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anaheim-gazette 1894-01-25

1894-01-25 · Anaheim Gazette · page 1 of 10 · OCR glm-ocr
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VOLUME XXIV. PROFESSIONAL CARDS DR. J. H. BULLARD A. B., M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. (Harvard University, Boston, Mass.) Office and Residence, corner Hermine and Chartres Streets, Anaheim. OFFICE HOURS 7 to 8:30 a.m.; 12 to 1:30, and 6 to 7:30 p.m. Wm. H. PERDOMO, M.A., M.D. (Successor to Dr. Hunt.) Twenty years' experience in Army Hospital and private practice. Office hours, at Reid's Drugstore—8 to 9 a.m. and 1 to 2 p.m. Residence at Dr. Hunt's house, near Opera-house. English, German, French, Spanish and Italian spoken. DRS. MENGES & MENGES Of Santa Ana have opened a Branch Dental Office Here, operated by Dr. Morris Coffin. They guarantee satisfaction in all kinds of work. Office open on Monday and Tuesday of each week. Room 23, over Dickel's store. PALACE MEAT MARKET Bailey & Adams, PROPRIETORS. Best Meats the Market Affords Always on Hand. Also keep Sausages, Bacon, Ham, Lard, etc. Meats delivered to all parts of the city free of charge Shop corner of Los Angeles and Chartres streets H. W. CHYNOWETH, Attorney-At-Law. Helmsen Building, Center street. NOTARY PUBLIC. Real Property Law a Specialty. ANAHEIM, CA. RICHARD MELROSE ATTORNEY AT LAW. MISCELLANEOUS. SHIP Your Fruit and Produce TO Henry Eaton & Co 513 and 515 Front street, San Francisco, And Receive Highest Cash P Tney either buy outright or handle on commission. Commission for handling car lots 2 per cent; small lot Send for their price list. M. H. CHEESEMA (WEST END GROCER) Desires to inform the People of Anaheim and vicinity that located in his NEW STORE (near the S. P. depot) and is give the Public Bargains In Every Line BRAND NEW GOOD Also keep Sausages, Bacon, Ham, Lard, etc. Meals delivered to all parts of the city free of charge Shop corner of Los Angeles and Chartres streets H. W. CHYNOWETH, Attorney-At-Law. Helmsen Building, Center street. NOTARY PUBLIC. Real Property Law a Specialty. ANAHEIM, CAL. RICHARD MELROSE ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. AND NOTARY PUBLIC. Center street, Anaheim, Cal Special attention given to PROBATE matters. L. NEMITZ, THE PAINTER, Shop on Center street, near the opera-house. I am ready to do first-class Carriage Painting & Trimming GENERAL JOBBING L. GUNTHER. PIONEER BOOT & SHOE MAKER. Corner Adelaide and Los Angeles treets. FRANK FOX. City Barber Shop. FOR A FIRST-CLASS SHAVE! HOT AND COLD BATHS A. D. PORTER. H. A. McWilliams. PORTER & McWILLIAMS. CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS. Office and shop, first door south of Ferdinand Backe' Furniture Store. Los Angeles street, Anaheim. CHAS. SCHINDLER, CONTRACTOR and BUILDER. ANAHEIM, - CALIFORNIA. I. V. ALBERTSON House Painter and General Decorator. Fine decorating and fine interior finishing work, polish finishing work, graining, etc., a specialty. Graining and Fine Inside Finishing OFFICE—In Metz block, Center street, opposite Postoffice. GEORGE BAUER, BOOT AND SHOE MAKER. Center street... Anaheim. Making and repairing at the lowest cash price. All orders promptly attended to. All work guaranteed CHAS. ALBRECHT give the Public Bargains In Every Line BRAND NEW GOOD Are Arriving Daily Watch · This · Sp For An Announcement The Public is cordially invited to call and Inspect my Stoo M. H. CHEESEMA GUS DAV Groceries and Se Informs his customers and the general public that he to sell goods at the smallest margin possible. He buys therefore can sell for a very small profit, giving his custom fit of low prices. No charge for showing goods or answers. Come one, Come all! All Kinds of Produce and Poultry Taken in T. J. F. BOEG Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Wines, Liquors and Cigars KEEPS ALWAYS ON HAND A COMPLETE STO Decorator. Fine decorating and fine interior finishing work, polish finishing work, graining, etc., a specialty. Graining and Fine Inside Finishing OFFICE—In Metz block, Center street, opposite Postoffice. GEORGE BAUER, BOOT AND SHOE MAKER. Center street...Ansheim. Making and repairing at the lowest cash price. All orders promptly attended to. All work guaranteed CHAS. ALBRECHT Contractor & Builder Estimates Given. Fine Workmanship. Agent for the Pomona windmill. First North street...Ansheim, Cal ANAHEIM Pharmacy J. REID, - PROPRIETOR. A full line of Pure Drugs constantly on hand. Also Toilet Articles, Brushes, Soaps, Perfumery, Fancy Stationery, Paints, Oils, Etc. Physicians' Prescriptions Carefully compounded day or night. H. P. LARSEN, CONTRACTOR & BUILDER. Estimates given, Contracts made and do a general obbing Business. CENTER STREET...ANAHEIM. Wommer & Halpin Draying Trucking, Express AND A GENERAL Transfer Business. Leave orders at office, on Center Street "All orders given prompt attention." Hay and Coal for Sale All Kinds of Produce and Poultry Taken in B T. J. F. BOEG Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Wines, Liquors and Cigars KEEPS ALWAYS ON HAND A COMPLETE STOCK Of the Finest Wines, Liquors and Cigars. WINES AND LIQUORS BY THE KEG, GALLON OR BOTTLE. Orders by Mail Promptly Attended. GOODS DELIVERED FREE OF CH Opp. S. P. Depot, ANAHEIM, WM. R. HARKER DEALER IN... Harness, Saddles, Robes, W BRUSHES, COMBS, ETC. Repairing - Neatly - D My Harness Shop will compare favorably with any shop or adjoining Counties. Call and inspect my stock and purchasing elsewhere. It is my aim to please my customers, and I am now paired than ever to give the public Great Bargains in the partsments of my large Harness Store. KROEGER'S BLOCK, CENTER STREET. ANAH JOSEPH BACKS, DEALER INFURNITURE Repairing Done. Funeral Director. Store in Backs Building (next to irrigation district office), Los Angeles street. F. BACK UNDERTA And Dealer in FURNITURE Wall Paper, Cornice, Shades, Picture Framstery Goods, Paints, Oil, Sewing Machine SupCorner Los Angeles and Char ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 25, 1894. MISCELLANEOUS. It and Produce TO — Eaton & Co. ont street, San Francisco, Highest Cash Price. handle on commission. Carlood lots a Specialty. ear lots 2 per cent; small lots 4 per cent jan11m2 KEESEMAN, (ID GROCER) Anaheim and vicinity that he is now near the S. P. depot) and is prepared to In Every Line NEW GOODS! The Weekly Gazette. Established 1870. SUBSCRIPTION, - 92 For Year, Six months... 1 90 Three months... 76 Payable invariably in advance. Advertising Rates made known on application at this Office. Customary Reductions, and usual discounts, on large Advertisements or those running regularly. The Gazette is issued every Thursday morning, and is sent to subscribers by the early mail. It is delivered by carrier in Anaheim on the morning of publication. Entered at the Anaheim Postoffice as second-class matter. Items of news and correspondence on all live subjects are solicited by the editor. Be brief, and write on one side of the paper only. All communications must be signed by the author, not for publication, but for the information of the editor. TO MR. EARL A SAN BERNARDINO ORANGE-GROWER PAYS HIS RESPECTS TO THE MILD-MANNERED COMMISSION MERCHANT. The following is a portion of a letter written by William Penn Rogers of Highland, San Bernardino county, to Mr. E. T. Earl of the Earl Fruit Company. It is in reply to a letter of Mr. Earl, and is abundantly able to speak for itself: * You beguile simple-minded and short-sighted people to sell their fruit to you, and you straightway use these oranges to demoralize the sale of oranges sold f. o. b. by the organized growers. I am credibly informed that you applied these out-throat tactics only a few days ago to prevent the f. o. b. sale of Redlands and Highlands oranges at Portland, Ore. Probably, as intimated by "Michael," when we begin to ship our oranges to Chicago we shall be confronted by a lot of Florida fruit bought by you to throw upon that market on consignment to demoralize the sale of California oranges. Children in the schools are agitated by the fear of political disturbances. "The wives, sisters and daughters of residents, including many Americans, have been in daily apprehension of civic disorder, many of them having even armed themselves in preparation therefor, and the citizens have made preparation in their homes for defense against assaults which may arise directly or indirectly from such conflict. "Persons have begun to pack valuables with a view of immediate departure. Large quantities of bandages have been prepared, and unprotected women have received promises of saylum from the Japanese representative against possible disturbance arising in consequence of an American invasion. "Rumors of an intended landing by your forces for offensive purposes have agitated the community for several days. The situation for weeks has been one of warfare, without the incident of actual combat. Even the exqueen has called upon this government for protection, which was awarded her. "Owing to your attitude the government has been compelled by public apprehension to largely increase its military forces, at great expense. Its offices have been placed, and still continue in a condition for defense and preparation