let this same area of mountain be denuded—by fire, the lumberman or the sheep or cattle herder—and four-fifths of every rainstorm or quick-melting snow will, within a few hours, run off in destructive torrents, which rush unrestrained down the mountain sides, carrying, on their way to the lower levels, soil, sand, gravel and stones, leaving nothing behind but the bare and rugged bed rock."
The different effects of the diverse conditions on evaporation and run-off having been shown, and the importance of man's agency in shaping these conditions, it now remains to trace the net proceeds of the rainfall, whatever the proportions may be which sink into the ground, to their last resting place, or to such place as they are made to minister to the wants of man. While in some places this percolating water will be found more abundant than in others, as a rule it is widely distributed, owing to its origin from the rainfall. It is most abundant in coarse gravel at some depth from the surface, where it has been collecting for an indefinite period, or along the borders of the stream, whither it has gravitated from the slopes farther back. The aggregate of this seepage from all sides forms the river; but, taken separately from any one place, the supply would prove totally inadequate to furnish an irrigation system of any magnitude. A few examples from actual experience will show the futility of counting on a large supply of water from the soil rapid withdrawal of what it took years to accumulate. His conclusion to that effect was based on his observations in Scotland, Colorado and elsewhere. There is, however, a reasonably sure test in the figures of the rainfall. It is impossible to continue for any great length of time to take more water out of the ground each year than is put into it during the same period.
Thus far this article has considered the source and quantity of water within the drainage basin of the Santa Ana river that might be drawn upon to supply an irrigation system. There is another consideration, however, and that is the expense of any development that might otherwise be regarded as feasible. From the very nature of the case, any person, firm or corporation undertaking at this late day to inaugurate an irrigation system on a large scale from the waters of the Santa Ana river, and at the same time respecting the rights of others in said stream, must do so at a great disadvantage. In fact, Newberry recognizes the necessity of putting forward some method of securing a water supply for his proposed system other than to seize upon that already in use; so he proclaims it his purpose to "develop" a new and entirely distinct supply from the alleged underground storage from pumping. Even if he were permitted to take the river water out of its channel to create a water power, the wear and tear upon the expensive machinery necessary to lift a large quantity of water continuously, would be enormous. Relative to the cost and impracticability of furnishing water for irrigation, with profit to the irrigator, by pumping, the Citrograph has the following to say:
"Constant production of irrigating water by pumping is entirely out of the question, because its expense is too great. As a dernier ressort in dry seasons, pumps and wells are of the greatest utility, and enable us to save our orchards from total destruction; but pumps and wells cannot be economically used as a constant source of supply. Neither the growing of citrus fruits, nor any other business, can be successfully carried on with reference only to the conditions of a single year. One year must be taken with another; and the horticulturist, like other business men, must expect occasional losses, and must adjust his items of production and expense upon a scale that will bring to him an average profit, taking one season with another. In making this adjustment, he must depend upon gravity water, because pumped water is too expensive. It is impossible to continue for any great length of time to take more water out of the ground each year than is put into it during the same period."
The Carters live in a substantial and attractive brick house, and the neighbors have begged the ex-Senator's family not to disturb the bees, but to let them continue the manufacture of the delicious sweet which Mrs. Carter has been distributing freely among the residents of the neighborhood. Mrs. Carter says she suspected the presence of the bees three years ago, but was not sure of it until last week, when a honey bee alighted on her neck as she was sitting near the window. An investigation followed and a defective place was found at the corner of the house where the bees entered their curious hive. The swarm will not be disturbed if Mrs. Carter can help it.
Saves Two From Death.
"Our little daughter had an almost fatal attack of whooping cough and bronchitis," writes Mrs. W. K. Haviland, of Armonk, N. Y., "but when all other remedies failed, we saved her life with Dr. King's New Discovery. Our niece, who had consumption in an advanced stage, also used this wonderful medicine and today she is perfectly well." Desperate throat and lung diseases yield to Dr. King's New Discovery as to no other medicine on earth. Infallible for coughs and colds. 50c and $1 bottles guaranteed by W. P. Turner. Trial bottles free.
Senator's Home
a Beehive.
