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anaheim-gazette 1887-04-09

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WEEKLY GAZETTE. Published every Saturday. Established 1870. Richard Melrose EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: One Year $2,00 Six months $1,25 three months $1,00 PRICE: In P.O. Boxing, Center Street, Anchorage TRANSIENT ADVERTISING: SPACE 1 square $1,00 2 squares 2,00 3 squares 2,00 4 squares 4,00 ST. JACOB'S OIL TRADE MARK GERMAN HEREDY For Pain THE CHARLES A. VOKELER CO., LAITMORE, MD. IN THE STRONG ROOM. PEOPLE WHO FIND USE FOR A SAFETY DEPOSIT VAULT. How the Companies Bid for the Favor of Feminine Depositors—Diamonds and Pearls in Profusion—A Sleeping Coupon Clipper. Nearly all of the safety deposit companies bid for the favor of the women by maintaining handsome parlors reserved for their use, with private rooms for examinations of securities and jewels. lavatory etc. The women are good customers too. In some of the vaults nearly one third of the renters are of the gentler sex and in one where there are 3,000 renters, 1,200 of them are misses or misdamns, 200 being married women who keep their safes in their own names, secured from the fingers and eyes of their high jordis. Women may not know much about business but that prudence which is so conspicuous in the mental composition of the sex finds expression in patronage of the safety vaults. Here women may keep their savings absolutely fearless of meddling by thriftless husbands. Here they may also store old love letters or love tokens, even newer ones, which are too precious to be destroyed and too sacred to be seen by the eyes of suspicious husbands. "I know women who keep old love letters in their boxes," said the vault clerk in one of the most popular companies. "Of course it is no business of mine what they keep in there but I have seen them take the letters out so often that it has got to be an oddity with me." "Young women." "All kinds, just principally middle aged or old ones." Young woman as a rule don't want their thin on chestnut loves, you know, but with old sins it is difficult. I have in mind how one woman with a thin face and gray hair, the mother of a large family, too, and with a rich husband who comes in here every week and takes out a yellow old letter, goes into one of the private rooms, strengthens half an hour or an hour, and comes out with red eyes. I know another who has to have a look at an old tintype about twice a week or else she couldn't be happy. Sometimes she runs in and takes a glance on it, and other times she goes into a private room and stays with it ten or fifteen minutes. She cries, too. Why there's woman who rent boxes here on purpose to keep such things in letters, photographs back of knifes and so on. Why don't they keep 'em at home? THE WONDER: The trick of "The How It Is Sold" The vanishing lady the town. She was de Kalta; a Paris city been performing at there. She is also in London and Berger illusion has been and scientists have about her as learning those which Poet D'Automaton. The intrigue in New York to sell He has made a dozen chaser is astonished the trick he has anew to command utilize it. Dextero feat is like this: Tears in full dress paints him. He tall while he moves abruptly he picks up seeming caroliness the middle of the newspaper. The assuming the ordining position. From a taunt piece of foulard still parent, but sufficient form of the girl after enveloped her and thug, he in an instant took. The girl is not left exactly as it stood the newspaper is better it was played. No heard in the mean darkening of the sky covering has shown preserved its form was lifted by the fake How is it done? Voy body correctly guesses but the investigator's The chair, the news confederate below the slim girl are the title The chair is not; as an article It is of the mahole any kind, with upolstered on the back. It is so built concealed spring the down from the rear the girl free to sink it is manipulated by the stage. There be chair the girl has an illusionist has so ever her head the siement she feels herself she works another spat a thin wire framewo the back of the chair GERMAN KEREDY For Pain RED STAR TRADE MARK. COUGH CURE Absolutely Free From Opitates, Emetics and Poison. SAFE. SURE. PROMPT. AT THE CHARLES A. VONKELER CO., BALTIMORE, ND. WIZARD OIL CONCERTS Are to be accompanied with pleasure by all and many can testify to the wonderful healing power of Hamlin's Wizard Oil. It Cures Neuralgia, Toothache, Headache, Catarrh, Croup, Sore Throat, RHEUMATISM, Lame Back, Sprains, Cruises, Wounds and All Aches and Pains. Person who