Newspaper Page Text
6 COLD. Cold is refreshing in summer but often terrible in winter. Cold causes more misery than fire j that gets beyond all control. Cold can be insured against as readily as fire and far more effectively. Cold should be carefully attended to when it first makes its appearance. Cold can be checked and all its evil consequences avoided if it is taken promptly and in time. Cold can be counteracted by a pure stimulant, and there is only one that is reliable—Duffy's Pure Malt. Cold comfort awaits the man or woman who fails to act upon this sug gestion whenever a chill makes its ap pearance. Cold shoulder and even contempt should be shown any druggist or grocer who tries to sell you something which he says is "just as good." He is deceiv lng you. IMPORTANT NOTICE. Immense reduction for the holidays. Fine All-wool Business Huitu, $15 to $26/ Fine Clay-wonted and Pique Hulls to ordei from f2O to $35. All-wool Overcoats to order, fl2 to $25. All-wool Tains to order from $4 to $10. You are patronizing home industry. It la •asy to sell shoddy goods at low prices, but t first-class all-wool goods at moderate pncei ' you can obtain only of JOE POHEIM, The Tailor, 1016-1018 SEVEXTH BTBBET. WASTING DISEASES WEAKEN" WOXDEU. fully because they weaken you slowly, gradu ally. Do not allow this waste of body to make you a poor, flabby, immature man.Health, strength and vigor Is for you whether you be rich or poor. The Great Hudyan is to be had only from the Hud eon Medical Institute. This wonderful discovery was mode by the specialists of the old famous Hud son Medical Institute. It is the strongest and most powerful vitalizer made. It is so powerful that it Is simply wonderful how harmless it is. You can get It from nowhrre but from the Hudson Medical Institute. Write for circulars and testimonials. This extraordinary Bejuvenator is the most wonderful discovery of the age. It has been en dorsed by the leading scientific men of Europe and America. HUD YAK is purely vegetable. HI'DYAX stops prematureness of the dis charge La twenty days. Cures LOST MAX HOOD, constipation, dizziness, falling sensations, nervous twitching of the eyes and other parts. Strengthens, invigorates and tones the entire system. It is as cheap as any other remedy. HVDIAX cures debility, nervousness, emis sions, and develops and restores weak organs. Pains in the back, losses by day or night stopped quickly. Over 2,000 private indorsements. Prematureness means ienpotency in the first stage. It is a symptom of seminal weakness and barrenr.pss. It can be stopped in twenty days by the use of Hudyan. Hudyan costs no more than any other remedy. Send for circulars and testimonials. TAIXTiiD BLOOD-Impure blood due to serious private disorders carries myriads of sore producing germs. Then comes sere throat, pimples, copper colored spots, ulcers in mouth, old sores and falling hair. You can sa%-e a trip to Hot Springs by writing for 'Blood Book' to the ol d physicians of the HUDSON MEDICAL INSTITUTE, Stockton. Murkrt »nd Ellis St»», 6A.N" .FRAXCISCO. CAL. Fcr Eorses, Cauls, Sheep, Legs, Begs, AND POULTRY. 500 Page Book on Treatment of Animal* and Chart Sent Free. Ctkt* I Fevers,Congestions.lpflammatloa A. A.'( s>plnal Meningitis, Milk Fever. U.K. — Stniins. Lameness, Khrnmctisia* CC—Didteroper, Nasal Discharges^ 1».U.--Boi> or (.rubs. Worms. E.E..-t'o'iicb*, lipaves, Pneumonia* F.F.—Colic or <.ripe«. Hrilracbe. 1..:,. — Minrarriaae. Hemorrhage*. tl.il.—l rinary and Kidney Diaeasesv 1.1. — Eruptive Dinrnwe*. Mange. J.K..--Diseases of Digestion, Paralysis* Single Bottle cover 50 doses). - - ,t;Q Stable Case, with Specific*. Manual, veterinary fure Oil and Medicator, 87.00 Jar Veterinary Cure Oil, • - 1.00 : ScM by Drriffyltu: or t»nt prepaid anjwber* ud In any ■.urtliT en r*<Flpt of pric*. HI HPBRITV IKD. CO., 11l A 113 WIUIub 81,1.wT.rk. fj4jgßl eoiceopa *thic fjf? HKISPECIFIC No.fiO In qm 30 yrart. Th» od'it ■Qcoetafui remedy fos* Nervous Debility, Vital Weakness, snd Prortrstion, fron. overwork or otbsr cautcs. fl p«r viai. or 6 mil axd !ar«» vi»! powder, for $&. 6»ld by Uroc:'.M«, oi stat poitpa'.d on ttcaipi ol price. . BCHPMBIB'Ub. Ca.lll4.ll»WlUia»BU.B««JM*. WEAK MEN CURED AS IF BY MAGIC. Victims of Lost Manhood should send at <«•■ -jf on<-e lor a hook Sp(*j that explains how /*^\./fc. 