anaheim-gazette 1902-09-25
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Pardee and Labor
The Democratic papers have raised the cry that Dr. Pardee, the Republican nominee for Governor, is the friend of capital and not labor. Every official act of Dr. Pardee while he was mayor of Oakland, the only political position he has ever held, gives the lie to the statements of the Democratic press, but in addition the words of the candidate himself, uttered in his speech at the Republican rally in Oakland, his opening speech of the campaign, should satisfy any working man, and especially union men, as to where Dr. Pardee stands in regard to labor. In that speech he said in part:
"I feel that labor has just as much right to organize for its protection and benefit as has any other class of people. For upon its intelligent and proper organization labor must depend to secure its proper share of all that goes to make life worth the living. Our school-houses are filled with their children of our common people, among whom you and I are classed. Their homes are homes indeed. Books and music lie on their tables and fill their shelves. They wear as good clothes as the best in the land; they eat as good food as can be bought; they go to the theater oftener than I do; they have bank accounts and own homes. And all this they have gained because they have banded themselves together and quietly and intelligently secured what they asked for.
"I am glad whenever labor adds another cent to its daily wages, and I rejoice when the laboring man is able to cut off another hour from the time that he spends at his daily toll. I am glad and I joyce over these things because I know that the more wages the laboring man gets the better citizen he will be, the more able he will be to send his children to school and to our university and make of them our future great men. For it is a fact that our greatest men have sprung from the common people. And I rejoice when the hours of labor are shortened, because I know that with shorter hours the workman will have more time to give to his wife and children. And I know, from my own experience, that the more time a man can give to his time gathered in a well known house in New York. The conversation was of course brilliant, and the repulsed with mirth and wit. Durdull in the talk the door slowly opened and an old southern darky grinned with age, poked his head in and slowly drew his body in after him waiter started to eject him, when of the gentlemen cried:
"Wait a moment. Let's see what old boy wants."
The darky bobbed up to the door where this gentleman sat and held his hat. Throwing a wink to his morsels, the gentleman took the hat making a show of placing someone into it, passed it on to the next who did likewise. The hat made a face of the room, to the puzzled womans darky. The last to receive it emnly handed it back with a bow, saying:
"There sir, don't you think your something to be thankful for?"
The old darky looked solemnly at the company and mechanically tilted the hat, he said:
"Gen'men, I'ze indeed glad dat oben de hat back!"
The reply was so thoroughly enforced by the company that the darky left place a much richer man than what had entered it—Kansas City Woman."
Transplanting Muscles
The wonders of surgery will, it seems never cease. Among the most impressive achievements is the tranglantin muscles. This has been successful in the case of a patient who for half a lifetime been unable to one leg on account of paralysis arising in early childhood. The open is thus described: "A six inch radial incision is made on the side of the thigh, with the middle white tip of the patella. The skin is dissected out, cut off ation, brought forward and attached to the muscular fascia just aboveattle to the inner side of the patella."
The attachment must be made by splitting the fascia and drawing muscle through, so that it becomes inherent to both inner and outer surfaces of Kangaroo tendon is used for support being the best material. The wo
Big Improvements
The Southern Pacific company is preparing to receive 40,000 tons of steel rails from Germany, to arrive with a few days. American foundries were too busy to accommodate the demand for material, hence the order was placed in Germany.
The rails are 75-pound ones and will probably be used principally in this state. The improvements ordered by President Harriman are based on a $9,000,000 estimate, and all the rails in California will be relaid, the object being to put heavy rails in place of the comparatively light ones now in use.
Scarcity of cars to handle the fall freight has compelled the same company to resort to the expedient of using over 100 furniture cars to haul hay from the Livermore valley. Even with this, the farmers of the valley are complaining of being unable to get their hay to market. Other districts are also affected. For the second time this year the company has had to forward freight to San Francisco by way of San Jose, as the freight ferries are unable to handle the traffic between Oakland and San Francisco.
President Harriman has ordered 1000 cars for California, but these will not be ready for several months.
At the present time the traffic of the company is said to be the greatest in its history.
Two hundred of the new refrigerator cars of the new equipment of the same company will fall to the lot of California. Most of the new cars are already here and employed in carrying fruit to the east.
The present activity will lead in more cars being sent to California, as all the new equipment is in use and growers are still asking for additional facilities.
Florida Orange Grop
A dispatch from Jacksonville, Fla., says the report that the Florida orange crop will be small this season, not over 600,000 boxes, has surprised many, but information and data secured by railroad agents and commission men serve to substantiate it.
