anaheim-gazette 1889-02-28
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OLD SPINNING WHEELS.
OUR GRANDMOTHER'S METHOD OF PREPARING WOOL FOR LOOMS.
Minute Description of the Little Old Machine Which Has Been an Inspiration to Poets and Composers—"Things Ain't Just as They Used to Be."
Spinning—that is, home spinning—has just as much gone out of fashion in the New England and eastern states as sulphur matches, and for just the same reason—there is no need of either now that something better has taken their place. There are, however, plenty of good wives who once on a time were learned practitioners in the domestic arts of spinning and dyeing, and it is from the lips of one of these that I gathered the following information, which I should imagine would be of interest to your western hearers:
"The first thing, you see," said this good lady, "is to pick the wool. No,aint either," she said, interrupting herself; "the first thing is to wash and shear the sheep, but as that’s done now just as it always was, I don’t need tell you anything about it. When the wool was abeared and washed we used to take it and pull it all apart, getting out all the tangles and barrins and dirt that was left. When it was all picked it had to be greased, and to do this we put a plate with lard on it in front of us and a heap of the picked wool to the left side. We then rubbed a bit of lard on both palms, took up a flock of wool and worked it between our hands until every bit was greased. When there was enough wool greased the old man or one of the farm hands would take it right away to the tarding mills."
"When the wool came back from the carders it was in bundles about two feet long, and made up a number of tight pressed rols the size of my little finger, each roll jest the length of the bundle. When we want to use the wool we’d take the bundle, give it a shake, pick out a roll and then begin spinning. I don’t know as ever you’ve seen a wheel, but if you aren’t there mine in the setting room, and praps I can best explain how we worked it if you’ll come in there."
A stout woolen horse with a slophe-body formed the base of the machine. At either end was inserted an upright—the one at the higher end stationary and supporting the wheel; that at the lower end movable and holding the "head," the vacant space between the "two being used to hold the rolls just spoken of. The wheel was fully four feet in diameter, of oak, with rounded spokes springing from a solid hub, and joining a lyre two inches wide, in which was stuck a groove to receive the driving band. This—a stout cord—passed round a sharply grooved barrel in the "head" of two inches in diameter, and wagons happened to be going our way a few miles, we reached Gorm some minutes after 10 o’clock, and saw a Frenchman hanging by the neck beside a well his breast torn by rifle shots—gently spectacle, to warn the people that they must not pollute the water to prevent the German soldiery from drinking it. We pushed on, a shade sickened by an object so repulsive. A beautiful bronze figure of an angel, the signal of the establishment of a benevolent sisterhood, appeared above low trees on the right. There was a remote rattle of musketry in the same direction, and occasionally the grumbling, beyond wooded hills, of cannon—Mural Halstead in The Century.
The Little "Fails" of Dear Ornans.
It is pen-ups well that some distant traits mark us all—it prevents wearsome monotony. How affectionately do we remember the little characteristic habits and fancies of those whom we love, more especially when our memories in these matters revert to the dead. The little "fails," as we call them, of father and mother become scarred as we look back upon them in our after years, and the quaint peculiarities of many an old friend are remembered lovingly when they themselves have traveled away.
THE FOURTH OF JULY
CELEBRATED BY POLITICAL OFFENDERS IN A RUSSIAN PRISON.
Three Hundred of the Czar's "Buspeets"
Remember the Centennial of American Independence—Flags, Streamers, Songs and Hurrahs—A Touching Spectacle.
In the summer of 1876, when there were confined in the house of detention more than 200 political offenders, it was decided to have a general prison celebration of the centennial Fourth of July—the birthday of the American republic. As early as the first week in June the prisoners began to make preparations for the proposed celebration, by requesting relatives who visited them to send to the prison for their use as many red and blue handkerchiefs, neckerchefs, shirts and pairs of red flannel drawers as could be sent without exiting suspicion, and at the same time all the prisoners who were permitted to have movable lights began to purchase and board candles. The colored garments were torn into strips, the candles were cut into inch-long bits, and both were distributed by means of the water closet pipes throughout the whole prison. None of the women, who were allowed to have noses and thread to sew in their cells succeeded in making rude American flags, and before July 1 almost every political offender in the prison had either a flag, or a few strips of red, white and blue cloth, and an inch or two of candle.
