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anaheim-gazette 1902-07-03

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Anaheim VOLUME XXXII. G. S. EDDY, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Telephone, Main 75... Office—Center street, opposite City Hall. 10 A.M. to 11 A.M. 2 P.M. to 4 P.M. 7 P.M. to 8 P.M., evenings. Residence—Corner Center and Palm streets. ANAHEIM CAL. DR. F. H. HOUCK DENTIST. OFFICE NEXT DOOR to P. O. (Federman Block, up stairs.) HOURS 9 to 5 ANAHEIM CAL. jy15tf HERBERT JOHNSTON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office and Residence: Corner of Broadway and Los Angeles St. Telephone 656... 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. 7 p.m. to 8 p.m., evenings. Dr. A. W. Bickford OFFICE OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE. Telephone Central. Residence near Christian Church. Telephone 101. ANAHEIM CAL. Boston Bakery FRESH BREAD, PIES AND CAKES. Ice Cream and Confectionery S. Kistler, Proprietor W. P. Turner, Pharmacist Matilija Hot Springs Ventura County, Cal. THIS MAGIC RESORT IS situated in a natural park of some 400 acres, in the Santa Inez mountains, Ventura county. As a place to pass a delightful summer vacation it offers facilities unequaled. There is hunting, fishing; dry, bracing air; hot sulphur baths; mineral water to drink; horseback and tally-ho riding; bowling alley; ping-pong, etc. The beautiful plunge is 50x120 feet and cost $10,000. Separate plunge for children under same roof. Every convenience, including post-office, general store, long-distance telephone, electric lights and library. Strictly temperance resort. No fogs: altitude 1000 feet. Rates for camping: $1 per week up; room in cottages, with board and mineral water to drink; $10 per week and up. Address: MATILJA HOT SPRINGS. Stage 5 miles, fare 50 cents. Fullerton Machine Shops J. F. HILTSCHER & CO., Proprietors Gasolene Engines Sold and Repaired Estimates Furnished on Pumping Plants Agents for the M. and E. Gasoline Engines WE GUARANTEE OUR WORK Telephone MAIN 54 will bring us IF YOU WANT TO SELL YOUR PROPERTY OR TRADE it for Los Angeles realty; or if you want to buy a place in Los Angeles or surrounding country, list with Wm. Schwenckert Boston Bakery FRESH BREAD, PIES AND CAKES. Ice Cream and Confectionery S. Kistler, Proprietor W. P. Turner, Pharmacist DRUGS, MEDICINES, Perfumes and Toilet Articles. BEST 5-CENT CIGAR IN TOWN MEDICAL HALL, KOLL BLOCK. PUBLIC TELEPHONE OFFICE. FRITZ RUHMANN'S Germania Halle. BACKS' NEW BUILDING LOS ANGELES STREET Keeps on hand a Large and complete stock of liquors, wines and cigars. Cold beer always on draught GO TO THE Oak Barber Shop FOR A FIRST-CLASS SHAVE OR HAIR CUT. TWO DOORS WEST OF BANK. HUSMANN BROS. CITY MEAT MARKET F. W. Fleischmann, PROPRIETOR. Best Meats the Market Affords Always on Hand. Also keeps on hand Sausages, Bacon, Ham, Lard, Etc. Meats delivered to all parts of the city free of charge. Roman Wisser Favorite Saloon. Finest of Wines, Liquors & Cigars Pool & Billiard Tables Schindler's Building, Center St., Anaheim LOS ANGELES BEER ON DRAUGHT. J.M. Griffith Company A CORPORATION LUMBER DEALERS Near Railroad Depot, Anaheim, keep constantly on hand Doors, Blinds, Windows Mouldings, Posts, Shakes, Shingles, Lath, Hair Plaster of Paris. WE GUARANTEE OUR WORK Telephone MAIN 54 will bring us IF YOU WANT TO SELL YOUR PROPERTY OR TRADE it for Los Angeles realty; or if you want to buy a place in Los Angeles or surrounding country, list with Wm. Schwenckert REAL ESTATE AND GENERAL BUSINESS AGENT Room 215 Henne Bldg, No. 122 West Third St., Los Angeles A Specialty made of Orange County Property SEE ME FOR THE BEST PROPOSitions IN FIRE, LIFE AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE, or write and I will call Agent AACHEN & MUNICH FIRE INSURANCE CO. of Germany, and the AETNA LIFE & ACCIDENT INSURANCE CO. of Hartford. (Chartered in 1830) WE, THE UNDERSIGNED, DESIRE TO HAVE THE PLEASURE OF EXPRESSING OUR APPROVAL OF THE RESOLUTIONS ADOPTED BY THE OFFICIAL DELIEGATION OF THE TEXAS FEDERA-TION WOMEN'S CLUBS. WE WISH ALSO TO EXPRESS OUR APPRECIATION OF THE EXCELLENT SERVICE OF THE SANTA FE ROAD; OF THE MANAGEMENT; OF THE SPECIAL TRAIN; OF THE COURTESY OF EVERY OFFICIAL FROM SUPERINTENDENT TO PORTER; OF THE PERFECTION OF THE HARVEY EATING HOUSES. MAY THE SANT FE LIVE LONG AND PROSPER Mrs. PERCY V. PENNYPACKER, Pres. Texas F. W.C. Mrs. ANNA McLEAN MOORES. The best and up-to-date Livery turnouts City Livery Stables EDWARD A. ZEUS, Proprietor. Anaheim Bakery, PETER SYRE, PROPRIETOR. FRESH BREAD CAKES & PIES CONFECTIONERY, ETC. Wedding Cakes a Specialty. Los Angeles and Cypress RAILWAY TIME TABLE. Pool & Billiard Tables Schindler's Building, Center St., Anaheim LOS ANGELES BEER ON DRAUGHT. J.M. Griffith Company A CORPORATION LUMBER DEALERS Near Railroad Depot, Anaheim, keep constantly on hand Doors, Blinds, Windows Mouldings, Posts, Shakes, Shingles, Lath, Hair Plaster of Paris. C.F. GRIM, Agent. F. BACKS, UNDERTAKER And Dealer in FURNITURE. Wall Paper, Cornices, Window Shades, Picture Frames, Upholstery Goods, Paints, Oils and Glass Sewing Machine Supplies, Etc. Cor. Los Angeles & Chartres Sts. Napoleon Hart. ...DEALER IN THE FINEST BRANDS OF... WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS CENTER STREET, - ANAHEIM. Bottled goods of superior quality for family use WIELAND BEER. Give me a call. RICHARDMELROSE ATTORNEY-AT-LAW And Notary Public. Special attention given to Probate Matters. —Center Street, Anaheim. West, Bell & Tipton--Attorneys & Counselors-at-law HELMSEN BLOCK Center St. - ANAHEIM, Cal RAILWAY TIME TABLE. Time