anaheim-gazette 1902-07-17
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The Santa Ana Herald—fit apologist for the political mess of the "Crawford system" which now confronts the Republican party on the eve of its nominating convention—says, in arguing for a change in the wording of the primary test, that "when the provisions of the new system are better understood," it will favor a return to the test which the county committee discarded the other day. The "provisions" of the system are so well known at the present time that, for the good of the party, we hope the convention will send it up skyrocketing higher than gilderoy's kite, and all the gangsters with it who fastened it upon the party—for no other reason in the world than that they might by and through it filch from the party a nomination which they could not by any means secure from a delegate convention. Those conversant with the true political situation are outspoken against the system which a coterie of office-seekers fastened upon the party for their own, not the party's good. Let it be abolished before given another opportunity of working mischief in the party. Out with it.
JUDGE BALLARD of the Superior court was in town on Tuesday, accompanied by Dr. Hill. The Judge had intended making no canvass for renomination to the office he now holds, deeming it best to keep the ermine as far removed as possible from the torments of petty politics. That he has been dissuaded from his object of which was practically to nullify the process of Judge Downing's court, Spreckels hastens with an appeal to the Supreme court of the State. Chief Justice Beatty convenes the court in immediate session, and the judges unanimously uphold Judge Cook in the legality of his decision. Spreckels thereupon shifts the scene of his action to the Circuit court of the United States. He petitions Judge Morrow for a writ identical in its purpose with that which Judge Cook had the day before dismissed, and Judge Morrow promptly decides against him. The wandering libeler then, what with the power of his money-bags, takes an appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States, hoping thereby to ward off the inevitable blow of justice until such moment as may permit his indecent campaign of falsification and mendacity to exercise its sinister effect upon the political situation in this State.
It is proper to say that when Gov. Gage, exercising his constitutional right in bringing his action against Spreckels for criminal libel in Judge Downing's court, Spreckels, artful dodger that he is, immediately set about to have the case heard in Judge Fritz's court in San Francisco. Fritz acknowledges his lack of jurisdiction, when Spreckels, still bewailing his anxiety for a "speedy trial," and proclaiming in screaming headlines in his paper that "he is ready to proceed with the hearing of the case," sets about in a characteristic way to cumber the record in an effort to put off the hearing of the case to a date as remote in the future as possible. He employs one Boardman to bring, in Fritz's court, an action for criminal libel against him identical in terms to that instituted by the Governor in Downing's court.
as a possibility, under the present board.
Placed by the whirligig of water politics in control of the engineering work of the company, he sees, in an instant as it were, this great work in an entirely new light—in the light, in a word, in which his associates saw it when, acting upon the advice of other engineers, they purchased the site at an expenditure of $5000.
Now, being in control of the work, wherein his salary as engineer may mount up into thousands of dollars, he "sees no reason why a safe dam cannot be constructed at this place, if a proper foundation is made in the above mentioned stratum of bluish clay."
But as to the particularity of the report, or its lack of it. We incline to the opinion of this stockholder, that if the company had no more authoritative data upon which to base their decision than that which Mr. Sherwood offers in his report, it had best not build the reservoir at all. The report seems to take it for granted that another report, more in detail and dealing with the work in a manner commensurate with its importance, was already on file with the board, to which reference might be made as required. And such is in very deed the case. There are maps and charts and drawings showing the dam, the "cross-section," the "contour" and other things to defeat the orchestra.
Mr. Sherwood proceeds at length to expatiate upon the methods by which he arrives at his wheelabout conclusion. He says:
Borings were begun on June 3rd and prosecuted continuously until July 2nd. The tools used were a two-inch and a three-inch ordinary augur, welded on three-quarter-inch black pipe. The augur was screwed into the ground with an ordinary pipe wrench for a foot or more, and then withdrawn and the adhering material removed. In dry ground a little water was poured into hole to make the material adhere
JUDGE BALLARD of the Superior court was in town on Tuesday, accompanied by Dr. Hill. The Judge had intended making no canvass for renomination to the office he now holds, deeming it best to keep the ermine as far removed as possible from the torments of petty politics. That he has been dissuaded from his high resolve is due to the circulation of mendacious reports about him—whence they come he does not know. At the urgent request of friends he has resolved to visit some of the larger precincts of the county—lack of time, coupled with his official duties, will prevent him from visiting all. While in town he was met by a number of friends and the situation discussed.
We have said before, as we say again, that Judge Ballard is an upright, conscientious and absolutely incorruptible judge, who dignifies the bench, and against whom the vile tongue of slander cannot wag without calling out his friends in legions to resent it. His decisions have been founded in the law, and he has tempered his justice with a merciful regard for all the facts in the case.
It would be a great political mistake not to renominate him.
SARSAPARILLA PSHAW, being roused from his kennel by the return of his keeper from Washington, whines in the McFadden Budget:
"The bosses claim the 11 votes of Orange county for Gage. Who promised them to him, and can they deliver the goods?"