The Washington house of ex-Senator Thomas H. Carter, of Montana, has become the hive of a swarm of bees, and the industrious insects have already packed full of honey the entire space under the floor of one room. Large quantities of honey—hundreds of pounds of it, Mrs. Carter thinks—have been taken out during the last week by the human inmates of the house. The store of honey is believed to represent the accumulations of three years. The ex-Senator himself has become interested in honey mining as he calls it, and declares, with his wife, that this honey is the most delicious ever tasted.
The Carters live in a substantial and attractive brick house, and the neighbors have begged the ex-Senator's family not to disturb the bees, but to let them continue the manufacture of the delicious sweet which Mrs. Carter has been distributing freely among the residents of the neighborhood. Mrs. Carter says she suspected the presence of the bees three years ago, but was not sure of it until last week, when a honey bee alighted on her neck as she was sitting near the window. An investigation followed and a defective place was found at the corner of the house where the bees entered their curious hive. The swarm will not be disturbed if Mrs. Carter can help it.
Training
Is indispensable to athletic success. In training, much stress is laid upon diet; careful attention to the quantity and quality of the food eaten, with regularity of meals.
That is the secret of strength for every man. No man can be stronger than his stomach. The careless and irregular eating, of business men, causes disease of the stomach and its allied organs of digestion and nutrition. There can be
at some depth from the surface,
where it has been collecting for an indefinite period, or along the borders of the stream, whither it has gravitated from the slopes farther back. The aggregate of this seepage from all sides forms the river; but, taken separately from any one place, the supply would prove totally inadequate to furnish an irrigation system of any magnitude. A few examples from actual experience will show the futility of counting on a large supply of water from the soil in any one place, especially near the surface, where there is little pressure and the accumulations are the result of but one season's rainfall.
When the bridge was built over the Santa Ana river on Chapman street, the work dragged until the water raised about three feet in the caissons for the piers. It was necessary to get this water out before putting in the cement, so the contractor dropped in the suction pipe of a small cistern pump and jiggled the handle a few moments, when lo! and behold! the caisson was emptied, notwithstanding the entire bottom was open and there was a pressure of three feet on the water at such bottom. The second example was on a much larger scale, although the conditions were similar. About 20 years ago the S. A. V. I. Co. put down a large caisson in the river, where the sand was saturated with water and quite a large stream showed on the surface. A centrifugal pump was installed, with steam power, and set to work with disheartening results. Little more water was obtained than what appeared on the surface, and that, too, for only a short time. The entire river bed, as far as one could see, was dried out so that the sand drifted about in the wind; but the water obtained, after the first supply was exhausted, would
The primary source of all the water, surface and subsurface, within the drainage basin of the Santa Ana river, is the rainfall upon the watershed of said stream. A portion of rainfall sinks into the ground and percolates through the soil by gravity into the river all along its course, thereby maintaining its flow after the rains have ceased. The proportion thus stored in the soil may be increased by the proper cultivation of the valleys and the encouragement of forest growth in the mountains. This water supply, having been apportioned by the rainfall to the area upon which it was precipitated, naturally belongs to the watershed of the river, and is thus circum-
In the law of riparian rights, surface flow of the river often put to a beneficial use limits prescribed by law. Effect methods or appliances entail loss in the handling, corrected by the present need all that might thus be needed.
Enough investigations made in different localities in the fact that the subsurround any one place is totally not to supply an irrigating any magnitude. Even the experiments, though comfew and of short duration, take the supply at greater pee limited. The figures of it for a long period of time ultimately the impossibility of efficient water, from all within the watershed of the supply another irrigating without infringing on the others. It is impossible to more than is put in. Even underground supply were ever untuck—which it is not—the pumping would preclude its use for horticulture and farming.
Of these indisputable facts, manifestly no room in the Newberry's peculiar ma-terial development of the It would undoubtedly be his pocket and spare himification of defeat, if he define his energies to driving trains in groceries, deliver-automobile, instead of trying to our people of their water orange Post.
