anaheim-gazette 1897-03-25
Searchable text
Anaheim
VOLUME XXVII.
Dr. J. A. Champion
PHYSICIAN, SURGEON
AND ACCOUCHEUR.
Office—Center street, opposite Derge's drugstore. Residence—Center street, near Clemen-tina. Office Hours—8 to 12 a.m., 1 to 5 p.m., 6 to 9 p.m.
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.
Paul A. Derge.
Graduate in Pharmacy.
DRUGS, MEDICINES,
Perfumes and Toilet Articles.
BEST 5-CENT CIGAR IN TOWN
MEDICAL HALL,
KOEL BLOCK.
PUBLIC TELEPHONE OFFICE.
L. GUNTHER.
PIONEER BOOT & SHOE MAKER.
Corner Adela and Los Angeles Streets
GO TO THE Oak Barber Shop
FOR A
IRST-CLASS SHAVE OR HAIR CUT.
TWO DOORS WEST OF BANK.
HUSMANN BROS.
CHAS. S. ROGERS
BUY A
SUPERIOR BEET DRILL
The only successful beet drill used at Chino and Los Alamitos.
And step in and see JUMBO. Implements and Harness and vehicles sold by
MR. A. H. PATTERSON & CO,
Anaheim, Cal.
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
R. H. SEALE
DEALER IN
Groceries and Provisions!
First-Class Stock of Goods!
GO TO THE Oak Barber Shop FOR A IRST-CLASS SHAVE OR HAIR CUT. TWO DOORS WEST OF BANK HUSMANN BROS. 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. A. McWilliams. Contractor AND Builder. Office, first door east of City Hall.
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—286. No. 316 Montgomery St., San Francisco, Cal.
L. NEMETZ. Carriage Painting & Trimming New Buggies for Sale. Shop on Center street, near the opera-house. Anaheim, Cal.
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 Cypress.
A. FREISE, ...KEEPS THE FINEST OF... Wines, Liquors
All Kinds of Produce and Poultry Taken in Exchange
R. H. SEALE DEALER IN Groceries and Provisions! First-Class Stock of Goods! My Prices Defy Competition. A share of the public patronage is respectfully solicited. Koll Building, Los Angeles St., R. H. SEALE, Proprietor.
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.
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
JOSEPH BACKS, DEALER IN FURNITURE Repairing Done. Funeral Director. Store in Backs Building (next to irrigation district office), Los Angeles street.
A QUINTUPLE KILLING.
Terrible Tragedy Reported from Orrick, Mo.
Richmond, Mo., March 21.-A tragedy resulting in the death of five members of one family is reported from Orrick, a small village thirty-five miles southwest of here. B. Rainwater, a farmer, shot and killed his wife, his mother-in-law, Mrs. William Artman; his brother-in-law, Johnnie Artman; and his little step-daughter, Ethel Gentry. Then, after so nearly exterminating a whole family, the murderer blew off the top of his own head, dying instantly.
The tragedy occurred before midnight last night at the home of William Artman, Sr., father-in-law of the murderer. The two families lived about a mile apart on the bank of the Mississippi river, three miles south of Orrick.
Last week Mrs. Artman was taken sick and sent for her daughter. Ethel Gentry, Mrs. Rainwater's daughter by a farmer husband, went with her mother. On Saturday evening Rainwater, who had been alone at home for several days, went over to the Artman house to spend the night. During the evening he went to church with his young brother-in-law, Johnnie Artman, and upon their return, he appeared in good humor. At bedtime Rainwater proposed to young Artman that they go out and shoot some dogs that were barking outside. Artman consenting, they took a shotgun and revolver and went out. They had gone but fifty yards from the house when Rainwater, who was walking behind the boy, levied his shotgun and shot Artman in the back. Leaving the boy for dead, Rainwater returned to the house, where all the other members of the family were by this time in bed. In one big room Mr. and Mrs. Artman, Mrs. Rainwater and her daughter, Ethel Gentry, and a ten-year-old daughter of the Art-
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 Cypress.
A. FREISE,
...KEEPS THE FINEST OF...
Wines, Liquors
And Cigars. Beer on draught
Metz Block, Center St., opposite Postoffice.
WHEAT, BARLEY
AND
ALFALFA HAY
For Sale.
Apply to SAM KRAEMER, 3 mil northeast of Anaheim.
NICK HUGO
BLACKSMITHING,
WOOD WORK, HORSE-SHOEING, AND A GENERAL JOBBING BUSINESS.
Los Angeles street, Anaheim, Cal.
ALL KINDS OF PLOWWORK
Executed in Workmanlike Manner, and at Lowest Living Rates.
Give Me a Call.
PALACE
MEAT MARKET
F W. Fleischmann,
PROPRIETOR.
Best Meats the Market Affords Always on Hand.
Also keeps on hand Sausages, Bacon, Ham, Lard, Etc.
Meats delivered to all parts of the city free o harge
Shop on East Center Street.
Handles Cudahy Cold-Storage Meats, Inspected by the Government Inspector.
BOOT AND SHOE MAKER.
Center street.....Anaheim
Making and repairing at the lowest cash price. All orders promptly attended to. All work guaranteed
JOSEPH BACKS,
DEALER IN
FURNITURE
Repairing Done.
Funeral Director.
Store In Backs Building (next to irrigation district office), Los Angeles street.
City Stables,
A. L. LEWIS & CO.. - PROPS
Center St, opp. Kroeger Block
BICYCLES
FOR SALE OR RENT.
Single and Double Teams
Furnished at short notice, and careful drivers familiar with the country, supplied when required. The patronage of the public is respectfully solicited.
Abstract & Title
GUARANTEE CO.
(INCORPORATED.)
Complete Property System.
Abstracts and Certificates of Title to all lands in Orange County.
Experienced Searchers. :: Reasonable Price
124 E. Fourth St., SANTA ANA, CAL.
This Is Your Opportunity.
On receipt of ten cents, cash or stamps, a generous sample will be mailed of the most popular Catarrh and Hay Fever Cure (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, Mont., 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 Presa Church, Helena, Mont.
