Newspaper Page Text
6
THEY LIKE HIM.
Well, Los Angeles Has a Warm Spot
in Its Heart Too.
The San Diego Union of a recent date
has the following: "After a brief so
journ here, Major George H. Bonebrake,
one of the leading and most public- |
spirited among the citizens of Los An- j
geles, will return this afternoon to the
scene of his labors and the field of his
great prosperity. Major Bonebrake is
at once one of the most successful and
one of the shrewdest financiers of the ■
day and of tbe city of his adoption. He j
is endowed wit h unusually great finan- j
cial capacity, coupled with that ample j
ability for enjoying the same, which ;
makes the combination a blessing. This ■
gentleman arrived in Los Angeles some
ten or twelve years ago on what might
be termed a prospecting tour, or one of !
observation, as it were. The climate ;
and the country readily captivated j
him, so by way of a side issue and as a
trial venture, the major caused a car
load of wagons to be shipped to him
from the east. It was a success, and
thus begun one of the most brilliant
careers yet witnessed among the grand
examples of "Fortune's favorites'.' in i
the history of Southern California. It
may have been written, and if so the
history of Major Bonebrake's inarch on
the road to eminence and prosperity
must prove an unusually interesting
and instructive narrative, especially
should it begin away back at his boy
hood's years, when he occupied the im
portant though humble uosition of prin
ter's devil, then reporter, editor after
wards, and then proprietor of a prosper
ous country newspaper. Again referring {
to the major's arrival in California, and
noting the various steps as he took them 1
up the ladder of opulence and fame,
Until he has become one of the most
esteemed among his fellow citizens,
one of the most public-spirited and
broad-minded men in Southern Califor
nia, at once prominent as a Republican
politician, a large landed proprietor and
possessor of a half interest in the larg
•St, most substantial and magnificent
blocks in the city of Los Angeles. He
also is president of the Los Angeles Na- ;
tional bank, one of the most substantial
institutions in the state. The major has
a large and most interesting family,
to whom he is most ardently devoted, j
and on whose account he has refused j
the high honor of nomination to con
grow for this district on more than one 1
occasion, much to the regret of his \
friends.
"Los Angeles is to be congratulated in
having among her citizens a man of
that enterprise, indomitable energy and
will power, such as this gentleman is
possessed of." •
THE GOOD MAN GOT MAD.
Niggers, Laborers and Foreigners are
Such Fools.
H. H. Matlock, of this city, recently |
sent a copy of the Illustrated Herald to i
a friend, W. E. Bowman, Ottawa, ;
Illinois. The other day he got an
answer, in which the Herald Annual is
thus commended: "I am glad to ob
serve that your booming city is up aud
dressed again. That is a good paper you
sent me, and shows enterprise and abil
ity on the part of the editors, in keeping
with your wide-awake city."
Mr. Bowman then goes oft' into a rev
erie about politics, which shows he is
an ardent Republican. He says : "Just
thir k of a tiigger votiug the Democratic
ticket. Then, again, the fool laborer
■who is protected by the Republican
party ! As soon as a foreigner gets here
he at once thinks he has adopted the
country, and at once wants to run the
■whole "political machine. The man that
caws off the limb of a tree he is hanging
to, or the fellow who bores a hole in the
bottom of a boat in the middle of the
river, is not as big a fool as the nigger or
laborer who votes a Democratic ticket.
But I am forgetting that it is Sunday,
and they say we must not get mad.
Well, I can't help it, when I think of
this last campaign and its results. I
hauled no end of fellows to the polls,
and they just quietly voted the Demo- I
cratic ticket."
So Mr. Bowman goes on, but the "re
sults" surely are enough to make even a
good man lose his temper over people he
hauled to the polls, and who went
against the g. o. p. But then, "these
"niggers," "laborers," "foreigners" and
the people generally are such cussed
"fools!"
A BAD TRADE.
Sottero Leon Must Answer For Sell
ing a Bottle of Whisky to Indians.
U. 8. Commissioner Van Dyke, yester
day, had Soltero Leon, a Mexican living
near Porterville, up before him on the
charge of having sold a bottle of liquor
to Sereno Emeterio and Guili Charley,
two Tulare Indians, the former of whom
was, on Tuesday, discharged from cus
tody on the charge of having caused the
death of the latter by poisoning* the
liquor and inducing him to drink of it.
