Newspaper Page Text
4
DAILY HERALD.
PUBLISHED
SEVEN DAYS A WEEK.
Joseph D. Lynch. James J. Ayers.
AVERS & LYNCH, - - PUBLISHERS.
I Entered at the postofflce at Los Angeles as
second-class matter.]
DELIVERED BY CARRIERS
At 20c Per Week, or 80c Per Month
" TBRXS BY MAIL, INCLUDING POSTAGE:
Daily Herald, one year $8.00
Daily Herald, six months 4.25
Daily Herald, three months 2.25
Weekly Herald, one year 2.00
Weekly Herald, six months 1.00
Weekly Herald, three months 60
Illustrated Herald, per copy 15
6mce of Publication, 223-225 West Second
street Telephone 156.
Democratic State Ticket.
(Election, Tuesday, November 4,1890.)
FOR GOVERNOR,
EDWARD B. POND, San Francisco.
FOR LIEUTENANT-GOVERNOR,
B. F. DEL VALLE Los Angeles.
FOR SECRETARY OF STATE,
W.C. HENDRICKS Incumbent
FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL.
WALKER C. GRAVES San Francisco.
FOR SURVEYOR GENERAL.
STANLEY C. BOOM Humboldt.
FOR STATE COMPTROLLER,
JOHN P. DUNN Incumbent.
FOR TREASURER,
ADAJM HE&OLD Incumbent,
FSR CHIEF JUSTICE,
JOHN A. STANLEY Alameda.
FOR ASSOCIATE JUSTICES,
GEORGE H. SMITH Los Angeles,
JAMES V. COFFEY San Francisco.
JACKSON HATCH, (short term) San Jose.
CLERK OF SUPREME COURT,
J. D. SPENCER Incumbent.
SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION,
H. CLAY HALL San Mateo.
District Nominations.
FOR CONGRESSMAN FROM SIXTH DISTRICT.
W. J. CURTIS San Bernardino
RAILROAD COMMISSIONER—THIRD DISTRICT,
LAWRENCE ARCHER . Santa Clara.
BOARD OF EQUALIZATION—FOURTH DISTRICT.
JOHN T. GAFFEY Los Angeles.
County Ticket.
F. H. HOWARD, Superior Judge.... Los Angeles
MAX LOEWENTHAL, "
W. 8. KNOTT, . " Pasadena
F.D. JOY, " Pomona
W. U. MASTERS, County Clerk Pasadena
ED. D. GIBSON, Sheriff. Xl Monte
M. E. C. MUNDAY, District Atty... Los Angeles
DR. JOSEPH KURTZ, Treasurer ..
W. N. FORKER, Auditor Newhall
R. BILDERRAIN, Assessor Los Angeles
B. 8. EATON, Tax Collector Pasadena
J. N. PEMBERTON, Supt. of Schools... .Vernon
W. 8. WATERS, Administrator Los Angeles
DR. H. NADEAU, Coroner "
L. FRIEL, Surveyor Redondo
L. M GRIDER, Recorder Downev
W T. MARTIN, Supervisor Ist Dist ..Pomona
T. E. ROWAN, " 3d " Los Angeles
8.1. MAYO, " sth "
LEGISLATIVE NOMINATIONS.
JNO.WOLFSKILL, State Senator.. Santa Monica
A.M.BRAGG,Assemblyman 7(ith Dist., Compton
J. R. MATTHEWS, " 77th "Los Angeles
HENRY B. WE3TERMAN, 78th " Pomona
TOWNSHIP NOMINATIONS.
Justice Los Angeles Township. .W.CRAWFORD
Constable " " D. F. FDJUCANE
" " " ..C.E.ROBERTS
CITY JUSTICES.
R. W. READY. W. P. HYATT.
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19. 1890.
CAUGHT IN THE TOILS.
The Herald has had but one feeling,
and it waa that of unqualified regret,
that the course of the leaders of the Re
publican party has made it necessary
that we should strip the mask from
Markham. He has shown little wisdom
in the present campaign, but he capped
the climax of fatuity in the follow ing,
which we take from the Examiner of
the 16th inst:
An Examiner reporter informed Col
onel Markham yesterday that the letter
had become public property, and asked
him if he desired to make any statement
for publication in connection with it.
