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DAILY I MOV SEBUM— LVII. X!». «.TIJ > uiilv KM OKI) »mits->oi.. \\». no. 4711;. J Z «£ DAILY RECORD-UNION. mm i ■ , . ■ g^ ■■— ■ _** J*ft-4 U rbe P j»'. Ofl -c at bi.-rtmciii'i^ seooad ulsss mat*** PUBLISHED BT THB Sacramento Publishing Company. ITM. ». ii lv. Scleral Manager. b)f ration Office, Third »t., b«l. J aad B. THE DAILY l:lll)UD-IMO<l 1. pvb'.l.heJ OTO7 day oi the Task, Su__.._Uj« viorptod. _fr.f-j_rflf.-_r ••..... •••....■.•.. $10 00 r.fx icou'-hn 5 00 .rthr*« moortfaa 3 00 T.a oi;,lr. MM /ear. to on* address 80 00 -'.rr'criber» samd by Carriers st Tsmit-TlTl Ckxts per week. In all Interior dues and towns ths » ._rrrr can be had ot lao principal Feriudieal Dealers. S. ewsmen and Axent*. Advertising Kates In Dally Brrord-t "nlr.n. © .«...„ i time |J 00 8»« Square, tttmes. 1 75 ■.•*|i»re, times. 350 SvhsJdiUonaltilDS. M Ifei l^Teeks. 1 Month X -'f g-iusre. Ist pa<s •_! to ISU (5 00 J'- : ; Square. 3d (>*«• 350 tM 800 li'xlf H'liiare. 3d pace SOO IN IW Bait Square, f.h page i 04 S 00 4 00 One -iqiure. i_it pace. 3 to 800 7 00 One S(iuar>. M pane SOO TOO 10 00 »■: ■ -Ki.nnr-j. tpace 400 SOO SOS One S-iriirr , Itli r«<o 800 4 00 00 Star Notices, to follow rsadinf matter, tvecty-flre . -i'l. a Has for each insertion. A«!n.rtis...menta of Sltuatl ma Wanted. Houses to Let. I .-li-ly M. 7 tlri^B, etc. of ivs lis is or i.r.HR, will be tniuvted in the Daily U-COOR-O-Uvion as follows: One time 25 cents Thrse times ..*••.. • SO cents Oie week 75ciruu Keren words to constitute a Una. r ■._, > i , THE WEEKLY MM [Published In seini-weckly partal Ib Issued on Wednesday and Saturday of each weeV, •omprliiof Ki/ht Pages Id each iiiaue. or Si i v»-n Parses •«£h we- k. and la tne cheapest and moat deslr.-rle Hon*. Neva and Literary Journal published on tha 1 .1 tfli CO* t -nns. On. Year $3 CO * >:nl- tif.-H) t-ttlon Adve rtlslag Bate*. Half B<inw, 1 time .....♦•». , t ..*» $1 00 Ka-:h additional time +.........*_?.. ....... SO i.|iCi>,-j-.r^. 1Uuif1..,,./.^ .T. tOOI JT Mb additional tarry 1 00 I K. CADWALADRR. ""*-*■" C. R. FARfiO^S. Cadwalader & Parsons, XC.__EJ__A.X_i -EISTr.A *r*i . ■ xm . INSURANCE AGENTS, MBOBI TUI Kb AXD J sTur.crs. DWELLING HOUSE FOR SALE— THE HANDSOME THREE- >M*. •Tory FRAME DWELLING, No. 7l'iW^i II street, contalalng It large rooms, con-JffilL vemently arranged, with all modern improvements attached. Tbii building was erected but a few years- under tbe careful su;>ervision of one of our best Architects; is in a perfect state of repair and pruHrrwt ion, and will lie sold with the desirable Lot u|>-.n which it stands, fronting 11 feet on II atreet, at a low price. For particulars and cards of admission, apply at office. ... * AGENTS xt SB" I o 3xr "INSURANCE COMPANY, SAN FRANCISCO. Fire and Marine. CAPITAL, fully J»1d..............-......8n».0«0 tT Losses promptly adjusted and paid in gold ocln CADWALADER * PARSONS, • . I : General Agents Sacramento Division, No. 61 J street. y; EDW. CADWALADER. , OFHCE, CORNER THIRD AND J STREETS : residence, corner Tenth aid N streets, Sacra- munto, CaL ■ ...:...- Notary Public. United Sut«e Connnlssionor. Commissioner of Deeds for the States andTenl- tDrios, and Conveyancer. Particular attention paid to taking deposuir.. .. Deeds, Mortgagee, Wills, Leases, Contracts, etc., drawn and acknowledged. : , ml-lptf ________________ TO LET OB FOB SALE. ' Advgrtiernwmt-l of five linea In thia department an tnaerted tot a oettta for one time; three timet for M i Dents or 73 cents pet week. TO LET-FURNISHED FRONT ROOM, WITH ' X bay window, facing the Plaza, on a line with street cars, two blocks from Capitol ; references re- qulred. Apply at 923 Tenth street. . ml6-tf ___- FOR SALE-A MOWER AND REAPER AND a Taylor rake. Inquire of J. McMORRY, cor- ' mr of Third and M -itieete. ■■■-:•%-, - ml€ tf ' THREE GOOD FARMS WILL BE SOLD «» cheap, and no reasonable oiler will b«9W reiused. Apply - for deaciription to UARL— »" STROBEL, S2l J street. - ■■-■■_ mls-Ct* fTTIOR KENT— LARGE, AIRY, - WELL-FUR Mi nished rooms ; stationary wash.tands, and gas, cheap; tl. $S and flO per month, in the well known Howard House, X street, between Front and Second. Aoply to MRS. JAMES LANSiNG, Internationa Hotel. ■■■■■--.- »■■-.-.■ r , mls-6f Q_f* AAA WILL BUY 235 ACRES tit hop vO.UUI/ Land, as good as can be found in this State. For particular* apply to CARL STRO- BEL. 3..1 J street. ml3-6t* FOR RENT-IN AMADOR CITY, A FIRF,J*6V " proof Brick Storeroom, with Shelving ■p^j ' and Counters ; hard-finished. . Inquire of G _x2___iJL W. KLING, Amador City, Amador county, Cal. * -^ '- ml3-6t ■ ' "*:• IjlOR SALE-TWO HEADERS.RUN ONE SEA- ' son ; six header wagon beds ' Inquire of J. H. FINLAY, Brighton, or J. H. CARROLL, Sec- ond street, Sacramento. . mll-tf O RENT OR FOR SALE-A PETALUMA HAY TO RENT good running order. ' Truck aud Sale Prem, in good running order. Truck and Scale with the Press. Inquire at this office. mlo-2w* TO TWO-STORYFRAMSDWKLL _|^±_i ing ; 9 rooms ; gaa and bath ; stable for ■*''*{ twa horses ; - carriage bouse, etc. • • Rent i:._ S___\. Corner Sixteenth and M. i Inquire of W. P. CuLE- AN, 325 J street. i ml-lm -. FOR SALE— GROCERY BUSINES3 OF M. J. KING, southwest corner Second and L streets. Will be sold cheap, as the owner wishes to retire, on account of ill health. Inquire on the premises. . . a2'.i lm TEXAS LANDS FOR BALE— WE HAVE FOR sale over 300,000 acres of selected Tex%B lands, for fanning and ranch purpoees. Prices from fl to $2 50 per acre. HOLT A WISE. Surveyors and Gen- eral Land Agents, Abilene, Tayh-r county, Texas. ' References : Colonel Caleb Dorsey, Hon. C. P. Ber- ry, MC, and Christy A: Wise, San Francisco. *■ '' ' a2S-4p3m* :.■':■'.■ FOR SALE-A COTTAGE HOUSE WITH _rfftfe{* " lot, southwest corner Twenty-sixth and .'..'or N streets ; cottage in fine condition ; lot, 80x^il 160 Will bo so.d cheap acl on easy terms. Apply on the premises. - a2G-tf ITIOR SALE-A BARGAIN-A HAND-iSV- •• JL" 1 some, gentle family Mare and ele-"}?ST> gant side-oar adjustable canopy-ton Bun- f L /\ gy, with Harness complete ; also, fine sidebar open Buggy. Inquire at 1212 Tenth stree*. ■ . a2i-tf i je"j3s.-rtxm: jpo_ee. 8-A.i.b. FOR SALE-180 ACRES OF EXCELLENT jagE. farming and garden land, situatf-d ; in^KV , Placer county, four miles southeast of New- » castle. There arc on the place a commodious, hard- finished house, a fruit-house, a well of excellent water, plenty of timber, 9 acres of orchard, 3 acres of vineyard, all varieties of berries, etc. Title per- fect. For particulars inquire of BERRY MITCHELL, Newcastle. .- . . mf-lin* FORSIIjEf EEAL ESTATE OF THE LATE R."T." BROWN,. DECEASED. TWO-STORYFRAMEDWELL- i >ytff— ing, containing 9 largo rooms?, A-^33^" hath, cioaets and gas. Lot, If^xV |^BfcJ^ 100; terraced and seeded to blue gjr_sjr»wßAtflC- graKs, with clioioe shiubbery, etc.^*-^^-SMKS- Will be sold for low price of $3 000 ALSO— Lot aOxltW, Eleventh street, between C :,'--> and D .-. ...EOO Lot 80x100, northwest cor. Fifteenth and E.'. -, 600 Lot 80x160, M street, between Ei<bteenth and Nineteenth '......, -. 