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anaheim-gazette 1884-10-11

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ANAHEIM VOL. XIV. HANNA & KEITH REAL ESTATE AGENTS. Live Stock Bought and Sold on Commission. ANAHEIM. Before Removing into our Store NOS. 13 AND 15 NORTH SPRING STREET, WE OFFER AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES 50 Extra Fine Walnut Bedroom Sets, 75 Medium Fine Walnut and Ash Bedroom Sets, 125 Low Priced Walnut and Ash Bedroom Sets. WE HAVE ALSO MADE GREAT REDUCTIONS IN CARPETS, OIL CLOTHS, LINOLEUMS, MATTINGS, ETC. Don't fail to call us before purchasing O. T. BARKER & SONS, 322. 324. 326 N. Main Street (near Pico House), Los Angeles. NEW No. 8 WHEELER & WILSON, With Straight, Self-Setting Needle and Back-Feed. ABSOLUTEGY NEW! In Principle and design No. Shuttle in thread. News from the thinnest gauze to the heaviest cloth or leather. Can DARN, PATCH MEND and EMBROIDER without any attachment. Only needs to be seen and tried to be appreciated. Don't buy until you have seen the New No. 8. BLAINE ON THE CHINESE The Champion of American Labor tracts From His Great Speech On the 14th day of February, 1879, we the bill introduced by Senator Sargent including Chinese from the United States before the United States Senate, Mr. Blaine said: "Ought we to exclude the Chinese? The question lies in my mind thus: Either Anglo-Saxon race will possess the Pacific Slope, or the Mongolians will possess You give them the start to-day, with their thrust of necessity behind them, with the inducements to come, while we fill up the other portions of the continent, and it is inevitable, if not demonstrable, that they will occupy that great spruce of country between the Sierras and the Pacific Coast. "The immigrants that come to us from the British isles, and from all portions of Europe, come here with the idea of the family as much engraven on their minds and hearts and in their customs and habits, as we ourselves have. The Asiatic cannot go on with our population and make a homogeneous element. "The Chinese have no regard for the family; they do not recognize the relation of husband and wife; they do not observe the type of parent and child, and they do not have the slightest degree, the ennobling and civilizing influences of the hearthstone and first side." "I am opposed to the Chinese coming here. I am opposed to making them citizens. I am unalterably opposed to making them voters. There is not a peasant cottage inhabited by a Chinaman. There is not O. T. BARKER & SONS, 322. 324. 326 N. Main Street (near Pico House), Los Angeles. NEW No. 8 WHEELER & WILSON, With Straight, Self-Setting Needle and Back-Feed. ABSOLUTEGY NEW! In Principle and design No Shuttle to thread. Seems from the thinnest gauge to the heaviest cloth or leather. Can DARN, PATCH MEND and EMBROIDER without any attachment. Only needs to be seen and tried to be appreciated. Don't buy until you have seen the New No. 8. Satisfaction Guaranteed or no pay. E. C. GLIDDEN, Agent, 33 North Main Street (Ponet Block). LOS ANGELES, CAL. WEEKLY GAZETTE Established 1870. For Terms, see Fourth Page. DRS. ELLIS A BULLARD, Physicians and Surgeons. Office and Drug Store opposite Planters' Hotel. HOMEOPATHIC DRUGS, wholesale and retail. Office hours: 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. H. C. KELLOGG, Surveyor and Civil Engineer. Parties will please leave their orders with Mr. John Hanna, Anaheim. M. B. HARRISON, Attorney-at-Law, ANAHEIM. WILL PRACTICE IN ALL THE COURTS OF the State. ROBT. W. SCOTT, ATTORNEY AT LAW AND NOTARY PUBLIC Commissioner of Deeds for Arizona Territory Kreiger's Block, Anaheim, Cal. VICTOR MONTGOMERY, Attorney-at-Law, SANTA ANA, CAL. Office in Dibbles' brick building, nearly opposite the Post office. Office hours from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. RICHARD MELROSE, NOTARY PUBLIC GAUNTTE OFFICE. L. GUNTHER, Pioneer Boot and Shoe Maker, Car. Adelaide and Los Angeles streets. ANAHEIM. GEORGE BAUER, BOOT AND SHOE MAKER, Center Street. LUMBER YARD PLANING, SAWING, AND MOULDING MILLS. Or Saxton & Cox, Anaheim. NEAR THE RAILROAD DEPOT All Varieties of Pine, Redwood,and Spruce LUMBER! Doors, Sashes, and Blinds, Grape Boxes, Fruit Boxes, Bee-Hives, and Fruit Dryers. Builders' Hardware and Nails Plain and Fancy SCROLL SAWING at Short Notice Anaheim Crist Mill! Grain, Feed, Meal, etc., of all Varieties CORN SHELLED AND SHIPPED. ANAHEIM STORAGE WARE HOUSE GRAIN, WOOL, AND GENERAL MERCHANDISE TAKEN ON STORAGE GRAIN RACKS and TWINE constantly on hand CONSIGNMENTS SOLICITED Of all kinds of PRODUCE. Advances made, MERCHANTISE forwarded and sold on Commission in best Markets. A. E. WHITE. E. A. WHITE BLACKSMITHING — AND — Wagonmaking! All Work Warranted. Prices as low as the lowest. "The Chinese have no regard for the family; they do not recognize the relation of husband and wife; they do not observe the time of parent and child, and they do not have the slightest degree, the ennobling and civilizing influences of the hearthstone and fire side." "I am opposed to the Chinese coming here. I am opposed to making them citizens. I am unalterably opposed to making them voters. There is not a peasant cottage inhabited by a Chinaman. There is not a heartstone, in the sense we understand it of an American home, or an English home or an Irish or German or French home. There is not a domestic fireside in that sense and yet you say it is entirely safe to down and permit them to fill up our country or any part of it." "Treat them like Christians, say those who favor their immigration, and yet I believe the Christian testimony is that the conversion of the Chinese on that basis is fearful failure; that the demoralization of the white is much more rapid by reason of the contact than is the salvation of the Chinese race, and up to this time there is not an authentic case of a Chinese conversion." "I have heard a good deal of their cheap labor. I do not believe in cheap labor. I do not believe that cheap labor should be the object of legislation, and it will not be in a republic. I undertake to repeat that say that you cannot permit the wealth classes in a republic where suffrage is universal to legislate in the interest of what is called cheap labor." "Labor should not be cheap. It should have its share, and it will have its share. There is not a laborer on the Pacific Coast today who does not feel wounded, aggrieved, and crushed by the competition that comes from this source. It is servile labor; it is not free labor, such as we intend to develop and encourage and build up in this country. It is labor that comes here under a mortgage. It is labor that comes here to subsist on what the American laborer cannot subsist on. You cannot work a man, who must have beef and bread, and would prefer beef, alongside of a man who can live on rice. It cannot be done. In all such conflicts, and in all such struggles, the result is not to bring up the man who lives on rice to the beef and bread standard, but