Well, now, sonny, Jim McFadden didn't promise them to Gage, for he had already performed that office for Tom Flint—he and Raggedy Wickham, who came down from Los Angeles hanging to Flint's coattails boasting of his ability to "swing the Orange county delegation" to him, when, as a matter of fact he left the county under such a cloud people merveled at his abnormal nerve at returning.
No one has "promised the vote" of Orange county to Gage—no one has that authority, so far as we have heard. But that Gage is the choice of nine-tenths and more of the Republicans of Orange county, a trip through the various precincts will amply demonstrate. One gets rather an imperfect idea of how the political wind is blowing while remaining in the kennel. There, amid the bleached bones and the Sarsaparilla Person, it may look like Flint, espe-
A STOCKHOLDER in the water company writes to point out the woeful lack of particularity in Mr. Sherwood's report finally approving the Yorba reservoir site, which, but for his antagonism of it, must now have been actively under construction, if not indeed completed, sending forth of jurisdiction, when Sherwood bewailing his anxiety for a "speedy trial," and proclaiming in screaming headlines in his paper that "he is ready to proceed with the hearing of the case," sets about in a characteristic way to cumber the record in an effort to put off the hearing of the case to a date as remote in the future as possible. He employs one Boardman to bring, in Fritz's court, an action for criminal libel against him identical in terms to that instituted by the Governor in Downing's court! If this does not savor of opera bouffe with a vengeance, it is difficult to surmise what transaction could possibly attain to that station in the line of burlesque. But to those who know Spreckels this maze of absurdities seems characteristic of him. Like the ostrich which, when pursued, sticks its head in the sands, leaving its beautiful tail feathers exposed for the impending sprinkling of the hunter's salt, this unconscionable libeler is taking refuge in a house of cards that must inevitably fall upon his frail person and do him great bodily harm.
Could anything be plainer than that Spreckels in all this has shown his utter contempt for the courts of the state, which his millions seem for the time being to be able to set at naught? But that he will finally have to answer for his crimes is as true as that the night will be followed by the roseate splendors of the dawn. That this libeler is at fault in his contention for a writ whose immediate effect is to nullify the process of the properly constituted trial court for the hearing of this case, the unbroken line of the judges whose decisions have gone against him unerringly attests—Cook, Beatty, Macfarlane and the other Supreme court justices and Morrow. Final hearing may be delayed, but retribution must overtake this vicious millionaire libeler, whose money-bags are all that have thus far saved him from sentence to imprisonment. But the day is speeding when he must come to a full realization of the truth that the law can make no distinction between him and his money and the commonest libeler who cumbers the land—between him and, well, say Jiural Otis and Mike de Young.
We haven't the time to follow their report further; but we publish again this week, upon the four page, that our readers may understand just what Mr. Sherwood saw it to feel constrained to oppose before; no less than what he sees it now, Kellogg and his whistle having been summarily removed from the perspective, to feel him impelled to honor it with his aug approval. It makes interesting reading.
But if Mr. Sherwood's report is in giving particulars about this portant undertaking, there is a happily an abundance of that ready on file in the archives of company—facts aplenty, indeed all practical purposes, buttressed by endorsement of eminent author.
No one has "promised the vote" of Orange county to Gage—no one has that authority, so far as we have heard. But that Gage is the choice of nine-tenths and more of the Republicans of Orange county, a trip through the various precincts will amply demonstrate. One gets rather an imperfect idea of how the political wind is blowing while remaining in the kennel. There, amid the bleached bones and the Sarsaparilla Person, it may look like Flint, especially when McFadden is about. Outside, where men move and have their being, it looks very much like Gage.
As a matter of fact no one in this county has had the audacity to pose as one having control over the party but this selfsame McFadden, and that he is exercising his petty jealousy against the Governor in a feeble effort to accomplish the impossible task of sending Flint delegates to the state convention, and that he has already so "promised" them to the man from San Benito, we have not the least doubt. And when Sarsaparilla Pshaw, rising in his kennel, bays expression to his virtuous wrath at the idea of "the bosses" claiming the county for Gage; adding that the party will have something to say about that itself, we reply those same words have been given expression to before in referring to McFadden's promise to turn the county to Flint. The party has had quite enough of this old man of the sea McFadden. Let the primaries decide whether he owns the party as he does Sarsaparilla Pshaw, or whether (which we rather suspect is the case) he is nothing but a False Alarm.
