anaheim-gazette 1884-05-31
Searchable text
WEEKLY GAZETTE.
SATURDAY...MAY 21, 1884
SUBSCRIPTION, per year, $2.
The Republican National Convention convenes at Chicago on Monday. Before the next issue of the Gazette, the name of the twenty-second President of the United States will be known.
The San Francisco Chronicle is represented at the Chicago Convention by the well-known correspondent "Gath." His telegraphic letters are unusually bright and interesting. Upon the eve of the Convention "Gath" sends up the probabilities as strongly for Blaine.
Riverside Colony by a vote of its citizens lately evolved into the "City of Riverside." A board of trustees was elected, city officials entered upon their duties, and yet Riverside was not happy. Suit has been brought through the Attorney General to annul the action and set aside the incorporation.
The wonderful extension and perfection of the world's telegraphic system was lastly evidenced by a remarkable feat accomplished over the Indo-European Company's line: From London connection was made with Teheran in Persia, thence to Kurrachru in India and to Calcutta, a distance of seven thousand miles. London talking with Calcutta is something of which our grandmothers did not dream.
Wir and wisdom do not always go together. Most certainly they did not in the article published last week in a Norwich (Conn.) paper which said that a steady run was in progress on one of the oldest banks in the city. Eastern people are panicky over money matters, and the effect of the paragraph included to was to cause a run on the Norwich Savings Bank, before the newspaper could explain that it referred to a "gravel bank."
AN ADVERTISING SCHEME.
Several thousand circulars are being printed at the Gazette office for grateful distribution on the emigrant trains and in the most prominent Eastern cities, the work being paid for by the subscriptions of citizens. In addition to a neat and suggestive title page, the circular contains the following, prepared by the editor of the Gazette:
There is probably no town on the Coast which has been oftener referred to in print than Anaheim. Its unique history, the fact of its being the pioneer colony of the State, and its phenomenal success, are the causes to which it is indebted for so frequent reference. But notwithstanding the celebrity thus galvanized, there are thousands of people to whom the section of country represented by Anaheim is as a sealed book, and it is for the information of these thousands that this brief statement is compiled and scattered broadcast. It is especially addressed to the many who are looking forward expectantly to a home in Southern California, but who are yet undecided as to the particular locality. It is especially dedicated to such people in the hope that after perusing it they will visit the place and verify the statements herein contained; and it further hoped that they will not permit themselves to bedriven of that pleasure by the interested efforts of those who, for reasons of their own, desire to divert attention to other localities.
Anaheim is situated 27 miles south of Los Angeles, and is reached from that city by rail, the cars arriving in Anaheim every afternoon at 4:30. It is a town of importance, every business being represented, and offers excellent hotel accommodations to travelers and tourists. It has the advantage of being a point from which one can drive to every place of importance in the southern portion of the county and return to the comforts of his hotel in the evening. Twelve miles to the west is the ocean, with its alluring beach, upon which hundreds camp during the summer months. A few rules to the east are the foothills and mountains, which are also in summer the resort of hundreds who prefer the rare mountain air to the more harsh ocean breeze. Game is abundant, and in evidence it may be cited that sportsmen have for years made Anaheim their headquarters in the winter time, coming in some instances thousands of miles to indulge in their favorite pastime.
Anaheim is proud of having the finest school building in the county, and the school is always in charge of the most competent teachers. The school term is never less than ten months in the year. There are five church buildings—the Presbyterian, Episcopal, Methodist Episcopal (German), Evangelical (German) and Catholic. Services are held in these churches every Sunday and NEWS OF THE
A Georgia lady hanged her husband for divorce not give her the comb.
A society belle of Cincinnati messenger boy to carry goods shopping while poole.
At Bowling Green, Anderson, aged seventy-five.
During the holiday Out Monday, Monday, the gage and 150 people were mingled though with no fate.
Mlle. Colombier had three months' imprisonment at Paris authorities Barnum."
Mrs. Laffley, who last fall, was hanged Monday. Contrary to representatives of the jail-yard.
The cost of cremation Mayne ordinator at $45, for which the body hearse a the depot an ed.
London is threatened scare. The malady is in several metropolitan areas from the city to the several of which are ad.
Two hundred colored mooga, Tenn., Saturday farms in California. The series of parties that will year.
On April 31st there was again installed O English Free Masons, Senior Warden, and London Grand Junior.
The Argentine Reporter land in various colonies five acres, for $1 an hour without interest, be in two years after publication.
