anaheim-gazette 1885-09-05
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WEEKLY GAZETTE.
Published every Saturday.
Richard Melrose
EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION:
One Year ... $3.00
Six months ... $1.25
Three months ... $75
OFFICE—In P.O. Building, Center Street, Anahiem
TRANSIENT ADVERTISING:
STACK
1 week
2 weeks
3 weeks
4 weeks
1 square ... $1.00
2 squares ... $2.00
3 squares ... $4.00
4 squares ... $6.00
RED STAR
TRADE RED MARK CURE
Absolutely Free from Opitates, Emetics and Poisons.
A PROMPT, SAFE, SURE CURE
For coughs, Sore Throat, Hearness, Influenza,
Cold, Hexchills, Group, Whipging Cough,
Asthma, Quinney, Pain in Chest, and other affections of the Throat and Lungs.
Price 50 cents a bottle Sold by Drummers and Dealers may be issued their dealer to promptly get it for them will receive two bottles, Express Charges paid, by sending one dollar to THE CHARLES A. VOGELER COMPANY,
Bolts Owners and Manufacturers,
Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.A.
W.H. Masser MD,D.D.B. D.R.Wilmer D.D.B.
MASSER & WILDER,
DENTISTS,
TOMBS OF THE PRESIDENTS.
[Mr. Louis Gilson-Demantel]
The President of the United States who are dead are nearly all buried in the neighborhood of the homes which they occupied. Washington's tomb, at Mount Vernon, is known to all the world. John Adams and John Quincy Adams he besame the Unitarian Church at Quincy, Massachusetts. The coffins are of lead, placed in cases bawn from solid blocks of granite. Their wives are buried with them. John Adams died on the same day with Jefferson, a strange coincidence itself, but stranger still, it was on the Fourth of July, 1826, just a half century after the Declaration of Independence, which they had joined in making. Jefferson, like his compatriots, was buried in his family burying ground, at his home in Monticello. He had written on the syleaf of an old account book his wishes concerning it. "Choose," his memorandum said, "some unfrequented vale in the park, where there is no sound to break the stillness but a brook that bubbling winds among the venerable woods. Let it be among venerable oaks, interspersed with some gloomy evergreens. Appropriate one-half to the use of my family, and the other to strangers, servants, etc. Let the exit look upon a small and distant part of the Blue mountains." These directions were substantially carried out. A little inclosure, containing some thirty graves, stands amid the woods on the road that leads from Charlottesville to Monticello, and a granite obelisk, much chipped by relic hunters, marks the grave of the ex-President.
In the same part of Virginia, in a small inclosure near his home in Montpelier, lies the successor of Jefferson, James Madison, fourth President. Beside him are buried his wife, who died in 1849, surviving him almost thirty years, and two nephews. Two other Virginia Presidents—Monroe and Tyler—lie within a few feet of each other in the fine cemetery of Hollywood, at Richmond. Monroe's death, like those of John Adams and Jefferson, fell upon the Fourth of July. He, too, in 1831, five years after his great predecessors and elders, marked the nation's birthday by his close. He died in New York a poor man, and his remains surrounded there until 1858; the Legisla-
EVERYTHING.
The southern part of Africa尝食蝎,producing $200 per feathers annually.
It is did that French railway hill one passenger in every year ried English railways one in 9,000 railways one in 21,500,000.
Artificial honey imported from this country has been far yeats, to be made of wheat or treated with oxalic acid. They be detected by the taste.
Two New England pastors pits, and one delivered a service congregation had within a month the month of the other. The vouches for this story,and know the real author of the diary.
The French militia having selves in thirteen days of camp by competent critics pronounce hastily raised bands than an army was their discipline and so lack in skill.
Mrs. Montgomery,a visitor to the Springs, Ky., came to hear days ago in a very singular way was in the act of taking a die from a bucket on her porch wary honey bee flew against upon the left temple. She felt been shot and died a very short ward.
A curious fact in connection is the amount of ashes recovered body and the disposition made two largest bodies cremated in weighed 200 pounds each,the ing 4 pounds 8 ounces and 1 ounce respectively.The large of ashes thus far received war weighing 180 pounds,and weighed 5 pounds 11 ounces.
Some of the coast negroes worship the shark and regard as the road to paradise. They try and goats two or three times at least once a year try to offer a ten-year-old child.tim is bound to a post in the water and as the tide rise shrieks and screams with tho
A PROMPT, SAFE, SURE CURE
For coughs, Sore Throat, Honeysuckle, Infusion,
Colds, Hemorrhoids, Group, Whipping Gough,
Asthma, Quinney, Palms in Chest and other
the Throat of Lunge.