950 South half of Block, O and P, Thirtieth and Thirty- first streets. Full Block, N and O, Ihirtieth and : Thirty streets. tr Any of the above property will be sold on the Installment plan. Apply to SWEETSER & ALSIP, H» vi Estate and Insurance Agent*. No. 1015 Fourth street, Sacramento. . - . .^ mD-lptf , 3S O TEL ' Restaurant Men, ATTENTION '.-y THE CLARENDON W'.LL BE READY FOR occupancy about fcay 15, 1882. LOCATED ON J STHEET, between Sixth and Seventh, bcinj; the best and most central location ie the city. t . THE TWO UPPER STORIES contain Forty-four Finely-A.rranired and Well Ventilated Rooms, with Closets, Bathrooms, Hot-Water Attachments, etc. THE FIRST STORY Is finished into an elegant Store, with Plate-Glass Show Window; fine large Dining Room, Pantry, Kitchen. with Ranee, Hot- Water Boiler, Scullery, Miikroom, Storeroom, etc , THE SECOND -AND THIRD. STORIES are so arranged that they can be rented independent of the First Story. _ - A SPLENDID OPENING for any one wishing to start a First-class Restaurant, with Bakery and Confectionery attached ; or any one wishing to Rent as a Family Lodging-house or Hotel. i Apply to' - , SWEETSER & ALSIP, Ileal " Estate and Insurance Agents, 1015 FOURTH STREET, SACRAMENTaaIS-lptf MONEY TO LOAN ON I'AL ESTATE, AT A LOW RATE OF IN. terest, by PETER BOHL, 326 J street.ml 7 tf * A Q. GRIFFITHS, FEJTBTIT 'JH BEABITB warn . l^^^^^L-- ASSESS CiL. ;' *E§i|y^||L,r7lllE BE.ST VARIETY A .TO , -SSSfcr^a l. Largest i.n__irrioe on tb? Pacific Coast, i-oiiahed Oranlto Monuments, Tomb- stones and Tabl sts made to order, -lit i JS"jL rte -. Cranio Kulldlns BtOKe "* Cot. BMM aol Polished to orde. 011-lpto l| ■"' :'' - '.' '' y -.**. r " ■ -■■ *.-7 '-: .'. _..-.. ■• -.■■- - SACRAMENTO DAILY RECORD-UNION. . fIALE BROS. ACQ., t .^r,, r UNPRECEDENTED I 1 i THE' .'.-*££ i I *_"* Ir I • ....... ! €3J- St 13 A. "Ac ESPECIAL SALE A;\\e\l\sx);\ ■{'ALTICIIIC HAY, AYI — 03E» — 1 A. T. Stewart & Co.'s ______________________________________ : " -r-y-'i • : '" : '\ STOCK ! '''. : ' ;^ •■• - :; ';_.'• ■ ; r|? Drew eager buyers from all parts of our county and State, filling tie commodious warerooms of HALE BROS- & CO., So much 1 so that standing room at times was at a premium. ; The simple announcement of the IMMENSE j STOCK that was to be sacrificed was sufficient of itself to arouse the enthusiasm of the people, and at no time in the history- of this city has there been such a commercial panic. A word with reference to the House of A. T. STEWAET & ! CO., and how we secured the prize : rfijfiJS! > r-./f!;.:/// imWf \-y. yiii ! n£l Uzj :i_\T ' THE ANNOUNCEMENT r " •'.■ ! ?'» ■':'-!*! >.'*' S-if". lii'J 'I '-'f ■-• i "I 'I - i'tta flj } -i* >'., T 7 r f...7| r\l, '.' , ,* - . - ,-...,•-., . iMMfcl x r -. 1..- J __'_).-. i.:!1,'.!!Kl ,djrt3 / Jj_3lQiOCj iili MADE IX NEW YORK, SOME FIVE WEEKS AGO, THAT THE .;:;.<_ MAGNIFICENT STOCK OF A. T. STEWART & CO. WOULD BE DISPOSED OF AT LARGE DISCOUNTS," UNTIL THE ENTIRE STOCK WAS SOLD, CREATED NO LITTLE f EXCITEMENT IN t jr THE DRY GOODS CIRCLES 4 NEW YORK. OUR "BUYER, |** MR. 0. C. HALE, BEING IN NEW YORK, AND REALIZING THE I r SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY OF OBTAINING BARGAINS, MADE i i yrtJ»*SU *~a l*.*uu/n a « CA'v THOROUGH INVESTIGATION OF THE STOCK. BEING _■ AMONG THE FIRST THERE, HE MADE HIS SELECTION FROM THE MOST DESIRABLE STOCK, AND OUT OF THE LARGEST ' DOUSE IN AMERICA. AT THE 'TIME OF A. T. STEWART'S \ 'H- DEATH; THE FIRM OWNED FIFTEEN MILLS IN THIS COUNTRY, ' „/. * . • ■ » — - .-,._.-. _-. ......ui. ..__.« .; li Hi ■ "7 BESIDES HAVING A BRANCH HOUSE IN- EVERY COUNTRY IN EUROPE IN FACT, MR. STEWART STOOD SELF-MADE— „.. THE GREATEST AND MOST .^ SUCCESSFUL BUSINESS • / MAN ! * THE WORLD EVER SAW. ' HIS SUCCESSOR^'' JUDGE ' HILTON, ~ ALTHOUGH POSSESSED OF MILLIONS OF MONEY, HAD NOT ; - THE t BUSINESS EXPERIENCE OF HIS PREDECESSOR, AND ' NOW, AFTER THREE SHORT YEARS, HE BECOMES TIRED OF - ITS WORRY^ND ' l RESPONSIBILITY, : AND HAS ( RESOLVED nIII. : -.-, I -:-■:■■ ■ -.;-. ■; y,.. .1... t. ...:'. : » • TO "TURN INTO CASH" THE STORES AND STOCK, TOGETHER r Z WITH THE , VARIOUS MILLS AND FOREIGN BRANCHES, SO ; ; THAT HENCEFORTH THE NAME OF A. T. STEWART & CO., -V* ALTHOUGH IMMORTALIZED, WILL' NO LONGER ADORN THE ; i"\ iVj/i-l i» ■■* xi *ti? tii r i iff fc-4 \«r fVf f _&* PORTALS OF THAT ELEGANT BUILDING THAT COVERED A | f , WHOLE BLOCK IN THE CITY OF NEW YORK, EARLY ON THE MORNING FOLLOWING THE ANNOUNCE- MENT, OUR BUYER ENTERED ESTABLISHMENT, AND INTIMATED THAT HE HAD SEVERAL THOUSAND DOLLARS .: ; IN CASH TO INVEST IN j DRY , GOODS,*" PROVIDING, THE s IN- .'■k-.- ■-.--.- i': — i ._.*> >*ji k . *& J '^t — «ii**-' ■^.■hiw^ !■■?■■•: DUCEMENT WAS GREAT ENOUGH. OUR FIRM BEING WELL " ; —^--*_.»».^ '""« -**sto*___. JL-Ja^S*/. *** AND FAVORABLY KNOWN TO THAT HOUSE, FROM THE 'FACT Ziggg \ •OF OUKVMR. M. HALE, Sk. OWNING- FIVE -STORES, IN NEW r ±r& .*. .__S _. v...,^^ .A.A.-X t±X. S_.t_l.\ iK.S_ K \ r ~ YORK STATE (AFTER THE SYSTEM OF HALES FIVE CALI- .'"' FORNIA STORES ESTABLISHED IN THIS STATE); f OUR BUYER 70 - » 72- WAS INFORMED THAT THEY ', WOULD DO ALL IN THEIR ' POWER TO SELL HIM , ALL THE GOODS 1. THAT HE WOULD .1 'BUY. _ SUCH WERE THE "INDUCE MENTS'. TO V PURCHASE, THAT HE BOUGHT FULLY THREE TIMES MORE GOODS THAN . -..; HE HAD ORIGINALLY INTENDED. «SrJ ' J^^, ~ fU h '• : -' c -■ 7r.i':-:.o' -::-,:■ iiJiv.' ,Li>l ilzU ih:v., :'_ - o ■■. .:-. rtfo ".:..:: :_s_z\l *ij>w6!i »»ii^rii' The consequence is we are overloaded with goods, and must soil. The public apparently have realized this .fact also, for the goods are going with a rapidity that far eclipses anything in : all: our business career, M gdigpgidlS "miidMk : I'cxvMfx ' THERE , ARE , . . .i l-J.r.<r, . .Ju.r-lij-iJ C, _U-__>Xf. ' l- 1 -t J ! '// r-i 'A :^ j&. s& ca- z iw ss ;r " ;;; '•'.'■'' - -a :c-r Srnaa ; j ? ;^t»i f:..;?:., b/;;J Among this lot . that i surprise i the oldest DEY GOODS MEN in our -j House, so call early and take advantage of this ' • : <^j> >v. ! WONDERFUL SPECIAL SALE. 'A } ! V. ?vA-_ **m '>'■'''■••■■'. \ 7- \ ' •■';'. .. iiiihi'iiyff nsiiii ih; nj - . ;,. { , •- _■ f H^^ttaam _______■_____■ HALE BROS. & GO. t 3 B 829, 831, 833, 835 X street, £M \, \ ...' ' - ' "* i^' * R-**.*^.-«*.-*^». .;__*____% \g^ — /*r iftfif a\ AHD— 1026 NINTH !S STREET, SACRAMENTO. SACRAMENTO, FRIDAY MORNING, MAY 19, 1882. MECHAUICS' STOBE; For Advertisement of WEIN- STOCK & LUBIN, see Second Page. It will be changed daily APA SODA MMM In the World. B^*^» **■ WV__T __* _r\m LEMONADE. :■--, i; 7 .... • ■ . - ml6-lp3-_tt Palmer & Sepulveda (Successors to J. S. TROWBRIDGE), f DRUGGISTS AND APOTHECARIES, $ Northeast Corner Second and X streets, Sacramento. IT PRESCRIPTIONS COMPOUNDED AT ALL HOUKS, "BOTH DAY AND NIGHT. AT THE LOWEST IUffES. .; . . i :.: .-..:■■ I , ; . . fe2B-lply REAL ESTATE SALESROOM : ""' ; AND — ZZST-fS'CTXS.^SL-KrCES ofpiob r...tr.i: ' _ ..7 ; OF - ,-.' W. P. COLEMAN •' No. 325 J street, Sacramento, Oal. -, FOR SALE OR ro LET ALL KINDS OF PROPERTY.— HOUSES SOLD ON INSTALLMENT PLAN. tr Money Loaned on Beat Fstatc. 