anaheim-gazette 1876-04-08
Searchable text
PERSONAL
Pristowen McCann's daughter received over $100,000 worth of bridal presents.
Oscar Romain-Travers, one of the President Tyler, edited the New Orleans Democrat.
Beckham was a man of simple taste. He would not drink champagne when he could get eye whisky.
Mrs. H. C. Blake has recovered $2,750 from the city of Lewiston for injuries sustained from a defective sidewalk.
The Misses Muller, Max Muller's two daughters, have passed successful examinations at Oxford, in English, French and German.
Dr. Andrew A. Bonar says that as a result of the work of Moody and Sankey in Glasgow, "they can lay their hands on 7,000 converts who hold out well."
It is stated that Father Hyacinth is about to make this country his future home, and will become pastor of a church in Boston. He is now forty-nine years old.
Gail Hamilton dislikes to be addressed by her nom de plume in private life. "My name is Abagail Dodge, and I live at Hamilton, Massachusetts," she says.
Congressman Holman says he never was a good speaker, and that he has to hold on to his desk and steady himself when he pronounces the word "eleemosynary."
It is said that Whitolaw Reid has offered to make the New York Tribune a religious daily if the Christian capitalists will furnish him with funds to retain control of the paper.
Bayard Taylor has accepted the position of an editorial writer on the New York Tribune, and will commence work as soon as his lecture engagements for the season will permit.
Names that commence with B are in the shadow. See what the world has suffered from Beecher, Bazaine, Bowen, Bacon, Babcock, Belknap, bribery, blackmail and the Black Hills!
Cardinal McCloskey has bought it is reported, the country residence built by the late Le Grand Lockwood at Norwalk, with the intention of making it a Roman Catholic convent.
Mr. Valentine, the sculptor, has finished the recumbent statue of Robert E. Lee, and it will soon be placed in a suit-train of Bedford.
Beethoven used to sit for hours at the piano, improvising the thoughts which he afterwards lotted down on paper, and subsequently elaborated into the music with which he established the world. If he discovered that he had been overheard at such times—as happened once when Cipriana Potter called upon the great composer and was shown into an adjourning room—he was incensed to the highest degree. In another mood, and especially after he had become deaf, while working out a subject in his mind, he would leave his house at night or in the early morning, and walk for many hours through the most remote and solitary places, through woods and by lakes and torrents, silent and abstracted. In this way he sometimes made the circuit of Vienna twice in a day, or, if he were at Baden, long excursions across the country. When engaged in his magnificent Senate Appassionata he one day took a long walk with Ferdinand Ries, his pupil. They walked for hours, but during the whole time Beethoven spoke not a word, but kept humming, or rather howling, up and down the scale. It was the process of incubation. On reaching home he seated himself at the piano without taking off his hat, and dashed into the splendid finale of that noble work. Once there he remained for some time, totally regardless of the darkness, or the fact that he and Ries had nothing to eat for hours. His appearance became perfectly well known to people of all classes, who exclaimed, "There is Beethoven," when they saw him; and it is related that once, when a troop of charcoalburners met him on a country path, they stood on one side, heavily laden as they were, to let him pass, for fear of troubling the great master's meditations. When composing in his own room at home, he would sometimes walk about in a reverie, pouring cold water on his hands alternately, from jug after Jug, till the floor of the room was inundated, and the people came running up-stairs to know the cause of the deluge. At his death he left, beside his finished works, a quantity of rough sketches, containing doubtless, the germs of many more works, which never passed the stage in which they appear there. The first draughts of his well-known compositions show the successive alterations which their subjects suffered before they pleased him; and these form a most interesting study, as exposing his manner of working. One
NAMES that commence with Bare in the shadow. See what the world has suffered from Beecher, Bazaine, Bowen, Bacon, Babcock, Belknap, bribery, blackmail and the Black Hills!
CARDINAL McCloskey has bought, it is reported, the country residence built by the late Le Grand Lockwood at Norwalk, with the intention of making it a Roman Catholic convent.
MR. VALENTINE, the sculptor, has finished the recumbent statue of Robert E. Lee, and it will soon be placed in a suitable structure above the Confederate leader's grave at Lexington, Va.
