anaheim-gazette 1894-11-01
Searchable text
Anaheim
VOLUME XXV.
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 3 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 Hermite 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.
Bentz & Steadman,
Wholesale and Retail Butchers
Anaheim, Cal.
Dealers in Beef, Pork, Mutton, Veal, Sausages and Lard
Of Our Own Make.
Highest Market price Paid for Live Stock
Watch for the Announcement Next Week.
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.
A. D. Porter.
H. A. McWilliams.
PORTER & McWILLIAMS.
CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS.
Shop and Office—In Odd Fellows' 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 jobbing Business.
CENTER STREET, ANAHEIM.
BEALE&CLARK
Dealers in Beef, Pork, Mutton, Veal, Sausages and Lard
Of Our Own Make.
Highest Market price Paid for Live Stock
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)
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.
N. Hart's Place.
Removal Notice!
I beg to inform the public that I have removed my place of Business to my New Block on Center Street, East of the Postoffice.
I KEEP CONSTANTLY ON HAND THE Choicest of Liquors in Wholesale Quantity
CONTRACTOR & BUILDER.
Estimates given, Contracts made and do a general jobbing 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).
may17ff
CHAS. ALBRECHT
Contractor & Builder
Estimates Given.
Fine Workmanship.
Agent for the Pomona win. mill.
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
FRANK FOX,
City Barber Shop.
N. HART's Place.
Removal Notice!
I beg to inform the public that I have removed my place of Business to my New Block on Center Street, East of the Postoffice.
I KEEP CONSTANTLY ON HAND THE Choicest of Liquors in Wholesale Quantity CIGARS, TOBACCO, ETC.
Anaheim Beer on Draught.
N. HART, - PROPRIETOR.
Commercial Hotel.
(Corner Center and Lemon Streets)
J. J. EVERHARTY, - PROPRIETOR.
First-class Accommodations for Families & Tourists
THE COMMERCIAL FORMERLY KNOWN AS THE ANAheim Hotel, has been thoroughly renovated, and will be conducted in first-class style. A share of the public patronage is respectfully solicited. SAMPLE ROOMS ATTACHED TO HOTEL.
The Finest of Wines, Liquors and Cigars
DUBLIN STOUT, PALE ALE, HALF-AND-HALF.
Fashion Livery Stables in connection with Hotel. First-class turn-outs furnished with or without drivers. Horses bought and sold.
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 Kindsof Produce and Poultry Taken in Exchange
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1894.
The Weekly Gazette.
Established 1870.
SUBSCRIPTION, - $2 Per Year.
Six months. 1,000
Three months. 75
Payable invariably in advance.
Transient advertising rates, $1 per inch per month.
The Gazette is issued every Thursday morning and is sent to subscribers by the early mail. It is delivered by carrier in Anahaim on the morning of publication.
Entered at the Anahaim Postoffice as second-class matter.
Items of news and correspondence on all live subjects are solicited by the editor.
California Fruit in New York.
New York, Oct. 29.—The receipts of California fruit in New York this season have been 1,100 carloads, the value of which is $1,000,000. These figures refer to fresh fruit exclusively. The shipments were principally berries, apples, peaches, plums, pears and grapes. The season began about June 1st with cherries, and will end December 1st with grapes, which are now coming on. About forty carloads more are expected. These large figures represent a business which has been built up entirely in eight years, and is possible only by the use of refrigerator cars.
The fruit is all sold at auction, and the scene on the Erie pier at the foot of Chambers street, at a sale, is an animated one. The business in this city and the figures given refer to fruit for local consumption. The business is almost wholly in the hands of Greeks and Californians. Wholesale and retail dealers flock to the pier at an early hour. Fruit is sold at wholesale for the account of the big commission houses, but often there are small lots in a carload, and for these the retailers are waiting. The sales amount to from five to twenty-five cars a day, which come through in eleven days.
At 9 o'clock the auction begins and the scene some mornings is as lively as the wheat pit of the Chicago Board of Trade. The fruit dealers are not so well dressed as the brokers, but they are quite as demonstrative, and only the stern rebuke of the auctioneer fire a volley, so the Japanese troops always know when a shower of lead is coming. The Chinese also exhaust their cartridges in the magazine guns as fast as they fire them, making them a hail of bullets and then a long calm. The rifles captured from the Chinese show rust of long standing and other careless treatment.
The Japanese of the Pacific coast are doing a great deal to help the mother country to carry on the war against China, and have already sent $10,000 to the war department, and a like sum will probably be sent by the next steamer leaving for the orient. When the war between the two nations broke out the Japanese of San Francisco formed a society for the purpose of aiding the Mikado to carry war to a successful issue. The society has made no attempt to direct how the money shall be used and leaves that to the department at home.
The cruiser Detroit, which is to be added to the fleet on the Asiatic station, has left New London, Conn., on her long journey. She will make the trip via the Suez canal. The vessel stopped at New London to obtain a supply of torpedoes before proceeding to her station.
Great Issues Involved in the Czar's Death.
The great issues which hang upon the Czar's life have kept all eyes fixed all the week on Livadia. Down to Wednesday his death was thought to be a question of days, if not of hours. Then the bulletins have been slightly better and there is now some hope that he may live for weeks, but none that he may recover. Probably there is no responsible statesman in Europe who does not look with dread to the possibilities which his death opens.
