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Full text of "Pacific wine and spirit review"

A WHOLESALER'S AND RETAILERS' JOURNAL 

CLASSIFIED INDEX OF ADVERTISEMENTS, PAGE 3. 







[INCORPORATED] 



VOL^ XXXIV, NO. 1. 



SAN FRANCISCO, FEBRUARY 7, 1895. 



$3.00 PER YEAR 



JWellmood Distillery Co. 



R. F. BALKE, President. 

LOUISVILLE, KY. 

DISTILLERS AJM D ff^OfRIETORS OF 



ttr..^>^'ss^' 



"MELLWOOD" 



AND — 



"DUNDEE" 



OLD-FASHION 
BOURBONS 



"NORMANDY" 



AND- 



ii 



MONTPELIER" ^^^^"°^ 



PU-RE "RgES. 



"RUNNYMEDE" 



AND 



VJ* W* O* SOUR 

FINE KENTUCKY WHISKIES. 



MADE 
MASH 



CONSIGNMENTS FOR AUCTION SALE, 

l/N MEW gCRK MARKET, 

AltiUST ROLKER, Al'CTIONEER, 205 GREENWICH STREET, NEW YORK. 

OF CALIFORNIA WINES, BRANDIES AND OTHER PRODUCE. 

TERMS REASONABLE ACCORDING TO QUANTITIES SOLD. 



E. C. liicHOWSKY, General Manai;er. 



llAYNE, Kii;Ki,ANn A Co., Eastern Representative 
lot Hudson Street, New York. 



J. H. Patrick, 
•ijS E. Madison Street, Chicago, III. 




«,^ ..861 ^fo 



^f.^Jt@S» M ^'m^f. LIMI TED 

:RY 5 DISTILLERY /J '^''^'"^^.T-^^MiPK/VSg^ 



VINEYARDS, WINERY 5 DISTILLERY /I '^"''"'^^-^^^ 

SAN GAB R I E L , CAL . ^ c, e/CNOWS/ff Cmeral nanay^ 



ACHILLE STARACE 



76 PEARL STREET, NEW YORK. 



Sole jPLgent in the XJnlted. StB.tes foi 



GUISEPPE SCALA, Lacryma Christi, Capri, Etc., NAPLES. 
L. LABOREL MELINI, Chianti Wine, FLORENCE. 



Dixeet PieseiTrer Of- 



CALIFORNIA WINES AND BRANDIES 



i: WIRE WOUND 







WIRE WRAPPED HOSE 



GOLD SEAL RUBBER GOODS 

^^I?/B THE BEST. 



BREWERS' RUBBER HOSE. 



RUBBER LINED 

GOTTOI HOSE 



R. H. PEASE, 

I'Irr-I'rrsldrtit aud Manager. 




SUCTION HOSE 

SEND FOR PRICES. 

577 and 579 Market Street, 

S.4.V FRAXCISCO. 



73 and 75 First Street, 

PORTLAND, OK. 



i. E. YOUNGBERG, Late Chief Deputy Int. Revenue, 1st Dist. Cal. 



J. H. RORLAND, Late Deputy Coll, Int. Revenue, 1st Dist. Cal 



YOUNGBERG & BORLAND, 

i3srTEi?,nsr^^L b^e^eisttje jlnid ctjsto3^^ house bb.ok:ei?.s 

Special attention given tn Ailjusting and F.jperting all Iteveniie Vanes, ISnnkti and .Icconnls. 
office: 502 WASHINGTON STREET, Room 6, 



TELEPHONE 7BB. 



SAN FRANCISCO. 



PAUL MASSON, 

Sticeessor to I_,EEB/.^lsrO &0 IMZ-A-SSOItT, S-AJSr a"OSE, O^L. 



^^KTUN/TT-a 




PROniKl'.U OF TlIK HKJHERT (IRAPEK OP 



..^^UDTP^ 



(California ^ham^a^nos. 



â–  PKOPfCTS' OF THK - 










?vv^-^ 



f/ceifie WiJME /JMD SflF^IT [REVIEW. 



CLASSIFIED INDEX OF ADVERTISEMENTS. 



CALIFORNIA WINES AND BRANDIES. 

Pago. 

I5oy<l, F. O. & Co (; 

Ciilitbrnia Wine Growei-s Uiiiou 34 

Carpv, O. & Co 21 

CliaiU'he & Bon 8 

Do Turk, 1 8 

Gumiladi. J. & Co , 31 

Giiasti & Bcniard 6 

Ilrd'ji'sido Viiicyanl 22 

Iiiiilfiiook \'iii(>varil Agoiiey 23 

Italian-Swiss Colony 31 

Kolilor & Van Bi-rgou 21 

Kolilor & Fioliling 21 

Kolh & Dcnlianl 28 

Kulils, Sclnvarke & Co 

Lacimian & Jaeobi 30 

Laclnnan Co., S 21 

IjamlsliergiT v^ Son 6 

Los Gatos i*t Saratoga Wiue Co 30 

Masson, Panl 2 

Melc'zer, Joseph & Co 34 

Minnse, William T 6 

Molins & Kaltenhacli 30 

Napa Valley Wine Co 21 

L J Rose &"Co., Ltd 2 

San (Jabriel Wine Co 34 

Schilling. C. & Co 8 

Smith, Julius P 6 

StaggCo., The Geo. T 23 

Staraee, Aeliille 2 

Thornton & Pippy 10 

To-Kalon Wine Co 30 

DISTILLERS AND BROKERS. 

Andei-gon & Nelson Distilleries Co The 11 

Barber, Ferriell & Co 24 

Bnchanan. George C 34 

Curley, E. J. & Co .........".........!..!....! 7 

Earh- Times Distillery Co 24 

Fleischman & Co 5 

Leading Distillers' Cards 40 

Lew, Jas. & Bro 42 

Mayhew, H. B. & Co ........................!!! 34 

Melhvood Distillerj' Co 1 

Moore & Selliger 23 

Overliolt, A . & Co .... "s 

(Juinine-Wliisky Co 27 

Rea. 11. R. & Co 29 

Shufeldt, II. H. &Co., C. W. Craig & Co., Agents...............'. "5 

Youngberg & Borland 2 

FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC CHAMPAGNES. 

Chapman, W. B 23 

Finke's AVidow, A 30 

Frash & Co 07 

Hellmanu Bros & Co I7 

Laehman, S. & Co 2 

Maeondray Bros. & Loekard 33 

Masson, Paul 2 

Meinecke. ('hiva. & Co 2fi 

Sherwood & Sherwood 10 

Molfl; Wm. & Co ..[....'^^^.....^^^^..... 20 

IMPORTERS. 

Chapman. W. B o'{ 

Glaser, S ^.'""" ""!"" '"'""!!!7!!"''"!"! '7 

Hellmann Bros. & Co 17 

Iiil)rowicz,, Julius 29 

Maeondray IJro.s. & Loekard 27 

Meinecke, Chas. & Co ...!!.!!...!!.!!! 2C 

Sherwood & Sherwood 17 

Staraee, Achille 9 

Stemmler, T. AV. & Co.........!... 40 



Vignier, A 34 

Woltr, M'm. & Co 15 

FRUIT BRANDY DISTILLERS. 

Taylor, W. A. & Co 32 

Nat oma Vineyard Co 28 

Walden & Co 5 

M'est, Geo. & Sou 33 

SAN FRANCISCO WHOLESALE LIQUOR DEALERS. 

Hey, Grauerholz & Co 6 

Hotaling, A. P. & Co ; 29 

Kolb & Denhard ; 32 

Kuhls, Schwarko & Co 6 

Moore, Hunt & Co 5 

Martin, E. & Co 6 

Naber, Alfs & Brune 6 

Siebe Bros. & Plagemann 4 

Spruance, Stanley & Co 34 

Walter, M. & Co 6 

IMPORTED BRANDY. 
E. Remy Martin & Co., Hellman Bros. & Co., Agents 13 

SYRUPS, CORDIALS, BITTERS, PRUNE JUICE, ETC. 

Abbot's Angostura Bitters 23 

Ball & Cheyne Co 7 

Culbert & Taylor .38 

Kolb & Denhard 32 

Rudkin, Wm. H 30 

Walter, M. & Co 6 

WINE FININGS, ETC. 
Scbulze-Berge & Koeehl 4 

WAREHOUSES, STORAGE, ETC. 

Bode & Haslett 4 

Louisville Pnblic Warehouse Co 33 

Sherman, J. D. W 23 

BOTTLES, CASINGS, CORKS, ETC. 
Colgan, J. B. Corks 41 

MISCELLANEOUS. 

Bolton & Strong. Engravers 34 

Bonestell & Co., Paper Dealers 41 

Chickasaw ( 'ooperage Co 28 

Cleveland Faucet Co 29 

Dunne, J. P & Co., Saloon 41 

Goodyear Rubber Co.... 5 

Henderson, Wm. G 34 

Hobbs, Wall & Co., Box Manufacturers 30 

Huml)oldt Mineral Water Co 28 

Jordan, Dr. & Co 41 

Loma Prieta Lumber Co 30 

Louisville, St. Louis & Texas Railway 35 

New Home Sewing Machine Co 41 

O'Brien, James, Saloon 41 

Rosenfeld's Sons, John, Clipper Ships 41 

Sanders & Co., Coppersmiths 41 

Sprague Corres])ondence School of Law 41 

Tubbs' Cordiige Co 47 

Wandelt, Samuel :M 



Su-bscribe for tJ-ie 

pacific l^inc and ^'tirit ^cviciO 

THREE DOLLARS PER YEAR. 

ADVCRTiaiNa RATES ON APPUCAri9M. 



PAGIfie Wij^E A>'I3 SflF^T f^EVIEW. 



C. BUNDSCHtl. 




J. GUNDLACH. 






J. GU]MDbACH & CO. 

Vineyard Proprietors and Shippers of 

^ Giliforiiiii Wines and Itraiidies, 

PRDI'lill'TOiK RHINE FARM, mm, C.U. 



And BACCHUS WINE VAULTS, 438-442 Bryant St., S. F. 




,S(iii rra nctsro Office, 

s. ic. con. MAitKi.T A sr.roxn sts. 



.\t'ir Vark llfinirli 
S. E. Cor. WATTS & WASHINGTON STS. 



JOHX V>. 8IEBE. 



J. P. ]'I,A(;i;m \nn. 



F, C. SIF.BE. 




SlESE Bf^OS. & PliflGEmflfifl, 

WINE AND LIQUOR MERCHANTS. 

.'^OLE AOENTS FOR 

O.K. Ptosedale BoiirlKiii & Rje Wliisfc 



AND THE- 



Celebrated Belle of Bourbon. 

Southeast Cor. Sacramento and Sansome Sts.. ------. s^p Francisco. Cal 

jOs.I=2.TISTIC "" PRINTING ^ ch:r.om:jPs-xic 

R. M. WOOD CO. 



."^lO BATTERY STREET, 



SAN FRAXCISOO. CAL. 



600 Times Sweeter Than Sugar. 

TIIK (;KK.\T SWEKTKN1N(J MEniUM IN THE MANUFACTURE OF AEKATED WATERS Rl'CH AS 

GINGER ALE, LEMON SODA, ETC. 

THE UNSURPASSKD INGREDIENT FOR PLEASANT TASTK-Tl) 

SVsZEETEN iA^INE T^MD TO BLEND iA^HISKIES 

K(»u rAirnciM.Aiis ai'I'I.y to 

SCHULZE-BERGE & KOECHL, 

SOLE UtI'OUTF.ns ASh I.K i:ssi:i:s. ..... ^:, MVUnAV street, hFA\ -iOlih. 

ABRAM«;ON-HEUNISCH CO., SAN FRANCISCO, SELLING AGENTS FOR THE PACIFIC COAST. 



BODE & HASLETT 

Warehousemen 1201 Battery St., San Francisco 



PHOPRlETOnS OF 



GENERAL INTERNAL REVENUE BONDED WAREHOUSE, No. ONE 

N. E Corner Third and King Streets "V For the Storage of Whisky and Spirits in Bond 

STORAGE AND INSURANCE AT LOWEST RATES. ADVANCES MADE ON GOODS IN WAREHOUSE. 



pyveifie wi|^e /^jmid sfif^ir f^eview. 



Hemry H. Shufeldt -{^ Coivipany, 

DISTILLERS, CHICAGO. 



L 01 ill RYU ILT fill 



DISTILLED BY THE HOLLAND PROCESS. 





Equal in flavor and surpassing in 
purity the most famous imported 
Gins. Put up in packages prepared 
to hold contents colorless, and con- 
tain, respectively 44, 24, 15 and 10 
gallons, all under double stamps. 





And are unquestionably the purest and most wholesome Gins today, used in the U. S. 

FOR SALE BY ALL WHOLESALE LIQUOR DEALERS AND DRUGGISTS. 

C. W. CRAIG & CO. California Agents, 205 BATTERY STREET. 



FLEISCHMANN & CO. 

CINCINNATI, OHIO. DISTILLERS OF 

SgLVA/N G-ROVE BOU-RBO/N A/ND Rg E WHISKIES. 



HIGH GRADE HOLLAND PROCESS- 



PERFECTION AND ROYALTY GINS. 



f*<- H »4t W W W W** 



« W W II tl I M I M I It 

II 




LARGEST DISTILLERS OF PURE BRANDY IN THE WORLD. 
DISTILLERY AND VINEYARDS, GEYSERVILLE, CAL. 



■■'5^*'5^"^v5^-'5^-5-'^-"**-'-S'--5~-*^'*--5^-^> -•+ -^ *^. s^. >.C^ 






WAIiDEK COG|«flC 



■^-n-n-n I I I I I » I I ^^■^■■l-^-^ 



^rapos, has ln-en Biiroessfiilly intro 
dnccd, and is now nu'iilnrlv snld in tin' iirimipal niarkilR nf Eiiiti|ii', in iipnipililnin willi Fivnch C'ofinai'. 
Otiliial (iiTman and Fiincli rlifmislf liavi- iipDnounci-d it Ihi! piiriM Brandy which coinis lo ihi'ir markiMs. 
It is C'S|H'('iallv Kuili'd for tilt' dint; trade and otlii'rs, wlnrf purity is dVmandid. WliiU' alnoad thi'se 
goods surrcssfully compete, iiavin;; fami dnties as the French, tlie American huyer has the advantajje in price between tlie Internal llevenne lax as- 
essed uereand the euetonis duties on forei^'n hiandies. .Samples will he sent on application. 



WALDEN, 



"W^^^LIDEISr & oo. 




Eiuterii Office 40 Broad Street, JVeir York. 



UETSEKVJLLLE SONOMA CO., OAL.^ 



f/reifie WIJME /cpJD Sflf^lT F^EVIEW. 








323-325 Market St., S, F. 



D. V. B. HEXAIUK. 



E. MARTIN & CO., 

IMPOKTEKS AND 'WHOLESALE 

408 Front St., San Francisco, Cai. 

SOLE Ar.EXTS FOR 

J. F. CUTTER AND ARGONAUT OLD BOURBONS. 



ESTABLISHED lsr)7. 

F. O. BOYD S^ CO. 

Commission Merchants, New York. 

CALIFORNIA WINES & BRANDIES, 



Barton's Celebrated Sweet Wines, Fresno. 

Cai'T. J. C. Merititew. PIvO.spei'T Vinevaki'. 

Advances Made on Consignments. 



William T. Minuse 

Commission Merchant. 

j,i: i!i:avi:i: st., xkw youk. 

Agent for the Sale of Viticuliural Products. 

Coiisif;ninenls of sound Wines iunl Biandius soliiilfil. .\,lvMn(is PKulf >â– ! 
same at lowest rates. 

Kcprescntiii!; John Tiiomann, St. Helena, Cal. 

KwKR it Atkinson, HiiTiiEKi'ORn, Cal. 

A. V. Adams I^ind Vineyard, Fresno, Cal. 
EisEN Vineyard Co., Fresno, Cal. 



FOR FINE PRINTING 



(iO TO 



I^. DVL. -^ATOOID Oo. 



314-316 Battery Street, 



SAN FRANCISCO 



Hey, Grauerholz & Co., 

Importers and Wholesale Dealers in 

WINES & LIQUORS. 



SOLE AGENTS FOR 



DA^Y CBOCK^ff WHISKY, 

BE SURE YOU ARE RIGHT, THEN GO AHEAD. 



NO. 215 SACRAMENTO STREET, - - SAN FRANCISCO. CAL. 



OLIVINA VINEYARD. 

The OLIVINA Comprises 600 Acres of Hill 

Side Vineyard, Located in the 

Livermore Valley. 




DRY, DELICATE, WELL MATURED TABLE WINES 
A SPECIALTY. 

SEND FOJl SAMPLE ORDEU. 

Correspondence Solicited By' The Grower. 

JULIUS P. SMITH, LIVERMORE, CAL. 



M. WALTER & CO., 

WHOLESALE LIQUOR DEALERS 

DlsliMs of Bitlers enil Mials, 



811 Montgomery St., Bet. Jackson & Pacific Sts. 
Telephone No. 4S4. San Francisco, Cal. 



Landsberger & Son, 

Commission JVIet^chants 

m CALIFORNIA STREET, SAN FRANCISCO. 



Agents fof the Purchase and Sale of Viticultural Products. 

Te:lsphion<s No. e90. 



John lU'iuNAiih. 



SlCCdNPO Gll-\.ST1. 



Quasti (£ "^ornavd^ 



Orowcrs and DMlkr.t of 



California WljlES M BWDIES 



Winery at niin.-<li <t /)(T»ianZ'.t Spur, Biiween West 
Glcndale and Tropica, Cal. 



bAf^GE PRODUeEF^S Of SWEET WINES. 

>/(iiii tlllhr. < or. til mill lliiiiiiilii Sis., /.on t niirlr.-^. « a I. 



^Jke\^\Q WIJ^E /rJMD Sflf^lT f^EVIEW. 



S. GLHSER. 

123 California Street, San Francisco, Cal. 

FjOlCIFIC COjPlST jPs-GENX FOF2.- 



r.. GIRAIin.fcCO.. Ei-ERN^Y, 
J. DUrONT A CO., CooNAi-, 
AHMAND liKOSSACQ, Counai-, 
OMK. iMAUFAUI), St. Meme fkes Counac, 
HEKMAN JANSKN, S.iiieham, 
BLAXKKNIIEYM ct XOLET, Rottekoam, 
THOS. I.UWNDES vt CO., London, - 
NIXON & CO., OroRTO, 



CHAMPAGNES 

COGNACS 

- COGNACS 

COGNACS 

GOLDFINCH GIN 

CENTAUR GIN 

OLD LONDON DOCK RUM 

PORT WINES 



GAMIiOA HERMANOS, Jkrez nu LA Fkonteua, 
RUIZ MATA .t CO., Jerez de la Fbonteka, 
CHR. MOTZ & CO., lionDEAUX, 
GEBR. ECKEL, Deiuesiieim, 



SHERRIES 

- SHERRIES 

CLARETS AND SAUTERNES 

RHINE WINES 



VICTORIA MINERAL WATER CO., OBErtLAiiNSTEIu, VICTORIA WATER 

RHEINSTItOM BROS., Cincinnati, O., - BLACKBERRY BRANDIES 

D. O. BEATSON, Kihkcaluv, Scotland, - SCOTCH WHISKIEiS 



jPs-LSO IIXIFOI^TEI^ OF"- 



RAMSAY'S SCOTCH WHISKY. WISE'S IRISH WHISKY, E. 4. J. BURKE'S IRISH WHISKY, OPORTO AND 
TARRAGONA PORTS AND PRUNE AND CHERRY JUICE. 




Tliese WhlsUles arc made in tlio Famous '• ItLVE <./M.s\S- JlECInX" so 
Justly celchraled as the home of the /liient M'hisklex In the IIV»i7<J, oiul 
vhtch have been j ■>)• the last Centurtj, reeopnized as sueh, j/lvlng the eh<n'- 
acter and hlph Kla«din{j to KKXTl'fKl' WlllSli Ii:S u-hleh :hetj now enjinj. 




THESE FAMOUS WHISKIES CAN BE HAD IN LOTS TO SUIT THE TRADE FROM 

HELL/v\A/N/N BROS. 3c CO., 5^5 FRO/NT STREET, SAM FRA/NClSeO. 



P/Veifie WIJME /rJND SflF^IT F^EVIEW. 



ESTATiT.ISnEn ISIO. 



^^^ 'Sfes; 




oves 



OVERHOLT 

PemM Pure Rye WDisley 

'The - Finest - in - the - World." 

JONES, MUNDY &. CO., Agents, San Francisco. 




I. DE TURK 

l^inas and ^randies 



BRANDY, 
ANGELICA, 
HOCK, . 

ZINFANDEL, 
PORT, 

TOKAY, 



CLARET, 
SAUTERNE, 

MUSCAT, 
""^ SHERRY, 

RIESLING, 
GUTEDEL. 



"VT'ineya.rds and Ce;lla.rs: 

Santa Rosa, Sonoma County, Cal. | 

^Bra.nc;ln: 
Vi'O SncrainiiiU' SI., Sun Fraiicixco, lal. 

C. M. MANN, Manager. 
New York Office, - - 91 Hudson St. 




TjHE |^I(BHEST AWARD f ARIS EXPOSITIOJN 




Establistied. 

Ciuernore l/alley, ^al. 



IBSS. 



»** 



'^o 






-w 



,\iGi^ 






,^' 



A. G. GHAUGHE. Proprietor. 

Office and Depot, C95 Front St., San Trancisco 



1889. 



GObD JV1EI3AL. 



CHAUCHE & BON, Successor to A. G. CHAUCHE 

Scilc GiMifral Ai;<Mit"i for llii' MouNT-HonoE 'Vines. 



^GttlLl-'NC ^ 

'WINE MERCHANTS 



NOV YORK H0USE,>"^^*^^'5^°- 

Y5EN &TOTTEN 



(alifornia. 



EUROPEAN HOUSE: 



24 DEY STREET. 



omci^^"^^ Faults • 

230 ^"240 BRANNAN STREET, 
BET l.!i & 2"-° 



" Bremen^ Germany 




VOL. XXXIV, No. 1. 



SAN FRANCISCO, FEBRUARY 7, 1895. 



Issued Semi- Monthly. 
A". .1/. uooi) CO.. - . ruiiutinERs. 

316 BATTERY STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 
TELEPHONE NO. 709. CABLE AODRESS "fIELDWIN," SAN FRANCISCO. 



The riciiic Wist: ami sriisir iti:vn:}i is tin- ,>ui,, impcr «/ 

ils <7((.s.K IIV.S7 «/■ Cliitajio. It clrciilalfs iimotuj the Mliolt-siile and 
Itilail Hiiic (iiiil S/iiril Itfiili-is i>f the l'<i<i/ir Const, the Wine Mak- 
ers ninl llrnnilii Hislillers o/' Calijoriiia, the IVine and lira ndji biii/- 
ers, and the Iiniiiirters, Uistllters and Jobbers of the United States. 



.Ill CUKCIiS. nn.lFTS, money OHUKUS, etc., should he 
made payable to the It. M. WOOD CO. 



Subsciiption per year— in advance, pootase paid; 

Fur I he United States, Mexico and Canada f:; yo 

Fur European countries ...........[.[.[[[...... 4 «» 

Sinjjle copies \[[ ".'.'.'.'. * ''n 

Entered at tlie San Francieco Post Office as second-class matter. 

EASTERN BRANCH OFFICE: 
W. A. GEFT, Manager, 1-3-5 i.eouard St., New York City. 



HELP WANTED, FOR SALE, EFC. 



WANTED— 20.000 gallons cleau Riesling, vintage 180] or 
ISO-.': must be cheap. L'O.OdO gallons I'ort. guaranteed 20 i)er 
cent., vintage ls;»-J or 1S!I3; must he cheap. .-.000 gallons liiicst 
Sherry obtaiual.le; will pay good price for this lot. Address W 
T. MiNusE, 40 Beaver street, New York. 

' 10-5- tl 

WANTED. 

Wanted l.y New York II.., is,- l..i C^-l,, :„,v .,iiantitv ,.f swert aii.l ,lrv 
wmcs. .\.l,;lres.s, giving all ,let.-vils, .\. 1'. Jl', .art- i'Acific Wink \Ni, 
Spirit Review. 



FOREIGN MARKETS. 



.\ Kentlcniaiir.'tinn-alli'i iiuiiiy v.mis Mr\i,v iji Knropcin Ihc I'liitcl 
.States Dup.rtiiioiit c,f .V^'ri.-iiltiire, desires t.. add, aiiDn^ otlicr ivpr(-<,.„ii. 
tions, a hrinor syiidnati- ..f Wine Dealers (.rtiiowers, wli.. arc prepin.! 
.-"' ■;"''"J;*.?'| ".■■"'<■.• •^"' ■'''"' desirous to arrant.' for t' e sale of ( 'alilornia 
Fniit. Wlnl.Mii Kiir,.j,e have been suc.essfiil in iiitrodiuiiit' ('alif.>riiia 
piiKliuts, and woiil.l like to c.ntiiiiie the saiiic. .Vl.lre.s.s Ciuhifs J 
MiKi'iiv, late Speiial .\);eiit in Kurojie, l»ei>artiiieiit of .Vf'rieiiltiire 3 Kasi 
41st street, New York. ' 



/VVA-RKET -REVIEW. 

/^AMFOKMA WINES.— The market is very nin.h unsel- 
\J tied, hut there is a strong tendency toward an advance- 
ment in prices beyond the ligures that now prevail. Demand 
and supply indicate that the business is coming back to a basis 
that it has not occupied (or many years, and with two absidute 
laws of trade in operation on the line of iniprovenient. the in- 
dustry can hut he largely henelitted within the current year. In 



$3. 00 PER YEAR 

other words, it appears that the lowest level of dejiression has 
been reached, and that the movement from now on will be to- 
ward better things. Sweet wines aic more attractive to buyers, 
and wo ari; coidident that they will be receiving more attention 
before midsummer. The '91 crop was very sjiort. and old stocks 
are none too large. 

Wine prices at first hands are very Jinn. In lact, there 
does not seem to be much trading. The knowledge of the great 
shortage in last year's crop, together with the formation of the 
California Wineniakers' Corporation, has stillened many a weak 
back among the growers, and heljied their credit and their abil- 
ity to hold on. The result is that tln^ California AVine A.ssoeia- 
1 ion (the dealers) have advanced their prices for New Orleans 
and New York delivery. Sixteen ci'iits is the pri^sent figure, 
and it is safe to say that, with the gi'owers holding out as they 
are now, an advance to twenty cents and over is a po.ssibility iu 
the near future. The Association or anybody else cannot ship 
wine for 1(> cents if the growers persist in their present course. 

As to tlu^ freights, they have advanced to â– 'JO cents per 100 
to New York, and IT) cents per hundred to New Orleans. This 
is practically eiiuivaleut to .5 and 7A cents per gallon. .January 
was an active month for shipiiers, who sent forward every gal- 
lon of wine they po.ssibly could, in anticiiiation of the rise in 
rates which went into elfect on the 4th. It is thought the total 
shipments for the month may reach 1,. 500, 000 gallons. 