The commissioner held Leon in the sum
of $250, to appear before the U. S. grand
jury. Charley Duncan, an Indian wit
ness, who was unable to give a recogni
sance of $100 for his appearance, was
.also remanded to jail, pending the trial
.of Leon. Under the U.S. laws, witness
must not be confined with malefactors,
or people awaiting trial, and they are
entitled to fifty cents a day, beside the
.extensive bill of fare provided by mine
Jiost Darcy,
MARRIAGE LICENSES.
The Courthouse Cupid Makes Four
Couples Happy.
Licenses were issued yesterday to
the following persons:
Joseph C. Hinshaw, 28, lowa, residing
in this city, and Sarah E. Rogers, 30,
lowa, a resident of Santa Monica.
Joseph (ieigerich, 20, Illinois, and
Blvira Smith, 23, California, both resi
dents of this city.
Kidd M. Sullivan, 35, Mississippi, and
Minnie Fleming, 21, Canada, both resi
dents of this city.
George W. Franck, 20, California, re
siding iv this city, and Elizabeth E.
Carson, 19, -Scotland, a resident of Ingle
wood.
An Exercise in Arithmetic.
Editors Herald : The secretary of
the sewer pipe company, in his answer
to the mayor's veto the other day, in his
real for his employers proved altogether
too much. His argument, like his
cracked sewer-pipe, won't hold water —
not even sewer water.
He said that what cost $1 in Akron,
Ohio, cost $5.17 here. Ergo, if the
Akron people sold pipe at 62>fc cents per
foot, and sold at cost, the same pipe
here would cost $3.23 per foot. Or, sup
posing the Akron fellowV pipe only
cost them four bits a foot, then it would
cost this fresh secretary's company $2.50
THE LOS ANGELES HERALD: THURSDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 20, 1890.
a foot, which, if it sells at $1.95, would
"bust it wide open!"
Certainly this city can have no desire
to cause such a catastrophe. Why does
this company sell its pipe for less than
cost? Exmo.
A Woman Engineer.
Chicago has a female engineer who
runs an engine at a laundry. The fact
has been brought into prominence by a
complaint made to the board of examin
ing engineers that she is working with
out a certificate. The law provides that
all engineers shall procure certificates of
ability, which shall be issued to them
upon their passing an examination, with
which requirement this young woman
has failed to comply. She has had
charge of the engine for two years, and
does her own firing, her own mending
of broken machinery, and is in fact an
all around mechanic of no mean ability.
This phenomenon is good looking, not
over 33 and manages to keep herself
looking charming, even at the grimy
work which is her choice. She had pre
vious to her debut as an engineer worked
at the laundry, and proving her mechan
ical ability by numerous tinkerings of
machinery was, when the proprietor
found himself short an engineer, trusted
with the charge of the little engine. All
she needed was a trial, and now she
reigns supreme, the goddess of the en
gine room. "I expect to get a certificate
for her." said her employer. "She will
have no trouble in passing the required
examination, as she knows more about
tho machinery than half the male engin
eers. —Exchange.
What All Mothers Should Know.
That over feeding is the chief cause of
cholera infantum and other forms of
bowel complaint in young children.
That in summer it is often water, not
milk, for which the child is crying, and
that the stomach may already be dan
gerously burdened.
That while the natural appetite of the
young is a pretty safe guide, so long as
the diet is simple, rich pies and cakes i
and other highly seasoned food tend to j
the habit of over eating, and lay the
foundation for future dyspepsia.
That the chief damage by smoking—
and cigarettes are at least as bad as
cigars—is done within the growing age,
while the child is still under the infiu- i
ence of the mother, and that the harm j
is most serious upon that center of life,
the heart.
That the chest is packed full with the
lungs and heart and room is gained for
the inflation of the lungs only by a wou- j
derful mechanism which lifts the ribs as
the breath is inhaled, and that it greatly
imperils health and life to bind down
the chest, especially in growing girls,
whether with corsets or tight dresses.—
Youth's Companion.
The Kind of Stuff" You Find in Women.
