anaheim-gazette 1884-07-26
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WEEKLY GAZETTE.
Published every Saturday.
Richard Metrose,
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:
SPACE
1 week
2 weeks
3 weeks
4 weeks
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. Wilder, D.D.S.
DENTISTS.
WE DESPECTFULLY ANNOUNCED TO YOU that one of us will visit Australia 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 houses in an artificially substantial manner at a reasonable price.
We replace lost teeth without a plate and place gold grown on roots, and decayed teeth by a new patent process.
We extract teeth without pain by the use of vital oil.
THE WITCH'S RING.
[V. R. H.* in San Francisco Argonant.]
A very curious, straggling, sleepy old village is A language. Had a century behind the rest of this world, it still sits between the green hills of an eastern state, with its elbows on its knees and its chin in its hands, musing on bygone days, when old King George held the land under his sway, and when, as its old folk sagely remark, things were not as they are now. There are a great many old people in Adlingtune—in fact very few die young there. The atmosphere is so dreary and peaceful that excitement cannot exist, and the wear and tear of the busy world is unknown, or at most only huns faintly over the hills, like the buzzing of a fly on a sunny page on a summer day. And so they still sit in their chimney corners from year to year and muse, and doze, and dream until they dream their lives away and take their final sleep. It was to an old crone of this description that I was invited for my adventure.
In the course of my idle ramblings about the village I chanced one day to peer over a crumbling wall and discovered an old, disused burial-ground. The brown slabs were broken, prostrate and scattered, with only here and there a forlorn, unsteady stone standing wearily, and waiting for the time to come when it, too, might fall down and rest with the sleepers beneath. Scrambling over the low wall, I stoope about among the grass, pushing away the tangled masses of vines and leaves from the faces of slabs that I might read the inscriptions there. But the sums and storms of over one hundred years had obliterated nearly all the letters, so that only portions of names and dates remained. Finally, down in a deep corner of the inclosure, where the weeds grew densest and the shade was darkest, I found an old stone which, leaning forward, had protected its face from the storms, and on this stone I read the words:
BARBARA CONWAIL.
BORN 1670, DIED 1730. AGE: 60 YEARS. HAVING BEEN LAWFULLY EXECUTED FOR THE PRACTICE OF WITCHCRAFT.
My curiosity was at once aroused. I enquired of several persons as to the history of this woman, but without success for a time. Finally, however, I found an old woman, who told me the history of Barbara Conwail, as it had been handed down by her ancestors.
Living in an old stone house at the edge of the village, she was rarely seen—for no one ever crossed her threshold—save when she was occasionally mot by a frightened party of children killing away a summer afternoon's holiday in the woods, when she would scowl and pass away, stooping along over the fields, gathering herbs with which to brew her mighty potions. No one ever interfered with her; however, until a sad year came to Adrienne's ring.
From a sat at home to burning heath fingers thrilled an electric faster still in the consciousness me that I held hands. There was sparkle, as the man upraised hand, ring set with fire began slipping down hurried on.
Some persons say my nervousness owed such that I am not have a medal hat which asserts that and above all, I void of superstition me to say that I lights on reaching that night, but to the bargain; and inspection of all from its peg a loot in a very suggestive This done, I sat down the wall—and exited.
It was a quaint and massive. The several small columns about a large diagonal stances had rendered acquaflit myself their values, so that the ring was something exciting the excited co-operation time; it was not so when my eye fell inscribed in quaria "Barbara."
I sat and muse'd what the crone bore the ring and (often) the thrill in the darkness.
Perhaps I should call myself an been in love—that not think that I was feeling for I own worshiped beauty fancy, but my life boys and men, and a mystery. A father, a hard worm lege, a stranger reputation in a law how it could be an ances among women.
W. H. Masser, M.D.D.S.
D. R. Wilder, D.D.S.
DENTISTS.
WE RESPECTFULLY ANNOUNCED TO YOU that one of us will visit Ausdalm 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 all braun hess of dentistry in an artificial and substantial manner at a reasonable price.