"Only this," he replied, "that no such
letter was ever written. I never had oc
casion to write such a letter, and I never
did an unnatural thing in my life."
"I refer, colonel, to the letter that
was used in the trial of the Oro Grande
case in Los suggested the re
porter,
"I aril aware of the alleged letter you
refer to. This whole thing was gone
over in my previous campaign, and I
offered then, as I do now, $1000 for the
production of that letter, and I think
that would have brought it out if any
such letter existed. This man, Hallock,
of course, was interested and mixed up
in that case, but he never had any such
letter. If the Democratic state central
committee is in possession of any such
letter with my signature attached it is a
fixed-up matter—it is a forgery—for I
never put pen to paper in the manner
alleged."
"That is your statement in response to
the document?"
"Yes, that is about all; I believe it
fully covers the ground when I say that
any such letter is a forgery."
In the above interview Col. H. H.
Markham says: "This whole thing was
"gone over in my previous campaign,
"and I offered then, as I do now, $1000
"for the production of that letter, and I
"think that would have brought it out
"if any such letter existed." "My pre
"vious campaign" evidently refers to
his congressional campaign, in 1884. It
is an incontrovertible fact that the letter
referred to waa entirely unknown to the
California public in 1884. The first
time it became known to the public, or
was used for any purpose, was in the
trial of the Hallock vs. Markham case
in 1887. It was then used and
brought out in the trial, without
either aide thinking of its political
bearing. It is most remarkable that
Col. Markham should have denied its
authenticity, when every word is in his
own handwriting, and the details that it
contains are about the business concern
ing which he waa then in Milwaukt c.
In the letter he says: "Can yon drop a
"letter to Ike James telling him that I
"will bring the money to pay him, and
"to get the amount, etc.; also a release
"of the mortgage, or would you try the
"plan of having some one buy the
"mortgage? As we once talked of, I
"feel that he has been kind to us, that
"we want to do by him what is right.
"Think over it, and do as you think
"beet. If I thought he would aell the
"mortgage for much off to some one else,
"we of course, would be glad of the dis
"count, and might aa well have it as
"any one else."
The evidence in the Hallock case
shows that this mortgage was for some
$10,000, which Colonel Markham bad
induced Ike James to loan the Oro
THE LOS ANGELES HERALD: SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 19, 1890.
Grande company. Yet here we find
him advising the buying up of this hon
est debt at a discount—at a time
when he had in his hands the money to
pay it. This detail also undoubtedly'
shows the genuineness of the letter.
Who had any interest, in 1887, to forge
such a letter? The contents of the let
ter show all the elements of genuineness
—to say nothing of the handwriting.
If Colonel Markham had been well
advised he would never have permitted
himself to deny the authenticity of the
Hallock pro-Chinese letter. If he had
had possession of an intelligence which
has been keen enough to enable him to
get away with his business partners in
mining deals, he would have taken the
position which the clear-sighted Chron
icle assumed for him, viz.: that when
he wrote that document, away back in
1881, he was an eastern man, with east
ern ideas about labor. He could even
better have afforded to have taken the
attitude of the Los Angeles Times,
which was short and brutal, but to the
point, and which took the epigrammatic,
form that the Irish vote in California
was not large anyhow, and that very
little of it would be cast in any event
for the Republican party.
As to his willingness to subject his
friend in need, Ike James, to a discount
on his mortgage, our readers will form
their own opinions.
A POLITICAL DR. JEKYLL AND MR.
HYDE.
The revelations which have rJeen
made of Colonel Markham's actual per
sonality contrast most painfully with
the theretofore received estimates of his
character. Before he was nominated
the Republicans of the northern and
central counties particularly had an
idea that some great orator and states
man had been lying perdu in Los An
geles county, available for a providential
conjuncture. Thsir surprise was great
when they realized the manner of man
their candidate was. When Markham
got off his extraordinary speeches they
consoled themselves with the thought
that, though they were poor stuff, and
his ideas were of the Simple Simon or
der, nevertheless he was a man of in
tegrity, with a flawless record. His
sweet snirles they accepted as an evi
dence of his ingenuousness.
