anaheim-gazette 1886-04-10
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WEEKLY GAZETTE.
Published every Saturday.
Established 1870.
Richard Melrose
EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION:
One Year ... $2.00
Six months ... 1.25
Three months ... 75
OFFICE—In P. O. Building, Center Street, Anahiem
TRANSIENT ADVERTISING:
SPACE
1 week
2 weeks
3 weeks
4 weeks
1 square ... $1.00
2 squares ... $1.50
3 squares ... $2.00
4 squares ... $2.50
5 squares ... $3.00
6 squares ... $4.00
7 squares ... $5.00
8 squares ... $6.00
W. H. MASSER M.D., D.D.S.
D.R. WILDER D.D.S.
MASSER & WILDER,
DENTISTS,
WE RESPECTFULLY ANNOUNCE TO YOU that one of us will be at the Planters' Hotel on the 10th of every month to attend to any dental work that you may wish to have done.
We are prepared to execute all branches of dentistry in an artistic and substantial manner at a reasonable price.
We replace the partial loss of teeth without a plate and place gold crowns on roots and decayed teeth by a new patent process.
We extract teeth without pain by the use of vitalized air.
Owing to the generous patronage of our many friends, we are compelled to move into more commodious quarters, in Parlor 13 Nadeau Block, Los Angeles.
Respectfully yours,
DRS MASSER & WILDER.
GOLDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERY
CURES ALL HUMORS,
from a common Blotch, or Eruption, to the worst Scrofulin, Salt-rheum, "Fever-sores," Scaly or Rough Skin, in short, all diseases caused by bad blood are conquered by this powerful
Hospitals for Nurses.
Advancement of sciences of all natures and descriptions has been very rapid during the past twenty-five years, and among them none has made longer strides toward perfection than that which looks to the alleviation of suffering in animals, the healing of wounds caused by accidents and the caring of such diseases as the dumb creation is heir to.
A few years since the number of practicing veterinarians in this city was not only very limited, but the facilities necessary to a proper and thorough dealing with patients was lacking. Such an institution as a horse hospital was entirely unknown, and the opportunity for the students to obtain the practical knowledge necessary for a perfect acquirement of the science was extremely limited.
To-day all these privileges are enjoyed, and hospitals for the cure of sick animals abound. The majority of these are, of course, private establishments, governed by individual veterinarians. In fact, the only one which may be said to partake of the nature of a public institution is the American Veterinary Hospital, on West Fifty-fourth street, which forms the practical department of the American Veterinary College. At this place there is, in addition to the care of private patients, a free dispensary for the care of animals whose owners have not the means to employ a skilled veterinarian in the treatment of their sick, and the extent of the practice may be judged from the fact that the list of free patients runs up to between 500 to 600 annually of horses alone.
In the entire hospital the total number of horses treated is nearly 2,500 annually, and the growth of the art can be well appreciated from the fact that ten years ago the number received in this same hospital was only 710. To what a state the knowledge of diseases and the power of cure has arrived is evidenced that while of the 2,500 treated in a year, upward of a thousand are injured to the extent that surgical operation was necessary, most of which required the use of anesthetics, the mortality of the whole number was only about one per cent.
The number of horse patients constantly under treatment average from twenty-five, and these are cared for as tenderly as human beings would be under the details of the Yesterday meeting Infanta Eulalia Montpensier took. The bride and her separately to the parents, the ladies bers of the house series, which were who were kept The Queen Regen She has scarceely gic attacks, and la dais to the rere were Queen Isabell the Due de Mon Chartres, not in lalia looked very satin dress, tru a coronet of diane Paris was in whitors knelt before mony, on either a groom. The Are ed. The small chie by the members o forms, the ladies tillas. All the m corps, including French, German tives, were present look of the bride w showed much emo The bridgroom lo uniform, with thercers of his regimen emony. The Duco son on both cheek tearfully kissed Quinta. All the roya gether privately. left by special train anjuez to spend thof the Infanta Eulalia £6,000 annually from Duc de Montpensier usually on her, and value of the present Dispatch to London.
About B
"Give me a beaver."
GOLDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERY
CURES ALL HUMORS,
from a common Blotch, or Eruption,
to the worst Scrofula, Sait-rheum,
"Fever-sores," Scaly or Rough Skin,
in short, all diseases caused by bad blood are conquered by this powerful, purifying, and lovorgrating medicine. Great Eating Ulcers rapidly heal under its benign influence. Especially has it manifested its potency in curing Tetter, Rose Hash, Bolt Carbuncles, Sore Eyes, Scrofulous Sores and Swellings, Hip-Joint Disease, White Swellings, Goitre, or Thick Neck, and Enlarged Glands. Send ten cents in stamps for a large treatise, with colored plates, on Skin Diseases, or the same amount for a treatise on Scrofulous Afections.
