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anaheim-gazette 1902-01-23

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UNIVERSITY WORK IN IRRIGATION Study of Present Condition of Irrigation Development Throughout the United States—Of Great Interest to Californians. The four-year course in Irrigation Engineering just organized by the University will meet a vital California need Elwood Mead, C.E., who is Professor of the Institution and Practices of Irrigation, is also in charge of the extensive irrigation investigations of the United States Department of Agriculture and its valuable publications on irrigation. He is aided in the work of instruction at Berkeley by Professor James M. Wilson, C.E., who was for some years State Engineer of Nebraska and who has borne an important part in the federal irrigation investigations. J. B. Lippincott, Resident Hydrographer in Southern California of the United States Geological Survey, has accepted an appointment as lecturer at the University, and will deliver ten lectures in Berkeley during the coming half year on engineering problems connected with the water supply of cities and farming communities. "The organization of the Irrigation Industry" will be the subject of a course of three lectures a week to be given throughout coming half year by Professor Head and Professor Wilson. This course will be a study of the present condition of irrigation development in the United States, of irrigation legislation, methods of establishing rights to water inter-state problems, conditions necessary to the development of the agricultural resources of the irrigation methods and laws of the other lands with those of the United States, and irrigation in humid sections of the country. Students who choose the four year course with the expectation of becoming irrigation engineers will receive instruction in irrigation methods and the practical details of construction, maintenance and operation of canals and reservoirs and will study the legal, social, and economic problems arising out of the development of irrigation in the arid West. The course is under the College of Civil Engineering. The University of California, because of its astronomical work at the Lick Observatory, was declared by Simon Newcomb, who is at the head of his profession in America, in his opening address before the American Astronomical Society. RAILROAD NEWS. An extremely gratifying fact attaching to the announcement that the Oregon short line is to be built to Los Angeles is the determination that city and Salt Lake are to be united by rail within the next twelve months. General Manager Bancroft is in the East and has not been publicly heard from, but the news is authentic, and has caused great rejoicing in Salt Lake. While that city still pins its faith to the San Pedro line, and proposes to assist in every possible way to hasten its building, it nevertheless believes that two roads are better than one, and that the coast as well as itself will realize that fact. The "rush" business policy that is to be inaugurated will join the two cities during the present year. In fact, it is confidently said that Salt Lake people will be able to ride into Los Angeles over the Oregon Short Line in time to spend Christmas on the Coast with their friends. With the big start the Short Line has, and with the facilities Harriman has for rapid extension, there is no doubt that this can be accomplished. The truth is, the Short Line is already constructed for half the distance, and the other half is not very difficult to traverse, except in a few notable places in the narrows of the Meadow Valley, and the California wash sections, where joint surveys are now being made with the San Pedro line. Work on this is sure to begin in a few weeks. When the road is built Los Angeles and Salt Lake will be only twenty-four hours apart. Value of Vegetables. Tomatoes rouse torpid liver, and do the work, ordinarily, of a doctor's prescription. Lettuce has a soothing, quieting effect upon the nerves, and is an insomnia remedy. Calery is an acknowledged nerve tonic, and is more and more used in medical prescriptions. Onions are also a tonic for the nerves. But people will be forever prejudiced because of their odor. Dandelions purify the blood and generally are declared to tone up the sys- AN UNUSUAL FEATURE FOR THE ONE OF THE MOST widely known famous leaders and authors today in Rev. Francis E. Clark, D.D., for of the Christian Endeavor Union editor of The Christian Endowment. Dr. Clark is the author many books of wide circulation, among them being "Our Journey Around World," "Fellow Travelers," and New Way Around an Old World. Dr Clark has been around three times in the interests of Christ Endeavor. Two years ago he escaped from China on one of the last that left the city before the B.C took possession. Dr. Clark sailed January 6th for a six months' tour of Continental, especially in Central Europe, Spain, Italy, Holland, Bolivia, Bulgaria and Scandinavia. Dr Clark bears letters of invitation not only to the leaders in rela-tion work, but also to prominent statesmen and leaders in every walk in life; will live with the people and have usual opportunities to study these topics and life. It is with the greatest pleasure we inform our readers that we have ranged with Dr. Clark to act as a correspondent for the GAZETTE; he will send us a series of twenters, which will be almost equally personal trip through those interesting features of the GAZETTE for the year. Send your subscription now. GRAPE CUTTINGS. Leave orders now. dec 5-1m CHAS. OTTO F Rev. Warner, who came to this last fall from Galveston, Tex., reported seriously ill. He came back with benefit of his health, his illness caused by overwork in care-the dead and injured after tha-Texas storm. He and his family everything they possessed. Co-to expectations, Mr. Warner's tion has grown worse, and he critically ill. course with the expectation of becoming irrigation engineers will receive instruction in irrigation methods and the practical details of construction, maintenance and operation of canals and reservoirs and will study the legal, social, and economic problems arising out of the development of irrigation