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anaheim-gazette 1894-09-27

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Anaheim VOLUME XXIV. R. L. BISBY, Principal. THE ORANGE COUNTY BUSINESS COLLEGE BUSINESS, BANKING, PENMANSHIP Richelieu Hotel SHORTHAND TYPEWRITING ENGLISH BRANCH Santa Ana, Cal. N. B. Fall Term Begins Monday, September 3. PROFESSIONAL CARDS Wm. H. PERDOMO, M.A., M.D. Office and Residence near Opera-house Block, Anaheim. Consultation Hours— Until 9 A.M. From 8 to 4 P.M. English, German, French, Spanish and Italian spoken. DR. J. H. BULLARD A. B., M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. (Harvard University, Boston, Mass.) Office and Residence, corner Hermina 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 JOHN SCHAUMAN DEALER IN AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENT A Large and Comple Stock of Bradley Plows, Farm Wagons McCormick Mowers, Etc. Blacksmithing and Wagonmaking in all Branches. HORSE-SHOEING A SPECIATY. Also Fine Carriage Painting. ANAHEIM, Watch for the Announce A. B., M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. (Harvard University, Boston, Mass.) Office and Residence, corner Hermline 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. A. D. Porter. H. A. McWilliams. PORTER & MoWILLIAMS. CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS. Shop and Office—In Old Fellow's building. Los Angeles street, Anaheim. CHAS. SCHINDLER, CONTRACTOR and BUILDER. ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA. L. NEMETZ, Carriage Painting & Trimming SIGN WRITING Shop on Center street, near the opera-house. Anaheim, Cal. L. GUNTHER. PIONEER BOOT & SHOE MAKER. Corner Adele and Los Angeles trests. H. P. LARSEN, CONTRACTOR & BUILDER. Estimates given, Contracts made and do a general obbling business. CENTER STREET, ANAHEIM. BEALE&CLARK Blacksmithing and Wagonmaking in all Branches. HORSE-SHOEING A SPECIATY. Also Fine Carriage Painting. ANAHEIM, Watch for the Announcement Next Week. For the Receipt of a Large and Well-Selected Stock of Groceries and Other Goods M. H. CHEESEMAN'S (WEST-END GROCER) Bentz & Steadman, Wholesale and Retail Butcher Anaheim, Cal. Dealers in Beef, Pork, Mutton, Veal, Sausages and Lard Of Our Own Make Highest Market price Paid for Live Stores T. J. F. BOEGH Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Wines, Liquors and Cigars KEEPS ALWAYS ON HAND H. P. LARSEN, CONTRACTOR & BUILDER. Estimates given, Contracts made and do a general obbling business. CENTER STREET, ANAHEIM. BEALE&CLARK Foundry AND Machine Work. Water Gates AND... Irrigation Supplies! A SPECIALTY. Foundry on West Broadway (near S. P. depot). may17th 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 WINZER SALOON H. KNAPKE, Proprietor. CHOICE WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS. Anahaim Beir on Draught. Highest Market price Paid for Live Stores T. J. F. BOEGH 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 LIQUOR BY THE KEG, GALLON OR BOTTLE. Orders by Mail Promptly Attended to. GOODS DELIVERED FREE OF CHARGE. Opp. S. P. Depot, ANAHEIM, CA WR. R. HARKER. FRED, C. SMYTHE. HARKER & SMYTHE. Real Estate Agent Kroeger's Block, Center Street, Anaheim, Money Loaned, Taxes Paid, Collections Made, Insurance Effected in Good and Reliable companies. Correspondence Solicited. Call and See Us for Bargains in Real Estate. GUS DAVI Groceries and Seeds Informs his customers and the general public that he is preto sell goods at the smallest margin possible. He buys for casl therefore can sell for a very small profit, giving his customers the efit of low prices. No charge for showing goods or answering tions. Come one, Come all! All Kinds of Produce and Poultry Taken in Excha ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1894. BISBY, Principal. COLLEGE THAND TYPEWRITING ENGLISH BRANCHES AUMAN IMPLEMENTS Plows, Farm Wagons and Makers, Etc. mmaking in all its SPECIATY. e Painting. Announce- The Weekly Gazette. Established 1870. SUBSCRIPTION, - $2 Per Year. Six months. 1,000 Three months. 75 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 Gazetta is issued every Thursday morning, and is sent to subscribers by the early nails. 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 time 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 Income Tax in Chicago. Between 25,000 and 30,000 residents of Chicago will enjoy the distinction of paying an income tax under the provisions of the law recently enacted by Congress. Excluding the incomes of the millionaire class, the earnings of great corporations and returns from so-called "sequestrated" funds, it would be safe to assume that the average upon which the tax will be paid will not be less than $2,000 for each of the 25,000 payers referred to, or $50,000,000 in the aggregate. A tax of 2 per cent on $50,000,000 is $1,000,000. In the city of Chicago there are about 150 corporations which depend for their revenue upon what they make out of the Chicago public, and the stock in these companies has a market value at the present time of something like $450,000,000. Then there are millionaires, of whom 200 or thereabouts live in the city. These most respected citizens would represent about $475,000,000. Least this should be regarded as an exaggeration a fairly complete list is here presented of Chicago millionaires, with their panied by his young daughter, and the crew forward consisted of twenty-seven men. It was early in March when the vessel sailed, and the only tidings of her was when Capt. Thompson of the schooner Mary C. Russ wrote from San Diego, a few weeks ago, saying that he was with her on the night of March 18. Olsen was on the deck of the schooner during the whole night at sea, and says that the storm that tossed the little ship about was the worst he had experienced in the score or more of years that he has spent on the ocean. The Senegal was sighted just as darkness was closing in, beating up against a freshening northeast gale. By midnight the gale was at its height. Olsen soon began to watch for the Senegal's red light. It seemed to him, in his dread of a death at sea, like a ray of hope. Several times he missed the light, when his vessel rode the crest of a wave, but the Senegal was then down in the trough of the sea, and the next instant it would appear. The danger increased, and every man had to hang on for dear life. Just before day began to break the red light of the big ship appeared for the last time. The Senegal rose on a crest of wave, as a squall more severe than its predecessors came down upon them. The red light gleamed, then went out for an instant. It reappeard for a moment, then was lost altogether. In vain the crew of the schooner watched for it. It had gone out forever, and with it went the lives of all her crew. When day broke, about an hour afterward, the big ship was nowhere in sight. A Great Naval Conflict. LONDON, September 24.-A dispatch filed at Shanghai at 12 o'clock last night gives the following details of the great naval battle in the Yalu river: The Chinese northern squadron, under the command of Admiral Ting, left Port Arthur last Friday night, having under convoy seven transports. All the troops on board the transports were Haunanense, most of them infantry. There were also a number of artillerymen with their batteries on board. Several European accompanied the fleet. The object of the expedition was to land the troops near Wuja, whence they were to be sent to the front. Nothing was seen of the enemy until the month of Yalu river was reached. Then guns on the Chang Yuen were she remained in the fighting her smaller and machine-guns. Yuen retired to beyond the Liai Kiang-Yuen was in a terrible shell burst through her decks a hor, and with the flames burst she slowly settled. A score of times the Japanese break through the Chinese line the last the Chinese guns were them, and the Japanese never transports. The Chinese vessels before the attacks, and while Yang-Woi stranded stern fire was similar to that of the ChenThe Chi-Yuen was nothing wallowing wreck when struck and she sank with all on board. The guns were now appalling. The guns on both sides were on the great ships rolled heavily. Of green water pouring from them showed the steam pumps werecessantly, and tortified to the damage inflicted. Some of these ships had exhausted their ammunition last hours of fighting. More than one of the Japanese seemed to be on point for four was not until dark; however, they ceased and the battered Japan parted in double-line formation. Toward morning the Chinese fleet, with six traps for Port Arthur, which was sank. The damage to the Chinese ships sensitive that it can scarcely be fore winter. The officers say they showed the most furious courage. The Czar of the Russians. St. Petersburg, Sept. 24.