anaheim-gazette 1888-12-20
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We shall be at Sarn-socks. I think Eleanorairty dresses.
The modiste)—Yes, madam.
That will give at least one every day.
The black lace costumes of several toilets, madam.
Then add six more have my daughter fixing up the dress one day with a rod ribe next with a blue; like an ooters—O, certainly not, madam!
Mrs. Crossus—Not by a long shot, indeed!
Waters—You want the costumes elegantly simple, I suppose, for Miss Crossus. She is so young.
Mrs. Crossus—No, I don't. Nothing of the sort I want the best right through, and lots of it; and I'll pay for it.
Waters—Very well, madam.
Mrs. Crossus—If Crossus did make his money in a corner in boot tops; it's still in Government securities now, and is as good as any body's.
Mrs. Cadwallader-Banks—I saw Dr. Montague this morning.
Mr. Cadwallader-Banks—Professionally or casually?
Mrs. Cadwallader-Banks—Professionally I have been quite anxious about the girls. Dorothea is languid, and Prisilla, too, is decidedly drooping.
Mr. Cadwallader-Banks—I hadn't noticed it.
Mrs. Cadwallader-Banks—a mother's eye is keener. The doctor thinks both need a tonic and recolumna August at the Spa.
Mr. Cadwallader-Banks—Him!
Mrs. K Newton Brown—I think with care and hurrying ourselves, at Backwoods during the early summer we can manage a week at Saratoga later.
Miss Brown That will be quite polly.
Mrs. K Newton Brown You will need to make the most of it. Young Dr. Darlington will be there.
Miss Brown Are you sure?
Mrs. K Newton Brown Perfectly he is quirky epris gow with you; spoke at your classic bust and profile at the Hospital Tableau.
Miss Brown I'll wear my hair in a Greek style and have my dresses additionally decorate.
Mrs. K Newton Brown (dryly) That will not be necessary. I think you might alter your style somewhat, however. I believe he admires yield-
and its pursuit is exciting in the extreme. It is a very peculiar animal both in its appearance and habits, and its mode of capture is interesting. The manatee looks like a huge porker "squeezed flat," or an elongated "pancake." It is generally 8 to 12 feet in length, and from 4 to 6 feet broad, and it has a flat body. Its head is shaped something like a cow's, with a round muzzle. The skin is dark and rough, and hangs in folds similar to that of a hippopotamus or rhinoceros; it is sparsely covered with hair. The animal's eyes are well-nigh covered up by the folds of flesh or skin that hang loose around its head. The animals weigh from nine hundred pounds upward, and though most helpless and ungainly looking creatures when on land, yet in the water they are exceedingly spry, their flukes and flippers sending them through the water with incredible speed. They are very acute of ear, and detect sounds on the water for a long distance; hence their capture is a matter of no small skill and dexterity. They live on grass almost wholly, and there are only a few places on the coast where they have feeding grounds.
St. Lucie river, which opens into Indian river from the Halpatteok creek some miles above this place, is their favorite haunt here. The stream is short, wide, and with little current. The waters are dark, and the bed of the river is covered with a thick growth of vegetation, a "cow-cow" grass being the principal plant. Many other rare plants are also found along its banks, none of which grow elsewhere.
Three fine specimens were captured last fall and two others a few months ago. The fast party used a very heavy and strong purse not strengthened with extra ropes. They subsided a cave near the mouth of the river where the water was about twelve feet deep. The net, which was about 50 long and with very large mesh, was extended between stakes set at the bottom and shaped so as to have an open place left at the lower side as the manatee eat against the stream. After this trap was set the party retreated to their camp-moarly a mile away, and patiently awaited results. The net was visited every day, but beyond an alligator or shark nothing was secured. At length, after eight or nine days of waiting, their patience was rewarded by finding one nook, two fine specimens entangled in the net's meshes. The task to get them out was not easy one by any means. While the animals were timid enough when not molested, yet when at bay they were antagonists not to be despised.
