anaheim-gazette 1883-05-26
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ANAHEIM
VOL. XIII.
WEEKLY GAZETTE IF YOU WANT
TO GET RID OF
SQUIRRELS AND
GOPHERS
USE CARBON BI-SULFHIDE
ONLY SURE EXTERMINATOR
A. LANGENBERGER,
Dealer in Groceries, Hardware,
Paints, Oils and Crackery.
D. E. MILES,
Warehouseman and Commission Merchant.
Highest Cash Price Paid for
Wheat, Barley, Corn,
Rye, Potatoes,
And all Country Produce. Cash ad-
RICHARD MELROSE,
NOTARY PUBLIC.
H.C. KELLOGG,
Surveyor and Civil Engineer.
ROBT. W.SCOTT.
VICTOR MONTGOMERY,
Attorney-at-Law,
SANTA ANA, CAL.
M.L.WICKS.
Attorney-at-Law.
LOS ANGELES.
MANSFIELD & CHENEY,
Attorneys-at-Law.
MONEY TO LOAN.
L.GUNTHER.
Pioneer Boot and Shoe Maker.
ANAHEIM.
GEORGE BAYER.
BOOT AND SHOE MAKER.
MAKING AND REPAIRING AT THE LOWEST
cash price. All orders promptly attended to
All work guaranteed.
WM.R.HARKER.
SADDLE & HARNESS MAKER.
CENTER STREET, ANAHEIM.
CHARLES WILLE.
COOPERAGE.
D.E.MILES,
Warchouseman and Commission Merchant.
Highest Cash Price Paid for
Wheat, Barley, Corn,
Rye, Potatoes,
And all Country Produce. Cash advances made on all consignments of Grain and Wool.
Sacks and Twine
A.E.WHITE.
E.A.WHITE
BLACKSMITHING
—AND—
Wagonmaking!
All Work Warranted.
Prices as low as the lowest.
Los Angeles Street, Anaheim,
B.DREYFUS & CO.
California Wines and Grape
Brandy.
MISS EUNICE CROSBY
Ladies Hair Pressing
Ladies' Furnishing Goods.
SULPHUR.
THIS UNDERSIGNED HAS ON HAND AND FOR
sole a large quantity of sulphur for use and use.
This oilpour is specially prepared as a preservative of small and outlaw.
Supplied in any quantity at the lowest price.
B.DREYFUS & CO.
ANAHEIM.
WM. R. HARKER,
SADDLE & HARNESS MAKER.
CENTER STREET, ANAHEIM
CHARLES WILLE,
COOPERAGE.
F. & J. BACKS.
Importers, 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
JOHN HANNA,
Real Estate Agent.
Live Stock Bought and Sold on Commission.
ANAHEIM.
ANAHEIM
BAKERY.
E. A. MEEK.
P. PELLEGRIN,
PRACTICAL
Watchmaker
and Jeweler.
CENTER ST., - ANAHEIM
Repairing of Watches, Clocks and Jewelry done promptly and warranted.
Sale Agent for the Johnston Optical Co.'s Improved Spectacles and Eye-Glasses (interchangeable).
Improved Eye Tester to perfectly suit the eye.
Ladies' Furnishing Goods.
The intricate of the ladies of Anahiem and to many is especially solitary.
SULPHUR.
THE UNDERSIGNED HAS ON HAND AND FOR sale a large quantity of sulphur for sewing use.
This supplier is specially prepared as a preservative of small and outlaw.
Supplied in any quantity at the lowest price.
B. DREYFUS & CO.
Anahiem
Exotic Gardens
AND Nursery.
New Los Angeles Street, between 1st and 3d, in rear of the Cathedral.
Los Angeles, March, 1883.
TO ALL MY FORMER CUSTOMERS AND THE public generally it would respectfully announce that I have this season to offer a large and well selected stock of everything in the Lavender, ornamental line. Some choice trees of Euphorbia in various varieties.
Lawson, Italian, Monterey, Weeping and other Cypress
Robusta, Morinda (double and single flowering) hardness in sorts.
Roses, Carnation, Dahlias, Gladiolas, and Tubers in great variety.
Variegated Leaf Plants, Pampas Grass Roots (the best white),
Choice Golden and always Golden Arbor Vitae, small and large Plants. Fine of different sorts.
Norfolk Pines (5 sorls)
and hundreds of other choice trees and shrubs, too numerous to mention.
Fresh Kentucky Blue Grass seed.
Call and see me at address:
LOUIS J. STENGEL,
Los Angeles, Cal.
For my prices, 25 per cent lower than elsewhere marl7.
KIDNEY-WORT
FOR THE PERMANENT CURE OF CONSTIPATION.
No other disease is so prevalent in this country as Constipation, and no remedy has ever equalled the celebrated Kidney-Wort as a cure. Whatever the cause, however obstructive the case, this remedy will overcome it.
