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anaheim-gazette 1889-02-14

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FREIGHT BRAKEMEN. THE MANY HARDSHIPS OF THEIR WORK IN COLD WEATHER. "He Slipped and Fall"—Waiting for a Chance to Step Into Dead Men's Shoes. Coupling Considered the "Ten Matchs" of Danger. On one of the very coldest and stormiest days of the past winter I was in the office of a Pennsylvania railroad official overlooking a vast yard of endless switches and sidings, over which shifting trains and locomotives were moving like so many huge shuttles. A rugged looking young man, wearing a cap, a rusty blue reefing jacket, a blazer flannel shirt, and baggage trousers stuffed in high rubber boots, entered the office, took off his cap, and as soon as he could get his breath thus addressed the official: "I want to leave my name for the job of brakin' on freight train 30. Jimmy Riley's out of it. He just got cut in two up in the yard. The train was comin' in parry lively, an' the cars was ley on top. The engineer whistled for brakes an' Jimmy started to run over the top of the train. He shipped an' fell betwixt two cars. He hit on the hamper, an' grabbed to save himself, but he cookt'n ketch nothin', an' dropped on to the rail. Both trucks went over him. Me an' another fellow was there, an' we started for here as fast as we could get to ask for Jimmy's place. I got here first, an' I'd like the job first rate, if you could give it to me, air." The railroad official promised to hold the application for consideration, and the man went out, evidently well pleased. "There is no calling," said the official when the man had gone, "so beset with danger and hardships as that of a railroad brakman, especially on long freight trains; and yet, if there should be twenty brakemen killed on this or any other road to-day there would be as many applicants for each man's place as soon as the news of his death became known. The man who was just here was an eye witness of Riley's frightful death, and yet what-over impression it made upon him was lost in appreciation of the fact that the dead man had left a place to be filled by some one else. This prompted him to act at once, and he lost not a second in securing all the advantage priority of application might give him. INTO DEAD MEN'S SHOPS. "Every railroad has hanging about its yards and stations a small army of these anxious applicants for chances to step into dead men's shoes. They are chiefly men who have followed railroading all their lives, and who have lost their jobs, for some cause. Railroading is a good deal like politics. If a man gets into it once he isn't worth a snap for anything else. And so if he gets out of it he is constantly on the lookout for the opportunity that he believes must come to let him in again. There isn't one among this class of men I refer to who does not feel genuine sorrow when a railroad man is killed, and not one of them would hesitate to risk his own life to save that of any trainman in danger, although he might be sure that the most currency on these pages. "When we convicted all of that horse was harnessed and that he was a very careful animal they wanted more. They had no eyes for anything but the horse. As we passed through the villages many of the inhabitants followed us. The man turned back after a mile or so, but many of the women who showed the greatest interest and curiosity, followed us for three miles. When my horse trotted they trusted, too, their eyes fixed on the heart. Unsurdified where they were shopping they fall into the furrows in the minute fields, and tumbled down in the tall grass. They kept pointing the railmen out to the horses that were festered on their hocks. From some of the villages depopulations came to me asking me to stop while in their towns that they might have time to admire the prodigy." A whole managerate of African curriculities would not excite so much attention in the civilized world as this horse around in a part of Africa where the zebra never roams and no species of the horse family is known—New York Sun. EDISON'S FIRST MARRIAGE. Forgetting Miss Bride at the Appointed Honee—Miss Second Wife. The first Mrs. Edison was an operator in the Newark factory where Edison was making the machines to fill his order for the staking indicator, which brought him into notice and formed the basis of his fortune. She was a tall, fine-looking girl—one of a down sitting at a bench winding magnets. One day as Edison was walking down the line, that girl spoke up and bade him good morning without raising her eyes from her work. "Good morning," said the inventor. "How did you know it was I?" "Oh, I can always tell when you're near," she replied. "Boe here," said the man of inventions, "I've noticed you a good deal of late. Suppose you and I get married?" "I'm really." "When shall it be?" "Three weeks from night." "All right!" and the inventor went on his rounds while his intended bride merrily wound away upon her bobbin of wire. On the