V ,r H) The Steam Plough. Fraeer't Magazine in an article upon the modern agricultural improvements, fLSs: In the way of sheer downright force, few effects of machinery are more striking than a steam-ploughing engine dragging the shares across a wide ex panse of stiff clay. The huge engines used in our iron-clad yesRls work with a graceful ease which dectifjs the eye; the ponderous cranks reyoiYe so smoothly, :and shine so brightly with oil and polish, that the mind is apt to underrate the work performed. But these ploughing engines stand out solitary and apart from other machinery, and their shape itself suggests force, such forces as may have -existed in the mastodon, or other un f iHeldy monster of the prehistoric ages. The broad wheels sink into the earth under the pressure; the steam kissing from the escape valves is carried by the breeze through the hawthorn hedge, hiding the red berries with a strange, unwonted cloud; the thick, dark brown smoke, rising from the funnel as the stoker casts its food of coal into the iiery mouth of the beast, falls again and floats heavily over the yellow stubble, smothering and driving away the par tridges and hares. There is a smell of oil and cotton waste, and gas, and steam and smoke, which overcomes the fresh, sweet odor of the earth and green things after a shower. Stray lumps of coal crush the delicate pimpernel and creep ing convolvulus. A shrill, short scream rushes forth and echoes back from an ad jacent rick puff! the fly-wheels revolve, and the drum underneath tightens its hold upon the wire rope. Across yonder, .a curious, shapeless thing, with a man riding upon it, comes jerking forward, tearing its way through stubble and clay, dragging its iron teeth with sheer strength deep through the solid earth. The thick wire rope stretches and strains as if it would snap and curl up like a tortured snake; the engine pants loudly and quick; the plough now glides for ward, now pauses, and, as it were, eats its way through a tougher place, then glides ag;iin, and presently there is a pause, and behold, the long furrow with the upturned subsoil is completed. A brief pause, and back it travels again, this time drawn from the other side, where, a twin monster puffs and pants and belches smoke, while the one that has done its work uncoils its metal sinews. When the furrows run up and down a slope, the savage force, the fierce remorseless energy of the engine pulling the plough upward, gives an idea of pow er which cannot but impress the mind. Handling Hops. Both the quality and value of hops are impaired if leaves and stems are mingled with them. Pick each hop singly and separate the clusters. Set apart or re ject all discolored, poor and rust-smitten hops, and wherever this is impossible, thoroughly mix the whole pile before baling, to secure uniform quality. Never pack green and bTown hops together, un- less you want to injure the value of your goods. Be very careful in drying your hops. Those too much dried or scorched loose their rich flavor and aroma, while those not sufficiently dried will heat when baled and become worthless. Bale on a rainy day, as the hops are then most pliable and pack better. Let each bale be neat and trim; for in hops, as in but ter, bad packages lower the price of the best of goods. Well pressed bales sam ple better, while in those compressed so tightly as to exclude air the hops are quite likely to heat, especially if slack dried. Mark your name in lull plainly on the narrow side, near the top of each bale, with a stencil plate and turpentine mixed with lamp-black, and be sure to put the date of growth on every bale. Just before shipping, especially to a great distance, make certain that the goods are in a proper condition to bear transporta tion, by examining the center of each bale with a "trier." In prudence, as well as from honesty, resist the temptation to mix old hop3 with those of this year's growth; buyers are neither rash nor inex perienced, and such an attempt at decep tion is pretty sure to recoil on the of fenders. i?urtfZ New Yorker. Yams in Florida. A correspondent says: uWe plant yam sprouts early in the spring, say a thousand, and from them we cut cuttings or vines, and cut them about eight inches long; have our ridges made, and dig a trench in the center of each one, in order to