Ely's Cream Balm is the unwelcome cure for catarrh and contains no mercury nor any injurious drug. Price: 50 cents.
Artman that they go out and shoot some dogs that were barking outside. Artman consenting, they took a shotgun and revolver and went out. They had gone but fifty yards from the house when Rainwater, who was walking behind the boy, levied his shotgun and shot Artman in the back. Leaving the boy for dead, Rainwater returned to the house, where all the other members of the family were by this time in bed. In one big room Mr. and Mrs. Artman, Mrs. Rainwater and her daughter, Ethel Gentry, and a ten-year-old daughter of the Artmans were in bed.
Entering the room and leveling his gun at the aged Mrs. Artman the murder shouted: "Dam you; I've got you all now!"
Mrs. Artman threw up her hands as he fired. The charge carried off all her fingers and tore away one side of her face. She was instantly killed.
Turning around he literally blew his wife's head off with the other charge in the shotgun.
Then drawing a revolver, the murderer fired two bullets into the body of Ethel Gentry, one passing through her lungs and the other entering the brain. She, too, died instantly.
For some unknown reason, Rainwater spared the aged Mr. Artman and the young Artman girl.
He then deliberately loaded both barrels of the gun and went out into the door yard. There he encountered Johnnie Artman, whom he had left for dead. The boy crawled almost to the door. Rainwater killed him with another charge of buckshot, which tore away a part of the boy's head.
The murderer completed his most horrible crime by leaning up against a fence and with the charge of buckshot remaining blew off the top of his head.
The tragedy was not known until this morning, when the aged Mr. Artmand and his little daughter, who were almost beside themselves with grief and fright, called in some neighbors who were passing by.
Rainwater had been considered
Weekly Gazette
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1897.
DRILL and Los Alamitos.
Harness and vehicles
ON & CO,
avis
Seeds!
Public that she is prepared
She buys for cash and
her customers the bendies or answering questions in Exchange
LE
provisions!
of Goods!
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.
jealous of his wife, and had frequently quarreled with her, but there had been nothing in his conduct to warn the family of his murderous intentions.
During a portion of the orange season the firm of Peycke, Bleekman & Co., Chicago orange brokers, have had an office at Riverside in charge of E. Peycke. Mr. Peycke was domiciled at the Glenwood with his family. Recently they went to Los Angeles and the office in Riverside was closed. Late Friday afternoon Mrs. Peycke arrived in town, and, with a woman companion, proceeded to the Riverside bakery. There she hunted up Miss Emma Walker. Without more ado, she presented a paper to Miss Walker and ordered her to sign a statement, at the same time emphasizing her request by pointing a revolver at the frightened girl's head. The girl, of course complied, but this was not enough. While her companion held the door, Mrs. Peycke commenced beating the girl with a horsewhip. Passersby rushed in and put the infuriated woman out of doors. She then drove to Casa Blanca and took the evening train for Los Angeles. Miss Walker
SNAP SHOTS AT THE NEWS.
An investigation of the ostrich industry discloses the fact that it may be made one of great profit in certain parts of California, for it is not only the plumes which find a ready sale at fancy prices, but the skin is valuable for leather, and the flesh is said to be palatable, while even the egg shell finds ready purchasers.
It is reported that well-known oil magnates of Los Angeles have purchased the Tanner ranch, near Puente, and that extensive developments are about to begin. The land is considered unsurpassed for oil. In Brea canyon the same strata of oil is supposed to exist and in no distant day that section will be a great oil producing district.
The total available stocks of wheat in the United States and Canada on the first day of the present month amounted to 63,000,000 bushels, as against 99,000,000 in 1896; 110,000,000 in 1895 and 111,000,000 in 1893. The supply on the markets in Europe is also lighter than for several years, which should mean that better prices will prevail before the next harvest.
The Riverside trust company has sold to the Southern Pacific Company the Dulez quarry on Arlington Heights. There is an extensive deposit of good granite at this point, and the quarry is near the line of the Southern Pacific as surveyed from Riverside to Corona. The purchase is believed to indicate the purpose of the company to extend its line down into this valley at an early day.
A circular from the Seed Trade Committee of Washington says: The annual free distribution of seeds is a very great injustice to, and seriously injures the seed business. This year there were given away by the government, about twenty million packets His age has been questioned, but he had documents which sustained him claim, though the papers themselves were never verified.
A man named James Manning appeared in a Los Angeles township court one day last week leading big greyhound by a chain. The quadruped looked as if a portion of its anatomy had been chewed up and in fact that was why its own was showing up in court. He preferred a charge of disturbing the peace against one William Ford, and was there to justify the charge. A matter of fact Ford possessed combatively inclined bulldog, and when it set upon its neighbor's green hound and took a chunk out of his hindquarter, he was persona nigrata, so to speak, to Manning. After some little testimony had been taken Manning brought forward his dog to exhibit its battered condition. The deputy district attorney who was prosecuting the case asked him if he proposed to put the dog evidence. "I do," answered Mannie with a knowing look. "Then," Mr. McComas in all seriousness "you'll have to file him as an exhilion in the case." "Oh, be gob, but won't," and consternation overspread the visage of the prosecution witness "an' I won't have him filed for the world, he's bad enough disfigured as it is." Suiting the action of the word, the dog was led away and the action dismissed.
The first carload shipment of celery to St. Louis was made on day last week, and the fact is of more than ordinary interest, since it may be the beginning of an important dustry. The shipment was made at a Los Angeles firm, who make specialty of produce shipments carload lots. The celery was grown for the most part by Chinamen on the bottom land of the Santa Ana river, and is a choice product. Part of the celery is the "Whit
Tragedy Reported from Orrick, Mo.
D., Mo., March 21.—A resulting in the death of sons of one family is re- Orrick, a small village southwest of here. After, a farmer, shot and wife, his mother-in-law, am Artman; his brother-Jhnnie Artman; and his daughter, Ethel Gentry. The two fam- so nearly exterminating family, the murderer blew of his own head, dying early occured before mid-night at the home of Artman, Sr., father-in-murderer. The two fam- about a mile apart of the Mississippi river, south of Orrick.
