anaheim-gazette 1885-07-25
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WEEKLY GAZETTE
SATURDAY...JULY 25, 1885
SUBSCRIPTION, per year, $2.
Hors have hopped down again in price with the agility which usually characterizes the varying values of that unsteady product.
And now it is Mahone who is dealing in alliteration. In a speech to the Republican convention at Richmond, he alluded to the Bourbon Democracy as promoters of "desolation, despoilation and desecration."
"WASHING sheep a bad practice," is the title of an article now being extensively published by the newspapers. The sheep-raisers of California are not given to that particular bad practice to any alarming extent.
SULLIVAN, the author of Pinafore, now in San Francisco, will be in Los Angeles in a day or two. His advent to this coast is not characterized with half the furore which hailed the visit of the slogger of the same name.
The work at Sheol Gate, New York harbor, which has been going on unceasingly for ten years, is reaching the climax and in a few months over 300,000 pounds of dynamite will be exploded in the rock, with the probability that the obstruction will be effectually removed.
A POSTMASTER at Melrose, Maryland, named Wintz, committed suicide recently because a charge of offensive partisanship had been made against him. Please take particular note of the fact that the foolish man's name was not Melrose, but Wintz. Persons and places sometimes get mixed up by careless readers.
The climate of Nogales, A. T., always sultry, must be particularly so just now for the editor of the local paper. The Mexican John Roach, the eminent ship builder, has made an assignment. The refusal of the government to accept the dispatch boat Dolphin, and the probability that the three uncompleted cruisers would also be rejected, convinced Roach that he had better get out of business. The only sad thing about the affair is that it throws out of employment about a thousand men who have been working in his ship-yard. Any sympathy for Roach is misplaced. He has been a most unscrupulous parasite on the government, and has drawn from the Treasury millions of money for ships that had to be docked for repairs a few weeks after being launched. In the insolent security begotten of long-continued success in plundering the National treasury, he delayed the completion of the Dolphin until the change of Administration, with the result that the floating fraud has been rejected because it is notoriously a botch. The most conspicuous defender of Roach and the Dolphin is ex-Secretary of the Navy Chandler, who is writing columns in praise of Roach and his boat and in abuse of Secretary Whitney. The inference is plain that if Chandler was "in" and Whitney "out," the boat would be accepted and the government again swindled.
He is indeed a blind partisan who does not believe that the Navy department has for years been a rotten and expensive fraud, or who believes that the Dolphin controversy is merely an attempt of Secretary Whitney to make party capital.
It is reported that Dr. Caromona, of Colima, Mexico, has discovered the living germ that is the herald of yellow fever, and by inoculating people with it secures their immunity from the disease. In Vera Cruz the Government physicians have been experimenting upon condemned murderers according to Caromona's process, and report that they have had great success. The commission appointed by President Diaz to investigate the discovery report favorably, and the Government has made a liberal appropriation to further investigate the matter. It is stated that in Hermosillo, such faith do the authorities place in the discovery, that they have issued a proclamation calling upon the people to submit themselves for incarriage.
Pacific County
A boy who remained hours at Oceanside, San Luis lost his reason.
Cha. Bardwell, an enlisted Coast Furniture Co. in killed on Saturday by tor.
J. M. Strain, who fouls get ever taken from the mines (worth $8,900), Hospital as Sonora last time.
The Pajaronian is able that the assessment roll Cruz) shows that there is to each unit of population.
By the explosion of Stockton last Tuesday, Mr severely burned about nine near losing her eyesight.
There are 20,000 kegs at the powder mills, San Luis 220 kegs of powder made by the mills are busy making United States Government.
Hon. Alfred Allen died last Thursday from the eld. The doctors placed him covered him with ice with tioned fatal result.
An election was held at the centre of the Cover d'Trict, last Saturday, the in Chinese should be allowed. The result was 410 to 108 not.
In 1868 road agents rob Blackfoot, Idaho, of 50 dust, which they secreted to the Penitentiary, and threw in a few days. A cloak kept on them.
J. C. Frisbie was poisoned by the poison-oak. warm weather, the effects appear and cause him great is now suffering from one An application of onions in dote.-San Diego Union.
The public schoolhouse trict, Fresno county, was Monday night. The loss is insurance. The fire is supposed by boys smoking throwing-the stumps into building.
