anaheim-gazette 1885-01-17
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ANAHEIM
VOL. XV.
WEEKLY GAZETTE
Established 1870.
For Terms, see Fourth Page.
INTERESTING CHINA LETTER.
[Correspondence Sacramento Record-Union.]
CANTON, November 24, 1864.
A brief description of this city and vicinity will not be without interest to your readers, although as general proposition California has more of the people from the Flowery Kingdom than they know what to do with. This city occupies a tract of land two miles across, and essentially square, surrounded by a brick wall twenty-five to forty feet in height. There are the southern and western suburbs, which lie outside of the wall, and are very populous. The city itself is divided into two portions, known respectively as the Old and the New, which are separated by a wall with four gates. The new city is simply a slice of land parallel to the river, which was added to the municipality after the first wall had been built. Twelve gates lead into the combined cities. Every night all these gates are shut at 10 o'clock, and in view of the present unsettled state of things, are carefully guarded. The outer gates are iron, while at certain intervals in the streets are wooden polygates, which are also closed at night to prevent the accumulation of deliberative assemblies. Some of these gates are provided with exceedingly pretentious and sanctimonious names. As for instance, the "Gate of 'Eternal Purity,'" the "Gate of Benevolence and Love," etc. At present it is reasonably safe to go about in the walled city, and I have made several trips the entire length of the place, in company with a missionary, and have not suffered molestation. It them facing each other. Some of them are fixed up in regal style within, while others are very plain and shabby. We passed close in front of the handsomest marriage-boat in Canton. To the river population here, this boat would correspond to the church in which we are wont sometimes to hold our marriage services. The people never go ashore, but some of them have accumulated considerable wealth, and go in for a tony wedding. A very swell ceremony was now in progresses we approached this grandly-decorated boat. The clash of gongs, cymbals and unusual drums was simply deafening. All this noise, which characterizes Chinese weddings, funerals, and festivals of every sort, is based on the theory that when the good and evil spirits are contending for the possession of the soul, the evil spirit may be driven away by a tumult of sounds. We inquired, and found that in this case the hideous noise had been going on almost incessantly for six days, in order to secure a prosperous career for the newly-wedded pair. We also learned that the cost of the boat exercises, complete, for the week, was $240—a princely sum to the average Chinaman. The boat itself was a most gorgeous affair, gilded from stem to stern and decorated on top with hanging baskets of artificial flowers.
In closing this letter I feel called upon to pay some little tribute to the Canton mosquito. It is rather small, but, oh, so energetic and persistent! We all sleep under nettings at night, but sometimes even these prove no protection. I shall engrave his name upon the same tablet of my memory where the Japanese flea is commemorated.
Spurious Wines
New York, Jan. 9.—For several days a Bulletin reporter has been endeavoring to trace the facts in connection with the sale of the alleged California Port wine, which the Herald stated had caused the sickness of
are shut at 10 o'clock, and in view of the present unsettled state of things, are carefully guarded. The outer gates are iron, while at certain intervals in the streets are wooden polygates, which are also closed at night to prevent the accumulation of deliberative assemblies. Some of these gates are provided with exceedingly pretentious and sanctimonious names. As for instance, the "Gate of 'Eternal Purity,'" the "Gate of Benevolence and Love," etc. At present it is reasonably safe to go about in the walled city, and I have made several trips the entire length of the place, in company with a missionary, and have not suffered molestation. It is always easy to tell when you are near one of the city gates, because of the crowds which line the streets, sometimes rendering progress next to impossible. Canton is the most elegant city in the empire—the representative city of all China. Its streets are excessively narrow, but they are tolerably clean—very clean from a Chinese standpoint—and evidences of wealth abound on many of the most important throughfares. Perhaps the average width of a street is from four to six feet; but I measured one which was only two feet six inches from wall to wall. It was barely possible for the line of pedestrians going one way to pass the line going the other way, and that was by means of a "siding" process. When coolies meet, wearing the broad brimmed hats which are so common with the working classes, they would be compelled to remove their headgear altogether. Of course, no wheeled vehicles of any sort can get inside of the city proper; much less could it move were it once landed in the streets by some impossible squeezing process. All traveling is done on foot or in chairs, and when a chair is encountered, everybody going in the opposite direction is compelled to step into the front of some shop (the fronts are all open without windows doors or any partition) and wait until it has passed. In order to conceive accurately the multitudinous life that animates these narrow streets, the reader has only to reflect that considerably over a million people are cooped up in an inclusion two miles square. Blockades are not very common in the streets and yet I do not understand how they are prevented, for the streets always swarm with humanity. A funeral or wedding procession takes up the entire highway, and a passing fire department crowds everybody into the store-fronts. People must mind their own business on the street, in order to avoid collisions, and the narrowness of the pathway both tends to hide the passer-by and to prevent the accumulation of a mob.
Occasionally we heard disrespectful language behind our backs, but we paid no attention to it. Children, and occasionally men, would cry out "Fankweil" as we passed by, and once heard that word which is still less adroable to the ear, pronounced in a low, sullen, hissing tone, that signifies in the Cantonese dialect: "Off with his head!"
