anaheim-gazette 1888-05-31
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The Santa Fe road, the building of which has been deferred so long as to make us all wonder whether it would ever reach here, is even now at our very doors. Last evening the track-laying force had entered Orange street, and by the time this is read track will have been laid to Center street. This is a day of jollification for our people. The great transcontinental line, soon to be in active competition with the Southern Pacific, will give us cheaper rates for freight and passengers to all points. The many disadvantages which we labor under at the hands of the Southern Pacific may confidently be expected to pass away with the advent of this competing road. The entire line to Los Angeles will be in running order in a few weeks. We shall soon have one of the most commodious freight and passenger depots on the line of the Santa Fe.
Before another issue of this journal the Democrata, in national convention assembled, will have made their nomination for President. It is almost certain that Cleveland will be nominated on the first ballot. Senator Thurman's name will be argued for the Vice-Presidential nomination, but while he declares he is not a candidate for the office, there seems to be a sentiment in his favor that will be hard to override. The South has no candidate for the second office. It was thought some time ago that a Southern man would go upon the ticket with Cleveland. However, the name of the Ohio stateless man is gaining weight every day, and it is now held in some quarters that he will receive the nomination on the first ballot. With Thurman on the ticket the Democrata will feel perfectly safe about carrying Indiana and will expect to keep the Republicans busy with preventing him from running away with Ohio.
Two burglar at Los Angeles last week encountered a vicious watchdog in a backyard. By their admittance his fidelity was overcome through a judicious use of chlorine, and they ransacked the house and escaped while yet the dog reposed in blissful arrests about him. Howell, in honor of her friend, the Dundella Castellata of Madrid. It was the duke's eldest son who was killed at a bell-tight same years ago, and it has been hinted that Miss Field had more than a passing regard for the unhappy lail."
In the current issue of the North American Review we have Mr. Gladstone's reply to Colonel Ingersoll's attack on the defense of Christianity; and a red-letter notice on the cover of the magazine tells us that the same number of the North American will contain Colonel Ingersoll's reply to Mr. Gladstone. Who next will take up the discussion, we are not informed. All these letters and replies and criticisms are in a certain way interesting reading. Colonel Ingersoll's brilliant rhetoric, says a reviewer, "dazzles like a skilful feat of horsemanship or sleight of hand;" and Mr. Gladstone's criticism of the Colonel's methods is "beautiful in its lofty serenity and confidence." Colonel Ingersoll asks what is thought of Josephah and of Abraham? Mr. Gladstone eloquently reviews the two cases and shows that neither of them can an arguement against Christianity. Coloniel Ingersoll cites the teachings of Darwin. Mr. Gladstone interposes a damnurer and argues at considerable length in support of it. Colonel Ingersoll claims that belief cannot be controlled by operation of the will, and asserts the "innocence of honest error." Mr. Gladstone denies in five pages, "This way and that they turn the stark and rigid cadaver, planging their scalpels into it and dispatting as to what they find." Such a discussion might go on forever.
Governor Waterman has appointed Col. H. H. Boye of the Tribune Brigade General of the First Brigade with headquarters at Los Angeles, vice General Matthews, renamed. The new Brigadier General has an easy task to make friends with our local company G. It is to follow the example, in reference to this youngest company, which actuated General Matthews in the matter, and to have the same painstaking regard for its welfare which the latter always displayed. General Matthews was an appointee of Governor Stoneman, his commission dating back some four years. During his incumbency the military has been his greatest care, and he leaves behind him nothing in the way of neglected duty to regret.
SHERIDAN'S SICKNESS.
Washington, May 21—General Sheridan where mines have caused alarm yesterday, is improving this evening, and how are entertained of his recovery. The General is still a very sick man, and is constantly watched by his physicians. Impossible yet to say what the outcome his sickness will be.
General Sheridan continues to improve and the doctors are at ams because of his marvelous rally. They don't know why to make it, and fear it cannot last. Bulletin at 8:20 this evening simply states that General Sheridan continued to improve that there had been no recurrence of heart trouble and that the indications that he would certainly live through night.
At midnight the house was closed, on the man at the door insisted that she had no reason Mrs. Sharydan that she had been permitted to die down and get rest, which she so much needed. Two physicians are still on watch, and we are of course, all night. The lights in the house are turned low, and everything from outside indicates that the family have retired for the night. There will no later bulletin makes a change for worse taken place; and that is not now anticipated, at least not for present.
A dispatch from Washington dated Monday evening may:
A more hopeful tone pervades the Sharydan mansion-to-night and the attendant physicians all appear much relieved at strength and vitality shown by the stricken soldier, and the determination exhibited him to fight off the attack. The weather which has been warm and close all day, changed, and this evening a cool southern breeds enters the sick-chamber. The General has had more sleep during the even than at any other time since the attack began, and it is easy and regular not to use of narotica. His respiration improved and even his braimaker is quite normal. He is weak and has not left his eyes thing that takes place around him and conscious and rational except immediate after oxygen is administered. His mind clear and bright, but this may be due in to the exertion which possesses exhilar qualities. Milk, beef tea and chicken bar are still given him for nourishment about 10 o'clock to-night the General awaits and more oxygen was administered.
