anaheim-gazette 1895-11-07
Searchable text
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.
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, Ca
BENTZ & BAILEY
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.
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 Adele and Los Angeles trests.
GEORGE BAUER
BOOT AND SHOE MAKER.
AGATEWARE, TINWARE,
Wall Paper, Paints and Oils.
Center Street, Opposite Postoffice, - - - Anaheim, Ca
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
Estimates given, Contracts made and do a general jobbing Business.
CENTER STREET - ANAHEIM
L. GUNTHER.
PIONEER BOOT & SHOE MAKER.
Corner Adele and Los Angeles trests.
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.
apt1tf
GRAY BROTHERS & WARD
Cement Contractors
Shillinger Patent.
Contracts for RESERVOIRS, IRRIGATION DITCHES, Cellar and Stable Floors, Sidewalks, etc.
OFFICES—No. 206 New High Street, Los Ancal. Telephone—236.
No. 316 Montgomery St., San Francisco, Cal.
A. D. PORTER.
Contractor and Builder.
Estimates Furnished.
Shop and Office—Corner of North and Lamen street.
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!
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, NOVEMBER 7, 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,
FINWARE,
and Oils.
-- Anaheim, Cal.
AILEY
The Weekly Gazette.
Established 1870.
SUBSCRIPTION, - $2 Per Year.
Six months... 1 00
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.
LOUISIANA SUGARCROP.
THE INDUSTRY REVOLUTIONIZED BY TARIFF LEGISLATION—THE REPEAL OF THE BOUNTY A HEAVY BLOW TO THE PLANTERS.
New Orleans, Oct. 30. The first sugar
of the new Louisiana crop was sold this week
for 4 5-16 a pound. This is about 1½ cents a
pound over the average of last year, and the
planters hope to see the price go still higher
and to make 1½ cents a pound more than
they did last season. This advance alone
has saved the sugar industry of Louisiana
from extinction. If it had been compelled
to sell its product at as low figures as last
season, and without the bounty, only a few
plantations would have survived. As it is,
the industry was badly struck, and some of
the strongest planters went down. When
the crop was planted last December the outlook was so unpromising that it was generally predicted that it would be the last season
of sugar growing in Louisiana. Some were
so convinced of this that they planted their lands to rice, but it is a difficult crop to abandon. Sugar, as cultivated in Louisiana,
is a four years crop, and it takes about four
years to get out of it. The cane plant is cut
down at the roots and is allowed to grow up
next year as stubble and the year subsequent
towns of Pennsylvania. The people of Louisiana have been very much horrified by some
of the plantation crimes recently perpetrated
near New Orleans, but they are the natural consequences of the condition of affairs prevailing there.
Three-fourths of the old plantation manor
houses along the Mississippi, one of the few
sections where rural life as we see it in Englaland was preserved, have been closed or deserted, or given up to the overseer of hands.
One by one the planters are abandoning
their plantations, finding life there no longer agreeable, with "the quarters," which are always near the house, filled with foreigners,
who do not know the language, or negroes ignorant of the family. The largest sugar producer in Louisiana, Leon Godchaux, is a clothing merchant from New Orleans, who makes his home here, and directs his plantation from the city. Gen. W. Porcher Miles,
the second larger producer, lives on his plantation, but the third in yield, Richard Milliken, although he has a dozen houses in Louisiana and a fine house in New Orleans, lives North, and directs his affairs from there.
Of the thirty large sugar planters in Louisiana not over six live on their places, and then only for a short season, spending most of the winter in New Orleans and the summer in the North or in Europe.
Of the large producers nine are companies,
with their headquarters in New Orleans, and are like all corporations, on strictly business principles; nine are commercial houses or business men in New Orleans or New York, also run on strictly business principles, free from all sentiment; four are planters who have moved away from the places; five are planters of the old style, who live on the place, direct it personally, look after the hands, and are interested not simply in making as much money out of it as they can, but have a love for the old plantation, try to keep it up to its old standard, keep their house and garden in order, having the quarters looking as well as possible, and take a personal interest in the employees.
There was of old no country life more enjoyable than that upon a sugar plantation during the grinding season. It was very much like the hunting season in England. The plantation houses, nearly all of which are large and handsome buildings, were crowded with relatives and friends, and there was general gayety. All this is disappearing. Very few of the houses are kept up, and only a fraction of the planters make any presence of living in their old baronial style. The drift is steadily toward torpedoes, and even the elements are guiding against by means of position or ranged whereby the guns above, although enveloped in clouds or mists, can be electrically pooled and discharged from half a mile below the enemy made to think that Great John harling clouds at him from high heavens self.
MEXICO IS WITH CUBA.
THE SOUTHERN REPUBLIC MAY OGNIZE THE ISLAND INSURANCE—SEVERAL REGIMENTS READ.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 4. There is prospect that the second largest republic in American continent will be actively gaged in aiding the Cuban insurgents to attain freedom on the island. Mexico pathizes with Cuba. This fact is accented by reports which have been received by the Mexican capital.
It is declared here in most positive that the Mexican Administration proposes to go several steps further than the United States has yet gone in the matter of the Cubans. Owing to the ties of which exist between the Mexicans and Cuba,the former are exceedingly anxious to be island of Cuba into the republic of Cuba as one of the States of that republic.
The latest advice indicate this idea has cordial support of Diaz. At a recent meeting of the Mexican Cabinet, it is asserted that proposition was made to the President he take an active part in the Cuban reaction by sending to Cuba of two or three regiments of Mexican troops to aid the insurgents. This radical proposition seems to meet with the cordial approval of the Mexican Cabinet, but it was realized that such course could only be adopted upon the vition of the Cubans themselves.
