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anaheim-gazette 1885-06-13

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WEEKLY GAZETTE SATURDAY... JUNE 13, 1885 SUBSCRIPTION, per year, $2. "Horine" is an article of Iowa manufacture sold in lieu of beer. It resembles beer so closely that the difference can not be distinguished any more than you can tell a Democratic Civil Service reformer from a spoilsman of the old stamp. The Apache outbreak furnished a text from which Rev. Mr. Wills of San Francisco preached last Sunday. The reverend gentleman's remedy is, of course, the gospel; but, as he expressed it, "not a gospel that will get the Indians out of hell, but a gospel that will get hell out of the Indians." Wills is evidently a muscular Christian. JUDGE BRUSSON of the Superior Court has decided that Chinese laundries in Los Angeles must close at 9 o'clock, P.M., in compliance with a city ordinance to that effect. What is good law in Los Angeles ought to be good throughout the State, and the enactment of a similar ordinance by the various municipalities would accomplish the object aimed at—whatever it is. SOUTHERN manufacturers and land owners have had agents in Europe seeking to divert immigration Southward. A great number of farm laborers are taking a Southern course, and extra efforts are to be made to give a greater impetus to Southern immigration by painting the attractiveness of living there. Colonies are to be formed, and, if possible, a direct line of steamers is to be established between a European port and New Orleans. THE guillotine in the Postoffice Department is being greased for the work of decapitation in California. The racsals are to be turned out in numbers during this month, and Los Angeles county is designated as one of the localities where the work of reform is being conducted. Board of Supervisors. The Board received a communication from O. dea Granges complaining that the Anaheim Union Water Company refused to deliver water to him for irrigation purposes. The complaint was referred to the District Attorney. [Mr. des Granges is entitled to purchase water from the company by receiving his certificate of stock, paying assessments thereon, and complying with the rules and regulations of the company. The laws of the company are not in accordance with his views of what they ought to be, and he will not submit to be bound by them, hence the refusal of the company to furnish him with water.] [Petition of F. R. Millis et al., asking that the appointment of Samuel Levy as justice of the peace of Los Nietos township be revoked, as he was not a resident of said township, and that G. E. Bennett be appointed.] Action deferred. In re Santiago School District—Certificate of election returns of said district, voting to raise $400, road and filed, and on motion, moved that the special tax be levied at the general levy in October, 1885. Carried. Clerk instructed to correspond with Panley & Bro., and obtain plans for a jail. Resignation of T. P. Lukena as Justice of the Peace, Pasadena district, San Gabriel township, accepted. Deed from Meyberg Bros. for land for Tustin road district, accepted, and road declared a public highway. Schedule of prices for stationery and printing for the coming year adopted, and five hundred copies ordered printed. Poisoned by Honey NEW YORK, June 6. — A Times Branchville, S.C., special says: Mrs. Jacob Dukes gave a negro servant some honey, which the servant gave to her four sons for dinner. Almost as soon as they had eaten it they complained of blindness and dizziness. In ten minutes one was dead and within half an hour two more had died. By this time a report of the affair reached Mrs. Dukes. Her entire family were just experiencing the first symptoms of the trouble from which the negroes had died. Dr. Ott was sent for and by applying antibiotics the family was saved after great suffering. Half a dozen other families who had been supplied with this honey were similarly affected and it was only by energetic work that there were not twenty instead of three deaths. This event explains two other deaths which took place in this neighborhood on Monday. An examination of the honey showed that it was impregnated with poison from the gelsemium or yellow jasminine, which has probably been the cause of many deaths heretoof persons eating wild honey. Pacific Coast News Ex Congressman Budd has received of the Land Office at John Mooney, aged ninety-nine months, died Monday in San Joaquin river is said to business. Miller & Lux have reduced the farm hands on their Kerns from $30 to $25 per month. The young volcano discovered year ago, ten miles south of San still burning. While digging holes for trees on the plains, seven miles from workmen struck a stream of three feet of the surface. James Hughes, thirty years accidentally shot and killed Nev., Tuesday, by the dischaff gun which he was taking out. The will of the late John prietor of the Philadelphia Brass Francisco, has been filed for total valuation of property