anaheim-gazette 1888-10-25
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WOMAN AND HOME.
THE RESULTS OF TOO CLOSSE CONTACT WITH THE WORLD.
I perceive you say "a lady may be a lady anywhere and person all the peculiar charm of femininity and romance." I beg to differ. Place a foiled girl in a position where she must, month in and month out, deal and come in contact with another woman elsewhere at the time and one of these two results will follow. She will either be unable to endure the pain or, the will unwillingly acquire and take on some of the circumstances by which she is surrounded. We are all affected and influenced by our moment surrounding of everyday association. If you are compelled to live for months to a certain age and among minors and we bear and speak with only that class, you might be subjected to emerging and going into a different social order to find how much of real life thought, idea and philosophy you had unconscionally acquired.
On the other hand, a refined woman's presence in store, office, or any place where men mostly congregate, has a softening and refined influence. It checks the course word and vulgar jest. It puts men on their good behavior but it is this always gained without a certain loss to the woman. Where thought has long been campant, it is only impersonal, not distroyed, and the women more sensitive nature will feel such thought, and fear it oppressively, and such feeling either becomes in time an injurious shock or the will to some extent give way to it and unconscionably become a part of it.
I do not think that woman is well fitted, physically or mentally, to go into the rough and tumble of the world business and fight on alongside of the man. I mean by "rough and tumble" any occupation she may engage in, be it teaching, clerking, book-hunting anything where she labors as long and as arduously as the man. That does not seem of fine her place, for she has a place and a "sphere" as man has his places and spheres. Man did not make this place for her. Nature dbl. As man's "honesty" she should
No one can tell when we were from memory; but we begin enough to hold two parts of himself in the same number of guilds, on account of no hard breaking shall be open to the knowledge of theory.
My mother told me when we were from memory: "you get anything from your mother; you get nothing from your father."
We cannot tell when we were from memory: "you get anything from your mother; you get nothing from your father."
We cannot tell when we were from memory: "you get anything from your mother; you get nothing from your father."
We cannot tell when we were from memory: "you get anything from your mother; you get nothing from your father."
Notice to Stockho
IN THE
ANAHEIM IMPROVED COMPANY
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT AT THE DIRECTORS BELD ON THE 12TH JUNE 1834 AN ASSUMPTION OF FIVE SHARES MADE BETWEEN THE CAPITAL STATE COMPANY IN AHABIM AND THE IMPLEMENTARY COMPANY IN AHABIM TURNED UP IN AHABIM AND ANY UNKNOWN AMENDMENT ALSO MADE BY THE CAPITAL STATE COMPANY IN AHABIM AND ANY UNKNOWN AMENDMENT ALSO MADE BY THE CAPITAL STATE COMPANY IN AHABIM.
FULLERT
NOTICE!
The thought has long been campanion, it is only mildly disrupted, and the women more sensitive nature will feel such thought, and fear it oppressively, and such feeling either becomes in time an injurious attack or she will to some extent give way to it and unreasonably become a part of it. I do not think that woman is well fitted, physically or mentally, to go into the rough and tumble of the world’s business and fight out alongside of the man. I mean by “rough and tumble” any occupation she may engage in, be it teaching, clerking, book-keeping, anything where she lays as long and as artificially as the man. That does not seem of her place, for she has a place and a “sphere” as man has his places and spheres. Man did not make this place for her Nature dbl. As man’s “h婆inate” she should be main rest. If the two-man and wife are both participants in what we call “the struggle for existence,” they both are equally tired with the struggle. If both are weary, they can only give each other weariness. If one is rested, that one can give the other rest. The rested one should be the woman—the wife. If she be a wife, a real wife, she will through such rest, give her companion strength, cheer, courage and inspiration for the next day’s effort. If she has been in the office working at the desk all day, she can. There is a great factor in social matters known as the homestand it is woman only who can make the home. At present there are relatively few homes, though many women, where men and women eat and drink together. A real home, with a bright, cheerful, rested woman in it, is worth far more to a man, even in dollars and cents, than any thing the woman may earn by any other effort.
