anaheim-gazette 1895-05-30
Searchable text
Anaheim
VOLUME XXV.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
Paul A. Derge.
Graduate in Pharmacy.
DRUGS, MEDICINES,
Perfumes and Toilet Articles.
BEST 5-CENT CIGAR IN TOWN
MEDICAL HALL,
KOLL BLOCK.
GRAY BROTHERS & WARD
Cement Contractors
Shillinger Patent.
Contracts for RESERVOIRS, IRRIGATION DITCHES, Cellar and Stable Floors, Sidewalks, Ete.
OFFICES—No. 205 New High Street, Los Angeles, Cal. Telephone—236.
No. 316 Montgomery St., San Francisco, Cal.
L. NEMETZ.
Carriage Painting & Trimming
SIGN WRITING
Shop on Center street, near the opera-house.
Anaheim, Cal.
CHAS. ALBRECHT
Contractor & Builder
Estimates Given.
Fine Workmanship.
Agent for the Pomona win smill.
First North street,
Anaheim, Cal
Wm. H. PERDOMO, M.A., M.D.
MRS. G. DAVIS
Groceries and Seeds
Informs her customers and the general public that she is prepared to sell goods at the smallest margin possible. She buys for cash therefore can sell for a very small profit, giving her customers the effit of low prices. No charge for showing goods or answering questions. Come one, Come all!
All Kinds of Produce and Poultry Taken in Exchange
John Schauman
Dealer in AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS. Blacksmithing Wagonmaking. Horse-shoeing a Specialty.
Mowers! Mowers!
Buy a McCormick Mower and a New York Champion Seed Dump Hay Rake,
And you will have something you can depend on and get the best results. Now is your time to have your old machines repaired. Make a specialty of repairing Mowers and Harvesting Tools. Moves extras always kept in stock.
Also have the Agency of the CANTON Orchard Cultivator new tool just out. Call and see it.
Shop on Los Angeles Street.
CHAS. ALBRECHT
Contractor & Builder
Estimates Given.
Fine Workmanship.
Agent for the Pomona win mill.
First North street,
Anaheim, Cal
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
poken
DR. J. H. BULLARD
A. B., M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
(Hargard 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 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.
CHAS. SCHINDLER,
CONTRACTOR and BUILDER.
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA.
L. GUNTHER.
PIONEER BOOT & SHOE MAKER.
Corner Adele and Los Angeles trets.
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
H. P. LARSEN,
CONTRACTOR & BUILDER.
Estimates given, Contracts made and do a general obbing Business.
CENTER STREET
ANAHEIM.
Mowers:
Buy a McCormick Mower and a New York Champion Seed
Dump Hay Rake.
And you will have something you can depend on and get the best results. Now is your time to have your old machines repaired.
Make a specialty of repairing Mowers and Harvesting Tools. Moves extras always kept in stock.
Also have the Agency of the CANTON Orchard Cultivator new tool just out.
Call and see it.
Shop on Los Angeles Street.
M. H. CHEESEMAN'S.
(WEST-END GROCER)
Large Invoice of Shoes
JUST RECEIVED.
Groceries and Provision
Dry Goods, Clothing,
Boots and Shoes, ETC
A Complete Stock Always on Hand
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.
Commercial Hotel.
(Corner Center and Lemon Streets)
BOOT AND SHOE MAKER.
Center street...Anaheim.
Making and repairing at the lowest cash price. All orders promptly attended to. All work guaranteed.
H. P. LARSEN,
CONTRACTOR & BUILDER.
Estimates given, Contracts made and do a general obbing Business.
CENTER STREET - ANAHEIM.
PALACE
MEAT MARKET
F. W. Fleischmann,
PROPRIETOR.
Best Meats the Market Affords
Always on Hand.
Also keeps on hand Sausages, Bacom, Ham, Lard, Etc.
Meats deliverid to all parts of the city free of charge
Shop on East Center Street.
FOR SALE.
Forty acres deeded in the sugar beet factory, all good land, for $40 per acres; cost $60.
Twenty acres deeded in the sugar beet factory for $50 per acre.
Thirty acres deeded in the sugar beet factory for $45.
Will sell as a whole, or divide as per lots as quoted above.
The whole is less $1600 less first cost.
WM. R. HARKER & CO.
St. Louis Barber Shop.
--- BACKS' BLOCK ---
Los Angeles Street...Anaheim
A share of the public patronage is respectfully solicited.
POOL TABLE, In Rear of Shop.
A fine stock of Cigars, Tobaccos and Candles always on hand.
Frank Baum, - - Proprietor.
Hier wird auch Deutsch gesprochen je2lff
FRANK FOX.
City Barber Shop.
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.
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.
WOODWARD ROPE GRADER.
FOR FRUITS AND NUTS.
Only Authorized Agents for California and Mexico.
E. B. MERRITT & CO., Anaheim, Cal.
Correspondence Solicited.
ANAHEIM. CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1895.
DAVIS and Seeds!
al public that she is prepared able. She buys for cash and giving her customers the ben- goods or answering questry Taken in Exchange
human
MENTS. Blacksmithing and
ing a Specialty.
Mowers!
New York Champion Selflike,
depend on and get the best old machines repaired. I Harvesting Tools. Mower
TON Orchard Cultivator, a
Street.
The Weekly Gazette.
Established 1870.
SUBSCRIPTION, - $2 Per Year.
Six months... 1 60
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 mails. It is delivered by carrier in Anaheim on the morning of publication.
Entered at the Anaheim Postoffice as second-class matter.
Items of news and correspondence on all live subjects are solicited by the editor.
THE RUSH FOR HOMES.
SCENES AND INCIDENTS AT THE OPENING OF THE KICKAPOO STRIP—ROADS CROWDED WITH SETTLERS BOUND FOR THE LAND OF PROMISE.
