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Anaheim VOLUME XXVII. GRAY BROTHERS & WARD Cement Contractors Shillinger Patent. Contracts for RESERVOIR, IRRIGATION DITCHES, Cellar and Stable Floors, Sidewalks, Ete. 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. NICK HUGO BLACKSMITHING. WOOD WORK, HORSE-SHOEING, AND A GENERAL JOBBING BUSINESS. Los Angeles street, Anaheim, Cal. ALL KINDS OF PLOW WORK Executed in Workmanlike Manner, and at Lowest Living Rates. Give Me a Call. GO TO THE Oak Barber Shop FOR A IRST-CLASS SHAVE OR HAIR CUT. TWO DOORS WEST OF BANK. HUSMANN BROS. PALACE MEAT MARKET F W. Fleischmann, 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. AUCTION. 600 HORSES. Old Chino Ranch Stables. CHINO, CAL. SATURDAY, JUNE 19th. 1897. AT 11:00 O'CLOCK A.M... Consisting of Norman Draft Horses, Trotting Stock, Brood Mares, Colts and Mules. Free Lunch. Sale positive and without Reserve. Time given on approved notes. Special train leaves Arcade depot at 8:30 on morning of sale, Round trip tickets, $1.50. For further particulars, apply to THOS. B. CLARK, Auctioneer! 222 W. First Street, Los Angeles, Cal. C. N. Ad. Co. Oak Barber Shop FOR A IRST-CLASS SHAVE OR HAIR CUT. TWO DOORS WEST OF BANK. HUSMANN BROS. PALACE MEAT MARKET F W. Fleischmann, PROPRIETOR. Best Meats the Market Affords Always on Hand. Also keeps on hand Sausages, Bacon, Ham, Lard, Ete. Meats delivered to all parts of the city free o charge. Shop on East Center Street Handles Cudahy Cold-Storage Meats, Inspected by the Government Inspector. Dr. J. A. Champion PHYSICIAN, SURGEON AND ACCOUCHEUR. Office—Center street, opposite Derge's drugstore. Residence—Center street, near Clementina. 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, KOLL BLOCK. PUBLIC TELEPHONE OFFICE. RICHARD MELROSE ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. AND NOTARY PUBLIC. center street, Anaheim, Cal Special attention given to PROBATE matters. L. GUNTHER. PIONEER BOOT & SHOE MAKER. former Adela and Los Angeles Streets 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. SATURDAY, JUNE 19th. 1897. ... AT 11:00 O'CLOCK A.M..... Consisting of Norman Draft Horses, Trotting Stock, Brood Mares, Colts and Mules. Free Lunch. Sale positive and without Reserve. Time given on approved notes. Special train leaves Arcade depot at 8:30 on morning of sale, Round trip tickets, $1.50. For further particulars, apply to THOS. B. CLARK, Auctioneer! 282 W. First Street, Los Angeles, Cal. C. N. Ad. Co. REMEMBER US FOR GOOD COFFEES AND TEAS. Our 50c. Uncolored Japan Tea Is Delicious In the Cup. WM. BOYD & SON. 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 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. F. CRIST Merchant Tailor LATEST STOCK OF A Prehistoric Monster. Discovery by an Oklahoma Farmer That Puts All the Other Fossils in the Background. WICHITA, Kans., June 7.—Henry Patterson of Perry, O.T., has dug from his farm a prehistoric monster, or rather a petrified skeleton of a mammoth sea lizard, that has excited much interest among scientists. The Chicago Academy of Sciences is negotiating for its purchase. It is the most wonderful and most colossal ever unearthed, its proportions being gigantic. There are vetbraze, a complete skull ribs and flippers that are mammoth in size. The fossil is fully petrified, the bones being calcareous. They are fifty or more vertebea, each as big as the joint of a stovepipe. The head is sixteen feet in circumference and has a long projecting bone, six feet across, like the beak of a bird. The ribs are twenty-five feet long, half-heoped in contour, and the eye sockets are two feet across. The propellers or fins are perfectly preserved and three feet wide and eleven feet long. The fossil is that of a saurianodan or sea lizard, and was fully 300 feet long. In the Cherokee Strip the aluvial deposit just overlies the cretaceous or chalk formation, and the fossil was found by Mr. Patterson in a putty clay, not more than four feet below the surface. It is believed to be the largest fossil ever found. Professor Marsh of Yale has received skeletons of reptiles of North America that are over 100 feet long, but nothing as gigantic as the Cherokee Strip lizard has ever been brought to light on this continent. Mr. Isaac Horner, proprietor of the Burton House, Burton, W. V., and one of the most widely known men in the state, was cured of rheumatism after three years of suffering. He says: "I have not sufficient command of language to convey any idea of what I suffered, my physicians told me that nothing could be done for me and my friends were fully convinced that nothing but death would relieve me of my suffering. In June, 1894, Mr. Evens, then salesman for the Wheeling Drug Co." L. GUNTHER. PIONEER BOOT & SHOE MAKER. 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. 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 Metz Block, Center St., opposite Postoffice. H. P. LARSEN, CONTRACTOR & BUILDER. estimates given, Contracts made and do a general business. 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 o.x 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 Center Street, near Opera-house. JOSEPH BACKS, DEALAR IN FURNITURE Repairing Done. Funeral Director. Store in Backs Building (next to irrigation district office), Los Angeles street A D. PORTER Contractor and Builder. Estimates Furnished. Shop and Office—Oorner f North and Lemon streets. 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 acknowledged cure for catarrh and contains no mercury nor any injurious drug. Prices, 50 cents. Mr. Isaac Horner, proprietor of the Burton House, Burton, W. V., and one of the most widely known men in the state, was cured of rheumatism after three years of suffering. He says: "I have not sufficient command of language to convey any idea of what I suffered, my physicians told me that nothing could be done for me and my friends were fully convinced that nothing but death would relieve me of my suffering. In June, 1894, Mr. Evens, then salesman for the Wheeling Drug Co., recommended Chamberlain's Pain Balm. At this time my foot and limb were swollen to more than double the normal size and it seemed to me my leg would burst, but soon after I began using the Pain Balm the swelling began to decrease, the pain to leave, and now I consider that I am entirely cured." For sale by P. A. Derge. Among the passengers on the Lucania which arrived in New York on Saturday was an attractive young woman, said to be Miss Sallie Gamble of Los Angeles, who has recently fallen heir to an estate valued at about $100,-000, left by her paternal grandmother, who was a resident of Leicester, England. This is not the first time that the young lady in question has become an object of public attention. For many years she has sold flowers in the lobby of the Nadeau Hotel of Los Angeles, and being a brunette with rosy cheeks and bright eyes and a demure style, she attracted the attention of ex-Senator James G. Fair when the latter visited Los Angeles in 1894. So favorably was the Senator impressed that during his stay at the hotel he purchased enormous quantities of flowers, and also developed an abnormal interest in the newspapers of the day, purchasing large quantities of them at $1 apiece. It is reported that he broached the subject of matrimony and was accepted, but soon after left Los Angeles without carrying out his intention. "There’s no use in talking," says W. H. Broadwell, druggist, La Cygne, Kas., "Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy does the work. After taking medicines of my own preparation and those of others, I took a dose of Chamberlain’s and it helped me; and a second dose cured me. Can-dibly and conscientiously I can recommend it as the best thing on the market." The 25 and 50 cents sizes for sale by P. A. Derge. ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, JUNE 10, 1897. MUSIC? and should be pleased to Magazines, harmonicas. TOBACCO respectfully solicit your LMSEN. ES. h. 1897. stock, Brood Mares, and without Real train leaves Artrip tickets, $1.50. Auctioneer! C. N. Ad. Co. 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. VICTORIA'S EARLY YEARS The Throne Was Not Deemed Near When She Was Born. On June 21, Victoria, Queen of Great Britain and Ireland and Empress of India, will have reigned sixty years. Only two British sovereigns have had reigns approaching hers in length—George III., her grandfather, whose reign, commonly computed at sixty years, lacked nine months of that period, and Henry III., who reigned fifty-six years. In the history of Europe there is recorded only one longer reign, that of Louis XIV., who nominally reigned seventy-two years. She has outlived all the peers that held their titles when she ascended the throne in 1837, except the Earl of Darnley, who was then 10 years old, and Earl Nelson, who was 14. Mr. Gladstone is one of the half dozen surviving members of Parliament who sat in that year. She has seen five Dukes of Norfolk succeed each other, and six Archbishops of York, and has outlived every Duke and Duchess and every Marquis and Marchioness who bore the title in 1837. She has seen France successively governed by one King, one Emperor and six Presidents, and she has seen seventeen Presidents in office in the United States. was proclaimed from St. James' Palace later in the day. Her coronation did not take place until June 28, 1838. After she became Queen she sang popular airs to her guests, accompanied by her mother on the piano. She is described as being 5 feet 2 inches high, with blue eyes and fair hair. Victoria met Prince Albert, who was her first cousin, being a son of the Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfield, on his visiting England when she was 17. In the spring of 1839 she sent him her portrait, and when he visited Windsor with his brother the following autumn she is said to have asked him how he liked England, and on his replying in the affirmative, she said it depended on him to make it his home. This is only a story. At the time she said frankly that she proposed to him. After he came in from hunting on Oct. 15 she sent for him. When he answered the summons she told him why. She spoke of it afterwards as a "nervous thing" to do, but it was apparently a love match on both sides. The wedding took place on Feb. 10, 1840, in the St. James' Palace. The Queen's first child, the present Dowager Empress of Germany, was born on Nov. 21 at Buckingham Palace. GOLD AND SILVER. An Increased Production of $6,250,000 in Gold and 1,900,000 Ounces of Silver Over the Output of 1895. WASHINGTON, June 4.—Mr. Preston, the director of the Mint, has about completed his figures of the gold and silver production in the United States during the calendar year 1896. He finds the production of gold to have been about $33,000,000, an increase of over $6,250,000, as compared with 1895. The production of silver is given as 57,700,000 fine ounces, an increase of 1,900,000 ounces over 1895. The principal gold producing States, with their product last year, in ounces, as compared with Mr. Preston's figures for 1895, are given as follows: Production 1896. State— California ... 721,600 ... 571 Colorado ... 708,006 ... 64,372 Montana ... 188,066 ... 9,339 SNAP SHOTS AT THE NEWS I. W. Lord the well-known citizen of Cucamonga was buncoed out of $7,000 some weeks ago by a couple of "gold brick" men. Three hundred convicts employed in the rock-crushing plant at Folsom planned a revolt, but Warden Aull, having wind of the proposed mutiny, ordered that at the first sign of trouble the guards shoot down the seven ring-leaders, and the result was that the mutineers collapsed. The Chino sugar factory is about to follow the example of the Southern California railway company in developing its own oil for fuel. The sugar people are said to have leased 500 acres in the oil belt and have commenced boring. The oil will be piped to the factory in time for the fall work, and will result in considerable saving to the company. The monthly statement of the public debt shows that the debt, less cash to the Treasury at the close of business on May 29, 1897, was $999,684,032 a decrease for the month of $1,560,080 which is principally accounted for by an increase of over $2,000,000 in cash in the Treasury at the close of business on May 29, 1897. The officers of the steamer Huphe which has arrived at Vancouver from the Orient state that when in the Philippine Islands on their last trip, it was learned that the Spanish government had captured 25 Roman Catholic priests, supposed to be in sympathy with the rebels, and roasted them. Negotiations are said to be pending for the sale of the Mount Lowe Railway and the hotels belonging to the company to the Southern Pacific. Should she be consummated it will be of the highest importance, not only because it would finally settle the financial embarrassments which have harassed the enterprise, but because the road would then be backed by resources sufficient to insure its successful and probably profitable operation. Richard Caldwell of Memphis shot and killed Mary Jenkins at Cairo, Illinois Saturday afternoon because he was jealous of the favors she had bestowed on others. Immediately after FOR ID TEAS. Japan Tea Cup. SON. Historic Monster: An Oklahoma Farmer That Is the Other Fossils in the Background. June 7.