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anaheim-gazette 1902-07-17

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Anaheim VOLUME XXXII. DR. F. H. HOUCK DENTIST. OFFICE NEXT DOOR to P. O. (Federman Block, upstairs.) HOURS 9 to 5 ANAHEIM CAL. jy15tf G. S. EDDY, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Telephone, Main 75... OFFICE—Center street, opposite City Hall. 10 A.M. to 11 A.M. Office Hours 2 P.M. to 4 P.M. 7 P.M. to 8 P.M., evenings. Residence—Corner Center and Palm streets. ANAHEIM CAL. HERBERT JOHNSTON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office and Residence: Corner of Broadway and Los Angeles St.. Telephone 666... 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 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 Agent AACHEN & MUNICH FIRE INSURANCE CO. of Germany, and the AETNA LIFE & ACCIDENT INSURANCE CO. of Hartford. (Chartered in Fullerton Machine Shops J. F. HILTSCHER & CO., Proprietors Casolene 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 Anaheim Bakery, PETER SYRE, PROPRIETOR. FRESH BREAD CAKES & PIE 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 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 & Cigarettes Pool & Billiard Tables Schindler's Building, Center St., Anaheim LOS ANGELES BEER ON DRAUGHT. J.M. Griffith Company Anaheim Bakery, PETER SYRE, PROPRIETOR. FRESH BREAD CAKES & PIPE CONFECTIONERY, ETC. Wedding Cakes a Specialty. Los Angeles and Cypress NO SACRIFICE OF ANY ESSENTIAL COMFORT AND THE COST OF AN EASTERN TRIP LESSENED BY USE OF TOURIST SLEEPING CARDS PERSONALLY CONDUCTED ED MONDAYS, THURSDAYS AND SATURDAYS. Santa Fe The best and up-to-date Livery turnouts City Livery Stables EDWARD A. ZEUS, Proprietor. The Place to Buy Your Stationery and Boo Confectionrey and Notice And articles that you need almost every day in the year, is at x 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. C.F. GRIM, Agent. F. BACKS, UNDERTAKER And Dealer in FURNITURE. Wall Paper, Cornices, Window Shades, Plature Frames, Upholstery Goods, Paints, Oils and Glass Sewing Machine Supplies, Etc. For 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 Daily.....9:49 am Daily.....4:22 pm Daily.....6:06 pm Pass Loara Station: To Los Angeles. Daily.....7:56 am Daily.....9:45 am Daily.....4:27 pm Daily.....5:59 pm LOS ALAMITOS TRAINS. Leave Anaheim—Arrive Anaheim— 9:35 am 8:00 am 2:07 pm 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 8:08 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—7:56 am 9:57 am *11:48 am; 5:06 pm To San Diego—9 m*3:07 pm. To Redlands—*11:31 am. To Riverside and San Bernardino—*11:31 am; 5:54 pm. 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—7:56 am; 9:57 am; *11:48 am; 5:06 pm. To Escondido—*4:07 pm. To Palbrook—*9:35 am; To Redondo—7:56 am; 9:57 am; *11:48 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 1881 SUBSCRIPTION, - $1.50 Per Month Six months....Three months....Payable invariably in advance. Transient advertising rates, $1 per month. The GAZETTE is issued every Thursday. Entered at the Anaheim Postoffice on-class matter. Notice to Creditor Estate of C. A. STREHLE, DECEMBER 18, 1902. Notice is hereby given by the signed administrator of the estate of Strehle, deceased, to the creditors of persons having claims against the said ceased, to exhibit the same, with the sary vouchers, within four months after first publication of this notice, to the administrator, at the office of Richard M. Center street, Anaheim, California, that being the place for the transaction business of said estate in the county Orange. Dated this 20th day of June, A.D. 1902. Administrator of the estate of C.A.B. deceased. Richard Melrose, attorney for a trator. JOSEPH BACKS Undertaker and Emballage in Furniture and Bedding Repairing Done. The Pure Bred Percheron SHOW will make the season of 1902 at JOHN HAHN'S LIVERY STABLE ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA. TERMS FOR SEASON-$10. Usual return ileges. ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, JULY 17, 1902. PROPERTY OR TRADE you want to buy a place, list with enckert BUSINESS AGENT First Third St., Los Angeles County Property POSITIONS IN ANCE, or write and I will call. D.O. of Hartford. (Chartered in 1830) ine Shops D., Proprietors and Repaired umping Plants Gasoline Engines GUARANTEE OUR WORK Bakery, OPRIETOR. Editorial Note and Comment To say there are no Republicans in Orange county who have not identified themselves with the Otis-Bulla-McFadden push in the efforts of that gang of bosses to defeat Gage for renomination, would be probably untrue. Jim McFadden, the Santa Ana boss, returned from Washington on Friday afternoon, grip in one hand, duster in the other, and the Santa Ana postmastership safely tucked away in his inside pocket. On arrival he went immediately into conference with his man Friday Shaw and Buck Wallace. Later