'uli manly vtfOC i M*~^^m. ** e*sily, quickly *(&J***t Ja m wrtowd. No man T-J&ftXJViL suffering from * J Wi^JlW'^lt weakness can af lt-*^-\jiXy l-VW l'°rd foifjnorfthis ff j^^\ t'f^i timely advice. ! /N^V **-T« X'Ai/'■. B(X)k tells how V- *t^* w*«>fuU strength, de •elopmont and tone aro Imparted to every portion of the body. Sent with positive proofs (sealed) fret to any man on application. ERIE MEDICAL CO.". BUFFALO.N.Y. BLOOD POISON A SPECIALTY! S " Uary KLOOD I'OISOX pennanentlj oure<l la 15 to Si days. Yon can be treated vi home for same price under same guaran ty. IX you prof *r to come here we will con tract to pay railroad rareanabotelt)li:s,ancl nochAW.lf wa^ail to cure If j ou hare taken mer cury. lodide potash, and still have aches and ton ins.MucouuVatch.es In mouth. Sore Throat, Ficupl«s, Copper Colored Hpotf», I'lrer* on any jartof the body. Hair or Eyebrows falline cut, It is this MeconUnry BLOOD POISOX *ie jjnarantce to cure. We sollrtt the ico^t obsti nate case* and Crsallcnire the world for » Chhp we canTjotetire. This disease hssalrray* buill««dth»>t»ki!l of the moat eminent phy-Hi Clans. •ROO.OOO oa(>ital behind our nnoondt- iruaraDty. Absolute proof* nent feaied or ».pUc»t!.o. Addr<-»» <Oi»K KKMKDY CO . £01 flljwonlo Xeuple. taiiACO, ILJm French Dressmaker AM) HAIRDRESSER And dealer In Hair (Joods. MADAM M. 1* BWILLI^O. 1012 Eighth ittVU XinrijmTirfl O. Johnston & Co.l \ rKIW 1 UIU 410 J STREET. 1 * OtlOUte FMOM TM6 OOUHIBT PBOMPTIY FlUE:>~~*i Pozzoni's Puff Box the latest thing out. One given vrith each box ol Powder. Ask for them. THE WEEKLY UNION —THE BKST weekly on the coast. SACRAMENTO DAiTT HECSBD-TOsTSSf. TOEgfcAif, fcl^WßEtt Si, ISOS. THE NATION'S HONOR. ; Soul-Stirring Address by the Silver- Tongued Orator. Hon. Thomas Fitch Suras Up the Ac counts Between England ami America In Burniue Words. The Arizona "Republican" of Decem ber 28th publishes the following report of an address delivered at Phoenix by Hon. Thomas Fitch: At the evening session the church was well tilled with the crowd that assem bled to hear Thomas Fitch's address upon the subject of "An Arizonian Abroad." The noted orator was in his happiest mood and for the greater portion of his lecture, in a humorous vein took his auditors on a veritable Cook's tour throughout Europe. But, when Eng land was reached, his patriotic mind turned to the great question now at issue and his words were given ap plause such as rarely comes to a speaker. Upon England's aggressions, Mr. Fitch in part said: "It is perhaps irrelevant to the topic of the evening to say just here that the people of Arizona, in common with their fellow citizens everywhere, rejoice that the doctrine which was announced by i James Monroe in the infancy of this Te ! public, and which was again announced I by Abraham Lincoln while we were yet I struggling in the throes of mighty civil war, has now been reannounced and in sisted upon in a way that makes every patriotic American citizen —oi" whatever politics—proud of Grover Cleveland. It is the doctrine that from the Rio Grande to Cape Horn there is no American re public so poor, so weak, so devoid of armies, so destitute of ships, so bank rupt in its treasury, so afraid of its i>p pressor, so fearful of its fate, but that it may—for the preservation of its ex istence and its territorial integrity as against any European power—com mand the aid of the treasury and the armies and the navies of the United States. "In defending this position we shall receive the sympathy of many peoples, for around the world the morning drum beat of Britain rolls in the ears of the nations she has vanquished and the glint of her bayonets lights the evening shadows where conquered and unhappy nations dwell. Her Hag is everywhere the symbol of unjust rule in the past and the sign of living oppression in the present. The woodsman by the bank of far northern rivers mutters a curse in French as her troops pass by. The Maori in the Antipodes remembers her cruelty and motions in dumb appeal to his gods against her. The dusky races of India kneel in their ancient temples and cry out to their unanswering idols in the helplessness and hopelessness of their despair, and among all who crouch upon the soils she has caused to be stained with blood and tears, none hate her with a more passionate hatred than the Irish people, and none have greater cause. Well has the good poet said: She baa scoured the seas as a spoiler, Her mart is a robbera den, "With ti.a wrested 101 lof the toiler And tlio mortgaged souls of men. She hath scourged the weak and the lowly And the just with an irun rod. She Is drunk with the blood of the holy; She shall drink of the wrath of God. "It may not be overlooked that in dealing with the present controversy the people of the United States are not embarrassed with any obligations of gratitude toward, the British Govern ment. I know that at occasional ban quets it has been customary for repre sentatives of both nations to assure each other of the brotherly love of the people of each country toward the other, and usually both speakers were lying and both knew it. As a matter of fact, we remember Lexington and Val ley Forge, and England has not yet commenced to erect statues to George Washington. We remember the wan ton destruction of the city of Washing ton, and England has not forgotten the battle of New Orleans. We remember that 4'.