for a siege, and the community has been put in a state of mind bordering on terrorism. "This government has most earnestly sought from you, and through our representative at Washington from your government, some assurance that force would not be used, and has failed to obtain it. Your action has unfortunately aroused the passions of all parties, and made it probable that disturbances may be created at any moment. "I am informed by the military authorities that, while the force at your command is sufficient to destroy this city, it is insufficient to suppress any general rising and the conflict of armed forces and insurrections, or to prevent the loss of life and property." "This government is reluctant to believe that this condition of affairs is contemplated or expected by yourself or by the President of the United States. I have, therefore, to ask you to inform me with the least delay whether you hold instructions to enforce your policy with the use of arms in any event." "I trust you will be able in reply to give assurances that will tend to allay the apprehensions existing in the community. I have the honor to be, with the highest consideration, your excellence's obedient servant." The Contract, the Wage and Nothing but New Orleans Times-Democrat It may now be taken for less in the event of an unpaid Wilson bill, so far as it is concerned, will be discussed passed by the House in that was originally drafted by That is to say, the sugar cane vision for a mutilated bond bill. Until the adoption of any committee there was room for the bounty contract which government made with were to be interfered with; be interfered with only to gether and to be replaced sugar (say l. 1.2 cent pars.) be something of an enforced sugar per pound bounty on ever raised in these United States years 1890-1905. But, since the income tax embodied in the bill, and as in revenue arising under that bill will be made up for there will therefore be possibly occasion for the revenue-producing sugar tax the government's intention. In Every Line NEW GOODS! iving Daily! this - Space Announcement to call and Inspect my Stock. HEESEMAN. DAVIS and Seeds! the general public that he is prepared in possible. He buys for cash and profit, giving his customers the benshowing goods or answering questions ON HAND TE STOCK! You beguile simple-minded and short-sighted people to sell their fruit to you, and you straightway use these oranges to demoralize the sale of oranges sold f. o. b. by the organized growers. I am credibly informed that you applied these out-throat tactics only a few days ago to prevent the f. o. b. sale of Redlands and Highlands oranges at Portland, Ore. Probably, as intimated by "Michael," when we begin to ship our Oranges to Chicago we shall be confronted by a lot of Florida fruit bought by you to throw upon that market on consignment to demoralize the sale of California oranges. Morally contrasted, you are no more like the Height Bros. than a horsethief is like the Angel Gabriel. You claim that you handled oranges for me two years ago honestly and fairly, and you assert—which I do not admit—that they netted me $1.20 a box. You state only half the truth, and fail to state that I gave you part of my crop to handle on a special agreement with your agent at Highland. Some of your employees now claim that this agent was a rascal, but I happen to know that he remained in your service at least one year after he was made the seaport of your rascality at Highland. This saddling of the crime of the principal upon the back of the servant is too old a form of insulty to deceive anyone. The spring never rises higher than its source. It was agreed between your agent and myself that my oranges were to be sold f. o. b. at Highland. The prices were to be fixed from time to time and no oranges were to be sold in any other way except by consultation and special agreement with me. The f. o. b. price was fixed at $2.10 for seedlings and $3.25 for navels. I was suddenly called East by the death of one of my family. No sooner was I out of the state than your agent, presumably with your consent, began to ship my oranges East, charging me for freight, long repacking, etc., and returning to me whatever sum you pleased. Without going into all the details of this transaction, which I reserve for a future time, it is sufficient for my present purpose to say the 335 boxes of oranges handled by you for me brought, according to your claim, $1.20 per box net, or $402. At the prices agreed upon between your agent and me the oranges I delivered to you, and for which I have your receipts, would have brought, if sold according to contract, and after deducting cost of boxes, packing, commissions, etc., the sum of $517.70 or a difference of $215.70. The interest on this sum for two years at 12 per cent is $57.52, making a total of $272.22, which you have stolen from me, unless by restitution you should change this crime into a lesser offense. Will you restore the stolen money, or do you prefer to be branded as a thief and a secondrel? Take your choice. Though you have forced me in self-defense to be decidedly personal, the main question at issue is one which transcends all personal limitations. It is the question of the supremacy of two classes whose interests are diametrically opposed. This contest means the survival and supremacy of the orange growers of Southern California, or the survival and supremacy, on the ruins of our homes and ranches, of a nest of cormorants and blood-suckers, of which you are the typical exponent and chief offender. I do not for one instant doubt the final result. There is too much capital, too much manhood, too much brain power and moral force collided in the defense of our God-favored section and our most vital industry, ever to submit to the rule of any olique of plunderers such as you represent and lead. All honest orange growers should shun you and your confesses as they would shun a pestilence. You beguile simple-minded and short-sighted people to sell their fruit to you, and you straightway use these oranges to demoralize the sale of oranges sold f. o. b. by the organized growers. I am credibly informed that you applied these out-throat tactics only a few days ago to prevent the f. o. b. sale of Redlands and Highlands oranges at Portland, Ore. Probably, as intimated by "Michael," when we begin to ship our Oranges to Chicago we shall be confronted by a lot of Florida fruit bought by you to throw upon that market on consignment to demoralize the sale of California oranges. Morally contrasted, you are no more like the Height Bros. than a horsethief is like the Angel Gabriel. You claim that you handled oranges for me two years ago honestly and fairly, and you assert—which I do not admit—that they netted me $1.20 a box. You state only half the truth, and fail to state that I gave you part of my crop to handle on a special agreement with your agent at Highland. Some of your employees now claim that this agent was a rascal, but I happen to know that he remained in your service at least one year after he was made the seaport of your rascality at Highland. This saddling of the crime of the principal upon the back of the servant is too old a form of insulty to deceive anyone. The spring never rises higher than its source. It was agreed between your agent and myself that my oranges were to be sold f. o. b. at Highland. The prices were to be fixed from time to time and no oranges were to be sold in any other way except by consultation and special agreement with me. The f. o. b. price was fixed at $2.10 for seedlings and $3.25 for navels. I was suddenly called East by the death of one of my family. No sooner was I out of the state than your agent, presumably with your consent, began to ship my oranges East, charging me for freight, long repacking, etc., and returning to me whatever sum you pleased. Without going into all the details of this transaction, which I reserve for a future time, it is sufficient for my present purpose to say the 335 boxes of oranges handled by you for me brought, according to your claim, $1.20 per box net, or $402. At the prices agreed upon between your agent and me the oranges I delivered to you, and for which I have your receipts, would have brought, if sold according to contract, and after deducting cost of boxes, packing, commissions, etc., the sum of $517.70 or a difference of $215.70. The interest on this sum for two years at 12 per cent is $57.52, making a total of $272.22, which you have stolen from me, unless by restitution you should change this crime into a lesser offense. Will you restore the stolen money, or do you prefer to be branded as a thief and a secondrel? Take your choice. Though you have forced me in self-defense to be decidedly personal, the main question at issue is one which transcends all personal limitations. It is the question of the supremacy of two classes whose interests are diametrically opposed. This contest means the survival and supremacy of the orange growers of Southern California, or the survival and supremacy, on the ruins of our homes and ranches, of a nest of cormorants and blood-suckers, of which you are the typical exponent and chief offender. I do not for one instant