One of the strangest sights witnessed on the streets was that of the blind leading the blind. The blind are wont to form coalitions for their mutual benefit, and may be seen moving cautiously along in a procession. I have counted as many as eleven in a procession. Each person takes hold of the garment of the person in front of him with the pay some little tribute to the Caucasian mosquito. It is rather small, but, oh, so energetic and persistent! We all sleep under netting at night, but sometimes even these prove no protection. I shall engrave his name upon the same tablet of my memory where the Japanese flea is commemorated.
Spurious Wines
New York, Jan. 9.—For several days a Bulletin reporter has been endeavoring to trace the facts in connection with the sale of the alleged California Port wine, which the Herald stated had caused the sickness of Martin J. Ryan Chief Edson of the Sanitary Department who has a sample of the wine for analysis, is so much away from his office as to be practically inaccessible. The wine-dealers in Vesey street, where the wine is said to have been purchased, of course know nothing about it. Reputable California houses here appear to be afraid of spurious dealers, and though well knowing the dishonest practices of the latter, are reluctant to take any steps for self-protection. Wines are sold by the best California houses here under foreign labels, and in the same manner spurious dealers affix California labels to their mixtures. Vesey street, near Broadway, is pretty full of wine cellars, and both the genuine and fraudulent California dealers sell within a few doors of each other. Martin J. Ryan is in Baltimore. His sister was found at 111 Nassan street this morning. She said to a Bulletin reporter: "My brother bought a quart bottle of California Port wine at Fuchs & Co.'s store in Vesey street, Christmas eve. He brought it home and drank a wineglassful. He remembered that this wine had a very peculiar taste. He drank another glass before going to bed. In the right he was taken with violent cramps and vomiting. He was sick one week, but was able to attend to his business. He took the remainder of the wine to the Board of Health, but we have heard nothing from them since. My brother ate nothing that disagreed with him that night and was perfectly well before he drank the wine. He paid sixty-five cents for the bottle."
Joseph Fucha of 22 Vesey street, a dealer in California wines, was very indignant when the reporter called. At first he refused to talk about the case, but finally said: "If Ryan says he bought the bottle of port here, which made him sick, he lies. I keep no spurious wines, selling only the pure juice of the grape, which I get from one of the largest producers in California. A chemist attached to the Sanitary Board has been here and examined my port wine, and compared them with the stuff in the bottle which Ryan bought, and entirely exonerated me from blame, saying that my wine is as different from that which Ryan drank as night is from day. Ryan may have bought that wine in this street. I don't deny that I know of one firm, not a block away, who manufactured and bottled a quantity of stuff especially for Christmas day, and sold it for California wine. There is a firm in Broad street who make immense quantities of California wine right in their shop. It is ruining our business, as we cannot compete with them. If they were suppressed I could make $10,000 more yearly. I would be will.
The readers of the Record-Union were member the interesting case of the "morning baby" that was left one night, three years ago, on the doorstep of Mr. back, at the old Durock mansion, nearogle Springs, and the source of whose being remained so much a question of spition and profound mystery until the deMrs. Taggart, of San Diego, a few months afterwards, when Miss Olive Slayer daughter of the parents where she childbeen so mysteriously left (and who that time a teacher in the public schoolSan Diego.) applied for letters of guaranty ship for the baby and of administrationthe estate of Mrs. Taggart, in behalf of little waif.
An estate was left by Mrs.
beige behind our backs, but we paid no attention to it. Children, and occasionally men, would cry out "Fankweil" as we passed by, and once we heard that word which is still less adroable to the ear, pronounced in a low, sullen, hissing tone, that signifies in the Cantonese dialect: "Off with his head!"
One of the strangest sights witnessed on the streets was that of the blind leading the blind. The blind are wont to form coalitions for their mutual benefit, and may be seen moving cautiously along in a procession. Each person takes hold of the garment of the person in front of him with the left hand, and with the right keeps a bamboo moving about on the ground, so as to prevent a misstep which those in front of him may have avoided simply through good fortune. In this way the pitiful little hand picks its way around the crowded streets, turning corners and ascending and descending steps with wonderful ease. The principal responsibility involves upon the leader.
Beggars are not near as common here as in Shanghai, where they infested the streets as rats do a wharf. In China, paradoxical as the statement may sound, a person may be too poor to be a beggar, that is, too poor to pay the initiation too which admits him to the beggars' union. In this case he simply lives anywhere, making himself an offensive as possible, and even inflicting torture upon himself, in order to wring pity from the crowd. This afternoon I passed by such a one. He was an old man, bared to the walsh, and as I went by he knocked his head on the tile pavement, thereby producing an audible report which made me shudder. As he raised his head from the ground I noticed that long practice of this sort had produced a large lump upon his scalp.
The flower boats on the rivers in China are quite an institution. They are not so named because they carry flowers, but because the Chinese regard the word flower as an indelinite term for that which is nise. So the designation of this nation as the Flowery Kingdom does not signify that the flora of China is especially extensive or choice. But in the case of the flower boats the term is additionally apropos from the fact that the front over the main entrance is showily carved, and flowers usually figure in this scrollwork. As a rule the flower boats are merely floating brothels. They are ranged in the form of streams on the water, long lines of them with the stuff in the bottle which Ryan bought, and entirely exonerated me from blame, saying that my wine is as different from that which Ryan drank as night is from day. Ryan may have bought that wine in this street. I don't deny that I know of one firm, not a block away, who manufactured and bottled a quantity of stuff especially for Christmas day, and sold it for California wine. There is a firm in Broad street who make immense quantities of California wine right in their shop. It is ruining our business, as we cannot compete with them. If they were suppressed I could make $10,000 more yearly. I would be willing to subscribe to a law for the suppression of this business."