Mr. Bradford Writes of the Exposition
Continued from First page.
showing every tribe and their customs, in miniature wigwams and villages, including the Eskimo ice hut, and showing the different kinds of houses or huts used by each tribe. A very large light-house stands in the center of the building. The progress made in small arms was shown from the year 1850 (range 200 yards). Then it was 2 shots per minute. In 1870, range 2000 yards: 25 shots per minute. In 1890, range 4000 yards: 36 shots per minute. The style of arms is shown; also, bullets and ball down to the present great rifle shells, 6 feet long; and from the crudest ancient cannon or field gun to the most modern machine gun, with 800 shots per minute. There are wax figures dressed in our army and navy uniforms, officers and men, from 1875 to 1901. Then there are models of cribs, fortifications, with disappearing guns, boat bridge or pontoons, the great ocean transports, canal locks, dry docks, the latest submarine boats, all the men-of-war of the U.S. navy, as well as those being built [The Government requires a model of each boat, perfect in pattern and detail, before it is constructed. These models cost about $5000 each. Admiral Dewey's Olympia is conspicuously marked]; block-houses used in the late war; modern rifles, 13-inch gun, weighing 629 tons, cost of charge $600; torpedos, 10 to 12 feet long and 18 inches in diameter—terrible instruments of destruction, furnished with the finest machinery. There are other guns—the 3-pounders, which are not small, being from 8 to 9 feet long; so on up to the 4-inch guns. The models of the naval officers and men are exhibited on a man-of-war deck, in the north end of the building. The 13-inch disappearing gun is placed on a cement foundation, within a counterpart of the fortifications adopted by our Government for coast defense. The guns are placed behind grass-covered embankments, consisting of 50 feet of soil, inside of which is placed 15 feet of solid cement. The guns are being operated for the benefit of visitors. There are also models of the ancient mail carrier, man on horseback, year 1800, going from town to town, and the old Rocky Mountain stage, and the Western mail carrier on horseback, armed to the teeth, down to the 1901 fast mail trains, with the railroad postal cars, and the City of Paris and other steamers carry.
Congress, but there is a question now whether he is a resident of Ontario or Los Angeles, and whether he will have settled down in either place or will have returned to Indiana by 1902 or 1904 remains to be seen. He is an able man, and San Bernardino could pick no stronger candidate for most any place, provided he elects to be a permanent resident of that county.
Didn't Marry for Money.
The Boston man, who lately married a sickly rich young woman, is happy now, for he got Dr. King's New Life Pills, which restored her to perfect health. Infallible for jaundice, biliousness, malaria fever and ague and all liver and stomach troubles. Gentle but effective. Only 25c at W. P. Turner's drug store.
How About It?
Orange Post.
The committees of the two water companies found Director Sherwood of the A.U.W.Co. camped at the division-gate Wednesday on his way home from Chino ranch. He has been employed by the Interurban Electric Railway company to investigate and report upon the feasibility of the development of artesian water on that ranch and its use for the generation of power. As there is a possibility of such employment becoming antagonistic to the water companies it is presumed that he will resign one or the other position when it becomes apparent that his duties in one capacity will conflict with those in the other.
At Bed Time
I take a pleasant drink, the next morning I feel bright and my complexion is better. My doctor says it acts gently on the stomach, liver and kidneys, and is a pleasant laxative. It is made from herbs, and is prepared as easily as tea. It is called Lane's Medicine. All drugs sell it at 25 and 50 cents. Lane's Family Medicine moves the bowels each day. If you cannot get it send for a free sample. Address, Orator F. Woodward, Le Roy, N.Y. For sale by W.P.Turner.
Fifty Dollars for a Kiss.
In Vineland, N.J., it costs $50 to kiss a pretty young woman against her will. George McCarthy, a canvasser for cray-on portraits, in making the rounds of the town, stopped at the residence of Mrs. Andrew J. Steinmeyer, one of the prettiest young matrons of the place, and upon her refusal to buy a protrait, to her amazement he is said to have exclaimed: "If you don't take an order for a picture I will kiss your pretty red
Verdi and the Critics.
No outsiders, not even members of the press, were allowed to be present at rehearsals of Verdi's operas. "The production of a work of mine," said Verdi, "is an affair between that work and the public. I do not write for this press; but for the public, who will support me if my work is good or who execute me if it is not. I do not care for aught else." M. de Nevers thus describes Verdi's attitude at a dress in bearsal of "Otello" in Paris, when the press was present against his wishes.
