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anaheim-gazette 1886-08-14

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WEEKLY GAZETTE. Published every Saturday. Established 1870. Richard Melrose EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: One Year ... $200 Six months ... 125 Three months ... 75 OFFICE—In P. O. Building, Center Street, Amaheim TRANSIENT ADVERTISING: SPACE 1 week ... $1.00 2 weeks ... $1.50 3 weeks ... $2.00 4 weeks ... $2.50 1 square ... 2.00 2 squares ... 3.00 3 squares ... 4.00 4 squares ... 5.00 HOW IT HAPPENED. This is a plain, unvarnished tale of a little scripture I had when I submitted to the operation of a Turkish bath. I went into Mr. Towells' establishment with a mind quiet and at peace with all men. It is not true, as Mr. Towells stated to a reporter, that I went in there bent on having a fuss and threatened to clean out the establishment. I know too well that nothing can be cleaned at a T. B. establishment. I took my place in the refrigerator, which Towells calls his hot room, and in due time the South Sea Islander, in his native costume, came in with a glass of ice water, most of it he spilled on my perspiring frame. Here again Towells is in error, or else the reporter took down his statement incorrectly. I did not attempt to brain the attendant with a chair. That episode occurred later, in the shampooing-room. In the hot room the attendant had escaped, and I found myself locked in before I had disenEVENTS IN 1985. The Chicago Herald recently issued an edition under date of September 26, 1985, giving events and occurrences which it is supposed will take place a hundred years hence. Here are some specimens: Miss Susan B. Anthony intends to make her farewell lecture tour next winter. Jay Gould, a New York beggar, was run over by an elevated electric train yesterday and killed. A grandson of the last King of England is keeping a saloon in Cheyenne. He goes under the name of Langtry. An Ohio man, Rutherford Hayes, claims that his grandfather was President of the United States. This is one of the disputed points of history. Boston reports a freak of nature in the shape of a child born with natural eye-glasses, the frame being of bone and the glasses of a tender skin stretched like a drum-head. The New York Committee on Grant Monument Funds reports encouraging progress. If contributions continue to come in freely, work will begin on the shaft next year. "Politician." — You lose your wager, Jumbo was not the name of the twenty-second President of the United States. Jumbo was an elephant who killed a locomotive by running into it. A large excursion party from the Argentine Republic and Patagonia passed through the city yesterday, en route for Alaska. They went via the Northern Pacific and British Columbia Roads. The excursionists made no stops on the up trip, except to view the ruins of St. Louis by moonlight. The old coal scow, the Great Eastern, more than a century ago a big steamship, was run down by the Cunarder Goliath and sunk near Queenstown, one day last week. The passengers on board the Goliath did not learn of the casualty until the intelligence was telephoned to them from the bow. The rumor to the effect that the health of Mr. Samuel J. Tilden is fast failing has been denied by his friends. Mr. Tilden, though not strong, is more active than he has been. THE ALIEN The House on this moment passed with lord Bill by the vote to 6. This bill proclaimed alien or foreigner, eigner who has not becoming an American ration—except for poses—in which no stock is owned; estate in the territory Though it is important this kind which cannot direct means, it is culty possible show of an abuse which recognized. The try are held in trust the benefit of its benefit of foreign service interest and agricultural rope to institute, as country the same which has resulted evils wherever it ple commonly regrets the public domain and yet this is the development as a people in geological history else. We shall be our folly long before we are taken up, and to our prodigality than thirty years away every year after Ireland—something acres. A very large the precious remain rendered almost as Sea water by foolish gation, so that we our public estate ever last report of the amount of land stitched without capital at does not make the difference. The Alien Landlord meet a future evil, that has already borne the establishment. I know too well that nothing can be cleaned at a T. B. establishment. I took