SIR GEORGE ELLIOTT, who purchased the Egyptian railways for English capitalists, was once a pit boy in the mines. He is now the largest coal proprietor in the world, and a member of Parliament.
JEWERSON DAVIS now spends his time in looking after the interests of the Mississippi Valley Company, formed to develop inter-communication between the Southern States and Europe, and in watching Blaine.
MR. RANDOLPH ROGERS writes from Rome that the statue of the late Secretary Seward is finished, and it will be shipped in time to reach this country in May. It cost $25,000, and is described as being one of Mr. Rogers' best productions.
THE Hartford City Government has named a park in that city "Bushnell Park," in honor of the Rev. Dr. Bushnell, who, 30 years ago, conceived the project of making the park out of what was then one of the most unsightly spots in the city.
MR. FRENCH, a Newburyport sculptor, is succeeding admirably in modelling a half life-size bust of John G. Whittier. The friends of the poet say he has secured a perfect likeness, and it is hoped that copies of the work in plaster and marble may soon be within the reach of all who may desire them.
TWENTY years ago, when the present Dr. Eliot was a tutor at Harvard he heard the students speak of him as "Old Eliot." But last winter, walking into town one evening, he met two under-graduates, and heard one say to the other, when he had passed by: "I wonder where Charlie is going at this time of night."
BELKNAP is not, after all, without a conscience. When the patriot editor of the Marshalltown Times wrote to him asking the loan of a Government cannon to shoot off on the Fourth of July, he promptly and firmly wrote back: "I have no more right to lend a gun belonging to the United States than the Secretary of the Treasury has to lend money."
It is proposed by the Virginia Legislature to have the will of Washington, now filed among the records of Fairfax county, and becoming worn out and dislipidated through the manipulations of parties examining it, reproduced by the photographic process for preservation in facsimile, and for use during the Centennial Exhibition as an interesting contribution to its relics.
The Sun says that the Rev. James S. Payne, who has succeeded Joseph J. Roberts as President of the Republic of Liberia, is not unknown in New York. He is a full-blooded African, a native of Richmond, on Ferry Mueller mulls buy Morris acquiesces proviso that Morris possesses him an arm lived. Mueller wise, agrees informal othem and ent. Mueller secured by as that man the transfer stocks, but bely though all events advantage transaction yer—Mr. out the co contained Morris next day—Morris strongly w probably of years s graceful erty.
Subsequent agreement through Johnson, ander Loing to be changed to the amount of quartical secerty which Mueller, of the co agreement shortly to him night fist, and it. Morr to New York without died in Now, possession amounted "great ea as yet, bc city with cling to Chaund deceased tor, and brought specific ment w Mueller Long, H Johnson Messis. There w able law old Mor balance
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Recent of his p some of o "Des de last gwine t more ch
It is proposed by the Virginia Legislature to have the will of Washington, now filed among the records of Fairfax county, and becoming worn out and dilapidated through the manipulations of parties examining it, reproduced by the photographic process for preservation in facsimile, and for use during the Centennial Exhibition as an interesting contribution to its relics.
The Sun says that the Rev. James S. Payne, who has succeeded Joseph J. Roberts as President of the Republic of Liberia, is not unknown in New York. He is a full-blooded African, a native of Richmond, and was educated at the Moravian College in Liberia, and was twenty years or more authorized missionary to his adopted country by the Methodist Episcopal Church of America.
An inquisitive but badly posted Briton went down to visit Mount Vernon not long since, and after making many inquiries, and noting down the answers, he said to the superintendent: "Ah! may I ask you if General Washington was, in the harmy!" "He was, sir," replied the superintendent. "And on which side, Union or Rebell?" "Rebel, sir," was the reply, which was carefully noted down.
M. Alexander Dumas' sayings and doings furnish a large amount of material to the newspapers. A writer in the London News gives an account of a visit to him, and describes his personal appearance. "He is tall, stalwart, very pale, and his first aspect is proud, cold, stern, and a little defiant. But he quickly thaws and shows himself the most fascinating of causes. He is gay, cordial, vivacious, and simple, full of anecdote, wit and laughter. He seems to wear his heart upon his sleeve, and to hear his conversation is like drinking champagne of a fine vintage. He talks freely about anything and everything."
