anaheim-gazette 1880-07-24
Searchable text
Intelligence Items.
Victor Emanuel, King of Italy, died January 9, 1878.
Gold discoveries are reported from Pennsylvania and New York.
Special teachers receive $1,500 a year in the Chicago public schools.
Seven thousand men are wanted for enlistment in the regular army.
The Hungarians are immigrating to this country in large numbers.
The total appropriations made by Congress amount to $186,805,000.
St. Louis expects to pay out about $600,000 for teachers' salaries the coming year.
One hundred and twenty-six summer hotels are advertised in one issue of the N.Y. Home Journal.
College Commencements are as thick as political conventions, and far more likely to benefit the country.
During Convention week, Cincinnati brewers sold 76,000 kegs of beer. Reduced to glasses it would be 8,360,000.
Cats buried in gardens afford the best sort of nourishment for growing shrubbery. The more cats buried the better.
It was estimated that the attendants upon the late Cincinnati Convention left in that city half a million of dollars.
Forty of the survivors of the Narragansett disaster have united to secure damages from the Stonington Company.
In the Italian quarter in New York the census enumerators found nearly five hundred persons living in seventy rooms.
Judge Hilton's park at Saratoga employs several hundred workmen. When it is finished he will present it to the village.
The famine in Asiatic Turkey increases. Two thousand persons are reported to have starved to death in Georgia.
Gen. Garfield has served more consecutive terms in Congress than any other man of his age that ever entered the House.
The pension business is lively. During the last session Congressmen made over 309,000 inquiries relating to claims of pensioners.
The Art of Married Life.
The sacred art and mystery of living together as husband and wife! It touches the deepest springs of human happiness and success.
When the novel reaches its last chapter; when the wedding-day crowns the happy story of love and courtship, then begins for man and woman the real test of what they are; then is thrown upon their own hands the question of what the future is to be. In a true marriage the sweet season of romance that precedes the bridal day is but the harbinger of better things to come. But the secret is easily missed. It is missed oftenest probably through the man's fault. The first and great lesson of marriage is that the thought of another is to come before the thought of self. The revelation which true love makes is this: One sees in another soul such beauty and attractiveness that its service is preferred to the service of self. No emotion which lacks this high element deserves to be called love. The desire of possession, the longing for intimate and habitual companionship, these come in too, and make a part. But higher than these there is that complete and joyful self-surrender in which a woman appears so lovely to a man that to make her happy becomes his strongest desire; and a woman sees in a man such a nobility that she can gladly devote her life to him. That is the loftiness and the rapture of true love.
The problem of married life is to maintain the nobility and elevation of this early sentiment. The chief requirement is simple enough. It is only, put your wife or husband before yourself in your thoughts and choices. To the wife this lesson is generally emphatically spoken by the circumstances into which marriage brings her. It gives her as her chief business the making of a home for her husband and afterwards for her children. The event of her day is his return from work. Her work is to make him comfortable and happy. His satisfaction and approbation are the standard of her success or failure. So she is put at once into an outward relation of service. Often there is a mingling of hardship in this. Before the wedding-day she was a queen; her will and wish were law. Her lover made it his first thought to please her. Now it must be
Dr. John Hall on "Funny" M.
The church should right. This saves a sequent trouble and the part of congregation we hear, these days, ington tea-parties, lectures, and grab-bought sometimes if God itself, to getting incumbrances, built a temple there, money in their hand, grand sacred piles on the products of chapelpered with church, the Temple at Jerusalem over with placards this:
GRAND DIME CONFERENCE
Given in the Temple Under the royal annapsiion
the proceeds to be devoid on them
How ridiculous all this is what is being our land and generals nified, be paid for from the gages based on the church shows, but debt be hung around congregation from time and to thwart it, may.
For the conscience Dr. Hall said he had not like the bishop tolerate the man who Lord's pulpit, jokes to raise laughter—the sensate preferred to raise that of religion. He been called upon to give general operations in the issue of which lives, and as he has geon probe a work upon the vital pass slip either way worked his profession had grown surgeon, however engaged in nature, had chaffed he could have hastenedemn business is tending in probing the heart bring to them
The famine in Asiatic Turkey increases. Two thousand persons are reported to have starved to death in Georgia.
Gen. Garfield has served more consecutive terms in Congress than any other man of his age that ever entered the House.