welding day the first consignment of stak indicators came back from the purchaser, inoperative. When Mr. Batchelor, who has always been Edison's right hand man, went down to the shop after supper he found the inventor there in his dirtiest shop clothes tinkering away at the machine. Didn't he remember that it was his wedding night? No, he'd forgotten all about it. Batchelor dragged the lagging groom to the nearest clothing store, got him into a new suit, then to a barber shop and finally put him on a car and shipped him off to the house of the bride. Then he went back to the shop to work, supposing that was the last of Edison for that night. In an hour or two, however, Edison rushed in again, throw his new coat down on a greasy lace, hung his waist out upon the gas pipe, kicked his waist out upon the gas pipe, kicked his waist out upon the gas pipe, kicked his waist out upon the gas pipe, kicked his waist out upon the gas pipe, kicked his waist out upon the gas pipe, kicked his waist out upon the gas pipe, kicked his waist out upon the gas pipe, OF ORDINANCE As ordinance to prevent the arrest trees, fruit tree and vine pumps, and to provide fair tirrition. The Board of Trustees of the town do ordain as follows: Section 1.—All fruit trees, vines infested by the insect knight mite, cottontail moth snake, and kindred noxious insects; paper, or any disease liable to ripen; are hereby declared public. Sec. 2.—One or more inspectors pests and a Quarantine Guard appointed by the Board of Trustees shall be due of this Inspector Pests to examine all fruit trees, vines within the city limits, kettle leaves or reported to be infested with any of the insects mentioned one of this ordinance; and if found in infested or infected, he shall go in writing to the owner or occupant inland in which sail insects are found such trees, fruit trees or vines live ten days after aid and maintenance. STACKS RESTING COURTS AT DUMMIES AND DREAMS THE CHARLES A.WELLS CO., LTD. NEW YORK UNITED STATES "Every railroad has hanging about its yards and stations a small army of these anxious applicants for chances to step into dead men's shoes. They are chiefly men who have followed railroading all their lives, and have lost their jobs. For some cause, railroading is a good deal like politics. If a man gets into it once he isn't worth a snap for anything else. And so if he gets out of it he constantly on the lookout for the opportunity that he believes must come to let him in again. There isn't one among this class of men I refer to who does not feel genuine sorrow when a railroad man is killed, and not one of them would hesitate to risk his own life to save that of any trainman in danger, although he might be sure that the death of that man would give him a long legged for place on the road; yet they haunt the tracks and the station yard day after day, watching the switching and coming and going of trains, knowing that sooner or later some one of the men on those trains is bound to be killed or mined into helplessness. It seems that there were only two of these men near to witness the shocking death of Riley today, and when others hear of it and that an application for Riley's place was put in an hour or so ahead of them they will bemoan the hard luck that had kept them from being present when the accident occurred and robbed them of an equal chance in reaching my car first. It is by no means likely that the young man who was just here will be hired, although he may. If he isn't given Riley's place it will not break his faith nor that of any of his kind in the importance of having early intelligence of fatal trainten and of being early in my office with the news and an application, or if the accident occurs somewhere else, at the office of the one in authority there." I walked through the railroad yard and to the spot where poor Jimmy Riley was killed. His mangled body had been taken away. A grimy, one armed switchman pointed out to me where the unfortunate brakeman fell on the rail, and explained how it all happened. THE TOP NOTCH OF DANGER. "This has been a hard winter on 'em," said the switchman. "Jimmy makes four this week, so far. Three of him was took just like him, and other unwashed twixit the bumpers while he was coupon'. I couldn't tell you how many has been caught up along this line, but I've been noticin' that there's a good many strange brakemen on some o' the trains that comes in. There's five fellows in these gangs alone that I don't know. I haven't had the heart to ask where the old hands are, for I apose. I'll be told that this one had been knocked off his car by a bridge, an' that one had missed a coupon'an' got the bumpers, an' that another one had slipped from the roof, like Jimmy just now, an' soon. It may be, though, that some of them are only laid up with a few fingers off, or an arm twisted out of the socket, or a foot run over and smashed, or some little thing like that. I hope so, anyhow. What makes brakin' so dangerous? A good many things. For instance, there's