"The critics were all placed in the corbelle of the amphitheater, some rows of stalls having been cleared away to make room for a table and chairs for Verdi. Bolto and the directors. MM. Sardou, Meilhac, Halev Obin, the director of fine arts, and two or three dignitaries and officials in the Opera sat behind in the remaining rows of stalls.
One day Judge Marshall, engrossed in his reflections, was driving over the wretched roads of North Carolina his way to Raleigh in a stick gig. His horse turned out of the road, and she sulky ran over a sapling and was tilled so as to arouse the judge. When he found that he could move neither right nor left, an old negro who had come along solved the difficulty.
"My old marster," he asked,"what fer你 don't back your horse?"
"That's true," said the judge,and acted as advised. Thanking his dearest heartily, he felt in his pocket some change,但他 did not have any "Never mind,old man,"he said.shall stop at the tavern and leave some money for you with the landlord."
The old negro was not impressed with the stranger,但他 called at tavern and asked the keeper if an gentleman had left anything there him.
"Oh,yes," said the landlord,"the a silver dollar for you. What do you think of that old gentleman?"
"She Let Concealment Like a Worm i' the Bud Feed on Her Damask Cheek."
How aptly Shakespeare touches the dominant chord in a woman's nature. She suffers in silence; draws a curtain over her private sorrows, and endures until endurance ceases to be a virtue. This is especially the case with the modest minded women who suffer from diseases peculiar to the sex. They are miserable and unhappy, and yet, although they know that they need medical aid and assistance, they choose rather to bear the ills they know than to submit to the examination of some local phy-
Sense Medical Adviser, and I thought from reading it that Dr. Pierce's medicine do more to improve the home doctors—and so it has. If one had told me it would do me so much good I would have said, 'Oh no, that's much good.' I can truly say that was surprised at the benefit I received. I can do all my washing and also teach my flower garden. In fact I am on a feet most all the time. An old friend mine said to me, 'Why, what is it matter with you? You are getting you again.' I told her I had taken six bottles of Dr. Pierce's medicines, and if she would do likewise she would feel as it appears. It is not wonderful to us, that a machine made to perform certain tasks accomplish it perfectly. We do wonder at the engine which pulls the train cars, although we know nothing of mechanic. We know the engine made to do this thing. We do not wonder any musical artist like Patti rewski who sits at the instrument and produces perfect harmony. We know that constant practice enables his percept command of the keyboard. Let an inexperienced player sit down the piano, and the keys falsely touched into discord. It is so wowing Dr. Pierce in his experience and practice of music.
"Favorite Prescription" only does what was made to do. Doctor Pierce knows the whole gamut of the female genius. Where a experienced practitioner produces a discord, experience and skill enables the production of perfect harmony. The difference between the two From Death.
The daughter had an almost full of whoooping cough and "writes Mrs. W. K. Havimok, N.Y., but, when all medicines failed, we saved her Dr. King's New Discovery. Who had consumption in an age also used this wonder-device and today she is perfectly separate throat and lung dissection to Dr. King's New Discov- other medicine on earth. For coughs and colds, 50c bottles guaranteed by W.P. Marial bottles free.
Her Home a Beehive. Washington house of ex-Senator Carter, of Montana, has become a swarm of bees, and various insects have already left of honey the entire space floor of one room. Large amount of honey—hundreds of it, Mrs. Carter thinks—have out during the last week by inmates of the house. The money is believed to represent relations of three years. The himself has become inter-money mining as he calls it, with his wife, that this most delicious ever tasted lives in a substantial and brick house, and the neighbor begged the ex-Senator's to disturb the bees, but to continue the manufacture of us sweet which Mrs. Carter distributing freely among the neighbors. Mrs. she suspected the presence three years ago, but was of it until last week, when a lightened on her neck as she neared the window. An in-followed and a defective found at the corner of the mere bees entered their home. The swarm will not be of Mrs. Carter can help it.