Yet Mr. Fachs, who claimed to know just who these manufacturers were, refused to give the Bulletin's reporter their names or addresses. C. Londannenberg & Co. of 48 Vesey street, and Deberg & Co. of 40 Vesey street, were both pointed out to your reporter by a California dealer as manufacturers of California wines.
This is quite alarming.
At the meeting of the American Astronomical Society in New York recently, Mr. G. D. Hiscox of Brooklyn read a paper on "The Secular Decrease of the Mean Temperature of the Earth." Although it did not appear that the earth was going to cool off very suddenly, some of the remote possibilities of the earth's cooling were certainly startling. In the course of his paper Mr. Hiscox said:
"The evidence of such changes is found to exist in nearly all of the continents. It will be perceived that the moderate allowance of only one-tenth of a degree decrease in the mean annual temperature in 10,000 years will be only ten degrees in 1,000,000 years, and thirty degrees in 3,000,000 years. May we opine that the Arctic zone will steadily encroach upon the now temperate regions of the earth with its impenetrable and enduring snows, while the temperate zones will move upon the tropics, to be followed by a relentless Arctic winter, and, at last, life becomes extinct upon the line of the equator, when solitude shall reign supreme?"
Ayer's Sarapurilla is the most potent blood purifier, and a fountain of health and strength. Be wise in time. All beneficial infections are promptly removed by this uninformed alternative.
Mrs. Taggart, of San Diego, a Jew monger afterwards, when Miss Olive Slayb daughter of the parents where the child been so mysteriously left (and who was that time a teacher in the public school San Diego) applied for letters of guardship for the baby and of administration; she estate of Mrs. Taggart, in behalf of little waif. An estate was left by Mrs. Taggart, it is believed, of about $15,000, be stated at the time to be worth a much er amount. To prove that the little piece of humanity which had been dawn upon a strange doorstep, in a huge hot of well selected and carefully made claes and wardrobes, at a midnight hour the offspring of the deceased woman, and such sole heir to her comfortable home was the task entered upon with unpluck and perseverance by Miss Slayb a short-time acquaintance of the decedent and who had been confidentially made aware of the hidden relations and circumstances.
Opposing her was Mr. Boyd, brother Mrs. Taggart who also applied for letter administration upon her estate, and mentally denied the proposition that she ceased held any relation whatever with strangely acquired little inmate of Mrs. Slayb's mansion. This point was persistently contended upon repeated in Court, but conclusive proof was proved in the unqualified testimony of Dr. Winder, a prominent physician of San Diego who attended Mrs. Taggart at the high child. The case was uniformly dealt in the Superior Court in favor of Miss back, and two or three times was applied to the Supreme Court, upon technical grounds; by Boyd. The last of these has just been dismissed by the San Court in favor of the defendant and her ward, and consequently the child bright healthy had become sole heir to Mrs. Slayb's mansion.
Miss Slayb passed through San Diego Tuesday; no route to San Diego; no change of property. She left with her parents in Folsom, where her permanently made her sole heir to Mrs. Slayb's mansion.
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MAGNETS TO CURE DISEASE.
A DAY WITH THE SPONGERS.
Having a curiosity to learn something of the modes operand of sponging, says a correspondent of Forest and Stream, I started one bright morning for the mouth of the Anelote. The air was soft and balmy, the surroundings were all that an enthusiastic lover of Florida could wish, the canoe sped merrily along on the strong ebb tide, the air vocal with the sage of birds, the water fretted with the leaping fish. Nearing the mouth of the river I caught sight of the spongers' fleet, some forty odd sail in all, and all hailing from Key West. Trim jaunty craft they were, too, all schooner rigged and varying in size from five to twenty tons. Some were painted black, some green, but the prevailing color was white with a narrow red stripe. Singling out the tastest one of the fleet, the General Hancock, I laid a course to bring me alongside. It was evident the crew had never seen a canoe and double blade before, but I found their hospitality even greater than their curiosity. I was soon alongside, and accepting the hearty invitation of genial Captain Sawyer, I stepped on board, the canoe was hauled on deck and critically examined, Captain Sawyer propounding the question, "Do you take that 'thing' to bed with you?" "No," I replied, "but I make my bed in that 'thing' quite often."
I found the General Hancock a very tidy craft, and well adapted to the work she was engaged in. The crew, all told, consisted of nine men, and she was fitted out for a three months' ernise. Sponging has been a lucrative business, but of late years competition has been high and consequently not so many chances for a good strike. The vessels fit out on shares, half to the ship, half to the men. Off the Anelote Keys is considered the best sponging ground on the coast, although it is good anywhere between here and the Suwance river.
HOUSEHOLD MINUTE.
DANIEL WAFLEY.—One pound of butter, six eggs, one quarter pound of sugar, one pound of flour and one quart of milk. Beat up the butter to a cream and then add it to its conversion, the yolks of the eggs, the flour, the milk (which should be warmed), and last of all the whites of the eggs beaten to a snow. Bake in the usual way.