PILES. THIS distressing complaint is very apt to be complicated with constipation. Kidney-Wort strengthens the weakened parts and quickly cures all kinds of Piles even when physicians and medicines have before failed.
IF YOU HAVE EITHER OF THEO troubles PRICE ST. USE Druggists Bell
KIDNEY-WORT
WEEKLY
EIM GA
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA: SATURDAY, MAY 26, 1883.
THE OATH
Oath or Affirmation—Civil Liberty and Religious Tolerance:
Below we give the concluding portion of the masterly speech of Gladstone, delivered a few days ago in the English House of Commons in favor of the affirmation bill, by which Mr. Bradlaugh, who had refused to take the usual oath, might have affirmed and have taken his seat in Parliament. Mr. Bradlaugh said:
I am convinced that on every religious ground, as well as every political ground, the true and the wise course is not to deal out religious liberty by halves, quarters and fractions, but to deal it out entirely, and make no distinctions between man and man, so the ground of religious difference from one end of the land to the other. [Cheers]
But I go a little farther in endeavor to provide this contention, which has been well put forward by honorable gentlemen opposite, and I want to know, is your religious distinction a real distinction at all? I will, for the sake of argument, go with you on this dangerous ground of splitting theology into shoes, and I ask you where you will draw the line. You draw your eye at the point where the abstract denial of God is severed from the abstract admission of the Deity. My proposition is that your sins thus drawn is worthless, and that much on this side of the line is as objective as the attestation on the other. It may be a characteristic test. It does, as I think, involve a reference to Christianity in the conscience of some gentlemen in the other House of Parliament, and in this also. But unobtrutely it is not good for any of us to force this test so flavored, or even not so flavored, upon men who cannot take it with a cordial acceptance. It is bad; it is moralizing. [Cheers]
I have no fear of theism in this House. Religion is the expression of the divine mind, and however little our feasible vision may be able to discern the means by which God may provide for its preservation, we may leave the matter in His hands, and we may be sure that a firm and courageous apposition of every principle of justice is the best way for the preservation and maintenance of religion. [Cheers] And I must carefully record my opinion that grave sinners has been done to religion in many minds not in instructed minds, but in those whose are ill instructed or partly instructed on consequence of things which ought never to have occurred. [Opposition]
A TRANSPARENT HEAD.
An Infant Whose Skull Reflects Light Strong Enough to Read by
(New York Morning Herald)
The expression that it is possible "to see through some people" is almost literally fulfilled in the case of a male infant twenty six months old, the son of Mrs. Mary Cannady, of No. 210 Bowery.
Yesterday afternoon a reporter saw this phenomenon and found it to be a healthy infant whose head is semi-transparent, and reflects with almost moreible intensity the light of a lamp, gas, or any other illuminating power that may be placed near it. So strong is this brilliance that its head when exposed within full light of the sun will cast a reflection similar in some respects to a punkish opalescence.
Several experiments were made yesterday in the presence of the reporter. The child was taken into a darkened room; a lamp was held near the back of its skull and the reflected light was so clear that through the forehead the frontal division of the skull, and the veins and arteries of the anterior portion of the head were distinctly observable. Upon placing the hand upon the forehead the infant felt no pain or inconvenience of any kind, and as the lamp was moved in different directions so also was the light reflected at an exactly opposite angle.
Perhaps the most singular feature of this extraordinary case is that the child's eyes
Scene in a Chicago Court.
The following anecdote is said to be literally true of an eminent lawyer.
The gentleman in question, who was then quite young, was retained as advocate in a case on which, not feeling himself sufficiently prepared to plead, he was very deprived of obtaining a postponement. As however, the Court had already protracted its session beyond the usual period in consequence of an unusual amount of business, and, of course, the jury were getting impatient to be released from their duties, he was well aware that it would be impossible to procure such a postponement unless he could allege some extraordinary cause.
Fortunately, or unfortunately as the result proved, he had a lovely imagination, and no quackily formed a plan which he was sure would be successful.
Rising, with his handkerchief in his eyes, he and issued the Court in great apparent emotion:
"May it please the Court, I have plastered of the dangerous illness of my venerable mother, who is living at the point of death. Until such circumstances, much as I regret protracting an already lengthened session, I must request that this case be postponed. My feelings are so powerfully agitated that I should be unable to do justice to the case, feeling as I do that my proper place is at the bedside of my mother."
The pathetic appeal was completely successful. A feeling of earnest sympathy for the afflicted pervaded all hearts, and the jurors, though anxious to return to their families, were not sufficiently hard of heart to wish to have the business of the Court proceeded at such a sacrifice of public feelings.
The Judge who was a tender hearted man, had risen, and was about to grant the re-
in the presence of the reporter. The child was taken into a darkened room; a lamp was held near the back of its skull and the reflected light was so clear that through the forehead the frontal division of the skull, and the veins and arteries of the anterior portion of the head were distinctly observable. Upon placing the hand upon the forehead the infant felt no pain or inconvenience of any kind, and as the lamp was moved in different directions so also was the light reflected at an exactly opposite angle.
