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10 NOW HE IS A DUKE. LORD HARTINGTON SUCCEEDS TO THE TITLE OF DEVONSHIRE. Be Haa Long Been • Prominent Figure In English Politics, and His Con stancy as a Lover Baa Added to Bis fame. At laat Lord Hartington, so well known by bis courtesy title of marquis, has come Into the full glory of his birth right by the death of his good old father. The dukedom is just upon two centuries old. Barely has an heir had to wait so many years as Lord Hartington has done before entering into full possession, though Lord John Manners, the present duke of Rutland, had passed his seven tieth year before he succeeded his broth* er in the title. The loss to the house of commons is greater than the gain to the house of lords by the transfer. By tem perament tbe new duke was just born to fit the languid upper honse, yet cir cumstances conspired to bring a degree of stalwart manliness out of his sluggish nature that astonished as much as it de lighted his compatriots of every party. England will sooner or later have a dnke for premier, and perhaps the equal in greatness of its "great dnke," Welling ton. A singular character is "Harty.'' Nothing could be more abhorrent to hia nature and taste than to pose as a hero In any sense, least of all as a hero of romance, and yet the Fates have made him just this very thing—a hero of ro mance in spite of himself. He is now fifty-eight The mass of his country men persist in knocking a score of years off, so much do his ways and looks belie his age. And they scarcely take him as THE NEW DUKE OF DEVONSHIRE. the real solid statesman he has long shown himself to be. It will surprise many to be reminded that Lord Hart ington served on Earl Granville's mis sion to China so long ago as 1866, and since then he has been a lord of this ad miralty, secretary for war, postmaster general, secretary for Ireland and suc cessor to Gladstone in the leadership of the Liberal party. This is an unusual record and of such uniformly good quality that it has es caped the sort of fame which mischiev ous brilliance often wins. He never was and never aspired to be brilliant, but for plain, straightforward, solid workman ship, sound common sense and indomit able grit Lord Hartington admittedly ranks among the very best public serv ants of England. This is the more re- markablo he is constitutionally indolent, as the heir to one of the wealth iest dukedoms may perhaps have been excused for being. He is wealthy in his own right, and delights in the turf. Not many horse owners can boast of keeping an earl to manage their stables, but in this capacity the late Earl of Westmore land was proud to serve Lord Harting ton. Fen? a quarter of a century this luckiest of favorites was the cynosure of the scheming eyes of British matrons on the lookout for a gilded son-in-law. Lord Hartington might have married the greatest belle in the land at any time He could even have had his choice of a crowd of princesses, and great was the marvel why he didn't. By and by a mild whiff of gossip got abroad, and for the last dozen years the names of the now Dowager Duchess of Manchester and the marquis have been coupled. They would be found bracketed in the lists of country house parties and at public entertainments. The late Duke of Manchester was away most of his time looking after his sheep farms in New Zealand or elsewhere. He died last year, and the faithful pair are smiled upon by all the little Cupid cher ubs who watch o'er the lives of lovers cruelly parted. The lady is a sister of the once vivacious empress of Austria, and they have both distinguished them selves in the saddle as cross country rid ers and share in a marked love of Eng lish sports and pastimes. The marquis has had plenty of trou bles to dash his cup of pleasure. His well beloved brother Frederick was the unfortunate chief secretary for Ireland who was martyred by the knife of polit ical assassins. The noble self restraint of Lord Hartington during the cyclonic time that