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anaheim-gazette 1910-07-07

1910-07-07 · Anaheim Gazette · page 7 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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APES NATIVE PARISIAN TO SMALLEST DETAIL FRANK JAY GOULD DISOWNS US — BUT NOT HIS YANKEE PATRIMONY The Earl of Yarmouth Receives Little Sympathy Here — His Prosperity, Through Marriage, Makes Him a Cad—Mrs. Charles M. Morse Provides Herself a Friend in Need — True to Convict Husband (Correspondence of The Gazette) New York, June 29. It would be interesting to note what the late Jay Gould would think of some of his progeny were he alive today. Withal the faults imputed to him the sturdy Americanism of the famous old financier could never be challenged. His observations on the recent announcement of his son, Frank Jay Gould, that he intends to give up his citizenship in the United States would probably be highly illuminating. Like William Waldorf Astor, who some years ago expatriated himself to become a British subject, young Gould has grown tired of the country from which he derives his large income and feels it is no place for a man of his means and leisure time to live. The young millionaire is as different from his older brother, George, as day is from night. The latter believes it is the duty of every man, rich or poor, to work. Frank Gould who is thought to be a good news in the stage world. To those who remember her in the palmy days in the career of Charles W. Morse, former Ice King, banker and steamship owner, when he rode on the crest of the financial wave, the devotion of his wife is inspiring. From the day that the doors of the federal prison at Atlanta closed behind him three months ago she been conducting a propaganda for his pardon that has had few precedents in the history of the country. If there ever was the least foundation for the suspicion that Morse caused the divorce proceedings, brought by his wife against her first husband to be reopened so as to have his subsequent marriage to her set aside, Morse must feel pretty cheap these days. For if he is ever liberated from prison by President Taft, he will owe it entirely to her persistence and the influence she has enlisted in his behalf. As Clementine Dodge, she was one of the most beautiful women of the south. Her pleasing personality is a potential asset to Morse just now when he needs every friend he can muster to help him in his fight for freedom. With General Greeley and Col. David Brainerd missing; the survivors of the ill-fated Greeley expedition of 1881 to the North Pole, met in this city the other day at what must have seemed a rather grim re-union. Morris Connel, one of them, who is employed by the United States weather bureau at San Jose, Cal., came to town especially for the meeting; believing it might be the last opportunity he would have of seeing alive his adhere to this that he keen to the infirmary in and put on a millet. The women passenger baby clothes for it and waists and by ship got in port pre-eminent with a full layer the position assumed both will be returned from which the motto: SCHOOLBOY "The earth is an owl Lord Raleigh was see the Invisible Army Tennyson wrote "I King Edward IV h geological right to the George Ellot left dren to mourn his gen Louis XVI was gela French revolution. The Rhine is boar mountains. Gender shows where masculine, feminine James I died from An angle is a trio two sides. Algebraical symbols you don't know what about. Geometry teaches angles. Parallel lines areance all the way and less you bend them. The whale is an am because it lives on la water. A parallelogram is four parallel straight Horse power is th horse can carry a po would probably be highly illuminating. Like William Waldorf Astor, who some years ago expatriated himself to become a British subject, young Gould has grown tired of the country from which he derives his large income and feels it is no place for a man of his means and leisure time to live. The young millionaire is as different from his older brother, George, as day is from night. The latter believes it is the duty of every man, rich or poor, to work. Frank Gould, who is thought to be a good deal of a cad, on the contrary regards toll of all kinds as an unnecessary evil. He belongs to that growing species of aristocratic Americans who at thirty find life uninteresting unless seasoned with old world extravagances, and at forty seek escape from satiety in monkey dinners and other eccentricities of the prematurely jaded. Ever since his wife divorced him he has been masquerading about Paris with Edith Kelly, an actress, who officiates as hostess at the elaborate dinners with which he entertains his friends and the legion of sybarites who cling to him, like fleas to a lazy dog. With his sister, the Duchess of Perigord de Tallyrand (Anna Gould) he apes the native Parisian to the smallest detail. His abjuration of everything American, except his Yankee patrimony which he does not disown, he