Supple jack, a New Zealander grows miles in length, now and then growing under grazed on the last steamer framed will be planted in this Staill will be used in the manufactures.
A POSTMASTER at Melrose, Maryland, named Wintz, committed suicide recently because a charge of offensive partisanship had been made against him. Please take particular note of the fact that the foolish man's name was not Melrose, but Wintz. Persons and places sometimes get mixed up by careless readers.
The climate of Nogales, A. T., always sultry, must be particularly so just now for the editor of the local paper. The Mexican General Carbo has offered a reward for him, dead or alive, if caught on Mexican soil. The ease with which the editor could be abducted ought to suggest to him the propriety of taking a vacation.
GAMBLING has been totally and fully suppressed at Sacramento, a fact which the Record-Union desires the press of California to conspicuously state, inasmuch as the action of the Sacramento authorities in licensing gambling was quite generally published and condemned at the time. It is true that poker and other games of chance are still played at the State Capitol, but as card playing for money or otherwise is not prohibited by law, the Record-Union ingeniously argues that such games cannot properly be designated as gambling games, that term being only properly applicable to what is known as "banking games."
The Young Men's Christian Association of London had a petition to present to the House of Commons, and a member of the House, named Hubbard, was asked to introduce it. Mr. Hubbard having very vague ideas regarding the proper construction of sentences and the importance of punctuation as represented by the insignificant comma, introduced the petition in this way:
Mr. Speaker, I beg to present a petition for the better protection of girls and young women from the members of the Young Men's Christian Association.
Mr. Hubbard is either a grim and sarcastic humorist, or his familiarity with the language is a trifle faulty. But perhaps he meant what he said.
We have read somewhere about somebody at some place who had some kind of an ingenious prison built by a skilled mechanic, the walls of which gradually contracted by the operation of machinery until the prisoner was crushed to death. Upon the completion of this chamber of torture its builder was the first victim, he having been condemned to die by the tyrant in order that the secret of the mechanism of the prison might die with him.
This little bit of ancient history is brought to mind by an incident which has just happened in the wonderful State of Texas. The contractors for the courthouse and jail at El Paso, which has just been completed, have been arrested for swindling and perjury and are the first prisoners in the new structure. Judging from the work done by modern constructors that is the herald of yellow fever, and by inoculating people with it secures their immunity from the disease. In Vera Cruz the Government physicians have been experimenting upon condemned murderers according to Caromona's process, and report that they have had great success. The commission appointed by President Diaz to investigate the discovery report favorably, and the Government has made a liberal appropriation to further investigate the matter. It is stated that in Hermosillo, such faith do the authorities place in the discovery, that they have issued a proclamation calling upon the people to submit themselves for inoculation. The information is as yet insufficient to justify implicit belief in the virtue of the remedy, but it is not unreasonable, and the hope that it is efficacious waits expectantly upon further investigation.
GEN. GRANT died at Mt. McGregor on Thursday morning at eight minutes past 8 o'clock, aged 64 years. His end was peaceful, and clustered about his death-bed were all whom he held most dear.
No man was more eulogized and more unmercifully criticised than Grant when alive; no departed hero has ever received more numerous, wide-spread and sincere tributes than will be written of the soldier who has just died. The errors and mistakes of his political life are generally either condoned or forgotten, but the splendor of his military career will forever remain enshrined in the hearts of all who love the glorious country which owes its existence in a great degree to the military skill and courage of the dead commander.
Presidential Proclamation
The President of the United States has just received the sad tidings of the death of that illustrious citizen and ex-President of the United States, General Ulysses S. Grant, at Mount McGregor, in the State of New York, to which place he had lately been removed in an endeavor to save his life. In making this announcement to the people of the United States, the President is impressed with the magnitude of the public loss of a great military leader, who was in the hour of victory magnanimous, amid disaster serene and self-sustained, who in every station, whether as a soldier or as a chief magistrate, twice called to power by his fellow-countrymen, trod unsawervingly the pathway of duty, undeterred by doubt, single-minded and straightforward. The entire country has witnessed with deepemotion his prolonged and patient struggle with a painful disease and has watched by his couch of suffering with tearful sympathy. The destined end has come at last and his spirit has returned to the Creator who sent it forth. The great heart of the nation that followed him with love and pride bows down in sorrow above him dead, tenderly mindful of his virtues, his great patriotic services and of the loss occasioned by his death. In testimony of respect to the memory of General Grant it is ordered that the Executive Mansion and the several Departments in Washington be draped in mourning for the period of thirty days, and that all public business shall on the day of his funeral be suspended, and the Secretary of War and the Navy will cause orders to be issued for appropriate military and naval honors to be rendered on that day. In witness whereof, I have heretounto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed.
