herald. eagleson co.paul k. michener was over front pasa-dena yesterday afternoon. ira niles and...

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United States Signal Service. Iteport of.observations taken at Los Angeles. March 24, 1890: Max. pea., 65; mm. tern., 45. Indications. San Francisco, March 24.?Forecast till 8 p. m. Tuesday: Light rains in Northern California; fair weather in Southern California. Eastern Temperature. Chicago, March 24.?New York, 30; New Orleans, 58; St. Louis, 50; Cincinnati, 40; Chi- cago. 34: Winnipeg. 30. PERSONAL. F. K. Barnard is down from Ventura. A. E. Bird, of Anaheim, was in the city yesterday. G. M. Walker came in from Long Beach yesterday. Paul K. Michener was over front Pasa- dena yesterday afternoon. Ira Niles and Miss Dot Niles, of De- troit, Mich., are in the city. Fred Sterns, of San Jose, is in the city visiting his friend, D. Moriarty. G. A. Naughton left yesterday on the afternoon train for San Francisco. J. C. Nelson was a passenger on the 1 :40 train for the north yesterday. A. H. Denker was on the list of pas- sengers bound northward yesterday. W. K. Wordsworth started for San Francisco yesterday on the afternoon train. Doctor J. E. Fulton has returned from a visit of several weeks to San Fran- cisco. Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Stiles, of Chicago, are paying a visit to Los Angeles and vicinity. H. A. Unruh, manager of the Baldwin ranch, and formerly of Los Angeles, is in the city. Miss Maud A. Lord, of this city, is now visiting friends at Geneva, 111. She will be absent in the East about seven months. C. A. Busill, wife and daughter, of Laconia, N. H., and William Berger and family, of Denver, are visiting Los Angeles. . Mr. and Mrs. \V r m. Kimers, of Hum- phrey, Neb., arrived yesterday on a short visit. Hon. R. S. Hall, of Omaha, a brother of Mrs. E. H. Enderlein, is in the city on a visit. Mr. Hall is attorney for tlie Missouri Pacific. Major E. W. Jones, president of the Chaml>er of Commerce, went north yes- terday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. V. Maghek, of San Fran- cisco, accompanied by their daughter, are visiting Los Angeles. Mr. and Mr?. G. S. Chapin, accom- panied by G. and K. Chapin, of Santa Barbara, came down to the city yester- day. Mrs. W. Kalisher left Sunday last for Chicago. She departed rather unex- pectedly. She will be absent some months. J. H. Campbell, of Kingman, Ariz., accompanied by A. D. Campbell, of Philadelphia, are looking around this part of tlie State. Richard Gird, of Chino, was in the city yesterday. He stated that the matter of ihe erection of the sugar re- lipery is being steadily pushed. W. S. Scott, for six years attorney in Kansas City. with his wife is visiting his uncle," J.W. Gillette, 322 Temple street, and will possibly reside in this city. NEWS NOTES. The Crown Hills Improvement Society meets this evening. The annual election of the Iroquois Club will elect officers on May 6th. A meeting of fruit-growers at Vernon will be held Thursday evening at West Vernoon school house. Mrs. C. F. Hathaway was granted a divorce from A. M. Hathaway yesterday on the ground of cruelty. B. B. Owens, who is charged with stealing a piano, was granted a new trial yesterday by Judge McKinley. The Carnival oi Famous Women to be given in Illinois hall tomorrow evening promises to be a very enjoyable enter- tainment. Albert Williams was examined before a commission yesterday and ordered committed to the Stockton asylum for the insane. A series of seven or eight lectures are to he delivered shortly before the pupils of the high school by prominent citizens upon various timely subjects. The artistic world ot Los Angeles is on the gui rive for the great wood-en- graving exhibit to be shown here by the Kuskin Art Club early next month. There will be a meeting of the mem- | bers of the Union League this evening, j Among the guests who are expected t< i j he present are Governor Waterman and Colonel Markham. The case of H. E. Whitesides, charged with assault with a deadly weapon, has been set for trial March 29th, instead of April 15th. The defendant asked for a speedier trial. Mr. Osborn Congleton, of The Voire. New York, is in the city. He lectured last night at the Trinity M. E. church, on "The Foundation Stone of Liberty." He will deliver a second lecture tonight at Temperance Temple hall, corner of Temple street and Broadway. A pair of diamond ear-rings, valued at $2,000, and belonging to George Hop- kins, was sold by the Sheriff yesterday morning on an execution of judgment for $1,072.28 obtained by tlie Farmers and Merchants Bank. The gems were bid in by J. A. Graves, Esq., for the bank at $400. The regular monthly meeting oi the Union Chautauqua Circle will be held in the lecture-room of the Fort-street M. E. church this evening. The pro- gramme willbe furnished by the Occi- dent Circle of West Seventh street, and consists of essays, recitations and vocal and instrumental music. R. D. List, Notary Public. Legal paper- care- fully drawn. Removed to ISM W. Second St., Burdlck block. Telephone 595. A New Bank. The great safe and other fixtures in tbe Safe Deposit vaults at the corner of New High and Temple streets are being removed to the new nnd elegant Ferret building, corner of Third and Spring streets. A new bank, over which Prof. Lowe, oi the gas company, will preside, is about to be opened there. The offices are being fitted up in fine style, and the report is that the new concern will l>c strong from the ground up. The people interested enjoy a large share of the public, confidence. THE PERMANENT EXHIBIT. It Attracted a Large Number of Visitors Yesterday. Although the work of collecting a per- manent exhibit is not more than well begun, still the display, as far as it goes, manages to attract a considerable num- ber of people. A register is kept, in which those who come to look at the ex- hibit are requested to enroll their names. About forty names were entered of Los Angeles people yesterday, and the fol- lowing of people from outside of the city: Wm. Burnet, New York; F. ('. Corvell, Whittier; Robert s. Woodside, Phil T. Thistlethwait and wife, Rich- mond, Ind.; C. E. Russell, Alhambra; H. M. Ames, Vernon; A. J. Bean, Gar- dena: G. A. Blakeslee, Florence; Wm. J. Allyn. Holyoke, Mass.; W. R. Light, Tropico: Abram Richmond, Ind.; ("has. P. Harris, Rutland, Vt. JC. R. Wellington Julian, San Diego; Mrs. E. M. Hewitt, Louisville, Ky.; Frances Herbert, St. Johns, (>.; A. J. Chambers, Omaha, Neb.; F. P. Sigler, Beaumont; John V. Ames, Alexander, So. Dak.; T. L. < rooeh, Kivera. The authorities of the chamber do not propose to allow the exhibit to be used for advertising purposes. One exhibitor took away his display yesterday because be was not allowed to hang an enormous sign above it. THE COUNTY DIVISION. The Commission is Nearly Ready to Make Its Report. The commission