"The BLOOD IS THE LIFE."
Thoroughly cleanse it by using Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, and good digestion, a fair skin, buoyant spirit, vital strength, and soundness of constitution, will be established.
CONSUMPTION,
which is Scrofulous Disease of the Lungs, is promptly and certainly arrested and cured by this God-given remedy, if taken before the last stages of the disease are reached. From its wonderful power over this terribly fatal disease, when first offering this now celebrated remedy to the public, Dr. Pierce thought seriously of calling it his "Consumption Cure," but abandoned that name as too limited for a medicine which, from its wonderful combination of tonic, or strengthening, alternative, or blood-cleansing, anti-biious, pectoral, and nutritive properties, is unequaled, not only as a remedy for consumption of the lungs, but for all
CHRONIC DISEASES OF THE LIVER, BLOOD, AND LUNGS.
If you feel dull, drowsy, debilitated, have shallow color of skin, or yellowish-brown spots on face or body, frequent headache or dizziness, bad taste in mouth, internal heat or chills, alternating with hot flashes, low spirits and gloomy boreddings, irregular appetite, and coated tongue you are suffering from Indigestion, Dyspepsia, and Torpid Liver, or "Billousness." In many cases only part of these symptoms are experienced. As a remedy for all such cases, Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery has no equal.
For Weak Lungs, Spitting of Blood, Shortness of Breath, Bronchitis, Severe Coughs, Consumption, and kindred affections, it is a sovereign remedy.
Send ten cents in stamps for Dr. Pierces book on Consumption. Sold by Druggists.
PRICE $1.00 FOR 6 BOTTLES
OR 6 BOTTLES FOR $5.00.
World's Dispensary Medical Association,
Proprietors, 663 Main St., BUFFALO, N.Y.
Pierce's LITTLE Pleasant LIVER URGENTIVE COLLETS.
ANTI-BILIOUS and CATHARTIC.
Sold by Druggists. 25 cents a vial.
$500 REWARD
is offered by the proprietors of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy for a case of catarrh which they cannot cure.
If you have a discharge from the nose, offensive or otherwise, partial loss of smell, taste, or bearing, weak eyes, dull pain or pressure in head, you have Catarrh. Thou-
ted from the fact that ten years ago the number received in this same hospital was only 710. To what a state the knowledge of diseases and the power of cure has arrived is evidenced that while of the 2,500 treated in a year, upward of a thousand are injured to the extent that surgical operation was necessary, most of which required the use of anesthetics, the mortality of the whole number was only about one per cent.
The number of horse patients constantly under treatment average from twenty to twenty-five, and these are cared for as tenderly as human beings would be under the same circumstances. They are placed in large box-stalls with every requisite for comfort, and all the appurtenances necessary for hospital use. The veterinary college has a class numbering 125 students, and a medical staff of four, of which Prof. A. Leantarl, M. D. F. S., is at the head for practical surgical work in the hospital.
A Sporting World reporter called at the hospital a day or two since and held a conversation with one of the faculty relative to the progress made in the science of animal surgery during the past twenty-five years. While evidently willing to give his opinion, the medical gentleman, however, requested that his name should not be printed.
"So far as veterinary science is concerned," he said, "its strides in America during a quarter of a century have been marvelous, but it is, I believe, only in its infancy even yet."—Sporting World.
Sister Venus:
Venus, so well known to us all as the loveliest object in the heavens, the evening and the morning star, resembles closely our own earth. Its size is about the same, its diameter being 7,660 miles; its day is almost the same length, and its density is rather less than five times that of water. It revolves round the sun at a distance of 60,-000,000 miles in the space of 224 days. Like Mercury, however, Venus is moonless. Passing the earth in the meantime we come to the well-known red planet, Mars. This planet is particularly interesting in many points of view. Next to Mercury, it is the smallest of the four interior planets, its diameter being only 4,200 miles or little more than half of the earth or Venus. Its distance from the sun is 141,000,000 miles, and it completes its circuit in 687 days. The length of its day does not differ materially from that of our own. Mars has two moons,and one of them presents a phenomenon unique in the system. No other moon behaves like this one; for it goes round Mars about three times every day; that is to say,它 goes faster round Mars than Mars does on its own axis. Imagine our moon rising and setting three times every twenty-four hours.Another interesting feature in Mars is this:We can see through our telescopes what seems to be the conflagration of its continents and oceans,and also accumulation of snow at its poles.