It is said of Mrs. Irving, the winner of the Greek prize in the recent intercollegiate college contest, that she is tall, slender, nervous and active, dresses for health, and in a style to suit herself, is a famous pedestrian, and has always had an ambition to do Europe on foot. Last summer she and a few of her Cornell companions took their skiff at Ithaca and rowed down Cayuga Lake, up the Seneca river to Geneva, then up Seneca Lake to Watkins. They visited the famous glens and all the romantic scenery of these beautiful lakes, tenting out all the time, and returned to Cornell in the same manner.
Some have many loved ones and some but one. Heaven help those who have none, though they are generally to blame for their empty-heartedness, for kindness wins love. They are always wretched, and they often show their craving for something to love by cherishing some dumb animal—a dog, a kitten, a parrot, perhaps, on which to lavish caresses, which better spent, would have bound some poor heart to theirs. Pride or morbid sensitiveness may have been at the bottom of their loneliness, and these pets fill the aching void a little!
Some one to love! It is the cry of the human soul, the note to which every human heart responds; the bond which will bind us all together in that other world where mourners shall be comforted and love shall reign forever.
A SEA SERPENT—The bark Tanline arrived at Zanzibar with coal. When off Cape St. Roque, South America, a sight was presented that made the crew agast—nothing less than the great sea serpent engaged in a conflict with a whale. It had wound itself twice round the whale, and was twirling it with tremendous velocity, lashing the water into foam. The noise could be distinctly heard on board, and after battling for some time both disappeared. The serpent's length can be imagined. It had two coils round a full-sized sperm whale, with thirty feet clear at each end. Its diameter was from three to four feet. They saw it twice afterward. Once it came very close to the vessel, and raised itself about sixty feet out of the water, as if about to attack them. I have questioned men and officers, trying to find out any discrepancy between their statements, but I am a convert to the belief that it was seen. A naval officer writes to the Western Morning News to precisely the same effect; and the officers of her Majesty's ships on the station are said to be convinced of the truth of the story.
JUDGE——of Toledo, Ohio, has a little, four-year-old boy, who, one day, when company was present, wished a seat at table, but was sent away with the remark that his whiskers were not long enough for him to sit there. The little chap took his seat by a stand where the servant gave him his dinner. While eating it the house-cat came purring round him when he said—
"Oh, go off! Your whiskers are big enough to eat at the other table."
Moving a Man's Life.
There is a suit now pending in the Court of Common Pleas, says the Cincinnati Commercial, which presents some novel features. It is to enforce the fulfillment of a contract whereby one man agreed to assign to another all his earthly possessions in consideration of the handsome annuity of $30,000. The circumstances of the case are as follows:
John P. Morris, or "Doe," as he was familiarly called, was a wealthy citizen of Ironton, Ohio, who had retired from active business, but was still willing to turn an honest penny by loaning money out to his neighbors at a high rate of interest. He was about fifty-nine years of age, very penurious, and yet quite intemperate. It was his custom to come to Cincinnati four or five times a year, and get on a spree that lasted him a couple of weeks, and, after his midsummer tussle with John Barleycorn, he regularly went on a trip to Europe. He was supposed to be worth "dead loads" of money in bonds, securities and real estate about Ironton, and believed to be a near heir to an estate in Wales worth two or three hundred thousand dollars. His principal places of resort when he came to the city were the coal and stone yards, and the beer saloons of the present Nineteenth Ward, about Front and Mill streets. He was drawn to that section of the city by his intimacy with and friendship for John M. Mueller, the Buena Vista stone man, it is supposed, and he is known to have become the creditor of Mr. Mueller for large sums of money at various times. In February, 1874, he was in the city on one of his periodical "progresses," and was more than usually twisted on his always-drinking-never-treating proclivities. It happened one Saturday afternoon that Morris, Mueller and several other acquaintances were having some beer at Gildhaus' salon, on Front street, near Mill, when Mueller made the boast that he could buy Morris and own him for life. Morris acquiesced in the proposition, with the proviso that he gave enough money for the proprietorship. Mueller then proposed that Morris deed to him all his worldly possessions, and he would in return give him an annuity of $30,000 as long as he lived. Morris, whether sober or otherwise, agreed to the proposition, and an informal contract was drawn up between them, and duly witnessed by those present. Mueller then owed Morris $60,000, secured by mortgage on real estate, and as that mortgage was to be included in
New Willow & White Automatic Sunday Main Street Railway.