We replace lost teeth without a plate and place gold-grown on roots, and decompose teeth by a new patent process.
We extract teeth without pain by the use of vital lead air. If you have not learnt to come to our office in the city, we will be pleased to call at your real dence and do the work there.
Leave orders at Post offices Anahim
BRS MASSER & WILDER
Rooms 15-17 and 19 Naked Block, Los Angeles may 10
HOSTETTER'S CELEBRATED
STOMACH BITTERS
To the needs of the tourist, commercial traveler and new settler, Hostetter's Stomach Bitter is particularly adapted, since it strengthens the digestive orals, and braces the physical energies to unhealthy indolences. It removes and prevents gnashal fever, constipation, dyspepsia, healthfully stimulates the kidneys and bladder, and shrinks as well as purifies the blood. When overcome by faggue, whether musical or physical, the wary and debilitated find it a reliable source of renewed strength and comfort.
For sale by all Drugstores and Dealers generally.
F. & J. BACKS,
Importers, Manufacturers and Dealersin
Furniture, Bedding, Paper Hangings, Picture Frames, etc,
UNDERTAKERS,
Agents for the Howe, Eldredge and Victor Sewing Machines.
Los Angeles Street, : Anaheim.
FROM THE PRESIDENT OF BAYLOR UNIVERSITY.
"Independence, Texas, Sept. 26, 1882.
Gentlemen:
Ayer's Hair Vigor
Has been used in my household for three reasons: —
1st. To prevent falling out of the hair.
3rd. To prevent too rapid change of color.
ING BEEN LAWFULLY EXECUTED FOR THE PRACTICE OF WITCHCRAFT.
My curiosity was at once aroused. I inquired of several persons as to the history of this woman, but without success for a time.
Finally, however, I found an old woman, who told me the history of Barbara Conwail, as it had been handed down by her ancestors:
Living in an old stone house at the edge of the village, she was rarely seen—for no one ever crossed her threshold—save when she was occasionally met by a frightened party of children killing away a summer afternoon's holiday in the woods, when she would scoll and pass away, stooping along over the fields, gathering herbs with which to brew her mighty potions. No one ever interfered with her, however, until a sad year came to Adlingtune.
An epidemic broke out and raged with a fury that nothing could withstand. People began to mutter that Barbara the witch was the cause of it. Passing along the road she was stoned by a party of boys, whom she turned, and shaking her bony hand, shrieked that the curse was upon them.
Two of the lails sickened and died in a few days, and though scores were carried away in a like manner, an especial import was at tached to their death. Barbara began to be watched. They looked through her windows at midnight and found her bending over a soothing cauldron, throwing in herbs, muttering caballistic words, and stirring the mixture with what they reported to be a human bone. Old Barbara was working her charms.
So when one morning a man came into town, bruised and covered with mud, and testified that as he rode past old Barbara's house at 12 o'clock the night before, he saw the arch fiend and the witch in conversation upon the house top, surrounded by flames and laughing fiend shily in the bird glare as they shook their fists at the plague-stricken village sleeping below his tale found recently credence. The fact that he was an habitual drunkard, and had on more than one occasion rolled from his house in a drunken stupor and passed the night in a ditch, dreaming wild dreams, did not in the least detract from the belief of the villagers in his account of this scene; and when he related how his pair of demons had pounced upon him, and had first tortured and then thrown him renceless into a ditch, their indignation became uncontrollable.
Old Barbara was tried, condemned and hanged, though she protested in her innocence to the last. The little sum of money found in her possession was used to buy that gravestone—as no one would dare appropriate it—and to this day if any one were bold enough to go to her grave at midnight on the same day of the year on which she was hanged and say, "Barbara, I believe you were innocent," at the same time stretching out his hand over the grave; she would appear to him and place in his hand a talisman.
This talisman would bring good fortune as long as he retained it, but at some time in his life the witch would return to him and claim her own.