hold the water, then drop them about twelve inches apart and go along with a forked stick to push them in, and then we are done until dig ging time. Our digging time comes off in September, and, in fact, we can have yams at almost any time, as we can plant at any time. On new pine land yams will yield from 100 to 300 bushels. They are selling at $1 per bushel, and never lower than 75 cents, and I think it will pay well to raise them. Horses, cows and hogs eat them as well as corn, and they are an easy crop raised." Feeding Horses. The American Ag- riculturiut says : "The best grain for a horse is certainly oats; the next barley; . corn as a steady feed is not wholesome at all. Oats have about the requisite quantity of nutricious and indigestible matter to be healthful, and barley ap proahes very near oats in this respect. The actual values of these grains are as nearly as possible equal to their usual market values, the latter being in reality based upon the former. m m A Washington letter-writer says that Mr. Simon Wolf, President of the Wash ington Schutzenverein, who set afloat the story that Mrs. Hayes sent the his toric bouquet to his society, is likely to lose his official head. He is Register of Deeds for the District of Columbia. Fright in a School-House. Many years ago a cub bear was caught by a stout lad near the borders of Lake Winnipiseogee, in New Hampshire, car ried into town, and, after proper drilling, became the playfellow of the boy of the village, and often accompanied them to the school-house. After passing a few months in civil ized society, he made his escape to the woods and after a few years was almost forgotten. The school-house, meantime, had fallen from the school-mistress's hands; and instead of large boys learn ing to read and cipher, small boys and girls were taught in the same place knitting and spelling. One winter's day, after a mild fall of snow, the door had been left open by some small ur chins going out, when, to the unspeaka ble horror ot the spectacled dame and her fourscore hopeful scholars, an enor mous bear walked in, in the most famil iar manner in the world, and took a seat by the fire. Huddling over their benches as fast as they could, the children crowded about their school-mistress, who had fled to the farthest corner of the room; and there they stood crying and pushing to escape the horror of being eaten first. The bear sat snuffing and warming himself by the tire, however, showing great signs of satisfaction,by putting off his meal until he had warmed himself thoroughly. The screams of the children continued, but the school-house was far from any other habitation, and the bear did not seem at all embarrassed by the out cry. After sitting and turning himself about for some time, Bruin got up on his hind legs, and shoving to the door, be gan to take down one by one the hats, bonnets and satchels that hung on sev eral rows of pegs behind it. His mem ory had not deceived him, for they con tained as of old the children's dinners, and- he had arrived before the holidays. Having satisfied himself with their cheese, bread, pies, doughnuts, and ap ples, Bruin smelt at the mistress' desk, but finding it locked, gave himself a shake of resignation, opened the door and disappeared. The alarm was given, and the amiable creature was pursued and killed, very much to the regret of the townspeople, when it was discovered by some marks on his body that it was their ohl friend and playfellow. llussian Funerals. Much as I dislike funerals, I have had to see many, and of all kinds, but none, except at times, in the form of the Epis copal church, are to me so beautiful or so pleasant as these Russian funerals. The Presbyterian form is too cold, too black, too still. We bury our dead too much as if we were trTing to draw a les son from the dead, and as if wedoubted where the soul had gone. The Catholic service is too grandiose. There is fine music, but the ceremony is too long and too entirely confined to the officiating priest. In the Russian church every one seems to be taking a part in the service, and the dead are treated with a tender ness and love not elsewhere found. The bows and prostrations, the tapers in each one's hands, the kissing the hands, the earth thrown in the coffin with its beau tiful symbolic meaning, are marks of