anaheim-gazette 1883-12-15
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WEEKLY GAZETTE.
SATURDAY...DEC. 15, 1883
SUBSCRIPTION, per year, $2.
The National Republican Convention, to nominate a President and Vice-President, will be held in Chicago on June 31, 1884, the National Committee having so decided at a meeting on Wednesday.
Over forty tons of poultry in the hands of Boston dealers sourced during Thanksgiving week, and three-quarters of it was purchased for canning houses, who claim that although it would not keep for many hours, and was therefore unsalable in the retail market, it was just as good as the dryest and freshest after being treated to a saleratus bath.
According to the English census, the arts generally give employment to a larger proportion of women than any other avocations. There are more actresses than actors, nearly as many girls studying art for a profession as there are boys, and about one-third as many female painters as there are males of the same art. No women describe themselves as architects; although sixteen are sculptors by profession. One half of the photographers are women.
The week of prayer for 1884 begins the first Sunday in January, the 6th proximo, and the general arrangement of topics is as follows: Monday, 7th—Praise and thanksgiving; Tuesday, 8th—Confession of sin, and prayer for cleansing and renewal; Wednesday, 9th—Prayer for families and instruction of youth; Thursday, 10th—Prayer for the Church of Christ; Friday, 11th—Intercession for the nations; Saturday, 12th—Prayer for missions at home and abroad.
A New York Times reporter asked 324 persons, professional and business men, if they had read the President's message, and it was ascertained that of 324 citizens, 105
A New York Times reporter asked 324 persons, professional and business men, if they had read the President's message, and it was asserted that of 324 citizens, 165 had read it, 96 frankly said they had not read it, 88 weakly promised themselves a study of the document by and by, 30 skimmed and 50 read the newspaper criticisms. This imperfect census probably represents a fair picture of the attitude of average citizens towards the message.
Medical men have for some time arrived at the conclusion that consumption is infectious. The matter has been taken up in a very practical way in the German army, in which the disease is stated to be very prevalent. All soldiers suffering from it are isolated, and, to prevent any possible infection, on no account are they allowed to associate with patients suffering from pneumonia or acute bronchitis, while special means are to be taken for the disinfection of the spartu in infectious cases.
It is stated that Speaker Carlsle will be ready to announce the House Committees before Christmas. Ramor reports Mr. Cox as distressed at the possibility that Master Perry Belmont may be given the Chairmanship of the Committee on Foreign Relations. Cox says he helped to get Perry his place on the Committee in the last Congress, and it grieves him to think that the young man should now be trying to defeat a gentleman who was a member of the House before Belmont got his first pair of trousers.
Since the adoption of the new standard time the Patent Office has received about four hundred applications for patents for clock disks "and other devices intended to present the twenty-four hours in a convenient manner and without unduly crowding the figures together." A large number of these applications have been rejected, "upon evidence found in a musty old volume that Prince Soltykoff once possessed a watch made in the year 1547, upon the dial of which appeared the hours from one to twenty-four, arranged in two concentric circles."
Robinson, the New York Congressman whose greatest delight it is to twist the British bon's tail and otherwise maltreat that animal, has began his usual onslaught by introducing a resolution of inquiry calling on the Secretary of the Interior for information concerning the purchase of public lands public life was as a member of the City Council of Philadelphia, wherein he showed marked ability and was soon transferred to the Senate of his native State. The beginning of the Civil War, in his thirty third year, prompted Mr. Randall to patriotic military service in the Light Horse of Philadelphia. His service under General Geo. H. Thomas for ninety days, and under the command of Gen. Robert Patterson followed, leading to his promotion first as Quartermaster of his company and then as Cornet, a rank corresponding to that of Captain in the Regular Army. In the terrible year 1863, Cornet Randall was among the troops advanced to Harrisburg as the result of General Lee's invasion of Northern Territory.
