anaheim-gazette 1896-06-25
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.
Medical College of Ohio.
New York Post-Graduate.
Physician, Surgeon and Accoucheur.
Dr. J. A. Champion
Office and residence, on Center street, near Clementina.
Calls Promptly Attended Day or Night.
sept5tf
Paul A. Derge.
Graduate in Pharmacy.
DRUGS, MEDICINES,
Perfumes and Toilet Articles.
BEST 5-CENT CIGAR IN TOWN
MEDICAL HALL,
KOLL BLOCK.
PUBLIC TELEPHONE OFFICE.
DR. S. S. TWOMBLY, D. V. S.
Veterinary Surgeon
Graduate from the Faculty of Comparative Medicine and Veterinary Science, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.
Late Professor of Chemistry and Veterinary Medicine at Agricultural College of Utah.
Office—Center street, one door east of Harker's real estate agency, Anaheim. Residence, 1 mile east of Fullerton, on Placentia road.
NICK HUGO
BLACKSMITHING.
Closing Out Sale
THE SAN FRANCISCO CHE P GSH STORE
Calls the attention of the public to their success in disposing of one-third of their stock of Clothing
The balance of stock of Clothing will be sold out at Great Sacrifice. We also call the attention of the public to the fact that our stock of Dry and Fancy Goods, Boots and Shoes, Clothing and Hats are all new and fresh, and not shelf worn or full of holes from moths; our competitors are trying to dispose of such goods and make you believe you are getting great bargains.
Particular attention is called to the fact that those who have made purchases of us have acknowledged that our prices are lower than Santa Ana and Los Angeles prices.
GREAT REDUCTION IN PRICES
Men's suits, $2 50.
Boys' suits, 65c.
Men's undershirts & drawers, 20c.
Men's over shirts, 20c.
Men's working shoes, $1 25.
Unbleached muslin, 36 in. wide, 5c
Cotton Flannel, $5 a yd.
Coats' cotton, 7 spools 25c.
Outing flannel, 5c.
Wash ginghams, 5c.
Table Linen, 60 in. wide, 25c.
Table oil cloth, 15c...
Challies, 5c.
Ladies' percale waists, 40c each.
Ladies' ribbed vests, 10c each.
Ladies' black hose, 5c.
Ladies' muslin chemise, 30c.
Ladies' straw hats, 20c.
Ladies' Dongola kid shoes, $1 25.
Ladies' Dongola Kid ties, $1.
Children's Dongola kid shoes, 75c.
Children's pebble goat, 75c.
Infants' Shoes, 15c.
OUR STORE IS LOCATED IN
PUBLIC TELEPHONE OFFICE.
DR. S. S. TWOMBLY, D. V. S.
Veterinary Surgeon
Graduate from the Faculty of Comparative Medicine and Veterinary Science, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.
Late Professor of Chemistry and Veterinary Medicine at Agricultural College of Utah.
Office—Center street, one door east of Harker's real estate agency, Anaheim. Residence, 1 mile east of Fullerton, on Placentia road. ma28-1m
NICK HUGO
BLACKSMITHING,
WOOD WORK, HORSE-SHOEING, AND A GENERAL JOBBING BUSINESS.
Schauman's old stand, Los Angeles street.
Having purchased the blacksmithing and wood work business heretofore owned by John Schauman, I take this means of informing the public that I shall continue the same and be ready to give satisfaction in all work entrusted to my care. The best workmanship and most reasonable prices. Give me a call.
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.
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.
ap11tf
GRAY BROTHERS & WARD
Cement Contractors
Shillinger Patent.
Contracts for RESERVOIRS, IRRIGATION DITCHES, Cellar and Stable Floors, Sidewalks, Kte.
OFFICES—No. 125 N. Broadway, Los Angeles, Cal. Telephone—236.
No. 316 Montgomery St., San Francisco, Cal.
H. P. LARSEN,
GREAT REDUCTION IN PRICES
Men's suits, $2 50.
Boys' suits, 65c.
Men's undershirts & drawers, 20c.
Men's over shirts, 20c.
Men's working shoes, $1 25.
Unbleached muslin, 36 in. wide, 5c
Cotton Flannel, 5c a yd.
Coats' cotton, 7 spools 25c.
Outing flannel, 5c.
Wash ginghams, 5c.
Table Linen, 60 in. wide, 25c.
Table oil cloth, 15c...
Challies, 5c.
Ladies' percale waists, 40c each.
Ladies' ribbed vests, 10c each.
Ladies' black hose, 5c.
Ladies' muslin chemise, 30c.
Ladies' straw hats, 20c.
Ladies' Dongola kid shoes, $1 25.
Ladies' Dongola Kid ties, $1.
Children's Dongola kid shoes, 75c.
Children's pebble goat, 75c.
Infants' Shoes, 15c.
OUR STORE IS LOCATED IN
ODD FELLOWS' BUILDING, LOS ANGELES St., ANAHEIM.
E. B. MERRITT & CO.,
DEALERS IN
FURNITURE
AND A COMPLELE LINE OF
House Furnishing Goods.
Heath and Muliigan's best prepared Paints for all kinds of work.
Wall Paper---Latest Designs.
Pure, Raw and Boiled Linseed Oil, Varnish, etc.
Agent for The Majestic Steel and Malleable Iron Range, the best on the market.
The war is over; get our prices; you will find them right.
Center Street, Opposite Postoffice, - - - Anaheim, Cal
H. A. DICKEL
DEALER IN
GROCERIES, HARDWARE
CROCKERY SETS.
Just Received a New Line of
FINE GROCERIES
ALL GOODSGUARANTEED.
Just Received a New Line of
FINE GROCERIES
ALL GOODS GUARANTEED.
Call for Snowflake Canned Goods
Ernest Bentz. Rudolph Bentz.
BENTZ BROS.
(Successors to 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 Kinds of Produce and Poultry Taken in Exchange
Sale
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, JUNE 25, 1896.
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.
THE SUGAR PLANK.
THE SUB-COMMITTEE ON PLATFORM ADOPTES A RESOLUTION FAVORING A PROTECTIVE DUTY.
St. Louis, June 16.—The Committee on Platform of the Resolutions Committee of the Republican convention to-night agreed upon a plank assuring protection to the sugar-growing industry of the United States. This plank is of more importance to California at present than any other State in the Union. The plank, as formulated and adopted by the Platform Committee, is:
We condemn the present administration for not keeping faith with the sugar producers of this country. The Republican party favors such measures of protection as will lead to the production, on American soil, of all the sugar which the American people consume, and for which they now pay to other countries more than $100,000,-000 annually.
The plank submitted by the American Beet Sugar Growers' Association to the committee was:
"We condemn the present administration for not keeping faith with the sugar producers of this country. The Republican
THE WAR IN CUBA.
GEN. GOMEZ DEFEATS THE SPANIARDS WITH THE LOSS OF A THOUSAND SLAIN.
HAVANA, (via Tampa, Fla.), June 21.—Later reports of the battle between Gomez and the Spaniads at Nejasa are to the effect that the battle which was claimed by the Spanish General as a Spanish victory, was really a Spanish defeat, the troops losing a thousand men. The battle was the bloodiest of the war. The Spanish troops fired 50,000 cartridges and 30 shells and the rebels 25,-000 shots. The Spanish General Castellanos figured the rebel losses from 400 to 500 and the Spaniards at 35, of whom only 4 were killed and the rest wounded, including two officers. He concludes his story by simply announcing the arrival of both columns in Puerto Principe without stating in what condition they entered the city; whether all their commanding officers of high or low rank returned or who were missing. This is the Spanish side of the fight, which is borne out of the official report.
From other sources, incomplete and lacking important details, it is shown that Gomez had only 1,800 men. General Castellanos' forces amounted to 3,500 men. Gomez knowing of his rival's approach, placed his men in convenient positions, dividing his forces in small groups of 300 men each. As soon as the Spaniards were comfortably encamped in the ranch, preparing for the next day's attack on Gomez stronghold at Nejasa, the Cuban chief suddenly made his appearance and attacked their positions simultaneously on all sides.
Taken unawares and completely surrounded, all they could do was to defend themselves from the continued charges, which, with marvelous military precision, were kept up night and day without affording the Spaniards a moment's rest.
Thanks to General Godoy's timely arrival with 2,500 men, Castellanos was saved from complete defeat. It is said that if Godoy had delayed his march six hours longer Castellanos would have surrendered, as he was already too weak to stand fighting much longer.
his rig, leaving his wife preparing to go with him. On opening his barn door he was knocked down with clubs. Staggering to his feet he tried to resist his assailant, but was again attacked from the rear by the second man. His skull was crushed and four ribs broken. When he was unconscious the ruffians went through his pocket without finding the booty. They returned to the house and demanded that Mrs. Rolley inform them as to where the money was. She refused to do so, and after beating her in vain they held her over a natural gas blaze until she could not endure the torture longer. Blackened and blistered and covered with bruises she was compelled to reveal the hiding place of the money. Rolley will die and there is little chance of his wife's recovery. The robbers drove rapidly from Rolley's towards the city of Shelbyville. There is talk of niveing bloodhounds to run them down.
THE CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS.
SIX WILL BE VOTED UPON BY THE PEOPLE IN NOVEMBER, THEIR OBJECTS BEING AS FOLLOWS.
Assembly Amendment No. 33 proposes to abolish the mortgage tax. It does this by including mortgages and trust deeds among the kinds of property exempt from taxation and it also specifically repeals two sections of the constitution which prescribe the method of assessing mortgages.
Senate Amendment No. 8 is evidently intended to authorize the use of the voting machine at elections. As the constitution stands, it provides: "All elections by the people shall be by ballot." The amendment would add: "Or by such other method a may be prescribed by law, providing that secrecy in voting be preserved."