Now you say, "But what are you going to do with all the single women who must earn their bread?" I don't know. I think it is a very unhealthy and unnatural state of affairs that there should be so many single women. I find in all nature where man has not medied that birds and animals are generally found in pairs, and they pair off at an early age. With us it is different. Many never do pair at all. I cannot look upon a woman as a whole woman, or a man as a whole man, until they are paired—really paired. I mean alike in sentiment, taste, aims, motive and inspiration. Then the men and women find their "respective spheres" of motion as natural and easily as you find air in breaths. But why say "but this is not dealing with the present situation." I think it is always dealt with by indicating the certain possibilities of the future. When you know a possibility when it strikes the chord of truth within you and you know it for a truth, you are on the road and are making your path toward such possibility.
There is a "place" and a "sphere" for the feminine nature and feminine mind which have thus far been little recognized. She is the source and only source of man's inspiration. By inspiration"I mean plan, idea, device, scheme and invention in any calling. Man cannot live without the feminine spiritual element about him. When you put hands of men together, as they are sometimes placed in armies or settlements and separated from the other sex, they grow not only coarse, but stupid and diluted in intellect. Where you find women best cared for, then shaddled from the world's roughness, and as the same time most congested, you find the most masculine power and the most rounded but masculine nature. Why! Because the feminine nature belonging to that man, and that man only, when as protected as you would protect any delicate instrument, is then in the point of giving him that strength which he uses as a strong plane of effort. Frontier Mulhollah in New York State.
Closets and "Clutter Places."
Can we not slightly modify an old and worn adage and find that "woman is known by the closet she keeps" for a chest inch to a greater or less extent among traits in average woman's character.
The Care of the Nice.
Most young women think that to smooth the pillow practically to carry cooling drinks to the lips, to arrange flowers on the table with the vials at the head of the bed, to sit beside the bed and read verses in a gentle voice, to move about the room in flowing roles with miscellaneous grace, is the sum total of pursing the sicks; and they are quite ready to begin a life in which they undertake all womanly duties; when they cannot make a cup of grudel so that it shall not be limpy. The care of the sick is in the real experience something immensely different; life and death hang in the balance; and all the venues of life, all the interests and loves of life, the sufferings of the dying, the hopes and fears and terrible sorrows of the living. Any serious illness is a fight all the way through between doctors and nurses on the one side and death and dissolution on the other.
It is then, one of the shameful things of our civilization that our daughters are brought up to chatter French, to take the last new dancing step; to talk critical jargon concerning the merits of this and that style of painting; to discuss theories and philosophies, mathematics and metaphysics; and to remain utterly ignorant of those things which are the most vital to every woman, to every one also with whom they are connected; the things of which both they and others are surest to have need. And we venture to predict that in days to come no girl will be thought to have finished her education in its clearest point; who has not spent nights and days of some months at least in hospital duty; learning how to make a patient as comfortable as fate permits; not to bear one in discomfort a moment; as unerged; in hospital arts; she must; and to keep the skid alive in some other way than that which might be adopted by a savage; by sheer force of vitality and letting alone—Harper's Bazar.
"DOCTORING OLD TIME."
A Striking Picture—a Revival of Old Time Simplifications.
In one of Harper's issues is given a very fine illustration of Roberts' celebrated painting, known as "Doctoring Old Time." It represents a typical old-timer, with his bellows, blowing the dust from an ancient clock, with its cords and weights carefully secured. One of these clocks in this generation is appreciated only as a rare relic.
The suggestive name,"Doctoring Old Time," brings to our mind another version of the title, used for another purpose—"Old Time Doctoring."
We learn through a rollable source, that one of the unerring proprietary medicine firms of the country, has been for years investigating the formulas and medical preparations used in the beginning of this century, and even before, with a view of ascertaining why people in our great-grandfathers' time enjoyed a health and physical vigor so solidom found in the present generation. They now think they have secured the secret or secrets. They find that the prevailing opinion that then existed, that
Closets and "Clutter Places."
Can we not slightly modify an old and worn attire and find that "woman is known by the closet she keeps" for one's closet indoors to a greater or less extent than traits in the average woman's character.