Price 50 cents a bottle. Sold by Drugsists and Dealers.
Purities unable to induce their desire to promptly get it for them will receive two bottles. Express charge paid by sending one dollar to:
THE CHARLES A. VOGELER COMPANY,
Belle Owens and Mason Industries,
Baltimore, Maryland, C.S.A.
W.H. MASSER M.D., D.D.S. D.R. WILDER D.D.S.
MASSER & WILDER,
DENTISTS,
WE RESPECTFULLY ANNOUNCED TO YOU
that one of us will go at the Planters' Hotel on the 10th of every month to attend to any dental work that you may wish to have done.
We are prepared to execute all branches of dentistry in an artistic and substantial manner at reasonable price.
We place the partial loss of teeth without a plate and place gold rows on roots and decayed teeth by a new patent process.
We extract teeth without pain by the use of vitalized oil.
Owing to the generous patronage of our many friends, we are compelled to move into more conscious quarters, in Parlor 13 Nadeau Block, Los Angeles.
Respectfully yours,
DRS' MASSER & WILDER
F. C.J. BACKS.
Importers, Manufacturers and Dealers in Furniture, Budding, Paper Hangings, Picture Frames, etc.
UNDERTAKERS.
Agents for the Howe, Eldredge and Victor Sewing Machines.
Los Angeles Street: Anaheim.
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 Diseases.
OUR FIELD OF SUCCESS.
Chronic Nasal Catarrh, Throat and Kung Diseases, Liver and Kidney Diseases Bladder Disease Diseases of Women, Blood Diseases and Nervous Affections, cured here or at home with or without seeing the patient. Come see us, or send ten cents in stamps for our "Invalid's Guide Book," which gives all particulars.
Nervous Bebility Impotency, Nocturnal Loss and All World Conditions caused by Youthful Follicles and Permicious Solitary Practices are speedily and permanently cured by our Specialists. Book post-paid, 10 cts. in stampa. Rupture, or Irreach, radically cured 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.
inclosure near his home in Montpelier, lies the successor of Jefferson, James Madison, fourth President. Beside him are buried his wife, who died in 1849, surviving him almost thirty years, and two nephews. Two other Virginia Presidents—Monroe and Tyler—lie within a few feet of each other in the fine cemetery of Hollywood, at Richmond. Monroe's death, like those of John Adams and Jefferson, fell upon the Fourth of July. He, too, in 1831, five years after his great predecessors and elders, marked the nation's birthday by his close. He died in New York a poor man, and his remains were entombed there until 1858; the Legislature of Virginia removed them to Hollywood and placed them in a substantial vault, marked by a Gothic temple on a foundation of Virginia granite. Tyler's grave, near by, is scarcely marked at all. A little mound, with a magnolia tree at the head, is pointed out as the spot.
The three Tennessee Presidents were buried at their homes. Jackson at the Hermitage, near Nashville, his wife beside him. A massive monument of Tennessee granite marks the place. Polk is buried in Nashville, at the old family homestead. He survived Jackson only four years, dying in 1849. The grave is handsomely inclosed, and a block twelve feet square by twelve feet in height bears the inscription. Andrew Johnson's grave is at Greenville, on a spot selected by himself. His three sons have erected a handsome monument of marble on a base of granite. It bears numerous patriotic emblems, a flag, an eagle, a scroll of the constitution, etc., while the inscription declares "His faith in the people never wavered."
Martin Van Buren lies in the village cemetery at Kinderhook, New York, in a family lot, his resting place marked by a modest granite shaft. He died in the summer of 1863, when the civil war was at its height. His successor, Harrison, was buried at his old home at North Bend, on the Ohio, a few miles below Cincinnati. An unfenced mound, over a family vault, formerly neglected, but more recently carefully kept, marks the spot.
The duet of Zachary Taylor is now buried in the cemetery at Frankfort, Kentucky, after several removals. Millard Fillmore's grave is at Forest Lawn cemetery, three miles from Buffalo, and that of Pierce in the old cemetery of Concord, N. H. Buchanan is buried at Woodward Hill cemetery.
The most magnificent of all the memorials to the dead Presidents is that over the resting place of Lincoln, in the Oak Ridge cemetery at Springfield, Illinois. It was dedicated in 1874, and cost $250,000.
Gartfield is buried in Lake View cemetery, at Cleveland, where a grand mausoleum has been erected in his honor.
