anaheim-gazette 1884-11-29
Searchable text
WEEKLY GAZETTE.
Published every Saturday.
Richard Meirose,
EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION:
One Year ..... $2.00
Six months ..... 1.25
Three Months ..... 75
OFFICE—In P.O. Building, Center street, Annelheim
TRANSIENT ADVERTISING:
W. H. MASER, M.D., D.D.S. D.R. WILDER, D.D.S.
MASSER & WILDER,
DENTISTS.
WE RESPECTFULLY ANNOUNCE TO YOU that one of us will visit your place on the 10th of every month to attend to key dental work that you may wish to have done. By leaving your order at the Southern Hotel we will be pleased to call at your residence and do the work there.
We are prepared to execute all branches of dentistry in an artistic and substantial manner at a reasonable price.
We replace the partial loss of teeth without a plate and place gold crowns on roots and decayed teeth by a new patent process.
We extract teeth without pain by the use of vitalized a.r.
Due to the generous patronage of our many friends, we are compelled to move into more commodious quarters, in Parlor 13 Nadeau Block, Los Angeles.
Respectfully yours,
DRS. MASER & WILDER.
HOSTETTER'S CELEBRATED
WOMAN AND HOME.
Mrs. Frank Leslie's Brief Letter from Long Branch.
A Good Word for Homely Girls—Bedroom Furniture—Face and Hands—Fashion Stems—Brevity.
[New York Tribune.]
EDITOR OF THE TRIBUTE: A letter from a Long Branch correspondent published in your paper is being extensively copied, and as many of its images put me in an unfavorable light before the public to which we both appeal, I will ask you to make a few corrections:
My immediate party at the Branch consisted of a lady, her daughter, son, and the gentleman whom I am to marry, and we joined a number of friends, and with them occupied a cottage at the west end.
I remained but four days, having been recalled to town by important business, and my hotel bill was $20.50, and not "$450 a week" as was stated.
I have a pair of horses, and not "fine," and no groom, and have never in my life employed a maid, French or otherwise, having faith in the proverb that "The Lord helps those who help themselves."
I really have not counted my dresses, and cannot say whether they number "sixty-three complete toilets," but I do know that on the visit referred to I wore but three (either black or white), and they of the simplest description.
Your correspondent is right as to my having worn diamonds (not "a pint measure full") and they were worn in proper place and season—a pair of solitaire, which I have the proud satisfaction of having purchased out of my own earnings, and a coronet, an old family jewel, an engagement gift.
As regards my marriage to the Marquis de Leuville, when that event takes place it will be as publicly announced as was our engagement.
It is always painful to have one's private affairs brought before the public, but since mine were considered of sufficient interest to form the subject of an article, it is but right that that article should be correct. Besides, as I am the head of a publishing house which issues eleven periodicals, and as my personal daily attention is given to the conduct of my business, you will readily see how statements like these and the reference intended to be deduced from them are likely to prove detrimental to my interests.
I can only hope and believe that your correspondent (whom I take to be a woman) has been misinformed and is not malicious, as no one has received greater or more generous encouragement and support from the press, or is more profoundly grateful for it than Yours respectfully, Mrs. FRANK LESLIE.
A Good Word for Homely Girls.
[Pittsburg Dispatch.]
Hostetter's Stomach Bitters is a fine blood depentent, a sinebathic and a superb antidotes specie. It raises the falling energies of the skeletal tissue and maintains body heat, but also lifts limbs reminiscent of drapes. Bowl compliments are among the eels which it entirely removes. In tropics, countries where the liver and bowels are organs most unfavourably affected by the combined influence of climate, diet and water, it is a very necessary salt guard.
For sale by all Druggists and dealers generally.
F. & J. BACKS.
Importers, Manufacturers and Dealers in Furniture, Bedding, Paper Hangings, Picture Frames, etc.
UNDERTAKERS,
Acents for the Howe, Eldredge and Victor Sewing Machines.
