anaheim-gazette 1884-12-20
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WEEKLY GAZETTE.
Published every Saturday.
Richard Melrose,
EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.
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W.H. MASSEY, M.D., D.D.S. D.R. WILDER, D.D.S.
MASSER & WILDER,
DENTISTS.
WE RESPECTFULLY ANNOUNCES TO YOU
the one of us will visit your place on the fifth of every month to attend to any dental work that you may wish to have done. If leaving your orders at the Ambulance 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 tooth without a plate and place gold crowns on roots and decayed teeth by a new patient process.
We extract teeth without pain by the use of vitalized air.
Owing 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. MASSEY & WILDER.
HOSTETTER'S CELEBRATED
STOMACH BITTERS
ELECTRIFIED.
Danger to the Time-Pieces of Visitors to the Electrical Exhibition.
Watches Magnetized When Wrought Too Near the Dynamometer—Dynamometric Time-Piece of Modify Electricity.
[Philadelphia Times.]
Behind the counter of an unpretentious little watch-requiring shop, situated nearly opposite the main entrance to the International Electrical Exhibition building hangs this sign:
EWARE OF THE DYNAMOS.
Watches of visitors to the Electrical Exhibition checked and taken care of.
"D-y-n-a-m-o-s, that must be a new name they have got for pickpockets," said a young fellow, who spelled the word for his companions.
As the reporter crossed the threshold the watchmaker looked up from his work.
"How do you do? I merely wished to inquire about the sign."
"The sign; yes, everybody seems to think it strange, but just wait until the exhibition opens, after the great electrical machines get in running order, then you will see the people coming in here to leave their watches after the first experience."
"Of what?"
"Why, the effect of an atmosphere surcharged with electricity acting upon the delicately adjusted steel parts of a watch. Those parts become magnetized charged with electricity. Simply standing beside one of those powerful machines is sufficient to magnetize a delicately adjusted time-piece. Have you never seen a magnetized watch. Here is one I allow to remain so for the purpose of showing skeptics. Wait a moment until I wind it up."
"It's an old Swiss movement that belonged to a young man who worked in one of the electric light and power companies down town. He came in here about two months ago to have the watch put in order. He supposed it merely wanted overhauling and cleaning. It had run down, so I wound it up and examined the movement. In a minute I knew what was the matter. I said to him: 'You work in some place where there is a great deal of electricity, don't you?' 'Oh, yes,' he answered, 'I work at the Electric Light & Power company's place.' So I told him that the watch was magnetized. He bought another one of me and I took his in trade.
"There, now, just notice these two springs; see how the coils strike and quiver. Every pinion in that watch is magnetized. Look at that pinion cap through the magnifier; see how it tembles. The watch may run ten hours all right, then stop for two or three hours and go on, or it may stop a dozen times in an hour. In fact a magnetized watch acts as if it were bewitched. In fact people have declared to me that their watches were bewitched. I laugh at the notion and demagnetize the affected parts. Then they think I practice the black art."
"You remember the electrical exhibit in Paris in 1881 and '82? Well, it was then that horologist took cognizance of the to them."
THE FLYING MACHINE.
A French inventor's Successful Aerial Navigation.
A memorable Event—The Problem But Not Solved—Difficulties in the Way—Electricity the Motive Power.
[New York Tribune.]
The report of M. Herve Mangen to the French academy describing a successful attempt to navigate the air, certainly, if the facts are stated, records a memorable event. A later dispatch states that the machine which was the subject of experiment at Mendenhall is cigar-shaped, with a short apparatus, and that the force is derived from a series of electric accumulators. M. Massen asserts that this machine moved cautiously to the belim against the wind and was successfully turned round and brought back to the place of starting.
If this is correct the new flying machine has accomplished more than any of its immensely predaciousness, though it by no means follows that its inventor has solved the hard problem of aerial navigation. No doubt false analogy between water and air navigation has greatly retarded progress in this line. Really there is no analogy, or but little, between the two. The ship floats on one find and is propelled by another. The flying machine is immersed wholly in fluid it is to navigate. The difference arising from dealing in the one case with an elastic and in the other with a melastic fluid, also has much to do with difficulties that have been encountered. No better model than that of the bird can probably be found; but we do not know enough about the motion of the bird's wings as yet to master the problem. Lightness and power are the desiderate, and it is very hard to bring them together as they are combined in the slender, hollow but strong frame and bones of the bird. It is however clear that as a motive power electricity possesses advantages over steam, and it may be predicted with safety that if aerial navigation ever is attained it will be through the aid of that force.
