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anaheim-gazette 1885-05-30

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WEEKLY GAZETTE SATURDAY MAY 30, 1865 SUBSCRIPTION, per year, $2. The postoffice department at Washington has adopted "Calif." instead of "Cal." as the abbreviation of California. This is to prevent confounding it with "Col." the abbreviation of Colorado. According to statistics recently gathered there are 350,000 men out of employment in this country. That is an immense number of idlers, even though they are scattered among fifty millions of people. The State appropriation of $10,000 for the benefit of the viticultural interest of the State will be expended in experiments to be made at the University in Berkeley under the direction of Prof. Hilgard. The Board of Regents so decided on Saturday. The presence of the seventeen-year locust, or cicada, in some of the States recalls the happy couplet of an ancient author: "Happy the cicada lives Since they all have volceless wives" The male cicada is noisy enough, but the female is mute. It is painful to note that Gen. Bragg of Wisconsin, the author of the famous phrase in the Democratic National Convention—"We love him [Cleveland] boat for the enemies he has made"—is still without an office though he has been in Washington since March 4th persistently seeking one. What is his opinion of Cleveland now? During the incumbency of the office of Secretary of State by D. M. Burns, much money was embezzled therefrom. The embezzlement was not known until unearthed by Controller Dunn and then ex-Secretary Burns was arrested therefor and tried. During the trial it was clearly proven that Burns was innocent and that his chief deputy, Reynolds, was guilty, and Burns was acquitted and Reynolds arrested. Reynolda was tried and the jury acquitted him on last Saturday, it being clearly proven that San Diego Union: Mr. H. Baecht, proprietor of the Germania Hotel, Olivenhain, was in town yesterday. From Mr. Baecht's words it is clear that the colonists are determined to abandon the lands they now occupy unless the present differences as to price can be settled to their suiting. The lands they consider practically valueless without irrigation facilities and they estimate $50,000 will be required to furnish these. The colonists are doing such work as is necessary to care for the growing crops, but will make no further improvements till the matters at issue are settled. In a later issue the same paper says: An agreement has been reached to settle the differences existing between the Olivenhain Colony and the Kimhail Bros., by arbitration, the question submitted being the price to be paid by the colonists for the lands. The arbitrators are Mesara, Bryant Howard, Jacob Gruendike, E. W. Morse, J. S. Bard and Judge W. T. McNealy. In case Judge McNealy finds it inconvenient to serve the remaining four arbitrators are to choose a fifth. The arbitrators are to be sworn according to law. They are to visit the lands in question and the parties may appear before them in person or by attorney and present any legal evidence they may have pertinent to the question in arbitration. The arbitrators are to fix the price the Colony shall pay for the land. This price is to be paid in the same proportions and at the same times as fixed in the original contract. The award is to be made in writing and entered as an order of the Superior Court. A Murderous Craft. LONDON, May 25.—The Admiralty at Portsmouth has just been presented, for inspection, with one of the largest and most destructive of what is known as the "spar torpedo" boats ever built. For some time past a Thames shipbuilding firm has been engaged in experimenting on a series of the most murderous little craft that the ingenuity of man could devise, and the boat just turned over for inspection is said to be as near perfection as possible. It is 113 feet long and twelve feet six inches in beam, and it will run at about twenty knots an hour. In the bows are two tubes, each to be charged with a Whitehead torpedo, and in the stern of the boat is another tube for another torpedo, which can be discharged in Indians on a half-grown boys and Outside reports indicate... DURING the incumbency of the office of Secretary of State by D. M. Burns, much money was embezzled therefrom. The embezzlement was not known until unearthed by Controller Dunn and then ex-Secretary Burns was arrested therefor and tried. During the trial it was clearly (1) proven