anaheim-gazette 1904-08-25
Searchable text
Anaheim
VOLUME XXXIV.
ANAH
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 M. ADAMS,
Anaheim Agent
SUMMER IS COMING
And so is bad water.
To avoid this, drink PURITAS Water
for sale by W. B. HUTCHINSON,
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
PETERS'
DIAMOND BRAND SHOES
O.S.DAVIS DISTRIBUTOR ANAHEIM.
AGENT FOR
Luzon Water Proof and Orchard Chief Shoes
NEW CROP OF Rubber Boots Just Arrived
All Cheap for Cash at Davis'
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
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.Jy15tt
Herbert Allan Johnston, M.D. Office and Residence: Corner Los Angeles St. and Broadway Hours 11-12 a.m. Phone Main 86 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 draught
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 Shades, Picture Frames, Upholstery Goods, Paints, Oils and Glass Sewing Machine Supplies, Etc. Cor. Los Angeles & Chartres Sts.
RICHARDMELROSE ATTORNEY-AT-LAW And Notary Public Special attention given to Probate Matters. —Center Street, Anaheim—
DR. W. W. ADAMS, Osteopathic Physician.
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
Palace : Meat : Market
W. E. HOUK, Proprietor.
Beef, Mutton, Pork, Fresh and Salted Meats, Hams, Bacon, Sausage, Lard,
Prompt attenton given to all orders.
Fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars
THE PEERLESS
A. FUHRBERG, Proprietor
Los Angeles Beer on Tap
ANAHEIM - - - - Californiac
CENTER MARKET Carries a choice line of Fresh and Salt Meat
Telephone Main 123 Center Street, ANAHEIM G. F. MARTIN, Proprietor
Anaheim Bakery,
PETER SYRE, PROPRIETOR.
FRESH BREAD CAKES & PIECONFECTIONERY, ETC.
Wedding Cakes a Specialty. Los Angeles and Cyprus
Subscribe for the Gazette
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. GELDERMANN, Manager.
Fresh and Salted Meats.
Special attention given to all orders, which will be filled promptly.
Roman Wisser
Favorite Saloon.
Finest of Wines, Liquors & Cigars
Pool & Billiard Tables
Ashindler's Building, Center St., Anaheim
LOS ANGELES BEER ON DRAUGHT
Drying preparations simply develop dry catarrh; they dry up the secretions, which adhere to the membrane and decompose, causing a far more serious trouble than the ordinary form of catarrh. Avoid all drying inhalants, fumes, smokes and snuffs and use that which cleanses, soothes and heals. Ely's Cream Balm is such a remedy and will cure catarrh or cold in the head easily and pleasantly. A trial size will be mailed for 10 cents. All druggists sell the 50c. size, Ely Brothers, 56 Warren St., N.Y.
The Balm cures without pain, does not irritate or cause sneezing. It spreads itself over an irritated and angry surface, relieving immediately the painful inflammation.
With Ely's Cream Balm you are armed against Nail Disease and Hay Fever.
PETER SYRE, PROPRIETOR.
FRESH BREAD CAKES & PIE CONFECTIONERY, ETC.
Wedding Cakes a Specialty. Los Angeles and Cyprus
Subscribe for the Gazette
RAILWAY TIME TABLE.
Time of Arrival and Departure of Trains.
June 8, 1904.
SOUTHERN PACIFIC RAILROAD.
Trains on the Southern Pacific pass Anaheim as follows:
To Los Angeles.
Daily... 7:52 am Daily... 9:49 am
Daily... 10:52 am Daily... 10:10am
Daily... 4:06 pm Daily... 6:14pm
Pass Loara Station:
To Los Angeles.
Daily... 7:56 am Daily... 9:45 am
Daily... 10:56am Daily... 10:06am
Daily... 4:10 pm Daily... 6:10pm
LOS ALAMITOR TRAINS.
Leave Anaheim—Arrive Anaheim—
Daily*... 9:36 am Daily*... 8:00 am
Mon.Wed.Fri.2:37 pm
* Except Sunday.
TRAINS TO NEWPORT BEACH
Leave Anaheim Arrive at Newport
Daily... 6:14 pm Leave Newport Arrive Anaheim
Daily... 7:05 am Dally... 7:53 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—7:58 am
9:37 am, 12:00pm, 5:20 pm.
To San Diego—9:20 a.m, 2:50 m.
