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anaheim-gazette 1880-08-21

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Intelligence Items. Chicago has 216,540 children of school age. The average age at which English students matriculate at Oxford is nineteen. The Amherst Faculty are considering the propriety of abolishing the marking system. A new Russian translation of "The Pilgrim's Progress," is to appear soon in Moscow. The eighth international congress of the societies for the protection of animals will be held at Brussels. There are technical schools in Holland, both at Amsterdam and at Rotterdam, in which several trainees are taught to young women. The crop report of the Agricultural Department shows an excellent condition of things for the farmers. The corn crop is far larger than any previous year. There can be no longer any doubt that the alligator does exist in the old world, as two fine specimens taken from the Yang-tse-kiang are now in the Berlin Zoological Museum. In Texas a herder offered to surrender to the Sheriff in case he should be provided with a square dinner. This was refused, and in the fight that took place three men were killed, two wounded and the herder escaped. The city of Hanchow, China, with 750,000 people, conducts its affairs with such quietness, friendliness and freedom from disorder that no policemen are required, and none employed. Violence is very rare, and murder does not occur oftener than once in two or three years. Prof. Earl, of the Fish Commission, has discovered that Spanish mackerel can be artificially hatched, and that its capacity of reproduction greatly exceeds that of either cod or shad. The professor is making further experiments with hatching apparatus on Chesapeake Bay. At its recent Commencement, Wells College for women, was presented with a beautiful building for the departments of Art and Science, erected by the Eberality of the late Mrs. Edwin B. Morgan. At the same time Mr. Morgan gave $30,000 to free the College wholly from debt. Luxury in Chill: A correspondent of the London Times writes from Santiago, Chill, of the habits of society there. He says: "Three wealthy land-owners, handicapped, or possessors of very large farms, are, as a rule, more absentee, having little more than pied a terre on their estates, which they only visit for a month or two in the year, and hardly ever leaving their homes in the capital, to which political or social duties are supposed to bind them, except for a short visit at Valparaiso, or some other watering-place on the sea or inland. The extravagance of this gentry is described as boundless. More than £1,600,000 has been spent in house-building in the period of four years, 1872-6, some of these private houses at a cost of £29,000 to £50,000 each, and 'the carriage licenses taken out in the latter year show that there were altogether 1,285 private carriages, besides 471 public conveyances and 2,750 carts and drays.' This will appear somewhat considerable if we reflect that it refers to a town mustering a population of 100,000. The luxury in which these Chilian magnates so liberally indulge has the effect of raising the price of all commodities, and especially of the articles imported from abroad, to an enormous extent. A book or an almanac charged 1 shilling in London at shop price cannot be purchased here for less than 3 shillings and 6 pence; a pair of kid gloves is not to be had for less than 10 shillings; and, as a rule, a dollar, a silver dollar, the value of which varies from 4 shillings to 5 shillings, will go no farther than 1 shilling would in the old countries. 'The charge for hair-cutting,' Mrs. Brassy found out in Valparaiso, 'is $1.50; a 3-and-5-penny Lett's diary $2.50; a tall hat (chimney-pot) costs 58 shillings; you must pay 6 pence each for parchment luggage labels, 3 pence apiece for quill pens, 4 shillings for a quire of common note paper, and so on in proportion.' All such articles for one who, like myself, tried the shops in both places, are even dearer in the capital than in the sea ports. The people here seem to value things rather from their cost than from their actual worth. The extravagance of all Americans is something that far transcends the limits of Old World comprehension. At Guayaquil the slabby seaport of the 'one-horse republic' of Ecuador I have seen a toy where Kemarkable Journals: Every journalist of the lects fonts which he has which it does not seem ever do again—long reagent labor which stretches the daylight and were the evening gas was life almonitions came to him was waiting, and that be closed