prefers these remedies on Wizard oil instigators and their inventors will be sold by all Dengesters. Price 50c and one hundred book fee at Address WIZARD OIL COMPANY, CHICAGO. City Stables, Center Street ( opposite Kroeger's Block) ANAHEIM. A. L. Lewis & Co. Proprietors. THESE STABLES ARE THE BEST VENTHATCH AND most commissions in the company will be paid by the hearing and the room. The charge in all cases is reasonable. Single and Double Teams Furnished at short notches and so full braces with the country surmounted when required. Anaheim COOPERAGE. "Much jewelry in this vault?" "Jewelry I should say sol. About three women out of four keep jewelry in their safes. Some of it don't worth much—old relics, family heirlooms and precious trinkets. Then there's some that have really valuable jewels. There's bushels of diamonds and pearls scattered about in them boxes, sir. Funny thing about women, too is that they are second of coming in and looking their diamond over. I know a woman who never lets a week pass without taking her ten box into one of the private rooms and staying there an hour admiring her jewelry." CARESLESS ABOUT VALUABLES. "Are people ever egregious about their valuables in here?" "Bless you, yes. Some of our renters we have to watch like hawks for fear they'll leave something on the examination desk there when they put their boxes away. I found lying on the desk one day a pile of government bonds that would have made me rich. An old clap bed left them there. One night our nightwatchman found a man睡在 one of the private rooms. He was about to ring for the patrol and hustle the fellow out when he discovered that the intruder was one of our renters, an old man who had fallen asleep while cutting coupons from a lot of bonds. On the desk before him was an enormous pile of the bonds. The two parlors and their little private rooms are all protected from intruders by the big iron fence through whose mate one may pass save renters. But there is still another department—the storage room, where boxes and frunks are kept in the same security from fire and robbery as that afforded by the strong room. Here are scores of big trunks and boxes containing silver plate, silk, fine dresses, relics, precious books and a great list of stuff. A few churches store their communion plate in these vaults, and people going away for the summer, and having like clothes, furs or plates to leave behind are good customers. The storage charges on a common slab trunk are $3 a year, or $2 or $3 for a summer. The value of the contents counts for nothing—the rate per 1,000 cubic inches. What kind of people use safe deposit vaults? First of all, the thrifty middle class; a one might say, meaning the well-to-do people who get not quite rich. Most capitalists have valuals of their own sufficiently secure. Retired merchants and capitalists are good customers. Many lawyers and boxes for safe保管 of personal documents or records intrusted to them. Wealthy people living in the suburbs or not far out in the country and the vaults a great convenience; as do executors, guardians, trustees of hedges, societies and public institutions. Indeed, it would not be easy to immeasure an article of value that could not withstand the audience she is still treated. The mystery of the spread under the chapel question of a trap, is on paper has been defied by a trap opening in itself by the operator as to when he gather it up is careful to fold it, put own work consists, first newspaper so that the cover exactly the trap second, in setting the both traps. He once talked to divert the from both news paper more he speaks of the better he can puz watching him. Of this submit either the chaunt inspection. The trap is the ordinary denomination size. After the girl has the confederate below hand up and springs hanged seat in the chair and the illusionist ad ready for him to pull Added mystery is gained girl run out into the she van. A neat can also cause the velvet up his sleeve after he Franklin File in Chicago. Rabbit Killing The experiment of trapping Australia to destroy the bits is reported to have successful. In one of districts of Victoria $50 at its head, included fiveited space by means of on rabbits and afterwards in batches, food having puilt in a rough build which might not at once solve by hunting. Not a single cat is known its way to its original result of the expert reporter of The Met Gunette says: "During question of the sand lable before twilight oceaked in seeing three cats, on the other hand with everywhere, and some shattered but reared for weeks, were coined directions. The cats were complete masters of it. The writer goes on to exe that there is no doubt w success of the experiment over, as in expensive na London standard." Anaheim COOPERAGE. Puncheons, Barrels. Half Barrels, Small Kegs Made and Repaired. Cooperage in all Branches WILLIAM FISCHER. R. LUEDKE. Watch Maker and Jeweler, Centre Street, Anaheim. EVERY DESCRIPTION OF WATCHES, CLOCKS and Jewelry carefully repaired and warranted A fine assortment of Elgin and Waltham Watches. JEWELRY AND CLOCKS ALWAYS ON HAND NAHEIM LODGE, NO. 27, F & A M. hold regular meetings on the Monday of or preceding the full moon in each month. Sojourning brethren in good standing are cordially invited to attend. THEO REISER, W. M. J. B. GARDINER, Secrstary. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria. When she had Children, she gave them Castoria, What kind of people use safe deposit vanity? First of all, the thrifty middle class, no one might say, meaning the well to do people who are not quite rich. Most capitalists have vaults of their own sufficiently secure. Retired merchants and capitalists are good customers. Many lawyers send boxes for safe keeping of precious documents or records intrusted to tenant. Wealthy people living in the suburbs or not far out in the country find the vaults a great convenience; as do executors, guardians, trustees, treasurers of lodges, societies and public institutions. Indeed, it would not be easy to mine an article of value that could not be found in one of the many thousand little safes of the seven safety deposit companies in China—abstracts, deeds, contracts, papers of attorney, insurance policies, collectors of coins, letter to be opened after the death of the writer, collections of autographs, patents—everything precious to man or woman, even honest or reputation. Has hidden and secure in these modern strongholds—Chicago Herald. It Was "The Last Story Told." A party of gentlemen at the Farming-barn hotel were telling stories one night recently of famous shoots and how many quails, partridges, ducks and other birds had been killed at a small dishearsed After listening to what seemed a wild exaggeration by different narrators, a stranger who was present voiced his experience of his only use of the fatal double barrelled gun as follows: "I went into the field one day to try gunning. The only game discovered was an immense flock of blackbirds. I should say there were 19,000 in the flock. Slowly I crawled up toward them, and when not more than four rods away the birds rose in a solid mass. I fired both barrels, and how many do you think I killed?" "Different guesses were made by the party ranging from 20 to 100. "Not one," said the stranger, "but I went out with my brother to look for results, and we picked up four bushels of legs. I had shot a little under." This was the last story told.—New Haven News. Bucklen's Armoire The best salve in the Brussels, Sorres, Ulcers, Salt Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hair Corrs, and all Skin Eruptions wipes Piles, or no pay guaranteed to give perfect money refunded. Price: 25 For sale by A. Krug. THE WONDER OF TO-DAY. The Trick of "The Vanishing Lady." How it is said to be Performed. The vanishing lady is the wonder of the town. She was invented by Lattier de Kalta; a Paris conjurer, and she has been performing at the Eden theatre there. She is also puzzling the public in London and Berlin. The secret of her illusion has been kept in those cities, and scientists have written theories about her as learned and conjectural as those which Pope devoted to the Chose Automaton. The inventor has an agent in New York to sell her at $100 per copy. He has made a dozen sales. Every purchaser is astonished by the simplicity of the trick he has acquired, and puzzled anew to command the manual skill to utilize it. Dexterously performed, the feat is like this: The necromancer appears in full dress. A pretty girl accompanies him. He talks to her pleasantly while he moves about the stage, and presently he picks up a chair. With seeming carelessness he places it in about the middle of the stage on an open newspaper. The girl seats herself, assuming the ordinery, womanly, restful position. From a table he takes a large piece of foulard silk, a fabric not transparent, but sufficiently soft to show the form of the girl after it has completely enveloped her and the chair. Still talking, he in an instant quickly lifts the roof. The girl is not there. The chair is left exactly as it stood before she sat in it, the newspaper is beneath it, precisely as it was placed. No sounds have been heard in the meantime; there is no darkening of the stager; even the silk covering