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ILLUSTRATED HERALD. IT IS HIGHLY SPOKEN OF BY NEWSDEALERS. What They Have to Say of It—Sure to Do the Country Great Good—Splendid Engravings and Reliable Statistics. A Hbbald reporter was detailed yesterday to go among news stands, stationers and newspaper sellers, to dis cover what they think about the Illus trated Hbbald as a beneficial proposi tion to this section. The reporter made an extended visit to the stands, and among the principal persons interviewed may be mentioned Stoll & Thayer, the Nadeau news stand, Edwards A McKnight, Lee & Miller, Fowler & Coldwell and the Westminster news stand. A considerable number of real estate agents, hotel men and others were also seen, and their opinion was eminently in favor of the Illustrated Herald and the good work it was doing. It had been the intention of the reporter to give each person who was spoken to a few lines, embodying his opinion in his own words, but the verdict expres sed by everybody was so nearly alike that it would have become a tedious re petition of words to have stated what each had to say laudatory to that splen did publication known as 'the Illus trated I.os Angeles Herald for 18110. The sale of the paper is reported us excellent. It is favorably spoken of by all purchasers, some of whom have learned to know its truthfulness in former years. As a general rule it is sold wrapped up to customers who buy a number of copies at once, all prepared to be sent to friends in the states by mail and merely lacking the address. It was the impartial opinion of all persons interviewed that the Illus trated contains nothing but what is strictly true, and although to eastern people some of the statements in it might appear exaggerated because they are unacquainted with California's lovely climate and her fertile soil, yet the gentlemen spoken to thought that a visit here would soon convince the in credulous of the truths contained in the Illustrated Ixis Angeles Hbbald. "Sta tistics," said one i news-dealer, "are things that need no praise. They speak for themselves, and ought to convince anybody, up to St. Thomas, who was the most difficult man to admit anything until he had touched it with his linger, but you can say that the splendid en gravings of tlie Illustrated will carry conviction wherever they are seen. The street scenes, the business blocks, the rural residences and some of the suburban views are so life-like and truthful that they can not fail to make the man, who already begins to shiver now, in apprehension of bleak winter's colds, wish that he could hie himself with his wife and family to this favored spot." The paper is sent north, east and south to friends of residents or visitors, so that they may form an opinion about this section of the state, and in hopes that the seductive pen pictures and en gravings may induce them to come here for the purpose of partaking a sli'ie of the delights that tlie Italy of America showers upon her guests. The general opinion was that the Illustrated I.os Angeles Hbbald is doing the greatest good in other sections to induce the immigration of desirable classes, that it does not fly to exagger ation for the purpose of accomplishing s*ch a result, but that it depended upon truthful and honest statements. Many laudatory remarks of other kinds Were made, the general import of which was that the Illustrated Hbbald has been, is now, and will in the future be one of the great factors for the aggrand izement and progress of Southern Cal ifornia. A Polities] Dreamer. Editors Hbbald: I have seen in the San Francisco Examiner of the 18th instant, the synopsis of a speech by Col. Markham, and also one by a gentleman by the name of 11. V. Morehouse, which I think deserve to be specially noticed. The main point discussed by Colonel Markham was by telling hie au dience what a tine clever fellow he was u\ his boyhood days, and how he had reaped, cradled and mowed the grain and grass, and laid it in wide swathes in his youthful manhood, the truth and honor of all which no one wishes to dis- • pute. But the people of this great state are not particularly interested at present to know what great feats in farming Colonel Markham may have performed in his youthful trays, as it is very well known that