«i Liverpool merchants outfitted the cruiser Alabama, and England has n million memories of the Ala bama award. We remember how Eng lish authors and orators and journal ists for many years derided and de nounced us concerning the institution I of slavery, which England originally ! '-st;il'lished among us, and when at last the hour of struggle came to us, then Exeter Hall went out of business, the sympathy shops for the slaves dosed their doors, the shops for the sale of arms and munitions of war to help slavery opened theirs, and British cruisers under Confederate flags dotted the Atlantic with the wrecks of our destroyed merchantmen, and lit the Ocean with the flames of our burning whalers. England's aid to the Confederacy cost N'otth and South thei two years more Of war, half a million more liv.es and three thou sands millions more of money. "NOT does the South owe England any good will for such aid, for it was a sordid, cold-blooded, wicked mo tive that Impelled Great Britain to help the Southern Confederacy; and now that the last disability has been removed from the last Confederate sol dier; now that the leaves of the pine and the palm, the magnolia and the maple are twined Inseparably in a n wreath; now that the North and South are united and keeping one sei 'of books, ail our accounts against Great Britain will be consolidated and charged In one sum against our an cient stepmother. "And yet I do not look for war us a result of the present conditions, for H< nry Laboochere has declared that it were better that all of British Guiana and Venezuela should be sunk in the bottom of the ocean than that there ild be war between Greed Britain the CJnlted States, and Lord Rose bery has said that the boundary ques i tion ought to be arbitrated, with the United States as arbitrator. These men repn - Mt the Liberal party of Bng ! land, and the Queen—to whom we owe henor for preventing the Trent affair— the Queen, who on great occasions has shown her disposition and ability to bo !thing more than a nominal sover lid to bo actively for peace. If his sovereign and the Liberals are both against Lord Salisbury and he can only !■< ly upon the Tory party for support, he may recede from his present posi tion, or else step down and out and al low the Liberal party to yield to the for arbitration. Arbitration la at hurt the only solution of the prob lem <ri!>d England must accept it. Bhe i ■ I disputed boundarit fore, and can do so with consistency and mnot with consist- I ency or honor abandon the Monroe doc trine. "At las{ we will be the gainer by what has occurred, for we will now mi our navy and coast fortifications to proper proportions, and the ooastruc , tion of the Nicaragua Canal by the United States will be promoted and we w ill have demonstrated our financial independence of the world." DECLARATION OP INDEPENDENCE Employers Combine Against tho "Walklag Delegate." (From the Los Angeles Times.) Whatever may be the merits or de merits of the demands made by the striking tailors in New York, there can hardly be two opinions among intelli gent and fair-minded men as to the justice of the rules and regulations adopted by the employers, a copy of which has been posted in each shop, as related in yesterday's dispatches. These rules and regulations, which are brief and to the point, are as follows: "This shop is open for such'employes as will suit our work. ".Nil shop chairman or walking dele gate admitted here. "Working hours from 7 a. in. to 111 m. and from 1 p. m. to 6 p. m. daily. "All employes must be at their re spective places on time. "Any one ten minutes late shall not start work before a quarter of a day. "All hands hired by the day only. "Payday each Monday. "The proprietor is the only boss of this shop and the management is under his contfbl. "By order." Can any reasonable objection be urged against the above rules? Is there anything oppressive in them? Do they contain any provision which can not conscientiously be accepted by any self-respecting, honest and industrious workman? Those questions admit of but one honest answer. No reasonable man can object to the regulations. They are simply a declaration that the men who have adopted them propose to conduct their business as they deem proper and expedient, within the lim itations of law and common sense. If they have not a right to do this, have they any rights as American citizens under the Constitution and the laws? Men who have money invested in a business