RED, WHITE AND BLUE.
Day breaks in the latitude of St. Petersburg in summer very early, and on the morning of the Fourth of July, 1876, hours before the first midnight cannot announced the beginning of the great national celebrations.
A stout woolen horse with a slophe body formed the base of the machine. At either end was inserted an upright. The gait at the higher end stationary and supporting the wheel; that at the lower end movable and holding the "head," the vacant space between the two being used to hold the rolls just spoken of. The wheel was fully four feet in diameter, of oak, with rounded spokes springing from a solid hub, and joining a lyre two inches wide, in which was sunk a groove to receive the driving band. This—a stout cord—passed round a slightly grooved barrel in the "head" of two inches in diameter, and gave to it, of course, all exceedingly rapid revolution, which was still further added to by a second grooved wheel of four inches in diameter set on the same axles as the barred driven by the main wheel. The hand over the second wheel encircled a still smaller one from which the spindle spring. The spindle was of iron, three inches long and with a half thread at the end, the laarings were of plained corn husks, and the whole was attached to tapering wooden pegs lifting into a socket drilled into the second or movable upright. By a wooden screen at its base the upright was worked back to give the driving band its proper tension. It will be easily understood, I trust, that a single turn of the big wheel would set the spindle revolving at such a rite that it would actually hum, and it was to the humming of such wheels that the old housewives of lang syne spun the thread from which stockings, carpets, coverlets and blankets were afterwards made by their tireless hands.
"Lennine see," said my delightful old informant, "it I can't find a speck of wool somewhere so as I can show you just how we worked." Then she went out on the search and soon came back with what she called a "check."
"Taint good wool," she said, "but I guess it will do."
Setting the wheel in motion with a light touch of her right hand, she held the end of the wool to the spindle with the left. It caught at office, and walking quickly backward and slightly from the wheel, but always keeping within its easy reach, a twisted thread seemed to grow out from between her practiced finger and thumb, even throughout and fine enough, if not to saw at least to darn with. When the thread grew long the spinner rapidly advanced toward the spindle, carrying her hand near the wheel, a motion that instantly wound up the thread around it—the spindle. So the operation was repeated until in a very few minutes the wool was exhausted.
"My fingers aren't quite what they used to be," said the old lady, but I assured her—as was the fact—that I had never seen any one spin a better thread. The old lady smiled and went on:
"When this spindle is full, you see, it has to be wound off, and that is done on the reel over yonder.
The reel thus pointed out was a simple arrangement of two cross pieces of wood set so as to make four revolving arms, and furnished at every end with a long peg.
"The reel," said my informant, "is placed beside the spinning wheel just under the spindle here, the band is thrown off, and by turning the reel the thread is wound off from the spindle. From the reel it was made up into skeins and laid away for use. We've still got the old boon out in the carriage house that my mother used to weave on, and I got so far on with it as to be able to lay out a blanket. Then the mills were built at the falls and the loom was laid away. We still used the wheel, however, for holding threads for hoisting with them."
Day breaks in the latitude of St. Petersburg in summer very early, and on the morning of the Fourth of July, 1870, hours before the first midnight cannot announced the beginning of the great national celebration in Philadelphia, hundreds of American flags and streamers of red, white and blue fluttered from the grated windows of the political around the whole quadrangle of the great St. Petersburg prison, and the members of the prison "clubs" were faintly hurrahing, singing patriotic songs and exchanging greetings with one another through the water closet pipes which united their cells.
