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anaheim-gazette 1890-11-06

1890-11-06 · Anaheim Gazette · page 1 of 4 · OCR glm-ocr
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VOLUME XX. ANAHEIM, C. Lodge Meetings. ANAHEIM LODGE, NO. 207, F. A. M., hold regular meetings on the Monday of or preceding the full moon in each month. Sojourning brethren in standing are cordially invited to attend PHILIP DAVIS, W. M. J. B. GARDNER, Secretary. ANAHEIM LODGE, NO. 199, I. O. O. F. Regular meetings every Tuesday evening. Visiting others always welcome. J. J. DYER, N. G. W. R. HARKER, Secretary. ANAHEIM LODGE, NO. 85, A. O. U. W. Meetings on the first and fourth Friday of every month. N. A. DENNIL, M. W. B. ORINDAW, Secretary. OPPELEUR LODGE, NO. 237, I. O. O. F. Meets every Thursday at 8 P.M. at Old Fallows Hall. PETER MENZEL, N. G. Max Neebleu, Secretary. MALVERN MILL POST, NO. 181, O. A. R. Meets at I. O. O. F. Hall, Los Angeles street, Anaheim, every second and fourth Saturday of each month. J. B. McCULLCUGH, P. C. T. K. McDOWELL, Adjutant. ORDER CHOPEN FRIENDS MEETS THE FIRST and third Saturday evenings in each month at 8 P.M. Odd Fellow's Hall. WM. M. McFADDEN, Counsellor. E. A. WHITE, Secretary. EVERGREEN COUNCIL, AMERICAN LEOION OF Honor. Meet's second and fourth Wednesday of each month at 8 P.M. F.C.RYTHE, F.C.RYTHE, Secretary. ANAHEIM COURT, I. O. F. Meets SECOND and third Fridays of each month. G.V.HORA, N.O.WOOD, Financial Secretary. Chief Ranger. Professional Cards DR. J. H. BULLARD, A.B., M.D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Offer and Residence, corner Hermina and Chartres streets, near Planters' Hotel. OFFICE HOURS: 7 to 8:30 a.m.; 12 to 1:30, and 6 to 7:30 p.m. NOTICE! THE Stearns Ranchos Company OFFER LANDS IN Artesia, Westminster, Norwalk, Consisting of 83,000 acres of Choice Lands in the Ra Siena, Los Coyotes, Las Bolsas, La Habra, and San Juan Cajon ta Ana IN QUANTITIES TO SUIT AT FROM $15 TO $75 PER AC R.J.NORTHAM, Agent; Or J.B.PIERCE at Anaheim, Califo Centralia Colony Lands for Sale at $40 to $60 Per Acre. Apply to J.B.PIERCE or R.J.NORTHAM, Anahe PROFESSIONAL CARES DR. J. H. BULLARD, A. B., M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Offer and Residence, corner Hermina and Chartres streets, near Planters' Hotel. OFFICE HOURS: 7 to 8:20 a.m.; 12 to 1:30, and 6 to 7:30 p.m. CHARLES PAMPERL Dealer in... HARDWARE, CROCKERY, and HOUSE-PURNISHING GOODS Los Angeles street, Anaheim. H. CAHEN. DEALER IN General Merchandise. ANAHEIM, CAL. C. E. GROAT, Contractor ana Builder. ANAHEIM, CAL. CHAS. SCHINDLER, CONTRACTOR and BUILDER. ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA. GEORGE BAUER BOOT AND SHOE MAKER. ANAheim. Making and repairing at the lowest cash price. All orders promptly attended to. All work guaranteed. L. GUNTHER. PIONEER BOOT & SHOE MAKER. Corner Adele and Los Angeles streets. H. P. LARSEN. CONTRACTOR & BUILDER. Estimates given; Contracts made and do a generalizing Business. CENTER STREET, ANAHEIM. FOX & BUTLER, City Barber Shop. FOR A FIRST-CLASS SHAVE: HOT AND COLD BATHS. FRANTZ'S BARBER SHOP. R. J. NORTHAM, Agent; Or J. B. PIERCE at Anaheim, Californias Centralia Colony Lands for Sale at $40 to $60 Per Acre. Apply to J. B. PIERCE or R. J. NORTHAM, Anaheima CABINETS---$3.50---CABINETS Full Figure $3 50 and Bust Same Quality Work Guaranteed as Our Foil $5 WORK. 111 East Fourth Street, Santa Ana F. CRIST, MERCHANT TAILORS Just received a complete assortment of Fall and Winter Goods of latest seams and fabrics, to which the attention of thezens of Anaheim and vicinity is directed. Suits to order from - $25 Pants to order from - $6 An invitation is cordially extended public to call and examine this stock. FRED CRIST T. J. F. BOEG Wholesale and Retail Dealer in WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS KEeps Always On Hand A COMPLETE STOCK Of the Finest Wines, Liquors and Cigars. WINES AND LIQUORS BY THE KEG, GALLON OR BOTTLE. CENTER STREET, ANAHEIM. FOX & BUTLER, City Barber Shop. FOR A FIRST-CLASS SHAVE: HOT AND COLD BATHS FRANTZ'S BARBER SHOP. First-Class Style. BATHS, - 25 Cts. PLEASE GIVE ME A CALL. FRANTZ, Prop., Center Street. H. W. CHYNOWETH, Attorney-At-Law. Meta Block, Cor. Center and Los Angeles Streets. Real Property Law a Specialty. ANAHEIM, CAL. RICHARD M. ROSE ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Crater street, Anaheim, Cal. Special attention given to PROBATE matters. Central Restaurant, Art. A. T. Wallop, Proprietor. Near lately vacated by Jas. Hahnman. Table Sound by the week of month. Meals at all times. Closet Cooking. The Unit the Market Allotte. A share of the public patronage responsibly utilized Terms Reasonable. VICTOR MONTGOMERY, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW ANA, CAL. WOOD, ARCHITECT AND MUSIC STORE. WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS KEEPS ALWAYS ON HAND A COMPLETE STOCK Of the Finest Wines, Liquors and Cigars. WINES AND LIQUORS BY THE KEG, GALLON OR BOTTLE. Orders by Mail, Promptly Attended to. GOODS DELIVERED FREE OF CHARGE Opp. S. P. Depot, ANAHEIM, CAL. ATTENTION Homes for Everybody. Investments for Every Or THE ANAHEIM HOMESTEAD TRANSAContaining 2,500 Acres! ONE-HALF MILE WEST OF ANAHEIM STATION, joins the magnificent orange groves of Ryan and Browning on north; in the New Irrigation District, and contains a splendid view of the closest Agricultural Lands in the State. Now subdivide down the market at Prices ranging from. $30 to $60 per Acre ON EASY TERMS. Within a short distance of Condominium Factory at Buena Park. Good schools, churches and configures closely settled colony. For full particulars call on or address. J. B. PIERCE, Agent, ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1890. CE! os Company NDS IN Garden Grove, Fairview, Price Lands in the Ranchos La ra, and San Juan Cajon de SanT FROM PER ACRE. AM, Agent; anaheim, California. for Sale at from Per Acre. CHAM, anaheim, Cal. The Weekly Gazette. Established 1870. Customary Reductions on above rates will be made on advertisements running for longer periods. Usual discounts on large advertisements. Items of news and correspondence on all line subjects are solicited by the editor. Brief, and write directly to the point. All communications must be signed by the author, not for publication, but for the information of the editor. Madam Blavatsky. Now that theophy has become a distinct cult everything pertaining to it is a matter of interest, and particularly anything concerning Madam Blavatsky, the high priestess in the apostolic circles. A correspondent who has just visited her at the house in St. John's Wood, where she at present lives, may be: As the world knows, Mme. Blavatsky is enormous in size, weighing more than 300 pounds. As she herself says, she is a "disabled invalid," and suffers intense pain as well. New Mind of Air Lines. For a week past a dozen passengers have gathered at the Grand Pacific in constant discussion of a plan which would like a take from the "Arabian Night." If carried out—and it is defined $200,000 of small cash has been paid in to any that it will be—theahlen will result in making railroad trains appear like more stage coaches, will make the transportation of the main almost equal to the telegraph, allow a business man to have his business office in New York and put live in Chicago with no more inconvenience than if his home was just around the corner. The tourist will be permitted to have any point of the United States one day and arrive in Europe the next, and any one may have the opportunity at having Nellie Myhank in the middle age by making the arrival of the globe in just five days. The project was completed yesterday afternoon and to-day at Springfield the Mount Carmel Automatic Manufacturing Company will be chartered with a capital of $200,000,000. Within sixty days the first air-ship is put down on the schedule to arrive in Chicago. The company is mind to be furnished by a powerful English syndicate and by English capitalists, both these interests having representative at the Grand Pacific meeting. The incorporation, however, are the Lavender, E. J. Punningham and Richard Butler, of the Mount Carmel Machine and Pulley Works at Mount Carmel, Ill.; W. C. Denny, of the Grand Rapids Furniture Manufacturing Company of Grand Rapids, Mich., E. L. Chamberlain and James A. Pugh. The proposed air-ship, models of which the inventor claim have been successfully tested, will carry one of the Pullmans and will contain fifty parachutes, special mere being manufactured for quick mail and passenger service. Work will commence immediately at Mount Carmel upon some of the moved. He campaigned. For a week past a dozen passengers have gathered at the Grand Pacific in constant discussion of a plan which would like a take from the "Arabian Night." If carried out—and it is defined $200,000 of small cash has been paid in to any that it will be—theahlen will result in making railroad trains appear like more stage coaches, will make the transportation of the main almost equal to the telegraph, allow a business man to have his business office in New York and put live in Chicago with no more inconvenience than if his home was just around the corner. The tourist will be permitted to have any point of the United States one day and arrive in Europe the next, and any one may have the opportunity at having Nellie Myhank in the middle age by making the arrival of the globe in just five days. The project was completed yesterday afternoon and to-day at Springfield the Mount Carmel Automatic Manufacturing Company will be chartered with a capital of $200,000,000. Within sixty days the first air-ship is put down on the schedule to arrive in Chicago. The company is mind to be furnished by a powerful English syndicate and by English capitalists, both these interests having representative at the Grand Pacific meeting. The incorporation, however, are the Lavender, E. J. Punningham and Richard Butler, of the Mount Carmel Machine and Pulley Works at Mount Carmel, Ill.; W. C. Denny, of the Grand Rapids Furniture Manufacturing Company of Grand Rapids, Mich., E. L. Chamberlain and James A. Pugh. The proposed air-ship, models of which the inventor claim have been successfully tested, will carry one of the Pullmans and will contain fifty parachutes, special mere being manufactured for quick mail and passenger service. Work will commence immediately at Mount Carmel upon some of the moved. He campaigned. For a week past a dozen passengers have gathered at the Grand Pacific in constant discussion of a plan which would like a take from the "Arabian Night." If carried out—and it is defined $200,000 of small cash has been paid in to any that it will be—theahlen will result in making railroad trains appear like more stage coaches, will make the transportation of the main almost equal to the telegraph, allow a business man to have his business office in New York and put live in Chicago with no more inconvenience than if his home was just around the corner. The tourist will be permitted to have any point of the United States one day and arrive in Europe the next, and any one may have the opportunity at having Nellie Myhank in the middle age by making the arrival of the globe in just five days. The project was completed yesterday afternoon and to-day at Springfield the Mount Carmel Automatic