1!1 m 17-1 ply • LATES I O^ YLES !C!ITT"Dnr i C! |: MAD L^ DER JSSS^SS jOHIJEfc 1 D F. Mason, m 23 lplm - - :tT SEND FOR SAMPLES TO SACRAMEXTO SHIRT FACTORY, 528 i STREET. JUST BEreiVED.I M «%««Wlf_||jy Ispeclally of lACF. s .. K ,xG «ood S . M 1 J* SJ 1 B ItTFlKjsl «;OODS of all de- ■"■»■«—•■ \jj±xisf JEi J- fe x?ffir«K2 CARPETS, OILCLOTHS . w* ma^amaWf ma .___-______« *.M^ | ,*,«;*„. ■ r All Sold at the Lowest Reduction for Thirty Days AT BEN COHEN'S - ----- J STREET ■ . — »121ptf —^ . mm i^^m — — —, OLDEST BOX FACTORY ONI W^ _P^. %X ____■* ___P^ I LATENT IMPDOTED TBE PACIFIC COAST. All Rfl VS" V 2 MACHINERY Ulnda ol Boxes on hand I J \^M _#V a SIJ — tor— and Made to Order. I Ws__W M .W, Warn |. BOX I'BI.VTIXe. '.■■■■ CAPITAL BOX FACTORY...... CORNER SECOND AND Q STREETS Depot I J St., bet. Front and Second (next door to W. R. Strong A Co.) NICHOLS & CO. ■.!"!,■ ■■■■ Boston Drug Store, fA. WALTHER, Chemist, Prop., &i OL ■■'■'.' -NOBTHEAST CORNER TnißD AND J STUtfcTS. Ok tT Prescriptions Compounded, day and night, with utmost care, at very low prices. aliMptf H. WACHHORST, -_f______e_3___9_.-_DX.Kr S3. JB'W.BI.'BRrj ____MXfB*MJHBKWn&Oa ; SPECIALTY: WATCHES AND DIAMONDS. , •^.X^i. SO, 315 J STBEET .".OKI II SIDE), BETWEEN TUIBD A.ND FOIRTII. tSE^H IST SIGN : TOWN CLOCK. [al3-tf] ■ <2SLI££M FOR BILIOUSNESS, —TAKE— ;.;;'; ;.'."•->■"" gag , ' Hammer's Cascara Sagrada Bitters, J|| THE GREAT FAMILY MEDICINE. gßggjCj*, HAMMtR'S DROC STORE, FOURTH AND X STREETS, md all Druggists, miip6m 1 — ■— — g ______________________________________ I BEZffSOX & £.ssb:_e jel~ '. CARRIAGE, SICK AND ORNAMENTAL PAINTINC AND CARRIACE TRIMMING,' - M^9<J3 ■ ..: 7 .. Second street, bet. X and L, Sacramento. 9 >c ?»»- i '^2^ (Over McOEE'S STABLE— Elevator to Shop). All orders promptly attended to aod <?_P^^gT faction fniaaanteed. First-class Work at Reasonable Prices. m6-lptf j SAN FRAKOISCO 0ABD& SAN FRANCISCO Business Directory AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS. George A. Davis A Co —Manufacturers' Agents, | 327 and 329 Market street. - Frank Bros.— General Ag'ts Walter A. Wood Mow- I ins and Reaping Machine Co., 319 _£ 321 Market st. Baker A Hamilton— lmporters of Agricultural - Implements and Hardware ; Agents of the Renicia j Agricultural Works, 7to 19 Front street David _. Ilnwlcy— lmporter and Dealer . in Agricultural Implements, Agent of Woods and Meadow King Mowers, 117 and 119 Market street. :;..;•.'• •'. ARTISTa';. Dcaseworth— Optician and Photographer, No. 12 Montgomery street. Established in 1861. * BUSINESS COLLEGES. Pacific Business College and Telegraphic Institute (Life Scholarship, fo* full Business - Course, $70). W. E. Chamberlain, Jr., and T. A. Robinson, Proprietora, No. 820 Post struct, eppo- : . lite Union Square, S. _ CaL Send r Circulars. j CARRIAGES AND WAGONS. Stnflebaker Bros. Mannfacturlnß Co.— Re- : pository, 31 Market street. A. li. Isbam, Manager CARPETS, OILCLOTHS, ETC. Frank V.Edwards— and Dealer, Nas. . G_2> to Vil Clay street, San Francisco. ; ; DRY GOODS. The' White House— The oldest Dry Goods House in San Francisco. We import direct from the * principal marts in Europe, consequently can sell lower than any other house in the trade. Country . orders attended to. &, W. Davidson A Co., Nos : 101 and 103 Kearny street, San Francisco. 9iJ I DRUGS, CHEMICALS. jnstln Gates.— Pioneer Druggist, removed to 'ill Montgomery st , S. F. Country orders solicited A»i EDUCATIONAL. . «<," School of Civil Engineering. Surveying, Drawingand Assaying. 24 Post St. A. Van der Naillen :,';"" ' V ."r^;HATa./"y- ■''.;- ,'" Herrmann, The Hatter— 885 Kearny street, near Pine. The finest hate at the lowest prices. . Factory: No. 17 Belden street .-•• HARDWARE, IRON, STEEL, ETC. Marcus ii. Hawley A Co.— lmporters of Hard, ware and Agricultural Implements, Noa. 301, 80S, i : 806, 807 and 309 Market street, San Francisco. : METALS, STOVES, RANGES, ETC. W. W. Montague A Co.— lmporters of Stoves, 1 'Ranges and Sheet Iron, Marbleized Mantels, si Orates ' and . Tiles. ' Manufact or«rs of Plain, ■ Japanned and Stamped Tinware. No« 110 0% 114, 116 and 118 Ba'.tery stree*. . ' ; " MILLINERY ' ; The Bandbox- The popular Milllnetf Establish- mint. B. 8. Hirscb A Co., No. 748 Market street. Btric» attention to orders from the Interior RESTAURANTS. Campi's Original Italian Restaurant has reopened under the management of N. Giambonl, - Campi's former partner. Nos. 631 and 533 Clay St., near Montgomery. Everything first-clam. Swain's ' Family :'■ Bakery - and Dining Saloon— No. 038 Market street. Wedding cakes, ice cream, oysters, Jellies, etc.. constantly ou hand. - Families supplied. r^— .■_--. -.■•>■ ■ --■-. RUBBER AND OIL GOODS. The Gutta Percha and Knbber Manufact- uring Manufacturers o' Rubber Goods of every description. Patentees of the celebrated " Maltese Cross Brand" Cart-ulizcd Hose. Corner First and Market streets. J. W. Taylor, Manager. Davis A Kellogg— Pioneer Manufacturers of Caps Ann Oiled Clothing, Ha'.s, Covers, etc Importers ' and Dualeis in Rubber Boots and Woolen Goods. No. 34 California street. STATIONERS, PRINTERS ETC. H. 8. Crocker A Co.— lmporting and Manufto*. • oring Stationers, PrinUrs and Lithographers, Noa. ' 216, 217 and 219 Bush street, above Sansome. " . WHOLESALE GROCERS. vTcllman, Peck A Co.- Importers and Whole- - sale Orocers and Dealers in Tobacco and Cigars, ' Kos. 126 to 132 Market, and No. 23 California. Taber, Harker A Co.— lmporters and Wholesale Grocers, Nos. 108 and 110 California street. SAORAMENTO REOORD-UNION. - Ban Francisco Office, No. 8 New Montgom- -, . cry street (Palace Hotel). — H. Sliarpe, Agent. | STAR MILLS AND MALT HOUSE. ' -"":, IKll-Oi Hfc A"■ LACES, I -_»--_~-_.."il _- -_._~_-- - - - .. . r..--* T^TOS. 60, 64 AND 64 FIFTH ST., SACRAMENTO. __S dealers in Produce and Brewers ' Supplies, Ma .ufacturers of Malt md ail kinds of Meals, etc Oatmeal, Cornmeal, Cracked Wheat, Graham Flour, Buckwheat Flour, etc. New Grain Bags for sale. A-rsnti Buckeye Mills Flour, Marys ville. alT.ln .____» - -*'_.-^«»_*___^*B_r-_r7__rS__ra_____^__7-.. -'--. --_."-. - ¥> v ' -»- WANTED, LOST AND FOUND. Advertisements of fare lines in this department are nserted for 25 cents for one time ; three times for 50 seats or 75 oeiSs per week. WANTED— AT KENNEDY A CO.'SJNEW EM- ployment Office, 1025 Eighth street, 0 hay- makers, $1 50 per day and board ; _ mowers, ?S per day ; 2 carpenters, $3 per day, city ; 2 good carpen- ters for country ; 4 cooks, good wages; 4 milkers, *30 per month ; 4 carpenter's laborers, $2 ; 2 team- sters, good wages ; 8 girls for housework ; 4 nurse girls; _ men and wives for farm, «50 per month ; 20 haymakers, 330 per month. - Apply esrly at KENNEDY A CO.'S, 1025 Eighth street, Clunie Building. - , , mlB-3t WANTED. w MALE— | FEMALE— -. : « Ranch Hands, : 4 Girls for Housework 2 Blacksmiths, . 8 Waiter Girls, - 3 Milkers* Butter M'ks 3 Women Cooks, Man and Wife for Ranch I 2 Nurse Girls. J " ' 4 Waiters for Hotels. •■■■ Apply to Houston A Co.'s Employment silllce. Fonrth and it streets. mlSlptf .: " DENTISTBY. ~ DBS. BRWEB A SOCTHWOETII, E DENTISTS,' SOUTHWEST CORNER ,*— r- of Seventh and J streets, in Bryte's AS«£________i new building, up stairs. Teeth citi^tea'^-UlljTf without pain by the use of improved Liquid Nitrous Oxide Gas. mlfi-lplm , ; H. M. PIF.KSOV, OF.NTIBT, 416 J STREET, BETWEEN *^s=±'- l_y Fourth and Fifth, Sacramento, rt rti ,f)j^~~ ficial Teeth Inserted on Gold, Vulcanito^iiUjUr and all b.