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Collection: Newspapers > Nevada City Daily Transcript

March 7, 1901 (4 pages)

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ioscan a ee ee Res et Me sgl ily so a a ee ae le RON Ean anete, THE TRANSCRIPT! Issued Rvory Evening, Sundays Excepted AT_NEVADA OITY, CALIFORNIA, ’ RY BROWN & CALEINS TERMS OF suteontteton H By Mall, -« ~~ «© = $6 Per Year By Carrier, 12 1-2c Per Week Delivered to any part of the city. TELEPHONE NO. 41. P. 0. BOX B THURSDAY.... .March 7, 1901 PERSONAL MATTERS. ‘Dally Chronicte of the Doings: of Both Old and “Young. I, Montre is down from Pike City. J. Powers is down from Washington, B. F. Fisher is here from San Francisco. C. Brittan is up from Yuba Ci.y on a visit. F. Reeb is here from San Francisco on business. W. Binett left this morning for Washington. ; , W. F. Haman Jr. of San Francisco, is here on a visit. ; W.H Rogers came down from Washington yesterday. J. Weir left this morning for the Independence mine. Geo. T. Wood and W. J. Hoffman of San Francisco are in town. , M. Calanan is over from Columbia Hill on a visit to his son. W. J. Jennings came down from Washington this afternoon. Geo. H. Swrienger came down from Downieville this afternoon. L. L. Woodmansee of San Francisco arrived here on the afternoon train. John Germen Jr, the livery man, is over from North San Juan. F. Boeckman of Fargo & Co. returnto San Francisco this morning. Scott F. Ennis, of Ennis, Brown & Co. of Sacramento, is in town. Henry Germdén and Dr. Victor returned last evening to North San Juan. W. 4. Norton returned here on last evering’s train from the lower country. ‘ Miss Duisy Shaver has gone to Reno on a vist to her sister, Mrs. J. A. McKenzie. Frauk Nye of Sonora arrived bere last evenirg and left this morning for Washington. Superintendent C. M. Reot left this morning for the Indepe:dence mine at Moores Flat. M. Vanberg came down from Washington this afternoon and left for San Francisco. C.D. Harvey and Misses Annie and Alice Harvey returned this afternyon to Loomis. E. J. Rector, Bert Rector and Merritt Rector will return home this evening from San Francisco, Mrs. J. Fe'z will arrive here this evening from San Francisco to visit Mr. and Mrs. Fred Zeitler. Jobn C. Suhr of San Francisco arrived here this afternoon from Sierra county and will return home tomorow, T. Larezzola, Mrs. Larezzola, Miss Larezzola and Miss Tweice came down from Downieville this afternoon and will leave tomorrow for San Francisco: Mrs. W. W. Waggoner and daughter left this morning for Sacramento to visit relatives. =~ J.A. Brent, ihe owner of the Red Cross mine, lett this morning for the mine at Omega. H. Sleembe of Jamestown arrived here last evening and left this morning ~~ for Gaston Ridge. C.L La Grane of Sacramento arrived here last evening and left this morning for Downieville. James Cairns left for Sacramento yesterday morning on business. He will return on tonight’s train. Bepjamin Hall of the Pioneer Reduction Works bas returned from a business trip tothe metropolis. Mrs. John German came over from North San Juan this morning and went to Auburn to visit her daughter. Passed BY the Senate. SACRAMENTO, March 7.—The Senate has passed Nutt’s bill amending the divorce law so as to provide that no divorce shall be granted for causes or= iginating in any other State, unless such causes would there be valid ground for divorce. The only exception to this rule, as amended in Committee, is that of extreme cruelty, in some other States is not legal grounds for divorcee, though it is in California. Other bills were passed as f. lows: Relative to County Government, Defining a miner’s inch of ater as one and one-half cubic. feet of water per minute, measured through: any aperture, zt : A bill providing that the punishment of arson in the second degree shall not be less than one nor more than twentyfive years. f ‘The traraest Head \Yet,. Cheerful Rastus hobbled painfull; Into the office of the city physicians supported by two abbreviated bL=non. handles, “Well, Rassy, how ts the limb to day?” inquired one of the young mep in charge. “ToVble, tol’ble,” replied Rastus, grin aing like a new moon. “Ah tell ye,” he said as the dressings were changed,’ “Ah’ze heerd all kin’s stories aboot niggers’ haids—how hawd dey is an bow presumshus it becomes er white man,ter ‘tempt ter break ’em —but. lemme tell ye ye doan know aboot it tel ye runs «g*in de real ting Me an dis feller wee wo’kin togedder puttin up a D’iler, an a dessertation ariz between us, an Ah in de ’zuber ance of me feelin’s kicked wid all me mite. Well, Ab reckoned ter strike him on de haid, an Ab did. ’Deed Ab did! Caught him squar’. He nevab moved—no, sah. But de reaction didn’t do er t’lng but break t’ree of me toes, an dat’s what Ah’m here fo’—ha, ha, ha! Huh, huh!” And cheerful Rastus, with the broken toes, laughed hilariously while the phy sician readjusted the splints.