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anaheim-gazette 1897-05-13

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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 hartress 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. Turner 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 Civil Engineer. DO YOU BUY MUSIC? I have just received a supply from the East, and should be pleased to have you call. Remember also my large stock of Books, Stationery, Magazines, Notions, Cutlery & Harmonicas. CIGARS, CIGARETTES & TOBACCO Being Agent for all Papers and Magazines, I respectfully solicit your subscriptions. JOSEPH HELMSEN. 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! GO TO THE Oak Barber Shop FOR A IIRST-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. Anaheim, Cal. Special attention given to PROBATE matters. GRAY BROTHERS & WARD Cement Contractors Shillinger Patent, Contracts for RESERVOIRS, IRRIGATION DITCHES, Cellar and Stable Floors, Sidewalks, Etc. OFFICES—No. 125 N. Broadway, Los Angeles, Cal. Telephone—236. No. 316 Montgomery St., San Francisco, Cal. 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 And Cigars. Beer on draught 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. Bosge, 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. F. CRIST Merchant Tailor LATEST STOCK OF SPRING SUITS Suits, $18 up. Pants, $5 up. Goods of Latest Styles Call and see my stock 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! My Prices Defy Competition. A share of the public patronage is respectfully solicited. Koll Building, Los Angeles St., R. H. SEALE, Proprietor. GREAT GRAPE INDUSTRY. The Shores of Lake Chautauqua Supply Half the Country. The management of the vineyard is an interesting study and one which to be successful requires technical knowledge. In the large vineyards, as a rule, the owner himself gives personal supervision to every detail. Sometimes a manager or overseer performs these duties. One of the largest growers in this section tells me that the most successful grower is the foreigner, who, with his family of eight or ten, comes and leases or buys 25 or 50 acres of land, each member of the family having his or her part in the work to perform from spring until picking time, while the winter is devoted to the making of the baskets. Thus no outside expenditure is incurred, and when the grapes are sold the proceeds return to the family as the profit on the individual labor of each member, quite in contrast with the large owner, who is compelled to hire help to do each little thing in addition to buying his baskets. The Concord grape is the only variety of any consequence raised in this region, and some idea of the magnitude of the business carried on may be had when it is known that the shipments for one year from Chautauqua county alone will amount to 3,500 carloads, 3,000 baskets of 10 pounds each in each car. These are taken from the grower by some one of the numerous growers' associations, whose business it is to find a market. Strange as it may seem, it is nevertheless true that three-fourths of them go to points west of Chicago, while the other one-fourth travels eastward. The making of baskets is an important item. Many factories are employed. The price ranges from 2 to 2½ cents per basket. Thus the grower who would find his business in any way profitable must, in addition to the cost of the basket, realize at least 1 cent per pound for his grapes, while today it is a common thing to find a ten pound basket on the retail market slow sale at 10 cents. Thus we find that the utmost care must be taken in the management of a vineyard to make it profitable.-Chautauquan. F. CRIST Merchant Tailor LATEST STOCK OF SPRING SUITS Suits, $18 up. Pants, $5 up. Goods of Latest Styles. Call and see my stock Center Street, near Opera house. JOSEPH BACKS, DEALER IN FURNITURE Repairing Done. Funeral Director. 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. 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 demonstrable 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 Pres. Church, Helena, Mont. Ely's Cream Balm is the acknowledged cure for catarrh and contains no mercury nor any injurious drug. Price, 50 cents. The making of baskets is an important item. Many factories are employed. The price ranges from 2 to 2½ cents per basket. Thus the grower who would find his business in any way profitable must, in addition to the cost of the basket, realize at least 1 cent per pound for his grapes, while today it is a common thing to find a ten pound basket on the retail market slow sale at 10 cents. Thus we find that the utmost care must be taken in the management of a vineyard to make it profitable.—Chautauquan. Her Train. "How did the queen of Sheba travel when she went to see Solomon?" asked the teacher of her Sunday school class of little girls. No one ventured an answer. "If you had studied your lesson, you could not have helped knowing," said their teacher. "Now look over the verses again." "Could she have gone by the cars?" asked the teacher, beginning to lose patience as the children consulted their books, but appeared to arrive at no conclusion. "Yes'm," said a little girl at the end of the class. "She went by steam cars." "Did she, indeed? Well, Louise, we would like to know how you found that out?" "In the second verse," responded the child, "it says 'she came with a very great train.'"—New York Advertiser. Before the Effects Wore Off. "Say, you're the fourth feller that has come here to try to trade hosses today," said Farmer Shortcrop. "Whut's got into you all?" "W'y," said the visiting farmer sheepishly, "the story got out someways that you'd got religion at the revival las' night."—Cincinnati Enquirer. The Westfield (Ind.) News prints the following in regard to an old resident of that place: "Frank McAvoy, for many years in the employ of the L., N.A. & C.Ry. here, says: 'I have used Chamberlain's Colle, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy for ten years or longer—and never without it in my family. I consider it the best remedy of the kind manufactured. I take pleasure in recommending it.'" It is a specific for all bowel disorders. For sale by Derge. Dry stove wood delivered at $6 per cord, novtf C. Otto Rust. Weim Weekly Gazette ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, MAY 13, 1897. MUSIC? and should be pleased to Magazines, harmonicas. & TOBACCO respectfully solicit your LMSEN. Seeds! public that she is prepared She buys for cash and her customers the bends or answering questaken in Exchange LE ovisions! 