Mrs. Artman was taken sent for her daughter. Country, Mrs. Rainwater's boy, a farmer husband, other mother. On Saturday Rainwater, who had be at home for several over to the Artman send the night. During he went to church with brother-in-law, Johnnie and upon their return, he good humor. At bed-water proposed to young that they go out and shoot that were barking out-an consenting, they took and revolver and went had gone but fifty yards house when Rainwater, walking behind the boy, shotgun and shot Artmanick. Leaving the boy for rainwater returned to the ore all the other members were by this time in one big room Mr. and man, Mrs. Rainwater and ever, Ethel Gentry, and a daughter of the Art-
with a woman companion, proceeded to the Riverside bakery. There she hunted up Miss Emma Walker. Without more ado, she presented a paper to Miss Walker and ordered her to sign a statement, at the same time emphasizing her request by pointing a revolver at the frightened girl's head. The girl, of course complied, but this was not enough. While her companion held the door, Mrs. Peycke commenced beating the girl with a horsewhip. Passersby rushed in and put the infuriated woman out of doors. She then drove to Casa Blanca and took the evening train for Los Angeles. Miss Walker gathered that the paper was a confession of intimacy between herself and Peycke, whom she had never met, or even heard of, she claims. She immediately swore out a warrant charging Mrs. Peycke with assault, and she and her friend, Miss Sanders were arrested at Orange, and brought back to Riverside Saturday afternoon and arraigned before Justice Chambers, and a charge of assault with a deadly weapon was substituted for that of simple assault. They were bound over for trial in the Superior Court. Mrs. Peycke's conduct while stopping at the Glenwood, indicated that she is insanely jealous of her husband, and she is said to have had detectives shadowing Miss Walker, whom she charges, went frequently to Los Angeles to meet Mr. Peycke.
A young man who apparently knows a girl in London came into the office the other day and asked whether candy could be sent abroad through the mails. So he was taken over to the postoffice and the state of affairs was laid before an official, who instigated an investigation. After a long time he returned and reported as follows:
"I am very glad," said he, "that you asked that question. Its answer shows a curious state of affairs. In this country you can send candy up to 4 pounds as merchandise for 1 cent for each ounce. If you want to send candy abroad you only have to pay 1 cent for every 2 ounces, but you can only send 13 ounces in each package. If it weighs more than 13 ounces you have to pay letter rates, or 10 cents an ounce for the whole thing.
"That is to say, you can send 10 ounces to London for 5 cents, but it would cost you 10 cents to send it to Brooklyn. So if you are thinking of sending a pound it will cost you $1.60. The stamp department is right over there."
"Thank you very much," said the young man. "I just happen to remember that the doctor has forbidden the girl to eat candy."—New York Mail and Express.
Folled.
Senator Wilson of Washington and his brother, Harry Wilson, look very much alike. One day in Spokane, where the two brothers live, Senator Wilson, who had just returned from his legislative duties, was stopped on the street by a man who had known him for years. "Harry," said the man, "when your brother John be here!"
"In a day or two," said John without a smile.
"Tell him I want to see him on an important matter."
A circular from the Seed Trade Committee of Washington says: The annual free distribution of seeds is a very great injustice to, and seriously injures the seed business. This year there were given away by the government, about twenty million packets of seed. Each Congressman and Senator had as his quota, forty-two thousand five hundred packets of garden, field and flower seeds, which were mailed free to any addresses which the Congressmen supplied. This free gift is very injurious both to the large seedsmen as well as every country store which handles seeds, for if their customers can get their seeds free and make their own selection, which was contemplated in the last bill, it will ultimately destroy all dealers in seeds if the appropriation increases as steadily as it has done for the past few years.
Twenty years ago Captain Moses B. Lucas went away from Vineland, N.J., without telling any one where he was going. He was not heard from and it was supposed he was dead. He left behind a wife and daughter. They have worked the farm which has given them support ever since. To facilitate movements about the farm and barnyards they adopted many years ago a more fitting style of dress for that kind of work than ordinary skirts. Since knickerbockers became fashionable they have modified their dress to knickerbockers. Lucas suddenly returned and in a carriage was driven up to her door. Mrs. Lucas answered and in a minute she and the stranger were clasped in each other's arms, the man being her long lost husband. Lucas is said to have become wealthy.
The murder of Pearl Bryan, fourteen months ago, was avenged at Newport, Ky., on Saturday by a double hanging. Scott Jackson and Alonzo M. Walling were executed at 11:14 a.m. from the same scaffold. There was a double trap, but only one lever, and when Sheriff Plummer pulled the lever both dropped the same instant. Walling, however, lingered a moment longer Jackson. The neck of neither was broken, and both struggled hard in the process of strangulation. The arrangements were complete and the performance was so perfect that it was without any incident unusual on such occasions. Both men were nervy to the last, and on the gallows protested their iancocense and died with their secrets, so that it may never be known what was done with the head of Pearl Bryan or where she lodged the two nights previous to her murder, or what part each took in the decapitation, or whether others were implicated.
A petition was filed in the Superior Court at Santa Ana one day last week, asking the court to dissolve sold to the Southern Pacific Company the Dulez quarry on Arlington Heights. There is an extensive deposit of good granite at this point, and the quarry is near the line of the Southern Pacific as surveyed from Riverside to Corona. The purchase is believed to indicate the purpose of the company to extend its line down into this valley at an early day.
A circular from the Seed Trade Committee of Washington says: The annual free distribution of seeds is a very great injustice to, and seriously injures the seed business. This year there were given away by the government, about twenty million packets of seed. Each Congressman and Senator had as his quota, forty-two thousand five hundred packets of garden, field and flower seeds, which were mailed free to any addresses which the Congressmen supplied. This free gift is very injurious both to the large seedsmen as well as every country store which handles seeds, for if their customers can get their seeds free and make their own selection, which was contemplated in the last bill, it will ultimately destroy all dealers in seeds if the appropriation increases as steadily as it has done for the past few years.