of Arrival and Departure of Trains. SOUTHERN PACIFIC RAILROAD. Trains on the Southern Pacific pass Anaheim as follows: To Los Angeles. Daily.....7:52 am Dally.....9:49 am Daily.....4:22 pm Dally.....6:06 pm Pass Loara Station: To Los Angeles. Daily.....7:56 am Dally.....9:45 am Daily.....4:27 pm Dally.....5:59 pm LOS ALAMITOS TRAINS. Leave Anaheim—Arrive Anaheim— 9:35 am 8:00 am 2:07 am 11:37 am 5:50 pm 4:30 pm Daily except Sunday. TUSTIN BRANCH. Leave Anaheim Arrive Anaheim 9:49 a.m 4:22 p.m. Daily except Sunday. NEWPORT BEACH RAILWAY. Daily Schedule. Leave Anaheim Arrive Anaheim 9:49 a.m 7:52 a.m. 6:08 p.m 4:23 p.m. All trains connect at Santa Ana with Newport trains. Santa Fe Time Table Effective June 1, 1902. Trains on the Santa Fe Route leave Anaheim for points named as follows: To Los Angeles—7:55 am 9:37 am *11:49 am..5:06 pm To San Diego—9:35 am *3:07 pm. To Redlands—*11:31 am. To Riverside and San Bernardino—*11:31 am.. To San Jacinto, Perris, Temecula and Elsinore—*11:31 am. To Santa Ana—9:35 am..*3:07 pm..5:54 pm. To Pasadena and Azusa—7:55 am..9:57 am.. *11:49 am..5:06 pm. To Escondido—*2:07 pm. To Fallbrook—*2:07 pm. To Redondo—7:55 am..9:57 am..*11:49 am. To Chicago, Denver, Kansas City and all points East—5:06 pm..5:54 pm. Trains marked with a * are daily except Sunday. All others daily. J.H. CLABAUGH, Agent. The Weekly Gazette, Established 1870 SUBSCRIPTION, - $1 50 Per Year Six months....$1 Three months....$1 Payable invariably in advance. Transient advertising rates, $1 per inch per month. The GAZETTE is issued every Thursday morning. Entered at the Anaheim Postoffice as second-class matter. Notice to Creditors ESTATE OF C.A. STREHL, DECEASED. Notice is hereby given by the undersigned, administrator of the estate of C.A. Strehl, deceased. To the creditors of and persons having claims against the said deceased, to exhibit the same, with the necessary vouchers, within four months after first publication of this notice, to the said administrator, at the office of Richard Melrose Center street, Anaheim, California, the same place for the transaction of business of said estate in the county of Orange. Dated this 20th day of June, A.D. 1902. A.E. STREHL, Administrator of the estate of C.A. Strehl deceased. Richard Melrose, attorney for adminstrator. JOSEPH BACKS, Undertaker and Embalmer DEALER IN Furniture and Bedding Repairing Done. The Pure Bred Percheron Stallion ALEXIS SECOND will make the season of 1902 at JOHN HAHN'S LIVERY STABLE ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA TERMS FOR SEASON-$10. Usual return prices. ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, JULY 3, 1902. Editorial Note and Comment Senator A. E. Nutt of San Diego was in town on Thursday from a trip through the northern counties of this Congressional district. He finds his prospects continue in a manner entirely satisfactory to himself. Mr. Nutt will undoubtedly have the San Diego delegation back of him in the convention, and being a property-owner in Orange county his claims are entitled to consideration at the hands of our voters. That he is popular in his own county, the following brief reference to him, from one of the San Diego papers, conclusively proves. Senator Nutt is acknowledged the leading candidate from this section and his nomination is almost a certainty. He is so well and favorably known in every precinct in the bay region that further comment seems unnecessary, but there is a fact in connection with his services in the State senate that is not generally known. The fact is that he was the author of the Coyote Scalp bill and had it passed, thus settling for all time a most vexing question; one which for ten years had been a source of trouble to every legislature. The bill provides for the discarding of many coyote scalp warrants tainted with fraud and for the payment of just claims. From the present outlook and reports from various portions of this district it is certain that he is a general favorite, so that while other sections will bring good men forward, FOREIGNERS ARE AHEAD OF US IN SOME THINGS Have Better Manners Than We as a Rule and the Peanut Butcher is Modest and Retiring BY FRANCIS E. CLARK, D. D. [CONTRIBUTED TO THE GAZETTE.] Undoubtedly America has something to learn from Old World countries in the matter of manners, however we may pride ourselves on our superior morals. In fact, I am inclined to think that in many respects English-speaking races are about the most unmannerly peoples on the face of the earth. I mean in the matter of surface matters, for I am by no means willing to admit that in deeper matters of the heart, in kindness of spirit and real self-sacrifice generosity we are surpassed by any. However, manners as well as morals have their place in everyday life, and the contrasts which different lands afford are worth noting. The Teutonic and Gothic races certainly surpass the Anglo-saxons in little matters of politeness. One notice it everywhere in public places. The conductor of the railway trains does not throw open the door like a cyclone, and shout at the top of his voice, "All tickets!" But in a mild and deferential way he approaches each passenger, touches his hat, begs you to please hand him your ticket, punches it as gently as he can, and hands it back to you, often with a little flourish and a "Thank you, honorable sir." So you feel that you have conferred quite a favor upon him by giving up your bit of pasteboard. NEWSBOY MANNERS. The newsboy does not go swaggering through a train, slapping down cheap magazines or cheaper trashy novels in every passenger's lap, or perhaps shying packages