Of the eighteen dead Presidents, two only lie in the same place. Two were buried in Massachusetts, two in New York, five in Virginia, three in Tennessee, two in Ohio, and one each in New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Kentucky and Illinois. Eight lie in private grounds or family burial places, as is the case of the Adams's at Quiney.
weighed 200 pounds each, the ing 4 pounds 8 ounces and ounces respectively. The large of ashes thus far received war weighing 180 pounds,and weighed 5 pounds 11 ounces.
Some of the coast negroes worship the shark and regard as the road to paradise. They try and goats two or three times at least once a year try to put offering a ten-year-old child. Tim is bound to a post in the water and!, as the tide rises shricks and screams with thorns until the ravenous fishes sight.
The greatest gunpowder blast with railway works was Sir William Cubitt blew charge of 19,000 pounds of entire mass of the Round Dow rose to the height of 350 feet of the sea within a few miles monster blast fired by electric points at one time,tore from mass of more than 1,000,000.
A curious fact has come to matter of telegraph wires. I Prof. Morse proposed at the put the wires underground,stringing of wires on poles thought.The first line of tele country was run in the year b Baltimore and Washington connected.The wires were ground between Baltimore anion,a plow being used to ent which the coil was unwound,the workmen struck a viac wherenepon plan to use peceived and put into practice.
"ROUGH ON COUGH"
Ask for "Rough on Coughs,Colds,Sore Throat,Hoarser 15c.Liquid,25c.
"ROUGH ON RATS"
Clear out rats,mice ,roach bed-bugs,skunks chipmunks Druggiste.
HEART PAINS.
Palpitation,Dropsical Swim ness Indigestion Headache cured by "Wells' Health Ren"
"ROUGH ON CORN"
Ask for Wells"Rough on Quick complete cure.Hard warts,bunions.
"ROUGH ON PAIN" FOROUS Strengthening.improved backache,pain in chest or sid neuralgia.
THIN PEOPLE.
"Wells' Health Renewer"and vigor,cures Dyspepsia,H vousness.Debility.$1.
WHOOING COUVERdand the many Throat Affectio promptly,pleasantly and safely "Rough on Coughs."Troc sam,25c.
MOTHERS.
If you are failing,broke,nervous use "Wells'Health Druggists.
LIFE PRESERVERIt you are losing your grief "Wells'Health Renewer."
weak spots.
"ROUGH ON TOOTHA Instant relief for Neural Facesache.Ask for "Rough on 15 and 25 cents."
Lung Diseases, Liver and Miliary Diseases, Bladder Disease, Nervous Affections, cured here or at home with or without seeing the patient. Come and see us, or send ten cents in stamps for our "Invalids' Guide Book," which gives all particulars.
Nervous Bobility, Impotence, Nocturnal Losses, and All Morbid Conditions caused by Youthful Follicles and Permicious Solitary Practices are speedily and permanently cured by our Specialists. Book, post-paid, 10 cents in stamp. Rupture, or Breach, radically cured without the knife, without trusses, without pain and without danger. Cures Guaranteed. Book sent for ten cents in stamps.
PILE 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 Tonie and Nervine, imparts vigor and strength to the system, and cure, as it by magic, Leucorrhea, or "whites" excessive flowing, painful menstruation, unnatural suppressions, prolapse or falling of the uterus, weak back, anteversion, retroversion, bearing down sensations, chronic congestion, inflammation and obstruction of the womb, inflammation, pain and tenderness in ovaries, internal heat, and "female weakness."
It promptly relieves and cures Nausea and Weakness of Stomach, Indigestion, Bloating, Nervous Prestoration, and Bleopleaseness, in either sex.
PRICE $1.00, or 4 BOTTLES.
Send ten cents in stamps for Dr. Pierce's large Treatise on Diseases of Women, illustrated.
World's Dispensary Medical Association,
693 Main Street, BUFFALO, N.Y.
CICK-HEADACHE,
Bilious Headache,
Blisteniness,
Constipation,
Indigestion,
and Bilious Attachment,
promptly cured by Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Fullness.
Mints a vial, by Drugs.
Two Bulls in a Well.
