anaheim-gazette 1876-06-24
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PERSONAL.
MRS. JANE G. SWISHELM is seriously ill in London.
GEORGE WASHINGTON's false teeth are on exhibition at Philadelphia.
DOM PEDRO gave a Catholic Church, in San Francisco, one thousand dollars.
THERE are said to be nearly one hundred women preachers in this country.
THE piano-forte of Charlotte Bronte is advertised for sale in the London Times.
The best way to stay in the penitentiary is to ride out—as McKee does in St. Louis.
ROBERT T. LINCOLN, the son of President Lincoln, has been appointed a Supervisor of Chicago.
At the meeting of the Woman Suffrage Association, in Boston, Julia Ward Howe was elected President.
LORD LYTTON with Viceroy of India receives a salary with "allowances" of $185,000 in gold a year.
MRS. LIVERMORE lectures on "Husbands." The Chicago Times thinks that's better than lecturing to 'em.
MISS BRISTOW, the daughter of the Secretary of the Treasury, has been at school near Paris for the last year.
The new drama of "Maud Muller" differs from the poem, inasmuch as the Judge marries Maud, and wishes he hadn't.
COLONEL ROBERT M. DOUGLAS, son of the late Senator Douglas, is a delegate to the Cincinnati Convention from North Carolina.
THE Iowa Episcopal Diocese, in session at Des Moines, elected as Bishop Dr. Stevens Perry, the President of Hobart College, Geneva, New York.
The opening of Moody's Tabernacle in Chicago took place recently. Sankey led the singing and Moody made a brief address. The building was commenced in 1873.
BISHOP SIMPSON is massive, has square shoulders, a square face and a low, broad forehead. His voice is thin, high and powerful, and his eloquence is of the enthusiastic kind.
JOSSEPH H. COOK, the Boston preacher to preachers, says the sad truth about Dr. Clarke's "Truth and Errors of Orthodoxy" is that it is a volume of truths and errors about orthodoxy.
A Herald reporter interviewed Thurlow Weed lately on the Presidential ticket. He did not think Conkling could succeed, and that the rival candidates would be Tilden and Washburne.
The Man Who Swallowed a Pearl.
Some of my readers may remember, says the New York Times' Paris letter, Thomme a la feurelette, or the young man who swallowed a fork, and they may be glad to hear further of this singular case. We have had two of the kind—the Italian, Ciprians, and the young clerk Lasner. Near two years ago he was at a table with some comrades, who were conversing about the Indian jugglers and their trick of swallowing a sword. Lesuer claimed that it was very simple, and, to prove his assertion, took a fork by the tines and pushed it down his throat. A spasmodic contraction of the organs took it from his fingers and carried it down the passage into the stomach. For a long time efforts were made to reach the fork by the mouth, but it was finally ascertained to be in his stomach, and Lesuer was given up for lost. He was shown at clinical lectures, and then went into the country. A report came that he was dead, and I believe that I published it as a fact. But as Lesuer did not fail in health, and continued strong and hearty for over a year, some of the doctors thought that the fork could be removed. Baron Larray and Drs. Labbe, Lepere and Prof. Gosselin undertook the operation—begun some weeks ago. They began by burning down slowly to the stomach with caustic, and determining an adhesion of the coat of the stomach with the outer edges of the hole thus made with the corrosives. When this adhesion was complete an incision was made in the stomach and the fork drawn out with forceps. It was as black as ink, but not worn to any extent. Lesuer is now regarded out of danger. If they desired the doctors might have here another Alewis Saint Martin, upon whom Dr. Beaumont made his valuable physiological experiments, for by continuing the use of the caustic a passage into the stomach could be kept open with little danger to the patient.
A Novel Style.
One of the most pleasing novelties of what are termed "female fashions," that has been introduced for many years, has lately, it is stated, been "brought into mode by some of our first dressmakers and adopted by Parisian elegantes." It consists of a deer-skin bodice clinging closely to the body and made in the same way as an ordinary bodice. It is dyed the same shade as the dress, and the sleeves are made of "faille with deer-skin parements." The most costly bodices of this description are embroidered with silver. It is not surprising that ladies...
Bishop Simpson is massive, has square shoulders, a square face and a low, broad forehead. His voice is thin, high and powerful, and his eloquence is of the enthusiastic kind.
Joseph H. Cook, the Boston preacher to preachers, says the sad truth about Dr. Clarke's "Truth and Errors of Orthodoxy" is that it is a volume of truths and errors about orthodoxy.
A Herald reporter interviewed Thurlow Weed lately on the Presidential ticket. He did not think Conkling could succeed, and that the rival candidates would be Tilden and Washburne.
Mr. Peter Cooper's declination of a Presidential nomination is only an evidence of his well-known good sense. He knows his own business, the glue business, and, of course, sticks to it.
A pompous little man approached a Centennial gatekeeper and said: "I'm a Philadelphia Alderman." "Oh, that's no matter," was the answer, "that don't exclude you. Pay your fifty cents, and you can go in like the rest."
Gen. Green Clay Smith, nominated by the Prohibition Convention for President, is a Kentuckian. He won his military title by gallant service in the Union army during the rebellion, but he is now a Baptist minister, we believe.
No biography of Gerrit Smith has been written yet, though no American of the present generation more deserved one. His family have requested Mr. O. B. Frothingham to write a "Life" of the great reformer and philanthropist, and he thinks favorably of undertaking the work.
