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THE INDIAN TRACKER HE IS A REAL WIZARD IN HIS ABILITY TO FOLLOW A TRAIL. To Him Even the Dry Prairie Grass Is an Open Book Wherein He Rapidly Reads Signs That an Ordinary Scout Would Never See. "The westerner pulled his horse into a walk and lit a cigar, dropping the match carefully on to a wet place in the trail, for fear of prairie fires. "Yes," he said, "there are a lot of people, not only in the old country, but right here in the colonies, who think that because a man has spent a couple of years on a ranch and wears a cowboy hat and long spurs he's a sort of combination of Leatherstocking and Sherlock Homes. Now, a man may be a good enough scout to avoid walking into a trap and to find his way about in a strange country and to take cover, but when it comes to tracking he's a sucking babe compared with some of the Indians and half breeds. A scout may be made, but a tracker must be born so. Let me tell you the kind of thing I mean. "I was managing the X ranch some years ago, about 120 miles from the American border. One night some horse thieves dropped in suddenly and carried off sixteen Clydesdales—heavy horses,' we call them here. Next morning early I started in pursuit with a couple of my cowboys. The trail wasn't difficult at first, and we managed to pick it out all right at a walk, but the men we were hupting were riding at a gallop, and I saw we should have our work cut out to catch them. We talked the matter over for a bit, and then I made up my mind that I knew the locality they were making for, about a hundred miles away, so I dropped the trail altogether, and we rode to the point as hard as we could go to cut them off. "When we got there we camped and strung out a lot of sentries and waited. Well, we waited and waited, and nothing turned up, so we saddled up again and went home, feeling a bit sick. Then we did what we should have done at first. We went on to the Indian reserve and asked for Colonel M., the Indian agent. I got him to act as interpreter, and I put $200 into his hands, asking him to explain that this sum would be paid to any Indians who after year and bring back moose and wapiti heads, they can find the real article for you. "Again, when he is found your Indian brave requires to be properly handled and humored a little if you don't want him to turn sulky. However, the police here can do it all right, and it is easy to enlist the services of an interpreter who knows his men. An Indian when his hunting instincts are aroused will follow a trail for a week on end on water and very little else, but at the end of that time he will sit down and eat steadily for twenty-four hours."—Canadian Cor. Pall Mall Gazette. RANK OF SAINTE-DEUVE. He Was the Foremost Critic of the Nineteenth Century. If we might credit Goethe to the eighteenth century few of those competent to judge would hesitate to call Sainte-Beuve the foremost critic of the nineteenth century. The qualifications of a critic of the highest rank are fourfold. First, he must have insight—acumen, the essential gift of the critical faculty—and this Sainte-Beuve possessed abundantly. Second, he must have an abundant equipment—scholarship, knowledge of many things, so that he may compare one thing with another, comparison being a chief necessity of criticism—and Sainte-Beuve had an equipment unapproached by other writers of his century, and his erudition was as wide as it was deep, for he not only knew many things, but he also knew all about each one of them. Third, the critic must have disinterestedness, he must love veracity for its own sake, he must insist on setting forth the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, and here was Sainte-Beuve's standard of honor, that as a critic he refused to be swayed by any of the social appeals to which most critics are only too ready to yield. He had a rigid independence, a sturdy individuality, a resolute freedom from party blasphethy, although he is not always absolutely devoid of personal prejudice. And, in the fourth place, a critic needs sympathy, or at least he must have enough of it to enable him to understand and to appreciate men and women wholly unlike himself, and sympathy Sainte-Beuve had, although his share of this quality is not so full perhaps as his share of the other three qualifications for his great office. He is the foremost critic of his cenCHAMBER OF COMMERCE The Anaheim Chamber of Commerce met on the first and third Thursday of February at Chamber of Commerce rooms North Los Angeles street. OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS J. F. Ahiborn, president; L. E. Miller, president; Edward Michod, secretary-treasurer. Directors—C. F. Grim, C.W. Foor, born Wallop, W. W. Adams. OHURCH DIRECTORY CHRISTIAN CHURCH—Northeast corner; laide and Center streets. Preaching 11 am Sunday school 9:45 am; Young People's singing 7:30 pm. Rev. Abraham B. Markle pastor. ST. BONIFACE CATHOLIC CHURCH—Man and 10 am; first Sunday; second, third fifth Sunday 7.8 and 10 am; fourth Sunday 8.50 am. Rosary and benediction dawn summer 7:30 pm; during winter 4:30 pm. tar Society, after last mass on first Sunday Building Society at Rectory on first Sunday Children of Mary 3:30 pm on first Sunday catechism classes 2 pm. Father Dubbel. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH—Corner City and Hermine streets. Preaching 11 am 7:30 pm; Sunday school 10 am; Christian devar Society 7 pm; Wednesday meeting 8 pm; Monthly meeting of Missionary Society second Wednesday on month at 8 pm. Ladies' Aid on fourth day of each month at 2:30 pm. W.H. man pastor. METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH—Philadelphia street. Preaching 11 am Sunday school 10 am; Women's Guilt Thursday in each month. Altar Guild Thursday in each month. W.S.-Decristor. GERMAN LUTHERAN—Southeast corner; Chartrees streets. Preaching Sunday at 10:30 am; Sunday school 9:45 am; A. Lussek, pastor. BETHEL BAPTIST CHURCH—Corner way and Lemon streets. Services mime and evening. Sunday school at 11 am John Berg pastor. GERMAN EVANGELICAL CHURCH—South corner Center and Adelaide streets. Preaching 10:45 am 7:45 pm. Sunday school 9:45 am; Young People's meeting 7:15 pm.meeting Wednesday 8 pm. J.Fich Residence, 313 Olive street. GERMAN METHODIST — Southeast Broadway and Clemente streets. Preaching 11 am 7:30 pm. Sunday school 9:45 am; Women's Missionary Society first Thursday every month at 2 p.m. A.F. Hilmertor. Parsonage north side of church. Blucher and HisPipe. Cromwell's Ironsides were sniffed large numbers of pipes who knew the locality they were making for, about a hundred miles away, so I dropped the trail altogether, and we rode to the point as hard as we could go to cut them off. "When we got there we camped and strung out a lot of sentries and waited. Well, we waited and waited, nothing turned up, so we saddled up again and went home, feeling a bit sick. Then we did what we should have done at first. We went on to the Indian reserve and asked for Colonel M., the Indian agent. I got him to act as interpreter, and I put $200 into his hands, asking him to explain that this sum would be paid to any Indians who should bring me in sight of my lost horses. That was all I wanted them to do. I could attend to the rest of the business myself. They held a bit of a powwow, and then three of them, White Wings and two more, whom I called Jack and Charlie—I couldn't tackle their Indian names—stepped out and volunteered to accompany us. "It was about the first week in August, and the prairie grass was long, dry and yellow. They took up the trail at a smart canter and made for the border not quite straight, but so that they struck it about 130 miles or 140 miles southwest from the ranch. The country was mostly prairie, some flat, some rolling. There were some deep valleys and coulees and one or two ranges of hills. We followed them at a fast trot, but sometimes they were so far ahead that we had to fire shots to attract their attention and make them stop. We had some difficulty in making them understand, and they traveled at such a pace that I couldn't believe they were on the line at all. We couldn't make out anything, not even a bruised blade of grass. But every now and then we came to a soft place, where the hoof marks were discernible, and some of the stolen horses played out here and there, and we passed them, still following the main body. One mare was a confirmed jibber. I never could do anything with her myself, and they turned her loose, so that when we struck the border there were only nine horses left in the bunch. "There were three horse thieves, and they had taken a long rope and fastened it to the saddle of the leader. At the other end rode a second man, trying to keep it as taut as possible. The stolen horses were haltered along this rope, eight on each side, and the third man rode alongside, with a whip, to keep them moving. Now and then the leading pony and the trailing pony would stop and change places. Whenever this had happened the Indians called our attention to it. They always knew the exact position of each of the men we were hunting. We rode eighty miles the first day and reached the border on the second, and after that we struck a trail that was as much traveled as the main street of a big city. "We followed that for thirty miles or more, and we hardly slackened speed either. One of the hunted horses had a broken shoe, and the Indians would point out that particular track whenever we were in doubt of their being on the right line. At last we came to a place where the band had divided, six horses going in one direction and three in the other. We followed the six." Well, to cut a long story short, we as a critic he refused to be swayed by any of the social appeals to which most critics are only too ready to yield. He had a rigid independence, a sturdy individuality, a resolute freedom from party bias, although he is not always absolutely devoid of personal prejudice. And, in the fourth place, a critic needs sympathy, or at least he must have enough of it to enable him to understand and to appreciate men and women wholly unlike himself, and sympathy Sainte-Beuve had, although his share of this quality is not so full perhaps as his share of the other three qualifications for his great office. He is the foremost critic of his century in the body and substance of his work. His contribution to literature looks big on the library shelves—some threescore volumes, more or less, all solidly documented, all alive with the play of his keen intelligence and all illuminated by his intellectual integrity. A thin book of poems and a stillborn novel must not be neglected, for in them it is possible to perceive the reason for Sainte-Beuve's occasional