anaheim-gazette 1904-06-30
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In the House of the Loving Heart
By Keith Gordon
Copyright, 1905, by T. C. McChare
"The idea of any wise person caring for money, especially in New York," she gibed as they sank down upon one of the benches at the entrance to the park. The carriages were hurrying feverishly after one another as if happiness lay at the other end or else rolling sadly back again as if to indicate that it was not there after all.
Hazard turned an astonished face toward her.
"You're guying," he observed disapprovingly. "New York's the place where one needs it most. Every one knows that."
"Every one," she echoed with scorn. "And why? Simply because 'every one' is suffering from the greed of possession. They want to possess, not to enjoy. They buy—buy—buy! Then they put what they have bought into a safe deposit vault and hurry off to Europe, where they begin all over again. There's one of them now." And she nodded gayly in response to a how from a lady in a passing victoria.
"Who is it?" asked Hazard laconically.
"Mrs. Lofty," laughed the girl, following the disappearing carriage with derisive eyes. "Poor thing!"
"Then you'd rather be Miss Sherwin, student of art, and sit here on a bench with a poor young lawyer than be Mrs. Lofty, would you?" he asked, watching a lock of hair which the spring wind blew softly across her cheek.
"I certainly would," she replied with promptness. "She never has any time for enjoyment or cultivation or reading or anything that counts," she ended vaguely. "You see, she has responsibilities. There are the servants. Of course I don't need to tell you about the awfulness of the servants. Then there is her house, one of those fearful places that just grip you by the throat when you enter and throttle you."
She paused for breath, with a reminiscent expression. Then she continued:
"You feel as if some one has just died—or perhaps 'demised' would be more in accord with the furnishing."
But one doesn't need to do such things with money," her companion in an unconscious apparently of their existence.
"I shall entertain a good deal for my poor friends—give them a chance to meet interview people and get out of the ruts of their workaday lives," Miss Sherwin penned. "But the rich ones—her eyes were dancing mischievously—I shall ask only on ordinary occasions when I am having simple, wholesome dinners that won't make them discontented with their lot."
They looked at each other and broke into long and nery laughter. Hazard's workfulness had vanished like a cloud.
"It's a great idea, sweetheart," he said softly. "and I'd like to work to make it come true. Would you let me—do you think?"
But the blushes were so violent this time that he got no further, and besides the old gentleman was standing before them.
"I am Jasner Clark," he said slimly and at that name they both stared at him in amazement. "I know you'll forgive an old man for listening." Then with a bow he continued whimsically: "I should very much like the pleasure of your company at dinner—and he made a gesture toward the Millionaires' club over the way." "You see, the time may come when I shall want to enter that quiet little door on Fifty-eighth street." And he glanced with kindly eyes at the future mistress of the House of the Loving Heart.
MOB LEADER BY TRADE.
Mayward Get Up a Mist in Paris For Any One Who Paid Him.
Paris had for years a professional leader of mobs, a man named Hayward, who would get up a mob and raise a riot any time, for any purpose, according to orders, provided a sufficient amount of money was paid to him. He was employed chiefly by political leaders, and his services were in great demand at election time.
His regular business was peddling toys, songs and novelties upon the street. Many of the songs were written by him, many of the toys were his invention, and he was a man of genius in some directions as well as a strong character—so strong that he was called the "Napoleon of the Camelots" and the "king of the Camelots." If he had any principles or opinions of his own he kept them to himself. He would break up a political meeting or create an ovation and make a popular hero for a fixed sum of money.
He had undesired his command and subject to his call at a moment's notice, night and day, between 2,000 and 3,000 miles per hour.
A MILLIONAIRE'S SYMPATHY
Refused Old Friend Loan of $100
Started Him Anew In Life
"A man whom I knew well, once had once been a prosperous but man in St. Louis, but who had reversed, walked into the office of our western millionaires and the loan of $5," said a Missou congressman.
"The man seeking the favor has a close friend of the millionaire; he had become immensely rich; unfortunately one went to the other fear and trembling, dreading turned down, for he knew the news of his taking to drink had ed the ears of his old time friend.
"He was greeted with care however, and plucked up heart for the money. Immediately the lionaire's demeanor changed," said he, "I can't let you have $5."
"I hardly expected you would plied the supplicant,' but though maybe for our former friendship might do me that little favor, ever, it does not matter. When a luck deserts him he can get no chance from any quarter, and will air of absolute dejection he turn leave the office.
"'No, I won't give you what want, but wait here a few minutes and the millionaire went into his private room and held a brief conversation with one of his employees, quarter of an hour the clerk relied out a big, fat envelope miserable being. The latter, realizing that any one should see a communication, broke the cover inside found five brand new $100 and a railway ticket to St. Louis berth or parlor car. On seeing and realizing that the man who supposed would not let him have been his benefactor, the reader of this unexpected generosity down and cried like a child.
"There is not much more to take except that with the money they went to his old home and started a small business, out of which derives a comfortable living moral; if there is one, is the lionaires often as sympathetic ordinary mortals. This particular I know to be the possessor of heart, and yet he has the best for never talking about his echarity.' —Washington Post."
promptness. "She never has any time for enjoyment or cultivation or reading or—or anything that counts," she ended vaguely. "You see, she has responsibilities. There are the servants. Of course I don't need to tell you about the awfulness of the servants. Then there is her house, one of those fearful places that just grip you by the throat when you enter and throttle you."
She paused for breath, with a reminiscent expression. Then she continued:
"You feel as if some one has just died—or perhaps 'demised' would be more in accord with the furnishing."
"But one doesn't need to do such things with money," her companion interrupted with argumentative intention.
"No, I don't suppose one does. And yet they generally do. You see, no lesse oblige seems to demand that when you have a million or upward copy one of the royal palaces of Europe and live your poor little republican life in it, though I'm sure I don't know why," she finished thoughtfully.
"Still, money is a good thing, and you can't say that it isn't. A fellow must have decent clothes, and it strikes me that simple little tailor made gown that you are wearing cost—he screwed his face up in the effort at appraisement—"about $100."
"Only $75," she corrected and returned to her subject somewhat hurriedly.
"There's another thing. When you're rich you just have to have a complexion—and no mere man can know what a fearful responsibility that is. It's worse than servants! You have to employ beauty doctors and have little pots of greasy stuff about. You should see Mrs. Lofty's supply. It is immense."
Hazard smiled in an absent way and then began with the air of a man who is weighing his words. "If you really prefer a castle in Spain to anything"—She cut him short.
"Have I ever told you about mine?"
He shook his head.
She pointed in the direction of the great, dark hotel which frowned down upon them.
"It ees vanish, n'est pas?" she mimicked. "Bebold in its place my House of the Loving Heart! I think the name especially telling since it is situated, as you see, on what we might call the Street of Love of Money."
"I hope you see the house plainly. The style is a sort of modified Italian with a projecting cornice and an inner court."
Hazard nodded.
