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anaheim-gazette 1871-04-22

1871-04-22 · Anaheim Gazette · page 1 of 4 · OCR glm-ocr
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ANAHEIM GAZETTE. PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY. G. W. BARTER, Ed'r and Prop'r. OFFICE AT CORNER OF CENTER AND LOS ANGELES STREETS. TERMS: For One Year (in advance.) $5 00 Six Months, $3 00 Three $2 00 Rates of Advertising: One Inch Spass, One Week $2 00 Two Weeks $3 00 One Month $4 00 Three Months $6 00 Quarter Columna, One Week $8 00 One Month $10 00 Three $15 00 Six $20 00 One Year $40 00 Half Columna, One Week $10 00 One Month $15 00 Three $20 00 Six $3 00 One Year $60 00 One Columna, One Week $20 00 One Month $30 00 Three $35 00 Six $50 00 One Year $120 00 AGENTS: Los Angeles, W. J. BRODRICK. Santa Ana, W. H. SPURGEON. San Francisco, L. P. Fisher. New York, Hudson & Monet. JOB WORK. ALL KINDS OF JOB WORK. PROMPTLY AND NEATLY EXECUTED AT THIS OFFICE. Business Cards. J. JONES, WHOLESALE DEALER IN GENERAL MERCHANDISE, No.7 and 8, ARCADIA BLOCK, Los Angeles. LAFAYETTE STORE. P. N. ROTH, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Gents Furnishing Goods, Clothing, Provisions, Cigars and Liquors Keeps always on hand a splendid assortment of BRANDIES; WHISKIES, and all kinds of Foreign Liquors. DR. J. S. CRAWFORD DENTIST, DOWNEY'S NEW BLOCK, LOS ANGELES [apr15] CASWELL, ELLIS & WRIGHT No.1 and 2, Arcadia Block. Los Angeles Street. Los Angeles. Wholesale and Retail Dealers in General Merchandise, Hardware, Dry Goods and Groceries. AGENTS: Los Angeles, W. J. BRODRICK. Santa Ana, W. H. SPURGEON. San Francisco, L. P. Fisher. New York, Hudson & Monet. JOB WORK. ALL KINDS OF JOB WORK. PROMPTLY AND NEATLY EXECUTED AT THIS OFFICE. NOTICE. Subscriptions and Transient Advertisements Paid for Invariably in Advance. Current Advertisements Must be Settled For Monthly. Business Gards. FRANK GANAHL. E. H. McDANIEL. Ganahl & M'Daniel OFFICE—In Downey's New Building, Main Street. Will practice in all the Courts of the 17th Judicial District. MAX. STROBEL, Attorney at Law. Office at residence on LEMON Street, ANAHEIM. DR. DAVID TAYLOR, Physician, Surgeon AND OBSTETRICIAN. A GRADUATE of J.Berion Medical College, Philadelphia, with the experience of active service in the Southern Field and Hospitals, during the late war, will reside his professional services to the citizens of Anaheim and surrounding country. Office and residence adjacent to Anaheim. M.K. CAMPENY. O'MELVENY & HAZARD ATTORNEYS AT LAW. OFFICE IN TEMPLE BLOCK, LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA. Special attention given to business in U.S. Land Office. EUREKA SALOON, Los Angeles Street, Anaheim, Cal. RICHARDS & MELROSE... Proprietors. THE BEST OF WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS Can standily on hand. Also San Francisco Lager Beer All layers of BILLIARDS will find here one of Stable & Co.'s best Carom Tables, with latest style of cushions, etc. TENNENT'S BOTTLED ALE AND PORTER FOR SALE. ANAHEIM Shaving Saloon, CASWELL, ELLIS & WRIGHT No. 1 and 2, Arcadia Block. Los Angeles Street. Los Angeles. Wholesale and Retail Dealers in General Merchandise, Hardware, Dry Goods and Groceries J. D. HICKS & CO., WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN Stoves, Hardware, Agricultural and Mining Tools, Etc., Etc. PLUMBERS and COPPERSMITH No. 10, Los Angeles Street. WILLIAM B. ROE, DEALER IN HAVANA and DOMESTIC CIGARS, TOBACCO, PIPES. TANNER NOTIONS Etc., Etc., Etc. Adjoining the BLUE WLVG SALOON no26tf LOS ANGELES. FRENCH RESTAURANT Los Angeles Street, Anaheim. BOARD BY THE DAY OR WEEK AT MOERATE PRICES. Meals can be obtained all hours. Everything First Class. GEORGE MILLER, Proprietor LAGER. ANAHEIM BREWERY CENTER STREET, Anaheim. All Orders Promptly Filled. A BAN ATTACHED TO THE PREMISES. GOLDSTEIN & DAVIS, Proprietors D. K. WILLIAMS, CARPENTER, JOINER and BUILDER, ANAHEIM CAL D. DESMON Los Angeles Street, Anaheim, Cal. RICHARDS & MELROSE, ... Proprietors. THE BEST OF WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS Constantly on hand. Also San Francisco Lager Beer. All lovers of BILLIARDS will find here one of Stable & Co.'s best Carom Tables, with latest style of cushions, etc. TENNENT'S BOOTLED ALE AND PORTER FOR SALE. ANAHEIM Shaving Saloon, By Professor Dean, Los Angeles Street, Anaheim. oct29tf SAM. PRAGER, DEALER IN DRY GOODS, Gent's Furnishing Goods, Boots, Shoes, and a general assortment of Ready Made Clothing, Etc., Corner of Commercial and Los Angeles streets. Los Angeles, Cal., dec24tf S. LAZARD & CO, MAIN STREET, Opposite the Bella Union Hotel, LOS ANGELES. DRY GOODS AND CLOTHING, Wholesale and RETAIL. o29tf Carpet Warehouse. WALTER & SMITH. IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN Carpets, Oil Cloths, Paper Hangings and Upholstery Goods. No. 8, Commercial Street, Los Angeles, Cal. Carpets saved and put down easily. dec24tf D. K. WILLIAMS, CARPENTER, JOINER and BUILDER, ANAHEIM CAL D. DESMOND HAT STORE, MAIN STREET, Los Angles. PICTURES OF EVERY SIZE, STYLE AND DESCRIPTION TAKEN AT Wolfenstein's Gallery, TEMPLE'S NEW BLOCK, Main Street, Los Angeles. Having the best light, the best Chemicals and best Gallery south of San Francisco. I am prepared to fill all orders promptly and inthe b style. B. H. SIMON, San Francisco. S. H. SIMON & CO. COMMISSION MERCHANTS, For the Sale of Wines and other CALIFORNIA PRODUCE, Dealers in Gigars and Tobacco, 309 and 311 Washington Street SAN FRANCISCO, Hellman's Block, Los Angeles. Cash advances made on engagements. Los Angeles, Feb. 8, 1871. NEIM GAZETTE ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, APRIL 22, 1871 CLEOPATRA. [The following is part of a poem which originally appeared in "Blackwood." Those who have read Shakespeare's "Antony and Cleopatra," will appreciate it:] Here, Chairman, take my bracelets; They bar with a purple stain My arms. Turn over my pillows— They are hot where I have lain. Open the lattice wider, A gauze on my bosom throw, And let me inbale the odors That over the garden flow. I dreamed I was with my Antony, And in his arms I lay; Ah, me! the vision has vanished— Its music has died away. The flame, and the perfume have perished— As this spiced aromatic pastille, That wound the blue smoke of its odor, Is new but an asby hill. Seatter upon me rose leaves, They cool me after my sleep, And with sandal odors fan me 'Till into my veins they creep. Reach down the lute, and play me A melancholy tune To rhyme with a tune that has vanished, And the slumbering afternoon. There, drowsing in golden sunlight, Lottera the low, smooth Nile, Through slender papyrus, that cover The sleeping crocodile: The lotus lilies on the water, And opens its heart of gold, And over its broad leaf-pavement Never a ripple is rolled, to the required shape on a revolver disc. When all the pieces are broken to the shape of the apertures desired for them, they are set in with shiny The outer surface has, up to this point been left rough; but, after the center has hardened, the lapidary takes brooch in his hand and manipulates on the grinding disc until the stone reduced to the level of the metal surrounds it. The surface is next ished, and the Brooch is returned to the jeweler. Usually, pebble brooches have a center a "caringorm," or what is commonly supposed to be one; there in most cases, the Oriental topaz duty for the Highland chrystal, a far as beauty is concerned, with considerable advantage on its side. The pazes are obtained ready cut, and not "set" until the work on the parts of the brooch is all but complete. The exposed surface of the metal the face of the brooch is usually lieved by engraved scroll-work. Amused jewelry has recently come fashion to some extent, and fine monies have been produced, the patterns especially being very ful. The lapidaries obtain their blossoms from various quarters of the try. Abrdeenshire furnishes emeralds, bryls, and the famous gorm crystals; and in the parish Leslie, in the same country, is for beautiful amianthus, which is written into snuff boxes, etc. Aryshire fur JEWELRY. How Manufactured in Edinburgh Character of the Workmen—Material Used and Where Found. In Edinburg there are upward of thirty master jewelers, who employ from half a dozen to thirty men each. All the work done is of a superior kind, no attempt being made to vie with Birmingham in the production of cheap and showy articles, the beauty of which is as transient as a flower. Gold and silver of standard quality are used to a large extent, but for a certain class of trinkets these metals are alloyed with a considerable proportion of copper. The jeweler melts his metals in a crucible, and cast them into ingots about two inches broad, and three inches long, and one-eight of an inch thick. The ingots are reduced to any degree of thickness by being passed between steel rollers. The sheets or plates of metal thus produced are intrusted to a workman, who guided by drawings or models, clips out the pieces required for the various articles to be made. The pieces are given fashion to some extent, and fine-mene have been produced, the patterns especially being very full. The lapidaries obtain their blies from various quarters of the try. Abrdeenshire furnishes emeragates, bryle, and the famous Gorm crystals; and in the parish Leslie, in the same country, is for beautiful amianthus, which is written into snuff boxes, etc. Aryshire furnishes agates and jasper; Perthshire stones