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anaheim-gazette 1884-06-14

1884-06-14 · Anaheim Gazette · page 4 of 4 · OCR glm-ocr
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WEEKLY GAZETTE. Published every Saturday. Richard Melrose, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: One Year ... $2.00 Six Months ... 1.25 Three Months ... 75 OFFICE—In Conrad's Brick Building, Los Angeles Street, Anaheim. TRANSIENT ADVERTISING: Planters' Hotel, ANAHEIM, CAL. THIS HOUSE HAVING BEEN THOROUGHLY Repaired and Furnished WITH Elegant New Furniture Is open for the reception of Gucsts. Suites of Rooms for Families. The Table and appointments are First-class. C.S. COMPTON, Manager. W. H. Masser, M.D.D.S. D. R. Willier, D.D.S., DENTISTS. WE DESPECTFULLY ANNOUNCE TO YOU that one of us will visit Anaheim on the 9th and 10th of every month to attend to any dental work that you may wish to have done. We are prepared to execute all bran lies of dentistry in an artistic and substantial manner at a reasonable price. We replace lost teeth without a plate and place gold crowns on roots and decayed teeth by a new patient process. We extract teeth without pain by the use of vitalized air. If you have not leisure to come to our office in the city, we will be pleased to call at your residence and do the work there. Leave orders at Palo Alto, Anaheim. DRS. MASSER & WILDER. Rooms 15, 17 and 19 Nadia Block, Los Angeles May 10. IN THE FORECASTLE. A Deep-Water Sailor’s Description of the Food He Had. New York Tribune. “You want to know how we fellows live in the fo’casle, do you?” said an old weather-beaten Jack tar in answer to a query of a Tribune reporter. “Well, we have a confounded hard time of it taking it by and large. Take a man, for example, that ships for a deep-water voyage. He gets, say $18 or $20 a month. The fo’casle is generally crowded to death and ain’t fit for a dog to live in at its best. It’s chock-a-block full of rats and cockroaches, with a smell of bilge-water, when we are in warm latitudes, that would turn the stomach of anything but a shell-back. When we first leave port the grub is pretty fair. The ‘salt horse,’ or salt beef you shore-going folks call it, is comparatively fresh; the weevils and worms haven’t had a chance at the hard tack, and the water tastes something like water. Once in awhile we have ‘soft tommy,’ or soft bread. It’s after we’ve been to sea for a month or six weeks that we catch it. Why, I’ve seen meat that bad, that the ‘doctor,’ as we call the cook aboard ship, had to take it out of the ‘harness-cask,’ in which it is kept on deck, with tongs. We got to like it that way after awhile. “It’s fun to see some of those coasting sailors get hold of a piece of hard tack that’s doubled the Horn two or three times. I’ve seen ’em take a piece and break it on the edge of a sea chest with a marline spike or a belaying pin and carefully pick out the weevils. Lord bless you, we don’t take such trouble after we’ve fairly taken to growing barnacles on our backs. We just soften it a bit in coffee and take it in, weevils and all. I don’t know how that is, but they ain’t half so bad when you get used to ’em. You know, when we are in port, the water-tanks are cleaned out and whitewashed. After the water has stood in them for three or four weeks, and we get into hot weather, it has the taste of a mixture of whitewash and iron rust, and to say it’s flat is to put it mildly. You can guess what nice drinking it makes. “Shore-going folks would think that sort of grub would go pretty hard, but we get so used to it that we won’t have anything else. The nearest I ever came to being in a mutiny was aboard a tea-cliper from New York to Shanghai. The salt-junk gave out and the ‘old man’ fed before-the-mast hands on tinned meats. The boys liked it first rate for a day or two, but then they began to growl and sent a man aft. The ‘old man’ said the men forward were living on ‘cabin grub,’ and wanted to know what ailed ’em. ‘Well, you see, sir,’ said the man there aln't no chaw in the meat you send forward.’ When the boys found out that that was all they could get, they made the beat of it. Why, there’s more chaw in that salt beef than there is in a piece of India rubber. I have chawed on a piece for a whole watch, and it was as good when I went below as it was when I went on deck. Thursday is generally ‘duff’ day aboard ship. Duff is first class when you get used to it. It is made of flour, and water, and salt. If the housekeeper To prepare Sails table oysters, are set if, after being thoughest waters, thine jackets on. These moved, and will loosen if salsify is scraped much of the flavor quite clean. Potato Omelet boiled potatoes, but these with three tails salt, white pepper, Mince three ounces dice, fry these in the butter, put in the stir all until set; the Fold over and serve. Patty Cake — pie crust or even a paste left after making this way: Line sour bake it, then put a jam into each one; custard over each pie is an instrument dren, let it not be done. Wedding-Cake fancy is the making send wedding-cake them of pink or blue with a narrow ribbon work-bag. Decorate initials of bride and be wrapped in the keectioners use about them. Maecaroni Soup bones and stuffing oat steak bone, with ham red pepper. The nut fat and put the stock boils add salt to taste caroni broken in short hour in tepid water; one good-sized potato half a carrot. Boil spoonful of Harvey’s FIG CAKE — A novel Make a cake after that add to it one pound cut the figs in thin sausage with flour below the dough: one cup of milk, three pints of feta fills and a half of bacon of ten eggs. As injices or extract shows a moderate oven and with buttered paper; the cake. A few drills put into the frosting. German Pancake are made of dough puff fried cakes. Roll quail a plain cooky cutter piece put some jelly; teaspoonful is a suffice other piece of the dough not press it down in press the edges firmly cessary wet them a lie here; then fry them HOSTETTER'S CELEBRATED STOMACH BITTERS Fortify the System. All who have experienced and witnessed the effect of Hostetter's Stomach Bitters upon the weak, brisk down, desponding victims of dyspepsia, liver complaint, fever and ague, rheumatism, nervous debility, or premature decoy, know that in this supreme tonic and aitative there exists a specific principle which reaches the very source of the trouble, and effects an absolute and permanent cure. For sale by all Druggists and Dealers generally. 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. A HOME DRUGGIST TESTIFIES. Popularity at home is not always the best test of merit, but we point proudly to the fact that no other medicine has won for itself such universal approbation in its own city, state, and country, and among all people, as Ayer's Sarsaparilla. The following letter from one of our best-known Massachusetts Druggists should be of interest to every sufferer: RHEUMATISM. "Eight years ago I had an attack of Rheumatism so severe that I could not move from the bed, or dress, without help. I tried several remedies without much if any relief, until I took AYER'S SARAPAPARILLA, by the use of two bottles of which I was completely cured. Have sold large quantities of your SARAPAPARILLA, and it still retains its wonderful popularity. The many notable cures it has effected in this vicinity convince me that it is the best blood medicine ever offered to the public. E. F. HARRIS." River St., Buckland, Mass., May 13, 1882. An Ungrateful Rat. From the Boston Globe. A few weeks since a Maltese cat, which makes her home in Mr. Hiram Thomas's office, brought forth two kittens. Evidently ashamed or dissatisfied at having so small a family, and feeling that she could very easily manage and care for a larger one, she began searching for some little wanderers who needed the kindly attention of a mother. Not finding one of her own species, and happening to discover a half-grown rat, whose forlorn condition wrought upon her sympathy, she promptly gathered him in and installed him in her little family. On the following morning Mr. Thomas found the cat quietly snoozing in her accustomed place in the