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anaheim-gazette 1910-01-06

1910-01-06 · Anaheim Gazette · page 3 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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THURSDAY, January 6 NEWS OF THE COMING CENSUS APPLICATIONS FOR ENUMERATORS MUST BE FILED THIS MONTH Forms Will Be Furnished by Lyman M. King of Redlands, Census Supervisor of the Eighth District—Every Applicant Will Be Given A Fair Chance—Instructions Will Be Sent In Advance (Correspondence of the Gazette.) Washington, D.C., Dec. 29.—By January 25 all applications for the positions of enumerators in the Thirteenth Decennial United States Census must be filed with the supervisors of census for the supervisors' districts in which the applicants reside. Between that date and February 5 the supervisors will send out cards to applicants informing them where they are to report for the "test" to be held in every one of the 330 supervisors' districts on Feb. 5 only. Census Director Durand emphatically states that persons desiring to hold such positions should not stand in fear of the "test" to be made. Any person of average public-school education who can write plainly and reasonably fast will go through the test with flying colors. In fact, the test is intended simply to help the supervisors pick suitable persons and to enable the Director of the Census to exercise intelligently his powers of approval of those whom the supervisors designate for appointment. It will involve the filling in of either a sample population schedule, by those who will make the count in duty, in which he emphasized and added to what had been said by the President of the Census field chiefs previously at the White House. The Secretary said: "I wanted a chance to meet you—not to speak to you, but to shake hands and possibly exchange a word here and there as occasion might offer. There is a further reason why it will be difficult for me to say anything at this time. We have a rule that after the President has spoken his Secretaries have nothing to say. (Laughter.) I happened to be in the White House when you were there, and heard what the President said. To now repeat would not give emphasis; to add is barely pardonable. "I am very glad that you did have an opportunity, however, to meet the President himself and to hear from him just what the attitude of the Executive on this matter of the taking of the census is; and I am glad that he had opportunity to say to you how thoroughly he is in earnest about what he has heretofore said. "It is unnecessary for me to dwell upon the importance of a correct census. Of course, we want to take a better census than has ever before been taken—and that is no disparagement of the work of predecessors. We ought to improve; we ought to improve because the need for a correct and adequate census now is greater than it has ever been before. It is so on account of the growth of our own country, and because we are coming into relations with other countries, so that a correct report and a reliable statement, to be used not only at home but for comparison with what other countries are doing, is the one essential foundation of all calculations." WEALTH IN FALLING Wonderful Possibilities Production In Californi One of the geographies the Pacific States, which est to receive popular news, the correlation of mountains and sea coast. Even when only valued on the basis of ability and availability it was seen to be a great of the coast that the most high; that they parallel and that they were two of many streams which their sides across large fertile land to their oceans. Evidently such a confounding country assured abundance under pressure for matters and abundance of would be carried by good fertile plains and valleys to call into existence without production, both miserable, to collect and rural and urban populations old days these things to be enough to establish greatness of any country sessed them under a mate which made humble and human effort the development of the ence and industry it has that the old measure of association of high moist waters, fertile valleys bors, was but partial generation and transmic energy has given for measuring the value tain and the stream understand now that oeers' tributes to the formia, great and enth person of average public-school education who can write plainly and reasonably fast will go through the test with flying colors. In fact, the test is intended simply to help the supervisors pick suitable persons and to enable the Director of the Census to exercise intelligently his powers of approval of those whom the supervisors designate for appointment. It will involve