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anaheim-gazette 1881-08-13

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WEEKLY GAZETTE. Published every Saturday. Richard Melrose, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: One year ... $2.50 Six months ... 1.25 Three months ... 75 Office—In Connell's Brick Building, Los Angeles Street, Anaheim. TRANSIENT ADVERTISING: SPACE 1 week 2 weeks 3 weeks 4 weeks 1 square ... $1.00 2 squares ... $2.00 3 squares ... $3.00 4 squares ... $4.00 All legal advertisements must be paid for before afidavit of publication is given. Advertisements must reach this office not later than Friday morning in order to insure their appearance on the day following. Brief communications on current topics are respectfully solicited from all parts of the county. THE LION AND THE JACKAL—A FABLE. One day a Hyena, who was out of a job and had a buzz-saw feeling toward all the world, met a Jackal on the plain and began: "Searching for old bones and leavings, I presume?" "Yes," was the humble reply. "As I am not able to kill for myself I must eat after others have been satisfied. I am, however, fat, healthy and in good spirits." "See here," continued the Hyena as he sat down in the shade, "you have as much right to be a Lion as the Lion has. I see no reason why he should live off the fat of the land and you off the bones." "I never thought of that before," mused the Jackal. "Well, you are very foolish to be hunting bones when you might as well be a Lion. I wouldn't stand it if I were scientific jargon. Monstrosities of diction are not confined to chemical science, but are to be found in physics as well as metaphysics. We recently gave some samples of the extraordinary and absurd length to which the names of certain organic salts had grown, and we may now add the following choice specimen of imagery (from a recently published paper by Sir William Thomson) to illustrate the grand style in modern natural philosophy. "The steam-lines," says the distinguished Glasgow physicist, "are represented in the diagram, in which the region of translational-velocity greater than wave-propagational-velocity is separated from the region of translational-velocity less than wave-propagational-velocity by a cat's-eye border pattern of elliptic whirls." The curious mixture of homely simile and abstract terminology in this passage is highly amusing. Its obscurity is, however, surpassed by Mr. Herbert Spencer's famous "Formula of Evolution," which runs: "Evolution is a change from an indefinite, incoherent homogeneity to a definite coherent heterogeneity, through continuous differentiations and integrations," which, being interpreted into plain English, the mathematician, means: "Evolution is a change from a nohowish, untalkaboutable all-alikeness to a somehowish, and in-general-talkaboutable, not-all-alikeness, by continuous somethingelsefications and stickto-getherations." As a clever travesty on the above cacophonous mystification of Mr. Herbert Spencer, which, like the language of diplomacy, conceals the meaning it ought to express, we have Mr. Kirkman's "Formula of Universal Change," which is "Change is a perichoretical synechy of pamparalagmatic and porroteroporeumtical differentiations and integration." After such pedantry as this, the clown in Shakspeare's "Twelfth Night" who "did impeticos thy gratillity" is absolutely nowhere. —Globe. CANNIBALS sometimes have their "See here," continued the Hyena as he sat down in the shade, "you have as much right to be a Lion as the Lion has. I see no reason why he should live off the fat of the land and you off the bones." "I never thought of that before," mused the Jackal. "Well, you are very foolish to be hunting bones when you might as well be a Lion. I wouldn't stand it if I were you." The Jackal thought the matter over, and went to a Lion who dwelt on the hillside and said: "I have just as good a right to be a Lion as you have." "I second the motion," was