About Bears:
"Give me a bear in a Washington-street day.
As he left the store friend and said:
"His asking for an incident which he for a hat manufactures that time silk hat lieved to be,a beaver,manded the trade of rich residents of th one day for a beaver expressed a doubt at beaver.' I'll prove he sent me a note to best I might and sent brought the note down.He said in t to mind his ringing from the store to th paid no attention to ry,bud did the job was shown to the man satisfied that the l were genuine for and
"The boy who wa ing so long coming de ter,and the boss ad tirn's expense.That good many times,bou are called by their to raise the price s sighed."
A Southwaters:
One of those heroes bears but little lives Her name is Sallie P has been bedridden w years,and she has had dren,two boys and t last year she bought off of it original forest,a two boys,fourteen cleared five acres.S rollled the logs together the fence and burned help and made last ye and also corn and pea use,paid $00 pounds her store account and She has bought her m paid for it.In addition the cooking and gong s and chickens.
Pierce's LITTLE
pleasant LIVER
urgative
pellets PILLS.
ANTI-BILIOUS and CATHARTIC.
Sold by Druggists. 25 cents a vial.
$500 REWARD
is offered by the proprietors of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy for a case of catarrh which they cannot cure.
If you have a discharge from the nose, offensive or otherwise, partial loss of smell, taste, or bearing, weak eyes, dull pain or pressure in head, you have Catarrh. Thousands of cases terminate in consumption.
Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy cures the worst cases of Catarrh, "Cold in the Head," and Catarrhal Headache. 50 cents.
DR. TOUZEAU'S
FRENCH SPECIFIC
G. & G.
Will cure (with care) the worst cases in five to seven days. Each box contains a practical treatise on special diseases, with full instruction for self-cure. (100 pages) Price, $3.
J. C. STEELE, Agent,
938 Market Street, San Francisco, Cal.
WOCH & SON'S
Celebrated Fashion Catalogue
SENT FREE
For Spring and Summer. 1864, ready March 10th, to any address. Illustrates and lists every thing for Ladies' Gents' Children's and Infants' wear and Housekeeping Goods, at prices lower than those of any house in the United States. Complete market shelves per warden; or money refunded. H. G. B. KOCH & SON, 6th Ave. & 9th St., N. Y. City.
FOR
Man and Beast.
Mustang Liniment is older than most men, and used more and more every year.
A Big Clock.
The works of the immense clock which has been put up in the Board of Trade building in Chicago are pronounced a most perfect reproduction of those of the great Westminster Palace clock in London, but with some additions and improvements adapted to its commercial purpose. It is constructed of iron, bronze and steel, and weighs ten tons without the bell, the latter adding some 4,500 pounds more. The pendulum alone weighs 750 pounds. In its arrangement the works are divided into a time train, a hand train, and a striking train, these several trains comprising separate machines, resting, side by side, on separate frames. Each of the trains is operated by a separate weight, and the three weights together reach some 3,500 pounds. The hammer that strikes the bell weighs eighty pounds, the clockwork is below the dials, which are ten feet ten inches in diameter, and the bell is above them, or 250 feet above the ground. The pendulum swings one way in two seconds.
Bucklin's Armica Salve.
THE BEST SALVE in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by Wm. M. Higgins.
Another of the famed died in the person of the who has just ended his at the age of ninety thirteen the first abolition in 1818, made anti-slaveryylvania, and was re-mobbed, and suffered He wrote several books told the circumstances dramatic parts of "Unhelpled the originals of escape, and his daughter at Ironton, remember fast." Boston Advertiser.
Comets
The two comets proare to be closely observed in the northern sky are Fabry's is about 130,000 Barnard's about 150,000 are approaching the edge about twenty miles away pear in their highest b Ist. It is unusual for in the same month.