followed in the house of com mons won the admiration of his bitterest foes. Not one word did he utter during all those scenes of recrimination, but bore bis sorrow and indignation in man liest silence. His parting from Mr. Gladstone in 1865 and his subsequent leadership of the Unionist coalition are sufficiently familiar to need no further allusion here. The death of another brother quite recently was a double blow, as apart from the bereavement it necessi tated a postponement of the wedding. Lord Hartington has himself been seri ously ill, but his stout constitution may be trusted to give him as long a lease of the dukedom as that enjoyed by his oc togenarian father. As a 'speaker he is like John Bright—plain, blunt, sense spoken in simple English, hitting the nail right on the head every time. Of course be lacks Bright's charm of elo quence. His manliness and transparent sincerity have long won the hearts of the people and the commoners in par liament. O, What a Cough. WIU you heed the warning? The signal per haps of the sure approach of that more terrible disease, Consumption. Ask yourselves If you OU afford for the take of saving SOc. to run the risk and do nothing for It We know from experience that Shiloh's Cure will cure your cough, it never fails. This explains why more than a Million Bottles were sold the past year. It relieves croup and whooping cough at once. Mothers, do not be without it. For tame back, side or chest, use Shiloh's Porous Plaster. Sold wholesale by Baas, Banco & Co., and ail retail druggists. THE ~LOS T ANGELES HERALD: TUESDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 23. 1892 A CROWD OF RICH MEN. The Throng Gathered at the Scene of* the Sage Tragedy. A noticeable thing in connection with the. excitement that followed the throwing of a dynamite bomb with in tent to kill Bnssell Sage at 71 Broad way, New York, the other day was the makeup of the crowd. The wildest rumors had startled Wall street, the RUSSELL SAGE. financial center of the country, almost before the echoes of the explosion died away, and brokers, bankers, capitalists and speculators rushed to the scene of the tragedy. With them went jewelers from Maiden lane, leather merchants from "the Swamp," wholesale traders of all sorts and descriptions—in fact, a well informed onlooker estimates that the throng surging about Sage's office could raise enough cash in twenty-four hours to pay off the national debt and "not use up 50 per cent of their assets at that." It was emphatically a "swell crowd," and a very assertive one too. In the presence of bo much wealth the police seemed paralyzed. They recognized the fact that it is one thing to crab some poor laborer and quite another to whack a man whose check is good for a million dollars, and who would be sure to enter complaint if balked of his desire to see and learn everything in connection with the sensation. Consequently there was little intervention with the ebb and flow of the human tide. After the capitalists had learned that Sage was but slightly hurt, and that the only dead were a clerk and the bomb thrower, they went back to their offices and then laughed at the utter insanity of any one "trying to make Pap Sage give up his money." THE BUSH DOWN BEOADWAY. Nowhere else in the world are the representatives of wealth so closely hived, together as in New York city, and nowhere else in the world could such a crowd of "plutocrats" have been assembled at such brief notice. A Child Actress in Dispute. If little Mildred Ewer succeeds iv getting cm the stage despite the S. P. C. C. and op posing friends, she will start out heralded by an advertisement big enough for a full grown actress—and she is scarcely seven years old. Little Mildred is also clever enough for a full grown actress and can LA REGALONCITA. dance a good deal better than most of the professional dancers of the day. She was born in Chili, where her father was a phy sician. He came to this country two years ago, but soon returned to Chili, leaving his wife