His condition is improved somewhat, chances are all still against his recovery, the fact is fully appreciated. It is impossible to tell when a change may occur, and several days elapsed between the early tacks of heart failure, there is constant appreciation of a recurrence. The appearance odema in the leg has been quite mark and has given rise to the fear that it have been part of the cause of
Two burglaries at Los Angeles last week encountered a vicious watchdog in a backyard. By their adroitness his fidelity was overcome through a judicious use of chloroform, and they ransacked the house and escaped while the dog reposed in blightous unconsciousness of events about him. How long the dog slept he does not know, but when he finally recovered he was overcome with that peculiar, tired feeling that dogs experience after anesthesia. Thus is the cause of science advanced by the entrepreneur Los Angeles burglar. And yet the police are looking for the same couple—with proper precautions against chloroforming, be it said.
The May debt statement shows that the Government has at command $290,000,000 cash. These are colossal figures, and most startle even wealthy England. Remembering the leanness of our treasury before the war and its present plethora, the money in the United States treasury is to be classed among the seven wonders of the modern world. Five hundred and ninety millions is more than one half of the entire bonded and certificate debt of the United States, the aggregate of which is $1,045,000,000. Of course the legal tenders are a debt, but as they are generally accepted to be a permanent and necessary currency of the country, the sum in the treasury seems the more prodigious. Under the law no one shall as a reserve for the redemption of the leased amount of usable cash is $1,045,000,000.
The divorce rate of Thomas Spencer, editor of Santa Monica Outlook, is said to lying at death a door in Los Angeles without medical assistance of any sort. The second editor enjoyed married life to the extent of nearly a month, was then possessed of the green eyed monster, applied for a divorce, it was granted, and now sighs, as he peacefully peers down into the sad sea waves, that he love must single hearted be.
A WRITER total loss in the coordinate estimates the caused by the phylloxel vineyards thus far. That is an enormous sum. $2,000,000,000 of France has depended largely on her other fact that cannot escape attention. One prize of $40,000 offered for a sovereign remedy for this plague has not been gained. In a country where the losses have run up to two thousand millions, and where every known resource of science has been made available, stimulated by a magnificent reward, all the terrors have been either entire or partial failures. It seems to be pretty well attained that the one radical remedy to destroy all the vines which become affected. The resistant stocks have for the most part met the case. But, according to the authority here quoted, only a small part of the area in France covered by infected vines,
The new Brigadier General has an easy task to make friends with our local company G. It is to follow the example, in reference to this youngest company, which activated General Matthews in the matter, and to have the same painstaking regard for its welfare which the latter always displayed. General Matthews was an appointee of Governor Stoneman, his commission dating back some four years. During his incumbency the military has been his greatest care, and he leaves behind him nothing in the way of neglected duty to regret.
This situation in Europe shows signs of improvement, although there are yet grave symptoms for mistrust on the frontiers of France and Germany and of Austria and Russia. On the Alaskan boundaries must strict and uneven rules have been enforced against French visitors and inhabitants passing from France into Alaska or Lerraluna, and this may lead to acts of retaliation on the part of the French Government, while Austria is naturally alarmed at having 500,000 of Russian troops aligned along her Galician frontier. There is however, a strong sentiment in European diplomatic circles against an outbreak of the situation in the near future. The London Telegraph thus sums up the situation: "The fact is that in the present condition of Europe the factor which makes for peace are very strong. There never was a time when nations were so intertwined in their monetary affairs, and were so independent as regards the issue of peace and war. The feeling, too, of all the peoples is against war, and this feeling can make itself heard if the rulers and agitators who desire hostilities now cease." Neither Russo nor France may engage either of adventures. When the French are deliberately consulted they Paris not partisan of radial but moderate Republicans as conservatives by a large number. The danger is not in the popular vote in the tricks, maneuvers and surprises or exhibition and intrigue playing with the passions of mob. The French Government requires not at firmness to save the republic from destruction and Europe from a new war.
Ireland is slowly going to ruin. The pith and marrow of her population are flying away in thousands every week, farmers and traders are in a state of chronic insolvency and the general condition of the country becoming every year more deplorable. Migration to the United States alone is going on at the rate of 3,500 a week, and the dragon population are remaining at home. There is a bright boy or girl in the family; he is or she who emigrates. The invalid dullardis and incurables remain at home. It does not require far reaching ken to test this most productive most disastrous rule on the well-being of the country, an yet no efforts are being made by the presumed friends of the people to stoke fatal hemorrhage. In 811 population was 5,147,836; to day it little above four and a half million. At the same rate of decrease that fifty years would convert the island to a denolate waste.
Philip Henry Sheridan was born in bainy, N.Y., March 6, 1831. His parents were Irish, and came to this country shortly prior to his birth. He graduated at Military Academy at West Point in Texas nearly two years, and in Oregon from to 1861. At the commencement of his he was appointed Quartermaster of the Army of Southwestern Missouri, and in April Chief Quartermaster of the Western Department. In May, 1862, he was appointed Colonel of the Second Michigan Volunteer Cavalry, was commissioned Brigadier-General of Volunteers July 1, 1862, and after brief period, was put in command at Eleventh Division of the Army of Ohio.