It appears that the Meudon machine can only run four hours. It is, therefore, only toy at present, and it remains uncertain whether a machine capable of carrying sufficient stored electricity for a reasonable voyage could be made to work. Nor can a single experiment, perhaps made under exceptionally favorable atmospheric conditions, decide the question of the steering affirmatively. Flotation and direction are equally involved in aeronautics, yet they are constantly clashing. To obtain sufficient flotation a superficial area is required which renders the task of direction doubly difficult. The cigar-shaped balloon has been tried before, moreover, and not successfully. The physical difficulties of the problem in fact are so great that it will need prolonged experiment under the most various atmospheric conditions to demonstrate its successful solution, even if what is now alleged should prove to be in no respect exaggerated or over-estimated.
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Power company's place.' So I told him that the watch was magnetized. He bought another one of me and I took his in trade.
"There, now, just notice those two springs; see how the coils strike and quiver. Every pinion in that watch is magnetized. Look at that pinion cap through the magnifier; see how it tembles. The watch may run ten hours all right, then stop for two or three hours and go on, or it may stop a dozen times in an hour. In fact a magnetized watch acts as if it were bewitched. In fact people have declared to me that their watches were bewitched. I laugh at the notion and demagnetize the affected part. Then they think I practice the black art.
"You remember the electrical exhibit in Paris in 1891 and 1892? Well, it was then that horologists took cognizance of the to them starting fact that watches were affected by electrical currents. Watchmakers there for a time were completely puzzled at the erratic actions of the time-pieces brought them for repair. At length a bright young fellow named La Force discovered the cause, and almost made a fortune demagnetizing watches. He charged a high price for his work, for he kept his knowledge to himself."
"Magnetized watches ob, yes; we now and then have them brought to us for treatment," said an expert watch repairer in the establishment at Seventh and Chestnut streets. "I had a case of that kind only a short time ago. A gentleman brought me a valuable chronometer balance watch. It had 'fits,' as he expressed it. The watch would stop for twenty or thirty minutes, then go on as well as ever, then stop again, and soon. It was not a very bad case of magnetism; he had only been in the habit of visiting the electric light works on Arch street and standing by the machine. I denmagnetized his watch in forty-eight hours by using the English garlic juice remedy, but it is very slow work. Three or four days are usually required to demagnetize a serious case. It is very common to have watches affected during a display of aurora borealis. Some very curious things concerning watches come under a watchmaker's observation at times. I remember lady who used to bring me her watch sometimes as often as once a week; it was either too fast or two slow with her; while it hung up in the shop it ran as steady as the state house clock. I studied that watch and one day I came across something in an English horological magazine that opened my eyes. It was simply a little item saying that sometimes delicately adjusted watches were affected by the temperament of their wearers.
"The whole thing flashed upon me in a moment. The woman's watch was affected by herself. I found out that she was of a highly nervous temperament, but would at times suffer from attacks of despondency. The watch only recorded her temperament. When she was vivacious it went fast, when she was in a low mood it went slow. Very often it is impossible to regulate a watch for some men by keeping the timepiece in the shop. There is some physical peculiarity about the man; it may be his guilt, his temperament or an excess of bodily electricity. In these cases I let the man wear the watch continually and then repulate it to his peculiaries.
"Bodily electricity is very marked in certain persons. I know a young watchmaker in whom it became so strong that he was obligated to give up that branch of the trade, because it was found that he magnetized the delicate hair-springs."
A Parliamentarian.
[Arkansaw Traveler.] The negro chairman of a convention which recently met in Little Rock, rendered an important decision. During a clamor for recognition, the chairman said:
"Let de cheer—let da cheer rule on dat pint. De cheer rules dat de two gennermain kain' talk at de same time. One gennerman mus' talk an' airer he gits dun, de udder gennerman he ken talk."
"Whisk got do foe' demanded a delegate."