in the arid West. The course is under the College of Civil Engineering. The University of California, because of its astronomical work at the Lick Observatory, was declared by Simon Newcomb, who is at the head of his profession in America, in his opening address before the American Astronomical Society, to be "the most active center of practical astronomy in the world." In both of his two addresses Professor Newcomb devoted all of his time to praise of the recent achievements of the Lick Observatory. Dr. Max Uhle, who for two years and a half has been excavating for the University in Peru, through the generosity of Mrs. Hearst, is now in Berkeley. He will lecture at the University in German, on the remarkable collections he has made, illustrating the extinct civilizations of the Incas and of the people who dwelt in Peru in the days before the Incasic empire. H. Morse, M.A., the most brilliant historical lecturer in America, and because of his great works on the French Revolution, on Revolutionary Europe, and on Portugal recognized as the foremost historical scholar in this country, has been engaged for the faculty of the next summer session, from June 26 to August 6. He will lecture twice daily, on "The Benevolent Despots of the Eighteenth Century," and on "The story of the Writing of History." The work of the second half year began on Monday, January 13. The entrance examinations ended Saturday, January 11. The first of the bi-weekly University Meetings were held in the Gymnasium on Friday morning, January 17. WAS IT DANIELS? Orange Post. In mentioning an incident in the late Col. I.E. Messmore's political career in Orange county the ANAHEIM GA ZETTE speaks of W.F. Heathman as the successful competitor of Col. Messmore for the Democratic nomination for District Attorney when the Colonel uttered the following prophecy: "You have nominated your man; now elect him. You think you are attending my funeral today, but I shall have the supreme satisfaction of attending the other fellow's funeral in November." If the Post remembers correctly, it was F.O. Daniel that won the nomination and lost the election in that campaign instead of W.F. Heathman. It makes little difference, however, who the victim was, as far as Col. Messmore was concerned; but, inasmuch as Daniel is putative candidate for superior judge on the Democratic ticket this year, he might as well have the full credit of his past failures. Blown to Atoms The old idea that the body sometimes needs a powerful, drastic purgative pill has been exploded; for Dr. King's New Life Pills, which are per- Value of Vegetables. Tomatoes rouse torpid liver, and do the work, ordinarily, of a doctor's prescription. Lettuce has a soothing, quieting effect upon the nerves, and is an insomnia remedy. Colery is an acknowledged nerve tonic, and is more and more used in medical prescriptions. Onions are also a tonic for the nerves, but people will be forever prejudiced because of their odor. Dandelions purify the blood and generally are declared to tone up the system. Potatoes should be eschewed by those who "have a horror of getting fat," as that is one penalty of eating them. Watercress is a "good, all-around" brace-up for the system. Spinach has medicinal properties and qualities equal to the most indigo of all blue pills ever made. Parsnips, it is now contended by scientists, possess almost the same virtue that is claimed for sarsaparilla. Beets are fattening, even a moderately learned man will explain, because of the sugar they contain. Ordinarily lima beans, some one has said, are good to ally thirst, but the same can be said with equal truth of a pitcher of water. Asparagus is efficacious in kidney alliments to an extent that is not yet perhaps thoroughly appreciated. Cucumbers, aside from sunbeam-emitting properties known to readers to facetious paragraphers, contain an acid that is helpful in cases of dyspepsia. Cabbage, in Holland, is regarded as something of a blood purifier, but the authority is vague. In Germany its efficacy is purely sauerkraut. Pumpkins are an ingredient in a patent medicine that is guaranteed to cure a variety of alliments flesh is heir to, but the world is increasing in inhabitants who do not believe all they hear. The Excitement Not Over. The rush at the drug store still continues, and daily scores of people call for a bottle of Kemp's Balsam for the Throat and Lungs for the cure of coughs, colds, asthma, bronchitis and consumption. Kemp's Balsam, the standard family remedy, is sold on a guarantee and neyer fails to give entire satisfaction. Price $25c and $35c. For sale by W.P. Turner, druggist. Fair Grounds Sold. An important real estate transfer was consummated at Santa Ana some days ago when George W. Ford disposed of the old fair grounds and race track, consisting of 65 acres, to J.B.Kight of Riverside. The consideration was $8000. Kight will make his home on the grounds and will establish a training track and training stable for race horses. It Girdles the Globe The fame of Bucklen's Arica Salve as the best in the world, extends round the earth. It's the one perfect healer of cuts, corns, burns, bruises, sores. scalds, bolls, ulcers, felons, aches. paints and all skin eruptions. Only infallible pile cure. 25c a box at all druggists. Presidential Poetry The superintendent of the Columbus, Rev. Warner, who came to last fall from Galveston, Tex., ported seriously ill. He came to benefit of his health, his illness caused by overwork in carriage dead and injured after the Texas storm. He and his family everything they possessed. Cto expectations, Mr. Warner's tion has grown worse, and he critically ill. Not Clipped. A naturalist says that the tribe is increasing all over the districts of England and in lowlands. In some parts S notably in the north, the little is unknown. It is not so long ago that a judge was trying a case which do with the escape of a squirrel its cage and the question as to it had been stolen. "Were its wings clipped?" he witness. "But, my lord," interposed to sel., "it is a quadruped." "Quadruped or no quadruped his honor sternly." If its wilt been clipped it could never caped." Celluloid. The base of celluloid is common. By action of sulphuric