anaheim-gazette 1888-02-09
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VOLUME XVIII.
REAL ESTATE AGENTS.
REAL ESTATE OFFICE
OF
F. U. Schaumburger
I Handle Only the
Very Choicest of Land
IMPROVED AND UNIMPROVED.
I Have for Sale Fine Homes, with Orange and Walnut Groves, and other Semi-Tropical Fruits; also all kinds of Deciduous Fruits.
I make a specialty of the Land lying in the magnificent Golden Bee country. This land cannot be excelled by any in the world. All the land lies within limit of the Anaheim Union Water Company's district with an Everlasting Attendance of Water. I will be pleased to show this land to all parties desirous of seeing it.
Correspondence Solicited and Promptly Attended to.
Postoffice Box 55: Anaheim, Cal.
And 114 West First Street, Los Angeles, Cal.
JOHN E. SCHRECK,
Real Estate,
Anaheim; Los Angeles, 20th S. Fort St.; And Fillmore City, S. P. R.
R., Between Los Angeles and Santa Barbara,
HAS ACRE PROPERTY AND LOTS FOR SALE
All over Southern California. The finest lots for building all sewered and water piped on the lots in Los Angeles. Also the finest area property, with natural gas well already in use.
LOTS Cheap Lots Everywhere LOTS For Sale
By J. E. SCHRECK, 21st South Flrt Street, Los Angeles; Anaheim; and Fillmore City.
Southern Pacific Railroad, between Los Angeles and Santa Barbara.
Remember the Alta Vista Tract. Houses built to order on credit. Lots all secure and water piped. Trees will soon be extensively planted and cement sidewalks laid.
CORRESPONDENCE Solicited and Promptly Attended to.
Postoffice Box 55: Anaheim, Cal.
And 114 West First Street, Los Angeles, Cal.
$70 PER ACRE $70
FOR A SHORT TIME ONLY.
Acres 2 miles from Carlton. 4-room house, stable, chicken house, well, tank and windmill. Water piped around yard and in house. House and other improvements all built within last 16 months. Plenty wood for fuel. House distant from school house 1 mile, 2 stores 1 mile, church 1 mile, depot 2 miles. Orange and Santa Ana ditch runs through land. Part of ranch now being sown to barley. One-third cash, balance on time.
LIBERAL DISCOUNT
For All Cash.
Call on Fugene Day, Galvester office, Anaheim, Cal.
or Frank Schoutenburger, Real Estate Agent, Anaheim.
H. D. POLHEMUS,
REAL ESTATE AGENT.
Postoffice Block, Anaheim, Cal.
Walnut orchards and Orange Groves in full bearing. Also unimproved lands in irrigating district and artesian-water belt. From five acres upwards. Prices extremely low. Terms easy.
Correspondence Solicited.
Buena Park
Buena Park
Buena Park
Buena Park
Buena Park
W. B. WILSHIRE
C. C. CARPENTER
H. O. WILSHIRE
Wilshire & Co., REAL ESTATE
No. 11 Temple St, Safe Deposit Building.
Telephone 665. Los Angeles, Cal.
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1888.
OFFICE
Hamburger.
of Land,
IMPROVED.
age and Walnut Groves, and
indigenous Fruits.
the significant Golden Belt
any in the world. All this
Water Company's district,
will be pleased to show this
omptly Attended to.
Anaheim, Cal.
s Angeles, Cal.
MISCELLANEOUS.
Express
and Baggage
COMPANY
All orders promptly at audited to.
Also Fine 'Bus for Plonics, Excusions, Elo.
OFFICE: Telephone-Cigar Store.
Opp, P. O. - Anaheim, Ca.
A. S. PIGOTT, Prep'r
J.S. WEBER.
Center street, Anaheim, dues to STOVES, TINWARE AGATEWARE,
Pumps, Pipes and Brass Goods
All kinds of Plumbing and Tin Work done to and warranted at Los Angeles prices.
Agent for Quick-Meal Gasoline Stove
Also agent for the HALIDAY WINDMILL,
The best in use.
E. E. MORRIS.
Manager California Day's
Amory Bigelow,
The Weekly Gazette.
Established 1870.
But the official reports made to the department of Pris tell a different which makes M. Dennis laugh. Acom to the record, such instances as the firing are frequent:
Julie C—a thief, who ran after diers, was confined in the house of poenauts, who extended every kindness to she buried her infant alive, and was her back dead drunk by two drunken soles she was deemed unworthy of pardon. From New Caledonia word is received she is a hard working industrious wife, wholly devoted to her husband, decline to pursue this branch of the se further.
We are impressed by what little we been able to learn about New Caledonia the Government does not publish much information concerning it—with the exception that French transportation will in and prove as signal a failure as did the trallian experiment. It is sustained by strong national desires—the desire to free colonies and the wish to be rid of danger criminals. So was the English attempt New South Wales. But the fates are agit it. First, there is the difficulty of determining what classes of criminals shall transported, and at what stage of their achment, and for how long a period. This is also the difficulty of supervision of crimes at such a distance; to say nothing the increased expense of guarding and porting them. Last of all we mention fatal dilemma which is the doom of system wherever it has been tried. Et the conflicts must be surrounded by a population of honest emigrants, which
Pumps, Pipes and Brass Goods
All kinds of Plumbing and The Work done to
and warranted at Los Angeles prices.