That the invitation will come seems assured, and in the event the reports show that exist between the Mexicans and Cuba most valued and effective support in revolution against the Spanish yoke. Cubans have only to ask Mexico to aid to secure from the Diaz Government not only moral support which recent meetings in the United States have accorded to but the support of several well-equipped regiments of Mexican troops, who will for Cuba with the idea that success
from extinction. If it had been compelled to sell its product at as low figures as last season, and without the bounty, only a few plantations would have survived. As it is, the industry was badly struck, and some of the strongest planters went down. When the crop was planted last December the outlook was so unpromising that it was the last season of sugar growing in Louisiana. Some were so convinced of this that they planted their lands to rice, but it is a difficult crop to abandon. Sugar, as cultivated in Louisiana, is a four years' crop, and it takes about four years to get out of it. The cane plant is cut down at the roots and is allowed to grow up next year as stubble and the year subsequent as second year's stubble. Should a planter decide to retire from sugar cultivation, and not plant an acre in cane, he will still have his stubble to look after for three years or so before he can plant anything else in its stead.
The sugar planters of Louisiana fared much worse last season than the cotton growers. It is generally conceded that the latter came out about even, that the crop cost to produce just what it sold for. Sugar was not so lucky. The planters prepared the most careful statistics of production, and knew to the thousandth part of a cent what it cost them to produce the sugar. It cost last season 3.55 cents a pound, and the product sold at an average of 2.75 cents; net loss 8 cents a pound. This means, on a crop of 375,383 tons, a loss of $5,686,620; in other words, all their labor for the year was lost and a very large amount in addition. It can easily be imagined how hard this hit the planters. Some of the largest of them, the Ferris Company, R.L. Rivers, and W.H. Chaffe & Co., failed, and others were only saved by the passage of the bounty law giving the producers .6 of a cent bounty per pound; this is the bounty suspended by Comptroller Bowler. The extraordinary section of the latter in withholding the money injured the planters less than may be imagined, because most of them had secured the money due them on their crop from merchants and banks, and the latter are out by Bowler's withholding of the money.
Even with the bounty, however, the crop was a dead loss. The sugar planters were able to stand it one year; although the smaller ones suffered severely; but a second season would have been impossible. The advance in sugar this year alone saved them from a disaster similar to that encountered in 1873, when overflow and tariff changes threatened to sweep the industry out of existence.
The tariff legislation of the last few years has completely revolutionized the sugar industry, and those who visit the plantations to-day will see a completely different condition from what has existed heretofore. The planters of old are being crowded out, and three-fourths of their handsome country houses are given up to bate; and they are being crowded out by small farmers, and are giving way to companies, with their headquarters in New Orleans or New York, and are operated by a strictly business basis, entirely free from sentiment. In old days it was something like the English agricultural system, where the landlord lived among his tenants and "kept up" his estate in baronial style. The old style planter knew all his hands; they had been together for several generations, and he was interested in their welfare, settled their differences, and looked after them like a father. All this is rapidly changing except in a few sections of the sugar district. Six years ago there were 1,274 sugar producers—landlords; in 1894 the number was 499; last season 449, and the probability is that the total number of sugar houses in operation this season will fall under 400, probably as few as 375.
This change has made great social, industrial, and political changes not at all to the advantage of the country. It is still going on, and there is no telling when it will end. The bounty law made a great change, but it was generally regarded as beneficial. The planters oppose it, realizing that followed, create an animus against bonnies and secure their lands personally, look after the hands, and are interested not simply in making as much money out of it as they can, but have a love for the old plantation, try to keep it up to its old standard, keep their house and garden in order, having the quarters looking as well as possible, and take a personal interest in the employees.
There was of old no country life more enjoyable than that upon a sugar plantation during the grinding season. It was very much like the hunting season in England. The plantation houses, nearly all of which are large and handsome buildings, were crowded with relatives and friends, and there was general gayety. All this is disappearing. Very few of the houses are kept up, and only a fraction of the planters make any pretence of living in their old baronial style. The drift is steadily toward big plantations run by corporations with cheap labor, and the change is not for the better. It is no longer possible to carry on sugar planting in the old style. Most of the planters are recognizing this, and are dropping out, leaving the business to be carried on by companies well backed with capital. These can grow sugar more cheaply, and are not affected so severely by a depressed market. A third of the sugar crop of Louisiana is now produced by these corporations and capitalists as datinguished from the planters men who know little about sugar production, never visit the plantation, but have some expert agent there to look after their affairs. It is pretty much the same condition of affairs as prevails in Ireland, where the abseize landlord reigns.
The bolt of the sugar planters last November over to the Republican party was a protest or revolt against this tendency, which they charged to the attitude of the Democratic Administration on the tariff. That result has been larger than the vote showed. Of these twenty-odd planters, enumerated as among the largest producers in the State, only four remained Democrats. The parish of St Mary, the home of Senator Caffery and Gov. Foster, where only white men were allowed to vote, gave a Republican majority, and a large majority of the planters probably vested the Republican ticket. The indications are that they have gone over permanently, unless there is a change in the tariff situation.
Better prices now being received for sugar will pull the planters through the season, whereas it looked at the beginning of the year as though they would all go to smash, but it is doubtful if it can stop the change going on, and prevent southern Louisiana, one of the most charming agricultural sections of the South, from drifting to a condition of absences landlordism, with sheap labor, overworked land, and consequent deterioration.
IMPREGNABLE FOR AGES
GIBRALTAR'S ROCK HAS BEEN REGARDED AS IMPOSSIBLE OF CAPTURE.
Gibraltar is almost an island of rock, its only connection with the mainland of Spain being a narrow causeway known as the 'Neutral ground.' This is patrolled up to a certain point by English sentries, looking neat, trim and businesslike in their short red coats and white belts. Just beyond the line of the sentry boxes the Spanish territory begins another relay of guards clothed in the yellow and red of Aragon and Castile stand ready to see that the realms of his majesty, Alfonso XIII, are not to be encroached upon and that no one crosses the border without first passing through the little Spanish custom house. For nearly 200 years, night and day, these two sets of sentinels have watched and challenged and glared at each other, and seem likely to continue so doing for a good many years to come.
