anaheim-gazette 1896-10-15
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DELIBERATE DECEIT.
Facts Cunningly Misapplied in Order to Produce Popular Mis-conception.
At the great Auditorium in St. Louis Mr. Bryan addressed a large assemblage of people on the political issues of the day, and in the course of his address uttered the following declarations:
"I call your attention to the fact that the Republican party in its platform and through its public men is making no effort to supply the people of the United States with a sufficient amount of money to do business with. I want you to remember the figures which I am going to read to you. These figures are taken from a government publication issued on the 1st day of July, 1896. In this publication I find a statement of the amount of money of all kinds in circulation among the people for the various years. Let me call your attention to the amount given here for the years 1894, 1895 and 1896. In 1894 the amount of money in circulation was $1,680,000,000. In 1895 the amount of money in circulation had fallen to $1,-601,000,000, a decrease in one year of $59,000,000. In 1896 the amount in circulation had fallen to $1,500,000,000. What does it mean? It means that in two years' time the amount of money in circulation among the people had fallen about 150,000,000, a decrease of about 10 per cent. This report shows that while the per capita circulation in 1894 was $2428, in 1896 it had fallen to $2110, a fall of more than $3. Mr. Sherman says that we need an increase of something like fifty millions every year, and yet instead of having an increase of fifty millions a year, in the last two years we have a decrease of about $155,-000,000, making a deficit of about $250,-000,000 in the currency of the country. Now, I want to ask you why it is that the Republican party has made no provision whatever to satisfy the needs of an increased population.
"Not only does the Republican party make no provision for an increase of the currency to meet the needs of the people, but the Republican party has been silent in regard to the manner in which this currency has been contracted. If the Republican party succeeds, we have every reason to believe that the Republican administration will follow the example set by previous administrations and followed by the Democratic administration."
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party, to sanction the packing of the convention of an opposition party and so filching its organization to put it to other uses. For a Democrat, in this emergency, to turn against the popocratic aggregation is not to betray his party, but to help to redeem it out of the hands of its enemies.
PER CONTRA
Two Views of Protection. Which Will You Choose?
In one of his recent speeches Mr. Bryan said: "We shall never get out of the slough of industrial stagnation until we compel higher prices for what we make and raise."
That seems to be good doctrine. It is good Republican doctrine. The Republican party believes that American laborers and American producers should be well paid, and it was never with the consent of the Republican party that the selling price of any staple article got below the cost of production.
But turn back four years and find ver, would chilt paper income to per capita or more, acquire the roads on behalf of the government, and the telegraphs and banking facilities and, with this patronage behind them their hold upon the government need could be shaken.
Those who study the forces of terror that they may foretell the events of morrow, know full well that they guarded confession of this Populist true index to the state of mind of whole Populistic fraternity. Ulysses principle they are opposed to the use metal of any kind as money, and lie that the government stamp paper is all that is needed to make money in limitless quantity. It something far different from free silk coinage for which they are struggling Little by little this great plot crops Confidential moments come to the secretive of the conspirators, admits are made, and gradually the whole spiracy to change the form of our government, to remodel the Supreme Court of the nation, to tie the hands of the executive so that he cannot put down insurrection and preserve order, to bark on the limitless and untried socialism, is being laid before an assembled people.
In the history of the world no greater conspiracy against an established faction of government was ever concocted. Change Russia into a republic would be a greater transformation in former government than lies within the secrepurpose of this organization. Lust power and socialistic fanaticism made them mad. They hesitate nothing. Demagogism runs unbridled deceit works all the night. Unreason agitation characterizes the day, and the great reserve conservative force this republic does not rise in its majors and put forth its mighty arm at crisis, the task it will have in restructuring the republic after an administration of fanatics shall have intervened will be herculean in its proportions.
It matters little that the spirit of conspiracy against free popular government is not disunion, but communal The purpose of it is to change the faction from a republic into a vast community where all the instruments of produce and all the instruments of distribution are owned and operated in common. The important fact is that, under guise of an agitation for the free colony of silver, an element is seeking power not primarily for the free coins silver, but to change the existing people.
000,000, making a deficit of about $250,000 in the currency of the country. Now, I want to ask you why it is that the Republican party has made no provision whatever to satisfy the needs of an increased population.