Havesthe first place, keep the closet door shut during the day, for an open door is one thing that gives an air of untidiness to the whole room. On the other hand, always leave the door open at night. That is the proper time to air the closet. It then that the chamber is the coolest, and the darker, or rather nightly—change of air prevents any musty oligating to the garments hung there. Do not hang your winter and summer garments in the same closet. In the fall put away the summer dress—the cotton ones washed and rough dried—folded in an empty trunk or box or bung in a disused closet kept for the purpose. In the spring, do the same with the winter garments. One will find it refreshing after a putting away of this kind, to be able to catch sight of a book or two that has nothing on it.
Rang up waists and skirts by loops properly attached. This not always as convenient, but it repays in the end. Keep rolled clothes from the closet, unless in a laundry bag.
It is a great deal more convenient to take a pair of shoes, polished and clean from a shoe bag of linen or tickling, hung on the inside of the door, than it is to strain one's back stepping over and picking among half a dozen dirty pairs—to find the mats—on the floor. If one has a shoe bag she will intuitively keep cast off shoes out of it. Some of these bags are made to cover nearly the whole door; then the upper pockets, made any size conveniences, are used for saddled collar, snuffs and handkerchiefs, and the score of little necessaries. Keep only the bottles and bones useful on the shelves. This prevents one of the disgraceful features of house cleaning, overhauling the closets.
In a hoose recently built, the lines closer...
MISCELLANEOUS
S JACOB'S OIL
REMEDY PAIN
FOR MAN AND BEAST.
Notice to Stockholders
IN THE
ANAHEIM IMPROVEMENT COMPANY.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT AT A MEETING of the Directors held on the 15th day of September, 1854, an assessment of Five Dollars per share was made upon the capital stock of the Anaheim Improvement Company, payable on or before October 20th, 1854, to R. Malone, Secretary, at his office in Anaheim. And any stock upon which such assessment shall remain unpaid on said date shall be withdrawn and all interest paid on sale will be paid on November 15th, 1854, to pay the delinquent amount together with costs of advertising and expense of sale.
BECRITORY ANAHEIM IMPROVEMENT COMPANY
Office in Postoffice Block, Anaheim, Cal.
FULLERTON
NOTICE!
FULLERTON NOTICE!
Payments Now Due on FULLERTON LOTS
Must Be Paid Immediately to E. M. FRAZEE, TREASURER FULLERTON LAND AND TRUST COMPANY.
No. 11 Temple St., Los Angeles NOTICE.
HAVING BEFORE QUITE HEAVILY OF SUGAR, anticipating the usual advance at this season in the year the BUENA PARK CASH STORE will supply customers with a five article of N. O. GRANUATED, giving them 12 pounds for $1, thus giving our customers the benefit of the advance JAMES A WHITAKER SCHOOL TAXES SCHOOL TAXES ARE OVERDUE. A PROMPT payment of the same time at my office is requested P. C. SMYTHE: Tax Collector
ANNOUNCEMENTS
SHELDON LITTLEFIELD (Of Anaheim)
Regular Repair can candidate for SUPERVISOR, FIFTH DISTRICT.
W. M. McFADDEN (Of Placement)
Assemblyman B. J. SNODGRASS (Road Overseer)
Baled Hay!
FOR SALE!
WIELAND'S Beer.
AT GADES.
Anaheim Union Water Co.
Location of principal place of business Anaheim, Los Angeles county, California.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT AT A meeting of the directors held on the 4th day of August, 1853 in Anaheim, No. 14 of fifty cents ($0.50) per share was levied upon the capital stock of the corporation payable on or before September 4, 1853, to the Secretary of the corporation at his office, in the town of Anaheim, California.
Any stock upon which this assessment shall remain unpaid on the 4th day of September 1853 will be delinquent, and advertised for sale at public auction, and unless payment is made before will be sold on October 6th, 1853, by the Delinquent Assessment together with costs of advertising and expenses of sale.
J. S. GARDINER, Secretary
Office at the Postoffice in the town of Anaheim, county of Los Angeles, state of California.
