anaheim-gazette 1895-09-05
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VOICE OF THE PRESS.
Yuma Has the Largest Wagon in the World.
The Man from Phoenix Who Hose from His Ashes Mysterious Case of the Disappearance of Blanche Witt.
From the Yuma Sentinel.
Standing in the store yard of Gandolfo & Sanguinetti is one of the largest wagons ever built. It was built in 1878 by Christopher Horner, the veteran blacksmith and machinist of the Pacific coast, at his shop on Gila street, which at that time was the finest equipped blacksmith and machine shop on the coast. It is one of an order of ten given by Cargill & Co. [Mr. Cargill is now the well-known resident of this place—Ed. Gazette], one of the largest companies dealing in mines in the Territory in early mining years, and who in the seventies did a very large and extensive business in the Castle Dome mining district. It was for the purpose of hauling ore from their mines in that district of twenty miles, for shipment to the amelter in San Francisco by boat, that these monster wagons were built.
The wagon now occupying a small and shadeless space in the above yard has stood there for nearly fifteen years, never having been used, as the company suspended operations a short time after it was turned out of the shop. It cost $2,000 and its carrying capacity is 20 tons.
In order that the reader may get a faint idea of the size and strength of this wagon we give the following dimensions:
The front wheels are five feet high and the hind wheels seven; the hubs, the largest ever made are 2x2 feet; the arms or shoulders are 18 inches in length; the axles are solid steel; the tires are five inches wide and one and a quarter inches thick. Mr. Horner informed us when we called on him a few evening ago at his shop on Gila street, that he was obliged to send to a large Eastern firm for a great deal of the steel used on the wagons. The same came around the Horn by sailing vessels and one year was consumed before it arrived here. He made it a rule to build one of the wagons in ten days with the assistance of a helper, and when completed he could run it all around the shop with one hand.
This wagon slowly decaying is a mute witness of the grand old days of Yuma and the wealth of the mines that lie along that, of all rivers of West—the Colorado—where fortunes were made and the value of money in former prosperous times were never taken into consideration.
The day will come again, and the time is not far distant, when this wagon, which has lain idle for nearly as many years as Rip Van Winkle slumbered, will once again see active service hauling the precious metal
He kept it to himself, be wever, until the last thing. It was 11:30 by the clock, and it was not a very rapid clock.
"Miss Molly," he said tremulously, "I am going away too narrow."
"Are you?" she said with the thoughtlessness of girlhood.
"Yes," he said, "are you sorry!"
"Yes, very sorry," she murmured, "I thought you might go away this evening."
Then he gazed at the clock wistfully, and said good night.
MAF.K TWAIN'S NOBLE SENTIMENT.
Samuel L. Clemens, better known as Mark Twain the humorist, has started upon a lecturing tour around the world, in order to earn money to discharge debts growing out of the failure of the publishing house of Webster & Co., in which he was a partner. Prior to starting, he said:
"It has been reported that I sacrificed, for the benefit of the creditors, the property of the publishing firm whose financial backer I was, and that I am now lecturing for my own benefit. This is an error. I intend giving the lectures as well as the property for the creditors. The law recognizes no mortgage on a man's brain, and a merchant who has given up all he has, may take advantage of the laws of insolvency and start free for himself; but I am not a business man, and honor is a harder master than the law. It cannot compromise for less than one hundred cents on the dollar, and its debts never outlaw.
"I had a two-thirds interest in the publishing firm, whose capital I furnished. If the firm had prospered, I should have expected to collect two-thirds of the profits. As it is, I expect to pay all the debts. My partner has no resources, and I do not look for assistance from him. By far the largest single creditor of this firm is my wife, whose contributions in cash from her private means have nearly equalled the claims of all the others combined. She has taken nothing. On the contrary, she has helped, and intends to help me, to satisfy the obligations due to the rest. It is my intention to ask my creditors to accept that as a legal discharge and trust to my honor to pay the other 50 per cent as fast as I can earn it. From my reception thus far on my lecturing tour, I am confident that if I live I can pay off the last debt within four years, after which, at the age of sixty-four, I can make a fresh and unincumbered start in life.
"I am going to Australia, India and South Africa, and next year I hope to make a tour of the great cities of the United States.
"I meant, when I began, to give my creditors all the benefit of this, but I begin to feel that I am gaining something from it too, and that my dividends, if not available for banking purposes, may be even more satisfactory than theirs."
Such instances of devotion to honor are not infrequent, but in most cases they are not given prominence. Were a record kept and made public of the sacrifices made to discharge honest debts, there would be a much healthier sentiment pervading commercial circles and a high standard of financial honor.
TUBERS BY THE THORDS AND SAND.
THREE THOUSAND BUSHELS OF IRREASON POTATOES PER ACRE—A CHERKEE FARMER'S SUCCESS.
From the Houston (Tex.) Post, Aug. 19.
Rusk, Cherokee County, Texas, August—Believing that my plan of planting Irish potatoes, the best and most certain of large crops without a failure, I space to give farmers my experience (and theory) and also will say I have neighbor who grow potatoes as I do. I send a photo graph of my potato patch, which I would be pleased to see published so that my farmer readers of the Post can see how 3 bushels could be raised upon an acre. You and not one-fourth bushel small or not neat ketable, to the acre.
There are only three important things observe to make a crop like mine. First sprout the seed to the size of peas. Second—it is impossible to make the land too rich Third—the planting cuts a big figure in amount of potatoes raised. I make 199 single hills to the acres and the potatoes broom room to grow and not be crowded; also in easy to cultivate. If you should plant 000 hills in straight rows you would make as many potatoes for they could grow for being crowded.
My potato seeds are generally about six sizes of English peas, but vary from one of a bird's eye to the size of a marble. We planted, and from the time of planting eating, all farmers know that when potato gets the size of marbles it is not long before we have potatoes on the table to eat; take whole year into consideration; is, the six crop year, you can raise a crop twice four and six weeks; and the most markable thing about the growing is there is not a peck of small potatoes in acres, all fine large beauties. The picture sends you shows exactly how the potato grew this year as the soil was scratched with carefully from the potatoes, so as not break roots. There were forty seeds at size of peas planted to every double hill. I plant my potatoes in the water furrow leave a balk four to six inches wide; when the potato seed is dropped on the bark a part of the seed fall on each side of it narrow balk; I cover with two furrow turning plow. I make my rows three apart;the hills eighteen inches apart in rinses which makes 140 hills acres an acres seventy rows to the acres makes 9800 doubled hills of potatoes to theacre,r 19600 surplus hills,as you will see that a hillof forty six potatoes goes across the balk,making hill cover some eighteen inches,half ground.I never plant less than twenty five have planted sixty,andthe sixtywill evaporate one make as fine potatoes if we have placed rain.I also give my potatoes fertilizer with liquid manure every rain.I take from sixtyto seventy-five potatoes to meet a bushel,never more than seventy-five.have keptthe same seed fortwenty years,andhave potatoes both sweet irishthewholeyearround.IthinkEarlyRosewillbeargoodtreatmentoffishingbetterthananyother.ButtheTrianglewillmakea crop twentydawaysquicker.t
THE MYSTERIOUS CASE OF BLANCHE WITT.
