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anaheim-gazette 1906-02-08

1906-02-08 · Anaheim Gazette · page 8 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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Buena Park William Forbes and Miss Myrtle Lovitt were married in the Congregational church at 8 o'clock Wednesday evening, Rev. Haresnape officiating. Many friends of the young couple were present and the high contracting parties were showered with congratulations. Many handsome presents were presented them. The groom is well and favorably known and the bride is a member of the younger society circles and universally admired by a host of acquaintances. After a brief honeymoon Mr. and Mrs. Forbes will take up their residence in the Park. On Monday afternoon the prospective bride was tendered a "shower" at the hospitable home of Mrs. H. E. Bixby. A large number of friends were present and the occasion was a very enjoyable affair. Misses Minnie and Ethel Champion of Long Beach are visiting with friends in the Park, the guests of J. D. Jaynes and family. A reception was tendered Rev. Haresnape at the parsonage on Friday evening. R. A. Sailor has sold 14 acres to E. M. Thurman of Pomona, through Bennett's agency. John H. Wright who disposed of a part of his place last week, is building a barn on the remainder besides making other substantial improvements on the tract. The new residence of Harry Warren on Ninth street is in course of construction and when completed will add greatly to the architectural beauty of the Park. Mr. and Mrs. Owens visited on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Japs. The Orientals met in the Centralia schoolhouse on Friday evening when one of their enjoyable meetings was participated in. Nine new subjects were enrolled. as did Elwood Mead, chief of the irrigation and drainage. They said the new available. The plan is to develop the efficiency of the system to make all alkali-laden soil suitable for agricultural purposes. Secretary the following day sent a message to congress relating inability of the Hawaiian government to dispose of public property larly the steam tug Eleu. A schedule of government laws to private citizens shows that Thompson, Los Angeles, leases years a strip of government land tidal canal, Oakland Harbor. Representative Powers of introduced a bill to limit railroad rates in Arizona and Mexico to 3 cents a mile, prince ticket need be sold for less than each passenger is to be all pounds of baggage. Municipal Saloon EDITOR GAZETTE.-I read much interest your article on municipal saloon, which you regard as quite nonsensical agree with you, but would not one question concerning Mr whose name I see among the new idea. Is this the man who recently asked the city grant him a restaurant liquor and is his support of a mucoon based upon the refusal of trustees to grant him his liquor license? This gentleman have experienced a change in change has come over the sea dream. Why is this thusly subscribed? [Ans.—The gentleman is who recently applied for a liquor license and was refusing city trustees.] The new residence of Harry Warren on Ninth street is in course of construction and when completed will add greatly to the architectural beauty of the Park. Mr. and Mrs. Owens visited on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Japs. The Orientals met in the Centralia schoolhouse on Friday evening when one of their enjoyable meetings was participated in. Nine new subjects were enrolled. On March 9th the Throop mandolin and guitar club will give one of its entertaining concerts in school hall, under the auspices of the Ladies' Aid society of the Congregational church. The ladies who have the affair in hand are determined to make the occasion a grand success. It is for a worthy cause and a large audience will doubtless be in attendance. McKaughan is busily engaged in "skinning" horses for the matinee to be given at the Santa Ana race track on February 22d. Wagner's McKinney is being worked out and some of the boys think if the horse can get down to "25" he will stand a show with the Chandler mare. A beautiful cup is up for the winner of three races straight between these two horses. Another race that will attract much attention will be the one between McKaughan's Carpus and Silver Horn, the latter having a mark of 2:10. Mac has a long eye on horseflesh, and while his nag has never been tracked, his friends are a-guessing. It's going to be a race, though, says Mac, and he is out to win. There will be other good entries and the driving club's outing on Washington's Birthday promises to be an interesting one. George Dunn and His Dog From the Redlands Review "And the dog came back." It was the first day of the quail season, October 15, 1905. George H. Dunn and Allan Wheaton were preparing to go quail hunting. As they labored with their outfit the day before, along came a man with half a dozen dogs he said were Cocker Spaniels, guaranteed bird dogs of the finest breed. What an idea! Mr. Dunn had just bought a fine English Setter, and why should Allen not buy a Cocker Spaniel, so he pungled him a ten spot and the man dropped it in the bottom of his jeans' son, October 15, 1905. George H. Dunn and Allan Wheaton were preparing to go quail hunting. As they labored with their outfit the day before, along came a man with half a dozen dogs he said were Cocker Spaniels, guaranteed bird dogs of the finest breed. What an idea! Mr. Dunn had just bought a fine