The idea and main innovations in heating machinery. The only MACHINE that can be used successfully without instruction or experience. Invitably does perfect and double work. Send for circuits and price lists, to Willett & Gilbe Sewing Machines Company All Post street, San Francisco. E. R. Cutler, General Agent.
The huge, drastic, gripping steaming pills consisted of crude cosmee and bulky ingredients, are fast being supervised by Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Fargative Pellets, or Sugar-coated, Concentrated Root and Herbal Juice, Anti-Billions Granules—the "Little Giant" Cathartic or Multum in Parro Physic. Modern Chemical Science enables Dr. Pierce to extract from the juices of the most valuable roots and herbs their active medicinal principles, which, when worked into little Pellets or Granules, accurately larger than mustard seed, renders each little Pellet as active and powerful as a large pill, while they are much more palatable and pleasant in effect.
Dr. Ira A. Thayer, of Baronsburg, Ohio, writes: "I regard your Pellets as the best remedy for the conditions for which you prescribe them of anything I have ever used, so mild and certain in effect, and leaving the bowels in an excellent condition. It seems to me they must take the place of all other cathartic pills and medicines."
Lyon & Macomber, druggists, Vermillion, D.T., say: "We think they are going to sell like hot cakes as soon as people get acquainted with them and will spoil the pill trade, as those that have used them like them much better than large pills."
CANCER CAN BE CURED—Dr. Bond, of Philadelphia, announces his discovery for the radical cure of Cancer. No Knife! No Pain! No Caustie! Remedies with full directions sent anywhere. Pamphlets and particulars sent free. Address with stamp, Dr. H. T. Bond, 899 North Broad st., Philadelphia, Pa.
A POSITIVE cure for diabetes, gravel. Bright's disease, dropsical swellings, non-retention or incontinence, and all diseases of the bladder and kidneys, is Kearney's EXTRACT BUCHE. As for it and take no other. Sold by druggists everywhere.
PERFECTION IN PHOTOGRAPHS—The beautiful "Spherical" (patent applied for), by J.W.Taber & Co., No.26 Montgomery street, opposite Lick House, near Sutter. Great reduction in prices.
VOLUMES OF TESTIMONY in favor of HALE'S HONEY OF HORSEHOUND AND TARAS a specific for throat and lung diseases, are pouring in from all parts of the country.
Pike's Toothache Drops cure in 1 minute.
A Cure for rheumatism, simple, but penetrating to the seat of pain and giving instant relief is Trapper's Indian Oil. Sold everywhere, at fifty cents per patent flask.
CALVERT'S MANHATTAN SHREW WASH
No more than 20 feet away from BOOTS AND SHOES,
NO. 419 CLAY STREET.
Between Snohomish and Bainbridge.
BAN FRANCISCO.
Manufacturers of Mounts Boyt, Yesterynth, and Oldham's FINE CALP BOOTS.
Orders solicited and promptly filled. All same and quality made at the lowest market prices.
Times examine the prices and services.
AGENTS WANTED.
CENTENNIAL MEDALLIONS,
Struck in solid Albana Plate equal in appearance,
wear and color to
SOLID SILVER OR GOLD.
Presenting a large variety of beautiful Designs in Matter.
These Medallions are larger than a Silver Trade Dollar,
being 1½ inch in diameter; they weigh less than a pound;
and sell real easily. They issued a complete
marketing of the Derivation of Independence (the first issue).
And Post Office order for $5.00; or will ship by draft.
C.O.D. upon receipt of express charges.
Agents' Circular and Price List and one sample sent upon receipt of 20 cts. Intense profits. Sells at sight.
Extensive fields for enterprise.
U.S.MEDALLION CO., 212 Broadway.