Agent for Quick-Meal Gasoline Stove
Also agent for the HALIDAY WINDMILL,
The best in use.
E. E. MORRIS, Established 1865.
Manager California Dept'.
Amory Bigelow,
Commission Merchant & Jobber in
CALIFORNIA PRODUCTS,
GREEN & DRIED FRUITS, NUTS,ETC.
105 South Water Street,
Chicago
Liberal Advances made on Consignments
milly ly
J. BENNERSCHEIDT,
Center street, Anaheim.
——TINSMITH AND DEALER——
In all kinds of
Tinware, Stoves,
Lead and Iron Pipe,
Pumps, Etc.
Agents for the
CYCLONE WINDMILL.
The Best and cheapest mill in the market.
Full particulars given on application.
FOUNTAIN SALOON
CENTER STREET, Kroeger's Block.
N. HART. PROPRIETOR.
FINENT
Wines, Liquors and Cigars.
Anheuser Busch BEER ON ICE.
I MAKE A SPECIALTY
Of BOOTS
AND SHOES,
S. S. FEDERMAN.
E. A. WHITE
Has just received a new job of CARTS, SPRINGWAGONS
Montravel; the two principal farms are those of Bourail and Koe. At Bourail only the best of the convicts are found.
The prisoners disembark at the island of Nou, which presents from the water the appearance of a great manufacturing establishment, with its workshops, its tall chimneys and its prison barracks, built of stone, in which the men sleep in groups of fifty to each barrack. The moral atmosphere of this island is identical with that of the old bagne, at Toulon, of unsavory memory, which has in effect been removed bodily to Oceanica. From this island they are conveyed by the "pententiary flotilla"—a tow of barges drawn by a wheeze steam launch to Noumea, which is a beautiful port, but destitute of soap means of entry, without lighthouses or wharves, much less fortifications, the streets of which are said to be open ditches. From Noumea they are sent to the camp of Montravel, where they enjoy a ten days' rest from the fatigue of the voyage. After this they are distributed to various points, to work; only, as M. Denia (formerly Assistant Director of the Colony) dryly remarks, they need not work unless they choose, for they cannot be punished for not working. The lighter punishments they do not fear, and though the law authorizes their confinement in a dungeon, the architect of the prison quarters on the island of Nou kindly omitted to provide any dungeon.
The climate of New Caledonia is healthy, and therefore not open to the objection urged against Gutana. But the soil is thin. The island consists of a wooded mountain range of volcanic origin, pushing its head above the level of the sea to a height, in some places, of 8000 feet. It is two hundred and twenty miles long and thirty miles wide. The greater part of the surface is rocky; here and there are plateaus of rock covered by a few inches of soil. The celebrated farm of Boural, the pride of the colony, produced in 1880, with the labor of 300 farm hands and 100 factory hands, three and a half tons of sugar, while the annual value of the products of the farm of Koe is
The Fear of Draughts.
Foul dust in rooms cannot be got rid by any amount of sweeping and car washing. The only thing that will remain and replace it is a current of compulsively pure air from the outside. Except in very cold weather, there should always be two open windows in each room, opposite sides. "If we should follow the advice," the horrified reader will exclaim, "we should all catch a fatal cold." Don't remember a dozen colds I got by being exposed to a sudden draught? Only few nights go when I occupied a near door of a theatre, the door wired open during the intermission, and draught, though pleasant enough, grape a bad cold. No, thank you; draught for me!" This logic seems good yet it is utter sophistry. As a metaphorician would say, the draught was on the occasion, not the cause, of the colony. The real cause was the foul, hot air in the theatre, which demoralized your skin and relaxed its blood vessels, so that they were unable to react suddenly and endure the healthful, cool air from the street. Other words, it was not the draught that gave you a cold, but the sudden transition from hot to cold air. Such a transition always is injurious to the skin, whether it be from hot to cold or from cold to air.
But if you are not overheated a current of cold air is never injurious. As one of the greatest authorities on hydene, Professor Reclam, remarks, "Draughts do not injurious unless we are in a globe To healthy persons they cannot do much harm as the stagnant air in a cloison. The fear of draughts is entirely groundless, though it affects most people in a manner which is simply indolorate. It is high time to acquit draughts of the charge of being the cause of our colony and to convict the true culprits, the injustices hothouse atmosphere in our room. Why do people on river excursions, or ocean steamers, where they are exposed to terrible draughts, never "catch cold Simply because their kins are not previously broiled in both houses." The Epoch.
With Nails on Their Gloves.
Of course there is absolutely no merit of judging the relative powers of these ancients and the moderns in "the no art of self defence." That the ancients especially the Greeks, did box, and the most savagely, we know. So far far...
BOOTS
AND
SHOES,
S. S. FEDERMAN.
E. A. WHITE
Has just received a new job of
CARTS, SPRINGWAGONS
BUGGIES, ETC.
Which are stored in Dennie's paint shop on Lemon St.
Call and import the vehicles and acquire our prizes
PASTURAGE!