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. TERRORS OF RABIES. A Chicago Laborer, Bitten by a Dog, in Convulsions and at the Point of Death. CHICAGO, May 7.—"Oh, I wish I had a drink of water," cried Gus Gunderson at the county hospital. But his attendant, knowing that water, even the sight of it, would only make his hydrophobic spasms worse, had to deny this, his only request. And so, writing, barking, spitting and famishing, poor Gunderson must die. About thirty days ago Gus Gunderson was bitten by a dog. He was making preparations to go out on a farm for a few months, and a friend gave him an ordinary yellow dog, which he had picked up, half-starved. This he was to take as his only companion to his new life on the farm. But during the night the cur roused the household by his barking and Gunderson went to him, to try to quiet him. The dog snarled, and when an effort was made to make him lie down, he jumped and bit his master in the face. It was only a slight scratch, and no thought was given to it. The next morning Gunderson shot the dog, and then went to his farm life in Lasalle county. Wednesday morning the first symptom of rabies showed itself. On al- which were brought into action as soon as the Greeks left the hills. The scene which followed was both interesting and cruel. The Greeks from all parts of the plain were converging toward a stone bridge spanning the river, which was the only means of getting across. The mass of humanity at this point was constantly growing, when the roar of the Turkish artillery began. The Turks obtained the exact range of the enemy, and shell after shell fell and exploded in the midst of the fugitives. The havoc created by the shrapnel was terrible. Gradually, however, through this declimating fire, the greater part of the Greeks crossed the river. The Turks, who were then covering the plain like bees, met with a strong resistance while attacking Vasilii. The Greeks from hidden positions opened a furious fire. In the face of this, the Turks advanced with marvelous temerity and captured the villages not so much by force of arms as by the fear which their splendid insouciance inspired in the enemy. Owing to the fact that it was decided not to commence the decisive engagement until to-morrow, the Turkish division which was intended to take the enemy in the flank only arrived a half-hour before, the close of the combat having marched thirty miles. The Greek guns, while they opened well, ended badly, while those of the Turks served even better than usual. The Turkish attack on Vasilii was made without any previous plan. The men were ordered to capture the place, and they advanced quietly, shooting as though hunting. The Greeks maintained a withering fire. I saw a Turk, wounded in the leg, advancing to the attack on all fours. The correspondent of the Associated Press is writing this dispatch in the midst of the bivouac in Edhem Pasha's head-quarters. The general and his staff at the same time are forming a little group around a lantern, studying the war maps for to-morrow's operations. The Turks captured a mountain battery and a number of mules, a great quantity of ammunition and provisions, and the personal effects of the Greek Princes, Constantine and Nicholas. ATHENS, May 8.—The Turks have SNAP SHOTS AT THE NEW A Riverside Supervisor, whose maage is cut down by the new county g ernment bill from 20 cents to 10 cent per mile, announces that he will t he constitutionality of the law. It is stated on authority that the Geman mission was tendered to Dr. H. pew by the President. Depew promptly declined. This was after his unsuceful effort to secure the mission in England. Considerable excitement prevails among the farmers of Stanislaus counover the depredations of an army; green worms that are spreading over the county. The worms are from one inch in length to six or seven inches. They are green, mottled with black and are supposed to be army worms. The government of Chile has offered a premium of $100,000 to any person who may discover a new use for nitrate in large quantities. Chile produces a great quantity of nitrate and a market which will use more than a comparatively small quantity hitherto been found. Recent excavations in Paris where workmen were constructing a sewer were revealed a subterranean passage in connection with the imperial box at the old Theatre Italian. After the attempt on Napoleon's life with an infernal machine as he was on his way to the open area subsidized theater subsequent built were supplied with underground exits, so that the Emperor might able to withdraw secretly or troops introduced into the theater without being seen by the audience. The first car of deciduous fruit leave California this season was shipped from Vacaville last Wednesday co-signed to Chicago. The car contains 1500 boxes of cherries. Another car was shipped East on Thursday. The crop of cherries is estimated at 35,000 boxes. Last season it was about 20,000. The shipments this season are eight days earlier than last season, warm weather having forced the fruit ahead rapidly. Thirty negroes crifting on a rail were landed at Natchez, Miss., after floating for four days with nothing grape is the only variety raised in this region, of the magnitude of the crop on may be had when it hit the shipments for one shauhtauqua county alone to 3,500 carloads, 3,000 pounds each in each car. Known from the grower by the numerous growers' assosse business it is to find a range as it may seem, it is true that three-fourths of cents per pound who would find any way profitable must, the cost of the basket, at 1 cent per pound for his today it is a common ten pound basket on the slow sale at 10 cents. That the utmost care must be management of a vine-ita profitable.—Chautauqua The grape is the only variety raised in this region, of the magnitude of the crop on may be had when it hit the shipments for one shauhtauqua county alone to 3,500 carloads, 3,000 pounds each in each car. Known from the grower by the numerous growers' assosse business it is to find a range as it may seem, it is true that three-fourths of cents per pound who would find any way profitable must, the cost of the basket, at 1 cent per pound for his today it is a common ten pound basket on the slow sale at 10 cents. That the utmost care must be management of a vine-ita profitable.