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anaheim-gazette 1887-08-18

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WEEKLY GAZETTE. Published every Thursday Established 1870. Richard Melrose EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: One Year ... $2.00 Six months ... 1.25 Three months ... 75 OFFICE—In P.O. Boxing, Center Street, A aheim TRANSIENT ADVERTISING: | Week | 2 weeks | 3 weeks | 4 weeks | | :--- | :---: | :---: | :---: | | 1 week | $1.00 | $1.50 | $2.00 | $2.50 | | 2 weeks | 2.00 | 3.00 | 4.00 | 4.50 | | 3 weeks | 2.00 | 4.50 | 5.00 | 5.50 | | 4 weeks | 4.00 | 6.00 | 7.00 | 8.00 | Santa Abie, THE KING of CONSUMPTION. Every Bottle is warranted to soothe and strengthen the Bronchial Tissue, they inflammation and cleanse the Lungs of Impurities. Gives Satisfaction and druggists like to sell it. "Your Long Look at Santa Abie is meeting with large sales, and gives universal satisfaction." W. B Stephenson, Drogist, Brooklyn, Colo. The Best Part of using your Lung Restorer, Santa Abie, pronounce it the best Cough Remedy on the market. W. E Denent & Co., Drogists, Ascita, Or. Because it is the only remedy that gives instant relief and therefore is preferred to all others. Those who have used it "Your remission gies are giving satisfaction, and a customer with Bronchitis has only remedy that gives instant relief and Cover, Drogis, Riverside, Cal." Have the pleasure to inform you that your preparations are meeting with large rates. We hear nothing but praise from any having occasion to use them Nanscawen & Co., Drogists, Visalia, Cal. Not over-estimated Sold under a positive guarantee of satisfaction when used as directed or money refunded. But one bottle returned from 20,000 sold in California the first year. That it will accomplish the end desired in all affections of the Throat and Lungs and you not only will not be without it yourself, but will recommend it to others as thousands have done, who have tried everything else in vain. Money is no object where health is in the balance and the trifling sum Convince you ORCHARD FARM AND VINEYARD. OVER PRODUCTION. In writing of fruit culture in California certain alarmists have, of late, raised the cry of over-production. With the statistics of fruit imports before us we can see no force in the alarmist argument. The United States imports annually about 60,000,000 pounds of prunes, 7,000,000 pounds of figs, 53,000,000 pounds of raisins, 5,000,000 pounds of almonds, 18,000 carloads ofanges and bananas, two hundred and ten carloads of preserved fruits, two hundred and fifty carloads of olive oil and six hundred and fifty carloads of other fruits representing a total value of over $20,000,000. With such figures in view the fear of overproduction is utterly groundless. SOMETHING ABOUT OLIVES The member of a large olive oil manufacturing firm of Port Maurice, Italy, is now in St. Louis. In an interview he said: Our olive grounds cover a great many acres and the trees are hundreds of years old. They commence bearing at ten year-and produce a crop every third year thereafter. Occasionally a tree will bear twice in two years, but this is something unusual. But a crop at any time is very uncertain, for if we have no rain we have no olives. The season lasts from six to eight months, and every day during this time we have a hundred or more girls gathering them. They are never taken from the tree, but picked up as they fall on the ground. The number of girls, therefore, depends a great deal upon whether the wind is blowing or not. After the olives are gathered they are carried in baskets to the mill, where the oil is pressed out of them. It is then strained through cotton to clarify it, and it is ready for market. From 200 pounds of olives we will get about thirty pounds of oil, or a little over 10 per cent. The olives which ripen in May make the clearest and most expensive oil, and that made in September the cheapest. We always take our orders a year in advance. A great amount of cotton-seed oil is mixed with a little olive oil in this country and sold for the pure article, but an examination will expose the adulteration." WHEN IS AN ORANGE TREE IN FULL BEARING? This is a question that is frequently asked Have the pleasure to inform you that our preparations are meeting with large rules. We hear nothing but praise from any having occasion to use them. Nunscawen & Co., Longgats, Visalia, Cal. Not over-estimated. Sold under a positive guarantee of satisfaction, when used as directed or money refunded. But one bottle returned from 20,000 sold in California the first year. That it will accomplish the end desired in all affect of the Threat and Lungs and you not only will not be without it yourself, but will recommend it to others, as thousands have done, who have had everything else in vain. Money is no balance and the trifling sum can purchase a remedy that will stand between you and one of the most dreadful of human ill. Circulars