anaheim-gazette 1881-09-17
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ANAHEIM
VOL. XI.
WEEKLY GAZETTE.
Established 1870.
For Terms, see Fourth Page.
Dr. Reginald A. Fergusson
Doctor of Medicine and Master of Surgery of the Queen's University, Ireland; Licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians and of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh; Licentiate of the Society of Apothecaries of London; late Senior Resident-Surgeon, Resident-Physician and Assistant Pathologist, Glasgow Royal Infirmary, and latter Resident in the Rotunda Hospital, (for diseases of women only) Dublin.
HAVING PURCHASED FROM DR. JAMES ELLIS the Anaheim Sanatorium and Drug Store may be consulted on all Medical and Surgical cases. Diseases of Women and Children a specialty.
Office hours from 7 A.M. to 12 M., and from 5 P.M. to 8 P.M.
DR. ALICE HIGGINS,
Physician and Surgeon!
OFFICE—Corner of Center and Lemon Streets,
ANAHEIM.
A. J. HOWE M. D.,
Physician and Surgeon,
SANTA ANA.
CITY DRUG STORE!
Ferguson & Lake, Prop's.
Centre Street (Opposite Planters' Hotel).
ANAHEIM.
A choice variety of perfumery, toilet articles, etc., pure and fresh Drugs, patent medicines, etc. Physicians' prescriptions carefully compounded at all hours.
IF YOU WANT TO GET RID OF SQUIRRELS AND GOPHERS
USE CARBON BI-SULPHIDE
Everybody who has used it recommends it as the ONLY SURE EXTERMINATOR
Of this vermin. For sale by A. LANGENBERGER,
Dealer in Groceries, Hardware,
Paints, Oils and Crockery.
APPALLY
Northern Michigan ordeal of fire, the pity of the most horrific counties of Sanilac devastated, and it is sand people perished is great destitution graphs under date George McDonnell county, tells a sad story homeless in that ing from want of food Ballentine of Verona three lives are known borhood of Sand Bay reached Verona Mini town was soon wiped so strong that Balle picked up and bled yards. A woman found lying against being partly delivered vastation caused nothing in comparison by the fires of the Reliable information upwards of 300 flames. There was woods and ground warning of danger a racehorse came through the terrible tess from the time would be no vestigio have just returned
DR. ALICE HIGGINS,
Physician and Surgeon!
OFFICE—Corner of Center and Lemon Streets,
ANAHEIM.
A. J. HOWE M. D.,
Physician and Surgeon,
SANTA ANA.
DR. E. L. COWAN,
Dentist,
Has opened an office in the upper part of Mrs. Metra's building, Los Angeles Street, Anaheim. Having had twenty years experience, he can speak with confidence of his work. His scale of prices is very low. He will be found in his office every day between the hours of 9 A.M. and 5 P.M.
GEO. B. SHAFFER,
NOTARY PUBLIC,
OFFICE—BANK OF ANAHEIM.
VICTOR MONTGOMERY,
Attorney-at-Law,
SANTA ANA, CAL.
Office at Anaheim on Tuesdays and Fridays. O. address, Santa Ana, Cal.
ROBT. W. SCOTT,
ATTORNEY AT LAW AND NOTARY PUBLIC Commissioner of Deeds for Arizona Territory. Kroeger's Block, Anaheim, Cal.
M. L. WICKS,
Attorney-at-Law,
Rooms 86 and 87 Temple Block.
LOS ANGELES.
H. M MITCHELL,
Attorney and Counselor at Law,
Office—Rooms 76 and 77 Temple Block.
LOS ANGELES.
H. J. STEVENSON,
Deputy U.S. Land and Mineral Surveyor,
Office: Room No 4, Downey Block,
LOS ANGELES, - - CAL.
L. GUNTHER,
Ploneer Boot and Shoe Maker,
Cor. Adele and Los Angeles streets.
ANAHEIM.
USE CARBON BI-8ULPHIDE
Everybody who has used it recommends it as the ONLY SURE EXTERMINATOR Of this vermin. For sale by
A. LANGENBERGER,
Dealer in Groceries, Hardware,
Paints, Oils and Crockery.
Len. J. Thompson & Co.,
DEALERS INGROCERIES, PROVISIONS,
ETC. Wholesale and Retail Agents for the Celebrated ANCHOR CHEESE.
36 SPRING Street.
Los Angeles, - Cal.
City Stables,
Corner of Los Angeles and Center Sts.
ANAHEIM.
L.F. Lewis, -- Proprietor.
THESE STABLES ARE THE BEST VENTILATED and most commodious in the town, and special attention will be paid to Boarding and Grooming horses. The charve in all cases will be reasonable.
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.
BLACKSMITHING
AND
WAGONMAKING!
Removal.
MR. H.A. STOUGH DESIRES TO INFORM THE public that he has removed his blacksmith shop to the shop on Lemon Street formerly occupied by H. J. McDermott, and respectfully solicits the continued patronage of his many customers.
One part of the shop is occupied by Mr. T. L. GAN-NON, Wagonmaker, who is prepared to do all kinds of woodwork in a thorough manner and at cheap rates.