—Chautauqua On seedlings yet to be marketed not less than $200,000 additional profit will be realized, I am informed that $1 a box more on lemons will be secured. As there are 1000 carloads, or 300,000 boxes, this means an added profit on both fruits of half a million dollars. In addition to this advantage, the California lemons will be introduced to Eastale and they advanced quietly, shooting as though hunting. The Greeks maintained a withering fire. I saw a Turk, wounded in the leg, advancing to the attack on all fours. The correspondent of the Associated Press is writing this dispatch in the midst of the bivouac in Edhem Pasha's head-quarter. The general and his staff at the same time are forming a little group around a lantern, studying the war maps for to-morrow's operations. The Turks captured a mountain battery and a number of mules, a great quantity of ammunition and provisions, and the personal effects of the Greek Princes, Constantine and Nicholas. ATHENS, May 8.—The Turks have completely occupied and burned Velestino. At 7:30 o'clock Thursday evening the defeat of the Greeks was complete, and the pass at Volo open to the Turks. The searchlights of the warships in the bay flashing up the mountain sides were of great assistance to the retreating Greeks, showing the road through the intense darkness. Over a dozen cannon were abandoned and captured by the Turks. Two hundred wounded soldiers were brought to Volo. Many of the Greek soldiers were left on the field. It is impossible to estimate the number of killed. Gen. Smolenski's shattered army was cut in two. The left wing retired to Almyros. What was left of the right wing came toward Volo broken and demoralized. The retreat across the mountains was almost as bad as the panic which resulted in the change of base from Tyrnavo to Volo. The scene of the more recent panic was wild and almost indescribable. On Thursday and Friday, the populace filled the streets of Volo with their household goods. The peasants from surrounding villages fed to the town and added chaos to confusion. Brigandage became common. Five steamers were completely filled with refugees. Scores of calques carried fugitives to the islands. VIENNA, May 10.—It is reported that Turkey's terms of peace with Greece include the payment of an indemnity of $15,000,000, the re-arrangement of the Greek frontier, the annulling of treaties favoring the Greeks, the cession of the Greek fleet to Turkey and the settlement of the Cretan question. THE BARON SKIPS. Leaves His New Made Wife In London—Telegrams From Her Reach San Francisco, SAN FRANCISCO, May 9.—Jeanine Young, the "Baroness von Turkheim," is now reaping the whirlwind. A cablegram from her received to-day in this city states that she has at last awakened to the fact that she is the victim of a conspiracy, and that she is anxious to return to this city. She states that she is at the Hotel Cecil in London and that von Arnold, alias Turkheim, intends to desert her early Monday morning. She asks her friends to send her sufficient money to return here, as she is without funds. That she now appreciates fully the villainy of Turkheim is shown by the suggestion that steps be taken to compel the extradition of her husband to this State, where he committed the crimes of bigamy and perjury, to say nothing of the conspiracy of which he was leading actor. The deceived and deserted woman sent three cablegrams to San Francisco, all of which were of the same tenor. One addressed to the chief of police and read as follows: and they advanced quietly, shooting as though hunting. The Greeks maintained a withering fire. I saw a Turk, wounded in the leg, advancing to the attack on all fours. The correspondent of the Associated Press is writing this dispatch in the midst of the bivouac in Edhem Pasha's head-quarter. The general and his staff at the same time are forming a little group around a lantern, studying the war maps for to-morrow's operations. The Turks captured a mountain battery and a number of mules, a great quantity of ammunition and provisions, and the personal effects of the Greek Princes, Constantine and Nicholas. ATHENS, May 8.—The Turks have completely occupied and burned Velestino. At 7:30 o'clock Thursday evening the defeat of the Greeks was complete, and the pass at Volo open to the Turks. The searchlights of the warships in the bay flashing up the mountain sides were of great assistance to the retreating Greeks, showing the road through the intense darkness. Over a dozen cannon were abandoned and captured by the Turks. Two hundred wounded soldiers were brought to Volo. Many of the Greek soldlers were left on the field. It is impossible to estimate the number of killed. Gen. Smolenski's shattered army was cut in two. The left wing retired to Almyros. What was left of the right wing came toward Volo broken and demoralized. The retreat across the mountains was almost as bad as the panic which resulted in the change of base from Tyrnavo to Volo. The scene of the more recent panic was wild and almost indescribable. On Thursday and Friday, the populace filled the streets of Volo with their household goods. The peasants from surrounding villages fed to the town and added chaos to confusion. Brigandage became common. Five steamers were completely filled with refugees. Scores of calques carried fugitives to the islands. VIENNA, May 10.—It is reported that Turkey's terms of peace with Greece include the payment of an indemnity of $15,000,000, the re-arrangement of the Greek frontier, an annulling of treaties favoring the Greeks, cession of the Greek fleet to Turkey and the settlement of the Cretan question. THE BARON SKIPS. Leaves His New Made Wife In London—Telegrams From Her Reach San Francisco, SAN FRANCISCO, May 9.—Jeanine Young, the "Baroness von Turkheim," is now reaping the whirlwind. A cablegram from her received to-day in this city states that she has at last awakened to the fact that she is the victim of a conspiracy, and that she is anxious to return to this city. She states that she is at the Hotel Cecil in London and that von Arnold, alias Turkheim, intends to desert her early Monday morning. She asks her friends to send her sufficient money to return here, as she is without funds. That she now appreciates fully the villainy of Turkheim is shown by the suggestion that steps be taken to compel the extradition of her husband to this State, where he committedthe crimesofbigamyandperjury,towaysomethingoftheconspiracyofwhichhewasleadingactor. The deceived and deserted woman sent three cablegrams to San Francisco, all of which were ofthe same tenor.One addressedtothechiefofpoliceandreadasfollows: and they advanced quietly, shooting as though hunting. The Greeks main-tained a withering fire.I saw a Turk,woundedintheleg,advancingtotheattackonallfours. The correspondentoftheAssociatedPressiswritingthisdispatchinthemidstofthebivouacinEdhemPasha'shead-quarter.Thegeneralandhisstaffatthesametimeareforminga littlegrouparoundalantern,dystopingthewarmapforto-morrow'soperations. TheTurkscapturedamountainbatteryandanumberofmules,agreatquantityammunitionandprovisions,andthepersonaleffectsoftheGreekPrinces,ConstantineandNicholas. ATHENS,May8.