af fectionate respect, as well as the carrying of the coffin and the earth thrown into the grave by the hands of the friends and relatives. There are no black palls, no double coffins or burial caskets, no horrible screwing down of the lid. "Dust thou art, to dust must thou return," is a truth which man here does not attempt to evade. As I said above, every cere mony and every repetition here tends to make us realize the fact of death, with out destroying any of its sanctity. My thoughts and reflections have de tained me long, and the funeral pro cession which gave rise to them has passed my window long since, and the church bells are silent. Eugene Schuyler, in Soribnr. Small Things. In the animal kingdom are found myri ads of forms so minute that their bulk is reckoned by less than the millionth part of a cubic inch, yet each one is en dowed with organs of sense or assimila tion sufficient to serve the purpose in their sphere of life. The vegetable king dom, also, offers abundant specimens of microscopic forms, calculated to excite our admiration by the beauty and mi nuteness of their organisms. Such is notably the case in several forms of Diatomacece. The striated markings of Pleuro&igma fasciola aggregate to 64,000 to the inch, while Amphipleura pellucida often exhibits striaj exceeding 100,000 to the lineal inch. And yet the skeleton of these minute organisms are composed mainly of silex, the silex again being made up of silicon and oxygen. Not Net withstanding: the almost infinitesimal magnitudes of the organic world, human skill is able to compete in the matter of minuteness. Platinum wire has been drawn so fine as to rival in minuteness the smallest fibre "of the spider's web. Gold has been deposited upon the sur face of other metals, and drawn to such extreme thinness that a thousand-millionth part of a grain exhibited the vis ible characteristics of the metal. The oscillations of the horizontal pendulum can be measured to the one eighty-millionth part of an inch, by the aid of a small mirror, a beam of light, and a graduated scale for reading the vibra tions. Nobert, with a mechanical skill unsurpassed, has repeatedly ruled with a diamond -point upon class the nine teenth band of his test-plate,consisting of lines less than the one one-hundred and twelve-thousandth of an inch apart, and it is claimed that he has succeeded in ruling plates covering 224,000 lines per inch, such as would aggregate in super ficial areas to over 50,000,000,000 to the square inch. L. R. Gurtiss, in Popular Science Monthly. Marry the Woman. Some men marry dimples, some eyes, a few ears ; the mouth, too, is occasionally married ; the chin not so often. A young man once fell head over heels and ears in love with a braid. He was so far gone that he became engaged to bi braid, but a new mode of hairdressing having been adopted by his fiance, the charm was dis solved and never renewed. What do young men marry ? Why they marry these and many other bits and scraps of a wife, instead of a true woman. And then, after the wedding, they are sur prised to find that although married, they have no wives. He that would have a wife must marry a woman rR. J. I. WJnLBIT, DENTIST, 703 JL Market St., San Francisco, room 12, over Wld her's drus store. Laughing traa administered. eavy Solid. Silver thimble 50 ctw.. Or eavv (.old ailed, -warranted 20 years. 51. 50. Ag'ts send stamp for catalogue. VAN ii CO., Chicago. H LIVE Al LET L1VK-WPLESD1D set of Teeth, only $7, at the Dental rooms of T. BOLTON, laO Fourth St., San Francisco, room 1. Filling a specialty. All work warranted. "P XXO VAJL.-J. L. COGSWELL, JOit Dentist, has removed to 232 Sutter Street, (Y. M. C. A. Bu Idlng), San Francisco. Ether or Chloroform administered. A GEIT7C SEND QUICK FOR NEW CIRCU AaCnlwlars of Thr Atlantic Wukklt. Great changes; entirely novel announcements; free outfttM and certain, profit. A. DURKEE & CO., 112 Monroe Street, Chicago. toE. PHOTOGRAPHIC APPARATUS ! Latest invention; anybody can operate it with perfect success: complete outfits from ?5 to f3U. Chrome Photography outfits, $3; Helio graph. $1 50. Send stamp for full Information Sacksiaxx & Co., MTrs, 278 Pearl st., N. Y. AfCilTQ DO YOO WANT THE BEST LINE HQbtllUof ChromoH and Framen in America? Do you want the lowest prices and free outfit T If so, address