lapses from justice in his estimate of some of the poets and novelists of his own time and of his own language. Brander Matthews in Century. How Fishes Breathe By means of their gills fish breathe the air dissolved in water. The oxygen consumed by them is not that which forms the chemical constituent of the water, but that contained in the air which is dissolved in the water. Fishes transferred to water from which the air has been driven out by a high temperature or in which the air absorbed by them is not replaced are soon suffocated. They require aerated water to maintain life, and they take it in constantly through their mouths and expel it through their gills, retaining the air. It follows that if the water in a lake should be completely cut off from contact with the air long enough to exhaust the supply of air the fish in the lake would die. It would take a severe and pretty long continued freeze to accomplish this, but it might happen and doubtless has frequently happened with a small body of water. The First Elevators. The idea involved in our modern "lift" or "elevator" was anticipated in the middle of the seventeenth century by Velager, who also established the first letter boxes in Paris in 1653. Velager's lift was in demand until a misapparition to the king's daughter at Versailles. The mechanism failed to work when she was halfway up, and there she stuck for three long hours until the servants could break away the wall to release her. His "flying chairs" then fell into disrepute. The apparatus was simple in the extreme; just a chair attached to a rope which was passed over a pulley, with a weight as a counterbalance at its other end. In 1860 some one brought out as a new invention an imitation of this primitive lift, which has developed into our hydraulic or electric apparatus. She Can, That's a Fract. Boyce—Why does a woman give so much attention to dress? Is it because she wants to attract men or because she desires to outshine her sister woman as a critic he refused to be swayed by any of the social appeals to which most critics are only too ready to yield. He had a rigid independence, a sturdy individuality, a resolute freedom from party bias, although he is not always absolutely devoid of personal prejudice. And, in the fourth place, a critic needs sympathy, or at least he must have enough of it to enable him to understand and to appreciate men and women wholly unlike himself, and sympathy Sainte-Beuve had, although his share of this quality is not so full perhaps as his share of the other three qualifications for his great office. He is the foremost critic of his century in the body and substance of his work. His contribution to literature looks big on the library shelves—some threescore volumes, more or less, all solidly documented, all alive with the play of his keen intelligence and all illuminated by his intellectual integrity. A thin book of poems and a stillborn novel must not be neglected, for in them it is possible to perceive the reason for Sainte-Beuve's occasional lapses from justice in his estimate of some of the poets and novelists of his own time and of his own language. Brander Matthews in Century. How Fishes Breathe By means of their gills fish breathe the air dissolved in water. The oxygen consumed by them is not that which forms the chemical constituent of the water, but that contained in the air which is dissolved in the water. Fishes transferred to water from which the air has been driven out by a high temperature or in which the air absorbed by them is not replaced are soon suffocated. They require aerated water to maintain life, and they take it in constantly through their mouths and expel it through their gills, retaining the air. It follows that if the water in a lake should be completely cut off from contact with the air long enough to exhaust the supply of air the fish in the lake would die. It would take a severe and pretty long continued freeze to accomplish this, but it might happen and doubtless has frequently happened with a small body of water. The First Elevators. The idea involved in our modern "lift" or "elevator" was anticipated in the middle of the seventeenth century by Velager, who also established the first letter boxes in Paris in 1653. Velager's lift was in demand until a misapparition to the king's daughter at Versailles. The mechanism failed to work when she was halfway up, and there she stuck for three long hours until the servants could break away the wall to release her. His "flying chairs" then fell into disrepute. The apparatus was simple in the extreme; just a chair attached to a rope which was passed over a pulley, with a weight as a counterbalance at its other end. In 1860 some one brought out as a new invention an imitation of this primitive lift, which has developed into our hydraulic or electric apparatus. She Can, That's a Fract. Boyce—Why does a woman give so much attention to dress? Is it because she wants to attract men or because she desires to outshine her sister woman as a critic he refused to be swayed by any of the social appeals to which most critics are only too ready to yield. He had a rigid independence, a sturdy individuality, a resolute freedom from party bias, although he is not always absolutely devoid of personal prejudice. And, in the fourth place, a critic needs sympathy, or at least he must have enough of it to