anaheim-gazette 1896-09-24
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VOLUME XXVI.
ANAHEIM
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.
sept5f
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.
W. A. CONNOLY.
GENERAL BLACKSMITHING!
Horse-Shoeing
—IN ANY STYLE.—
Bad Feet Carefully Attended
Great Sacrifice Sale
OF ...
CLOTHING AND STRAW HATS
THE SAN FRANCISCO CHEAP CASH STORE
Calls the special attention of the general public to its Sacrifice Sale of Clothing and Straw Hats. It will pay you to call on us and get articles, as they will be slaughtered Cost.
We also call the attention to the fact that we keep the best School Shoes in Anaheim, and our prices are so low that you will save from 25c to 50c on each pair.
Ladies' percale waists...Reduced to 40c
German knitted worsted...from 25 c to 20c
Saxony yarn...from 12½ c to 8 c
Dimities...from 10 c to 7½ c
Percales...from 12½ c to 9 c
Lonsdale Muslin...from 10 c to 8 c
Gingham...from 6 c to 4 c
Reductions in our Shoe Department:
Ladies' Dongola Oxford Ties...$1 50 to $1 00
Ladies' Dongola Button...$1 75 to $1 25
Men's working shoes...$1 75 to $1 25
Children's Dongola Button...$1 00 to 75
Remember, when you want to purchase
GOOD AND FINE SHOES
At low prices, call at the SAN FRANCISCO CHEAP CASH STORE
OUR STORE IS LOCATED IN
MEDICAL HALL,
KOLL BLOCK.
PUBLIC TELEPHONE OFFICE.
W. A. CONNOLY.
GENERAL BLACKSMITHING!
Horse-Shoeing
—IN ANY STYLE.—
Bad Feet Carefully Attended To, and Shod Properly.
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 measure 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.
L. NEMETZ,
Carriage Painting & Trimming
New Buggies for Sale.
Shop on Center street, near the opera-house.
Anaheim, Cal.
GO TO THE Oak Barber Shop
FOR A IRST-CLASS SHAVE OR HAIR CUT.
TWO DOORS WEST OF BANK.
HUSMANN BROS.
J.M.Griffith Company
A CORPORATION
LUMBER DEALERS
Near Railroad Depot
ANAHEIM,
eep constantly on hand
Doors, Blinds, Windows,
MOULDINGS.
Posts, Shakes, Shingles,
LATH, HAIR, PLASTER OF PARIS
ANAHEIM GRIST MILLS OPERATING ON Wednesdays and Saturdays of each week.
Grain, Feed, Real, Etc., of all varieties. Corn shelled and shipped.
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.
GOOD AND FINE SHOES
At low prices, call at the SAN FRANCISCO CHEAP CASH STORE
OUR STORE IS LOCATED IN
ODD FELLOWS' BUILDING, LOS ANGELES St., COR. O CHARTRESS, ANAHEIM.
E. B. MERRITT & CO.,
DEALERS IN
FURNITURE
Wall Paper, the Latest Patterns.
Heath and Milligan's House Paints, the Cheapest and Best for all uses.
Agent for The Majestic Steel and Malleable Iron Range, and Cooking Stoves of reliable manufacturers.
You Will Find our Prices Low and the Quality of our Goods the Best.
Center Street, Opposite Postoffice, - - - Anaheim, Cal
Ernest Bentz.
Rudolph Bentz.
(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
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.
GRAY BROTHERS & WARD
Cement Contractors
Shillinger Patent.
Contracts for RESERVOIRS, IRRIGATION DITCHES, Cellar and Stable Floors, Sidewalks, Etc.
OFFICES—No. 125 N. Broadway, Los Angeles, Cal.
Telephone—236.
No. 316 Montgomery St., San Francisco, Cal.
THE
WOODBRIDGE FERTILIZERS
ARE RELIABLE FOR Fruits, Lawns and Flowers.
Made by the Agricultural Chemical Works
901 to 907 Macy St., Los Angeles, je254f
GEORGE BAUER
BOOT AND SHOE MAKER.
Center street.....Anaheim.
Making and repairing at the lowest cash price. All orders promptly attended to. All work guaranteed
H. P. LARSEN,
CONTRACTOR & BUILDER.
Estimates given, Contracts made and do a general obbing Business.
CENTER TREET — ANAHEIM.
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 best fit of low prices. No charge for showing goods or answering questions. Come one, Come all!
All Kinds of Produce and Poultry Taken in Exchange
Anaheim Bakery
PETER SYRE, PROP.
FRESH BREAD,
Pies and Cake.
Free Delivery Wagon to all parts of the city.
A share of the public patronage respectfully solicited.
BAKERY, on Los Angeles Street, corner of Cyprus.
Stephen Kistler,
BOSTON BAKERY
Announces to his friends, customers and general public that he is now located in his new building on Center street, one-half block east of the Postoffice. The Bakery will have in connection a Lunch Room and Ice Cream Pavilion, in first-class style. Ice Cream will be served every day, also Lunch and hot coffee and cake.
The finest stock of Candles in town. He also has a Soda Pumpain and will serve Ice Cream Soda. Compressed Yeast and Condensed Milk and Cream.
L. GUNTHER.
PIONEER BOOT & SHOE MAKER.
Corner Adela and Los Angeles Streets.
This Is Your Opportunity.
On receipt of ten cents, cash or stamp, a generous sample will be mailed of the most popular Catarrh and Hay Fever Curse (Ely's Cream Balm) sufficient to demonstrate the great merits of the remedy.
ELY BROTHERS,
56 Warren St., New York City.
Rev. John Reid, Jr., of Great Falls, Monroe recommended Ely's Cream Balm to me. I can emphasize his statement: "It is a positive cure for catarrh if used as directed."
Rev. Francis W. Poole, Pastor Central Prairie Church, Helena, Mont.
Ely's Cream Balm is the acknowledgment cure for catarrh and contains no more nor any injurious drug. Price, 50 cents.
NEW BUGGIES.