Anna Cowley, only ten years old, became a highway robber in Baltimore, way-laying children who had been sent on errands and taking their money by force. In one instance she met a little boy who was going to a grocery with a pail in one hand and a pocketbook in the other. "You've lost your money," she said; and he opened the pocketbook to be sure that a twenty-dollar bill was still in it. She snatched the bill and ran away with. In court she was brazenly impudent, and did not seem to mind being sent to a reformatory school.
The Saturday Review thinks Dr. Hill's "True Order of Studies" deficient alike in logical soundness and practical method. But it adds that it is not too much to say that half the time and two-thirds of the labor which children are obliged to give to their studies up to the age of fourteen are simply wasted through bad teaching, and that any system whatever, especially such a system as might be gathered from Dr. Hill's work, might double the amount learned in a year by an intelligent child, with an infinite saving of time, trouble, and tears.
Mrs. Jane Reynolds, of Brooklyn, identified a dead body as the corpse of her husband, who had been sometime missing, and took it to New Haven, where it was buried. Yesterday, to Mrs. Reynolds' astonishment, if not joy, her husband put in an appearance at the domestic hearthstone, hale and hearty. He had been on a trip to the Adirondacks. Moral: If men do not wish to be mulcted for funeral expenses prematurely, and pay bills for their widows mourning while they are still living, and see their grieved by some other fellow, they should inform their wives when they are lightened.
A Novel Style.
One of the most pleasing novelties of what are termed "female fashions," that has been introduced for many years, has lately, it is stated, been "brought into mode by some of our first dressmakers and adopted by Parisian elegantes." It consists of a deer-skin bodice clinging closely to the body and made in the same way as an ordinary bodice. It is dyed the same shade as the dress, and the sleeves are made of "faille with deer-skin parments." The most costly bodices of this description are embroidered with silver. It is not surprising that ladies who must have suffered intensely from cold, owing to the deficiency of their garments, should have taken to clothing themselves in the skins of animals of the chase, after the fashion of their ancestresses; and if these deer-skin bodices are made ample enough to cover their throats the cost of embroidering them with silver will no doubt be saved in doctor's bills.
It will, however, be a graceful act of condescension on their part if, while utilizing the beasts of the field for ornamental purposes, they will take the opportunity of sparing the birds of the air. A lady with a deer-skin thrown over her shoulders may dispense with a cock-robin in her hat. The body of the deer may be cooked and eaten, and the appropriation of its skin is under these circumstances excusable; but nobody eats cock-robins, whose harmlessness, moreover, renders their destruction uncalled for. Woman should direct her attention to beasts and four-footed animals rather than to birds. By using rats or mice, for instance, as a head-dress, she will assist in extirpating disagreeable vermin and confer a real boon on society.
Duellino.—In the days of Peter the Great, duelling in Russia went very much out of the fashion, by reason of that monarch's passing an edict that any man who challenged another should be hanged, whether the meeting took place or not. General Zass and Prince Dolgoroucki, nevertheless, discovered, a means of repairing their wounded honor.
"We may not fight, prince," said the general; "but let us both stand in yonder embrasure against which the enemy are directing their fire, and remain there till one of us is struck."
The sagacious proposal being accepted, both accordingly repaired to the spot indicated, and, in the presence of their own army, as well as that of Sweden, stood erect with one hand on the hip, and looking fiercely at each other, until the prince was cut in two by a cannon ball. If this proceeding was not very sensible, it was at least a fair one; and the same may be said of that professional proposal of the physician who suggested that himself and his rival should select at random from a couple of pills, the one poisonous, and the other innocuous. A duel between a barber and a grocer with razors resulted, on the contrary (as might have been expected), in the victory of the former, who had, of course, precisely the same advantages as is enjoyed with pistols by the better shot.
In this country we have worshipped talent, enterprise, smartness—not integrity. People go to church on Sunday
MRS. JANE REYNOLDS, of Brooklyn, identified a dead body as the corpse of her husband, who had been sometime missing, and took it to New Haven, where it was buried. Yesterday, to Mrs. Reynolds' astonishment, if not joy, her husband put in an appearance at the domestic hearthstone, hale and hearty. He had been on a trip to the Adirondacks. Moral: If men do not wish to be mulcted for funeral expenses prematurely, and pay bills for their widows mourning while they are still living, and see their grave occupied by some other fellow, they should inform their wives when they are going off on a trip, and where, as well.
MR. JOHN RUSKIN has done a graceful thing, which Mr. Conway records in one of his letters to the Cincinnati Commercial: "A little way from Croyden, near London, there has long been a dirty, marshy little pond, which is now an exquisite clear spring of running water. Mr. Ruskin has expended £500 in making this spring, which is not far from the home of his childhood, and surrounding it with trees and flowers, and named it after his mother, Margaret's Well. On the neat tablet over it are inscribed the following words: 'In obedience to the Giver of Life, of brooks and fruits that feed it, of the peace that ends it, may this well be kept sacred for the service of men, flocks and flowers, and by kindness be called Margaret's Well.'"