What Lord Rosberry said at Sheffield on Thursday is no more than what all Europe feels. He spoke for all Europe when he described the Czar as "a monarch whose watchword and whose reign and character have been the worship of truth and the worship of peace." The Prime Minister and late Foreign Minister of Great Britain knows whereof he speaks when he affirms publicly that: "If peace has not been broken in more than one instance during the late years it is due to much to the character and influence of the Emperor of Russia as to any other cause we can mention." Such a tribute from such a source and from the head of a state often necessarily in collision with Russia, has never been paid to another night. Infante died suddenly after whey when the vessel was found from Gibraltar. Last spring he taking a trip to Europe with his wife was on his way home when he took him. The captain of the ship bury him at sea, but the wite officer of the dead man pleaded so hard finally decided to bring the boat port. The ship's carpenter made coffin and lined it with tin. The four cases of brandy were poured into coffin sealed with cement. There were in a good state of preservation the coffin was opened at the un-Tuesday night.
One Amendment to Vote.
However opinions may differ in other proposed amendments to this motion there ought to be a unanimous given to Assembly Amendment No. appears in the Governor's proclamation No. 3.
The amendment provides that not-bearing trees under the age of 3 from the time of planting in orchards and grapevines under the age of 3 do not plant from taxation. Its addition part of our organic law will be a form of justice to those who are benighted State and the people generally benefit new orchards and vineyards.
From the money and labor inventories of this kind no profits are within the period fixed for exempt taxation by the proposed amendments; yards entail a continual expense to and represent for three years an money instead of a gain. More of the trees and vines die, and a total loss, from which no profit ever derived.
It is manifestly for the best in State to encourage the planting yards and orchards, insamuch as deserts not only directly lead to an upgrowth lauded estates and installation of those small holdings, but tipify the number of home owners that people and promote every goal of civilization.
The most important point to be bered is that as the amendment
Announcement Week.
Selected Stock of Other Goods
SEMAN'S. PROCER)
Attended to. OF CHARGE! HEIM, CAL.
Notice!
Hand the lesale Quantity
There is no medicine so often needed in every home and so admirably adapted to the purposes for which it is intended, as Chamberlain's Pain Balm. Hardly a week passes but some member of the family has need of it. A toothache or headache may be cured by it. A touch of rheumatism or neuralgia quieted. The severe pain of a burn or scald promptly relieved and the sore healed in much less time than when medicine has to be sent for. A sprain may be promptly treated before inflammation sets in, which insures a cure in about one third of the time other.
At 9 o'clock the auction begins and the scene some mornings is as lively as the wheat pit of the Chicago Board of Trade. The fruit dealers are not so well dressed as the brokers, but they are quite as demonstrative, and only the stern rebukes of the auctioneer keep them from standing on the chairs which they persist in mounting. They shake printed lists of the lots wildly in the air wave umbrellas at the auctioneer and cheer or dey what suits or displeases them as if they were in a theater.
This season has been an unsatisfactory one to the growers, but had every expectation of doing well owing to the virtual failure of the Eastern peach drop. But the big railroad strike prevented any cars being sent out during July. Immediately after the strike ended great quantities of fruit were sent East from California, much of which was too ripe because it had been kept so long. The result was that this fruit, mostly Bartlett pears, sold slow. The New Jersey peach crop proved much larger than was anticipated and prevented good prices on California peaches.
Care in the preparation of fruit for market has won for the Californians a distinction above growers of similar fruit in other parts of the United States. The demand for California fruit in New York is rapidly increasing. One of the largest dealers in green fruit in the United States estimates that next year more than 1,500 carloads will be sold here. There are now in cold storage here quantities of winter pears from the Pacific slope, principally of Winter Nollis and Easter Beaurre. They will last until spring.
The Grand Jury has been drawn as follows: W.T. Reed, D.G. McClay, J.C. Joplin, G.W. Hubbard, Ed. J.Wright, M.Manley, I.B.Newell, D.Oyharrazebel, Samson Edwards, J.L. Forbes, H.Bert, J.D.Price, Silas Wright, J.G.Qick, Wiley Harris, B.J.Perry, S.Littlefield, K.A.R.Keenner, B.C.Barker, John Avas, W.H.Marquis, Fred Rafferty, Stephen McPherson, C.E.French, A.L.Dearing, Henry Wrede.
The panel will appear in the Superior Court Nov. 12 when the nineteen members of the jury will be chosen.
The following term trial jury has been drawn:
J.W.Shirley,A.J.Caudle,C.M.Salter,G.H.Rogers,G.W.Stevens,A.D.Akland,Frank Butler,H.C.Cullom,Wm.Reeder,Sr.E.B.Foster,WmSchulte,F.C.Sunythe,D.D.Armes,LymanChapinJ.L.Berry,C.C.Collins,T.Y.Long,O.H.LeefeldJ.W.DamronW.A.DyerJ.L.CollinsQ.P.JonesJ.S.FoxRobt.Boyd,Robt.FlookS.M.CradickRobt.A.Morton WilburnG.SmithWilliam Crowther,BonKraemer.
The trial jurors will appear in court Nov. 8th.
There is no medicine so often needed in every home and so admirably adapted to the purposes for which it is intended, as Chamberlain's Pain Balm. Hardly a week passes but some member of the family has need of it. A toothache or headache may be cured by it. A touch of rheumatism or neuralgia quieted. The severe pain of a burn or scald promptly relieved and the sore healed in much less time than when medicine has to be sent for. A sprain may be promptly treated before inflammation sets in, which insures a cure in about one third of the time other.