"Not only does the Republican party make no provision for an increase of the currency to meet the needs of the people, but the Republican party has been silent in regard to the manner in which this currency has been contracted. If the Republican party succeeds, we have every reason to believe that the Republican administration will follow the example set by previous administrations and followed by the Democratic administration, and go on contracting the currency instead of increasing it."
Stripped of superfluous verbiage, what are the allegations made against the Republican party in the aboveARGUE? They are that the present administration and "previous administrations" have decreased the volume of currency among the people, and that the Republican party will go on contracting the currency instead of increasing it, following the line of its previous policy. It was deliberately intended by Mr. Bryan that his hearers should understand him to mean just this and nothing else. What are the facts?
When the Republican party came into power in 1861 the per capita circulation of money among the people of the United States was $1385. In 1865 it was $2057. In 1870 it was $1750. In 1875 it was $1716, in 1880 it was $1941. In 1885, when Mr. Cleveland and the Democratic party took control, it was $2302. In 1889, when Mr. Harrison entered he White House, it was $2252. In the spring of 1893, when Mr. Harrison turned the affairs of state over to Mr. Cleveland and his party again, it was $2444. A per capita circulation more than $10 greater than when the Republican party first took the affairs of this government out of the hands of a disorganized and discredited Democracy.
And what shall we say of Mr. Bryan's declaration that "The Republican party has been silent in regard to the manner in which this currency has been contracted?" How has it been contracted? Let us consult the records and see.
The exports of gold from America during the first three years of Mr. Cleveland's present administration exceeded the imports by $173,626,102, and but for Mr. Cleveland's having borrowed gold from Europe, the exports would have been a round hundred million greater. And who and what is responsible for this outflow of gold, this outflow of the peoples' money, this contraction of the currency? Mr. Bryan and his associates were the responsible parties, and the causes for it were first, free silver agitation led by Mr. Bryan; second, free trade agitation and the Wilson-Bryan low tariff law, which turned the balance of trade against the United States, which increased our imports and cut off our exports. These were the patent and potent causes of this contraction of the volume of the people's money, and have the Republicans been silent about it? Have they not made their campaign on it?
Mr. Bryan has a fault very common to orators. He feels that if he can succeed in fooling his immediate hearers he has scored a point, and therefore becomes unwilling of the great one.
You Choose?
In one of his recent speeches Mr. Bryan said: "We shall never get out of the slough of industrial stagnation until we compel higher prices for what we make and raise."
That seems to be good doctrine. It is good Republican doctrine. The Republican party believes that American laborers and American producers should be well paid, and it was never with the consent of the Republican party that the selling price of any staple article got below the cost of production.
But turn back four years and find what Mr. Bryan stood for then. On the 20th of March, 1892, in his place in congress Mr. Bryan said:
I want to say as emphatically as words can say that I consider it as false in economy and vicious in policy to attempt to raise at high price in this country that which we can purchase abroad at a low price.
There is somehow a lack of harmony between these two declarations of Mr. Bryan. They are exactly opposed to each other, and yet Mr. Bryan is perfectly sincere in believing both statements, opposed to each other though they are. A few words of explanation will make the matter clear.
There are two kinds of protection. One is by a tariff which the foreign producer pays for the privilege of entering our markets. This sort of protective tariff Mr. Bryan is violently opposed to and it was in denouncing this that Mr. Bryan used the language last above quoted.
There is another sort of protective tariff and it is imposed by depreciating the money in which the laborer is paid, by making the dollar he gets for his work a cheaper dollar which will not buy so much, so that the protection thus enjoyed is taken out of the wages of labor. When they are paid in cheap dollars it does not cost the employer so much to pay them and consequently they do not receive so much for their labor. This kind of protection Mr. Bryan is radically in favor of and he is junketing all over the nation urging people to vote for that sort of protection to production, to use that device for "compelling higher prices for what we make and raise."
