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anaheim-gazette 1884-04-12

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ANAHEIM VOL. XIV. HANNA & KEITH, REAL ESTATE AGENTS. Live Stock Bought and Sold on Commission. ANAHEIM. DISSOLUTION SALE. Forty Thousand Dollars WORTH OF FURNITURE, CARPETS, Etc., At Prices never before heard of in California. In order to close our Coppartnership, we propose to sell our entire stock inside of Sixty Days. BARKER & ALLEN, No. 322, 324 and 326 N. MAIN ST. (Near Pico House), LOS ANGELES, CAL. WEEKLY GAZETTE Established 1870. A. E. WHITE. E. A. WHITE BLACKSMITHING In order to close our Coppartnership, we propose to sell our entire stock inside of SIXTY DAYS. BARKER & ALLEN, NO. 322, 324 and 326 N. MAIN ST. (Near Pico House), LOS ANGELES, CAL. WEEKLY GAZETTE Established 1870. For Terms, see Fourth Page. DR. JAMES ELLIS. OFFICE AND DRUG STORE IN THE BUILDING East of GAZETTE office. Homeopathic Medicine wholesale and retail. Office hours at 7 A.M. and 9:30 A.M. and at 2 P.M. and 6 P.M. H. C. KELLOGG. Surveyor and Civil Engineer. PARTIES WILL PLEASE LEAVE THEIR ORDERS with Mr. John Hanna, Anaheim. ROBT. W. SCOTT. ATTORNEY AT LAW AND NOTARY PUBLIC Commissioner of Deeds for Arizona Territory, Kreoger's Block, Anaheim, Cal. VICTOR MONTGOMERY, Attorney-at-Law, SANTA ANA, CAL. Office in Dibbles' brick building, nearly opposite the Postoffice. Office hours from 10 A.M. to 3 P.M. RICHARD MELROSE, NOTARY PUBLIC GAZETTE OFFICE. L. GUNTHEE. Pioneer Boot and Shoe Maker. Cor. Adule and Los Angeles streets. ANAHEIM. GEORGE BAUER, BOOT AND SHOE MAKER, Center Street Making and Repairing at the Lowest cash price. All orders promptly attended to All work guaranteed. WM. R. HARKER, SADDLE & HARNESS MAKER, CENTER STREET, ANAHEIM. CHARLES WILLE. COOPERAGE. Pipes, Barrels and kegs on hand at all times. Tanks and Tubes made to order. Honev Barrels for sale cheap Truck and Hauling Generally. A. E. WHITE. E. A. WHITE BLACKSMITHING AND Wagonmaking! All Work Warranted. Prices as low as the lowest. Los Angeles Street, Anaheim, (Adjoining the Gazette Office). City Stables, Center Street (Opposite Kroeger's Block) ANAHEIM. L. F. Lewis, - Proprietor. THESE STABLES ARE THE BEST VENTILATED and most comfortable in the town and special attention will be needed boarding and Grimming horses. The charge in all cases will be reasonable. Single and Double Teams Furnished at short notice and careful drivers familiar with the country, supplied when required. The patronage of the public is respectfully solicited. Anaheim Bakery. Fresh White and Rye Bread EVERY DAY Cakes for Parties on Short Notice. CENTER STREET, ANAHEIM. TO MY PATRONS. AFTER THIS DATE, MY TERMS WILL BE CASH, Or a credit of thirty days, but thirty days only. Please bear this in mind, as I cannot afford to vary from the above terms in any instance. C. E. LEONARD, Washington Market. Anaheim, Feb. 9th, 1884. Casks, Pipes AND PUNCHEONS IN PERFECT ORDER For Sale at Low Prices. B. DREYFUS & CO., Anaheim. WM. R. HARKER, SADDLE & HARNESS MAKER, CENTER STREET. ANAHEIM. CHARLES WILLE. COOPERAGE. Pipes, Barrels and keys on hand at all times. Tanks and Tubes made to order. Honest Barrels for sale cheap Truck and Hauling Generally. THE UNDERSIGNED WOULD RESPECTFULLY inform the community of Anaheim and vicinity that he is prepared to do all kinds of Hauling, Trucking and Prolighting. The very best of appliances for everything in his line will be used with the quickest dispatch and at living rates. Iatter myself after a fifteen years' experience in the business, that I shall be able to give entire satisfaction to all who may favor me with their patronage. Orders collected. Bulletin Board at office of Judge Bailey. J. J. DYER, PACIFIC WAGON COMPANY. J. R. MoMANIS, - Manager. 803 North Main Street, Los Angeles. sept 13m. F. & J. BACKS. Importers, Manufacturers and Dealers in Furniture, Bedding, Paper Hangings, Picture Frames, etc, UNDERTAKERS, Agents for the Howe, Eldredge and Victor Sewing Machines. Los Angeles Street.: Anaheim. Masonic Notice. THE REGULAR MEETINGS OF ANAheim Lodge No. 207, F. and A. M., are held in Masonic Hall on the Monday evening of or preceding the full moon in each month. Sujourning brethern in good standing are cordially invited to attend. THROU REISE, W. M. J. R. GARNEUR, Secretary. —THE— Plows, Cultivators, Harrows —and —Farming Implements— Manufactured by Funer & Branley Manufacturing Company of Chicago, are free dials and guaranteed in every respect. Sold by dee 12. A.R.E.R.A. WHITE. Please bear this in mind, as I cannot afford to vary from the above terms in any instance. C. E. LEONARD, Washington Market. Anaheim, Feb. 9th, 1884. Casks, Pipes AND PUNCHEONS IN PERFECT ORDER For Sale at Low Prices. B. DREYFUS & CO., Anaheim. B. DREYFUS, E.L. GOLDSTEIN, Anaheim, San Francisco. J. FROWENFELD, J. J.-WEGLIN, New York. B. DREYFUS & CO. Growers and Dealers in California Wines and Grape Brandy. 630 to 642 Brannan Street San Francisco; 45 Broadway New York. 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. OSTRICH FARM. IT HAVING BEEN FOUND NECESSARY TO close the above farm to visitors, notice is hereby given that all persons trespassing on the sand arm WILL BE PROSECUTED. Visitors wishing to see the birds can do so on Sundays and Wednesdays only, and the price of admission to the farm is fifty cents each. Tickets of admission to the farm can be purchased at the office of the GARDEN or at the Anaheim Hotel. ALL DOGS BROUGHT ON THE FARM WILL BE SHOT. C.J.SKETCHLEY, Superintendent California Ostrich Farming Company sept 29 THIS PAPER may be found on site at Geo. P. Rowell & Co. Newspaper Advertising Bureau (19 Spruce Street), where advertising contracts may be made for it in NEW YORK. TWO FAMOUS DESPERADOES. Men Whose Death Has Led to General Disarming in Texas. DALLAS, March 17.