up immediately by the evening fireside af the great things we not in any spirit of self in my own humble dreamed while the intrepreneur closing around genius I had when I he used to say of the Well, even little men their best, may look triumphs. I do, for not be very civil to my gainsey me. I remember great statesman died sent us the melancholy about three o'clock I should like to know capable of doing it said if they had been biography of that the whole period of his litalic history, with of what he had done and character—all the columns of the Tribune ready within nine hours member that "Obtain some people criticise faults and errors in it derstood the difficult thought of the faggers who had done his done it badly. But table critics! how she how knowing! Bless gentleman who had to consider the matter leisurely, to ransack memory, and to take book from the library would have finished in the day time, but at two o'clock in the night editor at his own foreman howling through tube. The public is not only ignorant. The mystery of the man it knows hardly and give it to the enthuys vigor of manhood, Prof. Earl, of the Fish Commission, has discovered that Spanish mackerel can be artificially hatched, and that its capacity of reproduction greatly exceeds that of either cod or shad. The professor is making further experiments with hatching apparatus on Chesapeake Bay. At its recent Commencement, Wells College for women, was presented with a beautiful building for the departments of Art and Science, erected by the liberality of the late Mrs. Edwin B. Morgan. At the same time Mr. Morgan gave $30,000 to free the College wholly from debt. Jefferson Davis' plantation at Hurricane, Miss., is leased by Montgomery & Sons. This firm is composed of four negroes, who were formerly owned by a brother of the ex-President of the Confederacy. They own plantations worth $75,000, hire several more, and do a large mercantile business at Vicksburg. A substitute for ice has been put down on the floors of certain skating rinks in London. It consists of a mixture of corbonate and sulphate of soda, which forms a crystalline mass offering about the same resistance to skates as ice does. It is ent up as easily as ice, but can be readily smoothed and repaired. The fast mail service between the East and the West is again to be established. The Postmaster-General has just completed negotiations with the New York Central and Hudson River and the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railroads, whereby the fast mail service, which was put in operation on those roads in 1875 and 1876, will be again given to almost the whole territory of the West. About Women. After reading the list of queries proounded by the census-takers, a lady exclaimed in utter bewilderment: "My occupation! What is it? I suppose they won't put me down correctly as a wife and mother. If I am the head of the house I must not say so. I am not the housekeeper, as that is a paid official; neither am I the housemaid, as I have no wages. I might put down my occupation as—woman!" The American ladies, says the Parisian, have distinguished themselves at the salon in the department of watercolors and painting on porcelain—arts which, from time immemorial, have been thought to be fitted only for the delicate hands of ladies and amateurs, but which some of the greatest artists have considered not unworthy of their efforts. We do not say that the American ladies have executed any astonishing masterpieces, but many of them give evidence of a talent which is more than agreeable. Aphorisms. Eternal silence is the duty of a man.—[Carlyle. Better be in shame now than at the day of judgment.—[Mohammed. The love principle is stronger than the force principle.—[Dr. A. A. Hodge. Art is the application of knowledge to a practical end.—[Sir John Herbert. Errors and their Correctors. I suppose that there are few things of which most men know so little as they know of the manufacture of newspapers. It is the business of those who edit to furnish the world with reading—it is the business of the world to find fault. I have sometimes wished that I could introduce these constant critics and censors to some better knowledge of the difficulties, anxieties and perplexities of the journalist's vocation—it is possible that their hearts might be softened, their tongues stayed and their querulous animosity subdued. As it is, most of mankind seem to stand guard over us, ready to pounce down upon us at the slightest aberration of memory, the smallest error of detail, the minutest possible mistake or mistreatment of fact. They