has shown no shrinkage, but preserved its form up to the moment it was lifted by the falx. How is it done? Very simply. Every body correctly guesses that a trap is used, but the investigator stops there, defeated. The chair, the newspaper, the trap, the confederate below the stage, and a bright slim girl are the things that are used. The chair is not, as it looks, an ordinary article. It is of the heavy old fashioned, nonburny kind, without rounds, thickly upholstered on the seat, with an open back. It is so built that by touching a concealed spring the seat is made to drop down from the rear on a hinge, leaving the girl free to sink down the trap, which is manipulated by the confederate below the stare. There being no rungs on the chair the girl has an easy job. When the illusionist has seated her he throws over her head the silk veil. At the moment she feels herself completely covered she works another spring, which causes a thin wire framework to rise up from the back of the chair and spread itself. A PUBLISHER TALKS OF HIS EXPERIENCE WITH AUTHORS WHO HAVE WRITTEN A BOOK. A Manuscript Worth Having is Like a Grain of Wheat in a Bushel of Chaff. Books Issued at the Author's Risk.—The Criticism of Experts. "How do we determine whether a manuscript is likely to suit our purposes?" Well," continued the publisher, "that is a pretty broad question. There are so many things to be considered and such a diversity of conditions that perhaps no two cases are handled in precisely the same way. Now, suppose you were an author with a manuscript. Unless you had some previous experience, the chances are that when walking into my office and taking a seat by ry desk you would feel rather shaky in the neighborhood of your knees. Your throat would also need considerable clearing, and I would have to be quite affable and polite before you would begin to feel at all easy in mind or body. After smoothing down the thorny path to the extent of at least endevoring to make you feel at home, I would undertake to find out whether you were the kind of man who would be likely to write a book of the kind you are offering me. I would also undertake to discover whether you wrote the manuscript because you had something to say, or simply for the purpose of making a book that might possibly sell and thus aid to your income and reputation. A GRAIN OF WHEAT. "You see, there is so much perfunctory book making in these days that a manuscript worth having is very much like a grain of wheat in a bushel of chaff. Some publishers order a new book from a back writer pretty much as they would order a pair of trousers, but my own notion is that unless a man is so full of his subject that he can't help writing his book won't amount to very much when it is written. A manufacturer can weave any given number of yards of cloth to order, and an architect can build a house to correspond exactly with the size of your bank account, but when a publisher says to some penny-niner here, I want a book of 500 pages on The Rise and Fall of Republican Principles in Europe," or some other abstract question of that sort, you can be very sure that when written the book will not be really worth reading much less printing and publishing. When a man comes to use whose ideas have evidently overflowed into a manuscript I feel that there is some promise in his work. A Safeguard. The fatal rapidity with which slight Colds and Coughs frequently develop into the gravest maladics of the throat and lungs, is a consideration which should impel every prudent person to keep at hand, as a household remedy, a bottle of AYER'S CHERRY PECTORAL. Nothing else gives such immediate relief and works so sure a cure in all affections of this class. That eminent physician, Prof. F. Sweetzer, of the Maine Medical School, Brunswick, Me., says: "Medical science has produced no other and dye expectant so good as AYER'S CHERRY PECTORAL. It is invaluable for diseases of the throat and lungs." The same opinion is expressed by the well-known Dr. L. J. Addison, of Chicago, Ill., who says: "I have never found, in thirty-five years of continuous study and practice of medicine, any preparation so great value as AYER'S CHERRY PECTORAL for treatment of diseases of the throat and lungs. It not only breaks up colds and cures severe coughs, but is more effective than anything else in relieving even the most serious bronchial and pulmonary affections." AYER'S Cherry Pectoral Is not a new claimant for popular confidence, but a medicine which is too dry saving the lives of the third generation who have come into being since it was first offered to the public. There is not a household