he walked down the street, looking complacently to right and left as though he had a chattel mortgage on the town. Since his return I hear efforts have been made to organize an anti-Gage sentiment in the county, and, they tell me, delegates have been actually picked out in various precincts to be selected for the state convention for Tommy Flint. Fullerton has one and West Anaheim, so they tell me, another. Coming close to us, eh? Heigho! but we shall have some fun primary day. STEVE KELLY, the San Bernardino man whose eye was put out some CHARLEY NORMAN, the West End road boss, was in Los Angeles the other evening on his way home after seeing the sights in the Angelic burg. He was at the Arcade depot with a delegation of seven or eight West Anaheim boys, when who should come up but Gov. Gage, accompanied by Guy Barham. Charley shook hands with the Governor and introduced the West End delegation, and the boys all came home shouting the praises of the old man. The explosive Charley McKelvey has broken out in a new place. He is now of Los Angeles and the other day joined a club formed by Flint supporters. Of course McKelvey is a candidate. We never had a campaign in Orange county, during his residence here, but he was up for one office or another. He couldn't get anything, so he moved to Los Angeles. And he promptly blossoms out as a candidate. Of course he won't get the nomination—he couldn't be elected if he did. The Seventh district congressional convention will be held in Pasadena August 16th. We commend this action to the Eighth district committee. Let us hold our convention in our own district somewhere, and before the state convention. We want no state trades or complications in our congressional fight.—Redlands alleged anti-push paper. Go to, thou worse than fool! Dost not know we no Eighth district. ART TREASURES OF FLORIDA Magnificent Galleries of Costumes—The Bridge Which Sends the Arno BY FRANCIS E. CLARK, [CONTRIBUTED TO THE GAZE] The Tuscan city of Florida many respects the most interest all Europe, since it combines which appeal to the antiquarian historian, and the lover of nature. Here Daud wrote; here the greatest owl and sculptors wrought their works; here Savonarola tries against the evils of his times; in the busiest square of Florida was strangled and then buried years ago. Today, as always cases, the children garnish them of the prophets whom their stoned, and Savonarola, though hunged and burned more than centuries ago, is still the domesticate in Florence; and the little cloisters of San Marco lived and prayed and wrote about thousands and thousands of every year. How completely have his been fulfilled! When the public officiated at his execution proclaimed an anathema upon him because patriotic heresies, he said, "I amate you forever from the church titan and the church triumph." From the church militia sponded Savonario with his breath, "but not from the chumphant." These centurials rolled away, and each one has sized more clearly than the last. STEVE KELLY, the San Bernardino man whose eye was put out some time ago in his efforts to get a neckhold on John Lynch's political job in San Francisco, was in Santa Ana the other day and simultaneously therewith the rumor spread that Gov. Gage was about to "withdraw from the race," and that Orange county had best get behind Flint. Whether Kelly started this story on its rounds I do not know, nor care, but one hears it occasionally on the "extreme q. t." as it were. That there is not a word of truth in the statement, it is hardly necessary to say, but I merely report it as it shows the despicable methods of the McFadden-Otis gang to carry their infamous program into practice. The first man to be seen by this coterie of bosses was my friend Greeley, who has been making quite a promising run for Superintendent of Public Instruction. The information was imparted to him that if he could get a "trading delegation" from Orange county, with Flint as their choice, he would stand a show of getting San Bernardino's vote in the convention. I doubt not the San Bernardino story, that Gage contemplated "withdrawing," was sprung upon him, but if Greeley has permitted himself to be caught with such abject chaff as that, he had better clear the scales from his optics and stand at "as you were." As a matter of fact Greeley's show of securing the nomination is good—has all along been good. But he will irrefriably wreck his political fortune if he listens to such discarded political hacks as Kelly of San Berdoo and Jim McFadden of Newport Beach. Mark what I tell you. Orange county feels kindly toward Greeley, but if he has been so foolish as to permit himself to become a catspaw in the hands of these political organ-grinders, with their little tin cups eternally out for something for themselves, he has made a mistake, which if persisted in will inevitably put him