he did not cut a very wide swathe in the hall of Congress. Mr. Moreho use began his speech by relating a dream, in which he saw Colonel Markham and Mayor Pond ap proach St. Peter, each basing his appli cation for passage through the gate on the ground that he had been a candi date for governor of California. Colonel Markham, so the dream went on, was assigned to the right hand elevator, and went up until he eventually reached paradise. Mayor Pond was assigned to the left hand elevator and was sent down. Now I have always been a skeptic in regard to dreams, but after reading Mr. Morehouses dream 1 determined at once to consult a lirst class astrologer to know what kind of a solution he would give it; and after relating the dream to him as told by Mr. Morehouse, the seer, after giving his cards a few mysterious shuflles, informed me that I would have to wait a little while as there seemed to be some complications as to the normal state of Mr. Morehouse's stomach when lie retired to bed on that night in which he had dreamed, as it occurs only on certain occasions that men are likely to have such lucid perceptions of the future, and he wished to ascertain whether the dream was caused by in dulging too freely in sourkrout linilnr ger cheese and lager beer, or by forty-rod whisky, or from all combined, and gave me the following interpretation : "The dream," he said, "taken all in all, is really very signilicant, and clearly portends the defeat of Colonel Markham. And in the windup of the dream, owing to certain irregular hallucinations caused by the limburger cheese and lager beer, Mr. Morehouse, in his visions, mistook the elevator which carried him up to bed for a craft that will ply, after the ides of November next, between the •city of Pasadena and intermediate ports to the head of Salt river, the paradise of the forlorn, a place where the woodbine twineth, and the notes of the whangdoodle are heard no more. And Colonel Markham will have a pre ferred passage on her first voyage. - And as to "Mayor Pond in the left hand ele vator," it simply means that he will go to Sacramento to fill the gubernatorial chair." An Old Democrat. Who Is to Be llclieved? Editors Herald: According to the report of the proceedings of the last ses sion of the board of health, in regard to TIIE LOS ANGELES HERALD; MONDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 22, 1890. the Donegan garbage nuisance, Mayor Hazard is reported as saying that in company with Dr. MacGowan he had inspected the dump, etc., and they found no nuisance there; everything clean and nice smelling in fact, and no cause whatever for the very vigorous "kicking" indulged in for some time past by residents and property owneiH in that vicinity. As the reverse, Dr. Kurtz, one of our very oldest, best, and most highly educated physicians, also a member of the board oi" health, gave it as his posi tive opinion that the place was "filthy" in the extreme, dangerous to health, a tirst-class nuisance and should be abated. To sustain the opinion of Dr. Kurtz, we have the sworn affidavit of Or. Parker, that in his belief it caused a case of typhoid fever of which he had charge; we know there have been other cases of malarial and typhoid fevers, where formerly they were unknown; and we have the certificate cf Dr. Orme, (one of our oldest and best physicians), to the effect that it is anui s nice and dangerous to the h'alth of the, surrounding com m inity. Yet these old and tried physicians, whose reputation was made while young Dr. MacGrowan was yet in his swaddling clothes, are flippantly told in ellect that they do not know a nuisance when they see it and smell it; and the dozen of citizens residing in the vicinity who are, and have been for months past, perfectly familiar with the outrage, are coolly told by bis honor the mayor and Dr. MacGowan that they do not know anything about it, and that their word and sworn affidavits cannot bi believed. Undoubtedly Mr. Donegan had put his "dumping ground" in the best possible condition for the visit of his honor the mayor, but even then it must have been a nuisance, such as neither himself or Dr. MacGowan nor any member of the council would willingly tolerate for a moment in the vicinity of their own residences or property, whether within two blocks, five