—Henry Patty, O.T., has dug from his historic monster, or rather aeton of a mammoth sea lizard excited much interest inists. The Chicago Acadies is negotiating for its is the most wonderful possal ever unearthed, its being gigantic. There are complete skull ribs and are mammoth in size. They are fifty or each, as big as the joint bee. The head is sixteen conference and has a long one, six feet across, like bird. The ribs are twenty-half-hooped in contour,ickets are two feet across, or fins are perfectly precee feet wide and eleven that of a saurianondan, and was fully 300 feet the Cherokee Strip the altest just overlies the cremation formation, and led by Mr. Patterson in a bit more than four feet bee. To be the largest fossil Professor Marsh of Yale skeletons of reptiles of caea that are over 100 feet thing as gigantic as the lizard has ever been kept on this continent. Norner, proprietor of the Burton, W. V., and one idely known men in the need of rheumatism after suffering. He says: "I command of lancy any idea of what I sufficians told me that nothone for我 and my friends avinued that nothing but believe me of my suffering. Mr. Evens, then sales Wheeling Drug Co., re On the Duke of Clarence becoming King in 1830 the contingency of Victoria's accession to the throne before she was eighteen, the epoch of her majority, was provided for by the establishment of a regency, with her mother as regent, assisted by a council drawn from the royal family and the Ministers of State. The sum of £10,000 a year was then voted for the Princess's maintenance, in addition to an annual grant of £0000, made when she was four years old. The Duchess of Kent who has outlived seventy-two years. She has outlived all the peers that held their titles when she ascended the throne in 1837, except the Earl of Darnley, who was then 10 years old, and Earl Nelson, who was 14. Mr. Gladstone is one of the half dozen surviving members of Parliament who sat in that year. She has seen five Dukes of Norfolk succeed each other, and six Archbishops of York, and has outlived every Duke and Duchess and every Marquis and Marchioness who bore the title in 1837. She has seen France successively governed by one King, one Emperor and six Presidents, and she has seen seventeen Presidents in office in the United States. The story of her life up to the time of her marriage contains episodes perhaps not generally known which are more interesting in some respects than more familiar subsequent events. When she was born, in Kensington Palace on May 24, 1819, there seemed no great probability that Victoria would ever become Queen of England. Her father, the Duke of Kent, was the fourth son of George III. The second son, the Duke of York, was still alive and the third son, the Duke of Clarence, who succeeded George IV., had a daughter and was considered liable to have other children, as his wife was still young. This daughter died in infancy, and the death of the Duke of York in 1827 without children made Victoria the presumptive successor of William IV. Her nearness to the throne was first made known to her when she was about 12 years old by showing her the royal genealogical table. She was warned at the same time that her uncle, William IV., might yet have an heir. In the proclamation of her accession to the throne six years later this contingency was provided for by a clause in which the rights of a posthumous child to William IV. were protected. The Queen was baptized Alexandrina Victoria. She was so designated in the accession proclamation and contemporaneous state papers, but her signing herself simply Victoria caused the other name to be dropped almost immediately. The name Alexandrina, after one of her sponsors, the Emperor Alexander of Russia, was given her by uncle, George IV., then Prince Regent. She was named Victoria after her mother. She was the first member of the English royal family to be vaccinated. No end of stories are told of her childhood which illustrate goodness of heart, if not brilliancy. When told that her succession to the throne would be barred if her Aunt Adelaide, William IV's wife, had children, she said: "If so I would not be disappointed, for I know by the love Aunt Adelaide bears me how fond she is of children." Although proved by her after life not to be brilliant, the Queen is represented as quite an infant phenomenon when six years old. She is said to have spoken French, as well as German and English, the tongues of her mother and father, to have some knowledge of Italian, and to have been able to read Virgil and Horace with ease. She had also begun Greek and knew something of music and mathematics, as well as drawing. On the Duke of Clarence becoming King in 1830 the contingency of Victoria's accession to the throne before she was eighteen, the epoch of her majority, was provided for by the establishment of a regency, with her mother as regent, assisted by a council drawn from the royal family and the Ministers of State. The sum of £10,000 a year was then voted for the Princess's maintenance, in addition to an annual grant of £0000, made when she was four years old. The Duchess of Kent who has outlived seventy-two years. He finds the production of gold to have been about $53,000,000, an increase of over $6,250,000, as compared with 1895. The production of silver is given as 57,700,000 fine ounces, an increase of 1,900,000 ounces over 1895. The principal gold producing States, with their product last year, in ounces, as compared with Mr. Preston's figures for 1895, are given as follows: Production 1896. Ounces. Increase. Decrease. California 721,600 571 Colorado 708,006 64,372 Montana 189,066 9,339 Arizona 125,980 30,908 Idaho 104,265 18,177 Utah 97,006 31,487 Alaska 97,445 19,305 The production of silver is given in ounces as follows: Production, 1896. Ounces. Increase. Decrease. Colorado 22,573,000 825,500 Montana 14,432,000 3,137,100 Utah 8,100,000 632,900 Idaho 4,550,000 1,439,400 Arizona 1,705,000 718,100 The figures will not be materially changed by the final revision which is now being made. THE SPEAKER AND THE WHITE HOUSE. Pasts That Upset One Sq-Called Unwritten Law Of American Politics. Various unwritten laws of American politics seem to have lost their force of late. There is that one to the effect that no President after leaving the White House could expect ever to be elected to return to it—a rule broken in the case of Cleveland. Another is the law that no United States Senator could become President—a law broken in the case of James A. Garfield. Still another of these laws has recently been brought again into notice by the critics and admirers of Speaker Thomas B. Reed,and there is traveling about in some newspapers an item to the effect that "every man who has sought the Speakership of the House since the foundation of the Government has done so with view to the Presidential nomination of his party." Nor was he the only foreign-born Speaker of the House of Representatives. Again,它 is not true that the previous service as a Speaker of the House of Representatives has ever been a bar to other honors in the field of American politics. Schuyler Colafx was the Speaker of three houses,在the Thirty-eight,the Thirty-ninth an Fortieth Congresses.Haplied to be Vice-President of the United States,an office to which he was nominated and elected in 1868.Hew was never a candidate for the Presidency and never aspired,so far as public records