enterprise cannot safely con sign to other hands the management of such business. Surely, there can be no more fundamental right than the right of a man to manage his property as he deems best, under the sanction of law, prudence and an intelligent self-inter est. If ho employ other men, the ques tion of compensation is a matter to be adjusted between employer and em ploye. If the latter does not like the rate of wages offered, he need not accept it. If the employer does not feel will ing to pay the rate of wages demanded by the workman, it is his right to em ploy other men, if he can find them, who are willing to accept the wages he of fers. There should be no compulsion on either side. There can be none without injustice on the one side or the other without a direct Invasion of that per sonal liberty which is a precious guar antee to every citizen living under the protecting aegis of the Constitution and laws of the American Republic. If employers of labor throughout the land would take a firm stand upon the platform al>ove denned, there would be fewer labor strikes, less discontent, more general employment, and far less suffering among wage-earners than now exist. Not least commendable among the rules adopted was that excluding "walking delegates" And ".shop chair men" from each establishment. These peripatetic leeches have done more to embroil workmen and employes in causeless contests than any other one cause. If they were shut out from every factory and workshop in the country, incalculable benefit to the great mass of wage-earners would ac crue. These gentry, who "toil not, neither do they spin," make their living by preying upon the industry of their betters. They have been responsible, probably, for not less than three fourths of the labor troubles which have disturbed the country during the past few years. The New York em ployers have acted wisely in shutting thum out. Beoovered from the Deep. The London correspondent of th? "East Anglian Daily Times" says: Here is an authentic story of a curious vari ant of the scriptural injunction, "Cast thy bread uiion the waters," etc. A gentleman left England with a large sum of money as well as letters of credit upon a round of continental bankers. It was to be a pilgrimage partly of pleasure, partly of business. All went well, and the voyager returned recently, carrying back several letters of credit which he did not require, as well as a good sum of money and valuable papers. But on reaching his home in London, what was his chagrin to find the }'"< k'-tbook containing these valu abl< B missing. He at once gave notice to his bankers, who at great expense stopped by telegraph thf circulation of the letters of credit. The bank notes were beyond their recall. To add to the general misfortune, the traveler's letter of identification was in the pocket book, but no news was received of the missing property, which the owner re luctantly settled himself to regard as irretrievably lost. At last, one day the post brought him a letter from a so licitor in a French seaport inclosing th<- missing property, with an explana tion that it had been drawn up in a net by a fishing trawler. All the papers were exactly as they had been left by their owner. He at once replied to the solicitor expressing his thanks and in closing the reward for distribution among the fishermen, who vowed it was the besi tisii they had landed for many a day. The gentleman resnem !.. red that as the steazn< r was leaving the i">rt he leaned .>v t .'r the taffrail, and the presumption le that the book Slippi d from the breast of his coat and fell un observed into the sea. A Spelling Question Settled. President ]..in<-"in was attracted to Governor Tod of Ohio <»n iirst m< him by his name, and took an early oc casion to say: "l never could under stand how yon come to spell your name with <'iily one d. Now, 1 married a Todd, and she spells her name with two d's, and I believe Bhe knows how to spill. "What is your authority for using only one. Well, drawled Governor Tod, "my authority f^r it is in part the fact that God spells hie name with only one d. :w,A it seems I should be satisfied if he is." —Argonaut. .joi>*s Record Broken. Justice Hawkins, when presiding *at th>> trial of a jury case, bore with ad mirable Belf-n stmint a long and some what irrelevant cross-examination. At a he seized a sheet of paper and wrote rapidly tho following memoran dum which he handed down to one of his friends at the inner bar: "Prizes f.T Patience: Mr. Hawkins, 2d Job, longo proxlmus lntervatl6L" —West- minster Gazette. L If you want a sure relief for pains in the back, side, chest, or J* / limbs, use an / \ ■ ■"■" ■ j^ JCISLWi l. Bear in Mind—Not one of the host of counterfeits