THE SACRAMENTO. WEDNESDAY. ypVEMBEB 8, 1899. 6 chuck-a-block. Agriculture and Horticulture. Up in Plumas they for American raise valand Indian, as well as some othervegetleys, are famous for all kinds of Oroville Register: gigantic, potatoes, Finally Mr. Howe com- he has menced shipping East, and worked up a good trade. This year he shipped ten car loads of thirteen tons through each, or 6,300 boxes. The freight bills from Suisun East were $3,230,. and the way freight from Sonoma brings the freight bills up a hundred or two more. The fruit which ripens between car load (shipments supplies San Francisco. TO-DAY, 9:30 A. M. SALE OF Ribbons and Embroideries at the Smallest Kind of Prices. THE CREAMERY. Modesto Herald, October l-'Oth: The this week presented ables. We were butter from the two creameries near with the king of spuds, for it weighed Newman- yielded 25 cents a pound net big po- The a little over six pounds. tato was grown on the ranch of J. W. Thompson of American/Valley and sent to us by W. J. Edwards of Quincy. Walker Bell brought it down and vouches Plumas that this is the kind of spuds produces. THE RAINS. Shasta Courier: The fall rains have so far come just right for stockmen in The first showers County. Shasta dampened the ground and caused grass and vegetables to sprout and spring up and the rains that soon followed have "boosting" tendency, and had magic with a few weeks more mild weather feed will be abundant to help live stock tide over the cold weather and storms that may always be expected in winWherever it is ter and early spring. possible, however, stock should be provided with dry shelter and some feed. NEW FRUIT TREE PEST. California Fruit Grower: Orchardists ln the State of Maryland are threatened with a new pest thought to be imported from Germany. The "American Packer" of Baltimore says: This source of worriment is an importation from Germany, such a disturbance was raised against American fruits because of the fact that they would carry (socalled) San Jose scale and other pests to the German orchards. In its ravages it is not unlike the San Jose scale, and already has a foothold in many sections Entomologists of the Agof America. ricultural Department at Washington are now studying the new arrival and are devising schemes to prevent its extention from the localities which it has invaded. In Europe the scale is known by the technical title of Aspidiotus octreoeformis, Curtis. It is found aleverywhere throughout the most States, kingdoms and principalities of Europe, and even in Northern Africa, and the damage it has done to the fruit interests, wherever it has broken forth, is beyond estimate. FOR CURING RIPE OLIVES. Colusa Sun: The following has been used by several parties in Colusa with entire success, and as there are a large number of trees in the county, it maybe of value at this time: For ten gallons of ripe olives, carefully picked without bruising, dissolve one pound of American concentrated lye in three or four quartes of water by heating; add cold water until the whole amounts to five gallons; pour it over the olives, which should be in an oak tub or cask with a faucet at the bottom to draw off the liquor or water; stir them frequently for the first few hours, being careful not to bruise them, after which stir them once in two hours. At the end of two and one-half days examine them to see if the lye has penetrated them to the pit, which is done by selecting a few of the berries and slicing them with a knife. If much of the flesh remains white draw off the lye; rinse water, several the fruit with clear buckets, and put on fresh lye, prepared as before. Usually this last bath of lye is sufficient after twenty-four hours, it not being necessary that the lye should penetrate to the pit of the berries, as the process of taking out the lye will The lye remove what bitter remains. baths are to take out the bitter properties from the fruit, the next process bt ing to remove the lye from the fruit. This is 'lone by frequent baths in clear, cold water. Use the water frequently for the first day or two, until the lye disappears, then put on strong brine for one day, which will remove the last of it. If any lye should remain, it is easy to detect it by tasting the fruit. Soak out part of the strong brine, when they are ready for the final pickle, of salt and water, which can be made to suit the taste. THE VINTAGE. Livermore Herald: The vintage' is Wente's and fairly over although Wagoner's wineries are still receiving a few straggling lots. D. A. McNally is hauling the last of the product of the Oak Spring vineyard to the Wagoner winery and a few wagon loads from the