Assembly Amendment No. 19 is intended to limit the liability of stockholders in corporations. At present a holder of stock in an incorporated company is liable for its debts in the proportion which his stock bears to the total amount of stock. The amendment would尊享 personal liability
We condemn the present administration for not keeping faith with the sugar producers of this country. The Republican party favors such measures of protection as will lead to the production, on American soil, of all the sugar which the American people consume, and for which they now pay to other countries more than $100,000,000 annually.
The plank submitted by the American Beet Sugar Growers' Association to the committee was:
"We condemn the present administration for not keeping faith with the sugar producers of this country. The Republican party favors such measures of encouragement and protection that will speedily lead to the production on American soil of all the sugar which the American people consume, and for which they now pay other countries more than $100,000,000 annually."
The committee, as will be seen by comparison, struck out the words "encouragement" and "speedily." H. T. Oxnard, President of the American Beet Sugar Growers' Association, commenting on this action, said:
"The striking out of the word 'encouragement' means that they are not in favor of a bounty." According to Mr. Oxnard, the full Committee on Resolutions was thought to be more favorable to such a plank than the sub-committee, and the adoption of the plank by the sub-committee makes its incorporation by the full committee certain. In Mr. Oxnard's opinion the adoption of this plank by the Republican party will be of the widest political significance and means the carrying of Louisiana and Utah by the Republicans and makes Nebraska and California certainly Republican. Mr. Oxnard said:
"The difficulty with us sugar producers has been that we did not know what to expect or how to lay our plans. We didn't know what either the Republicans or Democrats would do in relation to our industry. At first there was a protective tariff on sugar. Then that was abolished and a bounty put on, and again the bounty was abolished and an extremely low duty left on sugar. Such legislation disarranges all business plans. If a tariff law along the lines of this plan were enacted it would mean the expenditure at once of $300,000,000 or $400,000,000 in developing the beet sugar industry in the United States, and the beauty about it is that it will benefit all sections of the country. For illustration, all the machinery for the big sugar plant in Utah was manufactured in Cleveland, Ohio. So the benefit to Utah is not to Utah alone, but to other States as well.
"With this plank in the platform the Republicans will carry Louisiana. The sugar producers there have agreed to carry the State for the Republicans and put up for the expenses of the campaign themselves. The big sugar plant and industry in Utah were what caused two Republican Senators to be elected from that State. The adoption of this plank in reference to sugar will make Nebraska surely Republican. Why, there was a larger attendance at the sugar grower's meeting in Nebraska than at the State Convention. The beet sugar industry with adequate protection will become of vast importance all over the country. Senator Gear says that it is taking hold in Iowa and would become one of the most valuable crops."
Mr. Oxnard said the plank adopted by the Platform Committee meant more to the beet sugar growers, because that kind of sugar was the principal kind produced in this country. The product last year of California alone, he said, was 50,000,000 pounds, which was worth $2,500,000.
How's This?
We offer one hundred dollars reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Props., Toledo, O.
We the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions.
The plank, as formulated and adopted by the Platform Committee, is:
We condemn the present administration for not keeping faith with the sugar producers of this country. The Republican party favors such measures of protection as will lead to the production, on American soil, of all the sugar which the American people consume, and for which they now pay to other countries more than $100,000,000 annually.
The plank submitted by the American Beet Sugar Growers' Association to the committee was:
"We condemn the present administration for not keeping faith with the sugar producers of this country. The Republican party favors such measures of encouragement and protection that will speedily lead to the production on American soil of all the sugar which the American people consume, and for which they now pay other countries more than $100,000,000 annually."
The committee, as will be seen by comparison, struck out the words "encouragement" and "speedily." H. T. Oxnard, President of the American Beet Sugar Growers' Association, commenting on this action, said:
"The striking out of the word 'encouragement' means that they are not in favor of a bounty." According to Mr. Oxnard, the full Committee on Resolutions was thought to be more favorable to such a plank than the sub-committee, and the adoption of the plank by the sub-committee makes its incorporation by the full committee certain. In Mr. Oxnard's opinion the adoption of this plank by the Republican party will be of the widest political significance and means the carrying of Louisiana and Utah by the Republicans and makes Nebraska and California certainly Republican. Mr. Oxnard said:
"The difficulty with us sugar producers has been that we did not know what to expect or how to lay our plans. We didn't know what either the Republicans or Democrats would do in relation to our industry. At first there was a protective tariff on sugar. Then that was abolished and a bounty put on, and again the bounty was abolished and an extremely low duty left on sugar. Such legislation disarranges all business plans. If a tariff law along the lines of this plan were enacted it would mean the expenditure at once of $300,000,000 or $400,000,000 in developing the beet sugar industry in the United States, and the beauty about it is that it will benefit all sections of the country. For illustration, all the machinery for the big sugar plant in Utah was manufactured in Cleveland, Ohio. So the benefit to Utah is not to Utah alone, but to other States as well.
"With this plank in the platform the Republicans will carry Louisiana. The sugar producers there have agreed to carry the State for the Republicans and put up for the expenses of the campaign themselves. The big sugar plant and industry in Utah were what caused two Republican Senators to be elected from that State. The adoption of this plank in reference to sugar will make Nebraska surely Republican. Why, there was a larger attendance at the sugar grower's meeting in Nebraska than at the State Convention. The beet sugar industry with adequate protection will become of vast importance all over the country. Senator Gear says that it is taking hold in Iowa and would become one of the most valuable crops."
Mr. Oxnard said the plank adopted by the Platform Committee meant more to the beet sugar growers, because that kind of sugar was the principal kind produced in this country. The product last year of California alone, he said, was 50,000,000 pounds, which was worth $2,500,000.
How's This?
We offer one hundred dollars reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Props., Toledo, O.
We the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions.
The plank, as formulated and adopted by the Platform Committee, is:
We condemn the present administration for not keeping faith with the sugar producers of this country. The Republican party favors such measures of protection as will lead to the production on American soil of all the sugar which the American people consume, and for which they now pay other countries more than $100,000,000 annually."
The committee, as will be seen by comparison, struck out the words "encouragement" and "speedily." H. T. Oxnard, President of the American Beet Sugar Growers' Association, commenting on this action, said:
"The striking out of the word 'encouragement' means that they are not in favor of a bounty." According to Mr. Oxnard, the full Committee on Resolutions was thought to be more favorable to such a plank than the sub-committee, and the adoption of the plank by the sub-committee makes its incorporation by the full committee certain. In Mr. Oxnard's opinion the adoption of this plank by the Republican party will be of the widest political significance and means the carrying of Louisiana and Utah by the Republicans and makes Nebraska and California certainly Republican. Mr. Oxnard said:
"The difficulty with us sugar producers has been that we did not know what to expect or how to lay our plans. We didn't know what eitherthe Republicans or Democrats would do in relation to our industry.At first there was a protective tariff on sugar.The then was abolished and a bounty put on,and againthe bounty was abolishedand an extremely low duty left on sugar.Such legislation disarranges all business plans.FIf a tariff law alongthe linesofthisplanwere enacteditwillmeantheexpenditureatonceof$300,ooo,or$4oo,oooindevelopingthebeetsugarindustryintheUnitedStates,andthebeautyaboutitisthatitwillbenefitallsectionsofthecountry.InthesesmouldenbringethebeetsgarsugarproducerstherehaveagreedtocarrytheStatefortheRepublicansandputupfortheexpensesofthecampaign themselves.ThebigsugarplantandindustryinUtahwerewhatcausedtwothepublicanSenatorstobeelectedfromthatState.TheadoptionofthisplankinreferencetosugarwillmakeNebraskasurelyRepublican.Why,thewasa largerattendanceatthesugargrowersmeetinginNebraskathantattheStateConvention.Thebeetsugarindustrywithadequateprotectionwillbecomeofvastimportancealloverthecountry.SenatorGearsaysthatititis takingsholdinIowaandwouldbeoneofthemostvaluablecrops."
Mr. Oxnard said the plank adopted by the Platform Committee meant more to the beet sugar growers,because that kind of sugar wastheprincipalkindproducedinthiscountry.TheproductlastyearofCaliforniaalone,hesisaid.was50,ooo,ooopoundswhichwashouldbeoneofthemostvaluablecrops."
Mr. Crawdiscover A Mare's Nest.
From The Santa Ana Herald.
Orange June 18th, 1896.
It having come to my knowledge theroutine reports were being circulated regard to diversions of water fromtheSanAna river and that my name was being given as authority forthe same.I wish correct said report by giving true version as follows: I will premise by saying that I am a newcomer into this neighborhood and therefore not entirely conversed withthewaterquestion.On Friday,jun5th.asIwascomingdowntheSantaAnaya canyonIobservedthatrockiesbeen hauledfromneartheroad,anduponlookingacrossa bendoftheriverI sawsomemenbuildingdamandapplyingdivertedtothepeopleatAnabeim.Ihas since learned that damI sawwhetheritiscorrect,andfromthesimplecirculationareportstartedthewaterbeingillegallyandwrongfullydivertedtothepeopleatAnabeim.IhassincelearnedthatdamIwascorrect,andfromtheregulardivisiongatedambeingputinoursuperintendentundertheauthorityourboardofdirectorsaccordingtothedesignofthecourtsofdeterminingtheriverbetweenS.A.V.I.C.O.a.theA.U.W.C.o,the sameasdoneeveryyear.Geo.A.Crawd.
VOICE OF THE PRESS.
MR.CRAW DISCOVER A MARE'S NEST.
From The Santa Ana Herald.
Orange June 18th, 1896.