To Santa Ana—9:20 a.m, 2:50 pm, 5:54 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—2:20 am.
To Redondo Beach—7:77 am.
Trains marked with a care daily except Sunday. All others daily.
J. H. CLABAUGH, Agent.
The Weekly Gazette
Established 1876
SUBSCRIPTION.. $1.50 Per Yr.
Six months.
Three months.
Payable invariably in advance.
Transient advertising rates, $1 per month.
The GAZETTE is issued every Thursday morning.
Entered at the Anaheim Postoffice and on-class matter.
HAVE YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED AT HATZFELD DRUG STORE
J. P. Hatzfeld,
Graduate in Pharmacology
Next door Postoffice.
ANAHEIM
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY. AUGUST 25. 1904.
AGRICULTURAL EDUCATION LIFTS LEVEL OF COUNTRY
Inducing a Migration Back to the Land and Away from Overcrowded Centers.
[CONTRIBUTED TO THE GAZETTE.]
The little red brick schoolhouse of the earlier days of the settlement of the Mississippi valley states was the principal factor in the elevation of our great middle class, which made of the American nation a people of intelligent thinkers, ready and able in time of crisis to decide and to do right. Higher education has followed, and new systems and new methods have supplanted the "Hoosier schoolmaster" and the birch rod, identified with the little red schoolhouse. The educational level of the country has undoubtedly risen many degrees, but with this advance have come problems more perplexing than those which troubled the pedagogues of our fathers. The trend of the country-raised boy is all too irresistably toward the city, while there is no countervailing current impolling the young people of the cities to fill his place in the country. The problem is one for the most serious consideration of our best statesmen—this constant and centripetal movement which is overcrowding our centers of industry, where men work for day wages, and which is steadily drawing from our rural communities where men own the land they live upon and get their sustenance from the soil.
Yet there are quiet forces at work, year by year becoming better organized and of broader power, whose tendency is to overcome this hurtful condition and induce a migration back to the land and away from the overcrowded centers. Industrial and agricultural educations are playing an important part, and nature-study courses and city
ROOSEVELT AS A SAFE MAN
What Col. Charles J. Bonaparte Has to Say About It.
Charles J. Bonaparte of Maryland isaman of great influence in business and commercial circles. In seconding the nomination of Robert Garrett as representative of the Second congressional district of Maryland, Colonel Eonaparte says:
Some of our Democratic friends are much troubled just now because they think President Roosevelt "unsafe." He has had to deal, probably, with more grave and delicate problems, demanding for their solution tact, patience, self-control and sound judgment on his part than any President since the close of reconstruction; and while in many cases he has done what many people thought he should not do, in nearly every instance he has surprised and disappointed his numerous critics by complete success. To note but a few illustrations: The pacification of the Philippines, success of self-government in Cuba, the settlement of the coal strike and the consummation of the Panama treaty, with its assurance of an Isthmian canal. A man justified by the event in matters such as these is, I think, "safe" enough for another trial; and at all events, those so often mistaken in their prophecles of failure might show a little less assurance in calling him "unsafe." In truth I doubt if we have ever had a President, and I, at least, have never seen a man more open to suggestion, advice or remonstrance than Theodore Roosevelt. He can not be cajoled, he cannot be bullied, he cannot be bought, either with money or anything else. If Democratic editors mean that these qualities render a President "unsafe," then they are quite right to prefer another candidate; and I venture to add that David B. Hill is remarkably well fitted to suggest a candidate to suit them.
INTRODUCING NEW GAME BIRDS
California Coming to Be the Meco-Eastern Sportsmen in Search of Winter Hunting
No one who has hunted, with a dog, the various game birds of United States will refuse the little leu quail of California a high play the list of American game birds, w many will even place his little sourceful bunch of feathers at the top. It is not, then, because of lack of appreciation of this splendid game bird that the State Board of Game Commissioners is anxious introduce other varieties into the list. Its reasons are far-sighted and thus sult of careful investigation. The was when our native quail were found in abundance in every valley the state, but the encroachment ofivated fields upon what used their favorite feeding-grounds has en them back into the foothills mountains. It is true that tha number killed in years past to seethe demands of the markets has much to do with the decimation of supply; but their migration from valleys to the hillsides is in searcha safer and more congenial hall. The valley quail are essentially birds. They roost in the trees or cactus, and even resort to these du their noonday siesta. Their fur very largely the seeds of the saggeof other brush and weeds found on uncultivated sections. They are rnfound in grain fields, because oplaces furnish neither the feed nor cover to their liking. The rapidvelopment of the state, with its stantly increasing areas under cuction, is driving this splendid game into the brush of the hillsides wthe plow has been unable to climb will be but a few years until the vquail will no longer be found in place sufficiently open to be hwwith a dog.
overcrowding our centers of industry, where men work for day wages, and which is steadily drawing from our rural communities where men own the land they live upon and get their sustenance from the soil.