the grave reply. "And I'm going to be, too." "Bully for you!" growled the king of beasts. "And will you tell me how to begin?" "Certainly. Take this path over the hill, and whenever you meet any animal you must paw and roar and act as near like me as you can." The Jackal moved away in high spirits, and had not gone far before he met a troop of his kind. He began to paw and roar and swell up, and when he had tired himself out the leader of the troop came forward and said: "Any fool can see that you are nothing but a Jackal, but since you aspire to be a Lion we can have no feelings with you. Go your way and keep clear of us." The Jackal found himself knocked about by the Lions as a base impostor, and shunned by his kind as unworthy of friendship, and between the two fires he could neither kill for himself nor eat of what others had slain. He was brought low with starvation and despair, and as the vultures gathered around him he said: "Even had I succeeded in making myself believe I was a Lion, these birds would have known by the meat that I was a Jackal." Moral — You must be what you are to have the confidence of friends or respect of foes. Store-clothes only deceive the eye — Free Press. HIGH LIVERS. The highest spot on the globe inhabited by human beings is the Buddhist cloister of Hanie, Thibet, where twenty-one priests live at an altitude of 16,000 feet. The monks of St. Bernard, whose monastery is 8,177 feet high, are obliged to descend frequently to the valleys below in order to obtain relief from the phonous mysticization of Mr. Herbert Spencer, which, like the language of diplomacy, conceals the meaning it ought to express, we have Mr. Kirkman's "Formula of Universal Change," which is "Change is a perichoretical synechy of pamparalagmatic and porroteroporeuntical differentiations and integration." After such pedantry as this, the clown in Shakspeare's "Twelfth Night" who did impeticos thy gratillity" is absolutely nowhere. — Globe. CANNIBALS sometimes have their neighbors at dinner. A Sermon on Feet. "And they shall wear their feet with the flat side down." — Patent Office Report. The United States standard foot is a brass rule made for the coast survey by Troughton, of London, from the old English standard. Other feet mentioned in official organs are the old Greek pous, which is believed to have been exactly 12,135 English inches. The English standard foot is a "straight line or distance between the centers of two gold plugs or pins in the bronze bar deposited in the office of the Exchequer." This bar is designated as "bronze 19, No. 1," and the length is to be measured when its temperature is 62 deg. Fahrenheit. It is is the standard yard and the standard foot in its third part. The Old French pied du roy equals 1.07; the modern pied usuel, 1.068; German, 0.971: Amsterdam old foot, 0.93; Denmark-Rhineland foot, 1.04; Hamburg, 0.941; Stockholm, 0.97; St. Petersburg, 1.145; Riga, 0.89; Canton, 1.04 Lisbon, 0.927; Turkey, 1.116; Constantinople, 1.23. The foot is decimally divided. The decimal is a little black speck which often gets between the toes. A foot divided by too many decimals, or by too large decimals, is not a pleasant thing when the decimals get dead ripe. Other feet are the foot-rule, the foot-man, the foot-print-ed on the official organ, the "two foot to who!" of the rural statesman, the foot-pad who cushions the officeholder, and the "phut's that?" or whatisit. There is also a foot-stool of repentance, which is looking around for a chance to slip itself under our respected contemporaries. When our respected contemporary sits down on it the stool will squeal—leviticcusfirst fourteenth. In conclusion, we wish our contemporaries may get to heaven (soon) as fervently and mayhap, as vainly as they wish we may get to hell. For the grasshopper falls with the thermometer. F. Feet and D. Feet have applied for situations on our respected contemporaries, where their sisters, their cousins and their aunts welcomed