acids it is changed to gun cotton dried, ground and mixed with to 40 per cent of camphor, after it is ground fine, colored with colors, cast in sheets, pressed hard and at last baked between superheated rollers. South America. Competent authorities asses South America has greater resources than any other part of the world. Any crop grown can be duplicated there, and try abounds in mines of coal, gold, most of which have been slightly developed. MOTHERHOO! The greatest ambition of African men and women is to homes blessed with children woman afflicted with female ease is constantly menaced becoming a childless wife medicine can restore deaf gans, but Wine of Cardui regulate derangements that vent conception; does preserve miscarriage; does restore functions and shattered and does bring babies to barren and desolate for Wine of Cardui gives women health and strength to bear thy children. You can If the Post remembers correctly, it was F. O. Daniel that won the nomination and lost the election in that campaign instead of W. F. Heathman. It makes little difference, however, who the victim was, as far as Col. Messmore was concerned; but, inasmuch as Daniel is the putative candidate for superior judge on the Democratic ticket this year, he might as well have the full credit of his past failures. Blown to Atoms The old idea that the body sometimes needs a powerful, drastic, purgative pill has been exploded; for Dr. King's New Life Pills, which are perfectly harmless, gently stimulate liver and bowels to expel poisonous matter, cleanse the system and absolutely cure constipation and sick headache. Only 25c at all drug stores. HALE BUYS RANCH. A contract has been closed whereby W. L. Hale becomes owner of the twenty-eight acre tract, at Placentia, formerly the location of the Gold Belt winery, and of recent years owned by W. F. Botsford. The purchase price is not published, but includes not only land and improvements, but $1000 worth of hay, all the ranch stock, $1000 worth of mules, farm implements and water stock. Mr. Hale has been the superintendent of Mr. Botsford's extensive interests in the community, caring not only for his ranch property, but also for the ranches of several of Mr. Botsford's friends and associates in Chicago and elsewhere. Santa Fe Rates. The Santa Fe does not buy you a sack of flour or a new pair of pants or a dress, but it does offer you the best service and most frequent to Los Angeles or any other point reached by its lines. You can go to Los Angeles on the Santa Fe and return after attending to your business in time for dinner, and thereby save 25 or 50 cents. As to rates they are as low as the lowest. For family 25 ride commutation tickets, good for 60 days, the rate is $6.65. For individual 60 ride tickets $8.00, good during the month in which ticket is sold. For full information in regard to rates, routes, etc., to any point, call on or address J. H. Claibaugh, Santa Fe agent at Anaheim. 7th Presidential Poetry The superintendent of the Columbus, Ohio, schools has arranged a jingle on the Presidents which runs as follows: First stands the lofty Washington, That noble, great immortal one. The elder Adams next we see, And Jefferson makes the number three. Then Madison is fourth you know, The fifth one on the list, Monroe. The sixth, and Adams again again, With Jackson seventh in the train. Van Buren eighth falls into line, And Harrison makes the number nine. His death gives Tyler, teeth, a turn, While Polk's the eleventh, as we learn. Death comes to Taylor, twelfth in race. And Fillmore takes the empty place. The fourteenth, Pierce, is next elected, Buchanan, as fifteenth chief selected. In war time Lincoln rules the nation. Sixteenth, holds this highest station; But, lol the hero's stricken dead. And Johnson, seventh serves instead. The eighteenth, then, Grant, you know, And nineteenth, Hayes from Ohio, Then comes another Buckeye son, Garfield, the second martyrred one; His term was filled by Arthur through, When Cleveland comes as twenty-two. After Harrison as twenty-third Cleveland once again is heard. As twenty fifth, McKinley great. The third to share the martyr's fate. As twenty-sixth, while grief is felt, We hail the gallant Roosevelt. Ladies can Wear Shoes One size smaller after using Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken into the shoes. It makes tight or new shoes feel easy; gives instaht relief to corns and bunions. It's the greatest comfort discovery of the age. Cures and prevents swollen feet, blisters, callous and sore spots. Allen's Foot-Ease is a certain cure for sweating, hot, aching feet. At all druggists and shoe stores, 25c Trial package free by mail. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N.Y. All Stuffed That's the condition of many from catarrh, especially in the Great difficulty is experienced in the head and throat. No wonder catarrh causes impairs the taste, smell and pollutes the breath, deranges ach and affects the appetite. To cure catarrh, treatment constitutional—alterative and "I was afflicted with catarrh medicines of different kinds," gave a fair trial; but gradually grew wilt I could hardly hear, taste or smoke concluded to try Hood's Sarsaparake after taking five bottles I was have not had any return of since." Eugene Forbes, Lebanon Cures catarrh—it soothes and enshes mucous membrane up the whole system. UNUSUAL FEATURE FOR 1902. One of the most widely known religious leaders and authors today is the Francis E. Clark, D.D., founder of the Christian Endeavor Union and author of The Christian Endeavor Handbook. Dr. Clark is the author of many books of wide circulation, among them being "Our Journey Around the World," "Fellow Travelers," and "A Way Around an Old World." Dr. Clark has been around the world for times in the interests of Christian favor. Two years ago he escaped China on one of the last trains left the city before the Boxers possession. Dr. Clark sailed Jan. 6th for a six months' tour on the continent, especially in Central Europe, Spain, Italy, Holland, Bohemia, Austria and Scandinavia. Dr. Clark bears letters of introduction not only to the leaders in religious work, but also to prominent statesmen leaders in every walk in life. He