anaheim-gazette 1886-09-04
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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 7.5
OFFICE—In P.O. Building/Center Street, Anselmo
THANSIENT ADVERTISING:
EVERYTHING.
The Jews' quarter at Rome has been almost entirely abolished. The picturesque ruins, swarming with an active and industrious people, will no longer charm the interested tourist. The present Government has dispossessed the Jews of their town and gives them wide streets, more sanitary but less historic.
The New York Sick Children's Mission is an active charity during this season. A corps of physicians visit little sick ones in all parts of the city, and mothers receive at the central office such articles as condensed milk, farina, barley and other nourishing food which the poor families could not afford to buy themselves.
A long chancery suit over an estate of $7,000 left by one Colonel Patience, a Scotton officer of the British army, has just ended.
A Quaint Oriental City.
I am sure that Canton is the queerest, the most wonderful and bewildering old city under the sun. It certainly has more strange sights to the square yard than any other city I ever saw, and I am willing to back it against all the rest. Even now, when I try to recall the strange scenes and sounds I encountered on that memorable visit, it makes my eyes ache and my brain whirl, just as it did then.
Well, well, well! What a wonderful old city it is! How bewildering and how interesting at every step! This is no more like the Chinese quarters of Hongkong than an old bill is like a new silver dollar. How very, very different from what we had expected to see. Compared with the substantial newness and Europeanness of Hongkong, this is a veritable fossil, a relic of the past, with nothing of the Nineteenth century about it save the European quarter and the steamer on the river. The city is all on the ground, or at the very most, it will not average more than a story and a halt in height. Where the shops are the thickest, each square is an unbroken succession of wide doorways, for of every shop the whole end next to the street takes out boldly. From one street corner to the next there is only a succession of open-ended rooms and partition walls, with dark, narrow passages thrown in here and there. There is no architecture visible, for the houses are so jammed together that it is impossible to single out any one in particular without climbing on the roof to see how much it covers.
If this is not a street in Wonderland it might as well be. It is only about eight feet wide, and many are less. The eaves of the houses on each side project a quarter or a third of the way across the street, and the remaining third in the middle is very often loosely covered over with boards placed crosswise. When the sun is shining the streets are light enough, but in rainy or cloudy weather they are very dark and gloomy, and the peculiar twilight effect only adds another element of strangeness to the scene. Thank goodness, the streets are
The New York Sick Children's Mission is an active charity during this season. A corps of physicians visit little sick ones in all parts of the city, and mothers receive at the central office such articles as condensed milk, farina, barley and other nourishing food which the poor families could not afford to buy themselves.
A long chancery suit over an estate of $7,000 left by one Colonel Patience, a Scotch officer of the British army, has just ended. It appears that, according to Scottish law, the savings of the deceased are distributed among 101 persons, in sums ranging from £290 to £5. An enormous pedigree was introduced in Court.
One-fifth of all the coal produced in the United States is taken from the mines of only four counties of a single State, of which locality Pittsburgh is the business center. Nearly one third of all the coal there raised is converted into coke—a business in which $13,000,000 is invested and which gives employment to an army of 6,000 men.
The Egyptian lotus is attracting much attention in New York among the fine water lilies at the display in Central Park. The novelty of the lotus is equal to its beauty. Its great flowers are of different tints of white and red with the bud in the form of a tea rose opening out into a cluster of petals, nearly a foot in diameter, massed among solid-looking leaves.
Statistics have just been published in France, showing the results of the new divorce act there. The act was passed on July 27, 1884. By the end of the year 1,773 petitions for divorce were presented and 3,666 petitions for separation. Sixteen hundred and fifty seven divorces were granted and 2,821 separations. The law seems to have been a most timely one.
There is a great gold excitement in the north of Chile. It is claimed that ore is being shipped which is worth from three to twenty ounces per ton, in lots of ten to a hundred sacks at a time. The country wants capital and a little Yankee push, which would soon make it a famous mining section. The copper interests are pretty well developed, but are worked by primitive and slow processes.
