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8 fthie&tfo (\a J mot long mfcts^xszz ABB± 1 f . i \rjl \ Jr wßli IM strill g enc y of the times - Subject after subject was •n| 1 \ discussed at length by these representatives of the Birthplace of Legitimate Business, One Price, '«»3%A-l \fJ COURTEOUS TREATMENT A. \^\^^ i l Was handled in a masterly manner. It being the most im- / iffim/*** i re* t j| v JrfM' jk /V portaut of all the arguments it provoked the most intense IVI Til H ' \ b t*V MmMk M !|! j/ excitement among these intelligent people. It was Hi 1 /1 r L,Jg> liillkv < ; i'' A < Slfc. I v^s^\' - *r > finally decided to looser, a carrier dove, and they watched I X 111. li/Lty / # «W /iW j -' and watched until the midnight hour, Lo! she returns > m^ l^^ Z 2 ' the "Banner of Excelsior" AG° ° to £ BEN. L. MORRIS, Manager. Highest of all in leavening Power.—TJ. S. Gov't Report, Aug. 17, 1889. Baking Powder ABSOLUTELY PURE DAILY HERALD. United States Signal Service. Report of observations taken at Los Angeles, May 20, 1890: • :07 a. m. >:07 p. m. 58 66 78 64 E SE Max. tern., 69j mm. tern., 57. Indications. San Francisco, May '21.—Forecast for Califor nia: Fair weather. PERSONAL. Mr. and Mrs. Andrews, of Pomona, are in the city. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Crank were in from Fair Oaks yesterday. Mr. Lowe and family, of Pasadena, leave soon for a trip to Europe. Mrs. C. H. Blaisdell has returned with her family from San Francisco. Miss May McCallum left yesterday for San Francisco, to be absent six months. Mrs. Outhwaite, of Sierra Madre, leaves next Saturday for the east, to be gone all summer. James W. Johnson, of the Bacheller newspaper syndicate, New York, is vis iting Los Angeles. Mrs. Howes and Miss Ora Howes of Chicago, are the guests of Mrs. F. C. Howes at the west end. F. G. Coates of the F. R. G. S. of Lon don, England, is rusticating in Tasadena, the guest of Mrs. Dexter. C. E. Nestor, representing Edison's phonograph, is in the city. He has a machine at Bartlett Bros" Ben L. Morris, manager of the Chi cago Clothing Company, left on the 1:40 train for the north on business yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Miller, of River side, are at the Westminster. Mr. Miller is the proprietor of the Glenwood hotel. Mr. C. W. Colby left Tuesday for Barstow to meet his mother, Mrs. G. A. Colby, who will reside permanently in the city. Charles G. Haddock and wife started for their former home, Chicago, yester day morning, over the Santa Fe' route, to be absent till August. Mrs, L. Shuaizshilst, who has been the guest of her daughter, Mrs. M. S. Hellman, left for her home in San Fran cisco on the 10 :40 train Tuesday night. Judge Charles B. Fernald, of Santa Barbara, is in the city attending to some legal business. The judge is an old settler and prominent citizen of Santa Barbara. Mrs. J. A. Jamison and children ar rived in this city yesterday afternoon from Montserat, West Indies. Mrs. ! Jamison is a sister of J. A. Muir, of the Southern Pacific Company. J. H. White departed on the noon j train for San Francisco yesterday. He will make a short stay with friends in Lakeville, then will proceed on his way to his home in Boston. Mr. White will be pleasantly remembered by the many friends which he has made in his fre quent visits to Los Angeles during the past five years. NEWS NOTES. Henry Oser and H. J. Walter were admitted to citizenship by Judge Mc- Kinley yesterday. In the United States circuit court yesterday, Judge Erskine M. Ross heard a motion in the cause entitled Union Loan and Trust Company vs. Southern California Motor Road Company, for the appointment of a receiver for the defendant. A mass meeting of Sunday reformers, at which there were present about three hundred persons, was held last night in the First Presbyterian church, Dr. J. P. Widney presiding. The meeting was THE LOS ANGELES HERALD: THURSDAY MORNING, MAY 22, 1890. addressed by the Rev. Wilbur F. Crafts, of New York, who spoke for one hour and a quarter in favor of the Sunday closing question. A county convention of the American Sabbath Union will be held at the same place today, the session commencing at 9 o'clock this morning. The United States grand jury was in session yesterday in tlie district court, and will convene again this morning. It is understood that the only business Uiider its consideration is the sale of liquor to Indians. CRIMINAL NOTES. Frederick Lovell was arrested yester i day on a w arrant issued by United States Commissioner Van Dyke, charging him with cutting timber on government land 1 in the Little Tejunga canon. Detectives Auble and Bowler arrested a Chinaman named Ah Man, on Sanchez street yesterday morning for selling lot tery tickets. The Mongolian