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anaheim-gazette 1885-05-23

1885-05-23 · Anaheim Gazette · page 4 of 4 · OCR glm-ocr
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WEEKLY GAZETTE. Published every Saturday. Richard Melrose EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: One Year $2.00 Two Months 1.25 Three Months 7.5 OFFICE—In P.O. Building, Center Street; Anaheim TRANSIENT ADVERTISING: SPACE 1 week 2 weeks 3 weeks 4 weeks $1.00 $1.50 $2.00 $2.50 $3.00 $3.50 $4.00 RED STAR TRADE RED MARK COUGH CURE Absolutely Free from Opiter, Emetica and Poison. A PROMPT, SAFE, SURE CURE For Cougha, Sore Throat, Heaviness, Influenza, Cold, Brombita, Group, Whipping Cough, Antima, Quinny, Palms in Chest, and other situations of the Throat and Lung. Price 80 cents a bottle Sold by Drugists and Dealers. Parties unable to induce their desire to promptly get it for them will receive two Notions. Expenses charged paid, by sending one letter to THE CHARLES A. VOELER COMPANY, Bute Owners and Manufacturers, Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.A. W. H. Massera M.D., D.D.S. D.R. Wulder W.D.D. MASSER & WILDER, DENTISTS. WE RESPECTFULLY ANNOUNCES TO YOU that one of us will visit your plantation on the 10th of every month to attend to any dental work that you may wish to have done by leaving your orders at the Planters' Hotel we will be pleased to call at your residences and do the work there. We are prepared to execute all branches of dental try in an artistic and substantial manner at a reasonable price. We replace the partial loss of teeth without a plate and jade gold crowns on roots and decayed teeth by a new patent process. We extract teeth without pain by the use of vital land oil. Owing to the generous patronage of our many friends, we are compelled to move into more co-operative advertsing: ANAHEIM AS A HORTICULTURAL DISTRICT. By horticulture the writer does not desire to be understood as presenting the subject as defined by the dictionary, but as it seems to be understood in California—fruit culture. Horticulture per se appears to have been relegated to the industrious Chinaman, but fruit culture is the hope and ambition of every man, woman and child that enters the charmed circle of the glorious climate, and while it strikes all like an epidemic, it has various symptoms and breaks out in many different ways. About Anaheim it runs principally to vine culture, and that to the grapes best adapted to wine making; but there are many excellent vineyards of Muscat and Malaga grapes for raisin making, and no more thrifty and beautiful vineyards are to be found in the southern portion of the State than lie around the town of Anaheim, and no more thirty horticulturists than among the owners of those same vineyards. But there are many to whom the raising of grapes has no charm, and they are found with long rows of beautiful orange trees running off in deep green avenues, lighted up with spheres of golden fruit, perhaps alternated with other rows of lighter foliaged trees of the citrus family whose bright yellow fruit is gathered nearly all the year around and boxed up for the lemonade and lemon pies of the Pacific Coast. Another adds to his pomological collection a forty-acre apricot orchard whose juicy fruitage ripens in June and July. Southern California and particularly the vicinity of Anaheim is a field for peach culture equalled nowhere out of Delaware and Maryland, while the French prune, and it is believed the true fig of commerce, will soon be among the heavy yielding additions to the products of our community. There is no better paying crop than the English walnut, but many are deterred from planting it in large quantities because of the long time maturing, but a new variety recently introduced of an excellent quality and with thin shells which can be crushed in the hand, thus adding much to their value as a table nut, is now being planted, and coming into bearing two or three years earlier than the hard-shell variety will make a desirable addition to the orchard of the future. The most successful horticulturists are those who have planted with reference to a continuance of crops, and in most cases with an addition to their orchard of a small dairy or piggy, or both, and a good poultry yard. The writer would recommend for safety and ease of handling to a purchaser of any forty acres of land within the limits of the irrigation ditches, a division into five-acres lots somewhat as follows: Five acres to alfalfa, which will give all the green food and hay necessary for the live stock on the place; five acres to apricots ripening in June and early July; five acres in peaches ripening in July and August; five acres in Muscat grapes ripening in September and October. A lively trade has been opened up with the East lately in this fruit carefully packed in small baskets and shipped through by Express, often netting very handsome profits. Five acres in Winter Neillia pears ripening in October and November, and excellent keepers can be shipped wrapped like oranges in paper, and arriving in the East just after all other pears are out of market, about Thanksgiving and the holiday season, invariably bring good prices. As high as $3,000 has been netted from one carload. Five acres in oranges of the Washington Navel and Mediterranean