News of the World
A Georgia man tried to cease the feet of his daughter, so not imperil her soul by dancing. The deep, dark plot of a was to mix some chemical used by a rival, so that it cheeks black indelibly instead.
A French lion-tamer is put "sensation" for Parisians in to accompany him into the rate of 100 francs the trip.
The Russian government is inging a poll tax from one hundred roublels upon every longer than a fortnight in The Tampa, Fla., Tribune that on the 24th of June were so thick at Waldo that a tram couldn't see ten feet to light the headlights.
"The foremost belle at a mer resort is not beautiful," robe is not commandingly drives a four-in-hand of zax fixes her in the public eye." Five boys went in bathing Montgomery, Ala., recently order ordered them given apiece by their mothers. The to the rear of the court room administered.
A dispatch received at Louis King of Dahomey, with has massacred the French lage. The King has also French persons, and he propose to eat them.
Meteor, the pointer dog tha was awarded first prizes at Louis New York, Toronto and New York victory award pionship of the world, died near Dallas Texas, malaria Col. Hughes was offered an 000 for the dog.
Max Hoffman, who was seen in Indiana from 1890 to 1871
There is a paper in Texas called the Vanguard. Its motto is "Radical in Holiness," and its professed object is the "promotion of holiness." Speaking of a minister who has said something it does not like, and of a paper that contained an article it does not approve, it calls them "rationalistic, holiness-hating, hereay-hunting prelates," their words having "the hiss of the serpent;" charges one of them with having "a morbid and wolfish spirit;" calls a minister "a brazen bugot," a "Pharisee," "flourishing ignorance and conceit;" and says in one of the articles that physicians are a "mercenary class of men, most of whom are blasphemous foes of Christ, who will for pay prolong the needless afflictions of their fellow men," and closes the article by professing entire sanctification.
Los Angeles has a paper called the Advocate. It is an organ of the M. E. Church South, and its editor is a minister of that denomination. It preaches piety and religion, peace and good will toward men, and practices lying, slander and hate. Religion is as grand a fact now as at any time in the world's history, and if it is losing its hold upon the hearts and affections of men it is solely because of the character, the shallowness and insincerity of some of the men who are permitted and licensed by the various denominations to expound it to the world.
The Creator who sent it forth. The great heart of the nation that followed him with love and pride bows down in sorrow above him dead, tenderly mindful of his virtues, his great patriotic services and of the loss occasioned by his death. In testimony of respect to the memory of General Grant it is ordered that the Executive Mansion and the several Departments in Washington be draped in mourning for the period of thirty days, and that all public business shall on the day of his funeral be suspended. and the Secretaries of War and the Navy will cause orders to be issued for appropriate military and naval honors to be rendered on that day. In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed.
Done at the city of Washington, this twenty-third day of July, Year of our Lord, one thousand eight hundred and eighty-five, and of the independence of the United States the one hundred and tenth.
(Signed) GROVER CLEVELAND.
By the President.
T. F. BAYARD, Secretary of State.
The time and place of burial of Gen. Grant had not been decided upon up to a late hour yesterday afternoon.
The Cholera in Spain.
MADRID, July 22.—Incomplete returns of the progress of the cholera in Spain yesterday show a total of 1752 new cases and 685 deaths. These included thirteen new cases and nine deaths in the city of Madrid; forty-eight new cases and ten deaths in the province of Madrid; 163 new cases and ninety-eight deaths in the city of Saragossa; 491 new cases and 143 deaths in the province of Saragossa; ten new cases and four deaths in the city of Sevogia; thirty-six new cases and five deaths in the province of Sevogia; three new cases and five deaths in the city of Murcia; 230 new cases and sixty deaths in the province of Murcia. Cases have appeared in Huesca and Caceres.