Fifteen thousand men, with a large num- ber of women, made a grand rush from all sides of the Kickapoo Reservation for 450 odd claims open to white settlement. In less than an hour scores of contestants appeared on each of these claims in addition to "sooners," who had already taken possession of the lands.
Sweeney's bridge, on the north fork of the Canadian river, was one of the principal points of entrance to the new land. Three hundred men gathered there, and just before noon there was suppressed excitement as the minutes ticked off nearer and nearer the hour. Watches were held in one hand and the lines tightly grasped in the other. The first man to dash across the bridge was in a little buggy drawn by a pair of bays. The driver brought his whip down, shouting at them and the horses bounded across the bridge and off up the road with a good start, running away. Following this, eight horsemen jostled each other on the narrow bridge, trying to pass one another. They whipped a dozen places. Horses that two days ago were not worth $10 are readily selling for $50. From the country around Oklahoma at least three thousand men will run for claims.
UNCLE SAM AS AN ARBITER.
WASHINGTON, May 29. — The United States has been again asked to act as intermediary in an international complication. This time the trouble is between France and Venezuela, resulting in a complete termination of diplomatic relations between them. The French Minister at Caracas recently was given his passports, whereupon France sent two warships to take away her Minister and all the Legation archives. At the same time, France handed to the Venezuelan Minister at Paris his passports, and he summarily departed.
The request for the mediation of the United States is made by the Venezuelan Government through its Minister at Washington. He was instructed by the Venezuelan Minister of Foreign Affairs a short time ago to request that the United States Embassy at Paris, Mr. Eustis, be asked to act as intermediary in restoring friendly relations between the two countries. The United States Legation at Caracas was also notified of the desire of the Venezuelan Government, and sent a recommendation to the State Department that the office of intermediary be accepted.
The trouble between France and Venezuela originated about four months ago. A number of Europeans residing at Caracas united in a confidential note to their respective governments, in which they told of the lax condition of the Government and the tendeny of the Venezuelan officials to avoid the settlement of just claims. The note was signed by the Ministers of France, Germany, Spain and Belgium. The Italian Minister did not sign it, but sent it to his government for information. By mischance the "confidential" was omitted from the note, and Italy published it, with the signatures of the four Ministers, in the Italian Green Book. Venezuela thus was publicly pilloried. She at once gave their passports to the French, Spanish and Belgian Ministers, but the German Minister had left before this indignity could be offered to him. By this step Venezuela was almost cut off from relations with loading nations. Great Britain withdrew her Minister some time ago because of boun- on that afternoon a boat approached the shore manned by eight Moors; were savage-looking fellows, stripping to the waist, with heads entirely clean of hair, except a long tuft Breech-loading rifles and long knot their arms.
When within hailing distance they called in Spanish to the brigantine sail, and, on the brig refusing, began on the vessel. As the boat came into the crew armed themselves with ropes and crowbars, and one of the Moors tempted to board was struck down mate with a blow from a crowbar. Was returned and the mate fell. So revolver, the only firearm on board, Velvis began to use it on the pirates; fired one shot only when he was woken up the hand.
Meanwhile the wounded mate had ceeded aft, where he was fired on his Four bullets entered his body. The captain was permanently disabled by wound in the stomach. About three several other boats put out from the coast and resistance was out of question. On board, the pirates began their plunder. The ship's boat was lowered bedding, cooking utensils, compass lights, spare saills, a portion of the coat provisions, salt meat and man things, even the cabin door, were into the boats of the pirates and their land. Several trips were made, the coming and going the whole afternoon.
To complete their work the pirate even the shoes from the feet of the clothes from their backs. When came the buccaneers left the ship light breeze springing up, the sailor vowed to steer for the Spanish coast, without compass or lights. They said that night and the next day, using cotton shirt in daylight and burning after dark as signals of distress, but several vessels passed within sight, notification was paid to the brigantine.
At 4 o'clock the next morning Velvis died, and after many hardships Anna was sighted on April 30th by cules and brought into harbor. Mr Smith, who had been badly wounded both thighs, in the abdomen and right was taken to the Colonial Hospital in cal condition The Anna hailed from Pekela, in Holland, where the captain resided. The Consul for the lands at Gibraltar is investigating t
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
SEMAN'S.
OF Shoes!
CLOTHING,
PROVISIONS
ATTENDED TO.
E OF CHARGE!
HEIM, CAL.
Hotel.
The reduced fares on the railroads went into effect last night and the trains are crowded. Many of the passengers arriving were compelled to walk the streets all night, four abreast, with their Winchester and canteens strapped to their saddles.
Sweeney's bridge, on the north fork of the Canadian river, was one of the principal points of entrance to the new land. Three hundred men gathered there, and just before noon there was suppressed excitement as the minutes ticked off nearer and nearer the hour. Watches were held in one hand and the lines tightly grasped in the other. The first man to dash across the bridge was in a little buggy drawn by a pair of bays. The driver brought his whip down, shouting at them and the horses bounded across the bridge and off up the road with a good start, running away. Following this, eight horsemen jostled each other on the narrow bridge, trying to pass one another. They whipped their horses and struck at them and at each other and at last got across and scattered, racing like mad.
The recklessness of the drivers, whipping their horses down the bank and across, has seldom been equaled. Horses would go down, to be dragged to their feet again. Men were battles, their faces set, and their foreheads wrinkled with the strain. As the yard became clear, the wagons and horsemen in the road came on behind, rushing pell-mell, and in fifteen minutes the last wagon had passed over. The air was full of dust and the sound of shouting men, and the rumbling of wheels got fainter and fainter up the road. About half a mile northeast of Sweeney's, the road passed through a narrow lane of trees. Here an awful jam occurred. It was finally straightened out, and the men were off again.