and imita- \ P tions is as good as the genuine. *v VOICE OF THE PRESS. Expressions From tho Newspapers oj ! Interior California. Santa Barbara News: Stock gamb lers and preachers aro supposed to have about as much in common with each other as the devil does with the saints. But curiously enough they are in ca hoots just now. Both cry for peace at any price. Leaving out the prechers — i for it is none of their business in any sense—we are not at all surprised that tho rich rascals that have been in part nership with England in her looting this country should cry "peace." Just now it is in the interests of their pockets to have peace. Tho national cow has not yet been completely milked. After that Is accomplished war with all its horrors may come. INTEREST RATES. Vacaville Reporter: There can be no question but that we shall soon see a reduction of interest rates in Cali fornia. Money lenders cannot secure more than money will earn. In times past it has been possible to loan money at remunerative rates, because the bor rower was able to make the rate of in terest and something additional. The times have changed and the rates'of interest on all agriculture will have to be made to correspond. Wheat is not a paying crop. Lower taxes and lower interest will aid the rancher to make both ends meet. He can not pay the high rates current in the past and will either be obliged to surrender his lands to the mortgagee, or have a reduction of interest. BUT HOW? Pasadena Star: English authors ap peal to their American brethren to save the two countries from war. This is good; but how is it to be done on our side alone? By submission and sur render of national rights? The Brit ish lion is a very peaceable lion when he lies down with the lamb inside of him; but when the lamb wants his rights he is a horrible Irully. Perhaps our British brethren had better labor with their own Government. ABUSE OF CAPITAL. Santa Cruz Sentinel: The Colusa "Sun" says that great combinations of capital are absolutely necessary to the rapid development of a country. If the '\Sun" talks this way much, it will get itself "severely disliked" by those who hold that the right thing to do is to hate capital under all circumstances and times, and discourage its activity in promoting industry.—Sacramento Rec ord-Union. We remember once on a time how a New York millionaire came to a Cali fornia town and paid $25,UU0 for a home, spending $15,000 in improve ments thereon within a year; paid $30, --000 lor overflowed land and $10,000 in redeeming it from high water and river freshets; invested $100,000 in a street railroad located in the town in which he lived, every dollar of which coin was paid out right where the work was done; spent $9,000 of his own private money in getting up and maintaining a carnival advertisement of the town; drew $300,000 from first to last of East ern capital through a local bank, never making a dollar out of the community in which he lived, only to be talked about by many people around him, to be ridiculed in print, said print being sustained in its attacks by many people who were nightly praying for the in vestment of capital in their midst, but who were daily driving capital away by shooting their mouths off at the goose ; that lays the golden eggs. Abuse may read rich and racy, but it Is costly to those who sustain it, al though it may be a living to its author, who often has everything to gain and nothing to lose. Men of ample means, sensible and mi l- pendent, have been known to change their places of residence on account of spoken and printed abuse. Capital can never be drawn to a town or to a county by abusing capitalists, solely because they are possessed of wealth, this abuse resulting from mal ice, hatred, envy, Jealousy and admin istered by people who deal in tar. sponges who never yield but always ab sorb. TOWN MEETING SYSTEM. Riverside Press: There is one feat ure of the much criticised new Constitu tion of South Carolina that is to be commended. It provides that the New England town meeting system may be established in that State wherever the people may desire. It w< uld be a good thing for California if the same feature were a part of our fundamental law, and the people allowed to discuss local issues and act for themselves regard ing them in public meeting, instead of delegating the power to decide and act to an unpaid body as at present in small municipalities. PROTECTION[S.M AND SOCIALISM. Los Angeles Herald: Embassador Bayard hit protectionism a hard blow in his Edinburgh speech when he said it v, as one form 'of socialism. The statement is absolutely true, no matter how much protectionists may squirm and deny. Those who uphold the pro tective tariff plan of