DID THE GIRLS PAINT?
How the Question Was Decided and a Bet Paid.
Two well known society swells went to the Imperial theater one afternoon when "East Lynne" was the bill. A few evenings before there had been discussed at their club the subject of women painting their faces. Several girls were mentioned who were suspected by their admirers of wearing an artificial carnation bloom. Others defended the young damselflies and said it was natural. How to find out and win a wager that was laid then and there was the subject of the young men's visit to the Imperial.
"East Lynne" is a play which ought to make all women cry, they reasoned, for it makes even men's throats grow thick. They sent tickets for reserved seats to the girls under discussion, begging them to invite whomsoever they pleased of their acquaintances, as they, the donors, would not able to escort them.
The ruse was successful. In an upper box sat the young men ready to win or lose the wager, and right below, in the parquet, where they could see their faces and every move of their hands, were the young women. There were six of them, two of whom shed copious tears and hesitated not to wipe them away with their handkerchiefs while the other four never winced. Among those who did not cry were the girls suspected of laying on the red pigment, and it was on just that evidence that the bet hinged. That night the wager was paid with a supper at the University club.—St. Louis Republi-c.
She Will Teach Bonnet Making.
Mila Valentine About, daughter of Edmond About, the author, is going to open a "class in hat and bonnet making." Everybody in Paris is surprised at the necessity for it, as during his lifetime About kept open house in his hotel on Rue de Donai, and a fete that he gave to the Authors' society in the chateau he had just bought at Pontoise had been ordered by his relatives of the Waziri tribe to poison food.
"Don't you know it is wrong to kill people?" asked Nicholson.
"I know it is wrong to kill with a knife or a sword," answered the child.
"Why?"
"Because the blood leaves marks," answered the trained poisoner.
A Pathan chief, who fell by Nicholson's side in a skirmish, left a little son, upon whom the English officer lavished care and attention. One day the 7-year-old boy asked his protector to grant him a special favor.
"Tell me first what you want."
"Only your permission, sahib, to go and kill my cousins, the children of your and my deadly enemy, my uncle, Faltri Khan."
"To kill your cousins: exclaimed the Englishman, horrified at the answer.
"Yes, sahib, to kill all the boys while they are young. It is quite easy now."
"You little monster! Would you murder your own cousins?
"Yes, sahib, for if I don't they will certainly murder me."
The little boy wished to follow Pathan usage and thought it very hard that his guardian should prevent his taking so simple a precaution.
NUGGETS
How often is seeming courtesies?
Faith is the carrying quality.
Cruelty to a dumb animal is test form of cowardice.
Some successes are too easy to I know a man whose manner perfect that he has none.
Modesty is the most beautiful graces, but only the superlative can afford such a luxury.
It is necessary at times to teat but it becomes more necessary diately after to make that lie true.
The most miserable creature face of the earth is the foolish man. His bieth is a loss to him and his death is the world's gain.
21 Years a Dyspep c
R. H. Foster, 318 S. 2nd street Lake City, writes: "I have been served with dyspepsia or indigestion 21 years; tried many doctors relief. Recently I got a bad herbine. One bottle erred me now tapering off on the second recommended it to my friend curing them too." 50c at Ha
WON BY A FAINT BEAUTIFUL
I can never marry you," she beautiful blonde.
"But," pleaded the wealthy girl "won't you make my life happy few short years I will be here troubled with a weak and fainte "In that case I accept you."
And yet they say faint beaten fair lady.
A Shocking Calamity
"Lately befell a railroad lays Dr. A. Kellett of Wark." "His foot was badly crushed Bucklen's Arnica Salve quickly him. It's simply wonderful for boils, piles and all skin eruption the world's champion healer," guaranteed. 25c. So'd at Ha
IT RATHER NR.
There was once a young lady Who owned a bad parrot that
Florida Orange Crop
A dispatch from Jacksonville, Fla., says the report that the Florida orange crop will be small this season, not over 600,000 boxes, has surprised many, but information and data secured by railroad agents and commission men serve to substantiate it.
The summer was marked until recently by lighter rainfall than has been recorded for twenty-five years before. Drought caused a large percentage of the fruit to fall, thus decreasing the crop from last year's output of 1,250,000 boxes to 600,000 or 700,000 this season. During the past ten days rain has been frequent. The effect is to throw a large amount of sap into the tops, and this sudden lilling out has caused the oranges to split and decay.