coupon'. That's always at the top pitch of dangerous from one New Year's to another, every day in the year, year in any year out. Just now the ten an' snow on the cars is dangerous. It isn't an easy thing for a man to run along the top of cars going twenty miles an hour, even when there are ice on the boards an' the wind is light. But when you take it like it has been for a week or so, with the car roofs like glass and the wind tearing along faster than the train dass. I want you to know that there's got to be nerve in a man for him to climb up to the top of a car and run over half a dozen or every time the engineer calls for brakes. Then, mind you, a brakeman has no right to ride anywhere but on his car, no matter if the snow is falling on him by the ton or rain drunching him or hail a pelting him like hot shot. Then he's apt in the night to run his head against some bridge that spans the track. Business Is One Unending Drive. Business hours are from 9 to 5. In the larger establishments but little done after stork indicators came back from the purchaser, imperative. When Mr. Batchelor who has always been Edison's right hand man, went down to the shop after supper he found the inventor there in his driest shop clothes tinkering away at the machine. Didn't he remember that it was his wedding night? No, he'd forgotten all about it. Batchelor dragged the lagging groom to the nearest clothing store, got him into a new suit, then to a barber shop and finally put him on a car and shipped him off to the house of the bride. Then he went back to the shop to work, supposing that was the last of Edison for that night. In an hour or two, however, Edison rushed in again, throw his new coat down on a greasy labe, hung his waist upon the gas pipe, kicked his shoes under the bench, seized a file and went at the defective stick indicator as if there were no such thing as marriage and giving in marriage, and there he stayed with his faithful lieutenant till the morning sun looked in two weary tollers and an electrical stock indicator that worked like a charm. When wealth came to them, Mrs. Edison No. I betrayed a tendency to branch out in the social world, but it had no effect on the inventor's habits. One of the largest entertainments' Newark ever saw was given at her house. All the leading men of the Edison works were there, but he was nowhere to be seen. His subordinates grew a little uneasy. A committee of them went over to his laboratory about midnight and there was the inventor, tipped back in a rickety old chair, in his shirt sleeves, his shoeless feet high up on the workbench, singing away into his photograph at the top of his voice, happy as a clam at high tide. The present Mrs. Edison sticks to her husband working hours, with book and pencil, taking down his ideas and experiments. She is, in fact, a helpmate in every way worthy of his abilities—New York Tribune. How to Write a Plan. A very quick method of making a play and a very satisfactory one to those who adopt it is to steal it. If a foreign play, translate it or get some one to translate it for you, then change its title, clap your name to it and call it your own. We could easily mention several well known dramatists who have done this all along. Few persons think less of them for it, and most managers don't care what the history of a play is so that it will draw. If you make $10,000 or $15,000 by theft, and your conscience harms you, send the original author, if living,a check for $100. That will make you feel better and him feel worse. You will think that you have done a noble action,and be willgnash his teeth at having had insult added to injury. If you wish to write a farce in three or four acts,take two or three old English or French forces and alter them sufficiently to throw them into one. This will require thought and tact,bthis is the way "original" plays are sometimes made. Or you may dramatize a book by cutting out the conversation-an old and clumsy method which has almost gone out of vogue. Or you may extract the entire skeleton of some good novel published twenty years ago, change all the names,aid some new incidents,suppress others retain all the strong situations and give the "happy ending",which managers so much love,and then declare that you never read,saw or heard of the novel in question.Nobody will believe you,epecially your brother dramatists,但that does not matter if the play is a success.Nobody can prove that the similarity is not a coincidence except yourself,and of course you won't stand in your own light—New York Herald. After inspection of any of said trees,vines and other articles mentioned Two of this ordinance,known or reported to be infected or infested both in said Section Two,imply brought within the city limits,ainspectionthe same be found infested with any of said insects said Section Two.it shall be a mini-to offer the same for sale,gift,dish transportation or use withinthe city limits unlessthe first be disinfected,and on therethofthe party offeringthe sameor use