A lady living in Henderson county,
whose husband died a short while since,
did something the like of which is rarely
witnessed. It seems that her husband
owed some four thousand dollars, most
of which had either been barred by the
statute of limitations or had been
liquidated by his act in taking benefit of
the bankrupt law. His widow lost no
time in collecting these evidences of in
debtedness, and borrowed $4,000 with
which to pay them, mortgaging the
farm (which belonged to her and on
which she lived) to raise the money.
Recently checks were sent out to J
creditors in full, in amounts ranging
from a few dollars up to seven or eight i
hundred dollars.
She steadily refused to recognize either !
tho statute of limitations or the act of
bankruptcy as any bar to debts owing
by her husband, and not having the
money mortgaged her own home to raise j
it.—Henderson (Ky.) Journal.
A Living Monument.
When Mrs. Oliver H. Worthcote died,
in 1888, she requested that no tablet or
monument be erected to her memory.
Her friends she knew would remember,
and strangers could not be expected to
forget. She exacted a promise that in
case any memorial were dedicated to
her it should be a tribute to the living.
Her husband has recently purchased a
house on Bell island, Long Island sound,
which he has fitted up as a summer
home for poor, worn out teachers, trained
nurses and gentlewomen in professional
life. There are accommodations for
twenty people, and board is only $3 a
week. Tlie visitors, unless very ill, are
asked to give up their rooms to new ap
plicants at the expiration of a fortnight.
Revolutionary Widows.
There are thirty-five widows drawing
pensions from the government because
their husbands were soldiers in the
Revolutionary war. The oldest of them
is Mrs. Nancy Rains, of Knoxville,
Term., the widow of John Rains. She
is now in her ninety-eighth year. On
account of her great age she receives a
pension of $30 a month, which is more
than that received by any Revolutionary
pensioner. The number of them de
creases every year, and but few will
probably be left at the close of another
decade.—Pittsburg Press.
Miss Willard's Poverty.
Miss Frances Willard lives in Evans
ton, Ills., a suburb of Chicago, in a pretty
house called ''Rest Cottage." She is a
woman who never has a dollar, and
everything in and about the place ia a
gift. A short time ago her "snigEgery,"
where she writes and reads and dreams,
was fitted up at an expense of $850,
friends in the east, west and northwest
contributing the amount. —Washington
Letter.
It is unnecessary to pay a big price for
a toilet table when $10 or so will approxi
mate a French design. Have a pine
table made and paint and varnish it
white. Over it hang a mirror framed in
an inch of oak. Drape the glass with
some soft muslin or silk, tied back with
ribbons, and cover the table with lace,
linen or artist's canvas. A toilet table
of this sort ornaments the most beautiful
cafe in New York.
Houston, Tex., has a commission firm
doing business under the name of Foster
& Stewart, the members of which are
women. They are members of the'
board of trade and Cotton Exchange,
and conduct a real estate agency in all
its branches. Last January their sales
amounted to $500,000.
BOUGH ON COUGHS
For Coutrhs, Colds, Hoarseness, Sore Throat,
25c. HOUCIII ON TOOTHACHE. Instant re
lief. 15c.
HE KICKS! HE KICKS!
M. T. Collins on the Way of Making
Nominations.
Editors Hebald : Having been an
aspirant for councilman from the Ninth
ward up to Monday, I wish to say that
j T came in contact with the new or San
! Francijco system, which our city cau-
S cuses are called under. In that call it
says the precinct roll must open for two
! hours on the evenings of the 15th and
19th, from 7 :30 to 11:30 each evening.
Now many voters objected to the short
time allowed to sign the precinct roll,
and I applied to the chairman of the
city central committee to extend the
time to sign the precinct roll. I was re
fused, and was informed that I must
comply with the call. I did so, and I
' appeared at our precinct headquarters
to sign the roll on the evening of the
15th, at 7:30. I found over twenty
names already on the roll. I asked the
clerk in charge if these names were not
I placed there before 7 :30 that evening.
He first denied that they were, but
; being confronted with a person whom
be had enrolled early in tbe day, he ad
mitted that this wasso, and being further
pressed admitted that he had been can
vasing for two days, by and with the
consent of the city central committee.
So, you see, I must conform to the pub
lished rule, while the precinct clerks
are given unlimited privileges. And,
■by the way, my opponent, who is a
! member of the city committee, bad his
! say in appointing these precinct clerks.
:My first glance at the roil showed I was
I jobbed and my canvass ended there.