Now comes the revelation that the
southern paragon is in reality not only a
poor talker and a worse thinker, but that
he is a slippery and unscrupulous busi
ness man. They realize with unspeak
able disgust that his mining associates
say that he swindled them, and those
who have taken the trouble to investi
gate the matter know that this is true.
They are obliged to admit that in his
business correspondence with his cronies
Col. Markham writes much as Fagin
would have been supposed to dictate to
Oliver Twist.
In his public walk of life the Republi
can standard-bearer was suave, self-
respecting, observant of the laws of his
country and in line with the churches.
Nothing but God-fearing utterances and
demeanor characterized his daily life.
If he had been reported as using a
"cuss" word of the mildest description
his horror would have been unuttera
ble. He would have held up his hands
in holy horror, and his associates would
have drawn back affrighted. In all his
open acts he was godly and decorous.
When it comes to abusing fiduciary
relations to the undoing of his partners,
however, we find a melancholy change.
In adopting the methods of a sharper he
naturally drops into the language of a
rounder. When he develops to Hal
lock the idea of getting the best of Ike
James, his benefactor, he writes like an
habitue of Tar Flat or Barbary Coast.
Have we not here a remarkable polit
ical verisimilitude to Dr. Jekvll and
Mr. Hyde?
MARKHAM THE ENEMY OF ORGANIZED
LABOR.
The Evening Express, the other day,
contained a letter from Mr. Markham
to Mr. H. Z. Osborne denying the truth
of an affidavit which had been made by
Mr. W. B. Rogers, in which the latter
said that the Republican candidate for
governor had expressed hostility to the
Typographical Union and other trade
organizations. We were waited upon by
Mr. Rogers yesterday, and that gentle
man exhibited to us credentials
of the first character from his
former home in Little liock, Arkan
sas. He made, at the same time, a plain
and straightforward statement of the
facts upon which his affidavit was based.
The East San Gabriel Land and Water
company, of which Col. Markham was
one of the principal stockholders, had
conceived the idea of starting a weekly
paper to advance the claims of their
settlement. Mr. Rogers was at
that time working in the Times
composing room, and thought he
saw a favorable business opening.
He therefore waited upon Col. Mark
ham at his residence at Pasadena. That
gentleman and his brother had just re
turned from a hunting expedition. Mr.
Rogers was informed that he was too
late, and Col. Markham expressed re
gret at this because he (Rogers)
hailed from the office of the Times,
Daring the course of the conversation
Col. Markham asked if Rogers was a
member of the Printers' Union. Re
ceiving an affirmative reply, the Repub
lican candidate went off into a little
disquisition, in which he said that any
man who belonged to the Printers'
Union or any other labor organization
was lost to all manhood, that every tub
should stand on its own bottom, and
more to the same purport.
On inquiry we find that Mr. Rogers is
a member, in good standing, of the Los
Angeles Typographical Union, that his
character is good—as good, or rather,
better than Markham's, because it has
never been questioned in a court of law,
nor has he had associations with busi
ness partners that have been a matter
of excited public discussion. We are,
therefore, obliged to accept his sworn
statement as true-, and to brand Colonel
Markham as the enemy of organized
labor.
TIMES CHANGES.
The leading Republican paper in this
city and the organ of solid beliefs and
personal goodness—the paper in ques
tion has often admitted this, and we are
not, therefore, called upon to prove it—
not long ago, when it was free and un
trammeled, published a short editorial,
in which it said:
Strikes are once more becoming num
erous throughout the country. The
question of how capital and labor can be
reconciled is a most difficult one, de
manding the earnest attention of states
men and philanthropists. It is not a
question of party or nationality, but of
humanity and of the world. At present,
it cannot be denied that, even in this'
great, free and wealthy country, the
rich, as a rule, are growing richer, and
the poor poorer. This state of affairs
gives advocates of anarchy and disorder
a hold which they would not otherwise
have.
This was on March 23d last, and the
office boy distinctly recollects that the
editor was at his desk and in the enjoy
ment of his usual robust health. The
Republican party had been in power
over a quarter of a century when this
was written, on March 23d, and yet one
of its champions and organs felt com
pelled to break out with these tremen
dous words: "'lt cannot be denied that
the ricli are getting richer and the poor
poorer," though we have a "great, free
and wealthy country," and the Republi
can party has full charge of it.