The night before it was evident to many of the boomers that all could not get claims, so it was resolved to organize two towns. About midnight a big crowd left Sweeney's tor Dale, and, as this procession went along, large additions were made to the ranks. Two towns have already been projected, Olney and Aurora. A council was held, but the projectors of both towns were interested in a consolidation of interests. The new town is called McLord, in honor of the general solicitor of the Choostaw road. The procession, 5,000 strong, then took up the march to Douglass Mills, at the section on which McLord is to be. At the head of the enterprise is Dr. J.W. Gillett of Perry, who was chosen Mayor.
At noon the crowd passed over the Ford in a very quiet way and drew lots for positions on the town plat. A corps of surveyors on hand, and at once laid out the town. Wagons with liquor, groceries and cots came in, tents were erected and soon stores, restaurants and hotels were opened, and a new town had been born.
The Kickapoo opening was much in the nature of a huge farce. At 12:10 o'clock nearly all claims had from ten to twenty claimants on them. At Swance the crowd got reckless before the noon hour arrived. At 11:57 o'clock by some watches and at noon by others there was a break here and there into a run. The race across the level plateau was a very pretty sight.
Oklahoma City (Okla.), May 22.—All night long the roads leading to the Kickapoo lands were crowded with men on horseback going to the border. The crowd is much larger than was anticipated here. There will hardly be an able-bodied man in the town to-morrow morning. The banks have given notice that they will close for the day, and a report was started that a raid by outsaws was feared. It will be a great holiday event, and the town has to-day an air of gayety. No one seems to be working. People stand about the streets talking the matter over. Plenty of queer outfits are going out. This morning a bus drawn by four horses took out a town-site party. On the bus was loaded a big tent with wet and dry supplies, and inside were the town projectors and the men who will open the first hotel and restaurant. A large body of horsemen, over 100 strong, started out this morning. It was a fine sight as they went through the streets, four abreast, with their Winchester and canteens strapped to their saddles.
The reduced fares on the railroads went into effect last night and the trains are crowded. Many of the passengers arriving were compelled to walk the streets all night,
Sweeney's bridge, on the north fork of the Canadian river, was one of the principal points of entrance to the new land. Three hundred men gathered there, and just before noon there was suppressed excitement as the minutes ticked off nearer and nearer the hour. Watches were held in one hand and the lines tightly grasped in the other. The first man to dash across the bridge was in a little buggy drawn by a pair of bays. The driver brought his whip down, shouting at them and at each other and at last got across and scattered, racing like mad.
The recklessness of the drivers, whipping their horses down the bank and across, has seldom been equaled. Horses would go down, to be dragged to their feet again. Men were battles, their faces set, and their foreheads wrinkled with the strain. As the yard became clear, the wagons and horsemen in the road came on behind, rushing pell-mell, and in fifteen minutes the last wagon had passed over. The air was full of dust and the sound of shouting men, and the rumbling of wheels got fainter and fainter up the road. About half a mile northeast of Sweeney's, the road passed through a narrow lane of trees. Here an awful jam occurred. It was finally straightened out, and the men were off again.
The night before it was evident to many of the boomers that all could not get claims, so it was resolved to organize two towns. About midnight a big crowd left Sweeney's tor Dale, and as this procession went along, large additions were made to the ranks. Two towns have already been projected, Olney and Aurora. A council was held, but the projectors of both towns were interested in a consolidation of interests. The new town is called McLord, in honor of the General solicitor of the Choostaw road. The procession, 5,000 strong, then took up the march to Douglass Mills, at the section on which McLord is to be. At the head of the enterprise is Dr. J.W. Gillett of Perry, who was chosen Mayor.
At noon the crowd passed over the Ford in a very quiet way and drew lots for positions on the town plat. A corps of surveyors on hand, and at once laid out the town. Wagons with liquor, groceries and cots came in, tents were erected and soon stores, restaurants and hotels were opened, and a new town had been born.
The Kickapoo opening was much in the nature of a huge farce. At 12:10 o'clock nearly all claims had from ten to twenty claimants on them. At Swance the crowd got reckless before the noon hour arrived. At 11:57 o'clock by some watches and at noon by others there was a break here and there into a run. The race across the level plateau was a very pretty sight.
Oklahoma City (Okla.), May 22.—All night long the roads leading to the Kickapoo lands were crowded with men on horseback going to the border. The crowd is much larger than was anticipated here. There will hardly be an able-bodied man in the town to-morrow morning. The banks have given notice that they will close for the day, and a report was started that a raid by outsaws was feared. It will be a great holiday event, and the town has to-day an air of gayety. No one seems to be working. People stand about the streets talking the matter over. Plenty of queer outfits are going out at this morning a bus drawn by four horses took out a town-site party. On the bus was loaded a big tent with wet and dry supplies, and inside were the town projectors and the men who will open first hotel and restaurant. A large body of horsemen, over 100 strong, started out this morning. It was a fine sight as they went through the streets, four abreast, with their Winchester and canteens strapped to their saddles.
The reduced fares on the railroads went into effect last night and the trains are crowded. Many of the passengers arriving were compelled to walk the streets all night,
Sweeney's bridge, on the north fork of the Canadian river, was one of the principal points of entrance to the new land. Three hundred men gathered there, and just before noon there was suppressed excitement as the minutes ticked off nearer and nearer the hour. Watches were held in one hand and the lines tightly grasped in the other. The first man to dash across the bridge was in a little buggy drawn by a pair of bays. The driver brought his whip down, shouting at them and at each other and at last got across and scattered, racing like mad.