-At Russia presents the remarkaof a crazy monarch, Alexander I go into retreat in a castle in a and there be placed under an eccentric physician as mad Conciident with this deplorable in the reign of the Czar, is at mation that the succession to may not pass to the Czar's son seem to be the natural result will go to the Empress Maria wife. The Czar's son, the Czarov necessarilytheir prescriptive Announcement Week. The city of Chicago there are about 150 corporations which depend for their revenue upon what they make out of the Chicago public, and the stock in these companies has a market value at the present time of something like $450,000,000. Then there are millionaires, of whom 200 or thereabouts live in the city. These most respected citizens would represent about $750,000,000. Least this should be regarded as an exaggeration a fairly complete list is herewith presented of Chicago millionaires, with their popular ratings. Marshall Field, $40,000; Philip D. Armour, $25,000;000; L. Z. Leiter, $20,000; the McCormick, Cyrus H., Mrs. Cyrus H. and Leander, $23,000;000; S. W. Hurley, $25,000;000; Nelson Morris, $15,000;000; Potter Palmer, $10,000;000; S. A. Kent, $10,000;000; Laffins, Matthew, Lyourgus and George, $7,000;000; George M. Pullman, Charles T. Yerkes, James Morgan, each $5,000;000; A. M. Billings, Henry Botaford, R. R. Cable, $4,000;000, and Joseph Medill, S. M. Nickerson, Otto Young, Byron L. Smith, A. A. Munger, Gebhard Foreman, Columbus R. Cummings, Charles Counselman, Silas B. Cobb, D. K. Pearson, each $3,000;000. The above small group of twenty-nine persons is popularly supposed to have something like $232,000,000 to the right side of its account. The list of two millionaires numbers forty-one, representing $82,000,000. In the group of plain, every-day millionaires—men who are supposed to be worth $1,000,000 or near it—137 names are given Chicago's capitalists will give up a total of $2,300,000 as a result of the income tax. California Pears in New York The New York Sun says editorially: "When the English got a taste of California pears last month, they liked them, but of course complained that they were too dear. That is the English way. They say they are ready to take shiploads of them every week of the season, if they can get them cheap enough. In regard to the price, we have made inquiry of the owner of a great fruit ranch in California and he says that pear growers lost money upon the consignment, which was sent to London last August." "Pears for which growers get less than 50 cents a box in California cannot be sold in Europe for less than three times that price on account of the heavy cost of transportation across the continent and then across the Atlantic." The transportation companies, he writes us, 'are the only parties who are sure of any profit from California fruits.' This being the case, it must be impossible for the English to buy superior California products as cheaply as they can buy an interior English product. They must either pay a price that will be profitable to California ranch owners or go without the fruit. Under the circumstances what is the sense of transporting pears all the way from San Francisco to London? "Besides it is our opinion that the three great cities of which this is the center, can easily consume all the prime pears raised in California, and can also pay a fair price for them. As for the cost of transportation from California to New York, rates will have come down if they are too high. John Bull must either be satisfied with his own fruit or pay American prices for ours." Love's Opportunity When a pair of red lips are upturned to your eyes With no one to go ask about it. Do you pray for endurance to let them alone? Well, maybe you do—but I doubt it. When a sly little hand you are permitted to seize, less than $2,000 for each of the 25,000 payers referred to, or $50,000,000 in the aggregate. A tax of 2 per cent on $50,000,000 is $1,ooo,ooo. In the city of Chicago there are about 150 corporations which depend for their revenue upon what they make out of the Chicago public, and the stock in these companies has a market value at the present time of something like $450,ooo,ooo. Then there are millionaires, of whom 299 or thereabouts live in the city. These most respected citizens would represent about $755,ooo,ooo. Least this should be regarded as an exaggeration a fairly complete list is herewith presented of Chicago millionaires, with their popular ratings. Marshall Field, $4OOO; Philip D. Armour, $25OOOO; L. Z. Leiter, $2OOOOO; the McCormick, Cyrus H., Mrs. Cyrus H. and Leander, $23OOOO; S. W. Hurley, $25OOOO; Nelson Morris, $15OOOO; Potter Palmer, $1OOOOO; S. A. Kent, $1OOOOO; Laffins, Matthew, Lyourgus and George,$7OOOO; George M. Pullman, Charles T. Yerkes, James Morgan each $5OOOO; A. M. Billings,Henry Botaford,R.R.Cable,$4OOOO,and Joseph Medill,S.M.Nickerson Otto Young,Byron L.Smith,A.A.Munger,Gebhard Foreman,COLUMBUSR.Cummings.Charles Counselman,SilasB.Cobb,D.K.Pearson,cach$3OOOO. The above small group of twenty-nine persons is popularly supposed to have something like $232,oooo,ooo to the right side of its account.The list of two millionaires numbers forty-one,representing $82,oooo,ooo.In the group of plain,every-day millionaires—men who are supposed to be worth $1,oooo,ooo or near it—137 names are given Chicago's capitalists will give up a total of $2,3oooo,ooo as a result of the income tax. California Pears in New York The New York Sun says editorially: "When the English got a taste of California pears last month,they liked them,but of course complained that they were too dear That is the English way They say they are ready to take shiploads of them every week of the season,if they can get them cheap enough.In regard to the price,我们 have made inquiry of the owner of a great fruit ranch in California and he says that pear growers lost money upon the consignment,which was sent to London last August." "Pears for which growers get less than 5O cents a box in California cannot be sold in Europe for less than three times that price on account of the heavy cost of transportation across the continent and then across the Atlantic." The transportation companies,he writes us,'are the only parties who are sure of any profit from California fruits.' This being the case,它 must be impossible for the English to buy superior California products as cheaply as they can buy an interior English product。They must either pay a price that will be profitable to California ranch owners or go without the fruit.Under the circumstances what is the sense of transporting pears all the way from San Francisco to London! "Besides it is our opinion that the three great cities of which this is the center,can easily consume all the prime pears raised in California,and can also pay a fair price for them.As for the cost of transportation from California to New York,rates will have come down if they are too high.John Bull must either be satisfied with his own fruit or pay American prices for ours." Love's Opportunity When a pair of red lips are upturned to your eyes With no one to go ask about it. Do you pray for endurance to let them alone? Well,maybe you do—but I doubt it. When a sly little hand you are permitted to seize, less than $2,oooo for each of the 25,oooo payers referred to,或$5O,oooo,ooo in the aggregate.A tax of 2 per cent on$5O,oooo,ooo is$1,ooo,ooo. Philip D. Armour,$25,oooo,ooo; L.Z. Leiter,$2OOOOO;the McCormick,Cyrus H.,Mrs.Cyrus H.H,and Leander,$23,OOOO;S.W.Hurley,$25,OOOO;Nelson Morris,$15,OOOO;Potter Palmer,$1OOOOO;S.A.Kent,$1OOOOO;Laffins,Matthew,Lyourgus和George,$7,OOOO;George M.Pullman.Charles T.YerkesJames Morganeach$5,OOOO;A.M.Billings,Henry Botaford,R.R.Cable,$4,OOOO,and Joseph Medill,S.M.Nickerson Otto Young,Byron L.Smith,A.A.Munger,Gebhard Foreman,COLUMBUSR.Cummings.Charles Counselman,SilasB.Cobb,D.K.Pearson,cach$3OOOO. The above small