was subse quently taken before Justice Austin and lined in the sum of $30. , In the police court, yesterday morn ing. Thomas Corlew appeared before Justice Austin and a jury for trial upon the charge of battery preferred against him by Minnie Garrett, an unfortunate. The complainant was lined $10 for con tempt of court in not appearing at the appointed time, 9:30 o'clock, and keep ing the jury waiting two hours, while Corlew was convicted by the jury, and sentenced to jail for sixty days. On motion of the district attorney, , Abernethy and Kelley, two of the three men recently arrested in Nevada by De tective Bowler for complicity in the burglary of Brown's jewelry store, were | discharged from custody, there being no ! evidence against them beyond the fact ; that part of the stolen property was ! found in their possession in Nevada. Francis Duraine, the third man, who es caped from the city jail, is still at large. j J. F. Bedwell was arrested at 5 o'clock i yesterday afternoon, by Officer Collins, lon a warrant charging him with obtain- I ing money by means of false pretenses, jlt is alleged that on Saturday last Bed j well purchased sixty cents' worth of j goods at J. T. Sheward's store, in j payment for which he presented a check | for $!> on the University Bank, receiving ! $4.40 in change; but when the check was presented at the bank it was dis i honored, Bedwell not having any funds ! there. Justice Austin yesterday sent Katie j McDermott, a married woman, to jail for j twenty days for disturbing the peace. ! The defendant and her husband were jon a spree on Tuesday night and the former made so much noise as to disturb ! the other inmates of Becrs's lodging ! house on San Fernando street. Officer ■ O'Reagan notified her several times to ! desist, but she refused to do so and at an early hour yesterday morning she was arrested. A DOCTOR'S REBUKE. Immensely More Mlscbief than is Gen erally Suspected. Dr. King, the eminent medical writer, in a learned disquisition on our national com plaint, constipation, says:— 1 The great quantity of cathartic pills, etc., ' which are annually swallowed by the people of : this country has been productive of immensely i more mischief than is generally suspected, i True, the physic unloads the bowels, but in so ' doing its action tends to dimiuish the tone of j the intestines; so that, instead of removing the | costiveness, It aggravates it, leaving the bowels in a more torpid condition, j Joy's Vegetable Sarsaparllla was designed to I fill Just such a contingency as the doctor's ar j ralgnment anticipates, viz.: instead of being a ! powerful mineral purgative, it is a mild vege table laxative, that, owing to its solvent and j gentle stimulating properties, is so certain a re i lief In constipation that it has been given away to hundreds, not to be paid for unless It was of j positive benefit. It replaces constipation almost immediately with a natural easy habit, and is so mild that, unlike drastic purgatives, it can bo taken Indefinitely with perfect freedom and safety. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria} New Suits. The complaints in the following new suits were tiled with the county clerk yesterday. Henry T. Gage and S. M. White, vs. Clarence J. Richards; action to recover *7t'>4.:!7 for attorney's fees, together with M. I>. Chamberlain vs. C. J. Richards ; action to recover $600 with interest from March 30, 1889, to May Ist, 1880, at 10 per cent and from the "latter date at 15 tier cent together with $50 attorney's fees and costs, alleged to b: due on a promissory note assigned to plaintiff by the Los Angeles National Hank, May Bth, i 1890. William 11. Walker iiled a petition ! praying for the appointment of a guar | man over the estate of John Doughty J Walker, his brother, who is insane. G. Wiley Wells iiled a petition for i probate of the will of his deceased wife. Katie Wells, who died April sth last, leaving property of the value of $36,000, I consisting of real estate and furniture. Edvrin M. Frazee vs. Fullerton Land and Trust Company ; action to recover the sum of $2,787.96 alleged to be due on account of merchandise delivered to de fendants by F. P. Chadbourne A Co., at its request, May 22, 1888, and by them assigned to plaintiff. I The trustees of the Bethany Presby terian church of Los Angeles tiled an ap i plication for authority to mortgage lots 7 and 8, block 33 ; oj' tho Angelefio | Heights tract for $1,000, to the board of the church erection fund of the general assembly of the Presbyterian church in the United States of America. SHILOH'S CATARRH REMEDY—a positive euro for Catarrh, Diphtheria and < anker Mouth. For sale by C. F. Heiuzenian, 122 North Main street. ('ATARRII, THROAT DISEASES, v Asthma, Bronchitis