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anaheim-gazette 1894-05-04

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Anaheim VOLUME XXIV. PROFESSIONAL CARDS Wm. H. PERDOMO, M.A., M.D. Office and Residence near Opera-house Block, Anaheim. Consultation Hours— Until 9 A.M. From 3 to 4 P.M. English, German, French, Spanish and Italian aoken. DR. J. H. BULLARD A. E., 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. 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 Adele and Los Angeles streets. H. P. LARSEN, CONTRACTOR & BUILDER. MISCELLANEOUS. M. H. CHEESEMAN, (WEST-END GROCER) Desires to inform the People of Anaheim and vicinity that he is now located in his NEW STORE (near the S. P. depot) and is prepared to give the Public Bargains In Every Line BRAND NEW GOODS! Are Arriving Daily! Watch - This - Space For An Announcement 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 Adele and Los Angeles streets. H. P. LARSEN, CONTRACTOR & BUILDER. Estimates given, Contracts made and do a general obbing Business. CENTER STREET, - ANAHEIM. A. D. Porter. H. A. McWilliams. PORTER & MoWILLIAMS. CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS. Office and shop, first door south of Ferdinand Backs' Furniture Store. Los Angeles street, Anaheim. CHAS. SCHINDLER, CONTRACTOR and BUILDER. ANAHEIM, - CALIFORNIA. CHAS. ALBRECHT Contractor & Builder Estimates Given. Fine. Workmanship. Agent for the Pomona windmill. First North street, Anaheim, Cal 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 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. PALACE MEAT MARKET Bailey & Adams, Watch - This - Space For An Announcement The Public is cordially invited to call and Inspect my Stock. M. H. CHEESEMAN. GUS DAVIS Groceries and Seeds! Informs his customers and the general public that he is prepared to sell goods at the smallest margin possible. He buys for cash and therefore can sell for a very small profit, giving his customers the benefit of low prices. No charge for showing goods or answering questions. Come one, Come all! All Kinds of Produce and Poultry Taken in Exchange T. J. F. BOEGE, 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 to. GOODS DELIVERED FREE OF CHARGE! Opp. S. P. Depot, ANAHEIM, CAL. WR. R. HARKER. FRED, C. SMYTHE. HARKER & SMYTHE. 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 California Saloon. D. Vincent, Proprietor. LOS ANGELES STREET...ANAHEIM THE FINEST WINES, LIQUORS And Cigars constantly on hand. Billiard : Table. FRANK FOX. City Barber Shop. OR A FIRST-CLASS SHAVE! HOT AND COLD BATHS 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. H. A. STOUGH. BLACKSMITHING, Horse-Shoeing A Specialty. First-Class Workmanship. Satisfaction Guaranteed IN EVERY CASE Shop on Lemon Street, Rear of Langenberger' Store. Osborne Mowers and Steel Hay Rakes kept on hand. BY THE KEG, GALLON OR BOTTLE. Orders by Mail Promptly Attended to. GOODS DELIVERED FREE OF CHARGE! Opp. S. P. Depot, ANAHEIM, CAL. WR. R. HARKER. FRED, C. SMYTHE. HARKER & SMYTHE. Real Estate Agents. Kroeger's Block, Center Street, Anaheim, Cal. Money Loaned, Taxes Paid, Collections Made, Insurance Effected in all Good and Reliable companies. Correspondence Solicited. Call and See Us for Bargains in Real Estate. JOSEPH BACKS, DEALER IN FURNITURE Repairing Done. Funeral Director. Store in Backs Building (near irrigation district office), Los Angeles street. 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 Chartres Streets Buy Your BEET MACHINERY AT... John Schauman's Blacksmith Shop I have lately perfected a new beet cultivator, and invite all beet raisers to call at my place of business and inspect the same. Agency for the Superior Beet Drill of which I will have samples on hand in 10 or 12 days. John Schauman. ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1894. EMAN, OCER) vicinity that he is now (not) and is prepared to y Line GOODS! Daily! Space nt The Weekly Gazette. Established 1870. SUBSCRIPTION, - $2 Per Year. Six months... 1 00 Three months... 75 sxyable 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. THE BRENOT DIVORCE CASE. The Supreme Court has rendered a decision in the case of E. L. Brenot, respondent, vs. Jennie E. Brenot, appellant, an action for divorce, which came up on appeal from Orange county. The defendant, Mrs. Brenot, was charged with adultery, which charge was denied, and a cross-complaint with grounds of extreme cruelty filed. Judge Towner found both charges to be true, and dismissed the action. The wife was not satisfied with the result, and appealed from the judgment, and the usual order denying a motion for a new trial. The Supreme Court, in passing upon the case, rules that there was no question but that a court of equity was authorized to enter a judgment dismissing an action of divorce, where both parties were seeking a decree, and the evidence disclosed them to be equally guilty of the misconduct alleged. It was claimed that the custody of a minor child was a material issue in the case, and should have been passed upon by the court. The question as to the proper custody of the child was an element in the case entirely incidental to the main relief sought, and demanded alone upon the divorce proceedings. THE MIDWINTER FAIR. MARDI-GRAS NOT UP TO EXPECTATIONS—LION-BEAR FIGHT — WILD FLOWER EXHIBITION. SAN FRANCISCO, April 22, 1894 EDITOR GAZETTE. — I am very sorry to say that the Mardi Gras parade was not what it was expected to be, although the floats were quite as beautiful as anticipated. As in many cases the anticipation is more rosette than the realization, this parade was only too great and brilliant an instance. In the first place the citizens contributed toward the construction of the floats and fully expected them to be paraded along the greater thoroughfares; but they were badly disappointed because the floats appeared only on the Fair grounds and those who wanted to see them had to pay 50 cents admission. The procession was advertised to start at 7 o'clock, but the horsemen and tilters made a strike for higher wages, and struck so vigorously that it was 9:30 o'clock before the procession started. As the floats came around the court one of the small search lights on a minaret on Machinery Hall above them, bringing out the colored and jeweled effects in a most beautiful manner. There were twenty or twenty-one floats in all, very beautiful and accurate in their representations. There were classic myths and scenes from popular plays and novels. The ball, which ended the Mardi Gras, made up in brilliance what the procession lacked. The price of admission was $5, which kept a great many people away who would have come bad if the admission been $1 or $2. It was stricty a ball of the elite, and champagne and fine wine flowed in reckless and astonishing abundance, and many a young gentleman had to mix a few saltzersours with his wine in the morning. At 9 o'clock sharp the band struck up some tune sacred to his majesty Rex Felix. The enormous curtain in front of the stage was drawn, and the tableau vivant was presented to the eager ear of the spectators