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anaheim-gazette 1883-12-01

1883-12-01 · Anaheim Gazette · page 4 of 4 · OCR glm-ocr
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WEEKLY GAZETTE. Published every Saturday. Richard Melrose, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: One Year $2.00 Six months 1.25 Three months 75 Office: In Conrad's Brick Building, Los Angeles Street, Anaheim. TRANSIENT ADVERTISING: SPACE 1 week 2 weeks 3 weeks 4 weeks A legal advertisement must be paid for before affidavit 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. A NEW TREATMENT FOR THE DEAD. The question of cemetery interests the public more and more, and in view of its hygienic relations has been discussed by scientific societies, legislatures and municipalities. M. Ch. Deperais announces in the Cosmos les Mondes a new method of treating corpses by which they are rendered innocuous. To-day a feeling generally prevails that the cemeteries are centers of infection for the diffusion of epidemic maladies, and that their neighborhood is a menace by reason of their emanations and their influence upon percolating waters. This hurtful influence has long been recognized. In India the native yet expose their dead upon the banks of the Ganges or at the summit of the Towers of Silence. They become a prey in both instances to rapacious animals, and become partially harmless through their destruction. The Jews, Etruscans, Greeks and Romans had recourse to embalmment or incineration. Aphorisms of Oliver Wendell Holmes. Memory is a net. One finds it full of fish when he takes it from the brook, but a dozen miles of water have run through it without sticking. God bless all good women. To their soft hands and pitying hearts we must all come at last. Put not your trust in money, but put your money in trust. When a strong brain is weighed with a true heart it seems to be like balancing a bubble against a wedge of gold. Controversy equalizes fools and wise men in the same way—and the fools know it. If the sense of the ridiculous is one side of an irrepressible nature, it is very well, but if that is all there is in a man he had better have been an ape and stood at the head of his profession at once. Travelers change their guineas—not their characters. There are three little wicks to the lamp of a man's life—brain, blood and breath. Press the brain a little, its light goes out followed by both the others. Stop the heart a minute and out go all three of the wicks. Choke the air out of the lungs and presently the fluid ceases to supply the other centers of flame, and all is soon stagnation, cold and darkness. There are a good many real miseries in life that we cannot help smiling at, but they are the smiles that make wrinkles and not dimples. We must have a weak spot or two in a character before we can love it much. People that do not laugh or cry, or take more of anything than is good for them, or use anything but dictionary words, are admirable subjects for biographers. But we don't care most for those fine pattern flowers that press best in the herbarium. Faith always implies disbelief of a lesser fact in favor of a greater. I would have a woman as true as death. At the first real lie, which works from the heart outward, she should be tenderly chloroformed into a better world, where she can have an angel for a governess and feed on strange fruits, which will make her all over again, even to her bones and her marrow. Why can't somebody give us a list of things... To-day a feeling generally prevails that the cemeteries are centers of infection for the diffusion of epidemic maladies, and that their neighborhood is a menace by reason of their emanations and their influence upon percolating waters. This hurtful influence has long been recognized. In India the native yet expose their dead upon the banks of the Ganges or at the summit of the Towers of Silence. They become a prey in both instances to rapacious animals, and become partially harmless through their destruction. The Jews, Etruscans, Greeks and Romans had recourse to embalmment or incineration. Cremation fully satisfies the requirements of modern sanitation. The embalmment as practiced today demands cares and expenses which are never applied, and it has been shown that the chemical bodies employed are insufficient to destroy all the sorts of germs, spores, bacteria, etc., which arise. It only momentarily protects the body. The process of embalmment among the Egyptians was long and complicated. It was based upon the use of reagents and upon drying in the air or in