anaheim-gazette 1903-07-09
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HOUSING CATTLE.
Description of a Chautauqua County (N. Y.) Farmer's Barn.
My stable is a very ordinary affair, but I think as convenient as some more expensive ones. Platform on the ground at one end of stable 7 feet 4 inches long, at the other 8 feet, gradually lengthening. This accommodates large or small cows. Width of manger 20 inches, is included. Drop behind the cows, 8 inches; space from there to wall is cement, sloping toward the drop about two inches in three feet. Have no gutter and find this stable much easier to clean. Platforms should slope to gutter about two inches in four feet.
For manger back use 2 by 8 inch plank on edge twenty inches from front. Hayrack is thirty-four inches from floor to bottom of rack. For bottom use 2 by 12. Place its front edge even with the front of manger. For alats use 1 by 2, 3 feet long, nailed four and a half inches apart. Rack in this way is 12 inches at bottom, 3 feet high and should be about 3 feet wide at top, with equal flare on both sides. Put in partitions 4½ feet high, reaching back 4½ feet from front of manger, so that each cow has a separate manger and cannot hook her neighbor.
Partition is of inch boards up and down. Board at back end of partition should reach the ceiling for support. Do not let partition reach into rack, which is better not divided. For end of stable where platform is longest put partitions about 3 feet 2 inches apart and gradually nearer toward short end until only thirty-four inches is allowed. This is very little difference, but sufficient for stable fifty feet long. I have two.
Fasten a pole three inches in diameter into floor four inches from manger and four inches from partition on left side of each cow. Procure ordinary cow tie chains with the large ring and swivel. Slip ring over the pole, which should be about four feet high, and then fasten top of pole to partition nearly perpendicular. This allows the cows to step back and forth, but with the manger low. They lie down so far forward that they very seldom get any manure on them. My cows have no horns, so do not hook. Never have any trouble about wasting hay or keeping it.
PEOPLE OF THE DAY
Keene For a Fight.
Though he hasn't often "run away," James R. Keene has got in the habit of living to "fight another day." About once in so often this most daring of financiers puts on the gloves with another of the big ones in Wall street, and the fur generally files on such occasions. At present he has a "go" on with the Harriman Interests, the control of the Southern Pacific railway being the stake. Mr. Keene boldly states that the fight will be continued and will not end until the Harriman party has been ousted from the control of the Southern Pacific. He does not minor words in his explanation to the financial world why he has undertaken the present fight. He says that the suit to enjoin the Union Pacific from voting the $90,000,000 of Southern Pacific stock which it holds in its treasury was not begun by the famous stock pool of which he is the manager, but by himself.
He asserts that the joint operation of the two roads by one set of officers is contrary to the antitrust and interstate commerce laws and that a vigorous effort will be made to set aside the ownership of the Southern Pacific by the Union Pacific.
AMERICAN ROADS.
The Improvement of Our Highways by National Aid.
There is no questioning the fact that the subject of roadbuilding is engaging the attention of the people of the United States to a greater extent than ever before in the history of the country. Not only is the subject discussed in every county, township and civil district, but the legislatures of the several states are beginning to listen to the coming storm of public applause or public indignation by devising methods to improve the roads. But by far the most important, because the most comprehensive, movement inaugurated is that of the bill presented to congress by the Hon. W. P. Brownlow of Tennessee. In its scope this bill provides for national aid in road improvement to every political division or subdivision of the country.
The rapid extension of the rural free delivery system, now covering 300,000 square miles and destined in the near future to be extended to the 40,000,000 people living in the rural districts, makes good roads a necessity. Why should the United States, that has attained supremacy over all other nations in wealth and in a worldwide influence in commerce and diplomacy, hesitate to enter upon a work that will bind its citizens to it with a loyalty exceeding the loyalty of the people of any other nation whatever? Why hesitate to do that which every person desires to be done in some way? Why hesitate when good roads are the most important factors in carrying out the wise provisions for increasing the intelligence of its citizenship through rural free delivery? No other highly civilized nation on earth has so many bad roads as the United States. England, France, Germany, Spain, Italy, all have good roads.
Say what we please about the influence of public schools, the press, the pulpit, the platform and other institutions that mark the civilized progress of mankind, yet all these are more or less dependent upon the facilities of intercourse between the people. In fact it is an undeniable truth that civilization means labor in some form, and labor is the ability to move things from place to place, and its efficiency depends upon the ease with which they are moved. No nation has ever achieved permanent renown without good roads or ever built them and regretted it afterward. No community in possession of good roads would be
Fasten a pole three inches in diameter into floor four inches from manger and four inches from partition on left side of each cow. Procure ordinary cow tie chains with the large ring and swivel. Slip ring over the pole, which should be about four feet high, and then fasten top of pole to partition nearly perpendicular. This allows the cows to step back and forth, but with the manger low. They lie down so far forward that they very seldom get any manure on them. My cows have no horns, so do not hook. Never have any trouble about wasting hay or keeping bedding under cows.—Cor. Country Gentleman.