Messrs. Stough and Gannon are jointly agents for The Osborn Farm Machinery.
Connecting of Mowers, Reapers, Self-Binders, etc. Also agent for the Studebaker and other celebrated FARM WAGONS.
W. A. MORRISON,
BLACKSMITH
AND WAGONMAKER
Deputy U. S. Land and Mineral Surveyor,
Office: Room No 4, Downey Block,
LOS ANGELES, - CAL.
L. GUNTHER,
Ploneer Boot and Shoe Maker,
Cor. Adele and Los Angeles streets.
ANAHEIM.
GEORGE BAUER,
BOOT AND SHOE MAKER,
Los Angeles Street.
MAKING AND REPAIRING AT THE LOWEST
cash price. All orders promptly attended to
All work guaranteed.
CHARLES WILLE,
COOPERAGE.
Pipes, Barrels and kegs on hand at all times. Tanks
and Tube made to order. Honev Barrels for sale cheap.
MONEY
TO LOAN.
Apply to R. W. SCOTT, Attorney at Law
F. & J. BACKS,
Imperters, Manufacturers and Dealers in
Furniture, Bedding, Paper Hangings, Picture Frames, etc,
UNDERTAKERS.
Agents for the Howe, Eldredge and Victor Sewing
Machines.
Los Angeles Street.: Anaheim.
INTERNATIONAL
BREWERY.
T. P. NINDE, Proprietor.
Orders from Town and Country promptly attended to
WEEKLY
EIM GA
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA: SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1881.
APPALLING FIRES.
Northern Michigan has passed through an ordeal of fire, the particulars of which are of the most horrifying description. The counties of Sanilac and Huron were almost devastated, and it is believed that one thousand people perished in the flames. There is great destitution. A correspondent telegraphs under date of September 8th:
George McDonald of Mindon, Sanilac county, tells a sad story. Over 200 families are homeless in that section and are suffering from want of food and clothing. John Ballentine of Verona Mills says that fifty-three lives are know to be lost in the neighborhood of Sand Beach. The fires suddenly reached Verona Mills on Monday and the town was soon wiped out. The wind was so strong that Ballentine and his wife were picked up and blown fifteen or twenty yards. A women and her husband were found lying against a tree dead, the woman being partly delivered of a child. The devastation caused by the fires of 1871 was nothing in comparison with that occasioned by the fires of the last few days.
Reliable information leads me to say that upwards of 300 people perished in the flames. There was no escape for them. The woods and ground were so dry, and no warning of danger was given. Faster than a racehorse came the fire. It would embrace a house or barn with its contents, then pass to the next. Persons who have been through the terrible ordeal say in ten minutes from the time fire struck a house there would be no vestige of the building left. I have just returned from a trip through the
Timely Advice to Wine Makers and Grape Growers.
The early ripening grape varieties are obliging the growers in some portions of the State at this moment to gather and press them, whilst in every other part casks and vintage tools are being got ready for the active work shortly to be undertaken. At this season it behooves the grape grower to consider everything well, reviewing his own experience with that of his neighbor, in order to do the vintage work well and make his liquid of a quality which will be superior to last year's wines. Let cleanliness in press and casks be the first consideration. Let no foul nor unripe berries be added to your juice of sound grapes. Observe quality in the degree of maturity in your grapes. Sulphur your casks well and eschew every pipe that has the slightest smell of acidity. Try to regulate the building where your musts are to be fermented so that no unevenness of temperature will impede the proper progress of the important process of vinification. If you have not gathered sufficient experience in what degree of maturity your grapes produce the best wine, then see this season if for your white wines a stage just before full ripeness, the exact degree of maturity, or a shade after it, that is just a beginning of over ripeness, will give you the finest quality of wine; also whether you can obtain both color and body with equipoised acids, mildness of taste and flavor from fully ripe common grapes and one variety only, or do better by allowing them for a few hours to rest in the sun and adding a proportion of the juice of nobler grapes to their must, or
SPEED PROGRAMME.
For the Fair of District Agricultural Association No. 6, 1881.
Races to begin each day at 1 P.M., commencing Tuesday, November 1st, and ending Saturday, November 5, 1881.
FIRST DAY.
Tuesday — Trotting race, free for all horses that never beat 3 minutes; mile heats; 3 in 5; purse, $100.
Same day—Running race, for graded 2-year olds; half-mile dash; purse, $100.
Same day—Running race; free for all; one-half mile and repeat; purse, $100.
SECOND DAY.
Wednesday—Trotting race; 2:40 class; mile heats; 3 in 5; purse, $100.
Same day—Running race; free for all 2-year olds; three-fourth mile dash; purse, $100.
Same day—Running race; free for all; one mile and repeat; purse, $100.
THIRD DAY.
Friday—Trotting race; 2:30 class; mile heats; 3 in 5; purse, $200.
Same day—Running race; for graded 3-year olds; mile dash; purse, $100.
FOURTH DAY.
Saturday—Trotting race; free for all; mile heats; 3 in 5; purse, $200.
Same day—Running race; free for all; 2½ mile dash; purse, $150.
Same day—Running race; free for all graded horses; one mile dash; purse, $100.
