anaheim-gazette 1893-06-22
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VOLUME XXIII.
LODGE MEETINGS
NAHEIM LODGE, NO. 207, F. & A. M., hold regular meetings on the Monday of or preceding the full moon in each month. Sojourning brethren in good standing are cordially invited to attend. W. M. McFADDEN, W. M. H. W. CURSOWERN, Secretary.
NAHEIM LODGE, NO. 199, I. O. O. P. REGULAR MEETINGS every Tuesday evening. Visiting brothers always welcome. A. M. WILLIAMS, N. G. W. R. HARKER, Secretary.
NAHEIM LODGE, NO. 85, A. O. U. W. MEETINGS on the first and fourth Friday of every month. H. R. GROGAN, M. W. T. S. GRIMSBHAW, Secretary.
ORDER CHOSEN FRIENDS MEETS THE FIRST AND third Wednesday evenings in each month at 3 o'clock. Odd Fellows' Hall. MRS. L. F. LEWIS, Councillor. A. L. LEWIS, Secretary.
VERGREEN COUNCIL, AMERICAN LEGION OF Honor. Meets accountant last Wednesday of each month, at 3 p.m. WM. CROWTHER, W.A. WITTE, Secretary.
MALVERN HILL POST, NO. 131, G. A.R., meets every fourth Saturday in Chadbourne's Hall, Fullerton. All comrades and visiting comrades are welcome. M. H. DUNN, Commander. J. B. McCOLLOCON, Adjutant.
INVINGIBLE PARLOR, NO. 74, NATIVE SONS of the Golden West, meets the first and third Saturday of each month. Visiting brothers always welcome. H.W.DYER, President.
FELICIDAD PARLOR, NO. 52, NATIVE DAUGHTERS of the Golden West, meets the first and third Thursday of each month at 3 o'clock. MISS LOUISA WEIRKEVER, President.
NAHEIM TENT, NO. 9, KNIGHTS OF THE Macabees of the World, meets the second and fourth Saturday of every month. Sojourning brethren in good standing are invited to attend. W.T.BROWN, Commander. E.S.WARE, Record Keeper.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
D. W.HUNT, M.D.
Physician and Surgeon.
MISCELLANEOUS.
SPRING SEAS
I HAVE RECIVED THE BEST AND MOIST OF Dry Goods & Fancy That will be in the market for next Spring early in the season I had first picked Novelties, consisting of Woolen Dress Suits,
All evening shades of Nun's Veiling, Colore Toile du Nora, Scotch Zephyrs, Satee (plain and figured), Seer Sucker, Olc Percales, Linens, Scrim for Curtains, Laces, etc.
Ladies', Misses' and Children's Shoes,
Men's and Boys
FELICIDAD PARLOR, NO. 52, NATIVE DAUGHTERS of the Golden West, meets the first and third Thursdays of each month at 3 o'clock P.M. MISS LOUISA WEHMEYER, President. MISS MARGARET HUGGINS, Sec'y.
ANAHEIM TENT, NO. 9, KNIGHTS OF THE Macabees of the World, meets the second and fourth saturdays of every month. Sojourning brethren in good standing are invited to attend. W. T. BROWN, Commander. E. S. WARR, Record Keeper.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
D. W. HUNT, M. D. Physician and Surgeon.
Also U. S. Examining Surgeon.
At my residence, 7 to 8 A.M.; at my office, 10:30 to 12 M.; at my residence, 8 to 9 P.M.; at my office 1 to 3 P.M.
FRANK T. RIMPAU.
DRUGGIST AND CHEMIST,
Graduate of College of Pharmacy.
265 North Main street, opposite Baker block, Los Angeles, Cal.
Prescriptions carefully compounded. The patronage of the public respectfully solicited.
H. W. CHYNOWETH,
Attorney-At-Law.
Helmsen Building, Center street.
NOTARY PUBLIC.
Real Property Law a Specialty.
ANAHEIM, CAL.
RICHARD MELROSE
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
AND
NOTARY PUBLIC.
Center street, Anaheim, Cal.
Special attention given to PROBATE matters.
T. S. GRIMSHAW.
... Dealer In...
Lumber.
Sash, Doors, Blinds, Scroll Sawing, Planing, Turning, Moulding. Shop work of every description.