Santa Ana Cor. L. A. Times.
The mysterious disappearance of little Blanche Witt, the fourteen-year-old girl from Alamitos, is still the topic of conversation in the western portion of the county, notwithstanding the fact that her whereabouts are now known, and that she is safely with her father in the town of Perry, N. Y.
Her sudden disappearance resulted in starting the tongues of the village gossips to wagging, and it was not long until the name of a prominent young resident of the community, whose character since childhood has been above reproach, was connected with the mysterious absence of the little girl.
The neighbors claim that, so far as they knew, the child and her people always got along together, and therefore, there seemed to be no legitimate reason why she should leave them in such a manner, but a friend, which explains her disappearance, and incidentally gives some sensational information which, if true, puts her mother and the man who claims to be her stepfather in a very bad light, stating, as it does, that her mother ran away with Mr. Witt, who was working at their house, when she (Blanche) was only two years old, leaving her father and two sons.
As soon as it was learned where Blanche was, Mrs. Witt, as she is known here, left for New York to see the girl, presumably for the purpose of bringing her home again. But from the letter received from the girl herself and from the sensational information which it contains, there are many here who believe that her visit was made for the purpose of stopping, if possible, the probability of her escapade with Witt becoming known here.
As to the connection of the name of a prominent young resident of the neighborhood with her disappearance, the letter from the little girl fully exonerates him, and that he was only a kind friend to her. Mrs. Witt is still in New York, and, as an investigation is now being made of the treatment the girl received before she left for the East, there is yet liable to be some sensational developments. Mr. Witt is known in the neighborhood in which he lives as a sort of religious crank. Other developments of a sensational character are expected in the case.
BROTHERLY LOVE AMONG THE NEWSPAPERS AT ESCONDIDO.
From the Escondido Times
True to its vile instincts and general inclination to indecenty, the Escondido Boiler Plate replies to the Times criticisms last week by a conglomeration of personal abuse of the editor of this paper and a sickening appeal to the people of this locality not to punish the aforesaid Boiler Plate for its foolish bad "breaks" to which we called attention. It plays the "baby act" to a degree that might touch a heart of stone, had it not first befieled itself to an extent that would nauseate and disgust the most tender-hearted. The Boiler Plate thinks the Times wants it to get "off the earth," but were this so we would only have to call the attentive debt within four years, after which, at the age of sixty-four, I can make a fresh and unincumbered start in life.
"I am going to Australia, India and South Africa, and next year I hope to make a tour of the great cities of the United States.
"I meant when I began, to give my creditors all the benefit of this, but I begin to feel that I am gaining something from it, too, and that my dividends, if not available for banking purposes, may be even more satisfactory than theirs."
Such instances of devotion to honor are not infrequent, but in most cases they are not given prominence. Were a record kept and made public of the sacrifices made to discharge honest debts, there would be a much healthier sentiment pervading commercial circles and a high standard of financial honor maintained. The majority would strive to make their word as good as their bond.
AN INEXPENSIVE ICEBOX.
It Can Be Made at Home Very Easily and Will Cost Only $1.
Refrigerators and their plobian consums, plain iceboxes, are now sold in the stores at prices that are within the proverbial "reach of all," so to speak, but there are some people, nevertheless, that find it advisable, if not convenient, to make one at home. For their possible benefit the accompanying cut is printed, with a detailed description of how to make the box therein shown.
The arrangement consists of two boxes, the larger one about three feet square and the smaller one just enough smaller to allow a space of about three inches between the two around the four sides and also at the bottom. This space should be filled closely with sawdust or with fine charcoal.
Line inside of the inner box with sine, and through the bottom bore a hole that will admit a half inch lead pipe. A hole should also be bored in the bottom of the larger box right under that in the smaller one, and the lead pipe must be long enough to go through both holes and carry off the water that will come from the ice. The latter may lie upon the bottom of the box without support of any kind.
This box will be found a good preserver of ice, and it should not exceed $1 in cost if made at home. If shelves are desired, hang strips of tin over the edge of the inner box, with cleats attached on which the shelves may rest—Philadelphia Times.
What Is a "Lady"
It would never enter into my head to think a person of great wealth and possessed of a fine establishment a lady, if she could turn in her own house from a beaming recognition of some star of contemporaneous fashion to bestow a frozen greeting upon a social makeweight or a poor friend of other days who had not kept pace with her in progress up the ladder of society, writes Mrs. Burton apart; the hills eighteen inches apart in which makes 140 hills across an eleven-seventy rows to the acre makes 9,800 rows on potatoes to the acre makes 9,800 rows on potatoes goes across the balk, making hill coyer some eighteen inches, or half ground. I never plant less than twenty years, and have planted sixty, and the sixty will ever one make as fine potatoes if we have placed rain. I also give my potatoes fertilize with liquid manure every rain. It takes from sixty to seventy-five potatoes to make a bushel, never more than seventy-five years, and have potatoes both sweet and Irish the whole year round. I think Early Rose will bear good treatment for firing better than any other. But the Triumph will make a crop twenty days quicker to the Rose, also will stand the dry weather best of all, and I think the day will cool that no other potato will be grown in Texas Again they are so smooth and the eyes are not sunk and are the easiest potato clear.
By sprouting your potatoes you have no sprucing potatoes in less than one-half time takes under the old style of planting. I made one failure in twenty odd years. Potatoes were then the size of hen's eggs frost killed the vines and every potato rotted.
It takes from four to six weeks to spread the seed potato to the size of peas. Sprout room I keep warm by a small coal fire in a bake oven. One barrel charcoal will be plenty for the whole timber. I put my potatoes into old barrels or sand boxes so as to get them warm easier than a big heap or bunk. The smaller the box easier and quicker they will sprout. When the potatoes get large enough I off off the hoops, take down the staves so there are thousands upon thousands of potatoes from the size of a birch's eye to ten peas and a few size of marbles; whole mass is held together with small rods. I take a hand barrow (not a wheel barrow) and carry the seed down the row and do third person breaks off as many as you wish not less than twenty to forty, and let them fall on the balk in the water furrow we give two plowings and you will have potatoes to sell and to keep. My sprout house has double walls and is filled in between with sawdust, also overhead and has doubled doors.