Training indispensable to athletic less. In training, much is laid upon diet; care attention to the quantity quality of the food eat- regularity of meals. The secret of strength for every man can be stronger than his The careless and irregular business men, causes disease mach and its allied organs of nutrition. There can be
Training
dispensable to athletic
less. In training, much
is laid upon diet; caretention to the quantity
quality of the food eatth regularity of meals.
The secret of strength for every
man can be stronger than his
The careless and irregular
business men, causes disease
mach and its allied organs of
and nutrition. There can be
health until these diseases are
Nees's Golden Medical Discovery
uses of the stomach and other
digestion and nutrition, and
the body to be built up into vigth by the assimilation of the
extracted from food.
Men with the gripe, which resulted
from stomach trouble," writes Mr. T. R.
Montland, Alleghany Co., N.C. "I
to do anything a good part of the
life to Dr. Pierce about my condition,
confidence in his medicine. He adkends 'Golden Medical Discovery'
before I had finished the second
in to feel better. I have used nearly
I feel thankful to God for the benefived from Dr. Pierce's Golden Medicy. I can highly recommend it to
as a good and safe medicine."
Nees's Pellets cure constipation.
Body
news
out
Grain-Killer
Household
cine
and Sure Cure for
Coughs Bruises
Oea Golds Burns
Strains and Strains.
Instant relief.
Two sizes, 25c, and 50c.
Pain Killer, Perry Davis'.
A. S. BRADFORD
Orator Hubbell.
Riverside Press.
The Redlands Citrograph nominates
O. Z. Hubbell as State Senator from San Bernardino county. Brother Craig is certainly taking time by the forelock, as Senator Caldwell of Riverside will continue to represent San Bernardino county in the Legislature until 1904. It is, therefore, three years before a campaign for Senator will be in order. Where Mr. Hubbell will be by that time it is hard to tell. There is talk about his being a candidate for
Medician. For this reason many a woman lets disease fasten upon her. She conceals her condition and endures a daily martyrdom of pain because her mind revolts at the thought of submission to the treatment she knows the local practitioner will insist upon.
Very many women have written grateful letters to Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N.Y., because they have found in his methods an escape from the offensive questions, the obnoxious examinations, and the disagreeable local treatments insisted on by so many home physicians. These things are, as a rule, not necessary. Dr. Pierce's experience and success in treating hundreds of thousands of women, enables him at once to determine from the written statements of women the form of disease which it is necessary to treat. Sick women are invited to consult Dr. Pierce, by letter, free. All correspondence is sacredly confidential and the same strict professional privacy guards the written confidence of women as is observed by Dr. Pierce and his staff in personal consultations with women at the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N.Y.
A WOMAN'S STATEMENT.
"I enjoy good health, thanks to Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription and 'Golden Medical Discovery,'" writes Mrs. J. J. Schnetyer, of Pontiac, Livingston Co., Ill. "Have taken six bottles of each kind. I was taken sick last February and the doctors here called it 'Grip.' I lay for four weeks in bed, then when I got up I found I had 'Displacement.' Had such aches and pains in my back and limbs could not stand any length time. I knew that our home doctor would insist the first thing on an examination, and that I would not submit to, unless I was dangerously sick, and then it would be too late to do any good. My son had your book, Common
In the treatment and cure of womansailments is the difference between skincare and success on the one hand and a caseexperience on the other.
GAINED TEN POUNDS.
"I took four bottles of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription and two of 'Golden Medical Discovery,'" writes Mrs. Eliza D. Sheere, of Mount Hope, Lancaster Co.Pa. "I do not have those sick spellings formerly. Before I took your medication I could hardly walk at times, when I uttered trouble. I can truly say that after taking four bottles of 'Favorite Prescription' and two of 'Golden Medical Discovery' I did not suffer more. I gained ten pounds in weight.In June I commenced using the medicine and in July helped to harvest the wheat so you may know that I did not very bad."
Doctor Pierce's Favorite Prescription establishes regularity, dries disagreements drains, heals inflammation and ulceration and cures female weakness.tranquilizes the nerves, encourages appetite, and induces refreshing sleep.As a tonic for weak, worn-out, run-down women it is unequaled. It makes women strong, sick women well.
Accept no substitute for "Favorite Prescription." The only motive for such stitution is to enable the dealer to make little more profit paid on the sale less meritorious medicines.