them with dirty hands to hospitable graves. — New Orleans Times. The Queen of Home. Honor the dear old mother. Time has scattered snowy flakes on her brows, plowed deep furrows on her cheeks, but she not sweet and beautiful now? The lips are thin and shrunken, but those are the lips which have kissed many a hot tear from the childish cheeks and they are the sweetest lips An Unpublished Story. It was during the first great war of the Rebellion our ministers called on coln on an important eagle received them with and gave them a good brethren arose to leafless that probably Dr., Mr. Lincoln, you have painstaking, to answer We have yet one which deeply interested in an attempt before you for all to you here at Washington with slavery? They opened a momentous oak Mr. Lincoln was ready to give up his bony form, men, I will tell you how ment proposed by the slavey question is would be proposed by for a wen on a person with a large, ugly wee He consults a number about it. They all agree They all agree that in first thing They must come off About moving it they do not best way is to put and with the knife remains powerful external view to its removal The better way is to surround it and every day until at last a severer occur That gentlemen it is here with us We that slavery is a woken We are all agreed that We are not yet agreed it With this the heartily the hand of them went away. — Red Dull. Maj. Dunnup—Aw here, isn't it, Miss Ma! Do you think so then? You're a bad only yourself to please Only myself to plea know what a doomed di do! Rev. Thomas K. B. the work of women in preciated by men camped out and tried their own clothing, or after meals. The anti-polygamy plan adopted by the Iowa Reed through the influence HIGH LIVERS. The highest spot on the globe inhabited by human beings is the Buddhist cloister of Hanie, Thibet, where twenty-one priests live at an altitude of 16,000 feet. The monks of St. Bernard, whose monastery is 8,177 feet high, are obliged to descend frequently to the valleys below in order to obtain relief from the asthma induced by the rarity of the atmosphere about their mountain eyrie. At the end of ten years' service in the monastery they are compelled to change their exalted abode for a permanent residence at the ordinary level. When the brothers Schlaginswell explored the glaciers of the Ibi Gamin, in Thibet, they once encamped at 21,000 feet—the highest altitude at which a European ever passed the night. At the top of Mt. Blanc, 15,781 feet above the level of the sea, Prof. Tyndall spent a night, and with less discomfort than his guide, who found it very unpleasant. In July, 1872, Mr. Glaisher and Mr. Coxwel lascended in a balloon to the enormous height of 38,000 feet. Before starting Mr. Glaisher's pulse beat 76 strokes per minute, and Mr. Coxwell's 74. At 17,000 feet Mr. Glaisher's pulse had increased to 84, and Mr. Coxwell's to 100. At 19,000 feet the hands and feet of the aeronauts turned quite blue. At 26,000 feet Mr. Glaisher could hear his heart beat, and his breathing became oppressed. At 29,000 feet he became senseless; notwithstanding which he still ascended another 9,000 feet, when his hands were paralyzed, and he had to open the valve with his teeth. In the Alps, at the height of 13,000 feet, climbers suffer from the rarity of the air; yet, in the Andes, persons can dwell, as at Potosi, at a height of from 13,000 to 15,000 feet without inconvenience. Father Rudolph, a Roman Catholic priest at Clyde, Ohio, has left the ministry and married, The Queen of Home. Honor the dear old mother. Time has scattered snowy flakes on her brows, plowed deep furrows on her cheeks, but she not sweet and beautiful now? The lips are thin and shrunken, but those are the lips which have kissed many a hot tear from the childish cheeks, and they are the sweetest lips in the world. The eye is dim, yet it glows with the soft radiance that can never fade. Ah, yes, she is a dear old mother. The sands of life are