anaheim-gazette 1904-07-07
Searchable text
Anaheim
VOLUME XXXIV.
ANAHEIM
J. M. Griffith Co.
A Corporation
Lumber Dealers
Los Angeles St. near S. P. Depot
Keep constantly on hand Doors, Windows, Mouldings, Posts, Shakes, Shingles, Lath and Cement.
HENRY N. ADAMS,
Anaheim Agent
SUMMER IS COMING
And so is bad water.
To avoid this, drink PURITAS Water
for sale by W. B. HUTCHINSON,
ANAHEIM.
REAL ESTATE
and INSURANCE
ALL AND SEE US FOR ALL KINDS OF improved and unimproved orchard, farm and city properties, amongst which we have some real bargains. How about that place you wish to sell? Come in and list it with us, we are here to give you reliable service, and protect your interests. What can we do for you?
SANDILANDS & BACKS,
or. Los Angeles & Chartres Sts., Anaheim.
C. G. McKinley
Los Angeles street, Anaheim
Dealer in
Hay, Grain, Wood, Coal,
PETERS'
DIAMOND BRAND
SHOES
O.S.DAVIS DISTRIBUTOR ANAHEIM.
LADIES' PATENT COLT
LOW-CUT SHOES
CHEAP FOR CASH
: TENNIS AND RUBBER BOOTS:
All Cheap for Cash at Davis'
Palace : Meat : Market
W. E. HOUK, Proprietor.
Beef, Mutton, Pork, Fresh and Salted Meats, Hams, Bacon, Sausage, Lard.
Prompt attention given to all orders.
Telenhone Main 5
SANDILANDS & BACKS,
or. Los Angeles & Chartres Sts., Anaheim.
C. G. McKinley
Los Angeles street, Anaheim
Dealer in
Hay, Grain, Wood, Coal,
Illuminating and Lubricating Oils
Native and Imported Sulphur
Agents Aetna Mineral Water
Call and get prices.
.....Wilbur's and Grant's Animal Foods
DR. F. H. HOUCK
DENTIST.
OFFICE IN FEDERMAN BLK
UP STAIRS
HOURS 9 to 5
ANAHEIM CAL.
jy15tf
Herbert Allan Johnston, M.D.
Office and Residence:
Corner Los Angeles St. and Broadway
Hours 11-12 a.m.
2-4 p.m.
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA
Dr. A. W. Bickford
OFFICE AT RESIDENCE
309 West Center street.
Telephone 101.
ANAHEIM, CAL.
FRITZ RUHMANN'S
Germania Halle.
BACKS' NEW BUILDING
LOS ANGELES STREET
Keeps on hand a Large and complete stock of liquors, wines and cigars. Cold beer always on draugh
Boston Bakery
FRESH BREAD, PIES AND CAKES.
Ice Cream and Confectionery
S. Kistler, Proprietor
F. BACKS,
UNDERTAKER
And Dealer in FURNITURE.
Wall Paper, Cornices, Window
Palace : Meat : Market
W. E. HOUK, Proprietor.
Beef, Mutton, Pork, Fresh and Salted Meats, Hams, Bacon, Sausage, Lard,
Prompt attention given to all orders.
Telenphone Main 5
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF ANAHEIM
OFFICERS:
W. F. BOTSFORD, PRESIDENT
JOHN HARTUNG, VICE PRESIDENT AND CASHIER
FRANK SHANLEY 2ND VICE-PRES.
O. ZEUS, Ass't Cashier
DIRECTORS:
PETER WEISEL, A. S. BRADFORD,
FRANK SHANLEY.
Drafts sold direct on all European Countries
Fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars
THE PEERLESS
A. FUHRBERG, Proprietor
Los Angeles Beer on Tap
ANAHEIM - California
Anaheim Bakery,
PETER SYRE, PROPRIETOR.
FRESH BREAD CAKES & PIES CONFECTIONERY, ETC.
Wedding Cakes a Specialty. Los Angeles and Cyprus
City Stables
W. C. WARNER
Telephone Main 83
CENTER ST.
FRESH BREAD, PIES AND CAKES. . . .
Ice Cream and Confectionery
S. Kistler, Proprietor
F. BACKS,
UNDERTAKER
And Dealer in
FURNITURE.
Wall Paper, Cornices, Window Shades, Picture Frames, Upholstery Goods, Paints, Oils and Glass Sewing Machine Supplies, Etc.
For Los Angeles & Chartres St.
RICHARDMELROSE
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
And Notary Public.
Special attention given to Probate Matters.
—Center Street, Anaheim.
DR. W. W. ADAMS.
Osteopathic Physician.
Graduate of 'A. S. O., Kirksville, Mo.
Office and Residence—180 Philadelphia St., Anaheim, California.
We practice in Acute and Chronic cases and Obstetrics.
City Market!
F. W. FLEISCHMANN, Proprietor,
CHAS. GREDERMANN, Manager.
Fresh and Salted Meats.
Special attention given to all orders, which will be filled promptly.
