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anaheim-gazette 1890-01-09

1890-01-09 · Anaheim Gazette · page 4 of 4 · OCR glm-ocr
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CURIOUS THINGS OF LIFE. J. M. Meal, of Calhoun, Ga., killed five wild turkeys at one shot. Burgess entered a Detroit mansion the other night and took along with other things, a bath. The late Aaron White, of Connecticut, got together five tons of pennies during his lifetime, and probably died happy in the thought. An old man from North Carolina went to Plymouth church last Sunday to hear Henry Ward Becher preach. He hadn't heard of his death. The idea that fish food was brain food had a run of ten years before any one asked why Equimux, who eat the most fish, had no mental smartness. A citizen of Clackamas county, Ore., is asking the poor board for help. His strongest plan is that he has a family of eighteen children to support. Charles Rampel's pet bear at Williamsport swallowed a silver box full of fissure the other day, and has been spitting tobacco juice, with a addicted vengeance ever since. Millions of minute snails fell in a shower at Tiffin, O., a few days ago. They were alive and crawled away to places of security soon after they reached the ground. A Buffalo bachelor has a memorandum book in which he keeps the name of every girl he has ever kissed. He had 928 names on the list the last time he counted up. An ex-convict named Monroe died in England recently, and in his will he be bequeathed $100,000 to the warden of the Manitoba penitentiary, where he was confined at one time. Out of 100,000 people who cross the Atlantic from New York to Liverpool, the loss of life is not as great as among 100,000 who travel between New York and Pittsburg by rail. In one block on Main street in Battle Creek the other day a reporter saw three one-legged men, four one armed men and two other men who were so lame they couldn't walk without canes. A curious result of being hit with a baseball is reported from Philadelphia. A stuttering man was struck in the mouth and when he got well the impediment in his speech had disappeared. A rich Mexican lately had twenty bulls turned loose in his yard and single handed and alone he enjoyed the spectacle of contests between them until they were tired out and could fight no more. A man at Newton, Kan., advertises as follows: "Wanted—A good six or eight room house by a family without children, grandchildren, mother-in-law, grandparents or hired girl with a lover." William H. Harrison, a Haddonfield, N.J., grocer, dreamed a night or two ago that money was concealed in an ancient house near his store. He investigated and found $1.50 in continental currency back of an old mantelpiece. A rich Mexican lately had twenty bulls turned loose in his yard and single handed and alone he enjoyed the spectacle of contests between them until they were tired out and could fight no more. A man at Newton, Kan., advertises as follows: "Wantel—A good six or eight room house by a family without children, grandchildren, mother-in-law, grandparents or hired girl with a lover." William H. Harrison, a Haddonfield, N.J., grocer, dreamed a night or two ago that money was concealed in an ancient house near his store. He investigated and found $1.50 in continental currency back of an old mantelpiece. In the center of a rock taken from the Locust Spring colliery, was a collection resembling in size and appearance a snowball. It has a soapy nature, is quite soft, and when dried resembles silver dust. It puzzles Potteville geologists. Farmer Dutton, of Ellisville, N.Y., searched high and low for his father's will after the old gentleman died, nearly ten years ago. Eventually he took up the family Bible, and the missing paper was found between the leaves. It had been there all the time. Seventeen years ago John Morris left home at Gobbville, Mich., and without a word of warning to his friends "lit out" for California. A few days ago he came back, explained the situation, and as Mrs. Morris was still waiting for him they will go to California together this time. William J. Richardson, the secretary of the Atlantic Avenue Surface Railway company of Brooklyn, sent a beautiful lily to each of his 832 employees from Hamilton, Bermuda. A letter accompanied each lily instructing the men how to grow the beautiful flower. A team of four cows appeared in Bellevue, Idaho, not long ago, having been driven from Nebraska, a distance of 1,000 miles. They had acted as motive power for a prairie schooner, and had also furnished milk and butter for the farmer and his family en route. They were in good condition, with the exception of their feet, which needed thou bally. It is related that at a recent meeting in Vermont of a pension examining board twin brothers from