AMONG the notable persons connected with the Japanese Centennial Commission in Philadelphia, are Lieutenant-General Saigo Yorimichi, Commander-in-Chief of the Japanese army. He was one of the leaders in the Restoration of 1848, when the "Tycoon" went forever down and out, and the Mikado was given his ancient supreme power. He afterward commanded the army of occupation in Formosa, which cleared out the Botan savages, and prevented the further eating of shipwrecked Americans and other people. He is the brother of that very popular man in Japan, Saigo Kichinouke. Another notable person in Philadelphia is the brother of the late and last "Tycoon," and another is a near relative of the Daimio of Kaga—the richest of the old financial nobility. Some of the gold-lacquer pieces to be exhibited, by the way, have been over five years in preparation of manufacture.
AN EGYPTIAN TEMPLE.—There is in the main building on the Centennial grounds a structure which attracts much attention. It is a pavilion, about two hundred feet long and fifty feet wide, and represents an Egyptian temple. It closes the entire section of Egypt. There is nothing elaborate about it—nothing of that fanciful finish displayed by its right-hand neighbor, the Spanish pavilion, and which causes a remarkable contrast. The front comprises two towers, one at each end, and both frustrums of pyramids leaning inward. Their height is about thirty-five feet. Bounding the entrance are two circular columns of the same height as the towers. The sides and rear end of the structure are rigidly plain, and about eight feet in height, curving outward at the upper edge, in order to give a finish.
The Buddha's Answer
There came to the Buddha, one day, a woman who had lost her only child. She was wild with grief, and with disconsolate sobs and eries called frantically upon the prophet to give back her little one to life. The Buddha gazed on her long, and, with that tender sympathy which drew all hearts to him, replied, "Go, my daughter, and bring me a mustard seed from a house into which death has never entered, and I will do as thou hast bidden." The woman took up the dead child and began her search. She went from house to house, saying, "Give me a mustard seed, kind folks, a mustard seed for the prophet to revive my child."
They gave her what she desired. And when she had taken it she inquired: "They are all gathered around the hearth here, father, mother, and the children; is it not so? They are sound in health's bloom?" But people would shake their heads mournfully. And, far as she wandered through town and village, in the crowded thoroughfare and by the lonely roadside, she met the same experience still.
There was ever a vacant seat by the hearth, which remained unfilled though all were gathered. Then gradually, as she went on, outbursts of her grief abated, and the meaning of the Buddha's words dawned upon her mind. Gradually, as she learned to know the great sorrow of the race everywhere around her, her heart, ceasing to dwell on its own selfish pang, went out in strong yearning to the companions of her suffering.
The tears of her pity fell free and fast, passion slowly melted away in compassion. From passive suffering she turned to active helping, sought redemption by redeeming. She had learned the highest virtue which the Buddha taught, maitri, the consciousness of wide fellowship, the love of mankind, the perfect renunciation of self in behalf of the eternal interests.
Calm, unswerving self-control to avoid pain, acts of sympathy to lighten pain; such was the Buddha's answer to the great question of the origin and destruction of suffering. These were the two solid pillars of his church. If he had paused there he would have exhibited to the world an example of combined soberness and enthusiastic idealism nowhere transcended in human history.
But his faith in the doctrine of the transmigration compelled him to pass the limits which his strong ethical sentiment seemed to prescribe, into a nebulous beyond. This present life of ours is but a link in the great chain of existence. Of what advantage is it, therefore, to destroy the suffering of to-day, if, in the ceaseless
Liver and Blood Disorders
Dr. K. P. Prunus, M. P. Ashworth of "The Pleasant Common Sense Medical Association."
A healthy liver sustains each day about two and a half pounds of bile; which contains a great amount of white material taken from the blood. When the liver becomes lumpy or congested, it fails to eliminate this amount of serious substance, which then restores to poison the blood, and conveys to every part of the system. What must be the condition of the blood when it is receiving and retaining each day two and a half pounds of poison! Nature tries to work off this poison through other channels and organs—the kidneys, lungs, skin, etc., but these organs become overtaxed in performing this labor in addition to their natural functions, and cannot long withstand the pressure, but become variously diseased.
The brain, which is the great electrical center of all vitality, is unduly stimulated by the unhealthy blood which passes to it from the heart, and it falls to perform its office healthily. Hence the symptoms of bile poisoning, which are dullness, headache, incapacity to keep the mind on any subject, impairment of memory, dizzy, sleepy, or nervous feelings, gloomy forbodings, and irritability of temper. The blood itself being diseased, as it forms the swat upon the surface of the skin, it is so irritating and poisonous that it produces discolored brown spots, pimples, blotches, and other eruptions, sore,bolls,caruncules,and scrofulous tumors.
The stomach,bowels,and other organs cannot escape becoming affected,sooner or later,and we have,as the result,costiveness,pills,dropy,dyspealis,disarrhion. Other symptoms are common,as bitter or bad taste in mouth;internal heat,palpitation,teasing cough,unsteady appetite,choking sensation in throat,bloating of stomach,pain in sides or about shoulders or back,coldness of extremities,etc., etc.
Only a few of the above symptoms are likely to be present in any case at one time. The liver being the greatest depurating,or blood-cleansing organ of the system,set this great "housekeeper of our health" at work,和the foul corruptions which gender in the blood,and rot out,as it were,the machinery of life,are gradually expelled from the system.
For this purpose,Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery,with very small doses daily of Dr. Pierce's Flessant Purgative Pellets,is pre-eminent,the articles needed. They cure every kind of humor from the worst scrofula to the common pimple,blotch or eruption. Great eating ulcers kindly heal under their mighty curative influence. Virtulent blood poisons that lurk in the system are by them robbed of their terrors,and by their persevering and somewhat protracted use the most tainted systems may be completely renovated and built up anew. Enlarged glands,tumors and swellings,dwindle away and disappear under the influence of these great resolvents.
