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anaheim-gazette 1886-02-27

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ANAHEIM VOL. XVI. THE SHAKERS. Not many people know much of these singular people. They started about one hundred years ago in the State of New York. An illiterate, fanatical English woman named Ann Lee was the founder of the Order. She lived and died at the Shaker community near Albany, New York. Their history is quite remarkable, and shows how the most absurd theories and doctrines may find expents even in our own enlightened land. These people at length grew into organizations of community interest, fifteen of which now exist. These communes, or "Sociates," as they are termed, hold all things in common. The head center is at Mt Lebanon, Columbia county, New York. Each Society in the United States is governed by officers appointed by the head central authority. These various Society Heads hold the property of each Society in trust, but can buy and sell with the consent of the members. Their central doctrines are cathary, community of goods and confession of sins to the Elders. They have a sort of fantastic theory and a fantastic form of worship. They march, they dance, they sing and sometimes shake. Their "shakes" are nothing but shindigs, such as you may see at a Lunigan's ball. Occasionally some emotional or impressible brother, or more often sister, gets into a state of nervous exaltation and goes through a lot of high jinks that one would only expect to see in Bedlam. They live in large houses containing from fifty to one hundred people. These buildings have two, three or sometimes four stories, each floor having a wide nail, the men occupying the rooms on one side and the women on the other. They are governed by a system of espionage, each watching and reporting every other. This they are required to do the world. Fortunately it is rapidly losing its hold on the respect of mankind. It is drowned to early extinction. Such a small and religious abortion can find no larger place in the mental and moral sunlight of the nineteenth century. Grand Army Programme. SACRAMENTO, Feb. 20 — The Department encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic met at Old Fellows' temple, Commander Warneld presuling. The election of officers proceeded, with the following result: For Senior Vice Department, Commander Geo. E. Gard, of Los Angeles; for Junior Vice Department, Commander S. F. Daniels, of Alameda; for Medical Director, N. S. Hamlin, of Marysville; for Department Chaplain, Rev W. L. Stevens, of St Helena; for Council of Administration, J. H. Barbour, of San Jose; Geo. L. Harris and Chas. E. Royce, of San Francisco; Allen F. Bird, of Woodland, and Frank D. Swantzer. This afternoon delegates to the National Encampment were elected as follows: Stuart M. Taylor, W. H. L. Barnes, E. S. Solomon, Geo. Babcock of San Francisco, I. F. Laycock of Reno, Gen. Chapman of Red Bluff Alternates: A. G. Bennett of San Jose, E. Edwards of Santa Ana, P. H. McGraw of Oakland, T. H. Allen of Oakland, J. S. Moore of Sacramento, Z. V. Goldsby of Santa Cruz. For the next encampment Los Angeles was selected by a large majority. How the Jury Stood. When the jury went out last Friday noon in the Perkins Baldwin case they merely organized and then went to dinner. On returning, the first ballot was unanimous for the plaintiff. It appears that the mind of... How the Jury Stood. When the jury went out last Friday noon in the Perkins Baldwin case they merely organized and then went to dinner. On returning, the first ballot was unanimous for the plaintiff. It appears that the mind of the jury was made up pretty well on that point before the argument by counsel began at all. This, of course, transpired after everything was done by comparing notes. After this was settled as a fact by ballot, the next thing was the amount. The first ballot cast to settle this showed seven votes for $250,000 damages and one for $20,000. The other four were from $50,000 to $150,000. On the second ballot there were eight for $150,000. The $20,000 man would not vote at all on the second or third cast. It took four votes to get the twelve jurors to agree to the sum finally brought in of $75,000. It is the largest verdict ever awarded for breach of promise to marry. Los Angeles stands at the head for magnitude in all she puts her hand to. Six Artesian Wells. Six artesian wells have been bored by William Manson on the Cavit trail in San Bernardino valley, to supply the Gage Canal leading to Riverside, with water. The wells are all flowing ones, and a plot graph of them, which has been taken, shows the large amount of water which they supply. Three of the wells, each of seven inches in diameter, grow into the air a colding of water this size from two feet to thirty-one inches high. The other wells have been plugged, with a small hole in each plug, through which the water