doubt the final result. There is too much capital, too much manhood, too much brain power and moral force collided in the defense of our God-favored section and our most vital industry, ever to submit to the rule of any olique of plunderers such as you represent and lead. All honest orange growers should shun you and your confesses as they would shun a pestilence. You beguile simple-minded and short-sighted people to sell their fruit to you, and you straightway use these oranges to demoralize the sale of oranges sold f. o. b. at Highland. The prices were to be fixed from time to time and no oranges were to be sold in any other way except by consultation and special agreement with me. The f. o. b. price was fixed at $2.10 for seedlings and $3.25 for navels. I was suddenly called East by the death of one of my family. No sooner was I out of the state than your agent, presumably with your consent, began to ship my oranges East, charging me for freight, long repacking, etc., and returning to me whatever sum you pleased. Without going into all the details of this transaction, which I reserve for a future time, it is sufficient for my present purpose to say the 335 boxes of oranges handled by you for me brought, according to your claim, $1.20 per box net, or $402. At the prices agreed upon between your agent and me the oranges I delivered to you, and for which I have your receipts, would have brought, if sold according to contract, and after deducting cost of boxes, packing, commissions, etc., the sum of $517.70 or a difference of $215.70. The interest on this sum for two years at 12 per cent is $57.52, making a total of $272.22 which you have stolen from me, unless by restitution you should change this crime into a lesser offense. Will you restore the stolen money, or do you prefer to be branded as a thief and a secondrel? Take your choice. Though you have forced me in self-defense to be decidedly personal, the main question at issue is one which transcends all personal limitations. It is the question of the supremacy of two classes whose interests are diametrically opposed. This contest means the survival and supremacy of the orange growers of Southern California, or the survival and supremacy, on the ruins of our homes and ranches, of a nest of cormorants and blood-suckers, of which you are the typical exponent and chief offender. I do not for one instant doubt the final result. There is too much capital, too much manhood, too much brain power and moral force collided in the defense of our God-favored section and our most vital industry, ever to submit to the rule of any olique of plunderers such as you represent and lead. All honest orange growers should shun you and your confenses as they would shun a pestilence. You beguile simple-minded and short-sighted people to sell their fruit to you, and you straightway use these oranges to demoralize the sale of oranges sold f. o. b. at Highland. The prices were to be fixed from time to time and no oranges were to be sold in any other way except by consultation and special agreement with me. The f. o. b. price was fixed at $2.10 for seedlings and $3.25 for navels. I was suddenly called East by the death of one of my family. No sooner was I out of the state than your agent, presumably with your consent began to ship my oranges East, charging me for freight, long repacking, etc., and returning to me whatever sum you pleased. Without going into all the details of this transaction, which I reserve for a future time, it is sufficient for my present purpose to say the 335 boxes of oranges handled by you for me brought, according to your claim, $1.20 per box net,$402 At the prices agreed upon between your agent and me the oranges I delivered to you,and for which I have your receipts would have brought if sold according to contract,and after deducting cost of boxes,packing.commissions,the sumof$517.70ora 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IDEN IDEN IDEN IDEN IDEN IDEN IDEN IDEN IDEN IDEN IDEN IDEN IDEN IDEN IDEN IDEN IDEN IDEN IDEN IDEN IDEN IDEN IDEN IDEND IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND REFERENCE TO THE SOLUTION OF SINGLE COPPER OR CHROME GRAVETTES FOR THE PARTY WHICH IT GIVED IT TO THE GROUP DOWNLOADING THE MESSAGE ON THE MAILBOX AND THE SOLUTION OF SINGLE COPPER OR CHROME GRAVETTES FOR THE PARTY WHICH IT GIVED IT TO THE GROUP DOWNLOADING THE MESSAGE ON THE MAILBOX AND THE SOLUTION OF SINGLE COPPER OR CHROME GRAVETTES FOR THE PARTY WHICH IT GIVED IT TO THE GROUP DOWNLOADING THE MESSAGE ON THE MAILBOX AND THE SOLUTION OF SINGLE COPPER OR CHROME GRAVETTES FOR THE PARTY WHICH IT GIVED IT TO THE GROUP DOWNLOADING THE MESSAGE ON THE MAILBOX AND THE SOLUTION OF SINGLE COPPER OR CHROME GRAVETTES FOR THE PARTY WHICH IT GIVED IT TO THE GROUP DOWNLOADING THE MESSAGE ON THE MAILBOX AND THE SOLUTION OF SINGLE COPPER OR CHROME GRAVETTES FOR THE PARTY WHICH IT GIVED IT TO THE GROUP DOWN Poultry Taken in Exchange Retail Dealer in Drs and Cigars. AND LIQUORS ALLON OR BOTTLE. Promptly Attended to. FREE OF CHARGE! ANAHEIM, CAL. HARKER, LER IN... es, Robes, Whips, COMBS, ETC. Neatly - Done? are Favorably with any shop in this inspect my stock and prices before customers, and I am now better preGreat Bargains in the various deENTER STREET. ANAHEIM. F. BACKS, UNDERTAKER. And Dealer in FURNITURE. Wall Paper, Cornices, Window Shades, Picture Frames, Upholstery Goods, Paints, Oils and Glass. Sewing Machine Supplies, Etc. Corner Los Angeles and Charleston Streets. SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT. We have made arrangements with Dr. B. J. Kendall Co., publishers of "A Treatise on the Horse, and his Diseases," which will enable all our subscribers to obtain a copy of that valuable work free by sending their address (enclosing a two-cent stamp for mailing same) to Dr. B. J. KENDALL Co., ENOSBURGH FALLS, Vt. This book is now recognized as standard authority upon all diseases of the horse, as its phenomenal sale attests, over four million copies having been sold in the past ten years, a sale never before reached by any publication in the same period of time. We feel confident that our patrons will appreciate the work, and be glad to avail themselves of this opportunity of obtaining a valuable book. It is necessary that you mention this paper in sending for the "Treatise." This offer will remain open for only a short time. Swiss Cheese, Limburger, Pickled Mackerel, Pickled Salmon at Lyon's store, n301f Complete lines of boots and shoes at Isaac Lyons' store, jan11f DOLE'S VIGOROUS REPLY. The following is the concluding portion of Minister Dole's reply to the representative of this government at Hawaii, in response to the implied attitude of the United States to abolish the provisional government and restore the deposed queen: "In consequence of your attitude in this behalf the enemies of the government, believing in your intentions to restore the monarchy by force, have become emboldened. Threats of assassination of the officers of this government have been made. The police force is frequently informed of conspiracies to create disorder. Aged and sick persons of all nationalities have been and are in a state of distress and anxiety." pramacy of two classes whose interests are diametrically opposed. This contest means the survival and supremacy of the orange growers of Southern California, or the survival and supremacy, on the ruins of our homes and ranches, of a nest of cormorants and blood-suckers, of which you are the typical exponent and chief offender. I do not for one instant doubt the final result. There is too much capital, too much manhood, too much brain power and moral force collated in the defense of our God-favored section and our most vital industry, ever to submit to the rule of any olique of plunderers such as you represent and lead. All honest orange growers should shun you and your confreres as they would shun a pestilence. The red boxes of your company should be as baffict to an honest man as a red flag to an infuriated bull. You should change the color of your boxes. They disguise the anarchist red. You should paint a skull and cross-bones on each box, and from each car carrying the accured freight there should be thrown to the desecrated breeze a black flag, typical of the piratical and iniquitous traffic in which you are engaged. Yours for truth and justice. WM. PENN ROGERS. Highland, Cal., Jan. 4th. SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT. We have made arrangements with Dr. B. J. Kendall Co., publishers of "A Treatise on the Horse, and his Diseases," which will enable all our subscribers to obtain a copy of that valuable work free by sending their address (enclosing a two-cent stamp for mailing same) to Dr. B. J. KENDALL Co., ENOSBURGH FALLS, Vt. This book is now recognized as standard authority upon all diseases of the horse, as its phenomenal sale attests, over four million copies having been sold in the past ten years, a sale never before reached by any publication in the same period of time. We feel confident that our patrons will appreciate the work, and be glad to avail themselves of this opportunity of obtaining a valuable book. It is necessary that you mention this paper in sending for the "Treatise." This offer will remain open for only a short time. Swiss Cheese, Limburger, Pickled Mackerel, Pickled Salmon at Lyon's store, n301f Complete lines of boots and shoes at Isaac Lyons' store, jan11f DOLE'S VIGOROUS REPLY. The following is the concluding portion of Minister Dole's reply to the representative of this government at Hawaii, in response to the implied attitude of the United States to abolish the provisional government and restore the deposed queen: "In consequence of your attitude in this behalf the enemies of the government, believing in your intentions to restore the monarchy by force, have become emboldened. Threats of assassination of the officers of this government have been made. The police force is frequently informed of conspiracies to create disorder. Aged and sick persons of all nationalities have been and are in a state of distress and anxiety." There was also a production of about 6,670,000 pounds of maple sugar not included in these figures, as well as some other sugars which failed to polarize 80, or upon which no demand for bounty was made. This gives as the total consumption of sugar in this country for that year, 4,235,757,030 pounds, showing that we import over 88 per cent of the sugar we use. Under the McKinley bounty law, protec- Bucklen's Arnica SALVE. The Best Salve in the world or Cuts, Brasses, Sorces, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Faver Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chiliblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively oures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by W. M. Higgins. Buy and recommend Farmers' Healing Liniment because it is a gennine healing remedy. For sale by W. M. Higgins, drug-gist, Anaheim, Cal. For fine carts and all kinds of vehicles see John Schauman. For Rent. One hundred acres first-class best land for rent. Apply to [jan3 tf] J. B. Pierce. Hay for Sale. Texas Red Oak Hay, Loose Alfalfa and Paled Oat Hay for sale in quantities to suit cheap, by J. B. Pierce. SUGAR STATISTICS. Few people realize the vast amount of sugar consumed in this country, and the constant drain on our finances kept up in importing sugars that should be produced at home. The official figures of importation and production, values, and amount of bounties paid and duties received, for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1893, are appended. The amount of all sugars of all kinds imported from all countries for the twelve months was as follows: FREE OF DUTY. Pounds, Best sugar, 436,333,843 Cane and other sugar, 3,277,223,025 DUTIABLE. Not classified, 33,405,081 Total imported, 3,746,961,949 Value, $116,255,756 Duty collected, 163,850 The total sugar production of the United States for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1893, with the bounty paid by the government, was as follows: Pounds, Bounty, 450,633,915 $8,763,830 75 Beast, 27,083,288 531,363 81 Sorgham, 1,014,450 19,817 00 Maple, 3,393,428 60,119 32 Total, 482,125,081 $8,375,130 88 There was also a production of about 6,670,000 pounds of maple sugar not included in these figures, as well as some other sugars which failed to polarize 80, or upon which no demand for bounty was made. This gives as the total consumption of sugar in this country for that year, 4,235,757,030 pounds showing that we import over 88 per cent of the sugar we use. Under the McKinley bounty law,protec- Bucklen's Arnica SALVE. The Best Salve in the world or Cuts, Brasses,Sorces,Ulcerts,Salt Rheum,Faver Sores,Tetter,Chapped Hands,Chiliblains, Corns,and all Skin Eruptions,and positively oures Piles,or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction,or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by W.M.Higgins, Buy and recommend Farmers' Healing Liniment because it is a gennine healing remedy. For sale by W.M.Higgins,drug-gist,Anabaheim,Cal. For rent. One hundred acres first-class best land for rent. Apply to [jan3 tf] J.B.Pierce. Hay for Sale. Texas Red Oak Hay,Loose Alfalfa and Paled Oat Hay for sale in quantities to suit cheap,by J.B.Pierce. SUGAR STATISTICS. Few people realize the vast amount of sugar consumed in this country,and the constant drain on our finances kept up in importing sugars that should be produced at home. The official figures of importation and production,values,and amount of bounties paid and duties received,for the fiscal year ending June 30,1893,are appended. The amount of all sugars of all kinds imported from all countries for the twelve months was as follows: FREE OF DUTY. Pounds, Best sugar, 436,333,843 Cane和other sugar, 3,277,223,025 DUTIABLE. Not classified, 33,405,081 Total imported, 3,746,961,949 Value, $116,255,756 Duty collected, 163,850 The total sugar production of the United States for the fiscal year ending June 30,1893,with the bounty paid by the government, was as follows: Pounds, Bounty, 450,633,915 $8,763,830 75 Beast, 27,083,288 531,363 81 Sorgham, 1,014,450 19,817 00 Maple, 3,393,428 60,119 32 Total, 482,125,081 $8,375,130 88 There was also a production of about 6,670,000 pounds of maple sugar not included in these figures,as well as some other sugars which failed to polarize 80,or upon which no demand for bounty was made. This gives as the total consumption of sugar in this country for that year,4,235,757,030 pounds showing that we import over 88 per cent of the sugar we use. Under the McKinley bounty law,protec- Bucklen's Arnica SALVE. The Best Salve in the world or Cuts, Brasses,Sorces,Ulcerts,Salt Rheum,Favier Sores,Tetter,Chapped Hands,Chiliblains, Corns,and all Skin Eruptions,and positively oures Piles,or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction,or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by W.M.Higgins, Buy and recommend Farmers' Healing Liniment because it is a gennine healing remedy. For sale by W.M.Higgins,drug-gist,Anabaheim,Cal. For rent. One hundred acres first-class best land for rent. Apply to [jan3 tf] J.B.Pierce. Hay for Sale. Texas Red Oak Hay,Loose Alfalfa and Paled Oat Hay for sale in quantities to suit cheap,由J.B.Pierce。 SUGAR STATISTICS. Few people realize the vast amount of sugar consumed in this country,and the constant drain on our finances kept up in importing sugars that should be produced at home. The official figures of importation和production,values,and amount of bounties paid和 duties received,对the fiscal year ending June 30,1893,是appended。The amountof all sugarsofall kindsimportedfromallcountriesforthetwelvemonthswasasfollows: FREE OF DUTY. Pounds, Best sugar, 436,333,843 Cane和other sugar, 3,277,223,025 DUTIABLE. Not classified, 33,405,081 Total imported, 3,746,961,949 Value, $116,255,756 Duty collected, 163,850 The total sugar productionoftheUnitedStatesforthefiscarlyearendningJune30,thebusinessofthecountry,andtheeffectsontheeconomysupportingthemarketandreducingthecurrentsofexcession.asthehistoricalapproach.Hereispengerman.basedfriendshipwithhermotherlyingontheafterbreakfasthetookthethentothebarn,theattraininglookedinhisroom,andwhileshewasgettingbreakfasttiedherfeetlookedinhishorn,andwitnessit.bumbergerarateplaycardswithhisguardbreakfastthismorrow,andsignsoffexcessionasthehistoricalapproach.Hereispengerman.basedfriendshipwithhermotherlyingontheafterbreakfasthetookthethentothebarn,theattraininglookedinhisroom,andwitnessit.bumbergerarateplaycardswithhisguardbreakfastthismorrow,andsignsoffexcessionasthehistoricalapproach.Hereispengerman.basedfriendshipwithhermotherlyingontheafterbreakfasthetookthethentothebarn,theattraininglookedinhisroom,andwitnessit.bumbergerarateplaycardswithhisguardbreakfastthismorrow,andsignsoffexcessionasthehistoricalapproach.Hereispengerman.basedfriendshipwithhermotherlyingontheafterbreakfasthetookthethentothebarn,theattraininglookedinhisroom,andwitnessit.bumbergerarateplaycardswithhisguardbreakfastthismorrow,andsignsoffexcessionasthehistoricalapproach.Hereispengerman.basedfriendshipwithhermotherlyingontheafterbreakfasthetookthethentothebarn,theattraininglookedinhisroom,andwitnessit.bumbergerarateplaycardswithhisguardbreakfastthismorrow,andsignsoffexcessionasthehistoricalapproach.Hereispengerman.basedfriendshipwithhermotherlyingontheafterbreakfasthetookthethentothebarn,theattraininglookedinhisroom,andwitnessit.bumbergerarateplaycardswithhisguardbreakfastthismorrow,andsignsoffexcessionasthehistoricalapproach.Hereispengerman.basedfriendshipwithher母亲 lying on her feet looked into power do not unityof government...is itself.of.or play fast an contractual obligations underly by the government. We press therefore.uponal delegation from Loma House and in the Senate,and allthetime against them.the sugar schedule in its use all their influence stands,and to hold out in common justice for "the coo-contractual obligations underly by the government." HIS DAY OF NO Albert Bamburger.wherederived.inJuly.last,his united.his aunt and four young cousin.at Cando,N.D.,last Friday was employed by Krieder.onconceived an upholy passion.year-old cousin.Annie.willadvances and threatened father.Early onthe morning.of.King to his uncle's room.shortwent.tothe kitchen-andwhile she was getting breakfasttiedherfeetlookedinhishorn,andwitnessit.bumbergerarateplaycardswithhisguardbreakfastthismorrow,andsignsoffexcessionasthehistoricalapproach.Hereispengerman.basedfriendshipwithher母亲 