All pursues will be paid at the Secretary's office immediately after the decision of the
Reliable information leads me to say that upwards of 300 people perished in the flames. There was no escape for them. The woods and ground were so dry, and no warning of danger was given. Faster than a racehorse came the fire. It would embrace a house or barn with its contents, then pass to the next. Persons who have been through the terrible ordeal say in ten minutes from the time fire struck a house there would be no vestige of the building left. I have just returned from a trip through the burned district, and a description of the sights would make the reader's blood turn cold. I saw many instances of men, women and children lying on their faces in the road where they had fallen when overtaken by the fire. Children were lying on logs where they clambered for safety. There was no finding each other when once separated. Many took refuge in wells and on the roofs of houses, thinking to escape, but in almost every instance were suffocated. The details of suffering in Huron county are as sad as here. I believe that when the returns are all in 1000 persons will be found to have perished in the flames. Forest township will turn out Thursday to bury the dead cattle, horses and sheep, the stench from which is unbearable.
PORT HURON (Mich.), September 8.—The committee appointed to visit the burned region, after receiving their reports of a large number of persons familiar with the facts, and in most instances giving the names of victims and sufferers already ascertained, say: "In twenty towns in Sanilac and Huron counties we find over two hundred per sons destroyed by the fire, including entire families lost. We have lists already of more than 1500 families burned out, in most cases losing their houses, barns, cattle, horses, grain and hay.
DETROIT, September 9th.—A Port Austin dispatch says the loss of life on the burned peninsula by Monday and Tuesday's fires is estimated at 200 to 300. The following villages are burned: Badaxe, Vetona, Forest Bay, Richmondville, Charleston, Anderson, Dickersonville, Harrisonville and Sandusky. The following are partly burned: Port Hope, Mindon and Ubley. The country suffered vastly more than the villages in Saginaw, Tuscola and Lapeer. The counties on the tier back from the lake were greatly damaged, but not nearly as much as the shore counties.
DETROIT, September 8th.—The following appeal has been issued by a committee of citizens of Port Huron, headed by Senator Conger, Mayor Carlton and others:
To the People of the United States: A most appalling disaster has fallen upon a large portion of the counties of Huron and Sanilac, with some adjacent territory, a section of country recently covered with forests, and now occupied by nearly 50,000 people, largely recently settled and mostly you have not gathered sufficient experience in what degree of maturity your grapes produce the best wine, then see this season if for your white wines a stage just before full ripeness, the exact degree of maturity, or a shade after it, that is just a beginning of over ripeness, will give you the finest quality of wine; also whether you can obtain both color and body with equipoised acids, mildness of taste and flavor from fully ripe common grapes and one variety only, or do better by allowing them for a few hours to rest in the sun and adding a proportion of the juice of nobler grapes to their must, or whether by not waiting for full ripeness of the sweetest kinds of grapes you obtain a less heavy taste. In fact, try to learn, for now is your schooling season for future profitable application of what can be learned.
Try also the eration of the press mass for red wines. Allow the mash of grapes, as an experiment, for a few casks, to rest for half a dozen hours or longer, and often work it through with a shovel, so as to saturate the liquid with oxygen thoroughly before putting the mass into the fermenting cask. You may obtain, as others have, a red wine of a deeper color and taste that will compare rather favorably with non-aged musts. Avoid the mixing of Muscat grapes with grapes for white wines. A white wine having the powerful flavor of Muscat is of little use except as Muscat wine. Let Muscat must ferment by itself.
Let your study be to produce a clean tasting wine. Each grape variety will, if properly treated, yield a wine of its own nature, which when clean tasting and well fermented, will be useful and improve. Do your best to produce wines out of which some will be found worth keeping and develop into fine wines. This should be our great aim, for only a small proportion of our wines are above ordinary quality, and as it is certain that we have in many spots the material for superior qualities, and we want them, it will be the merit of the grower and maker to obtain fine wine from such grapes. Do not expect exaggerated profits from grapes; be contented with a decent price, for promised values of many hundreds of dollars for an acre of vineyard are illusions. Johannisberg, Chateau Lafite, and other exceptional vineyards in Europe, with palaces and everything in them, are not estimated above $800 per acre. A well ordered vineyard in California will always command a fair price, and your care of its produce will gain your property a name and value above the ordinary.
F. POHNDORFF.
A dispatch from St. Louis to the daily papers announces that what we have alluded to as possible, that is, the coming of Prof. Husmann as a resident of California, is assured. The dispatch says: "Prof. George Husmann of the Missouri State University, who recently visited the Pacific Coast, starts within a day or two for California to make his home on the Napa county vineyards of J.W. Simonton, and devote himself to the pursuit of viticulture in which his reputation is nothing short of that."
Friday—Trotting race; 2:30 class; mile heats; 3 in 5; purse,$200.
Same day—Running race; for graded 3-year olds; mile dash; purse,$100.
FOURTH DAY.
Saturday—Trotting race; free for all; mile heats; 3 in 5; purse,$200.
Same day—Running race; free for all; 2½ mile dash; purse,$150.
Same day—Running race; free for all graded horses; one mile dash; purse,$100.
All pursues will be paid at the Secretary's office immediately after the decision of the judges.
