anaheim-gazette 1905-11-23
Searchable text
WALLOP BRO'
When purchasing your Holiday Supplies don't neglect to call us. We have just received a line of Nuts, Cranberries, Sweet Cider, in Bulk and Bottles, Apples. We also have an Line of Groceries.
Malthoid Roofing
Is backed by 21 years successful experience
In the manufacture of roofing material. It is now by the largest concerns in the country.
FOR SALE AT
L. E. MILLER'S
successful experience
In the manufacture of roofing material. It is now
by the largest concerns in the country.
FOR SALE AT
L. E. MILLER'S
CENTER
MARKET
Carries a choice line of
Fresh and Salt Meats
Phne Main 123
Center Street, ANAHEIM
MARTIN & KLEMEN
Palace Meat Market
F. W. FLEISCHMAN, Prop.
Beef, Mutton, Pork, Fresh and Salted
Meats, Hams, Bacon, Sausage, Lard
Prompt attention given to all orders.
Telephone Main
CITY MARKET
In New Odd Fellow's block
The Best of Fresh Meats Constantly on H
Hams, Bacon, Lard, Sausage
F. W. Fleischman,
Prop.
Anaheim Beer on Tap
Telephone
In New Odd Fellow's block
The Best of Fresh Meats Constantly on Hams, Bacon, Lard, Sausage
F. W. Fleischman, Prop.
Anaheim Beer on Tap
Telephone
THE PEERLESS
A. FUHRBERG, Proprietor
Fine Wines, Liq
ANAHEIM, Cal and Cigars
BANNER
LYE
WITH
LESS WORK
You can thoroughly clean your home and household utensils, including washing, at a cost of Ten cents a month.
Send for free booklet
THE J. K. ARMSBY COMPANY, SAN FRANCISCO
BRO'S.
Your Holiday
set to call on
received a fine
berries, Sweet
Bottles, and
have an A1
Roofing
years of
experience
cial. It is now used
the country.
RIVERSIDE GROWS CELERY!
EVER HEAR OF THAT?
Fight for Pathological Station Grows Interesting as
Time for Final Decision
Draweth Nigh
We receive through courtesy of
the press clippings bureau an editorial excerpt from the Riverside Press of recent date, dealing at length with the claims of that sections for the state laboratory and experiment station.
We have not been receiving the Press regularly for some weeks past,
and these virile observations of Editor Clarke had hitherto escaped us. However, the commission has not yet rendered its decision upon the site, and it may be worth while to consider the arguments of the Press that are now before us. After quoting from our columns an editorial upon the subject, showing that Riverside's claims to the laboratory and experiment station are nil, the Press continues:
"The editor of the Gazette has evidently never made much investigation of the conditions in Riverside county, or he would not indulge in as sweeping statements as these. He says, for instance, that Riverside produces no walnuts. On the very day is the opinion of those co-judge that if no blight hails in the fields, the output year be 3000 carloads. He to the grower of this one that challenges the attenuation commission.
Our walnut crop this year tically a failure. The outage be 2000 carloads, yet is not perhaps not a quarter of unfavorable conditions due curtail the crop, yet it must in mind that the blight cipal cause for this short blight has sent men out of ness, and deterred others ing it. The vineyards of were swept away by someious malady—why might nuts, they ask. Inevitably sult has been to curtail to stay expansion of the threaten it with extermination.
Yet these things are not the people of Riverside. Rus fruits some first, the products are nowhere.
The Press quotes far our reference to this subject allows:
"And has not the state done much for the grower fruits? Does the commission member the importation fnesia of the vedalia cardin swept away the white scale dreaded of all citrus scale."
"Did not Mr. Compere China the parasitic ladybirds on the red scale?"
Mr. Compere now scour islands of the red scale."
terial upon the subject, showing that Riverside's claims to the laboratory and experiment station are nil, the Press continues:
"The editor of the Gazette has evidently never made much investigation of the conditions in Riverside county, or he would not indulge in as sweeping statements as these. He says, for instance, that Riverside produces no walnuts. On the very day that this statement in the Gazette was received in this office the editor of the Press gathered a fine lot of walnuts from a sidewalk tree in front of his house; and scattered all over Riverside there are thrifty walnut trees, either planted on the street, or on ranches, and in other parts of the county walnut growing is not without considerable importance. Elsinore has something of an acreage in walnuts, and in the Temescal canyon between Corona and Elsinore, there are several fine groves of walnuts from which large quantities of nuts are shipped. So far as Riverside is concerned, we have found the orange more profitable than the walnut, but there is plenty of good land for walnuts in this city and county and plenty of opportunity here to study the problems of walnut growing.
"The Gazette further says that Riverside never produced a plant of celery or tomato. There again our Orange county contemporary is entirely mistaken. There is some fine celery land in the river bottom section within the city limits of Riverside, and in some seasons several carloads of celery have been shipped from here. And all this season we have been shipping to points in Nevada and other outside territory considerable quantities of as fine tomatoes as are grown anywhere in the state.
