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anaheim-gazette 1895-10-31

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Anaheim VOLUME XXVI. PROFESSIONAL CARDS DR. CHARLES E. LEE (Successor to Dr. Bullard.) PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office and Residence—Corner Hermine and Chartress Streets, Anaheim. Office Hours—7 to 9 a.m.; 1 to 3 p.m.; 7 to 8. Dr. J. A. Champion PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Is permanently located in Anaheim. Office at residence, on Center street, near Clementina. Any One Wishing to Get Rid OF THE DRINKING HABIT WILL BE TREATED AT DR. Wm. H. PERDOMO'S Infirmary for the Cure OF INEBRIETY. IN ANAHEIM, CAL. DR. F. G. FLOURNOY PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Calls Promptly Attended to at all hours. The Whisky Habit cured by the Butler Plan of Treatment. One of the best treatments known in the world. A permanent cure guaranteed. Office—Opposite Derge's Drugstore, Center street, Anaheim. Paul A. Derge. Graduate in Pharmacy. R. H. SEALE. DEALER IN Groceries and Provisions Having purchased the Store formerly conducted by Mr. Robinson in the Koll building, on Los Angeles St., I would respectfully inform my friends and the public generally that my stock is of the best and my prices defy competition. A share of the public patronage is respectfully solicited. R. H. SEALE, Proprietor. E. B. MERRITT & CO. Furniture, Rugs, CARPETS, MATTING Stoves. Ranges, AGATEWARE, TINWARE, Wall Paper, Paints and Oils. Center Street, Opposite Postoffice, - - - Anaheim, Cal. BENTZ & BAILEY Wholesale and Retail Butchers IN ANAHEIM, CAL. DR. F. G. FLOURNOY PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Calls Promptly Attended to at all hours. The Whisky Habit cured by the Butler Plan of Treatment. One of the best treatments known in the world. A permanent cure guaranteed. Office—Opposite Derge's Drugstore, Center street, Anaheim. Paul A. Derge. Graduate in Pharmacy. DRUGS, MEDICINES, Perfumes and Toilet Articles. BEST 5-CENT CIGAR IN TOWN MEDICAL HALL, KOLL BLOCK. CHAS. S. ROGERS Civil Engineer. Irrigation and Hydraulic Work a Specialty. Surveys and Estimates made at Reasonable Rates. OFFICE—East of Santa Fe Depot, Anaheim. 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. H. P. LARSEN, CONTRACTOR & BUILDER. Estimates given, Contracts made and do a general jobbing Business. CENTER STREET — ANAHEIM. L. GUNTHER. PIONEER BOOT & SHOE MAKER. Corner Adela and Los Angeles trests. GEORGE BAUER' BOOT AND SHOE MAKER. Center street... Anaheim. AGATEWARE, TINWARE, Wall Paper, Paints and Oils. Center Street, Opposite Postoffice, - - - Anaheim, Cal. BENTZ & BAILEY 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 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 and therefore can sell for a very small profit, giving her 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 N. Hart's Place. I KEEP CONSTANTLY ON HAND THE Choicest of Liquors in Wholesale Quantity CIGARS, TOBACCO, ETC. Anaheim Beer on Draught. N. HART, - PROPRIETOR. T. J. F. BOEGE, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Wines, Liquors and Cigars. KEeps Always On Hand A COMPLETE STOCK! L. GUNTHER. PIONEER BOOT & SHOE MAKER. Corner Adele and Los Angeles streets. 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 L. NEMETZ. Carriage Painting & Trimming SIGN WRITING Shop on Center street, near the opera-house! Anaheim, Cal. H. A. McWilliams. Contractor AND Builder. Office, first door east of City Hall. splitf GRAY BROTHERS & WARD Cement Contractors Shillinger Patent. Contracts for RESERVOIRS, IRRIGATION DITCHES, Cellar and Stable Floors, Sidewalks, Me. OFFICES—No. 205 New High Street, Los Angeles, Cal., Telephone—236 No. 316 Montgomery St., San Francisco, Cal. A. D. PORTER, Contractor and Builder. Estimates Furnished. Shop and Office—Corner of North and Lemon streets. N. HART, PROPRIETOR. 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. M. H. CHEESEMAN'S. (WEST-END GROCER) Large Invoice of Shoes! JUST RECEIVED. Groceries and Provisions Dry Goods, Clothing, BOOTS AND SHOES, ETC. A Complete Stock Always on Hand ANAHEIM. CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1895. ALE. provisions! conducted by Mr. Robinson, would respectfully inform stock is of the best and the public patronage is reH. SEALE, Proprietor. T & CO. Rugs, MATTING ges, INWARE, Oils. Anaheim, Cal. THE POLYANDROUS TODAS. FIVE HUSBANDS THE USUAL ALLOWANCE TO EACH WIFE—DISCOVERIES OF A FRENCH SAVANT IN A MOUNTAINOUS REGION OF INDIA. LONDON, Oct. I.—M. H. Levalle, the noted French traveler, has arrived here from India, which he visited in search of anthropological phenomena, and on his return to France will prepare a book on the most extraordinary tribe of human beings ever discovered, the Todas, who live in a mountainous district in the Presidency of Madras, on almost inaccessible mountain tops and precipices, and have never before been visited by a savant. They are dying out fast, only 511 being alive now of this people, which is supposed to be descended from a colony of Roman soldiers or from soldiers belonging to the armies of Alexander the Great. M. Levalle made the following statement respecting this anthropological curiosity: "Men of science and others who take an interest in ethnology will have to make haste if they want to see a specimen of the Todas, the most curious race of human beings in all India. In the years 1890 the census takers counted 675 men, women and children belonging to this tribe. At the time I left and provisions. They said they did not know; it had always been thus since the days of King Ravana. "Who is King Ravana? "A mighty giant monarch, living far away from Madras. He banished the Todas to this territory, excluding them from their beautiful homes, their great cities, and all their riches." "The women are well treated and seem to keep the men in a sort of subjection. The girl does the courting herself and cannot be forced to marry against her will. This is only fair when it is considered that she marries not one, but half a dozen men by one ash, and is therefore forced to look closely into the affairs of a number of young men before binding herself to one of them. The man, on the other hand, may refuse the hand offered him. If he accepts, he