that Burns was innocent and that his chief deputy, Reynolds, was guilty, and Burns was acquitted and Reynolds arrested. Reynolds was tried and the jury acquitted him on last Saturday, it being clearly (2) proven that Burns was the thief and Reynolds an innocent lamb! It is incidents like this which bring law and its quibbles into disrepute. SULLIVAN's reply to the divorce suit instituted by his wife is satirical, though probably not meant to be. In his formal answer he charges her with cruel and abusive treatment and with gross habits of intoxication. Sullivan has shown a remarkable aptitude heretofore for ability to defend himself from cruel and abusive treatment, and it is not likely that he has suffered previous bodily harm from the assaults of his 130lb wife. Nor is it likely that the feelings of a confirmed drunkard are irreparably damaged because his consort gets on a jamboree once in a while. ONE'S faith in the actual loss of the Lost Cause will be rudely shaken by reading a dispatch in a Virginia newspaper describing a public sale of negroes at the court-house in Richmond. The bullying does not appear to have been active, one man bringing $38 for twelve months' service, another $14 for three months' and a woman 25 cents for a whole year. The record of this curious sale closes with the ominous declaration that the negroes were sold into slavery to the highest bidder. The "renting out" of these negroes is conducted under the vagrant laws of the State, and is only a penny to the pound in comparison with the auction sales of actual slaves before the war. We don't know whether Mr. Mackay, the U.S. Consul at Rio Janeiro, is a Democrat, Republican or mugwump, but he ought to be retained in office whatever he is, politically. A blackmailing paper published at Rio Janeiro had long pursued Mackay, and with a boldness born of immunity from counter-attack, it scandalized the Consul's mother. While the Consul was at the theatre on the 16th instant, the offending editor came in and looked at Consul Mackay in an offensive manner, whereupon, after an interchange of compliments, Mackay was struck by a sword stick and he responded by shooting the editor—unfortunately not fatally. As hundreds of the most prominent citizens of the city have complimented Mackay for his action, it is reasonable to infer that he did the correct and proper thing. The fact that the Pennsylvania Legislature has passed, and the Governor of that State has approved, a bill prohibiting the sale of oleomargarine suggests the query whether it is not possible to procure the oil. SHOT-GUN TITLE STOCKTON, May 27. About three or four miles north of Waterloo, H. H. Thurston held 160 acres of swamp land and overflowed land, his title to which was recently denied by the Interior Department. His son-in-law, George Scott and William Harrington then came to the front as claimants under a pre-emption title. Harrington, with a force of 140 men, well armed with revolvers, shot-guns and repeating rifles, attempted a few days ago to move a shanty upon the disputed ground. Before the shanty reached the Thuraton fence, Scott's men, similarly armed, made their appearance and threatened that if the Thuraton fence was disturbed there would be blood shed. The shanty was therefore allowed to stand near the boundary line. The Scott men then built a fort near by, 14 x 14 feet, of earthwork and heavy timber fastened with iron. They began building another fort on the opposite side of the land this morning, and a bloody encounter is expected any day. MRS. Brooks, the Scold. PHILADELPHIA, May 27. Mrs. Margaret Brooks was convicted to-day of being a common scold and was sentenced to four months' imprisonment. After her sentence her 18-year-old daughter jumped to her feet and struck one of the witnesses, an aged lady, in the face with her fist. Both mother and daughter then became intensely excited, crying, screaming and striking right and left. After the mother had been remanded to prison, the Judge sentenced the daughter also to four months' imprisonment for contempt of court. At this announcement the girl became frantic and began to scream at the top of her voice and resisted desperately the officers who took hold of her to remove her. Being strong, robust young woman, it took two officers to remove her from the room. A BIG FAILURE Montreal, May 27. The Canada Cooperative Society started here four years ago, modeled after the Civil Service Association of London, England, made an assignment