Orange boxes in any quantity and at reasonable prices.
Lime, Hair and Cement in any quantity.
Grist Mill in Operation Wednesdays and Saturdays of each Week.
FULLERTON, CALIF.
L. NEMITZ,
THE PAINTER,
Shop on Center street', near the opera-house.
I am ready to do first-class Carriage Painting & Trimming GENERAL JOBBING
L. GUNTHER.
PIONEER BOOT & SHOE MAKER.
Corner Adele and Los Angeles treets.
ALBERTSON & MIDDLEHAM
(plain and figured), Seer Sucker, Olc
Percales, Linens, Serim for Curtains, Laces, etc.
I invite my friends and the public in general my stock before purchasing elsewhere. No trouble if you do not intend to buy at once.
Goods delivered to all parts of the city.
H. CAHE
DAY: LIGHT:
GROCERIES AND CONFECTIONERY ...
NOTIONS, CUTLER
The Latest and Newest Kinds.
PIPES,-CIGARS-ANDAgent for Papers and Magazines
You can save time, trouble and risk by subscribing JOSEPH HE
O. R. LUEDK
Watchmaker and
A FINE ASSORTMENT OF WATCHES
Clocks, Jewelry, Silverware and Optical Goods Always on Hand.
Center Street, Opp. Comme
Carrlage Painting & Trimming
GENERAL JOBBING
L. GUNTHER.
PIONEER BOOT & SHOE MAKER.
Corner Adele and Los Angeles treets.
ALBERTSON & MIDDLEHAM
House - Painters!
Paper Hanging, Kalsomining.
All work done with neatness and dispatch. A share of the public patronage solicited.
Opposite Postoffice.
A. D. Porter.
H. A. McWilliams.
PORTER & McWILLIAMS.
CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS.
Office and shop, first door south of Ferdinand Backs' Furniture Store.
Los Angeles street, Anaheim.
H. P. LARSEN,
CONTRACTOR & BUILDER.
Estimates given, Contracts made and do a general Jobbing Business.
CENTER STREET, ANAHEIM.
CHAS. SCHINDLER,
CONTRACTOR and BUILDER.
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA.
GEORGE BAUER,
BOOT AND SHOE MAKER.
Center street... Anaheim.
Making and repairing at the lowest cash price. All ers promptly attended to. All work guarantees
FOR SALE.
Ten, twenty and forty acre tracts, improved nd unimproved.
Low Prices. Apply to H. D. POLHEMUS, Miraflores, Cal.
Postoffice address—Anaheim, Cal.
A FINE ASSORTMENT OF
WATCHES
Clocks, Jewelry, Silverware and Optical Goods Always on Hand.
Center Street, Opp. Comme
WM. R. HARR
DEALER IN...
Harness, Saddles, Robe
BRUSHES, COMBS
Repairing - Neatly
My Harness Shop will compare favorably w or adjoining Counties. Call and inspect my st purchasing elsewhere.
It is my aim to please my customers, and I pared than ever to give the public Great Bargain partments of my large Harness Store.
KROEGER'S BLOCK, CENTER STREET
GUS DA
Groceries and
Informs his customers and the general publ to sell goods at the smallest margin possible. I therefore can sell for a very small profit, giving efit of low prices. No charge for showing good tions. Come one, Come all!
All Kinds of Produce and Poultry Ta
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA. THURSDAY, JUNE 22, 1893.
THE SILVER QUESTION.
MR. GOSCH'S VIEWS AS EXPRESSED IN THE ENGINEERING AND MINING JOURNAL.
Mr. C. H. Gosch of this city, than whom there is not a better posted man in the country on the silver question, was lately asked by the editors of the New York Engineering and Mining Journal for his views upon that question. Mr. Gosch is extensively interested in silver mines in Mexico, and his mining business is appreciably affected by the constant fluctuations in the price of the white metal, which has likewise a very serious effect upon the entire financial fabric. He has studied this important question thoroughly, and is, we think, entirely competent to speak upon it in its every detail, the very fact that his opinion is solicited from a high authority in New York financial circles being certainly very creditable to him. Mr. Gosch writes upon "Universal Bimetallism and a Monetary Clearing-House." His letter, which we reproduce, is as follows:
Editor Engineering and Mining Journal—Sir: Your very able and explicit article in your issue of May 6th, headed, "Universal Bimetallism and a Monetary Clearing-House," most lucidly explains all points of the plan proposed by your journal for the solution of the "Silver Problem," published last year just before the adjournment of the Brussels Monetary Conference.