Shouting his anxiety for a speedy trial in the libel case brought against him by Gov. Gage, Spreckels belies his words by hiking from court to court in a vain attempt to escape the chastening wrath that follows him like an avenging nemesis. Decided against by Judge Cook of the Superior court of San Francisco, on his petition for a writ of habeas corpus,
A stockholder in the water company writes to point out the woeful lack of particularity in Mr. Sherwood's report finally approving the Yorba reservoir site, which, but for his antagonism of it, must now have been actively under construction, if not indeed completed, sending forth its life-giving streams to the many parched acres whose occupants are even now crying out for lack of water. It is perhaps unnecessary for us to again point out the fact that to Mr. Sherwood's unrelenting antagonism to this magnificent enterprise, with which the welfare and material progress of the people of this valley are so interwoven, is the non-action of the board in the matter of its construction in large part due. He opposed the purchase of the site, which had been passed upon by eminent engineers and unqualifiedly pronounced a superb natural formation for the storage of water for irrigating purposes. Indeed, so advantageous was the location that, the report of these engineers showed, the cost of impounding water in it was placed at the nominal price of $80 an inch; while the value of water in different points in Southern California ranges from $1000 to $1500 per inch. Moreover it was shown that the volume of our water in the river which we had, from one cause or another, permitted to flow to waste, was sufficient to fill this contemplated reservoir, great as was its capacity, in one irrigating season five times over. It would seem that to a man of ordinary intelligence this great work of internal improvement would claim instant and unreserved approval. Not so Mr. Sherwood. Step by step he fought the work with a pertinacity worthy of a better cause, until in the end he had the enterprise in such lowly state there were few who regarded it even
But if Mr. Sherwood's report in giving particulars about this portant undertaking, there is no happily an abundance of that ready on file in the archives of company—facts aplenty, indeed all practical purposes, but tresses the endorsement of eminent neers. The possession of this makes this latest report quite necessary, however. We trust the good of the irrigators that essentials lacking in Mr. Sherwood report will give rise to no unnecessary clamor for "more data" on part of those who from one reorder another may oppose the reservation—if any such there be. Those sentials may be found in Mr. Lewis' report. Build the reservoir.
Perry Lewis, a young gentleman from Tustin, who is well spoken at home, and comes with the credentials as to character and city, aspires to the Republican nation for County Recorder. Lewis a gentleman of pleasant dress who has been filling the sponsible office of deputy assessors at Tustin district. He is just man one feels like throwing up hat for, in the event he secure nomination, and should he succeed in that coveted honor, his fief will whoop it up white for him today.
The San Diego Union has nerve to intimate that the O.C. county newspapers which are porting Gage have been "subdued." The statement is what might naturally expect from a national owned by Spreckels, who been pretty well exposed to the temptation of the people of the state believe, during the past few years, that he untrue, but the facts are that the only Repu-
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YUNGBLUTH & KROEGER
Carry a complete line of
Gents' Furnishings
Also a large line of
STRAW AND FELT HATS
IN THE LATEST STYLES
Suit Cases, Trunks, Valises and Telescopes
A full line of
Linen and Covert Cloth Dusters
paper in the county which is anti-Gage is notoriously subsidized. San Diego papers—the Union along with the rest of them—may know what a subsidy means, but here in Orange county, where we have known the Governor a quarter of a century, and like him better the more we see of him—here there is no need of such a thing.
The call for the Republican convention to assemble in this county August 12th will be found in another column. Read it, and vote at the primaries August 5th.
The Kings county Republican convention, in session at Hanford on Tuesday, endorsed Gov. Gage, and selected a solid delegation to the state convention for him.
DANGER INDOORS ON A SHIP.
Steamship and Battleship Bulkheads Not Worth as Much as They Seem.
On all first class passenger steamships and on all large warships a great percentage of the total cost is spent directly and indirectly on bulkheads or on what these bulkheads necessitate. No passenger would willingly make a voyage in a liner which was not known to
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS
Perry Lewis
of Tustin, candidate for Recorder
Subject to the decision of the Republican primaries to be held August 5, 1902.
James Sleeper
of Santa Ana, candidate for SHERIFF
Subject to the decision of the Democratic primaries.
J. H. Hall
(Incumbent) candidate for COUNTY AUDITOR
Subject to the decision of the Republican primaries to be held August 5, 1902.
A. Y. Wright
of Santa Ana, candidate for Tax Collector
Subject to the decision of the Republican primaries to be held August 5, 1902.
Henry Yount
of Santa Ana, candidate for COUNTY ASSESSOR
Subject to the decision of the Republican primaries to be held August 5, 1902.
CALL FOR REPUBLICAN PRIMARY ELECTION
Pursuant to a resolution of the Republic County Central committee.
Notice is hereby given that a primary election will be held in the various vow precincts in the county of Orange on Tuesday, the 6th day of August, 1902, between hours of 6 o'clock a.m., and 6 o'clock p.m. of said day, for the purpose of nominating Republican candidates to be voted for in each county on the 4th day of November, 1902.
1. One judge of the superior court.
2. One treasurer.
3. One county clerk.
4. One auditor.
5. One sheriff.
6. One tax collector.
7. One district attorney.
8. One recorder.
9. One assessor.
10. One surveyor.
11. One superintendent of schools.
12. One coroner and public administrator.
13. One assemblyman.
14. Five supervisors, one for each suvisorial district.
15. One justice of the peace and one stable for each judicial township.
The election shall at the same time be conducted by the number of delegates to be mentioned stratum of
DANGER INDOORS ON A SHIP.
