anaheim-gazette 1910-04-14
Searchable text
LOS ALAMITOS NOTES
Interesting News Items From The Sugar Belt
The storm gave 1.13 inches, making a total for the season of 10:23. As a consequence the beet growers and barley ralsers wear broad smiles of satisfaction, insuring, as it does, a full crop on 33 1-3 per cent more beet acreage than last year, while the early sown barley will make a full crop.
This completely changes the outlook and now, looking backward, it is plain to be seen that the drouth was only in the minds of the people who wanted the rain so as to be sure of it. The continued dry weather has really been an advantage, as it made it possible to work the land and make the proper seedbed earlier than in former years when the usual heavy rains came during January, February and early March. Hence the rains of the last two weeks have been most opportune.
At the factory, steam will be turned off this week, the first time in eight months of continuous running on beets and molasses Osmosis. Improvements are progressing rapidly, the cement foundations being complete and the steel frames erected for the new machinery which will arrive soon.
F. K. Ewdards is making numerous improvements in his buildings on lots recently purchased and will very soon erect a commodious nine or ten room residence to cost $2500 to $3000 occupying the site of the house where he now lives, having already completed a garage. Also he has put in a foundation for a five-room cottage on the opposite corner which will be for rent.
M. F. Reagan is converting the old "Bee" office into a comfortable house. The proprietors of the Orange county hotel have recently built a commodious barn and have given all per ton, or $150; thus nature under best conditions provides a supply of that which is most needed to bring a crop to maturity year after year.
Nor is this more strange than the fact that the atmosphere and sunlight give the sugar beet its sweetness, worth to the farmer $6 per ton, while the structural fibre is discarded, being only fit for stock feed at the nominal price of fifty cents per ton.
MARTENS WAS MUHULLA
Charged With Misrepresentation and Fraud In Another Land Deal
Another victim of the frauds of Henry J. Martens has begun suit in the superior court of this county. The difference between this suit, in which J. L. Updyke is plaintiff, and the other suits, is that the property has passed to another party, who doubtless will declare he bought as an innocent party.
The defendants named are Henry J. Martens and his wife, Liese Martens, Henry Hodel and L. A. Evans.
As in the other four suits brought in this county, Anaheim ranch property was deeded to Martens in trade for Kern county land, to which, it is since shown, Martens had no title. Martens then deeded to another.
Updyke asserts that he deeded ten acres in return for a worthless deed to 160 acres in Kern county. Updyke has since been ousted from the Kern county land. The trade was made March 27, 1909. The complaint alleges that last October Martens conspired with Henry Hodel, and deeded the Anaheim ten acres to Hodel. Later Evans received a deed to this ten acres from Hodel. Updyke asserts that Evans knew of the situation and that Updyke claimed an interest in the land.
The court is asked to rescind all deeds and restore Updyke to the possession of the ten acres.
Martens is now in Hillsboro, Kas...
soon erect a commodious nine or ten room residence to cost $2500 to $3000 occupying the site of the house where he now lives, having already completed a garage. Also he has put in a foundation for a five-room cottage on the opposite corner which will be for rent.
M. F. Reagan is converting the old "Bee" office into a comfortable house. The proprietors of the Orange county hotel have recently built a commodious barn and have given all their buildings a coat of paint.
Money has been raised toward painting the church.
There is an opening here for another grocery store which would doubtless receive good patronage and one of our local capitalists is ready to put up the building for any party who might wish to make a term lease. Considering the increased tonnage of beets which the factory will handle this season, business in the grocery line should be first-class, and competition is the life of trade.
The question naturally arises whether the recent purchase of 1246 acres by Daniel Murphy adjoining the townsite on the south for which he paid in the neighborhood of $135,000 indicates a probable trolley line. It is rumored that the sale also includes the unsold lots of the Los Alamitos townsite.
George N. Watts, postmaster, has recently brought his bride to Los Alamitos to live and has begun housekeeping in the Scott house which he recently purchased and which he has put in spick and span shape inside and out.
