anaheim-gazette 1895-02-21
Searchable text
BIG WARS CAUSED BY TRIFLES.
A Shaven Chin Cost France Three Million Lives—Modena's Bucket.
Many times it has happened that a great and costly war has been brought about by an incident trivial and even ridiculous.
Thus the war of the Spanish succession is said to have been caused through a glass of water. A lady, Mrs. Masham, was carrying a glass of water when she was obstructed by the Marquis de Torey. A slight scuffle ensued, and the water was spilled.
The marquis thereat took offense, and bad feeling ensued between the English and French courts, with the ultimate result that a war was declared.
The campaign cost France many severe battles—viz. Blenheim, 1704; Ramillies, 1707; Audenarde, 1708, and Malplaquet, 1709.
Quite as absurd in its origin was the war that took place during the commonwealth of Modena.
A soldier stole a bucket from a public wall belonging to the state of Bologna. Although the value of the article did not exceed a quarter, its annexation was the signal for a fierce and prolonged war.
Henry, the king of Sardinia, assisted the Modenese to retain the bucket, and in one of the subsequent battles he was made a prisoner. The bucket is still exhibited in the tower of the cathedral of Modena.
A third instance of a war resulting from a trifling cause was that between Louis VII of France and Henry II of England.
The archbishop of Rouen decreed that no one should wear long hair upon their heads or chins. Louis submitted to the decree, whereupon his wife, Eleanor, rallied him upon his appearance. A quarrel ensued, which resulted in the dissolution of the marriage and Eleanor's marriage with Henry.
By this marriage the broad domains in Normandy formerly belonging to Louis passed into the possession of Henry. Louis, hotly incensed, made an attack on Normandy, and henceforth, for nearly 300 years, arose those bloody and devastating wars which cost France upward of 3,000,000 of lives.—London Answers.
CARDINAL ANTONELLI.
The Great Papal Statesman as He Appeared to a Painter.
Rudolph Lehmann's visit to Rome in 1857 led to the painter's introduction to the great papal statesman, Cardinal Antonelli.
Before me sat that execrated statesman, "the best hated man in Rome," in the most affable moods. His ed by absence of body. This lady displayed in the face of danger presence of both mind and body. As the secretary emerged from his doorway, his hands full of such family valuables as his agitated condition had allowed him to collect, Mrs. Jones confronted him with the appalling words:
"My dear, you have forgotten my slippers. You must go back and get them."
General Ross was almost at his door bringing imprisonment or death, but the unhappy man turned back to hunt the slippers, which, it is only fair to Mrs. Jones to add, were adorned with diamond buckles. In his headlong quest for these treasures—which he secured—his wig dropped off in a dark corner, and he did not dare to take time to hunt for it nor to attempt the purchase of another. The shorn appearance of the secretary, hitherto faultless in all appointments of dress, is said to have very much lessened the melancholy of the cabinet journey. It is further asserted that during the time of retirement, no matter how depressed any member of the presidential party felt over public and private woes, if he but glanced at Secretary Jones peal upon peal of irresistible laughter was sure to follow and that the despoiled Adonis cordially joined in these bursts of merriment.—Chicago Tribune.
THE KING OF INNISHKEA.
He Dwells on an Irish Island and Rules a Mayo Tribe.
About 16 miles from Dugort, in Achill island, out to sea, looking like a thin line of sand in the waves of the Atlantic, is the island of Innishkea. One fine morning our party started to visit it in a trusty hooker. As the hooker came in sight of the shore great excitement was visible among the islanders, and it was very hard to realize that we were still but 36 hours' journey from London.
The inhabitants turned out on masse. The women and children in their scanty garments of red flannel crouched outside their cabins, while numbers of the men ran down to the beach and put out in their coracles on chance of rowing us to land. It was a strange scene and curiously like a picture plate in a boy's book of adventures. We knew there was a king of Innishkea, and soon a tall, bronze faced man was pointed out to us as his majesty. On landing all the party were introduced and conducted by him to the palace, where the queen dowager, with her daughter, bade us welcome in true Irish fashion.
The old lady was in her picturesque native costume—red dress and plaid shawl over her head. The princess, however, had evidently on first sight of the hooker arrayed herself in modern fashions.
A LITTLE THING.
Such a little thing hides the sun, sweetheart, Such a little thing hides the sun,
A sudden cloud or a wall of mist!
And we moan "The day is done!"
Such a little thing hides the sun, sweetheart,
The top of waving tree,
A summer shower, of the sunshine born,
A mist that dips in the sea.
Such a little thing hides the sun, sweetheart,
But isn't it joy to know
That the sun still shines behind the clouds;
That the soft, warm winds will blow
Till the wall of mist shall be blown aside
And the shadows flee away,
And the sun behind the western hills
Gives pledge of a brighter day!
-Florence A. Jones in Minneapolis Housekeeper.
KID GLOVES.
Interesting Facts About the Skins Which Cover or Adorn the Hands.
Barefooted boys and hens form a curious partnership in the making of a pair of fine gloves.