Castleton presented themselves for examination. The claims were original and for the same disability, the brothers were the same height and weight and were enlisted in the same company and regiment. This was the first instance of the kind in the history of the board. LITERARY LIGHTS. Miss Mary E. Braddon will soon issue her fifty-seventh novel. Rider Haggard is at work on a novel which he says will be his greatest effort. Dumas' two children inherit the dramatic and literary talent of their parents. Taine's health has sufficiently improved to permit him to resume literary work. Thomas Nelson Pago, the southern dialect writer, is a first cousin of Amelle Rives. Mrs. Cashel Hoey, the Irish novolist, is about 65 years old, short, stout and thoroughly English in her style of dress. Owing to the decline of his faculties the venerable historian, George Bancroft, has entirely ceased his literary work. It is proposed to place a natural bowler, suitably inscribed, on some spot near Rev. E. P. Roos's old home at Cornwall-on-Hudson. Garrett P. Serviss, author of "Astronomy with an Opera Glass," is 38 years of age and an able member of the editorial staff of The New York Sun. Thomas Nelson Page, the southern dialect writer, is a first cousin of Amelle Rives. Mrs. Cahel Hooy, the Irish novelist, is about 65 years old, short, stout and thoroughly English in her style of dress. Owing to the decline of his faculties the venerable historian, George Bancroft, has entirely ceased his literary work. It is proposed to place a natural bowler, suitably inscribed, on some spot near Rev. E. P. Roos' old home at Cornwall-on-Hudson. Garrett P. Serviss, author of "Astronomy with an Opera Glass," is 38 years of age and an able member of the editorial staff of The New York Sun. The poet Whitter has acknowledged the authorship of "The Song of the Vermonters," which has been once or twice of late years reprinted as his. The Athenaeum says that the past winter has been unparalleled in the ravages it has made in the ranks of distinguished Scandinavian men of letters. Robert Burns Wilson, the Kentucky poet, who is also a talented artist, is said, has all the feeling required for the evolution of a great landscape painter. The health of Paul du Chaillu has broken down under the strain of preparing his great work on "The Viking Age," which he has had in hand for eight years. Henrik Ibsen, the Norwegian author and dramatist, is described as having "a large face, firm mouth and chin, heavy white hair, a broad, high forehead and kindly eyes." When Miss Huxley, daughter of the famous naturalist, was married the other day she had Mrs. Humphrey Ward's and Alma Fadema's daughters among her bridesmaids. It is rumored that the clever author, who, under the name Ary Rollaw, has for the last four or five years been wonderfully successful as a writer, is a lady closely related to Queen Victoria. Go to A. T. Wallop for best of maple syrup and sugar and rock candy syrup or any other make. Avery & Everhardy pay the highest cash market price for eggs. Go to A. T. Wallop for fresh ranch butter. Avery & Everhardy pay the highest price for calves and hogs. BANK OF ANAHEIM CAPITAL STOCK. $100,000.00. FLEZ JAMES.....President GEORGE V. HORR.....Cameron BOARD OF DIRECTORS: E. F. SPENCE; W. H. MANURY W. K. JAMES, & H. MOTT, P. JAMES. This Bank receives Deposits, Loans Money, Bugs and Sells Exchange and Currency, makes Collections and transmits a General Banking Business. CORRESPONDENTS: First National Bank, Los Angeles, Panama and Minnesota Banks, Los Angeles, Pacific Banks, San Francisco, First National Bank, New York. DRAPER, LETTERS OF CREDIT OR POSTAL letters issued on banks in the principal cities of European countries. Taking possession this holder to passage from New York to the several parts of England, Prussia or Germany, at any park in those counties in New York, via the Hampton Avenue Park Company, holds at regular rates. Returns tender at a rate currently established, extinguishing the holder to passage from San Francisco to New York, or than any other land at the established rate. Pursues in Anaheim or vicinity daring to mail to any point in the continental nation for any real or fictional own purchase that here and forward them to the present person by mail. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF Los Angeles. Capital Stock $200,000 Reserve $285,000 United States Depository. OFFICERS: E. F. SPENCE, President. SOUTHERN PORTLAND COMPANY. Thursday, Nov. 28, 1867 Banking hours and pay due to number of bills and New American Deposits daily on behalf Santa Fe Route IS THE SHORT LINE From Southern California to Denver, Kansas, Chicago, Boston, New York and all EASTERN CITIES Time from 12 to 24 Hours Quite than any other line. Pullman Palace Sleeping Car run through N. SAN DIEGO TO CHICA Every Day in the Year. TOURIST SLEEPING CA Completely Purchased run through on all Overland Trains. 