do not seem to understand, that the most ardent desire of the honest journalist is to be right. Always he goes into details with fear and trembling. Generally, no lawyer preparing for nist prius or for terms takes more pains, or subjects himself more entirely to the diligence of research; and yet in spite of all this, the journalist sometimes finds that he has blundered into an awful depth of error, and has been egregiously misled by what seems to him to be authority. But whether that error be large or small, he is sure to be instantly informed of it. Somebody at once finds him out; and just as surely as somebody finds him out there comes a letter, airy with superior knowledge, or ferocious with a sense of personal injury, or fussy in its splitting of hairs. Alas! we have so many critics, each of them mounted either upon a hobbyhorse or a charger of personal injury! Every human being, in my opinion, is pleased to detect any other human being in a mistake. To do so proves his sagacity, knowledge, discrimination, virtue and morality. I have had excellent evidence of this while the presidegentman who makes it consider the matter leisurely, to ransack memory, and to take book from the library would have finished in the day time, but at two o'clock in the night editor at his e-foreman howling thru tube. The public is not only ignorant. The mystery of the man it knows hardly any give it to the enthused vigor of manhood, dom old age may have this department or other, in the fields arena of public affairs dent has betrayed sphere of human enquirrel with their drifts into journal he still plods on which for him has Often there is no cleverest newspaper unknown, and now cause he has never His heart, however and come competetome the highest station, he still toll cheerfulness, and over that his assoc will be reasonably his funeral.—CHA How a Jagua The London T following singular was "treed" by way by an American t Treed by pigs in tion in which it find a colonial t not often. But Colonial Secrets was recently exploded the colony, he drove depeccaries to take a snap-shot and scramble up rifle in the perp whole pack went gnashing their teeth and sharpening their tree. Now the pecious, but patient an object of its about for days, so before him only remain where he down among them haustion and hit mit suicide at oz be eaten there ar Fortunately, headed man, and little and consid While he was ever, what show looking out for guar? Never was b tune, for the j fondness for wi ries know it, fo see the great run the bushes thru Aphorisms. Eternal silence is the duty of a man.—[Carlyle. Better be in shame now than at the day of judgment.—[Mohammed. The love principle is stronger than the force principle.—[Dr. A. A. Hodge. Art is the application of knowledge to a practical end.—[Sir John Herschel. The aristocracy of mind and heart is the only aristocracy that none wish to destroy. Nothing is a greater sacrilege than to prostitute the great name of God to the petulancy of an idle tongue.—[Jeremy Taylor. Every human being carries his life in his face. On our features the fine chisels of thought and emotion are eternally at work. The flowers within our reach we tread down without so much as even looking at them; the tiny exotic, which is far less beautiful, we covet because it is difficult of attainment. Rumer. Professor.—"What important personage was confined on the island of St. Helena?" Mr. H.—"Robinson Crusoe." Teacher.—"What is a score?" Pupil.—"A base-ball record." Teacher.—"No, no; what I mean is, how much does a score signify numerically? what idea does it give you? That is to say, if I were to tell you that I had a score of horses, what would you think?" Pupil:—"Please, marm, I should think you was stuffin'." An anxious father was consulting one of the Wall street magnates as to what business he should put his son to. "My boy, air," said he, "has had a first-rate education and is remarkably truthful." "I don't see much good in that," said the Wall street man, jingling the double eagles in his breasts pocket; "none of the successful men I know are truthful. Better make your boy an apothecary; that's the only business I know of where descit does not pay in the long run." The experiment of lighting the wharves of Montreal by electricity has not proved all that was promised, but it is nevertheless regarded as a vast improvement on what has hitherto been provided. The cost of running the sixteen lights is computed by the Chief Engineer at $1.28 per hour, or eight cents for each lamp. At this rate the total expense for the season is placed at $2,560 for the