They work together in preparing the skins for the hands of the fashionable woman who rushes to the stores every time a new shade of glove is announced.
Thousands of dozens of hens' eggs are used in curing the hides, and thousands of boys are employed to work the skins in clear water by treading on them for several hours.
When a woman buys a pair of gloves, she speaks of her purchase as "kids." If the clerk who sold her the "kid" gloves knew the secrets of the glove-making business, he might surprise his fair customer by telling her that those beautiful, soft, smooth fitting "kid" gloves came from the shoulders and belly of a 3-weeks-old colt whose neck was slit on the plains of Russia, and whose tender hide was shipped with huge bundles of other colts' hides to France, where they were made up into "kid" gloves, or he might with equal regard to the truth tell her that those gloves in the other compartment once darted from tree to tree in South America on the back of a ring tailed monkey. And if he made the rounds of the store and could distinguish one skin from another he could point out "kid" gloves made from the skins of kangaroos from Australia; lambs or sheep from Ohio or Spain or England; calves from India, muskrats from anywhere, musk oxen from China and other parts of Asia; rats, cats and Newfoundland puppies.
But the little Russian colt, the four footed baby from the plains where the Cossacks live, the colt from the steppes of Siberia, where horses are raised by the thousand, supply the skins which are the favorites at present with the glovemakers. Experts say that the colt-skin makes a better, stronger, finer glove than real kidskin, and as the colt is a
CARDINAL ANTONELI.
The Great Papal Statesman as He Appeared to a Painter.
Rudolph Lehmann's visit to Rome in 1857 led to the painter's introduction to the great papal statesman, Cardinal Antonelli. He says:
Before me sat that exorcated statesman, "the best hated man in Rome," in the most affable moods. His bronzed and somewhat oriental features were certainly far from handsome, but they were full of character, energy, and according to some, crenalty, with the large, dark, piercing eyes overshadowed by a heavy brow, the strong aquiline nose and the full sensual lips. He was in a talkative mood and spoke freely of the difficulties that beset his onerous ministry, of the position of the papacy becoming daily more threatened through the ever increasing energy of its wicked enemies, or what he called "the modern spirits." "But," he added, "history teaches us that it has always triumphed in the long run, and it will do so now."
He also told me that the worldly interests of the brothers Antonelli had never been separated; that they possessed all their worldly goods in common, one brother being director of the Banca Romana; one, the Conte Gregorio, taking care of their vast possessions in the Pontine marshes, a third being syndaco of Rome and the youngest being employed in diplomatic missions by the secretary of state.
During a short rest he showed me, with evident pride, over his elegant apartment, furnished with all the latest modern comforts. But the crowning climax was the bedroom, combining with the solemnity and mystery of the abode of a prince of the church all the luxuries of the boudoir of a petite maitresse. The walls, the curtains, as well as the hangings round the spacious four poster, were of the heaviest crimson damask, looped up with enormous tassels.—Boston Herald.
The Beauties of the Alleghanies.
The Alleghanies are fertile to the very summits, and not the least of their glories are their magnificent forests of oak, hickory, chestnut, maple, pine and other noble trees, in the spring when they are budding forth, in the summer when they are in the full bloom of maturity and when the laurel is in blossom, and in the fall, when the brilliant tints of red and gold and green and purple overwhelm one with a sense of Mother Nature's aesthetic genius in always harmonizing such a profusion of colors.
After all, it is the thoroughly satisfactory sport to be had with the game sheltered in these mountains that most endears them to the man who has any taste whatever for that sort of thing. The conditions are perfect. The game ranges from quail, or, as the Virginians call it, partridge, to deer and bear, and especially this is one of the last strongholds of that noble game bird, the wild turkey.—Magazine of Travel.
The Nonprofessional Profile Head.
"I don know how many times I have seen people—I don't mean artists, but all sorts of people, including children—draw profile heads. It is common enough their cabins, while numbers of the men ran down to the beach and put out in their coracles on chance of rowing us to land. It was a strange scene and curiously like a picture plate in a boy's book of adventures. We knew there was a king of Innishkea, and soon a tall, bronze faced man was pointed out to us as his majesty. On landing all the party were introduced and conducted by him to the palace, where the queen dowager, with her daughter, bade us welcome in true Irish fashion.
The old lady was in her picturesque native costume—red dress and plaid shawl over her head. The princess, however, had evidently on first sight of the hooker arrayed herself in modern fashion to do us honor, and we were amused on penetrating into the reception room to find advertisements from shops in Buckingham Palace road and St. Paul's churchyard hung up to embellish the wall, though only by a favored few could they be read.
The island was destitute of any school or means of instruction for the children, a very small proportion either understood or spoke English, and there was neither watch nor clock among the people, who had a happy go lucky idea of time and troubled themselves little as to Greenwich regulations.