Perhaps the most singular feature of this extraordinary case is that the child's eyes are only partially observable, the upper portion of the pupila being alone distinguishable. Yet the infant sees plainly and notes what is taking place. The reflection already referred to is not merely confined to the brain, but also applies to the eye-cells or sockets, two distinct balls of light appearing visible under illuminating power.
The head of the child from measurements taken by the reporter is 27 inches round the temples, from the base of the forehead to the crown 12 inches; from ear to ear, measured from the top of the head. Pinches, and from temple to temple, 12 inches. The infant's weight is about thirty five pounds. Its flesh is healthy and firm of gold color and very plump. It has a plentiful crop of beautiful golden hair, which is unusually heavy for to young a child.
In an interview with the mother, Mrs. Cannady said: "My baby was born in Wayne county, West Virginia. When about eight weeks old I first noticed the peculiar reflection given from its head when a light was applied. At birth the top of the head was perfectly flat, but gradually developed to shape until it is now as you see it.
When seven months old its head measurement was 173 inches, but it has not grown any within the past year. The power of reflection may be imagined, though you may doubt my statement, when I tell you that its head being placed near a calcium light threw an illumination upon a portion of a newspaper strong enough to make the type perfectly distinguisherable." From what the reporter saw this story is perfectly credible.
"Do you give it any special clue?"
No. It will eat everything that other children of its age usually eat, such as vegetables, milk and eggs. Franky is generally very good tempered, and excepting that he is scarcely strong enough to support the weight of his heart, he is in other respects a remarkably strong child.
Dr. Puffard of West Thirty-seventh street, called to see the infant phenomenon during the afternoon. He pronounced the novelty to be a case of chronic hydrocephalus, only one instance of the kind having been recorded, and that was in 1611.
"It is absolutely the most wonderful freak of nature I ever saw," he remarked, "and is simply a case of an extraordinary amount of water pressure, which accounts for the reflection. What astonishes me is that the child should be so perfectly free from any other ailment. I never saw anything to equal it of the kind, but it is impossible to say whether in
He was the author of that painful phrase, which goes to the heart of every Christian, "Hear, hear!" And that is the state of the law from which you are working up the country [cheers and counter cheers], to strengthen in the minds of the people the false notion that you have got a real test, a real safeguard; that Christianity is still safe, with certain unavoidable exceptions, under a protecting regis within the walls of this chamber, and for that you excite a great religious war. I hold that this contention of our opponents is disparaging to religion [cheers], it is idle, it is irrational. For if you are to have a religious test at all, a test of theism, it ought to be a test of a well-asserted theism, not a mere abstract idea dwelling in the air, and the clouds, but a practical recognition of divine government and power to which we are to account for every thought we conceive, for every word we utter.
I contend with my whole heart and soul that the interests of religion as well as the interests of civil liberty are concerned in the passage of the bill. [Cheers] My reason for saying that may be given in a very few words. If I were asked to put a construction upon this oath I should probably give it a higher meaning than most gentlemen opposite. It is my opinion that the oath has in it a very large flavor of Christianity. I am well aware that the doctrines of my honorable and learned friend, the Attorney-General, is, as I believe, that there are other forms of positive attestation, according to other ceremonies of religion, that may enable the oath to be taken by the removal of the words "so help me God," and the substitution of other words or some other symbolic act involving the notion of the Deity and responsibility to the Deity. But, remember, the oath does not consist of spoken words alone. The spoken words are accompanied by a corroborative act, which is kissing the book, that according to the intention of the Legislature ought to import the acceptance of the divine revelation.
There have been other forms in other countries. I do not know whether there is still in Scotland the form of holding up the hand. (Hear, hear!) In Spain, I believe, the form is that of kissing the cross; in Italy, that of laying the hand upon the Gospel. But in this, according to the original intention, there is something which involves the acceptance of Christianity. You do not session, I must request that this case be postponed. My feelings are so powerfully agitated that I should be unable to do justice to the case, feeling as I do that my proper place is at the backside of my mother.
The pathetic appeal was completely successful. A feeling of earnest sympathy for the afflicted pervaded all hearts, and the jurors, though anxious to return to their families, were not sufficiently hard of heart to wish to have the business of the Court proceeded at such a sacrifice of public feelings.
The Judge who was a tender hearted man, had risen, and was about to grant the request of the counsel when, the deep rush was broken by a shrill voice; which proceeded from a lady in a Quaker bonnet, who was bending over the railing of the gallery. It was the mother of the eloquent counsel, who so far from being at the point of death, came without her son's knowledge, to hear him plead.
"Timothy, Timothy," she exclaimed in a voice which could be heard all over the house. "Timothy, Timothy, how often have I chastised them for lying?
It is needless to say that the courtroom fairly shook with laughter, and the eloquent counsel, the late Timothy Coffin, sat down completely nonplussed.