«es. N trous Oxide or Laughing Oaa ad ministered | for painless extraction of Teeth. ml4-lm - W. WOOD, DENTIST— (REMOVED TO QUINN'S /~ta, Building, cor. Fourth and J strcetsi.i'Sij^^S Artificial Teeth inserted on all bases.^Tu_!Tr Improved Liquid Nitrous Oxide Gas, for the Painless Extraction of Teeth. a24-tf .W. H. HAKE, D. D. 8., _.- _ ■ . rVENTIST, NO. 806 J S'.TtEET, BE-^^g_-=\ tween Sixth and Seventh. Sacramento. , im_J_fT all-lplm .-...- ■' .- ■ . FBUITS, SEEDS AND FBODUOe! B. BBBSRSUSI. -. - JA g. UainZ D.' DEBERNARDI & CO., . WBOLESALI Mission DULSRS Dl Batter. Eggs, Poultry, Vegetables. Fruit, Fish and General Produce. a27-lplm . .. . LYON & BARNES, /COMMISSION MERCHANTS AND DEALERS IN Produce, Vegetanle*, Butter, Eggs, Cheese, • Pcultry, Green and Dry Fruits, Honey. Beans, etc} - ALFALFA SEED" tr Potato* in car-load lots or less a23-lptf ■- .-.■■-.. Vm . 21 and 23 J street. (Established is- , SUOB-VSJ.ORmORT ■ '--• nillx ORR3ORT. ' ■ CHARLKS r. OtUMSS. GREGORY & CO. (Successors to J. Gregory), COMMISSION MERCHANT.? AND WHOLESALE Dealers in PRODUCE AND FRUIT MA *^ .11 ;£?"• 12 % * d ,M J B *>-e«t. .. a_ii-iptf Sacramento, Cal. . .ft;.* -y '. W. R. STRUNG & CO, !.". Wholesale Commission Merchants -IKS SSALS3 IX ALL SWlin 01 CAXIFOBMA GHEES AND DKIED FKPITt NUTS, HONEY, BEED .. And General Merchandise. - ■ tT All orders promptly attended to. Address: W. R. STRONG ft CO., aB-lplm Nos. ._, 8 and 10 J street. Sacramento. A- HOOSBK- 8 _ OKHltoa. S. GERSON & CO., GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANTS,' AND X Dealers In .- Imported and Domestic Frrjls, Vegeta- bles, Stats, Etc., No. 280 J street, between Socoik: a nd Third, Sacra- mento. . a2-lm FRUIT DEALERS, ATTHNTIOHT I HAVING REMOVED TO MORE COMMODIOUS premises, we have enlarged our stock. - Ws offer you cho c Apples, free from worms. Lemons, Limes, Oranges, Dried Fruits, Nuts, Dates, Canned Goods, etc., at very low prices. • M. T. BREWER A CO., 1008 to 1010 Second street, between J and X, Sacra. —^nto. ■■■-- -' - _.- -:■: ...... ■ fe22ff — CARBON BISULPHIDE FOR KILLING SQUIR rels, Gophers, " Ants, ' Moth, Weevil,' Scale, Phylloxera, and all Rodents and Insects. Sulphur for sale. Manufactured at ! Sacramento Chemica Works-Office, No. V.'.i I street, Sacramento. --. J ,„ mfrlm-, | .-.- GEO. D, GARDNER Prnurietcr. | "<: MISOELLAUEOUS. pip tafll" TBADB « k MAb£*»^M ItiMMEII ---j ■ .iv;iFOß,'.-:*r--.'S'-' KHEMATISM, j Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, . Backache, Soreness of the Chest, . .'; Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swell- ings and Sprains, Burns and ' . Scalds, General Bodily Pains, * Tooth, Ear and Headache* Frosted Feet and Ears, and all other 7 Pains and Aches. - Ho Preparation on earth equals ST. Jacobs On as a safe, sure, simple and cheap External Bemedy. A trial entails but the comparatively trifling outlay of 60 Cents, and every one suffering with pain can have cheap and positive proof of its i •laims.. .'-.-■ - -.. ' ... j Directions ln Eleven Languages. SOLD ET ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS - i . -• - 15 MEEJCINE, I A. VOGELER & CO.. Baltimore, Md., V. 8. J. Tiie Kins of the body Is the Brain ; tbe stomach its main support ; the nerves its messen- gers ; the bowels, tbe kidneys and the pores its safe- f?ui.rd3. Indigestion creates a violent revolt among these attaches of the regular organ, and to bring them back to their duty there is nothing like the regulating, purifying, Invigorating, cooling operation of TAKRANFS SELTZER APEKIEST. It reno- vates the system and restores to health both the body and the mind. Sold by all druggists. I -. m!7-2wTuF ' , ■■: gj AMUSEMENTS, jjj COMING ! COMING ! Look out for ns : Lock ont for us ! equesgurrlgulum ; EQUINE PARADOX! : : - WiU eihibit at the CIRCUS LOT, Corner of Sixteenth and X streets, OS— FRIDAY AND j SATURDAY, ' ",'.,' V. Hay <9tb and 80th. . ',- . Don't Fall to Sec tbe BEST TRAINED HORSES -. ... In the world ; together with /'.. .. ,' 20 ' TWENTY STAR PERFORMERS. 20 Admission, 60 cents; Children, 25 cents. N. B. -GRAND MATINEE AT 2 P. M. SATURDAY. ■ ml6-5t THS EIGHTH ANNUAL PICHIO OT THK HEITERKEIT SOCIAL CLUB WILL RE lIKLD AT EAST PARK GROVE, 5c.iDAV.... ....'....;.:.:'... MAT n, 1882. GATK PRIZE FOR GENTLEMEN, «7. FOR M Ladies, »5. tr No disreputable characters allowed on the grounds. " -" ■" 7 (.ml-, Tickets, 50 Cents. Ladles Free. 2 ■ ' .. : : - ' m!5-lw ' •'■■ .-.-■ ■ rr. - ' : auctions. ■:■,:; " AUCTION^ SALE; SHERBURN & SMITHJ I .1- - .■';'■■; WILL BILL THE BNTIRS FURNITURE, '•■•■■' '■'■^— IS TIIK — KEJIDESCE, St). 408 1 STREET, Between Fourth and Fifth, on FRIDAY, MAT 19, 1882, At 10:30 o'clock A. u7, ' BEING CONTAINED IN EIGHT ROOMS, A> D | comprising, in part. Parlor Set, Walnut, i a. j hoeany and Cottage Bedroom Sets, Spring and Toy I -Mattresses, Bedding, Pillows, etc.. Bed Lounge, I Tables, Chair*, Carpets, Pictures, ( tc. ; also, one No. 7 Cooking Range and fixtures complete, Crocker}', Plateifrware, Glassware, etc. v tT Sold on account of removal. ■ mlB-2t SHERBURN i. SMITH. Auctioneers. Assignee's Auction Sale MAGNIFICENT AND COSTLY DIAMONDS.— jJM. Silver Watches, - ; 1 OolJ and Silver Chains, Diamond and other Earrings, ' Diamond and other Rings, - - Elegant Diamond Sets, Cameo Set. ■ - ; . ''.{.:. , 100 Large aud Small Diamond Rings, Massive Diamond Pius, Gold Watch Chains, ' Large Diamond Crosses, " 50 Elegant Gold Watches. D. J. Simmons & Co., Auctioneers, j ; —WILL BELL, COMMRNCISO OS . Friday Evening, at ::30 o'clock. And continue SATURDAY MORNIKG at 10:30 and ; SATURDAY EVENING at 7-30 o'clock, at the store I formerly occupied by Wfayts & Nicholl, comer of : Seventh and J streets, a Fifty Thousand Dollar (}5O,- \ 000) Stock Of fXEGAVr DIAMOND AND GOLD , JEWELRY— such an elegant stock as has never vet \ been seen in Sacramento, and each and every article ; mutt positively be sold, without regard to cost. The ' trade and buyer., in city and country are specially | called to this sale. Goods will be on exhibition from j THIS (Thursday) MORNING until time of sale. Sale positive.*- --•-_ - • -■.•.-.< .-- r.= 7. ■; ...r; P. lI A UR A\<; E. a -»-n« «-. , -' ' ■ . D. J. SIMMONS, Auctioneer, mIS ' Office, 1013 Fourth street. WILCOX&WHITE ORGANS , — AT W-AEKROOXS GP— x*. k. tt /% TvrayjpjEr,, Xo. 820 J street ..........Sacramento. 47 Sold on c Installment plan. Orders for TUNING prompt attended to. ferynnlm A. J. RIIOAPS. ISADORA 10930000. RHOADS & TOWSSEND HOUSE, .7.7 Southwest Corner Second anil J 81*. THIS HOUSE i:\-i JL'ST BEEN OPENED AND j fitted up with a magnificence which make* it r second to no establishment of the kind on the Pa- | cific coast. Attached to the saloon are handsomely ! furnished READING AND CARD ROOMS, and on ! the second floor are elegantly arranged ' BOOHS IX SriTES AND si M.LI.. »/.:.