It is for the American producer and the American workingman to say which kind of protection he will have to raise the prices of American products to the point where it will pay to produce them and their production will bring prosperity. Whether it shall be by a depreciation of the people's money so that it will not cost so much to pay them for what they do, or by the imposition of a protective tariff which will insure the wage earner goods and the producer good prices, both paid in good money, and where the cost of the protection is chiefly borne by foreign producers who are forced to pay for the privilege of entering our markets.
This question is before the people and the people must decide it. Will they decide it in their own interests or in the interests of silver mine owners and foreign manufacturers? That is true issue before the people.
Very Dangerous.
The Mobile Register is advising its constituents to vote for Bryan on the ground that he is only using the silver "racket" to get into office on; that he is really a prudent sort of fellow and,
structuring the republic after an admission of fanatics shall have intervened will be horculeau in its proportions.
It matters little that the spirit of government, to transform this nasal from a republic into a vast commune where all the instruments of production and all the instruments of distribution are owned and operated in common.
The important fact is that, under guise of an agitation for the free coinage of silver, an element is seeking power not primarily for the free coins; silver, but to change the existing form of government.
The capturing of the Chicago convention by this element was one of most adroit pieces of political maneuver ever consummated in any county.
The conspirators well knew the purpose of an old party name, knew that their sands would not distinguish a new critical doctrine from the old provide dunned the habiliments of the old, so Populism put on the garb of Deocracy the better to achieve its goal.
There is but one Democratic party day, and that is the party which Palmer and Buckner in nomination Indiansapolis. The other party quarreling under that title is as far in spirit from true democracy as from true republicanism. It is pivotalistic and socialist, and its real pose is to subvert democracy and publicisan alike and establish one ruins government by communes.
Freedom to Vote.
Of all the rascally humbugs that ever been inflicted upon a confederate public for political effect there never one that was more fraudulent than the pretence of the popocrats employers are intimidating theirployes in order to prevent their vex for Bryan. There never was a foundation for any such pretense.
A likely story that employers begin to intimidate two months later election! Two days before would quite soon enough for all practical poses and the opposition would not havethe grievance to work onployers of large gangs of men are fools. They know these facts will being told them. If they intend to play intimidation of their workers under threat of discharge there will be a word said about it before morning of election. Each man then receives his orders if he ever receives any orders at all. But many states of this Union now have Australian ballot system and intention is impossible. No employee tell how his men have voted and cannot intimidate if he would try it would be to rouse an antagonist that would be sure to make his slip in their votes just the other.
The whole pretense of intimidation of a piece with the campaign of freedom and misrepresentation which they creats are making.
Tillman On The Court.
A few weeks before Mr. Bryan nominated at Chicago, he wrote a title for a college magazine published in Nebraska, in which he asserted The Justices of the Supreme Courtthe United States should be electedthe people by popular vote,and they should be electedfor fixedtimeandnotforlife.W
Mr. Bryan has a fault very common to orators. He feels that if he can succeed in fooling his immediate hearers he has scored a point, and he therefore becomes unmindful of the great audience of readers outside the hall, in all the states of the Union, who will weigh his words and call him to account for his attempts at deceit. He knew what caused the contraction of the currency. He knew that the Republican policy had not been a policy of contraction. The very document from which he read the above figures contained the refutation of his argument. He misapplied the facts quoted with deliberate intent to deceive.
Bryan Voted for Weaver.
It has leaked out that four years ago William J. Bryan voted for and tried to elect James B. Weaver president. This is not denied but the excuse is made that he did it because a vote for Cleveland in Nebraska was thrown away and that a vote for Weaver would count for more against Harrison than a vote for the Democratic candidate. That is a lame sort of an excuse. When a man is a Democrat he is pretty apt to vote the Democratic ticket and not the Populist ticket. When a man is a Populist he is mighty apt to vote the Populist ticket and not the Democratic or any other ticket. Judged by these standards Bryan is a Populist and is not a Democrat at all, and is masquerading as a Democrat only that he may get the more votes for the office he covets.
Four years ago there was no such excuse for Democrats refusing to support their ticket as there is now. Then the platform adopted at Chicago was a Democratic platform and the candidates nominated for office were Democrats, not Populists. This year conditions are different. The party masquerading under the historical name of Democrat is in no sense a Democratic party. Its principles are Populistic and its candidate for president is a Populist and voted for the last Populistic candidate for president which ever ran. Therefore Democrats are absolved from all obligation to support Bryan and his ticket this year. To vote for him is to sanction fraud on the followers of the
Very Dangerous.