The old woman ended her story in a low, impressive monotone, which, with her earnestness and sincere belief in what she said almost carried conviction to me in spite of reason. As I santered away, ridiculing these ignorant and superstitious village folk, I found myself almost unconsciously wandering back through the old burial ground to the witch's grave. Carelessly glancing at the inscription, I was surprised to find that very day was the 15th anniversary of her death, and still more surprised when the thought occurred to me of watching at her grave that night. I ridicled and scoffed the idea. Where was my boasted common sense and incredulity? But, still returning ever, came that wayward thing called fancy
Perhaps I should called myself an orphan in love—that not think that I feel feeling; for I do worshipful beauty, but my life boys and men, and a mystery. A father, a hard worm lege, a stranger reputation in a how it could be an ance among women 25, but much expelled made me feel old of myself an old bad.
I have given this order to prepare for sion. I was falling that soft, warm heat but it is true. I In vain I tried to tell the witch was awake only picture that a beautiful young me; only she was as warm and subtle that hand had seized.
The fire-irons feared and startled me on bed to soothe me lay awake most of burning.
Fortune smiled two years of busy old Barbara's tail when one day—daily? Well, if the ter Wyman's sister she stood under tion of beauty and hand when she friend would hail Never had a touch! I held the witch's sister The same peculiar and the memory of over me like a flame.
But I did not stop Let me briefly say lessly and ridiculously acted just like all world begun. It a man's age. At pretty much as he and so I wrote myself with fears, and grew wonderfully timid concealing it all; the state of my mind to all my mother.
Matters were in one day an opportunity availed myself with presence of mind day. It all came to the young lady if "I suppose I considering my eve Leave a woman answer. Of course tion and she reel story:
"It was about two girls, just home a friend down in girls had beard a witch's grave, and annual appearance I expressed my intention to put it to the place!" All list
FROM THE PRESIDENT OF BAYLOR UNIVERSITY.
"Independence, Texas, Sept. 26, 1882. Gentlemen:
Ayer's Hair Vigor
Has been used in my household for three reasons: —
1st. To prevent falling out of the hair.
2nd. To prevent too rapid change of color.
3rd. As a dressing.
It has given entire satisfaction in every instance. Yours respectfully,
Wm. Carey Crane."
AYER'S HAIR VIGOR is entirely free from uncleanly, dangerous, or injurious substances. It prevents the hair from turning gray, restores gray hair to its original color, prevents baldness, preserves the hair and promotes its growth, cures dandruff and all diseases of the hair and scalp, and is, at the same time, a very superior and desirable dressing.
PREPARED BY
Dr.J.O.Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass.
Sold by all Druggists.
R. LUEDKE.
Watch Maker and Jeweler
Centre Street, Anaheim.
EVERY DESCRIPTION OF WATCHES, CLOCKS AND JEWELRY EXTENDED REPLACEMENT AND WARRANTIES
Folgin and Waltham Watches.
JEWELRY AND CLOCKS ALWAYS ON HAND
THIS PAPER may be made for it IN NEW YORK.
The old woman ended her story in a low, impressive monotone, which, with her earnestness and sincere belief in what she said almost carried conviction to me in spite of reason. As I sauntered away, ridiculing these ignorant and superstitious village folk, I found myself almost unconsciously wandering back through the old burial ground to the witch's grave. Carelessly glancing at the inscription, I was surprised to find that very day was the 150th anniversary of her death, and still more surprising when the thought occurred to me of watching at her grave that night. I ridicled and scoffed the idea. Where was my boasted common sense and incredulity? But, still returning ever, came that way ward thing called fancy—and it conquered.
The world was wild and weird that night, when I stole forth from the village. The wind was meaning through the trees and sobbing piteously; the black clouds were driven in broken patches across the sky, now letting down the moonshine, and again shrouding all in blackest night, and making the shadows chase each other about and steal around corners upon one in a manner that made me wince in spite of myself. Climbing the low stone wall—rather nervously, I confess—I stole away through the old, down-trodden graves, pushing through the weeds and briars as silently as possible, and making my way towards that dark, dreary corner where the old witch reposed. A graveyard at noon is a very different spot from a graveyard at midnight, especially if one is there to seek an interview with a spirit.