There were no church bells to ring, no trains to catch, no office hours requiring punctuality, so when the sun was high in the heavens they would get through their not arduous farming duties, and when he sank in the great waste of waters they could sleep. The king's word settled all disputes. It was a hereditary monarchy, and his people, so far as he was concerned, were untaxed. Happy those states, thought some of the visitors, where royalty could be maintained with so little grandeur! However, I am in honesty bound to add we found King Philip had other means of filling his coffers besides levying taxes on his faithful subjects and learned the art of making good his opportunity whenever the Saxon stranger ventured to land on his shore. But Innishkea has an interest altogether apart from its situation, surrounded as it is by lovely views of mountain cliff and rocky headland. On this spot, hundreds of years ago, early Christian missionaries landed, and on top of a shelly mount, half a mile from the beach, are Christian remains of great antiquity. West of the island there stand also the ruins of a church said to have been built by the successors of St. Columba—Leisure Hours.
Jenny Lind.
Jenny Lind must have been the most simple, unpretending prima donna that ever lived. When she first came to England she was bound to sing only at the Royal Italian Opera House, and when commanded to sing at the queen's concert she was obliged to refuse. Very sorry to be compelled to notify this, she ordered her carriage and drove straight to Buckingham palace. She handed her card to an official, who, not unnaturally declined to take it in. A higher authority happened to pass and took it upon himself to present it. As soon as her majesty saw it she said, "Admit her, by all means." Jenny Lind appeared and simply that she was so very sorry to be unable to sing at her majesty's concert that she thought it better to call herself and explain. The queen was charmed with her natural manner, gave her a cordial reception and promised to be her friend.—Today.
Dabster Misunderstood.
Figg—What kind of a writer is Dabster? Is he possessed of descriptive powers?
Fogg—Unfortunately yes.
Figg—Unfortunately?
Fogg—Yes. In his recent sketch of a western girl he spoke of her commercial traveler manner and her generous understanding. The Chicago people allowed that the "commercial traveler manner" was a compliment of which anybody except in the offeet east might well be proud, but they suspected that the other characterization was a cheap fling at the size of women's shoes, and after that his writings were a drug in the western market—Boston Transcript.
Wholesale Elopement.
At Delinicze, near Flume, on the Adriatic, 26 girls were carried off on horseback in one night recently by lovers to whom their parents had refused to give them. It is not uncommon for Croatian girls to force consent to their marriage by an elopement, but an organized raid like this is unprecedented and has made a sensation even in Croatia.—Cincinnati Enquirer.
After all, it is the thoroughly satisfactory sport to be had with the game sheltered in these mountains that most endear them to the man who has any taste whatever for that sort of thing. The conditions are perfect. The game ranges from quail, or, as the Virginians call it, partridge, to deer and bear, and especially this is one of the last strongholds of that noble game bird, the wild turkey.—Magazine of Travel.
The Nonprofessional Profile Head.
"I don know how many times I have seen people—I don't mean artists, but all sorts of people, including children—draw profile heads. It is common enough for anybody to draw them on a slate, a scrap of paper, anywhere," said Mr. Billtops, "but I don't remember ever to have seen any of them draw a right handed profile—I mean one facing to the right. I suppose there is some very simple reason for this, but I am acquainted only with the fact."—New York Sun.
A Bad Break.
"You brought all that beautiful china back with you?" exclaimed the caller. "Didn't you break anything?"
"Nothing but the customs laws," replied the young lady, who had just returned from Europe.—Washington Star.
A Bit of Hitherto Unpublished History of the War of 1812.
This is a chapter of semiofficial, semi-domestic history, and it is vouchered for by a granddaughter of the hero's family line, a Chicagoan who now lives on Dearborn avenue.
Prominent in Mr. Madison's cabinet sat, fourscore years ago, Secretary of the Navy Jones, the son of a famous shipbuilder, a man gallant not only in spirit, but in dress and manner. His fitness for his office is attested by the naval histories of the war of 1812. But the successful secretary had more wit than hair, and a wig was a sine qua non of his political and social life. All went well with this adornment until the lackless August day in 1814 when the British marched from Bladensburg upon Washington.
It will be remembered that President Madison and his cabin stood not upon the order of their going on that occasion, but went at once—to a very retired summer resort. Every one knows how Lady "Dolly" remained behind long enough to save some valuable White House portraits from having their eyes put out by English bayonets, but few have heard how collected Mrs. Secretary Jones was in this national crisis.
Presence of mind is said to be promoter she was obliged to refuse. Very sorry to be compelled to notify this, she ordered her carriage and drove straight to Buckingham palace. She handed her card to an official, who, not unnaturally, declined to take it in. A higher authority happened to pass and took it upon himself to present it. As soon as her majesty saw it she said, "Admit her, by all means." Jenny Lind appeared and said simply that she was so very sorry to be unable to sing at her majesty's concert that she thought it better to call herself and explain. The queen was charmed with her natural manner, gave her a cordial reception and promised to be her friend.—Today.
A Fine Polish For Tinware.