is forced to a height of ten or fifteen feet. The well giving the largest amount of water furnishes 2,200 gallons of water per minute, and the six together form about 5,560 gallons per minute. Thus far there has been no perceptible diminution in the flow. The cost of the largest flowing well was $750. Another group of wells will soon be flowing. It is estimated that these wells are worth $250,000 to Mr. Gage. A Street Car at Sea. There is a lawyer in Boston who is in the habit at times of addressing individual jurymen when attentive or restless and sometimes his argumentem and hominem is effective. Some time ago he was trying a case against a street railway company, and there was an old sailor on the jury who seemed to give no heed to what either counsel said. The lawyer made his most eloquent appeals, but all in vain. Finally he stopped in front of the old sailor and said: "Mr. Juryman, Edwards of Santa Ana, P. H. Metraw of Oakland, T. H. Allen of Oakland, J. S. Moore of Sacramento, Z. V. Goldsby of Santa Cruz. For the next encampment Los Angeles was selected by a large majority. The greatest trouble is with the sexual arrangements. In spite of all their efforts to suppress sexual commerce, it does exist and sometimes in high places. Men and women go out and get married frequently, which debars them from returning unless they separate and live as they did before. Frequently a sister is forced to retire, she having allowed herself to be seduced by some wicked Shaker. These things in some of the Societies are far from being uncommon, though not upheld. The fact is, the old Shakers, as a class, are good men and women, but the modern accessions are mostly "shaky." And the various Societies are falling into the hands of unworthy men and women. They are giving up many of their old-time notions and customs, and are fast becoming worldly and crafty. They cannot trust anybody with money, as they have been so often robbed. Consequently the old-tried Shakers have in their dotage at A Street Car at Sea. There is a lawyer in Boston who is in the habit at times of addressing individual jurymen when inattentive or restless and sometimes his argumentem and hominem is effective. Some time ago he was trying a case against a street railway company, and there was an old sailor on the jury who seemed to give no heed to what either counsel said. The lawyer made his most eloquent appeals, but all in vain. Finally he stopped in front of the old sailor and said: "Mr. Juryman, I will tell you just how this happened. The plaintiff was in command of the outward bound open car, and stood in her starboard channels. Along came the inward bound close car and just as their bows met she jumped the track, sheered to port and knocked the plaintiff off and ran over him. The sailor was all attention after this version of the affair, and joined in a $5,000 verdict for the injured man. Here is a Queer Liquor Law. A liquor law introduced into the Ohio Assembly provides that nobody shall sell, give or furnish intoxicants to be used as a beverage to any person who is not a legal habitual drinker, and does not have with him a certificate showing that he is such a drinker. Any resident of Ohio more than twenty-one years of age may become a legal habitual drinker by making affidavit before the Probate Judge of his county, registering his name, age, residence and occupation, and paying fifty cents for registry and the certificate, which the Judge will thereupon issue. Selling to a non-registered drinker is a misdemeanor punishable with fine and imprisonment. Killed his Mother-in-Law. Folson, Cal., Feb. 20.—Austin Keely had an altercation with his mother-in-law, Mrs. Rice, at Clarksville, and, in his endeavor to avoid injury from the blows of a hammer with which she attacked him, he choked her to death. Keely gave himself up, and will be examined for murder. WEEKLY GAIL ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA: SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1886. IMPROVED RESERVOIR CONSTRUCTION. At Tunbridge Wells, near London, a new reservoir has been constructed, capable of holding 45,000,000 gallons of water. In the construction of the reservoir some new methods have been adopted, which will be likely to interest many persons engaged in such work. Eight acres of land were secured for the site, and the walls take up one acre, leaving seven acres covered with water. The excavations necessitated the removal of 120,000 yards of earth, which was used in the construction of two artificial embankments, each 156 feet thick at the base and 27 feet deep, having a bottom surface of 21.418 square yards, which is concreted to a depth of 12 inches, while the slope measure 13.222 square yards, and concreted with an average of 9 inches, the whole surface of concrete being afterward covered with asphalt. At a dinner recently given to Mr. W. Brentnall, the engineer of the work, on its