No added money to be given for a walk-over.
All moneys in all purses to be divided two-thirds to the first horse, two-thirds of the remainder to second, and the balance to the third. If only two horses start, the third money to revert back to the Association.
Ten per cent. to accompany each entry in all purses, both running and trotting.
Three to enter and two to start.
National Trotting Association Rules to govern trotting, and Pacific Coast Blood Horse Association rules to govern all running races.
Entries to close with the Secretary October 15, 1881.
CONKLING AS AN EDITOR.
The statement that ex-Senator Conkling's friends are likely to establish a newspaper and install Mr. Conkling editor of it fills us with vague, undefinable something. We think, on the whole, it is uneasiness on account of Mr. Conkling. Does this gentleman know what it is to edit a newspaper? We greatly fear he does not. He appears to have fallen into a popular error that to edit a newspaper is to feed continually on chicken pie. Newspaper men everywhere would be glad to hail Mr. Conkling as a frater, but on Mr. Conkling's account we beg him to examine well the couch before he lies down upon it. No matter what representations may have been made to him, we can assure him that it is no flowery bed of ease upon which people are to tedo the skies. A man may able to hold three hundred and six delegates in a national convention and yet fail miserably to sustain himself against an injured subscriber. If it is true, as alleged, that Mr. Conkling has the warm and loving hearts of all the women in North America beating upon his string, he is hardly the person to say no to the sad-eyed suffragist when she brings in her two-column plea for her suppressed and suffering sex. It is one thing to levy an assessment to carry on a political campaign and another thing to collect two dollars in advance for a weekly newspaper. As to the getting money out of a man who is in arrests for his paper, we do not believe Mr. Conkling, with all his heaven-born talents, is equal to the emergency. And could he do this by the exorcism information leads me to say that upwards of 300 people perished in the flames. There was no escape for them. The woods and ground were so dry, and no warning of danger was given. Faster than a racehorse came the fire. It would embrace a house or barn with its contents, then pass to the next. Persons who have been through the terrible ordeal say in ten minutes from the time fire struck a house there would be no vestigie of the building left. I have just returned from a trip through the burned district, and a description of the sights would make the reader's blood turn cold. I saw many instances of men, women and children lying on their faces in the road where they had fallen when overtaken by the fire. Children were lying on logs where they clambered for safety. There was no finding each other when once separated. Many took refuge in wells and on the roofs of houses, thinking to escape, but in almost every instance were suffocated. The details of suffering in Huron county are as sad as here. I believe that when the returns are all in 1000 persons will be found to have perished in the flames. Forest township will turn out Thursday to bury the dead cattle, horses and sheep, the stench from which is unbearable.
PORT HURON (Mich.), September 8.—The committee appointed to visit the burned region, after receiving their reports of a large number of persons familiar with the facts, and in most instances giving the names of victims and sufferers already ascertained, say: "In twenty towns in Sanilac and Huron counties we find over two hundred per sons destroyed by the fire, including entire families lost. We have lists already of more than 1500 families burned out, in most cases losing their houses, barns, cattle, horses, grain and hay.
DETROIT, September 9th.—A Port Austin dispatch says the loss of life on the burned peninsula by Monday and Tuesday's fires is estimated at 200 to 300. The following villages are burned: Badaxe, Vetona, Forest Bay, Richmondville,Charleston,Anderson,Dickersonville,Harrisonville和Sandusky.The following are partly burned: Port Hope,Mindon和Ubley.The country suffered vastly more than the villages in Saginaw,Tuscola和 Lapeer.The counties on the tier back from the lake were greatly damaged,但 not nearly as much asthe shore counties.
DETROIT,September 8th.-The following appeal has been issued by a committee of citizens of Port Huron,headed by Senator Conger,Mayor Carlton和 others:
To the People of the United States: A most appalling disaster has fallen upon a large portion of the counties of Huron and Sanilac,with some adjacent territory,a section of country recently covered with forests,and now occupied by nearly 50,000 people,largely recently settled和mostly you have not gathered sufficient experience in what degree of maturity your grapes produce the best wine,then see this season if for your white wines a stage just before full ripeness,the exact degree of maturity,or do better by allowing them for a few hours to rest in the sun and adding a proportionofthe juiceof nobler grapesyou obtaina lessheavy taste.In fact,trytolearn,fornowisyourschoolingseasonforsureprofitableapplicationofwhatcanbelearned.