out of the breastworks. Orange county has been kind to Greeley. Since the time, many years ago, when he came in out of the tall grass over Placentia way, have been made to organize an anti-Gage sentiment in the county, and, they tell me, delegates have been actually picked out in various precincts to be selected for the state convention for Tommy Flint. Fullerton has one and West Anaheim, so they tell me, another. Coming close to us, eh? Heigho! but we shall have some fun primary day. The Seventh district congressional convention will be held in Pasadena August 16th. We commend this action to the Eighth district committee. Let us hold our convention in our own district somewhere, and before the state convention. We want no state trades or complications in our congressional fight.—Redlands alleged anti-push paper. Go to, thou worse than fool! Dost not know we have no Eighth district committee this year? Haist not heard the call for the congressional convention emanates from the state committee, and delegates to the state convention are credentialed as delegates to the congressional convention also, and bidden to report in meeting at the town of Sacramento? Hast not heard reasons therefor by the score? "State trades and combinations!" Canst hear of nothing in politics without imputing unworthy motives to men vastly thy superiors, who are not in politics, as thou fain would be, in quest of a fat office? Go to! Inform thyself ere seeking to pass judgment upon men whose very names are a bond of integrity, veterans in the service of their party, and, singularly as it may seem to you, not in search of an office? Go to, go to! The Republican county convention of Kern elected a solid Gage delegation to the state convention and at the same time gave Senator Smith, who has been depending on the Flint faction to back his congressional aspirations, a distinct setback. Senator Smith surrendered to the Gage faction early the morning of the convention upon the condition that A.C.Maude would not be a delegate to the state convention. Maude, however, ran as a delegate-at-large and was elected by a sweeping majority. This spoils the solid delegation which Smith expected to take to the state convention to back his fight for the congressional nomination. Maude is openly anti-Smith and as he is one of the most popular men in his section of the state the nomination of Smith by the Republican convention appears improbable. The mistake made by Smith was getting out for Flint; this is what has killed him. Had he advocated Gage he would have gone to the state convention with a solid delegation and probably carried off the honors. Although Smith now denies that he was an advocate of Flint, it is an assured fact that before the recent primary election he was working for Flint's benefit. The Seventh district congressional convention will be held in Pasadena August 16th. We commend this action to the Eighth district committee. Let us hold our convention in our own district somewhere, and before the state convention. We want no state trades or complications in our congressional fight.—Redlands alleged anti-push paper. Go to, thou worse than fool! Dost not know we have no Eighth district committee this year? Haist not heard the call for the congressional convention emanates from the state committee, and delegates to the state convention are credentialed as delegates to the congressional convention also, and bidden to report in meeting at the town of Sacramento? Hast not heard reasons therefor by the score? "State trades and combinations!" Canst hear of nothing in politics without imputing unworthy motives to men vastly thy superiors, who are not in politics, as thou fain would be, in quest of a fat office? Go to! Inform thyself ere seeking to pass judgment upon men whose very names are a bond of integrity, veterans in the service of their party, and, singularly as it may seem to you, not in search of an office? Go to, go to! The Republican county convention of Kern elected a solid Gage delegation to the state convention and at the same time gave Senator Smith, who has been depending on the Flint faction to back his congressional aspirations, a distinct setback. Senator Smith surrendered to the Gage faction early the morning of the convention upon the condition that A.C.Maude would not be a delegate to the state convention. Maude, however, ran as a delegate-at-large and was elected by a sweeping majority. This spoils the solid delegation which Smith expected to take to the state convention to back his fight for the congressional nomination. Maude is openly anti-Smith and as he is one of the most popular men in his section of the state the nomination of Smith by the Republican convention appears improbable. The mistake made by Smith was getting out for Flint; this is what has killed him. Had he advocated Gage he would have gone to the state convention with a solid delegation and probably carried off the honors. Although Smith now denies that he was an advocate of Flint, it is an assured fact that before the recent primary election he was working for Flint's benefit. The Seventh district congressional convention will be held in Pasadena August 16th. We commend this action to the Eighth district committee. Let us hold our convention in our own district somewhere, and before the state convention. We want no state trades or complications in our congressional fight.