and children in New York. His wife found it hard to make both ends meet and taught Mildred to dance and recite, accomplishments for which she had shown much talent. But as soon as their relatives learned that little Mildred was to appear in public a family quarrel was started which occupied a good deal of space in the newspapers. Mildred's grand papa, the late Key. Dr. Ferdinand C. Ewer, was once a prominent New York clergy man. Mildred's professional name is La Regaloncita. A Hello of Sherman's Bald. The digging of the trench for the Ho tel Dal ton sewerage unearthed a railroad at a depth of four feet below the surface of the street, which put old Daltonians to straining their memories. Chestnut ties and pine stringers were used when the road in question was built, and they were in a fair state of preservation. It was claimed by some that this was the original right of way and track of the Western and Atlantic railroad, but this is known to be a mistake. Others claim ed that it had been built before the days! of Dalton, and by some it was suggested' as an underground route to China. As a matter of fact, we learn that the road was built by some of Sherman's quartermasters while the old National hotel was used as a Federal storehouse during the war, to facilitate the unload ing of freight without drayage.—Cor. Atlanta Constitution. Bargain* in real estate on our classified page. ST. VINCENT'S BONES. HEREAFTER THEY WILL LIE IN A BHRINE AT PITTSBURG. Bow Father DufTner Secured the Belies of a Martyr for St. Peter's Church. Safe Arrival of the Sealed Casket from Switzerland. Some time in January the remains of a real saint will be exhibited in the sanctuary of St. Peter's church, on South Twenty-eighth street, in the city of Pittsburg. Rev. J. B. Duffner, the popular rector of the Smoky City church, secured the sacred relics while he was making a tour through central Europe last summer. He obtained them after months of nego tiation and not a little diplomacy. They are the bones of St. Vincent, who died a martyr's death, in the latter part of the Fifteenth century. FATHER DUFFNER. The final arrangements in the matter were concluded about a month ago and the remains of the saint have been trans ferred from their resting place in a little Swiss church to the grand altar of the handsome Pittsburg edifice. They came to Father Duffner, through the Adams Express company, a few days ago, in closed in a small iron bound oaken chest. In addition to the bones of the martyr there is a vial containing a few drops of his life blood. Father Duffner during his trip to Europe visited a great many shrines, and among others one at the town of Mettern, in Switzerland. In the old church at Mettern he found the bones of St. Vincent. As is the case at a great many other churches in the Old World, there were numerous evi dences of decay and neglect about the edifice, and for this aud other reasons Father Duffner decided to secure the saintly remains if possible. He learned thafrthe parish congrega tion was very poor and unable to main tain the agreement under which the bones had been committed to its care. This agreement was to the effect that a certain elaborate golden shrine should be erected in the church in which the re mains of the departed saint should be exposed. The congregation had been unable to provide the stipulated shrine since the sacred relics had come into its possession, in 1771. They had been delivered to it inclosed in the casket in which they still rest, but bound by a seal which no one dared break until the golden receptacle was prepared. Satisfying himself that the Mettern congregation would probably never be THE PROPOSED SHRINE. able to carry out its contract, Father Duffner appealed to the bishop of the diocese of Solothurn for the privilege of removing the holy casket to America. The request was granted on the under standing that the seal be not broken until St. Peter's church took steps to carry out the conditions under which it had been given to the parish of