L. NEMETZ, the Painter, has just received number of New Buggies, which he is painting and preparing for the trade. The vehicles are of the best workmanship and are warranted to be first-class. Call at shop, on Center street near Opera-house, and inspect same and price which defy competition.
feb20 1m
L. NEMETZ, The Painter
Storage Warehouse
I take this means of notifying the farm and public generally that I will make Liberty Advances on Grain for Storage in my Storage Warehouse at Brookhurst Station, the S. P.
For further particulars address
A. H. CARGILL,
aug8tf
P. O. Anaheim; or Brookhurst
Pure Weekly Gazette
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1896.
Price Sale
STRAW HATS
Public to its Sacrifice Sale of you to call on us and will be slaughtered
The fact that we keep the prices are so low that on each pair!
...Reduced to 40c
...from 25 c to 20c
...from 12½ c to 8 c
...from 10 c to 7½ c
...from 12½ c to 9 c
...from 10 c to 8 c
...from 6 c to 4 c
...$1 50 to $1 00
...$1 75 to $1 25
...$1 75 to $1 25
...$1 00 to 75
The Weekly Gazette.
Established 1870.
SUBSCRIPTION, - $1 50 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.
BLAINE'S SOUND VIEWS
THE GREAT STATESMAN SAID FREE SILVER WOULD CRIPPLE US.
The following extract from a speech of the late James G. Blaine shows clearly the inevitable effect of free silver coinage by the United States:
If we coin a silver dollar of full legal tender, obviously below the current value of the gold dollar, we are simply opening our doors and inviting Europe to take our gold. With our gold flowing out from us we shall be forced to the single standard, and our relations with the leading commercial countries of the world will be not only embarrassed, but crippled.
The question before Congress then sharply defined in the pending house bill—is whether it is now safe and expedient to offer free coinage to the silver dollar of 412½ grains, with the mints of the Latin union closed and Germany not permitting silver to be coined as money. At current rates of silver the free coinage of a dollar containing 412½ grains, worth in gold about 92 cents, gives an illegitimate profit to the owner of the bullion, enabling him to take 92 cents' worth by its insignificance, let us imagine, what portion of wealthy classes regarding future prosperity.
HAVAMA, September 17.—The rebeler Macao has left his stronghold in mountains and is encamped with a force on the Danes estate, south of Punta Rio city. An attack on that city is memorial expected. It is rumored that Captain-General Weyler will soon command of the Spanish forces in Pina Rio, with the intention of expelling Mora from the province. If true, hard fight expected on account of the strong position held by the insurgents.
The Cuban chief has determined to any sacrifice to affect the capture of Casam General Weyler.
Puerto Principe advises report thatoral Gomer was encamped on September in Guatemala de Agramonte, with five cavalry squadrons, and was marching ward. It appears he has initiated a move to reinvade the western provinces. Government is now rushing troops central part of the troops near Jamaica Moren, to prevent the immigrants or it is reported that Mayia Rodriguez, 1,500 man, forming Gomer's vanguard, the line recently and is now on borders of Sancti Spiritus and Santa Cruz as Prophet.
If it comes, Mr. Chairman into power of the departments of this Government not destroy industry; it will not injure it but it will save to the most good products wealth of the country a large portion of wealth. It will bring prosperity and joy happiness not to a few, but to every one, out regard to station or condition.—From speech delivered in Congress, March 1892.
Whatever may be said on behalf Mr. Bryan as a politician, not much be said on his behalf as a prophet—the departments of the Government were given into the hands of the Deraracy, and contrary to Mr. Bryan's phecy, industry was destroyed, was injured, and there was saved to producers a much smaller portion of wealth they jointly produced than previously enjoyed. Prosperity.
SHOES
O CHEAP CASH STORE
TED IN —
GELES St., COR. OF
EIM.
& CO,
Patterns.
house Paints, the
or all uses.
Malleable Iron Range, and
is Low and the
is the Best.
- Anaheim, Cal
Rudolph Bentz.
BROS.
(ailey.)
Ill Butchers
il.
Sausages and Lard
Make.
i for Live Stock!
Davis
POSITION OF FARMERS
AN INSULT TO THEM TO SAY THAT
THEY ARE AS A CLASS HOPELESSLY DEBT RIDDEN.
There is something decidedly insulting to the farmers of this country in the suggestion that they are to a man head over heels in debt and are ready, with the greatest antiquity, to jump at the chance to pay their debts in a poorer dollar than that which they borrowed. Probably most farmers owe money on current accounts, but only a small proportion of them owe money on a mortgage. The returns of the lastensus showed that there were less than one in five, and that the property was on the average, worth three times the obligation. To the extent that the farmer owes more than he owes he is a capitalist and a creditor. The crop and stock are debtor to the farmer not only for the capital invested, but also for the value of the labor bestowed upon them by the farmer and his family. The farmer has been rightly assumed to have a vital interest in the maintenance of a sound currency, for there is a long time between sowing and reaping, and he needs to collect from the produce of the fields and flocks as good money as he puts into these investments.
The examination made by Mr. Powers of the gold dollar, we are simply opening our doors and inviting Europe to take our gold. With our gold flowing out from us shall be forced to the single standard, and our relations with the leading commercial countries of the world will be not only embarrassed, but crippled.
The question before Congress then sharply defined in the pending house bill is whether it is now safe and expedient to offer free coinage to the silver dollar of 412 grains, with the mints of the Latin union closed and Germany not permitting silver to be coined as money. At current rates of silver the free coinage of a dollar containing 412½ grains, worth in gold about 92 cents, gives an illegitimate profit to the owner of the bullion, enabling him to take 92 cents' worth of it to the mint and get it stamped as coin and force his neighbor to take it for a fall dollar. This is an unfair advantage which the government has no right to give to the owner of silver bullion and which defrauds the man who is forced to take the dollar.
It assuredly follows that if we give free coinage to this dollar of inferior value and put it in circulation, we do so at the expense of our better coinage of gold, and unless we expect the invariable experience of other nations to be in some mysterious way suspended for our peonliar benefit, will inevitably lose our gold coin. It will flow out from us with the certainty and with the force of the tides. What gain, therefore, should we make for the circulating medium if on opening the gate for silver to flow in we open a still wider gate for gold to flow out!
Assurances from empires and scientists in finance that, in remonetizing the former dollar we at once and permanently advance its value to a par with gold, are worth little in the face of opposition and controlling facts.