On March 23. 1890. a great editor,
stung almost to frenzy at sight of the
people's wrongs, flung from his impa
patieut pen point these burning words.
Today this giant, shriveled by a fatal
political atrophy, is shorn of his
strength, and is helpless in the toils of
his party. The lion and the sacrificial
lamb have come together, and a little
blue-eyed boy of destiny is leading them.
There are not wanting indications
that the Stanford sack is, if not under
way, about to get a move on to itself.
The former lack lustre eyes of the gen
tlemen of the Oro Fino club are begin
ning to show a slight animation. Like
the scriptural war horse, they snuff the
battle from afar, and they are ready
to shout "Ha ha" the moment the sack
opens its mouth. Yea, verily, they will
not be without their reward!
Stamboul yesterday lowered his time
at Napa to 2:11 Vo , which is the fastest
mile ever made by a stallion on a circu
lar track. There was aIBO a great event
yesterday at Agricultural park, the fast
est two miles ever run by a three year
old, being made in 3:301;.. Stamboul is
a Los Angeles horse born and bred,
and he was sold by L. J. Rose to Mr.
W. S. Hobart, the mining millionaire,
for $50,000.
Judge Jackson Hatch, during his
late visit to Los Angeles, left a most
agreeable impression upon our people.
This young and able jurist would do
honor to the supreme bench. His per
sonal popularity and merit both reach
the superlative degree.
Blunted His Dignity.
Fonntaine, of Narford, is a name of
worthy associations in the minds of Nor
folk men, and one which must be famil
iar to all readers of Swift's correspond
ence, but its present holder's latest
achievement has certainly not added
anything to its luster. Mr. Fonntaine,
of Narford Hall, is a justice of the peace,
deputy lieutenant and master of the
West Norfolk foxhounds, and he appears
to have been .under the impression that
these accumulated dignities entitled him
to the privilege of having an express
train stopped whenever he pleased for
his especial convenience.
The station master at the little station
of Eastwinch not seeing things in this
light, Mr. Fountaine stepped out at once
upon the four foot way, and by gesticu
lating and throwing his arms aloft con
trived to stop the train for himself. The
driver not unnaturally inferred that
something serious was the matter until
he pulled up, on which Mr. Fountaine
coolly climbed into a first class carriage
and gave the word to proceed. This
curious escapade has imposed on the
magistrates of the Swaffham quarter
sessions the painful duty of fining a
brother justice and deputy lieutenant
£25, and binding him over to keep the
peace. The punishment cannot be said
to err on the side of severity.—London
>News.
A Neat Kick.
"Isn't ice very high just now, Mrs.
Codhooker?" inquired the young gentle
man boarder anxiously of the landlady
at breakfast.
"I should say it was," she gushed.
"My ice bills are so frightful I don't
know which way to turn to meet them."
"I was going to say," responded the
young gentleman boarder hesitatingly,
"that these boiled eggs are so cold they
would keep meat."—New York Tribune.
Jupiter and Venus.
Jupiter is the evening star, and exceeds
in radiant light every other star in the
heavens excepting Venus, while he has
the advantage of his rival in remaining
much longer above the horizon, as well
as in shining from the dark background
of the midnight sky. Jupiter is not in
the most favorable conditions for ob
servation, for he is receding from the
earth, and like Venus is low down in
the south.—Youth's Companion.
A Vegetable Wonder.
A remarkable vegetable or horticul
tural curiosity is to be exhibited at the
next state fair in California Several
weeks ago a grapevine growing in close
proximity to an apple tree was found to
have a bloom similar to those on the
tree. Finally a handsome apple has de
veloped, which will be exhibited as
above mentioned as proof of an abnor
mal growth, which seems to be natural
grafting.—St Louis Republic.
Mass meeting of worklngmen assembled at
the well known house of Mullen, Bluett & Co.,
to discuss the superior quality of their business
suits at «8 and »10. St
It Is a Boy,
And he wears a school suit, bought of Mullen,
Bluett & Co. It is true it is a splendid article,
but only cost $5.