One of the oddities of a Parisian journal is this advertisement: "A factory in Belleville produces within a few days artificial negroes. The metamorphosis, which is entirely harmless, is caused by iodine; it opens a brilliant future to young men, as black servants, circus negroes, etc., are always in demand. Prices low and payment easy. Curling irons for the manufacture of wooly hair always kept on hand."
There is a very religious restaurant in Boston, on the walls of which there is an odd jumble of texts of Scriptures and items from the bill-of-fare, something as follows: "He shall Feed His Flock like a Shepherd—
If this is not a street in Wonderland it might as well be. It is only about eight feet wide, and many are less. The eaves of the houses on each side project a quarter or a third of the way across the street, and the remaining third in the middle is very often loosely covered over with boards placed crosswise. When the sun is shining the streets are light enough, but in rainy or cloudy weather they are very dark and gloomy, and the peculiar twilight effect only adds another element of strangeness to the scene. Thank goodness, the streets are well paved with smooth granite flagstone, one foot by three, and being kept very clean there is no mud to plod through, even when it rains. Pedestrianism is the order of the day. There are no carriages, carts, drays, big freight wagons, omnibuses, or street cars to run over you, if you fail to get out of the way; for all the freight is carried by coolies.
Now and then, however, your wool-gathering is disturbed by a stir and loud shouting a little way down the street, and you see the crowd parting to right and left. Then you know there is a sedan chair coming and you take shelter behind a signboard, or in a friendly doorway, or flatten yourself against a wall until the peripatetic nuisance has gone by. But the streets are so narrow that chairs are not very often used. They move too slowly; it takes too much shouting to clear the way, and when two meet in a narrow thoroughfare one has to be side-tracked before the other can get by. The use of the chair, therefore, is confined to lazy merchants and officers, weak women and swell Europeans. For my part I would not do Canton in a sedan chair if I could have a whole set for nothing.
But there is one drawback to pedestrianism. As you pass along you are obliged to be on the alert to keep from coming into collision with half-naked coolies, carrying all sorts of loads. All loads are carried in the same way; every schoolboy knows it, so I will not stop to describe it. No matter where you go, you can be certain that every few minutes one of these coolies will come puffing and shuffling along at a dog trot, shouting every few steps to those in front of him to "clear the track," his load springing up and down, and his bamboo lathe creaking rhythmically at every step.—Cosmopolitan.
A Captain's Fortunate Discovery
Capt. Coleman, sehr. Weymouth, plying between Atlantic City and N.Y., had been troubled with a cough so that he was unable to sleep, and was induced to try Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption. It not only gave him instant relief, but allayed the extreme soreness in his breast. His children were similarly affected and a single dose had the same happy effect. Dr. King's New Discovery is now the standard remedy in the Coleman household and on board the schooner.
Free Trial Bottles of this Standard Remedy at Win. M. Higgins' drug store.
Business at Church·
is this advertisement: "A factory in Belleville produces within a few days artificial negroes. The metamorphosis, which is entirely harmless, is caused by iodine; it opens a brilliant future to young men, as black servants, circus negroes, etc., are always in demand. Prices low and payment easy. Curling irons for the manufacture of woolly hair always kept on hand."
There is a very religious restaurant in Boston, on the walls of which there is an odd jumble of texts of Scriptures and items from the bill-of-fare, something as follows: "He shall Feed His Flock like a Shepherd—Hot sausages, 10 cents." "If ye be Obedient ye shall eat of the Fat of the Land—Hot Apple Sauce, 5 cents." "God moves in a Mysterious Way—Hash, 10 cents." "Be Careful for Nothing—Cottee and Cakes, 10 cents."
There is said to be a tree in Mexico called the oily cocoa. Its seed is almost entirely composed of a fatty substance which has sometimes been used in making soup. A quantity of this seed was recently shipped to Europe, and a Stuttgart baker has successfully used the oil as a substitute for lard in making bread and cake. The seeds contain 12 per cent. more actual grease than ordinary pork lard, and can be kept without spoiling. There is said to be a fortune awaiting the man who will go down to Mexico and develop this business, says an exchange.
