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anaheim-gazette 1884-04-26

1884-04-26 · 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 7.5 OFFICE—In Conrad's Brick Building, Los Angeles Street, Anaheim. TRANSIENT ADVERTISING: SPACE 1 week 2 weeks 3 weeks 4 weeks 1 square ... $1.00 2 squares ... $2.00 3 squares ... $3.00 4 squares ... $4.00 5 squares ... $5.00 6 squares ... $6.00 7.00 ... 8.00 THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN. Relieves and cures RHEUMATISM, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, BACKACHE, HEADACHES, TOOTHACHER, SORE THROAT, QUINSY, SWELLINGS, SPRAINS, Soreness, Cuts, Bruises, FROSTBITES, BURNS, SCALDS, And all other bodily aches and pains. FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE. Sold by all Druggists and Dealers. Directions in 11 languages. The Charles A. Vogeler Co. Baltimore, Md., U.S.A. D W. HUDSON. L W. BENTZ. D. W. HUDSON & CO.. Real Estate Brokers and General Land Agents At Anaheim, Los Angeles County, California. Office:—Center Street. Forty Years Ago. Coffins were very plain and burial caskets were unknown. Tombstones had larger epitaphs and more verbiage engraved upon them. Eggs were a shilling a dozen and butter was considered high at eighteen cents per pound. Much of the silver currency, fips, levies, and dollars was of Mexican and Spanish coinage. The country retail trade was much better, as people could not so easily run to the city by rail. Business letters were more voluminous and formal, and written in a precise, round hand. There was York currency, eight shillings to the dollar and New England currency six shillings to the dollar. The diet was subcharged with grease, the winter breakfast usually being made of salted ham and hot cakes. Dinner was simply a hasty lunch at noon, and little importance was attached to the necessity for good digestion or a period of rest after eating. New Orleans and muscavado molasses, very black and thin, was the common sweetening for buckwheat cakes. Refined molasses was almost unknown. The bank bills were of State banks, and further West their locality the shakier they were. Illinois and Indiana bills would barely pass in New York. Bread was home made. Coffee was freshly ground every morning, and the grinding of the family coffee mill was a familiar sound before the children arose. Negro minstrelsy was just cropping out in the traveling circus. There were generally but two performers who assumed male and female cabracters. The popular melody was "Jump, Jim Crow." People did not live as long as they now do, nor was the average health as good as at present. They ate more meat, more grease, more hot bread, more heavy dishes, and drank more at meals. At funerals the undertaker cried with the mourners, the flow of tears being proportionate to the expense of the funeral. Young couples considered it a privilege to sit up all night with the corpse before burial. When the famous Judge Parsons was at the bar, a client sent him a written statement of a case, requesting his opinion upon it, and enclosed a fee of twenty dollars. After several weeks had elapsed, and no answer had been received, the client again wrote to know the reason of the lawyer's silence. Parsons replied that he had received both letters, had examined the case. Novel Use "What becomes bank notes after the years of uselessness bank note has its last other things useful story the travels moment it leaves the macerating maeverage life of a buryears perhaps a litterits purpose and curved into rabbits, bird process of destructive teresting one. The daily papers a prothis: National Bank demption to day,$ those notes are carried graving and Printing chine containing immeihethe notes into pieces ducted under the censors of the Treasury detailed for this busio to be present at this notes except the o run the machine remain in the room is destroyed. They afterwards to the each note, and show misplaced, and after circulation,the result discharge of thaily have in their c$2,000,000 or $3,000.The shreds are redby a patented process into figures of birds as mementoes to visit pen that one little oof what was once $1, Impossible to From the Bldg The other day a B coming up from Stair to see a man who lives river. In response he heard a shrill,sha entering,found a sha sitting in the room hole leading into the gun on her knee." D. W. HUDSON & CO. Real Estate Brokers and General Land Agents At Anaheim, Los Angeles County, California. Office:—Center Street. Abstracts of Titles Furnished, Loans Negotiated, Taxes Paid and Rents Collected for Non-Residents. Those desirous of making profitable INVESTMENTS cannot do better than to call on us at our office. Correspondence