Late advices from New York are as follows : " There i.s a 
small curi-enf demand for both dry and sweet wines, which in- 
dicates that tlu! buyers continue to buy from hand to mouth. 
The advance in freight maj' tend to improve the umrket a 
little." 

/^A LI FORM. V BRANDIES are in natural sympathy with 
^^ wines. Values are hard, and the inclination is toward 
higher ligures. As a conseiiueiice, holders of good stocks are not 
I'ourting customers on the existing liasis. I'uder present cir- 
cumstances, well-made goods \\ ill ain|ily it'iiay carrying. 

^ *^lIISKli:s.— There is a better feeling in the trade. The 
^^^ standard hou.ses, in pai'ticular, find the consumptive 
demand steadily increasing toward the old-time volume, and as 
a conscijncnce there is more cheerfulness on the street. There 
has certainly been a reaction for the bettei-, and, with the consum- 
mation of the plan to incorporate the San Joaquin N'alley Kail- 
road, the improvement will be still more marked. I\eceipts of 
whiskies for i\w half month have been of moderate volume, as 
will be seen by our tables elsewhere. 

/MI'()KT.\'i'l().VS. — IJnsincss is moving along in a moderate 
way, and is good only in spots. Orders are confined strictly 
to the necessities of the buyer, and small sales are largely the 
lule. Still, there are indications that better daj's are coming, 
and the importers are coDsciiuently feeling more encouraged 
than for some time past. The general business pulse presages 
a return to former trade conditions, and, all things considered, 
the outlook is better than it has been for a long time. 



-.0 



f/ceifie WIJ^E /c;^D SflJ^IT t^EVIEW, 



TRADE emeuLA-Rs. 

Fron? Gonzales Byass & Go. 

Dear Sirs ; Our frieiiils, Messrs. Kesslcr, Htliringcr & Co., of N" w York, bav- 
ins; ''y mutual c'ouEeut ceaswl to repiusfiit us for the sale of our Slurrifs, etc., in 
America, we bave now tbe |ileasure to inform you that from tliis dale «e liavc ap- 
I'oinled Messis. W. A. Tavlor >t Co., of KU Broad \v:iy. New York, as our A^enls for 
Wines and Spanirli ISraudy in llie United States, and we most respectfully solicit for 
them the same kiiul iiatrona;;e as lias hitherto been accorded to our late rep- 
resentatives. 

Assuring' von that your interests will be most carefully ^'uardcd, and that you 
may lepose every contidence in our continuing to ship wines of the hif;hctt possible 
value, and spare no trouble in procurini; perfect matches of any ^amples submitted 
to us. we remain dear sirs, yours faithfully, Gon/.ales Bva.sk iV; Co. 

Jeres de la Frontera, Spain, January 1st, lsu5. 



o9 BRoAinvAY, New York, January, 1S05. 

Dear Sir : We lake great pleasure in slating that we have been appointed sole 
agents of the ohl and renowned house of .Sherry shippers, Messrs. Gonzalez Byass 
A Co., Jerez de la Frontera. This hrm being one of the largest in Spain, and pos- 
sessing the grandest collections of wine found in the Bodegas there, we are privi- 
leged lo offer you a choice line of Sherries at as low a figure as it is possible to get 
them. There is an idea among many buyers in this country that wines can be 
bought cheaper from houses abroad Ihaii from agents here. To all who believe 
this is so, we would like to say : let us send you samples an.i prices, and we will 
Boon convince .you that such an idea is wrong. 

Trusting you will consider llie wines shipped by Gonzales Byass >t Co. before 
placing your impi>rt orders, extending compliments. 

We remain dear Sirs, very truly, W. A. Taylor & Co. 



Froin tlie Ph. Hanjburger Go. 



riTTSBURo, Pa , January 32, 1H95. 

EniTOU PAriFic Wine and Spirit Kf.view - Sir : Upon closing our books for 
the year 1S'J4 we find that we produced SU25 barrels during 18'J4. Our withdrawals 
for tbe same ju-riod were 1U,U5S barrels, and from tbe free warehouse 19'J7 barrels, 
the total withdrawals during ISUl being 12,055 liarrels. 

We have no comments to make upon these figures as they speak for themselves 
in no uncertain terms. Very truly. The Ph. Hamburoep. Co. 



Froin Actillle i^tarace. 



El 



7f. Pearl Street, New York, January 21, IS'JS. 
Dear Sir: Please take notice that 1 have just received per Sleainship " 
Mar" 52 barrels California Wine, of which kindly make mention in your nest. 
Also, per Steamship " p'ulda," 15 barrels Gorgoiizida cheese. 
Per Steamship â– ' Victoria," 1ST4 boxes Macaroni, A. Garofalo brand ; 1110 cases 
Chianli Wine, L. Laborel-Melinl brand. 

Per Steamship •' Fuerst Bismarck," 7 barrels Reggiano cheese. 

Per Steamship â– ' Armenia," 50 cases and 200 bo.ves green olive oil soap. 

Yours ve ry truly, Achille Sta'hace. 

Fron} the H. Kantorowicz Goinpany. 

42 Vesey Street, New Y'ork, January, 1895, 
Dear Sir : The bueiness heretofore carried on by me, at No 42 Vesey street 
uill hereafter be londucted by the H. Kantorowicz Company, of which I have been 
appointed Ibe general manager. 

The facilitiesof the business will be greftly e.iitended under tbe new manage- 
ment. Thanking you for past favors, and soliciting a conlinuance of the same for 
the new company, f remain. Yours truly, J. Libkowicz. 

PATE/MTS, TRA-DE-MA-RKS, ETC. 

The following list of reient patents and trade-marks of interest to our patrons 
is re|iorled by Win. G. Henderson, Solicitor of American and foreign patents and 
trade-marks, Norris Building, 501 F street, Washiiigloii, D. C A copy of any of Ihe 
United States patents n ill be furnished by bim for 25 cents. 

I.SSI K OF Dkckmbkk 25, 1S94. 
5.S1,400— Barrel-head I urniiig machine, W. W. Trevor, Lockport, New York 
53l,:i56— Beer carbonatiiig apparatus, C. Barns, Washington, d! C 
,'i31,4iM— Air-pressure beer-forcing apparatus, H. K. Bailey, Albany N V 
,531 ,:)14— Process of and apparatus for preparing beer, etc., A. M il'ofmai'i ChicaL'o 
53l,b01— Mashing machine, A. Schultz, Cincinnati. ' 

liESIOKS. 

23,892— Bottle, C. Gulden, New Y'ork City. ' 
23,891— Bottle, C. If. West, St. Louis, .Mo. 

TRAllK-MARKS. 

ica tonic for Champagne, Veuve I,aurent Cie, Bouzy, France Essential 

fealnre— I be represciilalion of a shield bearing Ihe words " iJanrenl-Per 

rier and •'Bouze-Jibcims," with a spray of a grape vine and branch of 

c'licA plunl . 

incB and li'inors, .Tcan B Oultin, New York City. Essential featuie-Tlie 

word and letters, "The J. B. G." 

hiidiy.Tbe Jos. II. Peebles Sons Co., Cineiiinali, Ohio. ICssenlial fealiin- 

-The words and ligures, "Peebles Old Cabinet, 1840 " 

'"'^I'J'v^^': "■•'""^:»*^<'-. Uoston, Mass. Essential feat ure-Tbe words 



25,710— C( 

25,71 1-W 
25,7i:^-W 
U5,713-W 



"Old Gold." 



25,?14— Whisky, Belmont Distillery Co., Louisville, Ky. Essential feature— The 

word "NutW(><»d." 
25,715— Louis A. Wessel, New Y'ork City. Essential feature — Tbe words, "Aiite- 

Bellum. ' 
'i5,715 — Malt beer, S. Licbmann's Son's Brewing Co., Brooklyn, N. Y. Essential 

feature — The word "Teutonic." 



Issue of Jani'Arv 1, 18',I5 

531,718— Apparatus for aging li.pno-s, J. S. Detwiler, Philadelidiia, airl M. (i. Ste- 
vens. .Mercbantville, \. J. 

.531,916— Barrel stand- J. FiUman, Oakwood, Ohio. 

5:il, 790— Capped milk-bottle, H. H. Hall, Newton, N. J. 

531,717— Bottle-tilling m.achine, (i. Claiiss, Jr., Klizabelh, N. J., and A. M. Sclioni- 
berg, Newark, N. J. 

531,7.59— Medicine bottle, C. Abs, Hoboken. 

531,791 — Metallic bung, At. Fischer, San Francisco, Cal. 

531,880— Centrifugal lii|uid separator, T. H. Springer, Philadelphia. 

.531,697 — Ajiparatns for handling li.|uids, G. W. Peltoii and J. E. McElrtiy, .Musca- 
tine, Iowa. 

TKAUK-MAUKS. 

25,782— Mineral waters. The Johannis Co , Lt"d., London, England. Essential feat- 
ure—The words "Life Buoy," and the word "Johannis." 

25,783— Whisky, Kochester Distilling Co., Itocbesler, N. Y. Essential feature— The 
word "Elite." 

25,784— Ai)erient wine, Lambert Violet, Thuir, Fi-auce. Essential feature — Tbe 
word "Byi rh," 

25,78.5— Tonic called rye phosphate, Edward C. Cowman, Bellefontaine, O. Essen- 
tial feature — A inouogram composed of the letters and abbreviation 
"C C Co." 

25,786 — Acidulated cherry juice as a cough medicine. The Bolton Drug Co., Lt'd , 
Brooklyn, N. Y. Essential feature — The Avords "B<dton"s Acidulat.^d 
Cherry Juice," and the representation of a branch of a cherry tree. 



Issue of January 8, 1895. 
532,399 — Aging Spirits, K. C.Scott, Liveriiool, England. 

532,322 — Barrel leveling and trussing macbiue, D \. Bordon, Wallaceburg, Canada. 
.532,324— Carrier for bottles or other articles, H. M. Ivolb, Philadelphia, Pa. 
532.23,5— Bottle-tilling apparatus, A. Grap, Brooklyn, N. Y. 
532,191 — Tool for formiug bottle necks, A. Acktenhagen, Milwaukee, Wis. 
,532,378— Tool for llaring lips on bottles, G. L. Jenkins, Philadelphia, Pa. 
532,390 — .^iijiaratus for distilling and sterilizing water, J. Negcl, Chemnitz, Ger- 
many. 
532,373 — Fermenting vat, C. Hanger, Washington, D. C. 

532,19.S — Means for transmitting lluids under pressure, W. S. Halsev, Alleiitown, Pa. 
533,377— Water still, E. L. .Tackson, and W. Fitzgerald, Memphis, Tenn, 

TRAIIE-MARKS. 

25,S24 — Concentrated extract for making lieverages, Kachelmacker ife B(dimer, 
Christiana, Norway, ana New York City. Essential feature—The woid 
"Cotfeeaddition." 

25,b25— Powdered mixture for use in making beverages, Sam'l Bear, New York City. 
Essential feature — Tbe letters "U K D" surrounded by a fanciful ribbon 
bearing the words "Universal Kida Drink." 

25,825— Scotch whisky, John Kobertson it Co., Dundee, Scotland. Essential feature 
— Tbe work "Craignisb" and the representative of a Tarn O'Shanlcr 
bonnet. 

25,827— Distilled Alcoholic Ibpiors, T. 11. Timby, Washington, D. C. Essential feat- 
ure — The word "Mellowine." 

25,849— Wbi.'^ky. The Live Oak Distillery Co., Cincinnati, Ohio. Essential feature— 
The words "Live Oak." 

25,850— Whisky—The Live Oak Distilicry Co., Cincinnati. Essential feature— The 
words "Live Oak," and the representation of a live-oak tree. 



1895. 



532,552 
532,6:iO 
533,498 
532,499 
532,575 
532,540 
532,699 
532,541 
532,542 
532,543 
532,544 
333,545 
.532.739 
532,731 



Issue of January 15, 
—Beer-cooler, E. L. Hall, Baltimore, Wd. 

Measuring bottle, W. S. Baird, Philadelphia Pa. 

Bottle-stopper, F. B. Thatcher, Pawlucket, li. I. 

Bottle stopper, F. B. Thatcher, Pawtucket, K. I. 

Cork extractor, C. Morgan, Freeport, III. 

Beer keg, W. E. Delehanty, Albany, N. Y. 
— Process of and apparatus for elevatiiiglii|nids. J. G. Pohlc, New Y'ork City. 

Spraying nozzle, J. F. DoriiHeld, Chicago, Illinois. 

Malt-stii'rer, " " " 

Malt stirrer, " '* " 

Malt house, " " " 

Maltinv lloor, " " " 

— Soda-water dispensing apparatus, 
—Soda-water dispensing apparatus 



C. .\dami, Boston. 
W. Helmer, Boston. 



trade-marks. 
25,S68—Nalural and carbonated mineral water, liedford Mineral Springs Co., Bed- 

f(od. Pa. Essential fealiirc— The figure of a keystone having its corners 

roniuled, and across the face Ihe \\ord "\'itat|ua." 
25,869 — Btittlcd lager Iieer, T. Hamm, .St. Paul. Minn. I'ssential feature tbe words 

"Tlieo. Hamm's," the wortl "Theo." being smaller than the word 

"Hamm's." 



532,794 
5;«,fl34 
532,978 

25,903 - 
25,918 - 
2.5,901- 
25,902-' 



Issue of January 22, 1895. 
— BairclfoUowcr, F. J. V. LcCand, Natchez, Miss. 

-Machine tor making barrels, kegs, etc., H. Campbell, Baltimore, Md. 
-Means for and Melhod of sealing bottles, W. B. Mann, lialtimore, .Md, 

TP.A DE-MA BKS. 

Whisky Valeuliiic Fiauz, PhiLidelphia, Pa. Essential fealure—.V mono- 
gram composed of Ihe letters "V F" inclosed by a circle. 

Whisky, Arthur Clarke, London, England. Essential feature— The wolds 
"Old Chiiin," and a far-simile signature. 

Tonic and nutrient beverages. The Pajioid Co., New Brunswick, N. J. Es- 
sential feature—The word "Kolafra. 

Tonic and rcsloralive beverages, the Papoid Co. Es.sential feature-The 
colored label divided horizontally into three panels printed thereon, the 
central panel being of green color and containing Hie representation of a 
crimson i)vrainid. 



THORNTON & PIPPY 



^I2^0 IDEL I^E^" 



i''C'>i'r{ri:'i()|{K sum- \(ji-n rs 

Sweet "Wines, Brandies and' Table \x7ines. 
204 MARKET STREET. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 

DmiuBVTiNG AuKSTs RAUL MASSON CHAMPAGNE 



pASIfie WljslE /fJvID Sflf^lT f^EV!£W. 



11 



THE FINEST WHISKIES IVIADE 

In the State of i^entueky. 



ANDERSON 



BUCHANAN 





^ ^HAND MADE^ "o 
c^ SDUR MASH 2 

LOUISVILLE 
KENTUCKY. 



PRODUCTION JAN. 1, 1874, TO JUNE 30, 1894, 
121,718 BARRELS. 






PRODUCTION JAN. 1, 1880 TO JUNE 30, 1894 
28,086 BARRELS. 



NELSON BOURBON NELSON PURE RYE NELSON PURE MALT 




W 



paje WHISKEY 

THENEWCOMB-BUCHANAf 
COMPANY ,\y 



PRODUCTION JANUARY 1, 1872, TO JUNE 30, 1894, 218,1464BARRELS 




U. S. CLUB 

/^ -'*^- -^ 

/ IJ.S.CLIJU \ 
/lUSTII.LKUY (MK^ v 

^riiiEi;i)iM>EH/^V/ 

PRODUCTION MARCH 1, 1889, TO JUNE 30, 1894, 69,697 BARRELS. 



J^IDIDI^ESS 



The Anderson & Nelson Distilleries Co. 



UOUISVIL-L- 



KY. 



12 



f/eifie WljsiE /rJ^D SflF^IT f^EVIEW. 



P-RGHIBITIO/N AGAI/N. 



So luucli lias l)t'('u .said recciitly in llic daily |iivss coiu'eni- 
in<; tlie li<iuor t|uestii)ii. and so seriously doi's tlii' proper solution 
ol' this prol)kMii con(;t'rn tlie wellaiv ol' our State, that it would 
seem to demand soniethiun; more than a iiimple reference to the 
eurrent of jiassiug events bearing tiiereupon. To that politieal 
absurdity, the Prohibition |)arty. we paid our eoniiiliments a Cew 
weeks ago. It is unreasonai)le in its demands for eomiilete pro- 
hibition, and is as much mi.sled in the belief that pro- 
hibition would put an end to erinie and drunkenness as is the 
liipior man who demands non-interferenei-, on the theory that in 
a IVee eountry every man n)ay eonduet his business as he sees 
lit. IJolh are in error, and the sueee.ssof either wo\ild result in- 
jui'iously to the Slate, rrohibition in (California would destroy 
ndllions of invested <'apilal, would wi'eck industries upon whieh 
thousands of our fellow men are de])en(leiit, would rendei' almost 
valueless acre upon aereof laud, and would inijjair the revenues 
of the State and counties to an extent whieh would seriously 
distvrrauge our financial system. 

Ghtnce at the wine and lirandy industries alone. This 
State produced twenty-one million gallons of wine and two mil- 
lion gallons of brantly during \H'Xi. A fair esliniate of wine 
production for !S!U is 12,t)0l),()0() gallons. Sonoma count}' alone 
has '_'2,(>i;5 acres of land devoted to the production of the wine 
"â– rape. Alameda county has (>,(>!l() atn-es. and live of our south- 
ern counties ()..")41 acr<'s devoted to tlui .same use. Napa county 
produced :l,.')(lit,(l(iO gallons of wine and l.^L'.S.'i'i gallons of brandy 
iu the year 1.S'.);!. In the past three years Califoi-nia has shipped 
by sea to New York wines to the value of $4,2:!S,1!)!) ; to Cen- 
tral America the shipnu'nts amounted in value to over three 
hundred thousand dollars, and to Mexico $1.5.S,<.)18. Large rev- 
enues have likewi.se been derived fiom shipments to British Co- 
lumbia, Japan, China, (ireat liritain (iermany and othei- f{;uro- 
peau countries. The total exports by sea and rail, for the past 
three years, amounted to ;J(),27(»,43i) gallons, valued at $1(),0S0,- 
960, while the bi-indy shipments for the .same time were valued 
at j?3,:i2i),.'Jl'2. How far our box nninufacturers, our coopers' 
establishments and our glass woi'ks would be alVeeted by a cessa- 
tion of their immense business, we leave to the imagiuati.)n. 

Tin- cultivation of hops and barley for the manufacture of 
beer is another industry dependent on this li(|U()i- question. The 
hop crop of California runs up into the millions annually. In 
1894 the shipments of hops to lOasttMii breweries alone amounted 
to S.(i4(t,00ll Dounds. All this vast business our I'rohibition 
friend would destroy for the sake of experimenting with a the- 
ory which has beeu tried and discarded in other States having 
less at stake. 

All this recent discussion, it seems, grew out of a vainglori- 
ous and ill-advised bamiuet given by tiie Retail hi(pior Dealers' 
Association of San Fnineisco, to commemorate and Jidjilate, if 
you please, in a semi-])iiblie nuinner, over some, alleged political 
victories which the " wets'' claim out of the llot.saui and jet.sam 
of the late election. This wild ann)unt of enthusiasm aroused 
an ciiual amount of horror and indignation among the " drjs," 
who protest and storm by turns. Says Mr. C. I!. Williams, the 
candidate for Mayoi' on the i'l-ohibition ticket at the late elec- 
tion, " This struggle that is going on between the li(juor and 
temperance elements is something lik(^ the old slavery (piestiou 
— it's got to be all saloons or all i>rohibition, sooner or later." 
This, of cour.se, is nonsense ; but it is the utterance of a man 
recognized as a leadernn tiie cau.se, and must be taken as semi- 
ollicial. We know but little of the Retail JJ<pior Dealers' As- 
sociation, think less of theii- Judgment, and know nothing of 
tlieir alleged political victories. They are as much an enemy 
(o the Slate and to good government as is the I'rohibition party 
itself, and this is saying a great deal. It is discouraging to one 
in search of a rational solution of a given social problem to cou- 
lemplate the utterances of sn(^h extremists on eithei- side. The 
good ])eo]>le engaged in tbt; I'rohibition movement do not seem 
t<i prolit by tin! ex|)erienee of others, do not modify their views 
to meet the vital objections which fair trials have (lemoustrated 
their theories to contain. 

rrohibition has been declared a failure, has beeu abolished 
in localities which have given to it a fair test ; it does not pre- 
vent but rather leads to drunk(!nuesH ; it inci-(!aseH taxes, it in- 
duces c<'rrui)tion, it degiades public morals, leads to i)erjury and 
crime; it injures business, redu(!es I'ents, leads to a loss of pop- 
idation. In fact, (he horrors of i)rohibition are ecjnal to, if not 



worse than, tho.se of an ill-regulated license State. We are not 
blind to the horroi-s of diunkenne.ss, but prohibitory laws will 
not regulate nu'u's appetites. Thonnis F. Bayard, ex-St en tary 
of Stale, .said on this subje(!t : " In many respects the <|ucstion 
is a suuiplnary one, and laws altemplingto establish sumptuary 
regulations beconn* inipiisitorial and impossible of execution, .so 
that, in those communities in this country where they have been 
enacted, they have either aggravated the evil they were intended 
to ])revent or liave fallen into contempt and useles.suess and 
Iteen repealetl. * * * I do not believe any man has a 
greater horror of intemperance than I, and my appreciation of 
its dangei's and evil efl'ects grows with my experience of human 
all'airs; but the graver the evil the more essential to ai)ply the 
right principle to its cure, and, for the reasons I have stated, 
and many others, I hope the exi)eriment of ' local option ' will 
not he tried by our Legislature, but increased checks under the 
license system be continued." 

The writer, a. few days ago, interviewed a prominent Re- 
publican from the State of Iowa, a genth man of national repu- 
tation, who was one of the advocates of pinhibition in that 
State He said the State had suffered woefully from the date of 
its adoption : that it increased taxes in some places as high as 
11.'5 per cent. ; that the cost of conducting crinunal courts in- 
crea.sed instead of diminished. •' I'rohibition," said the gentle- 
man, " brought suuiU men into [lolitics. The election of a 
County Clerk, a Supreme .ludge or a State Treasurer was luir- 
rowed down to the single ((uestion of Prohibition. It drove 
capital from the State, and destroyed, temporarily, the I epubli- 
ean [larty, which had fathered the movemeut. The law abso- 
lutely failed to accomplish the des-ired result. Young meu and 
old men formed private drinking clubs, liipior was smuggled in, 
and boys who would not, probably, in the ordinary course of 
events, drink to excess, fell into the habit of attending these 
clubs and indulging in wild orgies. It was not long,'' hecontin- 
"aed, " bcfoi-e Iowa discovei-ed its mistake, and repealed the law, 
but not until much havoc had been accomplished and millions 
of dollars of property destroyed, without any compensating 
benelit exce|)t experience at a very high cost.'' 

The solution of this li(|uor problem cannot be disposed of, 
as Ml-. Willia-ins suggests, by all saloons or all prohibition. It 
must receive Just and liberal treatment. Some time ago we said ; 

" Iviquor dealers are not the ' bad citizens ' the I'rohibition 
party woidd have us believe. If there existed in the Prohibitiiui 
ranks as much of a desire to do practical good as there is of 
respectability among the li(pu)r dealers, the practical element on 
one side and the respectable element cm the other would come 
together and agree upon some form of general regulation. Join 
hands in (!xterminating the worst features of the trade, and 
then yield their united eflbrts towards secui-ing benelicent laws 
and their Just and proper administtation. In the abolishment of 
l)it-l'alls and disrei>utable saloons, the practical side of the Pi'o- 
bibition party, if it has a. j)ra(!tical side, would, we firndy be- 
lieve, liud the respectable dealers more than willing to co- 
oiiei-ate." 

Since then, one of the otiicers of a newly-organized associa- 
ation, kmiwn as the Califorina. f tate Protective Association, 
called ujion us to certify to the willingness of that organization 
to purify the liquor traflic, renu)ve the iiuestion from politics, 
and elevate tin; business to the highest possible plane. The board 
of trustees of this organization is composed of gentlemen in the 
wholesale trade who are men of high commercial honor ami 
strict integrity. Such men as E. K. Lilienthal, J. P. EdotV, 
Thos. Kirkpatri(fk, Jas II. Mundy, Wm. .Vlfs, Fredk. Slaude, C. 
10. lienjaniin, A. P. Ilotaling, and others, all rational, practical 
men of all'airs, make np its nn'mbership. One of the professed 
objects of tlu! organization is to rid the community of the worst 
fcatui-es of the trallic, to close out the gi'oggeries and dens which 
infest the city, to yield such protection as they nniy to per.sons 
engaged in conducting respectable and orderly saloons, to deny 
])rotection, and to inllict, if possible, punishment upon tho.se en- 
gaged in the business who constantly olVeud decency, and who 
continually conu! in c-onllict with the otiicers of the law. This 
movement, if carried out u|)on the lines suggested, will do much 
to renu'dy the evils whieh staml most in need of reformation. 
^Ve will watch with interest its proceedings. — J. P. BuoWN, I'n 



Th(! Na|)a i*i Sonoma AVino Co. has incorporated, with a 
capital of «l.^),OIH). TIk^ stockholilers and directors are C. W. 
Meyer, .1. ('. W. Schnell, ,J. Frank and .las. Fiekforth. 



f/cSlfie WIJ^JE /cJMD Sflf^lT f^EVIEW. 



13 



^otcc and "^erccnalc, 

\\ni. A. \ (illi lias taken cliar^jic of llio l'',iscii Niiicyaril. at 
Kn'sno, Imt retains liis lalHuatorv lor tlie selcclion and eultiva- 
tion of pure yeasts in San Franeiseo, and w ill also erect a ialior- 
atory at the vineyard. He tinds it neeessai'V to increase faeiii- 
ities because of the increasing demand Ibr his yeasts. 

J. Garrow Inus retired from the wholesale house of C. E. 
houohoe & Co., of Portland, Or. 



The firm of Meyerfeld. Milclie: 
ris Meverfold and John S. Mitchell. 



\ l"o. now consists of Mor- 



The bark Calilbi'iiia, owned by N. liirliaid, which sailed mi 
Oct. ;{lst from lladlock for .Salaverry with lumber, is a total 
loss at Peseamajo. Pern — the crew saved. The cargo, shiipped 
by Mohns & Kaltenbach, of this city, was valued at about 
S7(HMI, and was fully insured in local companies and agencies. 
80 far as can be learned, there Svas no insurance on the hull. 
The California, which for several yeai^s made a picturcs(|ue foi-e- 
ground to Belvidere, was built in 1S4S, and in early days was 
famous as a side-wheel steamer on the Panama route, and more 
famous from the fact tliat at one time the late W. ('. llal.stoii 
was supercargo of the vessel. 