of candy right and left, which he will afterward call for if not wanted; but he approaches ferring and not receiving a faint stopping at her hostelry. I must say that, while the agrarian man is the most courteous, the disagreeable Englishman superlatively unpleasant. Likewise mihah's figs, the bad are very, very especially on the Continent in writing have I occasionally run specimens of such supercilious lofty John Bulls; or the equally greecable, grumpy, fault-finding, grained specimens of the same concerning whom I could only offer prayer of his own prayer-book, "all such, good Lord, deliver us." But, on the other hand, I have in many English homes such species of fine-grained, courteous man and such gracious, winsome whood, so thoughtful, considerate kind, so unwearied in seeking the fort of their guests, so generous in viding for every want, that I thanked God that I spoke the tongue with them and had a co-lineage. AMERICAN MANNERS. To speak of American manners moment. In public places there much to be desired. At railways and on street-cars, in hotel public halls, in the restaurant at the street, and even in the church self, the independent spirit of America is often more evident than refinement. And yet I believe heart politeness of our people is a erous and genuine as will be for any land beneath the sun. Know the door of any New England house, of any log cabin upon the prairie or at any Southern plantation and you will find within nine out of ten, a welcome and a good welcome that does not look for and a godspeed that is not dependent upon tips. As a country becomes more settled, as tramps and thieves be multiply, the hospitality becomes cautious, to be sure, and less cared but I believe (the result). was the author of the Coyote Scalp bill and had it passed, thus settling for all time a most vexing question; one which for ten years had been a source of trouble to every legislature. The bill provides for the discarding of many coyote scalp warrants tainted with fraud and for the payment of just claims. From the present outlook and reports from various portions of this district it is certain that he is a general favorite, so that while other sections will bring good men forward, he will no doubt come to the convention with a greater support than any other single candidate, and the chances for San Diego to again secure the nomination are unexcelled by those of any other county. A solid delegation for him from San Diego will secure his nomination for the simple reason that he has more friends in the other counties than any other San Diego man. Senator Nutt is a native of Chicago, where he was born on the 6th of September, 1861, "the year the war begun," so that he is now in his forty-first year. He attended the public schools, preparing for college in the preparatory schools connected with the Lake Forest, Ill., and with the Northwestern University at Evanston, Ill., which latter university was founded by his uncle, Governor Evans. He entered the classical course at Dartmouth College in 1880, and graduated from that college with the degree of A.B. in the class of 1884, receiving the degree of A.M. a few years thereafter. In 1885, while pursuing his law studies under the direction of Hon. C.C. Bonney of Chicago he was headmaster at St. Luke's Academy, an Episcopal school for boys in Philadelphia. In 1886 he passed a successful examination before the appellate court for admission to practice law before the supreme court of Illinois. Going to South Dakota, then a part of the territory of Dakota, he commenced the practice of his profession and while there acted as city attorney and assistant district attorney. In the fall of 1887 he emigrated to San Diego where he has ever since resided and been in the active practice of the law. He served one year in the board of delegates of the city council, and was afterward twice elected, each time for a term of four years, a member of the board of aldermen, having also been elected by the aldermen to fill out an unexpired term. Part of this time he was president of the board of aldermen and acting mayor. Mr. Nutt will be strong in the coneach passenger, touches his hat, begs you to please hand him your ticket, punches it as gently as he can, and hands it back to you, often with a little flourish and a "Thank you, honorable sir." So you feel that you have conferred quite a favor upon him by giving up your bit of pasteboard. NEWSBOY MANNERS. The newsboy does not go swaggering through a train, slapping down cheap magazines or cheaper trashy novels in every passenger's lap, or perhaps shying packages of candy right and left, which he will afterward call for if not wanted; but he approaches you modestly with his sheaf of magazines, or waits for you to call him to your side. In the German cars the first comers seem to regard those who afterward enter as their guests, and every man in the same compartment will touch his hat to each one who enters, and, if the newcomer is a lady, will often rise and bow before her as if she were an honored visitor. When you leave the compartment, all who are left touch their hats again, as if they were bidding adieu to a pleasant acquaintance, if not to an old friend. TABLE MANNERS. At a restaurant or hotel table the same polite customs often prevail, especially in purely German establishments. Your table-mates all politely bow when you take your seat, and often rise from their seats to do you honor, even though you may be a perfect stranger. When you retire they bow again, and say in their pleasant German manner, "Mahlzeit," "A happy meal-time to you." In Sweden they have a still