is expected to present six or eight buffaloes to the parents, and that settles the bargain." "The husband's brothers do not live with the couple—they may have wives of their own—but they may call upon their sister-in-law at all times, and the women must treat them in all ways like fall fledged husbands, tending their cattle, looking after their garments, etc." The French traveler accounted for the fact that the Todas degenerate on account of the consequences of polyandry, while other Indian tribes devoted to that form of marriage flourish in spite of it by saying it clearly proved their European origin. This deduction would be correct if the ancestors of this curious race hailed from Rome or Italy; if, on the other hand, they were Greeks, the argument would be rather weak, for polyandry was practised in several States of Greece, in Sparta, for instance. The Doctor showed me a passage in Humboldt's writings in which it is stated that the Orinoco Indians in South America practiced polyandry, as well as some Cosacks tribes in Russia that are fast disappearing. A Toda woman who has not at least five husbands is looked upon with contempt by her sisters and friends. "The waning numerical strength of the tribe," continued M. Levalle, "has forced the men to special effort in respect to levying their tribute of cereals among the neighboring communities. The fashion now generally followed is to send the young fellows after harvesting time, into the valley, where they drive out all males, taking up their residence with the women until the grain is forthcoming, which they carry off swiftly to support their own in idleness for a season. In this undertaking their physical beauty, their whole warlike appearance, stand them in good stead." ad valorem instead of a promised sparse sugar duty, thus cutting the Governor out of twenty odd millions of revenue American sugar producers out of nearly their pitiful measure of promised protection And now the "compensatory" five-million dollar appropriation is held up with the parent taxis approval of the President; the Secretary of the Treasury; for the identity could sure prevent a subordinate pointer from blocking a law that went effect with his Executive approval. "The faction of the national Democracy which was, unfortunately, predominated by the last Congress, has stigmatized the LA-sa sugar planters as 'traitors to the power worthy of no consideration.' That faction was more than willing to demolish the fact that our people, great factories built by this enterprise of three successive generations lay waste and turn over to weeds their daint and productive sugar fields, to cause the factory hands and field laborers to vorge of starvation, and to cover half a S.A.with ruin and desolation. This is not heroic age, and it is not natural now for people to lick the scourge which affords them, or to maintain their allegiance to political party which, having brought them to the blink of financial destruction, shows a greater desire to drive them in that abeys than to draw them out. Hence most of the sugar parishes of the State majority of the leading men and last sugar planters have been driven into national Republican party. In St. Mary the largest sugar-producing parish in Lewana and the home of Gov. Murphy J. Ford and United States Senator Don Caffery overwhelming majority of the white citizen all of whom were once Democrats, have gone over to the Republican party. "If there were any way of getting a fair, honest election in Louisiana in November, 1896, this change of politics would be enough to cost the Democratic party the electoral vote of the State, although it gave Cleveland the largest actual majority of any State in the Union in 1892." HAND THE mesale Quantity ETC. Draught. PROPRIETOR. E G E, ber in old Cigars. HAND — STOCK! The male children from this union, or number of unions, are all credited to the chief husband, or the original husband. The oldest female child is supposed to be the offspring of the husband's eldest brother; the second girl baby calls the second oldest papa, etc. "I spoke at the beginning of our talk," continued Mr. Levalle, "of the degeneration of the race; this, however, manifested itself solely in the decrease of population; individually the Todas appear healthy, beautiful of face and limb. Men and women wear the same single garment, a square piece of white or gray linen, in which they drape their muscular form with dignity and coquetry. Up to the time of the interference of the Madras British Government the women were dressed solely in their mantle of beautiful black tresses, which they wore loose around their shoulders, or a girdle or a metal chain around their neck and waist. To day they braid their hair and let it fall gracefully upon their nude neck; as of old, silver or gold links encircle their waist, but the official linen cloth does not in the least interfere with the display of their charms. The faces of men and women seem to indicate European orgn; they have little in common with the race characteristics of the people of and have never before been visited by a savant. They are dying out fast, only 511 being alive now of this people, which is supposed to be descended from a colony of Roman soldiers or from soldiers belonging to the armies of Alexander the Great. M. Levalle made the following statement respecting this anthropological curiosity: "Men of science and others who take an interest in ethnology will have to make haste if they want to see a specimen of the Todas, the most curious race of human beings in India. In the years 1890 the consuls takers counted 675 men, women and children belonging to this tribe. At the time I left Madras, four weeks ago, there were 511, among them 331 males. "I have lived for some time among these people, studied their morals and habits, their present mode of living and history, and come to the conclusion that polyandry is the reason for the astonishing and unprecedented degeneration of this race. At the beginning of this century they numbered a hundred thousand or thereabouts. Now they are almost wiped out, and, as I have learned, neither flood nor war nor epidemics helped to hasten the process of decimation. This race of warriors succumbed to the physical consequence of a law made several hundred