What Lord Rosoberry said at Sheffield on Thursday is no more than what all Europe feels. He spoke for all Europe when he described the Czar as "a monarch whose watchword and whose reign and character have been the worship of truth and the worship of peace." The Prime Minister and late Foreign Minister of Great Britain knows where he speaks when he affirms publicly that: "If peace has not been broken in more than one instance during the late years it is due as much to the character and influence of the Emperor of Russia as to any other cause we can mention." Such a tribute from such a source and from the head of a state often necessarily in collision with Russia, has never been paid to another sovereign nor was ever better deserved. France may learn from it that she has no monopoly of interest in the ruler of Russia. There are European interests lossless than hers.
France, indeed, has been in a panic since it became known that the Czar's life was in imminent danger. She sees slipping away from her support on which she counted. She would not take warning by the recent declaration of the Czar's Minister most in his confidence that Russia would be no party to an aggressive war, whether France or any other power began it. She relied blindly on Croostadt and Toulon and on a few civil words from Copenhagen, where the Czar was visiting while Paris was in delirium.
But the shadow of death is a warning which even the French cannot disregard. It covers France with gloom. It is the more menacing because no man quite knows what the Czarowitz thinks and feels and intends. He may prove as friendly to France as his father, but it is more probable that he will prove less so. He has kept his own counsel. No word publicly spoken by him can be quoted, but those most likely to know privately describe him as anti-French and friendly to England—anti-French in the sense that he will not strengthen but probably loosen the ties; whatever they be, which bind or are supposed to bind France and Russia together, and friendly to England from personal predicitions and family connections.
It is no secret that on the visit of the Czarowitz to London he showed himself cordial and sympathetic. The Queen's influence over him was thought to be great, and influence of that kind still counts for much. His marriage with the Princess Alexi of Hesse brings him near to the royal family of England. The days of alliances based on marriage ties are not quite over. They are certainly not over in Russia, where old ideas and old feelings of consanguinity and connection are still strong.
The Latest Dynamite Outrage.
Wilkesbarre, Pa., Oct. 29.-A large Hungarian boarding-house at Laurel Run, this county, was blown to atoms by dynamites at 3 o'clock yesterday morning, three of the inmates were killed outright, four fatally injured and half a dozen seriously hurt.
The fiends who planned the explosion did their work well despite the fact that part of the plan failed. They placed about twenty-four dynamite under the building, each being about nine inches long and weighing about half a pound.
A wire connected the sticks with a battery about fifty yards away. When the signal was given only about half a dozen of the sticks exploded. They were sufficient, however, to completely wreck the building, not a beam or plank of which was left standing. Several of the inmates who occupied beds on the upper floor were hurled fifty feet into the air, some of them escaping fatal injuries by lighting on the trees nearby. Half dazed by fear, they managed to hold onto the limbs of the trees until they
the contrary the young orchards yards entail a continual expense to represent for three years and a total loss from which no profit derived.
It is manifestly for the best in the State to encourage the planting yards and orchards, insamuch as dustries not only directly lead to a number up of large lauded estates and坠ishment of those small holdings, witply the number of home owners and people and promote every good of civilization.
The most important point to be bered is that as the amendment part of politics it will not be referred in the campaign and may be overthe people and defeated at the polls sheer negligence. Every citizen intends in the orchard and vineyard industry therefore charge his memory with this ment,and remind his neighbors that a full vote may be polled for this day.
Ha! Ha! Ha! Sam Armor is an
From the Santa Ana Standard
We have no comments to make references to Sammy Armor's description himself in the Orange Post; only remark that we think first fire. Army biggest political hypocrite in the States.
He is honest with his pays. He is just with his counts there is anything in it. He loves it if they stand by him. He is a probit but is afraid to vote for the parties they are in the minority. He is for but he wants it in the interest of Hew wants economy, but says,"Let tate methods by which we shalt it." Armor is a snake in the dangerous one. He hides behind paper, and tries to run a political card and then says he is not in it. He ography written showing his virgin man and a politician and says,"My it." The next thing we know he is diadex and still sweat "I am I am of Orange county."
Henry Meyer, a son of John Meyer ber of the Board of Education, of O., shot and killed John J. Grimm bar and former friend, Sunday Grimm claimed that Meyer was untimely with his wife. Mrs. Meyer grim makes threats follow husband through the rear yard as leaving the house and was pleaded him to remain home. Just as she rear gate, Grimm sprang from shed and exclaimed:
"Now, Meyer I've got you."
At same time he leveled his at Meyer's breast. The wife spied tween the two men just as Grimm receiving the bullet in her right saved her husband's life. The man grappled and several shots were exe when Grimme fell to the ground wounded. Two of the bullets pierced heart. Meyer escaped injury and locked up on the charge of murder.
Among Grimm's effects was for anonymous letter telling him of his intimacy with Meyer. This is probable cause of the tragedy.
PRESENCE OF MIND
Who in your judgment is the belle to she asked with downcast eyes and bloom,
as with the merry dancers full in sight We rested in a corner of the room.
A bellie A bright thought flashed as mind:
"I said she is the fattest of the fair- Prairy glance into the mirror just behind I am certain you will see her there I had some rivals then say three or four I had some rivals then say three or four"
...
