Calitoinian Advertisements.
/^HICKERING'S PIANOS. MASON & HAMLLN"S ORGANS. The Finest and most Celebrated in the World. KOHLEB, CHASE, & CO., SAN FRANCISCO.
jar Send for Catalogues and Price List,
WHEELER & WILSON'S IMPROVED " ELLIPTIC." Upward ef 75,000 in daily use. Giving better satis faction than any equal number of maobinea ever made or used. These celebrated Machines, having been greatly improved, are now unquestionably the very best in use for sewing the lightest fabrics or the heaviest cloth. t , They have been well termed model* of beauty and a triumph of mechanical skill. ...... Ihe Elliptic Machine is remarkable for its high speed, strength, simplicity, ease of management, economy of thread, quietness of movement, and adaptation to every class of manufacturing or family sewing. , The Maohines are complete, and warranted with Hammers and Braiders, and Idl the tools necessary for the use of the Machine. Agents wanted where there are none already established. A. H. SUPLEE, 27, South Montgomery-street, San Francisco, Cal. Send for Terms an Samples of Work.
p C. HASTINGS & CO., CLOTHIERS AND MERCHANT TAILORS, SAN FRANCISCO, U.S.A.
HOTEL GAILHABD Conducted on the European Flan, 607 and 509, PIN E-S T R E E T One door above Kearney, SAN FRANCISCO. Perwba and Co Proprietors. Restaurant, Bar, and Billiard Room, in the Hotel.
DAILY AST) WEEKLY BULLETIN San Francisco, Caxifornia. The Daily Bulletin (printed on one of Hoe's Mammoth Eight-cylinder Presses, capacity 16,000 an hour, contains the latest European and United States Telegrams ; the most accurate Market Reports and Shipping News ; Correspondence from all parts of the World ; Editorials on all important topics ; and is acknowledged to be the best Newspaper in California — having double the circulation of any other flr3tolass journal published on the Western Coast of America. Advertisers treated with liberality. Subscription, 12dol. per year, postage added. Rates pro rata for three or six months. THE WEEKLY BULLETIN Is a first-class Paper in every respect ; contains 72 columns of matter selected with care from the columns of the daily, with Market and Stock Reports, a general summary of the Pacific Slope brevities, the latest and most reliable news from the Mines and Agricultural Districts, with a vast amount of interesting intelligence from all quarters of the Globe has an immense circulation in the United States and> Europe. Everybody seeking Californian news reads the Weekly Bulletin. Subscription rates, sdol. per year, postage added Rates, pro rata for three or six months. Address : S«n Francisco Btilletin Company, San Francisco, California.
DAILY ALTA CALIFORNIA, Frkdkbick MacOrblwsh and Co , Proprietors, San Francisco, California.— The Daily Alta California is the oldest paper published on the Pacific Coast, the first number having been issued in January, 1849. It contains the latest news from all parts of tli o world, and its commercial and market reports are not surpaised by auy paper. The terms of subscription aie, by mail, 16doL per annum, or 8 for six mouths, postage additional. The WEEKLY ALTA CALIFORNIA, the largest paper printed in the United States, is made up with the greatest care, and contains all the information supplied in the Daily Alta California, together with original and selected matter, correspon dence from all parts of the world, and the fullest and mostreliable market reports. Published every Thursday morning. Subscription Prices '-.^One year, idol, six months, 2dol. 50cents.
Medical.
QUINIUM LABAKRAQUE, approved by the Imperial Academy of Medicine. The Quinium Labarraque is an eminently tonic and febrifuge wine, destined to replace all the other preparations of Peruvian Bark. The Bark #ines usually employed in medicine are prepared from barks which vary considerably in the degree to which they possess the desired properties Besides, owing to the manner in which they aie prepared, these wines contain scarcely mote than tho traces of active principles, and these Always in variable proportions. The Quinium Labarraque, approved by the Academy of Medicine, const ltutes, on the contrary, a medicine of determined composition, rich in active principles, and on wbich physicians and patients can always rely. Jhe Quinium tjabarraqueis prescribed with great success for person of weak constitution, or for those debiliated by /arioui exhausting causes or past sickness; for youths atigued by too rapid growth ; for young girls whose development takes place with difficulty; for women in child-birirb;and for ag persons enfeebled by years or illness. It is the best preservative against feveu. In cases of chorosis, ansemia, or greensickness, this pine is a powerful auxiliary of the ferruginous preparations. In conjunction, for exsmple, with Vallet's Pills, the rapidity of its action is really marvellous General depot in L. Frxk : 9, Rme Jacob.