my place in the refrigerator, which Towells calls his hot room, and in dusk time the South Sea Islander, in his native costume, came in with a glass of ice water, most of it he spilled on my perspiring frame. Here again Towells is in error, or else the reporter took down his statement incorrectly. I did not attempt to brain the attendant with a chair. That episode occurred later, in the shampooing-room. In the hot room the attendant had escaped, and I found myself locked in before I had disentangled myself from the sheet and seized the chair. I admit breaking the chair and have paid its value into court, but it was broken against the door and not on the attendant, who was one of the most nimble fellows I ever saw. Mr. Towells will find it a different thing testifying in court on oath to giving a garbled version of an affair to the inaccurate reporter of an irresponsible newspaper. In the interview I refer to, Towells says I kept up such a tirade of abuse at the operator who was shampooing me that a Detroit alderman who was in the cooling-room had to get up and leave. To that I have just two things to say. First: The operator jabbed the customary half pound of soap in my mouth the first time I opened it; and second: The alderman left when he found that he could only get coffee, no beer being kept on the premises. Now as to the feeling of the attendant. To show you the utter recklessness of that man Towells, I may say that his minion was lying insensible under the shampooing table when Towells, hearing the row, came down. As the man has not yet recovered consciousness at the hospital, I would like to know how Towells is in a position to state what occurred? Here is how it happened: I said to Scrubbs—"I've got a bad cold. You must be careful about cooling me down." "All right," says Scrubbs. He turned on the spray and I yelled. "Too hot?" asked Scrubbs. "Hot!" I shrieked. "It's boiling. Great Scott, don't you see you've scalded me? I don't want to leave this place a skeleton for an anatomy museum." "I'll fix that in a minute," said Scrubbs. He twisted a brass arrangement and turned the hose on me again. The drops struck me like pellets of ice. Before I froze solid I sprang at him, thrust my two hands in his hair, and that's how the marble table came to be broken. There was no chair in the room. Then Towells came galloping down. "You've killed Scrubbs," he shouted. I didn't deny it. I thought I had, at that time; so I said: "I've done it quickly and mercifully. Look at my shattered frame, first boiled and then frozen." "Pooh," he cried, "a little cold water doesn't hurt anybody." "Doesn't it?" British Columbia Roads. The excursionists made no stops on the up trip, except to view the ruins of St. Louis by moonlight. The old coal scow, the Great Eastern, more than a century ago a big steamship, was run down by the Cunarder Goliah and sunk, near Queenstown, one day last week. The passengers on board the Goliah did not learn of the casualty until the intelligence was telephoned to them from the bow. The rumor to the effect that the health of Mr. Samuel J. Tilden is fast failing has been denied by his friends. Mr. Tilden, though not strong, is more active than he has been since 1856, and his mind is particularly clear. There is some talk of running him for President in 1990. The evil effects of the abolition of the protective tariff are nowhere more strikingly shown than in this city. On the very day the tariff was abolished, the crack in the liberty bell began to extend, and has steadily grown until now the bell is in danger of destruction. Restore the tariff and save the grand old bell—Philadelphia Times (1985). A ship-load of Chinese Bibles arrived at San Francisco last week. The books will be distributed throughout the country by the Chinese Missionary Society in America. This society has organized 6,430 Sunday schools in the United States, which are attended by 98,000 boys, who are being reclaimed from heathenism and hoodlumism, and taught the morality of Confucius. SARATOGA, September 25, 1985.