anaheim-gazette 1887-02-05
Searchable text
A BATTERY TAKING POSITION.
Did you ever see a battery take position?
It hasn't the thrill of a cavalry attack, nor the grimness of a bayonet charge moving slowly and determinedly on; but there is a peculiar excitement about it that makes old veterans rise in their saddles and cheer.
We have been fighting at the edge of the woods. Every cartridge box has been emptied once or more, and one-fourth of the brigade has melted away in dead and wounded and missing. Not a cheer is heard in the whole brigade. We know that we are being driven foot by foot, and that when we break back once more the line will go to pieces and the enemy will pour through the gap.
Here comes help!
Down the crowded highway gallops a battery, withdrawn from some other position to save ours. The field fence is scattered while you could count thirty, and the guns rush for the hill behind us. Six horses to a piece—three riders to each gun. Over dry ditches where a farmer would not drive a wagon, through clumps of bushes, over legs a foot thick, every horse on the gallop, every rider lashing his team and yelling—the sight behind us makes us forget the foe in front. The guns jump two feet high as the heavy wheels strike rock or log, but not a horse slackens his pace, not a cannonner loses his seat. Six guns, six caissons, sixty horses, eighty men race for the brow of the hill as if he who reached it first would be knighted.
A moment ago the battery was a confused mob. We look again and the six guns are in position, the detached horses hurrying away, the ammunition chests open, and along our line runs the command: "Give them one more volley and fail back to support the guns." We have scarcely obeyed when boom! opens the battery, and jets of fire jump down and scorch the green trees under which we fought and despaired.
The shattered old building of California presented a resolution from the Chamber of Commerce of San Francisco against the commercial treaty with Spain, providing for a reduction of the duty on raisins. Referred.
Some Tall Men.
The existence of whole nations of gigantic persons may well be questioned; but there can be no reasonable doubt of the reality of certain individuals, whose height has greatly exceeded that of men in general. The giant as a curiosity has been seen by nearly every American boy in the museum and in the circus. The stories of great giants of the past ages are more than interesting. The exact height of Og, the King of Bashan, has frequently given some supposing him to be more than twelve feet in height, while others think his stature did not exceed eleven feet. In like manner the giant Goliath, of the Bible, is generally computed to have been nine feet nine inches high; but commentators suppose that he might have been fully eleven feet.
The Emperor Maximinus was nine feet in height, and several other Romans of equal stature are said to have lived during the reign of Augustus. Accounts are contained in the philosophical transactions of the Royal Society, of human skeletons dug up in England, measuring eight and nine feet in length. These were probably the remains of Romanus. Many fabulous and contradictory stories were told at one time of the Patagonians who, according to travelers, had been a race of giants. An English official once declared that he had measured the bones of the man, in sepulchers in South America, between eleven and twelve feet high. Turner, the naturalist, declares that he once saw upon the coast of Brazil a race of gigantic savages, one of whom was twelve feet in height. The declaration of Turner is all the more credible, by the statement of
NEW:
The brewers of liquor sold over $7,000,000.
The Postoffice sanction the name Sitting Bull and G.
Dr. C. N. Moore of the town of West (Penn.) is dying from poisoning, contract drug.
The Indians are of the Government to railroads through the consent of the is traversed.
The Knights of clothing manufacture apolis, an oil refiner a building associate all co-operative.
The boys of the state H.) are on a strike servance of an old man compelled to take looking after the fighter.
A counterfeit quared by burglars wielding blew open the side a night or two age, dozen shots the propeller.
A bill has been introduced of Texas requiring thirty days' notice of ployes or reduction or requiring laborers to work at a strike.
The prevalence of the railroad men in this country and they are forming press it. Hereafter.
A moment ago the battery was a confused mob. We look again and the six guns are in position, the detached horses hurrying away, the ammunition chests open, and along our line runs the command: "Give them one more volley and fail back to support the guns." We have scarcely obeyed when boom! boom! opens the battery, and jets of fire jump down and scorch the green trees under which we fought and despaired.