BELLOC'S CHARCOAL, approved by the Imperial Academy of Medicine, the 27th December, 1849. It is especially to its eminently absorbent properties that Belloc's Charcoal owes its great efficacy. It is specially recommended for the following affections :~Gastralgia, Dyspepsia, Pyrosis, Acidity, Difficult Digestions, Cramp in the Stomach, Constipation, Colici, Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Cholerine, Mode of Employment: Belloc's Charcoal is taken before or after each meal, in the form of Powder or Lozenges. In the majority of cases its beneficisl effects are felt after the first doses. Detailed instiuctions uccompany each bottle of powder and box of lozenges —Depot in Paris at L. Fkeke s, 10, Rue Jacob
UYOT'S TAR, concentrated Proof Liqueur.—M. Guyot has succeeded in depriving tar of its insupportable sourness and bitterness, and in rendering it very soluble. Profiting by this happy discovery, he prepares a concentrated liqueur of tar, which in a small vlolume contains a largo proportion of active principdes. Guyot's Tar possesses all the advantages of orginary tar-water without any of its draw-backs. A lass of excellent tai-water without any disagreeable taste may be instantaneously obtained by pouring a teaspoonful into a glass of water. Any one can thus prepare his glass of tar-water at the I moment he requires it, thus economising time facilitating carriage, and obviating the disagreeable necessity of handling tar. Guyot's Tar replaces advantageously several more or less inactive ptisans in the treatment of colds, bronchitis, coughs, and catarrhs. Guyot's Tar is employed with the greatest success in the following diseases: —As a Draught —A teaspoonful in a glass of water, or two tablespoonfuls in a bottle: Bronchitis, Catarrh of the Bladder, Colds, Obstinate Coughs, Irritation of the Chest, Hooping Cough, Diseases of the Throat, Pulmonary Consumption. As a Lotion.—Pure or diluted with a little water: Affections of the Skin, Itchings, Diseases o the Scalp. Guyot's Tar has been tried with the greatest success in the principal hospitals of Franco Belgium, and Spain. Experience has proved it to be the most hygienic drink in hot weather and in time of epidemics. Detailed instructions accompany earh bottle. General depot in Pails: L. Frere, 19,8ut Jacob.
DR. ROBERTS'S CELEBRATED OINTMENT, « THE POOR MAN'S FRIEND," is confidently recommended to the pnblic as an unfailing remedy for wounds of every description : a certain remedy for ulcerated soro legs, burns, scalds, bruises, chilblains, scorbutic eruptions, and pimples in the face-, «ore and inflamed eyes, sore heads, sore breasts, piles, &a, bo. Sold 1n pots, 18Jd., 2a. 9d.. 4s. 6d., Us , and 225. each ; PILULJ3 ANTI-SCROPHULJE OR ALTERATIVE confirmed by sixty years' experience to be one of the best alterative medioines ever compounded for purifying the blood and assisting Nature in her operations.. They form a mild «jd •upeiipr family aperient, that may be taken at all time* without confinement or change of diet. Sold in Boxe* »t 18*., 2s. od., 4«. 6d., IU. aad 21*. each. BEAOH^rtjWIOOTT, AnaiSaOl ttta/Tiaaort,
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Bibliographic details
Daily Southern Cross, Volume XXVII, Issue 4355, 31 July 1871, Page 4
Word Count
1,238Page 4 Advertisements Column 6 Daily Southern Cross, Volume XXVII, Issue 4355, 31 July 1871, Page 4
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