anaheim-gazette 1910-08-25
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FRENZIED FAIR FINANCE
That Scheme to Bond the State for Frisco's Show
Governor Gillett has been asked to call a special session of the legislature, the purpose of which is to adopt and submit a constitutional amendment which will permit the State to bond for $5,000,000 and the city of San Francisco for $5,000,000 more for the Panama exposition if Congress shall award it to the California metropolis. The purpose of all this is to put the San Francisco committee in a position to say that they are ready to spend the enormous sum of $17,500,000 on the fair, for that city has already raised $7,500,000, and they are obsessed by the notion that Congress will award government recognition to the highest cash bidder, which in itself is a bad plan to operate on, for New York or Chicago might raise us clear out of the game if there is no "limit.
Incidentally, the San Franciscans agree to pay all the expenses of the extra session if Governor Gillett will call it, and he has the matter under consideration.
The $5,000,000 which the state is asked to raise is a small matter for a rich commonwealth like California, and the estimate is that to repay the sum in five years, the tax will be only 40 cents a year on $1000 of assessed valuation. We are all willing to pay that much toward guaranteeing success of the big Panama show and we want it for California.
But there are other considerations. In the first place, all the expositions that have been held, rolled into one, have hardly cost such an enormous
asked to raise is a small matter for a rich commonwealth like California, and the estimate is that to repay the sum in five years, the tax will be only 40 cents a year on $1000 of asses sed valuation. We are all willing to pay that much toward guaranteeing success of the big Panama show and we want it for California.
But there are other considerations. In the first place, all the expositions that have been held, rolled into one, have hardly cost such an enormous sum as $17,500,000. To gather that immense amount of money will be to prepare for about 50 per cent of it to be expended in graft, for which San Francisco already has some reputation.
Nor is that all. The plan of bidding for the show on a cash basis is not only a false one, but it exposes us to the danger of being compelled to compete with cities and states which might put up even more money than California.
If San Francisco wants to supplement her $7,500,000 in cash with $5,000,000 more in bond money, that's for the San Franciscans to say. But we very much doubt, says the San Bernardino Sun, if the people of the state are willing to contribute another $5,000,000 to be squandered, and these can be no very legitimate way of spending more than the Chicago, Buffalo, St. Louis, Portland and Seattle shows cost in total.
WOMAN AND TOBACCO
A pleasant time was the portion of all the women concerned the other day in an animated discussion of the propriety of cigarette smoking by their sex. The debate took place in the town of Pittsburg, famous for its steel industry, its atmosphere and the explosive ways of its gilded youth. Starting incidentally in a typically feminine way, an absent member of the sex being pulled to pieces with chivalrous frankness, the discussion rapidly expanded from personal to general proportions. It stopped without reaching a conclusion when a woman with a sense of humor made a pointed reference to "our great-grandmothers, who smoked corncob pipes." She forgot to wave the snuff-stick as well in the faces of the censorious majority.
In all this volume of talk there was apparently only one argument pro, but that a potent one—woman's no longer seriously opposed right to do as she pleases "so long as she does not tread on any one else's toes," the
"Old Squire" handed the reporter the family Bible, timeworn and dusty, but still intact, in which the record was made at the time of his birth, on June 19, 1792. The record was made by Mr. Sander's father.
"I attribute my long life and good health to nature's wealth—pure food, pure water and ample exercise," said Mr. Sanders, "to all of which I am addicted."
Only the day before he had traveled deep into the forest and the mountains, where the air is always pure and the springs furnish refreshing drink, and hunted out the venison, the fish and the honey with which he entertained his guests.
Squire Sanders' eyes have been preserved remarkably. He avers his sight is better than when he was fifty years old. He is considered the crack shot of all the mountain section in which he hunts. He is a great pedestrian, a rapid walker. With his endurance and speed in walking he never found much advantage in keeping a horse save for what little farm work he engaged in.
Judging from his sound and white teeth, one would suppose the "Old Squire" has a set that was artificial.
He has cut his third set of teeth in recent years and mastigates his food as well as the average young man. Twice each week he shaves him self—and, too, without the use of a mirror—still using the old razor handed down by his father, Thos. Sanders.