"Don't you think the boxes of hyacinths in the windows and the big low entrance give it a friendly look? That is what I aim at particularly." (she explained with well-felged anxiety, "a friendly looking house!")
"Great!" was Hazard's feeling comment. "But who in thunder is that man standing at the window?" and he strained his eyes toward the great hotel. Then he turned to her with an expression of pleased and innocent surprise. "By Jove, it's me!"
"It looked so homely and inviting, I suppose, that I couldn't resist it," he explained as he noticed the warm flush rising in her cheeks.
In a moment she had recovered herself.
"Since you are in I hope you like the divans and the low table and the books that promptness." She never has any time for enjoyment or cultivation or reading or—or anything that counts," she ended vaguely. "You see, she has responsibilities. There are the servants. Of course I don't need to tell you about the awfulness of the servants. Then there is her house, one of those fearful places that just grip you by the throat when you enter and throttle you."
She paused for breath, with a reminiscent expression. Then she continued:
"You feel as if some one has just filed—or perhaps 'demised' would be more in accord with the furnishing."
"But one doesn't need to do such things with money," her companion interrupted with argumentative intention.
"No, I don't suppose one does. And yet they generally do. You see, no lesse oblige seems to demand that when you have a million or upward copy one of the royal palaces of Europe and live your poor little republican life in it, though I'm sure I don't know why," she finished thoughtfully.
"Still, money is a good thing, and you can't say that it isn't. A fellow must have decent clothes, and it strikes me that simple little tailor made gown that you are wearing cost—he screwed his face up in the effort at appraisement—"about $100."
"Only $75," she corrected and returned to her subject somewhat hurriedly.
"There's another thing. When you're rich you just have to have a complexion—and no mere man can know what a fearful responsibility that is. It's worse than servants! You have to employ beauty doctors and have little pots of greasy stuff about. You should see Mrs. Lofty's supply. It is immense."
Hazard smiled in an absent way and then began with the air of a man who is weighing his words. "If you really prefer a castle in Spain to anything"—She cut him short.
"Have I ever told you about mine?"
He shook his head.
She pointed in the direction of the great, dark hotel which frowned down upon them.
"It ees vanish, n'est pas?" she mimicked. "Bebold in its place my House of the Loving Heart! I think the name especially telling since it is situated, as you see, on what we might call the Street of Love of Money."
"I hope you see the house plainly. The style is a sort of modified Italian with a projecting cornice and an inner court."
Hazard nodded.
"Don't you think the boxes of hyacinths in the windows and the big low entrance give it a friendly look? That is what I aim at particularly." (she explained with well-felged anxiety, "a friendly looking house!")
"Great!" was Hazard's feeling comment. "But who in thunder is that man standing at the window?" and he strained his eyes toward the great hotel. Then he turned to her with an expression of pleased and innocent surprise. "By Jove, it's me!"
"It looked so homely and inviting, I suppose, that I couldn't resist it," he explained as he noticed the warm flush rising in her cheeks.
In a moment she had recovered herself.
"Since you are in I hope you like the divans and the low table and the books that promptness." She never has any time for enjoyment or cultivation or reading or—or anything that counts," she ended vaguely. "You see, she has responsibilities. There are the servants. Of course I don't need to tell you about the awfulness of the servants. Then there is her house, one of those fearful places that just grip you by the throat when you enter and throttle you."
She paused for breath, with a reminiscent expression. Then she continued:
"You feel as if some one has just filed—or perhaps 'demised' would be more in accord with the furnishing."
"But one doesn't need to do such things with money," her companion interrupted with argumentative intention.
"No, I don't suppose one does. And yet they generally do. You see, no lesse oblige seems to demand that when you have a million or upward copy one of the royal palaces of Europe and live your poor little republican life in it, though I'm sure I don't know why," she finished thoughtfully.
"Still, money is a good thing, and you can't say that it isn't. A fellow must have decent clothes, and it strikes me that simple little tailor made gown that you are wearing cost—he screwed his face up in the effort at appraisement—"about $100."
"Only $75," she corrected and returned to her subject somewhat hurriedly.
"There's another thing. When you're rich you just have to have a complexion—and no mere man can know what a fearful responsibility that is. It's worse than servants! You have to employ beauty doctors and have little pots of greasy stuff about. You should see Mrs. Lofty's supply. It is immense."
Hazard smiled in an absent way and then began with the air of a man who is weighing his words. "If you really prefer a castle in Spain to anything"—She cut him short.
"Have I ever told you about mine?"
He shook his head.
She pointed in the direction of the great, dark hotel which frowned down upon them.
"It ees vanish, n'est pas?" she mimicked. "Bebold in its place my House of the Loving Heart! I think the name especially telling since it is situated, as you see, on what we might call the Street of Love of Money."
"I hope you see the house plainly. The style is a sort of modified Italian with a projecting cornice and an inner court."
Hazard nodded.
"Don't you think the boxes of hyacinths in the windows and the big low entrance give it a friendly look? That is what I aim at particularly." (she explained with well-felged anxiety, "a friendly looking house!")
"Great!" was Hazard's feeling comment. "But who in thunder is that man standing at the window?" and he strained his eyes toward the great hotel. Then he turned to her with an expression of pleased and innocent surprise. "By Jove, it's me!"
"It looked so homely and inviting, I suppose, that I couldn't resist it," he explained as he noticed the warm flush rising in her cheeks.
In a moment she had recovered herself.
"Since you are in I hope you like the divans and the low table and the books that promptness." She never has any time for enjoyment or cultivation or reading or—or anything that counts," she ended vaguely. "You see, she has responsibilities. There are the servants. Of course I don't need to tell you about the awfulness of the servants. Then there is her house, one of those fearful places that just grip you by the throat when you enter and throttle你到他身边."
He had undesired his command and subject to his call at a moment's notice, night and day, between 2,000 and 3,000 street hawkers, newsboys and other gentlemen with lungs of leather and was in the habit of paying them from 2 to 4 francs each every time their services were required to raise a riot or give a triumphant greeting to any politician who wanted to convince the public of his popularity.
With 600 or even 250 of his followers Hayward could raise an awful rumpus, and human beings, like sheep, always follow a leader. It was Mr. Pickwick, I believe, who said that it was good policy to show with the loudest of the crowd, and no one could have collected such a band of howlers in Paris or anywhere else as the "king of the Camelots."
He led mobs and directed the riots in the interest of General Boucher when the latter attempted to repeat part of Napoleon I., and was author of the Dreyfus riots, for which he was paid by a syndicate of army officers. The police knew all about him but never interfered with his work because they had confidence in his ability to control his followers and realised that any interference on their part might demoralise them. So this professional mob organizer was allowed great liberties.
He could not have existed in any other city in the world. Paris is now place that could produce such a man, and when he died newspapers contained formal obituaries, giving a detailed account of his operations for the purpose of influencing public opinion, while more than 1,500 street peddlers followed him to his grave—Chicago Record-Herdal.