office, with her two kittens and their foster brother snugly ensconced by her side. "For several days," said Mr. Thomas, "she watched her adopted child just as tenderly as she did her offspring, nursing her with them and dividing her care generously between them." The rat was evidently happy in his new-found home for a time, and was apparently not disturbed at seeing his foster mother occasionally rush out and slay other rats. Finally the restraint of being "tied to his mother's apron strings" became irksome to his ratship, and he boldly essayed to play truant. On missing him the cat would at once hunt him up, and for the first few infractions she let him off with a gentle reproof. Again he ran away, and when caught, the cat, thinking it about time to assert her maternal authority in a more forcible manner, gave him a sound shaking up and cuffed his ears. This was more than rat nature could endure quietly, so as soon as opportunity offered the youngster made good his escape, making up his mind that it was a pretty smart cat that could give him points on getting a living. The cat is now without a family, as her two kittens were drowned after the departure of the rat. If the tests of not known in quarts instil perinures would be met. It may be supposed that how many pounds of a gallon, but the counting with the liquid usurped, and we may are hundreds of farm yield of cows, given a milk, and yet do not find what that quantity should use. The method of vv also misleads, as the seemingly larger than cow; but give the every farmer understory once. Milk does not weigh conditions. A gallon weigh eight pounds and pounds and two ounces quires a pencil and pay reduce a certain number more familiar quartes; or a quart exceeding two fraction to content again used milk weighs an ounce; or eight pounds and cream weighs only eighteen ounces. Butternilk pounds and eight and a fraction in that case is given for the milk records are given, for they do arithmetic in simple times; but give the greater interest will be for the easier and more stood the experiments; who make them and for rectly interested. Removing Wine at Ayer's Sarsaparilla. The following letter from one of our best-known Massachusetts Druggists should be of interest to every sufferer. RHEUMATISM. "Eight years ago I had an attack of Rheumatism, so severe that I could not move from the bed, or dress, without help. I tried several remedies without much if any relief, until I took AYER'S SARSAPARILLA, by the use of two bottles of which I was completely cured. Have sold large quantities of your SARSAPARILLA, and it still retains its wonderful popularity. The many notable cures it has effected in this vicinity convince me that it is the best blood medicine ever offered to the public. E. F. HARRIS." River St., Buckland, Mass., May 13, 1882. SALT RHEUM. GEORGE ANDREWS, overseer in the Lowell Carpet Corporation, was for over twenty years before his removal to Lowell afflicted with Salt Rheum in its worst form. Its ulcerations actually covered more than half the surface of his body and limbs. He was entirely cured by AYER'S SARSAPARILLA. See certificate in Ayer's Almanac for 1883. PREPARED BY Dr.J.C.Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by all Druggists; $1, six bottles for $5. HEAD QUARTERS. Corner of Center and Los Angeles Sts. HAVING JUST RECEIVED AN INVOICE OF French "Martel" Cognac, Brandy, Claret and Champagne direct from "La Balle France," all specially adapted for medicinal purposes, I now propose to sell them in any desired quantity at very low prices. Kentucky Whisky, imported direct from the famous Free Stone District, Covington, Kentucky; I make a specialty of. English Ale and Porter by the bottle; also Milwaukee Beer in connection with all home distilled or fermented Liquors, Wines and Beer. CIGARS of exquisite flavor in retail or by the box. BEVERAGES of every description compounded in a scientific manner. An experience of 20 years in the wholesale and retail liquor business enables me to guarantee satisfaction to all who favor me with a call and I trust their names