group of twenty-nine persons is popularly supposed to have something like $232,oooo,ooo to the right side of its account.The list of two millionaires numbers forty-one,representing $82,oooo,ooo.In the group of plain,every-day millionaires—men who are supposed to be worth$1,ooo,ooo or near it—137 names are given Chicago's capitalists will give up a total of$2,3oooo,ooo as a result of the income tax. California Pears in New York The New York Sun says editorially: "When the English got a taste of California pears last month,they liked them,but of course complained that they were too dear That is the English way They say they are ready to take shiploads of them every week of the season,if they can get them cheap enough.In regard to the price,我们 have made inquiry of the owner of a great fruit ranch in California and he says that pear growers lost money upon the consignment,这 was sent to London last August." "Pears for which growers get less than 5O cents a box in California cannot be sold in Europe for less than three times that price on account of the heavy cost of transportation across the continent and then across the Atlantic." The transportation companies,he writes us,'are the only parties who are sure of any profit from California fruits.' This being the case,它 must be impossible for the English to buy superior California products as cheaply as they can buy an interior English product。They must either pay a price that will be profitable to California ranch owners or go without the fruit.Under the circumstances what is the sense of transporting pears all the way from San Francisco to London! "Besides it is our opinion that the three great cities of which this is the center,can easily consume all the prime pears raised in California,and can also pay a fair price for them.As for the cost of transportation from California to New York,rates will have come down if they are too high.John Bull must either be satisfied with his own fruit or pay American prices for ours." Love's Opportunity When a pair of red lips are upturned to your eyes With no one to go ask about it. Do you pray for endurance to let them alone? Well,maybe you do—but I doubt it. When a sly little hand you are permitted to seize, less than $2,oooo for each of the 25,oooo payers referred to,或$5O,oooo,ooo in the aggregate.A tax of 2 per cent on$5O,oooo,ooo is$1,ooo,ooo. Philip D. Armour,$25,oooo,ooo; L.Z. Leiter,$2OООО;the McCormick,Cyrus H.,Mrs.Cyrus H.H,and Leander,$23,OOОО;S.W.Hurley,$25,ОООО;Nelson Morris,$15,ОООО;Potter Palmer,$1OОООО;s.A.Kent,$1OОООО;Laffins,Matthew,Lyourgus和George,$7,ОООО;George M.Pullman.Charles T.YerkesJames Morganeach$5,ОООО;A.M.Billings,Henry Botaford,R.R.Cable,$4,ОООО,and Joseph Medill,S.M.Nickerson Otto Young,Byron L.Smith,A.A.Munger,Gebhard Foreman,COLUMBUSR.Cummings.Charles Counselman,SilasB.Cobb,D.K.Pearson,cach$3OOOO. The above small group of twenty-nine persons is popularly supposed to have something like $232,oooo,ooo to the right side of its account.The list of two millionaires numbers forty-one,representing $82,oooo,ooo.In the group of plain,every-day millionaires—men who are supposed to be worth$1,ooo,ooo or near it—137 names are given Chicago's capitalists will give up a total of$2,3oooo,ooo as a result of the income tax. California Pears in New York The New York Sun says editorially: "When the English got a taste of California pears last month,they liked them,but of course complained that they were too dear That is the English way They say they are ready to take shiploads of them every week of the season,if they can get them cheap enough.In regard to the price,我们 have made inquiry of the owner of a great fruit ranch in California and he says that pear growers lost money upon the consignment,这 was sent to London last August." "Pears for which growers get less than 5O cents a box in California cannot be sold in Europe for less than three times that price on accountof the heavy cost of transportation across the continent and then across the Atlantic." The transportation companies,他 writes us,'are the only parties who are sure of any profit from California fruits.' This being the case,它 must be impossible for the English to buy superior California products as cheaply as they can buy an interior English product。They must either pay a price that will be profitable to California ranch owners or go without the fruit.Under the circumstances what is the sense of transporting pears all the way from San Francisco to London! "Besides it is our opinion that the three great cities of which this is the center,能 easily consume allthe prime pears raised in California,and can also paya fair price for them.As forthe costof transportationfromCaliforniatoNewYork,rateswillhavecomedowniftheyaretoohigh.John Bullmusteitherbe satisfiedwithhisownfruitorpayAmericanpricesforours." Love's Opportunity When a pair of red lips are upturned to your eyes With no one to go ask about it. Do you pray for endurance to let them alone? Well,我要你do一但I doubt它。 When a sly little hand you are permitted to seize, less than $2,oooo for each ofthe 25,oooo payers referred to,或$5O,oooo,ooo inthe aggregate.A taxof 2 per cent on$5O,oooa oo是$1,ooo,ooo. Philip D. Armour,$25,oooa oo;L.Z. Leiter,$2O ОООО;the McCormick,Cyrus H.,Mrs.Cyrus H.H,and Leander,$23,OO ОООО;S.W.Hurley,$25 ООООО;Nelson Morris,$15 ООООО;Potter Palmer,$1O ООООО;s.A.Kent,$1O ООООО;Laffins,Matthew,Lyourgus和George,$7,ОООО;George M.Pullman.Charles T.YerkesJames Morganeach$5,ООOA oo;A.M.Billings,Henry Botaford,R.R.Cable,$4,ООOA,and Joseph Medill,S.M.Nickerson Otto Young,Byron L.Smith,A.A.Munger,Gebhard Foreman,COLUMBUSR.Cummings.Charles Counselman,SilasB.Cobb,D.K.Pearson,cach$3OOOO. The above small group of twenty-nine persons is popularly supposed to have something like $232,oooa oo.totherightsideofitsaccount.Thelistoftwo millionairesnumbersforty-one,theprimepearsraisedinCalifornia,andcanalsopaya fairpriceforthem.AsforthecostoftransportationfromCaliforniatoNewYork,rateswillhavecomedowniftheyaretoohigh.John Bullmusteitherbe satisfiedwithhisownfruitorpayAmericanpricesforours." Love's Opportunity When a pair of red lips are upturned to your eyes With no one to go ask about it. Do you pray for endurance to let them alone? Well,我要你do一但I doubt它。 When a sly little hand you are permitted to seize, less than $2,oooa for eachofthe 25,oooa payers referred to,或$5O,oa oo是$1,ooo、ooo. Philip D. Armour,$25,oa oo;L.Z. Leiter,$2O ОООО;the McCormick,Cyrus H.,Mrs.Cyrus H.H,and Leander,$23,OO ОООО;s.A.Kent,$1O ООООО;Potter Palmer,$1O ООООО;s.A.Kent,$1O ООООО;Laffins,Matthew,Lyourgus和George,$7,ООOA;George M.Pullman.Charles T.YerkesJames Morganeach$5,oa oo;A.M.Billings,Henry Botaford,R.R.Cable,$4,OA.OOA,and Joseph Medill,S.M.Nickerson Otto Young,Byron L.Smith,A.A.Munger,Gebhard Foreman,COLUMBUSR.Cummings.Charles Counselman,SilasB.Cobb,D.K.Pearson,cach$3OOOO. The above small group of twenty-nine persons is popularly supposed to have something like $232,oaoa oo.totherightsideofitsaccount.Thelistoftwo millionairesnumbersforty-one,theprimepearsraisedinCalifornia,andcanalsopaya fairpriceforthem.AsforthecostoftransportationfromCaliforniatoNewYork,rateswillhavecomedowniftheyaretoohigh.John Bullmusteitherbe satisfiedwithhisownfruitorpayAmericanpricesforours." Love's Opportunity When a pair of red lips are upturned to your eyes With no one to go ask about it. Do you pray for endurance to let them alone? Well,我要你do一但I doubt它。 When a sly little hand you are permitted to seize, less than $2.oaoa for eachofthe 25.oaoa payers referred to,或$5O.oa oo是$1.ooo、ooo. Philip D. Armour,$25.oa oo;L.Z. Leiter,$2O ОООО;the McCormick,Cyrus H.,Mrs.Cyrus H.H,and Leander,$23.OO ОООО;s.A.Kent,$1O ООООО;Potter Palmer,$1O ООООО;s.A.Kent,$1O ООООо;Laffins,Matthew,Lyourgus和George,$7.ООOA;George M.Pullman.Charles T.YerkesJames Morganeach$5.oa oo;A.M.Billings,Henry Botaford,R.R.Cable,$4.OA.OOA,and Joseph Medill,S.M.Nickerson Otto Young,Byron L.Smith,A.A.Munger,Gebhard Foreman,COLUMBUSR.Cummings.Charles Counselman,SilasB.Cobb,D.K.Pearson,cach$3OOOO. The above small group of twenty-nine persons is popularly supposed to have something like $232.oaoa oo.totherightsideofitsaccount.Thelistoftwo millionairesnumbersforty-one,theprimepearsraisedinCalifornia,andcanalsopaya fairpriceforthem.AsforthecostoftransportationfromCaliforniatoNewYork,rateswillhavecomedowniftheyaretoohigh.John Bullmusteitherbe satisfiedwithhisownfruitorpayAmericanpricesforours." Love's Opportunity When a pair of red lips are upturned to your eyes With no one to go ask about it. Do you pray for endurance to let them alone? Well,我要你do一但I doubt它。 