The celebration, of course, was soon over. The prison guard, although they had never heard of the Declaration of Independence and did not understand the significance of this extraordinary demonstration, promptly seized and removed the flags and tricolored streamers. Some of the prisoners, however, had more material of the same kind in reserve, and at intervals throughout the whole day scrapes and tatters of red, white and blue werefurtively hung out here and there from soil windows or tied around the bars of the gratings. Late in the evening, at a preconcert hour, the political lighted their bits of candle and placed them in their windows, and the celebration ended with a faint but perceptible illumination of the great prison quadrangle.
TOUCHING AND MOURNING.
There seems to me to be something profoundly mournful and touching in this attempt of 300 political offenders to celebrate together, in the loneliness and gloom of a Russian prison, the centennial birthday of a free people. Compared with the banners, the fireworks, the marital music and the glowing pageantry of triumphant liberty in Philadelphia, the rudely fashioned stars and stripes hung out from grated cell windows, the faint burring and singing of patriotic songs through water closet pipes, and the few bits of tallow candle, illuminating faintly at night dark, silent quadrangle of the prison in St. Petersburg, may seem pitifully weak, ineffective and insignificant; but judged by a spiritual standard, the celebration in the house of preliminary detention, in the Russian capital, of the American centennial Fourth of July, is an event almost as extraordinary, and to heart and imagination of a freeman almost as impressive, as the splendid demonstration in Philadelphia.
Human actions are not to be judged solely by the scenic effect which they produce, but are also to be regarded as manifestations of human emotion and purpose. When Mary Magdalene anointed the feet of her Lord and Master as an expression of her devotion and love it was a simple thing, almost a trivial thing, but Christ said: "She bath done what she could." When the Russian revolutionists hung out rude imitations of the star-spangled banner from their cell windows, and lighted at night their boarded bits of candle as an expression of their devotion to liberty and their sympathy with the reprisals of a fever and happier people, it too was a simple thing, almost a trivial thing, but they did what they could. George Kennan in The Century.
A Brave Little Girl.
But," resumed Plankett," I asked or little girl over to the left of the Chancellorville tavern, that they couldn't make run by balls, but that there fire what I've told you
The reel thus pointer out was a simple arrangement of two cross pieces of wood set so as to make four revolving arms, and furnished at every end with a long peg.
"The reel," said my informant, "is placed beside the spinning wheel just under the spindle here, the band is thrown off, and by turning the reel the thread is wound off from the spindle. From the reel it was made up into skeins and laid away for use. We've still got the old boom out in the carriage house that my mother used to weave on, and I got so far on with it as to be able to lay out a blanket. Then the mills were built at the falls and the loom was laid away. We still used the wheel, however, for spinning thread for knitting with, and just rate thread it was, too."—Cor. San Francisco Chronicle.
The Blarney Stone.
A popular tradition attributes to the blarney stone the power of endowing whoever kisses it with the sweet, persuasive, wheeling eloquence so perceptible in the language of the Cork people, and which is generally termed blarney. This is the true meaning of the word, and not, as some writers have supposed, a faculty of deviating from veracity with an unblushing countenance, whenever it may be convenient.
The curious traveler will seek in vain the real stone, unless he allows himself to be lowered from the northern angle of the lofty castle, when he will discover it about twenty feet from the top, with the inscription: "Corinne MacCarthy fortis me terrificit, A. D., 1446."—St. Louis Republic.
A Duel with Paint Brushes.
One of the commonest ordeals to which movies were subjected in the painters' studios in Paris was the paint brush duel. The two latest arrivals were stripped to the waist and perched on very high stools face at arm's length. They were then armed with big brushes filled with color, one with Prussian blue and the other with crimson lake, and the duel began. Perfect strangers to each other, and having no insults to avenge, the combatants want very gingerly to work at the outset, anxious to keep their balance and avoid being daubed with paint. But, stimulated by the shouts of spectators, they gradually warmed to their work. A first blow was struck and returned; wavering, staggering and writhing, the opponents, with their bodies all splashed with paint, broke their brushes and rolled on the floor where they exchanged their blue and red sores in a hand to hand light, which ended in the duels fraternally soaping and washing each other's wounds.—Moran-Nauthier,
Incident of the France-Francais War.