Twenty years ago Captain Moses B. Lucas went away from Vineland, N.J., without telling any one where he was going. He was not heard from and it was supposed he was dead. He left behind a wife and daughter. They have worked the farm which has given them support ever since. To facilitate movements about the farm and barnyards they adopted many years ago a more fitting style of dress for that kind of work than ordinary skirts. Since knickerbockers became fashionable they have modified their dress to knickerbockers. Lucas suddenly returned and in a carriage was driven up to her door. Mrs. Lucas answered and in a minute she and the stranger were clasped in each other's arms, the man being her long lost husband. Lucas is said to have become wealthy.
The murder of Pearl Bryan, fourteen months ago, was avenged at Newport, Ky., on Saturday by a double hanging. Scott Jackson and Alonzo M. Walling were executed at 11:14 a.m. from the same scaffold. There was a double trap, but only one lever, and when Sheriff Plummer pulled the lever both dropped the same instant. Walling, however, lingered a moment longer Jackson. The neck of neither was broken, and both struggled hard in the process of strangulation. The arrangements were complete and the performance was so perfect that it was without any incident unusual on such occasions. Both men were nervy to the last, and on the gallows protested their iancocense and died with their secrets, so that it may never be known what was done with the head of Pearl Bryan or where she lodged the two nights previous to her murder, or what part each took in the decapitation, or whether others were implicated.
A petition was filed in the Superior Court at Santa Ana one day last week, asking the court to dissolve sold to the Southern Pacific Company the Dulez quarry on Arlington Heights. There is an extensive deposit of good granite at this point, and the quarry is near the line of the Southern Pacific as surveyed from Riverside to Corona. The purchase is believed to indicate the purpose of the company to extend its line down into this valley at an early day.
A circular from the Seed Trade Committee of Washington says: The annual free distribution of seeds is a very great injustice to, and seriously injuring the seed business. This year there were given away by the government, about twenty million packets of seed. Each Congressman and Senator had as his quota, forty-two thousand five hundred packets of garden, field and flower seeds, which were mailed free to any addresses which the Congressmen supplied. This free gift is very injurious both to the large seedsmen as well as every country store which handles seeds, for if their customers can get their seeds free and make their own selection, which was contemplated in the last bill, it will ultimately destroy all dealers in seeds if the appropriation increases as steadily as it has done for the past few years.
Twenty years ago Captain Moses B. Lucas went away from Vineland, N.J., without telling any one where he was going. He was not heard from and it was supposed he was dead. He left behind a wife and daughter. They have worked the farm which has given them support ever since. To facilitate movements about the farm and barnyards they adopted many years ago a more fitting style of dress for that kind of work than ordinary skirts. Since knickerbockers became fashionable they have modified their dress to knickerbockers. Lucas suddenly returned and in a carriage was driven up to her door. Mrs. Lucas answered and in a minute she and the stranger were clasped in each other's arms, the man being her long lost husband. Lucas is said to have become wealthy.
The murder of Pearl Bryan, fourteen months ago, was avenged at Newport, Ky., on Saturday by a double hanging. Scott Jackson and Alonzo M. Walling were executed at 11:14 a.m. from the same scaffold. There was a double trap, but only one lever, and when Sheriff Plummer pulled the lever both dropped the same instant. Walling, however, lingered a moment longer Jackson. The neck of neither was broken, and both struggled hard in the process of strangulation. The arrangements were complete and the performance was so perfect that it was without any incident unusual on such occasions. Both men were nervy to the last, and on the gallows protested their iancocense and died with their secrets, so that it may never be known what was done with the head of Pearl Bryan or where she lodged the two nights previous to her murder, or what part each took in the decapitation, or whether others were implicated.
A petition was filed in the Superior Court at Santa Ana one day last week,asking the court to dissolve sold tothe Southern PacificCompanytheDulezquarryonArlingtonHeights。ThereisanextivedepositofgoodgranitemathenogreatinjustionofthevicinityoftheWestminsterItbetainselteritkeineduniformlylowatthewaytoitsdestination.Thefinalmakingthisshipmentisdesiriousinterestingwhitemenincelerycurture,andwillofferbiginducementtotanywhowillofferitiquaint quantities.Thesoilalongtheribottomisexceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisexceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisexceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisexceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisexceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisexceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisexceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisexceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisexceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisexceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisexceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisexceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisexceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisexceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisexceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisexceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisexceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisexceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisexceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisexceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisexceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisexceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisexceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisexceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisceptionallywelladaptetothecelerygrowing.totheribbottomisceptionallywell adaptationtathecellerygrowing.totheribbottomisceptionallywell adaptationtathecellerygrowing.totheribbottomisceptionallywell adaptationtathecellerygrowing.totheribbottomisceptionally Well adaptationtathecellerygrowing.totheribbottomisceptionallyWell adaptationtathecellerygrowing.totherib底部是thecellerygrowing.totherib底部是thecellerygrowing.totherib底部是thecellerygrowing.totherib底部是thecellerygrowing.totherib底部是thecelleryg growing.totherib底部是thecelleryg growing.totherib底部是thecelleryg growing.totherib底部是thecelleryg growing.totherib底部是thecelleryg growing.totherib底部是thecelleryg growing.totherib底部是thecelleryg growing.totherib底部是thecelleryg growing.totherib底部是thecellteryg growing.totherib底部是thecellteryg growing.totherib底部是thecellteryg growing.totherib底部是thecellteryg growing.totherib底部是thecellteryg growing.totherib底部是thecellteryg growing.totherib底部是thecellteryg growing.totherib底部是thecellteryg growing.totherib底部是thecellteryg growing.totherib底部是thecellteryg growing.totherib底部是thecellteryg growing.totherib底部是thecellteryg growing.t其他细胞类型包括:癌细胞、干细胞、免疫细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、其他类型包括:癌细胞、干细胞、免疫细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、生殖细胞、其他类型包括:癌细胞、干细胞、免疫细胞、发育材料(例如DNA)、发育材料(例如RNA)、发育材料(例如蛋白质)、发育材料(例如核酸)、发育材料(例如多糖)、发育材料(例如脂质)、发育材料(例如氨基酸)、发育材料(例如维生素)、发育材料(例如矿物质)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、
发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、
发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(,例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、
发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、发育材料(例如微量元素)、
发育材料(如图所示),根据具体情况调整内容。
保护树和果树的特性,包括:耐寒性、抗旱性、防虫性、防霜性、防冻性、防盐性、防强光性、防干旱性、防暴雨性、防寒冷性、防干旱性、防霜性、防冻性、防盐性、防强光性、防干旱性、防霜性、防冻性、防盐性、防强光性、防干旱性、防霜性、防冻性、防盐性、防强光性、防干旱性、防霜性、防冻性、防盐性、防强光性、防干旱性、防霜性、防冻性、防盐性、防强光性、防干旱性、防霜性、防冻性、防盐性、防强光性、防干旱性、防霜性、防冻性、防盐性、防强光性、防干旱性、防霜性、防冻性、防盐性、防强光性、防干旱性、防霜性、防冻性、防盐性、防强光性、防干旱性、防霜性、防冻性、防盐性、防强光性防干旱性、防霜性、防冻性、防盐性、防强光性防干旱性、防霜性、防冻性、防盐性、防强光性防干旱性、防霜性、防冻性、防盐性、防强光性防干旱性、防霜性、防冻性、防盐性、防强光性防干旱性、防霜性、防冻性、防盐性、防强光性防干旱性、防霜性,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质,防冻性质的防尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用,防止尘作用.prevent尘作用 preventing尘作用 preventing尘作用 preventing尘作用 preventing尘作用 preventing尘作用 preventing尘作用 preventing尘作用 preventing尘作用 preventing尘作用 preventing尘作用 preventing尘作用 preventing尘作用 preventing尘作用 preventing尘作用 preventing尘作用 preventing尘作用 preventing尘作用 preventing尘作用 preventing尘作用 preventing尘作用 preventing尘作用 preventing尘作用 preventing尘作用 preventing尘作用 preventing尘作用的防虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫应用防止虫作用的防雾应用防止防雾应用防止防雾应用防止防雾应用防止防雾应用停止防雾 application停止防雾 application停止防雾 application停止防雾 application停止防雾 application停止防雾 application停止防雾 application停止防雾 application停止防雾 application停止防雾 application停止防雾 application停止防雾 application停止防雾 application停止防雾 application停止防雾 application停止防雾 application停止防雾 application停止防雾 application停止防雾 application停止防雾 application停止防雾 application停止防雾 application停止防雾 application停止防雾 application停止防雾 applications停止防雾 applications停止防雾 applications停止防雾 applications停止防雾 applications停止防雾 applications停止防雾 applications停止防雾 applications停止防雾 applications停止防雾 applications停止防雾 applications停止防雾 applications停止防雾 applications停止防雾 applications停止防雾 applications停止防雾 applications停止防雾 applications停止防雾 applications停止防雾 applications停止防雾 applications停止防雾 applications停止防雾 applications停止防雾 applications停止防雾 applications停止防雾 applications停止防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害应用防治害的应用防治害的应用防治害的应用防治害的应用防治害的应用防治害的应用防治害的应用防治害的应用防治害的应用防治害的应用防治害的应用防治害的应用防治害的应用防治害的应用防治害的应用防治害的应用防治害的应用防治害的应用防治害的应用防治害的应用防治害的应用防治害的应用防治害的应用防治害的应用防治害的应用防治害的应用防控害的应用防控害的应用防控害的应用防控害的应用防控害的应用防控害的应用防控害的应用防控害的应用防控害的应用防控害的应用防控害的应用防控害的应用防控害的应用防控害的应用防控害的应用防控害的应用防控害的应用防控害的应用防控害的应用防控害的应用防控害的应用防控害的应用防控害的应用防控害的应用防控害的应用防控害的应用防控害的应用防控有害的防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施防范措施
预防树木的养护预防树木的养护预防树木的养护预防树木的养护预防树木的养护预防树木的养护预防树木的养护预防树木的养护预防树木的养护预防树木的养护预防树木的养护预防树木的养护预防树木的养护预防树木的养护预防树木的养护预防树木的养护预防树木的养护预防树木的养护预防树木的养护预防树木的养护预防树木的养护预防树木的养护预防树木的养护预防树木的养护预防树木的养护预防树木的养护预防树木的养护预防
保护树和果树的特性,包括:耐寒性、抗旱性、抗旱性、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强,抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱性强、抗旱强势、抗旱强势、抗旱强势、抗旱强势、抗旱强势、抗旱强势、抗旱强势、抗旱强势、抗旱强势、抗旱强势、抗旱强势、抗旱强势、抗旱强势、抗旱强势、抗旱强势、抗旱强势、抗旱强势、抗旱强势、抗旱强势、抗旱强势、抗旱强势、抗旱强势、抗旱强势、抗旱强势,抗旱强势,抗旱强势,抗旱强势,抗旱强势,抗旱强势,抗旱强势,抗旱强势,抗气候,抗气候,抗气候,抗气候,抗气候,抗气候,抗气候,抗气候,抗气候,抗气候,抗气候,抗气候,抗气候,抗气候,抗气候,抗气候,抗气候,抗气候,抗气候,抗气候,抗气候,抗气候,抗气候,抗气候,抗气候,抗气候,抗气候,抗
Folled.
Senator Wilson of Washington and his brother, Harry Wilson, look very much alike. One day in Spokane, where the two brothers live, Senator Wilson, who had just returned from his legislative duties, was stopped on the street by a man who had known him for years. "Harry," said the man, "when will your brother John be here?"
"In a day or two," said John without a smile.
"Tell him I want to see him on an important matter."
"Certainly," said John.