The case wasn't postponed. Chicago Tabuse.
Modjeska Interviewed.
According to the New Orleans Times. Mine. Modjeska carries too many guns for the interviewers. She came down thus upon a wretched reporter of that paper: "And what have I to say when ze newspaper gentleman call on me?" Noting, except zat I am very well; zat I thank you; zat I think ze American country very beautiful; zat my business has been good eferyvare; zat I dearly loaf my profession; zat I have met with no accident to myself, and have not lost any jewelry or other valuables." Then she added, with an expressive shrug: "I have no loafer (lover) except my husband, and therefore, I have no scandals. What could I say that would interest the public?"
Invigorating Food.
For the brain and nerves is what we need in these days of rush and worry. Parker's Ginger Tonic restores the vital energies and brings good health and joyous spirits quicker than anything you can use. Tribune,
Dr. Pofard at West Thirty Seventh street called to see the infant phenomenon during the afternoon. He pronounced the novelty to be a case of chronic hydrocephalus, only one instance of the kind having been recorded, and that was in 1611. "It is absolutely the most wonderful freak of nature I ever saw," he remarked, "and is simply a case of an extraordinary amount of water pressure, which accounts for the reflection. What astonishes me is that the child should be so perfectly free from any other aidment. I never saw anything to equal it of the kind, but it is impossible to say whether the infant will live many years. It is possible that the size of the head may diminish, but whether its survives or not, it is an extraordinary case."
Detroit, May 17. The Brewer's Convention has resolved that the proprietor and manufacturer of malt liquors makes a drinkful, recognized as healthful and needful by the instincts of the human race, and that the habits of temperate men and those whose consumption for centuries has been continuous and contemporary with the growth, prosperity and progress of the most civilized and enlightened people, has passed beyond honest and intelligent controversy, and is only denied by idiots and fanatics.
That we, as brewers, have the same rights neither more nor less, as any body of men have who are engaged in a necessary and beneficial industry, and that we shall peaceably and firmly under and by lawful means defend those rights, and in that defense we confidently ask the aid and cooperation of all honest men interested in the maintenance of good order, preservation of the rights' of property and freedom of the person, and in the free enjoyment of any innocent pleasure that does not infringe upon the rights of others.
Reviving an Ancient Maxim.
"Till the earth grows old, and the stars grow cold and the leaves of the Judgment Book unfold, forever in this world will man suffer ill untold. The truth of these lines cannot be impeached, yet much of human misery and physical suffering could be obviated if the people would only accept practical advice. Probably no complaints are more frequent than Indigestion, Headache, Languor and Liver and Kidney Complaint, especially at this season of the year, yet mankind will suffer or be dosed without relief, when a box of Swayne's Pills would effect a thorough cure."
GAZETTE.
MAY 26, 1883. NO. 33
WISPARENT HEAD.
Those Skull Reflects Light Enough to Read by
York Morning Herald)
On that it is possible "to see people" is almost literally full of a male infant twenty six son of Mrs. Mary Cannally, very afternoon a World reporter mentioned and found it to be a whose head is semi-transparency with almost irreducible inlet of a lamp, gas, or any other power that may be placed near this radiance that its head within full light of the sun action similar in some respects and scene.
Items were made yesterday of the reporter. The child is a darkened room; a lamp the back of its skull and the so clear that through the mutual division of the skull, and arteries of the anterior head were distinctly observing the hand upon the infant felt no pain or inconvenience, and as the lamp was sent directions so also was the at an exactly opposite angle, most singular feature of this use is that the child's eyes are that the child's eyes
THE CANAL AGE.
A prop of the movement at present in progress for the construction of the ship canal between Liverpool and Manchester, a writer in an ably conducted North of England paper very pointedly draws attention to the probability of the remaining years of the nineteenth century being spoken of in history as "The Canal Age," his opinion being that the present indications are in the line of a large extension of inland water carriage by means of canals, and that the problem of quick international communication has now been solved, almost to "finality," by steamships and railways. Whether or not finality has been reached by those two great civilizing agencies, it is undoubtedly the case that the prospects of canalization on a great scale for the immediate future bulk very largely in the eyes, both of commercial men and of engineers. Not only is there in hand the project of the Liverpool and Manchester Ship Canal, with its probable cost of $30,000,000, estimated to make an income enough to pay the shareholders of only a single ship of 4,000 tons pass both ways every day, but there are also various other great inland water way schemes, of national and international importance, either in hand or actually carried into execution.
The sum of $200,000,000 has recently been voted by the French Parliament for inland canalization works, and it is thought that at least five times that sum will have been spent upon such works before the system of
WISCONSIN WIND.