may be legion. P. GRANET. ratship, and he boldly essayed to play truant. On missing him the cat would at once hunt him up, and for the first few infractions she let him off with a gentle reproof. Again he ran away, and when caught, the cat, thinking it about time to assert her maternal authority in a more forcible manner, gave him a sound shaking up and cuffed his ears. This was more than rat nature could endure quietly, so as soon as opportunity offered the youngster made good his escape, making up his mind that it was a pretty smart cat that could give him points on getting a living. The cat is now without a family, as her two kittens were drowned after the departure of the rat. Buildings that Resist Earthquakes The volcanic eruptions in Java, the earthquakes in Ischia, and our own western tornadoes, have probably caused much more destruction of life and property than they would have caused if buildings had been specially adapted to resist them. In Japan, where shocks of earthquake are frequent, a contemporary says that it is not usual to dig foundations for any building, no matter how large or important it may be. Rocks slightly rounded at the top are placed where the corners of the house are to be. The corner posts, rounded at the end, rest on these. The timbers are all pinned together, not tailed, so as to allow of considerable movement without coming apart. In the central portion of the building the timbers are particularly heavy, and act as ballast. In high towers there are sometimes huge beams swung from the roof and reaching to within a foot of the ground, which prevent the building from being overturned either by earthquake or storm. The oldest building in Japan, the Treasury at Nara, is built in this manner, without the swinging beam, but with a very heavy ballast in the framework of the center of the floor. A well-known artist is the inventor of a painting hut which is constructed in part on the same principle. It rests on stones at the corners, the timbers are keyed together, and it carries a heavy ballast under the floor. It is, however, in addition, secured to the ground by ropes and anchors. This hut will outride a gale in perfect safety. A hop-tical delusion—lager beer made of rice, quassia and glucose. Fruit juices, wine, jelly that are difficult to deceive some. First, it is well known to remove sugary matter ammonia to neutralize it expose to the fumes. The difficulty of the last injury to colors, as it dyes, so it must only be extremity. The agonious hostesses who see their serviettes stained with altogether concealed from poised until opportunity vent to indignation. That depositing a spoon port-wine stain immediately given will neutralize them together a delusion. A spot moist until remedied do as well. It is simple to dip the part in boiling sible afterwards, and kept until the spot disappears not yield to the last native first rub the spoon hard soap, and then lay of starch and cold water of starch well into the exposed it to sun and air; obstructate repeat the procedure. Ripe fruit makes some stain; sometimes same kind acts as a Word. The sure effects of Ayurthought and permanent taint of scrofula about parilla will dislodge it, your system. HOUSEHOLD HINTS. To PREPARE SALSIFY.—Salsify, or vegetable oysters, are improved in flavor greatly if, after being thoroughly washed in two or three waters, they are boiled with their jackets on. These can be very easily removed, and will look and be perfectly clean. If salsify is scraped, as is the usual practice, much of the flavor is lost, and it never looks quite clean. POTATO OMELETTE.—Grate three mealy boiled potatoes, beat three eggs, and mix these with three tablespoonfuls of milk. Add salt, white pepper, and any herb to flavor. Mince three ounces of ham or bacon in small dice, fry these in the pan; add a piece of butter, put in the mixed potatoes and eggs, stir all until set; then leave it to brown. Fold over and serve. PATTY CAKE.