Sweet varieties, the former ripening early—and being the choicest variety grown here as yet. The latten a late variety and the best keeper, and more profitable to ship, as getting into market after the frosts, and before the early fruits of the East come in, is most likely to obtain remunerative prices. Five acres in a field for barley and corn will be desirable, though probably put in either of the fruits mentioned might be more profitable, and its product be used to purchase what grain may be required. Another five acres about the house for buildings, corrals, garden, ornamental grounds, etc., will make up the forty, and will give the maker of it nearer to an Eden than can be had in any other place in the world. This, of course, cannot be had without some capital, but a small capital will go farther in California than anywhere the writer, who has seen much of the world, knows of. The lines between the five-acre plots should be planted with the soft-shelled walnut, and the apricot, peach and Pear orchard should be fenced with a six foot lath fence as an enclosure for about a thousand fowls whose presence will do much to keep the insects down, help fertilize the land, and roll in a hundred per cent income on cost of the hens every year with good management, for the diseases of Eastern fowls are hardly known here when proper care is given. With this tribute to the fruit of the hen, I close my article. MASSER & WILDER, DENTISTS. WE RESPECTFULLY ANNOUNCE TO YOU that one of us will visit your platoon the 10th of every month to extend to any dental work that you may wish to have done by leaving your orders at the Planters' Hotel we will be pleased to call at your residences and do the work there. We are prepared to execute all branches of dental try in an article and substantial manner at a reasonable price. We replace the partial loss of teeth without a plate and plate gold crowns on roots and decaved teeth by a new patent process. We extract teeth without pain by the use of vital seal 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 MASSER & WILDER F. & J. BACKS, Importers, Manufacturers and Dealers in Furniture, Bedding, Paper Hangings, Picture Frames, etc. UNDERTAKERS. Agents for the Howe, Edmonds and Victor Sewing Machines. Los Angeles Street, Anaheim. E. DREYFUS & CO. Growers and Dealers in California Wines and Grape Brandy. 650 to 642 Brannan Street San Francisco, 45 Broadway New York. B. DREYFUS & CO. Growers and Dealers in California Wines and Grape Brandy. 650 to 642 Brannan Street San Francisco, 45 Broadway New York. Invalid's Hotel Surgical Institute BUFFALO, N.Y. Organized with a full Staff of eighteen Experienced and Skillful Physicians and Surgeons for the treatment of all Chronic Discases. OUR FIELD OF SUCCESS. Chronic Naval Catarrh, Throat and Lung Diseases, Liver and Kidney Diseases, Bladder Diseases, Diseases of Women, Blood Diseases and Nervous Afflictions, cured here or at home with outpatient treatment. Come and see us, or send ten cents in dumps for our Invalid's Guido Book," which gives all particulars. Nervous Debility Impotence, Nocturnal Losses, and All Morbid Conditions caused by Youthful Palpitations and Prone Delirium Practices are speedily and permanently cured by our Specialists. Book post-paid, 10 cents in stamps. Rupture, or Breach, radically surged without the knife, without trusses, without pain, and without danger. Cures Guaranteed. Book sent for ten cents in stamps. FILE TUMORS AND STRICTURES treated under guarantee to cure. Book desirable, though probably put in either of the fruits mentioned might be more profitable, and its product be used to purchase what grain may be required. Another five acres about the house for buildings, corrals, garden, ornamental grounds, etc., will make up the forty, and will give the maker of it nearer to an Eden than can be had in any other place in the world. This, of course, cannot be bad without some capital, but a small capital will go farther in California than anywhere the writer, who has seen much of the world, knows of. The lines between the five acre plots should be planted with the soft-shelled walnut, and the apricot, peach and orchard should be fenced with a six foot lath fence as an enclosure for about a thousand fowls whose presence will do much to keep the insects down, help fertilize the land, and roll in a hundred per cent income on cost of the bens every year with good management, for the diseases of Eastern fowls are hardly known here when proper care is given. With this tribute to the fruit of the hen, I close my article. WATER FACILITIES OF ANAHEIM. The success of any portion of Southern California depends largely upon its water supply and facilities for irrigation, as the greater portion of the rains fall within a period of four months, and those crops which pay the best for the capital and labor invested in them require more moisture than attains from these rains. The Sierra Madre and San Bernardino mountains rise to a great elevation on the east of this valley, and are of vast area. The rains fall heavily on this immense water shed and the highest peaks are snow-capped the greater portion of the year. This water shell is drained by the Santa Ana river which flows through this valley to the ocean. It is the largest river in Southern California, heading