1890. Harper's Young People. AN ILLUSTRATED WEEKLY. The Eleventh Volume of Harper's Young People, which begins with the Number for November 5, 1889, presents an attractive programme. It will offer its readers at least four serials of the usual length, and others in two or three parts, namely, "The Red Mustang," by William O. Stoddard; "Phil and the Baby," by Lucy C. Lillie; "Prince Tommy," by John Runski Coryell; and "Mother's Way," by Margaret E. Sargent; two short serials by HJALMAR BORTH BOYERWELL. Two series of Fairy Tales will attract the attention of lovers of the wonder-world, namely, the quaint tales told by Howard Pyle, and so admirably illustrated by him, and another series in a different vein by Frank M. Bicknell. There will be short stories by W. D. Howells, Thomas Nelson Page, Mary E. Wilkins, Nora Perry, Harriet Prescott Spofford, David Kerr, Hezekiah Butterworth, Sophia Swett, Richard Malcolm Johnston, etc. A subscription to Harper's Young People secures a juvenile library. There is useful knowledge, also plenty of amusement—Boston Advertiser. TERMS: Postage Prepaid, $2 Per Year. Vol. XI begins November 5, 1889. Specimen Copy sent on receipt of a two-cent stamp. SINGLE NUMBERS, Five Cents each. Remittances should be made by Postoffice Money Order or Draft, to avoid chance of loss. Newspapers are not to copy this advertisement without the express order of Harper & Brothers. Adress: HARPER & BROTHERS, New York. 1890. Harper's Bazar. ILLUSTRATED. Harper's Bazar is a journal for the home. Giving the latest information with regard to the Fashions, its numerous illustrations, fashion-plates, and pattern-sheet supplements are indispensable alike to the home dress-maker and the professional modiste. 1890. Harper's Bazar. ILLUSTRATED. Harper's Bazar is a journal for the home. Giving the latest information with regard to the Fashions, its numerous illustrations, fashion-plates, and pattern-sheet supplements are indispensable alike to the home dress-maker and the professional modiste. No expense is spared in making its artistic attractiveness of the highest order. Its clever short stories, parlor plays, and thoughtful essays satisfy all tastes, and its last page is famous as a budget of wit and humor. In its weekly issues everything is included which is of interest to women. During 1890 Olive Throne Miller, Christine Terriune Herrick, and Mary Lowe Dickinson will respectively furnish a series of papers on "The Daughter at Home," "Three Meals a Day," and "The Woman of the Period." The serial novels will be written by Walter Branty and F. W. Robinson. HARPER'S PERIODICALS. Per Year: HARPER'S BAZAR.....$4.00 HARPER'S MAGAZINE.....4.00 HARPER'S WEEKLY.....4.00 HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE.....2.00 Postage Free to all subscribers in the United States, Canada, or Mexico. The Volumes of the Bazar begin with the first Number for January of each year. When no time is mentioned, subscriptions will begin with the Number current at time of receipt of order. Bound Volumes of Harper's Bazar for three years back, in stock, both binding, will be sent by mail, postage paid, or by express free of expense (provided the freight does not exceed one dollar per volume), for $7.00 per volume. Check Cases for each volume, available for binding, will be sent by mail, postpaid, on receipt of $1.00 each. Remittances should be made by Postmaster Money Order or Draft, to avoid delay of heat. Singapore are not to copy this advertisement without the express order of Harper & Brothers. Address: HARPER & BROTHERS, New York. A Friend of Every Buyer We keep the best quality and assortment of furniture, household decoration, etc. Our store is bought for cash and we will sell it at low price. Our intention is to please our Customers. UNDERTAKERS SUMMONS IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE California, in and for the County of Orange, William C. Jenks, plaintiff, vs. T. A. Owens, John Pickett, defendant. Action brought in the Superior Court of the City of Orange, State of California, and the Company filed in main county of Orange, in the office of Clerk of the mid Superior Court. The people of the State of California send promptly to T. A. Owens and John Pickett, defendants. You are here required to appear in an audit brought against you by the above named plaintiff the Superior court of the county of Orange, State of California, and to answer the Complaint filed within ten days (exclusive of the day of service) at the service on you of this summation. If served with this notice, or if served elsewhere, within this day, or judgment by default will be taken against you according to the prayer of mid complaint. The