enable him to understand and to appreciate men and women wholly unlike himself, and sympathy Sainte-Beuve had, although his share of this quality is not so full perhaps as his share of the other three qualifications for his great office. He is the foremost criticism of his century in the body and substance of his work. His contribution to literature looks big on the library shelves—some threescore volumes, more or less, all solidly documented, all alive with the play of his keen intelligence and all illuminated by his intellectual integrity. A thin book of poems and a stillborn novel must not be neglected, for in them it is possible to perceive the reason for Sainte-Bevue's occasional lapses from justice in his estimate of some of the poets and novelists of his own time and of his own language. Brander Matthews in Century. How Fishes Breathe By means of their gills fish breathe the air dissolved in water. The oxygen consumed by them is not that which forms the chemical constituent of the water, but that contained in the air which is dissolved in the water. Fishes transferred to water from which the air has been driven out by a high temperature or in which the air absorbed by them is not replaced are soon suffocated. They require aerated water to maintain life, and they take it in constantly through their mouths and expel it through their gills, retaining the air. It follows that if the water in a lake should be completely cut off from contact with the air long enough to exhaust the supply of air the fish in the lake would die. It would take a severe and pretty long continued freeze to accomplish this, but it might happen and doubtless has frequently happened with a small body of water. The First Elevators. The idea involved in our modern "lift" or "elevator" was anticipated in the middle of the seventeenth century by Velager, who also established the first letter boxes in Paris in 1653. Velager's lift was in demand until a misapparition to the king's daughter at Versailles. The mechanism failed to work when she was halfway up, and there she stuck for three long hours until the servants could break away the wall to release her. His "flying chairs" then fell into disrepute. The apparatus was simple in the extreme; just a chair attached to a rope which was passed over a pulley, with a weight as a counterbalance at its other end. In 1860 some one brought out as a new invention an imitation of this primitive lift, which has developed into our hydraulic or electric apparatus. She Can, That's a Fract. Boyce—Why does a woman give so much attention to dress? Is it because she wants to attract men or because she desires to outshine her sister woman as a critic he refused to be swayed by any of the social appeals to which most critics are only too ready to yield. He had a rigid independence, a sturdy individuality, a resolute freedom from party bias, although he is not always absolutely devoid of personal prejudice. And, in the fourth place, a critic needs sympathy, or at least he must have enough of it to enable him to understand and to appreciate men and women wholly unlike themselves. Gasol Caratarrh In all its stages. Ely's Cream Balm cleanses, soothes and heals the diseased membrane. It cures catarrh and drives away cold in head quickly. Cream Balm is placed into its nostril over the membrane and is absorbed. It mediate and cure follows. It is not dry not produce sneezing. Large Size, 50 centigrams or by mail; Trial Size, 10 cents. ELY BROTHERS. Warren Street, N.Y. Spoiled Her Beauty Harriet Howard, of 209 W.W. New York, At one time had her spoiled with skin trouble. She "I had Salt Rheum or Eczema for but nothing would cure it," until Bucklen's Arnica Salve." A quail sure healer for cuts, burns an 25c at Hutchinson's drug store. Give us your order for burned wood work early. Hutton Drug Store. A fine line of whiskles just at Commercial Hotel Bar—Will Vernon Hunter Marland Scott tucky Taylor, old Oscar Pepper son Club Rock and Rye brands. Dining room service class. Give us call: We followed eight miles the first day and reached the border on the second, and after that we struck a trail that was as much traveled as the main street of a big city. "We followed that for thirty miles or more, and we hardly slackened speed either. One of the hunted horses had a broken shoe, and the Indians would point out that particular track whenever we were in doubt of their being on the right line. At last we came to a place where the band had divided, six horses going in one direction and three in the other. We followed the six. "Well, to cut a long story short, we came on three horses at last in the Yellowstone park tied up to trees and 400 miles from their starting point, having averaged over eighty miles a day during the chase. We communicated with the local authorities, and the men were arrested almost immediately and taken to Fort Beaufort, while I sent back to Canada for Sheriff Chapleau to come and extradite them. Unluckily in those days there was extradition for pretty nearly every form of crime except horse thieving, and the sheriff turned up, a much disgusted man, to say that he could do nothing in the matter. There was a band of vigilantes there at the time, however, and their chief—a French count, by the way—told the sheriff that if he could arrange to wait over for a day he should see how they dealt with horse thieves