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The herald. [microfilm reel] (Los Angeles [Calif.]) 1893-1900, July 09, 1895, Image 10

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HALSTEAD'S PADDY'S RUN PAPERS
Murat Halstead's First View of
the Outside World
WONDERS OF CINCINNATI
Journeys to the City With a Load of
Produce—An Evening in Elysium.
He Meets a Bad Man
i vn.
f -fCOyyright, 1805, by Marat Halstead. ]
i Great preparations were being made by I
my father to go out to our great city with
marketing. Tbe first thing was to butcher
a aboat and a couple of calves. A largo
number of turkeys and chickens were torn
from their roosts, fluttering and vocifer
ous, and were killed and cleaned. Some
ot tho gobblers and roosters were my
friends. A flock of quail and a largo bas
ket of eggs wore added. There were some
bags of corn and potatoes. The whole as
sortment was not a load, but justa"jag."
I had noticed my mother busy over my
beat clothes, and thero was a new jacket
Of importance that had been hurriedly fin
ished. "Would you like to go to Cincin
nati with your father!"' was a question!
that was put to me, as if accidentally, tho
Horning of the start of the expedition.
Would I like to go? Would a hungry boy
like tried chicken and custard pie? Would
• boy kindly consent to wear a now pair
of boots? I concluded to go. And when
we turned to the loft at the crossroads and
crossed "tho run" a now world opened.
-If Columbus had any more thrilling expe
ctances, it is a wonder they did not wear
out his mind.
When wo had been under way 1 J< hours,
we struok a town, but father said it was
not Cincinnati, but Venice, and then wo
turned due south, and presently I said to
father, "Isn't tho road going right into a
house?" And he said "No." It was a
bridge over the Miami rivor, and that was
tbe river where we caught the big fish.
How did they catch tbe fish? Why, with
TEMPTED BY A GOLD PEN.
aots called seines and in traps made of
laths nailed on logs. When tho Ash ran
down stream in the fail, tbe water boing
mnddy, tbo flsh flopped in on the laths,
and tho water ran through and left them
to be picked up, tbo trap sloping up so
sharply they could not go over, and the
water rushing so swiftly through a gate in
a milldam tbey could not back out; and
thero was tbe mystery of tbo fish all told.
Wo were nearly all day getting to town,
and our wagon was at last backed up to
the sidewalk in "Lowermarkot." Wo did
not stop at a tavern, for wo bad cold chick
en and bread and butter and boiled bam
and preserves of our own, and we bad hay
and blankets in tbo wagon for a bed. I
did not mean to go to sloop early, but did
so and had a quiet night. In tho morning
there was strange news. A dozen chickens
bad been stolon from another wagon, and
the thief, running with them, had been
knocked down by my father, but had got
away. Tho chickens, however, were scat
tered when he fell and recovored by the
owner. Thero was a man who came early
In tbe morning with hot coffee to sell, and
I got aoup of it and had a great breakfast.
When we sold out, it appeared that I was
to havo a new cloth cap and a pair of new
bootsl Tho boots that seemed to fit mo— I
and if therowaß anything tho matterwlth
them they wero not too small—looked
pretty woll, and tbo thought of thoso boots
and tbo cap caused the long rido homo to j
pass pleasantly, and I had groat news to
tell from Clnolnnnti. Father had pointed
out the great river that ran to Now Or- j
leans. I had seen a steamboat. I had
missed the museum bocause I was asleep
all night, nnd thero was no timo to go in
daylight. I saw drug stores with big bot
tles in tho windows. I saw dond cattlo
hanging in rows by their hind legs. I cvon
saw a wooden Indian with a tomahawk in
his hand at tho door of a house, and a
stuffed bear, and there wore rows of houses
miles long and crowds and crowds of peo
plo, and no onosoemed to caro whether he
spoke to you or not.
When peoplo talked about Cincinnati, I
knew what they meant. I had been thero.
I knew whoro tho Brighton Houso was
and where tbo EteainboatH were tied up
and wheru the lowor market was. Humors
reached us occasionally of very successful I
men In tho town who had gono from tho
country. Ono young man got $50 a month
for work at tho Brighton Houso, but when
it camo out that he was tho barkeepor
thero was not so much cheer about him.