fifty-five miles from here in the San Bernardino mountain, one of the highest peaks of the Sierra Nevada range; from this point it winds through the San Bernardino valley, a distance of thirty-five miles to the Sierra Madre range, and all the rivulets draining the eastern slope of this range empty into it and add to its volume. It has worn its way through a detail of this range and at the narrowest points the bedrock approaches very near the surface. This important physical fact causes the subterranean flow of water to rise to the surface and be made available for irrigation. By this wise provision of nature our water supply is secured from danger by the diversion of water for irrigation at settlements higher up the river which have to depend on the surface flow. The waters of the river are divided equally, the people of this section getting one half and the people of Orange and Santa Ana getting the other half. Our water is conveyed to the settlement in two large canals, designated as the Cajon and New Anaheim canals. The Cajon (or upper canal) heads at a point near where the county line between this and San Bernardino county crosses the river; this is between three and four miles farther up the river than the head of any other canal that conveys water into this valley. This canal is ten feet wide in the bottom and three feet deep and has a carrying capacity of 3000 inches. It conveys water a distance of 16 miles into North Anaheim, an elevated section of country at the base of the foot hills. At the entrance of this canal into the settlement there is a small distributing reservoir that will hold the water during the night, doing away with the necessity for night irrigation. This is a great saving of water and labor. The new Anaheim (or lower) canal has its source at a point on the river just below the head of the Orange canal, between four and five miles below the head of the upper canal. This canal gathers up the waters that pass the upper canals and gets the advantage of the seepage of the river below them. It is 8 feet wide in the bottom and 4 feet deep, with a carrying capacity of 3000 inches, making a grand total of 6000 inches. It will be seen from the above that our irrigating facilities are very great, but we still have a large area of country not yet under cultivation, and knowing that with its development the demand for water will increase, and with a zeal and enterprise consistent with the importance of the water system as a component factor in the development of this country, the company are making arrangements to increase their water supply so as to insure to all parties a sufficient amount to meet their requirements. In order to do this they have secured site for a large reservoir on the upper side of the valley—at the terminus of the New Anaheim ditch before referred to. This reservoir contains 47.61 acres and will have a depth of 25 feet. When full of water its storage capacity will be 403.363.29 gallons. With a discharge of ten cubic feet per second (or 75 gallons) it would take sixty days to empty the reservoir, supposing no water to enter meanwhile. The reservoir will in all probability be completed within the ensuing year. The administration of our water affairs is on the best possible basis; the water company being of the people and for the people. It is a joint stock company known as the Anaheim Union Water Company, each share of stock representing an acres of land. A regular stockholders' meeting is held once a year and a board of seven directors is selected from their number to manage the business of the company forthe ensuing year. The charges for water are no more than sufficient to coverthe running expenses ofthe company. In addition tothe above source ofwater supply we have what is termedthe artesian well belt,beginning about one mile westof Anaheim and extending westwardtothe ocean. Fine flowing wellsare obtained at depths varying from 130 to 300 feet.A good wellwill furnishthe waterrequired to irrigate40 acresofland.Aninexhaustiblesupplyofsurfacewatercanbeobtainedatallpointsthroughthevalleyattdepthsvaryingaccordingtothelocality,从10to30feet.ThedomesticwaterforthetownofAnaheimis suppliedbyawell9in diametersand90feetdeep.Thewaterispumpedbyasmallsteam pumpinata tankholding20,000gallonsandthencedistributedthroughpipestoallportionsofthe town. THERMOMETRICAL RECORD. CHRONIC NASAL CATARRH, THROAT AND LUNG DISEASES, LIVER AND KIDNEY DISEASES, SLUDDER DISEASES, DISCENSE OF WOMEN, BLOOD DISEASES AND NERVOUS AFFECTIONS, curved here or at home with or without seeing the patient. Come and see us, or send ten cents in stamps for our "Invalid Guide Book," which gives all particulars. Nervous Dobility, Impotence, Nocturnal Losses, and All Morbid Conditions caused by Youthful Folicles and Pernicious Solitary Practices are speedily and permanently cured by our Specialists. Book post-paid, 10 cents in stamps, Rupture, or Breach, radically sured without the knife, without trusses, without pain, and without danger. Cures Guaranteed. Book sent for ten cents in stamps. FILE TUMORS and STRICTURES treated under guarantee to cure. Book sent for ten cents in stamps. Address World's Dispensary Medical Association, 693 Main Street, Buffalo, N.Y. The treatment of many thousands of cases of those diseases peculiar to WOMEN at