Fruit Drying.
Our attention has recently been called to a new invention,which is doubtless destined to work a revolution in the fruit trade upon the Pacific Coast. We refer to the "Walter Patent Fruit Dryer and Preserver." We do not propose to give an elaborate description of the construction of this machine,after the manner of the regulation scribbler,但 simply confine ourselves to the work it will
The Virginia Mountaineers in the Revolution.
The Virginia mountaineer of the eighteenth century was one of the most picturesque and notable figures of the epoch. He or his father had turned his back on the tide-water settlements, and resolutely set out to penetrate that "debatable land" and "bloody ground," the region west of the Blue Ridge, intent like Cooper's Leatherstocking, on securing "more elbow-room." The mountainer was tall, stalwart, sparing of speech, entirely fearless, injured to hardship, of the race that extends civilization in new lands, preparing the way for others to enjoy what he wins from the wilderness and the savage. His sole possessions often were a rifle and an axe. With the axe he felled trees and built his rude cabin in some gash of the Alleghanies on the farthest outpost of civilization. With his rifle he provided venison and bear meat, or defended wife and children from massacre by the savages. The story of these bloody combats, as we read in the old provincial history by Samuel Kercheval, is rich in romance, tragedy and exhibitions of the coolest courage. The mountaineer did not know the meaning of the word fear, and everything about him was in accord with his surroundings. He was liberal, open-hearted—as guileless and unsuspecting, indeed, as a child—but tougher manhood never dwelt in human breast. The fibre of his character easily stood any strain upon it, and he endured patiently and cheerfully all hardships. It was to this class of men that Washington looked, not to Braddock's "regulars," on the march to Fort Duquene and in the bloody engagement there, as in all-the-long and arduous years of border war; and they formed the corps d'elite of the little Virginia army under General Andrew Lewis, which broke the power of the savage tribes in 1774, at the battle of Point Pleasant, on the Ohio. When the Revolution began, they appeared as "Morgan's Riflemen" in front of Boston, clad in fringed hunting shirts, belts of wampum, and moccasins, with "Liberty or Death" on their breasts, every man grasping his long rifle; and they fought throughout the war with unfaltering courage and endurance, from Quebec to lighten pain; such was the Buddha's answer to the great question of the origin and destruction of suffering. These were the two solid pillars of his church. If he had paused there he would have exhibited to the world an example of combined soberness and enthusiastic idealism nowhere transcended in human history. But his faith in the doctrine of the transmigration compelled him to pass the limits which his strong ethical sentiment seemed to prescribe, into a nebulous beyond. This present life of ours is but a link in the great chain of existence. Of what advantage is it, therefore, to destroy the suffering of to-day, if, in the ceaseless cycle of new births, that suffering is destined endlessly to recur! To be a true deliverer, the prophet said, I must free men from the fear of resurrection, teach them to baffle fate. With the end of existence alone can come the end of pain. Hence arose the mystic doctrine of Nirvana—the third of the great principles on which the Buddhist system rests.—Prof. Adler, in the Atlantic.
The Virginia Mountaineers in the Revolution.
The Virginia mountaineer of the eighteenth century was one of the most picturesque and notable figures of the epoch. He or his father had turned his back on the tide-water settlements, and resolutely set out to penetrate that "debatable land" and "bloody ground," the region west of the Blue Ridge, intent like Cooper's Leatherstocking, on securing "more elbow-room." The mountainer was tall, stalwart, sparing of speech, entirely fearless, injured to hardship, of the race that extends civilization in new lands, preparing the way for others to enjoy what he wins from the wilderness and the savage. His sole possessions often were a rifle and an axe. With the axe he felled trees and built his rude cabin in some gash of the Alleghanies on the farthest outpost of civilization. With his rifle he provided venison and bear meat, or defended wife and children from massacre by the savages. The story of these bloody combats, as we read in the old provincial history by Samuel Kercheval, is rich in romance, tragedy and exhibitions of the coolest courage. The mountaineer did not know the meaning of the word fear, and everything about him was in accord with his surroundings. He was liberal, open-hearted—as guileless and unsuspecting, indeed, as a child—but tougher manhood never dwelt in human breast. The fibre of his character easily stood any strain upon it, and he endured patiently and cheerfully all hardships. It was to this class of men that Washington looked, not to Braddock's "regulars," on the march to Fort Duquene and in the bloody engagement there, as in all-the-long and arduous years of border war; and they formed the corps d'elite of the little Virginia army under General Andrew Lewis, which broke the power of the savage tribes in 1774, at the battle of Point Pleasant, on the Ohio. When the Revolution began, they appeared as "Morgan's Riflemen" in front of Boston, clad in fringed hunting shirts, belts of wampum, and moccasins, with "Liberty or Death" on their breasts, every man grasping his long rifle; and they fought throughout the war with unfaltering courage and endurance, from Quebec to lighten pain; such was the Buddha's answer to the great question of the origin and destruction of suffering. These were the two solid pillars of his church. If he had paused there he would have exhibited to the world an example of combined soberness and enthusiasm idealism nowhere transcended in human history. But his faith in the doctrine of the transmigration compelled him to pass the limits which his strong ethical sentiment seemed to prescribe, into a nebulous beyond. This present life of ours is but a link in the great chain of existence. Of what advantage is it, therefore, to destroy the suffering of to-day, if, in the ceaseless cycle of new births, that suffering is destined endlessly to recur! To be a true deliverer, the prophet said, I must free men from the fear of resurrection, teach them to baffle fate. With the end of existence alone can come the end of pain. Hence arose the mystic doctrine of Nirvana—the third of the great principles on which the Buddhist system rests.—Prof. Adler, in the Atlantic.