lying on her feet looked into power do not unityof government...is itself.of.or play fast an contractual obligations underly by the government." We press therefore.uponal delegation from Loma House and in the Senate,and allthetime against them.theugar schedule in its use all their influence stands,and to hold out in common justice for "the coo-contractual obligations underly by the government." HIS DAY OF NO Albert Bamburger.wherederived.inJuly.last,his united.his aunt and four young cousin.at Cando,N.D.,last Friday was employed by Krieder.onconceived an upholy passion.year-old cousin.Annie.willadvances and threatened father.Early onthe morning.of.King to his uncle's room.shortwent.tothe kitchen-andwhile she was getting breakfasttiedherfeetlookedinhishorn,andwitnessit.bumbergerarateplaycardswithhisguardbreakfastthismorrow,andsignsoffexcessionasthehistoricalapproach.Hereispengerman.basedfriendshipwithher母亲 lying on her feet looked into power do not unityof government...is itself.of.or play fast an contractual obligations underly by the government." HIS DAY OF NO Albert Bamburger.wherederived.inJuly.last,his united.his aunt and four young cousin.at Cando,N.D.,last Friday was employed by Krieder.onconceived an upholy passion.year-old cousin.Annie.willadvances and threatened father.Early onthe morning.of.King to his uncle's room.shortwent.tothe kitchen-andwhile she was getting breakfasttiedherfeetlookedinhishorn,andwitnessit.bumbergerarateplaycardswithhisguardbreakfastthismorrow,andsignsoffexcessionasthehistoricalapproach.Hereispengerman.basedfriendshipwithher母亲 lying on her feet looked into power do not unityof government...is itself.of.or play fast an contractual obligations underly by the government." HIS DAY OF NO Albert Bamburger.wherederived.inJuly.last,his united.his aunt and four young cousin.at Cando,N.D.,last Friday was employed by Krieder.onconceived an upholy passion.year-old cousin.Annie.willadvances and threatened father.Early onthe morning.of.King to his uncle's room.shortwent.tothe kitchen-andwhile she was getting breakfasttiedherfeetlookedinhishorn,andwitnessit.bumbergerarateplaycardswithhisguardbreakfastthismorrow,andsignsoffexcessionasthehistoricalapproach.Hereispengerman.basedfriendshipwithher母亲 lying on her feet looked into power do not unityof government...is itself.of.or play fast an contractual obligations underly by the government." HIS DAY OF NO Albert Bamburger.wherederived.inJuly.last,his united.his aunt and four young cousin.at Cando,N.D.,last Friday was employed by Krieder.onconceived an upholy passion.year-old cousin.Annie.willadvances and threatened father.Early onthe morning.of.King to his uncle's room.shortwent.tothe kitchen-andwhile she was getting breakfasttiedherfeetlookedinhishorn,andwitnessit.bumbergerarateplaycardswithhisguardbreakfastthismorrow,andsignsoffexcessionasthehistoricalapproach.Hereispengerman.basedfriendshipwithher母亲 lying on her feet looked into power do not unityof government...is itself.of.or play fast an contractual obligations underly by the government." HIS DAY OF NO Albert Bamburger.wherederived.inJuly.last,his united.his aunt and four young cousin.at Cando,N.D.,last Friday was employed by Krieder.onconceived an upholy passion.year-old cousin.Annie.willadvances and threatened father.Early onthe morning.of.King to his uncle's room.shortwent.tothe kitchen-andwhile she was getting breakfasttiedherfeetlookedinhishorn,andwitnessit.bumbergerarateplaycardswithhisguardbreakfastthismorrow,andsignsoffexcessionasthehistoricalapproach.Hereispengerman.basedfriendshipwithher母亲 lying on her feet looked into power do not unityof government...is itself.of.or play fast an contractual obligations underly by the government." HIS DAY OF NO Albert Bamburger.wherederived.inJuly.last,his united.his aunt and four young cousin.at Cando,N.D.,last Friday was employed by Krieder.onconceived an upholy passion.year-old cousin.Annie.willadvances and threatened father.Early onthe morning.of.King to his uncle's room.shortwent.tothe kitchen-andwhile she was getting breakfasttiedherfeetlookedinhishorn,andwitnessit.bumbergerarateplaycardswithhisguardbreakfastthismorrow,andsignsoffexcessionasthehistoricalapproach.Hereispengerman.basedfriendshipwithher母亲 lying on her feet looked into power do not unityof government...is itself.of.or play fast an contractual obligations underly by the government." HIS DAY OF NO Albert Bamburger.wherederived.inJuly.last,his united.his aunt and four young cousin.at Cando,N.D.,last Friday was employed by Krieder.onconceived an upholy passion.year-old cousin.Annie.willadvances and threatened father.Early onthe morning.of.King to his uncle's room.shortwent.tothe kitchen-andwhile she was getting breakfasttiedherfeetlookedinhishorn,andwitnessit.bumbergerarateplay cards with his guard breaking breakfast this morning,and signs of excitement as the hot cusion approach.Here is pengerman.based friendship with her mother lying on her feet looked into power do not unityof government...is itself.of.or play fast an contractual obligations underly by the government." HIS DAY OF NO Albert Bamburger.wherederived.inJuly.last,his united.his aunt and four young cousin.at Cando,N.D.,last Friday was employed by Krieder.onconceived an upholy passion.year-old cousin.Annie.willadvances and threatened father.Early onthe morning.of.King to his uncle's room.shortwent.tothe kitchen-andwhile she was getting breakfasttiedherfeetlookedinhishorn,andwitnessit.bumbergerarateplay cards with his guard breaking breakfast this morning,and signs of excitement as the hot cusion approach.Here is pengerman.based friendship with her mother lying on her feet looked into power do not unityof government...is itself.of.or play fast an contractual obligations underly by the government." HIS DAY OF NO Albert Bamburger.wherederived.inJuly.last,his united.his aunt and four young cousin.at Cando,N.D.,last Friday was employed by Krieder.onconceived an upholy passion.year-old cousin.Annie.willadvances and threatened father.Early onthe morning.of.King to his uncle's room.shortwent.tothe kitchen-andwhile she was getting breakfasttiedherfeetlookedinhishorn,andwitnessit.bumbergerarateplay cards with his guard breaking breakfast this morning,and signs of excitement as the hot cusion approach.Here is pengerman.based friendship with her mother lying on her feet looked into power do not unityof government...is itself.of.or play fast an contractual obligations underly by the government." HIS DAY OF NO Albert Bamburger.wherederived.inJuly.last,his united.his aunt and four young cousin.at Cando,N.D.,last Friday was employed by Krieder.onconceived an upholy passion.year-old cousin.Annie.willadvances and threatened father.Early onthe morning.of.King to his uncle's room.shortwent.tothe kitchen-andwhile she was getting breakfasttiedherfeetlookedinhishorn,andwitnessit.bumbergerarateplay cards with his guard breaking breakfast this morning,and signs of excitement as the hot cusion approach.Here is pengerman.based friendship with her mother lying on her feet looked into power do not unityof government...is itself.of.or play fast an contractual obligations underly by the government." HIS DAY OF NO Albert Bamburger.wherederived.inJuly.last,his united.his aunt和四个年轻 cousins.at Cando,N.D.,last Friday was employed by Krieder.onconceived an upholy passion.year-old cousin.Annie.willadvances和 threatened father.Early onthe morning.of.King to his uncle's room.shortwent.tothe kitchen-andwhile she was getting breakfasttiedherfeetlookedinhishorn,andwitnessit.bumbergerarateplay cards with his guard breaking breakfast this morning,and signs of excitement as the hot cusion approach.Here is pengerman.based friendship with her mother lying on her feet looked into power do not unityof government...is itself.of.or play fast an contractual obligations underly by the government." HIS DAY OF NO Albert Bamburger.wherederived.inJuly.last,his united.his aunt和四个年轻 cousins.at Cando,N.D.,last Friday was employed by Krieder.onconceived an upholy passion.yearOLD.CousINES.WAS.LAST.YEAR.OFF.NOVEMBER.OCTOBER.AUGUST.OCTOBER.A JUARY 25, 1894. NUMBER 12 by the years of, have disor-armed and the their which auch unables Large hared, received repro-aria-asion. Your stated attu-afare, ambat. this was mentionation in the sugar industry cost the people in bounties paid, the sum of $9,375,130.88, whereas by an import tariff the same protection would have cost us in increased prices for the same commodity, $74,939,228.88. Yet the most benign feature of the bounty law lies in the fact that it is building up the industry in this country, putting into circulation among American mechanics and American laborers many times the amount of the bounty paid in protection, to say nothing of the millions it will save from going abroad to purchase sugar. We have a broad field to open up yet before we are independent of the world for our sugar supply. It will take wise and liberal legislation to do this, without which the fate of the industry was told by a leading sugar producer of the United States, when he said to the Congressional tariff committee: It is my firm conviction and honest belief that unless a broad, liberal and permanent policy is maintained, we