RACING (Wis.), May 19th.—The sun ross bright this morning on the scene of desolation left in the ternado's track. As yet the list of dead is not accurate, but it is safe to estimate that sixteen lives were lost. In and about Racine men are at work clearing away the debris, and women, clad in borrowed clothes, are hurrying about with tear-stained eyes, bemoaning the loss of their homes. Steps are already being taken to relieve these in immediate want. Mayor Fish has issued a manifesto, calling on the citizens for contribution, to be left at the office of the City Treasurer. A special meeting of the Council was held at 10 a.m. and action taken toward caring for the dead, wounded and penniless. The suffering is confined to the very northern outskirts of the city, among the laborers and mechanics, who own their little property, which was completely swept away. It is known that fully twenty-five were killed and a hundred injured and a hundred and fifty houses demolished. Had the cyclones struck the business center the damage could not easily have been calculated. At Western Union Junction, seven miles west of Racine, many houses were carried away and one young man killed. The financial loss by the storm will not exceed $50,000. The buildings demolished are principally frame structures and individual losses range from $300 to $7000.
A ternado ravaged Morgan county, Ill.
The child was a darkened room; a lamp on the back of its skull and the was so clear that through the mental division of the skull, and arteries of the anterior head were distinctly observing the hand upon the infant felt no pain or inconvenience, and as the lamp was kept directions so also was the at an exactly opposite angle, almost singular feature of this house is that the child's eyes are easily observable, the upper porch being alone distinguishable instant seesplainly and notes place. The reflection already not merely confined to the applies to the eye-cells or instinct bills of light appearing diminishing power.
The child from measurements reporter, is 27 inches round from the base of the forehead 12 inches from ear to ear, the top of the head, 16 inch temple to temple, 12 inches weight is about thirty five pounds is healthy and firm of every plump. It has a pleasant golden hair, which is easy for young a child. Needs with the mother, Mrs. My baby was born in West Virginia. When kids I first noticed the girl given from its head when a bed. At birth the top of the flat, but gradually developed it is now as you see it, months old its head measure inches, but it has not grown past year. The power of re-imagined though you may moment, when I tell you that replaced near a calcium lightiation upon a portion of a long enough to make the type recognizable." From what the story is perfectly creatible is any special detail" will eat everything that other large usually eat, such as vegetable and egg. Franky is good tempered, and except carefully strong enough to support his heart, he is in other remarkably strong child."
West Thirty Seventh street, the infant phenomenon during He pronounced the novelty chronic hydrocephalus, only the kind having been received in 1611. "It is absolutely terrible freak of nature I ever knew," and is simply a case of any amount of water pressure, for the reflection. What is that the child should be so from any other adiment. I bring to equal it of the kind, able to say whether the in there in hand the project of the Liverpool and Manchester Ship Canal, with its probable cost of $30,000,000, estimated to make an income enough to pay the shareholders if only a single ship of 4,000 tons pass both ways every day, but there are also various other great inland water way schemes, of national and international importance, either in hand or actually carried into execution.
The sum of $200,000,000 has recently been voted by the French Parliament for inland canalization works, and it is thought that at least five times that sum will have been spent upon such works before the system of inland water carriage in France has been completed.
Many of our readers are familiar with the great engineering works which have resulted in the completion of a ship canal connecting the city of Amsterdam with the sea, and they scarcely require to be informed that it has proved to be a remarkable success, commercially and otherwise.
Additional canals are likewise in course of construction or projected in Belgium, a country well adapted by nature for such works.
Then, going into Prussia, we find that there is a prospect of a specially beginning with the canal scheme which aims at connecting the Rhine, the Weser and the Elbe with the Baltic sea, at an estimated cost of $35,000,000. Proceeding further east, we should notice another proposal which bids fair to become an accomplished fact in the early future, which is a scheme to cut a ship canal to connect the river Danube with the Oder, and thereby joining the Black sea with the Baltic.
But in Russia it is proposed to enter upon even a much larger canal scheme, to wit one to connect the river Dnieister with the Vistula, and thereby to bring the great ports of Olesna and Dantzic into direct communication.
A cable dispatch of May 10th says: A meeting of influential shipowners, today, in London including representatives of Kost, 000 tons of Suec canal traffic, unanimously adopted a resolution favoring the construction of another canal across the rithmus, and appointed an executive committee to carry out the plans of the meeting. More or less similar schemes are likewise contemplated in other parts of the world in Canada, Southern Europe, Southern Asia, the U.S., etc.
In our own country, the Florida canal may now be considered a definite fact. An organization was effected in Washington on the 9th instant by the election of ex-governor John C. Brown, of Tennessee, as President, with a large number of wealthy and influential corporators. Gov. Battler of Massachusetts among them. It was estimated that the canal will cost $30,000,000, of which $25,000,000 was reported as subscribed. The canal will be about 100 miles in length, and broad and deep enough for the largest class of ocean steamers. Its connection on the gulf side will be through the mouth of the Suwanee river, now so famous in song. It will connect with the there in hand the project of the Liverpool and Manchester Ship Canal, with its probable cost of $30,000,000, estimated to make an income enough to pay the shareholders if only a single ship of 4,000 tons pass both ways every day, but there are also various other great inland water way schemes, of national and international importance, either in hand or actually carried into execution.