A recent trip over the Montana land company ranch discloses a solid area o over three thousand acres devoted to beet raising. Intensive culture under methods found by many years of experience to be best, is pursued in the great "garden" for although 200 horses and mules are work ed upon the tract it should not be called beet "farming," as to insure best results the greatest care and the most exact methods need to be observed. The long straight rows showing strips of green as far as the eye can reach indicate the result of labor expended, in the most perfect stands of beets ever known in this section of the country. In the heart of this great beet field is an eighty acre tract devoted to experiments with commercial fertilizers to determine the particular kind which is best adapted to promote a quick growth and to produce the greatest
SIGNS OF REAWAKENING
Tiger Scents Battle From Afar, Would Get Busy.
The democrats of Orange county held a conference at Santa Ana some days ago, and the following names of candidates for the various offices were suggested: James S. Rice for assemblyman; Dr. H. E. W. Barnes for coroner and public administrator; J. A. Nunn of Santa Ana, D. C. Pixley of Orange and Jasper Leck of Tustin, for supervisors of the first, fourth and fifth districts, respectively. The democratic candidates already in the field were endorsed by the conference as follows: H. C. Head for district attorney, J. C. Joplin for treasurer, Theo. Lacy for sheriff, C. E. Jackson and R. S. Dickinson for constables of Santa Ana township, and James Fullerton for justice of the peace of Orange township. A committee of five was chosen to give notice of the action of the conference, to keep in touch with the candidates selected by the conference and to look over the field for available candidates for other county and township offices.
DREDGING NEWPORT HARBOR
United States Engineer Office, 723 Central Building.
Los Angeles, April 7, 1910.
To Whom it May Concern:
Application has been made by the Newport Bay dredging company to have the permit granted to the Newport Beach company, the Newport Bay dredging company and C. L.Lancaster by the secretary of war February 28, 1908, amended so as to narrow the channel in front of Newport Beach, Cal.
A map showing the location of the proposed work will be on exhibition in this office until 11 a.m., Thursday, April 14, 1910.
Interested parties are invited to inspect this map and submit in writing, in duplicate, on or before that made March 27, 1909. The complaint alleges that last October Martens conspired with Henry Hodel, and deeded the Anaheim ten acres to Hodel. Later Evans received a deed to this ten acres from Hodel. Updyke asserts that Evans knew of the situation and that Updyke claimed an interest in the land.
The court is asked to rescind all deeds and restore Updyke to the possession of the ten acres.
Martens is now in Hillsboro, Kas., He is wanted up in Bakersfield for fraud, but extradition has failed.
ONIONS
A farmer's garden have a good bed good, large, as kind should be greened we have provided now with An onion-tart is made onions in a diary seasoning with bulb til the onions are introduced, dredge onions slightly wilt good accompaniment It must be eaten To stuff onions take several meadow onions; peel and not cut off too much the onion fall to p
the most exact methods need to be observed. The long straight rows showing strips of green as far as the eye can reach indicate the result of labor expended, in the most perfect stands of beets ever known in this section of the country. In the heart of this great beet field is an eighty acre tract devoted to experiments with commercial fertilizers to determine the particular kind which is best adapted to promote a quick growth and to produce the greatest tonnage per acre it is possible to secure.
The important demonstration has been here made of the fact that thorough cultivation conserves moisture, holding it up to the very top of the ground. It is apparent that this is called "Campbell" method adopted has been on the whole better than a heavy flooding with water would have been for there was no lack of moisture except on the sandy soils, even after months of entire lack of rainfall.
Thorough cultivation also results in a thorough nitrification of the soil from the oxygen of the atmosphere, for the soil must breathe and absorb sunshine as well as drink water.
By the way, we question why followed land produces more of certain crops. A partial solution of the question may be found in the fact that it is computed that rainfall deposits nitrogen from the atmosphere at the rate of 7 1/2 pounds per inch of precipitation, or for 100 acres this would be 7500 pounds of nitrogen, having a commercial value of $40
Newport Beach company, the Newport Bay dredging company and C. L.Lancaster by the secretary of war February 28, 1908, amended so as to narrow the channel in front of Newport Beach, Cal.