The judicial statistics last five years show that yeatly average of over tried for murder in the average number oo to but five a year.
Mrs. Langtry, during America, earned $220,000, and Houre frivolous seen that the American $1,000,000 for the billing three foreign actors Mrs. Alexander Elm
Wir and wisdom do not always go together. Most certainly they did not in the article published last week in a Norwich (Conn.) paper which said that a steady run was in progress on one of the oldest banks in the city. Eastern people are panicky over money matters, and the effect of the paragraph allowed to be caused a run on the Norwich Savings Bank, before the newspaper could explain that it referred to a "gravel bank."
The Extraordinary Legislature, long since demanded, ought to be forgotten, and we think it not in accordance with the fitness of things for the Tuolunne Independent to honor it even with the following epitaph:
"It went to its grave unwept, unhonored and unsuspecting. Born in fraud, its life was a swirl and disgrace, and its death a public relief. Democracy's mountain, after two months labor, brought forth a mouse—and the mouse is dead.
Those enthusiastic, intensely partisan folk who subscribe to the "first, last and all the time" doctrine suffer a severe shock when their favorite is shelved, and in the subsequent campaign their influence is considerably weakened by their intemperate enthusiasm for the other man's nomination." But, as the poet of the period has said:
"The nomination—that's the thing To cleanse a man of sin;
His former foes his praise will sing,
If he's the one to win.
Though dark as pitch his ways may seem,
His record black as night,
Let him but waits (Chichester's stream),
And he is scar and white"
In the United States Senate debate upon the Utah bill, Senator Brown of Georgia characterized the large number of divorces in New England as the "Polygamy of New England." Senator Hoar of Massachusetts thought the presence of so large a number of mullattoes in the South might be due to the Polygamy of the South. Polygamy by law, Polygamy by custom and Polygamy by religion, or a difference of tweedle-de-dee, tweedle-de-da and tweedle-de-dum. There seems to be a technical or sectional disagreement of Senators. Senator Sharon's opinion is now being printed in the daily press.
In Netkinsville, Mineral county, W. Va., a little straggling village half hid in the leafy mountains, three lively young ladies intended to play an innocent practical joke on Arthur Knowlton, a rather airy young clerk in the principal general store in town. To this end they liberally seasoned a pie with a white powder, which they supposed to be Epsom salts, but which turned out to be a deadly drug. At a picnic the clerk ate freely of the pie, but his suckness took a rather more alarming turn than the young ladies expected. He eventually recovered, and the next time he met one of the young ladies on the street he cut a switch from a bushy by the road and whipped her severely. She ran home; crying with pain, rage and mortification. Her brothers took her part and that night tarred and feathered.
Wirs and wisdom do not always go together. Most certainly they did not in the article published last week in a Norwich (Conn.) paper which said that a steady run was in progress on one of the oldest banks in the city. Eastern people are panicky over money matters, and the effect of the paragraph allowed to be caused a run on the Norwich Savings Bank, before the newspaper could explain that it referred to a "gravel bank."
The Extraordinary Legislature, long since demanded, ought to be forgotten, and we think it not in accordance with the fitness of things for the Tuolunne Independent to honor it even with the following epitaph:
"It went to its grave unwept, unhonored and unsuspecting. Born in fraud, its life was a swirl and disgrace, and its death a public relief. Democracy's mountain, after two months labor, brought forth a mouse—and the mouse is dead.
Those enthusiastic, intensely partisan folk who subscribe to the "first, last and all the time" doctrine suffer a severe shock when their favorite is shelved, and in the subsequent campaign their influence is considerably weakened by their intemperate enthusiasm for the other man's nomination." But, as the poet of the period has said:
"The nomination—that's the thing To cleanse a man of sin;
His former foes his praise will sing,
If he's the one to win.
Though dark as pitch his ways may seem,
His record black as night,
Let him but waits (Chichester's stream),
And he is scar and white"
In the United States Senate debate upon the Utah bill, Senator Brown of Georgia characterized the large number of divorces in New England as the "Polygamy of New England." Senator Hoar of Massachusetts thought the presence of so large a number of mullattoes in the South might be due to the Polygamy of the South. Polygamy by law, Polygamy by custom and Polygamy by religion, or a difference of tweedle-de-dee, tweedle-de-da and tweedle-de-dum. There seems to be a technical or sectional disagreement of Senators. Senator Sharon's opinion is now being printed in the daily press.