blocks or ten blocks. Query : has the alleged boasted fact that Mr. Donegan controls one hundred and fifty votes anything to do with this deadening of the senses of seeing and smelling of our city officials? This (Sunday) morning. September 21st, the "dump" was visited by the following persons and found in the con dition hereinafter stated: Messrs. Adams, Odwarker, Gupser, Moulton, M. Lenahan, Wilson, Lee, Hottentott, B. Lenahan. Pollich, Kendall, Vachcr, Stauch, Arenas, W. Butler, J. Butler, G. Vachcr, Kercheval, Mrs. Ewing and Mrs. Pollich. A mass of garbage about 15 by 25 feet in area ami 4 or 5 in depth was exposed, as it had been left on Saturday evening, and as it will remain until Monday morning, without any covering of sand or earth whatever. From the rotten and decaying mass, emanated smells which, however sweet in the nostrils of "politicians" and city officials seeking votes, and garbage con tractors engaged in "reducing the surplus," is highly offensive to the average unappreciative tax-paying citizen whose purse is depleted, his health endangered, and his property ruined or depreciated in value thereby. In a portion of this putrefying mass great quantities of fat, loathsome mag gots were rioting, rolling and tumbling, and many could be found crawling about in the sand a considerable dis tance away. Scattered all around over four or live acres ol" land outside of this filthy deposit, is every conceivable va riety of rubbish and debris, some of it unsavory to the smell, and all most un sightly to the eye of anyone not a city official, or fattener on garbage apd trar bnge contracts. Let any citizen and taxpayer visit the spot at once and be convinced of all herein set forth. Los Angeles, Sept. 21, 1890. A. F. Kercheval. 11. T. Gordon. Mary Anderson's Only Rival. From the Now York Evening Sun. There is but one person who is Mary Anderson's rival, and she, if she chooses, has the power to command a wider ad miration and a deeper interest than it was ever given to the divine Mary to evoke. That person is Mrs. Antonio Navarro. It has not been given out to the world whether the contract with Mr. Abbey still holds her, or not, but Mr. Abbey's mysteiious business trip abroad, in conjucntion with the fact that the order for the sale of Mrs. Ander son's stage wardrobe has befen rescinded, has set many conjectures afloat as to whether Mrs. Navarro might not still appear in America during the coming winter. The Woman is able to say that Mrs. Navarro will almost certainly re appear in America for one season —the coming one. She feels that to set aside her contract with Mr. Abbey at so late a date would entail a very great loss upon him and would be manifest injustice to him— that the contract still holds in spite of her marriage, and that although she herself is reluctant and "Tony" is wildly unwilling, she should, without doubt, be Mary Anderson to the public for one winter more, and then Mrs. An tonio Navarro, and that alone, for all years to come. And this, by the way, is not conjecture, but comes directly from the actress herself. Safety From a Pestilential Scourge, Protection from the disease, not a medical agent which merely cheeks the paroxysms, is the grand desideratum wherever the epidemic scourge of malaria prevails. Quinine does not affordthifl'protection. The chief reason why Hostetter's stomach.Hitters has won such im mense popularity is, that it prepares the system to resist the malarial pest. This it dot I by bracing anil toning the physical organism: reg ulatingand promoting an equal How and distri bution ot the animal fluids, and establishing digestion on a sound basis. Not only is fever and ague prevented, hut the worst types of the disease are conqueredby it. such is the only conclusion to be drawn from the overwhelming evidence in its favor. It. is equally efHcacloui It! dyspesia, constipation, liver complaint, general debility and rheumatic complaint und is a reliable diuretic and nervine. Tho Annuals Have Come. A large consignment of the Annual Illustrated Herald has arrived. Parties desiring it can be supplied in quantities to suit at the Herald business office. Send it to your eastern friends. It will be more valued than a letter. Its wide circulation will materially benefit this section. There are forty-eight pages of information about Southern California, and fifty fine illustrations. Opening. Mrs. H. A. Thomas, the popular modiste, having \ejurned from New York, is prepared to receive her friends and patrons on Monday, the 22d. She will display a full line of novelties and the latest New York styles. Room 77, Phillips block. 