J. 1\[. AVaterlill & Co., distillers of McHrayer, 
sold their distillery to T. J. S. Prowii i^ Sons. 



Ky, 



On the 12th ult. the distillery of the Crystal Springs Distil- 
lery Co., of l.ouisville, was completely destroyetl by lire, entail- 
ing a lo.ss of SKi.tKiO. The warehouses were saved. 

J. B. AVathen & Pro. Company ha\c removed their Loui.s- 
ville offices to No. lit), south side of Main street. Tln-y now 
have better office facilities to accommodate tlieir rapidly growing 
trade. In other words, they are on the " ground floor," a posi- 
tion that every firm wants to occupy with the coming revival of 
the whisky interests. The front ottice is used for the transaction 
of general business, tlie middle apartment for cori-espoiulence, 
etc.. while a third apartment in the rear is elegantly fitted up as 
a private oflice. 

Henry Lachman, the active and .jolly, is soon to married. 
The auuouncemeut of the engagement is out, and the wedding 
will soon take jilace. The Eevikw wishes liiin and his chosen 
wife a long and happy life. Apropos of the coming wedding, the 
Wait says : " Matrimonially speaking, the debutantes are doing 
admirably this season. Henry Lachman. one the most ardent of 
business men, whose time and thoughtsare devoted to theexteii- 
sive iuterest.s of the great wine lirm, has .succumbed to the 
charms of Miss Rosalie (iosliusky, whose initial ajipearance in 
society was made at the New Year's reception at the Brown 
residence on Sutter street. She is a veritable beauty — a sweet, 
smiling, happy type of face, rounded outlines, an adorable month 
and ex((uisite coloring. The family is noted for the good looks 
of its daughters, however, though it is certain the youngest. Miss 
Rosalie, is the belle of the (lock. Goslinsky, Sr., is in the w hole- 
sale tobacco trade, and is reputed very wealthj'. Mr. Lachman 
is the active member of the S. Lachman ('o., and is so given to 
comnierce that he never had time to join aiij' of the clubs." 

The St. Louis warehouse of the Napa N'alley Wine Co. will 
be given up, owing to the company's consolidation with the 
California Wine .\ssociation. 

Mr. Norbert Becker, who has been re|»resenting Koliler i*t 
Frohling, of San Francisco, will henceforth i-epresent in Chicago 
and adjacent territory l-;dinger Bros. & .Jacobi, New ^'ork, who, 
as is well known, are soh? agents of Lachman & .Jacobi, of San 
Francisco. We congratntate the linn on having secured so elli- 
cient a representative as Mr. Becker, who deservedly enjoys the 
highest confidence and respect of the trade. — Cnlerinn. 

Messrs. J. R. Paikington & Co. state that the shipments of 
Port for Decemlier amount to ti.O.'i'J pipes ((Jreat Britain, L'*<SS 
pipes), making S'.',!!.")!! pipes for twelve months, as compared with 
!):{..32it pijies for ISiK!. and I14.(;.');! jiipes in 1S!I2. The Sherry 
shipments were (i.VO.'J butts, making 4'.t.(;!i."i butts for 18'J4, 
against 5 l,ti"J5 butts in ls'.t;3 and JU.i.MS butts in 181)2, 



The will of the late Charles Koliler has lni-ii admitted to 
probate. I'rovisiou is made in it that enough property shall be 
reserved to jiay a yearly income of SloO to Carrie Parsons, and 
the residue is left to Mrs, l\lise Koliler. The life insurance 
companies are paying up rapidly ini Mr. Kohler's life, evidently 
taking little stock in the suicide theory. 

Ip ill ('aiiaila the tax on one of oiii- proof gallons is about 
Sl.'^ll, if we are not misinfonned, and jet the best grades of Ca- 
nadian whiskies retail in the leading saloons of Toroito and 
elsewhere at 5 ci^its per diink. This, too, not wit listandiiig the 
fact that the giog of Canada calls for more spirits than the toddy 
of this country. In the United States, tliough, the retailer 
cliai'ges the consnnier l."> cents, and even higher, in all of the 
better places, and even then hands out a cheap grade of stiilf to 
the average customer. Saloon men in this country are not un- 
like the iialance of our population in that they want to grow 
rich ill a year, and they are always on the look-out for short 
cuts. They will lit up a saloon regardless of i-xiiiMise, put mir- 
rors u|i for ceilings, pave the lloor with nio.saics and S20 gold 
pieces, liiiish in the most expensive hard wood and decorate with 
artistic bric-a-brac, pictures, etc. And yet this very place will 
not hesitate to pass a 81.50 per gallon whisky over the bar and 
charge I") cents per drink for it. The trouble is that distillers 
pay no attention to the retailing of their liriuors in this <-ountry, 
while in Canada they give nuich attention to this matter. Dis- 
tillers over here are not Ibiid of details, or of small things gen- 
erally. They leave such tiresome and monotonous work to tln^ 
brewers, and in consequence the brewer lixes the price at which 
the beer must be i'etaile<l, and, fnitherinore, begets the monej', 
which the whisky man does not always do. — T. M. (iiLMOKK. 

(iiiite a number of the local wholesale houses are casting 
longing glances on Alaska iis a po.ssible future market. Thei-e 
is a bill at present in Congress providing foi- the licensing of the 
business in ;>11 towns having 100 or more white inhabitants at 
-S.'JOO per year. Better open tip the market. There is plenty of 
bad liijuor sold already. 

Charles Bundschu, of .f. Gundlach & Co., who was chair- 
man of the German Day celebration at the Midwinter Fair, and 
who is leading the movement to erect a Gietlie and Schiller 
monument at the (ioldeii (iate Pai-k. has isned a call for the 
committee to go to work. Many well-known names in the trade 
are ineliided in the call, among them Fred C. Seibe, William 
Wollf, .loseph Melczer, 11. Brannschweiger, 1*]. C. Priber, Henry 
Epstein, ]•;. .\. Deiiicke. W. Pogeii, Hans H. Koliler. Herman 
Bemh'l and W. C. Hildebrandt. The memorial to be erected is 
expected to be one of tin; most artistic in the city. 



gpi 



mM2mw2m!Kjmar\momiaruiXimsomiom£jmaomiiOh'mc) 



^c,^^BUSHEO /;v,^ 




E.REMYMARTIN&C? 



COGNAC 

1 TRANCE) 

AGENTS IN SAN FRANCISCD.Cal. 



fi 



525 FRONT STREET. 



lllllw^llum^^lnillll«^g|flI51^U|yl^Jlllnn^lwnl>^l^«l^tt^llu^u^^TrgigWn^ii^^ 



14 



f/cSlfie WIJME /rf^D SflF^IT I^EVIEW. 



WI/SE A/ND BKA/S-Og -REeEIPTS. I/STE-R/NAL -REVE/NUE DECISIO/N, 



Wine. 

January 2 6,220 

" 3 34.160 

4 2!),640 

" 5 y,600 

7 22,960 

" 8 44,080 

" 9 2(),!)20 

" 10 18,(130 

" 11 66,.3.50 

" 12 31,800 

" 14 23,700 

" 15 44,!Mi3 

'< 16 2".),(;()0 

17 46,150 



Biauily. 
2,600 
2,470 
9,600 
5,600 
2,570 
2,400 

240 

7,780 

13,140 

1,750 

2,300 

500 



18 

19. 

21. 



29,.350 

46,100 

46.700 

24,680 

23 29,220 

24 34,181 

26 39,360 

26 40,710 

28 13,380 

29 59,400 

30 55,770 

31 43,910 



Total to Jaiiy 31, 1895 897,534 

Total to same date last year.. 553,110 



120 

2,900 

6,620 

60.590 
142,705 



February 1 48,370 



SWEET WI/NE P-RODUCTIO/N. 



OfTicial Figures for the Fourth District of California. 



Nothing done in August. 

SEPTEJtBER, 



1894. 



Pkgs. 

Brandy withdrawn from distillery for for- 
tification 445 

Brandy witiidrawn from special bonded 

warehou.se for fortilication 117 

Braudv used for fortiiieatiou 453 



Port produced 

Muscat produced ... 
Angelica produced. 



ocTonFK, 1894. 



Brandy witiidrawn from distiilerj' foi- for- 
tification 714 

15randy withdrawn from sjiecial bonded 

wareliouse for fortilication 198 

Brandy used for fortilication 1 ,0 1 6 

Port produced 

Sherry produced 

Muscat produced 

Angelica produced 

Malaga produced 

Frontignan produced 

Lenoir produced 



NOVEMBKK, 1891. 

Ilrandy withdrawn from distillery for for- 
tification 

r.randy withdrawn from special bonded 
warehouse for fortilication 

Hrandv Ui-ed for fortilication 



Pkgs. 

556 

27 
583 



Tax Gals. 

37,584.90 

8,936 00 
38,334.70 

AVine Gals. 

141,672.91 

518.44 

4,652.55 

Tax Gals. 

II. ••.,920.40 

14,7.'{3..50 
13(;,:".64.30 

Wine Gals. 

324,426.86 

143,749.73 

4, .W 1.4 7 

44,194.16 

2,795.89 

6,133.27 

949.87 

Tax Gals. 

89,882.20 

1.823.50 
91,792.60 



Ml-. .1. !''• Newman has opened an oflice at 47 Vesey street, 
New York, its commission merchant and broker in California 
wines and brandies. 



'rni;.\si'KV r)i<;i'.\KTMi;.NT, \ 

Ofvick ok the Commissionku ok Internal Revenue, [â–  
il'csliiii'/liin, Jainiary /.7, ISOo, ) 

i;. M. \\ooD ('()., Publithetv J'ltcijic Wine and Spirit Review, 
oljf-^ilt! liiiltcnj St., San Francisco : 
SlKs : In compliance with the re(Hiest contained in yours 
of the 4tli instant I enclose for your information a copy of the 
regulations recently issued (Circular No. 431 ) cnncerninij snccen- 
xionx anil ehanije.s ofMi/leK hij iliMilhrx. This shows the full scope of 
the ruling; but should you desire further information on any 
point, please so advise this office. Respectfully yours, 

Jos. S. MlLLEK, Commia-iionrr. 



Treasdrv Department, ") 

Office of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, [- 

Washington, November 27, 1894. ) 

It is hereb}' prescribed that hereafter, whenever a change in 
the owership or opei'ation of any distillery shall take place, in 
fact, by a change in the person or persons engaged in operating 
the distillery, or whenever a nominal change shall occur by rea- 
son of a change in the name or style in which the person or 
persons operating a distillery conduct their busine.ss, in either 
case the operation and business of producing distilled .spirits 
shall be completely finished in all respects l)y the person or per- 
sons lirst carrj'ing on the business, or by the distiller desiring to 
change his name or style, before the business shall be undertaken 
or begun by the person or persons succeeding to the operation 
of the distillery, or b^' the distiller operating under a diflerent 
name or style. 

All mash or beer upon the distillery premises must lie fer- 
mented and distilled by tiie distiller outgoing or changing name, 
and all spirits on the distillery premises shall be run into the 
cistern room, before a mash shall be made or fermented by the 
incoming distiller, or by the distiller operating under a new or 
ditl'erent name or style. 

An}' per.son, firm, company or corporation engaged in car- 
rying on the business of distilling and intending to transfer its 
business to another person or to other persons, desiring to 
change the name or style as aforesaid, shall give notice to the 
eollector of the district of intention to su.spend business under 
its name or style then employed, upon the prescribed Form 124, 
and upon the day mentioned in said notice the collector or his 
deputy shall attend and duly afiix locks to all the furnace doors 
of said distillery. 

The succeeding distiller, distilling firm or corporation, or 
the distiller changing the iianit^ or style, shall thereupon give 
notice in the prescribed manner on Form 'J7i/ of intention to 
carry on the business of distilling from and after such date, and 
under such name or stjle as may be set forth in said notice. 

But the collector will decline to accejit said notice of inten- 
tion to carry on business or to approve tiie bond of a succeding 
distiller, or to recognize the distiller under a changed name or 
style unless he is informed by his deputy, or by the otlicer in 
charge of the distillery that full compliance has been made with 
the foregoing provisions of this regulation, and that all mash or 
beer and spirits on the distillery premises have been disposed of 
il« hereinbefore prescribed, on or before the date of said jiroposed 
suspension of business, and will order and direct the officers on 
duty at such distillery accordingly. 

It is further prescribed that the date of original inspection, 
tiie distiller's name, the district and State, and the registered 
nunilicr of the distillery shall be burned niion the stamp head 
of ail distillers packages which niay remain inanywarehou.se 
longer than six months, and if the said marks were cut upon 
the package upon entry intotlu" warehouse they shall be burned 
in with a branding iron uiion removal after the expiration of 
six niontiis. 

So nnich of any regulation heretofore issued as is inconsist- 
ent with tlicst' regulations is hereby revoked. 

Jos. S. Mii.leu, Commissioner. 

Approved: J. G. Carlisle, Secretiiry of State. 



Mktapiiok — <) let the aims be lofty 

M'hich animate your soul ; 
High as the star of evening — 
iligh as the price of coal. — Detroit Free Prccs. 



f/rSlfie WIJME f^fiQ Sflf^IT [REVIEW 



15 



Imports and Exports 

DURING THE PAST FORTNIGHT. 



EXPORTS OF WINE. 



TO CENTUAL AMERICA— Pku Str Comma, Jan 18, 1895. 



IIKSTINATION. 



Ol'OS 

Acajiitla 

I'untas Aivnns 

Acajiltlu 

Sail J do (riiatt'inala. 
La LiberUd 



Acajiitla 

San J lit' Oiiatemala. 
Champcrico 

San J de Gnatcmala . 

Acajulla 

LaLibeitad 



La Uiiliin. 



CWA, CCarpy &Co. 

T (luiuUaili &Co 



Cal W Aesociatioii. 

A Vij^nier 

C Schilling ,t Co... 



PA( KAUES. 



Sn cases 

20 casct. 

1 hf-lmrifl... 
li hf-lmni-ls.. 

40 cases 

5 barrels 

20 lif-barrels. 

30 lieKS 

50 packages. , 

C cases 

li caset- 



li barrels 

^kcfjs 

lo keij;s 

44 barrels. . . . 
11 lif-bairels. , 

3s cases 

30 cages 

4 keys 



Total amount ITG cases and. 



154 



250 
54 T 
300 
240 



314 

42 

530 

2,320 

310 



40 
5,080 



$ 149 

143 

28 
47 
102 

77 

lei 

240 
325 

12 

22 
165 

37 
381 
994 
105 
ISO 
120 

M 

t8,3S5 



TO MEXICO— Pee Str. Colima, Jan. 18, 1895. 



San Benito . 



C W A, C Carpy & Co. 



Maitatlan 

Sail IJciiito 

San Bias 

San Benito 

San Bias 

San Benito \V A Schultz it Sons... 



Tonala . 



Paul Masson 

\V Loaiza it Co 

Ini^lenook Vineyard... 
C Sobillins; it Co 



J Ivancovich 

Inglenook Vineyard. 
M Koderiguez 



6 eases 

8 kegs 

'ikens 

30 ke|;s 

5 casks 

25 kei;8 5 pki^s 
.-1 cases 

4 lif-barrels 

lOkegs 

5 kegs 

Ibbia kegs.. 
4 barrels 



Total amonnt 9 cases and. 



80 
10 

300 
150 
300 



117 
102 
50 
70 
120 

1,299 



$ 42 

66 
9 

84 
75 
275 
15 
(i8 

rA 

15 
40 
141 

?.S84 



TO EUROPE VIA NEW YORK— Pee Str. Progreso, Jan. 20, 1895. 



Hamburg; 


j Inglenook Vinej ard 

G Sieber 


1 barrel 


50 


If 35 




20U 


(I 




211 


SO 


Bordea'ix. . . 


Voss, Conrad & Co 

amount 84 cases and 


1 lif-barrel 

IS cases .... 


10 
2S0 










Total 


288 


»605 



TO NEW YORK-Per Str. Peogiieso, Jan. 20, 1895. 



New York. 


nl aniouu 


Cal W Association 

Lacbman it Jacobi 

J Uiehr 


1425 barrels 

IIIK) barrels 

5 bills 4 kegs 

10 barrels 

li barrcit 

1 barrel 

3 hf-barrels 


71 
55 

127 


,251) 
,490 
284 
500 

2SS 
48 
102 

,962 


»19,C25 

11,635 

114 




J L Koster 

Wolteis Bros it Co 

P MSS Co 


200 

100 

15 

107 


To 




»31,79fi 



TO PANAMA— Per 8tr. Proobeso, Jan. 


20 


1895. 






516 


(lliO 




45 


" Dempster it Co 10 barrels 


521 
1,087 


105 


Total amount 11 cases and 


$310 


TO HONOLULU— Per Str. Australia, Jan 


21, 1895. 





Honolulu. 



Lacbman it .lacobi 

(?al W .Vssociation 

Iii^rlenook Vineyard. . . . 

1' (1 Sabalie.tt'o 

P Lewis 

J H Boden it Co 

C W A, Holder & Van V. 



Iliiliall-Swifis Colony.. 



â– )0 ket'i 
10 bbls 5 bf-b 15 k 

30 cases 

7 cases 

2 cases 

3 octayes 

10 barrels 

I bf-barrel 

30 kegs 

1)0 barrels 



Total amonnt 39 eases and. 



2.511 
,22li 



(ill 

510 

26! 

30Ot 
i,120! 



ii;i9 

575 

85 
92 
12 
60 

210 
15 

1311 
l,i:.ti 



6,492' »2,974 



TO JAPAN AND CHINA -Per Str. BKUiie, Jan. 22, 1895. 



Hiogo 

Yokohama 



C Scliilliiif» it Co 

CWA, CCarpy it Co .. 
CWA, KohlentVanB. 



Sbangliai 

Total amount 6 cases and. 



5 barrels 

10 barrels 

6 cases 

3 barrels 



260 
470 



154 
884 



f 91 

Ifjil 
20 
40 

1301 



TO HONOLULU— Per Bkt. Plantek, Jan. 23. 1895. 



Honolulu. 



C Scbllliug & Co 

(I 

CWA, C Carpy it Co . . 



Lenormaiid Bros. . 
CWA, Kolilent F. 



100 kegs 

20 octaves 

lease 

1 keg 

20 bbls 30 kegs . . . 

2 barrels 

9qr-csks 3 casks.. 



Total amount 1 case and 



Sou 

421 



10 

1,179 

106 

4,50| 



$ 271 



270 

432 
9 

HI 
54S 

7.5 
200 



2,666' |:l,344 



TO MEXICO— Per Str. St. Paul, Jan. 25, 189.5. 



Guaymas. 



Ensenada . 



FSKordt 

CWA, Kobler it F 

CWA, CCarpy it Co.. 

B Frapolli it Co 

C H.liilliiii; it Co 

Jnscpli Mclczer it Co , 

W Loaiza it Co 



C Carpy it Co 

E Gamier it Co... 
C Scbilling it Co... 



8 kegs 

2 bbls 1 lif-bbl... 
10 kegs 1 lif-cask, 

10 kegs 

1 hf-bbl 

1 barrel 

6 kegs 

4 barrels 

4 kegs 

2 barrels 

5 barreU 

3 kegs 

1 barrel 



Total amount . 



40 

130 

i:<4 

100 

2' 

4' 

60 

202 

40 

102 

259 

60 

53 

1.254 



t 20 
40 
60 
3.5 
26 
.54 
30 
25 
34 
31 
65 
28 
24 

*4r2 



TO HILO— Per Ship Santiago, Jan. 25, 1895. 



flilo.. 


Pae Transfer Co 

C Schilling it Co.... 
" J Gniidlach it Co.... 

Total amount 


... 1 hf-barrel 

.. . 3 barrels 


35 

1.58 
355 

538 


125 

95 
1 95 






$.315 





TO PANAMA— Per Str. San Bi.as, Jan 28, 1895. 




Panama. . 


Migliayacca Wine Co . . 35 bf-barrels 


975 


|:198 


I 


" 50 cases 




142 


* 


Cal W Association 12 casks 


753 


296 


To 


Ill aniniiiit .VI cases ami 


1,72H 


*6;iG 



WM. WOLFF & CO., 

Importers and General Agents, 



327-329 Market Street, 



San Francisco, Cal. 



FJ^CDXFXC OO.A.ST J^G-EIbTTS IB'CDTt 



POMMERY SEC CHAMPAGNE 

J. & F. MiRTELL OOONAO 

MINERAL WATERS of the APOLLINARIS CO., Limited, 

HUN'iARlAN APERIENT WATER 

FRIEDRICllSHAlX APERIENT WATER 

MORGAN BRO.. PORT ST. MARYS' SHERRIES 

DIXON'S DOUBLE DIAMOND PORT 

ROYAL WINE CO.. OPORTO, Port WIdm 

OUBOS ERERES, BORDEAUX, Ch«t3 and Siatsniea 

I.V-(»il>or(fil American IVIilsklCK- 
Staple brands. 



HOCK WINES, fpim Messrs. Henkell & Co., Mayciifo 
BURGUNDY WINES from F. CHAUVENEF, NUITS 
London JnllN do KUYPER & SONS, Rotterdam. GIN 

tlAiU'liOLOMAY BREWER! CD.. R vhe.sler, N. Y. 
EXTRA FINE STANDARD, BOHEMIAN and the 
"KNICKERBOCKBR" 
"DOG'S-HEAD" BRAND of Guinness' Stont and Baas' Ale 
CANTRELL & COCHRANES Belfast Gmger Ale 
LONDON Duck Jamaica Ram 
-";r, Excelsior; Spr. 'N9 Belle of Nelson; Sjir. 'S9 Blue Ora»n 
Lowest market ijuotations furnished on application, to Ibe 



CANADIAN CLUB WHISKY Ima Messrs. HIRAM 

WALKER & SONS Ltd., W;iikor\'ill«, Canada. 
ANDREW USHER & COS S.-.iteh Wliiskiea 
JAME.SON & CO., IRISH WHISKY 
THEO. LAPl'ES GENUINE AROMATIQUg 
GILKA KUMMEL 

SUFTjN, garden A: CO., London, Old Tom Gin 
UDOIJHO WOLFE'S SON & CO., Schiedam, SHNAPPS 

Hiime,lMayfield; O. F. C; Cbickencock and othw O 
wholesale trade only 



16 



f/reifie WIJME /rJMD Sflf^lT F^EVIE\/V. 



TO i:i:nti 


:AL AMKRICA— Pbr Str. San Blas^ Jan 


. 28, 1895 




Acnjiida 


CWA,CCarpvv'iCo.... 


I lit'-burrel 


28 


« ii; 


Chain perico 

Corinto 


CWA, Kohler& F 






.'jti 


I lif-bl.l 1 keg ... . 


KB 


15 


>t 


Lachninn it Jacobi 


7 barrels . . . 


liiO 


175 


it 


24 cases 


100 


At-ajutla 


1 hf-banel 


3» 


14 


>( 


CSchiIlin-& Co 


IHO cases 




4(IS 


Coriiilo 


Uke-s 


154 


120 




" 


20 bf-barrcls 


rm 


K60 


'• 


'* 


24 barrels 


1,254 


SO.'. 


tt 


" 


Hi cases 




7:i 


San Jde Guatemala.. 




li barrels 


:il4 


IS'J 


" 


" 


y bf-barrcls 


250 


150 


CliamperUo 


Inirlenook Vineyard 


CtCi cases 




4S5 


" 


" 


.V2 ke-s 


520 


235 






5o cases 

5 barrels . . . . 


21 IB 


las 






1.S5 


• » 


• * 


4 bf-banels 


las 


77 




Castle Bros 


37 keijs 


3U2 


2fi2 




fiO cases 


185 


•» 1 




1 bf-barrcl 


27 


20 


Cliampeiito C A Wftnion* 


H2 cases 




232 


Aiajntla V Korbel A Uro 


;> bf-barrels 


S2 


38 


.i tt 




4(ii; 


210 








Tola! amonnt 


;J8fi cases anil 




4, '.Kir, 


«4,54 



TO 


MEXICO— Pbr Soiitt. Czar, Jan. 29, 1895. 










t 1.58 




UWA Koblei- it Van B. . 12 kegs 


23S 
300 


85 


Mazallan 


*» (i liai-reli". 

" 10 casfs 


95 

90 


.. 


.1 Guiidlach A Co 23 barn-Is 

ilIit-baiTcl 

30kej;^ 


1,427 

20 

570 


421 

10 

21S 


Total amount 


50 cases and 


2..50I 


?1.0S3 



TO TAHITI— Pek Str. City of Papeete, Jan. .30, 189.5. 



Tabiti 


PGSabalie .V: Co 


12 barrels 


.520 
1.54 


* 104 




39 




A Vignicr 

CWA, C Carpy & Co.... 

E G Lyons Co 

1 c.Tst"^ anil 




20 




1 cask 

50 ban-els 

5 hf-barrt'ls 

1 Ill-barrel 


32 

2,.5(;i; 

141 

28 


10 
775 

57 
14 


T..l:il ail Ill 


3,541 


« 1.025 



IMPORTS OF WINES AND LIQUORS BY SEA. 



FRO.M VICTOUIA, Per Stb. City of Puebia, Jan. 21st— 46 cases bitters. From 
overland— 15 cases liiinors. 

FROM EUnOI'E AND NEW YOIIK. Pek .Stu. Satiiun, .T.an. 271b -1 cask wine; 
100 cases fei net,; 1 barrel bot I led beei ; 5 barrels mineral water. 

FROM NEW YORK- Per Snip C. F. (Jakes, .Ian. 3l6t— So barrels, 200 cases 
wbiskv; 25 barrels rum. 

FROM EUROPE OVERLAND BY RAIL IN BOND, From .Tannary 15tli to Janu- 
ary 31, 1895 — 1004 case.s cliampagne; 000 cases mineral watei-; 125 eases j;in ; 10 
eases brandy ; .50 cases cosriiae. 

EXPORTS OF BRANDY TO DOMESTIC PORTS BY SEA. 



From January I.5tli to January 31, 1895. 



DESTINATION. 



Progreso New York 

Total amount 



Berin;;er Brn? 



PACKAGES. 



1 lif-bbi . 



Overland I'T Co... 5 barrels. 



OAT.T.ONK VALUE. 



2l'| 
230| 

25fi' 



* 00 
325 

$SS5 



EXPORTS OF BRANDY TO FOREIGN PORTS BY SEA. 

From January IStli to January ol, 1895. 



VESSEL. 


DESTINATION. 


SHIPPERS. 


PACKAOES. 


OALLONS 


VALCa. 


Pro<;reso 

Ausli'alia 


Bordeaux 

Honolulu 

Mazallan 

Guayinas 

Cliamiierico 


Voss, Conrad & Co 
CWA, B D.tCo .. 
PG SabalieACo.. 
<! Sehillini,' A Co... 

l^anl Masson 

B Frapcdii .V: Co. . , 

C A Wet more 

P M S SCo 

id 


20 cases... 
2 barrels. .. 


iiio 


»130 
150 


Planter 

St Paul 

San Bias 


5 barrels. .. 
4 bari'els .. . 

2llf-bl>l8... 

4 cases 


245 

195 

51 


220 
59 
04 

41 
UK) 


Total amount 35 cases ai 






.591 


?77r, 



EXPORTS OF MISCELLANEOUS LIQUORS BY SEA. 