When General Couch announced to Cornet Randall, commanding, that Governor Curtin would accept the active services of his troop without swearing its members, he said: "I know we can trust to the honor of the corps without an oath." In the summer of the same year he made a brilliant reconnaissance, in which he captured several prisoners and established the presence of the Confederates in force between Chambersburg and Williamsport. During the battle of Gettysburg, his rank was that of Provost Marshal of Columbia. He entered the 38th Congress in December, 1863, and has kept his seat in the House of Representatives ever since that time. He has served in the Committees on Public Buildings and Grounds, Banking and Currency, Retrenchment and Expenditures in the State Department. Mr. Randall is a ready, concise speaker, without rhetorical affectations. He opened the campaign for General Hancock in 1880 with a most able and effective speech at New York.
The most destructive earthquake of which any record has been preserved is that which devastated Autoch, A.D., 526, killing 250,000 people. That most unfortunate of Syrian cities has been earthquake-visited many times before. In 115 A.D., it was nearly destroyed, the Emperor Trajan narrowly escaping with his life. One of the earliest recorded earthquakes is mentioned in the Bible as happening in Syria during the reign of Ahab, 900 B.C. In the year 31 B.C., the Judean earthquake which happened contemporaneously with the battle of Actium was said by Josephus to have killed 10,000 persons, and to be greater than any then recorded. Japan suffered from earthquake violence in 1538, 1595, 1728 and in later years. Unhappy Calabria has been a repeated victim of earthquakes. It has been visited so many times that history has not indexed its disasters. The earthquakes of 1628 and 1783 were the most destructive, the latter being responsible for the destruction of fully 100,000 people. In that dreadful year five great shocks and 944 lesser ones were experienced, and in the following year 151 lesser ones; 182 towns were totally and 92 partially destroyed. The earthquake and tidal wave which struck Lisbon in 1755 killed 60,000 persons in six minutes, and
Phoenix (Arizona) Moffatt has placed sugar made by him from his ranch this season. Than maple sugar, or ginger and texture, and of good first sorghum sugar there being made in the valley for the forerunner of a promenade in near future.
There were taken river and tributaries facing October 15th, and sent packing firms, 451, 180,542 fall salmon pounds. The wholesale了 115,004 spring salmon making a total salmon weighing 9,583 pounds.
There has been an along the southern coast At San Buenaventura being position caused by it is expected a portion away. The steamer Land there on Tuesday. Tuesday night she her lines twice while at Harford she was taken.
At San Francisco on McLaughlin, President Company, was shot and Wise's office. The ship Jerome B. Cox, and are law suit. Cox went to demand $40,000 claims standing between Laughlin's refusing he shot three times.
The Tucson Star says Newport has purchased rancho in the Sulphur miles east of Wilcox area with cattle from California shipped one carload on railroad another Raine bought a carload and shipped them to probably ship back two weeks. He proposes to start good American blood to pipe the water from the valley, a distance of intermediate watering.
Suit has been brought Kinley, Ferguson and Smeardon against J. C Agent at San Carlos, for The facts alleged in the J. C. Tiffany, William others whose names are plaintiff conspired for
Robinson, the New York Congressman whose greatest delight it is to twist the British iron's tail and otherwise maltreat that animal, has began his usual onslaught by introducing a resolution of inquiry calling on the Secretary of the Interior for information concerning the purchase of public lands by foreign noblemen, so called, and titled aliens, with their names and amount of acres purchased. Also asking for information to enable the House to formulate a law to prevent the establishment of land monopolies and the landlord system, in our country, and provide against having the public domain fall under the power of aliens.
If reports are true, and they come from persons who ought to know the truth, President Vilard's friends suffered a good deal from the sample in Northern Pacific stocks. Villard says that he, too, is a poorer man than he was before he started out on his splendid picnic across the continent. Still he does not stop work on his fine house, which it is said will be the handsomest in the luxurious metropolis. That concealed floating debt deceived many men, and among them some in Villard's own office. The Vice President of the company is reported to have been a heavy loser, and with him Horace White and a man who has long had a good reputation as a writer for the magazines and newspapers. This man is said to have lost his all. The hardest cases are those of Roscoe Conkling and his friend A. B. Johnson of Utica. Conkling is reported to have bought freely on advices from headquarters, until now he is in debt to his bankers to the amount of $50,000. The world knows how A. B. Johnson met his fall. The son of a proud father and representative of an old family, he made away with his sister's property and shot himself. A sad tragedy of ruin and crime seems to have been enacting behind the mask of amnesia on that splendid excursion.