Solicited. THE FAMOUS, UNRIVALLED KNABE PIANO. THE HARDMAN PIANO.. A strictly first-class instrument at a moderate price. The Celebrated Chicago Cottage Organ. A. L. BANCROFT & CO. 721 Market Street, San Francisco. General Agents for Pacific Coast. mch15-2m GIANT BAKING POWDER THE ATTENTION OF HOUSEKEEPERS AND the public in general is called to the following facts: The value of Baking Powder is determined by the amount of gas it contains and the freedom of the article from any injurious ingredients. The Giant Baking Powder is absolutely pure, and contains about one-quarter more gas than any brand of Baking When the famous Judge Parsons was at the bar, a client sent him a written statement of a case, requesting his opinion upon it, and enclosed a fee of twenty dollars. After several weeks had elapsed, and no answer had been received, the client again wrote to know the reason of the lawyer's silence. Parsons replied that he had received both letters, had examined the case and formed an opinion, but somehow or other, "it stuck in his throat." The client took the hint and sent the lawyer one hundred dollars. A Scotch lawyer used to measure out his opinions in proportion to the fee. One day, while dictating an opinion to his clerk, he suddenly stopped. "By the bye, Sandy," said he, "what was the fee in this case?" "Two guineas." "Two guineas! Ay, is that all, man? Why didna ye tell me that sooner? Go on to the next case." Davy, an English barrister, once had a large brief handed him with a fee of two guineas. His client asked him if he had read the brief. "Yes," answered the lawyer, pointing to the words on the back, "'Mr. Davy, two guineas,' as far as that I have read, and for the life of me I can read no farther." An Evansville drummer was travelling in a buggy over in Southern Illinois, and stopped at a cabin in the woods and asked for a drink of water. A gourd was handed him, and, as he stood at the weil, the tall, angular, rawboned woman of the house asked: "Stranger, if it's any o' my business, who might you be,anyhow?" "I am a Hoosier, madam." the tourist replied. "Hoosier, eh? Oh, yes; one o' them fellers that peddles socks. Well, we don't want none. I made dad a pa'r outen his old gray wool shirt. I've got a pa'r o' rayther good ones yet, an 'Sal's'll tote her through till next bar-foot time if she darns up the heels. Like to bargain you, but money's money nowadays, an' we kin worry through with wa't we've got. Wat's that? Plug tobacker? Wish you'd gimme 'bout halt a pipeful of it." The Empress of Austria is getting on in years, but she is still pronounced to be the most beautiful of the royal women of Europe. She is proud of her hair, which is bountifully abundant, and of her waist, which is girlishly slender, and she maintains her fresh, clear complexion by going to bed betimes and getting up early and by spending hours every day on horseback. Prince Bismarck is no admirer of eloquence. "It is with these eloquent gentlemen," he says, "as with ladies who have small feet. They wear boots which are much too tight and always try to show their feet. So if anybody has the misfortune to be eloquent, his speeches are too long and too frequent." A petition of the women of Siam has been laid at the feet of the King, praying his Royal Serenity that he take from their husbands the right to pledge them in the payment of gambling debts. It is said the of what was once $100 million. Impossible to ask. "Yes, sir; he air." "Can I see him at No, sir; you can of im." "Why can't I, may speak to him on busiIf you was a dynamic doctor in Dakota, you him till he gives in dinner, awhile ago, the apple soss, an' but sass, an' he sawas soss, an' I tol' h notion that a little a to his stomach to have that soss or die defend that soss with for the shotgun, an through the scuttle his senses come to his sass is sass, he ki makes a break afore his head. Thar set that's Jim up in tha the matters stand jis better mosey along, throow." As the gentleman her voice saying: "Ji o' yer durn foolin' squeal out!" And a gruff voice fret replied: "Soss!" A Valuablen Boston Letter in The Queen, as he w has often made visits policy to her estates such times more than the canny Scots, who tion, highly reverence that she does. On one occasion, she her castle in the (blessed aptness), Mr eling through the Scotchwoman, with w majesty. "The Queen's a good I suppose she's go are things I canna be What do you mes Well, I think tha the Queen has no re thing, she goes rowing day and it isn't a Chi But you know tha I know," she inte read the Bible since knew ev'ry word in't Soonday fishing and s good Lord did, but I that I don't think any for adoin' it." THE ATTENTION OF HOUSEKEEPERS