sent free, containing detailed description. SANTA ABIE Is prepared only by the Abelia Medical Co., Grove Sodor & Kruz, drugstores, Anaheim Cal Hollman, Haas & Co., Wholesale agents, Los Angeles, Cal. J.M. Griffith Company (A CORPORATION.) LUMBER DEALERS (Near Railroad Depot) ANAHEIM, Keep constantly on hand. DOORS, BLINDS, WINDOWS. MOULDINGS. POSTS. SHAKES, SHINGLES, LATH, HAIR, PLASTER OF PARIS. Anaheim-Grist Mills Operating on WEDNESAYS' and SATURDAYS of each week. Grain, Feed, Meal, etc., of all varieties. Corn Shelled and Shipped W.T. BROWN, Agent. ALWAYS PURCHASE GOODYEAR'S "Gold Seal" RUBBER HOSE, PHYSICIANS Have Found Out That a contaminating and foreign element in the blood, developed by indigestion, in the cause of rheumatism. This settles upon the sensitive subcutaneous covering of the muscles and ligaments of the joints, causing constant and shifting pain, and aggregation as a calcareous, chalky deposit which produces stiffness and distortion of the joints. No fact which experience has demonstrated in regard to Hostetter's Stomach Bitters has stronger evidence to support than this, namely, that this medicine of comprehensive uses checks the formidable and atrocious disease, nor is it less positively established that it is preferable to the persons often used to arrest it, since the medicine contains only salutary ingredients. It is also a signal remedy for malarial fevers, constipation dyspepsia, kidney and bladder ailments, debility and other disorders. See that you get the genuine. A Philadelphia school girl, upon being asked by the teacher to define a hollow mockery, promptly replied, "A bustle." Don't Experiment. You cannot afford to waste time in experimenting when your lungs are in danger. GOODYEAR'S "Gold Seal" RUBBER HOSE, BELTING PACKING, Clothing, Boots and Shoes THE BEST THAT CAN BE MADE OF RUBBER. GOODYEAR RUBBER CO. R. H. PEASE, JA., Agents. 577 & 579 MARKET ST., San Francisco, Cal. WIZARD OIL CONCERTS Are remembered with pleasure by all, and many can testify to the wonderful healing power of Kamlin's Wizard Oil. It Cures Neuralgia, Toothache, Headache, Catarrh, Croup, Sore Throat, RHEUMATISM, Lame Back, Sprains, Bruises, Wounds and All Aches and Pains. Persons who profess to have been our partners, or claim to have improvements on Wizard Oil, are impassioned and their medicines cheap imitations. The genuine Wizard Oil is sold by all Drugstores. Price, 50c. and 10c. Our Song Book free to all. A Philadelphia school girl, upon being asked by the teacher to define a hollow mockery, promptly replied, "A bustle." Don't Experiment. You cannot afford to waste time in experimenting when your lungs are in danger. Consumption always seems at first, only a cold. Do not permit any dealer to impose upon your with some cheap imitation of Dr King's New Discovery for Consumption. Conghs and Colds, but be sure you get the genuine. Because he can make more profit he may tell you he has something just as good, or just the same. Don't be deceived, but insist upon getting Dr King's New Discovery, which is guaranteed to give satisfaction in all throat, lung and chest affections. Trial bottles free at A Krug's drug store. People who intend to put down artistic wells should first provide themselves with a Sinking fund. Saved his Life. Mr. D. I. Wilcoxson, of Horse Cave, Ky., says he was, for many years, badly afflicted with Psthiase, also Diabetes; the pains were almost unendurable and would sometimes almost throw him into convulsions. He tried Electric Bitters and got relief from first bottle and after taking six bottles, was entirely cured, and had gained in flesh eighteen pounds. Sava he positively believes he would have died, had it not been for the relief afforded by Electric Bitters. Sold at 50 cents a bottle by A. Krug. A woman being asked why husbands quit courting their wives, said it was because other men did it so much nicer. Bucklen's Arnica Satre. The best salve in the world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sorces, 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. Sold by A. Krug, druggist, Anaheim. SCENES IN NORWAY. A PEEP AT THE MOST NORTHERN FORT IN THE WORLD. A Visit to the Public Schools of Vardø. Pleasant and Entertaining Exercises. Malodorous Factories for Rendering Whale Blubber into Oil. Vardo is the most easterly town in Norway, located on an island of the same name in the Arctic ocean, in latitude 70 degrees 29 minutes 36 seconds north. It is separated from the mainland by a channel two miles wide, and contains a population of about 2,000. It claims the most northern fort in all the world, which is garrisoned by sixteen men and has an armament of about an equal number of old fashioned cannon, making a man for each gun. The keystone of an arch over the entrance to the rampart bears the date "1737." There being two public schools in the place, and I naturally having a curiosity to visit a seat of learning whose foundations were lashed by the Arctic