SKCONI) DISTRICT AGRICULTURAL ASSOCIATION. 

 ( I hiosity Shop— Continued. 



525 



Delia Wolf— Old silver watch 80 years old. 



Mrs. J. Belding — Point of whale's tooth; 

 China cup and saucer ami plate 200 years 

 old. 



Miss Sophie Belding — Sixty-year old nurse. 



Clara \ oung— Specimen big tree bark. 



.1. W. Hart— Photograph from a painting 

 Midyears old; candlestick 100 years old ; four 

 Steel engravings of Queen Victoria; cream 

 pitcher over 100 years old; picture of ladies' 

 dress in 1790, from London, England. 



Mrs. Mary Kuhn— Suit of baby clothes 28 

 years old; suit of boy's clothes 25 years old; 

 and old style of suspenders. 



Mrs. Phil. Rohrbacher — Set of pitchers 

 (three) from Sufiuin, Elsar, Germany, from 

 the largest pottery in the world. 



Minnie Puller — A set of jewelry made of 

 cantaloupe seeds. 



Mrs. Holman— A wood fan, all made from 

 one piece of wood. 



Thomas E. Ketchum — A flag presented to 

 Company "A," Third Infantry, California 

 Volunteers, Captain Thomas *E. Ketchum 

 (mostly raised in and around Stockton), by 

 the citizens of Eel River, Humboldt County, 

 for services rendered in and about that part 

 of the country during the late war. They 

 captured or killed six hundred and fifty In- 

 dians from the month of March to August, 

 1862. 



Miss Sophie Belding — Pair of silk hose 75 

 years old. 



Mrs. Giovanessi — Head of wheat 10 years 

 old. 



Case; two ships; marble table top, 



inlaid; three beaver skulls; charm string of 

 500 buttons; pig. just as they were 100 years 

 ago. 



Mrs. Dr. Clark — Stick of cones. 



Mrs. Dudley — Baby dress, hand made, 50 

 years old. 



Mrs. Win. P. Miller — Handkerchief, was 

 on the neck of a young lady at the time she 

 was murdered. 



Miss Susie Creanor — Old wooden cross 

 from the San Jos6 Mission, 125 years old. 



Mrs. Jos. Adams — Pewter platter 200 years 



old, used as a syrup jar in Germany in 1110; 

 specimens of gold and silver ore from the 

 Thredway mine, Douglass Island, Alaska; 

 garnet stone, thirty miles from Jeneau, 

 Alaska; mat and two baskets from Sitka, 

 Alaska ; Indian spoon from Alaska, 200 years 

 old; paper cutter made of sorrento wood, 

 from Italy; fox and lynx skin, and large mat 

 made from birch wood, from Alaska; locket 

 145 years old; lot of specimens from Mur- 

 phy's Cave. < 'alaveras County. 



Mrs. B. S. Clowes— Sheet of linen, spun and 

 woven by hand. 



Mrs. Dr. Ruggles— Case of California birds. 



Mrs. E. H. Wilkes— Genealogical tree for 

 five generations. 



Mrs. John Reid — Hawaiian fiber cloth 

 sheet. 



Mrs. Col. Hurd — View of the first Ameri- 

 can railroad train, and one picture. 



Miss Leonard — Case of birds' eggs, insects, 

 etc. 



Mrs. Mary Rhodes — Indian pillow. 



Lizzie Hudson — China teapot 100 years 

 old; six tablespoons over 100 years' old; 

 portrait of George Washington, framed from 

 a piece of timber from the house in which he 

 was born. 



Dr. Reid — The last relic of the Stockton 

 Custom House, a paperweight from Andrew 

 Lester, the last collector of the port. 



Mrs. Seivers — Fireman's belt ornamented 

 with pebbles, 1886. 



Mrs. Dr. Todd — A Moorish inkstand from 

 Del Ham bra, Spain ; lace handkerchief and 

 towel. 



Mrs. Wilkes— Set of silver buttons. 



Dr. Reid— Regulation sword and belt of 

 Surgeon of United States Army. 



M. A. Campbell— Bible printed in 1683. 



Mrs. Durand — Fragment of stone. 



Miss Bates— Cream and sugar bowl; saucer 

 and cup 100 years old; sampler worked in 

 1844 ; spoon and sugar tongs over 200 years 

 old; two fire screens 100 years old; black 

 shawl over 100 years old; burned tacks from 

 Chicago; pillow, all made by hand, 135 years 

 old. 