looting the many to enrich the few claim that they arc opposed to socialism and are prone to ridicule, if they do not actually abuse, socialistic leaders and doctrines. But in this, as in many other things, pro tectionists are palpably inconsistent. If it Is wise and just for the Govern- I ment to so legislate as to aid in building iup private enterprises and fortunes, why should it not go further in pater nalistic measures? To be consistent, the Government that upholds protec tionism for the benefit of a few persons should, in some way, provide means to help every man engaged in business of whatever kind, and should see that every man's business is made profitable to him. Good breeding is the result of much good sense, some good nature and a little self-denial for the sake of others. land with a view to obtain the same I Indulgence from them.—Chesterfield. Apollinaris "THE QUEEN OF TABLE WATERS." Supplied under Royal Warrants to Her Majesty the Queeii of England, and to His Royal High ness the Prince of Wales. JOHN CAFFREY; 47|First street, San Francisco. Ueprost nlinsj Cnarlts Graef A Co., N. V., for Mineral Waters. SKN'D THE WEEKLY UNION TO YOUR friends in the East. SAVED FROM NICOTINE Father and Son Set Free at Asheville, N. C. Little Charley Fogleman Used Tobacco Since Babyhood, and His Father Smoked and Chewed for the Past Twenty Years. "Is that true?" askeu the "News" man at Pelham's Pharmacy, as he laid down a letter In the presence of a dozen interested customers. -Yes, It is," promptly answered the proprietor. "It was written here on one of our letterheads, aad signed by J. C. Fogleman, who lives at "> Buxton street We all know he is a man of hi.s word." "I am glad to hear it. You will agree with me that it is almost too good to be true." This is what the letter said: "Office of Pelham's Pharmacy, -1 Pat ton avenue. Asheville, N. C, September 32, 1894—Gentlemen: My little now S years old. began chewing tobacco when o years old by the advice of our family physician, In the place of stronger stimulants. Four or five weeks ago I beg-an giving him No-To-Bac, which I bought at Pelham'* Pharmacy, and to my great surprise, and, it is needless to say. my delight, No-To-Bac completely cured him. He dues not seem to care for tobacco, ami Is very much improved in h< alth, eats heartily and has a much better color. "Finding such remarkable results from the use of No-To-Bac I began my self, and it cured me, after using to bacco, in all its various forms, ior a period of twenty years. "I take pleasure in making- this plain statement of facts for the b< neflt <>( Others. (Signed) J. C. FOGLKMAN." "What's that?" asked Chief of ! Hawkins, whose manly form, attired in the new police uniform, like Solomon in all his glory, came to the door. "Why, No-To-Bac cures!" "Cures'.' Why, I should say so. I have used it myself, it cured me." "Would you object to making a state ment of the fact for publication?" "Certainly not," and the Chief wrote as follows: "Asheville, X. C, Sept 25, 1894 Pelham Pharmacy —I bought one box of No-To-Bac from you some time since. Alter using No-To-Bac I found I had lost the desire for tobacco. I was ■ "I have used tobacco — chiefly chewing —for eight (6) or ten (10) years. "H. S. HAWKINS." Everybody looked astonished and wondered what would next turn ia>. "Suppose it don't cure?" someone asked. "The-n you get your money back." re pli< 1 the druggist. "No-To-Bac is made by the Sterling Remedy Com Chicago, Montreal and New York, and as sterling In character as in name. Hy them every druggist in America is au thorized to sell No-To-Bac under an absolute guarantee to cure or money re funded. They always do the square thing. Here, read their famous book let, 'Don't Tobacco Spit and in it.' " People in Sacramento. Theunenualeddemanrt for Paine's Celery Compound among the people of tin* city i"» ■ but one ln-lex of the great Rood it Is domg. There arc many In Sacramento wnotn it ! has cured of serious illness. Palne'BCelery i Compound makes people well who suffer ■ from weak nerves or impure blood. m NOW IS THE TIME. A S. STONKThe Tailor, XYiWgj 1-7> C. STREET, |P§|pf Has just got In all the latest in lp Suitings and Trouserings, V Jtf And has made l\W CUTTING REKUCIIONB FOR j|jffl THE HOLIDAYS. "%M Call and cat his wires. RAILROAD TIME TABLE. SOUTHERN PACIFIC COMPANY [PACIFIC SYSTEM.] NOVEMBER 20, 1895. Trains Lea re und nra Dna to Art-ire at Sacramento: LEAVE ! TRAINS RUN DAILY. ARRIVB (For) I i rom) 11:00 P Ashland and Portland 6:20 A b:45 A Callsiogaaud Napa S:10 P 3:00 P Calisloga and .Napa 11:^0 A 4:10 I' Liemini;,El Paso anu Kast S>:4s A. s:uO Pt'olfax 10:05 A 7:10 P KuiuhtsLa'd'g A Oroville 7:45 A 10:^. r > A i.os Angeles 2:50 P 4:40 P Los Angeles 9:45 A 11:4O AlAtlantlc Express for Og ; tien and Kast 4:30 P 10:00 P European Mai: for Og leu and Kast I 5:50 A 3:05 P Oroville via Ko«ev'le J'nc! 10:15 A 4.05 A Ked lilutl via Knljints Lad*; and Marysvllle.. 