Power company's place.' So I told him that the watch was magnetized. He bought another one of me and I took his in trade.
"There, now, just notice those two springs; see how the coils strike and quiver. Every pinion in that watch is magnetized. Look at that pinion cap through the magnifier; see how it tembles. The watch may run ten hours all right, then stop for two or three hours and go on, or it may stop a dozen times in an hour. In fact a magnetized watch acts as if it were bewitched. In fact people have declared to me that their watches were bewitched. I laugh at the notion and demagnetize the affected part. Then they think I practice the black art.
"You remember the electrical exhibition in Paris in 1891 and 1892? Well, it was then that horologists took cognizance of the to them starting fact that watches were affected by electrical currents. Watchmakers there for a time were completely puzzled at the erratic actions of the time-pieces brought them for repair. At length a bright young fellow named La Force discovered the cause, and almost made a fortune demagnetizing watches. He charged a high price for his work, for he kept his knowledge to himself."
"Magnetized watches ob, yes; we now and then have them brought to us for treatment," said an expert watch repairer in the establishment at Seventh and Chestnut streets. "I had a case of that kind only a short time ago. A gentleman brought me a valuable chronometer balance watch. It had 'fits,' as he expressed it. The watch would stop for twenty or thirty minutes, then go on as well as ever, then stop again, and soon. It was not a very bad case of magnetism; he had only been in the habit of visiting the electric light works on Arch street and standing by the machine. I denmagnetized his watch in forty-eight hours by using the English garlic juice remedy, but it is very slow work. Three or four days are usually required to demagnetize a serious case. It is very common to have watches affected during a display of aurora borealis. Some very curious things concerning watches come under a watchmaker's observation at times. I remember lady who used to bring me her watch sometimes as often as once a week; it was either too fast or two slow with her; while it hung up in the shop it ran as steady as the state house clock. I studied that watch and one day I came across something in an English horological magazine that opened my eyes. It was simply a little item saying that sometimes delicately adjusted watches were affected by the temperament of their wearers.
"The whole thing flashed upon me in a moment. The woman's watch was affected by herself. I found out that she was of a highly nervous temperament, but would at times suffer from attacks of despondency. The watch only recorded her temperament. When she was vivacious it went fast, when she was in a low mood it went slow. Very often it is impossible to regulate a watch for some men by keeping the timepiece in the shop. There is some physical peculiarity about the man; it may be his guilt, his temperament or an excess of bodily electricity. In these cases I let the man wear the watch continually and then repulate it to his peculiaries."
"Bodily electricity is very marked in certain persons. I know a young watchmaker in whom it became so strong that he was obligated to give up that branch of the trade, because it was found that he magnetized the delicate hair-springs."
A Peep at Whistler's Exhibition.
["H.H.A." London Letter.] Next to the Grovesn gallery on Bon街站 on the left is Du Maurier exposition; on the other side is the Whistler exibition, or, as it is called by the artist," An Arrangement in Pink and Gray." We were received at the door by a harmless and etheral looking youth, clad from top to bottom in pink and gray—a modest youth, with-also to whom we offered our admission fee in deadly fear lest he prove superior to earthy dress and bid us begone for the wild clay ware, but he did not—no, we took our little shilling; i hurt him, one could see that, still he took it but instantly dropping into a pink box convenient to his pink-gloved hand, be turned his pink—no, I would say his gray—eyes upon us and led us into the inner circle, the holy of holies, not to be profane," the arrangement in pink and gray."
I was quite prepared to take off my shoes or perform any other little act of reverence before entering upon this mystery, and have not yet recovered from a feeling that we were not sufficiently prepared for this high festival-day. I had wrought myself up to believe we were about to get a new sensation, What we did receive was a very old one—a disappointment. There's nothing partial new or elevating in that; is there! The gray curtains having been cautiously drawn our eyes beheld a small square room, light from a shaft above, the walls covered with pink flannels, stretched on like paper; the dado of light gray paint, with an occasional line of pink; the mantle draped in gray velvet, with but one spot of color on it, and that a sort of dissipated-looking bat, with a tiny crisscent above it—this in pink-gray carpet, pink chairs,and on the walls one above the other, perhaps fifty little—well.I won't insult the artist by calling them pictures! He doesn't tell Mr. Whistler intends to represent.I may be far behind the age in art,但 a picture never had much merit to me unless it expressed something,and I don't like a snow scene,ffor example,当我 find out bythe catalogueit isthe "Grand Canal in Amsterdam."