A new substance termed "saccharin" has been discovered in that wonderful material, coal tar, by a German chemist named Fahlberg, resident in the United States. It is stated to be 230 times sweeter than the best cane sugar, and hence it must be very sweet indeed. For some months past it has been used to sweeten and render palatable the food of persons suffering from diabetes at a Berlin hospital. In appearance it resembles flour, but is denser, and it dissolves easily in hot water. It appears from experiments by Prof. Emerson Reynolds, F.R.S., that it is harmless; and it is expected that, when its cost of production is reduced, saccharin will be a rival to cane sugar, because one part is enough to sweeten 10,000 parts of water. Either alcohol, glucose and glycerine dissolve it readily. At present the price is, however, about 40 cents per pound.
Business at Church
At a large and fashionable church, not a hundred miles from Wilton place, lives a careful and considerate shepherd, who is most anxious for the spiritual and the worldly welfare of those about to enter the holy state of matrimony under his auspices. The aspiring bridegroom on inquiring at the church receives a nicely got'up 'bill of fare,' much resembling what he would have handed to him on entering the Cafe Royal or similar resorts. On perusing he learns that he can have a marriage by banns for 12s., or a marriage by license for 15s. "N.B — The above fees only are legally demanded," says the carte de jour, but then comes a nice red line and the magic words: "When these fees are not adhered to, the following payments are customary."
To the Vicar..... Amount entirely optional
(We have heard this expression in other but not more pervasive words.)
£. s. d.
Clerk ..... 1 1 0
Verger ..... 0 5 0
Beadle ..... 0 5 0
Pew openers (divided) ..... 0 5 0
The fees for the choir follow, and then two items come:
£. s. d.
Use of red cloth (if desired) ..... 0 5 0
Use of awning ..... 3 3 0
To this there is a foot note:
The necessity for the red cloth and awning is left entirely to the discretion of those who arrange for the marriage, and they will not be supplied unless specially ordered.
London Truth.
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.
Oriental City.
I was the queerest, the wildering old city unnily has more strange hard than any other from willing to back it even now, when I try times and sounds I endurable visit, it makes brain whirl, just as it that a wonderful old suffering and how interThis is no more like Hongkong than an silver dollar. How am what we had exwith the substan-opeanness of Hongfossil, a relic of the Nineteenth cenEuropean quarter and ear. The city is all on every most, it will not story and a halt in ups are the thickest, broken succession of every shop the whole takes out boldly. So the next there is en-ended rooms and work, narrow passages here. There is no arch-houses are so jam-impossible to single or without climbing such it covers.
In Wonderland it only about eight less. The eaves of project a quarter or the street, and the middle is very often with boards placed sun is shining the roof, but in rainy or bare very dark and twilight effect on of strangeness to excess, the streets are
Love and Prayer.
I was a witness to a scene the other evening that made me feel young again, and that I shall remember with pleasure as long as I live. There is a cabled old Jersey Methodist cottager here who is noted for the length of his prayers and the sourness of his disposition. Strange to say, he has one of the sweetest and most charming of daughters, who looks as if she had seen about seventeen ice cream seasons. He holds family prayers every night in the cottage, at which time he prays long and loud, according to a set form, from which he never varies. In spite of his vigilance, a close intimacy has sprung up between his daughter and a young man, the son of a clergyman from near Easton, who is a college student.
The other evening she and her father were the only members of the family at home. I was strolling along, and as I came to the house I heard the "stern parent" praying away for dear life. I stopped in a place where I could not be observed, and looked in. The daughter composed the whole audience. She was kneeling with her face toward the window, with a bowed and tired look. Suddenly I saw her face light up, while she made a motion with her finger, as if beckoning to some one to come in. I looked, and there at the window was that rogue, her young man.
The bold rascal put his foot on the low window, raised himself up lightly with the grace and ease of a gymnast, dropped inside, and in less time than it takes to tell it was kneeling by her side. Such billing and cooing as went on there for about two minutes made my eyes stick out of my head at the audacity of the thing. I would have given a considerable sum to have been in that young man's place, but I almired his pluck and boldness so much that I could hardly keep from spoiling the affair by applaining.
The girl was able to accurately time the prayer from her long familiarity with the formula, and as it approached completion she gave her handsome Romeo due warning, he took a parting hug and kiss, dropped out of the window, and had hardly done.
Debt and Health.