Years ago the Grangers used to meet discus farm questions in this county; had some very warm debates about growing corn and cotton, etc., and when they down to a nice point it was common to say it brass tacks, and all old Grangers knew what brass tacks means in farming. But day day the professors, the graduates and all dictionary eaters who have turned boss farms have got a high-fanged name, when they call "intensive" farming; which exactlythe opposite of extensive.T means spread out;the other word means gather in.An intensive culture is to train ten acres of land by increasing cultivation and fertilizing and labor to make more profit than you would on 100 by those style farming. Well, we have seen in this case how this new intensive farming work on Irish potatoes.Compared with old style farming.Under the most frightful oracle circumstances you could not make more than 150 bushels to the acre,and under the new style you can make over twenty-five times more.On one hand you make one crop a year on,the other easily just as you wish.The more seed you planthe more potatoes you have to gather.A can be governed by the amount of manure you put on your land.More manure,more potato seed.Respectfully,C.E.FORD.
MR. FORD'S FIGURES QUENTED.
LEXINGTON,Texas,August 24.-Some Polk county's most successful vegetable farm.
BROTHERLY LOVE AMONG THE NEWSPAPERS AT ESCONIDO.
From the Escondido Times
True to its vile instincts and general inclination to indecency, the Escondido Boiler Plate replies to the Times criticisms last week by a conglomeration of personal abuse of the editor of this paper and a sickening appeal to the people of this locality not to punish the aforesaid Boiler Plate for its foolish bad "breaks" to which we called attention. It plays the "baby act" to a degree that might touch a heart of stone, had it not first be foiled itself to an extent that would nauseate and disgust the most tender-hearted. The Boiler Plate thinks the Times wants it to get "off the earth," but were this so we would only have to call the attention of Uncle Sam and he would soon wipe out the aforesaid Boiler Plate for circulating indecent papers through the mails. The Creator of the universe permits vermin, viperis, skunks, coyotes, hyenas and pests of various breeds to exist, and so cankerous newspapers of the Boiler Plate variety must, we suppose, be endured along with other nuisances.
THE MAN FROM PHOENIX WHO ROSE FROM HIS ASHES.
From the Arizona Journal Miner.
The well known story concerning the man from Yuma who died, went to hell and sent back for his overcoat, can now be considered as ancient history, if a recent arrival from Phoenix, who came up here a few days ago to cool off, can be believed. He says a prominent citizen died there not long since during one of the hot spells, and his body was taken to Los Angeles to be cremated. After reposing in the furnace several hours at a temperature of about 300 degrees, the attendants opened the doors and found the Phoenecian sitting up in his pie pan shivering with cold. As the draft from the open door struck him he cuddled up in one corner and bellowed out: "For God's sake, close that door, or I'll catch my death of cold."
THE WAY THEY ELOPE AT SANTA ANA.
Cor. Los Angeles Express.
J. D. Spellburg says that his wife Lola has run off with a Mexican and warns people against trusting her on his account, and he savs he hopes he may never see her again. The Mexican with whom she eloped leaves a wife. He drove up to Spellburg's house and made the proposition to Mrs. Spellburg to elope with him. She agreed to it and loaded in all of their furniture and took it with them. Neither the furniture or the wife are worth looking for. So the officers are not breaking their necks to arrest them.
SHE WAS SORRY.
He had been worshipping her for months, but had never told her, and she didn't want him to. He had come oftan and stayed late—very late—and she could only sigh and hope. He was going away the next day on a holiday, and he thought the last night was the time to spring the momentous question.
What Is a "Lady?"
It would never enter into my head to think a person of great wealth and possessed of a fine establishment a lady, if she could turn in her own house from a beaming recognition of some star of contemporaneous fashion to bestow a frozen greeting upon a social makeweight or a poor friend of other days who had not kept pace with her in progress up the ladder of society, writes Mrs. Burton Harrison in an interesting discussion of the proper usage of the terms "woman" and "lady" in The Ladies' Home Journal.
To lay down a law for the use of the word in the present condition of American society would, I think, puzzle the most ingenious makers of social codes. For the time it must remain a matter of intuition when and where to apply the graceful courtesy title of "lady."
Today's Woman.
Dublin has a new paper called Today's Woman. It is edited and written by a group of talented women, many of whom are university graduates. Its leading article is by Sir Charles Cameron on "Scientific Professions For Women." Progress in England has been along different grooves from what it has been in America. Here women have entered law, medicine, dentistry, the pulpit, chemistry, pharmacy and architecture, while in England they have seemingly avoided these fields and have gone into geology, mineralogy, botany, zoology, paleontology and higher mathematics. Today's Woman argues the adoption of the American system and the broadening of the British system.
Battle Creek's League.
In Battle Creek, Mich., March 6, a woman's league was organized. Its object is the promotion of all literary, musical, scientific, philanthropic, educational, artistic and social movements in which women are interested. It is proposed to make it auxiliary to the League of All Women Societies now in the city. The officers elected are: President, Mrs. Engene Glass; vice president, Mrs. C. M. Ranger, Mrs. L. A. Dudley; secretary, Mrs. Frank Dunning; treasurer, Miss Cora Leon; also a board of managers. The league starts out with a membership of over 300 prominent women.
500 cords of wood. C. Orro Rusz. [mar8]
THE ORIGINAL ARYAN.
I am the ancient Aryan,
And you have done me wrong.
I did not come from Hinduistan—I've been here all along.
I never traveled from the east
In huge successive waves.
You'll find your ancestors deceased
Inside your own old cavea.
There my remains may now be sought,
Mixed up with mastodons,
Which very long with flints I fought
Before I fought with bronze.
In simple skins I wrapped me round
Ere mats I learned to make.
I dug my dwellings in the ground
Or reared them on a lake.
I had no pen, I'm sure of this,
Although you say I penned
All manner of theories
In Sanskrit and in Zend.
My nature you've misunderstood.
When first I sojourned here,
I worshiped chunks of stone or wood;
My rites were rather queer.
The more my little ways you scan
The less you'll care to praise
And bless the dear old Aryan
Of neolithic days.
They've mixed me up till, I declare,
I hardly can report
Whether I first was tall and fair,
Or I was dark and short.
But on two things I take my stand
Through all their noise and strife—
I didn't come from Asia, and
I had no higher life.
Hotel Ramona, centrally located. The most popular house in Los Angeles. Coral South Spring and Third Sts. First-class accommodations at moderate rates.
MERS BY THE THOUSAND.
THOUSAND BUSHELS OF IRISH POTATOES PER ACRE—A CHEROE-FARMER'S SUCCESS.
On the Houston (Tex.) Post, Aug. 19.
Cherokee County, Texas, August 3.