In Netkinsville, Mineral county, W. Va., a little straggling village half hid in the leafy mountains, three lively young ladies intended to play an innocent practical joke on Arthur Knowlton, a rather airy young clerk in the principal general store in town. To this end they liberally seasoned a pie with a white powder, which they supposed to be Epsom salts, but which turned out to be a deadly drug. At a picnic the clerk ate freely of the pie, but his suckness took a rather more alarming turn than the young ladies expected. He eventually recovered, and the next time he met one of the young ladies on the street he cut a switch from a bushy by the road and whipped her severely. She ran home; crying with pain, rage and mortication. Her brothers took her part and that night tarred and feathered.
Wirs and wisdom do not always go together. Most certainly they did not in the article published last week in a Norwich (Conn.) paper which said that a steady run was in progress on one of the oldest banks in the city. Eastern people are panicky over money matters, and the effect of the paragraph allowed to be caused a run on the Norwich Savings Bank, before the newspaper could explain that it referred to a "gravel bank."
The Extraordinary Legislature, long since demanded, ought to be forgotten, and we think it not in accordance with the fitness of things for the Tuolunne Independent to honor it even with the following epitaph:
"It went to its grave unwept, unhonored and unsuspecting. Born in fraud, its life was a swirl and disgrace, and its death a public relief. Democracy's mountain, after two months labor, brought forth a mouse—and the mouse is dead.
Those enthusiastic, intensely partisan folk who subscribe to the "first, last and all the time" doctrine suffer a severe shock when their favorite is shelved, and in the subsequent campaign their influence is considerably weakened by their intemperate enthusiasm for the other man's nomination." But, as the poet of the period has said:
"The nomination—that's the thing To cleanse a man of sin;
His former foes his praise will sing,
If he's the one to win.
Though dark as pitch his ways may seem,
His record black as night,
Let him but waits (Chichester's stream),
And he is scar and white"
In the United States Senate debate upon the Utah bill, Senator Brown of Georgia characterized the large number of divorces in New England as the "Polygamy of New England." Senator Hoar of Massachusetts thought the presence of so large a number of mullattoes in the South might be due to the Polygamy of the South. Polygamy by law, Polygamy by custom and Polygamy by religion, or a difference of tweedle-de-dee, tweedle-de-dum. There seems to be a technical or sectional disagreement of Senators. Senator Sharon's opinion is now being printed in the daily press.
In Netkinsville, Mineral county, W. Va., a little straggling village half hid in the leafy mountains, three lively young ladies intended to play an innocent practical joke on Arthur Knowlton, a rather airy young clerk in the principal general store in town. To this end they liberally seasoned a pie with a white powder, which they supposed to be Epsom salts, but which turned out to be a deadly drug. At a picnic the clerk ate freely of the pie, but his suckness took a rather more alarming turn than the young ladies expected. He eventually recovered, and the next time he met one of the young ladies on the street he cut a switch from a bushy by the road and whipped her severely. She ran home; crying with pain, rage and mortication. Her brothers took her part and that night tarred and feathered.
Wirs and wisdom do not always go together. Most certainly they did not in the article published last week in a Norwich (Conn.) paper which said that a steady run was in progress on one of the oldest banks in the city. Eastern people are panicky over money matters, and the effect of the paragraph allowed to be caused a run on the Norwich Savings Bank, before the newspaper could explain that it referred to a "gravel bank."
The Extraordinary Legislature, long since demanded, ought to be forgotten, and we think it not in accordance with the fitness of things for the Tuolunne Independent to honor it even with the following epitaph:
"It went to its grave unwept, unhonored and unsuspecting. Born in fraud, its life was a swirl and disgrace, and its death a public relief. Democracy's mountain, after two months labor, brought forth a mouse—and the mouse is dead.
Those enthusiastic, intensely partisan folk who subscribe to the "first, last and all the time" doctrine suffer a severe shock when their favorite is shelved, and in the subsequent campaign their influence is considerably weakened by their intemperate enthusiasm for the other man's nomination." But, as the poet of the period has said:
"The nomination—that's the thing To cleanse a man of sin;
His former foes his praise will sing,
If he's the one to win.
