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anaheim-gazette 1888-03-01

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VOLUME XVIII. REAL ESTATE OFFICE OF F. U. Schaumburger. I Handle Only the Very Choicest of Land, IMPROVED AND UNIMPROVED. I Have for Sale Fine Homes, with Orange and Walnut Groves, and other Semi-Trople Fruits; also all kinds of Deciduous Fruits. I make a specialty of the Land lying in the Magnificent Golden Belt country. This land cannot be excelled by any in the world. All this land lies within limit of the Anaheim Union Water Company's district, with an Everlasting Atundance of Water. I will be pleased to show this land to all parties desirous of seeing it. Correspondence Sollelted and Promptly Attended to. Postoffice Box 49. Anaheim, Cal. And 114 West First Street, Los Angeles, Cal. Correspondence Sollected and Promptly Attended to. Postoffice Box 49. Anaheim, Cal. And 114 West First Street, Los Angeles, Cal. $70 PER ACRE $70 FOR A SHORT TIME ONLY. 393 acres 2 miles from Carlton. 5-room house, stable, chicken house, well, tank and windmill. Water piped around yard and in house. House and other improvements all built within last 15 months. Plenty wood for fuel. House distant from school house 1 mile, 2 stories 1 mile, church 1 mile, depot 2 miles. Orange and Santa Ana ditch runs through land. Part of ranch now being sown to barley. Once-third cash, balance on time. LIBERAL DISCOUNT For All Cash. Call on Eugene Day, Garrity office, Anaheim, Cal. or Frank Schaumburger, Real Estate Agent, Anaheim. JOHN E. SCHRECK Real E Anaheim; Los Angeles, 20] S. Fort R., Between Los Angeles HAS ACRE PROPERTY. All over Southern California. The finest lots for the lots in Los Angeles. Also the finest acre proThe finest house, with everything complete. LOTS Cheap Lots For By J. E. SCHRECK, 20] South Fort Street, L. Southern Pacific Railroad, between 1 Remember the Alta Vista Tract. and water piped. Trees will soon be extensively planted. H. D. PO REAL ESTATE A large quantity of BARRELS, HALF-BARRELS, FIVE AND TEN GALLON KEOS For sale. Apply to R. DREYFUR & CO. F. J. BACKS, Importors, manufacturers and dealers in FURNITURE, HEDDING, PAPER-MANING, PLOTTURE PAVER, etc. UNDERTAKERS. Agents for the News, Edridge and Vineer Servigation. Los Angeles street, Anaheim. A. T. WALL P. GROCERY AND FED STORE. Center Center and Los Angeles streets. C. CHARLES PAMPERL ... Dealer in... HARDWARE, CROCKERY, and HOUSE-FURNISHING GOODS Los Angeles street, Anaheim. F. FURNITURE Prices from Eastern Protetion. Latest Styles. At prices lower than in Los Angeles Call and examine for yourself. P. A. BACKS. S. A. BACKS, CARRIAGE & SIGN PAINTER. Offer on purchases the permanent request and sign guaranteed by him in Anaheim. PRICES REASONABLE. The purchase of the public responsibly solicited. Center street, Anaheim. B. A. BACKS, CARPIENTER AND BUILDER. Strength construction given by all kinds of carpenter work, and establishment permission. Law or regulation or no permit, Anaheim. S. STRAUWARN & PORTCHER, BRANDMARKER AND WASHMAKER, CENTER ST., Anaheim. All kinds of painting from all reasonable paints and collections given. New work is specially Germania Hall PRITE DEMANDE - Proprietor. By J. R. SCHRECK, 201 South Fort Street, L. Southern Pacific Railroad, between 1 Remember the Alta Vista Tract. and water piped. Trees will soon be extensively planted. H. D. PO REAL ESTATE Postoffice Block, Walnut orchards and Orange ( improved lands in irrigating disfive acres upwards. Prices extuCorresponden Buena Park Buena Park Buena Park Buena Park Buena Park Buena Park W. D. WILSHIRE. C. C. CARPENTER. R. G. WILSHIRE. WILSHIRE & CO., Real Estate. No. 11 Temple St. Safe Deposit Building. Telephone 645. Los Angeles Cal. ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, MARCH 1, 1895. OFFICE mburger. of Land, PROVED. and Walnut Groves, and fruits. The Magnificent Golden Belt by the world. All this Water Company's district. Will be pleased to show this implyly Attended to. Anaheim, Cal. Angeles, Cal. MISCELLANEOUS Express and Baggage COMPANY. All orders promptly as issued to: Also Fine 'Bus for Pleasure, Excursions, Etc. OFFICE: Telephone: Ogier Moore. Opp, P. O. - Anaheim, Cal. A. S. PIGOTT, Prop'r. J.S.WEBER. Center street, Anaheim, denies in STOVES, TINWAREAGATEWARE, Pumps, Pipes and Brass Goods All kind of Plumbing and Tin Work done to warranted as Los Angeles prison. Agent for Quick-Meal Gasoline Stove Also agent for the HALIDAY WINDMILL. The best in new. E. E. MORRIS. Manager California Dep't. Amory Bigelow, The Weekly Gazette. Established 1870. AT May in Punishin Publishing, Center Branch. SUBSCRIPTION, - 92 For Yen. Six months. Three months. Public invoices in advance. Transient Advertising. Brand 1 week 2 weeks 3 weeks One request..... $2.00 $4.00 $6.00 $8.00 Two requests..... $2.00 $4.00 $6.00 $8.00 Four requests..... $2.00 $4.00 $6.00 $8.00 The Customer is bound every Thursday morning, and sent to suburban by the early units. It is delivered by carrier in Anaheim on the morning of publication. Enclosed at the Anaheim Postoffice as second-class matter. Home of name and correspondence on