wave, I entered the larger of the two by a rear door, for there was no entrance from the street nor at either end. I was kindly and politely saluted by the teacher, and on entering the main room the pupils arose in a body and bowed to me. A seat was given me and a book was placed in my hand that I might follow the boys and girls through their reading lesson, which was characterized in some measure by that doleful enunciation so often heard in rural schools. The girls wore the inevitable handkerchief about their heads. A bit of lithe cane in a corner represented the pedagogic mace. The rooms on this day, the 8th of July, were heated by coal stoves. The school contained four departments, under a male principal, and three assistant female teachers, all intelligent and wide awake. From the principal's room I passed to an adjoining one in charge of a bright and neatly attired young lady, who required her pupils to sing for me, and strove with graceful tact to make the exercises pleasant and intelligible to one totally ignorant of the language. It was almost pitiful to see some of the girls caressing small bunches of pumy dandelion blossoms that seemed as precious to them as a victoria regia would be to a southern maid. Others were nursing a few sprays of millefolium in bottles of water, and one could only wonder that so stunted and sparse a flora could beget any love for flowers at all; and yet geraniums and roses in the windows of the better houses are not uncommon. Excepting a small and unimportant one at Hammersfest, this is the most northern school in the world, and after a pleasant hour there... The Modern Queen of Hearts. In the dark ages at his ease Men helped himself to all degrees Of learned distinction, Nor dreamed that woman ever could master Ho Race, Vir Gil, or Zo Roaster Without extinction. But all is changed. In Greek and Latin. By hives which learned drones have sat in, Queen bees sip honey. By classic streams they Homer spout, And no male don can drive them out For love or money. Eureka. The motto of California means, I found it. Only in that land of sunshine where the orange, lemon, olive, fig and bloom and ripen, and attain their perfection in mid-winter, are the herbs found, that are used in that place remedy for all throat and lung troubles. SANTA ABIE the ruler of coughs, ma and consumption. Mr. A. Krugheim, Cal., has been appointed agent this valuable California remedy, and she under a guarantee at $1 a bottle. Thrills $2.50. Try California Cat-R Cure, the only anteced cure for catarrh. $1, by mail. Women have danced publicly within only within the past 500 years. But they have led men many a dance since AD day. Unnecessary Misery. Probably as much misery comes from initial constipation as from any derangement of the functions of the body, and it is cult to cure, for the reason that no one to take the medicines usually present HAMBURG FIGS were prepared to obey this difficulty, and they will be found apt to the taste of women and children cents. At all druggists. J. J. Magg & proprietors, S. F. Some of the milkmen hang pails of down the well to keep the milk cool of them use too much rope. The Archbishop of Cologne has excommicated two men for dueling. Good Cologne! There’s scents even in her bins. “With all thy false I love thee,” quoted the husband she attended his store hair. And then she smiled upon with her celluloid teeth. The real reason why some people live such an extreme old age is that they know exactly when they were born. SADLY MISTAKEN WOMEN. The Great Cause of Female Unhappy and Loss of Attractiveness Explained [Mother’s Magazine.] How Consumption is Communicated. Professor Ruhle of Bonn, in a recent paper on consumption of the lungs, states that in his opinion the most frequent manner of contracting this malady is from a diseased person through the sputa, also through the glands, exfoliations from the skin, or any way in which the poison may appear on the surface and be transported by means of pocket handkerchiefs, washing, etc. The fact that the attendants in hospitals who have the care of consumptives are seldom attacked with the disease, convinced the writer that it is not the air through which the germs are carried, but it is communicated in another mode, in fact, the way in which the members of Now many sulters sought to win Minerra with their vapid chin And polished cheek She bowed not on the Appian Way To any man who could not say Ice cream in Greek For she was loveller than the dawn And little of figure as fawn Out of his mind One fellow wrote a song; His quantities, poor wretch, were wrong She cut him blind But, ally a lovely youth there came A very Paris, and his game Was, with a ball, Played by the Greeks in Athena when The gods were young Of all the nien He had the call. A champion he, whose mighty bat Had laid full many a floomer that His elm was true When at a rival head, Edolph With eye unrising, as in golf, The baseball three. One eye cause. Torn