wishes it understood is the result of long deliberation. The Idea. There are many who will probably be candid enough to say that the country that loses him, loses little and the nation that takes him into its fold gains nothing for which it need be grateful to us. By way of rebuking those gossips who have been making much of the fact that she made a clandestine marriage with a man 59 years old, Mrs. Althea Knickerbocker Hollister, retorted thus this week to her female critics: "I'd rather be an old man's slave than a young man's darling." Mrs. Hollister is but 22 years old and is quite pretty. The fact that she had married Hollister, who was wealthy, might still be a secret, but for his death the other day in one of the hospitals under what the authorities considered for a time suspicious circumstances. The young widow is highly sensitive and has been smarting under the unpleasant criticism to which she had been subjected since the death of her husband. She says the latter's spirit will return to her by pre-arrangement between them and that the visit of the wraith will With General Greeley and Col. David Brainerd missing; the survivors of the ill-fated Greeley expedition of 1881 to the North Pole, met in this city the other day at what must have seemed a rather grim re-union. Morris Connel, one of them, who is employed by the United States weather bureau at San Jose, Cal., came to town especially for the meeting; believing it might be the last opportunity he would have of seeing alive his companions on that tragic journey to the farthest rorth. But seven of the members of the expedition survived the horrors of the Arctic and they would have perished, too, but for the courage of Admiral Schley., who pushed a relief party to their rescue at Cape Sabine. Of the seven, but five are still alive. The rigors of the long night in the ice drifts have left its imprint upon all of them. The three who met here presented a pathetic picture, as they recounted some of the anguishing experiences of the expedition, when starvation and disease overtook them. It was a story that chilled to the marrow. As you listened to it you could fancy yourself stalking amidst the crazed and famished crew—abandoned to a horrible death in the igloes, on the desolate plains of ice. A touch of pathos was added to the recital by news that Albert Verse, one of the companions of Peary on his successful trip to the North Pole had died Tuesday in one of the local hospitals. Verse was one of Peary's men who located the Greeley camp at Cape Sabine and recovered the bleached bones of some of the Greeley dead. New York textile manufacturers this week were greatly interested in the arrival in town of the first samples of American linen dress goods ever made in this country. In texture and finish experts claim they equal the foreign made product, which has been so popular for many years with American women. The samples shown were made at the Oxford Mills in New England by the process by which flax is manufactured into linen in forty-eight hours against the twenty weeks consumed in making it abroad. In view of the fact that the United States imports from Great Britain in the neighborhood of $75,000,000 worth of linen dress goods a year, with a steadily increasing demand, the announcement that linen can be made here at less cost and in an infinitesimal about. Geometry teaches angles. Parallel lines areance all the way and less you bend them. The whale is an anecdote it lives on lae water. A parallelogram is four parallel straight lines. Horse power is that horse can carry a pot an hour. The magnesium salts these effervescence comes in. If the air contains per cent of carbolic injurious to health. Gravitation is that were none we should. The press of today gan of the people. A deacon is the lover Christian. The isles of Greece quarrelling as to which place of Homer. Charge right to claim him. A SURPRISE ALLEY Champ Clark, the er, said at the Newington, apropos of a ment: "Well, if they try tory in practice they surprised as the Laddie. "A farmer out Ladder to Bowling Green one some shopping. His proached him often afterness; so, to surprise in Bowling Green, all seeds and tools and wipe new rig from tht. "As the farmer drool twilight,, an idea strhalting his wagon on a deep stream he touches patched coat, doubled it in the water. "'Won't Emily be said to himself. 