The shattered old brigade has a chance to breathe for the first time in three hours, as we form in line and he down. What grum, cool fellows these cannoneers are! Every man is a perfect machine. Bullets splash dust into their faces, but they do not wince. Bullets sing over and around; they do not dodge. There goes one to the earth, shot through the head as he sponged his gun. That machinery loses just one beat, misses just one oog in the wheel, and then works away again as before.
Every gun is using short-fuse shell. The ground snakes and trembles, the roar snuts out all sounds from a line three miles long, and the shells go shrinking into the swamp to cut trees short off, to mow great gaps in the bushes, to hunt out and shatter and smuggle men until their corpses cannot be recognized as human. You would think a stormado was howling through the forest, followed by billows of fire, and yet men live through it—aye, great forward to capture the battery. We can hear their shouts as they form for the rush.
Now the shells are changed for grape and cannister, and the guns are fired so fast that all reports blend into one mighty roar. The shriek of a shell is the wickest sound in war, but nothing makes the flesh crawl like the demoniac singing, purring, whistling grapeshot, and the serpent-like sniff of cannister. Men's legs and heads are torn from bodies and bodies cut in two. A round shot or shell takes two men out of the rank as it crashes through. Grape and cannister mow a swath, and poke the dead on top of each other.
Through the smoke we see a swarm of men. It is not a battle line, but a mob of men desperate enough to bathe their bayonets in the flame of the guns. The guns leap from the ground almost as they are depressed on the foe, and shrieks and screams and shouts blend into one awful and steady cry.
Twenty men got on the battery are down, and the firing is interrupted. The foe accepts it as a sign of wavering and comes rushing on. They are not ten feet away when the guns give them a last shot. That discharge picks living men off their feet and throws them into the swamp, a blackened, bloody mass.
Up now, as the enemy is among the guns there is a silence of ten seconds, and then the flash and roar of more than 3,000 muskets, and a rush forward with bayonets. For what? Neither on the right nor left nor in England, measuring eight and nine feet in length. These were probably the remains of Romans. Many fabulous and contradictory stories were told at one time of the Patagonians who, according to travelers, had been a race of giants. An English official once declared that he had measured the bones of the men, in sepulchers in South America, between eleven and twelve feet high. Turner, the naturalist, declares that he once saw upon the coast of Brazil a race of gigantic savages, one of whom was twelve feet in height. The declaration of Turner is all the more credible, by the statement of M. Tauvet of France, who, in his description of America, published in Paris in 1575, asserted that he saw and measured the skeleton of a South American which was eleven feet five inches in length. To these remarkable instances may be added a well-proportioned living man, whom Dismemberbrock saw at Utrecht, measuring eight feet six inches. Dr. Becamus, an ancient scholar, reports having seen a youth of nine feet, a man of ten feet, and a woman nine feet in height.
Walter Parsons, who acted as porter to King James I. of England, was seven feet six inches in stature. But the Chinese claim to have had men among them in the last century who were fifteen feet high. However, this report may have no more foundation than the chronological tables of this son of China.
A Child-Wife Slays Her Husband
New York, January 27. — An Elmira (N.Y.) dispatch says: Jake Vanwert, a farmer living near Stockdale Junction, (Pa.) a short time ago married a girl scarcely 15 years old. He had a bad temper, and at times was a terror to the neighborhood, and shortly after the wedding day exhibited his audien and disagreeable nature to his children. Yesterday he got in a rage and chased her around the house and farm, brandishing a big knife. Finally she drew a revolver she had found in the house, and as he made a rush for her, she stepped aside, avoided the blade and sent a bullet through his neck near the jugular vein. Vanwert staggered back, but renewed the attack, and made a second lunge at the woman. Again she evaded the thrust and tired, the ball striking near the first. The man dropped to the ground and almost instantly died. The woman gave herself up to the authorities.