were his clothes. And on a patte he wore his nose. Arm in salting "Minerva" varied the youth, with plece. We've busted them. Horait" and also "Sad" Thing-sling. She was the belle. All it was sweet. She bade him a trunk down at her feet. And covered him then. My best and Lovestead of Art. The Master gave them no cards. Her joint pension-you. California Snakes. The eastern boom I made the boom made by eastern people with money has started up some of the old dead habitats of California With the easy progress of civilization this good old industry of lying had almost died cut It got discouraged, and so many wonderful things had happened elsewhere that it was hard for the California imagination to meet the necessities. It was easier to give up lying to strangers altogether, for even the most untraveled caster could ring the bell on the California guide or stage driver. These gently are now awakening from their lethargy and beginning to make the Yosemite and other trips lively. A friend of mine from the east has just come back from the Yosemite and he relates his experience. This stingo driver found out that he was seriously afraid of snakes and immediately proceeded to make his hair stand on each. Venomous reptiles? You bet. I don't know what reptiles, but them snakes, you can just bet your life is venomous. Why one day I was nominated here drivin' a wagon, when I catches sight of a snake in the brush, all ready for a spring. My horses starts an I whips me up fast to clear the snake, don't you see, before he could spring. He makes one clear spring, the snake does, an he misses the horse." That was lucky—but you—you" Lucky! You bet your life it was lucky. He missed the horses, the shake did, but he struck his fangs clean through the wagon." You don't say! I do say, and melrose you won't believe it; but it's a fact. He stuck his fangs clean through that wagon, not swelled up so bad that we had to leave it by the way side and take the horses home." San Francisco Chronicle. Around the Mabogany. Yes," said Miss Browze, of Chicago, "it is a pleasure to dine at the Wabashes. Mrs. Wabash is naturally hospitable, and aside from the general excellence everything is served in a way that is positively delightful to a person of cultured tastes. And her soups are delicious. Why, do you know," went on the young lady, that last evening I served to soup three times, and could easily quote her pupils to sing for me, and strove with graceful tact to make the exercises pleasant and intelligible to one totally ignorant of the language. It was almost pitiful to see some of the girls caressing small bunches of pungy dandelion blossoms that seemed as precious to them as a victoria regia would be to a southern maid. Others were nursing a few sprays of millefolium in bottles of water, and one could only wonder that so stunted and sparse a flora could beget any love for flowers at all; and yet geraniums and roses in the windows of the better houses are not uncommon. Excepting a small and unimportant one at Hammertest, this is the most northern school in the world, and after a pleasant hour there in I departed. The remainder of the day I concluded to spend in visiting the whale "fabriks;" that is, the establishments for rendering whale blubber into oil and transforming the krang (lensed carcasses) into artificial guano. I have had occasion already to mention several of the most northern things in the world; here I discovered the most powerful stench in all Europe, and probably in the world, and yet I felt willing to brave it to witness a dissection of levithans. There are around Vardo four or five establishments, each having several steam whalers constantly scouring the sens off the coast in pursuit of whales. Floating in the channel before the different factories were forty flensed carcasses, some swollen to enormous proportions. Two large whales, one seventy-five feet in length, were drawn out on the shore, one with the blubber newly removed, the other fresh from the water. Several men mounted the latter by a ladder and clambered about on its smooth slippery skin by means of sharp spikes attached to the soles of their boots; with blubber knives two feet in length in long wooden handles, they made transverse incisions as deep as the blubber —about twelve inches in this case—and five or six feet long, and then running the cut longitudinally for thirty feet, a blanket of fat was ready for removal; a chain was attached to the farther end; and by power of a windlass in the factory this prodigious slab of blubber, weighing several tons, was slowly torn from the carcass. This process was continued till the felling was completed. In the factory the blubber is cut into small pieces for the "trying out" pots. The flesh of the flensed carcass is then cut down into large pieces that are dragged and pitched with flesh hooks to small cars; it is then taken to drying furnaces, where it is rendered friable. When the flesh and viscera have been removed, the work of chopping down the filth forest of bones is commenced; the bones are also subjected to the drying furnace, and when parched are ground together with the flesh into a powder, which is barreled and shipped to all parts of Europe as a fertilizer.