the filling in of either a sample population schedule, by those who will make the count in the cities, or of both a sample population and agricultural schedule, by candidates who will enumerate the country. To prepare the way and to insure every applicant being given a fair chance, the supervisors will send in advance to each and every candidate a set of printed instructions for filling in these sample schedules. "We consider that a very important point," said Acting Census Director Willoughby today, "not only in treating these candidates fairly and giving them a chance to answer the questions properly, but also as a means of education of the candidates who are afterwards to be appointed." "They will study more thoroughly the instructions for filling in these schedules if they realize their chances of appointment depend upon that study than if they were appointed first and had to do the studying afterwards. You will see, therefore, that this test is not an appalling thing. It is not for the purpose of keeping people out of the places. It is applied simply to enable the Director to eliminate those who are plainly incompetent. Any person of good judgment and ordinary common-school education—for the work requires some little thinking power—can easily pass the test." Between February 5 and February 22 the supervisors will go through the test papers, satisfy themselves as to qualifications of those who have passed, and make their designations or recommendations to the Census Director. The next step will be the Director's approval, and then the supervisors will issue the commissions to the enumerators. Director Durand expects to have the army of 67,000 or more enumerators picked, tested, designated, and commissioned by the middle or latter part of March. From then on until April 15 the supervisors will send the enumerators circulars and books of instructions concerning the meaning of the schedule questions and the way the enumerators should write in the answers obtained from the poe ought to improve; we ought to improve because the need for a correct and adequate census now is greater than it has ever been before. It is so on account of the growth of our own country, and because we are coming into relations with other countries, so that a correct report and a reliable statement, to be used not only at home but for comparison with what other countries are doing, is the one essential foundation of all calculations. "Now, we have done, as we think, what we can to accomplish that result. So far as we could, we have placed in charge here at the head men who are experienced, competent and enthusiastic. Of course, the office here might be perfect in its machinery and its administration,and yet the entire work would be a failure unless you did what the President indicated this morning. After all granting a false premise anything can be proved. No matter how fine the superstructure may be, if the foundation is not right the building is not worth anything. It is for you to furnish the foundation for what is going to be done. You are responsible to the Director, to me, and to the President. That is the importance of your position. "Now, there is a lot of human nature in this thing, as was indicated to you this morning. You will have to be judges of a good many things, and you will have to show some discretion. And there is a lot of human nature beyond you when it comes to the activities of the enumerators then selves. A man might, for illustration, be a good business man and yet not be a good enumerator, because he might not have the confidence of the people with whom he has to deal. MINE OF LADYBUGS Pay Streak for Horticulturists Reported from Northern Citrus Belt Southern California melon and cabbage patches will be safe next year from destruction by the aphis. A mine of ladybugs has been discovered in Humbug canyon, Placer county, and millions of the aforesaid ladybugs, the deadly enemy of the aphis, have been placed in cold storage for use a few months hence. "Mine" is about the proper word, for the lucky find was made by miners and word sent by them to State Horticultural Commissioner Jeffrey. RESTORED TO Large Tract of Oil Landia Will Be Filled Based on the information by the Geological 456 acres of oil land have been restored to by Secretary Ballinger lands withdrawn previous to contain in all an 606 acres. The President, with aid, is preparing a proposal of oil lands. Garding the recommend obtained, but they way follow Secretary gestions in his annual. JAGS IN ME Looking for Denature ports Make D Washington, Jan. ment of Agriculture with some good newzens down in southern when arrested last F ing blind tigers, set that