"And you will not forget it?"
"I'll try not," promised John, and thus another office seeker was follied. — Washington Post.
Mrs. Hearst's Motive.
Mrs. Phobe Hearst of California has given $200,000 to found a mining school in connection with the state university at Berkeley as a memorial to her husband. She gives largely to the free kindergartens, supports several college settlements and contributed $1,000 to the recent campaign for the woman suffrage amendment. She has also given $200,000 to establish a fine gymnasium for girls at the state university. She said to Miss Anthony, "I am doing all this to make girls fit to vote."
The present head of the Swiss confederation is President Joseph Zemp, whom began Dec. 15, 1894. The Swiss confederation of Aug. 1, 1891, is regarded as the foundation of the Swiss republic.
How's This?
We offer one hundred dollars for any case of Catarrh-that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, Ohio.
We, the undersigned, have known F.J. Cheney for the last fifteen years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all his business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm.
WEST & TRAUX, 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. Testimonials sent free. Price 75c. per bottle. Sold by all druggists.
Nursery Stock.
Yearling buds, Washington Navel oranges, free from scale—A No. 1 stock. In quantities to suit. Apply to W.L Hale, Fullerton, or W.F. Botsford, 808 Wedgewood Road, Los Angeles.
Protection to trees and fruits
California by means of Federal quarantine and inspection is provided by the comprehensive bill introduced by the Senate by Senator White. The bill authorizes the Secretary of Agriculture to place in quarantine every tree, plant, graft, bud or nurse stock which is imported. When tree or plant is found to be infected it may be treated and if incurable destroyed. If found to be free from scale the owner shall be given a certificate stating that it is healthy stock. All expense, it is provided, shall be borne by the owner or importer. The measure also provides for inspections by officials of the National Government of all trees intended for interstate commerce, and any defected stock may be quarantined as inspected, as trees from abroad. Shall be unlawful to transport from one State to another trees without proper certificate, except for scientific purposes. When any State Territory shall provide an adequate inspection, its certificate shall be recognized. This bill is one which the Department of Agriculture long desired and is also one on which the agricultural and horticultural terests will unite. The bill covers $50,000 appropriation.
Walter Hughes, carpenter and engineer of the Southern Pacific Railway, met his death at the hands of Detectives Ellison and Proctor Houston, Tex., Friday night. So time ago Hughes proposed to Edel, a saloon keeper, to abduct children of Berry W. Camp, a lawyer, and Frank Dunn, a weal pawn-broker, and to demand from the fathers a ransome of $400. According to Edel's statement he did not give Hughes an answer; informed the chief of police of his proposal which had been made him. Under the chief's instruction he pretended to accept the offers Hughes and entered into the plan maintaining communication with officers Messrs. Camp and Dunn were informed of the plot, and Hughes in order to carry out his plan, took a cottage near the Dun mansion. Everything being said factorily arranged, Hughes went over Dunn's house two weeks after Friday night Detectives Ellison and Proctor were in waiting with shotguns. They were discovered...
Gazette.
1897. NUMBER 22
has been questioned, but he documents which sustained his though the papers themselves never verified.
An named James Manning ap- in a Los Angeles township one day last week leading a y呼hound by a chain. The dog looked as if a portion of fomy had been chewed up, fact that was why its owner bawing up in court. He had a charge of disturbing the against one William Ford, and were to justify the charge. As part of fact Ford possessed aively inclined bulldog, and set upon its neighbor's grey-and took a chunk out of its quarter, he was persona non to speak, to Manning. After little testimony had been Manning brought forward his exhibit its battored condi- The deputy district attorney was prosecuting the case asked he proposed to put the dog in case. "I do," answered Manning knowing look. "Then," said Comas in all seriousness, have to file him as an exhibit case." "Oh, be gob, but I and consternation overspread edge of the prosecuting witness, won't have him filed for world, he's bad enough disfig- it is." Suiting the action to aid, the dog was led away and motion dismissed.
first carload shipment of St. Louis was made one week, and the fact is of more ordinary interest, since it marks beginning of an important in- The shipment was made by Angeles firm, who make a variety of produce shipments in lots. The celery was grown most part by Chinamen on tom land of the Santa Ana land is a choice product. A of the celery is the "White Hughes while he was trying to enter the building. Hughes fired two shots from a pistol at the officers, narrowly missing them, and they poured four loads of buckshot into his body, literally riddling it. On his body besides a large pistol was found an immense knife and a bottle of chloroform.
Heart disease caused the sudden death of John Parshall, aged 65, of Indianapolis. He leaves a widow, but no family. He was a carpenter by trade and an old soldier. He was a member of the Alexandar Expedition, sent to Salt Lake City to force Brigham Young to vacate his office and allow the successor whom President Buchanan had appointed, to take his seat. Parshall was the driver of one of the ammunition wagons, and with his own hands burst open an iron gate which was preventing an entrance of the army into the Mormon's capital. He was also one of the six men who disposed of the body of John Wilkes Booth, the assassin of Abraham Lincoln. Parshall attended the performance at Ford's Theater, saw the fatal shot fired and was one of the soldiers who pursued the assassin through the wings to the stage door. When the murderer was finally shot and taken Parshall was one of the six men deputed to dispose of his remains in such a manner that the secret of their resting should never be known. They were sworn never to reveal their secret. Parshall is the fifth, so far as known, to die, and has steadfastly kept his oath.
A question of great importance throughout the West, involving the publication of notices of mining claimants, was settled by the decision of Secretary Francis at Washington in the case of H.W. Gowdy et al. vs. the Kismet Gold Mining Company, coming up from the Pueblo, Col., land district. These regulations heretofore have been generally disregarded. To present tempted to obtain a license for his marriage to Miss Marguerite Quinio, a beautiful girl of about 19. The couple were referred to City Clerk Smith, who made out the license in its usual form. Just before issuing it, however, he asked them if they were both citizens of the United States. Miss Quinio replied that she had been brought to this country from England when she was five years old, and that she had lived here for fourteen years. Her mother lived in California, but she had been adopted at an early age by an aunt in New York and lived there. She could not swear that her mother had ever become naturalized, which made it necessary for her to secure a certificate from the British Ambassador, Sir Julian Pauncefote, to the effect that she was elegible to marry according to the laws of England. The Ambassador declared he was unable to grant the desired permission until the mother's consent was obtained. It was then suggested that she take out naturalization papers, but this could not be done owing to the lack of a witness who could swear to her residence in this country. The couple decided finally to get married somewhere outside of the District of Columbia.