9-20-2t Voters, Attention! We have entered the campaign fully prepared to encounter a lively season. Bee our perfect titling sacks and frocks for young and old. Mullen, Bluett & Co. St. The Schools Will Soon Open. Now is the time to get your boy one of our well made suits at $3, $0.50 and $4. Go to Mullen, Bluett & Co. for re liable goods. 3t. All kinds of imported cheese at H. Jevuc's. A Mental Phonomenon. " ~~ A famous specialist in nervous disease* recently spent an evening with me. I asked him if ho had ever come into con tact with mental phenomena that science could not explain. Ho answered: Yes, I had a very curious experience not long ago. I was on my way to Washing ton, and had made the acquaintance in the smoking compartment of two cultivated men whose conversation was extremely en tertaining. Tho talk turned upon mind reading, and one of my companions pro posed an experiment. I left the compart ment and walked to tho other end of the car. On my return my friends informed me that they had chosen a woman's name and would will mo to guess it. We took hold of hands and sat silent for a time. Gradually irry mind became a blank. I could not concentrate my thoughts and a nervous twitching affected my muscles. Pretty soon a name come into my head. I glanced at my companions. They were eying me attentively. As though influ enced by an irresistible power I faltered out: "Edna Dorr." "That's it," they cried in chorus. "That was the name we had selected." On my return to New York I found the name of Edna Dorr constantly in my mind. I had never heard it before, and did not know whether it was the name of a living being or simply tho product of the experi menters' fancy. Whatever it was it haunted me. I really felt annoyed at my weakness. I began to fear that I had over worked and was in danger of nervous pros tration. One night some weeks later I was called to examine a critical case at a well known hospital. I found that the patient, a young woman, had been fatally shot in a resort on the Bowery. She was dying when I reached her side. Her face boro the marks of refinement and beauty, but a life of dissipation had almost obliterated them. I bent toward her, for I saw that her end was at hand. "What is your real name?" I asked, knowing that in death sho would tell the truth. "Edna Dorr," she answered. In another moment she was dead. That is tho whole case. Who she was or how my traveling companions happened to select her name I know not. Queor, wasn't it?— New York World. The Population of Africa. And under the name of the Independent State of Congo its government was organ ized after the most approved methods of Belgian administration, and it entered fully equipped into the family of nations. There is within its area, which, as said, is thirty-three times that of Belgium, a popu lation of 450 whites, about one-half state officials and employes, and the estimated number of natives within its borders is about 40,000,000; and in the whole Congo basin is estimated at about 50,000,000. Africa is about three times the area of Europe, or 12,000,000 square miles, and some writers estimate it to contain about an equal population—32s,ooo,ooo souls. Tho enormous trade developing there comes mainly from the narrow sel vage which separates the mountains from the sea. It is a great basin, composed of plateaus, gradually ascending to 7,000 feet at some of the central lakes. It has four great river systems. On the west the Con go, second only to the Amazon in" tho Volume of its waters, and the Niger; on the north tho Nile; on the east the Zambesi. These rivers once formed vast internal seas, which finally breaking through the mountain barriers have descended by cataracts aud canyons to the ocean, leaving great areas of rich deposits of wonderful fertility.