—John W. McKay, a guest at the United States Hotel, was caught in the act of eating with his knife at dinner this evening. He was promptly arrested and jailed, and would have been sent to Sing Sing this evening had he not succeeded in establishing his identity. He is a silver king from the Pacific Coast, and at a late hour to-night accepted the humble apology of the landlord and the freedom of the house. The dime museums are doing an excellent business under the new departure of throwing in a cigar for male and a box of chewing gum for female visitors. The latest attractions are: Mummy of an Alderman of 1885 who refused to accept a bribe; one dozen widowers who married the mothers of their deceased wives; a Fourth of July machine which recites The Declaration of Independence; a boy who never saw a game of baseball, and a fat woman weighing 3,200 pounds. Two young gentlemen of culture, living in Boston, have moved by the unruley influence of the dog-star to fight with hard gloves for the privilege of courting a pretty South End girl; an Ohio man has eloped with two sisters at once; several score of Georgia maidens, despairing of capturing an entire man, have secured a fraction of a husband by becoming Mormons, and a Texas youth has poisoned himself because his father had gone off to enjoy his honeymoon with the maiden whom both had courted. Hot days, moonlit nights, whispering leaves Ireland—something acres. A very large prey rendered almost as Sea water by foolish gation, so that we our public estate even last report of the amount of land sold without capital attest does not make the difference. The Alien Landlord meet a future evil, that has already been promoters of the big tortious cases. Of this Scullly is an excellent landlord who finished in Ireland by a bloody tenants, and after selling out his lands because in this county found necessary to protect him man is now said to be in Illinois alone. Judge Payson describes bill which has passed just such cases as this power of Congressure is naturally direct citizens of Great Britain has furnished a very til very recent year estate in England where It was a policy which turies commended, and ed when such owner gerous. There is no law would be retain could it be shown there as great as his Committee reported ty-nine alien company recently obtained acres, in estates of fife 000, in this country ing, it is even more Congressmen could hold to vote against than two hundred vents. Green Silene Some one asks how from collecting on in tank. My tank for bled the same way, lily cleaned, and at what seems after twenty. It is forcing me At first the feedpuper upon the surface of this very little disturbance changed so as to entomom, and as the wind er ground than the water by the large amount of air, is being filled the water at a great rate. Simi struck me like pellets of ice. Before I froze solid I sprang at him, thrust my two hands in his hair, and that's how the marble table came to be broken. There was no chair in the room. Then Towells came galloping down. "You've killed Scrubba," he shouted. I didn't deny it. I thought I had, at that time; so I said: "I've done it quickly and mercifully. Look at my shattered frame, first boiled and then frozen." "Pooh," he cried, "a little cold water doesn't hurt anybody." "Doesn't it?" "No; it doesn't!" "Well, see if it doesn't," and saying this I grasped him by the collar and leaped with him into the plunging bath, which was ice cold and six feet deep. He says I spoiled his $60 suit of clothes. He never had such a suit on his life. It was a $7 ready-made, and I heard it rip as I grasped him. Besides, it never fitted him better than when his two hired men pulled him out. He further claimed that I tried to hold him under water. Well, his own hired men are to blame for that. They shouted, "Let him up, let him up. He's the proprietor." Up to the moment I knew he was the proprietor I honestly tried to save him. It is just as well to have the truth about these little matters, and I now confidently leave my case in the hands of an unprejudiced people. An Enterprising, Reliable House. Wm. M. Higgins can always be relied upon, not only to carry in stock the best of everything, but to secure the Agency for such articles as have well-known merit, and are popular with the people, thereby sustaining the reputation of being always enterprising, and ever reliable. Having secured the Agency for the celebrated Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, will sell it on a positive guarantee. It will surely cure any and every affection of Throat, Lungs and Chest, and to show our confidence, we invite you to call and get a Trial Bottle Free. Brickmakers digging inside the Chicago city limits have struck oil. Several hundred barrels have already come to the surface. The flow is small, but the oil is of excellent quality. A more extensive well will probably be sunk. Two young gentlemen of culture, living