in which this invaluable remedy has once been introduced where its use has ever been abandoned, and there is not a person who has ever given it a proper trial for any throat or lung disease susceptible of cure, who has not been made well by it. AYER'S CHERRY PECTORAL has in numberless instances, cured obstinate cases of chronic Bronchitis, Larnygitis, and even acute Pneumonia, and has saved many patients in the earlier stages of Pulmonary Consumption. It is a medicine that only requires to be taken in small doses, is pleasant to the taste, and is needed in every house where there are children; as there is nothing so good as AYER'S CHERRY PECTORAL for treatment of Group and Whoooping Cough. These are all plain facts, which can be verified by anybody, and should be remembered by everybody. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral PREPARED BY. Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by all druggists. The mystery of the open newspaper spread under the chair, to kill any suggestion of a trap, is even simpler. The paper has been definitely cut so as to contain a trap opening in itself. It is so handled by the operator as to reveal the silt and when he gathers it up after the trick he is careful to fold it, partly at least. His own work consists first, in spreading the newspaper so that the trap cut in it will cover exactly the trap in the stage, and second, in setting the chair precisely over both traps. He ought to be clever in talking to divert the spectators attention from both newspaper and chair, and the more he speaks of the absence of a trap the better he can puzzle those who are watching him. Of course, he cannot submit either the chair or newspaper to inspection. The trap used in the case is the ordinary demon's drop of good size. After the girl has passed through the confederate below the stage puts her hand up and springs to its place the hanged seat in the chair. Then no raps, and the illusionist above knows all is ready for him to pull away the weed. Added mystery is gained by ranking the girl run out into the auditorium as soon she van. A neat height of hand than can also cause the veil itself to disappear up his sleeve after he has lifted it — Franklin File in Chicago Tribune. Rabbit Killing in Australia. The experiment of turning cathouse in Australia to destroy the swarms of rabbits is reported to have proved clinically successful. In one of the worst infestations of Victoria $200 cents were bought at 15 a head, inclosed for a time in a limited space by means of wire netting, fed on rabbits and afterward turned into batches, food having been still supplied in a rough building for may cots which might not at once support them, solved by hunting. Not a single cat is known to have found its way to its original home, and got to the result of the experiment, the special reporter of The Melbourne Farmers' Gazette says: "During a thorough investigation of the sand hummocks just a half before twilight our party only succeeded in seeing three rabbits. The cats, on the other hand, were to be met with everywhere, and mangled rabbits, some slaughtered but recently and others dead for weeks, were come across in all directions. The cats were evidently the complete masters of the situation." The writer goes on to express the opinion that there is no doubt whatever as to the success of the experiment, which is moreover, as expensive as it is successful — London Standard. Special Guardians of Royalty. Gen. Count Mirza, who was shot by the insurgent soldiers here the other day, sent to the celebratory clan of Mehmed. Writing the Christmas Stories: Margaret Litter—it is time to arrange small doses, is pleasant in every house where there are children; there is nothing so good as AYER'S CHERRY PECTORAL for treatment of Croup and Whooping Cough. These are all plain facts, which can be verified by anybody, and should be remembered by everybody. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral PREPARED BY. Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by all druggists. J.M.Griffith Company (A CORPORATION) LUMBER DEALERS (Near Railroad Depot) ANAHEIM. Keep constantly on hand DOORS, BLINDS. WINDOWS. MOULDINGS. POSTS. SHAKES. SHINGLES. LATH. HAIR, PLASTER OF PARIS. Anaheim Grist Mills Operating on WEDNESDAYS and SATURDAYS of each week. Grain, Food, Meal, etc., of all varieties. Corn Shellled and Shipped W.T.BROWN. Agent. Wellington Coal! (Screened) Selling now at $14 per ton delivered. Baled Hay! Special Guardians of Royalty. Gen. Count Minas, who was shot by the insurgent soldier here the other day, belonged to the celebrated clan of Montes de Espinosa. The latter have the military privilege of watching over the numbers of the royal family of Spain. At 11 p.m. the palace doors are solitary locked; the attendant and follower withdraw, and the whole building is occupied to the sole care of these Monsters. In pairs they march nonetheless through the rooms and corridors the whole night, crossing each other at stated intervals. Two remain standing but upright the whole night long in the entire room of each royal bed chamber. At no clock in the morning the glaze doors are again ceremoniously unlocked, and the Monsters retire. So jealous are they of this privilege that they never hurry out of the clan, and a woman belonging to it will travel from one end or stash to the other in order that her child may be born in their village of Espinosa. Artemilee Photographs. A photograph which has found its way into the shop windows recently is that of the Marquisess of Londonberry, wife of the new viceroy of Ireland. She is represented as wearing her coronet mid with a book of cold disclaim on her face which is in accordance with one's ideas of a royal lady of the old times. It is not customary nowadays for the aristocracy and royalty to affect crowns and coronets when they have their photographs taken. Nearly all those of the Princess of Wiles, and of the queen's family represent them in very plain attire—London Letter. Bucklen's Arnica Salve. The best salve in the world for Cats, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt, Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chillblains, Corps, and all Skin Eruptions, and positive cures Poles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price: 25 cents per box For sale by A. Krug. Writing the Christmas Stories: Margaret Linder—It is time to arrange for our Christmas to tie. Assistant—I have arranged them. "Are the authors work?" "Yes, they have collaborated together hired a team in our house, and I send the office boy granted twice a day to jingle skirts under the window." —Omaha Herald. An Explanation. Indignant Leander—Mrs. Winks, when I returned last night I found no lamp in my room, and this morning I saw that the two novels I was reading had disappeared. Mrs. Winks—Yes sir. You see, I need the girl forgot to put the lamp there. I thought you wouldn't need the novel. It's a very interesting one, sir—Omaha World. Injury to the Eye. Two German physicians have calculated the relative liability of injury to the eye, finding that if all parts of the body were equally injured to injury, wounds of the eye would bear to wounds of other parts the proportion of about one in 600. As a matter of fact, the actual proportion is more than twenty things as great, or 36 in 1,000—Arkansaw Traveler. The Better Word. "Wasn't it Dr. Holmes?" The Herald asks, "who said that only 'gentls' wear 'pants,' while gentlemen generally wear pantaloons." We think it was. The doctor might have added that men frequently wear trousers—Boston Record. At a recent convention of physicians it was proven by analysis that Red Star Cough Cure contained no dangerous narcotics. The test was so convincing that the most sceptical were satisfied, and physicians everywhere now recommend the remedy. Only 25 cents. W.T. BROWN Agent. Wellington Coal! Screened Selling now at $14 per to deliver. Baled Hay! Wholesale and Retail. H. C. GADE. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION LAND OFFICE AT LOS ANGELES CALIF. Notice is hereby given that the following masters or has filled more than 100 pages for proof in support of law and that such proof made before Berger and Receiver at Los Angeles, Cal., on April 4, 1877, will be delivered to J. D. BETHUNE Register. Dilley & Brunswicker. PROPRIETORS Palace Meat Market Los Angeles St., Anaheim Keep everything in line of meat of the freshest and boiled quintuplets of pork will deliver all orders to any person who has come to Anahe to buy we responsibly hold the percentage of the public, and will always collector to please them. AGENTS WANTED TO SELL "REMINISCENCES" OF 60 years in THE NATIONAL METROPOLIS. By BEN PERLEY POORE Illustrating the Wit. Humor and Enchantment of noted celebrities. A richly Illustrated treat of inner Sensory History, from "you old in time" to the wedding of Cleveland. Wonderfully Popular. Agents report rapid sales. Address for circular and terms: A.L.BANCKOTT & CO., Publishers, San Francisco, Cal. CASTORIA for Infants and Children. *Castoria is so well adapted to children that I recommend it as superior to any prescription known to me.