ALBERT DURKEE & CO.. 112 Mooroe Street, Chicago. & CALVERT'S OASBOlilO SHEEP WASH 83 per gallon. T. W. JACKSON, San Fran cisco, Sole Agent for the Fa cine Coast. & P. H. TIERELL & CO.. . - -- i UtPOBTSRS JLXD HAKUFACTOBSKS OT BOOTS AND SHOES, HO. 419 CIAY STREET, Between Sansome and Battery, SAN FKANCISCO. Manufacturers of Men's, Boys', Youth's, and Chil dren's FINE CALF BOOTS. Orders solicited and promptly filled. All sizes and qualities made at the lowest market prices. Please examine the goods and prices. t - C. 58 II. Jf. COOK., Manufacturer of Oak Tanned leather llelting and Hose, 415 Market St., 8an Francisco. Satisfaction Guaran teed. The Finest Lacing in Cut Strings or Sides always on Hand. Mall, Express and Bullion Bags. CirSend for Price liittt. AGENTS f ANTED-Ss Frontier :" A valuable and authentic history of the Heroism, Adventures, Trials, Privations, Captivi ties, and noble lives and deaths of the "Mothers of the Republic" By William W. Fowler F. DEWING & CO. Publishers. San Francisco Cftl. SUFFER NO MORE FROM SORE FEET. The "White Swan Salve" not only cures sweaty and tender feet, but also feet that are continually Durnmg ana ievensu, thereby hacking up and becoming very sore. It also effectually dispels the offen sive odor that Invariably arises from dis eased feet. No family should be without it. If your druggist has not got it, by all means send for it. Sent by mall, postage paid, on receipt of price $1 per box. Address all orders to H. J. SACKETTk 22 Webster avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa. . m San Francisco, Kay 30, 1877. We, the undersigned Wholesale Grocers take pleasure in remarking the increased de mand for Bowen's Premium Yeast Powder, and of testifying to the general satisfaction given hy this hrand: "PACIFIC ELASTIC TRUSS.' yTTjlElvN SO-TWO DOLLARS WILL BUY this new invention, which is GUARANTEED SUPERIOR to any Trus sold by the so-called Califor nia ElusticTruss Co., or moxey rk fuxded. Pacific ElasjTio Truss Company, 657 Sacramento street, San Francisco. N.CURRY &BRO. 113 Sansome Street, San Francisco, Importers and Dealers In every descrip tion of Ureecli and Muzzle-Iioading: RIFLES, SHOT-GUNS AND PISTOLS &ffcsk. Wellman, Peck & Co.," Boot & Sanderson, Ledden, Whipple St Co., Haas Pros., Taher, Harker & Co., J. H. Pike & Co., J. A. Polger & Co., Newton Pros. & Co., Castle Bros., Thos. Jennings, S. Poster & Co., Mebuis & Co., Sooth & Co., Milliken Bros., Sacramento Dillepiane & Co., Kruse & Euler, Jones & Co., M. Ehrman & Co., Adams, McNeill & Co. F. Daneri &Co., H. & C. Mangels, Tillmann & Bendel, Albert Man & Co., W. W. Dodge & Co. Allen & Lewis, " Portland When a child picks flowers in a field and brings us the whole handful, one up and one down, all see more clearly the beauty, the harmony in color and form that is so good to our sight. "We arrange them, and altogether they blend in a beautiful whole, so that we do not look at one, but at the whole boquet. This perception of the harmony of beauty is an instinct in us, lying in our eyes and ears these bridges between our souls and the created things, even in the beating of the waves of the air made manifest in sound. Teach self-denial, and make its prac tice pleasurable, and you create for the world a destiny more sublime than ever issued from the brain of the wildest dreamer. NOTICE OF CHANGE! EI.ORKXCE SEWIXG 3IACHHE Agency, lO New Montgomery street. San Fran cisco. Hereafter a moderate charge will be made for Cleaning and Repairing old Machines that have been In use longer than the time for which sewing machines are usually warramea, ana customers iu uu re quired to pay the freight. FLORENCE SEWING MACHINE CO. Purchasing Agency. Ladies who are desirous of having goods purchased for them in San Francisco can do so by addressing Mrs. W. H. Ashley, who will send samples of goods for their inspec tion and approval. Would say that I am an experienced dress-makor, and have the ad vantage of buying at wholesale, and would give my patrons the benetit of same. Goods purchased and sent C. O. D. Send for Cir cular. Any information in regard to styles cbeerfully given. Would add that I have a first-class establishment for Dress-making, and am prepared to execute country orders with dispatch. Address Alits. W. H. Ashley, 120 Suiter street Room 51 'San Francisco. Reading