—If Ben Thompson had not been killed the other night in San Antonio he would have been finished here. He intended to come to this city to attend the convention of cowmen, and as he was morally certain to get into trouble, it is also certain that he would have had no quarter. Dozens of cattle men and others now here came with the expectation that they would battle with Thompson, and the word had gone round that if he indulged in any of his customary pranks he should be fought to the death. The determined efforts of several unknown citizens of San Antonio who, standing high over Thompson's head, filled his body with bullets, spared the cowmen here the disagreeable duty of killing him during convention week. Since his death and that of King Fisher there has been a general disarming throughout Texas. Hundreds of men who carried weapons for no other reason than that they feared they might encounter one or the other of these desperadoes have now put away their six-shooters, and probably will have no occasion to carry them. Thompson was well known to the cowmen of Texas. He always attended their conventions, and he usually made himself obnoxious. When the cattle raisers met in Austin two years ago, Ben kept the entire crowd on the verge of battle for three or four days, but no blood was shed. On the last day of the Convention he drank heavily, and when the delegates were indulging in a farewell banquet he jumped into the dining hall with an unearthly war whoop, flourishing a big revolver in each hand. The attack was so sudden that the cowmen stampeded, some jumping out of windows, others crawling left Mexico the last time he had several stolen horses in his possession. His party was pursued. When they reached the river he told his men: "Wait here tell I go back to the top of the hill. If they are so close that we won't have time to get the horses across, I will fire my gun and you will shoot the horses." He rode back and soon the report of his gun was heard. The Mexicans came up soon after only to find a lot of dead and dying horses. Fisher was the man who was presented to Horace Greeley in 1870 or 1871 when the venerable editor was in Brenheim for the purpose of delivering an address before the Agricultural Society. Mr. Greeley had expressed a desire to see a typical Texas desperado, and Fisher good humoredly posed before him in this character. Mr. Greeley looked at him searchingly, and said he did not like to ask an improper question, but he would really like to know how many men Fisher bad killed. "Only one," was the prompt reply. "Why," said Mr. Greeley, with a look of surprise, "I was told that you had killed five Mexicans at a fandango on one occasion, to say nothing about many other like crimes." "Mexicans!" ejaculated Fisher, with a string of caths which startled his inquisitor; I don't call Mexicans men." Among other stories of this man's murderous exploits in Mexico is one to the effect that he charged through a town on the other side of the Rio Grande with nine pairs of Mexican cars strung on his bridle rein. Why Kerosene Lamps Explode. A great many fatal accidents occur from trying to pour a little kerosene on the fire to make it kinder better, also by pouring oil in a lamp while it is lit. Most persons SUGGESTIONS TO FRUIT DRIERS. (J. M. Hexosonin Rural Press) The present outlook is good for a heat crop throughout the State, and a full corn now means a great amount of fruit. It hooves the producer to seek every means preparing the same for market in the possible manner. While the prospect for demand for shipping East, for table consumption at home and for canning, were more promising than now, there must necessarily be a great deal that would pay better to dry than to sell fresh. While we would not advise drying in criminally by those convenient to mark provided they can sell at fair prices in a free state, there is much fruit that is too from market to be shipped at a profit, and there will no doubt be an excess of some variety over the amount which will be required in a fresh state. Therefore we would advise preparation for drying in case a necessary arises for doing so. There are but few orchards but whatsoever of the fruit would pay better dried than marketed fresh. Parties who are conveniently to market and have the chance to choose whether they will sell their fruit in a free state or dried, would do well to experiment and figure the profits to be derived on the kinds of fruit if sold fresh or dried. There are some varieties of plums, for instance that will make almost 50 per cent. more dried fruit than some others. We see this if all are sold green at the same price and the price is only about what the low grade would bring dried, there is a big loss on some varieties. The same will hold good on other kinds of fruit, but not to so great an extent as in plums. Owing to the manner of treatment in diving, there is often a very great difference... Thompson was well known to the cowmen of Texas. He always attended their conventions, and he usually made himself obnoxious. When the cattle raisers met in Austin two years ago, Ben kept the entire crowd on the verge of battle for three or four days, but no blood was shed. On the last day of the Convention he drank heavily, and when the delegates were indulging in a farewell banquet he jumped into the dining hall with an unearthly war whoop, flourishing a big revolver in each hand. The attack was so sudden that the cowmen stampeded, some jumping out of windows, others crawling under tables, and still others dashing madly into the street. Very few of them were armed, and the well-known desperation of the man threw them into a momentary panic. Five minutes later the banquetters were going round with tears in their eyes, beaming their luck and wishing they could have had second's warning of the terror's approach. When the banquetters were going round with tears in their eyes, beaming their luck and wishing they could have had second's warning of the terror's approach. When the banquetters were going round with tears in their eyes, beaming their luck and wishing they could have had second's warning of the terror's approach. Thompson stood at one end with a revolver in each hand, and emptied his weapons, two shots at a time, at the glasses on the tables, breaking about half of them. After this experience the cowmen