Manufacturing Company will be chartered with a capital of $200,000,000. Within sixty days the first air-ship is put down on the schedule to arrive in Chicago. The company is mind to be furnished by a powerful English syndicate and by English capitalists, both these interests having representative at the Grand Pacific meeting. The incorporation, however, are the Lavender, E. J. Punningham and Richard Butler, of the Mount Carmel Machine and Pulley Works at Mount Carmel, Ill.; W. C. Denny, of the Grand Rapids Furniture Manufacturing Company of Grand Rapids, Mich., E. L. Chamberlain and James A. Pugh. The proposed air-ship, models of which the inventor claim have been successfully tested, will carry one of the Pullmans and will contain fifty parachutes, special mere being manufactured for quick mail and passenger service. Work will commence immediately at Mount Carmel upon some of the moved. He campaigned. For a week past a dozen passengers have gathered at the Grand Pacific in constant discussion of a plan which would like a take from the "Arabian Night." If carried out—and it is defined $200,000 of small cash has been paid in to any that it will be—theahlen will result in making railroad trains appear like more stage coaches, will make the transportation of the main almost equal to the telegraph, allow a business man to have his business office in New York and put live in Chicago with no more inconvenience than if his home was just around the corner. The tourist will be permitted to have any point of the United States one day and arrive in Europe the next, and any one may have the opportunity at having Nellie Myhank in the middle age by making the arrival of the globe in just five days. The project was completed yesterday afternoon and to-day at Springfield the Mount Carmel Automatic Manufacturing Company will be chartered with a capital of $200,000,000. Within sixty days the first air-ship is put down on the schedule to arrive in Chicago. The company is mind to be furnished by a powerful English syndicate and by English capitalists, both these interests having representative at the Grand Pacific meeting. The incorporation, however, are the Lavender, E. J. Punningham and Richard Butler, of the Mount Carmel Machine and Pulley Works at Mount Carmel, Ill.; W. C. Denny, of the Grand Rapids Furniture Manufacturing Company of Grand Rapids, Mich., E. L. Chamberlain and James A. Pugh. The proposed air-ship, models of which the inventor claim have been successfully tested, will carry one of the Pullmans and will contain fifty parachutes, special mere being manufactured for quick mail and passenger service. Work will commence immediately at Mount Carmel upon some of the moved. He campaigned. For a week past a dozen passengers have gathered at the Grand Pacific in constant discussion of a plan which would like a take from the "Arabian Night." If carried out—and it is defined $200,000 of small cash has been paid in to any that it will be—theahlen will result in making railroad trains appear like more stage coaches, will make the transportation of the main almost equal to the telegraph, allow a business man to have his business office in New York and put live in Chicago with no more inconvenience than if his home was just around the corner. The tourist will be permitted to have any point of the United States one day and arrive in Europe the next, and any one may have the opportunity at having Nellie Myhank in the middle age by making the arrival of the globe in just five days. The project was completed yesterday afternoon and to-day at Springfield the Mount Carmel Automatic Manufacturing Company will be chartered with a capital of $200,000,000. Within sixty days the first air-ship is put down on the schedule to arrive in Chicago. The company is mind to be furnished by a powerful English syndicate and by English capitalists, both these interests having representative at the Grand Pacific meeting. The incorporation, however, are the Lavender, E. J. Punningham and Richard Butler, of the Mount Carmel Machine and Pulley Works at Mount Carmel, Ill.; W. C. Denny, of the Grand Rapids Furniture Manufacturing Company of Grand Rapids, Mich., E. L. Chamberlain and James A. Pugh. The proposed air-ship, models of which the inventor claim have been successfully tested, will carry one of the Pullmans and will contain fifty parachutes, special mere being manufactured for quick mail and passenger service. Work will commence immediately at Mount Carmel upon some of the moved. He campaigned. For a week past a dozen passengers have gathered at the Grand Pacific in constant discussion of a plan which would like a take from the "Arabian Night." If carried out—and it is defined $200,000 of small cash has been paid in to any that it will be—theahlen will result in making railroad trains appear like more stage coaches, will make the transportation of the main almost equal to the telegraph, allow a business man to have his business office in New York and put live in Chicago with no more inconvenience than if his home was just around the corner. The tourist will be permitted to have any point of the United States one day and arrive in Europe the next, and any one may have the opportunity at having Nellie Myhank in the middle age by making the arrival of the globe in just five days. The project was completed yesterday afternoon and to-day at Springfield the Mount Carmel Automatic Manufacturing Company will be chartered with a capital of $200,000,000. Within sixty days the first air-ship is put down on the schedule to arrive in Chicago. The company is mind to be furnished by a powerful English syndicate and by English capitalists, both these interests having representative at the Grand Pacific meeting. The incorporation, however, are the Lavender, E. J. Punningham and Richard Butler, ofthe Mount Carmel Machine and Pulley Works at Mount Carmel,Ill.; W.C.Denny,ofthe Grand Rapids Furniture Manufacturing Company of Grand Rapids,Mich.,E.L.Charborlain和James A.Pugh. 