Vigorous Disapproval.
On Sunday, at Greenville, Ala., the Rev. Lamar of the Methodist church, devoted his attention to the sins of dancing and whisky drinking. He was particularly severe in his denunciation of those who had lately formed a dancing club. Next night a crowd of men bespattered the presacher's house with rotten eggs, and afterwards paid the same attention to the store of a prominent druggist, and the residence of the editor of the Advocate.
Pacific Coast News.
A boy who remained in the water several hours at Oceanside, San Diego county, has lost his reason.
Chas. Bardwell, an employee of the West Coast Furniture Co. in San Francisco, was killed on Saturday by the fall of an elevator.
J. M. Strain, who found the biggest nugget ever taken from the Toulouse county mines (worth $8,900), died in the County Hospital at Sonora last Thursday.
The Pajaronian is alarmed over the fact that the assessment roll of its county (Santa Cruz) shows that there is only $1.50 in coin to each unit of population.
By the explosion of a coal oil stove at Stockton last Tuesday, Miss Goodspeed was severely burned about the face, and came near losing her eyesight.
There are 20,000 kegs of powder on hand at the powder mills, Santa Cruz. There are 320 kegs of powder made a day. At present the mills are busy making powder for the United States Government.
Hon. Alfred Allen died at Phoenix, A. T., last Thursday from the effect of a sunstroke. The doctors placed him in a bath tub and covered him with ice with the above mentioned fatal result.
An election was held at Murray, L. T., in the centre of the Coor d'Aleene mining district, last Saturday, the issue being whether Chinese should be allowed to work claims. The result was 410 to 108 that they should not.
In 1868 road agents robbed a stage near Blackfoot, Idaho, of 500 pounds of gold dust, which they secreted. They were sent to the Penitentiary, and their terms will expire in a few days. A close watch will be kept on them.
J. C. Frisbie was poisoned several years ago by the poison-oak. Once a year, in warm weather, the effects of the poison reappear and cause him great annoyance. He is now suffering from one of these attacks. An application of onions is used as an antidote.—San Diego Union.
The public schoolhouse in Wildflower district, Fresno county, was destroyed by fire Monday night. The loss is about $500; no insurance. The fire is supposed to have been caused by boys smoking cigarettes and throwing the stumps into debris near the building.
Supple jack, a New Zealand plant, which grows miles in length, now rising in the air and then growing under ground, was imported on the last steamer from Australia. It will be planted in this State, and if it grows, will be used in the manufacture of walking canes.
An Emitted Conversation.
Kansas City, July 21.—A most extraordinary and dramatic scene was enacted at St. Mary's Episcopal church, one of the oldest and formerly the most fashionable in the city, when the rector, the Rev. Henry D. Jardine, attempted to conduct services. He has been rector of St. Mary's for past six years, and has been of the most advanced men in the Episcopal church. Public sentiment has been immensely wrought up against Jardina, owing to the charges made against him of immoral practice. But for the presence of policemen in large numbers in the church he would undoubtedly have been shot, dragged from the pulpit and tarred and feathered. When Jardine appeared at the altar the congregation became a howling mob. In repeating the decalogue he read the seventh commandment when he was greeted with a storm of decisive laughter, stamping of feet and cries of "Rats, rats."
As soon as quiet had been in a measure restored, he proceeded in a firm voice and with peculiar emphasis to read: "Thou shalt not bear false witness." This did not have the desired effect, and was received with hisses. The Commandment, "Thou shall not covet thy neighbor's wife" called forth thunderous applause, which exceeded in violence the demonstration which had preceded it. As the rector ceased speaking and turned to kneel at the altar, another demonstration was made by the audience. All through the speaker was constantly interrupted by stamping and shouting, the exhibitions of disapproval being most pronounced when he denounced those who believed him guilty as "ignorant, prejudiced louts," and when he posed as a martyr in good cause.
During the sermon men and boys had gathered outside of the church and looked in the open windows. At the conclusion of the invective and while the rector was blessing the wine, his assistant Wilson dashed at one of the windows and closed it with a bang. The pastor, it is said, had been addicted to beer drinking, and every window in the sanctuary was filled with empty beer bottles. When the communion service was reached, the mob shouted: "Good beer; drink it down, Jardine." The female members of the church talked back to the mob, and a perfect pandemonium prevailed. Scenes of the wildest confusion were kept up until the close of the services. At the evening service the same riotous conduct was repeated.