The Virginia Mountaineers in the Revolution.
The Virginia mountaineer of the eighteenth century was one of the most picturesque and notable figures of the epoch. He or his father had turned his back on the tide-water settlements, and resolutely set out to penetrate that "debatable land" and "bloody ground," the region west of the Blue Ridge, intent like Cooper's Leatherstocking, on securing "more elbow-room." The mountainer was tall, stalwart, sparing of speech, entirely fearless, injured to hardship, of the race that extends civilization in new lands, preparing the way for others to enjoy what he wins from the wilderness and the savage. His sole possessions often were a rifle and an axe. With the axe he felled trees and built his rude cabin in some gash of the Alleghanies on the farthest outpost of civilization. With his rifle he provided venison and bear meat, or defended wife and children from massacre by the savages. The story of these bloody combats, as we read in the old provincial history by Samuel Kercheval, is rich in romance, tragedy and exhibitions of the coolest courage. The mountaineer did not know the meaning of the word fear, and everything about him was in accord with his surroundings. He was liberal, open-hearted—as guileless and unsuspecting, indeed, as a child—but tougher manhood never dwelt in human breast. The fibre of his character easily stood any strain upon it, and he endured patiently and cheerfully all hardships. It was to this class of men that Washington looked, not to Braddock's "regulars," on the march to Fort Duquene and in the bloody engagement there, as in all-the-long and arduous years of border war; and they formed the corps d'elite of the little Virginia army under General Andrew Lewis, which broke the power of the savage tribes in 1774, at the battle of Point Pleasant, on the Ohio. When the Revolution began, they appeared as "Morgan's Riflemen" in front of Boston, clad in fringed hunting shirts, belts of wampum, and moccasins, with "Liberty or Death" on their breasts, every man grasping his long rifle; and they fought throughout the war with unfaltering courage and endurance, from Quebec to lighten pain; such was the Buddha's answer to the great question of the origin and destruction of suffering. These were the two solid pillars of his church. 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A Wise Answer—Some of the fancies of the Jewish Talmud are very witty and neat. Particularly so are those short apothegms which illustrate or defend some attribute of God by answering an infidel's objection. The following is a perfect specimen of Oriental retort:
A prince once said to Rabbi Gamaliel—"Your God is a thief; he surprised Adam in his sleep and stole a rib from him."
The Rabbi's daughter overheard this speech, and whispered a word or two in her father's ear, asking his permission to answer this singular opinion herself. He gave his consent.
The girl stepped forward, and feigning terror and dismay, threw her arms aloft in supplication, and cried out:
"My liege, my liege! Justice! Revenge!"
"What has happened!" asked the prince.
"A wicked theft has taken place," she replied. "A robber has crept secretly into our house, carried away a silver goblet, and left a gold one in its stead."
"What an upright thief!" exclaimed the prince. "Would that such robberies were of more frequent occurrence!"
"Behold, then, sir, the kind of thief that our Creator was. He stole a rib from Adam and gave him a beautiful wife instead."
"Well said!" avowed the prince.
As the rays come from the sun and yet are not the sun, even so our love and pity, though they are not God, but merely a poor weak image and reflection of Him, yet from Him alone they come. If there is the light of love in us, it is a ray from the fall sun of love—Oscar Wilde.
FRUIT JARS.
THE MARKETERS OF FRESHLY BOTTLED FRUITS IN THE CALIFORNIA STATE UNION ARE SUPPLIED BY THE GEM AND PORCELAIN LINED JARS. These jars all the advantage and none of the disadvantages of other parent jars, and are in fact the only manufacturer that has been successful in their natural condition, for winter use, in becoming and only a security, but is a provident measure, often made fruit to health and pleasure.
The Gem and Porcelain Lined Jars possess all the advantages and none of the disadvantages of other parent jars, and are in fact the only manufacturer that has been successful in their natural condition, for winter use, in becoming and only a security, but is a provident measure, often made fruit to health and pleasure.
The Gem and Porcelain Lined Jars possess all the advantages and none of the disadvantages of other parent jars, and are in fact the only manufacturer that has been successful in their natural condition, for winter use, in becoming and only a security, but is a provident measure, often made fruit to health and pleasure.
The Gem and Porcelain Lined Jars possess all the advantages and none of the disadvantages of other parent jars, and are in fact the only manufacturer that has been successful in their natural condition, for winter use, in becoming and only a security, but is a provident measure, often made fruit to health and pleasure.
FRUIT JARS.
THE MARKETERS OF FRESHLY BOTTLED FRUITS IN THE CALIFORNIA STATE UNION ARE SUPPLIED BY THE GEM AND PORCELAIN LINED JARS. These jars all the advantage and none of the disadvantages of other parent jars, and are in fact the only manufacturer that has been successful in their natural condition, for winter use, in becoming and only a security, but is a provident measure, often made fruit to health and pleasure.