Whom the Governor Receives.
[A Arkansas Traveler.] A gentleman who has business with the governor of Arkansas enters the state house,and is not by the negro porter:
"I wish to see the governor!"
"Yes,sah; business particular!"
"Well,那's neither here nor there.I wish to see him."
"In colse,sah!in colse.Does yer want ter compirementmenthisministrationbeaunt'tgear,bettingtergetparon furer evil pusson,his is.Nowwhichoneisitshalf?"
"Ihave to tell himthatthepeopleoftheBear WallowdistricthaveinducedhimforexamplewhenIfindoutbythecatalogueitisthe"Grand CanalinAmsterdam."
A Parliamentarian.
[Arkansas Traveler.]
The negro chairman of a convention which recently met in Little Rock, rendered an important decision. During a clamor for recognition, the chairman said:
"Let de cheer—let de cheer rule on dat p'int. De cheer rules dat de two gennermen kain't talk at de same time. One gennerman mus't talk an' airter he gits dun, de udder gennerman he ken talk."
"Who's got de flo'?" demanded a delegate.
"Nebar mine, who's got de flo'." Keep on or axin' yer unpovermenty questions an' yerself'll hab de flo'—hab all o' hit dat yer kin kiver. I takes dis heath mefod fur ter 'nounce myself'd nominee fur county judge. All in faber o' de measure will make it known by sayin' I, an' dose opposed will please gin up dar seats ter passur what's got more sense. Do 'I've' hab it."
It Must Have Been the Door.
[Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph.]
"Has gone, dear!" Yes, Grandma."
"And what was that sound in the hall, Jessie?" "Why, it must have been the door shutting, grandma." "Your grandma may be old and deaf, Jessie, but doore did not shut with a sound like that when she was a girl." "Did the man wear mustaches than, grandma!" "No, my dear." "Well, that makes the difference probably."
A Masonic Convention
Boston, December 13.—A Masonic Convention has been held during the past week of all Masons in the United States of America, having taken the nineteenth degree or the ninety-fifth degree of either the rites Memphis or Mizraim, the thirtieth degree or thirty-fifth degree of the Ancient and Primitive Rite, no matter when or from whom or under what jurisdiction, for the purpose of considering the advisability of establishing a union Sovereign Sanctuary, embracing all the mysteries of the above-named rites, from the fourth to the seventy-sixth degrees inclusive, to be known as the Sovereign Sanctuary of the Royal Masonic Rite for the United States of America. The body organized with Judge Isaac H. Parish of Michigan as Most Illustrious Past Grand Master.
"Have you cornet?" blandly asked the corn-master pandler at the bury man's elbow.
"Yes, I am supplied," murmured the bury man without looking up.
Whom the Governor Receives.
[Arkansas Traveler.]
A gentleman who has business with the governor of Arkansas enters the state house, and is met by the negro porter:
"I wish to see the governor!"
"Yas, sah; business particular?"
"Well, that's neither here nor there. I wish to see him."
In coose, sah! in coose. Does yer want ter see him bad! Hol' on, sah. If yer wants ter-compperment his 'ministration he ain't gagged, but if yer wants ter get'er parlon fur er evil passion, he is. Now, which one is it, sah?"
"I have to tell him that the people of the Bear Wallow district have indorsed him for the United States senate."
"Den he'll be mighty pleased ter see yer, sah. Walk right in. Twenty-five cents would he'd cause. Thankee, sah."
Naming the Offender.
[Chronicle "Undertones."]
The Bobemian club, at its last high jinks in the redwoods, unveiled a plaster status of St. John of Nepomucus, the patron saint of the club. It seems that some religious body holding a camp meeting there shortly after objected to the cross and the halo and then ruthlessly off. They were replaced this year, but the story was very excitedly told by a gentleman who has charge of the grounds.
"It was mercilessly sir. I said no. I told them it was an outrage. And it was at the instigation of a man—well, I have no hesitation in naming him—Smith."