might as well abandon the hope of ever being able to establish the sugar industry in the United States." The Contract, the Whole Contract, and Nothing but the contract. New Orleans Times-Democrat (Dem.) Jan. 5. It may now be taken for granted that, unless in the event of an unfreezing accident, the Wilson bill, so far as its sugar schedule is concerned, will be discussed in and will be passed by the House in the form in which it was originally drafted by the committee. That is to say, the sugar clause with the provision for a mutilated bounty will remain in the bill. Until the adoption of an income tax by the committee there was room for hope that, if the bounty contract which the United States government made with the sugar planters were to be interfered with at all, it would be interfered with only to be removed altogether and to be replaced by such a tax on sugar (say 1.1.2 cent per pound) as would be something of an equivalent to sugar raisers for the government's promise of 2 cents per pound bounty on every pound of sugar raised in these United States during the fifteen years 1890-1905. But, since the income tax scheme has been embodied in the bill, and since all the deficit in revenue arising under the other classes of the bill will be made up from that source, and there will therefore be no necessity nor possibly occasion for the imposition of a revenue-producing sugar tax, it is evidently the government's intention to break faith in LATE NEWS OF INTEREST. The House on Monday adopted a resolution repealing the sugar bounty. San Diego's signal service officer reports the temperature the lowest in fourteen years. The Riverside Fruit Exchange shipped fifteen carloads of oranges last Thursday and Friday evenings. A dispatch to the Associated Press says that Tribune, Kansas, will give 10,000 acres of farm land worth $8 per acre, for the Corbett-Mitchell fight. Nineteen head of valuable Guernsey cattle, including one which received the highest award at the World's Fair, the property of ex-Vice-President Levi P. Morton, have been killed at the farm at Roudout, N.Y., on account of tuberculosis. The Watsonville beet sugar factory finished the season's run last Friday afternoon with gratifying results to the company and all concerned. Seven thousand seven hundred and sixty-nine tons of sugar were manufactured. An inventory of the appraisement in the Island Stanford est. principal items are bonds, $3,833,166; household effects, $009,364; cash, $15,176; notes and accounts $906,506; real estate, $909,989; the total is $17,689,319. This does not include the Palo Alto, Gridley, nor Vina ranches. Eva Erana, who some weeks ago was married to her cousin by contract, has annulled the marriage and is living in single blossomedness in San Francisco. Her husband was a clerk in Fresno, when they plighted their troth. Soon after this he gave up his place, deciding that Eva could make enough on the stage for both of them. She did support him so for awhile, but by the advice of friends decided to separate from him. The Grand Jury of San Bernardino county returned twenty-seven indictments. The announcement is made that Sheriff Booth and ox-Sheriff Seymour have been indicted on a charge of perjury committed in making out their returns for conveying prisoners to the State prisons. Several prominent men in the county were also indicted. They were arrested and all gave bonds and were released. Henry T. Gage and the other attorneys for the defendants in the case of Orison Bryant were left open by a brakeman in consideration of $20. The car had previously been stocked with provisions. Galveston, Texas, was reached in a few days; from there they went to New Orleans under the care of friends. Since then news has been received that the bandits got to sea without attracting any suspicion, and the wide Atlantic now separates them from their pursuers. The story is thought to be a hoax. Another yarn is to the effect that the bandits have escaped to Lower California. Secretary Carlisle has directed the captain of the revenue cutter Wolcott, now at Port Townsend, Wash., to make a long search along the west shore of Vancouver Island for traces of the schooner Mary Brown, which sailed from Sand Point, Alaska, early in October for Victoria, B.C., and has not been heard from since. The Mary Brown was a fishing and supply schooner of forty-six tons, and had eleven men on board. Little hope is entertained of finding her, but at the earnest solicitation of persons in San Francisco the secretary detailed the Wolcott to go in search of her. Advices have been received from Monett, Mo., to the effect that a negro rapist was burned at the stake near Verona Monday evening. This was the outcome of the crime reported from Aurora, Mo., which is near Verona, in which two burly negroes dragged the twelve-year-old daughter of a man named Jaquin to the woods, tied her to a tree and ravished her repeatedly. When found later she was fearfully hurt but was able to give a description of her assaults. Armed posses at once started in pursuit with the avowed intention of lynching the ravivers. "George Dunn, a native of Missouri, aged 23 years, and Tumblar Mike, a native of Japan, aged 24 years, both residing in Los Angeles," are the words that appears on the marriage license record of the Los Angeles County Clerk, and it is the first instance in the history of that city that a license has been granted a white man to marry clerks rustled around among the chambers of the several judges of the Superior Court before issuing the license. The gentlemen wanted judicial advice as to the legality of granting the permit, and kept the prospective groom waiting for an hour and a half before deciding what to do. The trial of Dr. Eugene West, who is charged with the murder of Addie Gilmour, Colonia milliner, who died in Dr. West's government made with the sugar planters were to be interfered with at all, it would be interfered with only to be removed altogether and to be replaced by such a tax on sugar (say 1.12 per pound) as would be something of an equivalent to sugar raisers for the government's promise of 2 cents per pound bounty on every pound of sugar raised in these United States during the fifteenth years 1890-1905. But, since the income tax scheme has been embodied in the bill, and since all the deficit in revenue arising under the other classes of the bill will be made up from that source, and there will therefore be no necessity nor possibly occasion for the imposition of a revenue-producing sugar tax, it is evidently the government's intention to break faith with sugar raisers and recode from the contract which it made with them three years ago. Against this contemplated breach of faith the sugar raisers are entitled to protest, and to protest still more strongly than they did three years ago against the change from the tax to the bounty system. The change then proposed and made was only a violation of sound economic principle, which was pregnant with certain future trouble; but it did no direct or immediate injustice to those engaged in the sugar industry. The change now proposed and contemplated is not only a heinous breach of contract on the government's part, to which no government having in it the elements of continuity and possessing the virtue of self-respect would under any circumstances lend itself; but it is, if we may use words without mincing them, a swindler's scheme on the part of the government, which will first rob and then rain the weaker contracting party on whom it imposed an unwelcome contract. It is a swindler's scheme for the government to scale by 30 to 40 per cent the bounty which it pledged itself three years ago to pay to sugar raisers for fifteen years. It is a scheme that robs sugar raisers, for it induced them under false pretenses to sink a vast amount of money in the industry, of which they must necessarily be defrauded if the bill become law. And it is a scheme that cannot help but ruin sugar raisers by and by; for once the period of the sealed bounty shall have expired the industry will become an impossibility in this country in the tooth of free competition with foreign sugars raised by slave or coolie labor, or by labor far cheaper than the industrial conditions of the United States admit of. Sugar raisers, we hold, therefore, are completely justified in doing everything they can to hold the government up to the letter of the fifteenth year's bounty contract, and to defeat the Wilson bill in its present form. This may be regarded as a peculiar sentiment for the Times Democrat, a Democratic paper; but it emanates from the honest conviction that justice should take precedence of partisanship. The Times Democrat, believing in the expediency of a sugar tax for revenue only, objected three years ago as strenuously to the proposed bounty as it is capable of objecting to anything. Like the sugar raisers, we reluctantly accepted the change to a bounty, when and only because it was impassed by an irresistible power; and we accepted it in the full belief that this same irresistible power was also an equitable power, which would carry out its own proposition in good faith. We are of those who hold that the government of a country, save in