anaheim-gazette 1887-12-01
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VOLUME NIVIL.
LODGE MEETINGS.
A FAMILY LODGE NO. 24, P.O. B.
REGULAR MEETING IN THE MONDAY
OF OR JULY THIRD, AT 10 AM.
SUBMITTED BY THE FOLLOWING:
J. H. BULLARD, A.R.M.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
OFFICE AND IRRIGATION
IN LAOS ANGELS, CALIFORNIA.
OFFICE HOURS
MON-FRI 8:30 AM TO 7:30 PM
DEL COWAN
DENTIST
Will be in his office on Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
RICHARD MELROSE
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Residence at 17 Tempole Blvd., Los Angeles.
Will be at his office in Anaheim every Friday and Saturday.
Special attention is given to PROFESSIONAL DENISSONS.
DURGES JOHNSON, ROBERT & VONKA
ATTORNEYS AT LAW AND EXAMINERS OF TITLES.
Residence at 54 Loren Street, Los Angeles, Cal.
Halter to John Hines.
JOHN C. PELTON, JR.
ARCHITECT
William Plank No. 114, Fort Worth, Texas.
REAL ESTATE OFFICE
OF
F. U. Schaumburg
I Handle Only the
Very Choicest of Land
IMPROVED AND UNIMPROVED.
I Have for Sale Fine Homes, with Orange and Walnut Groves,
other Semi-Tropic Fruits; also all kinds of Deciduous Fruits.
I Make a specialty of the Land lying in the Magnificent Gate
country. This land cannot be excelled by any in the world.
Land files within limit of the Anaheim Union Water Company's cessation,
with an Everlasting Attendance of Water. I will be pleased to allow
land to all parties desirous of seeing it.
Correspondence Solicited and Promptly Attended
Postoffice Box 55.
Anaheim,
And 114 West First Street, Los Angeles, Cal.
PIERCE & LITTLEFIELD
GENERAL LAND AGENTS
Correspondence Solicited and Promptly Attended
Postoffice Box 55. Anaheim,
And 114 West First Street, Los Angeles, Cal.
PIERCE & LITTLEFIELD
GENERAL LAND AGENTS
AND
REAL ESTATE BROKERS
We will sell land belonging to ourselves, well located and lots and prices to suit purchers who want & home. And buy, sell rent and lease for the property of others.
PIERCE & LITTLEFIELD.
ANAHEIM LAND BUREAU.
LANDELL & SCHNEIDER
Anahaim Hotel Building. Anaheim, Cal.
ORANGE AND VINEYARD LANE
Branch Office at Whittier.
McDuffie Bros. & C.
REAL ESTATE BROKERS.
GILT = EDGE PROPERTY
In Anaheim a Specialty.
168 S. SPRING ST. LOS ANGE
H. D. POLHEMUS.
REAL ESTATE AGEN
Postoffice Block, Anaheim, Cal.
FOR SALE: A NINE RANCH OF 320 Acres in Town of Anaheim.
Only 350 rods from the Southern Pacific depot, and the rafts from the site of the Santa Fe depot. Until November 15, tract will be offered in Blocks of five acres each, of 22 full lots 2 feet, at an average of $1,000 per block. Half-blocks in same property.
This is no new town scheme, as Anaheim is one of the oldest in Los Angeles county; already about 1,800 population; churches, fine schools, two hotels and another large one building street railroad. Parties with but little cash can buy a block of city lots. The entire plot is surveyed and staked off into lot streets are being graded through it. The Orange groves and Vine adjoining are evidence of what can be done with this land.
TERMS:—One-third Cash; One-third in six months, and third lit a year, with eight per cent interest on unpaid Portion further particulars and maps of the plot call on or address any real estate agents of Anaheim, Los Angeles county, California.
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1875
TE OFFICE
Only the
t of Land,
UNIMPROVED.
Orange and Walnut Groves, and
of Deciduous Fruits.
In the Magnificent Garden Here
by any in the world. All this
Union Water Company's district.
I will be pleased to show this
Promptly Attended to.
Anaheim, Cal.
Los Angeles, Cal.
TLEFIELD.
The Weekly Gazette.
Established 1870.
MR. BENONT'S STORY.