nearly run out, but, feeble as she is, she will go further and reach down lower for you than any other upon earth. You cannot enter a prison whose bars can keep her out! you cannot mount a scaffold too high for her to reach that she may kiss and bless you in evidence of her deathless love—when the world shall despise and forsake you; when it leaves you by the wayside to perish unnoticed, the dear old mother will gather you in her feeble arms and carry you home and tell you all your virtues until you almost forget your soul is disfigured by vices. Love her tenderly, and cheer the declining years with holy devotion. Temper at Home. I have peeped into quiet "parlors," where the carpet is clean and not old, and the furniture polished and bright; into "rooms" where the chairs are deal and the floor carpetless; into "kitchens," where the family live and the meals are cooked and eaten, and the boys and girls are as blithe as the sparrows in the thatch overhead; and I see that it is not so much wealth and learning, nor clothing, nor servants, nor toil, nor idleness, nor town, nor country, nor station, as tone and temper, that makes life joyous or miserable—that render home happy or wretched. And I see, too, that in town or country, good sense and God's grace make life what no teachers or accomplishments, or means, or society can make it—the opening stave of an everlasting psalm; the fair beginning of an endless existence, the goodly modest well-proportioned vestibule to a temple of God's building, that shall never decay, war old, or vanish away. John Hall, D. D. The Poison of Serpents. What a wonderful thing the venom of a serpent is! Chemical analysis fails to detect anything in it to account for its action. Water, a little albumen, some mineral salts and traces of mucus, epithelial cells, etc., lumped together as "extractive." Nothing more—nothing specific about it all. Tasteless, colorless and inodorous, it may be rubbed on the sound skin, or applied to the eye or taken into the mouth without any result whatever. The bites of different kinds of snakes produce different effects. Some act as a depressant to the vascular system, some as a powerful narcotic, some cause inflammation of the spine, while others seem to give rise to disorganization of the structural constituents of the blood. All are attended more or less with rigors, delirium, syncope, convulsions, paralysis and coma. Whether the poisons of any two or more species are identical I do not know—it seems probable, but in the five species with which I have experimented on myself, so far, I have found five distinct and separate venoms. I imagine, for instance, that the rattlesnake and copperhead will prove to possess the same, and perhaps several of the viperine snakes. I hope so. Some of these fluids are very unstable, and decompose if kept only a short time, or if their specific gravity is disturbed, while others retain their deadly properties even when dried. That of the common French viper (vipera aspis) may be diluted down till it forms a mere local irritant. No true antidote has ever been discovered for the bite of any snake, and the search for something which shall be an antidote against the bite of all appears to me to be irrational in the extreme, seeing that there are so many different poisons producing in many cases opposite effects. One might as well expect to find a general antidote for opium, belladonna, strychnine, arsenic and mercury poisoning. The action of ammonia upon which so much stress has been laid, is probably nothing more than that of a strong stimulant, certainly in its action in maintaining the fluidity of the blood is quite hypothetical, seeing that premature coagulation of the fibrine has never been actually demonstrated. Indeed, it is said that at the autopsy of the keeper, Girling, bitten many years ago by a cobra di capello at the gardens, the blood formed no clot at all, but was found permanently fluid in all the great vessels. BANK OF