There is no medicine so often needed in every home and so admirably adapted to the purposes for which it is intended, as Chamberlain's Pain Balm. Hardly a week passes but some member of the family has need of it. A toothache or headache may be cured by it. A touch of rheumatism or neuralgia quieted. The severe pain of a burn or scald promptly relieved and the sore healed in much less time than when medicine has to be sent for. An aprain may be promptly treated before inflammation sets, in which insures a cure in about one-third of the time otherwise required. Cuts and bruises should receive immediate treatment before the parts become swollen, which can only be done when Pain Balm is kept at hand. A sore throat may be cured before it becomes serious. A troublesome corn can be removed by applying it twice a day for a week or two. A lame back may be cured and several days of valuable time saved or a pain in the side or chest relieved without paying a doctor bill. Procure a 50 cent bottle at once and you will never regret it. For sale by Jesseon & Derg.
The Victorious Japanese.
The Japanese legation at Washington have received dispatches which confirm the news of a second victory of the Japanese army under Yamagata. The telegram is dated Hiroshima, and reads as follows:
"Before dawn of October 26th our army, under Marshal Yamagata, attacked Kin Len Chang, one of the important strongholds upon the Chinese frontier. The place was defended by 16,000 troops under Generals Lin and Song. They fled after offering only a slight resistance, and the Japanese forces took possession of the fortifications and the city. They captured 30 large field guns, an immense quantity of rice, food of other kinds, etc., and more than 300 tents. The Japanese loss was 20 killed and 83 wounded. The Chinese lost more than 200 killed; the exact number of their wounded is not known.
It is believed at the Japanese legation that the General Lin mentioned in the above dispatch is the noted Chinese commander who played a prominent part during the Tonking difficulty, and to whom it was recently reported Vicoroy Li had offered the chief command of the Chinese army.
The second army of Japan, under command of Marshal Yamagata has effected a landing near Tah Lun Wan, with great success.
The Japanese legation has received its first mail of Japanese newspapers since the battles of Yalu and Ping Yang, and they are filled with the details of the engagements, of the lists of the killed and wounded, accounts of heroism and other evidences of war.
The bad tactical methods of the Chinese soldiers excite the derision of the Japanese. The latter point out that the Chinese erected breastworks and then sat quietly within them without sending out skirmishers to harrass the enemy. The Chinese soldiers also raise a number of banners just as they
The fiends who planned the explosion did their work well despite the fact that part of the plan failed. They placed about twenty-four sticks of dynamite under the building, each being about nine inches long and weighing about half a pound.
A wire connected the sticks with a battery about fifty yards away. When the signal was given only about half a dozen of the sticks exploded. They were sufficient, however, to completely wreck the building, not a beam or plank of which was left standing. Several of the inmates who occupied beds on the upper floor were hurled fifty feet into the air, some of them escaping fatal injuries by lighting on the trees near by. Half dazed by fear, they managed to hold onto the limbs of the trees until they recovered their senses and were able to reach the ground.
The track-walker, who arrived on the scene shortly after the explosion, says it resembled a battlefield. The cries of the injured were heartrending. Some of them were in the trees, others lying on the ground and under the debris of the wrecked building. One of the boarders who escaped injury made his way to a neighbor-shanty and woke the inmates. Blankets and bedding were carried to the scene and the injured made as comfortable as possible.
At daylight the officials of the Lehigh Valley Railroad were notified and a special train with a full corps of physicians were hurried to the scene. The doctors dressed the wounds of the injured, who were then brought to the hospital in this city.
The boarding-house boss says he is at a loss to know what prompted the dastardly deed. So far as he knows, he has no enemies in the world. Some of the boarders think the motive was robbery, as several of them were known to have considerable money in their possession. If this was the object of the fiends, it is plain why they placed so much of the explosive under the building. They wanted to kill every person in the building in order to get the plunder and then escape detection.
One of the wounded men says that immediately after the explosion he saw four strange men running down the road leading to the village of Minera Mills. They carried lanterns. While he lay on the ground another stranger approached him and rifled his pockets. He also cut out the belt which circled his waist and carried it away. Another of the injured gives it as his opinion that the men seen on the ground after the explosion were tramps.
Adolph Scholz wants $30,000 for breach of promise, from Katharine Pilger, daughter of a Milwaukee merchant. August 1, 1899, he was engaged in the banking business in Berlin, Germany. He met Miss Pilger and proposed marriage and was accepted. Acting on her advice Scholz disposed of his business interests in Germany and came to Milwaukee, where he hoped to marry Miss Pilger. He arrived in 1893, but she refused to marry him. Scholz asks for $15,000 for the alleged breach of promise and an additional $15,000 for his loss of business. He has our sympathy.
The body of Joachim Infante, a wealthy wholesale cigar dealer and manufacturer of New Orleans and member of an old and highly respected Castilian family, arrived in that city on the steamer California Saturday.
Among Grimm's effects was for anonymous letter telling him of his intimacy with Meyer. This is probable cause of the tragedy.
PRESENCE OF MINDS
"Who in your judgment is the belle to you? She asked with downcast eyes and dazzle,
As with the merry dancers full in sight,
We rested in a corner of the room.
The belle: A bright thought flashed as mind;
I said: 'She is the fatest of the fair.'
Pray glance into the mirror just behind And I am certain you will see her there.
I had some iridescence, say three or four,
And they were dangerous, as I could but, bless you, rivals trouble me no more.
For since that night they've had me with me.
THE RULING PASSION
Said the doctor, as sadly he took his step,
By calling his body "He's nearing the happy, happy land—One minute and he'll dead!
He is going away to that better clime,
Where he'll meet with the rest of his Aht weep good friends, for now is this The Gassed the editor." To subscribe.
Poultry Supplies.