Steamship and Battleship Bulkheads Not Worth as Much as They Seem.
On all first class passenger steamships and on all large warships a great percentage of the total cost is spent directly and indirectly on bulkheads or on what these bulkheads necessitate. No passenger would willingly make a voyage in a liner which was not known to have a cellular structure, and no government would think of building a battleship or cruiser without bulkheads. Yet it is a fact well known, at least to all seafaring men and shipbuilders, that these bulkheads, strong and perfect in themselves, are precisely as safe and efficient as the doors in them and not a whit more so.
The doors as at present constructed and operated are notoriously bad and dangerous. They have been the direct and known cause in the loss of many lives and many good ships and are doubtless chargeable with many more ships on the list of "missing and uncounted for." It is astonishing to the expert to see the general public and even seafaring men so ready to accept the prevailing superstition about the safety of bulkheads. The best possible bulkheads without equally good doors, operated on a safe system, are about as good as a chain with a link missing. The history of marine disaster has taught us this if it has taught us anything, and yet we go on crossing the Atlantic in liners of much vaunted safety and bragging about invulnerable battleships, apparently with implicit confidence in this bulkhead fetish.
There should be as few doors as possible, and some very able experts contend that there should be none. On the other hand, most captains and chief engineers say they must have doors. Manifestly the only way out of the difficulty is to get safe doors, safely operated. The number of watertight doors and batches on a first class battleship is over 350, and there are nearly 800 valves and gates connected with ventilating, draining and flooding the hull and involving the safety of the ship. It will therefore be seen that the systematic control and operation of these devices is a matter of no mean importance.
It takes about 110 men to look after these details alone in response to a collision alarm under the present conditions, and it is a matter of very grave doubt on the part of those best informed as to whether the supreme efforts of these 110 men can attend to doors, batches and valves quickly enough to save the ship—Gasler's Magazine.
A Great Polyglot.
Solomon Oscar Malan habitually conversed with his children in Latin, but on his deathbed, when Solomon, his son, began to recite a psalm in familiar Vulgate of his youth, the dying man, scholar to the last, muttered, "Non ita, non ital! Hebraica;" so the son repeated it in Hebrew.
He could, for that matter, just as well have said it in Coptic or Chinese, for to him all tongues came naturally. At 18 he could write in 18 languages, oriental and European, and among his little water was poured into a makeshift raft in loam or clay, but difficult to use through a considererum of sand, as it will neither fall to the augur or stand dilled with clay. These difficulties partially overcome by piece of casing as fast as the bored, and working inside it, containing boulders we were unable to penetrate, except by its interesting. Nothing here is ancient river plane which falls down upon the unoffending it two as with a cheese-jacket yet about the pinch of the burrow of the scamperrel, albeit of some distance from the site proper; nothere-glacial conditions the very ease of which tended to prove porroir site a sieve. All these mentions—all of them—seem to impinched out" abjectly—the shooting match.
Are glad Mr. Sherwood has these discoveries—glad of it, a little water had to be poured into the augur hole to facilitate ingering in dry places; for they known conclusively, to his mind that the deposit of blue which Mr. Kellogg said was really is there and no mistake it; although Mr. Sherwood is color a yellowish blue clay. Haven't the time to follow this further; but we publish it this week, upon the fourth that our readers may understand what Mr. Sherwood saw in feel constrained to oppose it; no less than what he sees in Kellogg and his whiskers has been summarily removed the perspective, to feel himself need to honor it with his August val. It makes interesting digg.
If Mr. Sherwood's report fails bring particulars about this impertinent undertaking, there is very likely an abundance of that already on file in the archives of the many—facts aplenty, indeed, for practical purposes, buttressed by endorsement of eminent engi-
The possession of this data
DANGER INDOORS ON A SHIP.
Steamship and Battleship Bulkheads Not Worth as Much as They Seem.
On all first class passenger steamships and on all large warships a great percentage of the total cost is spent directly and indirectly on bulkheads or on what these bulkheads necessitate. No passenger would willingly make a voyage in a liner which was not known to have a cellular structure, and no government would think of building a battleship or cruiser without bulkheads. Yet it is a fact well known, at least to all seafaring men and shipbuilders, that these bulkheads, strong and perfect in themselves, are precisely as safe and efficient as the doors in them and not a whit more so.
The doors as at present constructed and operated are notoriously bad and dangerous. They have been the direct and known cause in the loss of many lives and many good ships and are doubtless chargeable with many more ships on the list of "missing and uncounted for." It is astonishing to the expert to see the general public and even seafaring men so ready to accept the prevailing superstition about the safety of bulkheads. The best possible bulkheads without equally good doors, operated on a safe system, are about as good as a chain with a link missing. The history of marine disaster has taught us this if it has taught us anyting, and yet we go on crossing the Atlantic in liners of much vaunted safety and bragging about invulnerable battleships, apparently with implicit confidence in this bulkhead fetish.