Roman Wisser
Favorite Saloon,
Finest of Wines, Liquors & Oigare Pool & Billiard Tables
Schindler's Building, Center St., Anaheim
LOS ANGELES BEER ON DRAUGHT
The Weekly Gazette.
Established 1870.
SUBSCRIPTION. - $1 50 Per Year.
Six months...$1
Three months...
Payable invariably in advance.
Transient advertising rates,$1 per inch per month.
The GAZETTE is issued every Thursday morning.
Entered at the Anaheim Postoffice as second-class matter.
RAILWAY TIME TABLE.
Time of Arrival and Departure of Trains.
June 9, 1904.
SOUTHERN PACIFIC RAILROAD.
Trains on the Southern Pacific pass Anaheim as follows:
To Los Angeles.
Dally...7:52 am
Daily...9:40 am
Dally...10:52 am
Daily...10:10am
Daily...4:06 pm
Daily...6:14pm
Pass Loara Station:
To Los Angeles.
Dally...7:56 am
Daily...9:45 am
Daily...10:56am
Daily...10:06am
Daily...4:10 pm
Daily...6:10pm
LOS ALAMITOS TRAINS.
Leave AnaheimDally*...9:55 am
Mon.Wed.Fri.2:37 pm
* Except Sunday.
TRAINS TO NEWPORT BEACH
Leave Anaheim
Daily...8:14 pm
Leave Newport
Daily...7:05 am
Santa Fe Time Table
Effective June 11, 1904.
Trains on the Santa Fe Route leave Anaheim for points named as follows:
To Los Angeles--7:55 am
9:57 am..12:00pm..5:20 pm.
ToSan Diego--9:20 a.m.
2:50 m.
To Santa Ana--9:20 am..2:50 pm..5:64 p.m.
To Riverside and San Bernardino--11:35 am..5:54 p.m.
To Redlands--11:35 am.
To San Jacinto and Hemet--11:35 am.
To Escondido--2:50pm.
To Fallbrook--9:20 am.
To Redondo Beach--7:55 am..
Trains marked with a * are daily except Sunday. All others daily.
J.H. CLABAUGH, Agent.
Nasal Catarrh quickly yields to treatment by Ely's Cream Balm, which is agreeably aromatic. It is received through the nostrils, cleanses and heals the whole surface over which it diffuses itself. Druggists sell the 50c. size; Trial size by mail, 10 cents. Test it and you are sure to continue the treatment.
Announcement.
To accommodate those who are partial to the use of atomizers in applying liquids into the nasal passages for catarrhal troubles, the proprietors prepare Cream Balm in liquid form, which will be known as Ely's Liquid Cream Balm. Price including the spraying tube is 75 cents. Druggists or by mail. The liquid form embodies the medicinal properties of the solid preparation.
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1904.
SHACKS AT LANDING
DEMOLISHED BY CHOLOS
Structures Remaining Upon Hellman's Land Turned Over to Mexicans and Demolished.
The presentious row of cottages at the Landing in which local residents have been wont to spend a season in summer for years past are no more. Those that were not moved off by their owners in accordance with orders from Sheriff Laoy, were set upon by a band of several hundred cholos a day or two ago and chopped to pieces. Only a few of the edifices remained, but of these one belonging to Pierre Nicolas of Fullerton, who had been granted time in which to move to his newly purchased lots at Bay City, may cause some trouble, as a suit for damages is talked of. Nicolas when notified by the sheriff to vacate, at once repaired to the Landing, and in looking over the situation determined to purchase two lots at Bay City, paying $1000 therefor. To Hellman's agent he applied for and was granted permission to leave his house at the Landing upon its site for several days, or until such time as he could move it upon his newly purchased property. This was agreed to, but later in the day a band of 100 cholos were directed to destroy such houses as remained upon the ground, and Nicolas' house was battered into splinters along with the rest.
Hellman's possession of the land occupied by these cottages is now undisputed, and all those who for the past quarter of a century were wont to repair to the Landing to bathe and camp during the warm season must look for different beach resorts.
"There's no camping place for these people any more," said one of the evicted tide-landers the other day. "People used to be able to go fishing and hunting all along this coast line, but now we haven't got a look-in. All
Republican Central Committee.
The Republican Central Committee met at Santa Ana on Saturday and fixed the date of primaries for Thursday, July 14, and the County Convention for Saturday, July 16. The primaries will be open for votes from 12 to 5 o'clock. The basis of representation will be one delegate at large for each precinct and one delegate for each fifteen votes and fraction thereof cast for Governor Pardee in the last state election. The business of the convention will be the selection of 12 delegates which will meet at Santa Cruz, August 25; the election of 12 delegates to the Congressional convention which will meet at Santa Ana, August 16; the nomination of an assemblyman, and the transaction of any other business.
The committee also voted to secure the Grand opera house for the day and evening of August 16, for the Congress convention to be held there in the morning and afternoon. In the evening a ratification and reception to the successful candidate is to be given by the Central committee and Columbia Marching club.
Frank Shanley was elected to represent Anaheim Precinct No.1 on the committee in place of Geo. Boyd, resigned.
Apricot Growers Dissatisfied.
