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WEEKLY GAZETTE SATURDAY JULY 18, 1885 SUBSCRIPTION, per year, $2. The deficit in the Postoffice Department for the quarter ending March 31st, is $1,666,000. Postmaster Vilas cannot shake his gory looks at me and say I have it! During the past eleven months we have imported commerce valued at $570,296,000 and exported $731,581,000. When we say we, we mean the United States. The balance of trade is on the right side. A woman in New York has given birth to four babies, all at once. It is said that she is doing quite well. Strange that they never deem it necessary to state the condition of the father's health and mind under such circumstances. There is actually a proposition now being considered by the Treasury officials for the abolishment of the Custom Houses at San Pedro and San Diego. This would be reform with a vengeance, but it would hurt the feelings of the half hundred Democrats who are after the offices. A Miss Helen Taylor has consented to stand for North Camberwell, England, at the next election, there being no law against a woman sitting and voting in the House of Commons. As she has every prospect of being returned, the next House will possess a refining influence to soothe its anger of discussion. Cholera is said to have been carried to every country on the globe except the islands of the South Pacific, Australia, the Cape of Good Hope, the islands of the North Atlantic, and the western coast of South America, all separated from India by a wide expanse of ocean, and having no commercial intercourse with that country. One result of the recent decision of the Surveyor-General Willey requests the publication in the Gazette of the following Act of the Legislature passed at the last sesse: Pacific County A. H. Rose, an Oakland for $800,000. There are now more physicians Bernardino county jail six years past. Sixteen oaks with felonies. The charitable citizens been imposed upon by two dressed as a woman, by the distress. The President has appointed presidential postmasters: at Gilroy, Cal., vice H. W. Sion expired; Jacob Van side, Cal., vice C. W. Fink. The workmen of a three-large county struck work cause they were required at 3:30 A.M., and worked without another meal. The Miner's Union at disbanded lately, and on the ribes caricatured the Unner that for a while a riot. The "Horribles" were known final round. Some of the large Mexico Barbara county are being it is found that there are acres of Government land which will be thrown open. Two members of a Mormon Pete, U. T., died last week soning. Although medical them in season, they refuse contenting themselves with of hands" of a church dignitary. James Matson was celebrated at Osceola, Nev., by en giant powder. He picked up he supposed had been ext exploded in his hand, killing and mutilating him beyond. At Parowan, Utah, B. Charles Lyman, eleven years upon a horse and sent a horse came home, the cordale under his body, where he been kicked so that he died from the horse. Notwithstanding the cost two lines of steamers between San Francisco has caused reduced to twenty-five cents rates to seventy-five cents are doing largely increase are making money. A correspondent of the writing from Shasta county road between Shasta and Washita it must be a luxury to ride from the charges. From Shasta ville and return (a trip of toll was $21 75 for a six-hour eight-hour team $26 75, and $7 25. CHOLERA is said to have been carried to every country on the globe except the islands of the South Pacific, Australia, the Cape of Good Hope, the islands of the North Atlantic, and the western coast of South America, all separated from India by a wide exposure of ocean, and having no commercial intercourse with that country. One result of the recent decision of the United States Supreme Court that persons accused of "infamous" crimes must be proceeded against by indictment, not by "information," is the turning loose of 125 Federal convicts from the House of Correction at Detroit. These men, guilty of robbing the mails, pension frauds, forgery and other like offenses, were all convicted on "information" of crimes, technically as well as morally "infamous," and they, therefore, came within the scope of the Supreme Court's opinion. What an embrace was there, my countrymen! At the Republican State Convention at Richmond, Va., on Wednesday, the warring Senators, Ruddleberger and Mahone, went upon the platform, made up their quarrels, and fell into each other's arms. The example proved contagious, and every delegate at once embraced every other delegate. If this is to be the common practice