Cure for Piles.
Piles are frequently preceded by a sense of weight in the back, loins and lower part of the abdomen, causing the patient to supFORSALE.
A FIRST CLASS BUDERAKER SPRING FARM wages but little need; newly painted.
BOARD OF EQUALIZATION.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE BOARD of Town Trustees of the town of Anaheim will meet as a Board of Equification for the purpose of equalling the amendment roll of said town of Anaheim, on the 28th, 34th 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,
K.P.NEWBOLD,Town Clerk.
Anaheim,July 2,1885.
New Drug Store.
THE UNDERSIGNED BEES 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.
STATEMENT
OF THE CONDITION OF THE
Bank of Anaheim,
At the opening of Business June 30th,1885.
ASSETS.
Cash on hand.....$ 6,060 22
Bills Receivable.....42,073 52
Real Estate.....9,564 20
Bank Lot,Vanft and Building.....6,200 00
Due from other Banks.....15,650 26
Other Assets.....$79,068 21
LIABILITIES.
Due depositors.....$52,932 63
Due other Banks.....
Capital Stock.....20,000 00
Surplus Stock.....6,735 58
State of California.
County of Los Angeles.
I,Plex James,President of the Bank of Anaheim,bearing duly sworn,dosepose and say thatthe above statement is true and correct to the bestof my knowledge and belief.
PLEZ JAMES,President.
Subscribed and sworn to before me this 1st day of July,1885.RICHARD MELROSE.Notary Public..
The public schoolhouse in Wildflower district, Fresno county, was destroyed by fire Monday night. The loss is about $500; no insurance. The fire is supposed to have been caused by boys smoking cigarettes and throwing the stumps into debris near the building.
Supple jack, a New Zealand plant, which grows miles in length, now rising in the air and then growing under ground, was imported on the last steamer from Australia. It will be planted in this State, and if it grows, will be used in the manufacture of walking canes.
Fire broke out in Miller's stable at Williams, Colusa county, on Wednesday, which destroyed the brick building occupied by Miller & Co., A. M. Hannah's saloon, P. B. Chamberlain's variety store and the postoffice and Pedro's barber shop, also Peter's blacksmith shop. Loss, $12,000.
At San Jose, as Mrs. G. A. Muirson was cooking on a coal oil stove it exploded, throwing the burning oil over her. Her son George by heroic efforts succeeded in putting out the flames, but not until she was so badly burned that it is feared that she will not recover. He, also, was severely but not dangerously burned. She is a widow, aged 70.
The residence of Frank Cavitt at Roseville was destroyed by fire Wednesday night. The family upon retiring had left a lamp burning, which exploded, throwing fire over the bed in which Mr. and Mrs. Cavitt were sleeping. They barely made their escape from the house in their night clothes. The building and contents was a total loss. Loss estimated at $500.
News of the Week.
A Georgia man tried to cut the cords in the feet of his daughter, so that she could not imperil her soul by dancing.
The deep, dark plot of a Baltimore girl was to mix some chemical with the rouge used by a rival, so that it would turn her cheeks black indelibly instead of pink.
A French lion-tamer is providing a new "sensation" for Parisians in allowing them to accompany him into the lion's cage at the rate of 100 francs the trip.
The Russian government meditates imposing a poll tax of from one hundred to two hundred ronbles upon every foreigner residing longer than a fortnight in that country.
The Tampa, Fla., Tribune gravely declares that on the 24th of June the mosquitoes were so thick at Waldo that the engineer of a train couldn't see ten feet ahead, and had to light the headlights.
"The foremost belle at a California summer resort is not beautiful, and her wardrobe is not commandingly fine; but she drives a four-in-hand of zebras, and that fixes her in the public eye."—Eastern Paper.
Five boys went in bathing at a ferry in Montgomery, Ala., and the Recorder ordered them given thirty lashes apiece by their mothers. They were taken to the rear of the court room and the punishment administered.
A dispatch received at London states that the King of Dahomey, with a large army, has massacred the French unprotected villages. The King has also captured 1000 French persons, and he and his followers propose to eat them.