—Redlands alleged anti-push paper. Go to, thou worse than fool! Dost not know we have no Eighth district committee this year? Haist not heard the call for the congressional convention emanates from the state committee, and delegates to the state convention are credentialed as delegates to the congressional convention also, and bidden to report in meeting at the town of Sacramento? Hast not heard reasons therefor by the score? "State trades and combinations!" Canst hear of nothing in politics without imputing unworthy motives to men vastly thy superiors, who are not in politics, as thou fain would be, in quest of a fat office? Go to! Inform thyself ere seeking to pass judgment upon men whose very names are a bond of integrity, veterans in the service of their party, and, singularly as it may seem to you, not in search of an office? Go to, go to! The Republican county convention of Kern elected a solid Gage delegation to the state convention and at the same time gave Senator Smith, who has been depending on the Flint faction to back his congressional aspirations, a distinct setback. Senator Smith surrendered to the Gage faction early the morning of the convention upon the condition that A.C.Maude would not be a delegate to the state convention. Maude, however, ran as a delegate-at-large and was elected by a sweeping majority. This spoils the solid delegation which Smith expected to take to the state convention to back his fight for the congressional nomination. Maude is openly anti-Smith and as he is one of the most popular men in his section of the state the nomination of Smith by the Republican Convention appears improbable. The mistake made by Smith was getting out for Flint; this is what has killed him. Had he advocated Gage he would have gone to the state convention with a solid delegation and probably carried off the honors. Although Smith now denies that he was an advocate of Flint, it is an assured fact that before the recent primary election he was working for Flint's benefit. The Seventh district congressional convention will be held in Pasadena August 16th. We commend this action to the Eighth district committee. Let us hold our convention in our own district somewhere, and before the state convention. We want no state trades or complications in our congressional fight.—Redlands alleged anti-push paper. Go to, thou worse than fool! Dost not know we have no Eighth district committee this year? Haist not heard the call for the congressional convention emanates from the state committee, and delegates to the state conference are credentialed as delegates to the congressional conference also, and bidden to report in meeting at the town of Sacramento? Hast not heard reasons therefor by the score? "State trades and combinations!" Canst hear of nothing in politics without imputing unworthy motives to men vastly thy superiors, who are not in politics, as thou fain would be, in quest of a fat office? Go to! Inform thyself ere seeking to pass judgment upon men whose very names are a bond of integrity, veterans in the service of their party, and, singularly as it may seem to you, not in search of an office? Go to, go to! The Republican county convention of Kern elected a solid Gage delegation to the state conference and at the same time gave Senator Smith, who has been depending on the Flint faction to back his congressional aspirations, a distinct setback. Senator Smith surrendered to the Gage faction early the morning of the conference upon the condition that A.C.Maude would not be a delegate to the state conference. Maude, however, ran as a delegate-at-large and was elected by a sweeping majority. This spoils the solid delegation which Smith expected to take to the state conference back his fight for the congressional nomination. Maude is openly anti-Smith and as he is one of the most popular men in his section of the state the nomination of Smith by the Republican Convention appears improbable. The mistake made by Smith was getting out for Flint; this is what has killed him. Had he advocated Gage he would have given an opportunity its delicate marble traceries; but tothe church triumph; "Fromthe church militia sponded Savonario with his breath," "but not fromthe church umphant." These centurials rolled away,and each one has sized more clearly thanthe last that this hero and martyrbe onlytothe church