When the kitchen range is cleaned out, there will be found in the fine under the oven a considerable quantity of gray dust. It is not ashes exactly, not yet soot, but a smoke deposit as near akin to lampblack as a coal fire is able to produce—soft, light, impalpable, finer than the finest flour. Not many among those who throw this into the ash bin are probably aware that this is the best thing in the world for polishing tinware, far surpassing all the prepared powders and pastes sold for that purpose. Apply it to the tin with a damp cloth, and a few strokes will produce such a luster as is on new ware or as the engraver puts upon his zinc plates by the use of charcoal.—Exchange.
Triumph of Bad Spelling.
Mr. R.E.Bartlett, Chelmsford, writes: "I can beat the achievement of Charles Edward, who, by spelling box 'botak,' made more mistakes than the letters admit of. I have in my possession a letter addressed many years ago to my father, in which 18 mistakes are made in a single word of five letters. The word is, or was meant to be, usage; the spelling is yowzitch. There are thus five sins of omission and eight of commission; total, 13."—London News.
Pretty Thin.
They have recently made gold leaf by electro-chemical processes as thin as four-millionths of an inch thick, if you can imagine that. It was exactly 1-2.-798,000 of an inch. The highest previous thinness ever reached was 1-367,650. This is 10,584 times thinner than ordinary thin writing paper.—Journal of Education.
Unconscious Candor.
"Some women can't believe a word their husbands say," she remarked.
"Well," confided the other, "I'm not quite so badly off as that. My husband talks in his sleep occasionally."
One result of the French-Russian fetes was the movement at St. Petersburg to provide Notre Dame, Paris, with a big bell made in Russia. The architects have discovered that the edifice cannot support the weight of the proposed bell, and an arrangement has been made between the Russian committee and Cardinal Richard that the bell shall be placed in the Church of the Sacred Heart. The gift, which is nearly finished, weighs 18 tons. It will be called "La Cloche de la Paix." In a few weeks it will be transported from St. Petersburg to Odessa in a Russian vessel and taken to Marseilles, thence overland to Paris.—Paris Letter.
An-Oral Will Probated.
A nuncapative will, the first filed in Pittsburg in 12 years, was accepted on Wednesday by the register. James Bresnan was injured on the railroad on Dec. 18 last and died a short time after on the operating table at the West Penn hospital. Before he died he stated to those around him that he wished his property to go to his younger children—John, James and Mary—excluding his oldest child because the latter was old enough to take care of himself. He also left $200 to the Rev. Thomas Bailey for masses.—Philadelphia Ledger.
A LITTLE THING.
The thing hides the sun, sweetheart,
the thing hides the sun,
cloud or a wall of mist,
the thing hides the sun, sweetheart,
of waving tree,
shower, of the sunshine born,
dips in the sea.
The thing hides the sun, sweetheart,
it joy to know
still shines behind the clouds;
warm winds will blow
all of mist shall be blown aside
shadows flee away,
behind the western hills
edge of a brighter day!
Jones in Minneapolis House
KID GLOVES.
Facts About the Skins Which
or Adorn the Hands.
Boys and hens form a euriship in the making of a pair
les.
Work together in preparing the
hands of the fashionable
to rushes to the stores every
shade of glove is announced.
Isds of dozens of hens' eggs are
being the hide, and thousands
employed to work the skins
after by treading on them for
urs.
Woman buys a pair of gloves,
of her purchase as "kids."
Worker who sold her the "kid"
new the secrets of the glovebusiness, he might surprise his
her by telling her that those
soft, smooth fitting "kid"
one from the shoulders and
38-weeks-old colt whose neck
in the plains of Russia, and
other hide was shipped with
ties of other colts' hides to
there they were made up into
trees, or he might with equal
the truth tell her that those
the other compartment once
tree to tree in South Amerback of a ring tailed monif他 made the rounds of the
could distinguish one skin
he could point out "kid"
one from the skins of kangaroos
or lambs or sheep from
train or England; calves from
krats from anywhere, musk
China and other parts of
cats and Newfoundland pup.
Little Russian colt, the four
dy from the plains where the
love, the colt from the steppes
where horses are raised by
and supply the skins which
favorites at present with the
urs. Experts say that the colta better, stronger, finer glove
kidskin, and as the colt is a
AS WE SEE THINGS.
INFLUENCE OF THE INNER LIFE ON
THE EXTERNAL WORLD.
How an Individual or a Scene May Have
an Entirely Different Appearance to Two Persons—Happiness and Sorrow Made by Ourselves.
There have been philosophers who delared that the earth on which we stand
and the stars on which we gaze have no real existence, but are merely the outcomes of our inner selves. Perhaps the best answer to this is that the mind it-elf, at least that of most people, refuses to receive the idea. The difference between me and not me is too sharply defined in the inner consciousness to permit Bishop Berkeley's notion from taking root within us.