barred from outside, a feeling of overtakes him, but rising heavens were feeling of awa is succeeded by one grand magnificance of scene, and the less beauty of the Exposition grounds underneath is the Hawaiian village on the right the Vienna Prater, while ahead the buildings of the Manufactures and oral Arts and Fine Arts. As your seconds the people on the Court of Honor into insignificance gradually until they about the size of the Liliputians in liver's Travels. Then coming down city side there is one of the finest vals San Francisco obtainable. Each trip is two turns and occupies ten or twelveutes. The steam engines which desire wheel are not as large as might be exp but are the size of the ordinary donkey gine on a steamboat. The cables which necte the wheel to the engine are six inches bor and each one is about 20 of an inch in older, so that there is no danger of breaking. There are sixteen cars and eleven will comfortably hold ten people. The construction was $50,000. The formation of the Firth wheel is in solid concret feel thick. It is with great regret that your apendent sees the lack of ambition in people of Orange county not sending exhibit. At the early part of the Fair treated as an oversight or perhaps a tardiness, but now in what light is it lit up? It is simply gross negligence on the of leading men of the county. Is sible that the gentlemen do not know meaning of the Fair? It is in the first to enhance prosperity of the State; for the second place to lot outsiders see different sections of the State produce ange is the only county in the State that capable of producing sugar to any larger extent; then why not let those interes sugar send in an exhibit? WALTER L. DREVEN NO LION-BEAR FIGHT. SAN FRANCISCO, April 28. — At 8 o'clock this evening there was a crowd of a thousand or more persons around Col. Boone's area Midwinter Fair grounds waiting a opportunity to gain admission and witness fight between the man-eating lion Pandi and the grizzly bear Siskiyou, which been extensively advertised for some past. However, there was apparently prospect that the event would take NO LION-BEAR FIGHT. SAN FRANCISCO, April 28. At 8 o'clock this evening there was a crowd of a thousand or more persons around Col. Boone's area the Midwinter Fair grounds waiting at a portunity to gain admission and witness a fight between the man-eating lion Puma and the grizzly bear Siskiyou, which been extensively advertised for some time. However, there was apparently no prospect that the event would take place. Col. Boone's entire establishment was hands of the Society for the Prevention Cruelty to Animals; and beaded all dozen officers of the society, there were policemen present. Col. Boone and his manager were placed under arrest, at least technically so neither they nor their employees weremitted to enter that part of the building which the animals are kept in their entrance to the large cage in the centre of the arena in which the fight was to have curred was guarded by so-called policemen other officers were stationed at every way. About thirty police guarded the entrance to the building. The police present at the request of the society the officers of the society stated most likely that not only would the fight be on the lion and bear not be permitted, but they would not even permit the usual nine programme in the arena. Harry Hamilton, press agent for Col. Boone, harangued the crowd at length was finally placed under arrest by the cops. The bonds of Boone, McGarvey, manager and Hamilton were placed by Colonlan, who was at the scene, at $500 and were promptly furnished. The war for Boone's and McGarvey's arrest based on the general statute for the protection of cruelty to animals. Judge Cannon notified Boone that if any attempt to on the light were made by him or any employees, he would be placed under arrest and that he would himself stay on grounds all night to see that his order executed. Boone finally determined to no further effort to carry on the fight after representative announced to the court. There will be no entertainment to-morrow. At 9 o'clock there were on duty at Beverly arena forty regular policemen twenty special officers of the Society for the Protection of Cruelty to Animals, and twenty winter Fair guards. They will stay on night if necessary. KEARSARGE'S CHAIN ARM The history of the Kearsarge has been many times told that it seems like "owls to Athens" to attempt to say anything about her. There is, however, an interesting history connected with this famous which, so far as I am aware, has never peared in print. A number of years ago while stopping little mountain town in Germany I became acquainted with Chief Engineer A. Hardsbauer, of the imperial army. He called me to that when the Kearsarge fled the Alabama off Cherbervour anchorage had been placed on both sides of the sargue in order to better protect them and engines from the enemy's fire. A long time after the battle, when Kearsarge was lying off the Azores is the anchor chains which had done such service were delivered over to the United States consul at Fayal, remained in the consular store house July, 1870. At this time just at the outset there were classic myths and scenes from popular plays and novels. The ball, which ended the Mardi Gras, made up in brilliance what the procession lacked. The price of admission was $5, which kept a great many people away who would have come bad the admission been $1 or $2. It was strictly a ball of the elite, and champagne and fine wine flowed in reckless and astonishing abundance, and many a young gentleman had to mix a few saltzers soups with his wine in the morning. At 9 o'clock sharp the band struck up some tune sacred to his majesty Rex Felix. The enormous curtain in front of the stage was drawn, and the tableau vivant was presented to the eager eyes of the spectators. In the center of the stage raised on a platform sat Rex Felix and the jester to his majesty. About in graceful attitudes were grouped his retinue, consisting of angels and devils, Egyptians (a la Rider Haggard), men with the heads of beasts, beautiful women (as ugly as red wigs and freckled-faced painted masks could make them) and other characters. After the tableau came dancing for some length of time, when the dancers seated themselves, and the Governor and staff entered and escorted to their box, and then the dancing was renewed with a vengeance. It is said that there were 300 couples on the floor at one time. The proposed lion and bear fight, which was mentioned in your last week's issue, will probably never take place, at least not if M.H. de Young can prevent it. Last Thursday Col. Boone received the following: Col. Daniel Boone, Boone's Areus, Exposition. Dear Sir: It has come to knowledge of the Executive Committee that you propose exhibiting a contest between a lion and a bear in your arena. We do not understand that the committee has granted you any rights for such a contest. While we fully understand that your privilege gives you the right to exhibit trained animals, we do not think this comes within the lines of your