Los Angeles Street. : : Araheim.
An Old Soldier's EXPERIENCE.
"Calvert, Texas,
May 3, 1882.
"I wish to express my appreciation of the valuable qualities of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral as a cough remedy."
"While with Churchill's army, just before the battle of Vicksburg, I contracted a severe cold, which terminated in a dangerous cough. I found no relief till on our march we came to a country store, where, on asking for some remedy, I was urged to try Ayer's CHERRY PECTORAL.
"I did so, and was rapidly cured. Since then I have kept the PECTORAL constantly by me, for family use, and I have found it to be an invaluable remedy for throat and lung diseases.
Thousands of testimonial certify to the prompt cure of all bronchial and lung affections, by the use of Ayer's CHERRY PECTORAL. Being very palatable, the youngest children take it readily.
PREPARED BY
Dr.J.O.Ayer&Co., Lowell, Mass.
Sold by all Druggists."
A Good Word for Homely Girls.
[Pittsburg Dispatch.]
"Why are homely girls always the best scholars, the best workers, and make the best wives? This question was propounded by an observant and intelligent gentleman who has been twice led to the hymenical altar, and is ready to be sacrificed again.
Is such really the case?
"I have reason to know that it is. It is natural enough, isn't it! The girl who is handsome in feature and form concludes very early in life that these are her stock in trade, and with them she enters the matrimonial market. Nine times out of ten she is soon off the books and at the head of a house. Her homely sister has hardly entered her teens until she discovers she is made to stand aside for the pretty-faced girls. All that neatness of dress, elegance of manners, and proficiency in the arts of making one's self attractive she does, deliberately and for a purpose, perhaps, or possibly for no other reason than, Topsy-like, she grow that way."
"The chances are she does it solely for the purpose of compensating for her lack of physical beauty."
"My observations lead directly to the opposite conclusions," replied the intelligent observer. "There is among the great laws of nature one known as the law of compensation, and I am thoroughly convinced that to it the homely girl is indebted for the tastes and disposition that prompts her to make herself useful when she can not be ornamental."
"Then if you had the choice of two ladies, one beautiful and the other homely, you would take the homely one!"
"Experience and observation both teach me that would be the wise thing to do. The first impulse would naturally be to take the pretter of the two, but I would give the first impulse time to pass off, and act upon sober, second thought."
The old gentleman may be entirely right in this matter.
Bed-Room Furniture.
[Hodley's Lady Book.]
The furniture of a country bed-room should never be heavy. Exquisite suits of common pine, covered with cretonne or satteen, are now admired more than wood; but ash, oak or satin-wood are still the conventional materials. Draped dressing bureaux or "tables" are extremely pretty. They are merely pine structures covered with frills and flounces, and holding an upright mirror from which falls a sweep of effective drapery. A garniture of bows and even artificial flowers is permitted, but the latter are always in dubious taste, and better not tampered with. A bedstead of brass or nickel hung with white curtains, is a pretty addition to the room. The whim now is to stand the bed out from the wall toward the center of the room, so that it is accessible from all sides. This is an old custom. Old furniture can often be adapted to a sleeping apartment. A bed with a valance is quite an institution, and the old straight-backed chairs are perfectly adaptable. Worn-out chairs may be resetted, taking folded pieces of stout tickling, and working them into a basket pattern secured around the edges with tacks. A cushion of crutone supplied with a flounce half way up to the floor, is the proper finish.
A Good Word for Homely Girls.
[Pittsburg Dispatch.]
"Why are homely girls always the best scholars, the best workers, and make the best wives? This question was propounded by an observant and intelligent gentleman who has been twice led to the hymenical altar, and is ready to be sacrificed again.
Is such really the case?