Yet we cannot afford to overlook the germ of truth which this idea contains. Though not literally the creation of our thought, the outer world is to each one of us largely that which we make it. Nature herself, in all her varied scenes, whatever she may be in reality, shows herself to us in the light which we throw upon her. One man looks at a landscape and sees land and water, grass and trees, hills and plains, and nothing more. Another, a farmer, sees the growing crops, the fallow land, the noxious weeds, the prospect for future tillage and the obstacles to be overcome. Another, with a painter's eye, sees every variety of form and color, proportion and perspective, harmony and contrast, beauty and sublimity. To the melancholy man all is tinctured with gloom—a leaden pall covers even the gayest scenes—while to the joyous everything seems bright and glad, and even the dreariest of November days only suggests the radiant sunlight that is sure later on to struggle through the clouds.
So with the sights of a city. For each of us as they take on the aspect of our own mental condition. How differently they impress the citizen who has spent his life among them from the foreigner who views them for the first time! What a different message the stately and magnificent buildings bear to the absorbed man of business and to the architect who appreciates every detail of their construction!
If there is so wide a divergence in the aspect which inanimate things have for us, the difference is still greater in the way we regard the men and women by whom we are surrounded. Character is a complex thing, difficult to detect, impossible to fathom, yet we presumptuously venture to gauge and pronounce upon it with the smallest modicum of
MISCELLANEOUS.
CITIZENS' BANK
OF ANAHEIM.
Capital Stock, $100,000
Hippolyte Cahen,. President.
W. T. Brown,- Vice President.
L. Goldwater,. Cashier
DIRECTORS.
Kaspare Cohn, W. T. Brown.
Richard Melrose, L. Goldwater
Hippolyte Cahen.
STOCKHOLDERS:
Herman W. Hellman, T.J. F. Boege, W.T. Brown.
P. Nicolus, Richard Melrose, L. Goldwater, Kaspare Cohn, H. Cahen, J. A. Goldwater, Schleinger.
CORRESPONDENTS:
Farmers and Merchants' Bank of Los Angeles;
London, Paris and American Bank, San Francisco;
Importers and Traders' National Bank, New York City, N.Y.; First National Bank, Santa Ana.
Exchanges for sale on all the principal cities of the United States and foreign countries.
PALACE.
Shaving Parlor
Pool and Billiard Room,
Cigars & Tobacco.
Hot and Cold Baths.
Office of Santa Ana Steam Laundry. Leave Wash on or before Mondays. Delivered on Fridays.
New Tables and Everything in First-Class Style.
Frantz & Cooper
PROPRIETORS
Four Doors east of Postoffice.
JOSEPH BACKS,
DEALER IN
TRANSPORTATION.
Pacific Coast Steamship Company.
Goodall, Perkins & Co., General Agents,
San Francisco.
NORTHERN ROUTES.
Embrace lines for Portland, Or., Victoria, B.
and Puget Sound and Alaska and all Copoints.
SOUTHERN ROUTES.
Time Table for February, 1895:
LEAVE SAN FRANCISCO
For—Port Harford....S. S. Corona, Feb. 8, 16,
March 4.
Santa Barbara....S. S. Santa Rosa—Feb. 4,
20, 28; March 8.
Port Los Angeles....S. S. Santa Rosa—Feb. 4,
20, 28; March 8.
San Diego....S. S. Coos Bay—Feb. 6,
22; March 2.
East San Pedro....S. S. Eureka—Feb. 2,
18, 26; March 6.
LEAVE PORT LOS ANGELES AND REDOND
For—San Francisco and Way Ports.
S. S. Eureka—Feb. 5, 13,
March 1.
S. S. Coos Bay—Feb. 9,
26; March 5.
Cars to connect with steamers via San Peel leave S. P. R. R.(Arcade Depot) at 5 P.M.
Terminal R. R.Depot at 5:15 P.M.
Cars to connect via Redondo leave Santa depot at 10 A.M., or from Redondo Railway.
Cars to connect via Port Los Angeles leave P.R.R.Depot at 1:10 P.M.for steamers no bound.
Plans of steamers' cabins at Agent's Office where berths may be secured.
The Company reserves the right to change steamers or their days of sailing.
For passage or freight as above or tickets to and from all important points Europe, apply to
W. PARRIS, Agent.
Office—No. 124 W. Second Street, Los Angeles
SOUTHERN PACIFIC COMPANY.
(Pacific System.)
Commencing...
Thursday, Dec. 20, 1894.
Trains will leave Anaheim as follows:
A. M.(DAILY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloresceWhittier,Los Angelesandwaystation12:13P.M.(DAILYEXCEPTSUNDAY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FloRESCEWHITTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.Loosecrewhit TIER.Loosecrewhit TIER.Loosecrewhit TIER.Loosecrewhit TIER.Loosecrewhit TIER.Loosecrewhit TIER.Loosecrewhit TIER.Loosecrewhit TIER.Loosecrewhit TIER.Loosecrewhit TIER.Loosecrewhit TIER.Loosecrewhit TIER.Loosecrewhit TIER.Loosecrewhit TIER.Loosecrewhit TIER.Loosecrewhit TIER.Loosecrewhit TIER.Loosecrewhit TIER.Loosecrewhit TIER.Loosecrewhit TIER.Loosecrewhit TIER.Loosecrewhit TIER.Loosecrewhit TIER.Loosecrewhit TIER.Loosecrewhit TIER.Loosecrewhit TIER...