completion, in course of his remarks he said: "There are some features of engineering interest in connection with these works. I will mention two only, which will perhaps allay the fears some may have as to the stability of the embankments. Storage reservoirs are usually so constructed that one artificially made embankment is required, which is built up in thick layers of earth of 11 inches to 2 feet in thickness, tipped loosely from barrows or wagons, and consolidated by its own weight (a very uneven and imperfect consolidation, taking an indemnite length of time), a clay puddle wall in the center of the embankment being relied on for water tightness. This sometimes fails with most calamitous results. I made a wide departure from the ordinary method of construction, just explained, in constructing the described J. C. Flood heading the list with $24,500, representing 245 shares. The Directors are J. L. N. Sheppard, J. P. Pierce, Henry A. Palmer, P. N. Lilienthal, John McKee, George L. Brander, Wendell Easton, George T. Marye, Jr., and Oliver Eldridge. The list of stockholders includes the names of many prominent business men of San Francisco. The Alcoholic Value of a Bushel of Corn. The Milling World, in answer to a correspondent, who calls in question the accuracy of a previous statement in the same paper on the percentage of our cereal crop used in distilling, gives the following curious statement of the value of a bushel of corn when converted into an alcoholic beverage: Let our correspondent says the editor, trage a bushel of corn, for instance, from the field to the drinker's glass. The grower works at least two hours in raising a bushel of corn. He sells the bushel for 30 cents on his farm. He spends the 30 cents for two drinks, thus parting forever with his corn. Now follow the corn. It cost 30 cents, and is turned into seventeen quarts of toxicating drink. The distillers receive 40 cents a gallon for converting it into whisky. The corn in its changed shape represents the original 30 cents and the $1.70 for the distiller, making its value at this stage, $2. Then the government tax of 90 cents a gallon adds $3.85 to the value, swelling it to $5.85. The bushel of corn now passes on to the job salesmen and wholesalers, and through them to the retailers. By the time it has reached the retailers it has been "reduced" in strength and increased in quantity by the admixture of water and other more harmful substances, so that its measure has at least been doubled, and the corn, RAILROADS VS. NEWSPAPERS. A curious warfare is being hotly waged at Detroit, Michigan. It is between the Michigan Central, the Wabash, the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern and the Detroit, Lansing and Northern Railroad companies, on the one hand, and the four English daily newspapers—the Free Press, Tribune, News and Journal—on the other. The equal numerical division of the forces does not of itself make the conflict an equal one. A month ago the four railroads named resolved that after January 1st they would no longer pay the newspapers for printing their respective time cards; For years past regular advertising rates have been charged for publishing the time-tables. At the meeting when it was decided to stop the practice the roads argued that the papers must publish the time of the arrival and departure of all passenger trains as a mere matter of news, and reasoning thus it was not a difficult thing to convince the railroad representatives present that for years the Detroit newspapers had been extorting money from the roads. However, as a mere matter of courtesy, the roads decided to grant the daily annual passes "on condition of publication of the time-cards of the company." This they had long done with the country press, and they failed to see why the condition should not also be exacted from the daffies. The surprise of the roads was great, therefore when the Detroit daffies, as if by previous understanding simultaneously stopped publication of the railroad time cards, and on the 10th instant, when the annual passes expired, refused to accept the new ones offered. The different lines were also notified that all notices of excursions change in time of the running of trains, and similar announcements which the papers there have been published from The Rabbit Plague in Australia. Some time ago we published a statement of the ravages of rabbits in Australia, they have become so numerous and destructive that the authorities were alarmed, and puzzled to know how to get rid of the pests. It was stated that one of England's colonies The freight rates on oranges from Los Angeles are: To all points on the Missouri river, including St. Paul, Omaha, New Orleans, St. Louis and Kansas City, $1 per cwt. To Chicago and Milwaukee, $1.05 per cwt., and to all points east of Chicago, $1.25 per cwt. A car load is 350 boxes, and a gallon of conventing into it with whisky. The