A Western newspaper very reasonably affirms that one's condition for health or disease often depends upon his pecuniary state. To ensure health, so far as human effort can control the matter, one should above all, be cheerful, contented and calm. You cannot do this if you intentionally or unintentionally incur debt, for debt is embarrassing and painfully annoying. No person of the least pride or self-respect can possibly be comfortable if in debt. Debt is something that cannot always be avoided, although it never fails to produce, in persons of principle, an amount of mental worry that is absolutely distressing. Mental tension, pecuniary trouble, is one of the chief causes of insanity. Men struggle for a competency because they, especially those not far removed from poverty, fear poverty, not for themselves, but for others. A father will suffer more in the thought that his wife and daughter may be left penniles than he will if the family physician tells him that his wife has an incurable cancer, and may die at any moment, or that the daughter will be crippled for life. He prefers even this to the thought that she may be forced to manual labor. It is true that poverty in our artificial state of society involves all the miseries—hunger, overwork, humiliation and sickness—yet we can hardly understand why men should not choose them all rather than sickness and physical suffering. The man who commits suicide from pecuniary troubles is nine times ten, found to be one who is overworked or who has caged secretly or openly at the apparent injustice involved in work that brings no return, or who haunted by fear of poverty, has lived beyond his income, incurred annoying debts and takes his life to escape the consequent misery; and mental agony. Nothing overturns the mental balance so surely as a long-continued sense of injustice or long-continued debt,and nothing is so frequent a cause for suicide. Hope is said to spring eternal in the human breast, but in the matter of money making years of non-success kill hope and destroy mental agony and bodily health. No other form of robust heart is not always enjoyed by those who possess it. The taint of blood may be secretly undermined constitution. In time,the poison tainly show its effects,and with all virulence the longer it has been to permeate the system. Each pill boil,skin disorder and sense of lassitude,or languor,是 one of warnings of the consequences o
Ayer's Sarsaparilla
Is the only remedy that can be reliably in all cases;to eradicate the taint literary disease and the special course of the blood. It is the only that is sufficiently powerful to clearsethe system of Scrofula Mercurial impurities and thieves of Contagious Diseases. It trains the poisons left by Dipidand Scarlet Fever,and enables recuperation from the enferbler debility caused by these diseases.
Myriads of Curse
Achieved by Ayer's Sarsaparilla,the past forty years are attested:is no blood disease;at all possible that will not yield to it.What actions of this class,and wherever from the scurvy of the Aretle circl "veldles"of South Africa,the edy has afforded health to them by whom it was employed.I everywhere can cite numerous cases in their personal knowledge.of able curses wrought by it;where treatment had been unavailing.will do well to
Trust Nothing Else
than Ayer's Sarsaparilla.Nerule mixtures are offered to those as "blood purifiers,"which only the patient with the pretense of cheap doses,and with which it is experiment while disease is steamed coming more deep-seated and difficult.Some of these mixtures last harm.Bear in mind that medicine that can radically purify vitalized blood is
Ayer's Sarsaparilla
PREPARED BY
Dr.J.C.Ayer & Co.,Lowell
Sold by all druggists;price $ six bottles for $
How Animals Practice Medicine.
Animals get rid of their parasites by using dust, mud, clay, etc. Those suffering from fever restrict their diet, keep quiet, seek dark, airy places, drink water and sometimes plunge into it. When a dog has lost its appetite its eats that species of grass known as dog's grass, which acts as an anesthetic and a purgative. Cats also eat grass Sheep and cows, when ill, seek out certain herbs. An animal suffering from chronic rheumatism always keeps, as far as possible, in the sun. The warrior ants have regularly organized ambulances. Latreille cut the antennae of the ant, and other ants came and covered the wounded part with a transparent fluid secreted from their mouths. It a chimpanzee is wounded, it stops the bleeding by placing its hand on the wound or dressing it with grass and leaves. When an animal has a wounded leg or arm hanging on, it completes the amputation by means of its teeth. A dog, on being stung in the muzzle by a viper, was observed to plunge his head repeatedly for several days into running water. This animal eventually recovered. A sporting dog was run over by a carriage. During three weeks in winter it remained lying in a brook, where its food was taken to it. This animal recovered. A terrier hurt its right eye. It remained under a counter, avoiding light and heat, although it habitually kept close to the fire. It adopted a general treatment, rest and abstinence from food. The local treatment consisted in licking the upper surface of the paw, which it applied to the wounded ear; again licking the paw when it became dry. Animals suffering from traumatic fever treat themselves by the continued application of cold water, which M.Delaunay considers to be more certain than any of the other methods. In view of these interesting facts we are, he thinks, forced to admit that hygiene and therapeutics as practiced by animals may, in the interest of psychology, be studied with advantage.