It having come to my knowledge theroutine reports were being circulated regard to diversions of water fromtheSanAna river and that my name was being given as authority forthe same.I wish correct said report by giving true version as follows: I will premise by saying that I am a newcomer into this neighborhood and therefore not entirely conversed withthewaterquestion.On Friday,jun5th.asIwascomingdowntheSantaAnaya canyonIobservedthatrockiesbeen hauledfromneartheroad,anduponlookingacrossa bendoftheriverI sawsomemenbuildingdamandapplyingdivertedtothepeopleatAnabeim.Ihassincelearnedthat damIwascorrect,andfromtheregulardivisiongatedambeingputinoursuperintendentundertheauthorityourboardofdirectorsaccordingtothedesignofthecourtsofdeterminingtheriverbetweenS.A.V.I.C.O.a.theA.U.W.C.o,the sameasdoneeveryyear.Geo.A.Crawd.
VOICE OF THE PRESS.
MR.CRAW DISCOVER A MARE'S NEST.
From The Santa Ana Herald.
Orange June 18th, 1896.
It having come to my knowledge theroutine reports were being circulated regard to diversions of water fromtheSanAna river and that my name was being given as authority forthe same.I wish correct said report by giving true version as follows: I will premise by saying that I am a newcomer into this neighborhood and therefore not entirely conversed withthewaterquestion.On Friday,jun5th.asIwascomingdowntheSantaAnaya canyonIobservedthatrockiesbeen hauledfromneartheroad,anduponlookingacrossa bendoftheriverI sawsomemenbuildingdamandapplyingdivertedtothepeopleatAnabeim.Ihassincelearnedthat damIwascorrect,andfromtheregulardivisiongatedambeingputinoursuperintendentundertheauthorityourboardofdirectorsaccordingtothedesignofthecourtsofdeterminingtheriverbetweenS.A.V.I.C.O.a.theA.U.W.C.o,the sameasdoneeveryyear.Geo.A.Crawd.
VOICE OF THE PRESS.
MR.CRAW DISCOVER A MARE'S NEST.
From The Santa Ana Herald.
Orange June 18th, 1896.
It having come to my knowledge theroutine reports were being circulated regard to diversions of water fromtheSanAna river and that my name was being given as authority forthe same.I wish correct said report by giving true version as follows: I will premise by saying that I am a newcomer into this neighborhood and therefore not entirely conversed withthewaterquestion.On Friday,jun5th.asIwascomingdowntheSantaAnaya canyonIobservedthatrockiesbeen hauledfromneartheroad,anduponlookingacrossa bendoftheriverI sawsomemenbuildingdamandapplyingdivertedtothepeopleatAnabeim.Ihassincelearnedthat damIwascorrect,andfromtheregulardivisiongatedambeingputinoursuperintendentundertheauthorityourboardofdirectorsaccordingtothedesignofthecourtsofdeterminingtheriverbetweenS.A.V.I.C.O.a.theA.U.W.C.o,the sameasdoneeveryyear.Geo.A.Crawd.
VOICE OF THE PRESS.
MR.CRAW DISCOVER A MARE'S NEST.
From The Santa Ana Herald.
Orange June 18th, 1896.
It having come to my knowledge theroutine reports were being circulated regard to diversions of water fromtheSanAna river and that my name was being given as authority forthe same.I wish correct said report by giving true version as follows: I will premise by saying that I am a newcomer into this neighborhood and therefore not entirely conversed withthewaterquestion.On Friday,jun5th.asIwascomingdowntheSantaAnaya canyonIobservedthatrockiesbeen hauledfromneartheroad,anduponlookingacrossa bendoftheriverI sawsomemenbuildingdamandapplyingdivertedtothepeopleatAnabeim.Ihassincelearnedthat damIwascorrect,andfromtheregulardivisiongatedambeingputinoursuperintendentundertheauthorityourboardofdirectorsaccordingtothedesignofthecourtsofdeterminingtheriverbetweenS.A.V.I.C.O.a.theA.U.W.C.o,the sameas doneeveryyear.Geo.A.Crawd.
VOICE OF THE PRESS.
MR.CRAW DISCOVER A MARE'S NEST.
From The Santa Ana Herald.
Orange June 18th, 1896.
It having come to my knowledge theroutine reports were being circulated regard to diversions of water fromtheSanAna river and that my name was being given as authority forthe same.I wish correct said report by giving true version as follows: I will premise by saying that I am a newcomer into this neighborhood and therefore not entirely conversed withthewaterquestion.On Friday,jun5th.asIwascomingdowntheSantaAnaya canyonIobservedthatrockiesbeen hauledfromneartheroad,anduponlookingacrossa bendoftheriverI sawsomemenbuildingdamandapplyingdivertedtothepeopleatAnabeim.Ihassincelearnedthat damIwascorrect,andfromtheregulardivisiongatedambeingputinoursuperintendentundertheauthorityourboardofdirectorsaccordingtothedesignofthecourtsofdeterminingtheriverbetweenS.A.V.I.C.O.a.theA.U.W.C.o,the sameas doneeveryyear.Geo.A.Crawd.
VOICE OF THE PRESS.
MR.CRAW DISCOVER A MARE'S NEST.
From The Santa Ana Herald.
Orange June 18th, 1896.
It having come to my knowledge theroutine reports were being circulated regard to diversions of water fromtheSanAna river and that my name was being given as authority forthe same.I wish correct said report by giving true version as follows: I will premise by saying that I am a newcomer into this neighborhood and therefore not entirely conversed withthewaterquestion.On Friday,jun5th.asIwascoming downtheSantaAnaya canyonIobservedthatrockiesbeen hauledfromneartheroad,anduponlookingacrossa bendoftheriverI sawsomemenbuildingdamandapplyingdivertedtothepeopleatAnabeim.Ihassincelearnedthat damIwascorrect,andfromtheregulardivisiongatedambeingputinoursuperintendentunder-theauthorityourboardofdirectorsaccordingtothedesignofthecourtsofdeterminingtheriverbetweenS.A.V.I.C.O.a.theA.U.W.C.o,the sameas doneeveryyear.Geo.A.Crawd.
VOICE OF THE PRESS.
MR.CRAW DISCOVER A MARE'S NEST.
From The Santa Ana Herald.
Orange June 18th, 1896.
It having come to my knowledge theroutine reports were being circulated regard to diversions of water fromtheSanAna river和that my name was being given as authority forthe same.I wish correct said report by giving true version as follows: I will premise by saying that I am a newcomer into this neighborhood和 therefore not entirely conversed withthewaterquestion.On Friday,jun5th.asIwascoming downtheSantaAnaya canyonIobservedthatrockiesbeen hauledfromnearther路和uponlookingacrossa bendof_theriverI sawsomemenbuildingdamandapplyingdivertedto_thepeopleatAnabeim.Ihassincelearnedthat damIwascorrect,andfrom_thesimplecirculatureareportstartedThewaterbeingillegallyandwronglydivertedto_thepeopleatAnabeim.Ihassincelearnedthat damIwascorrect,andfrom_thesimplecirculatureareportstartedThewaterbeingillegarlyandwronglydivertedto_thepeopleatAnabeim.Ihassincelearnedthat damIwascorrect,andfrom_thesimplecirculatureareportstartedThewaterbeingillegarlyandwronglydivertedto_thepeopleatAnabeim.Ihassincelearnedthat damIwascorrect,andfrom_thesimplecirculatureareportstartedThewaterbeingillegarlyandwronglydivertedto_thepeopleatAnabeim.Ihassincelearnedthat damIwascorrect,andfrom_thesimplecirculatureareportstartedThewaterbeingillegarlyandwronglydivertedto_thepeopleatAnabeim.Ihassincelearnedthat damIwascorrect,andfrom_thesimplecirculatureareportstartedThewaterbeingillegarlyandwronglydivertedto_thepeopleatAnabeim.Ihassincelearnedthat damIwascorrect,andfrom_thesimplecirculaturea报artstartedThewaterbeingillegarlyandwronglydivertedto_thepeopleatAnabeim.Ihassincelearnedthat damIwascorrect,andfrom_thesimplecirculaturea报artstartedThewaterbeingillegarlyandwronglydivertedto_thepeopleatAnabeim.Ihassincelearnedthat damIwascorrect,andfrom_thesimplecirculaturea报artstart了Thewaterbeingillegarlyandwronglydivertedto_thepeopleatAnabeim.Ihassincelearnedthat damIwascorrect,andfrom_thesimplecirculaturea报artstart了Thewaterbeingillegarlyandwronglydivertedto_thepeopleatAnabeim.Ihassincelearnedthat damIwascorrect,andfrom_thesimplecirculaturea报artstart了Thewaterbeingillegarlyandwronglydivertedto_thepeopleatAnabeim.Ihassincelearnedthat damIwascorrect,andfrom_thesimplecirculaturea报artstart了Thewaterbeingillegarlyandwronglydivertedto_thepeopleatAnabeim.IhassincelearnedsinceTheWaterBeingMissouriCanada.FromTheOutheast.MOReason.OleCrawd.Discovery.A.Mare'S.Nest.FromTheOutheast.MOReason.OleCrawd.Discovery.A.Mare'S.Nest.FromTheOutheast.MOReason.OleCrawd.Discovery.A.Mare'S.Nest.FromTheOutheast.MOReason.OleCrawd.Discovery.A.Mare'S.Nest.FromTheOutheast.MOReason.OleCrawd.Discovery.A.Mare'S.Nest.FromTheOutheast.MOReason.OleCrawd.Discovery.A.Mare'S.Nest.FromTheOutheast.MOReason.OleCrawd.Discovery.A.Mare'S.Nest.FromTheOutheast.MOReason.OleCrawd.Discovery.A.Mare'S.Nest.FromTheOutheast.MOReason.OleCrawd.Discovery.A.Mare'S.Nest.FromTheOutheast.MOReason.OleCrawd.Discovery.A.Mare'S.Nest.FromTheOutheast.MOReason.OleCrawd.Discovery.A.Mare'S.Nest.FromTheOutheast.MOReason.OleCrawd.Discovery.A.Mare'S.Nest.FromTheOutheast.MOReason.OleCrawd.Discovery.A.Mare'S.Nest.FromTheOutheast.MOReason.OleCrawd.Discovery.A.Mare'S.Nest.FromTheOutheast.MOReason.OleCrawd.Discovery.A.Mare'S.Nest.FromTheOutheast.MOReason.OleCrawd.Discovery.A.Mare'S.Nest.FromTheOutheast.MOReason.OleCrawd.Discovery.A.Mare'S.Nest.FromTheOutheast.MOReason.OleCrawd.Discovery.A.Mare'S.Nest.FromTheOutheast.MOReason.OleCrawd.Discovery.A.Mare'S.Nest.FromTheOutheast.MOReason.OleCrawd.Discovery.A.Mare'S.Nest.FromTheOutheast.MOReason.OleCrawd.Discovery.A.Mare'S.Nest.FromTheOutheast.MOReason.OleCrawd.Discovery.A.Mare'S.Nest.FromTheOutheast.MOReason.OleCrawd.Discovery.A.Mare'S.Nest.FromTheOutheast.MOReason.OleCrawd.Discovery.A.Mare'S.Nest.FromTheOutheast.MOReason.OleCrawd.Discovery.A.Mare'S.Nest.FromTheOutheast.MOReason.OleCrawd.Discovery.A.Mare'S.Nest.FromTheOut东南.