-. .... i~ — iLso- — 72.^.',.. tT Sample Booms for Traveling Agents, 7.7 Of which a specialty will be made. Only the choicest brands of WINES,. LIQUCRS AND CIGARS ■••; .'•!-. Will always be kept in stock and on sale. ;',:,;.; .... ml6-4ply .■-_ EX T RACTS FROM EMERSON. We owe to man higher succors than food and tire. We owe to man man. — [Domes tic Life. Nature is a rag-merchant, wko works up every shred and odd and end into new creations. [Beauty. But the people are to be taken in very small doses. If solitude is proud, so is society vulgar. — [Society and Solitude. - One of those conceited prigs who value nature only as it feeds and exhibits them is equally a pest with the roysterers. — [Poetry and Imagination. Wherever there is power there is age. Don't be deceived by dimples and curls. I tell you that a baby is a thousand years old.— [Old Age. The man that works at home helps so ciety at large with somewhat more of cer tainty than he who devotes himself to chari ties. — [Farming. The truest test of civilization is not the census, nor the size of cities, nor the crops — no, but the kind of man the country turns out.— [Civilization. Every man is not so much a workman in the world as he is a suggestion of that he should be. Men walk as prophesies of the next age. — [Circles. _i . -..i 7-:. ■ -\ Nature is upheld by antagonism. Pas sions, resistance, danger, are educators. We acquire the strength we have over come.—[Considerations by the Way.' , Every genuine work of art has as much reason for being as the earth and the sun. The gayest charm of beauty has a root in the constitution of things.— His tongue was framed to music, And his hand was armed with skill, ' His face was the mold of beauty. And his heart was the throne of will. ' - " —{Power. The less government we have the better — the fewer laws and the less confided power. The antidote to this abuse of 'formal gov ernment is the influence of private charac ter, the growth of the individual. — [Pol itics. "-' ■ '--.*'■ -''rr- ■' -■ ■ ' :.'■.- No way has ' been found for making heroism easy, even for the scholar. Labor, iron labor, is for him. The world was created a? an audience for him ; the atoms of which it is made are opportunities. — [Greatness. . Our efficiency depends so much upon our concentration that nature, usually, in the instances where a marked man is sent into the world, overloads him with bias, sacri ficing his symmetry to his working power. — [Culture. •' ■ . :.- ';' ,..; ;...;• The high prize of life, the crowning for tune of a man, is to be born to some pur suit which finds him in employment and happiness— whether it be to make baskets or broadswords, or canals, or statutes, or songs. — [Considerations by the Way. Life is a succession of lessons which must be lived to be understood. . All is a riddle, and the key to a riddle is another riddle. . There are as many pillows of il lusion as flakes in a snow-storm. We wake from one dream into another dream.[ll lusions. : - .*■ - ■^-■- "'*"".'> T; SAMPLES OF FRENCH NEWSPAPER WIT. ■ They are talking of Bernardin de Saint- Pierre. , " Oh, I've heard of him," says one of the company ; " he's . the fellow that wrote the book of his travels from the Pole to Virginia !" ' '■' : ' * " •• j A young third secretary in the diplo matic service is gently hauled over the coals by the head of the office for seeding down his wild oats too thickly. "Well, when would you have a fellow do it !" is the reply — " when he is an Envoy Extra ordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, hey?" • ...... Profound thought by middle-aged man : In the life of man there are two critical periods. The first is towards his twentieth year, when he anxiously inspects his upper lip to see if the hair is coming out ; and the second is toward his fortieth, when he as anxiously inspects the top of bis head to see if his hair is coming out. | Fond Parent, almost bursting into tears : Angelina, my love, I had . bad news for you. Heaven knows, my child, I would spare you the sorrow if I could, but Ed win — -". Daughter — "Speak quickly! My love, my promised . husband " Fond Parent " Is a gambler 1" Daughter — " O, pa, is he lucky ?". College Professor — "And so, gentlemen, we are reminded of the familiar fable in which the milkmaid upsets the pail of milk— what is it, Mr. Blank?" Mr. Blank — " I beg your pardon, Professor, but how would it have been, supposing it had been the pot of milk that had upset the milk maid !" Immense hilarity and applause, during which the voice of the - Professor can barely be heard suspending the entire class. - The lamented Ponson dv Terrail was al ways supposed to have produced a master piece of its own kind and unapproachable, ! when he remarked of a character : ' " She ! took his hand. .It was cold and clammy like that of a serpent," but he has been outdone by a reactionary journalist in Paris, who has been tracing a picture of M. Gambetta and his friends. "M. puller." says this writer, "is the alltr ego of M. Gambetta, who, indeed, has no eyes of his own but looks only through his right arm 1". A performance \of "Lea Exiles" was : given at Amiens not long ago, at which be- ' tween the sixth aud seventh tableaas the , manager came before the curtain, and deliv ered the following reassuring address to the audience : "Ladies and gentlemen, we are now about to present the sensation scene of this successful piece, j You will now have the pleasure of seeing a terrible conflagra- j tion on the stage ; but, ladies and gentle men, do not be alarmed — it's only make believe. There is no occasion for any panic. " , The remark is hazarded before a true ion of Marseilles that, in comparison with the ocean, the Mediterranean is a placid and calm expanse of water. " Placid and calm 1" echoes the southern patriot ;. " that's all you know about the Mediterranean. I'll tell you what happened me once. I was coming to Paris, and I brought a bottle of Mediterranean water with mc l always carry it - with me to think of horne — and I'll be hanged, sir, if the moment I entered the car every man jack in it wasn't seasick. And they were old sailors, too. That's how calm and placid the Mediterranean is, sir." ; ■ ••■ POOR BERNHARDT. Poor Madame Damala, or Damalas (the ! sensational press prints columns daily as to , the orthography of the name of Sarah ; Bernhardt's new husband) is threatened : with a lawsuit, which is said to lie rich in I revelations and in trouble for Sarah. All ' | her old comrades seem thoroughly angry ; I with her because she has taken unto her- < I self a helpmeet. They began by question- j | ing the validity of the marriage in London, i and now they are endeavoring to prove • ; that she has merely gratified a caprice, and that she will cast Monsieur Damala, or Da malas, aside in less than a year. But to 1 careful observers it looks as if | the eccen [ trie actress was really in love with her ; . husband. j She began by discharging him from her company, in which he was play- : ! ing ordinary parts, because be had been ' ' imprudent enough to go to a fox hunt in Rome and to get thrown from his horse, and because he rebelled at her merriment over the unfortunate circumstance. He went, and she was as inconsolable as Dido after the departure of .Eneas. At Naples ! she had a most extraordinary series of ; 1 nervous attacks, and some of them lasted t several hours. These did not cease until j she reached Monaco, where the wily actor ; > waa staying, and where she made peace i with him, and agreed to marry him forth ! with. The marriage was, it is said, re ] solved upon at 4 o'clock one afternoon, and I 1 the next morning at 6 o'clock Ssrah aud M. ' 1 Damala took the express train from Mo- i : naco for London. 