The pension business is lively. During the last session Congressmen made over 309,000 inquiries relating to claims of pensioners.
Mr. Matsudairi, a Japanese gentleman, educated in Hartford, Conn., has been appointed Secretary of the Japanese Legation to Rome.
For the education of negroes at the South, the American Missionary Association has expended $3,000,000 during the last nineteen years.
Italy has allowed Protestant preaching only twenty years, but hardly a town of any importance is now without a Protestant church.
Two little Illinois girls raised chickens and sold eggs; and after making a considerable sum of money they purchased a monument for their grandmother's grave.
The Archbishop of Quebec expects Canadian Roman Catholics to keep the Sabbath. He warns them against excursions, pleasure parties, walks and drives on that day.
The striking miners of Leadville managed things with high hand until the town was placed under martial law and invested with soldiers. Then the strikers wisely surrendered.
The Governor of Massachusetts has appointed Mrs. Clara Leonard, of Springfield, on the State Board of Health, Lunacy, and Charity—the first woman ever appointed on the Board.
The new railroad to the top of Mount Vesuvius coat $100,000, and, as travelers may now reach the summit within ten minutes after starting, it is believed that the increase of travel will pay for the road in a year.
Oberlin has a new fund of $10,000 to assist poor young women in obtaining a collegiate education. There have been 514 young men and 435 young women in attendance this year, and a class of 124 has just been graduated.
The French Jesuits have been denied an asylum in Spain, so they will be compelled to go further to fare better. It is remarkable that at the close of the nineteenth century the order of Loyola should find itself proscribed in two Catholic countries like France and Spain.—N. Y. Herald.
Mrs. Hayes has completed the reform begun at the White House by Mrs. Grant, and has suppressed the use of wine and spirits entirely at the private dinners. In recognition of this, the Women's Temperance Union propose to erect a drinking fountain in Washington city in her honor.
Famous Through Learning.
A recent utterance of Dr. McCosh, of Princeton, that Scotland has become famous because of its high educational attention
the wife this lesson is generally emphatically spoken by the circumstances into which marriage brings her. It gives her as her chief business the making of a home for her husband and afterwards for her children. The event of her day is his return from work. Her work is to make him comfortable and happy. His satisfaction and approbation are the standard of her success or failure. So she is put at once into an outward relation of service. Often there is a mingling of hardship in this. Before the wedding-day she was a queen; her will and wish were law. Her lover made it his first thought to please her. Now it must be her first thought to please him. His main occupation lies no longer with her, but with his daily work. He may be ever so devoted and tender, but most of his time and much of his thoughts must now go elsewhere. Her great business is his comfort and happiness; his great business is something apart from her. And he will never begin to know all she does for him. Hismannish eyes miss half the little details of work that go to carrying on a household in comfort. He will be a somewhat rare man if he ever fully comprehends the broad fact that her individual life is merged in service to him. It is the woman's lot to do more than she gets credit for. The heart's wages for work is appreciation, and few wives get full pay. It is when some sense of these things breaks upon the woman in the early months of her married life that she stands face to face—as probably never before—with her destiny. And what destiny offers her is service. A hard gift to look upon at first! Declined or grudgingly taken it will wound and bruise a life-time through. Bravely accepted it will temper the whole life to celestial sweetness. It is just here that the wife has the advantage over the husband that outward circumstances set straight before her the lesson of self-renunciation and service in the household, as they do not set it before him. His face must turn toward his daily work. There his best energy is spent and his vitality drained. When he comes home he wants rest. He feels himself, in a measure, off duty. And here he gets the full comfort of a good wife, and the home that a good wife makes. He is taken in and rested and shielded from annoyance, and encompassed by a hundred gentle ministries. Here he can forget the toils of his day, or review them in a serene light; finding here gladness for his successes, and comfort for his failures, and appreciation where others have misjudged him. Here body and soul find refreshment, and he is sent out a new man for the morrow's struggle. And if his wife is not allowed to give him this she is cheated as much as he is. This is her happiness and reward; this is what crowns her work. Yet this resting time has its danger. Who has not known men who were spoiled by the goodness of their wives? men who allowed themselves to receive until they utterly forgot to give? The more generously and gladly a wife gives the more watchful should the husband be that he makes due return.