-TheTurkshavecompletelyoccupiedandburnedVelestino.At7:30o'clockThursdayeveningthedefeatoftheGreekswascomplete,andthepassatVoloopentotheTurks.ThesearchlightsofthewarshipsinthebayflashingupthemountainsidewereofgreatassistancetotheretreatingGreeks,showingtheroadthroughtheintensedarkness.Overa dozencannonwereabandonedandcapturedbytheTurks.Twohundredwounded Soldierswere broughttoVolo. ManyoftheGreek soldlerswereleftonthefield.itimpossibletoestimatethenumberofkilled. Gen.Smolenski'sshatteredarmywascutintwo.TheleftwingretiredtoAlmyros.WhatwasleftoftherightwingcametowardVolobrokenanddemoralized.TheretreatacrossthemountainswasalmostbadasthepanicwhichresultedinthechangeofbasefromTyrnavoToVolo. Thesceneofthemorepresentpanicwaswildandalmostindescribable.OnThursdayandFriday,thepopulacefilledthestreetsOfVolowith theirhouseholdgoods.Thepeasantsfromsurroundingvillagesfedtothetownandaddedchaostocustomization.Brigandagebecamecommon.Fivesteamerswerecompletelyfilledwithrefugees.Scoresofcalquescarriedfugitioustotheislands. VIENNA,May10.-ItisreportedthatTurkey'stermsofpeacewithGreeceincludethepaymentofanindemnityof$15,000,000,there-arrangementoftheGreekfrontier,theannullingoftreatiesfavoringtheGreeks,thecessionoftheGreekfeettoTurkeyandthesettlementoftheCretanquestion. THEBARONSKIPS. LeavesHisNewMadeWifeInLondon—TelegramsFromHerReachSanFrancisco, SANFRANCISCO,May9.-JeanineYoung,the"BaronessvonTurkheim,"isnowreapingwhirlwind.Acablegramfromherreceivedto-dayinthiscitystatesthatshehasatlastawakenedto-thefactthatsheisthe victimofaconspiracy,andthatsheisanexisticobutreturntothiscity.ShestatesthatsheisattheHotelCecilinLondonandthatvonArnoldaliasTurkheim,intendstosettleherearlyMondaymorning.Sheaskersherfriendstosendher苏ufficientmoneytoreturnhere.assheiswithoutfundsThatshenowappreciatesfullythevillainyofTurkholmisshownbythesuggestionthatstepsbe takentocompeltheextraditionofherhusbandtothisStatewherehecommittedthecrimesofbigamyandperjury,towaysomethingoftheconspiracyofwhichhewasleadingactor. ThedeceivedanddesertedwomansentthreecablegramstoSanFrancisco.allofwhichwereofthe sametenor.Noneaddressedtoothechairoffcollegeandreadasfollows: andtheyadvancedquietly,shootingasthoughhunting.TheGreeksmain-tainedawitheringfire.I sawaTurk,woundedintheleg,advancingtotheattackonallfours. ThecorrespondentoftheAssociatedPressiswritingthisdispatchinthemidstofthebivouacinEdhemPasha'shead-quarter.Thegeneralandhisstaffatthesametimeareforminga littlegrouparoundaLANTERN,andthatvonArnoldaliasTurkheim,intendstosettleherearlyMondaymorning.Sheaskersherfriendstosendher苏ufficientmoneytoreturnhere.assheiswithoutfundsThatshenowappreciatesfullythevillainyofTurkholmisshownbythesuggestionthatstepsbe takentocompeltheextraditionofherhusbandtothisStatewherehecommittedthecrimesofbigamyandperjury,towaysomethingoftheconspiracyofwhichhewasleadingactor. ThedeceivedanddesertedwomansentthreecablegramstoSanFrancisco.allofwhichwereofthe sametenor.Noneaddressedtoothechairoffcollege和readasfollows: andtheyadvancedquietly,shootingasthoughhunting.TheGreeksmain-tainedawitheringfire.I sawaTurk,woundedintheleg,advancingtotheattackonallfours. ThecorrespondentoftheAssociatedPressiswritingthisdispatchinthemidstofthebivouacinEdhemPasha'shead-quarter.Thegeneralandhisstaffatthesametimeareforminga littlegrouparoundaLANTERN,andthatvonArnoldaliasTurkheim,intendstosettleherearlyMondaymorning.Sheaskersherfriendstosendher苏ufficientmoneytoreturnhere.as她iswithoutfundsThatshenowappreciatesfullythevillainyofTurkholmisshownbythesuggestionthatstepsbe takentocompeltheextraditionofherhusbandtothisStatewherehecommittedthecrimesofbigamyandperjury,towaysomethingoftheconspiracyofwhichhewasleadingactor. ThedeceivedanddesertedwomansentthreecablegramstoSanFrancisco.allofwhichwereofthe sametenor.Noneaddressedtoothechairoffcollege和readasfollows: andtheyadvancedquietly,shootingasthoughhunting.TheGreeksmain-tainedawitheringfire.I sawaTurk,woundedintheleg,advancingtotheattackonallfours. ThecorrespondentoftheAssociatedPressiswritingthisdispatchinthemidstofthebivouacinEdhemPasha'shead-quarter.Thegeneralandhisstaffatthesametimeareforminga littlegrouparoundaLANTERN,andthatvonArnoldaliasTurkheim,intendstosettleherearlyMondaymorning.Sheaskersherfriendstosendher苏ufficientmoneytoreturnhere.as她iswithoutfundsThatshenowappreciatesfullythevillainyofTurkholmisshownbythesuggestionthatstepsbe takentocompeltheextraditionofherhusbandtothisStatewherehecommittedthecrimesofbigamyandperjury,towaysomethingoftheconspiracyofwhichhewasleadingactor. Thedeceivedanddesertedwoman sent threecablegramstoSanFrancisco.allofwhichwereofthe sametenor.Noneaddressedtoothechairoffcollege和readasfollows: andtheyadvancedquietly,shootingasthoughhunting.TheGreeksmain-tainedawitheringfire.I sawaTurk,woundedin.theleg,advancing.to.theattack.onallfours. 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OffRCutded-word__. OffRCutded-word__. OffRCutded-word__. OffRCutded-word__. OffRCutded-word__. OffRCutded-word__. OffRCutded-word__. OffRCutded-word__. OffRCutded-word__. OffRCutded-word__. OffRCutded-word__. OffRCutded-word__. OffRCutded-word__. OffRCutded-word__. OffRCutded-word__. OffRCutded-word__. Off RCUTDED_WORD__ ACTIONS FROM THE MINING OFFICE FOR THE MINING OFFICE FOR THE MINING OFFICE FOR THE MINING OFFICE FOR THE MINING OFFICE FOR THE MINING OFFICE FOR THE The war in the orient Capture of Pharsala by the Turks brings the war nearer to a close. The Turkish army had no difficulty in capturing Pharsala, where the Greeks had retreated from Larissa, and where the Moslem again achieved a great victory. A dispatch from the headquarters of the Turkish army at the front, gives the following details of the fight: The Turkish army to-night is bivouacing in the eighteen villages surrounding Pharsala, captured from the Greeks. The battle began at 9 o'clock in the morning. After skirmishes