'It doea not appear that I : the bridegroom is the possessor of a large ; fortune, and we hear that Sarah's son ' Maurice is enraged at his mother's matri monial venture, and has threatened never I I to see her again ao long " as she lives with that man." — [Paris Correspondent. The Revised New Testament.— feasor Blackie expresses hi* opinion con cerning the Revised Vernon of the New Testament with Scotch emphasis. ' "On the whole," he says, " while those who are ignorant of Greek may here and there de rive a useful hint from the photographic minuteness with which the authors of the Revised Version have transferred some in different details ,of the original into Eng lish, it is in the highest degree undesirable that a version so marked by minute scru pulosity about trifles, servile verbalism, want of taste and disregard of I English idiom should be allowed to take the place which the Authorized Version has so long occupied in the estimation of all educated readers." - .'■ ■ ' ' . '2... ;• ■ It has wonderful power on bowels, liver »nd kidney.. Wh»t? Kidney-Wort. /■ SENSATION AT THE SEASIDE California's Crowning Curiosity. A Wonderful Scientific Ex - periment. Astonishing English Tourists and - German Savants. MARKING MARINE MONSTERS. The ; Grapfao-M-Optlcon —IU Marvelous Possibilities- tainted Seals. We have had such charming weather of late that everybody and his wife is going to the Cliff. ■ The atmosphere is just sufficiently humid to serve as a sort of emollient for cuticles frayed by our summer winds, and the life-giving rays of the sun permeate space like a benuon from the Giver of all Good. Lite lingering tourists have found a climatic bonanza, and we know of several Englishmen at our leading hotels, who, on this account, are loth to leave us for the pea-soup fogs, the wintry sleet and pelting rains of their tight little island. Our wealthy British cousins whose only object in life is enjoyment, are to be commended for this, for remaining where the atmospheric condition is so per fect as it is rat present on the peninsula of San Francisco. They ore making the moat of it. Two of these murh-to-be-envied indi viduals had an unexpected adventure the other day, which it is well enough to relate in detail. We call our friends Burroughs and Brown, sons of Manchester wealthy men who had chummed for a tour of the world, and, with youtb, health and unlimited money, they were pattern "globe trotters," Dawdling over breakfast at the Palace one morning, Burroughs throwing down the Call, said, with sudden earnestness, as if he had dis c red a new sensation. "Cliff to-day?" >■.-_!.' -■*.-■ -'.. - * " Why the Cliff?'' returned Brown, delib erately cracking the end of his third egg (your Englishman always eats his egg direct from the shell). " Why go to the Cliff I We are asked to go dawn to somebody's place at Menlo," you know. I believe they call ;it Menlo." - .... .. : -..,. ,-.: : "' '.' Aw, yes ; I remember ; but we can turn that up for the present, if you like: I've been reading in this paper - that the Cliff is delightful just now, and that the seals, taking advantage of the warm weather, are swarming over the rocks to bask in the sun. We're never had a good look at the beggars, and I would like to do so before we leave. Let's go to-day, and we'll catch 'em all out." ' - "Oh, I "don't mind," assented Brown. "I'm agieed. Here, waiter, have a team brought round from the nearest livery, and fetch us a go of brandy in the meantime." I They discussed the cognac leisurely, and juat as Burroughs was remarking on the ex cellent quality of the tipple the blasted Amer icans furnish, the waiter reported. '■,' ' <) s "Horses all ready, sir." ' " Aw ! send to Nos. 46 and 48 for our over coats and driving gloves. Look sharp about it, for I want to get there before the crowd comes. I 'ate a crowd. 'Ere's your tip." Then the two B's sauntered out into the patio, the slender, light-brown Villars they had lighted tracking their way with perfume. They admired the horses, as only Englishmen can. Clean-limbed, supple-jointed, velvety skinned animals they were, ' tossing their heads proudly, and sniffing this fresh air with quivering nostrils as a connoisseur inhales the faint bouquet of a fine wine.' «-<■>■» r "All ready?" asked Burroughs, when the needed garments were brought. "I'll take the ribbons." • " Right you are," paid Brown "but hold 'em 'ard, old man. They look skittish." The drive to the Cliff was an exhilaration. Brown had his wish in not finding the place crowded. It was too early for the rush. Fos ter, mine host, was there radiant in manner and jovial as usual. Otherwise, bald, blar neying and benevolent, sb became the keeper of the locus si'jillum— the Place of the Seal, as Charley Webb once facetiously called the Cliff House. The scene was health-giving, life-inspiring. Away to the west old Ocean stretched as smooth as a lake, and the white winged ships were slipping down the horizon's verge, bearing the products of California to every quarter of the globe. Old Pacificus was as smiling as if it had never been guilty of a treacherous act, never stranded a ship nor drowned a sailor. Burroughs, who af fected poetry, and quoted Byron occasionally, was moved from his insular poaaivity at the sight, and broke out into a verse of the Childe's Apostrophe:: " And I have loved thee, Ocean ! and my Joy Of youthful sports was on thy breast te be Borne, like thy bubbles, onward ; from a boy I wantoned with thy breakers -they to me Were a delight; and if the freshening sea ' • Made them a terror— 'twas a pleasing fear, . Fur I was, as it were, a child of thee And trusted to thy billows far and near . And laid my hand upon thy mane, as I do here." • " Oh, r come, I say, stop that," growled Brown; "hand me your glass. I want to take a good long look at the sea lions. Eh ! there's a rousing lot of 'em." , It was a splendid morning for the phoca. Tbey were out in force ; and like magnified leeches, wrigglad up the .creviced cliffs in ■very direction. Huge fellows, some of them, that might weigh half a ton and over, and cubs that you could carry away in the pocket of an ulster. I Every glass on the balcony was directed toward the interesting sight. Sud denly a gigantic specimen emerged from the ocean and fiippered himself up to a rocky bench "'Pears to me, lisped a young lady — same who had rapped applause with her para sol at Burroughs recitation " 'pears to ma that one is different from the others. Seems to be marked.". , ' "God bless my soul," exclaimed an elderly gentleman, her father, after vigorously rub bing and carefully readjusting the lenses of his glass, "if I did not know it was impossi ble, I should say that seal had letters marked on his pelt." There were half-suppressed ex clamations from the few present. . - Brown was silen f . Bat he was looking earnestly at tbe animal. Finally he handed the binocular to Burroughs with the remark. Tell me what you think of it. I'm beat." Burroughs, ia his turn, riveted his gaze on the huge body of the sea lion, as he turned himself in the sun. "By Jove, but it's curious, you know. I swear I can make out an S and a J — and, Ist me look again— and an O. There's another fellow coming up out of the water— big fellow — he seems to be marked or lettered, too. I think my eyes are all right, and the glass is A One Holland's of Lon don, you know. I can't bs deceived, But I must say it's, strange." . ..