The Latest and Greatest Discovery
DR J. DEPRATES HAMBURG FIGS — A crystallized fruit catarrhia. A discovery of the greatest interest to the Medical Profession. A bone to every household. A most delicious laxative or purgative prepared from fruits and vegetables. So perfectly harmless that they may be administered with entire safety to an infant. So efficacious to adults that a single dose will prove their value, and so elegant a preparation that it needs only to be presented to the public to become a necessity in every household throughout the land. For liver complaints, habitual constipation, indigestion, dyspepsia and piles, they are specific. To travelers by sea and land they will be England, measuring eight and nine feet in length. These were probably the remains of Romans. Many fabulous and contradictory stories were told at one time of the Patagonians who, according to travelers, had been a race of giants. An English official once declared that he had measured the bones of the men, in sepulchers in South America, between eleven and twelve feet in height. The declaration of Turner is all the more credible, by the statement of M. Tauvet of France, who, in his description of America, published in Paris in 1575, asserted that he saw and measured the skeleton of a South American which was eleven feet five inches in length. To these remarkable instances may be added a well-proportioned living man, whom Dismemberbrock saw at Utrecht, measuring eight feet six inches. Dr. Becamus, an ancient scholar, reports having seen a youth of nine feet, a man of ten feet, and a woman nine feet in height.
Walter Parsons, who acted as porter to King James I. of England, was seven feet six inches in stature. But the Chinese claim to have had men among them in the last century who were fifteen feet high. However, this report may have no more foundation than the chronological tables of this son of China.
The last stone of thieves on Bird's Mountain; been finished recently; monument just 100 dots was first proposed. At an elevation of 2,500 dots of the sea; and is placed ever atop the mount.
Two of the largest chicks drawn in New York have hung up in the office road. They are both male and represent two genetically ed March 2, 1867; for $ by C. Vanderbilt. This November 23, 1885; for $ by W. H. Vanderbilt.
St. Louis has a ghost; but a complete phantom buggy; with its front curtain appalled traverses some of the paths then mysteriously vanishes people assembled to watch police have been detailed Some of the spectators sight of the ghostly phenotype nothing.
A New York lady; after lay apart from her husband made up her mind later like to have him again brought suit to annul her ed in 1867. The Judge w voice; the lawyers and men are dead; the husband has has a son; and on
Twenty men got on the battery are down,
and the firing is interrupted. The too accept it as a sign of wavering and coins rushing on. They are not too feet away when the guns give them a last shot. That discharge picks living men off their feet and throws them into the swamp, a blackened, bloody mass.
Up now, as the enemy is among the gun's there is a silence of ten seconds, and then the flash and roar of more than 3,000 muskets, and a rush forward with bayonets. For what! Neither on the right nor left nor in front of us is a living foe. There are corps around us which have been struck by three, four and even six bullets, and nowhere on this acre of ground is there a wounded man.
The wheels of the gun cannot move until the blockade of dead is removed. Men cannot pass from caisson to gun without climbing over windrows of dead. Every gun and wheel is smeared with blood; every foot of grass has its horrible stain.
Historians write of the glory of war. Burial parties saw murder where historians saw glory.—Dorothy Free Press.
The Raisin Tariff.