"I have reason to know that it is. It is natural enough, isn't it! The girl who is handsome in feature and form concludes very early in life that these are her stock in trade, and with them she enters the matrimonial market. Nine times out of ten she is soon off the books and at the head of a house. Her homely sister has hardly entered her teens until she discovers she is made to stand aside for the pretty-faced girls. All that neatness of dress, elegance of manners, and proficiency in the arts of making one's self attractive she does, deliberately and for a purpose, perhaps, or possibly for no other reason than, Topsy-like, she grow that way."
"The characors are she does it solely for the purpose of compensating for her lack of physical beauty."
"My observations lead directly to the opposite conclusions," replied the intelligent observer. "There is among the great laws of nature one known as the law of compensation, and I am thoroughly convinced that to it the homely girl is indebted for the tastes and disposition that prompts her to make herself useful when she can not be ornamental."
"Then if you had the choice of two ladies, one beautiful and the other homely, you would take the homely one!"
"Experience and observation both teach me that would be the wise thing to do. The first impulse would naturally be to take the pretter of the two, but I would give the first impulse time to pass off, and act upon sober, second thought."
The old gentleman may be entirely right in this matter.
Bed-Room Furniture.
[Hodley's Lady Book.]
The furniture of a country bed-room should never be heavy. Exquisite suits of common pine, covered with cretonne or satteen, are now admired more than wood; but ash, oak or satin-wood are still the conventional materials. Draped dressing bureaux or "tables" are extremely pretty. They are merely pine structures covered with frills and flounces, and holding an upright mirror from which falls a sweep of effective drapery. A garniture of bows and even artificial flowers is permitted, but the latter are always in dubious taste, and better not tampered with. A bedstead of brass or nickel hung with white curtains, is a pretty addition to the room. The whim now is to stand the bed out from the wall toward the center of the room, so that it is accessible from all sides. This is an old custom. Old furniture can often be adapted to a sleeping apartment. A bed with a valence is quite an institution, and the old straight-backed chairs are perfectly adaptable. Worn-out chairs may be resetted, taking folded pieces of stout tickling, and working them into a basket pattern secured around the edges with tacks. A cushion of crutone supplied with a flounce half way up to the floor, is the proper finish.
A Good Word for Homely Girls.
[Pittsburg Dispatch.]
GIANT BAKING POWDER
Has No Equity Strongest, Purist, Best and Most Economical in the Market.
Never Varies In Quality. Recommended to Consumers by leading Physicians, Chemists and members of the San Francisco Board of Health.
PREPARED BY WISE MANUFACTURING COMPANY, SAN FRANCISCO AND SACRAMENTO.
WOOD BURY'S Business College!
310 N. Main St., near Pico House, LOS ANGELES, CA.
P. G. WOODBURY, Proprietor and Manager of Health Business College, San Francisco, for the past seventy years, has opened a First-class Business College Where Young Men and Ladies can acquire a Thorough, Practical Business Education.
For participation address:
P. G. WOODBURY & CO.
P. O. Box 1827, Los Angeles, Cal.
THIS PAPER NEW YORK
No sooner are the girls large enough to possess the requisite physical strength than they are set to the most servile work the land affords. The child has a pannier-basket fitted to her shoulders at the earliest possible moment, and she drops it only when old age, premature but merciful, robs her of power to carry it longer. I have seen sweet little girls, of 12 or 14, staggering down the mountain side, or along a rough pathway under the weight of bundles of fagots as large as their bodies, which they no sooner dropped than they hurried back for others.
I have seen girls of 15 or 16 years, bare-footed and bare-headed, in the blistering rays of an August sun, breaking up the ground by swinging mattocks heavy enough to tax the strength of an able-bodied man. And I have known a young miss no older than these to be employed as a porter for carrying the baggage of travelers up and down the steepest mountain path in all the region round about. She admitted that it was sometimes very hard to take another step, but yet she must do it. And she carried such an amount of baggage! A stout-limbed guide is protected by the law, so that he cannot be compelled to carry above twenty-five pounds, but the limit to the burden often put upon girls is their inability to stand up under anything more. But the burden increases with the age and strength of the burden-bearers, till, by the time girls have come to womanhood, there is no sort of mental toll in which they do not bear a hand—and quite commonly the chief hand.