МОReason.МОReason.МОReason.МОReason.МОReason.МОReason.МОReason.МОReason.МОReason.МОReason.МОReason.МОReason.МОReason.МОReason.МОReason.МОReason.МОReason.МОReason.МОReason.МОReason.МОReason.МОReason.МОReason.МОReason.МОReasons.МОReasons.МОReasons.МОReasons.МОReasons.МОReasons.МОReasons.МОReasons.МОReasons.МОReasons.МОReasons.МОReasons.МОReasons.МОReasons.МОReasons.МОReasons.МОReasons.МОReasons.МОReasons.МОReasons.МОReasons.МОReasons.МОReasons.МОReasons.МОReasons.Мо.Reasons.Мо.Reasons.Мо.Reasons.Мо.Reasons.Мо.Reasons.Мо.Reasons.Мо.Reasons.Мо.Reasons.Мо.Reasons.Мо.Reasons.Мо.Reasons.Мо.Reasons.Мо.Reasons.Мо.Reasons.Мо.Reasons.Мо.Reasons.Мо.Re reasons.Мо.Re reasons.Мо.Re reasons.Мо.Re reasons.Мо.Re reasons.Мо.Re reasons.Им.Responsibilities.Им.Responsibilities.Им.Responsibilities.Им.Responsibilities.Им.Responsibilities.Им.Responsibilities.Им.Responsibilities.Им.Responsibilities.Им.Responsibilities.Им.Responsibilities.Им.Responsibilities.Им.Responsibilities.Им.Responsibilities.Им.Responsibilities.Им.Responsibilities.Им.Responsibilities.Им.Responsibilities.Им.Responsibilities.Им.Responsibilities.Им.Responsibilities.Им.Responsibilities.Им.Responsibilities.Им.Responsibilities.Им.Responsibilities.Им.Responsibilities.Им.Responsibilities.Им.Responsibilities.Им.Responsibilities.Им.Responses.Им.Responses.Им.Responses.Им.Responses.Им.Responses.Им.Responses.Им.Responses.Им.Responses.Им.Responses.Им.Responses.Им.Responses.Им.Responses.Им.ResponsesИм.ResponsesИм.ResponsesИм.ResponsesИим.ResponsesИим.ResponsesИим.ResponsesИим.ResponsesИим.ResponsesИим.ResponsesИим.ResponsesИим.ResponsesИим.Res responsesИим.ResponsesИим.ResponsesИим.ResponsesИим.ResponsesИим.ResponsesИим.ResponsesИим.ResponsesИим.ResponsesИим.ResponsesИим.ResponsesИим.ResponsesИим.ResponsesИим.ResponsesИим.ResponsesИимResponsesИимResponsesИ
Mr. Oxnard said the plank adopted by the Platform Committee meant more to the beet sugar growers, because that kind of sugar was the principal kind produced in this country. The product last year of California alone, he said, was 50,000,000 pounds, which was worth $2,500,000.
How's This?
We offer one hundred dollars reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Props., Toledo, O.
We the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm.
West & Traxx, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo O. Walding, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo O.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all druggists. Testimonials free. je
Bicycle! Bicycles!
At McCollum's Cyclery, Center street, Anaheim. All kinds of wheels to sell, from $10 up. All kinds of bicycle supplies. New and second hand wheels for sale. Wheels to rent. All kinds of repairing done.
Sir William Temple directed that his heart should be buried under a sun dial in his garden. Napoleon desired that his heart be conveyed to Parma to Mario Louise, but he did not foresee that only a year after his death she would enter a ballroom attended by the Duke of Wellington or that she would marry her chamberlain.
You feel sore all over after taking a ride in some second-grade, hard-riding buggy. That's the interest you pay for purchasing a cheap rig. Now, we want you to go to Jacobson Bros., Santa Ana, and see those easy riding vehicles they are selling at such astonishingly low prices. It's a pleasure to ride in them—so comfortable, easy, airy, light-running, and the price is within reach of all. Also a large stock of home manufactured and guaranteed harness.
A. J. C. C. Bull for Service.
Dollys Toltec (42387), by Landseer Rioter (24947), dam Clover Bud 4th (19992). Test, 16 lbs. 14 oz. butter in seven days. Terms, $2, in advance. [may21-Jm] W.J.COLK.
Best grade of both gut and silvered steel wire, Violin, guitar and banjo strings at O. R. Luedke's. Also violin trimmings.[je4-tf]
In the parish church at Hammersmith is buried the heart of Sir Nicholas Crispe, a wealthy London citizen. He left sum of money for the purpose of refreshing his heart once a year with a glass of wine. This was done until the heart disintegrated.
House and Lot for Sale.
Enquire at this office, or of M. Nebelung.[may28-1m]
Milton Rolley, an aged pensioner of Shelbyville, Ill., went to town and drew $600 from a bank with which to pay off the balance due on his house. About dusk he started for home. Soon after arriving home two men drove up to his residence, called the old man out and requested him to go at once to the bedside of his daughter who, they said, had been taken suddenly sick and was dying. Relley hurried to the barn for United States Minister Taylorlor has been in Madrid since Tuesday and has seen the Duke of Totuan twice. The duke received him cordially on the nomination of McKinley and the allusion to a more active policy in regard to Cuba, embodied in the Republican platform, are considered so menacing to Spanish rule in the West Indies that the press is unanimously disapproving the government for having made public its intention of sending 6000 men to Cuba in the last tortnight of August and 16,000 in September. The papers applaud the purpose of the government to quell the insurrection before a new American president takes office.
Puerto Principe, June 18.-Further details have reached this city of the engagement between the Spanish column under Gen.N. Castellanos, and Godoy, and the Cuban forces under Maximo Gomez on the Saratoga plantation on the 9th, 10th and 11th inst. The Spanish commanders left Principe with 3500 men, cavalry, infantry and artillery, under telegraphic orders from Captain-General Weyler to scale Najasa Heights, and attack Gomez, then in his mountain headquarters. Advised of their movements, Gomez marched to meet them with 1800 men only. All were mounted, well armed and ammunitioned. The opposing armies first encountered each other at Saratoga, midway between Najasa and Principe City, late on the afternoon of the 9th. Castellanos, with a force about equal to that of Gomez, opened battle. The combatants kept each other at bay by an incessant fire for more than forty hours. The Spanish themselves were surprised at the determination with which the rebels fought. Castellanos used more than 400,000 rounds of ammunition, and but for the arrival of reinforcements led by Goboy, must have been wholly defeated.
The bravery of the Camaguay cavalry, led by Gomez in person, as they made charge after charge against the Spanish position, called forth praise even from Castellanos in his official report. Gomez launched his cavalry against the enemy by platoons of 300 at a time. The Spanish troops were deprived of sleep for two nights and days, and on the 11th had to abandon their position and fight their way back into the city, marching in the form of hollow squares. The columns entered this place to day bringing with them thirty-two wounded, among whom were two officers. Most of the wounds were caused by Mauser bullets.
Milton Rolley, an aged pensioner of Shelbyville, Ill., went to town and drew $600 from a bank with which to pay off the balance due on his house. About dusk he started for home. Soon after arriving home two men drove up to his residence, called the old man out and requested him to go at once to the bedside of his daughter who, they said, had been taken suddenly sick and was dying. Relley hurried to the barn for United States Minister Taylorlor has been in Madrid since Tuesday and has seen the Duke of Totuan twice. The duke received him cordially on the nomination of McKinley and the allusion to a more active policy in regard to Cuba, embodied in the Republican platform, are considered so menacing to Spanish rule in the West Indies that the press is unanimously disapproving the government for having made public its intention of sending 6000 men to Cuba in the last tortnight of August and 16,000 in September. The papers applaud the purpose of the government to quell the insurrection before a new American president takes office.