From January 15tb to January 31, 1895. 



Planter. . .% 

Australia... 



San Bias. 



DESTLTJATION. 



Honolulu. 



Aeajulla. 



Tlios Taylor & Co. 
F I)e Bary A Co... 
W B Cliapman 



A Vij'nier. 



PEGS * tONT. 



13 csBittere 

20 cs Cbam'gne. 

5 cs Gin 

10 cs Cbam'fjne. 
10 cs Vermouth 



Tidal ami>unt 5S eases, etc 



*117 

249 

14 

150 

30 

*50G 



EXPORTS OF WHISKY BY SEA. 



From January 15th to Jan lary 31, 1895. 



Colima. 



.\uslralia. 
Planter . . 



SI Paul .. 
San Bias. 



DESTINATION. 



Czar. . 



GRD, Mazallan.. 
Bi^jA, Acajutla .. 
Itll, Kan Benito.. 



/., ('hampci'ico. .. 

.11,, Oeos 

P.tCo.SanJdeG 

DA&Co, HJdeO . 

LB.tCo, La Lib.. 

WitCo, Acajutla. 

M.tcCo, Honolulu 

IIWC, 

EH*Co, 

C. 

l^VtC. Guaymas. . 

FS, 

MF, Acajutla.... 

.M. Ch:uni)erieo. . 

GS.ViCo, Cb.am'co 

AE, S J de G.... 

A.I, Ai'ajulla .. . 

JL, La Libertad. 



Total amount 202 cases and 



SHIPPERS. 


PACKAGES. 


GALLONS 


VALUE. 


CWA, C Carpy A Co 


Ikes 


8 


$ 18 


L 8 Ha.as . 


4 barrels 

2 barrels 


164 
81 


253 


Sherwood &S 


122 


Crown Dist Co .... 


10 cases 




185 






44 


eases 




108 


'* 


30 cases. . . 




278 


»* 


411 cases 




:i7i) 


Schilliui; & Co... 


1 barrel 


85 


70 


Wm Wolir ,ViCo. .. 


10 cases 




IIM 


Grown Dist Co 


75 cases. . . . 




499 


C Sibillini; .V: Co .. 


Ill i-a.-^cs .. . 




'.HI 


CWA, Koblcr.V F . 


Ill cs \ csk 


:«i 


l.MI 


Tho> Taylor .t Co.. 
los Melczcr .t Co.. 






325 


1 kei; 


10 


30 


W Loaiza it Co 


2 barrels. . 


82 


103 


CWA, CCarpv&Co 


1 kcK 


10 


;!ii 


Jrown Dist Co 


4 cases 




72 


" 


20 cases 




170 


»' 


11 cases. . . . 




i:s.s 


** 


I barrel .... 


57 


220 


L'ari'oll >t Carroll . . 


1 barrel 


44 


79 


" 


2 cases 




90 


Cbas Ell HeiseA Co 


1 barrel 


47 


30 










and 




508 


*:i.590 



SHERWOOD ^ SHERWOOD, 



IMPORTERS AND EXPORTERS' 



212-214 MARKET STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 



24. N. FRONT STREET, PORTLAND, OR. 



"Kcusloiie jllonogrniti il^i^" and **(OIft Snrnloga*' — The Finest Eastern "Ryes. 



MOET .t CIIANUON CHAMPAGNE 
HUNT ROOPE TEAOE A- CO. Cased Porta, 
g. \ 1. BUKKE'S lri.sh and Scotch Whi.skies, 



ESCHENAUER & GO'S CLARETS and SAUTBRNES, 
A. HOUTMAN .V CO'S HOIXAND (ilN. 
LAWSON'S LIQUEUR SCOTCH WHISKEY, 



BASS RATCLIFK & GREnON, Limited— Ba.«i Ale in Wood, (iUlNNE,«' DUHLIN STOUT in Wood, 



E. A- J. BURKE'S ai.s,V Ale and Dublin Porter (GUINNESS 

EXTRA COREIGN STOUT, the finesl brew). 
fLKlSCHMANNS ROYALTY GIN. 



.lOULE'.S STONE ALE in Hlids. and Hf-Hhda. 
MEINHOLU'S ANCHOR BRAND NEW YORK CIDER, 
HENK WAUKESHA Mineral Water, 

•Ror.iN Hoop," "O. P. S." ANii "PiiivATi; Stock 



MACKENZIE & CO'S S|ianisli Slierrics and Ports 

E. & J. BURKE'S NllNPAREll, OLD TOM GIN. 

BURKE'S HENNESSV BRANDY iind DRY GIN 

SCHLITZ MILWAUKEE BEER the "Pilsener" and Light SpirklinR 

also SCHLITZ in Wi»d, 
ROSS' BELFAST GINGER ALE. CLUB SODA, ETO. 
"CLUB COCKTAILS," EVANS HUDSON ALE 



ItMS.-KAM, GiiiisTi.i'.y iV Co., Piiii.Anii.iiiiA, I'i'iii; Whiskies: —"Mascot, ' 

III -nirolt 11.11 AMLItK tS nillSIiirS rtiillstr ll,nnhi,i>. Sinlnii •.<./. '.SY.-, •SI). •DO; llovsiy Itiir: O. /•'. C: Sprliiahlll: 11'. 11. MrJlrayer 

llirmiliiiir: M. I. Mniiii irh : hi„l„<U\i ilnh: Mill uiinil : Miillliiiil \i: < hiihtinml.-: /.'. « '. l:,rrii ti iitt iil hrr slii iidil lil Inn nils. 

Alto Agents For NAPA VALLEY WINE CO'S WINES AND BRANDIES IN CASES. California Wines and Brandies in Wood. 



f/tSlfie WIfJE /fjND Spif^lT f^EVIEW 



17 



MISCELLANEOUS FOREIGN WINE SHIPMENTS. 



Fii-m J;%iiii;irv IJtIi l«> .I;iiiii;it\ -W, l^'.t.■, 



BEER IMPORTS BY RAIL. 



riniitilla 

SValia Walla. 



Sail Bias. 



DESTINATION. 



Vancouver 
Victoria . . . 



Man/.nnint) . . . 
Granada 



SHII TKUS. 

F rnvaynara 

r DcTnrk 

Woltrrs llros 

E UarnuT ,t Co... 
Overland F T Co . 



PACK AG BS. 



I Imrrd . 
5 liarrcls,. 
I )il'-l>hl . 

1 hill (i ('nst'S 

2 casks. . 



'ri>l:il ainoiiiit t". fares and , 



UALLOMS 


VALUK. 


51| 
255l 

as' 

iiii 

I'll! 


$31 
lit 

::t 
lid 


4('<l) 


.*.'•; 1 



WHISKY AND SPIRIT IMPORTS BY RAIL. 



From January 15lli to January 31, 1895. 





SPIRITS. 






WHISKY. 






COHSIONRKS. 


Barrels 


Cases 


Cases 


Barrels 

7.5 

3 

.58 
75 
GO 


K bbls 


Kejjs 


Misc. 


Ciowii nislillerk's Co.. 
.Ii»iu'>. Miiiuly *.t Co . . 

llll lilV Slnrr-ket^lHT .. 

Will Wolff iV: Co 

(' W Craiu it Co 

H .M.niiii iVCo 

A Saiisi-lt 


275 

'/•- 
115 
350 






Tlios Taylor A Co 














S Mi-Cartiu'V 














Livingston *>: Co 














Cliri.^iv & WLse 






51 








Loewe Bros 






111) 
511 


30 






Moore, Hunt it Co .... 
Lanalcv it Michael!'... 
RediuKton .t Co . * 






iio 

I'll 




J L. Nickel iVCo 






4 








Sherwood iV S f 
















io 







.\ Qnacle A Co 










W H liins; 








1 
I 

3 






G DehKlii 














Lielini:in it Waters.... 














J I) I'lench X 








1 




Total 


945 




231 


405 


30 







- barrels Liquors. 

■ -M cases Li»|Uors, 
+ I ease Li'tuc»rs. 



ALCOHOL, GIN, BRANDY AND RUM IMPORTS BY RAIL. 



From January 15tb to January 31, IS95. 



CONSIGNEES. 


ALUOHOL, 


GIN. 


BRANDY. 


KUM. 


Cases 


Barrels 

5 


Cases 


octaves 


Cases. 


Barrels 


Barrels 


Crown Distilleries Co.. 






50 




CO 


Wni Wolff it Co. 






















15 


S (ilnser 

W C Chapman 








III 






30 










5 
5 

Ml 








.M.ick it Co 


:;â–  .:â– ;::;: 




1 










Tol.il 




::o 


10 


.")0 




T,") 



lliril.\i:li HEI.I.MAXN. 



From January 15lh to January 31, IS'JS. 







BOTTLBD 




nULK. 




Cases 


Barrels 


Casks 


Barrels 

85 
22 

3.5 

U. 


'A hbl }{ bbl 


Ke^h 


W Boiieii A Co 








30 




SO 


Sherwood it Sherwood 

Thaiihauser it (Jo 

Uoyal Kiiirle UisI Co... 

li i; S.hiil/. 

Will Wolff ite Co 


151) 

' â–  " 12.5 


210 

........ 

32 


ioi 


120 
40 

I '.HI 


200 
80 

â– JSI 


Tolal 


._,|S 


llll 


SI) 



NATIONAL IMPORTS AND EXPORTS, 



IMPOKTS. 



Ite-imported spirits, proof gallons., 

Miiitrnl water, itallons 

Malt liijuors, liotlUs, gallons 

jMall lic|iiors, hulk, jialloiis 

llraiuly, proof â– ;alloiis 

All oilier spirils, |iroof j^^allous 

Champairne, (lo/.eil 

Slill wines, casks, ^^allons. 

Slill wines, bottles, dozen 



Nov., 1.S'.I4. 



Quantity 

S.304 
200.1411 

li5,57:; 
12:1,051 

20 031 
IOC.,: 

29,915 
29S,.S.Hs 

29,99 



Value 



Nov., 189;j. 



Quantilyl Value 



* 7. con 
r.4.:ioi; 
ii:i.9l4 

:i7,."i,52| 
01,22;; 

118.143 
452,SliO 
21S,448| 

1.55,:ioil 



s,'>,:ioi 

207,999 
;5,:J70 
i.50.ii;M 

21,299 
90,800 
24,1.59 
:524,200 
28,4.8;) 



EXPORTS. 



Malt liquoi-s, bottled, dozen 

Malt liquois, bulk, gallons 

Alcohol, etc., proof jjallons 

Brandy, proof ;;aIloiis 

ISnni, jiroof ^callous 

Dcmrbon whisky, proof s;allons. 

Uye whisky, proot <;allons 

Ail other spirils, proof gallons. 

Wine in bottles, dozen 

Wine in hulk, trallons 



Nov., 


1894. 


Nov., 


(Jiiaiitily 


Value 


Quantity 


28.829 


$ :i7,l4C 


2S,C37 


17.2IVi 


4.7.53 


24,200 


27,071 


9.110 


5,9:i0 


1.071 


1,313 


9,919 


102,222 


i:i7,i)ol 


177,719 


19.751 


2:i.(K>:i 


140,7.50 


1 200 


2,511 


8,990 


2:3,27:! 


10,148 


• 2.8,011 


1041 


4,120 


983 


79.710 


:«.272 


55,.50:! 



* 79 

:s8, 
7:<, 
49 
02, 
103, 
:iiiO, 

2 Hi, 

13: 

189:5. 



704 
:J0.' 
449 
9.)li 
0.8» 
820 
,009 
.112 
.091 



* :m, 



9, 

212, 

147 

9, 

15, 

4. 

20, 



500 
805 
.548 
0011 
177 
285 
440 
404 
.21 
1)2 



EXPORTS OF FOREIGN LIQUORS. 



Re-imported spirils, proot gallons. 

Mineral Water, ijaUons 

Malt ^nlnor^. hot lied, gallons 

Malt lh|iioiv., hulk, gallons 

liraiuly, proof trallons 

-Ml other spirits, proof gallons 

tniaiiipagne, dozen 

Still wines, casks, gallonr. 

Slill wines, bottles; doz 



Nov., 1894. 



Quantity 



172 



220 
7.53 
079 
221 

:iO 



Value 



5 (iO 



182 



Nov , 1893. 



Quantity 



042 
1,3.34 

8,928j 
101; 
114' 



143 

240 
1.904 

l,:5:i:i 

15 

:!.5ii 



Value 



148 

79 
4 7S0 
1,275 

202 
i:iO 
.509 



iMii.i'in. Ky.. .J;iiiu;iiv '-â– "'. IMi."). 
Editiir I'dcific Wine 11 ml Spiiit. Jierliiv — Sir: I liclicvi; tliat 
tlio. silvtM- lining i.s Ix^ginuiiig to ppcp out of tlie <l:u-k cloud 
that lias litiiig so long and low over tlie ti-adc. and ho|)|. that '95 
will leave distillers in a more iirosperous condition than â– i>4. T 
feel much encoui-aged. My goods are moving nicely. A\'e have 
shipped five hundred haiTels in the last month. 

Respectfullj', Ki) Muui-nv, 

I?elle of .Vnderson Coniity Tlislillery. 

II. i;. lIKI.f.MANN 



HELLMANN BROS. & CO. 

-->->->^->^-MMPORTERb AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS ---'^-=- 
525 Front Street - - - San Francisco, Cal. 



»j-.j~.j-^ 



PACIFIC COAST AGENTS FOR 



J. PERKIER FILS & CO., Chalons s Mame, ClKirapiii-i.c 

ADRIEN & FILS, Epemav - - Champ,i>.-m- 

FORRESTER & CO., Xerez de la Frontera, Shernrs 

OARVEY & CO., - - - Shemes 

OFFLEY. CRAMP & FORRESTER, Oporto, Port Wines 

BUNKENHEYM & NOLET. R/itlerdam, Union Gin 
CH. LECHAT, R. PHILIPPE & CHESSE, Nantes, Sardines 



DUBLIN DISTILLERS- CO., Lfd, Dublin, 
E. REMY MARTIN & CO.. Rouillac, 
P. FRAPIN & CO., Segrmzac, 
ENGRAND FRERES, Angonleme, 

PATTERSON & HIBBERT, London, 



Irish Whiskey 
Cognacs 



\ Sass' and Gainness' 
j Stout 



L. DURLACHER, Bin?en - - Rhine Wine 

H. UNDERBERG ALBRECHT, Rheinberg a Niederrhein, 

Boooekamp Bitters 



CHAS. DAY & CO., London, 

J. B. RERRIFF & CO., Glasgow, 



J Old Tom Gin 

I Orange Bitter? 

(Scotch Whisky 

i Jamaica Rums 



ALL GOODS IN UNITED STATES BONDED WAREHOUSES. 

AMERICAN WHISKIES "Blue Grass" and "Boone's Knoll" 



18 



f/reifie WIJsIE /c^fsID Sflf^lT PREVIEW, 



THE RENOWNED JOHANNISBERG VINEYARD, 

Mr. Lconanl A. Jenkins, (Jfrinany, writos: •• Joliaiinisberij, 
now the property of Prince llii'liard Metternicii, son of tiie fa- 
mous statesman, wlio reeeived it as a }jift from the iMnjieror 
Fi-ancis, is situated on the rijjht bank of the Uiiine, an hour's 
(hiv<' above tlie |)ietures(iue viHage of Rudesheim. Kroni the 
terrace of t lie castle, which crowns the Iiill, is seen to tli(! left the 
witle expan.se of beautiful level country called the Hhineyan, 
through which the majestic river winds its way until lost to 
sight at the right in the narrow valley formed by the hills of 
liingen and the Niederwald, The monks of the middle ages not 
only kept alive the llame of learning, acted as schooi-inaHters, 
advocates, iihysieians and apotheeai'ies, fed and clothed the poor, 
visited the sick, and otl'ered spiritual consolation io all, but they 
were the fust agricr.iturists of their time, and scented out with 
infallible accuracy Just those hill-sides which would grow tiie 
best vines and pi'oduce the choicest wines. For eight centuries 
they cultivat4'd the grape upon Joliannisberg. Four hundred 
years ago they built tiie S|)len(lid cellar with the massive arches 
upon which tlu' modei'n castle stands, and built it so well that 
when in Isi;! the retreating I'"reneh ainiy attempting to blow it 
up, after drinking all the wine, their i)itiful barrel of gnnpowdi/r 
made no moir impression upon the solid masonry than it would 
iiave made upon the everlasting hills. The territory upon which 
this wine of uusurpassed e.xcellence can bo raised, is small, and 
therefore very valuable, and tlie best wine sells at the cellar for 
ten to twelve dollars a bottle. Nowhere el.se in the world is to 
bo found land devoted to agricultural purposes, which is estima- 
ted at such a figure. Yet it is not always profitable. Some 
years th(! expenses are twenty thousand dollars more than the 
income, for however unfavorable the season, the elaborate culti- 
vation must go on as usual. Of course it is onlj' a jji-oprielor 
proud of owning the pattern of tlui world, and to whom profit 
and loss u]ion this small item in his estate is of no consequence, 
who can afford to keep up such a vineyard. The soil is on an 
average seventy-five centimeters deep, and consists of a finely 
divided clay slate, <'on(aining iron, calcium and phosphates. 
These ingredients of the soil may appear in such varied propor- 
tions, within a radius of fifty feet, that the best and poorest 
parts of the vineyard may be separated by a distance not greater 
llian this radius. 

'• The grape which has found such favor liere is the Ries- 
ling, a strong, hardy vine, which, if uninjured, will bear profit- 
ably for forty-five years. To retain thi^ strength of the land, it 
is dressed every two years with stabhi manure whi(!h has been 
thoroughly mixed with pho.sj)hates. After the vines cease bear- 
ing, till! land lies fallow a couple of years, and is then re-iilantcd 
with young vines, which are set out in groups of three. The 
first year tliey will grow u)) clinging to a pole. The second year 
only one grows upward, and the two others are trained horizon- 
tally toward the neighboring vines, about a foot from the ground, 
facing as nearly north and south as possible. The third year the 
vine thai grew up is triniiiKMl to one side, and the vine which 
took this position the previous year is trained upward. In the 
fourth year this operation is repeated, except that the vine which 
has IjecMi trained horizontally for two years exchanges places 
with the viiK! that has grown upward. Ry this rotation each 
vino is trained hoi-izontally for two years and shoots up the 
third. It is claimed that when tlu! vino is trained horizontally 
it viclds a larger ipiantity of gra])es than when grown uprighi, 
and the grapes are better jirotectcd from the burning rays of tlu^ 
sun, yet kept warmer through proximity to the earth. The vine 
is, however, exhausted at tin; end of a few years if it does not 
receive periods of rest by being permitted tr) grow up toward 
the light. 

" The vintage occurs either at the end of October or begin- 
ning of November according to tlu^ character of tlu^ season. 
The wine of the same yi^ar is divided into thrtie grades. The 
first quality consists of wines made from tint best grapi^s picked 
by hand from tlieliiicst bunches. A .si^cond picking gives the 
second ciuality, and all the remaining grapes go to make up the 
third. After all llic! wini! is in tlie wood, it is |)laced in the 
vaults below IIk^ castle, in which the temperature, summer and 
winter, does not perceptibly vary more ihaii .seven to nine de- 
grees. When th(! wine arrives at the proper stage it is bottled 
and sold. A yearly auction takes phure, when much of the 
wine is disposed of to the higluist bidder. Many of the liner 
gradcB go directly into private hands, and not a few to the vari- 
ous courts of iMirope." 



Late Season in Champagne Districts. 

Di.iON-, France, Sept. 25. — It is a late year along the Cote 
d'Or. Last autumn, in the Champagne districts, they were 
plucking the grapes in the last week of August, This fall they 
liave scarcely yet begun in the last days of Seiiteiiiber. Last 
year was the dry year of ISil.S; within the memory of man tlio 
grapes had never hung so full and crowded from the vines. 
This year is the wet year of 1S'.I4, and the inspectors scowl at 
humble pickers when they eat an t^vtra bunch of grapes. The 
sky is cloudy. It has rained again. The; sky is liluish lead, the 
hills are bluish green. And the blue blouses of the men and 
the blue skirts of the girls combine with the blue-gray morning 
mists to form "A Key of lilue," which would be more to the 
delicate taste of the late Addington Symonds than to the unfor- 
tunate peasant proprietors, who, nevertheless, at least feel blue. 

If you wish to see the busiest picking you must go out in 
the misty early morning, almost at the break of day. The pick- 
ing ordinarily commences with daylight, and the vintager.s as- 
sert that the grajies gathered at sunrise always produce the 
lightest and most limjiid wine. Thus thej' are also believed to 
yield a fourth more juice. Later in the day, when the suu 
conies out, as it always does, even if but for an hour, it is im- 
possible to prevent some of the detached grapes from partially 
fernieuting, which fre(|uently suflices to give a slight excess of 
color to the must of grapes intended for higli-class champagne. 
When grape-i have to be transported in open baskets for some 
distance to the presshouse, jolting along the road on the backs 
of mules and exposed to even an autumnal sun, the juice, how- 
ever gently it may be s(jueezed, is often of a positively purple 
tint and is consequently unfit for the champagne of commerce. 

This does not mean, of course, that there are no red cham- 
pagnes. Although sparkling white wines are made to a eonsid- 
erable extent in Rurgundy, notably at Reaune, Nuits, and hero 
in I>ijoii, the proudest champagnes of the district are, naturally, 
from the red wines which have made it always famous. lu the 
middle ages the wines of Rurgundy passed as presents from one 
roj'al personage to another, just as orders ancl decorations are 
exchanged between them nowadays. And the favored million- 
aire stockbrokers and panamists of Paris, the noble, aristocratic, 
and even roj-al wine guzzlers of England, Germany, Austria and 
ever^' other European state, who buy up everything worth buy- 
ing, you might almost say. each year, knows well the more ob- 
scure red champagnes of the golden slope. The sparkling wines 
of this section, though as a rule heavier and more potent than 
the subtle and delicate llavored wines of the Marne, still exhibit, 
both in the red and the white varieties, a degiee of relinement 
which those familiar only with the commoner kinds of cham- 
pagnes can scarcely form an idea of. Of these red champagnes 
there are Chainbertin, Romanee and Vougeot of the highest or- 
der. 

Vou see that in one breath I am attempting to tell you al- 
most all I know. 1 ought to add that it is not dillieiilt to know 
things down in this wine district. Everyone talks wine, every 
one tastes wine, and every one eoueoives himself to be a judge 
of wiii(% at least for the time being. Rut which is the more 
jileasing to the sight, the cobwebbed bottle in the liandsof some 
old amateur who will, perhaps, give you a tiny " pony "' glass of 
it to si]), or the trim, fresh Riirguudian girls who will give you 
as many bunches of grapes as you want (on the sly) — this is a 
question which it will take a wiser head than mine to worry out. 
My best idea is tliatone should take the two together, moder- 
ately.^ 

The road lies fresh and damj) between two rows of closely 
planted po]ilar trees out in the country. A (jiiaiiil gray church 
lower dominates the vine-clad slo|ies. .Ml along the road is 
bustle and <'xciti'iiiciit. In the ordinarily (iiiiet little villages 
the majority of the inhabitants are afoot. The girls, both big 
and little, basket on arm, keep threading their way through the 
rows of vines half way u|> the hills, while the men are on the 
road between the vineyai-ds and the village or an^ working in the 
presshouse. (!arts piled up with baskets or crowded with peas- 
ants from a ilislance on their way to the vineyards, jostle trucks 
and dr.iys laden with brand-new wine casks. Now and then 
you see hurrying by thi^ liii(> wagons of some big wine hou.se, 
hurrying to clinch their linal bargain with some jjca-sant propri- 
etor, but it is not here as in the i-eal chaiupagne district. The 
great establishments of the <'haiiipague of cominerce of Reims, 
I'"pcrniay. Ay, Marcuil. Avi/e. b'illvaiid so on, jiossess their own 



f;«teifl<2 WIJME /cJMD Sflf^lT I^EVIEW 



19 



San Francisco, Oal. .^ ^^\^ f A F J | ^^ 1 J A. 'w- Loi;i6vii-lb, Kv. 

^_^y DIf^E(5T f F^OjVl bOUISVIbbE, KY. ^*^-^J > 



i> 



^} 



PEEI^CESS U/l;ISH[IES. 



* > â–  >< â–  < * 




^ 



^ 



CiJpi^PflSEED 



■ ■ ■ >< • > ■ < * 



•iiiiiiilBlliiiii 



I^ese Whiskies have a repiitafion second to none on the PuciQc Coast Thej/ have been given years of triai 
by the best class of trade and consumers and are pronounced without a peer. When given a trial they speak for 
themselves. For sale in quantities to suit in Louisville or San Francisco by 



SOLE AGENTS FOR THE PACTFIC COAST. 



404: :f:rcdi<tt sti^eet. 



S^AJSr ZPie/^A^ITCTSOO, 0-A.L. 



SIX GOLD jWEDALiS. 

A First Award, Gold Medal and Diploma, was awarded by 
the California Midwinter Exposition, 1894, to the following firms: 

PERRIER-JOUET & CO., Epernay, Champagnes. 

COATES & CO., Plymouth, - Plymouth Gin. 

BARTON & GUESTIER, Bordeaux, Red and White French Wines. 

H. CUVILLIER & FRERE, " Red and WhiteiFrench Wines. 

BOUCHARD PERE & FILS, Beaune, Red and White Burgundies. 

W. B. CHAPMAN, San Francisco, Special importations under his 

own label of Vintage Wines 
and Old Cognacs. 



123 CALIFORNIA STREKT, 



AGENT AND IMPORTER, 

N. B.— Sec Price Lists on Pages »1 and 35. 



SAN FRANCISCO, OAL. 



20 



f/ceifie WIJ^E /tJMB SflF^IT F^EVIEW 



ORI0INAT<»« OF 

OLD GRAND DAD, 




\i. 



Barber, Ferriell 25(0 

proprietors. 



BARBER, FERRIELL & CO 

A3 R. B. HAYDEN A CO< 
REGlSTeREO OtSTILLBRV. 

y NO. 420. 5thOI6T. 



i^ 



nmms 







B.H.HURT, 

PRESIDENT. 



J, H. BEAM . 

VICE PRESIDEMT. 




DISTILLERIES: NELSON CO, KY. 
OFFICE: LOUISVILLE. KV. 






f/eifie WIJVJE /rJvJD SflF^IT I^EVIEW. 



21 



S. LACHMAN CO. 
California ((lines and Brandies. 



453 to 465 BRANNAN STREET, 



SAN FRANCISCO 



V> piofl^^r^ u/ifi^ |^0iJ5E. e5t/^bi,i5[i^d 1854. ^ ^ VJ. 

California l^inoa and "^randios. 

VINEYARDS IN SONOMA CO., MEROED CO., AND FRESNO CO. 



COR. SECOND 4. FOLSOM liTS.. SAN FRANCISCO 



41-45 BROADWAY, NEW YOrK. 



Kohler & Van Bergen, 



CALIFORNIA 



ft^5 



WIHES m W^m^: 




\Viii.t\ ;iii.l liislill.TN; 



Sacramento, Cal. ^ {•)/"'/ /;>ifA " >l.>''' 



ca 



New York Oilici 



Main ntlii 



,. _. . . o» 'f^'V^VXr >?- Laiciit it VAitii'K Sts. 