Frank Lester's
"To La Mr. Benoni," and my friend Dr. Banke, as a sudden turn in the gravel walk brought us almost face to face with a man seated on a ratic bench. "Mr. Benoni is a friend of mine, and it looks like that last was said by way of introduction in Mr. Benoni's hearing, he having risen and vented towards us. He was tall, proportionately broad, and his steel gray hair framed an intellectual face. "Mr. Benoni, continued Mr. Banke, when we had sauntered up to the bench and seated ourselves, loves nature. I venture to say that two hours before we were stirring he was wandering through the world, listening to the
from danger, inside mixed a strong hold upon us. Not only did we hear the commissions of the grand matrons performed at homestead but we played arrangements of them as dancers on the plaza. Then we grew more familiar with them, until we heard them note by note. When we would play them technically correct, we tried to penetrate into their deeper meaning. It was then I began to discover the poetry of Alena's natura. Benectes which would have remained hidden from me she discovered, and for the interpretation of every composition she had numerous poetic suggestions. And so we often recalled in a month of beautiful sound. Yet we were quite unaware of the bond of sympathy which limited us, until there came a time when we thought we should be obliged to part—for the first time since early childhood. Alena's parents had decided to take her to Europe for a year or two, in order that foreign travel might complete her education. I remember, as if it weren't yesterday, the afternoon when she told me of our approaching separation. She could say of it with meaningful tenderness. I could say nothing. But I had a language better than speech in which to express the emotions which walked up as she spoke. There is an impromptu by Schubert, which has been aptly entitled "Elegy." It is a wonderful melody, floating over a soft flowing chordamentment, like the voice of a lonely bird over the water. Gently Lilwyn Alene to the piano, and seating myself at the instrument, introsel the 'Elegy.' Swayed by a feeling which I could not define, I played with the dearest expression of which I was capable. As the last notes died away hot tears fell upon my hands. Took up into Alice's face. She was sweeping. Flashed her with the heat of an idleness passion. I clasped her to my heart and kissed her. A moment later a thrill of joy passed through me as her lips touched my breast. R leasing her, I knelt before her. She had her hands upon my head as though in blessing. Not a word had bee spiked but our stories had been told—we loved our mother.
Alena did not go to Europe. Our parents were not opposed to our union. Instead they had expressed such an event, though not so soon. Silk, they had familiarized themselves to the idea that when our love for one another was made known to Alice's reals, the trip to Europe was fault it closed, tearing her fingers in her frozen efforts to lock and free herself, gripping more along the damp walls, until again at the unwarranted haunt of her raven hibernation of marmosum grus again and falling with a tumour the portal! Do you wonder if of perparation were on my肩 against the flanders through the opening in the bomb I stumbled and fell I clutched about me, and felt unnion an arm. The others had They dragged me out, my hand being that arm. What was it after me! Alice? Oh, her not call that haunt, distracted by that name! "Villaine!" I I gaze up on her larked, "You are her mollars--you are from her sale and closed this tomb upon her."
Mr. Benoni burned his face and I saw that he was trembling clement. Dr. Banks backcourt. The latter appeared, and waited took a seat beside the Dr. Banks and I walked away.
Are you not afraid to leave only Arundel to look after him?
No. Benoni is not a raindrop; he is one of the most mates of my syllabus, and Aruna worthy keeper.
Has his story no foundation all the offspring of his disease?
There is foundation for my mom's wife was a beautiful woman Alice Monroe. They had known since childhood, and unanimously happy. Three years after range she died, during the type here some twenty five years ago titled his reason. He wished that she was pleased. In the tour
Toula's Mr. Benoni, said my friend Dr. Banks as a sudden turn in the gravel walk brought us almost face to face with a man seated on a rattle bench. "Mr. Benoni is a friend of mine, and it here chill atitl. The last was said by way of introduction in Mr. Benoni's hearing, he having risen and attended towards us. He was tall, proportionately broad, and his steel gray hair framed an intellectual face. "Mr. Benoni, continued Mr. Banks, when we had sauntered up to the bench and seated ourselves, "loves nature, I venture to say that two hours before we were staring he was wandering through the world, listening to the voices of the morning.
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. Your friend," addressed me, "create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place." One can praise him without strung through the world, listening to the voices of the morning.
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. Your friend," addressed me, "create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place." One can praise him without strung through the world, listening to the voices of the morning.
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. Your friend," addressed me, "create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place." One can praise him without strung through the world, listening to the voices of the morning.
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. Your friend," addressed me, "create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place." One can praise him without strung through the world, listening to the voices of the morning.
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. Your friend," addressed me, "create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place." One can praise him without strung through the world, listening to the voices of the morning.