PUERTO PRincipe, June 18.-Further details have reached this city of the engagement between the Spanish column under Gen.N. Castellanos, and Godoy, and the Cuban forces under Maximo Gomez on the Saratoga plantation on the 9th, 10th and 11th inst. The Spanish commanders left Principle with 3500 men, cavalry, infantry and artillery, under telegraphic orders from Captain-General Weyler to scale Najasa Heights, and attack Gomez, then in his mountain headquarters. Advised of their movements, Gomez marched to meet them with 1800 men only. All were mounted, well armed and ammunitioned. The opposing armies first encountered each other at Saratoga, midway between Najasa and Principle City, late on the afternoon of the 9th. Castellanos, with a force about equal to that of Gomez, opened battle. The combatants kept each other at bay by an incessant fire for more than forty hours. The Spanish troops were deprived of sleep for two nights and days, and on the 11th had to abandon their position and fight their way back into the city, marching in the form of hollow squares. The columns entered this place to day bringing with them thirty-two wounded, among whom were two officers. Most of the wounds were caused by Mauser bullets.
Milton Rolley, an aged pensioner of Shelbyville, Ill., went to town and drew $600 from a bank with which to pay off the balance due on his house. About dusk he started for home. Soon after arriving home two men drove up to his residence, called the old man out and requested him to go at once to the bedside of his daughter who, they said, had been taken suddenly sick and was dying. Relley hurried to the barn for United States Minister Taylorlor has been in Madrid since Tuesday and has seen the Duke of Totuan twice. The duke received him cordially on the nomination of McKinley and the allusion to a more active policy in regard to Cuba, embodied in the Republican platform, are considered so menacing to Spanish rule in the West Indies that the press is unanimously disapproving the government for having made public its intention of sending 6000 men to Cuba in the last tortnight of August and 16,000 in September. The papers applaud the purpose of the government to quell the insurrection before a new American president takes office.
PUERTO PRincipe, June 18.-Further details have reached this city of the engagement between the Spanish column under Gen.N. Castellanos, and Godoy, and the Cuban forces under Maximo Gomez on the Saratoga plantation on the 9th, 10th and 11th inst. The Spanish commanders left Principle with 3500 men, cavalry, infantry and artillery, under telegraphic orders from Captain-General Weyler to scale Najasa Heights, and attack Gomez, then in his mountain headquarters. Advised of their movements, Gomez marched to meet them with 1800 men only. All were mounted, well armed and ammunitioned. The opposing armies first encountered each other at Saratoga, midway between Najasa and Principle City, late on the afternoon of the 9th. Castellanos, with a force about equal to that of Gomez, opened battle. The combatants kept each other at bay by an incessant fire for more than forty hours. The Spanish troops were deprived of sleep for two nights and days, and on the 11th had to abandon their position and fight their way back into the city,marching in the form of hollow squares.The columns entered this place to day bringing with them thirty-two wounded, among whom were two officers.Most of the wounds were caused by Mauser bullets.
Milton Rolley,an aged pensioner of Shelbyville,Ill., went to town和 drew $600 from a bank with which to pay offthe balance due on his house.About dusk he startedforhome.Soonafterarrivinghometwomendroveuptohisresidence,calledtheoldmanoutandrequestedhimtogoatonce治bedsideofhisdaughterwho,theysaid,hadbeentakensuddenlysickandwasdying.RelleyhurriedtothebarnforUnitedStatesMinisterTaylorlorhasbeeninMadridsinceTuesdayandhasseentheDukeofTotuantwice.AlltheMadridpaperscomment sharplyonthemnominationofMcKinleyandtheallusiontoamoreactivepolicyinregardingthebankdambeingisignaleddivertedtothepeopleatAnabeim.IhaistinelearnedthatthedamI sawwastheregular divisiongatedam,bestputinthesuperintendentundertheauthorityoftheboardwithouttakingtheprecautiondtodabathing suit.OftheofficerectedthecourtbetweenthecourtstodividethewaterstheriverbetweentheS.A.V.I.Co.attheA.U.W.W.Co.,thesameasisdoneeveryear.Geo.A.Crawawestinedearbyifitwascorrect,"andfromthesimplecircumstanceareportstarttedthewaterwasibligallyandwrongfullydivertedtothepeopleatAnabeim.IhaistinelearnedthatthedamI sawwastheregular divisiongatedam,bestputinthesuperintendentundertheauthorityoftheboardwithouttakingtheprecautiondtodabathing suit.OftheofficerectedthecourtbetweenthecourtstodividethewaterstheriverbetweentheS.A.V.I.Co.attheA.U.W.W.Co.,thesameasisdoneeveryyear.Geo.A.Crawawestinedearbyifitwascorrect,"andfromthesimplecircumstanceareportstarttedthewaterwasibliguallyandwrongfullydivertedtothepeopleatAnabeim.IhaistinelearnedthatthedamI sawwastheregular divisiongatedam,bestputinthesuperintendentundertheauthorityoftheboard withouttakingtheprecautiondtodabathing suit.OftheofficerectedthecourtbetweenthecourtstodividethewaterstheriverbetweentheS.A.V.I.Co.attheA.U.W.W.Co.,thesameasisdoneeveryyear.Geo.A.Crawawestinedearbyifitwascorrect,"andfromthesimplecircumstancea报案starttedthewaterwasibliguallyandwrongfullydivertedtothepeopleatAnabeim.IhaistinelearnedthatthedamI sawwastheregular divisiongatedam,bestputinthesuperintendentundertheauthorityoftheboard withouttakingtheprecautiondtodabathing suit.OftheofficerectedthecourtbetweenthecourtstodividethewaterstheriverbetweentheS.A.V.I.Co.attheA.U.W.W.Co.,thesameasisdoneeveryyear.Geo.A.Crawawestinedearbyifitwascorrect,"andfromthesimplecircumstancea报案starttedthewaterwasibliguallyandwrongfullydivertedtothepeopleatAnabeim.IhaistinelearnedthatthedamI sawwastheregular divisiongatedam,bestputinthesuperintendentundertheauthorityoftheboard withouttakingtheprecautiondtodabathing suit.OftheofficerectedthecourtbetweenthecourtstodividethewaterstheriverbetweentheS.A.V.I.Co.attheA.U.W.W.Co.,thesameasisdoneeveryyear.Geo.A.Crawawestinedearbyifitwascorrect,"andfromthesimplecircumstancea报案starttedthewaterwasibliguallyandwrongfullydivertedtothepeopleatAnabeim.IhaistinelearnedthatthedamI sawwastheregular divisiongatedam,bestputinthesuperintendentundertheauthorityoftheboard withouttakingtheprecautiondtodabathing suit.OftheofficerectedthecourtbetweenthecourtstodividethewaterstheriverbetweentheS.A.V.I.Co.at.theA.U.W.W.Co.,thesameasisdoneeveryyear.Geo.A.Crawawestinedearbyifitwascorrect,"andfromthesimplecircumstancea报案starttedthewaterwasibliguallyandwrongfullydivertedtothepeopleatAnabeim.IhaistinelearnedthatthedamI sawwastheregular divisiongatedam,bestputinthesuperintendentundertheauthorityoftheboard withouttakingtheprecautiondtodabathing suit.OftheofficerectedthecourtbetweenthecourtstodividethewaterstheriverbetweentheS.A.V.I.Co.at.theA.U.W.W.Co.,thesameasisdoneeveryyear.Geo.A.Crawawestinedearbyifitwascorrect,"andfromthesimplecircumstancea报案starttedthewaterwasibliguallyandwrongfullydivertedtothepeopleatAnabeim.IhaistinelearnedthatThedamI sawwasThe regular divisiongatedam,bestputinthesuperintendentundertheauthorityoftheboard withouttakingtheprecautiondtodabathing suit.OftheofficerectedThedamI sawwasThe regular divisiongatedam,bestputintThe superintendentunderThe superintendentunderThe superintendentunderThe superintendentunderThe superintendentunderThe superintendentunderThe superintendentunderThe superintendentunderThe superintendentunderThe superintendentunderThe superintendentunderThe superintendentunderThe superintendentunderThe superintendentunderThe superintendentunderThe superintendentunderThe superintendentunderThe superintendentunderThe superintendentunderThe superintendentunderThe superintendentunderThe 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TheSuperiorInterNTENDUNDERTHESuperiorInterNTENDUNDERTHESuperiorInterNTENDUNDERTHESuperiorInterNTENDUNDERTHESuperiorInterNTENDUNDERTHESuperiorInterNTENDUNDERTHESuperiorInterNTENDUNDERTHESuperiorInterNTENDUNDERTHESuperiorInterNTENDUNDERTHESuperiorInterNTENDUNDERTHESuperiorInterNTENDUNDERTHESuperiorInterNTENDUNDERTHESuperiorInterNTENDUNDERTHESuperiorInterNTENDUNDERTHESuperiorInterNTENDUNDERTHESuperiorInterNTENDUNDERTHESuperiorInterNTENDUNDERTHESuperiorInterNTENDUNDERTHESuperiorInterNTENDUNDERTHESuperiorInterNTENDUNDERTHESuperiorInterNTENDUNDERTHESuperiorInterNTENDUNDERTHESuperiorInterNTENDUNDERTHESuperiorInterNTENDUNDERTHESuperiorInterNTENDUNDERTHENewOrderINSTITUTEUPONWHEREISNOTINFORMATIONGOINGTOBUENAMEFORTHESUBANIPARKITEMS.MEISSOKOHARTERWITHHERBUENAMESORGAININGIMPROVEMENTS.HissEvaWarrenhasreturnedtoPark.PRANKITEMS.MEISSOKOHARTERWITHHERBUENAMESORGAININGIMPROVEMENTS.MissSorrieCookofSanta AnagameofrecreationattheStateY.P.S.C.E.E.convinceattheCongressionalChurchOh Sunday nightIt was very interestingand greatlyenjoyableBy society.MissM.PhebeJonesspokeintheninteenthweek.MrCharlesWhitakerhas purchasedGeo.Caldwellpropertyandisrapilymngimprovements.MissEvaWarrenhasreturnedtoPark.PRANKITEMS.MeissokohartierwwithherbuenaamesorgainngimprovementsmissSorrieCookofSanta AnagameofrecreationattheStateY.P.S.C.E.E.convinceattheCongressionalChurchOh Sunday nightIt was very interestingand greatlyenjoyableBy