A map showing the location of the proposed work will be on exhibition in this office until 11 a.m., Thursday, April 14, 1910.
Interested parties are invited to inspect this map and submit in writing, in duplicate, on or before that date, any objections, based on navigation interests, that they may have to the work proposed.
Charles T. Leeds,
First Lieut., Corps of Engineers.
A gaunt and kilted Scotsman recently made his appearance in a country village, and was endeavoring to charm the locals to charity with selections on his bagpipes. A shaggy-haired man opened the front door of a house and beckoned to the minstrel. Gie us a wee bit lilt just oot here, he said, in an accent which told that he also was from the land of the haggis. My auld mither's in a creetical condection oopstaor. The doctor wi' her the noo, and says the pipes may save her life. Up and down in front of the house marched the braw Hielander, discoursing music that might well have been incidental to a cat and pig fight. Presently the shaggy-haired man came out again. Gie us the Dead March noo, he said. Is the puir auid lady gone? questioned the piper. Na, na, mon; ye've saved mither, came the reply, but ye've killed the puir doctor.
To stuff onions take several meats; onion; peel and not cut off too much; the onion fall to pike hearts, and for a minute them with lean beef or pork three tablespoonfuls beaten egg, a spoonter, and salt and then the onions with side by side in a good gravy and two cut small. Sare perfectly tender the gravy, and see Sometimes, instead is made of crucibles, two hard boiled of grated cheese, melted butter.
A good dish is out the centers ing in each a pea veal kidney, and 1-2 hours in a pikeish or any large served in restaurants come winter dishes.
McCormick hands es are made right construction on the Lutz Co., Santa
ANAHEIM GAZETTE
HIRAM JOHNSON IMPOSSIBLE
A Criminal Lawyer With No Qualifications for the Governorship
The Lincoln-Roosevelt league is said to be seriously perturbed by the lack of enthusiasm so noticeable at Mr. Johnson's meetings. At San Jose the audience was pitilably small, and at no point upon the route has there been anything approaching a triumphal progress. With the primary still four months away, there is time and to spare for the fizzle in which this particular candidacy is likely to end.
The apathy displayed toward Mr. Johnson is easily explicable upon two grounds. First and foremost, the average elector has no confidence in the Lincoln-Roosevelt league. It has done nearly all the things that brought the graft prosecutors into public contempt, and, indeed, the resemblance between the two organizations is a marked one. Starting out with a flourish of moral trumpets, with impudent claims to be the sole patentees of political decency, it showed at once that it was prepared to use all the arts of chicane that it was supposed to overthrow. Loudly proclaiming the death of the convention system, it was the one organization that resorted to a convention. Not one of the old methods was omitted, and several new and particularly objectionable ones were added, such as a secrecy that was intended to be profound, but that was not quite profound enough to stifle the sounds of perpetual quarrels. It would be hard to imagine anything more laughable than the spectacle of half a dozen gentlemen, most of them with personal grievances, meeting in discordant privacy to dictate the electoral affairs of the state and taking this burden upon themselves without the flimsiest pretense of representative character. If this is actually the alternative to the old elected convention we seem to have jumped out of the frying pan into the fire.
WHAT STANTON STANDS FOR
Weighty Matters of State Overlooked by Mr. Hichborn
Speaker Stanton's stand on the anti-Jap bills won for him the personal congratulation of President Roosevelt.
He was right in killing two bad irrigation bills, both of which, if passed, would have been confiscatory of vested rights of irrigators in Orange county and elsewhere throughout the state. The two bills were probably the most important, so far as Orange county was concerned, among all the bills introduced in the legislature.
He was right in his support of the anti-racetrack gambling bill, the reciprocal demurrage bill, the primary election law, the bill abolishing grog shops and gambling dens along the Owens river aqueduct, in cutting down mileage of junketers from 10 cents to 6 cents, in abolishing the rail road lobby, in cutting down the expenses of attaches in the sum of $800 for each house during each and every day of the session, and in making attaches and employees earn their salary.