—Col. Henry Sauford in Forum Fugnacity of the Fox Terrier. A walk with a fox terrier as a companion can never be wholly without incident. There will be, unless a great amount of care is exercised, at least one fight, and if the owner likes he can without violent ex ertion promote several. Whether the dog's antagonist be a mastiff or a tiny toy ter rier it is all the same to him, his dispo sition being much like that of the Irish man who. hearing a noise in the street, sent his little girl to inquire its meaning and to say that "if there was going to be a row, father wanted to bo in it." Severe lessons and lacerations seem to lie entirely without effect, and the terrier is sure to go a second time at the bulldog who has all but con verted him into a corpse.—New York Tri bune. Scrap Books. I find that a very cheap scrap book can be made out of old government reports; they are just wide enough for two columns of the ordinary newspaper. Cut out about twenty pages after each fifty. Then the book will be tilled to its proper size again wheu the clippings are pasted in. Be sure to use only one side of the page in making the scrap book. Label your book when it is finished. An index can be easily at tached in each book.—Cor. Author and Writer. To Keep a Nosegay Fresh. "I can tell you how to cross tho Atlantic with a fresh carnation In your buttonhole," said an experienced traveler to me tho other day. His recipe was to start the voyage with two carnations and a raw po tato. The carnations aro to be worn on al ternate days, and each when not ornament ing the buttonhole is to be firmly thrust into a hole in the potato. At tho end of the week at lea/it one of them will still be fresh enough to excite the surprise of fel low passengers.—New York Star. WHY DID II 1J GO? A St. I,oni h Merchant's Trip to the Post ofilce, and the Itesult. California's last si a tion is beginning to take hold of St. Louis, J. v. S. Barrett, the commission merchant of 122 and 124 North Commercial Street, was one of the first to test Joy's Vegetable Sarsaparilla iv sick headaches. Its effect was such a gratifying surprise that he went over to the postoffice and told his friend, Thos. P. Culkin, the superintendent of the registry division, who was aUo worried with headaches, about it. The following letter de tails his friend's experience also: — Postoffice, St. Louis, Feb. 20,1890. J. V. S. Barrktt, Esq.:— De.ir Sir: You ask me. Did I act on your ad vice V I did, cud am glad to bave to thank yoa for it. For years I have suffered from iudigea tion aud headaches. Taking yourad\*iee, I pur chased a bottle of Joy's Vegetable Sarsaparilla Before I had finished the first bottle I could eat almost anything with impunity, and have been since rnrtly troubled with a headache of any kind, for which I give due credit to your ad vice and Joy's Vegetable. Sarsaparilla. Yours, etc., THOS. P. CULKIN Superintendent Registry Division, Postoffice. The Annuals Have Come. A large consignment of tlie Annual Illustrated Herald lias arrived. Parties desiring it can be supplied in quantities to suit at the Hkrald business oilice. Send it to your eastern friends. It will be more valued than a letter. Its wide circulation will materially benefit this section. There are forty-eight pages of information about Southern California, and fifty tine illustrations. This Week! This Week! This Week! Watch our show windows for the finest display of children's clothing ever made In Los" Angeles. They delight the eye, and what is better, they will bear the closest inspection as to quality and prices. Visit Mullen, Bluett & Co. 3t. WITH LOVE AWAY. I cannot write, I cannot play, There's nothing left worth while to say; The house is empty, dull and cold; I feel as if I were growing old— My love's away.J The clock ticks on like solemn fate. Its hands but point to the hour of eight; Hut time goes by on leaden feet; * There's nothing left worth having, sweet, With Jove away; i restless wander to and fro. My footsteps echoing as I go; Tin- soul of music all has tied, Ami every grace and joy seems dead When love's away, Oil. Love! dear Love! bring back to me My heart and soul that went with thee. Hring buck thyself, my day, my light, Let no more fall so black a" night, With love away. —Frances R. Hnswin. The Annuals Have Come. A large consignment of the Annual Illustrated Herald has arrived. Parties desiring it can be supplied in quantities to suit at tbe Herald business office. Send it to youi