The fortress stands at end of a rocky promontory extending about half a mile in public that she is prepared She buys for cash and ingering her customers the benzoids or answering questions Taken in Exchange
IN HAND THE HOLESALE QUANTITY OFTC DRAUGHT PROPRIETOR DANIEL HAUSER IN STOCK Davis
Seeds! Seeds! Seeds!
TASTE BUTCHERS MAIL Butchers MAIL
Sausages and Lard LAKE FOR Live Stock Davis
Daisies!
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TABLE! SEEDS!
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THE DISCOUNTMENT TO KEEP ON GUILD NEWS OF WHICH HAS JUST REACHED SAINTGIRE COUNTY.
WAITING WITH THE REVENUE OF THE CITY OF Mexico IS TRUE.
THE TURNING OF THE REVENUE OF THE CITY OF Mexico IS TRUE.
THE INDEX AT THE REVENUE OF THE CITY OF Mexico IS TRUE.
THE INDEX AT THE REVENUE OF THE CITY OF Mexico IS TRUE.
THE INDEX AT THE REVENUE OF THE CITY OF Mexico IS TRUE.
THE INDEX AT THE REVENUE OF THE CITY OF Mexico IS TRUE.
THE INDEX AT THE REVENUE OF THE CITY OF Mexico IS TRUE.
THE INDEX AT THE REVENUE OF THE CITY OF Mexico IS TRUE.
THE INDEX AT THE REVENUE OF THE CITY OF Mexico IS TRUE.
THE INDEX AT THE REVENUE OF THE CITY OF Mexico IS TRUE.
THE INDEX AT THE REVENUE OF THE CITY OF Mexico IS TRUE.
THE INDEX AT THE REVENUE OF THE CITY OF Mexico IS TRUE.
THE INDEX AT THE REVENUE OF THE CITY OF Mexico IS TRUE.
THE INDEX AT THE REVENUE OF THE CITY OF Mexico IS TRUE.
THE INDEX AT THE REVENUE OF THE CITY OF Mexico IS TRUE.
THE INDEX AT THE REVENUE OF THE CITY OF Mexico IS TRUE.
THE INDEX AT THE REVENUE OF THE CITY OF Mexico IS TRUE.
THE INDEX AT THE REVENUE OF THE CITY OF Mexico IS TRUE.
THE INDEX AT THE REVENUE OF THE CITY OF Mexico IS TRUE.
THE INDEX AT THE REVENUE OF THE CITY OF Mexico IS TRUE.
THE INDEX AT THE REVENUE OF THE CITY OF Mexico IS TRUE.
THE INDEX AT THE REVENUE OF THE CITY OF Mexico IS TRUE.
THE INDEX AT THE REVENUE OF THE CITY OF Mexico IS TRUE.
THE INDEX AT THE REVENUE OF THE CITY OF Mexico IS TRUE.
THE INDEX AT THE REVENUE OF THE CITY OF Mexico IS TRUE.
THE INDEX AT THE REVENUE OF THE CITYOF Mexico IS TRUE.
THE INDEX AT THE REVENUE OF THE CITYOF Mexico IS TRUE.
THE INDEX AT THE REVENUE_OF_the_CITY_OF_Mexico_IS_TRUE.
THE INDEX_AT_the_CITY_OF_Mexico_IS_TRUE.
THE INDEX_AT_the_CITY_OF_Mexico_IS_TRUE.
THE INDEX_AT_the_CITY_OF_Mexico_IS_TRUE.
THE INDEX_AT_the_CITY_OF_Mexico_IS_TRUE.
THE INDEX_AT_the_CITY_OF_Mexico_IS_TRUE.
THE INDEX_AT_the_CITY_OF_Mexico_IS_TRUE.
THE INDEX_AT_the_CITY_OF_Mexico_IS_TRUE.
THE INDEX_AT_the_CITY_OF_Mexico_IS_TRUE.
THE INDEX_AT_the_CITY_OF_Mexico_IS_TRUE.
THE INDEX_AT_the_CITY_OF_Mexico_IS_TRUE.
THE INDEX_AT_the_CITY_OF_Mexico_IS_TRUE.
THE INDEX_AT_the_CITY_OF_Mexico_IS_TRUE.
THE INDEX_AT_the_CITY_OF_Mexico_IS_TRUE.
THE INDEX_AT_the_CITY_OF_Mexico_IS_TRUE.
THE INDEX_AT_the_CITY_OF_Mexico_IS_TRUE.
THE INDEX_AT_the_CITY_OF_Mexico_IS_TRUE.
THE INDEX_AT_the_CITY_OF_Mexico_IS_TRUE.
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hands; they had been together for several generations, and he was interested in their welfare, settled their differences, and looked after them like a father. All this is rapidly changing except in a few sections of the sugar district. Six years ago there were 1,274 sugar producers—landlords; in 1894 the number was 499; last season 449, and the probability is that the total number of sugar houses in operation this season will fall under 400, probably as few as 375.
This change has made great social, industrial, and political changes not at all to the advantage of the country. It is still going on, and there is no telling when it will end. The bounty law made a great change, but it was generally regarded as beneficial. The planters oppose it, realizing that it would have the very results that followed, create an animus against bounties, and secure their repeal, leaving the industry unprotected. At the same time they recognized that it gave the sugar industry the greatest possible boom. Could it have continued for the fourteen years provided for it would have placed the business on a solid and substantial foundation and enabled Louisiana to supply the entire Union with sugar without protection of any kind. Its most beneficial effect, however, was in building up the small farm system. All through southern Louisiana the white farmers went to work growing cane, which they could sell profitably to the big refiners or central sugar houses at $4.50 a ton. The result was a large increase in the white population, and southern Louisiana which had been given over for more than a century to the negroes, became white and boasted of a white majority, and with that improvement there was a general improvement in the prosperity of the section, the building of schools, roads, etc.