Devoured by Worms
Children often cry, not from pain, but from hunger, although fed abundantly. The entire trouble arises from inattention. Their food is not assimilated, but devoured by worms. A few doses of White's Cream Vermifuge will cause them to cease crying and begin to thrive at once, very much to the surprise and joy of the mother. 25 cents at J. P. Hatzfeld's.
FINAL SENTENCES
In introducing Judge Sulzberger of Philadelphia at a recent banquet after several rabbis had spoken, Dr. Henry M. Leipzig told this story:
"Two ladies once had a dispute as to which was the most influential, the clergy or the bench.
"I think the bench is the most influential," said one, 'because the judge can say,' "You shall be hanged."
"But,' said the other, 'the clergyman can say,' "You shall be damned."
"Ah, yes,' said the first, 'but when the judge says,' "You shall be hanged," you are hanged!"
Croup
Usually begins with the symptoms of a common cold; there is a chilliness, sneezing, sore throat, hot skin, quick pulse, hoarseness and impeded respiration. Give frequent small doses of Ballard's Horchound Syrup (the child will cry for it), and at the first sign of a croupy cough apply frequently Ballard's Snow Liniment externally to the throat. 50 cents at J. P. Hatzfeld's.
She Will Teach Bonnet Making.
Mila Valentine About, daughter of Edmond About, the author, is going to open a "class in hat and bonnet making." Everybody in Paris is surprised at the necessity for it, as during his lifetime About kept open house in his hotel on the Rue de Donai, and a fete that he gave to the Authors' society in the chateau he had just bought at Pontoise is remembered as almost princely. By what reverse of fortune About's family were left destitute nobody seems to know. Although he himself began life humbly as the son of a grocer, his daughter was a brilliant young society woman brought up in luxury, and everybody is admiring the courage with which she has undertaken to solve the difficult problem of the "struggle for life."—Boston Woman's Journal.
Her Lucky Day.
A North Carolina paper says:
"A negro struck his wife two terrible blows on the head with an ax. The negro escaped to the woods, and his wife soon revived and said: 'I mighty glad he done it, kase now he'll stay clear or de neighborhood en I won't have ter suppo't him no mo'. It wuz a lucky tay for me w'en he hit me wid dat ax!'
Very few of us are as thankful as that for these little blessings in disguise—Atlanta Constitution.
Cruel Spaniards.
Spanish officers as well as men generally incline to cruelty and treachery. Here is a story in point, told by an excellent authority:
"In Alcala, the Guardia Civil—that is, one of the crack troops—was after a robber band. One of the robbers was caught. Being promised a full pardon, he gave away his comrades. This man had no sooner signed the paper that served as his death warrant for his late friends when the officer in charge said, 'We will begin with him.' The robber was immediately shot in the back of his head."
In 1870 Japan was visited by a terrible epidemic of smallpox, which almost decimated Yokohama. Vaccination was made compulsory in 1896. The Japanese are said to have been struck with the fact that pockmarked foreigners were rarely seen in Japan.
In the Rank of England there are many silver ingots which have lain on conect for nearly 200 years.
"I wrote to Doctor Pierce, who sent me a very kind letter and advised me."
Thousands of weak and sick women trace the beginning of a new perfect health to that letter written by Dr. Pierce.
Sick and ailing women are in consult Dr. Pierce, by letter, for correspondence held as strictly and sacredly confidential. Add R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescriptive weakness and aching backs, headaches and other womanly ailments curing the womanly diseases which them.
"In the spring of 1900 I became Mrs. Alviana Scholtz of Laketon, Lesseur Co., Minn., my back weak and acled so that I could do no ill, so I was obliged to take to my bed constant desire to urinate and then abdomen were almost unbeatable. Dr. Pierce, who sent me a Favorite Prescriptive medicine to take his Favorite Prescriptive medicine cannot enough in favor of Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets most desirable laxative for women."
STORY OF A HAT.
Calling the Secret of Its Two Trips Around a Table.
A number of literary men were at one gathering in a well known chapel in New York. The conversation of course brilliant, and the repartice filled with mirth and wit. During a talk the door slowly opened, an old southern darky, grizzled age, poked his head in and then drew his body in after him. A man started to eject him, when one gentlemen cried:
Wait a moment. Let's see what the boy wants."
The darky bobbed up to the table, this gentleman sat and held out his hat. Throwing a wink to his neighbor the gentleman took the hat and, being a show of placing something it, passed it on to the next man, did likewise. The hat made a tour of the room, to the puzzled wonder of darky. The last to receive it solitary handed it back with a politely saying:
Where, sir, don't you think you have nothing to be thankful for?"