more pleasant custom in private homes, for each guest shakes hands with his host and hostess after the meal and says, "Thank you for this good meal;" or, if it is only a cold bite and a cup of coffee, they say, "Thanks for coffee." The children of the family often kiss their father and mother and say to them in their musical language, which sounds like a song, "Thanks for the good meal." SLAVIC MANNERS. The Slavs, too, as a race are wonderfully polite. In a long journey across Siberia I found every one, with few exceptions, from the governor-general of Primorskia to the poorest Russian moujik, the embodiment of politeness. The peasants with whom we traveled in the unspeakable Siberian railroad trains on the far side of Lake Baikal would spring to lift our heavy baggage when we were changing cars, and would share with us their curds and whey and their black bread when the restaurant stations were few and far between. A genuine heart politeness is this, which is willing not only to lift its hat and make a bow, but to take pains to make another comfortable. LATIN MANNERS. The Latin races have always boasted of their politeness, and "polite as a Frenchman" has passed into a proverb. But in my experience the proverb is not altogether justified. And yet I believe heart politeness of our people is an erous and genuine as will be found any land beneath the sun. Known the door of any New England house, of any log cabin upon the prairie or at any Southern plantation and you will find within nine out of ten, a welcome and a god—a welcome that does not look for and a godspeed that is not dependent upon tips. As a country becomes more settled, as tramps and thieves be multiply, the hospitality becomes cautious, to be sure, and less served; but I believe "the real nature survives, and the underlying grace and generosity of the American nature is still an undeniable characteristic. A great national or internationalaster still stirs the hearts of our people to its depths. A famine in Ireland; an eruption in Martinique; an earthquake in Japan; a missile captured by brigands or a city merged by a flood, brings out the nate generosity of the American plebeia, and generosity is but heart-piece expressed in dollars and cents. A little more observance of our forms would not hurt us. Only a less independence and brusque public and private servants, a more realization on the part of others high and low that they are the serene of the people, is needed to place aica in appearance, as she is in reincarnation forefront of the polite and nery nations of the world. An Important Deep Water in Wyoming Recent advices from Wyoming port the completion of the deep water Cambria, in that state, which has progress for several years for local water supply at that place well was started as an experiment the suggestion of the United Geological Survey, as water-break were not definitely known exist in the region. Early in depth of 1810 feet was reached out finding water, but recently cellent supply, with a pumping capacity of 200 gallons per minute, has been developed at 2115 feet, a distance most one-half mile from the surface. Cambria is a coal-mining community on the western slopes of the Hills. The coal measures in which is located are estimated to cover area of 10 square miles and to produce capacity of 30,000,000 cubic meters. The experiment is therefore extremely important, as it not only throws light on underground water tractions in all the older formations western side of the Black Hill also indicates that water supplies be obtained in wells over a wide surrounding country. The prospect and depths of these waters shown on maps soon to be published by United States Geological Survey. N.H. Darton of the Geologicvey has spent several seasons in vestigation of the water resourcethe great plains region,and has that the sandstone strata underthe plains are upturned on them. In the fall of 1887 he emigrated to San Diego where he has ever since resided and been in the active practice of the law. He served one year in the board of delegates of the city council, and was afterward twice elected, each time for a term of four years, a member of the board of aldermen, having also been elected by the aldermen to fill out an unexpired term. Part of this time he was president of the board of aldermen and acting mayor. Mr. Nutt will be strong in the convention and will be strong before the people. Being a property owner in this county, he is entitled to the consideration of the delegates to be chosen from this county. Repulsive Features Blackheads, pimples, greasy faces and muddy complexions, which are so common among women, especially girls at a certain age, destroying beauty, disfiguring and making repulsive features which would otherwise appear attractive and refined, indicate that the liver is out of order. An occasional dose of Herbine will cleanse the bowels, regulate the liver and so establish a clear, healthy complexion. 