You very truly say that "fully two thirds of the world's population with all their belongings are based exclusively on unstable and ever-fluuctuating silver money," making it absolutely impossible for them to calculate been charged with an attack on a particular class, and it would seem that the right manable gentleman thinks more of the world who is to have a pound of flesh, who owes to have the sovereign, and whom it will be monstrous to compel to take silver ahead of gold."
This last sentence of Mr. Gosch's wonderfully well chosen, and striking nail square on the head. The English position to any change of their mount system is not to be ascribed to the people large, but exclusively to the all-powerful gold plutocracy, who deal in only one which is gold, and who, to make their scarce and sought for, have hit on persons their worst competitor, silver, in which they so far have been wonderfully successful, regardless of consequences to the nature of the world, and specially to the own country. They have embarked in "ra banque" and "apres nous le deluge" game, not aware of the fact that the delay they are conjuring up will be of such dimensions as to wipe out their "piles" as if they were nothing.
It surely is not a pleasant task to use a bitter truth. But in such a portentous question as this, that if badly handled throw the whole world back a century, it comes imperative to speak the naked truth. As already said, of the class that forms seemingly invincible barrier to a satisfactory solution of the silver problem, Baron Rothchild has made the one and honorable caption of confessing to the imminent danger of the prolonged actual situation before Brussels conference; but it appears that independent and mainly action has had echo on the balance of the great money rather gold, centers of England.
It is most fortunate that the real truth the situation is dawning on the most conservative of all countries. The great mass facturing and industrial centers, together with the merchants and hundreds of thousands of laborers, are beginning to see cause of the decrease of their form flourishing export trade. Every day swell their numbers, and the pressure the government will finally become...
Sir: Your very able and explicit article in your issue of May 6th, headed, "Universal Bimetallism and a Monetary Clearing-House," most lucidly explains all points of the plan proposed by your journal for the solution of the "Silver Problem," published last year just before the adjournment of the Brussels Monetary Conference.
You very traly say that "fully two thirds of the world's population with all their belongings are based exclusively on unstable and ever-fluuctuating silver money," making it absolutely impossible for them to calculate the cost of anything bought and payable in gold. This same majority of the world's population has been consuming the greater part of the products of English manufactures, and to them England owes the greater part of her wealth of to-day. The extraordinary fall of silver, however, has brought those willing contributors to England's wealth to the verge of ruin and bankruptcy, and the great decrease of the export trade to those countries is the natural consequence.
Besides the indebtedness of the silver-basis countries to England is estimated by Mr. Beckett, M. P., at £800,000,000, or about $4,000,000,000. How can England expect that those ruined debtors are able to pay even a moderate interest, which, being payable in gold, to them means an additional 40 or 50 per cent in silver? Ought not the recent Argentine collapse to be a rai sample, although on a small scale, of what inevitably will and must happen on a very much larger scale if the laws of cause and effect established by nature are still in force?
The answer to any question as to who will be the greatest loser in such a general breakdown is easy; it is England, and yet it is England whose strenuous efforts and hostile attitude against any change of her own, and thereby the world's monetary matters, have frustrated the objects of the Brussels conference. Her opposition was predicted and fully confirmed during all the sessions of the said financial high court. It has been fully proved since England's hostile attitude had an official character, and her delegates were instructed to obstruct any and all practical propositions that might be presectuted. They faithfully adhered to their instructions, with the honorable exception of Baron Rothschild, who, in a short but most eloquent speech, depicted to the conference the dangers inherent to the present monetary situation, and the financial catastrophe that must follow if the actual silver calamity were not settled, and the majority of the world's population suffering under it were not relieved by restoring to them a fixed measure of value of their currency. This lucid recognition of the true situation by England's leading financier is the more encouraging as it shows that the lurking dangers are known and appreciated, and if the rest of the great money and gold plutocracy were able to see their true interests they would follow Mr. Rothschild's example. That the English government has been influenced by this short-sighted plutocracy is fully shown up by the debates in Parliament of March 1st, published in full by the (London) Standard regarding the reassembling of the "International Monetary Conference." After Premier Gladatono had laid down his policy, adverse to a reassembling of the conference, ex-Chancellor of the Exchequer Goschen, whose child has made the one and honorable cession of confessing to the imminent danger of the prolonged actual situation before Brussels conference; but it appears that independent and mainly action has had echo on the balance of the great money rather gold, centers of England.