For Horses and Cattle,
ON THE THOMAS EDWARDS RANCH. TWO
miles southwest of Westminster. Inquire of
JAMES MOSS.
KELLOGG BROS.,
Real Estate
AGENTS.
Having sold our store we are prepared to devote our
money attention to the Real Estate business.
H. C. KELLOGG,
Ciul Engineer and Surveysor.
Baled Hay!
—FOR SALE!
WIELAND'S
Beer.
AT GADES.
Better goods for less money than any other store in town.
But the soil is thin.
The island consists of a wooded mountain range of volcanic origin, pushing its head above the level of the sea to a height, in some places, of 8000 feet. It is two hundred and twenty miles long and thirty miles wide. The greater part of the surface is rocky; here and there are plateaus of rock covered by a few inches of soil. The celebrated farm of Boural; the pride of the colony, produced in 1880, with the labor of 300 farm hands and 100 factory hands, three and a half tons of sugar, while the annual value of the products of the farm of Koe is $40,000 less than the cost of raising them.
At the International Prison Congress at Stockholm in 1878 the question of transportation as a penalty for crime was the theme of a brilliant debate, in which many persons took part, but the chief speakers were M. Beltrani-Scalia of Italy and M. Michaux of France. The former attacked the system with vigor, while the latter defended it with an ability worthy of a better cause. The sentiment of the Congress was adverse to it. It is true that when the Parliamentary Commission, of which Count d'Hanssonville was Chairman, in 1873, consulted the Courts of France, the Court of Cassation (which is the Court of last resort) and the Courts of Appeal very generally, though with some reservations, expressed themselves as favorable to transportation; but it is doubtful whether, with better information, they would do the same to-day. The report made by the Commission discusses it at length, and though it apologizes for it, its tone is that of a half-hearted apology.
But the publication in the Herne Nouvelle in April, 1884, of an elaborate article by H. Denis, formerly sub director of the penitentiary in New Caledonia, shook the faith of many who had before been its advocates. The discipline is ridiculously inadequate; crime is common; the absence of women is a serious evil, which the Government has sought to remedy by shipping female convicts from the French prisons, who are sent to a convent at Beaurel, in which they remain until they are married.
M. Denis draws a comic picture of the contrabale, under the eye of a vigilant nun, which occur between the male convicts and those promising mutilation for matrimony. The worst women are married first, for the others naturally wish to be rid of them as soon as possible. "From the moment that the men murder you are mistaken, the woman is free; the criminal law lays down it arrest before the Civil Code." Being free, the new groundless, though it affects most people in a manner which is simply indurable. It is high time to acquit draughts of the charge of being the cause of our colony and to convict the true culprits, the injunction hothouse atmosphere in our room. Why do people on river excursions, or ocean steamers, where they are exposed to terrible draughts, never "catch cold? Simply because their kins are not previously broiled in both houses." The Epoch.
With Nails on Their Gloves.
Of course there is absolutely no means of judging the relative powers of these ancients and the moderns in the "no art" of self defence." That the ancients especially the Greeks, did box, and most savagely, we know. So far from using gloves to lessen the damaging effect of their blows, or oven from using simple power that training and nature have given to their flats, they increased this strangle straps of hard bull's hide around them when clinched, and sometimes even attached nails and lead buckles to them to make their blows more deadly.
They also usually, but not always fought continuously until one of the contrabants gave in, "ronnads," apparently not being to their taste. But although there seems to have been this savagery against the contests, it by no means follows that a "scientific boxer" of the present day would not be able to hold his own one if a trial were possible.
Copyright in Clippings.
An important case in regard to the right newspapers and journals inserting with permission, clippings from other papers recently been decided in England. The prioriator of The Builder newspaper applied an injunction against The Brick, The, and Bulkers' Gazette to restrain the latter paper copying articles, essays, notes and other matter. Mr. Justice Birling, on the motion of the defendants that the motion should be treated as the trial of action, gave judgment, granting a perpetual injunction terms of the writ and a reference as to damages. As affecting paste and sequestration and the wholesale unknowledgeful items that has hitherto gone on uncheckable in perhaps one of the most important actions in connection with literary copyright yet decided.-The Journalist.
There is a reason for employing French for the masters bill of fare which is quite practical. It is that there are many cultural processes and arrangements and combinations of food for which no English definitions can be found. The French having many grievances pursued the art and science of cooking with ardor and success, he as always one in such undertakings graduated a terminology of the kitchen. There has no analogous in English because the British through possessing a refinement beyond the fathom skill have more attained the complexity and necessity of discrimination and combination with French words they can not understand all.-The Argonaut.
A HERMIT AT REST.
Stolting Buried as He Wanted.
The Last of a Marvelous Old Man
Where Excelsiorism Made Long Funnled His Neighbors.
New York World.
Under a big tree on the bleak side of a mountain, four miles back from Dobbe Perry, the body of Johann William Stolting, the Hermit of Anhalay, was buried recently. The huge rocks among which he made his home, and which, far above it, towered into the frosty air, seemed glad in the sunshine. The wind in the pine trees was the old man's request.