Many physicians have been keen observers of animals, their diseases and the methods adapted by them in their instinctive work who has caged secretly or openly at the ap-parent injustice involved in work that brings no return, or who haunted by fear of poverty, has lived beyond his income, incurred annoying debts and takes his life to escape the consequent misery, and mental agony. Nothing overturns the mental balance so severely as a long-continued sense of injustice or long-continued debt, and nothing is so frequent a cause for suicide. Hope is said to spring eternal in the human breast, but in the matter of money making years of non-success kill hope and destroy mental vigor and bodily health. No other form of misery produces quite the same impression as financial wrong. To be a healthy man, learn to bear cheerfully the misfortune as well as the good fortune of life. Therefore, the mental requirements of the laws of health are cheerfulness, contentment and calmness, and that man live within his incline, however small—Physiological Journal.
Dust for Dressing Wounds.
In a paper read before the last meeting of the Pennsylvania State Medical Society, Dr Hewson of Philadelphia stated that for sixteen years he had used different kinds of earth as tropical applications in diseases which involve the skin. He has used it in the form of paste and dusted dry upon the skin. Clay has proved to be the best application. Following its application in cases of smallpox, measles, scarlet fever, erysipelas, etc., he always noticed a direct and rapid reduction of temperature, a dissipation of pungent bacteria local sensations, a diminution of the duration of thy disease, an alluring ingenuity general or constitutional symptoms, a prevention of complications which frequently occur as to have long been recognized as characteristic of each special disease and the destruction of all contactlessness. In the various forms of scarlet fever, as well as in German and French measles, Dr Hewson dusts the powdered earth all over the skin. In erysipelas and smallpox the clay is mixed with water in a glass or china dish with a wooden spatula until a smooth paste is formed, which is applied directly to the skin. A marked increase in the temperature of the dressing is appreciable at first, which lasts until the clay has become dry, which Dr Hewson recognizes as indicative of the severity of the disease according to its stage, and he is always satisfied with that taken at the end of the first twenty-four hours—the greater reduction showing the greater destruction of the morbid progress.
A Plant Which Destroys Malaria.
Dr Brandes, a physician at Hitzackes, Hanover, has written an article in a German medical paper in which he demonstrates the valuable properties of the anacharis alaimataum, a water plant which has latherto been considered as an unmitigated plague, choking rivers and altogether useless. Dr
It adopted a general treatment, rest and abstinence from food. The local treatment consisted in licking the upper surface of the paw, which it applied to the wounded eye; again licking the paw when it became dry. Animals suffering from traumatic fever treat themselves by the continued application of cold water, which Mr. Delaunay considers to be more certain than any of the other methods. In view of these interesting facts we are, he thinks, forced to admit that hygiene and therapeutics as practiced by animals may, in the interest of psychology, be studied with advantage.
Many physicians have been keen observers of animals, their diseases and the methods adopted by them in their instinct to cure themselves, and have availed themselves of the knowledge so brought under their observation in their practices.—W. O. Pieau-yune.
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 specially removed, and the corns cured. W. M. Higgins is Agent.
Death in Boiling Steel.
It is long since the newspapers recorded any accident so horrible as the death of the Woolwich molder who was overwhelmed by a cataclysm of boiling steel, and it is not often that so strange a ceremony as the burial of poor Moriarty is described in black and white. The fact is, the poor fellow is now part of a sixty-ton gun, in which form he will continue to serve his country. Yet, oddly enough, he was buried yesterday. For some sares and fragments of clothing were collected from the ingot and shovelled into the coffin, which was followed to the grave by what is called an imposing cortege. This solemn but consecratory fare calls to mind another case somewhat similar, which forms one of the ghastly legends of MiddleBrough. A laborer had tumbled head foremost into the fiery liquid, and nothing of him was left. But they ran a coffin-full of slag, held an inquest over it, and laid it in consecrated ground in the orthodox manner.—Pall Mall Gazette.