is an artesian well on a desert Kern county has been commissioned gives a flow of 1,575,000 gallons four hours, and the water rise one-half inches above the ponds was only $700. The body of Richard Wilson er, was recently discovered near A.T., terribly mangled by sealsmal. His faithful dog was remains when found. At Gridley, Sunday, a consted to arrest four tramps and fight by one of them. He accolade and was whipped. The then arrested, and shortly after blew was served in like manner of a citizen. Umatilla county, Or., has one of $250 each for coyote scalp of the county had eighteen live raled for some time waiting for into effect, finally receiving $the band. At St. Helena opinions vary yard men as to the quantity product this season. Some high as 2,500,000 gallons, being of last year's crop. The grape gather this season six weeks last. James, the incendiary, has confession of the crimes with charged. He admits having seen that occurred in San Jose on May 30th, those at Milpitas on the 31st and at Santa Clara night. He denies any know other person engaged in the The guillotine in the Postoffice Department is being greased for the work of decapitation in California. The raisals are to be turned out in numbers during this month, and Los Angeles county is designated as one of the localities where the work of reform is to be felt forthwith. This will be pleasing news to the people who are suffering under the incubus of the present corrupt and inefficient postmasters with which this county is burdened. It must be all in the climate. The police magistrates in New York have given the Chinese residents of that city a certificate of character as being the most peaceable, law-abiding, industrious and honest nationality in the city. In San Francisco the Chinese occupy the time of the criminal courts almost continuously. Perhaps only the really and truly good Celtasals go to New York and other kind all stay here. Even the very conservative Catholic Church occasionally modifies its laws in reference to existing sentiment. Archbishop Ryan of Baltimore has issued instructions to his clergy not to permit any member of the Ancient Order of Hibernians to die without the last sacrament of the church. It is understood that all the members of the order will be similarly favored if they throw off their allegiance to the Board of Erin, a central governing body in Ireland. The cremationists have an influential convert to their hobby in preacher Talmage of Brooklyn who announces that he finds authority for cremation in the text "Dust to dust, ashes to ashes." He says we have always been going on the principle of dust to dust inhumation, and it is now time to come to the other part, ashes to ashes. He thinks that resurrection is easier after incineration than after inhumation. An onerous license tax which was imposed upon business men by the Supervisors of Los Angeles county last year was collected in part by the tax collector; and when public opinion compelled the Supervisors to repeal the ordinance, there was a general expectancy on the part of those who had paid the tax that the money would be refunded. This was not done, however, as the District Attorney gave as his opinion that there was no lawful way of refunding the money. A Supreme Court decision given in Ohio on Tuesday, sustains the opinion of ex-District Attorney White. The court decided that the assessment paid under the Scott Liquor Tax before it was declared unconstitutional, could not be returned to saloonists. The amount involved is about $320,000. On Wednesday the County Board of course, and extra efforts are to be made to give a greater impetus to Southern immigration by painting the attractiveness of living there. Colonies are to be formed, and, if possible, a direct line of steamers is to be established between a European port and New Orleans. A Sheol of a Change The Hebrew word "sheol" has lately been brought into prominence by being substituted in the revised version of the Old Testament for the familiar "hell." It would appear that the revisers could not find an English expression for "sheol" which satisfied them, and therefore they have transcribed it just as it stands in the Hebrew text. Originally however, "hell," like the Greek "nades," was the exact equivalent of "sheol," both being the designation of a vast hollow place or cavern under the earth where the spirits of the dead were supposed to dwell, not in torments, but still in darkness and discomfort. The place of punishment was called by the Hebrews in later days "gehenna," from the name of the valley near Jerusalem where the rubbish and ordure was cast, and where fires were kept burning to purify the air. The idea of "hell" as of a place of torment is a modification of the original conception, but it has become so firmly established that the word no longer answers to the Hebrew "sheol," and has therefore properly been discarded by the revisers. The San Diego Ostrich Farm (One of the Union) Observing an item in the Union "that two little