The old darky looked solemnly around company and, mechanically taking that, he said:
"Men'men, I ze indeed glad dat I got de back!" The reply was so thoroughly enjoyed the company that the darky left them a much richer man than when he entered it.—Kansas City World
Transplanting Musica.
The wonders of surgery will, it seems, far cease. Among the most important movements is the transplanting of muscles. This has been successfully in the case of a patient who had half a lifetime been unable to use leg on account of paralysis occurred in early childhood. The operation was described: "A six inch longinal incision is made on the inner of the thigh, with the middle opiate the top of the patella. The sarto-is dissected out, cut off at its inion, brought forward and attached the muscular fascia just above and a little to the inner side of the patella.
The attachment must be made firmly splitting the fascia and drawing the whole through, so that it becomes adent to both inner and outer surfaces. Muscaroo tendon is used for sutures, using the best material. The wound is
FACTS ABOUT ANAHEIM.
Sketch of the industries and Resources or this Most Beautiful Part of California.
The City of Anaheim, with a population of 2500, is situated in the northern part of Orange county, in Southern California, 12 miles from the ocean, 4½ miles from the foothills, and 148¼ feet above sea level. It is 27 miles from Los Angeles, the second largest city in the State of California.
The climatic conditions are the most favorable for out-door life to be found in Southern California. The temperature is extremely uniform, seldom rising above 90 degrees in summer, or falling below 32 degrees in winter. The abundance of sunlight and the absence of sharp frosts and cold winds make it a place especially acceptable to those desiring to escape the severe climate of the east.
The country is very attractive. It is practically level, with just sufficient slope from the hills to afford adequate drainage. The roads are level, well graded, and well kept, affording excellent opportunities for cycling and driving. The soil is a rich sandy loam which never bakes, making it a very easy ground to work; thus lending itself readily to the cultivation of berries, nuts, oranges, etc.
The variety of products, and the possibility of procuring small tracts of land at low figures, and on easy terms, make our section of the county very attractive and advantageous for truck raising, or for farming on a small scale. The following are a few of the products: oranges, lemons, walnuts, grapes, peaches, apricots, sugar beets, berries and vegetables of all kinds.
Anaheim is the possessor of a Building and Loan Association, Water company, two railroads, fruit
THE ROSES OF SEATTLE.
O roses of Seattle,
That bloom in June and May,
You are perfect as the poet's dream,
Fair as the golden day;
You scatter waves of fragrance
On the sleeping air of night;
Your rainbow painted petals
Are the glory of the light!
Fair is Nile's storied lotus
And the rose of Guilistan,
And pleasant is the poppy seed
That lalls the soul of man,
Raro are the lights and shadows
In the panay's purple eyes,
But the roses of Seattle
Are the flowers of paradise.
O roses of Seattle,
That bloom in May and June,
Deep hearts of gold and crimson
That light the summer noon,
The cottage of the lowly
You paint with God's own plan;
In the mansion of the lordly
You shame the art of man!
I hold them fast in memory
Wherever I may roam,
These blossoms from the garden
Of the gods, dropped down from home.
The cruel years take from us
What years cannot restore,
But the roses of Seattle—
They bloom forevermore!
Eliza Archard Conner in Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
A STRANGE SENTENCE.
Punishment For a Murder That Was More Cruel Than Death.
In 1801 a man died in the Catskills who had been condemned by one of the strangest sentences on record. Ralph Sutherland was born in 1701 and lived in a stone house near Leeds. He was a man of violent temper and morose disposition, shunned by his neighbors and generally distilled. Not being able to get an American servant, he imported a Scotohwoman, and according to the usage of the times, virtually held her in bondage until her passage money had been refunded.
Unable to endure any longer the raging temper of her master, the girl ran away. Immediately upon discovering her absence the man set off in an angry chase upon his horse and soon overtook her. The poor woman never reached the house alive, and Sutherland was indicted and arrested on the charge of murder.
At the trial he tried to prove that his horse had taken fright, run away, pitched him out of the saddle and dashed the girl to death upon the rocks, but the jury did not accept the defense, and Sutherland was sentenced to die upon the scaffold.
NUGGETS
How often is seeming courage cannées?
Faith is the carrying quality.
Frugalty to a dumb animal is the low-form of cowardice.
Some successes are too easy to attain.
I know a man whose manners are so effect that he has none.
Modesty is the most beautiful of theaces, but only the superlatively rich afford such a luxury.
It is necessary at times to tell a lie.