It couldn't be said that he had a funeral. Eccentric old wight that he was, he had digged the grave with his own hands long ago and had told how he wanted to be placed in it. "If I am found with my clothes," he said to grocaryman John Lange of Dobba Feery, "bury me in them; if unclead, bury me naked. The coffin will be all ready when there's need for it. Mumble no prayers over my grave. Just let four men carry me up the hill and put me out of sight, my head to the west."
It was all done at he ordered. The coffin stood on barrels in Stolting's hovel until it was thought no more people would be present. At 3 o'clock in the after noon ten men might have been tugging up the steep rocks with their burden. Under-taker George Baker of Hastings, Supervisor John Bessen of the town of Greenburg, Charles F. Eickhorn and Daniel Survivor.
Where he got his education so one knew. It was before he went to America. There was something in his life which made him hate women worse than poison. He would turn away when he met them on the streets. He told me he was born on the island of Halkigeland, in the North Sea, and that his father was a learned man. There was wild stories of the girl he loved having been killed by North Sea pirates, and that her death drove him out a wanderer. But he never would tell the true secret of his life. About a year ago a woman came to Dobba Perry and hunted the hermit up. She said she had come to bring him news of a fortune, which awaited him in Holland. He turned her away from the door of his hat, and that was the last heard of her.
The old man had been failing lately. He became bent and pallid. New Year's day he was taken sick, and last Saturday Dan Springsteal found him dead. His life will have to be numbered among the mysteries.
LIMITS OF HUMAN LIFE.
How It May Be Prolonged Beyond the Average Length—Contaminants.
I have before me the records of no less than fifty-two centemarions, the details in regard to whom have been collected by a committee of the British Medical Association. Let us see whether an inquiry into these details suggests anything either as to what are, probably, the natural limits of human life, or as to the regimen by which life may be prolonged beyond its average length.
Of the fifty-two go fewer than thirty-six (more than two-thirds) are women. This may probably be attributed in large part to the comparative immunity that women enjoy from many risks to which men are exposed, but probably it is due not less to their greater temperature and to their freedom from the anxieties and heartburns which attend men's struggle.
So was the English attempt in South Wales. But the fates are against it, there is the difficulty of deterring what classes of criminals shall be arrested, and at what stage of their punishment, and for how long a period. There is the difficulty of supervision of criminals such a distance; to say nothing of increased expense of guarding and supervise them. Last of all we mention the denomination which is the doom of the wherever it has been tried. Either victims must be surrounded by a free motion of honest emigrants, which will absorb them, and in that event the citizens rise in rebellion against the country to put a stop to the deprive practice of thriving convicts upon associates, or, if not so surrounded, a widow population preys upon itself, it pool of corruption, and the Governor put to enormous and never-ending repress crime and relieve death in the colony.
The case of New Caledonia, we see no evidence that the attempt to plant a populous free and honest citizens has been likely to be successful.
The Fear of Draughts.
In dust in rooms cannot be got rid of a amount of sweeping and carpet. The only thing that will remove place it is a current of comparative air from the outside. Except cold weather, there should always open windows in each room on the sides. "If we should follow that" the horrified reader will exclaim, would all catch a fatal cold. Don't I suffer a dozen colds I got by being led to a sudden draught? Only a night ago, when I accepted a seat door of a theatre, the door was on during the intermission, and the back, though pleasant enough, gave bad cold. No, thank you; no for me!" This logic seems good, but utter sophistry. As a metaphysicist could say, the draught was onlyasion, not the cause, of the cold. And canna was the foul, hot air in the which demoralized your skin and its blood vessels, so that they unable to react suddenly and endure thirsty, cool air from the street. In words, it was not the draught that caused a cold, but the sudden transition not to cold air. Such a transition is injurious to the skin, whether hot to cold or from cold to hot.
If you are not overheated a current air is never injurious. As one of highest authorities on hygiene, Proclamation remarks, "Draughts are curious unless we are in a glow. With persons they cannot do so warm as the stagnant air in a close time to acquit draughts of the kind being the cause of our colds, convict the true culprit, the injurious house atmosphere in our rooms. People on river excursions, or on steamers, where they are exposed to draughts, never "catch cold" because their kins are not previously rolled in hothouses.—The Epoch.
With Nails on Their Gloves.
Curre there is absolutely no means using the relative powers of the land and the moderns in the "noble self defence." That the ancients, only the Greeks, did box, and that vaguely, we know. So far from
Lange of Dohbe Feery, "bury me in them; if uncleal, bury me naked. The coffin will be all ready when there's need for it. Mumble no prayers over my grave. Just let four men carry me up the hill and put me out of sight, my head to the west.
It was all done at he ordered. The coffin stood on barrels in Stolting's hotel until it was thought no more people would be present. At 3 o'clock in the after noon ten men might have been seen tugging up the steep rocks with their burden. Under-taker George Baker of Hastings, Supervisor John Bessen of the town of Greenburg, Charles F. Eickhorn and Daniel Springatee lugged the coffin and its load, the others pushed the pall bearers. The only ceremony was heaping on the scant dirt. When it was done the ten mourners walked back to Dohbe Ferry.
Inside the rude but where 'the hermint had lived there was desolation even worse than that without. Amid the cooking utensils with which he had prepared his frugal food, were scattered books, newspapers and page upon page of closely written manuscript in all languages under the sun. There were slats and sheets of paper crowded with thousands of figures, of which none knew the aim. In a box by the window were some instruments with which the wise and solitary man had worked at astronomical problems. In a back room, cluttered with objects of every description, but for the most part appertaining to study, was the pallet on which he had slept and died.