Yet there are quiet forces at work, year by year becoming better organized and of broader power, whose tendency is to overcome this hurtful condition and induce a migration back to the land and away from the overcrowded centers. Industrial and agricultural educations are playing an important part, and nature-study courses and city school gardens, where children are taught to know something of the soil and plants and the real wonders of nature working around us on every hand, are no longer looked upon as fads. An interesting move in this direction was made the other day in the organization of the American League for Industrial Education in Chicago, with such national characters for officers and sponsors as N. O. Nelson of St. Louis, who has founded the village and school of Le Claire, adjacent to his factories at Edwardsville, Illinois; Thos. Kane, president of the Winona Assembly, which is establishing an institution for the teaching of agriculture at Indianapolis; J. H. Krauskopf, founder and president of the now noted national farm school at Doylestown, Pennsylvania; John H. Patterson, president of the National Cash Register Co., whose school gardens and model factory equipments at Dayton, Ohio, have awakened a widespread interest; Gen. R. S. Tuthill, through whose efforts the St. Charles Home for Boys at Chicago was founded; O. J. Kern, superintendent of schools for Winnebago county, Illinois, who has done a great work in the consolidation of county schools and perfected plans for engrafting on them methods for the practical teaching of improved agriculture in experimental gardens; E. B. Butler, president of the board of trustees of the Illinois Manual Training School Farm; Milton George, the founder of that school; Jane Addams, head resident of the Chicago Hull House Social Settlement, and others note in this movement.
The league is working for an industrial school system which will include the teaching of domestic science and both agricultural and manual training in all the public schools, so that children shall be taught to work with their hands and to farm as they are taught in the public schools of France and Denmark. It maintains that every school should have a school-garden, where every child should be taught to be a lover of nature and of the country and trained toward the land as a source of honorable livelihood, rather than away from it.
Such a system of education would doubtedly tend to very largely cheek the constant movement toward the cities. The farm boy who receives a fair school or high school education naturally turns toward the place where he can best apply it. His training has not been such as would help him to farm better or make of farming an interesting science. And so he goes to
It may be owned that, whether Mr. Roosevelt be "safe" or not, certain classes of people would undoubtedly feel in greater safety were he out of the White House. "Grafters" who look to "pull" for immunity; men, whether rich or poor, few or many, in the north or in the south, who trespass on the constitutional rights of their fellows; rebels and conspirators in the Philippines; Meorish brigands who kidnap our citizens; South American adventurers who would "hold up" our canal—in short, criminals and lawbreakers of high and low degree in our midst, enemies of our country both at home and abroad—all of these gentry agree in finding him too "strenuous" for their comfort, and would sleep better with a "safer" President at Washington. If the newspapers which declare him "unsafe" are the mouthpieces of one or more of these classes, I find no cause for wonder in their utterances; otherwise these seem surprising, except as showing that they have nothing more sensible to say.
Frail Women's Daring Feat
TACOMA, Aug. 18.—Two frail women last week performed a feat requiring more cool daring and nerve than the great majority of daring acts for which drusus performers receive plaudits of thousands.
No man has yet dared to cross Rocky Gorge on the narrow log stretched 300 feet above the foaming cataract, as did Mrs. John Ahl and Hattie Bell, young women from Boston. Mrs. Ahl is the wife of a rancher living near the mouth of Homihomi river, which empties into Hood's canal in Mason county.
These two women were exploring the canyon of Homihomi river and reached the great waterfall at the bottom of the upper canyon. Observing a fir tree that had fallen across the canyon above the falls, they determined to cross on this primitive bridge and explore the canyon.
Miss Bell led the way and with wonderful nerve crossed the log where it spanned the chasm with its rushing torrent, over 300 feet below. Mrs. Ahl followed her, and neither fully realized the danger of their position until they had safely reached the other side. So far as known, no one else has ever made this perilous trip.