furnaces. Cremation as at present executed is completely satisfactory; every atom of noxious gas even being consumed. Nevertheless, the feelings of most people are opposed to it, and there are practical difficulties connected with it not always easily overcome. It seems therefore necessary to find a new method which, while it guarantees the destruction of the causes of infection concoctes our customs and desires and is reasonable in its expense. M. Deperais has explained a process based on the fact or statement that at 100 deg. Cent. these pernicious germs are destroyed. He utilizes the well-known fact that saline solutions do not boil until after the boiling point of water (100 deg. Cent.) 212 deg. F.) has been passed. The salt he employs is the chloride of calcium, on account of its cheapness, the ease of its management, and because it is antiseptic and tanning in its effects. Plunging a corpse into such a solution at 47 deg. Banne and slowly raising the temperature of the bath, it is evident that when the temperature passes 100 deg. Cent. the water of the flesh and tissues will evaporate. Continuing the heat, the body contracts and the chloride of calcium impregnates it. The prolonged bath kills the disease spores, and the hardening and antiseptic properties of the salt partially embalm the body; as, however, chloride of calcium is deliquescent, the body would not dry on removal from the bath. It is removed by immersion in a bath of sulphate of soda, by which the lime salt remaining in the body and incrusting all its fibers becomes the sulphate of lime, and the chloride of sodium is free in the bath. Then the body is dried either in the open air or in an oven. How They Do It. An exchange thus states a hypothetical case, showing how rich men may (and if they may, how, of course, they will) escape taxation. It is most laughable to read the articles in the New York papers about the "blue blood" aristocracy, and the air they put on over those who have made money by speculation or in manufacturing. The recent engagement of a son of Jay Gould to a daughter of one of the Astors has caused a new outbreak, the aristocracy which has "blood" to back it claiming that the girl is lowering herself by marrying a man whose money has been made in speculation, and who has not always been rich. The Astors are considered the leaders of blooded aristocracy, and the Goulds are considered as leaders of shoddy, whose money has not been handed down. To a common, ordinary ninespot, it looks queer to see the descendants of a man who traded in bad smelling, raw furs, by which the money was accumulated, putting on style over a young fellow whose money was made in buying and selling nice clean, sweet-smelling railroad stocks. If you look back to the time Jay Gould, the father of the coming bridegroom, was working in a tannery, or peddling tinware, you find an Astor, a blue-blooded Astor, spearing muskrats through a hole in the ice, skinning the game speared, and selling the pelt to make a sealskin cloak. If you are ashamed of Gould as a surveyor, how do you feel about an Astor going about in a canoe, through marshes, taking dead muskrats and minks from steel traps set the night before, and baited with liver? This girl who feels that she is lowering herself by marrying a man who made money by building and buying and wrecking railroads, would probably blush to see a picture of one of her ancestors, dressed in a buckskin shirt and pants, packing green hides from Green Bay to Milwaukee, and trading them for whisky and salt pork, two rations of whisky to one of pork. By investing skins in real estate on Manhattan Island the Astors got their wealth, but where did they get the "blood" we read about? The same blood is landed at Castle Garden every day from emigrant ships. All the emigrant of to-day has to do is to take his short-waisted coat and high-water pants away out west and catch rats, and make a fortune, and he can go back to New York and put on style over the star anything but dictionary words, are admirable subjects for biographers. But we don't care most for those fine pattern flowers that press best in herbarium. Faith always implies disbelief of a lesser fact in favor of a greater. I would have a woman as true as death. At the first real lie, which works from the heart outward, she should be tenderly chloroformed into a better world, where she can have an angel for a governess and feed on strange fruits, which will make her all over again, even to her bones and her marrow. Why somebody gives us a list of things which everybody thinks and nobody