661 to 671 Third St. 
San Francisco 



'm9'>'' 



New Yorlc 




CARRY & CO. 



Proprietors 



Uncle Sam Winery and Dislillerv, 



CALIFORMA. 



-OFFUK AND SALESROOM- 



Jl r., 515-517 Sacramento St., - San Francisco. 



J_^— ^ CA 



>>- W 



WINERIES AND DISTILLERIES, 
NAPA AND SAN JO.SE, CAL. 



CARRY & MAUBEC, 

1^ CF.liAli STIiKKT, - - NEW YUItK. .\. V. 




ftbLEY 



^ 



^pv/fe HS 
PURE CALIFORNIA 



SPECIALTIES: 



PRIVATE STOGK HOCK. 

PRIVATE STOCK EL CERRITO. 
PRIVATE STOCK SAUTERNE, 

PRIVATE STOCK CLARET. 
PRIVATE STOCK BURGUNDY, 

PRIVATE STOGK VINE GLIFF, 






"WINESaho 



BRANDIES ^ I 



WINERIES AND DISTILLERIES: 

JM/rf/r eiTY, YOUjMTVIbbE Jk^B 
ST. JHEloEJM/r. 

OFFICES : 

11-13 FIRST ST., SAN FRANCISCO. 

200-202 S. FOURTH ST., ST. LOUIS. 

29 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. 



22 



f/cGlfie WIJME f^^Q Sflf^lT F^EVIEW. 



vimnaitlri. Tlifi-c everything: goes l>v system and true business 
methods. Neigh borin}? large vine proprietors will press their 
own grapes and sell the juices to the great estal)lisliiueiits, and 
thus are able to hold back for the best prices. Hut the gi-eat 
multitude of small cultivators of all the true champagne district 
(which every one, of course, knows is not hen; in ilurgundy) in- 
variably sell the grapes themselves and not the pi'essed juice to 
the giant monopolists who have tlu-ir names upon the bottles — 
the iMuninis. the Holliiigers. the so-called ("licquot-I'ousardius, 
the lleidsiecks, Moets, I'i))crs, Terriers, romnierys and all the 
rest — some of whom are cor]>oratioiis. some Joint stock compa- 
nies, and others millionaire partnershii)s, kee])ingthe old names 
which made their brands so fauuius. There it is the swift, strict, 
correct routine of a gr.'at factory. H(U-e, outside of l»ijon, it is 
the happy-go-lucky, but still get-there w.iys of peasants, where 
the center is the family. Here, as in the rest of France, the 
owner of even a single acre of vines will erusli its own grapes 
himself. It is a pretty sight to see it done in families. 

The fatlier, mother, grandfather, graiidmothei-, the big boys, 
little boys, big girls, little girls keep moving to and fro, in the 
ejirly morning light, to pick a whole piece of their little viue- 
yaril. Tln^y detach the grapes with scissors oi- hooked knives 
—such grapes as have escaped the phylloxera, the mildew, hail 
and wind. One mule, one single mule, one nu'laucholy mule 
will drag the baskets and the ttd)s. The sun mouiils to the 
zenith. The family march back to the farmhouse sileidly. 
Where are the sweet songs of the vintage? .Vnd then the little 
daughters of the farmer, singing with fatigue, ])ull olf their 
shoes and stockings, wash their pretty litth! feet, i>in up their 
skirts and petticoats and jump into the tubs to press the wine. 
The sweet grape juice .s(piirts up between their toes. Ah, nie! 

Ju the larger villages there is an air of greater jollity. The 
pickers (hired at T.O to SO cents a day. with food, I'odgiiig, and 
drink included) are as jolly in a bad year as in a good one. In 
a vine-i)roducing district every (uie particii)ates in the interest 
e.\ciled by the vintage. It is the timi> for settling accounts for 
the whole year ; trades peojile have a run of custom ; bakers 
and bootmakers, as well as cafe and restaurant proprietors, pre- 
sent a joyous front encouiaging the others. Half the popula- 
tion is half tipsy — not on the svveet new must, but on "-roen ab- 
sinthe and ri'd rum, it must bo said. The drum beats in the 
morning for the i)ieking and songs echo from the winesho|)s in 
the evening. 

It is not juice for champagni! they are scjueeziug in tin- vil- 
lage j)resshouse. For the most part, "of course, it is the great 
Hurgundiau still wine, red and white. ]hit the mind of an 
American must naturally run to cliami)agne, even in a still wine 
district; and, to tell the truth, there are ample evidences of tiie 
" little"' while wines of this section being shipped to be manip- 
nlat(^d, mixed and doctored in the big champagne establish- 
ments, to be shi|i|)cd in a few years to .\nierica. America which 
believeth all things, hopeth all things, and Ihinketh no evil. 

M least it is real grape juice hen- in the sweet vineyard. 
Whether for fancy red and pink champagnes, the sj>arkling 
Komauee destined to sparkle down th(> red and pink throat of 
the Primus of Wales; whetluM- for " vict )rious liurgundy," so 
smooth and strong, to make new blood foi- good Fran/. .Joseph ; 
whether for "still wines at .?I0 a bottle'" (dealers' brand) for 
Ward McAllister; whether to fortif"y the thin and ac'id wines 
of th<i .North to make Champagne of (iommerce, it is the same 
among the honest vintagers. It is pure juice. So, therefore 
when you drink your Burgundy in American hotels and res- 
tiiurants, whether at SI a Iwttle or $10, think of the i>iidv feet of 
the little Maries, Antionettes, Lucics, Berthes and Lizettes; 
tliink of the paticMit mule that drags the cart; think of the 
villag<' wine press, and the lilue-blousi-d peasants.aud the merry 
Hongs they <lo not sing. Think of the ancient church, the lou'o- 
lines of splcudid tr(!es along the smooth, while, loads, the vib 
lage wine shojis and the pickers sleeping in the barns at night. 
Think of intrigues and smothered laughter, kiss('s in th(^ dark 
and lusty girls who have tranijicd Iwciily mih's !o earn their i;() 
cents a day with food and lodging all included. 

Jl. 

There is another picture. Wine is not nuide in a da v. \m(I 
commerce liiis its claims. Business is business. 

Von ask a peasant what wine isand he will answer, "The 
juice of the grape." I!ut if yon ask the French I'heniists they 

will tell you fr their experience thai the only true delinilioii 

is this: " Wine is tln^ product of the fer uliition of the juice 

of fresh grapes." 



.MTter twenty centuries of renown French wine has come to 
be too often only a wine made from raisins, from ligs, from glu- 
cose, doctored with alcohol made fi-oin rice ami giain ami pota- 
toes, and coming (m the mai'ket masked and painted like a play- 
actor, all having the regulation titles and all e(|ually false. 

Here in the region of vineyards this jileasant win<>, which 
fulfills the true definition, has only from eight to ten degrees of 
alcohol and would be liked everywhere if |>eople"s |)alates were 
not corrupted by drinking over-ale<)holed wines, whiskies, bran- 
dies and absintlnw. When you see the " clairt^t " I'uuning from 
the spigot you may bid farewell to it, for yon may never see it 
again. It will be taken from the cellar to the nearest railway 
station and then make its way to the centers of the red-wiiu^ 
trade, where it will be treated commercially'. These are Cette 
in the south (for the wines of tin; Pyrenees), Bordeaux, Dijon, 
here in Burgundy, Chalons on the Marne (for champagne), and 
]?ercy, in Paris (for what Robert Louis Stevenson calls its " red 
ink 'â– '). 

lOven in the years when the phylloxera was exercising its 
ravages and there wei'(^ no moi'c vineyards l(» give gr a])es for the 
wine you could still have your I'.oideanx and your ISurgiindy of 
the yeai at everj' meal. It was a mysterj', only in pait made up , 
of alcohol and raisins. Here is the real secret of the years \ 
marked after high-class wines on restaurant cards — if you be- 
lieve them. Such and such a year was good, and such and such 
a year was bad. It does not altogether go by seniority, as some 
folks think. 

All the wholesale win(^ dealers, whether they perform theii- 
operations in Dijon or in Cette, in Bordeaux or in Bercy, hold J 
the same opinion. They cannot get on without Spanish wine. | 
At Bordeaux they call it the " wine doctoi-."" Othei's say it is 
the watch kej' of wine, namely, that w hich '• winds it up." It 
gives courage to the faint-hearted "clairet,'" it corrects acidity 
and enliv( us llatness. What is Spanish wine"? Not at all the 
sherry and Malaga. It is the blue-red, astringent, and heailv 
wiiK^ which tastes of the iron in the sandhills where it grew. It 
is a wine of Africa rather than of Furope. It is the " table 
wine " of Spain, and travelers are knocked out by its potency. 
In hotels they will give it to j'on free in big carafes. Whoop ! 
Bang ! No wondiM- Spain seems beautiful. 

Spanish win(^ owes the qualities which allow it to tyrannize 
oyer the natural wint^ of France to the alcohol which it con- 
tains. When these vineyard owners send up their mild gra))e 
juice to the wholesale deali'r he tells them : " Your wine is not 
drinkable. We must fortify it with S])anish wine." The wine 
owner would have the right to answer : "Your reason for in- 
sisting oii (1 actoiiug our wine, such as nature has given it to us, 
with tlie wine, of Spain is because it hel|)s on your trade com- 
binations. Yon can have Spanish wines brcuight you to Paris 
by water foi' half the jirice which our wines cost you l>y rail. 
Then our wines cannot be watere<l, while two barrels of Spanish 
wine can easily b(^ made inti) three for the use of Parisians and 
peof)!*^ across the seas. Do you expect us to compete success- 
fully with rain water?" 

It is not the mei-chaiifs alone who are responsil)le foi- this 
manipulation of the natural French wine. The cititied drinkers 
of win(^ all over the world have learned to like a strong dosi' of 
alcohol in their wines, <'ven though the wine should W made 
from stewed raisins and the aleolnd be no more than (ierman po- 
tato brandy. There is a Norwegian who I'or forty years has or- 
deied two barrels of wine yearly from thi' same house in liordeaiix. 
One year some accident had happened to the wines and a man- 
ufactured brand WiUs sent to him. It pleased him. and lie in- 
sisted ever after on having the same wim^ It was only neces- 
sary for the merchant to keep note of the i-ccipe. and each year 
it was furnished to his demand. This keeping of recipes, whi<>h 
is a perfectly luoper procedure in the case of non-vintage wines 
like shiM-ry and Malaga, is of course an aboiniuation in the case 
of any wine of I'"rance, excepting always champagne. 

So let ns turn to our own California wines, which arc cheap, 
pleasant, autl sometimes almost pure. In ISl).'! Karl Baedeker, 
the great Leipsic pul)lisher of iMiropean gui<Iebooks, put forth a 
splciidiil and painstaking " Handbook for Ti-avehrs in the 
I niled States." In his '• (icueral Hints " he has this sentence : 
• Win(^ is generally jxior or dcai', and often both, in the Inited 
States. It is mncli to be regretted that thi' native vintages sel- 
dom appear on the wine lists, and I'.uropean travelers will do 
"ood service by making a point of di'manding Calilornia wines 
and expressing surpi-ise when they cannot be Ininishcd."" 

Sterlini: Hki.io. 



f/rSlfie WIJ^E /cjSID SPIf^lT PREVIEW. 



23 



0. F. C. AND CARLISLE 



^WHIISI^IES: 



Bourbon 



Rye 



Distilleries: FRANKORT, KY. 



Address: THE GEO. T. STAGG CO., Frankfort, Ky, 



Diploma anp Mkhal, Taris. 1S89. 



Goi.i) Mepal, International Food and Wink ExiiiniTioN 
Heki.in, Jine, 1S92. 



First Award and Medal, 
Mei.hoikne, Australia, 1S89. 




THE INGLENOOK TABLE WINES 



jPlISTID 



OLD PRIVATE STOCK BRANDIES, 

GROWN and BOTTLED at the Celebrated 



iisra-XjEnsrooic -v^xi<r:H]irjL.TiiD 



SOLD ONLY IN GLASS. OF RUTHERFORD, NAPA CO. CAL. 

None Genuine Unless Beanug LEGAL PURE WINJ STAMP and TRADE MARK on Cork Cap or Seal. Only Matured and HIGHEST GRADE WINES Placed on the Market 

On Sale by Le.admg Grocers and Wine Merchants in Every City m the Union. 

Office and Depot, 101 Front Street, Cor. Pine Street, San Francisco. 




ABBOTT'S 

BALTIMORE, MO. U.S.A. BITTCRS 



THE JOHN T. CUTTING GO., SAN FRANGISGG. HAS A STOGK OF THESE GOODS. 



Special Bonded Warehouse No.1. 



2d DISTRICT, NEW YORK. 



FIRE PROOF BUILDINGS. ELECTRIC ELEVATORS. 

Storage Capacity 18,000 Barrels. 

Papers and Withdrawals Executed Free of Charge. J. D. W. SFHERMAN, PrOprietOT. 



24 



f/ceifie WIJ^E yVJSID Sfif^lT F^EVIEW. 



Qorres'pondonco, 

An Open Letter to the Wholesale Liquor Trade. 



To Abolish the Viticultura! Commission. 



Cincinnati, O., January 28Ui, 18115. 

M'liiU's the use trying to stop j)rico-lists when some of tho 
officers of tlie National AViiie and Spirit Association encourage 
brokers who issue price-lists (l)e they in book form, gross or net, 
or on slieets of pai)er a yard or so long) by Imying oi- selling 
through them ? 

Where is the justice of jobbei-s sending out jirice-lists to the 
Wholesale Trade, and furthermore, ((rivy;////./ n/v/ccs- friiiii brokers 
who do i.ssue pric-lists, but refusing to buy from tiio.se brokers 
vnle.-.i they sell cheaper, and then these same .lobbeis complain- 
ing about jirice-lists? 'I'lie brokers wlio do not send out price- 
lists don't ((l))ect to distilleis listing their own brands ; nor do 
they object to the johbei-s sending all the irtail dealers ou earth 
a price-list: but it's certainly unprincipled, to say tho least, for 
jobbers to list to jol)bers. and object to brokers doing it. 

There are still enough good brokers who do not send out 
jn-ice-li.sts do do your buying and selling tlirongh. If the trade 
don't want trade-lists galore in the near future as in the past, it 
is time for them to retui-n and i-efnse to accept jn ice-lists, books 
or lists, net or gro.ss, also all mail from parties sending out books 
or lists, as well as telegrams from idl those brokers, ('ancel 
your paid subscriptions; notify the parties to save their stamps, 
time an<l trouble : and, distilleis, hearken — take your " ad's " 
out of these price-list books. 

There are moi-e of the trade against price-lists tlian you 
think, and they watch these things close. Somany of the trade 
mean well, but forget when a book or list comes in ; they see 
something they might use at the jiricc or a shade less, andthey 
write or wire for it. Slop and think if you want that lot. You 
can, nine limes out of ten r- yes, oltener — buy the same goods 
through a broker who does not isne a book or list, at the same 
price ; and, if you have any whisky you want to .sell, any other 
broker can obtain as much for it as you .see olfered in that book 
or on that list. 

Put your foot down on books a. id circulars, and don't send 
them out yourself, or everlastingly hereattei- hold your peace. 

F.-VIR I'l.AV. 



Louisville, Kv., January 30, 1895. 

Editor Pacific Wine and Spirit Ticcieir — SlK : A meeting of 
the Board of Control of the National Wine and Spirit .Associa- 
tion was held in the city of Louisville, Ky., on January 25th, at 
which were present I. W. Uernheim, Clias. E. (;hase and E. M. 
Babbitt, of I^ouisville ; H. Van Nes, of Cincinnati, andWm. H. 
Lee, of St. T.i0uia. 

The minutes of the previous meeting were read and ap- 
proved. The following firms and individuals who failed to pay 
their dues were ordered dropped, and their names stricken from 
the roll : 

California Wine Co., Salt Lake City, Utah ; Head & Beam, 
Gethsemane, Ky.; (Jeo. Monnier, San Francisco ; Robt. Broker, 
Nevada, Mo.; M. M. Manville, La Salle, Wis.; Levy & Lewin, 
Denver, Col.; Isador Bush Wine; & IJcmor Co., St. Louis, Mo.; 
Norman Cole, Milllin X Roads, I'a. 

The following firms and individuals, having paid their dues. 
were unanimously clectttd members of the N;itional Wine and 
Spirit Association : 

J. Simon & Co., Louisville, Ky.; Jno. J. O'Brien, I'itlsburg, 
Pa.; F. A I'.enslierg & Co., St. Louis; A. (iraf & ('o., St. LouiiT; 
Swope & Mangold, Dallas, Te.x.; Kdgewood Dist. Co., and The 
Cramer Co., Cincinnati; I'liilij) l<'reilcr, Flgin, 111.; Corning & 
Co., Peoria, 111.; J. F. Dauglierty & Co.; Keokuk, Iowa; (Jlas- 
ner & I'.arzen, Kansas ("ity. Mo.; Sam'l Hari-ts & Co., and Fritz 
Thesi, Denver ; M. Shaugbnessy & Co., St. Louis. 

It was moved and sci^ondcd that the next annual conven- 
tion be held in St. Louis, Mo., .\pril Kith and 17th, 18'J5. 

Mr. E. M. Babhilt was appointed a committee of one, to act 
in conjunction with Mr. I. W. liernheim, to open coiTcs|iondcn<-c 
looking to the relief of the trade in regard to cerlain iinnccfs- 
sary work in c-onncction with the (ioviM-nment books. 

Tin; Natio.nal M'inic iS: Siimr A.s.-«kiation, 

By /I'. II '. Hullllt, Secretary. 



Senator Langford's bill to abolish the Viticultural Board 
and turn it over to the Uuiversitj' is before the Legislature. In 
this connection a statement by I. Do Turk, made in tlie Wave, 
will prove of interest : 

Sakia Rosa, .lanuary 22, 1895. 

Editor Wave: I have read with considerable interest your 
article in the ll'orcof the IDtli instant, entitled " The (ioveriioi's 
Message.'' I notice that you say that " His [the (iovernor's] 
suggestion that the Agricultural, \'iticultural and similar com- 
missions be abolished, and the control be turned over to the 
I'niversity is a wise as well as an economical suggestion." 

I have been a member of the Board of State Viticultural 
CommLssiouers since 1880. I was one of the original Board, and 
have been honored by reappointment by both Republican and 
Democratic (iovernors from that time to this. I have been 
l^resident of the Board ; I have b(!cn a m(nnber of its Executive 
Committee, and 1 have aiulited its accounts. If any one can 
jioint out the expenditure of a single cent bj' that Commission 
in a manner which has not resulted in direct profit to the .State 
of California, I am willing to resign my commission to-day, and 
to aid in every way the abolishment of the Board. 

The Viticultural Commission is not a scientific coinmission. 
The (lovernor complains in his message that we do not own a 
vineyard or experimental jilot. The fact is, the law prevents us 
from doing so. The Board has never pretended to be an ultra- 
scientific body. It has always been a commission composed of 
practical men who have directed its work to practical ends. We 
have not pursued lines of investigation such as have been at- 
tempted by the University. The Coinmission occupies an en- 
tirely diflerent field. Our efl'orts have been directed to topics 
pertaining to practical wine and brandy making and handling, 
and to the extension of the sale of pure California wines and 
brandies in the markets of the East and of the world. 

We are not a political Commi.ssiou. I cannot tell you tc-daj' 
the political status of the Board. I have never asked. I dcn't 
care whether any one of my as.sociates or eight of them are 
Democrats or Republicans. All that we have ever asked is that 
men of known standing and experience be appointed on this 
Commission, and that they give the business of the Board their 
careful attention. And this has been done. The names of the 
gentlemen who compose this Commfssion are guaranty sutUcicnt. 
Mr. Doyle, Mr. Shorb, Mr. West, Mr. Towie, Mr. " Bun.lschu, 
Mr. Stephens, Mr. Crabb and Mr. Bichowsky arc all men well 
known in their sections and throughout the State. 

If you w.ant to know what we have done during the past 
two years, I would tell yon that we have made magniiicent ex- 
hibits at Chicago and at the Midwinter Fair. We have had a 
representative at Washington, who, with the concurrence of 
Senators Perkins and White, made an agreement as to the wine 
and brandy schednh^ of the taritl' bill, which, liaving been adop- 
te(l liy a unanimous vote, preserved the wine and brandy makers 
of this Coast from the tul vdlorcin duty, first pro])0.sc(i, which 
would have completely wipt^l out their laisincss; we have pub- 
lished a report on iiliylloxcra, which is the standard work on 
the subject in the English language; we have issued a report on 
the mannfacturt^ of tlie finest grades of wine, which will be of 
iinmeiise benefit to lho.se of our growers who arc striving to im- 
jn-ove the (|uality of their product; we have in jn-cparation an 
exhibition in Borilcanx ; w<' are preparing to open depots in .New 
York and other Ivistern cities, wlii'ic the finest California w iocs 
c;iii bi- obtained. 

Is it not cvideiitf'rom this showing — and many other things 
might be mentioned that we art* <loing work which the I'ni- 
versity could not do ? Do yon want to consign us to the care of 
Professor Ililgard, who.se record for the past eight years in the 
viticultural line has not been strikingly successful ? I do not 
hesitate to say that there is sear<-ely aineinber of our Board who 
has not had, in one year, more experience in |>ractical viticult- 
ure than the entire College of Agricnllure can boast of Its 
connection uilli viticulture in tiiis State has brought us into 
eadhvss troubli'. It is hardly worth while to go into the details- 
of it all. But the details arc ready and at hand. 1 iiiighl how- 
ever, just bring to nieiiiory Piofessor llilgard's advocacy of I'as- 
lenrization — a failure - or his maintciiance of ;i plot of jiliyl- 
loxcratcd vines at lii'ikelcy a menace to every vineyard in 
Contra Costa and .Manieila counties. 

Where did the phylloxera plot at Mission San Jose originate'/ 



f/^eifie WIJvIE /cJMD Sflf^IT F^EVIEW. 



25 



Professor ITil<iard's last exploit in the viticiiltural field is 
still rather fi-csli — when he ran eounter to the authorities at 
>Vasliiiij;t(in in ri'siiecl to the regulations eoncerniufj the sweet 
wine law. ami was eoiniielleil to make an iufjlorious retrc^at. 

I must say that 1 feel very mueh hurt that so elear-headed ;i 
man as Senator Landlord should father a hill directed against 
thi-< Ho.ird. Mr. Laugford is a friend of Mr. (ieorge West, and 
his altaek on the N'itieultural Commission is, to some extent, an 
attack on Mr. West, whose judgment he must know ami re.speet. 
So far as I am per.-;onally eoneerned, I should rather see the 
Hoard utterly aholished than that it should he turned over to 
I'rofe.s.sor llilgard. 1 have given fourteen yi-ars of work to the 
Hoard. I have tried to perform my duties faithfully, and I 
have never di'awn one cent of money for my .services. If the 
Commission is now to be attacked unjustly, for my part I shall 
make no resistance to such attack. I shall not go to Sacra- 
mento. I .shall leave the whole matter to the good sense of the 
members of the Legislature, and accept their verdict, watever it 
may be. Very respectfnlly, I. De Turk. 



I/N -RECEIVE-RS' HA/MDS. 

The Distillers' and Cattle Feeders' Company has been 
placed in the hands of receivers. Judge (irosscup, of tlu> I'nited 
States Court, on the application of three comparatively small 
stockholders, appointed President J. B. (ireenhnt and E, F. 
Lawrence receivers of the §3."),0i)(i,0i)0 Distillers' and Cattle 
Feeders" Company. 

The appointment was made on the 2Sth ult., at the resi- 
dence of Judge Grosscup, on Grand Houlevard, Chicago. It was 
kept a .secret from the business world until 4 o'clock p. m. of the 
L'nth. During the day l^j.'SOO shares of stock were sold on the 
Xew York market, and prices closed at S^, against 9J the night 
before. The news of the appointment of receivers did not leak 
out until two hours after the market closed. 

In throwing the company into his own hands as receiver 
President Greeuhut took snap judgment, which will bring down 
on his head the wrath of the stockholders' committee and that of 
the holders of the .?.30,000,000 of stock which they represent. A 
short time ago a committee of stockholders was appointed to 
consider plans for reorganization. That committee consisted of 
Richard B. Hartshorne, John I. Waterbury and F. M. Lock- 
wood. When the committee was appointed, early in Jauuar.y, it 
took up the work at the request of over 810,0(10.000 of the stock. 

A circular was i.^sued on January 17th which announced it 
it to he the intention of the committee to make a full investiga- 
tion of the aflairs of tlie company, and effect an entire change 
in its management and methods. The circulars announcing the 
intentions of the committee, couched in exceedingly strong lan- 
guage as they were, Itrought in a flood of proxies, until it is as- 
serte<l the committee now represents nearly the entire list of 
stockhohlers. The circulars also brought the management of 
the company to a sharp understanding of tlie fact that they were 
to face at the coming annual meeting a most vigorous opposition. 

The committee wisiied to make an appointment to meet the 
officers of the companj'. and they wired that thej' would come 
to Peoria and meet them on the 30th, but President (ireenhnt 
asked them to postpone the visit for a day, alleging that he 
could not get his board of directors together before that. Prepa- 
rations were then immediately matle to apply for a receiver. The 
three stockholders wlio signed the bill are .said to hold but 1700 
shares. The company became a voluntary party to the proceed- 
ings, entering an appearance, and the result was that President 
Greeidiut was put in a position which, if he (;an maintain, will 
prevent the stockholders' committee fi-om carrying through its 
plan for a change of management. There will be a furious light. 
Not only is there sharp criticism of the appointment of Mi'. 
Greenliut as a receiver, but attention is al.so drawn to the fact 
that the other receiver is one of the Nelson-Morris Company 
directors in the First National Bank, while Mr. Morris has a 
S5,W,000 suit pending against the company for a non-fullillmeut 
of contract. 

The committee is represented in Chicago by Levi Mayer, 
and Mr. Mayer, when he learned of the march that had been 
stolen on his clients, went into court and asked that no orders 
be entered in the proceedings without giving him an opjiortu- 
nity to be heard. Judge Gros,scnp agreed to that. 

The bill which accompanied the ap|>lieation of (Ireeiihut 
says that up to ISiCJ tlie company jiaid nearly six millions in 
dividends, but since that time has paid nothing. At the present 



lime the company own outright seven or eight distilleries and 
the ground on which they stand ; the buildings and a|)|)liauce8 
of about twenty more," together with the leaseholds of the 
ground, and about fifty more bi'okeu down and dismantled dis- 
tilleries, on most of which it pays a land lea.se. From the latter 
the machinery has been removed to piece out that in the distil- 
leries which have been o|)erated. 

At present the ])roperty of the company is mortgageil. 
Bonds to the amount of .?l,ooi),U()(i have been sold, and $2,.5O0,- 
000 have been put up as collateral for loans. TIk! company owe8 
SSOO.dOO for rebate certilicates and 8200,000 on warehouse re- 
ceipts in addition to current expenses. The liill goes on to say 
that a large amount of rebate certificates are due anil payable 
on February 1st, and the company is without funds for their 
payment. Therefore, the bill alleges, the company is practically 
insolvent. The assets are thought to be sufficient to pay all the 
debts of t!ie company, leaving a small balance to be distributed 
among the .stockholders. 