Adulterated Wines
WASHINGTON, Aug. 17.—American consuls in the wine-producing countries of Europe are getting into hot failure might show a little less assurance in calling him "unsafe." In truth I doubt if we have ever had a President, and I, at least, have never seen a man more open to suggestion, advice or remonstrance than Theodore Roosevelt. He can not be cajoled, he cannot be bullied, he cannot be bought, either with money or anything else. If Democratic editors mean that these qualities render a President "unsafe," then they are quite right to prefer another candidate; and I venture to add that David B. Hill is remarkably well fitted to suggest a candidate to suit them.
Winter shooting in California bids to the state over a million dollars every year, spent by eastern sports who can find this winter sport now else in the Union. The fish and commissioners are therefore willing begin now with the introduction other varieties of game to fill the gap from which our valley quail are so widely being driven. This work must necessity be largely experiments some time. The problem is not to find a desirable bird, but it is to a desirable bird that will thrive in climate and upon the foods which conditions offer. The eastern white is an excellent game bird—in ing in the fields and nesting in hedgerows and fence corners—and been repeatedly brought to this area and has as repeatedly proved a faction They can not stand our long dry soil lack of humidity in the sphere. The prairie chicken can find with us the damp meadows are its native habitat. It is then that we must go elsewhere—the eastern part of our own country—the future game bird of our vex Mexico seems to offer the best field experiment. The climate of the eastern portions of that republic, six west of the Sierra Madre mountains very much like that of California with a vegetation closely allied with own. Mexico also offers a wide range of game birds from which to take in Mexico there are two or three cities of the "tinamous," a bird what larger than the quail. It is by those who have hunted it, excellent sport, and to have no prior as a table bird.
Of the quail family there is an nite variety, no less than four genera and possibly some twenty les. One of these the elegant parsley inhabiting the cult fields, has recently been introduced by Commissioners as an expert Of this same genus there are no possibly two other species that be worth trying. Of the both there are a large number speciety to Mexico. The masked booby is purely a grass bird, never found in the brush, but inhabit tall grass of the lower mountain piles from the Arizona line as far south as western side of the Sierra Mountains as the mouth of the river, where it meets another vex Grayson partridge, ranging from Pacific coast as far south southern boundry of the st
school should have a school garden, where every child should be taught to be a lover of nature and of the country and trained toward the land as a source of honorable livelihood, rather than away from it.
Such a system of education would undoubtedly tend to very largely cheek the constant movement toward the cities. The farm boy who receives a fair school or high school education naturally turns toward the place where he can best apply it. His training has not been such as would help him to farm better or make of farming an interesting science. And so he goes to the city. On the other hand, the city boy, as he grows up and marries, would like to have a home of his own on the land, but he knows only the trade he has learned. He knows nothing of farming and he would not know what to do on a piece of land if he had it. It has been often said that it is useless to put the poor of the great cities out in the country, because they will not stay there. They can not be expected to, for to them it is a strange and barren story. The experience of the Salvation Army, however, found in its many irrigated colonies, shows that men will go out from the cities and live on the land and make good citizens where they are taught what to do with the land after they get on it.
The irrigated farms of the west show the great capacity of land when well and intensively farmed, and that men can live in plenty and comfort on five acres and even on a single acre. Suppose that the 75,000 recently discharged employees of the Pennsylvania Railroad each had a highly cultivated acre of rich land to which he could turn his attention. Instead of being a drag on the community and the country, instead of having stopped producing and consuming, they would still be producers and would still be able to at least get a living from the soil. Does not this instance of the disemployment of 75,000 men who might, if they owned each an acre, be getting a living from the soil, supply food for thought to the man who is pondering over economic problems?
G.E.M.
Adulterated Wines
WASHINGTON, Aug. 17.—American consuls in the wine-producing countries of Europe are getting into hot water through their obedience to the orders of the State Department to make minute reports on the method of preparation and of shipment of wine destined for American consumption. The State Department is acting in this matter at the instance of the Departments of Agriculture and Commerce and Labor, with a view to the enforcement of the anti-adulteration act. The American consuls have worked with surprising results, it is said, for the extent of the adulteration and doctoring of foreign export wines never before had been appreciated.
This activity on the part of the consuls has engendered a bitter feeling toward them by the foreign wine producers and exporters, and, in some instances, they have succeeded in making the consul's stay at his post unpleasant. The State Department will uphold its agents to the fullest extent where their personality does not enter into the opposition.