Bucklin's Arnica Salve.
The Best Salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sorea, 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.
A Plant Which Destroys Malaria.
Dr. Brandes, a physician at Hitzackes, Hanover, has written an article in a German medical paper in which he demonstrates the valuable properties of the anarchis alismatrum, a water plant which has lathered to be considered as an unmitigated plague, choking up rivers, and altogether useless. Dr. Brandes has remarked that in the district where life lives, and where malaria and rhizoma yearly appeared in a sporadic or epidemic form, these diseases have gradually decreased since the anarchis alismatrum began to infest the neighboring rivers and marshes, and since four years have totally disappeared. The above-named water plant nourishes itself on decayed vegetable matter, and grows with incredible acidity. It thus destroys the cefus which produce malaria and diarrhoea, and beside its presence obliges the frequent cleansing of standing waters, a measure benefited to health. Dr. Brandes therefore proposes that the experiment should be tried of planting the anarchis alismatrum in marshy districts. It is also useful in protecting the young of fish and affords an excellent manure. The plant came originally from Canada whence it was brought to England, and thence to Germany about 1840. In North Germany it rapidly spread far and wide, and this year appears in all parts in unusual luxuriance.—London Telegraph.
The venerable Duchess of Cambridge, aunt of Queen Victoria, has just completed the eighty-ninth year of her age. She after the Emperor of Germany, who is a few months her senior, the oldest member of a reigning house, and is a living link with a generation still more remote than that with which the aged Emperor is connected, for the Emperor's father was not born when the Duchess of Cambridge's father-in-law, George III., came to the throne. She is the last of a long generation of George III.'s children, and numerous as the King's family was, and some of its members long lived, she has survived them all by more than a quarter of a century.
ROBUST HEALTH
Ayer's Sarsaparilla
the only remedy that can be relied upon,
all cases, to eradicate the taint of heredry disease and the special corruptions
the blood. It is the only alternative
it is sufficiently powerful to thoroughly
erase the system of Scrofulous and
mercurial impurities and the pollution
Contagious Diseases. It also neurizes the poisons left by Diphtheria
and Scarlet Fever, and enables rapid
operation from the enfeeblement and
illness caused by these diseases.
Myriads of Cures
achieved by Ayer's SARSAPARILLA. In
past forty years, are attested, and there
no blood disease, at all possible of cure,
will not yield to it. Whatever the
measures of this class, and wherever found,
on the scurvy of the Aretic circle to the
colds," of South Africa, this remhas afforded health to the sufferers
whom it was employed. Druggists
where can cite numerous cases, withtheir personal knowledge, of remarke cures wrought by it, where all other
ment had been unavailing. People
do well to
Trust Nothing Else
Ayer's SARSAPARILLA. Numerous
mixtures are offered to the public
"blood purifiers," which only suture
patient "with the pretence of many
app doses, and with which it is folly to
periment while disease is steadily being more deep-seated and difficult of.
Some of these mixtures do much
ing harm. Bear in mind that the only
choice that can radically purify the
rated blood is
Ayer's Sarsaparilla,
PREPARED BY
J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass.
Sold by all druggists; price $1,
six bottles for $6.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
Of the State of California, in and for the
County of Los Angeles.
In the matter of the estate of
Gottlieb Koeffler, dec'd.
Notice of Sale of Real Estate.—Sections 1547-1550.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, THAT IN PURSUance of an order of the Superior Court of
State of California, in and for the county of Los Angeles, made on the 38th day of August; A.D. 1886, in
the matter of the estate of Gottlieb Koeffler,
deemed, the undersigned; the Administrator of said
estate, will sell at public auction to the highest bidder,
for cash, in lawful money of the United States,
and subject to confirmation by said Superior Court,
On Monday, the 13th day of September, 1886, at 4 o'clock p.m., all the right, title, interest, and estate of the said Gottlieb Koeffler at the time of his death,
and all the right, title and interest that the said estate has, by operation of law or otherwise, acquired since his death, in and to all that certain Not, piece or parcel of land, situate and being in the county of Los Angeles. State of California, bounded and described as follows:
Sixteen and one half acres on the NE corner of lot 40, Anaheim Extension, bounded on the north by the section line between sections 4 and 9, T 4. See R:10 W. S. B.M.; on the easel by Palm street; on the south by land of F. H. Keith; on the west by the Armenian tract.