lives with the people and have unusual opportunities to study their customs and life. He is with the greatest pleasure that inform our readers that we have arrived with Dr. Clark to act as special respondent for the GAZETTE, and will send us a series of twenty letters, which will be almost equal to a personal trip through those interesting countries. They will describe people, places, customs never before written up, seldom seen by an American. Theses will begin about the middle of January. Tell your friends about interesting feature of the GAZETTE 1902. These articles alone when published in book form, as they will be, will cost more than the price of GAZETTE for the year. Send in your subscription now. GRAPE CUTTINGS. Leave orders now. Dec 5-1m CHAS. OTTO RUST. Rev. Warner, who came to this city at fall from Galveston, Tex., is relied seriously ill. He came here for benefit of his health, his illness because by overwork in caring for a dead and injured after the great Texas storm. He and his family lost everything they possessed. Contrary expectations, Mr. Warner’s condition has grown worse, and he is now critically ill. NOT CIPPED. A naturalist says that the squirrel THE ISLAND OF TAHITI. It May Be Rightly Termed the Paradise of the Pacific. Picture an island set in a reef of coral of myriad hues—the lagoon of a light green, outside the white foaming breakers the vast ocean of intense blue. On shore are great bunches of cocoanut palms lifting their plumes in stately magnificence, then there are lanes of trees blossoming in red and yellow flowers, and nestling in their midst are the low thatched houses of the natives. The delightful and healthy climate of the island brings to maturity all the products of the tropics, which are now found in greater fullness and perfection than here. The wayfarer is soothed by the fragrance of sweet smelling flowers and delighted with the abundance of oranges, bananas, breadfruit and coconut which give a perennial supply of food to the natives. Tahiti may be rightly termed the "paradise of the Pacific" or even the world, as in no other place is there so much variety of scenery. At every turn the constant surprises keep the traveler in a delirium of delight. Sometimes the sea lies before him, the waves wreathed in a foam of white breaking the silence in a continuous roar; on the other side the high, steep mountains in forms of towers, domes and steeples pierce the clouds. Now and then a silvery band of water falls from perpendicular heights to the turbulent stream below. Then you pass under the sheltering shadows of tall interlacing trees which excel even the grandeur of our elm. Further on you pass through lanes lined with bananas, mango and groves of cocanut—Overland Monthly. Garter Superstititions. A worn garter is regarded by some people as quite a valuable present, for it brings to its new wearer luck, or, at any rate, is supposed to do so. A bride should always wear a blue silk garter at her wedding. Her garter is often given her by a friend who has taken away its newness by wearing it a few times, says Home Notes. The wearing of the garter does not end the ritual concerning it. After the wedding ceremony it is either cut into pieces or hidden. When it is hidden, the bridesmaids hunt for it, and the finder is assured of being happily married before the year is out. When it is cut, it is divided among the bridesmaids to give to each good luck and a devoted husband. Sometimes the bride bestows her garters on the first bridesmaid, and in Germany each bridesmaid receives a pair of blue white silk garters from the bride. FACTS ABOUT ANAHEIM Sketch of the industries and Resources on this Most Beautiful Part of California. The City of Anaheim, with a population of 2500, is situated in the northern part of Orange county, in Southern California, 12 miles from the ocean, 4½ miles from the foothills, and 10¼ feet above sea level. It is 27 miles from Los Angeles, the second largest city in the State of California. The climatic conditions are the most favorable for out-door life to be found in Southern California. The temperature is extremely uniform, seldom rising above 90 degrees in summer, or falling below 32 degrees in winter. The abundance of sunlight and the absence of sharp frosts and cold winds make it a place especially acceptable to those desiring to escape the severe climate of the east. The country is very attractive. It is practically level, with just sufficient slope from the hills to afford adequate drainage. The roads are level, well graded, and well kept, affording excellent opportunities for cycling and driving. The soil is a rich sandy loam which never bakes, making it a very easy ground to work; thus lending itself readily to the cultivation of berries, nuts, oranges, etc. The variety of products, and the possibility of procuring small tracts of land at low figures, and on easy terms, make our section of the county very attractive and advantageous for truck raising, or for farming on a small scale. The following are a few of the products: oranges, lemons, walnuts, grapes, peaches, apricots, sugar beets, berries and vegetables of all kinds. Anaheim is the possessor of a Building and Loan Association, Water company, two railroads, fruit cannery and drier, large oil industry, ostrich farm, bank, several adequate commercial houses, two hotels and two newspapers. The city also owns its water and lighting plant. There are nine fraternal organizations including Masons and Odd Fellows; seven churches, embracing the BIG PRICES FOR ANIMALS A Small Sized Fortune Need Buy a Giraffe. Because of the difficulty of grazing to America and of keeping it alive it arrives a good giraffe is quite $7,000. Next to the giraffe in the arbor of cost come the rhinoceros or hippopotamus, worth from $5,000 each. If a dealer counts animals he could get them big mammals rarely breeding activity. About only place in where hippopotami have been to raise their young is in their erie in Central park. New York. A chimpanzee size is worth and when one reaches the interior of the late Mr. Crowley, Chile hanna he is beyond a fixed price monkey kind are most uncertainerty. The animal man says certain to die. But the ordinance can be bought very cheaply. One can buy a nice young phant for $1,000 at times, but good animal is worth from $3,000. An elephant does not eat the maximum price because beauty of his countenance, grace of his figure, his intelligence dowments or his size, but be a sweet, sunny disposition. Elephant is about most exciting things. Sooner or later he killed usually after he two or three keepers and did damage than he is worth. Othermals of equally good dispositions larger and finer commands this price, of course, but the most cent beast with an inclination der isn't worth as much as a mon one that is trustworthy ordinarily so. for the sweeter pered have days when they spired of satan.