chicks had emerged from the shell" at the ostrich farm, we would wish to relieve the public mind of its possible amazement, and positive adoration for the capacity of production of the egg of the Struthio Camelos which this announcement may produce. It is true that much might be naturally expected from a bird of so pretentious a title, but facts compel us to state that the two chicks made their advent from as many shells and "emerged" from the incubator in a somewhat surprised and fluffy manner on the 28th ultimo. On the morning of the 29th two more arrived, while at this writing, "Mr. and Mrs. Arthur," who have been attending to things incubatory with commendable zeal for the last six weeks, have hatched out a chick with pleasant assurances of more to follow. Bull-Pup Soup One of the baddest of the French charlatans—the Widow Noel—has lately been immedicated and imprisoned for trickery. Not content with proscribing nostrums, she used to insist upon residing with her patients, whom she thus robbed at her leisure. Her last victim was a man with heart disease. She remained with him for sixty days and received her board and $550. Her chief medicament was an "ointment" made by boiling bull pups for nine days in a mixture of red earth, and for this foal stuff she charged $4 per pot. Strange to say, seven witnesses of good character testified to the efficacy of the woman's remedies. Extenuating Circumstances "You are accused of snatching a handful On Wednesday the County Board of Education completed their labors in examining manuscripts and crediting the proficiency of the candidates who have completed the course of study in the grammar schools. Diplomas were issued to the following graduates: Susie Wagli, Arta Elliott, Mary M. Chapin, from Santa Monica; C. H. Winsor, from San Gabriel; Howard Congar, Carrie Hill, Chas. L. Turner, Maria B. Visscher, from San Pascual district, or Pasadena; Luu A. Marden, Stella F. Mack, from Westminster. Chas. L. Turner passed the highest examination. Los Angeles Times: It was stated in Council yesterday by Mr. Hamilton that the white scale had already done damage in the city to the amount of $10,000, and is spreading everywhere. The Street Superintendent was instructed "to get away with the bugs if he can." This plain Anglo-Saxon instruction, being without qualification, will authorize that official to use the axe, the grubbing hoe and the torch, if need be, in order to extirpate white-scaled trees which are gone past the point of saving. In other cases, where it is possible to save the trees, the shotgun and the lasso will have to be brought into active requisition. The desperate condition of the Scotch land market is shown by the surprising number of Scotch estates now offered for sale. One auctioneer alone advertised to sell on Saturday Scotch estates valued at $2,500,000. Many Americans are in the market looking at Scotch properties. Extenuation Circumstances "You are accused of snatching a handful of small change from the till of a grocery store on Austin avenue," said Justice Tegener to Jim Webster, a colored prisoner. "Yes, yer honor, I knows I did; but when a man am hungry, and hasn't had nuffin' ter eat for more denen days, he am desperit an' crazy, an' he doesn't care what he does." But it appears that, at the time you stole a handful of small change, you had a $5 bill in your pocket." Dat am so, but I did not want to bust a $5 bill. As soon as you busts a $5 bill hit melts away. Peach-peeling Machine W. A. Meeker of San Francisco claims to have perfected a machine for scouring peaches to take the place of peeling them. Besides the great saving effected in rapid handling of the fruit and increased weight saved from wastage, the product of the fruit is much better in its preservation, as the richest portion of the peach resides in and near its skin. The London Truth announces the marriage of a well-known London clergyman with a lady forty years his junior, which excited a good deal of interest in some sections of society last winter, has not proved a success, for incompatibility of temper has led to such very strained relations that the lady has returned to her father's house, and the severed gentleman has advertised his own house to let, and proposes to take a foreign tour. Prof. Arpad Bokai of the University of Klassenburg has made the important discovery of an antidote for strychnine, which is said to have been fully corroborated by a series of successful tests on animals. Pacific Coast News. Ex Congressman Budd has been appointed Receiver of the Land Office at Stockton. John Mooney, aged ninety-nine years and ten months, died Monday in Sacramento. Hunting wild hogs in the tules of the San Joquin river is said to be a profitable business. Miller & Lax have reduced the wages of the farm hands on their Kern county ranches from $30 to $25 per month. The young volcano discovered about one year ago, ten miles south of Santa Maria, is still burning. While digging holes for telegraph poles on the plains, seven