belated crop of the Tassajara Valley are also coming in. The crop has been very short, even below the estimates early in the season. Everything considered the vintage has been a fairly good one. Every winery in the valley had trouble with the fermentation at the outset, but a little experimenting removed the difficulty and after the first week or two no trouble was experienced. The quality of the season's output is said to be uniformly good. A QUTNCE ORCHARD. Santa Rosa Republican: On the Embarcadero road below- Sonoma is the largest quince orchard in America, and perhaps in the world. Thirty acres of this orchard. up quince trees make Thirty acres of ordinary fruit trees is not such a large orchard, but the bigness of this quince grove can be comprehended when the readers remember that all the other quince trees in all the other orchards in the county would not take up an acre of land. The orchard is on the Robert Howe It was planted by Mr. Howe ranch. and his associate at that time in the Afterwards the commission business. ranch was divided, and the quince orchard fell into Mr. Howe's portion. At the time of the tree planting the neighbors thought that the quince growers were crazy,-and for a time Mr. Howe shared a quite similar feeling. Time went on and the trees commenced to bear and there seemed to be no market. An acre of quinces will easily keep the San Francisco market Which Way? Are the children growing nicely? A little stronger each month 5 A trine heavier ? That's good. Or is one of them growing the other way ? Growing weaker, growing thinner, growing paler? If so, you should try Emulsion at once. 'Tis both a food and a Scott's medicine to all delicate children. It makes them grow in the right way? taller, stroi)ger, healthier. joe. sll drugf)»u, , into the patrons for September?more, deed, for the patrons received $5),14~>.17 for 35,708 The pounds of butter. skimmed milk, which is returned to the another material patrons, comprises source of revenue. Indeed, this item of revenue meets, if it does not exceed, the cost of milking. You will find these displayed immediately to the left of our main entrance. Lot I. Fancy Striped Ribbon, 10c a Bolt. We offer here good silk taffeta ribbon, with neat stripes, the kind that you would ordinarily be asked to pay from 30c to 50c a bolt for. Useful for hair purposes, fancy work, etc. Colors Nile, violet, ecru, silver gray, tan, light blue, shrimp and KEEPING POTATOES IN SAND. Sutter Farmer: Back of the farm of land Joseph Girdner on adjoining farmed by G. H. Robinson a large crop of fine quality of sweet potatoes were old rose. raised during the present season, says ?the "Democrat." Mr. Robinson has been placing a large number of potatoes in dry sand to be kept in a dry place until spring, when they will demand a better price. This process he has tried in years past and the result has been very satisfactory, the potatoes appearing as fresh as when first taken from the ground. Baby Ribbon, 3c Piece of 10 Yards. Gros-grain all-silk baby ribbon, with piquot edge, in the following shades: Brown, lemon, tan, navy, old rose or Nile. Lot 11. Lot 111. Satin Ribbon, sc, 10c Piece. This is an all-silk satin-face ribbon, with an invisible draw string by which it can be quickly xormed into ruffles or can be used plain; §-inch width will be sold at 5c piece, and 1 J-inch width 10c piece. Colors brown, navy, green and apple. CHESTNUTS. Alta Advocate: Henry Burum has on his place two chestnut trees that are loaded with mature and fully developed nuts. The raising of these nuts in California we have never heard discussed. It is suposed that heavy frosts are necessary to make them perfect and cause them to shed their hulls and spikes, but the nuts on these trees are now in a perfect state. Lot IV. Fancy Ribbon, 15c Yard. These are this season's designs. Regular 25c and 35c values. Come in beautiful hemstitched ef- SAN DIEGO LEMONS. The San Diego "Union" recently published a special edition, in which much space is devoted to the important lemon-growing industry of San Diego County. In an editorial, commenting upon the facts presented, the "Union" says: "In round numbers San Diego County has 500,000 lemon trees. Of these, onefifth are now in bearing, their product being 500 carloads or over for the present'year. Were the remaining 400,000 trees equally productive the present output would be over twenty-five hundred carloads. That shipments will reach the latter figure within a very few years is a certainty. Each season new trees come into bearing, and the older ones give larger yields. Annually, since the first orchards were set out, there has been a steady gain in