on the division of the property of Los Angeles and Orange counties is nearly ready to make its re- port to the Boards of Supervisors of the two counties. Probably about this time next week the report will be handed in. The last serious work done was the assessment of the values of the new court house site and of the old court bouse site and building. For some time there was disagreement, the Orange county commissioners claiming that tlfe Los Angeles county men were setting too low a price on the property, anil vice verm. Last Saturday they virtually agreed, setting the new court house site tit $125,000, and the old court house at $100,000. The balance has had to be struck be- tween the figures for the property in the two countias, and it will take some work to sum up* tabulate and deduce the re- sults of the two sets of figures. It is presumed that Orange will owe Los An- geles $30,000, which is a little less than former estimates, a natural result, as the Los Angeles people have been obliged to raise their estimates some- what. THE PRE-EMPTOR WINS. A Patent to the Railroad Set Aside. The case of Wotm against Hinekle has been in the courts lor a long time. Foss purchased a piece of land from the South- ern Pacitic Company some years ago. He found Hinekle on the land at the time, and began a suit for his ejectment. Hinckle's was a pre-emption claim. The case was tried before Judge O'Melveny when he was ou the bench, who gave judgment for Foss on his title front the railroad with a United States patent be- hind it. Will D. Gould appealed the case to the Supreme Court, and got a new trial. He tried it yesterday before Judge Van Dyke and secured a judg- ment for Hinekle on bis pre-emption claim. The land is in tbe territory ex- terior to the San Jose ranch which was reserved from the railroad grant, and the granting of a patent to the railroad was therefore an error on the part of the Secretary of the Interior. It could not therefore dispossess Hinekle, who had begun to pre-empt the land prior to the granting of the patent to the rail- i road. THE SANTA ANITA. E. J. Baldwin's Orange Orchard's Pres- ent and Future. H. A. Unruh, of Arcadia, was in Ihe city yesterday. In conversation with a Herald reporter he said that the old orchard on the Santa Anita ranch was in as good shape as he bad ever seen it. There is scarcely any scale of any sort on the trees, and the few of the red variety left are fast disappearing. Two years ago Mr. Baldwin set out 100 acres of young trees at the mouth of the Santa Anita canon. This was when nearly everyone in this section was frightened out of his wits lest the white scale should destroy all the orange trees here. Now these trees, about 10,000 of them, are in excellent condition, and promise well for the future. In the Santa Anita nurseries there are about 1,000,000 young orange trees. A small portion of these are ready to set in orchard rows this year, and will be so disposed of, and tbe others will be set out next spring. Mr. Unruh esti- mates that the plants of the two years ' will aggregate 75,000 to 100,000 orange 1 trees, or 750 to 1,000 acres. Must Be Tried Again. There was a singular termination toa trial yesterday before Judge Van Dyke. On May 1, 1888, Andrew Osgoodby loaned to J. IL Adams the sum of $1)14.85, with the understanding that the same should l>e paid on or before De- 8, 1888, with 7 per cent, interest. The money was not paid and a suit was brought, the complaint stating "that the sum is now due and payable, and defendant has not paid the same or any portion thereof, nor any inter- est thereon, though often jrequested to do so." # The defendant demurred on the ground that the complaint did not set forth that the money had not been paid by someone else; but the court was about to overrule the demurrer, until the defendant read a decision of the Su- preme Court in 73 Cal., page 123. The court looked at the decision a moment, and then sustained the demurrer. The allegation that the note has not l>een paid by some other than the one sued is essential. A new complaint will now be neces- sary. Mr. Osgoodby is from Pomona, nd 'is a brother of tne redoubtable Geo. Osgoodhv. alias '?Murchison," of the fa- mous Sack ville-West letter. Buggy robes nnd blankets ut Koy's hurnes sho|.. 217 Los Angeles street REAL ESTATE RECORD. Monday. March 24, 1890. TRANSFERS. W i Martin unci Rebecca C Martin to Anne F Broaded ?Lol:) blk 174, Pomona; $3,500. John Vexhoeven to Isabella Hcliingham- Agreement toconvey s 3t> foot <>f lot t; i,ik » mitwln of lots t>anil 7 blk B, 11 S; 11,400 Oeo M Danakln to Howl w Getchell? Lota 4 and o blk 11, California Co-operative Colons tract; 11,160. Ft' Howes to Lily A Barclay?Lots 4 5 and (i blk 37, Azusa: $1,300. George H Boncbrake. Joseph Daniels and H E t'pton to Henry Gilmore?W lot) feet Oflot 20 blk 0, Finney tract: $1,000. Horace M Russell to 1) Gregory Smith?Und 2.84 acres of und 'j of lot 05, W part Lick tract $2.500. H M Russell to Frank E Russell?An und 20 interest in 36 acres commencing at X point of said land and the junction of Boreham and Lo- pez station, and all the land lying lietween said [and and the Los Angeles river; also an und W of and und'., interest in lot 18 blk B, Marengo tract: $1,500. Mrs Laura BoqUlSt to Eli Stevens?Lot 35, F II Lowell's sulsln of SchictVelin tract, E 1. A |3,000. Geo I' W Jensen and Hattie Jensen to F A Ur- ban?W 150 feet of lot 21 blk C. Finnev tract 18,000. Tcodoro Vcrdugo and Maria A utonio C Ver dugo to Erskinc M R055?145.71 acres inRo San Rafael; $4,000. Hopcc E Upton to George P \V Jensen?Lot 1 blk C. Finney tract; 51.200. Edward Duncan to Otto Best?Lot 41, Rosas tract: $1,400. Nikolaus Priester to James A Huichings?Cud Vs interest in 10 acres of land insection 12, T 1 s. it 14 W; 11,250. Frank 1' Firey to Thomas A Cord?Lot 4, block B, of Firey, French and Rhorer's subd of s 20 Hi res of Burhank tract, and strip lying between said tract anil Ellen street; $1,500. Mary E McGce to Flora T Webster ?Lot com ut Intersection of Broadway avenue and Gleudale street, Pasadena; $2,500. Isaac J ltcvuolds to B F Ball?XW', of SW' and Si 4 of S%', of NWk of section 28, T 2 X, li It! W; $4,000. V John Vcrhoevcn to C, LDean?Lot ti, blook H. 1 Los Angeles Homestead tract; $5,000. James G Ogilvie and Alfred W Fames to Wil- liam II Clmmberlin?4 tracts in Ro La Oieaega $8,333. Isaias W Hellman, Ilenrv|llnmmcl aud A 11 Denker to O W " hilds?Lots 5 and 6, block 2. Sanchez tract; $0,000. Geo M Danskin to Joseph M Miller?Lots 7, H ' and 9, block 7, blocks 10, 15 anil 34. Clear water: $I,IIXI. J F Brow n and 0 O Brown to Jesse Q Hall- Lot 17 block 8, Angcleno Heights street; $5,000. i E T Wright to E F Kysor?Lot 3 and part of lot 12, and strip 10 feet wide adjoining said lot 12, all in Bunker Hilltract: $12,000. John C Rust and Ivaloo W Rust to AMMrson ; stout?Lot 4. Rust's stflj of Pasadena, M H 15, 1> 335: $S.