Perhaps the most remarkable thing in his life's story is the fact that, while for three quarters of a century Sander's hair has been gray, a few months ago it began coming out and in its stead came a crop of black hair. This seems too strange to believe, but hundreds who have visited the venerable mountaineer have seen the rejuvenation. The story is well authenticated. There are a few gray hairs in Sander's head today.
Many stories are told of the aged man's surprising strength and agility. During a recent visit of his son, Sam Sanders, Jr., aged ninety-two, the latter attempted to mount a flight of stairs, but calling him back, the 118-year-old father remonstrated.
"Don't do that, son, you'll fall just watch me," as he skipped up the stair with the alacrity of a boy. It was the "Old Squire's" joke but in reality he was fearful of the safety of his son.
Squire Sanders is the father of twenty-three children, all living within a radius of a dozen miles, having
Professor Pasqui photographed and exclaimed no doubt about the statue, as it is a pearl Augustus, and the eagle tween it and the owl emperor is striking. Of the statue consisted importance, which is that the emperor is he had just recovered illness in B.C. 23. Emperor bears trace and suffering and a man of middle age.
As the statue reposed with the toga drawn was concluded that he portrayed in the acrylic riffle and hence were garment. Professor remarks that not only their togas drawn also great personages ed in religious and art.
The statue consists and the head is de body. Evidently they edited originally a differently Julius Caesar; the work of a greater excellently finished in the rough work andery of the body.
The statue is important artistic work, but the emperor under fact it is the only fact at the age of 40, and is the latest made lifetime.
Professor Pasqui wrote recently, a sign that intends to purchase ee.
According to a new June 20, 909, the story to claim one-half of every archaeological right of pre-eminent there is little Partini to do; thereby sum of money represents of his half of the remain in the museum mae.
A LUNG TECHNIQUE
reaching a conclusion when a woman with a sense of humor made a pointed reference to "our great-grandmothers, who smoked corncob pipes." She forgot to wave the snuff-stick as well in the faces of the censorious majority.
In all this volume of talk there was apparently only one argument pro, but that a potent one—woman's no longer seriously opposed right to do as she pleases "so long as she does not tread on any one else's toes," the any one else for whose benefit this reservation was made being, of course of the feminine gender. Men do not really count any longer where emancipated women's right to do as she pleases is concerned. The arguments contra varied from the example which women in prominent places should set to the young daughters of the land to strictly individual prejudices, one matron declaring that a woman who smoked was as suspect to her as a woman who bleached her hair. But hasn't a woman a right to do as she pleases with her own hair, and with the "store hair" too for that matter? That was abundantly proved by the colffures in both our showhouses last winter. Moreover, it depends how she bleaches it. If it be done with sufficient art she will not be looked down upon with suspicion at all, while if she botches the job or prolongs it unduly the look will not be suspicious but one of rapid mental calculation, with the year of her debut or the height of her eldest as the known quantity. But we are digressing.
It is worth mentioning that in all this mingling of arguments, moral, social and personal, the most important question in regard to woman's smoking was not referred to once, so far as the reports show, namely, the health and strength of future generations.
Sanders, Jr., aged ninety-two, the latter attempted to mount a flight of stairs, but calling him back, the 118-year-old father remonstrated.
"Don't do that, son, you'll fall just watch me," as he skipped up the stair with the alacrity of a boy. It was the "Old Squire's" joke but in reality he was fearful of the safety of his son.
Squire Sanders is the father of twenty-three children, all living within a radius of a dozen miles, having thousands of descendants, all of whom are proud of the oldest surviving ancestor.
COYOTE AND JACK RABBIT
The speed of the jack rabbit has always been proverbial among western men, like the speed of a coyote. In a straightaway race it is claimed that the Riverside jack rabbit can distance the coyote, but he usually falls a victim to the coyote's superior intelligence. The favorite coyote method for catching jack rabbits is for one of the animals to start a jack and attend to the work of keeping the victim on the run, while the other coyote sits down, patiently awaiting the arrival of his dinner. The jack rabbit when he has a free range will run in circles, and the coyotes cleverly count on this habit. Before long the rabbit will arrive at the place from which he started, and there coyote No. 2, fresh and ready for a short sprint, will swoop down upon him and then divide the meal with the coyote that has done the actual chasing.