years before Christ, with necessity for its parent. When the ancestors of the Todas first settled on the mountain tops of Nilgiri, about 7,000 feet above the level of the sea, there was doubtless some reason for the cruel rule that a girl, given in marriage, shall be wife not only to her husband, but also to that husband's brothers. Tradition among the people says that their forefathers be long to the army of Alexander the Great, who entered India 327 B.C. Other legends claim Roman soldiers as the Todas' grand-arca—in either case, these earliest settlers were probably as hard up for wives as the ancient Romans, who had to steal their female companions among the Sabines. "In the interest of race propaganda, then it was decreed in the old community that no woman's love or affection, but on the contrary, should allow his brothers, or, in case he had none, his other near relatives, to participate in his conjugal bliss. That was very well for the time, being a practice that must have prevailed, in one form or other, with our Biblical forefathers, too, why it should be practiced to this day, or rather for what other reason than race prejudice it was revived at the beginning of the present century after the Todas had become a strong and numerous people, I cannot imagine; neither was I able to gather information on that point. From observation I know that every Toda woman has four, five or even more husbands." "The male children from this union, or number of unions, are all credited to the chief husband, or the original husband. The oldest female child is supposed to be the offspring of the husband's eldest brother; the second girl baby calls the second oldest papa, etc." "I spoke at the beginning of our talk," continued Mr. Levalle, "of the degeneration of the race; this, however, manifested itself solely in the decrease of population; individually the Todas appear healthy, beautiful of face and limb. Men and women wear the same single garment, a square piece of white or gray linen, in which they drape their muscular form with dignity and coquetry. Up to the time of the interference of the Madras British Government the women were dressed solely in their mantle of beautiful black tresses, which they wore loose around their shoulders, or a girdle or a metal chain around their neck and waist. To day they braid their hair and let it fall gracefully upon their nude neck; as of old, silver or gold links encircle their waist, but the official linen cloth does not in the least interfere with the display of their charms. The faces of men and women seem to indicate European orgn; they have little in common with the race characteristics of the people of" and have never before been visited by a savant. They are dying out fast, only 511 being alive now of this people, which is supposed to be descended from a colony of Roman soldiers or from soldiers belonging to the armies of Alexander the Great. M. Levalle made the following statement respecting this anthropological curiosity: "Men of science and others who take an interest in ethnology will have to make haste if they want to see a specimen of the Todas, the most curious race of human beings in India. In the years 1890 the consuls takers counted 675 men, women and children belonging to this tribe. At the time I left Madras, four weeks ago, there were 511, among them 331 males. "I have lived for some time among these people, studied their morals and habits, their present mode of living and history, and come to the conclusion that polyandry is the reason for the astonishing and unprecedented degeneration of this race. At the beginning of this century they numbered a hundred thousand or thereabouts. Now they are almost wiped out, and as I have learned, neither flood nor war nor epidemics helped to hasten the process of decimation. This race of warriors succumbed to the physical consequence of a law made several hundred years before Christ, with necessity for its parent. When the ancestors of the Todas first settled on the mountain tops of Nilgiri, about 7,000 feet above the level of the sea, there was doubtless some reason for the cruel rule that a girl, given in marriage, shall be wife not only to her husband, but also to that husband's brothers. Tradition among the people says that their forefathers be long to the army of Alexander the Great, who entered India 327 B.C. Other legends claim Roman soldiers as the Todas' grand-arca—in either case, these earliest settlers were probably as hard up for wives as the ancient Romans, who had to steal their female companions among the Sabines. "In the interest of race propaganda, then it was decreed in the old community that no woman's love or affection, but on the contrary, should allow his brothers, or in case he had none, his other near relatives, to participate in his conjugal bliss. That was very well for the time, being a practice that must have prevailed in one form or other, with our Biblical forefathers, too, why it should be practiced to this day, or rather for what other reason than race prejudice it was revived at the beginning of this century after the Todas had become a strong and numerous people, I cannot imagine; neither was I able to gather information on that point. From observation I know that every Toda woman has four, five or even more husbands." "The male children from this union, or number of unions, are all credited to the chief husband, or the original husband. The oldest female child is supposed to be the offspring of the husband's eldest brother; the second girl baby calls the second oldest papa, etc." "I spoke at the beginning of our talk," continued Mr. Levalle, "of the degeneration of the race; this however, manifested itself solely in the decrease of population; individually Todas appear healthy,beautiful of face and limb. Men and women wearthe same single garment,a square piece of white or gray linen,in which they drape their muscular form with dignity and coquetry. Up tothe timeoftheinterferenceoftheMadrasBritishGovernmentthewomenweredressedsolelyinthemantleofbeautifulblacktresseswhichwereloosearoundtheshoulderoragldlerandmetailaroundtheneckandwaist.Todaytheybraidthehairandletitfallgracefullyuponthenudeneck;asofold,silverorglodlinksencirclethewaist,buttheofficiallinenclothdoesnotintheleastinterferewiththedisplayofthecharms.ThefacesofmenandwomenseemtoindicateEuropeanorgn;theyhavelittleincommonwiththeracecharacteristicsofthepeopleof" and have never before been visited by a savant. They are dying out fast,only 511 being alive now of this people,which is supposed to be descended from a colony of Roman soldiers or from soldiers belonging to the armies of Alexander the Great. M. Levalle made the following statement respecting this anthropological curiosity: "Men of science and others who take an interest in ethnology will have to make haste if they want to see a specimen ofthe Todas,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceofhumanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceof humanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceof humanbeingsinIndia,themostcuriousraceof humanbeingsinIndia,themostcurious RaceOfPolynesiasbyTHEWILSONTARiffBill. POINT A LA HACHE,Parisifo Plaquemines,L.,Oct.15.