for Children. When chil dren are young, they must read books suited to their age. But after they have entered their teens we should buy them almost no books written especially for girls and boys. Of course exception must be made in favor of a few books by the best modern writers for young peo ple, whose influence is, on the whole, so beneficial; it would be wrong to deprive the young folks of the combined pleasure and profit of their perusal. But any in telligent child of thirteen, whose mind is not already vitiated by an acquired love of trash and sensationalism, will read with delight Cooper, Irving, Dick ens, the Yicar of Wakefield, Scott's prose and poetry, the descriptive poems of Whittier, Longfellow, Bryant, etc. Prom the best fiction it is an easy step to the lighter histories, travels, and bio graphy, and a taste for good reading has been created. Trash'has no a temptation then. . 4 How a Pedestrian Lives. Miss Von Hillern, when preparing for a walk, rises at five a. m., eats two raw eggs, and walks ten miles, returning to her bath and a hearty breakfast of rare beef, boiled potatoes, oat meal and stale bread. After this sherests until one o'clock, when she takes a fifteen-mile walk, dining on roast beef and potatoes, following with a light tea, and retiring at ten p. m., under all circumstances. During her walks she relies entirely on beef "tea and the raw yolks of eggs for nourishment, quenching her thirst with seltzer and prune water. m An old rail-splitter in Indiana put the quietus upon a young man who chaffed him upon his bald head in these words : "Young man, when my head gets as soft as yours, I can raise hair to sell." Attention is called to the offer made by the National Silver-Plating Co., 704 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, in our columns. Their silver-ware is beautiful and fully up to standard, and their generous oiler is available to all the readers of this paper for ninety days after date. Tested by Time. For Throat Diseases, Colds, and Coughs, "Brown's Bronchial Tro ches" have proved their efficacy by a test of many years. DR. L J. CZAPKAY'S Medical Institute, 209 XEABNY ST., San Francisco. ESTABLISHED IN ISM. POR THE PERMANENT CURE OF ALL SPECIAL andCnronlc Diseases, as also all Female Com plaints and Diseases of the Nervous System. The Immense destruction of human life annually, from Chronic and Difficult Diseases, caused this old and reliable Institute to be established first In Phila delphia, Penn., in 1850, and afterwards in San Fran cisco, Cal., In 1S54, as a private Dispensary, in order to afford the afflicted the best Medical and Surgical treatment, for the above and all other s flections and complaints. Permanent and quick cures at reasona ble charges. Consultations at the Institute or by letter free. Medicines sent by express. Address, L. J. Czapkay, M. D.. 20t Kearny street san t rancisco. mericaN Sewing Machine. Tlrree-quarters less friction than any otlier Machine. BEATS THEM ALL! Self-Threading: Shuttle! Self-Thread- injc Seedlej lightest RnnnLajgi Stillest Running: J Simplest ! UTThis Machine la fast becoming known as the BEST 1U THE WORLD! SEE IT ! TRY IT! BUY IT ! Warranted to Give Entire Satisfaction. American Sewing Machine Co. G. R. WOOD, Manager, 12 FIFTH STKEET, - - - SAN FRANCISCO B7Good Agents Wanted In all nn oc cupied Territory. IT WAKELEE'S Bathl Sheep! w .n. cut At' a;mj r.rrx.Mx ive Dip fox SCAB, axd ali, other Sheep Dis eases. "Vc earnestly recommend all "Wool Growers to try It. CHRISTY TVISE, 607 Front San Francisco. WHOIiESAXE Paper anfl..Stationery Warehouse. JEO. G. HODGE & CO., 327, 329 and, 331 Sansome St., San Francisco. Always on hand a very large stock BLANK BOOKS, STATIONERY, School Books, Flat Caps. Bill Heads, News, Book, Manilla aud Straw Wrapping Papers, Paper Bags, etc., etc. The Little PATNd, toothache, headache, earache, cramps, colics, corns and bunions, are relieved by one application of Trapper'9 Indian Oil. Price 50 Gents. Use Bumham's Abietine for croup, colds, sore throat and hoarseness. SAVJ5 "XOUlt 3IOXJSY BY getting your PHOTOGRAPHS at HOWLAND'S NEW GALLERY, No. 35 Third street, San Fran Cisco. First-class Photographs for half the price charged at other galleries. Life-size Portraits, in oil or water colors, only TEN DOLLARS. Old Pictures Enlarged to