YoreAnaheim the Anaheim newspaper archive
Publications Anaheim Gazette 1871 November

anaheim-gazette 1871-11-11

1871-11-11 · Anaheim Gazette · page 1 of 4 · OCR glm-ocr
Scanned page
Scan of anaheim-gazette 1871-11-11 page 1
Searchable text
ANAHEIM GAZETTE. PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY. CHAS. A. GARDNER. EDITOR and PROPRIETOR, 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 Space, One Week, $2 00 Two Weeks, $3 00 One Month, $4 00 Three Months, $6 00 Quarter Column, One Week, $8 00 One Month, $10 00 Three " $15 00 Six " $20 00 One Year, $40 00 Half Column, One Week, $10 00 One Month, $15 00 Three " $20 00 Six " $30 00 One Year, $50 00 Column, One Week, $20 00 One Month, $30 00 Three " $25 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 & Menet. JOB WORK. Miscellaneous. Photographic NOTICE. To my Friends and the Public Generally. The undersigned takes much pleasure in informing his friends, and the public generally, that he has leased the well known "Sunbeam Photograph Gallery," and, on and after October 26th, will be prepared to furnish a class of work to his customers, surpassing anything here-sfore made in Southern California, and not to be surpassed in the State. Having been the FIRST to present to the public, the RETOUCHED NEATIVE I would respectfully and CONFIDENTLY assert that I am now prepared to produce even a finer picture yet. The Gentleman Hellegraph, which need only to be seen to be appreciated; and made at no other Gallery south of San Francisco. Having the whole Gallery under my own supervision, I GUARANTEE every picture project, or no charge made. I also make all and every other style of picture pertaining to the photographic art. Old pictures copied, and retouched in India ink, Oil and Water colors. P. D. FLANDERS. In connection with the above, Mr. W. Godfrey, the favorite and well known artist has established a separate branch of the business, for viewing, having but recently received a new and improved View Camera, with all requisite appurtenances, and will pay exclusive attention to viewing; and is ready at ten minutes notice to take pictures of invalids, and deceased persons, at their residences. LAFAYETTE STORE. P. N. ROTH, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Gents Purnishing Goods, Clothing, Provisions, Cigars and Liquors. Keeps always on hand a splendid assortment of BRANDIES, WHISKIES, 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 NEATLY EXECUTED AT THIS OFFICE. NOTICE. Subscriptions and Transient Advertisements Paid for Invariably In Advance. Current Advertisements Must be Settled For Monthly. Business Gards. I RANK GANAHIL. 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. CHAS. A. GARDNER, ATTORNEY AT LAW ANAHEIM. Will Practice in the Justice Courts, County and Districts Courts. Prompt attention given to all legal business. O. H. ALLEN ATTORNEY AT LAW. Anneheim California. Not yet having secured an office I will be found at present at Fischer's Hotel. C. DASSONVILLE & Co. BRUGGISTS & CHEMISTS ALSO OFFICE OF Dr. D'ASSONVILLE. Center St., near Los Angeles St., ANAHEIM H. K. B. O'MELVENY, H. T. HAZARD O'MELVENY & HAZARD ATTORNEYS AT LAW. OFFICE IN TEMPLE'S BLOCK, LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA. Special attention given to business in W. S. Land Office. SAMUEL MEYER, DEALER IN Crockery, Glassware, Lamps, Oils, Gas Fixtures, and Kitchen Utensils. COMMERCIAL STREET. 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. J. D. HICKS & CO., WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN Stoves, Hardware, Agricultural and Mining Tools, Etc., Etc. PLUMBERS and COPPERSMITHS, No. 10, Los Angeles Street. FRENCH RESTAURANT, Los Angeles Street, Anaheim. BOARD BY THE DAY OR WEEK AT MODERATE PRICES. Meals can be obtained at all hours. Everything First Class. GEORGE MILLER, Proprietor. oct29tf D. DESMOND, HAT STORE, MAIN STREET, Los Angeles Keeps constantly on hand a large assortment of HATS AND CAPS, of the LATEST STYLES and FASHIONS. oct29tf FASHION STABLE MAIN STREET, Opposite Arcadia Street, LOS ANGELES. GEO. R. BUTLER, Proprietor. A branch of this stable, or the old original PIONEER LIVERY Stable, is located on Main street next to Lich-tenbergers wagon shop. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. OFFICE IN TEMPLE'S BLOCK, LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA. Special attention given to business in U. S. Land Office. SAMUEL MEYER, DEALER IN Crockery, Glassware, Lamps, Oils, Gas Fixtures, and Kitchen Utensils. COMMERCIAL STREET. LOS ANGELES D. K. WILLIAMS, CARPENTER, JOINER and BUILDER, ANAHEIM CAL MRS. S. A. HAWKINS, Dress Maker Center Street ANAHEIM TO LEASE For a Term of Years. The Vineyard and House Of the Undorsigned on Los Angeles street—Anaheim. Will be let either combined or separate, and a good Tenant may be sure of Liberal Terms. The Vineyard is 14 years old and in full bearing; with the choicest varieties. The house is large and commodious. For further particulars apply on the premises, to H. BREMMERMAN. J. JONES, WHOLSMALL DEALER IN GENERAL MERCHANDISE, No. 7 and 8 ARCADIA BLOCK, Los Angeles. HEIM GAZETE ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, NOVEMBER 11, 1871. Stationery. BOOK STORE [beneath the Gazette Office] ANAHEIM. BY P.A. CLARK. A Large Amortment Of School Books, Blanks, Stationery, Miscellaneous Books CIGARS & TOBACCO S. HELLMAN. NEW TEMPLE BLOCK. Main and Spring Streets LOS ANGELES (CAL.) Wholesale and Retail Dealer In BOOKS. STATIONERY, OILS, GLASS &c, Also a complete assortment of VOLUME NOTIONS. WILLIAM B. ROE, SLEEPING IN CHURCH. The following parly on Tempus's' Charge Light Brigade" is hand upon the statement in Dr. Guthrie, that at a large religious meeting he attended in Scotland, he actually opened six people alms: O'er their devoted hands While the law thundered, Enagly and headlessly Snored the six hundred. Great was the preacher's theme; Screwed on was all the steam; Neither with about nor scream Could he disturb the dream Of the six hundred. Terrors to the right of them, Terrors to the left of them, Terrors in front of them— Hell itself thundered Of its most awful things, Weak minded preacher flags At the dumbfounded. Boldly he spoke and well; All on deaf ears it fell; Vain was his loudest yell Volley'd and thunder'd: For caring the truth to tall— Neither for heaven nor hell, Snored the six hundred. Still with redoubled seal, Still he spoke onward, And in a wild appeal, Striking with hand and heel, Making the pulpit reel, Shaken and sanked— Called them the Church's feen. Threatened with endless weeps, Faintly the answer roes (Proof of their sweet repose) From the united nausea Wholesale and Retail Dealer In BOOKS. STATIONERY, OILS, GLASS &c, Also a complete assortment of YANKEE NOTIONS. WILLIAM B. ROE, DEALER IN HAVANA and DOMESTIC CIGARS, TOBACCO, PIPES. YANKEE NOTIONS. Etc., Etc., Etc. Adjoining the BLUE WLNG SALOON, LOS ANGELES. GET YOUR OLD MAGAZINES AND PAPERS BOUND. Mr. PERRY IS NOW PREPARED to bind Magazines, Papers, Sheet Music and Pamphlets in a neat and substantial manner. Also old Books rebound in any desired style of cover or finish. Bindery in the rear-Tiffany's Job Office, Hunter's Building, two doors south of Court House, Main street LOS ANGELES. N. B. Leave orders at the GAZETTE office Anaheim. For Sale Cheap. A SPAN of good gentle work horses and now double harness. JOHN W. CLARK Apply at the Book Store Anaheim. WORKMAN BRO'S MANUFACTURERS AND IMPORTERS OF HARNESS, SADDLES, BRIDLES, COLLARS, WHIPS, SADDLERY-WARE, ETC... ETC... ETC.. No. 76, LANFRANCO'S BUILDING. MAIN STREET, LOS ANGELES, WE WILL SELL A BETTER ARTICLE AT LESS PRICE. Than any other house in Lower California. PIONEER DRUG STORE, CENTER STREET, CORNER OF LEMON, ANAHEIM. W. M. HIGGINS,.....Proprietor. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Drugs, Chemicals, Perfumery, Hair Oils, Soaps, Dentrifices, Brushes, Combs, and oilet rticles. For caring the truth to tell—Neither for heaven nor hell, Snored the six hundred. Still with redoubled seal, Still he spoke onward, And in a wild appeal, Striking with hand and heel, Making the pulpit reel, Shaken and surrendered—Called them the Church's feast. Threatened with endless woes, Faintly the answer rose (Proof of their sweet repose) From the united ness Of the six hundred. Sermon of near an hour, Too much for human power; Prayers, too, made to match (Extemporaneous batah), Wooffully blundered; With a service of music Fit to turn every pew sick—Should it be wondered? Churches that will not move Out of the ancient groove Through which they flounder'd, If they would lag behind, Still must expect to find Hearers of such a kind