in Boston, have been moved by the unruly influence of the dog-star to fight with hard gloves for the privilege of courting a pretty South End girl; an Ohio man has eloped with two sisters at once; several score of Georgia maidens, despairing of capturing an entire man, have secured a fraction of a husband by becoming Mormons, and a Texas youth has poisoned himself because his father had gone off to enjoy his honeymoon with the maiden whom both had courted. Hot days, moonlit nights, whispering leaves and dancing waves seem to set the tender sensibilities of our youth in motion, and everywhere love is laughing at jocksmiths and seeking its mate. For a month to come it will be safe to look for matrimonial cyclones and volcanic eruptions of elopement. Bucklin's Arnica 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. Possible Customer—"What does a first-class funeral cost, Mr. Laymeout?" Mr. Laymeout—"Why, none of your family are dead, are they?" P. C.—"No, not yet; but the old lady has bought a kerosene stove, Johnny's bought a new bicycle, and my oldest daughter is keeping company with a Pittsburg dude who carries a hair-trigger pistol. It's well enough to keep abreast of the market." Merit Tells. It is an acknowledged fact that the National Horse Liniment is fast becoming a popular remedy, simply because it is found as represented. When you need a good Liniment try the National. Mr. Higgins is the Agent. At the Horticultural Exhibition. He—This is a lime tree, Clara. But you are not looking. She—Yes, Charles, I see it; but I was wondering how they extract the mortar from it. THE ALIEN LANDLORD BILL. The House on Saturday before adjournment passed without rebate the Alien Landlord Bill by the very remarkable vote of 209 to 6. This bill provides that no non-resident alien or foreigner, or resident alien or foreigner who has not declared his intention of becoming an American citizen, or any corporation—except for necessary railroad purposes—in which more than ten per cent. of the stock is owned by aliens, shall hold real estate in the territories of the United States. Though it is impossible to frame a law of this kind which could not be evaded by indirect means, it is desirable that every difficulty possible should be placed in the way of an abuse which has long been passively recognized. The public lands of the country are held in trust by the government for the benefit of its citizens, and not for the benefit of foreign syndicates induced by low interest and agricultural depression in Europe to institute, as far as possible, in this country the same system of absenteeism which has resulted in the most unendurable evils wherever it has prevailed. The people commonly regard these efforts to seize the public domain with a singular apathy, and yet this is the one great fact in our development as a people which, like the 'drift' in geological history, overlies everything else. We shall begin to feel the effects of our folly long before the last remaining acres are taken up, and yet this unpleasant end to our prodigality is certainly not farther off than thirty years. At present we are giving away every year a country about the size of Ireland—something over twenty millions of acres. A very large and important part of the precious remainder of our land may be rendered almost as useless as so much Dead Sea water by foolish laws discouraging irrigation, so that we may come to the end of our public estate even within a decade. The last report of the Land Office placed the amount of land still available to settlers without capital at 5,000,000 acres, which does not make the outlook less gloomy. The Alien Landlord Bill is designed to meet a future evil, but it cannot undo much that has already been accomplished. The THE EYE STONE. (New York Sun.) "Yes, we keep eye stones," said an up-town druggist, "but we don't have a call for one once in five years. Yet there must be quite a demand for them, for wholesale dealers purchase all that are brought them by sailors who make a business of collecting them on their voyages. Did you ever see an eye stone?" "No," said the reporter. "But they are found in the stomachs of crayfish, I believe." "Then your belief is as far wrong as it could be," said the druggist, as he took a small bottle from a drawer. It was half full of what seemed to be very small round, flat pieces of polished bone. Emptying a few of the pieces on the counter he picked one up and handed it to the reporter to examine. There