50c at J. P. Hatzfeld's. The Sea Serpent (indignantly)—What are all these empty bottles doing on the beach? The Lobster—Oh, you needn't kick. If bottles were never emptied you would cease to exist. White Man Turned Yellow Great consternation was felt by the friends of M. A. Hogarty of Lexington, Ky., when they saw he was turning yellow. His skin slowly changed color, also his eyes, and he suffered terribly. His malady was yellow jaundice. He was treated by the best doctors, but without benefit. Then he was advised to try Electric Bitters, the wonderful stomach and liver remedy, and he writes: "After taking two bottles I was wholly cured." A trial proves its matchless merit for all stomach, liver and kidney troubles. Only 50c. Sold by all druggists. Wanted to Sell. Five-foot Killifer cultivator. Cheap for cash. Apply to R. Fossick. may8-tf when we were changing cars, and would share with us their curds and whey and their black bread when the restaurant stations were few and far between. A genuine heart politeness is this, which is willing not only to lift its hat and make a bow, but to take pains to make another comfortable. LATIN MANNERS. The Latin races have always boasted of their politeness, and "polite as a Frenchman" has passed into a proverb. But in my experience the proverb is not altogether justified. To be sure, there is a vivacious and punctilious etiquette about a well-bred Frenchman which is captivating to the uninitiated, and there is a certain stately politeness to the Spanish don that is impressive; but, as for me, give me the more genuine thing which I find in northern climes. In Italy there is scarcely a pretense of politeness among the lower classes. They will gaze over your shoulders with eager and rapt attention while you read your private letters. They will fix a stony stare upon you for minutes at a time, as if they would try to read your inmost thoughts. They regard the foreigner as their legitimate prey, and will cheat him in change, pass bad money and shoddy goods upon him, and in every way strive to make him disgusted with their fair and sunny land, which in many respects is the paradise of Europe. But their impoliteness invades the field of morals, and I will not touch upon it in this article. HOTEL MANNERS. The supercilious hotel clerk is a peculiar unmannerly product of America and England, and I am sorry to say, that he is most often found in America. He is seldom found upon the continent of Europe, with his swagger and his diamonds and his curt and grudging pieces of information snapped out at the stranger, as if it were his duty to suppress as many facts as possible and keep them from the too inquisitive public. On the Continent, and frequently in England, he is a young lady with a melodious voice and a pleasant demeanor who makes you feel that you are important, as it not only throws light on the underground water tensions in all the older formations in western side of the Black Hills also indicates that water supplies be obtained in wells over a wide of surrounding country. The price and depths of these waters will shown on maps soon to be published by the United States Geological Survey. N. H. Darton of the Geologicvey has spent several seasons in investigation of the water resources the great plains region, and has that the sandstone strata under the plains are upturned on the surface of the Black Hills and there is most of the water from surface stream which finds its way through theseous material and appears in the sian and other wells in Wyoming the Dakotas. STATE OF OHIO, CITY OF TOLEDO, LUCAS COUNTY, FRANK J. CHENEY makes oath that the senior partner of the firm of F.J. & Co., doing business in the city of county and state aforesaid, and the firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED LAWS for each and every case of cataract can be cured by the use of Hall's Cure. FRANK I. CHENEY sworn to before me and subscribe presence, this 6th day of December 1886. A.W.GLEY Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally acts directly on the blood and mucus faces of the system. Send for test free. F.J. CHENEY & Co., Tollens Hall's Family Pills are the best. Use Allen's Foot-Ease in Your Glove A lady writes: "I shake Allen's Finger into my gloves and rub a little on me. It saves my gloves by absorbing perspiration. It is a most dainty toilet powder; vites the attention of physicians and does the absolute purity of Allen's Flower Dr. W.C. Abbott, editor of the Clinic says: "It is a grand preparer using it constantly in my own pharmal-all drug and shoe stores sell it." 25c sent FREE. Address Allen S. Olm Roy, New York. Go to E.W. McCollum for bicycle supplies and bicycle repair Our repair shop is in charge of the best bicycle men on the coast on repairs. Sporting goods kinds, baseball goods, lawn goods, footballs, boxing-glove ping-pong, the latest fad. Santa Ana Steam Laundry Age I run a laundry wagon that we for and deliver your laundry week. Laundry coming in as 9 o'clock Thursday morning will livered to you Saturday at 5 o'clock E.W. McCollum Gazette. JULY 3, 1902. NUMBER 36 PLENTY OF ROOM ON THE TOP FLOOR Mr. Chapman's Advice to High School Graduates at Commencement Exercises Friday Evening Mr. Chapman delivered the graduating address at the high school commencement at the opera-house on Friday evening. He took for his subject "The Value of an Education for the Man of Non-Professional Calling," and spoke as follows: I am only a practical, every-day business man and farmer, and shall therefore not attempt to talk learnedly about the sciences you have been studying, for I should utterly fail if I did. I shall rather discuss the common affairs of life in a plain, practical way. Much of what I shall say may seem commonplace and in a measure be uninteresting, yet I am persuaded that all of you want to get on in life, and perhaps this desire after all may put you in such frame of mind that you will see some force and value in what I shall say. Do not think for a moment, now that you have your diplomas, that your days of study are over. You are only equipped for beginning. This is indeed to you the commencement of the education which you are to get in the busy world. Your instructors have all these years been toiling to prepare and start the machinery of your brain