The sum of $200,000,000 has recently been voted by the French Parliament for inland canalization works, and it is thought that at least five times that sum will have been spent upon such works before the system of inland water carriage in France has been completed.
Many of our readers are familiar with the great engineering works which have resulted in the completion of a ship canal connecting the city of Amsterdam with the sea, and they scarcely require to be informed that it has proved to be a remarkable success, commercially and otherwise.
Additional canals are likewise in course of construction or projected in Belgium, a country well adapted by nature for such works.
Then, going into Prussia, we find that there is a prospect of a specially beginning with the canal scheme which aims at connecting the Rhine, the Weser and the Elbe with the Baltic sea, at an estimated cost of $35,000,000. Proceeding further east, we should notice another proposal which bids fair to become an accomplished fact in the early future, which is a scheme to cut a ship canal to connect the river Danube with the Oder, and thereby joining the Black sea with the Baltic.
But in Russia it is proposed to enter upon even a much larger canal scheme, to wit one to connect the river Dnieister with the Vistula, and thereby to bring the great ports of Olesna and Dantzic into direct communication.
A cable dispatch of May 10th says: A meeting of influential shipowners, today, in London including representatives of Kost, 000 tons of Suec canal traffic, unanimously adopted a resolution favoring the construction of another canal across the rithmus, and appointed an executive committee to carry out the plans of the meeting. More or less similar schemes are likewise contemplated in other parts of the world in Canada, Southern Europe, Southern Asia, the U.S., etc.
In our own country, the Florida canal may now be considered a definite fact. An organization was effected in Washington on the 9th instant by the election of ex-governor John C. Brown, of Tennessee, as President, with a large number of wealthy and influential corporators. Gov. Battler of Massachusetts among them. It was estimated that the canal will cost $30,000,000, of which $25,000,000 was reported as subscribed. The canal will be about 100 miles in length, and broad and deep enough for the largest class of ocean steamers. Its connection on the gulf side will be through the mouth of the Suwanee river, now so famous in song. It will connect with the there in hand the project of the Liverpool and Manchester Ship Canal, with its probable cost of $30,000,000, estimated to make an income enough to pay the shareholders if only a single ship of 4,000 tons pass both ways every day, but there are also various other great inland water way schemes, of national and international importance, either in hand or actually carried into execution.
The sum of $200,000,000 has recently been voted by the French Parliament for inland canalization works,and it is thought that at least five times that sum will have been spent upon such works before the system of inland water carriage in France has been completed.
Many of our readers are familiar with the great engineering works which have resulted in the completion of a ship canal connecting the city of Amsterdam with the sea,and they scarcely require to be informed that it has proved to be a remarkable success,commercially and otherwise.
Additional canals are likewise in course of construction or projected in Belgium,a country well adapted by nature for such works.
Then going into Prussia,我们发现这里是一个 prospect of a specially beginning withthe canal schemewhich aims atconnectingtheRhine,theWeserandtheElbewiththeBalticsea.atanestimatedcostof$35,ooo,ooo。Proceedingfurther east,我们应该注意到另一 proposalwhichbidsfairtobecameanaccomplishedfactintheearlyfuturewhichisaschemetocutashipcanaltocontnecttheriverDanubewiththeOder,andtherebyjoiningtheBlackseawiththeBalticsea.
ButinRussiaitisproposedtoreenteruponevenamuchlargercanalscheme,towitonetoconsidertheriverDnieisterwiththeVistula,andtherebybringthegreatportsOfOlesnaandDantzicintdirectcommunication.
A cabledispatchofMay10thsays:Ameetingofindentailshipowners,today.inLondonincludingrepresentativesofKost,ooo吨tonsofSueccanaltrafficunanimouslyadoptedaresolutionfavoringtheconstructionofanothercanalacrosstherithmus,andappointedanexecutivecommitteetocarryouttheplansofthemeeting.Moreorlesssimilarschemesarelikeworthenc contemplatedinotherpartsoftheworldinCanada,SouthernEurope,SouthernAsia,theU.S.,etc.
Inourowncountry,theFloridacanalmaynowbeconsidereddefinitefact.AnorganizationwaseffectedinWashingtononthe9thinstantbytheelectionofextroverJohnC.Brown.ofTennessee.asPresidentwithalargenumberofwealthyandmilutialcorporators.Gov.BattlerofMassachusettsamongthem。它wasestimatedthatthecanalwillcost$30,ooo,ooo。Proceedingfurther east,我们应该注意到另一 proposalwhichbidsfairtobecameanaccomplishedfactintheearlyfuturewhichisaschemetocutashipcanaltocontnecttheriverDanubewiththeOder,andtherebyjoiningtheBlackseawiththeBalticsea.
ButinRussiaitisproposedtoreenteruponevenamuchlargercanalscheme,towitonetoconsidertheriverDnieisterwiththeVistula,andtherebybringthegreatportsOfOlesnaandDantzicintdirectcommunication.