says, and another list of things that everybody says and nobody thinks? THE BLUE BLOOD MARRIAGE It is most laughable to read the articles in the New York papers about the "blue blood" aristocracy, and the air they put on over those who have made money by speculation or in manufacturing. The recent engagement of a son of Jay Gould to a daughter of one of the Astors has caused a new outbreak, the aristocracy which has "blood" to back it claiming that the girl is lowering herself by marrying a man whose money has been made in speculation, and who has not always been rich. The Astors are considered the leaders of blooded aristocracy, and the Goulds are considered as leaders of shoddy, whose money has not been handed down. To a common, ordinary ninespot, it looks queer to see the descendants of a man who traded in bad smelling, raw furs, by which the money was accumulated, putting on style over a young fellow whose money was made in buying and selling nice clean, sweet-smelling railroad stocks. If you look back to the time Jay Gould, the father of the coming bridegroom, was working in a tannery, or peddling tinware, you find an Astor, a blue-blooded Astor, spearing muskrats through a hole in the ice, skinning the game speared, and selling the pelt to make a sealskin cloak. If you are ashamed of Gould as a surveyor, how do you feel about an Astor going about in a canoe, through marshes, taking dead muskrats and minks from steel traps set the night before, and baited with liver? This girl who feels that she is lowering herself by marrying a man who made money by building and buying and wrecking railroads, would probably blush to see a picture of one of her ancestors, dressed in a buckskin shirt and pants, packing green hides from Green Bay to Milwaukee, and trading them for whisky and salt pork, two rations of whisky to one of pork. By investing skins in real estate on Manhattan Island the Astors got their wealth, but where did they get the "blood" we read about? The same blood is landed at Castle Garden every day from emigrant ships. All the emigrant of to-day has to do is to take his short-waisted coat and high-water pants away out west and catch rats, and make a fortune, and he can go back to New York and put on style over the star anything but dictionary words, are admirable subjects for biographers. But we don't care most for those fine pattern flowers that press best in herbarium. FAITH IS HERERY GIVEN NOTICE IS HERERY GIVEN HOTEL AT THE BOARD OF LISTER BAY OF DEATH AND WILL BE DUTY ABOVE FISH AND SALT PACKING AND UNTIL BEFORE IT IS DONE TO PAY THE DELINquent ASSEMBLY COSTS OF ADVERTISING AND EXPENSE BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF LISTER ANAHEIM NOV 34 1883 NOTE TAKEN UP ON LAS LOEWS BERTH 58 1883 I TWO YEARS EIGHT HOURS EAST EIGHT MONTHS OLD HEIFER AND UNDER BIT OUT OF RIGHT EAST TWO YEAR OLD TAILER RED BIT RIGHT EAST EIGHT MONTHS OLD HEIFER AND UNDER BIT OUT OF RIGHT EAST TWO YEAR OLD TAILER RED MORE RIGHT EAST ONE YEAR OLD HEIFER RED IN BOTH EARS EIGHT MONTHS OLD HEIFER RED IN BOTH EARS A E.E WHITE. BLACKSMITH - AND WESTERN COURSE WEEKS COUNTY. FARMERS' DITCH NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF ASSOCIATION NOTICE OF 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SDDLGNgUEsor SDDLGNgUEsor SDDLGNgUEsor SDDLGNgUEsor SDDLGNgUEsor SDDLGNgUEsor SDDLGNgUEsor SDDLGNgUEsor How They Do It. An exchange thus states a hypothetical case, showing how rich men may (and if they may, how of course, they will) escape taxation: Mr. is worth half a million of dollars. He wishes to borrow of the bank ten thousand dollars. His note is good for that amount without any security. But the bank for sundry and divers reasons satisfactory to itself as well as to Mr. A., prefers to take a mortgage. Mr. A. has a piece of swamp land worth about one thousand dollars, and offers that for security. It is satisfactory to the bank and a lien is executed and recorded upon that property. The Assessor in taking the valuation of the county for the purpose of taxation, finds this mortgage. He knows the value of the land mortgaged will not exceed one thousand dollars, and consequently, assesses the ten thousand dollar note and mortgage at one thousand. Mr. A.'s land, which is mortgaged for more than it is worth, escapes taxation, and the bank which holds the obligation gets it valued at one thousand dollars. At the time of the maturity of the note the bank gets all its money, interest and principal, and by this dodge legitimate and honest taxpayers are compelled to pay an increased per cent. because the nine thousand