Try 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materialforsuperiorqualities,andweanthemewithinmanyspotsthe materialforsuperiorqualities,andweanthemewithinmanyspotsthe materialforsuperiorqualities,andweanthemewithinmanyspotsthe materialforsuperiorqualities,andweanthemewithinmanyspotsthe materialforsuperiorqualities,andweanthemewithinmanyspotsthe materialforsuperiorqualities,andweanthemewithinmanyspotsthe materialfor superiorspecialityandwellfermentedwillbeusefulandimprove.DoyourbesttoproducewinesoutofwhichsomewillbefoundworthkeepinganddevelopintofinewingsThisshouldbeourgreataim,forsonlyasmallproportionofourwinesareaboveordinaryquality,andasitiscertainthatwehaveinmanyspotsthe materialforsuperiorqualities,andweanthemewithinmanyspotsthe materialforsuperiorqualities,andweanthemewithinmanyspotsthe materialforsuperiorqualities,andweantchemewithinmanyspotsthe materialforsuperiorqualities,andweantchemewithinmanyspotsthe materialforsuperiorqualities,andweantchemewithinmanyspotsthe materialforsuperiorqualities,andweantchemewithinmanyspotsthe materialforsuperiorqualities,andweantchemewithinmanyspotsthe materialforsuperiorqualities,andweantchemewithinmanyspotsthe materialfor superiorspecialityandwellfermentedwillbeusefulandimprove.DoyourbesttoproducewinesoutofwhichsomewillbefoundworthkeepinganddevelopintofinewingsThisshouldbeourgreataim,forsonlyasmallproportionofourwinesareaboveordinaryquality,andasitiscertainthatwehaveinmanyspotsthe materialforsuperiorqualities,andweantchemiewithinmanyspotsthe materialforsuperiorqualities,和我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报纸,我们有足够的时间来制作我们的报表。我们有足够的时间来制作他们的报表。我们有足够的时间来制作他们的报表。我们有足够的时间来制作他们的报表。我们有足够的时间来制作他们的报表。我们有足够的时间来制作他们的报表。我们有足够的时间来制作他们的报表。我们有足够的时间来制作他们的报表。我们有足够的时间来制作他们的报表。我们有足够的时间来制作他们的报表。我们有足够的时间来制作他们的报表。我们有足够的时间来制作他们的报表。我们有足够的时间来制作他们的报表。我们有足够的时间来制作他们的报表。我们有足够的时间来制作他们的报表。我们有足够的时间来制作他们的报表。我们有足够的时间来制作他们的报表。我们有足够的时间来制作他们的报表。我们有足够时间来制作他们的报表。我们有足够时间来制作他们的报表。我们有足够时间来制作他们的报表。我们有足够时间来制作他们的报表。我们有足够时间来制作他们的报表。我们有足够时间来制作他们的报表。我们有够时间来制作他们的报表。我们有够时间来制作他们的报表。我们有够时间来制作他们的报表。我们有够时间来绘制他们的图表。我们有够时间绘制他们的图表。我们有够时间绘制他们的图表。我们有够时间绘制他们的图表。我们有够时间绘制他们的图表。我们有够时间绘制他们的图表。我们有够时间绘制他们的图表。我们有够时间绘制他们的图表。我们有够时间绘制他们的图表。我们有够时间绘制他们的图表。我们有够时间绘制他们的图表。我们有够时间绘制他们的图表。我们有够时间绘制他们的图表。我们有够时间绘制他们的图表。We have enough time to create new newspapers from scratch using advanced technology like AI or machine learning techniques like neural networks or deep learning algorithms like convolutional neural networks or recurrent neural networks like transformer networks or attention networks like attention networks like attention networks like attention networks like attention networks like attention networks like attention networks like attention networks like attention networks like attention networks like attention networks like attention networks like attention networks like attention networks like attention networks like attention networks like attention networks like attention networks like attention networks like attention networks like attention networks like attention networks like attention networks like attention networks like attention networks like attention networks like attention networks like attention networks like attention networks like attention networks like attention networks 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DETROIT, September 8th. — The following appeal has been issued by a committee of citizens of Port Huron, headed by Senator Conger, Mayor Carlton and others:
To the People of the United States: A most appalling disaster has fallen upon a large portion of the counties of Huron and Sanilac, with some adjacent territory, a section of country recently covered with forests, and now occupied by nearly 50,000 people, largely recently settled and mostly poor or in very moderate circumstances. In the whole of this section there has been but little rain during the past two months, and everything was dry, when, on Monday, September 5th, a hurricane swept over it, carrying with it a abset of flame that hardly anything could withstand. We have advices of two hundred persons burned to death by the roadside or in fields while seeking places for safety, and it is probable that twice this number have perished. We have reports from twenty or more townships in which scarcely a house, or barn, or supplies of any kind are left, and thousands of people are destitute and helpless. All of these people require immediate assistance and most of them must depend on charity for months to come. We are doing all in our power to succor them, but the necessities of the case are so great that contributions from charitable people throughout the country will be required to keep them throughout the winter. We therefore appeal to you to send money, clothing, bedding, provisions or any other supplies that will help to maintain sufferers and enable them to provide shelter for themselves and begin work again or their farms. Contributions may be sent to Mayor R. C. Conkling, Chairman of the committee appealing to the citizens of Port Huron, who have sent agents through the burned district to ascertain the wants of the sufferers and to contribute supplies.
The work for forwarding supplies, feed and clothing from Detroit began to night by boat and rail. Efficient committees on the ground have been or will be appointed to receive and properly distribute supplies, and every effort he made to reach sufferers as promptly as possible, and to see that all contributions are properly bestowed.