Mr. Wm, Kaltenbach, a member of tin; lirm of Molins & 
Kaltenbach, wine and lii|Uor merchants, '_'!• Market street, San 
Francisco, became a benedict on the iith of January. On that 
day he was united in marriage to Miss Anna Mohns, daughter of 
l^Ir. Henry Mohns, the ceremony being performed at high noon 
in .\lameda, at the residence of the bride's father, Kev. Julius 
Fuendeling, of St. Mark's Church, ofliciating. Mr. Kaltenbach 
has already made quite a record for himself as a successful busi- 
ness man, "and in securing a " ])artuer for life" we congratulate 
him, and wish him much prosperity. 

A uni<iue thing in advertising comes to the Review from 
Guasti & Bernard, of Los Angeles, and now occupies a promi- 
nent place in our office. It is apparently the head of a barrel 
sawed otf two hoops down. On the face, in relief work, appear 
a dozen youngsters, boys and girls, in Nature's clothing, sporting 
with each other, and tapping tlu wine casks in great glee. In- 
spection shows the whole to be done in some composition of 
plaster. It is light, handsome, catchy, and testifies forcibly to 
the enterprise of Messrs, Guasti & Bernard. 

Good Showing for Fine Brandies. 

E. Remy Martin & Co. have good reason for feeling comfort- 
able over th"e volume of their exports to the Fnited States dur- 
ing the year 1804. Notwithstinding the extreme depression in 
all lines of business and the great falling off in demand for fine 
imported brandies, the firm made an excellent showing in the 
volume of sales of their goods. Their exports to this country 
last year aggregated 10,001 gallons in wood, and O.'JO cases, con- 
taining 1860 gallons — making a total of 19,861 gallon.s. This 
places the liou.se in with other foreign exporters of high-class 
goods. The agents of E Remy Martin & Co. on the Pacific 
Coast are Hellmann Bros. & Co., of this city. 




Jalias liibroiaiez, 

4ii VESEY HT., NEW YORK. 



SOT F \OF.NT IN THF, U. S. AND CAX.\D.\ FOS 

HARTWIG KANTOROWICZ, 

POSEN, GtRMANY, 

FRUIT JUICES and CORDIALS. 

SLXld. 

l/ietoria [Natural (r\i9^ral U/at^r Spri9($ Qo. 

OBERLAHNSTEIN. GERMANY. 



26 



f>/ceifie wi;^E /tjsiD sfif^iT j^eview. 



CHflS. JVIEIHECKE & CO. 



314 Sacramento Street, 



San Francisco, Cal. 



Sole Agents on the Pacific Coast for 









Deutz & Geldermann, Gold Lack Champagne, 

Dupanloup & Co., Champagne,, 

Duff Gordon &. Co., Fine Sherries, 

Lacave & Co., Sherries and Olives, 

D, M. FeuerheerdJr. &Co. Ports, 

The Vineyard Propr's Co., Brandies, 



I, A. I, Nolet, 

J. J, Meder & Zoon, 

Boord & Son, 

A. de Luz &. Fils, 

C. Marey & Liger Belair, 

G. M. Pabstmann Sohn, 

Haussmann Junr., 

Gebr. Macholl, 

L. Funke Jr. 

Dr. Teod. Meinhard, 

Genoveva Brunnen, 

Royal Prussian Amd., 

Societe Generale, 



Gins, - _ _ 

Swan Gin, 

Old Tom Gin, Jamaica Rum, Etc, 

Clarets and Sauternes, 

Burgundies, 

Rhine Wines, 

Mosel Wines, 

Kirschwasser, 

Boker's Bitters, 

Venezuela Bitters, 

Sparkling Mineral Water, 

Selters Waters, 

Vichy Water, - 

Oenotannin, Etc., 



A. Chevallier-Appert, 

A. Boake, Roberts & Co, Wine Finings, Etc., 

IVIoore & Sinnott, Rye Whiskies, 



- - Ay 

Reims 

Port St. IVIarys 

Cadiz and Sevilla 

Oporto 

Cognac 

Schiedam 

Schiedam 

London 

Bordeaux 

Nuits 

Mainz 

Traben 

Munich 

New York 

Ciudad-Bolivar 

Niedermendig 

N. Selters 

St. Yorre 

Paris 

London 

Philadelphia 



Greenbrier Dist. Co,, "R. B. Hayden" Sour Mash Whisky, G.-eenbrier, Ky. 



Prune Juice, Arrack, S. Croix Rum, 
Vermouth, Spanish Clay, Etc. 






4, SOUR MASHv-y 




J^/cGIfie WIJME /JMD Sflf^lT (REVIEW. 



27 



THE /NEW WAREHOUSE. 



•• I'JDI Hatikuv St., San Fkancisco, Oct. 25, l.S'tt. 

" To thiDiiilirt ill H'lihki'.-' iiiiil Sjilriln — (Jknti.kmkn : The 
rt'contly-eiiaetoil TarilV Law aiitliui-izcs the rciuoval of wliisky 
and s(iii-its in bond tVoni distillcfv bonded warelionses to general 
lionded warehouses, and also anthori/.es one removal in bond 
IVoui one jjeneral bonded warehonse to another, and authorizes 
the establislunent ol' sneli {general bonile<l wai'ehonses, to l>e used 
exehisively for the storage of wiiiskies and spirits. 

" In aecordauee wilii the |)rovisions of this law wi' have 
bonded one of the lirst-elass liuiiilinfis known as the Overland 
warehouses, situated on the northeast corner of Third and Kini; 
streets, in thiseity. for such storafic and are [H'eiiaicd to handle 
your whiskies to the best advanlM)j;e. 'I'his. \\arehouse is located 
on the tracks of the Soutiiern I'acilic ("otn|iany, and has its own 
track, so that car-load lots of whisky can be transfci'rcd directly 
to the warehouse on arrival, thus avoidinj; the cxjien.se of cart- 
age and the incidental re-handling of packages. 

'•Storage capacity, lo.dOi) barrels. Insuraniio rate, 90 
cents i)er -SlOd. 

" We shall be pleased to furnish any further information de- 
sired on application, and hope you will iind it to your advantage 
to use our warehouse. 

"Yours respectfully, Bode & IIaslett. 

" Agent ill Kentucky, W. G. Ooldewey, Louisville Public 
Wai-ehouse Co., Louisville." 

The above is self-explanatory. The enterprise and prompt- 
ness shown by this firm in thus furnishing full facilities under 
the new law will be appreciated l)y the Coast trade. Interest 
can now be saved on car-load lots of bonded goods while in 
transit, tax and storage can lie jiaid conveniently, and immediate 
delivery can be had when desired in ciuantiticsas ordei-ed. The 
rack-system of storage will be used, and advances will l)e made 
t)n goods in warehouse, upon apjilication, ]>ode & llaslett 
report a few cars already in, and more on the way. 



WI/NE SHIPME/NTS TO EUROPE. 



Some Misiniis. — Shakespeare wrote, in his day, " Frailty, 
thy name is Woman ! "' This nuiy be ciilled epigrannnatic, but 
it is not oiiginal, for N'irgil had written, 7it 15. ('.," (''o/n/K/c e< 
miiliiliilr .•omprr /'«»i/;ia " — variable and changeable at all times, 
woman, lioth being untrue, tlii-y that be wi.se still follow the 
aibnonition of tin' old Law," Honor' thy father «ni'/ M// »i'///itT." 
In this dav the ultra lempcrance p<-oi)le, the I'rohibitioni.sts, and 
" unco guid â– ' element of the churches decry the u.se of wine 
and denounce those who i>artake of it, forgetting that the Great 
Koun(h'r of the Church nmde wine, and that to " Drink no 
longer water, but take a little wine for thy stonuich's sake and 
thine often inlirniities,'' is a sonn-what reliable teaching. And 
they that be wi.se may safely follow this as a new Law. 

TueTo.vst — Then fill \ip high with generous Juice, 
.\s generous as your mind. 
And pledge me in this generous toast — 
" The whole of human kiTid." 

" To those who love us.'' second till ; 
But not to those whom we love — 
Lest we love those who love not us — 

A third, "To thee and mo, love." — Eobert Ihirns. 



Owing to the low freight rates on wine and brandy that have 
prevailed in the past year, much of our Lluropean trade in wine 
and l>raudy has been carried by rail direct to New York, and 
thence by steam to Kurope. Following are the figures showing 
the total volume of the European trade: 

Total wine shipments to Europe — 

To Great Britain, Cases. Bulk Gallons. 

By sea 77 '2!»,1()7 

By rail overland 15 54,702 

Total !)2 83,807 

To Germany, Cases. Bulk Gallons. 

By sea 130 23,S.-)I 

By rail overland 7 1,0, .S7I 

Total 147 69,7'22 

To all other European Countiies, Ca.ses. Gallons. 

By sea. .'),7'2(l 

„ ., Ill lielgium .'5 2(1,710 

By rail overland .... ^ j,,.^;;^^^ j,, 

Total 13 26,4.'J0 

ukaniiv exports. 

Totierniany, Ca.ses. Gallons. 

By sea...' 14 21)4,408 

By rail overland 40 

Total 14 294,448 

To Great Britain, Ciises. Gallons. 

By sea 1,495 

By rail overland 2, 660 

Total 4,155 



MERCANTILE EXCHANGE V^LTS. «■ 

S1.89,SIHODS0tiST. \A:, 




It cures Colds, Neuralgia, The most successful compound. 

Headache and all Malaria The most reliable and the best 
X.ni.hloc Family remedy in the World. 

It stands on its Merits. Try it and be convinced. 



jfPREVENTS^ 

/ ^ AND \ ' 

\ CyREs 

^-^ A * /I 



ACOLD/' 



DI5TILLED0NLY BY 

QUININE-WHISKY q 

' 1 . LOUISVILLE,KY.- 



It is Pleasant to take, the Bitter Taste of the Quinine is Disguised. 

Wi a. tSiicca \i'li' i-i nr liilniihirnl. 

Siu.ii liY Mam » AC TlKKr. and lii'TTIKU iiSJ.Y IIY 

I.iquur Dealers, DriiRBisiD anil llrocers. QUININE WHISKY CO. 

Slieclal Trrnis In Whnlvsiilc Vculcrs. 



28 



f/ceifie wi;4E /cJMD sfif^iT f^eview. 



KOLB & DENH ARD 



OLD NONPAREIL 

BOURBON AND RYE WHISKIES. 
CALIFORNIA 

WINES and BRANDIES. 

OFFICE AND VAULTS 

iS0-lS6 MOXTaOMEKY ST., SAlf FRAyCISCO. 

Tei-epiionb No. 509C. 




SPECIAL BOTTLING 



AVe MaKK a Sl'KClAl.TY OF 

Clarifying &, Bottling Wines 

VOK THE 

TRADE AND CONSUMER 
BEST FACILITIES — EIRST-CLASS WORK 

SSar" Price.1 Reasonable. -^8 




MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE. 



-1^ jPs-ISTUFjOlCTU K.E- 



Circled Headina and Jointed Stavesj aiso Shooks of an 
Kinds for Brandy, Wine, Whisky and other Barrels. 

We solicit orders from responsible parties who want goods in our line, of miju rior quality uud wdrkmausliip. 








%OLilrE ^m^'i(''ii'Kmtt, 



D HfflStlAVJ WARD t„i n 

BUT 






ar\a5er 

JUT — iiirj---T^' — m\ mi ^J I L 



^ , . 508Calipobnia6t. 



Nature's Remedy for Stomach and Kidney Troubles. 



â–  V'-'i'. 






HUlVIBOliOT IVIINERAL WATER. 



It ri-lievc» PyHiK-pHJa lit iiiHc ainl act.^^ ^|iliii(li.lly in 
caws of either Kidney or I.ivcr tioiitilcs. 

The I.eiiioiiaiIe made from IIiIk water i.'^ iiiiKiiri);";s..Ml. 
Ah 11 table water it liaM no e(|iial. 




"I liiiiilinlill Water (llU'crs from iiiaiiy natnial mineral 
water,« in the fart that it iloes not tontain a sinjile injurious 
ingredient." \V. II. .Iomnhton, M. ])., 

I'rofessor of C'homintry, Toxicolo^iy, vU-., 

Cooper Meilieal College. 



Office and Depot: No. 40 THIRD STREET, SAN FRANCISCO. 



Tiii.Ki'iiiiMK {>Bi;i;, 



f>jkQ\^lQ WIJME /tjNlD Sflf^lT l^EVIEW 



29 



Prices Current. 



Thi'tc are Ihi' hnii; |»i iic^. Tlic i:itf of 
discount on purchases oi a considcraldc 
quantity, can bo learneil by appylini; It* 
tbe aj;ent6 or dealer?. We ur;;e'ntly re- 
quest dealers;. a;:ents and pnuliicers to 
notify us when a chan;;e occui'S in the 
prices curri'ut of tbe ;;oods they liandle. 

California Wines & Brandies 

[Tlif Piicfs i:ivi'iiarf tor tiu;ii Is aiui pints. 
put up in vases of twelve* ami twenty- 
four bottles.] 

J. GUNDLACH .V: CO., 
Cor. Seeondit Market Sis. San Franeiseo. 
Prices Per c.i.'iE. 

QUARTS. I'INTS. 

Tiamiuer, S2 f h.M * fi.lKl 

Outetlel. 82 6.1)0 7.1X1 

BurL'undv, S4 6.00 7.00 

Zinfandei S3 5.00 6.00 

KOLB & DENHARD. 
4'iO-4J6 Montgomery St., San Franeiseo. 

Per Case. 

nocK ?:j.00 

Kiesling ;j..W 

Gutert-1 4.00 

Sautene 4.00 

Sauterne, 1SS5 ,5.00 

Claret 2.50 

Zinfandei 3.00 

Cabernet 3 50 

Burjfuiuly 4.00 

Port, ISfH 7.00 

Port, 1SS7 5.50 

Sherry 5.00 

Cognac, 18S5 10.00 

KOHLER & FROHLING. 
64U Folsom Street, San Francisco. 

Rieslinu $ 4.00 $ 4.50 

Hock 3..W 4.00 

Gntedel 4.50 5.0O 

Sauterne 4.50 5.00 

Zinfandei 3.75 4.25 

Zinfandei, old 4.50 5.00 

Bureuudv 4.00 4.50 

Superior Port 10.00 

SlierrT 7.50 

Angelica 6.00 

Muscatel 6.00 

Madeiia 6.00 

.Malaga 6.00 

Brandy 10.00 



INGI.ENOOK WINES. 
.\i:cniy. 101 l''r«tut street, San Francisco. 
Table Clatet blcndcil froni 

choice foreign gra|K'8, 

vintage ISUO |:i..50 

Zinfandei' 4.50 

Extrs Table Claret, Medoc 

tyue red label, ISS'J 5.50 

Bursiundv, 18.S.S, Iteservc 

Stc.ck 7.00 S.OO 

SanI erne tlrv.Sauvig'n Vert '86 5.50 

Gutcdel.Chasselas Vert, ISS'J 4..50 

Hock. Rhenish type " 6.00 

Burger. Chablis type ** 5.50 

Riesling, Johannisberg type 

l.SSS fi..50 

Pints of two do/.e(\$l per case additional. 
N4)ne gcnnine except bearing seal or cork 
brand of the piopnetor. 

CAL. WINE GROWERS' UNION. 
Car. Sutter and Grant ave. San Francisco. 

EI. QUITO VINEYARn. 

Riesling » 3.00 f 4.00 

Claret. 3.00 4.00 

FREttNO VINEYARD CO. 

Burger t 3.50 f 4.50 

Clai^et 3.50 4..50 

Port 5..50 6..50 

Angelica .5..50 6..W 

Sherry .^..'iO (i.'bO 

Cognac Brandy 10.00 11.00 

ST. HUBERT VINEYARP. 

Claret, Ca'dernel * 8.00 * 9.00 

Sauterne S.OO 9,00 

Cognac 12.00 13.00 

I. De TURK. 

220 Sacramento st. and 221 Coinnierc ial 

Et , San Francisco. 

Quarts. 

Cognac Brandy, XXXX $111.00 

'• " XX 9.00 

lenlniier Port 5.50 

Trous-eau Port, No. I 4 00 

Dry Sherry. Private Stock 5 50 

" Superior 4.00 

Angelica, Old Selected Stock 4.01) 

Muscatellc " " " 4.01) 

Malai:a " •' " 4 01) 

.Madeira " " 4.00 

Tokav, best, Old Selected Stock .... G.OO 

Tokay, " " " .... 4.,50 

Hant Sauterne " **.... 5.00 

Riesling, " " " 3 50 

Gutedel, " " " .... 3.50 

Hock " " .... 3.00 

Cabernet, "Grand Vin" •• 5.00 

Bnrguudv " " " 4.50 

Zinfandei Claret, Selected Claret 3.50 

XXClaiet, " " .... 3.5U 

Cl.ircl, '• " .... 2.75 



NAPA VAr.LEV WINE COMPANY 

11 and 13 Firht Street. .San Francisco 

SiiiiRwoiin ,v Shkrwooii, Agents. 
212-214 Market street, San Francisco 
Hock, green label t 3.00 * 4 



Hock, black label... 
Gutedel. 
Riesling. 
Cabernet . 



3..50 
4.00 
4.50 
4..50 



Madeii-a 

Brandy Crowu 



Burgundy 4.00 

Zinfandei 3.,50 

Claret, black label 3.00 

Claret . red label 2. 75 

Private Stock Hock 5.00 

" ElCcrrilo.,.. U.OO 

Sauterne S.OO 

•• Claret 5. 

Burgnndv.... 7.00 

" Vine Cliff.... P.'.OO 

Sherry 4..50 

Port 4. .50 

Angelica 4. .50 

ToRay 4. .50 

Muscatel 4 .50 

4..5I) 

10.00 

12.00 

15 00 

» .... 18.00 



C. CARPy A CO. 
511-517 Sacramento street, San Francisco 

La Loma, Grand Medoc I 7.IHI J S.OO 

Burgundy 5.00 fi.DII 

Zinfandei 3..5I) 4.50 

Sauterne .5.U0 G.OO 

Riesling 4.00 5.00 

Sweet Muscatel, 1882 9.00 10.00 

Sherry, 1882 9.00 10.00 

Poit,"lSS2 8.00 9.00 

Cal. Rochelle Brandy 12.00 13.00 

SAN GABRIEL WINE CO., 
Ramona, Los Angeles county, Cal. 

Riesling $ 4.75 $5.75 

Gutedel 4.75 5.75 

Port 5.50 

Angelica 5.50 

Muscatel 5.50 

Sherry 6.00 

Brandy, 1882 12.00 



LOS GATOS & SARATOGA WINE CO 
1227 Broadway, Oakland. Cal. 

Zinfandei '. * .3..50 

Sauterne 4.00 

Brandy 9.00 

Port.." 5.00 

Sweet Muscatel 5.00 

GrapeCordial 6.50 

GEORGE WEST & SON, Stockton, Cal 

Brandy, 1S79 120.00 



14.50 
5.00 

6.66 
6.00 
7.50 



Brandy, is^sii Ij.im 

Brandy, 1S85 1.5.00 

Frontignan 0.00 ... 

Sheiry 9.00 

Port (old) 12.00 

Poll 6.00 .,,'_ 

S. LACHMAN .S; CO., 
453 Brannan street, San Francisco. 

Old Port »7.00 »8.00 

Zinfandei .•J..50 4.00 

Riesling 4.50 5.00 

Madeiras 8.00 

Malaga 8.00 

Cognac 14.00 

JOSEPH MELCZEU*& CO., 
504 and .506 Market street, San Francisco 

Claret, ISM6 };j (jo 

Zinfandei. 1885 :i.50 

Burgundy, 1885 4.00 

Hock, 18S5 3..50 

Riesling. 1885 4.00 

Riesling, Johannisberger,18S4 5.00 

Quiedel, 1884 5.00 

Somlai Hungarian Tyfie, 1885 3..50 

Szatmari " " " 3.50 

SzegszardiFeherHun'TviTe" 4 CM) 

1885 5.00 

Port, 1884 6.00 

Sherry, 1SS5 5.00 

•' 1884 6.00 

Angelica and SweetMoul'n,84 4.50 

Mad'a,Malaga<fcSw'tTo'y'85 5.00 

Brandy, 18SJ 12.00 

1885 10.00 

MONT HODGE WINES. 

A. G. Chauche Livermore, 

OIHce and Depot, 61.5-617 Front St., S. F. 

Quarts 

Burgundy f 9.00 

Chablis u op 

Claret. Retourd'Europe 9.00 

Jurangon, Favorite wine of 

Henri IV. King of France 8.00 

Haut Sauternes 7.00 

Sauternes 6.00 

Light Sauternes 5.00 

Claret Grand Vin 6 00 

Table Claret 4.OO 

Zinfandei 3.00 

$1.00 additional for pints. Red and 
white wines in bulk at all prices. 

L .1. ROSE & CO., LTD. San Gabriel, Cal 

Port, 1873, I doz. qts. in case $15.00 

" 1876, 1-j.oti 

•' 1882, •' " •• y.iH) 

•' 1886, 7.50 

Sherry, 1882, 1 doz qts. in case 9 00 

1886, •' " 7.50 

Angelica. 1882. I dnz. qts. in case. . . 9.00 





?â–  




t*^-^ 429-437 JACKSON ST O 

San Francisco 



,£NUINE' * 'BEWARE OF 





BEEI^ PUmP 



Beer Supplies, Pumps, 
Etc., Etc. 



SOa ELUS STREET, CITY, 

TFl,E^^n^■F: ;>(^M'». 



^. Pacific Coast Branch, HARRY WENDT, Mgr. 



,.0 Sso^»»-, "<_ 



A i* HOtAllMOJbCOi 



60TT\(D B- 
A.P-HOTAilNO*CO. Itf^' 



EQUALLED BY NONE 




H. L. RE A & CO. 

INTERNAL REVENUE BROKERS, 

All kinds of busiucsB api>crtnininK to Ibe Internal Huvcnuc Dupartmcnl 
attended to with promptnees. 



423 WASHINGTON STREET, 



TKiKrifi'VK l7-">7. 



AN n; ANTISCO. 



30 



f/eifie wijsiE j^^Q sfii^iT r^EviEw. 



STILL ]LlkL\(; li(l.\l':S Kl THE OLD STAM), 

314 SPEAR ST., SAN FRANCISCO. 

Hobbs, Wall ^j^i Co., 

Muiiiifiiiiiini.t (if Knri/ Varictri of 

BOXES. 

AM kinds of Boxes on hand and made to order with 
promptness. Wine and Liquor Cases a Specialty. 



Redwood Cargoes Sawed To Order. 



Geo. Kammkkkk. 



Otto B Sciimiki'KK. 



Wi 



:?Q=KFI'LDN. 



wm. 



WINE COMPANY. 



W Ili'I. !â– ..â– - \T.K \M' Kt;T \11, 



|^i(^t7-(irad(^ U/i^i^s of ^bjoluti^ purity 

HIKKIT FKOM 

H. W. CRABB'S Famous Vineyard "TO-KALON." 

Loialed .It Oakville, Napa Co., Califounia, 

.M</l/''l/ I'limilll TdlllfH. OUR SPECIALTY. 

I'rirtttf Crlldrn I-'Hrnitihcd. 

Goods shipped to any part of the United States or llie American 
Continent generally. 

E.XPOKT TO EnKOPE. Correspondence Itcfpei (fully Sdluilcd. 

Office and Drpot: /.?7? MMIKKT ST.. San Fnniri.^n,. 



Lachman & Jacobi 



DEALERS IN- 



ifornia Wines aiin Branilles, 

BRYANT AND SECOND STUEETS, SAN FRANCISCO. 




Eastern Agents'* 



EDINGER BROS. & JACOBI, 

Cor. DiivcT .^ I'carl Sis., Brooklyn IJridgf Stoic No ?, N. Y 



LOf/lA PPI^TA uUlVlg^p CO. 

— SL'COE.S.SOllH TO— 

llavu Ci'tistaiitly on llaiiil n Full Su|)]i]y 

..f till," I'ullowiiit: Si/.cs of 

2x2--4 Feet Long, 2x2--5 Feet Long, 

2x2--6 Feet Long. 
,ir/i(«/i irlll be Hold iil rcaMimiilili' iiiIrM, 



LOMA PRIETA LUMBER CO. 



oma Prieta, 



Santa Cruz Co., Cal 



A JIalpa.-, .Vaiiamr. 



H. .V. .MijiKlAM, Siipcririlendi'iit. 



Los Gatos & Saratoga Wiae Go. 

i'i:<u>icEUS or ( noicE 

WINES and BRANDIES 



MUSCAT, 
ANGELICA, 
ROYAL NCCTAR, 

ZINFANDEL, 

SHERRY, 



HOCK, 

SAUTERNE, 

OLD POR"' 
GUTEDEL. 
RIESLING, 



FROM FOOTHILL VINEYARDS. 

VIXKV.UniS AM) Cia.LAlIS: 

Los Gatos and Saratoga, Santa Clara Co., C»i. 

Branch Office! 1227 Broadway, Oakland, California. 



P. O. Box 224S. 



Telephone fJo. 3IO. 



nOHNS & KALTENBACH 




CALIFORNIA WINES and BRANDIES. 



TillLi: WINES 
A SI'KCIALTY 



on l< i: AMt CELLAUS 

-â– ^. 23 1^jPlK.PCE,T ST. 

SA.N I'ltWCISCO. 



ESTABLISHED 



A. Finke's 



J'loduccrs oj 

CALIFORNIA 



ABSOLUTELY PURE 



809 MONTGOMERY ST.. 

San Francisco. 

Telephiine 5024. ; 




1 864n 



Widow 



First Premium 

(' II A ^1 PA ONES. 



(ioi.i) Seal, 

Caktk Blanche, 

nonpakkii.. 



JTc^FirsI Preminnns for llrt-l 
Callfiniiia Chami>ai:tR*sa\var(U(l 
I'.v till' Slale Fails, is7()-'.r,> .iiul 
\\ Iieii'VLT exliibiti'il. 



Liquor Flavors 

WlLliiflU t WWl 



74 WILLIAM STREET, NEW YORK. 



GENUINE XX BEADING OIL XX 

Jitiliutil To $7.r,0 lYr Oalloit, 

Goods F»>r Sale In liillfotttla only by 

REDINGTON &. CO. 23-27-29 second st., san francisco 



f/ceifie wi;^E /c|^d sfif^iT i^eview. 