Miss Brown. That will be quite puly.
Mrs. K. Newton Brown. You will need to make the most of it. Young Dr. Darlington will be there.
Miss Brown. Are you sure?
Mrs. K. Newton Brown. Perfectly. He is quite apt now with you; spoke of your classic host and profile at the Hospital Tableau.
Miss Brown. I'll wear my hair in a Greek collar and have my dresses additionally decorate.
Mrs. K. Newton Brown (dryly) That will not be necessary. I think you might alter your style somewhat, however he admires yielding, clinging women.
Miss Brown. Light! I don't. He thought, shall find me a "smash of concession."
Mrs. K. Newton Brown. You are too bravish. A little diplomacy is a small price to pay for his fine establishment.
ATTACK.
(on the hale) plaza)
Mrs. Crosus - You find America a little different from England, I suppose, Lord Bartone.
Lord Bartone. O, quite, you know; and most refreshingly so.
Mrs. Crosus - Why, really, now, I think suppose you'd say that.
Joint Bartone. I find every thing charming, notably the American girls (Montally.) And their money.
Mrs. Crosus - Do you really?
Lord Bartone. O, perfectly, you know. So simple and unaffected in the midst of such really colossal fortunes, you know.
Mrs. Crosus - Yes?
Lord Bartone. O, I do. Miss Crosus, in her simple white gown, for instance, when she might wear velvet and gins, betrays such charming taste, you know.
Mrs. Crosus - O, she won't wear any thing else. (Montally.) I'll wire Waters to night for a dozen; she hasn't one to her name but that on her back.
Mrs. Cadwallader-Banks - You were saying, Mr. Midas -
Mr. Midas - That I so much admire hearty, healthy girls.
Mrs. Cadwallader-Banks - And I too. I am particularly fortunate in that respect in my own daughters.
Mr. Midas - You are indeed.
Mrs. Cadwallader-Banks - They are never ill, and really have most wonderful powers of endurance.
Mr. Midas - They seem perfectly well.
Mrs. Cadwallader-Banks - O, yes. We all are. Dr Montague says he would starve if he had many such families as ours among his patients.
Mr. Midas - I doubt if he has, how ever.
Mrs. Cadwallader-Banks - And I It is a crying evil of our present society, the languid, drooping girls that seem to large a part of it.
Mr. Midas - I quite agree with you.
Mrs. Cadwallader-Banks - When we talked of coming on here myaughters were quite horrified lest people should think they needed the waters.
Mr. Midas - O, no one who saw them would think so.
Mrs. Cadwallader-Banks - I told them that.
Mr. Midas - They are most refreshing pictures of health.
Mrs. K. Newton Brown - Ah, my dear doctor, none but a mother can understand the anxieties of a mother's heart.
Dr. Darlington - And I am only a bachelor.
Mrs. K. Newton Brown - It is no leasing matter. In my widowed state long and with very large shoes was extended between stakes set at the bottom and shaped so as to have an open place left at the lower side as the manates eat against the stream.
After this trap was set the party retreated to their camp-nearly a mile away, and patiently awaited results. The pet was visited every day, but beyond an alligator or shark nothing was secured.
At length, after eight or nine days of waiting, their patience was rewarded by finding one moon, two fine specimens entangled in the net's mesh.
The task to get them out was not easy one by any means. While the animals were timid enough when not molested, yet when at Jay they were antagonists not to be despised. This net was gradually brought in toward shore, the animals making furious rushes and plunges as they felt the closing wings of the net. A flatbast was then pushed up close to the net strong ropes were thrown around one of the mantles, and it was so tightly wrapped up and enveloped that it could not move. This was attended with considerable danger, and one of the men received a severe wound in the thigh from the creatures tusks while another was knocked sensibly by a blow from its huge and powerful tail.
Both animals were finally secured, and then by means of powerful tackle lifted on to flats and placed in tanks. They were then taken to Titusville, shipped thence to Jacksonville, and after being exhibited there for several days, were hoarded to New York, there to be sold to a managerer: Jupiter Inlet (Fla.) Letter
The Depravity of Beggars.