6:40 P •6:16 A Rea Blutt \la Woodland] *7:oO P 3:06 P Hed !!lufl' v!a MarysvlUe 10:15 A 10:30 A Readinc via Willows j 3:55 P 4:50 P banKrfinco via Benlcia... 11:20 A 6:1O A Han Krun'co via Benk-Ui. J 9:40 P 0:16 A San Frau'co via Henicia...! 10:35 P 3:OO P» an Franco via Benicia..; S:10 P •10:00 A Ban Franco via steamer! jtj:Oo A 10:25 A San Fruu. via Liveriuure 2:50 P 10:25 A sau Jose 2:60 P 10:2^ A Santa Harbara 2:50 P 6:45 AiBant»RoMl i 8:10 P li:00 P,rianta Kos:t I 11:20 A 10:23 A Stockton and Gait.. 2:>o P •1:40 PiStoolttou and Gait 9:45 A 11:10 Aijruciieaand Keno , 4:30 P 10:00 PTruckee and Ke:io 5:50 A 6:45 A Vallejo JslO P 3:00 P Vallejo 11:20 A *7.00 A Folsom and Plncervlllo... *-!:40 P •5:10 P Folsom and Piacerville... '9:15 A •Sunday exceptod. iMonday excepted. A —!■ ov morning. 1' —For afUri.oou. RICHARD GCAY, Gen. Traffic Manager. T. H. GOODMAN, (Jen. Passenger Agent. JUDSON EXCURSION & r A ST K?2 Bacramonto weekly. Upholstered curs. Man aijers through to Chicago and Koston. Lowest rate. Call on UL J. KLLIB. Agent S. P. Co., Hacramento, or address JUDson <fc CO., 19 Montgomery street. San Fruncitico. Keep /^^X In ohgjn THE Sunset limited For the Season or IS9G-96. \A/IL-I_ RUM SEMI-WEEKLY BETWEEN San Francisco, Los Angeles and New Orleans, OVER THE GREAT— SUNSET ROUTE, LEAVING SAN FRANCISCO Tuesdays and Saturdays From Tucaday, November 5, 1895. The most complete, modern, elegantly equipped and perfectly arranged Vestibuled Transcontinental Train In America. New Equipment, especially designed and built for I tills service. Nothing spared to assure PEIt- FKCT COMFOKt and ihe highest degree of F.NTKRTAINMENT obtainable WHILE TRAVELING. Direct connection* In New Orleans I for all Baatera points. Quiclc time. Only one cnange. THE " WEEKLY"UN*IO>J"THE~~BES~T weekly on the coast. OFPICIAL. desolation Ordering Change of Grade. WHEREAS, THE BOARD OF TRUS tees did on the lith day of October, l>-'. resolution, declare its intention to ge and establish grades on S, T and V streets from the east line of Twenty first to the west line of Twenty-second street, and did on and after the 17th day ol October, ikc>, publish in u>.- Rscorv ■. a daily newspaper published and circulated in this city, for a p< (10) days, a notice describing the proposed sea and designating th< lira location of said changes; and. Whereas. >;o person has in any manner objected to the said changes or filed a petition asking for the appointmi mers to assess the da ■ suiting from su s. Now, fon>, the Board of Trustees of the cltj i I Sacramento order that grades sh and are established in conformity with such changes as follows: At the east line of Twenty-first street at center of S 2&80 One hundred at: i sixty feet oast of east line of Twenty-first street at center of S i:;*.;.. At the west line of Twenty-second street at the center ol 9 'jairi At the east line of Twenty-first street at center of T 28*80 One hundred and sixty feet east ol east line of Twenty-first street at <•■ nter of T 31.00 At the west line of Twenty-seco street at 1 of T. . ;?0.44 At the east line of Twenty-first street at the center of V ' 30.00 Eighty f« el east of the east line c>: Twenty-first street at the center of V .14.00 One hundred and twenty feet east >'i the east line of Twenty-flrst street at the center of V ' :>1.."0 One hundred and sixty feet east of the east line of Twenty-first street at the center of V ,'ij.OO Two hundred feet east of the east line of Twenty-first street at the center of V "5.-0 Tv o hundred and forty { : ol Twenty-first street at center of V .' ;!4.70 Two hundred and eights the east line of Twenty-first street at center of "V 32.70 At west line of Twenty-second street at center of V 30.00 At all points between the above Ints the grade shall be i lisln d so as to conform to a straight line •i between said designated pomts. i : above where their meaning is not shown to be others their Immedi ite context mean I the points designated In the proposed n< the city datum plan", i" Union, i'rr published and in this city, is hereby designated as the paper in which the City Clerk shi I ■ this resolution to be published in issue thereof for a period of tea (10) days as required by law. mber Is. 1595. W. I». [iAWTO \ President Board oi 1 O. S. Fill lerk. 12 i lot NOTICE TO CITY'S CREDITORS. ALL PARTIES HOLDING BILLS against the City of Sacramento will present them at the office ol tne City ci«-rtt cm or botoro MONDAY, December 30, L 895, In order to have thorn allowed during the pres ent