Mrs. Frankfurter—Ach, goodness, Louie. Don'd you see dot your husband iss-vighting? Mrs. Casey—An' why shouldn't he? Aint this his holiday?
ANAHEIM GAZETTE
A STATUE OF AUGUSTUS
Unearthed in Rome by Italian Archaeologist
A statue of historical as well as artistic importance was discovered a few months ago by Signor Ruggiero Partini, a building contractor, under the foundations of a house in Via Labicana, Rome. Workmen engaged in strengthening the foundations reported that they could not remove a huge block of stone under the building. Signor Partini examined the stone and found it was a marble statue over six feet high, representing a draped figure.
The head of the statue was detached from the body, and of a better quality of marble, and its workmanship also was far superior to that of the body, which revealed the hand of an ordinary sculptor. Signor Partini being in a hurry to complete the job removed the head and decided to leave the body.
As required by law, he notified the archaeological department, and the director of excavations, Professor Pasqui, made an investigation, recognized the head as a portrait of the Emperor Augustus and had the entire statue carefully unearthed. The statue was removed to the museum until the government decided whether to purchase it or not.
Professor Pasqui had it cleaned and photographed and examined. There is no doubt about the identity of the statue, as it is a perfect portrait of Augustus, and the resemblance between it and the other busts of the emperor is striking. The main value of the statue consists in its historical importance, which is due to the fact that the emperor is represented when he had just recovered from a serious
HOW TO BE HANDSOME
To be handsome is not always to be good, but there is surely no harm in being handsome if you can become so without spoiling your face. For years I was considered homely. My best friends admitted it, and my enemies made unkind references to it. I knew that there were dermatologists who were perfectly willing to give silver bridges to bridgeless noses, dazzling brilliance to lack-luster eyes and ravishing outlines to hideous profiles, but I did not care to go to the expense. I determined to be my own dermatologist.
I have drawn an outline of my profile as it was before I began to work on my face. It will be seen that, while intellectual, it was not handsome. My ear was too long, and my nose too like a toe, while my brow needed building up, and my chin pushing forward. My eyes, while not very beautiful, had character, and I decided not to alter that, but the other features needed manipulation.
I began with my nose. When I went to bed I lay on my back with a flatiron bound to my nose. It was rather painful at first, but I soon got used to it, and day by day my nose changed its shape until at last it was perfect. I next tried sleeping standing up in a specially prepared bed, with heavy weights hung to my chin. This had a tendency to bring my chin forward. Luckily I was out of a job, so I was able to do my sleeping in the daytime. To give myself a high brow I made a hat like those used by hatters to ascertain the size of the head. This I screwed on my head on retiring, increasing the pressure each night. I also took double doses of headache powders, as I needed them. As I look back it does not of the French mission which presented to America the statue of Rochambeau, now at Washington, and former United States Senator Nathan B. Scott of West Virginia.
General Brun, who presided, spoke of the statue as the greatest work of the greatest French sculptor of the eighteenth century. Col. Jas. Mann, chairman of the Virginia commission, delivered the speech of presentation.
State Senators Don P. Halsey and F. W. King of Virginia also made addresses on behalf of the state of Virginia. Ambassador Jusserand, in the absence of the French minister of foreign affairs, M. Pichon, accepted the statue on behalf of the French government.
He declared that the friendship of General Washington and of the American people constituted one of the glories of France. It was, therefore, singularly appropriate that this statue, the "third erected on French soil by our ancient allies, should be placed in the palace consecrated to all our glories."
He pointed out that here General Washington would be surrounded by his French companions in arms, the Marquis de Lafayette, Count Rochambeau and Admirals D'Estaing, de Grasse and Suffern, in the very building where the treaty of peace between Great Britain and the United States was signed in 1783.
In conclusion, he referred to the French-American friendship, unbroken during the existence of the American republic, and the work of time which had transformed into friends of both France and America the foes of 1783.