miles from Merced, the workmen struck a stream of water within three feet of the surface. James Hughes, thirty years of age, was accidentally shot and killed near Eureka, Nev., Tuesday, by the discharge of a shotgun which he was taking out of a buggy. The will of the late John Wieland, proprietor of the Philadelphia Brewery at San Francisco, has been filed for probate. The total valuation of property is $640,000. An artesian well on a desert section in Kern county has been completed, which gives a flow of 1,575,000 gallons in twenty-four hours, and the water rises eleven and one-half inches above the pipe. The cost was only $700. The body of Richard Wilson, an old hunter, was recently discovered near Oak Creek, A.T., terribly mangled by some wild animal. His faithful dog was watching the remains when found. At Gridley, Sunday, a constable attempted to arrest four tramps and was flared to fight by one of them. He accepted the challenge and was whipped. The tramps were then arrested, and shortly after the constable was served in like manner on complaint of a citizen. Umatilla county, Or., has offered a bounty of $250 each for coyote scalps. A resident of the county had eighteen live coyotes corraled for some time waiting for the law to go into effect, finally receiving $45 bounty on the band. At St. Helena opinions vary among vineyard men as to the quantity of the wine product this season. Some estimate it as high as 2,500,000 gallons, being about half of last year's crop. The grapes will be fit to gather this season six weeks earlier than last. James, the incendiary, has made a full confession of the crimes with which he is charged. He admits having set all the fires that occurred in San Jose on the night of May 30th, those at Milpitas on the night of the 31st and at Santa Clara last Monday night. He denies any knowledge of any other persons engaged in the same business. News of the Week. Gen. Resecrans has been appointed Register of the Treasury, vice Bruce (a colored man) removed. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has decided that speculation in margins is immoral, and that a mortgage given as a margin security cannot be enforced. Thomas Kay of Stockport, England, has found a process for making sea water drinkable. His process is to remove the chlorides by the use of citrate of silver. One ounce of citrate of silver will make half a pint of sea water drinkable. He proposes that bottles of citrate of silver be placed in the life-boats of ships. The proprietor of a Florida hotel, in order to get rid of fleas which infested his establishment, strewed fine straw over the floors and ignited it. The result was far above expectations, as it not only banished the fleas, but also the hotel, while the proprietor and help barely escaped death in the flames. The New York daily Commercial Bulletin places the aggregate loss by fires in May in the United States and Canada at $8,756,000 or 10 per cent increase in fire waste during the same month for ten years. The Bulletin remarks that this continuous increase in fire loss must advance insurance rates. Two young women, Cosby Payne and Mary Gregory, daughters of farmers of St. George, W.Va., had a brutal fight Tuesday over the attentions of a young man. Mary Gregory beat Cosby Payne in the face with a stone and threw her into bog embers left by burning brush, by which she was badly burned about the face and arms. The Marine Hospital bureau at Washington has information that vessels, supposed to be infested with yellow fever, have cleared from Cienfuegos for Delaware Breakwater, and are due at the latter place about this date. The quarantine officer at the breakwater has been notified, and a revenue cutter from Philadelphia has been ordered to intercept the vessels upon their arrival. First Assistant Postmaster General Hay says that he is unaware of any prerogative by which Senators may dictate the appointment of postmasters and that while he would give great weight to their suggestions, he would appoint a postmaster opposed in politics to the administration if a majority of the patrons of the office favored such an appointment. Locusta have appeared on the ridges north of Chattanooga, Tenn. Their numbers are increasing and all shrubbery and trees and every green object is covered with them. In some localities they are so numerous that all other sounds are drowned by their noise. They began moving into the valley and are spreading through the lowland farms. They appeared in this country seventeen years ago and destroyed nearly all vegetation. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. NOTICE. TO THE LADIES OF ANAHEIM AND VICINITY. The advertised auction of Dry Goods and Notions had to be postponed on account of sickness in the family; and as I leave for the East to-day, I invite my friends and acquaintances to call at my house where my wife will show goods with pleasure. Respectfully, P.W. DEETHMAN. NOTICE. SEALED PROPOSALS WILL BE RECEIVED BY THE Trustees of Anahiem School District for the redemption of one Bond (No. 6) of Anahiem School District, County of Los Angeles, State of California, of the value of $400. Proposals will be received until Saturday, June 27th, 1885, at 12 o'clock m., at which time said proposals will be opened at the office of the Clerk of the Board of School Trustees on Center street, Anahheim. No bid for more than par value will be accepted; nor any bid unless the bond to be surrendered accompanies such bid. By order of the Board of Trustees of Anahiem School District. D.W.C. COWAN, Clerk. Anaheim Union Water Company Location of principal place of business, Anahiem. Los Angeles County, California. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT AT A meeting of the Directors, held on the 6th day of June, 1885, an assessment (No. 4) of fifty cents per share was levied upon the capital stock of the corporation payable on or before July 8th, 1885, to the Secretary of the corporation at his office in the Town of Anahiem. California. Any stock upon which this assessment shall remain unaffected on the 6th day of July, 1885, will be delinquent, and advertised for sale at public auction; and unless payment is made before, will be sold on the 1st day of August 1885, to pay the delinquent assessment; together with costs of advertising and expenses of sale. RICHARD MELROSE. Secretary. Office at the Postoffice in the Town of Anahiem. County of Los Angeles. State of California. Election Notice. SCHOOL TAX. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT AN ELECTION will be held at the school house in the Orangesthorpe School District, in the County of Los Angeles, State of California, on the 6th day of July, 1885; for the purpose of submitting to the electors of said School District the question whether a Special District School Tax shall be levied and raised in said School District. The amount of money proposed to be raised is seven hundred and fifty dollars, and the purpose for which it is intended to be raised is three hundred dollars for repairing the school house, two hundred and fifty dollars for fenning and otherwise improving the school house lot; and two hundred dollars for the purchase of land adjoining the present school lot. The poll will be kept open at said election on said day from one hour after sunrise until sunset. At St. Helena opinions vary among vineyard men as to the quantity of the wine product this season. Some estimate it as high as 2,500,000 gallons, being about half of last year's crop. The grapes will be fit to gather this season six weeks earlier than last. James, the incendiary, has made a full confession of the crimes with which he is charged. He admits having set all the fires that occurred in San Jose on the night of May 30th, those at Milgazas on the night of the 31st and at Santa Clara last Monday night. He denies any knowledge of any other persons engaged in the same business and says his intention was to teach monopolists and Chinese lovers a lesson. While a man named Sherman was driving along a road near Happy Camp, Modoc county, accompanied by his wife and a man whose name is not known, they were fired upon from the roadside. One bullet cut off one of Mrs. Sherman's fingers and then killed her husband, while the other man received several wounds and is not expected to live. The motive is supposed to have been robbery, as the dead man had $7,000 with him, but the murderers failed to obtain it. 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: Food No. 1 ... $ .85 @ $1.00 No. 1, job lots ... 90 1.05 CORN: Large yellow, carload lots ... .95 1.00 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 ... .75 BUTTER: LA No. 1, per lb ... .20 Northern No. 1 " ... .25 EGGS: Eggs ... .14 HONEY: Extracted light ... .4 Job lots ... .4 POULTRY: Hens, No. 1, per doz ... 3.50 4.00 Old roosters ... 3.75 4.25 Young roosters ... 4.00 5.00 Broilers ... 2.25 3.00 Turkeys, per lb ... 14 15 Ducks, per doz ... 5.50 Geese, each ... 1.00 RAISINS: Layers, new ... 1.60 Ex. London layers, now ... 2.25 Loose Muscatals ... 1.65 Bulk raisins ... .5 Dried grapes ... .4 NUTS: Walnuts ... .6 Peanuts ... .4 CITRUS FRUITS: Oranges, Los Angeles ... 1.50 Lemons, Seedling, per box ... 1.37 " Eureka " ... 2.50 Limes ... 1.00 1.25 ONIONS: Yellow Danver ... Red ... 