Being that my plan of planting and Irish potatoes, the best and most of large crops without a failure, I ask give farmers my experience and no and also will say I have neighbors new potatoes as I do. I send a photo of my potato patch, which I would used to see published so that the readers of the Post can see how 3,000 could be raised upon an acre. Yes, one-fourth bushel small or not married to the acre.
are only three important things to make a crop like mine. First to the seed to the size of peas. Second to make the land too rich. The planting cuts a big figure in the amount of potatoes raised. I make 19,600 hills to the acre and the potatoes have grown and not be crowded; also it is impossible to make the land too rich. The planting cuts a big figure in the amount of potatoes raised. I make 19,600 hills to the acre and the potatoes have grown and not be crowded; also it is impossible to make the land too rich.
Potato seeds are generally about the English peas, but vary from the size's eye to the size of a marble. When and from the time of planting to all farmers know that when potato sizes of marbles it is not long before they grow and not be crowded; also it is impossible to make the land too rich.
The planting cuts a big figure in the amount of potatoes raised. I make 19,600 hills to the acre and the potatoes have grown and not be crowded; also it is impossible to make the land too rich.
Potato seeds are generally about the English peas, but vary from the size's eye to the size of a marble. When and from the time of planting to all farmers know that when potato sizes of marbles it is not long before they grow and not be crowded; also it is impossible to make the land too rich.
Potato seeds are generally about the English peas, but vary from the size's eye to the size of a marble. When and from the time of planting to all farmers know that when potato sizes of marbles it is not long before they grow and not be crowded; also it is impossible to make the land too rich.
Potato seeds are generally about the English peas, but vary from the size's eye to the size of a marble. When and from the time of planting to all farmers know that when potato sizes of marbles it is not long before they grow and not be crowded; also it is impossible to make the land too rich.
Potato seeds are generally about the English peas, but vary from the size's eye to the size of a marble. When and from the time of planting to all farmers know that when potato sizes of marbles it is not long before they grow and not be crowded; also it is impossible to make the land too rich.
Potato seeds are generally about the English peas, but vary from the size's eye to the size of a marble. When and from the time of planting to all farmers know that when potato sizes of marbles it is not long before they grow and not be crowded; also it is impossible to make the land too rich.
Potato seeds are generally about the English peas, but vary from the size's eye to the size of a marble. When and from the time of planting to all farmers know that when potato sizes of marbles it is not long before they grow and not be crowded; also it is impossible to make the land too rich.
Potato seeds are generally about the English peas, but vary from the size's eye to the size of a marble. When and from the time of planting to all farmers know that when potato sizes of marbles it is not long before they grow and not be crowded; also it is impossible to make the land too rich.
Potato seeds are generally about the English peas, but vary from the size's eye to the size of a marble. When and from the time of planting to all farmers know that when potato sizes of marbles it is not long before they grow and not be crowded; also it is impossible to make the land too rich.
Potato seeds are generally about the English peas, but vary from the size's eye to the size of a marble. When and from the time of planting to all farmers know that when potato sizes of marbles it is not long before they grow and not be crowded; also it is impossible to make the land too rich.
Potato seeds are generally about the English peas, but vary from the size's eye to the size of a marble. When and from the time of planting to all farmers know that when potato sizes of marbles it is not long before they grow and not be crowded; also it is impossible to make the land too rich.
Potato seeds are generally about the English peas, but vary from the size's eye to the size of a marble. When and from the time of planting to all farmers know that when potato sizes of marbles it is not long before they grow and not be crowded; also it is impossible to make the land too rich.
Potato seeds are generally about the English peas, but vary from the size's eye to the size of a marble. When and from the time of planting to all farmers know that when potato sizes of marbles it is not long before they grow and not be crowded; also it is impossible to make the land too rich.
Potato seeds are generally about the English peas, but vary from the size's eye to the size of a marble. When and from the time of planting to all farmers know that when potato sizes of marbles it is not long before they grow and not be crowded; also it is impossible to make the land too rich.
Potato seeds are generally about the English peas, but vary from the size's eye to the size of a marble. When and from the time of planting to all farmers know that when potato sizes of marbles it is not long before they grow and not be crowded; also it is impossible to make the land too rich.
Potato seeds are generally about the English peas, but vary from the size's eye to the size of a marble. When and from the time of planting to all farmers know that when potato sizes of marbles it is not long before they grow and not be crowded; also it is impossible to make the land too rich.
Potato seeds are generally about the English peas, but vary from the size's eye to the size of a marble. When and from the time of planting to all farmers know that when potato sizes of marbles it is not long before they grow and not be crowded; also it is impossible to make the land too rich.
Potato seeds are generally about the English peas, but vary from the size's eye to the size of a marble. When and from the time of planting to all farmers know that when potato sizes of marbles it is not long before they grow and not be crowded; also it is impossible to make the land too rich.
Potato seeds are generally aboutthe English peas, but vary fromthe size's eye tothe sizeofa marble.Whenandfromthetimeofplantingtoallfarmersknowthatwhenpotatoesperacreisitnotlongbeforetheygrowandnotbe Crowdedalsoitnotbe Crowdedalsoitnotbe Crowdedalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe CrowDEDalsoitnotbe Croweedsoilinparis
AN EXHIBITION IN A SHOW WINDOW THAT ATTractS BIG CROWDS.
A private dispatch from Paris says:
"A somewhat unique exhibition appears in a show in Boulevard Madeline. It is a garter show, and attracts big crowds. Garterts that are alleged to have been the property of celebrated women are exhibited, and these bejeweled articles of dress afford ample evidence that ornate garterts are not a modern fancy only. Some of them furnish interesting information regarding women whose beauty of face and figure has been celebrated."
"Nell Gwynne's garters are quite elaborate, and noticeable for their very ample proportions. They are of white sheepskin, and ornamented with red gold roses, and have golden claps." Sarah Bernhardt is commonly supposed to be a woman of rather alder proportions, but she sat elastics bedecked with pearls, which are said to have been once her property, show that, at least, her rather limbs are of goodly proportions."
"The pair that attracts most attention are vouched for as having been worn by Mary Stuart. They are pale red, somewhat faded, and have silver buckles. They are much worn. The shop keeper has had constructed a pair of wax limbs, calculated from the size of the garterts to be an accurate counterfeit of those for which she garnets once did service. If that be case, the originals were indeed of a creditable size."
"Just opposite, in respect to this latter feature, are the pair that were once worn by the Princess of Wales. They are plain and have very slight ornamentation."
"There is in the collection a life-size wax figure representing the French Marveilleuse, the ultra Parisiense who attired themselves in robes of transparent gauze, opened down the side, so as to display legs encased in long gaudy stockings. The shapely legs of these figures are adorned with garrants of rose-colored satin, having diamond clasps. There are long ribbon streamers attached. Here is an inscription embroidered on the garters:"
"Make your petiocoats short,
That a hoop eight yards wide
May decontily show
How your garters are tied."