for working and solving the problems of life as they are presented to you. The difference between an educated person and one not educated is briefly this: One is prepared to take up and master the innumerable problems of life, or at least adjust them to his conditions, while the other must submit to adverse winds—to the obstacles that constantly confront him, and be compelled to adjust his conditions to suit them. Vast therefore is the difference. One person picks the seed from the cotton in a slow and expensive way, but a Whitney gives the gin. We wash Get the bulletins issued by our experiment stations and by the Department of Agriculture of the government. Attend farmers' club meetings and farmers' institutes. In this work give free rein to your enthusiasm, and I tell you that you can find no calling more delightful, more health-giving than the study and culture of flowers, plants and trees. Consider their beauty, their fragrance, their fruitage. The knowledge of botany you have gained in the schoolroom will give an added interest to your work. Then there is in this calling as you go into the fields and enjoy the scenes an ever-present feeling of reverence and gratitude toward the Great Giver of all good for His bounty. Southern California abounds in natural wealth. Her mountains are filled with valuable minerals. Great strata of oil seem to underlie almost every section. Our valleys are beautiful and fertile. Great, indeed, is the natural wealth of this favored section of our country. After all, the value of all these is dependent more upon the skill and genius of the mind—the educated mind—of our people than upon the vast natural richness. It is education that develops our oil fields and makes practical use of the product. It is education that locates the metals in the mountains, digs them, and converts them into useful articles of commerce. It is education that makes our valleys fruitful, that makes the wilderness and solitary place glad and that causes the desert to rejoice and blossom as the rose. The thought I want to impress upon you is that however boundless our natural wealth may be, the mind, the intellect of our people, is far richer. It is this which not only develops the physical resources and gives to them value, but it is this which adds beauty, grace, refinement and happiness to the heritage of our people. It is therefore paramount that more thought and more dollars should be devoted to securing this educated mind—this mental culture—than is devoted to it, although in this respect we have been more generous than almost any other state in the Union. This is the real wealth of a community or a nation. To the Indian who roamed these mountains and valleys the copper, the silver, the gold, the granite and oil were of no value. All of these things acquired a value when looked upon by the educated Important Deep Well in Wyoming Recent advices from Wyoming reflect the completion of the deep well at Albria, in that state, which has been progress for several years for the water supply at that place. This was started as an experiment, at suggestion of the United States Geological Survey, as water-bearing water were not definitely known to exist in the region. Early in 1900 a depth of 1810 feet was reached with finding water, but recently an extent supply, with a pumping capacity of 400 gallons per minute, has been depleted at 2115 feet, a distance of almost one-half mile from the surface. Ambria is a coal-mining community in the western slopes of the Black Hills. The coal measures in which it located are estimated to cover an area of 10 square miles and to have a productive capacity of 30,000,000 tons. Experiment is therefore extremely important, as it not only throws needed light on the underground water conditions in all the older formations on the eastern side of the Black Hills, but indicates that water supplies may be obtained in wells over a wide area surrounding country. The prospects for depths of these waters will be even more promising when maps soon to be published by the United States Geological Survey. H. Darton of the Geological Surveys has spent several seasons in an investigation of the water resources of great plains region, and has found that the sandstone strata underlying plains are upturned on the flanks of this country becomes more thickly sedimented, as tramps and thieves begin to plowly, the hospitality becomes more generous, to be sure, and less unreliable; but I believe "the real thing" lives, and the underlying graciousness and generosity of the American people is still an undeniable characteristic. Great national or international disaster still stirs the hearts of our people to depths. A famine in Ireland or France an eruption in Martinique or earthquake in Japan; a missionary buried by brigands or a city submerged by a flood, brings out the ingenuosity of the American people and generosity is but heart polite expressed in dollars and cents. Little more observance of outward wear would not hurt us. Only a little independence and brusqueness of logic and private servants, a little realization on the part of officials and low that they are the servants we people, is needed to place American appearance, as she is in reality, the forefront of the polite and manly nations of the world. Important Deep Well in Wyoming Recent advices from Wyoming reflect the completion of the deep well at Albria, in that state, which has been progress for several years for the water supply at that place. This was started as an experiment, at suggestion of the United States Geological Survey, as water-bearing water were not definitely