anaheim-gazette 1888-08-16
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WHAT IS THE MATTER?
WHY DO AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE STUDENTS LEAVE THE FARM?
They Study Law or Medicine, or Engage in Merchantile Pursuits—Some of the Reasons Why They Learn to Dialike Farming.
A gentleman who had been invited to deliver a commencement address at an agricultural college, in which he had once held a professor's chair, recently told the writer of this article that he found it impassable to select a subject. We suggested several topics more or less connected with farmers and their calling, but the ex-professor shook his head. "It is melodic to talk to the young men about agriculture," he said, "the fact is, when the students leave the college none of them go to farming."
Setting our bewildered look, the ex-professor went on to say that although the students went from the farm to the college and took an agricultural course, they all left the institution to study law or medicine, or to engage in merchantile pursuits.
THEY GET HIGH NOTIONS.
"I don't know how it is," he said, "but they all get high notions in their heads, and they think that farming is too slow and unprofitable to suit them. During the whole time I was at the college, I never knew one out of the hundreds of students to return to the farm."
All this was said in a deliberate matter of fact way, and we at once jumped to the conclusion that if our agricultural schools were simply used to turn young farmers into lawyers, doctors and merchants, there was something wrong somewhere.
If these facts have not been unconsciously overstated, the advantage of agricultural education will very naturally feel inclined to ask a few questions. Are the teachers, as a rule men who have a fancy for the learned professors? Do the students in their debates literary and political subjects? Are they allowed to deviate much time to reading novels, poetry, history and the newspapers? An affirmative answer to these questions will explain much that is new mysterious.
THEIR WICH LEAD ANTRAY.
The young agricultural student who finds his professors always talking about great lawyers, writers, and successful business men will fall into their way of thinking. Political detates will fire him with the ambition to distinguish himself at the bar or in public life. Too much time devoted to belles lettres will make him think of everything in the world except diversified farming.
But it may be that some of the points mentioned can be urged against the agricultural schools and their teachers. What, then, is the matter? Do our youngsters naturally take a desire to farm life? Do their fathers tell them that there is no money in it and that the farmers are growing poorer every year?
The song of a myth, should be fitted to the popular illustrated poems and songs family published in Harper's Magazine; for instance, Tally in Our Alley; where every stanza has an appropriate illustration. Now, suppose that the fault was obliterated forever—indeed, the art of reading lost—the illustrations remaining, as also the memory to many persons of the ballad; the illustrations kept in order, would supply always the order of the stanza, and also the general subject matter of each particular stanza, and the latter would be a reminder of the words.
This is what the rolls of birch bark do in ingestant Ojibwa, and what Schoolcraft presented, in some cases, to show, but what, for actual understanding, requires the obtaining of the literature of the actual songs and charges of the initiation ceremonies, or in other instances the literature in the aboriginal language of the non-scottie songs and stories."—Belenoe.
SHAPING THE FACE.
THE UGLY LINES CARVED BY ENVY AND DISCONTENT.
Premier Mulford's Advice to Otto, Beth Young and Old—Thoughts Make Phones Planning or Regulating How Ugly It Is Becoming On—Think.
You have it in your power. If honesty, to make your face pleasing and attractive. If handsome, you have it in your power to keep your beauty up to 40 and beyond it, and to keep growing more attractive. Your face is not shaped by chance. There is a case for the expression usually found on it. If you are on the point much of the time; if you are grumbling and growling inside about yourself or somebody else, and you have been so doing for years, your face will wear grumble and growl on it because what you think most of the time shapes your face. If you are discontented, or soviotic, or jealous much of the time, discontent, envy and jealousy will cause disagreeable lines on your face. If you are handmade at 17, and growling thought takes up a good deal of your time, your beauty will be more than half gone by 87 or 80. If you are much of the time discouraged or depressed; if you give way to the blues and will not try to fight them off, you will in a few years more find the corners of your mouth turning downward, as you see today on the faces of so many sour and ancient maidens, married and single.