(HK). SUMMARY. Number transfers $1,000 and over, 23. Amount, $75,933. Number transfers under $1,000,35. Amount, $8,950. Number nominal transfers, 3. Total amount of considerations, $^4,553. NOTa?Transfers of which the consideralM j is less than *1.000 are not published in the 1 above list. ' HOTEL ARRIVALS. Hollenbeck. Barclay Henley, S F LR Stiles ,t wf. ( hlflago F E Barnard, Ventura Mrs B Lanini, Memphis II M Russell, S Monica Mrs E Cundav, do , H W Holdett, Detroit H Engelbricbt, S F X M Adams. Cal C E White, do Win Eimers &wf, Xcb E C Wilson, do C M Fogg, Phila W H Chamberhiin, do 1 J Lambert, Pueblo A Caro, do GS Chapin &wf, S Bars J H Williams, do G A X Chapin, do A II Emery, do Mrs X E Christie. 11l Chas XSeumale, do ! L B Palmer, Hastings A L Brown, do A A Pond, Minneapolis } 8 Shults, San Jacinto JII Campbell, Ariz V D Campbell, Phila < J H Byrnes <& fain, X J B Dunham, LaCanafa P X Mieln ner.Pasadena C Stamps, Cal Nadejwi. B T Richardson, N*Y E M Pastor, Portland F Korbel .t wf.s F R A Graham, San Diego v Mashek, wf Adtr, do s Rheinstorm, Clncinati G w BJder,Cleveland,o 8 B Sunn, X v Ira Niles, Detroit X 1! Walker.Orlando.Fla Miss Dot Xiles, do W D Perkins, S Monica John A Scott, s F (I W. Cummings&tt f.x V C H Lessig. do B II Chase, do Win Sexton, do Will J Giddings. do cc Qorham, Del Mar AE Bird, Anaheim Geo M o'DonneU. S F G M Wulker.Lougßeach OTi«- Throat.? "Brown's Bronchial Troche*" art directly on the organs of the voice. They have an extraordinary effect inall disorders of the throat. Merrill Lodge No. 229. I. O. G. T., Will give an entertainment and social on Wed- nesday evening, March 26th. at their hall in Temperance temple, corner of Broadway and Temple street. A splendid programme has leen prepared. Everybody Invited. Admittance free. Over One Thousand Persons Have been cured. It mukes no difference what is votirdisease. Radam's Microbe Killer vill cure. Ollice, 109' /:z S. Broadwivy. WHY WILL YOU cough when Shiloh's Cure w ill give immediate relief. Pri<fe 10 cents, 50 cents andsl. For sale by C. F. Heinzeman, 122 North Main street. DAILY HERALD. THE LOS ANGELES HERALD: TUESDAY MORNING, MARCH 25, 1890. 8 a. in., p. m. 90 77 I \ I w ! 1 W I 9 AMUSEMENTS.; / 1 H \NH OPERA hoYseY 1J H. C. wyatt. Lessee and Manager nVK SIGHTS only: KIVK NIGHTS ONLY With a Spec ial Satiinlay Matinee. I OWMENCTNG TUESDAY, MAKCH 85TB. The Original ami World Famous HANLONS Their New Grand Fairy Spectacle NE W rANTA S >l A I INTRODItINu NKW SCENES, MUSIC, COSTUMES and SPECIALTIES. iW Remember Everything New This -*J<l Season. marl S j TABARD'S PAVILION. SIXTH ANNUAL :?: j{e F I. O W E It FESTIVAL APRIL 39-30. For Premium Lists address MISS VICTORIA WITMER) LuCflS and West Third streets. On all other matters address mrs. j. i). nmcH, :tir»s. inn st. TjIIRST CONGREGATIONAL CrTUKCH. ENTEKTAINMENT. MONDAY EVENING, MARCH 9BBT, i.I'ANU MUSICAL TREAT. The following artists have kindly volunteered their services: MESSRS. NAY, I.EBO,MAYBIN A WALLACE MRS. TAGGAKT and PROS'. AREVALOI MRS. M. PERKY-DAVIS. SIG. MODINI, MBSS PREWITT, BARLEY E. HAMILTON. MISS BERGER, MRS. OWENS and MR .»<- QUILLEN. Admission '25 eentis inar2S-td) I)ALACE RESTAURANT AND SALOON, Corner First and Spring Street". The Most Magnificent and Popular Resort in the City. tf IS EE C&HCK B T S ! £ ;j: BY TIIE CELEBRATED PHILHARMONIC SOLOISTS Every Night trom 8 to 12. JOSEPH SCHURTJt PROPRIETOR. "BTAZARD'S PAVILION, J I Fifth and Olive Streets. 11 OLI £ It SH. A TING! BEGINNING BATURI AY. MARCB 221. FOR RESPECTABLE CLASSES ONLY. Attbtfsslom Free to Gallery, Skating. 25 cents. ,1. L. WALTON. Manager. mrlS 1 m BAKTLETT'S Mt T SIC 1! ILL, First street. \«CI>NESUAY KVENIMi, MARCH 20T11. At ft oV.'liek CONCERT ! CONXEKT ! By MISS NORA LARGE, and MR. WILLIAM PIUTTI. Tickets 50 cents, now 'or sale at Hartlett's mush: store. mar2:-L4t* XT<*W OPEN IN THE Natatorium or Swisniitiliig Itath ! Water Heated by stean; several new porcelain- lined tubs added, also a large dressing-room for ladies, connecting withbaths. Tuesday nights for ladies and gentlemen. WM. .1. McCALDIN. martt-tf President and Manager. ILLINOIS HALL, Broadway and Sixth street. FRIDAY EVENING, MARCH 2STH, ILLINOIS ASSOCIATION SOCIAL! Vocal aud Instrumental Music, aud the Pleas- ing Farce. "Five O'clock Tea" Rettdered by the Angel Cltj Amateurs. Arthur W. P. Kinney, manager. Music by High School Orchestra Admission (to cover expenses). 10 cents. Illinois hall to let. DISEASES OF THE Head, Throat, Lungs Successfully treated by M.HILTON WILLIAMS, M.Di M. C. P. S. 0., By His Hot Air Medicated Inhalations and his COMPOUND OXYGEN TREATMENT. ASTHMA. It is a common error to suppose every disease ?rhieh is attended by oppressed breathing tobe Asthma or Phthisic. We have shortness of breath inConsumption and Pneumonia just as wedoiu Asthma, only that in these diseases it I is always present, whereas in Astlima it occurs in paroxysms, Asthma is a spasmodic disease of the Dings, which manifests itself in periodic attacks or "fits." It comes oa suddenly and is attended with great difficultyof breathing while it lasts, but when the attack is over the patient br jtithes almost as well as in health. Nervous. Humid and Dry Asthma are names given to different forms of this disease. Emphy- sema is another and more Inveterate Una of Asthnu, while Hay Fever or Rose Cold : « a pe- culiar variety of Asthma which occurs at a cer- tain season (if the year. Each of these forms of ! disease differs somewhat from the ethers in symptoms, but practically these distinctions are of very little value. II does not matter to the patient which form of Asthma he has,, since hi? Bufferings are the same in all. lv on* case the expectoration becomes yellow, and we call it bronchial. In another it is light and we call it dry. When he coughs up clear water, with a white froth on the surface, we say he has Hu- moral Asthma. In Nervous Asthaia there is very little expectoration of any kind. Hay Fever always begins as a crying cold in the head or influenza, and a clear water runs froi£ the nose and the eyes before the Asthma fit comes on. In Emphysema the expectoration I) generally thick, and continues so m the inter val between the fits, while the shortness o: breath is increased on the slightest exertion. It is a foolish conceit of many people to. he lieve-that if they have Asthma they cannot get Consumption. The truth is the very opposite They are more liable to fall into Consuwptior because they have Asthma. Another idea ii that Asthma itself is not a dangerous disease aud yet the published bills of mortality for thii city prove to all who read them that great num bors lose their lives every year by this foul de stroyer of our homes. Without courage and perseverance nolhlug i curable. But with these aided by proper an< skillful treatment, Asthma can be cured evei after the lungs are extensively diseased. Persons desiring