by the advance posts, the Greek forces opened fire with great precision. The Turks rushed forward, exposing themselves to the Greek fire with the greatest sangfroid. The Greeks then made a fatal error in leaving the commanding position which they occupied, and retiring upon the plain, which was commanded on all points by four batteries. She is at the Hotel Cecil in London and that von Arnold, alias Turkheim, intends to desert her early Monday morning. She asks her friends to send her sufficient money to return here, as she is without funds. That she now appreciates fully the villainy of Turkheim is shown by the suggestion that steps be taken to compel the extradition of her husband to this State, where he committed the crimes of bigamy and perjury, to say nothing of the conspiracy of which he was the leading actor. The deceived and deserted woman sent three cablegrams to San Francisco, all of which were of the tenor. One was addressed to the chief of police and read as follows: "LONDON, May 9.—Discovered proof of Delmas’ villalny. At Hotel Cecil, London. Turkheim intends leaving early to-morrow morning. Tell friends. Wish for immediate return. No money. Can you have Arnold, alias Von Turkheim, extradited to Frisco? Has valuable papers of Fair case in his possession. Cable me care American embassy. (Signed.)" "JEANINE VON TURKHEIM." Chief Lees turned the cablegram over to the woman’s attorney, who will probably demand Arnold’s extradition to-morrow. The Peruvian government, after May 10, will cease the colage of silver and will not permit the importation of any silver coin. Director Preston of the United States mint is officially advised to this effect the other day. The decree provides that silver coinage shall be suspended and that the mint shall cease to receive silver bullion. Silver solos (the Peruvian dollar, worth about 93 cents American money converted into bullion for export), shall not be brought back except as bullion. All importations of any silver coin after May 10, shall be made exclusively at the port of Callao and shall be delivered to the mint by the customs officer to be melted into bars and then returned to their owners. Each traveler entering Peru shall not be allowed to bring more than fifty solos in Peruvian money. Silver coin sent from place in Peru shall be accompanied by invoice showing that it has not been imported and that the custom house has authorized the transportation. It is said that these new regulations are made to check if possible the rapid depreciation of Peruvian silver currency. All humors of the blood, from a small pimple to the dreadful scrofaula sore, are cured by Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which purifies, vitalizes and enriches the blood. Hood’s Pills cure nauseau, sick headache, indigestion, billiousness. 25c. A big slab of redwood, a cross section cut from a log fourteen feet four inches in diameter, with the bark peeled off, was lowered into the hold of the German ship Maria Hackfield at Long Bridge in San Francisco bay, on Saturday, bound for London. The big block of wood is consigned to William Waldorf Astor and is intended to decide a wager. At a recent dinner party given in London to a select circle, some stories were told flavored with hyperbole. Astor was responsible for one in which the big trees of California figured. A young English blood doubted the existence of such trees. There were just forty guests at the dinner and Astor, to prove his assertion, offered to wager that a table big enough to accommodate forty at dinner could be made from the cross section of one of California’s trees. The wager was accepted and the shipment on the Maria Hackfield is the result. The piece of redwood was cut from one of the many giant trees of Humboldt county. There is not a knot or blemish in the whole piece. Heavy wire cables are bound around its outer rim and heavy planks protected it from being split. It is three feet thick and weighs nineteen tons. It was brought from the lumber woods on the steamer National City, and the ship’s hatchway just gave the slab a play of one inch as it was lowered into the hold. The Mallory line steamer Leona, which left her pier in New York on Saturday bound for Galveston, took fire at sea, put back and arrived in port Sunday night with sixteen corpses on board. The dead were thirteen steerage passengers and three members of the crew who succumbed to a terrible fire which occurred off the Delaware capes at an early hour Sunday morning. The horror of the story can hardly be told. Those who are dead were penned up below decks, and 1897. SHOTS AT THE NEWS Riverside Supervisor, whose mile-out down by the new county government bill from 20 cents to 10 cents, announces that he will test institutionality of the law. Stated on authority that the Gerrison was tendered to Dr. Dee the President. Depew promptly said. This was after his unsuccessful effort to secure the mission to aid. Durable excitement prevails in the farmers of Stanislaus county because depredations of an army of worms that are spreading over town. The worms are from an elongation to six or seven inches, are green, mottled with black, and supposed to be army worms. Government of Chile has offered rum of $100,000 to any person or who may discover a new use of large quantities. Chile is a great quantity of nitrate market which will use more than marginally small quantity has been found. At excavations in Paris while sewer reclamation subterranean passage in conjunction with the imperial box at theatre Italian. After the attempt Nelson's life with an infernal maiden he was on his way to the opera, insidized theaters subsequently supplied with underground so that the Emperor might be withdraw secretly or troops inside into the theater without being the audience. First car of deciduous fruit to California this season was shipped cocaine last Wednesday concoction Chicago. The car contained boxes of cherries. Another car stopped East on Thursday. The cherries is estimated at 35,000 last season it was about 20,000. Moments this season are eight earlier than last season, warm having forced the fruit ahead. Negroes crifting on a raft loaded at Natchez, Miss., after four days with nothing to although frantic efforts were made by the officers of the vessel to save them, the fire had gained such headway before the danger was discovered that all escape was cut off. The steamer carried in her cargo many bales of cotton. It is not certain how the fire