We breakfasted on a bit of chocolate cake and a sip of wine and a rank and rough cigar, and after a tollsome march, broken by the chance that the telegram
A Brave Little Girl.
"But," resumed Plankett, "I see ar little girl over to the left of the old Chancellorsville tavern, that they couldn't make run by bails, but that there fire what I've told you erust made her git up.
"The little girl's folks were refugued folks, and they were living in or little house out in the wilderness by some old gold mines. The mother had went up the river and got cut off from her home, and the little girl erout 12 years old was taking care of the house and the little baby boy, and the fighting soon got so force that it was safer to lay down at one place than it was to try to run out, so she stayed and hugged the little brother close in her arms, and lay down on the floor till she heard the fire or cracking and erouaring, and then she rix, and with the baby boy in her arms and her hair all streaming down her back, with nothing on her head, she pitched out amidst the shower of lead, and the soldiers seed her and begin to cheer, and that seemed to get her faster, till her foot caught in or bush and tripped her and threw her down, and the little baby fall away in front of her, and er bomb buried and tore up the dirt not more than twenty feet in front, but she never left her little brother. She grabbed him and started ergin, and the Yankees coated firing, and the soldiers of both sides cheered worse than ever, and the whole line pulled off their caps and waved to the little lady as she went over the brow of the hill. I hope she lived to see the days of peace restored, and I hope she may live to raise up a family as true to the old flag as she was to her little baby brother."—Sargee in Atlanta Constitution.
European Residents of Calcutta.
And now something of the society of Calcutta. The Europeans live in considerable style, own fair horses, and the ladies are finely dressed. All have a large array of servants, whose demanor toward their employers is far more servile than was ever that of the slaves of our southern states. This, however, is entirely outward, and here has characterized for ages the deportment of all inferiorers toward their superiors. The children are fairly rauddy up to 4 or 5 years of age. After that it is not safe to attempt to wear them here. They become debilitated and painfully lacking in vital energy. All live amid too trepid exposure to the sun, even at this season. We are constantly warned on this point. Carter Harrison in Chicago Mail.
BEBCHALS PILLS
BEAK STRAIN; BREAD MESIN; MOORD LIE;
PILL MAIL; MECHANIS PILLS ON RECRIT OF PRICE 25 CENTS A BOX.
P. DES GRANGES.
Steam Boring Well Tools.
and Shallow Wells bored on abortant
zines. Also deep and shallow Drive Wells.
orders through the postoffice at Anaheim and
CYCLONE WINDMILL.
nips and Tanks supplied and set up.
Notice to Creditors.
STATE OF HENRY SCHWARTZ, DECEASED.
Notice is hereby given by the undergrad., Addresser of the estate of Henry Schwartz, deceased,
a creditor of and all persons having claims
on the mid descend to exhibit the name, with
secondary vouchers, within four months after the
annual closing of this building at the mid sale. Addresser of his place of business at Room 23 to 24, Lanbuilding, offices of Willis & Trout, attorneycity of Los Angeles, in the county of Los Anglestate of California.
This twenty-fourth day of January, A. D.
Z. DECKER,
Administrator of the estate of Henry Schwartz, deceased,
has a final attorneys for Administrator.
M.Griffith Company
(A CORPORATION.)
NUMBER DEALERS
(Near Railroad Depot)
NAHEIM.
Keep constantly on hand
Doors, Blinds, Windows,
OULDINGS.
ORANGETREES
FOR 1889.
Great Reduction in Prices.
FIRST-CLASS TREES.
The best Orange Trees are now within the reach of
all planters. Genuine Washington Navels, of our own building, and other variation at about one-half usual prices.
NAVEL
Orange Orchards $300 to $400 an Acre.
Rooted Muscat Vines and Cuttings.
ORANGE AND VINEYARD LANDS AT LOW PRICES. Hand for circulars.
J.H.FOUNTAIN & CO.
dec2711 RIVERSIDE, CAL.