The Mobile Register is advising its constituents to vote for Bryan on the ground that he is only using the silver "racket" to get into office on; that he is really a prudent sort of fellow and, confronted with the alternative of carrying out his silver policy or ruining his country, would find some means of crawling out of his obligations to silver and silver men without inflicting free silver coinage and silver monometalism upon his country. The fact was called to mind that Secretary Carlisle was a free coinage advocate when out of office and wanting to get in, but confronted with the responsibility of inflicting free coinage upon his country did not dare to do it and changed his colors.
This is a very dangerous and a very cowardly view to take of the situation. Mr. Bryan is a fanatic. His most intimate friends say this of him, and there is no knowing what a fanatic will do. But if, as many think, he is not sincere in his advocacy of silver, if, as many believe, he is a demagogue who will do and say anything to get elected to office, it may be that he will, if elected, sustain the honor of the nation as Mr. Cleveland has sustained it, but there is no warranty for the assumption that he will do this that is not founded upon a belief in his dishonesty and if he is dishonest he is unfit to be president. If he is honest his election will be dangerous. If he is dishonest his election will be disgrace.
THEY DON'T CARE FOR SILVER.
The Silver Racket Is Worked for Power and Office Only.
A report is current in Chicago to the effect that a certain friend of Alf Gold's went to him and asked: "How about this 16 to 1 business, Governor? What is there to it?" And the answer was: "Well, there isn't much in it, but you see it's the only thing we have got to talk about this year."
A prominent Populist in this state recently confessed to a friend that he and his party really cared nothing for silver, that they were only using that as the most convenient pretext to get into office on, but once in power they would waste little time on free coinage of sal
mould eight paper money to $50 apita or more, acquire the railroad behalf of the government, alsoographs and banking facilities, with this patronage behind them, should upon the government never be shaken.
Who study the forces of to-day they may foretell the events of today, know full well that the united confession of this Populist is a index to the state of mind of the Populistic fraternity. Upon these they are opposed to the use of any kind as money, and because the government stamp on this all that is needed to make it in limitless quantity. It is going far different from free silver for which they are struggling. Only little this great plot crops out. Essential moments come to the most severe of the conspirators, admissions made, and gradually the whole concept to change the form of our government, to tie the hands of the chief slave so that he cannot put down rejection and preserve order, to eminent the limitless and untried sea ofism, is being laid before an astonishing people.
The history of the world no greater tragedy against an established form government was ever concocted. To Russia into a republic would not greater transformation in form of government than lies within the secret idee of this organization. Lust for social and fanaticism has them mad. They hesitate at digging. Demagogism runs unbridled, works all the night. Unreasoningomon characterizes the day, and if great reserve conservative force of republic does not rise in its majesty forth its mighty arm at this task it will have in reconciling the republic after an administration of fanatics shall have intervened herculean in proportions.
Matters little that the spirit of this tragedy against free popular governance is not disunion, but communism. Purpose of it is to change the form government, to transform this nation into a vast commune, all the instruments of production all the instruments of distribution owned and operated in common. Important fact is that, under the unreserved agitation for the free coinage power, an element is seeking power, primarily for the free coinage of but to change the existing form platform is paramount; and when Democrats whose convention at Sacramento indorsed President Cleveland's administration, now turn the other way they are doing no less than Republicans whose convention at Sacramento mistakenly indorsed the idea of independent free coinage of silver, but who nevertheless stand with their national platform which declares for free coinage by international agreement only. In both instances the voters have followed the national platforms of their respective parties, and in so doing both have done right and neither has the right to call the other to account for it.
BISMARCK.
Something That He Did Say About Americans Institution.