it is to bring down the beef and bread man to the rice standard." "Slave labor degraded free labor. It took out its respectability, and it put an odious cast upon it. It throttled the prosperity of a fine and fair portion of the United States in the South, and this Chinese, which in worse than slave labor, will throttle and impair the prosperity of a still finer and fairest section of the Union, on the Pacific Coast." We can choose to day whether our legislation shall be in the interest of American free labor, or for the servile labor from China. The question we have to regard is whether, on the whole, we will devote that interesting and important section of the United States, that land of the vine and orange, inexhaustible in resources and matchless in climate, to be the home and refuge of our own people." RICHARD MELROSE, NOTARY PUBLIC GAZETTE OFFICE. L. GUNTHER, Pioneer Boot and Shoe Maker, Cor. Adelaide and Los Angeles streets. ANAHEIM. GEORGE BAUER, BOOT AND SHOE MAKER, Center Street 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. Pipes, Barrels and kegs on hand at all times. Tanks and Tubs made to order. Honey Barrels for sale cheap S. A. DENNIS, Carriage and Sign Painter, Center Street, Anaheim, OFFERS AS REFERENCES THE NUMEROUS wagons and signs painted by him in Anaheim. PRICES REASONABLE. The patreonage of the public respectfully solicited may be Casks, Pipes AND PUNCHEONS IN PERFECT ORDER For Sale at Low Prices. B. DREYFUS & CO. Grewers and Dealers in California Wines and Grape Brandy. 639 to 642 Brannan Street San Francisco; 45 Broadway New York. A. E. WHITE. E. A. WHITE BLACKSMITHING — AND — Wagonmaking! All Work Warranted. Prices as low as the lowest. Los Angeles Street, Anaheim, (Adjoining the Gazette Office. City Stables, Center Street (Opposite Kroeger's Block) 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 charge in all cases will be reasonable. Single and Double Teams Purchased at short notice and careful drivers, familiar with the country, supplied when required. The patronage of the public is respectfully solicited. Masonic Notice. THE REGULAR MEETINGS OF ANAheim Lodge No. 207, F. and A. M. are held in Masonic Hall on the Monday evening of or preceding the full moon in each month. Soljourning brethren in good standing are occasionally invited to attend. Three Reissers, W. M. S. Gardiner, Sec. weiay. IN THE SUPERIOR COURT, In and for the County of Los Angeles, State of California, In the matter of the Estate of Peter W. Bras, deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN BY THE UNDER-signed, Administrator of the estate of Peter W. Bras, deceased, to the creditors of, and all persons having claims against the said deceased to exhibit them with the necessary vouchers within four months after the first publication of this notice to the said Administrator, as the Saloon of F. Rhneman in the Town of Anaheim, or at the office of M. B. Harrison., in the Town of Anaheim, County of Los Angeles and State of California. HENRY N. BRAS. Administrator of the estate of Peter W. Bras, deceid'd. Dated Sept. 20, 1884. THIS PAPER may be found on file at Glo. P. ROWELL & Co's Newspaper Advertising Bureau (10 Spruce Street), whose advertising contracts may be made for it in NEW YORK. It throttled the prosperity of a fine and fair portion of the United States in the South, and this Chinese, which in worse than slave labor, will throttle and impair the prosperity of a still finer and fairer section of the Union, on the Pacific Coast. We can choose today whether our legislation shall be in the interest of American free labor, or for the servile labor from China. The question we have to regard is whether, on the whole, we will devote that interesting and important section of the United States, that land of the vine and orange, inexhaustible in resources and matchless in climate, to be the home and refuge of our own people and our own blood, or whether we will continue to leave it open, not to the competition of other nations like ourselves, but to those who degraded themselves and will inevitably degrade us. "We have this day to choose whether we will have for the Pacific Coast, the civilization of Christ or the civilization of Confucius." Fruit From Mexico. A San Francisco papers say that an importing firm of that city is paying special attention to bringing fruit from Mexico. "From that country we obtain liberal supplies of limes, which have hitherto been brought by the Panama steamer. Occasionally, we have shipments of bananas, while less frequently importations of Mexican oranges come to hand. All of these varieties as a rule find quick sale in our market at remunerative prices, if in good condition. But there are so many contingencies in the way of transportation that very often the fruit becomes too ripe before it reaches this city, and in some instances the cost of freight has not been covered. It is believed that a regular fruit trade can be established between San Francisco and the City of Mexico, if proper care be used in selection and the railroad be accepted as the mode of conveyance. In order to test the matter, Wightman Brothers arranged with a merchant in the City of Mexico to send forward by rail a full carload of fruit, and yesterday the firm received a telegram that the first shipment was made yesterday, embracing an assortment of oranges, bananas and limes. The distance is expected to be bridged in a week's time, and considerable interest and curiosity are being manifested in regard to the condition in which the fruit will reach our market." Dress reformers who advocate trousers for the feminine costume are called pantaloonatics. WEEKLY ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA: SATURDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1884. AINE ON THE CHINESE Champion of American Labor Excels From His Great Speech 14th day of February, 1879, when introduced by Senator Sargent ex-chinese from the United States was United States Senate, Mr. Blaine. we to exclude the Chinese? The lives in my mind thus: Either the race will possess the Pacific the Mongolians will possess it; them the start to-day, with the need of necessity behind them, and inducements to come, while we are the other portions of the Conti- it is inevitable, if not demonstra- they will occupy that great space between the Sierras and the Pa- migrants that come to us from the states, and from all portions of Eurea here with the idea of the family graven on their minds and hearts, our customs and habits, as we our- The Asiatic cannot go on with vision and make a homogeneous ele- nese have no regard for the fami- not recognize the relation of hus- life; they do not observe the tie and child, and they do not have in it degree, the ennobling and civilizes of the hearthstone and fire. apposed to the Chinese coming opposed to making them citi- unalterably opposed to making there is not a peasant cottage by a Chinaman. There is not a THE PECAN TREE. A correspondent of the New York Sun writing from