show,to the Presidential nomination.NathANIEL P.Banks,who was Speaker of the House in the The trouble with the convicts employed in the jute mill at San Quentin prison is about over and no further disturbance is looked for.Work started up on Monday morning in the mill with 400 men. This leaves about 250 of the most desperate and mutinous of the criminals still confined on a die off bread and water,and it is expected that of these all but the ringleaders of othe so-called "strike" will be work again.The ring leaders and those who took part in the attempted break from the dungeon will be brought before the board of directors and their cases considered for punishment.Extra guards will be stationed in the milt to prevent any further trouble and see that they more peaceably inclined convicts who wish to work are not intimidated by their more hardened and vicious fellow prisoners. One thousand men imprisoned in the penitentiary at Lansing.Kan., passed an unusually uncomfortable hour one night last week when fire broke out in passengers on the Lurvair in New York on an attractive young woman Miss Sallie Gamble of who has recently fallen late valued at about $100. paternal grandmother, resident of Leicester, England not the first time that any question has become public attention. For he has sold flowers in the Madeau Hotel of Los Angeles in 1894. So the Senator impressed his stay at the hotel he enormous quantities of flowering newspapers of the large quantities of peace. It is reported that one subject of matrimony tipped, but soon after left without carrying out his use in talking," says W. H. druggist, La Cygne, Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera Remedy does the work, medicines of my own prethose of others, I took a Chamberlain's and it helped and dose cured me. Cancientiously I can recomb best thing on the marrow and 50 cents sizes for sale. On the Duke of Clarence becoming King in 1830 the contingency of Victoria's accession to the throne before she was eighteen, the epoch of her majority, was provided for by the establishment of a regency, with her mother as regent, assisted by a council drawn from the royal family and the Ministers of State. The sum of £10,000 a year was then voted for the Princess's maintenance, in addition to an annual grant of £6000, made when she was four years old. The Duchess of Kent, who had control of her daughter after the death of the Duke in 1820, made herself obnoxious to William IV., apparently, by secluding the Victoria from royal functions, and Greville tells of a public exhibition of regal resentment which took place at the celebration of the King's birthday at Windsor on Aug. 21, 1836. Victoria burst into tears and the Duchess of Kent ordered her carriage. She was persuaded to remain, however, until the next day on a quasi reconciliation being effected. Victoria was less than a month more than 18 years of age when the death of her uncle made her Queen. William IV died shortly after 2 a.m. on June 20, 1837, at Windsor. The Archibishop of Canterbury (Dr. Howley) and the Lord Chamberlain (Marquis Conyagham) set out about twenty minutes later for Kensington to inform Victoria of the event. They reached the ugly palace, which still stands at the west of Kensington Gardens, at 5 o'clock. They had difficulty in arousing the porter, and it was some time before they could persuade any one to awaken Victoria. It was not until they said, "We are come on business of State to the Queen and even her sleep must give way to that," that they were admitted. She appeared shortly with a robe thrown over her night dress, her hair hanging over her shoulders and her bare feet in slippers. On being informed of her accession to the throne she asked the prayers of the Archbishop in her behalf, and they knelt down together. Her first Privy Council was held at Kensington Palace on the following morning. Lord Melbourne had to coach her as to what to do after first being coached by Greville, who describes the scene. When, after she had read the speech prepared for her, her two old uncles, the Duke of Cumberland and the Duke of Sussex, knelt before her to swear allegiance and kiss her hand, she blushed at the incongruity of their attitude, and, rising from her chair, kissed them both. She would not have sought the Speech Club for two terms "with a view to the Presidential nomination of his party." Nor was he the only foreign-born Speaker of the House of Representatives. Again, it is not true that the previous service as a Speaker of the House of Representatives has ever been a bar to other honors in the field of American politics. Schuyler Colfax was the Speaker of three Houses, in the Thirty-eight, the Thirty-ninth an Fortieth Congresses. He aspired to be Vice-President of the United States, an office to which he was nominated and elected in 1868. He was never a candidate for the Presidency and never aspired, so far as public records show, to the Presidential nomination. Nathaniel P. Banks, who was Speaker of the House in the Thirty-fourth Congress, aspired afterward to be Governor of his native State of Massachusetts, and his service as Speaker did not prove an obstacle to this for he became Governor of Massachusetts in 1868, being the predecessor of John A. Andrews. John G. Carlisle, who was Speaker in three Congresses, was never seriously regarded as a candidate for the Presidency, and the obstacle to his ambition was not past service as Speaker of the House of Representatives, but the fact that he came from Kentucky, a State south of the Ohio River line, and was, therefore, regarded as unavailable on geographical grounds. Galusha A. Grow, who was Speaker in the Thirty-seventh Congress, was never, as far as any one knows or has heard, a candidate for the Presidential nomination. He is a member of the present Congress and a prominent figure in it. John Bell was Speaker in the Twenty-third Congress elected in 1834, and his defeat for the Presidency twenty-six years later could have had little connection with his service in the House of Representatives and his successor, James K. Polk, as Speaker, who presided over the House in the Twenty-fourth and Twenty-fifth Congresses, was elected President in 1844. Speaker Reed is not an old man in years and his service in Congress need be considered no bar to his Presidential aspirations, if he has any. A. H. Patter, with E. C. Atkins & Co., Indianapolis, Ind., writes: "I have never before given a testimonial in my life. But I will say that for three years we have never been without Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy in the house, and my wife would as soon think of being without flour as a bottle of this Remedy in the summer season. We have used it with all three of our children and it has never failed to cure—not simply stop pain, but cure absolutely. It is all right, and anyone who tries it will find it so." For sale by P. A. Derge. One thousand