—Detroi) Free Press. ; Once, when be first came to LonJon and was laying the foundation of his great career, says a London letter, the future Lord Chief Justice Russell went to the ,it of a theater. The piece was popular, the pit was crowded and the young #Qvocate had only standing room. All of a sudden a man at his sid» cried out that his watch was stolen. Mr. Russell and two other men were hemmed in. : “It is one of you three,” cried the man minus the watch. “Well, we had better go out and be searched,” said Mr. Russell, with the alertness of mind that did not fail him at a trying moment amid an excited crowd. A detective was at hand, and the suggestion was accepted. As Mr. tussell walked out the idea flashed through his mind that if the man ~ hind him had the stolen property h would probubly try to secrete it in the pocket of his, front rank man. Quick as thought he drew his ceattails about thing large and smooth and round already in his pocket. While he was still wondering what this might mean for him, the detective energetically seized the hindmost man, exclaiming: “What, you rascal! At it again!” To Mr. Russell and the other man he apologized and bade them go free. ~But Mr. Russell, before he had taken many steps, reflected that he could not keep the watch. He went back to the box office and explained, with a courage on which he afterward said he rarely experienced greater demands, that though he did not take the watch he had it. So saying, he put his hand Into his pocket and pulled out—a for. xotten snuffbox. Settles the Counterfeits. When a person comes into “Old Man” Smith’s cigar store and hands him money in return for something purchased, the old man can ascertain by a single glance or touch whether the money is good or counterfeit. If the money is bad, he puts it under the tobaceo cutter, or his money tester, as he calls it, and severs it in two. \ One day last week a rough looking young man came into his store and asked for a piece of chewing tobacco. At the same time he laid a 50 cent him-—only to feel, to his horror, some F eter has never been less thai tilty six degrees below: zero. jured at the, Mountaineer’ juine last evening by a flyivg piece of rock, had his skull trepanned today by Dr Mulier, who was assisted by R. J. Bennett. . aud the patient is doing vicely. mens eres * : : Noted Gold Seeker Dead. Cxrtoaao, March 6.—Moses E. Butterworth, pioneer, gold seeker and one of the founders of the Quaker colony at La Porte, Ind, is dead at his home here of neuralgia of the heart. He was born in Harveysburg, Ohio, in 1829 and removed when a child with his parents to La Porte. The gold fever in 1849 took Mr. Butterworth to. the Pacific Coast and seven times afterwards he crossed the plains with his oxen. One of these trips was made with the late George M. Pullman at the time Mr. Butterworth installed the first quartz mill west of the Missouri river. Died Very suddenly. OakLanD, March 6.—Charles W. Stewart, a well-known horseman, died 1066 Sixtieth street, early this morning. tle complained of. feeling ill just before the breakfast hour and _ before medical aid could be called passed away. The Ooroner was at once notj‘fied and an autopsy and inquest will be held to ascertain the cause of death. He was a native of Illinois, 45 years.of age anda widower He bad only been in Oakland a few months, Mismated’ ‘Cott le County Cierk Gordon Bowman of Yuba county has issued a marriage licensé to David Hilko Cramer, aged €8, of Nicolaus, and Addie Freshour, aged 18, of Nicolaus. The ink was not dry on the license before Justice of the Peace I. N. Aldrich pronounced them man and wife, in the County Clerk’s office. The bridegroom is a rancher. 