Try "Pride of the Family" soap.
HEATH A MJLLIGAN Prepared Paint at
Scriver & Quinn, 140 S. Uain street.
WINEBURGH'S.
We study to please our customers.
One satisfied customer is better than ten
dissatisfied ones. It can't be done by
marking one or two articles away down
and charging good round prices for the
balance. We mark everything at reasona
bly low prices. You will save money by
getting our prices before consummating
your purchases. We will place on sale
Monday:
Bargain 1. Marble oil cloths gold and blue
vein, best quality, 20c a yard, 45-inch wide.
Brrgain 3. 33-lnohgrtlk furniture plush, best
colors, i)oc a yard.
[{Bargain S. 18-inch raven black velveteen,
close weave, 25c a yard.
Bargain 4. 50-inch wide all wool ladies'
cloth, In the four best colors, 50c a yard.
Bargain 5. Striped and checked dark colors
outing flannels, 7%c a yard.
Bargain 0. Hed lined cotton-filled good size
bed-comforters, 75c each.
Bargain 7. 10-4 White shaker blankets,
double, $1 a pair.
Ba-gain7. 48x70, heavy grey blanket?, s
pound weight, 110 c each.
Bargain 8. Children's silk plush bonnets,
lace edged, variety of colors, 50c each.
Bargain 9. Ladies' cashmere jockey caps,
cream and all colors, 38c each.
Bargain 10. Ladies' fine silk finished Henri
etta Jersey caps, 53c each.
Bargain 11. Ladies' colored Roman pearl
bead necklaces with metal clasp, 10c each.
Bargain 12. Ladies' Shetland wool shawls in
scarlet, cardinal, cream, black, blue and pink,
50c. each.
Bargain 13. Ladies'cuff kid gauntlet driving
gloves, 90c a pair.
Bargain 14. Oxidized fillagrce work dress
trimming buckles, 15c each.
Bargain 15. Infants' all-wool Sanaa) siinwin,
scolloped and embroidered in cream silk, 85c
each.
Bargain IG. Surah silks, pure silk, all colors,
37'j,c a yard.
Bargain 17. Infants' surah silk and cashmere
embroidered in silk bonnets, 50c each.
Bargain 18. 38-inch raven black silk luster,
fine imported secillian, 35c a yard.
Bargain 19. Infants' long cashmere cloaks,
tan and cream, enibroirderod in silk, $1.85
each.
Bargain 20. Ladies' sateen strip full boned
double brisk, perfect fitting corsets, all sizes,
42c.
Bargain 21. Men's scarlet all-wool medi
cated shirts and drawers, $1.
Cut this ad. out and bring it along. We don't
specify what these goods are worth; we desire to
let you judge for yourselves.
Wineburgh's,
309-311 S. Spring.
Y. M. C. A. Concert.
The Los Angeles Choral society, of
150 voices, with several fine soloists,
will give a grand concert at Pasadena,
Tuesday evening, the 21st inst. A
special train will leave Los Angeles on
the Los Angeles, Pasadena & Giendaie
road, at 7 o'clock p.m., returning from
Pasadena after the concert is over.
Fare for the round trip, 25 cents.
Attention.
If you wish to buy fine old Napa and Sonoma
Zinfandel go to Leou Cordier, South Spring
street.
If you wish to buy pure, unadulterated port,
sherry, angelica and muscatel go to Leon
Cordier, 618 South Spring.
Old Kentucky whiskies and grape brandies
at Leon Cordler'6, 618 South Spring street.
ARMOUR'S
(CHICAGO)
EXTRACT OF BEEF.
Is made exclusively from Prime, Selected Beef.
Armour & Co. killed over (100,000 cattle last
y«4r, 1889, or say, 2,000 for every working day
In'tlie year. Their facilities for selection are
therefore unsurpassed.
By Armour & Co.'s process of manufacture the
life and flavor of the beef are retained and not
burned out.
Professor Haines, of Rush Medical college,
Chicago, having made careful, comparative
analyses of all the Meat Extracts, on the mar
ket, pronounced Armour's the best—standing
first in its physical properties, and in its nutii
tiveand stimulating values.