When a sly little hand you are permitted to seize, less than $2.oaoa for eachofthe 25.oaoa payers referred to,或$5O.oa oo是$1.fooo、fooo. Philip D. Armour,$25.oa oo;L.Z. Leiter,$2O ОООО;the McCormick,Cyrus H.,Mrs.Cyrus H.H,and Leander,$23.OO ОООО;s.A.Kent,$1O ООООо;Potter Palmer,$1O ООООо;s.A.Kent,$1O ОООоо;Laffins,Matthew,Lyourgus和George,$7.ООOA;George M.Pullman.Charles T.YerkesJames Morganeach$5.oa oo;A.M.Billings,Henry Botaford,R.R.Cable,$4.OA.OOA,and Joseph Medill,S.M.Nickerson Otto Young,Byron L.Smith,A.A.Munger,Gebhard Foreman,COLUMBUSR.Cummings.Charles Counselman,SilasB.Cobb,D.K.Pearson,cach$3OOOO. The above small group of twenty-nine persons is popularly supposed to have something like $232.oaoa oo.totherightsideofitsaccount.Thelistoftwo millionairesnumbersforty-one,theprimepearsraisedinCalifornia,andcanalsopaya fairpriceforthem.AsforthecostoftransportationfromCaliforniatoNewYork,rateswillhavecomedowniftheyaretoohigh.John Bullmusteitherbe satisfiedwithhisownfruitorpayAmericanpricesforours." Love's Opportunity When a pair of red lips are upturned to your eyes With no one to go ask about it. Do you pray for endurance to let them alone? Well,我要你do一但I doubt它。 When a sly little hand you are permitted to seize, less than $2.oaoa for eachofthe 25.oaoa payers referred to,或$5O.oa oo是$1.fooo、fooo. Philip D. Armour,$25.oa oo;L.Z. Leiter,$2O ОООО;the McCormick,Cyrus H.,Mrs.Cyrus H.H,and Leander,$23.OO ОООО;s.A.Kent,$1O ОООоо;Potter Palmer,$1O ОООоо;s.A.Kent,$1O ОООоо;Laffins,Matthew,Lyourgus和George,$7.ООOA;George M.Pullman.Charles T.YerkesJames Morganeach$5.oa oo;A.M.Billings,Henry Botaford,R.R.Cable,$4.OA.OOA,and Joseph Medill,S.M.Nickerson Otto Young,Byron L.Smith,A.A.Munger,Gebhard Foreman,COLUMBUSR.Cummings.Charles Counselman,SilasB.Cobb,D.K.Pearson,cach$3OOOO. The above small group of twenty-nine persons is popularly supposed to have something like $232.oaoa oo.totherightsideofitsaccount.Thelistoftwo millionairesnumbersforty-one,theprimepearsraisedinCalifornia,andcanalsopaya fairpriceforthem.AsforthecostoftransportationfromCaliforniatoNewYork,rateswillhavecomedowniftheyaretoohigh.John Bullmusteitherbe satisfiedwithhisownfruitorpayAmericanpricesforours." Love's Opportunity When a pair of red lips are upturned to your eyes With no one to go ask about it. Do you pray for endurance to let them alone? Well,我要你do一但I doubt它。 When a sly little hand you are permitted to seize, less than $2.oaoa for eachofthe 25.oaoa payers referred到,或$5O.oa oo是$1.fooo、fooo. Philip D. Armour',$25.oa oo;L.Z. Leiter,$2O ОООО;the McCormick,Cyrus H.,Mrs.Cyrus H.H,and Leander,$23.OO ОООО;s.A.Kent,$1O ОООоо;Potter Palmer,$1O ОООоо;s.A.Kent,$1O ОООоо;Laffins,Matthew,Lyourgus和George,$7.ООOA;George M.Pullman.Charles T.YerkesJames Morganeach$5.oa oo;A.M.Billings,Henry Botaford,R.R.Cable,$4.OA.OOA,and Joseph Medill,S.M.Nickerson Otto Young,Byron L.Smith,A.A.Munger,Gebhard Foreman,COLUMBUSR.Cummings.Charles Counselman,SilasB.Cobb,D.K.Pearson,cach$3OOOO. The above small group of twenty-nine persons is popularly supposed to have something like $232.oaoa oo.totherightsideofitsaccount.Thelistoftwo millionairesnumbersforty-one,theprimepearsraisedinCalifornia,andcanalsopaya fairpriceforthem.AsforthecostoftransportationfromCaliforniatoNewYork,rateswillhavecomedowniftheyaretoohigh.John Bullmusteitherbe satisfiedwithhisownfruitorpayAmericanpricesforours." Love's Opportunity When a pair of red lips are upturned to your eyes With no one to go ask about it. Do you pray for endurance to let them alone? Well,我要你do一但I doubt它。 When a sylittle hand you are permitted to seize, less than $2.oaoa for eachofthe 25.oaoa payers referred到,或$5O.oa oo是$1.fooo、fooo. Philip D. Armour',$25.oa oo;L.Z. Leiter,$2O ОООО;the McCormick,Cyrus H.,Mrs.Cyrus H.H,and Leander,$23.OO ОООО;s.A.Kent:$1 Francisco to London: Besides, it is our opinion that the three great cities of which this is the center, can easily consume all the prime poars raised in California, and can also pay a fair price for them. As for the cost of transportation from California to New York, rates will have come down if they are too high. John Bull must either be satisfied with his own fruit or pay American prices for ours. Love's Opportunity. When a pair of red lips are upturned to your eyes, With no one to goosip about it. Do you pray for endurance to let them alone? Well, you do but I doubt it. When a sly little hand you are permitted to seize, With a velvety softness about it. Do you think you can drop it with never a squigze? Well, maybe you do but I doubt it. When a tapering waist is in reach of your arm, With a wonderful plumpness about it. Do you argue the point twixt the good and the harm? Well, maybe you do but I doubt it. And if by these tricks you should capture a heart, With a womanly softness about it. Will you guard it and keep it, and act the good part? Well, maybe you will but I doubt it. The Chinese Defeat. The defeat of the Chinese army in North Korea was crushing. It has very few parallels in history. There have been heavier losses in battle, but few instances where they were quite so one-sided. It is common remark that the enormous population of China renders the loss of a single army a matter of small importance. But this is an error, for the population from which China can draw an army is not nearly so large as is supposed. Of her 400,000,000 people there is not an aggregate of 30,000,000 from which soldiers can be called who would make even food for powder. From the whole of her great territory lying along foreign Asian borders, it is doubtful if China could recruit twenty regiments of men fit to bear arms against Japan. Out of almost any of the white races soldiers can be produced of fairly good quality after a weeks' training. It is testified by all American and European officers who have attempted the task, that a full year of hard work is essential to warp the coolie, or even the better class of Chinese, into soldiers fit to cope with trained armies. More numbers do not count for much in a contest where skill and enthusiasm are on one side, and ignorance of arms and indifference are characteristic of the larger force. The Lost Senegal. SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 20—The big British ship Senegal is at the bottom of the Pacific, somewhere in lat. 30.17 deg N., long. 119.08 W., for it was in about that locality that C. Olson, a sailor on the schooner Mary C. Rus, saw her red light go out one stormy night at sea. The Senegal was bound from San Diego to Tacoma, with loose sand for ballast. She was a large iron ship of the latest design, and was considered one of the best in the English merchant marine service. The captain was socom. Voted themselves for a time to the transports, which had not time to get out of range. It is believed several of the transports were sunk, including one from which the troops had not been landed. It is estimated that the total Chinese loss in killed and wounded is 1,500, and that the Japanese lost 1,000 killed and wounded. LONDON, Sept. 24—A dispatch from Tien Tsin says that from Chinese officers with dispatches, who have arrived there, and later messages from Port Arthur, a full narrative of the naval battle of Yalu is obtained. Admiral Ling, commanding the Chinese northern squadron, was instructed by the Council of War to convey six transports and to land the troops, guns and stores at Yu-Chow, from which base China intended to renew operations in Corea. They arrived at the entrance of the Yala river early on Monday morning and the disembarkation proceeded rapidly, the transports steaming into the river while the warships anchored outside. At 11 o'clock, smoke on the horizon indicated the approach of a large flotilla. The situation was grasped immediately, and Admiral Ling gave orders for the weighing of anchors and the placing of ships in battle array. His position was a difficult one. If he remained near the shore his movements would be cramped, and if he steamed out for sea-room he ran the risk of a Japanese torpedo-boat running among his transports. He chose the lesser of the two evils and formed a fighting line to guard the catuary