Women's Week Voyage Mem.'s The reason why women are not paid as well as men for what seems to be an equal degree and kind of labor, says a woman writer, is in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred cases because the work is not well done as a man would do it in the same circumstances. It is not so well done because first, it is not the custom to train girls as severely as boys and precedent and usage are potent here; secondly and chiefly, because a girl considers her trade be it typewriting bookkeeping, selling merchandise or teaching as a raft that will float her and her fortunes until she is picked up—near shore or far at sea-by the good ship Matrimony. Then the raft is abandoned and forgotten, so far as she can forget an unpleasant episode. The boy learns his business for a lifetime. That he hopes to marry somebody is but another reason why he should master the more thoroughly every department of his work and make himself so sooner indispensable to his employer.
The selfish mortal who never saddles any one but himself.
The young man who always his money before he gets it.
The lazy person who dishones propriates praise or commendation long to another.
The lazy young man who gets office late, leaves early, grumbles continually at their languid and haughty interests wants of the customers—Phila Telegraph.
The First Preaching In Man
The earliest church permaneled in Maine is said to hail Episcopal. Services were held in 1837. At what is now Pophaices were held frequently in 1831 first instances of the performers rites of the Episcopal chant part of the United States of America and the first Presbytery and preaching by an ordained minister in any portion of this territory.
Poker.
Germans claim that poker is German game which for most 100 years has been played and being played in some districts ophalia. Emigrants took it to their edens where its name wenzel was changed into pokern.
Snubbed Again.
"有 care , madam," said Meeker, summoning up a little"The worm will turn!"
"Did you ever know the worm will hurt anybody when it turned?" asked his wife—Chicago Tribune.
Just think of it! We are through this world, but we are stopping here. Let us make theseney agreeable to each other—the master.
It Costs Nothing.
Thackaytells of a lord who saw a vacant place on his estate,
ook an acorn out of his pocket dropped it in. Never lose a chance saying a kind word, doing another not.
It costs nothing!
"Great!" was Hazard's feeling comment. "But who in thunder is that man standing at the window?" and he strained his eyes toward the great hotel. Then he turned to her with an expression of pleased and innocent surprise. "By Jove, it's me!"
"It looked so homely and inviting, I suppose, that I couldn't resist it," he explained as he noticed the warm flush rising in her cheeks.
In a moment she had recovered herself.
"Since you are in I hope you like the divans and the low table and the books and pictures. Please notice, too, that little door (it opens quietly on Fifth-eighth street, you see), and I shall cheer them up."
"Leave care behind, all those who enter here," he murmured, as if he were reading an inscription.
The girl laughed in a pleased way.
"Excellent! A public sympathizer is really what we need. I believe as many people fall from lack of sympathy and encouragement as from lack of ability."
She had grown suddenly earnest and her eyes filled with tears. Hamid leaned toward her in real distress.
"So silly of me," she began, with a little shake in her voice. "But there have been some rough places where Mrs. Lofty, for instance, has looked on from her luxurious life and said: 'I hope you'll get on all right. Goodby, dear!' and left me with loneliness and discouragement eating my heart, and I have felt that in my House of the Loving Heart I should like to have it different."
The old man in the next seat shifted himself around so as to get a better view of the girl's face, but neither of the young people noticed him, and she began her description once more.
"The bedrooms are the best in the house. I intend them for my poor friends. Still, I have indulged in small economies. Now, for instance, in their rooms—and with a wave of the hand she ushered him into another imaginary suit—'the appointments, though very comfortable, are less luxurious.' In these I shall install my rich friends when they visit me."
An unmistakable clutch escaped from the old gentleman, Hazard and Miss Sherwin thrilled in his direction in surprise. But he was bowing to the command of a helpless carriage usage are potent here; secondly and chiefly, because a girl considers her trade, be it typewriting, bookkeeping, selling merchandise, dressmaking or teaching, as a raft that will float her and her fortunes until she is picked up—near shore or far at sea—by the good ship Matrimony. Then the raft is abandoned and forgotten, so far as she can forget an unpleasant episode. The boy learns his business for a lifetime. That he hopes to marry somebody is but another reason why he should master the more thoroughly every department of his work and make himself the sooner indispensable to his employer.
RIGHT FOOTED PERSONS:
A Shoe Dealer Says They Are In the Vast Majority.
"Did you ever notice that people are right footed?" asked the proprietor of a shoe store. "Watch my clerks, and you will see that invariably customers will put out their right foot when going to be fitted. Now watch that corpulent woman going to sit down over there."
The woman with great weight of body took a seat, lifted her curtain of black velling, and, as the clerk approached her, she poked her right foot from beneath an expanse of shirt.
"I've always the case, and I don't believe I ever knew it to fail. The shoe manufacturers evidently are wise to this fact, as in the cartons the right shoe is always packed on top. Once I had a lot of shoes come to me with the left shoe on top, and it caused me such annoyance that I wrote to the manufacturer, calling his attention to the matter so that it wouldn't happen again. The majority of people are right handed, yet a left handed person has the right foot habit. The right band is larger than the left, as it is used more and consequently develops the muscles to a greater extent. On the other hand, the left foot is larger than the right in most persons. The difference is so slight that we seldom have trouble in fitting shoes, however. It is the left shoe that wears out before the right, and probably for this reason."—Shoe Retailer.
Rooms to Rent.
Four furnished rooms to rent. Apply to Mrs. Schauman, Claudina street Je2-tf
MILLIONAIRE'S SYMPATHY
Used Old Friend Loan of $5, but Started Him Anew In Life.
A man whom I knew well, one who once been a prosperous businessman in St. Louis, but who had met verses, walked into the office of one our western millionaires and asked for loan of $5," said a Missouri expressman.
The man seeking the favor had been close friend of the millionaire before he become immensely rich. The fortunate one went to the other in arm and trembling, dreading to be handed down, for he knew that the sons of his taking to drink had reached the ears of his old time friend.
He was greeted with cordiality, never, and plucked up heart to ask the money. Immediately the millionaire's demeanor changed. 'No,' he said, 'I can't let you have $5.' He hardly expected you would, read the supplicant, 'but thought that they be for our former friendship you ought do me that little favor. How far it does not matter. When a man's kills deserts him he can get no assistance from any quarter,' and with an outrage of absolute dejection he turned to leave the office.
'No, I won't give you what you want, but wait here a few minutes,' the millionaire went into his private room and held a brief conversation with one of his employees. In a letter of an hour the clerk returned and held out a big, fat envelope to the recipient this unexpected generosity brokeown and cried like a child.
There is not much more to the story except that with the money the man lent to his old home and started up small business, out of which he lives a comfortable living. The real, if there is one, is that millionaires are often as sympathetic asinary mortals. This particular one know to be the possessor of a big cart, and yet he has the best reasons ever talking about his acts of charity."—Washington Post.
WAYS OF FAILURE.
The selfish mortal who never consents any one but himself.
The young man who always spends
OUR TREASURY SEAL,
The Inscription It Bears and Its Early Significance.