Habitual beggars are very much of opinion that they need no advice as to a better means of obtaining a living than the mode they adopt. In Paris philanthropist has found this out. He collated the sympathy of ship keepers and merchants in his plans and he proceeded to unfold them to the army of beggars who have methodically laid out Paris as a medicants' preserve. He had an audience of seven hundred and twenty-seven vagrants when he began his explanation of a scheme for their well-being and social elevation, but before he got through his listeners had for the most part decamped. They had no mind to lead in nitrate salts and to on four frames a day. Some did accept employment but in three days there were only eighteen fulfilling their engagements. These were genuine workers; the others were only human parasites regarding them from the most charitable point of view: Lacels Mercury.
What animal has the greatest quantity of brains? The hog, of course for he has a hogs-head full.
WIT AND WISDOM.
The time a man most needs a vacation is just after he returns from one.
A dead man enjoys better health than others. He does not catch everything that is going: N.O.Peugane.
If the human race evolved from the apes, it at least has the satisfaction of knowing that its ancestors were intelligent—they were educated in the higher branches.
It never yet happened to any man since the beginning of the world, nor ever will, to have all things according to his desire, or to whom fortune was sever opposite or adverse.
To be forever feeling when your boy yields to a temptation, and never discovering when he resists one, is the surest way to promote the faults and discourage the virtues: Luman Abbott
we talked of coming on here my daughters were quite horrified lest people should think they needed the waters.
Mr. Midas—O, no one who saw them would think so.
Mrs. Cadwallader-Banks—I told them that.
Mr. Midas—They are most refreshing pictures of health.
Mrs. K. Newton Brown—Ah, my dear doctor, none but a mother can understand the anxieties of a mother's heart.
Dr. Darlington—and I am only a bachelor.
Mrs. K. Newton Brown—It is no jesting matter. In my wildowed state I realize that when I am gone Edith will be wholly alone in the world.
Dr. Darlington—Miss Brown seems a young woman of resources, however.
Mrs. K. Newton Brown—O, you mistake her. She is the most timid and dependent of girls.
Dr. Darlington—Indeed!
Mrs. K. Newton Brown—O, yes; it is the wish of my heart to see her provided with a suitable protector.
Dr. Darlington—I can fancy that.
Mrs. K. Newton Brown—She needs one sadly.
Dr. Darlington (sotto voce as Miss Brown approaches)—Yes, a chest protector.—Philip H. Welch, in Puck.
EXCITING BUSINESS.
The Capture of Manatees on the East Coast of Florida.
The east coast of Florida at one time not so very far distant was the hunter's paradise. And even now, for the smaller game, there are few parts of the State where more fun can be enjoyed by the hunter or fisherman. The manatee, or "sonow," is one of the few large animals left in this section.
A dead man enjoys better health than others. He does not catch every thing that is going.—N. O. Preagane.
If the human race was evolved from the apes, it at least has the satisfaction of knowing that its ancestors were intelligent—they were educated in the higher branches.
It never yet happened to any man since the beginning of the world, nor ever will, to have all things according to his desire, or to whom fortune was never opposite or adverse.
To do forever seeing when your boy yields to a temptation, and never discovering when he resists one, is the surest way to promote the faults and discourage the virtues.—Luman Abbott
RELIGIOUS AND EDUCATIONAL.
There are passions within your soul that have never been unchained. Look out if they once slip their cables—Talmove.
There is something cruel in the fate of the Vermont man who spent several weeks in a swamp looking for a mine of plumbago, and who, while so engaged caught the lumbago.—N. Y. Tribune.
Doing the Thing Up Brown.
Departing guest (to summer resort landlord)—I've paid high prices for everything I've had, Mr. Squeezem, and I haven't grumbled. Don't you ever set 'em up?
Landlord—Certainly; we make a specialty of our liberality. (To clerk): Mr. Hauton, kindly give this gentleman a few of our circulars—Time.