Terms and Conditions of Sale:
One-half cash, lawful money of the United States;
to be paid on confirmation of the sale by the court,
less ten per cent. of the purchase money to be paid
to the undersigned on day of sale; balance to be paid six months from date of dead. The buyer to give his note for this balance, to draw interest at the rate of 5 per cent. per annum till paid, to be secured by mortgage on the land and the note to read "on or before," so the maker can pay it off any time he chooses to do so.
Deed at expense of purchaser.
J. R. PIFECK.
Administrator of the estate of Gottlieb Koeffler, decensed
DATED Aug. 12, 1886.
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.
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.
DRAFTS. LETTERS OF CHRIST OR POSTA
orders issued on Banks in the principal cities in all European countries.
Tickets entituting the holder to passage from New York to the several ports of England, France or Germany, or from any port by those worldly To New York via the Hamburg American Packet Company sold at regular rates. Return tickets at a reduction.
Certificates entituting the holder to passage on railroad from San Francisco to New York, or vice versa, issued at the established railroad.
Persons in Anabeim or vicinity desiring to send to any point in the countries named for any relative a friend can purchase ticket here and forward themor 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 mail.
Dairy Cows for Sale.
THIRTY-SIX HEADS OF MILCH COWS AND YOUNG HETTERS.
One spat of cattle.
A full line of farm utensils.
The above at the rate cheap. This is an excellent opportunity to go with a paying business, as I have a profitable milk cattle supply to D. W. C. COWAN, Anaheim.
F. & J. BACKS.
Importers, Manufacturers and Dealers in Furniture, Bedding, Paper Hangings, Picture Frames, etc.
UNDERTAKERS.
Agents for the Houses, Eldridge and Victor Sewing Machines.
Los Angeles Street.: Anaheim.
QUICK TIME AND CHEAP FARES
To Eastern and European Cities
Via the Great Trains interstate All Rail Routes.
Southern Pacific Company
(PACIFIC SYSTEM)
Daily Express and Enlighten Train make prompt connections with the several railway lines on the East.
New York and New Orleans
with the several steamer lines to ALL EUROPEAN PORTS.
PULLMAN PALACE SLEEPING CARS
attacked to Overland Express Trains;
THIRD-CLASS SLEEPING CARS
are run daily with Overland Express Trains.
No additional charge for Bertle in Third Class Cars.
All tickets sold, Shoppers get better service, and other information given upon application at the company’s office, where passenger calling in person can secure choice of routes.
RAILROAD LANDS
For sale in reasonable terms.
Apply to or address:
W. H. MILLS,
JEROME MAIDEN,
Land Agent,
C.P.R. R. San Francisco,
S.F.R. R. San Francisco.
A.N. TOWNE,
T.H. GOODMAN,
York, via the Hamburg American Packet Company sell 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 established gate.
Persons in Anabeim or vicinity desiring to send to any point in the countries named for any relative a friend can purchase ticket here and forward them to the proper person by mail.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF
Los Angeles.
Capital Stock $100,000
Surplus $175,000
E. F. SPENCE, President.
J. M. ELLIOTT, Cashier.
DIRECTORS:
J. D. BECKEL,
J. F. CRANE,
H. MARRY
W.W. LAW,
E. F. SPENCE.
STOCKHOLDERS:
Estate of A. H. WILLOW
I. W. HEDMAN,
J. W. WILLOW,
G. Q. SNEEY,
K. H. BECK,
H. MARRY,
S. H. MTE,
L. E. CARLSON,
J. H. BECKEL,
W.E.JAMES.
R. LUEDKE.
Watch Maker and Jeweler,
Centre Street, Anaheim.