There should be as few doors as possible, and some very able experts contend that there should be none. On the other hand, most captains and chief engineers say they must have doors. Manifestly the only way out of the difficulty is to get safe doors, safely operated. The number of watertight doors and batches on a first class battleship is over 350, and there are nearly 800 valves and gates connected with ventilating, draining and flooding the hull and involving the safety of the ship. It will therefore be seen that the systematic control and operation of these devices is a matter of no mean importance.
It takes about 110 men to look after these details alone in response to a collision alarm under the present conditions, and it is a matter of very grave doubt on the part of those best informed as to whether the supreme efforts of these 110 men can attend to doors, batches and valves quickly enough to save the ship—Gasler's Magazine.
A Great Polyglot.
Solomon Oscar Malan habitually conversed with his children in Latin, but on his deathbed, when Solomon, his son, began to recite a psalm in familiar Vulgate of his youth, the dying man, scholar to the last, muttered, "Non ita, non ital! Hebraica;" so the son repeated it in Hebrew.
He could, for that matter, just as well have said it in Coptic or Chinese, for to him all tongues came naturally. At 18 he could write in 18 languages, oriental and European, and among his little water was poured into a makeshift raft in loam or clay, but difficult to use through a considererum of sand or clay, but difficult to use through a considererum of sand or clay, but difficult to use through a considererum of sand or clay, but difficult to use through a considererum of sand or clay, but difficult to use through a considererum of sand or clay, but difficult to use through a considererum of sand or clay, but difficult to use through a considererum of sand or clay,
Attend to my order, sir. Include in your bill a carriage and an express wagon on transfer us and our things and tell Mr. Blondly when he comes in that he will find us at the other house where we will spend the rest of the season. Understand, we must go at once. I want to go to a hotel where it will be possible to warm some milk for baby before the little angel starves to death."
Then the loungers had fun with the clerk, and the best he must muster was a sickly grin—Buffalo News.
Zola's Proposed Lecture Tour.
It is reported that M. Zola has agreed to come to the United States and deliver about 15 lectures, relating probably to Anti-Semitism in France and to the trials of Dreyfus and himself. The arrangement is asserted to have been made with Mr. Edmund Gerson of New York and to have followed immediately upon the decision of French government to grant M. Zola an appeal from the sentence of imprisonment lately pronounced upon him. An interesting detail of this report is that a sum approaching $60,000 is promised to M. Zola for his visit. One could wish perhaps that that detail had been omitted. M. Zola would undoubtedly excite great interest here and would draw full houses, but he most interests Americans at present in his character, lately assumed, of patriot protest against prejudice and injustice, and interest based on grounds of that sort is hardly suitable for conversion into cash. It is possible now ever that his recent experiences have been costly, and that he has more than ordinary need of money—Harper's Weekly.
Not Used To Fragile Pieces.
Mrs. Housewife—Bridget, that is the seventh piece of china that you have broken within the last two days.
Bridget—I know, mum. At the last place where I wor-rked like folks never ate off of anything but good and silver—Somorville (Mass.) Journal.
A Bible is now in the possession of Forty-sextigrum of Massachusetts upon which Washington once took an oath of Masonry.
Can't Tell Their Husbands Apart.
Jim Hisoy, aged 48, is a prosperous grain dealer in Yale. He has a wife two sons and a daughter. Will Hisey, aged 48, his brother, lives at Sparta. He is also married. The two men are twins,and all through life have beenthe living duplicates of each other.So near alike are they even their wives cannot tell them apart. They dress alike,their voices are alike and their hair and moustaches have the same color and curls. When boys,they had to be tagged so that their parents and teachers would know the difference. When Jim gets a crick in the back.Will be liable to have the same complaint,and time.“She acts pretty hot.”
Pretty cold,a love affinity,dressed in bewitching style,here face flushed and her blue eyes throwing off sparks.“Make out our bill and receipt it at once,” she said as her dainty foot beat time on the marble tiling.
“Attend to my order,sir.Include in your bill a carriage and an express wagon on transfer us and our thingsand tell Mr.Blondlywhen he comes in that he will find us at the other housewhere we will spendthe 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A Great Polyglot.
Solomon Caesar Malan habitually conversed with his children in Latin, but on his deathbed, when Solomon, his son, began to recite a psalm in the familiar Vulgate of his youth, the dying man, scholar to the last, muttered, "Non ita, non itali Hebraice;" so the son repeated it in Hebrew.
He could, for that matter, just as well have said it in Coptic or Chinese, for to him all tongues came naturally. At 18 he could write in 18 languages, oriental and European, and among his published works we find translations from the Arabic, Persian, Syriac, Ethiopic, Hebrew, Coptic, Armenian, Georgian, Mongol, Chinese, Korean, Japanese, Greek, Russian, Welsh and Gothic. He is said to have learned to speak Armenian fluently in a fortnight, and he preached in Georgian to a Georgian congregation in the cathedral of Kutais—Saturday Review.