Cumberland and, as at the battle of New River December 31, 1862 saved from rout by his stabborn resistance his gallant conduct he was promoted to Major-General of Volunteers. In April 1864, he was called to the Army of that tomacite by General Grant, put in command the Cavalry Corps, and within the month May June and July, besides protecting thanks of the army and reconnoitering enemy's position, was successfully engaged in eighteen distinct actions. On the August 1864 he was put in command at Army of the Shenandoah, and soon after Middle Military Division where gained several successes over General Earl For this he was made a Brigadier-General of the United States Army, and in November following was made Major-General joined General Grant's army at City Park from whence he started March 25, 1863 strike the final blow for the overthrow General Lee's Army of Northern Virginia He fought the battle of Dinwiddie College, March 31st, and that of Five Fork which necissated Lee's evacuation of Richmond and Petersburg April 31st, and he still attacked and harassed them compelled their surrender at Appomattoe Courthouse, April 9, 1863. He was signed to the command of the Military division of the Southern June 3, and of that Gulf June 17, 1863. Under a new organization of the military districts and departments, he was assigned to the Department ofthe Gulf August 15, 1866,and March 1867; to the department ofthe Maui where he continued until March 1869By the promotion Sherman he became Lieutenant-General,and assumed command ofthe Western and Southwestern Military visions,vith his headquarters at Chicago.
AS TO THE CANDIDATES
The editor of the Pull Mall Gazette writes to his journal from Paris as follows: "The political horizon is dark with gathering storm clouds. The hearts of men fail them for fear, and all are listening for the first clear intimation that the storm is about to burst. Is it about to burst or is it not? That is what I have to find out. To discover if I can what is the true answer to that question is the reason why I am in Paris today inquiring, interrogating, interviewing and endeavoring to ascertain, as best I can, whether the new Europe is for peace or war. The old Europe, as we have known it since the end of the Franco-German war, is passing away. A new Enorpe is coming into existence before our eyes and the old world will confront the unknown fate under new rulers and under altered conditions. The death of the old German Emperor, the resignation of M. Grevy, the interregnum of the deathbed of Preleierick III and the threatening partent of the rise of General Bonlanger in France, all remind us that we are passing rapidly into the realm of the unknown, on the possibilities and conditions of which all may expelate, but few can say anything with certainty. All that we can see at present is that the old man are going and the younger generation is coming to the front."
MISS KAYA FIELD has arrived in Chicago and called on her cousin Ragene of the Daily News. She said: "the youth that she intends to spend the evening of her days here. But the greatest news of all in this." Accordingly, Mrs Ragene, "she has purchased an orange grove near Los Angeles, and is erecting a splendid villa overlooking he run. This beautiful estate also calls Can..."
It is obvious to note how many leading personages appear to be on their death-bed. The Emperor of Germany's death may be expected any day; the Emperor of Brazil will probably have risen from the bed on which he lies at Milan, King of Portugal has made his peace with the world, and awaits his end; General Saridan is supposed to be dying at Washington; the King of Denmark is in very poor health, and every few weeks we have omnious stories about the condition, mental and bodily, of Queen Victoria. It looks as though the necrology of 1833 would be marked by persons of rank and note.
The attention of the Horticultural Society was called at the meeting on Friday to the appearance of a false label pasted on a can of peaches. The label stated that the fruit was put up by the Sacramento Valley Fruit-Packing Company at Coloma, wherein, in fact, there is no such company and no fruit is packed at Coloma. It is stated that the false label was affirmed to the can by the Russell Morgan Company of Cincinnati. It so, it is doubtful whether this company has committed an offense which is punishable. It is not a crime to use a name which belongs to no one. But if the Russell Morgan Company knowingly affixed false labels to its can, it has unlawfully committed an offense which morality and commerce should be prompt to condemn, and, so far as they can, to penalize. It is contagious that a purveyor of merchandise should send it forth under false representations as to its origin and its character. The peaches, which are said to have been caused by the Russell Morgan company and labeled as Coloma fruits were pronounced by commissioners to be an inferior article; the chance of marketing them lay in representing them to be California fruit—hence the fraud.
It is obvious to note how many leading personages appear to be on their death-bed. The Emperor of Germany's death may be expected any day; the Emperor of Brazil will probably have risen from the bed on which he lies at Milan, King of Portugal has made his peace with the world, and awaits his end; General Saridan is supposed to be dying at Washington; the King of Denmark is in very poor health, and every few weeks we have omnious stories about the condition, mental and bodily, of Queen Victoria. It looks as though the necrology of 1833 would be marked by persons of rank and note.
The attention of the Horticultural Society was called at the meeting on Friday to the appearance of a false label pasted on a can of peaches. The label stated that the fruit was put up by the Sacramento Valley Fruit-Packing Company at Coloma, wherein, in fact, there is no such company and no fruit is packed at Coloma. It is stated that the false label was affirmed to the can by the Russell Morgan Company of Cincinnati. It so, it is doubtful whether this company has committed an offense which is punishable. It is not a crime to use a name which belongs to no one. But if the Russell Morgan Company knowingly affixed false labels to its can, it has unlawfully committed an offense which morality and commerce should be prompted to condemn, and so far as they can, to penalize. It is contagious that a purveyor of merchandise should send it forth under false representations as to its origin and its character. The peaches, which are said to have been caused by the Russell Morgan company and labeled as Coloma fruits were pronounced by commissioners to be an inferior article; the chance of marketing them lay in representing them to be California fruit—hence the fraud.