Another young man was said by his sis
ters to bo tho "head soup boiler in a great
faotory, "and ho had plenty of monoy, but
■hat did not impress me, for I had smelt a
soap factory as I was coming out of town.
Thore was a young man from tho lower
Dry Fork who had been sitting up nights
"reading law," they said, until at last he
read so much ho "passed as a lawyer," so
they said, and ho bud gone to Cincinnati
and was a lawyer, and, they added, he had
so much business ho was getting rich, t,nd
he had been a poor country boy like the
lest of ua. Tho next.thing ho was a can
didote for on office, with a salary of $12,000
a year, and was nearly elected, and tho
next time tbo election came around ho got
the offloel Tho lawyer story was hard to
believe, but it turned out true. And there
Was a boy I knew whose father told my
father he was in a storo and was paid $10
every Saturday night, and it appeared
■trange that ho could dosomothing to gain
all tbat money. It was clear that Cincin
nati was the place to go, right on the road
as it was to New Oilcans, which was the
biggest plaoe in tho world. There was not
any Chicago. St. Louis was out of tho
way—that is, tho river that got the wator
from our farm did not run right down to
St. Louis, but it did run to New Orleans,
and my father hud gono there on thi
steamer I'lowboy when lie was a young
man, and on the uppearance of yellow
fever my father left N"ew Orleans.
My father and mother concluded—l for
kbit the year, Trot tbe month waa Novem
ber, and the fall wheat was "put In"—to
go to visit my mother's father and mother,
who lived on Green's Fork, Wayne county,
Ind. . They took a one horse wagon, leav
ing tho heavy team and the market wagon
at home—nlso myself, alone to watch
things. They expected me to be anxious
to go along, but I was not They won
dered whether I would bo afraid alone at
night In tho house, but I was not I had
: been well taught that there was nothing
to bo soared abas* » tbe dark. The truth
was I had r>S^ns— deep, dark designs—
and my parents were hardly out of sight,
to bo gone ten days, when I began to pro
pare for an independent market excursion
to Cincinnati. I planned the whole thing
carefully. First, I knocked the seed out
of an enormous heap of mustard stalks
that I had gathered on tbe barn floor.
That was my private mustard. The labor of
thrashing and cleaning tho seed was enor
mous, nnd thero were nearly two bushels
of it. It wnswhat people now call capital.
Tho rumor was that dear mustard seed
was worth $10 a bushel, but that turned
out to be an exaggeration. I had also a
quantity of nuts—hiokory nuts and wal
nuts—about three bushels. I "hitched up j
the horses" and patiently husked nil by
myself our wagon bed full of yellow flint
corn that had just got bard, but not dry,
and thought it would be the better that
way, and that tbo Cincinnati people knew
what was good and would want it for
broad. But tbat was a mistake. It was
too green for tho best prico. Then come
somo trouble I had not anticipated with
tho wagon bows, but the cover was all
right. I feared rain on the corn and justly
end while I made a night march to get a
correct wagon bow thnt I knew a man had
in a shod I covered the ears with corn
stalks and put rails on them and stretched
the cover over tho rails, and thus turned a
smart shower tbat would havo depreciated
the corn. With the aid of a Welsh girl on
gaged for the occasion I killed 36 chick
ens, and wo mustered four dozen eggs and
ten pounds of butter. I had a long strug
gle between showers to get tho wagon cov
er adjusted, nnd when I had everything In
tho wagon, including n dozen sheaves of
oats in tho straw for the horses, tho team
stalled on a bench of soft ground, and I
bad to go half a mile to get a third horse
to help pull out, and when that was done
the rain began to fall, and I found one ot
my horses had lost o shoe, and I had to
stop an hour to got cne put on. But the
blacksmith sympathized with me and hur
ried the job, and so I concluded I did not
want to die, after all.