POTATO PUDDING.—Boil and mash some misc Irish potatoes, season delicately with salt and butter, and beat into a thick batter with two eggs and sufficient milk. Put at the bottom of a baking dish some pieces of cold beef or lamb with salt, pepper and a little stock jelly; add a layer of the potato, then a layer of the meat, and put a thick layer of the potato on top. Bake to a rich brown.
BRAIN OUTLENT.—Well wash the brains and soak them in cold water till white. Parboil in a small saucepan for about a quarter of an hour; then thoroughly drain them, and place them on a board. Divide them into small pieces with a knife. Dip each piece into flour, and then roll them in egg and breadcrumbs, and fry them in butter or well-clarified dripping. Serve very hot with gravy.
CANNED PEARS.—Canned pears are rather cold and tasteless affairs, but they may be served in a delicious fashion. Put them in a saucepan with their liquor, and as soon as they heat add a little lump of butter to them. When they have cooked until clear, brush them over with the yolk of an egg, sprinkle powdered sugar over them and arrange in a glass dish. Add an ounce of gelatine to the syrup and let it simmer for about five minutes, strain it over the pears and let the dish stand long enough before serving, to become perfectly cold and jelly-like.
FANCY WAFLEY.-You can give a dish of ordinary plain waffles a pretty appearance
EVERYTHING.
The first horse railroad was used 1827.
New Haven, Conn., resumed $104,000 to friends in 1831.
One hundred and twenty-half worth was the fire excrement.
A Pittsburgh harbor has given to receive a $290,000 legacy.
A New York newsboy of arrest for breach of promise.
Car farms have been reduced five cents on all the street rents.
There will be 20,000 tickets Cleveland inauguration ball.
The Illinois Railroad Company ordered the roads to reduce material.
A New York debutants in eight bouquets on her comics them after the party, to the wedding cost of Andrew shown at New Orleans in 1838.
The population of St. Petersburg 620,000, showing an increase in fifteen years.
The average glass of white ten or fifteen cents is paid for one sixth of a cent.
A soup made of black beans one of the latest epicanne said to be of Norwegian origin.
We have a President, and an ex-President, and no Avalanche has discovered any "next-President Randall."
Miss Annie Boyer, an lady, has just died at Midday at age of eighty-two, with inches long.
A Pittsburg newspaper in the statement that there is no Union in which the keepden is an indictable offense.
The legal profession in York has increased in time at the rate of 17 per cent, while cal has increased at the rate.
The semi-annual divide Hartford, Conn., this month about $1,000,000, and this year is in round numbers,
Mysterious Baby" Victorious.
Readers of the Record-Union will re-read the interesting case of the "mystery" that was left one night, two or three ago, on the doorstep of Mr. Slay, the old Durock mansion, near Shinjuku, and the source of whose combined so much a question of specula-profound mystery until the death of Taggart, of San Diego, a few months ago, when Miss Olive Slayback, or of the parents where the child had mysteriously left (and who was at the teacher in the public schools at Gojo) applied for letters of guardian-the baby and of administration upon the dept. of Mrs. Taggart, in behalf of the dept. An estate was left by Mrs. Tagar.
I found the General Hancock a very tidy craft, and well adapted to the work she was engaged in. The crew, all told, consisted of nine men, and she was fitted out for a three month's' errise. Sponging has been a lucrative business, but of late years competition has been high and consequently not so many chances for a good strike. The vessels fit out on shares, half to the ship, half to the men. Off the Ancolote Keys is considered the best sponging ground on the coast, although it is good anywhere between here and the Suwance river.
The work is done in calm weather, when the water is comparatively smooth. The small boats (each vessel has from two to four) supplied with poles, grapnels and water glass, and manned with two and sometimes three men, drift along with wind and tide, all the time keeping a bright lookout on the bottom. The water glass is simply a bucket with a piece of common window glass set in the bottom. By setting this contrivance in the water with the glass just below the surface, one can see quite plainly to a depth of thirty or forty feet, the vibrations from ripples, swell, etc., being entirely overcome, and nothing to obstruct the vision save the density or color of the water. When sponge is discovered the grapnel is brought in use, the sponge torn from its hold and deposited in the boat.
The grappel is simply a bunch of strong hooks at the end of a long pole; let the reader half close his hand with the fingers slightly separated, and he will have a fair idea of a sponge grapnel. The boat, when full, is pulled to the vessel, the sponge is then thrown on the deck where it is left to die. At this stage of the proceedings the sponge looks like a lump of semi-transparent jelly; it is left on the deck of the vessel from four to eight hours; then taken to the rendezvous, and thrown into the crawl—Kraal, from the Dutch). The crawl consists of a palisade of ten or twelve yards in diameter, and is made in shoal water. After the sponge has lain in the crawl for some five days, the men get in with bare feet, and tread and squeeze the sponge until it is comparatively clean, when it is taken to the ship and stowed below.
San Quentin.