and Consumption, to gether with diseases of the Eye, Ear and Heart, successfully treated by M.HILTON WILLIAMS, M.D. M. C. P. S. 0., By His Hot Air Medicated Inhalations and his COMPOUND OXYGEN TREATMENT. ASTHMA It is a common error to suppose every dis ease which is attended by oppressed breath ing to be Asthma or Phthisic. We have short ness of breath In Consumption and Pneumonia just as we do in Asthma, only that in these diseases it is always present, whereas in Asthma it occurs In paroxysms. Asthma is a spasmodic disease of the lungs, which manifests itself in periodic attacks or "lits." It comes on suddenly and is attended with great difficulty of breathing while it lasts; but wnen the attack is over the patient breathes almost as well as in health. Nervous, Humid and Dry Asthma are names given to different forms of this disease. Em physema is another and more inveterate kind of Asthma, while Hay Fever or Hose Cold is a , peculiar variety of Asthma which occurs ut a i certain season of the year. Each of these forms of disease differs somewhat from the others in symptoms, but practically these dis tinctions are of very little value. It does cot matter to the patient which form of Asthma he has, since nis sufferings are the same in all. In one case the expectoration becomes yellow, and we call it bronchial. In another it is light, and we call it dry. When he coughs up clear water, with a white froth on the sur face, we say he has Humoral Asthma. In Nervous Asthma there is very little expecter ation of any kind. Hay Fever always begins as a crying cold in tlie head or influenza, and a clear water runs from the nose and the eyes before the Asthma fit comes on. In Emphysema the expectoration is generally thick, and con tinues so in the interval between the fits, while tlie shortness of breath is increased on the slightest exertion. Without courage and perseverance nothing is curable. But with these, aided by proper and skillful treatment, Asthma can be cured even after the lungs are extensively diseased. Persons desiring treatment by this system of practice can use the remedies at home' as well as at our office, and which will cause no incon venience or hindrance from business whatever Every case of Asthma is curable. Eastern visitors and invalids will be wise in being cured before they return home. Those who desire to consult with me in regard to their cases had better call at the office for an examination, but if impossible to visit the office personally can write for list of questions and circular, both of which will be sent free of charge. Address M.HILTON WILLIAMS, M.D., 137 S. Broadway, Log Angeles, Cal. Office hours—From 9 a. m. to 4 p. m Sundays—From 2 to 2:30 p. m. Residence—ll9 South Grand Avenue f22 The Natiek House. NEW MANAGEMENT. The Natiek House, one of the oldest and best known Hotels in the city, has lately changed hands. M. 8. Rowell has retired from the man agement, and the House will hereafter be con ducted by Mr. H. A. Hart, a Hotel man of ex perience. Mr. Hart has already made a num ber of changes which will prove of benefit to His patrons, and adds, very much to the con venience and comforts of the House. The Table and Dining Service especially has been greatly improved. During the past few weeks the Natiek has been in the hands of the painters and decorat ors. A commodious office is one of its stood features. Electric Bells with return calls and Fire Alarm have also been added, and altogether the House is in better condition than ever be fore for doing business. mati-lm OOKS ON 4 MCHITECTVBE! BUILDING! PAINTING ! Decorating, etc. My 100-page Illustrated Catalogue sent free. Address: WM. T. COMSTOCK, S3 Warren St., New Xork. I Mar22-sa-3t 0 JUST . 4P|& FINISHED I ' A BIG WEEK'S BUSINESS W.* ( ' ' »\X Way ahead of last year and we are pleased \ «Vj* '''(-'• ***** \ because it proves to us that people have /.'.'<• ' ' * ''* \ V;*# >f *V V A confidence in us, and when we advertise BARGAINS "^^^^^^i^i^^^^^K 1 They appreciate our efforts OUR JUNIOR PARTNER WE HATE BRAGGING And always try to avoid it in our advertisements; don't believe it often times when we read it from others, but we Honestly believe we sell three times more clothing, Honestly believe we show three times more styles, Honestly believe we give BETTER VALUES THAN ANY OTHER FIRM IN OUR LINE THIS WEEK T We continue our sale on the balance of the big invoice advertised last week. BIG BARGAINS 'IN MEN'S SUITS FOR • • ■ $5-00 BIG BARGAINS IN MEN'S SUITS FOR $7-50 BIG BARGAINS IN MEN'S SUITS FOR $10.00 BIG BARGAINS IN MEN'S SUITS FOR $12.50 BIG BARGAINS IN MEN'S SUITS FOR $15.00 Elegant Styles for $17.50, $20 and $25; equal to tailor-made. Special Value in Men's Pants for $2.50, $3, $4 and $5. C — WYP f/? ( lO CORNER