P.O.Box 5270.
New York.
You should Insure your Life in the PACIFIC Mutual Life Insurance Co.
OF CALIFORNIA,
No. 41 Second St., Sacramento.
ACQUUMULATED FUND, NEARLY
$1,350,000.
$100,000 Approved Securities deposited with the California State Department as Security for Polley-Holders everywhere.
LELAND STANFORD.
President.
J.H.CARROLL.
Vice President.
A.C.VALLIANT.
Secretary.
A Disappointed Politician.
Recently, Si was found engaged in one of his philosophic, political harangues to some of his colored friends.
"Desy hair 'publicans' kin promise till de last day in de morin', but dey ain't gwine to ketch dishyar blackbird wid no more chaff!" he exclaimed, positively.
A Disappointed Politician.
Recently, Si was found engaged in one of his philosophic, political harangues to some of his colored friends.
"Dese hyar 'publicans kin promise till de last day in de mornin', but dey ain't gwine to ketch dis hyar blackbird wid no more chaff!" he exclaimed, positively.
"What's you mad 'bout? asked another darkey."
Dis is what I'm mad 'bout—mind my words now! Didn't dey say, when de war was played out, dat de nigger wus gwine to be made just as good as de white people?"
"Ob koarse dey did."
An' dat de nigger worked fur all dat de ole marsters has, and could soon yearn all dat property to demesel, hey?"
Yes; dat's true, too."
Dat de white folks waz gwine ter be pore as church-mouses and niggers rich, hey?"
Oom-hook; dat's what dey said!"
Dat all sounded jus' as purty as read-in' on a circus bill, didn't it?
You're right, it did."
Well, makes me mad is dat circus hasn't arrove down byar yit, an' we can't hear dat it's coming! Bres de Lord, de white folks is jes' as rich as eber, an' it wuz de nigger what got busted eber sence, an' is gwine to stay busted! Dat's what makes me mad, an' ef de 'publicans eber git anodder chance at me, I'll go die wid de yaller jandiss, a chawin' ole yaller 'lecahun tickets!"
No one felt capable of responding to Si's point.
Few more "popular fallacies" have done more mischief than the maxim that "charity begins at home." Avaricious people quote it, not intending that charity shall begin anywhere. Honesty, kindness, economy, thrift, and some other virtues start no doubt in the home circle. Charity very rarely begins there, because till we pass beyond that boundary, the realm of voluntary and self-sacrificing honesty is not reached.
Arrivers were originally brought from the East by the Roman. The crab apple is indigenous to Great Britain.
CALVERT'S
SHEEP WASH
AND SHOES,
CLAY STREET,
Battery. San Francisco.
WANTED.
MEDALLIONS,
Albana Plate, equal in appearance,
color to
Silver or Gold.
Variety of beautiful Designs
are larger than a Silver Trade dollash, handmade, yet usable.
Three sizes: Large, Medium, Small.
EVER insured. A complete
sample for agents, in velvet-lined
clothing the bust of "George Washentrance International Exhibition.
Art Gallery). Horticultural Hall.
and the grand representation of the
declaration of Independence (designed
for $2.50 or will ship by express
ceipt of express charges).
Agents' Price List and one sample sent upon
Immense profits. Sells at sight.
or enterprise. Address
ALLIION CO., 212 Broadway.
New York.
CALVERT'S
SHEEP WASH
AND SHOES,
CLAY STREET,
Battery. San Francisco.
WANTED.
MEDALLIONS,
Albana Plate, equal in appearance,
color to
Silver or Gold.
Variety of beautiful Designs
are larger than a Silver Trade dollash, handmade, yet usable.
Three sizes: Large, Medium, Small.
EVER insured. A complete
sample for agents, in velvet-lined
clothing the bust of "George Washentrance International Exhibition.
Art Gallery). Horticultural Hall.
and the grand representation of the
declaration of Independence (designed
for $2.50 or will ship by express
ceipt of express charges).
Agents' Price List and one sample sent upon
Immense profits. Sells at sight.
or enterprise. Address
ALLIION CO., 212 Broadway.
New York.