they had become eating watermelons. Has not yet analyzed brand of melons, but there is a tag in the Director's approval, and then the supervisors will issue the commissions to the enumerators. Director Durand expects to have the army of 67,000 or more enumerators picked, tested, designated, and commissioned by the middle or latter part of March. From then on until April 15 the supervisors will send the enumerators circulars and books of instructions concerning the meaning of the schedule questions and the way the enumerators should write in the answers obtained from the people of the country. It is very probable that census special agents may be assigned to certain supervisors' districts for the purpose of meeting the enumerators personally and giving them additional information concerning the character of their duties. Application forms with complete directions concerning the method of preparing them, can be secured by writing at once to the supervisor named in the list appended whose district embraces the place of residence of the applicant. California—First district, H. Julian Wright, Nevada City, Nevada county; Second district, Emmett Phillips, Sacramento, Sacramento county; Third district, James M. Burke, Oakland, Alameda county; Fourth district, J. J. Deane, San Francisco, San Francisco county; Fifth district, John W. Rogers, San Jose, Santa Clara county; Sixth district, Lewis L. Dennett, Modesto, Stanislaus county; Seventh district, Bert L. Farmer, Los Angeles, Los Angeles county; Eighth district, Lyman M. King, Redlands, San Bernardino county. Washington, D.C., Dec. 29.—Secretary Nagel of the Department of Commerce and Labor, under whose supervision is the work of the Bureau of the Census, at the conference of eastern state supervisors here, gave a vigorous talk on the subject of their Southern California melon and cabbage patches will be safe next year from destruction by the aphis. A mine of ladybugs has been discovered in Humbug canyon, Placer county, and millions of the aforesaid ladybugs, the deadly enemy of the aphis, have been placed in cold storage for use a few months hence. "Mine" is about the proper word for the lucky find was made by miners and word sent by them to State Horticultural Commissioner Jeffrey. Since then 140 pounds of the little parasites have been carried out of the canyon, and C. K. Carnes, in charge of the State insectary, with his assistant, B. B. Whitney, has gone after more. Field Deputy Whitney's first shipment amounted to 3,398,080 ladybugs. These he carried up and down mountain sides twelve miles, in flourbags, to the Rawhide mine trail. This point reached, some pine boughs were thrust into the bags to keep the bugs from mashing, and then they were loaded onto a burro, which carried them to the railroad station. Having reached Sacramento, the wad of bugs was thrust into cold storage reduced to a temperature of 44 deg. and will remain so until May, when they will be sent to Southern California. Ladybugs are found hibernating in large clusters like bee swarms, moving to keep up circulation, under the snow. The cold bug on the surface of the ball is constantly working inward and displacing his brother who has become warm and drowsy. It is a sort of "survival of the fittest" struggle, but the rotary movement has the effect of keeping all warm and alive. Hunting ladybugs, says the deputy horticultural commissioner, has many of the charms of game-hunting in the mountains. Looking for Denatured Ports Make Dyes Washington, Jan. 16. Department of Agriculture with some good news zens down in southern when arrested last Friday eating blind tigers, set that they had become eating watermelons. Has not yet analyzed brand of melons, but there is a jag in the edge Of course it is careful and much care and hard to extract it, but it is same. The department this beyond doubt. On red pounds of watermelon chemistry made one-tenth of alcohol. They also the humble sweet potato another spree. Secretonounced the discovery tendency in the war fore unsuspected. "We have been exerting every sort of fruit and contains sugar," said watermelons, pears, plums, pumpkins, melon potatoes, sweet potato other vegetables surprised us. We need of it. The purpose is cheapest kind of denation use as fuel. "The experiments under the direction of Wiley, chief of the botrytic. Of course it is difficult this alcohol in from melons, but we from sweet potatoes." "The experiments to benefit the seacoast south from Virginia lantic around Florida guilf. Sweet potato cheaply in the sand o WEALTH IN FALLING WATER Wonderful Possibilities of Power Production in California One of the geographical glories of the Pacific