to-day with liabilities of $500,000. The original capital of the company was usurped out, after two years of business, when an issue of preference stock was made. The directors now claim that if another $50,000 is subscribed the concern can be made to one of the largest and most destructive of what is known as the "spar torpedo" boats ever built. For some time past a Thames shipbuilding firm has been engaged in experimenting on a series of the most murderous little craft that the ingenuity of man could devise, and the boat just turned over for inspection is said to be as near perfection as possible. It is 113 feet long and twelve feet six inches in beam, and it will run at about twenty knots an hour. In the bows are two tubes, each to be charged with a Whitehead torpedo, and in the stern of the boat is another tube for another torpedo, which can be discharged in any direction, while the vessel is going at full speed, and which, it is said, will with almost absolute certainty, hit a ship at 200 or 300 yards distance. It is also armed with a Nordenfeldt gun, with nearly all-round fire. They also carry a torpedo about twice the size of a hat, and containing forty pounds of dynamite, which is stuck on the end of a spar thrust outward and downward from the boat, and with which the enemy is to be struck. LAYER.—The Indians eing into small parties and the country, coming this Forty-five armed men lie to protect the families in courier from Juniper from here; states that they ing squaws and child A man just in from afresh there. One man killed and one man was organizing to go out. A courier from Captain is just in with a request reports the finding of the murdered prospectors; are hot on the trail. PACIFIC CONSULTANT The Catholic laity of Sacred Archbishop Alema $8000 on eve of his death A sheep owner in Oregon 300 sheep by reason of dipped and turned out in Prof. Riley, the Entomologist of Agriculture, imens of the Hessian fly maia and pronounces it At Recka, the little Schnabley, aged 6 years burned by her clothes caire fire built in the yard; arct playing. Her recovery is Thirty-three boxes arrived on the Colima route to the Hawaiian Isla second consignment sent which the animals are expatriates and other vermin destr Dr. N. L. Buck was snout while standing on his door by H. F. Prindle, a promoter of that burgh. Buck his murderer arrested. Dr Buck was guilty of with Mrs. Prindle; while it claim that the lady is the cincination. The fact that the Pennsylvania Legislature has passed, and the Governor of that State has approved, a bill prohibiting the sale of oleomargarine suggests the query whether it is not possible to procure the enactment of laws by the several State Legislatures prohibiting, under heavy penalty, the sale or manufacture of adulterated wine. The vile concoctions, destitute of the slightest familiarity with grape juice, sold under the brand of California or French wine, is a thousand fold more harmful to the human stomach than "bull butter." As a matter of fact, the latter is not at all injurious, but its suppression is sought in the interests of the makers of genuine butter and because it is fraudulently sold as the genuine article. The sale of adulterated wine, on the contrary, is positively injurious to the physical well-being of the consumers, and for that reason, as well as because it would protect the vast interests engaged in the production of pure wine, there should be some legislation to stop the immense traffic in adulterated wines. In view of the alleged prevalence of yellow fever in the northern Mexican States, the Secretary of the Treasury has been requested to appoint sanitary inspectors on the border line of Arizona. He will probably comply with the request. Miss Nellie Canfield, a niece of the wife of President Lincoln, attempted suicide Monday morning in Mr. DeWitt's seminary for young ladies in Belleville, N. J. Miss Canfield shot herself in the left breast near the heart. A physician pronounces the wound fatal. Miss Canfield is 18 years old. A Big Failure Montreal, May 27.—The Canada Cooperative Society started here four years ago, modeled after the Civil Service Association of London, England, made an assignment to-day with liabilities of $500,000. The original capital of the company was usurped out, after two years of business, when an issue of preference stock was made. The directors now claim that if another $50,000 is subscribed the concern can be made to pay, but there is not much chance of the public investing any more funds in the enterprise which has already swallowed up over a quarter of a million. An immense business was carried on by the society, the transactions being more than two millions per year, but extravagant management caused the concern to collapse. A Religious Sensation Edinburgh, May 26.