This fact that the state of mind you mostly keep in shape not only the face, but the whole body, is nothing new. It is as work all about us. A man or woman who is always growing looks growl all the time, and it is not a pleasing look. Their very expression is a breach of the public peace. A man who thinks he knows it all and can't tell anything new looks it all the time, and when he speaks you can feel his ignorance and conceit in the tone of his voice.
Thoughts make faces pleasing or repulsive. They carve lines, put in wrinkles, keep the
The young agricultural student who finds his professors always talking about great lawyers, writers, and successful business men will fall into their way of thinking. Political delites will fire him with the ambition to仕卿 himself at the bar or in public life. Too much time devoted to belles letters will make him think of everything in the world except diversified farming.
But it may be that some of the points mentioned can be urged against the agricultural schools and their teachers. What, then, is the matter? Do our youngsters naturally take a drink by farm life? Do their fathers tell them that there is no money in it and that the farmers are growing poorer every year?
There is something in this way of putting when farmers take a gleamy, hopeless view of their occupation they cannot look on the bright side of things. And yet, in spite of all that can be said the fact reminds that the young and industrious farmer who goes to work with the advantage of a scientific education has it in his power so make himself happy, independent, prosperous and distinguished but after all success does not depend so much upon the education, or the land, as it does upon the man. Atlanta Constitution.
House Interiors in Algiers.
I look advantage of the offer of the Arab in his character of guide and followed him in arrows streets and through whitewashed tunnels to ramshackle doors hung in the more primitive manner, with log round bounded and eminent rails in various designs, and furnished with elaborate brass knives. The last named invention of prehistoric usefulness must have been intended for foreign sailers. The Arab's way of keeping at the door is in accordance with the primitive images, he pounds away with his last until some one of the inmates an ass. A man or boy may come to the door, but a woman either emits a decidedly and the stream from the inner court, or she pokes her head through a window just big enough, or peeps out a terrific wall concealing her face (course) by questioning the caller as his name and object.
The outer door is very frequently left wide open but the house. With few exceptions are constructed with sufficient ingenuity to present passers by from seeing anything but a black wall and a little vestibule turning at a right angle. Occasionally, however, one's curiosity is rewarded by a glimpse of the inner court neatly paved with little six-sided tiles, with here and there a valuable square of ancient marble facade let into the door will sit on the "dash" shaker obliterated lengthwise for tortuous branches of a fig tree throw shews in delicate patterns across the pavement and a thread of sunlight fits its way into an inner chamber. In no case is an observer expected to enter without knocking. Should an Arab walk into a reptile together's house he would run the greatest risk of being stabbed, but he would no more think of doing so than we would recognize the property of a gentleman walking deliberately into a lady's bedroom—F.A.Bridgman, Harper's Magazine.
An Old Telegrapher's Escape
I am confined believer in the old adages that one never "too old to learn," said a prominent pulpit man. "And I also believe that there are a good many things learned early in life which prove of material value a man when he is creeping along in years. When I was clarking a few years' learned telegraphy and used it a great deal. Concerns so decreed my future that I have got used during late years. Besetently I went to the upstown office of a well-known broker for the purpose of making some queries relative to certain stocks my niece being to buy some. A young woman in charge and she sat at a telepher's desk. When I had stated my best guess turned on the button and will not try to fight them off, you will in a few years more find the corners of your mouth burning downward, as you see today on the faces of so many sour and ancient maidens, married and single.
This fact that the state of mind you mostly keep in shape not only the face, but the whole body, is nothing new. It is as work all about us. A man or woman who is always growing looks all the time, and it is not a pleasing look. Their very expression is a breach of the public peace. A man who thinks he knows it all and can't be told anything new looks it all the time, and when he speaks you can feel his ignorance and concern in the tones of his voice.
Thoughts make faces pleasing or repulsive. They carve lines, put in wrinkles, keep the mouth open as it should not be or keep it shut as it should be, and dye the skin yellow or death color or the pink and white of health. They govern the walk and the way the body is carried. A "slouch" or a tramp without pride, ambition or self respect will have a slouchy walk, his knees bent and the lower jaws have dropped or drooping. When you are firm and decided about anything there is a natural tendency for the mouth to close firmly and the lips to be pressed together. Then the mouth and whole lower part of the face grow into that expression of firmerness.