"There is a single black silk garter, once the property of Tagliont. A cord attached says an Italian nobleman fell in love with her, and sent her a note, which after making a proposal, said: 'If you accept, give the bearer one of your garter.' The proposal was accepted. The dashing nobleman received the single garter now on exhibition."
"A pair of garters of light blue silk, with no clasps, once the property of La Goulne, has this inscription:"
"Aroundthesilkenkneesofladiesfair,
A fairy-bandis placed to keep their stockings there.
Lost transient glimpesofIvoryskin
Should let bold thoughtsOf Cupid in."
Bucklen's Arnica Salve.
The best salve in the world for Cuts,
Braises,Sores Ulcers,Salt Rheum,
Fever Sores,Tetter,Chapped Hands,
Chilblains,
Corns,andAll Skin Eruptions,and positively cure Piles,或no pay required。It is guar-
Less In Drawing
...And...
PAINTING
In Superior Court.State Of California.County.ofOrange.
IntheSuperior Court.StateOfCalifornia.County.ofOrange.
NoticeIs hereby given that Friday,the 29th dayofSeptember,1895.at10 o'clock.a.m.ofsaiddayattheCourtroomofThisCourt.intheCityofSanta Ana,county.ofOrange.StateOfCalifornia.county.ofOrange.
AtGardenStreet,BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheapplicationofRobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthatadocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheapplicationofRobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthatadocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheapplicationofRobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthatadocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheapplicationofRobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthatadocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheapplicationofRobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthatadocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheapplicationofRobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthatadocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheapplicationofRobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthataDocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheapplicationofRobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthataDocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheapplicationofRobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthataDocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheapplicationofRobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthataDocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheapplicationofRobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthataDocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheapplicationofRobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthataDocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheapplicationofRobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthataDocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheapplicationofRobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthataDocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheapplicationofRobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthataDocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheapplicationofRobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthataDocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheapplicationofRobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthataDocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheapplicationofRobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthataDocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheapplicationofRobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthataDocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheapplicationofRobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthataDocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheapplicationof RobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthataDocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheApplicationofRobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthataDocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheApplicationofRobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthataDocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheApplicationofRobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthataDocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheApplicationof RobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthataDocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheApplicationofRobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthataDocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheApplicationof RobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthataDocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheApplicationof RobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthataDocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheApplicationof RobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthataDocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheApplicationof RobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthataDocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheApplicationof RobertThelleandF.A.Hartman,prayingthataDocumentnowoninTheCourtStreet.BaldwinDepot.iscommittedforhearingtheApplicationof RobertTHELEAND,F.RAPELEAND,F.S.MAIRLAND,F.PAULYAND,F.TRUCK AND,F.WEST STREET.,LOS ANGELES
SOUTHERN PACIFIC COMPANY.
(Pacific System.)
THURSDAY, DEC. 20, 18
Trains will leave Anaheim as follow:
A.M.M.(DAILY) LOCAL PASS
train for Buena Park,Norwalk;
Fioreance,Whittier,Los Angeles and way station;
Connects via Redondo leave Deposit at 10 A.M., or from Redondo Deposit at 9 A.M.
Cars to connect via Port Los Angeles,P.R.E.D at 1:10 P.M.; M.p.s. for passage or freight as above
Tickets to and from all important post Europe, apply to
W.PARIS,A.P.O.
Office-No.1234 W Third St.,Los Angeles
SOUTHERN PACIFIC COMPANY.
(Pacific System.)
THURSDAY, DEC. 20, 18
Trains will leave Anaheim as follow:
A.M.M.(DAILY) LOCAL PASS
train for Buena Park,Norwalk;
Fioreance,Whittier,Los Angeles and way station;
Connects via Redondo leave Deposit at 10 A.M., or from Redondo Deposit at 9 A.M.
Cars to connect via Port Los Angeles,P.R.E.D at 1:10 P.M.; M.p.s. for passage or freight as above
Tickets to and from all important post Europe, apply to
W.PARIS,A.P.O.
Office-No.1234 W Third St.,Los Angeles
SOUTHERN PACIFIC COMPANY.
(Pacific System.)
THURSDAY, DEC. 20, 18
Trains will leave Anaheim as follow:
A.M.M.(DAILY) LOCAL PASS
train for Buena Park,Norwalk;
Fioreance,Whittier,Los Angeles and way station;
Connects via Redondo leave Deposit at 10 A.M., or from Redondo Deposit at 9 A.M.
Cars to connect via Port Los Angeles,P.R.E.D at 1:10 P.M.; M.p.s. for passage or freight as above
Tickets to and from all important post Europe, apply to
W.PARIS,A.P.O.
Office-No.1234 W Third St.,Los Angeles
SOUTHERN PACIFIC COMPANY.
(Pacific System.)
THURSDAY, DEC. 20, 18
Trains will leave Anaheim as follow:
A.M.M.(DAILY) LOCAL PASS
train for Buena Park,Norwalk;
Fioreance,Whittier,Los Angeles and way station;
Connects via Redondo leave Deposit at 10 A.M., or from Redondo Deposit at 9 A.M.
Cars to connect via Port Los Angeles,P.R.E.D at 1:10 P.M.; M.p.s. for passage or freight as above
Tickets to and from all important post Europe, apply to
W.PARIS,A.P.O.
Office-No.1234 W Third St.,Los Angeles
SOUTHERN PACIFIC COMPANY.
(Pacific System.)
THURSDAY, DEC. 20, 18
Trains will leave Anaheim as follow:
A.M.M.(DAILY) LOCAL PASS
train for Buena Park,Norwalk;
Fioreance,Whittier,Los Angeles和way station;
Connects via Redondo leave Deposit at 10 A.M., or from Redondo Deposit at 9 A.M.
Cars to connect via Port Los Angeles,P.R.E.D at 1:10 P.M.; M.p.s. for passage or freight as above
Tickets to and from all important post Europe,apply到
W.PARIS,A.P.O.
Office-No.1234 W Third St.,Los Angeles
SOUTHERN PACIFIC COMPANY.
(Pacific System.)
THURSDAY, DEC. 20, 18
Trains will leave Anaheim as follow:
A.M.M.(DAILY) LOCAL PASS
train for Buena Park,Norwalk;
Fioreance,Whittier,Los Angeles和way station;
Connects via Redondo leave Deposit at 10 A.M., or from Redondo Deposit at 9 A.M.
Cars to connect via Port Los Angeles,P.R.E.D at 1:10 P.M.; M.p.s. for passage or freight as above
Tickets to and from all important post Europe,apply到
W.PARIS,A.P.O.
Office-No.1234 W Third St.,Los Angeles
SOUTHERN PACIFIC COMPANY.