"It is true that these industries are overshadowed by the great orange industry, but it should be distinctly understood in any discussion of this laboratory and experiment done much for the grower fruits? Does the commission member the importation finesia of the vedalia cardinal swept away the white scale dreaded of all citrus scale?
"Did not Mr. Compere China the parasitic ladybug preys on the red scale? Mr. Compere now scour islands of the south seas in a parasite for the purple not the state board of hov vigilantly guarding the s rightly so, against impo other pests which threaten rus grower?
"Have not tens upon thousands of dollars been by the state for the orange not vast sums being conti pended for these growers?
"Is it not time somehow done for the other industrial walnut, the celery, the tomat this be the purpose of the vision, Orange county, wha the world also on oranges, place for these institutions. Clarke goes far afield in
"This is not quite a fair admitting the truth of a gazette says, it is also true that experts in the employ of have been studying the prince walnut grower, the grower and the general fact there is located at San splendidly equipped maintained by the federal ment in charge of Prof. N Pierce, which is largely de re study of the pathologic leses, of which the walnut one. The state has been as the asparagus industry. A erable expense a parasite has found for the coddling mot it is hoped, will greatly b apple industry. The last le appropriated $150,000 for a perimental farm where all problems relating to gener al and deciduous fruit growing."
have been shipping to points in Nevada and other outside territory considerable quantities of as fine tomatoes as are grown anywhere in the state.
"It is true that these industries are overshadowed by the great orange industry, but it should be distinctly understood in any discussion of this laboratory and experiment station location that Riverside and Riverside county grow successfully many other things besides oranges, and that there is ample opportunity here for the study of other agricultural problems beside those appertaining to the orange industry."
Our esteemed Riverside contemporary jests. Walnuts gathered from sidewalk trees, and celery found in the river bottoms, indeed! This must be wild celery, and at best Riverside's walnut "crop" must be a negligible quantity. The local walnut association of this city some days ago received from a Riversider a letter asking if 500 pounds of walnuts grown in that county could be received by the association here. As to celery, the river bottoms of this county, the creeks and sloughs near the ocean are lined with wild celery, but we do not bother about that. Orange county is shipping 2000 carloads of domesticated celery this season. A trainload of it may be seen passing through this city every afternoon during the shipping season, fresh from the peatland celery beds. It
The state has been interested that while the dustry and other industries titled to due recognition under terms of this most important that the orange industry is ing one of Southern California ship 30,000 carloads of or only 750 cars of walnuts and cars of celery; and the total of other vegetables of other from Southern California up to a few hundred cars. Ant as these industries are several localities, when they combined they are insignificated with the great industry. The orange and growers therefore feel they have a just claim for reeunder this bill; and if the
Royal Baking Powder Makes the lightest most delicious and tasty hot biscuit
secure it they certainly will show
hot biscuit
secure it they certainly will show up at the next legislature with another bill specifically providing for a citrus experiment station."
Of course the esteemed Press does not seek to create the impression that Riverside ships 30,000 cars of oranges: but it might as well be said right here that this represents the total shipments from Southern California.
Riverside ships probably a fifth of this crop—a no inconspicuous output. The other four-fifths are grown mainly in the counties of San Bernardino, Los Angeles and Orange.
Our products are not confined to deciduous fruits alone. As Mr. Chapman said at the Los Angeles meeting: "If there is a place in Southern California which beats us on oranges, we have not yet found where it is."
Nor have we. Everything Riverside says of oranges, applies to this county with equal force and precision.
SON LOST MOTHER
"Consumption runs in our family and through it I lost my mother," writes E. B. Reid of Harmony, Me.
"For the past five years, however, on the slightest sign of a cough or cold I have taken Dr. King's New Discovery for consumption, which has saved me from serious lung trouble." His mother's death was a sad loss for Mr. Reid, but he learned that lung trouble must not be neglected, and how to cure it. Quickest relief and cure for coughs and colds. Price 50c and $1; guaranteed at Hutchinson drugstore. Trial bottle free.
Death came to Mrs. Edith Polley-Tuffree at 6 o'clock Friday morning at a Los Angeles hospital where she had been since being rendered unconscious
Death came to Mrs. Edith Polley-Tuffree at 6 o'clock Friday morning at a Los Angeles hospital where she had been since being rendered unconscious the night of November 4th, when her aunt, Mrs. H. T. Austln, was killed in a collision between an automobile and a Boyle Heights car. She never regained her senses. Her skull was fractured, and this, with a severe concussion of the brain, caused her death.
Mrs. Polley-Tuffree was a handsome young woman and a favorite in her set. A chance meeting last spring with Henry D. Tuffree of Fullerton, son of the late Col. J. K. Tuffree a pioneer Californian, led to a love match, culminating in an elopement to Ocean Park, where they were married on May 4th.
Domestic differences followed after a few months, and a few weeks ago the young wife instituted suit for divorce in the Orange county superior court which was to have been heard this week.
HOW'S THIS?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarah Cure.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm.
WALDING, KINNAN & MARVIN.
Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75 cents per bottle. Sold by all Druggists.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.