The question of economy of storage room is entirely in favor of silage, writes a correspondent of American Cultivator. Less room is required for storing the product from a certain number of acres in the silo than in a barn in cured condition. Hay placed in the mow will take up more than three times as much room as the same quantity of food materials put into the silo. In the case of field cured fodder corn the comparison comes out still more favorably to the silo on account of the greater difficulty in preventing the thick cornstalks from spoiling when placed under shelter.
Another reason why the silo has been adopted generally is that an acre of corn can be placed in it at less than it can be put up as cured fodder. To derive full benefit from the food materials in the field cured corn fodder it must be run through a feed cutter in small proportions at a time; the corn must in most cases be hunked, cribbed and either ground cob and all or shelled and ground. In siloing corn the whole plant is now as a rule run through the cutter and filled into the silo at once, thus doing away with the separate handling of ear corn. Careful experiments with milk cows conducted by several of our experiment stations have shown that silage thus made from corn cut "ears and all" has produced somewhat more milk and butter than dry fodder and ear corn handled and fed separately, the product from the same area of land being compared in both cases.
Extra Pasture Land.
As animal industry becomes a permanent industry more of the farm must be converted into pasture. But if the fertility of the farm is to be increased, if a good profit is to be realized from the new system, two blades of grass must grow in the place of one; twice as much stock must be kept on the same number of acres. It will draw very greatly upon the intelligence of the man to handle his pasture land so that the yield of forage it produces becomes even better every year. The pasture must have periods of rest. It cannot be continually nipped into the ground. It must not be overstocked. Forage crops must help it out in a hot, dry spell and in early fall. It will need a top dressing of manure or some good social world why he has undertaken the present fight. He says that the suit to enjoy the Union Pacific from voting the $90,000,000 of Southern Pacific stock which it holds in its treasury was not begun by the famous stock pool of which he is the manager, but by himself.
He asserts that the joint operation of the two roads by one set of officers is contrary to the antitrust and interstate commerce laws and that a vigorous effort will be made to set aside the ownership of the Southern Pacific by the Union Pacific.
Littlefield Passed.
Several members of the judiciary committee were gathered in their room near the close of the late session of congress relating experiences when they took their examinations for admission to the bar.
"A member of the committee before which I appeared for examination," said Mr. Littlefield, "was an old judge who had written extensively on legal questions. One of the questions asked presented a problem that had been dealt with exhaustively in a treatise by the judge, and I happened to remember it because I knew the author so well by reputation. When I presented my answer, therefore, I took exactly the ground the judge had taken.
"The old judge looked over his spectacles at me in evident approval."
"Young man,' he said, 'I think you have answered that question very well, very well indeed. I am surprised that so young a man should have so profound a knowledge of the law.'"
Moody's Big Dinner.
President Roosevelt tells this joke to many of his callers at the White House:
"My secretary of the navy broke down last winter. Moody had an attack of nervous prostration.
"Overwork?" naturally asks the visitor.
"No, the heavy round of social duties. He cannot stand much. He gave one dinner, and that completely unnerved him. He gave it at the hotel, where everything was got up for him. Mrs. Dewey invited all the guests. He had a guard of marines to see that everything was all right. He did not do anything but eat the dinner. He was in a state of collapse for days after the dinner. It is wonderful how delicate these bachelors are." Then the president laughs loud and long.
Duchess at Palm Beach.
The Duke and Duchess of Mancheser, with the father of the latter, Mr Zimmerman, have been enjoying themselves at Palm Beach, Fla., for some weeks. They have entered heartily into the various sports with cottagers and hotel guests. Lady Mary Alice
Say what we please about the influence of public schools, the press, the pulpit, the platform and other institutions that mark the civilized progress of mankind, yet all these are more or less dependent upon the facilities of intercourse between people. In fact it is an undeniable truth that civilization means labor in some form, and labor is the ability to move things from place to place, and its efficiency depends upon the ease with which they are moved. No nation has ever yet achieved permanent renown without good roads or ever built them and re-gretted it afterward. No community in possession of good roads would be willing to surrender them upon the payment of their cost and maintenance.
J.B.KILLEBREW.
NEW YORK ROADS.
How the Empire State Aids In Highway Improvement.
The state of New York is giving ally for highways under two laws. The one is known as the Fuller law, or "money system of taxation," and permits any town to change its system of highway taxation to the money payment to an amount not to exceed one tenth of 1 per cent of the taxable property of the town, in which case this state gives a bonus of 50 cents of the amount so assessed and collected, such money to be expended as the commissioner of highways and the town board may determine. The other is known as the Higble-Armstrong act.