The repeal of the bounty, followed as it was by the lowest price sugar ever knew, has completely revolutionized all this and made another change in the condition of the sugar industry. It drove the white farmers out of the business, for the refiners could not afford to pay more than half what they had been paying for cane. It converted the industry more and more into a manufacturing one, crowding out not only the small white farmers, but the planters as well. Under the new system it requires a large capital to run a sugar plantation, a million or more to make a success of it. A first class sugar house will cost from $250,000 to $600,000. The planter must be able to stand a heavy loss one season and make it up on the next, and he must get the cheapest labor. The result has been the crowding in all of kinds of cheap labor, in pretty much the same way as in Hawaii, Chinese coolies, Sicilians and Mississippi negroes. The Sicilians are coming in by thousands and a large part of the population of the upper coast is Italian today. The Louisiana negroes, brought up in the district and accustomed to good wages, are being crowded out by negroes imported from Mississippi, who are willing to work for smaller wages. These Sicilians, coolies and negroes live together in the same quarters, and the planter himself having deserted the plantation, there is less supervision and a great deal more crime than formerly. Instead of being like the old-fashioned English estates, they are getting more like the mining coasts and whites helmets. Just beyond the line of the sentry boxes the Spanish territory begins and another relay of guards clothed in the yellow and red of Aragon and Castile stand ready to see that the realms of his majesty, Alfonso XIII, are not to be encroached upon and that no one crosses the border without first passing through the little Spanish custom house. For nearly 200 years, night and day, these two sets of sentinels have watched and challenged and glared at each other, and seem likely to continue so doing for a good many years to come.
The fortress stands at the end of a rocky promontory extending about half a mile in breadth. The north end which overlooks Spain, springs up nearly perpendicular to a height of 1,800 feet. The east and south sides are steep and rugged and extremely difficult of access, even if they were not fortified; so that it is only on the west side, fronting the bay, where the rock declines to the sea and the town is situated, that it could be attacked with the faintest hope of success. Here, however, the strength of the fortification is such that the place may be said to be impregnable. The lower batteries are all casemated and masked by bushes, while higher up vast galleries have been excavated in the solid rock and mounted with heavy modern artillery; the damage which might ensue from the explosion of shells is guarded against by open traverses, and a network of passages gives communication between the different batteries and protects the gunners from the enemy's fire. Looked at from below there is nothing save an occasional empty porthole to indicate the deadly character of this huge martial monolith, but if it could be looked down on from above it would be found to present from sea to summit a perfect labyrinth of stone tunnels bristling with cannon and stored with chained lightning sufficient to shake the earth to its very center.
According to the historians Gibraltar has been besieged no less than thirteen times. Its possession rested alternately with the Moors and the Spaniards until 1704, when it was attacked during the war of the Spanish succession by the English and Dutch fleets, and surrendered after a short resistance. The Spaniards during the nine years following vainly endeavored to recover it, but in 1713 its possession was secured to the English by the peace of Utrecht. The last and most memorable siege was in 1779, when General George Elliott and his gallant band of 9,000 half starved men successfully held the place for four years against the combined fleets of Spain and France. That was a close shave for the English, but they have provided against it recurrence in such a manner that it seems certain that nothing short of an earthquake will ever dislodge them from the rock. It is said that the fortress is always kept victudled for a siege of seven years. Aerial railways, telephone telegraphs, electric searchlights and a perfect code of signals have united the garrison practically into a fighting machine. The blue waters of the bay are said to be treacherous with sunken I love my life. Was taken with LA GREAT and tried all the physicians for miles away but of no avail and was given up and took could not live. Having Dr King's advice Discovery in my store I sent for a bottle began its use and from the first dose he got to get better, and after using three bars was up and about again. It is worth weight in gold. We won't keep stores house without it." Got a free trial at M. Higgins' drugstore.
A Radical Correction.
A daily paper publishes the follow-up correction of an article which had peared in its columns the previous year.
"Yesterday we gave the partition of a fire which had occurred in the town of Barricic mentioning the names of victims. Having tainted further information, we had to rectify certain inaccuracies in the port of the sad event. There were victims since the fire in question never took place. We may add that the town of Barricic does not exist." — Motton Ridere.
Touring In Greece.
The party had been toiling for hour up a steep road along the edge of a precipice.
"See, sir," said the chief of guides, "it was just here I let an Irishman drop over ten years ago. I sentenced for culpable negligence to years' imprisonment. But I was released for my good behavior long before expiration of that period." And as a pause, "Might I be so bold as to you for a little pourboire (tip)? Paris Figaro."
Crystal Balls.
Roman ladies of rank had their slaves carry for them a number of amber crystals balls about the size of a billiard ball. At fetes, or while seated at gladiatorial games, they held crystal balls in their hands for the coolness parted by them.
Mrs. Pallette—Yes, my husband is awful artist; but there is one thing he cannot draw although he has attempted often.
"What is that?" "A sober breath."
Mrs. W.B. Meek, who resided at Cantonville, Cal., says her daughter was for several years troubled at times with severe cramps in the stomach, and would be in agony that it was necessary to call in a physician. Having read about Chamberlain Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy concluded to try it. She found that it always gave prompt relief. It was seldom necessary to give the second dose. "It has not saved us lots of worry and time," she said "but also doctor bills. It is my opinion every family should have a bottle of remedy in the house." For sale by Derga
ODDS AND ENDS OF NEWS
The public debt was increased $5,341,472 during October. The debt is steadily mounting up higher and higher.