-Forty miles below New Orleans down inthe famous orange regionofthe lowercoastoftheMississippiRiver liesa great sugarplantationalmost historicinterestintheStateOfLouisianaThisisWoodlandanestatewhichhas beenincultivationsincethebeginningofthecenturyIthas beenforgenerationsinthepossessionofthesnewYorkfamilyastheLawrencesOsqoods,andtheJohnsonsoGeorgeandtheJohnsonsoGeorgeandBradiah. BradishJohnson,diedtwoorthreeyearsagoisinantebellumdaysoneofthelargestdistillersandsugarrefinerinhNewYorkcity.HewmadeWoodlandhis winterhome,andtherebeforeandafterthewarlivedlikeawealthyLouisianaplanteroftheoldregime,jentainingtheluxuries-ofa favoredlandanddispensingunlimitedhospitalitiestot hundredsoft visitorsfromNewOrleansandfarcitiesoftheNorthTherewithhisadjoisingneighbor,nothernotedsugarplanterOfNewYorknativity,FinkghamLawrenceOfMagnolia,h entertainedHoraceGreeleyontheoccasionofthevisitofthateminentjournalist,saintmanandphilanthropisttotSouthtolearn somethingaboutSouthernfarmingin1869.EarlyinthecenturyWoodlandwas equippedwitha horsemilltogrindthesoftCreolecane,thelenonlykind cultivatedlnLouisiana.LatertheWestPointFoundryOfNewYorkbuiltforitsugarhousea millconsideredbigforthosedays.Butearlyinthefiftiesthatmachinewashout,andthesamefoundryconstructedforWoodlandthe largestcanemillexistingintheworldatthattime.MerrickFoundryOfPhiladelphia fitteditsfactorywitha largevacuumpanotherNorthernironestablishments和copperandbrassfoundries supplieditwithsteamtrains,andacompleteboneblackfilteringplant,andatthecommencementofthecivilwar WEDDED THE COACHMAN Edna Schmidt,eighteen-yearsoldfatherK.G.Germondoichainwardherfather'sdisciplinecoachman.ErnstWohl.Atleethi什whattheoldman thinkswhatishemadeherownbedshewouldhavetobutit.Iadvisedherthathehadweledhimdownandkickedhimoutoftheroom,andWohlwouldpromptdischargeSincethenlovedinstinctclandestiny,andtheend cameonWohlneedyadwhenEdenwent shoppingandnotreturn.HerfatherthinksthecourierwenttoMilwaukeeandgotmarriedIcidowcareIfhewoolIcidowwhenIweremarriedandsowasmywife,但wemailedtogetalongallrightjustthesameMyobjectiontoEdna'smarryingwasthisshewastoyoung.Iwillsendher$2.50oherownmoney,但beyondthat shehadnotgetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercentfromme.Welcometrainedhowhewasnevergetanothercent从me.wellcomebetweenbothhouseswhilesheisironing." "Do you think so?" "Yes,我 would like to have one like it." "Is that so?" "Yes,但I would rather have a nice wife like you." "Mr.Brombeck turned around from her work at this juncture and Thomas took hollowed from his salary at the rate of $10 a month.Mrs.Brombeck is a pretty brunette about twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis is as follows: Thomas whispered twenty-two years old.The tale is told stolen kis是as follows: Thomas whispered二十二年是作为学生使用的教材。" "Yes,但我愿意接受这样的教材。" "Yes,但我愿意接受这样的教材。" "Yes,但我愿意接受这样的教材。" "Yes,但我愿意接受这样的教材。" "Yes,但我愿意接受这样的教材。" "Yes,但我愿意接受这样的教材。" "Yes,但我愿意接受这样的教材。" "Yes,但我愿意接受这样的教材。" "Yes,但我愿意接受这样的教材。" "Yes,但我愿意接受这样的教材。" "Yes,但我愿意接受这样的教材。" "Yes,但我愿意接受这样的教材。" "Yes,但我愿意接受这样的教材。" "Yes,但我愿意接受这样的教材。" "Yes,但我愿意接受这样的教材。" "Yes,但我愿意接受这样的教材。" "Yes,但我愿意接受这样的教材。" "Yes,但我愿意接受这样的教材。" "Yes,但我愿意接受这样的教材。" In the decrease of population; individually the Todas appear healthy, beautiful of face and limb. Men and women wear the same garment, a square piece of white or gray linen, in which they drape their muscular form with dignity and coquetry. Up to the time of the interference of the Madras British Government the women were dressed solely in their mantle of beautiful black tresses, which they wore loose around their shoulders, or a girdle or a metal chain around their neck and waist. To day they braid their hair and let it fall gracefully upon their nude neck; as of old, silver or gold links encircle their waist, but the official linen cloth does not in the least interfere with the display of their charms. The faces of men and women seem to indicate European orgn; they have little in common with the race characteristics of the people of India. The mouth is firm, the teeth are good, and their foreheads high and slightly receding; both sexes have buahy eyebrows and Greek noses. The men all wear a long black and thick beard. Men and women are tall, and have plastic forms with small extremities. Like other children of nature, they have no notions of prudery or moral restriction. Their lives run smoothly in patriarchal fashion. "The mountain plateau they inhabit is steeped in internal spring and summer; they know nothing of cold seasons or of want. They have a god of their own, whom they honor in a temple a little larger, but otherwise corresponding with their own huts. Two priests, an old and a young man, act as intermediaries between the Toda god and his people. They must adopt the single state for a while, but are allowed to take a wife after a certain routine. "There are still in existence 106 Toda villages, so called, each consisting of four huts and a temple. A good many, though, are uninhabited, the population having died out. The villages are built on mountain tops and precipices that can be reached only with much difficulty by narrow and dangerous paths. The huts make a cleanly and pleasant appearance. They are built of wood, and the walls on the inside are covered with some sort of cement. They cover from 8 to 15 square feet, and are 7 or 8 feet high. The roof consists of bambus twigs and palm leaves. There is only