The foe of married happiness in attention. The real wrong to the wife, the failure of the husband is when
Mrs. Hayes has completed the reform begun at the White House by Mrs. Grant, and has suppressed the use of wine and spirits entirely at the private dinners. In recognition of this, the Women's Temperance Union propose to erect a drinking fountain in Washington city in her honor.
Famous Through Learning.
A recent utterance of Dr. McCosh, of Princeton, that Scotland has become famous because of its high educational standing, has attracted wide attention, and deservedly. Of the 3,000,000 population of Scotland, 5,000 young men are undergoing educational training, and their intellectual attainments will mark the influence of their country during the next fifty years. The suggestion of President McCosh deserves special attention in New York, a city which aspires to be a great metropolis and wield a commanding influence. The magnitude of commercial interests cannot satisfy our city's desire for greatness. It is the educational standing to which Princeton's President refers that can make her famous. We have repeatedly suggested the need of the establishment here of a great university, which, in money and in men, would be able to take rank at the front of the world's institutions of learning, and give to New York an intellectual atmosphere which, although so rich in scholarly men and literary resources, the modern Babylon does not as a city possess. The thought expressed by Dr. McCosh emphasizes this need. If wise men of vast wealth would found and endow with vast resources a university which could command the services of leaders in every department of knowledge, they would do what is most essential to make New York famous. Numerous and noble institutions of learning our city now possesses, but one great enough to overshadow the greaging greed of commerce and impress the stamp of intellectual culture upon its character it lacks, and profoundly needs—N. Y. Mail.
Olive Logan, in a Paris letter to the Cincinnati Enquirer, says of the French Capital: "It is the most beautiful capital the hands of man have ever reared. It is the wickedest city that exists on the face of the earth. It is a lovely place to visit, either for a week or a twelfemonth. It is the cruelest spot in the world to pass a lifetime in?"
Ex-Senator Pomeroy, of Kansas, receives $1,000 a weak from his gold mine in North Carolina.
Dr. John Hall on Church Fairs and "Funny" Ministers.
The church should be paid for outright. This saves a great deal of subsequent trouble and heartburning on the part of congregations. How much we hear, these days, of Martha Washington tea-parties, concerts, sensational lectures, and grab-bag performances, brought sometimes into the very house of God itself, to get rid of these building incumbrances. When the Jews built a temple they did it with the money in their hands; none of the grand sacred piles of olden days were the products of church fairs, or were hampered with church debts. Imagine the Temple at Jerusalem plastered all over with placards and notices like this:
GRAND DIME CONCERT AND OYSTER SUPPER.
Given in the Temple next Thursday week,
Under the royal anacisses of King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba!
The proceeds to be devoted to paying off the debt on the building!
How ridiculous all this seems. Yet this is what is being done every day in our land and generation. It is undignified. Let your church be paid for from the start—not in mortgages based on the receipts of future church shows, but in cash; let not a debt be hung around the neck of a congregation from the start, to hamper and to thwart it, turn which way it may.
For the consciously funny preacher Dr. Hall said he had no sympathy. He did not like the breed. He could not tolerate the man who turned buffoon in the Lord's pulpit, and crack deliberate jokes to raise laughter in the congregation—the sensational minister who preferred to raise any excitement but that of religion. He had himself often been called upon to be present at surgical operations in the hospitals, upon the issue of which depended human lives, and as he had watched the surgeon probe a wound for hours, close upon the vital parts, when a half-inch slip either way would be instant death to the patient, his admiration for the profession had grown into awe. If the surgeon, however, at so serious a moment, engaged in such solemn business, had chaffed and joked, he thought he could have hated him. In like solenn business is the minister engaged, in probing the hearts of the people, to bring to them life and heal their
Mistakes and Prejudice of Religious and Temperance Journals.
Some good Religious and Temperance journals are making the mistake of declining to advertise a most valuable anti-toxicating medicine, simply because it is called "Bitters," while the same journals are making a greater mistake by advertising some drunken whiskey stuff, or nostrum, because it has some nice, fancy deceptive name ending with "eine," "tine," printed on its label, when the bottle is filled with destruction, drunkenness and death. If these good journals will take the trouble to ascertain how many overworked clergymen have had their lost nerve-force, brain-waste and flagging energies restored by the use of Hop Bitters, enabling them to perform their arduous pastoral duties and preach the good sermons that they would have been totally unable to do but for this valuable medicine, and did these journals but know of the host of good Christian Temperance women who rely on them for their family medicine, and how many invalid homes they could make happy and what glad tidings they would send to every neighborhood by publishing the merits of Hop Bitters, they would advertise them without money and without price. And did these journals but know how many have been, and may be saved from forming intemperate habits by doctors prescribing Hop Bitters, instead of beer, where the use of hopes are needed, (there being more actual hop strength in one bottle of Hop Bitters than in a barrel of beer, without any of the intoxicating effects of beer), they would lay aside their fear and prejudice against the word "bitters."