in political conventions, we propose to advocate with renewed vigor our favorite hobby of woman suffrage. Let the women have a right to vote and be eligible as delegates, say we. The cholera in Spain is undoubtedly making sad havoc, but it is difficult to arrive at the actual death rate from the figures imported by the telegraph and manipulated by the intelligent composer. We read that the official report shows a total of 30,000 cases in Spain since the inception of the scourge up to last Saturday evening, and a total of 130,000 deaths. This, according to the methods of computation in vogue, makes 43 deaths to every case. It is possible that the explanation lies in a transposition of figures, which would indicate 130,000 cases of cholera and 30,000 deaths therefrom. He is a true philosopher who always searches for the bright side of unpleasant things. Thus a New York paper says that "the heat of such a day as yesterday is not without its consolations. It is first-rate weather for hay, androtting horses are at their best when the thermometer is over '80'." When the Riverside people are disposed to grumble at the excessive heat, which tradition says is characteristic of that place in summer, they should console themselves with the reflection that it is splendid weather for raisins. PRESIDENT CLEVELAND has made three appointments in Ohio at which even the not-too-particular members of his To Land Claimants Surveyor-General Willey requests the publication in the Gazette of the following Act of the Legislature passed at the last session: 3498. All applications, under whatsoever Act, filed in the office of the Surveyor-General, must be retained ninety days before approval, and must be approved (when there is no conflict) by the Surveyor-General, at the expiration of six months, subject, however, to the provisions of sections three thousand four hundred and six and three thousand four hundred and seven of this Code, and all unapproved applications, which have been on file over six months, wherein the approval has not been demanded, and wherein the contest has not been referred to Court, or a demand made for an order of reference, as provided in section thirty-four hundred and fourteen of the Political Code, shall be null and void. SEC. 2. This Act shall take effect on the first day of August, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, and the Surveyor-General shall give notice to each applicant to be effected thereby, by sending to said applicant, or his attorney, a copy of this Act. A Strange Freak EMMETTSBURG, (Md.), July 14.—David Gamble, a farmer of Frederick county, was found dead in a coffin in the dining hall of his residence this morning. For at least thirty-five years Gamble had been in an unsettled frame of mind, caused, it is supposed, by the sudden death of his wife from heart disease shortly after their marriage. They were much attached to each other and the shock was too much for the former. After the wife was buried Mr. Gamble ordered the same undertaker to prepare a coffin for him. From that time to the day of his death Mr. Gamble would dress himself in a shroud and immediately after dark lie down in the coffin, draw the lid over the top, leaving only his face exposed. Mr. Gamble said he slept in the coffin as a constant reminder that death was inevitable and that it might come at any moment. During the past month his health began to break down, and as he would not permit a physician to visit him, his death was looked for daily. The body will not be removed and will be buried as he prepared himself. Monument to Mrs Surratt. WASHINGTON, July 14.—A sensation has been created here by an announcement by Brick Pomeroy that he will receive subscriptions for the erection of a monument to Mrs. Surratt, who was executed as a conspirator in the assassination of Lincoln. Pomeroy claims that Mrs. Surratt was worse than murdered; that she was an innocent Roman Catholic woman, without murder in her heart. He points to the fact that all the members of the Military Commission that condemned Mrs. Surratt to death are dead, except Judge Holt; that he is residing in a suburb of this city and is almost crazed, and that the majority of those dead committed suicide, proof, he thinks, that they saw the injustice of their verdict. The citizens of Surrattsville, a small village in Maryland near here, have subscribed $1000, which they believe will guarantee their safety. Notwithstanding the course two lines of steamers between San Francisco has caused piles reduced to twenty-five cents rates to seventy-five cents are doing largely increase are making money. A correspondent