If you are in mind bright and cheerful, making the best of everything willing to please others, but not to "toody" to them; if you want to do the "square thing" by everybody, and want also insist on having the "square thing" done by yourself, your face will take on an expression in accordance with that kind of permanent thought, and it will not be an unpleasant one. And expression is four-fifths of beauty.
There are handsome faces the same all the year round. That's trouble. They never change. Be they on man or woman, there is not enough brains inside to make them change.
It is mind that rules and ways and pleases and fascinates, and does so to last. The mere face will hold but a short time if it has no change of expression. It is as natural to like change of expression in the face as it is to like changes of fashion in dress. And as it is natural, it is right in both cases.
I am telling you that your daily thoughts are not fog nor air nor myths. They are forces. They are things as real as things you see and as you think them. They can increase your good looks or decrease them. They can make you fortunate or unfortunate in life or business. They can make you sick or well. "No," say you. If I were to tell you at 10 o'clock toorrow morning that the building you are working in was to be blown up by dynamite is an hour, and that you must stay there and be blown up with it, would your face during that hour have on it. The expression it would wear at your waking? If you found out that the girl next you had caught the smallpox would not that knowledge and the fear coming of it change the expression of your face! If you should be kept in that fear and anxiety a whole year would not your face grow permanently into such expression! Now, when you are worrying over anything for hours or weeks you are setting to work a similar power to make your face look worry.
I see sometimes in the street a really pretty girl, or one who would be, were not her face spoiled and being spoiled more and more by the peruvian and discontented state of mind she is in—a girl who looks as if she had just got off some "hard words" with her mother or sister, or somebody else, and is still going through with it all, and giving them all a piece of her mind. But keeping this up does beg a gross deal of harm. It is bringing on ugleness. It weakens the stomach. It poisons the blood. It drives the best people from her. It attracts and brings the worst. It ruins the completion.
You may not take much stock in these ideas just now, but you will in time. You will think more of them three months hence. You will think of them still more a year
An Old Telegrapher's Escape
I am confined believer in the old age that one becomes too old to learn," said a prominent railroad man.
And I also believe that there are a good many things early in life which prove of material value to a man when he is creeping along in years. When I was clerking a few years ago, I learned telegraphy and used it a great deal. Occasionally so decreed my future that I have got used it during late years. Recently I went to the upstown office of a well-known broker for the purpose of making some inquiries relative to certain stocks my niece being to buy some.
A young woman was in charge and she sat at a telegrapher's desk. When I had stated my business she fairly jumped on the button, and then to my surprise I found that I could read the questions and answers as easily as though it was but yesterday when I was doing the same work myself. My curiosity was contemptibly arrowsed, and two or three times I was on the point of answering the questions that came over the ticker before she had time to repeat it. Finally this message came over the wire.
"Has he got money?"
"Yes, and I think he is a good piggy."
"It is dressed well!"
"Quite and he looks respectable."
"This last was too much for me, and before the authorized woman could translate the reply I felt from the office—New York Evening Sun."
Hunting Wild Turkeys.
A citizen of Blakely, Ga., has a novel method of hunting wild turkeys. He takes a large gobble along, fathers it to a tree then hides and waits for the wild birds to come up and make acquaintance—Chicago cage.
Ojibwa Photographs in the West.
In the neighborhood of Olanah, on the dead river, "Says Capt. Garrick Mallory, of the bureau of ethnology, in a paper, 'is a large, vertical soft rock, on which photographs are still to be observed, although nearly obliterated. The objects figured are chiefly birds and quadrupeds, many of them being repeated, and are all probably totemic indeed, that is the direct evidence of an old Indian who saw some of them made in his boyhood. He says that when Indian visitors came by there—that being a well known trail—they would each cut his toenom on the rock to show to what clan he belonged, either to establish his identity to the resident Indians who might happen to be present, or as a record of his passage. This is interesting in comparison with a similar proceeding in New Mexico and Arizona."