AND the public in general is called to the following facts: The value of Baking Powder is determined by the amount of gas it contains and the freedom of the article from any injurious ingredients. The GIANT BAKING POWDER is absolutely pure, and contains about one-quarter more gas than any brand of Baking Powder in use on this Coast. Three cans of GIANT BAKING POWDER are equal to four cans of any other brand. Study economy and use none other. Your grocer will furnish you with a sample can free. Try it. FACTS. SAN FRANCISCO, JULY 13, 1853. BOTHIN MANUFACTURING CO. GENTLEMEN: The sample of GIANT BAKING POWDER I handed me, also samples of the following brands of Baking Powders purchased by me in open market. I have tested for total quantity of available gas, with results as follows: GIANT 196 cubic inches per ounce avoiddupola. ROYAL, 139 cubic inches. NEW ENGLAND, 110 cubic inches. PIONEER, 107 cubic inches. GOLDEN GATE, 107 cubic inches. DR. PRICE'S, 90 cubic inches. Yours, respectfully, THOMAS PRICE, Chemist. SAN FRANCISCO Sept. 24, 1853. H. E. BOTHIN, President Bothin Manufacturing Co. DEAR SIR: After a careful and complete chemical analysis of a can of GIANT BAKING POWDER, purchased by us in open market, we find that it does not contain alum, acid phosphate, terra alba, or any injurious substances, but is a pure, healthful Cream Tartar Baking Powder, and as such can recommend it to consumers. Yours, respectfully, WM. T. WENZELL & CO., Analytic Chemist. R. BEVERLY COLE, M. D. J. L. MEARES, M. D., Health officer. ALFRED W. PERRY, M. D. W. A. DOOGLASS, M. D. ADR. ALGER, M. D. MANUFACTURED BY THE BOTHIN MANUFACTURING COMPANY 17 AND 19 MAIN ST., SAN FRANCISCO FOR SALE BY ALL DEALERS A PRIZE. Send six cents for postage and receive free, a mostly box of goods which will help all, of either sex, to more money right away than anything else in this world. Fortune awaits the workers absolutely sure. At once address Taunton & Co., Augusta, Maine. Prince Bismarck is no admirer of eloquence. "It is with these eloquent gentlemen," he says, "as with ladies who have small feet. They wear boots which are much too tight and always try to show their feet. So if anybody has the misfortune to be eloquent, his speeches are too long and too frequent." A petition of the women of Siam has been laid at the feet of the King, praying his Royal Serenity that he take from their husbands the right to pledge them in the payment of gambling debts. It is said the King finds many difficulties in the way of guanting this presumptuous prayer. According to a letter in a London newspaper, one is not allowed to write on postal cards in an English postoffice, and the writer compares this stupid prohibition with the conveniences for writing furnished in the Belgian post offices. A large Newfoundland dog that held one end of a rope while one girl at the other end swung the rope so that another skipped it, amused New York in the City Hall Park, Sunday week. Capt. Traynor, of Bath, Me., has gone to New York to prepare for his attempt to row across the Atlantic in a boat thirteen feet long and five feet wide, beginning in June. The Montgomery, Ala., Advertiser says the Southern country is almost overrun with negro preachers, who are multiplying by scores and hundreds. It is said there is still outstanding $6,984,000 in fractional currency, the most of which is either lost or destroyed, or in the hands of curiosity dealers. An insurance company to indemnify bicycle riders for injuries received has been organized in London with a capital of £100,-000. The price of Circassian girls has lately dropped to about $600, or the lowest figure ever known. A Persian pupil of the following extraordinaire: "What is gratitude? "Gratitude is the most important thing; what is hope?" "Hope is the blossom of life; what is the difference between desire." "Desire is a true flower; enjoyment is better; what is eternity?" "A day without ye shall lose your mind; a line that has no end shall never die." Novel Use of Greenbacks. Hartford Globe. "What becomes of all the greenbacks and bank notes after they have served their few years of usefulness?" is a frequent query. A bank note has its life, just the same as all other things useful. What an interesting story the travels of a greenback, from the moment it leaves the press until it returns to the macerating machine, would make! The average life of a bank note is about three years, perhaps a little longer. After serving its purpose and currency, it is metamorphosed into rabbits, birds and other figures. The process of destruction of the notes is an interesting one. The readers will often see in the daily papers a paragraph something like this: National Bank