originated, but when discovered it burst forth with such fury that it was impossible to reach the steerage. Even then the steerage passengers were apparently unmindful of the danger, else the smoke and flames had not reached them. The saloon passengers were first aroused and in such a manner as to occasion little alarm. When it became apparent that the fire had eut off the steerage, the captain and his men poured great quantities of water down the ventilators and the most frantic efforts were made for the escape of those penned up. In this way eight of the steerage passengers made their escape. The porter at the Hotel Palomares at Pomona fired the building one night last week while the guests were asleep. The fellow claims that he was drunk when he kindled the fire, in the attic. But for the prompt work of firemen the building would have been burned to the ground and several lives might have been lost. The porter, whose name is Crewes, is a young man and married. One wing of the building was quite badly damaged. Public indignation was great but is subsiding. The Berkeley Board of Education has called F. E. Perham of Santa Ana to be City Superintendent of Schools, at a salary of $2500 a year. Perham is now city superintendent at Santa Ana and has been at the head of the school department there for nine years. He was recommended by many members of the faculty of the university and State Superintendent of Schools Black. The newly appointed superintendent is expected to arrive in Berkeley next month, and will assume the duties of his office July 1. The extradition of Butler, the Australian multi-murderer, who was captured in San Francisco and taken back to the antipodes, is said to have cost the English government nearly $10,000. Outside of the fee of the San Francisco attorneys retained to prosecute the murderer, the cost at disappearing from view the ship circled around, the navigator hoping to meet with a favorable current. At last the ship began to sail to the west, and went fifteen miles. When four miles from Nashville on the return trip, the gas began to give out. The navigator then sought a safe place to descend, and came down easily. When aloft a sudden gust broke one of the spans of the ship. No other damage was done. The time aloft was one and a half hours. The Professor was returning along the line of the outward flight when he was compelled to land. A crowd of a thousand assembled in Boston to see A. Rube, his wife, dog and tandem cycle begin a tour across the continent to San Francisco. Rube proved to be William Vino, better known to fame as "Barnum's Yankee." The dog, Fritz, occupied a basket on the tandem. Vino wore long hair, all his own; a luxuriant bunch of acquired whiskers of the spinach variety under his chin, and a small hat, a souvenir of his Barnum days. He is a typical countryman. Mrs. Vino is a prepossessing little woman, tastefully garbed in a stylish dark green courduroy jacket, loose bloomers, tan leggings, gaiters and a green courduroy Tam O'Shanter. She is English and an expert cyclist, like her husband. This is the first time a woman has attempted the journey to San Francisco on a tandem. The couple expect to be on the road until November, and to ride about forty miles a day, or about two hundred and fifty a week. A procession of several hundred men and boys escorted them out of town. An unusual scene was witnessed at the State prison at San Quentin on Sunday morning when Archbishop Riordan administered the sacrament of confirmation to over one hundred convicts. The preliminary work of preparing the prisoners for the sacrament commenced some days previously by Rev. Father Lagan of San Rafael and two assistants. From cell to cell the priest and his assistants made their way offering religious consolation to the men in stripes. While large numbers of the men declined to embrace the faith espoused by Father Lagan they gave him a kindly answer and he in turn had a pleasant word for all. About every three months Father Lagan first car of deciduous fruit to California this season was shipped across the Chicago. The car contained boxes of cherries. Another car headed East on Thursday. The cherries is estimated at 35,000 last season it was about 20,000. Moments this season are eight earlier than last season, warm having forced the fruit ahead. negroes crifting on a raft loaded at Natchez, Miss., after four days with nothing to sooner had they reached land by fell down and worshipped it. Baptist preacher near by offered services and began at one to the whole crowd. They refusor leave the river bank until was completed. They considered was a visitation of divine southern Pacific Company will begin the erection of an extension and car-building shop in Bales. The building of these will give employment to a thousand. Rumors to the effect that move was contemplated have circulation and have been the considerable excitement real estate men and property. The tract of land upon which crops are to be located—at the Tenth and Alameda streets—was issued by the Southern Pacific during the boom, the price being about $100,000. Theains twenty acres. This new doubt hastened by the Sanboro site. James J. Ayers, State Printer, the administration of Governor and editor of the Los Angeles, in charge of the Federal authorities. The celestials were put ashore from a two-masted schooner which hove to in the offing at the approach of night, and none of them had certificates entitling them to land. From the fact that the Chinamen had Mexican money in their wallets it is believed they were shipped at some port of that republic. The vessel after landing its passengers set sail and disappeared before its name could be determined. The revolution in Ecuador, according to advises received from South American points, seems to be in the nature of a holy war. Among the leaders of the rebels are many priests. The uprising, while not so serious as thought at first, is still causing some apprehension. In the attack on the city of Rio Bamba the rebels met with heavy reverses. A Jesuit superior, who was with the rebels, was killed, and two of the principal leaders were taken prisoners. Eighty-three others were captured, among them thirty-two priests. The rebels are receiving the aid of small factions of Liberals who are discontented with prevailing conditions. For the first time in many years a public meeting was broken up in San Francisco by a shower of eggs at a street meeting of the Socialist Labor party. Fully