I Now, this is the Buckley system, and if
'■ we submit to it our city affairs will be
managed from the southeast corner of
; the Temple block instead of the city
1 hall. So I say kick it down and over
j and with McGinty into the sea; call
I mass meetings in each ward, elect dele
, gates and nominate councilmen. If you
j abide by the present proposed call every
j man on the ticket will get left. Buck
ley-ism and bossism must go.
Respectfully yours, M. T. Collins.
How Severe Colds are Broken Up In
Montana.
J From the Virginia City (Mont.) Madisonian.
When we find a medicine we know to
possess genuine merit, we consider it a
duty, and we take pleasure in telling
the public what it is. Such a medicine
we found Chamberlain's Cough Remedy,
last winter, when la grippe was prevail
■ ing. We are satisfied that we warded
i off several attacks that weie threaten
j ing by the use of this syrup, and we
j have since relieved, in a few hours,
I severe colds, and in the course of two or
three days, entirely broken them up by~
J its use, as we have several of our friends
ito whom we have recommended it. It
jis all that it is represented to be by the
j manufacturers. If you have a cough
' and want to stop it, Chamberlain's
I Cough Remedy will do the work. For
■ sale by C. F. Heinzeman, 222 N. Main
' street;" John A. Off, Fourth and Spring,
j and all leading druggists.
A Recommendation.
; I, the undersigned, being dangerously ill,
i applied to Dr. Mtug Chow and was restored to
\ perfect health, and 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 office at No. 041 Upper Main
street and be cured Loong Hino.
! July loth, 1890.
Drink Eccalypta for headache, sour stomach.
HEATH & MILLIGAN Prepared Paint at
Scriver & Quinn, 140 S. Main street.
Drink EfCAi.vrTA. ye thirsty thousands.
Frank X. Engler.
iano regulator and tuner, 119 S. Olive St.
SPONGE? 40^^
BLACKING VOID
ONCE A WEEK !\
Other days wash them \.
SPONQE AND*WATER. \ «~
EVERY Housewife
EVERY Counting Room.
EVERY Carriage Owrier
EVERY Thrifty Mechanic
EVERY Body able to hold a brush
SHOULD USE
Will Stain Old a. New Furniture f on< *
will »tain Class and chinawahi: I ramie/
Will Stain TmwAßt -j at the
Will Stain you* Old ba.kcts 1 tatne
Will Stain SAav-s Coach I time*
WOLFF a. RANDOLPH, Philadelphia.
FOR SALE BY—
JON ES, MUNDY &■ CO.,
10 Front street, San Francisco.
T. WIESENDANGER^
50 BKYSON-BONKBRAKK BLOCK.
(ELKVATOR.)
The cheapest residence in Los Angeles, Main
street, 10 rooms, two stories, only $3,250.
The cheapest improved fruit ranch, 25 acres
and water, only $3,500.
House 7 rooms, barn, windmill and tank; lot
52V* by 170, on Eighteenth street, $4000.
A big, big bargain for $3250; new, modern
two-story house. 10 rooms, Main street, near
Twenty-ninth.
T. WIESENDANGER,
sti Bryson.Bonebrake Block (elevator).
10-22-lm
JOHN WIELAND, FREDERICKS
BURG, UNITED STATES and
CHICAGO BREWERIES.
EXTRA PALE PILSENER, STANDARD, ER
LANGER and CULMBACHER BEERS of high
repute. Also brew the liest PORTER and ALE
JACOB ADLOFF,
General Agent, Los Angeles.
Telephone, 4<>S. P. 0. Box 1231, Station 0,
Corner New North Main, Mission and Chavez
sts , opposite Naud, Weyse & Co.'s warehouse.
11-l-Om
WAGON MATERIAL,
HABO WOODS,
IRON.STEEL
Horseshoes and Nails,
j Blacksmith's Coal, Tools, Etc.
JOHN WIOMOKB,
! 117 and 118 South Los Angeles Htree
iui tf
YOU WEAK MAN!
Needlcttlyweak! Debility, Atrophy, Impotency,
Fears, Evil Thoughts, Varicocele, Losses,
Slavery to unmanly practices, Nervousness,
Shrunken Organs,—all these are curable!