I arrived at the Temperance tavern, on
Seventh and Western row, Cincinnati, in
time for a lato supper and to go to tho
museum after I had taken care of the .
horses. And that museum was a wonder
ful place. Tho crowning glory of it was
tbe Infernal regions constructed by Hiram
Bowers, tho famous soulptor. This was
the most famous show that ever was in
Cincinnati. Down stairs they had the
actual heads of two dissected murderers in
jars of alcohol, and the ropes with which
they were hanged; also the bloody ax with
whiob a man killed his wife and children;
and a group of wax figures, with the reai
clothing, showing how the murder was
dona I had a most Instructive night and
have seldom known time to pass so quick
ly. I never had beon to the theater, and
tbe remembrance of that astouuding mu
seum—that supper of .errors that did not
scare, but exhausted —was about all I
could carry. I had to sleep in a room with
half a dozen beds in it and was glad to
find overythlng safe in the wagon nnd was
early to Sixth stroot markot. I sold tho
butter, chickens, eggs nnd nuts first nnd
then the mustard seed and at last tho corn.
This was all done before 11 o'clock. My
policy was to take all tho money home,
but I was tempted to buy n gold pen from
a gentleman who offered to let me havo it,
as he bad to sell it, for 75 cents. 'It may
havo cost him 5 cents, but I doubt it,
though ho gave mo bis address and said
tho pen was puro gold. He was a bad man.
I also bought a book forll that was worth
it. The empty wngon was cheerless on
the way home. Tho rain was incessant
and cold, and tho horses had to be handled
to humor them.
I do not know how they could have
reached homo if they had not known they
wero going there and had not become zeal
ous. I was nevor better satisfied with my
self than when tho horses were snug in
our stables and fed. I got into my own
bed, after filling myself with milk, and
with $40 under ray pillow was asleep as
soon as I got warm. My unauthorized expe
dition was a surprise to the neighbors and
moro than a surpriso to my father and
mother. But I had not got killed or robbed
or killed the horses or had a chill, and I
turned over tho monoy so cheerfully, and
it was so largo a sum, that I was allowed
enough of it to buy a littlo cose of survey
or's instruments and a dictionary.
MOBAT lIALSTEAD.
One of Napoleon's Stratagems.
Liko the regular return of tho pendu
lum, tho French moved back again and
confronted tho Austrian centor that very
night, but now with every company in line
and Bonaparte at their head. A portion
of tho onemy, about 88,000 in number,
had reached Lonato, hastening to tho sup
port of Quasdanowich. Wurmser had lost
a day beforo Mantua. A socond timo the
hurrying French ongaged their foe almost
on tho same field. A second time tbey
%voro easily victorious. In fact, so terrible
was this second defoat that tho scattered
bands of Austrians wandered aimlessly
about in ignorance of their way.
Ono of them, 4,000 strong, reaching
Lonato, found it almost abandoned by tho
French, Bonaparte and his staff, with but
1,200 men, being left behind. A herald,
blindfolded, as was then tho custom, was
at oneo dispatched to summon tho French
commander to surrender to tbo superior
Austrian force. Tho available remnant of
the victorious army quickly gathered, and
tho messenger wan introduced in tho midst
of them. As the bandage was taken from
his ejus, da/.zlod by tho light falling on
hundreds of brilliant uniforms, the im
perious voico of his great enomy wag
beard commanding him to return and say
to Ills leader that It was a personal insult
to speak of surrender to tho French army,
and that it was ho who must immediately
yield himself and hi 3 division. Tho bold
scheme was successful, and to tho 10,000
previously killed, wounded and captured
by tho conquerors 4,000 prisoners wero
added. —Professor Sloano's Lifo of Napo
leon in Century.
A Failure.
Jess —Tho first thing Mrs. Blocker did
was to break her husband of all his bad
habits.
Bess—Then what?
Jess —Ho became so insipid tbat she hail
to sue for a separation.—New York World.
Trilby In the Vegetable Kingdom
Baltimore Ban: The Trilby craze has
even struck tho vegetable world. In a
bunch of radishes bought in Hanover
market by Charles A. Wemeth,. night
watchman at the Busquehannah Ice com
pany's plant, was found a radish shaped
distinctly like tho front part of afoot,
with five white toes sticking out. It was
scarcely as beautiful as the foot which
Little Billee made renowned by drawing
on the walls of a Fan's studio, i
j
t.-M '. .. *
LOS ANGELES HEBALDt TUESDAY MOITNTNGr, JTTLT 9, 18»5.
THE NEW WOMAN.