ANAHEIM. CAPITAL STOCK, $100,000.00. S. H. MOTT...PRESIDENT B. F. SEIBERT...CASHIER This Bank receives Deposits, Loans Money, Buys and Sells Exchange and Currency, makes Collections and transacts a General Banking Business. CORRESPONDENTS. FIRST NATIONAL BANK, Los Angeles. Farmers and Merchants Bank, Los Angeles. Pacific Bank, San Francisco. First National Bank New York. DRAPTS, LETTERS OF CREDIT OR POSTAL orders issued on Banks in the principal cities in all European countries. Tickets entitling the holder to passage from New York to the several ports of England. France or Germany, or from any port in those countries to New York, via the Hamburg American Packet Company, sold at regular rates. Return tickets at a reduction. Certificates, entitling the holder to passage on railroad from San Francisco to New York, or vice versa, issued at the established rate. Persons in Anaheim or vicinity desiring to send to any point in the countries named for any relative or friend can purchase tickets here and forward them to the proper person by mail. FIRST NATIONAL THE STEARNS ALFRED ROBINSON 120 Sutter St., San LAND FOR SALE IN LOTS TO SUIT. SUITABLE FOR THE figs, almonds, walnuts, apples, peaches, pears, alfalfa corn; many thousand pounds of NATURAL EVERGREEN PASTURES; daint at an average depth of six feet from the surface. On alfalfa can be obtained, and the more elevated portions can be irrigated of these lands are naturally moist, requiring only good cultivation. TERMS: One-fourth cash; balance in one, two or three years in showing these lands to parties seeking land, who are invited purchasing elsewhere. R. J. NORTHE SENIOR AND JUNIOR "BUCKEYE" LAWN MOWERS EASY TO WORK NOSELESS IN OPERA-TION, BEAUTIFUL IN APPEARANCE, LIGHT STRONG AND DURABLE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF Los Angeles. PRESIDENT: J. E. Hollenbeck. CASHIER: E. F. Spence. B. DREYFUS & CO. Growers and Dealers in California Wines and Grape Brandy. COOPERAGE A LARGE QUANTITY OF BARRELS, HALF BARRELS, 10 Gallon and 5 Gallon Kegs SENIOR AND JUNIOR "BUCKEYE" LAWN MOWERS EASY TO WORK, NOISELESS IN OPERATION, BEAUTIFUL IN APPEARANCE, LIGHT, STRONG, AND DURABLE. They Stand Ahead of all Competitors! Strictly First-class in every respect. Fully Warranted. Send for Descriptive Circular. MAST, FOOS & CO., MANUFACTURERS, SPRINGFIELD, OHIO. STATEMENT OF THE CONDITION OF THE Bank of Anaheim, At the close of Business ON THURSDAY, JUNE 30th, 1881. ASSETS: Cash on hand... $7,554 03 Bills receivable... 39,101 41 Miscellaneous Stocks... 22,002 00 Furniture and Fixtures... 3,500 00 Other Assets... 1,469 81 Real Estate taken for debt... 10,347 21 LIABILITIES: Capital paid in Coin... $20,000 00 Surplus—Reserve fund... 4,000 00 Due depositors... 5,126 18 Due Banks and Bankers... 128 02 State of California. County of Los Angeles. I. S. H. Mott, and I. B. F. Seibert, the President and Cashier of the Bank of Anaheim, being duly sworn, do each depose and say that the above statement is true as we each verily believe. S. H. MOTT, President. B. F. SEIBERT, Cashier. Subscribed and sworn to before me, this 18th day of July, A. D. 1881. G. B. SHAFFER, Notary Public. STATEMENT OF THE... Bank of Anaheim, Of the amount of Capital paid up in Gold Coin. Capital paid up in Gold Coin... $20,000 00 State of California. County of Los Angeles. I. S. H. Mott, and I. B. F. Seibert the President and Cashier of the Bank of Anaheim, being duly sworn, do each depose and say that the above statement is true as we each verily believe. S. H. MOTT, President. B. F. SEIBERT, Cashier. Subscribed and sworn to before me, this 18th day of July, A. D. 1881. G. B. SHAFFER, Notary Public. WASHINGTON Meat Market! CENTRE STREET, ANAHEIM, C. E. LEONARD, Proprietor. REV. THOMAS K. BEECHER says that the work of women is not properly appreciated by men until they have camped out and tried to wash and mend their own clothing, cook and clean up after meals. The anti-polygamy plank of the platform adopted by the