in single column. The Japanese fleet approached at full speed within range. Then they advanced in columns, forming into two lines. Nine ironclad cruisers formed the fighting line, while three gunboats and five torpedo boats formed the second line. Firing commenced forthwith. The guns on both sides were worked uneasingly at long range and the hits were infrequent. The Japanese crucet close and the gunners made better progress. The Ting-Yuen was the first to suffer a shell bursting in her battery. From the outset, the Japanese directed a powerful fire upon the Chinese battleships Chen-Yuen and Ting-Yuen. For ninety minutes a terrific cannonade was continued. The result was that one Japanese cruiser, reported to have been the Saiko, was placed out of action. One Chinese officer declares he saw her sink. Meantime, the two big guns on the Chen-Yuen were disabled, and the other ships showed signs of damage. Both fleets were under easy steam, the Japanese maneuvering, while the Chinese held their original positions. Suddenly two of the Japanese cruisers sought to break through the Chinese line on the starboard side. Three torpedo-boats swiftly pursued them. The Chen-Yuen and Ching-Yuen went at full speed astern to avoid a catastrophe. The boats fired their torpedoes, but the nets about the Japanese cruisers stopped them. Meantime other guns were brought to bear upon the cruisers, which are believed to have been the Akitsushima and the Yoshimo. They were beaten back by the weight of metal in an almost helpless state; and Chinese officers declare both sank. The Chinese had fared little better, for the Ching-Yuen had been several times shelled and pierced upon the water-line, while the Chen-Yuen had stranded while trying to evade the Japanese torpedo-boats. All attempts to float her had been frustrated by the fire directed against her. Finally she burst into flames from shells. The big voted themselves for a time to the transports, which had not time to get out of range. It is believed several of the transports were sunk, including one from which the troops had not been landed. It is estimated that the total Chinese loss in killed and wounded is 1,500, and that the Japanese lost 1,000 killed and wounded. London, Sept. 24—A dispatch from Tien Tsin says that from Chinese officers with dispatches, who have arrived there, and later messages from Port Arthur, a full narrative of the naval battle of Yalu is obtained. Admiral Ling, commanding the Chinese northern squadron, was instructed by the Council of War to convoy six transports and to land the troops, guns and stores at Yu-Chow, from which base China intended to renew operations in Corea. They arrived at the entrance of the Yala river early on Monday morning and the disembarkation proceeded rapidly, the transports steaming into river while the warships anchored outside. At 11 o'clock, smoke on the horizon indicated the approach of a large flotilla. The situation was grasped immediately, and Admiral Ling gave orders for the weighing of anchors and the placing of ships in battle array. His position was a difficult one. If he remained near the shore his movements would be cramped, and if he steamed out for sea-room he ran the risk of a Japanese torpedo-boat running among his transports. He chose the lesser of the two evils and formed a fighting line to guard the catuary in single column. The Japanese fleet approached at full speed within range. Then they advanced in columns, forming into two lines. Nine ironclad cruisers formed the fighting line while three gunboats and five torpedo boats formed the second line. Firing commenced forthwith. The guns on both sides were worked uneasingly at long range and the hits were infrequent. The Japanese crucet close and the gunners made better progress. The Ting-Yuen was the first to suffer a shell bursting in her battery. From the outset, the Japanese directed a powerful fire upon the Chinese battleships Chen-Yuen and Ting-Yuen. For ninety minutes a terrific cannonade was continued. The result was that one Japanese cruiser, reported to have been the Saiko, was placed out of action. One Chinese officer declares he saw her sink. Meantime, the two big guns on the Chen-Yuen were disabled, and the other ships showed signs of damage. Both fleets were under easy steam, the Japanese maneuvering, while the Chinese held their original positions. Suddenly two of the Japanese cruisers sought to break through the Chinese line on the starboard side. Three torpedo-boats swiftly pursued them. The Chen-Yuen and Ching-Yuen went at full speed astern to avoid a catastrophe. The boats fired their torpedoes, but the nets about the Japanese cruisers stopped them. Meantime other guns were brought to bear uponthe cruisers, which are believed to have beenthe Akitsushima andthe Yoshimo.Theywerebeatenbackbytheweightofmetalinanhelplessstate,andChineseofficersdeclarebothsank. The Chinese had fared little better, fortheChing-Yuenhadbeenseveraltimes shelledand pierceduponthewater-linewhiletheChenYuenhadstrandedwhiletryingtoevadetheJapanesetorpedo-boata.Allattemptstofloatherhadbeenfrustratedbythefiredirectedagainsther.Finallysheburstintoflamesfromshells.ThebigpeopleboughtsomepersonsthatareaboutcommonwordstakethelearninghowtopronounceBienniscourelseconculsedwhentheybecausimprisonenceChopinandbecentlytheybrokeoutwiththoughtheweightofauthoritKnowlesaloneallowsit.Wizesonlyonepronunciation,andhissing"sa."Woreater,sound,butnotthe"aw." useofthesoundsof"oa"isThosewhohavethecourageiaiandorthemodifiedItalianunlawfully.asincannettandproper soundsof"o"particledogandsomeotherwords.nored.Thecommonusagecaseoftheterminal"two"inchemicals.asmorphine.chailine.benzine,cotinamideasthoughthe"v."Itisomorphin.notmore guns on the Chang Yuen were disabled, but she remained in the fighting line, working her smaller and machine-guns. The Tai-Yuen retired to beyond the lines and the Kiang-Yuen was in a terrible plight. A shell burst through her decks and set fire to her, and with the flames bursting from her she slowly settled. A score of times the Japanese sought to break through the Chinese line, but until the last the Chinese guns were able to stop them, and the Japanese never reached the transports. The Chinese vessels gave way before the attacks, and while doing so the Yang-Woi stranded stern first. Her fate was similar to that of the Chen-Yuen. The Chi-Yuen was nothing more than a wallowing wreck when struck by a torpedo and she sank with all on board. The scene was now appalling. The guns on several of the ships on both sides were disabled and the great ships rolled heavily. The streams of green water pouring from most of them showed the steam pumps were working inconsistently, and testified to the extent of the damage inflicted. Some of the Chinese ships had exhausted their ammunition during the last hours of the fighting. More than one of the Japanese vessels seemed to be on the point of foundering. It was not until dark, however, that the firing ceased and the battered Japanese fleet departed in double-line formation. Toward morning the remnants of the Chinese fleet, with six transports, started for Port Arthur, which was safely reached. The damage to the Chinese ships is so extensive that it can scarcely be repaired before winter. The officers say that both sides showed the most furious courage. The Czar of the Russians is Insane. Sr. Petersburg, Sept. 24. — The throne of Russia presents the remarkable spectacle of a crazy monarch, Alexander III, forced to go into retreat in a castle in a wilderness, and there be placed under the sole care of an eccentric physician as mad as himself. Concident with this displeasant denouement in the reign of the Czar, is the startling information that the succession to the throne may not pass to the Czar's son, as would seem to be the natural result, but that it will go to the Empress Marie, the Czar's wife. The Czar's son, the Czarowitz, who is necessarily the heir presumptive, is the subSNAP SHOTS AT THE NEWS. While Mrs. M. J. Grubb was helping her husband prepare a sheep cleaning mixture near Ukhane one day last week her clothing took fire, and before the flames could be extinguished she was burned to death. Her husband was also badly burned in his endeavors to save her. C. T. Buchanan and T. C. Gallagher, railroad men who were found guilty by the Federal Grand Jury of obstructing the United States mails in Los Angeles in June last, by endeavoring to persuade a fireman to fore-sake his engine, were sentenced by Judge Ross on Monday to eighteen months in the county jail and to pay a fine each of $1,000. L. L. Liberman, who ran a fraudulent employment bureau in San Francisco, was fines $500 and sentenced to six months' imprisonment for defrauding B. F. Littlejohn out of $1. Littlejohn applied to his agency for work and on payment of $1 was directed to go to Monterey, where he could get work on the railroad. He found the railroad had no dealings with Liberman, and accordingly prosecuted him. A large hanging lamp in the choir alcove in the Prebyterian church at Orange fell Saturday night shortly after the members went home from choir practice and so satured the carpets that on Sunday morning several of the ladies were rendered ill by the scent of the oil. Only three ladies had the courage to appear in their places in the evening, and one of them was overcome and had to retire before the end of the service. Capt. James Carriock of the British ship Ellisland, reports the death of an ordinary seaman on July 25th, on the voyage from Cardiff to San Diego. The seaman, whose name was W. Ulen, a German 19 years old, was sent aloft on July 21st to furl up the main top gallant sail, and he fell from the port yard arm to the main deck, a distance of 90 feet. He was unconscious when picked up but died four days later, being buried at sea. The residence of Mrs. Mary J. Platt, five miles south of Temecula, was entirely consumed by 3rd late last Thursday night, and Mrs. Platt perished in the flames. The news was brought to Temecula by an Indian, but he could give no coherent story of the accident. Foul play, however, is suspected, and the authorities are investigating the matter. Mrs. Platt had been a teacher at the reservation for a long time, and was genreaching to the fold, a close or loose waist as she wearer may prefer, and cloth leggins to match the trousers. It is the intention of the Topeka women to organize into relief squads so that a number of them may be on the streets all day, and thus the community will become familiar with the reform. John G. Jury of San Jose, Populist and Prohibition nominee for Justice of the Peace, commenced suit for damages against the Monitor Publishing Company for damages alleged to have been sustained by reason of an article in the Monitor, charging him with being a member of the A. P. A., and as such being guilty of the crime of treason. Jury is not a member, he says, of the society. The suit has caused great excitement. Land is caving in toward the center of the earth in the vicinity of the junction of Harvey, Butler and Marion counties, in Kansas. Great excitement prevails among people, and many of them are getting away. The disasters are of the most unaccountable origin, and the State Geologist has been summoned to investigate the disturbances of the earth formations. There was no shock felt when the ground caved in bearing any resemblance to an earthquake. John Randolph, a miner in Skelly's Gulch, near Marysville, Mont., was tortured one day last week by two highwaymen, who bound and gagged him and ransacked his cabin for treasure that he did not have. When he protested that he had no money or gold dust in the house, they heated an iron poker red hot and drew it across his feet and leg, burning him frightfully. They then thrust the hot iron into the right ear causing the most awful pain. Randolph was then chloroformed and his cabin ransacked, but no treasure was found. Though the men were masked, Randolph recognized one of them as a man he had provided with food and shelter a few days previously. On September 1 lease on the building occupied by the Odd Follows and several other secret organizations at Fresno expired, and the landlord refused to renew the lease. The Odd Follows claimed privilege of renewal and paid the rent into the bank in the landlord's name, and continued in possession of the building, until one night last week, the landlord changed the lock and sat in front of the door, where he soon fell asleep. The Odd Follows gained entrance through a transom and removed their paraphrase from the eyes of the curious. The landlord served an injunction to keep them out of the building, and now the Odd Follows will ST. PETERSBURG, Sept. 24.—The throne of Russia presents the remarkable spectacle of a crazy monarch, Alexander III, forced to go into retreat in a cattle in a wilderness, and there be placed under the sole care of an eccentric physician as mad as himself. Concident with this deplorable denouement in the reign of the Czar, is the startling information that the succession to the throne may not pass to the Czar's son, as would seem to be the natural result, but that it will go to the Empress Marie, the Czar's wife. The Czar's son, the Czarowitz, who is necessarily the heir presumptive, is the subject of grave doubts as to his mental abilities and physical standing, and the prevailing impression in Russia is that it would be fool-hardy to place on the throne a ruler who is not only physically and mentally unfit, but whose chances of long life are extremely slim. That he will abdicate in favor of his mother, the consent of Germany, Austria and Great Britain having first been obtained, is the common belief. In fact, it is his imperative duty in case the crown is offered to him. The Czar has been ailing from a third attack of influenza, misnamed "mild catarrh" by the Court Circuler, for some time. His illness made him morose and suspicious, fear of assassination deterred him from taking physical exercise, with the result that he has grown enormously in bulk ever since his return from Denmark last fall. The Peterhorn plot of August 6, when the troika of the Grand Dachess Nema and her husband, Alex Michailovitch, was wrecked by dynamite, realized Alexander's worst prehensions of unilateral evil, and his nervousness became intolerable. The doctors diagnosed his case as Bright's disease, accompanied by dropy. To alleviate the patient's associating pain they dosed him with narcotics, and one fine morning recently, when Alexander woke from rest induced by the opiates, he was a raving maniac. His medicine he believed was a species of stow poison, and that his physicians and even his relatives were in league with his enemies. It was then that the Czarina, his wife, called in the eccentric Moscow savant, Prof. Sacharjin, who holds Russia's monarch under complete subjection, and whose strange and unheard of remedies are the wonder and ridicule of the medical world of Europe. It was this same quack doctor under whose treatment the Czar once before was saved from the grave and naturally in his skill the raving monarch of all the Russians has perfect confidence. Sacharjin was recognized instantly by the sick man, who held Russia's monarch under complete subjection, and whose strange and unheard of remedies are the wonder and ridicule of the medical world of Europe. It was this same quack doctor under whose treatment the Czar once before was saved from the grave and naturally in his skill the raving monarch of all the Russians has perfect confidence. Sacharjin then ordered the Czar to be isolated far from the scene of all his fears and hallucinations. A chalet in Beloweschki forest—a veritable wilderness, enlivened only by divisions of gen d'armes of Russia—was made ready and thither his majesty was transported in a hospital car. To keep the Czar's true condition secret as possible, the continental papers in the pay of M. DeGiers, who controls journals in Berlin, Paris, Brussels and Vienna, are publishing misleading paragraphs day after day announcing the Russian Emperor's proposed attendance at this or that function or that he has issued ukases ordering certain changes in the ad- St. Petersburg, Sept. 24.