I reached the place and stood by the tomb. It still lacked a few minutes of 12, and as I stood there watching the moonlight fitting over the graves I longed for a little ray to creep in with me. But no—approaching and receding and wavering all about me, it never touched this grave, but fled away as often as it approached, as though frightened at the black shadow forever lurking there.
By and by the village clock tollled 12. As the slow tremulous tours stole out on the night the wind ceased moaning, the clouds covered the face of the moon, the insects stopped clirping, and when the last stroke was finished the almost unbearable silence was broken only by my own breathing, which I trove in vain to suppress. The darkness was intense and I could see nothing. A terrible feeling of guilt and terror seized me, that I mortal, should be intruding there at such an hour. Mechanically I strove to speak the words I had been told, but my lips refused to form a sound.
Still I stood in that awful black silence, chilled with fear, until with a mighty effort I reached out my arm over the grave and grasped—a nand.
It was only for an instant—not that, for it was jerked away in a twinkling—but long enough to feel how warm and velvety it was and how small. Not that I lingered there to reflect upon those novel qualities in the hand.
"I suppose I considering my answer. Of course and she rela-tory:
"It was about two of girls, just home a friend down in girls had heard a witch's grave, and annual appearance. I expressed my interest to put it to the touch. The place! All it!
"Foolishly I received a terrible instructions and grave. It was so but some one seize numbed with fear but could only fly yard to where my awaiting me in the venture, for I for able ring, which w Barbara. 'For he when she sent it see, the ring was and was pulled off."
"By me," I inter-from my pocket.
It was time for that was her not hope I may say that occasion. I pressive way, lining which's hand on me fortune the tailsm very pretty allusion claiming her own after all, as I charms—and flashes turn the ring, b bargain.
She took both Fashion.
Slavery to fashion of the beauties in point where luxury further. One pur-siring, one size too of excessive straining dressing, and the toilet is spoiled for myself, and for of thinking—not for virgins who are making their lamp are burning for u-
ING.
argument.] my old valience behind the its elbows, musing George when, as were not great many very few so dreamy cannot exist, my world is instantly over on a sunny day still sit ur to year until they their final descrip-venture, things about never over a man old, disalaba were with only ready stone for the time down and crambling out among led masses of slabs there. But hundred letters, so dates recorder of new densest and an old protected this stone I
NS. HAY-FOR THE sed. I in-history of or a ghost, and an old witch at that, for you altogether mistake my bravery in supposing it; but it was after I had cleared the old wall at a bound and was out on the moonlit road, walking at a raittling good pace toward town, that I recalled it.
From a sat of intense cold I had changed to burning heat. The touch of those soft fingers thrilled me through as with an electric shock, and I walked faster still in my excitement. Gradually the consciousness forced itself upon me that I held something in my clenched hands. There was first a glitter and then a sparkle, as the moon fell on the hollow of my upraised hand, and I saw there a glittering ring set with flashing stones. The icicles began slipping down my back again, and I hurried on.
Some persons may be inclined to deride my nervousness on this occasion, but I assure such that I am not naturally a timid man. I have a medal hanging in my room at home which asserts that I am not a timid man, and above all, I had always been particularly void of superstitious fear; but truth compels me to say that I not only lighted all the lights on reaching my room at the little inn that night, but turned them very high into the bargain; and that I made a systematic inspection of all the closets and removed from its peg a long cloak that was hanging in a very suggestive position on the wall. This done, I sat down—with my back against the wall—and examined the ring.
It was a quaint old ring, curiously carved and massive. The setting was composed of several small colored stones set in a circle about a large diamond. My financial circumstances had rendered it unnecessary for me to acquaint myself with precious stones and their values, so that I could only surmise that the ring was somewhat valuable. Considering the excited condition of my nerves by this time, it was not strange that I should start when my eye fell upon the name that was inscribed in quaint letters inside the ring—"Barbara."