A cabledispatchofMay10thsays:Ameetingofindentailshipowners,today.inLondonincludingrepresentativesofKost,ooo吨tonsofSueccanaltrafficunanimouslyadoptedaresolutionfavoringtheconstructionofanothercanalacrosstherithmus,andappointedanexecutivecommitteetocarryouttheplansofthemeeting.Moreorlesssimilarschemesarelikeworthenc contemplatedinotherpartsoftheworldinCanada,SouthernEurope,SouthernAsia,theU.S.,etc.
Inourowncountry,theFloridacanalmaynowbeconsidereddefinitefact.AnorganizationwaseffectedinWashingtononthe9thinstantbytheelectionofextroverJohnC.Brown.ofTennessee.asPresidentwithalargenumberofwealthyandmilutialcorporators.Gov.BattlerofMassachusettsamongthem。它wasestimatedthatthecanalwillcost$30,ooo,ooo。Proceedingfurther east,我们应该注意到另一 proposalwhichbidsfairtobecameanaccomplishedfactintheearlyfuturewhichisaschemetocutashipcanaltocontnecttheriverDanubewiththeOder,andtherebyjoiningtheBlackseawiththeBalticsea.
ButinRussiaitisproposedtoreenteruponevenamuchlargercanalscheme,towitonetoconsidertheriverDnieisterwiththeVistula,andtherebybringthegreatportsOfOlesnaandDantzicintdirectcommunication.
A cabledispatchofMay10thsays:Ameetingofindentailshipowners,today.inLondonincludingrepresentativesofKost,ooo吨tonsofSueccanaltrafficunanimouslyadoptedaresolutionfavoringtheconstructionofanothercanalacrosstherithmus,and appointedanexecutivecommitteetocarryouttheplansofthemeeting.Moreorlesssimilarschemesarelikeworthenc contemplatedinotherpartsoftheworldinCanada,SouthernEurope,SouthernAsia,theU.S.,etc.
Inourowncountry,theFloridacanalmaynowbeconsidereddefinitefact.An Organization was effected in Washington onthe 9th instantbythe electionof extroverJohnC.Brown.ofTennessee.asPresidentwitha large numberofwealthyandmilutialcorporators.Gov.BattlerofMassachusettsamongthem。它wasestimatedthatthecanalwillcost$30,ooo,ooo。Proceedingfurther east,我们应该注意到另一 proposalwhichbidsfairtobecameanaccomplishedfactintheearlyfuturewhichisaschemetocutashipcanaltocontnecttheriverDanubewiththeOder,andtherebyjoiningtheBlackseawiththeBalticsea.
ButinRussiaitisproposedtoreenteruponevenamuchlargercanalscheme,towitonetoconsidertheriverDnieisterwiththeVistula,andtherebybringthegreatportsOfOlesnaandDantzicintdirectcommunication.
A cabledispatchofMay10thsays:Ameetingofindentailshipowners,today.inLondonincludingrepresentativesofKost,ooo吨tonsofSueccanaltrafficunanimouslyadoptedaresolutionfavoringtheconstructionofanothercanalacrosstherithmus,and appointedanexecutivecommitteetocarryouttheplansofthemeeting.Moreorlesssimilarschemesarelikeworthenc contemplatedinotherpartsoftheworldinCanada,SouthernEurope,SouthernAsia,theU.S.,etc.
Inourowncountry,theFloridacanalmaynowbeconsidereddefinitefact.An Organization was effected in Washington onthe 9th instantbythe electionof extroverJohnC.Brown.ofTennessee.asPresidentwitha large numberofwealthyandmilutialcorporators.Gov.BattlerofMassachusettsamongthem。它wasestimatedthatthecanalwillcost$30,ooo,ooo。Proceedingfurther east,我们应该注意到另一 proposalwhichbidsfairtobecameanaccomplishedfactintheearlyfuturewhichisaschemetocutashipcanaltocontnecttheriverDanubewiththeOder,andtherebyjoiningtheBlackseawiththeBalticsea.
ButinRussiaitisproposedtoreenteruponevenamuchlargercanalscheme,towitonetoconsidertheriverDnieisterwiththeVistula,andtherebybringthegreatportsOfOlesnaandDantzicintdirectcommunication.
A cabledispatchofMay10thsays:Ameetingofindentailshipowners,today.inLondonincludingrepresentativesofKost,ooo吨tonsofSueccanaltrafficunanimouslyadoptedaresolutionfavoringtheconstructionofanothercanalacross-therithmus,and appointedanexecutivecommitteetocarryouttheplansofthemeeting.Moreorlesssimilarschemesarelikeworthenc contemplatedinotherpartsoftheworldinCanada,SouthernEurope,SouthernAsia,theU.S.,etc.