GIVEN AWAY.
The Common Sense Medical Advice referred to in Mrs. Schnetyer's letter sent free on receipt of stamps to an expense of mailing only. This gives medical work contains over a thousand large pages and more than seven hundred illustrations.Send 31 one-cent stamps for the cloth-bound volume, or only stamps for the book in paper cover.Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N.Y.
THE UNITED MINES MINING CO.
Incorporated under the Laws of the State of Delaware
Capital Stock $400,000 Authorized Issue. Par value $1 per share.
"May carry on any business except banking in any part of the world."
The mines and mining claims are: The Old Shoes, The Red Bug, The Patsy Bollvar,
The Harmony, the Standard, the Central (one half), The Polka Dot, The Bull's Eye, The
Full Moon, The Half Moon, The Meteor, the Colored Money, The Fellowship, The Little
Giant, The Lookout, The Jason, The Blackhawk, The Lone Star, The Lucky Boy and
Sixteen to One. There is also the divided one-tenth of the Good Hope group of
mines and claims, twelve in number. Values in ores are of gold, silver, lead, copper
and some bismuth, as the product of the veins.
...OLD SHOES MINE...
During the former explorations, and by sinking the shaft on the Old Shoes mining
claim and vein by mill sampling, these values were found and shown to be in the ore
of that vein:
First: On discovery, small chips were broken off all along this Old Shoes vein, at
surface croppings of the vein, for the distance of 1000 feet, these crushed and sampled
down to 25 pounds, and then down to an assay sample, which on assay, gave gold value
per ton of rock in jasper, 46.11. Sinking by shaft was started at once, at depth:
Three feet.....$8.56
Six feet.....17.14
Twelve feet.....47.64
Eight feet.....19.34
Twelve feet.....22.50
Twenty-eight feet.....16.65
Fifty-seven feet.....12.62
Seventy-two ft.(v. in ½ feet).....20.62
Three Sections—1....8.50
2....19.91
3....58.45
Seventy-six feet.....59.82
All of the outside claims and the veins thereof, as outcroppings have been sampled
just as was the surface of the Old Shoes vein outcropping. The ores are similar, and
the result of values was an average of three to nine dollars per ton of rock in place,
as exposed by the veins outcroppings. The results having been obtained from eightteenth samples of about 25 pounds each, and each crushed and averaged down to the
assay sample. It is plainly apparent that all of these claims will justify good development in search for the high-grade ore shoots of the vein. Work has been resumed and is now in progress on these properties.
FUNDS FOR DEVELOPMENT
To obtain and have cash funds for, and to do a special work of surveying for patents, etc., and farther exploration immediately on and in the OLD SHOES MINE, and
in the outlying group of 34 claims, at Manvel, San Bernardino county, Cal., there has
been issued and placed in my hands with orders to sell a limited amount of the capital
stock shares of this company, and I am selling them out NOW (remaining shares).
AT FORTY CENTS PER SHARE
During the month of July, 1901. It is a very great bargain, and will make you or any
investor much money. Be prompt with your conclusions and deals. Must forward
cash with your orders. State positively number of shares and to whom to be issued,
and that person's postoffice address. Get into this company as a shareholder and owner.
In ordering shares, address and remit to, and in favor of,
GILES OTIS PEARCE,
General Manager United Mines
Mining Co., Santa Ana, Cal.
AT FORTY CENTS PER SHARE
During the month of July, 1901. It is a very great bargain, and will make you or any investor much money. Be prompt with your conclusions and deals. Must forward cash with your orders. State positively number of shares and to whom to be issued, and that person's postoffice address. Get into this company as a shareholder and owner, in ordering shares, address and remit to, and in favor of.
GILES OTIS PEARCE, Mining Co., Santa Ana, Cal.
Medical Adviser, and I thought reading it that Dr. Pierce's medical do me more good than all one doctors—and so it has. If any I told me it would do me so much would have said, 'Oh no, not such good.' I can truly say that I prised at the benefit I received. Do all my washing and also tend ever garden. In fact I am on my last the time. An old friend of said to me, 'Why, what is the with you? You are getting young. I told her I had taken six bottles Pierce's medicines, and if she do likewise she would feel ten younger, too."