—If the cook has a little pie crust or even a little of her best puff paste left after making pies, let her use it in this way: Line some patty pans with it, bake it, then put a teaspoonful of jelly or jam into each one, and pour enough boiled custard over each to fill it. If a patty-pan pie is an instrument of happiness to the children, let it not be despised. WEDDING-CAKE BAGS.—A late and pretty fancy is the making of satin bags in which to send wedding-cake to absent friends. Make them of pink or blue, draw them together with a narrow ribbon like an old-fashioned work-bag. Decorate with the monogram or initials of bride and groom. The cake should be wrapped in the kind of paper which confectioners use about fresh candies. MACARONI SOUP.—Boil together the bones and stuffing of a roast chicken and a steak bone, with half an onion and a bit of red pepper. The next day take off all the fat and put the stock on to heat. When it boils add salt to taste and two sticks of macaroni broken in short bits and soaked an hour in tapid water. Grate into the soup one good-sized potato, half a small turnip, half a carrot. Boil well and add a dessert-spoonful of Harvey's sauce. FIG CAKE.—A novelty in fig cake is this: Make a cake after the following recipe, and add to it one pound and a quarter of figs; cut the figs in thin slices or strips; dredge them with flour before putting them into the dough; one cup of butter, one and three-quarters of a cup of sugar, one of sweet milk, three pints of flour and two tablespoonfuls and a half of baking powder, the whites of ten eggs. As injuring the fig flavor, no spices or extract should be added. Bake in a moderate oven and be sure to line the tin with buttered paper. Frost the top only of the cake. A few drops of vanilla may be put into the frosting. GERMAN PANCAKES.—German pancakes are made of dough prepared as if for plain fried cakes. Roll quite thin, cut out with a plain cooky cutter; on the top of one piece put some jelly; or thick jam; about a teaspoonful is a sufficient quantity; put another piece of the dough over this one; do not press it down in the center at all, but press the edges firmly together, and if necessary wet them a little to make them adhere; then fry them in hot lard, just as you OIL LANDS FOR SALE At Petrolia, Six Miles North of Anaheim. In Soquel Canyon, 240 acres at $80 per acre. Also 20 acres in Brea Canyon, $80 per acre. Also 20 acres in Telegraph Canyon at $15 per acre. Title: U.S. Patent. These lands are in the heart of the petroleum oil belt, with acres of asphaltum or bree beds and numerous oil springs. Near these lands is one producing oil well with two more being drilled. Shallow wells of heavy lubricating oil can be obtained at slight depths on all of these lands. Inquire of the owner: R. CHANDLER, Boyle Heights, or address P.O. Box 884, Los Angeles. HEADACHES Are generally induced by Indigestion, Foul Stomach, Costiveness, Deficient Circulation, or some Derangement of the Liver and Digestive System. Sufferers will find relief by the use of Ayer's Pills to stimulate the stomach and produce a regular daily movement of the bowels. By their action on these organs, Ayer's Pills divert the blood from the brain, and relieve and cure all forms of Congestive and Nervous Headache, Billous Headache, and Sick Headache; and by keeping the bowels free, and preserving the system in a healthful condition, they insure immunity from future attacks. Try LUMBER YARD PLANING, SAWING, AND MOULDING MILLS. OF Saxton & Cox, Anaheim. NEAR THE RAILROAD DEPOT All Varieties of Pine, Redwood,and Spruce LUMBER! Doors, Sashes,and Blinds,Grape Boxes,Fruit Boxes,Bee-Hives,and Fruit Dryers. Builders' Hardware and Nails Plain and Fancy SCROLL SAWING at Short Notice Anaheim Grist Mill! Grain,Feed,Meal,eic.ofall Varieties CORN SHELLED AND SHIPPED. ANAHEIM STORAGE WAREHOUSE. GRAIN,WOOL,and GENERAL MERCHANDISE TAKEN ON STORAGE. GRAIN SACKSand TWINE constantly on hand CONSIGNMENTS SOLICITED Of all kinds of PRODUCE.Advances made,MERCHANDISE forwarded and sold on Commission in best Markets. 