was nothing notable about the little bone except that one side was composed of numerous concentric grooves. "That is an eye stone," said the druggist, pouring some liquid out of a bottle on to a smooth plate and diluting it with water. "And this is a weak solution of lime juice." The druggist took one of the eye stones and put it into the solution. Presently the stone began to move as if it were alive. It made its way slowly about in different directions in the liquid in a mysterious manner. "That strange movement of the eye stone when placed in a weak solution of lime juice or vinegar has given rise among ignorant and superstitious people to the notion that it has life, and that it loves vinegar, and loves to swim in it above all things. But there is no more life in an eye stone than there is in a paving stone. It is composed of calcareous material, and when placed in the solutions named is made to move about by carbonic acid gas, which is evolved by the contact with the liquid acid. These little stones and all genuine eye stones once were the front doors to the shells of a little molluscous animal that lives along the Venezuelan and other South American coasts. The shell is a univalve. This calcareous formation is on the tip end of the little animal, and when he draws himself into his shell he draws himself into an eye stone." WORTHY Of Confidence. AYER'S Sarsaparilla is a medicine that, during nearly 40 years, in all parts of the world, has proved its efficacy as the best blood alternative known to medical science. SARSAPARILLA (extracted from the genuine Honduras Sarsaparilla) is its base, and its powers are enhanced by the extracts of Yellow Dock and Stilginia, the lodges of Potassium and Iron, and other potent ingredients. IS your blood vitilated by derangements of the digestive and assimilatory functions? is it tainted by Scrofula? or does it contain the poison of Mercury or Contagious Disease? THE leading physicians of the United States, who know the composition of AYER'S SARSAPARILLA, say that nothing else so good for the purification of the blood is within the range of pharmacy. ONLY by the use of this remedy is it possible for a person who has corrupted blood to attain sound health and prevent transmission of the destructive taint to posterity. THOROUGHLY effective renovation of the system must include not only the removal of corruption from the blood, but its enrichment and the strengthening of the vital organs. RELIABLE world, testify that this work is better accomplished by AYER'S SARSAPARILLA than by any other remedy. BLOOD that is corrupted through disease is made pure, and blood weakened through diminution of the red corpuscles is made strong, by AYER'S SARSAPARILLA. PURIFYING up the system require time in serious cases, but benefit will be derived from the use of AYER'S SARSAPARILLA more speedily than from anything else. MEDICINE for which like effects are abundant in the market, under many names, but the only preparation that has stood the test of time, and proved worthy of the world's confidence, is Ayer's Sarsaparilla, PREPARED BY Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by all druggists: Price $1; six bottles for $5. Ireland—something over twenty millions of acres. A very large and important part of the precious remainder of our land may be rendered almost as useless as so much Dead Sea water by foolish laws discouraging irrigation, so that we may come to the end of our public estate even within a decade. The last report of the Land Office placed the amount of land still available to settlers without capital at 5,000,000 acres, which does not make the outlook less gloomy. The Alien Landlord Bill is designed to meet a future evil, but it cannot undo much that has already been accomplished. The promoters of the bill had in view many notorious cases. Of these the case of William Scully is an excellent type. He was an Irish landlord who finished a career of oppression in Ireland by a bloody encounter with his tenants, and after being tried for murder, sold out his lands and invested in Illinois, because in this country it has not yet been found necessary to give the tenant even the protection he would have in Ireland. This man is now said to possess over 90,000 acres in Illinois alone. He is a resident of London. Judge Payson designed, by means of the bill which has passed the House, to meet just such cases as this, so far as it is within the power of Congress to do so. The measure is naturally