privilege, and therefore, request that you do not proceed with this intended combat between a lion and a bear, as our people do not approve of such a contest. Respectfully yours, M.R. DE YOUNG, Director-General. This letter is, of course, only warning, and if Boone proceeds he will find himself in pretty warm water. The Wild flower exhibition, of which so much has been talked of late, was opened last Wednesday and proved very beautiful and interesting owing to the numerous flowers and various shades. The other evening one of the South Sea Islanders (who cooks during the day and has evenings off), thought he would take a stroll on the Midway. So, very carefully making his toilet, which consisted of a cigarette, a toothpick and a very much abbreviated shirt, he sailed forthwith. Then the small boy was in his element and immediately started to guy the South Sea gentleman, who imagined he was being praised on account of his elaborate toilet. This show did not continue long, for a guard gave him a friendly tip and he retired to the village to don American clothes. Those people are plentifully supplied with complete wardrobes, but find it hard to understand the intricacies of civilized harness. An Indian of the Arizona camp created a big sensation a few days ago, and this is the way it came about. He got a bottle of Hi On Skuggum fire-water some place or other and soon had a glorious jag on. Putting on his war paint and feathers he raved about the camp in true orthodox style until finally conceiving the startingly brilliant idea of killing his wife he started in at once do so, but was caught in time and continued to his hut till he recovered from his spree. The Forty-Nine Camp is a great place for fun. The principal amusement is losing money and drinking bad liquor. You can For such reasons the judgment was or-dered affirmed, but the order denying a motion for a new trial was reversed, with directions to the trial court to pass upon the sufficiency of the evidence suggested by the specification and then to pass upon the motion for a new trial. BEAUTIFUL IN MIDDLE LIFE. Helen of Troy comes upon the stage at the age of forty. Aspasia was thirty-five when married to Pericles, and she was a brilliant figure thirty years thereafter. Cleopatra was past thirty when she met Anteny. Diane de Poitier was thirty-six when she won the heart of Henry II. The king was half her age, but his devotion never changed. Anne of Austria was thirty-eight when described as the most beautiful woman in Europe. Mme. de Maintenon was forty-three when united to Louis, and Catherine of Russia was thirty-three when she seized the throne who occupied thirty-five years. Mlle. Mar was most beautiful at forty-five, and Mme. Recamier between the ages of thirty-five and fifty-five. The old saw about sweet sixteen is exploded by the truer knowledge that the highest beauty does not dwell in immaturity. For beauty does not mean alone in fashion of form and coloring, as found in the waxen doll. The dew of youth and a complexion of roses sometimes combine in a face that is unmoving and unresponsive as though lacking utterly the life spark. In the course of years, however, a time arrives when the coming of age must be recognized, when the muscles begin to relax, the skin to lose its polish and roundness, and softness gives place to angles. Contentment and good humor will still outcurvall all medical inventions as a preservative of youth. A woman beautiful in all else, but wanting mirth, will grow old, sour, thin and sallow, while the merry, fun-loving woman will be fresh and sweet despite life's happenings and sorrows. We have the exclusive agency of Orange county for the Fowler and Elmore bicycles, the two leading wheels of the country. The Fowler is the only wheel that has the truss frame and is the strongest and most rigid wheel on the market—a wheel that is a credit to American skill and workmanship. It will stand the most critical inspection. Weight from 16 to 30 pounds. The Elmore is a first-class wheel at a popular price. We have a number of other wheels in stock that we sell at from $50 to $135. All kinds of bicycle repairing done. Bicycle extras, sweaters, lamps, bells and bicycle sundries. Headquarters for bicycles for Orange county at M.J. Bundy's Hardware store, Santa Ana. Buy your hardware, stoves and kitchen goods at Isaac Lyons' store. Farmora' Healing Liniment is a sure cure for piles. For sale by W.M. Higgins, drug-gist, Anaheim, Cal. Large stock of Clothing and boots and shoes just received at Isaac Lyons' store. Swiss Cheese, Limburger, Pickled Mackerel, Pickled Salmon at Lyon's store. For such reasons the judgment was or-dered affirmed, but the order denying a motion for a new trial was reversed, with directions to the trial court to pass upon the sufficiency of the evidence suggested by the specification and then to pass upon the motion for a new trial. BEAUTIFUL IN MIDDLE LIFE. Helen of Troy comes upon the stage at the age of forty. Aspasia was thirty-five when married to Pericles, and she was a brilliant figure thirty years thereafter. Cleopatra was past thirty when she met Anteny. Diane de Poitier was thirty-six when she won the heart of Henry II. The king was half her age, but his devotion never changed. Anne of Austria was thirty-eight when described as the most beautiful woman in Europe. Mme. de Maintenon was forty-three when united to Louis, and Catherine of Russia was thirty-three when she seized the throne who occupied thirty-five years. Mlle. Mar was most beautiful at forty-five, and Mme. Recamier between the ages of thirty-five and fifty-five. The old saw about sweet sixteen is exploded by the truer knowledge that the highest beauty does not dwell in immaturity. For beauty does not mean alone in fashion of form and coloring, as found in the waxen doll. The dew of youth and a complexion of roses sometimes combine in a face that is unmoving and unresponsive as though lacking utterly the life spark. In the course of years, however, a time arrives when the coming of age must be recognized, when the muscles begin to relax, the skin to lose its polish and roundness, and softness gives place to angles. Contentment and good humor will still outcurvall all medical inventions as a preservative of youth. A woman beautiful in all else, but wanting mirth, will grow old, sour, thin and sallow, while the merry, fun-loving woman will be fresh and sweet despite life's happenings and sorrows. We have the exclusive agency of Orange county for the Fowler and Elmore bicycles, the two leading wheels of the country. The Fowler is the only wheel that has the truss frame and is the strongest and most rigid wheel on the market—a wheel that is a credit to American skill and workmanship. It will stand the most critical inspection. Weight from 16 to 30 pounds. The Elmore is a first-class wheel at a popular price. We have a number of other wheels in stock that we sell at from $50 to $135. All kinds of bicycle repairing done. Bicycle extras, sweaters, lamps, bells and bicycle sundries. Headquarters for bicycles for Orange county at M.J. Bundy's Hardware store, Santa