The first effect of issuing any silver dollar that will pay custom dues and interest on the public debt will undoubtedly be to raise it with a practical equality with gold, but that condition will last only until the amount needed for customs shall fill the channels of its use, and the overflow going into general circulation will rapidly settle to its normal and actual value, and then the discount will come on the volume of the paper currency, which will sink; pari passus, with the silver dollar in which it is made redeemable.
That remonetization will have a considerable effect in advancing the value of the silver dollar is very probable, but not enough to overcome the difference now existing—a difference resulting from the causes independent of our control in the United States.
POSITION OF FARMERS
AN INSULT TO THEM TO SAY THAT THEY ARE AS A CLASS HOPE-LESSLY DEBT RIDDEN.
There is something decidedly insulting to the farmers of this country in the suggestion that they are to a man head over heels in debt and are ready, with the greatest antiquity, to jump at the chance to pay their debts in a poorer dollar than that which they borrowed. Probably most farmers owe money on current accounts, but only a small proportion of them owe money on a mortgage. The returns of the lastensus showed that there were less than one in five, and that the property was on the average, worth three times the obligation. To the extent that the farmer owes more than he owes he is a capitalist and a creditor. The crop and stock are debtor to the farmer not only for the capital invested, but also for the value of the labor bestowed upon them by the farmer and his family. The farmer has been rightly assumed to have a vital interest in the maintenance of a sound currency, for there is a long time between sowing and reaping, and he needs to collect from the produce of the fields and flocks as good money as he puts into these investments.
The examination made by Mr. Powers of the gold dollar, we are simply opening our doors and inviting Europe to take our gold. With our gold flowing out from us shall be forced to the single standard, and our relations with the leading commercial countries of the world will be not only embarrassed, but crippled.
The question before Congress then sharply defined in the pending house bill is whether it is now safe and expedient to offer free coinage to the silver dollar of 412 grains, with the mints of the Latin union closed and Germany not permitting silver to be coined as money. At current rates of silver the free coinage of a dollar containing 412½ grains, worth in gold about 92 cents, gives an illegitimate profit to the owner of the bullion, enabling him to take 92 cents' worth of it to the mint and get it stamped as coin and force his neighbor to take it for a fall dollar. This is an unfair advantage which the government has no right to give to the owner of silver bullion and which defrauds the man who is forced to take the dollar.
It assuredly follows that if we give free coinage to this dollar of inferior value and put it in circulation, we do so at the expense of our better coinage of gold, and unless we expect the invariable experience of other nations to be in some mysterious way suspended for our peonliar benefit, will inevitably lose our gold coin. It will flow out from us with the certainty and with the force of the tides. What gain, therefore, should we make for the circulating medium if on opening the gate for silver to flow in we open a still wider gate for gold to flow out!
Assurances from empires and scientists in finance that, in remonetizing the former dollar we at once and permanently advance its value to a par with gold, are worth little in the face of opposition and controlling facts.
The first effect of issuing any silver dollar that will pay custom dues and interest on the public debt will undoubtedly be to raise it with a practical equality with gold, but that condition will last only until the amount needed for customs shall fill the channels of its use, and the overflow going into general circulation will rapidly settle to its normal and actual value, and then the discount will come on the volume of the paper currency, which will sink; pari passus, with the silver dollar in which it is made redeemable.
That remonetization will have a considerable effect in advancing the value of the silver dollar is very probable, but not enough to overcome the difference now existing—a difference resulting from the causes independent of our control in the United States.
POSITION OF FARMERS
AN INSULT TO THEM TO SAY THAT THEY ARE AS A CLASS HOPE-LESSLY DEBT RIDDEN.
There is something decidedly insulting to the farmers of this country in the suggestion that they are to a man head over heels in debt and are ready, with the greatest antiquity, to jump at the chance to pay their debts in a poorer dollar than that which they borrowed. Probably most farmers owe money on current accounts, but only a small proportion of them owe money on a mortgage. The returns of the lastensus showed that there were less than one in five, and that the property was onthe average, worth three times the obligation. Tothe extent thatthe farmer owes more than he owes he is a capitalist and a creditor. The crop and stock are debtor tothe farmer not only forthe capital invested,但 alsoforthevalueofthelaborbestoweduponthembythefarmerandhisfamily.
The farmer has been rightly assumedtohavea vitalinterestinthermaintenanceofa SoundCurrency,forshereislongtimebetween sowingandreaping,andheneedstocolllectfromtheproduceofthefieldsandflocksasgoodmoneyasheputsintotheseinvestments.
The examinationmadebyMr.PowersofthegolddollarwearesimplyopeningourdoorsandinvitingEuropetotakeourgold.Withourgoldflowingoutfromusshallbeforcedtothesinglestandard,andourrelationswiththeleadingcommercialcountriesoftheworldwillbenotonlyembarrassedbutcrippled.
ThequestionbeforeCongressthen sharplydefinedinthependinghousebilliswhetheritisnowsafeandexpedientsofthedollarofsilverdollarof412grainswiththemintsoftheLatinunionclosedandGermanynotpermittingsilvertobecoinedasmoney,purchasesilkdollarsdidprevioustoreftivecoinage.Likeallhis fellow-workmen,hwillhavethefreecoinagedollaratitsface.Thelabormancannotmarkupihisgoodsatwhosepw pleasure.Hewmustsellhisloststock,thepowerinhisgood,强muscleorhisskill.inordertolivestfromdaytoday.
Ifthen,theminereownertobethesolebeneficiary,Lettnesquirewhatportionofthewholepeopleweareaskedtobenefit.Intheyearof1890therewascoinedmoresilverthanhadeverbeencoinedbeforeinoneyearintheworld'shistory.Wemaythenconsiderthatyearagoodoneuseincomparison.AbsentleitwillbetheverybestonefromaSilverstandpoint.
In1890therewereabout6000minesinthiscountryproducingbothgoldandsilverinvarietyquantities.
Inthesameyearthereweremorethan185000factoriesintheUnitedStatesturningontmanufacturedproducts.Morethan thirtytimesasmanyfactoriesasminesofgoldandsilverputtogether.