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, CITY PROPERTY BOUGHT AND SOLD,ORANGE Groves,vineyards,farms and unimproved lands for sale. Ayer's Pills to stimulate the stomach and produce a regular daily movement of the bowels. By their action on these organs, Ayer's Pills divert the blood from the brain, and relieve and cure all forms of Congestive and Nervous Headache, Billous Headache, and Sick Headache; and by keeping the bowels free, and preserving the system in a healthful condition, they insure immunity from future attacks. Try Ayer's Pills. PREPARED BY Dr.J.C.Ayer&Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by all Druggists. P. PELLEGRIN. PRACTICAL Watchmaker and Jeweler, CENTER ST., - ANAHEIM Repairing of Watches, Clocks and Jewelry don promptly and warranted. Sole Agent for the Johnston Optical Co.'s Improv of Spectacles and Eye-Glasses (interchangeable) Improved Eye Tester to perfectly suit the eye. THEPlows, Cultivators, Harows AND-- Farming Implements Manufactured by FIRST & BRADLEY Manufacturing Company of Chicago, are first-class and guaranteed in every respect. Sold by A.E. & E.A. WHITE. PASTURAGE. AN UNLIMITED QUANTITY OF HORSES TAKEN ON POSTAGE AT THE ALFAILA RANCH OF J.W. BIKNY IN Santa Ana Canyon. Terms—$250 per month. For further information apply to P.DAVIS & BRO., Anaheim. GIANT DAKING POWDER Has No Equalt Strongest, Purest, Best and Most Economical in the Market. Never Varies In Quality. Recommended to CONSUMERS by leading Physi- Measurement of Milk. If the tests of noted cows were made known in quarts instead of pound, the experiments would be more easily understood. It may be supposed that every farmer knows how many pounds of milk are contained in a gallon, but the common custom of measuring with the liquid system is not easily usurped, and we may safely assert that there are hundreds of farmers who read of the yield of cows, given as so many pounds of milk, and yet do not feel competent to state what that quantity should be in liquid measure. The method of weighing by the scales also misleads, as the quantity is usually seemingly larger than that from good dairy cows; but give the record in quarts, and every farmer understands the quantity at once. Milk does not weigh the same under all conditions. A gallon of new milk should weigh eight pounds and eight ounces, or two pounds and two ounces per quart. It requires a penil and paper for the farmer to reduce a certain number of pounds to the more familiar quarts, owing to the weight of a quart exceeding two pounds, and with a fraction to contend against. Again, skimmed milk weighs an ounce more to the gallon, or eight pounds and nine ounces, while cream weighs only eight pounds and four ounces. Butternilk, however, weighs eight pounds and eight and a half ounces, and the fraction in that case is a bother. Few farmers read milk records closely when pounds are given, for they do not wish too much arithmetic in simple statements, although the weight system may be preferable at times; but give the production in quarts, and greater interest will be created in the tests, for the easier and more thoroughly understood the experiments, the better for those who make them and for those who are indirectly interested.—The Farm, Field and Fireside. Removing Wine and Fruit Stains. Removing Wine and Fruit Stains. Fruit juices, wine, jams, etc., leave stains that are difficult to deal with, and troublesome. First, it is well to wash with water to remove sugary matter, then use diluted ammonia to neutralize the acid, after which expose to the fumes of burning sulphur. The difficulty of the last application is its injury to colors, as it bleaches vegetable dyes, so it must only be sorted to as the last extremity. The agonies of mind suffered by hostesses who see their best tablecloths and serviettes stained with wine are not always altogether concealed from guests, nor postponed until opportunity serves for giving vent to indignation. There is a tradition that depositing a spoonful of salt upon a port-wine stain immediately after it has been given will neutralize the injury. This is altogether a delusion. Anything to keep the spot moist until remedies are applied would do as well. It is simpler and more effective to dip the part in boiling milk as soon as possible afterwards, and keep the milk boiling until the spot disappears. Fruit may or may not yield to the last remedy. As an alternative, first rub the spot on each side with hard soap, and then lay on a thick mixture of starch and cold water. Rub this mixture of starch well into the spot, and afterwards expose it to sun and air. If the stain proves obstinate repeat the process a few days afterwards. Ripe fruit makes the most troublesome stain; sometimes unripe fruit of the same kind acts as a remover.