At Boise city Sam Miller and me was digging a well on some property that belonged to B.M. Durell this was in eighteen hundred and sixty-four I should have written something of this before when we had it down eighteen feet we come out to dinner there was two bulls fighting I bet the read would be winner they fought over an hour and my bet I had forgotten when one crowded the other in the well to the bottom the bull in the well was much displeased the bull on the top went to well got down on his knees the bull in the well did Bellow and pray then we went to drive the other a way he stood on his knees howled a solome prairie then went in the well tramped from the other the lair then we went to the well and to hour surprise one stood on his ramp the other on his face and eyes we went up to the fort Borrowed a Block and Teakle went down pulled out the Bulls by the help of the people this was in the fall of 1802 at the city of Dalton when we got them out they went there way rejoicing this is true you knotted not doubt is for by one hundred man I can prove it.
At Drowning Grant on erosion pay what you please—New York Sun.
This is the tenth succulent bad season for the vineyards of the Dijon district. Plenty of wine is made, but of a bad quality, and only of small value for home consumption.
EVERYTHING.
The southern part of Africa has 70,000 tame eaters, producing $2,000,000 worth of feathers annually.
It is said that French railways annually kill one passenger in every 2,000,000 carried, English railways one in 5,200,000, Belgian railways one in 9,000,000, Prussian railways one in 21,800,000.
Artificial honey imported into England from this country has been found on analysis, to be made of wheat or corn starch treated with oxalic acid. The fraud cannot be detected by the taste.
Two New England pastors exchanged pulpits, and one delivered a sermon which the congregation had within a month heard from the mouth of the other. The Baptist Weekly vouches for this story, and would like to know the real author of the discourse.
The French militia having shown themselves in thirteen days of camp training, are by competent critics pronounced more like hastily raised bands than an army, so poor was their discipline and as lacking were they in skill.
Mrs. Montgomery, a visitor at Rock Castle Springs, Ky., came to her death a few days ago in a very singular manner. She was in the act of taking a drink of water from a bucket on her porch when an ordinary honey bee flew against and stung her upon the left temple. She fell as if she had been shot and died a very short time afterward.
A curious fact in connection with cremation is the amount of ashes received from a body and the disposition made of them. The two largest bodies cremated in Philadelphia weighed 200 pounds each, the ashes weighing 4 pounds 8 ounces and 5 pounds 4½ ounces respectively. The largest percentage of ashes thus far received was from a body weighing 189 pounds, and whose ashes weighed 5 pounds 11 ounces.
Some of the coast negroes of Africa still worship the shark and regard its stomach as the road to paradise. They offer it poultry and goats two or three times a year, and at least once a year try to propitiate it by offering a ten-year-old child. The little victim is bound to a post in the sands at low water and, as the tide rises, mingles its shrinks and screams with those of its mother.
IF YOU
Want a Purchaser,
Want a Writer,
Want a Submitter,
Want a Servant,
Want to rent a Farm,
Want to sell a Farm,
Want to sell a Home,
Want to buy a Home,
Want to buy a Home,
Want to sell a Curriage,
Want to buy money,
Want to sell
WANT ANYTHING AT ALL
Advertise in the ANAHEIM GAZETTE.
Dr. SANFORD'S LIVER INVIGORATOR
Is just what its name implies; a purely vegetable compound, that acts directly upon the Liver; curing the many diseases incident to that important organ, and preventing the numerous alimentants that arise from its damaged or irritation, such as Dysppeptic Jaundice, Billionsum Conjunctivitis, Malaria, Sick-headache, Rheumatism etc. It is therefore a bruised this "To have Good Health the Liver must be kept in order."
DR. SANFORD'S LIVER INVIGORATOR Invigorates the Liver. Regulates the Bowels, Strengthens the System, Purifies the Blood, Amends Digestion, Prevents Fevers. Is a Household Need. An Invaluable Family Medicine for common complaints.
DR. SANFORD'S LIVER INVIGORATOR An experience of Forty years, and Thousands of Testimonials prove the Morit.
FOR SALE BY ALL DEALERS IN MEDICINE.
For full information send your address for 139 page book on the "Liver and Its Diseases," to DR. SANFORD 26 BOARDS ST., NEW YORK CITY.
CASTORIA
for Infants and Children.
Castoria is so well adapted to children that recommend it as superior to any prescription Castoria cure Colic, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Eructation, Kills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes di-
CASTORIA
for Infants and Children.
"Castoria is so well adapted to children that it recommends its superior to any prescription given to me." H. A. Archer, M.D., 111 Bo. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N.Y.
THE CENTAUR COMPANY, 138 Fulton Street, N.Y.
FIRE!
Insurance Agency!
Richard Melrose
Is Agent for the following sterling Companies
Richard Melrose
Is Agent for the following sterling Companies
LIVERPOOL and LONDON and GLOBE
GUARDIAN of London.