Theminereownedlessthan300000hands.Inshort,fiftytimesasmany.Mininesdo.notpurchaserawmaterials,andsogivenoemploymenttoothers;butthefactories.in1890paidmorethanthreebilliondollarsfordrawmaterials.
Andwhatofthevalueofproducts?Thatofthemineswas nearlyonehundredmillionsofdollarsingoldandsilver.Thatlookbiguntilyoucompareitwithseventhousandmillionsofvalueproducedbythefactory.FourcitiesOfCaliforniaalonein1890showedanoutputofmanufacturenearlydoubleinvaluetheproductofallthegoldandsilverminesoftheUnitedStates.AndCaliforniaisnotamainufacturingStatecomparedwithsomeofher sisters.OhichdischargedmorefactoryhandsonaccountoftheWilsonbiltonwereeveremployedinalltheminesinoneyear.New Yorkcityalone didthesamething.
Whichistheparamountissue?Whichshallweprotect?Itishadhardrealizemagnitudeourofmanufacturinginterestsexceptbycomparison.Thevalueproduced,thepeopleemployeddirectly,thepeopleemployedindirectly,thefarmproductstofeedthem,therailroadandsteamfacilitiestomovethem—alltheitemsrunintocomprehendthem.
Yetweareaskedtobelievethatitismoreimportanttohelpthemineowners sellhisbullionthanitisto fosterthesegigantic manufacturinginterests.Iwillnotbewouldmakeusagreatnation.Miningislocalissue;minesareconliedtoa half-dozenStates,andstrangeasitmayseem,a半-dozencitiesinthoseStatesturnedout.In1890,nearlythreetimesasmuchvalueinmanufacturesasthehalf-dozenStatesdidingoldandsilver.
Manufacturingisnotlocal.itIsoexpensivewithnationaldomain.GivenonlyreasonableprotectionandthefactorywhistlewillechofromMaine'spineforestsToCalifornia'sgulfandfromthehamldswampsofFloridatoAlaska'sice-boundshores.Andwhyshoulditnotbeso?Whatdestinyhasthis nation throughtradeandcommerceandtheartsofpeace?Whatwouldcommercebewithoutthefactory?We cannotbrivecongest,buypreyuponotherpeople.Wewmustdevelopownresources.Wehave theminabundanceandinendlessvariety.
THE CUBAN STRUGGLE
A CONCERTED EFFORTTOBE MADEBYTHEINSURGENTSTOEFFECTTHECAPTUREOFWEYLER.
HAVANA待21—theoneyquestion
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when它是不能被允许的。否则,如果他们没有足够的资金来购买这些商品,他们可能会因为无法购买而无法生存。因此,他们需要更多的资金来购买这些商品。如果他们没有足够的资金来购买这些商品,他们可能会因为无法购买而无法生存。因此,他们需要更多的资金来购买这些商品。如果他们没有足够的资金来购买这些商品,他们可能会因为无法购买而无法生存。因此,他们需要更多的资金来购买这些商品。如果他们没有足够的资金来购买这些商品,他们可能会因为无法购买而无法生存。因此,他们需要更多的资金来购买这些商品。如果他们没有足够的资金来购买这些商品,他们可能会因为无法购买而无法生存。因此,他们需要更多的资金来购买这些商品。如果他们没有足够的资金来购买这些商品,他们可能会因为无法购买而无法生存。因此,他们需要更多的资金来购买这些商品。如果他们没有足够的资金来购买这些商品,他们可能会因为无法购买而无法生存。因此,他们需要更多的资金来购买这些商品。如果他们没有足够的资金来购买这些商品,他们可能会因为无法购买而无法生存。因此,他们需要更多的资金来购买这些商品。如果他们没有足够的资金来购买这些商品,他们可能会因为无法购买而无法生存。因此,他们需要更多的资金来购买这些商品。如果他们没有足够的资金来购买这些商品,他们可能会因为无法购买而无法生存。因此,他们需要更多的资金来购买这些商品。如果他们没有足够的资金来购买这些商品,他们可能会因为无法购买而无法生存。因此,他们需要更多的资金来购买这些商品。如果他们没有足够的资金来购买这些商品,他们可能会因为无法购买而无法生存。因此,他们需要更多的资金来购买这些商品。如果他们没有足够的资金来购买这些商品,他们可能会因为无法购买而无法生存。因此,他们需要更多的资金来购买这些商品。如果他们没有足够的资金来购买这些商品。他们需要更多的资金来购买这些商品。如果他们没有足够的资金来购买这些商品。他们需要更多的资金来购买这些商品。如果他们没有足够的资金来购买这些商品。他们需要更多的资金来购买这些商品。如果他们没有足够的资金来购买这些商品。他们需要更多的资金来购买这些商品。如果他们没有足够的资金来购买这些商品。他们需要更多的资金来购买这些商品。如果他们没有足够的资金来购买这些商品。他们需要更多的资金来购买这些商品。如果他们没有足够的资金来购买这些商品。他们需要更多的资金来购买这些商品。如果他们没有足够的资金来购买这些商品。他们需要更多的资金来购买这些商品。如果他们没有足够的资金来购买这些商品。他们需要更多的资金来购买这些商品。如果他们没有足够的资金来购买这些商品。他们需要更多的资金来购买这些商品。如果他们没有足够的资金来购买这些商品。他们需要更多的资金来购买这些商品。如果他们没有足够的资金来购买这些商品。他们需要更多的资金来购买这些商品。如果他们没有足够的资金来购买这些商品。他们需要更多的资金来购买这些商品。如果他们没有足够的资金来购买这些商品。他们需要更多的资金来购买这些商品。如果他们没有足够的资金来购买这些商品。他们需要更多的资金来购买这些商品。如果他们没有足够的资金来购买 these 商品。或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理这些问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理这些问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理这个问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理这个问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理这个问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理这个问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理这个问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理这个问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理这个问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理这个问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理这个问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理这个问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理这个问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理这个问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理这个问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理这个问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理这个问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和精力去处理问题,或者,如果他有足够的时间和财力去处理问题,或者如果他有足够的时间和财力去处理问题,或者如果他有足够的时间和财力去处理问题,或者如果他有足够的时间和财力去处理问题,或者如果他有足够的时间和财力去处理问题,或者如果他有足够的时间和财力去处理问题,或者如果他有足够的时间和财力去处理问题,或者如果他有足够的时间和财力去处理问题,或者如果他有足够的时间和财力去处理问题,或者如果他有足够的时间和财力去处理问题,或者如果他有足够的时间和财力去处理问题,或者如果他有足够的时间和财力去处理问题,或者如果他有足够的时间和财力去处理问题,或者如果他有足够的时间和财力去处理问题,或者如果他有足够的时间和财力去处理问题,或者如果他有足够的时间和财力去处理问题,或者如果他有足够的时间和财力去处理问题,或者如果他有足够的时间和财力去处理问题,或者如果他有足够时间和她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她朋友的关系,以及如何与她 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Davis
Seeds!