Under the Higble-Armstrong law says Edward A. Bond, New York state engineer, the first agitation or petition for a road begins with the proper owners adjoining the road proposed to be improved or with the town in which the road is located, passes from there to the board of supervisors, from there to the board of supervisors to state, and when the plans and estimates are prepared by the state it is again returned to the board of supervisors for its final action, and when one-half of the money is voted for the construction of any particular road it receives a number and as rapidly as the state approves money to meet the appropriations of the several counties of the state these roads are built in consecutive order as called for by the numbers.
So you see this law is not made compulsory. No locality is compelled to build good roads until the sentiment in locality inaugurates the movement.
Taxation and Good Roads.
In a letter read before the Arkansas good roads conventionthe Hon.Jan Wilson, secretary of agriculture, said: "I know the principal obstacle to road improvement is the burden of taxation that it imposes. But in considering this question the taxpayers should be member that bad roads impose enormous burden, a sort of perpetual tax, from which there is no escape except through the permanent improvement of the highways. While the burden of taxation may appear heavy, money spent in improving the highways should be looked upon as an investment, returns from which we increase the prosperity of the community far more than it is depleted by necessary taxation. Then besides material advantages there are costs and pleasures, moral and societal results from good roads."
DUCHESS OF MANCHESTER.
Montague, the sixteen-month old daughter of the duchess, also receives much attention. She resembles her mother, being fair, plump and of the German type.
The duchess dresses in exquisite taste. She and the duke are taking bridge whist lessons every day. The duchess is having her portrait painted by Mrs. Leslie Cotton of New York and is giving the sittings at Whitehall.
The Dear Child.
Little Tommie—Sister Lillian likes to have you come here.
Mr. Simperling—Aw, indeed! How do you know that?
Little Tommie—Well, people always like what makes them glad, don't they?
Mr. Simperling—Generally. But how do you know I make her glad?
Little Tommie—I heard her tellin one of the other girls today that she just had to laugh every time she looked at you.—Cleveland Leader
The Perfect Liver Medicine
Mrs. M. A. Jolly, Noble, O. T., writes: "I have used Herbline for a number of years and can cheerfully recommend it as the most perfect liver medicine, and the greatest blood purifier. It is a medicine of positive merit and fully accomplishes all that is claimed for it." Malaria cannot find a lodgment in the system while the liver is in perfect order; for one of its functions is to prevent the absorption of fever producing poisons. Herbline is a most efficient liver regulator. 50c at J. P. Hatzfeld's.
Governor Van Sant on Good Rest.
Governor Van Sant recently said that he was enthusiastic in the fact that good roads were needed and now was the time to secure the Whatever is of benefit to the corporation, he stated, is a benefit for country. If railways and street ways find it advantageous to spend thousands and thousands of dollars proving their roadbeds and cutting down grades, then it follows that worth just as much to the farmer have an easy road upon which to his produce to market.
Restaurant For Sale
For $800 cash. Inquire at 202 Philadelphia street, Whittier, Cal.
What is the difference between hens and poultry, pop? "Why, my son, are things that belong to neighbors; poultry is something a man owns himself."
Eruptions
The only way to get rid of pimples and other eruptions is to cleanse the blood improve the digestion, stimulate the kidneys, liver and skin. The medicine to take Hood's Sarsaparilla Which has cured thousands
AMERICAN ROADS.
Movement of Our Highways by National Aid.
No questioning the fact that the roadbuilding is engagement of the people of the states to a greater extent than in the history of the country is the subject discussed county, township and civil law legislatures of the seve-ler are beginning to listen to storm of public applause or denation by devising methods for the roads. But by far the instant, because the most com-movement inaugurated is the bill presented to congress. W. P. Brownlow of Ten-its scope this bill provides aid in road improvement political division or subdivision of the roads a necessity. Why United States, that has attem-tory over all other nations and in a worldwide influence peace and diplomacy, hesitate to work that will bind its it with a loyalty exceeding that of the people of any other state? Why hesitate to do so every person desires to be one way? Why hesitate when we are the most important fac-rying out the wise provisions arising through rural free delivery? How highly civilized nation on so many bad roads as the states. England, France, Ger-Italy, Italy, all have good roads. What we please about the influ-ful schools, the press, the platform and other institu-ment mark the civilized progress had, yet all these are more or student upon the facilities of in-between the people. In fact, undeniable truth that civiliza-ts labor in some form, and la-ability to move things from place, and its efficiency de-veloped the ease with which they did. No nation has ever yet permanent renown without adults or ever built them and re-ent afterward. No community vision of good roads would be
CALDWELL'S SPEECH.
Continued from first page.
zens of Orange county, when the value of your manufactures will exceed the value of your farming products.
Why should you not furnish the orient with her goods; you are 3000 miles nearer than the manufacturing centers to the East. The welfare of the Pacific Coast demands that we insist on the open door for our products. The firearms of our state department has partially accomplished this. It is useless to vell the fact that our demands only become imperative in the eyes of foreign nations, when we have the guns to back us up. Great ports await the coming of ships, San Diego, San Pedro and San Francisco will in no far distant day be harbors crowded with vessels loading for the Eastern trade. As patriotic Americans let us further this; let us build up the state of California to be the greatest in the Union as New York is the keystone of the Arch in the Atlantic column, so will California become the keystone of the great western gate-way of the republic.