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. Your friend," addressed me, "create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place." One can praise him without strung through the world, listening to the voices of the morning.
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. Your friend," addressed me, "create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place." One can praise him without strung through the world, listening to the voices of the morning.
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. Your friend," addressed me, "create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place." One can praise him without strung through the world, listening to the voices of the morning.
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. Your friend," addressed me, "create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place." One can praise him without strung through the world, listening to the voices of the morning.
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. Your friend," addressed me, "create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place." One can praise him without strung through the world, listening to the voices of the morning.
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. Your friend," addressed me, "create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place." One can praise him without strung through the world, listening to the voices of the morning.
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. Your friend," addressed me, "create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place." One can praise him without strung through the world, listening to the voices of the morning.
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. Your friend," addressed me, "create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place." One can praise him without strung through the world, listening to the voices of the morning.
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. Your friend," addressed me, "create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place." One can praise him without strung through the world, listening to the voices of the morning.
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. Your friend," addressed me, "create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place." One can praise him without strung through the world, listening to the voices of the morning.
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. Your friend," addressed me, "create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place." One can praise him without strung through the world, listening to the voices of the morning.
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. Your friend," addressed me, "create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place."
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. Your friend," addressed me, "create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place."
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. Your friend," addressed me, "create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place."
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. Your friend," addressed me, "create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place."
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. Your friend," addressed me, "create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place."
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. Your friend," addressed me, "create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place."
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. Your friend," addressed me, "create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place."
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. Your friend," addressed me, "create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place."
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. Your friend," addressed me, "create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place."
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. Your friend," addressed me, "create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place."
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. Your friend," addressed me, "create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place."
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. Your friend," addressed me,
"create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place."
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. My friend," addressed me,
"create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place."
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning morning; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. My friend," addressed me,
"create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place."
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this morning evening; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. My朋友," addressed me,
"create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place."
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this evening evening; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. My朋友," addressed me,
"create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place."
Yes, and Mr. Benoni, "I was out early this evening evening; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. My朋友," addressed me,
"create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place."
Yes, and Mr. Benoni,
"I was out early this evening evening; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. My朋友," addressed me,
"create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place."
Yes,
and
Mr.
Benoni,
"I was out early this evening evening; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. My朋友," addressed me,
"create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place."
Yes,
and
Mr.
Benoni,
"I was out early this evening evening; and where child once it more fully than in this beautiful garden. My朋友," addressed me,
"create a fortunate chance which he selected for a country place."
Yes,
and
Mr.
Benoni,
"I was out早晚这段时间里,我看到一个孩子坐在地板上,穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我注意到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我提到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手里拿着一个物品。我提到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手里持有一种物品。我提到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手里持有一种物品。我提到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手持一种物品。我提到这个孩子坐在地板上,
穿着白衣,手持一种物品。我提到这个孩子坐着在床上。
说着:
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name is Benjamin Smith."
"My name是 Benjamin Smith."
"My名是 Benjamin Smith"
"My名是 Benjamin Smith"
"My名是 Benjamin Smith"
"My名是 Benjamin Smith"
"My名是 Benjamin Smith"
"My名是 Benjamin Smith"
"My名是 Benjamin Smith"
"My名是 Benjamin Smith"
"My名是 Benjamin Smith"
"My名是 Benjamin Smith"
"My名是 Benjamin Smith"
"My名是 Benjamin Smith"
"My名是 Benjamin Smith"
"My名是 BenjaminSmith"
"My名是 BenjaminSmith"
"My名是 BenjaminSmith"
"My名是 BenjaminSmith"
"My名是 BenjaminSmith"
"My名是 BenjaminSmith"
"My名是商业银行"
"在银行",
"在银行",
"在银行",
"在银行",
"在银行",
"在银行",
"在银行",
"在银行",
"在银行",
"在银行",
"在银行",
"在银行",
"在银行",
"在银行",
"在银行",
"在银行",
"在银行",
"在银行",
"在银行",
"在银行",
"在银行",
"在银行",
"在银行",
"在银行",
"在银行",
"在银行",
"在银行",
"在银行",
"在银行",
"</font>
</table>
LOS ANGELES,
HEMUS,
TE AGENT,
Anaheim, Cal.