corn in its changed shape represents the original 30 cents and the $1.70 for the distiller, making its value at this stage, $2. Then the government tax of 90 cents a gallon adds $3.85 to the value, swelling it to $5.85. The bushel of corn now passes on to the job salesmen and wholesalers, through them to the retailers. By the time it has reached the retailers it has been "reduced" in strength and increased in quantity by the admixture of water and other more harmful substances, so that its measure has at least been doubled, and the corn, when it begins to drop into the drinkers' glasses on the bar, represents about 8½ gallons of drink. Allowing sixty drinks to the gallon, the official bar average, the bushel of corn will furnish 270 drinks, which, at an average of 15 cents to the drink, will take $40.50 from the pockets of the consumers. This, added to the $5.85 put into the corn up to the time of reaching the jobbers, makes a total of $46.35. Subtract the 30 cents which the farmer received for the corn, and the balance, $46.05, will show the amazing profits made by those who do not till the soil to grow the corn, but who multiply infinitely by scientific means the mischievous powers of the grain, and who from this hurtful multiplication reap easy, large and reliable profits. The original price of the bushel of corn is contained 155 times in the ultimate receipts from it. In this way the enormous wasting power of alcoholic drink can be easily understood. Our correspondent can follow a bushel of oats, rye, barley, malt or wheat from the producer to the consumer through the same channel, and in each instance his computations will satisfactorily answer his questions. Put the Agreement in Writing. How many misunderstandings arise from the loose way in which business matters are talked over, and then when each party puts his own construction, the matter is dismissed by each with the words, "all right, all right." Frequently it turns out all wrong, and becomes a question for lawyers and the courts. More than three-fourths of the litigation of the country would be saved, if people would put down their agreements in writing, and sign their names to it. Each word in our language has its own particular meaning, and memory may; by the change of its position in a sentence, convey an entirely different idea from that intended. When once reduced to writing, ideas are fixed, and expensive law-suits avoided. Rates on Oranges. The freight rates on oranges from Los Angeles are: To all points on the Missouri river, including St. Paul, Omaha, New Orleans, St. Louis and Kansas City, $1 per cwt. To Chicago and Milwaukee, $1.05 per cwt., and to all points east of Chicago, $1.25 per cwt. A car load is 350 boxes, and a gallon of conventing into it with whisky. The surprise of the roads was great, therefore, when the Detroit dames, as if by previous understanding simultaneously stopped the publication of the railroad time cards, and on the 10th instant, when the annual passes expired, refused to accept the new ones offered. The different lines were also notified that all noticees of excursions change in the time of the running of trains, and similar announcements which the papers there have been accustomed to publish free of charge, would be accepted only on payment of regular reading matter rates. The spirit of the fight soon spread to everybody connected with the press, and although no orders to the effect were issued, it was understood in every newspaper office that war had been declared and that the campaign was to be a long one. Since the 10th of January there is not a reporter who has not been able to scent a railroad accident at twice the distance as formerly, and several recent fatal accidents, as depicted, have been unusually harrowing and distressing. Among other things the papers have suddenly discovered that a number of railroad gates are needed at an equal number of street crossings, and this discovery resulted this week in State Railroad Commissioner William McPherson of Howell coming here to inspect the alleged dangerous localities, and the gates will no doubt be ordered up by the Commissioner. The proposition of the railway companies owning elevators to charge extra storage for grain therein in order to force its removal, although an unusual thing, has just been found to be a "high-handed outrage" on the Detroit Board of Trade, and such a howl was raised that the companies changed their minds and notified the Board of Trade that extra storage rates would not be exacted. How Would you Like it? New York Sun, Feb 8 The girdle of ice around Manhattan Island was thicker and harder to plough through yesterday than it had been at any time since the recent succession of freezes. In the East River only the dark trails of ferryboats struggling from shore to shore showed that some water was still beneath the frosty mass that looked almost solid enough for the boats