Vitality of Mormonism.
New York, December 13th.—Bishop John Sharp of Utah is now here. He said on being interviewed: "The Edmunds bill will make matters worse. Hoar's proposition will also be a failure. The trustees could never manage Utah, because they know nothing about its affairs, and the Mormon would not take the trouble to enlighten them. I wonder how New York Prebysarians would like it if a Board of Mormon Trustees should undertake to run their church government for them? They would be easily to object pretty handily. This whole agitation is unwise. The more we are persecuted the greater or will be the growth of Mormonism, and the more the temporal interest of Utah will suffer. The latter is something that Uncle Sam will real in his pocket. It is hard been for persecution the Christian religion would never have been what it is in memory of strength. It is in the same with Mormonism increase its vitality."
PLYING MACHINE.
Inventor's Successful Aircraft at Aerial Navigation.
Arable Event—The Problem Solved—Difficulties in New Way—Electricity the Motive Power.
[New York Tribune.]
Part of M. Harve Mangen to the academy describing a successful attempt to navigate the air, certainly. If the subject of experiments is cigar-shaped, with a steering and that the force is derived from electric accumulators. M. Manzani that this machine moved easily to the belim against the wind successfully turned round and back to the place of starting.
It corrects the new flying machine finished more than any of its humiddecessors, though it by no means its inventor has solved the hard material navigation. No doubt the key between water and air navigates greatly retarded progress in this way there is no analogy, or but little else. The ship floats on one is propelled by another. The machine is immured wholly in the air to navigate. The difference from dealing in the one case plastic and in the other with an oil, also has much to do with the fact that have been encountered. No real than that of the bird can probound, but we do not know enough motion of the bird's wings as yet one problem. Lightness and power considerata, and it is very hard to together as they are combined in hollow but strong frame and bird. It is however clear that power electricity possesses many over steam, and it may be prefamely that if aerial navigation fitted it will be through the aid of machines that the Mendon machine can run hours. It is, therefore, only a moment, and it remains uncertain whether a machine capable of carrying stored electricity for a reason could be made to work. Nor can periment, perhaps made under ex-favorable atmospheric conditions, question of the steering affirmation and direction are equally aeronautics, yet they are confusing. To obtain sufficient flotacritical area is required which trait of direction doubly difficult, impeded balloon has been tried ever, and not successfully. The peculiarities of the problem in fact that it will need prolonged ex-derer the most various atmospheric conditions demonstrate its successful solution what is now alleged should be in no respect exaggerated or used.
SURVIVING MINIQUELANT.
The Tanner or Varnishman—Pud Tyndall suggests that just as the soil may be so effectively mixed of some essential ingredient by one abundant crop as to be incapable of producing another, so in the human expents a parallels district may no completely exhaust the blood of some ingredient necessary to the growth and propagation of the parasite, that the production of a second crayfish is fatal or considerable quantity may be impossible. It would thus appear that protective vaccination or inoculation is simply the introduction into the blood of washnad and comparatively harmless disease germs to consume the material which might become food for similar germs in a more vigorous and dangerous condition.
WIND WORK.—A gale at east St. Louis in 1871, according to Mr. C. Shaler Smith, overturned a locomotive, exerting a force of no less than 93 pounds per square foot. At St. Charles a jail was destroyed in 1877, the pressure required being 84 pounds per square foot. At Marshfield, in 1880, a brick mansion was leveled, the force necessary being 58 pounds per square foot. Below these extraordinary pressures, Mr. Smith has instanced numerous cases of traina blown off rails and bridges, etc. blown down by gales of 24 to 31 pounds per square foot.
GREAT WORMS.—According to Mr. P. E. Baddard, a London zoologist, earthworms two feet in length have been found in the British Isles, and various species as large or larger are known to exist in South America, Western Africa, Australia and New Zealand. The largest species known, however, nihabits South Africa. Forty years ago a specimen was described which measured six feet two inches in length; but it seems to have been nearly forgotten until the other day, when a gigantic creature of the same species was sent to the London Zoological Gardens from Cape Colony. The longest measurement of this worm yet taken reaches six feet five inches; its diameter being nearly half an inch.