determined to be ready for him, and many of them came to the meeting this year expecting to have trouble with him, for he sent word early that he would be here. Ben Thompson had been a border desperate ever since the war, and his victims numbered fully a score. He was well known in all the cities of Texas, in many Western mining camps, and along all the cattle trails. His parents are English people, who came to this country just before the war, when Ben was a lad of 16. He served in a Confederate regiment during the rebellion, and at the surrender crossed over into Mexico, where he was soldier for a short time under Maximilian. On the fall of that monarch he returned to Texas and entered on a career of crime which has few equals even in this country. Kunming gambling games of all kinds, he made his home with the cattle men. When the drive occurred he and his brother Billy always went along, and always got into trouble. In 1868, when Abidene was the shipping point for Texas cattle, Thompson arrived there with a herd, and the same night undertook to "run town," as he called it. William Huckock, better known as Wild Bill, was Marshal of Abidene, and hearing of Thompson's movements, he recruited a party and attacked him. Thompson had several backers, and in the running fire that was kept up for more than an hour, several men on both sides were killed and wounded. The next morning Wild Bill organized a posse and chased Thompson and his friends into the Indian Territory, keeping close on their trail, and allowing them no time to rest or sleep. Thompson finally escaped, but he never appeared in Abidene again while Wild Bill was Marshal. The next year the drive ended at Ellsworth, Kansas, where Ben and his brother Billy determined to recover some of their lost prestige. They captured the town immediately on their arrival, and when the Sheriff demonstrated they shot him dead. Finding the place too hot for them, they left the town next day, closely pursued by a posse, but the brothers, who were magnificently armed with Winchester and revolvers, kept their pursuers at bay, and escaped in safety to Texas. Although Billy Thompson was arrested for this murder some time afterward he was never punished for it. After killing a number of men down on the border, Thompson appeared in Austin in 1874, and provoking a quarrel with the owner of a theater there named Wilson shot him. "Mexicans!" ejaculated Fisher, with a string of caths which startled his inquisitor; I don't call Mexicans men." Among other stories of this man's murderous exploits in Mexico is one to the effect that he charged through a town on the other side of the Rio Grande with nine pairs of Mexican ears strung on his bridle rein. Why Kerosene Lamps Explode. A great many fatal accidents occur from trying to pour a little kerosene on the fire to make it kindle better, also by pouring oil in a lamp while it is lighted. Most persons suppose it is the kerosene itself that explodes, and that if they are very careful to keep the oil itself from being touched by fire or light there will be no danger. But this is not so. It can or lamp is left almost half full of kerosene oil the oil will dry up—that is, "evaporate" a little, and will form by mingling with the air in the upper part, a very explosive gas. You cannot see this gas any more than you can see air. But if it is disturbed and driven out and a blaze reaches it there will be a terrible explosion, although the blaze did not touch the oil. There are also several other liquids used in houses and workshops which will produce an explosive vapor in this way. Benzine is one, burning fluid is another, naphtha, alcohol, ether, chloroform may do the same thing. In a New York workshop lately there was a can of benzine or gasoline on the floor. A boy, sixteen years old, lighted a cigarette and threw the burning match on the floor close to the can. He did not dream there was any danger, because the liquid was corked up in the can. But there was a great explosion and he was badly hurt. This seems very mysterious. The probability is that the can had been standing there a good while, and a good deal of vapor had formed, some of which had leaked out around the stoper and was hanging in a sort of invisible cloud over and around the can, and this cloud, when the match struck it, exploded. Suppose a girl tries to fill a kerosene lamp without first trying to blow it out. Of course the lamp is nearly empty, or she would not care to fill it. This empty space is filled with a cloud of explosive vapor arising from the oil in the lamp. When she pushes the needle of the can into the lamp at the top and begins to pour, the oil runs into the lamp hills the space, and pushes the cloud of explosive vapor up; the vapor is obliged to pour out over the edges of the lamp at the top into the room outside. It strikes against the blazing wick when the girl is nudging down by one side. The blaze of the wick sets the invisible cloud of vapor aire, and there is an explosion which ignites the oil and scatters it over her clothes and over the furniture of the room. This is due to wind in which a kerosene lamp bursts. The same thing may occur when a girl pours the oil over the fire into the range or stove, if there is a cloud of explosive vapor in the upper part of the can, or if the stove is not enough to vaporize quickly some of the oil as it falls. Remember it is not the oil but the invisible vapor which explodes. Taking care of the oil will not protect you. There is no safety except in this rule: Never pour oil on a lighted tire or into a lighted lamp. Teaching His Sister To Fly. A Philadelphia dispatch of March 24th to the New York Sun says: "A West Philadelphia boy tried an experiment to-day. He had made up his mind that a human being string of caths which startled his inquisitor; I don't call Mexicans men." Among other stories of this man's murderous exploits in Mexico is one to the effect that he charged through a town on the other side of the Rio Grande with nine pairs of Mexican ears strung on his bridle rein. Why Kerosene Lamps Explode. A great many