I tells tbe si...ry. Mailed
OUR NEW BOOK I ' r «° » »° or <
and win a Monopoly of Suiwtw.
■■KB HEDIC'AKT CO., Buffalo. H. T. Yon
CANT HOOK HEALTH 1
MERCHANT TAILORS.
Slaughtering Prices
The successor to the well-known firm of
GORDAN
BROS.
-2T A I LORS,i(-
Will sell the entire stock at a sacrifice to dis
pose of their large stock of
IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC
WOO LEN S.
Suits made to order at the following prices:
DRESS SUITS.
FOKMKR PRICE. NOW.
Full Dress Suit $«5 00 $7(1 00
Prince Albert Suit 00 00 50 00
Walking Suit 55 00 411 00
Evening Suit 47 50 311 00
BUSINESS SUITS.
Cutaway Suits $40 00 $32 50
Cutaway Suite... 35 00 30 00
Sack Suits 30 CO 24 00
Back Suits 27 50 24 00
Suck Suits 25 00 21 00
Sack Suits 22 00 18 00
Overcoats, from 22 50 up.
Trowsers, from 5 00 up.
Perfect lit and first-class workmanship guar
anteed.
118 SOUTH SPRING STREET.
Call and examine our "stock before ordering
elsewhere. 11-15-3 m
JOE POHEIM,
THE TAILOR,
Has just received an immense stock of Fall and
Winter Woolens and is making Suits to order at
40 per cent less than any other Tailor on the
Pacific Coast,
Elegant English Serge and Cheviot
Suits, to order, from 835 to 835
Fine Dress English Worsted
Suits, to order, from 830 to 840
(Cost elsewhere from $55 to $75)
Fine French Heaver and Pique
Snlts, to order, from S3 5 to 845
(Cost elsewhere $60.00 to $90.00).
French Cassimere
Suite, to order, from 835 to 848
Overcoats, fine Silk Linings,
from 885 to 840
And other garments in proportion. Perfect fit
and best of workmanship guaranteed or no sale.
Rules of self-measuremeut and samples of cloth
dent free to any address, or application to
JOE POHEIM, The Tailor,
ill and 143 S. Spring Street,
LOS ANGELES.
T TIT'BTr' I * P ° r hnproved & eeo-
JjlJlilillT nomic cookery. Use
it for Soups, Sauces,
Made Dishes (Game,
CODID3.IIV S " tme * t Preparation.
wv r J Contains no added
salt. Is cheaper and
of finer flavor than
U*v riio A PT 1 an> otlier stock.
HiAlXtiH-yA One pound equal
to forty pounds of
____»_ lean beef of the value
OF BSEE rm oi about $7.50.
Genome only with
7t mm signature as shown.
10-9-raon-th-lm
SPECIAL PRICES
FOR
FIRST-CLASS DENTAL WORK
Teeth Filled Without Pain.
Gold Crowns, the best, $5.00 and up.
Gold Fillings, the best, -Si .00 and up.
Silver or Amalgam Fillings, 50 cts. and up.
Cement or White Fillings, 25 cts. and up.
Teeth cleaned, 50 cts. anil up.
Artificial Teeth, the best, $3,00 and up.
Teeth extracted without pain.
Teeth extracted free of charge from 8 to 9 a.m.
Nothing but First-Class Work Done.
DR. PARKER,
Cor. Broadway and Third st..
(En"anee on Third st.) 10-28-lm
^^%
PRICES TO SUIT THE TIMES.
No. 6 Bertha (a 5-hole) Ranrre t 9.00
No. 7 Bertha (a 5-hole Range 10.00
No. 8 Bertha (a 5-hole) Range IS.OO
I am overstocked with Gasoline Stoves and am
selling them at
$4 Loss Than Eastern Prices.
EVERY STOVE GUARANTEED!
A fine line of Dry Air Refrigerators at very low
prices. A full line of Medallion Ranges.
Stoves sold on the installment plan nt'j
F. E. BROWNE'S
ml2-tf 136 8. Main St., opp. Mott Market
LUMBER YARD
Kerekhoff-Cuzner
MILL AND LUMBER CO.
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.
Main Office: LOS ANGELES. Wholesale Yard
at SAN PEDRO.
Branch Yards—Pomona, Pasadena, Lamanda,
Azusa, Burbank. Planing MHlh—l-os Angeles
and Pomona. Cargoes furnished to order.