Engene Field, the poet, died at his home in Chicago of heart failure early on Monday morning. He was aged 45.
The past season has been the dryest yet recorded by the United States Bureau at Portland, Or. Up to last week the rainfall for that State was 14 49 inches below the normal. The average rainfall for the month of October is 3 96 inches, but this year there has been none.
W. P. Bently, a member of the Kentucky Legislature in 1887, and the most prominent man in Leslie county, fought a duel to the death at London depot, Ky., Wednesday night with Bige Hignite, who killed his brother after an ago. Hignite died immediately. Bently lived eight hours.
John D. Rockefeller has made another magnificent gift to the Chicago University, which he founded by his royal endowment and enlarged by frequent donations. His latest act of munificence is the unconditional presentation of $1,000,000, available January 1 next, and the gift of $2,000,000 more, conditional on raising the same amount within a specified time.
The girls employed in the Chelsea Pottery Works at New Cumberland, W. Va., demanded a night off each week for receiving their sweethearts, and threatened to strike if they were refused. The works are being operated overtime now, and orders are behind time, but the managers were forced to give in. The girls will have Wednesday nights off.
Irwin Hostley and Bettie Shields, who were lovers at Charleston, W. Va., fell out on account of Hostley's jealousy. She was seen by him in company of another man and he demanded an explanation, which was given, but which did not suit him. He fired at her, the bullet cutting her neck slightly. Bettie used her pistol freely in the street duel that ensued, shooting three times, and each bullet took effect. Hostley is dying and Bettie is under arrest.
London is just now interested in the case of Edith Lanchester, 24 years of age and born of wealthy parents, who left her home several years ago and became a socialist. She resided in the working class district and of Spokane the Great Northern track crosses the Northern Pacific track. There Mrs. Hahlo was handed off the train, and fortunately caught a Northern Pacific train back to Spokane within a few minutes. Arriving at Spokane she met her husband. Explanations were exchanged and everybody was happy again in a very few minutes. The next day the couple got on the right train together, and went on their way rejoicing.
Representative Meyer and Colonel Hill of New Orleans, representing the Louisiana sugar producers, have had another interview with Auditor Baldwin of the Treasury Department at Washington in regard to the sugar bounty claim cases. In view of the fact that a decision favorable to them cannot be had under Controller Bowler's recent decision, they asked for the rejection of two specific claims, one under the appropriation of $238,000 on sugar produced before the repeal of the Bounty Act, and the other under the $5,000,000 appropriation by the last Congress, their purpose being to secure a proper basis for action to be brought in the United States Circuit Court as New Orleans against the Government for the same claimed to be due. The Oxnard, Neb., case does not meet the situation, ins much as the Controller did not specifically reject it, but directed that it be sent to the Court of Claims. Auditor Baldwin, however, declined to certify another claim to the Controller in the absence of instruction to that effect from the Secretary or Controller.
Bill Nye was rotten-egged after his lecture at Patterson, N.J., the other night. When he arrived in town he was faultlessly attired in a dress suit, with a new shirt of unspotted linen. His hair was nicely combed and his head, fresh from the barber, gave a semblance of continuity to his shirt front. When he left Patterson he looked as if he had been mixed up with the colors of a Kansas sunset. For several weeks Bill had been extensively advertised to appear at the First Baptist church. His entertainment was the first of a course arranged by the Young Men's lecture class, and they had worked hard to make the inaugural a success to secure the undertaking. Bill was to lecture on "Farming Exposed," and was to be assisted by Bert Poole the Boston cartoonist. When the time for the lecture arrived at 8 o'clock there was not a vacant seat in the church and many persons were standing. The audience embraced the elite of Patterson's fashionable society. Bill did not say much about farming and what he did say no one knew with it.
The invitation will come seems to be held in the city of Mexico, but it was realized that such a request could only be adopted upon the invitation of the Cubans themselves.
Irwin Hostley and Bettie Shields, who were lovers at Charleston, W. Va., fell out on account of Hostley's jealousy. She was seen by him in company of another man and demanded an explanation, which was given, but which did not suit him. He fired at her, the bullet cutting her neck slightly. Bettie used his pistol freely in the street duel that ensued, shooting three times, and each bullet took effect. Hostley is dying and Bettie is under arrest.
London is just now interested in the case of Edith Lanchester, 24 years of age and born of wealthy parents, who left her home several years ago and became a socialist. She resided in the working class district, and was so eloquent an advocate of socialism that she was put forward as the socialist candidate for membership in the London School Board. Recently she wished to live with a working man, a well-known socialist named Sullivan. Neither believed in marriage, and it was their intention to dispense with any formal ceremony. The parents of the young woman, hearing this, took steps to prevent their daughter from living with Sullivan, and with that object consulted a specialist in mental disorders, and, as a result of their consultation, had her confined in a lunatic asylum. Sullivan endeavored to ascertain the whereabouts of Miss Lanchester, but her parents refused to tell him. Thenenup he made representations to the Commissioners in Lunacy, who ordered the young woman to be set at liberty.
Miss Alma Crouch, the seventeen-year-old daughter of William O. Crouch, a prominent Bourbon (Ky.) county farmer, was walking in her father's orchard when she suddenly struck her feet against the body of a dead man lying in the high weeds and fell over it. She was struck with horror when she recognized the face as that of her lover, Doc Ellington. A few days ago Ellington had a difficulty with her father, and the old gentleman had ordered him off the premises and not to come and see his daughter again. They met again the next day, when Ellington was talking across the fence to the girl. The girl's father attempted violence to the boy and the latter drew his pistol and fired at the old man, the bullet striking him in the leg. He was put to bed and is thought not to have been out of his room since. The body of the young man showed that life had been extinct for some time. Both eyes were blown out, the killing having been done with a double barrel shotgun.
