anaheim-gazette 1871-07-01
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ANAHEIM GAZETTE.
PUBLISHED EVERY S TURDAY.
G. W. BARTER, Ed'r and Prop'r.
OFFICE AT CORNER OF CENTER AND LOS ANGELES STREETS.
TERMS:
For One Year (in all France) $5 00
Six Months $3 00
Three $2 00
Rates of Advertising:
One Inch Space $2 00
Two Weeks $1 00
One Month $4 00
Three Months $6 00
Quarter Column One Week $8 00
One Month $10 00
Three $13 00
Six $20 00
One Year $40 00
Columba One Week $10 00
One Month $15 00
Three $20 00
Six $30 00
One Year $45 00
Columba One Week $20 00
One Month $30 00
Three $35 00
Six $45 00
AGENTS:
Los Angeles, W. J. BRODRICK.
Santa Ana, W. H. SPURGEON.
San Francisco, L. P. Fisher.
New York, Hudson & Mcnet.
JOB WORK.
AGENTS:
Los Angeles, W. J. BRODRICK.
Santa Ana, W. H. SPURGEON.
San Francisco, L. P. Fisher.
New York, Hudson & Menet.
JOB WORK.
All kinds of Job Work Promptly and Nearly Executed at the Office.
Business Cards.
Ganahl & M'Daniel
OFFICE—In Downer's New Building, Main Street.
Will practice in all the Courts of the 17th Judicial District.
MAX. STROBEL,
Attorney at Law.
Offer at residence on LEMON Stroat
ANAHEIM.
DR. DAVID TAYLOR,
Physician, Surgeon
AND OBSTETRICIAN.
GRADUATE of Jefferson Medical College,
Pittsburgh, with the experience of active service in the Southern Field and Hospitals, duing the late war offers his professional services in the citizens of Anaheim and surrounding country.
Office and residence adjacent to Anaheim.
O'MELVENY & HAZARD
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
OFFICE IN TEMPLE BLOCK,
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA.
Special attention given to business in U.S. Land Office.
SAMUEL MEYER,
DEALER in Crockery, Glassware, Lamps,
Oils, Ghs Fixtures, and Kitchen Utensils.
COMMERCIAL STREET.
LOS ANGELES
S. LAZARD & CO,
DENTIST
DOWNEY'S NEW BLOOK, LOS ANGELES
CASWELL, ELLIS & WRIG
No. 1 and 2, Arcadia Block
Los Angeles
General Merchandise
Dry Goods
And Grocers
J. D. HICKS & CO,
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Stoves, Hardware,
Agricultural and Mining Tools, Etc., PLUMBERS and COPPERSMITHES
No. 10 Los Angeles Street.
WILLIAM B. ROE
DEALER IN HAVANA AND DOMESTIC CIGARS,
TOBACCO, PIPES.
YANKEE NOTION
Etc., Etc., Etc.
Allowing the BLUE WING SALOON no26tf LOS ANGELES.
FRENCH RESTAURANT
Los Angeles Street, Anaheim.
BOARD BY THE DAY OR WEEK AT ERATE PRICES.
Meals can be obtained at all hours.
Everything First Class.
GEORGE MILLER, Proprietor
D. DESMOH
HAT STORE
MAIN STREET. Los Ames
Keeps constantly on hand a large assortment of HATS AND CAPS, or LATEST STYLES and FASHIONS.
PICTURE OF EVERY SIZE, STYLE AND DESCRIPTION TAKEN AT Wolfenstein's Galleria.
SAMUEL MEYER,
DEALER IN
Crockery, Glassware, Lamps,
Oils, Ghs Fixtures, and
Kitchen Utensils.
COMMERCIAL STREET.
LOS ANGELES.
S. LAZARD & CO,
MAIN STREET,
Opposite the Bella Union Hotel,
LOS ANGELES.
DRY GOODS
AND CLOTHING, Wholesale and
REPAIL.
PATENTS.
INVENTORS,
Or Those Desiring to Secure
Letters Patent,
WILL DO WELL TO CONSULT
WILLIAM C. HORNFAGER,
Counselor at Law & Solicitor of Patents,
Room 21—No. 23 William Street, New York.
Will give personal attention at the Patent Office, Washington D.C., in the application for, and obtaining Letters Patent.
Will also attend to all matters in the United States in relation to Letters Patent.
Ice Cream
AND
THE UNDERSIGNED would respectfully call to the attention of the Ladies and Gentlemen of Anaheim and surrounding country, that they have opened a first-class Ice Cream and Confectionery Establishment, at Los Angeles, where they will serve up Ice Cream of the best quality to all who may favor them with their patronage.
They have a fine stock of Fresh Candies made expressly for their use, which will be sold at Wholesale and Retail.