New problems have come with added territory, the accession of foreign races under the American flag is brought with some danger. While America cannot immediately give up those charges now in our hands, the day will surely come when the best interests of our country will require that we give the Philippines independence. The form of that independence will have to be circumscribed by their power to assimilate modern ideas and their power to carry out those immortal truths laid down in our own declaration of independence. Until that time shall come our best efforts must be put forth to educate them to those high ideals. It matters not what our individual ideas may be as to the wisdom of taking them under our care in the first instance we have them now and are responsible for them. It would be suicidal for America's interests to leave them to be the prey of any foreign government and a breach of trust to the cause of civilization. No civilizing power is greater than the school house. Already the Yankee school marm is planting the seeds of a genuine republic in the Island of Luzon. There is no danger but that her work will be a success. Schools on the island are crowded and a very few years will see a transformation wrought in Philippine character. Now they are a people of many tribes and of as many languages incapable of cohesion; when our work shall have been accomplished they will have become a nation.
HEAVY APRICOT LOSSES
The apricot crop in the Santa Clara valley is beginning to ripen. Not a large crop to begin with, it will be even smaller than expected for the reason that the fruit is prematurely falling. Reports from all sections of the valley are to the effect that this dropping is the most serious in the history of the valley. Peaches are also dropping, but not so generally or seriously. The cause has not yet been definitely determined:
Night Was Her Terror
"I would cough nearly all night long," writes Mrs. Chas. Applegate of Alexandria, Ind., "and could hardly get any sleep. I had consumption so bad that if I walked a block I would cough rightfully and split blood, but, when all other medicines failed, three $1 bottles of Dr. King's New Discovery wholly cured me and I gained 58 pounds." It's absolutely guaranteed to cure coughs, colds, la gripe, bronchitis and all throat and lung troubles. Price 50c and $1.00. Trial bottles free at J. P. Hatzfeld's.
Mrs. William Curtis Wakefield of Philadelphia has begun suit for the annulment of her marriage by filing papers in New York in the Supreme court. Wakefield, the defendant, is the 22-year-old Massachusetts financier who organized many large concerns and floated stocks in this country and abroad. Mrs. Wakefield met him in Switzerland. He followed her across the Atlantic, and they were married by a New York alderman. Wakefield was sentenced to a term in the State reformatory at Concord, Mass., for perjury in swearing that a copper mining company which he had organized had a paid in capital of $250,000.
The Boss Worm Medicine
H. P. Humep, druggist, Leighton, Ala., writes: "One of my customers had a child which was sick and threw up all food, could retain nothing on its stomach. He bought one bottle of White's Cream Vermifuge and it brought up 119 worms from the child. It's the boss worm medicine in the world." White's Cream Vermifuge is also the children's tonic. It improves their digestion and assimilation of food, strengthens their nervous system and restores them to the health, vigor and elasticity of spirits natural to childhood." 25c at J. P. Hatzfeld's.
FACTS ABOUT ANAHEIM
Sketch of the industries and Resources or th- Most Beautiful Part of California.
The City of Anabeim, with a popula- tion of 2500, is situated in th- northern part of Orange county, Southern California, 12 miles fro- mine from the ocean, 4½ miles from the foo hills, and 148¼ feet above sea level. It is 27 miles from Los Angeles, th- second largest city in the State Cali- frica.
The climatic conditions are th- most favorable for out-door life; be found in Southern Cali- frica. The temperature is extremely u- form, seldom rising above 90 o'grees in summer, or falling below degrees in winter. The abundan- d of sunlight and the absence of shai frosts and cold winds make it place especially acceptable to th- desiring to escape the severe clim- ates of the east.
The country is very attractive. is practically level, with just su- cient slope from the hills to affe- duate drainage. The roads i- level, well graded, and well ke- affording excellent opportunities for cycling and driving. The soil i- rich sandy loam which never bac- making it a very easy ground- work; thus lending itself readily th- cultivation of berries, nuts, anges, etc.
The variety of products, and possibility of procuring small tr- olf land at low figures, and on o- terms, make our section of th- county very attractive and adva-gious for truck raising, or for fa- ing on a small scale. The follow- are a few of the products: oran- lemous, walnuts, grapes, peach apricots, sugar beets, berries vegetables of all kinds.
Anabeim is the possessor Building and Loan Associa- Water company, two railroads cannery and drier, large oil industrich farm, bank, several adeq commercial houses two hotels
NEW YORK ROADS.
Empire State Aids In Highway Improvement.
The state of New York is giving aid always under two laws. The known as the Fuller law, or system of taxation," and per town to change its system of taxation to the money payable amount not to exceed one percent of the taxable property in the town, in which case the taxes a bonus of 50 cents of the assessed and collected, such as be expended as the commission highways and the town board determines. The other is known Higbie-Armstrong act.