Critical Periods in Girl Life.
[Phrenological Journal.]
As a child approaches maturity, the parent should try in every way to win their full confidence, especially in those little personal matters that young folks generally keep to themselves. They may feel sure of their love, but they want more than that; they should have their confidence and trust, full and unwavering.
Young girls standing
On the brink with trembling feet.
Where womanhood and childhood meet, have many new and perplexing emotions. They are swamped by impulse and fidgets they do not understand. Life is becoming a new revelation to them. There is no natural flexibility and abstraction at this moment.
Dont Strike with the Hand.
[Mrs. Negel in Phrenological Journal.]
Don’t strike a child with the hand; a little switch of ration is taken. The reason is philosophical use. The hand tells a good deal. It gives out of the delight of its heart.
new condition. They have and think of themismon. They talk their comparisons and compare how "hands to talk to matter," they can't speak to her; they are in a period in a girl's life. Mother does the wooing. Talk to their confidential way; tell them how their age; confess the mistakes and acknowledge the blunders. Mothers know that the mothers will are, human, and can sympathize little tribulations. The mother down to the daughter's level on an equality with her. In the heart and confidence of the weq, and the mother's fear, if any, are gone forever.
Poor German Girl.
[El Perkins.]
The girls in Germany outnumber the boys by several millions. This, and the fact that many men are too poor to marry, leaves about 5,000 women who have to remain single. The rich girls get married, but the poor ones stay single and are forced to shame or hard labor. In Munich no young man is permitted to marry until he has proved to the authorities that he is able to support a wife. If children are born and the parents cannot support them, the state holds the city authorities responsible for their maintenance. When an unmarried German woman becomes old and poor she is miserable indeed. She cannot starve, so she carries burdens in the street. Often she is hitched like a horse to a wagon, and does a beast's work. Happy indeed ought a young lady to feel when her good fate has permitted her to be born in America!
Brains for the Kitchen.
[Chicago News.]
The happiness of home life and worldly success are dependent in a large measure on what comes from the kitchen to the table to be eaten. Mental poise hinges on the physical condition, and a man's stomach can play the dickens with him, not to say anything of his liver. The subject of preparation of food and the creation of appetizing dishes is one which no housewife should deem beneath her consideration. It is quite possible to be well informed, cultivated, and accomplished, and also to give time enough to the requirements of the table to furnish it in such a manner that the most fastidious palate shall be satisfied and danger of dyspepsia and indigestion averted. Almost universally the women of brains and judgment cook better than those of untrained mental capacities.
Engagement Bracelets,
[American Queen.]
Engagement bracelets are more used than engagement rings. Some of them are very pretty, being set with diamonds, rubies and sapphires, and having the initials of the engaged pair engraved on the back of the lock. Chain bracelets are extensively worn, and are far more popular than bangles. Silver is preferred by a great many people to gold. It is more stylish and never looks shoddy.
THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN.
Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica,
London, Sudhaus, Hudsonla, Isolade,
Gene Thurmont, Brettlage, Spreadma, Bergen,
Burna, Denka, Prest Milow,
and All Other Monthly Pains And Cures.
THE CHASLES A VOGELEN CO.
Simmons S.A., F.C.B.L.
COOPERAGE
A LARGE QUANTITY OF
BARRELS, HALF BARRELS,
10 Gallon and 5 Gallon Kegs
For Sale Cheap.
Apply to
B. DREYFUS & CO. Anaheim
IT LEADS ALL.
No other blood-purifying medicine is made, or has ever been prepared, which so completely meets the wants of physicians and the general public as Ayer's Sarsaparilla.
It leads the list as a truly scientific preparation for all blood diseases. If there is a lurking taint of Scrofula about you, Ayer's Sarsaparilla will dislodge it and expel it from your system.