It is most fortunate that the real truth the situation is dawning on the most servative of all countries. The great manfacturing and industrial centers, together with the merchants and hundreds of the saudis of laborers, are beginning to seize cause of the decrease of their form flourishing export trade. Every day we swell their numbers, and the pressure the government will finally become strong to be resisted any long r.
The attitude of Germany, France and other European countries on the silver question is entirely dependent on that of land; in case of a crash she would have bear the whole responsibility.
The chances of final success would be very much advanced if, as is now the meeting of the next conference is presented till November. In the intervening time your admirable plan can be spread and wide, and discussed in all its details which it can only gain; as its provisions pose no sacrifice on any country, but, on contrary, make every one a gainer by adding it, it must find favor even with severeest hypercritics. If therefore, imperiality can be secured and jealousy exclude it will no doubt be adopted.
C. H. Gosseau
Anaheim, Cal., May 15, 1893.
La Grippe.
During the prevalence of the Gripppe past seasons it was a noticeable fact that those who depended upon Dr. King's M Discovery, not only had a speedy recovery but escaped all thistlebome after effect of the malady. This remedy seems to be a peculiar power in effecting rapid curcuma only in cases of La Gripppe, but in all diacre of throat, chest and lungs, and has causes of asthma and hay fever of long standing. Try it and be convinced. It will disappoint. Free trial bottles at W. Higgins' Drug Store.
SOUTHERN PACIFIC RAILWAY TIME TABLE
Trains pass Anaheim as follows:
FROM ARRIVE AT ANAHEIM
Tustin
Santa Ana to Los Angeles
Los Angeles to Santa Ana
Los Angeles to Santa Ana
Anahiem to Tustin
* Except Sundays. Street cars connect with trains.
Santa Fe Route.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA RAILWAY COMPANY
TIME TABLE—In effect January 1, 1893.
Trains pass Anaheim as follows:
NORTH BOUND
Los Angeles Accom., daily
Belt Line Express, daily
Belt Line mail (daily)
Atlantic Express, daily
South bound.
Santa Ana Accom., daily
Pacific Express, daily
Belt Line mail, daily except Sunday
San Diego Mail (daily).
D.S. HILL Agency
Santa Ana Railroad Time Table
(Daily except Sunday.) In effect November 23,
Leave Santa Ana—9:30 A.M. Leave Newport—4:
(On steamer days there will be an extra train running Santa Ana at 6 P.M.)
ALL WORK
CAREFULLY
Repaired
Warranted
Opp. Commercial Hotel.
MR. HARKER,
...DEALER IN...
Huddles, Robes, Whips,
ES, COMBS, ETC.
- Neatly - Done!
Compare favorably with any shop in this small and inspect my stock and prices before my customers, and I am now better prepared to public Great Bargains in the various dealers Store.
CK, CENTER STREET. ANAHEIM.
DAVIS
Seeds and Seeds!
and the general public that he is prepared at margin possible. He buys for cash and may small profit, giving his customers the benign urge for showing goods or answering queries!
and Poultry Taken in Exchange
This lucid recognition of the true situation by England's leading financier is the more encouraging as it shows that the lurking dangers are known and appreciated, and if the rest of the great money and gold plutocracy were able to see their true interests they would follow Mr. Rothschild's example. That the English government has been influenced by this short-sighted plutocracy is fully shown up by the debates in Parliament of March 1st, published in full by the (London) Standard regarding the reassembling of the "Interational Monetary Conference." After Premier Gladstone had laid down his policy, adverse to a reassembling of the conference, Chancellor of the Exchequer Goschen, whose standing as a high authority in financial circles nobody will dispute, combatted Mr. Gladstone's policy in an eloquent speech. As most likely but few of your readers have read said highly interesting debate, it may not be amiable to cite a few of Mr. Goschen's most pungent sallies, containing dowaright charges of partiality in this most important question:
1. "What I am concerned with is, that gold in relation to commodities has varied not 3 or 4 per cent, but 40 per cent."