Sherman, Texas, says: The experience of Mrs. Cowles of Mobile with the pecan tree, and her facts and figures are convincing proofs of the possibilities of this hitherto undeveloped industry. She mentions having gathered three barrels of nuts from a single tree (145 pounds per barrel). I have known as many gatherered from a single tree in this country. This gives 435 pounds per tree, at say 10 cents per pound, the usual jobbing price, or $43.50 as the yield of the tree. Here there are from forty to a hundred trees to the acres. We cut them out as they get older. Forty trees at the rate mentioned would be $740 per acre. This will beat an orange grove, for the trees do not require as much care or skill as orange trees. We cannot believe that the efforts of our California friends will fail in growing pecan trees. For the benefit of Mr. W. A. Sanders of that State I will say that Mr. S. R. Thorne of San Francisco says he saw growing at San Jose some pecan trees four or five years old, ten feet high with seven feet spread of limb. This is certainly not a bad showing. It would be considered a fair growth for most localities. I cannot see any reason why these trees should not succeed in that country. For eight years succeeding the war I was engaged in the winter months in the fur business. This work led me through the timbered and swamp regions of Southern Illinois, Missouri and Kansas, over the whole of Arkansas and the Indian Territory. In all these countries I observed the pecan growth, and in no locality was it confined exclusively to either low or upland ground. It seemed THE PRINCESS WINNEMUCCA Returning as a Lecturer to the Home of the Plates. VIRGINIA CITY, Nev., Sept. 15.—Sarah Winnemucca, daughter of old Chief Winnemucca of the Piutes, and sister of the present Chief Naches, has been here for several days, and she delivered a lecture the other evening. She has been in Boston and vicinity for a long time and has been made much of in that city by the people who are inclined to lionize somebody continually. Sarah is no longer the gay young thing who used to be known to everybody on the Comstock. She stole away from her old father's wickup many years ago and came down among the whites to live. She was then a bright little girl with irregular features and straight black hair. She was dressed in the costumes of her tribe, which consisted of about the poorest stuff that could be found anywhere, and the least of it that frontier etiquette would permit of. A white family took her in and cared for her, giving her a calico dress, of which she was very proud. Soon afterward she got some stockings and shoes and a sun bonnet. She worked in one family after another, going to school when she could, and in this way earned a living and obtained the rudiments of an English education. When she grew to womanhood she ceased working in kitchens and took in washing. By this means she earned enough money to buy herself such books as she cared to read, and in the course of time she became a very intelligent woman, fully posted on English literature, a clever speaker and writer, and a conversationalist of great vivacity. Certain Boston travelers becoming inter- ORIENTAL NEWS A thousand troops have we listed in Hongkong for several French, if war ensues. The rolled by one Chun, a mandarin from Canton for the purpose. She has been living at the Tung Wan The pay of these men is to be a month, and they are to be Tai-wan foo, in Formosa glories in the name of "The King on the Sky." It seems he was once pirate in the Kwangtung province time ago the high officials at China to pardon the offences of anyone would accept military or naval the Government, and the "Pine Sky" was one of the most offenders who threw aside their habits to serve their country and the French. Three women have been dead Wonsau, for loose conduct with Domestic calamities are added fortunes of China. Cholera hail Amoy, and the Pelho and Yellow broken through their banks in ruining the growing crops and causing great injuries to the industry. An inflammatory placard was 14th at Foochow. It was illus caricatures of the Viceroy, O Tartar-General and the Imperial sonner of Coast Defence, and is following effect: "You are a Foreign Devil, whereas we are anxious to fight if power be given allow the French to destroy our you allow things to remain in them they are now in we will cause." The Atlantic cannot go on with intention and make a homogeneous elephant. Chinese have no regard for the family not recognize the relation of husbands; they do not observe the tie and child, and they do not have in degree, the ennobling and civilizes of the hearthstone and firemen. There is not a peasant cottage by a Chinaman. There is not a sense we understand it, can home, or an English home, or German or French home, a domestic fireside in that sense, say it is entirely safe to sit permit them to fill up our country, of it. Them like Christians, say those their immigration, and yet I be christian testimony is that the Chinese on that basis is a mere; that the demoralization of much more rapid by reason of than is the salvation of the Chinese up to this time there is not an ease of a Chinese conversion. Board a good deal of their cheap not believe in cheap labor. I love that cheap labor should be legislation, and it will not be. I undertake to repeat that I cannot permit the wealthy republic where suffrage is unimplicate in the interest of what is labor. Should not be cheap. It should not, and it will have its share. A laborer on the Pacific Coast does not feel wounded, and is crushed by the competition from this source. It is servile not free labor, such as we intend and encourage and build up in it. It is labor that comes here. It is labor that comes on what the American laborist on. You cannot work a must have beef and bread, and beef, alongside of a man who cease. It cannot be done. In all cases, and in all such struggles, the boy bring up the man who lives on beef and bread standard, but it is on the beef and bread man to tend. For degraded free labor. It took stability, and it put an odious irritation of the United States and this Chinese, which is have labor, will throttle and impority of a still finer and fairer Union, on the Pacific Coast. Goose to day whether our legislature in the interest of American free the servile labor from China. We have to regard is whether we will devote that interesting section of the United States, the vine and orange, inexhaustible and matchless in climate, and refuse of our own people. For eight years succeeding the war I was engaged in the winter months in the fur business. This work led me through the timbered and swamp regions of Southern Illinois, Missouri and Kansas, over the whole of Arkansas and the Indian Territory. In all these countries I observed the pecan growth, and in no locality was it confined exclusively to either low or upland ground. It seemed to flourish on all kinds of soil. As Mrs. Cowles remarks, it is a species of the hickory, or