The Gem and Porcelain Lined Jars possess all the advantage and none of the disadvantages of other parent jars, and are in fact the only manufacturer that has been successful in their natural condition, for winter use, in becoming and only a security, but is a provident measure, often made fruit to health and pleasure.
FRUIT JARS.
THE MARKETERS OF FRESHLY BOTTLED FRUITS IN THE CALIFORNIA STATE UNION ARE SUPPLIED BY THE GEM AND PORCELAIN LINED JARS. These jars all the advantage and none of the disadvantages of other parent jars, and are in fact the only manufacturer that has been successful in their natural condition, for winter use, in becoming and only a security, but is a provident measure, often made fruit to health and pleasure.
FRUIT JARS.
THE MARKETERS OF FRESHLY BOTTLED FRUITS IN THE CALIFORNIA STATE UNION ARE SUPPLIED BY THE GEM AND PORCELAIN LINED JARS. These jars all the advantage and none of the disadvantages of other parent jars, and are in fact the only manufacturer that has been successful in their natural condition, for winter use, in becoming and only a security, but is a provident measure, often made fruit to health and pleasure.
FRUIT JARS.
THE MARKETERS OF FRESHLY BOTTLED FRUITS IN THE CALIFORNIA STATE UNION ARE SUPPLIED BY THE GEM AND PORCELAIN LINED JARS. These jars all the advantage and none of the disadvantages of other parent jars, and are in fact the only manufacturer that has been successful in their natural condition, for winter use, in becoming and only a security, but is a provident measure, often made fruit to health and pleasure.
FRUIT JARS.
THE MARKETERS OF FRESHLY BOTTLED FRUITS IN THE CALIFORNIA STATE UNION ARE SUPPLIED BY THE GEM AND PORCELAIN LINED JARS. These jars all the advantage and none of the disadvantages of other parent jars, and are in fact the only manufacturer that has been successful in their natural condition, for winter use, in becoming and only a security, but is a provident measure, often made fruit to health and pleasure.
FRUIT JARS.
THE MARKETERS OF FRESHLY BOTTLED FRUITS IN THE CALIFORNIA STATE UNION ARE SUPPLIED BY THE GEM AND PORCELAIN LINED JARS. These jars all the advantage and none of the disadvantages of other parent jars, and are in fact the only manufacturer that has been successful in their natural condition, for winter use, in becoming and only a security, but is a provident measure, often made fruit to health and pleasure.
FRUIT JARS.
THE MARKETERS OF FRESHLY BOTTLED FRUITS IN THE CALIFORNIA STATE UNION ARE SUPPLIED BY THE GEM AND PORCELAIN LINED JARS. These jars all the advantage and none of the disadvantages of other parent jars, and are in fact the only manufacturer that has been successful in their natural condition, for winter use, in becoming and only a security, but is a provident measure, often made fruit to health and pleasure.
FRUIT JARS.
THE MARKETERS OF FRESHLY BOTTLED FRUITS IN THE CALIFORNIA STATE UNION ARE SUPPLIED BY THE GEM AND PORCELAIN LINED JARS. These jars all the advantage and none of the disadvantages of other parent jars, and are in fact the only manufacturer that has been successful in their natural condition, for winter use, in becoming and only a security, but is a provident measure, often made fruit to health and pleasure.
FRUIT JARS.
THE MARKETERS OF FRESHLY BOTTLED FRUITS IN THE CALIFORNIA STATE UNION ARE SUPPLIED BY THE GEM AND PORCELAIN LINED JARS. These jars all the advantage and none of the disadvantages of other parent jars, and are in fact the only manufacturer that has been successful in their natural condition, for winter use, in becoming and only a security, but is a provident measure, often made fruit to health and pleasure.
FRUIT JARS.
THE MARKETERS OF FRESHLY BOTTLED FRUITS IN THE CALIFORNIA STATE UNION ARE SUPPLIED BY THE GEM AND PORCELAIN LINED JARS. These jars all the advantage and none of the disadvantages of other parent jars, and are in fact the only manufacturer that has been successful in their natural condition, for winter use, in becoming and only a security, but is a provident measure, often made fruit to health and pleasure.
FRUIT JARS.
THE MARKETERS OF FRESHLY BOTTLED FRUITS IN THE CALIFORNIA STATE UNION ARE SUPPLIED BY THE GEM AND PORCELAIN LINED JARS. These jars all the advantage and none of the disadvantages of other parent jars, and are in fact the only manufacturer that has been successful in their natural condition, for winter use, in becoming and only a security, but is a provident measure, often made fruit to health and pleasure.
FRUIT JARS.
THE MARKETERS OF FRESHLY BOTTLED FRUITS IN THE CALIFORNIA STATE UNION ARE SUPPLIED BY THE GEM AND PORCELAIN LINED JARS. These jars all the advantage and none of the disadvantages of other parent jars, and are in fact the only manufacturer that has been successful in their natural condition, for winter use, in becoming and only a security, but is a provident measure, often made fruit to health and pleasure.
FRUIT JARS.
THE MARKETERS OF FRESHLY BOTTLED FRUITS IN THE CALIFORNIA STATE UNION ARE SUPPLIED BY THE GEM AND PORCELAIN LINED JARS. These jars all the advantage and none of the disadvantages of other parent jars, and are in fact the only manufacturer that has been successful in their natural condition, for winter use, in becoming and only a security, but is a provident measure, often made fruit to health and pleasure.