SOUTHERN PACIFIC COMPANY.
(Pacific System.)
Commencing...
THURSDAY DEC. 20, 1894.
Trains will leave Anaheim as follows:
A. M.(DAILY)LOCAL PASSENGER train for Buena Park,Norwalk,FlorescenceWHITTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIER.LoosecrewhitTIERE...
he could point out "kid" from the skins of kangarooes; lambs or sheep from train or England; calves from krakes from anywhere; musk China and other parts of cats and Newfoundland pups; little Russian colt, the four from the plains where the dove, the colt from the steppes where horses are raised by land, supply the skins which favorites at present with the bears. Experts say that the colt is a better, stronger, finer glove kidskin, and as the colt is a few only 3 weeks old when he has a small amount of skin can to gloves, so that the price is high.
all, the real kid, the live-of the goats which live in Switzerland, Spain and Italy, the best, finest and most expensive, and nearly 10,000,000 milled every year in order and men may cramp their wrinklesless, delicate hued Chicago Record.
What Is It?
The title of "A Game We Might Marquis of Lorne in Good Times in a plea for an open air time in the low countries of Europe which has for centuries sort of national reputation. Each sort of golf, played without holes, is inexpensive and by two single opponents on a side. The article concludes picturesque description of a two villages in Friesenwich the writer was present, and a striking impression of quality of the game and of the situation which it awakens. It out that in England there are facts, especially in the east of which are peculiarly well known the game, there being in these flat land where winter ground hard. Wherever these exist, there, we are told, theosen," or "clotshot" game used with advantage.—London
Misunderstood.
That kind of a writer is Dabossessed of descriptive power unfortunately, yes.
In his recent sketch of a he spoke of her commercial manner and her generous unselfish. The Chicago people all was a compliment of which except in the efface east might mind, but they suspected that characterization was a cheap size of women's shoes, and this writings were a drug in market—Boston Transcript.
Wholesale Elopement.
Cozze, near Flume, on the girls were carried off on one night recently by love in their parents had refused it. It is not uncommon for girls to force consent to their boy an elopement, but an ordinance even in Croatian Enquirer.
Startling Announcement.
An English literary man who was on the verge of bringing out a book at the Pitt Press ordered his proofs to be sent to him at a house where he was engaged to dine out intending to look them over they impress the citizen who has spent his life among them from the foreigner who views them for the first time! What a different message the stately and magnificent buildings bear to the absorbed man of business and to the architect who appreciates every detail of their construction!
If there is so wide a divergence in the aspect which inanimate things have for us, the difference is still greater in the way we regard the men and women by whom we are surrounded. Character is a complex thing, difficult to detect, impossible to fathom, yet we presumptuously venture to gauge and pronounce upon it with the smallest modicum of knowledge. It is curious to notice how differently the same person will impress various individuals. His friend will perhaps see no fault in him, his enemy no virtue. One will put faith in him; another will suspect his every action. One will deem him cold hearted; another will think him affectionate and kind. It must be that their own personalities are reflected in him, and that to a certain extent he does thus become for a time, while under their influence, what they suppose him to be always. It is certainly true that the good and gentle find far more goodness and gentleness in the world than those who are deficient in such qualities. It is the selfish man who is the keenest to detect selfishness in others; it is the overbearing who complain most of the arrogance and pride with which they are met, and the unjust who murmur at the injustice they receive. On the other hand, the loving and sympathetic discover love and sympathy everywhere; the noble and true bring to light nobility and truth which might otherwise be hidden. Thus to a large extent we develop the character of those we meet. By a subtle magnetism we draw like to like and evolve out of other personalities the characteristics of our own.
Even the outward circumstances of life are largely what we ourselves make them. We are accustomed to consider prosperity a blessing and adversity a curse, but quite frequently they change places. It is the spirit in which they are received that determines their result. The rich and self indulgent man, surrounded by luxury and opportunity, may be far less happy than his poorer neighbor who brings industry, fidelity and generosity into constant exercise. The same privileges that raise one young man to honor and usefulness are a snare and temptation to another. The same recreation that invigorates one enfeebles another. The same sorrow that softens one and leads him out of self to works of kindness and helpfulness prostrates another and renders him valueless. It is that which is within a man that so acts upon the externals of life as to decide their results to him, through him to others.
If this be so, then happiness or wretchedness is largely in our power, and most of our complaints only bear witness to our own remissness. We may rightly recognize the futility of struggling against outward events which we cannot control, but we can always bring to bear upon them such a spirit and influence as shall turn evil into good and bitter into sweet.—Philadelphia Ledger.
New Tables and Everything in First-Class Style.
Frantz & Cooper
PROPRIETORS
JOSEPH BACKS,
DEALAR IN
FURNITURE
Repairing Done.
Funeral Director.
BOSTON BAKERY.
Sthepen Kistler,
PROPRIETOR
FRESH BREAD,
PIES, CAKES, ETC.
For parties and bails furnished on short notice.
Wedding cakes and cakes for parties a specialty.