Apricot growers of Orange county are dissatisfied over the low prices offered by buyers. There will be a good crop in this county and quality will come up to the average. Growers here believe they should receive much higher prices, as the crop is said to be short all over the state, with the exception of Orange county. Growers are now only offered about $16 a ton and many of them hold that they should receive at least from $30 to $35 for the entire crop, orchard run. Some go so far as to state that there is no opposition among the buyers and that they have an understanding as to the amount they will pay the growers.
MINERAL WEALTH OF ISLANDS
Rich Deposits of Precious Metals Awaiting Touch of Capital
We have been favored with a copy of the report of the bureau of circular affairs dealing with matters in the Philippines and referring at length to the exhibit made by the islands at the World's Fair. We quote therefrom as follows:
The mineral wealth of the Philippine islands is very great, but as yet is in the preliminary stage of development. There are extensive lignite beds in Bataan, Cebu and Mindoro, and slight traces of petroleum are to be found in Cebu. Gold exists in paying quantities in Luzon and Mindanao, traces of this precious metal being found in most of the other islands. Iron is abundant, and there are copper prospects in the Benguet and Lepanto-Bontoc provinces with every sign of becoming paying properties. For years the Igorrote has made his own jewelry from the auriferous deposits in the Benguet hills, and his brother, the Lepanto-Bontoc, has coined the big brass clacquers that pass current with the Spanish "dos centavos" throughout the island. It is hardly to be expected that the Philippines will have a Klondike boom, yet there is a steady growth in the mining industries, stamp mills are now working in the gold districts and three coal mines are now supplying a part of the Manila market.
A number of difficulties are in the way of the proper exploitation of the mining industries in the Philippines, the most serious one at present being the lack of adequate transportation.
Under the American government there have been constructed more miles of good roads than during the entire Spanish regime, and the system is still progressing. This and the hope...
such houses as remained upon the ground, and Nicolas' house was battered into splinters along with the rest.
Hellman's possession of the land occupied by these cottages is now undisputed, and all those who for the past quarter of a century were wont to repair to the Landing to bathe and camp during the warm season must look for different beach resorts.
"There's no camping place for these people any more," said one of the evicted tide-landers the other day. "People used to be able to go fishing and hunting all along this coast line, but now we haven't got a look-in. All the beaches have been taken up, and we are not in it any more."
Some of the tide-landers begin to think they have been sold out by somebody. When Hellman brought suit to quiet title to land occupied by them, they were advised by their counsel not to appear in court to contest the suit.
"If Hellman wins the suit," their attorney is reported to have said, "he will be required to show us where the line is, and this he can never do."
This advice was followed by the tide-landers, and when Hellman secured judgment against them by default, some of them laughed in their sleeve at the sly trick played on the banker. A few days thereafter they received the following postal note from the sheriff:
SANTA ANA, Cal., June 22, 1904.
On the 25th day of May, 1904, I.W. Hellman obtained judgment in the superior court of the state of California, in and for the county of Orange, against you, for possession of property located at Anaheim Landing, Orange county, California. A writ of possession issued out of said superior court has been placed in my hands, as sheriff of Orange county, California, commanding me to place the said I.W. Hellman in quiet and peaceable possession of said land and premises, described in said judgment.
Now, this is to notify you that you must remove your property from the land of said I.W. Hellman before next Monday, the 21st of June. If you fail to comply with this notice, I will be compelled to remove your personal effects and place the said I.W. Hellman in the possession of the buildings claimed by you.
THEO. LACY, Sheriff,
Orange County, Cal.
Lacy's communication was delayed in transit, so that it was not received by some of the parties affected until a week after it had been mailed. Even the mails seemed to be against the outlanders.
But after the first brush with the sheriff, as already narrated in these columns, the settlers decided to move. Some of the cottages were torn down and the lumber hauled to this city, some were moved off and others were abandoned to their fate.
One day last week a rumor spread to the effect that Lacy was on his way to the Landing with a posse of twenty able-bodied men to disposes the outlanders. This story was untrue, as Lacy was accompanied by a single deputy. But he had no trouble in disposing Hellman's tenants.
Mr. Nicolas' structure was an exception. He was granted permission to such houses as remained upon the ground, and Nicolas' house was battered into splinters along with the rest.
Hellman's possession of the land occupied by these cottages is now undisputed, and all those who for the past quarter of a century were wont to repair to the Landing to bathe and camp during the warm season must look for different beach resorts.
"There’s no camping place for these people any more," said one of the evicted tide-landers the other day. "People used to be able to go fishing and hunting all along this coast line, but now we haven’t got a look-in. All the beaches have been taken up, and we are not in it any more."
Some of the tide-landers begin to think they have been sold out by somebody. When Hellman brought suit to quiet title to land occupied by them, they were advised by their counsel not to appear in court to contest the suit.
"If Hellman wins the suit," their attorney is reported to have said, "he will be required to show us where the line is, and this he can never do."
This advice was followed by the tide-landers, and when Hellman secured judgment against them by default, some of them laughed in their sleeve at the sly trick played on the banker. A few days thereafter they received the following postal note from the sheriff:
SANTA ANA, Cal., June 22, 1904.