WASHINGTON, January 28. — Randall's Tariff bill proposes a direct assault upon California's interest, which will be resisted "tooth and toe-nail" by her representatives in the House and Senate. He proposes to put "currants, Zante, or other grapes," on the free-list, which would have the practical effect under the operation of customs decisions of making Spanish raisins free of duty. Secretary Bayard simply asked for an equalization of duties between Zante currants and raisins. The former are now paying one cent per pound, and the latter two cents per pound. Both are equally dried grapes. Randall, however, proposes to admit Zante currants free of all duty. There is no likelihood of the passage of Randall's bill, should it get through the House, as the Senate cannot be expected to concur in the bill in time for it to become a law before the 4th of March. In the House to-day, Morrow
The Latest and Greatest Discovery
DR. J. DEPRAT'S HAMBURG FIGS,
—A crystallized fruit cathartic. A discovery of the greatest interest to the Medical Profession. A boon to every household. A most delicious laxative or purgative prepared from fruits and vegetables. So perfectly harmless that they may be administered with entire safety to an infant. So efficacious to adults that a single dose will prove their value, and so elegant a preparation that it needs only to be presented to the public to become a necessity in every household throughout the land. For liver complaints, habitual constipation, indigestion, dyspepsia and piles, they are specific. To travelers by sea and land they will be found invaluable; they are positively unfair in their action, and this is the only medicine ever offered to the public that is acceptable to the taste, and so pleasant that children will eat the figs as eagerly as canny. For sale by every Drugstist throughout the world. Price: 25 cents a box. J. J. Mack & Co., Proprietors, 9 and 11 Front Street, San Francisco, Cal.
A Serious Drought.
NEW YORK, January 28. — At a meeting of the Directors of the Northern Pacific Railroad Company yesterday, a letter from Vice-President Oak was read, in which he stated that farmers along the line in Dakota west of the Missouri river, and for eighty miles east of the river, had lost nearly all their crops last year by drought and hail, and he had taken the responsibility of giving the public notice that the company would furnish seeds—wheat, oats and other grains—to such farmers as were destitute, to enable them to put in a crop the coming spring. The seed is to be a loan from the company, to be repaid, bushel for bushel, in the autumn. Mr. Oaks expresses the opinion that 100,000 bushels of wheat and 60,000 bushels of oats would be needed for seed, and he recommended that the board appropriate $100,600 for the purpose. His action was approved.
We do not sound a needless alarm when we tell you that the taint of scrofula is in your blood. Inherited or acquired, it is there, and Ayer's Sarsaparilla alone will effectively eradicate it.
A New York lady, after lying apart from her husband made up her mind later like to have him against brought suit to annul them ed in 1867. The Judge wore voice, the lawyers and men are dead, the husband has had a son, and on the thought it hardly worth existing arrangements.
The Bucksport Clipper went to a New Year's baggage "had pennants," flags all over them, and light, good setting sails up," says the nautical man right and left!" was the order crafts hove up, struck back and forth, placed with their port tacks about being a flaw of wind, they outside the lines with an rounded to and came back souther." The old salt quite understand all the matters considered them an impatient old time fore and aft break barn.
The expenditures of Contracting the attention of people should use at the public en copies of rules for several hundred packs of opera glasses, four $50 fine articles beyond comp overlooked, but when they asked to buy corset laces for ants, low mutterings of dishewing the coming storm, and that Representatives used to towels during the year canyon endurance of the earth.
An artesian well, now being Augustine, a dispatch to
WEEKLY
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA: SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 5. 1887.
NEWS ITEMS.
The brewers of New York city hold mortgages on liquor saloons to the amount of over $7,000,000.
The Postoffice Department has refused to sanction the naming of post offices after Sitting Bull and Geronimo.
Dr. C. N. Moore, a prominent physician of the town of West Springfield, near Erie, (Penn.) is dying from the effects of cocaine poisoning, contracted by the use of the drug.
The Indians are about to test the power of the Government to grant rights of way to railroads through the Territory without the consent of the tribe whose reservation is traversed.
The Knights of Labor have organized a clothing manufacturing company at Minneapolis, an oil refinery at Olean, (N. Y.) and a building association at Richmond, (Va.) all cooperative.
The boys of the schools of Dunbarton, (N. H.) are on a strike against the further observance of an old rule by which they are compelled to take turns at building and looking after the fires.
A counterfeit quarter was all that was secured by burglars who broke into a brewery and blew open the safe at Columbus, Ohio, a night or two age, not to mention a half dozen shots the proprietor fired at them.