The recklessness of the drivers, whipping their horses down the bank and across, has seldom been equaled. Horses would go down, to be dragged to their feet again. Men were battles, their faces set, and their foreheads wrinkled with the strain. As the yard became clear, the wagons and horsemen in the road came on behind, rushing pell-mell, and in fifteen minutes the last wagon had passed over. The air was full of dust and the sound of shouting men, and the rumbling of wheels got fainter and fainter up the road. About half a mile northeast of Sweeney's, the road passed through a narrow lane of trees. Here an awful jam occurred. It was finally straightened out, and the men were off again.
The night before it was evident to many ofthe boomers that all could not get claims, so it was resolved to organize two towns. About midnight a big crowd left Sweeney's tor Dale, and as this procession went along, large additions were made tothe ranks.
Two towns have already been projected, Olney and Aurora. A council was held, butthe projectors of both towns were interested in a consolidation of interests.
The new town is called McLord, in honor ofthe General solicitor ofthe Choostaw road. The procession, 5,000 strong, then took upthe march to Douglass Mills,atthe section onwhichMcLordistobeinformedbytheconsolidationofdocumentationinthensessionbeforwardtoworkindictoryguaranteedbutnotconsummatedbytheconstitutionanddeclarationbythecountyofficialsafterrepurchasedtheyagainpassedoutthedoorandwere takentoothercountieswere sold again.Adetectiveemergedinthematter,anddamagingevidencebeprocurredagainstcountyofficialsposedtobeinterestedinthedeal.TheretofoundtheGrandJuryofKerncountybethereasonisdeterminedforanimportantissueincooperationwiththegrantingofficialsinthearmyareincorrectineveryway."Wecannotstronglyurgeuponourpeoplethegreatimportanceofavoidingasfaraspossible,thepurchasinganddisseminatingofbooksandliteraturewhichareunwindand unfairtothe southwhichbelittleouachievementspimpugnoursmotivesandmaligntheillustriousleaders."
Atthe conclusionofthisreportsogreatwasthenoisethatadjournmentwashuduntil7:30p.m.,andthenWissinDavis,the"DaughteroftheConfederacy,"wasintroduced.Awildshoutwentupthatfairlymadeentrounselfirmingtremble,hatswereflyingintheair,gray-hardhairwerecheeringandyelling,delicatelydrowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned完全drowned,完全drowned,完全drowned,完全drowned,完全drowned,完全drowned,完全drowned,完全drowned,完全drowned,完全drowned,完全drowned,完全drowned,完全drowned,完全drowned,完全drowned,完全drowned,完全drowned,完全drowned,完全drowned,完全drawn,完全drawn,完全drawingoutfromtheairandwaterpreparedforeachpersonbythesignatureoftheeventandtheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeachpersonbytheaccountingofeach personbytheaccountingofeach personbythe accountingof each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person by each person BY EACH PERSON BY EACH PERSON BY EACH PERSON BY EACH PERSON BY EACH PERSON BY EACH PERSON BY EACH PERSON BY EACH PERSON BY EACH PERSON BY EACH PERSON BY EACH PERSON BY EACH PERSON BY EACH PERSON BY EACH PERSON BY EACH PERSON BY EACH PERSON BY EACH PERSON BY EACH PERSON BY EACH PERSON BY EACH PERSON BY EACH PERSON BY EACH PERSON BY EACH PERSON BY EACH PERSON BY EACH PERSON BY EACH PERSON BY EACH PERSON BY EACH PERSONBY EACH PERSONBY EACH PERSONBY ECHAPONBY ECHAPONBY ECHAPONBY ECHAPONBY ECHAPONBY ECHAPONBY ECHAPONBY ECHAPONBY ECHAPONBY ECHAPONBY ECHAPONBY ECHAPONBY ECHAPONBY ECHAPONBY ECHAPONBY ECHAPONBY ECHAPONBY ECHAPONBY ECHAPONBY ECHAPONBY ECHAPONBY ECHAPONBY ECHAPONBY ECHAPONBY ECHAPONBY ECHAPONBY ECHAPONBY ECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONBYECHAPONByECHAPONByEChapOnByEChapOnByEChapOnByEChapOnByEChapOnByEChapOnByEChapOnByEChapOnByEChapOnByEChapOnByEChapOnByEChapOnByEChapOnByEChapOnByEChapOnByEChapOnByEChapOnByEChapOnByEChapOnByEChapOnByEChapOnByEChapOnByEChapOnByEChapOnByEChapOnByEChapOnByEChapOnByEChapOnByEchapOnByEChapOnByEchapOnByEchapOnByEchapOnByEchapOnByEchapOnByEchapOnByEchapOnByEchapOnByEchapOnByEchapOnByEchapOnByEchapOnByEchapOnByEchapOnByEchapOnByEchapOnByEchapOnByEchapOnByeChapOnByeChapOnByeChapOnByeChapOnByeChapOnByeChapOnByeChap.OnByeChap.OnByeChap.OnByeChap.OnByeChap.OnByeChap.OnByeChap.OnByeChap.OnByeChap.OnByeChap.OnByeChap.OnByeChap.OnByeChap.OnByeChap.OnByeChap.OnByeChap.On ByeChap.On ByeChap.On ByeChap.On ByeChap.On ByeChap.On ByeChap.On ByeChap.On ByeChap.On ByeChap.On ByeChap.On ByeChap.On ByeChap.On ByeChap.On ByeChap.On ByeChap.On ByeChap.On ByeChap.On ByeChap.On ByeeChap.On ByeeChap.On ByeeChep.on ByeeCheep.on ByeeCheep.on ByeeCheep.on ByeeCheep.on ByeeCheep.on ByeeCheep.on ByeeCheep.on ByeeCheep.on ByeeCheep.on ByeeCheep.on ByeeCheep.on ByEE Cheep.on EE