Stolting's history, as one gleanes it in the dreary locality where he was so long dweller, is a strange weaving of strange tales. Now that he is under ground, the villagers in Dohbe Ferry, the workers at the aqueduct shall which hill where his but was hurt and foot all neighborhood is talking adamantly about the "gray-haired man," as they called him. John Lange's grocery was turned into a meeting house, and a memorial service was taking place about the big stone when a reporter for the World went in. He sat down upon a barrel, and soon learned that Stolting's will, drawn by lawyer Francis Larkin, was in keeping of Surrogate Coffin, at White Plains, and Mr. Lange was made his executor.
No one knows yet what the old man owned, but the barren property where he lived was among his possessions. It lies about a mile and a half from the village of Ardley, and is in the very midst of a vast tract which Gyrus W. Field bought there five years ago. Anxions to complete his purchase, Mr. Field offered the strange, batless, coatless and shoeless old man a big sum for his four acres of rocks, but the offer was refused. Stolting settled on the place fully thirty years ago, when it was out of earshot of a human being. Once some vanials set fire to his dwelling and burned it to the ground. Among the heap of manuscripts which perished was the minute history of his strange life. He neverrewrite it, but he rebult his but and wouldn't leave the place.
Now that his needs are limited to six feet of earth, they say he has willed his four acres to Mr. Field, that the great financier's purchase might be complete.
For forty years the hermitt's gigantic form
I have before me the records of no less than fifty-two centenarians, the details in regard to whom have been collected by a committee of the British Medical association. Let us see whether an inquiry into these details suggests anything either as to what are, probably, the natural limits of human life, or as to the regimen by which life may be prolonged beyond its average length.
Of the fifty-two so fewer than thirty-six (more than two-thirds) are women. This may probably be attributed in large part to the comparative immunity that woman enjoy from many risks to which men are exposed, but probably it is due not less to their greater temperance and to their freedom from the anxieties and heartburnings which attend men's struggles for influence, and even maintenance. Medical men contend, however, that women also possess greater inherent vitality than men, the mortality of girls being less than that of boys, even during the first year of life, when the female is neither more temperate nor less ambitious than the male, and is exposed to as many dangers.
Of the sixteen men one only was single; ten of the thirty-six women were single; fifteen men and twenty-six women; then among the centenarians, were married; but naturally enough, of these forty-one a large number all in fact but five were widowed. Three of the fifty-two were rich, nineteen poor; the rest is comfortable circumstances; nine were fat (only one man), twenty-three lean; eighteen medium; only eight were full blooded; the rest average or pale. Forty had good digestion, which after 100 years means a good deal. Most of the fifty-two have had goal appetites only two having appetites classed as actually bad; most of them have been through life moderate eaters; twelvehowever have eaten large quantities of food. Only one is returned as a large enter of flesh and blood; and only one as a great consumer of alcoholic liquors in his case the liquor preferred has been been.
Only eight of all the number are classified as simply irritable. But these must be added five classes as irritable and energetic.
Unfortunately, however, the inquiries have not in such matters as these been extended into the post. A man or woman may be very irritable in extreme old age and we may call 100 a good old age; even here when I am striving to show that it is the natural limit of life) who has been very placid and even extremely amiable throughout the greater part of his or her career.
As to smoking: thirty-two are non-smoking; seventeen smoke much (four of them are women); three moderately; and two a little; only one chews; thirty seven avoid sniff.
Most of the remaining returns relating only to actual conditions of the fifty-two centenarians at present, are of no special interest, showing only that same weaknesses prevail in about the same degree among them; as many men and women of the average sort between 70 and 90 years old. If only our fifty-two centenarians could have been examined twenty years ago in these respects,the world might have obtained some useful hints. It is worthy of noticehowever that most of them were free from rheumatic and gouty troubles.The only man whose joints were stiff and deformed from such causes statedin reply to questions as to his capacityand taste for strong drink,"I always drank as much as I could,and I always will"-not a case,它will be observedof "Willful will to water so Willful must wet,"but Willful would not to waterand so wet his whistle to his own discomfort.-Richard A. Proctor in The Cosmopolitan.
Methods of the "Hospital Heart."
The "hospital heart" is an individual we have to be on constant lookout for.His business is to impose himself onthe hospitals ofthe different cities and thus
With Nails on Their Gloves,
turns there is absolutely no means
giving the relative powers of the
and the moderns in the "noble
self defence." That the ancients,
only the Greeks, did box, and that
avagely, we know. So far from
to lessen the damaging effects
of blows, or even from using simply
over that training and nature had
their fists, they increased this by
straps of hard bull's hide around
when clinched, and sometimes even
nails and lead buckles to these
in their blows more deadly.
Also usually, but not always,
continuously until one of the comgave in, "ronnda," apparently,
going to their taste. But although
rooms to have been this savagery,
the contests, it by no means follows
"scientific boxer" of the present
old not be able to hold his own in
trial were possible.
Copyright in Clippings.