A bill has been introduced in the Legislature of Texas requiring railroads to give thirty days' notice of the discharge of employees or reduction of their wages, and also requiring laborers to give a month's notice of a strike.
The prevalence of profanity is distressing the railroad men in the Mississippi Valley, and they are forming associations to suppress it. Hereafter conductors breaken.
Tribune says, upsets many preconceived opinions about Florida. The well, which is twelve inches in diameter, is the largest artesian well in the world, and by actual measurement flows at the rate of 7,000,000 gallons a day. The well is now 760 feet below the surface, and is being deepened every day. The old-fashioned Hea that Florida was of coral formation has of late years been vigorously disputed. The boring of this well proves that an immense depth of coral underlies the State, and samples of the material have been saved at ever-gestage of depth. The deeper the well is drowned the higher the temperature of the water becomes. It is now about eight degrees Fahrenheit.
Puck's Girdle.
There are now eight cables between North America and Europe. They average three thousand miles long and in one world there are something like one hundred thousand miles of submarine telegraph line. South America is connected with Europe by a cable from Lisbon, Portugal, to Pernambuca, Brazil, a distance of 3,333 nautical miles. This is the longest cable.
Two cables connect Florida with the Island of Cuba, and one extends from Cuba to Aspinwall on the Isthmus and another to Rio Janeiro.
From Trinidad, the most southerly of the West Indies, a cable follows the coast line of Brazil, clear down to Montevideo, in Uruguay, touching at many ports.
There are sixteen cables crossing the North Sea and the Straits of Dover. Two cables connect England and Portugal, and one cable connects England and Spain.
Nearly a score of cables lie beneath the Mediterranean.
One cable extends the entire length of the Red Sea from Suez to Aden, thence under the Arabian Sea to Bombay across India, under the Bay of Bengal to Penang and Singapore, under the Malay Peninsula, thence north under the Gulf of Siam and China Sea to Hongkong and China. This is known as the Indo route in the East, and extends to Yokohama and Yeddo, Japan.
No. 2635.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of California, in and for the county of Los Angeles.
Lewis Mellen plaintiff va. Mrs. Stella Anne Mellen 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 is the office of the Clerk of said Superior Court.
The people of the State of California send greeting to Mrs. Stella Anne Mellen, wife of Edwin Mellen, carpenter, city and county of Los Angeles (her maiden name having been Stella Anne Farneworth) defendant.
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 by the plaintiff for divorce from his wife, the defendant, on the ground of wilful and canceled desertion by her of the plaintiff and for dissolution of the marriage between them, which was celebrated at Russell Village, county of Saint Lawrence and State of New York, on the 21st of September, 1899. Reference is had to Complaint for partiemans.
And you are hereby notified that if you fail to appear and answer the said Complaint as above required, the said plaintiff will take judgment of divorce and dissolution of the said marriage against you, and for custody of Almanuel Mellen, the minor child of the marriage.
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 22nd day of December in the year of our Loud one thousand eight hundred and eighty-six.
C. H. DUNSMOOK, Clerk
By L. J. THOMPSON, deputy
Jan22 2m
J. Gardiner, attorney for plaintiff No. 4, Lawyers' Block. Temple street, Los Angeles.
No. 1525.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT IN AND FOR the county of Los Angeles, State of California.
In the matter of the estate and guardianship of Edwin Wood, Edith Wood, Fannie Wood and Corn Wood, minors—Order to show cause on application of guardians for order-of sale of real estate belonging to an order for sale of these purposes therein set forth:
It is hereby ordered That the next of kin of the said ward, and all persons interested in the said estate, appear before this Court on Monday, the 21st day of February, 1887, at 10 o'clock a.m., at the courtroom of this Court at the courthouse in the city and county of Los Angeles; then and there to show cause why an order should not be granted for the sale of such estate;
And it is further ordered That a copy of this
ROBUST HEALTH
Is not always enjoyed by those who seem to possess it. The taint of corrupt blood may be secretly undermining the constitution. In time, the poison will certainly show its effects, and with all the more virulence the longer it has been allowed to permeate the system. Each pimple, sty, boil, skin disorder and sense of unnatural habitue, or languor, is one of Nature's warnings of the consequences of neglect.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT AND OF THE County of Los Angeles, State of California.