Ana. Buy your hardware, stoves and kitchen goods at Isaac Lyons' store. Farmora' Healing Liniment is a sure cure for piles. For sale by W.M. Higgins, drug-gist, Anaheim, Cal. Large stock of Clothing and boots and shoes just received at Isaac Lyons' store. Swiss Cheese, Limburger, Pickled Mackerel, Pickled Salmon at Lyon's store. For such reasons the judgment was or-dered affirmed, but the order denying a motion for a new trial was reversed, with directions to the trial court to pass upon the sufficiency of the evidence suggested by the specification and then to pass upon the motion for a new trial. BEAUTIFUL IN MIDDLE LIFE. Helen of Troy comes upon the stage at the age of forty. Aspasia was thirty-five when married to Pericles, and she was a brilliant figure thirty years thereafter. Cleopatra was past thirty when she met Anteny. Diane de Poitier was thirty-six when she won the heart of Henry II. The king was half her age, but his devotion never changed. Anne of Austria was thirty-eight when described as the most beautiful woman in Europe. Mme. de Maintenon was forty-three when united to Louis, and Catherine of Russia was thirty-three when she seized the throne who occupied thirty-five years. Mlle. Mar was most beautiful at forty-five, and Mme. Recamier between the ages of thirty-five and fifty-five. The old saw about sweet sixteen is exploded by the truer knowledge that the highest beauty does not dwell in immaturity. For beauty does not mean alone in fashion of form and coloring, as found in the waxen doll. The dew of youth and a complexion of roses sometimes combine in a face that is unmoving and unresponsive as though lacking utterly the life spark. In the course of years, however, a time arrives when the coming of age must be recognized, when the muscles begin to relax, the skin to lose its polish and roundness, and softness gives place to angles. Contentment and good humor will still outcurvall all medical inventions as a preservative of youth. A woman beautiful in all else, but wanting mirth, will grow old, sour, thin and sallow, while the merry, fun-loving woman will be fresh and sweet despite life's happenings and sorrows. We have the exclusive agency of Orange county for the Fowler and Elmore bicycles, the two leading wheels of the country. The Fowler is the only wheel that has the truss frame and is the strongest and most rigid wheel on the market—a wheel that is a credit to American skill and workmanship. It will stand the most critical inspection. Weight from 16 to 30 pounds. The Elmore is a first-class wheel at a popular price. We have a number of other wheels in stock that we sell at from $50 to $135. All kinds of bicycle repairing done. Bicycle extras, sweaters, lamps, bells and bicycle sundries. Headquarters for bicycles for Orange county at M.J. Bundy's Hardware store, Santa Ana. Buy your hardware, stoves and kitchen goods at Isaac Lyons' store. Farmora' Healing Liniment is a sure cure for piles. For sale by W.M. Higgins, drug-gist, Anaheim, Cal. Large stock of Clothing and boots and shoes just received at Isaac Lyons' store. Swiss Cheese, Limburger, Pickled Mackerel, Pickled Salmon at Lyon's store. For such reasons the judgment was or-dered affirmed, but the order denning a motion for a new trial was reversed, with directions to the trial court to pass upon the sufficiency of the evidence suggested by the specification and then to pass upon the motion for a new trial. BEAUTIFUL IN MIDDLE LIFE. Helen of Troy comes upon the stage at the age of forty. Aspasia was thirty-five when married to Pericles, and she was a brilliant figure thirty years thereafter. Cleopatra was past thirty when she met Anteny. Diane de Poitier was thirty-six when she won the heart of Henry II. The king was half her age, but his devotion never changed. Anne of Austria was thirty-eight when described as the most beautiful woman in Europe. Mme. de Maintenon was forty-three when united to Louis, and Catherine of Russia was thirty-three when she seized the throne who occupied thirty-five years. Mlle. Mar was most beautiful at forty-five, and Mme. Recamier between the ages of thirty-five and fifty-five. The old saw about sweet sixteen is exploded by the truer knowledge that the highest beauty does not dwell in immaturity. For beauty does not mean alone in fashion of form and coloring, as found in the waxen doll. The dew of youth and a complexion of roses sometimes combine in a face that is unmoving and unresponsive as though lacking utterly the life spark. In the course of years, however, a time arrives when the coming of age must be recognized, when the muscles begin to relax, the skin to lose its polish and roundness, and softness gives place to angles. Contentment and good humor will still outcurvall all medical inventions as a preservative of youth. A woman beautiful in all else, but wanting mirth, will grow old, sour, thin and sallow; while the merry, fun-loving woman will be fresh and sweet despite life's happenings and sorrows. We have the exclusive agency of Orange county for the Fowler and Elmore bicycles, the two leading wheels of the country. The Fowler is the only wheel that has the truss frame and is the strongest and most rigid wheel on the market—a wheel that is a credit to American skill and workmanship. It will stand the most critical inspection. Weight from 16 to 30 pounds. The Elmore is a first-class wheel at a popular price. We have a number of other wheels in stock that we sell at from $50 to $135. All kinds of bicycle repairing done. Bicycle extras, sweaters, lamps, bells and bicycle sundries. Headquarters for bicycles for Orange county at M.J. Bundy's Hardware store, Santa Ana. Buy your hardware, stoves和 kitchen goods at Isaac Lyons' store. Farmora' Healing Liniment is a sure cure for piles. For sale by W.M. Higgins, drug-gist, Anaheim,Cal. Large stock of Clothing和boots和shoes just received at Isaac Lyons' store. Swiss Cheese,Limburger,PickledMackerel,PickledSalmonatLyon'sstore.n30tf Everybody knows wheretheTonnealeplaceis,andmanyaFairgoerisevenso desperateasto try oneofthehuskcovereddelicabies.Andthereisa greatdiversityofopiniononthesubjectoftomales.InthefirstplacemaybeonlyonepersoninfivehundredhasevercatenatamobileinSanFrancisco,coconsequentlyitrequiresitgreedeforgurgingtogetapersonnotusedtothemtocatone.Aftertheyhave eatenittheyusuallyprefertokeep their opiniontothemselves.Watcha personwhomecomesoutoftheTomalevillageandyouwillseethatheprefersthemoresecludedpartsoftheFairgroundsuntilheregainshisconfidence.TheFirthheelisprobablyoneofthemostwonderfulpiecesofengineeringeverseenonthecoast,或forthat matter,在theUnitedStates.Fromthegroundtothetopnofhewheelitis150feet,andtheviewissimplygrand.Asongetsintoacarwhichis A number of years ago while stoppinglittle mountain town in Germany I been acquainted with Chief Engineer A.Hardbauner.oftheImperial army.H calledtome thatwhentheKearsargefortheAlabamaoff Cherbourganchororhadbeen placed on both sidesofthebarsargentinordertobetherproofthedesertservicewere deliveredovertocetheUnitedStatesconsulatFayal.RemainedintheconsularstorehouseJuly,1870.Atthistimejustatthe