On the 14th of March, 1882, in the Reichstag, the great German chancellor, made a great speech which changed the policy of the German empire and made it a protective tariff nation, and in the course of this speech he paid to America and the American system of protection the glowing tribute reproduced below, and he meant every word of it for he made the American protective policy the policy of the German empire. What he said that has been quoted by the free silver advocates was merely that if America were to resolve to take a substantial step toward international bimetalism that fact might incline European nations to enter into an international agreement for the coinage of silver, but there was not a word which even implied that free coinage of silver undertaken by this government alone would be successful. It was a very guarded statement and nothing at all like the unreserved and full hearted sanctioning of the doctrine of protection contained in the paragraph quoted below. Surely, if the great Chancellor's opinion of American policies is valuable to American voters the paragraph here quoted is of exceptional value because on the strength of these declarations Germany adopted the American policy of protection to home industries. Here it is:
"The success of the United States in material development is the most illustrious in modern times. The American nation has not only successfully borne and suppressed the most gigantic and expensive war of all history, but immediately afterward disbanded its army, found employment for all of its soldiers."
The republic after an administration of fanatics shall have intervened in the herculean in its proportions.
matters little that the spirit of thisocracy against free popular governance is not disunion, but communism. Purpose of it is to change the form government, to transform this nation into a vast commune, all the instruments of production and operated in common. Important fact is that, under the of an agitation for the free coinage over, an element is seeking power, primarily for the free coinage of money but to change the existing form government.
Capturing of the Chicago convenancy this element was one of the drooit pieces of political maneuver over, consummated in any country. Conspirators well knew the power of party name, knew that though would not distinguish a new polo doctrine from the old provided it and the habiliments of the old, and populism put on the garb of Democrate better to achieve its ends. It is but one Democratic party to and that is the party which put her and Buckner in nomination at Napolis. The other party mashing under that title is as foreign spirit from true democracy as it is true republicanism. It is populand socialistic, and its real purpose is to subvert democracy and recanism alike and establish on their government by communes.
Freedom to Vote.
All the rascally humbugs that have been inflicted upon a confiding lie for political effect there was one that was more fraudulent than the pretense of the popocrats that employers are intimidating their employees in order to prevent their voting cryan. There never was a bit oflation for any such pretense. It is likely story that employers would be intimidated two months before on! Two days before, would be soon enough for all practical purposes and the opposition would not then be grievance to work on. Emrs of large gangs of men are not told them. If they intend to emntimidation of their 'workmen' threat of discharge there will not word said about it before the ring of election. Each man will receive his orders if he ever resis any orders at all. But most of states of this Union now have the Russian ballot system and intimidation is impossible. No employer can know his men have voted and so he not intimidate if he would and to would be to rouse an antagonism would be sure to make his men on their votes just the other way. Whole pretense of intimidation is piece with the campaign of fraud misrepresentation which the popoare making.
Tillman On the Court.
few weeks before Mr. Bryan was named at Chicago, he wrote an arford a college magazine published abraska, in which he asserted that Justices of the Supreme Court of United States should be elected by people by popular vote, and that should be elected for fixed terms and not for life. When he got
INGERSOLL ON MONEY.
A SPEECH HE MADE AT COOPER UNION ON THE SUBJECT.
The richest word painter of older political speakers, Robert G. Ingersoll, is still in the harness. His nominating speech at the Cincinnati convention of 1876, in which he enunciated James G. Blaine as the "Plumed Knight," will live forever in the histories of political campaigns.
More than twenty years ago he delivered a speech at Cooper Union, New York, to an immense audience, and what he said there is closely allied to the great issue of the present campaign. Here it is:
"I am in favor of honest money. I am in favor of gold and silver and paper with gold and silver behind it. I believe in silver because it is one of our greatest products, and I am in favor of anything that will add to the value of an American product. But I want a silver dollar worth a gold dollar, if you make it or have to make it four feet in diameter. No government can afford to be a clipper of coin."
"A great government cannot afford to stamp a lie upon gold or silver. Honest money, an honest people, an honest nation."
"When our money is only worth 80 cents on the dollar, we feel 20 per cent below par. When our money is good we feel good. When our money is at par there is where we are. I am a profound believer in the doctrine that for nations, as well as men, honesty is the best always, everywhere and forever."
"What section of this country, what party, will give us honest money—honor bright? I have been told that during the war we had plenty of money. I never saw it. I lived years without seeing a dollar. I saw promises for dollars, but not dollars. And the greenback, unless you have the gold behind it, is no more a dollar than a bill of fate is a dinner."