Probably few Americans, young or old, have had sufficient curiosity in examining a bank note to translate the Latin device on the seal of the treasury and to inquire how it happened to read as it does. A writer in the Washington Star believes the inscription throws light on the hopes of our forefathers regarding American dominion.
"Thesaur Amer. Septent. Sigil." is the legend, an abbreviation of "Thesaur America Septentrionalls Sigillum," "Seal of the Treasury of North America."
The Continental congress in 1778 authorized a committee, consisting of Messrs Witherspoon, Robert Morris and R. H. Lee, to design seals for the navy and the treasury. The treasury seal has come down to us with very little change.
In those days it was still hoped that Canada would eventually join the Revolution or would at least be wrested from Great Britain before the struggle was over and would become one with this country. That was apparently a project dear to Robert Morris, and he looked upon his country as the whole of North America.
Later, when authorized to establish a bank and a mint "of North America," Morris maintained the legend on the seal, showing that he still hoped for a continental nation. Whenever the seal has been recut the original legend has been adhered to.
INDIA SUPERSTITIONS.
A Typical Story/Illustrating the Behef Im Animal Ghosts.
India is full of animal ghosts, from the Himalayas to Cape Comorin, if the natives may be believed. Here is a typical story:
"By the beard of my father, sahib, I speak straight words," said an old Mohammedan mahout. "One evening we were hunting wild elephants in the jungle for our lord, the maharaja of Gidhaur. I saw a large tusker alone by a pool. His color was grayish white, and my heart beat fast, for I thought Allah had been gracious to me and had placed in my hands that greatest of all prizes, a lord white elephant. Cautiously I urged my own tame elephant toward him, hoping that while they made friends I could bind him fast to a tree by the rope. My beast trumpeted in terror and trembled violently, but I goaded him on, and then when I put my hand on the white elephant I felt nothing but air. It was a ghost elephant one of those elves."
MOHAMMEDANS AND DOGS.
They Take Particular Pains Not to Come In Contact.
In Egypt dogs are never permitted to enter the dwelling of a Mohammedan, and if one is found in a mosque he is immediately put to death.
In consequence of this excommunication from the society which its animal seems so instinctively disposed to cultivate, Egyptian dogs live, for the most part, in the open air, feeding upon garbage and any other filth that chance throws in their way. Yet they are found to be faithful protectors of the property and even persons of the very men by whom they are thus despitefully treated, although Sonini remarks, it is extremely curious to see the pains taken by a Mussulman and a dog when they happen to meet to avoid coming in contact with each other. Notwithstanding this state of persecution, dogs are remarkably numerous in the towns of Egypt. The species is a large one, about the size and make of the grey bound. As proof of the Mohammedan prejudice against this useful animal, it is sufficient to state that they regard the terms Christian and dog as synonymous—both, of course, in the most opprobrious sense.
As a singular contrast for their dislike for dogs, the Egyptians have ever held cats in greatest veneration, and in ancient time even worshiped them. And historians tell us that Bubastis and Atribes, two towns in Egypt, the former a votary of cats and the latter of mice, contracted on that account so strong an antipathy to each other that the inhabitants were never known to intermarry, although only a few miles asunder. In some parts of India, too, we are told, they have a similar reverence for grimalkin, as the only crimes punished capitally there are the murder of a man and a cat—New Orleans Times-Democrat.
Classified.
"She says she is very fond of music."
"Instrumental?"
"Well, it's instrumental in making the neighbors swear when she gets at the piano."—Exchange.
Life
The poet's exclamation, "O Life! I feel these bounding in my veins," is a joyous one. Persons that can rarely or never make it in honestly to themselves are among the most unfortunate. They do not live but exist; for to live implies more than to be. To live is to be well an strong—to arise feeling equal to the ordinary duties of the day—to feel life bounding in the veins. A medicine possibility of procuring snail land at low figures, and terms, make our section county very attractive and geous for truck raising, or ing on a small scale. There are a few of the products lemons, walnuts, grapes, apricots, sugar beets, be vegetables of all kinds.
Anaheim is the possesse Building and Loan Agency Water company, two railways cannery and drier, large oil ostrich farm, bank, several commercial houses, two two newspapers. The city
WAYS OF FAILURE.
The selfish mortal who never concludes any one but himself.
The young man who always spends money before he gets it.
The lazy person who dishonestly appropriates praise or commendation being to another.
The lazy young man who gets to the ice late, leaves early, grumbles continually at the firm that employs him.
The lazy woman who shirks her hips, whether as wife, mother or wage earner, and slips through life as easily possible.
The lazy man who allows his faculties to rust, doing as little as possible, sowing ambition, energy and self-reject to go up, literally and figuratively in smoke.
The lazy young woman who arranges hair, manicures her finger nails, skirts continually and takes but a unguided and haughty interest in the duties of the customers.—Philadelphialegraph.
The First Preaching In Maine.
The earliest church permanently established in Maine is said to have been Episcopal. Services were held at Saco 1637. At what is now Popham services were held frequently in 1607, the first instances of the performance of its rites of the Episcopal church in any part of the United States north Virginia and the first Protestant worship and preaching by an ordained minister in any portion of this vast territory.
Poker.
Germans claim that poker is an old german game which for more than 20 years has been played and is still being played in some districts of West Virginia. Emigrants took it to the UnitStates, where its name of scharazel was changed into poker.
Snubbed Again.
Have a care, madam," said Mr.eker, summoning up a little spunk. The worm will turn!"
Did you ever know the worm to tart anybody when it turned?" calmly used his wife.—Chicago Tribune.
Just think of it! We are passing tough this world, but we are notapping here. Let us make the journey agreeable to each other.—Schoolmaster.
It Costs Nothing.
Thackeray tells of a lord who never was a vacant place on his estate, but he took an acorn out of his pocket and tapped it in. Never lose a chance of ing a kind word, of doing a kindly thing. It costs nothing.
PROVING THE CONVEXITY OF THE EARTH.
An experiment was made a hundred years ago or so on the Bridgewater canal, in England, to prove the convexity of the earth. At intervals of five miles in a straight stretch of the canal three posts were driven until their tops were precisely six feet above the surface of the water. Then careful measurements and observations were made from either end, with the result that the top of the center post was found to be some distance above a line drawn from top to top of the first and last posts.
The experiments were repeated a number of times, always with the same result. This proves for ordinary persons that the earth is convex, but scientists reached the same conclusions by more scientific ways.
A Sure Thing.
A witty individual one morning wavered that he would ask the same question of fifty different persons and receive the same answer from each. The wit went to first one and then to another until he had reached the number of fifty. And this is how he won the bet: He whispered, half audibly, to each:
"I say, have you heard that Smith has failed?"
"What Smith?" queried the whole fifty, one after another, and it was decided that the bet had been fairly won.—London Tit-Bits.
AN Eye To Business.
"So you are going to send his letters back, are you?" asked the blond.