Jubileo Incubator and Brooder Mills, Grass Cutters, Roop Core, Egg Bone Meal, Cracked Bone, Shells, Ging Tools and Books of Instruction, for Whitowashing, Poultry Nottingham, M. J. Bundy's Hardware Co., San Cal.
Lieutenant Bang (as the wedding leaves the altar): "M-m—just done there on right, will you, dearest!"
"Whilst with her lightning stories told as thre Havaanas clouds of gold storms of laughter rolled."
Jessen & Derg keep them. A full cigars always on hand. You light on draw—you step over the threshold tentment.
Every mother should know that can be prevented. The first symptom group is hoarieness. This is followed pourier rough cough. If Champe Cough Remedy is given freely as soon child becomes hoariese or even after that has developed it will prevent it for 50 cent bottles for sale by Jesson and
The Orphans.
The following children have been into the Orphans' Home, Ansoheim, since 20th, 1894: Whole orphans: Santias 6 years, Edward Spooner, 6 years; Spooner, 3 years, Lauriatina Vierra; John VIerris, 3 years; Francisco Viera; Angel De Vorba, 9 years; Phanes: Charles Patte, 5 years; Migjon son, 7 years; Manuel Duron, 6 years; Philips, 6 years; Fredric Plummer; Mother M. Salemia; Direct.
Sugar Beets for Sale.
Forty tons of Sugar Beets for stock feed. Apply to A. Gillison.
Money to Loss.
In sums to suit from $500 to $1100 apply to Frank Ey, Santa Sep27-1m
INFANTO DIED SUDDENLY FROM APOLLOXY WHEN THE VESSEL WAS FOUR DAYS OUT FROM GIBRALTAR. LAST SPRING HE DECIDED ON MAKING A TRIP TO EUROPE WITH HIS FAMILY, AND HE WAS ON HIS WAY HOME WHEN DEATH OVERBOOK HIM. THE CAPTAIN OF THE SHIP DESIRED TO BURY HIM AT SEA, BUT THE WIFE AND DAUGHTER OF THE DEAD MAN PLEASED SO HARD THAT HE NALLY DECIDED TO BRING THE BODY TO THIS PORT. THE SHIP'S CARPENTER MADE A ROUGH COFFIN AND LINED IT WITH TIN. THEN TWENTY-FOUR CASES OF BRANDY WERE POURED IN AND THE COFFIN SEaled With cement. THE REMAINS In A Good State Of Preservation Whenever The Coffin Was Opened At The Undertaker's Tuesday Night.
ONE AMENDMENT TO VOTE FOR. However opinions may differ in regard to other proposed amendments to the constitution there ought to be a unanimous support even to Assembly Amendment No. 7, which appears in the Governor's proclamation as amendment No. 3.
The amendment provides that fruit and nut-bearing trees under the age of four years from the time of planting in orchard form and grapevines under the age of 3 years from the time of planting in vineyard form shall exempt from taxation. Its adoption as a part of our organic law will be a simple act justice to those who are benefiting the state and the people generally by planting new orchards and vineyards.
From the money and labor invested in enterprises of this kind no profits are derived within the period fixed for exemption from taxation by the proposed amendment. On contrary the young orchards and vineyards entail a continual expense to the owner and represent for three years an outlay of money instead of a gain. Moreover, many of the trees and vines die, and are thus a real loss, from which no profit ever can be derived.
It is manifestly for the best interests of State to encourage the planting of vineyards and orchards, inasmuch as these industries not only directly lead to the break-up of large landed estates and the establishment of those small holdings, which mully the number of home owners among people and promote every good feature civilization.
The most important point to be remembered is that as the amendment is not a right, Infante died suddenly from apolloxy when the vessel was four days out from Gibraltar. Last spring he decided on taking a trip to Europe with his family, and he was on his way home when death overboard him. The captain of the ship desired to bury him at sea, but the wife and daughter of the dead man pleaded so hard that he finally decided to bring the body to this port. The ship's carpenter made a rough coffin and lined it with tin. Then twenty-four cases of brandy were poured in and the coffin sealed with cement. The remains here in a good state of preservation when the coffin was opened at the undertaker's Tuesday night.
SNAP SHOTS AT THE NEWS
A dispatch from Buenos Ayres says that an appalling earthquake occurred there and in the Argentine Republic. The city of San Juan de la Frontera, capital of the province of the same name, has been totally destroyed. Hundreds of lives are reported lost.
While Jose Marie Herrara was herding a flock of sheep on the ranch of Julio Flore, forty miles west of Durango, Mexico, she discovered a cave which he partly explored. He found stored in the cavern a box filled with gold coins and ornaments valued at $30,000. It is supposed the treasure is a part of the ill-gotten gains of the brigand Benito Marez, who operated in that section about thirty years ago and was killed on one of his expeditions. Of the amount discovered 10 per cent must be turned over to the State government.
News of a sad tragedy comes from Trenton, Mo. Farmer Sproutt severely whipped his son for some misdemeanor. His twin sister, Olie, an exceedingly stout young woman, became enraged at the treatment accorded her brother, and attacked her father. She broke three of his ribs and injured him so severely internally that his life is despaired of. The girl then, stricken with remorse, placed the muzzle of a small shotgun to her left breast and sent a load through her body. She died in great agony.
Advices from Honolulu state that the orchards and fields of Hawaiuia are being devastated by an insect about the size of a ladybug. The natives believe it to be an involuntary importation from Japan and so call it the Japanese bug. The insect attacks the leaves, eating all the soft parts and leaving the fiber untouched. Shrubs and trees quickly die under the ravages of these destructive insects. The bug mysteriously disappears during the day, working only at night. The Hawaiians have so far been unable to procure an antidote for the pest.