notes received for redemption to-day, $500,000." The next day those notes are carried to the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, and placed in a machine containing immense knives, which cut the notes into pieces. The operation is conducted under the supervision of three officers of the Treasury Department especially detailed for this business. No one is allowed to be present at this daily maceration of the notes, except the officials and the men who run the machine. They are compelled to remain in the room until each separate note is destroyed. They must account in detail afterwards to the Redemption Bureau for each note, and should one become lost or misplaced, and afterwards find its way into circulation, the result would be the immediate discharge of the three gentlemen who daily have in their custody from $500,000 to $2,000,000 or $3,000,000 of notes and bonds. The shreds are reduced to pulp, and then, by a patented process this mass is molded into figures of birds and animals, and sold as mementoes to visitors. Often it will happen that one little object will be composed of what was once $1,000,000 worth of money. Impossible to See the Doctor. From the Bismarck Tribune. The other day a Bismarck gentleman was coming up from Standing Rock, and stopped to see a man who lives near the Cannon Bail river. In response to a knock at the door he heard a shrill, sharp "Come in!" and, on entering, found a sharp-faced, angular woman sitting in the room under an open scuttle hole leading into the loft above, with a shotgun on her knee. "Is the gentleman of the house in," he asked. EVERYTHING. No woman should borrow the husband of another, because it is not good for man to be a loan. Proofreaders are a very incredulous body of men. They won't take anybody's word for anything; they must have the proofs. What is the difference in the entrance-to-a barn and a loafer in a printing office? One is a barn door and the other is a darn bore. "Links of Love," is a very pretty heading for a wedding notice. The real lynx of love is the watchful, jealous wife of the equally vigilant husband. A patent medicine manufacturer advertises for bald men who are willing to have advertisements painted on the tops of their heads, "for a high pecuniary recompense." "Uncle, when sis sings in the choir Sunday nights why does she go behind the organ and taste the tenor's moustache?" "Oh, don't bother me, sonny! I suppose they have to do it to find out if they're in tune." An old subscriber being handed his paper right from the press, asked why the paper was so damp. The editor said he didn't know, unless it was because there was so much due on it. "No one dying," says a Baltimore clergy-man, "sends for a dancing master to comfort him." Certainly not. And no one giving a party sends for a Baltimore clergyman to lead the German. "Tell me, mother, tell your daughter, Tell me truly—do not scoff— Tell me if you think I oughtter Take these durned old flannels off?" "Talk about bein' careful about wearin' out the seat o'my trousers," said the boy to his mother, "you don't seem to think o'that when your old slipper's again' it." The editor of a Western journal says: The great art of running a newspaper is the art of guessing where hell is liable to break loose next, and to have reporters right there to write it up promptly. An exchange from Georgia says that a man in that State catches fish in his well that are big enough to fry. That is just the well that a man needs to keep him home Sundays. A Rochester baker has made a cake weighing 610 pounds. This is about the weight of the cake usually baked by a newly married young woman, but why should a baker try to beat the record of a bride? The population of London came within one of exactly doubling, in the past forty-one years. It would have doubled exactly only the census takers refused to count Oscar Wilde as more than one-half. "They say that absence conquers love, but I believe it not," said a Newport young man who had been visiting a week in a temperance town and couldn't get whisky as he walked up to the bar and called for a drink. "Is your mother in?" asked a visitor of LUMBER YARD PLANING, SAWING, AND MOULDING MILLS. OF Saxton & Cox, Anaheim. NEAR THE RAILROAD DEPOT AllVarieties of Pine, Redwood,and Spruce LUMBER! Doors,Sashes,and Blinds,Grape Boxes,Fruit Boxes,Bee-Hives,and Fruit Dryers. Builders' Hardware and Nails Plain and Fancy SCROLL SAWING at Short Notices 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. GRAIN SACKS and TWINE constantly on hand CONSIGNMENTS SOLICITED Of all kinds of PRODUCE. Advances made,MER CHANDISE forwarded and sold on Commission in best Markets. QUICK TIME AND CHEAP FARES