2. "I can give proof of the right honorable gentleman desires it, and quote Mr. Griffin, who is one of the highest living authorities on the subject. He says: 'I say positively that the recent change from a high to a low level of prices is due to a change in money in the nature and direction of absolute contraction of the currency.'"
3. "It was my impression, and that of those who were present in Brussels, that it was the action of the British delegates which practically broke up the conference."
4. "I think we are not asking too much of the government in saying we wish them to do their beat once more to bring the conference together."
5. "The right honorable gentleman asked if it was not absurd to go into the conference without any chance of finding a solution of the question, but I would point out to him what was said by the Royal Commission, of which his own Lord Chancellor was a member. That commission stated that in their opinion it might be worth while to meet the great commercial nations in any proposal that would lead to a more extended use of silver, and so tend to prevent a further falling off in the value of commodities. The whole of the commission were in favor of that proposal, and I think that no difficulty should stand in the way of a final solution of this most complex problem; and we further say that this is not a proposition to be treated with ridicule."
6. "It cannot be denied that, if England would only put forward some plan for an increased use of silver, it would be hailed with acclamation by all the nations of Europe. Let me now refer to the six hundred millions to which reference has been made. If I had made the speech of the right honorable gentleman I should have
Santa Ana Accom daily... 6:58
Belt Linen mall daily... 9:07
Santa Ana Accom daily... 11:54
Santa Ana Accom daily... 2:43
San Diego Express daily... 5:25
D.S.HILL Acre
Santa Ann Railroad Time Table (Daily except Sunday.) In effect November 23, 1894 Leave Santa Ana—9:30 A.M. Leave Newport—4:43 (On steamer days there will be an extra train bringing Santa Ana at 6 P.M.)
Strength and Health.
If you are not feeling strong and healthy Electric Bitters. If La Gruppe has you weak and weary, use Electric Bitters This remedy acts directly on liver, stomach and kidneys, gently aiding those organs perform their functions. If you are afflicted with sick headache, you will find speedy permanent relief by taking Electric Bitters One trial will convince you that this is remedy you need. Large bottles only 50 ml at W. M. Higgins' Drug Store.
General Kirby Smith's Daughter
Two months ago, in the most obsessive pigeon hole in the Postmaster General's office the application of Carrie Kirby Smith filled away. It was not weighty with sons why she should be appointed, nor it lay any particular claims to the attention of President Cleveland. It bore no indemnment. It was simply an humble petition that the applicant might be given the office at Sewanee, Tenn. The only scant which might recommend this prayer to Bissell was the closing paragraph:
"I am the daughter of the late Gen.mund Kirby Smith."
The fair applicant kept what she done a secret for three weeks, when she grown accustomed to her disappointment receiving no reply, she told some one she dared to ask to distribute the mail residents about the mountain state and to the students of the University of South, who depend on this office for letters. Thus her secret became known and now two generations are watching her appointment—that which made its order along with Kirby Smith and another which has grown up with his daughter the Cumberland Plateau. When Shoup, the Indiana sharpshooter, now copying the chair of applied mathematic Swanage University, heard that K Smith's "war baby" wanted an office swore by all the Union and Confederate soldiers at once that she should have place.
"We will put her in if we have to call a regiment of war veterans to do it," he added. And this has literally come to pass. By the Confederate Survivors' Association Nashville the humble application was known throughout the South, and finally reached the line of the Grand Army on R public posts in the North. The fact
JUNE 22, 1893.
NEWS IN BRIEF
The 40,000 souvenir silver dollars authorized by Congress have been finished at the Philadelphia mint and shipped to Chicago. The coins, which were authorized at the suggestion of the Board of Lady Managers of the World's Fair, are said to be fine in design and finish as were ever turned out by the government. Owing to their beauty and the limited number issued, it is thought they will command a big premium as souvenirs, and that $2 would perhaps not be an extravagant price.
Thirty thousand acres of land of the Hesperia Land and Water Company, owned by a Los Angeles company, of which P. M. Widney of the University Bank is president, was sold last week to an English syndicate for $750,000. The land is on the north side of the San Bernardino range of mountains, in San Bernardino county, and on the line of the Santa Fe railroad route to Barstow. It is irrigated by water piped from the sources of the Mojave river, several miles distant.