Call and see them for yourselves.
Pin-nice, Wedding Parties, and Private Parties furnished with Cream and Cake on the shortest notices.
STEVENS & WOOD.
my13
Temple's Block,
Next to BRODRICK'S, Los Angeles.
HEIM GAZETTE
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, JULY 1, 1871.
BISINESS CARDS.
JONES,
MERCHANDISE DEALER IN
L MERCHANDISE,
8, ARCADIA BLOCK,
Los Angeles.
YETTE STORE.
ROTH,
Retail Dealer in
Shining Goods,
ing, Provisions,
Cigars and Liquors.
Hand a splendid assortment of
IES, WHISKIES,
and all kinds of
foreign Liquors.
CRAWFORD,
NTIST,
W BLO K, LOS ANGELES.
[april 15]
ELLIS & WRIGHT,
2, Arcadia Block.
Los Angeles Street.
Angeles.
and Retail Dealer in
Merchandise.
CONSOLATION
There are once-beloved faces
We gaze on no more,
As we stand in the places
That knew them of yore;
Death came not upon them—
Their smiles still are bright;
But strangers have won them,
And live in their light.
Yet age has its wrinkles,
And life has its cares;
And each passing year sprinkles
A few silver hairs!
They must watch the cheek shrivel,
And greet the gray hair;
But to us it is unchanging—
For us ever fair.
There are ties that must bind us,
Though severed for days;
There are scar leaves that mind us
Of love's summer-day;
There are hopes that still datter
When hope long has died;
Like flowers that we scatter
With tears over the dead;
But dearer, though broken;
Such ties may become;
More sweet than if spoken
Our dead hopes and dumb;
Than the triumph and gloom
On a fatal success.
Which turns into curses
For things that should bliss.
ADVANTAGES OF GROWING
I heard it said, not long ago,
man whose opinion I very much
speet, that in the maturity of
we are much more easily lacerated by external circumsure and that our wounds much heal, than in the elastic youth. I cannot say how he sent from this as a general point. It is not to be denied that in reality is fairly knocked down of life, he does not pick up readily as a man of five-sidedness. But these knock-down blows rarely delivered. Life is not small joys and small sorrows longer we live the better we to disturb ourselves about man who has fought the battle who has encountered some serious ties in the course of his care very likely to suffer himself wretched by imaginary events as I have before said, he inexperience is, continually the thought of what others ing or him. He is assured of them. Haknows what it is, as it is derived, and he does not himself about circumstances not really affect it. And so far to the real evils of life, with of years comes an increase o
The Inspiration of the Commune.
When Napoleon the Third had ended his massacre in the streets of Paris, and had deported thousands of the best citizens to Algeria, he was petted with the complimentary title of a dutiful son of the Church." The Communists never forgive the transaction, nor forget its sequel. They threatened that at the next outbreak vengeance should be wrecked on the Church. How well this promise was kept, the murdered Archbishop and priest sattest. Had the Communists remained in power six months longer, probably not a single church edifice would have remained unmolested in all that great city.
The inspiration of the Communists is revealed in the reported conversation of Bergeret, one of the leading spirits.
Question—Do you believe in God?
Bergeret—No.
Question—Why?
Bergeret—Because it is not republican. Because if there were a God, he would be a tyrant. I fight God in the universe as I did the empire in France. It is the one man power, too pouvoir personnel of Napoleon the III. If there is such a place as heaven, and I were there and found a God, I would immediately commence throwing up barricades. I would hoist the red flag. I would rebel. It is contrary to justice, it is contrary to reason, it is contrary to right, that any one should govern the many—that there should be a God.
Question—What do you substitute for God?
Bergeret—Universal harmony.
Question—What do you mean by that?
Bergeret—the union of everything that exists in one harmonious whole. Man, animals, plants, flowers, trees, stars, planets—everything.
Question—Otherwise the universe itself?
Begeret—Yes.
Question—Did this universe, of universal harmony as you call it, create ties in the course of his career very likely to suffer himself wretched by imaginary events all as I have before said, he inexperience is, continually the thought of what others ing of him. He is assured tion. He knows what it is, as it is derived, and he does not himself about circumstances not really affect it. And so to the real evils of life; with 0 years comes an increase or have somehow or other, even troubles are at the worst, a conviction that we shall them. The past gives us cone the future. We have lived during troubles, and shall we not these? So think that in years we are much less prone youth to disturb ourselves at nary evils, we have far more live them down. It will be perhaps that over and above there is the fact that we get hardened—that the continuity of trouble renders us less sensitive to its influence. But I take a higher view of the matter this, and believe that the larger training patience of maturer needs from an increased faith goodness of God.