"It would never do tempt to conform to said De Wiggs the other why not?" asked Law sometimes compel Senate off in the middle of a s
The Queen had her other day. May Villho aged four and a half year her Majesty. The oak child was cool and colloid readily believed; she wa
Details of the Spanish Marriage
Yesterday morning the marriage of the Infanta Eulalia with the son of the Duc de Montpensier took place in the Chapel Royal. The bride and bridegroom were conducted separately to the chapel, preceded by their parents, the ladies in waiting, and the members of the household, along the palace galleries, which were crowded with spectators, who were kept back by the Halberdiera. The Queen Regent was in deep mourning. She has scarcely recovered from her neuralgie attacks, and looked sad as she sat under a dais to the right of the altar. Near her were Queen Isabella, the Infanta Isabella, the Duc de Montpensier and the Duc de Chartres, not in uniform. The Infanta Eulalia looked very pretty. She wore a costly satin dress, trimmed with lace, and a coronet of diamonds. The Comtesse de Paris was in white and manue. The sponsors knelt before she altar during the ceremony, on either side of the bride or bridegroom. The Archbishop of Seville officiated. The small chapel was densely crowded by the members of the official world, in uniforms, the ladies in black dresses and mantillas. All the members of the diplomatic corps, including Sin Clare Ford and the French, German and Austrian representatives, were present. The pallor and fatigued look of the bride were much observed. She showed much emotion during the ceremony. The bridegroom looked well in his Hussar uniform, with the Toison d'Or. All the officers of his regiment were present at the ceremony. The Duc de Montpensier kissed his son on both cheeks. The Infanta Eulalia tearfully kissed Queens Isabella and Christina. All the royal family breakfasted together privately. The bride and bridegroom left by special train in the afternoon for Aranjuez to spend the honeymoon. The dower of the Infanta Eulalia is £140,000, besides £6,000 annually from the Civil List. The Duc de Montpensier has settled £2,500 annually on her, and £5,000 on his son. The value of the presents is £40,000. — Madrid Dispatch to London Daily News, March 8th.
About Beaver Hats.
Boston Globe.
"Give me a beaver hat," said a gentleman
Hannah.
Have you heard of Hannah, she who mastered the piano, and was thoroughly conversant with the thingness of the here?
She could dance the polka masses and discourse in learned phrases in a most peculiar language that was startling to my ear;
And she had a great devotion to the famed methetic notion, wearing lilies on her garments, and she moved with languid grace,
And when she and I were walking, why the way she kept on talking, made me feel so densely common, that a blush came to my face;
She had gained her wondrous knowledge at a famous Eastern college, and she was a head and shoulders up above the common nerd;
And the way we talked of weather when plain people came together seemed to her, at least she said so, most ungrateful and absurd.
In the ball-room she was queenly, and she moved along serenely, with a haughty way of snubbing people who were not so learned.
Though I tried her heart to soften, yet she snubbed me hard and often, and a raging thirst for vengeance in my manly bosom burned.
Years passed on—at last I found her with a dozen people round her, but their looks were not admiring, and no praises from them fell.
And as I was interested, information I requested, when they told me she was waiter in a second-class hotel.
Thus was my revenge complete. — Whip.
Facts Not Generally Known.
[The Microcosm]
Asparagus was originally a wild sea-coast plant, and is a native of Great Britain.
Nectarine received its name from nectar, the principal drink of the gods.
The tomato is a native of South America, and takes its name from a Portuguese word.
Greengage is called after the Gage family, who first took it into England from a monastery in Paris.
Parsley is said to have come from Egypt,
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 supose he has some affection of the kidneys or neighboring organs. At times, symptoms indigestion are present, flatulency, uneasiness of the stomach, etc. A moisture, like perspiration, producing a very disagreeable itching, after getting warm, is a common tendant. 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 cta. Address: The Dr. Bosanko Medical Co., Piqua, O. Sold by A. Krug. July18-1yr
Got Shot.
Mr. Eutaler, of Calaveras county, says: "I accidentally shot my horse, discharging the contents of a double-barrelled gun into the hip, making an ugly hole, and quits deep. I cured him in a short time with the National Horse Liniment. One peculiar feature of this Liniment is, it keeps away the flies and prevents proud fleas."
W.M.Higgins agent.
QUICK TIME AND CHEAP FARES
To Eastern and European Cities
Via the Great Transcontinental All-Rail Routes,
—OF THE—
Southern Pacific Company
(PACIFIC SYSTEM)
Daily Express and Emigrant Trains make prompt connections with the several railway lines in the East,
—CONNECTING AT—
New York and New Orleans
with the several Steamer Lines to ALL EUROPEAN PORTS.
PULLMAN PALACE SLEEPING CARS attached to Overland Express Trains;
About Beaver Hats.
Boston Globe.
"Give me a beaver hat," said a gentleman in a Washington street hat store the other day.