Cheep.on EE Cheep.on EE Cheep.on EE Cheep.on EE Cheep.on EE Cheep.on EE Cheep.on EE Cheep.on EE Cheep.on EE Cheep.on EE Cheep.on EE Cheep.on EE Cheep.on EE Cheep.on EE Cheep.on EE Cheep.on EE Cheep.on EE Cheep.on EE Cheep.on EE Cheep.on EE Cheep.on EE Cheep.on EE Cheep.on EE CheEP_on EE CheEP_on EE CheEP_on EE CheEP_on EE CheEP_on EE CheEP_on EE CheEP_on EE CheEP_on EE CheEP_on EE CheEP_on EE CheEP_on EE CheEP_on EE CheEP_on EE CheEP_on EE CheEP_on EE CheEP_on EE CheEP_on EE CheEP_on EE CheEP_on EE CheEP_on EE CheEP_on EE Ch EP_on EE Ch EP_on EE Ch EP_on EE Ch EP_on EE Ch EP_on EE Ch EP_on EE Ch EP_on EE Ch EP_on EE Ch EP_on EE Ch EP_on EE Ch EP_on EE Ch EP_on EE Ch EP_onEE Ch EP_onEE Ch EP_onEE Ch EP_onEE Ch EP_onEE Ch EP_onEE Ch EP_onEE Ch EP_onEE Ch EP_onEE Ch EP_onEE Ch EP_onEE Ch EP_onEE Ch EP_onEE Ch EP_onEE Ch EP_onEE Ch EP_onEE Ch EP_onEE Ch EP_onEE Ch EP_onEE Ch EP_onEE Ch EP_onEE Ch EP_onEE Ch EP_onEE Ch EP ONEE CH EP_ONEE CH EP_ONEE CH EP_ONEE CH EP_ONEE CH EP_ONEE CH EP_ONEE CH EP_ONEE CH EP_ONEE CH EP_ONEE CH EP_ONEE CH EP_ONEE CH EP_ONEE CH EP_ONEEE CH EP_ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA ONEEE CH EPA OnEEE_CH EPA OnEEE_CH EPA OnEEE_CH EPA OnEEE_CH EPA OnEEE_CH EPA OnEEE_CH EPA OnEEE_CH EPA OnEEE_CH EPA OnEEE_CH EPA OnEEE_CH EPA OnEEE_CH EPA OnEEE_CH EPA OnEEE_CH EPA OnEEE_CH EPA OnEEE_CH EPA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CH PA OnEine_CHPA OnEine_CHPA OnEine_CHPA OnEine_CHPA OnINE_CHPA OnINE_CHPA OnINE_CHPA OnINE_CHPA OnINE_CHPA OnINE_CHPA OnINE_CHPA OnINE_CHPA OnINE_CHPA OnINE_CHPA OnINE_CHPA OnINE_CHPA OnINE_CHPA OnINE_CHPA OnINE_CHPA OnINE_CHPA OnINE_CHPA OnINE_CHPA OnINE_CHPA OnINE_CHPA OnINE_CHPA OnINE_CHANTRAFAAACHAFAAACHAFAAACHAFAAACHAFAAACHAFAAACHAFAAACHAFAAACHAFAAACHAFAAACHAFAAACHAFAAACHA
LIQUORS
BOTTLE.
ATTENDED TO.
E OF CHARGE!
HEIM, CAL.
HOTEL.
Streets)
PROPRIETOR.
Families & Tourists
OWN AS THE ANAed, and will be conducted patronage is respectfully CHED TO HOTEL.
LF-AND-HALF.
Hotel. First-class turn-outs horses bought and sold.
GRADER.
NUTS.
The reduced fares on the railroads went into effect last night and the trains are crowded. Many of the passengers arriving were compelled to walk the streets all night, asleep bed in town had been engaged the night before. There is not one horse in town for hire, and very few for sale, even at an enormous figure. The weather is very cool and the sky has been overcast for two days. Everybody is praying for rain. There will be no crops in this country unless there is rain very soon. In the Kickapoo country everything looks much better.
Marshal Nix has deputies and a large number of horsemen in the country. At the land office nothing is known of any trouble. The purpose of the marshal in the country is understood to be more in the nature of detective work than arresting sooners or driving them out. Hiatt, the Kansas boy, who was first in the line at the land office, sold his place last night for $500 to a lady who wants a claim. He has been engaged by her to hold the place for her file, and will make the race out to the land for her.
United States Marshal Nix sent a dozen deputies into the Kickapoo country to arrest sooners, and take them before United States Commissioner Wilkinson, who is stationed at Kickapoo Falls. The sooners are liable to a fine of $1,000 each. It is said that some of the sooners are desperate men from all parts of the country, and that the deputies are likely to have trouble in taxing them. A man who came from Shawnee says that the country is filling up with sooners, so there will soon be more of that class of men than honest homeseekers.
It was reported here yesterday afternoon that Big Jim's band of Kickapoos had been in council on the Deep Fork since Sunday night, talking about the coming of the settlers. The man who brought the report said they were all armed with Winchesters, and had plenty of ammunition, and numbered about one hundred and fifty braves and squaws. The story is laughed at, but Marshall Nix said they might make trouble, and he has wired for instructions. Settlers are forming along the west bank of the North Canadian river from Sweeney's bridge south for two miles, and the woods are full of camps. It is estimated that at least ten thousand men will make the run from that line, run two miles across the Kickapoo allotments and meet the runners from the south. When the two bodies get together trouble is predicted.
The streets of Oklahoma city resemble those of Arkansas City just prior to the opening of the Cherokee Strip. Men on horseback and covered wagons are on their way to the border of the Kickapoo country. Street auctions of ponies are going on in half
DEAR, DEAR!