On the 25th day of May, 1904, I.W. Hellman obtained judgment in the superior court of the state of California, in and for the county of Orange, against you, for possession of property located at Anaheim Landing, Orange county, California. A writ of possession issued out of said superior court has been placed in my hands, as sheriff of Orange county, California, commanding me to place the said I.W. Hellman in quiet and peaceable possession of said land and premises, described in said judgment.
Now, this is to notify you that you must remove your property from the land of said I.W. Hellman before next Monday, the 21st of June. If you fail to comply with this notice, I will be compelled to remove your personal effects and place the said I.W. Hellman in the possession of the buildings claimed by you.
THEO. LACY, Sheriff,
Orange County, Cal.
Lacy's communication was delayed in transit, so that it was not received by some of the parties affected until a week after it had been mailed. Even the mails seemed to be against the outlanders.
But after the first brush with the sheriff, as already narrated in these columns, the settlers decided to move. Some of the cottages were torn down and the lumber hauled to this city, some were moved off and others were abandoned to their fate.
One day last week a rumor spread to the effect that Lacy was on his way to the Landing with a posse of twenty able-bodied men to disposes the outlanders. This story was untrue, as Lacy was accompanied by a single deputy. But he had no trouble in disposing Hellman's tenants.
Mr. Nicolas' structure was an exception. He was granted permission to such houses as remained upon the ground, and Nicolas' house was battered into splinters along with the rest.
Hellman's possession of the land occupied by these cottages is now undisputed, and all those who for the past quarter of a century were wont to repair to the Landing to bathe and camp during the warm season must look for different beach resorts.
"There’s no camping place for these people any more," said one of the evicted tide-landers the other day. "People used to be able to go fishing and hunting all along this coast line, but now we haven’t got a look-in. All the beaches have been taken up, and we are not in it any more."
Some of the tide-landers begin to think they have been sold out by somebody. When Hellman brought suit to quiet title to land occupied by them, they were advised by their counsel not to appear in court to contest the suit.
"If Hellman wins the suit," their attorney is reported to have said, "he will be required to show us where the line is, and this he can never do."
This advice was followed by the tide-landers, and when Hellman secured judgment against them by default, some of them laughed in their sleeve at the sly trick played on the banker. A few days thereafter they received the following postal note from the sheriff:
SANTA ANA, Cal., June 22, 1904.
On the 25th day of May, 1904, I.W. Hellman obtained judgment in the superior court of the state of California, in and for the county of Orange, against you, for possession of property located at Anaheim Landing, Orange county, California. A writ of possession issued out of said superior court has been placed in my hands, as sheriff of Orange county, California, commanding me to place the said I.W. Hellman in quiet and peaceable possession of said land and premises, described in said judgment.
Now, this is to notify you that you must remove your property from the land of said I.W. Hellman before next Monday, the 21st of June. If you fail to comply with this notice, I will be compelled to remove your personal effects and place the said I.W. Hellman in the possession of the buildings claimed by you.
THEO. LACY, Sheriff,
Orange County, Cal.
Lacy's communication was delayed in transit, so that it was not received by some of the parties affected until a week after it had been mailed. Even the mails seemed to be against the outlanders.
But after the first brush with the sheriff, as already narrated in these columns, the settlers decided to move. Some of the cottages were torn down and the lumber hauled to this city, some were moved off and others were abandoned to their fate.
One day last week a rumor spread to the effect that Lacy was on his way to the Landing with a posse of twenty able-bodied men to disposes the outlanders. This story was untrue, as Lacy was accompanied by a single deputy. But he had no trouble in disposing Hellman's tenants.
Mr. Nicolas' structure was an exception. He was granted permission to such houses as remained upon the ground, and Nicolas' house was battered into splinters along with the rest.
Hellman's possession ofthe land occupied by these cottages is now undisputed, and all those who forthe buyers and that they have an understanding as tothe amount they will paythe growers.Northern California it is said,has only about 50 per centofthe average crop.Growersstate that another reason why they should receive higher prices is because there is practicallyno peach crop this season.Many growersofthe county are talkingof formingsome sortofan associationfor self-protection againstthe low prices offered.
Blind Pig Escapes
Henry Gibbs of Santa Ana chargedwith having sold liquorin that townin contraventionofthe prohibitionordinancewas releasedathis trialforlackof evidence.Asa Taylorof Talbert,the main witnessinthe case,who sworetothe complaint,was absent.Severalother witnesseswere calledbutnone wouldsweartheywere cognizantofthefactthatGibbshad soldliquorwithouta license.Thebeingno evidencedofanykindagainsttheaccusedhewasdischargedfrom custody.Gibbswas arrestedon achargesworntobyAsaTaylor statingthathehadpurchasedliquorfromthe defendant.Gibbspleadednotguiltyatthepreliminaryexaminationandwasreleasedon$20ball.Withher Taylorwentorwhyhehasgoneisnotknown.HewasformerlyemployedbyMr.Swift.ofthepeastlandsandFarnsworthwhostatedthathehadleftthecountry.
Model Farm Desired.