3.50 PROVISIONS: Extra light bacon ... .12 Medium bacon ... .11 LOCUSTS: The locusts have appeared on the ridges north of Chattanooga, Tenn. Their numbers are increasing and all shrubbery and trees and every green object is covered with them. In some localities they are so numerous that all other sounds are drowned by their noise. They began moving into the valley and are spreading through the lowland farms. They appeared in this country seventeen years ago and destroyed nearly all vegetation. At Barra, Ontario, June 6, about 12 o'clock the wife of J. W., Wonch and four children were burned to death in bed in their house. Mr. Wonch escaped by jumping out of a window, after a van effort to rescue his wife and children. He says when he wakened the whole room seemed on fire. He tried to pull his wife off the bed but could not do so, as the fire was leaping out of the mattress all around her. He thinks there were no signs of fire when he retired at 10:30 P.M. Schneider, who is in the Hamilton, O., jail, agreed to be hanged June 19th for killing his mother, made a concession to the jailer and his spiritual adviser. He said that his mother had threatened to poison his wife and had asked him to get her live with him. He agreed to let her live with him half the time, but at supper a quarrel arose and the mother demanded to be taken to the railroad station. On the way she said that if his wife were dead she would have a home. This maddened him and he stunned her on the head with a stone and carried her off and hurled her. He then invented the story that a transp met them and murdered his mother. Three starling exclosures which occurred in New York have completely blown up Renson's liquor silo on Thomas Street. The debris was hurled in all directions and some half a dozen people were badly cut and hurt. Joseph Remson, the owner of the place, was found beneath the debris in the cellar terribly bent and mangled. He had sat on a twenty-five pound key of powder and exploded it. He had two such keys with which he told the City Marshal, he intended to blow up himself and his place because everybody was after him. A razor was found covered with blood by his side. The fire brigade quickly extinguished the flames. Renson is at the hospital suffering terrible agony and slowly dying. Dolirium tremens is given as the cause for his novel yet determined act. An Old Family Feud. "How is that old family feud of yours with the Smith family coming on?" asked one Kentucky citizen of another. "It's all gone our way." I left you see, and part of Brother Jim is still on earth, but it goes about on crutches. Father, you know, perched out over three weeks ago with a bullet in his heart, and Uncle Robert is up at the hospital doin' as well as can be expected for a man who hasn't got any nose. Where have you been lately?" "Out of town And the Smiths?" "Well, I don't want to brag about myself or my relations. You just go to the graveyard and turn to the right." KNOW ye the land where the cypress and myrtle ARE emblems of deeds that are done in their clime, WHERE the rage of the vulture, the love of the turtle, SCHOOL TAX. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT AN ELECTOR will be held at the school house in the Orangesthorpe School District, in the County of Los Angeles, State of California, on the 6th day of July, 1885; for the purpose of submitting to the electors of said School District the question whether a Special District School Tax shall be levied and raised in said School District. The amount of money proposed to be raised is seven hundred and fifty dollars, and the purpose for which it is intended to be raised is three hundred dollars for repairing the school house, two hundred and fifty dollars for fencing and otherwise improving the school house lot, and two hundred dollars for the purchase of land obtaining the present school lot. The poll will be kept open at said election on said day from one hour after sunrise until sunset. Wm SCHULTER, Wm FITHIAN, S.L CHILSON Trustees of Orangesthorpe School District Casks, Pipes AND PUNCHEONS IN PERFECT ORDER For Sale at Low Prices. B DREYPET & CO., Anaheim. Notice to Taxpayers. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE taxes for the year 1885, in Anheim School District, County of Los Angeles, State of California, are now due and payable to me at my office in the prosecution in the Town of Anheim. L S BARD MICROSE Tax Collector Anaheim Cal., May 1885. BANK OF ANAHEIM. CAPITAL STOCK, $100,000.OO. PLEZ JAMES...President G.B.SHAFFER...Secretar 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. COHRESPONDENTS. 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 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 Anheim or vicinity desiring to send to KNOW ye the land where the cypress and myrtle ARE emblems of deeds that are done in their clime, WHERE the rage of the vulture, the love of the turtle, NOW melt into sadness, now madden to crime? WHERE the light wings of zephyr, oppressed with perfume, WAX faint o'er the gardens of Gul in their bloom? YES, DEAR FRIENDS, you may know all these things, and yet you will acknowledge that even the perfumed "gardens of Gul in their bloom" could only faintly parallel the RARE AND EXQUISITE FRAGRANCE that is wafted from a cup of PURE YOUNG EOLA TEA. HAGAN'S Magnolia Balm is a secret aid to beauty. Many a lady owes her freshness to it, who would rather not tell, and you can't tell. 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. RIMPAU BROS. 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 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. 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, Vice-Presidents W. A. WITTE, - Secretary F. A. Korn, E.A. Saxton J. P. Zeyn, Executive Committee