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Now that the morphy has become a distinct cult everything pertaining to it is a matter of interest, and particularly anything concerning Madam Blavatsky, the high prentem in the philosophic circle. A correspondent who has just visited her at the house in St. John's Wood, where she at present lives, may be her: As the world knows, Mme. Blavatsky is enormous in size, weighing more than 300 pounds. As she herself says, she is a "disabled invalid," and suffers intense pain well as inconvenience from chronic rheumatism. She nun is more of a recluse. She rarely drives out and never walks, it being a tax on her strength to move about the premises in which she lives and works. She doctors constantly, and while vegetarian by virtue of her creed, has no heatlancy in ordering the alanghtar of a piggen or a lamb when her physician prescribes a meat diet. Notwithstanding report, she is strictly temperate, never touching animals of any sort. She is, however, an incincent smoker. Her fingers are stained with tobacco, and it is with the greatest difficulty that she can refrain from the habit long enough to provide at the meetings, and whether writing, sending, receiving or resting, the Turkish tobacco is either between her lips or within easy reach of her beautiful hands. On the little smoking tray, which is carried wherever she goes by one of her numerous prostages, is a package of tobacco, book of rice paper and a spirit lamp that burns might and day. She rolls all of her cigarettes herself, and no one harpist ever manipulated the responsive strings of her instrument with more bewitting grace than this marvulous woman wags about the delicate white snake. The Minneapolis of Old Flautted the small and cross bones their assign defiantly at the manhand. Your Modern pirate not on the high maze, but upon the high reputation of standard remedia, skulks under various diagnoses. His hole and corner trade has never to any degree affected Hostetter's stomach blitters, although that standard invigorant and corruptive has long been the shining mark at which his shafts have been directed. Cheap local bitters, composed of fiery unreified stimulants, with an infusion, or extract possibly of some tonic bark, are sometimes recommended in identical with, or similar to, or presumptuous kindred to those of America's shaven family madness. These perish quickly, while the great subsister and preventive of diseases pursues its successful career, overcoming malaria, dyspepsia, nevumorphy, killer troubles, constipation and rheumatic affections, not only on this, but on many continents. The Art of Breathing. In each respiration an adult inhales one pint of air. A healthy man respires 16 to 20 times a minute, or 20,000 times a day; a child 25 or 35 times a minute. While standing, an adult respiration is 22 times a minute; while lying down, 13. The superficial surface of the lungs i.e., of their alveolar space, is 200 square yards. The amount of air expired every 24 hours is about 10,000 quarts. The amount of oxygen absorbed in 24 hours is 500 litres (744 grams). The amount of carbonic acid expired in the same time is 460 litres (911.5 grams). Two-thirds of the oxygen absorbed in 24 hours is absorbed during sleep night hours, from 6 p.m., to 6 a.m.; three-fifths of the total in thrown off during the day. The pulmonary surface given 150 grams of water daily in the state of vapor. An adult must have at least 300 litres of air in an hour. The heart sends 800 quadrats of blood through the lungs every hour, or about 5,000 daily. The duration of inspiration is by English capitalists, both these interests having representative at the Grand Pascal meeting. The incorporation, however, are the Invadems, E. J. Pringlington and Richard Bather of the Mount Carmel Machine and Pulley Works at Mount Carmel, Ill.; W. C. Dewey of the Grand Rapids Furniture Manufacturing Company of Grand Rapids, Mich.; E. L. Chamberlain and James A. Pegh. The proposed air-ship models of which the inventors claim have been successfully tested will carry one of the Pullmans and will contain fifty persons each special care being manufactured for quick mail and passenger service. Work will commence immediately at Mount Carmel upon the manufacturing plant being a mammoth one covering many acres. The first building to be erected will be 200 feet squares, and the construction for it have already been laid. The company will manufacture all the materials from the raw material even to the aluminium, of which the air-ships will almost entirely compound. This portal is not only the strongest and lightest, but by a new pneumaticized by the company it can be made cheapest. The claim is made that the ship combines mildly speed, comfort and is no perfect as to be under the ultimate control of a crew of two men. It is shaped very much like the hull of an ordinary caravan. It has on either side and extending the entire length large wings arranged so as to turn into a parachute in case of accident. At the corners of these wings there are proweller wheels, enabling the ship to be raised or lowered at will. A large propeller wheel at the bow gives the ship power either to go backward or forward. Above the buoyant chamber is a rudder for steering horizontally. Just in rear of this is a smaller one to steer either to the right or left. The cabin or car