Tillman On the Court.
few weeks before Mr. Bryan was nominated at Chicago, he wrote an article for a college magazine published in Nebraska, in which he asserted that Justices of the Supreme Court of United States should be elected by people by popular vote, and that should be elected for fixed terms since and not for life. When he got Chicago he got as much of this idea as could into the Chicago platform, but remained for Tillman, of South Dakota, to enunciate the pure popocratic doctrine in relation to the Supreme Court. In his own terse way, in speech delivered at Philadelphia the day after he had held a long conference with Bryan, he said: "The Democratic party will take these really judges by the throat and learn that there is some liberty left in land."
There is no question but that the expression of the indiscreet Tillman exactly volces the feelings of the form element in the popocratic party. They had their way, and they had it Chicago, they would revolutionize, only the Supreme Court, but the government every four years and much oftener as opportunity offered. We are a set of extremists, of visionmen, out of their heads, and the unsafe leaders in the world.
An Interesting Plank.
The Democratic State Convention assembled at Sacramento on the 10th June adopted the following plan:
1. Solved. That we hereby indorse the adoration of President Cleveland. His policy has been wise, statesmanlike andotic, and his domestic policy has been sound and incorruptible.
2. The question is: Are California Democrats bound by that plank? If the administration of President Cleveland worthy of endorsement when the democratic convention met at Sacramento in June, why was it not worthy endorsement when the popocratic convention assembled at Chicago in 1896?
But the populistic convention Chicago not only refused to indorse administration of President Cleveland but traduced it and the populic candidate for president has conceived to traduce it from that day to the simple fact is that the national
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CITIZENS' BANK OF ANAHEIM.
Hippolyte Cahen - President
W. T. Brown, Vice President
L. Goldwater, Cashier
DIRECTORS.
Kaspare Cohn, W. T. Brown
Richard Melrose, L. Goldwater
Hippolyte Cahen.
STOCKHOLDERS
Herman W. Hellman, T. J. F. Boege, W. T. Brown
P. Nicolus, Richard Melrose, L. Goldwater, Kaspare Cohn H. Cahen, J. A. Goldwater, J. Schlesinger.
CORRESPONDENTS:
Farmers and Merchants' Bank of Los Angeles; London, Paris and American Bank, San Francisco; Importers and Traders' National Bank, New York City, N.Y.; First National Bank, Santa Ana.
Exchanges for sale on all the principal cities of the United States and foreign countries.
Southern California Railway.
Trains leave Anaheim depot for the following points as follows:
LOS ANGELES.
8:00 a.m. 11:00 a.m. 6:20 p.m.
SAN DIEGO.
*9:56 a.m. 2:50 p.m.
SANTA ANA.
9:56 a.m. 2:50 p.m. 6:00 p.m.
SAN BERNARDINO AND RIVERSIDE,
9:56 a.m. 6:00 p.m.
SAN JACINTO, ELSINORE, PERRIS, AND TEMECULA.
*9:56 a.m.
SANTA MONICA AND REDONDO
8:00 a.m. 11:00 a.m.
ONTARIO, POMONA, PASADENA AND AZUSA.
8:00 a.m. 11:00 a.m.
ESCONDIDO
*9:56 a.m. *2:50 p.m.
FALLBROOK.
*9:56 a.m.
REDLANDS.
9:56 a.m.
OVERLAND.
To Chicago, Kansas City, Denver, St. Louis and all points East.
8:00 a.m. *9:56 a.m.
Trains marked with a "are daily except Sun day."
Overland tickets sold to all points East in the United States, Mexico and Canada, and baggage checked through to destination. Commutation tickets at low rates. Special excursions via
Hippolyte Cahen.
STOCKHOLDERS
Herman W. Hellman, T. J. F. Bocge, W. T. Brown
P. Nicolus, Richard Mcrose, L. Goldwater, Kaspare
Cohn H. Cahen, J. A. Goldwater, J. Schlesinger.
CORRESPONDENTS:
Farmers and Merchants' Bank of Los Angeles,
London, Paris and American Bank, San Francisco;
Importers and Traders' National Bank, New York City,
N.Y.; First National Bank, Santa Ana.