Though dark as pitch his ways may seem,
His record black as night,
Let him but waits (Chichester's stream),
And he is scar and white"
At an Anti-Monopoly meeting" in San Francisco on Saturday afternoon at 10:30 am; there were three foreign countries involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American government was involved; no American政府was involved;
No man who has been public for last quarter every occasion and ever
Kuloch' to
At an Anti-Monopoly meeting" in San Francisco on Saturday afternoon at 10:30 am; there were three foreign countries involved; no American Government was involved; no American Government was involved; no American Government was involved; no American Government was involved; no American Government was involved; no American Government was involvement;
No man who has been public for last quarter every occasion and ever
Last September members of the I. O. O. F. lodge in Fife Lake, Michigan, were astonished to find that a man named Levanway had hold of the secret work of the order. How, when or where was a mystery. He had not been out of town, and some one who was posted had posted him. Time passed on, and no one seemed more anxious to expose the person that had violated his obligation than Stephen Green. April of this year solved the problem. On election day Levanway was challenged as to his being a voter by Horace Green, a brother of Stephen Green. Levanway, being of a quick temper, got mad and told him he belonged to a pretty family, as his brother had given him the secret work of the Old Follows for the paltry sum of $35, and he had the documents to prove it. They were produced and found to be genuine, stamped with the seal of the lodge. Green has held the office of N. G. R. S. in the subordinate lodge and was a charter member of the encampment at Fife Lake.
French wine cultivators and fruit growers have had their prospects terribly marred by the recent weather. Owing to the brilliant and genial days of March, things were quite three weeks earlier than usual, and the recent severe frosts, coupled, as they have been with a cloudless sky, have consequently worked and havoc. In the vineyards of the Macounaie and of the Saone valley the damage is estimated by millions of francs. The upper Burgundy, Beaujolais, Champagne, and Lorraine districts have equally suffered, and in the Franche-Comte, where there have been heavy falls of snow, the effects of the change of temperature have been especially disastrous. In the Midi and the Bordelaise the muschief has been of but partial extant.
A Louisville, Ky., man ran into Schaefer's drug store at 10 o'clock on Friday night and asked for court plaster. When questioned as to his wounds, he said: "I live in Bible alley, and my wife chased me out of a second-story window, with a revolver. I fell on my face as I jumped. Be quick, please, for I expect she is following my trail."
An English provincial newspaper has a correspondent in London who holds a lucrative place under Government, and is consequently indolent, forgetting sometimes to write his letter but never forgetting to draw his pay. The other day, at the end of a silent week, he wired, "No time to write letter." To which the editor answered, "No time to send check. Send letter." It came.
Land is cheaper, considering its quality and other advantages, than in any other portion of the county. If one desires farming land it can be had for from $25 to $50 per acre; for land adapted to vines or oranges, the prices range from $75 to $150 per acre, with water stock. These prices are low compared with what is demanded in other parts of the county, and there is no doubt but that they will advance greatly within the year.
The water system is in better form than it ever has been. The rival companies have consolidated, and are now united in one company. The determination is expressed to place the water system in advance of any other in Southern California, and even now the preliminary work is being done to utilize a natural reservoir which has a storage capacity of four hundred millions of gallons of water. Nor is this the only reservoir which it is proposed to utilize; there are a number of them along the line of the company's canal which will be made useful.
In conclusion, we reiterate the hope heretofore expressed, that homeseekers visit famous Anaheim and see the lovely homes which its people have made within a few short years. Let them come aid look at the vineyards with their bunches of grapes, tempting even in their immaturity; at the orange trees, loaded with blossoms, giving forth an overpowering perfume; at the historic olive burdened with the coming crop. Let them come and see the stately groves and profitable vineyards on land which was but a barren plain less than a decade ago, and it will be strange indeed if they do not like the thousands who have preceded them, "cast their lines" in this pleasant place.
They have eclipsed the passed the socialists, abbot and jumped clean out of lots! How to beat the politics, and emancipate thraldom of rings and work before as; and I am contribution to it by running dependent, afloat and allowing nobody's nomination port but that ot independent voke the abuse, the wrath of every self-constituted mer, striker, shoulder-and piece-taker in the clothing but the pistol. They into office before. I want to get it without being crats owe me the nomination not been for me there was Democratic party in this...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
A Georgia lady has entered suit against her husband for divorce, because he would not give her the combination to his safe.
A society belle of Columbus, Ohio, hires a messenger boy to carry her satchel when she goes shopping, while she lugs a nine-pound poodle.
At Bowling Green, Ky., Saturday, George Anderson, aged seventy-five, was beaten to death with a hickory cane by his wife aged sixty-five.