the product, although owing to dry seasons the increase has been much less during the past two or three years than it would have been under more favorable conditions. And in spite of all drawbacks the gain has been sufficiently great to indicate the vast proportions that the industry will assume during the next half decade. "As said before, if all the trees were now- producing, there would be over 2,500 carloads to ship, and it will not be But long before that figure is reached. when that time shall have come, the product will continue to increase, for even then there will be many trees not yet at their maximum of productiveness. And even if no new orchards were set out. the 500,000 trees now in the ground will insure an ultimate output of between 5,000 and 0,000 carloads annually; for at an average of three boxes to the tree, the orchards now in this county would produce the former amount. "In no country in the United States has lemon-growing assumed the proportions that it has reached in San Diego County, and nowhere can lemons be produced more successfully than here, the frostless belt of the bay region being peculiarly adapted to this fruit. The industry has a magnificent future." fects and in 'such swell shades as new blue, bluet, to 3$ castor, violet, lilac or magenta. Width inches. Very choice for neck purposes. Lot V. Hagnificent Satin Face Ribbons at Little Prices. There is only one objection to this ribbon. It is too good a quality and would ordinarily sell for a higher price than most people are willing to pay. To make it popular we will offer it at the lowest price that the commoner kinds would sell for. Now, if you want a desirable ribbon for fancy work or any other purpose, here is a most unusual opportunity. We have a full range of widths, Nos. 5, 7, 9, 12, 16 and 22. Not every shade in each width, but a big list of shades in the various widths. Here are our little prices: Widths, 5, 7, 9, 6c, Be, ioc, Prices 12, 16, 22. 15c, 18c. Lot VI. Embroideries, Slightly Imperfect, 8c yd. We offer several hundred yards of choice openwork embroidery on splendid wearing material, varying in width, including the cloth measure, from 3! to 5 inches. These come in lengths from 4to 6 yards, and at the low price at which we shall offer these we have decided not to cut the pieces. We wish to state that occasionally there appears a slight imperfection, but we don't think that it will interfere with the wearing quality of the embroidery. Weinstock, TO-DAY. New Jackets Children's Capes Misses' Jackets $6.50 $5.50 The above garments have just been received by us and will be placed on sale to-day in our Cloak Department. LOT I?Fine quality kersey jackets in pretty shade of tan, perfect shade of castor, and blue. These garments are stylish three-button coats with slightly dip front and six pearl buttons. We can fit you now, the line being complete with all sizes. Price, $6.50. LOT lI?A lot of tan capes with collar and hood "golf lined, for misses and children. ServiceaPrice, $2.95. ble Winter capes, , LOT lll?Misses' dark cadet blue covert jackets, with velvet piping. These garments have high storm collars and button close up to the neck. We can fit misses 14, 16 and 18 years of age and, also, small women. Price, 5>5.50. raoung mm Men's Suits. Prof. Mathews, the Expert Phrenologist. Professor Matthews, the phrenologist, will be here this week, 9 to 12 a. m., 2 to 5:30 p. m., in the Downstairs Department. He explains the "'bumps" in the heads free of charge. He tells the good qualities and the badness that these bumps indicate. Don't mind if he tells you some plain truths. He throws in plenty of good advice in his talks, and we are quite sure he will make many friends. Parents are especially invited to bring in their children. Young men who make any pretense to dressing in a stylish manner should pay heed to this. There is to be found here the most complete stock of young men's suits in the city. Late arrivals are many lines of handsome suits in fancy and striped worsteds, some with double-breasted vests and others with seven button high, cut vests. Numbers of high-class novelties not to be found elsewhere are shown here. Prices range $8.50, $10, $12.50, 815, $17.50, $18.50, $20 and $22.50. \u25a0niin Those who know of the merits of air-tight heaters and desire coal stoves will find several interesting items in that line here. Those who are not yet convinced of the merits of air-tight stoves should investigate at once. Air-tight stoves have now been thoroughly tried and tested and have come to stay. These coal air-tights that we offer use about one-third of fuel that ordinary coal stoves use. Besides, they