For constitutional or serofulous Catarrh, Ayer's Sarsaparilla is the true remedy. It has cured numberless cases. It will stop the nauseous catarrhal discharge, and remove the sickening odor of the breath, which are indications of serofulous origin.
"Hutto, Tex., Sept. 28, 1882."
At the age of two years one of my children was terribly afflicted with ulcerous running sores on its face and neck. At the same time its eyes
At a Woman Can Do.
Globe-Democrat.
Victoria's career is cited as an instant that keeps them white, cannot be
held, therefore one of the best means
the body of its perilous gases is
not imagined than described. Of
race and hands, if covered with
to keep them white, cannot be
held, therefore one of the best means
the body of its perilous gases is
not imagined than described. Of
race and hands, if covered with
to keep them white, cannot be
held, therefore one of the best means
the body of its perilous gases is
not imagined than described. Of
race and hands, if covered with
to keep them white, cannot be
held, therefore one of the best means
the body of its perilous gases is
not imagined than described. Of
race and hands, if covered with
to keep them white, cannot be
held, therefore one of the best means
the body of its perilous gases is
not imagined than described. Of
race and hands, if covered with
to keep them white, cannot be
held, therefore one of the best means
the body of its perilous gases is
not imagined than described. Of
race and hands, if covered with
to keep them white, cannot be
held, therefore one of the best means
the body of its perilous gases is
not imagined than described. Of
race and hands, if covered with
to keep them white, cannot be
held, therefore one of the best means
the body of its perilous gases is
not imagined than described. Of
race and hands, if covered with
to keep them white, cannot be
held, therefore one of the best means
the body of its perilous gases is
not imagined than described. Of
race and hands, if covered with
to keep them white, cannot be
held, therefore one of the best means
the body of its perilous gases is
not imagined than described. Of
race and hands, if covered with
to keep them white, cannot be
held, therefore one of the best means
the body of its perilous gases is
not imagined than described. Of
race and hands, if covered with
to keep them white, cannot be
held, therefore one of the best means
the body of its perilous gases is
not imagined than described. Of
race and hands, if covered with
to keep them white, cannot be
held, therefore one of the best means
the body of its perilous gases is
not imagined than described. Of
race and hands, if covered with
to keep them white, cannot be
held, therefore one of the best means
the body of its perilous gases is
not imagined than described. Of
race and hands, if covered with
to keep them white, cannot be
held, therefore one of the best means
the body of its perilous gases is
not imagined than described. Of
race and hands, if covered with
to keep them white, cannot be
held, therefore one of the best means
the body of its perilous gases is
not imagined than described. Of
race and hands, if covered with
to keep them white, cannot be
held, therefore one of the best means
the body of its perilous gases is
not imagined than described. Of
race and hands, if covered with
to keep them white, cannot be
held, therefore one of the best means
the body of its perilous gases is
not imagined than described. Of race and hands, if covered with to keep them white, cannot be held,
there is a morbid fancy for restillness in English society, and
produced by bismuth powder.
Haven been heretofore patched,
and stained with antimony, but
treated with bismuth. The results
or imagined than described. Of
race and hands, if covered with to keep them white, cannot be held,
there is a morbid fancy for restillness in English society, and produced by bismuth powder.
Haven been heretofore patched,
and stained with antimony, but treated with bismuth. The results
or imagined than described. Of race and hands, if covered with to keep them white, cannot be held,
there is a morbid fancy for restillness in English society, and produced by bismuth powder.
Haven been heretofore patched,
and stained with antimony, but treated with bismuth. The results
or imagined than described. Of race and hands, if covered with to keep them white, cannot be held,
there is a morbid fancy for restillness in English society, and produced by bismuth powder.
Haven been heretofore patched,
and stained with antimony, but treated with bismuth. The results
or imagined than described. Of race and hands, if covered with to keep them white, cannot be held,
there is a morbid fancy for restillness in English society, and produced by bismuth powder.