She talked with great Intensity of each' man's
base propensity and spoke with volubility
of woman's higher plane.
She dwelt on domesticity with mental elastici
ty and said that such felicity was really
quite in vain.
With gestures oratorical and phrases meta
phorical she voiced the powers numerical
that woman had untold
And spoke with cool dramatical of voting sys
tematical and ballot boxes spherical and
votes not bought with gold.
She said in each vicinity the doctors of divini
ty would come from femininity; la
bloomers they would be.
And matrons with rapidity wonld lose all
their timidity, and no more aslnlnity in
congress would wo seo.
And whllo with such audacity she showed her
great capacity and talkod with great di
dacity her husband learned to sweep,
And while with such agility sho dwelt on her
utility with such intense pugnacity ho
put the twins to sleep.
—Tom Mosson In New York San.
MY COUSIN MARY.
It was my sad fortune from earliest boy
hood up to be a failure in all ways. I
" as not so handsomo as could have been
expected in tho son of my beautiful moth
er and the young father who died before I
was born, and who was also beautiful, I
was told. I was not brilliant, though
both sides of tho house showed men and
women of excellent ability, and, worst ot
nil, I was not good, though this puzzled
me not a little as n child, for my inten
tions were of a magnificent order and the
resultant behavior not nearly so repre
hensible ns that of many boys I knew less
punishud.
But in somo way tho things I meant to
do failed of accomplishment or were found
when accomplished to havo most unhappy
consequences, nnd tho things I did under
pressure of discipline wore seldom satis
factory.
Years of reproof and often overheard
complaint as to my trying disposition
finally convinced me of my unworthine&s,
nnd in titno I grow to look at my life as
a fniluro, merely an opportunity for as
much self indulgence as could be procured
without too groat expense.
Being of a lazy and luxurious disposi
tion, I early fell into the habit of dorlving
an inoxhnustiblo fund of pleasuro from
mere imagination of what things might
be, to console myself for my ineffectual
struggle to make them such. As a little
boy I was sent to bed with military pre
cision by my inflexible mother, usually
with a sense of failure nnd ill doing in
the day behind mo, and I used to lio mute
and still in my little chamber and make
up to myself in royal bursts of Imagina
tion for tbe disappointments of tho real
lifo. How often, so laid and thought to
be sound asleep, I havo* In spirit not only
established my pre-eminent virtues by a
series of noblo acts, so easy to imagine, so
difficult to perform in tho gray irksomo
ness of everyday lifo, but besides this havo
I glutted my infant soul with the sweet
vengeance of magnanimity, arranging
unparalleled donations and privileges to
bo conferred by mo, me the lamentable
and unworthy son, upon my grateful fam
ily and friends. One sweetest joy of these
fair dreams was that when I should bo a
man my Cousin Mary, who disliked me
for tho disagreeable boy I was, should
lovo and marry me.
It was a sore problem with me in those
days to decide whether I should indeed re
ceive tho open gratitude of my beneficia
ries, reveling gloriously therein, or wheth
er, proudest height of power concealed, I
should bostow all benefits in secret, and
yet remain, condemned and criticised by
the unwitting recipients of my bounty.
But my Cousin Mary in these dreams al
ways loved mo for myself, and then, after
ward, ah, tho jewols I showered upon herl
"'his habit of internally satisfying_niy-
How the City Man Gets Rest.
Mr. Bonds (at tho club): "I tell you lam worn out with this hard
work hero in the city. lam going away to the woods for rest and ra
tional enjoyment."
Mr. Bonds enjoying himself in the woods.
—Chicago Record.
BEST MADE IN THE WORLD
ALL OTHERS ARE IMITATIONS
•elf, of paying back in trramphant mag
nanimity for all "thestings and arrows ot
outrageous fortune" continued with me
as I grew and remained my bast consola
tion after I had become an unaspiring re
porter on a great newspaper. And still in
my solitary chamber down town, when I
was not so tired as to sleep perforce in
what hours remained to me, I would con
sole myself for all the mortifications of tho
day and of all other days in my unhappy
memory by proud, unhampered visions of
what I would do under given conditions
of wealth and power.
Splendid conditions these, so easily im
agined, fitting so smoothly to my shoul
ders as I planned and adapted them, but,
ah, so laughably impossible of attainment!