"Yes," replied the brunette, with tears in her eyes. "But not until I have copied them all. They will make a splendid book, and I have a lovely title for them already." The Letters of a Lazy Lover.'"—Cincinnati TimesStar.
A Telltale Sign.
"Old Blinker is a confirmed bachelor, isn't he?"
"Yes, but I am sure that he was once engaged."
"Why?"
"Because he tells me there was a certain period of his life when he went to church regularly."—Detroit Free Press.
Bismarck's Regrets.
Shortly after 1870 Bismarck was were hunting wild elephants in the jungle for our lord, the maharaja of Gidhaur. I saw a large tusker alone by a pool. His color was grayish white, and my heart beat fast, for I thought Allah had been gracious to me and had placed in my hands that greatest of all prizes, a lord white elephant. Cautiously I urged my own tame elephant toward him, hoping that while they made friends I could bind him fast to a tree by the rope. My beast trumpeted in terror and trembled violently, but I goaded him on, and then when I put my hand on the white elephant I felt nothing but air. It was a ghost elephant, one of those elephants which come back after death to walkthe earth because in this life they went forth and murdered men. I went from the spot as if Shaitan himself were at my heels, and soon afterward I made a pilgrimage to Mecca to avert the curse. But my elephant fell sick and died."
PROVING THE CONVEXITY OF THE EARTH.
An experiment was made a hundred years ago or so on the Bridgewater canal, in England, to prove the convexity of the earth. At intervals of five miles in a straight stretch of the canal three posts were driven until their tops were precisely six feet above the surface of the water. Then careful measurements and observations were made from either end, with the result that the top of the center post was found to be some distance above a line drawn from top to top of the first and last posts.
The experiments were repeated a number of times, always with the same result. This proves for ordinary persons that the earth is convex, but scientists reached the same conclusions by more scientific ways.
A Sure Thing.
A witty individual one morning wavered that he would ask the same question of fifty different persons and receive the same answer from each. The wit went to first one and then to another until he had reached the number of fifty. And this is how he won the bet: He whispered, half audibly, to each:
"I say, have you heard that Smith has failed?"
"What Smith?" queried the whole fifty, one after another, and it was decided that the bet had been fairly won.—London Tit-Bits.
AN EYE TO BUSINESS.
"So you are going to send his letters back, are you?" asked the blond.
"Yes," replied the brunette, with tears in her eyes. "But not until I have copied them all. They will make a splendid book, and I have a lovely title for them already." The Letters of a Lazy Lover.'"—Cincinnati TimesStar.
A Telltale Sign.
"Old Blinker is a confirmed bachelor, isn't he?"
"Yes, but I am sure that he was once engaged."
"Why?"
"Because he tells me there was a certain period of his life when he went to church regularly."—Detroit Free Press.
Bismarck's Regrets.
Shortly after 1870 Bismarck was were hunting wild elephants in the jungle for our lord, the maharaja of Gidhaur. I saw a large tusker alone by a pool. His color was grayish white, and my heart beat fast, for I thought Allah had been gracious to me and had placed in my hands that greatest of all prizes, a lord white elephant. Cautiously I urged my own tame elephant toward him, hoping that while they made friends I could bind him fast to a tree by the rope. My beast trumpeted in terror and trembled violently, but I goaded him on, and then when I put my hand on the white elephant I felt nothing but air. It was a ghost elephant, one of those elephants which come back after death to walkthe earth because in this life they went forth and murdered men. I went from the spot as if Shaitan himself were at my heels, and soon afterward I made a pilgrimage to Mecca to avert the curse. But my elephant fell sick and died."
PROVING THE CONVEXITY OF THE EARTH.
An experiment was made a hundred years ago or so on the Bridgewater canal, in England, to prove the convexity of the earth. At intervals of five miles in a straight stretch of the canal three posts were driven until their tops were precisely six feet above the surface of the water. Then careful measurements and observations were made from either end, with the result that the top of the center post was found to be some distance above a line drawn from top to top of the first and last posts.
The experiments were repeated a number of times, always with the same result. This proves for ordinary persons that the earth is convex, but scientists reached the same conclusions by more scientific ways.
A Sure Thing.
A witty individual one morning wavered that he would ask the same question of fifty different persons and receive the same answer from each. The wit went to first one and then to another until he had reached the number of fifty. And this is how he won the bet: He whispered, half audibly, to each:
"I say, have you heard that Smith has failed?"
"What Smith?" queried the whole fifty, one after another, and it was decided that the bet had been fairly won.—London Tit-Bits.
AN EYE TO BUSINESS.
"So you are going to send his letters back, are you?" asked the blond.
"Yes," replied the brunette, with tears in her eyes. "But not until I have copied them all. They will make a splendid book, and I have a lovely title for them already." The Letters of a Lazy Lover.’"—Cincinnati TimesStar.
A Telltale Sign.
"Old Blinker is a confirmed bachelor, isn't he?"
"Yes, but I am sure that he was once engaged."
"Why?"
"Because he tells me there was a certain period of his life when he went to church regularly."—Detroit Free Press.
Bismarck's Regrets.
Shortly after 1870 Bismarck was were hunting wild elephants in the jungle for our lord, the maharaja of Gidhaur. I saw a large tusker alone by a pool. His color was grayish white, and my heart beat fast, for I thought Allah had been gracious to me and had placed in my hands that greatest of all prizes, a lord white elephant. Cautiously I urged my own tame elephant toward him, hoping that while they made friends I could bind him fast to a tree by the rope. My beast trumpeted in terror and trembled violently, but I goaded him on, and then when I put my hand on the white elephant I felt nothing but air. It was a ghost elephant, one of those elephants which come back after death to walkthe earth because in this life they went forth and murdered men. I went from the spot as if Shaitan himself were at my heels, and soon afterward I made a pilgrimage to Mecca to avert the curse. But my elephant fell sick and died."
PROVING THE CONVEXITY OF THE EARTH.
An experiment was made a hundred years ago or so on the Bridgewater canal, in England. To prove for ordinary persons that the earth is convex, but scientists reached the same conclusions by more scientific ways.
A Sure Thing.
A witty individual one morning wavered that he would ask the same question of fifty different persons and receive the same answer from each. The wit went to first one and then to another until he had reached the number of fifty. And this is how he won the bet: He whispered, half audibly, to each:
"I say, have you heard that Smith has failed?"
"What Smith?" queried the whole fifty, one after another, and it was decided that the bet had been fairly won.—London Tit-Bits.
AN EYE TO BUSINESS.
"So you are going to send his letters back, are you?" asked the blond.
"Yes," replied the brunette, with tears in her eyes. "But not until I have copied them all. They will make a splendid book, and I have a lovely title for them already." The Letters of a Lazy Lover.’"—Cincinnati TimesStar.
A Telltale Sign.
"Old Blinker is a confirmed bachelor, isn't he?"
"Yes, but I am sure that he was once engaged."
"Why?"
"Because he tells me there was a certain period of his life when he went to church regularly."—Detroit Free Press.