and a variety of others. Fshire, jaspers, and Mid Lothian Pentland pebble and the Arthur's jasper. Amethysts were abundant Scotland, but they have now been so scarce that they fetch about one ounce At Ella, in Fiteshire, are occasionally found. Then the Scotch pearls, so much valued their size and beauty, though in some respects to the Oriental With such a variety of materials Scotch jewelers have great facility producing multitudinous designs they seem to be improving their portunity. As might be expected, the silver and jewelers are an intelligent craftmen, and nearly all of them have been students in the School Design. Their occupation being ever, to a great extent, simply mechanical, their wages are not higher than those of skilled workmen in trades which fall under that definition. Silversmiths and lapidaries are apprenticeship of six years, and clers and silverbasers of seven. Silversmiths, chasers and jewelers rarely receive from 20s. to 30s. and lapidaries 24s.; but in except cases higher rates are earned. Two years ago the men made a useful movement for the reduction of hours of labor to fifty-seven hours, but without any press their part, considerable advance been made on the rates of wages in the past few years. The Use of Lemons — When pears are feverish and thirsty beyond natural, as indicated by a taste in the mouth, especially drinking water, or by a whitish rance of the greater part of the one of the best "coolers," internal external, is to take a lemon, cut top, sprinkle over it some loaf working it down into the lemon spoon, and then suck it slowly, ing the lemon and more sugar acidity increases, from being THE USE OF LEMONS — When pearls are feverish and thirsty beyond natural, as indicated by a taste in the mouth, especially drinking water, or by a whitish rance of the greater part of the throat one of the best "coolers," internal, is to take a lemon, cut top, sprinkle over it some loaf working it down into the lemon spoon, and than suck it slowly, ing the lemon and more sugar acidity increases, from being baked up to the surface from a lower Invalids with feverishness may two or three lemons a day in this manner, with the most marked manifested by a sense of coolest fort and invigoration. A lemon thus taken at tea time, as an substitute for the ordinary tea omer, would give many a coarse night's sleep and an awakening rest and invigoration, with an aid for breakfast, to which they are givers who will have their cup of tea a hearty supper. In order to get an enemy, man a small sum of money for Call upon him in a week for it. two months. In three, insist up paying you. He will get angry nounce you, and ever after speak in abusive terms. CALIFORNIA OPium. — The Lake Bulletin says: We learn from Dr. Belmont has, upon Mr. Bower's ranch in Valley, some ten or twelve popies that are doing finely. It is the product of the poppy, an valuable and profitable product when properly managed. We hear Doctor may be successful in producing a merchantable article, as it was quite an addition to our country once. In the course of his duties as President of the New York Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to animals, Mr. Henry Bergh had occasion a few weeks ago to remove a sick Frenchman named Louis Bernard from a dirty room in Wooster street, to a hospital. This apparently poverty-stricken man died, and at his death bequeathed to the society the sum of 1,000,000 in bonds and real estate. The deceased had resided in this country for twenty years, and he lived in all the squalor and wretchedness of the most abject poverty in a low tenement house. In his room was found, after his death a trunk filled with alternate layers of gold and silver watches and jewelry, such as breastpins, many of them set with diamonds, chains, rings, etc. His sickness was brought on by exposure in his den, as he was too avericious to buy fuel. In addition to this strange gift, the Society has lately had three other bequests, which will insure its establishment on a permanent basis. Two Quakers have given $2,000,000, and Mr. Bergh has pledged the Society 1,000,000 more from his own fortune. Hens — Some interesting experiments have recently been made upon the comparative fecundity of ducks and hens, so as to determine from which of the two the larger number of eggs can be obtained at the same time. For this purpose three hens and ducks were selected, all hatched in February, and nourished with suitable food. In the following autumn the ducks laid 225 Some interesting experiments have recently been made upon the comparative peculiarity of ducks and hens, so as to determine from which of the two the larger number of eggs can be obtained at the same time. For this purpose three hens