In the State Prison at San Quentin there are over seventy persons under twenty years of age, and six are under fifteen years. Adults who are well known are variously employed. James Doda, formerly the Alameda county Treasurer, is a clerk in the clothing-room. M. P. Kay, formerly in the County Clerk's office in Oakland, is operating the telegraph in the outer-wall department of the prison. "Black Bart" is a clerk in the hospital. John S. Gray, former Secretary of the Board of Harbor Commissioners, is a clerk in the jute department. Thomas Quirk is a gate-opener. H. W. Rothschild is running a machine in the sahah and blind factory. Ex-Policeman Lanktree is carrying boards from one place to another. Watts, first mate of the Gatherer, tends the elevator of the door department. George Curtis, second mate died in the prison last spring. Jimmy I found the General Hancock a very tidy craft, and well adapted to the work she was engaged in. The crew, all told, consisted of nine men, and she was fitted out for a three months' errise. Sponging has been a lucrative business, but of late years competition has been high and consequently not so many chances for a good strike. The vessels fit out on shares, half to the ship, half to the men. Off the Ancolote Keys is considered the best sponging ground on the coast, although it is good anywhere between here and the Suwance river.
The work is done in calm weather, when the water is comparatively smooth. The small boats (each vessel has from two to four) supplied with poles, grapnels and water glass, and manned with two and sometimes three men, drift along with wind and tide, all the time keeping a bright lookout on the bottom. The water glass is simply a bucket with a piece of common window glass set in the bottom. By setting this contrivance in the water with the glass just below the surface, one can see quite plainly to a depth of thirty or forty feet, the vibrations from ripples, swell, etc., being entirely overcome, and nothing to obstruct the vision save the density or color of the water. When sponge is discovered the grapnel is brought in use, the sponge torn from its hold and deposited in the boat.
The grappel is simply a bunch of strong hooks at the end of a long pole; let the reader half close his hand with the fingers slightly separated, and he will have a fair idea of a sponge grapnel. The boat, when full, is pulled to the vessel, the sponge is then thrown on the deck where it is left to die. At this stage of the proceedings the sponge looks like a lump of semi-transparent jelly; it is left on the deck of the vessel from four to eight hours; then taken to the rendezvous, and thrown into the crawl—Kraal, from the Dutch). The crawl consists of a palisade of ten or twelve yards in diameter, and is made in shoal water. After the sponge has lain in the crawl for some five days, the men get in with bare feet, and tread and squeeze the sponge until it is comparatively clean, when it is taken to the ship and stowed below.
A Vigorous Defenses.
The State Board of Equalization in its report just printed, referring to the increase of assessments by the Board, replies to the assaults made upon it by blows straight from the shoulder. As an example, we quote a few lines of exceedingly vigorous defense: So far as the mortgages held in the interior counties are concerned, they were benefited by the raise. For instance, the State taxes for 1883 had there been no increase, to produce the required amount of revenue would be served in a delicious fashion. Put them in a saucepan with their liquor, and as soon as they heat add a little lump of butter to them. When they have cooked until clear, brush them over with the yolk of an egg, sprinkle powdered sugar over them and arrange in a glass dish. Add an ounce of gelatine to the syrup and let it simmer for about five minutes, strain it over the pears and let the dish stand long enough before serving, to become perfectly cold and jelly-like.
FANCY WAFFLEK.-You can give a dish of ordinary plain waffles a pretty appearance by making them in different colors, by first baking what you choose from the original batter; then dividing what remains into three parts—and coloring one par yellow, by addition of strong saffron water, another pink, by addition of coochineal (a perfectly harmless color) and remaining one brown, by addition of powdered cocoa or chocolate. To make these it is requisite to obtain the most fancy design in waffle irons. The foregoing waffle mixture will also make a very fine "Spanish puff," or "Vanity," as it is called, by dropping and cooking them in boiling fat.
APPLE SOUFLE.-Take six or eight Rhode Island Greenings; or any other tender sour apple; pare; core and slice them; and stew them gently to a pulp, sweetening them to taste and flavoring with a little of the grated kind of lemon. Place upon a large dish, and when thoroughly cold pour over them a rich custard made either in the ordinary way or with custard powder. Now whiskthe whites of four eggs to a stiff froth,and drop it in heaps upon the custard sifting white sugar over the tops of them. Then setthe whole in an oven untilthe beaten eggbecomes delicately browned. Then removefromthe ovenandwhencolserve.
CHICKEN CANNELONS.-Mince up finelythe remainsofa cold chicken togetherwith halfthe quantityof lean,cold ham.Mixthemwell,andaddingenoughwhite saucetomoistenthem.Nowhavea light pasterolled out untilabouta quarterofan inchor.a littlemorein thickness.Cutthe pasteinto pieces,一 inchbytwoinsize,andlaya littleofthemixtureupthecentersofhalfofthepiecesandcoverthemwithotherhalf,pressingtheedgesneytogetherandformingthemenintolittlerolls.Haveyourfrying-panreadywithplentyofboilinghotlard,或otherfryingmedium,andfryuntiltheybecomea golden-browncolor.AminteortwobillenumberforthisThendrainthemwellandserviestimidelyonapakkin.
A Vigorous Defenses.