Bismarck's Regrets.
Shortly after 1870 Bismarck was were hunting wild elephants in the jungle for our lord, the maharaja of Gidhaur. I saw a large tusker alone by a pool. His color was grayish white, and my heartbeat fast, for I thought Allah had been gracious to me and had placed in my hands that greatest of all prizes, a lord white elephant. Cautiously I urged my own tame elephant toward him, hoping that while they made friends I could bind him fast to a tree by the rope. My beast trumpeted in terror and trembled violently, but I goaded him on, and then when I put my hand on the white elephant I felt nothing but air. It was a ghost elephant, one of those elephants which come back after death to walkthe earth because in this life they went forth and murdered men. I went from the spot as if Shaitan himself were at my heels, and soon afterward I made a pilgrimage to Mecca to avert the curse. But my elephant fell sick and died."
PROVING THE CONVEXITY OF THE EARTH.
An experiment was made a hundred years ago or so on the Bridgewater canal, in England. To prove for ordinary persons that the earth is convex, but scientists reached the same conclusions by more scientific ways.
A Sure Thing.
A witty individual one morning wavered that he would ask the same question of fifty different persons and receive the same answer from each. The wit went to first one and then to another until he had reached the number of fifty. And this is how he won the bet: He whispered, half audibly, to each:
"I say, have you heard that Smith has failed?"
"What Smith?" queried the whole fifty, one after another, and it was decided that the bet had been fairly won.—London Tit-Bits.
AN EYE TO BUSINESS.
"So you are going to send his letters back, are you?" asked the blond.
"Yes," replied the brunette, with tears in her eyes. "But not until I have copied them all. They will make a splendid book, and I have a lovely title for them already." The Letters of a Lazy Lover.’"—Cincinnati TimesStar.
A Telltale Sign.
"Old Blinker is a confirmed bachelor, isn't he?"
"Yes,but I am sure that he was once engaged."
"Why?"
"Because he tells me there was a certain period of his life when he went to church regularly."—Detroit Free Press.
Bismarck's Regrets.
Shortly after 1870 Bismarck was were hunting wild elephants in the jungle for our lord,the maharaja of Gidhaur. I saw a large tusker alone by a pool. His color was grayish white,and my heartbeat fast,for I thought Allah had been gracious to me and had placed in my hands that greatest of all prizes,a lord white elephant. Cautiously I urged my own tame elephant toward him, hoping that while they made friends I could bind him fast to a tree by the rope.My beast trumpeted in terror and trembled violently,but I goaded him on,and then when I put my hand on the white elephant I felt nothing but air." She says she is very fond of music." Instrumental?"
Well,it's instrumental in making
the neighbors sweater when she gets at
the piano."—Exchange.
Life
The poet's exclamation,'O Life!' I'm feeleled bounding in my veins," isa joyous one. Persons that can rarely or never make it in honesty to themselves amongthe most unfortunate.The
donor live but exist; for live implies more than be,
accomplished a great work,bestowing
theric blessings,and that medicine
is Hood's Sarasparilla.The weak,
run-down or debilitated,从 any cause,
should not fall to take it.I build up
the whole system,changes existence into life,and makes life more abounding.We are glad to say these things in its favor tothe readersof our columns.
Lincoln's Opinion of Himself.
In the "Memoirs of Henry Villard"
the author tellsof ordinary persons
thatthe earth can be
manipulatedforthe United States senate sincethe dayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhewas clerkinathemocracysincethedayswhenhe Was clerkinathemocracysincethedays WhenHeWasClarkedInTheStreet
FACTS ABOUT ORANGE COUNTY IS apparent:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan BernardinoSan Diego8400 square mile县is apparent:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县is apparent:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县is apparent:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县is apparent:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县is apparent:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县is apparent:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县is apparent:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县is apparent:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县is apparent:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县is apparent:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县is apparent:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县is apparent:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县is apparent:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县is apparent:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县is apparent:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县is apparent:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县is apparent:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县is apparent:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县is apparent:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县is applicable:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县is applicable:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县is applicable:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县is applicable:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县is applicable:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县is applicable:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县is applicable:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县is applicable:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县是 applicable:
Counties.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县是 applicable:
Countines.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县是 applicable:
Countines.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县是 applicable:
Countines.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县是 applicable:
Countines.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县是 applicable:
Countines.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县是 applicable:
Countines.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县是 applicable:
Countines.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县是 applicable:
Countines.Los AngelesOrange.RiversideSan Diego8400 square mile县是 applicable:
COUNTIES.OVERTHEWATER
Houses are very acute vision,purely as most acute of any creature,and they sense also more widely diffused over-the retina than is case with man.Consequentlya bird can see sideways as well as objects in frontof it.A bird sees,showing great
timelessness in consequence,a hawk long before it is visible to man.So,towfowl和 pigeons find minute scrapsof food,distinguishing themfrom what appearto us similar piecesof earth or gravel.Young chickensare also able to find their own food,knowing its positionand how distantit is as soon as they are hatched,thewherea child only very gradually learns either it see or to understandthe distanceof objects.Seven birds,sapparing greatly timelessness in consequence,a hawk long before it is visible to man.So,towfowl和 pigeons find minute scrapsof food,distinguishing themfrom what appearto us similar piecesof earth or gravel.Young chickensare also able to find their own food,knowing its positionand how distantit is as soon as they are hatched,thewherea child only very gradually learns either it see or to understandthe distanceof objects.Seven birds,sapparing greatly timelessness in consequence,a hawk long before it is visible to man.So,towfowl和 pigeons find minute scrapsof food,distinguishing themfrom what appearto us similar piecesof earth or gravel.Young chickensare also able to find their own food,knowing its positionand how distantit is as soon as they are hatched,thewherea child only very gradually learns either it see or to understandthe distanceof objects.Seven birds,sapparing greatly timelessness in consequence,a hawk long before it is visible to man.So,towfowl和 pigeons find minute scrapsof food,distinguishing themfrom what appearto us similar piecesof earth or gravel.Young chickensare also able to find their own food,knowing its positionand how distantit is as soon as they are hatched,thewherea child only very gradually learns either it see or to understandthe distanceof objects.Seven birds,sapparing greatly timelessness in consequence,a hawk long before it is visible to man.So,towfowl和 pigeons find minute scrapsof food,distinguishing themfrom what appearto us similar piecesof earth or gravel.Young chickensare also able to find their own food,knowing its positionand how distantit is as soon as they are hatched,thewherea child only very gradually learns either it see or to understandthe distanceof objects.Seven birds,sapparing greatly timelessness in consequence,a hawk long before it is visible to man.So,towfowl和 pigeons find minute scrapsof food,distinguishing themfrom what appearto us similar piecesof earth or gravel.Young chickensare also able to find their own food,knowing its positionand how distantit is as soon as they are hatched,thewherea child only very gradually learns either it see or to understandthe distanceof objects.Seven birds,sapparing greatly timelessness in consequence,a hawk long before it is visible to man.So,towfowl和 pigeons find minute scrapsof food,distinguishing themfrom what appearto us similar piecesof earth or gravel.Young chickensare also able to find their own food,knowing its positionand how distantit is as soon as they are hatched,thewherea child only very gradually learns either it see or to understandthe distanceof objects.Seven birds,sapparing greatly timelessness in consequence,a hawk long before it is visible to man.So,towfowl和 pigeons find minute scrapsof food,distinguishing themfrom what appearto us similar piecesof earth or gravel.Young chickensare also able to find their own food,knowing its positionand how distantit is as soon as they are hatched,thewherea child only very gradually learns either it see or to understandthe distanceof objects.Seven
It Costs Nothing.