in the States. The culprits were let out of jail that night, and early next morning Chapleau saw their three bodies hanging from trees within 300 yards of the fort. "Now, that was tracking. I've seen some very wonderful tracking ability exhibited by the Blackfeet and Assiniboine men and others. You won't find it among white men. How can they compete with hunters whose forefathers for generations have been following the trail of soft moccasins over all kinds of ground till they can almost run by scent? Only be sure to select the right men. I've known too many Englishmen come out to this country to shoot moose and get into conversation with some loafer in a hotel 'rotunda,' who invariably 'knows all about it' and has just the right man to recommend for the job. Then the Englishman spends weeks following stale moose tracks in charge of some drunken half breed, who is quite content to promenade through the woods so long as he is earning $1.50 a day and his grub. But the officers of the northwest mounted police and the Indian agents and the sportsmen who go out year until the servants could break away the wall to release her. His "dying chairs" then fell into disrepute. The apparatus was simple in the extreme; just a chair attached to a rope which was passed over a pulley, with a weight as a counterbalance at its other end. In 1860 some one brought out as a new invention an imitation of this primitive lift, which has developed into our hydraulic or electric apparatus. She Can, That's a Fact. Boyce—Why does a woman give so much attention to dress? Is it because she wants to attract men or because she desires to outshine her sister women? Mrs. Boyce—Can't a woman do two things at once?—Smart Set. BLACK-DRAUGHT STOCK & POULTRY MEDICINE This great stock medicine is a money saver for stock raisers. It is a medicine, not a cheap food or condition powder. Though put up in coarser form than Thedford's Black-Draught, renowned for the cure of the digestion troubles of persons, it has the same qualities of invigorating digestion, stirring up the torpid liver and loosening the constipated bowels for all stock and poultry. It is carefully prepared and its action is so healthful that stock grow and thrive with an occasional dose in their food. It cures hog cholera and makes hogs grow fat. It cures chicken cholera and roup and makes hens lay. It cures constipation, distemper and colds in horses, murrain in cattle, and makes a draught animal do more work for the food consumed. It gives animals and fowls of all kinds new life. Every farmer and raiser should certainly give it a trial. It costs 25c. a can and saves ten times its price in profit. PITTSBURG, KAS., March 25, 1904. I have been using your Black-Draught Stock and Poultry Medicine on my stock for some time. I have used all kinds of stock food but I have found that yours is the best for my purpose. J. S. HASSON. CHAMBER OF COMMERCE Onaheim Chamber of Commerce meets first and third Thursday of each at Chamber of Commerce rooms, 110 Los Angeles street. OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS Whiborn, president; L. E. Miller, vice president; Edward Michod, secretary-treasurer—C. F. Grim, C.W. Foor, Wellallop, W. W. Adams. CHURCH DIRECTORY BRIAN CHURCH—Northeast corner Adele and Center streets. Preaching 11 am and Sunday school 10 am; Christian Entrance Society 7 pm; Wednesday prayer 8 pm; Monthly meeting of Ladies' Primary Society second Wednesday of each at 8 pm. Ladies' Aid on fourth Thursday each month at 2:30 pm. W. H. Chapastor. BODYTERIAN CHURCH—Corner Cypressermine streets. Preaching 11 am and Sunday school 10 am; Christian Entrance Society 7 pm; Wednesday prayer 8 pm; Monthly meeting of Ladies' Primary Society second Wednesday of each at 8 pm. Ladies' Aid on fourth Thursday each month at 2:30 pm. W. H. Chapastor. ISCOPAL CHURCH—Northeast corner Adele streets. Preaching 11 am, Sunday school 10 am, Woman's Guild first Friday in each month. Alter Guild third Friday in each month. W. S. Decring, pastor. MAN LUTHERAN—Southeast corner Emil Chartreuse streets. Preaching every day at 10:30 am. Sunday school 9:30 am, Missy, pastor. HEL BAPTIST CHURCH—Corner Broadway and Lemon streets. Services morning evening. Sunday school at 11 am. Rev. Berg, pastor. MAN EVANGELICAL CHURCH—Southwest Center and Adelaide streets. Preaching 9:45 am, 7:45 pm. Sunday school 9:30 am, People's meeting 7:15 pm. Prayer meeting Wednesday 8 pm. J. Rich, pastor, Science, 313 Olive street. MAN METHODIST—Southeast corner Way and Clementine streets. Preaching 7:30 pm. Sunday school 9:45 am, Men's Missionary Society first Thursday every month at 2 pm. A. F. Hilmer, passt Parsonage north side of church. Blucher and HisPipe. Fromwell's Ironsides were smokers, large numbers of pipes have been leaving the balance of the state another district subject to such subdivision as may be deemed advisable later. Many sportsmen in the south have long contended that the general game laws do not give the game in this section of the state sufficient protection, that the laws are all right as applied to other sections of the state, but in the south some special legislation is desired to prevent the extermination of big game. New Game Laws A proposition of interest to sportsmen throughout Southern California is to be acted upon at this session of the legislature. It consists of the creation of game districts