It is obvious to note how many leading personages appear to be on their death-bed. The Emperor of Germany's death may be expected any day; the Emperor of Brazil will probably have risen from the bed on which he lies at Milan, King of Portugal has made his peace with the world, and awaits his end; General Saridan is supposed to be dying at Washington; the King of Denmark is in very poor health, and every few weeks we have omnious stories about the condition, mental and bodily, of Queen Victoria. It looks as though the necrology of 1833 would be marked by persons of rank and note.
The attention of the Horticultural Society was called at the meeting on Friday to the appearance of a false label pasted on a can of peaches. The label stated that the fruit was put up by the Sacramento Valley Fruit-Packing Company at Coloma, wherein, in fact, there is no such company and no fruit is packed at Coloma. It is stated that the false label was affirmed to the can by the Russell Morgan Company of Cincinnati. It so, it is doubtful whether this company has committed an offense which is punishable. It is not a crime to use a name which belongs to no one. But if the Russell Morgan Company knowingly affixed false labels to its can, it has unlawfully committed an offense which morality and commerce should be prompted to condemn, and so far as they can, to penalize. It is contagious that a purveyor of merchandise should send it forth under false representations as to its origin and its character. The peaches, which are said to have been caused by the Russell Morgan company and labeled as Coloma fruits were pronounced by commissioners to be an inferior article; the chance of marketing them lay in representing them to be California fruit—hence the fraud.
It is obvious to note how many leading personages appear to be on their death-bed. The Emperor of Germany's death may be expected any day; the Emperor of Brazil will probably have risen from the bed on which he lies at Milan, King of Portugal has made his peace with the world, and awaits his end; General Saridan is supposed to be dying at Washington; the King of Denmark is in very poor health, and every few weeks we have omnious stories about the condition, mental and bodily, of Queen Victoria. It looks as though the necrology of 1833 would be marked by persons of rank and note.
The attention of the Horticultural Society was called at the meeting on Friday to the appearance of a false label pasted on a can of peaches. The label stated that the fruit was put up by the Sacramento Valley Fruit-Packing Company at Coloma, wherein, in fact, there is no such company and no fruit is packed at Coloma. It is stated that the false label was affirmed to the can by the Russell Morgan Company of Cincinnati. It so, it is doubtful whether this company has committed an offense which is punishable. It is not a crime to use a name which belongs to no one. But if the Russell Morgan Company knowingly affixed false labels to its can, it has unlawfully committed an offense which morality and commerce should be prompted to condemn, and so far as they can, to penalize. It is contagious that a purveyor of merchandise should send it forth under false representations as to its origin and its character. The peaches, which are said to have been caused by the Russell Morgan company and labeled as Coloma fruits were pronounced by commissioners to be an inferior article; the chance of marketing them lay in representing them to be California fruit—hence the fraud.
It is obvious to note how many leading personages appear to be on their death-bed. The Emperor of Germany's death may be expected any day; the Emperor of Brazil will probably have risen from the bed on which he lies at Milan, King of Portugal has made his peace with the world, and awaits his end; General Saridan is supposed to be dying at Washington; the King of Denmark is in very poor health, and every few weeks we have omnious stories about the condition, mental and bodily, of Queen Victoria. It looks as though the necrology of 1833 would be marked by persons of rank and note.
The attention of the Horticultural Society was called at the meeting on Friday to the appearance of a false label pasted on a can of peaches. The label stated that the fruit was put up by the Sacramento Valley Fruit-Packing Company at Coloma, wherein, in fact, there is no such company and no fruit is packed at Coloma. It is stated that the false label was affirmed to the can by the Russell Morgan Company of Cincinnati. It so, it is doubtful whether this company has committed an offense which is punishable. It is not a crime to use a name which belongs to no one. But if the Russell Morgan Company knowingly affixed false labels to its can, it has unlawfully committed an offense which morality and commerce should be prompted to condemn, and so far as they can, to penalize. It is contagious that a purveyor of merchandise should send it forth under false representations as to its origin and its character. The peaches, which are said to have been caused by the Russell Morgan company and labeled as Coloma fruits were pronounced by commissioners to be an inferior article; the chance of marketing them lay in representing them to be California fruit—hence the fraud.
It is obvious to note how many leading personages appear to be on their death-bed. The Emperor of Germany's death may be expected any day; the Emperor of Brazil will probably have risen from the bed on which he lies at Milan, King of Portugal has made his peace with the world, and awaits his end; General Saridan is supposed to be dying at Washington; the King of Denmark is in very poor health, and every few weeks we have omnious stories about the condition, mental and bodily, of Queen Victoria. It looks as though the necrology of 1833 would be marked by persons of rank and note.
The attention of the Horticultural Society was called at the meeting on Friday to the appearance of a false label pasted on a can of peaches. The label stated that the fruit was put up by the Sacramento Valley Fruit-Packing Company at Coloma, wherein, in fact, there is no such company and no fruit is packed at Coloma. It is stated that the false label was affirmed to the can by the Russell Morgan Company of Cincinnati. It so, it is doubtful whether this company has committed an offense which is punishable. It is not a crime to use a name which belongs to no one. But if the Russell Morgan Company knowingly affixed false labels to its can, it has unlawfully committed an offense which morality and commerce should be prompted to condemn, and so far as they can, to penalize. It is contagious that a purveyor of merchandise should send it forth under false representations as to its origin and its character. The peaches, which are said to have been caused by the Russell Morgan company and labeled as Coloma fruits were pronounced by commissioners to be an inferior article; the chance of marketing them lay in representing them to be California fruit—hence the fraud.