During the holiday games at Chatham, Out., Monday, the grand stand collapsed and 150 people were injured, several seriously, though with no fatal results so far.
Mile. Colonbier has been sentenced to three months' imprisonment and a fine by the Paris authorities for publishing "Saza Barnum."
Mrs. Laffley, who poisoned her husband last fall, was hanged at Lincoln, England, Monday. Contrary to the usual custom no representatives of the press were admitted to the jail-yard.
The cost of cremation of a body in the Le Moyne ordematory at Washington Penn., is $45, for which the body is received in a hearse the depot and the sahes returnel.
London is threatened with a small-pox scare. The malady is alarmingly prevalent in several metropolitan districts and is spreading from the city to the adjoining provinces, several of which are already badly infected.
Two hundred colored laborers left Chattanooga, Tennessee, Saturday morning to work on farms in California. This is the first of a series of parties that will be organized this year.
On April 31st the Prince of Wales was again installed Grand Master of the English Free Masons, Lord Cromerius Grand Senior Warden, and the Lord Mayor of London Grand Junior Warden.
The Argentine Republic offers tracts of land in various colonies, amounting to seventy-five acres, for $1 an acre, on ten years time without interest, the first payment to be in two years after possession.
The judicial statistics of France for the last five years show that there has been a yearly average of over three hundred men tried for murder in various degrees while the average number of executions amounted to but five a year.
Mrs. Langtry, during her first season in America, earned $220,633; Bernhardt $390,000; and Henre Irving $435,604. Thus it is seen that the American public has paid over $1,000,000 for the blessed privilege of seeing three foreign actors.
Mrs. Alexander Elmont of St. Louis cut the Pacific Coast News.
The Utah Grand Lodge of A. O.' U. W. have decided to exclude Mormons from the Order.
Ex-Congressman Page will be a candidate for U. S. Senator, provided a Republican Legislature is elected in November.
The first apples of the season arrived in San Francisco on Tuesday, from Vaccille. They sold for $1 a box.
A post-office has been established at Washington, Pima county, A. T., and the office at Blythe, San Diego county, Cal., was discontinued.
An artesian well has been sunk for General Williams, on Union Island, to a depth of 1,275 feet, without obtaining a sufficient flow of water.
The 12-year-old son of Rev. T. R. Palmer of Loch jumped from a moving train on last Saturday and received injuries from which he died.
Isaac Sylvester is under arrest charged with arson. It is said he paid a man named Dimmock to set fire to property in Weston, Oregon, by which nearly the whole town was destroyed, the loss reaching $200,000.
In San Francisco Frank Patchel, aged 16, attempted to commit suicide by taking strychnine, but an emetic was administered in time to save him. He had attempted a robbery and had been discovered.
A paper is being numerously signed in San Benito county, pleading the subscribers not to vote for any man for a county office who patronizes or frequents saloons, or who will use saloon influence to secure his election.
The Free Lance thinks if the signera stands up to their pledge there will be a light vote in the county this fall.
A special train consisting of seven elegant sleepers, decorated with flags and flowers and laden with piles of boxes marked "Riesling," "Zinfandel," "Eclipse," etc., with the Pacific coast delegation to the Chicago Convention, left San Francisco on Monday. The train will be met at various points by other Western States' delegations and arrive in Chicago today with a great hurrah for Blaine of Maine.
William Sales and John Menson, says the Folsom Telegraph, have met with heavy losses the past two weeks. Black leg and black tongue have made sad havoc among their band of calves. We believe these are the only instances where the plague has broken out in virulent form in this part of the State, although north and east of us it last fall, assumed the form of an epidemic, killing young stock by hundreds.
C. M. Chapman writes the Record-Union from White Rock, above Folsom, as follows: "I write to ask you if you have heard of any complaints of grasshoppers in this section of Georgia Messiah."
Gainesville (Ga.), May 25.—El Mahdi promises to have a rival in a Georgia colored man, who has been gradually spreading a delusion among the people of his race for several months. Considerable religious fervor has existed among colored people in Madison, Jackson and neighboring counties, one of the strange features of which was the secrecy with which the proceedings were kept from the knowledge of the whites. Meetings would take place in out-of-the-way places and at late hours' of the night generally after the regular services were over, when a chosen few would be asked to listen to the new oracle who had risen to point the way to the future life. This new speaker, who was a stranger in the country, always introduced himself as the one who was to come, the hope of Israel, and by similar designations. He found followers who believed implicitly in his mission and who never lost an opportunity of securing converts. The increasing zeal of his followers heightened the pretensions of the mysterious preacher, who soon began to announce his appearance on a great white horse, when the world would bow in submission to him. The colored man had been under foot long enough and the day of his deliverance was at hand, when he should enter into possession of the promised land. He should watch and wait and look for signs which would precede his coming. Reports from points where the man has been thus holding forth indicate a firm conviction on the part of the negroes that the prophet has risen among them has no common mission.