ANCH OF
320 Acres;
southern Pacific R. E station imAtchison and Topeka R. R stathe north corner. Good house of
large open attic. Two large
Wagon and tool shops. Six arcal five-board boats. Forty acres
Alfalfa; 115 acres in Barley the
is around house in fruits of all
rizzle. Apples, Pears, Free; an
pasture, and 10 acres in corrals.
third Cash; One third in 1 year
rest at eight per cent on the
tail on or address any of the
Angeles county, California.
Acres of the Koeffler Trast,
of Anaheim.
Pacific depot, and the same dispat.
Until November 15th this
trees each, of 22 full lots 50x150.
Half-blocks in same proportion.
anaheim is one of the oldest towns
but 1,800 population; has five
another large one building, and a
cash can buy a block of 28 full
and staked off into lots, and
the Orange groves and Vineyards
done with this land.
third in six months, and oneinterest on impaid portion. For
it call on or address any-of the
Angeles county, California:
All benedial looked at me earnestly, and then bowed its head meditative? I Ping suddenly up again and pointing to a lily which rose majestically yet grays fully above a bed of flowers, he said.
"That only things vividly before me a form of grace and a class of beauty—the form and face of my dead wife. I hold the doctor dear above all other men, because he knew her and remembers her beauty. I love nature, because in all that is beautiful in nature I can see her. Hence I have solitude, because in schools I can beat immense what is most beautiful in nature.
No one who never knew my life can appreciate the shadow which her death has cast over my eyes from an idea of the gift and would know them have entered my heart. We had known each other since childhood, for we had grown up together. Our parents homes were all being the tempter together with the condition of the gentleman. In these conditional games Cassimus kind of protectorate our her, and in those disputes in which children sports and more quickly end, I took care that she was never wronged. I remember specially one occasion when I was her champion. As a child already Alice had a profession of black hair. In the days when we played those ramping games it was bound by a tiger ribbon, from which it fed over her shoulders and back. Wuchs ran her hands she were graceful. Her cheeks glowed with excitement and her hair streamed in the wind. One day a boy who was running after her in one of our games, in his eagerness to catch her, instead of waiting till he gained on her sufficiently to grasp her arm, caught her streaming hair. The chick was so awful and no rule that the ful with a harkery of pain. What followed I cannot tell to my own knowledge. Lookers on told me that I threw myself upon the boy, and that a short but severe light wished—short because my blood was up—and I soon fell him. That insult drew Alice and myself closer to one another, and our friendship man became providential among our companions. And so our childhood pawned, and she entered upon lovely maidenhood and youth. The promise of her beauty as a child was more than fulfilled; the loveliness of her lascarmiento with the musculature of her form. In her childhood I had been her protector, but now seemed as though I relied upon her than she upon me; for I had all my hopes and ambitions before her, and sought guidance of her. She would laugh to me with tender interest and admire me gently, yet harshly.
Some another hand of sympathy sprang up between us. We had in common a love for beautiful music. The parents of both of us were married, and we had received lessons on the piano. But in these days we were more interested in our chilish names. As we grew older, miserable and uttered, and we esteemed looking at me with tears through the town and into the country occupied barely an hour. Yet when we drawn up in front of the tomb it seemed to me if years had elapsed. What will happen whirled through my brain during that drastic drive—my beautiful Alice in her midst, stretching out her arms into the Jurai Darkness of the tomb and potentially calling my name; calling in still no longer her way along the dawn well to this portal, thrilling with despair as she
fath it closed, tearing her flesh from her fingers in her frantic efforts to hone the iron lock and free herself, gregping her way once more along the damp walls, only to find her mil again at the narrow portal, and with famine, again housing her hand amidst the cruel iron, in the apathy of immunity tearing out hands of her raven hair, in the last desperation of masthem grasping the lock again and falling with a moan lifelong against the portal! Do you wonder that the hands of persecution were on my brow when we reached the tomb? I am ashamed the large key from the hand of one of my relatives who had accompanied me, turned it in the lock and pushed back the portal. It opened slowly for a few inches. Then something impaled it. Almost trivial, I called upon those who had come with me to summon all their strength. With a great effort we made the portal yield enough to admit me. I rushed through the opening. When barely in the tomb I stumbled and fell. As I fell I clutched about me, and felt one hand close upon an arm. The others had followed me. They dragged me out, my hand still clutching that arm. What was it they drew out after me! Alice? Oh, horror! Let me not call that hailous, distorted vision of her by that name! "Villains!" I shrieked, as I gazed upon her lair; Bleeding form, "you are her millers" - you who dragged me from her side and closed the portal of this tomb upon her."