akin to it, and it has a very tough and hardy growth. Some of the largest trees ever saw were along the banks of Osage river in Missouri and Kansas, where they were exposed to hard winters and sudden and severe changes of weather. The tree is found in the western part of this State, on poor, dry, sandy land, yielding annually good crops of nuts. Nor are the trees affected by our long, hot summers. It would seem that they are adapted to a wide extent of our country. I suppose that the nuts planted by Mr. Sanders got too dry in transit. If so, they would not germinate. If he would try a few fresh nuts received by mail and plant on receipt of them, no doubt this result would be different. When they get a few trees to bearing in California and have fresh nuts to plant, they will have no trouble in establishing extensive and profitable pecan groves. It will be observed that the territory to which I have referred is tributary, commercially, to St. Louis. This makes that city the great pecan market of America. By reference to her market reports I find that pecan nuts of this State rated at from two to four cents per pound more than those from any other section. This, we are sure, is not due solely to quality, but to superior size. It may be that Mrs. Cowles' trees are grown from nuts from this State, and they may be of the best size and quality. The Proper Time to Get Married [Clara Belle in Enquirer.] Various influences are at work to change the fashionable time for getting married from the spring to the autumn. New Yorkers have accustomed to mate just after Easter, and, in the circles of our acutest culture and biggest wealth, there are more weddings in a few weeks of the early springtime than during the rest of the year. These matches were sometimes a result of the winter season of dancing and other festivities skim to flirtation in town, but not usually. As a rule they were the climaxes of engagements made in the preceding summer. There is no time like the torrid one, and no place equal to the hot resorts, so favorable to the generation of love. Girls are never so bewitching as when dressed in the soft white flummery of July and August. A merely pretty mortal in a dark tight costume becomes a beauteous angel when clothed in the sweetness and light of nainsook. Every sensitive and alert girl knows that she can very proud. Soon afterward she got some stockings and shoes and a sun bonnet. She worked in one family after another, going to school when she could, and in this way earned a living and obtained the rudiments of an English education. When she grew to womanhood she ceased working in kitchens and took in washing. By this means she earned enough money to buy herself such books as she cared to read, and in the course of time she became a very intelligent woman, fully posted on English literature, a clever speaker and writer, and a conversationalist of great vivacity. Certain Boston travelers becoming interested in her, she was induced to go to that city some years ago, and since then she has passed most of her time there. Among the impressionable Bostonese she has been accepted as a type of the modern savage, and seeing in her much to admire and wonder at, they have been generous with money, sympathy, tracts and old clothes in their dealings with her tribe. Instead of being proud of her and grateful for what she has done, the Piutes regard her with suspicion. They know that she has adopted the garb of the white sisters, and it is even suspected that she uses soap and a comb and brush occasionally. To the genuine Piute these things are inconsistent with the traditions of the race. They came to book upon her as a host one when they saw her voluntarily at work in the kitchen and over the washtubs of the whites. Her old father, who though a mighty chieftain in his own estimation, was not above fishing around a swail barrel for something to eat, and who always banqueted on cold victuals passed out of back doors, could not restrain a feeling of contempt for his fair daughter, who insisted upon working like a slave. She was regarded as a little queer by everybody. The ordinary Piute never cared to speak of her. Chief Naches, her brother, does not recognize her to this day. He cast her off years ago, and holds himself much above her still. Since she has been here this time he has made no effort to see her, and she probably will not undertake to hunt him up. The people of Boston will be pained to know that Princess Sarah's people and the white residents of the Comstock are not so much interested in hearing about them as the Bostonians are in the stories which Sarah tells of life in the Sage Brush State. Her lecture here on "People I Met in the East" was slimly attended, not a single Piute being in the audience, though many of them are marching around the poker shops with Boston clothing on. When Sarah determined to lecture in Boston, it was agreed that, in order to heighten the effect, she must appear in her native costume. The kind ladies who suggested this did it with the purse of motives, but the Indian girl was insulted, and it took some time to straighten matters out. She explained to them that the climate of Boston was such that she could not accede to their request, but the ladies insisted that she must wear some aboriginal costume, and thinking that she was short of money, they presented her with a fanciful suit of buckskin and flannel, trimmed with beads and feathers, and a head dress topped off with beautiful plumes. She was delighted with the regalia, and always wore it broken through their banks in ruining the growing crops and causing great injuries to the innate nature. An inflammatory placard was 14th at Foochow. It was illuscaricatures of the Viceroy. On Tartar-General and the Imperior sonor of Coast Defence, and is following effect: "You are my Foreign Drills," whereas ice are anxious to fight if power be given allow the French to destroy our you allow things to remain in them they are now in; we will cause After first shot is fired by them shall rise in a body and not only foreigner in the port; but yours This is only the text of the obnoxion A literal translation of the same obtained; for the Mandarin had its destruction. The dispositions natives towards foreigners at traceable to the tone of the day which are eagerly looked for by These biasthe minds of the native not sufficient intelligence to be a sound and impartial judgment alof the same. Lately the feeling more peaceable. On the 13th Gen. Tsao chief at Woosung called all his office before him and made the follow "Affairs are now approaching to therefore,the French should attend at the forts,它是 exceedingly important you do not feel fruried and fire If The French fire at us from a will aim at them carefully with no but if they should approach us we will use our breece on them You must all aim can do not fire before you have been do so.A reward will be given capture alive the detached enemy all be sure that I will not forgive ard., as I shall