of the several counties for which legislation can be made to meet the conditions existing there, such legislation to have no effect upon other portions of the state. Two years ago the people authorized an amendment to the state constitution empowering the legislature to divide the state into fish and game districts, but nothing was done at the last session for the reason that the sportsmen and others interested in the matter could not reach an agreement as to the territorial divisions of the proposed districts. Game conditions in Southern California are wholly different from those which exist in the north. The present law is such that any district once created can be subdivided if necessary. It is therefore possible to create a district in Southern California leaving the balance of the state another district subject to such subdivision as may be deemed advisable later. Many sportsmen in the south have long contended that the general game laws do not give the game in this section of the state sufficient protection, that the laws are all right as applied to other sections of the state, but in the south some special legislation is desired to prevent the extermination of big game. Talbert Drainage The Talbert drainage district, organized last year, has elected as new directors, John C. McDowell, representing the northern end; S. E. Talbert, Talbert; and Caspar Borchard, Jr., the southern portion. Ten thousand of the recent $20,000 bond issue have been sold to the Adams-Phillips company of Los Angeles for par and accrued interest. The money will go to the improvement of the big canals through the district, which drain off surplus water. Vinol The New Body Builder As delicious as a Fresh Orange Supersedes old-fashioned Cod Liver Oil and Emulsions Guaranteed to contain all the medicinal elements, actually taken from genuine fresh cods' livers, with organic iron and other body-building ingredients, but no oil or grease, making the greatest strength and flesh creator known to medicine. For old people, puny children, weak, pale women, nursing mothers, chronic cold, hacking coughs, throat and lung troubles, incipient consumption—nothing equals Vinol. Joseph Back Undertaker Embalmer Furniture Bedding Repairing City Market Fresh and Salted Meat Special attention to all which will be filled pans. F.W. Fleischmann, Chas. Geldermann, Finest of Wines, Liquors and Glasses as prescribed by me as the foremost remedy for the chafes, nervousness, facial neuritis muscular or nervous eye strain eye trouble or for new glasses cured by a specialist. DR. ALFRED LOY OPTICIA EYE STRAIN MONKEY can be borrowed favorable terms. SAVINGS, LOAN AND BUILD ASSOCIATION OF A than from an institution in A Home Institution conducted by home masters If you want to borrow money at a low rate to pay off present mortgage, or take a home or to improve present one address or rent Vinol The New Body Builder As delicious as a Fresh Orange Supersedes old-fashioned Cod Liver Oil and Emulsions Guaranteed to contain all the medicinal elements, actually taken from genuine fresh cod's livers, with organic iron and other body-building ingredients, but no oil or grease, making the greatest strength and flesh creator known to medicine. For old people, puny children, weak, pale women, nursing mothers, chronic cold, hacking coughs, throat and lung troubles, incipient consumption—nothing equals Vinol. Try it—if you don't like it we will return money. W. B. Hutchinson, Druggist ALL SCHOOLS Are not alike. The WQODBURY is different. It has a marked individuality of its own. It not only teaches, but inspires—gives the student an impetus that aids him through life in his struggle for position, prestige, power and supremacy. WOODBURY FEATURES: New college building; clean, spacious, inviting rooms, whole-some moral atmosphere; cordial, helpful, sympathetic teachers; firm but kind discipline; strict attention to business; admirable social features; intensely practical and fascinating courses of study; unapproached facilities and prestige in placing graduates in good positions; absolute fidelity to its motto: "The success of the student." Up-to-date systems of bookkeeping and shorthand; thoroughly modern spirit; absence of catch-penny inventions and kindergarten business practice schemes; loyal and appreciative students and patrons; perfectly harmonious and enthusiastic faculty and management; progressive and vigorous policy. EFFECT: The largest Fall enrollment in the history of the school, and according to report, about twenty-five percent greater than that of any other business college in Los Angeles. To Earn more you must Learn more. WOODBURY Business College Los Angeles Cal. Notice to Stockholders The stockholders of the Anaheim Union Water Company are hereby notified that, at the regular meeting of the Board of Directors of said corporation, held on Saturday, February 4th, 1905, a resolution was adopted by said Board declaring it to be for the best interests of said corporation to increase the bonded indebtedness thereof from $114,500.00 to $300,000.00. At the same time said Board further resolved that a meeting of the stockholders of said corporation should be called to vote on said proposition of increasing the bonded indebtedness as aforesaid. By virtue of said resolution said meeting of stockholders is hereby called to be held at the Backs' Building, Los Angeles