It is obvious to note how many leading personages appear to be on their death-bed. The Emperor of Germany's death may be expected any day; the Emperor of Brazil will probably have risen from the bed on which he lies at Milan, King of Portugal has made his peace with the world, and awaits his end; General Saridan is supposed to be dying at Washington; the King of Denmark is in very poor health, and every few weeks we have omnious stories about the condition, mental and bodily, of Queen Victoria. It looks as though the necrology of 1833 would be marked by persons of rank and note.
The attention of the Horticultural Society was called at the meeting on Friday to the appearance of a false label pasted on a can of peaches. The label stated that the fruit was put up by the Sacramento Valley Fruit-Packing Company at Coloma, wherein, in fact, there is no such company and no fruit is packed at Coloma. It is stated that the false label was affirmed to the can by the Russell Morgan Company of Cincinnati. It so, it is doubtful whether this company has committed an offense which is punishable. It is not a crime to use a name which belongs to no one. But if the Russell Morgan Company knowingly affixed false labels to its can, it has unlawfully committed an offense which morality and commerce should be prompted to condemn, and so far as they can, to penalize. It is contagious that a purveyor of merchandise should send it forth under false representations as to its origin and its character. The peaches, which are said to have been caused by the Russell Morgan company and labeled as Coloma fruits were pronounced by commissioners to be an inferior article; the chance of marketing them lay in representing them to be California fruit—hence the fraud.
It is obvious to note how many leading personages appear to be on their death-bed. The Emperor of Germany's death may be expected any day; the Emperor of Brazil will probably have risen from the bed on which he lies at Milan, King of Portugal has made his peace with the world, and awaits his end; General Saridan is supposed to be dying at Washington; the King of Denmark is in very poor health, and every few weeks we have omnious stories about the condition, mental and bodily, of Queen Victoria. It looks as though the necrology of 1833 would be marked by persons of rank and note.
The attention of the Horticultural Society was called at the meeting on Friday to the appearance of a false label pasted on a can of peaches. The label stated that the fruit was put up by the Sacramento Valley Fruit-Packing Company at Coloma, wherein, in fact, there is no such company and no fruit is packed at Coloma. It is stated that the false label was affirmed tothe can bythe Russell Morgan CompanyofCincinnati.Itsso.itisdoubtlwhetherthiscompanyhascommittedanoffensewhichispunishable.itwasnota 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SHERIDAN'S SICKNESS.
January 29, May 20, General Sheridan, whom issued general alarms yearly in improving this evening, and bound himself of his recovery. The Gen. still a very sick man, and is being watched by his physician. It is yet to say what the outcome of news will be.
Al Sheridan continues to improve, detectors are at sea because of his rally. They don't know what of it, and fear it cannot last. At 8:20 this evening simply said Sheridan continued to improve, there had been no recurrence of the trouble and that the indications were would certainly live through the nightlight the house was closed, and at the door insisted that the rally marred Mrs. Sheridan that she had armed to be down and get some such she so much needed. Two of officers are still on watch, and will not course, all night. The lights in the house are turned low, and everything outside indicates that the family tried for the sight. There will be ballistic missiles a change for the skien-place; and that is not now antitreat least not for the present.
Watch from Washington dated Monday may:
We hopeful tone pervades the Sheridan-to-night and the attendants and all appear much relieved at the and vitality shown by the stricken and determination exhibited by night off the attack. The weather has been warm and close all day, has been warm and close all day, has been warm and close all day, has been warm and close all day, has been warm and close all day, has been warm and close all day, has been warm and close all day, has been warm and close all day, has been warm and close all day, has been warm and close all day, has been warm and close all day, has been warm and close all day, has been warm and close all day, has been warm and close all day.
The Gen. had more sleep during the evening any other time since the attack first and it is easy and regular and not due to narcotics. His respiration has end and even his lungs is quite natte-ble weak and has not left his bed the day, but watches closely every that takes place around him and its nasal and rational, except immediately oxygen is administered. His mind is bright, but this may be due in part enlightenment, which possesses exhilarating Milk, beef tea and chicken broth given him for nourishment. At midclock to-night the General awoke are oxygen was administered. While addition is improved somewhat, the are all still against his recovery, and is fully appreciated. It is impatient when a change may occur, and as days elapse between the early at-heart failure, there is constant apprehension. The appearance of in the leg has been quite marked, given run to the fear that it may even in part cause the cause of the other News in Brief.
Glened Robert G. Ingersoll has given his photograph to Mind. Schalchi, with this inscription: "Imagine amethysts_rabbins diamonds_earthals_and opals molted together; imagine this molten glory changed to a home, and you have the voice of Schalchi."
Simon Hamburg, who was Last week found $19,000 by Judge Tooby in the Superior Court of San Francisco, was on Saturday find another thousand for comparity to defend. Hamburg's total fine of $20,000 is equivalent to nearly 58 years in jail.