"It is desirable to explain the mode of using the Male and other bark records of the Ojibwa. The devices are not only mono-but are also diaphragmic and descriptive. They are not merely invented to answer or memorize the subject, but are evolved therefrom. A general map of explaining the so called "symbolism" is by a magnification than the plarity of such."
ANAHEIM GAZETTE, THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 1888.
MISCELLANEOUS
FOUNTAIN
BALOON
Center Street.
ROEGER'S BLOCK.
N. HART,
PROPRIETOR
WEST WINES, LIQUORS
AND CIGARS.
Anheuser-Busch Beer
ON DRAUCHT.
CE FOR SALE.
anaheim Bakery
TER PEDERSEN, PROP.
Fresh Bread, Pies and Cakes Every
Delivery Wagon Makes Daily
Lips.
The Patronage of the Public Retotfully Solicited.
MORRIS,
Established 1865.
Amory Bigelow,
Commission Merchant & Jubber in
CALIFORNIA
PRODUCTS.
EEN & DRIED FRUITS, NUTS, ETC.
105 South Water Street.
MISCELLANEOUS
STATEMENT
OF THE
CONDITION
OF THE
BANK OF ANAHEIM
At the Opening of Business on MCNDAY,
July 2, 1888.
ASSETS
Cash on hand $10,063.51
Hills receivable 97,723.47
Real estate taken for debt 12,800.00
Bank lot, vanit and premises 6,300.00
Due from other banks 72,160.39
LIABILITIES
Dues deposited $114,623.70
Capital stock paid in coin 20,000.90
Surplus 4,912.67
Reserve Fund 10,000.90
STATE OF CALIFORNIA,
County of Los Angeles:
Piez James, President, and George V. Horr.
Cashier, of the Bank of Anaheim, depose and say that the above statement is true and correct to the best of their knowledge and belief.
PLEZ JAMES, President
GEO. V. HORR.
Cashier
Subscribed and sworn to before me this 3d day of July, 1888.
A.V.FOX.
Justice of the Peace
STATEMENT
OF THE
BANK OF ANAHEIM
Of the Amount of Capital paid up in Gold Coin.
Capital paid up in Gold Coin $20,000
STATE OF CALIFORNIA,
County of Los Angeles:
Piez James, President, and George V. Horr.
Cashier, of the Bank of Anaheim, depose and say that the above statement is true and correct to the best of their knowledge and belief.
PLEZ JAMES, President
GEO. V. HORR.
Cashier
Subscribed and sworn to before me this 3d day of July, 1888.
A.V.FOX.
Justice of the Peace
J.S.WEBER.
Center street, Anaheim, dealer in STOVES, TINWARE AGATEWARE,
Pumps, Pipes and Brass Goods
Plumbing done according to the San Francisco Sanitary Plumbing Law, to keep your house healthy and free from smell.
Agent for Quick-Meal Gasoline Stove.
MISCELLANEOUS
Pacific Coast Steamship COMPANY.
GOODALL, PERRINS & CO.
General Agents, San Prentice
NORTHERN ROUTES.
Embrace lines for Portland, Or., Victoria, R.C., and Puget Sound and Alaska, and all coast ports.
SOUTHERN ROUTES.
TIME TABLE FOR AUGUST, 1888
STREAMERS
July 20th July 31st Aug 1st Aug 4th
Pumona
Santa Rosa
Aug 1st Aug 4th Aug 5th Aug 6th Aug 7th Aug 8th Aug 9th Aug 10th Aug 11th Aug 12th Aug 13th Aug 14th Aug 15th Aug 16th Aug 17th Aug 18th Aug 19th Aug 20th Aug 21st Aug 22nd Aug 23rd Aug 24th Aug 25th Aug 26th Aug 27th Aug 28th Aug 29th Aug 30th Aug 31st Aug 32nd Aug 33rd Aug 34th Aug 35th Aug 36th Aug 37th Aug 38th Aug 39th Aug 40th Aug 41th Aug 42th Aug 43th Aug 44th Aug 45th Aug 46th Aug 47th Aug 48th Aug 49th Aug 50th Aug 51th Aug 52th Aug 53th Aug 54th Aug 55th Aug 56th Aug 57th Aug 58th Aug 59th Aug 60th Aug 61th Aug 62nd Aug 63rd Aug 64th Aug 65th Aug 66th Aug 67th August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August August AugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAugustAu...