—James Ricalton in Outing. How Consumption is Communicated. Professor Ruhle of Bonn, in a recent paper on consumption of the lungs, states that in his opinion the most frequent manner of contracting this malady is from a diseased person through the sputa, also through the glands, exfoliations from the skin, or any way in which the poison may appear on the surface and be transported by means of pocket handkerchiefs, washing, etc. The fact that the attendants in hospitals who have the care of consumptives are seldom attacked with the disease, convicted that writer it that is not the air through which the germs are carried, but it is communicated in another mode, in fact, the way in which the members of Now many sulters sought to win Minerra with their vapid chin And polished cheek. She bowed not on the Appian Way To any man who could not say "Ice cream" in Greek For she was loveller than the dawn And little of figure as fawn. She cut him blind. But, ally a lovely youth there came, A very Paris, and his game Was, with a ball. Played by the Greeks in Athena when The gods were young. Of all the nien He had the call. A champion he, whose mighty bat Had laid full many a floomer that His elm was true When at a rival head, Edolph With eye unrising, as in golf, The baseball three. One eye cause. Torn were his clothes. And on a patte he wore his nose. Arm in salting "Minerva" varied the youth with plice. "We've busted them." Horait" and also "Sad" Thing-sling. She was the belle. All it was sweet. She bade him a trunk down at her feet. And covered him then. My best and Lovestead of Art. The Master given their noars No carts. Her joint pension-you. New York Journal California Snakes. The eastern boom I made by eastern people with money has started up some of the old dead habitats of California With the easy progress of civilization this good old industry of lying had almost died cut。它 got discouraged,and so many wonderful things had happened elsewhere that it was hard forthe Californian imagination to meetthe necessities. It was easier to give up lying to strangers instead for eventhe most untravelled caster could ringthe bell onthe California guide or stagdriver.The gently are now awakening from their lethargyandbeginningtomaketheYosemiteandothertripslively.AfraidofsnakesandimmediatelyproceedItomakethehairstandoneach. Venomous reptiles? You bet.I don't know what reptiles,because they can just bet your life is venomous.Whyone dayIwasnotdownheredriving'awagonwhenIchcatch sightofa snakeinthebrushallreadyforaspring.MyhorsestartanIwhipsemupfasttoclearthesnake,dontyousee,frohehecouldspring.Hemakesoneclearspring,thesnakedoes,andhemissethahorse." Thatwas lucky—butyou—you" Lucky! You bet your life it was lucky. He missedthehouses,theshakedil,hasthestruckhisfangscleanthroughthewagon."Youdon'tsay! I do say,andmelroseyouwontbelieveit;butit'safact.Hestackhisfungyscleanthroughthatwagon,nofiswelledupsbadthatwehadtoleaveitbythewaysideandtakethehorseshome."SanFranciscoChronicle. AroundtheMabogany. Yes," said Miss Browze,of Chicago,"itisapleiretodineattheWabashes.Mrs.Wabashisnaturalhospitable,andasidefromthegeneralexcellenceeverythingisservedinawaythatispositivelydelightfultoapersonofculturedtastes.AndhersousaredeliciousWhydoyouknow,"wentonyouknow,"wentonyouknow,"wentonyouknow,"wentonyouknow,"wentonyouknow,"wentonyouknow,"wentonyouknow,"wentonyouknow,"wentonyouknow,"wentonyouknow,"wentonyouknow,"wentonyouknow,"wentonyouknow,"wentonyouknow,"wentonyouknow,"wentonyouknow,"wentonyouknow,"wentonyouknow,"wentonyouknow,"wentonyouknow,"wentonyouknow,"wentonyouknow,"wentonyouknow,"wentonyouknow,"wentonyouknow,"wentonyouknow,"wentonyouknow,"westonshowingtolearnthemselflesslyandsimplyapplyingthisquestioniftheycanjustbetyourlifeisvenomous.Whydo你nowknow,"wenton你nowknow,"wenton你nowknow,"wenton你nowknow,"westonshowingtolearnthemselflesslyandsimplyapplyingthisquestioniftheycanjustbetyourlifeisvenomous.Whydo你nowknow,"westonshowingtolearnthemselflesslyandsimplyapplyingthisquestioniftheycanjustbetyourlifeisvenomous.Whydo你nowknow,"westonshowingtolearnthemselflesslyandsimplyapplyingthisquestioniftheycanjustbetyourlifeisvenomous.Whydo你nowknow,"westonshowingtolearnthemselflesslyandsimplyapplyingthisquestioniftheycanjustbetyourlifeisvenomous.Whydo你nowknow,"westonshowingtolearnthemselflesslyandsimplyapplyingthisquestioniftheycanjustbetyourlifeisvenomous.Whydo你nowknow,"westonshowingtolearnthemselflesslyandsimplyapplyingthisquestioniftheycanjustbetyourlifeisvenomous.Whydo你nowknow,"westonshowingtolearnthemselflesslyandsimplyapplyingthisquestioniftheycanjustbetyourlifeisvenomous.Whydo你nowknow,"westonshowingtolearnthemselflesslyandsimplyapplyingthisquestioniftheycanjustbetyourlifeisvenomous.Whydo你nowknow,"westonshowingtolearnthemselflesslyandsimplyapplyingthisquestioniftheycanjustbetyourlifeisvenomous.Whydo你nowknow,"westonshowingtolearnthemselflesslyandsimplyapplyingthisquestioniftheycanjustbetyourlifeisvenomous.Whydo你nowknow,"westonshowingtolearnthemselflesslyandsimplyapplyingthisquestioniftheycanjustbetyourlifeisvenomous.Whydo你nowknow,"westonshowingtolearnthemselflesslyandsimplyapplyingthisquestioniftheycanjustbetyourlifeisvenomous.Whydo你nowknow,"westonshowingtolearnthemselflesslyandsimplyapplyingthisquestioniftheycanjustbetyourlifeisvenomous.Whydo你nowknow,"westonshowingtolearnthemselflesslyandsimplyapplyingthisquestioniftheycanjustbetyourlifeisvenomous.Whydo你nowknow,"westonshowingtolearnthemselflesslyandsimplyapplyingthisquestioniftheycanjustbetyourlifeisvenomous.Whydo你nowknownownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewownewow新owshowingtolearnthemselflesslyandsimplyapplyingthisquestioniftheycanjustbetyourlifeisvenomous.Whydo你nowknownownewownewow新owshowingtolearnthemselflessly和simplyapplyingthis question if they can just bet your life is venomous.Why do you know how sick you are? Why do they hate you? Why do they love you? Why do they want you? Why do they need you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? SADLY MISTAKEN WOMEN. The Great Cause of Female Unhappy and Loss of Attractiveness Explained [ Mother's Magazine.] The question is often asked why women of today so delicate feel? Why do they hate you? Why do they love you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? Why do they want you? MRS.SNOLAS.Nathanael Greenbliss used with a good constitution; she hardly knew what sickness or pain was until a few years ago. Her duties called her up and down in states; but she womankind) very frequently and began to notice that her breath was strong during frequentaintment; she Mr.Nicholas had thinclicky blood off an ester in her veins and would not get up there came a day; however,she would best rest in her own words.In conversionswith her writer she said: "I cannot describe how sick I was.had sharp pains shooting through my chest; it was almost impossible to draw an single breath,and my limbs will swellmostto burst.I consult these doctors two points whom admitted thieeyhe could not cureme while,the third pronounced my case drops.My limbs continued to swell;thewater filled my lungs,and I never fora moment thought of ever recovering.Fort eight months I was unable to lie down,and could only sleep in my chairWhen I was in this hopeless condition,myself son,Lafayette G.RESTORED.Nicholas.of Providence,came to see me several years before he had been sickbut under direction of Dr.GeorgeWillex.OxfordProvidence he had recoveredHew insisted that I should employ myselfhe had used so successfulland as a last resort I consented to die.In a short time I began to grow better,the swelling decreased,and finally opeamed;I regained my breath,themy health,themy strength,andI tookthegrandsmedicinesHunt's Remedywhich alone wasso save meThis wasthe 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Professor Ruhle, of Bonn, in a recent paper on consumption of the lungs, states that in his opinion the most frequent manner of contracting this malady is from a diseased person through the sputa, also through the glands, exfoliations from the skin, or any way in which the poison may appear on the surface and be transported by means of pocket handkerchiefs, washing, etc. The fact that the attendants in hospitals who have the care of consumptives are seldom attacked with the disease, convicted the writer that it is not the air through which the germs are carried, but it is communicated in another mode, in fact, the way in which the members of the family kiss and fondle the patient and handle his linen. From one member of the family the special germ which excites the disease goes to another. Instances can frequently be found, on inquiry, where the parents transmit the disease to their children; in such cases the family physician should put in his word of warning.—Boston Herald. Rather an Exaggerated Type. The German, the Frenchman, the Englishman, would not like to be taken for anything else; why should the American? I don't know, but it is so. I have never seen more than two or three Americans in Europe of whom I was able to believe that they would not be secretly pleased to be mistaken for Englishmen. Very often, indeed, I have had young men approach me in conversation in continental hotels or cars and confide to me in the purest Chicago or St. Louis idiom that they were English. One of these, I remember, a refugee in Paris from the earthquake panic on the Riviera last winter, gravely answered me, when I asked him what part of England he came from. "The county of Berkshyre." Of course this sort of young fool is familiar in America, and his folly is properly commented upon: But he is after all only an exaggerated type of the great average mass of Americans who swarm over the continent during the opera season.