Never wonderful it may seem, that Pierce's Favorite Prescription is only successful in curing diseases or to women, it is not so wonder- it appears. It is not wonderful that a machine made to perform a certain task accomplishes it perfectly. We do not wonder at the engine which pulls the train of cars, although we know nothing of mechanics. We know the engine was made to do this thing. We do not wonder at a musical artist like Pade-reski who sits at the instrument and produces perfect harmony. We know that constant practice enables his perfect command of the keyboard. Let an inexperienced player sit down to the piano, and the same keys falsely touched jar into discord. It is so with Dr. Pierce in his experience and practice of medicine. "Favorite Prescrip- tion" only does what it was made to do. Doctor Pierce knows the whole gamut of the female organism. Where a less experienced practitioner produces a discord, his experience and skill enables the production of perfect harmony. The difference between the
They Eat Themselves.
From various causes, such as anger and fear, many animals eat their own flesh. Rats, when caught in a trap by the leg, will gnaw off the captured member, and mice in captivity have been known to bite off their tails. But there are some creatures which go much further and actually eat parts of themselves if left for too long a period without food.
A hyena belonging to a menagerie was kept by the proprietor without food in order to tame it. One morning he was horrified to find that the ferocious creature had actually eaten part of its own leg.
An eagle in the zoo a few years ago was noted for the fact that it would now and then pick pieces of flesh out of its own legs and eat them.
Certain caterpillars and toads devour their cast off skin. This may be due to fear, but it looks like economy.
There is just a trace of this characteristic in human beings. Children when in rage sometimes bite their own hands and arms, although it must be admitted that they desist when it begins to hurt.
Covers Too Much Ground.
Binks—Jinks is continually telling me what a lucky fellow you are.
Kinks—Yes, but I don't like the way he expresses it. Every time he meets me he says: "Kinks you're a lucky man. You don't seem to have anything on your mind at all."—Indianapolis Sun.
A Fellow Feeling.
Hasben—Yes, I am always interested in perpetual motion ideas I like 'em.
Tatters Yet do? What fur?
Hasben They never work.
Use Allen's Foot-Ease.
A powder to be shaker into the shoes. Your feet feel swollen, nervous and hot, and get tired easily. If you have smarted feet on light shoes, Allen's Foot-Ease will cool the feet and makes walking easy. Cures swollen, sweating feet, ingrowing nails, blisters and callous spots. Relieves corns and bunions of all pain and gives rest and comfort. Try it today. Sold by all drug- isters and stores for $2c.* Trial package free.
Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N.Y.
4p
Southern Pacific Company.
San Francisco and Los Angeles Limited—'THE GWL.' Between Los Angeles and San Francisco daily, Leave Los Angeles 5:00 pm; arrive San Francisco 8:55 am. Leave San Francisco 5:00 pm; arrive Los Angeles 7:45 am.
The Sunset Route offers unexcelled adven-tages for winter travel, and an unequalled train service. Sunset Limited, season November to April.
This is the most magnificent train in America, vestibulated throughout, illuminated with Pintsch gas and heated by steam. Every train is made up as follows: One composite car, contain- ts bath-room, barber-shop, cafe, library; one compartment car with law- tory in each compartment, and parlor for the special use of ladies, and a ladies' maid in attendance; as many double drawing-room, tensection sleepers as may be necessary, with toilet annexes; one dining-car, meals served a la carte.
1800—SUNSET EXCURSIONS—1900
Through Tourist Sleepers from Los Angles.
To Washington, D.C., via New Orleans, 2 p.m.; Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays.
To Chicago, Ill., via El Paso 2 p.m.; Tuesdays.
To Glacinnatti, Ohio, via New Orleans, 2 p.m.; Fridays and Sundays.
To St. Paul via St. Louis City, 11:40 am; Thursdays.
To Chicago Mondays, Tuesdays; Wednesdays and Thursdays; Leave Los Angeles 11:40 am.
SHASTA ROUTE EXCURSIONS.
To Portland, St. Paul and Minneapolis Mondays, 10:30 pm.