The love story of Gustav Pabst and Margaret Mather is end where the former's friends expected it would, in the divorce court. Pabst's attorney admits that divorce proceedings are under way, although the papers are not yet ready for filing. Mrs. Pabst is still confined to her residence under a physician's care, as the result of an open quarrel she had with her husband in Milwaukee when she struck him with a whip. Pabst left the city the day after the affair and has not returned. It was given out that he had gone on a hunting trip. Whether this be true or not, the fact remains he has been separated from his wife for the last month, nor does she know where he is. His friend say that there was no doubt that he and his wife were much in love with each other. While they had the usual differences that will come in married life they were on the whole quite happy. His feelings are pretty well shown by the statement vouch-safed for by those acquainted with the facts, that only a week before the quarrel which ended in their separation, he took out a life insurance policy of $100,000 in favor of his wife, indicating that he wished to provide in some way for her in case of his death.
Harriet Powell is the prepossession sixteen-year-old daughter of a St. Paul widow who keeps a boarding-house. To the boarding-house came a Spaniard, with all the leugrorus grace and poetic sentiment of the Castillian, giving his name as V. Gonzales. He had not been a great long when he began making love to the girl and soon gained her affections. The widow, seeing the drift of blind time, but the managers were forced to give in. The girls will have Wednesday nights off.
Irwin Hostley and Bettie Shields, who were lovers at Charleston, W. Va., fell out on account of Hostley's jealousy. She was seen by him in company of another man and he demanded an explanation, which was given, but which did not suit him. He fired at her, the bullet cutting her neck slightly. Bettie used her pistol freely in the street duel that ensued, shooting three times, and each bullet took effect. Hostley is dying and Bettie is under arrest.
London is just now interested in the case of Edith Lanchester, 24 years of age and born of wealthy parents, who left her home several years ago and became a socialist. She resided in the working class district, and was so eloquent an advocate of socialism that she was put forward as the socialist candidate for membership in the London School Board. Recently she wished to live with a working man, a well-known socialist named Sullivan. Neither believed in marriage, and it was their intention to dispense with any formal ceremony. The parents of the young woman, hearing this, took steps to prevent their daughter from living with Sullivan, and with that object consulted a specialist in mental disorders, and, as a result of their consultation, had her confined in a lunatic asylum. Sullivan endeavored to ascertain the whereabouts of Miss Lanchester, but her parents refused to tell him. Thenenup he made representations to the Commissioners in Lunacy, who ordered the young woman to be set at liberty.
Miss Alma Crouch, the seventeen-year-old daughter of William O. Crouch, a prominent Bourbon (Ky.) county farmer, was walking in her father's orchard when she suddenly struck her feet against the body of a dead man lying in the high weeds and fell over it. She was struck with horror when she recognized the face as that of her lover, Doc Ellington. A few days ago Ellington had a difficulty with her father, and the old gentleman had ordered him off the premises and not to come and see his daughter again. They met again the next day, when Ellington was talking across the fence to the girl. The girl's father attempted violence to the boy and the latter drew his pistol and fired at the old man, the bullet striking him in the leg. He was put to bed and is thought not to have been out of his room since. The body of the young man showed that life had been extinct for some time. Both eyes were blown out, the killing having been done with a double barrel shotgun.
The love story of Gustav Pabst and Margaret Mather is end where the former's friends expected it would, in the divorce court. Pabst's attorney admits that divorce proceedings are under way, although the papers are not yet ready for filing. Mrs. Pabst is still confined to her residence under a physician's care, as the result of an open quarrel she had with her husband in Milwaukee when she struck him with a whip. Pabst left the city the day after the affair and has not returned. It was given out that he had gone on a hunting trip. Whether this be true or not, the fact remains he has been separated from his wife for the last month, nor does she know where he is. His friend say that there was no doubt that he and his wife were much in love with each other. While they had the usual differences that will come in married life they were on the whole quite happy. His feelings are pretty well shown by the statement vouch-safed for by those acquainted with the facts, that only a week before the quarrell which ended in their separation, he took out a life insurance policy of $100,000 in favor of his wife, indicating that he wished to provide in some way for her in case of his death.
Harriet Powell is the prepossession sixteen-year-old daughter of a St. Paul widow who keeps a boarding-house. To the boarding-house came a Spaniard, with all the leugrorus grace and poetic sentiment of the Castillian, giving his name as V. Gonzales. He had not been a great long when he began making love to the girl and soon gained her affections. The widow, seeing the drift of blind time, but the managers were forced to give in. The girls will have Wednesday nights off.
Irwin Hostley and Bettie Shields, who were lovers at Charleston, W. Va., fell out on account of Hostley's jealousy. She was seen by him in company of another man and he demanded an explanation, which was given but which did not suit him. He fired at her, the bullet cutting her neck slightly. Bettie used her pistol freely in the street duel that ensued, shooting three times,and each bullet took effect. Hostley is dying and Bettie is under arrest.
London is just now interested in the case of Edith Lanchester, 24 years of age and born of wealthy parents, who left her home several years ago and became a socialist. She resided in the working class district,and was so eloquent an advocate of socialism that she was put forward as the socialist candidate for membership in the London School Board. Recently she wished to live with a working man,a well-known socialist named Sullivan.Never believed in marriage,and it was their intention to dispense with any formal ceremony.The parents ofthe young woman,hearing this,took steps to prevent their daughter from living with Sullivan,and with that object consulted a specialist in mental disorders,and.asaresultoftheir consultation,dadheredoutinlunaticasylum.SullivanendeavowedtoascertainthewhereaboutsofMissLanchesterbutherparentsrefusedtotellhim.TheendnuphemaderepresentationstotheCommissionersinLunacywhoorderedtheyoungwomantobesetatliberty.