Iowa Republicans was inserted through the influence of some 10,000 anti-polygamy Mormons who abide in the southwestern part of that State. They hold the original tenets of the Mormon Church, but are strongly opposed to the favorite institution of the church as it is conducted at Salt Lake. A Maryland farmer claims to have picked 307½ bushels of peas from 3½ acres of land during the past season. HOSTETTER'S CELEBRATED STOMACH BITTERS Makarina in an Unseen Vaporous Poison, spreading disease and death in many localities, for which quinine is no genuine antidote, but for the effects of which Hostetter's Stomach Bitterns is not only a thorough remedy but a reliable preventive. To this last there is an overwhelming array of test-many, extending over a period of thirty years. All disorders of the liver, stomach and bowels are also compared by the Miters. For sale by all Druggists and Dealers generally. Broadway, New York. COOPERAGE A LARGE QUANTITY OF BARRELS, HALF BARRELS, 10 Gallon and 5 Gallon Kegs For Sale Cheap. Apply to B. DREYFUS & CO., Anaheim 1881. Harper's Bazar. Illustrated. This popular periodical is preeminently a journal for the household. Every Number furnishes the latest information in regard to Fashions in dress and ornament, the newest and most approved patterns with descriptive articles derived from authentic and original sources; while its stories, poems and essays on social and domestic topics, give variety to its columns. Harper's Periodicals. HARPER'S BAZAE, One Year.....$4 00 HARPER'S MAGAZINE, One Year.....4 00 HARPER'S WEEKLY, One Year.....4 00 The THREE above publications, One Year.....10 00 Any TWO above named, One Year.....7 00 HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE, One Year.....1 50 Postage free to all subscribers in the United States or Canada. The Volumes of the Bazar begin with the first number for January of each year. When no time is mentioned, it will be understood that the subscriber wishes to commence with the number next after the receipt of order. The last eleven annual volumes of Harper's Bazar, in next cloth binding, will be sent by mail, postage paid, or by express, free of expenses (provided the freight does not exceed one dollar per volume) for $7 60 each. Cloth cases for each volume, suitable for binding, will be sent by mail, postpaid, on receipt of $1 00 each. Remittances should be made by Post-Office Money Order or draft, to avoid chance of loss. Newspapers are not to copy this advertisement without the express order of Harper & Bazar. Address HARPER & BROTHERS, New York WASHINGTON Meat Market! CENTRE STREET, ANAHEIM, C. E. LEONARD, Proprietor. THE PATRONAGE OF THE PEOPLE OF ANAHEIM and vicinity is respectfully solicited. SPECIAL NOTICES. What Eminent St. Louis Physicians Say. PREVENTIVE OF MALaria.—Colden's Liberty's Liquid Extract of Beep and Tonic Invisalignator is a very agreeable article of diet, and particularly useful when tonies are required, being tolerated when other forms of animal food are rejected. In Diphtheria, Ague, Malaria, Typhoid Fevers and every depressing disease its use will be attended with great advantage. We have prescribed it with excellent success. J. H. Leslie, M.D.; G. P. Copi., M.D.; S. B. Parsons, M.D.; R. A. Vanghan, M.D.; Dra. S.L. and J. C. Niedelst; Willham Porter, M.D., and many others. (Remember the name, Colden's—take no other.) Of druggists generally. To Country Belles. Vells and sunshades cannot prevent the summer sun from embrowning your complexions; but "Gloss's Sulphur Soap" will speedily restore them if duly applied according to directions. The great charm of this article is that nobody would suspect the effect it produces to be artificial. Nothing can be more natural than the soft, velvet texture it imparts to the skin. "C.M. Griffenox, Proprietor," is printed on each packet, without which none is genuine. Sold by druggists and fancy goods dealers. HILL'S HAIR AND WHISKER DYE, black or brown, 50c. Church-Yard Coughs