Inourowncountry,theFloridacanalmaynowbeconsidereddefinitefact.An Organization was effected in Washington onthe 9th instantbythe electionof extroverJohnC.Brown.ofTennessee.asPresidentwitha large numberofwealthyandmilutialcorporators.Gov.BattlerofMassachusettsamongthem。它wasestimatedthatthecanalwillcost$30,ooo,OOO。Proceedingfurther east,我们应该注意到另一 proposalwhichbidsfairtobecameanaccomplishedfactinTheearlyfuturewhichisaschemetocutashipcanaltocontNECTHE RIVER DANUBE WITH THE ODER AND THEREBY JOINTING HIS HOUSE WITH THE INTERNATIONAL TRAFFIC OF THE SUWANEE RIVER NOW SO FAMILY MARKED BY THE WESTERN EUROPEAN RIVER DANUBE WITH THE ODER AND THEREBY JOINTING HIS HOUSE WITH THE INTERNATIONAL TRAFFIC OF THE SUWANEE RIVER NOW SO FAMILY MARKED BY THE WESTERN EUROPEAN RIVER NOW SO FAMILY MARKED BY THE WESTERN EUROPEAN RIVER NOW SO FAMILY MARKED BY THE WESTERN EUROPEAN RIVER NOW SO FAMILY MARKED BY THE WESTERN EUROPEAN RIVER NOW SO FAMILY MARKED BY THE WESTERN EUROPEAN RIVER NOW SO FAMILY MARKED BY THE 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West Thirty Seventh street, the infant phenomenon during which he pronounced the novelty rhythmic hydrocephalus, only the kind having been recorded in 1611. "It is absolutely wonderful freak of nature I ever knew," and is simply a case of my amount of water pressure, as for the reflection. What is that the child should be so from any other aidment. I am to equal it of the kind, able to say whether the innumerable years. It is possible the head may diminish, but lives or not, it is an extraor-
Varied Resources of California.
A writer in a recent issue of the San Francisco Weekly Chronicle, in the course of a valuable and graphic description of the resources of our State, says.
"No part of the world of the same area can show such a list of native products, or such possibilities of production and development. We all the rest of the world, by some condition of nature, suddenly rendered unproductive, or otherwise placed beyond our reach, this State could supply everything necessary for subsistence, for use, or for ornament to which civilization is now accustomed." No region, therefore, can be made so independent or so self-supporting as California. We raise everything of which valuable, textile fabrics are made: cotton, wool, flax, jute, hemp and silk. We have already several woolen mills, and a mill for the making of the coarser cotton cloths is about to be established. Our iron mines will soon furnish material for all kinds of hardware which we care to manufacture on this coast. Nail works have already been established in Oakland, and works for the manufacture of steel will be erected in the spring. Such portion of our gold and silver as is not minted or exported in the form of bullion is made into tasteful ornaments in our own workshops. Our minor minerals are either utilized in our manufactures, or exported, returning to the State in other forms of wealth. No State can carry on manufactures more cheaply when the relations of capital and labor are more carefully adjusted. Our streams in the Coast Range and the Sierra furnish abundant power, and are not, as in the East, frozen for half the year. Our climate stimulates physical exertion, and makes labor comfortable and easy. All the wants of the laborer can be easily supplied. Food is abundant, cheap and wholesome, and living inexpensive, on account of the mildness of the climate."
The storm moved in a path varying in width from five hundred to twelve hundred feet. Mud was splashed on trees twenty foot high, and cornstalks he around and look as though they had been left by a flood. Logs from ten to twenty feet long were carried hundreds of yards, and houses were leveled with the ground. The people who suffered the least were those who took refuge in cellars. One man put his wife and children in a ditch three feet deep, and from this retreat saw his house except entirely away. The whole country outside the track of the storm has become a great relief society. Doctors are attending the wounded, and today the men turned out en masse to corral stock and put up the fences torn down.
A Cairo special says: Information has reached here that the little town of Marquand, on the Iron Mountain railroad, was brown to pieces by a tornado about 5 o'clock this evening. Every house in the town is said to be demolished, but no lives were lost.
The most reliable, carefully prepared and best purgative of the present age is Brandreth's Pills.
They are composed of Roots, Herbs and Gums of the most healing and beneficial kind.
As a family medicine they are unrivalled, curing Headache, Constipation, Liver Complaint, Rheumatism, Dyspepsia — clearing the blood of all impurities acting on the liver, kidneys and other important organs, removing the waste tissue, and adding years to the lives of all who use them.
For fifty years they have been used by the American public, and their constantly increasing sales show how they are appreciated.
One man's meat is another man's poison. Kidney Wort expels the poisonous humors. The first thing to do in the Spring is to clean house. For internal cleansing and renovating, no other medicine is equal to Kidney-Wort. In either dry or liquid form it cures headache, bilious attacks, constipation and deranged kidneys.
Bucklen's Arnica Salve.
The Best Salve in the World for Cuts Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns and all Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by W. M. Higgins, Druggist.