Three years ago he voted against the bill permitting the sale of the Los Angeles state normal school for $200,000. The bill passed, and Stanton prevailed upon Gov. Pardee to veto it. In the last legislature Stanton favored a bill disposing of this property for not less than $500,000. He thereby saved the state $300,000.
He was right in approving appropriations for the Riverside experiment station, for the Whittier laboratory, for the forestry station at Santa Monica, for getting appropriations for investigating the walnut blight, pear blight and for continuing the work of the farmers' institutes.
He stands for redistricting the Equalization districts of California to the end that Southern California may be accorded a square deal. At the
TEXAS FEVER TICK
Pest Is Not Exterminated by Range Fires
Contrary to a widespread belief, the U.S. Department of Agriculture does not consider the burning over national forest lands as an effective means of dealing with the cattle tick and the dreaded fever which it produces. This is set forth by Secretary Wilson in the following passages of a recent letter to Representative Floyd, of the Third Arkansas District:
"I have just received a communication from Dr. Cooper Curtice, veterinary inspector of the bureau of animal industry of this department, setting forth certain opinions respecting the burning of forests and ranges to destroy ticks which infest and transmit disease, in which the department fully concurs. Dr. Curtice has had many years experience with the department, is one of the original investigators of the fever tick, and has probably had more experience in this line of work than any other scientist. He has recently made a tour through northern Arkansas and investigated the conditions which exist in that locality, and his observations are therefore quite pertinent to the question of conflict in the policies of the bureau of animal industry and the forest service. The observations of Dr. Curtice are, in effect, as follows:
"It is true that at certain times of the year burning the grass on an enclosed field may remove the ticks wherever the fire travels, but even then many places remain unburned and the owner depends on the fire for eradication and consequently fails. At meetings of cattle men and others I have been speaking against the practice of burning over the forest ground and have held that no work would be saved in the process of eradication because the cattle should necessarily be treated according to some..."
ONIONS AS FOOD
A farmer's garden should always have a good bed of onions and a good, large, as well as a keeping, kind should be grown. When this is neglected we have the shops well provided now with the Spanish onion. An onion-tart is made by placing sliced onions in a dish lined with paste, seasoning with butter, and baking until the onions are tender. If Spanish onions are used and a little cream introduced, dredging each layer of onions slightly with flour, this is a good accompaniment to baked meats. It must be eaten hot.
To stuff onions with force-meat, take several medium sized Spanish onions; peel and trim neatly, but do not cut off too much of the tops lest the onion fall to pieces; scoop out the perpetual quarrels. It would be hard to imagine anything more laughable than the spectacle of half a dozen gentlemen, most of them with personal grievances, meeting in discordant privacy to dictate the electoral affairs of the state and taking this burden upon themselves without the flimsiest pretense of representative character. If this is actually the alternative to the old elected convention we seem to have jumped out of the frying pan into the fire.
It is hardly less remarkable that Mr. Johnson personally should prove inacceptable to the voters, who would naturally prefer some man for the governor who knows his own opinions without having to wait for his brief. Mr. Johnson as a criminal lawyer has been a success, but it is precisely the qualities that have made him a success that are undesirable in the governor's chair. Mr. Johnson can argue with equal ability upon either side of any question so long as his clerk tells him in good time for which party he is retained. He is equally at home in the prosecution of the criminal or in his defense, and he finds no inconsistency in assailing Ruef on one day and defending Rider on the next. And if his fee is not large enough he says so frankly in open court, as in the Conboy case, and effects a more or less graceful withdrawal. These things are not discreditable to the attorney. They may belong to the ethics of his profession, but the voter may be pardoned if he wishes to keep hired advocacy in its proper and even honorable place and to exclude it from the highest position in the gift of the state.—Argo-naut.
He thereby saved the state $300,000.
He was right in approving appropriations for the Riverside experiment station, for the Whittier laboratory, for the forestry station at Santa Monica, for getting appropriations for investigating the walnut blight, pear blight and for continuing the work of the farmers' institutes.