of the writing from Shasta county road between Shasta and Washoe it must be a luxury to ride from the charges. From Shasta ville and return (a trip of one toll was $21 75 for a six-hour eight-horse team $26 75,and $7 25. A young son of Henry Cedered Sunday night in Cajun extension of the California road. Coombs keeps a small and having business elsewhere Coombs men stopped for a drink,and as stir entered the tent and off young Coombs on a bed wi nthe head. The boy had amount of money in the tent posed was robbed and killed working on the road. The Rev. Dr. William F., serving out a ten-year sentence at Folsom, for swindling Chosen Friends by means certificates, while he was ousted position of Grand Receives realizes the truthfulness of "the way of the transgression" is kept steadily at work in th e other convicts,and when a pick and shovel he is devel cle on a derrick. Those w ho the prison since Morrison's state that he appears to be that same look of indifference during the trial with the clerical fraud. Mrs. Mabel Treadwell is bad as the Gazette painted She has filed an answer to her plaintiff is forty-five enjoying good health and has H. Steiger, who is capable of mother. She also further attained status with always offered and still on her mother. The defendant willow of J.P.Treadwell San Francisco December 27th allowed by the will of the per month for the support of children. In her complaint claimed that she was old,and able to support herself. News of the Week In Momence sixty persons deely and critically ill from beef,presumably made from No deaths yet. There is great Mrs.James H.McMuller,c while en route to Old Orleanton & Maine railway.was roped chel containing diamonds and bonds of the value about $2 More hog cholera is reported county.Some three weeks ago lace and young Cathey drove Cathey's valley to Minturn's Chowchilla river to pasture or last week they counted two found less than two hundred.of the drove lay strewn over tating a great stench.In Bell county.Ky.,a Mary Macatee wife of a moo jealous of the attention her ha s a neighbor,Mrs.Alice Noe,men quarrelled,and Mrs.Mac "without its consolations. It is first-rate weather for hay, and trotting horses are at their best when the thermometer is over 80°." When the Riverside people are disposed to grumble at the excessive heat, which tradition says is characteristic of that place in summer, they should console themselves with the reflection that it is splendid weather for raisins. President Cleveland has made three appointments in Ohio at which even the not-too-particular members of his own party have kicked vigorously. One of the appointees has served a term in the State Prison for forgery, another has been in the same institution for theft and t'other was also accused of having been in the penitentiary. In the latter case, however, it appears that it was a cousin of the criminal, bearing the same name, who was appointed, but the other two are known to be notorious jail-birds. The President has demanded an explanation from the men who recommended these appointments, and has expressed his determination not only to revoke the appointments but also to punish those who "put up the game" on him. It is estimated that at the rate of progress prior to last week, it would have taken eight years to fill all the Federal offices with Democrats. Since that interesting calculation was made, however, the President has issued an order that all appointments to offices where no vacancies exist must stop unless it is clearly proven that they are unfit. In the first four months of the administration there were 5,108 changes in Federal offices—less than five per cent. of the whole number. In the Treasury Department proper there had been, during the four months mentioned, 164 appointments, in the Revenue Department 550 appointments, Customs Department about 600, War Department about 40, State Department about 87, Postoffice Department over 3000, Interior Department 250. The Raisin and Wine Crop. SAN FRANCISCO, July 15. — The San Francisco Merchant, in its issue of July 17th, will give an estimate of the present year's raisin crop at 210,000 boxes, as against 160,000 last year. It will also give the California wine shipments to the East by rail for the first five months of the present year at 1,370,700 gallons, as compared with 920,800 gallons for the same period in 1884, showing an increase for the first five months of this year of 449,900 gallons. The shipments by sea for the half-year ending June 30, 1885, are 597,000 gallons, while for the same period in 1884 there was shipped by sea 689,300 gallons, showing a decrease of