immediately decase as show cowardice You are all injured to war,and have killed before this.Now,thehereit,show your worth again." Statistics have been publish that the numberof men,between seventeenand fortyengaged directlyin fishing operations on Japan.is259.816. The typhoon in the south o f done considerable damage and cause lossof life Towns onthe coast dated bythe sea.AtTamashima,the sea embankments were carried persons were drowned和120a430 houses having being swept awayMatsuyama.Iyo metwithaaster;30 lives were lost,170 percentsand151 housesand112junksweeded. An Australian Drought In February last,在New South correspondent of a provincial traveled for some 200 miles both throughoutthe whole journey either side nothingbuta desert-nestitudedestituteofanygreen thinn It throttled the prosperity of our portion of the United States and this Chinese, which is have labor, will throttle and impority of a still finer and fairer Union, on the Pacific Coast. Goose to day whether our legislature the servile labor from China. We have to regard it whether, we will devote that interesting section of the United States, the vine and orange, inexhaustible and matchless in climate, and refuge of our own people blood, or whether we will conflute open, not to the competitions like ourselves, but to graded themselves and will include us. This day to choose whether we the Pacific Coast, the civilization of Confusit From Mexico. Cisco papers say that an immortality of city is paying special bringing fruit from Mexico. Country we obtain liberal support which have hitherto been Panama steamer. Occasion shipments of bananas, while importations of Mexican orchard. All of these varieties quick sale in our market at prices, if in good condition. Too many contingencies in the importation that very often the too ripe before it reaches this same instances the cost of freight covered. It is believed that a trade can be established between Francisco and the City of Mexico, who used in selection and the accepted as the mode of convey- to test the matter, Wightanged with a merchant in the town to send forward by rail a full train, and yesterday the firm reram that the first shipment yesterday, embracing an assortment of bananas and limes. The expected to be bridged in a considerable interest and being manifested in regard to which the fruit will reach ers who advocate trousers for costume are called pantaloon- The following is cut from the Machinery Market, a London trade journal, of January last: The year is likely to see important political changes on the other side of the Atlantic which will have their influence on business here. Events move rapidly in America and the coming triumph of the Democratic party there means the triumph of the Free Trade movement in the States. It is not to be supposed that there will be free imports into the States, but "a tariff for revenue only," which is the leading cry of the Democrats, will open an immense additional field for the sale of English manufactured goods in the States. The man who said "one swallow does not make a summer," was a thirsty man who wanted another swallow. in order to heighten the effect, she must appear in her native costume. The kind ladies who suggested this did it with the purest of motives, but the Indian girl was insulted, and it took some time to straighten matters out. She explained to them that the climate of Boston was such that she could not accede to their request, but the ladies insisted that she must wear some aboriginal costume, and thinking that she was short of money, they presented her with a fanciful suit of buckskin and flannel, trimmed with beads and feathers, and a head dress topped off with beautiful plumes. She was delighted with the regalia, and always wore it when appearing in public. To please the Comstockers, who had heard of this suit, she consented to wear it at her lecture here, and a number of them went up to see how she looked in the ideal Indian finery. All agreed that she made a very creditable looking Indian woman, but they were unanimous in the opinion that the lecturer bore no resemblance to the gay and festive Sally Winneucca who used to romp around in this country with an old blanket tied at the waist with a piece of clothes line. When Naches heard of her exhibition he gave an expressive grunt and observed: "Heap circus. Catch um white man's dollar. No more Piute." Sarah in her lecture describes in a serious and humorous manner the various persons and things of interest which she saw at the East. She claims to have fallen among sharpers when she first went to Boston, and related how they had swindled her. In the main, however, she had found the whites very kind and generous. She described the cities she had seen very graphically, and made many remarks on Caucasian habits, customs and civilization which showed that she had a retentive and an appreciative mind. While Sarah has many friends among the white people here, it is probable that she will never be appreciated in the West as she is in the East. The progress which she has made, mainly through her own efforts, is little less than wonderful. The daughter of a chief whose pride had no other basis than his consuming egotism, she was nevertheless born to poverty, ignorance and mendicancy. Without a mentor anywhere, she voluntarily tore herself away from her tribe, and by the severest toll supported herself and gained an education. From a position in one of the lowest tribes of a deteriorated and inferior race she has risen to an honorable station in a superior race. She can speak and write English and Spanish as fluently as though they were her native tongues, and in power of thought and reason she is the superior of thousands of so-called smart white women. In February last, in New South correspondent of a provincial travelled for some 200 miles both throughout the whole journey either side nothing but a desertiness destitute of any green thumb any water worthy of the name; or the paddocks, dead or dying; scorching rays fell on fields as hard. The leaves on the treasured were as death itself; there being breath of air stirring. The state of quite as bad in other parts of there were thousands of square miles baked and cracked, with the dry, flying off in dust, without a vexing or a drop of water anywhere. They resorted to in this terrible crisis was times of a most desperate character farmers endeavored to send their cattle to the coasts or to the towns, but on the road, and their owners had not only the loss of the animals but of their conveyance. This doublely prevented others from imitation ample. They sat down in mutex watch their rain. One man lost 50,000, and the third 150,000 without the slightest power to save them. Millions of sheep have hundreds, and probably thousand onists who were prosperous last poor and perhaps ruined to-day. Sydney the drouth was so severe inhabitants had to be placed on an tent allowance of water. Rain fell fallen, and therefore, the severest crisis may be regarded