give a greater heat with considerably less care and trouble. In addition, they are handsome in appearance and can be depended on to last for years. The Stove Department in\ites you to investigate. Prices $14 and $16.50. W. L. Douglas Boys' Shoes. Calfskin lace and elastic shoes, coin toes and heavy soles. Boys' sizes, 2$ to ss, $2.50; youths', in lace only, sizes 11 to 2, $2. Men's Shoes. Men's seal goat lace shoes, as near waterproof as $3 leather is made. Seal goat lace shoes, bull dog toes, capped and double soles. Sizes sto 12. Our price $3. Men's calfskin shoes, welt sewed, $3. Fine calfskin lace or elastic side shoes, Goodyear welt hand sewed process. All styles of toes? coin, bulldog, square, capped and plain square toe. Our price $3. , considered to have come down the main Trinity Valley a long distance, per- j haps from beyond Scott's Mountain. The present Trinity River has eroded the old channel deposits above Trinity Center, nearly destroyed them and scattered their coarse gold along the bedrock in the deepest channel in the Extra in Boys' Star Waists, 50c. BJ We've Kfir-Tight {\u25a0] Coal Heaters. Lubin & Co., 400 and Pacific Coast 52.95 made a reduction in a line of "Star" shirt waists for boys aged Bto 13 years. The garments are made of French percale and have small round collars. Price how 50c. fflen's Fill Fine They sold originally for $1. Suits. New four button round cut sack suits of very high-grade pure worsted cloth, in a small olive check. Tailored up to the top notch and fit perfectly. These suits have individuality seldom seen in clothes. Price of suit, $22.50. PHevv Handkerchief ffrl Pockets. These are quite a dressy contrivance, being made of velvet or satin and richly beaded. Some all black and some black and white mixed. They have chatelaine handles to hook into the belt waist and the bottom part is trimmed with beaded fringe. Prices $1, $1.25 and $1.75 each. Hose, 3 Pairs for 25c. Infants' Here is a splendid hose offering. Seamless finish, good wearing, fine gauge cotton in light or dark shades of tan. Sizes 4, 4} or 5 inches. Sacramentol 412 X Street, County* will come to the front rank among the mining communities of the State, where it rightfully belongs. canyon, borne aloft by the upward current of air. The stroller noticed a number of spiders on the leaves and branches in singular attitudes, and then it occurred to him that there was a spider migration, and that instead of walking or crawling away the insects were going, like Andree, by balloon. More on the leaves of the wild lilac were preparing for the journey across chasm, the and forming, building launching their balloons. A sipider that had been actively climbing up a branch of a neighboring oak now stood on an outer leaf and prepared to make its balloon. It had a wonderful arrangement of spinnerets in which the balloon-making material, which is also employed to construct nets and traps, is stored. Some of the spiders have an additional spinning organ and a comblike implement upon the hind legs>, by which they comb out the silk, making a tanThus they are well gle of fine webs. prepared to make cables for balloons, guy ropes, net. and. by the aid of the comb, a fluffy platform web. Some of the spiders made litfle platforms of fluffy" web as tlx y we,it; others merely clung to the thread, but in one way. or the,-other scores of ih m crossed the canyons and traveled through the air, aeronauts in all the name implies.?Chicago Chronicle. * 4} I \u2666 X Don't bo afraid to ask for credit. \u25a0 I JOHNNY BULL MINE. Plumas Bulletin, Nov. 2d: W. S. Chapman, the well-known mining man. oak extension 0 arrived from Greenville Monday eventable may be ing and next day went to San FranAmador Record: The Gwin mine is rock floor of the present valley below cisco, taking with him samples of ore I,ulled out to now assured of abundant water and, Trinity Center. Some of this gold has from the Johnny Bull mine, which is length of 8 feet; Visiting the Khediviah. will soon have eighty stamps pounding been carried on down the river and situated near the head of North Can- i The following is the description of a I the quartz. It is expected, says tbe into the sea, but much of it must re- j yon, near Greenville, and just below Oh a n d 9 o m e'.y visit to the highest lady in the land bf ] San Francisco Furthermore, Coffee Creek and the i main. J| "Chronicle," that carved massive \u26 6 From Valley the Round reservoir. who j Gwin Mine Development Company will other streams Egypt, as related by a woman Swift Creek have Greenville Price, $27. of information we sources base. spent last winter in the land of the pay $25,000 a month in