four hundred people had assembled, and matters went on well until a patent-medicine vender drove up in an open hack. He took up his position on the opposite side of the thoroughfare and began the usual harangue. A row ensued, and a fusilade of eggs was kept up until some two dozen had reached targets in the crowd, which began to thin rapidly. Women as well as men were the victims, and the meeting was obliged to adjourn. The last time such a thing happened was when the Salvation Army first came to the town. An agricultural experiment section has been organized by the executive board of the Southern California Academy of Sciences at Los Angeles. It is the purpose of this section to take up questions affecting the agricultural interests of the southern country, such as insect pests and their remedies, the betterment of crops, preservation of forests, the analysis of commercial fertilizers and naming of different species of plants. The work will be done free of charge and bulletins will be issued for free distribution, giving the results of the work accomplished. A committee has been appointed by the academy of sciences to have charge of the work at a salary of $2500 a year. Perham is now city superintendent at Santa Ana and has been at the head of the school department there for nine years. He was recommended by many members of the faculty of the university and State Superintendent of Schools Black. The newly appointed superintendent is expected to arrive in Berkeley next month, and will assume the duties of his office July 1. The extradition of Butler, the Australian multi-murderer, who was captured in San Francisco and taken back to the antipodes, is said to have cost the English government nearly $10,000. Outside of the fee of the San Francisco attorneys retained to prosecute the murderer, the cost was at least $4000, as every item of expense for keeping Butler at the county jail and the city prison had to be paid. The American government or the city of San Francisco was at no expense. For awhile there were six keepers hired to watch Butler at all a day. Seven Chinamen who landed at Capistrano in violation of the exclusion law, were taken into custody by the Capistrano officers and are now in jail in Los Angeles. In charge of the Federal authorities. The celestials were put ashore from a two-masted schooner which hove to in the offing at the approach of night, and none of them had certificates entitling them to land. From the fact that the Chinamen had Mexican money in their wallets it is believed they were shipped at some port of that republic. The vessel after landing its passengers set sail and disappeared before its name could be determined. The revolution in Ecuador, according to advises received from South American points, seems to be in the nature of a holy war. Among the leaders of the rebels are many priests. The uprising, while not so serious as thought at first, is still causing some apprehension. In the attack on the city of Rio Bamba the rebels met with heavy reverses. A Jesuit superior, who was with the rebels, was killed, and two of the principal leaders were taken prisoners. Eighty-three others were captured, among them thirty-two priests. The rebels are receiving the aid of small factions of Liberals who are discontented with prevailing conditions. For the first time in many years a public meeting was broken up in San Francisco by a shower of eggs at a street meeting of the Socialist Labor party. Fully four hundred people had assembled, and matters went on well until a patent-medicine vender drove up in an open hack. He took up his position on the opposite side of the thoroughfare and began the usual harangue. A row ensued, and a fusilade of eggs was kept up until some two dozen had reached targets in the crowd, which began to thin rapidly. Women as well as men were the victims, and the meeting was obliged to adjourn. The last time such a thing happened was when the Salvation Army first came to the town. An agricultural experiment section has been organized by the executive board of the Southern California Academy of Sciences at Los Angeles. It is the purpose of this section to take up questions affecting the agricultural interests of the southern country, such as insect pests and their remedies, the betterment of crops, preservation of forests, the analysis of commercial fertilizers and naming of different species of plants. The work will be done free of charge and bulletins will be issued for free distribution, giving the results of the work accomplished. A committee has been appointed by the academy of sciences to have charge of the work at a salary of $2500 a year. Perham is now city superintendent at Santa Ana and has been at the head of the school department there for nine years. He was recommended by many members of the faculty of the university and State Superintendent of Schools Black. The newly appointed superintendent is expected some days previously by Rev. Father Lagan of San Rafael and two assistants. From cell to cell the priest and his assistants made their way offering religious consolation to men in stripes. While large numbers of the men declined to embrace the faith espoused by Father Lagan they gave him a kindly answer and he in turn had a pleasant word for all. About every three years Father Lagan prepares the prisoners at San Quentin who desire to take the sacrament of confirmation. He does not wait for the convicts to appeal to him, but goes to them and makes a plea for them to reform. Many of the convict workers in the jute mill were allowed to stop labor while they received religious instruction from the priest. Editor Anson H. Smith of the Mojave Miner, was the hero of a remarkable incident that occurred on the tablelands near Needles. He came upon two Mojave squaws holding an excited powwow over a big rattlesnake that lay colled in the middle of the road. With true gallantry he dismounted and struck the reptile a dextrous blow on head. Then the excitement began. Instead of thanks their deliverer she squaws began to disrobe, greatly to Smith's discomfort, and with many incantations they threw their garments as offerings to his maikesh. The editor began to get scared. He tried to mount his horse, but the squaws insisted on his presence untilthe charm was broken,and it was not broken until they had discarded all their clothing and had gone through a weird dance overthe remainsofthe rattlesnake.This was done in order to propitiatethe godsand breakthe spell that portendsthe deathofa big chief uponthe wanton slaughterofa venomous reptile.Editor Smith leftthe sceneas soon ashe daredandwill never go backany more. Judge Smith of Santa Cruz decided intheSan Benito county Superior Court thatthe indictmentsagainstE.B.Montgomery,ex-TreasurerofSanBenito county,the shouldbe set asideMontgomerywaschargedwithembezling$12,000whichamountwamadegoodbyhimselfandsureties.Sixindictmentswerefoundagainthim.Thedefenseattackedthelegalityofthegrand jury.Amongothergroundsitclaimedthatthe courthadnoauthoritytoselectgrand jurorsinOctoberwhenJanuaryisdesignatedbylaw;thatnamesofimportantwitnesseswerenotendorsedinindictions;thatanoutsiderwhowasnotawitnesswaspermittedinthegrandjuryroomwhilethegrandjurywasinsession.Thecourtheldthatthesewouldvalidobjectionsandsetasidetheindictments。