men imprisoned in the penitentiary at Lansing. Kan., passed an unusually uncomfortable hour one night last week, when fire broke out in the prison about 9 o'clock, and soon all the men held within the walls were in an uproar. The fire seemed to be spreading rapidly in the tailoring department and chapel, and the imprisoned men begged of their keepers to be released. Finally the flames became so threatening that fifty convicts, all of them trustless, were released to assist the officers in their struggle with the fire. There was no break for liberty; the men performed their duty heroically, and the fire was ultimately quenched after a damage of a about $8000 had been done. Edward Schieffelin, the miner who founded the town of Tombstone, Arizona, and who died May 12th in Oregon made queer provisions in his will for his last resting place. It was his wish to be buried in the garb of a prospector, his old pick and canteen with him on top of the granite hills about three miles westerly from the city of Tombstone, Arizona, and a monument such as prospectors build when locating a mining claim built over his grave and no other monument or slab erected. None of his friends were to wear crepe Under no circumstances did he wish to be buried in any cemetery or graveyard. The will was filed in Oakland for probate. All of the estate, valued at $75,000, is given the widow and brother. Adelaide R. Hasse, who has gone to New York from Washington to catalogue the Astor library's public documents is said to know more about this usually uninteresting literature than any other woman, and for that matter perhaps more than any other man. For ten years she has been engaged in library work, eight years as assistant librarian at Los Angeles where she gave a great deal of attention to public documents, and two years as librarian in the Bureau of Public Documents in Washington. Miss Hasse is an unusually bright young woman and does not look as if she were accustomed to deliver in dry documents. Her work in Washington SHOTS AT THE NEWS Record the well-known citizen of Georgia was buncoed out of $7,000 bills ago by a couple of "gold men." Hundred convicts employed in crushing plant at Folsom plan-olt, but Warden Aull, having the proposed mutiny, ordered the first sign of trouble the boot down the seven ring-lead that result was that the mutt-lapsed. No sugar factory is about to be example of the Southern railway company in develop-own oil for fuel. The sugar he said to have leased 500 acres of belt and have commenced. The oil will be piped to the time for the fall work, and it in considerable saving to many. Monthly statement of the public is that the debt, less cash in currency at the close of business on August 1897, was $996,654,052, a derer the month of $1,560,080, principally accounted for by one of over $2,000,000 in cash in currency at the close of business on August 1897. Others of the steamer Hupeh, is arrived at Vancouver from that state that when in the Islands on their last trip, it need that the Spanish govern- captured 25 Roman Catho- supposed to be in sympathy rebells, and roasted them. Actions are said to be pending due of the Mount' Lowe Rail-the hotels belonging to the to the Southern Pacific. The sale be consummated it will highest importance, not only it would finally settle the embarrassments which have the enterprise, but because would then be backed by re-ficient to insure its success-bobably profitable operation. Caldwell of Memphis shot Mary Jenkins at Cairo, Ill., afternoon because he was the favors she had bestowed. Immediately after the ington has been of great value, as it renders available for the first time a vast amount of information. There have been fifty desertions from the ranks of marines and seamen from the battleship Oregon since it arrived at Seattle on the Sound, about two months ago. As a rule the deserters are new men, and chafed under the restraint and discipline exacted aboard a man-of-war. Stella and Lizzie Hansen, while driving across the Southern Pacific railroad track on the county road at Sen Luis Obispo on Saturday, were struck by the northbound passenger train and received injuries which will probably result fatally. Both girls were hurled across the track, and before the train could be brought to a standstill the wheels had passed over the legs of the younger and horribly mangled the elder. The injured girls were placed on the train and conveyed to Paso Robles, but no hopes are entertained of their recovery. They were aged 15 and 19 respectively. President McKinley has expressed his regret that he cannot accept the invitation to visit the coast this summer. A letter is now on the way to the West in answer to the invitation, in which the President states why he does not expect to be able to come to the West after the adjournment of Congress. In the epistle attention is called to the press of business and the fact that the length of the trip would keep him away from the capital too great a time. Now when the end of the session seems closer than on any former occasion, western people who joined in the invitation had expected the Chief Executive to visit the Pacific Slope, but his decision seems to be final. Edgar Harris, a Baltimore letter-carrier, 32 years of age, shot and killed his twelve-year-old son, George, and his young daughter, Ada; wounded his daughter Ella, aged 14, and then turned his pistol on himself. Edgar Harris, aged 9, was the only member of the family who escaped uninjured. He was lying in bed beside his brother George. The father fired at him, but the bullet missed his head by half an inch and buried itself in the pillow. The father then rushed into the back room to kill the girls and the little fellow fled down stairs and escaped. Harris thought to think about business obligations contracted in the regular course of business. H. J. Wollacott, one of the defendants, is president of the plaintiff's bank and the others are directors or stockholders. The suit, which is an echo of the boom, has created a stir in financial circles, where the litigation has been anticipated for several days past. E. B. Crum shot Lloyd Russell with a Winchester at Sheridan, Or., on Saturday, the ball entering from the right side, passing through the body and wounding a horse. Russell is a quiet man who has respect and goodwill of the neighborhood. Crum felt that Russell had misused him, owing to the fact that Russell superseded him as clerk of the school district last spring. A neighborhood road passes through Crum's place, which Russell had to traverse to get out to the county road. Crum forbade him to pass over it, and Russell disobeyed the edict. As he was returning a woman accompanied him. He was accosted by Crum, who said: "I thought I told you not to use this road. I may as well fix you now as any time." Crum then leveled his rifle and shot Russell Russell will probably die. Old Man Vance of Great Falls, Mont., aged 