Last Saturday night a bar of silver bollion, weighing 114 pounds, valued at about $1,000 was stolen from a Welle-Eargo trunk at the depot at Daggett, Cal. A reward of $100 for the arrest and conviction of the thief, and $200 for the recovery of the bollion is offered. The opinion is that the bollion is buried close to the office.
The Supreme Court on Friday afternoon affirmed the decision of the Superior Court in the case of the People vs. Goldenson, for the murder of little Mamie Kelly two years ago, which was that he should have hanged. When Goldenson was informed of the decision of the Supreme Court that seals his fate, he gave little outward indication of his feelings, except a trembling of his knees and lips. He expressed a determination to die game if no further way of escape offers itself.
A letter was received on Monday from Lieutenant Bartella, who went out to find news of Henry M. Stanley, the explorer, and it settled the anxiety felt about the explorer's fate. Bartella writes from Zanzibar, under date of October 28th, and states that deserters from Stanley's camp after journeying over twenty days, reached Singatint, and reported Stanley and party alive and well. They were well supplied with food and clothing, and in no immediate danger of a hostile attack. The deserters can give no news about the route which Stanley proposed to take when he broke camp.
Enjah Holcomb, $2 years old, went to a cistern in his yard at Troy, N.Y., on Monday, to get a pail of water. The pail fell into the cistern, and trying to recover it, the old man fell in. The water was scarcely five feet deep, and the old man recovered his feet and stood up with the water about his neck. As he fell, however, his fake teeth slipped down out of place and he swallowed them, and they choked him to death as he stood in the water, unable to cry for help. His body was gotten out later.
The letter of the Secretary of War was laid before the Senate on Tuesday in response to a resolution of May 22nd, calling for information as to the probable cost of a breakwater in Santa Monica bay. The chief engineer in his report to the Secretary reports that the building of such a breakwater is believed to be entirely feasible, but that the cost would be necessarily great. An estimate of the total cost, the report says,
"The German Frontier."
A Trip to the Boundary Post of Minneapolis.
Country At Sea.
We spring out of the tarmac, and we stand by the tarmac a square pillar, ten or twelve feet in height of stained or plastered brick, bearing on one side the coat-of-farms of the European province of Perm, and one on the other that of the Asian province of Tohokla. It was the boundary post of Siberia. No other spot between St. Petersburg and the Pacific is more fall of painful suggestions, and none has for the traveler a more malmuchy intact than the little opening in the forest where stands this grief-concerned pillar. Here hundreds of thousands of smiled 'human beings'—men and women and children, princes, nobles and peasants—have bidden good-by forever to friends country and home.
No other boundary post in the world has witnessed so much human suffering or been passed by such a multitude of heartbroken people. More than 170,000 airlines have traveled this road since 1878, and more than half a million since the beginning of the present century. As the boundary post is attested about half-way between the last European and the first Siberian etape it has always been customary to allow exile parties to sleep here for rest and for a just good-by to home and country. The Russian peasant, even when a criminal is deeply attached to his native land, and heart-rending scenes have been witnessed around the boundary pillar when such a party ever taken perhaps by frost and snow in the early autumn stopped here for a last farwellwell. Some gave way to unrestrained grief, some comforted the weeping some knelt and pressed their faces to the loved soil of their native country and collected a little earth to take with them into exile, and a few pressed their lips to the European side of the cold brick pillar, as if kissing good-bye forever to all that it embolized.
"At last the stern order 'Strofae,' (form ranks) from under officer of the convoy put an end to the rest and the leave-taking, and at the word, march' the gray-coated troop of exiles and convicts crossed themselves hastily altogether, and with a confused jingling of chains and leg-fetters moved slowly away past the boundary post into Siberia."
Regarding the case of General Sheridan as possibly hopeless, the newspapers are already outlining the immediate future for the officers a few grades below him in rank. His own rank will not survive him unless Congress shall repress The Act which created it. Anyway, the authority and virtual rank of the active headjointthe Army will continue Major-General Scholz will succeed to the first place; Major General Crook will move up a step without a change in titular rank
The letter of the Secretary of War was laid before the Senate on Tuesday in response to a resolution May 22nd, calling for information as to the probable cost of a breakwater in Santa Monica bay. The chief of engineers in his report to the Secretary reported that the building of such a breakwater is believed to be entirely feasible, but that the cost would be necessarily great. An estimate of the total cost, the report says, would not be less than $6,000,000. The report also says that it would be useless to start the work with a less appropriation than $800,000. A breakwater, the estimates figure, would give a depth of nine lathoms and a safe anchorage not less than one mile wide in the harbor.
Henry George has been expelled from the Twenty-third Assembly District of the Central Labor Party. Charges were preferred against him to the effect that he had visited Washington and immediately afterward advocated the affiliation of the United Labor party with the Democratic-party and that he had endeavored to cast discredit on the organization by calling it an annex of the Republican party. The following was passed: "Resolved. That we consider the course pursued by Henry George as a member of the United Labor party as unmanly, void of every principle and ungentlemanly; his action that of a traitor and, not desiring his fellowship any longer, we declare him expelled from the organization."