all list subjects are admitted by the editor. Be brief, and write directly to the point. All communications must be signed by the author, and for publication, but for the information of the editor. HER GHASTLY FIND. Within a Dissecting-Room. A Daughter's Search for Her Father's Memoir—A Failure to Substitute Another Man's Leg for One of Those of the Dead Man. San Francisco Examiner. The weeping daughter had in the mid-time been taken to another room and the count was clear. In less time than it took to tell it, one of the subjects from the room was on the table, and left hands, a sharp knife, had severed a limb from her body. It was placed with the rest of Abel's remains and the daughter brought to inspect the reconstructed corpse of the father. Her first look of and gratification at seeing him together again suddenly gave place to one of horror and dismay as pointed to the substituted leg. In the hurry and excitement of the rapid amputation a mistake had been made such as often made in field hospitals during the war. They had cut off the wrong leg, and Abel had two right feet and legs. The substitute would not do, and another call was made on the student who had the genuine one. After much persuasion he consented to give up the real leg and take the substitution and do his work all over again. Finally Mrs. Townshend had succeeded in securing all that was mortal of her father. The remains were put in a handsome casket and shipped to Nevada for burial. A recent return shows that the number of agriculturalurtiers in Japan is 4,328,825, a decrease in ten years of 6,550. The infant Prince of Portugal has recovered from the injuries he received through the accidental fire in his nursery. The Bulletin du Credit of Paris, January 221, presents a doleful picture of the conduction of life insurance companies in France. Dr. Koch, the bacteriologist, already a Privy Councilor, has been made Physician General, one of the highest professional ranks in Germany. A young Vermonter who arrived in London on the other day was mistaken by the detectives for Tacotts, the murderer of millionaire Snell, at Chicago. The bronze statute in honor of Sergeant William Jaeger of Revolutionary fame was unveiled at Savannah, Ga., recently, in the premises of 10,000 people. The optest between cotton-seed oil and Chicago lard for supremacy in kitchen economy is animated and interesting. It looks somewhat as though hog fat would have to go. Since the forest fires last fall fires have seen burning beneath the surface near Sigler's Landing, Tenn. Flames constantly issue from crevices. It is thought a bed of coal is on fire. A cave which rivals Mammoth Cave in extent and beauty has been discovered one mile from Huntsville, Ala. There are immense pyramids of stalagmites and a large lake in the cavern. J. W. Siren of Waverly, Mich., walked right through the handmade plate-glass window of a Kalamazoo bank a few days ago. He said afterward that the glass was so clear that he took it for an open door. After serving eight years of a life sentence in the Ohio Penitentiary for murder, Conrad Rautebach was last week pardoned by Governor Foraker, as it had been pretty well established that he was innocent. A sample of the oil found at New Egypt. Having learned this much, Mrs. Townsend hastened to the Medical College and asked to have the remains surrendered to her. The authorities of the college sympathised with her and said they would aid her in every way, and, if possible, return the body, but there was a very great chance that it had already been upon the dissecting table, in which event it would be impossible to gather together the scattered members so that they could be given Christian burial. She was warned also that her attempt to identify the remains of her father would be attended with certain features which would be painful and repulsive, and that she must brace her nerves to stamax a shock which few women have undergone and which has often sickened strong men until use had made them callous to the sight she would see. Nothing daunted by the picture presented, Mrs. Townsend followed her conductor to the room where the cadavera are kept in a vat of brine until needed for the purpose of the school. An attendant removed the cover of the vat and with an implement made for that purpose drew to the surface of the murky water a dead body. At first Mrs. Townsend thought it was the corpse of her father, but the attendant assured her she was mistaken. It was the remains of an old tramp, who was well known on the water front, and who had died of cold and exposure, sleeping on the docks during the cold weather in January. Thirteen more was the half-faint woman called upon to approach the huge vat and gaze upon what the ghostish fisherman had brought to the surface, and each time his tour-blinded eyes failed to recognize the remains. This exhausted the useful contents of the receptacle, and Mrs. Townsend turned away, saying she did no. "I would know my father anywhere, because the lobe of his right ear was shot away many years ago in a fight with the Indians." As she made this remark a look of horror and consternation was