Within the past week the pretensions of this man have passed all belief. He boldly declared himself to be the Messiah whose coming had been foretold from the beginning. His deluded followers eagerly assented to this claim and speak of him as a veritable Christ. A gentleman who has just arrived from one of the haunts of the impostor declares that his dupes worship him and he has forgiven the sins of a large number, being quite lavish in his clemency. He exhibits scars which he pretends are marks of wounds in his hands and feet, and spear wounds in his side. He has evidently used an instrument upon himself, so as to secure the marks of nails. Colored people who are in his following are shy of all inquirers and always give equivocal answers. Whether the impostor is a lunatic or a knave it is hard to decide. He gives no trouble to the communities which he visits, simply traveling around in the style of an English ranter, confining himself to the propagation of his claim to Divinity. The Gainesville Press, in speaking of him, says his dupes are ardent in his support, going to any length to testify their devotion.
Kulloch to the Fore.
At an Anti-Monopoly Democratic mass meeting in San Francisco last Saturday, ex-Mayor and ex-Minister Kuloch was among the speakers. He said:
"No man who has been prominently before the public the last quarter of a century, on every occasion and every question, in every habit scars which he pretends are marks of wounds in his hands and feet, and spear wounds in his side. He has evidently used an instrument upon himself, so as to secure the marks of nails. Colored people who are in his following are shy of all inquirers and always give equivocal answers. Whether the impostor is a lunatic or a knave it is hard to decide. He gives no trouble to the communities which he visits, simply traveling around in the style of an English ranter, confining himself to the propagation of his claim to Divinity. The Gainesville Press, in speaking of him, says his dupes are ardent in his support, going to any length to testify their devotion."
Bucklen's Arnica Salve.
The Best Salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by W. M. Higgins.
SHILOH'S CATARRH REMEDY — a positive cure for Catarrh, Diphtheria and Canker Mouth. Sold by Wm. M. Higgins.
THE REV. GEO. H. THAYER, of Bourbon, Ind., says: "Both myself and wife owe our lives to Shiloh's Consumption Cure." Sold by Wm. M. Higgins.
WHY WILL YOU cough when Shiloh's Care will give immediate relief. Price 10 cts., 50 cts. and $1. Sold by Wm. M. Higgins.
A NASAL INJECTOR free with each bottle of Shiloh's Catarrh Remedy. Price, 50 cents. Sold by Wm. M. Higgins.
ARE YOU MADE miserable by Indigestion, Constipation, Dizziness, Loss of Appetite, Yellow Skin? Shiloh's Vitalizer is a positive cure. Sold by Wm. M. Higgins.
SHILOH'S CURE WILL immediately relieve Group, Whooping Cough and Bronchitis. Sold by Wm. M. Higgins.
FOR DYSPEPSIA and Liver Complaint you have a printed guarantee on every bottle of Shiloh's Vitalizer. It never fails to cure. Sold by Wm. M. Higgins.
"HACKMETACK," a lasting and fragrant perfume. Price 25 and 50 cents. Sold by Wm. M. Higgins.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
Wanted.
GROVER & FRENZEL
COMMISSION MERCHANTS
Kulloch to the Fore.