71, who for years has been a pauper, received word that the Supreme Court of North Carolina had rendered a decision in a suit brought by his mother (now dead) ten years ago, in favor of Mrs. Vance, and handed down to him as next of kin an estate valued at about $4,000,000. During a recent illness, he was cared for by Miss Alice Crossman, the sixteen-year-old daughter of a Montana section boss. Upon receipt of the news he proposed marriage to the girl, who accepted, and the next day they were married. Crossman has resigned his position, and with his wife will go with their newly made son-in-law to his southern home. The attorneys for Theodore Durrant, whose execution was fixed for to-morrow, again appeared before the United States Court in San Francisco Thursday and applied for a writ of superse-deas for the purpose of staying the execution of the sentence, but this was denied by the court. An application for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States was then made and granted. Although it is an open question whether in view of the Caldwell of Memphis shot Mary Jenkins at Cairo, Ill., afternoon because he was the favors she had bestowed. Immediately after the fled to a lumber yard back there he was found two hours later officers. He was arrested for difficulty, when he opened officers. His first shot pass the wrist of Deputy Sheriff who returned the fire, killing instantly. Moore was accused by a coroner's jury. Margaret Craven, daughter of the Craven, who claims to have tried to James G. Fair and is in a share of his vast wealth, arrived as soon as her mother's settled, or possibly before, to cheer, Jr., of St. Louis, President American Brewing Company interested in other large corporations. His fortune is estimated at 10 million dollars formerly one of the Fraway. The announced shortly after the station assumed power, that would be allowed to serve full term unless removed for been modified, and it is exempt wholesale appointments to be made soon. It is offered that the President postmaster-General would conserve expired all postoffice bills are due to expire between July 15. Miss Craven is an act was formerly one of the Fraway. The State Board of Prison Directors has determined the punishment to be imposed upon the convicts who took part in the recent strike at San Quentin prison, and about forty of the ring-leaders will be kept in solitary confinement on a bread-and-water diet for at least three months. All the other prisoners who refused to obey orders will be subjected to similar treatment until the next meeting of the directors. For at least a year the allowance of tobacco and possibly sugar and syrup will be cut off. According to the present custom each convict is given one large plug of tobacco as he enters the jute mill every Monday morning. The annual cost of this luxury to the State is $7000. It is proposed to use this money in the future in the employment of eleven extra guards. The prisoners consume at least twenty barrels of sugar and many gallons of ayrup each month. The cost is considerable, and it is now proposed to do away with all these luxuries for at least one year. This step will insure a saving to the State at least $20,000. The restriction as to tobacco and sugar will also be made at Folsom. With the dead body of a woman for a target the bullet-proof cloth invented by Casimir Zeglen, a cloistered brother of the Order of Resurrectionists, was tested Friday evening at the Chicago College of Dental Surgery in the presence of a number of professors and many officers and citizens interested in the science of bodily armor. The test was conducted under the supervision of a lieutenant of the Austrian army. A 44-calibre Colt revolver was first put into practice and after the body had been encased in the alleged impenetrable cloth three shots failed to pierce the cloth, fired at a distance of from three to fifteen paces. A 36-calibre revolver was then brought into use and the representative of the inventor demonstrated that it was impossible to puncture the cloth with a projectile. While the other portion of the armor had been disfigured but slightly, an examination revealed the fact that two of the ribs on the right side had been shattered by the force of the bullets. Aside from the bruises on those parts of the body with which the bullets had come in contact there was no indication of harm. Jacob Barron of Los Angeles, 25 years of age, formerly of San Francisco, where his parents are said to be now living, went to the receiving hospital to get surgical attention for a bullet-hole in his leg. He said he had been accidentally shot by a woman, but would give no particulars. He was lying in bed beside his brother George. The father fired at him, but the bullet missed his head by half an inch and buried itself in the pillow. The father then rushed into the back room to kill the girls and escaped. Harris is thought to have been mentally unbalanced by the recent death of his wife. A letter was found among Harris's effects, in which he clearly indicated his intention to kill himself and his four children. In it he gives a list of all his property, makes provision for its distribution, and in an inconsequent manner, asked that all five be buried in one grave. The State Board of Prison Directors has determined the punishment to be imposed upon the convicts who took part in the recent strike at San Quentin prison, and about forty of the ring-leaders will be kept in solitary confinement on a bread-and-water diet for at least three months. All the other prisoners who refused to obey orders will be subjected to similar treatment until the next meeting of the directors. For at least a year the allowance of tobacco and possibly sugar and syrup will be cut off. According to the present custom each convict is given one large plug of tobacco as he enters the jute mill every Monday morning. The annual cost of this luxury to the State is $7000. It is proposed to use this money in the future in the employment of eleven extra guards. The prisoners consume at least twenty barrels of sugar and many gallons of ayrup each month. The cost is considerable, and it is now proposed to do away with all these luxuries for at least one year. This step will insure a saving to the State at least $20,000. The restriction as to tobacco and sugar will also be made at Folsom. With the dead body of a woman for a target the bullet-proof cloth invented by Casimir Zeglen, a cloistered brother of the Order of Resurrectionists, was tested Friday evening at the Chicago College of Dental Surgery in the presence of a number of professors and many officers and citizens interested in the science of bodily armor. The test was conducted under the supervision of a lieutenant of the Austrian army. A 44-calibre Colt revolver was first put into practice and after the body had been encased in the alleged impenetrable cloth three shots failed to pierce