Mrs. Willie K. Vanderbilt with her family will spend the winter at the Marble House in Newport. This appears to be a change in in the Vanderbilt program, for it has been generally understood that the family would go to New York for the winter. The purpose of Mrs. Vanderbilt to continue her residence at Newport seems to give additional force to the opinion that a divorce is to be asked for. To give her standing in Rhode Island she will have to reside there a year.
No other explanation was given, and the mother, the deserted husband and the neighbors are equally at a loss to understand her absence. Smith went to Seattle to search for his missing wife.
While Cornelius Daly of Oakland was incarcerated in jail awaiting examination before the Lunacy Commissioners he imagined that his left ear was the receiving bell of a telephone, at the other end of which John L. Sullivan was stationed. While Daly was explaining the peculiarities of his telephone ear to his fellow prisoners they gathered around him and ventured several criticisms. Several advised him to apply for a patent at once. "Sullivan is telling me to swing on the Chinese coolio's jaw," he shouted, and grasping the queue of a Chinese lad that was in the corridor, he awoke—the little yellow clear of the floor.
It was only when the Chinese boy's cries alarmed the jailers that he was rescued from the crazy man's clutches. Daly was subsequently committed to Agnews Asylum.
When Cornelius Vanderbilt opens his new house at Fifty-eighth street and Fifth avenue in New York with a ball soon to be given to introduce his daughter in society. Siedle will sit down to a $15,000 piano which has been put in place in one of the magnificent parlorors. This piano is said to be one of the finest instruments ever made. Vanderbilt was not satisfied with an ordinary satinwood instrument, and an eminent artist was engaged to decorate it. The paintings are on panels along the sides and on the cover. The wood has undergone elaborate preparation to keep it from warping or cracking before going to the painter. In this condition it is said it will last for centuries.
At the beginning of August the whalers Aurora, Balena and Esquimaux were in Prince Regent's inlet searching for white whales. They steamed in Elvin bay and the party from the Balena went ashore. They had not got far when they came upon a ghostly ring of corpse, the remains of Esquimaux who evidently died of starvation. The clean picked bones and partly devoured bodies revealed the story of cannibalism. One corpse had been beheaded and the head found thirty yards away from the trunk at a place where some one had evidently made a meal upon the flesh and brains. It is supposed the party, while traveling, found their progress choked by the setting in of winter. One by one they succumbed to hunger and finally the strong-
It is manifestly for the best interests of State to encourage the planting of vine-ards and orchards, inasmuch as these industries not only directly lead to the break-up of large land estates and the establishment of those small holdings, which multiply the number of home owners among people and promote every good feature civilization.
The most important point to be remembered is that as the amendment is not a set of politics it will not be referred to often by the campaign and may be overlooked by the people and defeated at the polls through their negligence. Every citizen interested in orchard and vineyard industry should therefore charge his memory with this amendment, and remind his neighbors of it, so that a full vote may be polled for it on elec-
day.
Mrs. Willie K. Vanderbilt with her family will spend the winter at the Marble House in Newport. This appears to be a change in the Vanderbilt program, for it has been generally understood that the family would go to New York for the winter. The purpose of Mrs. Vanderbilt to continue her residence at Newport seems to give additional force to the opinion that a divorce is to be asked for. To give her standing in Rhode Island she will have to reside there a year. It looks as though she intends to do this. The change of mind seems to have been arrived at after a visit to her counsel in New York, which she made ten days ago. Up to that time the plan was to live in New York. Meanwhile she and her children continue to lead isolated lives. It is apparent that she and others of the Vanderbilt family are not on good terms.
Alex. Ludwig, the People's Party candidate for Assessor of Shasta, and H. Clineschmidt of Redding returning from an electioning trip came near being drowned in Sulphur creek, three miles north of Redding. A cloud-burst in that locality had filled the creek with rushing water. They attempted to cross the creek and were washed down the stream. Clineschmidt jumped out and by holding on to the willow bushes managed to reach the shore. Ludwig tried to save the team, but the buggy upset and he scrambled on shore on the opposite side from Clineschmt. The horses were drowned and the buggy wrecked. The cloudburst extended over the radius of only a few miles. In Redding the streets ran rivers of water.
A suit in equity to recover $25,000 from the American Surety Company has been brought in the United States Circuit Court in New York by Frederick N. Pauley, receiver of the California National Bank that failed on November 9, 1891, in San Diego. The American Surety Company gave its bond in $25,000 for the integrity of President J. W. Collins. The receiver alleges that Collins' disobey acted to downfall of the bank. The American Surety Company refuses to pay the amount of the bond, alleging that the date of the bond's expiration had been reached before the bank failed. A similar suit against the company to recover $15,000, the amount of the bond for the cashier of the bank, George N. O'Brien, resulted last week in the verdict for the full amount claimed, with $1,847 50 interest.
Judge W. D. Crichton of Presso received an anonymous letter stating that his horse had been poisoned and a stick of wood in his shed had been filled with powder for the purpose of blowing his house up. The writer claimed that he had been sent to jail unjustly by Crichton and as soon as liberated had gone about getting revenge and had made up his mind "to kill despots." He stated that he had repented of his design, because by blowing up the house he might kill the cook or some other innocent party and he wrote the letter as a warning. Perhaps little or no attention would have been paid to this letter had not a part of it already proved true. Judge Crichton's horse had already died of poison. He had a search made in his wood-house but up to the latest report had not found any powder.