An almost unprecedented waterfall was reported on Monday throughout the West. At Quincy, Il., 24 inches fell in less than four hours. This has greatly discouraged the people in the flooded districts. Great damage was done by the hail, wind and lightning in the territory extending from Indiana to banks and a water spout, which broke in the northwestern part of Adams county, Nebraska, submerged five miles of track on the Fremont, Elkhorn and Missouri Valley Railway and washed away numerous bridges. The damage along the White and Lone Tree rivers is very great. White river rose sixteen feet in forty minutes and farmers had to abandon their homes, many of which were washed away. No loss of life is yet reported.
The labors of the commissioners to the Melbourne exposition are progressing satisfactorily, and are now enabled to announce that the exhibit to be made by Californiaans at the great exhibition will be highly credible to the State of California. The exhibit will be confined almost exclusively to the product of the soil of the State, such as canned and dried fruits and vegetables, wines, brandies, olive oil and raisins, as well as manufactured woolen goods, etc. A joint committee of the Grand Army and the State Board of Trade, appointed to arrange for a California exhibit at Columbus in September next, to-day adopted a circular, calling upon the people of the State to begin the collection in their several districts of suitable products for the exhibition. These will be forwarded free by the Southern Pacific Company to the State board headquarters.
A sensational murder occurred at Saa Juan by the Sea on Tuesday of last week. Frank Wilson, a fisherman, and an infamous man, living on the beach, some five weeks ago took Alfred R. H. Wolff, aged 29 years, and wife, a good-looking well-proportioned little blonde of 20 years, and a friend named Alfred K. Peterson, a swinee, aged 37 years, to his cabin to board. The little blonde paid too much attention to Wilson and trouble ensued. A few days before the murder Wolff drew a revolver and tried to shoot Wilson, but was prevented by his wife. Wolff and his wife and Peterson moved to Santa Ana four weeks ago. They hired a
Interviews With C. A. Dunn and Whitecaw Held.
May 30. The Commercial print an interview with Charles A. the New York Sun and Whitelaw the New York Tribune. Dana says land there is nothing now to show attention to his renomination and he likely that Cleveland will have the nominee for Vice-President, other-lected he might be handicapped, that if Blaine should be nominated woman would be quite as strong and bitter as before, and the Stalwerta, those of the Oneida county will likewise be very strong and very hardy with Senator Sharman; while he was but little known the people, he was strong among the men. Some of them oppose him of the opinion that he used his positions for his personal benefit. It be nominated, that view of the could be exploded in a great way. He said that Governor Hill sounded by Cleveland, but was solid in New York masses. Of the Re-Presidential candidates, he said, M. Dapew would undoubtedly be right in New York with any man the could push up, with the except-Governor Hill. Depaw would com-plete the elements of the Republican He would command the confidence business man, and the laboring man friends. In an interview Whiteslaw, in reference to Blaine: No one what he would do if unanimously held at Chicago. His Flannery letters and he really wanted to be on cash and he would be greatly able to be taken as his word, subject of an unanimous recommendation him to reconsider his detention. Hold said that point of the Margaret as much opposed to Sharman himself. He said: "After Blaine, M. Dapew is undoubtedly the most man among the Republicans of A. His popularity extends beyond him and is heard largely on his qualification. I think he would immer-New York and almost Command-New Jersey."
Delicious for Hot Cakes.
$1 PER CAN
AT NORCROSS:
THE GAZETTE
WITH THE
SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER.
EACH SUBSCRIBER TO THE GAZETTE, WHO pays the price of subscription in advance, will be entitled, on payment of Fifty Cents additional, to receive the San Francisco Examiner for six months. All those who desire a first-class metropolitan newspaper during the approaching Presidential campaign can secure the name at this really reduced rate by applying at this office.
Delinquent Notice.
Anaheim Union Water Company.
There is delinquent upon the following described stock, on account of ammunition levied on the 7th day of April 1896, the several amounts set opposite the sum of the respective shareholders, as follows:
NAME NO. WAXER NO.CRYT ANY.
Crowns D. 450 250
Gormany & MacPearl 100 150
Hawks N. L. 100 60
McPerland, C. M. 50 250
McNeil, J. 100 60
Moore & Higgins 100 90
Sherriff, W. 100 90
And in accordance with law and an order of the Board of Directors made on the 7th day of April 1896, so many dollars of each parent of such stock may be subscribed, will be paid at the office of the Company on the 11th day of June, 1896, at 2 o'clock p.m., of such day, to pay difference amounts therefrom, together with sum of advertisement and amount of sale.
Secretary Anaheim Union Water Co.
Office at the Post Office, Anaheim, Cal.
Adamson, May 19, 1896.
Still Giving away Houses on the Homestead Plan in
DARLTON!
The Coming Town of the Santa Ana Valley, situated on the Olinda Ranch.
Ships for Sale - From $75 to $100 Each
Improved acre property, $160 per acre. Improved land with orchard and vineyard, together with water stock, from $220 to $270 per acre.
Terms Easy. Sixty-four Houses to be Built. Large and Commodious Hotel and Motor Road. This is only a Starter. No other Town Sites in Southern California has met with Such Grand Success. For Full Particulars Call on
D. W. Hudson & Bro,
CENTER STREET, ANAHEIM, CAL.
JUST RECEIVED
A LARGE AND COMPLETE STOCK OF
Spring Goods
At S. S. FEDERMAN'S.