Listen to this tale of woe, all the way from Santa Ana:
A case of downright cussness was given your reporter yesterday of a certain man named Teele, who has been paying attention to a young lady of Santa Ana and at the same time he had a wife and two little girls, the oldest of whom is 8 years old, living somewhere in the East. While Teele was at Newport wharf the other day with his intended what was his surprise to see his wife and two little girls step from the train. The oldest girl on seeing her father ran to him, saying, "O! here is papa," but the little girl's spirits were broken when her unnatural father turned his back on their entreaties and wouldn't listen to them at all, but maintained a discreet silence and turned a deaf ear to the pathetic entreaties of his wife and children who had come all the way from the East expecting to receive a royal welcome, but instead they are spurned and disowned. Mrs. Teele pleaded a long time with her husband, but to no use, for he went off with the other woman, leaving his wife and children to their fate among strangers and without the means to take care of herself and children. Since the above happened the Santa Ana women have given Teele the grand bounce and won't have anything to do with him. Teele claimed to the Santa Ana woman that he was divorced from his first wife, but Mrs. Teele says there is nothing of the kind. If all we have heard is true this unnatural husband and father should have a stone tied to his neck and thrown from the wharf.
STIRRING TALE OF THE SEA.
WASHINGTON, May 23.—A stirring tale of the sea comes to the State Department in a dispatch from the acting United States Consul at Gibralta, under date of May 2d. The story is all the more surprising because events occurred in well-traveled waters in the Mediterranean. On the afternoon of April 30th the steam tug Hercules towed into Gibralta the Dutch brigantine Anna, which had been flying signals of distress off Europa point. The experience of the Anna, according to the story told by her crew, recalled the worst days of piracy.
On March 19th she set sale from Bari, a port in the Adriatic, with a cargo of coal, and on Sunday, April 25th she became beamed seven miles from shore in Alhucemas bay in the Riff country, between Melilla and Centa. She was manned by a captain, mate, three seamen and a cook. About 2 o'clock
YEAR 30, 1895.
ODDS AND ENDS OF NEWS
Oscar Wilde gets two years in prison at hard labor.
Secretary Gresham died at Washington at 1:15 on Tuesday morning.
San Diego has put in a claim of $5,192.24 to the Board of Supervisors of Riverside county, which it claims as its share of the back Southern Pacific railroad taxes of 1886-7.
The Supreme Court of Nevada has rendered a decision sustaining the judgment of the District Court in the case of Mrs. Hartley, who killed Senator Foley in her studio at Reno and was sentenced to eleven years in the penitentiary.
Mrs. Hedberg, widow of Captain Hedberg, who was shot and killed some months ago by Lieutenant Maney at Fort Sheridan, at which post both men were stationed, is to be married in June to D. Stephens, son of Henry Stephens, the Chicago box manufacturer.
Five Chinese were working on the Sharon estate alfalfa ranch in Freeso, irrigating. One of them let the water overflow, and another became enraged and killed him by beating him over the head with a shovel. The murderer tried to escape, but the others tied him hand and foot until arrested.
The celebration of the second anniversary of the establishment of Kings County took place Thursday at Hanford. The attendance was in the neighborhood of 10,000 people. The program of exercises included an exhibition drill of the fire department and a display of the water system and fire alarm. A barbecue of five oxen, fifteen sheep and three hogs was served. The literary exercises included an oration, and a chorus of 100 voices.
The overdue French line steamer La Gascogne arrived safely in port after a tedious and exciting voyage of eleven days, several days overdue. The cause of the delay was the breaking of the piston rod of the intermediate engine. The steamer immediately stopped and the disabled engine was disconnected. After much labor the task was accomplished and the ship resumed her voyage under high and low pressure engines at reduced speed. When Fire island was sighted Captain Baudelson signaled that La Gascogne was disabled, and two tugs which were sent out intercepted the steamer as she neared theriage and was accepted. On January 3, 1892, he kissed left her. Morse in court attempted to explain his sudden change of purpose. Genealogical conditions were at the bottom of it. Mrs. Van Houten, who is a decided brunette, told him her ancestors were Spanish—pure Castilians. This circumstance commended the attractive widow to the further favor of the genealogist, but just when he was happiest a doubt crept in. He was horrified to find that her mother had married a barber as her second husband, and the barber had negro blood in his veins. He more than hinted that the plaintiff had an African taint, and that the ebony hair he had so much admired had come from farther south than Castile. This excited the sympathy of the jury, and a verdict for $10,000 was returned after brief deliberation. Pending a rehearing of the case a compromise was effected, and Mrs. Van Houten left Boston many thousands richer than when she entered it.
A shooting affray took place at the Troy Presbyterian church on the line between Louisville county and Woodford at 12 o'clock Sunday, between George and John Montgomery, brothers, and Archie Riley. Riley was killed and George Montgomery fatally injured. The trouble is of long standing, and grew out of Riley deceiving a sister of Montgomery two years ago, and then refusing to live with her. The wonder is that others were not killed, as the churchyard was filled with people when the shooting was going on.
A sensational divorce case was decided in San Francisco the other day by the granting of a divorce to the wife of Antonio Agacia, a wealthy Guatemalan coffee planter, who married twenty-five years ago in Manchester, Eng. While his wife and children were in England visiting some years ago Agacia eloped with Carlotta Batres of an aristocratic Guatemalan family. The pair came to San Francisco and have lived there four years, and now have four children. He sued his wife for a divorce on the ground of desertion, alleging that he was a clerk with $100 a month. His wife contested the suit and many members of the Central American colony testified for her, and she was given the decree on her cross-complaint. A financial settlement has been reached.