The Higbie-Armstrong law, Howard A. Bond, New York state road begins with the property adjoining the road proposed to drive or with the town in which it is located, passes from the board of supervisors, from the supervisors to the state, and the plans and estimates are prepared by the state it is again returned to guard of supervisors for its final land when one-half of the monies for the construction of any new road it receives a number, rapidly as the state appropriates to meet the appropriations several counties of the state roads are built in consecutive or aligned for by the numbers.
We see this law is not made compulsory but locality is compelled to road conditions until the sentiment of utility inaugurates the movement.
Taxation and Good Roads.
Better read before the Arkansas roads convention of the Hon. James secretary of agriculture, said: "For the principal obstacle to road investment is the burden of taxation imposes. But in considering question the taxpayers should reevaluate that bad roads impose an amount which there is no escape through the permanent improve the highways. While the burdaxation may appear heavy, the spent in improving the highways should be looked upon as an indicator, the returns from which will be the prosperity of the community more than it is depleted by the taxation. Then besides the vital advantages there are command pleasures, moral and social improvements on good roads.
Today under its protecting folds this blessed arm of life liberty and the sponsorship for them. It would be suicidal for America's interests to leave them to be the prey of any foreign government and a breach of trust to the civilization. No civilizing power is greater than the school house. Already the Yankee school marm is planting the seeds of a genuine republic in the Island of Luzon. There is no danger but that her work will be a success. Schools on the island are crowded and a very few years will see a transformation wrought in Philippine character. Now they are a people of many tribes and of as many languages incapable of cohealon; when our work shall have been accomplished they will have become a nation.
Powerful without we must be powerful within. National habita form national character. The splendor of wealth has attached a superiority to some of our citizens not merited by any talent. It has not improved their virtues as its possession is a menace to themselves, and to their posterity. Commerce and the mechanical arts should be secondary to agricultural pursuits. The farms furnished the bulwark of national success. National character will be firm as long as babits of frugality and temperance predominate. It is very obvious that without the man with the hoe the productive powers of the soil would never have furnished the sinews of civilization. The strength of our country is character not wealth. Washington at his first inauguration as chief magistrate admonished the people to honor men who with their own hands maintained their families and raise up children who are injured to toll; he doubtless saw in this class of citizens the surest pledge of their welfare and the permanency of our privileges.
In our republic it is remarkable that the majority of our greatest men have been brought up on the farm. There they imbibed the lessons nature taught; the bee and the flower were their emblems of thrift and purity. National happiness does not depend upon a martial name. France had Napoleon and the pull of grim visaged war scattered death broadcast.
He watered Europe with blood and tears. He clothed his people in sackcloth and ashes. Far better had it been this human energy been spent in the tilling of fields. War, unless for safety and happiness of our country, or for humanity, is a dead loss.
No, fellow citizens, we are for peace, not peace at any price, but peace with honor. We are for our homes for plenty and prosperity. These make patriots. It is unnecessary to command armies or even to risk life on the field of battle: nor is it necessary to control congress by the powers of eloquence. Patriotism is a heritage of American atmosphere; it is God given. Our adopted citizens breathe its air; their children feel it pulsate in their hearts.
Those stars and stripes born of woman and "rocked by cannon in the cradle of the deep" long may they wave. "The star spangled banner red by blood of men washed by tears of women floats over land and sea." Emblem of liberty it rouses of manhood in hearts grown faint from tyranny of Kings. Its broad stripes and bright stars invite a havene resting in improving the highways should be looked upon as an indicator, the returns from which will be the prosperity of the communal area more than it is depleted by the taxation. Then besides the vital advantages there are command pleasures, moral and social improvements on good roads.
H.P. Humpe, druggist, Leighton, Ala., writes: "One of my customers had a child which was sick and threw up all food, could retain nothing on its stomach. He bought one bottle of White's Cream Vermifuge and it brought up 119 worms from the child. It's the boss worm medicine in the world." White's Cream Vermifuge is also the children's tonic. It improves their digestion and assimilation of food, strengthens their nervous system and restores them to the health, vigor and elasticity of spirits natural to childhood." 25c at J. P. Hatzfeld's.
The Brooklyn board of health, which is systematically exterminating mosquitoes by means of kerosene oil, is now about to take up a suggestion calling attention to a new process for lessening the evil by means of musical sounds. The discoverer of the new process says: "It has been found that practical application has been effected by raising to a number of vibrations per second the particular note to which the mosquito is most sensitively attuned. This intensified note produced by sudden electrical impulse upon a musical instrument, causes every mosquito near to plunge headlong to the instrument and die."
Brutally Tortured
A case came to light that for persistent and unmerciless torture has perhaps never been equaled. Joe Golobick of Colusa, Cal., writes: "For 15 years I endured insufferable pain from rheumatism and nothing relieved me though I tried everything known. I came across Electric Bitters and it's the greatest medicine on earth for that trouble. A few bottles of it completely relieved and cured me." Just as good for liver and kidney troubles and general debility. Only 55c. Satisfaction guaranteed by J. P. Hatzfeld, druggist.