A dispatch from St. Louis to the daily papers, announces that what we have alluded to as possible, that is, the coming of Prof. Husmann as a resident of California, is assured. The dispatch says: "Prof. George Husmann of the Missouri State University, who recently visited the Pacific Coast, starts within a day or two for California to make his home on the Napa county vineyards of J. W. Simonton, and devote himself to the pursuit of viticulture, in which his reputation here is of the highest. His scientific tastes and practical experience cannot fail to contribute materially to the vine growing interests of the Pacific Coast." Prof. Husmann is already known to our grape growing and wine making people, as the most prominent Eastern writer on the grape and the handling of its juice. He comes to our land of different grapes, different methods of growing them and different conditions affecting the vine, with much to learn, as he himself assured us during his last visit; but the new facts he will soon master, and his life of observation and experience hitherto will be of great value in the problems which are still in progress of solution here. We trust his California life will realize all his anticipations, and we know they are high.—Rural Press.
Farmers and commission merchants are just now excited about beans. That is, they would be excited if there were any white beans in the market. All kinds, white and colored, are very scarce, and there are no Limas, pea and white in the market worth speaking of. Reports from the bean districts are discouraging as to the new crop, and a bean famine is threatened. They are wanted in the Eastern States, and recently a sharp inquiry for the particular kinds mentioned has drained San Francisco of the greater part of its supplies. There is always more or less of a demand for Limas for the East, but it is now so sharp, and stocks are so light, that even hayes are being shipped to satisfy the urgent inquiry. Within several weeks wholesale prices have advanced as follows: Limas from $2 25 to $3 25 per cental; the latter price having been offered yesterday in vain; pea and small white from $2 50 to $3 50 per cental.
Farmers and commission merchants are just now excited about beans. That is, they would be excited if there were any white beans in the market. All kinds, white and colored, are very scarce, and there are no Limas, pea and white in the market worth speaking of. Reports from the bean districts are discouraging as to the new crop, and a bean famine is threatened. They are wanted in the Eastern States, and recently a sharp inquiry for the particular kinds mentioned has drained San Francisco of the greater part of its supplies. There is always more or less of a demand for Limas for the East, but it is now so sharp, and stocks are so light, that even hayes are being shipped to satisfy the urgent inquiry. Within several weeks wholesale prices have advanced as follows: Limas from $2 25 to $3 25 per cental; the latter price having been offered yesterday in vain; pea and small white from $2 50 to $3 50 per cental.
Rev. Jacob Mulford, a well-known perance lecturer who was relieved of postmate charge three weeks ago on account of intoxication, committed suicide in Philadelphia.
GAZETTE.
MER 17, 1881.
PROGRAMME.
District Agricultural
No. 6, 1881.
Each day at 1 p. m., commence November 1st, and endcember 5, 1881.
FIRST DAY.
Getting race, free for all
over beat 3 minutes; mile
race, $100.
Getting race, for graded 2me dash; purse, $100.
Running race; free for all;
repeat; purse, $100.
SECOND DAY.
Notting race; 2:40 class;
purse, $100.
Running race; free for all 2ourth mile dash; purse,
Running race; free for all; one
pursue, $100.
THIRD DAY.
Long race; 2:30 class; mile
race, $200.
Running race; for graded 3me dash; purse, $100.
FOURTH DAY.
Getting race; free for all;
purse, $200.
Running race; free for all; 2½
$150.
Running race; free for all
the mile dash; purse, $100.
Be paid at the Secretary's
ay after the decision of the
THE BEEKEEPERS.
The following resolutions were adopted by
the Bee-keepers' Association at their meeting
in Los Angeles last week:
Resolved, That bee-keeping having been
one of the leading industries of Southern
California, bee-keepers should take care to
put their honey on the market in the best
possible shape, discarding the old process of
straining the honey, and adopting the more
scientific and business-like way of extracting
their honey with machinery, thereby
producing an article as pure as the best comb honey.
Whereas Our Pacific Coast papers in
quoting extracted honey as strained honey
and also honey merchants in speaking of
liquid honey calling it strained honey, are
doing those engaged in producing extracted
honey a serious injury that has been keenly
felt for several years, individual efforts
proving of but very little if any avail in
changing the quotations. Therefore,
Resolved, That we, the bee-keepers of Southern California in convention assembled,
protest against the name "strained" and request that all papers quoting our honey quote it as extracted honey.
The committee appointed to draft a law relative to the suppression of foul brood, to be presented to our State Legislature for passage, reported the draft of a law which was approved.
The following resolution was presented and adopted: Resolved, That this association authorize Levering to correspond with European honey dealers relating to the establishing of an agency or agencies in Los Angeles and other honey-producing counties
Love Making in Chicago.
From the Chicago Tribune.
"I am very rich, my darling," she said softly, punctuating her sentences with soft, warm kisses. "Already I have $100,000 worth of four per cents registered in my name, and when the leaves are turning red in the golden October days, and the fields are laughing in the rich abundance of the bountiful harvests, I shall cut off the coupon. And when papa dies he will leave me nearly $200,000 more. Yes, my sweet-heart, I am a very happy girl," and a fair young head rested confidently on the shoulder of the strong-limbed, hazel-eyed young man to whom this avowal was made. He looked tenderly down at the brown trees and the invisible not that bound them to the fair forehead. Gently lifting the beautiful face to his, he pressed a passionate kiss on the full. red lips that seemed only made for osculation.