J. M. Griffith, President.
H. G. Stevenson, Vice-Pros, and Treas.
T. E. Nichols, Secy. E. L. Chandler, Supt
J. M. GRIFFITH COMPANY,
Lumber Dealers
And Manufacturers of
DOGitB, WINDOWS, BLINDS, STAIRS,
Mill work of every description.
984 N. Alameda Street, Los Angeles.
lul tf
PERRY, MOT T Sc COS
LUMBER YARDS
AND PLANING MILLS,
No. 76 Commercial Strc t. jul tf
J. A. HENDERSON, WM. F. MARSHALL,
President. Secretary.
J. R. SMFRU,
Vice President and Treasurer.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
LUMBER CO. .
350 East First Street,
9-19-5 m Los Aiirclhs, California.
DENTISTS.
Removed to 208 N. Main St. opposite Temple
Block, Rooms 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6.
FILLINGS.
Gold filling $2.00 to 110.00
Gold alloy filling 1.50 to 5.00
White fillings for front teeth 1.00 to 2.00
Silver or amalgam filling 1.00
CROWN AND BRIDGE WORK.
Gold and porcelain crowns $ 5.00 to $10.00
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 6.00
EXTRACTING TKBTH.
With vitalized air or gas $1.00
With cocaine applied to gums 1.00
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.m. to 5:30 p. m. Sundays 10 to
12 a. m.
RAMONA!
The Gem of the San Gabriel Valley.
Only Three Miles from City Limits of Los
Angeles.
Property of San Gabriel Wine Co.,
Original owners.
LOCATED AT SHORB'S STATION,
On line of S. P. R. R. and San Gabriel Valley
Rapid Transit U. R.,
From 10 to 15 minutes to the Plaza, Los An
geles City.
CHEAPEST SUBURBAN TOWN LOTS,
VILLA SITES, or
ACREAGE PROPERTY.
POPULAR TERMS.
PUREST SPfiINQ WATER I
Inexhaustible quantities guaranteed.
Apply at Office of
SAN GABRIEL WINE CO..
Ramona, Los Angeles County, Cal.,
10-26tf Or to ta, D. WILLIAMS, Ramona.
rpIIE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA BLUE
A Gravel Mining Company—Location of mines,
Placerito Creek, Los Angeles County, State or
California.
Location of principal place of bnsiness, 126
South Spring street, in the city of Los Angeles,
in the State of California.
Notice is hereby given, that at a meeting of
the Directors, held on the 22d day of October,
1890, an asessmeut (No. 2) of 20 cents per
share was levied on the capital stock of the
corporation, payable on or before the 25th day
of November, 1890, at its principal place of
business. No. 126 Booth Spring street, in the
city of Los Angeles, in the County of Los An
geles, State of California, to Gay W. Brown, the
secretary of said corporation. Any stock on
which this assessment shall remain unpaid, on
the 25th day of November, 18-90, will be delin
quent, and advertised forsale at public auction,
and unless payment is made before, will be sold
on Monday, the 15th day of December, 1890, at
10 o'clock a.m., to pay the delinquent assess
ment, together with costs of advertising aud
expense of sale.
GAY W. BROWN,
Secretary of the Southern California Blue Gravel
Mining Company.
Office, 120 South Spring street. l.os Angeles,
California. 10-24t011-25
STOCKHOLDERS' MEETING.
Office of the )
Los Angeles City Water Company,>
Ix>a Angei.es, October 13, 1890. )
Notice is hereby given that the annual meet
ing of the stockholders of the above company
will be held on Mo day, the 17th day of No
vember, A. D. 1890, at 3:30 o'clock p m., at
the office of the company, on tne northwest
corner of Marchessault and Alameda streets,
Los Angeles City, for the purpose of electing
Crustees for the year ensul c.
S. H. MOTT, Secretary.
City papers please copy. 10-14-td
mam \
To the Democrats of the city of Los Angeles:
For the purpose of effect inn a more complete
organization of our parly, and for the purpose
of insuring to each precinct in I,os Angeles
city, a fair representation in all party councils,
the Democrats of each voting precinct in Los
Angeles city are requested to meet at tlie place
in their respective precincts hereinafter named
upon the loth day of November, 1890. and
organize a Democratic club in each of said pre
cincts in accordance with the rules and direc
tions and under the supervision of the persons
hereinafter named.