The San Francisco Stock Report pertinently says: The practice of selling California wines under foreign labels at six times the fair price is one which should be checked, and which we are glad to learn Congress is to be asked to check. But, after all, wine drinkers can do much more to check it than Congress can. They have only to eschew foreign wines, so called, ask for California wines and insist on having them. Swindling restaurant-keepers pretend they do not keep California wines, because they want to sell them under foreign labels at six prices. When you ask a restaurateur for California wine and he says he does not keep it, you may know that you are dining in an establishment kept by a swindler; and, if you are sensible and respect yourself, you will dine somewhere else in future. Snobs, of course, will continue to buy the wine that costs most, regardless of its quality; but gentlemen will buy wine at its proper price, and will not allow themselves to be cheated with their eyes open. One of the easiest off-hand ways to tell a gentleman from a snob is to see whether the individual permits himself to be overcharged without opposition. If he does, he is a snob. Let our gentlemen drink California wine, as such, and pay for it as such, and the wine cheats will soon find their dishonest income reduced.
Suit has been brought by Kinley, Ferguson and Smeardon against J. C. Agent at San Carlos, for The facts alleged in the J. C. Tiffany, William others whose names are plaintiff, conspired for venting her husband, G appearing as a witness in certain criminal cases of America against Tiffany alleges that they admire drugs till Smeardon bends then forcible took him or placed him in a carriage Hermosillo, in a foreign was stricken with the end and where he sickened.
The Supreme Court of which has had the Musician consideration for some time on Saturday in Pacific Railroad Company the right to oust Hanford refused to pay for the patch from Visalia says been selected by the M.D. to examine the railroad through P. D. Wiggintree. The committee is Fowler, D. V. Robinson tan, all old residents of pected that the action lead to a satisfactoryment of this much vexed Tulare county.
Commander Cheney mention from the University of State, saying that he has decided that his school North Pole by balloon.
A NASAL INJECTION bottle of Shiloh's Catachina 50 cents. Sold by Winchester.
PACIFIC COAST NEWS.
The November losses by fires on the Pacific coast footed up $243,000 to the insurance companies, the town of Dixon, Cal., contributing $103,600 to the amount.
At La Grande, Or., Mrs. Fuller, aged 44 years and a victim of epilepsy, fell across the kitchen stove during an attack and was literally roasted to death.
At a town election held at Tumwater, W. T., last week, twenty-three women voted. This is their first balloting under the new Equal Suffrage Act. The women's ticket won the day.
The Occidental, a paper published at Mazatlan, Mex., publishes a list of 50,000 names of those who died from yellow fever in Sonora and Sinaloa during September and October. The list includes about forty Americans.
Some trouble between a school teacher named Rose and a family named Prather, living at Knight's Landing, culminated last Sunday in the pedagogue being waylaid near the town. A number of shots were fired, but nobody was hurt. The two Prather brothers are in jail.
Elder Coons, a Mormon missionary, has returned to Salt Lake from a mission to the Eastern States. He reports being rotten-egged in Indiana, and pelted with rocks in Illinois. He says he enjoyed his work notwithstanding and feels repaid for all the privations he endured, as he knows the Lord was with him.
Saturday night, five mounted men raided the town of Bisbee, A. T., killed J. C. Tappenier, D. T. Smith, J. R. Nally and Mrs. Roberts and robbed A. A. Castenadas' safe of $1200. The entire transaction occurred within five minutes. The robbers are the same who, a few weeks ago, robbed the Southern Pacific train at Gage station.
Phoenix (Arizona) Gazette: "Mr. J. P. Moffatt has placed upon our table a cake of sugar made by him from sorghum grown on his ranch this season. It is a shade lighter than maple sugar, of good crystaline quality and texture, and of good flavor. This is the first sorghum sugar that we have heard of."