sea shipments for the first six months of this year of 92,300 gallons. The wine crop of this year is now estimated at from 10,000,000 to 12,500,000 gallons, against 15,000,000 gallons last year. Krug's Creditors. ST. HELENA, July 11. — Creditors of Chas. Krug, to the number of sixty, met here today, and manifested a liberal spirit toward that gentleman in his financial embarrassment. They represented mainly the unsecured indebtedness. While Mr. Krug is only legally responsible to them for 50 cents on the dollar, he stipulates to pay 100 cents on the dollar at the end of three and one-half years, giving them half in the meantime. The property is to revert to him, D. B. Carver and Seneca Ewer to act as trustees. C. P. Lollar manifested opposition, but all the creditors present signed the agreement. Pacific Coast News. A. H. Roos, an Oakland farmer, has failed for $800,000. There are now more prisoners in the San Bernardino county jail than at any time for six years past. Sixteen of them are charged with felonies. The charitable citizens of Stockton have been imposed upon by two young men, one dressed as a woman, by their pitiful tales of distress. The President has appointed the following presidential postmasters: W. J. Thomason, at Gilroy, Cal., vice H. W. Briggs, commission expired; Jacob Vandegrift, at Riverside, Cal., vice C. W. Filkins, resigned. The workmen of a thresher outfit in Tulare county struck work the other day because they were required to take breakfast at 3 a.m., and work through to 12 M. without another meal. The Miner's Union at Austin, Nevada, disbanded lately, and on the Fourth the "Horribles" caricatured the Union in such a manner that for a while a riot seemed imminent. The "Horribles" were knocked out on the final round. Some of the large Mexican grants in Santa Barbara county are being surveyed, and it is found that there are many thousand acres of Government land illegally held, which will be thrown open for settlement. Two members of a Mormon family at San Pete, U. T., died last week from copper poisoning. Although medical aid was tendered them in season, they refused to accept it, contenting themselves with the "laying on of hands" of a church dignitary. James Matson was celebrating the Fourth at Oscoola, Nev., by exploding sticks of giant powder. He picked up one whose fuse he supposed had been extinguished, and it exploded in his hand, killing him instantly and infiltrating him beyond recognition. At Parowan, Utah, Elgar A., son of Charles Lyman, eleven years old, was tied upon a horse and sent after cows. The horse came home, the cords holding the boy under his body, where he had slipped and been kicked so that he died on being untied from the horse. Notwithstanding the competition of the two lines of steamers between Stockton and San Francisco has caused passage rates to be reduced to twenty-five cents and freight rates to seventy-five cents a ton, both lines are doing largely increased business, and are making money. A correspondent of the Sacramento Bee, writing from Shasta county, tells of a toll road between Shasta and Weaverville which it must be a luxury to ride over, judging from the charges. From Shasta to Weaverville and return (a trip of forty miles), the toll was $21.75 for a six-horse team; for an eight-horse team $26.75, and for one horse $7.25. Cure for Piles Files are frequently preceded by a some of weight in the back, loins and lower part of the abdomen, causing the patient to supose he has some affection of the kidneys or neighboring organs. At times, symptoms of indigestion are present, flatulency, uneasiness of the stomach, etc. A moisture, like peripiration, producing a very disagreeable itching, after getting warm, is a common attendant. Blind, Bleeding and Itching Piles yield at once to the application of Dr. Bosanko's Pile Remedy, which acts directly upon the parts affected, absorbing the Tumors, allaying the intense itching, and effecting a permanent cure. Price 50 cts. Address, The Dr. Bosanko Medical Co., Piqua, O. Sold by A. Krug. July17-1yr "Weeda," says an agricultural paper, "affect the yield of any crop." Not excepting widows' weeds, which have a very marked effect upon the matrimonial crop. When Baby was sick, we gave her CASTORIA, When she was a Child, she cried for CASTORIA, When she became Mise, she clung to CASTORIA, When she had Children, she gave them CASTORI. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. THE OLD HARTFORD Fire Ins. Co. Has an unimpeachable record for making PROMPT AND FULL PAYMENTS OF ALL LOSSES. Insure your property in the Old Hartford and secure absolute indemnity. Apply to RICHARD MELROSE, Insurance Agency. Anaheim Postoffice Building. This Agency is prepared to give special rates on good risks. Call for information. Anaheim Union Water Company Location of principal place of business, Anaheim, Los Angeles County, California There is delinquent upon the following described stock, on account of assessment levied on the sixth day of June 1885, the several hundred dollars. FOR SALE. A FIRST CLASS STUDENAKER SPRING FARM waren, has little need; newly painted. S. A. DENNIE. BOARD OF EQUALIZATION. NOTICE IS HEREY GIVEN THAT THE BOARD of Town Trustees of the town of Anaheim will meet as a Board of Equalization for the purpose of equalling the assessment roll of said town of Anaheim; on the 22th, 24th and 25th of July, 1885, between the hours of 3 and 5 o'clock p.m. of each day at the Town Hall of said town. By order of the Board of Trustees, E. F. NEWBOLD, Town Clerk. Anabeim, July 2, 1885. New Drug Store. THE UNDERSIGNED BEGS LEAVE TO INFORM the citizens of Anaheim and neighborhood that he has opened a drug store on Center street, Anaheim, Opposite the Postoffice. Having not only learned and studied the business in Germany but having also kept a drug store in San Francisco over 15 years, I hope by strict and careful attention to business to gain as much confidence and custom as I have enjoyed in San Francisco. I am importing direct from Germany and THE EAST; and will keep as fresh and pure medicines as are kept in any first-class drug store. AUGUST KRUG. STATEMENT OF THE CONDITION OF THE Bank of Anaheim, At the opening of Business June 30th, 1885. ASSETS. Cash on hand... $ 6,080 23 Bills Receivable... $ 42,073 52 Real Estate... $ 954 20 Bank Lot, Vault and Building... $ 6,300 00 Due from other Banks... $ 15,050 26 Other Assets... $ 79,068 21 LIABILITIES. Due depositors... $52,032 63 Due other Banks... $20,000 00 Capital Stock... $ 6,736 58 Surplus Stock... $ 79,068 21 State of California. County of Los Angeles. I. Plz James, President of the Bank of Anaheim, being duly sworn do depose and say that the above statement is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and belief. PLEZ JAMES, President. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 1st day of July, 1885. RICHARD MELROSE, Notary Public. STATEMENT OF THE... Bank of Anaheim, Notwithstanding the competition of the two lines of steamers between Stockton and San Francisco has caused passage rates to be reduced to twenty-five cents and freight rates to seventy-five cents a ton, both lines are doing largely increased business, and are making money. A correspondent of the Sacramento Bee, writing from Shasta county, tells of a toll road between Shasta and Weaverville which it must be a luxury to ride over, judging from the charges. From Shasta to Weaverville and return (a trip of forty miles), the toll was $21 75 for a six-horse team; for an eight-horse team $26 75, and for one horse $7 75. A young son of Henry Coombs was murdered Sunday night in Cajon Pass, on the extension of the California Railroad. Coombs keeps a small liquor stand, and having business elsewhere left young Coombs in charge. Monday morning several men stopped for a drink, and finding no one astir entered the tent and found the body of young Coombs on a bed with a bullet-hole in the head. The boy had a considerable amount of money in the tent, and it is supposed was robbed and killed by Chinese working on the road. The Rev. Dr. William F. Morrison, who is serving out a ten-year sentence of imprisonment at Folsom, for swindling the Order of Chosen Friends by means of forged death certificates, while he was occupying the exalted position of Grand Kecorder, now fully realizes the truthfulness of the saying that "the way of the transgressor is hard." He is kept steadily at work in the quarry with the other convicts, and when he is not using a pick and shovel he is developing his muscle on a derrick. Those who have visited the prison since Morrison's advent there, state that he appears to be contented and that the same look of indifference that was noticeable during the trial, still remains with the clerical fraud. Mrs. Mabel Treadwell is perhaps not as bad as the Gazette painted her last week. She has filed an answer to her mother's complaint of non-support in which she alleges that the plaintiff is forty-five years of age, enjoying good health and has a husband, W. H. Steiger, who is capable of supporting her mother. She also further alleges that she has always offered and still offers to support her mother. The defendant in this suit is the widow of J. P. Treadwell, who died in San Francisco December 27th, 1884. She