Republic that she is prepared
She buys for cash and
bring her customers the bengoods or answering questions
New Taken in Exchange
This Is Your Opportunity.
Receipt of ten cents, cash or stamps,
ous sample will be mailed of the
popular Catarrh and Hay Fever Cure
Cream Balm) sufficient to demonthe great merits of the remedy.
LY BROTHERS,
56 Warren St., New York City.
John Reid, Jr., of Great Falls, Mont.
handed Ely's Cream Balm to me.
I斋ize his statement, "It is a posifor catarrh if used as directed."—
Annis W. Pools, Pastor Central Pres.
Helena, Mont.
Cream Balm is the acknowledged
catarrh and contains no mercury
injurious drug. Price, 50 cents.
NEW BUGGIES.
ETZ, the Painter, has just received a
New Buggles, which he is painting
painting for the trade. The vehicles are
best workmanship and are warranted
class, Call at shop, on Center street,
warehouse at Brookshurst Station, on
other particulars address
A. H. CARGILL,
P. O. Anaheim; or Brookshurst.
Gage Warehouse
This means of notifying the farmers
generally that I will make Liberal
on Grain for Storage in my large
warehouse at Brookshurst Station, on
other particulars address
A. H. CARGILL,
P. O. Anaheim; or Brookshurst.
THE CUBAN STRUGGLE.
A CONCERTED EFFORT TO BE MADE BY
THE INSURGENTS TO EFFECT THE
CAPTURE OF WEYLER.
HAVANA, Sept. 21.—The money question
is the all absorbing topic of the hour. Ever since General Weyler issued his famous decree ordering the Spanish banks' paper money to be accepted at par with gold, it was foreseen that complications would arise because, not having the Government's proper guarantee, it could not be accepted as a circulating medium.
The Government is doing all in its power to sustain the value of the paper, threatening with severe penalties those who refuse to accept it on the same basis with gold.
The Spanish bank, with the assistance of the Government, in order to uphold its paper, announced its willingness to accept it in payment of drafts on Spain, but when one of the local banks—as a test case—solicit from the bank a draft on Spain for $150,000, the bank refused on the ground that it could not furnish bills to bankers who did not admit its paper in payment of their exchanges.
By repudiating its own paper the bank has initiated a crisis in financial circles, which has upset the money market and many believe will end in a commercial panic.
Many efforts are being made to avert disaster by inducing General Weyler to allow the quotation on exchange of the paper currency that everybody should know its exact intrinsic value, but it seems Weyler stands firm on his degree and does not allow the least variation of his orders.
The result is that ever since then the Stock and Gold Exchange has not done any operations and all quotations are considered nominal.
On the other hand, all the bankers, in order to avoid the penalties of Weyler's decree by refusing the acceptance of paper in payment of drafts, have decided to close their exchange departments, alleging that they have no funds abroad to check against except when they are offered gold—then the draft is furnished.
The governor of the Spanish bank called a meeting of all the bankers some days ago to see how the financial difficulty could be solved, but no definite agreement was reached and the situation continues the same.
As a natural consequence of this state of affairs the exportation of gold and silver is being carried on to a great extent, all the outgoing steamers carrying considerable quantities of the precious metals to Spain and the United States, this being attributed to the great distrust existing among the whites will come from shades pure lands to California's gulf and from the humid swamps of Florida to Alaska's ice-bound shores. And why should it not be so? What destiny has this nation but through trade and commerce and the arts of peace? What would commerce be without the factory? We cannot thrive by conquest, by preying upon other people. We must develop our own resources. We have them in abundance and in endless variety.
Rain is badly needed in San Diego for irrigation purposes. The water Excondido reservoir is so low that the entire week will consume it and the old ing plant must be worked to supply town for domestic uses. The Guyana servoir is little better, the water less than seventeen feet. No more from that source now reaches the city supply coming from La Mesa reservoir. The pressure of the latter is insufficient residents on the hills are without physicians, as the damage they will fold to the good you can possibly from them. Hall's Catarrh Care, mustured by F. J. Chenay & Co., Toilets contains no mercury, and is taken into acting directly upon the blood and surfaces of the system. In buying Catarrh Care be sure you get it. It is taken internally and is made in Ohio by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testified free.
Sold by druggists price 750 per cent.
The White Caps have created a sensation in Ohio by whipping a man Huntsman, who lives at Holland ten miles from Toledo, and burying alive. The story has just leaked through the outrage was committed ten第九. The Huntsman under were afraid to relate to the another story, but neighbors learned of the fact informed the police. The foe, as to the police, are that two of the Hunts children, coming from the postoffice picked up on the road by two men buggy and scooted of stealing a pool containing $80. The next sight a man came to the Huntsman house, calling Huntsman out of bed, dragged him outside and beat him abused him in a frightful manner, they carried him to a grave, and put in it covered him with earth. After they dug him up again. They abused him a second time, and finally him again. Then they dug him up second time and again lashed him again. The two children were lashed. The affair occurred about nine Huntsman is a respectable and well farmer.
Gazette.
24, 1896. NUMBER 48
SNAP SHOTS AT THE NEWS.
Complete returns of the Maine election give Powers, 83,573; Frank, 34,841. Republican plurality, 48,732.
Ida May, the four-year-old daughter of J. J. Gobbi of Healdaburg, met a shocking death at her father's winery one day last week. In some way the little girl was caught in the steam crusher and was ground to death.