the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, has afforded large experience in adapting remedies for their cure, and DR. PIERCE'S Favorite Prescription is the result of this vast experience. It is a powerful Restorative Tonicle and Norrine, imparts name and strength to the system, and cures, as if by magic, Leucorrhea, or "whites," excessive flowing, painful menstruation, unnatural suppressions, prolapses or failing of the uterus, weak back, autersion, retroversion, bearing-down sensations, chronic congestion, inflammation and ulceration of the womb, inflammation, pain and tenderness in avaries, internal heat, and "female weakness." It promptly relieves and opens Nausea and Weakness of Stomach Indigestion, Bloutur, Nervous Prostration, and biceps tension for either sex. PRICE $1.00, FOR $5.00. Send ten cents in stamps for Dr. Pierce's large Treatment on Diseases of Women, illustrated. World's Discursive Medical Association, 693 Main Street, BUFFALO, N.Y. BICK-HEADACHE, Mild Headache, Business, Constipation, Indigestion, and Billions Attacks, promptly cured by Dr. Pierce's Plentiful Prescription Rolls. 25 cents a vial by Druggists. THERMOMETRICAL RECORD. The following record of the average temperature of Anaheim was kept by Mr. E. S. Saxton. The record is made up from readings of the thermometer at 7 A.M., 7 P.M., and the highest and lowest points reached during the twenty-four hours: 1877 1878 1879 1880 1881 1882 1883 1884 Jan....51% 51% 51% 48% 49% 48% 52% 51% Feb....56% 52% 54% 46% 53% 49% 52% 54% March...58% 54% 56% 48% 52% 54% 59% 54% April....57% 56% 57% 54% 60% 56% 57% 57% May.....61% 60% 61% 60% 63% 63% 62% 60% June....70% 64% 66% 64% 66% 67% 70% July....72% 67% 68% 65% 69% 70% 72% August.70% 69% 70% 66% 69% 72% 70% September.69% 66% 66% 63% 66% 67% 67% October....62% 64% 62% 60% 59% 61% 61% November....59% 56% 53% 54% 54% 57% 57% December....54% 50% 52% 54% 52% 54% 54 % CANNED GOODS. The Legislature of New York has passed a bill requiring canners of fruit to put their names on the cans and so specify the place from which the fruit comes. Some jealous New-York packers regard the bill as a blow directed at California fruit. The prevention is ingenious, but will deceive no one who is well informed. The packers who put up apple cores and apple parings as canned apples are Eastern men, not Californians. We have such a superfluity of fine choice fruit that there is no necessity to save the cores and the rinds. We could ship ten times as much as we do, if we were sure of a market, without needing to use the refuse of the fruit. In the Eastern States, where the fruit crop is scanty, fruit growers naturally make most of what little they have, and after they have canned the most of their fruit are loath to render the parings and the cores to the pigs; so they can them and sell them as "seconds." The new law will put a stop to this business. California fruit canners have now a chance to secure a practical monopoly of the Eastern market for canned fruit. They start in with the advantage of having a reputation already secured. Grocers in New York, Philadelphia, Boston, Chicago and Cincinnati know from experience that California canned fruit will sell better than any other canned fruit. To establish a monopoly of the business all that is necessary is for California canners to exercise particular case in putting up their fruit, to ship no seconds," and to send no goods easy to which the most fabulous judge can take exception. Our fruit canners are now put on their mettle. The man, or the firm, or the company that puts up the best fruit in the last year will abide a reputation that will outlast the man who established it before us more of California "seconds." Let every canner put up nothing but fruits and extras, and it will not be long before one who can afford it, in the great cities of the East, will buy anything but California canned fruit. NURAL DISTRICT. understood as presenting seems to be understood in cases to have been relegated to the hope and ambition of armed circle of the glorious haem it runs principally apted to wine making; but Malaga grapes for raisin vines are to be found in the town of Anabeim, and no of those same vineyards has no charm, and they are turning off in deep green ave gaps alternated with other whose bright yellow fruit is for the lemonade and lemon neurological collection a forty in June and July. South-haem is a field for peach argyland, while the French will soon be among the community. There is no many are deterred from time maturing, but a new and with thin shells which their value as a table nut, two or three years earlier addition to the orchard of those who have planted cases with an addition hush, and a good poultry yard. Of handling to a purchaser irrigation ditches, a divi-acres to alfalfa, which will have stock on the place; five-active acres in peaches ripen roses ripening in September with the East lately in passing through by Express, Winter Neilis pears ripe keepers, can be shipped Fast just after all other the holiday season, invariably netted from one carload. Travel and Mediterranean early- and being the latten a late variety getting into market after come in, is most likely to barley and corn will be fruits mentioned might be what grain may be re-buildings, corns, garden, or will give the maker of it once in the