was allowed by the will of the deceased $1000 per month for the support of herself and five children. In her complaint Mrs. Steiger claimed that she was old, indigent and unable to support herself. News of the Week. In Momence sixty persons were taken suddenly and critically ill from eating dried beef, presumably made from diseased cattle. No deaths yet. There is great alarm. Mrs. James H. McMuller, of Portland Me, while en route to Old Ormond, on the Boston & Maine railway, was robbed of a satchel containing diamonds and government bonds of the value of about $30,000. More hog cholera is reported in Fresno county. Some three weeks ago Win. Wallace and young Cathey drove 530 hogs from Cathey's valley to Mintern's ranch on the Chowchilla river to pasture on stubble, and last week they counted the live ones and found less than two hundred. The balance of the drove lay strewn over the fields, creating a great stench. In Bell county, Ky., a week ago Mrs. Mary Macatee, wife of a moonshiner, grew jealous of the attention her husband paid to a neighbor, Mrs. Alice Noe. The two women quarrelled, and Mrs. Macatee seized an Anaheim Union Water Company location of principal place of business, Anaheim, Los Angeles County, California. There is delinquent upon the following described stock, on account of assessment levied on the 6th day of June, 1885, the several amounts set opposite the names of the respective shareholders, as follows: NAME NO.CERT NO.SHARES AMT: Henry Hammel 294 15 $7.50 Mansur & Wilcox 174 115 50.00 Gabino Real 211 2 1.00 Thomas Strain 142 44 11.50 C.H. Weldwood 282 22 11.00 And in accordance with law and an order of the Board of Directors made on the 6th day of June, 1885, so many shares of each parcel of such stock as may be necessary will be sold at the office of the company on the 1st day of August, 1885, at 2 o'clock p.m. of such day to pay delinquent assessments thereto, together with costs of advertising and expenses of sale. RICHARD MELROSE, Office at the Postoffice, Anaheim, Cal. A Great Bargain Ninety acres of land slanted 1 miles north of town is offered for sale by the undisputed at a great bargain for cash. There are on the tract. 22 I-2 ACRES OF VINES Thrifty Fruit Trees Of various kinds, one year old; 47 acres of the tract is unproved. It is as fine a body of land as three in Southern California. And the vines and trees plainly prove its quality by their growth and vigor. Water Stock Goes with the land. It will be sold entire or in 20 and 25 acres tracts. Those who are seeking for a pleasant, profitable and cheap Home Should investigate this offer. I will show the land to all who may apply. W.M.BAILEY, ANAHEIM. School Bond Election Notice. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TO THE QUALIFIED electors of Osan View School District, County of Los Angeles, State of California that an election will be held at the school house in said district, on the 6th day of August, A.D., 1885, and the polls will be then and there open from 9 o'clock A.M., until 4 o'clock P.M., of the same day. Said election will be conducted by Patterson Bowers, John Brush and Charles Loyd who have been duly appointed to serve as Judges thereof. Said election will be held for the purpose of submitting to the electors of said district whether bonds of such district shall be issued and sold for the purpose of raising money to purchase a school lot and to build and furnish a school house. In conformity with the provisions of the Political Code of this State, and a resolution of the Board of Trustees, of said district hereby adopted. The amount of the bonds proposed to be issued is twenty-five hundred dollars ($2500) of the denomination of $500 each, and to bear interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum. The number of years which said bonds are to run are as follows: bond No.1 for two years, bond No.2 for three years, bond No.3 for four years, bond No.4 for five years and bond No.5 for six years. E.P.JUSTICE, J.H.GLINES, R.A.MARTIN, District School Trustees. Anheuser-Busch Beer. At BILLY'S OPPOSITE HELMSEN'S. white en route to Old Orchard, on the Boston & Maine railway, was robbed of a satchel containing diamonds and government bonds of the value of about $30,000. More hog cholera is reported in Fresno county. Some three weeks ago Wm. Wallace and young Cathey drove 530 hogs from Cathey's valley to Minturn's ranch on the Chowhill river to pasture on stubble, and last week they counted the live ones and found less than two hundred. The balance of the drove lay strewn over the fields, creating a great stench. In Bell county, Ky., a week ago Mrs. Mary