shall be punished bya fine than ten dollars or more than one dollar. President of the Board of Trust I hereby certify that the foreign insurance was passed by the Board of Trust Just now the ice on the cars is dangerous. It isn't an easy thing for a man to run along the top of cars going twenty miles an hour, even when there is ice on the boards and the wind is light. But when you take it like it has been for a week or so with the car roofs like glass and the wind tearing along faster than the train does, I want you to know that there's got to be nerve in a man for him to climb up to the top of a car and run over half a dozen or so every time the engineer calls for brakes. Then, mind you, a brakeman has no right to ride anywhere but on his car, no matter if the snow is falling on him by the ton or rain draining him or hail a pelting him like hot shot. Then he's apt in the night to run his head against some bridge that spans the track. But couplet is what carries the most of this away. I used to be a freight brake myself, and one day I stepped between two cars that couple them, having at the time two as good arms as anybody ever had. When I came to my senses my right arm was gone. The bumpers took it off. These link and pin couplers are what ruins the boys. Every brakeman knows that just for having to do that he has to pay six times as much for insuring his life as the man that sets in a warm office and makes out the train way bills does. Then brake chains are apt to part, too, when the brakeman is twisting up his wheel, and away goes the brakeman to the ground. If he don't get in under the wheels he's apt to get his head or his neck or his legs broken by the fall."—New York Times. Boy—What is a crank, pa? Pa—A crank is a man with one limb. Boy—But suppose a man has no idea at all what is he then! Pa—A juror my son—Detroit Free Press; A Horse in Tropical Africa. Several incidents of recent African exploration call to mind the stories that were told of the early travels of white men in this country. A white man on horseback is a very unusual spectacle in tropical Africa, and the animal Mr. Holister rode a few months ago made almost as much of a sensation as the horses that Cortez introduced into Mexico. 'Hodister's journey was a short one, extending only from Landana, on the coast, to Boma, on the Congo, but it led the traveler through a densely populated region of which little is yet known. "My horse," he writes, "made a great sensation. At sight of him all the women in the villages at first were petrified with astonishment. They stood motionless, with their eyes fixed on the strange animal. Coming to themselves at last, with their hands raised above their heads, they raised their cry of 'Ho, ho, ho! expressive of boundless astonishment. Some of them threw themselves upon the ground, smiling their breasts. Could it be, they said, that such a great beast, with a white man move him, was harmless such an mal- Business Is One Unending Drive. Business hours are from 9 to 5. In the larger establishments but little is done after 4 o'clock, except in certain seasons. During these seven or eight hours the work of twenty four is done. Every nerve, every muscle, every power and faculty of body and mind is tasted to the utmost to discharge the duty of the day. Go into any of the large establishments of the city during business hours, and you will be amazed at the ceaseless rush and push of clerks and customers. It is one unending drive. Everything must be finished up to the closing hour, so that the morrow may be begun with a series of new and clear transactions. Merchants from other cities, coming into these establishments to make purchases, find themselves caught in this whirl of work, and are carried along and made to decide questions and make purchases with a rapidity utterly unknown to them in their own home. We grind, grind at our treddmills all day, and grind too hard. We bolt our meals in a fourth of the time we should give to them; we rush back home at night as furiously as we lift in the morning, and our evenings are spent in an effort to keep up the excitement of the day. We are living too fast, too hard. We break down long before we should. This haste, this furious pace as which we are going, at business, at pleasure, as everything, is the great curse of New York life—Joe Howard in New York Graphic. The Prepagation of Cholera. An examination of the waters of New York harbor has been undertaken for the purpose of determining its character, and how long it would support life of the different microorganisms, more especially that of Asiatic cholera. Specimens were obtained at different places, the first at the Narrows, the second alongside the Steamship Britannia (lying in quarantine); the third at Hoffman's island and the fourth at Swainbarne Island. The results of the chemical and microscopic tests were such that the investigator Asistant Surgeon J. J. Kinyoua, M. H., says: "After closely studying the currents of the jigger bay, I am led to believe that, if dejecta from cholera patients should be thrown into the lower bay, cholera could gain a foot id on the contiguous shores where every condition favorable to its development and growth often sometimes exists."