It Is a fact, that Armour's Extract is relished
by invalids, even when all other forms of
nourishment nauseate.
ARMOUR'S EXTRACT should be in every
household. It is a culinary necessity, taking
tbe place of fresh meat and other stock in soup
making. It is cheaper and more convenient.
As an American Product, it appealsto your
patriotism, as an article of dietetic and thera
peutic value it appeals to the medical profes
sion, and as an aid to good cooking it is worthy
of adoption In your own family.
ARMOUR & CO., Sole Manufacturers.
Chicago.
W. H. MAURICE,
Sole Agent,
10-5-sun-3t SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA.
• 5 CENT DEPOSIT STAMPS.
A New Feature in Savings Bank
Deposits.
The--Security Savings Bank & Trust Co.
At 148 South Main street, has for the past six
months been receiving Children* Deposits in
sums as low as 25 cents and issuing to each de
positor a pass-book.
As an aid to this department of our Savings
Bank and for the purpose of encouraging Small
Savings by all pemons both old aud young, we
have decided to introduce what is known as the
5-CENT DEPOSIT.3TAMR
We will issue a5-cent Stamp, about the size of
a U. S. Government stump, bearing the name of
our Bank. * ' .
To the purchaser of two of these stamps will
be given a blank book containing ten leaves,
each leaf ruled for twenty stamps.
On presentation to the Bouk of one of these
leaves with 20 stamps, a pass book will be is
sued to the depositor showing a deposit of one
dollar, which will at once i egin to bear interest
according to the rules of the bank. Every time
a leaf filled with twenty stamps is presented, a
dollar credit will be entered in the pass-book,
and so on.
In order to facilitate the working of the sys
tem and in order to enable all desiring to avail
themselves of its benefits, to secure the stamps
and blank books we will have agents in various
and convenient parts of the city and county,
who, on the purchase of two or more stamps,
will give to such depositors a blank book. The
aepositor, when he has purchased twenty
stamps and filled one leaf, can send or
bring the same to the£Bankand secure his pass
book.
This 5 cent feature of Savings Deposits has
been successfully operated in many of the Eu
ropean and several of the prosperous and pro
gressive American Savings Banks; notably the
Citizens Savings Bank In Detroit.
Believing that it Is the province of a Savings
Bank to receive and encourage the making of
small deposits by both children and grown
people as well as to receive the larger accounts
of the more well to do, we have decided to
adopt this 5 Cent Stamp Bystem as the simplest
and most effective way of obtaining the end
desired.
We are pleased to announce to the miblic that
in a short time we will publish in" the dally
papers a complete list of our agents of whom
these 5 Cent Stamps and blank books can be ob
tained.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS.
Isaals W. Hellman, Emeline Childs,
H. W. Hellman, Maurice S.Hellman,
S. A. Fleming, V. P., J. A. Graves,
AC. Rogers, T. L. Dnque,
Andrew Bowne, James Rawson.
F.N, MYERS, Pres. J. F. BARTORI, Cas er.
1010-lm
WE LEAD
IN LATEST STYLES, FINEST GOODS AND
-H LOWEST * PRICES *-
We defy Competition. All our Goods are marked in plain figures.
SPECIAL PRICES THIS ►WEEK
_ IN
BB LADIES' UNDERWEAR
We are Headquarters for Dress Goods..
Cin"OFPARIS,
203 to 209 North Spring Street
J^OTICE— LOS ANGELES AND PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY.
Location and prjnclpal place ol business, Los Angeles oitv,.Ca'iforaia. There Is delinquent
upon the following described Stock, on account of assessment loftied September 10, 1890, the
several amounts set opposite tne names oi the respective nimiciiulucrs, as fclliv.s:
S o . r *■ ~
SUBSCRIBKR. || 2| | 0 TOTAL.
1 §S 8« |£
o g 3 -* -<!