I,. .1. i;ci«i'iV:r.>.. SnnGnlirifl.('i)iiliiiu«n 

\lH;i'lHil, l^M'i, 1 iluz. .|1^. ill l-lisi'. .. $7.:ii) 

.Musi-alcl, l^ivj, 1 iluz. Ills, ill i-iiM'. . . 'J.IKI 

lS,si!, •• "• "... 7.5U 

Tnkav, li^f'-, 1 lUiz. (its. in cnse U 1)0 

■• ■ ISSC, " •• '• T.SO 

.M:uliir:i, iss'i. 1 ,luz. qls. in CISC... U.OU 

issc, ■• •• '■ .... 7,.'j(l 

llnimly, IsM, '■ •' " .... l.'i.OII 

issc. •• ■' •• .... lii.(K) 

Zinfa-iili'I, ivjil, 1 cliiz .(ts. Ill casf.. 4.IKI 

" a •• pt)!. " .. 5.U0 

I!iii-,!,'cr, Ifi'JO, r ili)z. (1(6. in cisc -I.IHl 

• -J •• pis. " .MX) 

.\ll llii' l<iiTi;niii'; viiil:i!;i's iiw true In 
iiuiiu' and ai^f, as iiuticatt-it on labi-1. Wc 
iruai'aiiU'i? tlK*al)siiliiU' piu'it.v of I'vcry but- 
lli- iif wine and bianily put lip by us. 

Bitters. 

C. W. AIJIJOTT A 00. 

AN(;oSTtIkA lUTTKKS. 

TIk' John 'r. OutliiiL; Co.. Ai^cnls, 
San FraiK-isi'o, 

One ease 2 do/., pints f 15.01) 

Onf-hnlf cnso 1 doz. pints . . T.liU 

— ^-.^..^. — 

Imported Wines. 

HELLMANN BltOH. & CO., 
5*J.5 Front street, San Francisco. 

SIIKKKIES. 

Forrc^tcr vV: t'o., Jerez, in 

Hooil, per !;alloii $ l..'j() ^'>.m 

Forrester A; Co., Jerez, per 

ease 12.00 10.00 

Garvey I'i: Co., Jerez, in 

wood, l)er gallon 1.75 5.00 

PORTS. 

Olllev :J1.75 to S5.IIII 

Oltlev, per case ?!:.' DO 

W. B. CHAl'MAN. 
123 California street, Han Francisco. 

RED WINES. 

(Barton it Guestier, Bordeaux.) 

Quarts. Pints. 

Floirac $ 7.50 f .S..iO 

Fanillac U..il) 

Cliateau I.acroix s.llll 'J, (HI 



St. Jiilieii IfiSl iJ.IKI 

SI. .lulien l.s.s; U.'.'iii 

St. Esteplle 1S.S1 0.00 

Clialeau duGallan, 18S1 10.50 

ISiS 

le I'ain, 1.S7S 11..V) 

Poiitet Canet, 1S87 i:i..')0 

l.SSl 15.00 

riiat. lievchevelle, l.S,Sl ItJ.OO 

("liHteau Layranije, 1M78 'i^'.OO 

I'liat lirown ('anteiiac, 1S74. li'J.OO 

Cliateau Laii;;oa IS.OO 



1874. . . 

1S7S... 
liCoville, 1S7S.., 
Lariise, 1S74. . . 
LaKle, 1.S74.... 
Mari^iux, 1S74. 
Latour, 1S70... 



24.00 
21.00 
24..')0 
24.50 
2U.II0 
20.00 
31.00 



(IT. Cnvillier tVi frere, Bordeaux.) 



FaniUac, IfiSO U.OO 

ISSl 11.50 

Cliateau Bataillev, l.SSl 17.51) 

Chat. Kirwaii, IS7S 20.rill 

Clial. Cos d'Estourliel, IS7S. 28.00 

Cliateau Latour, ISIW 30.00 

Chat. Larose, 1S70 24.00 

'* Bevcheville, 1S74 

ChateauTalbot d'Anx, 1S75 24.00 

Cliateau Leoville, ISSy 16..M 

Latour, ISliS 30.00 

Chat. Foiilel Canet, IS74.... 23.00 
Cliat. I'ichoii Loii,:;iieville 

1S7II â–  23.00 

Cliat. Cheval Blane, 1889... 14.00 ... 

St. Etnilion Superieur 10.00 

(Du Vivier & Co., Bordeaux.) 

St. Marc ? 7 00 * 8 

Pontet Canet 1100 12. 

(It. >t C. Balarcsque, Bordeaux) 
Chateau de Frauds 0.00 10. 



31.00 



U.OO 



24.00 



WHITE WINES. 

(Barton A Guestier, Bordeaux. 



Sautenies 1S78 

Viii de Graves, 1878. 
Barsac, 1878 



9.25 
10.50 
U.OO 



10.25 
11. 50 
12.00 
18.50 
23.00 
31.50 



Haul Sauternes, 1874 17..50 

La Tour Blanche, 1S74 22.00 

Chi.leau Yquem, 1884 30 50 

Chateau Yqllcm, 1874 .S6.00 

(H. Cnvillier * frere, Bordeaux.) 

Sauternes 12.00 13.00 

CUateau Giraud, 1884 28.00 29.00 

LaToiirBlanclie'84 28.00 29.00 
(Du Vivier i<: Co., Bordeaux.) 
Graves premieres *9.00 *IO.IIO 



CAI.II'OUNIAN— IlKn WINKS. 

I A. Duval). 

I!ur;,'iiiiily. 1S.S9 .5.00 li.ill) 

Cabernet" SauvlftiKMi, 1890... 5.00 (j.OO 

CAI^ll-'OllNIA — WHITE WINKS. 

(A. Duval). 

Uieslinp, 1889 4.50 5..5I1 

Chablis, 18S.S .'i.llii ll.lHI 

.Sautcrne, ISSU 5.111) il.iid 

Creme de Sauterne, 1889, 

(private stock) 7.50 8.50 

rl'IilJUNIIIKS— RED WINKS. 

(Boucliard i)eie A tils, BeauneCote D'Or.) 

Macon, 1S84 10..50 11.50 

roimnurd, IS84 12..50 13..50 

1881 13.75 

CI06 de Vonyeot, 1887 (Mono- 
pole)... 20.00 21.00 

Cliainljcrtin 1884 21. .50 22.50 

(Bouchard pere <fc tils, Beaune, Cole D'Or) 

Chaldis, 1884 1 1. .50 12.50 

Chablis, '84(H.C.&F., bot- 
tled here) 10.50 I1..50 

DOCKS. 

(S. Friedborig, Mayellce. ) 



.? 9. .50 
. 10.50 
. 14.00 
14 .50 
. 14..')0 
. 17.00 



'Se- 



*I0..50 
ll..'iO 
15 00 
15.50 
15.50 
18,00 

I8.IK) 



23 .511 



31.00 
33.00 



Laubeiiheimcr. 18S9 . . . 

Niei-sleiner, 1889 

Hoihheimei-, I8'<i; 

Liebfrauinilch, 188;) . . . 

Geiscuhelincr, 1880 

liudesheilner, 1884 .... 
Liel>cnfrallinilcli, I8S9, 

Icctcd Grapes" 17.00 

Haiientlialer. 18-84 21.00 

Hochheiiner Doin Deehaney, 

1.SS4 22.50 

Liebfraumilcli, 1876, "Extra 

Qualitv" 30.00 

SteinberycV Cabinet, 1870... 32.00 

(Prince Mettci nidi's Estate.) 
Schloss,Toliannislierf;er, '0S.J4.5.OO ?4ii.0(i 

SPARKLINCi HOrK. 

(S. Fricdborii;, Mayence.) 
Liebfiaumilch Brut, 1889 ...S'iS.OO S;30.00 

SHERRIES. 

(Sandeman, Buck A: Co., Jerez. 

Pemartin Brut 20.00 

" Umbrella 21.00 

" Amontillado 22.00 

PORTS. 

E. D. dry. 1887 18.00 

L. O. fiiiil V, I8ST 18.1111 



31 

WM. WOLFF i\i CO., 

329 Market strcel, San Francisco. 

(Diibos Freres, liordeaux.) 

Chateau de I'Isle, in casks.. (95.00 

(Jonrnu Kreres, Bordeaux.) 
Clarets and Sauternes, per 

case from f 7..50 to JwJO.oo 

(F. Cliuuvcnel, Nuils, Cote d'Or.) 

Bui;;uiulv wines 110.00 to ii.'i2.00 

(ilciikell .\: Co., Mayeiiic.) 

Hock wines from ."f8.i)() to ♦00.00 

(Dciiihard »V: C()., Coblenz.) 

Mock and Moselle wines f8.00 to ISiS.OO 

(Mor;;an Bros., Port St. Mary.) 
Ports and Sherries in wood, 

per(;alloii |;|.75 to $-1.50 

Port and Sherries in cases, 

[n-i- case »8.00 to 1:15.00 

(Mackenzie it Co., -Terez.) 
Ports and Sherries in wood 

from »1.75 lo »4..50 

ACHILLE STAKACE. 
70 Pearl street. New York. 

ITALIAN WINKS. 
RKI) WINES. 

(Giuseppe Scala, Naples.) 
Lacryma Christi, 12 qts.. . .$ (i.50 per case 

Faleriui, " 7..50 " 

Capri. " B..50 " 

Capri, 24 pis 7..50 " 

Moscato di Siracnsa, 12 (its. 9.00 *' 
Vesuvius wine in barrels of 

about (io t{ull(>ns 1.05 per gal 

WHITE WINES. 

Lacryma Cliristi, 12 iits f 7..5fl per ease 

Faleriio " 7.50 

Capri, " 0..50 

Capri, a4pts 7..50 

KPARKI.INO WINK.X. 

Lacryma Christi, 12 (|ls flO.OO per case 

24 pts 2050 

(Tj. Lalxirel Melilii, Florence) 
Chianti Wine ill llatks without oil 

Cases of 2 doz. i|t6 $12..50 per case 

" 4 " pts 14.50 

SIIEKWOOI) ,t SHEHWOOD, 
212-214 Market street, San Fraiiciseo. 

ESlllENAUEK A CO., IIOUDKAU.'C. 

Quarts. 

Medoc * 7 l>0 

Merin d'or 7..'>0 

l*...uillac .8.00 

lied Seal S.flll 

St. .lulicn superior '.' 50 




P. C. ROSSI 

President 



\T 



p.U^^ 



-SWISS 



co^o 



A. SBARBORO, 

Secretary 



ASTI, SONOHA CO., CAL. 

PRODUCERS OF FINE 



Ny 



CALIFORNIA WINES and BRANDIES 



AN 1) 



MONTECRISTO CHAMPAGNES 

(NATURALLY FKiaiENTED IN F.OTI'I.KS) 

Grand Diploma of Honor Gold IV/ledal Dub>lin, Ireland, 1892 

Highest Award Genoa, Italy, 1892 Gold Medal Columbian EZxp'n, 1893 

Gold tvledal California Midwinter Fair, 1894- 



MAIN OFFICE, 524 MONTGOMERY STREET 



SAN FRANCISCO 



Gold Medal "Turin, 1 884 ^l& Highest Award Chicago, 1894 

L. GANDOLFI & CO., Eastern Agents Italian wines and produce 

113-123 souxm: fikxm: jPs.\/e:., neax/ ^iroK.tc 



-3FORie 



iJine B)oofe ©Y^oriC arjc} ©Artistic ^o& printing go to 

R. n. woob CO. >i^ -!•' r. A iTKio SI., s. v\ 



t-vie_ 



WHERE nothing BUT FIRST-CLASS WORK IS EXECUTED- 



32 



PASIfie WIJME /cJMD SflF^IT (REVIEW. 



W. A. TAYLOR & CO. 

39 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. 



GONZALEZ, BYASS & CO., 
SUVA & COSENS - 
BLANDY BROS. & CO., 
ACKERMAN-LAURANCE, 
WILHELM PANIZZA, 
MARTINI & ROSSI, 
I. & V, FLORIO, - - 
PETER F. HEERING, - 
REIN & CO,, - - - 



I?.EI='I?.ESE3SrTIISrC3-: 

SHERRIES 

PORTS 

MADEIRAS 

SPARKLING SAIIMUR 

RHINE WINES 



VERMOUTH 

- MARSALAS 

CHERRY CORDIAL 

MALAGAS 



JOSE BOULE, 
A, BRONDUM & SON, 
ROUYER, GUILLET & CO., 
JOHN JAMESON & SON, Ltd., 
THE ARDBEG DISTILLERY CO., 
CHAS. TANQUERAY & CO., 
MAGNUM BRAND, 
MAGNUM BRAND, 
MAGNUM BRAND, 



TARRAGONAS 

ACQUAVIT 

. BRANDIES 

IRISH WHISKY 

SCOTCH WHISKY 
OLD TOM GIN 
JAMAICA RUM 

ST. CROIX RUMS 
HOLLAND GIN 



ORDERS SOLICITED FOR DIRECT SHIPMENTS. 



SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS IN TERMS, PRICES, ETC. 

^0\^EBMAN-LA[;ftA/Vcf 

Dry Royal 

3i^ 



$21 Per Case, 

QUARTS 

lli»)'l Irt thr nrltp FflfiUIrn loii. 
The nVAL,lTl' is Ihrtr. 




$23 Per Case, 



PINTS 




^i l)ryli,)y.il 



Universally recognized as one of the choicest 
DRY SPARKLING WINES OF FRANCE. 

FOR SALE BY 



r»rrf Ta-lhiy Ini Siinie <if thr Finest Wine 

Driithirs 111 Arir lor/.-, Koslon 

ami I'hihtilrl fthta. 



WINE MERCHANTS & GROCERS. 
TRY IT. 

This Wine has been known since 1811. Very largely used both in Europe and England, 
claimed by best Authorities in the World as an Absolutely Pure French 
Sparkling Wine of Remarkable Value. 

TRY IT ONCE. YOU WILL USE NO OTHER. 



Pro- 



SOLE AGENTS W. A. TAYLOR & CO., 39 BROADWAY, N. Y. 



f/fSlfie WIJME /rJMD Sflf^lT f^EVIEW. 



33 



(Sherwood .t Sberwtioil, Continue'l.) 

White Seal 10. 

I'ontet Canet 11. 

La Uose 12. 

Gold Seal i:t. 

Gittvee S. 

Sauteriies U. 

Macken?,ie's Ports ami Sher- 
ries in wood per gallon 1.75 to 4. 

M«< kenzie's Ports and Sher- 
ries in eases Hl.dOto 14. 

HnnI, liiMipe, Teai;ne iV Co's 

P<irts ill eases 13.0U to 19. 

CHARLES MEINECKE A CO. 
314 Saeramelitii street. San Franeiseo, 

A. de Luze »<: Fils, Hoideans 

Clarets, per ease tS.OO to $28. 

A. de Luze ct tils, Bordeaux 

Saiilernes, per ease 12.00 to 26. 

C. Marey&LigerBelair.Nuits 

Bnrguudies, white and 

red, iier ease 15.C0 to 2:1 

D. M. Feuerlieerd, JriitCo., 

Oporto. Port wines 

per case 15.00 to 20. 

D. M. Feuerheerd, .Ir.,.tCo., 

Oporto, I'lirt Wines, 

ill wood per gal 2.00 to 5. 

Dutf Gordon t.V Co.. Slierries 

in wood per jj:al 2 00 to 5. 

Laeave tS; Co. ,Sheri ies Crown 

Brand in >g 1.40 to 1. 

South Side Madeira 2.00 to 2. 

St. Croix Rum, L. B 5.50 

Arrack •Bo.yal" Batavia 5.00 to 0. 

Boord *!t Son, London Dock 

Sherr.v, per ease 12.00 to 15. 

O. M. PabstmannSohn, Mainz 

Rhine Wines per case.. S.50 to 28 
Schulz A Wafiner, Frankfurt 

o M Kliiiie Wines per 

case 11.00 to 14. 

W. A. TAYLOR .t CO. 
Jerez de la Frontera. 

SHERRIE.S. 

Per G 
No. 1 P Tahle. full bodied ( 4, 

1 VP Table, very pale \ '^ 

2 P Full anJ round ) , 

2 VP Vcrv Pale, lii;lit, fine ( • ' 

3 P Full body, soft, rich ( , 

3 VP Very pale, liulit, full ( ' 

4 P Full body, old, mellow ( ., 

4 VP Very pale, delicate, dry \ ' ~ 

5 P Full body, rich, fruity ( ., 
5 VP Pale, old", tine ' ^ • • - 



6 r Extra full and fruity ) „ -, 
l> VP Very line mid mellow ( •" "" 

7 Aino AMONTI LLAno, old and 

iiultv 2.M5 

s Cl.O (''I,()|t()S.\, mellow soft.. :i25 
Itex Superb. a,l Desert Wine... ;i.;i5 
Ul AMONTILLADO Solera, yery 

idd auduultv 4.4U 

11 QUEEN VICtOltIA Grand old 

wine 5 05 

.SPECIAL WINK.S. 

Velyet \ Clean, soinul wine 1.25 

B Full bodv anil rich l..")l( 

Special N S.ill, full and line Li'ill 

W Dark, full b.idy 1.75 

" B C^lean and sound — Fino... l.HO 

Seeo Fine, old and dry $l.S5 

O S Fine, rich and fruity S.45 

C N Superb table 3.10 

Corona Delieiuu^ and tielieate. . . . ;i.25 

Special S (Irand old wine 4.011 

Neclar-Fiuo, N. P. U 4.05 

RHINE AND MUSEI.I.IC WINES. 

Willielm Panizza, Mayeiiee. 

Per Case. 

Laubeuheimer »8-0» 

Dledisheiiner S.'iO 

Niesteiuer 10.25 

Hockheinler II 50 

Lieltfranmileh 13.25 

Foster .Tesuitfjarten 13.75 

Rudeslieimer 14.00 

Ebacher 14.75 

Geseuheiiner 17,25 

Marcobrnnner 17.5(1 

Rannlhaler ly.iiil 

Geisenheim Rothberg 21.(H) 

Neisteimer Ilebbach 21.5(1 

Rudeslieimer lieri; ' 23.0(1 

Bulk wines at f. o. b. prices. 

PORTS. 

Silya A Cosens. 

Per Gal. 

T— Tawnev *1.90 

R -Extra fiiU body and rich 2.05 

V T— Very tawney 2.25 

V O T — Very old tawney 2.35 

T P -Extra tawney, delicate 2..50 

T P O— Tawney, extra old 3.10 

BRANCO— White— Fine While Port, 3.25 
JEWEL— A Specialty, (dd and mel- 
low â–  3..50 

S 0— Superior old 3.85 

EMPEROR— 30 years in wood, grand 

old wine 4.75 

M C R— 1827— Choicest royal, li.Itt 



Direct shipplni; ordere solicited on the 
most favorable terins. 

TAUKAIIONA WlNKH. 

Jose Boule, Tanajjoiiia. 

ip's. t\: oi'ts. per Gal. 

* Fine, clear and smooth $1.15 

ItOVAL PURE JUICK-Full body 

and rich 1.25 

TAWNEV PORT -Light color, soft 

and old 1.2.% 

These wines have none of the object- 
ionable as! rini^cncy so eomnion in wines 
of this eliiss, and ;ue alKoliitely pure. 

American Whiskies. 

IIEI.LMANN BROS. X CO., 
525 Front street, San Francisco. 

Blue Grass, per !,'allon t2,00 to |:i..50 

Boone's Knoll, " 2.40 to 4..50 

SPRUANCE, STANLEY A Co., 
410 Front street, San Francisco. 

Kentucky Favorite f 3.00 

Extra Kentucky favorite... 3.50 

O. P. T 2..50 

O. K. Olil Stoik 5.00 

Harries' Old Bourbon 2.00 

Kentucky Favorite, in cases 8. ,50 

H. O. B.'juKS U.OO 

O. P. C ju.es 10..50 

African Stomach Bitters, C9. 7.50 

SIEBE BROS. & PLAGEMAN. 
322 Sansome street, San Francisco. 

O K Extra 13.50 to 10.00 

OK Rosedale 2.50 to 3.110 

Ilvain 2.75 

Golden Pearl 2.25 

Marshall 2.25 

Old Family Bourbon 1.75 

Old Bourbon 1..50 

SHERWOOD & SHERWOOD. 
212-214 Market street, San Francisco. 
Carlisle in bbls. Re-imported 

Spriiifc '80 per f;al 12.50 

Carlisle in bbls. Re-imported 

Spring '.SO, per gal 8.25 

Keystone Monogram Rye in 

cases, per ease 14.25 

Old Saratoga, in cases, per 

case 15.25 

Mascot Bourbon 'u bbls per 

gal 2.25 

Robin Hood Bourbon in bbls 

per .gal 2..50 



Sherwood Private Stock in 

bbls, per gal S.On 

O. P. S. Sherwood in bbls, 

per gal 3.25 

Old Saratoga, ill bills per gal 4.00 

JOSEPH MELC/.ER & CO. 
.504 and 500 Market street, San Franeiseo. 
Native Pride, Old Bourbon, 

(per bbl) per gallon »2.,50 

Old Ulp Van Winkle 2.50 

Nevilles Old Bourbon 1.50 

KOLB & DENHARD, 
420-426 Montgomery si., Han Francisco. 
Per gal l*er cs. 

Ncmpareil t;i;,5(i $7.50 

Nonpareil A 4.U0 9.00 

Nonpareil A A 5.00 12.00 

Canteen 3.5(; 8.00 

Canteen O P S ,5.00 11.00 

NABER, ALFS .t BRUNE. 

323 and 3'25 Market street, San Francisco. 

Phoenix Old Bourbim, Al. . . t2.75 

•• Old SI'k 3.00 

" " Al.yopf 2.50 

" OK,llK)pf 3.,50 

" Ponv,Priv St'k 4.00 

Club House Bourbon, Old.. 4.50 C.OO 

Gold Medal Boui bon, 100 pf '2.50 

Union Club '• " 2.25 

Superioi Whisky 1.75 

•• BB Whisky 1.50 

Liquors— In cases. 

Per Case 

Phu'iiix Bourbon OK, in Ss II0..50 

Al, " 7.50 

Al,24pts 8.00 

AI,48Mpt 9.00 

Rock and Rye Whisky in ,58 7.50 

Rum Punch Extract, in 58. 8.00 

Blackberry Brandy, in 58. 7.50 

HENCKEN & SCHRODER, 
210 Front street, San Franeiseo. 

Per Gallon. 

Our Favoiite O K };2.75 to f:i.M 

Our Choice 2.,5II " 3.00 

Paul Jones 2.25 " 2.50 

Star of '76 2.00 

Old Crown 1.75 "2 00 

Old Bourbon 1.50 

CHARLES MEINECKE .t CO., 

314 Sacramento street, San Francisco. 

(Charles Meinecke & Co.,' Continued) 

John Gibson Son A Co *2.0(l to $4.00 



Ms ^Um\ CMagDe 



Highest Grade m the World! 

Used by All the Leading Clubs 
Hotels and Restaurants . . . 

For sale by .\U First-Class 
Grocers and Wine Merchants. 




THREE KINDS, ALL OF EQUAL EXCELLENCE. 

CA-RTE BLA/NCHE 

A Rich Wine! 

G-RA/ND Vl/N SEC 

'Ihe Perfeotion of a Dry Wine! 

B-RUT 

An Exoeedingli/ D;y Wine! 



Macondray Bros. & Lockard, 



124 SANSOME STREET 

Sole .\ gents for the I'acific Coast. 



FOR FINE PRINTING, V:: R. M. WOOD CO., #rv 



6Battery St., 
rancisco, Cal. 




W. G. COLDEWEY, President. 






LOUISVILLE 

PUBLIC WAREHOUSE GO. 

LOUISVILLE KY. 
CHARTERED ISSS. C.IPITAL $300,000.00. 

1 Mic mm: 



hi hSPf ^ r r !-^'"''FSi' STORAGE OF KENTUCKY WHISKIES. 




mm:::^ 



*^»«*. 






â–  I'lOH'HlKTOHS 



m'^ 



fjT- 



i 



SPECIAL BONDED WAREHOUSE No. 1. 

101: rUl IT liUA.NUlK.-. 
NoTK — Posilirel]' uo Whisky received unless direct from the Distillery. Wbitx fob Rates. 



34 



f/reifie WIJME /rJME) SflF^IT F^^EVIEW. 



fov FIXE PKIXTING 



<iO TO 



R. M. Wood Co 

314-316 BATTERy STREET 

SAN FRANCISCO 



lllAS. w. I'l'l;!-;. 



J")IN .M'ia'.V.\* 1,. 



Spruance, Stanley & Co. 

IMroi:Ti;i:s axi> Jni;in;i:s hf riXE 

WfilsFJes, Wiiies Lipois. 

Sole agents for the Celebrated African Stomach Bitters 

4\C, I'i:oN-T Stiieet, - - San FuAN*"is<'t. <^'\i,. 



ifoinia Wine 






Wines and Brandies, 

Cor. Sutter ct- Grant A vr. San Franei.-<eo. ( 'ah 



ESTABLISHED 1853. 



SAMUEL WANDELT, 



STEAM AND HAND 



/;/. ti.t, (ir, SOUTH Tiiiiii) ST.. uiionii i.y\. \ i. 

Wine and Lip BarrelsaimTanKs 

jPl Spe;eialty. 

I am now prepared lo mnkc and furnifth the Iai't;c8tf as well as the smalU-Ht, 
arlicte in my line of CoDperafjc. EstlmalCH fjiven wilh promptness. All Work war- 
ranted to lie Hnislied In workmanlike manner and eipiAl to any in tb^ market. 



TRADE MARKS. 

WM. C. HENDERSON, Patent Attorney and Solicitor. 

\orrlM lllilil- •'"• •' '' ■'»'''•. A'vir f. .V. fulfill o/Jlit: llniniix 'JO to j:{ 

P. O. iJox VS2. ir i.s/f/vr.yov. /;. r. 

KiTi'iiti'cn ymrr' f^iKTlinii". iiiiliitliiic niTViri' in I'vamiiiiii); Ciirps, U. S. Patviit 
oillif. AniiTlinii mid l''(>ri'>);ii Pnli'iilH |ir(i(iiri'(l. f'livi'air (ilfil. lU'juc'ti'd a|ipli('»- 
liiinr. ri'Vlvcd. ()|>iiiliiiiii ulvi'ii ns to hi'ii|h' niicl viillillly nf pnli'iilK. Iiifrhi^'i'iiu'iil 
KiillH prorwiilcd mill tlrfciiilfd. TIlADK-MAIth'S, I.AUKLS AND COPYUUIHTS 
reiiiftlcrt'd. 

£;j^" Ctijiy of niiy priiili'd pnlriit , tradt'-niiirk or lulirl fiirnixla-d for 'J'l ('cnl!*. 
Corrtupondcncu Invited. Ilaiid-bouk on PitcnlB furnisliud FitEE on itpplleation. 



Mmi llEVEME AND ilSTOUS lillOKEllS. 

THE EXPORTATION OF QRAPE BRANDY, WHISKY AND SPIRITS FROM 
BOND OR WITH PRIVILEGE OP DRAWBACK, SPECIALTIES 

btMliTP in U. S. Staiiilanl Hytlromelrrs and Kxtra Stems, Prime's Wantaj^e 

Kods, l.>ic Wlit'fls and (iau^inix rods. Also DistiUei-s'. Keetihers, 

^Vtll^ll.•^alL■ Li'Hinr DeaU-rs and llrewers' lUxtks. 