directed in the main against citizens of Great Britain, and that country has furnished a very famous precedent. Until very recent years the right to hold real estate in England was forbidden to aliens. It was a policy which the experience of centuries commended, and it was only abandoned when such ownership ceased to be dangerous. There is not the faintest doubt that this law would be re-enacted in Great Britain could it be shown that the need of it there is as great as here. The Public Lands Committee reported in May last that twenty-nine alien companies and individuals had recently obtained control of 20,407,000 acres, in estates of from 100,000 to 4,500,000, in this country. In view of this showing, it is even more remarkable that even six Congressmen could be found with the hardihood to vote against the bill than that more than two hundred voted for it. Green Silme in Tanks. Some one asks how to prevent green slime from collecting on inside walls of a water tank. My tank for several years was troubled the same way, and had to be frequently cleaned, and at length I chanced upon what seems, after two years, to be the remedy. It is forcing air through the water. At first the feedpipe to the tank discharged upon the surface of the water, and there was very little disturbance. Then the pipe was changed so as to enter the tank at the bottom, and as the windmill is on slightly higher ground than the tank, the forcing in of the water by the pump carries with it a large amount of air, so that when the tank is being filled the water boils and bubbles at a great rate. Since that time the tank He Wanted It Pure. The New York Mail and Express reports the following conversation between the grocer and his customer in an uptown store: "Give me a quarter of a pound of black pepper. I want it pure." The grocer took down a little package done up in tinfoil and adorned with a yellow label bearing the legend: "Pure Black Pepper." "This is what sells for black pepper, but seeing I know you pretty well, I don't mind telling you there's not a grain of black pepper in it. I worked five years in the milling room of a spice mill, and I'm on to the business from end to end. Now, this time in serious cases, but benefit will be derived from the use of AYER'S SARSAPARILLA more speedily than from anything else. MEDICINE for which like effects are falsely claimed, is abundant in the market, under many names, but the only preparation that has stood the test of time, and proved worthy of the world's confidence, is Ayer's Sarsaparilla, PREPARED BY Dr.J.C.Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by all druggists: Price $1; six bottles for $5. J.M.Griffith & Co., LUMBER DEALERS (Near Railroad Depot) ANAHEIM DOORS, BLINDS, WINDOWS, MOULDINGS, POSTS, SHAKES, SHINGLES, LATH,HAIR,FLASTER OF PARIS. Anaheim Grist Mills Operating on WEDNESDAYS and SATURDAYS of each week. Grain.Feed.Meal etc., of all varieties. Corn Shelled and Shipped City Stables, Center Street (Opposite Kroeger's Block) ANAHEIM. L.F.Lewis.-Proprietor THESE STABLES ARE THE BEST VENTILATED AND most convenient in the Iowa and special at tention will be paid to handling and Grooming horses.The charge in all cases will be reasonable. Single and Double Teams Purchased at short notice and excellent drivers familiar with the contract supplied where required.The rat roach of the pigeon is successfully adopted. A stately memorial arch, erected by the town and city of Hartford in honor of the dead of the late war, is now completed, and the commission having the work in charge has fixed upon September 17th for the dedicatory exercises. A general reunion of war veterans will be held on that date, which is the anniversary of Antietam and also of the famous battle-flag day of 1870. Corns. Should your horse have corns, purchase a bottle of the National Horse Liniment from W. M. Higgins, and pour a little on the hoof, allowing it to run under the shoe. All tenderness will be speedily removed, and the corns cured. W. M. Higgins is Agent. Yellowstone Park is now without a Super-intendent, and the failure to make an appropriation for salaries makes it necessary for the military to protect the grounds. The Secretary of War has been asked to make a detail for that purpose. For its soothing and grateful influence on the scalp, and for the removal and prevention of dandruff, Ayer's Hair Vigor has no equal. It restores faded or gray hair to its original dark color, stimulates the growth of the hair, and gives