A few of the many witnesses from religious and temperance sources are given below, who use, recommend and advertise Hop Bitters.
The President and Manager of Hop Bitters Mfg. Co. is a veteran Temperance advocate and worker of forty-eight years' service; every man in the Company is an
The Robertson Process
For working rebellious ores is remarkable for its simplicity and cheapness. No other method is known which so completely reduces rebellious gold and silver ores to the same condition as free milling ore. Parties who have the machinery for pulverizing and amalgamating can erect suitable furnace for using the Robertson Process at a cost of from $1,000 to $1,500, according to capacity required. For full particulars address John A. Robertson, the patentee, P. O. box 598, Oakland, Cal.
Lippincott's Gazeteer.
A new and revised edition of Lippincott's Gazeteer of the World has been issued by the publishers, J.B. Lippincott & Co., Philadelphia. The original edition has been so thoroughly recast, rewritten and enlarged as to give to the present publication almost the character of a new work. It is one of the completeest, most comprehensive and exhaustive books extant. The range and variety of information contained within its 2,493 pages is simply marvelous.
Sohoenholz Bros. & Co., 110 and 112 Sixth St., corner of Mission, beg to notify their country patrons of their now complete line of Children's German Knit Hosiery in excellent quality and at lowest possible rates. They are also willing to send a price lacy to anybody desiring one, as also samples of Laces, Kibbons, Dress Goods, Silka, Satins, Fringes, Gimps, White Goods, Embroideries, etc., and invite all parties visiting the city to inspect their well-selected and cheap stock of all classes of dry goods.
Catarrh a Specialty.
J.A. Hunter, M.D., devotes special attention to diseases of the Head, Throat, and Chest, embracing Catarrh, Desiness, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Asthma, Consumption, Heart Affections, etc. All letters of inquiry will receive attention. Office 321 Sutter street, San Francisco.
Voltaio Belt Co., Marshall, Mich., Will send their celebrated Electro-Voltage Belts to the afflicted upon 30 days' trial. Speedy cures guaranteed. They mean what they say. Write to them without delay.
Furniture.
New and second-hand at auction prices. H.Sheilhaas', 11th St., Odd Fellows' Building, Oakland, Cal. Country orders promptly attended to.
Among the little items of personal comfort and economy are Ayer's Pills. They are the ready remedy which defeat many disorders; if taken in season, and should be kept in every family.
All Photographs made at the New York Gallery No. 25 Third St., S.F., are guaranteed to be first-class. Prices to suit the times. J.H.Patrans & Co.
How it was Fixed.
A stranger, bearing that seedy, rusty outline which fastens to a man who lives on free lunches and sleeps under stairways, walked boldly into a Woodward avenue store the other day and asked for the proprietor. After some remarks about the weather, politics, etc., he stated:
"I am obliged to acknowledge that I am somewhat embarrassed. If I could secure a loan of $20 of you until I reach Cincinnati I would then forward my check and be greatly obliged."
"But I don't know you," replied the merchant.
"Ah! beg a thousand pardons. Please favor me with a pencil."
He took the pencil and wrote on a sheet of wrapping paper the name: "S. Mortimer Montgomery."
"Are you in business there?"
"Not just now. I am at present managing an estate."
He was informed, after a little further discussion, that he must apply elsewhere. He bowed himself out, but returned in half an hour and said:
"Pardon my intrusion. As you do not feel like lending me any money, perhaps you wouldn't object to giving me a line stating that you would stand security for my board for a week."
The merchant gave him to understand that he did object, and the stranger retired in good order. Directly after dinner he came again, and he seemed in better spirits.
"Everything is all fixed to our tual satisfaction," he explained. "They saw me come here from the hotel, and have discovered from the resemblance between us that we are brothers. All you've got to do is to favor the delusion and I'll be all right."