To Eastern and European Cities Via the Great Transcontinental All-Rail Routes, CENTRAL PACIFIC R.R. OR SOUTHERN PACIFIC R.R. Daily Express and Emigrant Trains make prompt connections with the several railway lines in the East. NEW York and New Orleans Impossible to See the Doctor. From the Bismarck Tribune. The other day a Bismarck gentleman was coming up from Standing Rock, and stopped to see a man who lives near the Cannon Bail river. In response to a knock at the door he heard a shrill, sharp "Come in!" and, on entering, found a sharp faced, angular woman sitting in the room under an open scuttle hole leading into the loft above, with a shotgun on her knee. "Is the gentleman of the house in," he asked. "Yes, sir; he air." "Can I see him a moment?" "No, sir; you can't see a hide nor a hair of him." "Why can't I, madam? I would like to speak to him on business." "If you was a dyn', and Jim war the only doctor in Dakoty, yo couldn't set an eye on him till he gives in an talks decent. At dinner, awhile ago, he told me to pass im the apple soss, an' I tol' him it wasn't soss, but sass, an' he said he knew better, it was soss, an' I tol' him that when he tuk a notion that a little apple sass'd feel soothin' to his stomach to say so, an' he said he have that soss or die. Then I tol' him I'd defend that soss with life, an' made a break for the shotgun, an' he made a break up through the scuttle inter the loft. When his senses come to him, an' he gives in that siss is siss, he kin cum down; but if he makes a break after that, off goes the top of his head. Thar sets the siss, stranger, an' thar's Jim up in the loft, an' that's the way the matters stand just now, an' reckon you'd better mosey along, an' not get mixed inter therow." As the gentleman moved away he heard her voice saying: "Jim, when you get tired o' yer durn foolin' an' want this saass, jes squeal out!" And a gruff voice from the darksome garret replied: "Soss!" A Valuable Opinion. Boston Letter in New York Graphic. The Queen, as he who wishes may read, has often made visits both of pleasure and policy to her estates in Scotland, being at such times more than heartily welcomed by the canny Scots, who, almost without exception, highly reverence her and indorse all that she does. On one occasion, shortly after a visit to her castle in the outskirts of Balmoral (blessed aptness), Mr. Irving, who was traveling through the country, met an old Scotchwoman, with whom he spoke of her majesty. "The Queen's a good woman," he said. "I suppose she's gude enough, but there are things I canna bear." "What do you mean?" asked Mr. Irving. Well, I think there are things that even the Queen has no recht to do. For one thing, she goes rowing on the lake on Soonday and it's not a Chreestian thing to do! But you know the Bible tells us— "I knaw," she interrupted angrily, "I've read the Bible since I was so high an' I knaw evry word int'. I knaw about the Soonday fishing and a' the other things the good Lord did, but I want ye to knaw, too, that I don't think any the more e'en of him for adoin' it." A Rochester baker has made a cake weighing 610 pounds. This is about the weight of the cake usually baked by a newly married young woman, but why should a baker try to beat the record of a bride? The population of London came within one of exactly doubling, in the past forty-one years. It would have doubled exactly, only the census takers refused to count Oscar Wilde as more than one half. "We say that absence conquers love, but I believe it not," said a Newport young man who had been visiting a week in a temperance town and couldn't get whisky as he walked up to the bar and called for a drink. "Is your mother in?" asked a visitor of a little Mormon boy who opened the door. "No, ma'am," the little boy replied, with tears in his eyes (he had just been spanked), but my brother's mother is in." In some parts of Java, at a wedding, the bride kneels and washes the feet of the bridegroom after he has trodden upon raw eggs. How touching. How symbolic of "putting your foot in it" to the henpecked husband. "I'm on the press," said John Henry, as he folded his girl in one fond embrace. "Well, that's no reason that you should try to pye the form," she replied, as she rear-ranged her tumbled collar and pinned up her hair. The Casket, which is published in the interest of undertakers, complains of depression in the coffin industry. Overproduction is not the trouble in this case. What is needed is more consumption. This is encouraging for all the rest of us. A ranchman down in New Mexico tacked this note on the cover of his securely locked well: Owing to those disorganized state affairs in the territory, and the laxiness