eastern friends. It will be more valued than a letter. Its wide circulation will materially benefit this section. There are forty-eight pages of information about Southern California, and fifty fine illustrations. Mr. G. W. Sutherland, a druggist in the town of Colfax, state of Washing ton, keeps in stock all of the leading medicines for the throat and lung dis eases, but says he sells more of Cham berlain's Cough Remedy than any other anil has never heard a complaint lrom anyone. This Remedy gives en tire satisfaction, because it can always be depended upon. It is popular be cause it never disappoints and because it is plesant to take. Let anyone af flicted with a severe cold or other throat or lung troubles, give it a trial and he will realize for himself what a valuable medicine it is, and learn why it is so popular. For sale at 50 cents per bottle by C. F. Heinzeman. 222 N. Main street" John A. Off, cor. 4th and Spring streets, and all leading drug gists. Bear in mind that St. Patrick's Pills not only physic, but cleanse the whole system and regulate the liver and bowls. A dose at bed-time is suf ficient. For sale by C. F. Heinzeman, 222 N. Main street. ' John A. Off, 4th and Spring streets, and all leading druggists. St. Patrick's Pills are liked because they are reliable ; because they produce a pleasant cathartic effect; because they conect bilious disorders and because they are as near perfect as they can possibly be made. For sale by C. F. Heinzeman, 222 N. Main street. John A. Off, 4th and Spring streets, and all leading druggists. A Recommendation. I, the undersigned, being dangerously ill, applied to Dr. Mtug Chow and was restored to perfect health, nnd therefore desire all my friends to be informed in reference to Dr. Mtug Chow, that his reputation be not con cealed; and advise all afflicted ones to repair to Dr. Mtug Chow's oilice at No. 041 Upper Main street nnd he cured LooNU HING. July 15th, 1890. When purchasing teas or coffees, do not look for a chromo or a six cent pickle dish to go with it, but go to H. Jevne's grocery house, where pure teas and cof fees at proper values can always be had, 101 l and 138 north Spring street. The Herald Job Office is now better prepared to turn out first-class job print ing than ever. Give us a call wben in need of printing of any description. The Los Angeles Soda Works. 11. W. Stoll & Co., proprietors, 509 Commer cial street, uses only the celebrated Poland Rock Natural Mineral Water for the manufac ture of nil carbonated drinks. Cull for their Soda, Selzer, Ginger Ale nnd Sarsaparilla nnd Iron All goods are of the finest quality, and for purity and flavor Ban not be excelled." Look Young! Prevent tendency to Wrinkles or ageing of the skin by using LEACBELLEOIL. Preserves a youth ful, plump, fresh condition of the features. Prevents withering of the skin, drying up of the flesh. Prevents Hubbiness. Breveiitschapping, cracking. Keeps skill soITT smooth. $1.00, Druggists, or prepaid by express on receipt oi $1.00. c. s. Wei.sb, Jersey City, N. J. ■'BOUGH ON WORMS." Sure Cure. 25c. The Exchange Saloon. Neatest resort in the city, excellent hot lunch served from 11 to 2 oclock daily. 228 South Spring street, opposite L. A. Theatre. Telephone6oß. ROBT. KERN, Manager. Our Home Brew. Philadelphia Lager, fresh from the brewery, on draught in all the principal saloons, de livered promptly iv bottles or kegs. Office aud Brewery, 238 Aliso street. Telephone 01. Don't buy stale roasted coffees, when you can always And it fresh from the r*aster at H. Jevne's, 136 and 13S North Spring street. For Durability and Beauty, House owners should insist on having their painters use only the Sherwin-Williams paints, for sale by P *H. Mathews, cor. Second and Main. California Vinegar and Pickle Works, Telephone No. 359, Removed to 555 Running street, opposite soap factory, near Alameda nnd First streets, one half block from electric light works. Highland unsweetened Condensed Milk diluted with either fresh dairy milk or water according to directions makes an excellent and inexpensive cream. Thrifty and economical housekeepers will find a gr'ocerv store to their likingat 11. Jevne's, 130und 138 North Bpring Btreet, Highland Unsweetened Condensed Milk is delicious for tabic use and all culinary purposes