0@e County Assessor Here. County Assessor Schroeder was over from the county seat the first of the week on official business. Mr. Schroeder got all the former railway ‘cars on the road. This’‘adds much to the assessable valuation on the county’s tax books and the plan by which refrigerator, fruit and other companies outside of the State are made to meet a proper sbare of their county’s taxes, is & most commendable one The Asses ser went to Grass Valley Tuesday. He will be here again the first of June — Truckee Republican. Weather Prediction. McAdie, of the San Francisco Weather Bureau, telegraphs as follows; Showers tonight and Friday. Case Submitted. The $5,000 damage suit, instituted by Mrs. Stager against Supervisor Wood was concluded this forenoon., This afternoon the case was argaed and snbmitted. Seriousty Ii. While on a visit in San Francisco M:s. B. Guscetti, one of the best kuown ladies in this city, had a paralylic stroke, and was brought home a few days ago.’ Her condition is critical, A Cold Country. Charles L. Miller, who left bere a short time since to superiatend a mine near Dawson, writes that be arrived at hie destination all right, but the climate there is almost unbearable. Ever since he has been there the thermomHis Skull Trepanned. The Chinaman who bai bis head inlhe operation was a success Degree of Honor. Hereafter the lodge of the Degree f suddenly at the home of his daughter, ieaienmecenaaantiiaiin Two Children Badly Burned. San Franoisco, March 6.—A fire which occurred in the home of Edward Flood this morning may result in the death of two of the Flood children, and in addition, the father and mother were seriously burned. How the fire started isa mystery. Mrs. Flood was preparing breakfast, and had left the kitchen for a few seconds when. the father and mother noticed a great cloud of smoke ‘coming from the kitchen. They rushed into the room and lying in the bed enveloped in flames was their little four-fear-old child, aud her two weeks old brother. The infant’ was frightfully burned, and can hardly survive his injuries The father and mother were burned in trying to save. their little ones. Ro “The Devil's Turnip Patch,” On the top of Bald Eagle mountain, just where the old turnpike breaks over the brow down into Black Hole valley, is a queer field of rock, which years ago was christened “The Devil’s Turnip Patch.” The rocks, which are of a reddish sandstone, have a striking peculiarity of all standing on end, thus forming a Jagged, irregular surface, that won for it its queer name from the early settlers. In bygone days,» when the stages wheeled their way up from Northumberland to Williamsport, the four in hands traversed the old pike that skirts the turnip patch, and the strange garden of rocks was a constant source of wonderment to the traveler, .Added to its interest as a natural curiosity is n hidden stream of water somewhere beneath the standing stones, the noisy flowing of which forms a romantic song beneath one’s feet. Nobody knows where: the source of this stream is, nor can anybody find where it empties itself into Black Hole valley. . The rock field-eovers an area of two or three acres, with its widest part to the north, then narrowing down V shaped to the south, where the angle is lost in a fringe of stunted hemlocks and eldérs. Theorists have figured on the cause of this mountain freak, but the theory obtaining most credence is thut it is a legacy of the glacial age, the rocks being a. collection pushed into their present vertical position by the moving ice.—Philadelphia Record. Why Cables Get Tired. There has been some question, says The Electrical Engineer, as to the rea son why certain cables lose their eon ducting properties and have in some instances to be replaced. A learned Frenchman bas submitted a paper on the subject to the Academie des Sci ences. In this paper be states that when cables Inse their electrical prop erties 4¢ iy -becnuse they are always used for one Rind of current only. ei ther positive or negative, If used sometimes for positive and sometitmes for negative, they wih. he states pre serve their conductive qualities indef Initely. Experiments with nine wires running from Paris to Dijon demon strated this, he says, “T have noticed.” said the social phi” losopber, “that people who gossip about their neighbors are the people who are always fretting because they imagine they are being talked about by their neighbors.”—Omaba World-Herald. It is safer to marry a thrifty woman with only 15 cents ‘han it is to wed a vain belle with $15,000 — Gaivesto News. ; had entered. Serious Illness of John §. Hittell. March 7.—Jobn 8. San FRAncisoco, ill at his home. . recovery. Only his most nurse. ee. OD j d,t Hittell, author and journalist, at the ard, the advanced age of 76,is lying seriously to Berkeley at t Hie ageand enfeebled Hearst to behead i -' miniog building w health after an illness which has conmining 1 a fined him to his bed for the last three erected according to ape res te ae weeks are what his physicians fear Mrs. Hearst will erect the way of his ultimate a memor! ao 4 intimates Howard will draw the . Plans. naeer friends are allowed to see him, and he fourth 2 i aes oe at ttention ot a trained drawn the plans so ecpanaialees buildings in New York. Plans for Mining Building, BERKELEY, March 6.—John G. Howhe New York architect, has come he request of Mrs. the site for the new hich will be the first ial to the late Senator Hearst. He. was Not. Endorse Cuicaco, March 6,—A_ Special to Tribune from Kelamazoo, Michiga says: The Prohibition State Conver, . tion by an almost unanimons fi: ‘ refused to endorse the work ‘ of M Carrie Nation, in smashing Saloons in . Kansas. Walter 8. Western, of 4, drag . was nominated for Supreme Coan Justice, hve oie pianetield, of oe City, and Aro utters, of 4 voix, for Regents.: am % Of Charla. . Advertising in the TRANSORIPT tells, : The Story og a Hoodoo Hat, Mr. John Cooper, one of Dooly coun ty’s most prominent citizens, is in the city or his way to Augusta to attend the old veterans’ reunion. ‘When hé got off the train, he looked up Captain Warren Moseley, one of the bravest or the boys who went out in the sixties, and they immediately began swapping reminiscences about their army life in Virginia. Finally Mr. Cooper asked Captain Moseley if he remembered the Yankee hat. A reporter who was standIng there heard the following story, which both men vouch for as being abe solutely true: On the first day of the battle of Winchester a Yankee was killed so near the line of battle that a soldier of the name of McLendon, Company I, Fourtk COHEN’S BOBBINET RUFFLED CURTAINS See Window! Georgia, picked up the hat and put it on and wore it. He had not had it on
his head for more than two hours when he was shot through the head, the bullet piercing the hat in almost the same killed the Yankee. Another soldier of the name of Wooten of Company H, Fourth Georgia, picked up the hat and put it on, and in less than an hour he, too, was killed, the bullet striking him in the head near the place where the other two bullets The next day another soldier of the name of Kilpatrick of Company H, Fourth Geotgia, was wearing the hat when he, too, was struck in the head and killed. Although the hat was a fine one, it was left lying on the field, as there All New—00 pair received today at the Big Store. Well worth going miles to see, COME TODAY ! Lace Curt MAHER & CO’) See Window! Laces Curtains at $1 00 a pair, and up as high ag $7:50. All we ask is for you to come and see them. We have those hole that the bullet had entered that . New Bobbinet Curtains with Ruftiles on. They are very swell. SALE OF SPRING DRESS GOODS—We have two lots of Spring Dress Goods, in them are all the new weaves both in plain and figured. sold for $1 50 for a full suit. sists of silk and wool goods and all wool. Lot No. 1 will be Lot No. 2—'This lot conWe have about 20 suits which will besold for $2.25 fora full suit. If you want a nice SPRING DRESS, CHEAP, now is the time to get it. New Dress Trimmings, New Yoking. Lots of New Thivgs to show you. Respectfully, was Do one who would wear it. as four men who had worn it were then cold and stiff, and each one had been shot through the hat in almost the same place.—Macon News. A Philadelphia Story, Sunday School Teacher—Where did the three wise men come from? Phil Adetphy (whose family had only recently moved to Chicago)—They came from the east, Sunday School Teacher— And why were they called “wise men?" Phil Adel phy—Because, ma’am, they went back again.—Philadelphia Press, eal EE aesiar An Inference. “I Just know she is ten years older than she admits,” said the woman with . the sharp nose. “How? usked the other half of the iuo. a ‘ “Why would she be letting that 16year-old kid make love to her if she were as young as she pretends?”—In flanapolis Press. The Doctor’s Hint, Patient— Doctor, I can’t sleep at aight. I tumble and toss until mornIng. ' Doctor--H’m, that’s bad. Lét me see your tongue. (After diagnosis) Physieally you are all right. Perhaps you Worry over that bill you’ve owed ma tor the last two years! H. L. Johnson, foreman of the Gaston Ridgé mine, accompanied by J. M. Branecomb, arrived here yesterday. F. J. Sloat, one of the parties interested in the Mountaineer mine, returned last evening. from a trip to San piece lightly on the counter. man picked up the money and 1 . at it. The old It had a dull color and was not as heavy as an ordinary half dollar. The proprietor walked over to where the tobacco was, and, taking down a Honor will meet at Odd Feilows Hall on the first and third Wednesday even. ings of each month, immediately after the adjournment of the A.O U. W’s meetings, ooked Francisco. William Maher, tbe well known dry goods merchant, retured lust evening piece of the brand the young man had called for, he pretended to put it under the tobacco cutter, but instead he slipped in the counterfeit piece and cut it Sensible Governor. Recently the Governor of Oregon NEW ADV. SOON. . = my I am getting settled in my Fine New Tatloring Shop ON BROAD STREET, Between Miss Stevens’ Millinery store and W. H. Andrews’ Fruit Store. O. WAXEL. i _ Sazor. Just hold Our V POCKET Razors, Shears Home Journal. : : from a trip to Auburn and other! into halves. places, * E. T. Worthley, the well known hotel man, of Washington, who has been here for a few days, returned home this morning. ; Mrs. J.R Koowland, wife of Assemblyman Knowland of Alameda, accompénied by her daughter, arrived here Jast evening on a visit to Miss Winnie Mulloy. Mrs. J. R. Aitken and two daughters of Sin Fi ancisco are here as the guests of George.©. Gaylord and family. Ralph Gaylord went to Colfax yesterday to meet them. did.—Chicago Record. A Joly Funeral, An Italian doctor named Louis tusio, who died in the eighteenth to the manner of his burial. tleman. by his will, forbade his being disinherited and appointed atee. be should be buried. They were The Odd Fellows of Truckee will within the next two weeks install a 20light acetylene gas plant at the hall. +4 re me Personally, I do not believe thet any one needs meat more than once a day. By careful experiments, during bard labor say for fourteen bours a day, I found one meal of meat all that ig nec-. °Y for her dowry essary—in fact, more is a burijen —) the procession was to wear black. Mrs. 8. T. Rorer, in the March Ladies’ these orders’ were: aksolutely va boughs on the day of -his funeral. with the clergy sounding their fi trombones and trumpets. The {nto effect.— Housvbold: Words. He then handed the two pieces to the young mé&n and commandcd him to “get.” which he promptly tury, left some curious instructions as This gentions to weep at his funeral on nain of or her who. should laugh the longest and loudest the principal heir and legNot a stitch of black was to be displayed either in the house in which he should die or in the chureb in which to be strewn with flowers and green stead of the tolling of bells lively musi¢ was to accompany his body to the church, and 50 minstrels were to march was to be carried by 12 marriageable girls clothed in green. to each of whom the testator bequeathed a sum of monLastly. no one in vetoed a bill to provide for a residence for him to be built by the State. He! reason was that he was a poor man and . not able to keep up stich an establish. ment. He said the house be lived in, and for which he pays $15 a month rent, was sufficient for his needs, The Governor of Oregon is a sensible man, ad the fact becomes more potent when you consider that his salary is . only $1500 a year. Cor. cee. relabim Care In tow. eg vss ke, The garments of workers ip powde) wills are pocketless, so thiat they can not varry knives or matches. or indeed mable material No ene is allowed to go about with trousers turned up ut the bottom, because grit is collected In that way, and.the merest hard speck fs dangerous. ‘ both InPone Pay. Dr Pl That's the worst paying family . ever attended é Pr Pellet Yes; 1 once attended them. but . never sueceeded in getting . ~ a penny out of them. . Dr Pill Well, 1 have had petter tack LE got @ nickel out of one of the ‘hildrep after it had oearly choked the kid wo death.— Exchange. utes, bier All rried ferent patterns. FOR SALE Bo” \ LEGG © SHAW Co. Don’t lay it flat as you would a of about 20 degrees, as above, and work from heel to point, HS: Bmce it at an angle Best YRADE MARK-REGISTERED” Knives are made from the finest KNIVES and Butcher FOOD FOR FASTERS. Daring Lent the bill of fare may not inclade meats at all meals but. we cab provide many excellent substitutes. We have a specially selected stook of Salt, Dried and Canned Fish and the housekeeper need be at no loss to prepare something toothsome and satisfying for breakfast, lunc’ or diuner. Here are some itens: Fine Salt Mackepel, Herrings, Boneless Oodfish, Bloaters, Oanned Shrimps, Lobster, Salmon, 3 Ete., Etc. Cash Grocer. steel and seldom need sharpen. tng. Made in hundreds of dis anything. wed are made of puninflam : kkkk ** hiidddRESEEELEE EET TOO I blnlchsilsisleinicici List hii t it hihi itdtdd big idy PIONEER GRO wee: Ket: PICKLED PIG’S FEET. MACAROON SNAPS. : CRANBERRY SAUCE. 4 HORSERADISH. -MUSTARD. =. ALL KINDS OF SALT—Smoked and Canned Fish. TRY LUNCH HERRING. + See CHAS. E. POR IOR IA OR UE ett FRO ik FER I TOR IISA ATOR RRP eeseat BERETA EATERS THEY'RE ALL NEW. seeememmeee ie kek pas eee ers ieseetestanteeravennigeeett : MULLOY. eC Lilitistirtterirrr si acacereenen CERY STORE. They’re All Good to Eat, Com noraidt 3 Oyster tam Bu Tealer’s CHAS. B. TEGLER, Constantly on hand 4 large steek of Candies Nuts, . Oranges Lemons. Bananas, Lim Cocktails, Hot i ot Beet T When Papa comes home he is thrice welcome if he’s the bearer of FOLEY'S DELICIOUS CONFECTIONS: . All the best varieties of sweetme™ here by the box or pound. FOLEY. 13 Commercial Street, Nevada City 7 »99D. Transord pt Block, = Proprietor } ——. and (fection . Frame o Pict es With Artistic Jadg nell. Moore iso Makes Photographs MAHER & Co. JHE TRANS na ilieecinint mance etnies THURSDAY,. .. 000045. A GREAT. Y. Iteus That Shonld Interes Something New Eve For Life Insurance see’ The change’ in the 4 about as predicted by sharps. : For first-class plumbing ‘ell. Illegal fishing is exter ticed elong the Truckee Reno. Call on Ed Schmidt whe anything in the tobacco lit “Was it real courtship ?’ go. The threat of court was what finally landed hi: Fine Imported Cigar Ri: ‘at Giffin’s Cigar Store, Ti tiful. W.D. Vinton is repaint ing up the interior of his 4 first-class shape, Itching scalps and dandr troublesome. Manzanita will give instant relief. £ Vinton’s. Samples free. The late George Fietel life insured in the A. O. U sum of $10,000. Use just one-half the amo ton’s Vanilla Extract for fi: you have never tried it ask . ple. The roads are now getti a fair condition, but anothe coming to knock them , agaia. an Secretary Gage has sent t a resolution providing. th must be taken back to the p which they come, if rejecte The next few weeks will cellent time to plant som Lebr’s famous berries, guaranteed by June and Jul; Louis Janin, Jr., the you -expert who was found-on the Denver in @ demented con since been found to have t jous at the time from fever. Dandruff can be cured wit nita Hair Tonic. Vinton has The Board of Supervisor; in regular session on Mon Ist,at which time the new: the third district wil! take hi the Board, The time is drawing near . will have to make your sewe tions. ‘Howell does the best and he will treat you with fai James Allen of Grass V ‘been granted a divoree fron Nettie Allen, on the grour \sertion. The custody of t children was given to the m Wu. Harry, proprietor of t at the corner of Pine ahd Sy makes a speciality of serving t cent beer in town. Try it. keeps a full stock of fancy liq Tonight about fifteen ‘mer Mountain Company, Uniform of P., will go to Grass Vall uniform to visit the compar place. If you should desire anythi: drinking line you should ca Grotto. It is the most popul in town and you are alws fair treatment. Everything looks bright ‘future of the Federal Loan Willow Valley. Ogden brot have a lease on the propert; day shipped four tons of ore Smelting work, which assays ‘ton, A number .of the article ‘from the residence of Myers Los Angeles last month, have covered. The valuablés were the trunk of a man who had rested by the police. The thi utes his downfall to indal, absinthe, Foley Loses Both Fée J. J. Foley, who has hee treatment at the County fos his frozen feet, submitted to Operation yesterday, and h limbs removed above the al few weeksago, when Foley was from ‘fruckee in bis sad plig tors Hunt and Conlan found Sary to remove all of the toe feet, thinking they could feet, but it later developed “freeze” which Foley #xperie1 destroyed more tissue than first thought. In the operation performer day the newmethod. of admi Cocaine through the spinal -c ®mployéd, and Foley was . 10 sit’and watch the proceedi Ont any inconvenience or ‘! / dave § sociable chat with the ¢ RO termine Those Seeds: A few days ago the TRANSo Rotice of a large lot of seec been received from Oon Woods for free distribution., 88 the notice wag published . * Rreat demand for the seeds lot Wa8 soon exhausted. D Will be given when another Ic Do You know . That Moore carries the lar 128t stock of frames for pho frames to orde : \ eee When taken at the proper t: “tle Jesse Moore “ . AA” Veta cold. poeta, ~