CONTINENTAL, of New York.
ROYAL, NORWICH UNION and LANCASHIRE.
GIKARD, of Philadelphia.
AGRICULTURAL, of Watertown.
SCOTTISH UNION AND NATIONAL
HARTFORD, of Hartford
TEUTONIA, o New Orleans
NEW ORLEANS, of New Orleans
FIRE INSURANCE ASSOCIATION of London, England.
COMMERCIAL UNION, of London,
CITY OF LONDON, Capital $10,000,000
SOUTH BRITISH AND NATIONAL,
GERMAN AMERICAN, of New York.
A Clear Skin
is only a part of beauty; but it is a part. Every lady may have it; at least, what looks like it. Magnolia Balm both freshens and beautifies.
OFFICE AT THE POSTOFFICE, ANAHEIM.
BANK OF ANAHEIM.
CAPITAL STOCK,
$100,000.00.
PLEZ JAMES...President
G. B. SHAFFER...Secretary
BOARD OF DIRECTORS:
K. P. SPENCK, W. H. MABURY,
W. K. JAMES,
S. H. MOTE, 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 Merchants Bank, Los Angeles Pacific Bank, San Francisco, First National Bank, New York.
DRAFTS, LETTERS OF CREDIT OR PORTAL 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 railroad from San Francisco to New York, or vice versa, issued at the established rate.
Persons in Anaheim or vicinity desiring to send to any point in the countries named for any relative or friend can purchase ticket here and forward them to the proper person by mail.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
1885.
Harper’s Magazine.
ILLUSTRATED.
With the new volume, beginning in December 1884, Maxwell will commence thirty-fifth issue. The oldest particular of the type is yet in such new volume, a new magazine, not simply because it possesses high规格 and new platform, but who and chiefly because it already advances in the central itself of magazine making. In a while the Maxwell banner more and more the dignified nature of current life and invariant. Loading tuition in the attractive programme for 1885; new serial novels by Constance Furness Woman and W. D. Howman a new novel entitled "At the End Quarter" descriptive illustrated paper by F. J. Haunt E. Bryan Gorman, E. A. Ammer, H. Cummins and others Goldsmith's "The Stamps in Company," Illustrated by Arthur; important papers on Art, Science, etc.
HARPER’S PERIODICALS.
Per Year:
HARPER’S MAGAZINE.....$10.00
HARPER’S WEEKLY.....$4.00
HARPER’S BAZAR.....$4.00
HARPER’S YOUNG PEOPLE.....$7.00
HARPER’S FRANKLIN SQUARE LIBRARY,
One Year (32 Numbers).....$10.00
Postage Free to all subscribers in the United States or Canada.
The volumes of the Maxwell begin with the Numbers for June and December of each year. When no time is specified, it will be understood that the subscriber wishes to begin with the current Number.
The last eleven Biennial Volumes of Maxwell’s Magazine, in next cloth binding, will be sent by mail postpaid, on receipt of $30 per column. Chick Cases, for binding, 50 cents each—by mail postpaid.
Index to Maxwell’s Magazine, Alphabetical, amalgamated and Classified, for Volumes 1 to 60,浸透ure June, 1850, to June, 1865, one vol., five Chels? $4.00.
Remittances should be made by Post-Office Money Order on Draft, to avoid charge of loan.
Newspapers are not to copy this advertisement without the express order of Harper & Brown.
Address: HARPER & BROTHERS, New York.
1885.
Harper’s Bazar.
ILLUSTRATED.
Harper’s Bazar is the only paper in the world that combines the choice literature and the basic art illustrations with the latest fashion and method of household adornment. Its weekly illustrations and descriptions of the newest Paris and New York styles, with its useful pattern-sheet supplement and cut patterns, by enabling ladies 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.
Per Year:
HARPER’S BAZAR.....$4.00
FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF Los Angeles.
Capital Stock $100,000
Surplus $100,000
E. F. SPENCE, President.
J. M. ELLIOTT, Cashier.
DIRECTORS:
J. D. BICKNELL, J. F. CRANK, H. MARRY
WM. LAUT, E. F. SPENCE.
STOCKHOLDERS:
CARY A. H. WILCOX,
O. N. WITHERBY,
J. P. CRAK,
G. Q. STORY,
J. LAYMANSHIN,
H. MARRY,
WOODS MAURY,
J. D. BICKNELL.
F. W. KROGH & Co.
Manufacturers and Patentees of the Latest Improved Self-Regulating Wind Mills.