—A great sensation has been produced in Free Church circles over the alleged apostasy of the distinguished preacher, Dr. Adam Stuart Muir of Trinity Free Church, Leith, whose appeal from his dismissal for papist practices was unsuccessfully heard yesterday here in the General Assembly of the Free Church of Scotland. Muir was accused of teaching baptismal regeneration, the worshipping of God in nightly prayer before the representation of Christ on the cross and sanctioning the sale of his own portrait in an attitude indicating the approval of Popish doctrines and practices. Miss Elizabeth Cleveland, sister of President Cleveland, has written a letter to Dr. Howard Crosby of New York, upon the question of total abstinence, in which she takes exceptions to certain views expressed by Dr. Crosby upon the liquor question. Miss Cleveland argues steadily for total abstinence, and makes a plea for the absolute extinction of intoxicating beverages. It is asserted by the T that, although the statistic no increase in the consumer per capita during the last ten yeas if we take into account key—that is, whisky which whisky in bond, and diminishing of whisky for certain uses great increase of whisky drived. The common figuring 55,000,000 people in the United States summed less spirits than 31, Indians on the War-Path. Denver, Col., May 26.—Last Saturday the Apaches killed two men at Cantwell & Peterie's ranch, on the Gila, and on Sunday afternoon killed Charles Stevens, foreman of Alley & Ingersol's ranch, and Harvey Moreland, son of James Moreland, living between Grafton and Fairview. The bodies were found about six miles north of Grafton, still warm. Moreland was shot several times, and when found was lying on his back with an iron rod driven through his head into the ground. Frank Adams, son of George Adams, a ranchman living near Fairview, is supposed to be killed also. His hat was found near the bodies of the two dead men. A special from Winslow, Arizona, says that about one hundred and sixty Navajoes, Utes and Pintes, all thoroughly armed and with war paint on, were camped near Hardis last night. It is currently rumored that they are making preparations to join Geronimo's band of Apachees. The latest information from the front indicates that they are hostile on Diamond Creek, northeast of Port Bayard, in the Black range. Colonel Morrow and San Carlos scouts are in that vicinity, and Colonel Biddle, with a battalion of the Sixth Cavalry, is around Hillsboro, and Lieutenant Davis, with fifty mountain Apache scouts, are on their trail. Deming, N. M., May 27.—The Indians are scattering in small bands in different parts of southern New Mexico, mostly in the vicinity of Black range. More than thirty citizens are reported killed and many mangled beyond recognition. This evening Indians are reported in the vicinity of Cook's Peak, fifteen miles northwest of Deming. The greatest excitement provals in the settlements of the Gila. No Indians were killed or captured since the outbreak. General Crook is on the way here to relieve General Bradley. He is expected Saturday morning. The miners and ranchmen are coming in from all directions. Much dissatisfaction is expressed concerning the action of the troops. It is reported from Lake Valley that a band of about forty Indians came in sight of the settlement. The citizens armed themselves and went out to hold them in check. The Indians moved in the direction of Cook's Canyon. Silver City, May 27.—The Indian scouts are reported deserting to the hostiles. A Fort Bayard special says that the Indians are leaving the reservation daily. The number of Indians doing the killing the last ten days is said by the military authorities to have been only 134—thirty-four bucks, eight half-grown boys and ninety-two squaws. Outside reports indicate that there were Los Angeles Markets. Extracts from the Los Angeles Produce Exchange "Call List" of Thursday, furnished by the Germain Fruit Company, 28 Main street, Los Angeles: BARLEY: Feed No. 1... $ .85 @$1.00 No. 1, job lots... 1.10 CORN: Large yellow, carload lots... 1.00 1.10 do, job lots... 1.00 1.10 Small yellow, job lots... 1.00 1.20 Small white... 