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
A banquet was given to Parnell in London Tuesday night at which he was presented with £38,000 as a national tribute.
The Republican Senators, in caucus to nominate a Secretary of the Senate, selected Gen. Anson G. Cook of New York by a vote of 19 to Gorham's 13.
At Frederickston, N. B., the wife of John Howie, of Thomerville, gave birth to four boys. One died two hours afterwards. The others are doing well.
A sail boat containing seven decomposed bodies has drifted ashore at Sebec Island, Canada. The bodies are believed to be the remains of Captain Quick and several sons, who left two weeks ago for a trip around the Island.
At Little Rock, Ark., a Deputy Marshal and posse, who were watching the road for an outlaw, fired upon Judge Noidywater and three other Cherokees, who were returning to their homes Tuesday night. One hundred buckshot penetrated his body.
Free trade journals are commenting on the fact that seventy workmen discharged from the Paterson, N. J., locomotive works, sailed on the Alaska for Liverpool, to fill engagements to work on iron ship building on the Clyde. Each man paid his own passage.
The Austrian bark Josef arrived at New Orleans on Sunday from Cape Town, South Africa. She left Cape Town October 15th, and as part of her freight has twenty-three ostriches, all of which reached here alive. The birds will be taken to the ostrich farm near San Diego, Cal.
At Moscow, an immense throng of poor people gathered before the house of a merchant recently deceased, to receive the money usually distributed at the demise of wealthy persons. The pressure was so great that several persons were crushed to death and four severely injured.
General Howard's recommendation that deserters from the army be branded with the letter "D" is severely criticised by the journals of Philadelphia. The Press says: It is not only unworthy of a Christian soldier, but a quarter of a century behind the
A Destructive Storm in England.
London, Dec. 12. There was a terrific wind storm here today. Huge trees were torn up and carried away, and the low lying districts of Birmingham were flooded. A portion of the roof of a church at St. Chad at Derby was demolished. The Congregational church here was also injured. The Parish church at Rotherham was much injured, and the chimney shafts thrown down at Manchester, Leeds, etc. A large gas holder near Bradford capsized and the chemical works at Wildnes were damaged. The Leicester carriage works were destroyed. At Birkenhead great damage was done. The chief officer of the steamer just arrived from Glasgow was killed. Pool cabs were overturned and many buildings were damaged. At Lincoln a parapet tower of the Cathedral was blown down, and a ship blown from her moorings at Belfast harbor. At South Shields the vessels broke adrift and three wherries were sunk. The British ship Liverpool, from Quebec for Greenock, is a total wreck near Straunover, Scotland, only a man and a boy are saved of the crew. Two persons are killed at Hull and several injured. A portion of Portsmouth was flooded. At Hart and Liverpool many ships were damaged. At Birmingham two persons were killed and a number injured. Three were killed at Manchester. At Dewsbury three were killed, and at Chester a man was blown down in the street and killed, and two persons were killed at Leveredge. A portion of the roof of St Mary's church at Berwick was destroyed, and several houses in the suburbs of Nottingham were blown down. At Kildurick a gasometer was demolished and the postal telegraph inspector cut in halves.
At Bradford the monuments under the cliff at the cemetery and a portion of the depot of the Midland railway were blown down. Several vessels docked in Mersey were damaged, two vessels were wrecked at Dunure, Scotland, two men were drowned in the lowlands west of Lancashire, and Garstag district was flooded. At Glasgow the damage to property was very great.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
THE
Plows,
Cultivators,
Harrows
Phoenix (Arizona) Gazette: "Mr. J. P. Moffatt has placed upon our table a cake of sugar made by him from sorghum grown on his ranch this season. It is a shade lighter than maple sugar, of good crystaline quality and texture, and of good flavor. This is the first sorghum sugar that we have heard of being made in the valley, and is, we trust, the forerunner of a profitable sugar industry in the near future."