Mettern. The South Side priest gladly agreed to this and arranged at once for carrying tbe stipulation into effect. On the ar rival of the casket, and under the in structions of the Bishop of Solothurn, Father Duffner sent for Bishop Phelan, who broke the seal, opened the lid and examined the contents. They consisted of the crumbling bones, the vial of blood before -referred to, and a parchment statement giving the life history of St, Vincent. The shrine has not yet been com pleted, but it will be a sort of receptacle with glass sides, thus enabling the faith ful to view the remains. Loaded Down with Medals. Little Clifford Grapes, of Hamilton, 0., is but nine years old and has already won as many medals as a veteran. When he was four years old he heard some stories about the war and grew so inter ested that he got a small gun and went to drilling. In two years or so he was master of the manual of arms in "Upton's Tac tics" and as well drilled as any man in the regu lar army. In 1888 he was at the state encamp ment at Colum bus, and General Sherman was so CLIFFORD GRAPES. delighted with his performance that he gave the little fellow a medal. At Nash ville he entered a competition drill with twelve men and won the prize. There after honors were showered upon him and he is said to have 121 medals, of which he wears only the most valued. Captain Grapes, as they call him, is in other respects a very boyish boy, not large or precocious for his age, but ap parently a natural soldier. As Staple as Coffee. "Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is as staple as coffee in this vicinity. It has done an immense amount of good since its introduction here." —A. M. Nordell, Maple Ridge, Minn. For sale by C. F. Heinzeman, 222 North Main street. Drink Dblbece Champagne, H. J. Woolla oott, agent. Dse German Family Soap. COMPLEXION! TREATMENTS! MANICURING! And treatments for every kind of facial blemish are given with the greatest success at MRS. GRAHAM'S TOILET PARLORS, —AT THE — HOTEL RAMONA, LOS ANGELES. Ladles treated (and cured) for falling hair, hair turning gray, for freckles, for moth patches, for moles, for sallowness, for wrinkles, for coarse pores, for oily Bkin, for blackheads, for pimples, and for every blemish to fr 2e or hands. Superfluous hair permanently removed by ELECTROLYSIS, Facial massage for the removal of wrinkles and invigorating the skin tissues. MissC. I. Weaver in charge. MRS. GERVAIBE GRAHAM, Beauty Doctor, Ramona Hotel. Los Angeles. <^^^% WHY IS THE W. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE centleVh EN THE BEST SHOE IN THE WORLD FOR THE MONEY? It Is a seamless shoe, with no tacks or wax thread to hurt tho feet*made of tho best line calf, stylish and easy, and because tee make more shoes of this grade than any other viaiivfacturer, It equals hand so Wed shoes costing from $4/ — to $5.00. 4&R 00<*euuiue Haml-sewed, the finest calf «Pwb shoo ever offered for $5.00; equals French Imported shoes which cost from $8.00 to $12.00. <£ A 00 Hand-Mewed Welt Hhoe, fine calf, «P"*b stylish, comfortable and durable. The best shoe ever offered at this price ; some grade as cus tom-made shoes costing from $6.00 to $9.00. ffiO 50 Police Shoe; Farmers, Railroad Men vwi audLetterCarrlersall wearthem; flneculf, seamless, smooth inside, heavy three soles, exten sion edge. One pair will wear a year. Cf) 50 fine calf; no better shoo ever offered at %&mmm this price; one trial wiU convince those who want a shoe for comfort and service. tiiQ - * 11,111 $2.00 Workiiiirmaii'ri shoes «J9db a are very strong and durable. Those who have given them a trial will wear no other make. Btf*u<*' $2.00 and $1.75 school shoes aro W| 9 worn by the boys every where; they sell on their merits, as the increasing sales show. I aHiAC Hand-sewed shoe, best kCIU IvO Dongola, very stylish; equals French Imported shoes costing from $1.00 to $6.00. Ladies' 2.50, $2.00 and $1.75 shoe for Misses are the best fine Dongola. Stylish and durable. Caution.