treatment by this system o practice can use the remedies at home as wel as at our ollice, and which will cause no Inoon venience or hindrance from business whatevei Every ease of Asthma is curable. Eastern visi tors and invalids will be wise inbeing curei before they return home. Those who desire to consult with me in regar* to their oases had better call at the office for ai pxaminntiou, but if impossible to visit the offic cersonally can write for list of questions an circular, both of which will be sent free c ha rge. Address M. HILTON WILLIAMS, M.D., 137 S. Broadway, Los Angeles, Cal Office hours?From 9 A. 51. to 4 p. M. Sundays-From 2 to 8:30 r. M. KesiUeuee-15 South Grand Avenue. POWDER Absolutely Pure* The powder never varies. A model of purity and wholesomeuess. More economical than the ordinary kinds, and cannot be Bold incompe- tition with the multitudes of low test, short weight, slum of phosphate powders. Sold Only in Cans. Royal Baking Powder Co., 100 Wall St.. N. Y. THE JOIINSON-LOOKtE MERCANTILE CO., San Francisco, agents. . d4-4ui P.WO' ?mi SPECIAL NOTICE. IMPORTANT TO CONTRACTORS \. AND BUILDERS. Having purchased the entire stock of the Willamette Steam Mills, [.timber and Manufacturing Company, corner Main and San Fernando streets, and being obliged to remove the same within sixty days, we will lill orders from the above yard and allow our patrons the benefit of the cost of removal. GANAHL LUMBER CO. W. A. Driscoll, Manager. Main office and yard, coiner First and Alameda street. Temporary branch office and yard,cor- ner Main and San Fernando streets. C. DUCOMMUN, Hardware, Mechanics' Tools for All Trades* AND DEALERS IN Shelf Hardware, Brushes, Orange Clippers, Pruning Shears, Honey Knives, sheep Shears, As- savers' Outfits, Spectacles, Birds' Eyes and other Optical Instruments, Fancy Goods, etc., und 25,000 assorted articles. No. 302 N. Main [ street, Los Angeles, CaL 120 3m XAOI.ESON * CO. EAGLESON & CO. No. 50 North Spring Street. 4 Mens Furnishing Goods. GRAND OPENING NEW SPRING GOODS I On Saturday Next, the 29th. We will show the LARGEST STOCK of CHOICE ONDERWEAR, NEGLIGE SHIRTS, HOSIERY, NECKWEAR, PAJAMAS, WHITE SHIRTS, GLOVES, etc., etc., e-wer shown in the city, and AT THE LOWEST PRICES. inrl-lm Mtri.LEX, IM.JIETT & CO. M. B. & (o. INow Goods Arriving JVerj- Dnv ' WC Can siiow Extra Values in Men's aud Hoys' Bolts, Furnishing Goods, Dress Shirts. Seek wear, etc. A Specially Select Assortment of Men's Neglige Shirts. Children's Department Well Stocked with Dopaolc Suits All Styles and Sizes of Felt and Straw Hats. BUY EASTER SUITS BEFORE THE RUSH OUR. EMPLOYEES GET SHORT HOURS. We Close at 6 P. M.. . %t Saturdays at 10 P.M. *'* ' ,% ' ;% MULLEN, BLUETT i CO.. Northwest Corner Spring and First Streets. marl -5m FN P ARAIJ.ELED OI'I'OKTi'NITY TO SECURE A BEARING ORANGE or LEMON GROVE On the True Orange Belt of Southern California on the: co-operative plan. The Cucamonga land !i;.d Improvement Company have selected 20 ten-acre traits forthe pur- pose of planting and cultivating the sunn; for non-resident investors for a term of 5 years. The tracts to t>e plan'jed to navel oranges or lemons. SUBSCRIPTION SOOKS NOW OPEN. Far full particulars and terms cail or address The Cucamonga Land and Improvement G0.,. marS-lm Room 7. No. 11 Temple Street, LOS ANGELES. CAL. ORANGE LANDS. Maelay San Fernando RaneS. THE WATER SYSTEM Has cost over $120,000 cash to January I,lB{lo. All water is delivered along the streets In iron pressure pipes for irrigation nnd domestic pur- poses. Over 25 miles of mains und laterals are laid at a cash cost of over $73,000. The mains are from t! inches to 24 inches in diameter.' The water is from artesiun wells and from the subterranean flew of Pacoima at the submerged dam. This dam is built of granite and l\irtland lament, and cost $44,000 iv cash. No seeds of weeds or germs of disease can ever cuter the water pipes. The following letters shew the 1 land to be tho best in Southern California for oranges: SiffiD AND Nt-RSERY IIEI'AJCTMENT Germain Fruit C 0... K. Germain, President. San Fernando Land and Water Co.?ln the interest of Los Angeles county, I take pleasure instating that for several years past I have han- dled the Sau Fernando orange and lemon crops, and have found no earlier, cleanur or sweeter oranges or better lemons in the California mar- ket. They are absolutely clean, and free from any smut, dirt or discoloration whatever, and ripen earlier than any oranges oi: lemons in this section, and are fully up to the best Riverside fruit that I have ever seen. GERMAIN FRUIT CO., Per EUGENE Germain, President. February 14,1890. Morning Side Nurssiry, San Fernando, February 20,1890. Messrs. Macneil, Hagar, Alexander, Maclav and Widney, Trustees of Maelay Runcho at San Fernando; Gentlemen?ln the interests of San Fernando asd those seeking orange lands, I take pleasure in stating that 1 have MBS engaged in semi- tropic nursery and orchard raising for the past three years in this place, and 1 know of no place inSouthern California superior to this locality 1 for early, clean fruit of flue quality, and the t growth of remarkably fine orange, lemon, lime \u25a0 trees, etc. All orchards und nurseries are free I and absolutely clean from all insect pests. San i Bernardino and San Diego county buyers show their appreciation of this place by quarantining against all other points in I.os Angeles county except San Feruando. 1 uui, geutlemen, re- spectfully yours, JOHN BURR, District Inspector. These lands are "or salt! in 10 to 40 acre "tracts, with water rights, price $250 per acre and upward. Address R. M. WIDNEY, umrl-lni 119 New High st., Los Angeles. Tester Coal Oil 1 I 1-t la Tz -- Bf (w g a 7 N - -j a> 2 W -- cr a P| 3 J 1 on l tg>=p Ho W 9 Fit s " * ill 3 \u25a0 ' , iI 2 nt 1 A I * 111 §1 rani i o i £ ' ? n 3 fa mar23-lm NOTICE TO STOCKHOLDERS. NOTICE IB HEREBY GIVEN TO THE stockholders of the Sespe Land and Water Company, a corporation duly organized under thelawsof the State of California, whose place of principal business v in the city of Los Ange- les, County of Los Augeles, State of CalUornia, that a meeting of the stockholders has been called by the Board of Directors of the said company, at the written request of certain stockholders representing in the aggregate at least one-third of the capital stock of said com- pauy, to considen aud act upon the matters in- volved in the suit of 11. B. Baldwin against said company, No. 12,288, inthe Superior Court of said County of Los Angeles, and matters con- nected therewith, and such other business as may come before the meeting. Said meeting will be held ut the office of the company, room 5, No. 41 South Spring street, in the City and County of Los Angeles, State of California, on tlie 27th day of March, 1890, at 10 o'clock a. m. FRANCIS BATES, Secretary, Los Angeles, CaL, March 18,1890. marl2-td