mum depicted on the commemoration of the dinner, the attendants and several students who had become interested witnesses of the end search. "Why," enclosed one of the statements, "that is the last subject we had on the table, and there is nothing left of him except the head." Then allusion fell upon the group, which was at length burdened by the swearing牙齿, who, with salute, sat down what was left of the body. All attempts to dismember her mouth and the presumed wound toward the Swelling room were on the march, fable than the extent and beauty has been discovered one mile from Huntaville, Ala. There are immense pyramids of stalagmites and a large lake in the cavern. J. W. Siren of Waverly, Mich., walked right through the handsome plate-glass window of a Kalamazoo bank a few days ago. He said afterward that the glass was so clear that he took it for an open door. After serving eight years of a life sentence in the Ohio Penitentiary for murder, Conrad Rautebach was last week pardoned by Governor Furaker, as it had been pretty well established that he was innocent. A sample of the oil found at New Egypt, Ocean county, N. J., has been sent to Philadelphia for analysis, and is pronounced to be petroleum of a very fair grade. The neighborhood is greatly excited over the discovery. Arrangements are now being made by the St. Louis and San Francisco Road for assuming the joint management with the Atchison Company of the Atlantic and Pacific, and extensive improvements are contemplated. A fight occurred between Mexican troops and a band of Iquita in the Bancete mountains a few days ago. The Yaquis got away during the night, leaving ten dead on the field. The Mexicans lost one man and two wounded. An endeavor is being made in Derby, Kan., to have clemency extended to the 12-year-old boy who is serving out a sentence there of two months' imprisonment for selling beer. In addition the young offender was fined $200. Kansas City is to have a Government building costing $1,500,000, or $15,000,000, or something of that sort. Whatever the amount may be, you will see it in the building boom tables annually for the next ten years. A Nebraska man who got drunk, and while in that condition had his foot frozen as they had to be amputated, has recovered $2000 from the saloon keeper who sold him the liquor. A thousand dollars a foot is a pretty big price for that kind of man. It is reported in Ottawa that, in view of increasing attempts to defend the customs, the Dominion Government intends publishing a blast list of one hundred dimension experts who have been denied supplying fake inventories to their Canadian customers for customs purposes. The purity of branding fun houses are 2. Installed in a sale of fancy stunting stalls at Leington, February 14th. Sixyears high hand animals of various ages bought $29,280; or an average of $3726. A fifty-two years old of Tennessee lions man and in a California man for dogs. and neck of a man. The grimled hooks had the core, and it was not until one student gently brushed aside the hair on the right side, exposing the right ear, that the daughter could easily identify the hand as that of her mom, learned that the body had been abused only the day before, and that human members had been paraded among the students for dissection and each of the students had paid the price for the portion allotted to it was extremely doubtful if all it could be recovered. Laughter implored the authorities to be effort, and they did so with much that in a few hours all the parts collected with the exception of the That had been sold to a young woman was an enthrastant in a specialty, and been working industriously and reached the most interesting and five point in his studies. He held once should take precedence of multi-released to give up the mining Another student, fall of resource, granted the substitution of a log. Keeping daughter had in the mean time taken to another room and the clear. In less time than it takes one of the subjects from the table, and dealt hands, aided by irons, had covered a limb from the It was placed with the rest of old mains and the daughter brought in at the reconstructed corpse of her Her first look of and gratification him together again suddenly gave one of horror and dismay as she to the substituted leg. In the excitement of the rapid amputation had been made no way LIVERLY GIRLS OF LONG AGO. Minnesota Branch Empirical Since the St. Louis Minimalism Demanded an In Table. St. Louis Reprints. A woman of New York, formerly a resident of St. Louis where, however, she has been but for short periods at long intervals for many years past, during a recent visit made some observation involving comparisons between the rudeness and manners in fashionable society now and in her time that, being complimentary in many pants. "I have spent two or three days on family as the home of a number of my old friends during this visit to St. Louis," she remarked, "and I can but admit that there has been a great growth and advancement in all the amenities of social life, and especially the home life in them very familiar since my girlfriend. Especially are its results