E. E. MORRIS,
Manager California Dept.
Amory Bigelow,
Commission Merchant & Jobber in
CALIFORNIA PRODUCTS,
GREEN & DRIED FRUITS, NUTS, ETC.
Pacific Coast Steamship COMPANY.
GOODALL, PARKING & CO. General Agent in Premises.
NORTHERN ROUTES.
Business House for Portland, Or., Tustona, R.C., and Peugeot bound and Abode, and all resort points.
SOUTHERN ROUTES.
TIME TABLE FOR FEBRUARY, 1889.
STKAMERS.
Quem of Produce Jan. 26 Feb. 2 Feb. 4
Quem of Produce Feb. 26 Feb. 4
Quem of Produce Feb. 26 Feb. 4
Quem of Produce Feb. 26 Feb. 4
Quem of Produce Feb. 26 Feb. 4
The smallest Quem of the Pacific, and City of Puget Sound San Pedro for San Diego on the date of Gulf arrival from San Francisco, and on their trip between San Pedro and San Francisco call at Santa Barbara and Port Hardt (San Luis Obispo) only.
The Erie and Los Angeles calls at all way ports leave R.P.R.B.D., Los Angeles, as follows:
With Queen of the Pacific, and City of Pugetla at 8:00 o'clock, A.M.
With Los Angeles and Eureka gelag north, at 8:00 o'clock, P.M.
For passage or freight; as above, or for Ticket to and from
All Important Points in Europe,
Apply to
W. PARRIS, Agent.
OFFICE—No. 8 Commercial Street* Los Angeles*
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN
In the oldest and most popular scientific and mechanical patent published and has the largest number of inventions among all parts illustrated. Best stock Warranties. Published weekly. Send for specimen copy $3 a year. Four month trial. H.MUNN & CO., FURNARIES, MI Broadway, N.Y.
ARCHITECTS & BUILDERS
Edition of Scientific American.
A great success. Each home contains colored lithographic plates of country and city residences and full plans and provisions for such contempte building. Price $1.00 a year. Mtns a copy. Munn & Co., FURNARIES.
DATENTS
may be acquired by applying to Munn &
Co., who no years' experience and have made over
PASTURAGE
REDUCED RATES 1
now prepared to receive an unlimited
of stock for pasture at my ranch three miles
of Anaheim.
Samuel Kraemer,
ck Time and Choap Fares
To Eastern and European Cities,
the great Transcontinental All-Rail Routes.
Southern Pacific Company
(PACIFIC SYSTEM)
Express Trains make prompt connections with
the several Railway Lines in the East,
AND AT
YORK AND NEW ORLEANS
With the several Steamer Lines
ALL-EUROPEAN PORTS.
Pullman Palace Sleeping Cars.
URIST SLEEPING CARS
Attached to Overland Express Trains
Tickets sold, Sleeping-car Berth secured and
information given upon application to the city's Office, where passengers calling in persecure choice of routes, etc.
TOWNE, J.C. STUBBS,
Manager.
T.H. GOODMAN,
Gen. Traf Mer.
San Francisco, Cal.
RAILROAD LANDS
For Sale on Reasonable Terms
Lands in Central and Northern California, Oregon and Utah, apply to our address
W. H MILLS, Land Agent, C.P. K. R.
San Francisco.
VILLIAM McINIOSH,
vanized IRON CORNICE
MAKER—PLUMBER,
E. E. MORRIS,
Manager California Dept.
Amory Bigelow,
Commission Merchant & Jobber in
CALIFORNIA
PRODUCTS,
GREEN & DRIED FRUITS, NUTS,ETC.
105 South Water Street,
REKEBRACKER:
Commercial National Bank, and
THE WHOLESALE GROWERY TRADE GARDEN.
Chicago.
Liberal Advances made on Consignments mid-lyr.
BANK OF ANAHEIMCAPITAL STOCK,
$100,000.00.