society.MissM.PhebeJonesspokeintheninteenthweek.MrCharlesWhitakerhas purchasedGeo.CaldwellpropertyandisrapilymngimprovementsmissSorrieCookofSanta AnagameofrecreationattheStateY.P.S.C.E.E.convinceattheCongressionalChurchOh Sunday nightIt was very interestingand greatlyenjoyableBy society.MissM.PhebeJonesspokeintheninteenthweek.MrCharlesWhitakerhas purchasedGeo.CaldwellpropertyandisrapilymngimprovementsmissSorrieCookofSanta AnagameofrecreationattheStateY.P.S.C.E.E.convinceattheCongressionalChurchOh Sunday nightIt was very interestingand greatlyenjoyableBy society.MissM.PhebeJonesspokeintheninteenthweek.MrCharlesWhitakerhas purchasedGeo.CaldwellpropertyandisrapilymngimprovementsmissSorrieCookofSanta AnagameofrecreationattheStateY.P.S.C.E.E.convinceattheCongressionalChurchOh Sunday nightIt was very interestingand greatlyenjoyableBy society.MissM.PhebeJonesspokeintheninteenthweek.MrCharlesWhitakerhas purchasedGeo.CaldwellpropertyandisrapilymngimprovementsmissSorrieCookofSanta AnagameofrecreationattheStateY.P.S.C.E.E.convinceattheCongressionalChurchOh Sunday nightIt was very interestingand greatlyenjoyableBy society.MissM.PhebeJonesspokeintheninteenthweek.MrCharlesWhitakerhas purchasedGeo.CaldwellpropertyandisrapilymngimprovementsmissSorrieCookofSanta AnagameofrecreationattheStateY.P.S.C.E.E.convinceattheCongressionalChurchOh Sunday nightIt was very interestingand greatlyenjoyableBy society.MissM.PhebeJonesspokeintheninteenthweek.MrCharlesWhitakerhas purchasedGeo.CaldwellpropertyandisrapilymngimprovementsmissSorrieCookofSanta AnagameofrecreationattheStateY.P.S.C.E.E.convinceattheCongressionalChurchOh Sunday nightIt was very interestingand greatlyenjoyableBy society.MissM.PhebeJonesspokeintheninteenthweek.MrCharlesWhitakerhas purchasedGeo.CaldwellpropertyandisrapilymngimprovementsmissSorrieCookofSanta AnagameofrecreationattheStateY.P.S.C.E.E.convinceattheCongressionalChurchOh Sunday nightIt was very interestingand greatlyenjoyableBy society.MissM.PhebeJonesspokeintheninteenthweek.MrCharlesWhitakerhas purchasedGeo.CaldwellpropertyandisrapilymngimprovementsmissSorrieCookofSanta AnagameofrecreationattheStateY.P.S.C.E.E.convinceattheCongressionalChurchOh Sunday nightIt was very interestingand greatlyenjoyableBy society.MissM.PhebeJonesspokeintheninteenthweek.MrCharlesWhitakerhas purchasedGeo.CaldwellpropertyandisrapilymngimprovementsmissSorrieCookofSanta AnagameofrecreationattheStateY.P.S.C.E.E.convinceattheCongressionalChurchOh Sunday nightIt was very interestingand greatlyenjoyableBy society.MissM.PhebeJonesspokeintheninteenthweek.MrCharlesWhitakerhas purchasedGeo.CaldwellpropertyandisrapilymngimprovementsmissSorrieCookofSanta AnagameofrecreationattotheStateY.P.S.C.E.E.convinceattotheCongressionalChurchOh Sunday nightIt was very interestingand greatlyenjoyableBy society.MissM.PhebeJonesspokeintheninteenthweek.MrCharlesWhitakerhas purchasedGeo.CaldwellpropertyandisrapilymngimprovementsmissSorrieCookofSanta AnagameOfrecreationattotheStateY.P.S.C.E.E.convinceattotheCongressionalChurchOh Sunday nightIt was very interestingand greatlyenjoyableBy society.MissM.PhebeJonesspokeintheninteenthweek.MrCharlesWhitakerhas purchasedGeo.CaldwellpropertyandisrapilymngimprovementsmissSorrieCookOfSanta AnagameOfrecreationattotheStateY.P.S.C.E.E.convinceattotheCongressionalChurchOh Sunday nightIt was very interestingand greatlyenjoyableBy society.MissM.P
CALIFORNIA STATE LIBRARY.
Gazette.
NUMBER 35
SNAP SHOTS AT THE NEWS.
A peculiar disease is prevalent among hogs in various parts of Fresno county. The chief characteristics are lumpy head and lameness. Infected animals have been quarantined.
A masked man entered the Miners' Bank at Crede, Coio., at noon on Monday, covered the cashier with a revolver, snatched all the bills in the money drawer, amounting to about $1,000, and escaped. It is thought the robber is hiding in town, and a posse is hunting for him.
The Democratic State convention in session at Sacramento last week nominated W. T. Jeter of Santa Cruz for Lieutenant Governor and L. J. Maddox of Stanislaus for Congressman from this district. Jeter says he will decline to accept the nomination and so wired the convention. As he understands the situation, it is not necessary to make the nomination.
Thirty thousand people were drowned by a tidal wave on the Island of Jesolo in the northern part of Japan, which was accompanied by a succession of frightful earthquakes lasting about twenty hours. In addition to the town of Kumassia, which was wholly destroyed, many other coastal towns were washed away entirely or in part.
Convention week was one of the busiest the hotels of St. Louis ever had. Every room in the hotels was crowded, and cot space in the halls was at a premium. During the three days of the convention the Plantera' Hotel lodged 1206 people and Wednesday evening 2580 people were fed in the dining room. Over three tons of spring chickens, beef and mutton were consumed.
Noble Shepard, who was awaiting execution in jail at St. Louis, Mo., for the murder of Thomas Morton and Lizzie Leahy, escaped from his cell between midnight and 4 o'clock Monday morning. He crawled twenty feet through a sewer, climbed to the roof of the gallows on which he was to hang, thence to a high brick wall surrounding the jail yard and then to the street. There is no doubt he was aided by friends outside.
H. L. Packard of Bakersfield, a deputy county clerk at the time the coyote scalp bounty was being paid by themselves against the carrying of said bonds at the coming municipal election; and,
"Whereas, a great number of citizens and taxpayers of said city are strenuously opposed to said city paying the said gas and electric light company anything for its plant, or to purchase anything thereof, be it
"Resolved, that said resolution, passed and adopted by said board on April 20, 1896, whereby said board agreed, on the part of said city, in the event the said bonds should carry, to pay the sum of $4,000 for certain portions of the plant of said Santa Ana Gas and Electric Light Company, be, and the same and every part thereof is rescinded and declared of non effect and of no validity whatever against said city."
O. E. Hart, a farmer of Wichita, Kan., shot and killed his wife Sunday afternoon, then ended his own life in the same manner. Jealousy prompted the act. He had accused his wife of intimacy with a local business man, and Saturday night bought a revolver, and started out to get him. His search was unsuccessful, and Sunday morning he had apparently gotten over his desire to kill, and spent the day pleasantly with his wife. At 2 o'clock he sent her for a cigar, and while she was away, wrote a farewell note to their friends, and signed both their names to it. When she returned, he shot her. Before neighbors, who heard the shot, could arrive, he turned the revolver on himself. Both died within a few minutes.
Great distress and dissatisfaction with guards and petty officials exists in San Quentin prison. Within the past week the prisoners have taken to quarrelling among themselves, and as a result one of them is now in the hospital, stabbed almost to death with a case knife in the hands of a fellow convict, while another is nursing what the prison physician fears is a fractured skull. Four incendiary fires have been discovered in the jute mill within the past month, and hardly a day passes without some refractory convict losing his "coppers" and being tossed into the dungeon. Add to all this the fact that the officials have taken to quarrelling among themselves, and that it is on the cards that Warden Hale is seriously considering the advisability of making a wholesale decapitation among the guards, and some idea may be gained of the demoralization that just now exists in California's big
A sensation was caused in San Francisco on Friday when a friend of Mrs. Nettie Craven filed for record a deed from the late Senator Fair, conveying to the lady two very valuable pieces of San Francisco property. The deed is dated September 8, 1894, and was acknowledged before Notary Public Cooney on September 22 of that year.
A notice was issued by the city council regarding the sale of stockholders in corp. At present a holder of stock in a corporation is liable for its proportion which his stock would abolish personal liability. State debts after the face value of been paid.
Amendment No. 25 is another attempt to section the constitution relating the relations between the government and the municipal corporation it reads now the constitution, so citizens, says: "And all charters named or adopted by authority of jurisdiction shall be subject to and congeneral laws." The amendment pertains in this sentence the words, "municipal affairs."
In other amendments would make city laws purely city affairs, free from influence State laws.
Amendment No. 13 seems to be desquare the new San Francisco with the State constitution.
Authorizes cities by virtue of their own establish and regulate in their police courts, boards of education, commissioners and boards of election.
Amendment No. 11 merely drops "male" out of the provision which "Every native male citizen of United States," etc., may vote. But noting this one word a revolution brought, for the ballot would be women.