-Junior Munson. NATURAL HISTORY The pouch of a pelican enough to contain seven quail. For mountain climbing covevery inefficient and seldom Abyssinia and other mountain tribes. Sparrows begin housekeeping expeditiously. A pair of birds build a nest and furnish it within 24 hours from the site she was selected. The female red grouse is said its dress according to surroundings red grouse occurs in no other world but the British Isle. No one has been able to give factors reason for the formation... Rev. Warner, who came to this city at fall from Galveston, Tex., is relied seriously ill. He came here for the benefit of his health, his illness because by overwork in caring for dead and injured after the great storm. He and his family lost everything they possessed. Contrary expectations, Mr. Warner’s condition has grown worse, and he is now critically ill. Not Clipped. A naturalist says that the squirrel is increasing all over the wooded districts of England and in the Scottish countryside. In some parts of Scotland it is not so long ago that a Scotch hedge was trying a case which had to do with the escape of a squirrel from its cage and the question as to whether had been stolen. “Were its wings clipped?” he asked a witness. “But, my lord,” interposed the count, “it is a quadruped.” “Quadruped or no quadruped,” said its honor sternly, “if its wings had been clipped it could never have escaped.” Cellnold. The base of celluloid is common paper. By action of sulphuric and nitric acids it is changed to gun cotton, then dried, ground and mixed with from 20 to 40 per cent of camphor, after which is ground fine, colored with powder colors, cast in sheets, pressed very hard and at last baked between sets of superheated rollers. South America. Competent authorities assert that South America has greater undeveloped resources than any other portion of the world. Any crop grown elsewhere can be duplicated there, and the country abounds in mines of coal, silver and gold, most of which have been only lightly developed. MOTHERHOOD The greatest ambition of American men and women is to have homes blessed with children. The woman afflicted with female disease is constantly menaced with becoming a childless wife. No medicine can restore dead organs, but Wine of Cardui does regulate derangements that prevent conception; does prevent miscarriage; does restore weak functions and shattered nerves and does bring babies to homes barren and desolate for years. Wine of Cardui gives women the health and strength to bear healthy children. You can get a bottle of Squirrel Poison. CARRIES DEATH AND DESTruction TO Squirrels, Gophers, Rats, Mice AND OTHER Ranch and Orchard Pests. Sure an speedy in action and reasonable in cost. Ask grocer or druggist for it. HAAS, BARUCH & CO, LOS ANGELES; CALIFORNIA SOLE AGENTS. THE TOUCH DOES IT Benson’s Plasters are like your other friends—they hate to see you in pain or in weakness and are dog-tired hearing you complain about it. They want to cure you and send you along to your business—whole and happy. They can do it and will do it. Try them on. What for? Why for any cough or cold you may be troubled with, or any bothering pain or ache, or worry with kidneys or liver. Possibly some old clutch of muscular rheumatism renders an arm or a leg worth only half price just now. For anything that makes the machine work slow and stiff, with pain maybe in the motion of silk garter at her wedding. Her garter is often given her by a friend who has taken away its newness by wearing it a few times, says Home Notes. The wearing of the garter does not end the ritual concerning it. After the wedding ceremony it is either cut into pieces or hidden. When it is hidden, the bridesmaids hunt for it, and the finder is assured of being happily married before the year is out. When it is cut, it is divided among the bridesmaids to give to each good luck and a devoted husband. Sometimes the bride bestows her garters on the first bridesmald, and in Germany each bridesmald receives a pair of blue white silk garters from the bride. Made Good Matches. She—I can’t make out how it is that Mrs. Wise has fish for nearly every meal. It can’t be for economy’s sake, for she must be fairly well off. He—She has a large family of unmarried daughters, you know. She—Now, don’t be nasty and say something about girls and their brains. That’s so old. He—Oh, no, I hadn’t the slightest intention of doing so! She—Well, can’t you tell me? He—I don’t know, I’m sure, unless it’s because fish are rich in phosphorus. She—I don’t see what that has to do with it. He—Perhaps not, but still it’s good for making matches. PLEASURE WHarf The West Coast Land and Water company, a concern formed for the purpose of laying out and improving Pacific City, has ordered Surveyor S. H. Finley to provide plans and specifications for a new wharf at the beach. The order calls for a wharf 500 feet long and 16 feet wide, total cost of construction not to exceed $4000. At its end it will be in fifteen feet of water, a depth calculated to give excellent fishing facilities. The wharf will be completed before the summer camping season, to be available for use of pleasure seekers by that time. The wharf is but one of the many improvements already carried out or planned by the company, which is endeavoring to introduce summer beach-goers to the beauties and advantages of Pacific City as a summer watering place. The Bullet Of the assassin may be more sudden, but it is not more severe than the dire punishment meted out to the man who abuses his stomach. No man is stronger than his stomach. When the stomach is diseased the whole body is weakened. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery cures diseases of the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition. It cures diseases of other organs when it cures the diseases of the stomach, on which the several organs depend for nutrition and vitality. “I would say in regard to your medicines that I have been greatly benefited by them,” writes Mr. J. S. Bell of Leando, Van Buren Co., as I thought almost at death’s door. I was confined to my house and part of the time to my bed. I had taken gallons of medicine but did say that ‘Golden Medical Discovery’ has cured me, and to-day I am stouter than I have been for twenty-three years old. Have taken in all twenty-nine Crane Island. In Lake Minnetonka, Minnesota is a picturesque island where name from the fact that habited by man and given cranes. Generations back decided upon this spot resort. As times went on... homes blessed with children. The woman afflicted with female disease is constantly menaced with becoming a childless wife. No medicine can restore dead organs, but Wine of Cardui does regulate derangements that prevent conception; does prevent miscarriage; does restore weak functions and shattered nerves and does bring babies to homes barren and desolate for years. Wine of Cardui gives women the health and strength to bear healthy children. You can get a dollar bottle of Wine of Cardui from your dealer. WINE OF CARDUI 148 Market Street, Memphis, Tenn., April 14, 1901. In February, 1901, I took one bottle of Wine of Cardui and one package of Thefdord's Black-Draught. I had been married fifteen years and had never given birth to a child until I took Wine of Cardui. Now I am mother of a fine baby girl which was born March 31, 1901. The baby weighs fourteen pounds and I feel as well as any person could feel. Now my home is happy and I never will be without Wine of Cardui in my house again. For advice and literature, address, giving symptoms, "The Ladies' Advisory Department", The Chattanooga Medicine Company, Chattanooga, Tennessee. THE TOUCH DOES IT Benson's Plasters are like your other friends—they hate to see you in pain or in weakness and are dog-tired hearing you complain about it. They want to cure you and send you along to your business—whole and happy. They can do it and will do it. Try them on. What for? Why for any cough or cold you may be troubled with, or any bothering pain or ache, or worry with kidneys or liver. Possibly some old clutch of muscular rheumatism renders an arm or a leg worth only half price just now. For anything that makes the machine work slow and stiff, with pain maybe in the motion of it, clap Benson's Porous Plaster squarely on the bad spot. They are the get-out-to-morrow plasters—not the sort that go to sleep on your skin like a cat on a cushion. There is comfort and speedy relief in the touch of them. No other external remedy, no matter how made or how called, is worthy to live in the same street with Benson's Plasters. Phins and ailments melt away under them as a sheet of ice does under the spring sun. You cannot foretell the weather but you can always foretell the effect of Benson's Plasters; it is as sure as the effect of a hot breakfast in a hungry man's stomach. But look out for substitutes. Get the genuine. All drugists, or we will prepay postage on any number ordered in the United States on receipt of 25c each. Seabury & Johnson, Mfg. Chemists, N.Y. All Stuffed Up That's the condition of many sufferers from catarrh, especially in the morning. Great difficulty is experienced in clearing the head and throat. No wonder catarrh causes headache, impairs the taste, smell and hearing, pollutes the breath, deranges the stomach and affects the appetite. To cure catarrh, treatment must be constitutional—alterative and tonic. "I was afflicted with catarrh. I took medicines of different kinds, giving each a fair trial; but gradually grew worse until I could hardly hear, taste or smell. I then concluded to try Hood's Sarsaparilla, and after taking five bottles I was cured and have not had any return of the disease since." Eugene Forbes, Lebanon, Kan. Hood's Sarsaparilla Cures catarrh—it soothes and strengthens the mucous membrane and builds up the whole system. Everybody Knows About Pain-Killer A Household Medicine A Safe and Sure Cure for Cramps Coughs Bruises Diarrhoea Golds Burns Sprains and Strains. Gives instant relief. Two sizes, 25c. and 50c. Only one Pain Killer, Perry Davis'. Nasal Catarrh quickly yields to treatment by Ely's Cream Balm, which is agreeably aromatic. It is received through the nostrils, cleanses and heals the whole surface over which it diffuses itself. Druggists sell the 50c size; Trial size by mail, 10 cents. Test it and you are sure to continue the treatment. Announcement. To accommodate those who are partial to the use of atomizers in applying liquids into the nasal passages for catarrhal troubles, the proprietors prepare Cream Balm in liquid form, which will be known as Ely's Liquid Cream Balm. Price including the spraying tube is 75 cents. Druggists or by mail. The liquid form embodies the medicinal properties of the solid preparation. Crane Island. In Lake Minnetonka, Minnesota is picturesque island where name from the fact that habited by man and given cranes. Generations back decided upon this spot for resort. As times went on rounding islands popular had the heart to disturb now Crane Island is point passing boats as one of the northwest. Shaves and Collar. It is not generally known that close shaving is apt to cold. Barbers, however, ed with this fact, and its account of it than through to bring their patrons back that they do not, unless o minister close shaves. NEWS AND OPINION OF NATIONAL IMPORTS ALONE CONTAINS Daily, by mail, Daily and Sunday by mail. THE... Sunday is the greatest Sunday in the world. Price 5c a copy. By mail Address THE SUN, N... BIG PRICES FOR ANIMALS. Small Sized Fortune Needed to Buy a Giraffe. Because of the difficulty of getting it in America and of keeping it alive after it arrives a good giraffe is quoted at 7,000. Next to the giraffe in the aristocracy of cost