As he left the store the batter turned to a friend and said:
"His asking for a "beever" reminds me of an incident which happened when I worked for a hat manufacturer a long time ago. At that time silk hats were styled, and believed to be, beaverskin hats. My boss commanded the trade of a large number of the rich residents of the city. A man called one day for a beaver hat, but while trading expressed a doubt as to its being genuine beaver. 'I'll prove it,' said the boss. So he sent me a note to rumble up a hat the best I might and send it by the boy who brought the note. I did so, and sent it down. He said in the note that I was not to mind his ringing at the tube which ran from the store to the workroom above, so I paid no attention to his calls for me to hurry, but did the job as soon as possible. It was shown to the man, who was perfectly satisfied that the long hair-like threads were genuine for and bought a fine $10 hat."
The boy, who was soundly rated for being so long coming down, was given a quarter, and the boss and I had a smoke at the firm's expense. That scheme was worked a good many times, but now that these hats are called by their true name it would fail to raise the price at all," and the man sighed.
A Southern Hereine.
One of those heroines of whom the world bears but little lives near Boston, Ca. Her name is Sallie Pansford. Her husband has been bedridden with rheumatism for nine years, and she has had a family of four children, two boys and two girls, to support. Last year she bought 107 acres of land, much of it original forest, and with the aid of her two boys, fourteen and fifteen years old, cleared five acres. She cut down the trees, rolled the logs together, split the rails, built the fence and burned the brush with their help and made last year nine bales of cotton and also corn and peas enough for her own use, paid £80 pounds for rent last year, paid her store account and paid £40 on her land. She has bought her meat for this year and paid for it. In addition to this she has done the cooking and gone to market with eggs and chickens.
Facts Not Generally Known.
[The Microcosm.]
Asparagus was originally a wild sea-coast plant, and is a native of Great Britain.
Nectarine received its name from nectar, the principal drink of the gods.
The tomato is a native of South America, and takes its name from a Portuguese word.
Greengage is called after the Gage family, who first took it into England from a monastery in Paris.
Parsley is said to have come from Egypt, and mythology tells us it was used to adorn the head of Hercules.
Apples were originally brought from the East by the Romans. The crab-apple is indigenous to Great Britain.
The cantaloupe is a native of America, and so called from the name of a place near Rome, where it was first cultivated in Europe.
A Brilliant Future.
"So you want my daughter? Well, sir, what are your prospects in life? Have you any deinite aim?"
"Aim? I should say I had. I'm going to be an Alderman one of these days."
"What makes you think so?"
"Why, it's a dead-sure thing. I'm tending bar now, am' at the rate I'm knocking down I'll have a saloon of my own before next year's election."—Chicago News.
A Student of Human Nature.
Stranger (to fellow passenger)—Excuse me, but am I not right in taking you for a professional man.
Fellow Passenger—Yes, sir.
Stranger—Thanks. It's not often that I make a mistake in judging my fellow men. Your work is head work altogether, of course?
Fellow Passenger—Oh, yes sir, entirely so.
Stranger—Er—Lawyer!
Fellow Passenger—No, sir; barber.—N. Y. Sun.
A New York plumber went out to collect a bill some three weeks ago, and has not yet returned. It is presumed that he was paid catat狸 in silver dollars, and is looking for a vehicle that will carry them all.
Patient—"Well, doctor, what do you find ails me?" Doctor—"I can't tell just yet, Mr. Peters. I am afraid I shall have to diagnose your case more thoroughly before I can tell you." Say, doctor, will it hurt?
You may hide your thoughts, conceal your mind and disguise your actions, but the smell of a raw onion will rise in its sight and inform a sneering world how you have gathered it to your inner man.
There is one streak of conglutation marrying a girl with a squint. You never need to fear her daring you to look her square in the face when you are explaining how it happened that you are late from your club.
Sarcastic wife—"Coming home as usual, I suppose!" Found of staying-out late husband—"Yes, certainly." Well, put this letter in the mail every day.
DUIARDIN'S NERVINE
IS UNFAILING AND INFALLIBLE
Epileptic Fits Spasms, Falling Sickness, Convulsions, St. Vitus Dance, Alcoholism, Opium Eating, Scrofula, and All NERVOUS and BLOOD DISEASES.
To Clergymen, Lawyers, Literary Men, Merchants, Bankers, Ladies and all whose sedentary employment causes Nervous Prostration, Irregularities of the Blood, Stomach, Bowels or Kidneys, or who require a nerve tonic, appetizer or stimulant. DEJARDIN'S NERVINE is invaluable.