Ata meetingoftheboardofdirectorsoftheCaliforniaLiveStockBreeders'AssociationatSacramento.onSaturday,a billwassubmittedwhichwasproposedshouldbepassedbythelegislatureatthenextsession.Thebillprovidesforkeepurchaseofafarmtobeknownas"TheUniversityFarm,"andtobunderelicondetailoftheboardofregentsoftheUniversity.itistoconsidestofnoless than250acresofbestagriculturallandinthestateandistobeusedinconnectionwiththedepartmentofagricultureoftheUniversity.Schoolsandcollegebuildingsaretobeconstructedonitandsuchfarmbuildingsofthemoderntypeaswillbenecessaryfortheuseoffarmforexperimentalworkandfortheuseofthe farmasthelocationofaschoolofinstructioninpracticalagriculture.
This schoolitisproposedshallbemodeledafterthesuccessfulinstitutionsoftheMiddleWesternStateswherehundredsofyoungmenandwomenenterannuallyandareeducatedpissishedoverthelowpricesofferedbybuyers.Therewillbeagoodcropinthiscountyandqualitywillcomeupuptotheavengeance orewitha steady growthintheminingindustriesinthePhilippines,themostconservativeunitsofthe islands.Systematicprospectingwillundoubtedly revealthisimportantoreinlargequantities.
AllofthedifferentmetalsarecomprehensivelygroupedandclassifiedenablingtheinterestedvisitortoobtainaclearandconciseideaofthevastmineralwealthofthePhilippineislands.
AlongtheChineseandPhilippinecoasts,during certainseasonsoftheyear,terrific storms,knownastyphons,sweep overthePacificoceanandtheChinasea.leavinginhirepathwreckanddisaster.Inordertogiveadvancewarningoftheseterriblehurricanestherehavebeenestablishedforyearspastmeterologicalobservatorieswhosesolentistssendto-theworldatlargeadvancereportsofimpendingstorms.ThemostprominentofthesiestaWauillaObservatorywhichforyearshasbeenunderthe directionofFatherAlgue,aJesuitpriest,whoisnowatexpositionchiefoftheManilaObservatoryexhibit.Thisexhibitwhichis situatedjusttotheleftfrontoftheWalledCityconsistsofalargebuilding,amap仁 reliefofthePhilippineislandsandtwogalvanizedsteeltowers.Theexhibitisdividedproperlyintothreesections,viz,themeteorologicalsection,theseismicsectionandthegeographicsection.
The meteorologicalsectionisheadstation.inwhichthemostimportantinstrumentsofthePhilippineWeatherBureauareshown.Thestandardinstrumentsofthesessionarethecinemo-anemograph,tosregisterthemeanvelocityofthewind,Richardanemograph,theWild'sanemograph,theFrieranemograph,andtwopartsceneraUraumograph(lightning)
W. C. WARNER
ONE Main 83
ENTER ST.
Gazette
11, 1904.
Santa Fe
heath for
follows:
7:55 am.
5:20 pm.
9:20 a.m.
and San Bernardino—11:35 am.
11.35 am.
ato and Hemet—11:35 am.
2:50pm.
9:20 am.
beach—7:55 am..
with a* are daily except others daily.
J. H. CLABAUGH. Agent.
Arth quickly yields to treat-Cream Balm, which is agresite is received through the grass and heals the whole surhit diffuses itself. Druggists size; Trial size by mail, 10 and you are sure to continue announcement.
Donate those who are partial biomizers in applying liquids passages for estuarial trout-storers prepare-Cream Balm in which will be known as Ely's Balm. Price including the is 75 cents. Druggists or build form embodies the medias of the solid preparation.
Burrows In Jail
James Burrows, the Centralia bully who attacked and beat defenseless Mrs. Eaton, was taken to the county jail this week in Santa Ana, in default of paying a fine of $100. He will serve a 50 days term on the chain gang.
Call us up by phone and we will be there. Hutchinson's drug store. sep24
the state and is to be used in connection with the department of agriculture of the University. Schools and college buildings are to be constructed on it and such farm buildings of the modern type as will be necessary for the use of the farm for experimental work and for the use of the farm as the location of a school of instruction in practical agriculture.
This school it is proposed shall be modeled after the successful institutions of the Middle Western States, where hundreds of young men and women enter annually and are educated practically as well as theoretically in the latest developments of agricultural science.
For the purpose of selecting and locating this farm this bill provides for a commission consisting of the governor of the state, who shall be its president, the president of the university, the state commissioner of horticulture, the president of the state board of agriculture and the chief justice of the supreme court.
Money for the State Militia.
WASHINGTON, June 30.—Acting Secretary Oliver of the war department has made the usual announcement of the allotment of the $1,000,000 appropriated by congress to provide arms and equipment for the organized militia of the United States. Of the money apportioned, California will receive $19,-497, and Hawaii $7,500.
BRUTALLY TORTURED
A case came to light that for persistent and unmerciful torture perhaps has never been equalled. Joe Golobick of Colusa, California, writes: "For fifteen years I endured insufferable pain from rheumatism and nothing relieved me, though I tried everything known. I came across Electric bitters and its 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 50c. Satisfaction guaranteed by W. B Huteninson, druggist.