The State Board of Equalization in its report just printed, referring tothe increaseofassessmentsbytheBoard,theRealmotionandtheassaultsmakingoneofastationandtheweberofpersonsoccurredwitheachotherontuesdaywearingitinNewYorktimeoftrottinghorseswilldowntotwoseminutesduringthepreviousyear.birthregisteredintheyear30527,aunt28972in1883Tagswiththewords"takemehome"printedonblanklinedoffforthenamedweber.were SoldontheadelphiatoyoundeadaybeforeNewYear'a.
Ina suit brought byagainsta firmofgrocers,toworthbeingpoisonedbymuscanoftomatoes.JudgeBrowgoodcauseofactionliesinadogcanofpoisonedfruitsome,andsellingitaccordingtodemandfordwellinginTheSouth.accompaniedfromtherewhichstate townsinFlorida.notavacanthouse.Inhousesarebeingbuiltallthreeinstancesarerentedarefinished.
"that was left one night, two or three days ago, on the doorstep of Mr. Slayback, the old Durock mansion, near Shin-ning, and the source of whose comings so much a question of speculaa profound mystery until the death of Slayback, of San Diego, a few months ago, when Miss Olive Slayback, or of the parents where the child had mysteriously left (and who was at the teacher in the public schools at Mrs. Taggart, in behalf of the girl). An estate was left by Mrs. Taggart, believed, of about $15,000, but was at the time to be worth a much high cost. To prove that the little floating humanity, which had been dumped upon a strange doorstep, in a huge basement selected and carefully made arti-wardrobe, at a midnight hour, was writing of the deceased woman, and, as she heir to her comfortable heritage, task entered upon with untiring and perseverance by Miss Slayback—time acquaintance of the deceased, who had been confidentially made aware of sudden relations and circumstances.
Being her was Mr. Boyd, brother of Slayback, who also applied for letters of gratification upon her estate, and vehemently denied the proposition that the deed any relation whatever with the boy acquired little inmate of the elder Slayback's mansion. This point was most likely contested upon repeated trials, but conclusive proof was presented unqualified testimony of Dr. W. A. A prominent physician of San Diego, named Mrs. Taggart at the birth of Dr. W. A. A prominent physician of San Diego, named Mrs. Taggart at the birth of Dr. W. A. A prominent physician of San Diego, named Mrs. Taggart at the birth of Dr. W. A. A prominent physician of San Diego, named Mrs. Taggart at the birth of Dr. W. A. A prominent physician of San Diego, named Mrs. Taggart at the birth of Dr. W. A. A prominent physician of San Diego, named Mrs. Taggart at the birth of Dr. W. A. A prominent physician of San Diego, named Mrs. Taggart at the birth of Dr. W. A. 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A Vigorous Defense.
The State Board of Equalization in its report just printed referring to the increase of assessments by the Revenue system and the relation of the counties to the State.
The spirit of fairness so inherent in the people of this State will when they are properly informed, readily respond to an effort to secure and preserve an equality of assessment.
The press so far has generously and jointly assisted our efforts and we have relied on their enlightened aid to present the facts and law or occasion presents; to the reading public.
Of course there are few instances where the water can act as a powerful purifier; but resemblance pumps are not only misrepresented but facts must be verified.
No one has yet what is in Saitou; Saltwater has been so strong as any great depth.
A vigorous uprise upon the South coast; a southen Florida; a floridian Florida; a floridian Florida; a floridian Florida; a floridian Florida; a floridian Florida; a floridian Florida; a floridian Florida; a floridian Florida; a floridian Florida; a floridian Florida; a floridian Florida; a floridian Florida; a floridian Florida; a floridian Florida; a floridian Florida;
A complete Medical Workhouse brought into charge by members from various states.
Tells how to prevent and treat dues from each state.
It will date in August by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in January by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in February by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in March by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in April by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in May by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in June by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in July by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in August by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in September by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in October by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in November by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in December by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in January by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in February by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in March by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in April by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in May by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in June by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in September by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in October by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in November by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in December by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in January by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in February by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in March by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in April by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in May by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in June by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in September by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in October by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in November by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in December by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in January by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in February by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in March by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in April by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in May by which body has paid off a debt owed by a member from every state.
It will date in June by which body has paid offa debt owedbya memberfromeverystate
It will date in Julybywhichbodyhaspaidoffa债务oowedbyamemberfromeverystate
It will date in Augustbywhichbodyhaspaidoffa债务oowedbyamemberfromeverystate
It will date in Septemberbywhichbodyhaspaidoffa债务oowedbyamemberfromeverystate
It will date in Octoberbywhichbodyhaspaidoffa债务oowedbyamemberfromeverystate
It will date in Novemberbywhichbodyhaspaidoffa债务oowedbyamemberfromeverystate
It will date in Decemberbywhichbodyhaspaidoffa债务oowedbyamemberfromeverystate
It will date in Januarybywhichbodyhaspaidoffa债务oowedbyamemberfromeverystate
It will date在七月由哪bodyhaspaidoffa债务oowedbyamemberfromeverystate
它将会在八月由哪bodyhaspaidoffa债务oowedbyamemberfromeverystate
它将在九月由哪bodyhaspaidoffa债务oowedbyamemberfromeverystate
它将在十月由哪bodyhaspaidoffa债务oowedbyamemberfromeverystate
它将在十一月由哪bodyhaspaidoffa债务oowedbyamemberfromeverystate
它将在十二月
GAZETTE.