H. L. PATY
(Present Incumbent)
Announces himself as a candidate for reelection to ROADMASTER Anaheim Road District. Oldest roadmaster in the county.
ARTISTIC
JOB-WORK
AT THIS
$100,000.00.
PLEZ JAMES...President
GEORGE V. HOERR...Cashier
BOARD OF DIRECTORS:
K. F. SPENCE, W. H. MARCY
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.
COMRESPONDENTS:
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 PORTAL orders issued on backs if the principal cities of all European countries.
Tickets notifying the holder to passage from New York to the several ports of England, France or Germany, or from any port in those countries to New York via the Hamburg American Packet Company sold at regular rates. Return tickets at a reduction.
Certificates, antitaking the holder to passage or railroad from San Francisco to New York or overseas, issued at the established rate.
Persons in Anaheim or vicinity desiring to send any point in the countries sampled for any fraction or blend can purchase ticket here and forward them to the proper person by mail.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF Los Angeles.
Capital Stock ¥200,000
Reserve ¥205,000
OFFICERS:
E. F. SPENCE...President.
J. D. BICKNELL,...Vice-President.
J. M. ELLIOTT,...Cashier.
G. B. SHAFFER,...Asst. Cashier.
DIRECTORS:
E. F. SPENCE,
J. D. BICKNELL,
S. H. MOTT,
J. M. ELLIOTT,
Tutt's P
This popular remedy not effectually cure Dyspepsia, Constipac Headache, Bilious And all diseases arising Torpid Liver and Bad The natural result is good and solid flesh. Do note amply coated and easy to SOLD EVERYWHILE
JOB-WORK
AT THE
Gazette Job Office
Lowest Prices.
First-Class Work.
Express and Baggage COMPANY.
All orders promptly at added to.
Also Fine 'Bus for Pionics, Exoursions, Etc.
OFFICE: With Westerhill Telegraph Co.
Anaheim, Cal.
OFFICERS:
E. F. SPENCE. President.
J. D. BICKNELL. Vice-President.
J. M. ELLIOTT. Cashier.
G. B. SHAFFER. Asst. Cashier.
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.
TUBE STABLES ARE THE BEST VENTILATED
AND most accommodations in the town, and special allenvironments will be paid to boarding and Grooming horses.
The charge in all means will be reasonable.
Single and Double Teams
Pursued at short notice and as useful drivers, families
with the money, supplied when required.
NOTICE:
Wanted in borrow on first class security,
from five to twenty-five thousand dollars.
For further particulars inquire of Manus,
Prince & Lettersfield,
Anaheim, April 11, 1899.
F. & J. BACKS,
Furniture, Bedding
And Wall Paper.
UNDETAKERS
F. CONRAD,
Brower and Wine Manufacturer
Melwood & Rye
Whiskies.
I have a large collection of wines and liqueurs from the state.
My BEER is Equal to any Lager Beer in the State.
R. LEIDKE
Watch Maker and Alarm Centre Street Anaheim.
E.
Elgin and Waittown Watches
I MAKE A SPECIALTY.
To Wine Makers!
OFFER FOR SALE
very cheap, for the reason that I have no further use for them, the following articles:
Van Dresk Pumping Company
Tannin Cane Wine Press
Quincy and Durham (purely 180 gallons) and a lot of miscellaneous articles of interest to wine makers.
All the above are in good condition and ready for immediate shipment. Apply to Theo./Reiser,
Anaheim, Cal.
TO MAKE
DELICIOUS BISCUITS OR WHOLESOME BREAD
USE
DWIGHT'S COW-BRAND SODA or SALERATUS.
ABSOLUTELY PURE.
ALWAYS UNIFORM AND FULL WEIGHT.
On sure that there is a picture of a Cow on your package and you will have the best Sody mash.
THE GAZETTE
THE GAZETTE
IS THE BEST.
ADVERTISING MEDIUM.
OUR PREMIUMS
PRESIDENTIAL YEAR.
THIS PAPER
THE SAN FRANCISCO
WEEKLY BULLETIN,
SEMI-WEEKLY BULLETIN,
DAILY BULLETIN,
COMPLETE ATLAS OF THE WORLD.