PLEZ JAMES...President
GEORGE V. HORR...Cashier
BOARD OF DIRECTORS:
E. F. SPENCE, W. H. MABURY
W. K. JAMES,
S. H. MOTT, P. JAMES.
This Bank receives Deposits, Loans Money, Buys and Sells Exchange and Currency, makes Collections and transacts a General Banking Business.
CORRESPONDENTS:
First National Bank, Los Angeles, Farmers and Merchants Bank, Los Angeles Pacific Bank, San Francisco First National Bank New York.
DRAFTS, LETTERS OF CREDIT OR POSTAL orders issued on Banks in the principal cities of 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 relatives or friend can purchase ticket here and forward them to the proper person by mail.
FIRST
NATIONAL
BANK
Notice of Sale of Real Estate at Private Sale.
Notice is hereby given that in pursuance of an order of the Superior Court of the county of Los Angeles, State of California made on the 21st day of January, A.D. 1889, in the matter of the estate and guardianhip of Hortensia Gates, a minor, the undersigned, the guardian of said minor, will sell at private sale to the highest and best bidder on or after the 11th day of February, 1889, for cash, gold coin of the United States, and subject to confirmation by said Superior Court, all the right, title and interest of the said Hortensia Gates, minor, and in to that certain lot, piece or parcel of land situate lying in being in the city of Los Angeles, county of Los Angeles, State of California, and particularly described as follows: to wit:
Being a part of Lot 3 of Block 26 of Hanock's survey of said city, and more particularly described as follows: to wit: Commencing at a point on the southerly line of Diamond street, distant farley feet easterly from the southeast corner of Diamond and Smith streets, and which point is distant 1.07 chains easterly from the north-west corner of said lot No. 3; thence easterly along the southerly line of Diamond street and hundred and ten (110) feet; thence southerly parallel with Smith street six hundred and seventeen and three-fourths (617) feet to place of beginning on Diamond street.
All bids or offers must be in writing and may be made at any time after the first publication of this notice and before the making of the sale, and must be left with Wicks & Ward, attorneys, rooms 86 and 87 Temple block, Los Angeles, California, or delivered to the undersigned personally at his residence in Los Angeles city, or filed in the office of the clerk of said Court.
Guardian of the person and estate of Hortensia Gates, a minor.
Dated, January 24th, 1889.
Richard Melrose and Wicks & Ward. At torneys for Guardian.
NOTICE.
CAME TO THE PLACE OF THE UNDERSIGNED ON the Marion York road nearby on December 18th, 1889. The owner may have same by proving property and paying for advertisement.
GABRIEL DE LOS REVES.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF Los Angeles.
Capital Stock $200,000
Reserve $35,000
United States Depository.
OFFICERS:
E. F. SPENCE, President.
J. D. BICKNELL, Vice-President.
J. M. ELLIOTT, Cashier.
G. B. SHAFFER, Assistant Cashier.
DIRECTORS:
E. F. SPENCE,
J. D. BICKNELL,
S. H. MOYT,
J. M. ELLIOTT,
KELLOGG BROS., Real Estate AGENTS.
Having sold our shares we are prepared to devote our entire attention to the Real Estate business.
H. C. KELLOGG, Civil Engineer and Surveyor.
NOTICE.
CLIENT TO THE PLACE OF THE UNDERSIGNED ON THE MARQUEe One day may white feet and loose soil in Jeans Moreno in July 1888. The owner may have same by providing property and paying for advertisement.
GABRIEL DE LOS REVES
$5 REWARD.
LOST—BETWEEN THE RESIDENCE OF F. G. Ryan and the Episcopal Church on Sunday January 6th, a Black Fur Cape. Route was on Palm Center and Los Angeles streets. Above reward will be paid on return of Cape to Mr. Ryan.
J. S. WEBER.
Center street, Anaheim, dealer in STOVES, TINWARE AGATEWARE, Pumps, Pipes and Brass Goods.
Plumbing done according to the San Francisco Sanitary Plumbing Law, to keep your house healthy and free from smell.