JANUARY 17. 1885.
NO. 13
EVERYTHING.
The first horse railroad was built in 1826 and 1827.
New Haven, Conn., residents annually send $104,000 to friends in Ireland.
One hundred and twenty-five million dollars' worth was the fire sacrifice of 1884.
A Pittsburgh barber has gone to Germany to receive a $250,000 legacy.
A New York newboy of eighteen is under arrest for bribe of promise.
Our faves have been reduced in Boston to five cents on all the street railroads.
There will be 20,000 tickets printed for the Cleveland inauguration ball at Washington.
The Illinois Railroad Commissioners have ordered the roads to reduce rates on building material.
A New York debutante received twenty-eight bouquets on her coming out, and sent them after the party, to the hospitals.
The wedding cost of Andrew Jackson is shown at New Orleans. It was made in 1828.
The population of St. Petersburg is now 962,000, showing an increase of 25 per cent in fifteen years.
The average glass of whisky, for which ten or fifteen cents is paid, costs the distiller one sixth of a cent.
A soup made of black beans and sherry is one of the latest spiceean novelties. It is said to be of Norwegian origin.
We have a President, a President-elect and an ex-President, and now the Memphis Avalanche has discovered a new species in "next-President Randall."
Miss Annie Boyer, an eccentric English lady, has just died at Middleton, Del., at the age of eighty-two, with toe-nails three inches long.
A Pittsburg newspaper is authority for the statement that there is not a State in the Union in which the keeping of an opium den is an indictable offense.
The legal profession in the State of New York has increased in the last seven years at the rate of 17 per cent, whereas the medical has increased at the rate of 3.
The semi-annual dividends payable in Hartford, Conn., this month, aggregate about $1,000,000, and the total for the past year is, in round numbers, $2,500,000.
HANNA & KEITH
REAL ESTATE AGENTS.
Live Stock Bought and Sold on Commission.
ANAHEIM.
O. T. Barker & Sons,
LOS ANGELES, CAL.
Here removed to Nov. 13 and 15 NORTH SPRING STREET, opposes the Prodigal where they are now offering a new and well-market line of FURNITURE, WALL PAPER,
CARPETS
WINDOW SHADES, LACE CURTAINS,
Upholstery Goods, Eto.
They pay no rent, buy their goods for cash thereby saving discounts, and are selling cheaper than the cheapest. Their motto is:
THE BEST GOODS FOR THE LEAST MONEY
NEW No. 8
WHEELER & WILSON,
With Straight, Self-Setting Needle and Back-Feed. ABSOLUTEOY NEW!
In Principle and design. No Shuttle to thread. News from the thinnest game to the heaviest cloth of leather. Can DARN, PATCH, MEND and ENBROIDER without any attachment. Only needs to be seen and tried to be appreciated.
Don't buy until you have seen the New No. 8.
Satisfaction Guaranteed or no pay.
E. C. GLIDDEN, Agent,
33 North Main Street (Ponet Block)
LOS ANGELES, CAL.
J. H. BULLARD, A. B., M. D.
"next-President Randall."
Miss Annie Boyer, an eccentric English lady, has just died at Middleton, Del., at the age of eighty-two, with toe-nails three inches long.
A Pittsburg newspaper is authority for the statement that there is not a State in the Union in which the keeping of an opium den is an indictable offense.
The legal profession in the State of New York has increased in the last seven years at the rate of 17 per cent, whereas the medical has increased at the rate of 3.
The semi-annual dividends payable in Hartford, Conn., this month, aggregate about $1,000,000, and the total for the past year is, in round numbers, $2,500,000.
The colored people of Mississippi are circulating a call for a State Convention to talk over the condition of their people in the State, and take steps to devise some means for redress.
In a Michigan perjury trial it came out that the prisoner had uplifted his left hand instead of the right in making oath to the lie, supposing that thereby he exculpated himself from legal responsibility.
The body of a colored child, which had remained unburied for two weeks while the parents were trying to raise the funeral expenses, was discovered the other day by the Newark, N.J., Health Inspector.
A Chicago man gets a living shooting snow birds right in the heart of the city. He uses an air-gun, sells the birds for sixty cents a dozen, and they are served in restaurants on toast to epicures and invalids.
The burglars who entered Mrs. Charles Rutherford's house at Petrolia, Penn., the other day, and chloroformed the family, not only took all the valuables usually stolen, but cut off Mrs. Rutherford's luxuriant hair close to her head and carried that off.
Three collisions on the New York Elevated Railroads, resulting in the smashing of half-a-dozen cars and two engines, the wrecking of a station and the wounding of a number of persons, occurred within half an hour of each other on Tuesday week.
Plaster of Paris is now all the go for the cure of gout. Lord Greville's recovery from a severe attack is said to have been considerably accelerated by its use. The limb is encased in it in a new and efficacious way.
Not a mile of railroad, not a bank, not a telegraph office is erected in Calburn county. Ill., though it has a population of about 8,000. The typical resident is said to be part hunter and part farmer, with a decided leaning to leisure.
It is the opinion of Budd Doble that the time of trotting horses will yet be brought down to two minutes, and he bases it upon the fact that a quarter of a smile in thirty seconds is frequently done.