fatal accidents occur from trying to pour a little kerosene on the fire to make it kindle better, also by pouring oil in a lamp while it is lighted. Most persons suppose it is the kerosene itself that explodes, and that if they are very careful to keep the oil itself from being touched by fire or light there will be no danger. But this is not so. It can or lamp is left almost half full of kerosene oil the oil will dry up—that is, "evaporate" a little, and will form by mingling with the air in the upper part, a very explosive gas. You cannot see this gas any more than you can see air. But if it is disturbed and driven out and a blaze reaches it there will be a terrible explosion, although the blaze did not touch your ear or light there will be no danger. But this is not so. It can or lamp is left almost half full of kerosene oil the oil will dry up—that is, "evaporate" a little, and will form by mingling with the air in the upper part, a very explosive gas. You cannot see this gas any more than you can see air. But if it is disturbed and driven out and a blaze reaches it there will be a terrible explosion, although the blaze did not touch your ear or light there will be no danger. But this is not so. 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than if a dark color. If brass and over-ripe; it cannot be made desirable; If not properly cured; it cannot long to either heat of drizzle or sun; it becomes hard; tasteless as unsightly. Secondly — After curing it should be placed in uniform size boxes; made as light as pristice to bear the strain of packing; or strong cotton sacks. If boxes are needed different sizes; difference should be less depth; length and width remaining same so they can be piled one on top of other so advantage in store-house or car; must see its importance of packing in new form packages. In that case small lots such as variety and grade can be put together; thereby making a straight lot to load cars; and thus enabling merchants to make sales often when they could not do so small lots if they were in different styles of packages. Thirdly — A matter which is of much more importance than thought for; is to get thru fruit ready for market to advance; more salable than if a dark color. If brass and over-ripe; it cannot be made desirable; If not properly cured; it cannot long to either heat of drizzle or sun; it becomes hard; tasteless as unsightly. 第四季 — After curing it should be placed in uniform size boxes; made as light as pristice to bear the strain of packing; or strong cotton sacks. If boxes are needed different sizes; difference should be less depth; length and width remaining same so they can be piled one on top of other so advantage in store-house or car; must see its importance of packing in new form packages. 第五季 — After curing it should be placed in uniform size boxes; made as light as pristice to bear the strain of packing; or strong cotton sacks. If boxes are needed different sizes; difference should be less depth; length and width remaining same so they can be piled one on top of other so advantage in store-house or car; must see its importance of packing in new form packages. 第六季 — After curing it should be placed in uniform size boxes; made as light as pristice to bear the strain of packing; or strong cotton sacks. If boxes are needed different sizes; difference should be less depth; length and width remaining same so they can be piled one on top of other so advantage in store-house or car; must see its importance of packing in new form packages. 第七季 — After curing it should be placed in uniform size boxes; made as light as pristice to bear the strain of packing; or strong cotton sacks. If boxes are needed different sizes; difference should be less depth; length and width remaining same so they can be piled one on top of other so advantage in store-house or car; must see its importance of packing in new form packages. 第八季 — After curing it should be placed in uniform size boxes; made as light as pristice to bear the strain of packing; or strong cotton sacks. If boxes are needed different sizes; difference should be less depth; length and width remaining same so they can be piled one on top of other so advantage in store-house or car; must see its importance of packing in new form packages. 第九季 — After curing it should be placed in uniform size boxes; made as light as pristice to bear the strain of packing; or strong cotton sacks. If boxes are needed different sizes; difference should be less depth; length and width remaining same so they can be piled one on top of other so advantage in store-house or car; must see its importance of packing in new form packages. 第十季 — After curing it should be placed in uniform size boxes; made as light as pristice to bear the strain of packing; or strong cotton sacks. If boxes are needed different sizes; difference should be less depth; length and width remaining same so they can be piled one on top of other so advantage in store-house or car; must see its importance of packing in new form packages. 第十一季 — After curing it should be placed in uniform size boxes; made as light as pristice to bear the strain of packing; or strong cotton sacks. If boxes are needed different sizes; difference should be less depth; length and width remaining same so they can be piled one on top of other so advantage in store-house or car; must see its importance of packing in new form packages. 第十二季 — After curing it should be placed in uniform size boxes; made as light as pristice to bear the strain of packing; or strong棉花 sacks. If boxes are needed different sizes; difference should be less depth; length和width remaining same so they can be piled one on top of other so advantage in store-house或car;must see its importance of packing in new form packages. 第十三季 — After curing it should be placed in uniform size boxes;made as light as pristice to bear的 strainofpacking;or strong棉花 sacks。If boxes are needed different sizes;差异应该在存储中得到妥善处理;并且能够带来经济效益。 第十四季 — After curing it should be placed in uniform size boxes;made as light as pristice to bear的 strainofpacking;or strong棉花 sacks。If boxes are needed different sizes;差异应该在存储中得到妥善处理;并且能够带来经济效益。 第十五季 — After curing it should be placed in uniform size boxes;made as light as pristice to bear的 strainofpacking;or strong棉花 sacks。If boxes are needed different sizes;差异应该在存储中得到妥善处理;并且能够带来经济效益。 第十六季 — After curing it should be placed in uniform size boxes;made as light as pristice to bear的 strainofpacking;or strong棉花 sacks。If boxes are needed different sizes;差异应该在存储中得到妥善处理;并且能够带来经济效益。 第十七季 — After curing it should be placed in uniform size boxes;made as light as pristice to bear的 strainofpacking;or strong棉花 sacks。If boxes are needed different sizes;差异应该在存储中得到妥善处理;并且能够带来经济效益。 第十八季 — After curing it should be placed in uniform size boxes;made as light as pristice to bear的 strainofpacking;or strong棉花 sacks。If boxes are needed different sizes;差异应该在存储中得到妥善处理;并且能够带来经济效益。 第十九季 — After curing it should be placed in uniform size boxes;made as light as pristice to bear的 strainofpacking;or strong棉花 sacks。If boxes are needed different sizes;差异应该在存储中得到妥善处理;并且能够带来经济效益。 第二十季 — After curing it should be placed in uniform size boxes;made as light as pristice to bear的 strainofpacking;or strong棉花 sacks。If boxes are needed different sizes;差异应该在存储中得到妥善处理;并且能够带来经济效益。 第二十一季 — After curing it should be placed in uniform size boxes;made as light as pristice to bear的 strainofpacking;or strong棉花 sacks。If boxes are needed different sizes;差异应该在存储中得到妥善处理;并且能够带来经济效益。 第二十二季 — After curing it should be placed in uniform size boxes;made as light as pristice to bear的 strainofpacking;or strong棉花 sacks。If boxes are needed different sizes;差异应该在存储中得到妥善处理;并且能够带来经济效益。 第二十三季 — After curing it should be placed in uniform size boxes;made as light as pristice to bear的 strainofpacking;or strong棉花 sacks。If boxes are needed different sizes;差异应该在存储中得到妥善处理;并且能够带来经济效益。 第二十四季 — After curing it should be placed in uniform size boxes;made as light as pristice to bear的 strainofpacking;or strong棉花 sacks。If boxes are needed different sizes;差异应该在存储中得到妥善处理;并且能够带来经济效益。 第二十五季 — After curing it should be placed in uniform size boxes;made as light as pristice to bear的 strainofpacking;or strong棉花 sacks。If boxes are needed different sizes;差异应该在存储中得到妥善处理;并且能够带来经济效益。 第二十六季 — After curing it should be placed in uniform size boxes;made as light as pristice to bear的 strainofpacking;or strong棉花 sacks。If boxes are needed different sizes;差异应该在存储中得到妥善处理;并且能够带来经济效益。 第二十七季 — After curing它 should be placed in uniform size boxes;made as light as pristice to bear的 strainofpacking;or strong棉花 sacks。If boxes are needed different sizes;差异应该在存储中得到妥善处理;并且能够带来经济效益。 第二十八季 — After curing它 should be placed in uniform size boxes;made as light as pristice to bear的 strainofpacking;or strong棉花 sacks。If boxes are needed different sizes;差异应该在存储中得到妥善处理;并且能够带来经济效益。 第二十九季 — After curing它 should be placed in uniform size boxes;made as light as pristice to bear的 strainofpacking;or strong棉花 sacks。If boxes are needed different sizes;差异应该在存储中得到妥善处理;并且能够带来经济效益。 第三0季 — After curing它 should be placed in uniform size boxes;made as light as pristice to bear的 strainofpacking;or strong棉花 sacks。If boxes are needed different sizes;差异应该在存储中得到妥善处理;并且能够带来经济效益。 第三1季 — After curing它 should be placed in uniform size boxes;made as light as pristice to bear的 strainofpacking;or strong棉花 sacks。If boxes are needed different sizes;差异应该在存储中得到妥善处理;并且能够带来经济效益。 第三2季 — After curing它 should be placed in uniform size boxes;made as light as pristice到 Bear's Garden,Tennessee,Oklahoma,Tennessee,Oklahoma,Tennessee,Oklahoma,Tennessee,Oklahoma,Tennessee,Oklahoma,Tennessee,Oklahoma,Tennessee,Oklahoma,Tennessee,Oklahoma,Tennessee,Oklahoma,Tennessee,Oklahoma,Tennessee,Oklahoma,Tennessee,Oklahoma,Tennessee,Oklahoma,Tennessee,Oklahoma,Tennessee,Oklahoma,Tennessee,Oklahoma,Tennessee,Oklahoma,Tennessee,Oklahoma,Tennessee,Oklahoma,Tennessee,Oklahoma,Tennessee,Oklahoma,Tennessee,Oklahoma, 第三3季 — After curing它 should be placed in uniform size boxes;made as light as pristice到 Bear's Garden,Tennessee,Oklahoma,Tennessee,Oklahoma,Tennessee,O Oklahoma,Tennessee,O Oklahoma,Tennessee,O Oklahoma,Tennessee,O Oklahoma,Tennessee,O Oklahoma,Tennessee,O Oklahoma,Tennessee,O Oklahoma,Tennessee,O Oklahoma,Tennessee,O Oklahoma,Tennessee,O Oklahoma,Tennessee,O Oklahoma,Tennessee,O Oklahoma,Tennessee,O Oklahoma, 第三4季 — After curing它 should be placed in uniform size boxes;made as light as pristice到 Bear's Garden,Tennessee,Oklahoma,Tennessee,O Oklahoma,Tennessee,O Oklahoma,Tennessee,O Oklahoma,Tennessee,O Oklahoma,Tennessee,O Oklahoma,Tennessee,O Oklahoma,Tennessee,O Oklahoma, The next year the drive ended at Ella-worth, Kansas, where Ben and his brother Billy determined to recover some of their lost prestige. They captured the town immediately on their arrival, and when the Sheriff demonstrated they shot him dead. Finding the place too hot for them, they left the town the next day, closely pursued by a posse, but the brothers, who were magnificently armed with Winchester and revolvers, kept their pursuers at bay, and escaped in safety to Texas. Although Billy Thompson was arrested for this murder some time afterward he was never punished for it. After killing a number of men down on the border, Thompson appeared in Austin in 1874, and provoking a quarrel with the owner of a theater there named Wilson, shot him dead. This was a desperate battle, a dozen men or more taking part, and weapons of every description, from a shotgun to a bowie knife, being used. Much of Thompson's deviltry was committed in a spirit of fun. Going by the Raymond House in Austin one night, he noticed a number of guests on the piazza fanning themselves. "Let's have some fun," said he to his companion, and, walking behind one of the strangers he hired twice with his revolver in rapid succession into his chair. The man was hit by one of the bullets, but was not fatally hurt. In the excitement Thompson escaped. Once when in partnership with a man named Lorraine in the gambling business at Austin, Thompson, who had drawn more money from the bank than was due him, was turned off when he asked for more. Drawing his six-shooter, he put one bullet through the check rack, smashed the globe of the hazard dealer with another and shot off a gas burner. Hearing that a woman named Fannie Kelly had spoken of him in uncomplimentary terms, he visited her at her house and opened the interview by shooting the keys out of her piano, shattering the mirrors, and snuffing the lamps with pistol balls. Only two weeks before his death he wrote to Jim Courtwright of Fort Worth, saying: I have no place to go and I am coming up there to run your town. I understand that you are running it now. To this Courtright replied: I am Deputy Marshal here. I can run the town without your help. You need not come. Ben had one or two fights with Courtright, and knowing his man pretty well, let him and Fort Worth alone. King Fisher was younger, slighter, and more genteel than Thompson, although the latter sometimes dressed elegantly and appeared well. Fisher was quiet and of pleasant address. An old admirer said of him the other day that "no man was ever wrapped up in a tougher hide than Fisher." He was run out of Mexico for robbery. He lived on the border generally. He had killed many men, his choice being Mexicans. He had a deadly antipathy to the "greasors" and enjoyed killing them. When Fisher there is a cloud of explosive vapor in the upper part of the can, or if the stove is hot enough to vaporize quickly some of the oil as it falls. Remember it is not the oil but the invisible vapor which explodes. Taking care of the oil will not protect you. There is no safety except in this rule: Never pour oil on a lighted fire or into a lighted lamp. Teaching His Sister to Fly. A Philadelphia dispatch of March 24th to the New York Sun says: "A West Philadelphia boy tried an experiment to-day. He had made up his mind that a human being could fly as well as a bird if he went about it in the right way and he thought he knew the way. He persuaded his younger sister, who had great confidence in him, to become his assistant. Having laid his plans before her and convinced her that flying was a very simple matter after all, she consented to make the first attempt. He took her up to the second-story porch, and having brought out a pair of big turkey wings, an old umbrella and some stout cord, he began to rig up the too-confiding victim for the great trial. He bound one wing to the outside of each of her arms and fastened the outspread umbrella to her body by putting the handle behind her head and passing the cord around just below her shoulders. The umbrella was to act as a parachute, about which he had read just enough to make his knowledge dangerous, and he quieted the girl's misgivings by saying that this arrangement would 'let her down easy.' When the little girl stood completely arrayed for the trip the boy told her that all she had to do was to jump and flap her wings and she would fly like any bird. Five minutes later the family doctor was sent for in great haste to mend a broken leg, and the youth, when upbraided and punished for his cruel folly, insisted that if the little goose had flapped her wings as he told her to she would have been all right." Company Shops. Mr., M. M. Shoffner, Postmaster and Justice of the Peace, Company Shops, Almanac Co., N.C., writes, he has used St. Jacob's Oil for rheumatism, cuts, swelled ankles and knees, pains in the back and sore-throat. One or two applications in each case has always cured, and he believes the Great German Remedy is the best in the world. "As long as I can get it," he adds, "I never intend to be without it." I will quote from the remarks of the eastern gentleman referred to above. He said that they had found it difficult to get traction from California in time for their fall traction that they were forced to buy peaches from North Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee and other places; prunes from France and Turkey and raisins from Malaga. After they had secured sufficient stocks for their trade there was no disposition to buy, although they might do so if offered for less than they had paid; but no one wants an oversteal with such articles. He expressed the belief that if the dried products of the California orchards were brought into market early they would have much to do with discounting foreign importations, and if sold prices as low as others, all that could be raised, or at least many times more than they yet been produced, would find ready markets. Our producers should profit by such a vice; for it must be evident to them that their markets were supplied with dried fruits, raisins, prunes, etc., before California began to produce them, and if our products were blotted out, the markets would agree be supplied with those articles from other countries. Thus, as we do not hold a monopoly, we should avail ourselves of every opportunity to outstrip those we come in competition with. By taking pains we can do so in quality. We would like to impress our fruit men the necessity of pruning heads or thinning their trees and vines, so as get better sized fruit. Unless they take more pains in that they will not only efface the sale of California dried fruit, but they will destroy the chances to hold the prestige we claim to have with prunes and raisins. There will be no trouble in getting oiled fruits, nuts and prunes into market time if growers will only attend to it. Many localities there will have to be a different mode adopted for curing raisins to hasten them ready for market in time. They should be in the hands of the retail merchants by the middle of November in order that consumers may have their supply for Thanksgiving, as large amounts are consumed there and at Christmas. It is in this the important raisins have had great advantages over California. Our producers must realize they have these things to contend with, and in order to succeed must remedy them as far as possible their power. The time was when it was raining; but since it was working off them now have to go on their merits, and that they can do if the producers will talk pains in preparing them. "Finger nails cameod, price $25 and up wards," is the sign of a Philadelphia artist. For a cough or cold there is no rumor equal to Ammen's Cough Syrup. GAZETTE. APRIL 12, 1884. ATIONS TO FRUIT DRIERS. It will be remembered that last spring Dr. Koch reported the results of microscopic and other investigation and research by himself and associates upon the infectiousness of consumption. He concluded affirmatively on that question. Subsequently the British Medical Association sent out a circular of inquiry to the physicians of Great Britain with a view of collecting the results of their observations. The report on the replies received has been made. There were sent in 1,068 replies to the circular. Of these 673 could give no opinion for lack of cases in which observations could be made. In the negative—belief in non-communicability of the disease—105 physicians recorded themselves, and 39 gave answers that were doubtful, while 261 replied that their observations justified their subscribing to the affirmative proposition of the question. These cited cases to show that consumption is caused by a germ, and that it is communicable. Thus, in the case of a dressmaker with the consumption, the disease was communicated to three young apprentice girls who, from time to time, slept in the same bed with her, and the three all died within two years. A young man with consumption was nursed by his sister, and she took the disease, and from her the disease was communicated to a companion, a robust young woman. Many cases were cited of the disease being communicated by one of a married pair to the other. In 130 out of 192 instances of this kind, the party contracting the disease had no predisease. The highest rate postage from this country is to Patagonia and the island of St. Helena—fifty-four cents an ounce. Telephone apparatus is now so perfect that conversation between New York and Boston can be carried on in a whisper. According to a prominent physician, one-half the colored children born in Baltimore die before attaining the age of two years. Mrs. Dillon, aged sixty-five years, was recently buried at Pittsburg in the shroud she made forty-four years ago in Ireland. Two patient erotic bage players in Boston have played 23,000 games, and at the latest accounts one was only one game ahead of the other. Mrs. Hannan Simon of Newark waltzed ten minutes at the celebration of her ninety-seventh birthday. From 1334 to 1831 sumptuary edicts as to dress were issued at Berlin. The last forbids women without rank to wear silk dresses. Kerosene oil will soften boots and shoes that have been hardened by water, and will render them pliable and new. At a recent meeting of "bunko" men in Philadelphia it was resolved that no checks would be after he received unless certified. A young ladies' brass band has been established at Santa Barbara. The members are said to be talented musicians. An Alabama judge has decided that a man who puts his satchel on a seat in the car reserves the seat—unless the man who removes it is bigger than he is. An Iowa town of 1,300 inhabitants is endeavoring to maintain twelve church organizations. This gives everybody in town who pretends to sing a chance in the choir. Last autumn no fewer than twenty-one refineries of beet-root sugar were started in After curing it should be put in boxes made as light as practicable the strain of packing, or in sacks. If boxes are used of oils, the difference should be in width remaining the same, be piled one on top of the other in the store-house or car. All importance of packing in units. In that case small lots of oily and grade can be put to use enabling the merchants to often when they could not do so, slots if they were in different stages. A matter which is of much more than thought for, is to get the market as soon as possible. It much the custom to hold back it for the market to advance, orders come from the East for winds it is difficult to get up carriage hands of the commission. Thus is lost one profit which might make if they sent in fast as dried, for then the command would have accumulated time the demand springs up a direct to Eastern buyers. Due from the remarks of the eastman referred to above. He said I found it difficult to get fruit in time for their fall trade; there forced to buy peaches from Georgia, Tennessee and others from France and Turkey, from Malaga. After they had sufficient stocks for their trade, disposition to buy, although so if offered for less than they met no one wants an overstock articles. He expressed the belief fried products of the California were brought into market early, have much to do with discouragement. Wedded to a Corpse. At a recent meeting of "bunko" men in Philadelphia it was resolved that no checks would hereafter be received unless certified. A young ladies' brass band has been established at Santa Barbara. The members are said to be talented musicians. An Alabama judge has decided that a man who puts his satchel on a seat in the cars reserves the seat—unless the man who removes it is bigger than he is. An Iowa town of 1,300 inhabitants is endeavoring to maintain twelve church organizations. This gives everybody in town who pretends to sing a chance in the choir. Last autumn no fewer than twenty-one refineries of beet-root sugar were started in Thuringsa, Germany; at this present time thirty-two others are in course of erection. A resolution has been adopted by the Congregational Church of Wallingford Conn., for bulding the members "to drink bipurp of any sort, except hard cider." Raw flesh from one hog in Prussian Saxony, last year, made 403 persons seriously ill and caused the death of sixty-six of them from trachomosis. There were 23,310 houses built in London and the suburbs in 1883, forming 508 new streets and one new square, and covering a distance of 75 miles. The English taste for port is apparently diminishing. At the recent sale of the Burghley cellars, port of the famous vintage of 1854 sold for 61s, per dozen. In defiance of the prohibitory law of Kansas, a man named Herold opened a saloon at Canton. On the third day he was shot by a constable. The next morning the women of the place poured his liquors into the street. A paste that will keep paper labels on tin boxes may be made by using a dilute solution (1 to 20) of white gelatine or isinglass, or Sarah paste with which a little Venice turpentine has been incorporated while it was warm. Memphis is stirred to the profoundest depths over the sermon of Rev. N. M. Long, a Presbyterian minister, in which he maintained that Sunday laws were unconstitutional and an outrage upon the rights of citizens—a positive burden upon one class of people. The German town of Fustenfield thinks it has the oldest tree in the world. It is a linden standing in the churchyard among the tombs of centuries, has a trunk fully fifteen feet in diameter and twisted branches, which seem to stretch out all over the enclosure, and is supposed to be 1,000 years old. The Government in France is not afraid of the clerk class, and is afraid of the workmen class, consequently the new income tax will be hardest on the former. The laborer at 8 francs or 10 francs a day will not be taxed, but the railroad or Government employe on a salary amounting to half that sum per day, will have to pay 2½ per cent out of it. At the term of Court in Yanktown county, W. T., just closed, there were eight convictions for polygamy, one for adultery, and one for attempted outrage. One of the peculiar features of the trials is that only the Clerk of the Court is a white man. All the rest—Judge, jury and criminals—were Indians. On the Chinese telegraph lines, which are run by a Danish company, the messages are sent and received in numbers. This is managed by having Chinese characters stamped on one end of a block and numbers on the other. The message is given to a clerk, who turns the blocks over and sends the numbers. Three of the machines patented by a French inventor for the use of the consen- Wedded to a Corpse. Augusta (Me.), April 3.—Samuel B. Robbins was born in the little village of Appleton 51 years ago. He served in the civil war and received wounds which entitled him to a pension. Last July he began to fail rapidly and a month ago it was evident that he could live only a short time. If he died his pension money would be lost, for his wife was dead and he had no children. In this emergency it was decided that a bride must be obtained for the dying soldier. In Rockland was found a woman who was willing to become a wife and widow in quick succession, and on February 26th the banns were published. The law requires five days' notice before marriage. On March 21 Robbins fell into a comatose condition and did not recover his senses before he died, on March 4th. It is said that when Squire Pease, the Pension Agent, learned how near dissolution Robbins was, he sent post-haste to Rockland for the bride; but it is alleged that the woman did not arrive until midnight, nine hours after Robbins' death. The story goes that the woman was hurriedly taken to the chamber where Robbins lay dead and the horrible mockery of a marriage ceremony between the living woman and the corpse was gone through. Some say that Pease's son took the clammy hand of the dead man and placed it in that of the woman, while others say a young man named Fuller performed this repugnant office. At the funeral she was introduced as Robbina' wife and it is understood she claims his pension money. The case has caused so much scandal that a legal investigation will be held. Ella Wheeler, who writes such burning poetry, is only twenty-four years old, and is engaged to be married. One volume of his wife's poems placed under the dinner-pet will come it to hell in five minutes. W. T., just closed, there were eight convictions for polygamy, one for adultery, and one for attempted outrage. One of the peculiar features of the trials is that only the Clerk of the Court is a white man. All the rest—Judge, jury and criminals—were Indians. On the Chinese telegraph lines, which are run by a Danish company, the messages are sent and received in numbers. This is managed by having Chinese characters stamped on one end of a block and numbers on the other. The message is given to a clark, who turns the blocks over and sends the numbers. Three of the machines patented by a French inventor for the use of the concentrated solar rays as a general motive power have been set up in Algeria for the French Government. He is now stated to be carrying on his experiments on the Porquerolles, near Hyeres, in France, where he is thrashing Indian corn by the action of the sun's rays. A Chinaman recently took an Indian aquaw as a wife at Hawthorne, Nev., and the tribe to which she belonged have declared that they will either have the aquaw or the pagan's scalp. The Celestial has barricaded his house and hired a body-guard and is waiting a good opportunity to leave with his bride. There is a badly sold temperance lodge in Lompoc, Santa Barbara county. Having read in the papers that a wind-storm had destroyed "every cabin and gin-house" on the plantation of Major Young at West Point, Mississippi, the members of Lily Dale Lodge passed congratulatory resolutions and hoped such storms would continue. They thought the "gin-houses" were gin mills, and when they were told that the gins referred to were buildings in which cotton is prepared for market, they were greatly surprised and felt very queer. A left the table at his hotel the other day because there was a dwarf present. He said good digestion could not wait on appetite where there was any diner mite. Fred. Douglass's new father and mother-in-law are said to be nearly heart-broken. Except a son there is nothing more to be dreaded in a family than a daughter. Your common sense should teach you that if any doctor or druggist knew of a better remedy for colds, coughs and lung complaints, than Ammen's Cough Syrup, he would either put it up for general sale or sell the prescription to Mr. Ammen who offers to the world one thousand dollars for the prescription for a better remedy than Ammen's Cough Syrup. All respectable drugists and dealers sell Ammen's Cough Syrup. Ask for it and take no other.