Mr. Bennett buried his face in his hands, and I saw that he was trembling with excitement. Dr. Banks beckoned to Arundel. The latter approached, and without further order took a seat beside the narrator. As Dr. Banks and I walked away, I asked: "Are you not afraid to leave him with only Arundel to look after him?" "No. Bennett is not a faving maniac Indebted he is one of the most tractable inmates of my asylum, and Arundel is a trust worthy keeper." "Has his story no foundation of fact? Is all the offspring of his diseased mind?" "There is foundation for much of it. Bennett's wife was a beautiful woman named Alice Mowbray. They had know each other since childhood, and their union was singularly happy. Three years after their marriage she died, during the typhus epidemic here some twenty five years ago. Her death unsettled his reason. He would not believe that she was dead. In the tomb he musted
LETTER FROM LOS ANGELES
To Some of the Tender-feet Back East.
A Los Angeles Real Estate Agent Tells What Me Knows About the Climate Here. Takes These and many other Matters.
The following letter is taken from the Dauville, Illinois, Commercial. It was written by Mr. L. M. Brown of Los Angeles, a brother-in-law of our worthy townman William R. Harker, and is worthy of intelligent perusal.
Los Angeles, Cal., Oct 31, 1887.
I see in the Commercial of the 24th, with a great display head, an article entitled "A Crash Predicted." I can only account for the venom exhibited on the part of newspaper men seat of the Rocky mountains toward southern California by attributing it to their monumental assurance of this country, a kind of jealouay of a country that in these times of depression and failure of crops in that country is thriving and growing in a wonderful way. You have been here twice within the last two years and you know whether the state of affairs here is as represented by these newspaper men who are trying to disassemble people from coming to the best country in the world.
Bless their little souls, we don't care whether any more than our special friends come here or not. Does it not seem some what queer that those of us who are here, and know what we have got, should endeavor to induce our relations and friends for whom we have the kindest feelings, to leave everything and come here?
MASHEN OF HEXAN GIRL
Puritan Way of Making Love and Believing Parents.
Many interesting stories could be told of the commons balls of the past, but only not will be mentioned at an instance of the popularity of this parish feature of the ball. One one occasion, at a hall given at the residence of Don Jose Abruga in Manterry, Pete Serrano, then a mollusk, was on hand selling oceansmen. A gentleman approached and asked what he would take for his chicaronne.
"One dollar a dozen," was the answer.
"How many have you?" was the next inquiry.
"Forty down."
"All right, I'll take them."
Taking the basket he started down the hall, but had not taken a dozen steps when he was surrounded by a number of young lilies, and in a moment all hands were diving into the basket, coming out with doubles handfuls and crushing them on his hand, while he manfully strove to return a few of the compliments he received. In five minutes not one of the forty dozen oceansmen remained whole.
The medus operandi of oceansone-making is very simple, and about as follows: Later an empty eggball—whole, except for an
order took a seat beside the narrator. As Dr. Banks and I walked away, I asked,
"Are you not afraid to leave him with only Arendal to look after him?"
"No. Benoni is not aaving maniac Indebt he is one of the most tractable inmates of my asylum, and Arundel is a trustworthy keeper."
"Has his story no foundation of fact? Is it all the offspring of his diseased mind?"
"There is foundation for much of it. Benoni's wife was a beautiful woman named Alice Mowbray. They had know each other since childhood, and their union was singularly happy. Three years after their marriage she died, during the typhus epidemic here some twenty five years ago. He death unsettled his reason. He would not believe that she was dead. In the tomb he musten be allowed to see her face again. For fear of mastening him they complied with his wish and opened the coffin. He elapsed with a dead form. His breath, and had been removed by force. He has been hopeless since then, his maturity taking its shape at a local idea, that some time after he was dead, as the story took place in my charge, and has been here ever since.
Three years after I had heard Mr. Benoni story I received, while I was traveling abroad, a letter from Mr. Banks announcing the death of his patient. "You remember his will tale," he wrote. "I have something to all." Day before yesterday the tomb was opened in order that the cataclysm upon which his remains were be placed lie there of his wife might be prepared. The coffin in which Mrs. Benoni a body lay when they closed the tomb, some twenty eight years ago, was found to be open and empty. On searching the tomb near the portal, portions of the skeleton, and clutching the book so firmly that they had to house them by force, skeleton fingers."