* H.A. Archer, M.D., III So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N.Y. Castoria cures Colle, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Eructation, Kills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes digestion. Without injurious medication. The Centaur Company, 122 Fulton Street, N.Y. BANK OF ANAHEIM CAPITAL STOCK, $100,000.00. PLEZ, JAMES... PRESIDENT G. B. SHAFFER... SECRETARY BOARD OF DIRECTORS: E. F. SPENCE, W.H.MAURY 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 Merchants Bank, Los Angeles, Pacific Bank, San Francisco, Post National Bank, New York. GOLDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERY CURES ALL HUMORS, from a common Blotch, or Eruption, to the worst Scrofula. Salt-rheum, "Nover-sores," Scaly or Mough Skin, in short, all diseases caused by bad blood are conquered by this powerful, purifying, and invigorating medicine. Great Eating Ulcers may heal under its benign influence. Especially has it manifested its potency in curing Atherer, Rose Hash, Bolls, Carbuncles, Sore Lyes, Scrofulous Sore and Swellings, Hip-Joint Disease, White Swellings, Golttre, or Thick Neck, and Enlarged Glands. Send ten cents in stamps for a large treatise, with colored plates, on Skin Disease, or the same amount for frontice on Scrofulous Afections. "THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE." Throughly cleans it by using Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, and good digestion, a fair skin, buoyant spirit, vital strength, and soundness of constitution, will be established. CONSUMPTION, which is Scrofulous Disease of the Knee, is promptly and certainly arrested and cured by this God-given remedy; if taken before the best stages of the disease are reached, from its wonderful power over this terribly fatal disease when first offering this now collected remedy to the public, Dr. Pierce through a worthy calling it his "Consumption Cure." But abandoned that name as too limited for a medicine which, from its wonderful combination of tonic, or strengthening, alternative, or blood-cleansing, anti-bilious, pectoral, and nutritive properties, is unequalled not only as a remedy for consumption of the lungs, but for all. Money, Buys and Sells Exchange and Currency, makes Collections and transacts a General Banking Business. CORESPONDENTS: First National Bank, Los Angeles, Farmers and Merchants Bank, Los Angeles, Pacific Bank, San Francisco, Fargo National Bank, New York. DRAFTS, LETTERS OF CREDIT OR POSTAL notice issued on banks in the principal cities of all European countries. Tickets entitle the holder to escape from New York to the several ports of England; France or the many 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, entailing the holder to passage in railroad from San Francisco to New York, or vice versa, issued at the established rate. Persons in Academy or visiting district to send to any point in the country to need for any relative friend can purchase ticket here and forward them to the proper person by mail. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF Los Angeles. Capital Stock $100,000 Surplus $125,000 E. F. SPENCE, President, J. M. ELLIOTT, Cashier DIRECTORS: J. D. BOWEN, J. E. COOK, B. MALEY WILLAY, E. E. SENSE STOCKHOLDERS: Edgar A. B. WHITMAN O. WATTERS J. F. CAIVEN E. H. HUNGELESS H. MURRAY LIN CARLTON J. D. BOWEN TRIED IN THE CRUCIBLE. S.S.S. GOLDEN Medical Discovery, and good digestion, a fair skin, buoyant spirits, vital strength, and soundness of constitution, will be established. CONSUMPTION, which is serofulous Disease of the Kerns is primarily and certainly arrested and called by this God-given remedy, if taken before the last stages of the disease are reached. From its wonderful power over this terrible fatal diseases when first offering this now celebrated remedy to the public, Dr. Prince thought it so calling it his "Consumption Curse." It abandoned that name as too limited for a medicine which, from its wonderful combination of tonic, or strengthen-irrelevant, or blood-cleansing, anti-bilious, pectoral, and nutritive properties, is unequaled, not only as a remedy for consumption of the lungs, but for all. CHRONIC DISEASES OF THE Liver, Blood, and Lungs. If you feel dull, frosty, debilitated, have salver color of skin, or yellowish-brown spots on nose or lips, frequent headache or diarrhea, total tissue in mouth, internal heat or chills alternating with hot flashes, low spirits and gloomy hordeoning, irregular appetite, and constipation you are suffering from Indigestion, Diarrhea, and Torpid Liver or Biliary Neck." In many cases only part of these conditions are experienced. As a remedy for all acesses, Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery has no doubt. Week Drugs: Supling of Blood, Sharpeness of North Atlantic Consumption, and liberal effusions; it is a sovereign remedy, lead to a recovery for Dr. Pierce's book on Consumption. Sold by Druggists. PRICE $1.00, PRICE $3.00. World's Dispensary Medical Association, Precipitates 335 Main St., Buffalo, N.Y. ANTI-SALICIDE AND CARBAMATIC PILLS. $500 REWARD Refined by the prescribing of Lemon curd ash thereby they cannot care. If you have a discharve from ten times offensive or other white portal loss of smell taste, collaring weakness duplex pain Convenience to look you have Catarrh. Thoroughly cleanses in consumption. Dr. Pierce curses the worst Cholera in the Head and Gallerias in Baconee. 