Amory Bigelow,
CALIFORNIA PRODUCTS,
EEN & DRIED FRUITS, NUTS, ETC:
105 South Water Street,
Chicago.
General Advances made on Consignments
I MAKE A SPECIALTY
Of DOES AND MOES,
S. FEDERMAN.
Baled Hay!
FOR SALE!
VIELAND'S
Beer...
AT GADES'S.
NOTICE.
ALED PROPOSALS WILL BE RECKIVED BY the Trustees of Anaheim School District for the auction of one Bond (No. 9) of Anaheim School District, Los Angeles county, State of California, of value of $400. Proposals will be received until August 2, 1888, at 2 o'clock p.m., at which and proposals will be opened at the office of the Board of School Trustees on Center Anaheim.
Order of the Board of Trustees of Anaheim District, PLEZ JAMES Clark, Anaheim, Cal., July 5, 1888.
THE SUPERIOR COURT
J. S. WEBER,
Center street, Anaheim, dealer in STOVES, TINWARE AGATEWARE,
Pumps, Pipes and Brass Goods
Plumbing done according to the San Francisco Sanitary Plumbing Law, to keep your house healthy and free from smell
Agent for
Quick-Meal Gasoline Stove.
Also agent for the HALIDAY WINDMILL.
The best in use
Boston Bakery!
FRESH BREAD, CAKES AND DOUGHNUTS DAILY.
ICE CREAM SERVED EVERY SATURDAY AND SUNDAY
J. KREISS,
MANAGER
Los Angeles Street, Anaheim, Cal.
J.M.Griffith Company
(A CORPORATION.)
LUMBER DEALERS
(Near Railroad Depot)
Doors, Blinds, Windows,
MOULDINGS,
Posts, Shakes, Shingles,
LATH, HAIR, PLASTER OF PARIS.
ANAHEIM GRINT MILLS OPERATING ON Wednesdays and Saturdays of each week
Grain, Feed, Meal, Etc., of all varieties. Corn smelted and shipped.
F. & J. BACKS,
Furniture, Bedding And Wall Paper,
Picture Frames, Curtains and Mountings, Paints, Walls and Varnishes, Sewing Machines and Material.
UNDERTAKERS.
All Orders for Cabinet Work, Paper Hanging, Etc., Promptly Executed
LOS ANGELES STREET.
PASTURAGE!
Extra No. 1 Feed FOR
PASTURAGE AT
Samuel Kraemer's Ranch
Three Miles North of Anaheim.
BANK OF ANAHEIM
CAPITAL STOCK.
$100,000.OO.
PLRZ JAMES...President
GEORGE V. HOERR...Cashier
BOARD OF DIRECTORS:
E. F. SPENCE, W. H. MARKEY
W. K. JAMES.
S. H. MOTT, P. JAMES.
This Bank receives Deposits, Loans Money, Buys and Sells Exchange and Currency, makes Collections and transacts a General Banking Business.
COMPRESPONDENTS:
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 European countries.
Tickets attenting the holder to passage from New York to the several parts of England or Germany, or from any port in those countries to New York via the Hamburg American Market. Compiled sold at regular rates. Return tickets at a rate.
Certificates untitled the holder to passage from San Francisco to New York or vice versa. Issued at the established rate.
Persons in Anaheim or vicinity desiring to attend any point in the countries named for their friendly can purchase ticket here and for further information to the proper person by mail.
FIRST
NATIONAL
BANK
OF
Los Angeles.
Capital Stock
$200,000.
Reserve
$203,000.