I sat and mused upon the whole adventure; what the crone had told me—the graveyard, the ring and (this was returned to me the oftentimes) the thrilling touch of that soft hand in the darkness.
Perhaps I should say right here that I called myself an old bachelor, and I had never been in love—that is, with any mortal. I did not think that I was devoid of sentiment or feeling, for I often dreamed of love, and worshiped beautiful things of my own fancy, but my life had been thrown among boys and men, and woman was far away and a mystery. A motherless home, a stern father, a hard working student's life at college, a stranger struggling for bread and reputation in a large city—one can perceive how it could be that I made few acquaintances among women. In reality I was only
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FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE.
Sold by all Druggists and Designers in 11 languages.
The Charles A. Vogeler Co.
(Suppliers to A. Vogeler & Co.)
Baltimore, Md., U.S.A.
Oil Lands for Sale
At Petrolla, Six Miles North of Anaheim.
In Soquel Canyon, 240 acres at $80 per acre.
Also 80 acres in Irene Canyon, $60 per acre.
Also 320 acres in Telegraph Canyon at $45 per acre.
Title: U.S. Patent.
These lands are in the heart of the petroleum oil belt, with acres of asphaltium or bree beds and numerous oil springs. Near tasse 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, B. CHANDLER,
Boyle Heights, or address P.O. Box 884,
Los Angeles.
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 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."
River St., Buckland, Mass., May 13, 1883.
SALT RHEUM.
George Andrews oversees 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.
PULLMAN PALACE SLEEPING CARDS attached to Overland Express Trains;
CONSIGNMENTS SOLICITED
O all kinds of PRODUCE. Advances made, MERCHANTISE 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 Anahim
Los Angeles County, California.
Office:—Center Street,
CITY PROPERTY BOUGHT AND SOLD, ORANGE Groves, vineyards, farms and unimproved lands for sale.
Abstracts of Titles Furnished,
Loans Negotiated, Taxes Paid and
Rents Collected for Non-Residents.
Those desires of making profitable INVESTMENTS cannot do better than to call on us at our office.
Correspondence Soilcited.
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 pasture at the alfalfa ranch of J.W. Bixby in Santa Ana Canyon. Terms—$2.50 per month. For further information apply to P.DAVIS & BRADLEY.
QUICK TIME AND CHEAP FARES To Eastern and European Cities Via the Great Transcontinental All-Rail Routes.
SOUTHERN PACIFIC R.R.
Or--
Daily Express and Emigrant Trains make prompt connections with the several railway lines in the East.
CONNECTING AT New York and New Orleans with the several Steamer Lines to ALL EUROPEAN PORTS.
PULLMAN PALACE SLEEPING CARDS attached to Overland Express Trains;
"I suppose I should," said she, laughing,
"considering my experience."
Leave a woman alone to make an evasive answer. Of course, I implored an explanation and she related to me the following story:
"It was about two years ago when a party of girls, just home from school, were visiting a friend down in the country. One of the girls had heard a foolish old story about a witch's grave, and some nonsense about her annual appearance, and a talisman, and when I expressed its incredulity, they braved me to put it to the test. What is the matter? The place! A little town called Adlingtune.
"Foolishly I accepted their challenge and received a terrible fright. I carried out the instructions and stretched my arm over the grave. It was so dark I could see nothing, but some one seized my hand. I was so numbed with fear that I could not cry out, but could only fly through the lonely graveyard to where my trembling companions were awaiting me in the field. It was a foolish adventure, for I fell ill, and it cost me a valuable ring, which was left to me by poor Aunt Barbara. 'For her little namesake,' she sailed when she sent it across the sea to me. You see, the ring was a little large for my finger and was pulled off by—by—"
"By me," I interrupted, taking the lost ring from my pocket.
It was time for Barbara (I forgot to say that was her name), to be startled now. I hope I may say that I came out strong on that occasion. I told my story in a very impressive way, lingered over the effect of the witch's hand on my heart, spoke of the good fortune the talisman had brought me, made a very pretty allusion to Barbara the witch reclaiming her own—for she was a witch, after all, as I could testify, having felt her charms—and finally not only offered to return the ring, but to give myself into the bargain.