FRUIT JARS.
THE MARKETERS OF FRESHLY BOTTLED FRUITS IN THE CALIFORNIA STATE UNION ARE SUPPLIED BY THE GEM AND PORCELAIN LINED JARS. These jars all the advantage and none of the disadvantages of other parent jars, and are in fact the only manufacturer that has been successful in their natural condition, for winter use, in becoming and only a security, but is a provident measure, often made fruit to health and pleasure.
FRUIT JARS.
THE MARKETERS OF FRESHLY BOTTLED FRUITS IN THE CALIFORNIA STATE UNION ARE SUPPLIED BY THE GEM AND PORCELAIN LINED JARS. These jars all the advantage和none of the disadvantages of other parent jars,and are in fact the only manufacturer that has been successful in their natural condition,their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,$and their work,$and their work,$and their work,$and their work,$and their work,$and their work,$and their work,$and their work,$and their work,$and their work,$and their work,$and their work,$and their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,
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FRUIT JARS.
THE MARKETERS OF FRESHLY BOTTLED FRUITS IN THE CALIFORNIA STATE UNION ARE SUPPLIED BY THE GEM AND PORCELAIN LINED JARS. These jars all the advantage和none of the disadvantages of other parent jars,and are in fact the only manufacturer that has been successful in their natural condition,their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,and their work,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,
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FRUIT JARS.
THE MARKETERS OF FRESHLY BOTTLED FRUITS IN THE CALIFORNIA STATE UNION ARE SUPPLIED BY THE GEM AND PORCELAIN LINED JARS. These jars all the advantage和none of the disadvantages of other parent jars,and are in fact the only manufacturer that has been successful in their natural condition,their work,and their work,and their work,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$and Their工作,$和 Its works at upper end; it did not come up to the standard of equality and efficiency demanded by the general fruit growers of The Pacific coast. Therefore the Agents, J.M.Kanier gave him immediate advice and urged attention to improve the drier that it would more fully and precisely illuminate the intrinsic value of the principles involved; and he believed now that these who purchased first drives would hardly realize its increase in quality and practical utility now claimed for Kener's improved American drier with similar heating attachment. The special new features of the improved Drier are: smoke and vapor escape fine at upper end; it V-shaped bottom; having the pipe from above in the furnace box lying up through it; thereby utilizing heat of the smoke; and also entering fire at upper end; it did not come up to the standard of equality and efficiency demanded by the general fruit growers of The Pacific coast. Therefore the Agents, J.M.Kanier gave him immediate advice and urged attention to improve the drier that it would more fully and precisely illuminate the intrinsic value of the principles involved; and he believed now that these who purchased first drives would hardly realize its increase in quality and practical utility now claimed for Kener's improved American drier with similar heating attachment. The special new features of the improved Drier are: smoke and vapor escape fine at upper end; it did not come up to the standard of equality and efficiency demanded by the general fruit growers of The Pacific coast. Therefore the Agents, J.M.Kanier gave him immediate advice和needed advice on improving its effectiveness by improving its technical features from its own experience. The following is a description of the ingroving: A door to furnace; A door for entering traps; A fall door covering top of furnace; And a driveway inside furnaces; A pipe from stove entering improved hot air chamber; A furnace made of narrow tongue and grooved flooring; And with short size windowed vaults; Of building wall hot air chamber through which planks utilize heat of the smoke; And is flushed with moisture added by draft ofthe smoke; And shows pipe coming out upper end of drier It shows fall door cheating upper end of drier; And does little figure on fire; And as 1 Fig. 4 shows traps at upper end. Door (Fig. 1) open.
MASON'S PORECLAIN LINED.
THE GEM.
FRUIT JARS.
THE MARKETERS OF FRESHLY BOTTLED FRUITS IN THE CALIFORNIA STATE UNION ARE SUPPLIED BY THE GEM AND PORCELAIN LINED JARS. These jars all the advantage和none of the disadvantages of other parent jars,and are in fact the only manufacturer that has been successful in their natural condition,their work,and their work,and their work,$and Its works at upper end; it did not come up to the standard of equality和efficiency demanded by the general fruit growers of The Pacific coast. Therefore the Agents, J.M.Kanier gave him immediate advice和needed advice on improving its effectiveness by improving its technical features from its own experience. The following is a description of the ingroving: A door to furnace; A door for entering traps; A fall door covering top of furnace; And a driveway inside furnaces; A pipe from stove entering hot air chamber through which planks utilize heat of the smoke; And is flushed with moisture added by draft ofthe smoke; And shows pipe coming out upper end of drier It shows fall door cheating upper end of drier; And does little figure on fire; And as 1 Fig. 4 shows traps at upper end. Door (Fig. 1) open.
THE CELEBRATED TOUR PUMPS!
force, as now improved and manuJ. M. Keeler & Co., San Francisco,
and cheap pumps for house,
irrigation, mining and ship purpure Pacific Coast; and we will give
hand, power or steam from onehalf the advantage in bringing
a volume of water to the
from 30 to 1,000 gallons per minute,
of pump, or in elevating water to
height, from 50 to 300 gallons
rate; and as regards simplicity
only common sense has issued her
in its favor over all others. The
Pumps, especially for wine purd delight any man who wants a
lifetime. Sold by
J. M. KEELER & CO., San Francisco,
descriptive circulars and price list.