—Chicago Gazette Job Office STOCKHOLM REMAINING Prefect, Storing, Concentrating Prints. ORANGE TREES FOR 1889. Great Reduction in Prices. FIRST CLASS TREES NAVEL Orange Orchards $300 to $400 an Acre. Rooted Muscat Vines and Cuttings. J. H. FOUNTAIN & CO. AMERICA J. P. DES GRANGES. Steam Boring Well Tools. OF ORDINANCE 54. An ordinance to prevent the spreading of trees, fruit tree and vine pests, and diseases, and to provide for their extirpation. The Board of Trustees of the city of Anaheim do ordinate as follows: Section 1.—All fruit trees, trees and trees infested by the most known noxious or odors, cottons, common snails, and worms and kindred noxious insects, their larvae or pupae, or any disease liable to spread on them, are hereby declared a public notice. Section 2.—All fruit trees, vines, fruit, fruits, cuttings, grafts and soils, and all fruit boxes and packages or any appliance be used in orchards, introduced within the city limits from other places or other areas, which are a retail or infestation by any said insects, their lawn or pipes, or any them, or by any disease liable to spread on them, are hereby declared a public notice. Section 3.—One or more inspectors of fruit trees and a Quarantine Guardian shall be appointed by the Board of Trustees. It will be the duty of the Inspector of Fruit trees to examine all fruit trees, trees and trees within the city limits, known, believed or reported to be infected or infected with any of the insects mentioned in section 3 of this ordinance; and if found by him infected or infected, he shall give notice writing to the owner or occupant of the land in which said insects are found, to direct such trees, fruit trees or vines within days after and notice in person. E. E. MORRIS, Established 1865. Manager California Dep't. Amory Bigelow, Commission Merchant & Jobber in CALIFORNIA PRODUCTS, Pacific Coast Steamship COMPANY. MONTERN ROUTE. Southern ROUTE. F. & J. Furniture And Ward UNDERT Watch Maker Elgin and Walt REMO Having established quarters on Center St., I am now prepared to ing at astonishingly low S.A. D. Scientific American Architects & Builders Edition of Scientific America. RECESS: 3. One or more inspectors of fruit trees and a Quarantine Guardian shall be appointed by the Board of Trustees. It will be the duty of the Inspector of Fruit trees to examine all fruit trees, trees and trees within the city limits, known, believed or reported to be infected or infected with any of the insects mentioned in section 1 of this ordinance, and if found by him infected or infected, he shall give notice writing to the owner or occupant of the land in which said insects are found, to direct such trees, fruit trees or vines within ten days after said notice is served. All owners or occupants who shall not disfect such trees, fruit trees or vines within ten days after said notice is served shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and on conviction thereof be punished by a fine of not less than twenty-five dollars nor more than one hundred dollars each offense. Should said infested or infected trees, it trees or vines be not disinfected within said ten days, the Inspector shall with report the same to the Quarantine Guardian in writing, giving the locality, name of occupant or owner, and the number and kind of infected or infected trees or vines. The Inspector and Quarantine Guardian shall then proceed to the locality thoroughly disinfect such infected or infected trees, fruit trees or vines, and the cost of such disinfection shall be borne by owner of the trees, fruit trees or vines disinfected. It shall be the duty of the Quarantine Guardian to serve upon such owner a written statement of the cost of such disinfection, and make a demand upon payment of such cost, and it will demand be not paid within ten days for the service of such demand, it shall be duty of said Quarantine Guardian to institute legal proceedings for the recovery of costs of such disinfection. It shall be duty of the Inspector or Quarantine Guardian to examine all trees, fruit trees, vines and other articles mentioned in Section Two of this ordinance, known, believed reported to be infested or infected as set forth in said Section Two, imported or brought within the city limits, and if upon infection the same be found infested or infected with any of said insects mentioned in Section Two, it shall be a misdemeanor offer the same for sale, gift, distribution transportation or for use inorchards within the city limits, unless they shall be disinfected, and on conviction of the party offering the same for sale case shall be punished by a fine of not less than ten dollars or more than one hundred dollars. After inspection of any of said trees, fruit trees, vines and other articles mentioned in Section Two of this ordinance, if the case are found to be infested or infected, it shall be duty of the Inspector or Quarantine Guardian to disinfect or cause to be inflected the infested or infected articles delivered to them to the owners, the cost of such disinfection to be borne by the seller. Marshal of the city may be appointed Officer Quarantine Guardian. 