In the matter of the estate and guardianship of Elvin Wood, Edith Wood, Fannie Wood and Cora Wood, minors—Order to show cause on application of guardian for order of sale of real estate.
On reading and filing the petition of Salome A Wood, the guardian of the person and estate of Elvin Wood, Edith Wood, Fannie Wood and Cora Wood, minors, praying for an order of sale of certain real estate belonging to said wards for the titles and purposes therein set forth.
It is hereby ordered that the next of kin of the said ward, and all persons interested in the said estate, appear before the Court on Monday, the 21st day of February, 1857, at 10 o'clock A.M., at the court room of this Court at the courthouse in the city and county of Los Angeles, then and there to show cause why an order should not be granted for the sale of such estate.
And it is further ordered, that a copy of this order be published at least once a week for three successive weeks before the said day of hearing, in the Anaheim Gazette, a newspaper printed and published in said county of Los Angeles.
WM. A. CHINEY,
Superior Judge.
Dated January 19, 1857.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE County of Los Angeles, State of California.
In the matter of the Estate of Lawson L. Farley, deceased, having filed his petition hereinafter for an order of sale of a certain portion of the real estate held for the purposes herein set forth.
It is therefore ordered by the Judge of said Court, that all persons interested in the estate of said decedent, appear before the said Superior Court on Monday, the 21st day of February, 1857, at 10 o'clock A.M., at the court room of this Court at the courthouse in the city and county of Los Angeles, then and there to show cause why an order should not be granted for the sale of such estate.
And that a copy of this order be published at least once a week for four successive weeks in the Anaheim Gazette, a newspaper printed and published in said county.
WM. A. CHINEY,
Judge of the Superior Court.
Dated January 6, 1857.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE County of Los Angeles, State of California.
CORNELIA H. SCARBOROUGH,
Plaintiff
JOHN W. SCARBOROUGH,
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 Cork of said superior Court.
The People of the State of California send Greeting to John W. Scarborough, Defendant:
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 Sammanuja, if served within this country or, if served elsewhere, within thirty days or judgment by default will be taken against you according to the prayer or said Complaint.
The said action is brought to obtain the judgment and decree of said Court disclosing the bounds of matrimony now existing between plaintiff and defendant and that they be forever and absolutely divorced, the one from the other, and that the care, custody and control of the minor child of plaintiff and defendant, Ada Scarborough, be awarded to the plaintiff, and for such other and further relief as may so meet to the Court and agreeable to equity and for cost of suit. Reference is had to Complaint for par-ticulars.
And you are bergery notified that if you fail to appear and answer the said Complaint will cause your default to be entered herein and will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in said Complaint.
GIVEN under my hand and the Seal of
ROBUST HEALTH
Is not always enjoyed by those who seem to possess it. The taint of corrupted blood may be secretly undermining the constitution. In time, the poison will certainly show its effects, and with all the more virulence the longer it has been allowed to permeate the system. Each pimple, styli, skin disorder and sense of unnatural lassitude, or languor, is one of Nature's warnings of the consequences of neglect.
Ayer's Sarsaparilla
Is the only remedy that can be relied upon in all cases, to eradicate the taint of hereditary disease and the special corruptions of the blood. It is the only alternative that is sufficiently powerful to thoroughly cleanse the system of Serofulous and Mercurial impurities and the pollution of Contagious Diseases. It also neutralizes the poisons left by Diphtheria and Scarlet Fever, and enables rapid recuperation from the enfeeblement and debility caused by these diseases.