one entrance, which can be locked by a stout plank. Opposite the door is the master's bed, on a little platform covered with straw mats and fur rugs. At the other end of the room are an oil stove and shelves, with kitchen utensils. "The temple is always the largest hut of the village," as all the inhabitants keep their milk in one part of the edifice, separated from the priest's room by a board wall. "The Todas call themselves 'Kings of the Hille,' and as such scorn the idea of tilling the soil. For many centuries the neighboring tribes have paid them tribute in the shape of grain and other necessary cereals. This seems to indicate that the supposition is correct which stamps the Todas as despondents of soldiers or conquerors. I have asked members of the Bagada tribe, living in the Nilgiri Hills, why they continue this practice of furnishing the enemy with food." Early in the century Woodland was equipped with a horse mill to grind the soft Creole cane, then the only kind cultivated in Louisiana. Later the West Point Foundry of New York built for its sugar house a mill considered big for those days. But early in the fifteenth that machine was thrown out, and the same foundry constructed for Woodland the largest cane mill existing in the world at that time. The Merrick Foundry of Philadelphia fitted its factory with a large vacuum pan, other Northern iron establishments and copper and brass foundations supplied it with steam trains, etc., and a complete boneblack filtering plant, and at the commencement of the civil war the plantation contained the most complete sugar manufacture and refinery in the State of Louisiana. This fine result was reached only after the expenditure of several hundred thousand dollars. After the war, under the administration of Bradish Johnson, and later that of his heirs, Kiffingham Johnson and the Carrolls of New York, Whitneys of New Haven, and Forsythies of New Orleans, Woodland continued its prosperous career as a sugar plantation up to the passage of the Wilson bill. Last year the plantation produced 1,300,000 pounds of sugar. This year its immense sugar factory has been dismantled, its costly machinery has been sold in scattered pieces and for old junk, and the famous estate has gone out of sugar production forever; its smokestack, a lofty pile of masonry, towers over a useless mass of rubbish as a monumental protest against the rain wrought there and all over the Louisiana sugar region by the tariff bill of 1894. Another fine plantation of this parish, Scaredale, the property of H. P. Kernochan, one of the New York Kernochans, was lost to its owner last winter through the iniquity of that bill. Mr. Kernochan was Naval Officer of the port of New Orleans through Mr. Cleveland's first Administration; now he is one of the most active "National Republics" in Louisiana. The Bradish Johnson heirs are well able to drop the sugar planting business as soon as it shows itself to be unprofitable. But all they own, and more too, is invested in their business by nine-tenths of the Louisiana sugar planters. And this year all over the sugar region of this State factories have gone out of sugar production which will never turn a wheel nor light a furnace fire again. These idle and abandoned factories gave annual employment to thousands of skilled white workmen; they contributed annually hundreds of thousands of dollars to Northern foundries and workshops for the best makes of sugar machinery, and every pound of their fuel was purchased from the mines of Pennsylvania. "Last year," said one sugar planter of this parish, "the dominant faction of the Democratic Congress postponed the passage of the tariff bill until the country was loaded up with almost a year's supply of free sugar. It made the fatuous blunder of imposing an That's nice sieve you have there," he said. "Do you think so?" "Yes, I would like to have one like it." "Is that so?" "Yes; but I would rather have a nice wife like you." Mrs. Brombeck turned around from her work at this juncture and Thomas took hold of her and kissed her. Then she said: "If your wife knew this it would turn her hair gray." "Yes, but it won't turn mine gray," said the officer. Thomas then left her and said he was going downstairs to go to bed. She told her husband, who reported the matter to the Chief of Police. Thomas sought to prove alibi, but failed. Three of the Commissioners thought him guilty and two favored his dismissal. The line of $100 was a compromise. "There goes young Van Doodle over there did you hear that he tried to blow out his brains when the heiress refused him?" "No; did he succeed?" "They don't know." "Paw," said Tommy Tucker, "am I deceived from the monkeys?" "Not on my side of house," replied Mr. Tucker, with much positiveness. There is one medicine which every family should be provided with. We refer to Chamblelain's Pain Balm. When it is kept on hand the severe pain of a burn or scald may be promptly relieved and the sorre 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 the time otherwise required. Cuts and bruises should receive immediate attention before the parts become swollen, and when Chamberlain's Pain Balm is applied it will heal them without matter being formed, and without leaving a scar. A sore throat may be cured in one night. A piece of flannel dampened with this liniment and bound on over the seat or pain will cure lame back or pain in the side or chest in twenty-four hours. It is the most valuable, however, for rheumatism. Persons afflicted with this disease will be delighted with the prompt relief from pain which it affords, and it can be depended upon to effect a complete cure. For sale by Darge. Hotel Ramona, centrally located. The most popular house in Los Angeles. Corr., South Spring and Third Sts. First-class accommodations at moderate rates. For Rent. Building on Center St., belonging to Mrs. M. Blanchard; suitable for bakery, butcher-shop or store. Apply to Mr. Pauchon, in adjoining premises. Positively: yes, easily. You save about one quarter by trading with the Red Rice Furniture Co., 351-353 North Main St., Los Angeles. And we pay the freight. Yes, deliver free in Anaheim.* CALIFORNIA STATE LIBRARY Gazette. 