它isnotbelievedthatanythingmorewillbedonewiththecase.ThedecisionseemstomeetwithpopularapprovalinHollister. Four footpads heldupThomas Brady,a landscape gardener.ontheoutskirtsofthecityofSt.Louis,Mo.,robbedhimremovedhisshoesandhat,batteredhisheadwithsandbags,laidhimacrossthesuburbanrailwaytracksandlefthimtobegroundbeneaththewheelsofanelectriccar.As theirvictimlayonthetrackwithoneofthefootpadsbendingoverhimarranginghisshoesandhatwiththepurposeofmakingitappearthathehadfallenintoadrunkensleep,asuburbancarcaimedthunderingdownthegrade.Thehighwaymenfledbuttoo 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An agricultural experiment section has been organized by the executive board of the Southern California Academy of Sciences at Los Angeles. It is the purpose of this section to take up questions affecting the agricultural interests of the southern country, such as insect pests and their remedies, the betterment of crops, preservation of forests, the analysis of commercial fertilizers and naming of different species of plants. The work will be done free of charge and bulletins will be issued for free distribution, giving the results of the work accomplished. A committee has been appointed by the academy of sciences to have charge of the work of organizing the section and appointing officers. S. M. Woodbridge, Ph.D., will be the Director. A sensation has been created in theatrical circles in Paris by an attempted murder and subsequent suicide, on the part of Mathilde Riverson, an actress, the divorced wife of a Marquis. She had a quarrel with her lover, M. Moreau, over his approaching marriage, and an engagement was made that they should spend the last day of his bachelorhood together at her residence. The meeting took place as agreed, and the woman reproached him for deserting her, and sought to have him cancel his marriage engagement. Moreau refused to resume his relations with her, whereupon she drew a stiletto and stabbed him in the chest. The man fled, but the infuriated woman pursued him, screaming as she ran, and overtaking him, drove the stiletto into his back. Moreau made his escape to the street, and his mistress returned to her apartments and threw herself from a window. She struck the pavement head first and was picked up and taken to a hospital, where she died soon afterward. Moreau may recover. At the Centennial Exposition grounds at Nashville one day last week Prof. Arthur Barnard, physical instructor of the Young Men's Association of Nashville, began a journey in an airship constructed by himself. The officials of the exposition and the people attending witnessed the ascent of the aerial voyager. The ship moved off in perfect order and passed out of sight in a few minutes. Prof. Barnard promised to sail against the wind after arising into the air, and he did so. The airship is forty-six feet long and twenty feet in diameter. Barnard returned with his airship at night, and said that he has a machine which will fly under ordinary conditions. He says it was not perfect, nor could it be perfectly controlled, but he believed he could perfect it so that its course could be controlled. After It is not believed that anything more will be done with the case. The decision seems to meet with popular approval in Hollister. Four footpads held up Thomas Brady, a landscape gardener, on the outskirts of the city of St. Louis, Mo., robbed him, removed his shoes and hat, battered his head with sand bags, laid him across the suburban railway tracks and left him to be ground beneath the wheels of an electric car. As their victim lay on the track with one of the footpads bending over him, arranging his shoes and hat with the purpose of making it appear that he had fallen into a drunken sleep, a suburban car came thundering down the grade. The highwaymen fled, but too late to escape the notice of the motorman, who vainly tried to stop the car before the prostrate man was reached. Brady was dragged beneath the fender and mutilated. His right arm was broken and his left thigh cut open. His death is momentarily expected. Motorman West says he saw two men on the track rifling Brady's pockets, who fled at the approach of the car. Captain William Strong, leader of the faction that bore his name in the Strong-Amos and Strong-Calahan feuds, which have cost more than forty lives in Breathitt county, Ky., was found on the roadside near his home at Lexington, on Sunday, shot to death, with seven bullets in his body. Two weeks ago he met Ed Calahan, leader of the opposition faction, in Judge Day's office at Jackson, where they shook hands and declared the feud ended. Strong was 72 years old, and a captain in the federal army. After the war the Amos family and their friends tried to exterminate Strong and his friends. They besieged Strong in his house three days, when Strong's nephew, with a dozen other soldiers, came to his rescue. A few nights afterward Strong and his men met the Amos faction in an open meadow in the moonlight. A fierce battle ensued in which one of the Amoses was killed and several were wounded. Only one of Strong's men was wounded. The Amos family removed to Kansas after several more of their men were killed. When the Ku Klux rode in Breathitt county last year Captain Strong denounced them in unmeasured terms and when it was told him that the Callahans were the leaders he made war on them. In this three men have been killed and the authorities, realizing that Breathitt county would witness another bloody mountain war, summoned the leaders on both sides to appear before County Judge Day, with the result that peace was supposed to be restored. Strong's friends will never rest until his murder is avenged.