Important case in regard to the right of
oers and journals inserting, without
on, clippings from other papers has
been decided in England. The professor of The Builder newspaper applied for
action against The Brick, Tile, and
Gazette to restrain the latter paper
article, amaya, nouse and other
Mr. Justice Sirlring, on the subdefendants that the motion should
as the trial of the action, gave
granting a perpetual injunction in
the writ and a reference to doamsage pastes and screns editing,
wholesale unknowledgeful stamps
that has hitterts gone on unchecked,
perhaps one of the most important
in connection with literary copyright.
The Journalist.
Is a reason for employing French on
own bill of fare which is quite procitious is that there are many culinary
and arrangements and combinations
for which no English definitions can
be. The French, having for many germanthe art and science of cookard and serve, have, as always,
in such undertakings, gradually
the terminology of the kitchen. This
analgesia in English, because the Burrough possessing always a robust
and though in their former colonizing
a refinement townsend by the family.
More than many British dishes are
in French words they can not be betained at all. The Aryman.
Among his effects were found several copies of the little in various languages. He spoke archaic languages.
Why," and groceryman Lange, "I have heard him, sitting right on that old barrel where you sit, write from Shakespeare and Schiller and Dante as hour and a half at a
less, coatiness and shores old man a big sam for his four acres of rocks, but the offer was refused. Stolting settled on the place fully thirty years ago, when it was out of earshot of a human being. Once some vanials set fire to his dwelling and burned it to the ground. Among the heap of manuscripts which perished was the minute history of his strange life. He never rewrote it, but he rebuilt his but and wouldn't leave the place. Now that his needs are limited to six feet of earth, they say he has willied his four acres to Mr. Field, that the great financier's purchase might be complete.
For forty years the hermit's gigantic form has been a familiar figure in towns along the Hudson. His hair, which of late has been silver white, swept his shoulders. His clothing, of which he himself was the maker, consisted of Pantaloons reaching a little below the knee, and a sort of biosse waist made of blue jeans and soaked with oil. He wore neither hat, shoes nor stockings. But no tempest could drive him in doors. He used to take children upon his broad shoulders, wade with them into a stream, and hold them aloft while he plunged neck deep in the ice cold water. At Hastings, thirty-five years ago, he taught a school and tried to make his boy scholars follow his example and take a plunge in the river up winter mornings, but they wouldn't have it, and all left him. Then he went to making house buttons with a secret machine of his own invention, which he never permitted anyone to see. Finally, urining utterly of civilization, he left Hastings and took up his home in the rocks where he was buried. Until work on the squodent brought people there he lived alone, never seeing anyone except on his weekly excursions to the village to procure groceries. There the preschera and scholars got hold of him and indushed him in pot on civilized clothing and lecture in the town hall on astronomy. Man who heard his lecture hold up their hands yet in marvel at all he knew. Afterward he lectured on religion, and set all the orthodox townmen by the ears. The preschera thought it was a pity so much beans should suffer eternal damnation, and Rav: D. M. Nevins went up and offered him a bible.
"I know it by heart," said Stolting.
Among his effects were found several copies of the little in various languages. He spoke archaic languages.
Why," and groceryman Lange, "I have heard him, sitting right on that old barrel where you sit, wrote from Shakespeare and Schiller and Dante as hour and a half at a
less, coatiness and shores old man a big sam for his four acres of rocks, but the offer was refused. Stolting settled on the place fully thirty years ago, when it was out of earshot of a human being. Once some vanials set fire to his dwelling and burned it to the ground. Among the heap of manuscripts which perished was the minute history of his strange life. He never rewrote it, but he rebuilt his but and wouldn't leave the place. Now that his needs are limited to six feet of earth, they say he has willied his four acres to Mr. Field, that the great financier's purchase might be complete.
For forty years the hermit's gigantic form has been a familiar figure in towns along the Hudson. His hair, which of late has been silver white, swept his shoulders. His clothing, of which he himself was the maker, consisted of Pantaloons reaching a little below the knee, and a sort of biosse waist made of blue jeans and soaked with oil. He wore neither hat, shoes nor stockings. But no tempest could drive him in doors. He used to take children upon his broad shoulders, wade with them into a stream, and hold them aloft while he plunged neck deep in the ice cold water. At Hastings, thirty-five years ago, he taught a school and tried to make his boy scholars follow his example and take a plunge in the river up winter mornings, but they wouldn't have it, and all left him. Then he went to making house buttons with a secret machine of his own invention, which he never rewrote it, but he rebuilt his but and wouldn't leave the place. Now that his needs are limited to six feet of earth, they say he has willied his four acres to Mr. Field, that the great financier's purchase might be complete.
For forty years the hermit's gigantic form has been a familiar figure in towns along the Hudson. His hair, which of late has been silver white, swept his shoulders. His clothing, of which he himself was the maker, consisted of Pantaloons reaching a little below the knee, and a sort of biosse waist made of blue jeans and soaked with oil. He wore neither hat, shoes nor stockings. But no tempest could drive him in doors. He used to take children upon his broad肩膀, wade with them into a stream, and hold them aloft while he plunged neck deep in the ice cold water. At Hastings, thirty-five years ago, he taught a school and tried to make his boy scholars follow his example and take a plunge in the river up winter mornings, but they wouldn't have it, and all left him. Then he went to making house buttons with a secret machine of his own invention, which he never rewrote it, but he rebuilt his but and wouldn't leave the place. Now that his needs are limited to six feet of earth, they say he has willied his four acres to Mr. Field, that the great financier's purchase might be complete.