INVERY DESCRIPTION: F.WATCHES, CLOCKS AND JEWELRY carefully repaired and warranted.
Elgin and Waltham Watches.
JEWELRY AND CLOCKS ALWAYS ON HAND.
Ostrich Farm NOTICE.
On and after JANUARY 1st the above farms will be open to visitors daily.
CHARGE: 20 cents each person.
All dogs found on the farm will be destroyed.
Transporters will be prosecuted.
By order
H.G.REID,
JUJARDIN'S NEVER FAILS AND INFALLIBLE NERVINE IN CURING Epileptic Fits Spasms, Full-Sickness, Convulsions, St. Vitus Disease, Alcoholism, Opium Eating, Foofula, and All NERVOUS and BLOOD DISEASES.
To Clergymen, Lawyers, Literary Men, Chants, Bankers, Lists and all whose sediment employ newtons Netrous Prostration, Suddances of the Food, Stomach, Bowels or organs, or who require a nerve tonic, appetizer stimulant, JUJARDIN'S NEVER FAILS is invaluable.
To Labrines - On account of its proven merits recommended and prescribed by the besticians in the country. One says: "It works a charm and so much pain. It will cure only the worst form of failing of the uterus, menorrhea, irregular and painful Menstruation, ovarian Troubles, inflammation and Ulceration all displacements and the consequent spinal weakness, and is especially adapted to change of Life."
Thousands proclaim it the most wonderful ornament that ever sustained a mining system. Price, $1.50 per bottle.
Sale by all Druggists.
REDINCTON & CO.
WHIGLESALE AGENTS,
San Francisco, Cal.
DR. WOOD'S IVER REGULATOR
Prepared from the Active Medicinal Properties Contained in Dandrake, Dandelion, Butternut, Black Root, Bog Bane, Bitter Root, Blood Root, Calisaya Bark, Barberry Bark, Sweet Flag, Indian Hemp, Wa-a-Hoo, Golden Seal, etc.
For the Speedy and Permanent Belief of the hopeless cases of Epilepsia, Jaundice, Chills and Fever. Disordered Digestion, sick Headache, General Debility,
DINGTON & CO., S.E. Wholesale Agt'z FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
THIRD-CLASS SLEEPING CARS are run daily with Overland Emigrant Trains. No additional charge for Berth in Third Class Cars.
IT TICKETS sold. Shorter great Births secure, and other information given upon application at the company's offices, where passenger calling in person can secure choice of routes.
RAILROAD LANDS For sale on reasonable terms.
Apply to or address:
W.H. MILLS,
JEROME MARDEN,
Land Agent,
C.P.K.R. San Francisco,
A.N. TOWNE,
T.H. GOODMAN,
General Manager,
Gen Pass & Tik Agt.
Aug 4-6m.
San Francisco, Cal.
UNDERTAKING
A SPECIALTY.
Bodies embalmed or preserved for any length of time without the use of ICE. Forest hearse in Los Angeles county.
TELEPHONE TO:
JOHN R. PAUL,
Santa Ana,
Embalmer 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, allays the itching acts as a poultice 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.
DONT 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: 50 cents each person.
All dogs found on the farm will be destroyed.
Trespassers will be prosecuted.
By order
H.G. REID,
Surveyor 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 contivae Pain in the head with a dull sensation in the back part. Pain under the shoulder-blade. Fulness after eating with a disinlination to exertion of body or mind. Irritability of temper. Low spirit with a feeling of having neglected some duty. Weariness, Dizziness, Flattering at the Heart. Dota before the eye. Headache over the right eye. Rastlessness with stiff dreams. Highly colored Urine, and CONSTIPATION.
TUTT'S PILLS are especially adapted to such cases, one does affects such a change of feeling as to astonish the sufferer.
They Increase The Appetite, and cause the body to Take on Fleas; thus the system is nourished, and by Our Tomie Action on the Digestive Organs, Gorman Blood is produced. Price Me. 44 Murray St., New York.
TUTT'S HAIR DYE.
GRAY HAIR OR WHINKERS 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 principal treatise on special diseases, with full instruction for sub-cases (30 pages). Price, $2.
J. G. STEELE, Agent,
328 Markee Street, San Francisco, Cal.