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Page 1: HERALD. EAGLESON CO.Paul K. Michener was over front Pasa-dena yesterday afternoon. Ira Niles and Miss Dot Niles, of De-troit, Mich., are in the city. Fred Sterns, of San Jose, is in

United States Signal Service.Iteport of.observations taken at Los Angeles.

March 24, 1890:

Max. pea., 65; mm. tern., 45.

Indications.San Francisco, March 24.?Forecast till 8 p.

m. Tuesday: Light rains in Northern California;fair weather in Southern California.

Eastern Temperature.Chicago, March 24.?New York, 30; New

Orleans, 58; St. Louis, 50; Cincinnati, 40; Chi-cago. 34: Winnipeg. 30.

PERSONAL.

F. K. Barnard is down from Ventura.

A. E. Bird, of Anaheim, was in thecity yesterday.

G. M. Walker came in from Long

Beach yesterday.Paul K. Michener was over front Pasa-

dena yesterday afternoon.Ira Niles and Miss Dot Niles, of De-

troit, Mich., are in the city.

Fred Sterns, of San Jose, is in the cityvisiting his friend, D. Moriarty.

G. A. Naughton left yesterday on theafternoon train for San Francisco.

J. C. Nelson was a passenger on the1 :40 train for the north yesterday.

A. H. Denker was on the list of pas-sengers bound northward yesterday.

W. K. Wordsworth started for SanFrancisco yesterday on the afternoontrain.

Doctor J. E. Fulton has returned froma visit of several weeks to San Fran-cisco.

Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Stiles, of Chicago,

are paying a visit to Los Angeles andvicinity.

H. A. Unruh, manager of the Baldwinranch, and formerly of Los Angeles, is inthe city.

Miss Maud A. Lord, of this city, isnow visiting friends at Geneva, 111. Shewill be absent in the East about sevenmonths.

C. A. Busill, wife and daughter, ofLaconia, N. H., and William Berger andfamily, of Denver, are visiting LosAngeles.. Mr. and Mrs. \Vrm. Kimers, of Hum-phrey, Neb., arrived yesterday on ashort visit.

Hon. R. S. Hall, of Omaha, a brotherof Mrs. E. H. Enderlein, is in the cityon a visit. Mr. Hall is attorney for tlieMissouri Pacific.

Major E. W. Jones, president of theChaml>er of Commerce, went north yes-terday afternoon.

Mr. and Mrs. V. Maghek, of San Fran-cisco, accompanied by their daughter,are visiting Los Angeles.

Mr. and Mr?. G. S. Chapin, accom-panied by G. and K. Chapin, of SantaBarbara, came down to the city yester-day.

Mrs. W. Kalisher left Sunday last forChicago. She departed rather unex-pectedly. She will be absent somemonths.

J. H. Campbell, of Kingman, Ariz.,accompanied by A. D. Campbell, ofPhiladelphia, are looking around thispart of tlie State.

Richard Gird, of Chino, was in thecity yesterday. He stated that thematter of ihe erection of the sugar re-lipery is being steadily pushed.

W. S. Scott, for six years attorney in

Kansas City. with his wife is visiting

his uncle," J.W. Gillette, 322 Templestreet, and will possibly reside in thiscity.

NEWS NOTES.

The Crown Hills Improvement Societymeets this evening.

The annual election of the IroquoisClub will elect officers on May 6th.

A meeting of fruit-growers at Vernonwill be held Thursday evening at WestVernoon school house.

Mrs. C. F. Hathaway was granted a

divorce from A. M. Hathaway yesterdayon the ground of cruelty.

B. B. Owens, who is charged withstealing a piano, was granted a new trialyesterday by Judge McKinley.

The Carnival oi Famous Women to begiven in Illinois hall tomorrow eveningpromises to be a very enjoyable enter-tainment.

Albert Williams was examined beforea commission yesterday and orderedcommitted to the Stockton asylum forthe insane.

A series of seven or eight lectures areto he delivered shortly before the pupilsof the high school by prominent citizensupon various timely subjects.

The artistic world ot Los Angeles is

on the gui rive for the great wood-en-graving exhibit to be shown here by theKuskin Art Club early next month.

There will be a meeting of the mem- |bers of the Union League this evening, jAmong the guests who are expected t< ijhe present are Governor Waterman andColonel Markham.

The case of H. E. Whitesides, charged

with assault with a deadly weapon, hasbeen set for trial March 29th, instead ofApril 15th. The defendant asked for aspeedier trial.

Mr. Osborn Congleton, of The Voire.New York, is in the city. He lectured

last night at the Trinity M. E. church,

on "The Foundation Stone of Liberty."He willdeliver a second lecture tonightat Temperance Temple hall, corner ofTemple street and Broadway.

A pair of diamond ear-rings, valued at$2,000, and belonging to George Hop-kins, was sold by the Sheriff yesterdaymorning on an execution of judgmentfor $1,072.28 obtained by tlie Farmersand Merchants Bank. The gems werebid in by J. A. Graves, Esq., for thebank at $400.

The regular monthly meeting oi theUnion Chautauqua Circle will be held

in the lecture-room of the Fort-streetM. E. church this evening. The pro-gramme willbe furnished by the Occi-dent Circle of West Seventh street, andconsists of essays, recitations and vocaland instrumental music.

R. D. List, Notary Public. Legal paper- care-fullydrawn. Removed to ISM W. Second St.,Burdlck block. Telephone 595.

A New Bank.

The great safe and other fixtures in

tbe Safe Deposit vaults at the corner of

New High and Temple streets are beingremoved to the new nnd elegant Ferretbuilding, corner of Third and Springstreets. A new bank, over which Prof.Lowe, oi the gas company, will preside,is about to be opened there. The officesare being fitted up in fine style, and thereport is that the new concern will l>cstrong from the ground up. The peopleinterested enjoy a large share of thepublic, confidence.

THE PERMANENT EXHIBIT.

It Attracted a Large Number ofVisitors Yesterday.

Although the work of collecting a per-manent exhibit is not more than wellbegun, still the display, as far as itgoes,manages to attract a considerable num-ber of people. A register is kept, inwhich those who come to look at the ex-hibit are requested to enroll their names.About forty names were entered of LosAngeles people yesterday, and the fol-lowing of people from outside of thecity: Wm. Burnet, New York; F. ('.Corvell, Whittier; Robert s. Woodside,Phil T. Thistlethwait and wife, Rich-mond, Ind.; C. E. Russell, Alhambra;H. M. Ames, Vernon; A. J. Bean, Gar-dena: G. A. Blakeslee, Florence; Wm.J. Allyn. Holyoke, Mass.; W. R. Light,Tropico: Abram Richmond, Ind.;("has. P. Harris, Rutland, Vt. JC. R.Wellington Julian, San Diego; Mrs. E.M. Hewitt, Louisville, Ky.; FrancesHerbert, St. Johns, (>.; A. J. Chambers,Omaha, Neb.; F. P. Sigler, Beaumont;John V. Ames, Alexander, So. Dak.; T.L. < rooeh, Kivera.

The authorities of the chamber do notpropose to allow the exhibit to be usedfor advertising purposes. One exhibitortook away his display yesterday becausebe was not allowed to hang an enormoussign above it.

THE COUNTY DIVISION.The Commission is Nearly Ready to

Make Its Report.The commission on the division of the

property of Los Angeles and Orangecounties is nearly ready to make its re-port to the Boards of Supervisors of thetwo counties. Probably about this timenext week the report will be handed in.The last serious work done was theassessment of the values of the newcourt house site and of the old court

bouse site and building. For some timethere was disagreement, the Orangecounty commissioners claiming that tlfeLos Angeles county men were setting toolow a price on the property, anil viceverm. Last Saturday they virtuallyagreed, setting the new court house site tit$125,000, and the old court house at$100,000.

The balance has had to be struck be-tween the figures for the property in thetwo countias, and it will take some workto sum up* tabulate and deduce the re-sults of the two sets of figures. It ispresumed that Orange will owe Los An-geles $30,000, which is a little less thanformer estimates, a natural result, asthe Los Angeles people have beenobliged to raise their estimates some-what.

THE PRE-EMPTOR WINS.

A Patent to the Railroad SetAside.