—London Cor. New York Times. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria. When she had Children, she gave them Castoria. Mr. Brown, who is reading a newspaper—"Eergh ought to be down in Texas. There is a fine field for him there." Mrs. Brown—Are the poor brutes treated so badly in Texas? "They are. Just think of putting poor bloodhounds on the track of negroes who have assaulted women and children."—Texas Siftings. Get your Job Printing done in your Own Town. By a liberal use of money in procuring the latest styles of type, and by first-class workmanship, the Gazette hopes to deserve the patronage of all its readers who need any kind of job printing. Neither in style nor cheapness of printing can this office be surpassed. Get your printing done in your own town. When I was in this hopeless condition, my son, Lafayette G., restored Nicholas, of Providence, came to see me several years before he had been sick but under the direction of Dr. George Wilcox, of Providence he had recovered. He insisted that I should employ same means he had used so successfully and as a last resort I consented to do. In a short time I began to grow better the swelling decreased, and finally appeared; I regained my breath, then my strength, and I am life to day to that grand medical Hunt's Remedy, which alone was to save me. This was the medicine which administered by Dr. Wilcox stored my son and rescued me from grave. I know it is pure, simple and good, and I believe it is the only remedy that will certainly regulate and cure many troubles of women, and rest them to health, beauty and attractiveness. "I have thought a great deal about the health of women since I regained health and I wish I had the power to trouble is, many men do not know what ails them. They take cold and have unpleasant symptoms but think that they will soon pass away but they do not. These are followed by more serious troubles, annoying, weakening and life-destroying, but still they take no steps to check them. How can women be so blind? Do they not know that such things are the beginning of end unless taken in time?" The experience of Mrs. Nicholas, who is now in her eighty-fifth year, should a warning to all who read her earnest all known means for preserving or restoring health before it is too late. Eureka. DR. FLINT'S HEART REMEDY. It is Smirnoff to neglect any of the many forms of heart disease, though many do so from ignorance. Read Dr. Flint's treatise on Heart Disease, and if you have any symptoms therein set forth, take Dr. Flint's Heart Remedy. Sea Sickness. Dr. Flint's Heart Remedy is a medicine which has been found particularly efficacious in cases of Sea-dickness, as it at once stops the terrible vomiting, throbbing in the temples, and enables the patient to secure repose. Take it in Time. A man who presents an apoplexy, pneumonia of debility, whose constipation is anxious, and who is subject to spells of fainting, is liable to sudden death from heart disease. Let him take Dr. Flint's Heart Remedy before it is too late. At Druggists; or address J. J. MACK & CO., 9 and 11 Front St., San Francisco, Cal. BANK OF ANAHEIM CAPITAL STOCK, $100,000.00. CLEZ 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, Loan Money, Buys and Sells Exchange and Currency, makes Collections and transacts a General Banking Business. Invalid's Hotel's Surgical Institute BUFFALO, N.Y. organized with a full staff of eight experienced and skillful Physicians and Surgeons for the treatment of all Chronic Diseases. OUR FIELD OF SUCCESS. Chronic Nasal Catarrh, Throat and Lung Diseases, Liver and Kidney Diseases, Digestive Diseases, Dizziness of Women, Blood Diseases and Nervous Affections, cured here or at home or with/or along the patient. Cures and cures in ten cents in stamps per person. Nervous Debility, Impaired Nocturnal Losses and Morbid Conditions caused by Youthful Patients and Fernicious Sellings are speedily curved by our Book and by our own staff. Knifes or Broaches, readily cut without the knife, without dependence upon very little pain. Book sent for ten cents. FILE TUMORS AND STRICTURES with the greatest success. Book sent for ten cents in stamps. The treatment of many thousands of cases of those diseases is peculiar to WOMEN. Dr. PIERCE'S Prescription It is a powerful Restorative Tonics and Suspension and strength tonic, made by magic, Louis Carrine or "white," excessive pouring painful medication, uncontrolled perceptions, prolapse or killing of the uterus, weak back movement, retroversion, bearing on conditions, chronic congestion, inflammation and ulceration of the womb, inflammation, pain and tenderness in earles, internal脓肿 and "foran weakness." It promptly relieves and cure Nausea Weakness of Stomach, Leads BOARD OF DIRECTORS: E. F. SPENCE, W. H. MABURY W. K. JAMES, S. H. MOTT, P. JAMES This Bank receives Deposits, Loan Money, Buys and Sells Exchange and Currency, makes Collections and transacts a