4. It shall be the duty of the Inceptor of Fruit Pests to make perennial crops to all the orchards within the limits once a month and report the case to the Quarantine Guardian. 5. The Inspectors of Fruit Pests receive such salary or compensation their services as the Board of Trustees direct, payable from the General Bank. 6. This ordinance shall take effect in force from and after April 1, 1889. President of the Board of Trustees hereby certify that the foregoing ordinance was passed by the Board of Trustees. Notice of Sale of Real Estate at Private Sale. Notice is hereby given that in pursuance of an order of the Superior Court of the county of Los Angeles, State of California, made on the 22nd day of January, A.D., 1889, in the matter of the estate and guardianship of Hortensis Gata, a minor, underigned, the guardian of said minor, will sell at private sale to the highest and best bidder on or after the 11th day of February, 1889, for cash, gold coin of the United States, and subject to confirmation by said Superior Court, all the right, title and interest of the said Hortensis Gata, minor, in and to that certain lot, piece or parcel of land situate lying and being in the city of Los Angeles, county of Los Angeles, State of California, and particularly described as follows: to wit: Being a part of Lot 3 of Block 20 of Hanck's survey of said city; and more particularly described as follows: to wit: Commencing at a point on the southern line of Diamond street, distant forty feet easterly from the southeast corner of Diamond and Smith streets, and which point is distant 1.07 chains easterly from the northwest corner of said lot No. 3; hence easterly along the southern line of Diamond street one hundred and ten (110) feet; thence easterly parallel with Smith street six hundred and seventeen and three-fourths (617) feet; thence at right angles westerly and parallel with Diamond street one hundred and ten (110) feet; thence at right angles northerly and parallel with Smith street six hundred and seventeen and three-fourths (617) feet; thence at right angles westerly and parallel with Diamond street one hundred and ten (110) feet; thence at right angles northerly and parallel with Diamond street one hundred and ten (110) feet; thence at right angles northerly and parallel with Diamond street one hundred and ten (110) feet; thence at right angles northerly and parallel with Diamond street one hundred and ten (110) feet; thence at right angles northerly and parallel with Diamond street one hundred and ten (110) feet; thence at right angles northerly and parallel with Diamond street one hundred and ten (110) feet; thence at right angles northerly and parallel with Diamond street one hundred and ten (110) feet; thence at right angles northerly and parallel with Diamond street one hundred and ten (110) feet; thence at right angles northerly and parallel with Diamond street one hundred and ten (110) feet; thence at right angles northerly and parallel with Diamond street one hundred and ten (110) feet; thence at right angles northerly and parallel with Diamond street one hundred and ten (110) feet; thence at right angles northerly and parallel with Diamond street one hundred and ten (110) feet; thence at right angles northerly and parallel with Diamond street one hundred and ten (110) feet; thence at right angles northerly and parallel with Diamond street one hundred and ten (110) feet; thence at right angles northerly and parallel with Diamond street one hundred and ten (110) feet; thence at right angles northerly and parallel with Diamond street one hundred and ten (110) feet; thence at right angles northerly and parallel with Diamond street one hundred and ten (110) feet; thence at right angles northerly and parallel with Diamond street one hundredand ten (110) feet; thence at right angles northerly and parallel with Diamond street one hundredand ten (110) feet; thence at right angles northerly and parallel with Diamond街 one hundredand十(110) feet; thence at right angles northerly和 parallel with Diamond街 one hundredand十(110) feet; thence at right angles northerly和 parallel with Diamond街 one hundredand十(110) feet; thence at right angles northerly和 parallel with Diamond街 one hundredand十(110) feet; thence at right angles northerly和 parallel with Diamond街 one hundredand十(110) feet; thence at right angles northerly和 parallel with Diamond街 one hundredand十(110) feet; thence at right angles northerly和 parallel with Diamond街 one hundredand十(110) feet; thence at right angles northerly和 parallel with Diamond街 one hundredand十(110) feet; thence at right angles northerly和 parallel with Diamond街 one hundredand十(110) feet; thence at