States, which was earliest to receive popular recognition, was the correlation of mountains, valleys and sea coast. Even when water was only valued on the basis of its potability and availability for irrigation it was seen to be a grand endowment of the coast that the mountains were high; that they paralleled the coast and that they were the birth place of many streams which flowed from their sides across large stretches of fertile land to their ocean emptying. Evidently such a conformation of the country assured abundance of water under pressure for many unborn cities and abundance of water which would be carried by gravity to the fertile plains and valleys and there to call into existence vast aggregates of production, both mineral and vegetable, to collect and support great rural and urban populations. In those old days these things were believed to be enough to establish the future greatness of any country which possessed them under a salubrious climate which made human life enjoyable and human effort effective. In the development of the race in science and industry it has become clear that the old measure of value in the association of high mountains, falling waters, fertile valleys and good harbors, was but partial and limited. The generation and transmission of electric energy has given new standards for measuring the value of the mountain and the stream and we all understand now that even the pioneers' tributes to the glories of California, great and enthusiastic as they One bushel of sweet potatoes will make a gallon of alcohol. The product is a better and cheaper fuel than the Standard's benzine." GETS ITS MONEY BACK San Bernardino County Receives Special School Funds Sacramento, Jan. 1.—San Bernardino county will get back that $41,000 belonging to its special school fund, which, by a mistake of its County Auditor, was included in the school fund to be turned over to the state school fund for apportionment to the several counties, and it will get it back without taking the matter into the courts. Indeed, it is expected that the money will be taken out of the State strong box Monday, and that the schools of San Bernardino county will go right along as if the vexatious problem had never arisen. Controller Nye had a long seance with the Attorney-General and the State Treasurer. Treasurer Williams desired to let go of the money, Controller Nye was anxious to see it returned, and the Attorney-General wanted to please both these gentlemen. Finally, the head of the law department of the State concluded that as the State never had had any right to the money raised by the people of San Bernardino county for special school purposes, the money had no right to be in the state treasury, and that the only thing to do was to take it out. He was of the opinion that if the treasurer and the controller of the funds would make the proper corrections upon their books, making it plain that the $41,000 had no business there had been put in through QUEER BITS OF HISTORY Victor Hugo was at the time of his death the wealthiest of nineteenth century authors. In his younger days, however, he knew the pangs of poverty, as, after a quarrel with his father, Gen. Hugo, he and his brother had their allowances stopped. "We made $160 last us for eighteen months. One chop would serve for lunch three days in succession; on the first day we would eat the lean, on the second day the fat and on the third day we would suck the bone. We discovered a place in the Quarter Latin where for 15 sous (15 cents) we obtained a four-course dinner, a bottle of wine and as much bread as we liked. For another sou we obtained the sweetest of smiles from the pretty girl who looked after us." This regime does not appear to have spoiled Hugo's digestion, for at the age of 83 he cracked nuts with his teeth and ate oranges as some people eat apples—peel and all. Wrecks on the coast of Cornwall, England, were once a source of revenue to the natives. A writer says that, in the local dialect, "the folks on the coast taich their children to zay in their prayers night times, 'God bless father’s mother an’ zend a ship ta shore vore mornin'." The Cornish folk were great smugglers, too. Rev. R. S. Hawker had in his service as a man of all work old Tristram Pen tire, the last of the smugglers. One day he made to the vicar this notable confession: "Well sir, I do think, when I come to look back and to consider what lives we used to live—drunk all night and idle abed all day, cursing, swearing, fighting, gambling, lying and always prepared to shoot the gauger—I do really believe, sir, we surely was in sin." Tossing in the blanket, which has able and human effort effective. In