He stands for redistricting the Equalization districts of California to the end that Southern California may be accorded a square deal. At the present time the state has four equalization districts. The fourth, which comprises Southern California reaches to and includes San Mateo county. The northern line of the district includes Santa Clara, Stanislaus, Mariposa, and Mono counties. All the counties in the state south of these counties are included in the district. The counties north of San Francisco, comprising territorially about two-thirds the area of the southern district, are divided into three equalization districts. The total assessed wealth of the state is two and a half billion dollars. More than half of this wealth is in the southern district. The state board of equalization by a vote of its northern members against the single Southern California member, last year arbitrarily raised the assessed valuation of Southern California counties $321,532,596. This outrageous raise was not square. Had Southern California had a governor of Stanton's capacity, no such raise would have been made. The people of the south cry out for a redistricting of these districts.
These are some of the matters of state Speaker Stanton approved, and still approves. Evidently Mr. Hichborn does not consider them "reform" measures, or may hap of any consequence at all.
When he is told that Speaker Stanton believes in a square deal in the matter of equalizing taxes, he throws up his hands in horror and exclaims "Stanton voted against abolishing the Party Circle bill."
When told that the Speaker fought the anti-Jap bills, the pernicious irrigation bills, the Owens river gregshops and gambling bills to their death, he pounds his saintly breast and exclaims, rolling his beautiful blue eyes heavenward, "Stanton voted for the gag."
When told that the Speaker supported the anti-racetrack gambling bill, voted for the reciprocal demurrage bill, and the direct primary bill, he pulls his hair and howls, "Stanton voted against the Non-Portion Judicial Law."
The year burning the grass on an enclosed field may remove the ticks wherever the fire travels, but even then many places remain unburned and the owner depends on the fire for eradication and consequently fails. At meetings of cattle men and others I have been speaking against the practice of burning over the forest ground and have held that no work would be saved in the process of eradication because the cattle should necessarily be treated according to some one of the methods specified in farmers' bulletin No. 373 (Methods of Exterminating the Texas Fever Tick), in order to secure perfect results. It is necessary to remember in this connection that there are many unburned places, especially around the dwellings, barns and other places where cattle lie.
'Whenever the grass is repeatedly burned, the roots become eventually destroyed, the sweeter grasses give way to the more resistant and finally the latter perish. Not only does fire destroy the scanty sod but in removing the leaves as a protective covering the hot sun of summer is permitted to dry the soil to a crust and continues the devastation. The best grass I saw was in a place where the young growth was at least three years old. In so far as tick eradication is concerned, it seems to me an injustice that the necessities of the work should be quoted as being opposed to the needs of the forest service. Firing the leaves has not eradicated the ticks, although followed for years. Instead of being beneficial in the forest it has killed out the grasses and even the new growth of trees, which so often furnish in spring the only source of nourishment, the buds upon which the cattle may browse while the scanty herbage grows.
'I have steadily advised that pastures, meadows and growing crops be provided, upon which the cattle could be held and fed the year around, and thus the need for using the range be obviated, and the farmer, by securing control of the feeding and breeding factors, be able to raise better cattle for the markets. Under present conditions the mountain farmers are saving no manure, are making small crops, and are raising a very poor quality of cattle and hogs. By attending to better cultivation, diversified crops, and feeding stock on the farm, and abandoning the prejudicial burning of the woods and range, they can raise a very high quality of live stock and acquire a better money crop than
ed onions in a dish lined with paste,
seasoning with butter, and baking until the onions are tender. If Spanish
onions are used and a little cream introduced, dredging each layer of
onions slightly with flour, this is a good accompaniment to baked meats.
It must be eaten hot.