Rates to Oceanside and Coronado
Until September 10, 1903, the Santa Fe will sell excursion tickets to Ocean Beaches as follows:
To Oceanside and return, with final limit 30 days from date of sale; rate $2.25.
To Coronado and return, with final limit to September 30, 1903; rate $3.50.
Special excursions to San Diego July 3d and 4th, July 31st, and August 1st, August 28th and 29th; rate of fare $3.00 for round trip. Final return limit 30 days from date of sale. For full particulars call on Santa Fe Agent at Anaheim je25td
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.MCOLLUM.
Professor Cooley of the State Agricultural college at Bozeman has returned from an investigation of the grasshopper-ridden district near Butte, Montana. He says insects have devoured everything in a strip seventy miles long and fifty miles wide and that as a consequence of their passage range conditions are the worst he ever saw. The plains are dotted with cattle that have starved to death as a result of the grasshopper raids.
Terms, make our section off county very attractive and advantageous for truck raising, or for farming on a small scale. The followers are a few of the products: orange lemons, walnuts, grapes, peach apricots, sugar beets, berries vegetables of all kinds.
Anaheim is the possessor Building and Loan Association Water company, two railroads, cannery and drier, large oil industry rich farm, bank, several adeq commercial houses, two hotels or two newspapers. The city also offers its water and lighting plant.
FACTS ABOUT ORANGE COUNTY
The census bureau has issued bulletin on agriculture in California which we quote from extensive another part of this issue. On the interesting features of this report is the paragraph giving the number of farms and acres of farming in the five Southern California counties. The pre-eminence of Orange County is apparent:
Counties No. farms.
Los Angeles
Orange
Riverside
San Bernardino
San Diego
But it is in the acreage of irrigated lands that Orange county takes precedence over other counties of Southern California:
Counties Los Angeles
Orange
Riverside
San Bernardino
San Diego
The area of Orange county square miles; that of Los Angeles its irrigated acres exceed those in jumbo county by nearly approximately ten per cent.
San Diego is eleven times it get its irrigated acres exceed this jumbo county by nearly approximately ten per cent.
San Diego is eleven times it get its irrigated acres exceed this jumbo county by nearly approximately ten per cent.
The former's irrigation is compared with that of these almost the irrigated areas Dale and Riverside combined.
Orange county possesses these systems of irrigation, most water rights, that exist in South California That is what we said many a time and oft figures prove it. It is hardest and most productive counties outdoors and is settling up than any other in the State.
At half mast.
Sometimes we are greeted in the morning by flags at half-mast for some prominent official who yesterday was apparently in perfect health. When we inquire about the ailment by which he was stricken it is not uncommon to be told "acute indigestion" or "stomach trouble." It is time people learned that indigestion or any form of "stomach trouble" is not a thing to trifle with. The result may not be fatal, but there can be no condition of diseased stomach which does not carry with it physical loss and weakness. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery cures indigestion and other forms of disease affecting the stomach and its allied organs of digestion and nutrition. It enables the perfect digestion and assimilation of food.
Thanks to Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery," writes Mr. Charles H. German of Lehighton, NeWT is the only medicine that has done any good. I tried everything I could think of to cure indigestion, and found I was only throwing away money. Then I heard of Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and tried a bottle of it, and to my joy found it was doing me good. I used six bottles of it, and am now cured. It is the best medicine on earth."
This grand remedy does its work in a thorough manner; it gives the health that is all health; the strength that is solid, substantial and lasting; not flabby fat, not false stimulus, but genuine, complete, renewed vitality and life force.
Accept no substitute for "Golden Medical Discovery." There is nothing "just as good" for diseases of the stomach, blood and lungs.
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure constipation and its consequences.
At half mast.
Sometimes we are greeted in the morning by flags at half-mast for some prominent official who yesterday was apparently in perfect health. When we inquire about the ailment by which he was stricken it is not uncommon to be told "acute indigestion" or "stomach trouble." It is time people learned that indigestion or any form of "stomach trouble" is not a thing to trifle with. The result may not be fatal, but there can be no condition of diseased stomach which does not carry with it physical loss and weakness. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery cures indigestion and other forms of disease affecting the stomach and its allied organs of digestion and nutrition. It enables the perfect digestion and assimilation of food.
Thanks to Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery," writes Mr. Charles H. German of Lehighton, NeWT is the only medicine that has done any good. I tried everything I could think of to cure indigestion, and found I was only throwing away money. Then I heard of Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and tried a bottle of it, and to my joy found it was doing me good. I used six bottles of it, and am now cured. It is the best medicine on earth."
This grand remedy does its work in a thorough manner; it gives the health that is all health; the strength that is solid, substantial and lasting; not flabby fat, not false stimulus, but genuine, complete, renewed vitality and life force.