world. This, of small capital will go farther seen much of the world, should be planted with the orchard should be fenced at a thousand fowls whose help fertilize the land, and senses every year with good hardly known here when it of the hen. I close my Beware New You Drink- [Scientific Press] What many people, especially children, call thirst merely a sense of dryness in the mouth and throat. This uncomfortable sensation is caused by the general habit of breathing through the mouth. The air taken into the lungs drives the mouth, tongue and the upper portion of the throat. To drink for the purpose of relieving a mouth made dry by being open, is frequently to overload the stomach with fluids which are not needed, and which, consequently, are detrimental to digestion. It is peculiarly injurious also, for it washes into the stomach all the foal solids which, in the form of dust, find their way into the mouth and throat. Persons who are compelled to cool and moisten their palates should first rinse the mouth with a sip or two of water. If, afterward, they feel that they must drink they should imbibe by single sips. By this method they will be as fully satisfied with a gill of water as with a pint hastily swallowed. Actual thirst is as quickly satisfied with hot water as with cold. When only ice water is desired the probability is that the person drinking it has eaten something which has irritated the stomach. The rage for salt, pepper and mustard may be charged with much of the inordinate thirst which makes the American traveler a marvel to his European cousins. Water, to which has been added one-twentieth part of its weight in ice is cold enough for any properly fed person. Coffee is not a good summer drink. Its stimulating property is beneficial to persons with a sense of physical debility; but coffee arrests, temporarily, all natural processes of waste, whereas in hot weather these should be allowed full play. Tea is a far better drink. It is stimulating, and is therefore very injurious when taken in large quantities; but over-stimulation, with its implied necessity of in some way making good the physical force which it enables to develop too rapidly, are its only bad effects. Taken without sugar it is cooling, but a heaped tea-spoonful of sugar will generate as much physical heat as a quarter of a pound of beefsteak. Sugar is the most heating of all articles of home consumption. "Second Wind" The reader may not be aware that ordinary respiration we only use a portion of our lungs, the cells at the extremity not being brought into play. This is the reason why those who are not "in training," and who try to run for any distance soon begin to gasp, and unless they are courageous enough to persevere in spite of the choking sensation, are forced to stop. But if they will persevere the choking goes off, and the result is what is technically known as "second wind." When the second wind is fully established the runner does not become out of breath, but goes on running as long as his legs will carry him. I know this by experience, having been accustomed for some years to run three miles every morning over a very hilly road. The fact is, that on starting, the farthest portions of the lungs are choked with effete air, and the remain- ANAHEIM. A depends largely upon its greater portion of the rains which pay the best for moisture than attainsardino mountains rise to a vast area. The rains fall at peaks are snow-capped drained by the Santa Ana It is the largest river in here in the San Bernardino Nevada range; from this valley, a distance of thirty-lets draining the eastern rimage and at the narrowest. This important physiise to the surface and be vision of nature our water water for irrigation at set on the surface flow. The of this section getting one ing the other half. large canals, designated as upper canal) heads at a San Bernardino county miles farther up the river into this valley. This deep and has a carrying capacity of 16 miles into North of the foot hills. At the small distributing reservoir away with the necessity water and labor. The new on the river just below the lies below the head of the pass the upper canals below them. It is 8 feet capacity of 3000 inches, facilities are very great, older cultivation, and know will increase, and with of the water system as a way, the company are make to insure to all parties order to do this they side of the valley—at referred to. This reservoir set. When full of water With a discharge of ten sixty days to empty the reservoir will in all on the best possible people and for the peo as the Anaheim Union ing an acre of land. A board of seven direc business of the company for more than sufficient to cover supply we have what about one mile west clean. Fine flowing wells 300 feet. A good well land. An inexhaustible through the valley at feet. The domestic waterhes in diameter and 90 pump in a tank holding to all portions of the CORD. Trespassers will be prosecuted. By orer Superintendent California Ostrich Farming Company WIN more money than at anything else by taking the agency for the best selling book out. Beginners succeed granly None fall Term free HALLETT BOOK CO., Fortland, Maine CASTORIA for Infants and Children. Castoria is so well adapted to children that it is superior to any prescription. Sore Rhinosis, Entrustion, Kills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes drowsiness injurious modification. THE CENTRAL COMPANY, 192 Fulton Street, N.Y. FIRE! Insurance Agency Richard Melrose Richard Melrose Is Agent for the following sterling Company: LIVERPOOL and LONDON and GLOBE GUARDIAN of London. CONTINENTAL, of New York. ROYAL, NORWICH UNION and LANCASHIRE. GIRARD, of Philadelphia. AGRICULTURAL, of Watertown. SCOTTISH UNION AND NATIONAL. HARTFORD, of Hartford. OFFICE at THE POSTOFFICE, ANAHEIM. 