1895. NUMBER 1 ODDS AND ENDS OF NEWS. The bridal boquet intended for Miss Consuelo Vanderbilt upon the occasion of her marriage on November 5th to the duke of Marlborough is being taken to New York by a steamship sailing from Liverpool. It is exceptionally large and beautiful and is made up of the choicest and most valuable flowers ever gathered in the historical gardens and conservatories at Blonheim. This magnificent boquet, which is tastefully arranged, is twelve feet in circumference. Apparently the British authorities feel they have gone as far as prudence and courtesy permits in assisting in the education of our naval constructors, for the navy department has been notified that hereafter no American naval officers will be permitted to take the course at the Greenwich Royal School of Naval Architecture, a privilege which has been enjoyed by them for many years with such signal benefit that they have usually graduated at or near the head of their classes. The Glasgow school and that at Paris, however, are still open to our young constructors, and with the opening of the Cornell course of naval architecture the navy department feels it can get along very well. Too much religious zeal caused Etta Kimball, a highly respected young woman living alone on her farm near Traver, to become violently insane, and while in this condition she inflicted serious bodily injury upon herself. For several days neighbors noticed that her mind was wandering and they procured an attendant. On Saturday morning she became worse, and several persons went to the house to see her. She refused to allow any one to come near her and rushed out of the house and climbed a windmill tower near by. When she reached the top she tore off her clothing and jumped from the tower. She struck the ground on her right hip, and the bones were badly crushed. She was placed in a straight jacket. Dr. Nannie A. Stevens is sueing her hushing, Ralph Stevens, for divorce over in Kansas City. Her husband lives in Wichita, Ks., and she lived there with him and practiced medicine till two years ago, when she took her children to Kansas City and opened an office there. Dr. Stevens, when she lived in Kansas, was a prominent member of the Women's Federation, which works for the advancement of women along many lines which have been heretofore monopolized by men. The attendance of Dr. Stevens at the meetings of the Federation was one of her husband's money with her, and the father is now more anxious to recover the child than the wife and money. Penfield, his wife and child arrived at Seattle from Chicago a few days ago. His motive for leaving the East was to get his wife away from Fairchild's influence. She represented to him that the relations between herself and Fairchild had been purely platonic; that she had tired of his friendship, and a change of scene would influence her to forget him altogether. Upon this followed their emigration to the West. A week ago Penfield was amazed at meeting Fairchild face to face in Seattle. Penfield told his wife of the gambler's arrival. She laughed the matter away, saying that he had some time ago vanished from her mind, and the draped husband felt more at ease. But when he returned to his lodgings in the evening he was told that his wife, their child and a strange man, taking with them a quantity of luggage, had left the house at 10 o'clock that morning. An exciting scene was witnessed on the wharf at San Diego the other morning when three ladies disembarked from the steamer Pachace, just arrived from Ensenada. One of the women kept apart from the others, who were mother and daughter, and as soon as the steamer landed called upon an officer on the wharf for protection, saying the other women were trying to follow and kill her. The older lady gave her name as Senora Jesus de Miramontes, and the younger Lady was her daughter Rosa. She had no sinister intentions she declared against the other woman and was following her because Luis Rodriguez, a worthless gambler, had courted Rosa, who is only sixteen years old, and had obtained her promise to marry him. They went before the civil Judge at Ensenada and had the banus announced. Then Rodriguez fled to San Diego. The strange woman was Rodriguez's mistress and Miramontes had reason to believe she was on her way to join him. She was therefore following her, with was the hope of finding him. While she was telling her story the strange woman took a hack and left the wharf, and Miramontes and daughter hastily took another and followed her. The woman went direct to the northbound train and purchased a ticket for Los Angeles. Miramontes and daughter did the same, and the last seen of the party was when mother and daughter boarded the car occupied by the strange woman. A. F. Naftger of Los Angeles who went before the Interstate Commerce Commission in the spring and succeeded seemingly in opposition to the spirit of law in getting DEED THE COACHMAN. Schmidt, the eighteen-year-old of K. G. Schmidt of Chicago, ran and married her father's discharged Ennert Wohl. At least this is the old man thinks, as he received signed by his daughter to the effect the time he got the missive she he married, and as she had never and any one else he is sure she has the coachman. Wohl is 24 years has been in this country about a three weeks ago he told Schmidt wanted to marry Edna, and a nuanced. George Schmidt, a son millionaire, was so angry at the ennert's impudence that he knockdown and kicked him out of the old Wohl was promptly discharged. When the lovers have been meeting quietly, and the end came on Wednesday Edna went shopping and did not. Her father thinks the couple Millwakee and got married, but he instituted any inquiries and will be there. There is no record of the marriage taken place in Chicago. The makes the matter philosophically "I told my daughter that when her own bed she would have to lie advised her that she had better good one while she was at it, for she sleep better. This was when he wanted to marry her. I didn't was poor. I was poor when I was and so was my wife, but we manet along all right just the same.ation to Edna's marrying was that too young. I will send her $2,500 own money, but beyond that she will get another cent from me. Wehl do have been an officer in the Ger., but I doubt it. He wasn't much not even a good coachman." Edna are now stopping with the young ents in the Windy City. Marvelous Results. Letter written by Rev. J. 