1.00 HAY: Barley... 8.00 POTATOES: Early Rose... 1.40 BUTTER: LA No. 1, per lb... .18 Northern No. 1 "... .22½ EGGS: Eggs... .12 .12½ HONEY: Extracted light... .4½ Job lots... .4½ POULTRY: Hens, No. 1, per doz... 4.00 4.75 Old roosters "... 3.75 4.25 Young roosters "... 5.00 5.50 Broilers "... 3.00 3.50 Turkeys, per lb... .14 .15 Ducks, per doz... 5.00 5.50 Goese, each... RAISINS: Layers, new... 1.60 Ex. London layers, new... 2.25 Locose Muscatels... 1.65 Bulk raisins... 5 Dried grapes... .4 .5 NUTS: Walnuts... .6 .7 Peanuts... .4½ CITRUS FRUITS: Oranges, Los Angeles... 1.50 Lemons, Seedling, per box... 1.37 " Eareka " ... 2.50 Limes " ... 1.00 1.25 ONIONS: Yellow Danver... .3.50 PROVISIONS: Extra light bacon... .12 Medium bacon... .11 Heavy bacon... .10 A Reporter Tarred and Feathered New York, May 26—The Tribune's Toledo, Ohio, special says: Roy S. Hathaway, reporter for the Sunday Democrat and author of scantial articles reflecting on the best society of Norwalk, a city of 12,090 inhabitants at the Lake Shore. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. Dissolution of Copartnership. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE PARTNERSHIP heretofore existing between the under-signed, under the firm name of Hanna & Keith, is this day dissolved by mutual consent Mr Hanna retiring. The business will be continued as heretofore by Mr Keith. JOHN HANNA, F. D. KREGH & Co. Manufacturers and Patentees of the Latest Improved Self-Restoring Wind Mills, Horse Powers, And all kinds of Pumping Machinery on hand. Tanks Built to Order. FACTORY AND OFFICE—No 51, Beale St. Bet Market and Mission, San Francisco. Send for a Circular. May 16-3m FOR SALE. ONE HUNDRED AND SIXTY-EIGHT SHARES OF TOCK IN THE ANABEIM UNION WATER COMPANY IS offered for sale below par. The transfer of the stock can be effected upon application to Mr Piez James at the Bank of Anabeim. Notice to Taxpayers Bradley. He is expected Saturday morning. The miners and ranchers are coming in from all directions. Much dissatisfaction is expressed concerning the action of the troops. It is reported from Lake Valley that a band of about forty Indians came in sight of the settlement. The citizens armed themselves and went out to hold them in check. The Indians moved in the direction of Cook's Canyon. Silver City, May 27.—The Indian scouts are reported deserting to the hostels. A Fort Bayard special says that the Indians are leaving the reservation daily. The number of Indians doing the killing last ten days is said by the military authorities to have been only 134—thirty-four bucks, eight half-grown boys and ninety-two squaws. Outside reports indicate that there were many more. The news from the north is that several men were killed in the Black Range country and that there are Indian outbreaks from the Mescalero agency. Capt. Smith, of the Fourth Cavalry, who followed the Indians from the reservation, passed through Silver City to day tor Fort Bayard. In the night at Devil's Park one Indian was killed. One soldier and one Indian scout were wounded. Captain Smith routed the Indians, capturing 2,000 rounds of government ammunition and nine pennies. General Bradley, now at Fort Bayard, has ordered two troops of the Tench Cavaliro to go after the Indians reported on the Upper Delta river. Later.—The Indians are reported breaking into small parties and scattering through the country, coming this way from the delta. Forty-five armed men left here this evening to protect the families now surrendered. A courier from Juniper Springs, ten miles from here, states that thirty inmates, including squaws and children, camped there. A man just in from a ranch near Niro Creek, four miles from her reports nighting there. One man and one child were killed and one man was wounded. Parties are organizing to go out. Arms are garrisoned. A courier from Captain Madden's command is just in with a request for supplies. He reports the finding of the bodies of two more murder suspectors, and that the troops are hot on the trail. Pacific Coast News The Catholic laity of San Francisco presented Archbishop Alemany with a purse of $8000 on the eve of his departure for Rome. A sheep owner in Oregon has just lost 1,300 sheep by reason of their being sheared, dipped and turned out into a cold rain. Prof. Riley, the Entomologist of the Department of Agriculture, has examined specimens of the Hessian fly sent from California and pronounces it the genuine article. At Yreka, the little daughter of John