as past. Begus Butter in New York The United States Commission culture has presented to the British at Washington a report in which it regarding the butter of New York of 100,000,000 pounds sold annually York city, between 40,000,000 and 600 pounds are bogus. Oleomarge is said, cut down the average butter to ten cents a pounding a loss of $4,000,000 annually ers. GAZETTE. TOBER 11, 1884. ORIENTAL NEWS. A thousand troops have, we learn, been enlisted in Hongkong for service against the French, if war ensues. The men were enrolled by one Chun, a mandarin sent down from Canton for the purpose. This official has been living at the Tung Wah Hospital. The pay of these men is to be twenty dollars a month, and they are to be dispatched to Tai-wan foo, in Formosa. Their leader glories in the name of "The Flying Flee in the Sky." It seems he was once a well-known pirate in the Kwangtung province, but some time ago the high officials at Canton offered to pardon the offences of any pirates who would accept military or naval service under the Government, and the "Flying Flee in the Sky" was one of the most noted of such offenders who threw aside their nefarious habits to serve their country and annihilate the French. Three women have been decapitated at Wonsau, for loose conduct with Japanese. Domestic calamities are added to the misfortunes of China. Cholera has appeared at Amoy, and the Pelho and Yellow rivers have broken through their banks in many places, ruining the growing crops and otherwise causing great injuries to the innundated territory. An inflammatory placard was posted on the 14th at Foochow. It was illustrated with caricatures of the Viceroy, Governor and Tartar-General and the Imperial Commissioner of Coast Defence, and is worded to the following effect: "You are afraid of the Foreign Devils, whereas ice are not, and are anxious to fight if power be given us. You allow the French to destroy our trade. If you allow things to remain in the same state they are now in, we will cause a rebellion." A NOBLE DOG. Olzak, N. Y., Sept. 21.—The large Newfoundland dog Heck, belonging to the St. Elmo Hotel, in the neighboring oil town of Eldred, Pa., was known throughout the Northern Oil field for its great strength and intelligence. The porter of the hotel, a small man, slept in a little room back of the office. The dog slept in the office. On Thursday night last the porter was drunk when he went to bed, and soon fell into a heavy sleep. Some time in the night he was awakened by the loud barking of Heck, who was jumping frantically on the porter's bed and seizing the pillow with his teeth. The still drunken and drowsy porter tried to make the dog go away, but the animal persisted in his efforts, and it finally dawned on the mind of the porter that the house was on fire. His room was full of smoke, and he could hear the crackling of the flames. He sprang from bed, but was still so drunk that he fell to the floor. The faithful dog at once seized him by the coat collar, the porter net having removed his clothing before going to bed, and dragged him out of the room and half way to the outer door of the office, when the man succeeded in getting to his feet, and unlocking the door, staggered into the street. The fire was rapidly spreading over the building and the hotel was filled with guests, not one of whom had been aroused. The dog no sooner saw that his helpless friend was safe than he dashed back into the house, and ran barking loudly up stairs. He first stopped at the door of his master's room, where he howled and scratched at the door until the inmate was made aware of the danger, and hurried out of the house, as there was no time to lose. The dog gave THINGS WORTH KNOWING. Beeswax and salt will make your rosty flat-irons as clean and smooth as glass. Tin a lump of wax in a rag and keep it for that purpose. When the irons are hot rub them first with the wax rag, and then scour them with a paper or cloth sprinkled with salt. Steel knives which are not in general use may be kept from rusting if they are dipped in a strong solution of soda, one part water to four of soda; then wipe dry, roll in flannel and keep in a dry place. For "grassing" the griddle, cut a white turnip in halves and rub the griddle with it. It causes no smoke, smell, taste or odor, and is better than butter or grenade. The value of crushed ice as a drumming for burns and soaks, first pointed out by Sir James Karle, is confirmed by Dr. Richardson. The ice, after being reduced by crushing or scraping to a fine state of division as dry as possible, is mixed with fresh lard into a paste, which is placed in a thin cambric bag and laid on the burns. This is said to be banish all pain until the mixture has so far melted that a fresh dressing is necessary. Milk which is slightly turned or changed may be sweetened or rendered fit for use again by stirring in a little soda. Stale buns may be made to taste as nice as when fresh if they are dipped a moment or so in cold water, then put into a hot oven for five or ten minutes. They will turn out as light and crisp as when first baked. To scarce knives easily, mix a small quantity of baking soda with your brick dust, and see if your knives do not polish better. Kerosene will soften boots which have been hardened by water, and render them as pliable as new. Kerosene will make tin tea-kettles as bright as new. broken through their banks in many places, raining the growing crops and otherwise causing great injuries to the inundated territory. An inflammatory placard was posted on the 14th at Foosehaw. It was illustrated with caricatures of the Viceroy, Governor and Tartar-General and the Imperial Commissioner of Coast Defence, and is worded to the following effect: "You are afraid of the Foreign Devil, whereas we are not, and are anxious to tight if power be given us. You allow the French to destroy our trade. If you allow things to remain in the same state they are now in, we will cause a rebellion. After the first shot is fired by the French we shall rise in a body and not only kill every foreigner in the port, but yourselves also." This is only the text of the obnoxious placard. A literal translation of the same could not be obtained, for the Mandarins had wisely caused its destruction. The disposition of the natives towards foreigners at this port is traceable to the tone of the daily posters, which are eagerly looked for by the natives. These bias the minds of the natives, who have not sufficient intelligence to be able to form sound and impartial judgment after perusal of the same. Lately the feeling has grown more peaceable. On the 13th, Gen. Tao, chief in command at Wooung, called all his officers together before him and made the following speech: Affairs are now approaching to a crisis. If, therefore, the French should attempt to fire at the forts, it is exceedingly important that you do not feel flurried and fire at random. If the French fire at us from a distance we will aim at them carefully with our