Mr. Benoni allotted with madness or gifted with second sight?
It is transferred to the Superior Court of Sonoma county.
SAN FRANCISCO, November 25 — Judge Sulivan this morning granted the motion for a change of bail in the case of Robert F. Morrow, and transferred the case to the Superior Court of Sonoma county.
In transferring the case Judge Sulivan钻 at length upon the decision of the Supreme Court in the case of the People's York, in which the judgment of the Superior Court of Kern county denying the motion for a charge of vengeance was reversed. Yorkum was charged with murder, and the extent to which public indignation was against him in Kern county, Judge Sulivan believed, is similar to the state of public mind on San Francisco against Morrow, and he stated that if Morrow's application of conviction under the present circumstances would be reversed by the Supreme Court.
Feminist group.
The reign of the tan colored glove is over. Parison women are again wearing the hair masked on the back of the head.
Stockings and gloves in Sardinian green attest the popularity of this new shade.
None but street suits and walking dresses are made with coat sleeves this fall.
Sea skin gloves for women's wear have the palms and nails finger pieces of dogskin.
Hand painting, in lieu of embroideries on black satin tea gowns is the latest "tail." More and changeable richs have grown the bronzed ones entirely out of fawn skin.
There is foundation for much of it. Benoni's wife was a beautiful woman named Alice Mowbray. They had know each other since childhood, and their union was singularly happy. Three years after their marriage she died, during the typhus epidemic here some twenty five years ago. He death unsettled his reason. He would not believe that she was dead. In the tomb he musten be allowed to see her face again. For fear of mastening him they complied with his wish and opened the coffin. He elapsed with a dead form. His breath, and had been removed by force. He has been hopeless since then, his maturity taking its shape at a local idea, that some time after he was dead, as the story took place in my charge, and has been here ever since.
Three years after I had heard Mr. Benoni story I received, while I was traveling abroad, a letter from Mr. Banks announcing the death of his patient. "You remember his will tale," he wrote. "I have something to all." Day before yesterday the tomb was opened in order that the cataclysm upon which his remains were be placed lie there of his wife might be prepared. The coffin in which Mrs. Benoni a body lay when they closed the tomb, some twenty eight years ago, was found to be open and empty. On searching the tomb near the portal, portions of the skeleton, and clutching the book so firmly that they had to house them by force, skeleton fingers."
Mr. Benoni allotted with madness or gifted with second sight?
It is transferred to the Superior Court of Sonoma county.
SAN FRANCISCO, November 25 — Judge Sulivan this morning granted the motion for a change of bail in the case of Robert F. Morrow, and transferred the case to the Superior Court of Sonoma county.
In transferring the case Judge Sulivan钻 at length upon the decision of the Supreme Court in the case of the People's York, in which the judgment of the Superior Court of Kern county denying the motion for a charge of vengeance was reversed. Yorkum was charged with murder, and the extent to which public indignation was against him in Kern county, Judge Sulivan believed, is similar to the state of public mind on San Francisco against Morrow, and he stated that if Morrow's application of conviction under the present circumstances would be reversed by the Supreme Court.
Feminist group.
The reign of the tan colored glove is over. Parison women are again wearing the hair masked on the back of the head.
Stockings and gloves in Sardinian green attest the popularity of this new shade.
None but street suits and walking dresses are made with coat sleeves this fall.
Sea skin gloves for women's wear have the palms and nails finger pieces of dogskin.
Hand painting, in lieu of embroideries on black satin tea gowns is the latest "tail." More and changeable richs have grown the bronzed ones entirely out of fawn skin.
There is foundation for much of it. Benoni's wife was a beautiful woman named Alice Mowbray. They had know each other since childhood, and their union was singularly happy. Three years after their marriage she died during the typhus epidemic here some twenty five years ago. He death unsettled his reason. He would not believe that she was dead. In the tomb he musten be allowed to see her face again. For fear of mastening him they complied with his wish and opened the coffin. He elapsed with a dead form. His breath, and had been removed by force. He has been hopeless since then, his maturity taking its shape at a local idea, that some time after he was dead, as the story took place in my charge, and has been here ever since.
Three years after I had heard Mr. Benoni story I received, while I was traveling abroad, a letter from Mr. Banks announcing the death of his patient. "You remember his will tale," he wrote. "I have something to all." Day before yesterday the tomb was opened in order that the cataclysm upon which his remains were be placed lie there of his wife might be prepared. The coffin in which Mrs. Benoni a body lay when they closed the tomb, some twenty eight years ago, was found to be open and empty. On searching the tomb near the portal, portions of the skeleton, and clutching the book so firmly that they had to house them by force, skeleton fingers."