Aunie L. Sloane has begun suit in the San Bernardino Superior Court against the Santa Fe Railway Company asking $10,000 damages. She was ejected from a train near that city some time ago for not having a ticket, the conductor on the train from which she changed having taken her ticket and given no coupon back. When she was put off the train she started to walk to town, and when on the railway trestle a freight train overtook her, and owing to her delicate condition her health was seriously impaired.
Two cases of forgery, to the extent of $9,300, perpetrated on May 13th, were discovered in San Francisco last week. A check drawn by the Bank of Batte County, in Chico, on the London and San Francisco Bank, for $5,500, and a check for $3,800, drawn by the Farmers' Bank of Fresno on the London, Paris and American Bank, were paid. When the discrepancy was discovered in the accounts of the different banks, it was discovered upon examination that the checks had been raised from $35 and $38.
fortunate that the real truth of a is dawning on the most con-
all countries. The great manu-
and industrial centers, together
archants and hundreds of thou-
porors, are beginning to see the
decrease of their formerly
export trade. Every day will
numbers, and the pressure on
ment will finally become too
resisted any long r.
made of Germany, France and the
sean countries on the silver ques-
erly dependent on that of Eng-
hoe of a crash she would have to
role responsibility.
less of final success would surely
although advanced if, as is now said,
of the next conference is post-
November. In the intervening
admirable plan can be spread far
and discussed in all its details, but
only gain; as its provisions im-
plice on any country, but, on the
make every one a gainer by adopt-
must find favor even with the
meritories. If therefore, impa-
ce secured and jealousy excluded,
could be adopted.
C. H. Gosch.
Cal., May 15, 1893.
La Gripps.
the prevalence of the Gripps the it was a noticeable fact that depended upon Dr. King's New not only had a speedy recovery, all the troublesome after effects.
This remedy seems to have power in effecting rapid cure not of La Gripps, but in all diseases aest and lungs, and has cured ama and hay fever of long stand-
and be convinced. It won't Free trial bottles at W. M. Lug Store.
PACIFIC RAILWAY TIME TABLE.
this pass. Anaheim as follows:
ARRIVE AT ANAHEIM.
7:23 A.M.
8:13 A.M.
9:10 A.M.
10:13 P.M.
Santa Ana.
6:17 P.M.
6:17 P.M.
Street cars connect with all T. A. DARLING, Agent.
Santa Fe Route.
CALIFORNIA RAILWAY COMPANY TABLE.-In effect January 1, 1893.
Annaheim as follows:
NORTH BOUND.
8:00 A.M.
9:27 A.M.
9:27 A.M.
10:44 P.M.
5:04 P.M.
5:04 P.M.
SouthBound.
6:58 A.M.
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
daily,
D.S. HILL, Agent.
AN RAILRIDE TIME TABLE.
sunday.) In effect November 23, 1891.
Mays there will be an extra train leave-
at 6 P.M.
Strength and Health.
not feeling strong and healthy.
Bitters. If La Gripps has left and weary, use Electric Bitters.
acts directly on liver, stomach gently aiding those organs to functions. If you are afflicted
How many remedies are which merely relieve without uprooting disease. The contrast with sterling medicines which such palliative afford, not only enhances the dignity of the former, but serves to emphasize the folly of employing half-way measures when thorough ones are available. A marked instance of this is the effect, on the one hand, of Hostaet's Stomach Bitters in cases of chills and fever
The following transfers of real estate have been recorded during the week:
Christopher Stappenback, by Sheriff, to William Koenig—Original town lot 24, Anaheim; $2,700.
J. B. Pierce to Frank J. Womner—Lots 53 and 55, in vineyard lot E 5, Langenberger trt, Anaheim; $10.
Thomas S. Fuller to W.G. Rurtz—Und int in lots 1 and 2, Anaheim Homestead trt; $6,000.
Alfred Day Jr., and Mary Day to Edwin T. Munn and Rebecca A. Munn—Blocks 23, 25, 26 and 39, except lot 37, block 39, Carlton; $2,000.
Matt E. Copeland and Rilda M. Copeland to E. F. Pickering—6 acres on SW corrier of North and E streets, Anaheim; $3,200.