The merchant looked at him without power to speak for a moment, and in this interval the stranger said:
"You might do one little turn for me. You wear a mustache and I don't. If you'd only have yours shaved off it would bring our looks closer together and we might pass for twins. Good-day—everything is beautifully fixed." —Detroit Free Press.
A Petrified Tree.—Thomas Love-lock, the pioneer of Lovelock station, Nevada, was describing some of the
in one bottle of Hop Bitters than in a barrel of beer, without any of the intoxicating effects of beer.) they would lay aside their fear and prejudice against the word "bitters."
A few of the many witnesses from religious and temperance sources are given below, who use, recommend and advertise Hop Bitters.
The President and Manager of Hop Bitters Mfg. Co. is a veteran Temperance advocate and worker of forty-eight years' service; every man in the Company is an active Temperance worker, and the Company spends thousands of dollars annually in Temperance and Christian work.
WHAT THE RELIGIOUS PRESS SAYS.
Chicago, Nov. 18, 1878.
Hop Bitters Mfg. Co., Rochester, N.Y.
GENTLEMEN—We do not allow anything in the line of Bitters to enter our paper that contains alcohol, but we are satisfied that your Bitters are free from that ingredient. We feel responsible for the good or bad that may be done to the families of our subscribers that are affected by our advertisements. Therefore our discrimination in your favor, and we trust that our very low rates will meet your approval and that we may hear from you. "THE LIVING CHURCH."
Temperance clergymen, lawyers, ladies and doctors use Hop Bitters, as they do not intoxicate, but restore brain and nerve waste.—Temperance Times, Brockport, N.Y.
NOT A BEVERAGE.
They are not a beverage, but a medicine, with curative properties of the highest degree, containing no poisonous drugs. They do not tear down an already debilitated system, but build it up. One bottle contains more hops, that is, more real hop strength, than a barrel of ordinary beer. Every druggist in Rochester sells them, and the physicians prescribe them."—Rochester Evening Express on Hop Bitters.
We are not in the habit of making editorial mention of patent medicines, but in case of Hop Bitters, feel free to do so, because their merits deserve to be known.—New York Independent.
$500 Reward--Catarrh Cure.
Some people would rather be humbugged than to get "value received" for their money. Hence it is that such persons run after this and that pretended cure for catarrh, forgetting Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy is so positive in its effects, that its former proprietor advertised it for years throughout the United States under a positive guarantee, offering $500 reward for an incurable case and was never called upon to pay this reward except in two cases. This remedy has acquired such a fame that a branch office has been established in London, England, to supply the foreign demand for it. Sold by druggists
DIPHTHERIA
and all affections of the throat. All should keep it constantly oiled, as it is sure to fail for terrible diseases with every bottle. Joyful news! No more deaths from this disease where this medicine is used before
A PETRIFIED TREE.—Thomas Love-lock, the pioneer of Lovelock station, Nevada, was describing some of the natural curiosities of his section while in town. He says that fifteen miles north of his place there is a petrified tree six hundred feet in length and two feet thick. Its roots and most of its branches are still perfect. The tree is lying on the surface of the ground, and is petrified through and through, from bark to core. Clarence King was taken to see the tree by Mr. Love-lock. The geologist pronounced it one of the greatest natural curiosities he had ever seen. Mr. Love-lock says he recently stumbled upon a petrified rattlesnake in the vicinity of his ranch. The snarl's head was gone, but his body and rattles were whole. The rattles give out a metallic sound when shaken, like the ringing of a bell. The body of the snake is as hard as a rock.
Baron de Lesseps' lecture on his return to Paris was a remarkable one. He used a magic lantern which exhibited views of everything from the coast of Panama to a New York ferry-boat. "Do you dare to hint," he asked, "that the Panama canal route runs through an unhealthy country? Look here!" and he presented to the audience a dark-eyed, laughing beauty—a Panama angel, whom one of the Baron's engineers had married. "Do you think that an unhealthy country can produce such beings as this?" The listeners applauded to the echo.
"John," said a clergyman to his man, "you should become a testtotaler; you have been drinking again to-day." "Do you ever take a drop yourself, minister?" "Yes, John; but you must look at your circumstances and mine." "Very true, sir," says John; "but tell me how the streets of Jerusalem were kept clean?" "No, John, I cannot tell you that." "Well, air, it was just because every one kept his air door clean."