Macatee, wife of a moonshiner, grew jealous of the attention her husband paid to a neighbor, Mrs. Alice Noe. The two women quarrelled, and Mrs. Macatee seized an axe and hacked her rival to pieces. The man in the case was arrested by the revenue officers a short time ago, and Mrs. Macatee pursued them and pistol in hand effected his rescue. She is still at large. Bridgeport, Conn., has been considerably excited over a reported death from cholera which occurred Tuesday after an illness of thirteen hours. The deceased was Miss Josephine Morcel, aged forty-two years. During her sickness she had some symptoms of sporadic cholera, and Medical Examiner Downs, who attended her, gave a certificate of death as resulting from cholera nostria, which is an aggravated form of cholera morbus. The premises have been thoroughly disinfected. James McGovigan was arrested at Merced on Wednesday night while in the act of burglarizing the dwelling of James Galbraith. He had entered the pantry through a small window, in doing which he accidentally turned the water faucet. Mrs. Galbraith, hearing the water running, slipped out of bed in her night clothes and got in the yard and listened near the window. Hearing some one inside, she went quietly across the street and awakened two neighbors, who came and caught the man in the room and conducted him to jail. A horrible tragedy near Davisville, Sacramento county, is just reported. Tuesday night Juan Lopez, a laborer on the ranch of G. Pena, found the rigid form of his dead wife in a field near the house. Four bullet holes were found in her head and her left arm was severed by an axe. Lopez and a neighbor found some distance away, the warm body of an old fellow-laborer named Ramon, with a bullet-hole in his temple. It is believed that he killed the woman and then himself. Ostrich Farm NOTICE. On and after JULY 1st the above farm will be open to visitors daily. CHARGE—50 cents each person. All dogs found on the farm will be destroyed. Trespassers will be prosecuted. By order. C. J. SKETCHLEY. Superintendent California Ostrich Farming Company Vineyard For Sale. 20 ACRES OF VINEYARD IS OFFERED FOR SALE IN NORTH ANAHIEIM. The vines are four years old—Zinfandel, Malvoisie, Muscat and Mission grapes. There is a Good Crop of Grapes Now on the vines. The owner offers it for sale because he cannot give it his personal attention. WATER STOCK GOES WITH THE LAND. Apply to F. H. Keith or to the Anaheim Immigration Association. GUIDE TO SUCCESS In BUSINESS and SOCIETY. The most universally useful book ever published. It tells completely HOW TO DO EVERYTHING in the best way. How to Be Your Own Lawyer. How to Do Business Correctly and Successfully. How to Act in Society and everywhere. A good mine of varied information to all classes for constant reference. AGENTS WANTED for all or spare time. To know why this book of REAL value and attractions sells better than any other, apply for terms to H.B.SCAMMEL & CO., July 11-6m ST. LOUIS, MO. GENERAL AGENTS WANTED Of extra ability and experience, to take general pointing agencies, to find and start other convassers on fast-selling books Extraordinary inducements.Applicants must show they mean business by stating by letter (no postal cards) in full their experience,HENRY BUCKLIN & CO.,201 N. Second St., St. Louis, Mo. AGENTS WANTED FOR THE NEW BOOK, DEEDS of DARING by BLUE&GRAY The great collection of the most thrilling personal adventures on both sides during the Great Civil War.Intensely interesting accounts of exploits and spies, forlorn hopes, heroic bravery, imprisonments and hair-breadth escapes, romantic incidents,hand-to-hand struggles,humorous and tragic events,pervious journeys,bold dashes,brilliant successes and magnanimous actions on each side the line.70 chapters,prefuriously illustrated to the life.No other book at all like it.Grisells everything Address,STANDARD PUBLISHING HOUSE,203 Pine St.,St. Louis,Mo. This space reserved for Rimpau Bros. announcement next week. KELLOGG BROS. One Price Cash Store! AT THE DEPOT. Having purchased the stock of the assignes of M. H. Cheeseman and the warehouse property of D. E. Miles we are now prepared to do a GENERAL MERCHANDISING BUSINESS, And to handle the entire Produce of the country. PRODUCE BOUGHT, SHIPPED OR STORED All Goods sold at Lowest Cash Prices. $3000 worth of Dry Goods, Boots & Shoes sold at Cost To make room for our new line of goods. Give us a call and be convinced that we mean what we say. 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. Rimpan, T.J.F. Eoebe, P. James, Treasurer. W.A.WITTE Secretary F.A.Korn, E.A.Saxton J.P.Zeyn, Executive Committee