To Larderis On account of its proven merits is recommended and prescribed by the best physicians in the country. One says: "It works like a charm and saves much pain. It will cure entirely the worst form of falling of the uterus, Lucorrhoea, Irregular and painful Menstruation all Ovarian Troubles, Inflammation and Ulceration, all Displacements and the consequent spinal weakness, and is especially adapted to the Change of Life."
A Famous Abolitionist Dead.
Another of the famous old abolitionists has died in the person of the Rev. John Rankin, who has just ended his life at Ironton, Ohio, at the age of ninety three years. He organized the first abolition society in Kentucky in 1818, made anti-slavery speeches in Pennsylvania, and was repeatedly stoned and mobbed, and suffered endless persecution. He wrote several books, and is said to have told the circumstances which make the most dramatic parts of "Uncle Tom's Cabin." He helped the originals of Eliza and her child to escape, and his daughter, who is now living at Ironton, remembers cooking their breakfast. Boston Advertiser, March 26.
Comets Coming.
The two comets promised in April or May are to be closely observed. Their outlines in the northern sky are now faintly visible. Fabry's is about 130,000,000 miles off, and Barnard's about 150,000,000 miles. Both are approaching the earth at the rate of about twenty miles a second, and will appear in their highest brilliancy about May 1st. It is unusual for two comets to appear in the same month.
"It would never do for the Senate to attempt to conform to the eight-hour law," said De Wiggs the other morning. "And why not?" asked La Diggis. "It would sometimes compel Senator Evarts to break off in the middle of a sentence."
The Queen had her circus at Windsor the other day. May Villion, the bicycle rider, aged four and a half years, was presented to her Majesty. The onole reporter says the child was cool and collected, which may be readily believed; she was born in Chicago.
Mr. Peters. I am afraid I shall have to disgose your case more thoroughly before I can tell you." "Say, doctor, will it hurt?"
You may hide your thoughts, conceal your mind and disguise your actions, but the smell of a raw onion will rise in its might and inform a sneering world how you have gathered it to your inner man.
There is one streak of consolation in marrying a girl with a squint. You never need to fear her daring you to look her square in the face when you are explaining how it happened that you are late from your club.
Sarcastic wife—"Coming home as usual, I suppose?" Found of staying-out-late husband—"Yes, certainly." "Well, put this letter in the first mail in the morning, and if you meet the milkman tell him to leave two quarts."
A poet writes: "Why are thy spirits thus concealed!" How thoughtless in him to think for a moment that any sane man would have his spirits bottle lying around loose in the same locality with a thirsty poet.
"You are a regular dude," rudely observed the young man to an expressively dressed stranger in the theater lobby the other night. "Wrong, my friend," replied the stranger politely, "I make dudes. I am a tailor."
Distinguished amateurs — The hospital nurse. Impressive female—"I want the post of head nurse or matron to your institution." Secretary—"Well—but—may I ask where you have been trained?" "I'm not trained; I'm gifted."
A colored carpenter in Savannah fell backward from a third-story scaffolding, turned a complete somersault, struck square on his feet and was back to his work so quick that the boss only docked him three minutes' loss of time.
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 MELHOSE,
Insurance Agency.
Anabeim Postoffice Building.
MAGNOLIA BALM
is a secret aid to beauty.
Many a lady owes her freshness to it, who would rather not tell, and you can't tell.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
Of the State of California, in and for the County of Los Angeles.
THE BANK OF ANAHEIM, plaintiff,
Vs.
THOS. P. HINDE, defendant.
Action brought in the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the county of Los Angeles, and the Complaint filed in said county of Los Angeles, in the office of the Clerk of said superior Court.
The people of the State of California send greeting to Thos. P. Hinde, defend on,
You are hereby required to appear in an action brought against you by the above named plaintiff, in the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the county of Los Angeles, and to answer the Complaint filed therein, within ten days (exclusive of the day of service), after the service on you of this summons, if served within this county or, if served elsewhere, within thirty days, or judgment by default will be taken against you according to the prayer of said Complaint.
The said action is brought to obtain the judgment of this Court against you in the sum of $500 with interest thereon from Dec 12, 1885, at the rate of one per cent per month compounded monthly, and ten per cent upon judgment debt as attorney's fees. Sale sum of $600 with interest as aforesaid being due the plaintiff herein on a certain note given to plaintiff by defendant on April 12, 1884. Reference is had to Complaint for particulars.