Turning his head away, Herbert Ainsleigh appeared for a moment to be wrapped in thought. Then kissing Miriam with a rich, warm, two-for-a-quarter kiss, he said: "Do you love me, Birdie?"
She gave answer by placing her white arms around his neck, and throwing herself madly on his shirt front.
"Do not hug so hard,darling, an' you love me, or my collar stud will raise a carbuncle on the back of my neck," he said in low, mellow tones.
"It is only the deep, passionate longing of my love, Herbert. It rocks not of carbuncles. But you are right. Too much pressure on the cervical vertebra will cause an exostosis. My professor of anatomy told..."
AS AN EDITOR.
It that ex-Senator Conkling's duty to establish a newspaper Conkling editor of it fills us undefinable something. We whole, it is uneasiness on conkling. Does this gentle it is to edit a newspaper? he does not. He appears into a popular error that to be is to feed continually on newspaper men everywhere, to hail Mr. Conkling as a Mr. Conkling's account we mine well the couch before he sit. No matter what repre- have been made to him, we can sit it is no flowery bed of ease people are to ted the skies. A able to hold three hundred and a national convention and only to sustain himself againstcriber. If it is true, as al-Conkling has the warm and all the women in North King upon his string, he is hard-say say no to the sad-eyed suffice brings in her two-column expressed and suffering sex. It levy an assessment to carry campaign and another thing to dollars in advance for a weekly as to the getting money out of an arrears for his paper, we do Mr. Conkling, with all his talents, is equal to the emer- should he do this by the exer-
protest against the name "strained" and request that all papers quoting our honey quote it as extracted honey.
The committee appointed to draft a law relative to the suppression of foul brood, to be presented to our State Legislature for passage, reported the draft of a law which was approved.
The following resolution was presented and adopted: Resoleed, That this association authorize Levering to correspond with European honey dealers relating to the establishing of an agency or agencies in Los Angeles and other honey-producing counties in Southern California, for the purchase and sale of honey.
The following officers were unanimously elected for the ensuing year: President, J. E. Pleasant; Vice-Presidents, J. W. Wilson, Los Angeles county; J. S. Harbison, San Diego; Frank Flint, Santa Barbara; R. Wilkins, Ventura; S. W. Wickoff, Monterey; J. Anderson, San Bernardino; Wm. Rasmussen, Inyo; Mrs. E. W. Steel, San Luis Obispo; Secretary, W. W. Bliss; Treasurer, R. Hall.
The State Division Conference at Los Angeles last week was attended only by delegates from San Bernardino, Santa Barbara, Ventura and Los Angeles. After discussion, the following resolution offered by Judge Widney was adopted:
Resoleed, That a committee of four be appointed to communicate with the County Central Committees of San Diego, San Luis Obispo, Kern and Inyo counties, inviting them to appoint delegates to meet this committee at an adjourned meeting to be held on the 22d of February, 1882, at 11 A.M., at Los Angeles, the object of the meeting being to consider the question of the State division, and determine whether it is to the interest of the southern counties to proceed with the matter or not; the committee to have discretion inviting other counties interested in the movement; the committee also to issue such an address as may be advisable.
The Chairman appointed as the committee in question R. M. Widney of Los Angeles, C. F. McGlashen of Santa Barbara, W. E. Shepherd of Ventura and J. W. Satterwhite of San Bernardino. On motion Capt. C. E. Thom was added to the committee.
The fund for Mrs. Garfield's benefit has reached the sum of $151,757 65, with a conditional subscription of $5,000 from the city of Columbus, Ohio. New York city subscribed $113,274, Philadelphia $12,284, Chicago $11,500, London, England, $6,500, Washington, $5,855, and other cities and villages lesser sums. The United States Trust Company has purchased and now holds for this fund $125,000 of United States four per cent. registered bonds, on which the interest is $5,000 per annum, which will be paid to Mrs. Garfield during her life, and at her death the principal will be divided among the surviving children of James A.
warm, two-for-a-quarter kiss, he said: "Do you love me, Birdie?"
She gave answer by placing her white arms around his neck, and throwing herself madly on his shirt front.
"Do not hug so hard,darling, an' you love me, or my collar stud will raise a carbuncle on the back of my neck," he said in low,mellow tones.
"It is only the deep, passionate longing of my love Herbert. It rocks not of carbuncles. But you are right. Too much pressure on the cervical vertebra will cause an exostosis. My professor of anatomy told me that."
"And we will be married in the fall, my sweet?"
"Yes, Herbert, in the rich,bazy,sensuous days of Indian summer, when the low note of the farmer's boy seeking the lost cow is heard as he sits on the vine-embowered stile and blasphemes until the fire-fly leaves for a cooler spot. You must take all my money,Herbert; it must be yours to do as you will with it; to attain the glorious fame that awaits you; for I know that my love's name will some day be known through the length and breadth of the land. Surely you have an ambition?"
"I have," said Herbert,kissing her while she caught her breath.
"And you will not let any false pride stand in the way of using my money to attain the height you fain would reach?"
"No,darling.I will not. You say you have $100,000 in four per cents. It is enough.To-morrow I will act,and in less than a day my name will be as familiar throughout the world as that of England's proud Queen."