It becomes more necessary immeiately after to make that lie the truth.
The most miserable creature on the face of the earth is the totally selfish.
His birth is a loss to the world and his death is the world's gain.
R. H. Foster, 318 S. 2nd street, Salt Lake City, writes: "I have been bothided with dyspepsia or indigestion for years; tried many doctors without relief. Recently I got a bottle of rubbing oil. One bottle cured me; I am now tapered off on the second. I have commended it to my friends; it is bringing them too." 50c at Hatzfeld's.
WON BY A FAINT HEART
I can never marry you," said the cutiful blonde.
"But," pleaded the wealthy old man, "don't you make my life happy for the short years I will be here? I am doubled with a weak and faint heart."
"I in that case I accept you."
And yet they say faint beauty never on fair lady.
A Shocking Calamity
"Lately befell a railroad laborer," writes Dr. A. Kellett of Williford, N.Y.
"His foot was badly crushed, but Jacklen's Arnica Salve quickly cured him. It's simply wonderful for burns, piles and all skin eruptions. It's the world's champion healer." Cure guaranteed. 75c. So'd at Hatzfeld's.
IT RATHER NR.
here was once a young lady Dr. who owned a bad parrot that mr.
The variety of products, and the possibility of procuring small tracts of land at low figures, and on easy terms, make our section of the county very attractive and advantageous for truck raising, or for farming on a small scale. The following are a few of the products: oranges, lemons, walnuts, grapes, peaches, apricots, sugar beets, berries and vegetables of all kinds.
Anaheim is the possessor of a Building and Loan Association, Water company, two railroads, fruit cannery and drier, large oil industry, ostrich farm, bank, several adequate commercial houses, two hotels and two newspapers. The city also owns its water and lighting plant.
FACTS ABOUT ORANGE CO.
The census bureau has issued a bulletin on agriculture in California which we quote from extensively in another part of this issue. One of the interesting features of the report is the paragraph giving the number of farms and acres of farming lands in the five Southern California counties. The pre-eminence of Orange county is apparent:
Counties. No. farms. Acres.
Los Angeles. 6577. 856,968
Orange. 2288. 999,486
Riveride. 2340. 472,087
San Bernardino. 2350. 219,182
San Diego. 2368. 809,419
But it is in the acreage of irrigated lands that Orange county takes easy precedence over the other counties of Southern California:
Counties. Acres.
Los Angeles. 85,644
Orange. 414,540
Riverside. 23,941
San Bernardino. 27,877
San Diego. 16,022
The area of Orange county is 780 square miles; that of Los Angeles, 3880; that of Riverside, 7008; that of San Bernardino, 20,055, and that of San Diego, 8400 square smiles.
Orange county thus contains one-fifth the area of Los Angeles; yet its irrigated lands approach in area to one-half those of its neighbor to the north.
Riverside embraces nine times its area, yet it irrigates 9000 more acres, or a fourth more than the belauded county on the east.
San Bernardino is 25 times its size, yet its irrigated acres exceed those of this jumbo county by nearly 4000, approximately ten per cent.
San Diego's eleven times its size, yet it irrigates 25,000 acres more than the county on the south—300 per cent is the former's irrigated area as compared with that of the latter—almost the irrigated area of San Diego and Riverside combined.
Orange county possesses the finest system of irrigation, the most secure water rights, that exist in Southern California. That is what we have said many a time and oft. These figures prove it. It is the handsomest and most productive county that lies outdoors and is settling up faster than any other in the State.
A Communication
MR. EDITOR—Allow me to speak a few words in favor of Chamberlain's car space at once.
List of the World's "Colonies."
Number Area.
colonies.Sq.Miles.Population
United Kingdom 48 11,800,412 844,059,129 France 6,017,837 824,062,660
Is the worst kind of poverty rich a woman may be if her "poor" she is poor indeed; appetite for food and the chance cannot tempt her. She turns through a restless night on which might woo an empress She has no strength for house no delight in social pleasure perked up in a glistering golden sorrow." She is mother. But she has no choice relation. She knows life is set in tune and time music of her own misery laughs or cries her nerves pain.
Ask such a woman if she will be well; to her husband her child's playmate. Coub but one answer?
Such a woman can get wet All her symptoms indicate condition of the delicate ganism. Curse that condition woman will be lifted up to joyment of health.
In ninety-eight cases out of dred Dr. Pierce's Favorite will cure womanly diseases the womanly health. It has had thousands of women had been given up by phriends. It is essentially a woman's ills. It dries enfeites it heals inflammation and uprocs female weakness and pains. It tranquilizes the
"I wrote to Doctor Pierce, who sent me a very kind letter and advised me."