'Won' aback when she sees n span? "He took off his waist it after his coat. The hat into the stream, then his shoes and trousers. And so this kept on until the far course pitch dark by ing further to disrobe." "I'll certainly surprihe said." Mighty little sympathy is felt these days for the Earl of Yarmouth by his old cronies in this city. A good many of them are making no effort to conceal their elation over the success of his former wife, Alice Copeley Thaw, in recovering $500,000 of the dowry he forced from her at the foot of the altar when they were married a few years ago in Pittsburg. When Yarmouth was on his uppers in this city, looking for a job as an actor with second-class outfits he appeared to be a pretty decent sort of a fellow and made many friends by his amiability and freedom from caste. He was the humblest of the bunch and ever ready to take pot luck with the lowest of them. But after he married Miss Thaw he didn't know any of those with whom he formerly was glad to fraternize in the days when a five-dollar bill was a luxury and a meal ticket in one of the theatrical boarding houses to which he was often staked by his actor friends., a God-send. Whatever popularity he won in the early days was quickly lost and few helping hands would go out to him nowadays should he stroll along the "Great White Way" where the actor folk daily gather to muse on the latestican women. The samples shown were made at the Oxford Mills in New England by the process by which flax is manufactured into linen in forty-eight hours against the twenty weeks consumed in making it abroad. In view of the fact that the United States imports from Great Britain in the neighborhood of $75,000,000 worth of linen dress goods a year, with a steadily increasing demand, the announcement that linen can be made here at less cost and in an infinitesimal fraction of the time than abroad, foreshadows a revolution in that industry. Manufacturers predict that the day is coming when America will make all of its own linen dressgoods and be able to dominate the markets of the old world. The new process is to the linen industry what Eli Whitney's cotton gin is to cotton. The latter made cotton one of the greatest industries in the world, its output last year approximating more than $600,000,000. The former may enable the United States to control the linen-staple and create for Uncle Sam an industry commensurate in value and commercial importance with that of cotton. A pathetic case of a mother refusing to recognize her own child was called yesterday to the attention of the immigration authorities at Ellis Island on the arrival in port of the Noordam from Rotterdam. When the ship was in mid-ocean, Cecelia Dudonafski, a second cabin passenger, gave birth to a baby boy. The newcomer was a buster and soon after its presence aboard had been heralded became the idol of the ship. Its mother was unconscious for sometime before its birth and when she recovered some twenty hours after the youngster had made his advent, disowned it. Although desperately ill, the woman insisted the baby belonged to her sister. So firmly did she He took off his waist it after his coat. The hat into the stream, then his shoes and socksers. And so this kept on until the farmer course pitch dark by ing further to disrobe. "I'll certainly surphe said. "Then, shivering an evening air, he reached package of new cloth under the seed bag, lightly to the back of searched the floor or knees. But the bundle floor, either. For quite the farmer looked for with a sigh, he took again on the hard, cold off homeward through. "It was a long ride for the white sliing the reins, but it and the farmer hopped gen and dashed nimbling to reach his room. 'But his wife, a lam came full upon him in strange, snowy apparition lightly, gave her a greet. "'Why, Father,' she "But the farmer, bride, sped upstairs thru time. "I said I'd surprised grimly, 'and, by I I've done it.'" A few bargains in townobiles; if you want don't call, our cars are and will run. Wm. F. Ana. For Sale: A barn 35 feet deep. Inquire o Contractors, Anaheim. ANAHEIM GAZETTE here to this that the child was taken to the infirmary in the first cabin and put on a milk and water diet. The women passengers there made baby clothes for it from their skirts and waists and by the time the ship got in port presented the little one with a full layette. Because of the position assumed by the mother both will be returned to the port from which the mother embarked. SCHOOLBOY "HOWLERS" The earth is an obsolete spheroid. Lord Raleigh was the first man to see the Invisible Armada. Tennyson wrote "In Memorandum." King Edward IV had no claim by geological right to the English throne. George Elliot left a wife and children to mourn his genii. Louis XVI was gelatined during the French revolution. The Rhine is boarded by wooden mountains. Gender shows whether a man is masculine, feminine or neuter. James I died from argue. An angle is a triangle with only two sides. Algebraical symbols are used when you don't know what you are talking about. Geometry teaches us how to bisex angles. Parallel lines are the same distance all the way and do not meet unless you bend them. The whale is an amphibious animal because it lives on land and dies in the water. A parallelogram is a figure made of four parallel straight lines. Horse power is the distance one horse can carry a pound of water in TO CURE PLANT DISEASES Prof. Wickson Reports Upon Work for Coming Year Professor E. J. Wickson of the University of California and also director of the Southern California pathological laboratory and branch experiment station, has