right angles northerly和 parallel with Diamond街 one hundredand十(110) feet; thence at right angles northerly和 parallel with Diamond街 one hundredand十(110) feet; thence at right angles northerly和 parallel with Diamond街 one hundredand十(1 FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF Los Angeles. Capital Stock $200,000 Reserve $263,000 United States Depository. OFFICERS: E. F. SPENCE, President. J. D. BICKNELL, Vice-President. J. M. ELLIOTT, Cashier. G. B. SHAFFER, Assistant Cashier. DIRECTORS: E. F. SPENCE, William Lacty. J. D. BICKNELL, J. P. CRASE, S. H. MEY, J. M. KELLOGG, Civil Engineer and Surveyor. KELLOGG BROS., Real Estate AGENTS. Having said our share we are prepared to devote our entire attention to the Best Rates business. H. O. KELLOGG, Civil Engineer and Surveyor. EXCURSIONS East and West. SEMI-MONTHLY. Through Sleeping Comes in Kansas City and Chicago. Free Sleeping Accommodations GOING EAST. For lowest rates and full information apply to Warner Bros., at W. Springs, LA, Los Angeles, CA, Chicago. Dr. L. A. MINNESON, district agent, Boston, MA, Boston, MA, Chicago. NEW BARBER SHOP DESURE TO RESPECTFULLY INFORM THE public of Anaheim, that I have bought the barber shop of H.S. Waddy and will continue to conduct the same in First-Class Style. PLEASE GIVE ME A CALL. W.A. FRANTZ, Pop., opp P.O. Center St. NOTICE. CAME TO THE PLACE OF THE UNDERSIGNED (on the Maroon Yorks mansh), one lay man, white feet and fair, sold to Jesus Moreno in July, 1888. Owner may have name by proving property and paying for advertisement. GABRIEL DE LOS REYES. $5 REWARD. LOST—BETWEEN THE RESIDENCE OF P.O. Ryan and the Eminent Church on Sunday, January 14th, a Black Pur Cape. Rente was on Palm Center and Los Angeles streets. Above reward will be paid on return of Cape to Mr. Ryan. J. S. WEBER, Center mansh, Anaheim, denial 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 new. SCOTT EMULSION OF PORE GOD AIR HYPOPHOBIA Almost as Palata No diagnoza than a diagnosis and not a treatment but a celebration of the benefits in this world for the Consumption of General Seminal Disease S. OOLDS and ONPOIL The great remedy for Watering in Children. F. & J. BACKS Furniture, Bedding And Wall Paper. UNDERTAKERS LOS ANGELES STREET... ARNESBURY CAL. S. LUEDKE Watch Maker and Jeweler Center Street, Anaheim. EVERY DESCRIPTION OF WATCHER, CLOCK and Jewelry carefully repaired and warranted San annexment of Elgin and Waltham Watches. REMOVED! Having established myself in my new quarters on Center St., near the opera-house, I am now prepared to do all jobs in painting at astonishingly low prices. S. A. DENNIS TO MAKE DELIVERIES RIGHTS ON WIMLESSINE BREAD DWINTTS COR-BURN SOBA-SALERATUS ABSOLUTELY PUBLIC. Always hiring and full time. THE GAZETTE JS THE BEST S. A. DENNIS City Stables, Center Street (Opposite Kroeger's Block) ANAHEIM. A. L. Lewis & Co. Proprietors. THESE STABLES ARE THE BEST VENTILATED and most comfortable in the town and special attention will be paid to boarding and dressing horse the charge in all cases will be reasonable. Single and Double Teams furnished at short notice and careful drivers, families with the country, supplied as per the rateage of the public is respectfully solicited. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM. Committee and beautification the hair-removal implant growth. Never Falls to Pasture. Gray Hair makes Youthful Color. Ownership distance and hair falling at Deptford. PARKER'S CINGERTONIC Invaluable for Cosmetics, Cols, Inward Poles, Maintenance. PAINLESS CHILDDBIRTH HOW ACCOMPLISHED. Every year should know. Sensation, MAKER, CO., Berkshire, N.Y. Persian Bloom, Cooperative Bank, New York, bond stamp for final package. Address as above. Tutt's Pills This popular remedy never fails to effectually cure Dysppepsia, Constipation, Sick Headache, Billiousness And all diseases arising from a Torpid Liver and Bad Digestion. The natural result is good appetite and solid flesh. Doze small elegantly sun-routed and easy to swallow. SOLD EVERYWHERE. CATARRH COLD ALYSIS JS THE BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM. OUR PREMIUMS FOR THE PRESIDENTIAL YEAR THIS PAPER WITH THE SAN FRANCISCO WEEKLY BULLETIN, SEMI-WEEKLY BULLETIN, DAILY BULLETIN, AND A COMPLETE ATLAS-OF THE WORLD. PICK OUT YOUR COMBINATION. The San Francisco Weekly Bulletin is a handmade 8 column 12 page paper, bound every Wednesday morning, and is the largest and best weekly newspaper published in the west. Its political news is copious and reliable, and will be special features during the presidential campaign. It contains all the tolerable news of the week, cleaned from every quarter of the globe, besides vast amount of the best selected and original general literature. It furnishes the latest and most valuable financial news and market quotations, and gives special attention to agricultural and agricultural news, and is in every respect a first-class family paper, appealing to the interest of every member of the household. The Semi-Weekly Bulletin is the regular