HOUSE OF THE PRESS.
AW DISCOVERS A MARE'S NEST.
From the Santa Ana Herald.
ORANGE, June 18th, 1896.
Ongoing come to my knowledge that reports were being circulated in diversions of water from the Santa Ana and that my name was being authorized for the same, I wish to report by giving the true verbiols: I will promise by saying a newcomer into this neighbor therefore not entirely conversant with water question. On Friday, June was coming down the Santa Ana observed that rocks were being near the road, and upon looking at a bend of the river I saw some diverting a dam and apparently diverting to a point about three miles above the S. A. V. I. Co.'s ditch. Not what this diversion was for, on my spoke to some of my neighbors in it, saying "it should be investible if it was correct," and from this circumstance a report started that being illegally and wrongfully to the people at Anaheim. I have heard that the dam I saw was the division gate dam, being put in by an independent under the authority of directors, according to the decree courts to divide the waters of between the S. A. V. I. Co. and W. Co., the same as is done every Geo. A. Crawl.
JUDE IN ART AT SANTA MONICA.
From the Outlook.
New Oleson was arranged before Wells this morning on the charge in an ocean bath between the bath room and the church.
Noble Shepard, who was awaiting execution in jail at St. Louis, Mo., for the murder of Thomas Morton and Lizzie Leahy, escaped from his cell between midnight and 4 o'clock Monday morning. He crawled twenty feet through a sewer, climbed to the roof of the gallows on which he was to hang, thence to a high brick wall surrounding the jail yard and then to the street. There is no doubt he was aided by friends outside.
H. L. Packard of Bakersfield, a deputy county clerk at the time the coyote scalp bounty was being paid by the State, was acquitted of a charge of falsifying the county records in that city a few days ago. The grand jury charged him with being implicated in frauds in certificates to bounty claimants. The case was considered sufficient interest for the Attorney-General to assist in the prosecution. The jury was out barely long enough to take one ballot.
When President Cleveland arrives at Gray Gables for his summer vacation he will find his vapor launch newly painted and renamed "Three Sisters." Last year when the President and Mr. Cleveland bought this launch they christened it the "Two Sisters," and their other daughter claims attention now, and this led to the changing of the name of the boat, the suggestion having been made by Mrs. Cleveland before starting for Buzzard's bay. As soon as the President can dispose of a quantity of his business which demands his attention before he can leave Washington, he will rejoin Mrs Cleveland and the babies in the cage by the sea.
A letter from an Englishman who has long been a resident in Italy is published in London "Truth," and presents a serious picture of affairs in that country. He says that a revolt is only a question of time; that the taxes are 60 per cent on all incomes, and that the starving state of the peasantry and the lower classes generally equals that of the French before the revolution. In Sardinia mothers are feeding their children on grass and weeds by the roadside, and in all parts there are deaths from starvation. The women straw-workers of Tussoany, it appears, are in open revolt, and everywhere the men and women are reduced to skeletons, and are to be seen carrying their last rags to be sold for taxes. In Lombardy and other northern districts, where people live on insufficient diet of Indian corn, the writer also says that the horrible disease pellagra is increasing, more than 100,000 being affected, about three thousand dying yearly from this cause. A good part of the victims die insane.
Two of three men who murdered Jacob Hays and Edward Paul at Wyoming, Minn., Saturday morning, are now lying in the State Prison at Stillwater, Minn., and the third is dead at North Branch, having been killed there Sunday by officers while trying to escape. After the Wyoming murder, the man walked north fourteen miles to North Branch and entered the house of ex-Mayor Frank Smith, carrying away clothes money and provisions. Half a mile from Smith's house they were seen by a couple of railroad men and ordered to halt, but they fired and ran. The men who attempted to halt the murders hurried into the North Branch station, routed out the agent and wired along the line that the desperadoes had been located. A large pose was immediately sent out, and the gang was located in a tamarack swamp at 11 o'clock in the morning. The pose formed a circle. A furnace of shots came from the robbers, who were entrenched behind breastworks of logs. The pose returned the fire, and for a few minutes there was a lull in the battle, when one of the desperadoes raised his head. He was shot through the forehead. The two others then surrendered. One of them was badly wounded in the head. He gave his name as James Cunningham, and is 19 years old.
The last chapter of the story of do
Quentin prison. Within the past week the prisoners have taken to quarrelling among themselves, and as a result one of them is now in the hospital, stabbed almost to death with a case knife in hands of a fellow convict, while another is nursing what the prison physician fears is a fractured skull. Four incendiary fires have been discovered in the jute mill within the past month, and hardly a day passes without some refractory conviction losing his "copper" and being tossed into the dungeon. Add to all this fact that the officials have taken to quarrelling among themselves, and that it is on the cards that Warden Hale is seriously considering the advisability of making a wholesale decapitation among the guards, and some idea may be gained of the demoralization that just now exists in California's big bastile.
The funeral of a living man, plain old Lorenzo Dow McKenny, at which he was present, was preached at Fallen Timbers, Ohio, on Sunday to an assembly of 8000 people. It was in a primeval forest of grand oaks, camp meeting style. Rev Evans conducted the ceremonies. Just behind him sat the living Lorenzo Dow McKenny. In congruities in the shape of hokey-pokey, gingerbread, popcorn, lemonade, with all the accompaniments, were discordantly present. A committee of eight venerable men, in lieu of pal- bearers, conducted the subject to the platform. They had all known him from youth. Then gray-haired Jared Blakeman, nearly 90 years old, started singing "Jesus, Lover Of My Soul," and the oaken vaults of that temple coohed the sound of 8000 voices. After the prayer by Rev Evans, the place again rang with the song "Sweet By And By." Then came the text, "The time of my departure is now at hand." At the conclusion of the sermon, the hymn "Are You Washed in the Blood of the Lamb," was sung, and then by invitation, the congregation filed by, taking leave of the departed, tearfully shaking him by the hand.
Horace Dibble, formerly of Santa Ana, but for some years past a traveling salesman with headquarters at Los Angeles, killed J.F.Wallace, an associate employee in a Los Angeles crockery house, shortly before 8 o'clock last Thursday morning. The men had just come to work, and quarreled over some trivial matter. Wallace was the aggressor, and attempted to strike Dibble with a hammer. Dibble retreated across the room, followed by Wallace, who hadthe hammer raised as if to strike him, and when cornered against some barrels in rear of store, drew a knife and punished Wallace with it, inflicting three punctures; oros in the region of heart, twice in the abdomen, severing the intestines. Wallace expired in a short while. Dibble was released on $5000 bail, the Coroner's jury returning on verdict of justifiable homicide. Dibble is well-known in Anaheim. He used to run a drugstore at Santa Ana, and is universally liked throughout the county.
Several well-developed cases of leprosy have been discovered in The Kanaka settlement in Toole county, Utah, about seventy miles west of Salt Lake. A sixteen-year-old girl is the most seriously afflicted. Her limbs are shriveled beyond description and covered with white blotches which mark an eruptive form of the malady. Several other cases were discovered in The settlement but in less developed stages. The inhabitants are very reticent and it is difficult to get particulars touching other cases. The county authorities are taking measures for a thorough investigation. Bishop Cluff, who lives in the vicinity, admitted leprosy had prevailed there for some time but denies that it is contagious. He says he has lived with lepers at the settlement and on the islands for fourteen years,and had no fear of taking disease.
A sensation was caused in San Francisco on Friday when a friend of Mrs. Nettie Craven filed for record a deed from late Senator Fair, conveying to her lady two very valuable pieces of San Francisco property. The deed is dated September 8, 1894,and was acknowledged before Notary Public Cooney on September 22 of that year.
A sensation document which portrays to be
NUDE IN ART AT SANTA MONICA.
From the Outlook.
New Oleson was arraigned before Wells this morning on the charge of an ocean bath between the bath without taking the precaution to don suit. The officers caught him in about 11 o'clock, and had to wait to dress before bringing him into the testimony that the defendant merely without clothing was indigenced by the seeker after cleanliness, armed with warmth that he still had socks. The socks were admitted, but the native of Sweden $5 for his bath, His Honor added the warning second offense would be much more severe. Bathing suits are the cheaper item.
NAME FOR THE CUBAN PATRIOT from the San Francisco Bulletin.
Gomez has won a great battle, without a report that he has been the cause of the Cuban insurgents widely—but gains.
AL AUTHORITIES UP TO SNUFF.
From the South Riverside Bee.
NAHEIM GAZETTE now comes to us and Corona, Cal. The postal authority to know which way incorporation
WENA PARK ITEMS.
Ish Butterworth has took up a hule, and ye men and women sing and young of this settlement have and ye jiners do sing in ye back room nesting house at early candle light night, and will soon have a public kohle to show forth the voices of John McCarthy of Los Angeles, and will spend the summer at Mr. John Walder's new residence is in progress on. It will be a fine addition to the public school closes on Friday of this Charles Whitaker has purchased the oldwell property and is rapidly makemovements.
Eva Warren has returned to the Sorrie Cooke of Santa Ana gave a of the State Y. P. S. C. E. convention congregational Church Sunday night. Every interesting and greatly enjoyed society.