First and second-class tickets for sale at Ana being at Los Angeles prices, and baggage check-up to any point in the United States Canada or Mexico.
Our local train service is unexcelled for comfort. Day coaches are equipped with the celebrated Scarritt seats, luxuriously upholstered, and passengers for Los Angeles are lended right in the center of the business part of the city—at street or commercial street—within a block of the large warehouse houses.
Our connection at Molave for the famous gold mining camp of Randsburg is superb; good hotel at Molave and elegant stage coaches through to the city of gold. Fare from Anaheim to Randsburg, $7.56.
Family commutation kits for sale between Anaheim and Los Angeles, and other local points at greatly reduced rates. Limit six months. For further information, call at the Southern Pacific depot at Anaheim.
T.A.DARKING.Agent.
G.W.LUCK Asst.Gen Pass.Agt.,Los Angeles 261 South Surfing St.
GAINED TEN POUNDS.
Book four bottles of Dr. Pierce's
Favorite Prescription and two of his
Medical Discovery' and regreat benefit," writes Mrs. Elmer
Searle, of Mounthope, Lancaster Co.,
I do not have those sick spells as
only. Before I took your medicine
hardly walk at times, when I had
trouble. I can truly say that
making four bottles of 'Favorite
Prescription' and two of 'Golden Medidiscovery' I did not suffer any
I gained ten pounds in weight.
I commenced using the medicine
July helped to harvest the wheat,
may know that I did not feel
head."
For Pierce's Favorite Prescription
ashes regularity, dries disagreeable
heals inflammation and ulcerand cures female weakness. It
illizes the nerves, encourages the
ease, and induces refreshing sleep.
Nonic for weak, worn-out, run-down
it is unequaled. It makes weak
strong, sick women well.
The only motive for submission is to enable the dealer to make
more profit paid on the sale of
meritorious medicines.
GIVEN AWAY.
Common Sense Medical Adviser
to in Mrs. Schinetyer's letter is
free on receipt of stamps to pay
of mailing only. This great
work contains over a thousand
pages and more than seven hundred
instructions. Send 31 one-cent stamps
the cloth-bound volume, or only 21
for the book in paper covers.
Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N.Y.
A Fellow Feeling.
Hasben—Yes. I am always interested
in perpetual motion ideas. I like 'em.
Tatters Yet do? What fur?
Hasben They never work.
Use Allen's Foot-Ease,
A powder to be shaker into the shoes.
Your feet feel swollen, nervous and hot, and
get tired easily. If you have smarting feet
or tight shoes, try Allen's Foot-Ease. It
cools the feet and makes walking easy.
Cures swollen, sweating feet, ingrowing
nails, blisters and callous spots. Relieves
corns and bunions of all pain and gives rest
and comfort. Try it today. Sold by all drugist and stores for $25c. Trial package free.
Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N.Y.
Some Reasons
Why You Should Insist on Having
EUREKA HARNESS OIL
Unequaled by any other.
Renders hard leather soft.
Especially prepared.
Keeps out water.
A heavy bodied oil.
HARNESS
An excellent preservative.
Reduces cost of your harness.
Never burns the leather; its
Efficiency is increased.
Secures best service.
Stitches kept from breaking.
OIL
Is sold in all Localities
Manufactured by Standard Oil Company.
For Catarrh May-Fever Cold in Head
ELY'S CREAM BALM is a positive cure.
Apply into the nostrils. It is quickly absorbed. 60 cents at Druggists or by mail; samples for. by mail.
ELY BROTHERS, 66 Warren St., New York City.
Eight Cheap Excursions
East via Santa Fe
The places, the rates for the round trip and the dates of sale are below. The other details can be had of the Santa Fe agents.
Buffalo, $87
July 3, 4; Aug. 22, 23: Sept.
5, 6.
Cincinnati, $76.50
June 30 and July 1.
Detroit, $82.25
July 1 and 2.
Colorado Springs, $55
July 8 and 9.
Milwaukee, $74.50
July 17 and 18.
Chicago, $72.50
July 20 and 21.
Louisville, $77.50
Aug. 20 and 21.
Cleveland, $82.50
Sept. 5 and 6.
The Comfortable Way is Santa Fe
J. H. Clabaugh, Agent