The number of deaths reported in New York during 1884 was 35,044 against 33,982 during the previous year. The number of births registered in the year just closed was 30,527, against 28,972 in 1883.
Tags with the words "When I am full take me home" printed on them, and a blank lined off for the name and address of the wearer, were sold on the streets of Philadelphia to the young dudes of that city, day before New Year's.
In a suit brought by a Brooklyn lady against a firm of grocers, to recover $50,000 for being poisoned by muriate of zinc in a can of tomatoes, Judge Brown holds that a good cause of action lies in negligently labeling a can of poisoned fruit as good and wholesome, and selling it according to the label.
The demand for dwellings is rapidly growing in the South, according to papers from there, which state that in several towns in Florida, notably Key West, there is not a vacant house. In the latter city houses are being built all the time, and in some instances are rented out before they are finished.
NEW NO. 8
WHEELER & WILSON,
With Straight, Self-Setting Needle and Back-Feed. ABSOLUTEOY NEW!
In Principle and design. No Shotto to thread. Sows from thirteenth gauge to the kestert depth of leather. Can DARN, PATUH, MEND and ENBROIDER without any affinities. Only needs to be seen and tried to be appreciated.
Don't buy until you have seen the New No. 8.
Satisfaction Guaranteed or no pay,
E. C. GLIDDEN, Agent,
33 North Main Street (Ponet Block)
LOS ANGELES, CA.
J. H. BULLARD, A. B., M. D.
Physician and Surgeon.
Office and Drug Store on Los Angeles St. opposite Planters' Hotel.
HOMEOPATHIC DRUGS always on hand.
Office Hours: 6 to 9:30 and 12 to 12:30 A.M.; 1 to 3 and 6-30 to 7:20 P.M.
H. C. KELLOGG,
Surveyor and Civil Engineer.
PARTIES WILL PLEASE LEAVE THEIR ORDERS with Mr. John Hanna. Anaheim.
M. B. HARRISON,
Attorney-at-Law.
ANAHEIM.
WILL PRACTICE IN ALL THE COURTS OF THE STATE.
VICTOR MONTGOMERY,
Attorney-at-Law.
SANTA ANA, CAL.
office in Dibbles' brick building; nearly opposite the Postoffice.
Office hours from 10 A.M. to 3 P.M.
RICHARD MELROSE,
NOTARY PUBLIC
GAETTE OFFICE.
L. GUNTHER,
Pioneer Boot and Shoe Maker,
Cor. Adele and Los Angeles streets.
ANAHEIM.
GEORGE BAUER,
BOOT AND SHOE MAKER,
Center Street.
MAKING AND REPAIRING AT THE LOWEST cash price. All orders promptly attended to All work guaranteed.
WM. R. HARKER,
SADDLE & HARNE88 MAKER,
CENTER STREET. ANAHEIM.
S. A. DENNIS,
Carriage and Sign Painter,
Center Street, Anaheim.
OFFER AS REFERENCES THE NUMEROUS wagons and signs painted by him in Anaheim.
PRICES REASONABLE.
The patronage of he public respectfully solicited may
In a suit brought by a Brooklyn lady against a firm of grocers, to recover $50,000 for being poisoned by muriate of zinc in a can of tomatoes, Judge Brown holds that a good cause of action lies in negligently labeling a can of poisoned fruit as good and wholesome, and selling it according to the label.
The demand for dwellings is rapidly growing in the South, according to papers from there, which state that in several towns in Florida, notably Key West, there is not a vacant house. In the latter city houses are being built all the time, and in some instances are rented out before they are finished.
When vessels or timber sink to great depths in the ocean the pressure is so great that water is forced into the pores, and the wood becomes too heavy to rise again. Even when a ship is broken up the detached portions sink like lead. It is this pressure that makes it impossible for divers to descend to any great depth.
The first instance on record of the creation of a priest is that of Mgr. Gaetano Savi Searponi, whose body was cremated in Rome about two weeks ago. The priest left a will, dated in 1883, in which he directed that his body should be burned as soon as possible after his death. He was well known in Rome and had been a court chaplain.
A Hornellsville, N.Y., special says: All the wells and springs in the vicinity of Port Byron became dry a few weeks ago. Drills have been employed, and water was found twenty feet below the well bottoms; but there came up with it oil so pungent and offensive that the water cannot be used. It acts as a powerful purgeer. The oil is not petroleum, but resembles castor oil in appearance. No one has yet been able to tell what it is. Salt water has also been found, the brine being so strong as to yield 75 per cent. of pure salt.
A veritable upon tree grows in the keys south of Daytona, Fla. It is called the machinel. Any one taking shelter under it during a rain or sleeping under it when the snow falls is sure to be poisoned. One who experienced it says "it swells a fellow all up and makes him feel as if he had been skinned and peppered." A man who begins making canes for the New Orleans Expedition from the wood becomes poisoned and won't touch it any more.
London Medical Advice
A Complete Medical Work for Women handlessly bound in china, and illustrated Talks how to prevent and cure all diseases of her sex, by a treatment at home. Worth its weight in gold to every lady suffering from any of these diseases. Over 10,000 sold already. Postpaid calls of China. Forth note on Shell Finance. Addition Boundary Prices for City, Houston, N.Y.