submitted to the regents a general plan and schedule for the work of the departments for the fiscal year beginning July 1st, 1910. The recommendations, which are most important to fruit men throughout the state were adopted by the regents, and are as follows: "First—The effort to circumvent the walnut blight will continue, with studies of immune varieties which have been gathered and planted in the vicinity of the plant disease laboratory at Whittier, including careful exploration for trees which are productive in spite of the blight in various parts of the state. Scions are taken from such trees and grafted into various stocks on our own grounds, so that systematic observations can be made, and are also grafted into trees in other regions, so that practical tests of value under commercial handling can be had. We are also testing a large number of wild walnut species and hybrids to determine suitability for root stocks of the English walnut in various soils and moisture conditions." "Second—Investigations in orange growing will be extended. Particular study will be made of brownspot which has caused great losses in the shipping. Preliminary work with this disease has yielded encouraging results and commanded the interest of growers, who will co-operate with us" YOUTH GUILTY, WITH COSTS Augustus is a very good dancer, but his conversational powers could not by any stretch of imagination be described as brilliant. The disadvantage under which he labors in this respect is often productive of amusing passages. He attended a dance the other evening and his partner in the first waltz said to him gushingly: "You are a divine dancer, Mr.Saphed. I could waltz to heaven with you for a partner." Augustus was considerably embarrassed by this delightful compliment, and had some trouble in thinking of a suitable reply. "Indeed," he said at last. "Can you—er—can you—er—er—reverse?" Traveling Inspector (cross-question ing the terrified class)—And now, boys, who wrote "Hamlet?" Timid Boy—P-p-please, sir, it wasn't me. Traveling Inspector (the same evening to his host, the squire of the village)—Most amusing thing happened today. I was questioning the class and asked a boy, "Who wrote 'Hamlet?' and he answered tearfully "P-p-please, sir, it wasn't me." Squire (after loud and prolonged laughter)—Ha, ha, that's good; and I supposed the little devil had done it all the time. Every bearing is fitted with a removable bushing on a McCormick mower. Wm. F. Lutz Co., Santa Ana. See Harley-Davidson motor cv.l at Wickersheim Implement Co., Fullerton, Cal. Geometry teaches us how to bisex angles. Parallel lines are the same distance all the way and do not meet unless you bend them. The whale is an amphibious animal because it lives on land and dies in the water. A parallelogram is a figure made of four parallel straight lines. Horse power is the distance one horse can carry a pound of water in an hour. The magnesium salt in the sea creates the effervescence when the tides comes in. If the air contains more than 100 per cent of carbolic acid it is very injurious to health. Gravitation is that which if there were none we should all fly away. The press of today is the mouth organ of the people. A deacon is the lowest kind of a Christian. The Isles of Greece were always quarreling as to which was the birthplace of Homer. Chaos has the most right to claim him. A SURPRISE ALL AROUND Champ Clark, the democratic leader, said at the New Willard, Washington, apropos of a political argument: "Well, if they try to put that theory in practice they will be as much surprised as the Laddonia farmer was" "A farmer out Laddonia way drove to Bowling Green one afternoon to do some shopping. His wife had reproached him often about his shabbiness; so, to surprise her, he bought in Bowling Green, along with his seeds and tools and what-not, a complete new rig from the skin out." "As the farmer drove home in the twilight., an idea struck him, and halting his wagon on a bridge over a deep stream he took off his old patched coat, doubled it up and flung it in the water." "'Won't Emily be surprised?' he said to himself. 'Won't she be taken aback when she sees me so spick and span?'" "He took off his waistcoat and sent it after his coat. Then he flung his hat into the stream, then his shirt, then his shoes and socks, then his trousers. And so this disrobing act kept on until the farmer—it was of course pitch dark by now—had nothing further to disrobe." "'I'll certainly surprise the wife,' he said." Second—Investigations in orange growing will be extended. Particular study will be made of brownspot which has caused great losses in the shipping. Preliminary work with this disease has yielded encouraging results and commanded the interest of growers, who will co-operate with us by testing preventive measures in their packing houses.