Horse Powers,
And all kinds of Pumping Machinery on hand.
Tanks Built to Order.
FACTORY AND OFFICE—No 51, Beale St. Bet Market and Mission, San Francisco.
Send for a Circular.
May 16-Sun.
California WIRE WORKS,
329 Market St., San Francisco,
MANUFACTURERS OF WIRE and EVERYTHING IN WIRE.
Barbed Wire We offer for sale at lowest figure, 2 & 4 point regular and thick set.
Being regularly licensed we guarantee our customers against damages.
Harper's BAZAR is the only paper in the world that combines the best literature and the best illustrations with the latest fashion and method of household adornment. Its weekly illustrations and descriptions of the newest Paris and New York styles, with its useful pattern-sheet supplement and cut patterns, by enclosing ladies to be their dressmakers, save many times the cost of subscription. Its papers on cooking, the management of art and housekeeping in its various details are eminently practical. Much attention is given to the interesting topic of social etiquette, and its limitations 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 Year:
HARPER'S BAZAR.....$100
HARPER'S MAGAZINE.....$100
HARPER'S WEEKLY.....$100
HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE.....$100
HARPER'S FRANKLIN SQUARE LIBRARY.
One Year (52 Numbers).....$100
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 Bazar, in neat cloth binding, will be sent by mail, postpaid, or express (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, or express (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, or express (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, or express (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, or express (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, or express (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, or express (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, or express (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, or express (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, or express (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, or express (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, or express (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, or express (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, or express (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, or express (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, or express (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, or express (provided the freight does not exceed one dollar per volume), for $7.00 per Volume
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 postpaid 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 or by express free of expense provided the freight does not exceed one dollar per volume)for $7.00 perVolume
Cloth cases for each volume suitable for binding will be sent by mail postpaid or by express free of expense provided the freight does not exceed one dollar pervolume)for $7.00 perVolume
Cloth cases for each volume suitable for binding will be sent by mail postpaid or by express free of expense provided the freight does not exceed one dollar pervolume)for $7.00 perVolume
Cloth cases for each volume suitable for binding will be sent by mail postpaid or by express free of expense provided the freight does not exceed one dollar pervolume)for $7.00 perVolume
Cloth cases for each volume suitable for binding will be sent by mail postpaid or by express free of expense provided the freight does not exceed one dollar pervolume)for $7.
California
WIRE WORKS,
329 Market St., San Francisco,
MANUFACTURERS OF
WIRE and EVERYTHING IN WIRE.
Barbed Wire
We offer for sale at lowest figure. 2 & 4 point regular and thick set.
Being regularly licensed we guarantee our customers against damages.
Baling Wire
"Pacific" brand of very best steel, all sizes at lowest market rates.
Wire Netting
All materials & widths, galvanized after made, for poultry yards, etc.
Wire Cloth
of all kinds for fruit dryers, threshers, harvesters, riddles, etc.
Hop Wire
for training hope, made from steel in long lengths specially for the purpose.
Gopher Traps
and all other kinds of traps for moles, squirrels, rats and mice.
Vineyard Lines
for laying out vineyards, divided in distances and made of steel wire.
Ornamental and Useful Wire and Iron Work.
NOTES—We meet Eastern competition by hosts manufacture, and sell you better goods at a lower price.
July 1st-6th.
The BUTTER GUIDE of learned Hands and Sage, each year. For 50 pages, 9½ inches wide with 3,000 illustrations — a whole Picture Gallery! ORDER WHATAMS PRINT direct to consumers on all guides for personal or family use. Units how to order and given which cost of everything you may own. Sage or have this width. These INVALUABLE MONITOR contains information general from the蔓蔓 of the world. We will send a copy WHILE to add them upon receipt of 20 cents. In doing expense of mailing. Let us hear these you. Merchants!
MONTOOMERY WARD & CO.
877 & 229 Wabash Avenue, Chicago, Ill.
1885.
Harper's Young People:
An Illustrated Weekly.
The serial and short stories in Harper's Young Poets have all the dramatic interest Our favorite 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 lists 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 these subjects. There is nothing cheap about it but its价值.
An epitome of everything that is attractive and desirable in juvenile literature.—Boston Court.
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, N.Y.
TERMS: Postage Prepaid, $2 Per Year.
Vol. VI. commences November 4, 1884.
Single Numbers, 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
115 CLAY STREET,
SAN FRANCISCO,
CASH
SAN FRANCISCO...CAL...