OFFICERS:
E. F. SPENCE,
President.
J.D. BICKNELL,
Vice-President.
J.M. ELLIOTT.
Cashier.
DIRECTORS:
E. F. SPENCE,
William Lester,
J.D. BICKNELL,
S.H. MOTT.
J.M. ELLIOTT.
KELLOGG BROS..
PASTURAGE!
Extra No. 1 Feed
PASTURAGE
AT
Samuel Kraemer's Ranch
Three Miles North of Anaheim.
(Triple-skating Irrigating Pump)
WINDMILLS, HORSE POWER, TANKS,
PUMPS and all kinds of Pumping Machinery.
Bend for illustrated catalogue and Price List.
P.W. KROGH & CO., at Baina St., San Francisco, Cal.
CONSUMPTIVE
The PARKER'S ORIGINAL TOY MACHINE is now available in the market.
HINDERCORNS.
The new model has been designed to be more efficient and durable.
PAINLESS CHILDREN'S DENTAL BLOOD AND CARE FOR THE EAR.
Tutt's Pills
This popular pharmacy provides safe and effective Dyspepsia, Constipation, Sick Headache, Bilirubinness
And all diseases arising from a Tropid Liver and Bad Digestion.
THE MAJOR REASONS FOR GREATER USE OF THIS PHARMACEUTICAL IS IN GREATER USE OF ITS MULTIPLE FUNCTIONS.
OFFICERS:
E.F. SPENCE, President.
J.D. BICKNELL, Vice-President.
J.M. ELLIOTT, Cashier.
DIRECTORS:
WILLOW LEE,
J.D. RICKNELL,
S.H. MORT.
J.M. ELLIOTT.
KELLOGG BROS..
Real Estate AGENTS.
H.C. KELLOGG,
Civil Engineer and Surveyor.
City Stables,
Center Street (Opposite Kroeger's Block).
ANAHEIM.
A.L. Lewis & Co.
Proprietors.
THERE STABLES ARE THE BEST VENTILATED
AND MOST COMMONLY IN THE TWO AMAZING ATTENSIONS WILL BE PAID TO BOUNDING AND GROUNDING HOUSE.
The shirts in all rooms will be reasonable.
Single and Double Teams
Purchased at short notice and so useful drivers' family with the country, supplied when required.
The entire price is responsibly collected.
Estray Mare!
ONE CREAM-COLORED MARE STRAYED FROM Cereus much about 3/4 of Jane. The mare has many bruises, white fawn and mar on one front knee.
A liberal period will be paid for return of animal to E. Colina, Anaheim.
CONSUMPTION
which is herefuls of the Lameness, and caused by this remedy; if the earlier stages of the disease, Provenous power over this terrifying fate when first offering the now world-famous medicine which, from its wounds, binds of tonic, or strengthening, or blood-cleaning, anti-bilious, nutritive properties, is unresolved as a remedy for Consumption, because Liver, Blood, and Liver, Blood, and Liver,
For Weak Lungs, Spitting of Breath, Chronic Kail Otchitis, Asthma, Burden Cheggs, an infection in Druguese, is $1.25 or less.
World's Expensive Medical Imaging
803 Main St., Brooklyn
MISCELLANEOUS.
F. CONRAD,
Brewer and Wine Manufacturer
Dealer in the Best Brands of
Melwood & Rye
Whiskies.
KEEP ALWAYS ON HAND AND FOR SALE
Wines and Pure Brandy.
My BEER is Equal to any Lager Beer
in the State.
R. LUEDKE.
Watch Maker and Jeweler
Centre Street, Anaheim.
EVERY DESCRIPTION OF WATCHES, CLOCK
and JEWELRY, carefully repaired and warranted.
A fine assortment of
Elgin and Waltham Watches.
OUR PREMIUMS
For 1000.
THIS PAPER WITH
THE SAN FRANCISCO
WEEKLY CALL
OR
THE SAN FRANCISCO
MORNING CALL
AS PREMIUMS FOR THE
PRESIDENTIAL YEAR.