She took both.
Fashion's Silvery.
[Clara Bella]
Slavery to fashion is delightful, like that of the beauties in a Turk's haram, up to the point where luxurious ease ends, and no further. One pull too much in a corset string, one size too little in a shoe, an ounce of excessive strain the wrong way in hair-dressing, and the enjoyment of the finest toilet is spoiled. Mind you, I am speaking for myself, and for those of the same manner of thinking—not for the thousands of foolish virgins who are not satisfied with simply making their lamp-shaped waist trims, but are burning for unnatural lightness of figure.
A lady writes: "I have used Ayer's Sarasparilla in my family for many years, and could not keep house without it. For the relief of the pains consequent upon female weaknesses and irregularities, I consider it without an equal."
P. PELLEGRIN.
PRACTICAL Watchmaker and Jeweler.
CENTER ST., - ANAHEIM
Recording of Watches, Clocks and Jewelry can promptly and warranted.
Sale Agent for the Johnston Optical Co.'s Improved Spades and Keepsakes (Interchangeable) Improved Eye Tinters can suit the eye.
Giant Making Powder
Has No Equality:
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.
BOTH MANUFACTURING COMPANY,
SAN FRANCISCO AND SACRAMENTO.
PASTURE.
Best of Pasture for Stock at The Costa Rica Range.
Apply on the premises to A. V. Howard or to SAXTON & COX.
May 17.
CENTRAL PACIFIC R. R.
SOUTHERN PACIFIC R. R.
Daily Express and Emigrant Trains make prompt connections with the several railway lines in the East.
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New York and New Orleans with the several Steamer Lines to ALL EUROPEAN PORTS.
PULLMAN PALACE SLEEPING CARS attached to Overland Express Trains;
THIRD-CLASS SLEEPING CARS are run daily with Overland Emigrant Trains.
No additional charge for Berths in Third-Class Cars.
Tickets sold. Sleeping-car Berths secured, and other information given upon application at the Company's Office, where passengers calling in person can secure choice of routes etc.
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 Hamna & Keith, Anaheim, or to the undersigned at Westminster,
HULL & CALDWELL,
mary
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Sulphur.
THE UNDERSIGNED HAS FOR SALE-SULPHUR especially adapted for vineyards at 1-west rates.
R. DREYFUS & CO.
anaheima.
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on & Cox,
naheim.
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MBER!
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m Crist Mill!
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EN ON STORAGE
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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.
DRAFTS, 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 point in the countries named for any relative or friend can purchase tickets here and forward them to the proper person by mail.
FIRST
Pacific Coast Steamship COMPANY.
GOODALL, PERKINS & CO. General Agents, San Francisco.
NORTHERN ROUTER.
STREAMERS LEAVE SAN FRANCISCO
For Wrangle, Stikh and Hattrubum, Albuquerque and Nassimo and New Westminster, B. G., as advertised in San Francisco newspapers.
For Victoria, Port Townsend, Seattle, Taunus, Salinas and Olympia on July 10th, 1823, 1824, and Aug. 3d at 10 a.m.
For Astoria and Portland, July 2, 8, 12, 18, 22, and Aug. 2, at 10 a.m.
For Eureka, Arends and Hockenbush, every Wednesday.
For Point Arena, Cuffy's Gate, Little River, Whalenboro, Mendocino City and Novo every Monday.
SOUTHERN ROUTES
TIME TABLE FOR JULY.
Coming South Going North
STREAMERS
Santa Rosa....June 20 July 2 July 5 July 7
Los Angeles....July 8 July 9 July 10
Orizaba....5 7 9 10 12
Eureka....7 10 12 14 16
Santa Rosa....10 12 14 16 18
Los Angeles....13 15 17 19 21
Orizaba....15 17 19 21 23
Eureka....17 19 21 23 25
Santa Rosa....20 22 24 26 28
Los Angeles....22 24 26 28
Orizaba....25 27 29 31
Eureka....27 29 31
Santa Rosa....30 Aug 1 Aug 3
Steamers Santa Rosa and Orizaba go through to San Diego, leaving San Pedro on the dates of their arrivals from San Francisco.