dollars was permitted to escape paying its proportion of money towards supporting the government. Millions Given Away. Millions of bottles of Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds, have been given away as trial Bottles of the large size. This enormous outlay would be disastrous to the proprietors, were it not for the rare merits possessed by this wonderful medicine. Call at Higgins' Drug Store and get a trial bottle free, and try for yourself. It never fails to cure. Consul Charles Seymour, writing from the Consulate at Canton, China, says: "It is high time that the United States should carry on business in its own name. California sends about 100,000 gallons of wine a month, via the isthmus route, to France, where it is shipped to various countries in which American wine by its proper name would find little or no sale. California brandy, at the age of five years, if properly managed, is infinitely superior to the ordinary brands of European brandy, which is found to be generally adulterated to meet the demands for a genuine article. It is surprising that American brandy has not become a favorite article where purity is desired, and as to whiskies, the American favorite brands are so much superior to the Scotch and Irish whiskies that there is no reason why America should not export them to European and American consumers in Asia." It is seldom we speak editorially of a business man, but it is with pleasure that we write of Robert S. Ammen, the proprietor of the famous Ammen's Cough Syrup. Mr. Ammen is a thorough business man, and has reduced the advertising of his medicines to an exact science. He believes that his Cough Syrup is a public benefit, and advertises it in every county in the State, and extensively throughout the territories. He is one of the subantial business men of San Jose, and we recommend him to the newspaper fraternity as one of the most prompt paving advertisers in the country.—Editorial, Vanity Fair, San Francisco, June 17th, 1892. THE SUN. New York, 1884 About sixty million copies of The Sun have gone out of our establishment during the past twelve months. If you were to paste end to end all the columns of all The Sun printed and sold last year you would get a continuous strip of interesting information, common sense, wisdom, sound doctrine, and sane wit long enough to reach from Printing House square to the top of Mount Copernicus in the moon, then back to Printing House square, and then three-quarters of the way back to the moon again. But The Sun is written for the inhabitants of the earth, this same strip of intelligence would girdle the globe twenty-seven or twenty-eight times. If every buyer of a copy of The Sun during the past year has spent only one hour over it, and if his wife or his grandfather has spent another hour, this newspaper in 1882 has afforded the human race thirteen thousand years of steady reading, night and day. It is only by little calculations like these that you can form any idea of the circulation of the most popular American newspapers, or of its influence on the opinions and actions of American men and women. The Sun is, and will continue to be, a newspaper which tells the truth without fear of consequences, which gets at the facts no matter how much the process costs, which presents the news of all the world without waste of words, and in the most readable shape, which is working with all its heart for the cause of honest government, and which therefore believes that the Republican party must go, and must go this coming year of our Lord, 1884. If you know The Sun, you like it already, and you will read it with accustomed diligence and profit during what is sure to be the most interesting year in its history. If you do not yet know The Sun, it is high time to get into the sunshine. Terms to Mail Subscribers. The several editions of The Sun are sent by mail, postpaid, as follows: DAILY - 50 cents a month, $6 a year; with Sunday edition, $7. SUNDAY - Eight pages. This edition furnishes the current news of the world, special articles of exceptional interest to everybody, and literary reviews of new books of the highest merit. $1 a year. WEEKLY - $1 a year. Eight pages of the best matter of the daily issues; an Agricultural Department of unequalled value, special market reports, and literary scientific, and domestic intelligence make The Weekly Sun the newspaper for the farmer's household. To clubs of ten with $10 an extra copy free. Address: I W ENGLAND, Publisher, The Sun, N.Y. City. FARMERS' DITCH COMPANY. Principal place of business, Orangesthorpe, Los