We make the following proposition for irrigation, and parties engaged and river mining, that we will agree our pumps, force from 25 to
and lift from 30 to 1,000 gallons
run by windmill, horse, water or
according to the contract, as to
water and power, and price as redesignated; payment to be made upon after ten days' trial if the bushesatisfaction; or will remove the without charge where satisfaction
we have faith in the "Shutour"
in this proposition we take the Please preserve a copy.
J. M. KEELER & CO.
ENTENNIAL
SOMETHING ENTIRELY NEW, AND SUPERIOR TO ALL.
FOR STRENGTH, LIGHTNESS AND DURABILITY UNSUPRASED.
The only Mattress
THAT CAN BE TIGHTENED OR LOOSENED AT PLEASURE.
Warranted for five years. Send for Circular and Price List to TRUMAN B. CLARK, Sole Agent,
919 Market St., San Francisco, Cal.
BILLIARD TABLES.
JACOB STRAHLE & CO.,
Sole Agents for Delaney's Patent Wire Cushions.
THE BEST AND UNLY RELIABLE TABLES
in use, indorsed by all the Champions of the day,
Great reduction in prices. Balls, Cloths, Cushion,
First-Class Appertaining to Billiards.
First-Class Standard Bevel Billiard Table, 200 to 400 Pool Tables, Jenny Lind, and Bagatelles, $20 to $110.
Sole Agent for the renowned Monitor Billiard Lamp,
price $12.
Revolving Cue Racks, $12. Finest lot Fancy Cues ever imported, $2.50 to $8.
All Tables of our manufacture guaranteed for years.
JACOB STRAHLE & CO.
328 Market Street, San Francisco.
TEN PINS AND BALLS!
PRICES REDUCED!
POUR-INCH BALLS, $1.50; FIVE-INCH, $2.50;
six-inch, $6.60; seven-inch, $8.25; eight-inch, $6.75. Ten Pins, Maple Leaves, per尺.
Goods warranted. Packed and shipped free.
JACOB STRAHLE & CO..
ENTENNIAL MEDALS.
CENTENNIAL MEDALS.
RENTENNIAL MEDALS.
ENTENNIAL MEDALS.
ENTENNIAL MEDALS.
ENTENNIAL MEDALS.
ENTENNIAL MEDALS.
ENTENNIAL MEDALS.
ENTENNIAL MEDALS.
ENTENNIAL MEDALS.
ENTENNIAL MEDALS.
ENTENNIAL MEDALS.
ENTENNIAL MEDALS.
ENTENNIAL MEDALS.
ENTENNIAL MEDALS.
ENTENNIAL MEDALS.
ENTENNIAL MEDALS.
ENTENNIAL MEDALS.
ENTENNIAL MEDALS.
ENTENNIAL MEDALS.
ENTENNIAL MEDALS
TEN PINS AND BALLS!
PRICES REDUCED!
FOUR-INCH BALLS, $1.50; FIVE-INCH, $2.00; six-inch, $6.50; seven-inch, $8.25; eight-inch, $8.75; Ten Pins, Maple or Laurel, per set, $10.
Goods warranted. Packed and shipped from JACK STREAMLER & CO., 328 Market Street, San Francisco.
Largest Billiard House on the Coast.
CALIFORNIA WIRE WORKS,
Established in 1862.
ECKFELDT & CO.,
WIRE GOODS
Of all kinds. Agents for Holloway's Fire Extinguisher, 419 Clay Street, S. P.
Send for circular and price list.
Collateral Loan and Savings Bank,
N. E. CORNER POST AND KEARNY ST., SAN FRANCISCO.
Incorporated Under the Laws of the State of California.
President, SOLON PATTEE.
Secretary, P. S. CARTER.
DIRECTORS:
SOLON PATTERE....President.
ELMER TERRY.....Of K. Terry & Co.
JOSHIP R. SPEAR, Jr...Of K. S. Spear & Co., Amcts.
FREDERICK TURRILL....Capitalist.
THE object of this Bank is to loan money upon Collaterals, Diamonds, Watches, Furniture, etc., charging the legal rate of interest, 4 per cent. per month; also to receive deposits subject to mail or check. For the present the Bank will allow the following rates of interest to depensors:
THERM DEPOSITS OF
Six Months.....1 Per Cent. Per Month
Twelve Months.....1 Per Cent. Per Month
Subscription books are now open for a limited number of shares at Ten Dollars per share at the COLLATERAL LOAN AND SAVINGS BANK,
N. E. CORNER POST AND KEARNY ST., SAN FRANCISCO.
CIRCULAR BEST ON APPLICATION.
MRS. H. A. MOORE,
The Great Scientific Mains Producer,
No. 400 Avery St., Miami Key, N.O.S.A., San Francisco.
Mrs. H. A. Moore was interested in better and gentler than the present advertisement of a fast bank that she has opened part by its expanse continuity. They are extremely admired because the most important element of their business is the credit system which they have established on behalf of all customers. A few hundred years ago they were the first bank to accept cash advances without charge according to the contract, as to water and power, and price as redesignated; payment to be made after ten days' trial if the satisfaction or will remove the without charge where satisfaction ennies and parties decline to accept. The men who mean business cannot we have faith in the "Sluthour in this proposition we take the Please preserve a copy.
J. M. KEELER & CO.