triumph; buttothe churchof every creed below;that recognizepremacyof conscience,andcauseanddevotiontothe truth. Inthe centerofthe squarehewas burneda great bronze plaquepavement marksthe spot,andbyhundredsofreverentfee fear,bythundredsof irreverentcarelessoneseveryday. ITSGREATWORKSOFA Florence,theoosisprobablythecityintheworldinworksforsarethegreatPittiandUffizilwiththeirpricelesstreasuresinglepicturesbeingworthymansomsoormanyperhapsitwouldproperinthesedaystosay,aarysransom.Herethegreatofmodernart,Cimabueandmanyothers,didtheirbethanddevotiontothetruth. "Thecharacteristicsofbepower,"saysRuskin,"occurslessin differentbuildings,solidsandsomeinanother;butallandallinthehighestpossibledegrees,theystexist,sowknowonlyinonebuildingworld,thecampanileofGlottie. IdonotthinkthatRuskinbeeninIndia,或hadseenMahal,thewonderfultombwhijehanbuiltinmemoryofhis wife.Perhapshewouldhavehisjudgmentifhehadseenwonderfulofarchitecturalbehaviororatleasthavelimitedit,thethatGiotto'stowerwas-thedwarfpieceofarchitectureEurope,intwhichhewouldhavebeenunqualifiedlyright. Thisgreatbell-towerlinessthreehundredfeetinheightbuiltinfourstories,andisnificentlydecoratedwithcoloblesandbas-rellefs.Butnoformationunaccompaniedbycolorsgraphscanpossiblygiveandsymmetryitsimposingcharactersdelicatemarbletraceries;combinedtoimpressthebehindthethoughtthatheislookmagnificentjewelofpreciousItisfineasitisstately.asc Orange county has been kind to Greeley. Since the time, many years ago, when he came in out of the tall grass over Placentia way, and stood for county school superintendent, the party has stood loyally back of him. To be sure the party bucked a bit in the last convention, when an unknown man ran a neck-and-neck race with him for the nomination, and only lost it by a handfull of votes at the showdown. Yet the party stands by him loyally when, having held the county office for a dozen years, he aspires to the higher honors and emoluments of a state office of widespread responsibilities and trust. I want to say that while it is perhaps true that Orange county has some Flint Republicans within its borders, the preponderating sentiment is for Gage—ten to one, yes a hundred to one. Greeley ought to know this, and knowing it, he ought to save his bacon by quitting his flirting with these political bosses who are going to be turned down flatter than a pancake in the convention—mark that. The Los Angeles Times is a great Republican newspaper, I don’t think. The other evening a two-by-six Flint club was organized in that town, and poor old Otis shouted himself liver red in the face about it. A few days afterward Kern county held its primaries. Otis had been claiming Kern for Flint, but when the county went solid for Gage, the old rooster never said a word about it in his newspaper, except to say “the gang claims Kern.” Republicans who want the news, don’t get it from Otis, unless he can color it to his liking. Otis is a squigicum-bingo. Here is a set of figures which an enthusiastic Gage boomer has prepared: Countles. Delegates. For Gage Alameda. 71. 35 Calaveras. 8. 8 Contra Costa. 11. 11 Glenn. 2. 2 Humboldt. 20. 20 Kern. 8. 8 Los Angeles. 96. 68 Mariposa. 3. 3 Nevada. 12. 12 Sacramento. 28. 28 San Francisco. 177. 150 San Joaquin. 18. 9 San Luis Obispo. 8. 8 Santa Barbara. 10. 10 Santa Clara. 37. 19 Santa Cruz. 11. 11 Shasta. 8. 8 Solana. 15. 15 Sonoma. 22. 15 Tuolumme. 7. 7 Totals: 572. 447 The Governor in addition to the foregoing list expects to get the 5 votes of Kings, 11 of Orange, 12 of Riverside and 16 of San Bernardino. It will take 415 votes to nominate. Walter Parker, one of Gage’s faithful supporters at Los Angeles, says he is certain of sweeping the home county for the Governor. Flint does not admit utter defeat there, but concedes Gage at least half the vote. The hand of the Triumvirate is seen on the horizon of Orange county, no larger than Jinral Otis’ whiskers, so to speak. The old man is in a sweat to draw an anti-Gage delegation from this county out of the political lottery. Delegates have been selected, so ’tis whispered, and a still hunt is to be inaugurated in their behalf. As the Jinral would say, Huh! This great bell-tower is three hundred feet in height built in four stories, and is not significantly decorated with cobbles and bas-reliefs. But no tension unaccompanied by colour graphs can possibly give an symmetry, its imposing charge its delicate marble traceries, combine to impress the beholder thought that he is looming magnificent jewel of precloak. It is fine as it is stately, as exalted it is massive, and combines no other building does, the grace and strength. ITS OLD BRIDGE. One of the structures which longest in the traveler’s mind is not the magnificent with their miles of costly roads nor the great black and white edal, nor even Giotto’s tower, but the old bridge where the rushing Arno and course two busiest sections of the city