There were taken from the Sacramento river and tributaries for the year 1883, ending October 15th, and delivered to the different packing firms, 451,057 spring salmon and 180,542 fall salmon, weighing 7,349,988 pounds. The wholesale dealers have received 115,004 spring salmon and 52,962 fall salmon, making a total number of 780,405 salmon, weighing 9,585,672 pounds.
There has been an unusually high sea along the southern coast during the week. At San Buenaventura the wharf is in a leaning position, caused by the high sea, and it is expected a portion of it will be carried away. The steamer Eureka was unable to land there on Tuesday. At Santa Barbara Tuesday night the steamer Orizabar parted her lines twice while at the wharf. At Port Harford she was taken away three times.
At San Francisco on Thursday Charles McLaughlin, President of the Central Gas Company, was shot and killed in Tully & Wise's office. The shooting was done by Jerome B. Cox, and arose out of a railroad law suit. Cox went to McLaughlin's office and demanded $40,000 in settlement of claims standing between them. On McLaughlin's refusing he drew a revolver and shot three times.
The Tucson Star says that J. B. Raine of Newport has purchased the Apache Spring rancho in the Sulphur Spring valley, ten miles east of Wilcox and is now stocking it with cattle from California. He has already shipped one carload on the rancho and shipped through another car yesterday. Mr. Raine bought a carload of mules last week and shipped them to California and will probably ship back two carloads this trip. He finds a ready sale for them in Los Angeles. He proposes to stock his rancho with good American blood, and is now preparing to pipe the water from the spring down into the valley, a distance of ten miles, making intermediate watering places for his stock.
Suit has been brought at Tucson by Messrs. Kinley, Ferguson and Welsh for Mrs. Geo. Smeardon against J. C. Tiffany, ex-Indian Agent at San Carlos, for $25,000 damages. The facts alleged in the complaint are that J. C. Tiffany, William Eustis and three others whose names are unknown to the plaintiff, conspired for the purpose of pre-penier, D. T. Smith, J. R. Nally and Mrs. Roberts and robbed A. A. Castenadas' safe of $1200. The entire transaction occurred within five minutes. The robbers are the same who, a few weeks ago, robbed the Southern Pacific train at Gage station.
Phoenix (Arizona) Gazette: "Mr. J. P. Moffatt has placed upon our table a cake of sugar made by him from sorghum grown on his ranch this season. It is a shade lighter than maple sugar, of good crystaline quality and texture, and of good flavor. This is the first sorghum sugar that we have heard of being made in the valley, and is, we trust, the forerunner of a profitable sugar industry in the near future."
There were taken from the Sacramento river and tributaries for the year 1883, ending October 15th, and delivered to the different packing firms, 451,057 spring salmon and 180,542 fall salmon, weighing 7,349,988 pounds. The wholesale dealers have received 115,004 spring salmon and 52,962 fall salmon, making a total number of 780,405 salmon, weighing 9,585,672 pounds.
There has been an unusually high sea along the southern coast during the week. At San Buenaventura the wharf is in a leaning position, caused by the high sea, and it is expected a portion of it will be carried away. The steamer Eureka was unable to land there on Tuesday. At Santa Barbara Tuesday night the steamer Orizabar parted her lines twice while at the wharf. At Port Harford she was taken away three times.
At San Francisco on Thursday Charles McLaughlin, President of the Central Gas Company, was shot and killed in Tully & Wise's office. The shooting was done by Jerome B. Cox, and arose out of a railroad law suit. Cox went to McLaughlin's office and demanded $40,000 in settlement of claims standing between them. On McLaughlin's refusing he drew a revolver and shot three times.
The Tucson Star says that J. B. Raine of Newport has purchased the Apache Spring rancho in the Sulphur Spring valley, ten miles east of Wilcox and is now stocking it with cattle from California. He has already shipped one carload on the rancho and shipped through another car yesterday. Mr. Raine bought a carload of mules last week and shipped them to California and will probably ship back two carloads this trip. He finds a ready sale for them in Los Angeles. He proposes to stock his rancho with good American blood, and is now preparing to pipe the water from the spring down into the valley, a distance of ten miles, making intermediate watering places for his stock.