-.', "Lets go and seethe landlord," suggested Brown. After a glass of " Bitter," Brown said to Foster, "Landlord, whit's the matter with the seals over yonder Have you been brand ing them?" -■..,, "Tut,", replied Foster, sententiously ; " they're old bulls, I suppose, torn in a fight. They get horribly chawed up, sometimes." " Oh, is that it ?'' said Brown, drawing a deep breath. " 1 must be the victim of an optical Illusion. Let's go back to the balcony and have another look." - Meanwhile, an animated debate . was -in progress on the outside. A positive-minded German, who held a glass of more than average power In his hand, and who conld not be reasoned from the evidences of his senses, insisted that be had readily made out the letters on the bodies of both the seals, and they read nothing more. nor less than " St. Jacob* Oil." The rest of the company win laughing at and pooh-poohing him ; hut Brown said quietly to Burroughs, " I made out the same word/, you know, but hang me, if I liked to say so. I didn't care to be laughed at, although I could well afford to, because St. Jacobs Oil cured my rheumatism contracted during our buffalo hunt in Wyo ming last season. Just 'then a serious, honest-looking man approached our English tourist", and re marked: "Gentlemen, I think I can explain this apparent mystery. Yesterday morning, quite early, when I was out here enjoying the fresh sir quietly, a party of three persons arrived from the city, and after nuking a reconnoiasance and finding the coast clear, they took an oddly-formed instrument from their buggy, which they sat up In that corner and adjusted with a good deal of care. It was shaped somewhat like a photographer's camera, but with more complicated machin ery. They seemed jealous of observation, an I did not intrude myself on them at first, and only noted their operations from a distance. They were evidently testing their queer ma chine by a series of experiments, with more or leas success. I observed that when they directed the projecting tubes of the apparatus toward any object, making a focus, I suppose, there was always a commotion at that point. For example, a Whitehall boat, polled by a couple of men, happened to {.ass at the time. It was made an object. The rowers suddenly unshipped their oars and crawled under the thwartr, as if to escape an attack. When the instrument was turned in another direc tion, they reappeared, and after comparing notes and finding they had suffered no per sonal injury, stood up in the boat and cursed vigorously. We were in plain view from the platform — machine and all. A pilot-boat ting out of the Heads was also brought under the influence, and I saw the man at the wheel squirm as if in pain, and call op some one from below, who evidently repeated his experience. I noticed, further, that a strange sort of light flickered over and about the object toward which the tube* were di rected ; it was quite visible, although the sun was shining brightly. Alter several tach tests, one cf the experimenters said : " Now, then, for the seals." There were not many on the rocks at the time, but there were two or three large ones among tba number. The man who appeared to have principal di rection of the machine produced a placard a St. Jacobs Oil placard and fitted it in a sort 'of slide attached jto I the apparatus. Selecting the largest animal in the group of sea lions as the object, ha sighted the tube, then moved a lever, as he had done before, ! that set some bidden machinery in motion. The effect was almost instantaneous. The sea lion roused himself, gave a sudden roar, leaped into the ocean, and was out of sight at , once. -" I think he's marked." said the oper -1 ator ; "let's try another," The experiment ( DAILY KECOHO-I'XIO.V SEBIES. 1 VOL. XV.-.VO. IS. ... I , was repeated on another sleepy monsler, an 1 he rolled down the side of the cliff in a hurry, barking as if in pain. But by this time it would seem the animals had taken alarm, for they left the rocks in short order. There was a good deal of congratulation among the party as they discussed the effect of the operations of the apparatus, while they were carefully covering it in order to return to the city. I ventured tn approach and to ask one of them the nature and ures of the in strument : but I received at first only evasive replies. My curiosity was evidently out of place. Finally one of the parties said: "My friend, this is a recent invention, that has cost no end of time and trouble, and which has been secured by the house of A. "Vogeler 4 Co., of Baltimore, Md., the proprietors of St. Jacobs. Oil, at an expense of $200,000. We call it the Graphoecopticon; but ths nature of its operations must remain a secret at present, as its possibilities are yet . greater than what yon have seen to-day. We ' are in the employ of A. "Vogeler 4 Co., and our business is to make their gTeat remedy known all over the United States, and by every means possible. I think, therefore, gentlemen," concluded the serious, honest-looking man, "the lions that have excited your wonder are those marked yesterday in the . strange manner I have described." : Wonders will never cease. Good morning, gentlemen." "".- --. ... "Stop," said Burroughs, to the serious, honest-looking man. . " 'Old 'ard," followed Brown. " Did yon ever see air instrument called a Hellostat or Heliotrope, used for rendering distant sta tions visible?" . .."Yes, I have seen the instrument you name." .... ,-. , . . _ . -' "Was this one -thia Graphoscopticon, as you call it— anything like it V "Only in a degree. Perhaps it was an ex pansion of the same idea." "Good morning." . J',2.-..