side of the river. A bridge here for two thousand years, finally rebuilt as it is today by Gaddi, one of the famous artists, who knew how to build as well as to paint pictures. By the way, it is worth noting these great men of Florence to turn their hands to any artist should call them Jacks of all day. Michael Angelo not one of the world’s most renowned sculptures and sculptured her blues, but built the walls some places, surround the once ence, and was not above dwell-curb for the monastery—a little out of the city. Giotto not only founded painting, but, as we have seen tower that is, after all these still the despair of architect over. There is an Italian which may be translated—“Round as the O of Glotto, d’ye Which means as well done as be.” Taddeo Gaddi also painted ful pictures whose value is beyond computation, and bridge five hundred years which countless millions of trod, and it is still as strong esque and beautiful as ever—the secret of their superb handiwork is this: that they could possibly Gazette. JULY 17, 1902. ART TREASURES OF FLORENCE Magnificent Galleries of Costly Paintings—The Bridge Which Spans the Arno BY FRANCIS E. CLARK, D. D. [CONTRIBUTED TO THE GAZETTE.] The Tuscan city of Florence is in many respects the most interesting in all Europe, since it combines elements which appeal to the antiquarian, the historian, and the lover of art, literature, and nature. Here Dante lived and wrote; here the greatest of painters and sculptors wrought their immortal works; here Savonarola thundered against the evils of his times; and here on the busiest square of Florence he was strangled and then burned 404 years ago. Today, as always in such cases, the children garnish the tombs of the prophets whom their fathers honored, and Savonarola, though he was dugged and burned more than four centuries ago, is still the dominant figure in Florence; and the little cells in the cloisters of San Marco where he lived and prayed and wrote are visited by thousands and thousands of pilgrims every year. How completely have his last words been fulfilled! When the priest who officiated at his execution pronounced the anathema upon him because of his patriotic heresies, he said, "We separate you forever from the church militant and the church triumphant." From the church militant," responded Savonarlo with his dying breath, "but not from the church triumphant." These centuries have rolled away, and each one has emphasized more clearly than the last fact as well as could possibly be done, every least task. They were not ashamed of the commonest things, and did with an artist's eye and appreciation of the beautiful humblest task. This, after all, is the great secret of success in any undertaking. MODERN LIFE OF FLORENCE. But this old bridge of Taddeo Gaddi is of as much interest to the student of life and manners and present-day problems as to the architect and the antiquarian. It is covered on each side with little booths, where for hundreds of years the jewellers have displayed their wares. It is a little town all by itself, where there is buying and selling and getting gain, haggling and bargaining and quarrelling in the harmlessly vociferous manner of Italians. It is not merely a connecting link between the two sides of the river, but it is a place where a man may live and move and have his being and get a genuine insight into the language and customs, the habits and eccentricities, the seamy side and the bright side of Italian life today, while underneath flows the Arno, yellow and turbid and turbulent after the spring rains, or dwindling away in the dry season to an insignificant brook brawling over the stones and sand. SOME NOTED GRAVES. Other spots of great interest to Americans are found in the tombs of the great men and women of the past. The church of Santa Croce is the Westminster Abbey of Italy. Here are buried Galileo and the father of the great astronomer as well, whose tomb in the floor now worn almost smooth by generations of passing feet is pronounced by Ruskin to be one of the OFFICIAL LIST OF CANDIDATES Names from Which the Intelligent Voter is Expected to Pick Winning Ticket The Republican county central committee met on Saturday and announced the following candidates for county office to be entitled to have their names placed upon the official primary ballot: County clerk—W. A. Beckett. Auditor—S. W. Munger, J. H. Hall, W. M. Smart. Judge of superior court—J. W. Ballard, Z. B. West. Coroner and public administrator—C. G. McKinley, George S. Smith. Sheriff—J. C. Nichols, John F. Snower, A. Meacham. Treasurer—W. G. Potter. Assessor—Henry Yount, Robert Flook, Frank Vegeley. Superintendent of schools—W. R. Carpenter, J. B. Nichols, M. S. Davis. Recorder—George E. Peters, Perry Lewis. Tax collector—A. Y. Wright, Edward W. Hardy. District attorney—R. Y. Williams, E. T. Langley. Surveyor—G. W. Sherwood. Assemblyman—D. W. Hasson, E. R. Amerige. Supervisors—First