Saluted the Short Skirt.
The rainy day skirt has been accorded a lordly salute, and by one of Boston's most dignified and best known citizens, says the Boston Herald.
Not long ago, when the rain had been falling for over 24 hours and the street and crosswalks were in such a shape as to well nigh ruin an ordinary dress skirt unless the wearer held it up nearly to the knee, one of Boston's well known women, dressed in a neat and well fitting rainy day costume, was returning from the Old Colony station, after bidding goodbye to a friend. While walking erectly and freely across the Lincoln street crossing, where scores of other women were holding up one side of their skirts while the other dragged in the mud, she was suddenly confronted by a middle aged, courtly gentleman who was an entire stranger to her, and, lifting his hat, he addressed her thus:
"I beg your pardon, madam, but a woman who has the good sense and courage to wear so comfortable and appropriate a costume on the streets deserves the most respectful salute. I take off my hat to your short skirt."
"I thank you, sir," was the pleasant reply, "but if all women knew the comfort and cleanliness of such a garment I am sure they would wear no other on such a day as this."
After this short dialogue the two persons passed on, the woman more than ever convinced that the future of the short skirt was fully assured and the man made glad with the thought that the age of reason among women was making satisfactory strides.
Jim Hisey, aged 48, is a prosperous grain dealer in Yale. He has a wife, two sons and a daughter. Will Hisey, aged 48, his brother lives at Sparta. He is also married. The two men are twins, and all through life have been the living duplicates of each other. So near alike are they even their wives cannot tell them apart. They dress alike, their voices are alike and their hair and mustaches have the same color and curls. When boys, they had to be tagged so that their parents and teachers would know the difference. When Jim gets a crick in the back, Will is liable to have the same complaint, and when Will gets the rheumatism Jim also gets it precisely in the same place. They were formerly both engaged in the milling business and served an apprenticeship under the same man. They were born in western Ontario, their parents being Jacob and Betsy Hisey. Jim's wife has only one way in which she can tell her husband from his brother. He has a slight curve in one of his fingers, which has to be held up in full view. Then he must give a password before he is received into full fellowship of the home circle. Many amusing instances of mistaken identity are told of the two.—Detroit Tribune.
What are Humors?
They are vitiated or morbid fluids coursing the veins and affecting the tissues. They are commonly due to defective digestion but are sometimes inherited.
How do they manifest themselves?
In many forms of cutaneous eruption, salt rheum or eczema, pimples and boils, and in weakness, languor, general debility.
How are they expelled? By Hood's Sarsaparilla
which also builds up the system that has suffered from them.
It is the best medicine for all humors.
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. Draggists 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 stomizers 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. Draggists or by mail. The liquid form embodies the medicinal properties of the solid preparation.
Cresse, inspector,
Newhope, at Fountain Valley school,
O P Wood, judge: S E Talbert, co.
Wills inspector,
Newport, at school house: O H Ellen,
Jeff Harlin, clerk: D W Ellis, inspector,
Newport Beach, at school house:
judge: — clerk: John McMacleod,
Olive, at school house: J A Woolsey,
C J Stranley, clerk: A A Leo,
Linda, at Santa Ana Valley Inspector,
Orange No. 2, at Santa Ana Valley Inspector,
H Z Adams, clerk: W S Calcea,
Placentia, at school house: R H Judge,
Ben Kraemer, clerk: Arthur Inspector,
San Joaquin, at school house: O Judge;
— Gardiner, clerk: Arthur Inspector,
San Juan, at Forster's store: John Judge,
Henry Stewart, clerk: Frank Inspector,
Santa Ana No. 1, at city hall: Chad Inspector,
Santa Ana No. 2, at Rogers' Stone; Judge: E D Atwood; clerk: ans Inspector,
Santa Ana No. 4, at waterworks Ingham; judge: J W T Kimball; o Glist; inspector,
Santa Ana No. 5, at corner Six streets; U T stine; judge: U S Len George William Inspector,
Silverado, at school house: H O Harry Julian; clerk: M M Alsbach;
Trabuco, at school house: George Venna; judge: Herbert Straw; clerk Robinson Inspector.
Tustin, at Arts' real estate office Newell; judge: J D Wilder; clerk: inspector.
West Anahiem, at Duckworth's Wspilman; judge: B Walley; ander Henry Inspector.
West Orange, at school house: Judge: ER Williams; clerk: A C Inspector.
Westminster, at school house: son; judge: H Larter; clerk: R Inspector.
Yorba, at Marquez Bros.' store quez; judge: Walter Stadtegger;
Frank Buther; inspector.
Any person being challenged vote,the judge of the election must answer in the affirmative,the right to vote.
(a) Are you a resident of this?
(b) Are you a Republican,and support the Republican ticket th
Z B.