Puts An End To It All
A grievous wall oftimes comes as a result of unbearable pain from over taxed organs. Dizziness, backache, liver complaint and constipation. But thanks to Dr. King's New Life Pills they put an end to it all. They are gentle but thorough. Try them. Only 25c. Guaranteed by W.B. Hutchinson's drug store.
ROOMS TO RENT.
Two sunny front rooms apply at this office.
For Rent
Furnished front room for rent. Inquire at this office.
CONTINUE
Those who are gaining and strength by regular ment with Scott's Emulsion should continue the treat in hot weather; smaller and a little cool milk with do away with any objection which is attached to fatty ducts during the heat season.
Send for free sample.
SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemist
409-415 Pearl Street,
New York,
50c. and $1.00; all draughts.
Gazette.
1904.
PRODUCING NEW GAME BIRDS
California Coming to Be the Mecca of Eastern Sportsmen in Search of Winter Hunting
one who has hunted, with a good variety game birds of the United States will refuse the little valuation of California a high place in most of American game birds, while it will even place his little reefful bunch of feathers at the very end. It is not, then, because of any kind of appreciation of this splendid bird that the State Board of Fish Game Commissioners is anxious to reduce other varieties into the state. Seasons are far-sighted and the reefful careful investigation. The time when our native quail were to be found in abundance in every valley of state, but the encroachment of cultivated fields upon what used to be favorite feeding grounds has driven them back into the foothills and retains. It is true that the vast herder killed in years past to satisfy demands of the markets has had to do with the decimation of the city; but their migration from the hillsides is in search of water and more congenial habitat. Valley quail are essentially brush animals. They roost in the trees or the grasses, and even resort to these during noonday siesta. Their food is largely the seeds of the sage and other brush and weeds found only in cultivated sections. They are rarely found in grain fields, because these furnish neither the feed nor the hay to their liking. The rapid development of the state, with its constantly increasing areas under cultivation, driving this splendid game bird into the brush of the hillsides where low has been unable to climb. It may but a few years until the valley will no longer be found in any sufficiently open to be hunted dog.
Death Came Suddenly.
Don Marcos A. Forster of San Juan died suddenly in Los Angeles at 10 o'clock on Friday morning. John Johnson of West Anaheim was present at the time, being thus an eye witness of the sad affair. Mr. Johnson was standing on the sidewalk in front of the Hollenbeck hotel when his attention was directed to a man being held up by two others, one on either side, he being about to fall. Blood flowed from the mouth and spilled itself upon the man's clothing and fell upon the sidewalk.
Mr. Johnson recognized Don Marco and went immediately to his assistance: He assisted in carrying him into the hotel, where death intervened within a short while. Telegrams arrived in this city soon after, notifying friends of the death.
Don Marcos was known throughout Southern California as the head of one the best families in this part of the state. He was aged 64 years. His father was Don Juan Forster, who is still remembered by old timers in this county. Don Marco owned a principal at San Juan, where the family have resided for many years. He was born in Los Angeles, but moved to San Juan with his parents while yet a mere youth.
He leaves four sons and two daughters.
The body was taken to San Juan on Saturday afternoon and lay in state at his residence where in life time Don Marcos had entertained so sumptuously. The funeral occurred Monday, from the Catholic church, and interment was made in the cemetery at San Juan. The remains were laid to rest beside those of his wife who passed away seven years ago.
Don Marco had been engaged to marry an estimable young lady of this city, and the wedding was to have occurred in the near future. Owing to an unfavorable turn in his health, the wedding, which was to have taken place in June, was deferred until a later period.
WALNUTS AND MISINFORMATION
A Los Angeles Paper Offers Some Fearful and Wonderful Figures.
Walnut growers hereabout will be glad to know prices for this season's crop have already been fixed at 12 cents, and that the output has already been figured up in carloads, and that the monetary return to growers will be $3,000,000. That is what the Los Angeles Times says, and it is a cold day when that newspaper hasn't something fearful or wonderful to offer concerning one thing or another. Some days ago the Times blossomed out with the following gob of misinformation:
Based on reports from growers and shippers of walnuts, this year's crop is estimated at between 800 and 850 twelve-ton carloads. This is a great advance over the crop of last year, which amounted to 625 ten-ton carloads. The wind and rainstorm of Saturday damaged walnuts somewhat in this end of the San Gabriel Valley, but not enough to affect to any extent the above estimate of the season's output. The increase from 6250 tons last year to about 9750 this year—more than fifty percent—is said to be due in large measure to the decrease in the falling of the nuts from the blight which thrives in damp weather, eating away the stems. The quality this year is the finest. The price is 12 cents a pound, which means a gross income to the walnut growers of Southern California of about $3,000,000.