Mr. Benoni allotted with madness or gifted with second sight?
It is transferred to the Superior Court of Sonoma county.
SAN FRANCISCO, November 25 — Judge Sulivan this morning granted the motion for a change of bail in the case of Robert F. Morrow, and transferred the case to the Superior Court of Sonoma county.
In transferring the case Judge Sulivan钻 at length upon the decision of the Supreme Court in the case of the People's York, in which the judgment of the Superior Court of Kern county denying the motion for a charge of vengeance was reversed. Yorkum was charged with murder, and the extent to which public indignation was against him in Kern county, Judge Sulivan believed, is similar to the state of public mind on San Francisco against Morrow, and he stated that if Morrow's application of conviction under the present circumstances would be reversed by the Supreme Court.
Feminist group.
The reign of the tan colored glove is over. Parison women are again wearing the hair masked on the back of the head.
Stockings and gloves in Sardinian green attest the popularity of this new shade.
None but street suits and walking dresses are made with coat sleeves this fall.
Sea skin gloves for women's wear have the palms and nails finger pieces of dogskin.
Hand painting, in lieu of embroideries on black satin tea gowns is the latest "tail." More and changeable richs have grown the bronzed ones entirely out of fawn skin.
There is foundation for much of it. Benoni's wife was a beautiful woman named Alice Mowbray. They had know each other since childhood, and their union was singularly happy. Three years after their marriage she died during the typhus epidemic here some twenty five years ago. He death unsettled his reason. He would not believe that she was dead. In the tomb he musten be allowed to see her face again. For fear of mastening him they complied with his wish and opened the coffin. He elapsed with a dead form. His breath, and had been removed by force. He has been hopeless since then, his maturity taking its shape at a local idea, that some time after he was dead, as the story took place in my charge, and has been here ever since.
Three years after I had heard Mr. Benoni story I received, while I was traveling abroad, a letter from Mr. Banks announcing the death of his patient. "You remember his will tale," he wrote. "I have something to all." 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FEMINIST GROUP.
The reign of the tan colored glove is over. Parisian women are again wearing the hair masked on the back of the head. Stockings and gloves in Sarlman green attest the popularity of this new shade. None but street suits and waking dresses are made with cost above that fall.
Sea skin gloves for women's wear have the palms and inside finger pieces of dog skin.
Hand painting, in lieu of embroidery, on black satin tea gowns is the latest "fall" more and changeable ribbons have been worn the broached once entirely out of fashion.
Iris in millimetres are using steel ornaments very extensively in their lattice installations.
Live is more used in millinery and almost decoratation than every and all kinds of clothes are in vogue.
The Couture of Paris recently shot by rabbits with her own whim in three days during a hunting expedition.
One of the most successful and best paid drummers in Iowa is Miss Lena Krausen, who travels for a Dublin pubbing house.
Miss Emma Nevada has scored an imminent success in "Montreal at Lachine," having here fulfilled three times at the close of the performance.
EPIDOTE
Jesting is over with my severer illness.
Nothing that animated me last week and I may not be able to do it until tomorrow.
There is a plum tree in front right.
And my fellow traveller left and right.
Fall away from the traps we were unwilling to leave, and I may not be able to do it until tomorrow.
To try to find a place to stay, I may not be able to do it until tomorrow.
To try to find a place to stay, I may not be able to do it until tomorrow.
Yet what is to demand? There's a master there, full of joy, to welcome the winter greetings. Whilst I'm home from the farm, I'm going to him uncledred.
I hear that an inn is open for Penguins, but I carry a penguin within my breast of this new warm world, and a diamond shape.
AN AUTUMN PICTURE.
A soft-gray skirt, marked here and there, with tangled texture of bare bristles. A braid around the neck. A thickening rille of blond hair. Which are wind coming to roam.
Inspired always everywhere.
The maximum water hardness is 80 ppm.
In all seasons blowing than the snow.
Winter, a shadow of ice on the heart.
Thickening rille of blond hair.
To shop bunnies, it is 6 per cent.
Now look at these figures and compare Danville and Los Angeles on the tax question. No, it is feeling of pain that prompts the publication of these big lies on an island California, and we walk all those old four crackers who think that there is the best country to remain there and enjoy their glaziers and all the discomforts of that hurried climate.