Every person desiring to become a member of
any of said precinct clubs shall sign a written
statement to the eflVct that he is a Democrat,
and that he endorses and approves the Demo
cratic national platform of 1888, aud the Dem
ocratic state platform, for the state of Califor
nia, for the year 1890, and that he will in all
lawful ways seek to advance the interests of
the Democratic party.
Said statement shall also contain his resi
dence and his voting number upon the Great
Register of Los Angeles county.
Any person desiring to become a member of
said precinct clubs shall also write his own
name and plnceof residence upon the precinct
club roll.
No person shall bo permitted to become a
member of any of said precinct clubs unless his
name lie upon the Great Register of „Los
Angeles county.
Every person applying for membership" in
any of said precinct clubs shall be asked the
following questions:
Will you be R qualified voter In this precinct
at the' next ensuing electicn? And unless
an-wercd affirmatively, such person shall not
be received into membership.
lor the purpose of organizing the said clubs,
the inspectors hereinafter named shall preside
at the first and second meetings thereof, and
until permanent organisation lie established.
And all questions relative to the enrollment of
persons as members of any of such precinct
clubs shill be decided by such inspec or, but
any person dissatisfied with the decision of the
inspector may appeal to the city central com
mittee by tiling a notice of such appeal with
the secretary 01 the city central committee.
Fortlic purpose of enrolling members, said
precinct clubs shall meet upon the loth day of
November, 1890, and upon the 19th day of No
vember. 1890, and the rolls shall be opened for
the entry of new members between the hours
of 7:30 and 9 o'clock p m.
At the close of each nipht's enrollment the
inspector shall announce the number of per
sone enrolled, and shall sign his name, to
gether witli the date of enrollment on the first
line below the name of the hist member en
rolled.
At 9 p.m. on November 19, 1890, the said
precinct club rolls shah be closed, and no per
son permitted to enroll as a member of any of
said dubs until the first meeting of said club
after and succeeding the election of officers and
delegates hereinafter provided for.
Upon November '20, 1890, the said club shall
meet and shall elect the officers and delegates
hereinafter named, by secret ballot, In accord
ance with the provisions of chapter XIV. title
11, of the Political Code of Ca ifornia, and no
person Khali be permitted to vote for officers or
delegates unless he be a member of the said
precinct club at which he desires .o vote, and
his name regularly enrolled on the precinct
club roll
The polls shall open in said precinct clubs at
7:30 p.m., and shall be closed at 9:30 p.m.,
and the following ollieers shall he voted for and
elected: A president, secretary, two memliers
of the executive committee and a men: her of the
city central committee, to serve until their suc
cessors are elected and qualify. Also one dele
gate to a city Democratic convention to be held
November 22 1890, for every twenty-five
votes, and major fraction thereof, cast for E. B
Pond for governor, in said precinct at the state
election held November 4,1890.
At 7:30 p. m., November 20, 1890, the
members of tlie club present shall elect
viva vooe two clerks for said elec
tion, and the inspector hereinafter named
shall acl us judge of said election, and the said
inspector and clerks shall certifiy the result of
said election to the secretary of the city central
committee, and shall preserve the ballots cast
at said election, seal them up and return them
at once to the secretary of the city central com
mittee. In case of the absence at the tiroes here
inbefore named of the inspector or clerks here
inafter named the elector* present shall elect
some person to fill the vacancy.
City Convention.
The delegates elected by the various precinct
clubs of this city under and by virtue of the
foregoing provisions will meet in Turn Verein
hall on Saturday the 33d of November, 1890, at
10 o'clock a m , and shall have the power and
authority, when convened, to nominate can
didates for all city offices within said city which
are to be voted for nt the next city election,and
the said delegates are further empowered to
transact such other business as may properly
come before them.
The following are the names of the Inspectors
who are to organize said precinct clubs:
Precinct I—Charles Hayden, Plata Fina Club,
5 delegates.
Precinct 2—A. Guudlach, Plata Fina Club, 2
delegates.
Precinct 3—(". 11. Ihms, Hayes and Mozart, 4
delegates.
Free net 4—\V. H. Mitchell, Downey avenue
Postofflce, 4 delegates.