Dr. W. I. Seymour, eye and ear, 420 W. 6th St., Los Angeles. je-23-3t
large building, a map in relief of the Philippine islands and two galvanized steel towers. The exhibit is divided properly into three sections, viz., the meteorological section, the seismic section and the geographic section.
The meteorological section is the head station, in which the most important instruments of the Philippine Weather Bureau are shown. The standard instruments of this section are the cinemo-anemograph, to register the mean velocity of the wind, Richard anemograph, the Wild's anemograph, the Frier anemograph, and two types of ceraunograph (lightning register). Two galvanized steel towers erected near the building will act as collectors for the ceraunograph, and they may be used also as a regular collector for a wireless telegraph station.
The main feature of the seismic section is a universal microselmograph manufactured at the Manila Observatory by Philippine mechanics. It registers all earth tremors, local and foreign. A special kind of suspension of a seismic pendulum is also shown. Records of earthquakes, curves and effects of earthquakes on buildings may be seen in a large-sized chart.
The most important part of the geographic section is a large relief map of the Philippine islands, built on the grounds in the open air. It covers an area of 110x75 feet, and represents a spherical segment from 7 degrees latitude north, and from meridian 110 degrees to meridian 125 degrees east of Greenwich. More than three thousand islands are shown in their own shape and proportional size, including the two groups of Gagayan de Folo and Sibritu group, overlooked by the commissioners in the treaty of Paris, December 10, 1898. The horizonal scale is 18 minutes to a kilometer, or nearly 1½ seconds to a mile. The vertical scale has been enlarged eight times, to show platylythe height and mountain plateaus. There are twenty active volcanoes shown. In the interior of the building a set of eight relief maps, 13x7 feet, will show the principal features of the islands.
As an illustration of the maps, there are some 110 mother-of-pearl shells with oil paintings on each shell, showing different types of inhabitants churches, landscapes etc. The paintings are taken from photographs and are made by a famous Philippine artist. Each shell is mounted on different kinds of Philippine woods.
Gazette.
NUMBER 37
AL WEALTH OF ISLANDS
Posits of Precious Metals
Awaiting Touch of Capital
be been favored with a copy
port of the bureau of circular
alting with matters in the
and referring at length to
made by the Islands at the
air. We quote therefrom as
general wealth of the Philippine
every great, but as yet is in
primary stage of development.
extensive lignite beds in Baand Mindoro, and slight
petroleum are to be found in
exists in paying quantities
and Mindanao, traces of this
metal being found in most of
islands. Iron is abundant,
are copper prospects in the
and Lepanto-Bontoc provinces
by sign of becoming paying
For years the Igorrote has
own jewelry from the auriferasis in the Benguet hills, and
ear, the Lepanto-Bontoc, has
big brass clacquers that
with the Spanish "dos
throughout the island. It is
expected that the Philippehave a Klondike boom, yet
steady growth in the mining
stamp mills are now workgold districts and three coal
now supplying a part of the
market.
Rer of difficulties are in the
the proper exploitation of the
industries in the Philippines,
serious one at present being
adequate transportation.
The American government
been constructed more
good roads than during the
lish regime, and the system
pressing. This and the hope
STORING FLOOD WATERS
Conditions in Montana Like Those of California
[Contributed to the Gazette.]
Washington, D. C., June 29.—The great copper, silver, and gold mines of Montana, the "Treasure State" of the union, potent as has been their influence in her development, and while they are yet far from their maximum output and value, must soon take a second place in the state's resources.
It is Montana's destiny to be one of the richest agricultural states in the union.
As the agriculture of Colorado, now the foremost state in the production of precious metals, has already outstripped her mines, so in a few years will Montana's farming lead her mines,
With lands of surpassing fertility,
in which agricultural plant food has lain stored for centuries, with no drenching rains to leach them away,
and with a magnificent water supply from the rain and snows which fall upon the high peaks and water sheds of the Continental Divide, Montana's fat cattle and sheep, splendid fruit, heavy grains and varied agricultural products will become widely famous.
GREAT AGRICULTURAL WEALTH.
"The next ten years," said a prominent official of the government reclamation service, in speaking of the great present and coming development of the far northwest, "will see Montana lead all the western states in the area of her irrigated land. Her agricultural future is assured and brilliant. She has the land and she has the water—all that are needed in the region to produce fabulous wealth."
Montana has an area equal to that of France. She has, it has often been stated by various authorities, with all
JOHN HEART KILLS HIS MAN
Murders Thomas Kerns Over Dispute About Fifty Cents—Has Bad Reputation Here.
John Heart, who some weeks ago engaged in a pistol duel with Frank Pallas, a few miles south of this city, shot and instantly killed Thomas Kerns, a plumber, in Los Angeles, Saturday. Heart, after his affray here, left this place and moved to Santa Ana; subsequently going to Los Angeles, where he purchased a lodging house. Kerns was his tenant and the dispute which ended with the killing began over a difference of fifty cents between them. Heart gave as a reason for leaving this section that he was in fear of his life. At the investigation into his scrape with Pallas he testified Pallas attempted to murder him. Pallas was discharged from custody and Heart left for pastures new.