Angeles County, California. NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TO THE SHARE-holders of the Farmers' Dutch Company that at a meeting of the Board of Directors held on November 31, 1883, an assessment (No. 3) of one dollar (81.00) per share was levied upon the capital stock of each company; payable immediately to the Secretary at his residence in Anaheim, Los Angeles county. And it is further offered that any stock upon which said assessment comes updrawn on the 31 day of December, 1883 shall be deemed delinquent. LUMBER YARD PLANING, SAWING, AND MOULDING MILLS. Of Saxton & Cox, Anaheim. NEAR THE RAILROAD DEPOT All Varieties of Pine, Redwood,and Spruce LUMBER! Doors, Sashes, and Blinds, Grape Boxes, Fruit Boxes, Sea-Hives,and Fruit Dryers. Builders' Hardware and Nails Plain and Fancy SCROLL SAWING at Short Notice Anaheim Grist Mill! Grain, Feed, Meal, etc.,of all Varieties. CORN SHELLED AND SHIPPED. ANAHEIM STORAGE WAREHOUSE. GRAIN, WOOL, AND GENERAL MERCHANDISE TAKEN ON STORAGE. RAIN SACKS and TWINE constantly on hand CONSIGNMENTS SOLICITED Of all kinds of PRODUCE. Advances made, MER HANDISE forwarded and sold on Commission i-best Markets. BANK OF ANAHEIM. CAPITAL STOCK, $100,000.00. "THE STEARNST ALFRED ROBINS 120 Sutter St., Sa Land for Sale in SUITABLE FOR THE Oranges,Lemons,Limes,Fiqs,Almonds, Alfalfa,Corn,Rye,Barley,Flo ALSO,MANY-THOUSAN Natural Evergreen Pastures, GOOD WATER is abundant at an average On almost every acre of this land Flo obtained,and the more elevated portions e Irrigated by the water of th Most of these lands are naturally Moist to produce crops. TERMS:- One-fourth cash; balance in one,two or three yean on showing these lands to parties seeking land who are in to purchasing elsewhere. This space res Wheeler & Manufacturing E.C.GLIDDE 33 North Main Street(Ponet Block). FARMERS' DITCH COMPANY. Principal place of business, Grangehorpe, Los Angeles County, California. NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TO THE SHARE-holders of the Farmers' Ditch Company that at a meeting of the Board of Directors held on November 10, 1883, an assessment of $250,000.50 of one dollar (9.60) per share was levied upon the capital stock of each company, payable immediately to the Secretary at his residence in Anaheim, Los Angeles county. And it is further ordered that any stock upon which said assessment can be paid on the 21 day of December, 1883, shall be deemed delinquent, and will be duly averted for sale at public auction, and unless payment shall have been made before will be sold on. The 29th day at December, 1883, to pay the delinquent assessments, together with costs of advertising and expenses of sale. By order of the Board of Directors C.H.ZEYN, Secretary Anaheim, Nov. 34, 1883. NOTICE. TAKEN UP ON LAS LOSAS MESA, NOVEMBER 5th, 1883. I two-year old heifer, red and white, slit in both ears, brand on right hip. I eight months old heifer, red and white, upper and under his out of right ear, slope off left ear. I two-year old heifer, red crop off left ear, under bit right ear. Has ten calf. I eight months old heifer, red and white, slit in both ears. I eight months old heifer, red and white, quarter fork on both ears. I monte-colored Jenny. I hay yearling horse colt, white spot on forehead. I hay mare, white spot on forehead, brand on left thigh. I gray horse with bell on neck. I gray horse with rope on neck. I worel horse, white face, white right hind leg. I bay colt, stud, branded E.5. I mare colt, bay color, about two years old, white spot between eyes, white spot on nose, two hind feet white. The above will be delivered to the respective owners upon their proing property and paying all charges. R.J.NORTHAM, Anaheim, or SAMUEL HALL, Rancho Las Bolsas Chica, ALL FOR NOTHING. Why the Doctor was Disgusted, and what Might have been Been done without Him. "Well, wife," said Dr. E., as he entered his house, which was situated in a coyy village in Central New York. "I have got back from a long and dreary ride away down among the mountains, and all to no purpose whatever. The messenger said the man wouldn't live till morning, when the fact is he had only an ordinary attack of cold. If the simple-tons had only had sense enough to put a BENSON'S CAPCINE POROUS PLASTER or his stomach he would have been all right in an hour or two. But some folks are slow to learn." added the old physician, swallowing the cap of steaming tea which his wife had just poured for him. Doctor E.