Thackeray tells of a lord who never was a vacant place on his estate, but he took an acorn out of his pocket and tapped it in. Never lose a chance of being kind word, of doing a kindly thing.
Dragging Pains
2825 Keeley St., Chicago, IL., Oct., 2, 1902.
I suffered with falling and congestion of the womb, with severe pains through the groins. I suffered terribly at the time of menstruation, had blinding headaches and rushing of blood to the brain. What to try I knew not, for it seemed that I had tried all and failed, but I had never tried Wine of Cardui, that blessed remedy for sick women. I found it pleasant to take and soon knew that I had the right medicine. New blood seemed to course through my veins and after using eleven bottles I was a well woman.
Mrs. Bush is now in perfect health because she took Wine of Cardui for menstrual disorders, bearing down pains and blinding headaches when all other remedies failed to bring her relief. Any sufferer may secure health by taking Wine of Cardui in her home. The first bottle convinces the patient she is on the road to health.
For advice in cases requiring special directions, address, giving symptoms, "The Ladies' Advisory Department," The Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn.
WINE OF CARDUI
Shortly after 1870 Bismarck was complaining that life had brought him no happiness or love. "But," said a friend, "you have made a great nation happy." "Yes," replied the prince, "but many people unhappy. But for me three great wars would not have been waged, $80,000 men would not have perished, and parents, brothers, sisters, widows, would not now be mourning. That I have to settle with God. But I have had little or no pleasure from what I have done; on the contrary, much vexation, anxiety and toll."—London News.
Sound of the Human Voice.
No man knows the sound of his own voice. He hears himself through two channels—the outer ear and the eustachian tube. He hears his friend through the ear only; hence he would rather listen to himself than to his friend. Try your voice in a gramaphone. At first you will not recognize it, but you will immediately identify that of your friend.—New York Press.
The Dear Friends.
Mabel—What a perfectly exquisite new bonnet, dearest? Ethel—Oh, I'm so glad you like it. I was so afraid you wouldn't. Are you sure you like it? Mabel—Sure? Oh, perfectly. I always did adore that shape. Why, I had three just like it—when it was in fashion.
Not Yet.
"Henry," whispered the bride of two hours, "you don't regret marrying me even yet?"
"No, darling," replied Henry, "not even yet."
The train sped on, and she waited for another five minutes.
A Telltale Sign.
"Old Blinker is a confirmed bachelor, isn't he?"
"Yes, but I am sure that he was once engaged."
"Why?"
"Because he tells me there was a certain period of his life when he went to church regularly."—Detroit Free Press.
Bismarck's Regrets.
Shortly after 1870 Bismarck was complaining that life had brought him no happiness or love. "But," said a friend, "you have made a great nation happy." "Yes," replied the prince, "but many people unhappy. But for me three great wars would not have been waged, $80,000 men would not have perished, and parents, brothers, sisters, widows, would not now be mourning. That I have to settle with God. But I have had little or no pleasure from what I have done; on the contrary, much vexation, anxiety and toll."—London News.
The Big Bell of Burma.
One of the sights of the Shwe Da-gone pagoda in Burma is a gigantic bell of bronze, weighing forty-two and a quarter tons and said to be the third largest bell in the world, the largest being in Moscow and the next largest in Mingin, also in Burma. After conquering Burma the British undertook to carry the great Rangun bell to Calcutta as a trophy, but dropped it overboard in the Rangun river, where it defied all the efforts of the engineers to raise it. Some years later the Burmese, who had not ceased to mourn its loss, begged to be allowed to recover it. Their petition was granted, and by attaching to it an incredible number of bamboo floats the unwieldy mass of metal was finally lifted from its muddy bed and triumphantly restored to its place.
Do You Want The Earth?
The Earth is a new monthly illustrated journal, published by the Santa Fe. Tells the truth about the great Southwest and California—the truth is good enough. Frequent articles describing your part of the country. Contains letters written by farmers, stockmen and fruit raisers; men who have succeeded and who give the reasons why. Strong editorials and interesting miscellany. A very persuasive immigration helper.
Why not have it sent to friends "back East," to do missionary work for the Southwest? Regular subscription price is 25 cents a year; worth double. Send us 50 cents (colon or stamps) with names and addresses of five Eastern friends; we will mail The Earth, 1120 Railway Exchange Bldg., Chicago.
Celery one of its principal digestive organ.
Prepared by
FOR SAL
FACTS ABOUT ANAHEIM.
Sketch of the industries and Resources or the Most Beautiful Part of California.
The City of Anaheim, with a population of 2500, is situated in the northern part of Orange county, in Southern California, 12 miles from the ocean, 4½ miles from the foothills, and 148½ feet above sea level. It is 27 miles from Los Angeles, the second largest city in the State of California.
The climatic conditions are the most favorable for out-door life to be found in Southern California. The temperature is extremely uniform, seldom rising above 90 degrees in summer, or falling below 32 degrees in winter. The abundance of sunlight and the absence of sharp frosts and cold winds make it a place especially acceptable to those desiring to escape the severe climate of the east.
The country is very attractive. It is practically level, with just sufficient slope from the hills to afford adequate drainage. The roads are level, well graded, and well kept, affording excellent opportunities for cycling and driving. The soil is a rich sandy loam which never bakes, making it a very easy ground to work; thus lending itself readily to the cultivation of berries, nuts, oranges, etc.
The variety of products, and the possibility of procuring small tracts of land at low figures, and on easy terms, make our section of the county very attractive and advantageous for truck raising, or for farming on a small scale. The following are a few of the products: oranges, lemons, walnuts, grapes, peaches, apricots, sugar beets, berries and vegetables of all kinds.
Anaheim is the possessor of a Building and Loan Association, Water company, two railroads, fruit cannery and drier, large oil industry, ostrich farm, bank, several adequate commercial houses, two hotels and two newspapers. The city also owns
It must be kind o' phony,
Like an eddycated Coney,
Or a solid mile o' Baraum, if ye like;
And I just tell you, by jago,
I'm a-hepla' that I Also go
For a week or so to rubber on the Pike.
"A Ballad of the Pike," by Wallace Irwin. Copyright by Collier's Weekly. Published by permission.