At an Anti-Monopoly Democratic mass meeting in San Francisco last Saturday, ex-Mayor and ex-Minister Kulloch was among the speakers. He said:
"No man who has been prominently before the public the last quarter of a century, on every occasion and every question, in every relation and position, has been so conspicuously, so unselfishly, so devotedly, and so continuously the friend of the laboring people as Ben Butler. But, whoever disputes that, nobody will dispute that he is a man of brains. He is the brainiest man in the United States. He has a surplus of what our politicians lack. The most inexcusable fools, and the most incurable fools, are the chiv leaders of the California Democracy. When the masses of the party followed my advice and came back to it, when was a party ever in a better condition, or with brighter prospects? And what is its condition to-day? Divided, distracted, defeated by the stupidity and assiminity of its chives and bosses! I know they talk about the people supporting them in their crazy calling and conduct of the extra session. But I know they will find themselves mistaken. The people have no confidence in their honesty and sincerity, and the people have no desire to destroy railroad values. Why, those fellows called us communists, socialists, agrarians, and what not, because we sought to bring railroad property, like all other, within the purview of the law, and under the control of the Legislature. But these new converts have out-Herod Herod. They have eclipsed the communists, surpassed the socialists, abashed the agrarians, and jumped clean out of sight of the sand lots! How to beat the bosses, purify our politics, and emancipate the people from the thralthom of rings and cliques—this is the work before us; and I am going to make my contribution to it by running for Mayor, independent, afoot and alone if necessary, asking nobody's nomination and nobody's support but that of independent citizens. I invoke the abuse, the wrath and the slander of every self-constituted boss, ward-bummer, striker, shoulder-hitter, place-seeker and piece-taker in the city. I invoke everything but the pistol. They say I was shot into office before. I want to see how it feels to get it without being shot. The Democrats owe me the nomination, for if it had not been for me there would have been no Democratic party in this city."
A citizen went into a hardware store the other day and asked, "How much do you ask for a bath-tub for a child?" "Three dollars and seventy-five cents," was the reply. "Whose wolf whistled the customer." "Guess we'll have to go on washing the baby in the coal-scuttle till the prices come down."
"I want a Henry Two Eyes hat," said she. The assistant altogether at fault, replied: "If you will excuse me a moment I will see if we have it in stock," and went away to see if anybody could tell her the shape nearest to a Henry Two Eyes hat. It was as good as a Christmas riddle, and wanted as much puzzling over as a society paper acrostic, but at last they made it out that what was required was a Henri II.
A crusade against piano playing has begun in Berlin. The promoters of the crusade have circulated petitions in all the residences, and petitions have now been presented to the authorities. They set forth that the constant and monotonous practicing of scales and exercises by piano pupils has become an intolerable nuisance, causing much suffering to invalids, aggravating all forms of nervous diseases, and depreciating the value of real estate.
The London Truth says that at a royal marriage in England some years ago the bridegroom was a German Prince. Only members of the royal family were present at the ceremony, with a few chief officers of the household. When the bridegroom came to repeat the words, "with all my goods I three endow," an indignant exclamation was heard from the royal circle, "Good God! the very shoes the fellow wears are not paid for!" It was the old Duke of Cambridge who had blurted out this awkward truth in one of his fits of abstraction.
A correspondent, writing to the St. James's Gazette about the recent fatal fire in old Bailey, London, says: "I recommend that on retiring to rest you should place a pocket handkerchief under your pillow. Should you be awakened by the alarm of fire, steep the handkerchief in water and tie it round your head covering the mouth and no trills. This will enable the wearer to to withstand the suffocating influence of smoke, and give him or her a valuable chance to escape. For years I was an amateur fireman, and so proved the efficacy of this plan."
—a new No. 8 Wheeler & Wilson sewing machine is offered for sale at a large discount. The machine can be seen at D. W. Hudson's real estate office.
GROVER & FRENZEL
COMMISSION MERCHANTS
IN THE
Products of California.
All consignments in our care will receive prompt attention and quick returns.
Also, will fill orders for people living at a distance.
311 Main Street, Los Angeles,
(Opposite Pico Hotel)
Anaheim Union Water Company
Location of principal place of business, Anaheim,
Los Angeles County, California.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT AT A
meeting of the Directors, held on the 19th day
of May, 1884, an assessment of one dollar per share
was levied upon the capital stock of the corporation.
payable on or before June 19th, 1884, to the Secretary
of the corporation at his office in the Town of
Anaheim, California.
Any stock upon which this assessment shall remain
unpaid on the 19th day of June, 1884, will be delinquent,
and advertised for sale at public auction,
and unless payment is made before, will be sold on
the 19th day of July, 1884, to pay the delinquent
assessment, together with costs of advertising and
expenses of sale.
RICHARD MELROSE, Secretary.
Office at the Postoffice at the Town of Anaheim,
County of Los Angeles, State of California.
may24
PASTURE.
BEST OF PASTURE FOR STOCK AT THE COOS-Ta Ranche.
Apply on the premises to A. V. Howard or to SAXTON & COX.
Near the depot.
This Space reserved for
RIMPAU BROS.
S. B. SMITH,
Contractor and Builder.
Pumping Outfits
A SPECIALTY.