Dilute it either with fresh dairy mila or water Senour's prepared Moor paint dries over night Try it. For sale by J. M. Blackburn A Co., 418 S. Sprlagstreet. uu24-3m Bakery. Ebhtger's bakery and ice cream and dining parlors, cor. Third and S. Spring sts. Make your own cream from Highland Un sweetened Condensed Milk. It is delicious economical aud does not sour. Granula, the great health food, for sale by all grocers. Highland Unsweetened Condensed Milk im parts to coffee a richness and delicious flavor never obtained by dairy cream. Ask your grocer for Highland Unsweetened Condensed Milk. Delicious for coffee, fruits, ice cream, deserts, etc. Buy a can of Highland Unsweetened Condensed Milk, use it according to directions, and you will be delighted. Good coffee necessitates good cream. Use Highland Unsweetened Condensed Milk aud you have the best. ' No more trouble about fresh cream if you use Highland Unsweetened Condensed Milk. Ask your grocer for it. Physicians recommend Highland Un sweetened Condensed Milk for infant feeding and general use. Consult your physician concerning the merits of Highland Unsweetened Condensed Milk as a food for infants. ■ Did you ever try ice cream made from High land Unsweetened Condensed Milk? It's ex cellent. . Do not be disappointed with sour cream, but use Highland Unsweetened Condensed Milk instead. HEATH et MILLIGAN Prepared Paint at Scriver & Quinn, 140 S. Main street. Paints, Oils and Glass, Corner Second and Main. P. H.Mathews. Tents and wagon umbrellas at Foy's Baddlery house, 315 N. Los Angeles street. Senour's Celebrated Floor Paint At Scriver & Quinn, 140 South Main street. Frank X. Engler. Piano regulator and tuner, 110 S. Olive St. Manioca, for puddings, at Jevne's, For fifteen years I was afflicted with rhru matisrp,four yearsol which I wascompellac to go on crutches. Words arc Inadequate to express the suffering 1 endured during that time. During these fifteen years of exis tence ,'itwns not living), I tried every known remedy Without receiving any beneiit. I flnallv began on swift's Specific (8. s. s. . which from the lirst gave me relief, and to day 1 am enjoying the best of health, and am a weli man. I candidly believe that S. S. s. is ihe blood purifier on the market to day, J, JJ. TA YLOR, Cuba, Mo. Treatise or Blood and Skin Diseases maii edfroe. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. Atlanta Ga EDUCATIONAL. HAKVAKD GRAMMAB A ND COLbSGIATE SCHOOL For Boj-s and Girls Ul4-020 South llii.i. Stkeet. School opens Monduv, Sept. 15th. Same will consist of Primary, Grammar and Collegiate Departments. A. E. Schi i.te, General Manager, H. S. Litnt, Head of Collegiate Department, O. BIRDSALL, Master of Matliematics.*!)-14-lm ANGELES BAPTIST UNIVERSITY. Devoted to Christianity and culture. Healthlul, retired and beautiful location just outside the city limits on the west, between Temple and Seventh street cable cars. Preparatory, collegiate and elective courses. Military and calisthenic drills. Modern languages, elocu tion and art, special. Best music courses. Bus free for students to and from cable cars. Now C. ESTERLY, President. au22-lm P. 0. Box 2893. ST. HILDA'S HALL i * ■ •■-^■'Stf 4 -- ,s*^a^r^'^ s ' GLENDALE. Boarding and day school for girls, will re-open SEPTEMBER 10th. Faculty increased, terms reduced. Thorough instruction ln all departments, Pri mary, Collegiate. Business, Especially strong Musical faculty Circulars at Booksellers und at room 35, California Bank building. Address, Rev. J. D Eastkk, D. D. nui9lm Mason, I' O. LUMUKK YAKD CLARK & HUMPHREYS DEALERS IN ALL KINDS 0E LUMBER YARD: [ San Mateo and Seventh-street Bridge. General Business Office—l2s West Becond S, Burdick Block. P. O. Box 1235. Telephone 178. mls-3m Kerekhoff-Cuzner MILL AND LUMBER CO., WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. Main Office: LOS ANGELES. Wholesale Yard at SAN PEDRO. . Branch Yards—Pomona, Pasadena, Lamanda, Azusa, Burhank. Planing Mills—Los Angeles and Pomona. Cargoes furnished to order. IH LIBER CO. YARD: Corner Siutli and San Pedro Streets. LUIHBES of all classes can be had at this yard. ui6 tf J. M. Griffith, President. H. G. Stevenson, Vice-Pres. and Trea«. T. E. Nichols, Secy. E. L. Chandler, Supt J. M. GRIFFITH COMPANY, Lumber Dealers And Manufacturers of DOGiIS, WINDOWS, BLINDS, STAIRS, Mill work of every description. 