At the request of the state of Virginia, a list of the American officers and soldiers who fought in the revolution was sealed in the pedestal of
Professor Pasqui had it cleaned and photographed and examined. There is no doubt about the identity of the statue, as it is a perfect portrait of Augustus, and the resemblance between it and the other busts of the emperor is striking. The main value of the statue consists in its historical importance, which is due to the fact that the emperor is represented when he had just recovered from a serious illness in B.C. 23. The face of the emperor bears traces of recent pain and suffering and almost reveals a man of middle age.
As the statue represents Augustus with the toga drawn over his head it was concluded that the emperor was portrayed in the act of offering sacrifice and hence wearing a sacredotal-garment. Professor Pasqui, however, remarks that not only priests wore their togas drawn over the head, but also great personages who participated in religious and civil functions.
The statue consists of two pieces and the head is detached from the body. Evidently the statue represented originally a different person, possibly Julius Caesar, and the head is the work of a great sculptor, as it is excellently finished and quite unlike the rough work and indifferent drapery of the body.
The statue is important not only as an artistic work, but also as it shows the emperor under a new aspect. In fact it is the only statue of Augustus at the age of 40, and very probably it is the latest made in the emperor's lifetime.
Professor Pasqui refused to allow the statue to be photographed until recently, a sign that the government intends to purchase it.
According to a new law voted on June 20, 909, the state has the right to claim one-half of the ownership of every archaeological find and enjoys the right of pre-emption in case of sale. There is little left for Signor Partini to do, therefore, but accept a sum of money representing the value of his half of the statue, which will remain in the museum of the Thermae.
A LUNG TELESCOPE
By the use of a newly invented miniature searchlight telescope passed down the windpipe and into the bronchial tubes of a patient who had swallowed a shawl pin, one of the surgeons of Kings' hospital was recently perfect. I next tried sleeping standing up in a specially prepared bed, with heavy weights hung to my chin. This had a tendency to bring my chin forward. Luckily I was out of a job, so I was able to do my sleeping in the daytime. To give myself a high brow I made a hat like those used by hatters to ascertain the size of the head. This I screwed on my head on retiring, increasing the pressure each night. I also took double doses of headache powders, as I needed them. As I look back it does not seem more than six months that I labored with my visage, but my diary tells me it took a year.
I append a profile of my face as it was after I had secured beauty for my self. The difference between the two profiles is great, and the torture was great, but it is certainly pleasant to hear people say whenever I appear in public: "Who is that strikingly handsome man?"
LOVE-MAKING IN SUMMER
Sometimes it is possible to find a chief of police with more than ordinary insight. Of such, evidently, is the chief of the St. Louis police, who has given orders to his men not to disturb young couples in public parks whose only offense is spooning. The matter came into the ken of public discussion through some rather heated denunciations by St. Louis ministers, who stigmatized lovemaking in the public parks as an evil and a menace to public morals.
It is often just a little difficult to try to adjust the inconsistencies of which the preachers are guilty, and it would seem that many of them are rank pessimists, always willing to make the worst of things and to find evil where there is none. What is more natural in life than the courting of a maid by a man, and why, in the name of common sense, should it be called an evil? Lovemaking is an inherited instinct, and summer time the heyday for it. To what better use could the public parks be put? What are they there for? As grateful to the eye as the verdure of the trees, the sloping lawns, and the brilliant flowers should be the sight of the swains enjoying these—made for just these two, they are quite sure; a fitting frame for the beautiful thoughts that rise in the hearts of each and which decorates, in the imagination, the long vista of life through which, hand in hand, mutually faithful and ever-loving, they are to travel together. Let us remember that a great majority of young folk have no place ding where the treaty of peace between Great Britain and the United States was signed in 1783.
In conclusion, he referred to the French-American friendship, unbroken during the existence of the American republic, and the work of time which had transformed into friends of both France and America the foes of 1783.
At the request of the state of Virginia, a list of the American officers and soldiers who fought in the revolution was sealed in the pedestal of the statue, the Marquiz de Segurn, whose ancestors fought with the American army during the revolution, performing the ceremony.