Accept no substitute for "Golden Medical Discovery." There is nothing "just as good" for diseases of the stomach, blood and lungs.
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure constipation and its consequences.
At half mast.
Sometimes we are greeted in the morning by flags at half-mast for some prominent official who yesterday was apparently in perfect health. When we inquire about the ailment by which he was stricken it is not uncommon to be told "acute indigestion" or "stomach trouble." It is time people learned that indigestion or any form of "stomach trouble" is not a thing to trifle with. The result may not be fatal, but there can be no condition of diseased stomach which does not carry with it physical loss and weakness. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery cures indigestion and other forms of disease affecting the stomach and its allied organs of digestion and nutrition. It enables the perfect digestion and assimilation of food.
Thanks to Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery," writes Mr. Charles H. German of Lehighton, NeWT is the only medicine that has done any good. I tried everything I could think of to cure indigestion, and found I was only throwing away money. Then I heard of Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and tried a bottle of it, and to my joy found it was doing me good. I used six bottles of it, and am now cured. It is the best medicine on earth."
This grand remedy does its work in a thorough manner; it gives the health that is all health; the strength that is solid, substantial and lasting; not flabby fat, not false stimulus, but genuine, complete, renewed vitality and life force.
Accept no substitute for "Golden Medical Discovery." There is nothing "just as good" for diseases of the stomach, blood and lungs.
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure constipation and its consequences.
San Diego is eleven times more wet than it irrigates 25,000 acres more than the county on the south—30 percent is the former's irrigation compared with that of the city—almost the irrigated area of Diego and Riverside combined.
Orange county possesses the system of irrigation, the most water rights, that exist in South California. That is what we said many a time oftens prove it. It is the hardest and most productive counties outdoors and is settling up than any other in the State.
A NATURAL INFERENCE
When I'm sitting on the beach, Harry close to me,
And he holds my hand, convinNobody can see,
Up comes my old chaperon,
Crying, "Come, my pet,
You must hurry home at once,
For your shoes are wet."
When the sea's a glint with glaze
From the moon above,
And the music dreamingly
Whispers low of love,
And I linger on the porch,
Teddy by my side,
And he's begging for a kiss—
Will not be denied—
With a horrid shawl, my bare shoulders to enfold,
Comes my chaperon, and maybe "Dear, you will take cold!"
As a girl she must have been Wild as wild can be,
Or how could she know so well When to look for me!
-D Elizabeth B-
DESCENT OF LOVE.
Both man ever had experience like this: For poets sing a love which children And bliss of love therein is laughing
Their silly words make creed for men?
Our life had long been dreary holiday Till when one even on the bleak high
I told her that I loved her, and she loved Her goal upon my lips, and thus we Sereft of earth, and then—oh, strayed Down the bleak highway till the place had closed his wings and left from so here, within sound of her sweet sway This summer's day I fathom that dread And liken it how up some desert pea Sublime went ancient men and heard And won his law But once they went Yeah, though God's dreams ran burning brain They hurried to the ways of humble Nor prayed of life to visit them again--they scots in Black an
1902 Improvements.
THE SANDERS-ARNOTT DISC PLOW.
The solid cast frame now being used on the Sanders-Arnott Disc Plow is the most valuable feature added to the Disc Plow since they were placed on sale. See them before buying. No more sprung beams out of line or bolts sheared off. We have a new pattern four gang plow for the largest manchess. Any disc plow without the solid cast frame is old style. Do not be misled into buying one. Made in one, two, three and four gang patterns. The most successful disc plow in the market. Draft reduced 30 per cent. Gend for circulara. We have a liberal proposition to offer any rancher who wishes to investigate the merits of this plow. Write for it
ARNOTT & COMPANY
Wagons, Carriages and Farm Machinery.
129, 122, 124 Los Angeles Street
Los Angeles, Cal.
THE GAZETTE
JOB - OFFICE
Is fitted to do all kinds of Commercial Printing
From a Card to a Book or a
Is fitted to do all kinds of
Commercial Printing
From a Card to a Book or a
Transcript, Etc., Etc.
Call and see us and get prices.
All work done in the highest state
of the art.
Broom For Woodwork.
I wish to describe a covered broom
for sweeping hardwood floors and dusting woodwork. Get a sheep pelt from
the tanner, cut a case to loosely fit a
broom. Avoid seams across bottom by
holding the pelt and marking the pattern. Overcast the seams with strong
thread. After first seam turn the case,
sew the second seam from inside and
when finished pull over the broom.
Fasten by wrapping around the handle.
If you wish dry or damp cloths,
te them around the broom. When
cleaning the case, let it remain on the
broom. Use plenty of soap and water.
—Exchange.
Dusting.
It is no use whatever to dust with a
feather duster if the object in view is
really the removal of dust. The feathers merely scatter fine particles abroad,
which would be much less injurious if
permitted to remain on the original
articles. Always employ a soft cloth,
shaking it at frequent intervals. If
something else is really needed to relieve the monotony of continual stooping, the best possible solution.