The Times must have a private underground wire giving it these remarkable figures on walnuts. No grower in Orange county has yet been able to estimate the crop, and as far as prices, they will not be fixed for a month yet. Conservative growers hereabout seem disposed to favor ten cents, inasmuch as the former crop is reported to be large and of good quality.
The Times' figures showing the total value of the crop to be $3,000,000, will be news indeed to the growers. As its editor is wont to say, this is important if true. As a matter of fact, the crop is not looked to yield much more than half
The winter shooting in California brings the state over a million dollars every year, spent by eastern sportsmen, can find this winter sport nowhere on the Union. The fish and game commissioners are therefore wise to now with the introduction of our varieties of game to fill the places which our valley quail are so raptor being driven. This work must of necessity be largely experimental for our time. The problem is not alone and a desirable bird, but it is to find desirable bird that will thrive in our state and upon the foods which our institutions offer. The eastern bobwhite is an excellent game bird—dwellin the fields and nesting in the overwows and fence corners—and has repeatedly brought to this state as repeatedly proved a failure. My can not stand our long dry season lack of humidity in the atmosphere. The prairie chicken can not with us the damp meadows which its native habitat. It is plain, that we must go elsewhere than eastern part of our own country for future game bird of our valleys. Mexico seems to offer the best field for experiment. The climate of the north-portions of that republic, situated in the Sierra Madre mountains, is much like that of California, and is a vegetation closely allied to our Mexico also offers a wide range game birds from which to select. Mexico there are two or three varieties of the "tinamous," a bird somewhat larger than the quail. It is said, those who have hunted it, to afford excellent sport, and to have no superstes as a table bird.
Of the quail family there is an infinitely variety, no less than four distinct species and possibly some twenty species. One of these the elegant partridge variety inhabiting the cultivated hills, has recently been introduced by Commissioners as an experiment. This same genus there are one and probably two other species that might unworth trying. Of the bobwhite, there are a large number of species native to Mexico. The masked bobwhite purely a grass bird, never being used in the brush, but inhabiting the grass of the lower mountain plateaus on the Arizona line as far south on western side of the Sierra Madre mountains as the mouth of the Mayo river, where it meets another variety, Grayson partridge, ranging along Pacific coast as far south as the northern boundary of the state of New York.
The funeral occurred Monday, from the Catholic church, and interment was made in the cemetery at San Juan. The remains were laid to rest beside those of his wife who passed away seven years ago.
Don Marco had been engaged to marry an estimable young lady of this city, and the wedding was to have occurred in the near future. Owing to an unfavorable turn in his health, the wedding, which was to have taken place in June, was deferred until a later period.
Dairymen's Association
A state dairymen's associations being formed, composed of the dairymen throughout the state. The work of organization is being done by Edward F. Schulz, secretary of the San Francisco Dairymen's Association. Prominent dairymen throughout the state have been communicated with and will be in attendance at the convention, which is to be held this year at Sacramento on Tuesday August 30, at the State Fair grounds. The association is the outcome of the continual legislation against the dairymen throughout the state by local boards of health, who are in most instances inexperienced in dairy matters, and is therefore not only an association for the protection of all dairying interests, but to establish just and equitable rights to all and to encourage one of the most profitable of our agricultural pursuits. There are in this state eight local dairymen's associations located at Los Angeles, Passadena, Kings county, Sacramento, Vallejo, Oakland, San Francisco and the Bay Counties Commercial Co., of San Francisco. A number of bills will be drafted relative to the cattle and dairying interests with a view of presenting them at the coming State Legislature. Dairymen are invited to attend this convention.
Married Again
Princess Chimay, formerly Miss Clara Ward of Michigan, who has on a number of occasions created a sensation by her eccentric actions was married last week at a registry office in London, to Cuglielmo Ricardo. Before the ceremony the Princess, in the presence of witnesses, gave Rigo, the violinist, for whom she deserted Prince Chimay, £3,000, upon receipt of which he signed a paper resigning all claims upon her.