£• Barnard 43 54 I $ if 270 00 »~270 00
J. Bennington 82 20 100 00 100 00
R. O. Brewer 194 35 175 00 175 00
C. Cole , 29 100 100 00 500 00 600 00
" 30 100 100 00 500 00 GOO OO
" , 31 133 145 04 133 00 GHS 00 943 04
8. Cole 90 10U 250 00 100 00 500 00 850 (K>
91 50 125 00 50 OO 250 00 425 00
D. F. Donegan 36 50 50 00 250 00 300 00
•' 37 50 50 00 250 00 300 OO
38 50 50 00 250 00 300 00
39 67 67 00 335 00 402 00
76 50 50 00 250 00 300 00
- 30 30 00 150 00 180 00
" 207 100 139 70 100 00 500 00 739 70
208 100 250 00 100 00 500 00 850 OO
209 100 250 00 100 00 500 00 850 00
" 210 50 125 00 50 00 250 00 425 00
Justin Delpont 239 5 5 00 25 00 30 00
2 " 240 5 5 00 25 00 30 00
F. I. Frantz 244 118 590 00 590 00
" 245 146 730 00 730 00
J- Fargo. 182 100 500 00 500 00
A. Gayford 27 133 665 00 665 00
70 117 585 00 585 00
_ ' ••• gj 50 250 00 250 OO
M. E. GarL .itt 54 50 250 00 250 00
H. Garth mi:it 46 54 270 00 270 00
fee...... 243 100 500 00 500 00
8. W. Luitweiler 19 200 1000 00 1000 00
j.w.Madderin . :: J :::::::::::::::::::::::: w % 88 lw i «g
B.P.BWS 32 50 250 00 250 00
_ ' 35 «7 335 00 335 00
Robt. Steere * 22 162 50 110 00 272 50
R.C.Shaw 52 41 VO5 00 205 00
, ' 59 30 150 00 150 00
A -H. Trotter •.. 237 50 250 00 250 00
fit?- Woodhead » 7 35 00 35 00
M. L. Wicks 44 43 215 00 215 00
Jno. Wolfskill * 162 542 50 810 00 1352 50
Jennie L. Wicks 249 200 1000 00 loop qq
"Certificate Unissued.
And in accordance -fkth law and an order of the Board of Directors, made on the 10th of
September, 1890, so many sllares of each parcel of said Stock, as may be necessary, will be sold at
No, 200 N. Los Angeles street, Los Angeles city, on the 29th day of October, 1890, at 11 a. m., of
said day.to pay delinquent assessments thereon: together with costs of advertising and expense of
sal e 10-14-15t F.E. FRANTZ, Secretary.
BARTLETT'S
JEWELRY m MUSIC HOUSE
Has Removed to
129 N. SPRING ST.
NEXT DOOR TO PEOPLES' ©TORE
J. J. SCHALLERT, President. T. W- BROTHERTON, Vice-Pres. J. H. BURKS, Secy. & Treas
Cor. 3d and Spring.
ICE CO.jf-
CAPITAL. — — $100,000. •
DIRECTORS: J. J. Schallert, T. 8. C. Lowe, Geo. R. Shatto, W. L. Packard, T. W Brothertou.
This company will soon be fully equipped to furnish the citizens of Los An
geles solid ice, manufactured from water, free from all impurities. The ice fnr
nished by this company will be absolutely pure, so much so that druggists will use
it instead of the distilled water of commerce.
The Citizens' Company was formed to relieve the impositions of a monopoly,
and they fully intend to do it, and will furnish ice at the lowest rates. Do not
contract with any other company. 9-13-tf
REMOVAL.
T. IT. KLAGES,
(Formerly the OPERA HOUSE JEWELRY STORE)
Has Removed to
NO. 120 WEST FIRST STREET.
Where he will keepup the high standard of goods that has made him justly Celebrated
throughout Southern California, embracing Finest White Diamonds. Spectacles, sterling Gotham
Silverware, Opera Glasses, Jewelry of all kinds, Bronze Ooods, Gold and Silver Watches, Art
Goods, Gold and Silver Cane. Heads, Silver Plated Ware, Fine Table Cutlery, French Clocks Silver
and Plated Spoons, American Clocks. 10-14-lm
131 North
S. H. BUTTERFIELD Art Photographer.
XJJJJIJj Crayen Portraits a Specialty.
315 S. Spring Street. TEMPLE BLOCK GALLEBY
CABINETS. «8 PER DOZEN,