the development of the race in science and industry it has become clear that the old measure of value in the association of high mountains, falling waters, fertile valleys and good harbors, was but partial and limited. The generation and transmission of electric energy has given new standards for measuring the value of the mountain and the stream and we all understand now that even the pioneers' tributes to the glories of California, great and enthusiastic as they were, were inadequate. Of course, waterfalls have always had due credit for scenic beauty, and it is almost trite to speak of it as attractive to mankind and promotive of settlement and development. In this measurement of economic influence it is now clear that it does not express value adequately. In fact, the waterfall rises as far beyond its scenic estimate as the stream has added to its ancient riparian value. Because waterfalls are now exponents of power most available for electric transmission, and everywhere in civilized lands the hand of enterprise is upon them for the production of new wealth and of old wealth in new ways and for the enrichment of human life in all ways. RESTORED TO ENTRY Large Tract of Oil Lands in California Will Be Filed Upon Based on the information furnished by the Geological Survey, 378,456 acres of oil lands in California have been restored to public domain by Secretary Ballinger. The area of lands withdrawn previously is thought to contain in all an aggregate 3,242,606 acres. The President, with Mr. Ballinger's aid, is preparing a plan for the disposal of oil lands. No details regarding the recommendations can be obtained, but they will in a general way follow Secretary Ballinger's suggestions in his annual report. JAGS IN MELONS Looking for Denatured Alcohol, Experts Make Discovery Washington, Jan. 1.—The Department of Agriculture has come along with some good news for those citizens down in southern Indiana who, when arrested last Fall for conducting blind tigers, set up as a defense that they had become intoxicated from eating watermelons. The department has not yet analyzed the Indiana brand of melons, but it asserts that there is a lag in the Georgia melons partment of the State concluded that as the State never had had any right to the money raised by the people of San Bernardino county for special school purposes, the money had no right to be in the state treasury, and that the only thing to do was to take it out. He was of the opinion that if the treasurer and the controller of the funds would make the proper corrections upon their books, making it plain that the $41,000 had no business there, had been put in through mistake, and had been paid back to the southern county, after the mistake had been detected, things would move along all right. CHRISTMAS SNAKE STORY In the days when papers printed a page of snake stories every week—sometimes two—it would have delighted the snake editor to get this one from Minneapolis: In a banana car that arrived there a few days ago was a snake that had traveled all the way from Central America possibly looking for a winter resort where they have no revolutions. He might have been a fine, prosperous snake when he started, but, like some others, he had an antipathy for bananas, and when the car door was opened he looked like a 15-foot piece of spaghetti. The journey was so wearing that his skin resembled father's overcoat on Willie, "in the language of our informant." It occurred to the car openers suddenly that the snake might be hungry, and they removed themselves from his presence, perhaps with the idea of allowing him privacy, but he didn't want privacy. He started to follow with the crowd. He fell in the snow and lost his enthusiasm. He had neglected to wrap up well before going out, and he got a chill all down his spine. A chill down the spine is a serious thing with a snake, he has so much spine. A humane rescuer picked up the benumbed creature, wrapped its skin about it, fastening it at each end with a rubber band—remember that a snake story is a privileged narrative—and colled it carefully in a pickle bottle. Next day the snake revived and was found with the pickle bottle half swallowed—in its delirium, no doubt, imagining itself a Christmas stocking. DEEDS, NOT WORDS Anaheim People Have Absolute Proof of Deeds at Home Why suffer With back and kidneys or from any rheumatic pains when that wonderful little remedy Kinney's Rheumatic and Kidney Remedy will commence to relieve from the first dose. This remedy is composed of the essence of the pine, fir and juniper trees, not a patent medicine; all troubles of the urinary organ disappear under its mild but efficacious