For forty years the hermit's gigantic form has been a familiar figure in towns along the Hudson. His hair, which of late has been silver white, swept his shoulders. His clothing, of which he himself was the maker, consisted of Pantaloons reaching a little below the knee, and a sort of biosse waist made of blue jeans and soaked with oil. He wore neither hat, shoes nor stockings. But no tempest could drive him in doors. He used to take children upon his broad肩膀,wade with them into a stream,and hold them aloft while he plunged neck deep in the ice cold water. At Hastings,thirty-five years ago,he taught a school和 tried to make his boy scholars follow his example和take a plunge in the river up winter mornings,but they wouldn't have it,and all left him. Then he went to making house buttons with a secret machine of his own invention,which he never rewrote it,but he rebuilt his but and wouldn't leave the place. Now that his needs are limited to six feet of earth,they say he has willied his four acres to Mr. Field,that the great financier's purchase might be complete.
For forty years the hermit's gigantic form has been a familiar figure in towns along the Hudson. His hair,which of late has been silver white,swept his shoulders。His clothing,of which he himself was the maker,consisted of Pantaloons reaching a little below the knee,and a sort of biosse waist made of blue jeans and soaked with oil。他 wore neither hat,shoes nor stockings。But no tempest could drive him in doors。He used to take children upon his broad肩膀,wade with them into a stream,and hold them aloft while he plunged neck deep in the ice cold water。At Hastings,thirty-five years ago,he taught a school和 tried to make his boy scholars follow his example和take a plunge in the river up winter mornings,but they wouldn't have it,and all left him。Then he went to making house buttons with a secret machine of his own invention,which he never rewrote it,but he rebuilt his but and wouldn't leave the place。Now that his needs are limited to six feet of earth,they say he has willied his four acres to Mr. Field,that the great financier's purchase might be complete.
For forty years the hermit's gigantic form has been a familiar figure in towns along the Hudson。His hair,which of late has been silver white,swept his shoulders。His clothing,of which he himself was the maker,consisted of Pantaloons reaching a little below the knee,and a sort of biosse waist made of blue jeans and soaked with oil。他 wore neither hat,shoes nor stockings。But no tempest could drive him in doors。He used to take children upon his broad肩膀,wade with them into a stream,and hold them aloft while he plunged neck deep in the ice cold water。At Hastings,thirty-five years ago,he taught a school和 tried to make his boy scholars follow his example和take a plunge in the river up winter mornings,but they wouldn't have it,and all left him。Then he went to making house buttons with a secret machine of his own invention,which he never rewrote it,but he rebuilt his but and wouldn't leave the place。Now that his needs are limited to six feet of earth,they say he has willied his four acres to Mr. Field,that the great financier's purchase might be complete.
For forty years the hermit's gigantic form has been a familiar figure in towns along the Hudson。His hair,which of late has been silver white,swept his shoulders。His clothing,of which he himself was the maker,consisted of Pantaloons reaching a little below the knee,and a sort of biosse waist made of blue jeans and soaked with oil。他 wore neither hat,shoes nor stockings。But no tempest could drive him in doors。He used to take children upon his broad肩膀,wade with them into a stream,and hold them aloft while he plunged neck deep in the ice cold water。At Hastings,thirty-five years ago,he taught a school和 tried to make他的 boy scholars follow his example和take a plunge in the river up winter mornings,but they wouldn't have it,and all left him。Then he went to making house buttons with a secret machine of his own invention,which he never rewrote it,but he rebuilt his but and wouldn't leave the place。Now that his needs are limited to six feet of earth,they say he has willied his four acres to Mr. Field,that the great financier's purchase might be complete.
For forty years the hermit's gigantic form has been a familiar figure in towns along the Hudson。His hair,which of late has been silver white,swept his shoulders。His clothing,of which he himself was the maker,consisted of Pantaloons reaching a little below the knee,and a sort of biosse waist made of blue jeans and soaked with oil。他 wore neither hat,shoes nor stockings。But no tempest could drive him in doors。He used to take children upon his broad肩膀,wade with them into a stream,and hold them aloft while he plunged neck deep in the ice cold water。At Hastings,thirty-five years ago,he taught a school和 tried to make他的 boy scholars follow his example和take a plunge in the river up winter mornings,but they wouldn't have it,and all left him。Then he went to making house buttons with a secret machine of his own invention,which he never rewrote it,but he rebuilt his but and wouldn't leave the place。Now that his needs are limited to six feet of earth,they say he has willied his four acres to Mr. Field,that the great financier's purchase might be complete.