dividends after continued to supply gold to the Trinity learn that Mr. Chapman, who has a M» A six-foot expyramids: "At the door in the court- \u25a0 January Ist. The stock is not on the River of the present day, just as they bond on the property referred to, now yard a eunuch of the palace helped us 1 market. tension for as did to the old Miocene river, thus addO has about fifteen men at work. Prepto alight, and in entrance, on staircasa ing many nuggets to those derived di- arations are being made MEADOW LAKE. low as $4.50. \u26 6 to erect a o and in the corridor above, stood and Nevada Transcript: John Clark, pro- rectly by the erosion of the old channel hoisting plant and to sink a shaft 500 waited at indolent attention a half- prietor of the Oro Fino quartz mine, at deposits. feet deep to test and develop the propdozen or more Egyptian ladies of the Meadow Lake, has taken out In sihort, so far as the geological evi- erty. Should this prove to be what is in .5«197 bedchamber, Turkish mistresses of j free gold from a pocket, recently disdence is concerned, there is every reaexpected of it, the price named in the 0 Ranges. Rugs, Hut racks. Ktc. 4, the robes and Circassian women equer- ; covered on the claim. This amount son to believe that under the alluvial bond will be paid and a quartz ntW gravels ries, so to say. of the Trinity River, between erected, the latter to be of modern patwas secured by pounding the decom411-413 *C St. "The English lady of quality who posed quartz and sluicing it through a; the Comstock bank and Crooked Bend, tern and to contain the most Improved preceded us was greeted by one of the long torn. Mr. Clark has only worked the lowest channel in the bedrock conmachinery for the work to be accomlatter, who took her by the hand. To- ! to a depth of three feet, and has tains a considerable amount of coarse plished. Mr. Chapman is reported to a gether they laboriously mounted the i number of tons of rich quartz that he gold, constituting it a good proposition think very well of the mine. It is unlong staircase, the glorified dressing- j will pack out and mill next spring. The to work by any method which will en- derstood to be his intention to push th? gown costume of the lady of the pal- j snow is now over' three feet deep, and able this lower gold bearing level to be development work on the property. ace following her over several stairs in 1 Mr. Clark must soon close down for the reached. So confident am I of this, GOLD MINING IN THE SOUTH. We will sell you buggies, and when As the not numerous her rear. car- winter. that I am willing to stake my future you are througli using them tor the Comparatively San Diego Tribune: riagts set down their occupants at the reputation as a mining geologis..t, upon season we will STORE and TAKE! residents of Southern California reBLACK SAND OF TRINITY. CARE of them FREE OF CHARGE my argument of the fact. entrance, they mounted from behind In I am not few gold mining important Oscar H. Hershey willing alize how the until the opening of spring. Trinity Journal: miscellaneous order. An advance to assert that it is as rich as industry is becoming at this end of the Call and select your buggy or phaein a letter to the Redding "Free Press" is the party which had already had its audfrom Minersville ton or surrey. old channel "Mining makes Bragdon State. The Review" under date of October south, but yet as compared with the A Consistent Christian Scientist. ience was assembled at the stair-head i from remarkable showing that, although in animated parley, and in contrast ard 24th, has the following to say regardaverage of gold-bearing river gravels the Hicks?Is your wife any better since years old, as a goldA. & apart stood a knot of already men- ing the sands of the Trinity: the world over, it stands well up to- less than four she went to Dr. Nihil, the Christian California section, Southern producing "In the course of my wanderings wards the Builders tioned women of the palace?slaves, scientist? of Tine Business front rank. and Pleasure is to-day producing nearly one-half of Vehicles, satellites, or simply friends there for about among the mining districts of The fact is, he is the Wicks?No. The few tests that have been made proState, the the mined in gold Trinity I have encountered the County, 908, a of the bedrock under the Trinity Val910, 912 and 914. Ninth St., the afternoon. most scientist I ever encounduction of 18!(8 being taken as a basis tered. consistent project which is known as the Trinity "We followed one submissively He not only denies that there the ley, are no safe criterion of the real SACRAMENTO, CAL. In that year the for the calculation. It value of the proposition. length of a scarlet corridor, through I River Bars Dredging proposition. are such things as pain and disease, Obviously, a ,"(!15.