And then, all at once, by a chance no
strangor, to bo sun, than many a one I
was in the daily habit of recording, there
fell into my hands, not talent and beauty
and power indeed, as I had demanded in
my boyish dreams, but wealth practically
unbounded, such wealth as I could never
of myself have earned or won or found, or
in any least or faintest way deserved.
To bo sure, I had boon laying myself out
on the old fellow, as I should never havo
dared to do had I known him for a mil
lionaire, but that was not from benevo
lence, but a purely selfish appreciation of
bis boundless fund of travel and experi
ence. His soolety was worth money to me
besides the pleasure ot it, and therefore
did I court him assiduously, with many
an entertainment and excursion, which
again were no oredit to my generosity, for
had I not tho Interminable tiokets aud
passes and the duty ot going to all those
weary things, a duty much lightened by
tho society of tho lounging, invalid old
gentleman, whom I supposed no richer
than myself.
I told him my story, such as it was,
and am fain to think thnt some subtlo
sympathy, some consciousness of a similar
experience in his own boyhood, made him
take more of an interest than I then sus
pected in this poor series of failures I
called my life.
Then be died very suddenly and serene
ly, leaving mo some unbelievable millions,
and as no ono but his solicitor knew that
hn bad any money so no ono knew tbat I
had any, and behold mo forthwith in ex
actly the position of my ohildish heart's
deal Eel
What joyl What wild, free rapturo of
plans, with occasional bursts of fancy
which even I dismissed as quite untenable.
For instance, I had no longer any faintest
hope of marrying my Cousin Mary. Sho :
was quite taken up with another cousin,
Fred by name, nnd would have married
him long since no doubt had he beon ablo
to support a family. But ho was proud
and would not marry until he could offer
something to his wife. I knew that, for
ho had told me so.
However, it was now my delicious fate
to be ablo to arrange matters for these
two so that they should be able to marry,
neither knowing how it had come about
nor in the least oorner of their hearts sus
pecting me. Then with what swelling
pride should I look upon their happiness
and know that I had given it—l who sc
far had given only trouble and mortifica
tion to my family!
It was an easy matter to make my
mother's last years comfortable, and, ah I
the pleasure, the selfish pride I took in
remembering small personal wishes and
gratifying them bit by bit, while never
suspected I
It was an easy matter, too, through my
agent, to buy the very paper on which I
write, to slowly dismiss tho men who were
a disgrace to it, to promote and ongngo
men whose work made it a great voico
soon, and through it 6lowly to win tho
public confidence and work my will little
by little among the affairs of tho city.
Such a splendid gamo it was to arnuso
public enthusiasm over somo froo baths or
children's playground scheme or other, to
start subscription lists and covertly head
thorn mysolf, to machinate safely and
quietly throneh my great pages, and all
the while having my copy refused half the
time, and, the other fellows wondering
bow I kept my place.
All this and much more was easy and
exciting, more of a triumph and a Joy even
than I had over Imagined It would be, but
my pet scheme of schemes hung nre a lit
tle Fred got his new position In a per
fectly natural manner. He was a good fel
low and dosorved It Still there waa no
sign of an engagement between him and
my Cousin Mary. Then I thought, being
an Independent girl, she might be waiting
to have something of her own, and aftor
as protty a bit of finesse as I ever saw In
my life, if it was ray own Invention—and
small wonder, for had I not schemed at
such pleasant miracles since I was 8 years
oldf—l managed to provide her with a
neat little fortune of her own. Still no re
sult. So ono day, when I was at home—l
did not go often, for mother would always
lecture me on my habits, and somehow I
never could ontirely get ovor the hurt of It,
big as I was—l chanced to be alone with
my Cousin Mary for as much of an evening
ns she would be willing to bear my com
pany.
I felt very happy to see how beautifully
sho was dressed in theso days, how her
hands were whlto already and grown
smooth again where tbo delicate fingers
used to be rough with countless needle
pricks. Tho houso was a comfortable one
now, my mother was far easier in hor
mind and therefore a sweeter companion.
Everything looked pleasant around
Mary, and I told her how glad I waa to
Geo it.