known to exist in the region. Early in 1900 a depth of 1810 feet was reached with finding water, but recently an extent supply, with a pumping capacity of 400 gallons per minute, has been depleted at 2115 feet, a distance of almost one-half mile from the surface. Ambria is a coal-mining community in the western slopes of the Black Hills. The coal measures in which it located are estimated to cover an area of 10 square miles and to have a productive capacity of 30,000,000 tons. Experiment is therefore extremely important, as it not only throws needed light on the underground water conditions in all the older formations on the eastern side of the Black Hills, but indicates that water supplies may be obtained in wells over a wide area surrounding country. The prospects for depths of these waters will be even more promising when maps soon to be published by the United States Geological Survey. H. Darton of the Geological Surveys has spent several seasons in an investigation of the water resources of great plains region, and has found that the sandstone strata underlying plains are upturned on the flanks of this country becomes more thickly sedimented, as tramps and thieves begin to plowly, the hospitality becomes more generous, to be sure, and less unreliable; but I believe "the real thing" lives, and the underlying graciousness and generosity of the American people is still an undeniable characteristic. Great national or international disaster still stirs the hearts of our people to depths. A famine in Ireland or France an eruption in Martinique or earthquake in Japan; a missionary buried by brigands or a city submerged by a flood, brings out the ingenuosity of the American people and generosity is but heart polite expressed in dollars and cents. Little more observance of outward wear would not hurt us. Only a little independence and brusqueness of logic and private servants, a little realization on the part of officials and low that they are the servants we people, is needed to place American appearance, as she is in reality, the forefront of the polite and manly nations of the world. Important Deep Well in Wyoming Recent advices from Wyoming reflect the completion of the deep well at Albria, in that state, which has been progress for several years for the water supply at that place. This was started as an experiment, at suggestion of the United States Geological Survey, as water-bearing water were not definitely known to exist in the region. Early in 1900 a depth of 1810 feet was reached with finding water, but recently an extent supply, with a pumping capacity of 400 gallons per minute, has been depleted at 2115 feet, a distance of almost one-half mile from the surface. Ambria is a coal-mining community in the western slopes of the Black Hills. The coal measures in which it located are estimated to cover an area of 10 square miles and to have a productive capacity of 30,000,000 tons. Experiment is therefore extremely important, as it not only throws needed light on the underground water conditions in all the older formations on the eastern side of the Black Hills, but indicates that water supplies may be obtained in wells over a wide area surrounding country. The prospects for depths of these waters will be even more promising when maps soon to be published by the United States Geological Survey. H. Darton of the Geological Surveys has spent several seasons in an investigation of the water resources of great plains region, and has found that the sandstone strata underlying plains are upturned on the flanks of this country becomes more thickly sedimented, as tramps and thieves begin to plowly, the hospitality becomes more generous, to be sure, and less unreliable; but I believe "the real thing" lives, and the underlying graciousness and generosity of the American people is still an undeniable characteristic. Great national or international disaster still stirs the hearts of our people to depths. A famine in Ireland or France an eruption in Martinique or earthquake in Japan; a missionary buried by brigands or a city submerged by a flood, brings out the ingenuosity of the American people and generosity is but heart polite expressed in dollars and cents. Little more observance of outward wear would not hurt us. Only a little independence and brusqueness of logic and private servants, a little realization on the part of officials and low that they are the servants we people, is needed to place American appearance, as she is in reality, the forefront of the polite and manly nations of the world. Important Deep Well in Wyoming Recent advices from Wyoming reflect the completion of the deep well at Albria, in that state, which has been progress for several years for the water supply at that place. This was started as an experiment, at suggestion of the United States Geological Survey, as water-bearing water were not definitely known to exist in the region. Early in 1900 a depth of 1810 feet was reached with finding water, but recently an extent supply, with a pumping capacity of 400 gallons per minute, has been depleted at 2115 feet, a distance of almost one-half mile from the surface. Ambria is a coal-mining community in the western slopes of the Black Hills. The coal measures in which it located are estimated to cover an area of 10 square miles and to have a productive capacity of 30,000,000 tons. Experiment is therefore extremely important, as it not only throws needed light on the underground water conditions in all the older formations on the eastern side of the Black Hills, but indicates that water supplies may be obtained in wells over a wide