it a beautiful, soft, glossy and silken appearance. The following conversation between the grocer and his customer in an uptown store: "Give me a quarter of a pound of black pepper. I want it pure." The grocer took down a little package done up in tinfoil and adorned with a yellow label bearing the legend: "Pure Black Pepper." This is what sells for black pepper, but seeing I know you pretty well, I don't mind telling you there's not a grain of black pepper in it. I worked for five years in the milling room of a spice mill, and I'm on to the business from end to end. Now, this particular spice is made this way: Take $6 pounds of fine ground bran mixed with pulverized charcoal—the last to represent the black hull of the pepper grain; then add 15 pounds of cayenne pepper, and there you have 100 pounds of pure black pepper. It's the same way with mustard," the grocer continued. "Fifteen to twenty pounds of cayenne pepper, the balance of cheap wheat flour colored yellow, makes 100 pounds of genuine mustard. The highest grades, which aren't often retailed, contain as much as one half of real mustard. Put cream of tartar is the biggest swindle. A fifteen-pound can of the low grade contains one pound of tartaric acid and fourteen of terra alba. The terra-alba is a mild alkaloid and neutralizes the effect of the acid. Higher grades of the mixture contain a trifle more tartaric acid. "You probably think you've eaten some cinnamon in your time," the grocer went on. "Well, you haven't. I don't suppose there are ten pounds of cinnamon bark in the United States. What passes for cinnamon is the bark of the cassia tree. This is adulterated with a still coarsenbark, known as cassia vera. The article is also mixed with peas and roast bran. I need not tell you about roast coffee; everybody knows about that. It's just the same way through the whole list of spices. If you could amuse yourself into the basement of some spice mill, you would find bins of bran, peas, terra alba, etc." The pleasure yacht, Cruiser, was caught in a storm on Sunday, and wrecked on Lake Huron. She had as a crew six young men, all of whom were drowned. They were all of the first families of Sarnia, Quebec, and held prominent business positions. STATEMENT OF THE CONDITION OF THE Bank of Anaheim. At the opening of Business July 1st, 1895. ASSETS: Cash on hand ... $ 8,655 03 Bills Receivable ... 47,479 25 Real Estate ... 19,025 03 Miscellaneous Stock ... 1,201 00 Bank Lot, Building and Fixtures ... 6,380 00 Due from other Banks ... 22,610 58 LIABILITIES: Dues depositors ... $40,620 09 Capital Stock ... 20,000 00 Reserve Fund ... 6,011 32 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 M. day of July, 1886 J. B. PIERCE, Justice of the Peace. STATEMENT OF THE BANK OF ANAHEIM. Of the amount of Capital paid up in Gold Coin. Capital paid up in Gold Coin ... $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 M. day of July, 1886 J. B. PIERCE, Justice of the Peace. NEW STORE. CONRAD'S BRICK BUILDING ON LOS ANGELES STREET A. T. WALLOP, Proprietor. —13lbs. Dry White Sugar—For $1. ALL KINDS OF GROCERIES SOLD CHEAPER THAN IN ANY OTHER STORE IN TOWN. Goods delivered in town and vicinity by 10-ft. BANK OF ANAHEIM. CAPITAL STOCK, $100,000.00. PLEZ JAMES... President G. B. SHAFFER... 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 Banking Business. CORRESPONDENTS: First National Bank, Los Angeles, Farmers & Merchants Bank, Los Angeles, Pacific Bank, San Francisco; First National Bank New York. DRAGERS: UTTERANCE OF CREDIT OR POSTAL OFFICES 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 Italy except 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 vice versa, issued at the sanctioned rate. Persons in Anaheim or vicinity desiring to send to any point in the counties named for any relative or friend can purchase ticket here and forward them to the proper person by mail. FIRST NATIONAL BANK NEW STORE. CONRAD'S BRICK BUILDING ON LOS ANGELES STREET A. T. WALLOP, Proprietor. —13lbs. Dry White Sugar—For $1. ALL KINDS OF GROCERIES SOLD CHEAPER THAN IN ANY OTHER STORE IN TOWN. Goods delivered in town and vicinity by 10:15 VISIT F. A D A M, THE Pioneer Tailor, No. 113 North Spring St., Los Angeles. For the Latest and Finest Styles of goods je 12:2m F. & J. BACKS. Importers, Manufacturers and Dealers in Furniture, Bedding, Paper Hangings, Picture Frames, etc. UNDERTAKERS. Agents for the Howe, Ettolge and Victor Sewing Machines. Los Angeles Strat.: Anghelim. QUICK TIME AND CHEAP