MONEY VEGETATION.—A short time since Paul Reinsch discovered several kinds of minute plants, including two algae which had before been unknown, growing upon coins after having been long enough in circulation to receive thin incrustations of organic matter. A Hungarian botanist, Jules Schaarschmidt, has more recently found the microscopic growths upon paper money, even the cleanest specimens not being free from them. He has detected seven species, including although they are rare, the two new algae described by Rainsch.
PICTURES OF SOUND.—Some remarkable
MONEY VEGETATION.—A short time since Paul Reinsch discovered several kinds of minute plants, including two algae which had before been unknown, growing upon coins after having been long enough in circulation to receive thin incrustations of organic matter. A Hungarian botanist, Jules Schaar-schmidt, has more recently found the microscopic growths upon paper money, even the cleanest specimens not being free from them. He has detected seven species, including, although they are rare, the two new algae described by Reinsch.
PICTURES OF SOUND.—Some remarkable photographs of a pistol bullet in its flight, under the illumination of an electric spark, have been secured by Prof. E. Mach, of Prague. He has also photographed the air streams which one may see over a Bunsen burner placed in sunshine; and has even obtained pictures of waves of sound, these last being made visible by a method in which advantage is taken of the irregular refraction of light by air set in vibration by sound.
A French astronomer has found reasons for believing that a circular protuberance, presumably a volcano, which exists in the southern hemisphere of Venus, has an elevation of not less than seventy miles. He regards such a vast mountain as not incompatible with the planet's volcanic nature.
Successful experiments in distributing the electric light to great distances have been made in connection with the Turin Electrical Exhibition. A Siemens machine of 30 horse-power generated a current which was simultaneously used by several electric light systems spread over a circuit of about 25 miles.
A motor driven by small charges of gun-cotton is an English novelty. It is said to be applicable wherever small powers are required.
A German botanist has given instances of the modification of plants by insects so as to produce new varieties.
The Sun's Supply.
[Professor Langley in December Century.]
How is this heat maintained? Not by the miracle of a perpetual self-sustained flame we may be sure. But, then, by what fuel is such a fire felt? There can be no question of simple burning, like that of coal in the grate, for there is no source of supply adequate to the demand. The State of Pennsylvania, for instance, is underlaid by one of the richest coal fields of the world, capable of supplying the consumption of the whole country at its present rate for more than a thousand years to come. If the source of the solar heat (whatever that is) were withdrawn, and we were enabled to carry this coal there and shoot it into the solar furnace fast enough to keep up the known heat supply, so that the solar radiation would go on at just its actual rate, the time thus coal would last is easily calculable. It would not last days or hours, but the whole of these coal beds would demonstrably be used up in less than one one-thousand of a second! We find by a similar calculation that if the sun were itself one solid block of coal it would have burned out to the last.
For Sale.
Fine Spanish Merino Rams.
Apply to N. H. MITCHELL, at the Fashion Livery Stable, Anaheim.
DOUGLAS WALKER.
BANK OF ANAHEIM.
CAPITAL STOCK,
$100,000.00.
PLEZJ AMES....PRESIDENT
G. B. SHAFFER....SECRETARY
BOARD OF DIRECTORS:
E. 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.
CORRESPONDENTS.
First National Bank, Los Angeles. Farmers and Merchant's Bank, Los Angeles Pacific Bank, San Francisco. First National Bank New York.
DRAFTS, LETTERIES OF CREDIT OR POSTAL orders issued on Banks in the principal cities in all European countries.
Tickets entitling the holder to passage from New York to the several ports of England, France or Germany, or from any port in those countries to New York, via the Hamburg American Packet Company sold at regular rates. Return tickets at a reduction.
Certificates entitling the holder to passage on
FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF Los Angeles.
A cement that will attach labels to metals can be made by taking ten parts of gum traganth muxilage, ten parts of honey, and one part of flour.
A Complete Medical Work for Women handensely bound in cloth and illustrated tells how to prevent and cure all diseases of the heart, by a treatment at home. Worth its weight in gold to every lady suffering from any of these diseases. Over 10,000 sold already. Postal rate or East Hampshire. Address Mennah Puntman Co., Nada, N.Y.