cases of revolution, is a continuous government; and we repudiate the notion that the Democratic party when it comes into power—but those coming into power do not break the continuity of government—is entitled to rid itself of, or to play fast and loose with, the contractual obligations undertaken previously by the government. We press, therefore, upon the congressional delegation from Louisiana, both in the House and in the Senate, to vote first, last and all the time against the Wilson bill with the sugar schedule in its present shape, to give up his place, deciding that Eva could make enough on the stage for both of them. She did support him so for awhile, but by the advice of friends decided to separate from him. The Grand Jury of San Bernardino county returned twenty-seven indictments. The announcement is made that Sheriff Booth and six-Sheriff Seymour have been indicted on a charge of perjury committed in making out their returns for conveying prisoners to the State prisons. Several prominent men in the county were also indicted. They were arrested and all gave bonds and were released. Henry T. Gage and the other attorneys for the defendants in the case of Orison Bryant vs. Drs. Kurtz, Brainerd and Murphy, for damages in the sum of $25,000 for an alleged malpractice, moved to non-suit the case on the grounds of the insufficiency of the evidence, and for the additional reason that the plaintiff's own witnesses testified to the excellent care Bryant had received at the hands of his physicians. Judge Clark granted the prayer of the defense, and the case was summarily dismissed. By a unanimous vote of the Aldermen at a special meeting, the "Mussell," or "Kouta Koua" dance, alleged to have been performed by dancers from the Midway Plaiance, has been officially declared immoral and banished from Boston. This action is the result of an investigation by two Aldermen who witnessed the exhibition at the Howard Atheneum. The action is alleged to be due to certain际 persons having a spite against the house. The tunnel through the Santa Lucia mountains, which the Southern Pacific Company has been beng for over a year past, was pierced last Saturday morning. It is nearly 4,000 feet long and one of the largest and most important tunnels in the world. This is the third finished of the seven tunnels which the railroad had to make complete—the line to San Luis Obispo. The remaining four are short ones, and all will be finished before March 1st. Some still has been created in Berlin society by the marriage of a member of one of the oldest and most aristocratic families of Prussia, Ellimer von Sanchen, and Clotilde Hagen, a riding mistress and granddaughter of the well-known circus proprietor, Ernest Rentz. Clotilde is one of the foremost women in her profession and is worth millions, having inherited the Renz fortune. The affair was a love match. As Clotilde bears a spotless reputation society is favorably disposed toward her. After a year's absence, Herbert Bismarck attended the annual festivities of the distribution of orders at Berlin Monday. Emperor William did not notice him; although he spoke to many others. When dinner was over and Emperor Rose to address the guests individually, Herbert Bismarck was placed at a point in half circle where the Emperor was to pass. Before he came to Herbert's place, the Emperor turned purposely and avoided him. When he approached the second time Herbert bowed. The Emperor nodded in return, but did not speak. Mrs. C. Galori, a well known figure on the streets of Los Angeles, shot and seriously wounded her husband at their residence, 628 New High street, one day last week. He endeavored to force her to go on the streets and play the accordion, as has been her custom for some time past. She objected, being in a delicate condition. Hot words followed her refusal, and it is claimed her husband made an attempt to use a pistol, when she grabbed one from a bureau drawer and shot him through the right arm, fracturing the bone and cutting an artery. She was arrested and taken to the County Jail. He was taken to the receiving hospital. At the opening of the season it was esti- 23 years, and Tumblar Mike, a native of Japan, aged 24 years, both residing in Los Angeles., are the words that appears onthe marriage license record ofthe Los Angeles County Clerk,and it isthe first instance inthe historyofthat citythata licensehas been granteda white manto marrya Japanese woman.The deputy clerks rushed around amongthe chambersofthe several judgesofthe Superior Courtbefore issuingthe license.The gentlemen wanted judicial adviceastothe legalityofgrantingthe permit,andkeepstheprospective groomwaitingforan houranda halfbeforedecidingwhattodo. The trial withDr.Eugene Westwhois chargedwiththe murderofAddieGilmour,theColusa millinerwho diedInDr.West'sofficeonTurkstreetonSeptember9thoflastyear,andwhosebodywasafterwarddissected,thefragmentsbeingcoasedinthebay,beguninSanFranciscoMondaymorning.Asthecasehasbeen thoroughlyexploitedinthenewspapersandwasofsuchintenseinterestatatthetimethedevelopmentswerebeingmadeitwillbeextremelydifficulttosecureanintelligentjury.onaccountofthefactthatperusalofthenewspapersis sufficient excusefordiagnification.Underthecircumstancesititiscalculatedthatitwilltakeanumberofdaystogettwelvementotrythecase. An eloping coupleprominentpeopleofGlendale,LosAngelescountyareafriendlyquarteredatAvalon,CatalinaIsland,havingbeenmarriedonthehighseasonedaylastweekbyCaptainTrolethenofsteamerwhichcarriedthenover.ThepartiesareE.J.NewcombandMissJennieBoothofGlendale.Bothareofprominentfamilies.Mr.Newcombpossesconsiderableproperty,andhasbeenpayingattentiontoyoungladyforayearormore.Herparentsobjectedtothealliance,andfinallyresortedtothedesperateplanoflookingherupinherroomtocventhergoingouttocmeetNewcomb.She finally slippedcut,andelopementandmarriageonthesteameronthewaytoCatalina-speedilyfollowed. H.K.ClelandwasreturningtoSanDiegoacrosstheColorado desertfromYumaa few daysago,当whenhefoundamanonfootandalongwithoutfoodorwaterwanderingabout,crazedwithheatandthirst,andswildthatforcehadtobeusedtogethimtoapringfromwhichhewasnotmuchthanhalfa mile.Thepoorfellow recoveredhisreasonaftera fewhours,但hismouthandtongueweresoawakenthathecouldnotwrite,soyoungClelandcouldonlyguess,bysignehere came.AnearashecouldunderstandtwomenwithonehorsestartedfromCampoandbecameseparatedatLagunathoughwhatbecameoftheotheroneorwhothismanwascouldnotbeacertained.AsClelandcouldnotremainlongwithhimhehiredaYumaIndiantoakehimtorancheriaandcareforhimuntilherecoveredandthentakehimwhereverhewishedtogo. WhentheywerechildreninSanFranciscofickleLouisArguello toldAnnieGadabyhe lovedandshewithouta blushconfessedtolovingsimilarlyhonoredhimandwashappy.Nowsheisausinghimforalargesumofmoneyforbreachofpromise.Thewerechildrenbut,theywereseparatedbyfateLouis forgothisloveandmarriedanother,Banniewasconstant.Intimedeathlefthimwithtwomotherlessbabies,andthenherememberedAnnie.He toldhathestilllovedhor,andshedeclaredshehad neverceasedlovinghim Thensheconsentedtobehiswifeandmothertohisbabies,forsheywerechildren together.Anniewasachildagain,andshewashappy,boulswas stillfickleandfalse-hearted,andhemarriedanother;andnowAnniewasachildagain,andshewashappy,boulswas stillfickleandfalse-hearted,andhemarriedanother;andnowAnniewasachildagain,andshewashappy,boulswas stillfickleandfalse-hearted,andhemarriedanother;andnowAnniewasachildagain,andshewashappy,boulswas stillfickleandfalse-hearted,andhemarriedanother;andnowAnniewasachildagain,andshewashappy,boulswas stillfickleandfalse-hearted,andhemarriedanother;andnowAnniewasachildagain,andshewashappy,boulswas stillfickleandfalse-hearted,andhemarriedanother;andnowAnniewasachildagain,andshewashappy,boulswas stillfickleandfalse-hearted,andhemarriedanother;andnowAnniewasachildagain,andshewashappy,boulswas stillfickleandfalse-hearted,andhemarriedanother;andnowAnniewasachildagain,andshewashappy,boulswas stillfickleandfalse-hearted,andhemarriedanother;andnowAnniewasachildagain,andshewashappy,boulswas stillfickleandfalse-hearted,andhemarriedanother;andnowAnniewasachildagain,andshewashappy,boulswas stillfickleandfalse-hearted,andhemarriedanother;andnowAnniewasachildagain,andshewashappy,boulswas stillfickleandfalse-hearted,andhemarriedanother;andnowAnniewasachildagain,andshewashappy,boulswas stillfickleandfalse-hearted,andhemarriedanother;andnowAnniewasachildagain,andshewashappy,boulswas stillfickleandfalse-hearted,andhemarriedanother;andnowAnniewasachildagain,andshewashappy,boulswas stillfickleandfalse-hearted,andhemarriedanother;andnowAnniewasachildagain,andshewashappy,boulswas stillfickleandfalse-hearted,andhemarriedanother;andnowAnniewasachildagain,andshewashappy,boulswas stillfickleandfalse-hearted,andhemarriedanother;andnowAnniewasachildagain,andshewashappy,boulswas stillfickleandfalse-hearted,andhemarriedanother;andnowAnniewasachildagain,andshewashappy,boulswas stillfickleandfalse-hearted,andhemarriedanother;andnowAnniewasachildagain,andshewashappy,boulswas stillfickleandfalse-hearted,andhemarriedanother;andnowAnniewasachildagain,andshewashappy,boulswas stillfickleandfalse-hearted,andhemarriedanother;andnowAnniewasachildagain,andshewashappy,boulswas stillfickleandfalse-hearted,andhemarriedanother;andnowAnniewasachildagain,andshewashappy,boulswas stillfickleandfalse-hearted,$n$ WepressthereuponthecongionaldelegationfromLouisianabothinTheHouse和inTheSenate,towritefirst.lastallthetime 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маденаммадеANA маденаммадеANA маденаммадеANA маденаммадеANA маденаммадеANA маденаммадеANA маденаммадеANA маденаммадеANA маденаммадеANA маденаммадеANA маденаммадеANA маденаммадеANA маденаммадеANA маденаммисмемемемемемемемемемемемемемемемемемемемемемемемемемемемемемемеме.meме.