FARES To Eastern and European cities Via the Great Transverse 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. New York and New Orleans with the several Steamer Lines to ALL EUROPEAN PORTS. PULLMAN PALACE SLEEPING CARS attached to Overland Express Trains; THIRD-CLASS SLEEPING CARS are run daily with Overland Emigrant Trains. No additional charge for births in Third-Class Cars. Tickets sold. Sleeping car berths sooted, and other information given upon application at the company's offices, where passengers calling in person can secure choice of routes etc. RAILROAD LANDS For sale on reasonable terms. Apply to, or address W. H. MILLS, JEROME MALDEN, Land Agent, C.P.R.K. San Francisco, S.P.R.K. San Francisco. A. N. TOWNE, T. H. GOODMAN, General Manager. Certificate, entitling the holder to passage on railroad from San Francisco to New York, or vice versa, issued at the station rate. Persons in Anaheim or vicinity desiring to send to any point in the counties named for any relative or friend can purchase ticket here and forward them to the proper person herein. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF Los Angeles. Capital Stock $100,000 Surplus $100,000 E. F. SPENCE, President. J.M. ELLIOTT, Cashier. DEVELOPER: J.D. BROWN, J.E. GRASS, H. MASURY WELLOW, E.F. SPENCE, STOCKHOLDERS: C.O. A. H. VILLINS, P.C.E. H. M. DEWARD O.N. WESTMORE, D.J. CHRISTIAN, J.H. BECKHAM, H.L. WATSON, H.W. WATSON, S.H. WATSON, H.W. WATSON, S.H. WATSON, R. L. KIDNEY. Watch Haber and Jeweler, Centre Street, Anaheim. EVERY DESCRIPTION I WATCHES, CLOCKS AND JEWELRY EXCEPT REQUIRED AND WARRANTED A FINANCEMENT OF Elgin and Waltham Watches. JEWELRY AND CLOCKS ALWAYS ON HAND. Ostrich Farm NOTICE. On and after January 1st the above farm will be open to visitors daily. CHARGE: 20 cents each person. All dogs found on the farm will be destroyed. Trespassers will be presented. By order Superintendent California Ostrich Farming Company RAILROAD LANDS For sale on reasonable terms. Apply to, or address W. H. MILLS, Land Agent, C.P.R.K. San Francisco, S.P.R.K. San Francisco. A.N. TOWNE General Manager, Gen Pass, & Tkt Agt aug4-6m San Francisco, Cal UNDERTAKING A SPECIALTY. Bodies embalmed or preserved for any lengthed time, without the use of ICE. Finest hearses in Los Angeles county. TELEPHONE TO JOHN R. PAUL, Santa Ana, Enbalmer and Funeral Director, who will give his personal attention to all cases. PILES SURE CURE FOR BLIND, BLEEDING and Itching Piles. One box has cured the worst cases of ten years standing. No one need suffer ten minutes after using Kirk's German Pile Ointment. It absorbs tumors, allows the itching, acts as a politicis and gives relief. Dr. Kirk's German Pile Ointment is prepared only for Piles and itching of the private parts, and nothing else. Every box is warranted. Sold by Druggists and sent by mail on receipt of price, $1.00 per box. J. J. MACK & CO., Wholesale Agents, San Francisco, Cal. DON'T BUY WATER STOCK UNTIL YOU HAVE LEARNED THE PRICE FROM MELROSE & KNAPP, REAL ESTATE AGENTS. Ostrich Farm NOTICE. On and after January 1st the above farm will be open to visitors daily. CHARGE: 15 cents each person. All dogs found on the farm will be destroyed. Trespassers will be presented. By order of Superintendent of California Ostrich Farming Company TUTT'S PILLS 25 YEARS IN USE. The Greatest Medical Triumph of the Age! SYMPTOMS OF A TORPID LIVER. Loss of appetite, Bowel contivion in the back part, Pain under the shoulder-blade, Fullness after eating, with a disinclination to exertion of body eruption, Irritability of temper, Low spirits, with a feeling of having neglected some duty, Weariness, Dizziness, Fluttering at the Heart, Dots before the eye, Headache over the right eye, Restlessness, with stiff drowsy, Highly colored Urine, and CONSTIPATION. TUTT'S PILLS are especially adapted to such cases, one doso effects such a change offeeling astonish the sufferer. They Increase the Appetite and cause the body to Take on Flesh, thus the system is nourished, and by their Tonic Action on the Digestive Organs. Regular Stools are produced. Price 25c., 4 fl. gross N.L.T. TUTT'S HAIR DYE. GEAT HAIR or WHISKERS changed to a Glossy BLACK by a single application of this DYE. It imparts a natural color, acts instantaneously. Sold by Druggists, or sent by express on receipt of $1. Office, 44 Murray St., New York. 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. (20 pages) Price, $32. J. O. STEELE, Agent, 628 Market Street, San Francisco, Cal.