Agent for Quick-Meal Gasoline Stove.
Also agent for the HALIDAY WINDMILL.
EXCURSIONS East and West. SEMI-MONTHLY.
Through Sleeping Care to Kalah City and Chicago Free Sleeping Accommodations GOING EAST.
For lowest rates and full information apply to Warner Brothers Clark st., Chicago.
Or, L. A. DEMOTD, ticket agent, Rutka Pa route, at Alameda. Said in C. D. Commsilge, North Spring street, Los Angeles, for the Southern California Excursion.
Second-Hand Spring Wagon FOR HALE GREAT FOR CAMEL. Apply to S. A. DENNIIS, the PAINTER.
SCOTTS EMULSION is Physicians to be the Financial ration in the world for the Consumption of General Resiliency Diseases, Emulsions, Colors and Chemicals.
The great remedy for Cold Weather in Children...
F. & J. BACKS,
Furniture, Bedding
And Wall Paper,
Picture Frames, Curtains and Mirrors, Palettes,
Oils and Carriages, Building Machines
and Material.
UNDERTAKERS.
All Orders In Chains Work, Paper Hanging,
Post, Promptly Exercised.
H. LUEDKE.
Watch Maker and Jeweler
Centre Street, Anaheim.
EVERY DESCRIPTION OF WATCHES, CLOCK
and Jewelry carefully repaired and warranted
the assortment of—
Elgin and Waltham Watches.
REMOVED!
Having established myself in my new
quarters on Center St., near the opera-house,
I am now prepared to do all jobs in painting at astonishingly low prices.
S. A. DENNIS
S. A. DENNIS
City Stables,
Center Street (Opposite Kroeger's Block)
ANAHEIM.
A. L. Lewis & Co.
Proprietors.
PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM
Contains and beautifies the hair
Never Falls to Restores Gray
Hair its Youthful Color.
Contains and hair falling
PARKER'S GINGERTONIC
Invaluable for Curls, Colds, Inward Fading, Exhaustion,
PAINLESS CHILDBIRTH
Persian Bloom
And all diseases arising from a Torpid Liver and Bad Digestion.
The natural remedy is good appetite and solid flesh. Does small elegantly scar confined and easy to sainth.
CATARRH
GOLD
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ADVERTISING MEDIUM.
OUR PREMIUMS
FOR THE
PRESIDENTIAL YEAR.
THIS PAPER
WITH
THE SAN FRANCISCO
WEEKLY BULLETIN,
SEMI-WEEKLY BULLETIN,
DAILY BULLETIN,
AND A
COMPLETE ATLAS OF THE WORLD.
PICK OUT YOUR COMBINATION.
The San Francisco Weekly Bulletin is abstentive and it press paper, issued every Wednesday morning, and is the largest and best weekly newspaper published in the West. Its political news is copious and reliable, and will be useful features during the presidential campaign. It contains all the latest and most important financial news and market quotations, and those special attention to agricultural and agricultural news, and is in every respect a first-class form of publication, appealing to the interest of every member of the household.
The Semi-Weekly Bulletin is the regular Weekly Bulletin and Friday issue of each week.
PASTURAGE:
For Horses and Cattle.
ON THE THOMAS EDWARD'S RANCH,
on the southern end of Westminster or Doune,
JAMES MOSS.
The Original Little Liver Pills.
FREELY VEGETABLE! PERFECTLY NARRATED!
Encouraged as a LIVER PILL. There not grape, ONE PALETT A NAME.
MAILLEST, CHEAPEST, EASIEST TO TAKE.
Beware of limitations, containing Poisonous Minerals. Always ask for Dr. Pierce's Pellets which are little sugar-coated Pills, or Anhydrous Granules.
Dr. Pierce's Vegetable, Dr. Pierce's Pellets operate without disturbance to the system, diet, or occupation. Put up in green vignette, bermetically sealed. Always fresh and reliable. They are a gentle laxative, or active purgative, according to size of dose.