(Pacific System.)
THURSDAY, DEC. 20, 18
Trains will leave Anaheim as follow:
A.M.M.(DAILY) LOCAL PASS
train for Buena Park,Norwalk;
Fioreance,Whittier,Los Angeles和way station;
Connects via Redondo leave Deposit at 10 A.M., or from Redondo Deposit at 9 A.M.
Cars to connect via Port Los Angeles,P.R.E.D at 1:10 P.M.; M.p.s. for passage or freight as above
Tickets to and from all important post Europe,apply到
W.PARIS,A.P.O.
Office-No.1234 W Third St.,Los Angeles
SOUTHERN PACIFIC COMPANY.
(Pacific System.)
THURSDAY DEC.20 ,18
Trains will leave Anaheim as follow:
A.M.M.(DAILY) LOCAL PASS
train for Buena Park,Norwalk;
Fioreance,Whittier,Los Angeles和way station;
Connects via Redondo leave Deposit at 10 A.M., or from Redondo Deposit at 9 A.M.
Cars to connect via Port Los Angeles,P.R.E.D at 1:10 P.M.; M.p.s. for passage or freight as above
Tickets to and from all important post Europe,apply到
W.PARIS,A.P.O.
Office-No.1234 W Third St.,Los Angeles
SOUTHERN PACIFIC COMPANY.
(Pacific System.)
THURSDAY DEC.20 ,18
Trains will leave Anaheim as follow:
A.M.M.(DAILY) LOCAL PASS
train for Buena Park,Norwalk;
Fioreance,Whittier,Los Angeles和way station;
Connects via Redondo leave Deposit at 10 A.M., or from Redondo Deposit at 9 A.M.
Cars to connect via Port Los Angeles,P.R.E.D at 1:10 P.M.; M.p.s. for passage or freight as above
Tickets to and from all important post Europe,apply到
W.PARIS,A.P.O.
Office-No.1234 W Third St.,Los Angeles
SOUTHERN PACIFIC COMPANY.
(Pacific System.)
THURSDAY DEC.20 ,18
Trains will leave Anaheim as follow:
A.M.M.(DAILY) LOCAL PASS
train for Buena Park,Norwalk;
Fioreance,Whittier,Los Angeles和way station;
Connects via Redondo leave Deposit at 10 A.M., or from Redondo Deposit at 9 A.M.
Cars to connect via Port Los Angeles,P.R.E.D at 1:10 P.M.; M.p.s. for passage or freight as above
Tickets to and from all important post Europe,apply到
W.PARIS,A.P.O.
Office-No.1234 W Third St.,Los Angeles
SOUTHERN PACIFIC COMPANY.
(Pacific System.)
THURSDAY DEC.20 ,18
Trains will leave Anaheim as follow:
A.M.M.(DAILY) LOCAL PASS
train for Buena Park,Norwalk;
Fioreance,Whittier,Los Angeles和way station;
Connects via Redondo leave Deposit at 10 A.M., or from Redondo Deposit at 9 A.M.
Cars to connect via Port Los Angeles,P.R.E.D at 1:10 P.M.; M.p.s. for passage or freight as above
Tickets to and from all important post Europe,apply到
W.PARIS,A.P.O.
Office-No.1234 W Third St.,Los Angeles
SOUTHERN PACIFIC COMPANY.
(Pacific System.)
THURSDAY DEC.20 ,18
Trains will leave Anaheim as follow:
A.M.M.(DAILY) LOCAL PASS
train for Buena Park,Norwalk;
Fioreance,Whittier,Los Angeles和way station;
Connects via Redondo leave Deposit at 10 A.M., or from Redondo Deposit at 9 A.m.
Cars to connect via Port Los Angeles,P.R.E.D at 1:10 P.m.; M.p.s. for passage or freight as above
Tickets to and from all important post Europe,apply到
W.PARIS,A.P.O.
Office-No.1234 W Third St.,Los Angeles
SOUTHERN PACIFIC COMPANY.
(Pacific System.)
THURSDAY DEC.20 ,18
Trains will leave Anaheim as follow:
A.M.M.(DA
The hills eighteen inches apart in row, makes 140 hills acres on an arc and rows to the sore makes 9,800 double potatoes to the acre, or 19,600 single you will see that a hill of forty seed goes across the balk, making the rope some eighteen inches, or half the I never plant less than twenty and planted sixty, and the sixty will every be as fine potatoes if we have plenty liquid manure every rain. It takes twenty to seventy-five potatoes to make it, never more than seventy-five. I opt the same seed for twenty-six and have potatoes both sweet and whole year round. I think the rose will bear good treatment of forsyth or any other. But the Triumph a crop twenty days quicker than also will stand the dry weather all, and I think the day will come either potato will be grown in Texas. They are so smooth and the eyes are and are the easiest potato cleaned. Routing your potatoes you have cuttings in less than one-half the time under the old style of planting. I have the failure in twenty old years. My were then the size of hen's eggs and killed the vines and every potato leaves from four to six weeks to sprout and potato to the size of peas. The room I keep warm by a small charm in a bake oven. One barrel of will be plenty for the whole time. My potatoes into old barrels or small as to get them warm easier than in cup or bunk. The smaller the boxes he and quicker they will sprout. One potatoes get large enough I knock hoops, take down the staves and thousands upon thousands of small from the size of a birl's eye to that and a few the size of marbles; the mass is held together with small roots. He hand barrow (not a wheel barrow) dry the seed down the row and the breaks off as many as you wish, than twenty to forty, and let them the balk in the water furrow and plowings and you will have potato and to keep. My sprout house mole walls and is filled in between dust, also overhead and has double ago the Grangers used to meet and farm questions in this county, and very warm debates about growing cotton, etc., and when they got a nice point it was common to call tacks, and all old Grangers know tacks means in farming. But to professors, the graduates and the eaters who have turned boss farms got a high-fangled name, which "intensive" farming, which means the opposite of extensive. This spread out; the other word means An intensive culture is to take of land and by increasing culture and labor to make more net an you would on 100 by the old farming. Under the most favourable circumstances you could not make an 150 bushels to the acre, and unnew style you can make over twenties more. On the one hand you crop a year, on the other easily six crops a year, and again, you planted trees, and trusted to providence for agriculture, frost to sprout and grow po-From the time of planting to gath-was generally from ninety to 120 Under the new order of things you potatoes that you gather. Yes, I you plant the potatoes that you dig and you can regulate the planting you wish. The more seed you plant potatoes you have to gather. All governed by the amount of manure on your land. More manure, more ed. Respectfully, C.E. Ford.
FORD'S FIGURES QUESTIONED.
TON, Texas, August 24.—Some of county's most successful vegetable COMPRISING 20 ACRES.