The case of Wotm against Hinekle hasbeen in the courts lor a long time. Fosspurchased a piece of land from the South-ern Pacitic Company some years ago.He found Hinekle on the land at thetime, and began a suit for his ejectment.Hinckle's was a pre-emption claim. Thecase was tried before Judge O'Melvenywhen he was ou the bench, who gavejudgment for Foss on his title front therailroad with a United States patent be-hind it. Will D. Gould appealed thecase to the Supreme Court, and got anew trial. He tried it yesterday beforeJudge Van Dyke and secured a judg-ment for Hinekle on bis pre-emptionclaim. The land is in tbe territory ex-terior to the San Jose ranch which wasreserved from the railroad grant, and thegranting of a patent to the railroad wastherefore an error on the part of theSecretary of the Interior. It could nottherefore dispossess Hinekle, who hadbegun to pre-empt the land prior tothe granting of the patent to the rail- iroad.

THE SANTA ANITA.

E. J. Baldwin's Orange Orchard's Pres-ent and Future.

H. A. Unruh, of Arcadia, was in Ihecity yesterday. In conversation with aHerald reporter he said that the oldorchard on the Santa Anita ranch wasin as good shape as he bad ever seen it.There is scarcely any scale of any sorton the trees, and the few of the redvariety left are fast disappearing.

Two years ago Mr. Baldwin set out 100acres of young trees at the mouth of the

Santa Anita canon. This was whennearly everyone in this section wasfrightened out of his wits lest the whitescale should destroy all the orange treeshere. Now these trees, about 10,000 ofthem, are in excellent condition, andpromise well for the future.

In the Santa Anita nurseries there areabout 1,000,000 young orange trees. Asmall portion of these are ready to setin orchard rows this year, and will beso disposed of, and tbe others will beset out next spring. Mr. Unruh esti-mates that the plants of the two years

'will aggregate 75,000 to 100,000 orange1trees, or 750 to 1,000 acres.

Must Be Tried Again.

There was a singular termination toatrial yesterday before Judge Van Dyke.

On May 1, 1888, Andrew Osgoodbyloaned to J. IL Adams the sum of$1)14.85, with the understanding that the

same should l>e paid on or before De-8, 1888, with 7 per cent, interest.

The money was not paid and a suit wasbrought, the complaint stating "thatthe sum is now due and payable, anddefendant has not paid the sameor any portion thereof, nor any inter-est thereon, though often jrequested todo so." #

The defendant demurred on theground that the complaint did not setforth that the money had not been paidby someone else; but the court wasabout to overrule the demurrer, untilthe defendant read a decision of the Su-preme Court in 73 Cal., page 123. Thecourt looked at the decision a moment,and then sustained the demurrer. Theallegation that the note has not l>eenpaid by some other than the one sued isessential.

A new complaint will now be neces-sary. Mr. Osgoodby is from Pomona,nd 'is a brother of tne redoubtable Geo.Osgoodhv. alias '?Murchison," of the fa-mous Sack ville-West letter.

Buggy robes nnd blankets ut Koy's hurnessho|.. 217 Los Angeles street

REAL ESTATE RECORD.Monday. March 24, 1890.

TRANSFERS.W i Martin unci Rebecca C Martin to Anne F

Broaded ?Lol:) blk 174, Pomona; $3,500.John Vexhoeven to Isabella Hcliingham-

Agreement toconvey s 3t> foot <>f lot t; i,ik »mitwln of lots t>anil 7 blk B, 11 S; 11,400

Oeo M Danakln to Howl w Getchell? Lota 4and o blk 11, California Co-operative Colonstract; 11,160.

Ft' Howes to LilyA Barclay?Lots 4 5 and (iblk 37, Azusa: $1,300.

George H Boncbrake. Joseph Daniels and H Et'pton to Henry Gilmore?W lot) feet Oflot 20blk 0, Finney tract: $1,000.

Horace M Russell to 1) Gregory Smith?Und2.84 acres of und 'jof lot 05, W part Lick tract$2.500.

H M Russell to Frank E Russell?An und 2 0interest in 36 acres commencing at X point ofsaid land and the junction of Boreham and Lo-pez station, and all the land lyinglietween said[and and the Los Angeles river; also an und Wof and und'., interest in lot 18 blk B, Marengotract: $1,500.

Mrs Laura BoqUlSt to Eli Stevens?Lot 35, FII Lowell's sulsln of SchictVelin tract, E 1. A|3,000.

Geo I' W Jensen and Hattie Jensen to F A Ur-ban?W 150 feet of lot 21 blk C. Finnev tract18,000.

Tcodoro Vcrdugo and Maria A utonio C Verdugo to Erskinc M R055?145.71 acres inRo SanRafael; $4,000.

Hopcc E Upton to George P \V Jensen?Lot 1blk C. Finney tract; 51.200.Edward Duncan to Otto Best?Lot 41, Rosas

tract: $1,400.Nikolaus Priester to James A Huichings?Cud

Vs interest in 10 acres of land insection 12, T 1s. it 14 W; 11,250.Frank 1' Firey to Thomas A Cord?Lot 4, block

B, of Firey, French and Rhorer's subd of s 20Hi res of Burhank tract, and strip lying betweensaid tract anil Ellen street; $1,500.

Mary E McGce to Flora T Webster ?Lot com utIntersection of Broadway avenue and Gleudalestreet, Pasadena; $2,500.

Isaac J ltcvuolds to B F Ball?XW', of SW'and Si 4 of S%', of NWk of section 28, T 2 X, liIt!W; $4,000. V

John Vcrhoevcn to C, LDean?Lot ti, blook H. 1Los Angeles Homestead tract; $5,000.

James G Ogilvie and Alfred W Fames to Wil-liam II Clmmberlin?4 tracts in Ro La Oieaega$8,333.

Isaias W Hellman, Ilenrv|llnmmcl aud A 11Denker to O W " hilds?Lots 5 and 6, block 2.Sanchez tract; $0,000.

Geo M Danskin to Joseph M Miller?Lots 7, H 'and 9, block 7, blocks 10, 15 anil 34. Clearwater: $I,IIXI.

J F Brow n and 0 O Brown to Jesse Q Hall-Lot 17 block 8, Angcleno Heights street; $5,000. iE T Wright to E F Kysor?Lot 3 and part oflot 12, and strip 10 feet wide adjoining said lot12, all in Bunker Hilltract: $12,000.

John C Rust and Ivaloo W Rust to AMMrson ;stout?Lot 4. Rust's stfljof Pasadena, M H 15,1> 335: $S.(HK).

SUMMARY.

Number transfers $1,000 and over, 23.Amount, $75,933.Number transfers under $1,000,35.Amount, $8,950.Number nominal transfers, 3.Total amount of considerations, $^4,553.NOTa?Transfers of which the consideralM j

is less than *1.000 are not published in the 1above list. '

HOTEL ARRIVALS.

Hollenbeck.Barclay Henley, S F L R Stiles ,t wf. (hlflagoF E Barnard, Ventura Mrs B Lanini, MemphisII M Russell, S Monica Mrs E Cundav, do ,H W Holdett, Detroit H Engelbricbt, S FX M Adams. Cal C E White, doWin Eimers &wf, Xcb E C Wilson, doC M Fogg, Phila W H Chamberhiin, do1 J Lambert, Pueblo A Caro, doGS Chapin &wf,S Bars J H Williams, doG A X Chapin, do A II Emery, doMrs X E Christie. 11l Chas XSeumale, do !L B Palmer, Hastings A L Brown, doA A Pond, Minneapolis }8 Shults, San JacintoJII Campbell, Ariz V D Campbell, Phila <J H Byrnes <& fain, X J B Dunham, LaCanafaP X M ieln ner.Pasadena C Stamps, Cal

Nadejwi.