And it is this knowledge, which leads us to cease from repinings and regrets. It is how much misery men make selves by lamenting either their good, or that they them not done different. But, in a ability the circumstances which plore are just those which contributed to our advance the way in which we have got our work is the only one in could have done it all. To talk illustration that comes most neat and familiar one, perhaps sufficiently suggestive—am I finished this essay, to regret not write it in a different way did not apply myself more steperoveringly to it—never once aside or suffering myself to be deted from my work instead of going every five minutes, going to day, strolling into another roving faces on the blotting-paper the newspaper, and deviating other irregularities? Or what to say that I should have easily sooner, and that it would been much better when written had done none of these things the profoundest possible convien
MAIN STREET, Los Angeles
ently on hand a large as
ITS AND CAPS, of the
LES and FASHIONS.
FURRES
SIZE, STYLE AND
TION TAKEN AT
Hein's Gallery,
NEW BLOCK, Main Street
Los Angeles.
STANWAY,
College of Surgeons,
LONDON.
Bank, Bella Union Block,
Los Angeles.
WILLIAMS,
BOINER and BUILDER,
HEIM CAL
KANE.
Ornamental Painter.
HAHEIM.
HEIM
ing Saloon,
Professor Dean,
and Los Angeles Streets.
MACHINES.
Goins, is the Agent for
VING MACHINES, in
inity.
God?
Bergeret—Universal harmony.
Question—What do you mean by that?
Bergeret—The union of everything that exists in one harmonious whole.
Man, animals, plants, flowers, trees, stars, planets—everything.
Question—Otherwise the universe itself?
Begeret—Yes.
Question—Did this universe, of universal harmony as you call it, create itself?
Bergeret—Ah, that is a question I cannot answer. It is something the human mind cannot grasp; probably because we lack faculty. As a person who is born blind cannot comprehend light, so we cannot understand creation. I could ask you as well who created God, and you would probably give me the same answer. Try to think it out and you will go crazy.
Question—Therefore at this limit of human understanding there is a barrier which you call universal harmnoy, whereas we call it God?
Bergeret—That is my meaning exactly.
Now a people working under an inspiration like this can construct nothing in the State perpetuity. The Communists constructed nothing. They organized a local revolution, represented by a mob, which began its work by wreaking vengeance upon the most precious monuments of Paris. A more brutal fanaticism probably never was witnessed than that of a people who made it their especial boast that they were opposed to all fanaticism. Men without moral consciousness may lapse toward the character of tigers or monkeys. But they will never lay the foundation of a prosperous State. The reds of Paris have murdered two Archbishops within forty years and they have set on foot the most brutal revolutions of modern times. The inspiration of madness is terrible for destruction but powerless for reconstuction.—Bulletin.
JOB PRINTING IN EVERY STYLE neatly executed at the Gazette Job Office
perseveringly to it—never once aside or suffering myself to be ted from my work instead of going every five minutes, going to day, strolling into another roaring faces on the blotting-paper the newspaper, and deviating other irregularities? Or what to say that I should have easily sooner, and that it would been much better when writing had done none of these things the profoundest possible conviction I could not have done it in any way.
I am broken and trained.
To my old habits. They are part of me.
So, too, in the larger concern we pray be sure that our way our work is a part of ourselves could not have been otherwise stronger; or cleverer than we are.
And then as to repinings—we complaints that circumstances been favorable to us—that if that thing bad not happened, ferent it would have been! An agent! But let it not be assumed be different is to be better. Our lessons which we learn by growth is that all things work together evil, but for good. Let us think and quietly over the reverses we have sustained at different places; of the disappointment we have encountered; of a which, at the time of their oceans we consider to be gigantic ties. How small they appear in themselves, looking at us approach the summit of life! But think of them connection with later events and present position, and the change that we shall come to recognize "blessings in disguise." I hear last night of a man who owes thing to a heavy blow in early wished, whip he married, to in life, but the officers rejected him made him careful and thrifty; end was that he died at the eighty-five, worth a quarter of a lion. It will be often thus. I grand reverse of fortune, in
INTOXES OF GROWING OLD.
It is said, not long ago, by a close opinion I very much retated in the maturity of our years much more easily stabbed and
by external circumstances, our wounds much less readily
in the elastic season of
cannot say how heartily I disthis as a general proposition
to be denied that it a man of
early knocked down or the road
does not pick himself up so
a man of five-and-twenty.
knock-down blows are very
divered. Life is made up of
and small sorrows; and the
live the better we learn not
ourselves about trades. A
has fought the battle of life—
encountered some stern readcourse of his career—is not
try to suffer himself to be made
by imaginary evils. Above
before said, he is not, as
once is, continually fretted by
light of what others are thinkm. He is assured of his posknows what it is, and whence
ed, and he does not disturb
about circumstances which do
affect it. And so with regard
of evils of life; with an increase
comes an increase of faith: we
hood, perhaps, we were left to struggle broad breast against the stream of life, instead of quietly floating down with the current; we were cast upon our own resources, compelled to put forth our own strength, with nothing to aid us but our God given manhood.