Haven been heretofore patched,
and stained with antimony, but treated with bismuth. The results
or imagined than described. Of race and hands, if covered with to keep them white, cannot be held,
there is a morbid fancy for restillness in English society, and produced by bismuth powder.
Haven been heretofore patched,
and stained with antimony, but treated with bismuth. The results
or imagined than described. Of race and hands, if covered with to keep them white, cannot be held,
there is a morbid fancy for restillness in English society, and produced by bismuth powder.
Haven been heretofore patched,
and stained with antimony, but treated with bismuth. The results
or imagined than described. Of race and hands, if covered with to keep them white, cannot be held,
there is a morbid fancy for restillness in English society, and produced by bismuth powder.
Haven been heretofore patched,
and stained with antimony, but treated with bismuth. The results
or imagined than described. Of race and hands, if covered with to keep them white, cannot be held,
there is a morbid fancy for restillness in English society, and produced by bismuth powder.
Haven been heretofore patched,
and stained with antimony, but treated with bismuth. The results
or imagined than described. Of race and hands, if covered with to keep them white, cannot be held,
there is a morbid fancy for restillness in English society, and produced by bismuth粉末.
Haven been heretofore patched,
and stained with antimony, but treated with bismuth粉末.
Haven been heretofore patched,
and stained with antimony, but treated with bismuth粉末.
For Grease Spots.
Philadelphia Call.
Dry buckwheat flour if repeatedly applied will entirely remove the worst grease spots on carpets or any other woolen cloth,and will answer as well as French chalk for grease spots on silk.
Stainless Carpet.
The staircase should always be carpeted at least with a narrow carpet running down the center,even if the stairs be of bandsome wool,xw-polished.The unyielding surface of the wood is very trying to the feet.
Be Cheery at Meals.
Be pleasant as meal times;if you cannot any hour in the day. It is a powerful aid to digestion to have the mind cheory and bright when taking our food.
Bangs are seldom seen now,the hair being brushed straight back from the forehead,and arranged in little "beau-catchers" over each temple.
Brown will be as fashionable for tailor-made dresses this fall.as grey was last spring.
Pink is to be the fashionable color for all evening dresses next winter.
Down From a Balloon.
New York.November 22d.-A Times' special from Enfala,Ala.,of November 21st,says:About 5,000 people were in attendance at the Fair now going on here to witness a ballon ascension by Miss Nellie L.Burche this afternoon.She is a pupil of Prof.J.N.Fisk and this was her second ascension,the first having been made at Marion,Ala.,last week.The spectators to-day knowing she was a novice,rent the air with cheers as the balloon reached an altitude of 2,000 feetwhen it began to ascend slowly,and soonwith a more rapid movement went onwardand downward toward a clump of trees.Whether Miss Burche lost her balance on the slender trapeze is not known,但 she was seen to fall from it when the balloon was near the ground and half a mile from the starting point.The balloon proceeded without her and people from all directions followed its course.The young woman was found.stalled from the shock,but arrange to say,nobones were broken.A physician was quickly in attendance and administered precisely to warts of physicians and the general public as
Ayer's Sarsaparilla.
It leads the list as a truly scientific preparation for all blood diseases.If there is a power to treat all types of Scrofula Ayer's Sarsaparilla will dislodge it and expel it from your system.
For constitutional or serotulous Catarrh CATARRH it has cured numberless cases.it will stop the nauseous catarrhal discharges,and remove the sickening odor of the breath which are indications of serotulous origin.
ULCEROUS "At the age of two years one of SORES my children was terribly afflicted with ulcerous running sores on its face and neck.At the same time its eyes were swollen,much inflamed,and very sore.SORE EYES performed alternative medicine must be employed They united in recommending Ayer's Sarsaparilla.A few doses produced a perceptible improvementwhichby an alteration to your direction was confirmed to a complete and permanent cure.No evidence has since appeared of the existence of any serotulous tendencies;and no treatment of any disorder was ever attended by more prompt or effectual results.Yours truly,B.F.JOHNSON.*
PREPARED BY Dr.J.C.Ayer & Co.,Lowell,Mass.Sold by all Druggists;$1,six bottles for $5.