—See that W. L. Douglas* name and price are stamped on the bottom_ofeach shoe. INTAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. Insist on local advertised dealers supplying you. W. 1.. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass. Sold by L. W. OODBN, 104 N. Spring St. MSB) ACTS LIKE-MAGIC /JfoGH^TTDLDS nL-« !^-and>-' PRICE •OOCTS.-ANO • OrJEDOLtAR ABiETENEMEDOLCO. —•'• OROVfLIXCAL.*— 2-10 Tu-Th-Sat 2m GRATEFUL—COMFORTING. EPPS'S COCOA. BREAKFAST. "By a thorough knowledge of the natural laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of the fine properties of weU selected Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided our breakfast tables with a delicately flavored beverage which may save us many heavy doctors' bills. It is by the judi cious use of such articles of diet that a constitu tion may be gradually built up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hun dreds of subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever there is a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well fortified with pure blood and a properly nourished frame."—Civil Service Ga zette. Made simply with boiling water or milk. Sold only in half-pound tins, by grocers, labeled thus: JAMBS BI'PS tc CO., Homoeopathic Chem ists. London, England. 10-9-tu-th«fcw-12m woods' o^th Penetrating STER ia y UICK. Others in AND THE jSEr-comparison are slow or _, _ ft? DKAU. if suflVringtry ;S\DE A D.is*% wood's blaster. JtVvN It Penetrateo, Re. - . . . . lieves. Cures. /vvVWvvX \ All Druggist*. VIGOR OF MEN Easily, Quickly, Permanently Restored. WenkneMt Nervou«iieaa, IkebllUy. and all the train of evils from early errorsor later exceßfles, the results of overwork, sickness, worry, etc. Full strength, development, and tone given to every organ and portion of the body. Simple, natural methods. Immediate improvement seen. Fatluro Impossible. 2,000 references. Book, explanations and proofs mailed (Healed) free. Address ERIC MEDICAL CO., BUFFALO. N. Y. "wagon material, HA HO WOODS, IRON. STEEL. Horseshoes and Nails, Blacksmith's Coal, Tools, Etc JOHN WIOHOBI, 117, 119 and 181 South Los Angeles St. NaurTs Warehouse. GRAIN, WOOL., —A»D— General Merchandise Warehouse. ADVANCES MADE ON WOOL. 7-11-U BANKING HOUSBS. NO. 148 SOUTH MAIN BTRKKT, LOS ANQELEB, CALIFORNIA. OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS f. N. MYERS PRESIDENT ISAIAS W. HELLMAN, President Nevada Bank, San 'Francisco;' President Farmers and to er n II ,\f9.F , S, R S, N President Foundational Bank, Grand Rapids, MX b- T. L, DUQUE .'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.■'.'.'.' M. L. FLEMING Capitalist, Los Angeles c - ROGERS Physician, Los Angeles i » vArr,, t L:„ HKLLMAN 0f Hellman, Waldeck & Co., Wholesale Stationers, Los AngeUs r uJui.'i™;™ Oi Graves, O'Molveny & Shankland, Attorneys, Los Angeles Va i'i?J 4 . h, LA > N , D °' Graves, O'Melveny & Shankland, Attorneys, Los Angeleß, ( si. I v o B .^ Wtoi ' • . •• Capitalist, Bos SARTORI CASHIER; also Vice-president First National Bank, Monrovia, < FIVE PER CENT INTEREST PAID ON DEPOSITS, T .,v„ . . .. .A. , . THE NOTICE OF THE PUBLIC IS CALLED 10 'he fact that this bank has the largest paid up capital and surplus combined of any sayi oans in southern California, and only loans money on approved real estate security; ' amor? its stookholdeis are some of the oldest and most responsiole citizens of the conimun toai under the State law, the piivate estates of its stockholders arc pro rata liable for the U indebtedness of the bank. These facts, with care exercised in making loans, insure a ■ aerository for saving accounts. School teachers, clerks, mechanics, employees in factoriet i aWT S fc f ? bo^ B ,'.