Fresh Bread Delivered to all parts of Anaheim and vicinity.
H. A. STOUGH.
BLACKSMITHING.
Horse-Shoeing A Specialty.
First-Class Workmanship.
Satisfaction Guaranteed
IN EVERY CASE
Shop on Lemon Street, Rear of Lanqenberger' Store.
Osborne Mowers and Steel Hay Rakes kept on hand.
DOMINICK LIEB,
GROCERIES
Provisions,
Lowest Prices.
Goods delivered to all part of the City. Everything First-class.
Center street. Opp. Commercial Hotel.
GO TO THE Oak Barber Shop
FOR A
FIRST-CLASS SHAVE OR HAIR CUT.
TWO DOORS WEST OF BANK.
HUSMANN BROS.
Notice of Sale of Real Estate at Public Auction.
Notice is hereby given that in pursuance of order of the Sheriff Court of the State of California, in addition for purchase price made on the 20th day of February, 1894, in matter of the estate of Priscilla Price, deceased at the undersigned, the Administrator of the state estate, will sell at Public Auction, to the highest bidder, for cash, gold coin of the United States ten per cent of purchase price to be paid at Superior Court, on Saturday, the 16th day March, 1895, at twelve o'clock m., at the front door of City Hall, situated on south side of Center hall, between Gladina and Phildephia streets, in the city of Anaheim, county of Orange, State of California, all right, title to property recorded by Los Angeles county, book four (4) mile cellarous Records of said county, said lot belonged in the town of Anaheim, in that portion of the State of California formerly a part of the county of Los Angeles, and now the county of Orange. The terms and conditions of said sale are the twenty (20) per cent of the purchase money issued by bank on the auctioneer on date of January 1st, bonded on confirmation of sale by said Superior Court.
Deed at expense of purchaser.
FRANK M. KELSEY,
Administrator of the estate of Priscilla Price deceased.
A. U. W. Co. BONDS
John D. Pope,
Law office,
Rooms 296-7-8, Stimson Block,
Third and Spring Sts.
LOS ANGELES, Cal., January 10, 1895
Anaheim Union Water Company.
Gentlemen—I have carefully examined the bonds of your company date January 1st, bonds on your company date January 1st
GO TO THE Oak Barber Shop FOR A FIRST-CLASS SHAVE OR HAIR CUT. TWO DOORS WEST OF BANK. HUSMANN BROS. Roman Wisser. Finest of Wines, Liquors & Cigars Pool & Billiard Tables Schindler's Building, Center 8 est.
ANAHEIM BREWERY. F. CONRAD, PROPRIETOR.
LAGER BEER! FURNISHED BY THE BOTTLE OR 5 or 10-Gallon Keg ICE FOR SALE! 1 Cent Per Pound.
On October 3d the following time table took effect on the Santa Ana and Newport railroad:
Leave Santa Ana. Arrive Newport.
*9:00 a.m. 9:30 a.m.
On Steamer days. 4:00 p.m. 4:30 p.m.
Leave Newport. Arrive Santa Ana.
*8:00 p.m. 8:30 p.m.
Regular trains arrive and depart from Second Street and 1 Santa Fe depot, Santa Ana.
TRANSPORTATION.
Mffic Coast Steamship Company.
All, Perkins & Co., General Agents,
San Francisco.
NORTHERN ROUTES
Lines for Portland, Or., Victoria, B. C.
Auget Sound and Alaska and all Coast
SOUTHERN ROUTES.
Time Table for February, 1895:
LEAVE SAN FRANCISCO
PORT LOS ANGELES AND REDONDO.
S. S. Santa Rosa—Feb. 6,
14; 22; March 2.
S. S. Corona—Feb. 2, 10, 18;
26; March 6.
S. S. Santa Rosa—Feb. 8, 16,
24; March 4.
S. S. Corona—Feb. 4, 12, 20;
28; March 8.
S. S. Coos Bay—Feb. 6, 14,
22; March 2.
S. S. Eureka—Feb. 2, 10,
18; 26; March 6.
PORT LOS ANGELES AND REDONDO.
S. S. Santa Rosa—Feb. 6,
14; 22; March 2.
S. S. Corona—Feb. 2, 10, 18;
26; March 6.
S. S. Santa Rosa—Feb. 8, 16,
24; March 4.
S. S. Corona—Feb. 4, 12, 20;
28; March 8.
S. S. Coos Bay—Feb. 9, 17;
26; March 5.
connect with steamers via San Pedro,
R. R. (Arcade Depot) at 5 p.m., and
R. R. Depot at 5:15 p.m.
connect via Redondo leave Santa Fe
10 A.M., or from Redondo Railway
A.M.
connect via Port Los Angeles leave S.
Depot at 1:10 p.m.for steamers north
of steamers' cabins at Agent's Office,
mays may be secured.
company reserves the right to change the
or their days of sailing.
or passage or freight as above or for
and from all important points in
apply to
W. PARRIS, Agent.
No. 124 W. Second Street, Los Angeles'
THERN PACIFIC COMPANY.