For Sale.
Fine Spanish Merino Rams.Apply to N.H.MITCHELL.at the shion Livery Stable,Anaheim.DOUGLA W ALKER
BANK OF ANAHEIM.CAPITAL STOCK,$100,000.OO.PLEZ JAMES...President.G.B.SHAFFER...Secretary
BOARD OF DIRECTORS:
E.F.F SPENCE.W.H.MABURY.W.K.JAMES,S.H.MOTT,P.JAMES.
This Bank receives Deposits,Loans Money,Buys and Sells Exchange and Currency,makes Collections and transacts a General Banking Business.
CORESPONDENTS.
First National Bank,Los Angeles,Farmers and Merchants Bank.Los Angeles,Pacific BankSan Francisco.First National BankNew York.
DRAFER,LETTERS OF CREDIT OR POSTAL orders issued on Banks in the principal cities in all European countries.
It seems like dragging heart-shaped, rustic grandmother out of the chair, and dropping the dear old glaze and revelry of a fast banquet. Beautiful as the ever-crowned stalk may look surreal, a glittering forest of crystal should never be taken from the tower of the garden it becomes so rare as a dinner decoration.
For Buckwheat-Blossoms. [New York Letter.] It is just in fine blossom all over about now," said the florist, "and at spring-places you will see quantitatively bouquets and other pieces. It and very poetical, to be sure, but one of the prettiest you would sing time, and it is almost as fragrantette. It was first introduced at where it was hailed with joy, people didn't know what it was,ISTS gave it a fanciful name. It beautifully with heliotrope or especially with pink roses, not fall to pieces like spirea. See, water," and he took up a bunch of its growing somewhat like bellobout the same shape. The stems came red and the blossoms white, centers. The fragrance was delicate"It looks pretty by itself, too. I am to send this huge bouquet of itello now at Saratoga for a hop.I with pale pink ribbon and putthe edge."
Washing the Face. [Herbert in The Household.] Is some who object to washing the especially with soap, thinking away to the complication. But those made a specialty of skin diseases of the body needs soup so much; then being constantly exposed to so much it is not enough to clear water. They say if soap face shiny, as so many claim, it that it is the more needed, and work of drying after the bath has properly performed! The face, should not be wet immediately before going out. Its most thorough could be performed at night, bed, and bed, and the following method observed in the process: rinse with soft, warm water; lather mince sponge with good soap, and face carefully. Then take fresh bout soap, and wash again with and rub thoroughly with a Turkish towel until the face is dry and This will do much toward improving the complication; and theations, black spots, called "Hash will usually disappear after a time, worsened in."
A Strike with the Mouth. [Legend in Therapeutical Journal.] Like a child with the hand; a little irritation is better. The reason is real use. The hand with a peeled out of the dentures of the mouth is in the middle based on dishes. It seems like dragging heart-shaped, rustic grandmother out of the chair, and dropping the dear old glaze and revelry of a fast banquet. Beautiful as the ever-crowned stalk may look surreal, a glittering forest of crystal should never be taken from the tower of the garden it becomes so rare as a dinner decoration.
For Buckwheat-Blossoms. [New York Letter.] It is just in fine blossom all over about now," said the florist, "and at spring-places you will see quantitatively bouquets and other pieces. It and very poetical, to be sure, but one of the prettiest you would sing time, and it is almost as fragrantette. It was first introduced at where it was hailed with joy, people didn't know what it was,ISTS gave it a fanciful name. It beautifully with heliotrope or especially with pink roses, not fall to pieces like spirea. See, water," and he took up a bunch of its growing somewhat like bellobout the same shape. The stems came red and the blossoms white, centers. The fragrance was delicate"It looks pretty by itself, too. I am to send this huge bouquet of itello now at Saratoga for a hop.I with pale pink ribbon and putthe edge."