PICK OUT YOUR COMBINATION.
PASTURAGE:
For Horses and Cattle.
JAMES MOSS.
Tutt's Pills
This popular remedy never fails to effectually cure Dyspepsia, Constipation, Sick Headache, Biliousness
And all diseases arising from a Torpid Liver and Bad Digestion.
The natural result is good appetite and solid flesh. Does small, elegantly neat coated and easy to swallow.
SOLD EVERYWHERE.
CATARRH
SICK HEADACHE,
Bilious Headache,
Bilious Headache,
All arrangements of the stomach and bowels, are presently relieved and permanently caused by the use of Dr. Pierce's Purgitive Pellets. In explanation of the cause of the action upon the system, we shall be able that they act upon the system.
CATARRH
COLD IN HEAD.
Try the Cure
Ely’s Cream Balm
Cleanses the Nasal Passages. Always Inflammation. Healing the Sore, Restores the Sensors of Taste, Smell and Hearing.
A particle is applied into each mouth and is aggrieable. Price 50c at Dresden or by mail. ELY BROTHERS, WARDEN YARD.
SCOTT'S EMULSION OF PURE GOD LIVER OIL AIR HYPOPHOSPHITES Almost as Palatable as Milk.
Be disgusted that it can be taken, digested, and stimulated by the most mutative stomach, when the plain all must be tolerated; and by the combination of the oil with the hypophosphates is much more amenable.
Remarkable as a fish product.
Persons palm rapidly while taking it.
SCOTT'S EMULSION is acknowledged by Physicians to be the Finest and Best preparation in the world for the relief and cure of CONSUMPTION, SOROPULA, GENERAL DEBILITY, WASTING DISEASES, EMACIATION, OLDDS and CHROMIC COUCHS.
The great remedy for Consumption, and Wading in Children. Sold by all Druggists.
PICK OUT YOUR COMBINATION.
The San Francisco Weekly Bulletin. $2.90.
With Semi-Weekly. Weekly and Friday Daily. $3.20.
With Daily Bulletin. $6.00.
Standard Atlas (Retail Price $4.50). $2.00 Each in Connection with the Bulletin sent postpaid to Subscribers.
I CURE FITS!
When I say Cruel I do not mean merely to stop them for a time, and then have them return again. I mean a KADICAL CURSE.
I have made the disease of FITS, EPILEPSY or PALLING SICKNESS,
A life-long study. I warrant my ready to Crash the worst. Because others have failed to reason for her need. Send as once for a treatise and a PARIS BOOTLILY of my INFALLIBLE KENNDY. Give Express and Post Office. It costs you nothing for a trial, and it will cure you.
N.C. ROOT, M.C., 183 PLAIN ST., NEW YORK
$500 REWARD
Refunded by the manufacturer of Dr. Magee's Curry Homemade for a case of Catarrh in the Mead which they cannot cure.
NYMPHTONS OF CATARRH.—Dull, heavy byache, destruction of the nasal passages, discharge falling from the head into ear, sometimes profuse, watery, inflamed, and often pungent; milious parental blood and pusture; the voice is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "nasm" twang"; the breath is hard and has a "纳sm"twang";
The thousands of cases annually, without manufacture half of its cure, end in death. No disease so common, more deceptive and dangerous, or less understood by physicians.
By this mild something, and healing properties,
Dr. Magee's Catarrh remedies cure the word Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh,
Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh,
Catarrh, Catarrh, Catarrh, Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Cat arrrh,
Constant Hawking and Spitting."
Thomas J. Husman, New York.
St. Louis. Mo., written: "I was a great sufferer from catarrhs for three years. At once I could hardly breathe, and win constantly hawking and spitting, and for the next eight months could not breathe through the nose." I might perhaps could be drunk easily if advised to drink any alcohol almost strangle life. By the use of Dr. Husman's catarrhs therapy I was a well man, and the cure had permanent."
Constant Hawking on Catarrhs: string malleable skin to clothing; dizziness; pain; paiting to any address; odor of mixture of two-digit postage stamps. Addition:
World's Magazine Method Association.
No. 900 Main St., New York City.