Thousands of weak and sick women can trace the beginning of a new life of perfect health to that letter written to Dr. Pierce.
Sick and ailing women are invited to result Dr. Pierce, by letter, free. All correspondence held as strictly private and sacredly confidential. Address Dr. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N.Y.
Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription cures peak and aching backs, headaches, nervousness and other womanly ailments by caring the womanly diseases which cause them.
In the spring of 1900 I became very ill," writes Mrs. Alviera Scholtz, of Lake Washington, Lesseur Co., Minn., "my back was very weak and aching so that I could do no work at all, so I was obliged to take to my bed. I felt a constant desire to urinate and the pains in my abdomen were almost unbearable." I wrote to Dr. Pierce, who sent me a very kind letter, and advised me to take his 'Favorite Prescription' and 'Golden Medical Discovery.' I took six bottles of each and am a well woman now. I cannot say enough in favor of Dr. Pierce's medicines."
"Favorite Prescription" makes weak women strong, sick women well. Accept no substitute for the medicine which works wonders for weak women.
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are the most desirable laxative for delicate women.
A Communication
Mr. Editor—Allow me to speak a few words in favor of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. I suffered for three years with bronchitis and could not sleep at nights. I tried several doctors and various patent medicines, but could get nothing to give me any relief until my wife got a bottle of this valuable medicine, which has completely relieved me. W. S. Brockman, Bagnell, Mo. Tals remedy is for sale by all druggists.
Queen Elizabeth had refused to consider the death warrant of Mary Queen of Scots.
"No," she insisted, "my mind is made up."
"I think your face is, too," instantly retorted the captive sovereign.
Josh Westhafer of Le goose, Ind., is a poor man, but he says it would not be without Chamberlain's Palm Balm if it cost five dollars a bottle, for it saved him from being a cripple. No external application is equal this liminature for stiff and swollen joints contracted muscles, still neck, sprains and rheumatic and muscular pains. It has also cured numerous cases of partial paralysis. It is for sale by all druggists.
Coronado & cautions
Every day the Santa Fe sells tickets to Coronado and return for $3.50. Special $3.00 excursions to San Diego. Inquire of agent at Santa Fe depot for full information giving dates, also for Coronado booklet.
jun26 sep20
The Whole Story in one letter about Pain-Killer (PERRY DAVIS')
From Capt. F. Loye, Police Station No. 5, Montreal: "We frequently use Perry Davis' Pain-Killer for pain in the stomach, rheumatism, stiffness, frost bites, chillblasts, cramps, and all afflictions which befall men in our position. I have no heat-tation in saying that PAIN-KILLER is the best remedy to have near at hand."
Used Internally and Externally.
Two Sizees, 25c. and 50c. bottles.
Such a woman can get weaker symptoms indicated by gauism. Cure that condition of the delicate ganism will be lifted up to joyment of health.
In ninety-eight cases out of eighty-five women may have been given up by physicians. It is essentially a woman's illness. It dries enfeebled it heals inflammation and cures female weakness and pains. It tranquilizes the stores the appetite and gives sleep.
"Favorite Prescription" almost all other medicines woman's use in that it comforts and is entirely free from caine and all other narcotics the truest sense of the permeance medicine.
A Constant Surprise
"I had been a constant sufferer disease for five years," writes J.A. Keem Dam, Clay Co., West Virginia months previous to taking your own out of my room. Could not as there was such pain and drawn and bearing down weight in my accompanied with soreness; stantly with headache, pain in arms and chest, hard palpation, tition, constipation, disairiness, rite could not sleep, and breathing wintimes I could not lie down. We scribe my sufferings when I wish advice. In a short time I receive from you telling me I would fit it. If not entirely cured, by Pierce's Favorite Prescription. We one bottle of the 'Prescription,' Pierce's Pleasant Pellets and the which you advised, I could walk port of a cane), the drawing and bearing down weight were not sized if taken three bottles of the periods were regulated. I was could sleep well, and the pain ing down had vanished. I have tiled of 'Favorite Prescription,' Medical Discovery' and four years been five times.
With grateful thanks for your aid with best wishes."
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are a most effective laxative for women. They cure biliousness and sick headache.