$67.50
To St. Louis and Return
May 11, 12, 13; June 1, 2, 15, 16, 22, 23; July 1, 2, 7, 8, 13, 14; August 8, 9, 10, 18, 19; September 5, 6, 7, 8; October 3, 4, 5, 6.
Return limit, alcoy days.
Take the Rock Island System and you go thro' without change. Scenic or Southern Line, as preferred. Standard and tourist sleeping cars; dining cars. Trains stop at Main Entrance World's Fair.
Full information on request.
Call or write.
F. L. MILLER, Dist. Pass. Apt.
237 S. Spring Street.
Los Angeles.
WHY KINLOCH PASTE IS THE IDEAL HOUSE PAINT
The purpose of House Paint is to Protect and Beautify.
"Linseed oil is the life of paint" because it is the binder; the masticage; that holds the pigments (the dry paint) to the surface; and only when the oil loses this binding quality through its disintegration by atmospheric influences should the leached dry particles of pigment come off. The office of the pigment is decorative and also preservative in protecting the life of the oil by protecting it from the elements.
Absolute certainty of the purity of the linseed oil constitutes the chief economy in paint buying; for exactly the extent that the binding quality of the oil is weakened by the use of adulterants or cheap "thinners," the durability of the whole paint is diminished.
You have this absolute certainty of the quality of the oil in the Paint put on your house when you buy Kinloch Paint, because you buy the oil separately and give your paint this absolutely certain durability by mixing this oil gallon for gallon with the thick "Kinloch" paste in which, for your convenience and the certainty of proper proportions, all the pigments, tinting colors," "urpe" and dryers are ground together and sold you, ready for the admixture of the pure raw oil by yourself.
These facts alone make "Kinloch" the ideal paint; but besides this guarantee of durability through your personal knowledge of the purity of the oil, is the fact that when you buy two gallons of the ordinary ready-mixed paint—the "ready for the brush" sort not just the ready-mixed paint price for the one gallon of oil therein, regardless of its purity, or 2 1/2 to 3 times more than for the fresh pure oil in your local dealer's barrel.
We invite correspondence from those who use or buy House Paint.
FACTS ABOUT ORANGE CO.
The census bureau has issued a bulletin on agriculture in California which we quote from extensively in another part of this issue. One of the interesting features of the report is the paragraph giving the number of farms and acres of farming lands in the five Southern California counties. The pre-eminence of Orange county is apparent:
Counties. No. Farms. Acres.
Los Angeles .6577 865,063
Orange .2388 599,436
Riverside .2340 427,097
San Bernardino .2350 219,182
San Diego .2698 869,419
But it is in the acreage of irrigated lands that Orange county takes easy precedence over the other counties of Southern California:
Counties. Acres.
Los Angeles .85,044
Orange .41,549
Riverside .32,947
San Bernardino .37,877
San Diego .16,022
The area of Orange county is 780 square miles; that of Los Angeles, 3880; that of Riverside, 7008; that of San Bernardino, 20,055, and that of San Diego, 8400 square miles.
Orange county thus contains one-fifth the area of Los Angeles; yet its irrigated lands approach in area to one-half those of its neighbor to the north.
Riverside embraces nine times its area, yet it irrigates 9000 more acres, or a fourth more than the belauded county on the east.
San Bernardino is 25 times its size, yet its irrigated acres exceed those of this jumbo county by nearly 4000, approximately ten per cent.
San Diego is eleven times its size, yet it irrigates 25,000 acres more than the county on the south—300 per cent is the former's irrigated area as compared with that of the latter—almost the irrigated area of San Diego and Riverside combined.
Orange county possesses the finest system of irrigation, the most secure water rights, that exist in Southern California. That is what we have said many a time and oft. These figures prove it. It is the handsomest and most productive county that lies outdoors and is settling up faster than any other in the State.
The purpose of House Painting is to Protect and Beautify.
"Linseed oil is the life of paint," because it is the binder, the muralist, that holds the pigments (the dry paint) to the surface; and only when the oil loses this binding quality through its disintegration by atmospheric influences should the licensed dry particles of pigment come off. The omice of the pigment are decorative and also preservative in prolonging the life of the oil by protecting it from the elements.
Absolute certainty of the purity of the linseed oil constitutes the chief economy in paint buying, for to exactly the extent that the blending quality of the oil is weakened by the use of adulterants or cheap "miners," the durability of the whole paint is diminished.
You have this absolute certainty of the quality of the oil in the Paint put on your house when you buy Kinloch Paint, because you buy the oil separately and privately with such quality as possible. By making this oil gallon for gallon with these "Kinloch" paste in which, for your convenience and the certainty of proper proportions, all the pigments, tinting colors, "hurps" and dryers are ground together and sold you, ready for the admixture of the pure raw oil by yourself.
These facts alone make "Kinloch" the ideal paint; but besides this guarantee of durability through your personal knowledge of the purity of the oil, is the fact that when you buy two gallons of the ordinary ready-mixed paint—the "ready for the break" sort—you pay the ready-mixed paint price for the one gallon of oil therein, regardless of its purity, or 2 1/2 to 3 times more than for the fresh pure oil in your local dealer's burrow.
We invite correspondence from those who use or buy House Painting.
WHEREVER WE HAVE NO AGENT, YOUR OWN DEALER WILL GET "KINLOCH" FOR YOU, IF SHOWN THIS AD., BY WRITING DIRECT TO KINLOCH PAINT COMPANY, ST. LOUIS, MO.
THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE.
SOLD BY H. A. DICKEL, ANAHEIM, CAL.
To the East
The traveler seeking the most comfortable, economical and quickest way,naturally looks up a Santa Fe agent, that he may secure full information about this route, and get a copy of pamphlet giving in detail the pleasures of traveling
In a Tourist Sleeper
Personally conducted
Habra Valley
Ten acres to colony tracts, with an abundance of pure water piped on land. Price $130 to $150 per acre. Easy terms.
W. J. Hole, Los Angeles
Beware of Olntments for Catarrh That Contains Mercury
As mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell ana completely derange the whole system when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do is tenfold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Mall's Catarh Oure manufacture takes no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarh Oure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken internally and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free.
Sold by drugrists, Price 75c per bottle. Hall's Family Pills are the best.
The Only Celery Food
The only food in which celery forms an important part—its nourishing qualities of a marked character. It acts admirably upon the nervous system—recommended for wakefulness, rheumatism and neuralgia.
Dr. Price's Wheat Flake Celery Food
Celery one of its principal ingredients, it helps to regulate the bowels; a restorative in debility of the digestive organs and has a direct effect upon the kidneys. It's a food—not a medicine.
Palatable—Nutritious—Easy of Digestion and Ready to Eat
Signature on every package.
Dr. Price, the creator of Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder and Delicious Flavoring Extracts.
A cook book containing 70 excellent receipts for using the Food melded free to any address.
Prepared by PRICE GEREAL FOOD COMPANY, Chicago, Illinois.
FOR SALE BY—STERN BROS., WALLOP BROS., H. A. DICKEL.