English Setter, and why should Allen not buy a Cocker Spaniel, so he pungled him a ten spot and the man dropped it in the bottom of his jeans' pocket, handed out the dog and went his way. Act two took place on the initial hunting trip. At the lake on the Dunlap ranch, Mr. Wheaten and Mr. Dunn were looking for ducks. A band flew up and with a biff! bang! one fell in the water. Mr. Dunn's dog made for the fallen bird, while Mr. Wheaten turned around just in time to see his Cocker Spaniel going over the hill at a 2:30 clip, his tail tucked between his legs and yelling at every jump. That was the last seen of that ten-dollar purp until a few nights ago, three months and a half gone by. When Mr. Wheaton opened the door at his home last evening he encountered the dog, looking wistfully up into his face, licking out his tongue and wagging his tail in an expectant manner. "Well, I will be hanged!" spake the surprised hunter as he turned to the cupboard and took therefrom a plate of meat for his prodigal Bone Setter. Alkali Land Cure Representative Needham on Friday asked Secretary Wilson to drain a large tract of land near Fresno and wash alkali out of the soil. Secretary Wilson indicated his willingness to comply, A Transformation Seen A fashionable audience interested to a lecture on chemically celebrated chemist. At the end of the lecture a lady and who were among the first to hall had reached the open air lady caught her escort starring "What is the matter?" asked dame in surprise. "Pardon me are quite blue!" The lady ran the hall and approached a man started back in horror. The man cheeks had been converted beautiful blue by the chemical position which had taken place the influence of the gases we been generated during the lea majority of the women in the had suffered in a similar There were all sorts of coy yellow, violet and black. So vanity had induced them to on the skin, coral on the lips the cheeks and black on the had undergone a ludicrous trion. SEED POTATOES Choice Burbank seed pot sale. George L. Wagner. For Sale, cheap—Top buggy; in good condition; at L. paint shop, Anaheim. wood Mead, chief of the bureau igation and drainage investition. They said the money was The plan is to demonstrate agency of the system which will alkali-laden soil good for agripurposes. Secretary Metcalf giving day sent a mass of cornce to congress relative to the of the Hawaiian government of public property, particusteam tug Eleu. rule of government land leased the citizens shows that R. R. Rao, Los Angeles, leased for five strip of government land in the trial, Oakland Harbor, for $100. Presentative Powers of Maine has and a bill to limit passenger rates in Arizona and New to 3 cents a mile, provided no need be sold for less than 10 cts. passenger is to be allowed 150 baggage. Municipal Saloon GAZETTE.—I read with interest your article upon the saloon, which you seem to be quite nonsensical. I fully with you, but would like to ask concerning Mr. Heffner, name I see among the advocates new idea. Is this the gentleman ently asked the city trustees to own a restaurant liquor license, his support of a municipal sad upon the refusal of the city to grant him his restaurant license? This gentleman must relienced a change of heart, a has come over the spirit of his Why is this thusly? Yours, SUBSCRIBER. The gentleman is the same ently applied for a restaurant license and was refused by the ees. The Farmers' Power California land is coming into its estate. In the beginning of our agriculture and horticulture, remoteness from market and the difference in seed time and harvest between this State and the East presented obstables that discouraged cultivation of the soil, except to supply local needs, which were limited. In the flush mining times there was a market in the camps, which encouraged farming to supply it. When the gold output of the State in one year was $81,000,000, the men that tilled land, and such were few, got prices for the product that made them rich. That condition continued until the sharp decline of mining carried farming down with it, and land became a burden. Then railroads brought us in touch with markets, and rural industry began to rise in importance. California land products began to share in the national export trade, and farming has risen steadily in importance, until now modern methods and intensive farming are bringing our soil to the front as the finest in the world. We are sharing in the rise in land values that is in progress all over the country, and are bound to exceed the average of that rise. The agricultural product of the United States now exceeds that of any other country in the world. The hay crop of 1905 was valued at $605,000,000; cotton, $575,000,000; wheat $525,000,-000; oats, $282,000,000; potatoes, $138,-000,000; barley, $58,000,000; tobacco, $52,000,000; dairy products, $665,000,-000; poultry products, $500,000,000. Our hens last year cackled and laid 20,000,000,000 of eggs. We exported $827,000,000 of farm products. American farmers last year furnished the capital to start 1754 new national banks, all for the service of rural communities. The American farmer is an industrial prince and the Californian. Information Writer John Schnider, who leaves cisco in 1894, and went there will learn something to do by communicating with McLauchlin and Gundey. Two News Continued from past waste ditch, Yorba..... Total cleaning..... Repairs— To labor and team work on pair gate at Anaheim s half bbl. cement