big guns, but if they should approach near enough, we will use our breech loaders on them. You must all aim carefully, and do not fire before you have been ordered to so. A reward will be given to such as capture alive the detached enemy. You may well be sure that I will not forgive any coward, as I shall immediately decapitate such as show cowardice. You are all brave men trained to war, and have killed an enemy before this. Now, therefore, it is time to know your worth again. Statistics have been published showing that the number of men between the ages of seventeen and forty engaged directly or indirectly in fishing operations on the coast of Japan, is 259,816. The typhoon in the south of Japan has one considerable damage and caused serious loss of life. Towns on the coast were innuated by the sea. At Tamashima, in Bitchiu, the sea embankments were carried away; 100 persons were drowned and 120 are missing; 50 houses having been swept away. Imbari and Matsuyama, Iyo, met with a similar disaster; 30 lives were lost, 170 persons missing, and 151 houses and 112 junks were destroyed. An Australian Drought. In February last, in New South Wales, a correspondent of a provincial newspaper traveled for some 200 miles by railway, and throughout the whole journey he saw on other side nothing but a desert—"a wilderness destitute of any green thing," without and dragged him out of the room and half way to the outer door of the office, when the man succeeded in getting to his feet, and unlocking the door, staggered into the street. The fire was rapidly spreading over the building and the hotel was filled with guests, not one of whom had been aroused. The dog no sooner saw that his helpless friend was safe than he dashed back into the house, and ran barking loudly up stairs. He first stopped at the door of his master's room, where he howled and scratched at the door until the inmate was made aware of the danger, and hurried out of the house, as there was no time to lose. The dog gave the alarm at every door, and in some instances conducted guests down stairs to the outer door, each one of these, however, being a stranger in the house, which fact the dog seemed to understand in looking out for their safety. All about the house seemed to have lost their heads in the excitement, and it is said that the hotel dog alone preserved complete control of himself, and alone took active measures to save the inmates of the house. In and out of the burning building he kept continually dashing, piloting some half-dressed man or woman down stairs, only to at once return in search of others. Once a lady with a child in her arms tripped on the stairs while hurrying out, and fell to the bottom. The child was thrown on the floor some distance away. The woman regained her feet, and staggered in a dazed way out of the door, leaving the child in midst of the smoke that was pouring from the office door. The brave dog saw the mishap, and jumping in through the smoke, which was now becoming almost impassable, and seizing the child by its night clothes, carried it safely out. The mother of the child on being restored by the fresh air first became aware that the child was not with her, and crying out wildly that "Anna was burning up in the house!" made a dash for the building as if to rush through the flames to seek her child. Heck had already brought the little one out, but it had not yet been restored to its mother. The dog saw the frantic rush of the mother toward the burning building and heard her exclamation that some one was burning up in the house, and although the building was now a mass of smoke and flames inside and out, the dog sprang forward and, as a dozen hands seized the woman and held her back from her insane attempt to enter the house, disappeared with a bound over the burning threshold. The faithful animal never appeared again. The Latest Matrimonial Freak William Culver is the son of late A. K. Culver of Utica, N. Y., who was at one time a forwarder of prominence and wealthy, but who, at his death, was financially embarrassed. His family, however, still hold a prominent social position, and one of his sons graduated at the Naval Academy at Annapolis, and is now a lieutenant in the United States navy. Mrs. Culver still resides at Utica, is possessed of considerable property, and is highly esteemed in the best circles. William Culver is now about 35 years of age. Milk which is slightly turned or changed may be sweetened or rendered fit for use again by stirring in a little soda. Stale buns may be made to taste as nice as when fresh if they are dipped a moment or so in cold water, then put into a hot oven for five or ten minutes. They will turn out as light and crisp as when first baked. To scour knives easily, mix a small quantity of baking soda with your brick dust, and see if your knives do not polish better. Kerosene will soften boats & shoes when have been hardened by water, and render them as pliable as new. Kerosene will make tin-kettles as bright as new. Saturate a woolen rag and rub with it. It will also remove stains from clean varnished furniture. The Scientific American says if a bottle of old oil of pennyroyal is left uncorked in a room at night not a mosquito or any other blood-sucker will be found there in the morning. Mix potash with powdered meal and throw it into the rat holes of a cellar and the rats will depart. If a rat or mouse gets into your pantry, stuff in its hole a rag saturated with a solution of cayenne pepper, and no rat or mouse will touch the rag for the purpose of opening a communication with a despot of supplies. Salt will dull new milk; hence, in preparing milk porridge, graying, etc., the salt should not be added until the dish is prepared. Paint spots may be removed from any kind of clothing by saturating with equal parts of tarpentine and sprite of ammonia. When coffee beans are placed upon hot coals or upon a hot plate the flavor arises in one of the most effective acid at the same time agreeable daimfectants. If no host is obtainable even the spreading of grout coffee on the object to be disinfected is most satisfactory. To clean stained woolwork, which is also varnished, an old house wife recommends using saving of tea leaves from the teapot for a few days. Drain them, and when you have a sufficient quantity put them in clean, soft water; let them simmer for half an hour. When almost cold, strain them out, and diping a flannel cloth in the water wipe off the paint, drying it with another flannel cloth. One cup of tea leaves to one quart of water is due allowance. Hartshorn applied to the stings of poisonous insects will allay the pain and stop the swelling, or apply oil of saffraresis, which is better. Bees' stings should be treated in this way. Pickles or vinegar will not keep in a jar that has ever had any kind of grease in it. Neatly Caught London October 3.