the cloth, fired at a distance of from three to fifteen paces. A 36-calibre revolver was then brought into use and the representative of the inventor demonstrated that it was impossible to puncture the cloth with a projectile. While the other portion of the armor had been disfigured but slightly, an examination revealed the fact that two of the ribs on the right side had been shattered by the force of the bullets. Aside from the bruises on those parts of the body with which the bullets had come in contact there was no indication of harm. Jacob Barron of Los Angeles, 25 years of age, formerly of San Francisco, where his parents are said to be now living, went to the receiving hospital to get surgical attention for a bullet-hole in his leg. He said he had been accidentally shot by a woman, but would give no particulars. He was lying in bed beside his brother George. The father fired at him, but the bullet missed his head by half an inch and buried itself in the pillow. The father then rushed into the back room to kill the girls and escaped. Harris is thought to have been mentually unbalanced by the recent death of his wife. A letter was found among Harris's effects, in which he clearly indicated his intention to kill himself and his four children. In it he gives a list of all his property, makes provision for its distribution, and in an inconsequent manner, asked that all five be buried in one grave. The State Board of Prison Directors has determined the punishment to be imposed upon the convicts who took part in the recent strike at San Quentin prison, and about forty of the ring-leaders will be kept in solitary confinement on a bread-and-water diet for at least three months. All the other prisoners who refused to obey orders will be subjected to similar treatment until the next meeting of the directors. For at least a year the allowance of tobacco and possibly sugar and syrup will be cut off. According to the present custom each convict is given one large plug of tobacco as he enters the jute mill every Monday morning. The annual cost of this luxury to the State is $7000. It is proposed to use this money in the future in the employment of eleven extra guards. The prisoners consume at least twenty barrels of sugar and many gallons of ayrup each month. The cost is considerable, and it is now proposed to do away with all these luxuries for at least one year. This step will insure a saving to the State at least $20,000. The restriction as to tobacco and sugar will also be made at Folsom. With the dead body of a woman for a target the bullet-proof cloth invented by Casimir Zeglen, a cloistered brother of the Order of Resurrectionists, was tested Friday evening at San Quentin prison, and about forty of the ring-leaders will be kept in solitary confinement on a bread-and-water diet for at least three months. All the other prisoners who refused to obey orders will be subjected to similar treatment until the next meeting of the directors. For at least a year the allowance of tobacco and possibly sugar and syrup will be cut off. According to the present custom each convict is given one large plug of tobacco as he enters the jute mill every Monday morning. The annual cost of this luxury to the State is $7000. It is proposed to use this money in the future in the employment of eleven extra guards. The prisoners consume at least twenty barrels of sugar and many gallons of ayrup each month. The cost is considerable, and it is now proposed to do away with all these luxuries for at least one year. This step will insure a saving to the State at least $20,000. The restriction as to tobacco and sugar will also be made at Folsom. With the dead body of a woman for a targetthe bullet-proof cloth invented by Casimir Zeglen,a cloistered brotheroftheOrderofResurrectionistswastestedFridayeveningatSanQuentinprison,andaboutfortyoftheringleaderswillbekeptinsolitaryconfinementonabread-and-waterdietforatleastthreemonths.Alltheotherprisonerswhosoftheconvictsherewouldbekeptinsolitaryconfinementonabread-and-waterdietforatleastthreemonths.Alltheotherprisonerswhosoftheconvictsherewouldbekeptinsolitaryconfinementonabread-and-waterdietforatleastthreemonths.Alltheotherprisonerswhosoftheconvictsherewouldbekeptinsolitaryconfinementonabread-and-waterdietforatleastthreemonths.Alltheotherprisonerswhosoftheconvictsherewouldbekeptinsolitaryconfinementonabread-and-waterdietforatleastthreemonths.Alltheotherprisonerswhosoftheconvictsherewouldbekeptinsolitaryconfinementonabread-and-waterdietforatleastthreemonths.Alltheotherprisonerswhosoftheconvictsherewouldbekeptinsolitaryconfinementonabread-and-waterdietforatleastthreemonths.Alltheotherprisonerswhosoftheconvictsherewouldbekeptinsolitaryconfinementonabread-and-waterdietforatleastthreemonths.Alltheotherprisonerswhosoftheconvictsherewouldbekeptinsolitaryconfinementonabread-and-waterdietforatleastthreemonths.Alltheotherprisonerswhosoftheconvictsherewouldbekeptinsolitaryconfinementonabread-and-waterdietforatleastthreemonths.Alltheotherprisonerswhosoftheconvictsherewouldbekeptinsolitaryconfinementonabread-and-waterdietforatleastthreemonths.Alltheotherprisonerswhosoftheconvictsherewouldbekeptinsolitaryconfinementonabread-and-waterdietforatleastthreemonths.Alltheotherprisonerswhosoftheconvictsherewouldbekeptinsolitaryconfinementonabread-and-waterdietforatleastthreemonths.Alltheotherprisonerswhosoftheconvictsherewouldbekeptinsolitaryconfinementonabread-and-waterdietforatleastthreemonths.Alltheotherprisonerswhosoftheconvictsherewouldbekeptinsolitaryconfinementonabread-and-waterdietforatleastthreemonths.Alltheotherprisonerswhosoftheconvictsherewouldbekeptinsolitaryconfinementonabread-and-waterdietforatleastthreemonths.Alltheotherprisonerswhosoftheconvictsherewouldbekeptinsolitaryconfinementonabread-and-waterdietforatleastthreemonths.Alltheotherprisonerswhosoftheconvictsherewouldbekeptinsolitaryconfinementonabread-and-waterdietforatleastthreemonths.Alltheotherprisonerswhosoftheconvictsherewouldbekeptinsolitaryconfinementonabread-and-waterdietforatleastthreemonths.Alltheotherprisonerswhosoftheconvictsherewouldbekeptinsolitaryconfinementonabread-and-waterdietforatleastthreemonths.Alltheotherprisonerswhosoftheconvictsherewouldbekeptinsolitaryconfinementonabread-and-waterdietforatleastthreemonths.Alltheotherprisonerswhosoftheconvictsherewouldbekeptinsolitaryconfinementonabread-and-waterdietforatleastthreemonths.Alltheotherprisonerswhosoftheconvictsherewouldbekeptinsolitaryconfinementonabread-and-waterdietforatleastthreemonths.Alltheotherprisonerswhosoftheconvictsherewouldbekeptinsolitaryconfinementonabread-and-waterdietforatleastthreemonths.Alltheotherprisonerswhosoftheconvictsherewouldbekeptinsolitaryconfinementonabread-and-waterdietforatleastthreemonths.AlltheotherprisonerswhosoftheconvictsherewouldbeKEPTINGTHEMATTERS WHICH WERE USED TO EXPLORE THE INFORMATION OF THE DISTRICT COMMITTEE FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF APPLICATIONS FOR 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nm nm nm nm nm nm nm nm nm nm nm nm nm nm nm nm nm nm nm nm nm nm nmNMNMNMNMNMNMNMNMNMNMNMNMNMNMNMNMNMNMNMNMNMNMNMNMNMNMNMNMNMNMNMNM husband men imprisoned in the army at Lansing, Kan., passed away peacefully uncomfortably hour one week, when fire broke out in about 9 o'clock, and soon all held within the walls were in war. The fire seemed to be rapidly in the tailoring department, and the imprisonment of their keepers to be finally the flames became igniting that fifty convicts, all of which were released to assist in their struggle with the fire was no break for liberty, performed their duty herodied the fire was ultimately after a damage of a about three-mile limit, where the cermonles were performed. Schieffelin, the miner who made town of Tombstone, Ariz., died May 12th in Oregon, under provisions in his will for resting place. It was his wish lived in the garb of a prospee pick and canteen with him, the granite hills about three miles from the city of Tombstone, and a monument such actors build when locating a claim built over his grave, other monument or slab erected. His friends were to wear crepe circumstances did he wish to be in any cemetery or grave he will was filed in Oakland县. All of the estate, valued at $50,000, is given the widow and R. Hasse, who has gone to work from Washington to cataclysm library's public document to know more about this interesting literature than woman, and, for that matter, more than any other man. For R. Hasse has been engaged in librarians eight years as assistant Los Angeles, where she gave final of attention to public documents two years as librarian in lieu of Public Documents in Boston. Miss Hasse is an unusually young woman and does not she were accustomed to delve documents. Her work in Washington is demonstrated that it was impossible to puncture the cloth with a projectile. While the other portion of the armor had been disfigured but slightly, an examination revealed the fact that two of the ribs on the right side had been shattered by the force of the bullets. Aside from bruises on those parts of the body with which the bullets had come in contact there was no indication of harm. Jacob Barron of Los Angeles, 25 years of age, formerly of San Francisco, where his parents are said to be now living, went to the receiving hospital to get surgical attention for a bullet-hole in his leg. He said he had been accidentally shot by a woman, but would give no particulars. His attempt to conceal the facts availed nothing, for the truth came out soon after. Barron was shot by Mrs. J. Bostick because the woman objected to his paying her attentions. Mrs. Bostick took this means of discouraging the young man. She says Barron came from San Francisco about six months ago and has since been trying to make love to her, a proceeding she did not relish, inasmuch as her husband recently went to Alaska, leaving her with the children. She warned him to keep away from her, but he persisted, and she shot at him. Like most women under similar circumstances, she did not aim well for a vital spot and only punctured her tormentor's leg, though it was probably sufficient to have the desired effect. Barron's wound is not a dangerous one. The State Loan and Trust Company of Los Angeles has begun a sensitional suit against its own officers. The action is against Samuel B. Hunt, who eight years ago was the bank's cashier and general manager and had absolute control of the bank and the responsibility of making all the loans. He was required to give a bond in the sum of $25,000, on which Dr. W. G. Coohran, John Bryson, Sr., H. J. Wollacott and Sarah B. Hunt qualified. Loans to the amount of $55,000 were made and only $41,000 realized, showing a shortage in the collateral of $14,000, and it is this balance that the bank wishes to recover from the bondsmen. The bondsmen will undertake to prove that these loans were made in the regular course of business, were shown upon the books of the bank in regular form and appear among the regular business transactions of the bank, and the failure to realize the full amount from the collaterals deposited to secure them was not in any sense in the character of a shortage on the part of Hunt, for which they agreed by the terms of the bond to be responsible; in other words the bond which they signed was never intended to guarantee the payment to the bank of Hunt's ordinary vice of the parson would not suit him better. Swift declined, and replied that if he was to be married at sea, he wanted it to be done in a proper sea manner. Capt. Parsons finally agreed to perform the ceremony, and the steamer was headed beyond the three-mile limit, where the cermonles were performed. Chuck Wong Park, a Chinese with a record, was arraigned before Commissioner Van Dyke in Los Angeles some days ago for attempting illegally to enter the country. Chuck was once a prosperous merchant of San Francisco and made so much money that he resolved to visit his parents in China. He got out of this country easily enough and spent some time in his native province, but when he essayed to get back he found the exclusion law of the United States in his way. Chuck returned to China and purchased the certificate of a Chinese who did not want to return to the land of the free and again made an attempt to land at the Golden Gate with the same result as before. A third time he returned to his native land and his next assault on American soil was by way of British Columbia, but his nemesis, Inspector Putnam, again barred the way. Still undaunted, Chuck bought a ticket for Lower California, intending to work upward from the south. He crossed the boundary at Tia Juana safely, as he thought, and was congratulating himself on his success when Putnam again swooped down on him and placed him under arrest. The Chinese has spent two years' time and $2000 in money in his efforts to reestablish himself in the land of his adoption, and he says he will keep at it as long as his money lasts. A rock recently discovered in the mountains of Magdalena district, State of Sonora, which is covered with Chinese inscriptions, has just been visited by Sen Yuep, a well-educated Chinese of Guaymas. He says the inscriptions are Chinese, but are somewhat indistinct. He made a copy of them and has translated enough of the lines to show that the writing was probably inscribed on the rock at least two thousand years ago. There are ten lines of characters on the part of the rock in view, and some of the lines may be still buried under the earth. There are ancient Chinese tombs and monuments to the north of Magdalena, near the mining camp of Jacoba. These have never been explored. Sen Yuep asserts that, in the history of China, there is a tradition that an exploring expedition divided into eighteen parties, landed on the western coast of what is now Mexico over twenty centuries ago.