Washing the Face. [Herbert in The Household.] Is some who object to washing the especially with soap, thinking away to the complication. But those made a specialty of skin diseases of the body needs soup so much; then being constantly exposed to so much it is not enough to clear water. They say if soap face shiny, as so many claim, it that it is the more needed, and work of drying after the bath has properly performed! The face, should not be wet immediately before going out. Its most thorough could be performed at night, bed, and bed, and the following method observed in the process: rinse with soft, warm water; lather mince sponge with good soap, and face carefully. Then take fresh bout soap, and wash again with and rub thoroughly with a Turkish towel until the face is dry and This will do much toward improving the complication; and theations, black spots, called "Hash will usually disappear after a time, worsened in."
A Strike with the Mouth. [Legend in Therapeutical Journal.] Like a child with the hand; a little irritation is better. The reason is real use. The hand with a peeled out of the dentures of the mouth is in the middle based on dishes. It seems like dragging heart-shaped, rustic grandmother out of the chair, and dropping the dear old glaze and revelry of a fast banquet. Beautiful as the ever-crowned stalk may look surreal, a glittering forest of crystal should never be taken from the tower of the garden it becomes so rare as a dinner decoration.
For Buckwheat-Blossoms. [New York Letter.] It is just in fine blossom all over about now," said the florist, "and at spring-places you will see quantitatively bouquets and other pieces. It and very poetical, to be sure, but one of the prettiest you would sing time, and it is almost as fragrantette. It was first introduced at where it was hailed with joy, people didn't know what it was,ISTS gave it a fanciful name. It beautifully with heliotrope or especially with pink roses, not fall to pieces like spirea. See, water," and he took up a bunch of its growing somewhat like bellobout the same shape. The stems came red and the blossoms white, centers. The fragrance was delicate"It looks pretty by itself, too. I am to send this huge bouquet of itello now at Saratoga for a hop.I with pale pink ribbon and putthe edge."
1885.
Harper's Magazine.
ILLUSTRATED.
With the new volume, beginning in September, Harper's Magazine will include Saturday daily news. The oldest periodical of its type is now to hold new volume, a new magazine, and Sunday. Harper's presents fresh articles and new graphics, but also and closely examines in steadily advancing the method itself of magazine-making. In a week, the Harper business men and more the added number of one set life and to commute. Leading fictions in the adjacent programmes for 1885 now earn social awards by Governors Pressmen Women and W. D. Howe; a new novel entitled "At the End, Glory" descriptive illustrated papers by F. D. Howe, R. Puzey Garrison, K. A. Amur, Nl. Gunn, and others; Gibbons's "The Europe to Compass," illustrated by Amur; important papers on Art, Science, etc.
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1885.
Harper's Bazar.
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1885.
Harper's Weekly.
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Harper's Weekly has now, for twenty years, maintained its position as the leading illustrated weekly newspaper in America. With a constant increase of literary and artistic resources, it is able to offer for the ensuing year attractions unequalled by any previous volume, embracing a capital illustrated series by W.R. Noyans, illustrated articles with special prefaces to the West and South, and closing the World's Exposition at New Orleans; entertaining short stories, mostly illustrated, and important papers by high authorities on the chief topics of the day.
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1885.
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1885.
Harper's Young People.
An Illustrated Weekly.
The serial and short stories in Harper's Young People have all the dramatic interest that juvenile fiction can possess, while they are wholly free from what is pernulous or vulgarly sensational. The humorous stories and pictures are full of innocent fun, and the papers on natural history and science travel, and the facts of life, are by writers whose names give the best assurance of accuracy and value. Illustrated papers on athletic sports, grimes and pastimes get full information on these subjects. There is nothing cheap about it but its price.
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