M. Phebe Jones spoke in the interest Washington convention.
The last chapter of the story of the domestic infelicities of Mrs. J. Coleman Drayton and her divorced husband was written in a New York auction room. Tuesday Mrs. Drayton sold at auction every article of furniture, clothing, bric-a-brac, pictures, photographs, books and household goods, the continued possession of which might in any way be calculated to remind her that she was ever a bride. From the appearance of the goods at the auction room, it seemed that when the Draytons broke up house-keeping they hurriedly sent everything to the storage room. The goods were removed to the auction rooms without being overhauled, and the auctioneers have found photographs and albums and papers which it is probable Drayton would have destroyed had she overhauled things. In the lot Drayton's wedding gown, made of stiff white satin and elaborately embroidered in pearls. A tiny bouquet of orange blossoms nestles in the throat of the gown; the white satin slippers she wore are included in the lot. Other gowns, old-fashioned, of course, but expensive in stuff and trimmings, were knocked down also, while one big Saratoga trunk was piled full of lace-trimmed nightgowns, underwear covered with embroidery, silk hosiery and a hundred accessories of a lady's toilet.
On account of the persistent efforts of the Santa Ana Gas and Electric Company to defeat the proposition of the city putting in its own electric light system, after agreeing to work for municipal ownership, the city council on Monday night passed the following resolution rescinding its offer to purchase the company's plant for $4,000 hitherto agreed upon:
"Whereas, the president of the Santa Ana Gas and Electric Light Company came before this board and withdrew all objection and opposition to municipal ownership of an electric light plant; and,
"Whereas, this board on the 20th day of April, 1896, passed a resolution agreeing on part of said city to purchase and take of the Santa Ana Gas and Electric Light Company certain portions of its plant, and to pay therefor the sum of $4,000, in event that bonds for municipal ownership should carry; and,
"Whereas, the stockholders and friends of the Santa Ana Gas and Electric Light Company have almost unanimously arrayed men and ordered to halt, but they fired and ran. The men who attempted to halt the murders hurried into the North Branch station, routed out the agent and wired along the line that the desperadoes had been located. A large posse was immediately sent out, and the gang was located in a tamarack swamp at 11 o'clock in the morning. The posse formed a circle. A fusillade of shots came from the robbers, who were entrenobed behind breastworks of logs. The posse returned the fire, and for a few minutes there was a lull in the battle, when one of the desperadoes raised his head. He was shot through the forehead. The two others then surrendered. One of them was badly wounded in the head. He gave his name as James Cunningham, and is 19 years old.
The last chapter of the story of the domestic infelicities of Mrs. J. Coleman Drayton and her divorced husband was written in a New York auction room. Tuesday Mrs. Drayton sold at auction every article of furniture, clothing, bric-a-brac, pictures, photographs, books and household goods, the continued possession of which might in any way be calculated to remind her that she was ever a bride. From the appearance of the goods at the auction room, it seemed that when the Draytons broke up house-keeping they hurriedly sent everything to the storage room. The goods were removed to the auction rooms without being overhauled, and the auctioneers have found photographs and albums and papers which it is probable Drayton would have destroyed had she overhauled things. In the lot Drayton's wedding gown, made of stiff white satin and elaborately embroidered in pearls. A tiny bouquet of orange blossoms nestles in the throat of the gown; the white satin slippers she wore are included in the lot. Other gowns, old-fashioned, of course, but expensive in stuff and trimmings, were knocked down also, while one big Saratoga trunk was piled full of lace-trimmed nightgowns, underwear covered with embroidery, silk hosiery and a hundred accessories of a lady's toilet.
On account of the persistent efforts of the Santa Ana Gas and Electric Company to defeat the proposition of the city putting in its own electric light system, after agreeing to work for municipal ownership, the city council on Monday night passed the following resolution rescinding its offer to purchase the company's plant for $4,000 hitherto agreed upon:
"Whereas, the president of the Santa Ana Gas and Electric Light Company came before this board and withdrew all objection and opposition to municipal ownership of an electric light plant; and,
"Whereas, this board on the 20th day of April, 1896, passed a resolution agreeing on part of said city to purchase and take of the Santa Ana Gas and Electric Light Company certain portions of its plant, and to pay therefor the sum of $4,000, in event that bonds for municipal ownership should carry; and,
"Whereas, the stockholders and friends of the Santa Ana Gas and Electric Light Company have almost unanimously arrayed men and ordered to halt, but they fired and ran. The men who attempted to halt the murders hurred into the North Branch station, routed out the agent and wired along the line that the desperadoes had been located. A large posse was immediately sent out, and the gang was located in a tamarack swamp at 11 o'clock in the morning. The posse formed a circle. A fusillade of shots came from the robbers, who were entrenobed behind breastworks of logs. The posse returned the fire, and for a few minutes there was a lull in the battle, when one of the desperadoes raised his head. He was shot through the forehead. The two others then surrendered. One of them was badly wounded in the head. He gave his name as James Cunningham, and is 19 years old."
The last chapter of the story of the domestic infelicities of Mrs. J. Coleman Drayton and her divorced husband was written in a New York auction room. Tuesday Mrs. Drayton sold at auction every article of furniture, clothing, bric-a-brac, pictures, photographs, books and household goods, the continued possession of which might in any way be calculated to remind her that she was ever a bride. From the appearance of the goods at the auction room, it seemed that when the Draytons broke up house-keeping they hurriedly sent everything to the storage room. The goods were removed to the auction rooms without being overhauled, and the auctioneers have found photographs and albums and papers which it is probable Drayton would have destroyed had she overhauled things. In the lot Drayton's wedding gown, made of stiff white satin and elaborately embroidered in pearls. A tiny bouquet of orange blossoms nestles in the throat of the gown; the white satin slippers she wore are included in the lot. Other gowns, old-fashioned, of course, but expensive in stuff and trimmings, were knocked down also, while one big Saratoga trunk was piled full of lace-trimmed nightgowns, underwear covered with embroidery, silk hosiery and a hundred accessories of a lady's toilet.
On account of the persistent efforts of the Santa Ana Gas and Electric Company to defeat the proposition of the city putting in its own electric light system, after agreeing to work for municipal ownership, the city council on Monday night passed the following resolution rescinding its offer to purchasethe company's plant for $4,000 hitherto agreed upon:
"Whereas, the president ofthe Santa Ana Gas and Electric Light Company came before this board and withdrew all objection and opposition to municipal ownership of an electric light plant; and,
"Whereas, this board on the 20th day of April, 1896,passed a resolution agreeing on part of said city to purchase和takeofthe Santa Ana Gas和ElectricLightCompany certain portionsofitsplant,andtopaythereforthesumof$4,000.ineventthatbondsformunicipalownershipshouldcarry;and,
"Whereas,thestockholdersandfriendsofthesantaanaGasandElectricLightCompanyhavealmostunanimouslyarrayedmenandorderedtohaltbuttheyfiredandran.ThemenwhattemptedtohaltthemurdershurredintotheNorthBranchstation,routedouttheagentandwiredalongthelinethatthedesperadoesraisedhishead.Thewashotthroughtheforehead.Thetwoothersthensurrendered.Onethelepsatrentwoethereisthatitiscontagious.Hewesshehas livedwiththelepsatrentthesettlementandontheislandsforfourteenyears,andhadnofearoftakingthe disease.
A sensation was caused in San Francisco on Friday when a friend of Mrs. Nettie Craven filed for record a deed from late Senator Fairy, conveying tothe lady two very valuable piecesofSan Franciscoproperty.ThedeedisdatedSeptember8,1894,andwasacknowledgedbeforeNotaryPublicCooneyonSeptember22ofthatyear.The entiredocument,whichpurportstobeinthehandwritingofSenatorFairy,isinlepencil,andtheacknowledgmentisinink.Forloveandaffection,theSenatordeededalargelotonthecornerofPineandSansomestreetsandhalfablockoflandonMissionstreettoMr.Craven.Some timeagoitwasrumoredthatMrs.CravenhadinhereinpossessionadocumentshowingthatshehadbeenmarriedtoFairy;alsoacknowledtodavalueableproperty.Thefilingofthedeadisthefirstconfirmationofthe rumors.
ForthepasttwomonthstheSantaBarbarasea Lioncompanyhasbeentryinginvaintofillanorderfortwenty-fiveseaLionsfromtheChannel Islands.LastThursdaythe little schoonerRestlessarrivedwiththerequirednumberofamphibiansasacargoandthetriumphant hunters.Thecompanyhasbeenformanyyearsengagedinthecaptureofsealsforexportationpurposes,theseaLionsbeingtheplainordinary hairseals.Neverbeforeinitshistoryhasthecompanyreceivedandfilledatatdime.timesoananorder.Thecaptivesaredestinedtofigureinthevoological gardensofBerlin,LondonAndAmsterdam,andwereorderedbyCaptainMullett,whoformanyyearsafterleavingthesea.devotedhimselftocapturingwildanimalsofallkindsforsihpatrons.HewasbeeninSantaBarbaraawaitingtheresultsofthecompany'sefforts,andwilltakehispurchasesEastbyrail.Theunusuallyheavy windsatthe islands,whichhaveprevailedforthe pastsixtydays,resultedinheavyseas,andthesealswhichfrequentcavesandrockslongalongtheseawardshore,couldnotbecapturedaliveforsometime.Butthepastweekcalmweatherprevailed,andthehunterssecuredthedesirednumber.allbeingunusuallyfinespecimens Theywereallcapturedbymeansofalasso.Tobeeligibleforexhibitionpurposestheyhadtobeyoung,notovertwoyearsold.TheSantaBarbara sealhasthe reputationoflivinglongerincapitivitythanthoseofanyotherlocality,andtheJardindesPlantesatParishasapremiumcapturedfifteenyearsago.Each sealisplacedinacratebyitselfandwetdownfrequentlyduringtransportation.Eachwillconsumeonthejourneyaboutfourteenpoundsoffishdaily.
You can't buy happiness,但 if you are suffering from dyspepsia,scrofula,salt rheum,impure blood,你 may be cured和made happy by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla.
Hood's Pills are best family catharticand liver medicine.Harmless,reliable,sure