Henry returns in triumph from the junior examination. "How did you get along, my son?" his doting parent inquires. "First rate," answered Henry; "I answered all the questions." Good! How did you answer them? "I said I didn't know."
MISCELLANEOUS
P. DAVIS & BRO., CENTER STREET, ANAHEIM,
(Between Los Angeles and Launch)
DEALERS IN PROVISIONS,
GROCERIES, CROCKERY.
HARDWARE, GRAIN,
LIQUORS, CIGARS,
WOOL, HIDES, ETC.
1879.
Harper's Bazar,
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1889.
HARPER'S WEEKLY.
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Supplements are frequently provided, and no expense is spared to bring the highest order of artistic ability to bear upon the illustration of the changed phases of home and foreign history. A new work of fiction from the pen of William Dean Howells, and one by Capt. Charles King, will be among the leading features of the Weekly for 1889.
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1889.
Harper's Magazine.
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Harper's Magazine is the most useful, entertaining and beautiful periodical in the world. Among the attractions for 1889 will be a new novel—an American story, entitled "Jupiter Lights"—by Constance F. Woolson; illustrations of Shakespeare's Comedies by E. A. Abbey; a series of articles on Russia, illustrated by T. do Thulstrup; papers on the Dominion of Canada and a characteristic serial by Charles Duley Warner; three "Norwegian Studies," by Bjørnjerne Bjørnson, illustrated; "Commodus," a historical play by the author of "Ben Hur," illustrated by J. Woguelin, etc. The Editorial Departments are conducted By George William Curtis, William Dean Howells, and Charles Duiley Warner.
FORECLOSURE SALE.
Order of Sale and Decree of Consent and Sale.
Under and by virtue of this order and decree of consent and sale of the Superior Court of the county of Los Angeles, State of California, on the day of November, A.D., 1888, and any subsequent decree issued out of said court on the 30th day of November, A.D., 1888, in its already entitled action, warrant P. James above named painter, obtained at purgence and decree of foreclosure and sale against John E. Schreit et al., executants on the 20th day of October, A.D., 1888, for the sum of $150.00 in gold coin of the United States, and in which said decree is further provided, adjudged and decreed that the process of auto sale be applied as follows:
First to the satisfaction of the claim of plaintiff, including his costs and attorney fees and second the remaining proceeds thereafter to the claim costs and attorney fees of defendant, Harper & Reynolds Co., and until the remaining process thereafter in this claim, attorney fees and costs of defendant W. Z. Osborne,
a social interest was on the 20th day of November, A.D., 1888, recorded in Judgment Book II of said court at point I.
I am commanded to sell all these items at their own lots, prices or parceles in land-settling and being in the county of Los Angeles, State of California, and bounded and inscribed as follows:
Lot number twenty six (26) of Workman and Heilman's subdivision of Lot Named Sween (7) in block seventy-two (72) of Hook's survey of the city of Los Angeles now known and designated as the Altai tract as surveyed by J. Hook. In year 1887 and map thereof recorded in the Recorder's office of said Los Angeles county in book 20 page 33. Miscellaneous records: said Altai tract being a division of Lot No. 20 of Workman & Heilman's subdivision of Lot No. seven (7) in block seventy-two (72) of Hook's survey of said city of Los Angeles, and is bounded on the north by Alebreda street on the south by Stevenson avenue and on the west by Kuehl street.
Together with all and singular terms herewith pertains hereditaments and appurtenances thereto belonging or in any wise appearing.
Public notice is hereby given that on Saturday, the 29th day or December A.D., 1888, at 12 o'clock M. of that day, in front of the Courthouse door of the county of Los Angeles on Spring Street I will be obliveness to said order of sale and decree foreclosure and sale, sell the above described property, so much thereof as may be necessary to satisfy said judgment, with interest and costs, etc., to the highest and best bidder, for cash in gold coin of the United States.