—was right yet people do learn, even though slowly. The rapid rise easing use of Benson's plaster proves this beyond question, and the good doctors are certain to be saved much of their needless tool. In all diseases capable of being affected by a plaster bison's acts efficiently and at once. The genuine have the word CAPCINE cut in the center. Price 25 cents. Seabury & Johnson, Chemists, New York. A. E. WHITE. E. A. WHITE BLACKSMITHING — AND — CONSIGNMENTS SOLICITED Of all kinds of PRODUCE. Advances made, MER HANDISE forwarded and sold on Commission i-best Markets. BANK OF ANAHEIM. CAPITAL STOCK, $100,000.00. PLEZ JAMES...President G. B. SHAFFER...Secretary BOARD OF DIRECTORS: E. F. SPENCE, W. H. MABURY, W. K. JAMES, S. H. MOTT, P. JAMES. 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'AX Merchants Bank, Los Angeles Pacific Bank. San Francisco First National Bank New York. DRAFTS, LETTERS OF CREDIT OR POSTA-orders issued on Banks in the principal cities in 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 old 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 BANK OF — STEAMERS LEAVE SAN FRANCISCO For Wrangle, Sitka and Harmsburg, Alaska; and Napanoce and New Westminster, B.C.; as advertised in San Francisco newspapers. For Victoria, Port Townsend, Seattle, Tacoma; Stellaceon and Olympia on Nov. 14th, 20th, 29th Dec. 14th, 22d, 29th at noon. For Astoria and Portland; every Wednesday and Saturday. For Eireka, Arrata and II Boston; every Wednesday For Point Arena, Cuffy's Cove;attle River; Whitesboro; Mendocino City and Norwood Monday. SOUTHERN ROUTES TIME TABLE FOR NOVEMBER FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF Los Angeles. PRESIDENT: E. F. Spence. CASHIER: W. Lacv. MOORE'S REMEDY FOR POISON OAK And other skin diseases. The only PREVENTATIVE And certain cure. Sold by all druggists. REDINGTON & CO, General Agents, San Francisco. PASTURAGE. AN UNLIMITED QUANTITY OF HORSES taken on parturage at the alfalfa ranch of J.W. Bixby in Santa Ana Canyon. Terms—$2 50 per month. For further information apply to P. DAVIS & BRO., Anaheim. SOUTHERN ROUTES TIME TABLE FOR NOVEMBER STEAMERS LOS ANGELES Nov. 2 Nov. 4 Nov. 5 Nov. 8 ANCON ... 5 ... 7 ... 9 ... 11 EUREKA ... 7 ... 9 ... 10 ... 13 ORIZABA ... 10 ... 12 ... 14 ... 16 LOS ANGELES ... 12 ... 14 ... 15 ... 18 ANCON ... 15 ... 17 ... 19 ... 21 EUREKA ... 17 ... 19 ... 20 ... 23 ORIZABA ... 20 ... 22 ... 24 ... 26 LOS ANGELES ... 22 ... 24 ... 25 ... 28 ANCON ... 25 ... 27 ... 29 Dec. 1 EUREKA ... 27 ... 29 Dec. 3 ORIZABA ... 30 Dec. 2 Dec. 4 ..... 6 Steamers Orizaba and Ancon go through to San Diego, leaving San Pedro on the dates of their arrivals from San Francisco. The Orizaba and Ancon call at Santa Barbara and Port Harford (San Luis Obispo) only on the route to and from San Francisco. The Eureka and Los Angeles call at San Buenaventura, Santa Barbara, Gaviotta, Port Harford, Cayucos, San Simeon, Monterey and Santa Cruz. Cars to connect with mers from San Pedro leave the S. P. R. P. depot, Los Angeles, at 10 o'clock A.M. railroad time. RATES OF FARE FROM LOS ANGELES. CARIBIN, STEERAGE To San Francisco, Monterey or Santa Cruz ... $15.00 $10.00 To San Simonson ... 13.00 10.00 To Caviness ... 13.00 10.00 To Port Harford ... 12.00 9.00 To Gaviota ... 10.00 8.00 To Santa Barbara ... 8.00 6.00 To San Buenaventura ... 7.00 5.00 To San Diego ... 6.00 5.00 To San Diego and return ... 11.00 Plans of steamers' cabins at agent's office, where berths may be secured. For Newport Landing, via Santa Cruz, etc., freight steamers leave San Francisco about every two weeks as tides serve on the Newport bar. The Company reserve the right to change the steamers, or their days of sailing. For passage or freight; as above, or for Ticket to and from All Important Points in Europe, OR FOR EXCHANGE ON EUROPE Apply to H. McLELLAN, Agent. OFFICE- No. 8 Commercial Street, Los Angeles. STEARNS RANCHOS." FRED ROBINSON, TRUSTEE 120 Sutter St., San Francisco. For Sale in Lots to suit. SUITABLE FOR THE CULTURE OF Limes, Figs, Almonds, Walnuts, Apples, Peaches, Pears, Corn, Rye, Barley, Flax, Ramie, Cotton, Etc. ALSO, MANY THOUSAND ACRES OF Green Pastures, suitable for Dairying. This abundant at an average depth of six feet from the surface. Every acre of this land Flowing Artesian Wells can be more elevated portions can be by the water of the Santa Ana River. Islands are naturally Moist, requiring only good cultivation R. LUEDKE. Watch Maker and Jeweler Centre Street, Anselm. EVERY DESCRIPTION OF WATCHES, CLOCKS AND JEWELRY carefully repaired and warranted A fine assortment of Elgin and Waltham Watches. JEWELRY AND CLOCKS ALWAYS ON HAND 1884. Harper's Weekly. ILLUSTRATED. Harper's Weekly stands at