street, Anaheim, Orange County, California (such being the principal place of business of the corporation and the building where the Board of Directors usually meet) on Saturday, THE 22ND DAY OF APRIL, 1905. at ten o'clock A.M. of said day, for the purpose of voting upon the proposition to be submitted to said meeting of stockholders, authorizing the increase of said corporation from $114,500.00; said bonds to be secured by mortgage or deed of trust upon the franchises and property of said corporation, and to bear a rate of interest not to exceed six per cent per annum, and to be payable as follows: 200 bonds of the denomination of $250.00 each; forty of said bonds to be payable five years after their date, and forty of said bonds payable every year thereafter until all have been paid. Three hundred bonds of the denomination of $500.00 each; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable十ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable十ten years after their date; twenty of said bonds to be payable十ten years after their date; twenty of said债券十ten years after theirdate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十tenyearafterthedate;二十年债券十TenYearAfterTheDate; AT HUTCHINSON'S DRUG MONEY can be borrowed favorably terms SAVINGS, LOAN AND BUILD ASSOCIATION OF A from an institution in A Home Institution conducted by home mone If you want to borrow now at a low rate to pay one present mortgage or to take a home or to improve present one address or Fred A. Back Secretary Choice Many Routes EAST and WEST "Sunset" "Ogden" "Shasta" Pullman Vestibuled Traffic Personally Conducted cursions via all routes every week, at REDUCED RAISONS The SOUTHERN PASS you choice of many routes northern boundry of the U.S. to the Atlantic Coast, so you go one way and return a varied scenery and climatisation Full information from an Southern FOREIGN ..OLD MEXICO EXCURSION MARCH 7, Going via Grand Canyon El Paso. 18 days off sightseeing in a won YOU OUGHT and see Santa Fe about it. Rates all expenses, will bury from points north o field and $189.00 fromern California Low Rates From The East to California, Arizona and New Mexico will be in effect, via the SANTA FE, from March 1st to May 15th, 1905. From Chicago $33.00; Kansas City $25.00; St. Louis $30.00, and similar rates from many other points. Tell Your Friends about it and instruct them to ask for tickets via the Santa Fe All agents will take deposits for prepaid tickets. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of MINA KOSSERT, deceased. Notice is hereby given by the undersigned, administrator of the estate of Mina Kossert, deceased, to the creditors of, and all persons having claims against the said deceased, to exhibit the same with the necessary vouchers, within four months after the first publication of this notice, to the said administrator at his office in The First National Bank of Anaheim, Center street, Anaheim, California, the same being the place for the transaction of the business of the said estate in the county of Orange. Dated this 8th day of February, A. D. 1905. JOHN HARTUNG, Administrator of the estate of Mina Kossert, deceased. Richard Melrose and F. C. Spencer, attorneys for administrator. LUMBER Sash, Doors, Shingles Shakes, Lath, Cement Lime : : : : C. Ganahl Lumber Co CHAS. F. GRIM, Manager EAST CENTER ST., ANAHEIM. FOR SALE. Two spans of good work mules, some barley hay and seed barley. Address j19-1m Jacob Everhardy, Anaheim. Now is the time to look into the merits of our Syrup White Pine FOR COUGHS AND COLDS 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 draught. Subscribe for the GAZETTE PUBLIC ADVERTISING To the Hon. Z. B. West, presiding judge of the probate department. Geo. S. Smith, public administrator of said county, respectfully commencing July 1, 1904, to Jan. 1, 1905, in pursuance of the provisions. Date of Issuance Names of Decedents Approximate value of estate as far as ascertained. Money which has come into administrator's hands. March 13 Wm Harmon ... under 100 00 5 00 October 9 Arvilla M. Berry ... under 100 00 5 00 March 18 Ferdinand L. Arndt ... under 100 00 861 73 April 1... Dutson B. Barker ... under 100 13 209 13 May 27 H. A. Newman ... under 7 340 10 198 65 Feb'ry 29 Jas H. Ward ... under 30 65 30 65 July 22 Sarah Ann Renz ... under 804 92 Oct. 7 Jno. Schaumann ... under 100 00 That he is Geo. S. Smith, being duly sworn, deposes and says decedents foregoing is a full, true and correct copy of all estate, interested in before named; that he is not, and was not at any wise, with any estate, nor is he associated in business, or of January 1905. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 9th Joseph Backs Undertaker Embalmer Furniture Bedding Repairing Done City Market Fresh and Salted Meats Special attention to all orders, which will be filled promptly F. W. Fleischmann, Proprietor Chas. Geldermann, Manager Finest of Wines, Liquors and Cigars at Roman Wisser's Favorite Saloon ANAHEIM BEEK ON DRAUGHT Center St. - r - Anaheim DR. ALFRED LOERCH Optician EYE STRAIN Glasses as prescribed by me are conceded the foremost remedy for the cure of head ache, nervousness, facial neuralgia, due to muscular or nervous eye strain. For any eye trouble or for new glasses consult me. I am a specialist. MONEY can be borrowed on more favorable terms from the SAVINGS, LOAN and BUILDING ASSOCIATION OF ANAHEIM than from any similar institution in the State A Home Institution... conducted by home men If you want to borrow money at a low rate to pay off your present mortgage, or to build a home or to improve your present one, address or call on Fertilizers for Sale Thousands of tons of Lime Cake at 50c per ton Hundreds of tons of Cow Manure at 40c per ton For Walnut and Orange Groves Address or call on Los Alamitos Sugar Co. Los Alamitos, Cal. Pianos Pianos Pianos Any piano in our stock of over 200 instruments and from the world's most famous makers may be bought from us now on the following payments $600 1st Payment $600 per Month NO Interest MONEY can be borrowed on more favorable terms from the SAVINGS, LOAN and BUILDING ASSOCIATION OF ANAHEIM than from any similar institution in the State A Home Institution conducted by home men If you want to borrow money at a low rate to pay off your present mortgage or to build a home or to improve your present one, address or call on Fred A. Backs, Jr Secretarv Anaheim Choice of Many Routes EAST and WEST “Sunset” via New Orleans and El Paso “Ogden” via San Francisco “Shasta” via Portland Pullman Vestibuled Trains Daily. Personally Conducted Tourist Excursions via all routes every day in the week, at REDUCED RATES The SOUTHERN PACIFIC gives you choice of many routes from the northern boundry of the United States to the Atlantic Coast, so that you may go one way and return another, with varied scenery and climatic conditions. Full information from any agent. Southern Pacific OLD MEXICO EXCURSION MARCH 7, 1905 Going via Grand Canyon and El Paso. 18 days of delight-sightseeing in a wonder land YOU OUGHT TO GO and see Santa Fe agents about it. Rates including all expenses, will be $199.00 from points north of Bakersfield and $189.00 from Southern California Any piano in our stock of over 200 instruments and from the world’s most famous makers may be bought from us now on the following payments $600 1st Payment $600 per Month NO Interest Think of it Krell, Decker, Regent, Sohmer, Chickering Bros., Steger & Son, Fitzjerald, Sherwood, Standard and a score of other makes. We also offer on the same terms a lot of used pianos which we have taken in exchange on new Regents, Deckers, Chickering Bros., and Krells. Prices from $95 to $200. We pay the treight to Anaheim FITZGERALD Music and Piano Co. 113 South Spring St. LOS ANGELES The Brownsberger Home School Incorporated 953 W. 7TH ST. LOS ANGELES, CAL. A thorough business college. Beautiful home surroundings. The school owns its own property, 95x250 ft. The policy of the school is broad and liberal. Over 100 typewriters. Over 100 roll-top desks. Complete bank equipment. Business training and bookkeeping may be combined with shorthand. Each pupil may have a machine free at home and gain time in school. Day and evening sessions. We invite investigation Send for catalogue and college paper. Correspondence invited F. BROWNSBERGER, Business Manager Los Angeles Beer on Tap Telephone Main 55 GOING via Grand Canyon and El Paso. 18 days of delight-sightseeing in a wonder land YOU OUGHT TO GO and see Santa Fe agents about it. Rates including all expenses, will be $199.00 from points north of Bakersfield and $189.00 from Southern California. SANTA FE IS THE WAY A thorough business college. Beautiful home surroundings. The school owns its own property, 95x250 ft. The policy of the school is broad and liberal. Over 100 typewriters. Over 100 roll-top desks. Complete bank equipment. Business training and bookkeeping may be combined with shorthand. Each pupil may have a machine free at home and gain time in school. Day and evening sessions. We invite investigation Send for catalogue and college paper. Correspondence invited F. BROWNSBERGER, Business Manager Los Angeles Beer on Tap Telephone Main 55 THE PEERLESS A. FUHRBERG, Proprietor Fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars PUBLIC ADMINISTRATOR'S REPORT Edge of the probate department of the superior court of the county of Orange; lector of said county, respectfully makes this return of all estates of decedents which have come into his hands for the term 1905, in pursuance of the provisions of section 1736 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Date Money which has come into administrator's hands. Funeral expenses expenses of last illness, debts and family allowance paid by administrator. Fees and expenses paid by administrator. Lodged in county treasury by administrator. Money deposited in savings banks by the decedents not withdrawn by administrator. Balance cash in the Hands of the administrator. Property exclusive of money in the hands of administrator Distributed to next of kin & turned over to gen. admstrs and executors 297 79 1 081 79 508 65 295 01 5 00 278 13 1 500 00 100 00 5 00 861 73 851 25 44 00 10 48 1 510 00 310 00 209 13 209 13 214 18 65 25 65 144 13 340 00 198 65 30 65 5 00 555 77 50 65 804 92 182 65 66 50 10 00 10 00 $712 30 $1 295 41 $870 03 $10 350 00 $824 13 STATE OF CALIFORNIA. County of Orange. That he is the Public Administrator of said County; that the decedents which have come into his hands for the estates here- copy of all estate, interested in the expenditures of any kind made on account of was not at any time, with any one who is so interested. Business, or o'f January 1905. C. D. LESTER, County Clerk. [Seal] GEO. S. SMITH, Public Administrator