BT Richardson, N*Y E M Pastor, PortlandF Korbel .t wf.s F R A Graham, San Diegov Mashek, wfAdtr,do s Rheinstorm, ClncinatiG w BJder,Cleveland,o 8 B Sunn, X vIra Niles, Detroit X 1! Walker.Orlando.FlaMiss Dot Xiles, do W D Perkins, S MonicaJohn A Scott, s F (I W.Cummings&tt f.x VC H Lessig. do B II Chase, doWin Sexton, do Will J Giddings. doc c Qorham, Del Mar A E Bird, AnaheimGeo M o'DonneU. S F G M Wulker.Lougßeach

OTi«- Throat.? "Brown's Bronchial Troche*"art directly on the organs of the voice. Theyhave an extraordinary effect inall disorders ofthe throat.

Merrill Lodge No. 229. I. O. G. T.,Willgive an entertainment and social on Wed-nesday evening, March 26th. at their hall inTemperance temple, corner of Broadway andTemple street. Asplendid programme has leenprepared. Everybody Invited. Admittancefree.

Over One Thousand PersonsHave been cured. Itmukes no difference whatis votirdisease. Radam's Microbe Killer villcure. Ollice, 109' /:z S. Broadwivy.

WHY WILL YOU cough when Shiloh's Curew illgive immediate relief. Pri<fe 10 cents, 50cents andsl. For sale by C. F. Heinzeman, 122North Main street.

DAILY HERALD.

THE LOS ANGELES HERALD: TUESDAY MORNING, MARCH 25, 1890.8

a. in.,p. m.

9077 I \

Iw!1

W I9

AMUSEMENTS.;/ 1 H \NH OPERA hoYseY1J H. C. wyatt. Lessee and Manager

nVK SIGHTS only: KIVK NIGHTS ONLYWith a Spec ial Satiinlay Matinee.

I OWMENCTNG TUESDAY, MAKCH 85TB.The Original ami World Famous

HANLONS

Their New Grand Fairy Spectacle

NE W rANTA S >l A I

INTRODItINuNKW SCENES, MUSIC, COSTUMES and

SPECIALTIES.

iW Remember Everything New This -*J<lSeason. marl S

jTABARD'S PAVILION.

SIXTH ANNUAL:?: j{e

F I. O W E It FESTIVAL

APRIL 39-30.

For Premium Lists address

MISS VICTORIA WITMER)LuCflS and West Third streets.

On allother matters address

mrs. j. i). nmcH,:tir»s. inn st.

TjIIRST CONGREGATIONAL CrTUKCH.

ENTEKTAINMENT.

MONDAY EVENING, MARCH 9BBT,

i.I'ANUMUSICAL TREAT.

The following artists have kindly volunteeredtheir services:

MESSRS. NAY, I.EBO,MAYBIN A WALLACE

MRS. TAGGAKT and PROS'. AREVALOIMRS. M. PERKY-DAVIS. SIG. MODINI, MBSS

PREWITT, BARLEY E. HAMILTON.

MISS BERGER, MRS. OWENS and MR .»<-QUILLEN.

Admission '25 eentis inar2S-td)

I)ALACE RESTAURANT AND SALOON,Corner First and Spring Street".

The Most Magnificent and PopularResort in the City.

tf IS E E C&HCKB TS !

£ ;j:

BY TIIE

CELEBRATED PHILHARMONIC SOLOISTS

Every Night trom 8 to 12.

JOSEPH SCHURTJt PROPRIETOR.

"BTAZARD'S PAVILION,J I Fifth and Olive Streets.

11 OLI £ It SH. A TING!

BEGINNING BATURI AY. MARCB 221.

FOR RESPECTABLE CLASSES ONLY.Attbtfsslom Free to Gallery, Skating. 25 cents.

,1. L. WALTON. Manager. mrlS 1 m

BAKTLETT'S MtTSIC 1! ILL,First street.

\«CI>NESUAY KVENIMi, MARCH 20T11.At ft oV.'liek

CONCERT ! CONXEKT !

By MISS NORA LARGE, andMR. WILLIAM PIUTTI.

Tickets 50 cents, now 'or sale at Hartlett'smush: store. mar2:-L4t*

XT<*W OPENIN THE

Natatorium or Swisniitiliig Itath !

Water Heated by stean; several new porcelain-lined tubs added, also a large dressing-room forladies, connecting withbaths. Tuesday nightsfor ladies and gentlemen.

WM. .1. McCALDIN.martt-tf President and Manager.

ILLINOIS HALL,Broadway and Sixth street.

FRIDAY EVENING, MARCH 2STH,ILLINOIS ASSOCIATION SOCIAL!

Vocal aud Instrumental Music, aud the Pleas-ing Farce.

"Five O'clock Tea"Rettdered by the Angel Cltj Amateurs. ArthurW. P. Kinney, manager. Music by High SchoolOrchestra

Admission (to cover expenses). 10 cents.Illinois hall to let.

DISEASES OF THE

Head, Throat, LungsSuccessfully treated by

M.HILTON WILLIAMS,M.DiM. C. P. S. 0.,

By His Hot Air Medicated Inhalations and hisCOMPOUND OXYGEN TREATMENT.

ASTHMA.Itis a common error to suppose every disease

?rhieh is attended by oppressed breathing tobeAsthma or Phthisic. We have shortness ofbreath inConsumption and Pneumonia just aswedoiu Asthma, only that in these diseases it

Iis always present, whereas in Astlima it occursin paroxysms,

Asthma is a spasmodic disease of the Dings,which manifests itself in periodic attacks or"fits." It comes oa suddenly and is attendedwith great difficultyof breathing while it lasts,but when the attack is over the patient br jtithesalmost as well as in health.

Nervous. Humid and Dry Asthma are namesgiven to different forms ofthis disease. Emphy-sema is another and more Inveterate Una ofAsthnu, while Hay Fever or Rose Cold :« a pe-culiar variety of Asthma which occurs at a cer-tain season (if the year. Each of these forms of

! disease differs somewhat from the ethers insymptoms, but practically these distinctions areof very little value. II does not matter to thepatient which form of Asthma he has,, since hi?Bufferings are the same in all. lvon* case theexpectoration becomes yellow, and we call itbronchial. Inanother it is light and we call itdry. When he coughs up clear water, with awhite froth on the surface, we say he has Hu-moral Asthma. In Nervous Asthaia there isvery little expectoration of any kind. HayFever always begins as a crying cold in thehead or influenza, and a clear water runs froi£the nose and the eyes before the Asthma fitcomes on. InEmphysema the expectoration I)generally thick, and continues so m the interval between the fits, while the shortness o:breath is increased on the slightest exertion.

It is a foolish conceit of many people to. helieve-that if they have Asthma they cannot getConsumption. The truth is the very oppositeThey are more liable to fall into Consuwptiorbecause they have Asthma. Another idea iithat Asthma itself is not a dangerous diseaseaud yet the published bills of mortality for thiicity prove toall who read them thatgreat numbors lose their lives every year by this foul destroyer of ourhomes.

Without courage and perseverance nolhlug icurable. But with these aided by proper an<skillful treatment, Asthma can be cured evei

after the lungs are extensively diseased.Persons desiring treatment by this system o

practice can use the remedies at home as welas at our ollice, and which will cause no Inoonvenience or hindrance from business whateveiEvery ease of Asthma is curable. Eastern visitors and invalids willbe wise inbeing cureibefore they return home.