and ducks were selected, all hatched in February, and nourished with suitable food. In the following autumn the ducks laid 225 eggs, while the hens laid none. In the next February the laying season began again with the ducks and continued uninterruptedly until August. They showed no inclination to set, but become very thin, although they afterwards fattened up somewhat. The total number of eggs laid by the hens amounted to 257, or 86 eggs each; and 392, or 191, each for the ducks. Although the eggs of the ducks were smaller than those of the hens, yet they prove to be decidedly superior in nutritive material, so that the superiority in productiveness appears to be decidedly with the ducks. FARMERS CREED — We believe in small farms thorough cultivation. We believe the soil loves to eat as well as the owner, and ought, therefore to be well manured. We believe in going to the bottom of things, and therefore, the deep plowing and enough of it. All the better if it be a subsoil plow. We believe in large crops which leave land better than they found it, making both the farm and farmer rich at once. We believe that the fertilizer of any soil is a spirit of industry, enterprise, and intelligence—without these lime, gypsum, and guano, will be of little use. We believe in good fences, good farmhouses, good orchards, and children enough to gather the fruit. We believe in a clean kitchen, a neat wife in it, a clean cupboard, a clean dairy, and a clean conscience. The Way to Cook Beans — The usual way people cook beans is to parboil and put them in a kettle or pan and set them in the oven to bake, with a chunk of fat pork in them. The grease bakes out into the beans, making a most wholesome and indigestible mess destroying all the good flavor of the beans. Now my method for cooking them (which all who have tried it pronounce excellent) is as follows: Parboil them as usual, putting in salt to suit the taste. Then put them in a pan and set in the oven to bake, putting in a piece LEMONS — When persons and thirsty beyond what is indicated by a metallic mouth, especially after water, or by a whitish appearance, the outer part of the tongue, most "coolers," internal or take a lemon, cut off the lower it some loaf sugar, down into the lemon with a can suck it slowly, squeezed and more sugar as theoses, from being brought face from a lower point. Feverishness may take lemons a day in this man's most marked benefit, in a sense of coolest comoration. A lemon or two at tea time, as an entire ordinary tea of summe many a one a comfort sleep and an awakening oforation, with an appetite to which they are stran- have their cup of tea and water. To get an enemy, lend a sum of money for a day in a week for it. Wait In three, insist upon his He will get angry de- and ever after speak of you items. OPIUM.—The Lower says: From Dr. Belmont that he Bower's ranch in Burn's ten or twelve acres of are doing finely. Opium of the poppy, and is a profitable production managed. We hope the successful in producing article, as it would be notion to our country resource al way people cook beans is to parboil and put them in a kettle or pan and set them in the oven to bake, with a chunk of fat pork in them. The grease bakes out into the beans, making a most unwholesome and indigestible mess destroying all the good flavor of the beans. Now my method for cooking them (which all who have tried it pronounce excellent) is as follows: Parboil them as usual, putting in salt to suit the taste. Then put them in a pan and set in the oven to bake, putting in a piece of good sweet butter—the size of a butternut will answer. Bake until tender and nicely browned over on the top. Beans are very nutritious; and cooked in this way are palatable, digestible, and can be eaten by any one. If you want the pork, cook in a dish by itself. INTRINSIC PURITY OF ICE — Besides the fact that ice is lighter than water, there is another curious thing about it which many persons do not know, perhaps—namely its purity. A lump of ice melted will become pure distilled water. Water in freezing turns out of it all that is not water—salt, air, coloring matters, and all impurities. Frozen sea-water makes fresh-water ice. If you freeze a basin of indigo water it will make ice as clear and as white as that made of pure rain water. When the cold is very sudden these foreign matters have no time to escape either by rising or sinking, and are thus embedded with the ice, but do not make any part of it. An anti-kissing society has been formed by some of the Boston girls. "No kissing before marriage," is their motto. Our motto is to always try, before buying.—Termini. Why are candidates who fail to get elected like the world? Because they are depressed at the polls.