60 cents. The BUVER'S GUIDE is issued Sept. and March each year. 243 pages, 87½ inches with over 3,800 illustrations—a whole Picture Gallery. GIVES Wholesale Prices direct to consumers on all goods for personal or family use. Talk how to order, and gives exact cost of everything you use, eat, drink, wear, or have fun with. These INVALUABLE BOOKS contain information gained from the markets of the world. We will mail a copy FREE to any address upon receipt of 10 cents to defray expense of mailing. Letters hear from you. Hopefully, MONTGOMERY WARD & CO, 997 Avenue Wash Ave., Chicago, IL WARNING CLASSES Alert! We are now prepared to furnish all news with accurate information. Business new and proximal of either sex may easily TRIED IN THE CRUCIBLE. About twenty years ago I discovered a little sore on my cheek, and the doctors pronounced it cancer. I have tried a number of physicians, but without receiving any permanent benefit. Among the number were one or two specialists. The medicine they applied was like fire to the sore, causing intense pain. I saw a statement in the papers telling what S. S. S. had done for others similarly afflicted. I procured some at once. Before I had used the second bottle the neighbors could notice that my cancer was healing up. A general health had been bad for two or three years—I had a hacking cough and spit blood continually. I had a severe pain in my breast. After taking six bottles of S. S. S. my cough left me and I grew stouter than I had been for several years. My cancer has healed over all but a little spot about the size of a half dime, and it is rapidly disappearing. I would advise every one with cancer to give S. S. S. a fair trial. Mrs. Nancy J. McConaughey, Ashle Grove, Tippecanoe Co., Ind. Feb. 16, 1896. Swift's Specific is entirely vegetable, and seems to cure cancers by forcing out the impurities from the blood. Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., DRAWER 3, ATLANTA, GA. MONEY to be made. Cut this out and return to us, and we will send you free something of great value and importance to you, that will start you in business which will bring you in more money right away than anything else in the world. And we will do the work and live at home. Either sex all ages. Something new, that just gains money for all workers. We will start your capital not needed. This is one of the important chances of a lifetale. These who are abilt and enterering will not delay. Grass outfit free. Address Lack Co., Augusta, Maine. TUTT'S PILLS 25 YEARS IN USE. The Greatest Medical Triumph of the Age SYMPTOMS OF A TORPID LIVER. Loose appetite, Howea costive, Pain in the head, with a dull sensation in the back part, Palm under the shoulder-blade, Fullness after eating, with a dislocation of body or mind, Irritability of temper, Low spirit, with a focusing of having neglected some duty, Weariness of Dizziness, Fluttering at the Heart, Dote before the eyes, Headache over the right eye, Restlessness, with total dreams, Bright colored Urine, and CONSTIPATION. TUTT'S PILLS are especially adapted to such cases, one does effects such as change of feelings on emotion in the sufferer. They increase the Appetite and cause the body to Take on Flesh; thus the system is nourished by the Tonic Action on the digestive Organs. Hunger & Stoolare produced by Tutts' Hair Dye. Gray Hair or Whiskers changed to a Glossy Black by a single application of this Dye. It imparts a natural color, acts instantaneously, sold by Druggists, or sent by express on receipt of $1. Office: 44 Murray St., New York. YOU can live at home, and make more money at work for us than at any thing in this of ridiculous not-needed; you are started free. Both sexes; all ages. Any one can do the work. Large earnings sure from first start. Costly outfit and terms free better not delay. Cost you nothing to send to your address and find it if you are wise you will do so a price. H. Hallert & Co., Portland, Maine.