Weekly Bulletin and Friday's issue of each week. PASTURAGE! For Horses and Cattle. ON THE THOMAS EDWARD RANCH. The miller southwest of Westminster. Tennille JAMES MOSS. WHAT WAILS YOU? Do you feel dull, languid, low-spirited, lifeless and indolentibly misguided, both physically and mentally? Experience a sense of fullness or bleakness after eating one of the morning, tongue coated, bitter or bad taste in mouth, irregular appetite, dizziness, frequent headaches, blurred sight " floating speck" before the eyes; nervous promotion or exertion; irritability of temper; hot flushes alternating with sweating; sharp biting; transient pain here and there; free drowsiness after meals; waterfulness, a disturbed and unrestrained sleep; constant indiscribable feeling of dread, or of impending calamity? If you have all, or any considerable number of cold symptoms, you are suffering from that most common illness associated with Dysppepsia, or Torpid Liver, associated with Dysppepsia, or Indigestion. The more complicated your disease has become, the greater the number and diversity of symptoms. No matter what stage it has reached, this condition may even manifest for a reasonable length of time if not cured, complication multifaceted and cumbersome. CATARRH COLD IN HEAD. Try the Cure Ely's Cream Balm Cleanse the Nasal Passage. Always Inflammation. Heals the Soras. Restores the Senses of Taste, Smell and Hearing. A particle is applied into each nostril and is soreable. Price 50c, at Draggleton or by mail. ELY BROTHERS Warren St. New York. SCOTT'S EMULSION OF PORE GOD LIVER OIL AIR HYPOPHOSPHITES Almost as Palatable as Milk. No digestion that it can be taken, and not unintended by the small intestine. Be tolerated by trained, and by the combination of oil with the hypophosphites is much more efficacious. Remarkable as a fish product. Persons gain rapidly while taking SCOTTS EMULSION is acknowledged by Physicians to be the Finest and Best preparation in the world for the mild and rare of CONSUMPTION, SORPULA, GENERAL BENILITY, WAITING DISEASE, EMACIATION, OLDDE and ONDONIO CONGUE. The great remedy for Consumption, and Wasting in Children, Sold by all Drugs. The San Francisco Weekly Bulletin is a handmade column 12 page paper, bound every Wednesday morning, and is the largest and best weekly newspaper published in the west. Its political news is copious and reliable, and will be special during the presidential campaign. It contains all the telegraphic news of the week, glanced from every quarter of the globe, bewilder vast amount of the best selected and original general literature. It furnishes the latest and most valuable financial news and market quotations, and gives special attention to botanical and agricultural news, and is in every respect a first-class family paper, appealing to the interest of every member of the household. The Semi-Weekly Bulletin is the regular Weekly Bulletin and Friday's basis of each week. The Daily Evening Bulletin is the leading evening paper of the Pacific Coast, and its astonishing principles, reliability and enterprise has gained for it a well-deserved and extensive popularity. The Atlas is the latest edition of HAND & McNALLY'S STANDARD ATLAS OF THE WORLD. It is large and handsomely bound book, with the best colored maps and professionally illustrated with fine engravings. It is printed on heavy book paper, and as a book of reference and geographical knowledge is indispensable to every household. Either of the above papers with the Atlas will be sent postpaid as a premium with this paper, on receipt of the following subscription price for the combination: The Gazette with 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 Subscrib'rs ICURE FITS! When I say CURSE I do not mean merely to stop them for a time, and then have these by turns again. I have made the disease of FITS, EPILEPSY or FALLING SICKNESS. A life-long study. I WARRANT my readers to CURSE the worst case. Because there has been no reason for our current tooth cure feed success in any of our patients. DUE EXPERIMENTAL TESTING AND ITS WELL-BEING. M.O.R.D.Y.A.M.E.N.P.A.S.T. CONSUMPTION, which is feverish and stiffness is increased and earlier stages of the illness. From its侵害 he may become now very hardened to this degree. By the necessity of treatment he may be able to maintain his health under conditions which are difficult to cope with. For a complete diagnosis it is necessary to consult a physician. FOR THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE. WHAT MAY BE THE PREVIEW OF THE BLOOD? WHAT MAY BE THE PREVIEW OF THE BLOOD? CONSUMPTION, which is feverish and stiffness is increased and earlier stages of the illness. From its侵害 he may become now very hardened to this degree. By the necessity of treatment he may be able to maintain his health under conditions which are difficult to cope with. For a complete diagnosis it is necessary to consult a physician. FOR THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE. WHAT MAY BE THE PREVIEW OF THE BLOOD?