said section is brought to adjudicate this court for the foreclosure of a property in the mid compartment, and executed by the said A. Owens on the fifth day of October, A.D. 1897, securing the payment of a certain premium in made by him to mid plaintiff on the same day ($5.00 paid with drawn on the compartment house and which has become due, and arising from no participation or financial aid note due here. For further pertinence reiterate that this court will accept any evidence from the mid day of October 1897 (commission appointed amount a reasonable amount between hundred and thousand dollars) equal to those shown here and furnished to mid plaintiff on this day. That the defraudments will all persons have heard and found to be false or misleading. And you may bring your proof if you wish to prove that you have been deceived by mid plaintiff on this day by providing such proof as may be presented by you. [main] CITY MEAT MARKET GO TO Bentz & Steadman, Per Bentz Meat, Central Ind., Public Park, Cotton Land and Sandwich Meat. The "Lily" Ham and Bacon cut to Order. Highest Market Price Paid for Fat Stock, Eggs and Poultry CENTER ST. AMAHEIM. I Have Several Thousand STAKES On hand, suitable for staking Young Trees! The stakes are Six Feet long And from 2 to 3 Inches square POINTED, AND POINTS TARRED. I offer them in quantities to suit at Reasonable Figures. M. NEBELUNG. VICTOR MONTGOMERY. Attorney-at-Law. SANTA ANA, CALIFORNIA. Rooms—Nos. 4, 5 and 6, Commercial Bank Building. City Stables, Center Street (Opposite Kroeger's Block), AMAHEIM. A. L. Lewis & Co. Proprietors. THESE STABLES ARE THE BEST-VENTILATED and most ommodious in the town, and special at station will be paid to Boarding and Grooming horses. The sharpe in all cases will be reasonable. P. DAVIS & BRO., CENTER STREET, - AMAHEIM. (Detroit Los Angeles and Louis.) DEALERS IN PROVISIONS, GROCERIES, CROOKERY, HARDWARE, GRAIN, LIQUORS, CIGARS, WOOL, HIDES, ETC. First-class Potatoes In Quantities to Suit. 1890. Harper's Magazine. ILLUSTRATED. A new Shakespeare—the Shakespeare of KOWIN A. ARBRE—will be presented in Harper's Magazine for 1890, with comments by Andrew Lang. Harper's Magazine has also made special arrangements with Alphonse Daudet, the greatest of living French novelists, for the exclusive publication, in serial form, of a humorous story, to be entitled "The Colonists of Tartaria: the Last Adventures of the Famous Tartaria." The story will be translated by Henry James, and illustrated by Romy and Myrbach. W. D. Howells will contribute a novelette in three parts, and LACADIO HEARN a novellette in two parts, entitled "Youma," handsomely illustrated. In illustrated papers, touching subjects of current interest, and in its short stories, poems, and timely articles, the Magazine will maintain its well-known standard. HARPER'S PERIODICALS. Per Year: HARPER'S MAGAZINE.....$4 00 HARPER'S WEEKLY.....4 00 HARPER'S BAZAR.....4 00 HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE.....2 00 Postage Free to all subscribers in the United States, Canada, or Mexico. The Volumes of the Magazine begin with the Numbers for June and December of each year. When no time is specified, subscriptions will begin with the Number. City Stables, Center Street (Opposite Kroeger’s Block) ANAHEIM. A. L. Lewis & Co. Proprietors. THESE STABLES ARE THE BEST-VENTILATED and most ommodious in the town, and special at ention will be paid to Boarding and Grooming horses. The charge in all cases will be reasonable. Single and Double Teams Pursued at short notice, and careful drivers, familia with the country, supplied when required. The pat conge of the public respectfully solicited. R. BOETTCHER, WAGONMAKING AND BLACKSMITHING! HORSE-SHOEING A SPECIALTY. Satisfaction Guaranteed. GIVE ME A CALL L. NEMETZ, CARRIAGE Painting and Trimming. Lowest Prices. First-Class Workmanship CENTER STREET, West of Boettcher’s Carriage and Wagon Shop. nov7-3m Now is the Time to Subscribe TO THE North American Review! Arrangements have been made for the coming year which will maintain for the Review its unrivalled position among periodicals, and render it essential to every reader in America who desires to keep abreast of the times. From month to month topics of commanding interest in every field of human thought and action will be treated of in its pages by representative writers, whose words and names carry authority with them. The forthcoming volume will be signalized by the discussion of questions of high public interest by the foremost men of the time, notably by a controversy on Free Trade and Protection in their bearing upon the development of American Industry and Commerce, between the two most famous living statesmen of England and America. The Right Hon. W. E. GLADSTONE AND Hon. JAMES G. BLAINE. This discussion, embracing the most important contributions ever made to an American periodical, will begin in the January number. In illustrated papers, touching subjects of current interest, and in its short stories, poems, and timely articles, the Magazine will maintain its well-known standard. HARPER’S PERIODICALS. Per Year: HARPER’S MAGAZINE... $4 00 HARPER’S WEEKLY... 