^ tc - wlu flnd H convenient to make deposits in small amounts. CHILDREN oAvir.ua 11EP08ITS received in Bums of {Scents and upward. Remittances may be sent drait or Wells, Fargo & Co.'s express, 3-1 6n 5 PER CENT INTEREST PAID ON DEPOSITS. MAIN-STREET SAYINGS BANK AND TRUST GO 426 8. MAIN BTRKKT, LOS ANGELEB, OAL. CAPITAL, - - - - $200,000. The design of this institution is to afford a safe depository for the earnings of all persoi who are desirous of placing their money where it will be free from accident, and at the sain time be earning for them a fair rate of Interest. Deposits will be received in sums of from |1 l JoOOO. Working men and women should deposit at least $1 per week from their wages. Thi w "AJ orm a nucleus that will ultimately enable you to purchase a home or begin businesi Children can purchase 5-cent stamps in all parts of the city and county. It is the best cducatioi you caD have in saving and caring for money. B. LANKERSHIM, Pres't. CHAS. FORMAN, VICK-PSBS'T FRANK W. DE VAN, CABHIBI DIRECTORS. Chas. Forman, Geo. H. Pike, I. N. Van Nuys, E. Germain, A. Haas, J. J. Schallert, J. H. Jones, H. W. Hellman, J. B. Lankershim. INCREASE OF TOTAL RESOURCES. January 1, 1890 8115,871 37 Jauuary 1, 1891 389,453 80 January 1, 1892 523,504 14 Money loaned on Mortgages. Los JLngfeles Savings Bank, 286 NORTH MAIN STREET, CAPITAL STOCK SiIOO.OOC SURPLUS SJIO.OOC I W. HELLMAN, President. J. E. PLATER, Vice-President. W. M. OABWELL, Secretary. . „ „ STOCKHOLDERS; L W Hellman L. C. Goodwin, J. E. Plater. R. 8. Baker, J. B. Lankershim, A.A.Curtis, a. W Prescott, 0. E. Paxton, H. H. Paxton. 6 A it. Five Per Cent. Interest Paid on Term Deposits. German-American Savings Bank, 114 SOUTH MAIN STEEET, LOS ANGELES, OAL, OAPITAL PAID IN GOLD, - . $100,000.00. Nt res compounded quarterly to depositors at the rate of 5 per cent on term and 3.6 m per cci on ordinary deposits. E. ... MCDONALD, Pres't L. LICHTENBERGER and W. M. SHELDON, VII TOR PONET, Treasurer. M. N. AVERY, Secy. P. F. SCHUMACHER, Asst. Sec' 3 . KMT" Open every Saturday evening for deposits. "^BO Southern California National Bank 10l 8 BPHING ST., NADEATJ BLOCK.. L. N. BREED. President, WM. F. BOSBYSHELL, Vice-President. 0. N. FLINT, Cashier Capital Paid In Gold Coin 8300 000 Surplus and Undivided Profits 36 000 Authorized Capital BOO.OOC DIRECTORS—L. N. Bieed, H. T. Newell, Wm. h! Avery, Silas Holmaa, *V H. Holliday, E. C. Bosbyshell, M. Hagan, Frank Rader, D. Remick, Thos. Gose William F. Bosbyshell. lul . tJ AND MERCHANTS BANK OF LOS ANGELES, OAL. Capital paid np) $500,000 Surplus nd Profits 749,000 Total 11,249,000 officers: leaiab W. Hbllhan President Herman W. Heli.mam Vice-President John Milner Cashier H, J. Fleishman Assistant Cashier BIBBCTOB9. W. H. Perry, EmeUne Childs, J. B. Lanker shim, C. E. Thorn, C. Dncommun, H. W. Hell man, T, L. Duque, A. Ulassell . W. Hell man. Exchange for sale on all the principal cities of the United States. Europe, China and Japan. OS \NGELEB NATIONAL BANK, Cor. First and Spring streets, U. 8. DEPOSITORY. Capital 1500,000 00 Surplus 82,500 00 Total $582,500 00 GEO. H. BONEBRAKE President JOHN BRYBON, 8R Vice-President F. C. HOWES Cashier E. W. COE Assistant Cashier No interest paid on deposits. DIRECTORS. Dr. W. 0. Cochran, H. H. Markham, Perry M. Green, John Bryson, Sr., Dr. H. Sinsabaugh, F. C. Howes, George H. Bonebrake. Warren Glllelen. No Interest paid on deposits. Exchange for sale on all the principal cities of the United States and Europe. rat! QaLIFORNIA BANK, Oor. Broadway and* Second St.., Los Angeles Subscribed Capital 1500,000 Paid up Capital $300,000 Surplus $ 20,000 J. Frankenfleld President Bam Lewis Vice-President J. m.Wltmer Assistant Cashier directors: J. Frankenfleld, G. W. Hughes. Ram. Lewis. J. 0. Kays, E. W. Jones. I. B. Newton, Hervey Llndley. General Banking and Exchange Business transacted. mi-im Maiißtreet Savings Bank & Trust Co. NO. 426 SOUTH MAIN STREET. DIVIDEND NOTICE. FOR THE HALF YEAR ENDING DECEM ber 31st, 1391. a dividend has been de clared by tho Directors of this bank, at the rate of 5 per cent per annum on term deposits and 3 per cent per annum on ordinary deposits, payable on and after Monday, Jan. 11,1892. FRANK W. DeVAN, Secretary and Cashier of the Main-street Savings Bank aud Trust Co. 13lm jpiRST NATIONAL BANK OF LOS ANGELES. CAPITAL STOCK $200,000 RESERVE $260,000 ■ E. F. SPENCE President J. D. BIC KNELL Vice-President J. M. ELLIOTT Cashier G. B. SHAFFER. Assistant Cashier Directors—E. F. Spence, J. D. Bloknell, 8. H Mott, Wm. Lacy, H. Mabury, J. M. Elliott, D. M. McGarrv lul QITIZENB' BANK OF LOB ANGELES, ~,~ Corner Third and Spring streets. Capital $200,000.00 T. W. BROTHERTON President T. 8. C. LOWE Vice-President Directors: T. S. C. Lowe, L. W. Blinn, Ja bez Percival, C. F. Cronin, T. W. Brotherton. T. D. Stimson, Robert Hale. General banking business. Bonds for sale and other first-class investments. "?