The tug Ethel and Marion was sunk in San Francisco bay Saturday morning, owing to the carelessness of her engineer, who attached a hose to her water-tanks and then went off up town. Before he returned the tanks and hull were filled, and the tug is now at the bottom of the bay, near the wharf, where she was moored.
Oliver Winfield Winthrop was on Monday morning sentenced in San Francisco to life imprisonment for robbery in connection with his abduction of James Campbell, an Hawaiian millionaire, whom he kept a prisoner two days in a cottage at the west end of California street, in the hope of securing a ransom of $20,000.
Chris von Der Aha, president of the St. Louis Browns, has been recently defendant in a suit filed by Miss Annie Kaiser of St. Louis, who seeks for $20,000 damages for breach of promise. Recently Mr. von Der Aha married in Erie, Pa., a Miss Della Wells of St. Louis. When this was announced Miss Kaiser stated that Von Der Aha had promised to marry her, but the time had never been set for the wedding. So she sued him for $20,000 damages.
The occupations of the Vermont voters indicate that they do not belong to what the Populistic orators call the "entrenched few." According to the last census of the state's male population, 34,310 were farmers, 18,012 agricultural laborers, 9000 unclassified laborers, 2010 railway employees, 3912 carpenters, 2403 teamsters, 2068 quarry men, 2974 marble and stone cutters, 2270 mill employees, 614 clergymen and citizens engaged in 118 other pursuits.
San Diego missing men are excited over a sensation has been caused in the Populist and Democratic ranks at Santa Rosa by the discovery that G. W. Hoyle, the fusion candidate for the Assembly in the Seventeenth district, is ineligible to serve as a legislator. Hoyle has not been in the State quite long enough to entitle him to membership in the Legislature. He will be taken off the Populist Democratic ticket and another man substituted, probably John W. Keogan of Santa Rosa.
At a meeting of the Pomona Grange, at Stockton during last week, the constitutional amendments were discussed. That abolishing the mortgage tax was disapproved. That for a secret ballot and the one for women suffrage were endorsed. The two relating to the incorporation of cities and the management of the police court were passed as being without the province of the Grange, and that limiting the liability of stockholders in corporations, was passed as being ambiguous, but voters were recommended to read the amendment several times before voting for it.
The suspension of the Union National bank of New Orleans, which closed its doors recently, was due to along line of defalcations covering several years and amounting to nearly $500,000. There had been a run on the bank, and at the time of closing, total deposits were below $100,000. The government has held the two bookkeepers pending further information. It is believed that there has been outside collusion. There has been a run on some of the other banks, but the treasury officials are doing what they can to tide the National banks of the city over the crisis. $1,000,000 has been transferred to the New Orleans banks from their reserve agents in New York.
A dispatch from Hongkong to the Government paper at Madrid says that the insurgents at Cavite, Philippine Islands, captured a monastery there and massacred the monks, putting them to death with knives. The Spanish warships afterward started a bombardment of the insurgent position, but the shots fell short and no harm was done. Over a hundred insurgents who had been captured by the Spaniards were flung into a small dungeon at Manilla. The next morning fifty-four of the prisoners were found
Whatever may be said on behalf of Bryan as a politician, not much can hold on his behalf as a prophet. All departments of the Government given into the hands of the Democracies contrary to Mr. Bryan's procluse, industry was destroyed, labor injured, and there was saved to the mercy a much smaller portion of the which they jointly produced than was usually enjoyed. Prosperity, joy happiness, if they were brought to joy season of the change of administration, came only to Democrats who into office and all the rest, without need to station and condition, have the past four years the hardest in their experience. Then it was made that was to bring to the poor the good things prophecied. Now silver, but the man who was a prophet in 1892 is not likely to be the prophet in 1896. Put not your in him. Free trade was bad, free war would be worse if attempted by country alone, and free trade and silver coupled together would undo nation altogether.
Maculay's Prophecy.
A letter addressed to a blogger Thomas Jefferson the great historian student of affairs, Thomas Babbing-Maculay penned the following necency:
Day may come in the United States a multitude of people oppressed by hard will be called upon to choose rulers. On side will stand a statesman preaching peace, respect for vested rights, and strictness of public faith. On the other side stand a demagogue running about the way of usurcers and capitalists. Let us know that if such a season of adversity ever hit the time, foreshadowed by Maculay, has come when a campaign is tought on lines practically as he laid down scarcely admits of question, will the issue be? This is a question millions of men are asking them every day, and while they feeludent and hopeful, they cannot help being concerned because the gravest sequences to rich and poor depend on the issue. It is not that Bryan is aagogue who, with malicious intent, tries to destroy his country or to overthrow the social order. He is not deep enough for that, and there is no spirit of valence in him. He is not even bad. Personally he is undoubtedly well liked by those who know him; but he depends for his advancement on telling people the truths that are pleasant for them to rather than the truths which they must be told. His kind of politics is the same relation to genuine mismanship that trays literature to classical masterpieces. In most speech he appeals more or less likely to the most dangerous passions of man character, and it is that which brought to mind with so much force long forgotten prophecy of Maculay which gives to thinking men so much concern in regard to this election.
It is badly needed in San Diego county irrigation purposes. The water in the adjoined reservoir is so low that the presseek will consume it and the old pumpplant must be worked to supply the domestic use.
The occupations of the Vermont voters indicate that they do not belong to what the Popocratic prostrates call the "entrenched few." According to the last census of the state's male population, 34,310 were farmers, 18,012 agricultural laborers, 9000 unclassified laborers, 2010 railway employees, 3912 carpenters, 2403 teamsters, 2068 quarry men, 2974 marble and stone cutters, 2270 mill employees, 614 clergymen and citizens engaged in 118 other pursuits.
San Diego mining men are excited over Mat Werner's discovery in the Boulder Creek district. He has just located a mine under the name of the Pacific Traction and brought in samples of ore richer than any thing yet seen in the county. Some samples went into the tens of thousands and Werner is confident the ledge will average over $100 its entire width. The mine is situated on Boulder Creek, between Stonewall and Julian, in the heart of the mining country and the spot where Werner uncovered the riches he has been passed over for years by prospectors. Several parties have gone out and others are preparing to leave, hoping to find other ledges in the vicinity.