Suit has been brought at Tucson by Messrs. Kinley, Ferguson and Welsh for Mrs. Geo. Smeardon against J. C. Tiffany, ex-Indian Agent at San Carlos, for $25,000 damages. The facts alleged in the complaint are that J. C. Tiffany, William Eustis and three others whose names are unknown to the plaintiff, conspired for the purpose of pre-penier, D. T. Smith, J.R.Nally and Mrs.Brothers and robbed A.A.Castenadas' safe of $1200.The entire transaction occurred within five minutes.The robbers are the same who,a few weeks ago,they trust,the forerunner of a profitable sugar industry.in.the near future."
There were taken from the Sacramento river and tributaries for the year 1883,ending October 15th,and delivered to the different packing firms,451,057 spring salmon和180,542 fall salmon,weighing7,349,988 pounds。The wholesale dealers have received 115,004 spring salmon和52,962 fall salmon,makinga totalnumberof780,405 salmon,weighing9,585,672 pounds。
Therehasbeenan unusuallyhighseaalongthesoutherncoastduringtheweek.AtSanBuenaventurathewharfisinaleaningposition,causebythehighsea,anditexpectedapartifewiththereontheTuesday.AtSantaBarbaraTuesdaynightthesteamerOrizabarpartedherlinestwicewhileatthewharf.AtPortHarfordshewastakenawaythreetimes.
AtSanFranciscoonThursdayCharlesMcLaughlin,PresidentoftheCentralGasCompany.wasshotandkilledinTully&Wise'soffice.TheshootingwasdonebyJeromeB.Cox,andaroseoutofarailroadlawsuit.CoxwenttoMcLaughlin'sofficeanddemanded$40,000insettlementofclaimsstandingbetweenthem.OnMcLaughlin'srefusinghedrewarevolverandshotthreetimes.
TheTucsonStarsaysthatJ.B.RaineofNewporthaspurchasedtheApacheSpringranchointheSulphurSpringvalley,tennileseastofWilcoxandisnowstockingitwithcattlefromCalifornia.Hewasalreadyshippedonecarloadontheranchoandship逢throughanothercaryesterday.Mr.RaineboughtacarloadofmuleslastweekandshippedthemtoCaliforniaandwillprobablyshipbacktwocarloadsthistriip.HefindasreadysaleforkineminLosAngeles.HewprossessthacomingsontheranschoowithgoodAmericanblood,andisnowpreparingtopipethewaterfromthespringdownintothevalley,a-distanceoftenmiles,makingintermediatewateringplacesforhisstock.
Suithasbeens broughtatTucsonbyMessrs.Kinley,FergusonandWelshforMrs.Geo.SmeardonagainstJ.C.Tiffanyex-IndianAgentatSanCarlosfor$25,000damages.ThefactslabeledinthecomplaintarethatJ.C.TiffanyWilliamEustisandthreeotherswhosenamesareunknowntotheplaintiffconspiredforthepurposeofpre-penier,D.T.Smith,j.R.NallyandMrs.BrothersandrobbedA.A.Castenadas'safeof$1200.Theentiretransactionoccurredwithinthenewworthenfiveminutes.Therobbersarethesamewho,a fewweeksago,theytrust,theforerunnerofaprofitablesugarindustry.in.thenewworthenfiveminutes.Therobbersarethesamewho,a fewweeksago,theytrust,theforerunnerofaprofitablesugarindustry.in.thenewworthenfiveminutes.Therobbersarethesamewho,a fewweeksago,theytrust,theforerunnerofaprofitablesugarindustry.in.thenewworthenfiveminutes.Therobbersarethesamewho,a fewweeksago,theytrust,theforerunnerofaprofitablesugarindustry.in.thenewworthenfiveminutes.Therobbersarethesamewho,a 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In witness wherefore I have hereunto set my hand and affixed my official seal at my office in the said County of Los Angeles day and year first above written.