Are evils of the past. Any Cough, however violent, can be cured by HILL'S HAIR OR HORSEHOUND AND TAP. Sold by druggists. PIKE'S TOOTHACHS Drops cure in one minute. HARCERGINV. "Dr. Pierce's Electric Bell" is the fastest best. Wimmed gummies. Superior to all others. Prima loco: $25 For RUPTURE using "Dr. Pierce's Magnetic Elastic Trunk." Hundred Crowd: PIKE'S & SOFT. Prairie: THE SECRET STREET, San Francisco, Cal. THIS PAPER may be found on file at OCLC Advertising Bureau (10 Spruce St.), where advertising contracts may be made for $18 NEW YORK. STEARNS RANCHOS." RED ROBINSON, TRUSTEE 20 Sutter St., San Francisco. DIRECTORY. SOCIETY MEETINGS. Anaheim Lodge No. 85, A. O. U. W. Meeting every Saturday night. Richard Melrose, Master Workman. T. S. Grimshaw, Recorder Anaheim Lodge No. 207, F. and A. M. Meeting the Monday preceding the full moon in each month. W. M. McFadden, Worshipful Master D. R. Miles, Secretary. Anaheim Lodge No. 109, I. O. O. P. Meeting every Tuesday evening. John P. Zeyn, Noble Grand, J. Gooch, Secretary. Orpheus Lodge No. 237, I. O.O.P. Meeting every Thursday evening. H.A.Boenge, N.G. R. Menzel, Secretary. Orion Encampment, No. 54, I. O. O. P. Regular meetings on the first and third Fridays in each month. W. J. Hill, C. P. F. A. Korn, Scribe. Anaheim Fire Company No. 1. H. A. Steugh, Foreman, N. A. Bittner, Secretary. Regular meetings on the last Saturday in each month. Anaheim Viticultural and Horticultural Society. Theo. Reiser, President; Richard Melrose, Secretary. Regular meetings on the Wednesday of or preceding the full moon in each month, at 7:30 p.m. Anaheim Land League. Regular meetings at Grange Hall on the first Sunday in each month at 2 o'clock p.m. President, Edw'd Evey. Secretary, J. J. Bodkin. St. Michael's Church, Rev. J. A. Emery, Missionary. Services at 11 o'clock every Sunday morning. Sunday school at 10 a.m. Evening service on the first and third Sundays in every month at 8 o'clock. Evangelical Association-German. Preaching on the first and third Sundays in each month at 3 o'clock p.m., at the Presbyterian Church. Sunday school every Sunday at 2 o'clock p.m. All are invited. R. Staehli, Pastor. Ladies' Aid Society. Meetings on first Wednesday of each month at 2 p.m.m at residence of Mrs. Dreytus. Mrs. B. Dreyfus, President; Mrs. J. A. Emery, Secretary. R. LUEDKE. Watch Maker and Jeweler Centre Street, Anaheim. THE "BUCKEYE" JUNIOR LAWN MOWER MANUFACTURED BY MAST FOOS & GO. SPRINGFIELD.O. IOR EYE" OWERS DISELESS IN OPERAIN APPEARANCE, AND DURABLE THE BUCKKEYE JUNIOR LAWN MOWER MANUFACTURED BY MAST FOOS & CO. SPRINGFIELD, O. MENTION OF THE Anaheim, JUNE 30th, 1881. ENTIES. $20,000 00 4,000 00 54,740 26 5,126 18 128 02 $23,004 46 Seibert, the President Anaheim, being duly sworn that the above statement beve. H. MOTT, President. F. SEIBERT, Cashier. before me, this 8th day of G. B. SHAFFER. Notary Public. MENTION OF THE Anaheim, ALPHA Pointe up in Gold Coin. $20,000 00 Seibert the President and heim, being duly sworn, do the above statement is H. MOTT, President. F. SEIBERT, Cashier. before me, this 8th day of G. B. SHAFFER. Notary Public. NGTON Market! ET, ANAHEIM, RD, Proprietor. King of the Blood Is not a "cure-all" it is a blood-purifier and tonic. Impurity of blood poisons the system, deranges the circulation, and thus induces many disorders known by different names to distinguish them according to effects, but being really branches or phases of that great generic disorder. Impurity of Blood. Such are Dyspnea, Billiomens, Liver Complaint, Constipation, Nervous Disorders, Headache, Backache, General Weakness, Heart Disease, Dropay, Kidney Disease, Piles, Rheumatism, Coltarm, Sorafida, Skin Disorder, Pumps, Ulcers, Swellings, etc., King of the Blood prevents and curse these by attacking the cause. Impurity of the Blood. Chemists and physicians agree in calling it "the most genuine and efficient preparation for the purpose." Sold by Druggists. I per bottle. See testimonial