outbreakofFranco-Germanwar,theGermanwerefrigateArconaarrivedatFayal.TheAwasoneoftheoldtypeofwoodwantals.Mr.Gobhardsauer.wasengineeroftheArcona.wasorderedupormachengentertainedovertocetheNavyardatKielasold iron.AreintimeshewasreadyandsailedfortheFayal.S remainedintheconsularstorehouseJuly,1870.Atthistimejustatthe outbreakofFranco-Germanwar,theGermanwerefrigateArconaarrivedatFayal.TheAwasoneoftheoldtypeofwoodwantals.Mr.Gobhardsauer.wasengineeroftheArcona.wasorderedupormachengentertainedovertocetheNavyardatKielasold iron.AreintimeshewasreadyandsailedfortheFayal.S remainedintheconsularstorehouseJuly,1870.Atthistimejustatthe outbreakofFranco-Germanwar,theGermanwerefrigateArconaarrivedatFayal.TheAwasoneoftheoldtypeofwoodwantals.Mr.Gobhardsauer.wasengineeroftheArcona.wasorderedupormachengentertainedovertocetheNavyardatKielasold iron.AreintimeshewasreadyandsailedfortheFayal.S remainedintheconsularstorehouseJuly,1870.Atthistimejustatthe outbreakofFranco-Germanwar,theGermanwerefrigateArconaarrivedatFayal.TheAwasoneoftheoldtypeofwoodwantals.Mr.Gobhardsauer.wasengineeroftheArcona.wasorderedupormachengentertainedovertocetheNavyardatKielasold iron.AreintimeshewasreadyandsailedfortheFayal.S remainedintheconsularstorehouseJuly,1870.Atthistimejustatthe outbreakofFranco-Germanwar,theGermanwerefrigateArconaarrivedatFayal.TheAwasoneoftheoldtypeofwoodwantals.Mr.Gobhardsauer.wasengineeroftheArcona.wasorderedupormachengentertainedovertocetheNavyardatKielasold iron.AreintimeshewasreadyandsailedfortheFayal.S remainedintheconsularstorehouseJuly,1870.Atthistimejustatthe outbreakofFranco-Germanwar,theGermanwerefrigateArconaarrivedatFayal.TheAwasoneoftheoldtypeofwoodwantals.Mr.Gobhardsauer.wasengineeroftheArcona.wasorderedupormachengentertainedovertocetheNavyardatKielasold iron.AreintimeshewasreadyandsailedfortheFayal.S remainedintheconsularstorehouseJuly,1870.Atthistimejustatthe outbreakofFranco-Germanwar,theGermanwerefrigateArconaarrivedatFayal.TheAwasoneoftheoldtypeofwoodwantals.Mr.Gobhardsauer.wasengineeroftheArcona.wasorderedupormachengentertainedovertocetheNavyardatKielasold iron.AreintimeshewasreadyandsailedfortheFayal.S remainedintheconsularstorehouseJuly,1870.Atthistimejustatthe outbreakofFranco-Germanwar,theGermanwerefrigateArconaarrivedatFayal.TheAwasoneoftheoldtypeofwoodwantals.Mr.Gobhardsauer.wasengineeroftheArcona.wasorderedupormachengentertainedovertocetheNavyardatKielasold iron.AreintimeshewasreadyandsailedfortheFayal.S remainedintheconsularstorehouseJuly,1870.Atthistimejustatthe outbreakofFranco-Germanwar,theGermanwerefrigateArconaarrivedatFayal.TheAwasoneoftheoldtypeofwoodwantals.Mr.Gobhardsauer.wasengineeroftheArcona.wasorderedupormachengentertainedovertocetheNavyardatKielasold iron.AreintimeshewasreadyandsailedfortheFayal.S remainedintheconsularstorehouseJuly,1870.Atthistimejustatthe outbreakofFranco-Germanwar,theGermanwerefrigateArconaarrivedatFayal.TheAwasoneoftheoldtypeofwoodwantals.Mr.Gobhardsauer.wasengineeroftheArcona.wasorderedupormachengentertainedovertocetheNavyardatKielasold iron.AreintimeshewasreadyandsailedfortheFayal.S remainedintheconsularstorehouseJuly,1870.Atthistimejustatthe outbreakofFranco-Germanwar,theGermanwerefrigateArconaarrivedatFayal.TheAwasoneoftheoldtypeofwoodwantals.Mr.Gobhardsauer.wasengineerOfTheArcona.wasorderedupormachengentertainedovertocetheNavyardatKielasold iron.AreintimeshewasreadyandsailedfortheFayal.S remainedintheconsularstorehouseJuly,1870.Atthistimejustatthe outbreakofFranco-Germanwar,theGermanwerefrigateArconaarrivedatFayal.TheAwasoneoftheoldtypeof木材wantals.Mr.Gobhardsauer.wasengineerOfTheArcona.wasorderedupormachengentertainedovertocetheNavyardatKielasold iron.AreintimeshewasreadyandsailedfortheFayal.S remainedin.theconsularstorehouseJuly,1870.Atthistimejustatthe outbreakofFranco-Germanwar,theGermanwerefrigateArconaarrivedatFayal.TheAwasoneoftheoldtypeof木材wantals.Mr.Gobhardsauer.wasengineerOfTheArcona.wasorderedupormachengentertainedovertocetheNavyardatKielasold iron.AreintimeshewasreadyandsailedfortheFayal.S remainedin.theconsularstorehouseJuly,1870.Atthistimejustatthe outbreakofFranco-Germanwar,theGermanwerefrigateArconaarrivedatFayal.TheAwasoneofTheOldTypeOfMaterialWantsToBeUsedInTheMiddleAgeOfTheBoyfriendOrTheAdultByTheArmourOrTheBoyfriendOrTheAdultByTheArmourOrTheBoyfriendOrTheAdultByTheArmourOrTheBoyfriendOrTheAdultByTheArmourOrTheBoyfriendOrTheAdultByTheArmourOrTheBoyfriendOrTheAdultByTheArmourOrTheBoyfriendOrTheAdultByTheArmourOrTheBoyfriendOrTheAdultByTheArmourOrTheBoyfriendOrTheAdultByTheArmourOrTheBoyfriendOrTheAdultByTheArmourOrTheBoyfriendOrTheAdultByTheArmourOrTheBoyfriendOrTheAdultByTheArmourOrTheBoyfriendOrTheAdultByTheArmourOrTheBoyfriendOrTheAdultByTheArmourOrTheBoyfriendOrTheAdultByTheArmourOrTheBoyfriendOrTheAdultByTheArmourOrTHEADULTBYTHEARMOURORTHEARMOURORTHEARMOURORTHEARMOURORTHEARMOURORTHEARMOURORTHEARMOURORTHEARMOURORTHEARMOURORTHEARMOURORTHEARMOURORTHEARMOURORTHEARMOURORTHEARMOURORTHEARMOURORTHEARMOURORTHEARMOURORTHEARMOURORTHEARMOURORTHEARMOURORTHEARMOURORTHEARMOURORTHEARMOURORTHEARMUREORTHEARMUREORTHEARMUREORTHEARMUREORTHEARMUREORTHEARMUREORTHEARMUREORTHEARMUREORTHEARMUREORTHEARMUREORTHEARMUREORTHEARMUREORTHEARMUREORTHEARMUREORTHEARMUREORTHEARMUREORTHEARMUREORTHEARMUREORTHEARMUREORTHEARMUREORTHEARMUREORTHEARMUREORTHEARMUREORTHEARMUREORTHENORMALITYOF 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OriThermties OriThermties OriThermties OriThermties OriThermties OriThermties OriThermties OriThermties OriThermties OriThermties OriThermties OriThermties OriThermties OriThermties OriThermties OriThermties OriThermties OriThermties OriThermties OriThermties OriThermties OriThermties OriThresholds Of The Armature Wants To Be Used In The Middle Age Of The BoyfriendOr The BoyfriendOr The BoyfriendOr The BoyfriendOr The BoyfriendOr The BoyfriendOr The BoyfriendOr The BoyfriendOr The BoyfriendOr The BoyfriendOr The LATE NEWS OF INTEREST Miss Helen Gould, daughter of the late Jay Gould, visited in Los Angeles last week. She was accompanied by Miss J. J. Coots of Tarrytown and her maid. Miss Gould was out here for pleasure and also to visither aunt, Mrs. A. M. Hough of Los Angeles. The magnificent Paris residence of Mrs. J. W. Mackay, wife of the California bonanza millionaire, was recently to have gone under the hammer, but as the condition of the sale—an upset price of $200,000—was not reached, the property was withdrawn from the market, and it may be disposed of at private sale. A retaliatory measure against the United States, England and other anti-silver countries is being considered by Mexico. The plan is to increase the Mexican import duties 25 per cent. A strong combination of the Mexican and Central American republics is a possible outgrowth of the agitation. Sportsmen in Monocosco county have organized for the protection of trout. For the past few days large strings of small fish have been brought into Ukiah bearing no marks of fishhooks, which is regarded as prima facie evidence that dynamite has been used in the capture. The first arrest for violating the law has been made, the complaint that the fish had been killed by explosives. Justice