RICHARD MELROSE.
Notary Public.
Endorsed: File Dee lst., A.W.Petta,
Cerk by A.Rimpa.
Deputy:
The Pureest and Best.
CHEESEMAN'S.
Is far.
Safe sold.
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He proposes to stock his ranch with good American blood, and is now preparing to pipe the water from the spring down into the valley, a distance of ten miles, making intermediate watering places for his stock.
Suit has been brought at Tucson by Messrs. Kinley, Ferguson and Welsh for Mrs. Geo. Smeardon against J. C. Tiffany, ex-Indian Agent at San Carlos, for $25,000 damages. The facts alleged in the complaint are that J. C. Tiffany, William Eustis and three others whose names are unknown to the plaintiff, conspired for the purpose of preventing her husband, George Smeardon, from appearing as a witness against J. C. Tiffany in certain criminal cases of the United States of America against Tiffany. The complaint alleges that they administered liquors and drugs till Smeardon became stupied and then forcible took him out of his house and placed him in a carriage and took him to Hermosillo, in a foreign country, where he was stricken with the yellow fever plague and where he sickened and died.
The Supreme Court of the United States, which has had the Mussel Slough case under consideration for some time, rendered a decision on Saturday in favor of the Southern Pacific Railroad Company, who now claim the right to cust Hanford people who have refused to pay for the disputed land. A dispatch from Visalia says a committee has been selected by the Mussel Slough settlers to examine the railroad lands and report through P. D. Wigginton, the railroad attorney. The committee is composed of Thomas Fowler, D. V. Robinson and Richard Chatan, all old residents of Visalia. It is expected that the action of the committee may lead to a satisfactory and peaceable settlement of this much vexed land difficulty in Tulare county.
Commander Cheney has received a communication from the United States Secretary of State, saying that the Secretary of War has decided that his scheme for reaching the North Pole by balloon is impracticable.
A NASAL INJECTOR free with each bottle of Shiloh's Catarrh Remedy. Price, 50 cents. Sold by Wm. M. Higgins.
Some months since a small son of Charles Pretzel of Buffalo, N.Y., was bitten by a little dog. No attention was given to the matter, but the boy has lately exhibited symptoms of hydrophobia in a violent form. Sunday another small brother who had been sleeping with him, although not bitten by the former, was slightly attacked with the malady, while another whom he bit in his ravings is almost as bad. The lives of two are despaired of.
Quite a startling event occurred in Mercantile Library Hall, St. Louis. James F. Gein and wife of New York were giving a spiritualistic performance, towards the close of which Gein stepped into an ante-room at the rear of the stage to rest, after an exhausting cabinet exhibition, and when followed two or three minutes later by his wife, was found dead on the floor. An examination by a physician present showed that death was caused by heart disease. Gein was a Mason in good standing and belonged to Pacific Lodge of New York.
Rev. William M. de Hart, rector of St. Andrew's Episcopal Church at Walden, N.Y., publishes a card containing statements in regard to a difference with his parishioners which led to the rector’s resigning. He says he interfered in a dispute between a husband and wife on account of the former striking the latter. De Hart says: “I said to him, ‘You must not strike a woman in my presence.’ The man then turned and struck me full in the face. Forgetting for a moment that I was a clergyman, and in the heat of passion, acting only as a man, I returned the blow with the force and skill I had learned at college.”
A London dispatch says: It is understood that the home officers sent a letter to Judge Benman, who presided at the trial of O’Donnell, asking his opinion in regard to sufficient evidence having been submitted by the prosecution to support the charge of willful murder against O’Donnell. The Judge, in reply, stated that the evidence given fully justified the verdict. The sheriffs have completed their arrangements for the execution Monday. Binna, the hangman, arrived in London Saturday. Only twelve members of the jury will be permitted to be present.
RICHARD MELROSE.
Notary Public.
Endorsed: Filed Dec 1st, 1883. A W. Potta,
Cork, by A Rimpau. Deputy.
The Purest and Best.
CHEESEMAN'S BAKING POWDER
For sale at the Store at the Depot.