Exchanges for sale on all the principal cities of the United States and foreign countries.
Sale Under Foreclosure of Mortgage.
In the Superior Court of the County of Orange,
State of California.
Lucinda A. Rowell, plaintiff, vs. William
Hounson, Caroline V. Hounson, Alvin Pratt
and Wesley J. Bryant, defendants.
Under and by virtue of a decree of foreclosure and order of sale duly made and entered in the Superior Court of the County of Orange,
State of California, on the 25th day of September,
A. D. 1896, and a Writ of Execution for the enforcement of Judgment requiring sale of property under foreclosure of Mortgage issued out of the said Superior Court on the 30th day of September,
A. D. 1896, in the above entitled action, in favor of Lucinda A. Rowell, plaintiff,
and against William Hounson, Caroline V.
Hounson, Alvin Pratt and Wesley J. Bryant,
defendants, for the sum of three hundred six
and 94-100 ($306 94) dollars, gold coin of the United States, besides costs, interest and forenees' fees, a copy of which said decree of foreclosure duly attested under the seal of the said Superior Court on the 25th day of September,
A. D. 1896, and to me delivered on the 30th day of September, 1896, together with the said writ annexed thereunto, whereby I am commanded to sell at public auction, for cash, gold coin of the United States, the following and in said decree described real estate: Lots eight (8), nine (9),
and ten (10) of Block "G," of J. W. Clark's addition to Anaheim, as per map thereof, recorded in Book 31, on page 100 of the Miscellaneous Records in the Reorder's office for the County of Los Angeles, State of California.
Public notice is hereby given that on Friday,
the 30th day of October, A. D. 1896, at 2 o'clock
p.m. of said day, I will proceed to sell at the Courthouse door, No 304 East Fourth Street, in the City of Santa Ana, at public auction, to the highest bidder for cash, in gold coin, of the United States, all the above described real estate, or so much thereof as will be sufficient to satisfy said decree for principal, interest and all costs and attorneys' fees.
Given under my hand this 30th day of September,
A. D. 1896.
J. C. NICHOLS Sheriff.
J. W. Ballard, Attorney for plaintiff.
Wieland's Beer ON DRAUGHT AT.....
The Club,
R. CALLAHAN, PROP.
Finest stock of Wines, Liquors and Cigars.
Best service in the city; Courteous Treatment.
ONTARIO, POMONA, PASADENA AND AZUSA,
8:00 a.m. 11:00 a.m.
ESCONIDO
*9:56 a.m.* *2:50 p.m.
FALLBROOK,
*9:56 a.m.*
REDLANDS.
9:56 a.m.
OVERLAND.
To Chicago, Kansas City, Denver, St. Louis and all points East
8:00 a.m. 9:56 a.m.
Trains marked with a are daily except Sunday.
Overland tickets sold to all points East in the United States, Mexico and Canada, and baggage checked through to destination. Commutation tickets at low rates. Special excursions via Santa Fe route every Thursday; 27 hours quickest time to all points east.
Train No. 2 carries both palace and tourist sleeper through to Kansas City and Chicago. Excursions every day.
Santa Fe Route—Personally conducted excursions leave California every Thursday for Kansas City, Chicago and Boston. These excursions occupy improved Pullman Tourist Sleeping Cars completely equipped with all necessary articles of comfort and convenience, and are in charge of competent conductors employed by the railroad company whose duties are to look after the comfort of passengers. These excursions make fully one day quicker time from Southern California to Kansas City, Chicago and the East than is possible by any other line.
Ask any of the agents of the Southern California Railway for a copy of "East in a Tourist Sleeper."
I will be pleased to make sleeping car reservations, sell through tickets and furnish maps and information in regard to rates, routes etc., over the Santa Fe route. Call on or address.
J. H. CLABAUGH, Agent, Anaheim, Cal.
Hereafter We Shall Do a Strictly Cash BUSINESS ONLY!
NO DEVIATION FROM THIS RULE.
All parties indebted to us are requested to call at once at our establishment and settle.
BENTZ BROS.
Wholesale and Retail Butchers.
H. A. McWilliams.
Contractor
And Builder.
Office first door east of City Hall.
apilft