4 00 HARPER’S BAZAR... 4 00 HARPER’S YOUNG PEOPLE... 2 00 Postage Free to all subscribers in the United States, Canada, or Mexico. The Volumes of the Magazine begin with the Numbers for June and December of each year. When no time is specified, subscriptions will begin with the Number current at time of receipt of order. Bound Volumes of Harper’s Magazine for three years back, in neat cloth binding, will be sent by mail post-paid, on receipt of $3 00 per volume. Cloth Cases, for binding, 50 cents each—by mail post-paid. Index to Harper’s Magazine, Alphabetical, Analytical, and Classified, for Volumes to 70, inclusive, from June, 1850, to June 1885, one vol., 8vo, Cloth, $4 00. Remittances should be made by Postoffice Money Order or Draft, to avoid chance of loss. Newspapers are not to copy this advertisement without the express order of Harper & Brothers. Address: HARPER & BROTHERS, New York. 1890. Harper’s Weekly. ILLUSTRATED. Harper’s Weekly has a well-established place as the leading illustrated newspaper in America. The fairness of its editorial comments on current politics has earned it for it the respect and confidence of all impartial readers, and the variety and excellence of its literary contents, which include serial and short stories by the best and most popular writers, fit it for the persual of people of the wildest range of tastes and pursuits. The Weekly supplements are of remarkable variety, interest and value. No expense is spared to bring the highest order of artistic ability to bear upon the illustration of the changeful phases of home and foreign history. A Mexican romance, from the pen of Thomas A. Janvier, will appear in the Weekly in 1800. HARPER’S PERIODICALS. PER YEAR: HARPER’S WEEKLY... $4 00 HARPER’S MAGAZINE... 4 00 HARPER’S BAZAR... 4 00 HARPER’S YOUNG PEOPLE... 2 00 Postage free to all subscribers in the United States, Canada or Mexico. The volumes of the Weekly begin with the first Number for January of each year. When no time is mentioned, subscriptions will begin with the Number current at time of receipt of order. Bound volumes of Harper’s Weekly for three years back, in neat cloth binding, will be sent by mail, postpaid, or by express, free of expense (provided the freight does not exceed one dollar per volume), for $7 per volume. Cloth Cases for each volume, suitable for binding, will be sent by mail, post-paid, on receipt of $1 each. Remittances should be made by Postoffice Money Order or Draft, to avoid chance of loss. Newspapers are not to copy this advertisement without the express order of Harper & Brothers. Address: HARPER & BROTHERS, New York. The Right Hon. W. E. GLADSTONE AND Hon. JAMES G. BLAINE. This discussion, embracing the most important contributions ever made to an American periodical, will begin in the January number. It is a significant fact—as showing the unparalleled popularity and usefulness of the periodical, and its wide influence upon public opinion—that the circulation of The North American Review is greater than that of all other American and English Reviews combined. Subscription Price, Postage Prepaid Five Dollars a Year. The North American Review. 3 East Fourteenth Street, New York. In the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California. In the matter of the Estate and Guardianship of Dominic Rios, Rafaelio Rios, Benanche Rios, Bella Zaldia Rios and Requiella Rios, minors. It appears to this Court from the petition this day presented and filed by Carmen Morillo-Pitchelado. The generality of the persons and matters of Dominic Rios, Rafaelio Rios, Benanche Rios, Bella Zaldia Rios and Requiella Rios, minors, praying for an order of sale of certain real estate belonging to said wards, that it is necessary that such real estate should be sold. It is hereby ordered that the next of kin of the said minors, all persons interested in the said estate, present before this Court on Monday, the Fifth day of November, 1890 at 10 o'clock A.M., at the courthouses of this Court, in Santa Ana, then and there to hear correctly an order not be granted for the sale of such assets. And if further ordered that a copy of this order be published at least a week for three months before the midday of hearing in the Assistant Secretary, a newspaper printed and published in said county of Orlando. Baldwin, October 25, 1890. J. W. TURNER, Judge of the Superior Court. National Public Library, attorney for Guadalupe counties.