Patterson of the State Supreme Court has tendered his resignation to Gov. Markham, to take effect immediately. This action by Judge Patterson leaves three vacancies on the Supreme bench to be filled at the next general election. Judge Van Fleet, Judge of the Superior Court of Sacramento county, has been appointed to the Supreme bench in place of Judge Patterson, resigned. A tremendous effort is being made to convince the people of Kentucky that the verdict against Breckenridge in the Pellard case was due to the unfair charge of Judge Bradley to the jury. Thousands of circulars asserting that the charge and vendit were unjust are being distributed. In Woodford county the friends of the Colonel are so aroused that a big meeting is to be held, at which Judge Bradley is to be buried in effigy. Frank Toal of Los Angeles, who has within the last eight years been swine convicted of having assaulted his wife with intent to commit murder, appeared again last week before a Los Angeles Justice for experiences it would be hard to say. In a short time their train had been side-tracked and put under guard. The charge of burglary will be entered against them as soon as the government reaches them. The Commonwealth will be here until to morrow, awaiting orders from the Secretary of War. The arrested men are to be turned over to the United States Marshal and his deputies and escorted by them to Butte, accompanied by two companies of troops. Some months ago the South Riverside Water Company purchased Elsinore Lake with the intention of drawing the water supply therefrom. Within a few days past the company had an engineer looking over the ground for the purpose of making an estimate of cost of work necessary to tap the lake. To do this a long cut will have to be run, and as soon as the estimate and necessary surveys can be made work on the cut will begin, and the fine water supply will be greatly increased. Information has been received of a murder which was committed about April 16th at Pala, a settlement in the interior of San Diego county. Ramon, a young half-breed Indian, brained his wife with a club, and afterward carried the body to the hills where he left it under a mesquite bush, where it was found by ranchers. The flesh had been eaten away by coyotes and little was left by which to identify the remains. However, when confronted, Ramon confessed the crime and said he had visited the body three days after he carried it to the hills, but found it already partially eaten by the wolves. He was arrested. The Democrat Senator who have been making a tariff compromise have considered the sugar duty and decided besides fixing a tariff of 40 per cent ad valorem on all sugars and one-eighth of a cent additional on refined sugar, to impose a further duty of one-tenth of a cent on sugar imported from countries paying a bounty to sugar producers. This last provision is supposed to be aimed at Germany, where a bounty is paid on beet-sugar. It has been decided also to extend the time when the sugar schedule shall take effect until January 1, 1895, which will ensure the bounty under the McKinley law for this season's crop. It is understood these two propositions have been inserted in response to the earnest solicitation of the Louisiana Senators. At the session of the Episcopal diocesan convention in San Francisco last week the delegates worked themselves into a heated NO LION-BEAR FIGHT. FRANCISCO, April 28. At 8 o'clock evening there was a crowd of a thousand people around Col. Boone's arena at Winter Fair grounds waiting an opportunity to gain admission and witness the between the man-eating lion Parnell the grizzly bear Siskiyou, which had extensively advertised for some weeks. However, there was apparently little that the event would take place. Boone's entire establishment was in the of the Society for the Prevention of Animals; and, besides about a officers of the society, there were forty men present. Boone and his manager were placed arrest, at least technically so, and they nor their employees were permitted to enter that part of the building in the animals are kept in their cages. Due to the large cage in the center of a room in which the fight was to have occurred guarded by several policemen, and officers were stationed at every door. About thirty police guarded the main gate to the building. The police were at the request of the society, and members of the society stated most positively that not only would the fight between Boone and Bear not be permitted, but that could not even permit the usual nightly crime in the arena. By Hamilton, press agent for Daniel Charangued the gang at length and formally placed under arrest by the officiers of Boone, McGarvey, his wife and Hamilton were placed by Judge who was at the scene, at $500 each are promptly furnished. The warrants one’s and McGarvey’s arrest were on the general statute for the preventive cruelty to animals. Judge Conlan Boone that if any attempt to carry right were made by him or any of his eyes, he would be placed under arrest and that he would himself stay on the all night to see that his orders were made. Boone finally determined to make her effort to carry on the fight and his initiative announced to the crowd, will be no entertainment to-night. “O clock there were on duty at Boone’s forty regular policemen, twenty-three officers of the Society for the Preventive Cruelty to Animals, and twenty Mid-Fair guards. They will stay on all necessary. ARSARGE'S CHAIN ARMOR. history of the Kearsarge has been so times told that it seems like “taking Athens” to attempt to say anything ever. There is, however, an item of connected with this famous vessel so far as I am aware, has never apen print. Number of years ago while stopping in a mountain town in Germany I became used with Chief Engineer A. Gebauer, of the imperial army. He re-rome that when the Kearsarge fought Alabama off Cherbourg anchor chains on placed on both sides of the Kean order to better protect the boiler lines from the enemy’s fire. Long time after the battle, when the wedge was lying off the Azores islands, noor chains which had done such good were delivered over to the care of United States consul at Fayal. They died in the consular store house until 170. A tremendous effort is being made to convince the people of Kentucky that the verdict against Breckenridge in the Pallard case was due to the unfair charge of Judge Bradley to the jury. Thousands of circulars asserting that the charge and vendet were unjust are being distributed. In Woodford county the friends of the Colonel are so aroused that a big meeting is to be held, at which Judge Bradley is to be buried in effigy. Frank Toal of Los Angeles, who has within the last eight years been twice convicted of having assaulted his wife with intent to commit murder, appeared again last week before a Los Angeles Justice for preliminary examination upon a similar charge, he being accused of having shot at his wife three times Thursday night last. He was hold to answer under bonds in the sum of $3,000. Although the utmost secrecy has been observed it has leaked