$500 Reward--Catarrh Cure.
Some people would rather be humbugged than to get "value received" for their money. Hence it is that such persons run after this and that pretended cure for catarrh, forgetting Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy is so positive in its effects, that its former proprietor advertised it for years throughout the United States under a positive guarantee, offering $500 reward for an incurable case and was never called upon to pay this reward except in two cases. This remedy has acquired such a fame that a branch office has been established in London, England, to supply the foreign demand for it. Sold by druggists at 50 cents.
UNABLE TO BREATHE THROUGH NOSE.
PORTLANDVILLE, Iowa, March 11th, 1879.
Dr. R. V. Pierce:
Dear Sir—Some time ago I bought a Douche, some of your Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy and Golden Medical Discovery and commenced to use them. The saches and pains as well as sore throat and catarrh from which I have been for so long a time a sufferer, have entirely left me with their use. I feel like a new man as well as look like one. For four years I was unable to breathe through my nose. From the use of the Catarrh Remedy I can now do so freely. Your medicines I know to be all that they are represented. Long live Dr. Pierce and the gentlemen connected with him.
Gratefully yours,
WATSON Smith.
There are prospective vacancies in the editorial force of Paris papers. Five editors have duels on hand, and the rest are hourly expecting challenges.
One Experience from Many.
I had been sick and miserable so long and had caused my husband so much trouble and expense, no one seemed to know what alled me, that I was completely disheartened and discouraged. In this frame of mind I got a bottle of Hop Bitters and used them unknown to my family. I soon began to improve and gained so fast that my husband and family thought it strange and unnatural, but when I told them what had helped me, they said, "Hurrah for Hop Bitters! Long may they prosper, for they have made mother well and us happy."—The Mother.
An Unusual Record.
The life of Mr. H. H. Warner, of Rochester, N.Y., was saved by the Safe Kidney and Liver Cure, which now bears his name. What this wonderful remedy did for him it has done for thousands, and, we believe, will continue to do for those afflicted with kidney liver and urinary troubles of any kind. If any reader has any organic trouble, this remedy will prove "a friend in need."
J. W. Shaeffer & Co., 321 and 323 Sarramanto St., San Francisco, employ no drummers. Gigus sold very cheap.
GOLD MINING.
SILVER PLATED AMALGAMATING PLATES FOR SAVING GOLD.
Used in Quartz, Placer and Gravel Mining.
Warranted the best made. Prices greatly reduced. San Francisco Gold, Silver and Nichol Plating Works, 650 and 650 Minesom St., between New Montgomery and Third street.
Head for circular.
THAT WATCH.
The New Premium
OFFERED BY
THE OCCIDENT
FOR ONLY
4 NEW SUBSCRIBERS
AND
$10.
AN AMERICAN
Stem-Winding
Watch.
A PERFECTLY RELIABLE
Time-Keeper.
The above cut is the exact size of the Watch offered by us, and will give a correct idea of its style. It is not a toy, but a real watch, that, according to actual experiments made by us, will keep time as accurately as a P.S. Bartlett-Waltham movement.
It has an open face of heavy cut-crystal through which Children can see the movement and "the wheels go round."
It is a stem-winder having a stop-work which prevents its being damaged by overwinding, and is thoroughly protected from dust to which key-winders are exposed.
It has a long thin main-spring, four times the length of an ordinary spring, which will not break; every one being calculated to out-wear the watch.
Its case is made of beautified, highly polished, silvered metal, which, for looks, endurance, and all practical purposes, is just as good as solid silver.
It is popular, as there is a great demand from boys, mechanics, farmers, business men and teachers for such a watch. The inventor, after spending a fortune in perfecting it, is now turning out over 400 per day.
We offer to send this watch by registered package or express to every one who sends us the names of four new subscribers and $10. Send for specimen copies of the paper. You will find it the largest and best family paper on this Coast.
Address,
C. A. POAGE, 757 Market St., S.F., Cal.
Publisher of "THE OCCIDENT."
THE OREGON CELEBRATED
Diuretic KIDNEY TEA.
Kind nature's own remedy—her "last, best gift to man." A plant which grows in mountain fastnesses, sedum trodden by human foot.