at $2 65 $1 To make gate and repairs ervoir...... Labor to repair ditch on branch, Orangethorpe. To labor and team work north branch ditch, Ful To repair ditch, Olive su heim...... Total repairs..... Construction— To labor and team work pipe line for Jan., 760 ft Used 6 bbls cement, $15 9 To labor on Wagner gage cement ditch...... Used 101¼ bbls cement at To labor by Johnson at pu plant and arch at Horse To labor and team work mer ditch to date...... To labor and team work forth gate.....Cement used, 2 bbls. at $2 To labor and team work 80 ft pipe on Santa Ana Anaheim.....Uused 1 bbl. cement at $2 To bundling sacks.....To unloading asphaltur taking incoe Precision Reversed Noyes of Riverside has rendered in the case of Mrs. Hatzer of this city against the Life insurance company Angeles, in which Mrs. Spencer collect money alleged to be kick and accident policy. Juscard of this city rendered for plaintiff, but the life insurance company carried an appeal to superior court. Judge Noyes, after the question under deliberation a verdict for the life company, reversing the low-ground Her Own Gown. All a story of an unfortunate society woman who, being termed for a gown to wear at a fashion, sold seven gowns for one to Mme. X. Among women was one hardly rumpled, though very magnificent,ently been worn at most only his dress Mme. X. sold as a Mme. Y., who was the society dressmaker and who had curate about making another for the poor little woman with down. When this "model" she saw a chance for big remoney, so she compromised her customer and agreed to let a new dress, just imported, very low figure. Whereat the woman paid all the money received for all her dresses and Mme. Y. brought the model. The man talked herself blue in the she could not say anything but herself without betraying him with Mme. X., so, poor he danced in her old frock having swapped all her other for the privilege. American farmers last year furnished the capital to start 1754 new national banks, all for the service of rural communities. The American farmer is an industrial prince and the California farmer is a king among his kind. Farmers are 35 per cent of our total population, a number unequalled by the members of any other vocation. A large majority of the people of California are farmers. They have the power, by combination, to control any policy they may choose to favor, either in the State or nation. We are accustomed to read resolutions to congressmen and legislators passed by organizations of various kinds in our cities. These expressions are indulged in without consulting the farmer. He is ignored entirely. No one asks if the instructions are in his interest or against it. Some day the farmers will pinch themselves, wake up, organize and go into the resolution business themselves and for themselves. They will stand by what they want at the polls, and the dealers in city resolutions will get a jolt that will be starting. The advance in our cities being under the eye of the press is noted and we point to it with pride. The increase in our rural population and the gains in settlement and cultivation of the land are observed only by their results. Crops of all kinds increase. The railroads find it difficult to manufacture cars fast enough to carry the products of the soil to the markets. The distant consumer of the specialties of California thinks of us and our land every time he eats an orange, a raisin, prune, pear or grape. In other days we all saw Italy in the yellow skin of an orange. When we sparingly partook of Valencia raisins we had visions of the far Dehazas, and dreamed of the golden foot of the sheep. The Moor and the Cid lived again in the fruit of luxury. Now all of this useful sentiment turns to California. We export our sunshine to the east in our fruits. When men drink wine, good and sound, it is from California, and the libation is poured to us and not to plant and arch at Horse To labor and team work, mer ditch to date... To labor and team work forth gate... Cement used, 2 bbls. at $20 To labor and team work 80 ft pipe on Santa Ana Anaheim... Used 1 bbl. cement at $20 To bundling sacks... To unloading asphalt taking invoice... Total construction... Grand total... Gentlemen:—I will report per foot of Young-Wagtail ditch at the next meeting as yet had measurements Respectfully sent A. L. Po J. I. Mefford was save dential chance from a fate Monday while working in the McFadden & Cubbon Myford, eight miles east Mefford was examining twenty-feet below the surcoat was caught by the shi trifugal pump whirling at 900 revolutions a minute soon have been beaten not Elmer Cubbon, who engine, hearing an unusual pit, turned off the belttained a wrenched showthe engine stopped his re complete, for the water teen-foot level in a few the pump is shut off. Our companion secured knives Ford's clothes from the slim him from his dangerous just as the water was on his chin, thus saving him G. D. Walker, known as zard, in jail at Santa Ana for embezzlement, made his way out of prison week his cell was searched were found, but on Friday was in court, Deputy Law other thorough examination covered that two bars had been cut through, one and the other at one end with which the prisoner work were found concealed He had filled the cuts with soap. It is the supp Transformation Scene. A notable audience in Paris listened to a lecture on chemistry by a chemist. At the conclusion of the lecture a lady and gentleman among the first to leave reached the