Schnabley, aged 6 years, was dangerously burned by her clothes catching fire from a fire built in the yard, around which she was playing. Her recovery is rather doubtful. Thirty-three boxes containing mongoses arrived on the Colima from Panama, en route to the Hawaiian Islands. This is the second consignment sent to the islands, which the animals are expected to free from rats and other vermin destructive to cane. Dr. N. L. Buck was shot on Sunday night while standing on his doorstep in Oakland by H. F. Prindle, a prominent Grand Army man of that burgh. Buck was killed and his murderer arrested. Prindle claims that Dr. Buck was guilty of improper conduct with Mrs. Prindle, while the doctor's friends claim that the lady is the victim of a hallucination. A Reporter Tarred and Feathered New York, May 26—The Tribune's Toledo, Ohio, says Roy S. Hathaway, reporter for the Sunday Democrat and author of scantial articles reflecting on the best society of Norwalk, a city of 12,000 inhabitants on the Lake Shore Road, was seized yesterday in the St. Charles Hotel by a committee of citizens, whose names are given, taken to a barn in the rear, bound hand and foot, and a thick coat of tar and feathers administered. He was then ornamented with placards bearing the words, "Compliments of the Peek-a-boo Club," and ordered to leave town on the first train. He was told to tell A. J. Belost, the editor, that if he was ever seen in Norwalk he would be lynched. Hathaway reached Tolbeck this afternoon nearly dead and will lose the sight of both eyes. No sympathy is waisted on him, as the Democrat has long prevailed upon the best people in this part of the State. Prof. Silber says the seventeen-year loins, whose visit he has predicted, are harmless to the growing crops and do no injury except to leaves of forest and fruit trees. Wherever young orchards have been planted on land which has been cleared during the last seventeen years the trees are liable to suffer somewhat, but it is probable that a kerosene spray will protect them. The ordinary locust, which is so destructive to growing crops, has jaws which cut, while the seventeen year species, more properly called Clealia, has only a beak, through which he sucks his nourishment. With the exception of peaches, this yield of fruit in East will be one of the largest and best in many years. The peach crop is reported as being nearly a total failure, but the yield of grapes, it is said, will be enormous. Indications are that the yield of raspberries, strawberries and currants will be up to an average, and the crop of apples, pears, plums, quinces and apricots will be equal to that of previous years. A woman and her three children were found living in an empty beer vat in Pittsburg a few days ago. It was a family of vagrants. When Baby was sick, we gave her CASTORIA, When she was a Child, she cried for CASTORIA, When she became Miss, she clung to CASTORIA, When she had Children, she gave them CASTORIA. If I was a woman, Do you think I'd buy that nasty Green tea to drink? It looks so nice And so smoothly rolled, But ah! the story That might be told Tanks Built to Order. FACTORY AND OFFICE—No 51, Beale St. Bet Market and Mission, San Francisco Send for a Circular. FOR SALE. ONE HUNDRED AND SIXTEEN SHARES OF stock in the Amherm Union Water Company is offered for sale below par. The transfer of the stock can be effected upon application to Mr. Perez James at the bank of Amherm. Notice to Taxpayers. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE taxes for the year 1859 in Amherm School District, County of Los Angeles, State of California, are now due and payable to me at my office in the postoffice in the Town of Amherm. RICHARD SELLOSSH, Tax Collector Amherm, Cal., May 1, 1859 BANK OF ANAHEIM. CAPITAL STOCK, $100,000.OO. PLEZ-JAMES....President G.B.SHAFFER....Secretar BOARD OF DIRECTORS: E.F.SPENCE.W.H.MARURY. W.K.JAMES. So.