FIRE Insurance Agency.
I beg to inform the citizens of this vicinity that I am agent for the following first-class Fire Insurance Companies:
GIRARD, of Philadelphia
AGRICULTURAL, of Watertown
SCOTTISH UNION AND NATIONAL
HARTFORD, of Hartford
TEUTONIA, of New Orleans
NEW ORLEANS, of New Orleans
FIRE INSURANCE ASSOCIATION of London, England.
COMMERCIAL UNION, of London, Capital $12,500,000
ITY OF LONDON, Capital $10,000,000
OUTH BRITISH AND NATIONAL,
Harper's Magazine,
ILLUSTRATED.
With the new editions, including in American Harper's Magazine full content and illustrations from the earliest publication of its type. It is yet, no more widely known than any other edition, because it contains both articles and new pictures, but also and slightly less directly relevant to the method used in magazine publishing. In a word, the Magazine has been and since the political nature of content life and purpose. Loading further elaboration on this theme for future use, new social needs by Congressmen Woman and W. J. B. Mason; a most novel article "As the First Glory" contemplates Disabled papers by F. D. Munson, R. Stewart Gorman, R. A. Archer, K. Gunner, and others (Discussed in "The Manage to Compete." Illustrated by Amary, Important papers on fire, Delaware, etc.
HARPER'S PERIODICALS.
For Years:
HARPER'S MAGAZINE.....$8.00
HARPER'S WEEKLY.....4.00
HARPER'S BAZAR.....4.00
HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE.....2.00
HARPER'S FRANKLIN SQUARE LIBRARY,
One Year ($2 Numbers).....10.00
Postage Free to all subscribers in the United States or Canada.
The volumes of the Magazine begin with the Number for June and December of each year. When no time is specified, it will be understood that the subscriber wishes to commence with the current Number.
The last eleventh annual Volume of Harper's Magazine is now cloth binding, will be sent by mail postpaid, on receipt of $2.00 per volume. Cloth Ones, for binding, 50 cents each—by mail postpaid.
Index to Harper's Magazine: Alphabetical, Analytical and Classified, for Volumes 1 to 60; Instructions from June, 1530, to June, 1830, one vol., free; Cloth, $4.00.
Remittances should be made by Post-Office Money Order or Draft, to avoid chance of loss.
New impeters are not to enjoy this advertisement without the express offer of Harper & Bazara.
Address: HARPER & BZARDERS, New York.
1895.
Harper's Bazar.
ILLUSTRATED.
Harper's Bazar is the only paper in the world that embines the choicest literature and the finest art illustrations with the latest fashion and methods of how should adornment. Its weekly illustrations and descriptions of the newest Paris and New York styles, with its useful pattern-the-supplement and cut patterns, by enabling indices to be their own dressmakers, save many times the cost of subscription. Its papers on cooking, the management of servants, and housekeeping in its various details are eminently practical. Much attention is given to the interesting topic of social etiquette, and its illustrations of art needle-work are acknowledged to be unequalled. Its literary merit is of the highest excellence, and the unique character of its humorous pictures has won for it the name of the American Punch.
HARPER'S PERIODICALS.
For Years:
HARPER'S BAZAR.....$8.00
HARPER'S MAGAZINE.....4.00
HARPER'S WEEKLY.....4.00
HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE.....2.00
HARPER'S FRANKLIN SQUARE LIBRARY,
One Year ($2 Numbers).....10.00
Postage Free to all subscribers in the United States or Canada.
The volumes of the Bazar begin with the first Number for January of each year. When no time is mentioned, it will be understood that the subscriber wishes to commence with the Number next after the receipt of color.
PRINTING.
TEUTONIA, of New Orleans
NEW ORLEANS, of New Orleans
FIRE INSURANCE ASSOCIATION
of London, England.
COMMERCIAL UNION, of London,
Capital $12,500,000
ITY OF LONDON, Capital $10,000,000
SOUTH BRITISH AND NATIONAL,
Capital $10,000,000
GERMAN AMERICAN, of New York.
MANUFACTURERS of Boston.
All of the above named Companies are staunch and reliable, and insurers can have their choice of Companies.
Richard Melrose,
Dr. SANFORD'S LIVER
HARPER'S PERIODICALS.