Chairman County Central OLINN L. SHAWSecretary.
NOTICE
Board of Equalities
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN Board of Supervisors of Orden will meet as a Board of Equalities meeting Monday July 7,1902,a tinue in session as such Board tion up to and including Monday By order of the Board of Orden county.Cal.
jys-3t W.A.BECKETT,Clerk o
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS
Joseph C. Nichols
of Santa Ana, candidate for
SHERIFF
Subject to the decision of the Republican primaries to be held August 5, 1902.
W. L. Hale
of Placentia, candidate for
Supervisor
(Third District)
Subject to the decision of the Republican primaries to be held August 5, 1902.
A. S. Bradford
of Placentia, candidate for
Supervisor
(Third District)
Subject to the decision of the Republican primaries to be held August 5, 1902.
W. A Beckett
(Incumbent)
Candidate for
COUNTY CLERK
Subject to the decision of the Republican primaries to be held August 5, 1902.
John F. Snover
of Newport, candidate for
SHERIFF
Subject to the decision of the Republican primaries to be held August 5, 1902.
Frank Vegely
(Incumbent)
Candidate for
ASSESSOR
Subject to the decision of the Republican primaries to be held August 5, 1902.
W. G. Potter
of Buena Park, candidate for
Treasurer
Subject to the decision of the Republican primaries to be held August 5, 1902.
S. W. Munger
of El Toro, candidate for
COUNTY AUDITOR
Subject to the decision of the Republican
MONEY SENT WITHOUT DANGER OF LOSS.
ABSOLUTELY SAFE.
MONEY ORDERS ARE ISSUED BY THE CITIZENS BANK OF ANAHEIM
Payable in all parts of the United States.
Do not send money in a letter by mail; purchase a BANK MONEY ORDEK. This way of remitting money is absolutely safe. The purchaser of a Bank Money Order may feel confident that the payment of the amount named therein will certainly be made to the person for whom it is intended. Bank Money Orders are cheaper and more secure than any other method of sending money. The Government is not responsible for loss of a registered letter, so purchase a Money Order. If a Bank Money Order is lost in the mails, we issue a duplicate with out delay or charge. See schedule of fees below and compare with others. We pay a license tax—others do not.
THE COST OF BANK MONEY ORDERS IS AS FOLLOWS:
For Orders for sums not exceeding $10.00...5c Over $10.00, not exceeding $50.00...10c Over $50.00, not exceeding $100.00...15c Over $100.00, not exceeding $500.00, 15c per $100 Over $500.00 and up...10c per $100 Also Bank Money Orders for sale on all Foreign Countries.
Pacific Coast Steamship Co.
FOR
SANTA BARBARA
AND
SAN FRANCISCO
LEAVE REDONDO
SANTA ROSA—Wednesdays, 7 a.m.
STATE OF CAL.—Sundays, 7 a.m.
LEAVE PORT LOS ANGELES
SANTA ROSA—Wednesdays, 11 a.m.
STATE OF CAL.—Sundays, 11 a.m.
Arrive at San Francisco, Thursdays and Mondays, 1 p.m.
For SAN FRANCISCO,
calling at Ventura, Carpenteria, Santa Barbara, Goleta, Port Harford (San Luis Obispo), Cayucos, San Simeon, Monterey and Santa Cruz.
LEAVE SAN PEDRO
CORONA—6:30 p.m., July 7, 15, 23, 31, Aug 8.
COOBS Bay—6:30 p.m., July 3, 11, 19, 7, Aug 4.
For SAN DIEGO.
Leave PORT LOS ANGELES
SANTA ROSA—Mondays, 4 p.m.
STATE OF CAL.—Fridays, 4 p.m.
Leave REDONDO
SANTA ROSA—Mondays, 8 p.m.
STATE OF CAL.—Fridays, 8 p.m.
Steamers connect at San Francisco with Company's steamers for ports in British Columbia, Puget Sound, South-Eastern Alaska, Nome, Humboldt Bay and Mexico.
For further information obtain folder.
Right is reserved to change steamers or sailing dates.
W. PARRIS, Agt., 328 South Spring St., Los
Subject to the decision of the Republican primaries to be held August 5, 1902.
W. G. Potter
of Buena Park, candidate for Treasurer
S. W. Munger
of El Toro, candidate for COUNTY AUDITOR
Geo. E. Peters
of Santa Ana, candidate for COUNTY RECORDER
J. W. Ballard
(Inoumbent) candidate for SUPERIOR JUDGE
George S. Smith
of Santa Ana, candidate for Coroner and Public Administrator
A. Meacham
of Orange, candidate for SHERIFF
M. S. Davis
of El Modena, candidate for County Superintendent of Schools
C. G. McKinley
of Anaheim, candidate for Coroner and Public Administrator
D. W. Hasson, M. D.
(Inoumbent) candidate for THE ASSEMBLY
Edward R. Amerige
of Fullerton, candidate for THE ASSEMBLY
Edward W. Hardy
of Orange, candidate for COUNTY TAX COLLECTOR
LEAVE SAN PEDRO
COORNA-6:30 p.m., July 7, 15, 23, 31 Aug. 8
For SAN DIEGO
Leave PORT LOS ANGELES
SANTA ROSA-Mondays, 4 p.m.