During the wedding, the Princess, who was handsomely dressed and rouged and powdered, kept wetting her fingers at her lips and plastering down Ricardo's scalplock and otherwise fondling him.
After the ceremony the newly-married couple left for Paris on their honeymoon.
The Princess first saw Ricardo at a small railway station in Italy. She made an excuse to leave Rigo at the next station and returned to talk to Ricardo. She found he was but a poor railway clerk, but he was handsome, and this won the Princess heart.
To Open Sundays
Within the next week:the World's Fair management plans to begin Sun-
Commissioners as an experiment,
this same genus there are one and
only two other species that might
worth trying. Of the bobwhite,
there are a large number of species native to Mexico. The masked bobwhite
purely a grass bird, never being
in the brush, but inhabiting the
grass of the lower mountain plateaus
on the Arizona line as far south on
the western side of the Sierra Madre
mountains as the mouth of the Mayo
river, where it meets another variety,
of Grayson partridge, ranging along
Pacific coast as far south as the
sthern boundary of the state of
Mexico. Being natives of a dry country,
near of the species named, and possisive some of the other, might do well in
california.
Our winter climate if we have the
time to offer with it, is sure to make
California, in the very near future, the
coast of a great army of Eastern
portmen. These men will spend millions of dollars with our people, and
any of them will eventually become
citizens, bringing with them their
health. The State Board of Fish and
Game Commissioners realizes this, and
is begun a timely search for new vahtles of game to add to the attractions
which we already have.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Koenig departed
from Hamburg on Tuesday on the
Samar Moltke for New York. They
be expected to arrive in Anaheim
out Sept. 15th.
CONTINUE
Those who are gaining flesh
and strength by regular treatment with
Scott's Emulsion
should continue the treatment
in hot weather; smaller dose
and a little cool milk with it will
do away with any objection
which is attached to fatty produces during the heated season.
Send for free sample.
SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemist,
409-415 Pearl Street,
New York.
doc. and $1.00; all druggists.
SUCCESS, AND A REVELATION.
On June 15th the Santa Fe ran a special excursion to the World's Fair at St. Louis. The party was personally conducted all the way, and spent an entire day viewing the Grand Canyon in Arizona. That the excursion was a success, and the Grand Canyon a revelation is vouched for in the letters of the participants to their friends here and to the press. As a happy sequel, to the event the Santa Fe has announced another excursion of the same character for Wednesday, Sept. 7th, the numerous particulars of which may be had from any Santa Fe agent, or from Jno. J. Byrne, G. P. A. Los Angeles.
aug
After the ceremony the newly-married couple left for Paris on their honeymoon.
The Princess first saw Ricardo at a small railway station in Italy. She made an excuse to leave Rigo at the next station and returned to talk to Ricardo. She found he was but a poor railway clerk, but he was handsome, and this won the Princess heart.
To Open Sundays
Within the next week: the World's Fair management plans to begin Sunday opening. Those who are engineering the move say they have found a loophole in the Congress enactment which will permit Sunday opening. It is urged that the success of the fair, financially and otherwise, depends on throwing open the gates on the remaining Sundays of the exposition period.
The special committee appointed by the Pike Concessionaires Association has been at work with men of power, both in the exposition management and in the national commission, and it is stated a definite agreement has practically been reached. According to a plan outlined, the exposition will be opened Sundays from 2 p.m. to 10 p.m.
The price of admission to the fair will be 25 cents. Leaders in the movement estimate that the fair management will be benefited not less than $1,500,000. Amusement concessionaires will gain at least $1,000,000.
END OF BITTER FIGHT
"Two physicians had a long and stubborn fight with an abscess on my right lung" writes J. F. Hughes of DuPont, Ga., "and gave me up. Everybody thought my time had come. As a last resort I tried Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption. The benefit I received was striking, and I was on my feet in a few days. Now I've entirely regained my health." It conquers all Coughs, Colds, and Throat and Lung troubles. Guaranteed by W. B. Hutchinson's drug store. Price 50c, and $1. Trial bottles free.
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh That Contains Mercury
As mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and 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 ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken internally and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free.
Sold by druggists, Price 75c per bottle.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
FIRST IN THE U.S.
First in penmanship in the country is the standing of the Los Angeles Business College for the past year. Over 40 national diplomas have been earned by the students of this institution since Christmas last. This school is also second to none in all the other branches. A course of study spent here is the best investment a young person can take. For catalogue address 212 W. Third street, Los Angeles.
aug4-4t