After shooting Kerns, Heart ran to his room and barricaded the door. It is said he narrowly escaped lynching by infuriated neighbors. When the police arrived they found Heart behind barred doors in his room, but he came promptly forth at their call, seeming to desire their protection. As the police led him away, a crowd sought to lay hands upon him, but he was taken on the car and lodged in jail.
Heart had run the lodging house only a few weeks. Kerns had been a tenant a few days and had given notice that he was going to leave. Heart claimed Kearns owed him fifty cents more than the latter offered to pay and the murder was a direct outcome of the quarrel which followed.
Kerns has a wife and grown up children.
The Los Angeles papers refer to a woman who claims to be Heart's wife.
have a Klondike boom, yet steady growth in the mining stamp mills are now work-gold districts and three coal now supplying a part of the market.
of difficulties are in the proper exploitation of the industries in the Philippines, serious one at present being adequate transportation.
the American government has been constructed more good roads than during the Irish regime, and the system pressing. This and the hope the legislation has kept the sand miner tied to the islands most adverse conditions.
exhibits are, with a few extra grade auriferous quartzes, placer mining being carried islands. The specimens from and Lepanto-Bontoc are interesting, as shown with the crude bateas, or wooden by the natives for separator gold from the sand and cost of these are immense in size is shown with the concen-just as the batea was found collector in the hands of the three samples of manganese three different localities lands. They were unrecognized received at St. Louis, and have been included by accidental prospecting will unreveal this important ore in cities.
The different metals are commonly grouped and classified, the interested visitor to observe and concise idea of the vast wealth of the Philippine island. The Chinese and Philippine king certain seasons of the tropical storms, known as typhons, for the Pacific ocean and the leaving in their path wrecker. In order to give advance of these terrible hurricanes he been established for years meteorological observatories, artists send to the world atance reports of impending the most prominent of these Guila Observatory, which for been under the direction ofague, a Jesuit priest, who is exposition in charge of the observatory exhibit. This exch is situated just to the left of Walled City, consists of a building, a map in relief of the islands and two galvanized arms. The exhibit is divided into three sections, viz., the logical section, the seismic section, the geographic section.
meteorological section is the son, in which the most impor-ments of the Philippine Bureau are shown. The instruments of this section linemo-anemograph, to register velocity of the wind, anemograph, the Wild's anne-Frier anemograph, and of ceraunograph (lightning
GREAT AGRICULTURAL WEALTH.
"The next ten years," said a prominent official of the government reclamation service, in speaking of the great present and coming development of the far northwest, "will see Montana lead all the western states in the area of her irrigated land. Her agricultural future is assured and brilliant. She has the land and she has the water—all that are needed in the region to produce fabulous wealth."
Montana has an area equal to that of France. She has, it has often been stated by various authorities, with all her great water supply conserved and made to irrigate her rich lands, room for as dense a population as that of France.
Over three-fifths of this great state is drained by the Missouri river and its big tributaries, such as the Yellowstone, the Jefferson,the Milk river and other branches. Strong rivers these are, rushing down out of their mountain fastnesses—the Absaroka, the Snowy, the Big Horn and the Wind river ranges—where at elevations of 8,10 and 11 thousand feet the snows are perpetual, melting under the summer suns and furnishing a constant water supply, especially in the late summer when it is most needed for irrigation.
Much has already been accomplished by co-operative effort in irrigation among farmers. The irrigated area, according to the census figures, has increased during the past two years at the rate of 100,000 acres a year and now irrigates 1,140,000 acres. This has been accomplished by the cooperation of small communities, and some of the most successful examples are seen at such places as Hinsdale and Chinook in the great Milk river valley where farmers have combined, taking up land under the five-year homestead law and constructing their own irrigation works, thus owning the land and the water and paying no rent or tribute to water companies or water bond holders.
SMALL COST OF IRRIGATED HOMES.
Most of these works have been simple diversion propositions without expensive dams, and the cost has been very slight, land reclamation averaging, according to the 1900 census, but $4.92 per acre. The opportunities are legion where bands of twenty or forty or one hundred enterprising farmers with a little money, and with their strong arms and good teams may build diversion or storage dams and lead the water out upon 160 acre homestead claims, building up homes upon the desert which will make each and every one of them prosperous and wealthy. The great productivity of Montana's lands is shown by the census figures. The total amount invested in ditches in Montana up to June 1, 1900, was $4,683,073, while the total value of irrigation products for the one year, 1899, was $7,230,042.
At the rate of increase in farming and irrigation in the state during the last census decade the next ten years will see Montana's cultivated area police led him away, a crowd sought to lay hands upon him, but he was taken on the car and lodged in jail.
Heart had run the lodging house only a few weeks. Kerns had been a tenant a few days and had given notice that he was going to leave. Heart claimed Kearns owed him fifty cents more than the latter offered to pay and the murder was a direct outcome of the quarrel which followed.
Kerns has a wife and grown up children.