—The throne of Russia presents the remarkable spectacle of a crazy monarch, Alexander III, forced to go into retreat in a cattle in a wilderness, and there be placed under the sole care of an eccentric physician as mad as himself. Concident with this deplorable denouement in the reign of the Czar, is the startling information that the succession to the throne may not pass to the Czar's son, as would seem to be the natural result, but that it will go to the Empress Marie, the Czar's wife. The Czar's son, the Czarowitz, who is necessarily the heir presumptive, is the subject of grave doubts as to his mental abilities and physical standing, and the prevailing impression in Russia is that it would be fool-hardy to place on the throne a ruler who is not only physically and mentually unfit, but whose chances of long life are extremely slim. That he will abdicate in favor of his mother, the consent of Germany, Austria and Great Britain having first been obtained, is the common belief. In fact, it is his imperative duty in case the crown is offered to him. The Czar has been ailing from a third attack of influenza, misnamed "mild catarrh" by the Court Circuler, for some time. His illness made him morose and suspicious, fear of assassination deterred him from taking physical exercise, with the result that he has grown enormously in bulk ever since his return from Denmark last fall. The Peterhorn plot of August 6, when the troika of the Grand Dachess Nema and her husband, Alex Michailovitch, was wrecked by dynamite, realized Alexander's worst prehensions of unilateral evil, and his nervousness became intolerable. The doctors diagnosed his case as Bright's disease, accompanied by dropy. To alleviate the patient's associating pain they dosed him with narcotics, and one fine morning recently, when Alexander woke from rest induced by the opiates, he was a raving maniac. His medicine he believed was a species of stow poison, and that his physicians and even his relatives were in league with his enemies. It was then that the Czarina, his wife, called in the eccentric Moscow savant. Prof. Sacharjin, who holds Russia's monarch under complete subjection, and whose strange and unheard of remedies are the wonder and ridicule of the medical world of Europe. It was this same quack doctor under whose treatment the Czar once before was saved from the grave and naturally in his skill the raving monarch of all the Russians has perfect confidence. Sacharjin was recognized instantly by the sick man, who held Russia's monarch under complete subjection, and whose strange and unheard of remedies are the wonder and ridicule of the medical world of Europe. It was this same quack doctor under whose treatment the Czar once before was saved from the grave and naturally in his skill the raving monarch of all the Russians has perfect confidence. Sacharjin was recognized instantly by the sick man, who held Russia's monarch under complete subjection, and whose strange and unheard of remedies are the wonder and ridicule of the medical world of Europe. It was this same quack doctor under whose treatment the Czar once before was saved from the grave and naturally in his skill the raving monarch of allthe Russians has perfect confidence. Sacharjin was recognized instantly by the sick man, who held Russia's monarch under complete subjection, and whose strange and unheard of remedies are the wonder and ridicule of the medical world of Europe. It was this same quack doctor under whose treatmentthe Czar once before was saved fromthegraveandnaturallyinhisskilltheravingmonarchofalltheRussianshasperfectconfidence. St. Petersburg, Sept. 24.—The throne of Russia presents the remarkable spectacle of a crazy monarch, Alexander III, forced to go into retreat in a cattle in a wilderness,and there be placed under the sole care of an eccentric physician as mad as himself. Concident with this deplorable denouement in the reign of the Czar, is the startling information that the succession to the throne may not pass to the Czar's son,as would seem to be the natural result,但that it will go totheEmpressMarie,theCzar'swife. The Czar has been ailing from a third attack of influenza,misnamed"mild catarrh"bythe Court Circuler,forsome time.His illness made him morose and suspicious,fearofassassinationdeterminedhimfromtakingphysicalexercise,withtheresultthathehasgrownenormouslyinbulkeversincehisreturnfromDenmarklastfall. ThePeterhornplotofAugust6,whenthetroikaoftheGrandDachessNemaandherhusband,AlexMichailovitchwaswreckedbydynamicrealizedAlexander'sworstprehensionsofunilateralevil,andhisnervousnessbecameintolerable.ThedoctorsdiagnosedhiscaseasBright'sdisease,cocompanydiedbydropy.Toalleviatethepatientassociatingpainstheydosedhimwithnarcitis,andone finemonthagowithoutwitnesses,andonc医师Aquiresbreaddownupbya greatblackeagleandcarriedawayfarbeyondhumanreach.Treeaglesdriven northfromMexicoby stormshadbeenseeninthelocalityforseveraldays.Apartfromlossofblood,Clemens drewhisknifeandslashingcontentbeginsincarnert.AftercuttingeachotherforfullyfifteenminutesbothfellinthegrassinadyingconditionTheywerefoundlaterandremovedto theirhome.Neithercanlivethe bodiesofbothareliterallycoveredwithstubsandcuts. TheMilesPlaitingandManufacturingCompanyofLouisiana,eugagedintheplantingandgrowingofsugarcane.appliedtoJudgeMcComasintheDistrictSupremeCourtatWashingtonfordamandusagainsttheSecretaryofTheTreasuryandCommissionerOfInternalRevenuetocmpel themtocontinuetheinspectionofsugarplantationsrequiredbytheMcKinleysugarbountylaw.JudgeMcComasdirectedthatSecretaryCarlieshowcausedonOctober4whymandamdusshouldnotissueThisisthefirststepinthematteroftheretentionofthesugarbounty. "King"McManus,thenotoriousSanFranciscofighter,saloon-keeperandpolitician,hasagainedescapedtheclutchesoflawHewaschargedwithdisturbingthepeace,becausewhenpritesrefusedtosayhighmassoverthebodyofhisbrotherwhowaskilledinadrunkenrowbyCharlesSweeey,theballplayer,thetreatedthelifeofFatherGrayandthrewcurbstonesthroughthewindowofSt.Patrick'schurch.Noneofthepolicejudgesseemedanxioustotrythecase,andthey triedtoshiftittoajusticeofthepeace.Theschemefailedandthecasewas finallycalledbeforeJudgeCampbell.Nooneappearedprosecutethekingandthejudgedismisedthecase.ManypeoplewillrememberCol.J.HamiltonHoge,howappointedConsultoAmoyChina,ayearagobyPresidentClevelandandgotasfarasSanFranciscoonhiswaywhen,becauseofcertainstoriescircularoftothebankonthebuildingoccupiedrenewalandpaidrentintothebankinthelandlord'sname,andcontinuedinpossessionofthebuilding,t Untilonenightlastweek,thelandlordchangedthelockandsatintfrontofthedoorwherehesoonfallesleep.OddFellowsgainedentrancethroughatransomandremoved theirparaphroralismfromtheeyesofthecurious.Thelandlordservedaninjunctiontokeepthemoutofthebuilding,andnowtheOddFellowswillcarrythecaseinto court.Meanswillbe keptonshortrations. AtmidnightMondayA.H.Susaskid,kownowsa triangular pieceof landatthejunctionofFirst,andSecondstreetsoppositeTheSecond-streetPark,在LosAngelesstrucka greatrunof luckinshapeoftheoilmenandcertainexpertswhovery sagelyannouncedthatno oilcouldbefoundinthatlocality.TheflowofgasfromthewollistheHeaviestthathasyetbeestruckinSouthernCaliforniaindicatesthatthereisastronggasbeltunderlyingthatsectionofthecity. Dr.S.McIntosh,thecorespondinaisensationaldivorce suit,intwhichJ.T.JenkinsofSheriff Ark.,is plaintiff,sawbyJenkinsatPineBluff Ark.,whilestanding amonga crowdofpeople,and almostinstantly killed.Jenkinssuedhis wifefordivorceonthegroundsofadulterywithMcIntoshwhoisalsomarried.Hiswifeatathimefileldsuitedfitfor83000damagesagainstP.N.Vaughn,awealthplanterandmerchant;foralanderandforalionatingher-husband'saffects,d allegingthatbyVaughnslibulousremarksaboutherrelationswithMcIntoshwhich had beenonlyofaneighborlycharacterandthoseoffamilyphysicianonhispart,hershusbandbecamecursedfromheranddeserthedenialwouldhavegithimelfortosuretheresidentativewas discovereddowninArkanasconsequentlypassengerfromBrazilwasallowedtogofree.Thepeoplewhohadsentforhimdeclinedtopaytheexpenseofthetrip,andTheAmericanMinisteristhereforeoutofpockettothatextent unlessCongresschoosesto reimbursehimforScoretaryGreshamannounces that thereis noauthoritytopaythebilloutoftheStatedepartmentfund. Why Don't You Pronounce Correctly? Why should so many persons say spontaneity instead of spontaneity? There is no excuse for saying ap-priori for a pricot, or eck-quable for equivale, or Erin for E-rin, or asadidity for asafetida, or Ven-zu-oo-la for Ven-e-zu-ala, or Ado-nis (short o) for Ado-nis (long o), or Dia-na (long a), or matrann or patrion, and so on. It is just as easy to accent the last syllable as the first in "protense." Some persons call bomb "boom" instead of "bum," because the spelling seems to warrant it, but when they call tedious "tejus" they have no such apparent warrant. In the West and South the "i" in isolate is made long and nearly everywhere educated