come the rhinoceros and the hippopotamus, worth from $4,000 to 6,000 each. If a dealer could breed these animals, he could get rich, but big mammals rarely breed in captivity. About the only place in America where hippopotamans have been known to raise their young is in the menagère in Central park, New York. A chimpanzee of size is worth $5,000, and when one reaches the intelligence of the late Mr. Crowley, Chico or Joanna he is beyond a fixed price. The monkey kind are most uncertain property. The animal man says they are certain to die. But the ordinary ones can be bought very cheaply. One can buy a nice young baby elephant for $1,000 at times, but a really good animal is worth from $1,800 to $3,000. An elephant does not command the maximum price because of the beauty of his countenance, the elegance of his figure, his intellectual endowments or his size, but because of a sweet, sunny disposition. A mean elephant is about the most evil of living things. Sooner or later he has to be killed, usually after he has slain two or three keepers and done more damage than he is worth. Of two animals of equally good disposition the larger and finer commands the higher price, of course, but the most magnificent beast with an inclination for murder isn't worth as much as a very common one that is trustworthy—that is, ordinarily so, for the sweetest tempered have days when they seem inspired of satan. Junior Munsey. NATURAL HISTORY. The pouch of a pelican is large enough to contain seven quarts of water. For mountain climbing camels are very inefficient and seldom used in Abyssinia and other mountainous countries. Sparrows begin housekeeping very expeditiously. A pair of them will build a nest and furnish it with an egg inside of 24 hours from the time when the site was selected. The female red grouse is said to vary its dress according to surroundings. It is a fact worth remembering that the red grouse occurs in no other part of the world but the British isles. No one has been able to give a satisfactory reason for the formation adopt- WARTS AND WEEDS. THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN WISHING AND WORKING. It is popularly believed that warts can be wished away. But the farmer who sat down and tried to clear his field by wishing the weeds away would soon find his crops gone. It takes working to get rid of weeds, and the man with the hoe must put in many a long day before he can take a well earned rest. It is a singular fact that a great many people treat certain forms of disease as warts are said to be treated—by wishing. This is especially so in the case of coughs. "I wish this cough didn't bother me so," they say. "I wish my cough didn't keep me awake so much," and so on. It never seems to occur to them that it takes active measures to get rid of a cough; that a cough is like a weed, growing right along, and the longer it grows the deeper it strikes its roots. If a man heard the alarm of a rattle-snake near by he'd jump aside at once to avoid the attack and then seek to find and destroy the dangerous reptile. The cough is a danger alarm as much more significant than the rattle of the snake as the disease it heralds is more dangerous than the snake bite. PEW PEOPLE ARE KILLED by snake bites each year. Consumption alays its thousands and tens of thousands annually and it is the fatality of consumption which makes the cough that heralds it a danger signal to be promptly heeded. Don't wish the cough would stop it! "I had long been a sufferer from chronic catarrh of the head," says Chas. T. Stone, Esq., of Whitford, Chester discovery. It cures obstinate and deep-seated coughs, bronchitis, bleeding of the lungs and other diseases of the organs of respiration, which if neglected or unskilfully treated find a fatal termination in consumption. In hundreds of cases a cure has been effected by the use of "Golden Medical Discovery" after all other means and medicines had failed to benefit and doctors had said, "There is no hope." DON'T GIVE UP HOPE. Let every one who suffers from respiratory and pulmonary diseases cherish hope until Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery has been given a fair and faithful trial. It always helps. It almost always cures. Ninety-eight percent of those who use "Golden Medical Discovery" find in it a perfect and permanent cure. Even the two per cent acknowledge benefit and help from the use of the medicine. "I want to say a word in favor of your grand medicine," writes Mrs. Priscilla Smail, of Leechburg, Armstrong County, Pa. "About three years ago I was taken with a bad cough; had night-sweats; would take coughing spells and have to sit up in bed at night for an hour at a time. When I would walk up hill I could hardly breathe; would get all stopped up in my throat. I did not try any doctor but I saw the advertisement of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and decided to try it. I took three bottles which cured me. Whenever people tell me they are sick I say to them, 'Why don't you get Dr. Pierce's medicine? It cured me and will cure others.'" A GREAT FREE OPER. Persons suffering from chronic forms of disease are invited to consult Dr. Pierce by letter free. All letters are held as private and their contents guarded by the same strict professional privacy observed by Dr. Pierce in personal consultations at the Invalida' Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N.Y. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N.Y. This offer is not to be confounded with those offers of "free medical advice," which are made without any evidence of medical qualification or professional standing. For more than thirty years Dr. Pierce, as chief consulting physician to the Invalida' Hotel and Surgical Institute, of Buffalo, N.Y., assisted by his medical staff of nearly a score of physicians, has treated and cured many thousands of men and women who had been given up by friends and physicians as incurable. Dr. Pierce's success has been founded on the fact that he cures so-called "incurables." There are thousands of men and women to-day, living in the enjoyment of perfect health, who bless the day when they wrote the first letter to Dr. Pierce. Who can wonder that these For mountain climbing camels are very inefficient and seldom used in Abyssinia and other mountainous countries. Sparrows begin housekeeping very expeditiously. A pair of them will build a nest and furnish it with an egg inside of 24 hours from the time when the site was selected. The female red grouse is said to vary its dress according to surroundings. It is a fact worth remembering that the red grouse occurs in no other part of the world but the British Isles. No one has been able to give a satisfactory reason for the formation adopted by the wild duck or mallard in flight. The birds arrange themselves in two converging lines, like a huge V, the leader occupying the point. The ostrich is a descendant of a genus of bird which in prehistoric times attained an enormous size. In the alluvial deposits of Madagascar evidence has recently been found to show that ostriches 14 and 15 feet in height once lived on the island. Stevenson's Cup of Misery. R. L. Stevenson, writing in 1893 to George Meredith, in an epistle quoted in a new edition of his "Letters," says with heart touching pathos: "For 14 years I have not had a day's real health. I have wakened sick and gone to bed weary, and I have done my work unfinchingly. I have written in bed and written out of it, written in hemorrhages, written in sickness, written torn by coughing, written when my head swam for weakness, and for so long, it seems to me, I have won my wager and recovered my glove. I am better now—have been, rightly speaking, since first I came to the Pacific—and still few are the days when I am not in some physical distress. And the battle goes on—ill or well is a trifle so that it goes. I was made for a contest, and the powers have so willed that my battlefield should be this dingy, inglorious one of the bed and the physic bottle. At least, I have not failed, but I would have preferred a place of trumpetings and the open air over my head." The Life Line In One's Hand. There are three prominent lines in the palm—the line of life, that of the head and the heart line. The line of life begins on the inner boundary of the palm, about midway between the thumb and the foreling. If we imagine the last hand to be a map, with the fingers pointing north, this line runs toward the southeast, then curves toward the south and in some hands curves finally toward the southwest. It thus skirts the base or "uprise" of the thumb, known as the uprise of Venus. If it is deep, broad, of good color and extends nearly or quite to the wrist and if the rest of the hand indicates vitality and cheerfulness, the subject may be expected to live to a green old age; he has a good disposition and the qualities which good health and good temper usually create. Crane Island. In Lake Minnetonka, Minnesota, there is a picturesque island which takes its name from the fact that it is uninhabited by man and given over to the cranes. Generations back these birds decided upon this spot for a summer resort. As times went on and the sur- If a man heard the alarm of a fatter snake near by he'd jump aside at once to avoid the attack and then seek to find and destroy the dangerous reptile. The cough is a danger alarm as much more significant than the rattle of the snake as the disease it heralds is more dangerous than the snake bite. Few PROPLE ARE KILLED by snake bites each year. Consumption slays its thousands and tens of thousands annually and it is the fatality of consumption which makes the cough that heralds it a danger signal to be promptly heeded. Don't wish the cough would stop it! "I had long been a sufferer from chronic catarrh of the head," says Chas. T. Stone, Esq., of Whitford, Chester Co., Pa. "About last May it developed into a very disagreeable and hacking cough, with soreness and fullness of the chest. Doctors here pronounced it bronchitis. I tried several doctors and took different remedies without receiving any benefit whatever. I then consulted Dr. R. V. Pierce, in reference to my case. The first bottle of his 'Golden Medical Discovery' stopped the cough. I used several bottles, with Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy, and have since had no symptom of a return of the cough." "Last spring I had a severe attack of pneumonia which left me with a very bad condition," writes John M. Russell, Esq., of Brent, Cherokee Nat., Ind. Ter. "I had no appetite and was so weak I could scarcely walk. My breast was all sore with running sores. I got two bottles of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery which I believe saved my life. I cannot express my gratitude to you. I am able now to do very good work." The surest way to stop a cough is to use Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Disc- ANY HEAD NOISES? ALL CASES OF EAFNESS OR HARD HEARING ARE NOW CURABLE by our new invention. Only those born deaf are incurable. HEAD NOISES GEASE IMEDIATELY. F. A. WERMAN, OF BALTIMORE, SAYS: Baltimore, Md., March 30, 1901. "Being entirely cured of deafness, thanks to your treatment, I will now give you story of my case, to be used at your discretion." After five years ago my right ear began to sing, and this kept on getting worse, until I lost in this ear entirely. My treatment for deafness, for three months, without any success, consulted a numbologist among others, the most eminent ear specialist of this city, who told me that perilion could help me, and even that only temporarily, that the head noises would cease, but the hearing in the affected ear would be lost forever. In my advertisement accidentally in a New York paper, and ordered your treatment after I had used it only a few days according to your directions, the noises ceased, and after five weeks, my hearing in the diseased ear has been entirely restored. Thank you neatly and beg to remain. F. A. WERMAN, 730 S. Broadway, Baltimore, Md. Our treatment does not interfere with your usual occupation. Examination and YOU CAN CURE YOURSELF AT HOME at a nominal cost. INTERNATIONAL AURAL CLINIC, 596 LA SALLE AVE., CHICAGO, IL. ANAHEIM GAZETTE OLDEST ESTABLISHED Newspaper In The County Prints More Local News Than Any Other Paper In The County ... JOB PRINTING Department Fitted With The Newest Faces In Types and Ornamets. Give US a Caff