Best and Cheapest.
10 foot... $75
12 " ... $85
14 " ... $100
PUMPS, PIPE AND
PIPE FIXTURES
For neatness of design, for strength, durability, great lifting power, a perfect self-regulating Windmill safe in the fierce storm, an adjustable stroke (4 different lengths), and by far the cheapest first-class mil 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.
S. B. SMITH, Anaheim, Cal.
LARGE PUBLIC SALE
OF
SPANISH MERINO RAMS,
ON
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 18, 1884,
AT
COMSTOCK'S STABLES, - 524 Third St., San Francisco, Cal.
We will sell at public auction one hundred and forty-head of Spanish Merino Kams, one and two years old this spring, at the above time and place. These kams were recently imported from Vermont, and were selected with great care from the Top of some of the Best Flocks in that State, and are all recorded in the Verman Registers. They were started for Australia, but being prevented from going further by laws passed by that Government prohibiting further importation of American sheep, we take this method of closing them out, thus placing within the reach of Fleck Masters on this Coast an extraordinary opportunity of obtaining some No. 1 kams.
We are confident it will be for the interest of every sheep breeder to attend this sale. Remember, this is to be a bona fide sale, as we intend to close out the lot.
The sheep can be seen at above place, and all are invited to call and examine them.
Sale to commence at 11 A.M., sharp. For catalogue or participles address:
GEORGE HAMMOND, Grand Hotel,
Or MEMSIS KILLIP & CO.
Auctioneers, 116 Montgomery Street.
F. D. BARTON & CO., San Francisco.
COMSTOCK'S STABLES, - 524 Third St., San Francisco, Cal.
WE WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION ONE HUNDRED AND FORTY-FEED OF SPANISH MERINO KAMS, one and two years old this spring, at the above time and place. These runs were recently imported from Vermont, and were selected with great care from the Top of some of the Best Floors in that State, and are all recorded in the Verman Register. They were started for Australia, but being prevented from going further by laws passed by that Government prohibiting further importation of American sheep, we take this method of closing them out, thus placing within the reach of Fleck Masters on this Coast an extraordinary opportunity of obtaining some No.1 Kams.
We are confident it will be for the interest of every sheep breeder to attend this sale. Remember, this is to be a bona fide sale, as we intend to close out the lot.
The sheep can be seen at above place, and all are invited to call and examine them.
Sale to commence at 11 A.M., sharp. For catalogue or particuliers adresses:
GEORGE HAMMOMD, Grand Hotel,
Or MESSRS KILLIP & CO.,
Auctioneers, 116 Montgomery Street.
F. D. BARTON & CO., San Francisco.
THE "BEDETTE."
PATENTED JUNE 13, 1882.
This invention supplies a long felt want for a cheap portable bed, that can be put away in a small space when not in use, and yet make a roomy, comfortable bed when wanted. Of the many cots that are in the market there is not one, cheap or expensive, on which a comfortable night's rest can be had. They are all narrow, short, without spring, and in fact no bed at all. While The Bedette folds into as small space, and is as light as anything can be made for durability. When set up it furnishes a bed wide and long enough for the largest man, and is as comfortable to lie upon as the most expensive bed.
It is so constructed that the patent sides, regulated by the patent adjustable tension cords, form the most perfect spring bed. The canvas covering is not tacked to the frame, as on all cots, but is made adjustable, so that it can be taken off and put on again by any one in a few minutes, or easily tightened, should it become loose, at any time, from stretching.
It is a perfect spring bed, soft and easy, without springs or mattress. For warm weather it is a complete bed, without the addition of anything; for cold weather it is only necessary to add sufficient clothing.
The "Bedette" is a Household Necessity,
and no family after once using would be without it. It is simple in its construction and not liable to get out of repair. It makes a pretty lounge, a perfect bed, and the price is within the reach of all.
PRICE LIST:
No. 1—35 inches wide, 6½ feet long, raised head, adjustable cover, painted vermillion red, covered with first quality 8 oz. Duck..... $40
No. 2—30 inches wide, 6½ feet long, raised head, adjustable cover, painted vermillion red, covered with first quality 8 oz. Duck..... $40
No. 3—27 inches wide, 4½ feet long, raised head, painted vermillion red, child's bedette, covered with first quality 8 oz. Duck..... $40
For sale by
F. & J. BACKS, Anaheim.
D. B. SUMNER, Los Angeles, Cal., General Agent Pacific Coast.