Precinct s—l. L. Clark, Aliso and Pleasant
avenue, 0 delegates.
Precinct 6—Thomas Hyans, Boyle Heights
Power Hou'e, 4 delegates.
Precinct 7—J. J. Thornton, Cummings and
First. 8 delegates.
Precinct B—E. E. Schafer, 1456 San Fer
nando, 4 delegates
Precinct 9—F. Colby, 1110 North Main, 5
delegates.
Precinct 10— N. M Quirola, 527 Macy street,
4 delegates.
Precinct 11—Thos. Savage. Pico House, 3 del
egates.
Precinct 12— B. ('.. Weir, Supreme Court
Rooms, Anieslov Block, 4 delegates.
Precinct 13— R. Malloney, 200 Wilmington
street, 3 delegates.
Precinct 14—Geo. F. Willig, Alameda Block,
4 delegates.
Precinct 15—P. C. Connolly, 725 Turner, 2
delegates.
Precinct 10—Geo. Booth, Collins' Stable, 3
delegates.
Precinct 17—Mike Curran. Second and Los
Angeles, 4 delegates.
Precinct 18—M. W. Conkling, Rose and Davis,
5 delegates
Precinct 19 — Jonh Nerney, Sixth and
Santa Fe, 3 delegates.
Precinct 20— J. W. Wilson, 261 E. Fifth, 5
delegates.
Precinct 21— J. J. Donovan, Fifth and Regent,
5 delegates.
Preci ot 22—A. A. Frew, Atlas Mills, Fifth
and San Pedro, 5 delegates.
Precinct 23— J. Mai ion Brooks, Washington
and Central aye,2 delegates.
Precinct 24— J. T. Houx, Fifteenth and Main,
3 delegates.
Precinct 25—E W. Taylor, Field's Building,
corner Main and Jefferson, 5 delegates. .
Precinct 26—John Maskell, Main and Thirti
eth, 3 delegates.
Precinct 27—D. V. Waldron, Washington Gar
dens, 5 at legates.
Precinct ita —f'au. Einstein, Sixteenth-Btreet
Engine House, S delegates
Precinct 29—VirstT Portion, olive and
Twelfth, 7 delegatus.
Precinct 30— S. P. Bowen, Twelfth and Olive,
4 delegates. M
Precinct 31—C S. E. corner Seventh
and Hill, 5 delegates.
Precinct 32— T. E. Gibbons, front room Illi
nois Hall. 6 delepjotes.
Precinct 33—Tom Donahue, Moriarty's Paint
Shop, 110 W. Third. 4 delegates.
Precinct 34—11. F. Stiles, 321 W. Fourth,
near Hill, 3 delegates.
Precinct 35—Joe Davidson, Austin's Court, 4
delegates.
Precinct 36— J. H. Dockweiler, Metropolitan
Stables, 320 W. First, 4 delegates.
Preclnet 37— W. P. Hyatt. Fifth and Pearl, 3
delegates.
Precinct 38— J. H. Crawford, Second and
Firueroa, 4 delegates,
Precinct 39— J: Kuhrts, Tammany Hall, Jonea
Block. Spring street.
Precinct 40— J. L. Mansfield, Willct's Store,
Temple street,3 delegates.
Precinct 41—Wm. E. Warden, 916 Temple
street, 3 delegates.
Precinct 42— F. B. Colver, 1700 Temple, 4
delegates.
Precinct 43—A. Ramish, Allianoe Rooms, 4
delegates.
Precinct 44— W. T. Henry, Temple and Beau
dry sts., 3 dolcxates.
Precinct 45— R. F. Sepulvcda, Walters and
Buena Vista, 4 delegates.
Precinct 40—A. E. Senseny, 955 Bueua Vista,
6 delegates.
Precinct 47—M. C. Marsh, West End Board of
Tiade Rooms, 3 delegates.
By order of the City Central Committee.
B. E TANSY, Chairman.
A. C. ©LARKE, Secretary,
i
; JULIUS VIERICK,
DEALER IN
HARDWARE,
STOVES AND TINWARE,
; II AS REMOVED
t From his old stand to
j 323 AND 325 N. MAIN STREET,
Opposite the Farmers and Merchant* Bank.
Xl-15-lm