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 BankLos AngelesParmeterandMerchantsBankLosAngelesPaticBankSanFranciscoFirstNationalBankNewYork DRAFTS,LETTERS OF CREDIT OR POSTALorders 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,French or German,many or from any port in those countries to New York via Hamburg American Packet Companysold at regular rates.Return tickets at a reduction.CertificatesentitlingtheholdertopassageonrailroadfromSanFranciscoToNewYorkorviceversaissuedattheestablishedrate.PersonsinAnahiem或vlcnitydesiringtosendtoanypointinthecountriesnamedforanyrelativeorfriendcanpurchasetickethereandforwardthemtotheproperpersonbymail. FIRSTNATIONALBANKOF— It is asserted by the Temperance Voice that, although the statistics compiled from the United States revenue returns indicate no increase in the consumption of whisky per capita during the last twenty-five years, yet if we take into account "crooked" whiskey—that is, whisky which paid no tax—whisky in bond, and diminution in the use of whisky for certain medical purposes, a great increase of whisky drinking is indicated. The common figuring is that in 1884 55,000,000 people in the United States consumed less spirits than 31,000,000 in 1860. If I was a woman, Do you think I'd buy that nasty Green tea to drink? It looks so nice And so smoothly rolled, But ah! the story That might be told Of the paint and the rolling Would make you think twice. Ere you tasted a sip, Though it looks so nice! But the flavor and strength Of EOLA TEA Are as rich as the day That it bloomed so free, In the sunny gardens Of fair Japan, And its password is The Perfection Can. A. SCHILLING & CO. CHICAGO. SAN FRANCISCO. NEW YORK. All Sorts of hurts and many sorts of ails of man and beast need a cooling lotion. Mustang Liniment. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF Los Angeles. Capital Stock $100,000 Surplus $100,000 E. F. SPENCE, President. J. M. ELLIOTT, Cashier. DIRECTORS: J. D. BICKNELL, J. F. CRANE, H. MARRY, WM. LACY, E. F. SPENCE; STOCKHOLDERS: CAPIT. A. H. WILCOX, O. S. WITHERBY, J. F. CRANE, J. E. HOLLENBECK, H. MARRY, WOODS MARRY, J. D. BICKNELL, DR. R. H. McDONALD, JAMES MCOT, G. Q. STORY, I. LAKEERSHIN, A. W. VAIL, S. H. MOTT, E. F. SPENCE. THE Plows, Cultivators, Harrows AND Farming Implements Manufactured by Furst & Bradley Manufacturing Company of Chicago, are first-class and guaranteed in every respect. Sold by Dec 19. A.E.E.A.WHITE. RIMPAU BROS. HAVE The Largest, The Best, The Cheapest, STOCK OF Dress Goods, Clothing, Fancy Goods and Notions And are receiving new goods every week. Call and examine the stock before purchasing elsewhere, and you will be convinced that the best bargains you get are at RIMPAU BROS. Sole Agents for the Butterick Patterns. A first-class Tailor is engaged to make clothing to order. Sole Agents for the Butterick Patterns. A first-class Tailor is engaged to make clothing to order. CHEESEMAN Again to the front with a new stock of goods FROM EASTERN MANUFACTURIES, consisting of BOOTS, SHOES and HATS, Which are offered lower than ever before sold in Los Angeles county. Also a fine stock of Ginghams, Muslins and Prints. Also a complete stock of GROCERIES. HARDWARE. CROCKERY, Glass, Earthen, Wooden and Willow Ware. A large variety of SOAP, English and American. Including Fancy Soap not offered before. CALL FOR ANYTHING YOU WANT At the closely packed Store near the Anaheim Railroad Depot, and satisfy yourself of the statements made as to the variety and prices. M. H. CHEESEMAN, P. PELLEGRIN & SONS. Jewelry and Music House, New Postoffice Block, Center St., Anaheim PRACTICAL WATCHMAKERS. Everything in the line of Watches, Clocks, Jewelry and Silverware AT San Francisco Prices. Manufacturers' agents for PIANOS AND ORGANS of all the leading makes for cash or on easy instalments. MUSIC BOOKS AND SHEET MUSIC And a Fine Assortment of Musical Instruments and General Musical Merchandise. AT—San Francisco Prices. Manufacturers' agents for PIANOS AND ORGANS of all the leading makes for cash or on easy instalments. MUSIC BOOKS AND SHEET MUSIC And a Fine Assortment of Musical Instruments and General Musical Merchandise. A. L. PELLEGRIN, PHOTOGRAPHER Has a Fine Photograph Gallery in the same Block. All Work Pertaining to the Art Done in First-class Style. Anaheim Immigration Association. This association has been called into existence by, and is under the direct management of, the citizens of Anaheim and vicinity. Its object is the collection, publication and free distribution of reliable information concerning the ADVANTAGES, RESOURCES, CLIMATE, FERTILITY OF SOIL, etc., of Anaheim and vicinity for the purpose of encouragement of immigration thereto; also, to assist immigrants in finding employment and permanent homes in this vicinity. All parties in need of help will please leave word with the Secretary at the office of the Association. Office in the Anaheim Hotel Building. H. KROEGER . . President. W.M.McFadden, A. Rimpau, T. J. F. Boege, P. James, . . Treasurer. W. A. WITTE, . . Secretary F.A. Korn, E.A.Saxton J. P. Zeyn,