For forty years the hermit's gigantic form has been a familiar figure in towns along the Hudson。His hair,which of late has been silver white,swept his shoulders。His clothing,of which he himself was the maker,consisted of Pantaloons reaching a little below the knee,and a sort of biosse waist made of blue jeans and soaked with oil。他 wore neither hat,shoes nor stockings。But no tempest could drive him in doors。He used to take children upon his broad肩膀,wade with them into a stream,and hold them aloft while he plunged neck deep in the ice cold water。At Hastings,thirty-five years ago,he taught a school和 tried to make他的 boy scholars follow his example和take a plunge in the river up winter mornings,but they wouldn't have it,and all left him。Then he went to making house buttons with a secret machine of his own invention,which he never rewrote it,but he rebuilt his but and wouldn't leave the place。Now that his needs are limited to six feet of earth,they say he has willied his four acres to Mr. Field,that the great financier's purchase might be complete.
For forty years the hermit's gigantic form has been a familiar figure in towns along the Hudson。His hair,which of late has been silver white,swept his shoulders。His clothing,of which he himself was the maker,consisted of Pantaloons reaching a little below the knee,and a sort of biosse waist made of blue jeans and soaked with oil。他 wore neither hat、shoes nor stockings。But no tempest could drive him in doors。He used to take children upon his broad肩膀,wade with them into a stream,and hold them aloft while he plunged neck deep in the ice cold water。At Hastings,thirty-five years ago,他 taught a school和 tried to make他的 boy scholars follow他的 example和take a plunge in the river up winter mornings,但他 wore neither hat、shoes nor stockings。但 no tempest could drive him in doors。他 used to take children upon his broad肩膀,wade with them into a stream,他 wore neither hat、shoes nor stockings。但 no tempest could drive him in doors。他 used to take children upon his broad肩膀,
wade with them into a stream,他 wore neither hat、shoes nor stockings。但 no tempest could drive him in doors。他 used to take children upon his broad肩膀,
wade with them into a stream,他 wore neither hat、shoes nor stockings。但 no tempest could drive him in doors。他 used to take children upon his broad肩膀,
wade with them into a stream,他 wore neither hat、shoes nor stockings。但 no tempest could drive him in doors。他 used to take children upon his broad肩膀,
wade with them into a stream,他 wore neither hat、shoes nor stockings。但 no tempest could drive him in doors。他 used to take children uponhis broad肩膀,
wade with them into a stream,他 wore neither hat、shoes nor stockings。但 no tempest could drive him in doors。他 used to take children uponhis broad肩膀,
wade with them into a stream,他 wore neither hat、shoes nor stockings。但 no tempest could drive him in doors。他 used to take children uponhis broad肩膀,
wade with them into a stream,他 wore neither hat、shoes nor stockings。但 no tempest could drive him in doors。他 used to take children's broad肩膀,
wade with them into a stream,他 wore neither hat、shoes nor stockings。但 no tempest could drive him in doors。他 used to take children's broad肩膀,
wade with them into a stream,他 wore neither hat、shoes nor stockings。但 no tempest could drive him in doors。他 used to take children's broad肩膀,
wade with them into a stream,他 wore neither hat、shoes nor stockings。但 no tempest could drive him in doors。他 used to take children's broad肩膀,
wade with them into an ocean,
wade with them into an ocean,
wade with them into an ocean,
wade with them into an ocean,
wade with them into an ocean,
wade with them into an ocean,
wade with them into an ocean,
wade with them into an ocean,
wade with them into an ocean,
wade with them into an ocean,
wade with them into an ocean,
wade with them into an ocean,
wade with them into an ocean,
wade WITH THE ORIGIN OF THE BOOKS IN THE WORD OF THE BIBLE.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention elsewhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention everywhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention everywhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention everywhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention everywhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention everywhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention everywhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention everywhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention everywhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention everywhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention everywhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention everywhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention everywhere.
The proof is clear; there is no mention everywhere.
The proofis clear;
the proofis clear;
the proofis clear;
the proofis clear;
the proofis clear;
the proofis clear;
the proofis clear;
the proofis clear;
the proofis clear;
the proofis clear;
the proofis clear;
the proofis clear;
the proofis clear;
the proofis clear;
the proofis clear;
the proofis clear;
the proofis clear;
the proofis clear;
theproofisclear;
theproofisclear;
theproofisclear;
theproofisclear;
theproofisclear;
theproofisclear;
theproofisclear;
theproofisclear;
theproofisclear;
theproofisclear;
theproofisclear;
theproofisclear;
theproofisclear;
theproofisclear;
theproofisclear;
theproofisclear;
theproofisclear;
theproofisclear;
theproofisclear;
theproofisclear;
THE PROOF IS CLEAR!
WHAT ARE "Wild Hair?"
"Wild hair?" are evaluations growing as so as project against our eyelash during our business irritation They are best renamed by electricity as first announced by Dr. Charles K. Michels at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr. Charles K. Michels at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr. Charles K. Michels at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr. Charles K. Michels at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr. Charles K. Michels at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr. Charles K. Michels at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr. Charles K. Michels at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr. Charles K. Michels at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr. Charles K. Michels at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr. Charles K. Michels at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr. Charles K. Michels at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr. Charles K. Michels at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr. Charles K. Michels at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St Louis Aiming for electricity as first announced by Dr.Cheryl K.Michael s at St louis.Amendment 1998-2003-2004-2005-2006-2007-2008-2009-2010-2011-2012-2013-2014-2015-2016-2017-2018-2019-