John Nutt and Annie E. Nutt to Alfred E Nutt—NE of NE Sec 29, T 4, R 10; $5.
A. E. Nutt to RC Vroom—SW of SE Sec 20, T 4, R 10; $1,000.
J.W. Shirley and Mary V Shirley to John R. Berkehill—Five acres in NW of SW Sec 6, T 5, R 9; $1.
Estate of Milton R. Chambers, deceased, certified copy of decree of distribution—One half each to Frances M Chambers and Jenie O. Chambers, lots 15 and 16, blk 4, Anaheim.
Herman Werder and Eliza Werder to Mrs. Cynthia Emery—Blak 16, Whitaker's add, Buena Park; $400.
Annaheim Co operative Best Sugar Company to George Hansen—S 10 acres of E 50 acres of SW Sec 31, T 3, R 10; also W 20 acres of E 70 acres SW Sec 31, T 3, R 10; $1.
B.F. Pritchard and Mary A. Pritchard to Pacific Condensed Milk, Canning and Coffee Company—SW of SW of NE Sec 9, T 4, R 11; $10.
S.S. Wood and Lazzie M. Wood to Edward R. Amerige—Lot 36, blk 22, Fullerton; $20.
Benjamin M. List and Elizabeth List to Frank B. Ransom—NW of NW Sec 27, T 4, R 10; $1.
Frank B. Ransom and Homer J.Ronsom to John B.Rea—Same property; $3,500.
Stearns Ranchos Company to John Kordae—E of NW of NE Sec 10, T 4, R 11; $10.
Estate of John Adams, deceased to M. Nobelung, confirming sale—N' lot 48, Anaheim Extension, except 1 acre in NW corner; $1,700.
Thomas H. French to Samuel French—NE of NE Sec 24, T 3, R 10; also lots 1 and 2, blk A., Kraemer trt; $10.
Thomas Dunn and Isabella Dunn to William Kelly—SE of SW of NW Sec 16, T 4, R 10; $75.
Completely Uprooted.
How many remedies are which merely relieve without uprooting disease. The contrast with sterling medicines which such palliative afford, not only enhances the dignity of the former, but serves to emphasize the folly of employing half-way measures when thorough ones are available. A marked instance of this is the effect, on the one hand, of Hostaet's Stomach Bitters in cases of chills and fever
The Church of Chudley Monastery, which is within the walls of the Kremlin at Moscow, was recently robbed of a vast amount of plate, money and gems. The plate had just been used in the ceremonies attendant upon the reception of the Czar, and had not returned to the vaults where it is usually kept. The property and money taken amounted to between 2,500,000 and 3,000,000 roubles. Last week all the monks belonging to the monastery were arrested. A search of the cells occupied by them revealed that they had perpetrated the robbery. Secreted in the cells were found diamonds and other gems which had been hastily torn from settings in the holy robes, and holy vessels made of precious metals. The charge of sacrilege has been made against the monks. This is a crime that is punishable in Russia with the most severe penalty. Aside from the scandal arising from the robbery and arrests another cause for gossip has been given through the fact that the police in searching the monastery for the stolen property learned beyond dispute that a number of women had been living secretly with the monks for a considerable time.
The Country Editor.
The Gilroy Gazette contains some very judicious remarks about the value of the country paper. It rebukes the local silurians who are unable to see advertising is of any direct benefit to them, and explains how a good newspaper builds up a town and how all the business in its locality would languish without it. In fact it makes out little too strong a case for the patriotism of the country editor. It frankly confesses that he impulis his soul in his desire to give his town a good reputation. His paper exaggerates the good and conceals the bad:
"It carefully notes the genial climate, speaks of the fertile soil and chronicles the
Strength and Health.
Not feeling strong and healthy,
Bitters. If La Gripe has left
and weary, use Electric Bitters.
acts directly on liver, stomach
gently aiding those organs to
or functions. If you are afflicted
headache, you will find speedy and
effective by taking Electric Bitters.
All convince you that this is the
need. Large bottles only 50 cts.
Giggles Drug Store.
Kirby Smith's Daughter.
Things age, in the most obscure
in the Postmaster General's office.