suspended immediately beneath this framework, and beneath this are the storage hatcheries, which also not all ballast. In front of the car is a plane for the pilot, who is provided with lavens for switching the electric appliances, the rudders and propellers being controlled by electricity. The invention may chief secret in maritime navigation problem has been aluminum. In addition to this all the machinery is of entirely new design and of high lightweight possible. It is also said that in order to cause the ship to fall or so he lost control of all the rudders, the mings, the propeller wheels, and the buoyancy chambers must all break at once for any one of them would keep it suspended. But even if they should do so the automatic parachute formed instantly by the wings would allow the ship to demand gently to the earth, and an especial one will be made for arranging the ocean even should this happen in mid-ocean it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle it would dismantle它 Would be placed on a plane for the pilot who is provided with lavens for switching the electric appliances, the rudders and propellers being controlled by electricity. The invention may chief secret in maritime navigation problem has been aluminum. In addition to this all the machinery is of entirely new design and of high lightweight possible. It is also said that in order to cause the ship to fall or so he lost control of all the rudders, the mings, the propeller wheels, and the buoyancy chambers must all break at once for any one of them would keep it suspended. But even if they should do so the automatic parachute formed instantly by the wings would allow the ship to demand gently to the earth, and an especial one will be made for arranging the ocean even should this happen in mid-ocean it would dismantle它 Would be placed on a plane for the pilot who is provided with lavens for switching the electric appliances, the rudders and propellers being controlled by electricity. The invention may chief secret in maritime navigation problem has been aluminum. In addition to this all the machinery is of entirely new design and of high lightweight possible. It is also said that in order to cause the ship to fall or so he lost control of all the rudders, the mings, the propeller wheels, and the buoyancy chambers must all break at once for any one of them would keep it suspended. But even if they should do so the automatic parachute formed instantly by the wings would allow the ship to demand gently to the earth, and an especial one will be made for arranging the ocean even should this happen in mid-ocean它 Would be placed on a plane for the pilot who is provided with lavens for switching the electric appliances, the rudders and propellers being controlled by electricity. The invention may chief secret in maritime navigation problem has been aluminum. In addition to this all the machinery is of entirely new design and of high lightweight possible. It is also said that in order to cause the ship to fall or so he lost control of all the rudders, the mings, the propeller wheels, and the buoyancy chambers must all break at once for any one of them would keep it suspended. But even if they should do so the automatic parachute formed instantly by the wings would allow the ship to demand gently to the earth, and an especial one will be made for arranging the ocean even should this happen in mid-ocean它 Would be placed on a plane for the pilot who is provided with lavens for switching the electric appliances, the rudders and propellers being controlled by electricity. The invention may chief secret in maritime navigation problem has been aluminum. In addition to this all the machinery is of entirely new design and of high lightweight possible. It is also said that in order to cause the ship to fall or so he lost control of all the rudders, the mings,the propeller wheels,andthebuoyancychambersmustallbreakatonceforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspendedbutnotopenedforanyoneofthemenwouldkeepit Suspended但不公开披露的秘密信息可能会泄露给公众。 STOCK! LIQUORS OR BOTTLE. Attended to. FREE OF CHARGE! AHEIM, CAL. I ON! dy. or Every One. TEAD TRACT O Acres! AHEIM STATION, AND Ryan and Browning on the contains a splendid body of e. Now subdivide and on er Acre. attance of Cond and Milk urchas and configuous to a call on or adhuse Anahaim. while lying down, 13. The superficial surface of the lungs i.e., of their alveolar space, is 200 square yards. The amount of air expired every 24 hours is about 10,000 quarts. The amount of oxygen absorbed in 24 hours is 500 litres (764 grams). The amount of carbonic acid expired in the same time is 460 litres (911.5 grams). Two-thirds of the oxygen absorbed in 24 hours is absorbed during the night hour, from 6 p.m., to 6 a.m.; three-fifths of the total is thrown off during the day. The pulmonary surface gives 150 grams of water daily in the state of vapor. An adult must have at least 300 litres of air in an hour. The heart sends 800 quadrats of blood through the lungs every hour, or about 5,000 daily. The duration of inspiration is five-twelfths of expiration, seven-twelfths of the whole respiratory act. During sleep, inspiration occupies two-twelfths of the respiratory period. The Pulpit and the Stage. Rev. F. M. Shroat, Pastor United Brethren Church, Blue Monad, Kan., says: "I feel it my duty to tell what wonders Dr. King's New Discovery has done for me. My Lange were badly distressed, and my patients thought I could live only a few weeks. I took five bedrooms of Dr. King's New Discovery and an sound and well, gaining 25 lb., in weight. Arthur Love, Manager Love's Young Pallion Combination, writes: "After a thorough