Fire broke out in the char house of the sugar refinery at Moncton, N.B., Sunday evening. Before the fireman could reach the place, the upper stories were in flames. Nothing could be done, and within an hour the flames had extended into the sugarhouse, eight stories high. The fall of the heavy machinery sent sparks and flames a hundred feet above the highest walls. Within two hours only the bare walls were left standing. There was no wind and the boiler-house, office and storehouse were saved. The works are said to be insured for $300,000, but the loss will exceed that figure. About 150 men have been thrown out of employment. The cause of the fire is unknown.
Antone Dabner, a Vallejo farmer, has disappeared and considerable mystery hinges about his departure. One day last week four attachments, aggregating $550, were issued against his possessions, and they are now in the hands of a constable. Several days ago Dabner bade his wife good-byd and started for San Francisco, where he intended to collect a bill of $62 due him from a commission house. That was last his wife heard of blim until Thursday when the mail brought a letter purporting to be from him, which stated that he had been robbed in San Francisco, and that he was ashamed to return home, and would go away for good. Dabner is unable to write and the mystery of the case increases. Persons having claims against Dabner, hearing of his disappearance, hastened to file attachments.
The Coronado Water Company have received a cargo of pipe and is extending its system to connect with the lower Otay dam, which has now reached a size equal to the Sweetwater dam, holding something like six billion gallons of water. The dam is being built to hold almost three times as much water. With a small extension of ten miles the Coronado system can be joined to the Otay mains, thus furnishing water for the entire region around the head of the bay, and insuring the city of San Diego against a water famine in case the present supply gives out. While lower Otay is going forward another gang of 110 men are at work on Moreno dam, fifty miles east, clearing off the foundation and reservoir site, and running tunnels for a monster blast. It is expected the shot will be ready to be tired in about two months, when over 500,000 tons of rock will be discharged by sixty tons of giant powder. The Moreno dam is where the city will hereto get its supply.
The rival to the goose that laid the golden egg has been found. It is a hen—and a town bird has been hit on it since a little time ago.
A dispatch from Hongkong to the Government paper at Madrid says that the insurgents at Cavite, Philippine Islands, captured a monastery and massacred the monks, putting them to death with knives. The Spanish warships afterward started a bombardment of the insurgent position, but the shots fell short and no harm was done. Over a hundred insurgents who had been captured by the Spaniards were flung into a small dungeon at Manilla. The next morning fifty-four of the prisoners were found dead having been suffocated during the night. The Spaniards, with the object of striking terror among the sympathizers of the insurgents, make it a practice to execute their prisoners publicly. The men are taken out in batches and shot before the eyes of anyone who desires to witness their death.
The dispatch adds that the insurgents are making headway in the interior.
Leo Stephan has had an adverse decision from the Supreme Court in his Orange saloon case. The court on Thursday made a ruling in his case, establishing the supremacy of the statutes over ordinances of Supervisory. Stephan was convicted in this county of selling intoxicating liquors without a license, and was sentenced to pay a fine of $250 or to be imprisoned 125 days. The defendant sued out a writ of habeus corpus, averring that the sentence was illegal, and that the ordinance under which he was convicted provided for a maximum fine of $200, and that his sentence was in excess of that. The Supreme Court, in remanding the petitioner, cites section 435 of the Penal Code, which provides that a person who sells intoxicating liquors without a license is guilty of misdemeanor, and section 19 of the same code declares the maximum punishment of a misdemeanor to be a fine of $500 or imprisonment, both.
Frank Hepburn, son of Congressman Hepburn of Iowa, fought a duel in Chester, Ark., and was killed by the second shot from his antagonist's weapon. Hepburn was an engineer on the Frisco road,and was waiting over at the station.The day was hot and oppressive,and several persons were asleep on the platform.Among them was W.E.Sims proprietor of a saloon in Chester.Hepburn removed the latter's shoes for a joke,and then awakened him.Sims lost his temper,and upon learningthe identity of the perpetrator of the practical joke rushed at the engineer and stabbed him in the side with a pocket knife,intifing a slight wound.At Hepburn's suggestion they parted and armed themselves and a few minutes later met on the street and opened fire.In the exchange of shots Hepburn was hit,and died two hours later.
Miss Emma C. Pullman,a niece of the millionaire palace-car man,has been sued by the dressmaking-house of Redfern of New York and London.Miss Pullman resides in River Forest,near Chicago.atthe palatial dwellingof her uncle,C.L.Pullman.The account has been run for three yearsandthe actual liability on it amounts to nearly $1000.Miss Pullman's billisfor bicycle costumes,riding habits,tea gownsand other garments.The neighborsofthe Pallmanshave noticedthat during this summer muchof Miss Pullman's timehas been given overto bicycling.The neighbors have also noticed that no one onthe boulevard ever appeared in more nattycostumes.Witha prepossessing countenance,a wealthof blonde hair.ofa goodfigureandnaturallygraceful,Miss Pullmanin her brown costumeswith theirshort skirtsandclose-fittingleggingsattracted attentionwhere she rode.Brownwasher favoritecolor,andthoughshehadagreatvarietyofcostumes,theywereallinsome shadeofbrown.Miss Pullmanis thoughttobethepossessorofconsiderablemoney,anditisknownthatsheisgoingEaststreetwhere shespendsaGreatporchinforthereserveagentinNewYork.
His kind of politics is the same relation to genuine manhood that trashy literature is to classical masterpieces. In most speech he appeals more or less to the most dangerous passions of man character, and it is that which brought to mind with so much force long forgotten prophecy of Macaulay which gives to thinking men so concern in regard to this election.
His is badly needed in San Diego county irrigation purposes. The water in the adido reservoir is so low that the prescok will consume it and the old pump plant must be worked to supply the farm domestic uses. The Cuyamaca reservoir is little better, the water measuring than seventeen feet. No more water that source now reaches the city, the city coming from La Mesa reservoir, pressure of the latter is insufficient, and efforts on the hills are without water. Why of rains has fallen further south and islands of仁nes went to waste in the Moeroservoir, now being built by the city. The new reservoir in the inty will be used the possibility of a water famine.