9 034 N. Alameda Street, Los Angeles. iul tf PERRY, MOTT 6c COS LUMBER YARDS AND PLANING MILLS, No. 76 Commercial Street. jul tf F. HANIMAN, Telephone 188. P. 0. Box 537. LOS ANGELES FISHING COMPANY, Wholesale and retail dealers in FISH, GAME AND POULTRY All kinds of OYSTERS always on hand. Stalls 8, 11,13, Hi, 18 and 20, Mott Market, Los Angeles, Cal. mlB-5m J A Leading feature Si j 5 THE CENTURY MAGAZINE \ _ during the coming year will b« a brilliant _ 0 series of illustrated articles on # 4 THE GOLD HUNTERS OF S A CALIFORNIA. d _ The Century costs $4.00 a year. News- _ W dealers and postmasters take subscriptions. W ■ — C. F. HEINZEMAN, Druggist & Chemist No. 123 N. Main St., Los Augeles, Cal. Prescriptions carefully compounaed day and uieht. m2l-tf Joe B 131 North Anoeles,Cal. 3 MERCHANT TAILORS. OIMPSON'S FINE TAILORING PARLORS. Los Angeles Theatre Building, up stairs. Telephone 284. JOE POHEIM THE TAILOR, litis just received an immense stock of Fall and Winter Woolens and is making Suits to order at 40 percent less than any other Tailor on the Pacific Coast. Elegant English Serge and Cheviot Suits, to order, from *25 to 535 Fine Dress English Worsted Suits, to order, from *.!(> to »40> (Cost elsewhere from $55 to $75) Fine French Beaver ami Pique Suits, to order, from «35t0545 (Cost elsewhere $00.00 to $90.00). French Casaimere Suits, to order, from »35 to *45 Overcoats, fine Silk Linings, from »*5 to SaO And other garments in proportion. Perfect Bt and best of workmanship guaranteed or no sale. Rules of self-measurement and samples of cloth sent free to any address, or application to JOE POHEIM, The Tailor, L4l and 143 S. Spring Street, LOS ANGELES. DENTISTS. Removed to 208 N. Main St. opposite Temple Block, Rooms 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 aud 6. FILLINGS. Gold filling $2.00t0510.00 (iold alloy filling 1.50 to 5.00 White fillings for front teeth 1.00 to 2,00 Silver or amalgam filling 1.00 CEOWN AND BRIDGE WORK. Gold and porcelain crowns $ 5.00 to $1000 Teeth with no plate 10.00 to 15.00 ARTIFICIAL TEETH. Gold plates, best grade $30.00 to $40.00 Silver plates, best grade $20.00 to 30.00 Rubber plates, best grade 10.00 Rubber plates, 2d grade 8.00 Rubber plates, 3d grade 0.00 EXTRACTING TEETH. With vitalized air or gas $1.00 With cocaine applied to gums I.o© Regular extracting 50 Regulating and treating teeth and gums and all other operations known to dentistry at lowest prices. All work guaranteed. Office hours from Ba. in. to 5:30 p. m. Sundays 10 to 12 a. m, — 1 ——» f 1 A TPPT All W. J). DougW Shoes are uAU 11UPI warranted, and every pair has his name and price stamped T i notion. $3 SHOE GENTLEMEN. Fine Calf and Laced Waterproof Grain. The excellence and wearing qualities of this shoe cannot be better shown than by the strong endorse ments of Its thousands ot constant wearers. Sf-.00 Genuine II nnd-sewed, an elegant and O stylish dress Shoe which commends itself. $4 .CO Hana-aewed Welt. A line calf Shoo *> unequalled for style and durability. $0.50 Goodyear Welt Is the standard dress O Shoe, at a popular price. $4.50 Policeman's Shoe is "specially adapted O for railroad men, furmers, etc. All made lv Congress, Hutton und Lace. $3 & $2 SHOES LADIES, have been most favorably received since Introduced and the recent Improvements make them superior to any sho.-s sold at th. s" prices. Ask your Dealer, and if he cannot supply you send direct to factory enclosing advertised price, or a postal for order blanks. W. L. (MX CMS, Brockton, Mass. MASSACHUSETS Boot | Shoe House, Sole Agents for Los Angeles, fcl-5m 120 WEST FIRST ST. . A. HENDERSON, WM. F. MARSHALL, President. Secretary. J. R. SMI RR. Vice President and Treasurer. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA LUMBER CO. 350 East First Street. 9-19-5 m Los Angeles, California. Notice to the Ladies. The Grand Opening of the Paris Pattern. Hats and Bonnets, and Imported Novelties, will take place at MME. D. GOTTHELF'S, Saturday. Sept. 20th. and tbe following Mon duy and Tuesday. Nocards. 919 1m PIONEER TRUCK CO., (Successors to McLain & Lehman,) PROPRIETORS OF THE Pioneer Truck & Transfer Co. Piano and Safe Moving a Specialty. Telephone 187. 3 Market St. Los Angeles CaL lei-I f