to coast across on. The upper bay, filled with crushed ice, looked like a snow-covered plain. Few steamers and no sailing vessels ventured out. The bark P. J. Palmer, bound for Buenos Ayres, and the brig Donal Ena, for China, went as far as Staten Island, and put in at the American Docks, because of the dangerous floating ice. Capt. Jack Brown of the revenue cutter Grant reported that he had seen a brown seal in the bay, but inquiry developed that it was merely the private seal of the Brown family, and that Capt. Jack was joking. The ice about City Island is very trouble-borne to passing vessels, and only steamers... The Rabbit Plague in Australia. Some time ago we published a statement of the ravages of rabbits in Australia, they having become so numerous and destructive that the authorities were alarmed, and puzzled to know how to get rid of the pests. It was stated that one of England's colonies had already lost two millions of sheep by them. One flock owner, it was stated, had trapped five thousand of the troublesome creatures, but that they were so numerous they must be killed by the million to per centibly check the rapid multiplication of these prolific and devouring pests. In a recent English newspaper we see that, although Queensland has not as yet been afflicted by the rabbit plague, attempts are being made to prevent their ingress into their territorial limits by erecting rabbit-proof wire fences on their boundary line. Tenders have been accepted for 2,550 miles of fencing wire and 450 miles of wire netting of small mesh. The order will be shipped from England fortnwith. A route has been laid out, running for a distance of 300 miles to the intersecting angle of Queensland and New South Wales, and thence northward for 100 miles. The Queensland government has voted £50,000 for this purpose. It is estimated that 1,300 miles of fencing will have to be laid in New South Wales; while in Victoria so great is the demand for wire that the authorities have signified a willingness to forego the duty upon it. A Novel Enterprise The California Title Insurance and Trust Company has filed articles of incorporation, with a capital stock of $250,000, divided into 2,500 shares. The purpose of the corporation is to conduct a business that shall include every kind of real estate transactions, buying and selling, conveyancing, searching and insuring titles. The sum of $200,000 of the capital stock has been already sub- Rates on Oranges The freight rates on oranges from Los Angeles are: To all points on the Missouri river, including St. Paul, Omaha, New Orleans, St. Louis and Kansas City, $1 per cwt. To Chicago and Milwaukee, $1.05 per cwt., and to all points east of Chicago, $1.25 per cwt. A car load is 350 boxes, and weighs about 28,000 pounds. The rate by passenger train is $2.50 per cwt., or about the old rates of a year or two ago. As the fast freight cars go to Omaha in four days there is no need of shipping by passenger train. This is a vast saving to shippers and growers. Accidentally Killed by his Son EUREKA, Nev., Feb. 20.—James Berryman, a raucher four miles from town, called at Thomas Pedler's house on Ruby Hill, this morning, and while there pulled a small revolver from his pocket which he had just purchased. Mr. Pedler took the revolver in his hand, and then handed it to his son Harry, a boy of sixteen years. The boy, believing that it was loaded, pulled back the hammer, which slipped from his thumb, and the piece exploded. Pedler received the bullet in the lower part of the abdomen, and died in half an hour. Denouncing Spurious Wine New York, Feb. 20.—The convention called by the American Agricultural and the National Dairymen's Associations, has adopted the following resolution: Resolved That the adulteration of wines and the putting on the market of a poisonous compound called wine, is one of the gigantic frauds and crying abuses practiced on the American public; this peril to health and the demoralizing effects upon the growth of grapes and the honest wine productions of the country we feel called upon to denounce, and hold that stringent laws should be enforced to arrest this gross evil and punish all offenders. The church where Rev. E. E. Hale administers to the spiritual need of his congregation is popularly known from its ugly steeple, like an old-fashioned summer house, as "The Church of the Holy Pepper-pot." The Berkeley street Church, which boasts, I suppose, the ugliest steeple in creation—certainly it is to be hoped there is none uglier—is variously known as the "Church of the Holy Dragon's Tail," the "Church of the Holy Corn-cob," the "Church of the Holy Cork-screw," and from the fancied resemblance of the spire to a pile of those articles, the "Church of the Sacred Demijohns." The church on Somerset street which was taken down a year or two since to make room for Sleeper Hall, and of which the slender and graceful spire was