Those who desire to consult with me in regar*to their oases had better call at the office for aipxaminntiou, but if impossible to visit the officcersonally can write for list of questions ancircular, both of which will be sent free cha rge. Address

M. HILTON WILLIAMS, M.D.,137 S. Broadway, Los Angeles, Cal

Office hours?From 9 A. 51. to 4 p. M.Sundays-From 2 to 8:30 r. M.

KesiUeuee-15 South Grand Avenue.

POWDERAbsolutely Pure*

The powder never varies. A model of purityand wholesomeuess. More economical than theordinary kinds, and cannot be Bold incompe-titionwith the multitudes of low test, shortweight, slum of phosphate powders. SoldOnly in Cans. Royal Baking Powder Co.,100 Wall St.. N. Y. THE JOIINSON-LOOKtEMERCANTILE CO., San Francisco, agents.. d4-4ui

P.WO'?mi

SPECIAL NOTICE.IMPORTANT TO CONTRACTORS

\. AND BUILDERS.

Having purchased the entire stock ofthe Willamette Steam Mills, [.timber

and Manufacturing Company, cornerMain and San Fernando streets, andbeing obliged to remove the same withinsixty days, we will lill orders from theabove yard and allow our patrons thebenefit of the cost of removal.

GANAHL LUMBER CO.W. A. Driscoll, Manager.

Main office and yard, coiner First andAlameda street.

Temporary branch officeand yard,cor-ner Main and San Fernando streets.

C. DUCOMMUN,Hardware, Mechanics' Tools for All Trades*

AND DEALERS INShelf Hardware, Brushes, Orange Clippers,Pruning Shears, Honey Knives, sheep Shears, As-savers' Outfits, Spectacles, Birds' Eyes and otherOptical Instruments, Fancy Goods, etc., und25,000 assorted articles. No. 302 N. Main

[street, Los Angeles, CaL 120 3m

XAOI.ESON *CO.

EAGLESON & CO.No. 50 North Spring Street.

4

Mens Furnishing Goods.

GRAND OPENING

NEW SPRING GOODSI

On Saturday Next, the 29th.

We will show the LARGEST STOCK of CHOICE ONDERWEAR,NEGLIGE SHIRTS, HOSIERY, NECKWEAR, PAJAMAS, WHITESHIRTS, GLOVES, etc., etc., e-wer shown in the city, and

AT THE LOWEST PRICES.

inrl-lm

Mtri.LEX, IM.JIETT & CO.

M. B. &(o.INow Goods Arriving JVerj- Dnv

'WC Can siiow Extra Values in Men's aud Hoys' Bolts,

Furnishing Goods, Dress Shirts. Seek wear, etc.A Specially Select Assortment of Men's Neglige Shirts.

Children's Department Well Stocked with Dopaolc SuitsAllStyles and Sizes of Felt and Straw Hats.

BUY EASTER SUITS BEFORE THE RUSHOUR. EMPLOYEES GET SHORT HOURS.

We Close at 6 P. M.. . %tSaturdays at 10 P.M. *'* ',% ';%

MULLEN, BLUETT i CO..Northwest Corner Spring and First Streets.

marl -5m

FN P ARAIJ.ELED OI'I'OKTi'NITY TO SECURE A

BEARING ORANGE or LEMON GROVEOn the True Orange Belt of Southern California

on the: co-operative plan.

The Cucamonga land !i;.d Improvement Company have selected 20 ten-acre traits forthe pur-pose of planting and cultivating the sunn; for non-resident investors for a term

of 5 years. The tracts to t>e plan'jed to navel oranges or lemons.

SUBSCRIPTION SOOKS NOW OPEN. Far full particulars and terms cail or address

The Cucamonga Land and Improvement G0.,.marS-lm Room 7. No. 11 Temple Street, LOS ANGELES. CAL.

ORANGE LANDS.

Maelay San Fernando RaneS.

THE WATER SYSTEM

Has cost over $120,000 cash to January I,lB{lo.Allwater is delivered along the streets In ironpressure pipes for irrigation nnd domestic pur-poses. Over 25 miles of mains und laterals arelaid at a cash cost of over $73,000. The mainsare from t! inches to 24 inches in diameter.'The water is from artesiun wells and from thesubterranean flew of Pacoima at the submergeddam. This dam is built of granite and l\irtlandlament, and cost $44,000 ivcash. No seeds ofweeds or germs of disease can ever cuter thewater pipes. The following letters shew the

1 land to be tho best in Southern California fororanges:SiffiD AND Nt-RSERY IIEI'AJCTMENT

Germain Fruit C0...K. Germain, President.San Fernando Land and Water Co.?ln the

interest of Los Angeles county, I take pleasureinstating that for several years past I have han-dled the Sau Fernando orange and lemon crops,and have found no earlier, cleanur or sweeteroranges or better lemons in the California mar-ket. They are absolutely clean, and free fromany smut, dirt or discoloration whatever, andripen earlier than any oranges oi: lemons in thissection, and are fully up to the best Riversidefruit that I have ever seen.

GERMAIN FRUIT CO.,Per EUGENE Germain, President.

February 14,1890.

Morning Side Nurssiry,San Fernando, February 20,1890.

Messrs. Macneil, Hagar, Alexander, Maclav andWidney, Trustees of Maelay Runcho at SanFernando;Gentlemen?ln the interests of San Fernando

asd those seeking orange lands, I take pleasureinstating that 1 have MBS engaged in semi-tropic nursery and orchard raising for the pastthree years in this place, and 1 know of no placeinSouthern California superior to this locality

1 for early, clean fruit of flue quality, and thet growth of remarkably fine orange, lemon, lime\u25a0 trees, etc. Allorchards und nurseries are freeI and absolutely clean from all insect pests. Sani Bernardino and San Diego county buyers show

their appreciation of this place by quarantiningagainst all other points in I.os Angeles countyexcept San Feruando. 1 uui, geutlemen, re-spectfully yours,

JOHN BURR, District Inspector.

These lands are "or salt! in 10 to 40 acre"tracts, with water rights, price $250 per acreand upward. Address R. M. WIDNEY,umrl-lni 119 New High st., Los Angeles.

Tester Coal Oil

1 I 1-t laTz - - Bf (w g a 7N - -j a> 2W -- cr a

P| 3 J1 on

l tg>=p Ho W9 Fit s" * ill3 \u25a0 '

, iI2 nt

1 A I * 111§1 rani i o i

£ ' ? n 3 famar23-lm

NOTICE TO STOCKHOLDERS.

NOTICE IB HEREBY GIVEN TO THEstockholders of the Sespe Land and WaterCompany, a corporation duly organized underthelawsof the State of California, whose placeof principal business v in the city ofLos Ange-les, County of Los Augeles, State of CalUornia,that a meeting of the stockholders has beencalled by the Board of Directors of the saidcompany, at the written request of certainstockholders representing in the aggregate atleast one-third of the capital stock of said com-pauy, to considen aud act upon the matters in-volved in the suit of 11. B. Baldwin againstsaid company, No. 12,288, inthe Superior Courtof said County of Los Angeles, and matters con-nected therewith, and such other business asmay come before the meeting.

Said meeting will be held ut the office of thecompany, room 5, No. 41South Spring street, inthe City and County of Los Angeles, State ofCalifornia, on tlie 27th day of March, 1890, at10 o'clock a. m.

FRANCIS BATES, Secretary,Los Angeles, CaL, March 18,1890.

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