out that papers have been signed at Redlands ceding to leading members of the Wheeler & Wilson Sewing Machine Company extensive water power rights in the canyon of the Santa Ana River. A large electric plant will be put in to furnish light and power for cities within a radius of fifty miles, also part of the plant to operate an electric road from Redlands to Los Angeles, a distance of seventy miles. A special train bearing Theodore Seligman and Harry Seligman, son of the late Jesse Seligman, the New York banker who died at Coronado last week, arrived at San Diego midnight Wednesday, having made a run of sixty-two hours from New York city, thirty-six hours faster than regular train service. The same train, bearing the remains of the deceased millionaire and his living relatives, started eastward from San Diego at 4 o’clock last Thursday evening, scheduled to reach New York at 1 p.m. Sunday. The train consisted of three cars, exclusively occupied by the mourning party. Hattie Blaine, whose marriage to E. Truxton Beale was celebrated Monday, has received many costly and beautiful presents. Among them are a blue enamelled watch from her sister-in-law, Mra. John R. McLean, set with sapphires and diamonds, and a large diamond star from the bridegroom’s mother. After the ceremony and wedding breakfast the newly married couple left for California, where they will pass two months on a ranch owned by Mr. Beale. Later in the season they will go to Bar Harbor, where members of both families have summer homes. Suit has been commenced against State Controller Codan to compel him to pay the claim of J. W. Ingham of Kern county for $365 for seventy-three coyote scalps. This is a test case. There are at present $131,000 in these claims outstanding against the State. The Controller claims that, while he believes the law to be constitutional and that an appropriation has been made, he cannot pay the claims until they are approved by the State Board of Examiners. The State Board hold that the act providing for the payment of the claims out of the general fund is not an appropriation, and they will decline to act until a specific appropriation is made. The Democratic members of the Senate Committee on Finance held a meeting for the purpose of conferring over proposed changes in Tariff bill. Secretary Carlisle was before the committee. There is no room for doubt that the committee agreed upon a policy, but all the parties to One conference are very reticent. It is known that the Income Tax bill has been altered so as not to discriminate against persons who derive an income from corporations or business partnerships. Other changes have also been made which it is believed will satisfy its opponents. It is believed, also, that amendments to tariff of 40 per cent ad valorem on all sugars and one-eighth of a cent on sugar imported from countries paying a bounty to sugar producers. This last provision is supposed to be aimed at Germany, where a bounty is paid on beet sugar. It has been decided also to extend the time when the sugar schedule shall take effect until January 1, 1895, which will insure the bounty under the McKinley law for this season’s crop. It is understood these two propositions have been inserted in response to the earnest solicitation of the Louisiana Senators. At the session of the Episcopal diocesan convention in San Francisco last week the delegates worked themselves into a heated discussion over a proposed amendment to allow women to vote at vestry elections. The committee to whom the resolution was referred returned an adverse report, which precipitated the discussion. It was argued that should women be allowed to vote they would become eligible as vestrymen. Such a state of affairsthe opposing delegates were loth to contemplate. The friends of the resolution attempted to pass it; however, despite the adversary report and all the argument, but they were doomed to disappointment. The resolution was effectually buried, it being resubmitted to the committee on canons, to be considered by them until the next convention. There are a number of Chinese vegetable gardeners on outskirts of Sacramento who have long been depreciating the dry spell because of the effect it had upon the potato crop. Try as they would they could not get the potatoes to grow as they should. The Chinamen saw that some decisive step was necessary, so they raised among them $300. Then they sent word to three Chinese priests at San Francisco to come up and pray for rain. A contract was entered into whereby the priests were to receive $300 if by repeated prayers they secured rainfall before Thursday of last week. Sure enough rain came twenty-four hours before the expiration of the time set, and the priests got the money. The Chinese believe the money was well spent since it saved their extensive crop of potatoes. All dry-weather records for the spring season in northern citrus belt were broken Wednesday when rain after fifty days of drought began to fall. The rain was general over the northern part of California ranging from 25 of an inch in San Francisco to over an inch in some of northern counties of Sacramento valley. In The San Joaquin valley the precipitation varied from a trace at Fresno to a quarter of an inch in northern portion. Heavy showers fell in Monterey, San Luis Obispo and other counties along the coast. The rain was of great benefit to the crops in the bay counties and Sacramento and San Joaquin valleys. While the precipitation in the grain-growing region of latter valley was slight; it was enough to increase the prospect for a good yield. On the west side of the valley it came too late, as the hay and grain were past the point where moisture could help them. Fruit was benefited. In southern part of State, where rain is most needed, the fall was hardly enough to lay the dust. The latest news reports from Hayti bring news of an unusual character. Instead of tales of murder and revolution, the announcement is made that President Hipolyte has forgiven his old enemy Legitime, and has invited him to return Hayti, and he has furthermore urged the chamber to vote a pension to Legitime on the ground that Legitime is an ex-President of the black republic. The reconciliation is apparently genuine and complete, for the Hippolytes in the Cabinet are offering a welcome to them time after the battle, when the large was lying off the Azores islands, or chains which had done such good were delivered over to the care of United States consul at Fayal. They did in the consular store house until 1870. just at the outbreak of the German war, the German wooden Arcona arrived at Fayal. The Arcona of the old type of wooden war vessel, Gebhardbauer, who was chief of the Arcona, was ordered by her order to up something to afford for her engines in case the Arcona fall in with a French ship, it being intention to proceed to Germany at once. Search for material in the storehouse Dabney, the United States consul, he the old anchor chains of the Kearn and immediately secured them. They placed on the Arcona exactly as they on the Kearn, and in a short time was