Meteor, the pointer dog that successively was awarded first prizes at Cincinnati, St. Louis, New York, Toronto and other points, the New York victory awarding it the championship of the world, died a few days ago near Dallas, Texas, of malaria. The owner, Col. Hughes, was offered and refused $10,000 for the dog.
Max Hoffman, who was Secretary of State in Indiana from 1869 to 1871 died.
Cure for Piles.
Piles are frequently preceded by a sense of weight in the back, loins and lower part of the abdomen, causing the patient to suppose 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 perspiration, 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.
July 18-19
When Baby was sick, we gave her CASTORLA,
When she was a Child, she cried for CASTORLA,
When she became Miss, she clung to CASTORLA.
When she had Children, she gave them CASTORLA.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
For Sale.
A Fresh Milch Cow.
Apply to CHAS MEYER,
Anaheim.
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.CRAY NO.SHARES ANT.
Henry Hammel 224 15 $7
Gabino Real 211 2 $10
Thomas Straun 142 44 $7
C.H. Wedgewood 282 11 $0
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 Anustr., 1885, at 2 o'clock p.m. of such day, to pay delinquent assessments thereon, together with costs of advertising and expenses of sale.
RICHARD MELROSE,
Secretary Anaheim Union Water Co.
Office at the Postoffice, Anaheim,
A Great Bargain
Ninety acres of land situate 3 miles north of town is offered for sale by the undersigned at a great bargain for cash. There are on the tract.
22 1-2 ACRES OF VINES
In their third year of growth, and they are now bearing a fair crop; 20 acres of Thrifty Fruit Trees
Of various kinds one year old.
STATEMENT OF THE... Bank of Anaheim,
Of the amount of Capital paid up in Gold Colm.
Capital paid up in Gold Colm.....$20,000 00
State of California,
County of Los Angeles.
I. Plez 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.
California WIRE WORKS,
329 Market St., San Francisco,
WIRE and EVERYTHING IN WIRE.
Barbed Wire
We offer for sale at lowest price at 2 & 1 point regular and thick set.
Baling Wire
"Pacific" brand of very best steel all sizes at lowest market rates.
All meshes & widths galvanized after made for poultry yards, etc.
of all kinds for fruit dryers threshers harvesters riddles etc.
for training hopes made from steel in long lengths specially for the purpose.
Gopher Traps
and all other kinds of traps for moles, squirrels rats and mice.
for laying out vineyards divided in distances and made of steel wire.
Ornamental and Useful Wire and Iron Work.
NOTE—We meet Eastern competition by home manufacture,and sell you better goods at a lower price.
Anheuser-Busch Beer,
At BILLY'S
OPPOSITE HELMSEN'S.
ntents a glass.
One
Having purc
wareho
GENER
PRODUC
A
Dry Go
Give
A dispatch received at London states that the King of Dahomey, with a large army, has massacred the French unprotected villages. The King has also captured 1000 French persons, and he and his followers propose to eat them.
Meteor, the pointer dog that successively was awarded first prizes at Cincinnati, St. Louis, New York, Toronto and other points, the New York victory awarding it the championship of the world, died a few days ago near Dallas, Texas, of malaria. The owner, Col. Hughes, was offered and refused $10,-000 for the dog.
Max Hoffman, who was Secretary of State in Indiana from 1869 to 1871, died of small-pox a few years ago, after having been wrecked by dissipation. His family was left destitute, and his wife now supports herself and family by selling papers and keeping a fruit stand in the city.
A sensation has been created in aristocratic circles in London by the report of a fistic encounter between Lord Lonsdale and Sir George Chetwyd. The sight took place in a well-known fashionable resort in Rotten Row, and lasted ten minutes. A number of members of the lobby and other gentlemen witnessed the contest. The trouble between the two men grew out of the attention each was paying to Mrs. Langtry.
The residence of John Allman, near Oakland, was destroyed by fire on Saturday; loss $25,000, partly insured. At Santa Barbara, Chas. B. Hammond's frame dwelling was burned by the explosion of a lamp; loss $1.,000, insurance $500. At Napa, Souther & Biggs' stables were burned; loss $3000, insurance $1500. Krunge's brewery at Susanville burned; loss $2500, insurance $1000.