trial and convincing evidence, I am confident Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, hence all, and comes when everything else fails. The greatest kindness I can do any many thousand friends in life urge them to try it." Free trial bottles at Wm. M. Haggard Drugstore. Regular size 50c, and $1. To reach the sunshine" as a blood partner. T. Be Detroit Press Press magazine: "Hilda's Rhema syrup, prepared by The Orford Wright Medicine Company, of this city, has struck the Golden Man, in the thickness of all blood diarrhea, and its amount in no dues that an human, pure and valuable medicine, is not intangible of estimating the cathetis of every family. These means to be but one opinion on its worth so a family medicine." This is the real measure of the manness of this wonderful remedy. In perfect quiet action, in measuring all important vital parameters from blood. He here should be without it, in it through and essential blood purifier for young and old. For male by D. W. Hunt. Broadway's Beautiful Times. The bad Salary in this world for Colin Bradley Sams, Ulman, Stal Hyphen, From Serta, Taiton, Charged Monthly (California), Corn, and Old Salt; Broadway, and probably more than any required. It is gratuitous to these past additions at many rail stations. Paul M. Smith per bar for sale by Wm. M. Haggard. John Fisherman within a peculiar of the same sharing. Call on him would bear that. Nor would a dollar's worth of stock be offered public until the company had complete and perfect equipped ships in which they could ask the public to furnish it might be placed on the market, but as prudent not a shame is for sale. "When it is first presented to you," said Mr Burney, "it seems simply impossible—it is really the simplest and most personal matter in this world. New was there once so great an abundance by a more solid husband and financial assistance. I have no more doubt of its amount than of the fact that I shall be in Grand Rapids in the morning. Of course, if successful, it will revolutionize the world even more than the mailroom or the telegraph has done. We are already in correspondence with the postoffice department at Washington, and have been informed that the mail will be sent by our airplane; we prove that they can fly faster than the present mail station. They have not realized the disappointment that that in four months a man will be able to fly over the continental Saturday night and return in time for business Monday morning." The first war hones St. Louis for Mount Carmel within two months, and will then dume to Chicago where the man and a few hundred grants will allow a day's vacation for a trip to the Pacific coast or to many other distant points—Rosville (II.) Plane, Oct. 9. Van Bustin. Count Holmes van Bustin, whose mischief was last celebrated with grape repelling by the Guernsey nation, was born in Middlesbury on October 29, 1831. He brings up an inflexibly who had their own plan for assimilation in the place where he was born. He was making his father attentive to an article in Holstein; there in Dempster; he and his siblings came out to Guernsey; he learned all things necessary for assimilation at Presbyterian church; and in Bristol he attended a parochial school in Bristol Military Academy. Adult children by their fathers remained true to their parents' wishes; but only on their behalf did they have their own plans for assimilation into American society. In a humble manner he received his education from St. Louis University School of Law; he graduated from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he received his degree from Columbia University College of Law; he reached her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida but she have not yet achieved her goal for this year in Florida但她有未完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成的任务,未能完成任务, 未能完成任务, 未能完成任务, 未能完成任务, 未能完成任务, 未能完成任务, 未能完成任务, 未能完成任务, 未能完成任务, 未能完成任务, 未能完成任务, 未能完成任务, 未能完成任务, 未能完成任务, 未能完成任务, 未能完成任务, 未能完成任务, 未能完成任务, 未能完善的内容, 完善的内容, 完善的内容, 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Keep the mines in a cool place, and spread them out. Never pile them up in hamps. The grade of milk in bottles is increasing in popularity in some of the Rumba States. Use a little matten yellow or vanilla when there are signs of the cow's teats wrinkling. Plane for numbering farm bunnies and others in the country are being tried in some states. If there is anything that needs a thorough cleaning commonly it is in the water-trough. While putting the tools and implements away do not forget to coat them with kerosene, as it is an excellent preventive of rust. All recent agricultural exchanges than war be the practice of sulpharing fruit condens it. Net one has a word to say in its favor. Germany sent to the United States last year best root sugar to the value of $1,000,000. Two years ago the amount was less than $1,300,000. In France a practical knowledge of gardening is given in the primary schools. In this country the gardens of many large farmers are small and poor. If you intend putting out trees this fall the ground should be made ready. No moisture should be used, but the earth thrown next to the roots should be rich. The fine polish on the horns of show cattle is given by first scraping with glass, rubbing with emery paper, and then rubbing well with linened or neat's-foot oil. How long to keep a cow depends on how well she is doing. Age should be given no consideration as long as the cow does her equal to the younger one and gives a profit. Fences depend on the objects in view. A plain fence with no barbe may keep horses, cows and hogs confined, but to prevent the ball from getting out there is