-2 12m rpuE NATIONAL BANK OF CALIFORNIA, Comer of Spring and Second streets, LOB ANGELES, CAL. CAPITAL PAID UP $250,000 board or directors: Dr. W. L. Graves, E. F. C. Klokke. O. T. John son, W. Hadley, E. N. McDonald, M. H. Sher man. Fred Eaton, John Wolfskin, Thos. R.Bard. J. M. C. Marble, President, O. H. Churchill, Vice-President, Perry Wildman, Cashier. 10-31 A. Hadley. Asst. Cashier. E. F. Spence, F. C. Howes, John N. Hunt, Pres't. Vice-Pres. Secy and Treas. Savings Bank of Southern California, Southeast corner Spring and Court streets, LOS ANGELES, CAL. CAPITAL, ... 8100,000 DIRECTORS. Geo. H. Bonebrake. J. H. Braly, H. L. Drew, J. M. Elliott, C. N. Hasson, F. C. Howes, M. W. Stimson, Hiram Mabury, E. F. Epence, Warren Glllelen. 3-2612 m rpHB CITY BANK, X 37 South Spring street: Capital Stock $300,000 A. D. CHILDRESS Preside! JOHNS. PARK Casalt DIRECTORS. W. T. Childress, Poindexter Dunn J. J. Schallert, h. E. Crandall, John 8. Park, R. a. L-nt, A. D. Childress. General banking. Fire and bnrglar proof SB' eposit boxes rented at from $3 to f2O per ai nim. m 26 12i THE UNIVERSITY BANK OF LOS ANOELEI „ „ . No. 317 New High street. capital stock fully paid up. 1100.00 Surplus 40,00 R. M. WIPNEY Presldei D.O. Mil riMORE VicePreslder GEO. L. ARNOLD CashU DIRECTORS. „ B i, M ,-, Wldney, D. O. Miltlmore, 8. W. Little, ( M.Wells, JohnMcArthur, C.A.Warner, L.J.I Morrill. General banking business, and loans on firs class real eßtato solicited. Buy and sell flrs class stocks, bonds and warrants. Parties wisl ing to invest in first-class securities on eithi long or short time can be accommodated. BANK OF AMERICA FORMERLY LOS ANGELES COUNTY BANK, Temple Block. Capital Stock Paid Up, $300,000, OFFICERS. JOHN E. PLATER Preside ROBT. 8. BAKER Vice-Preside GEO. H. STEWART Cashl DIRECTORS Jotham Bixby, Chas. Forman, L. T. Garnßey, Lewellyn Bixby, R. S. Baker, John B. Plater, Geo. H. Stewart. Slate Loan ailffCi OF LOS ANGELES, Subscribed Capital •1,000,009. Capital Paid Up H6K&.000. BANKING ROOM, N. W. CORNER SPB7* AND SECOND STREETS, BRYSON BONEBRAKE BLOCK. OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS. GEORGE H. BONEBRAKE, President JOHN BRYSON, Sr. ( ' , W. H. PERRY. j Vice-Presidents A. E. FLETCHER, Cashier. J. F. TO WELL, Genl. Manager. W. G. Cochran. p. M. Green. H. J. Woollacott, wm. H. Crocker, 0 ?■ J ,?, n n s 9, n ' Ban FranciM Judge W.P.Gardiner, A.A.Hubbard. We act as trustees for corporations and estaU Loan money on flrßt-clajss real estate ai collaterals Keep choice securities for sal Pay Interest ou savings deposits. Safe d poßit boxes for rent. Applications for toe: received from oorrowers in person or by mail. LUBIBKB i.llilis. J. MrGrirTltii7?Tesl^^ H. G. Stevenson, Vloe-Pies. and Trea T. E. Nichols, Secy. B. L. Chandler, Sup J. M. GRIFFITH COMPANY, Lumber Dealers And Manufacturers oi DOORS, WIKIWWB, BLINDS, BTAIBE Mill work of every description. OS* N. Alameda Street, Lot Angeles. lul tf KerckhoiT-Cuzner MILL AND LUMBEB, 00. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. Main Office: LOS ANGELES. Wholesale Van at SAN PEDRO. Branch Yards—Pomona, Pasadena, Lamanda Asusa, Burbank. Planing Mills—Los Augelev and Pomona. Cargoes furnished to order. CLARK & HUIViraREYS, Wholesale and Retail Lumber : Dealers, REDONDO BEACH ANDi— LOS ANGELES. Head office, Los Angeles—l23><i W. Second st. 12-27-3 m ' PERRY. MOTT A. OO'S LUMBER YARDS AND PLANING KILLS, No. 816 Commercial Street Jul