—Household Words. The sure effects of Ayer's Sarsaparilla are thorough and permanent. If there is a lurking taint of scrofaula about you, Ayer's Sarsaparilla will dialogge it, and expel it from your system. Baking Powder Has No Equal Strongest, Purest, Best and Most Economical in the Market. Never Varies in Quality. Recommended to Consumers by leading Physicians, Chemists and members of the San Francisco Board of Health. Prepared by the BOTHIN MANUFACTURING COMPANY, SAN FRANCISCO AND SACRAMENTO. 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 George Hull. Joseph Caldwell. HULL & CALDWELL Having PURCHASED THE PATENT RIGHT to manufacture the celebrated CEMENT PIPE are now prepared to make and lay the said pipe of any dimension from two inches to four feet in diameter, in any part of Los Angeles county south of and including Anaheim and Westminster Townships. For information regarding the pipe and prices apply to Hannah & Keith, Anaheim, at to the undersigned, at Westminster, mav3 The Buyer's Guide is issued March and Sept., each year: 216 pages, 84 x 116 inches, with over 3,300 illustrations—a whole picture gallery. Gives wholesale prices direct to consumers on all goods for personal or family use. Tells how to order, and gives exact cost of everything you use, eat, drink, wear, or have fun with. These invaluable books contain information gleaned from the markets of the world. We will mail a copy Free to any address upon receipt of the postage—7 cents. Let us hear from you. Respectfully, MONTGOMERY WARD & CO. 507 & 509 Washah Avenue, Chicago IL BER YARD NG, SAWING, AND ING MILLS. OF on & Cox, naheim. RAILROAD DEPOT ine, Redwood,and Spruce IBER! Hardware and Nails ROLL SAWING at Short Notice in Crist Mill! real, etc.of all Varieties LED AND SHIPPED. IM STORAGE E HOUSE. GENERAL MERCHANDISE ON STORAGE. TWINE constantly on hand ENTS SOLICITED DUCE. Advances made, MER and sold on Commission in West Markets. L. W. BENTZ DUDSON & CO. rokers and General Agents naheim County, California. Street, OUGH AND SOLD, ORANGE farms and unimproved lands BANK OF ANAHEIM. CAPITAL STOCK, $100,000.00. PLEZ JAMES...President G. B. SHAFFER...Secretary BOARD OF DIRECTORS: E. F. SPENCE, W. H. MABURY, W. K. JAMES, S. H. MOTT, P. JAMES. This Bank receives Deposits, Loans Money, Buys and Sells Exchange and Currency, makes Collections and transacts a General Banking Business. CORRESPONDENTS. FIRST NATIONAL BANK, Los Angeles. Farmers and Merchants Bank, Los Angeles. Pacific Bank, San Francisco. FIRST NATIONAL BANK, New York. DRAPTS, LETTERS 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 joint in the countries named for any relative or friend can purchase tickets here and forward them to the proper person by mail. FIRST NATIONAL Pacific Coast Steamship COMPANY. GOODALL, PERKINS & Co. General Agents, San Francisco. NORTHERN ROUTES. STREAMERS LEAVE SAN FRANCISCO For Wrangle, Sitka and Harrisonburg, Alaska; and Nassau and New Westminster, R.C., as advertised in San Francisco newspapers. For Victoria, Port Townsend, Seattle, Tacoma, Stillegorm and Olympia on June 8th, 10th, Bank, and July 2d at 10 A.M. For Astoria and Portland, June 8, 9, 12, 26, 32, 41 and July 5, as 10 A.M. For Eureka, Arcuta and Hockenbey, every Wednesday. For Point Arena, Cuffy's Cove, Little River, Whalen boro, Mendocino City and Novo every Monday. SOUTHERN ROUTES TIME TABLE FOR JUNE. Coming South Owing North STREAMERS. San Francisco Leave San Pedro Aridio Leave San Pedro San Francisco Los Angeles June 21 June 4 