And lo! the result Are we not wiser,
greater, perhaps richer, for the reverse which in early youth we so often lamented? I speak only in the plain;
sober, demonstrable language of truth;
when I say that I owe everything,
humanly speaking, that makes life dear to me, to a reverse of fortune in my boyhood. Hard work has been my heritage. I shudder to think what I might have been it existence had gone more smoothly with me—it action had not encountered passion in the great battle of life—in a word, if I had more leisure to be wicked. It is a common case. Our very misfortunes save us. It may seem very hard at the time. Some one has got our heritage, as far as money makes heritages, and we bewail our miserable lot; but there is one heritage to which no man can play the part of Jacob, and be even once a sapantan—the heritage of our own strong brain. To be "lord of ourselves" is not to have a heritage of woe. The real heritage of woe is not to be "lord of ourselves," but to be lorded over by wealth, by luxury, or by
Hank Monk and the Michigan deeds.
The Carson Register of May 16th gives another good story about Hank Monk, the Greeley stage driver:
Sunday afternoon Hank Monk—who gained a national reputation by driving Horace Greeley through to Placerville on time," at the imminent risk of dislocating that distinguished philosopher's neck—had a load of Michiganers (male and female) down from Lake Tahoe. Coming up the mountain from Glenbrook, Hank took his time, and the tourists became alarmed lest they should miss the evening train for Virginia. Hank replied to them the little speech he made to Greeley: "Keep your seats. I will get you there on time." Reaching the summit, he issued a notice of backskin to each of his passengers up eight heels, and away from four feet horses, down a torrential rain, like rocked lightning hitting crossed panes, while a force wind from the rear enveloped the rapidly descenting mass in a dense cloud of dust. The crack of a whip, the short of a mustang, the concussion caused by an occasional touch of the ground by the vehicle, shrieks, cries, groans, thumps, imprecations, prayers, and "keep your seats!" was all that could be heard amid the roar of the wind—but Hank avers that he only made four miles in five minutes. Suffice it to say the Michiganers reached this city more than an hour before train time, fully impressed with the idea that
In the larger concerns of life,
ensure that our way of doing
is part of ourselves, that we
have been otherwise—taller.
We cleverer than we are.
As to repinings—vain, idle,
that circumstances have not
able to us—that if this or
had not happened, how difuld have been! Ay, differ,
it not be assumed that to
this to be better. One of the
which we learn by growing old
things work together, not for
good. Let us think calmly
over the reverses which we
need at different periods of
of the disappointments which
encountered; of accidents
the time of their occurrence
or to be gigantic calamities.
Small they appear even
lives, looking at them as
with the summit of the hill.
I think of them in conlor later events and with our
tion, and the chances are
all come to recognize them as
on disguise." I heard only
of a man who owed everyheavy blow in early life. He
up he married, to insure his
officers rejected him. This
careful and thrifty; and the
that he died at the age of
worth a quarter of a milbe often thus. By some
use of fortune, in our boy-
The rapidly decreasing mass in a dense cloud of dust. The crack of a whip, the short of a mustang, the concussion caused by an occasional touch of the ground by the vehicle, shrieks, cries, groans, thumps, imprecations, prayers, and "keep your seats!" was all that could be heard amid the roar of the wind—but Hank avers that he only made four miles in five minutes Suffice it to say the Michiganers reached this city more than an hour before train time, fully impressed with the idea that Nevada is a fast State, but one in which staging is not conducive of longevity.
William Wirt's letter on the "small sweet courtesies of life," contains a passage from which a great deal of happiness might be learned. "I want to tell you a secret. The way to make yourself pleasant to others is to show them attention. The whole world is like the Miller at Mansfield, who cared for nobody—no, not he, because nobody cared for him. Aud the whole world would serve you so if you gave them the cause. Let every one see that you do care for them by showing them what Stern so happily called the small courtesies, in which there is no parade, whose voice is too still to tease, and which manifest themselves by tender and affectionate looks and little acts of attention, giving others the preference in every little enjoyment, at the table, in the field, walking, sitting and standing."
The following paragraph contains brief a history of the entire railway interest in our sphere: The whole length of all the railways in the world is 120,000 miles. The cost of the same was, in round numbers, ten billions of dollars. Those of Great Britain are the most costly, and those of the United States the least so. The railway system of the world is supposed to give employment to over one million of persons.
FOR THE ASSEMBLY.
I ANNOUNCE myself a candidate for member
of the Assembly, subject to the decision of the Democratic primaries.
ASY ELLIS.