<i.i7.total of California was output that, appears some months since, a few miners without capital or machintwo lofty salons of Parisian appoint- j but he declares there are nf> such things i A conservative estimate places as cures. ?Boston Transcript. mining man, J. Wes? ery could reach the bedrock in such --000. ment, and into a farthest third. The well-known gold output of the mines of SouthKhediviah herself was sitting there Moore, for two years resident of thr: places only as the river is cutting into the It is said the smallest hair throws a by actual the solid formation of the valley slides, ern California for the present year at alone, no careful mother-in-law on this Trinity Valley, discovered, it Yes, of course, it does; four years ago, the shadow-. Yet, $6,000,000. prospecting placer and work, mining occasion supporting her. The shutters where the rock floor of the valley is production gold in Southern throws a shadow across your appetite that the total of gravels alluvial in the Trinity relatively high, and where the tendency were closed; the apartment was dim. | did not amount to half a if you discover it in the butter. ?Chitherefore; but in a darkened room such River In the vicinity of Bragdon, con- of the action of the river is to remove California The develop- cago Daily News. million dollars a year. splendor of diamonds and shining satin i tain not only considerable values in the the gold rather than to deposit it. «. desert mines has scarcely of the ment \u2666 gold widely scattered through the j The real channel, the deep channel is his worst \u2666 "A man's discontent light. must almost have made An fine and we may look for evil." Avoid discontent by looking after deposit, but also in the black magnetic yet commenced, face, but not a face of any which must be somewhere under the amiable a large further increase during the next human plentiful in this district, and j Purify housecleaning. the valley bottoms, and have a course irrebirth, for her highness is an ex-slave. ; sand so of the blood, Writh nine-tenths years. the few same time a number of Eastclear the system by taking that \u2666 spective of the present liver, has never had surmounting it a large tiara of about \u2666 pefruits, the seven-eighths capitalists of conceived a. desire to been touched, and no one knows how citrus Sarexcellent blood purifier, Hood's diamonds, and most magnificent her era of the beet-sutroleum, three-fourths Like the acquire possession of few miles a cf1 much gold it may contain. young person was costumed, Only a gar, and nearly half of the gold of the saparilla. not as were her ladies and maidens, but in the ; thesie river deposits along the Trinity, dredger can reach it. and work them by means of a dredger, State. Southern California may surely \u2666 ever produced, and T fashion of Paris ?in white satin, stiff The alluvial gravels above the present said to be doing quite well, thank long A time in be ago, geologists what and incrusted with embroidery in front low water level of Trinity River are not appreciated by \ u 2666 \ u2666 you! call the Miocene period, a great river phenomenally rich in gold, but I have j and heavy with a regal length of gretnevery architect flowed across the j mountainous country The English lady myseif prospected them enough to know lined train behind. SPIDER BALLOONS. of what is now Trinity County. In that they compare favorably in this reof quality took the seat upon the young general, its course coincided with the spect Khediviah's left and engaged her in with many other river deposits Navigate the Air in Ships of Their \u2666 converse, if that can be called converse main Trinity River of the present day, j that are considered good dredging prop south Trinity as far as Center. Own Construction. Thence economically is, least, that on the side which should bo ositions. At if i chief, only smiles, assenting bows and the old channel passes to the west of mined and on a large scale, they will Travelers who have wandered through 200-210 J Street. monosyllables. The Khediviah could the mountain range (the Minerva) sep- pay a profit upon the capital invested. | the mountain region of California, rearating the Trinity Valley from that of of ordinary voluble, the the avenues interesting doubt, be and in i As for the "biack sand" phase of } moved from no her own language, Turkish, and in the 1 the east fork of Stewart's fo. k of Trin- I project, I know but little about it. I travel, have noticed a