sixteen lamps. The machinery has been found to work well, and no special trouble has been experienced in keeping the lamps going. The Chinese skill in dwarfing plants is well known. The Chinese ladies wear in their bosoms little dwarf fir-trees, which, by a carefully adjusted system of starvation, have been reduced to the size of button-hole flowers. These remain fresh and evergreen in their dwarf state for a number of years, just as fir-trees in mountains are evergreen, and thus are excellent symbols of perpetuity of love, in express which they are used by the ladies of the highest rank in the Colonial Empire. Harper's Dancer. MEMORABLE JOURNALISTIC NOTES. Every journalist of any ability recollects facts which he has accomplished, which it does not seem to him he could ever do again—long reaches of persistent labor which stretched through all the daylight and were persisted in after the evening gas was lighted, long after admonitions came to him that the press was waiting, and that the forms must be closed up immediately. Sometimes, by the evening fireside, I sit and dream of the great things which I once did, not in any spirit of self-sufficiency, but in my own humble way, as Swift dreamed while the intellectual shadows were closing around him. "What a genius I had when I wrote that book!" he used to say of the "Tale of a Tub." Well, even little men, who have done their best, may look back upon their triumphs. I do, for one, and I should not be very civil to whomsoever should gainay me. I remember how once a great statesman died, and the wires sent us the melancholy intelligence at about three o'clock in the afternoon. I should like to know what most people capable of doing it at all would have said if they had been called upon for a biography of that statesman, covering the whole period of his life, all his political history, with a decent estimate of what he had done, and of his talents and character—all this to fill some six columns of the Tribune, and all to be ready within nine hours! I well remember that "Obituary," and how some people criticised it, and found faults and errors in it, and how few understood the difficulties of the work, or thought of the fagged and weary man who had done his beat, and had not done it badly. Bless the breakfast-table critics! how sharp they were and how knowing! Bless also the sagacious gentleman who had a month in which to consider the matter, to turn it over leisurely, to ransack the chambers of memory, and to take down book after book from the library shelves! He would have finished it all charmingly in the day time, but not quite so well at two o'clock in the morning, with the night editor at his elbow and the night foreman howling through the speaking-tube. The public is not inconsiderate—it is only ignorant. The newspaper is a mystery of the manufacture of which it knows hardly anything. Those who give to it the enthusiasm of youth, the vigor of manhood, and whatever wis- BETTER TESTIMONY. Where testimonials give the residence of the parties it is an easy matter for any person to verify them. Thousands of people from all parts of the Pacific Coast can and have expressed the opinion that there is no other article in the world equal to PHOSPHATE SOAP for common toilet use. A great many people have tested this soap for skin diseases. Among others we give the following from parties who have thoroughly tested PHOSPHATE SOAP: OAKLAND, Cal., April 5, 1898. STANDARD SOAP COMPANY—GENE: Some two or three months ago, I had a boy about two years old that had suffered for a year with a severe eruption on the head and face, caused by nothing. The child was in such misery that it would often be awakened out of sleep by the severe 'teching. He would then scratch his head and face until the blood ran from the scabs. We tried everything we could find, but nothing seemed to give any permanent relief until we tried PHOSPHATE SOAP. Before we had used one cake, the child's head and face were entirely healed, and there has been no appearance of the disease since. MICHAEL KANE No. 1068 Kirkham St. FORT VERDE, Arizona, Dec. 12, 1879. STANDARD SOAP COMPANY—GENE: Having received your box of PHOSPHATE SOAP, and having used only one cake of SOAP out of the three, I am happy to say that it has completely cured my sore eyelids which was caused by the alkali dust in Idaho Territory, in 1877, and have been more ever since until I used PHOSPHATE SOAP. CORPORAL DENNIS BURKE, Twelfth Infantry. SAN FRANCISCO, November 27, 1879. STANDARD SOAP COMPANY—GENE: After a number of trials of Soaps, I have learned that the PHOSPHATE is certainly the very best for shaving. I thank you for its introduction. JAMES P. ARTHUR. ALEXander the Great Wept because there were no more worlds to conquer, but the proprietors of Dr. Pierce's Family Medicines who have found it necessary to establish a branch of the World's Dispensary at London, England, in order to supply from that great commercial emporium these remedial blessings to foreign countries, where they are largely in demand, do not share the great conqueror's sentiments, as their conquests are of disease and have made happy not only the conqueror but the people who employ them. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery cures all blood and skin diseases, scrofulous affections, swellings and internal soreness. Dr. Pierce's Pellets are the little giant cathartic; Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription—woman's tonic and nervine—Dr. Pierce's Extract of Smart-Weed, the great remedy for colds and all bowel affections as diarrhoea, dysentery and flux. World's Dispensary Medical Association, proprietors, Buffalo and London. The black raspberry is the shad among small fruits. Its disposition is so mean that it wishes every one of its seeds was a bone. Whreling Sunday Leader. to consider the matter, to turn it over laisurely, to ransack the chambers of memory, and to take down book after book from the library shelves! He would have finished it all charmingly in the day time, but not quite so well at two o'clock in the morning, with the night editor sit his elbow and the night foreman howling through the speaking-tube. The public is not inconsiderate—it is only ignorant. The newspaper is a mystery of the manufacture of which it knows hardly anything. Those who give to it the enthusiasm of youth, the vigor of manhood, and whatever wisdom old age may have brought with it, might have won an abiding fame in this department of literature or the other, in the fields of science, in the arena of public affairs. Taste or accident has betrayed them into a humble sphere of human exertion, nor do they quarrel with their fortune. He who drifts into journalism rarely leaves it; he still plods on in the daily toil which for him has a rare fascination. Often there is no fame for him. The cleverest newspaper man may be utterly unknown, and not forgotten only because he has never been remembered. His heart, however, is stout at any rate; and come competency or the lack of it, come the highest or the humblest position, he still toils with irrepressible cheerfulness, and hopes when all is over that his associates who survive him will be reasonably sorry or solemn at his funeral.—CHARLES T. CONGDON. How a Jaguar Saved a Man. The London Telegraph recalls the following singular story of a man who was "treed" by wild hogs, and released by an American tiger: Treed by pigs is not exactly the position in which we should expect to find a colonial secretary—at least, not often. But when Mr. Fowler, Colonial Secretary of the Honduras, was recently exploring the interior of the colony, he was overtaken by a drove of peccaries, and had only time to take a snap-shot at the first of them and scramble up a tree, dropping his rifle in the performance, before the whole pack were around his perch, gnashing their teeth at him, grunting and sharpening their tusks against his tree. Now the peccary is not only ferocious, but patient, and rather than let an object of its anger escape will wait about for days, so that the Secretary had before him only two courses—either to remain where he was until he dropped down among the swine from sheer exhaustion and hunger, or else to commit suicide at once by coming down to be eaten there and then. Fortunately, Mr. Fowler is a cool-headed man, and so decided to wait a little and consider the situation. While he was in this dilemma, however, what should come along—and looking out for supper, too—but a jaguar? Never was beast of prey so opportunistic, for the jaguar has a particular fondness for wild pork, and the peccaries know it, for no sooner did they see the great ruddy head thrust through the bushes than they bolted helter-shells and forgetting in their desire to their conquests are of disease and have made happy not only the conqueror but the people who employ them. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery cares all blood and skin diseases, serofulous affections, swellings and internal soreness. Dr. Pierce's Pelllets are the little giant cathartic; Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription—woman's tonic and nervine—Dr. Pierce's Extract of Smart-Weed, the great remedy for colds and all bowel affections as diarrhoea, dysentery and flux. World's Dispensary Medical Association, proprietors, Buffalo and London. The black raspberry is the shad among small fruits. Its disposition is so mean that it wishes every one of its seeds was a bone. Wheeling Sunday Leader. Guilty of Wrong. Some people have a fashion of confusing excellent remedies with the large mass of "patent medicines," and in this they are guilty of a wrong. There are some advertised remedies fully worth all that is asked for them, and one at least we know of—Hop Bitters. The writer has had occasion to use the Bitters in just such a climate as we have most of the year in Bay City, and has always found them to be first-class and reliable, doing all that is claimed for them.—Tribune. 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 a suitable furnace for using the kibberson Process at a cost of from $1,000 to $1,500, according to capacity required. For full particulars address John A. Kibberson, the patentee, P. O. box 552, Oakland, Cal. A Suggestion to Summer Tourists. A change of climate is at all times more or less dangerous. There are elements in a new atmosphere which are injurious, especially when the system is exhausted by care and overwork, and which should be guarded against. After careful observation we have come to the conclusion that Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure is the best preventive for atmospheric evils, and that it will restore health and vigor sooner than any remedy which has ever been discovered. Voltaio Belt Co., Marshall, Mich. Will send their celebrated Electro-Voltaic 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. Schellhaas', 11th St., Odd Fellows' Building, Oakland, Cal. Country orders promptly attended to. J. W. Shaeffer & Co., 321 and 323 Sacramento St., San Francisco, employ no drummers. Cigars sold very cheap. Gray hairs are honorable, but few like them. Clothe them with the hues of youth by using Ayer's Hair Vigor. 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. Peters & Co. TROPIC FRUIT LAVATIVE TROPIC FRUIT LAXATIVE UNLIKE PILLS And the usual Purgatives, Is Pleasant to Take, A young student on the eve of his departure to study law at Paris, received from his uncle a code which was to be one of his text-books at college. "If you are faithful," said the old gentleman, "I will make you a fine present." Visiting Paris some months later, he called upon his nephew and asked him how he was pleased with his gift. "But I have received nothing," said the nephew. "Let me look at your code," was the response. The book was produced, and between the leaves of the first chapter a banknote for 500 francs was discovered, which had not been found by the faithful disciple of Justinian. This was speedily restored to the pocket of the old gentleman. Young miner wants to know if we would advise him to go to Leadville or stay in New Jersey to dig for gold. Stay in New Jersey, my boy. You will find easier digging in the sand of that State than in the Colorado rocks, and when you get tired of digging you won't have to walk back three thousand miles.—Boston Post. WARNER'S SAFE REMEDIES Warner’s Safe Remedies are an immediate solution for a painful Lice, and cure Ointments, Dysphagia, Hirsutism, Milkum Harlem, Malaria, Psoriasis, Agrus, and are much of those in beauty all Diseases to cause a free and regular action of the Newell. The best medicine for all Material Poisons, Price, $c., a box. Warner’s Safe Remedies quickly gives Red and Sleep to the miteing, gum Mastache and Neuralgia. Prevenient Epileptic Pits, and is the best remedy for Nervous Frenation brought on by excessive drinking, over-work, mental stress and other causes. It relieves the Pain of All Diseases, and is never injurious to the system. The best of all Nervines. Bottles of two sizes; prices, $c., and $1.00. Warner’s Safe Remedies are sold by Druggists and Dealers in Medicine everywhere. H.H. WARNER & CO., Proprietors, Manchester, N.Y. N.B. Sand for Pamphetomine and Tumiminidine. Ask your druggist for it. Sold by all wholesale drug stores in San Francisco, Sacramento and Portland. CAMELLINE FOR THE COMPLEXION AND TEETH, Supersedes Everything. PRICE, 50c. and $1. Sold by Druggists and general dealers. THE OREGON CELEBRATED PHOSPHATE SOAP A superb article for the toilet, beneficial to the skin, giving it a soft, velvety appearance, and leaving a soothing pleasant sensation after use,. imparting a healthy, natural and lasting beauty to the complexion. It eradicates the poisonous effects of cosmetics; preventing skin diseases by