CENTRALIA
POULTRY YARDS!
W. G. POTTER, Proprietor.
BREEDER OF PLYMOUTH ROCKS AND BROWN Leghorns. Eggs for hatching; $1.50 per dozen. Also have on hand fifty fine young cockerels of Hawkim’s Strain of P. K. and Bonney Strain of R. L.; $2 to $3 each. Cash with order.
P.O. Anaheim.
nov10
Mr. Adolph Rimpau has returned from San Francisco and
The Largest Importation
OF
DRY GOODS,
Fancy Goods,
Clothing.
Boots and Shoes
—Ever brought into this town will be ready for inspection at—
RIMPAU BROS.
About Monday, Dec. 17, 1883,
And we can assure our customers and the public in general, that we shall be pleased to show our goods and give them our prices, and feel satisfied that no one will go out without being
Perfectly Satisfied
in every shape, manner and form. Our motto shall be
“Quick Sales and Small Profits.”
We shall also have a very large assortment of
Ladies’ Winter Goods
—and a large assortment of
Plain Silks and Satins as well as Brocaded Silks and Veluets.
Agents for DEVLIN & CO.,
MERCHANT TAILORS OF NEW YORK.
Suits ordered from samples and a perfect fit
Agents for DEVLIN & CO., MERCHANT TAILORS OF NEW YORK.
Suits ordered from samples and a perfect fit guaranteed.
NUMEROUS SAMPLES ON HAND.
FALL, WINTER AND HOLIDAY GOODS.
I have received a complete assortment of Dry and Fancy Goods,
Consisting of VELVETS, SILKS, RIBBONS, HOSE, EMPROIDERED FLANNELS, HANDKERCHIEFS, CORSETS, WORSTEDS, BEADS, SLIPPER PATTERNS, FANCY JEWELRY
And a number of Fancy Articles suitable for Holiday Presents
Too numerous to mention. Also, a full line of Gents Furnishing Goods, Ladies', Men and Children's Gaiters, BOOTS and SHOES.
All of which I will sell at the LOWEST LIVING PRICES.
First-class Groceries and Provisions Always on hand.
HIPPOLYTE CAHEN,
CORNER CENTER AND LOS ANGELES STREETS
S. B. SMITH,
Contractor and Builder.
---Pumping Outfits---
A SPECIALTY.
PUMPS, PIPE and PIPE FIXTURES
At LOS ANGELES RATES.
For neatness of design, for strength, durability, great lifting power, a perfect self-regulating Windmill safe in the fiercest storm, an adjustable stroke (4 different lengths), and by far the cheapest first-come mill sold on this coast.
JACKSON'S CALIFORNIA WINDMILL
is far ahead of all competitors. I am now furnishing these Mills with
Best and Cheapest.
A SPECIALTY.
10 feet... $75
12 " ... $85
14 " ... $100
MADE BY JACKSON & TRUMAN,
San Francisco.
PUMPS, PIPE and
PIPE FIXTURES
At LOS ANGELES RATES.
For neatness of design, for strength, durability, great lifting power, a perfect self-regulating Windmill safe in the forest storm, an adjustable stroke (4 different lengths), and by far the cheapest first-class mill sold on this coast.
JACKSON'S CALIFORNIA WINDMILL is far ahead of all competitors. I am now furnishing these Mills with Tanks, Pumps, Pipe, Faucets, etc., and setting them up in complete running order at LOWER PRICES THAN EVER GIVEN IN THIS COUNTY. Do not purchase a pumping outfit without first examining my work and price.
K. B. SMITH, Anaheim, Cal.
LARGEST STOCK. LOWEST PRICES.
DON'T FAIL TO VISIT Phil. Hirschfeld's BOOK STORE,
275 North Main St., Downey Block, Los Angeles.
We have this season an assortment of Novelties in the Book, Fancy Goods Line, TOYS AND DOLLS, XMAS CARDS,
ETC. ETC. ETC.
Never before exhibited in Los Angeles.
DOLLS. NOVELTIES.