12 Acres Planted in Soft-Shell Wainuts Orchard near the house with assorted fruit trees.
Twenty shares of Anaheim Union Water Company stock included.
PRICE, $3,000.
Inquire of H.A.DICKEL, Anaheim.
MAY 30
LESSONS IN DRAWING ...AND...
PAINTING
Wednesdays and Saturdays.
MRS. LARSEN.
Broadway, near Los Angeles Street.
BOSTON BAKERY.
Stephen Kistler,
PROPRIETOR....
FRESH BREAD,
PIES, CAKES, ETC.
For parties and balls furnished on short notice. Welding cakes and cakes for parties a specialty.
Fresh Bread Delivered to all parts of Anaheim and vicinity.
Ruddock & Case.
PLUMBING,
TINNING,
Pump Work
Agents for Woodmanse, Galvanized Steel Geared Windmill.
Write or call us for estimates.
ANAHEIM, CAL.
City Stables,
A.L. LEWIS & CO., PROPS.
Center St, opp. Kroeger Block
BICYCLES FOR SALE OR RENT.
Single and Double Teams.
Furnished as short notice, and careful drivers familiar with the country supplied when required. Ibe patronage of the public is respectfully solicited.
GO TO THE Oak Barber Shop
FOR A FIRST-CLASS SHAVE OR HAIR CUT.
TWO DOORS WEST OF BANK.
Southern California Railway
Trains leave and Anaheim depot follows:
CHICAGO LIMITED.
To Denver, Kansas City, Chicago, St. Leaves 5:18 p.m. Arrives 9:24 a.m.
OVERLAND EXPRESS
Through to Denver, Kansas City, Chicago Louis and East.
Leaves 5:47 p.m. Arrives 5:47 p.m.
SAN DIEGO TRAINS.
Leave 9:05 a.m. M. 5:18 p.m.
Arrive 12:29 p.m. M. 5:47 p.m.
LOS ANGELES TRAINS.
Leave 7:55 a.m. M. 12:29 p.m.
Arrive 9:05 a.m. *12:10 p.m.* M. 5:47 p.m.
RIVERSIDE, SAN BERNARDINO, REDDISH AND HIGHLANDS LOOP.
Leave *12:10 p.m.* M. 5:18 p.m.
Arrive 9:05 a.m. *12:10 p.m.* M. 5:47 p.m.
REDONDO AND SANTA MONICA
Leave 7:55 a.m. M. 12:29 p.m.
Arrive *12:10 p.m.* M. 9:05 a.m.* 2:55 p.m.
PASADENA, AZUSA AND INTERMEDIATE
Leave 7:55 a.m. M. 12:29 p.m.
Arrive 9:05 a.m.* *12:10 p.m.* M. 5:47 p.m.
SANTA ANA TRAINS.
Leave 9:05 a.m. M. 12:29 p.m.
Arrive 9:47 p.m.
Trains marked with a "are daily except daytime."
THE ORIGINAL ARYAN.
The ancient Aryan, you have done me wrong. Not come from Hindustan—been here all along.
I traveled from the east huge successive waves. Find your ancestors deceased. Make your own old caverns.
My remains may now be sought and up with mastodons, every long with flints I fought are I fought with bronze.
Apple skins I wrapped me round mats I learned to make. My dwellings in the ground seared them on a lake.
No pen, I'm sure of this, though you say I penned manner of theologies makrit and in Zend.
Future you've misunderstood. First I sojourned here, filled chunks of stone or wood; it were rather queer.
More my little ways you scan access you'll care to praise the dear Aryan molithic days.
Me mixed me up till, I declare, really can report. Or first was tall and fair, was dark and short.
Two things I take my stand through all their noise and strife—it come from Asia, and no higher life.
Punish lamona, centrally located. Theilar house in Los Angeles. Coring and Third Sts. First-class stations at moderate rates.
BICYCLES FOR SALE OR RENT.
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.
GO TO THE Oak Barber Shop
FOR A FIRST-CLASS SHAVE OR HAIR CUT.
TWO DOORS WEST OF BANK.
HUSMANN BROS.
PALACE MEAT MARKET
F.W.Fleischmann,
PROPRIETOR.
Best Meats the Market Affords
Always on Hand.
Also keeps on hand Sausages, Bacon, Ham, Lard, Etc.
Meats deliverid to all parts of the city free of charge.
Shop on East Center Street.
F. BACKS,
UNDERTAKER.
And Dealer in FURNITURE.
Wall Paper, Cornices, Window Shades, Picture Frames, Upholstery Goods, Paints, Oils and Glass.
Sewing Machine Supplies, Etc.
Corner Los Angeles and Chartres Sts.
FRED MAURER
DEALER IN...
Fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars
Call In and See Me.
Opp. S.P. depot... Anaheim
White-wine Vinegar FOR SALE.
TRANSPORTATION.
Pacific Coast Steamship Company.
Godall, Perkins & Co., General Agents,
San Francisco.
NORTHERN ROUTES
Arrive lines for Portland, Or., Victoria, B. C.,
and Puget Sound and Alaska and all Coast
foods.
SOUTHERN ROUTES.
Table for September, 1895.
LBAVE SAN FRANCISCO
Harford
S. S. Mexico, Sept. 4, 12, 20,
28; Oct. 6.
Barbara
S. S. Santa Rosa, Sept. 8, 16,
24; Oct. 2.
Los Angeles
S. S. Santa Rosa, Sept. 8, 16,
24; Oct. 2.
Diego
S. S. St. Paul—Sept. 2, 10,
18, 25; Oct. 4.
San Pedro
S. S. Eureka—Sept. 6, 14, 22,
30; Oct. 8.
Pedro and Way
S. S. Eureka—Sept. 6, 14, 22,
30; Oct. 8.
PORT LOS ANGELES AND REDONDO.
Diego
S. S. Mexico—Sept. 6, 14,
22, 30; Oct. 8.
Francisco
S. S. Santa Rosa—Sept. 4,
12, 20, 28; Oct. 6.
Harford
S. S. Mexico—Sept. 8, 16, 24;
Oct. 2.
EAVE SAN PEDRO AND EAST SAN PEDRO
Francisco
S. S. Eureka—Sept. 1, 9, 17,
25; Oct. 8.
Ports.
S. S. St. Paul—Sept. 5, 13,
21, 29; Oct. 7.
To connect with steamers via San Pedro
S.P.R.R.(Arcade Depot) at 5 p.m., and
terminal R.R.Depot at 5:15 p.m.
To connect via Redondo leave Santa Fe
at 10 A.M., or from Redondo Railway
at 9 A.M.
To connect via Port Los Angeles leave
R.R.Depot at 1:10 p.m.for steamers north
and south of steamers' cabins at Agent's Office,
are berths may be secured.