I did not toll her how glad I was to see
hor, how tn all tbo rich and varied joy of
my present position, as in all tbo unutter
able weariness and dullness of my formor
state, to see her was tho keenest delight I
over felt or over hoped to feel. Calm,
strong beautiful woman that she was;
perfect in loveliness of faoo and form and
character, mine would be a poor triumph,
nftor all, if I could not contrivo to make
her happy.
I sot watching her, and sho watched tbo
leaping flames of tho Arc, and I wondered
clumsily in what possible way I could forco
her into the happiness which should bo
hers, when all at once she roso and coma
to lny side.
"Cousin Tom," she said In that deli
cious voice of hors. "Why don't you
amount to more, why don't you do your
self justice in some way? Is it" —and here
she blushed beautifully, but tho cousin
ship gnvo her courage, and she went On —
"is it for lack of money to make a start
with? Because, you know, I am quite
rich now, because I want you to let mo—
you'll forglvo my awkwardness, won't
you?—to let mo give you some of it, Tom,
a whole pile of It."
Tbat blessed, generous, self forgetting
creature! She looked so lovely as she said
it that my poor brain swam dizzily.
"No," said I at length, "it is not lack
of money, my dear Cousin Mary, but
sheer personal Incapacity that prevents
my amounting to anything. lam an or
dinary, stupid follow at best, and my fnm
lly are too clear headed to give me that
blind loving faith wbioh makes even
stupid fellows do very well sometimes."
"You ore not stupid," sbe cried, "nor
ordinary—l know you better than you
think. You could be something splendid
if you ohoso. Why don't you choose?"
And then she looked at me with such
an oarnest, tender, believing glance as
fairly drovo mo to her feot.
"Oh, Mary, you blessed angel!" I cried
to her. "Could you—would you—is it pos
sible that you, after all, oan find it in
your swoet heart to make a place for such
a useless good for nothing as I?"
And then my Cousin Mary just oamo
into my arms and comforted my sore
heart witli a thousand tender words of
hopo and faith. And sho said the sweet
est joy of joys to her was that now sbe
was roally ablo to help me with herpreo
lous llttlo fortune And since she values
it so much I bnve let her help mo with it
always. As If any fortune, great or small,
wore to bo mentioned in the same breath
with hor love!—lmpress.
GOOD NEWS, LADIES I
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It will pay you to visit us.
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Buying directly saves middlemen and ped
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We will send free, securely sealed, a little pamphlet of which the following Is the title page.
NEW REA^^ ENT
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■ I — BY —
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We are specialists for every form of Cor. Main end Third Streets, All Private Diseases of which we make
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Corner Main and Third Sts. OVER WELLS-FARGO EXPRESS OFFICE. Private Entrance on Thir4Bt>
t"To Remove Paint.
"Sit down on it before it is dry."— (Texas Si/tings)
hat's a good way—easy, too. And another
way is to do your cleaning in the old
fashioned way with soap; the necessary rub
bing takes off the paint along with the dirt,
but this is very tiresome work.
You ought to do your house-cleaning with
. Pearline; that's the modern
way —easiest and most eco
|hjL /\ nomical way—takes away the
Fr fL dirt easily and leaves the paint
<Pl| Saves rubbing, saves work,
JPSJ»s»m«w saves time, saves whatever is
**" cleaned. Use Pearline (with
•it soap) on anything that water doesn't hurt. *»
THE FINEST FINISHED
Beautiful MAT Surface
PHOTOCRHPHS
Price same as ordinary finish, at
Largest and most complete Photograph Studio In Southern California.
liUhent Award Diploma at Chicago AorTd'aPair, I*oB.
First Prize Gold Medal aborc all competitors at Midwinter Fair. San Pranelsqe. lMfc
And Highest Award above all competitors wherever work was entered la ooaaaan
lion in the State. *^
Studio, 107 N. Spring St., Los Angeles, CaL
$5 Per Month And Special Diseases.