richly adorned with the crockets characteristic of flamboyant gothic architecture, was known to scoffers rs the "Church of the Holy Asparagus," while a predecessor of Rev. M. J. Savage succeeded, by his attachment to horses, yachts and the like, with his eccentricities in the pulpit, in winning for the Church of the Unity thetheatrical sobriquet of "Hepworth's Varieties." — Arle Bates on Boston. GAZETTE. JULY 27, 1886. NO. 21. F. H. KEITH, REAL ESTATE AGENT. Live Stock Bought and Sold on Commission. ANAHEIM. RICHARD MELROSE: HENRY S. KNAPP. Melrose & Knapp TRANSACT A GENERAL BUSINESS IN REAL ESTATE IN ALL ITS BRANCHES. LOANS NEGOTIATED, COLLECTIONS MADE, ETC. Fire Insurance Policies written and Delivered at once ALL BUSINESS CONFIDED TO THEM WILL BE Promptly and Honorably Executed. J. H. BULLARD, A. B., M. D. Physician and Surgeon. Office and Drug Store on Los Angeles St. East of Planters' Hotel. M. NEBELUNG, (Center Street, opposite Lewis' Stable). DEALER IN Cigars, Cigarettes, And the most popular brands of Chewing and Smoking Tobarcos, Pipes, etc., etc. ALL BUSINESS CONFIDED TO THEM WILL BE Promptly and Honorably Executed. J. H. BULLARD, A.B., M.D. Physician and Surgeon. Office and Drug Store on Los Angeles St. East of Planters' Hotel. OFFICE HOURS: 8 to 9:30 A.M.; 1 to 2, and 6:30 to 7:30 P.M. DR. E. L. COWAN, DENTIST, Will be in his Anaheim office on Thursday, Friday and Saturday of each week. We Have Just Received a Carload of FURNITURE! Direct from Eastern Factories. Latest Styles at prices lower than in Los Angeles. Call and examine for yourselves. F & J BACKS H. C. KELLOGG. Civil Engineer and Surveyor. (Deputy County Surveyor.) Office in Room 2, over Langenberger's Store, corner Center and Lemon streets, Anaheim. RICHARD MELROSE, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW GALETTE OFFICE Anaheim. VICTOR MONTGOMERY, Attorney-at-Law, SANTA ANA, CAL. Rooms 4 and 5, Commercial Bank building Office hours from 10 A.M. to 3 P.M. M. NEBELUNG, Real Estate & Insurance AGENT. SUBSCRIPTIONS TAKEN FOR NEWSPAPERS and Periodicals. Accounts kept with contness and accuracy. Store opposite Leeds's Stable, Anaheim. L. GUNTHER. Pioneer Boot and Shoe Maker, Cor. Adele and Los Angeles streets, ANAHEIM. GEORGE BAUER, M. NEBELUNG, (Center Street, opposite Lewis Stable). DEALER IN Cigars, Cigarettes, And the most popular brands of Chewing and Smoking Tobacco, Pipes, etc., etc. Call and examine my fresh stock of Candles and Cakes. I always keep on hand a full and well selected stock of stationery, such as Blankbooks, Memorandums, Letter, Note, Bill and Legal papers, Inks, Postcards, Envelopes and a general school supply. Legal Blanks (Barcroft's form) a specialty. Fresh Fruits of the season and Nuts always on hand. Also a stock of Canned Fruits, Jams and Meats which I offer at the lowest market prices. Highest prices paid for eggs. JOHN HANNA, Real Estate & Commission AGENT. OVER FIRST NATIONAL BANK. Entrance No. 120 North Main Street, LOS ANGELES. P.O. BOX 1009. J. M. Griffith & Co., LUMBER DEALERS (Near Railroad Depot) ANAHEIM Keep constantly on hand DOORS, BLIND'S, WINDOWS, MOULDINGS. POSTS, SHAKES, SHINGLES, LATH, HAIR, PLASTER OF PARIS. Anaheim Grist Mills Operating on WEDNESEAYS and SATURDAYS of each week. Grain, Feed, Meal, etc., of all varieties. Corn Shelled and Shipped. Real Estate & Insurance Agent, SUBSCRIPTIONS TAKEN FOR NEWSPAPERS and Periodicals. Accounts kept with honesty and accuracy. Store opposite Lewis's Stable Anaheim. L. GUNTHER, Pioneer Boot and Shoe Maker, Cor. Adele and Los Angeles streets. ANAHEIM. GEORGE BAUER, BOOT AND SHOE MAKER, Center Street. MAKING AND REPAIRING AT THE LOWEST cash price. All orders promptly attended to. All work guaranteed. WM. R. HARKER, SADDLE & HARNESS MAKER, CENTER STREET, ANAHEIM. S. A. DENNIS, Carriage and Sign Painter, Center Street, Anaheim. OFFERS AS REFERENCES THE NUMEROUS wagons and signs painted by him in Anaheim. PRICES REASONABLE. The patronage of the public respectfully solicited may be E. G. HUNTINGTON, Carpenter and Builder Shop on Los Angeles street, in rear of Wille's Cooper Shop. All Kinds of REPAIRING Done. Oct. 30. ANDREW PFAHLER, (Successor to A. E. White) Blacksmith and Horse-Shoer, LOS ANGELES ST., ANAHEIM. The patronage of the public is solicited, and satisfaction guaranteed. SHINGLES, LATH, HAIR, PLASTER OF PARIS. Anaheim Grist Mills Operating on WEDNESEAYS and SATURDAYS of each week. Grain, Feed, Meal, etc., of all varieties. Corn Shelled and Shipped Chas. Willie Chas. Albrecht. Wille & Albrecht, Properties of the Old Pioneer Cooperage. AUGUSTE STREET. ANAHEIM, CAL. COOPERAGE A LARGE QUANTITY OF BARRELS, HALF BARRELS 10 Gallon and 5 Gallon Keqs For Sale Cheap. Apply to B. DREYFUS & CO, Anaheim. J. WALTON Is prepared to fill orders for FRESH MILCH COWS AND BEEF CATTLE On short notice and at low rates. Orders addressed to me at the Westminster Postoffice will receive prompt attention.