To stuff onions with force-meat,
take several medium sized Spanish
onions; peel and trim neatly, but do not cut off too much of the tops lest
the onion fall to pieces; scoop out the hearts, and for four stuffed onions
mince them with as many ounces of lean beef or pork, one of fat bacon,
three tablespoonfuls of crumbs, a beaten egg, a spoonful of melted butter,
and salt and pepper to taste.Fill the onions with this, and lay them
side by side in a saucepan with some good gravy and two tart apples pared
and cut small. Stew until the onions are perfectly tender, slightly thicken
the gravy, and serve on a hot dish. Sometimes, instead of meat, a dressing
is made of crumbs, the minced onions, two hard boiled eggs, one ounce
of grated cheese, and salt, pepper and melted butter.
A good dish is made by scooping out the centers of the onions, placing in each a parboiled mutton or veal kidney, and stewing for 2 or 2-1-2 hours in a pint of gravy. Spanish or any large onion, braised, as served in restaurants, is often a welcome winter dish.
McCormick hand and self-dump rakes are made right. Look at the wheel construction on these rakes. Wm. F. Lutz Co., Santa Ana. 3-17-tf
When told that the Speaker fought the anti-Jap bills, the pernicious irrigation bills, the Owens river grogshops and gambling bills to their death, he pounds his saintly breast and exclaims, rolling his beautiful blue eyes heavenward, "Stanton voted for the gag."
When told that the Speaker supported the anti-racetrack gambling bill, voted for the reciprocal demurrage bill, and the direct primary bill, he pulls his hair and howls, "Stanton voted against the Non-Partisan Judiciary bill."
When told the Speaker saved the state $80,000 in the house for salaries of attaches, and was instrumental in bringing about a like reduction in the senate; when told the Speaker saved the state $300,000 in preventing the sale of the Los Angeles state normal school for a ridiculously small amount he sobs, his eyes streaming with bitter scalding tears, "Stanton voted for the Leeds' amendment to the direct primary bill."
When told the Speaker was right in approving bills for the Riverside experiment station, the Whittier pathological station, the Santa Monica forestry station, for farmers' institutes, the walnut blight and pear blight, he strokes his pious head and sighs, "Stanton voted against second reading for the Party Circle bill."
Yet this is the man whose utterances are the keystone in the arch, nay the whole superstructure of Boss Lissner's attacks upon the Speaker. Its base is merely a desire on the part of the little Los Angeles boss to get his hands on "them offices."
From my observations and conversations with the farmers of the Ozark forest, on my recent trip, I am led to believe that they will take up tick eradication as soon as they can raise the necessary money. The legislature meets in 1911 and they will then ask for a new five-cent district in addition to state funds.'"
Customer—My wife told me to stop in and buy her a bathing suit. What are your prices and sizes? Dealer—We have a very nice one here that I'm sure she will like. A fifty-dollar bill will just cover it. Customer — That is just about the size she wants. How much is it?
Casual Acquaintance—So you were always opposed to cigars? But one never knows what these husbands do once they are out of your sight. I wouldn't be surprised if your husband was smoking now. Young Woman (in horrified tones)—Oh, don't suggest such a thing. Casual Acquaintance — Why not? Young Woman—Because because—my—my husband is dead.
Pa—But, young man, do you think
Is Your Money at Work for You?
An opportunity is offered to you right here at home where your money will work for you to its fullest earning capacity, in an enterprise which success should be of interest to every man in Orange County. This county is growing very rapidly and the
Home Investment Co.
is keeping pace with this growth; we have grown from 5 stockholders to 100 in less than one year, and our assets have increased from a mere nothing to over $30,000.00, a pretty good showing we think. BECOME ONE OF US, be a partner in this business, you can do so by buying stock in the
Only Co-operative Building Company in Orange County
Start now, $5 will open a stock account. Shares are now selling at $10.50 each. We will soon be on a dividend paying basis, this means that stock will rapidly advance. Read one of our booklets; we will send one to you for the mere asking.
Home Investment Company
MAIN OFFICE
122 Center St. - Anaheim, Cal.
Both Phones—Use Them
Fullerton Office - Tribune Bldg.
HARDWARE
Is our Specialty. Call and examine our line of Tools. We carry the largest assortment of Cook Stoves in the city. Heaters as well and gas plates. No ranges.