A chance meeting at a strawberry festival in the Freeport church in a Rhode Island town has ripened into a suit for breach of promise. The plaintiff is Miss Euella M. Mueller, and William Corning is the man she accuses of trifling with her affections. At the festival referred to Miss Mueller was one of several women who sold kisses for 50 cents each, the proceeds going toward the church funds. Corning invested 50 cents.
At the beginning of August the whalers Aurora, Balena and Esquimaux were in Prince Regent's inlet searching for white whales. They steamed in Elvin bay and the party from the Balena went ashore. They had not got far when they came upon a ghostly corpse, the remains of Esquimaux who had evidently died of starvation. The clean picked bones and partly devoured bodies revealed the story of cannibalism. One corpse had been beheaded and the head found thirty yards away from the trunk at a place where some one had evidently made a meal upon the flesh and brains. It is supposed the party, while traveling, found their progress choked by the setting in of winter. One by one they succumbed to hunger and finally the strongest in a futile attempt to save their own lives were driven to eat the others.
A collision between the Atlantic liner City of Paris, which arrived at Southampton Wednesday night from New York, and an unknown ship which sank soon afterwards is the subject of an investigation by the agent of the line. The collision took place between 1:30 and 2:24 m. Wednesday during thick weather, accompanied by heavy rain. As soon after the collision as possible the Paris was put about and search was made for the ship, which although sighted for a moment drifted away before a lifeboat could be lowered, and nothing more was seen of it, although the Paris searched for the ship until daylight. The liner was eventually compelled to proceed on its way without having sighted the wrecked vessel again or having saved any of the crew. The resell is supposed to have foundered soon after the collision. The Paris was little injured. When she arrived at Southampton it was reported that with which Paris collided showed signals of distress after the collision and screams were heard aboard her. She displayed a white light about her.
She added that no red or green light was visible after the steamer struck the unknown ship.
The journey of the Princess Alix, the betrothed wife of the Czarowitz through the Crimea was in the nature of a state progress. The Princess was met at the Russian frontier by the Grand Duchess Sergeia. At Alushthisi she bride-elect was welcomed by the Czarowitz and his uncle, the Grand Duke Sergius. As she Princess and party drove through Yalata, the Czarowitz and his intended wife, seated side by side, were heartily cheered by the crowds. The imperial castle was reached at dusk and Princess was immediately conducted into the presence of Czar and Czarina. The imperial sufferer greeted the Princess with every mark of affection. The bride-elect, accompanied by the Czarina and other members of the imperial family, proceeded to chapel in the castle. A selenus religious service was then conducted;the Princess Alix kneeling beside the Empress and joining in long and frequent supplications offered for the recovery of the Czar. After the religious ceremony the Princess and imperial party returned to room occupied by the Czar. The wedding followed quietly.
It is announced that the engagement of Miss Anua Gould to W.B.Harriman, which was declared off when she sailed to Europe with her brother, is now acknowledged by her family. So far as can be learned George Gould was responsible for the announcement that the engagement had been broken off. Miss Anna contracted it before consulting either her selenite and well-balanced sister, Miss Helen, or any of her brothers.
Some weeks later Mr Harriman broke new to George Gould. The young millionaire said then he had no personal objections to Mr Harriman—in fact he thought very highly of him—but he did not think that his sister was old enough to know her own heart. Miss Anna was approached by her brother George and her sister Blenhoff, both of whom have a great deal of influence over
PRESENCE OF MIND
In your judgment is the belle to night?
She asked with downcast eyes and deepening gloom,
with the merry dancers full in sight
rested in a corner of the room.
A bright thought flashed across my mind,
said: "She is the fatest of the fair;
glance into the mirror just behind
I am certain you will see her there."
Some rival们, say three or four,
and they were dangerous, as I could see,
you rivals trouble me no more,
since that night they had no chance
with me.
THE RULING PASSION.
The doctor, as sadly he took his stand
the editor's being been
nearing the happy land—
minute and he will be dead.
Going away to that better clime,
he'll meet with the rest of the tribe;
keep good friends, for now is the time
pealed the editor, "To subscribe."
Poultry Supplies.
Bilboe Incubator and Brooder, Bono,
Grass Cutters, Roup Cure, Egg Food,
Meal, Cracked Bone, Shells, Caponizools and Books of Instruction, Pumps
Whitwashing, Poultry Notting, etc., at
M. Bundy's Hardware Co., Santa Ana,
novl-1t
Sultant Bang (as the wedding party
is the altar): "M-m—just dress up
on the right, will you, dearest!"
Just with her Lightning stories told
Chloe Havana chouder of gold the thunder
forms of laughter rolled.
Queen & Dergo keep them. A full line of
always on hand. You light one—you
—you step over the threshold of conduct.
Early mother amount know that croup can
prevented. The first symptom of transis is hoarseness. This is followed by a
tier rough cough. If Chamberlain's
Remedy is given freely as soon as the
becomes hoarse or even after the cough
developed it will prevent the attack.
But bottles for sale by Jason and Derge.
The Orphans.
The following children have been received
the Orphans' Home, Anaheim, since July
1894: Whole orphans: Santiago Rios,
aars; Edward Spooner, 6 years; Harold
Armstrong, 3 years; Lauriano Vierra, 6 years;
Vierra, 3 years; Francisco Vierra, 2
Angel De Yorba, 9 years. Half Orphans: Charles Pittte, 5 years; Miguel Durero, 7 years; Manuel Duron, 6 years; Elvin
upes, 6 years; Fredric Plummer, 10 years.