BACK
EAST
Excursion
BY THE
SANTA FE
October
7 and 8
Tickets Good for Retr n
Until December 8
Read the Rates
Chicago and back ... $72.50
St. Louis and back... 67.50
St. Paul and back... 67.90
Kansas City and back 60.00
Omaha and back... 60.00
Memphis and lock... 67.50
New Orleans and back 67.50
And many other points on the same basis
DURING THE CAMPAIGN
THE ANAHEIM GAZETTE
WILL PUBLISH
MORE INTERESTING NEWS
OF THE DOINGS OF
BOTH POLITICAL PARTIES
THAN ANY OTHER PAPER
Full information of what is most important in the political world will be presented each week
As well as all other news of Orange county and elsewhere
WE DO THE FINEST JOB WORK
IN THE COUNTY
CALL AND SEE US
Is the worst kind of poverty. However rich a woman may be, if her health is "poor" she is poor indeed. She has no appetite for food and the choicest dishes cannot tempt her. She turns and tosses through a restless night on a couch which might woo an empress to slumber. She has no strength for household cares, no delight in social pleasure. She sits "perked up in a glistering grief wearing a golden sorrow." She is a wife and mother. But she has no happiness in either relation. She knows her husband's life is set in tune and time to the minor music of her own misery. If her child laughs or cries her nerves quiver with pain.
As such a woman if she would like to be well; to be her husband's comrade, her child's playmate. Could there be but one answer?
Such a woman can get well if she will. All her symptoms indicate a diseased condition of the delicate womanly organism. Cure that condition and the woman will be lifted up to the full enjoyment of health.
In ninety-eight cases out of every hundred Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription will cure womanly diseases, will restore the womanly health. It has cured tens of thousands of women many of whom had been given up by physicians and friends. It is essentially a medicine for woman's ills. It dries enfeebling drains. It heals inflammation and ulceration. It cures female weakness and bearing down pains. It tranquilizes the nerves, re-
BURNS AND SCALDS.
Remedies That Should Be Used Before the Doctor Arrives.
A burn may result from excessive heat applied in any way—hot air or hot water, steam, flame or electricity—or even from extreme cold. The injury resulting from contact with hot water or steam is usually called a scald, but is practically the same in its results as a burn.
Surgeons speak of different degrees of a burn, according to the amount of tissue destroyed by it. Thus a burn of the first degree is one that simply redens and irritates the skin; a burn of the second degree is one that causes actual inflammation of the skin with the formation of blisters, while a burn of the third degree destroys the skin and more or less of the flesh beneath it, or even chars and kills all the tissues, including the bone itself.
The effects of a burn depend partly upon its degree, but not entirely, for a burn even of the first degree may cause death if it involves a very large portion of the surface of the body. This it does by interfering with the necessary excretion of waste matter which is constantly taking place through the skin.
A curious effect of a severe burn in any part of the body is ulceration of the bowels following very intense congestion of the entire digestive canal. The bronchial tubes and the lungs are sometimes injured by the inhalation of steam or very hot air, but even apart from such an accident a person who has been burned about the chest or back is very liable to have an attack of bronchitis or pneumonia in consequence.
The first thing to be done in the case of an burn of any degree is to stop the pain. This should be done not only from the natural impulse to relieve suffering, but because the shock resulting from the injury may be so greatly increased
Such a woman can get well if she will. All her symptoms indicate a diseased condition of the delicate womanly organism. Cure that condition and the woman will be lifted up to the full enjoyment of health.
In ninety-eight cases out of every hundred Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription will cure womanly diseases, will restore the womanly health. It has cured tens of thousands of women many of whom had been given up by physicians and friends. It is essentially a medicine for woman's ills. It dries enfeebling drains. It heals inflammation and ulceration. It cures female weakness and bearing down pains. It tranquilizes the nerves, restores the appetite and gives refreshing sleep.
"Favorite Prescription" differs from almost all other medicines put up for woman's use in that it contains no alcohol and is entirely free from opium, cocaine and all other narcotics. It is in the truest sense of the term a temperance medicine.
A Constant Sufferer.
"I had been a constant sufferer from uterine disease for five years," writes J. A. Steorts, of Yankee Dam, Clay Co., West Virginia, "and for six months previous to taking your medicine I was not out of my room. Could not walk or stand, as there was such pain and drawing in left side and bearing down weight in region of uterus, accompanied with soreness. I suffered con-stantly with headache, pain in back, shoulders, arms and chest, had palpitation, nervous prostration, constipation, diziness, ringing in ears; could not sleep, and breathing was so difficult at times I could not lie down. Words fail to describe my sufferings when I wrote to you for advice. In a short time I received a kind letter from you telling me I would be greatly benefited, if not entirely cured, by the use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. When I had taken one bottle of the 'Prescription,' together with Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets and the local treatment which you advised, I could walk (with the support of a cane), the drawing and pain in side and bearing down weight were not so bad, and when I had taken three bottles of the medicine the periods were regulated, I was not so nervous, could sleep well, and the pain in side and bearing down had vanished. I have taken six bottles of 'Favorite Prescription,' two of 'Golden Medical Discovery' and four vials of 'Pellets.' An my health is better at this time than it has been five years.