nothing like barbed wire and plenty of it. It is well known that if a venual is full of water no air can enter therein. Water is also a conductor of heat, and its presence in the soil largely condenses to the degree of heat or cold to which till land reaches under certain conditions. Plants require moisture, but will not thrive if the land is wet, because the excess of moisture prevents the warmth from reaching the roots. To render the land warm, dry and adapted to the production of crops, the water on the soil must be reduced below its usual level. As the water in the soil must be lowered to an extent to permit harm to transect on the land, and an open dishies are obstructions and entail expenses in repair and cleaning, the only correct method of draining land is by tiling placed under the ground and at a depth sufficient to carry off the water at all seasons. It is not necessary to explain the manner in which tiles are placed on the ground for purposes of drainage, as it is very simple and also familiar to nearly all farmers; but the majority of farmers do not view the matter from a standpoint of economy. The cost of tiles, the placing of them in position and the labor in general overshadows the great advantages gained. The object here is to point out the fact that tile drainage brings under cultivation land that would otherwise be of no value. Heat and air on the soil are essential to plant growth. The air exerts an influence in breaking down combinations in supplying oxygen, while heat hastens and promotes all chemical processes. As the water is compelled by its weight and other natural influences due to gravity, to escape by the nearest outlet, it is carried off by the drain tiles very rapidly, and it is impossible for the water to again remain near the surface after the land is once open for cultivation. As the water in the cold soil demands the air follows, and the earth becomes dry, and consequently more porous. The escape of the water upon a vacuum, which is immediately filled with air, and warmth is carried wherever the air enters. The soil, which was before saturated with stagnant water, is now rendered failable, and the moisture which reaches the plants is fresh from the clouds carrying oxygen and heat, the roots going down into the sub-soil in search of moisture during dry seasons, which the dried and porous soil remains, although the excess is carried off. The air also comes from below through the drain pipes, and not only a dry soil is obtained by drainage, but the land can be cultivated early in the season, is easily wormed along the spring begin, and in a single year day, with a suitable crop, pay the mature cost of drainage. — Philadelphia Record Twenty-four for The Mailings. The credit for the institution of Thanksgiving day is greatly due to New England, but it has now spread over the whole land. The fine polish on the horns of show cattle is given by first scraping with glass, rubbing with emery paper, and then rubbing well with linened or neat's-foot oil. How long to keep a cow depends on how well she is doing. Age should be given no consideration as long as the cow does her equal to the younger one and gives a profit. Fences depend on the objects in view. A plain fence with no barbe may keep horses, news and hogs confined, but to prevent the ball from getting out there is nothing like barbed wire and plenty of it. Begin the work of stopping up the cracks of the barn and outhouses. The wind will find all those that you overlook, and on cold days more food will be required, because more cold gets in. Chemicals for preserving milk are more dangerous than the impure milk. No dairy-man should use any substances for preserving milk unless he knows of what it is composed, as his customers have rights in the matter which he is in duty bound to respect. Honey is one of nature's purest sweets, valuable both as food and medicine. It has always been esteemed a luxury—the food of kings. Kaken in small quantities with other food it is very nourishing, and favors the cure of pulmonary diseases and colds. The old greeks make batter layers and mothers than the young ones, and can be kept for breeding for years. As old greeks are not readily salable in market, the young ones only should be sold. If given a good range, greeks will cost but very little, as they delight in green food and insects, and forage industrially. No animal should be guarded more carefully than the cow. She daily provides milk as an article of food, and should she be attacked by disease, or suffer ailment of any kind, the whole family may incur danger. It is more important to look after the health of the cow than to the health of the horse. In gathering squashes before severe frost, bear in mind that their keeping well roots vary largely in the manner they are handled. Any which accidentally become bruised should be kept out for first use, and not put in with others, as they will surely rot and cause the others to decay as wall. A cool, dry location is best for preserving over winter. A change from grass to dry food means a change in the quantity of milk, unless the food is varied and some succulent food, such as amallage or roots, be allowed in addition to hay and grain. Some cows fall off in milk when put on dry food and do not regain in yield until the next spring. Regulating the milk supply by regulating the food and its quality is something that requires judgment. A healthy hen needs nothing. If a tonic, or medicine, is required, let it be something simple. Give it in the drinking water, and small quantitition. Never compel the hen to drink or eat anything that they do not seem to partake with a relish. The simplest tonic is