Things to Be Avoided.
Don't make a narrow door narrower
by a heavy portiere. A small house is
made stuffy by too many hangings.
Don't put chandeliers in a room with
a low ceiling. Side brackets are to be
held in artistic shapes.
Don't have too much of any one kind
of decoration in the house. Grill work
and stained glass, repeated in more
than two rooms become monotonous.
Don't buy a bright colored carpet to
put in rooms where the furniture is
not to be correspondingly toned up.
Don't have the floor, wall and furniture in a room covered with material
which has a decided pattern.
A sallow complexion, dizziness,
biliousness and a coated tongue
are common indications of liver
and kidney diseases. Stomach and
bowel troubles, severe as they are,
give immediate warning by pain,
but liver and kidney troubles,
though less painful at the start, are
much harder to cure. Thedford's
Black-Draught never fails to benefit diseased liver and weakened kidneys.
It stirs up the torpid liver to throw off the germs of fever and ague. It is a certain preventive of cholera and Bright's disease of the kidneys. With kidneys reinforced by Thedford's Black-Draught thousands of persons have dwelt immune in the midst of yellow fever. Many families live in perfect health and have no other doctor than Thedford's Black-Draught. It is always on hand for use in an emergency and saves many expensive calls of a doctor.
Mullins, S.C., March 10, 1901.
I have used Thedford's Black-Draught for three years and I have not had to go to a doctor since I have been taking it. It is the best medicine for me that is on the market for liver and kidney troubles and dyspepsia and other complaints. Rev. A.G. LEWIS.
A NATURAL INFERENCE.
When I'm sitting on the beach,
Harry close to me,
And he holds my hand, convinced
Nobody can see.
Up comes my old chaperon,
Crying, "Come, my pet,
You must hurry home at once,
For your shoes are wet."
When the sea's a glint with gleams
From the moon above,
And the music dreamingly
Whispers low of love.
And I linger on the porch,
Teddy by my side,
And he's begging for a kiss—
Will not be denied—
With a horrid shawl, my bare
Shoulders to enfold,
Comes my chaperon, and says,
"Dear, you will take cold!"
As a girl she must have been
Wild as wild can be,
Or how could she know so well
When to look for me?
-Elizabeth Harman-
DESCENT OF LOVE.
In man ever had experience like this
for poets sing a love which children mock,
and bliss of love therein is laughing stock.
Heir silly words make creed for common men?
For life had long been dreamy holiday
When one even on the bleak highway,
Old her that I loved her, and she left
For soul upon my lips, and thus we staid
Breast of earth, and then—oh, strangel—we fled
Down the bleak highway till the place's fear
had closed his wings and left from following.
Here, within sound of hor sweet singing.
In summer's day I fathom that dread time
and liken it—how up some desert peak
Bellis wee ancient men and heard God speak
And won his live. But once they went, no more!
Though God's dreams ran burning in their brain,
They hurried to the ways of humble men,
or prayed of life to visit them again!
-John Boyd Book in Black and White-
Things to Be Avoided.
Don't make a narrow door narrower
by a heavy portiere. A small house is made stuffy by too many hangings.
Don't put chandeliers in a room with a low ceiling. Side brackets are to be laid in artistic shapes.
Don't have too much of any one kind of decoration in the house. Grill work and stained glass, repeated in more than two rooms become monotonous.
Don't buy a bright colored carpet to put in rooms where the furniture is not to be correspondingly toned up.
Don't have the floor, wall and furniture in a room covered with material which has a decided pattern.
Don't put into a room unsteady little tables loaded with meaningless brie-a-brac.
Star Sofa Pillow.
From any lining material cut a regular star the desired size. First cut a paper pattern, then cut another pattern of a regular pentagon. This should be about the size of the star. Cut a star from pale blue wash silk. Cut the pentagon from deep blue silk. Adjust the points of the star to the points of the pentagon, and around the five sides dispose of a full puff of light blue silk.
Around the edge place a ruffle of the deep blue silk and finish the star with several rows of embroidery silk couched down.
Apples.
The housekeeper who wishes to keep her family healthy will use apples freely, not eternally in apple sauce and apple pies, but in ways that vary and banish monotony. Apples, raw and cooked, even stewed dried apples, are better for constipation than liver pills.
Matching In Furnishings.
Too much matching is not considered desirable in house furnishing, as it is apt to result in a tiresome lack of variety. One authority says, "Anybody can match, but it takes a master hand to introduce the proper color touches and produce harmony."
Cures Sciatica
Rev. W. L. Riley, L. L. D., Cuba,
N. Y., writes: "After fifteen days of excruciating pain from sciatic rheumatism, under various treatments, I was induced to try Ballard's Snow Liniment, the first application giving my first relief, and the second, entire relief. I can give it unqualified recommendation. 25c, 50c and $1 at J. P. Hatzfeld's."