HARDWARE
Is our Specialty. Call and examine our line of Tools.
We carry the largest assortment of Cook Stoves in the city. Heaters as well and gas plates. No ranges.
A. NAGEL
Cor. Center and Claudina Sts., - Anaheim, California
A Timely Tip
To Travelers About Eastern Excursions
From Los Angeles and other points from which same fares apply, round trip tickets will be sold by Southern Pacific via direct lines, as follows:
DESTINATIONS
Atchison and Leavenworth, Kan., Council Bluffs and Pacific Junction, Ia., Kansas City and St. Joseph, Mo., Omaha, Neb. $60.00
Chicago, Ill. 72.50
St. Louis, Mo. and Memphis, Tenn. 67.50
New Orleans, La. 67.50
Houston and Mineola, Texas 60.00
Baltimore, Md. and Washington, D.C. 107.50
Boston, Mass. 110.50
New York, N.Y. and Philadelphia, Pa. 108.50
Montreal, Canada 108.50
Duluth, Minn. 79.50
St. Paul and Minneapolis, Minn. 73.50
Toronto, Canada 95.70
Other cities in proportion.
The above fares apply only via direct routes—through San Francisco and Ogden, through El Paso or through New Orleans.
For tickets one way via Shasta Route and Portland fares will be $24.50 higher from Los Angeles and $25.50 higher from Riverside, Colton and San Bernardino.
DATES OF SALE
To Chicago, St. Louis, New Orleans, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Washington, New York and Boston, April 6, 7, 8, 1910. and to all points named above, on May 11, 12, 13, 14, 25, 26, 27, June 2, 3, 4, 24, 25, 26, 30, July 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 25, 26, 27, August 1, 2, 3, 4, September 1, 2, 3, 11, 12, 13, 14.
GOING AND RETURN LIMITS
Going transit limit of all tickets will be fifteen days to final Eastern destination and return limit three months after date of sale, but not exceeding Oct. 31, 1910.
EXCEPTION—On tickets to Atlantic Coast points, sold in May and June in connection with tickets to Europe, return limit will be four months, but not exceeding Oct. 31, 1910.
STOPOVERS
Stopovers will be allowed on going trip within transit limit at any point outside California as far East as Chicago.
GOING AND RETURN LIMITS
Going transit limit of all tickets will be fifteen days to final Eastern destination and return limit three months after date of sale, but not exceeding Oct. 31, 1910.
EXCEPTION—On tickets to Atlantic Coast points, sold in May and June in connection with tickets to Europe, return limit will be four months, but not exceeding Oct. 31, 1910.
STOPOVERS
Stopovers will be allowed on going trip, within transit limit, at any point outside California as far East as Chicago, St. Louis, New Orleans, etc., and on return trip at any point up to original starting point. In addition to foregoing regular excursions will be reduced fares for various
CONVENTIONS
New Orleans—Mystic Shrine. Fare $67.50. Sale dates, Apr. 6, 7, and 8. On same dates tickets will be sold, good via New Orleans if desired, to St. Louis at $67.50; Chicago, $72.50; Washington and Baltimore, $107.50; Philadelphia and New York, $108.50; Boston, $110.50.
CINCINNATI—Women's Clubs. Sale dates May 2 and 3.
BOSTON—N.E.A. Sale dates June 24, 25, 26.
SARATOGA Springs—B.Y.P.U. Sale dates June 30, July 1, 2, 3.
DETROIT—B. P. O. E. Sale dates July 4, 5, 6.
MILWAUKEE—K. of P. Sale dates July 25, 26, 27.
ATLANTIC City—G. A. R. Sale dates Sept. 11, 12, 13, 14.
Fares for above named Conventions may be obtained from any Southern Pacific ticket ag't as soon as decided upon.
Steamship Tickets to all parts of the world.
Southern Pacific Is the Way
Phone J. M. PICKERING, Anaheim, Cal.
Pacific 1231, Home 1724.
ARTISTIC JOB PRINTING
AT THE GAZETTE OFFICE