fresh, air-claacked lime in the water, a small quantity only being necessary. A little salt in the food will also be beneficial. During this winter season some kind of sorbent material should be used on the roosts of the poultry house as a remedy for this purpose, and it wish to lay a supply of it, present time is when it should be done. The facility with which dry dirt can be procured, and its law should be an inducement to have a The credit for the institution of Thanksgiving day is greatly due to New England, but it has now been spread over the whole land that it is deeply national in its character. Thanksgiving turkeys are now being fastened for the month, for no matter how many years into the large adjoining area that important day, the market adds yet demonstrained. High prices always rule just before holidays, and the owner does not run much risk in losing his stock even if a full in prison should result from an ever supply. The cold storage system is no perfet in the markets that the birds can be kept until the plant is ever. More turkeys are raised in the West than in the East, but so rules they are not so good birds as the normally fastened Eastern turkeys. The Eastern turkeys are carefully fed from their birth, formed tart and malted fish in the Fall, picked occasionally, never malted, and stored cold for high prices. Central attention and sympathetic feeding attempts for much in turkey mining, for flavor and quality of the meat take a vast difference in the prices received. Some cases to protect the wild turkey to the drought-tolerant fowl, and big primes are now paid for the wild meat. The turkey is its wild state is naturally Anatomy, and not formally planted in the farmstead from Canada to Florida, but he is no longer note that he is indeed found around the world of the Southern States. However, turkeys still abound throughout the plains of northeast, this disturbance may make such a map quite difficult to adapt their original habitats. This is often they grow more easily, malted butter, and malted wheat. Although this is too simple plans of feeding them properly which food which they like. They do better when they have the unpleasant smell of a squirrel mice, some of the fairly being snowdrops and pussy flowers, and bind will fall. It might up in summer peanuts and not initially they have something of the fine quality of the sugar grapes, and almost this time. They should have plenty of sugar, but not be found in past of their being entirely. Finally at first should be slowly when they have matured for it during the dry time, and have not found enough. During the disturbing period they should have extra attention, and very plan to keep them as soon as possible. On to W. M. Higgins (Sussex) and put a sample bird on a tray. Nothing less. It is a splendid hunting preparation. Magill of A healthy hen needs nothing. If a tonic, or medicine, is required, let it be something simple. Give it in the drinking water, and small quantity. Never compel the hen to drink or eat anything that they do not seem to partake with a relish. The simplest tonic is fresh, air-claack lime in the water, a small quantity only being necessary. A little salt in the food will also be beneficial. During the winter season some kind of sorbent material should be used for the roosts. Nothing dirty for this purpose, and wish to lay a supply of it, the present time is when it should be done. The facility with which dry dirt can be procured, and its low cost should be an inducement to have a plentiful supply stored away for winter use, and the poultryman who does so will not regret it. Nearly all stables are made with ventilators, or have some kind of arrangement for ventilation. The matter of how to ventilate without allowing the warmth to escape, and to avoid colds from draughts of air, demands attention. Many animals contract diseases in winter by being exposed to draughts from ventilators when the wind blows from certain directions. It is safe to claim that more victims have resulted from two much fresh air in winter than from too little. A single coat of spirits of turpentine or herne applied to the black knot in plum and cherry trees would destroy it; also, linseed oil applied with a brush in a similar manner two or three times would destroy it. In either case, care must be taken not to apply to any but the affected parts of the tree. It is not necessary to remove the knot when this application is made. Of course, the remedy should be used as soon as the knot or mortar makes its appearance. The remedy is so simple that it deserves a trial by our friends. Cultivation of orchards, as a rule, fail in finding their roots by merely damping a little heap of peapower around the base of each when it should be maintained overnight on the mating surface as far as the branches extend. The roots usually extend at least twice as far on the branches; and if the branches of a large tree extend twenty feet from the ground, the roots have pushed out at least forty feet. One who grows those trees should have a definite idea from the start as to what he means in the way of a tap, and then each year he should prune according to the plan. If this pruning should be neglected for the first four years, the tree will suffer too much mating away when the growth or finally consumes power. A good top can never be obtained unless it is attended from the stems. While early spring is usually the best time to prune, put there are occasions when the wood may be done on growing time, or it matures. The rich well cultivated in summers may be available immediately and a hardie animal of predation in hibernation; and in terms of this pest may be quite admirable.