June 8 June 11 Oriental 5 7 9 10 12 Eureka 7 9 10 12 Santa Rosa 10 12 14 16 Los Angeles 12 14 16 18 Oriental 15 17 19 21 Kurika 12 19 20 23 Santa Rosa 20 22 24 28 Los Angeles 22 24 28 28 Oriental 25 27 29 only 1 Fureka 27 29 only 1 Santa Rosa 20 July 8 July 5 Steamers Santa Rosa and Oriental go through to San Diego, leaving San Pedro on the dates of their arrivals from San Francisco. The Santa Rosa and Oriental call at Santa Barbara and Port Harford (San Luis Olímpico) only on the route to and from San Francisco. Cars to connect with steamers leave R. P. R. R. Depot, Los Angeles, as follows: With Santa Rosa and Oriental going north, at 10 o'clock, A.M.; going south, at 4 o'clock, P.M. With Los Angeles and Eureka, going north, at 4 o'clock, P.M. Railroad time. RATES OF FARE FROM LOS ANGELES. CAREN. STEAMAGE To San Francisco, Monterey or Santa Cruz $15.00 $10.00 To San Simson 13.00 10.00 To Cayucos 13.00 10.00 To Port Harford 12.00 9.00 To Gaviota 10.00 8.00 To Santa Barbara 8.00 6.00 To San Buenaventura 7.00 8.00 To San Diego 6.00 8.00 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 and from FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF Los Angeles. PRESIDENT: E. F. Spence. CASHIER: W. Lacv. Eureka! Eureka! Eureka! The long desired TEA Free from all poisonous mixtures, that makes a healthy drink, of delicious flavor, can now be had at the Store near the Depot. Call for the "Mayflower" brand and test its merits. Also when there sample the various COFFEES that have been provided for his customers by M. H. CHEESEMAN. COOPERAGE Cruz. $15 00 $10 00 To San Simson. 13 00 10 00 To Cayucos. 12 00 10 00 To Port Harford. 12 00 9 00 To Gaviota. 10 00 8 00 To Santa Barbara. 8 00 6 00 To San Buenaventura. 7 00 5 00 To San Diego. 6 00 5 00 To San Diego and return. 11 00 Plans of steamers' cabins at agent's office, where berths may be secured. For Newport Landing, via Santa Cruz, etc., freight steamers leave San Francisco about every two weeks, as tides serve on the Newport bar. The Company reserve the right to change the steamers, or their days of sailing. For passage or freight; as above, or for Tickets to and from All Important Points in Europe, Apply to H. McLELLAN, Agent. OFFICE—No. 8 Commercial Street, Los Angeles. FIRE Insurance Agency. I beg to inform the citizens of this vicinity that I am agent for the following first-class Fire Insurance Companies: GIRARD, of Philadelphia AGRICULTURAL, of Watertown SCOTTISH UNION AND NATIONAL HARTFORD, of Hartford Sr. PAUL, of St. Paul TEUTONIA, of New Orleans NEW ORLEANS, of New Orleans FIRE INSURANCE ASSOCIATION of London, England. COMMERCIAL UNION, of London, Capital $12,500,000 CITY OF LONDON, Capital $10,000,000 SOUTH BRITISH AND NATIONAL, Capital $10,000,000 All of the above named Companies are staunch and reliable, and insurers can have their choice of Companies. Richard Melrose, The Purest and Best. CHEESEMAN'S BAKING Call for the "Mayflower" brand and test its merits. Also when there sample the various COFFEES that have been provided for his customers by M. H. CHEESEMAN. COOPERAGE A LARGE QUANTITY OF BARRELS, HALF BARRELS, 10 Gallon and 5 Gallon Kegs For Sale Cheap. Apply to B. DREYFUS & CO. Anaheim OSTRICH FARM. IT HAVING BEEN FOUND NECESSARY TO close the above farm to visitors, notice is hereby given that all persons trespassing on the said rm 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 GAZETTE or at the Anaheim Hotel. ALL DOORS BROUGHT ON THE FARM WILL BE SHOT. C. J. SKETCHLEY. Superintendent California Ostrich Farming Company sep29 The Victor Mower, The only Mowing Machine made in California. —OHIO BUCKEYE. Latest Improved. Walter A. Wood's Mowing Machines, And all kinds of HAY RAKES For sale by JACOB YAEGER. The Purest and Best. CHEESEMAN'S BAKING POWDER For sale at the Store at the Depot. MANWO, Retail Dealer in Chinese Goods. EMPLOYMENT OFFICE for Chinese Labor. may10-1m Sulphur. THE UNDERSIGNED HAS FOR SALE SULPHUR especially adapted for vineyards, at lowest rates. B. DREYFUS & CO. Anaheim. THIS PAPER may be used for advertising purposes where appropriate.