the head of American illustrated weekly journals. It is unprized position in politics, its admirable illustrations, its curiously clean serials, short stories, sketches and poems, contributed by the foremost artists and authors of the day. It carries instruction and entertainment to those words of American men. It will always be the aim of the publishers to make Harper's Weekly the most popular and attractive family newspaper in the world, and, in the presence of this design, to present a constant improvement in all those features which have gained for it the confidence, sympathy, and support of the a ge army of readers. HARPER'S PERIODICALS. Per Year: HARPER'S WEEKLY.....84 00 HARPER'S MAGAZINE.....4 00 HARPER'S BAZAR.....4 00 HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE.....1 50 HARPER'S FRANKLIN SQUARE LIBRARY, One Year (52 Numbers).....10 00 Postage Free to all subscribers in the United States or Canada. The volumes of the Weekly 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 Four Annual Volumes of Harper's Weekly, in neat cloth binding, will be sent by mail, postage paid, or by express, free of expense (provided the freight does not exceed one dollar per volume), for $7.00 per volume. Wheeler & Wilson Manufacturing Company. GLIDDEN, Agent, Street (Ponet Block), LOS ANGELES, CAL. CLARK JOHNSON'S Indian Blood Syrup cares all diseases of the Stomach, Liver, Bowels, Kidneys, Skin and Blood. Millions testify to its efficacy in healing the above named diseases, and pronounce it to be the BEST REMEDY KNOWN TO MAN. Guaranteed to cure Dyspepsia. AGENTS WANTED. 7 W. 3d St, New York City. Druggists sell it. SACRAMENTO CITY, CAL. troubled with Dyspepsia and Kidney Disease for years and used allied doctors, but found no relief until I tried your Indian Blood Syrup perfect cure. Miss. H. Wittriffe January City Stables, Center Street (Opposite Kreeger's Block ANAHEIM. L. F. Lewis -- Proprieto: THE STABLES ARE THE BEST VENTILATE. It is most commensal in the Town, and special to children will be supplied when required. The charge in all cases will be reasonable. Single and Double Teams Furnished at short notice and careful drivers family with the country supplied when required. D. E. MILES, Warehouseman and Commission Merchant. Highest Cash Price Paid for Wheat, Barley, Corn, Rye, Potatoes, And all Country Produce. Cash advances made on all consignments of Grain and Wool. Sacks and Twine At lowest market prices. Office opposite Railroad Depot, Anaheim, Cal. Certificate of Coppartnership. STATE OF CALIFORNIA Harper's Magazine 4 00 Harper's BAZAR 4 00 Harper's Young People 1 50 Harper's Franklin Square Library, One Year (32 Numbers) 10 00 Postage Free to all subscribers in the United States or Canada. The volumes of the Weekly 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 Four Annual Volumes of Harper's Weekly, in next cloth binding, will be sent by mail, postage paid, or by express, free of expense (provided the freight does not exceed one dollar per volume), for $7 00 per volume. 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 & Brothers. Address: HARPER & BROTHERS, New York. 1884. Harper's Bazar. ILLUSTRATED. Harper's Bazar at once the most brilliant and useful household journal in existence. It is the acknowledged author of fashion in this country. Its fast on pages are the newest and most stylish, and its pattern sheet supplies ink. A economic suggestion there are worth many times the cost of subscription. Its illustrations of art make work from the best artists. Its library and artistic merits are of the highest order. Its sources, journals and essays are by the first American and Latin authors. Its choice of pictures would fill portfolios, and its humorous cities are the most amusing to be found in any journal in America. A host of brilliant novelties are promised for 1884. HARPER'S PERIODICALS. Per Year: Harper's Bazar 84 00 Harper's Magazine 4 00 Harper's Weekly 4 60 Harper's Young People 1 50 Harper's Franklin Square Library. One Year (32 Numbers) 10 00 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 Four Annual Volumes of Harper's Bazar, in next cloth binding, will be sent by mail, postage paid, or by express, free of expense (provided the freight does not exceed one dollar per volume), for $7 00 per volume. 