notifiable in the manner of the young man. We women must acknowledge to ourselves, even if we do not proclaim it aloud, that we are treated by men exactly as we alert to be treated. If women in good society hold lax ideas and talk in double entendre, they need not expect the men who surround them to be chivalrous and deferential in manner. In my young days double entendre was much indulged in, and indeed, thought an accomplishment by many of the reigning bellows of the highest circle—you know there was really only the upper and lower set in St. Louis society in those days—and the young man, of course, hold their own in such conversation, and naturally in the battlescene and shuttlecock of that kind of wordy game, hit often harder that they were struck.' Wins showed freely to quicken the title of talk; the girls touched glances with the young man and drank to toasts that often launched license and sometimes announced. BURDETTE. Edwardian Jewelry on Happy Humans - A Troubleshoot Matched Children. "Yes," said Mr. Milne, so they were walking home, "I do enjoy the theatre; I can write a play myself." "Oh, Mr. Milne, he exhanced with quantum mechanics," "the you really thought! And what was it about and when did you write it, and was it a cry, and did I ever ask it played?" "I don't know that you ever did," he said, in slow cumulative terms. "It was only a short one not play; it was a play upon the word I am told a lady what the author called me, but I cannot forget it. And not too soon afterward I saw that very many things in his paper as original." "I believe all editions are just other writings," said Miss Childlight. "humana care no written illustrating Mr. Cleveland for president, long before anybody else thought of him, and signed it 'Tharpayer'—that's push men do plums; he writes all these articles signed 'Tharpayer'—and after election he wants to find it to moth a diapause, and the author had cut out whole copy of that paper out of the file, and said they never published a paper on the fifth of July; and everybody knew it is the fifth of July is the holiday, and not the Fifth paid him no tax, and the editor said if pa didn't get rooms in an income he wouldn't keep through the summer." "I don't see why you can't keep awake in church," said the pastor. "I am there as long as you are and I don't have to sleep half the time." "Oh well," replied the demon, "you just down in the pew and let me preach and I'll bet a new organ you couldn't keep your eyes open ten minutes." "To say you stamped Texas for the Prohibition ticket. What peculiarity of your audience struck you most fervently?" "Well," said the ministerary, "the shanks of clay and pieces of brick struck me most fervently, like the eggs stayed by me the longest." A French scientist, who dirts character by a simple inspection of noses, says that "the quick, painless, mangueous penis has a strongly colored nose of a uniform shape." This The return shows that the number jurists in Japan is 4,328,826, a dozen years of 6,550. At Prince of Portugal has recovered the injuries he received through total fire in his nursery. Linnaeus' Credits of Paris, January A doleful picture of the confezione insurance companies in France, such, the bacteriologist, already a color, has been made Physician one of the highest professional Germany. Vermonter who arrived in Long day was mistaken by the de Tacott, the murderer of millall, at Chicago. A statute in honor of Sergant superior of Revolutionary fame was Savannah, Ga., recently, in the 10,000 people. Just between cotton-used oil and for supremacy in kitchen coominated and interesting. It looks as though hog fat would have to forest fires last fall fires have gone beneath the surface near Sig. g. Penn. Flames constantly invades. It is thought a bed of which rivals Mammoth Cave in beauty has been discovered one mantaville, Ala. There are imprints of stalagmites and a large worm. On Waverly, Mich., walked on the handsome plate-glass winemaker bank a few days ago. Arrowward that the glass was so took it for an open door. Eight years of a life sentence suquitentiary for murder, Connell was last week parpounded by Gov., as it had been pretty well that he was innocent. Of the oil found at New Egypt, the New York Tribune continues its attacks on the Fisheries Treaty, which, says, "marks the lowest point of degradation which American diplomacy has ever reached." beauty has been discovered one montville, Ala. There are immails of stalagitics and a large aworn. of the oil found at New Egypt, N. J., has been sent to Philaanalysis, and is pronounced to be very fair grade. The neighnially excited over the discovrals are now being made by the San Francisco Road for recent management with the Attray of the Atlantic and Pacific, the improvements are contemnered between Mexican troops in the Bamatee mounya ago. The Yaquis got away night, leaving ten dead on the Mexicans lost one man and two or something of that sort, amount may be, you will see boon tables annually for man. man who got drank, and condition had his feet frozen to be amputated, has refrom the saloon keeper who gave. A thousand dollars a big price for that kind of in Ottawa that, in view of engrave to defend the customs, Government intends publishof one hand-drawn dimension that bears detained supplying their Canadian continents. breaking fast houses are 1. scale of fancy building stock at January 14th. Sixteen male of varnum age bought arranged of Stiffly. A silky two contemporary linings was worn man for brim. The New York Tribune continues its attacks on the Fisheries Treaty, which it says, "marks the lowest point of degradation which American diplomacy has ever reached." The other night during a heavy rain storm a large house used as the headquarters of the Eleventh Regiment Mexican troops at Cras da Piedras, Sonora, fell in and four soldiers were instantly killed and a large number wounded. Lord Randolph Churchill takes a cheerful view of the Tery outlook. In a speech before the Oxford Union Society recently he said the present Parliament was likely to last until 1803, before which time the Irish party would probably go to pieces. A committee of Liverpool Underwriters investigating the cause of fires in American cotton say the damage from sparks, smoking, incendiasism and contact with oil is enormously increased by defective packing, insufficiency of ties and methods of sampling. A Reprieve for the Comdemand. Wretched man and women long condemned to suffer the tortures of dyspepsia, are filled with new hope after a law decree of Hentetzer's Stomach Bitters. This building hopes blossoms into the fruition of certainty, if the Bitters is permitted in. It brings a revive to all dyspeptias who seek its aid. Flashtail, heart-burn, sinking at the pit of the stomach between meals, the nervous tremens and insomnia of which chronic indigestion is the parent, disappear with their harmful progenitor. Most benefit of stomachian who can wonder that in so many instances it awakens painful oligoease in those who benefited by it, speak voluntarily in its behalf. It requires a graphic pen to describe the torments of dyspepsia, but in many of the discomforts removed by the proprietors of the Bitters there are portrayed with vivid bravado. Constipation, bloominess, numbness dullness, malearal favors and rheumatism are relieved by it. Consternations Survey Current. To see Boston—Pennsylvania your minder that I have a good reason for the sharp named dinner. By its timely use thousands of bargains once have been personally used. I shall be glad to send five my mutually free to one of your vendors who have consummation if they will send me their expense and your other admonish. Responsibly. T. A. Kearns, M. D., MI Post Mr. N. Y. German ship that had about 10,000 carriages on board was wrecked off Campenchy. The camarades most of 'em get away, and book to the woods. There were only common crops there before, but now the crow carriages are as common as bells on a Dogo's jacket. They are beautiful birds, and sing ban. Tell you, a big flock of 'em when they get into a tree and tune up, sound like so many bass violins. Mighty curious thing to hear, and breaks a man all up the first time he hears it." The crowd said they should think it would. "But it isn't so scary a thing, after all, so bear a chorus of crocodiles singing in the moonlight. When we was in the Amazon, whenever the ship's hand struck up, the crocodiles would put on full cry, and though the bandmaster put all his men on base drums, the crocodiles would drawn 'em out every time. Crocodiles are knowing, but they will go to sleep on the sand when the man's hot. Then is your time to match hold of 'em, and with a quick motion, over with 'em. I turned one over, and we manhandled him and got him on board船. I cut my name and the date —T. Topall, 1807—on his hide, and when we got him into New York I said him to armmen." "Well, I'll be goldarmed!" said Jim Piperlay, the old soldier, who had carried twenty-five years in the regular army: "I now him in Barnard's museum in 1809 with your name on him, but I never thought I should know you. Shake!" And the Alliance of the two services was eminent on the spot—Boston Transcript. Young Love's Dream. Lovely Girl (at a restaurant—My dear order what you please for both; I don't feel hungry a bit). Affirmed Young Man—I can't eat a mouthful, my darling. "Mor L. haven't eaten anything hardly for weeks. By the way, what was the result of that human we were looking at? "One hundred dollars a month." "That's just your salary, so that won't do." "No; the other one altogether of it is slightly difficult." "Let's take that." "But twenty dollars weren't buy cool and pay a girl's woman." "A girl! Dear me, I forget all about that. We must get a cheaper house because there must be enough over to buy something for the girl to eat, you know."—Queen World. A shaky constitution. "That home is slightly shaky," announced a man on Washington around as he pointed to the plains of Indiana of a well known white town. "It'll have to have anything in it." Where's the money? More spontaneously. "Oh no." Trying to do business on too little capital? "But here the building is so old that it transmits all even every time you talk about a window—Minneapolis demand."