directions, etc., in pamphlet. ("Treatise on Diseases of the Blood," wrapped around each bottle. D. HANSOM, SON & CO., Props., Buffalo, N.Y. TRASK'S Magnetic Ointment. WARRANTED To cure Piles and Chafing Sores. Also, Sore Ryes, Sore Throat, Karache, Bruises, Burns, Cuts, Corns, Skin Disorders, Sorefations and all Sores. Its effect in all Kidney, Liver, Bowel and Lung Diseases, Rheumatism, Backache, Lameness, Sprains, and Swellings is regarded by the best physicians as simply wonderful. For sale by druggists. Price 25 and 40 cents. D. Hansom, Son & Co., Sole Propia., Buffalo, N.Y. G. H. KELLOGG. General Commission Merchant. R. LUEDKE. Watch Maker and Jeweler Centre Street, Anaheim. EVERY DESCRIPTION OF WATCHES, CLOCKS and Jewelry carefully repaired and warranted A fine assortment of ELGIN WATCHES. JEWELRY AND CLOCKS ALWAYS ON HAND. NULL VAPOR COOK STOVE. The only Vapor Cook Stove that has stood the test of years, and given entire and perfect satisfaction. 50,000 Now in use, and growing in favor wherever used. Those who have them will not do without them. The Most Simple The Most Durable The Most Economical No Sweltering Heat No Fires to Build No Ashes to Remove No Fuel to Carry No Smoke No Odor. FOR SUMMER USE THEY ARE INDISPENSABLE. Does every description of cooking or other work heretofore done by the ordinary cooking stove or range, with ease and perfect comfort. Washing, ironing, baking, broiling, fruit-canning, etc., without the insufferable heat of the old-fashioned cook stove, and always ready. Our "Patent Automatic Safety Can" renders the use of our stoves "perfectly safe" in the hands of the most careless or inexperienced. Send for full descriptive circular and price list. Special inducements to agents in unoccupied territory.-Address, "NULL VAPOR STOVE COMPANY." Cleveland, Ohio. USE DURE TRASK'S Magnetic Ointment, WARRANTED To cure Piles and Chafing Sore. Also, Sore Eyes, Sore Throat, Kearache, Bruises, Burns, Cuts, Corps, Skin Disorders, Sorefulness and all Sores. Its effect in all Kidney, Liver, Bowel and Lung Diseases, Rheumatism, Backache, Lameness, Sprains, and Swellings is regarded by the best physicians as simply wonderful. For sale by druggists. Price 25 and 40 cents. D. Ransom, Sen & Co., Sole Proprietor. G. H. KELLOGG. General Commission Merchant, —AND DEALER IN— Provisions and Groceries. Especial attention paid to Country Orders. Consignments Solicited. 425 Clay Street San Francisco. ANAHEIM Lighter Company! ANAHEIM LANDING. THIS COMPANY IS NOW PREPARED TO RECEIVE AND DELIVER freight at GREATLY REDUCED PRICES And the patronage of the public is solicited. Having unequaled facilities for the storage of grain, we offer special inducements in the matter of rates to those who desire to store their grain. All inquiries will be promptly answered upon application in person or by letter to GEORGE HULL, Agent. Preston's Express! —CARRYING— Passengers & Parcels. LEAVES WESTMINSTER FOR LOS ANGELES, via Fulton's Walk, every Friday at 10 A.M. Returning, will leave Los Angeles on Saturdays at 10 A.M. Orders in Los Angeles can be left at the Grange Store or as Lambourn & Turner's Store. J. E. PRESTON, PROPRIETOR. USE PURE TINTED GLOSS PAINT DON'T make experiments on your buildings with untreated and unreliable articles at your expense. DON'T PAY for water and benzine $1.50 to $2.00 per gallon. DO BUY the Lucas reliable and guaranteed tinted gloss PAINTS. Circulars and Sample Cards of Paint mailed on application. JOHN LUCAS & CO. 141 NORTH FOURTH STREET, Philadelphia CHEAPEST BOOKS Shakespeare's Complete Works handedly bound in dust. Black and gold by 10 cents. The History of English Literature 1 hundred 100 volume, ditho, only 10 cents. Other books equally fair. But describes entropia from MANHATTAN BOOK CO. P.O. Box 6789. ANTT SELL PIANOS Lancaster in the WestMiddle peninsula, premier, Thursday, 20:00 lay and 20: midnight Tuesday noon in June, June and July 6th Quarter, T. M. ARRIBELL & CO. Cor. Martin & Powell, G. F., Cali