There are thousands afflicted with diseases of the kidneys or Urinary Organs who suffer in silence rather than to make known their troubles. Others seek relief by the use of various patent medicines, which, if they do not aggravate the disease at least do not lessen it. Even those who secure the advice of physicians often fail to get relief, owing to the very complicated and delicate nature of the organs affected. The Oregon Kidney Tea is a strictly vegetable production, and will not injure the smallest child, nor the most delicate woman, but will cure Pain in the Back and Kidneys, non-restitution of Urine, Diabetes, Inflammation of the Bladder or Kidneys, Brick Dust Deposit in Urine, Leucorrhoea, Painful > Suppressed Menstruation, and all complaints arising from a diseased or debilitated state of the kidneys or urinary organs of either sex.
Hedge, Davis & Co., Proprietors,
PORTLAND, OREGON.
FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
Price: ONE DOLLAR.
N. CURRY & BRO.
113 Sansome St., San Francisco,
Sole Agents for the
SHARPS RIFLE CO., OF BRIDGEPORT, CONN.
FOR California, Oregon, Arizona, Nevada, Washington Territory, and Idaho. Also, agents for W. W. Greener's celebrated Wedgefast, Chokebere, Breast-leading Double Guns; and all kinds of our finest Mids and Pliois made by the Landing Manufacturers of England and America of all kinds in quantities to suit.
F. W. SPENCER
Pianoforte Company.
Owing to the increasing demand for our Matchless Spencer Flane and Smith American Organs of Boston, we have greatly enlarged our place of business and now have one of the largest and finest stocks of instruments on the coast, including the Matchless Spencer Flane. square and upright; also SteinWarner'S SAFF
SHARPS RIFLE CO., OF BRIDGEPORT, CONN.
FOR
California, Oregon, Arizona, Nevada, Washington Territory, and Idaho. Also, agents for W. W. Green's celebrated Wedgefast, Choice Breech-loading Double Guns; and all kinds of guns, rifles and pistols made by the Leading Manufacturers of England and America. Ammunition of all kinds in quantities to suit.
F. W. SPENCER Pianoforte Company.
Owing to the increasing demand for our Matchless Spencer Pianos and Smith American Organs of Boston, we have greatly enlarged our place of business and now have one of the largest and finest stocks of instruments on the coast, including the Matchless "Spencer Pianos" square and upright; also Steinway's Knabe, Chickering, Emerson, Miller's, Bradbury's and other makers, at all prices.
Mason & Hamlin, George Weods
AND
"Smith American Organs of Boston," Sold on installments if desired.
Send for circulars. F. W. SPENCER & Co., 28 and 25 Fifth St., San Francisco.
N. B.-Piano tuned, repaired and for rent.
$1,000 Challenge Ore Feeder!
MACHINIST TOOLS,
Mining and Saw Mill Machinery.
Dealers in all kinds of new and Second-Hand ENGINES AND BOILERS,
And other Machinery Bought and Sold.
J. HENDY,
N. E. Cor. Mission and Freemont St., San Francisco.
HUMPHREYS' HOMEopathic SPECIFIC No.28
In use 25 years. The only successful remedy for Newcastle Mobility, Vital Weakness, and Pestation, from over-work or other cause. For vial, or 5 vials and large vial powder, for $400 BY DEALERS ENERALLY, or sent post-fax on receipt of price. Humphreys' Homeopathic Medicine Co., 100 Putton Street, N.Y.
NOT FAIL to send Funeral Price List for 1890. Fare to any address with application. Contains descriptions of everything required for personal or family use with over 1,200 illustrations. We sell all goods at wholesale prices in quantities to suit the purchaser. The only institution in America who make this their special business. Address, MONTGOMERY WARD & CO., 257 & 259 Wabash Ave., Chicago.
Cheap toilet soap manufactured from rancid and refuse grease injure the skin and are really more expensive than PHOSPHATE SOAP, which retails for 25 cents per cake.
PHOSPHATE SOAP
The genuine merits of PHOSPHATE SOAP and persistent advertising will force every druggist, groceryman and general dealer to order it by the gross sooner or later. Ask for it in every store. The retail price is 25 cents per cake. We wish to sell it only at wholesale, but in case you cannot find it we will send a nice box of three cakes by mail, postage paid, on receipt of 85 cents in stamps.
STANDARD SOAP CO., 2004 Monumentte St., N.F.