HOME CHEESE MAKING
Some one asked last year for a recipe for cheese making. I'll tell how a lady taught me to make it. I had good success; don't be afraid to try. First prepare things. Get a vessel, a new tub or large jar, which ought to hold six or eight gallons. Then you must have a press—a peck or a half-peck measure, according to the size of the cheese wanted. You must have a good strong lever or a heavy weight (I used a stone). I used night and morning milkings. Be sure put night's milk in a cool place. It must be sweet when used. Strain morning's milk in a vessel and put on to heat, but don't let it boil. Now skim night's milk, saving the cream out. Turn your milk in your vessel. The morning's milk should be hot enough to make all blood heat. Stir good. Now add your cream and stir up good. I used an egg-beater to stir (a wire one). The curd must be kept fine, else you will need to grind it. Now it is ready for the rennet. You can get it at a drug store. Each box has full directions. Stir good as you add the rennet. Spread a cloth over it and let stand twenty or thirty minutes. Stir through and let stand a little. The whey will rise if warm enough. If not, dip off the top, heat and pour back. You may have to heat two or three times at first—a little experience will teach you just how warm it should be. The curd should grit or squeak when you chew it. Dip off all the whey you can. It is ready for salt now; be careful not to salt too much. You can add sage if you like. Put a cheese cloth over your press; press the cheese smooth and weight down. Take out in the evening and turn. Weight again. Take out next morning; cap with the cheese cloth; rub with grease (butter, bacon, grease or paraffin), and
A LUNG TELESCOPE
By the use of a newly invented minature searchlight telescope passed down the windpipe and into the bronchial tubes of a patient who had swallowed a shawl pin, one of the surgeons of Kings' hospital was recently able to see the pin, to remove it with forceps and to save the life of the patient, who was apparently beyond human aid, says a London dispatch.
The instrument, called a broncho-scope, resembles a small bent telescope fitted with lenses at different angles, and has a tiny electric light which can be passed deep into the lung. The day after the pin was swallowed an X-ray examination showed its position beneath the sixth rib, an inch to the right of the breastbone. The patient was chloroformed and then a 20 per cent solution of cocaine was sprayed over the larnyx and windpipe. The telescope tube was then passed through the mouth and larnyx down the windpipe. Peering down the tube the surgeon finally located the pin, fixed head downward, in one of the branches of the windpipe at a distance of thirteen inches from the mouth.
A pair of very fine forceps on the end of a long, flexible wire passed down the hollow telescope tube was then made to grasp the pin, and the pin, forceps and telescope were then withdrawn together. Within a few hours the patient was able to return to her home none the worse for an accident which before the invention of the long telescope would almost inevitably have proved fatal.
WASHINGTON STATUE
Presented to French Republic by the State of Virginia
In the Napoleon hall of the Chateau of Versailles, in the presence of the French minister of war, General Brun; the French ambassador to the United States, M. Jusserand, and his wife, and the American ambassador, Robert Bacon, and Mrs. Bacon, the bronze replica of Houdon's celebrated statue of Washington in the state house at Richmond, Va., presented by the state of Virginia to the French republic, has been dedicated.
Among those present were the Marquis de Lafayette, the members experience wipil teach you just how warm it should be. The curd should grit or squeak when you chew it. Dip off all the whey you can. It is ready for salt now; be careful not to salt too much. You can add sage if you like. Put a cheese cloth over your press; press the cheese smooth and weight down. Take out in the evening and turn. Weight again. Take out next morning; cap with the cheese cloth; rub with grease (butter, bacon, grease or paraffin), and turn every day. Keep away from the flies. Will be good in 20 days.
Knicker—Bread is to be sold by weight. Bocker—Then my wife can make us rich.
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 by mail. The liquid form embodies the medicinal properties of the solid preparation.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
Of the County of Orange, State of California.
In the Matter of the Estate of John M. Kuhn deceased.
Notice for Publication of Time for Proving Will, Etc.
Notice is hereby given that Friday, the 2nd day of September, 1910, at 10 o'clock a.m. of said day, at the Court Room of this Court, in the City of Santa Ana, County of Orange, State of California, has been appointed as the time and place for hearing the application of Kate E. Kuhn, praying that a document now on file in this Court, purporting to be the last Will and Testament of the said deceased, be admitted to probate, that Letters Testamentary be issued thereon to Kate E. Kuhn, at which time and place all persons interested therein may appear and contest the same.
Dated August 4, 1910.
W. B. WILLIAMS, County Clerk.
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German Language
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Notary Public
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