"Oh,Herbert,what will you do?"
"I shall purchase Mand S."
Two minutes later a human form tell with a dull thud on the front porch of the baughty pork-packer's residence. It was Herbert Analeigh. The old man had fired him out.
—From "Hints to Parents,"by Halstead M.
John King took strychnine at Tombatone, with fatal result.
Charles Davis,a Jewish boy,aged 14,
stabbed and killed a Chinaman at Tulare last week. He was arrested.
Ira Van Compen suicided at Hornitos,Mariipona County.Domestic and financial troubles were the impelling causes.
Willie Lynch,aged 8 years,was run over by a Southern Pacific train near Redwood City and killed.
MINNEAPOLIS.Sept.9.-Miss Cooke beat Miss Kallett in the ten-mile race with horses to-day,killing a horse in the trial.
William Miller was stabbed and killed by William Schneider at Stockton last week.The murderer,who is a San Francisco booth-lum,is under arrest.
From 190 acres of wheat John Morehouss of Umatilla county Oregon,realized 7,150 hundred of excellent wheat Seventy-three
All the women in North
ing upon his string, he is harde say no to the sad-eyed suffe brings in her two-column
impressed and suffering sex. It
levy an assessment to carry
campaign and another thing to
dollars in advance for a weekly
to the getting money out of
an arrears for his paper, we do
Mr. Conkling, with all his
adents, is equal to the emerould be do this by the exerstratagems of love or war, it
cast down as the greatest effect.
Does Mr. Conkling know
the details of newspaper
Can he estimate job work,
nomic committee how much
eighth-sheet posters will cost
they will be ready? Can he
notices and indits obituary
the make paste and punctuate
Can he write of a prize bog or
with equal fitting terms? These
lock Mr. Conkling must answer
We have also to inform this
man that there is a vast and
nace between taking the stump
few off-hand speeches for a
candidate every four years, and
declaration of Independence, and
fourth of July oration every
mental life. It is an easy thing to
in dead-lock, but quite a different construct a newspaper that
prove or four hundred people,
can near-nighted. When Mr.
here the journalistic field he
is subject for newspaper critisis is at all sensitive he will not
the remarks which will be
him. Just one more hint,
which avail a person in one sphere
him utterly in another. Bewill find that he cannot print
gesture or a successful look,
or in cold type. But we perthing we can say will dater this
ughty person from his purpose,
that it may be. Some people are
in where angels fear to trend.
New York, September 9.—A special from Panama of August 31st says: In a fight at Matagales between about five thousand Indians on one side and a detachment of troops and some five hundred citizens on the other side, the Indians lost 500 in killed and wounded. The other party had twenty-eight killed and a number wounded. Previous to this fight the Indians attacked the Esquipulas and killed the Captain in command, the Commissary and a young telegraph operator named Vega, who was struck down while repairing a break in the Government telegraph line. The slaughter of various individuals followed. Some of them were Indians who refused to join the malcontents, and horrible outrages were inflicted upon the others.
DANVILLA, Va., Sept. 9.—Two daughters of Robert Williams, a well-educated and well-connected man living near Whitmill, cut off his head yesterday with an axe and find. Williams was addicted to drink, and had probably threatened them.
The Jews in New York propose to raise a fund of $20,000 for their Russian co-religionists seen expected to arrive in that city.
Willie Lynch, aged 8 years, was run over by a Southern Pacific train near Redwood City and killed.
MINNEAPOLIS, Sept. 9.—Miss Cooks beat Miss Kallett in the ten-mile race with horses to-day, killing a horse in the trial.
William Miller was stabbed and killed by William Schneider at Stockton last week. The murderer, who is a San Francisco hoodlum, is under arrest.
From 190 acres of wheat, John Morehoma of Umatilla county, Oregon, realized 7,150 bushels of excellent wheat. Seventy-three acres on the farm of H. McArthur yielded 2,750 bushels, machine measure. Barney Keenan thrashed 1,673 bushels of wheat from fag-ty two acres.
Various correspondents of the Nevada (Cal.) Transcript are essaying to convince the public that the best of potatoes can be rained in "alickens." One gentleman sends eight specimens of Early Rose that weigh 124 pounds, and says these are not the largest, but fair samples of his "alickens" potatoes.
As a chronicler of events we must record the fact that there is very little enthusiasm in favor of State Division. Most of the counties in the projected new State have failed to send delegates, and the local attendance has been very small indeed. State division, as a living issue, must be relegated to the future.—Los Angeles Herald.
A man named Green, a dissolute character, sold his body about three years ago to Dr. Johnson, of Kernville, for $7.50. A week ago Monday Green died at Harvillah, and upon being notified of the fact Dr. Johnson took the body to Kernville, divested the bones of the flesh, and is arranging the framework of his purchase for future use.
At the election in San Francisco last month the Republicans elected their candidates for Mayor, Sheriff, Anditer, Treasurer, Recorder, County Clark, District Attorney, Attorney and Commissioner, Coroner, Public Administrator, Superintendent of Strokes, bar of the twelve Supervisors and all the School Directors. The Democrats elected their candidates for Tax Collector and Surveyor and two Supervisors.