The Company reserves the right to change the
employees or their days of sailing.
For passage or freight as above or for
sets to and from all important points in
cope, apply to
W.PARRIS, Agent.
No.123¼ W Third St., 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, Downey,
Whittler, Los Angeles and way stations.
Cabs at Los Angeles with "New Orleans Export" for the East, via Yuma, El Paso and San
Monto; also for Colton, Redlands, Riverside, San
ardino, Monrovia, Long Beach, San P dro, Santa
Caica and Port Los Angeles.
A.M.(DAILY) LOCAL PASSENGER train for Miraflores, Orange and Santa
Caica.
P.M.(DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY) LOCAL Passenger train for Buena Park, Norwalk,
Florence, Los Angeles and way stations.Contact Los Angeles with Passenger Trains for ColRedlands, Riverside, San Bernardino, Monrovia,
Monica, Port Los Angeles and Santa Barbara.
STERN BROS.
General Merchants
And Shippers.
ANNOUNCEMENT
Grand Special Sale In
Dry Goods, Clothing,
MEN'S FURNISHING GOODS
Groceries, Crockery,
Hardware, Tinware, Feed and Provisions.
AND WILL GIVE A
Special Cash Discount of 10 Per Cent
On Every Dollar's Worth of Goods.
Butter and Eggs and all kinds of Farm Produce bought and taken in exchange at highest prices.
STERN BROTHERS.
N.Hart's Place.
I KEEP CONSTANTLY ON HAND THE
Choicest of Liquors in Wholesale Quantity
CIGARS, TOBACCO, ETC.
Anaheim Beer on Draught.
N.HART,
PROPRIETOR
N. Hart's Place.
I KEEP CONSTANTLY ON HAND THE
Choicest of Liquors in Wholesale Quantity
CIGARS, TOBACCO, ETC.
Anaheim Beer on Draught.
N. HART, PROPRIETOR.
CITIZENS' BANK
OF ANAHEIM.
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. Boere, W. T. Brown
P. Nicolus, Richard Melrose, L. Goldwater, Kaspare
Cohn, H. Cahen, J. A. Goldwater, J. Schlesinger.
CORRESPONDENTS:
Farmers and Merchants' Bank of Los Angeles,
London, Paris and American Banks; 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.
JOSEPH BACKS,
DEALER IN
FURNITURE
Repairing Done.
Funeral Director.
Store in Backs Building (next to irrigation district office), Los Angeles street.
FRANK FOX,
City Barber Shop.
FOR A FIRST-CLASS SHAVE!
Ramon Wisser.
Finest of Wines, Liquors & Cigars
ANAHEIM
BREWERY.
F. CONRAD,
PROPRIETOR.
LAGER BEER!
FURNISHED BY THE
BOTTLE
OR—
5 or 10-Gallon Keg
ICE
FOR SALE!
1 Cent Per Pound.
H. A. STOUGH.
BLACKSMITHING.
Horse-Shoeing A Specialty.
First-Class Workmanship.
Satisfaction Guaranteed
IN EVERY CASE.
Osborne Mowers and Steel Hay
Rakes kept on hand.
Center Street.
City Barber Shop.
FOR A FIRST-CLASS SHAVE
Ramon Wisser.
Finest of Wines, Liquors & Cigars
Pool & Billiard Tables
In the Superior Court of the County of Orange, State of California.
H. R. Cooper, Plaintiff, vs. Sheldon Littlefield, Nancy Littlefield, his wife, Main Street Savings Bank and Trust Company (a corporation), John Doe and Richard Roe, defendants.
Under and by virtue of a decree of foreclosure and order of sale, duly made and entered in the Superior Court, of the County of Orange, State of California, on the 12th day of August, 1895, and a Writ of Execution for the enforcement of judgment requiring sale of property under foreclosure of mortgage, issued out of said Superior Court on the 13th day of August, 1895, in the above-entitled action, in favor of H. R. Cooper, Plaintiff, and against Sheldon Littlefield, Nancy Littlefield, his wife, Main Street Savings Bank and Trust Company (a corporation), defendants, a copy of which said decree of foreclosure, duly attested under the seal of the said Superior Court, on the 13th day of August, 1895, and to me delivered on the same day, together with the said Writ annexed thereto, whereby I am commanded to sell at public auction, for cash, in Gold Colin of the United States, the following and in said decree described real estate, so witt: Situated, lying, and being in the City of Anaheim, County of Orange, State of California, and commencing at the southeast corner of Sycamore and Olive streets, and running thereeasterly on the south line of Sycamore street nine hundred and forty-eight (948) feet to a point; thence at right angles southerly three hundred and sixty (360) feet to a point in the northerly line of Adele street, extended; thence at right angles westerly on said northerly line of Adele street nine hundred and forty-eight (948) feet to the northeast corner of Adele and Olive streets; thence at right angles northerly on the easterly line of Olive street three hundred and sixty (360) feet to the point of beginning, being a part of Vineyard Lot C2, in said City of Anaheim. Together with all and singular the tenements, hereditaments and appurtenances thereunto belonging or in anywise appertaining.
Public notice is hereby given that on Friday, the 6th day of September, 1895, at 1 o'clock p.m. of said day, I will proceed to sell at the Courthouse door, No. 304 East Fourth street, in the City of Santa Ana, in said County of Orange, at public auction, to the highest bidder, for cash in Gold Colin of the United States, all the above described property, or so much thereof as will be sufficient to satisfy said decree for principal interest and all costs.
Given under my hand this 14th day of August, 1895,
N. A. BITTNER,
Commissioner of Sale.
Richard Melrose, Attorney for plaintiff,
Cent Per Pound.
H. A. STOUGH.
— BLACKSMITHING,
Horse-Shoeing A Specially.
First-Class Workmanship.
Satisfaction Guaranteed
IN EVERY CASE.
Osborne Mowers and Steel Hay Rakes kept on hand.
Center Street,
East of Postoffice.
ST. LOUIS BARBER SHOP.
Backs Block, Los Angeles Street, Anaheim.
A share of the public patronage is respectfully solicited. POOL TABLE In Rear of Shop.
A fine stock of Cigars, Tobacco and Candies always on hand.
ERANK BAUM, PROPRIETOR.
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CEMENT!
A.M.WILLIAMS&CO
Dealers In
Lime, Hair,
Plaster of Paris and Cement
For Sale in Quantities to Suit.
FRITZ RUHMANN'S
New Place.
BACKS' NEW BUILDING.
OS ANGELES STREET.
KEEPS CONSTANTLY ON HAND A LARGE AND complete stock of fresh liquors, wines and cigars. Cold beer always on draught.
The patronage of the public solicited
A. FREISE,
... KEEPS THE FINEST OF....
Wines, Liquors
And Cigars. Beer on draught