District: Frank Ey, F. P. Nickey, H. E. Smith. Second: J. Fulson, R. E. Larter Third: W. L. Hale, A. S. Bradford Fourth: D. A. McMullen Fifth: George W. Stevens, U. C. Holderman, W. Hoyle, G. H. Clark. Justices of the peace—F. Shanley, Anaheim; C. K. Ford, Fullerton; J. N., Lemon, Orange; Charles Chandler, Orange; George E. Freeman, Santa Ana; Josiah McCoy, Westminster; R.. In the center of the square where he was burned a great bronze plate in the pavement marks the spot, and is crossed by hundreds of reverent feet, and I year, by thousands of irreverent and careless ones every day. ITS GREAT WORKS OF ART. Florence, too, is probably the richest city in the world in works of art. Here are the great Pitti and Uffizi galleries, with their priceless treasures, many single pictures being worth a king's ransom, or perhaps it would be more proper in these days to say, a missionary's ransom. Here the great pioneers of modern art, Cimabue and Glotto and many others, did their best work; and here their greatest pictures are preserved. Here is the magnificent cathedral and the old baptistery whose bronze doors Michael Angelo said were worthy to be the gates of heaven itself." Here, too, is the most beautiful architectural work in all Europe, the campanile or bell-tower of Giotto, which stands beside the cathedral, though separated from it. "The characteristics of beauty and power," says Ruskin, "occur more or less in different buildings, some in one and some in another; but all together, and all in their highest possible relative degrees, they exist, so far as I know, only in one building in the world, the campanile of Giotto." I do not think that Ruskin had ever been in India, or had seen the Taj Mahal, the wonderful tomb which Shah Jahan built in memory of his beautiful wife. Perhaps he would have modified his judgment if he had seen this most wonderful of architectural creations, or at least have limited it, and said that Giotto's tower was the most wonderful piece of architectural art in Europe, in which he would doubtless have been unqualifiedly right. This great bell-tower is nearly three hundred feet in height. It is built in four stories, and is most magnificently decorated with colored marbles and bas-reliefs. But no description unaccompanied by colored photographs can possibly give an idea of its symmetry, its imposing character, and its delicate marble traceries, which all combine to impress the beholder with the thought that he is looking at a magnificent jewel of precious stones. It is fine as it is stately, as exquisite as Smith seems to have encountered a bad case of chilblains up in Kern, and his walk is characterized by a list to starboard, quite noticeable to the naked eye. Shifted his cargo, as it were. The congressional situation seems simmered down to Daniels and Nutt. Should the latter get away with the San Diego pri E. T. Langley. Surveyor—G. W. Sherwood. Assemblyman—D. W. Hasson, E. R. Amerige. Supervisors—First District: Frank Ey, F. P. Nickey, H. E. Smith. Second: J. Fulsom, R. E. Larter. Third: W. L. Hale, A. S. Bradford. Fourth: D. A. McMullen. Fifth: George W. Stevens, U. C. Holderman, W. Hoyle, G. H. Clark. Justices of the peace—F. Shanley, Anaheim; C. K. Ford, Fullerton; J. N., Lemon, Orange; Charles Chandler, Orange; George E. Freeman, Santa Ana; Josiah McCoy, Westminster; R. P. Marquez, Yorba. Constables—J. W. Watts, F. M. Snee, Los Alamitos; S. O. Llewellyn, Anaheim; H. A. Miller, Orange; Lafayette Flood, Sidney Smithwick, Santa Ana. FINANCIAL CONDITIONS SATISFACTORY K. G. Dun & Co.'s Monthly Review of Trade Conditions for June in Southern California. Financial conditions throughout the country are exceptionally satisfactory; trade is well maintained. Manufacturing activities increased for the month especially in the iron and steel industry. Crop prospects show no important change. Money is easy. Railroad earnings show increase over last year. In our immediate district interest now centers in the deciduous fruit crop. The output will exceed any of past few years. Unseasonably cool weather has retarded the maturing of fruit about three weeks. The canneries and dryers are new busy, however, with apricots and peaches will come about last week of present month. Apricots this year vary greatly in size and quality, the more inferior bring about $10 a ton. Sugar beets are doing well. Harvest will begin about 15th of this month. It is estimated that 250,000 tons will be sliced at Oxnard and 90,000 at Chino during the season. Bean crop of Ventura is in fair condition. Output will be considerably less than last year; 350,000 bags as against 575,000 bags last season. Celery planting has begun. In Orange county about 1800 acres will be put to this vegetable. The returns from celery crop the past season was comparatively smallest ever noted in history