persons say truck-u-lent for true u-lent, a-menable for a-meen-able, lever-for lee-ver, and give the sound of "u" in up instead of "i" in it in such words as squirrel, stirrup and sirap. There are many words in which the accent is persistently misplaced by persons who know better. It is common to put the accent on the second syllable of peremptory instead of on the first, on the first instead of the second syllable of coquetry, on the second instead of the first syllable of exemplary, etc. Many persons place the accent on the first instead of the second syllable of inquiry, and do not give the "i" its proper length. The accent in gladiolus should be on the second syllable, with a long "i," but many place it on the third. The exasperating thing about it is that some of these persons who are so careless about common words take the utmost pains to learn how to pronounce Bongnereau, and are convulsed when they hear anybody else mispronounce Chopin and Beethoven. Recently they broke out with rawz for vase, though the weight of authority is against it. Knowles alone allows it. Webster authorizes only one pronunciation, the long "a" and hissing "s." Worcester prefers the "z" sound, but not the "aw." The improper use of the sounds of "a" is most serious. Those who have the courage to use the Italian or the modified Italian "a" often use it unlawfully, as in cain't and rawther. The proper sounds of "o," particularly in God, dog and some other words, are widely ignored. The common usage is wrong in the case of the terminal "ine" in the names of chemicals, as morphine, chlorine, iodine, aniline, benzine, etc., all of which should be pronounced as though there were no final "e." It is morphin, not morpheon. He was charged with disturbing the peace, because when priests refused to say high mass over the body of his brother, who was killed in a drunken row by Charles Sweeney, the ball player, he threatened the life of Father Gray and threw curbstones through the window of St. Patrick's church. None of the police judges seemed anxious to try the case, and they tried to shift it to a justice of the peace. The scheme failed and the case was finally called before Judge Campbell. No one appeared to prosecute the king and the judge dismissed the case. Many people will remember Col. J. Hamilton Hoge, who was appointed Consul to Amoy, China, a year ago by President Cleveland and got as far as San Francisco on his way when, because of certain stories circulated regarding his habits, Secretary Gresham revoked the appointment and recalled him back to Washington. Hoge proposes to have his revenge. He denounces the Democratic party, burning his bridges behind him, and now, as part of his program, has captured the Republican nomination for Congress from his district in Virginia. Information received in Washington leads to the belief also that he will be elected. Should this be the case he promises to make it lively for the administration whenever an opportunity presents itself. Many Democrats in the district influential among the people have announced their intention to work for him. Judge Victor Barringer, who was appointed by President Grant in 1874 Justice of the International Court of Appeals of Egypt, has returned to America after a continuous residence in Alexandria of twenty years. The appointment was for life, but he resigned the place on account of broken health and a desire to end his days in his native country. In speaking of the explorations for Egyptian antiquities which have been carried actively forward during the last five years he says that the credit belongs to the French. In ancient Memphis and Thebee results have been most gratifying. The most important recent find was in the pyramid of Medoum, where the body of the Queen of one of the Pharaohs in an almost perfect state of preservation was discovered. Her tomb was richly decorated with golden ornaments and a golden crown was found upon her head. One day last week Jim Harber and others were sitting in front of a grocery store in Tremble, Tenn., when Bob Jellow drew a sun glass from his pocket and focused it on Harber's uncovered head. The glass did more than was expected. The concentrated rays did not reach Harber's scalp, but suddenly his head was a mass of flames, caused by the ignition of the bay rum on his hair, he having just come from the barbershop. When his head caught fire he started to run, but Frank Gordon caught and held him while others extinguished the blaze with their hats and handkerchiefs. He would doubtless have killed the joker on the spot had he not been restrained by friends. Next day he brought suit against Jellow for $15,000. Physicians say that Harber's head will never again be adorned with hair. About 100 of the suffrage women of Topska, Kansas, will come in reform dress. They have entered into an agreement with Dr. Eva Hastings and Dr. Agnes Haviland, said to be reduced to writing. This agreement describes the costume. It is to consist of Turkish trompers, covered by a skirt to be his relatives, telegraphed that the man was demented and asked that he be sent home at their expense. Thompson bad the man put on board the first passenger steamer sailing for Boston, paying for the ticket out of his own pocket. When the man got to Boston it was discovered that the friend there had sent for the wrong man. Their own relative was discovered down in Arkansas, consequently the passenger from Brazil was allowed to go free. The people who had sent for him declined to pay the expense of the trip, and the American Minister is therefore out of pocket to that extent unless Congress chooses to reimburse him, for Secretary Gresham announces that there is no authority to pay the bill out of the State department fund. A telephone message came to the Police station at Sacramento reporting that Mrs. Josephine Dawson had attempted suicide by cutting her throat with a razor. Arriving at house, the officers found Mrs. Dawson living on a lounge in the parlor with a towel saturated with blood wrapped about her throat. The woman was too weak and bysterical to speak. Joseph Dawson, who let the officers into house explained to them that she had tried to kill herself but that he had prevented her. Mrs. Dawson is a powerful woman and her husband is just the opposite, and the officers did not accept his statement as true, and told him that he would have accompanied them to the station. He demurred and made an attempt to escape. But failed. An examination of the woman's wounds showed a deep cut on each side of the neck, the largest being about two inches long and half an inch deep. Later in evening Mira. Dawson's brother went to jail and reported that his sister would swear to a complaint charging her husband with assault to kill. Dawson and his wife had a quarrel in the afternoon, during which he drew a revolver and tried to shoot her. The weapon failed to go off at first attempt and they grappled; she succeeding after a short struggle in wrestling the pistol from him. He then sprang to the dresser and picking up a razor returned to the attack. Another struggle ensued in which she received the wounds in her throat. After having been blown up by dynamite on two occasions, the monument erected to the memory of Major John Andre, by Cyrus W. Field in 1885, at Tappan, N.Y., again stands upright on Andre Hill. Ever since the surrender of Cornwallis certain residents of the village of Tappan have concluded to fight over old battles and engage in new ones. Cyrus W. Field was not aware of the survival of revolutionary sentiment among the residents of the Hudson river hills when he erected the granite block to commemorate the execution of Andre; but when it was dynamited from the pedestal two weeks after it had been placed in position, he guessed the riddle. The monument was again erected, and a wicked-looking fence with sharp iron spikes placed around it; but the fiery patriots surmounted this obstacle; and the stone was again dismantled within a fortnight. From that time until last Monday night, the mists and logs Of Andre Hill searched in vain for the peak of the monument which was hidden from view in the grass and weeds. On the night mentioned there was a formal declaration of peace at Tappan, and the next daythe villagers themselves raised big stones to lie perpendicularity instead of spontaneity?