year. ' >. s. FLINT, City Clerk. (BC) d27-td In the Matter ot Reclamatian District Number Four Hundred and Seven of the County of Sacramento, State of California. IN THE MATTER OF RECLAMATION i District Number i''o.n- Hundred and Seven of the County of Sacramento. State of California. The petition for the formation of suid district having heretofore been ap] by this board, and the landowners of said ct having heretofore adopted and tiled their by-laws, Now, upon application of P. H. Gardiner, a landowner of said .Reclamation District No. 407, It is ordered that an election be Ik Id on SATURDAY, the 4th day of January, l v.,;. i immi i ■ ing al 10 ■■'clock a. m I ng at 4 o'clock p. m., on that day, tor the purpose of electing three Trusi said Reclamation District No. 10 thai notic* thereof be published in the Record-Union, s dally newspaper o era! circulation in said county, for uiie month, and that the County Clerk sign said noti> And it Is further ordered, that said elec tion be held at the [sleton if itel, at tsle ton, in the County of Sacramento, State of Caffornia, In saia district, and that San ford Dickey be and he is hereby appointed Inspector, and that H. M. Laßue and ! Samuel Lavenson be and they are hereby appointed Judges of said election. By unanimous vote of thi Board of Supervisors of the County of Sacramento, December '_'. 1895. (Seal.) Attest: YVM. is. HAMILTON. County Clerk ol" the County of Sacra mento and ex-officio Clerk of the Board o: Supervisors. d3-td In the Matter of Reclamation District Number Five Hundred and Fifty-four ol the County of Sacramento, State of California. INTI 1 E M ATT ER OF RECLAMATION i District Number Five Hundn d and Fifty ' four of the County of Sacramento, Stato Ifornia. < The petition for the formation of said : district having heretofore been approved by th ■■ ;a l!" landowners of said district having heretofore adopted and filed their by-laws. Now, upon application of 11. T. Lufkin, a landowner ot said Reclamation District i " ii is ordered that an election be held on MONDAY, '.!;■ 6th day of January, 1890, i commencing at lv o'clock a. m. and clos ing at 1 o'clock p. m. on that day. for the purpose of electing three Trustees o j'.-i lamation District No. .V>4. and that no tice I published In the Kecord ! Union a daily newspaper of general cir culation in said county, foi ■ and that the County Clerk niiiii said no- And it Is further ordered that sal tion be held at the store of Tl. T. Lufkin, it Walnut Grove, in the County of Sacra mento State of California, In paid dis trict and that Sperry Dye be and he ia hei-. -by appointed Inspector, and Henry jT Lufkin and Clara B. Lord be and they I arc hereby appointed Judges of sa,d elec- By unanimous vote of the Board of Su pervisors of the Cpunty of Sacramento, December 2. 1595. a l.) -•• it: WM. B. HAMILTON. County Clerk of the County of Sacra mento and ex-officio Clerk of the Board ol" Supervisors. d::-ttl TRUSTEES' SALE. PURSUANT TO THE PROVISIONS OF a certain deed of trust, executed by David ! C. Shuita and Fiances P, Shults, his wife, both of the county of Tehama, State of California, to William Bookman and J. L. Huntoon of the city of Sacramento, county of Sacrai te of California, as trustees, dated October 7, 1893, and re corded on October 16, l*-'.*:;. in the office of the County Recorder of the countyof Te a, State of California, in Book "E' of Trust Deeds, at page 405, and on applica tion of the holder and owner of the prom issory note secured to be paid by said deed of trust, and because default has bi en made in the payment of the Indebted ii, - - • be paid by said deed of trust, the undersigned trustees will Bell, at auction, to the highest aivi best bidder for cash, in United States sold coin, at the front of the Courthouse of the county of Sacramento, in the city of Sac ramento, State of California, on SATtTR DAY, the 25th day of January. 1896, be tween the hours of 10 a. in. and l'J in. (said sale commencing at the said hour of 10 a. m. of said day), the following fle s< ribed real estate, with the improvements I thereon, situated in the county of Te hama, State of California, to wit: The southwest one-quarter of section 10, town ship 23 north, range r> west, Mount Diablo Base and Meridian. WILLIAM BECKMAN, Trustee J. L. HUNTOON, Trustee. Sacramento, CaL, December 30, 18rc>. A. h. Bart, Attorni y. NEW FURNITURE. Special Bargains. Hall Racks, Sideboards, Fine Extension Table 3, Center Tables, And Furniture of all descriptions at W. D. COMSTOCK'S, . Fifth and X Streets. h: lages, GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS. HAY, FEED- AND GRAIN. mRY OUR CUP AND SAUCER COFFEB J. »Bd Banner Powder. Goods de i verad irea. 1128 and 1430 Seooad street.