of industry. Growers have arranged for coming season different system of marketing. The outlook for maturing of present orange crop is not as encouraging as those interested in the citrus fruit industry would wish. Fruit is falling from trees in almost every section. The consensus of opinion seems to be that the crop will be lighter than for several seasons past. The season's output just closed was less by 5,000 carloads than the one preceding, but prices were uniformly good. The fruit was so handled as to avoid any great gluts on slumps in the eastern markets. The walnut crop will fall short, and growers are talking 12 cents for No. 1 nuts this year. Condition of grape crop now seems to insure large product of raisins. One of the structures which lingers longest in the traveler's mind in Florence is not the magnificent galleries with their miles of costly paintings, nor the great black and white cathedral, nor even Giotto's wonderful tower, but the old bridge which spans the rushing Arno and connects the two busiest sections of the city on either side of the river. A bridge has existed here for two thousand years, but it was finally rebuilt as it is today by Taddeo Gaddi, one of the famous early Italian artists, who knew how to build bridges as well as to paint pictures. By the way, it is worth noting how these great men of Florence were able to turn their hands to anything. We should call them Jacks of all trades today. Michael Angelo not only painted one of the world's most renowned pictures and sculptured her finest marbles, but built the walls that still, in some places, surround the city of Florence, and was not above designing a well-curb for the monastery of Castosa, a little out of the city. Giotto not only founded a school of painting, but, as we have seen, built a tower that is, after all, these centuries, still the despair of architects the world over. There is an Italian proverb which may be translated— "Round as the O of Glotto, d'ye see! Which means as well done as a thing could be." Taddeo Gaddi also painted wonderful pictures whose value is now almost beyond computation, and he built a bridge five hundred years ago over which countless millions of feet have trod, and it is still as strong, as picturesque and beautiful as ever. I suppose the secret of their superb and eternal handiwork is this: that they did as well as they could possibly do, perhaps lovely place in the world for his countrymen, or for those who speak his common mother English, to find their last long home than in this beautiful "God's acre" in Italy's most historic city. Smith seems to have encountered a bad case of chilblains up in Kern, and his walk is characterized by a list to starboard, quite noticeable to the naked eye. Shifted his cargo, as it were. The congressional situation seems simmered down to Daniels and Nutt. Should the latter get away with the San Diego primaries and come with a delegation close up to the Governor's band wagon, he would win the sweepstakes and Daniels will be boloed again. Sure as shootin! Repulsive Features Blackheads, pimples, greasy faces and muddy complexions, which are so common among women, especially girls at a certain age, destroying beauty, disgusting 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. Use Allen's Foot-Ease in Your Gloves. A lady writes: "I shake Allen's Foot-Ease into my gloves and rub a little on my hands. It saves my gloves by absorbing perspiration. It is most daunting toilet powder." We invite the attention of physicians and nurses to the absolute purity of Allen's Foot-Ease. Dr. W. C. Abbott, editor of the Chicago Clinic says: "It is a grand preparation; I am using it constantly in my own practice." All drug and shoe stores sell it, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, New York. Go to E. W. McCollum for bicycles, bicycle supplies and bicycle repairing. Our repair shop is in charge of one of the best bicycle men on the coast. Try us on repairs. Sporting goods of all kinds, baseball goods, lawn tennis goods, footballs, boxing-gloves and ping-pong, the latest fad. Santa Ana Steam Laundry Agency I run a laundry wagon that will call for and deliver your laundry twice a week. Laundry coming in as late as 9 o'clock Thursday morning will be delivered to you Saturday at 5 o'clock. E. W. McCollum. Wanted to Sell. Five-foot Killifer cultivator. Cheap for cash. Apply to R. Fossick. may8-tf For Sale. Seventy-five cords of stovewood, one surrey one phaeton, one buggy, one three-gang plow. JOHN HANNA, f20-tf Miraflores. DOCTORS say "Consumption can be cured." Nature alone won't do it. It needs help. Doctors say "Scott's Emulsion is the best help." But you must continue its use even in hot weather. If you have not tried it, send for free sample. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, 409-415 Pearl Street, New York. 5cc. and $1.00; all druggist.