C. I. SCHULTZ, . rfEl
EUROPEAN SPECIALIST, M3Mm&Jk
Makes this most generous offer to the afflicted: j WWI '/tvv^XaW
Remember, my new process, with medicated va- / • .jf __ _X
pors and all necessary medicaments without extra OQ M
charge. WEAKNESS, DEBILITY, NIGHT LOSSES, Ml Jf"| lo|
etc., restored by n new remedy now in use in Europe, Mr llaWtmll II
in a very short time. SKIN DISEASES. SYPHI- W gWB\
LITIC POISONS and all impurities of the blood *j|lF* J
promptly eradicated without the use ot mercury. Kisglßle^Hßja
SPECIAL ATTENTION given to all Chronic In- WmWkWmW^Msi
flammations, Discharges and Irregulatics in female i-Tstsr 'nrnATkuntmaana
diseases. LIVER, KIDNEY, BLADDER and all GENITO URINARY
diseases permanently cured.
$2000 ,n Qo ' d f° r an y case undertaken that I cannot cure.
SANITARIUH: 120 NORTH MAIN STREET
New Hellman Block.
Auction
Auction
Fine Driving Horses,
Carriages, Harness, Etc.
I will on Saturday, July 20, 1895, et 10
o'clock a.m., on the premises. No. 208 8. Los
Angeles street, sell at public auction without
reserve, my entire st.ict vf livery and private
drivine; horses The horses to be solo are of
selected stock, are lirst-class in eveiy resrect
and cannot be excelled in style and action as
well as speed. Having been lelected by myself
in person, I can truly «ay that I believe them
to be the best lot of harness horses on tho
coast for every day use. The following is a list
of horses, surreys, buggies, hacks, harne.'S,
robes, etc., etc., to-wit:
Edison b g by Electricity-Sally Benton.
Holly c g by Woodnut.
cbarles Steinway c g by Steinway.
Dennis gg by au English coacher.
Graves g g by Duke McClelland.
Hank bg by Dashwood.
Quien Sabe b g by Untraced.
Koicoe b g by son of Brigadier.
lowa b g horse bred in Now York state.
Willets blk g by sire of Blackwood.
Silkwood jrblk g by Silkwood.
Santa Ana b g by Bloc horse of Santa Ana.
Leon c g by son of Newry.
Tonto b g by Dashwood.
Handy b g by Altoona.
Andy b g by son of A. W. Richmond.
Castro blk g by Altoona.
Mollle X bn m by Antioch.
Dick bn g by A. w. Richmond.
One hack, one three-seater, two surreys, five
top buggies, one open buggy, five sets of
double harness, ten sets single harness, extra
boles, lead bars, robes, robe sheets, etc.
'I he stock can be sold at private sale and a
satisfactory lease given on property if desired.
And further notice is hereby given that the
said Club Stables will remain open to transient
stock and will be kept exclusively as boarding
stables from time of sale.
Reason for selling is that my official duties
as United States marshal occupy my whole
time precluding personal attention to tho
liver'o DUBlße9B ' N. A. COVAKRUBIAS.
DR. wong HIM, who has practiced mo«K
cine in Los Angeles for 20 years, on*
whose office is at G3(» Upper Main street, will
treat by medicine all diseases of women, mea
and children. The doctor claims that he haf
r. medics that are superior to all others safe
specific for troubles of women and men. A
trial alone will convince tho sick that Dr.
Wong Hint's remedies ar. mors efficacious thaa
can be prescribed, Dr. Wong Him is a Chinese;
physician of prominence and a gentleman of
responsibility. His reputation is mora that)
well established, and all persons needing hit
services can rely on his skill and ability, A
euro Is guaranted In every case In which a re*
covery Is possible Herb medicines tot sale.
DR. WONGHIM
HERB DOCTOR,
639 Upper Main Street. Los Angela.
jmmZ DR. CATON'S RELIABLE "*
TANSY PILLS
VV* *\ Bring safety, comfort and health,
ay j.* Lookout! There are Imitations!
T J Don't take any risks. Boatbatjob
/ f 1 " get Dr. Catos's, the original and
/ *v only absolutely safe and certain
v, preparation, Drug stores, or by
e>^^~F^" M ' ed>maUr ° r **' Advl ">froa,
.fliCslon Specific Co.. Batten. Maia.
C. F. HEINZETIAN,
Druggist and Chemist
523 N. Main St, Los Angeles.
Prescriptions carefully oompoandad day 0*
Bight

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