Miss Alma Crouch,theseventeen-year-old daughterofWilliamO.Crouch,aprominentBourbon(Ky.)countyfarmer,waswalkinginherfather'sorchardwhenshe suddenly struckherfeetagainstthebodyofademandloftheroom.felloverit.Shewasstruckwithhorrorwhensherecognizedthefaceasthatofherlover.DocEllington.AfewdaysagoEllingtonhadadifficultywithherfather,andtheoldgentlemanhadorderedhimoffthepremisesandnottocomeandseehisdaughteragainstTheymetagainthenextday.WeretheyaskedtofindthejokeTherewerepartingsafterhegotinthecar.Millwaukeeallovedhowthedoorwasclosed,thewhitebleuwilldowntheinstreampaintbusiness.wenthisdrippinghomewardway.BillescapedToNewYork.
President Cleveland has issued proclamation designating Thursday,November 28,Tuesdaygivingday.Theproclamationisasfollows:
"TheconstantgoodnessandforebearanceOfAlmightyGodwhichhasbeenvouceasedtheAmericanpeopleduringtheyearjustpastcallforthesincereacknowledgementofdevont gratitude."
"Totheendtherefore,thewemaywiththankfulheartuniteintolistingthelovelandcareofourbeavenlyFather.I,GroverCleveland,PresidentofTheUnitedStatesdo herebyappointandsetapartThursday,the28thdayofthepresentmonthofNovemberasdayofthe Thanksgivingandprayertokeandobservedbyallourspeople.Onthatdayletusforegoourusoccupatiesthomeworkjoinindrenderingthankstothegiverofeverygoodandperfectgift,forsoundteorenouncereturnsthathave rewardedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailed throughouthereignsaredeployedfromherlifeintoherwork.Joininrenderingthankstothegiverofeverygoodandperfectgift,forsoundteorenouncereturnsthathave rewardedthroughouttheland;fordurpeasonandorderthatprevailedthroughouttheland;forderedthroughouttheland;forderedthroughouttheland;forderedthroughouttheland;forderedthroughouttheland;forderedthroughouttheland;forderedthroughouttheland;forderedthroughouttheland;forderedthroughouttheland;fordered throughouthereignsaredeployedfromherlifeintoherwork.Joininrenderingthankstothegiverofeverygood和perfectgift,forsoundteorenouncereturnsthathave rewarded throughouthereignsaredeployedfromherlife intoherwork.Joininrenderingthankstothegiverofeverygood和perfectgift,forsoundteorenouncereturnsthathave rewarded throughouthereignsaredeployedfromherlife intoherwork.Joininrenderingthankstothegiverofeverygood和perfectgift,forsoundteorenouncereturnsthathave rewarded throughouthereignsaredeployedfromherlife 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intoherwork.JoininrenderingthankstoThegiverofeverygood和perfectgift,forsoundteORENANCEDEMANDFORALMIGHTYGODwhichhasbeenvouceasedtheAmericanpeopleduringtheyearjustpastcallfortherseincereacknowledgewhichhasbeenvouceasedtheAmericanpeopleduringtheyearjustpastcallfortherseincereacknowledgewhichhasbeenvouceasedtheAmericanpeopleduringtheyearjustpastcallfortherseincereacknowledgewhichhasbeenvouceasedtheAmericanpeopleduringtheyearjustpastcallfortherseincereacknowledgewhichhasbeenvouceasedtheAmericanpeopleduringtheyearjustpastcallfortherseincereacknowledgewhichhasbeenvouceased.theAmericanpeopleduringtheyearjustpastcallfortherseincereacknowledgewhichhasbeenvouceased.theAmericanpeopleduringtheyearjustpastcallfortherseincereacknowledgewhichhasbeenvouceased.theAmericanpeopleduringtheyearjustpastcallfortherseincereacknowledgewhichhasbeenvouceased.theAmericanpeopleduringtheyearjustpastcallfortherseincereacknowledgewhichhasbeenvouceased.theAmericanpeopleduringthisdayjustpastcallfortherseincereacknowledgewhichhasbeenvouceased.theAmericanpeopleduringthisdayjustpastcallfortherseincereacknowledgewhichhasbeenvouceased.theAmericanpeopleduringthisdayjustpastcallfortherseincereacknowledgewhichhasbeenvouceased.theAmericanpeopleduringthisdayjustpastcallfortherseincereacknowledgewhichhasbeenvouceased.theAmericanpeopleduringthisdayjustpastcallfortherseincereacknowledgewhichhasbeenvouceased.theAmericanpeopleduringthisdayjustpastcallfortherseincereacknowledgewhichhasbeenvouceased.theAmericanpeopleduringthisdayjustpastcallfortherseincereacknowledgewhichhasbeenvouceased.theAmericanpeopleduringthisdayjustpastcallfortherseincereacknowledgewhichhasbeenvouceased.theAmericanpeopleduringthisdayjustpastcallfortherseincereacknowledgewhichhasbeenvouceased.theAmericanpeopleduringthisdayjustpastcallfortherseincereacknowledgewhichhasbeenvouceased.theAmericanpeopleduringthisdayjustpastcallfortherseincereacknowledgewhichhasbeenvouceased.theAmerican 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Early on Wednesday morning the engineer and fireman of Santa Fe Overland train,bound cast ,when near the Cajon pass,
imagined they saw something on the track right ahead.
Thinking they both jumped.
The engineer was rather badly hurt ,but when he fireman picked himself up he found that he engineered himself up because they were on their horses had been attached.
Their driver had seen them headlight of their engineered火车.
He woke up from his case ,waking up from his sleep.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away.
He went back to his place after being taken away
A Radical Correction.
Daily paper publishes the following article which had appeared in its columns the previous day: "Mustday we gave the particulars here which had occurred in the town mercy, mentioning the names and names of the victims. Having obeyed further information, we hasten to clarify certain inaccuracies in the report of the sad event. There were no injuries since the fire in question never occurred. We may add that the town mercy does not exist."—Motto per page.