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in Chicago. The makes the matter philosophically "It told my daughter that when her own bed she would hare to lie advised her that she had better good one while she was at it, for she sleep better. This was when the ma wanted to marry her. It didn’t was poor. It was poor when I was said so was my wife, but we manet along all right just the same.ation to Edna’s marrying was that too young. It will send her $2,500 own money, but beyond that she will get another cent from me. Wehl do have an officer in the Ger., but I doubt it. He wasn’t much not even a good coachman." Edna are now stopping with the young cents in the Windy City. Marvelous Results. Letter written by Rev. J. 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Charles Brombek of Cincinnati charged Thomas with having kissed her, was fined $100 more than for being his salary at the rate of $10 a Mrs. Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old. The tale of kiss is follows: Thomas, who acquaintance came to her home was ironing. A nice stove you here there," he think so? He would like to have one like it." Wait, let me look at the first line again. "Thornton with having kissed her, was fined $100 more than for being his salary at the rate of $10 a Mrs. Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Next line: "A Mrs. Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "The tale of kiss is follows:" Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton with having kissed her, was fined $100 more than for being his salary at the rate of $10 a Mrs. Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "The tale of kiss is follows:" Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton with having kissed her, was fined $100 more than for being his salary at the rate of $10 a Mrs. Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "The tale of kiss is follows:" Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton with having kissed her, was fined $100 more than for being his salary at the rate of $10 a Mrs. Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "The tale of kiss is follows:" Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton with having kissed her, was fined $100 more than for being his salary at the rate of $10 a Mrs. Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "The tale of kiss is follows:" Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton with having kissed her, was fined $100 more than for being his salary at the rate of $10 a Mrs. Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "The tale of kiss is follows:" Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton with having kissed her, was fined $100 more than for being his salary at the rate of $10 a Mrs. Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "The tale of kiss is follows:" Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton with having kissed her, was fined $100 more than for being his salary at the rate of $10 a Mrs. Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "The tale of kiss is follows:" Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton with having kissed her, was fined $100 more than for being his salary at the rate of $10 a Mrs. Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "The tale of kiss is follows:" Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton with having kissed her, was fined $100 more than for being his salary at the rate of $10 a Mrs. Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "The tale of kiss is follows:" Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton with having kissed her, was fined $100 more than for being his salary at the rate of $10 a Mrs. Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "The tale of kiss is follows:" Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton with having kissed her, was fined $100 more than for being his salary at the rate of $10 a Mrs. Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "The tale of kiss is follows:" Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton with having kissed her,was fined $100 more than for being his salary at the rate of $10 a Mrs. Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "The tale of kiss is follows:" Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton with having kissed her,was fined $100 more than for being his salary at the rate of $10 a Mrs. Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton with Having kissed her,was fined $100 more than for being his salary at the rate of $10 a Mrs. Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton with Having kissed her,was fined $100 more than for being his salary at the rate of $10 a Mrs. Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton with Having kissed her,was fined $100 more than for being his salary at the rate of $10 a Mrs. Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton With Having kissed her,was fined $100 more than for being his salary at the rate of $10 a Mrs. Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton With Having kissed her,was fined $100 more than for being his salary at the rate of $10 a Mrs. Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton With Having kissed her,was fined $100 more than for being his salary at the rate of $10 a Mrs.Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton With Having kissed her,was fined $100 more than for being his salary at the rate of $10 a Mrs.Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton With Having kissed her,was fined $100 more than for being his salary at the rate of$ 10 a Mrs.Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton With Having kissed her,was fined $100 more than for being his salary at the rate of$ 10 a Mrs.Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton With Having kissed her,was fined$ 100 more than for being his salary at the rate of$ 10 a Mrs.Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton With Having kissed her,was fined$ 100 more than for being his salary at the rate of$ 10 a Mrs.Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton With Having kissed her,was fined$ 100 more than for being his salary at the rate of$ 15a Mrs.Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton With Having kissed her,was fined$ 15a Mrs.Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton With Having kissed her,was fined$ 15a Mrs.Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton With Having kissed her,was fined$ 15a Mrs.Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton With Having kissed her,was fined$ 15a Mrs.Brombek is a pretty brunette twenty-two years old." Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton With Having kissed her,was fined$ 15a Mrs.Brombek is a pretty brunette二十年" Yes, that's correct. Then line: "Thornton With Having kissed她,was fined$ 15a Mrs.Brombek是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她,她,是她, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的, 她是她的 她是她的 她是她的 她是她的 她是她的 她是她的 她是她的 她是她的 她是她的 她是她的 她是她的 她是她的 她是她的 她是她的 她是她的 她是她的 她是她的 她是她的 她是她的 她是她的 她是她的 我要的 我要的 我要的 我要的 我要的 我要的 Georgia legislators have witnessed the alluring dances on the Midway Heights at the Atlanta Exposition, and have been so shocked thereby that the House passed a bill to suppress the lithe-limbed young women in their endeavors to introduce the latest oriental novelties in the South. If the Senate and Governor view the matter in the same light as the representatives, there will soon be no more dances on the Midway. Early in the history of the exposition, the ministers of Atlanta, inspired by certain reports wafted from Chicago and San Francisco, appointed a committee to investigate the dance and report. The committee visited the Midway, ate the "hot-hots" of Egyptian commerce, drank of the seductive liquid refreshments purveyed by the Turks, witnessed the "cocoee cocoee" dance, and pronounced it a good thing. The Ministerial Association accepted the report, and there was no further talk about the Midway. It seems, however, that the legislators also had an exploring expedition on their own account, and did not see matters in the same light. A fight in midair and the giving and taking of blows by two men standing on a small beam in the tenth story of a big building, was the dramatic situation witnessed by pedestrians in Buffalo the other day. Edward Jacobs and Frank J. Connors, ironworkers, employed on the building, had been quarreling for several days over the ownership of some tools. The argument was reaumed at the noon hour and was getting warm when the whistle blew and the men ascended to their work again. They had been working about fifteen minutes when Connors, who was standing near the shafting, saw Jacobs coming toward him, walking on one of the iron scantlings. When he was within a few feet of him Connors recognized in Jacobs' hands the tools over which they had been disputing. Connors stepped out on the beam and the men began striking at each other. The beam was ten inches wide, and below them was the network of beams—ten stories of them. A fall meant death. The other workmen cried to them to desist, but dared not interfere. Jacobs struck Connors in the breast and Connors replied with a staggering blow. Jacobs aimed another blow, but Connors dodged back and the impetus of his own blow carried Jacobs beyond his balance and he fell with a great ory of terror head first inside the building. His leg struck a beam at the eighth floor and this changed the direction of the fall, throwing him toward the shafting. Past the eighth floor he shot, turning over and over. Between the seventh and eighth floors the elevator rope had a loop. In some way or other Jacobs grappled it. With a last effort of nervous force he threw his leg into the loophole and hung. He was taken down faint and sick from the fall and was removed to the hospital, where it was found he had suffered a bad contusion on the leg and a bad cut on the head. Mrs. M. E. Penfield eloped from Seattle with Henry Fairchild, a Chicago gambler, taking her nine-year-old daughter and $500 All silver coinage except that of subsidiary silver has been ordered suspended after November 1 by Secretary Carlisle. In carrying out this policy the New Orleans mint will be practically closed and dismantled after that date. Secretary Carlisle has for some time been considering the advisability of stopping all silver coinage except that of subsidiary coins. Since he has been head of the Treasury Department only 4,-382,224 standard silver dollars have been minted. Since July 1 last only ninety standard silver dollars have been coined. The total coinage of silver under all acts amounts to $423,289,307. The treasury now holds 137,644,000 fine ounces of silver bullion purchased under the Sherman act, the cost of which was $124,080,323, with a coinage value in silver dollars of $177,964,-000. If this bullion were coined into silver dollars the profit to the Government on its coinage would be nearly $54,000,000, which sum could be paid out for the ordinary expenses of the Government or against which silver certificates could be issued. The principal effect of the action taken by Secretary Carlisle is to convert all the silver bullion held by the Government into gold obligations under the parity clause of the Sherman act. Secretary Windom, in 1891, construed the law to mean that all the Sherman notes issued against bullion were redeemable in gold. This construction of the law was concurred in by his successors, Secretaries Foster and Carlisle, and has been in practical operation during the past four years Under it $76,193,552 has been redeemed. The coinage of silver bullion into standard silver dollars operates to prevent Sherman notes being issued, and silver certificates issued against the standard silver dollars are redeemable only in silver. Thus, from the same base (silver bullion), the Sherman notes become gold obligations, and silver, coined into standard silver dollars, and silver certificates, issued upon them, become silver obligations. The suspension of the coinage of standard silver dollars therefore leaves the silver bullion free from any other liability of conversion into silver obligations. The closing up of the New Orleans mint leaves only the United States mints at Philadelphia and San Francisco in operation. At these mints only gold and subsidiary silver will hereafter be coined, unless Congress should direct to the contrary and its action be approved by the President.