MISCELLANEOUS.
Hotel del Campo Tract!
Three Minutes walk from the business center of Anaheim.
Adjoining the depot grounds of the California
Central Railroad.
Fifty Thousand Dollar Hotel now being
Built on the Tract.
Business and residence lots are now offered for sale on this tract at low
prices, which will only hold good for a limited time.
Special inducements are offered to persons who will build on
This Tract.
The owners of this tract will spare no expense in improving it and
Making it the choicest part of town.
For information, maps and price list apply to
A. E. Hendricks, Real Estate Agt,
ANAHEIM, CAL.
THE GAZETTE
IS THE BEST
THE SAN FRANCISCO
WEEKLY CALL
OR
THE SAN FRANCISCO
MORNING CALL
AS PREMIUMS FOR THE
PRESIDENTIAL YEAR.
THE SAN-FRANCISCO WEEKLY CALL is a handsome eight-page paper. It is named every Thursday, and contains all of the important news of the week, glued from every quarter of the globe, complete up to date of publication. It contains interesting special correspondence from all of the principal cities of the world and a vast amount of the best selected and original general literature. It furnishes the latest and most relevant financial news and market quotations, and gives special attention to horticultural and agricultural news, and it is every respect first class family paper, appealing to the interest of every member of the household. Every subscriber to THE WEEKLY CALL gets
HANDSOME NEW MAP OF California and Nevada
Beautifully printed in color showing every railroad, postoffice and town in the state, with table of population, etc.
THE WEEKLY CALL will contain fun reports of the PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN.
THE MORNING CALL
(SEVEN INCLUDES A VIZEL)
Is like metropolitan daily.
Lively, clear, crisp.
Being the leading daily newspaper.
GAZETTE- and Weekly Call with Map, $2 75 per year
GAZETTE- and Daily Morning Call, $6 per year.
WHAT AILS YOU?
Do you feel dull, languid, low-spirited, lifeless, and indescribably miserable, both physically and emotionally; experience a sense of illness or bloating after eating, or of "goneess," or emptiness of stomach in the morning; tongue-coated, bitter or bad taste in mouth; frequent headaches, blured eyesight; tearing pecking before the eyes; nervous prostration or exhuma-tion; irritability of temper, but flushes alternating with chilly sensations, sharp, burning, transient, pains here and there, cold feet, drowsiness after meals, wakefulness, or irritation after sleeping, constant indigestion feeling of drunk, or of impending calamity?
If you have all, or any considerable number of these symptoms, you are suffering from that most common of American maladies—dizziness, Torsipid Liver, associated with Dyspnea, or Torpid Liver. The more complicated your final diagnosis. The more greater the number and diversity of symptoms.
No matter what stage it has reached, Dr. Pierre's Golden Medical Discovery will subdue it, if taken according to directions for a reasonable length of time. If not permitted to multiply and Consum-
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FOR THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE."
Boroughly clean it by using Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, and good consumption of the Lungs, Skin Disease, Hurt Diastoemia, Kidney Disease, or the many amounts of Consumption, which is merciful of the Lungs, is arranged and cured by this remedy. It taken in the earlier stages of the disease. From its marathon power over this terribly fatal disease, when first offering this now world-famed remedy to the public, Dr. Pierce thought seriously that Consumption Cura, handmade that man-made medicine for medicine which, from its wonderful combination of tonic, or strengthening, alimentary, blood-cleaning, anti-billions, pestilent, and nutritive property, is unequaled, not only is a remedy for Consumption, but for all Arthritis Minimus of the Liver, Blood, and Lungs.
For Weak Lungs, Spitting of Blood, Shortness of Breath, Chronic Nail Catarrh, Bronchitis, Asthma, Burns Cough, and Kindred infections it is an efficient remedy. Dr. Pierce took ten cents in stamps for Dr. Pierce's book on Consumption.
PASTURAGE!
For Horses and Cattle.
ON THE THOMAS EDWARDS RANCH. TWO miles southwest of Winston-Salem. Inquire of JAMES MOSS.