The Los Angeles papers refer to a woman who claims to be Heart's wife. The Iman's wife died here several months ago, and it was not known that he had remarried. After the death of his wife, Heart applied to a Los Angeles employment agency for a housekeeper. A young lady was sent to his ranch but she was compelled to leave soon after on account of Heart's improper advances toward her.
This woman testified on the stand at Pallas' examination, giving testimony derogatory to Heart's character. The trial brought out a dozen witnesses who swore Heart's reputation was bad.
One witness swore that while hunting rabbits one day Heart came upon him unexpectedly in the mustard.
"Oh, it's you," said Heart. "If I'd known whom it was I should have brought my rifle!"
"I'll wait here till you go and get it," responded the other.
Heart sold his ranch to Mrs. Mott, recently arrived from Kansas. A few days after she and her two sons took charge of the property her son,a young man, aged about twenty, while down a well pit,twenty feet in depth,was buried in a cave-in and instantly killed.The accident happened about 2 o'clock in the afternoon and it was not until nearly dark that the body was recovered.The mother's cries brought the neighbors to the scene of the unfortunate accident,and immediate steps were taken to recover the body. Three men descended into the well and while filling buckets with sand which were hauled to the top,narrowly escaped death by another treacherous cave-in. They succeeded in saving themselves and the work of rescue proceeded with redoubled effort. Four hours after the accident the body was recovered and brought to the surface.
Local Jealousies.
A Santa Ana correspondent, referring to the efforts on the part of some of the citizens of that city to replace recently mustered out Co.L., by a new company, states the case as follows:
"Local jealousies came near wrecking the chance for the organization of a new company here to take place of Company L,just mustered out. It was reported as coming from headquarters that unless N.A. Ulm were made captain of the new company its application for organization would not be recognized.Major Truman Cole,the mastering officer sent here to settle
A map in relief of the islands and two galvanized rivers. The exhibit is divided into three sections, viz., the geological section, the seismic section, and the meteorological section. The instruments of this section include an anemograph, to register velocity of the wind, anemograph, the Wild's anemograph, and a ceraunograph (lightning). Two galvanized steel towers near the building will act as for the ceraunograph, and be used also as a regular collar wireless telegraph station. In feature of the seismic seismicograph, noted at the Manila Observatory, Philippine mechanics. It resembles tremors, local and for special kind of suspension of pendulum is also shown. Re-earthquakes, curves and effects quakes on buildings may be large-sized chart.
Most important part of the geo-section is a large relief map of Philippine islands, built on the open air. It covers an 10x75 feet, and represents a segment from 7 degrees latitude, and from the meridian 115 to the meridian 125 degrees greenwich. More than three islands are shown in their size and proportional size, in two groups of Gagayan de Sibritu group, overlooked by missioners in the treaty of December 10, 1898. The horizole is 18 minutes to a kilometer nearly 1½ seconds to a mile. Local scale has been enlarged to show plaintly the heights contain plateaus. There are active volcanoes shown. In the building a set of eight caps, 13x7 feet, will show the features of the islands.
Illustration of the maps, there is 110 mother-of-pearl shells painted on each shell, showing different types of inhabitants, landscapes, etc. The paint-taken from photographs and made by a famous Philippine arch-shell is mounted on diffrents of Philippine woods.
CHANGING THE COURSE OF NATURE.
The project for storing the flood waters of the Milk river in Northern Montana under the direction of Engineer Cyrus C. Babb, of the geological survey, is one of the first great works investigated by the government engineers, even before the passage of the national irrigation act. This involves huge dams and canals, and will reclaim when carried to full completion a very large area—probably half a million acres, of exceedingly rich land in the already famous Milk River valley. It will be a famous engineering exploit, by which the water now flowing into the Saskatchewan, and thence into Hudson Bay will be carried into the Missouri basin and ultimately reach the Gulf of Mexico. The Government has also taken up the Fort Buford project in Eastern Montana and North Dakota and is likewise preparing to spend $2,500,000 in the Wyoming-Shoshone project which will reclaim some of the lands of Southern Montana. These are the most advanced of the government works. In various other parts of the state the national hydrographers are making reconnoissances and surveys, investigating reservoir sites and reclaimable areas.
A serious menace, however, to the
A Santa Ana correspondent, referring to the efforts on the part of some of the citizens of that city to replace the recently mustered out Co. L., by a new company, states the case as follows:
"Local jealousies came near wrecking the chance for the organization of a new company here to take place of Company L, just mustered out. It was reported as coming from headquarters that unless N. A. Ulm were made captain of the new company its application for organization would not be recognized. Major Truman Cole, the master officer sent here to settle the Company L matter, was the alleged authority for the statement, and in order to settle the matter a special meeting of the chamber of commerce was called, at which Ulm refused absolutely to have anything to do with the new company outside of rendering it such assistance as he might in his capacity as a private citizen. The statement had also come from General Wankowski that men mustered out of company L would not be eligible for re-enlistment, and this, too, was a disturbing element in the effort to secure men for the new company. The matter was finally settled by agreeing to let the men choose a captain in case the company shall be raised and organized, but the bad against company L men is still in force.
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