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 & Brothers. Address: HARPER & BROTHERS, New York. 1884. Harper's Young People. An Illustrated Weekly—16 Pages. Suited to boys and girls of from six to sixteen years of age. Vol. V.commences November 6, 1883. Harper's Young People is the best weekly for children in America — Southwestern Christian Advocate. All that the artist's skill can accomplish in the way of illustration has been done, and the best talent of the country has contributed to its text — New England Journal of Education, Boston. In its special field there is nothing that can be compared with Hartler Evening Post. TERMS: HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE. For Years Purchase Price. $1 50. Wheat, Barley, Corn, Rye, Potatoes, And all Country Produce. Cash advances made on all consignments of Grain and Wool. Sacks and Twine At lowest market prices. Office opposite Railroad Depot, Anaheim, Cal. Certificate of Copartnership. STATE OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES. We, the undersigned, do hereby certify that we are partners, transacting business in this State, at Anaheim and German station, in the County of Los Angeles, under the firm name and style of W. M. and M. Nailery; that the names in full of such partnership are William Mackindry Bailey and Marks Castleberry Bailey, and that the places of our respective residence are set opposite our names, hereunto subscribed. In witness whereof we have hereunto set our hands and soals this 1st day of November, A. D. 1882. WILLIAM MACKINDRY BAILEY, Anaheim. MARKS CASTLEBERRY BAILEY, Gorman Station. STATE OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES, On the 1st day of November, one thousand eight hundred and eighty three, before me, Richard M. Rose, a Notary Public in and for said Los Angeles County, residing therein, duly commissioned and sworn, personally appeared William Mackindry Bailey and Marks Castleberry Bailey, known to me to be the persons described in, whose names are subscribed to and who executed the within instrument, and they duly acknowledged to me that they executed the same. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and affixed my official seal at my office in the said County of Los Angeles the day and year first above written. RICHARD MELROSE. Notary Public. Endorsed: Filed Nov. 24, 1883. A. W. Potts, Clerk, by E. H. Owen sputty Masonic Notice. THE REGULAR MEETINGS OF ANAHEIM Lodge No. 207, P. and A. M. are held a Masonic Hall on the Monday evening of or preceding the full moon in each month. Sojourning brethren in good standing are cordially invited to attend. THROUGH REISER, W. M. J. S. GARDINER, Secretary. PEARSON'S DINING PALACE. NICE BILL OF FARE. MEALS AT ALL HOURS. WITH EVERYTHING THAT THE MARKET affords. No. 269 North Main St., Log Angeles (Rose Block). je30-3m Harper's Young People. An Illustrated Weekly—16 Pages. Suited to boys and girls of from six to sixteen years of age. Vol. V. commences November 6, 1883. Harper's Young People is the best weekly for children in America — Southwestern Christian Advocate. All it at the artist's skill can accomplish in the way of illustration has been done, and the best talent of the country has contributed to its text — New England journal of education, Boston. In its special field there is nothing that can be compared with Hartford Evening Post. TERMS: HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE, Per Year, Postage Prepaid; SINGLE NUMBER, Five Cents each. Specimen copy sent on receipt of Three Cents. The volumes of Harper's Young People for 1881, 1882 and 1883, hands firmly bound in illuminated Cloth, will be sent by mail, postage prepaid, on receipt of $3.00 each. Cloth Cases for each volume, suitable for binding, will be sent by mail, postpaid, on receipt of $50 cents each. Remittances should be made by Postoffice Money Order or Draft, to avoid chance of loss. Newspapers are not to copy this advertisement without the express order of Harper & Brothers. Address: HARPER BROTHERS, NEW YORK The Buyers' Guide is issued March and Sept., each year: 216 pages, 8½ x 1¼ inches, with over 3,300 illustrations—a whole picture gallery. Gives wholesale prices direct to consumers on all goods for personal or family use. Tells how to order, and gives exact cost of everything you use, eat, drink, wear, or have fun with. These invaluable books contain information cleaned from the markets of the world. We will mail a copy Free to any address upon receipt of the postage—7 cents. Let us hear from you. Respectfully, MONTGOMERY WARD & CO. 207 & 209 Webb Avenue, Chicago, IL. Casks, Pipes AND PUNCHEONS IN PERFECT ORDER For Sale at Low Prices. B. DREYFUS & CO., Anaheim. THIS PAPER may be found on file at then P. Rowall & Co.'s Newspaper Advertising Bureau (10 Spruce St.), where advertising contract may be made for it IN NEW YORK.