As the six hundred. A Beautiful Sentiment. In Augustine Daily's great "Under the Gaslight," Laura Coland utters these beautiful sentiments: "Let the woman you look upon be or vain, beautiful or holy, she has one thing she can really give or reand that is--her heart. Her beauty, wit, her accomplishments, she may off, but her love is the treasure witmoney and without price. She can only ask in return, that when you looher your eyes shall speak a mute diction; that when you address her voice shall be gentle, loving and M. That you shall not despise her because she cannot understand all at once y vigorous thoughts and ambitious p for when misfortune and evil have feated your greatest purpose--her remains to console you.--You upon the tree of strength and grand do not despise the flowers because tha fragrance is all they have to give. Remember, love is the only t that a woman can give—but it is only thing which God permits u carry beyond the grave. Sympathies and Antipathies Plants. Dr. Richter-Sandor makes the following statement which, if true, be as useful as curious The vine likes the nearness of ehe trees and elms. A white planted beside a blue PIONEER DRUG STORE, CENTER STREET, CORNER OF LEMON, ANAHEIM. W. M. HIGGINS, Proprietor. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Drugs, Chemicals, Perfumery, Hair Oils, Soaps, Dentrines, Brushes, Combs, and oillet rticles. PATENT MEDICINES OF EVERY NOTE AND EFFICACY. PURE LIQUORS FOR MEDICAL PURPOSES. PHYSICIANS' and Family Prescriptions compounded with the utmost care at all hours, day and night. APOTHECARIES' HALL, 30 Main Street, Oppental Commercial, LOS ANGELES. THEO. WOLLWEBER, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN DRUGS, CHEMICALS, PERFUMERY; &C., &C., &C. PICTURES OF EVERY STYLE, SIZE AND QUALITY Wolfenstein's Gallery, TEMPLE'S NEW BLOCK, Main Street, Los Angeles. MERCHANTS AND MEUHANICS GET YOUR Printing done at the Ganzwa Job Printing Sympathies and Antipathies of Plants. Dr. Richter-Sandor makes the fowing statement which, if true, be as useful as curious. The vine likes the nearness of eb trees and elms. A white planted beside a blue gets blue grapes. Cheatput among mulberry trees l fruit twice as large. Lemon, orange, myrtle, cypress laurel trees succeed best among another. If you would increase the fragra of your roses, plant garlic or onion mong them. Roses and white lilies planted gether yield a sweeter odor. To produce extra-large turnips, be carrots, and parsnips, pull up one these, plant the seeds in the hole made and in two or three days tak and sow them. Powdered tartar and blood apply the roots of the vine will cause inc ible fertility. The walnut tree is noxious to other fruit trees. The vine, laural oak and olive natural enemies. Cucumbers planted among olive tr perish. An oak beside a walnut, drice up. Colocynths are noxious to every b or flower in the same bottom. Rose and orange water loss t sweet scent at the blooming time those plants. Wine becomes unquiet and forme in the casks while the vine is in blu A French chemist asserts that if he ground like coffee before hot w is poured upon it, it will yield no double the amount of its exhilara qualities. SHALL WE MEET AGAIN. The following is said to be one of the most brilliant articles ever written by the late George D. Prentice: The first of nature is inexorable. There is no appeal of relief from the great law which dooms us to dust. We flourish and fade as the leaves of the forest, and the flowers that bloom and wither for a day have no frailer hold upon it, than the mightiest monarch that ever shook the earth with his footsteps. Generations of men will appear, and as the grass and the countless multitudes that throng the earth to-day, will to-morrow disappear as the footsteps on the shore. "Men seldom think of the great event of death until the shadows fall across their own path, hiding from their eyes the traces of loved ones whose living smile were the sunlight of their existence. Death is the great antagonist of life, and the cold thought of the tomb is the skeleton at all feasts. We do not want to go through the dark valley although its passage may lead to paradise; and with Charles Lamb, we do not want to lie down in the grave with kings and princes for our bed fellows. "In the beautiful drama of Ion, the instance of immortality, so