(Pacific System.)
Commencing...
HURSDAY, DEC. 20, 1894.
trains will leave Anaheim as follows:
A. M. (DAILY) LOCAL PASSENGER
train for Buena Park, Norwalk, Downey,
Whittier, Los Angeles and way stations.
P.M.(DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY) LOCAL
passenger train for Buena Park, Norwalk,
Norence, Los Angeles and way stations.
ConAngeles with Passenger Trains for Colnds, Riveride, San Bernardino, Monrovia,
h, San Pedro, Santa Monica, Port Los Anta Barbara.
Also with "San Francisco
or San Francisco, Sacramento and Second
the East via Ogden.
A. M. (DAILY) LOCAL PASSENGER
train for Miraflores, Orange and Santa
P.M.(DAILY) LOCAL PASSENGER
train for Buena Park, Norwalk, Downey,
Bentz & Steadman,
Wholesale and Retail Butchers
Anaheim, Cal.
Dealers in Beef, Pork, Mutton, Veal, Sausages and Lard
Of Our Own Make.
Highest Market price Paid for Live Stock.
John Schauman
Dealer in AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS. Blacksmithing and
Wagonmaking. Horse-shoeing a Specialty.
A Large and Complete Stock of Bradley Plows, Old Hickory
Wagons, McCormick Mowers.
Horse Beet Drills and Cultivators
Will Give You Bargains in Them.
Gang Plows, Farm Wagons, Harrows. Call for Prices.
MRS. G. DAVIS
Groceries and Seeds!
Informs her customers and the general public that she is prepared to sell goods at the smallest margin possible. She buys for cash and therefore can sell for a very small profit, giving her customers the benefit of low prices. No charge for showing goods or answering questions. Come one, Come all!
All Kinds of Produce and Poultry Taken in Exchange
When You Travel, Take the SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA RAILWAY.
Santa Fe Route.
reaches all points of interest in Southern California.
is the only line with its own tracks from California to Chicago and St. Louis.
When You Travel, Take the SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA RAILWAY.
Santa Fe Route.
Personally Conducted Excursions
Leave California every Thursday for Kansas City, St. Louis, Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis and intermediate points, in improved Pullman Tourist Sleeping Cars running without change in charge of special agents.
Personally conducted Excursions also leave every Thursday for Boston and intermediate points, via Chicago. The sleeping cars used on these excursions have upholstered spring seats and are furnished complete with carpets, curtains and bedding.
If you are going East, or have friends coming West, call on nearest agent of the Southern California Railway for tickets, maps, and general information.
J. H. Clabaugh, Agent, Anaheim, Cal.
REMEMBER
It will pay you in Dollars and Cents to Remember
That we are carrying as fine and extensive a line of Groceries, Confectionery, Tobacco, etc., as can be found in the city.
That we have on hand, at all times, a choice stock of Provisions, Flour, Feed, and above all
That our Prices speak for themselves, and are as low as they make them.
Don't forget the location,
BOYD'S GROCERY STORE,
Back's Block,
Los Angeles st., Anaheim.
REMEMBER
O. R. LUEDKE,
Watchmaker and Jeweler.
A FINE ASSORTMENT OF WATCHES
Clocks, Jewelry, Silverware and Optical Goods Always on Hand.
Center Street, Opp. Commercial Hotel.
Ruddock & Case.
SEED BARLEY
Seed Rye, Barley Hay and Wheat Hay for Sale by Ed Kraemer.
Ruddock & Case.
PLUMBING,
TINNING,
Pump Work!
Agents for Woodmanse, Galvanized Steel Geared Windmills.
Write or call on us for estimates.
J.M. Griffith Company
A CORPORATION
LUMBER DEALERS
Near Railroad Depot
ANAHEIM.
Keep constantly on hand
Doors, Blinds, Windows,
MOULDINGS.
Posts, Shakes, Shingles,
LATH, HAIR, PLASTER OF PARIS.
City Stables,
A. L. LEWIS & CO., - PROPS.
Center St, opp. Kroeger Block.
Single and Double Teams.
Furnished at short notice, and careful drivers familiar with the country, supplied when required. The patronage of the public is respectfully solicited.
SEED BARLEY
Seed Rye, Barley Hay and Wheat Hay for Sale by
Ed Kraemer.
Three Miles Northeast of Anaheim.
COAL.
A.M.WILLIAMS & CO
Dealers In
Lime, Hair,
Plaster of Paris and Cement
For Sale In Quantities to Suit.
COAL
By the Sack or Ton.
Yard at Residence on Los Angeles St.
Wheat, Barley,
AND...
BARLEY HAY
FOR SALE.
Apply to SAMUEL KRAEMER, on Ranch mills northeast of Anaheim.
F. BACKS,
UNDERTAKER.
And Dealer in
FURNITURE.
Wall Paper, Cornices, Window Shades, Picture Frames, Upholstery Goods, Paints, Oils and Glass.
Sewing Machine Supplies, Etc
Cornea Lo Angles and Chartres Ste.