But the fact is that those who have gren enough to get away and see if they want to make a better country cannot smell what they have and must stay where they are and try to believe that they have a good enough country.
I'll you find an individual who ever spent a month in California who is satisfied to live elsewhere. Your property which you purchased while here two months ago was worth per cent more than day than you paid for it, and I would sell either so速ly in population very rapidly and well the countryside of mechanics building houses at their altitude as speed demand for houses cannot be applied. Manufactories of all these rooms are bringing up on all alley and everybody is busy. And if ten thousand wage workers should come into the city to move every one of them could find profitable employment inside of a week. Advise all who want to work at big wages to come and they can find employment at double the wages they have been working for. The letter is written for publicization. The commercial has given out the impression that my word is not to be real upon because I am in the real estate business, and as a consequence I want to induce people to come here that I may make victims of them.
I wish all my friends could be induced to come and live in the glorious climate, for pleasure under the sun. And if they will agree not to try to induce them to buy a piece of our high-rated real estate. There is plenty of cloud land in the state if they don't want our high-priced lands. I bought a half section of as fine land as the man ever shown, apart within twenty-five miles of Los Angeles last week for ten dollars per year, and in friend's entire section; the weather age of government land. Say you are that if shampoo land is what we have then that shampoo land charge nothing for the climate.
Frank Riley and wife arrived here today and are delighted with the country. Frank will never be satisfied in that even gdy climate again for the remainder of his life. I could go on to an indelicata length but it is problem, for you have all attention and will attend me as you can get away. Your humane which meant you lost than 1000. I have saved for 250 per breath, and I would rent five more times within a week for the same price.
The Commercial says that men who know how property have now will have to stand the depreciation: Yes, that is true, but it dishes were eggs and roast meat, particularly venom, which was served on long spits by his foresters. Luther preferred Torgan beer and book to all other beverages.
As a young man Melanethon was very fond of barley soup, and he would often exchange a diet of meat for a bowl of barley soup, small fish, vegetables and all kinds of fortuneous food he liked, but large fish and meat he disliked, and he hated all public meals or drinking hosts. Yorquito Tama was very fond of preserved fruits and all kinds of fancy sweets.
Henry IV was often ill from sitting too many oysters or melons. His favorite drink was vin d'Arbois. Peter the Great liked nothing better than Limberchrome chamelea XII, King of Sweden, preferred a piece of bread and butter to anything else. Voltaire, like Frederick the Great and Napoleon I, was very fond of coffee. His favorite food was maltakes, but he preferred orange to any other kind of fruit. The Dutch lady scholar, A. M. Schipper, ate spiders as a delicacy. Leasing preferred fennels, and Klopstock, who was a real gourmand, fed on salmon, miserries, pastry and smoked meat. Or vegetables he liked pungent beef, and grapes as dessert, together with a bottle of good claret or buck.
Knuts retained till bill old age a preference for pork, all kinds of pulse, and stewed fruit. He devoted three hours a day to hit dinner. Schiller was, in youthful days, very fond of ham. An old notebook belonging to a Montmartre restaurant contains some items about "Meuli Dr For Dr. Schiller in 1782," from which it appears that besides a bottle of wine, ham was every day among Matthias on Schiller's table. Matthias confirmed a preference for pans, beans and pork; Lord Byron for Chester church; with ale and porter; Pope was "greatly intermixed" in reminiscence; Jonathan Swain in turkey; and Sir Walter Scott for renown goes.
Mrs. Langtry's Music
New York Mall and Progress
Mrs. Langtry has a weakness for hambur; and an obligant millionaire showed me two by three ordered by the Lily the other day. One of these was a round but in a dachish grass velvet, with a brim summer hat narrow, and a shirred crown with a mute midnight top, over which published in great hands of half lung blanch marsh palm pitcher which wholly pervived father intimately but undoubtedly "fathing," and beginning with the Lily's general style. A named hat was a big Glenmorerough which in Mrs. Langtry's funniest shape, in a dark Mee folk, with changable mittles fathers shading from blue through a dull alive in round of mild swelling from the thick middle I surround the face. The third wit a lazy turban covered with a silt white plush and with a hair of hay white bird's hair peeped upon the high height. The Lily is a summoning of hats; there is always multifacial in admirable adjustment of the shipwise clothing by attention and prominence of her hot bell the red brown hue of hag half.