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.me.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.mе.МЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМЕМИСMEМИСMEМИСMEМИСMEМИСMEМИСMEМИСMEМИСMEМИСMEМИСMEМИСMEМИСMEМИСMEМИСMEМИСMEМИСMEМИСMEМИСMEМИСMEМИСMEМИСMEМИСMEМИСMEМИСMEМИСMEМИСME HIS DAY OF DOOM. Albert Bamburger, who brutally murdered, in July last, his uncle, Daniel Krelder, his aunt and four young cousins, was hanged at Cando, N. D., last Friday afternoon. He was employed by Krieder on the farm and conceived an unholy passion for his fifteen-year-old cousin, Annie, who rejected his advances and threatened to inform her father. Early on the morning of July 7th he went to his uncle's room, shot him dead, then went to the kitchen and killed his aunt while she was getting breakfast. Annie was looked in his room. He next killed Bernice, aged 19, Morley, aged 11; May aged 9, and David, aged 7. In answer to Annie's supplications he spared the three younger boys. He then, with the utmost coolness, compelled Annie to get breakfast with the body of her mother lying on the kitchen floor. After breakfast he took the girl to his room, then to the barn, outraging her repeatedly, tied her feet, locked her in the barn, took a horse and made for the Manitoba border, but was captured. Only by the utmost vigilance on the part of the authorities was he saved from lynching. The execution took place in the valley a mile south of town, and fully two thousand people from the surrounding country gathered on the neighboring hills as early as sunrise to witness it. Bumberger spent the night playing cards with his guards, ate an early breakfast this morning, and showed little signs of excitement as the hour for the execution approached. He refused to see a clergyman. Bamberger calmly bade farewell to his friends and ascended the scaffold. He again refused to hear a clergyman. His last words were: "I am sorry for my crime, and hope no one will follow in my footsteps." Farmers' Healing Liniment is a sure cure for piles. For sale by W. M. Higgins, drugglut, Anaheim, Cal. Buy one of those durable buggies at John Sohauman's Cheap for cash ap13tf A large and complete stock of Holiday Goods just received at Lyone's store. Everything suitable for presents on hand. Mrs. C. Galori, a well known figure on the streets of Los Angeles, shot and seriously wounded her husband at their residence, 628 New High street, one day last week. He endeavored to force her to go on the streets and play the accordion, as has been her custom for some time past. She objected, being in deliato condition. Hot words followed her refusal, and it is claimed her husband made an attempt to use a pistol, when she grabbed one from a bureau drawer and shot him through the right arm, fracturing the bone and cutting an artery. She was arrested and taken to the County Jail. He was taken to the receiving hospital. At the opening of the season it was estimated that the southern citrus belt would yield 5,800 carloads of oranges. These signatures have been cut until now it is thought the total will not exceed 5,000 carloads. Shipments indicate that the product now being sent forward is of a high grade. Florida growers are acting in a way that is not entirely satisfactory to the orange orchardists of California. The output of Florida is 50 per cent more than it was last year, and the fruit from that State threatens to lap over into the session heretofore monopolized by our own growers. It is said that there will be no further public test of English locomotives after the series of experimental trips over the St. Paulia line between Milwaukee and Chicago. The locomotive is claimed by railroaders to be a failure, so far as claims of superiority go. The locomotive, having been constructed upon an entirely new idea of engine mechanism, was being closely watched in the hope that some valuable improvements had been made and that the problem of high speed had been solved. But the series of trials has resulted in the conviction in the minds of practical men that, in comparison with the American compound locomotive, the "Taleman" is not in it. Marco Forster and Victor Yorba of San Juan Capistrano have brought suit in Lower California in the Court of First Instance at Eosonada against the Mexican Land and Colonization Company, to gain title and possession of the Yorba ranch in San Rafael valley, on the peninsula, comprising 12,000 acres of fertile valley land. It is claimed by Senora Concepcion Serrana de Yorba and the heirs of her husband, the original owners. The ranch was sold some years ago to one Domingoñal, who agreed to pay $5,000 the first year, $5,000 the second and $10,000 the third, giving a mortgage on the property to secure payment. Forater and Yorba claim that the colonization company purchased Domingoñal's interest and obtained possession, but that the terms of the sale were not complied with, and therefore the mortgage should be foreclosed. The property is of great value and the case will no doubt be stubbornly fought on both sides. The statement is made that Evans and Morrel are safely out of the State, and are sailing on the high seas free from puruuit. It is said that Evans sent to a friend in Arizona a narration of his adventures after his escape from jail at Freeso. After capturing a buggy, instead of driving out of town as was generally supposed, he and Morrel drove to a sliding of the Southern Pacific railroad. The bandits entered a box car, the door of Annie Gadaby he loved her, and she without a blush, confessed to loving him. Louis swore his love would be eternal, and Annie believed him and was happy. Now she is suing him for a large sum of money for breach of promise. They were children together, but they were separated by fate; Louis forgot his love and married another; but Annie was constant. In time death left him with two motherless babies, and then he remembered Annie. He told her that he still loved her, and she declared she had never ceased loving him. Then she consented to be his wife and a mother to his babies; for they were children together. Annie was a child again, and she was happy; but Louis was still fickle and false-hearted; and he married another; and now Annie has sued him for $25,000 damages for breach of promise. Her heart was broken; but her spirit was not crushed. She would make him pay for his sickleness. One of the large reservoirs at Pazadena belonging to the Pasadena Improvement Company, located in Altadena, a mile north of the Terminal Railway tracks, broke last Friday evening and the water washed out, doing thousands of dollars' worth of damage, but fortunately, as no houses were in its track, no lives were lost. The flood cut a ditch averaging 200 feet wide and over a mile long, and in its course swept away orange groves, grain fields and railroad tracks. The loss to orchardists and grain farmers is very large and is likely to be brought home to the owner of the reservoir, as it is claimed the break occurred through its faulty construction. The place of Andrew McNally, the Chicago book publisher, suffered greatly from the flood; many fine trees being carried away and the earth cut and washed. The tracks of the Terminal Railway were washed out for about half a mile, seriously impeding traffic. On investigation it was found that one side of the reservoir, fifteen feet wide, had fallen out, letting out the entire volume of water in an instant. Some four years ago the marriage at the Hotel Brewster in San Diego of Senator Allen Thurman's only daughter; Mary Thurman Doles; to J. T. Gifford of San Diego led to a series of sensations. She had resided in San Diego quietly for a time, and but a few days before precurred a divorce from a lieutenant in the navy, and hardly was the second marriage made public when it developed that a woman in the East with two children who had formerly lived at Coronado, laid prior claim to Mr. Gifford. It was held that he had introduced her as his wife, and to escape bigamy proceedings Gifford and his new-made wife crossed the line, and have since resided in Lower California. At first his second wife was very devoted. She transacted all business for him that required journeys to San Diego, and for a time Gifford conducted a general store in the hamlet of Tanama. Then they were heard of at Tia Juana Hot Springs, where they camped in a tent, and rumors came of cruelty on his part: Now an action for divorce has been brought by Mrs. Gifford on the ground of cruelty and failure to provide. The marriage has caused a breach between Mrs. Gifford and her family, though she went back to Ohio to attend her mother's funeral. Up to recently the Giffords have been living in the Mexican half of Tia Juana, where it is understood Gifford remains.