eloquently uttered by the death devoted Greek, finds a deep response in every thoughtful soul. When about to yield his nonexistence as a sacrifice to fate." Farming by Machinery. A Chicago paper tells about another farmer who has been ruined by Mr. Greeley's insane theories. Horace, it appears, went out to inspect this man's farm, and during the visit he advised his host to purchase some kind of a new fangled, duplex-elliptic, burglar proof steam plow, belonging to a misguided miscreant who advertises in the Tribune. The courding agriculturist bought one of those plows, and paid six hundred dollars for it. The first time he took it out in the field the throttle valve got out of order, and the machine started off with a spurt. It ran over the farmer's oldest boy, killing him on the spot; it tore down two dozen panels of fence; swooped into the stack-yard; set fire to three thousand bushels of grain, cut the legs off a short-horn cow; ripped forty peach trees up by the roots burst into the house, upsetting the stove and crushing the cook to death; dashed through the parlor, gonging a furrow through the Brussels carpet, and devastating the piano; sporting out through the wall, leaving the edifice a crumbling ruin; went eathooting down the road; whistling and puffing and carrying on generally like mad, until it reach the school-house. Into that seat of learning it swooped with a wild and awful yell; and, jamming up against the black-board, it burst its boiler, scalding eighteen scholars to death, and distributing the schoolmaster in microscopic fragments around over the four adjoining counties. And now, if you wish to cause that farmer to act insanely—if you desire to see that deluded agriculture... and Antipathies of Plants. Sandor makes the foliage which, if true, may curious in the nearness of cherry bushes beside a blue vine among mulberry trees have goose, myrtle, cypress and succeed best among one increase the fragrance plant garlic or onions against white lilies planted to weeter odor. Extra-large turnips, beets, ransips, pull up one of seeds in the hole thus or three days take up scar and blood applied to vine will cause increased tree is noxious to all real oak and olive are planted among olive trees, a walnut, dries up. Noxious to every herb same bottom. Orange water loses their blooming time of unquiet and fermentate the vine is in bloom. Artist amends that if tea coffee before hot water it will yield nearly of its exhilarating through the wall, leaving the edible crumbling ruin; went eshooting down the road; whistling and puffing and carrying on generally like mad, until it reach the school-house. Into that seat of learning it swooped with a wild and awful yell; and, jamming up against the black-board, it burst its boiler, scalding eighteen scholars to death, and distributing the schoolmaster in microscopic fragments around over the four adjointing counties. And now, if you wish to cause that farmer to act insanely—if you desire to see that deluded agriculturist lie down on the floor, and tear his hair and groan and roll over and howl—just ask him if he intends to vote for Horace Greeley for President—Western Paper. The Best Have Their Failings—a painter was once engaged upon a likeness of Alexander the Great. In one of his great battles Alexander had received an ugly scar on the side of his face. The artist was desirous of giving a correct likeness of the monarch, and at the same time, desirous of hiding the scar. It was a difficult task to accomplish. At length he hit upon a happy expedient. He painted him in a reflective attitude, his hand placed against his head, while his finger covered the scar. The best men are not without their failings, their scars—but do not dwell upon them. In speaking of them to others, adopt the painter's expedition and let the finger of love be placed on the scar. Mr Froude, in an essay, says: "Many a hundred sermon have I heard in England, many a dissertation on the mysteries of faith, on the divine mission of the clergy, on apostolic succession, on bishops, and justification, and theory of good works, and verbal inspiration, and efficacy of the miracles; but never during these thirty wonderful years, never one that I can recollect on common honesty, or those primitive commandments. Thou shalt not lie, and Thou shall not steal."