open air when the light her escort staring at her. In the matter?" asked the mauririe. "Pardon me, but you are blue!" The lady returned to and approached a mirror. She stuck in horror. The rouge upon us had been converted into a blue by the chemical decomposition which had taken place under pressure of the gases which had erupted during the lecture. The women in the audience were all sorts of colors—blue, violet and black. Some whose induced them to put ivory on, coral on the lips, rouge on eyes and black on the eyebrows grogone a ludicrous transformation. SEED POTATOES Burbank seed potatoes for George L. Wagner. feb1-tf cheap—Top buggy and sur-condition; at L. Nemetz's, Anaheim. feb1-t2 pear or grape. In other days we all saw Italy in the yellow skin of an orange. When we sparingly partook of Valencia raisins we had visions of the far Dehazas, and dreamed of the golden foot of the sheep. The Moor and the Cid lived again in the fruit of luxury. Now all of this useful sentiment turns to California. We export our sunshine to the east in our fruits. When men drink wine, good and sound, it is from California, and the libation is poured to us and not to France. It is small wonder that as a result of this silent mission of our products thousands are led to come and be producers of the things of necessity and luxury that they have consumed. California is literally eaten every day by millions of people in the East, and they swallow the evidences of our climate and soil with relish, and are inspired to come and see, to admire and to stay. The advance of our cities is in response to the rural advance and growth. California offers today the best inducements in the world to land buyers and tillers of the soil, provided they buy so prudently that the land value will get its proper increment from their labor. No prudent investor anywhere pays for raw land the price that it will bring when improved. If he do, his margin is discounted in the first place. But properly bought and tilled, the land of California promises the quickest competence and the greatest pleasure in earning it of any land on the planet.—Call. Get a children's deposit box at the American-Savings bank and teach them how to save their money. $1 starts an account. Full information at the bank. week his cell was searched were found, but on Friday was in court, Deputy Law other thorough examina- covered that two bars o had been cut through, one and the other at one end with which the prisoner work were found concealed He had filled the cuts with soap. It is the suppo officers that Walker had who passed the tools in him, as no other theory s Information Wanted John Schnider, who left San Francisco in 1894, and went to New York, learned something to his advantage communicating with A. M. S., Gaule Office. feb8-3t MUCHLIN AND GUNDERSON TWO NEW DIRECTORS Continued from page 1. Ditch, Yorba... 16 00 Cleaning... $ 66 00 Repairs— Orchard and team work to re-gate at Anaheim school... $ 3 50 Confectionery, Cigars DRY GOODS Harness and Shoe Repairing. I also sell Harness. I am the only man in Buena Park that can satisfy you. Shorty Owens Buena Park W. S. TAYLOR REAL ESTATE Orange and Walnut Ranches, Alfalfa Land. City Property Eastern property traded for California property, or vice versa. With J. A. Woy Realty Co., 632 Bryson block Los Angeles. Call or address W. S. TAYLOR, Buena Park. Ring up Sunset, Farmers 14. For High-Grade Watch and Clock Repairing And Reliable Jewelry and Silverware C. I. HOOPLE 125 Center St. Anaheim Pacific Coast Mines Bureau We are fiscal agents for the Bluebelle Gold Mining and Milling Pacific Coast Mines Bureau We are fiscal agents for the Bluebelle Gold Mining and Milling Co. of California; Touapah-Wall Street Mining Co., and Eldorado-Nevada Mining Co. 421 Chamber of Commerce Los Angeles, Cal. HATZFELD'S PRESCRIPTION PHARMACY J. P. HATZFELD Graduate in Pharmacy Next Door to Postoffice Anaheim, Cal. IF YOU are in need of a Good Clock and wish one at an Exceptionally Low Price, call and look over our line Mantle Clocks of that Old Reliable Make, the Seth Thomas. We also carry in stock the best makes of Watch Cases and Movements and which we can sell you at a Surprisingly Low Price Considering quality offered and the guarantee given. W. C. Talcott Mullinix Drug Store Anaheim, Cal. FOR SALE CHEAP 9 head of milch cows, 1 Holstein bull (thoroughbred), 15 hogs, 3 heifers, at Carter ranch. Inquire at Morgan's store, near Smith's creamery on the Anaheim road. FOR RENT, A 7-room house on Lemon street; has bath, electric lights; all modern conveniences. Inquire of Wm. Konig. 4t FOR SALE CHEAP 9 head of milch cows, 1 Holstein bull (thoroughbred), 15 hogs, 3 heifers, at Carter ranch. Inquire at Morgan's store, near Smith's creamery on the Anaheim road. FOR RENT, A 7-room house on Lemon street; has bath, electric lights; all modern conveniences. Inquire of Wm. Konig. 4t Grafted walnut trees, W.W. Manter, Anaheim P. O., residence, Katella. 2t The Brownsberger Home School 953-55-57 W. 7th Street, Los Angeles, Cal. SHOWING LARGEST BUSINESS COLLEGE In Los Angeles Largest in Grounds, Equipment, Faculty, Attendance Quiet, Beautiful Home Surroundings. SPECIAL FEATURES We call especial attention to our methods in SHORTHAND and PREPARATORY ENGLISH work. Every seat taken in our BOOKKEEPING DEPARTMENT, and desks—all office roll-top—being brought in. Room for 100 more in the great school, WITHOUT CROWDING. New catalogue just out. Send for it. F. BROWNSBERGER, President.