1885. Harper's Magazine. ILLUSTRATED. With the new volume, beginning in December, Harper's Magazine will conclude its thirty-fifth year. The oldest periodical of its type, it is yet, in such new volume, a new magazine, not simply, but also, presents fresh subjects and new pictures, but also, and chiefly, because it steadily advances in the method itself of magazine-making. In a word, the Magazine becomes more and more the faithful mirror of our ent life and movement. Loading features in the attractive programme for 1885 are: new serial novels by Constance Perrine Woodson and W. D. Howell; a new novel titled "At the Red Globe," describes illustrated papers by F. D. Muart, R. Swary Gifford, E. A. Arrow, H. Cormor, and others; Goldsmith's "She Stoops to Conquer," illustrated by Abery; important papers on Art, Science, etc. HARPER'S PERIODICALS. Per Year: HARPER'S MAGAZINE.....$4.00 HARPER'S WEEKLY.....4.00 HARPER'S BAZAR.....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 Magazine begin with the Numbers for June and December of each year. When no time is specified, it will be understood that the subcriber wishes to begin with the current Number. The last eleven Semi-annual Volumes of Harper's Magazine, in neat cloth binding, will be sent by mail, postpaid, on receipt of $3.00 per volume. Cloth Cases, for binding, 50 cents each, by mail postpaid. Index to Harper's Magazine. Alphabetical, Analytical and Classified, for Volumes 1 to 60, inclusive, from June, 1830, to June, 1880, one vol., $vco. Cloth, $4.00. 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 & Bedford. Address: HARPER & BROTHERS, New York 1885. Harper's Bazar. ILLUSTRATED. Harper's Bazar is the only paper in the world that combines the choicest literature and the finest art illustrations with the latest fashions and methods of household adornment. Its weekly illustrations and descriptions of the newest Paris and New York styles, with its useful patterns-sheet supplement and cut patterns, by enabling Ladies to be their own dressmakers, save many times the cost of subscription. Its papers no exchanging—the management of so vast and horrendous springs in its various details are eminently practical. Much attention is given to the interior topic of social etiquette, and its illustrations of art needle-work are acknowledged job to be unqualified. Its literary merit is of the highest excellence, and the unique character of its humorous picture has won for it the name of the American Punch. HARPER'S PERIODICALS. Per Year: HARPER'S BAZAR.....$4.00 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. HARPER'S PERIODICALS. Per Year: HARPER'S BAZAR ... $4 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. The last Five Annual Volumes of Harper's Weekly, in neat cloth binding, will be sent by mail, postage paid, on receipt of $1 60 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 nine per 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 in equality by any previous volume, both original and illustrated serial story by W.K. Nugent illustrated articles with special reference to the West and South, in closing the World's international New Orleans, entertaining short stories, mostly illustrated, and important papers by high authorities on the chief topics of the day. Every one who desires a trustworthy political guide to colophony and bourgeois family journal, entirely free from objectionable false facts in either letter presses of illustrations, should subscribe to Harper's Weekly. HARPER'S PERIODICALS. Per Year: HARPER'S WEEKLY ... $4 00 HARPER'S MAGAZINE ... 4 00 HARPER'S BAZAR ... 4 00 HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE ... 1 56 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, on receipt of $1 60 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 Young People have all the dramatic interest that juvenile fiction can possess, while they are wholly free from what is pernicious or vulgarly sensational. The numerous statues and pictures are full of innocence 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, games and pastimes have full information on those subjects. There is nothing cheap about it but its price. 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 pernicious 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, games and pastimes have full information on those subjects. There is nothing cheap about it but its price. An epitome of everything that is attractive and desirable in juvenile literature—Boston Court. A weekly feast 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, N. Y. TERM8: Postage Prepaid, $2 Per Year. Vol. VI. commences November 4, 1884. Sixole Newman, Five Cents each. Remittances should be made by Postoffice 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. 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