* Gum diseases and yellowing of citrus fruits will be continued. Fertilization will be studied through field experiments and laboratory tests under conditions determined by analysis. All features of this effort will be extended to demonstrate tentative results already attained. Third—Pomological study of the navel oranges, with a view to the selection of improved types and the phases of development of the fruit will be continued and similar research extended to other citrus varieties, with a view to increased commercial value and suitability. Fourth—the investigation of the life histories of the more important insects of citrus trees will be continued to extend knowledge needed to develop the most effective and economical warfare against these pests. Fifth—the culture and commercial handling of lemons will be investigated on a broader scale, both in field and laboratory. The disease known as anthracnose, or wither tip, will receive particular attention. Sixth—Studies and field tests of protective treatments of leading commercial vegetables will be extended through direct investigations and cooperation with growers, whose interest has been so far commanded by earlier efforts in this line that they desire to make contribution toward large scale demonstrations. Seventh—Crown gall or root knot or stone fruits will receive systematic studies and curative treatment. Eighth—The test of peaches with a view of securing varieties of more regular growth and production under conditions which invite unseasonable activity and dormancy will be continued by means of a collection of peaches now growing upon the grounds of the station, and hybridization for the production especially of suitable varieties will be undertaken. Ninth—Propagation and growth tests of various fruits and timber please, sir, it wasn't me." Squire (after loud and prolonged laughter)—Ha, ha, that's good; and I supposed the little devil had done it all the time. Every bearing is fitted with a removable bushing on a McCormick mower. Wm. F. Lutz Co., Santa Ana. See Harley-Davidson motor cycle at Wickersheim Implement Co., Fullerton, Cal. Drying preparations simply develop dry catarrh; they dry up the secretions, which adhere to the membrane and decompose, causing a far more serious trouble than the ordinary form of catarrh. Avoid all drying inhalants, fumes, smokes and snuffs and use that which cleanses, soothes and heals. Ely's Cream Balm will master catarrh or cold in the head easily and pleasantly. All druggists sell the 50 cent size. Ely Brothers, 56 Warren Street, New York. The Balm is used without pain, does not irritate or cause sneezing. It spreads itself over an irritated and angry surface, relieving immediately the painful inflammation. Ely's Cream Balm contains no cooaine, mercury nor other harmful drugs. "He took off his waistcoat and sent it after his coat. Then he flung his hat into the stream, then his shirt, then his shoes and socks, then his trousers. And so this disrobing act kept on until the farmer—it was of course pitch dark by now—had nothing further to disrobe. "'I'll certainly surprise the wife,' he said. 'Then, shivering a little in the evening air, he reached down for the package of new clothes. It wasn't under the seed bag. So he hopped lightly to the back of the wagon and searched the floor on hands and knees. But the bundle wasn't on the floor, either. For quite five minutes the farmer looked for it. And then, with a sigh, he took his old place again on the hard, cold seat and drove off homeward through the darkness. "It was a long ride and a chilly ride for the white slim figure holding the reins, but it ended at last, and the farmer hopped from the wagon and dashed nimbly indoors, hoping to reach his room unnoticed. 'But his wife, a lamp in her hand, came full upon him in the hall. The strange, snowy apparition, moving so lightly, gave her a great shock. "'Why, Father,' she said. 'But the farmer, brushing her aslide, sped upstairs three steps at a time. 'I said I'd surprise ye,' he shouted grimly, 'and, by gosh, I reckon I've done it.'" A few bargains in second hand automobiles; if you want an old wreck don't call, our cars are all overhauled and will run. Wm. F. Lutz Co., Santa Ana. For Sale: A barn 35 feet front by 27 feet deep. Inquire of Conliff Bros., Contractors, Anaheim. 6-9-tf "Eighth—The test of peaches with a view of securing varieties of more regular growth and production under conditions which invite unseasonable activity and dormancy will be continued by means of a collection of peaches now growing upon the grounds of the station, and hybridization for the production especially of suitable varieties will be undertaken. "Ninth—Propagation and growth tests of various fruits and timber trees and other plants with sewage irrigation, in co-operation with the city of Pasadena upon a farm owned for that purpose by the city, will be continued upon an increased scale to make demonstrations promising great value to all interior municipalities. "Tenth—Increased equipment of the plant disease laboratory at Whittier and the citrus experiment station at Riverside will be secured through appropriations for that purpose by the California