Myriads of Cures
Achieved by Ayer's SARSAPARILLA, in the past forty years, are attested, and there is no blood disease at all possible of cure, that will not yield to it. Whatever the aliments of this class, and wherever found, from the sourv of the Arctic circle to the "veilt-sores" of South Africa, this remedy has afforded health to the sufferers by whom it was employed. Drugists everywhere can cite numerous cases, within their personal knowledge, of remarkable cures wrought by it, where all other treatment had been unavailing. People will do well to
Trust Nothing Else
than Ayer's SARSAPARILLA. Numerous crude mixtures are offered to the public as "blood purifiers," which only allure the patient with the pretense of many cheap doses, and with which it is folly to experiment while disease is steadily becoming more deep-seated and difficult of cure. Some of these mixtures do much fasting harm. Bear in mind that the only medicine that can radically purify the vitilated blood is
Ayer's Sarsaparilla,
PREPARED BY
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass.
Sold by all druggists; price $1, six bottles for $5.
GAZETTE.
RY 5. 1887.
NO. 18.
J. H. BULLARD, A. B., M.D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Office and Drug Store
On Los Angeles street, east of Planters' Hotel.
OFFICE HOURS:
8 to 9:30 a.m.; 1 to 2, and 6:30 to 7:30 p.m.
DR. E. L. COWAN,
DENTIST.
Will be in his Anaheim office on Thursday, Friday and Saturday of each week.
MASSER & WILDER,
DENTISTS.
ROOMS: 15, 16 and 17.
Cor. Main and Commercial sts.
LOS ANGELES
Will be at the Planters' Hotel, Anaheim, on the 19th and 11th of each month.
RICHARD MELROSE,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
"GAZETTE" Office, Anaheim
G. D. FIELD,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
ANAHEIM.
H. C. KELLOGG,
CIVIL ENGINEER & SURVEYOR.
(DEPUTY COUNTY SURVEYOR)
OFFICE—In Room 2, over Langenberger's store, cor. Center and Lemon streets, Anaheim.
CHAS. W. HICKS,
SEED MERCHANT.
Dealer in
GRAIN, MILL FEED,
POTATOES AND ONIONS.
No. 4, S. Main street, Los Angeles.
nov 27-4m
Telephone No. 407
A. T. WALLOP,
GROCERY AND FEED STORE.
Cor. Center and Los Angeles sts.
CHARLES PAMPERL,
Dealer in
HARDWARE, CROCKERY, and HOUSE-FURNISHING GOODS
... Anaheim...
WILLE & ALBREcht,
Proprietors of the old
PIONEER COOPERAGE.
COOPERAGE.
A large quantity of
BARRELS, HALF-BARRELS,
FIVE & TEN GALLON KEGS.
PERIOR COURT
Los Angeles, State of California.
center of the estate of Lawson filing his petition herein sale of a certain portion of decedent, for the purposes by the Judge of said Court, in the estate of said deceiver said Superior Court on February, 1887, at 10 o'clock at the Court Room of the Court House in the city to show cause why an order to the said executor to state of the said deceased necessary.
order be published at least five consecutive weeks in the Anaheim print and published
WM. A. CHENEY,
of the Superior Court.
RIOR COURT
California, in and for the Los Angeles.
BOROOUGH,
Plaintiff
ROUGH,
Defendant
terror Court of the State of the county of Los Angeles in said county of Los Angeles Clerk of said superior California send Greeting defender.
to appear in an action above named plaintiff in state of California, in and to answer the ten days (exclusive service on you of this county; or, if served or judgment by decree you according to the to obtain the judgment ordering the bonds of mat- plaintiff and defendant absolutely divorced, that the care, custody of plaintiff and defense warranted to the plaintiff, over relief as may so mable to equity and for to Complaint for par that if you fail to ap- Complaint as above re- cause your default to apply to the Court for the palat.
my hand and the Seal of
G. D. FIELD,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
ANAHEIM.
II. C. KELLOGG,
CIVIL ENGINEER & SURVEYOR.