SICK HEADACHE,
Milious Headache,
Biziness,
Constipation,
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CATARRH
COLD IN HEAD.
Try the Cure
Ely's Cream Balm
Cleanses the Nasal Passage. Allays Inflammation. Heals the Sores. Restores the Senses of Taste, Smell and Hearing.
A particle is applied into each natural and is available. Prevents or Dampens at by mail. ELY BIRD HEISENA WARMSTONE, New York
SCOTT'S EMULSION OF PURE COD LIVER OIL AND HYPOPHOSPHITES
Almost as Palatable as Milk.
Be disguised that it can be taken vaginally, and maintained by the most cautious, when used with plums will not be tolerated. Be taken with my hypophosphites is much more admirable.
Remarkable is a fish predator.
Persons gain rapidly while taking it.
SCOTT'S EMULSION is acknowledged by Physicians to be the finest and Best preparation in the world for the mild and ome of COUSUMPTION, SCROPULA, GENERAL BEBILITY, WASTING DISKARD'S, EMACIATION, OLDB and CHAPTEROCOHEME.
The great remedy for Consumption, and Wasting in Children. All by Dr. Francis Weekly Bulletin.
The San Francisco Weekly Bulletin is abridged and page paper, bound every Wednesday morning, and is the largest and best weekly newspaper published in the West. Its political focus is exploits and reliability, and will be useful during the presidential period. It contains all the literatures of the week, cleared from every quarter of the globe, headed and amount of the books edited and original general literature. It includes the latest and most reliable news and market quotations, and these special attention to agricultural and agricultural and is in every respect a fraternity from a point of appeal to the interest of every member of the household.
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ICURE FITS
When I say Curse I do not mean to stop them for a time, and then return again. I mean A Difficult Disease!
FITS, EPILIPSE FALLING SICKNESS
A life-long study. I MAKE IT MY FIRST FAULTED no reason for retiring instead of finding at once for a routine daily dose of my INFALLIBLE KANDEY. Have you ever felt Onion? It results you probably trembling, and it will cure you. M.C. ROOT, M.C., 1627 PARIS 4.
$500 REWARD
is offered by the manufacturers of Dr. Sagge's Catarrh Remedy for three Pellets over so great a variety of diseases; it may truthfully be said that their action upon the system is universal: stand or tissue escaping their movement indicates influence on their vital Manufactured at the Central Laboratory of World's Dispensary Medical Association, No. 60 Main St., Buffalo, N.Y.
SYMPTOMS OF CATARRH—Do heavy headache, obstruction of the plexus into the throat, sometimes protrusion, watery and arid; at others thick, tenacious, mucous purulent, bloody and putrid; the eyes are weak and watery; there is ringing in the ears, deafness, backing or coughing to clear throat, expectoration of offensive matter from ulcers; the chest is changed and has a small wound; the breath is offensive; smell and taste are impaired; there is a sensation of dizziness with mental depression, a hacking sough and sexual debility. Only a few of the above-names are likely to be present in any one patient; but they are infrequent in most infiltrating half of the above symptoms in consumption, and in the grape No disease is so common, more dampive and digressive, or has undergone physiological or mild soothing, and healing properties Dr. Catarrh strongly excels the wrist of Countess Catarrh himself. The wrist of Countess Catarrh himself. In three months I was a wid man, and the cure has been permanent.
"Commonly Hearking and Spitting/ Thomas J. Burnham, E.I., New Pine Street My family physician gave me up a humble, and I must die. My son much a bad ones, that every day towards set my voice would become so brave I could barely speak above a whisper. In the morning my coughing and shivering of my three words I found Catarrh remedy in three months. I was a wid man, and the cure has been permanent."
"Commonly Hearking and Spitting/ Thomas J. Burnham, E.I., New Pine Street My family physician gave me up a humble, and I must die. My son much a bad ones, that every day towards set my voice would become so brave I could barely speak above a whisper. In the morning my coughing and shivering of my three words I found Catarrh remedy in three months. I was a wid man, and the cure has been permanent."