Mother M. Salexia, Directress.
Sugar Beets for Sale.
Tons of Sugar Boots for sale for feed. Apply to A. GILLISON. oct 18-1t
Money to Loss.
Suits to suit from $500 to $1,500.
FRANK Ex, Santa Ana.
might kill the cook or some other innocent party and he wrote the letter as a warning.
Perhaps little or no attention would have been paid to this letter had not a part of it already proved true. Judge Crichton's horse had already died of poison. He had a search made in his wood-house but up to the latest report had not found any powder.
A chance meeting at a strawberry festival in the Freepark church in a Rhode Island town has ripened into a suit for breast of promise. The plaintiff is Miss Euella M. Mueller, and William Corning is the man she accuses of trifling with her affections.
At the festival referred to Miss Mueller was one of several women who sold kisses for 50 cents each, the proceeds going toward the church funds. Corning invested 50 cents with Miss Mueller. The acquaintance was continued until according to the lady, they became engaged and October, 1892, was fixed as the date of their wedding. But the ceremony did not take place, and Miss Mueller states that it was postponed at the request of Corning. During the summer Corning's father died, leaving him a fortune, and as Corning delayed the marriage Miss Mueller finally became convinced that her lover intended to discard her altogether, and she has called on the courts to right her wrongs.
A week ago County Clerk Ward of Los Angeles, who is also the Republican candidate for Clerk of the Supreme Court, decided in printing the election tickets to place on the ticket only once the names of those candidates who were the nominees of both the Democratic and Republican parties. This was a departure from the method pursued in last election, when the names of such candidates went on the ticket twice, representing each party of which they were the nominees. Ward was mandamused by the Democratic and Populist Central Committees and an effort was made to compel him to put the names of fusion candidates on the ticket twice. The position of the committees was that in no other way could it determine what percentage of the total vote was in the election, hence neither party would be entitled to go on the ticket the most election, the law denying to any party the right to go on the ticket which had not cast 3 per cent of the total vote in the preceding election. Judge Shaw decided that Ward had right to put the names on the ticket in the manner he intended. The fusion candidates will of course lose votes by this ruling.
There is mystery surrounding the disappearance last Monday night of Mrs. Charles Smith, the nineteen-year-old wife of a mechanical engineer, residing in Victoria B. C. Where she has gone and whom she is gone to see, if any one constitutes the mystery. Mrs. Smith was until three years ago Miss Carthrow, her mother being also a resident of Victoria. She was but sixteen when she married Smith, who was a widower with one child. Since then two other little ones have been added to the family, in which there has been at no time discord. On Monday night the mother, Mrs. Carthrow received a letter from her daughter informing her that the children were home in bed sleepy, and that she (the daughter) was leaving by the Puget Sound steamer in the morning and did not propose to return. The postscript was to the effect that it would be no use for any one to look for her, as she would not be
Miss Anna Gould to W. B. Harriman, which was declared off when she sailed to Europe with her brother, is now acknowledged by her family. So far as can be learned George Gould was responsible for the announcement that the engagement had been broken off. Miss Anna contracted it before consulting either her sedate and well-balanced sister, Miss Helen, or any of her brothers. Some weeks later Mr. Harriman broke the news to George Gould. The young millionaire said then he had no personal objections to Mr. Harriman—in fact he thought very high of him—but he did not think that his sister was old enough to know her own heart. Miss Anna was approached by her brother George and her sister Helen, both of whom have a great deal of influences over her. After deliberating and after the news of the engagement had gone abroad they asked her to agree to the announcement of the annulment of the contract on the condition that if, after several months spent abroad she felt the same toward Mr. Harriman, as she did then, and the engagement should be reannounced, and that the unmarriage should follow within a reasonable time. Miss Anna consulted with her fiancée, and he agreed to accept the conditions. On her return, after having met the most eligible men of Europe, she shows herself true to Poll.
The suit for divorce brought at Minneapolis by George F. Crocker against Jeanneette Crocker, which was called a few days ago and continued to the next term, turns out to be a most unusual and interesting case. Crocker married the woman about fifteen years ago at Schenevus, N.Y. It was only about a year since that he discovered her living as another man's wife, thus abiding him an opportunity to apply for a divorce. Crocker was the son of wealthy parents and was engaged to one of the belles of the community, an heiress whose name does not appear in the case. These two young people were extremely devoted to each other, but the attentions of Crocker to the young woman he intended to marry excited the jealousy of another girl named Jeanneette Smith. Miss Smith had shown her devotion to Crocker, but without any reciprocal feeling on his part. But when the date of his marriage to another woman was announced she tagged him to throw over his plans and run away with her. This he would not listen to, and Miss Smith caused the report to be circulated that she had been betrayed by Crocker, and threatened to bring suit on that ground. The young woman to whom Crocker was engaged refused to believe that any woman would so compromise herself falsely and urged Croker to marry the girl. This he did, but never lived with her. They drifted apart, but later he returned to Schenevus, where he found his former fiancée still a single woman and his legal wife married to another man and living in Pennsylvania.
After meeting with his old love, he secured a promise from her that if he could secure an absolute divorce she would marry him. So he went to Minneapolis and tiled his papers.
Wanted.
A young Work-horse. Must weigh from 1,000 to 1,300 perfectly sound, as well as gentle. Should go in buggy if so desired. No objection to team if you have a bargain. Apply to W. C. Eyman, opposite city water works, Anaheim.