A. F. Blanton, a young rancher whose home is near Selma, has been committed to the Stockton Insane Asylum. Last Saturday Blanton was married to Miss Sophronia Jane Dean of Birchtree, Mo. who came to California to wed the young farmer. At the time of the wedding there was nothing to indicate anything wrong with his mind, but on Monday he became a dangerous maniac.
A wagon hitched to the corpse of a horse has been found in the rushing current of the Alameda, the stream flowing down Niles canyon. In a trunk strapped to the wagon was a memorandum book, on the fly leaf of which was the entry.
The shipment was made by Angeles firm, who make a variety of produce shipments in lots. The celery was grown most part by Chinamen on from land of the Santa Ana and is a choice product. If the celery is the "White variety, which the gardeners cannot be grown otherwise the vicinity of Westminster, relieved that no finer celery is available.
The celery is packed in 18 to 10 dozen bunches in a bag of 135 crates in a car. A reorder car is used and the teme is kept uniformly low all the way to its destination. The firm this shipment is desirous of bringing white men in celery culled will offer big inducements who will offer it in cities. The soil along the river is exceptionally well adapted for growing. Another ship will be made as soon as a car is available.
First beef-steak that ever reachable City, Alaska, sold for $48 and a few weeks ago. The consisted of a ten-pound piece that was slaughtered at Forty Greek and was packed at that land shipped 250 miles to City by Thomas O'Brien. On the camp the miners turned a body to see the steak. It placed on exhibition, and it attained much attention as would not-legged calf. Everybody had a piece of the fresh meat, and prices offered were such as have resulted in a mining quarrel or bloodshed if it had been decided to raffle the steak the benefit of a hospitable Bishop Rowe is trying to esquire the miners of Circle City. Only $5 per pound was offered price of the steak, but the bid came brisker as the meat was and as high as $35 per pound dried. Finally to avoid commens, it was decided to sell at 50 cents to $2.50 for the sale of drawing for a slice. After worth of tickets had been drawn began, and to the managers of the sale no result in the disposition of City's first beef-steak.
Section to trees and fruits ofonia by means of Federal quarantine inspection is provided by preparative bill introduced in state by Senator White. The authorizes the Secretary of Agriculture to place in quarantine every plant, graft, bud or nursery which is imported. When a plant is found to be infected it be treated and if incurable. If found to be free from the owner shall be given a ceratating that it is healthy stock. Disease, it is provided, shall be by the owner or importer. Measure also provides for insuch a manner that the secret of their resting should never be known. They were sworn never to reveal their secret. Parshall is the fifth, so far as known, to die, and has steadfastly kept his oath.
A question of great importance throughout the West, involving the publication of notices of mining claimants, was settled by the decision of Secretary Francis at Washington in the case of H.W. Gowdy et al. vs. the Kismet Gold Mining Company, coming up from the Pueblo, Col., land district. These regulations heretofore have been generally disregarded. To prevent confusion and misrepresentation and to enforce the law the following rule is substituted for rule 29 of official regulations: "The claimant is required to post a copy of the plat of such survey in a conspicuous place upon the claim, together with a notice of his intent to apply for patent thereof, whether or not he will give the date of posting name of claimant, name of claim, mining district and county; whether or not the location is of record, and if so, whether the record may be found, giving the book and page thereof, the number of feet claimed on the lode in each direction from the point of discovery or other well-defined place on the plain; names of all adjoining and conflicting claims or, if none exist, the notice should so state." This will take effect June 1 next and publications thereafter must conform to it.
Late arrivals from Gleason Ariz., the scene of the new strike in the Short Horn mountains, give out sensational reports of developments there. The King of Arizona ledge, the original discovery, which was four feet wide on top, and was estimated to be worth $2,000 per ton, has now widened to twelve feet, at a depth of twenty feet, and the ore is continually growing richer. Reports from Gleason and from other portions of the county that rich strikes are being made, are fanning the flames of excitement, and Yuma county is now being prospected as never before; in fact, as no portion of Arizona ever was. On the streets, which are filled with strangers, no talk is heard but of mining, and every one has his pockets and hands full of rock. An old miner discovered a ledge of gold-bearing rock, which those who have tested it claim to be very rich, directly across the river from Yuma on the Indian reservation. The ledge runs beneath the Catholic church connected with the Indian mission. He will probably not be allowed by the authorities to work the mine, be it ever so rich. Work is progressing on the strike made in South Yuma. As depth is attained the ledge grows wider and better looking. A contract has been let for 100 feet of development work, and the work will be pushed. It seems a return to the days of "forty-nine," and mortars, gold pan and horn spoons are in demand.
Germany, France and Austria pay bounties on exports of sugar and impose excise taxes on sugar used at home. It is stated that the tax on sugar of home consumption in three countries amounts to $100 committed to the Stockton Insane Asylum. Last Saturday Planton was married to Miss Sophronia Jane Dean of Birchtree, Mo. who came to California to wed the young farmer. At the time of the wedding there was nothing to indicate anything wrong with his mind, but on Monday he became a dangerous maniac.
A wagon hitched to the corpse of a horse has been found in the rushing current of the Alameda, the stream flowing down Niles canyon. In a trunk strapped to the wagon was a memorandum book, on the fly leaf of which was the entry, "Claus Antony," the name of a farmer who is missing. It is supposed that he, accompanied by a woman, tried to ford the treacherous torrent at night and both were drowned. The river is being searched.