Carried Kirby Smith was
It was not weighty with reashould be appointed, nor did
particular claims to the attention
Cleveland. It bore no indorsewas simply an humble petition
might be given the Postvance, Teen. The only sentence
recommend this prayer to Mr.
the closing paragraph:
daughter of the late Gen. EdSmith."
Applicant kept what she had
for three weeks, when having
stomated to her disappointment at
reply, she told some one how
ask to distribute the mail to
tats about the mountain station
students of the University of the
depend on this office for their
hus her secret became known,
no generations are watching for
men—that which made its recirhit Kirby Smith and another
rown up with his daughter on
Island Plateau. When Gen.
Indiana sharpshooter, now occuhair of applied mathematics at
university, heard that Kirby
baby wanted an office he
all the Union and Confederate
once that she should have the
put her in if we have to call out
of war veterans to do it," he said,
has literally come to pass. From
rate Survivors' Association at
the humble application was made
throughout the South, and finally
line of the Grand Army of the
asts in the North. The fact that
The Secretary of War has received a report from Mr. Batcheldor of the Gettyburg Battlefield Commission setting forth at great length the wanton destruction of important landmarks on the field by the operations of an electric railroad company, by which he says the whole character of the historic place is being changed. The report has been referred to Colonel Lincoln, Acting Judge Advocate General, for an opinion as to what authority the War Department has to prevent or interfere with the lines of the railroad.
Dr. Gunn's Onion Syrup.
This remedy is a sure cure for all diseases of the throat and lungs, caused by taking cold. It will stop a cough in one night, no matter how severe. It is just what its name implies; an onion syrup, compounded in such manner as to do away with the unpleasant taste and odor of the vegetable. When in need of a cure for a cough or cold, try it. Price 50 cts. Sold by J. Reid, druggist.
Commissioner Miller has prepared a statement which shows that the total sugar bounty for the fiscal year ending June 30th will be $9,403,989. The amount actually paid is as follows: On cane sugar, $8,697,594; on best sugar, $31,363; on sorghum sugar, $19,817; on maple sugar, $60,119.
A Sure Cure for Pills.
Itoching piles are known by moisture like periparation, causing intense itching when warm. This form as well as Blind, Bleeding or Protruding, yield at once to Dr. Bosanko's Pile Remedy, which sets directly on parts affected, absorbs tumors, allays itching and affects a permanent cure. 50 cts. Druggists or mail. Circulars free. Dr. Bosanko, 329 Aroh at., Philadelphia, Pa. Sold by Reid's Drugstore.
It rebukes the local sillurians who are unable to see that advertising is of any direct benefit to them, and explains how a good newspaper builds up a town and how all the business in its locality would languish without it. In fact it makes out little too strong a case for the patriotism of the country editor. It frankly confesses that he imperils his soul in his desire to give his town a good reputation. His paper exaggerates the good and conceals the bad:
"It carefully notes the genial climate, speaks of the fertile soil and chronicles the profitable crop of A, but it suppresses the fact that during the last three or four days the thermometer marked 112 in the shade; that a lot of the land would be dear at any time, and that B and C lost money on their crops. It even inflates your own little self-importance by telling the world that you went to Hollister or San Jose or even so far as San Francisco, but it did not say that you were as drunk as a boiled owl while at the latter place."
We are really sorry to be robbed of our illusions in this way. Reposing unbounded confidence in our catechol contemporary's statements, we had supposed that it never became uncomfortable warm in Gilroy, that all the land in the vicinity was as rich as Nile mud, and that every farmer in the surrounding country was rapidly accumulating wealth. Above all, we had never dreamed that any resident of Gilroy would ever become drunk as an owl, whether boiled or raw.
But the Gazette's admonitions to its backward townpeople are well founded. The condition of a place may always be ganged by the appearance of its newspapers. When the local journal has a poverty-striken look and live advertisements are scarce, it is safe to say that the town is either on the down grade or never got very far up. When a sensible man is thinking of settling in a new place the first thing he does is to get hold of a paper published there. Unless that shows signs of prosperity he looks as mowhere else. What a front gate off its hinges is to a house, a poorly-supported local paper is to a town.
A gentleman, under 40 years of age, whose hair was rapidly becoming thin and gray, began the use of Ayer's Hair Vigor, and in six months his hair was restored to its natural color, and its more enjoyable. It is certainly a most wonderful medicine.