ready and sailed for the Father-Arcona met with neither adventure liable of any kind on her homoward but she remained in service, and she were kept on her until the close of the latter being turned over to the end at Kiel as old iron. There were in 1838, and several indents made from the Alabama could still be them. book of the Kearsarge does not say chains were disposed of as I have No mention whatever of the disposition of them. Further, the records of the department contain nothing on the facts remain, nevertheless, and now the old ship has gone it would seem proper that everything in the way of her should be in the possession of government. Portugal courteously re-fitted the gun "Long Tom" of the brig and Germany would undoubtedly same with the armor of the Kearn. arm about the short hay and grain England and Southern California has a rush of buyers to Salt River Valleza. J. A. Fleming, treasurer of territory, has just returned from Los Angeles, where both hay and barley are in demand. He, with others, made a estimate that the valley can this year 100,000 worth of hay and barley. The hay crop is the heaviest known valley, and one man has already cut off from twenty-five acres of alfalfa. Offer $2 per ton standing for alfalfa, not buy. Water was plentiful all. The shortage outside is the only of marketing the immense surplus. Of all kinds, except figs, are in heavy Apricots are already ripe and the unusually large. Orange trees are fully laden and nothing is touched by it. The Democratic members of the Senate Committee on Finance held a meeting for the purpose of conferring over proposed changes in the Tariff bill. Secretary Carlisle was before the committee. There is no room for doubt that the committee agreed upon a policy, but all the parties to the conference are very reticient. It is known that the Income Tax bill has been altered so as not to discriminate against persons who derive an income from corporations or business partnerships. Other changes have also been made which it is believed will satisfy its opponents. It is believed, also, that amendments to many of the schedules have been agreed to. Secretary Carlisle is in sympathy with the efforts of the committee to obtain a bill that will surely pass by a party vote, and there is good reason for believing the movement has the sanction of the President. The Riverside Fruit Exchange publishes a long statement of the business done for the season thus far. The report shows that 1,217 carloads of oranges have been shipped to date, and the exchange estimates that 200 carloads yet remain to go forward. The cost of maintaining the exchange amounts to 8 cents per box, a figure below the estimate made when the exchange was formed. Figures giving the cost of marketings of fruit show the cost to be fully one-third less than what the growers have paid under the old system of packers and middlemen. Nearly $250,000 has been distributed to growers from sales of 800 carloads of fruit. The work of the exchange demonstrates the wisdom of the co-operative plan of marketing fruit, and the growers are well satisfied with the showing made for the season. Forsyth (Mont.), April 26.-Midnight last night saw the end of the Butte contingent of the Coxey army marching on to Washington. For sixty hours traffic on the Northern Pacific had been stopped in this State and during all this time a train had been running wild from the mountains to this point, where it was taken in charge last night by Col. Page with 500 men from Fort Keogh. This place is forty-three miles west of the fort and the military had been ordered to hold themselves in readiness to intercept the train when it arrived at that point. Later, however, it was learned that the Hoganites proposed to stop over night at Forsyth and the troops were bundled on a special train and started for that place. When they arrived at 11:30 o'clock they found the stolen train standing at the depot. The Commonweal brakeman flagged the train and when he found the troops were on the train, tersely remarked, "Well, the jig up." The soldiers lined up on the platform beside the Coxey train and the Montana contingent was ordered to surrender. It was scarcely a necessary command and they were promptly obeyed. The Commonweal train consisted of fourteen cars, one well filled with provisions and one with railroad tools, one with coal and the other eleven cars carrying men. Each carried from thirty to forty men with their baggage, camp equipage, etc., making a total of about four hundred men. The men are a hard-looking set, whether so naturally or from their recent set. The latest news reports from Hayti bring news of an unusual character. Instead of tales of murder and revolution, the announcement is made that President Hippolyte has forgiven his old enemy Legitime, and has invited him to return to Hayti, and he has furthermore urged the chamber to vote a pension to Legitime on the ground that Legitime is an ex-President of the black republic. The reconciliation is apparently genuine and complete, for the Hippolytes in the Cabinet are offering a welcome to the exile. Legitimate has been living in Kingston, Jamaica, ever since he was overthrown by Hippolyte in 1885. For some time he plotted to overthrow the latter, but finally he abandoned it and lived in quiet, and the leading of the malcontents passed into the hands of General Manigat, likewise an exile at Kingston. The political inducements which urged Hippolyte to become reconciled to his old enemy are doubtless that he makes himself by this means more secure in power. His adherents are mostly in northern provinces of the islands, while Legitime is very strong in the south. It is now understood, although the Haytiien papers do not say so, that Legitime will be President in 1897, when Hippolyte's term expires. Meanwhile the latter will be secured from Legitime's plotting and both can use their influence to defeat the schemes of General Monigat and his followers. STUB ENDS OF THOUGHT. Beauty covereth a multitude of sins. A kiss doesn't become atrophied by activity. Love without limit is simply emotional jim-jams. We pass through the gates of matrimony into a lustrous cloud of romance. If a woman's intuition were replaced by reason, she would be wearing inside of sixty days. Courtship is to matrimony as the distant view of beautiful mountains is to the climbing of them. Some people are moral without being religious; and some are religious without being moral. When a man becomes so bad that women desert him, it is time for him to be heading toward a graveyard. A woman's saying that no man should know her preference for him, until he has shown his for her, does not make it so. When a girl is fidgely because the young man isn't where she is, he can stay away as long as he pleases, and be welcome when he comes. Go and see the fine display of Hardware in Isaac Lyons' display window. A large stock of Dry Goods and Boots and Shoes at Isaac Lyons'. Dr. Morris Coffin will be in his dental office over Dickel's store every Tuesday. Buy one of those durable buggies at John Schohan's Cheap for cash apll3tf