Touring In Greece.
The party had been toiling for an up a steep road along the edge of the spice. The sir," said the chief of the party, "it was just here I let an English drop over ten years ago. I was forced for culpable negligence to 15 imprisonment. But I was released for good behavior long before the condition of that period." And after being "Might I be so bold as to ask for a little pourboire (tip)?"—Figaro.
Crystal Balls.
Man ladies of rank had their slaves for them a number of amber and balls about the size of a billiard. At fetes, or while seated at theorial games, they held the crystal on their hands for the coolness imbued by them.
Pallette—Yes, my husband is a won-artist; but there is one thing he could draw, although he has attempted it at that!
Ober breath."
W.B. Meek, who resides at Camp Cal., says her daughter was for several troubled at times with severe pain in the stomach, and would be in such that it was necessary to call in a physician. Having read about Chamberlain's cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy she tried to try it. She found that it always impetrified the second dose. "It has not only lots of worry and time," she says, so doctor bills. It is my opinion that family should have a bottle of this in the house." For sale by Derge.
Harriet Powell is the prepossessing sixteen-year-old daughter of a St. Paul widow who keeps a boarding-house. To the boarding-house came a Spaniard, with all the languorous grace and poetic sentiment of the Castillian, giving his name as V. Gonzales. He had not been a guest long when he began making love to the girl and soon gained her affections. The widow, seeing the drift of affairs, promptly sent the Spanish boarder away and forbade her daughter to receive his addresses. But the Spaniard was cunning. He had a friend name J. Drinkwine, and to the latter he went and enlisted his services in luring the girl from her mother's home. Last Thursday he went to Toronto and awaited the result of his plotting. Drinkwine called on the girl and told her of her lover's plan. She was very much in love and readily consented to elope with Drinkwine, who was to take her to Toronto, where she would join Gouzales. On Sunday evening Drinkwine called at Harriet's home, ostensibly to escort her to church. They went to the railroad station and boarded a train for Chicago. At that place they took the first train going direct to Toronto, where Gouzales was awaiting the coming of his sweetheart. Whether they were married there has not yet been learned, but the romantic aspect of the case was dispelled when the girl's mother learned that Gouzales was a married man and had deserted a wife in Jersey City.
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Hahlo of Butte, Mon., are making a bridal tour of the Pacific coast. They were married at Spokane, where the bride, well known in society circles of that city as Miss Fisher, lived for several years. The newly wedded pair met with a curious mishap at the Union Depot in Spokane, where they were to take the sleeping car for Portland. Two trains leave the depot within three minutes of each other, one bound East, the other West. Mrs. Hahlo, accompanied by some friends, went to the depot without her husband who was to join her before the train left. By mistake she got aboard the Great Northern train, eastbound. Mr. Hahlo arrived at the depot, and supposing that his bride was safely aboard, stepped aboard just at the train was pulling out of the station. Going into the sleeper he soon discovered that his wife was out on the train. Immediately, to draw it mild, he got considerably excited. This train had gone several miles before he made un his mind the best thing to do was to get off and walk to Spokane. Meantime Mrs. Hahlo was having an interesting time. When the Great Northern train pulled out of the depot for the east, and her husband had not joined her in the sleeper, she sent for the conductor, who soon discovered she was on the wrong train. A few miles east ing us with rectitude and virtue and keeping alive within a patriotic love for free institutions which has been given us as our national heritage. And let us also on the day of our thanksgiving especially remember the poor and needy, and by deeds of charity let us show the sincerity of our gratitude."
Early on Wednesday morning the engineer and fireman of the Santa Fe overland train, bound east, when near the Cajon pass, imagined they saw something on the track right ahead. Thinking the train was about to be wrecked they both jumped. The engineer was rather badly hurt, but when the fireman picked himself up he found that the engine had made kindling wood of a wagon to which two horses had been attached. Their driver had seen the headlight of the engine and had jumped in time to save himself, and the animals themselves were cropping the dried grass along the roadside, which showed that they had not been greatly disturbed by the accident. The train, with nobody at the engine's throttle, was plunging away through the darkness, the passengers sleep in their berths, unconscious that they were being drawn by a wild locomotive. The fireman determined to overtake the flying train. Jumping saturd one of the horses, he set out after it. He knew it must stop shortly, as it had to climb a steep grade, and as the fire under the boiler was not kept up the supply of steam would not furnish sufficient pressure to keep it going. The train stopped a mile and a half ahead There did not seem to be any reason for an interruption of the journey just at that point, and the conductor and brakeman hurried ahead with their lanterns to see what was up. When they found the cab empty, they were very much mystified. They were engaged in looking up theories to account for the strange disappearance of the engine crew, when the fireman came loping along on the horse behind them. After explanations had been made he started for San Bernardino and brought in the first tidings the railroad people had of the missing train. A hack was sent out with another engineer, and as soon as steam was raised the train went on over the hills through the pass. The carriage returned with the injured engineer.
Derge, the druggist, will tell you that no one is better qualified to judge of the merits of an article than the dealer, because he bases his opinion on the experience of all who use it. For this reason he wishes us to publish the remarks of other dealers about an article which they handle. Messrs C. F. Moore & Co., Newberg, Ore., say: "We sell more of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy than all others put together, and it always gives good satisfaction." Mr. J. F. Allee, Fox, Ore., says: "I believe Chamberlain's Cough Remedy to be best I have handled." Mr. W. H. Hitchcock, Columbus, Wash., says: "Chamberlain's Cough Remedy sells well and is highly praised by all who use it."
Sore Throat. Any ordinary case may be cured in one night by applying Chamberlain's Pain Balm as directed with each bottle. This medicine is also famous for its cure of rheumatism, lame back and deep seated and muscular pains. For sale by Derge.