Peter Curto, a convict recently discharged from the Nevada Penitentiary by Judge Field, is indignant at his liberation, as it interfered with his learning the trade of shoe-maker. He said: "I had no desire to get out until I could learn the trade, and then I would have something to start with. Had I been able to make shoes in the first place, I would not have been passing counterfeit money. I was just getting along nice when that cursed order came from Judge Field.
An enormous quantity of grog is being sent to western Africa. From Boston a single vessel recently took out 132,000 gallons, and a ship which sailed previously carried a few missionaries to the tribes on the Congo and also bore 5,200 gallons of rum to the same tribe. Trendous quantities of liquor are shipped at Liverpool and Glasgow. Hamburg is now said to be providing liquor of the worst kind for the Niger and Congo regions.
A Great Bargain
Ninety acres of land situate 2 miles north of town is offered for sale by the undersigned at a great bargain for cash. There are on the tract.
22 1-2 ACRES OF VINES
In their third year of growth, and they are now bearing a fair crop; 20 acres of Thrifty Fruit Trees
Of various kinds, one year old; 471 acres of the tract is unimproved. It is as fine a body of land as three is 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 acre 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. HABLEY,
ANAHEIM.
Vineyard For Sale.
20 ACRES OF VINEYARD IS OFFERED FOR SALE IN NORTH ANAHEIM. The vines are four years old—Zinfandel, Malvolde, Muscat and Mission grape.
There is a Good Crop of Grapes
New 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 P. H. Keith or to the Anaheim Immigration Association.
CHEAP MUSIC
Send to Will K Reeves, Ashtabula, Ohio, or Catalogue (Saint Free) Over 2,600 places Vocal and Instrumental music usually sold at from £2 to £5 per copy; our price is 5 cents per copy.
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 gold 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. K SCAMMEL & CO., July11-6m
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 of scouts and spies, forlorn hopes, heroic bravery, imprisonments and hair-breadth escapes, romantic incidents, hand-to-hand struggles, bumorous and tragic events, perilous journeys, bold dashes, brilliant successes and magnanimous actions on each side the line. 70 chapters, profusely illustrated to the life. No other book at all like it Outsells everything Address: STANDARD PUBLISHING HOUSE,
298 Pine St., ST. LOUIS, Mo.
MONEY
Made easily in a pliess business. Send 5 cents for all necessary information and津贴 to go to work with. Don't miss this chapter. F. V. Johnson,
Ashtabula, Ohio.
CLEARANCE SALE OF
Dry Goods, Clothing, Boots and Shoes,
Hats and Caps.
In Order to Make Room for Our
FALL AND WINTER GOODS
We have reduced prices lower than ever in all our lines. All goods will be sold at
Extremely Low Prices Without Reserve.
CALL AND EXAMINE GOODS AND PRICES FOR YOURSELF.
Respectfully,
RIMPAU BROS,
KELLOGG BROS.
One Price Cash Store!
AT THE DEPOT.
Having purchased the stock of the assignees of M. H. Cheeseman and the warehouse property of D. E. Miles we are now prepared to do a
GENERAL MERCHANDISING BUSINESS,
KELLOGG BROS.
One Price Cash Store!
AT THE DEPOT.
Having purchased the stock of the assignees of M. H. Cheeseeman 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
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.
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
Executive Committee
J.P.Zeyn,
Treasurer.
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.
Treespassers will be prosecuted.
By order.
C.J.SKETCHLEY,
Superintendent California Ostrich Farming Company
GENERAL AGENTS WANTED
Of extra ability and experience, to take general ap- pelling agencies, to find and start other commensors on fast-selling books. Extraordinary inducements. Applicants must show they mean business by stating by letter (no postal card) in full their experience, etc.
HENRY BUCKLIN & CO.
291 M. Second St., St. Louis, Mo.
School Bond Election Notice.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TO THE QUALL- fied electors of Ocean 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 8th day of August, A.D., 1864, 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 Peterson Browns, 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 heartworm duly adopted.
The amount of the bonds proposed to be issued is twenty-five hundred dollars ($2500) of the denomination of $0.00 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: vint-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.
R.P.JUSTICE
J.H.GLANER
R.A.MARTIN
District School Trustees.