General Banking Business. CORRESPONDENTS: First National Bank, Los Angeles Farmers and Merchants Bank, Los Angeles Pacific Bank, San Francisco First National Bank, New York DRAFTS, LETTERS OF CREDIT OR POSTAL orders issued on Banks in the principal cities of all Europe and countries. Tickets entitle the holder to passage from New York to the several ports of England, France or Germany, from any port in these countries to New York via the Hudson American packet Company sold at regular rates. Return tickets at a reduction. Certificates, entailing the holder to passage on railroad from San Francisco to New York, or the versa, issued at the actual listed rate. Persons in Anaheim or vicinity desiring to send any point in the countries required in any relative friend can purchase ticket here and forward that he proper person by mail. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF Los Angeles. Capital Stock $100,000 Surplus $175,000 E. F. SPENCE, Preside M. M. ELLIOTT, Cash DIRECTORS: D. BICKNELL, J. F. CRANK, H. V. WM LACT, E. F. SUSCK Wellington Coal Screened DR. PIERCE'S Prescription The wonderful efficacy of Swift's Specific as a remedy and sure for rheumatism and all blood diseases, has never had a more complete illustration than this case affords. The candid, unsolicited and emphatic testimony given by the venerable gentleman must be accepted as convincing and conclusive. The writer is a prominent citizen of Mississippi. The gentleman to whom Mr. Martin refers, and to whom he is indebted for the advice to which he owes his final relief from years of suffering, is Mr. King, for many years the popular night clerk of the Lawrence House, at Jackson. JACKSON, Miss., April 29, 1897. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY, Atlanta, Ga.: Gentlemen—I have been an invalid pensioner for forty years, having contracted pulmonary and other diseases in the Mexican War, but not till the last of March, 1873; did I feel any symptoms of rheumatism. On that day I was suddenly stricken with that disease in both hips and ankles. For twenty days I walked on crutches. Then the pain was less violent, but it shifted from joint to joint. For weeks I would be totally disabled, either on one side of my body or the other side of my moment for eleven years and seven months; then from 1873, when I was first attacked, to October 1, 1883, when I was cured. During these eleven years of intense suffering I tried innumerable prescriptions for various ailments and tried everything suggestible I by friends, but if I ever received benefit from any medicine taken internally or externally, I am not aware of it. Finally, about the first of September, I made arrangements to go to the Hot Springs of Arkansas, having despaired of every other experience when Leland helped me quaintance, Mr. King, now of the Lawrence Home of this city. He had once been a great sufferer from rheumatism, and, as I supposed, had been cured by a visit to Hot Springs. But when I met him he had waited to the hot spring in vain—the found no relief. On his return from Hot Springs he heard, for the first time, of the S. S. s., as a remedy for rheumatism. He tried it and six bottles made a complete cure. Several years have passed since, but he remained of the disease. I immediately returned to try it. In September I took four bottles, and by the first of October I was well—as far as the rheumatism was concerned. All pain had disappeared, and I HAVE NOT FELT A TWIST OF FRIEND. For sale by all druggists. Treatise on Blood and skin Diseases mailed free. Wellington Coal Screened Selling now at $15 per ton delivered. Baled Hay! Wholesale and Retail. H. C. GADE. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE State of California, in aid of the county of Los Angeles. Horace Hayward plaintiff is Helen Hayward defendant—Action brought in the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the county of Los Angeles, and the complaint filed therein, within ten days (exclusive of the day of service), after the service on vou of this summons, 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 of said complaint. The said action is brought to obtain a decree dissolving the bonds of matrimony existing between the plaintiff and defendant, and giving to plaintiff the care, custody and education of the minor children of plaintiff and defendant, and for cost of such reference is bad to complain for particulars. And you are hereby notified that if you fail to appear and answer the said complaint as above required, the said plaintiff will cause your default to be entered and will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the complaint. Given under my hand and the Seal of the [REAL] Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the county of Los Angeles, this 9th day of June in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and eighty-seven. CHAS. H. DUNSMOOR, Clark. By P. R. FANNING, Deputy. Wicks & Ward and R. McRose, attys for plaintiff.