any size and beautifully colored. Best Enameled Cabinets and Cards VERY CHEAP, at HOWLAND'S NEW GALLERY. K2rpiease call and see our work and get our prices before visiting else where, and be sure and remember the number: 35 Third street, corner of Jessie. B. F. HOWLAND, Artist, Sax Fbaxoisco. Cax. THE PAPER WAREHOUSE 0P THE PA0IPI0 G0AST. A. D. REMINGTON & CO., k Successors to F. M. Spaulding & Co. Nos. 411, 413 and 415 Sansome Street,' . , SAX FKANCISCO, CAX. A. D. REMINGTON, New York. F. M. SPAULDING ) Managers. F. W. AINSWORTH J San Francisco. All grades of Book, News, Flat, Writing, Poster, Manila and. Straw Paper. Card Stock of every description. MENZOSPRING Manufacturer of ARTIFICIAL LIMBS Otllce and address, 9 Geary street, San Francisco. Descriptive circulars, blanks for measurements, with Instruc tions, and price list free on application. nUff hw Frames & Cbromoe, ThUrjttmnnfrtariE$flra of Agenti Jnma and Chrooci ia Amine dtrinns to Introduce their ne IUutrJd Ctaloc (n look form), containing txpemiT tssnrica of tit mart popular itjlei of Moulding nd Chronof nor la use, print bole! price nd iastmctionj bow to Mil. m Mnd thir eU Iojm. togttccr with box eontalnfan lix conur nuaple of popular mooldinsf (to fiMM all picture! from aua 1Sx2 to tlzX) to aaj address free (pcS-paSI) CO receipt of "SctsU to pajoott of pottage, packin& etc. .A&drsaf, ALBERT DURKEE, 112 Monroe St., Chicago. MONTGOMERY'S TEMPERANCE HOTEL, 227 Second St., San Francisco. O Meal Tickets. 81. SO -PAGE CATALOGUE FKEE TO AGENTS W1B8TZR & Co.. IT New Montgomery st., S. F. CA.RDH, &1: Cabinets S2perdoz. PEOPLE'S ART GALLERY, A Third St.. Sag Francisco. - DR. FERGUSON, GRADUATE DENTIST. FICE, 223 Kearny Street. San Francisco. OF- B URNHAM'S ABIETINE FOR BURNS, SCALDS, onus uuu ourca ui an muu. jS2 MAGNETIC TIMEPIECE. Slotal 1 . C....1. "li-n.. r . Agents. A. COULTER & CO., Chicago 111. INTERNATIONAL HOTEL, 824 and 826 Kearny St., San Pranclsco. SI 50 and S2 OO PER DAY. H. C. PATRID6E, - - - - Pbopbibtok. Two Concord Coaclies. with the name of the Hotel on, wljl always be In waiting atJhe landing to convey passengers io'the Hotel free. J3TBe i sure you get into the right Ceach: If you do not. they -will charge you. . Pi ano S 9fin BEAUTIFUL ROSEWOOD PIANOS OF JJKjyJ best make, worth, old rates, S050. SQUARE and UPRIGHT, guaranteed for six years, at the low rates of 250each. 100,000 pieces of Sheet Music, worth 50 cents each, at C cents. Also, the celebrated ASfTISEIiX, PIANOS, the best in use. Cata logues free. lOO ORGANS at half price. PrTlease state where you saw the advertisement. T. 31. AXTISELL & CO., 805 MaVket Street. San Francisco. TIME ATO) STORM ALONE FURNISH THE TRUE TEST FOR AGRI cultural Machinery. Short-lived patent inven tionB, manufactured 3,000 miles away, are being offered to the Farmers under every apparent induce ment. The ECLIPSE WINDMILL IlaH been Tested lO Years ; In used toy 4,O0O American Farmers ; Is made lie re In California from Spruce Wood ; Is folly Warranted, or no Sale. Send for Circulars on Pumps and Windmills. CHAEIES P. HOAG, 118 Seale St.. San Pranclsco. CONCORD Carriages, Buggies, Express Wagons 1 Harness AT ABBOT DOWNING CO.'S, 413 and 415 Battery Street, San Francisco. T. S. JEAST3TAIT, A cent. COMMERCIAL HOTEL SAN PBANCISCO. TOHNKELLY JB..FOR 26 TEARS PROPRIETOR tJ of thi -Rrnntlvn Hotel. &. r., 13 now cuuuccicu only with the COMMERCIAL HOTEL, F. The Commercl; (hiK PREMIUM WATCH AND CHAI N a Jhif-irfc stem-winder. Free with every order. Out - v Hi free. J. B. Gaylord & Co., Chicago, 111. on Montgom alls hotel, with frv iiw nnrt TTparnv St.. S. flrsf-flooa an rniTlTTiandlnE new 4-StOrV hotel. elevator, etc., and offers superior facilities at low rates. Free coach and carriages from all points. A call from former patrons respectfully Invited. 1,000 CMlenp Ore leefor! MACHINIST TOOLS, Mining and Saw Mill Machinery, Dealer la all kinds of New and Second-nand EStemnES AOT BOILERS, And other 3Iachinery Bought and Sold. ar. 3E3Z3E33xrjr , Cob. Fbemokt xxt Missiok Sts.. Sajt Fbanoisco. Globe Washboards. PAR SUPERIOR TO TBLE OM STYLE "We also have the Common and Regular CALIFORNIA WASHBOARDS I Of Superior Quality and Finish at same price as the inferior article. HUNTINGTON, HOPKINS & CO., MAiroTAOTUBEBa' Agents Junction Bush and Market Streets, San Francisco fr