acting as a constant purifier and disinfectant; if used constantly will cure skin diseases of long standing; is superior to any other article for bathing infants; cleansing and healing for all eruptions on the scalp or face of children; good for the teeth; produces a soft, creamy lather, nicely adapted to shaving or shampooing, removes dandruff, and gives health to the scalp without injuring the hair. If your wife is in the habit of using cosmetics of any kind, advise her to give up the pernicious practice, as the most harmless face powders obstruct the pores of the skin and sooner or later injure the complexion, while PHOSPHATE SOAP removes all impurities and assists nature in developing a natural, healthy and beautiful skin. It is an old proverb that an ounce of preventive is better than a pound of cure. Twenty-five cents invested in a cake of PHOSPHATE SOAP will save hundreds of dollars in doctors’ bills. It acts as a constant disinfectant, preventing Salt THE OREGON CELEBRATED Diuretic KIDNEY TEA. Kind nature's own remedy—her "last, best gift to man." A plant which grows in mountain fastnesses, seldom 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 Diuretic Kidney Tea is a strictly vegetable production, and will not injure the smallest child, nor be 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 or Suppressed Menstruation, and all complaints arising from a diseased or debilitated state of the kidneys or urinary organs of either sex. Hodge, Davis & Co., Proprietors, PORTLAND, OREGON. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. Price: ONE DOLLAR. CARRIAGES. N. M. BLACK & CO. Carriage Makers. 74 and 76 New Montgomery St., one block from Palace Hotel, San Francisco. All kinds of Spring and Thorough-Brace Wagons, Express Wagons, bikes, Sons and Butcher Wagons, Grocery, Litter and Surveyor's Wagons, etc. WAGONS and CARRIAGES. Of every description made to E.P. Guernsey Imported Wagons constantly on hand and for sale. Orders from the country promptly attended to. THE AUDINET, A NEW INVENTION THAT ENABLES the deaf to hear at church, concerta theater, and all ordinary conversation. Send for circular. L. N. HASTA, Pacific Coast Agent. Broom St., No. 126 Knarry street, San Francisco. GOLD MINING. SILVER PLATED AMALGAMATING PLATES FOR SAVING GOL Used in Quartz, Placer and Gravel Mining. Warranted the best made. Prices greatly reduced. San Francisco Gold, Silver and Nickel Plati Worlds 658 and 635 Mission St., between New Montgomery and Third streets. Bend for circular. STAMP CABINET. JUST THE THING For Linen Marking, Etc. GOLD MINING. SILVER PLATED AMALGAMATING PLATES FOR SAVING GOL Used in Quartz, Placer and Gravel Mining. Warranted the best made. Prices greatly reduced. San Francisco Gold, Silver and Nickel Plati Works, 658 and 635 Mission St., between New Montgomery and Third street. M. & G. DENNISTON, Proprietor. STAMP CABINET. JUST THE THING For Linen Marking, Etc. This cut represents a fac-simile of the Cabinet (open), which consists of fourteen articles, as follows: 1. Name in Full, any Style Letter desired. 2. Fancy Initial of Surname. 3. Initials of Entire Name. 4. Bottle of Indelible Ink, Blue or Black, warranted. 5. Bottle of Ink, Red, Blue, Violet or Green. 6. Pad and Distributor for Colored Ink. 7. Pad and Distributor for Indelible Ink. 8. Bottle of Gold Bronze. 9. Bottle of Silver Bronze. 10. Camel's hair Brush, for applying Bronze. 11. Twenty-five Transparent Cards, new styles. 12. Twenty-five Superfine Bristol Cards, Assorted Colors. 13. Patent Cabinet. 14. Card Case. PRICE, $2.00. Every man, woman and child should have one of these Cabinets, as it is something entirely new and useful, neat, clean and compact. If judiciously used, it will do all your Linen Marking, Card Printing, useful, neat, clean and compact. It is manufactured expressly for this Cabinet, and is guaranteed not to gain up the Stamps or wash out. The Pads, when saturated with ink, contain enough for one thousand imprints each. Below we give a few samples of our styles of letters, any other style of letter desired No. 1. Thomas Smith. Miss Nellie Fisher. No. 2. Bertha R. Spuds. No. 4. Chas. S. Banks. No. 5. Don F. Miller. BUSINESS STAMPS FROM $3.00 TO $5.00 According to Size, Style, &c. In ordering, give the number of the style of letter desired, if any other style is wanted, include a sample with the order. These Stamps will be sent to any address in the United States on receipt of price, $2.00 in postage stamps or overnight charge prompt. Address orders to CARLOD WYER, 319 Hammon Street, (Over Smith, Fargo & Co.) Expressman San Francisco.