MOODY & FARISM,
WOOL
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
219 Davie Street, San Francisco.
Eureka Glycerine and Carbolic Sheep Dip; Sheep Shears; Wool Stocks and Twine constantly on hand at low prices.
CANCER
CAN BE TREATED WITH SUCCESS
At the house of the patient Without the use of the KNIFE OR CAUSTICS and without pain. Address Dr. A. M. BROWN.
NEW HAVEN, CONN.
COLD MEDAL AWARDED
BY THE MECHANICS INSTITUTE PAIR OF 1875, TO SAN FRANCISCO STEAM PUMP WILCOX PATENTS.
114 and 118 BEALE ST., SAN FRANCISCO.
Hoffmann's Patent Liquid Fertilizer.
AN ARTICLE FOR FERTILIZING THE SOIL
and protecting Seeds and Plantas from the ravages
of insects, worms and such small animals as are destructive to vegetable life. Also for treating the disnating quality of seeds. The price of all cents per gallons is one of two and a half and five gallons
respectively, or in barrels. A liberal discount will be made
large orders. Directions sent with the article:
HOFFMANN & GREENE, care of Hueks, Lambert &
Greene, 144 Natoma st., near New Montgomery, R.F.
A. POTTER,
223 MISSION STREET, San Francisco
Sole Agent for Pacific Coast for sale of MACKEY,
WALKER & Co's
Patent Gang Edgers,
BOLTERS, and LATH MACHINES.
Emery & Burry's Saw Gummers, Saw Upsets, Barrex Foot Lathes and Scroll Saws. Send for Circulars and Price List.
BRYANTS
Popular History
OF THE
UNITED STATES.
From the First Discovery of the Western Hemisphere by the Northman,
to the End of the First Century of the Union of the States.
Proceded by a Sketch of the PreHistoric Period and the Age
of the Mound Builders.
WM. CULLEN BRYANT
AND
Sydney Howard Gay.
FULLY ILLUSTRATED WITH
original designs by the leading American and foreign artists. To be compared to four volumes,
large will be published early in 1876, and the other three volumes will follow as rapidly as the magnitude and importance of the work will permit.
PRICES.
Extra Cloth... per vol.... $0.00
Leather, marble edges... $0.00
Half Turkey Morocco... $0.00
Full Turkey Morocco... $0.00
No want in our literature has been so widely fall
and so universally acknowledged as that of a companion and its supposed pre-historiatic inhabitants. It will carry the record through the first century of the
independence of the Iberian, and to the year 1876.
In these important particulars it differs from and is superior to any history of the United States now publabed.
L-It Will be Complete.
Beginning with a summary of the facts established by archiophotographers regarding the earliest history of the continent and its supposed pre-historiatic inhabitants, it will carry the record through the first century of the
independence of the Iberian, and to the year 1876.
In these important particulars it differs from and is superior to any history of the United States now publabed.
II-It Will be Popular.
Without detracting in the least from the dignity of
the work as a history.
A. POTTER,
223 MISSION STREET, San Francisco
Sole Agent for Pacific Coast for sale of MacKy,
Walke & Co's
Patent Gang Edgers,
BOLTERS, and LATH MACHINES.
Emery & Burr's Saw Gummers, Saw Upsta, Barnes Foot Lathes and Scroll Saws. Send for Circulars and Price List.
DONNOLLY & CO'S
PREMIUM CALIFORNIA YEAST POWDER
Trade Mark.
THE BEST IN THE WORLD.
For Sale by All Grocers.
MANUFACTURED BY
D. CALLACHAN & CO.
121 FRONT STREET,
SAN FRANCISCO.
B. GALLAGHER'S CARRIAGE REPOSITORY.
SOLE AGENT
JAMES CUNNINGHAM & SONS
CARRIAGES & HEARSES
222 MISSION ST., S. F.
Send for Illustrated circular and Price List.
KENDALL'S
Improved Quartz Mill
QUARTZ MINING REVOLUTIONIZED
A LIGHT, CHEAP and POWERFUL MILL at one half the cost of the usual style. Send for Circular and Price List to STEPHEN KENDALL,
Care of F. A. Huntington,
143 and 145 Fremont St.