Complete Line of the Latest Styles of Dress Goods and Trimmings to Match.
Large Assortment of PARASOLS at Bottom Figures. An Elegant Line of Men's and Boys' CLOTHING. A very Large Invoice of BOOTS and SHOES
AS THIS IS MY SPECIALTY.
ARTISTIC
JOB-WORK
AT THE
Gazette Job Officee
Lowest Prices.
Complete Line of the Latest Styles of Dress Goods and Trimmings to Match.
Large Assortment of PARASOLS at Bottom Figures. An Elegant Line of Men's and Boys' CLOTHING. A very Large Invoice of BOOTS and SHOES AS THIS IS MY SPECIALTY.
For a Great Assortment of Lawns and Ginghams at Low Prices.
Enormous Assortment of Straw Goods for All.
THE PUBLIC IS RESPECTFULLY INVITED TO CALL AND JAMINE MY STOCK OF GOODS BEFORE PURCHASING. ALWAYS TREAT MY PATRONS WITH COURTESY.
BY SQUARE DEALING AND LOW PRICES I HOPE TO ENTER IN THE FUTURE THE LIBERAL PATRONAGE I HAVE JOYED IN THE PAST. RESPECTFULLY,
S. S. FEDERMAN.
HIPPOLYTE CAHEN,
DEALER IN
General Merchandise
OCCERIES AND PROVISIONS, HARDWARE, TINWARE, STATIONERY, AGATEWARE, WOODENWARE, OILS, Boots 'and Shoes. Men's Furnishing Goods.
Will my Stock of Dry Goods and Ladder, Mineral and Children's Stoves at Cost for Cash. Southwest Center and Los Angeles Sts., Anaheim, Cal.
JOSEPH HELMSEN,
—DEALER IN—
Proceries and Confectionery, Stationery and Notions, OBACCOS AND CIGARS.
Fruits of the Season Always on Hand.
Newspapers and Magazines at Publishers Rates. You can save trouble and risk by ordering through my agency. Also, leave orders for Book and Magazine Binding.
R. PELLEGRIN & SON,
ART, JEWELRY AND MUSIC HOUSE.
Postoffice Block. Anaheim, Cal.
Gazette Job Officee
Lowest Prices.
First-Class Work.
CITY MEAT MARKET
GO TO BENTZ & CO.
For Fresh Meats, Corned Beef, Pickled Pork, Chicken Lard and Smoked Meat.
The "Lily" Ham and Bacon out to Order, Highest Market Prices Paid for.
Fat Stock, Eggs and Poultry CENTER ST... ANAHFIM. CAL.
Notice to Creditors.
Emails of J. F. QUIRADO, deceased.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN BY THE UNDER signed, administrative of the estate of J. F. Quirado, deceased in the creditor's possession having claims against the said deceased to exhibit the same with the necessary summons within four months after the first publication of this Notice in the said administrator's at the office of her attorney, Richard Malrum and Wicka & Ward, Rimma 80 and 71 Temple Blvd. Los Angeles, in the county of Los Angeles.
Bated this Saturday of February, A.D. 1895.
ENTER REPULEDDA OR GUARDO.
Administrator of the estate of J. F. Quirado, deceased in the county of Los Angeles.
J. S. WEBER,
Center street, Anaheim, dealer in STOVES, TINWARE AGATEWARE, Pumps, Pipes and Brass Goods
Plumbing done according to the San Francisco Standard Plumbing Law, to keep your house healthy and free from small Agent for Quick-Meal Gasoline Stove.
Also agent for the HALIDAY WINDMILL.
OUR PREMIUMS
FOR 1994
THIS PAPER
Fruits of the Season Always on Hand.
Newspapers and Magazines at Publishers Rates. You can save trouble and risk by ordering through my agency. Also, leave orders for Book and Magazine Binding.
R. PELLEGRIN & SON,
ART, JEWELRY AND MUSIC HOUSE.
Postoffice Block.
Anaheim, Cal.
We buy all our Musical Instruments and Sewing Machines direct from the Manufacturers.
R. A. SCHUMACHER,
Real-Estate Broker.
Planters' Hotel Block.
Anaheim, Cal.
REWARD.
NOTICE
Wanted to be served on four days notice, from five to twenty-five thousand dollars. For further particulars see of Monroe, Pineau & Leroyman, Anaheim, April 19, 1886.
REWARD.
A warrant of $50 will be paid for information then binding to the record of the person who appropriate a load of wood from any plant on the Indian land, on Monday night, James Vernon.
OUR PREMIUMS FOR 1886
THE SAN FRANCISCO WEEKLY CALL
OR THE SAN FRANCISCO MORNING CALL
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THE SAN FRANCISCO WEEKLY CALL is a hundred eight-page paper. It is bound every Thursday, and contains all of the important news of the week, ground from every quarter of the globe, complete up to date of publication. It contains interesting special correspondence from all of the principal offices of the world and a much segment of the business and original personal diaries. It furnishes the latest most valuable financial terms and market quantities, and gives special attention to horizontal and perpendicular news, and in every recent financial family paper, appealing to the interest of every named bar of the community. Every minute by THE WEEKLY CALL goes to HANDSOME NEW MAP OF California and Nevada. Beautifully printed in white, showing every milestone, penitance and torment in the hills, with fullness of population, etc.
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