And you are hereby noffiled that if you fail to appear and answer the said Complaint as above required, the said plaintiff will cause your default to be entered and will take judgment against you in said sum of $600 with interest as aforesaid and for attorney's fees and costs.
GIVEN under my hand and the Seal of the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the county of Los Angeles, this 29th day of February, in this year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and eighty six.
CHAS. H. DUNSMOOR, Clerk,
By F. B. FANNING, Deputy.
Richard Melrose and Moye Wicks, attorneys for plaintiff.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
In the Superior Court of the county
BANK OF ANAHEIM.
CAPITAL STOCK,
$100,000.00.
PLEZ JAMES...President
G. B. SHAPPER...Secretary
BOARD OF DIRECTORS:
E. F. SPENCE, W. H. MABURY,
W. K. JAMES,
S. H. MOTT, P. JAMES.
This Bank receives Deposits, Loans Money, Buys and Sells Exchange and Currency, makes Collections and transacts a General Banling Business.
CORRESPONDENTS:
FIRST NATIONAL BANK, Los Angeles. Partners and Merchants Bank, Los Angeles. Pacific Bank, San Francisco. First National Bank, New York.
DRATTS, LETTERS OF CREDIT OR POSTAL or leased on Banks in the principal cities in all European countries.
Tickets entitling the holder to passage from New York to the several ports of England, France or Germany, or from any port in those counties to New York, via the Hamburg American Packet Company sold at regular rates. Return tickets at a reduction.
Certificates entitling the holder to passage on railroad from San Francisco to New York, or via versa, issued at the established ate.
Persons in Anaheim or vicinity desiring to send to any point in two countries named for any relative or friend can receive a ticket here and forward them to the proper person by mail.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF —
EMIGRANT TRAINS make prompt
the several railway lines in
the East.
CONNECTING ATand New Orleans
several Steamer Lines to
OEPEAN PORTS.
ACE SLEEPING CARS
overland Express Trains;
SLEEPING CAR Berths secured,
and upon application at the Compassengers calling in person can
ete.
ROAD LANDS
in reasonable terms.
to, or address
JEROME MADDEN,
Land Agent,
co., S.P.R.K. San Francisco.
T. H. GOODMAN,
Gen. Pass. & Tkt. Agt
Francisco, Cal.
E. L. GOLDSTEIN,
San Francisco.
J. J. WEGELIN,
New York.
FUS & CO.
and Dealers in
lines and Grape
brandy.
street San Francisco; 45
av New York
Patent Rein Holder.
where you put them-not
fect. One agent sold it doz.
dealer 800 6 doz. in 15 days.
$1.50 FREE. Write for terma.
WSTER, Holly, Mich.
IS UNFAILING
AND INFALLIBLE
IN CURING
Epileptic Fits
Spasma, Fallinvulsions, St. Vitus
am, Opium Eating,
BLOOD DISEASES.
Lawyers, Literary Men,
Ladies and all whose sedness Nervous Prostration,
blood, stomach, Bowels or
one nerve tonic, appetizer
is invaluable.
count of its proven merits
and prescribed by the best
dryery. One says: "It works
much pain. It will cure
of falling of the uterus,
and painful Menstruation
Inflammation and Ulcerplacements and the consendard is especially adapted
um it the most wonderful
QUIRRED, the said plaintiff will cause your default to
be entered and will take judgment against you in
said sum of $800 with interest as aforesaid and for
attorney's fees and costs.
GIVEN under my hand and the Seal of the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the county of Los Angeles, this 26th day of February, in this year of our Lord one thousand hundred and eighty six.
CHAS. H. DUNSMOOR, Clerk,
meh-o-m.
Richard Melrose and Moye Wicks, attorneys for plaintiff.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
In the Superior Court of the county
of Los Angeles, State of Californinia
In the matter of the Estate
of BENJAMIN DREYFUS, deceased J
Notice is hereby given by the undersigned, executors of the last will and testament of Benjamin Dreyfus, deceased, to the creditors of and all persons having claims against the said deceased to exhibit them with the necessary voucherers, within ten months after the first publication of this notice, to the said executors, at the office of Richard Melrose, Esq., at Anaheim, in the said county of Los Angeles, the same being the place of business of the said executors for the transaction of the business of the said estate, in said county of Los Angeles.
LEAH DREYFUS,
L. P. WILL.
IS CAUC HEIGHT.