legislature of 1909. Both interior equipment and outdoor improvements significant from the point of view of ornamental and commercial horticulture will be advanced. "Eleventh—Especial work under the legislature appropriation of 1909 for investigations on the conditions and problems attending the culture of crops in the Imperial valley and similar adjacent sections, will be pursued to the completion of a report for the legislature of 1911. This work is receiving the careful attention of the university experts in soils, animal industry, plant production, etc., and significant results are anticipated." Mound City Paints go farthest, wear longest, look best. Jos. Backs & Son. Anaheim beer 90 cents per dozen at the Union Brewing Co. 1-20-tf Valencia Orange Trees for sale by J. J. Schneider. Phone Pacific Main 1551, Anaheim. je16-tf BERRIES AND Fresh Vegetables EVERY DAY Just Received a fresh line of Cheese, and imported Italian Macaronies and Noodles At Dickel's Sole Agent for New Home Washing Machine. Best Washer on Earth. Nagel's Hardware 136 E. Center St., Anaheim, Cal., handles everything in light and heavy Hardware, Garden Hose, Garden Tools, Poultry Wire, Screen Wire, Lawn Mowers, Oil Stoves, Gas Stoves, Plates and Ranges, Refrigerators, Ice Cream Freezers, Queensware, Glassware, Tinware, Graniteware, Cooking Utensils, and a full line of Paints and Oils. A. NAGEL 136 E. Center St., Anaheim, California Nagel’s Hardware 136 E. Center St., Anaheim, Cal., handles everything in light and heavy Hardware, Garden Hose, Garden Tools, Poultry Wire, Screen Wire, Lawn Mowers, Oil Stoves, Gas Stoves, Plates and Ranges. Refrigerators, Ice Cream Freezers, Queensware, Glassware, Tinware, Graniteware, Cooking Utensils, and a full line of Paints and Oils. A. NAGEL 136 E. Center St., Anaheim, California EAST AND BACK VIA SOUTHERN PACIFIC From nearly all points in Southern California ROUND TRIP TICKETS will be sold as follows. Slightly higher fares will apply from a few points TO ROUND TRIP FARES Atchison, Kansas ... $ 60.00 Baltimore, Md ... 107.50 Boston, Mass ... 110.50 Chicago, Ill ... 72.50 Colorado Springs, Colo ... 55.00 Council Bluffs, Iowa ... 60.00 Denver, Colo ... 55.00 Duluth, Minn ... 79.50 Houston, Texas ... 60.00 Kansas City, Mo ... 60.00 Leavenworth, Kansas ... 60.00 Memphis, Tenn ... 67.50 Mineola, Texas ... 60.00 Minneapolis, Minn ... 73.50 Montreal, P. Q ... 108.50 New Orleans, La ... 67.50 New York, N. Y ... 108.50 Omaha, Neb ... 60.00 Pacific Junction, Iowa ... 60.00 Philadelphia, Pa ... 108.50 Pueblo, Colo ... 55.00 St. Joseph, Mo ... 60.00 St. Louis, Mo ... 67.50 St. Paul, Minn ... 73.50 Toronto, Ont ... 95.70 Washington, D. C... 107.50 SALE DATES July 25, 26, 27. August 1, 2, 3, 4, 16, 17, 18. September 1, 2, 3, 11, 12, 13, 14. Tickets may be purchased 10 days in advance of dates named but must be used for passage on those dates. TO COLORADO POINTS Tickets will be sold to Denver, Colorado Springs and Pueblo on all above named dates, and also on Sept. 21, 22 and 23, at $55.00 Round Trip. GOING AND RETURN LIMITS 15 days on going trip to reach destination of ticket, and final return limit three months. EXCFPT that tickets sold in May and June to Atlantic Coast Points in connection with European tickets will be limited to FOUR months. In no case will limit extend beyond October 31st, 1910. SOME CONVENTIONS Tickets may be purchased 10 days in advance of dates named, but must be used for passage on those dates. TO COLORADO POINTS Tickets will be sold to Denver, Colorado Springs and Pueblo on all above named dates, and also on Sept. 21, 22 and 23, at $55.00 Round Trip. GOING AND RETURN LIMITS 15 days on going trip to reach destination of ticket, and final return limit three months. EXCFPT that tickets sold in May and June to Atlantic Coast Points in connection with European tickets will be limited to FOUR months. In no case will limit extend beyond October 31st, 1910. SOME CONVENTIONS For which reduced fares will be made. Return limit of all tickets, three months, but not later than Oct. 31, 1910 DETROIT—B: P. Order of Elks. Sale date, July 7. Fare $81.00. MILWAUKEE—Knights of Pythias. Sale dates, July 25, 26, 27. Fare $74.50. CHICAGO—Knights Templar Conclave. Sale dates, August 1, 2, 3, 4. Fare $72.50. ST. LOUIS—Eagles. Sale dates, August 16, 17, 18. Fare $67.50. ATLANTIC CITY—Grand Army of the Republic. Sale dates, Sept. 11, 12, 13, 14. Fare $101.90. PUEBLO—National Irrigation Congress. Sale dates, Sept. 21, 22, 23. Fare $55.00 to Pueblo, Colorado Springs and Denver. DIVERSE ROUTES—Tickets will be sold going via any direct route and returning via another, if desired, without extra charge. For the trip ONE Way via SHASTA Route and Portland, an extra charge of $24.50 from Los Angeles will be made. Proportionate charge from other stations. For more particular information, stop-over arrangements, etc., see J. M. PICKERING, Agt., Anaheim. Phones, Pacific 1231, Home 1724 SOUTHERN PACIFIC Subscribe For The ANAHEIM GAZETTE The Paper with the News