influence, relieving the system of the poison urea and uric acid, healing and allaying the nish folk were great smuggiers, too. Rev. R. S. Hawker had in his service as a man of all work old Tristram Pen tire, the last of the smugglers. One day he made to the vicar this notable confession: "Well sir, I do think, when I come to look back and to consider what lives we used to live—drunk all night and idle abed all day, cursing, swearing, fighting, gambling, lying and always prepared to shoot the gauger—I do really believe, sir, we surely was in sin." Tossing in the blanket, which has been forbidden to certain British troops as the sequel to a fatal accident, is a very old sport or punishment. "Blanketing" Ben Jonson called it, and in Holinshed (1577) we find a denunciation of "jesting, plaicing, blanketing and such other filthie and dishonorable exercises." The French have a special verb, "berner," for it, "berne" being the name given to the sheet or blanket used. The verb "berner" is also used for the Moorish punishment, in which four men hold the victim by his ankles and wrists and send him as high as they can—presumably with no blanket to catch him. A CLIMATIC REFUGEE "Yes, this is bad weather," said Senator Tillman, on a day of rain and sleet. "It is nothing to London, though. "Once, on a dripping winter day in London, a sulphur-brown or pea-soup fog in the air, and everybody drenched to the skin, I sat on a 'bus top beside a Parsee in a red fez. "When the Parsee got off, the driver of the 'bus, touching his hat with his whip, said to me: "'Would you mind tellin' me sir, wot sort o' chap that is?' "'He's a Parsee,' said I. 'An Indian, you know, a sun worshiper.'" "'Worships the sun, does he, sir?' said the wet and shivering driver. 'I suppose he's come 'ere to 'ave a rest.''" Looking for Denatured Alcohol, Experts Make Discovery Washington, Jan. 1.—The Department of Agriculture has come along with some good news for those citizens down in southern Indiana who, when arrested last Fall for conducting blind tigers, set up as a defense that they had become intoxicated from eating watermelons. The department has not yet analyzed the Indiana brand of melons, but it asserts that there is a jag in the Georgia melons. Of course it is carefully concealed, and much care and labor is required to extract it, but it is there just the same. The department has proved this beyond doubt. Out of the hundred pounds of watermelons experts in chemistry made one-tenth of a gallon of alcohol. They also have convicted the humble sweet potato of possessing another spree. Secretary Wilson announced the discovery of a criminal tendency in the watermelon heretofore unsuspected. "We have been experimenting with every sort of fruit and vegetable that contains sugar," said Mr. Wilson, "the watermelons, pears, apples, peaches, plums, pumpkins, muskmelons, Irish potatoes, sweet potatoes, beets and other vegetables. The watermelon surprised us. We never expected it of it. The purpose is to develop the cheapest kind of denatured alcohol for use as fuel. "The experiments have been made under the direction of Dr. Harvey W Wiley, chief of the bureau of chemistry. Of course it is impossible to extract this alcohol in paying quantities from melons, but we hope to do so from sweet potatoes. "The experiments have been made to benefit the seacoast portion of the south, from Virginia down the Atlantic around Florida and along the guilf. Sweet potatoes can be grown cheaply in the sand of these sections." DEEDS, NOT WORDS Anaheim People Have Absolute Proof of Deeds at Home It's not words, but deeds that prove true merit. The deeds of Doan's Kidney Pills, For Anaheim kidney sufferers, Have made their local reputation. Proof lies in the testimony of Anaheim people who have been cured to stay cured. Mrs. N. Hart, 122 S. Claudina St., Anaheim, Cal., says: "I am only too glad to recommend a remedy of such great value as Doan's Kidney Pills. I suffered severely from rheumatism for some time and my back was so weak and lame that I could hardly get about. On the advice of a friend, I procured a box of Doan's Kidney Pills at Mullinix's Drug Store and commenced their use. I was surprised at the results, as the first dose brought me relief. When I had taken the contents of a box, the rheumatism and kidney trouble had been driven from my system. I gave a statement for publication in 1907 setting forth my experience with this remedy and now I gladly confirm all I then said. The benefit Doan's Kidney Pills gave me has been lasting." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan's—and take no other. With back and kidneys or from any rheumatic pains when that wonderful little remedy Kinney's Rheumatic and Kidney Remedy will commence to relieve from the first dose. This remedy is composed of the essence of the pine, fir and juniper trees, not a patent medicine; all troubles of the urinary organ disappear under its mild but efficacious influence, relieving the system of the poison urea and uric acid, healing and allaying the inflammation in the tissues. The causes of lumbago,sciatica,kidney and bladder troubles are removed. The remedy can be found at your drug-gist. Nasal Catarrh quickly yields to treatment by the agreeable, aromatic Ely's Cream Balm. It is received through the nostrils and cleanses and heals the whole surface over which it diffuses itself. Druggists sell the 50c size. Test it and you are sure to continue the treatment till relieved. Announcement. To accommodate those who are partial to the use of atomizers in applying liquids into the nasal passages for catarrhal troubles, the proprietors prepare Cream Balm in liquid form, which will be known as Ely's Liquid Cream Balm. Price including the spraying tube is 75 cents. Druggists or mail. The liquid form embodies the medicinal properties of the solid preparatio- Real Estate Activities In Orange County are recorded in the offices of Williams Bros. Co. With advertising facilities unequalled by any other firm in California. Our matchless equipment of expert salesmen, and extensive automobile service for showing property. WE REACH THE BUYERS Do we sell to them? Our phenomenal list of sales tells the story. List your property where you can get quick action. Give us the right price and we will do the rest. Williams Bros. Company, J. B. ANDREWS, Mgr Orange Co. Office. Next to Santa Fe Depot, ANAHEIM. Home 1631; Sunset 1651 Los Angeles Office, 236-237 H. W. Hellman Building IT'S A PRETTY BAD SMASH UP in the automobile line that we cannot repair. If you have one send us the car and we will make it fit for business again, if such a thing is possible. We do small repairs too. Do them in such a way that they save many a big break. Anaheim Garage Skinner & Dickenson, Proprietors ANAHEIM - CALIFORNIA smugglers, too. in his service old Tristram Pen smugglers. One vicar this notasir, I do think, back and to conused to live— dled abed all day, lighting, gambling, prepared to shoot ally believe, sir, anket, which has certain British to a fatal acciport or punishBen Jonson called (1577) we find jesting, plaicing, other filthie and es." The French "berner," for it, ame given to the the Moorish punour men hold the and wrists and they can—presumto catch him. REFUGEE weather," said Sen day of rain and thing to London, ing winter day in brown or pea-soup everybody drenchat on a 'bus top red fez. got off, the drivhing his hat with and tellin' me sir, that is?" said I. 'An Innun worshiper.' un, does he, sir? delivering driver. 'I ere 'ere to 'ave a suffer neys or from any en that wonderful 'y's Rheumatic and commence to redose. This remeof the essence of niper trees, not a all troubles of the appear under its us influence, reliev the poison urea g and allaying the send us the car and we will make it fit for business again, if such a thing is possible. We do small repairs too. Do them in such a way that they save many a big break. Anaheim Garage Skinner & Dickenson, Proprietors ANAHEIM - CALIFORNIA Reo, Kissel Kar & Mitchell AUTO-MOBILES California Wine Co. F. Conrad & Son, Props. Center Street - Anaheim Wholesale Wine and Liquor Merchants Best Brands of Bottled Beer. Delivery Made Everywher FULLERTON HATCHERY 2000 EGGS WANTED from thoroughbred stock at FULLERTON HATCHERY each FRIDAY CHICKENS FOR SALE Every Week on Saturday For information write or call. Phone, Pacific—1082 L. E. BLACKFORD, Fullerton, Cal. Corr. N. Spadra and Chapman ave. HENSHAW, BULKLEY & CO. 262-64 So. Los Angeles St. Los Angeles IRRIGATION PLANTS INSTALLED COMPLETE MACHINERY of all kinds, including road-making machinery, levelers, scrapers, hardpan ploughs, etc. Full stock always on hand. GASOLINE ENGINES CENTRIFUGAL PUMPS Superior Printing The Gazette Office EXCLUSIVE DESIGNS Wall Paper $1.00 buys enough Wall Paper for 12 ft. room —Sides, Ceiling and Border .091-2 for 36 inch Colored Burlap. .20 for Sanitos Wall Oil Cloth. ALBERT L. WALTER 627 So. Spring St., Los Angeles Mission Stables Cor. Lemon and Oak Sts. W. B. FINCH, - PROPRIETOR Fashionable Rigs Furnished at Reasonable Rates. Contracts Taken for Team Work on Short Notice. PLUMBING Plumbing Materials WATER PIPE All Plumbing Repairs We Contract to Furnish all the Materials and Do the Work, or Furnish the Materials only Get Our Prices JAMES W. HELLMAN Hardware, Stoves. Etc. 157-161 N. Spring St. LOS ANGELES