STATE OF CAL-Fridays, 4 p.m.
Leave REDONDO
SANTA RO莎-Mondays, 8 p.m.
Steamer connect at San Francisco with Gonzalez's steamers for ports in British Columbia, Puget Sound, South-Eastern Alaska, Nome, Humboldt Bay and Mexico.
For further information obtain folder.
Right is reserved to change steamers or sailing dates.
W. PARHIS, Agt., 328 South Spring St., Los Angeles,
C. D. DUMANN, Gen. Pass, Agt.
GOODALL, PERKINS & Co., Gen. Agts.
San Francisco.
J. L. JACKSON
PRACTICAL
WELL BORER
Surface and Deep Wells Bored
DEEP WELLS A SPECIALTY
P.O. ADDRESS - WHITTIER, CAL
Announcement.
Having purchased the business formerly conducted by R.F. Zerman I desire to inform my friends and the public generally that I shall continue the business at the old stand, Los Angeles St., near Center, and keep on hand a full supply of Hay, Grain, Oils, Gasoline and Coal
AT THE LOWEST PRICES
Ice deliver red to any part of the city
A share of your patronage is solicited
Car of Black Diamond coal just received
C. G. McKINLLIY
J. HAHN
Palace Stables
Los Angeles St., Anaheim
Best Rigs at Reasonable Rates
Give me a call
In the Superior Court
Of the County of Orange, State of California.
In the matter of the estate of William J. Smith, deceased.
A.V. Smith, executor of the last will and testament of William J. Smith, deceased,
having filed his petition herein, duly verified, praying for an order of sale of real estate of said deceden by the purposes therein set forth; It is therefore ordered by the court room of said Superior Court in the court house building in the old estate of said deceden at Santa Ana, in said county of Orange to show cause why an order should not be granted to the said executor to sell so much of the real estate of said deceden, at private sale, as shall be necessary; and that a copy of this order be published at least four successive weeks in the ANAHIM WEEKLY GAZETTE, a mosa-paper printed and published in said county of Orange.
Dated June 13, 1902.
J.W.BALLARD.
Judge of said Superior Court.
Richard Melrose, attorney for executor.
Notice to Creditors.
E STATE OF ANDREW BITTNER DECEASED. Notice is hereby given by the undersigned administrator of the estate of Andrew Bittner, deceased, to the creditors of all persons having claims against the said deceased, to exhibit the same with the
NOTICE
Board of Equalization
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE Board of Supervisors of Orange county will meet as a Board of Equalization, continue in session as such Board of Equalization up to and including Monday, July 21, 1902.
By order of the Board of Supervisors of Orange county, Cal.
Jy3-3t W. A. BECKETT, Clerk of said Board
Edward R. Amerige
of Fullerton, candidate for
THE ASSEMBLY
76th District
Subject to the decision of the Republican primaries to be held August 5, 1902.
Edward W. Hardy
of Orange, candidate for
COUNTY TAX COLLECTOR
Subject to the decision of the Republican primaries to be held August 5, 1902.
Z. B. West
of Santa Ana, candidate for
SUPERIOR JUDGE
Subject to the decision of the Republican primaries to be held August 5, 1902.
Robert Flook
of Santa Ana, candidate for
ASSESSOR
Subject to the decision of the Republican primaries to be held August 5, 1902.
R. Y. Williams
Candidate for
DISTRICT ATTORNEY
Subject to the decision of the Republican Primary election, to be held Aug. 5, 1902.
E. T. Langley
Candidate for
DISTRICT ATTORNEY
Subject to the decision of the Republican Primary election, to be held Aug. 5, 1902.
John B. Nichols
of Orange, candidate for
County Superintendent of Schools
Subject to the decision of the Republican primaries to be held August 5, 1902.
W. R. Carpenter
of Placentia, principal of Fullerton High School, candidate for the nomination of County Superintendent of Schools
Subject to the decision of the Republican primaries to be held August 5, 1902.
Notice to Creditors.
ESTATE OF ANDREW BITTNER, DEceased. Notice is hereby given by the undersigned, administrator of the estate of Andrew Bittner, deceased. To the creditors of, and all persons having claims against the said deceased, to exhibit the same with the necessary purchers, within four months after the first publication of this notice, to the said administrator, at the office of Richard Melrose, Center street, Anaheim, California; the same being the place for the transaction of the business of said estate in the county of Orange.
Dated this 18th day of June, A. D., 1902.
N. A. BITTNER.
Administrator of the estate of Andrew Bittner, deceased.
Richard Melrose, attorney for estate. j19-5t