Dated this 30th day of November, 1888,
James C. Kay,
Sheriff of Los Angeles county.
By Justin Williams,
Deputy Sheriff.
In the Justice's Court of Ana-
Harper's Magazine is the most useful, entertaining, and beautiful periodical in the world. Among the attractions for 1889 will be a new novel—an American story, entitled "Jupiter Lights" by Constance F. Woolson; illustrations of Shakespeare's Comedies by K. A. Abbery; a series of articles on Russia, illustrated by T. de Thulstrop; papers on the Dominion of Canada and a characteristic serial by Charles Dudley Warner; three "Norwegian Studies," by Bjørnjerne Bjørnson, illustrated; "Commodus," a historical play by the author of "Ben Hur," illustrated by J. Waguelin, etc. The Editorial Departments are conducted by George William Curtis, William Dean Howells, and Charles Dudley Warner.
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M.J. BUNDY, Santa Ana, is selling the best Screen Wire Cloth by the bolt at 20 per square foot cut to any length at 2½c. Other Hardware in proportion. Do not fail to get his prices before buying.
In the Justice’s Court of Anaheim Township,
County of Los Angeles, State of California.
Louis Bozl, plaintiff, vs. A. Fabre, defendant.
The people of the State of California could greet you at A. Fabre, defendant.
You are hereby required to appear in an action brought against you by the court named plaintiff in the Justice’s Court of Anaheim Township, county of Los Angeles, State of California, and be answer before the Justice at his office in the said township, the complaint filed therein, within five days after the summons if served within the township in which you are referred, at the outset of said township, but in said county, within ten days or within twenty days if served elsewhere.
The sale act is brought to register the sum of $32 due said plaintiff for board, lodging and money furnished at defense-in-training and request, and more fully appears by the complaint on file herein to And you are hereby notified that if you fail to appear and allow said complaint, as above required, said plaintiff will take judgment for said sum of $32 and costs of suit.
Take legal service and due return hereafter.
Given under my hand this eighth day of April 1852.
Justice of the Peace of Anaheim Township.
NOTICE:
Wanted to borrow on first class security; from five to twenty-five thousand dollars. For further particulars inquire of Meara Pierce & Littlefield.
Anaheim, April 11, 1852.
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PASTURAGE:
For Horses and Cattle
On the Thomas Jefferson Memorial in Washington, D.C., a large collection of horse-related materials has been dedicated to honoring the memory of Thomas Jefferson. This collection includes photographs, paintings, sculptures, and other memorabilia that reflect his life and legacy.
Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is an ointment or cream that provides relief from the symptoms of colds and flu. It is made from natural ingredients such as aloe vera, chamomile, lavender, and other herbal remedies. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is designed to be applied directly to the skin to relieve symptoms of colds and flu.
As a powerful invigorating tonic, it imparts strength to the whole system and to the mouth and its appendages in particular. For overweight individuals, it can help to reduce body fat and improve overall health.
Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is a legitimate medicine, carefully prepared by a licensed physician and approved by women's doctor organizations. It is purely vegetable in composition and perfectly harmless in use.
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ICURE FITS!
When I say CURSE I do not mean merely to stop them for a time, and then have them return again. I mean A RADICAL CURE.
I have made the disease of
FITS, EPILEPSY or FALLING SICKNESS.
A life long study. I warrant my remedy to cure dengue fever because others have tested it no reason for not now receiving a care send at once for a treatise and a FREE BOTTLE of my INSTALLABLE REMEDY. Give Express and Post Office. It sets you nothing for a trial, and it will care you. Address
H.C. ROOT, M.C., 183 PLANK ST., NEW YORK
Dr. Pierre's Favorite Prescription is a legitimate medicine, carefully compounded by an experienced and skilled practitioner, and designed to alleviate nervous excitability, irritability, exhaustion, prostration, hysteria, spasms and other distressing nervous symptoms commonly attendant upon functional and organic diseases of the womb. It induces refreshing sleep and relieves mental anxiety and reponsibility.
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