In the case of W. P. Redington vs. the Pacific Postal Telegraph Company, the Supreme Court handed down a decision affirming that afternoon a boat approached from one shore manned by eight Moors. They were savage-looking fellows, stripped naked from the waist, with heads entirely shaved on the chest, and on the brig refusing, began firing at the vessel. As the boat came alongside the crew armed themselves with hatchets and crowbars, and one of the Moors who attempted to board was struck down by the state with a blow from a crowbar. A volley was returned and the mate fell. Seizing his revolver, the only firearm on board, Captain Elvis began to use it on the pirates, but had one shot only when he was wounded in the hand.
Meanwhile the wounded mate had provided aft, where he was fired on and fell. Our bullets entered his body. Then the captain was permanently disabled by a shot wound in the stomach. About this time several other boats put out from the shore and resistance was out of question. Leaping board, the pirates began their work of tendering, where he was fired on and fell. Our bullets entered his body. Then the captain was permanently disabled by a shot wound in the stomach. About this time several other boats put out from the shore and resistance was out of question. Leaping board, the pirates began their work of tendering, where he was fired on and fell.
To complete their work the pirates took on the shoes from the feet of the crew and clothes from their backs. When night onethe buccaneers left the ship and, a bit breeze springing up, the sailors endeavored to steer for the Spanish coast, although about compass or lights. They sailed all night and the next day, using an old shirt in daylight and burning oakum or dark as signals of distress, but although several vessels passed within sight, no attention was paid to the brigentine.
At 4 o'clock the next morning Captain Elvis died, and after many hardships she was sighted on April 30th by the Herbert Moth, who had been badly wounded in thighs, in the abdomen and right hand, taken to the Colonial Hospital in a critical condition. The Anna hailed from old belia, in Holland, where the captain and his residue. The Consul for the Netherland at Gibraltar is investigating out-
When Miss Ella C. Knowles becomes the lieutenant of Henri J. Haskell, Attorney-General of Montana, it will furnish the final act in most interesting romance that State hasished this spring. In the campaign of 1892, Kell was the nominee of the Republican party for the position he now holds, and Miss Knowles was the candidate of the Populist party for the same office. She made a brilliant campaign, and at first the result was a tie for the place. A recount was made and the latter won by a few votes. The candidates were good friends through the campaign, and Miss Knowles so loved her assistant. They were shortly engaged. Some months ago Miss Knowles with a severe accident from a runaway car came to this State to recuperate. Arrived in San Francisco one day last and Mr. Haskell followed a few days.
Grand Jury of Kern county has for time been engaged in an investigation into alleged frauds in coyote scalp claims, as obtained evidence that may result in many influential county officials being the bars. A confidential agent of the Jury appeared before the Board of inmates at Sacramento and requested that in documentary evidence in their position be forwarded to Kern, to be used in trial which will follow indictments by body. Hundreds of coyote scalps red by the county officials, after having purchased by the State, found their into the hands of certain outside persecutors and were again resold, and after being they again passed out the back and were taken to other counties and sold again. A detective was employed on the matter, and damaging evidence has procured against county officials supposed to be interested in the deal. The re-funding of the Grand Jury will result in indictment, the telegraph says, that will shock entire community.
Orange County Marble Works.
L. Talbott, the Marble Cutter, won't underscore any agent or middle-man hire all their work done. When you your grave stones from them you double for them, and when you buy off you pay twenty per cent to them. Any own work, and if I make living I can live and let live, and save you. I will call on those that are indeed five stones. Or when in Santa Ana call shop on Main street, butween Third fourth. I handle nothing but the bestIBLE and guarantee all my work. I give you prices from a $10 stone to as you want to pay for a monument or jan10tf
saan," said Farmer Punkin of Kansas, have ter take the lid off them two rabbits or they'll bile too much." The most skirt to," answered his wife. Here isn't nothing to be skared of." Don't know' bout that. The Legislature's that anti-gamblin' law so strictest that he the police down on us of they'd we was openin' a pot with a pair o'
Selling Out Below Cost.
entire stock of Boots and Shoes will fill below cost price, as I intend to return.
The overdue French line steamer La Gascogne arrived safely in port after a tedious and exciting voyage of eleven days, several days overdue. The cause of the delay was the breaking of the piston rod of the intermediate engine. The steamer immediately stopped and the disabled engine was disconnected. After much labor the task was accomplished and the ship resumed her voyage under high and low pressure engines at reduced speed. When Fire island was sighted Captain Baudelon signaled that La Gascogne was disabled, and two tugs which were sent out intercepted the steamer as she neared the Sandy Hook lightship and assisted her into port. The piston rod broken was the new rod placed in the ship on her return to Havre after her memorable voyage in February last. There was no excitement on board.
John P. Gladden of Portland, Or., went to Chicago a week ago and the first night out donned a flasby suit, slipped a $500 ring over his finger, and saluted along State greet. He carried $23,750 in a wallet in one his hip pockets. He wandered down along Clark Street, and a woman took him into a dive. While there a part of the wall slid back, a long lim arm reached in, seized Gladden's wallet, the leaf was turned back, and $23,750 in green backs fell on the floor. The sight of that amount of money caused a panic among the inmates and there was a consultation, which resulted in $3,500 being taken from the roll, and the rest was returned to his pocket. Gladden left the house about midnight and staggered to his hotel. Next morning he discovered his loss and appealed to a detective agency. A detective was set to work, and by noon had located the "panel" game. By noon parley, $1,000 was handed back. Sunday night the remainder was delivered by a messenger boy to Gladden at the hotel, and the next morning he packed his trunk and left for Oregon.
From the official data respecting the sugar campaign for 1893 94 in Germany we glean some interesting figures: 405 factories were working, and 966,200 acres were planted to beets. The total weight of beets was 10,644,300 tons, giving an average per factory of about 26,000 tons. The average sugar campaign was 78 days, and the total sugar production was 1,319,000 tons, corresponding to an extraction of 12.36 per cent. If we include the sugar extracted from molasses, the extraction becomes nearly 13 per cent. The exportation of home-made sugars was 728,000 tons. The consumption of sugar remains about the same from year to year, and is nearly 600,000 tons.