area surrounding country. The prospects for depths of these waters will be even more promising when maps soon to be published by the United States Geological Survey. H. Darton of the Geological Surveys has spent several seasons in an investigation of the water resources of great plains region, and has found that the sandstone strata underlying plains are upturned on the flanks of this country becomes more thickly sedimented, as tramps and thieves begin to plowly, the hospitality becomes more generous, to be sure, and less unreliable; but I believe "the real thing" lives, and the underlying graciousness and generosity of the American people is still an undeniable characteristic. Great national or international disaster still stirs the hearts of our people to depths. A famine in Ireland or France an eruption in Martinique or earthquake in Japan; a missionary buried by brigands or a city submerged by a flood, brings out the ingenuosity of the American people and generosity is but heart polite expressed in dollars and cents. Little more observance of outward wear would not hurt us. Only a little independence and brusqueness of logic and private servants, a little realization on the part of officials and low that they are the servants we people, is needed to place American appearance, as she is in reality, the forefront of the polite and manly nations of the world. Important Deep Well in Wyoming Recent advices from Wyoming reflect the completion of the deep well at Albria, in that state, which has been progress for several years for the water supply at that place. This was started as an experiment, at suggestion of the United States Geological Survey, as water-bearing water were not definitely known to exist in the region. Early in 1900 a depth of 1810 feet was reached with finding water, but recently an extent supply, with a pumping capacity of 400 gallons per minute, has been depleted at 2115 feet, a distance of almost one-half mile from the surface. Ambria is a coal-mining community in the western slopes of the Black Hills. The coal measures in which it located are estimated to cover an area of 10 square miles and to have a productive capacity of 30,000,000 tons. Experiment is therefore extremely important, as it not only throws needed light on the underground水 condiions in allthe older formations onthe eastern sideoftheBlackHillsbutindicatesthatwatersuppliesmaybeobtaininedwellsoverawidearea surroundingcountry.Thepropecsthdepthsfotheswaterswillbewnownmuchoverawidearea surroundingcountry.Thepropecsthdepthsfotheswaterswillbewnownmuchoverawidearea surroundingcountry.Thepropecsthdepthsfotheswaterswillbewnownmuchoverawidearea surroundingcountry.Thepropecsthdepthsfotheswaterswillbewnownmuchoverawidearea surroundingcountry.Thepropecsthdepthsfotheswaterswillbewnownmuchoverawidearea surroundingcountry.Thepropecsthdepthsfotheswaterswillbewnownmuchoverawidearea surroundingcountry.Thepropecsthdepthsfotheswaterswillbewnownmuchoverawidearea surroundingcountry.Thepropecsthdepthsfotheswaterswillbewknownmuchoverawidearea surroundingcountry.Thepropecsthdepthsfotheswaterswillbewknownmuchoverawidearea 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robbed by them because they are not robbed by them because they are not robbed by them because they are not robbed by them because they are not robbed by them because they are not robbed by them because they are not robbed by them because they are not robbed by them because they are not robbed by them because they are not robbed by them because they are Important, as it not only throws needed attention on the underground water conditions in all the older formations on the eastern side of the Black Hills, but indicates that water supplies may be obtained in wells over a wide area surrounding country. The prospects and depths of these waters will be known on maps soon to be published by United States Geological Survey. H. H. Darton of the Geological Surveys has spent several seasons in an investigation of the water resources of great plains region, and has found that the sandstone strata underlying the plains are upturned on the flanks of the Black Hills and there receive all of the water from surface streams, which finds its way through their porous material and appears in the artesian and other wells in Wyoming and Dakotas. Use Allen's Foot-Ease in Your Gloves, lady writes: "I shake Allen's Foot-Ease my gloves and rub a little on my hands.aves my gloves by absorbing perpiration—a most dainty toilet powder." We in the attention of physicians and nurses the absolute purity of Allen's Foot-Ease. W. C. Abbott, editor of the Chicago Life says: "It is a grand preparation; I using it constantly in my own practice." Drug and shoe stores sell it, 25c. Sample FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Levy, New York. Go to E. W. McCollum for bicycles, bicycle supplies and bicycle repairing. Our repair shop is in charge of one of best bicycle men on the coast. Try on repairs. Sporting goods of all kinds, baseball goods, lawn tennis goods, footballs, boxing-gloves and jump-pong, the latest gadget. Santa Ana Steam Laundry Agency run a laundry wagon that will call and deliver your laundry twice a week. Laundry coming in as late as 'clock' Thursday morning will be deferred to you Saturday at 5 o'clock. E. W. McCollum. Teething Then the baby is most likely nervous, and fretful, and doesn't gain in weight. Scott's Emulsion is the best food and medicine for teething babies. They gain from the start. Send for a free sample. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, 409-415 Pearl Street, Soc. and $1.00; all druggists.