(DEPUTY COUNTY SURVEYOR)
OFFICE—In Room 2, over Langenberger's store, car. Center and Lemon streets, Anaheim.
JOHN C. PELTON, Ja.
ARCHITECT.
Wilson Block, No. 14 W. First Street, bet, Spring and Main, LOS ANGELES, Cal.
WM. R. HARKER,
SADDLE AND HARNESS MAKER,
Center street.....ANAHEIM.
L. GUNTHER,
PIONEER BOOT & SHOE MAKER.
Cor. Adele and Los Angeles stg....ANAHEIM
GEORGE BAUER,
BOOT AND SHOE MAKER.
Center street.....Anaheim.
Making and repairing at the lowest cash price. All orders promptly attended to. All work guaranteed.
FURNITURE
Direct from Eastern Factories.
LATEST STYLES
At prices lower than in Los Angeles
CALL AND EXAMINE
For yourself.....F. & J. BACKS—
S. A. DENNIS,
CARRIAGE & SIGN PAINTER,
Offers as references the numerous wagons and signs painted by him in Anaheim.
PRICES REASONABLE.
The patronage of the public respectfully solicited.
Center street.....ANAHEIM.
T. S. GRIMSHAW.
D J SORENSEN.
SORENSEN & GRIMSHAW CONTRACTORS,
BUILDERS AND HOUSE-MOVERS,
ANAHEIM.
PLANS AND ESTIMATES FURNISHED FOR ALL WORK IN OUR LINE, AND GUARANTEES GIVEN THAT OUR WORK SHALL BE SATISFACTORY.
F. H. KEITH
PIONEER COOPERAGE.
Auguste street.....ANAHEIM
COOPERAGE.
A large quantity of
BARRELS, HALF-BARRELS,
FIVE & TEN-GALLON KEGR.
For sale cheap. Apply to R. DREYFUS & CO.....ANAHEIM
F. & J. BACKS.
Importers, manufacturers and dealers in
FURNITURE, BEDDING
PAPER HANGING,
PICTURE FRAME, NEQ
UNDERTAKERS
AGENTS
For the Howe, Eldridge and Vletor Sewing machinaq
Los Angeles street.....ANAHEIM.
B. DREYFUS & CO.
Growers and dealers in
CALIFORNIA WINES
AND
GRAPE BRANDY.
630 to 612 Grannan street, San Francisco.
45 Broadway, New York.
BALED HAY.
BEST QUALITY.
For sale in any quantity...
Apply to MELOSEE & NAPP.
ANAHEIM LODGE, NO. 207, F & A.M., hold regular meetings on the Monday of or preceding the full moon in each month.
Sojourning brethren in good standing are qualified invited to attend.
THEO. REISED, W. M.
J. S. GARDINER, Secretary.
Dilley & Brunswicker,
Palace Meat Market,
Los Angeles St., Anaheim.
Keep everything in the line of meat of the freshest and best quality procurable, and gill dealing sherders to any part of town. Having come to Anaheim to stay, we respectfully solicit the patronage of the public, and will always endeavor to please them.
SORENSEN & GRIMSHAW CONTRACTORS,
— BUILDERS AND — HOUSE-MOVERS,
ANAHEIM.
PLANS AND ESTIMATES PURNISHED FOR ALL WORK IN OUR LINE, AND GUARANTEERS GIVEN THAT OUR WORK SHALL BE SATISFACTORY
F. H. KEITH,
= REAL ESTATE AGENT.
Live Stock Bought and Sold on Commission,
ANAHEIM.
Melrose & Knapp
TRANSACT A GENERAL BUSINESS IN
REAL ESTATE
IN ALL ITS BRANCHES.
LOANS NEGOTIATED, COLLECTIONS MADE, ETC.
Fire Insurance Policies written and Delivered at once
ALL BUSINESS CONFIDED TO THEM WILL BE
Promptly and Honorably Executed,