-After a prime-fight near here yesterday was broken up by the police, most of aristocrats present escaped from the police in carriages or on horseback. Some, however, were less lucky, and one party of five was neatly captured. They were the leading spirits in arranging the fight and had taken precautions to hoodwink the police in case of a raid. They had engaged a large furniture van, and when they constables appeared upon scene the noble abettors of the mainly art climbed into th An Australian Drought. In February last, in New South Wales, a correspondent of a provincial newspaper traveled for some 200 miles by railway, and throughout the whole journey he saw on either side nothing but a desert—"a wilder desitute of any green thing, without any water worthy of the name, of cattle in the paddocks, dead or dying; the sun's torching rays fell on fields as hard as iron. The leaves on the trees were as motionless as death itself, there being not a death of airstirring. The state of affairs was quite as bad in other parts of the country, where were thousands of square miles of land, kicked and cracked, with the dry, brown grass off in dust, without a vestige of green drop of water anywhere. The expedients shortened to in this terrible crisis were sometimes of a most desperate character. Some farmers endeavored to send their cattle down the coasts or to the towns, but they died on the road, and their owners had to bear it only the loss of the animals but the cost their conveyance. This double loss prevented others from imitating their example. They sat down in mute despair to watch their ruin. One man lost 20,000, another 50,000, and the third 150,000 sheep about the slightest power to save one of them. Millions of sheep have died, and hundreds, and probably thousands, of colts who were prosperous last year are or and perhaps ruined to-day. Even inydney the drought was so severe that the inhabitants had to be placed on an intermittent allowance of water. Rain has at last been, and, therefore, the severity of the crisis may be regarded as past. Bogus Butter in New York The United States Commissioner of Agriculture has presented to the British Minister Washington a report in which it is stated,arding the butter of New York, that out 100,000,000 pounds sold annually in New York city, between 40,000,000 and 60,000,-10 pounds are bogus. Oleomargarine has it said, cut down the price of average butter to ten cents a pound, involving a loss of $4,000,000 annually to farm- The Latest Matrimonial Freak William Culver is the son of the late A. E. Culver of Utica, N. Y., who was at one time a forwarder of prominence and wealthy, but who, at his death, was financially embarrassed. His family, however, still hold a prominent social position, and one of his sons graduated at the Naval Academy at Annapolis, and is now a lieutenant in the United States navy. Mrs. Culver still resides at Utica, is possessed of considerable property, and is highly esteemed in the best circles. William Culver is now about 35 years of age. Some years ago he contracted a marriage which his parents considered beneath him. The woman died, and young Culver was received at home again. During the past summer he has been at work in the American Express office in Utica, and made frequent trips to Trenton Falls. An old negro named Brister, with two light-colored mulatto daughters of some vocal ability, has been the musical attraction at that resort. Young Culver on Thursday embarked in a second marriage and wedded one of Brister's daughters. The father at first opposed the union, but the girl's appeal prevailed, and he finally acted as a witness to the ceremony. The event occurred on Thursday, but the influence of Culver's family has kept it out of the local papers. Gossip, however, has been busy, and Utica society is greatly excited over the event. A Curt Reply Ex-United States Senator Ne Smith of Oregon, it is said, has become insane. Mr. Ne Smith was a self-made man, unpolished in manner, but with a vigorous intellect. He never saw a railroad till he made his journey to Washington City. He was a favorite with Charles Sumner, who on one occasion asked him, in the presence of several other Senators, to give his impressions of members of Congress. Mr. Ne Smith replied that "when he came into the Senate chamber and its old associations and the great debates in the Senate crowded on his memory he wondered how he ever got into such as historic and august body." "But," added Ne Smith, "after I had sat in the Senate a few weeks and listened to its debates, I wondered how any of you ever got there." Many forget that the hair and scalp need cleansing as well as two hands and feet. Extensive use of Ayer's Hair Vigor has proven that it is the best cleansing agent for the hair—that it prevents as well as removes dandruff, cools and soothes the scalp, and stimulates the hair to renew growth and beauty. Neatly Caught London, October 3. After a prize-fight near here yesterday was broken up by the police, most of the aristocrats present escaped from the police in carriages or on horseback. Some, however, were less lucky, and one party of five was neatly captured. They were the leading spirits in arranging the fight and had taken precautions to hoodwink the police in case of a raid. They had engaged a large furniture van, and when the constables appeared upon the scene the noble abettors of the manly art climbed into the van, bolted the doors on the inside and told the driver to drive with all possible speed to London. The van started off all right, but the extraordinary rate at which it went attracted the notice of the police and a mounted squad was sent in pursuit. The constables overtook the van, and a short conversation with the driver convinced him he had better direct his course to the police station. The five gentlemen inside heard nothing of this conversation and knew nothing of the change of destination which had been arranged. They laughed and chatted lusterously,and when the van stopped they unbotted the door, clambered down the back steps and found themselves in the grasp of stalwart policemen. Stepped In Time Erick Pa. Oct. 3. Leo Schrik and wife and John Flankee had $118 deposited in the Erie County Savings Bank when the bank suspended. The loss of the money drove them insane. Thinking afterwards they were committing a great sin they inflicted self-flaggelation. To-day two officers saw the man and his wife digging a grave in the back yard of their house. They entered and found the people intended to enact the death of Christ, to be followed by the killing of their children, to represent Herod's slaughter of innocents. They were arrested and jailed. The Good Time Coming The chorus of a favorite song of the Irish Republican Club of San Francisco recites what will happen when Blaine is President: Oh, we'll smoke great big dollar cigars And the hydrants will New hour and wine Five dollars for showing eight hours And this poor in the Depths will dim. A Texas paper says the people of jamaica have gone swimming so much of love that the fish are tame and will lick salt out of the hands of the batten.