For Years:
HARPER'S BAZAR.....$6 00
HARPER'S MAGAZINE.....4 00
HARPER'S WEEKLY.....4 00
HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE.....2 00
HARPER'S FRANKLIN SQUARE LIBRARY,
One Year (52 Numbers).....10 00
Postage Free to all subscribers in the United States or Canada.
The Volumes of the Bazar begin with the first Number for January of each year. When no time is mentioned, it will be understood that the subscriber wishes to commence with the Number next after the receipt of order of the freight does not exceed one dollar per volume.
for $7 00 per volume.
Cloth Cases for each volume, suitable for binding, will be sent by mail, postpaid, on receipt of $1 00 each.
Remittances should be made by Post-Office Money Order or Draft, to avoid chance of loss.
Newspapers are not to copy this advertisement without the express order of Harper & Brothers.
Address HARPER & BROTHERS, New York.
1885.
Harper's Weekly.
ILLUSTRATED.
HARPER's WEEKLY (has now), for twenty years, maintained its position as the leading illustrated weekly newspaper in America. With a constantly 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 serial story by W. E. Nogans. Illustrated articles with special reference to the West and south, including the World's Exposition at New Orleans; entertaining short stories, mostly illustrated, and imprudent papers by high authorities on the chief topics of the day.
Every one who desires a trustworthy political guide, an entertainer and instructive family journal, entirely free from objectionable features in either letter-press or illustrations, should subscribe to Harper's Weekly.
HARPER'S PERIODICALS.
For Years:
HARPER'S WEEKLY.....$6 00
HARPER'S MAGAZINE.....4 00
HARPER'S BAZAR.....4 00
HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE.....1 00
HARPER'S FRANKLIN SQUARE LIBRARY,
One Year (52 Numbers).....10 00
Postage Free to all subscribers in the United States or Canada.
The volumes of the Weekly begin with the first Number for January of each year. When no time is mentioned, it will be understood that the subscriber wishes to commence with the Number next after the receipt of order.
The last Five Annual Volumes of Harper's Weekly, in neat cloth binding, will be sent by mail, postage paid, or by express, free of expense (provided the freight does not exceed one dollar per volume).
for $7 00 per volume.
Cloth cases for each volume, suitable for binding, will be sent by mail, postpaid, on receipt of $1 00 each.
Remittances should be made by Post-Office Money Order or Draft, to avoid chance of loss.
Newspapers are not to copy this advertisement without the express order of Harper & Brothers.
Address HARPER & BROTHERS, New York.
1885.
Harper's Young People.
An Illustrated Weekly.
The serial and short stories in Harper's Youth People have all the dramatic interest that journalism can possess while they are wholly free from what is pernicious or vulgarly sensational. The numerous stories and pictures are full of innocent fun, and the papers on natural history and science travel, and the facts of life, area by writers whose names give the best assurance of accuracy and value. Illustrated papers on athletic sports games and pastimes give full information on these subjects. There is nothing cheap about it but its price.
An epitome of everything that is admirable and desirable in juvenile literature.—Boston Courier.
A weekly least of good things to the boys and girls in your town. It reads daily.
Harper's Young People.
An Illustrated Weekly.
The serial and short stories in Harper's Young People provide all the dramatic interest that juvenile fiction can possess, while they are wholly free from what is perilous or vulgarly sensational. The numerous 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 security and value. Illustrated papers on athletic sports, games and pastimes give full information on these subjects. There is nothing cheap about it but its price.
An epitome of everything that is attractive and desirable in juvenile literature—Boston Courier.
A weekly list of good things to the boys and girls in every family which it visits—Brooklyn Union.
It is wonderful in its wealth of pictures, information and interests—Christian Advocate, K. Y.
TERMS: Postage Prepaid, $2 Per Year.
Vol. VI, commences November 4, 1834.
SERVAN NUNMAN, Fire Cante end.
Remittance should be made by Pemberton Money Order or Draft, to avoid chance of loss.
Newspapers are not to copy this advertisement without the express order of Harper & Norrisman.
Address: HARPER BROTHERS, New York.
IF YOU
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A notice in the ANAHEIM GAZETTE.