With grateful thanks for your kind advice, and with best wishes."
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are a most effective laxative for women. They cure biliousness and sick headache.
The postmasters were free from all public offices, from liability to quarter soldiers, and they received gazettes free of postage, "wherewith they advantage themselves in their common trade of selling drink, and they have their single letters free to London."
The rates of postage in 1677 were comparatively low. A single letter — i.e., a letter consisting of one sheet of paper only—could be sent for any distance up to 80 miles for twopence, and beyond 80 miles for threepence. A letter weighing an ounce cost eightpence for 80 miles and a shilling beyond.
The mails were dispatched from London about midnight on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays and were due to arrive in London early on Monday, Wednesday and Friday mornings. They were carried on horseback at the rate of five miles an hour, and they were liable to a detention of not more than half an hour at each postoffice (stage) on the road. England was divided into six runnings, or roads—vix, west, Bristol, Chester; north, Yarmouth and Kent, starting from Plymouth, Bristol, Chester, Edinburgh, Yarmouth and Dover respectively. —Notes and Queries.
Getting Even With Him.
"Papa," said the little girl, "who do you love best in the world?"
Of course she thought she knew what he would reply, and he knew that she thought she knew it, says the Chicago Post. Consequently he decided to tease her.
"Daisy," he replied.
Daisy was her sister.
She thought it all over, and then she climbed up in his lap.
"Papa," she said, "I wish you would ask me if I love you or mamma best."
"Very well," he returned. "Do you love mamma or me best?"
Revenge is sweet, but even so a tender hearted bit of humanity does not like to be too harsh.
"You won't feel very, very bad if I tell you, will you?" she whispered.
He promised that he wouldn't.
"Well," she said, "then I guess I love mamma best."
Yes, revenge is sweet.
Red Pipestone Quarry.
Every one familiar with Longfellow's "Hiawatha" remembers the references to the famous red pipestone quarry, which is situated at the extreme eastern boundary of South Dakota. This is the only quarry of the kind known to exist on the American continent.
A curious effect of a severe burn in any part of the body is ulceration of the bowels following very intense congestion of the entire digestive canal. The bronchial tubes and the lungs are sometimes injured by the inhalation of stearu or very hot air, but even apart from such an accident a person who has been burned about the chest or back is very liable to have an attack of bronchitis or pneumonia in consequence.
The first thing to be done in the case often burns of any degree is to stop the pain. This should be done not only from the natural inpulse to relieve suffering, but because the shock resulting from the injury may be so greatly increased by the agony as to cause the death of the patient, even when the burns in themselves would not do so.
Covering the part with any bland substance, such as olive oil, vaseline, sweet butter or flour paste, to keep off the air will often afford great relief, and in burns of the first degree nothing more may be needed. Carron oil, the name given to a mixture of equal quantities of linseed oil and limewater, was formerly and is still in many workshops the favorite application for a burn. Better still is bicarbonate of soda (cooking soda) or calcined magnesium, made into an ointment with vaseline or lard or dusted thickly over the skin.
Another application which is often exceedingly grateful is a solution of nitrate of potash (nitre). Hunters often make a paste of gunpowder for this purpose. One or other of these applications will usually suffice in mild cases, and in severe burns will help to reduce the pain for the time until the doctor comes.
-Youth's Companion.
His Mustard Plaster.
The mustard plaster is a harmless looking wafer, but it must be handled with as much circumspection as a woman. There was a newly married man once whose wife told him to put on a mustard plaster to cure a cold. He had faith in her, and put it on. Then he went to sleep, being gifted with the power of sleeping under torments which is not given to one man in a thousand. The plaster seemed to him somewhat unreasonably hot, but he argued that the hotter it was the better. Besides, he had confidence in his wife. Next day he found a well developed blister on his chest, and his wife only laughed and said she had supposed any one would have sense enough to take off a plaster when it hurt him. Though that was 11 months ago, the mark of the plaster is still upon the man like a brand, and he now regards his wife's remedies with suspicion. —New York Commercial Advertiser.