-. •.,*.... ° ...... . ;• ... •. jj • .... Brown and Burroughs did not talk much on their way back to the city. They seamed puzzled by what they had seen. " Brown," said Burroughs, at last, as they turned out of the Park gates, " what do you think of this business, anyway ? Do yon be lieve thai smooth-talking fellow's story ?".... "I'm blessed if I know what to say," re sponded . Brown, as jbe ; lit J a fresh cigar. "These llamericans are up to hev'rytblok in the way of advertising. He may tell the truth. That signaling arrangement they call a heliosta*. isn't a marker to this, though." - •'• "Do you mean that as a joke ? " asked Burroughs, somewhat sternly. • -.: --■ V 'Pon honor, no. If you like, we'll drop the subject. When we get back to London we'll Bet those fellows at the Polytechnic to work to find out all about it." ' 1 ' - . . GENERAL NOTES. : Six of the twelve Bishops of the Method ist Episcopal Church are unable, on ao* count of some oodily infirmity, to work, so that it leaves six to do the labor devolving upn the whole number. '■' - A European firm has patented a news paper press which, it is claimed, prints in four or five . different , colors at the same time. It is somewhat . similar "to presses nsed in printing wall paper. * The Canadians are congratulating them selves that by the - passage 'of the bill making it legal for a man to marry his dead wife's Bister, he can be certain "what sort of a mother-in-law he is to have." ' Insects, caterpillars and larva- are not destroyed— as is often believed by intense cold or heavy frosts. After an exposure to a temperature of 11" below zero the com mon caterpillar has revived on the return of sufficient warmth. - Dr. Wollaston's observation that certain sounds are inaudible to many ears was re cently, illustrated by Professor Tyndall. During a lectnre he blew a small whistle, ' the low, shrill note of which instantly agi tated the sensitive flame, while full half of the audience failed to hear the sound. ' A Florida man the other day killed a rattlesnake by throwing a glass of whisky in its face. Now we understand why Oil City hunters invariably take a quart bottle of whisky with them when they go gun ning. Vie had been told that it was a good rattlesnake antidote, but we never knew how it was used.— [Oil City Derrick. " ' Black letter is the name given to the Old English or modern Gothio letter. It waa introduced into England in the fourteenth century, and was the character | used in | manuscript works before the introduction of the art of printing.' ' Books printed be fore the year 1500 are generally in thia character, and are called black-letter books. : An imperfect copy of the rare old vol ume " Dame Juliana . Bernar'a Boke of Sir Albans," was sold lately in London ' for $3,000. It was ' the ' most perfect copy offered for sale during the present century. Of the three absolutely perfect copies in ex istence, one is -in Earl Spencers library, - another is in "- . F-rl of • Pembroke's col lection, and the third is in tha library of the Earl of Devon. ' •*> '■' r On St. ' Valentine's day : a ' city doctor committed a folly of sending the traditional missive to three charming ■ but petite § : young girls. ' Having a facile pen, he de signed a big bruin standing erect and re- * garding with curious wonder three little - ducks. Proud of his effort, he afterwards asked the brightest of the three demoiselles - .what , aha thought the, little ducks, were .-. saying to the bear, - ' ' Undoubtedly 'Quack Itf quack ! quack I' " came the instant reply. ' The minute lines and furrows on persons' hands are likely te ' receive a far mora use ful attention than tha observation of the great ' lines by fortune-tellers. ? t There is reason to believe the spiral whorls on the thumb and finger points are peculiar to I individuals and - raoes, and may be as cer tainly nsed to define the ethnological class j or positive identification of the being pos- . sessing them ias the I measurement* of the skall or the examination *{-a photogrtpfr would be. '■v.^-s-rrr: "_.;«; '*."c.-i\i.-;,.« t .,..-,.„•, A barber at Amsterdam, N. V., received carbolic acid instead of salts of tartar from a I druggist, the other I day, and - prepared his shampooing fluid accordingly with that liquid. Upon his assistant's applying it to his first customer, the man exclaimed: "I4ub that stuff off my bead or I won't hava any scalp left." This rr the man tried to do, but the acid burned his lingers. The proprietor went to his assistance, and be tween the two they j saved the man from otter, ruin. .His. scalp,, however,, is not brown. i.'.'y.'.r- 'jJ7. , , *'•' A dangerous experiment was recently undertaken, in which Professor White a champion swimmer and inventor. of tho theory of resuscitation, consented a short time ago to drown himself, that it might be tested for the benefit of the London Hu mane Society, who were present to witness the experiment. lie plunged into the wa ter, and, after remaining some time, waa taken out in an apparently lifeless condi tion. His body was then pot through tbe coarse of treatment laid down, and be re vived in a short tii.-ft-, without apparent unpleasant . consequences. '" . _ Nearly a year ago Mayor King of Phila delphia issued an order to the police force requiring a strict enforcement of the ordi nance against carrying concealed weapons. Since that time there have been three timet a* many arrests | for violation of . the ordinance as there were I before daring an equal period, and the police do not think that this mischievous habit of the free-born American has been even partially cured. There has been a decrease in the number of shooting affrays, however, though that circumstance is -rendered lets gratifying than it would otherwise be by a corre sponding increase in " catting cases." Tha knife is apparently taking the place of tie pistol in homicidal brawls. A Tranquil Nervous System Can never hi possessed by those whose diges tive and assimilative - organs are in a state of chronic d -'sorder. Weak stomachs make weak nerves. To restore vigor and quietude to the latter, the first must be Invigorated and regu lated. The ordinary sedatives may tranqnilire the nerves for a while, but they can never like Hoatetter's Stomach Bitters, remove the causes of nervous debility. - That superb in vigorant and corrective of disordered condi tions of the alimentary organs bos also the effect of imparting tone to the nerves. - Ths delicate tissues of wbich they are constituted, when weakened in consequence of impover ishment of the blood, resulting from imperfect digestion and assimilation, draw strength from the fund of vitality developed in the system by the Bitters, which imparts the re quired impetus to the nutritive functions of the stomach, - enriches the circulation, and gives tone and regularity to tba secretive and evaluative organs. , Ateb's Hair Vigor restores the color and stimulates the growth of the hair, prevents it from falling off, and greatly increases ita beauty. . It has a delicate and lasting per fume, its ingredients are harmless, and for the toilet it is 'unequalled. _ - .... -wa.-;7r--7.rsr_. '.Thousands or Ladies have found sudden relief from all their woes by the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, the gnat remedy for diseases peculiai to females, ' send to Mrs. Lydia E. Piokham, No. 233 Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass., for pamphlets. * Think, ladies ! You can permanently beautify your complexion with j Glenn Sul phur Soap. "Hill's Hair and Whisker Dye," 50 centa.