San Francisco, Cal.
PATENT ADJUSTABLE
Band Sawing MACHINES.
Three different styles are built: Large size, for small work, as shown in cut; Bracket, or Medium, with Stationary Top; and Tipping Top, as shown in cut of Bracket Saw.
The machines are worked with the least hard in adjusting and are guaranteed to work well as well as any
No want in our literature has been so widely fall and so universally acknowledged as that of a complete and compact History of the United States, adapted to popular perusal through its attractive narrative and accepted as an authority through separate presentation of all the facts in our career as a nation.
L-It Will be Complete.
Beginning with a summary of the facts established by archologists regarding the earliest history of the continent and its supposed pre-historic inhabitants, it will carry the record through the first century of the independence of the Republic, apart from the rise of important particulars, which differs from and is superior to any History of the United States now published.
I-It Will be Popular.
Without detracting in the least from the dignity of the work as a history.
III.-It Will be an Authority as a Work of Reference.
As far as possible every fact stated shall be traced back to the original authorities, and every data will be carefully verified.
IV.-It Will be Profusely Illustrated
No work ever produced in this country has enlisted in its illustrations so large a number of artists of diverse ability.
The work will be sold exclusively by subscription, and delivered to Subscribers Only, as per quotation prices. In all cases the volume will be equal and the same in every particular as the sample pages shown in the specimen Books.
SCRIBNER, ARMSTRONG & CO., Publishers.
A. ROMAN & CO,
Llok House Block,
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
General Agents for the Pacific Coast.
WIMBLEDON
Long Range Breech Locelling
Practice Pistol & Targets.
Carries a 14 inch ball with accuracy fifty feet, without powder or percussion. Brass barrel, hair trigger. For sale by dealers. By mail, free for 75 cents, with permanent ammunition for target practice indoors, and for sporting out of doors.
AGENTS WANTED.
A. A. GRAHAM, 67 Liberty Street, New York
PATENT SHIMOLE MACHINE.
GLOBE IRON WORKS, F.A. HUNTINGTON, No. 149 and 145 Farmort Energy, San Francisco, manufacturer of Shingle, Lath, and Picket Machines, Portable and Stationary Beam Engines, and Saw Mill Machinery of all kinds: send for Circumsians.
STEPHEN KENDALL,
Care of F. A. Huntington,
148 and 145 Fremont St.
San Francisco, Cal.
PATENT ADJUSTABLE
Band Sawing
MACHINES.
Three different styles are built:
Large size, for mill work, as shown
in cut, bracket, or Medimum, with stationary Top;
and Tipping Top, as shown
in out of Bracket Saw.
The machines are worked
with the least lost time in
adjusting, and are guarteed to work as well as any
machine made, costing
twice the money.
MANUFACTURED BY
O. BONNEY,
221 Nimon St., San Francisco.
THE INVENTOR OF THE SEKTER WINDMILL
has made new and useful improvements on the maze, and now feels confident of having the Simplest, Cheapest, Most Durable, and Only Permanent Windmill in the World!
The Turbine
In SIMPLER, consume it is less complicated; CHAPTER, because I never get out of order; MOUNT DURALL, because it is all under cover, and has less rigging
to get out of repair; ONLY PERMANENT, because only
Windmill in the world that has never been injured by storms.
Mills built of the best material and workmanship by
A. H. SOUTHWIICK.
Office and shop on Second Street, between Wamingtown and Broadway, Oakland.
For further information regarding Mills or Territory
addresses the inventor.
P. O. Box 1096 San Francisco, or Box 30, Oakland, Cal.
Crimins contains new price list, and much valuable
information will be furnished on application.
M. H. KEHLER & CO.
929 and 930 Basement St. S. P.
Berlin Bazar Patterns.
Send stamps for Customs to HALL TELEPHONE
NYU COL. 37 New Montgomery St. San Francisco.
GOLDEN GATE
PLASTER MILLS,
215 and 217 Main Street,
SAN FRANCISCO.
Selected Plaster $12.00 a year bid.
Lawn Window $20.00 per ten.
(Our Mr. Lacey has been for threes prince miniaturers of the Washington board of Trustees.)