The Santa Rosa 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 leave & P. R. R. Dept., Los Angeles, as follows:
With Santa Rosa and Orizaba, 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:
CARIN. STEERAGE
To San Francisco.....$15.00 $10.00
FROM SAN PEDRO WHARF
To Monterey and Santa Cruz.....14.00 9.50
To San Simeon.....12.00 9.00
To Cayne.....11.50 9.00
To Post Harford.....10.50 8.00
To Gavilota.....9.00 7.00
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 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.
Rates of Fare FROM LOS ANGELES:
CARIN. $15.00 $10.00
To San Francisco. $15.00 $10.00
From SAN FEDRO WHARF. 14.00 9.20
To Monterey and Santa Cruz. 13.00 9.00
To San Simeon. 11.20 9.00
To Caynees. 11.20 9.00
To Port Harford. 10.50 8.00
To Gaviota. 9.00 7.00
To Santa Barbara. 6.00 5.00
To San Buenaventura. 5.00 4.00
To San Diego. 5.00 4.00
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.
DR.SANFORD'S LIVER INVIGORATOR
Is just what its name implies; a Purely Vegetable Compound, that acts directly upon the Liver; curing the many diseases incident to that important organ, and preventing the numerous ailments that arise from its deranged or corrupted action, such as Dyspepsia, Jaundice, Biliousness, Costiveness, Malaria, Sick-headache, Rheumatism etc. It is therefore a cruisin't that "To have Good Health the Liver must be kept in order."
DR. SANFORD'S LIVER INVIGORATOR Invigorates the Liver, Regulates the Bowels, Strengthens the System, Purifies the Blood, Assists Digestion, Prevents Fevers.
Is a Household Need. An Invaluable Family Medicine for common complaints.
DR. SANFORD'S LIVER INVIGORATOR An experience of Forty years, and Thousands of Testimonials prove its Merit.
FOR SALE BY ALL DEALERS IN MEDICINE.
For full information send your address for M.D. page Book on the "Liver and its Diseases." To DR. SANFORD 24 BRAND ST., NEW YORK CITY.
The Purest and Best.
CHEESEMAN'S
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.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
Of the State of California in and for the
County of Los Angeles.
John J. Weglein, Plaintiff, vs. Frank Leopold Kuhn, Defendant. Action brought in the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the County of Los Angeles, and to answer 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 Frank Leopold Kuhn, 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 complainant.
The raid action is brought to recover a degree and judgment against you annulling and declaring void that certain contract between plaintiff and defendant herein, of date August 5, 1879, for the sale of the N. W. 1 of the N. K. 1 of the S. W. 1 of Sec. 23, Tp. 4, S.R. 10 W., situated in the County of Los Angeles and State of California, that the said contract be wholly set aside and cancelled of record, and for each other and further relief, or both, as shall be just and equitable, and for costs of suit. Reference is bad to complaint 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 apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint.
Given under my hand and seal of the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the County of Los Angeles, this 17th day of April, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and eighty-four.
A. W. POTTS, Clerk.
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by E. H. Owen, Deputy.
BLAINE
Agents wacked for antithesis edition of his life.
Published at Augusta, his home Largest, handwritten, cheapest best. By the renowned historian and biographer, Col. Cowwell, whose life of Garfield, published by us, unbound the twenty others by 60,000.
Ouisells every book ever published in this world; many acounts are selling fifty daily. Agents are making fortunes. All new beginners successful; grand chance for them $25.50 made by a lady agent the first day. Terms most昂贵. Particulars free. Better send 35 cents for postage, etc. on free outfit, now ready, including large prospective book, and save valuable time.
ALLEN & Co., Augusta, Maine.
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