prevalent everywhere, all parties are positively forbidden to camp on the ranch or take water from the well. No questions answered, but shoot on sight. It is well to be posted in the French names of some of the brand new shades which fashion has introduced: "Gris" is a fiercely drab shade. "Chauvette," a shade of drab beng. "Armande," a delicate salmon yellow. "Isard," an assess of rose or pinkish bage shade. "Champignon," is a yellowish soft drab or, as its name suggest, a mushroom shade. The Prussian people believe that Bismarck is superstitious. They say that he is asked by apparitions in uninhabited castles, shrinks from dining where thirteen sit down at table, believes in unlucky days, and adheres to the ancient belief of the influence of the moon on every living thing. The most crushing objection thus far recorded to the scheme for converting the Savara into a sea has just dropped from the pen of a statistician, who calculates that a canal 100 feet wide and 25 feet deep, with a flow of four miles an hour, would require several thousand years to flood the desert. A pair of shears, which had long occupied an editorial table, one day observed a cockroach going for the paste pot, and promptly called out: "How now, you vagrant!" "See here," said the cockroach, as he came to a sudden halt. "I don't want to crowd anybody body off the editorial staff, but I must warn you that while plenty of editors never have any use for shears, no newspaper in this country can be run without cockroaches." The Jersey cow liar, who has figured in the newspapers for the last two or three years, has settled down in this vicinity, it seems. He sends us his compliments in a little note as follows: "Having purchased the gentle creature and led her home in the evening, I turned her into the barnyard to rest for she was weary from on trample. In Beautiful Answers. A Persian pupil of the Abbe Sicord gave the following extraordinary answers: "What is gratitude?" "Gratitude is the memory of the heart." "What is hope?" "Hope is the blossom of happiness." "What is the difference between hope and desire." "Desire is a true leaf; hope is a tree in flower; and enjoyment is tree in fruit." "What is eternity?" "A day without yesterday or to-morrow; a line that has no end" "What is time?" "A line that has two ends; a path which begins at the cradle and ends at the tomb." "What is God?" "The necessary being, the sum of eternity, the merchant of nature, the eye of justice, the watchmaker of the universe, the soul of the world." "Does God reason?" "Man reasons before he doubts; he deliberates, he decides. God is omniscient; He never doubts; He, therefore, never reasons." The German Emperor has given permission to the trumpeters of the Seventh Cuirassiers, the so-called "Bismarck's Yellow Cuirassiers," to proceed to London to play at the Crystal Palace in full uniform. This is a very exceptional occurrence. A Mississippi man writes to Denton county, Texas, for a runaway wife, and describes her "with high cheek bones, upper front teeth out, crippled in one foot, crosse-eyed and quick-spoken." "THE STEARNS RANCHOS." ALFRED ROBINSON, TRUSTEE 120 Sutter St., San Francisco. Land for Sale in Lots to suit. SUITABLE FOR THE CULTURE OF Oranges, Lemons, Limes, Figs, Almonds, Walnuts, Apples, Peaches, Pears, Alfalfa, Corn, Rye, Barley, Flax, Ramie, Cotton, Etc. ALSO, MANY THOUSAND ACRES OF Natural Evergreen Pastures, suitable for Dairying. GOOD WATER is abundant at an average depth of six feet from the surface. On almost every acre of this land Flowing Artesian Wells can be obtained, and the more elevated portions can be Irrigated by the water of the Santa Ana River. Most of these lands are naturally Moist, requiring only good cultivation to produce crops. TERMS: One-fourth cash; balance in one, two or three years, with ten per cent interest. I take pleaser in showing these lands to parties seeking land, who are invited to come and see this extensive treat before purchasing elsewhere. R. J. NORTMAN, Anaheim, Los Angeles County, Cal. NEW No. 8 WHEELER & WILSON, With Straight, Self-Setting Needle and Back-Feed. ABSOLUTEGY NEW! In Principle and design. No Shuttle to thread. News from the thinnest gauge to the heaviest sloth or leather. Can DARN, PATCH, MEND and EMBROIDER without any attachment. Only needs to be seen and tried to be appreciated. Don't buy until you have seen the New No. 8. Satisfaction Guaranteed or no pay. E. C. GLIDDEN, Agent, 33 North Main Street (Ponet Block). LOS ANGELES, CAL. BANK OF ANAHEIM. CAPITAL STOCK, Pacific Coast Steamship COMPANY. GOODALL, PERKINS & CO. General Agents, San Francisco 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. CORESPONDENTS. First