Farmers in many centers are unwilling to devote their attention to any other crop than beets. The returns from an acre of beets are $40, while from wheat and other cereals it is only $20. Cattle raising is becoming popular, and farmers who receive $3 25 per ton for their beets and 40 per cent pulp gratuitously can realize considerable profit from their efforts in cultivation and cattle feeding.
Nearly 95 per cent of the molasses exported was sent to France. Since the increase of duty to that country, the price of molasses has fallen from $12 50 per ton to $6 25. Many efforts are to be made with the view of shipping the residuum to the United States.
Mrs. Van Houten of Spokane, Wash., is well on her way home from Beston, and is richer by $20,000 than when she left for the effete East. Her breach of promise suit was settled as a compromise on the original award for that sum of $40,000. Asa Morse, the defendant, is a bank president, ex-Senator and ex-member of the school board. At the age of 70 he is a well-preserved, hale old gentleman, with a weakness for family genealogy. Mrs. Van Houten met him in 1890. She was then at the New England conservatory of music, having come on from Spokane, where she had secured a divorce from her husband for cruel treatment. She said she possessed $40,000 worth of property there, and in borrowing on it she met the bank president.
The overdue French line steamer La Gascogne arrived safely in port after a tedious and exciting voyage of eleven days, several days overdue. The cause of the delay was the breaking of the piston rod of the intermediate engine. The steamer immediately stopped and the disabled engine was disconnected. After much labor the task was accomplished and the ship resumed her voyage under high and low pressure engines at reduced speed.
When Fire island was sighted Captain Baudelon signaled that La Gascogne was disabled, and two tugs which were sent out intercepted the steamer as she neared the Sandy Hook lightship and assisted her into port. The piston rod broken was the new rod placed in the ship on her return to Havre after her memorable voyage in February last. There was no excitement on board.
John P. Gladden of Portland, Or., went to Chicago a week ago and the first night out donned a flasby suit, slipped a $500 ring over his finger, and saluted along State greet. He carried $23,750 in a wallet in one his hip pockets. He wandered down along Clark Street, and a woman took him into a dive. While there a part of the wall slid back, a long lim arm reached in, seized Gladden's wallet, the leaf was turned back, and $23,750 in green backs fell on the floor. The sight of that amount of money caused a panic among the inmates and there was a consultation, which resulted in $3,500 being taken from the roll, and the rest was returned to his pocket. Gladden left the house about midnight and staggered to his hotel. Next morning he discovered his loss and appealed to a detective agency. A detective was set to work, and by noon had located the "panel" game. By noon parley, $1,000 was handed back. Sunday night the remainder was delivered by a messenger boy to Gladden at the hotel, and the next morning he packed his trunk and left for Oregon.
From the official data respecting the sugar campaign for 1893 94 in Germany we glean some interesting figures: 405 factories were working, and 966,200 acres were planted to beets. The total weight of beets was 10,644,300 tons, giving an average per factory of about 26,000 tons. The average sugar campaign was 78 days, and the total sugar production was 1,319,000 tons, corresponding to an extraction of 12.36 per cent.
If we include the sugar extracted from molasses,the extraction becomes nearly 13 per cent.The exportation of home-made sugars was 728,000 tons.The consumption of sugar remains about the same from year to year,and is nearly 600 000 tons.
Samuel Clayborn,a negro about twenty-six years old,says he comes originally from Tuscaloosa,iowa,arrived in El Paso accompanied by his wife and two children one day last week and told a sensational story.Hes says that a negro named Bill Ellis,hwo lives at San Antonio,visted Georgia and Alabama last fall and induced a colony of 800 negroes fromthe States named to follow him to Mexico and locate in a barren valley onthe bordersoftheStatesofDurango和Ogahulla,babout forty miles eastofMapimi onthe MexicanCentralrailroad.He toldhis peoplethattheyweregoingtoa perfect paradise;thatthelandswerefertileandhomewouldbegiventoeveryfamilyfreebutwhenthepoornegravesreachedtheirdestinationtheywereputtoimprovinglandunderMexicanoverseersandwerenotpaidfor theirwork,andwere fedonthevilestfoodandcompelledtoseleepontheground.OnMay9Clayborn,hisfamilyandaboutfortothorowsofthenegroesmadetheira escapeandwerepursuedbyarmedMexicans.Clayborn became separatedfromtheotherfugitivesand succeededinreachChihuahua.Hothersw capturedandoneof theirnumber,AntonioBonesofEutaw,Ala.,whoagainmadehisescapesandreachedChihuahua,saystheparuersshotandkilledallofhispartexcepthimself.TheUnitedStatesConsultatchihuahuaisinvestigatingtheaffair.
Bucklen's Arnica Salve.
The best salve inthe world for Cuts,Bruises,Sores Ulcera,Salt Rheum,Fever Sores,Tetter Chapped Hands,Cliublains,Corn,and all Skin Eruptions,and positively cures Piles,或no pay required.it is guaranteedtogiveperfectsatisfactionormoney
Accept None of the Pretended Substitutes
FOR Royal Baking Powder
BECAUSE inferior and cheaper made baking preparations are sold at wholesale at a price so much lower than Royal, some grocers are urging consumers to buy them in place of the Royal at the same retail price.
If you desire to try any of the pretended substitutes for Royal Baking Powder bear in mind that they are all made from cheaper and inferior ingredients, and are not so great in leavening strength nor of equal money value. Pay the price of the Royal Baking Powder for the Royal only.
It is still more important, however, that Royal Baking Powder is purer and more wholesome and makes better, finer, and more healthful food than any other baking powder or preparation.
ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK.