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Evening Sentinel from Santa Cruz, California • Page 3

Publication:
Evening Sentineli
Location:
Santa Cruz, California
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SANTA CRUZ EVENING SEN riNEL TUESDAY, MARCH 20, 1900 "SENTINEL" JOTTINGS. St 3 SS ss BON TON MILLINERY. PFYP A PPTT The most delicate and ricnlv flavored 1 liMml 1 JiOJ. of Fruit3 Just for a treat we place ss ss 18 Cts. ss ss SS ss iS ss 3 fifty large, naturally ripened Singapore Pineapples on sale at the price quoted.

They are pared and cored ready for table use. Friday and Saturday only at this price. Served free on these days that you may taste how delicious they are. iS 0 ss EACH. SPRING 1900 SUMMER CORRECT MILLINERY AT CORRECT PRICES arc displaying ihc largest all-around, uphwith-tlic-timcs Millinery at prices that defy competition.

Your patronage solicited. Satisfaction guaranteed. SS it SS No. 2 Pacific Av. Cor.

Mission St. A slight frost Sunday morning. J. Teshara will plead in the Supe- rior Court today. M.

Pisi, a native of Italy, was naturalized Monday. Read ad) of Le Bon Ton Millin- i ery in another column. A building is being erected in the rear of the Garibaldi Villa Hotel. According to the Call the division encampment will be held here in June. Eleven candidates were initiated into the A.

O. U. W. Monday evening- i The salmon have again appeared in the bay. About thirty were caught Monday.

The Two Bar creek road, beyond Boulder Creek, will soon be open to the public. No more petitions for Mayor or Councilmen can be tiled, as the time expired Monday night. On Sunday the Laurels beat the Skylands at Glenwood in a baseball game, the score being 16 to 13. HINKLE'S CASH STOIiE mi ss LE BON TON MILLINERY. 168 Pacific Av.

ss THE ANIMAL SHOW. the Mcculloch. SHELDON'S PAPER. I FATAL BLOW. Does your memory ever call you back to the day when you were a fair-haired little "tot," and the advance agent of the old time circus invaded vour little home town with his GLOVE CONTEST THAT ENDED IN THE DEATH OF FRANK CASS.

Fought Eight Rounds With Bert S. F. Examiner. Now that the Rev. Charles M.

Sheldon has had his week of experience with the Topeka Capital, it may not be unprofitable to consider what has been accomplished. During the week the Examiner has reproduced the principal features of Mr. Sheldon's paper and has refrained from comment, thin leaving our readers free to have the benefit of the Capital's distinctive qualities and to form. funny painted! face and grotesque garb and the innumerable wonderful things to see? Of course it does. Do you remember how your heart beat, and how you longed for the time to come when the circus would arrive, and after counting the weeks and days and hours the time arrived and the "great- Whidden Betore the End Came.

The revenue cutter McCulloch ar-1 rived in port Monday from' Monterey. I She was Admiral Dewey's dispatch I boat at the battle of Manila, and was supposed to have fired the first shot in the battle, but Capt. Coghlan of the Raleigh denies it, saying: Now, so far as the article intends to laud the McCulloch and her officers and men for their conduct in that campaign, I am with it heart and soul; for in my opinion, and I am sure in the opinion of every other naval officer out there, no vessel could have possibly been more alert, more attentive to duty or shown more zeal, promptitude and efficiency than did the McCulloch, whom we all learned to respect and love. She was always ready, and, what's more, did whatever work was assigned her, and did it well. And the fact that she was not in position to, and did not fire the first gun in the Manila campaign in no way distracts from her more than meritorious conduct out there.

AT THE RECORDER'S OFFICE. Shortly before noon Sunday a fatal uninfluenced, their own estimates of the value of them. Comment coming at the conclusion ol the experiment will not, we think, be deemed glove fight took place close to Twin Lakes between Frank Cass and Bert Whidden, resulting in the death of Cass. They had arranged for the con- Speaking broadly, we should say test during last week. The young; tnat the public has not felt much in- I est show on earth" appeared? Wa3 that not one of the happiest days of your life? Without doubt it was.

The man must be blase indeed who can not associate his first circus with the happy days of youth. Time has passed since then. You may have little men and women of your own now, who will experience the same joys and sensations, the expectations and the disap-' pointments that you did. Norris- Rowe's Big Trained Animal shows ex-: hibit in this city on Saturday and Sunday afternoons and nights under their enormous waterproof tents which will be located at Dolphin Park. Do not fail to take the little ones to men were good friends, but each be- terest in the things Mr.

Sheldon has lieved himself capable of defeating the1 Printed. Considerable curiosity was I manifested as to what would be done, other in a boxing match is true-enough, probably to On Sunday morning they fough make the week financially profltable to u. the publishers of the Capital; in the Y. M. C.

A. building with six- but the Kansas preacher has net been able to engage Interest in the matter he has presented from day to day. It seems fair to suppose that, should this administration run on for six months, his paper would drop out of notice that is, out of general notice; would not be widely read would not be a power. In the first place, it seems to us, the Capital has not been sui ounce gloves, but being interrupted they decided to continue the contest at some place where they would not be disturbed. They went to the beach, and talked of beving the contest there, but came to the conclusion that it wa3 not the proper place.

Accompanied by some of their friends they continued along the railroad track until the'' came to a clearing near Twin Lakes. When the fight began about thirty A glove fight is reported to have taken place between two boys near the upper bridge Sunday afternoon. Owing to the failure of the So-quels to appear, the Stars were unable to play at Dolphin Park Sunday. The National Editorial Associa-' tion delegates visited the Ben Lomond Winery Monday, and were presnted with bottles of wine. On Monday1 evening the Naval Reserves had a banquet in honor of the newly-elected officers at the California Restaurant.

There were 50 members present in uniform. Pleasant Sunday, but cloudy. At nine o'clock in the evening there was a light fall of rain. Weather not entirely settled Monday morning, which condition pleases the farmers. Wni.

Long has written to L. Balsz regarding the formation of a new baseball league, to be composed of teams in San Francisco, Oakland, San Jose, Watsonville and Cruz. During his review of the Topeka Capital, edited by Rev. C. M.

Sheldon Rev. J. B. Orr Sunday evening delivered a stirring temperance address. It was local in its nature and plain in assertion.

The State Board of Education ha3 granted life diplomas of the grammar grade to Teresa C. Leonard, Marie Pioda; educational diplomas of the grammar gradle to Ella Dakan, Zenie Giddier, May Grant. James Dougherty, the Boulder Creek lumberman, but whose home is in San Jose, has returned from the East, where he has been having a cancer treated. It will pain his many friends to learn that the physicians gave him no hope. The disease started in the lip some two years ago and1 is now in the throat.

this great moral show; do not fail to let them see the new big free spectacular street carnival and children's fairyland! parade which, will be given on the morning of (he exhibition. Norris Rowe's show are eminently suited and adapted to amuse the little ones. You can not crowd too much sunshine into their lives. Their happiest days are now, and they will remember the day spent at Norris Rowe's show in after years, as one of the happiest of their lives. Do not disappoint the little ones.

ThorA nrc fln7ina nf rmhlipntinnfl run 1 It VI 11 'n 11 II J' 1. II I m. young men and Doys surrounueu uu. 1n th. SflT11 linp thnnh thfilp publishers have not had the irrever ence (or what you may be pleased to Reported daily for the "Sentinel" by Makinney and Dake, Searchers of Records and Conveyancers, No.

22 Cooper St. Marie P. Amaya and Cassimero Amaya to Henry Elphick, Jr. Lot in Branciforte, $10. Adele Lee Waters to Annie Murphy and Ella Murphy Lot 13 of James Waters Subdivision of the Pajaro Valley Nursery Tract, Watsonville, $10.

Cloramedo Cordora to J. H. Bilodeau 1 acre, near San Lorenzo River, Annie O. Wendt and J. C.

Wendt to Josephine A. West Lot on Railroad Branciforte, Josephine A. West and George W. West to Charles W. Hammer and Harry B.

Towne Lot on Railroad $10. Refugio Cordova to Cloromedo Cordova IV2 acres near San Lorenzo River, gift. MORTOAOES. Mortgages for $200 and $4,000 filed. Mortgages for $4,000, $650 and $150 satisfied.

LIKELY TO BE AN ACQUISITION. i YESTERDAY'S HOTEL ARRIVALS, HOTEL ST. GEORGE. L. II.

Bailey, San Jose; C. B. Har-' woodl, Thoa Lynch, A. C. Jackson and wife, Brown, E.

C. Johnson, John A. Prensen, Walter J. Wilson, Edw. Hanahan, A.

Zennell, G. F. Flint, Chas. II. Beldn, Dr.

and Mrs. McGal-lyenddy, San Francisco; F. W. SUiarpe, Oakland; S. F.

Wren and wife, Cham-i paign, W. Raley, J. T. Buell, J. Krauss, San Jose; A.

M. Peachy, Oma-1 ha, Neb; E. C. Johnson, John B. Kel-i ley, San Francisco; R.

F. Scott and I wife, Master F. Scott, D. B. Van-l gaut and wife, Paris, II.

M. Win-ans and wife, Maurice, Wm. M. Pinkerton and wife, W. M.

Pinkerton, Spokane, E. T. Power, San Francisco. and Whidden. Fred Fitch was select-1 ed as time-keeper, while E.

Finney and Wm. Morris acted as seconds, 'lho former was second for Cass and the latter for Whidden. For three rounds Cass had toe best of it, landing on Whidden's breast. Then Whidden tried to reach Cass' head1, landing occasionally. Neither displayed any science.

At first it was proposed to fight for points, but it is presumed some of the crowd urged the men to fight to a finish. It was understood that the round's were to be of three minutes' duration with two minutes' rest and five seconds to toe the scratch. After the third round the fight became exciting. It was give and take, with no favors shown. In the eightn round, Whidden knocked down Cass, who arose and again was sent to earth never to rise.

The fatal blow landed behind the right ear. Cass went down on one knee andi then on both. Ten seconds were counted and Cass feil forward, seemingly in pain. Water was poured on him in an effort to re- vive him, but it did not have any 1 effect. Medical aid was summoned, but did not prove of any avail, for Cass died half an hour after receiving the fatal blow.

Roy Cass, brother of the deceased, consider it) to advertise their work in just the way that the Sheldon work has been advertised. Mr. Sheldon is not brainy enough to make a journal stand out from the level of the average religious paper. He brought to bear an ordinary mind's commonplace notions of what Christ would have done, and the result has been flat and stupid. There has been neither force nor brilliancy in the Capital nothing compelling, nothing masterly, nothing fine, nothing worth while.

The tone has been shallow, feeble. So, the Capital has been narrow in its sympathies, false in its conceptions of the scope of life. It has substituted the small personality of a provincial clergyman for the universal heart and brain. That is another way of saying that it has not been a newspaper in the sense that a newspaper is a faithful epitome of the day-to-day life of the world, whatever that lif" may mean. The moment a publisher sets to work to put himself between 1 the lines of his news reporter and to cut and slash contemprary history to the measure of his own knowledge and present convictions, he is in a fair way to have a few readers, unless he be a I person of rare genius and large in "Who are these new people that are moving into the house next door?" "I don't know, but I am sure we shall get along splendidly with them.

They have just unloaded a wheelbarrow and a lawn mower." Chicago Tribune. SOCIAL AND PERSONAL. E. Lindsay is back from Altru- C. ria.

W. II. Raymond of the Chronicle is here. J. F.

Coope is back from San Hundreds of ladies are thinking of their new Spring to visit our store Hagemann is in San Fran- Mrs. F. cisco. Hat. It pays them it will pay you-and look through our immense stock Misses' and Children's Hats.

of Pattern Hats, formation. Even so, he would much C. A. Bixby has returned: from San Francisco. Mrs.

E. Kingsley has returned from OUR SIDE LINE and returned to the place where the: to ihns books body was. The remains were placed I contribut ions to papers owned by oth- in the wagon, and reached the home of ers than iot the nCWS' experl the parents of the deceased just E(cs to show-they had returned from the Methodist i The truth appears to be that the Church. modern press is at its best when it is an accurate cnronicier 01 tne worm Whidden cave himself up. After This line consists of Ladies' Wrappers, Shirt Waists, Ladies' ami Children's Furnishing ods, Handkerchiefs and Gloves.

Stamped Linens and Kmbroiderv Silks. Also the lamous R. G. Corset. This Corset does not stretch and is sure to please you.

WELKER'S MILLINERY Successors to Hall's. 153 Pacific Av. THE HYPNOTIST. THE EXAMINER'S MISSTATEMENTS. Prof.

week's House over Lee, the hypnotist, began a engagement at the Opera Monday evening. For two hours he kept a audience interested. Before being in the custody of Sheriff Besse for three hours he was released on his own recognizance, as it is not thought he can be criminally prosecuted' for the reason that the blow was accidental. On Monday an autopsy was held, and it was ascertained that the blow was received under the right ear, dislocating the neck. The left eye was bruised and bruises were on the body.

Coroner Morgan will hold an inquest at 2 P. M. today at the Court-House. Cass was the son of A. B.

Cass, residing in East Santa Cruz. He was in the employ of J. M. Green Co. Deceased was a member of the Methodist Church and Maccabees.

Whidden, who is aoout 18 years of age, was recently employed in a tea store and had worked in the telephone office. Cass was about twenty poundd heavier than Whidden. Los Angeles. Miss May Baldwin has returned from Pacific Grove. M.

L. Blum was down from Boulder Creek Monday. Rev. Alex. Eakin returned Monday from the metropolis.

Fred Carr is slowly recovering from a very severe illness. Miss Rebie Ilowland is visiting relatives in San Francisco. E. Anthony and Mrs. W.

Huntington were in Watsonville Monday. Col. B. Peyton and Miss Eugenie Peyton will leave next month for Carlisbad, Germany. Mr.

and Mr3. Geo. Wilson, after a visit to L. K. Baldwin and family left Monday for Mexico, N.

Y. Mrs. W. R. Van Wagner and daughter, Miss Daphina, left Saturday for Fresno, to visit her sister, Mrs.

W. A. White of Raisna Vineyard. C. R.

Callaghan of Bellevue, Huron Ohio, a newspaper man, with the Eastern editors who were in town Monday, paid us a fraternal visit. Ed. "Two lads, Bert Whidden anidi Frank Cass, eighteen years old, had a bout this morning in the Y. M. C.

A. gymnasium." "The match was to have taken place large demonstrating his ability with a dozen thought and action, and a vigorous opponent of offenBes cutting across the cardinal doctrines of pure and honorable life. It is not its province to be a book of prayer, nor does it fail when it reports whatever of evil it find3 among men, as well as whatever of good. It is not essential, nor even desirable, that it assumes a breadth ot knowledge it does not possess and Bit in judgment on everything that happens, giving its own interpretations ot events and rejecting as nothing worth whatsoever falls outside the sweep of its own experience. Life is so much broader, so much more complex, so much fuller of division of labor than the Sheldons think for, that they miss some of Its greatest tendencies and misunderstand some of its most potential powers for good.

The press of today has faults grave faults. So has the age. The press can not live on in advance of its age. But the press of today is one of the world's most powerful agents of progress along those lines leading to sweetness and light. There are many men hidden away in editorial rooms all over the globe, too, who are striving earnestly to lift the human race.

They do not cry their virtue from the housetops, they do not assume that what they find it prduent or practical to leave undone will not be done by others in this age of interdependent labor; but perhaps they are not the less sincere, the less effective, because of that. On the whole we are Inclined to be-lcve that the Rev. Mr. Sheldon has accomplished very little. men wh volunteered for the purpose, he gave a short talk on hypnotism.

He said that he had hypnotised over five hundred thousand! people during his i thirty years experience. As a matter of fact, he said, the subject hypnotises himself through the suggestion of the hypnotist. He told of the progress hypnotism is making in the various branches of surgery. In the large medical colleges there are now hypnotists attached to the regular staffs. i Prof.

Lee made some of his subjects go to sleep. His best test was to make a lady in the audience fall asleep. He has two subjects with him who are so last night at the Y. M. C.

A. building, but was postponed until this morning, when a crowd of a dozen or more I formed and went to the gymnasium." "The towels belonging to the Y. M. C. A.

were used and the six-ounce 1 gloves were also the property of the Association." "The crowd made so much noise that the Y. M. C. A. members got frightened and an adjournment was taken to look for a more secluded bat- tie The above statements as reported by I the Examiner's correspondent are ut- i ter faleshoods.

BOULDER CREEK WANTS LIGHTS. SUPERIOR COURT PROCEEDINGS. The boys met in my room on the ran make them insensible to all pain. VIOIfDAT. Echo: There are rumors in the air that the reorganized Big Creek Power Co.

are preparing to put a transmis- nn nne from the power works on Big Creek through Ben Lomond, Boulder Creek and Los Gatos to San Jose for the purpose of furnishing electric power to the places named. The Big Creek people have recently purchased additional water rights and are other- wise preparing to increase their ca-1 pacity, so that the report of the new line, to San Jose seems quite reason-i able. Boulder Creek could and would refofa of wvrkoff ADoraised third floor, which I rent from the Y. One of the subjects he put to sleep for JSiaie Ui 11. 11 HT A In ta ,1 A IT at SI 30" 67 uul liuL LL1 L1 bjuiuaomui, in yju Esute3 of' J.

Janson-F. L. HeatU, The E. W. Fields and J.

M. ureen ap-: Kn piacea in a snow wincow me noiai is. He to- M. ing building, wnere he now w-ill be awakened at 10:30 morrow. i All CI LLIC Uvl it u.k9 aj vivn u.

i'w pointed apnraisers. i towel3 of tne Association were used. Guardianship of Emma L. Clapp, a eitner did the gloves belong to the minor T.J. Clapp appointed guardian.

A I take a good deal of power from the After a little friendly sparring the Estate of Clara L. Tibbetts to March 23d'. boys left my room at my request. This evening Prof. Lee will talk on' new line in the way of electric lights, hypnotism in India, and give another should it come this way and give rea-demonstration of his ability.

He gives sonable rates. We believe It will an interesting entertanment. come. There was no noise, and no one was frightened. ERWIN K.

FINNEY. Subscribe for the "Sentinel" Subscribe for the "Sentinel".

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About Evening Sentinel Archive

Pages Available:
17,147
Years Available:
1896-1907