National Bank, Los Angeles, Farmers and Merchants Bank, Los Angeles, Pacific Bank, San Francisco, First National Bank, New York. DRATTS, LETTLERS OF CREDIT OR POSTAL orders issued on Banks in the principal cities in all European countries. Tickets entitling the holder to passage from New York to the several ports of England, France or Germany, or from any port in those countries to New York, via the Hamburg American Packet Company sold at regular rates. Return tickets at a reduction. Certificates, entitling the holder to passage on railroad from San Francisco to New York, or vice versa, issued at the established rate. Persons in Anaheim or vicinity desiring to send to any point in the countries named for any relative or friend can purchase tickets here and forward them to the proper person by mail. FIRST NATIONAL BANK Pacific Coast Steamship COMPANY. GOODALL, PERKINS & CO., General Agents, San Francisco. NORTHERN ROUTES. STEAMERS LEAVE SAN FRANCISCO For Wrangle, Sitka and Harrisburg, Alaska; and Nanamo and New Westminster, B.C., as advertised in San Francisco newspapers. For Victoria, Port Townsend, Seattle, Taoma, Stellacoom and Olympia on April 4th, 12th, 20th, 28th and May 6th, at 10 A.M. For Astoria and Portland, April 4, 9, 12, 46, 28, 24, 28 and May 2, at 10 A.M. For Eureka, Arcata and Hookton, every Wednesday. For Point Arena, Cuddy's Cove, Little River, Whitesboro, Mendocino City and Novyo every Monday. SOUTHERN ROUTES TIME TABLE FOR APRIL Steamers Queen of the Pacific and Orizaba go through to San Diego, leaving San Pedro on the dates of their arrivals from San Francisco. The Queen of the Pacific and Orizaba call at Santa Barbara and Port Harford (San Luis Obispo) only on the route to and from San Francisco. Cars to connect with steamers from San Pedro for San Francisco leave the S.P.R.P. depot, Los Angeles, at 10 o'clock A.M. railroad time. Cars to connect with steamers from San Pedro for San Diego leave the S.P.R.P. depot, Los Angeles, at 4 p.m., railroad time. RATES OF FARE FROM LOS ANGELES. CARRIER STERAGE To San Francisco, Monterey or Santa Cruz. Cruz.....$15.00 $10.00 To San Bimco.....13.00 10.00 To Cayucos.....13.00 10.00 To Port Harford.....12.00 9.00 To Gaviola.....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 Tickets to FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF Los Angeles. PRESIDENT: E. F. Spence. CASHIER: W. Lacv. COOPERAGE A LARGE QUANTITY OF BARRELS, HALF BARRELS, 10 Gallon and 5 Gallon Kegs For Sale Cheap. Apiv to B. DREYFUS & CO. Anaheim To San Francisco, Monterey or Santa Cruz. $15.00 $18.00 To San Simeon 13.00 10.00 To Cayucos 13.00 10.00 To Port Harford 12.00 9.00 To Gaviole 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 berth 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 Tickets to and from All Important Points in Europe, Apply to H. McLELLAN, Agent. OFFICE—No. 8 Commercial Street, Los Angeles. Summons. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT Of the State of California in and for the County of Los Angeles. Olive M. Liddell, Plaintiff, va. Henry Liddell, defendant. Action brought in the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the County of Los Angeles, and the Complaint filed in said County of Los Angeles, in the office of the Clerk of said Superior Court. The people of the State of California send greeting to Henry Liddell, defendant: You are hereby required to appear in an action brought against you by the above named plaintiff in the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the County of Los Angeles, and to answer the complaint filed therein, within ten days (exclusive of the day of service), after the service on you of this Summons—if served within this County; or, if served elsewhere, within thirty days—or judgment by default will be taken against you according to the prayer of said complaint. The said action is brought to obtain a decree of said Court dissolving the bonds of matrimony existing between the plaintiff and defendant, and for such other or further relief in the premises as may seem meet and agreeable to equity, and for costs of suit. Reference is had to complain for particulars. And you are hereby notified that if you fail to appear and answer the said complaint as above required the said plaintiff will cause your default to be entered and will apply to the Court for the rebel demanded in the complaint. Given under my hand and the seal of the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the County of Los Angeles, this 6th day of February in the year of our Lord, one thousand eight hundred and eighty-four. A. W. POTTER, Clerk. By A. RIMPAU, Deputy. Glassells, Saven & Partners, Attorneys for Plaintiff. July 18-2m