Executors of the last will of Benjamin Dreyfus, deceased.
Dated at Anaheim this 4th day of March, A.D. 1886.
R. LUEDKE.
Watch Maker and Jeweler,
Centre Street, Anaheim.
EVERY DESCRIPTION OF WATCHES, CLOCKS
and Jewelry carefully repaired and warranted.
A fine assortment of
Elgin and Waltham Watches.
JEWELLE AND CLOCKS ALWAYS ON HAND
M. W. DUNHAM
Wayne, Du Page Co., Illinois,
HAS IMPORTED FROM FRANCE
Percheron Horses Vailed at $3,500,000,
which includes about
70 PERCENT OF ALL HORSES
Whose purity of blood is established by pedigree recorded in the Percheron Stud Book of France,
the only Stud Book ever published in that country.
EVER IMPORTED TO AMERICA.
STOCK ON HAND
140
Imported Brood Mares
200
Imported Stallions,
Old enough for Service.
128 COLTS,
Two years old and younger.
Recognizing by all intelligent breeders that,
however well bred animals
Persons in Anaheim or vicinity desiring to send to any point in the countries named for any relative or friend can not see ticket here and forward them to the proper person by mail.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF—Los Angeles.
Capital Stock . . . $100,000
Surplus . . . $100,000
E. F. SPENCE,
President.
J. M. ELLIOTT,
Cashier.
DIRECTORS:
J. D. BICKNELL, J. F. CRANK, H. MABURY
WM. L. CV., E.F. SPENCE,
STOCKHOLDERS:
CAYV. A. H. WILCOX,
DR. R. H. McDONALD
JAMES MCUNT,
G.Q. STORY,
I. LAKERSHEIM,
A.W.VAIL,
S.H.MUTT,
E.F.SPENCE.
Ostrich Farm NOTICE.
On and after JANUARY 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
IF YOU
Want a Purchaser,
Want a situation,
Want a Saleman,
Want a Servant,
Want to Purchase a Farm,
Want to sell a Piano,
Want to sell a Horse,
Want to lend Money,
Want to buy a house,
Want to rent a House,
Want to sell a Carriage,
Want a Boarding Place,
Want to borrow Money,
Want to sell Groceries,
Want to sell Hardware,
Want to sell Real Estate,
Want a Job of Carpentering,
Want a Job of Blacksmithing,
Want to sell Military Goods,
Want to sell House and Lot,
Want to sell a Farm,
Want to find Anyone's Address,
Want to find a Strayed Animal,
Want to sell a piece of furniture
WANT ANYTHING AT ALL.
Advertise in the ANAHEIM
IRE!
rance Agency!
Hard Melrose
AT THE POSTOFFICE, ANAHEIM.
EVER IMPORTED TO AMERICA.
STOCK ON HAND
140
Imported Brood Mares
200
Imported Stallions,
Old enough for Service.
128 COLTS,
Two years old and younger.
Recognizing the principle accepted by all intelligent breeders that, however well bred animals may be said to be, if their pedigrees are not recorded they should be valued only at prices I will sell all imported stock at grade prices when I cannot furnish with the animal sold, pedigree verified by the original French certificate of its number and record in the Percheron Stud Book of France. 100-Page Illustrated Catalogue sent free. Wayne, Ill., is 36 miles west of Chicago, on Chicago & Northwestern By.
AGift
Send 10 cents postage, and we will mail you free a royal, valuable sample box of goods that will put you in you in the way of making more money at once, than anything else in America. Both series of all ages can live at home and work in spare time, or all the time Capital not required. We will start you. Immense pay sure for those who want at once.
STINSON & CO., Portland, Maine.
115 CLAY STREET,
IS SMITH'S STORE
The Best Place on the Coast to get Supplies. Wholesale prices to Consumers. Equality to all.
No Humbug. No Tricks. A full List of Prices sent free on application.
CASH
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
The BUYERS GUIDE is issued March and Sept., each year. At 210 pages, 6% x 11½ inches, with over 2,500 illustrations—a whole Picture Gallery. GIVES Wholesale Prices direct to consumers on all goods for personal or family use. Tells how to order, and gives exact cost of everything you use, eat, drink, wine, or have fun with. These INVALUABLE BOOKS contain information ground from the markets of the world. We will mail a copy FREE to any address upon receipt of 10 e.m., to dating expense of mailing. Let us hear from you. Respectfully,
MONTGOMERY WARD & CO.
297 & 329 Walnut Avenue, Chicago, Mo.