species of spiders River, its gravels occurring at and ity less euphonious but more classic Ara- i know that the entire alluvial deposit of\u25a0 \u25a0that traverse long distances upon balAs bic she is equally in her element; but near Minersville. on Buckeye Mountain, the Trinity valley abounds in magnetic | loons of their own construction. ARE NOT of French she has little knowledge and and in the Weaverville basiin. sands, and it is probable that in the i a stroller who recently descended the Everyone who is acquainted of English none. with deeper portions considerable beds of it; bank by a little trail crouched low in saw "Another party being ushered into the the history of mining in Trinity Counwill be found. The samples for assay the shadow of a wild lilac he You can put my Improved Electric Belt room of audience, we, who had been ty in the early days, knows that all have been taken at random, and are against the dark green bank of the op- around your waist when you go to bed, sitting in line against the wall, to our the gulches that cross or in any way fairly representative of the whole. They j posite canyon a cobweb afloat; then set the regulator so as to give the force ot" current that you like,, and can go to countrywoman's and to the Khediviah'.-* cut into the gravels of this old Miocene indicate rather high values, it j another, drifting down the aerial chanand left, rose when she stood to receive also river channel have been rich in coarse seems safe to say that if the sand is j nel on the wind. Others followed?a sleep with the soothing, vitalizing influtheir salutations and then, one by one placer gold. Those who mine in this carefully saved sufficient quantities of procession of webs was passing; some ence pouring through your body, it you health and strength. courtesying over her hand, we left the region s>oeak of "slugs" rather than of it may be secured to make its working were long and formed of. a single thread brings mass of room as we had entered it. leaving the "colors." nuggets of $80 to $1,500 hay- j profitable. had a delicate sJlk; others of DISEASES OP TMB party more recently arrived seated on Ing been secured not unfrequently. All! On the whole, I see no reason for not fabric attached. Presently one of them Lame Back, Kidney Troubles, Varicocele the evidence indicates that this old considering the dredging proposition. came so near that he put out his hand and many other troubles are quickly her right." channel deposit has been rich in gold There are other rivers on which the and caught it. It will cure oveixsome by this method. the the most aggravated cases in a few days. wherever it has been explored. Should Survive. conditions are similar to those on the It was a perfect balloon, and "Do you think this poem of mine will | The gold of the old Miocene channel Trinity, and when one dredger is sue ? aeronaut?a srmall spider?sat complac- ? Gall and test it if yoii can, or send for was practically all secured ?by the cessfully at work on this side of the ently on its basket, a fluffy mass of my booklet about it free. live?" asked the high-browed youth. from ledges and pojkets in the Trinity range "I dunno." answered other companies will be webs half an inch in length, light as a the brutal ac- stream country north of Minersville. A quaintance. formed, dredgers ought "It to. It seems other set up, and the feather, and supported by a long thread came down Swift Creek, more came I present activity in the mining camps which reached away, undulating and pretty 'tough."? Washington Star. corner Geary 700 Market street, San NEAOLE MEDICAL INSTITUTE OF | down Coffee Creek, but most of it, b3- of Trintiy County will be reinforced by curving upward. Scores of these aero- Francisco, and corner Second and Spring, PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS, loemteii any Angeles. Not all new books have new thoughts. yond reasonable permanently at It** X at.. BacnuMata. doubt, may be such cause for prosperity that Trinity nauts passed by, drifting up the little Los Mining News. I 1 \ j ! : ' J J| J 1 £\lti ° vFLJI JJ * %4 J ** O (3 J 1l» : CHARLES M. CAMPBELL, t j| I There Are Still Several Months of Pleasant Driving This Season. , MEISTER SONS. j j 1 j j L. &C. HARDTMUTH'S I Koh=l=Noor j : : ! ! ! I j j ' i I I I ! ' ! i I | ! ! Tracing Cloth I X X i , CURE AT HOME I X Pencils, Koh-I-Noor the finest X % and % X willbe draughtsman. i ? ?j X H. S. CROCKER COMPANY, X X X j ; ROLLER AXLES BALL-BEARING AXLES. ! j I ? 1 , j 1 j INEAGLE , RHEUMATISM, j EYE, EAR, ' I litt'.e' ' MedicaMnstitute, dr. m. a. Mclaughlin NOSE «nd THROAT,
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