The mercury will surely destroy the sense of heat and completely derange the whole system when entering it through the mucous spaces. Such articles should never be except on prescriptions from reintable patients, as the damage they will do is ten to the good you can possibly derive them. Hall's Oatarth Care, manufactured by F. J. Chenay & Co., Toledo, O.,ains no mercy, and is taken internally, directly upon the blood and mucous moes of the system. In buying Hall's Oatarth Care be sure you get the gennine, taken internally and is made in Toledo, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials sold by druggists price 750 per bottle.
The White Caps have created another station in Ohio by whipping a man named Watman, who lives at Holland Station, miles from Toledo, and burying him there. The story has just leaked out although the outrage was committed on September 9th. The Watmans, under threats, afraid to relate to the authorities the fact, as reported by police, are that two of the Huntsman children, coming from the postoffice, were dead up on the road by two men in a carry and sooooned of stealing a pocketbook bearing $50. The next night a party of came to the Huntsman house, and after huntingman out of bed, seized and carried him outside and beat him and killed him in a frightful manner. Then carried him to a grave, and patting him covered him with earth. After a while he dug him up again. They beat and seized him a second time, and finally buried again. Then they dug him up for the third time and again lashed him and then drove away. The two children were also seized. The affair occurred about midnight.
Watman is a respectable and well-to-do man.
With a small extension of ton miles the Coronado system can be joined to the Otay mains, thus furnishing water for the entire region around the head of the bay, and insuring the city of San Diego against a water famine in case the present supply gives out. While lower Otay is going forward another gang of 110 men are at work on Moreno dam, fifty miles east, clearing off the foundation and reservoir site, and running tunnels for a monster blast. It is expected the shot will be ready to be fired in about two months, when over 500,000 tons of rock will be dislodged by sixty tons of giant powder. The Moreno dam is where the city will hercaster get its supply.
The rival to the goose that laid the golden egg has been found. It is a hen—and a town bird, to boot—for it roosts in a little back yard in the Belleville quarter, London. One morning when the mistress of the fowl-run paid her matutinal visit to the nests she came across, to her intense amazement, a bundle of papers under one staid old hen. She could scarcely believe her eyes at this strange find especially when on examination, it was found to contain securities valued at £1000. The lady who found the fortune said not a word to her friends, but quietly converted the bonds into ready money and changed her mode of life considerably. But this sudden show of wealth aroused the suspicions and jealousy of the neighbors who had not been visited by a windfall of unexpected riobes. Rumors spread, and the police were called upon to investigate the matter. Then the stove came out, and a romantic fabric crumbled away to vulgar robbery. The securities had been stolen about eight years ago by some individual, who had passed them on to a third person. This latter, unable to get rid of them in a profitable manner, had popped them under the benn one night. The owner of the innocent bird, together with several other persons connected with the case, have been taken into custody.
The Supreme Court has ordered a new trial for Alonzo J. Whitman, who was sentenced to nine years' imprisonment for forgery. Whitman was at one time a millionaire. He inherited a fortune and became prominent in Michigan and Minnesota politics. He was elected as Mayor of Dudash and State Senator in the Minnesota Legislature. He lost his money in speculation and came West. In San Francisco he posed as a man of wealth and went into good society. Finally he ceased a check for $500 at the Bank of California. The check was drawn by Arthur Dixon, but the bank knew of no such man. Whitman was arrested in New York and brought for trial. He contended that the check was not forgued, but was given to him by his friend Dixon. The latter could not be found and Whitman was found guilty. The Supreme Court holds that the lower court arred in allowing other checks to be introduced as evidence which were alleged to be forged, but which were not proved to be so. This tended to create the impression that Whitman was a forger and a cheat. Whitman now claims to have affidavits from Dixon that the check was all right as far as he was concerned. Whitman says there has been a conspiracy to send him to prison on a trumped-up charge.
Miss Pullman's bill is for bicycle costumes, riding habits, tea gowns and other garments. The neighbors of the Pullmans have noticed that during this summer much of Miss Pullman's time has been given over to bicycling. The neighbors have also noticed that no one on the boulevard ever appeared in more natty costume. With a prepossessing countenance, a wealth of blonde hair, of a good figure and naturally graceful, Miss Pullman in her brown costumes with their short skirts and close-fitting leggings attracted attention wherever she rode. Brown was her favorite color, and though she had a great variety of costumes, they were all in some shade of brown. Miss Pullman is thought to be the possessor of considerable money, and it is known that she is going East shortly, where she spends a great portion of her time.
Three men of Brighton Park, Joseph Culver, his brother, John Culver, and Thomas Cary, started out on the Chicago drainage canal one day last week on a shooting tour, and put their powder in a stove to keep it dry. Joseph Culver was resting easily that night at the County Hospital.
The other two fortunately escaped serious injury! The three men left their homes prepared for their trip, and in order to get an early start they went to the foot of Hyman avenue, where the old canal runs, and fixed themselves and their guns and powder in a place for the night, which was cold and damp. History does not tell what time the hunters went to bed, or what time they put the powder in the oven of the stove, but it does sell time the three hunters awoke and the manner of their awakening. The powder traveled upward. So did the stove. So also, did the men in one, two, three order. Joseph Culver's body was bruised, and in some places torn by the force of the explosion. John Culver and Thomas Cary took unwilling flights in the air and landed plump into the old canal. The shooting trip was postponed, and the three started back, John Culver and Cary siding their more badly hurt companion.
The curiosity of Ralph Hamlin, a bridge tender and amateur naturalist, occasioned him a strange experience on the Alameda marsh at daybreak Friday last. As he emerged from his hut at Bay Farm Island bridge he noticed a blue haze hanging over the marsh south of the island, which appeared to be rising and falling. Armed with a shotgun he proceeded to investigate the phenomenon and found to his delight that the wavering blue line was an immense flock of oranges, most of which were dancing with outstretched wings and fencing with their bills. His curiosity overcame his discretion and he drew closer to the birds, but being attacked by two of the largest was compelled to use his gun in self-defense. Immediately he discharged the weapon he regretted his hasty action; for the whole flock rose and circling around him made a concerted attack upon him. After clubbing his assailants with the butt of his gun without apparent effect he made a dash for his hut, which he finally reached without further injury than a few painful jabs from the spear-like bills of his puruers, which hovered round for some time after he had escaped from their fury.