Two drummers at West Point military academy, John Pretel and W.E.Davis, fought a seven-round battle with bare knuckles in front of the band barracks before falling into retreat a day or two ago. The drummers have been rivals for the affections of Nellie McCaffery, a daughter of Sheriff McCaffery, who lives with her parents in Cold Spring, directly across the river from West Point, and on winter nights, when the Hudson was frozen, the musicians crossed on the ice to visit the pretty girl. The men were fast friends at first, but jealousy soon made them enemies. Davis is English. Pretel is a New York boy and full of mischief. He took delight in teasing his rival about the girl. All the musicians of the post knew of the rivalry, and did all in their power to fan the flame of jealousy. Pretel and Davis had not spoken for months. Then Davis made some remark which Pretel presented, and more words followed. Davis told Pretel, when the latter went on guard after retreat, that he (Davis) would go to Cold Spring and tell Nellie that the other fellow was unworthy of her.
"I'll spoil your mug; you can't show yourself to the girl for a week," retorted Pretel. The call had just sounded, and only half an hour remained before retreat. A ring was made by the other musicians, the drummers stepped to the center and a savage battle followed. Pretel scored, the first knock-down, but it seemed to be a pretty even match, for while the Englishman was a little heavier, his antagonist was quicker. The seventh round was in progress when the signal to march was given. Both men seized their drums and marched with the squad to the cadet barracks. The cadets were all gathered in the area as the drum corps passed, and but few noticed the battered and bruised faces of the fighters. Pretel kept his promise to make his rival unpresentable for the trip to Cold Spring.
The effects of the new tariff, whose enactment is now assured, are already felt in industrial circles. This was made evident by the dispatches of a few days ago, announcing that
Section to trees and fruits of
Nyria by means of Federal quarand inspection is provided by
comprehensive bill introduced in
state by Senator White. The
Authorizes the Secretary of Agrito place in quarantine every
plant, graft, bud or nursery
which is imported. When a
plant is found to be infected
it may be treated and if incurable
need. If found to be free from
the owner shall be given a cerstating that it is healthy stock.
Expense, it is provided, shall be
by the owner or importer.
Measure also provides for industries by officials of the National
Department of all trees intended for
state commerce, and any instock may be quarantined and
used, as trees from abroad. It
is unlawful to transport from
state to another tree without
certificate, except for scienpurposees. When any State or
Mary shall provide an adequate
ration, its certificate shall be
issued. This bill is one which
department of Agriculture has
resired and is also one on which
farmultural and horticultural insult will unite. The bill covers
appropriation.
Under Hughes, carpenter and experienced of the Southern Pacific
way, met his death at the hands
detectives Ellison and Proctor at
ton, Tex., Friday night. Some
ago Hughes proposed to Sol
a saloon keeper, to abduct the
son of Berry W. Camp, a rich
man, and Frank Dunn, a wealthy
broker, and to demand from
others a ransome of $40,000.
Being to Edel's statement he
give Hughes an answer, but
need the chief of police of the
real which had been made to
Under the chief's instructions
extended to accept the offer of
bids and entered into the plot,
dining communication with the
Messrs. Camp and Dunn,
informed of the plot, and was in order to carry out the
ook a cottage near the Dunn
on. Everything being satisly arranged, Hughes went to Dunn residence to steal the
on. Guards had been placed Dunn's house two weeks ago Friday night Detectives Ellison Proctor were in waiting with bids. They were discovered by
Germany, France and Austria pay bounties on exports of sugar and impose excise taxes on sugar used at home. It is stated that the tax on sugar of home consumption in the three countries amounts to $100,-000,000 a year, while $25,000,000 is paid in bounties. One consequence of this policy is that the three nations furnish other countries with sugar at less than the cost of production, while their own people pay the full cost of production and the excise tax added. England, for example, buys sugar from Germany at from 2½ to 2⅔ cents per pound, while Germans pay from 9 to 10 cents for sugar of their own production. In the United States, with a 40 per cent ad valorem duty on sugar, it has been cheaper for much of the time than it was under the McKinley law that admitted sugar free. If France, Germany and Australia find a profit in this policy which provides other nations with sugar at less than cost they are free to follow it. It becomes the business of the United States to see that this European policy shall not prevent the growth of the sugar industry in the United States. England profits by the importation of cheap German sugar because she has no home sugar industry to develop. In the United States it is different. We have a sugar industry which may with proper legislation be so developed as to render us independent of supplies from other nations.
On the statute books of the District of Columbia is a law relating to the marriage of foreign people, which provides that when persons who are citizens of a foreign country wish to get married in the district, they must produce a certificate from the Mayor or Council of their native country to the effect that all the laws of that country have been complied with before a marriage certificate can be supplied. George N. Hensey, son of Thomas G. Hensey, a well-known real estate dealer at-
The effects of the new tariff, whose enactment is now assured, are already felt in industrial circles. This was made evident by the dispatches of a few days ago, announcing that the great Williamsburg sugar refinery, after a shut-down of over five months, has opened with a force of nearly 500 men. The dispatch added that the introduction of the tariff bill with its increased duty on sugar is the cause of the resumption of work at the mills. California has more than ordinary interest in the sugar industry. The subject has been so thoroughly studied in this State that it would be easily possible for California alone to produce all the beet sugar we now import from foreign lands. The soil and climate are so adapted to the growing of the best varieties of beets than no other country could compete with us except in the element of oil cap labor. With a customs duty sufficient to protect the wages of working men we can look forward to the time when the people of the United States will obtain their beet sugar from California instead of from Germany. It is gratifying, therefore, to note this speedy revival of industry at a great factory which has long been shut down. If this much is accomplished by the mere promise of a new tariff we may be sure that its realization will result in great benefits to American industry. In these days, when every city in the Union is thronged with unemployed men, it is no slight thing to have a factory resume work and give employment to 500 persons. It will be a great thing for America when all the mills now closed shall be reopened and their machinery started again. We have waited long for the accomplishment of this much-desired result, and every item of news which records the revival of industry will be received with more than ordinary gratification.