OFFICE, 413 WASHINGTON STREET, SAN FRANGISGO. 

F. O. :Bo3c 240Q. Telephone; 646. 




JOS.|nELGZEIi&GO: 

Growers and liealers in 

WINES AND BRANDIES 



Pniprietors Glen Ellen Wine Vaul's. 



". Fine Table Wines a Specialty 



504-506 Market St., 

S:ili ]'iaii.i.-c.., Cn\. 






A30 PINE STREET. 



SAN FRANCISCO. CAL. 



See Specimen of our Work in thi.s Paper. 




Pure California Wines & Grape Brandie,s.| 
THE 

San Gatinei Wine Go. 



OF S.iS (l.lliUlEl., 
5^ Los Aiiyrles County, CaU 

S^-^ ^ Are now prei>art*d with a lari;t' stock of wines and 

i£4f5i>^ Inandies of their own };row 111 t.i supply the traile 
and the market i;enerally. This Company o« ns 
the lamest vineyard in the world, eoverinf; over ^.-'lOO aeres. They have held theii 
u ines and hrantlieft fur several years in their own cellars, and do not offer any of 
their product until it has become properly matured. Their lar;;e stock of nia- 
ture<l wines and lirandies thus accumulated is now open to the purchaser. All 
l^oods nnilcr theii tr.ide mark are warranted pure and unadulterated, lieiiij; the 
successors to B. D. Wilson i^ Co., and to J. Dk Baktii Shokb, thev have become 
possessers of the "SHOItB" Brand of Brandy and -MOUNT VINEYAIUV 
Wine. Corres]iondence solicited. 

M.utsim.i.. svi:i.i.M.\yA co., .r. dk it.ntTii siionii. 

No. r, Ni'w York anil Brooklyn I!rid:;e Vault, President San Oabriel Wine Co. 

ri:\NKFOIlT St., NkW YolJK. San Oaiihiei.. Cai.. 



GEO. 0. BUCHANAN 



WHISKY BROKER, 



122 EAST MAIN STREET 



LOUISVILLE, KY. 



f/^eifie WIJME yV[MD Sfi'^IT F^EVIEW. 



35 



QUININE-WHISKY CO., Loiiifville, Ky. 

IN FIVK CASK LOTS. 

Lurire sizo, 1 dozen to ruse. .. . $1100 

Meilium " 2 " " U-'iO 

Sm.iU "5 " " 10.00 

COMIIINATION CAfilC. 

Oiu' dozen larj:e f^O.OO 

" medium 20A\] 

Two '• smiill 20.00 

MOOUE, HUNT .t CO., 
404 Front street, San FrnneL^co. 

I'er Gallon. 
Extra Ponv in Idds or J.j-lilds Jti.OO to fS.OO 
A .\ " '• •• l>f 4,00 

li " ■• " :i.."iO 

c ■• " • :i.oo 

live in Idils and Jii-ldds from '.IM) to .'i.OO 

A A in eases 11.00 

C in eases S.-W 

Imported Champagnes. 

CHARLES MEINECKE >M CO. 
.â– 114 Saeramento street, San Francisco. 

DKIIT/. A (ill. HERMANN, AY.. CHAMPAtJNE. 

Oold I-aeli See. |)er ease *.'i2.00 *;U.OO 

Gold Lack See. ti Maj^!uims 

per ease 31.00 

Cabinet Green Seal, per l)skt 25.50 27.00 

DIII'ANLOITP A CO., REIMS. 

Carte Bianehe, per case 21.00 22.00 

HELLM.\NN BROS. A CO., 
.VJ."i Front street, San Francisco. 

Krni; ,\: Co. "Private Cuvee" 

"per ca.ve.. *:!4.00 *:!C.tK) 

.losepli Terrier tils * Co 

per Ijasket 19.00 20.00 

Adrien & tils, per basket.... 17.(K) IS.OO 

W. B. CHAPMAN, 

12:! California street, San Francisco. 
Perrier.Tonet .\:Co."Spteial"*:i:i..50 ?;S5.50 

Resei ve Dry S4.00 SC.OO 

I'eirier Jonet iV; Co. Brut.... :i4.00 :ir,.00 
Half pts "Special" *42 in cs of 4S bottles. 

SHERWOOD A SHERWOOD, 
212-214 Market street, San Fi'ancisco, 
Moet iV: Chandon, White Seal :)4.00 36.00 
Brut Imper'l o6..')i: ;iS..50 

WM. WOLFF it CO. 
329 Market street, San Francisco 

QUARTS. PINTS 

Pommery Sec |:i4.00 *:j6.00 

MACONDRAY BROS. i<i LOCKARD, 

AGENT.S 

124 Sansome street, San Francisco. 
Louis Roederer, Carte 

Blanche $:!4.00 $;m.00 

Ltiuis Roederer, Grand Vin 

Sec 34.00 30.00 

Louis Roederer, Brut ;v4.00 30.00 

W. A. TAYLOR. too., 
.â– '.9 Broadway, New York. 

Sl'AKKT.INt; SAr.MClC. 

Ackermau-I^ansencc, Sanninr, France. 

Dry Royal *21.0l) ¥Si.OU 

Brut " al.OO 23.00 

Imported Brandies. 

WM. WOLFF A CO., 
329 Market street, San Francisco. 
Martell's Brandy, ' per cise $15.00 

•* •• 17.00 

VO " 24.00 

VSO •• 32.00 

" WSOP •' ,5U.50 

" " in octaves 5.75 to 12 00 

CHARLES MEINECKE A, CO., 
314 Sairamciito street, San Francisco. 
Champ Vineyard Pr«)pi-s. Co., 
Boutellean & Co. man- 
niiers Cofjnac in Octaves 

I'l^r Ral *5.25 to»,S.,50 

The Vineyard Proi)rs. Co. 
Boiitelleauit Co. mana- 
gers Reserve Vintai;es. 11.00 to 14.00 

E. REMY MARTIN * CO., Cofnae. 

IIRI.I.MANN BROS. A CO., AOENTS. 

525 Front Street, San Francisco. 

Kaii-de-Vie vieille f 15.00 

n'oo 

" 10.110 

Fine eham])agne 20. (K) 

Grande champai;ne vieille 22.00 

extra. •S'i.m 

•■ V O. p. I.S.5.S 30.00 

" •• S. O. p. IH47 35.00 

V.S. 6. iX'isi'A 50.00 

In octaves * 4.70 to 6.2.5 

W. B. CHAPMAN. 

12;i California street, San Francisco. 
(H. Cuvillier & frere Cof,'nai-.) 

Quarts. 
Fine CJi.ampagne, "Reserve," 

1H70 ^2 (jj| 

Grande Fine Champagne, isfio :iC.OO 



HELLMANN BROS. A CO.. 

.')25 FnnO street, San Francisco. 

E. Reniy Martin .^c Co., Cosmic. 

Cojrnac m ocla\cs per i;al . . 5.50 (i.,50 

In cases, sec special advert iscinent. 

P. Frapin .V; Oi., Co);nae. 

Co!;nac in octaves, perjjal.. 5,05 

Planat A Co., t'os;imc. 
Cognac in octaves, per Ka\. 



0,.50 



W. A. TAYLOR A VO.. 
39 Broailway, New York. 

C01iNA<' ilKANIIIKS. 
KOUYKU, (UIII.I.KTiV: CO., COdNAC. 

Vintasre. Qr. Casks, per i;al. 

IS,S0 *^••■*'> 

1SS4 •'■).40 

1,S75 ''â– â– >â– ' 

\HW T.40 



1,S40 

VSO 


12,25 

17 50 


Octaves, 5 cents per gallon 

CASKS. 


'XI ra. 

14, .Ml 


t, * . 

,1 « « * 


'.'.'.'. ,17.55 


,, # . * # 


19.50 



Imported Whiskies. 

BOWEN & SCHRAM, 

204 California street, San Francisco. 

Bernard .t Co., Leitli Scotland. 

Encore Scotch *12.00 



SHERWOOD & SHERWOOD. 

212-214 Market street, San Francif 
Burke's » » ♦ Irish, cases 
,1 # . # # •' " 

" Garnkirk Scotch " 
" Vieercfjal Scotch " 
Lawson's Li<inenr " '* 
Uam Var, " 

MeKenzie's Glenlivct » » » 

Scotch, i>cr case 

Busbell's Clul) Irish, in wood 
per g.allon 

HELLMANN BROS. & CO. 

525 Front street, San Francisco 
J. B. Sberritf .V Co,, Lochin- 

dae Islay, Scotili whisky 

iu wood, per i,^alIon. . . . 
J. B. Sherriff .V: Co,, Lochin- 

dae Islay, Scotch whisky 

per case 

Dublin Disliliers Co., Ltd., 

Dublin, Irish whisky, 

in wood, per ;.^aUon 

Dublin Distillers Co., Ltd,, 

Dublin, Irish whisky, 

iwiinse 



3., SO 
12,00 

4,.M) 
I'i.OO 



WM. WOLFF A CO., 
329 Market street, San Francisco. 

Can.idian CInl per case »15,00 

Wm. Jameson .V: Co.. " '" 'O 

A. Usher's Scotch.... " 11.00 and 12,00 



CHARLES MEINECKE A CO., 

314 Sacramento street, San Francisc 

Boord .V: Scui, London Finest 

Irish Malt Wl.iskcy 

Royal lli;bUl Si olcb Whisky 
John Ranisav, Islay M 
Scotch Whisky 



Jl'J, 

1!J., 



all 



W. A.TAYLOR .t (^O., 
39 Broadway, New York. 
The Ardbeir Distillery Co., Islay 
(^rs. 

isi..S5 

4.20 

4..55 

4.95 



New 

One Year 

Tnii Years 

Thiee Years 

CASKS. 

. ... one doz. hot. ?11 
. . 1.1 

. . »'i:;;;; 20 

JoilN JAMK.SON & SONS, DIIUI.IN. 

Qrs. Ocis 

New *4.00 *4.05 

One Year ■»•■»'• ^t' 

Two Years ■••'" * '■> 

Three Years 5 05 .5.10 

Foui Ycirs ••♦•• ■'■'" 

CASKS. 

« 1 doz hot. #12,00 

..* 14..'i0 

, . .â– ; '24.00 



W. B. CHAPMAN 
l-JS California si reel, San Francisco. 

SCOTCH WHISKY. 

(John Dewar .V: Siuis.) 

Old iliu'lilanil "Extra Spec- 
ial" *'■'•"" ■ - 

Old Hi(,'liland "Special Liip 
uener " 



Domestic Champagnes. 

A. WERNER & Co., 

52 Warren street, New York. 

Extra Dry t 7.00 t SOI) 



A. FINKE'S WIDOW, 

sou Monlfiomery street, San Francisci 

Prices on application. 

Lil'cral discount tollie trailc. 



ICOO 



PAUL MASSON, 

San Jose, California. 
Less than 5 cases. 

Premiere Cuvee, Dry *I0,00 JIS.OO 

Special.... 10. 00 IS.OO 
Special disconni for i|iiantities of 5 
cases or more. 



CHARLES MEINECKE & CO., 
314 Sacramento street, San Francisco. 

(BOOllD A son's, LONDON.) 

Old Tom Gin, per case ?11,00 

Pale Oranije Bitters, per ease 11,50 

dinner Brandy, Lii|ncur " 12.00 

Jamaica Rum, Old " 12.00 to 14.00 

IAIN Roval Batavia Gin in 

cases of 15 larj;e black 

bottles per ease 23.50 

in cases of 15 lar^e 

wliite liollles per case 24. .50 

Kii-sehwasser, Macholl Frercs 

Bavarian Hii^htand, per 

case 20.00 

S\\an Ci iu in }^ casks 3.75 

Double Kafile Oiu iu }i casks. 3.00 

John Ramsay Islay Scotch 

' Whisky in )-^ lasks 4 75 

' Boord's Piueaiiple brand Ja- 
maica Rums ill X casks. 5.25 to 0.50 



Imported Goods. 

(MISCELLANEOUS.) 

WM. WOLFF * CO., 
:i29 Market street, San Francisco. 
,1 de Kuvpcr iV: Sons Gin, large hot f20,.50 
med. " .... 10.00 
small 9..50 

Caiilrcll it Cochrane Belfast Giii^er 

Ale per barrel of 10 dozen 15.00 

Wolfe's Schiedam Schnapps per case 

,,narts 9..50 

Wolfe's Schiedam Schnapps per case 

imils 10..50 

Benedictine, per case, iinaiis 20.00 

" " pints 21.50 

.\polliiiaris Mineral Water 

Hinii;ari:ui Aperient Water 

F.icdrichsball 

I'.arlhohimav Brewery Co., Roches- 
ter, N. Y 

Dog's He.id brand of Oninncss' 

Stout an Bass' Ale 

Theo. Lappe s Genuine Aiomalii|ne 

per case 12,00 

fiilka Ktimmel per case 12. .50 



W, B CHAPMAN, 

123 California sircci, San Francisco. 
Plymouth Gin (unsweetened) #10..50 



HELLMANN BROS. & CO., 

525 Front street, San Francisco. 

Blankenlieym it Nolet. 

Union Gin 2.50 

Vanghan Jones 

Old Tom Gin, in cases 11,00 

Orange Bitters " 11. .50 

Patterson .t llibbcrl. 
Bass' Stout, per double doz 3.00 

Oninncss' Stout, " " 3. .50 

H. Underberg-Albiecht. 
Boonek-amp of Ma.ag liitlers, 12.75 to 1.'!.75 

J. B. Sberritf .V: Co. 
Jamaica Rum in V "'"' i'i'^ 

per gallon 4,30 to 5.10 

Tarragona Port in % casks 

pergallon 1.25 

Adrien M. Warde's Italia de 



[ isco, ]K'r case 



.30.00 



Sardines, brand "Philippe & Canand." 

W. A. TAYLOR & 00. 
39 Broadway, New .York. 

.MAUNtlM IlUA!si>, .lAMAlCA KIM. 

(^•«. Ocls. 

\ — Full body ^i.'M ?;>.95 

B— Rich, fat and idd 4.30 4.35 

C— Siiperhne, cxt la .5,05 .5.05 

MAGNUM 3.10 3..50 

(IINS. 
CIIAS. TANQUKRAY & CO., LONIION. , 

Bulk. 

Old Tom Gin, ipiarter casks #:! 25 

Old Tom Gin, octaves 3,.30 

Cases, one (h»zcn each S.75 



SHERWOOD & 8HERW 
212-214 Market street San F 



A. Hontman .t Co.'s Oiu, 

large black bottles 

Hontman iSc Co.'s Gin, 

medium b)ack bottles. 

Hontman it Co.'s Gin, 

small black bottles 

Houtman it Co.'s Gin 

large \vliite bottles 

Houtman it Co.'s Oiu, me- 
dium white bottles 

Houtman it Co 's Gin 

small white bottles 

Hontman it Co.'s Oiu, 

octaves per gallon 

Bass' Ale in wood, lilids 

Joules Stone Ale in wood, 

hhds 

R.^ss Ginger Ale. per barrel.. 
* Soda Water, per case 
" Tonic Water, " 

' Potash Water, *' 

" Raspberry Vinegar to 

gal, per case 

" Raspberry Vinegar S to 

gal, per ease 

" Lime Juice Cordial 6 to 

gal, per ease 

" Lime Jiiice^Cordial 8 to 

gal, per case 

" Lime Fruit Juice to 

gal, per case 

" Lime Fruit Juice .S to 

gal, per case 

" Orange Bitters, jier case. 
Burke's Bass' Ale, pints, per 

bid of s doz 

Burke'.". Guinness' Stout, pts 

per bid of .S doz 

Burke's Jamaica Rum per cs, 
" Old Tom Gin " 
Dry Gin " 

" Henne.ssy Brandy, per 

case 

Port Wine, Gato br'd 

l>cr case 

Flcischman's Royalty Gin, 10 

gal ]iackages, per gal, . . . 

Flcischman's Royalty Gin, 15 

gal packages, i»er gal 

Flcischman's Royally Oin, 20 

gal packages, jier gal 

Flcischman's Roy.alty Gin, 50 

gal packages, per gal 

Meiuhold's Anchor Brand 

Ciller, [ler case, quarts.... 

Meiuhold's Anchor Brand 

Ciller, per ease, pints 



OOD. 
raueisco. 
Per Case 

t2l..50 

18. .50 
9.00 

22.50 

19. .50 

9.50 

3..55 
»50.00 

50.00 

15.00 

7,00 

7,00 

7,00 

7.00 

6.00 

6.00 

4. .50 

4.00 



3. .50 
S.OO 

IC.OO 

10.00 
12..50 
10.75 
10.75 

16.00 

10.00 



2.22K 
2.20 
2.15 
3.25 
4.00 



Syrups, Cordials, Etc. 

KOLB it DENIIARD, 
422 Miuitgomcry street, San Francisco. 

Rock Ciindy Syrnp 75c. per gaj 

Raspberry Syrui 7.5i*. 

Orixcat Syrnp 7.5c. " 



Louisville, St. Louis & Texas Railway 

" BEECHWOOD ROUTE." 

Consign your shipments from Louisville and interior 
Kentucky points, care of the Louisville, St. Louis &. Texas 
Railway, w/hich Is a direct line to Pacific Coast points and 
same will receive prompt attention. 

For rates and other information address the undersigned 

L. S. Parsons, J. K. McCracken, H. C. Mordue, 
Traffic Man'g, Gen. Man'g, Asst. Gen. Frt. Agt 

Louisville, Ky. Louisville, Ky. Louisville, Ky. 



36 



f/eifie WIJNt _/VJMD Sflf^lT F^EVIEW. 



XjEJ^HDIHiTa- XDTSTILLEK,S. 



ADDRESS, INSURANCE. j BRAND. 


ADDRESS, INSURANCE. 


BRAND. 


BOTJIS.BOITS. 


G. G. WHITE Co., 

Add: Paris, Bourbon Co., Kj'., 

N OS. 1,4, 6, 7, 85c: No. 5,1.00. 


Chick en cock. 


BELLE of ANDERSON D'G CO. 


Belle of Anderson, 
(ilenaruie. 
Jessamine, 
Arlington. 




Adil; S. J. Greenl):uiin. Louisville. 
Kate, L'-T.. 


GREENBRIER DIST'Y CO. 

Greenhriei'. I). No. 239 

Add: AVm. Collins & Co., Louisville. 


Greenbrier, 

T) T> IT.,,,,!..,. 


MELLWOOD DIST'Y CO. 


Mel 1 wood, 

and 
Dundee. 


Rate 1.3.5. .v. x.. x...j ..,..,. 


Loiiisvillt', Ky. 
Rate, 85c. 


ANDERSON & NELSON DIST'S CO.. Anderson, 

Louisville. , XTpifinn 
Add: Auder.son & Nelson Distilleries Co . J^eison, 
Rate S5c. Louisville. Buchanan. 


EARLY TIMES DIST'Y CO. i Early Times, 

F-iilv TiiiH'>< Kv D fin 7 


5 M. E. of Rar.lstown. " Rates }.'2r> 
Add: 1!. 11. Hurt, Loiii.sville. 


A. G. Nail, 
Jack Beam. 


R. F. BALKE ."v: CO. 

Louisville, Ky. 
Rate 85c. 


"G. W. S." 
and 


F. C. DISTILLERY D. No. !!.'{ 


0. F. C, 

Carli.sle. 


Runnymede, 


Frank foi-t. 
Add: Geo. T. Stagg Co., Fiaukfort. 


I^^^'FIS. 


Rate 85c. 


SUSQUEHANNA DIST'G CO., 

Milton. 
Add; Jas. Levy & Bro., Cincinnati. 
Rates, 85c & 1.25. 




SI'NNY BROOK ani. 

WILLOW CKKKK DIST'G GO'S 

Distillery, I.miisvillc, Ky. 
Contracting Office.'!, 1L'8-I;il) I'laiiklin St. 


Willow Creek, 
Sunny Brook. 

J. B. Watlien & Bro. 


Susquehanna. 


('hirago, 111. 
KOSENl'IKLD BROS & CO., Proprietors. 

J. B. WATIIEN & CO. 

Louisville, 


NORMANDY DIST'G CO., „ , 
Louisville, Ky. Normandy, 
P. 0. Box 23,')4, ,, =V' ,• 

Rate 85 c. Moutpeher. 




A. OVERHOLT & CO., 
Add; A. Overholt & Co., Pittsburg, Pa. Overliolt. 
Rate, 80c. 


OLD TIMES DIST'Y CO., 

Louisville. 
Rate8,SL00&S1.2.-). 


01<1 ^riino.s. 


BARBER, FERRIELL & CO. 
Hobbs. D. No. 240 
Rate 1.50 




OLD KENTUCKY DIST'Y CO., 

Louisville, Ky. 


Kentucky Comfort 

and 

(iladstone. 


Old Grand-Dad, 
R. B. Hayden & Co. 


Rates, $1 and $1.25. 


J. B. WATIIEN & CO. 

Louisville, 
Rate 85c. 




E. J. CURLEY & CO. D. No. 3 & W 

Camp Nelson 


Blue Grass, 
Boone's Knoll. 


Lackawanna Rye. 


Rates: "B," "D," "E" 1.25. "F," 3.50 


ANDERSON & NELSON DIS'G CO. 


W. S. HUME, 

Silvei- Creek. 
Rate .S5c. 


Hume. 


Louisville. „ , 
Add: Anderson & Nelson Distiller's Co iNelson. 
Rate ,S5c. Louisville. 



T. W. STEMMLER & CO. 

SOLE ;6c(aEJslTS fOR UNITED STATES AJMD CAN;«fDA. 

THEOPHILE ROEDERER & CO., MAISON fONDEE UN 18(:4. BOSHAMER LEUN & CO.. CLARETS aud SAUTERNES, BORDEAUX A. & I. BEAUDET FRERES, BURGUNDIES, BEACNB 

The Celebral«d RED LABEL CHAMPAGNE, REIMS FELIX POTIN & CIE, CHOCOLAT snd CONSERVES, PARIS GUlG'lNlS KRERES, OLIVE OIL, NICE 

OADBURY BROS, CHOCOLATE acd COCOA, BOUHNVILLE Deo. BELLARDl A CO., VERMOUTH, Established 1740, TURIN BRAND & CO., ESSENCE OF BEEP, LONDON 

.7<A1)E MAKK J^ J^ I IE?. O IN" ID -A. O IKI HKCil.-iTKKKI.. 

PURE RYE WHISKY. Purity and Quality Unexcelled. 

'I'ha "AVIllONDACK" in a lilrnd of ripi- hiiih ilass \ilii.shtr.s llniiiiiiiihl ii in ii hi nil iniil ran hr hlulily recotlimcnilcd for 

mt'dlt-t not tt lilt iifm'rtti um\ 
IKonf <<4'inilnt' ivtlhout oiir stijiuituri' ou ii<-fk label and rork. 

NEW YORK: Union Square. PARIS! Boulevard des Italiens. 



3ynj^I?.IE :BTi.XZJ^:RTD &c I2.0C3-EI?. 

CORDIAL MAKERS OF THE WORLD. 

r.NiuhiisiDd nr,.-,. r ir sii:m>u.i:is. ith-niot. 

CCLCBRATED C.tCUi: DE UENTHE AND OTHER CORDIALS. WELL KNOWN FLEUR-DE-LIS COQNACS. FOR SALE EVERYWHERE. 

IF YOU are in need of PRINTING give us a call. We make a specialty 
of fine Printing, Engraving, Lithographing, Photo-Engraving and, also 
original designs for labels of every description. 



p/teifie WiJME /cJ^D Sp^lf^lT f^EVIEW. 



CLASSIFIED INDEX OF ADVERTISEMENTS. 



CALIFORNIA WINES AND BRANDIES. 



Boyd, F. O. & Co 

California Wine Growers Union. 

Carpy, C. & Co 

Chauelie & Bon 

De Turk, I 

Gundlach. J. & Co 

Guasti & Bernard 

Hedgeside Vineyard 

Inglenook Vineyard Agency 

Italian-Swiss Colony 

Kohler & Van Bergen 

Koiiler (S; Froliling 

KoU) & Denhard 

Kuhls, Sehwarke & Co 

Lachmau & Jacobi 

Laehnian Co., S 

Landsberger & Son 

Los Gatos & Saratoga Wine Co.. 

Masson, Paul 

Melczer, Joseph & Co 

Minuse, William T 

Mohns tSc Kaltenbaeh 

Napa Valley Wine Co 

L J Rose & Co., Ltd 

San Gabriel Wine Co 

Schilling. C. & Co 

Smith, Julius P 

StaggCo., The Geo. T 

Starace, Aehille 

Thornton & Pippy 

To-Kalou Wine Co 



age. 
. 6 
. 34 

. 21 
. 8 
. 8 
. 31 
. 6 
22 
. 23 
. 31 
. 21 
. 21 
. 28 



30 
21 

6 
30 

2 

34 

6 

30 

21 

2 

34 
8 
6 

23 
2 

7 
30 



DISTILLERS AND BROKERS. 

Anderson & Nelsou Distilleries Co The 11 

Barber, Ferriell & Co 24 

Buchanan, George C 34 

Curley, E. J. & Co 7 

Early Times Distillery Co 24 

Fleischman & Co 5 

Leading Distillers' Cards 40 

LevA'i Jas. & Bro 42 

Mayhew, H. B. & Co 34 

Meihvood Distillery Co 1 

Moore & Selliger 23 

Overholt, A. & Co 8 

(iuinine- Whisky Co 27 

Rea, U. R. & Co 29 

Shufeldt, H. H. &Co., C. W. Craig & Co., Agents 5 

Youugberg & Borland 2 

FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC CHAMPAGNES. 

Chapman, W. B 23 

Finke's Widow, A.. ,30 

Fra.slwS; Co 27 

Hellmann Bros & Co 17 

Lachman. .S. & Co 2 

Macondray Bros. & Lockard 33 

Masson, Paul 2 

Sherwooil & Sherwood l(i 

Wolft; Wm. &Co 20 



IMPORTERS. 

Chapman, W. B 19 

Glaser, S 7 

Hellmann Bros. & Co 17 

Librowicz. Julius 29 

Macondray Bros. & Lockard 27 

Meinecke.'chas. & Co 26 

Sherwood & Sherwood 17 

Starace, Aehille.. 2 

Stemmler, T. W. & Co 40 



Vignler, A 34 

Wolflf, Wm. &Co 15 

FRUIT BRANDY DISTILLERS. 

Taylor, W. A. & Co .32 

Natoma Vineyard Co 28 

Walden & Co 5 

West, Geo. & Son 33 

SAN FRANCISCO AVHOLESALE LIQUOR DEALERS. 

Hey, Grauerholz & Co 6 

Hotaling, A. P. & Co 29 

Kolb & Denhard .• 32 

Kuhls, Sehwarke & Co O 

Moore, Hunt & Co 5 

Martin, E. & Co 

Naber, Alfs & Brune 6 

Siebe Bros. & Plagemann 4 

Spruance, Stanley & Co 34 

Walter, M. & Co 6 

IMPORTED BRANDY. 
E. Remy Martin & Co., Hellman Bros. & Co., Agents 13 

SYRUPS, CORDIALS, BITTERS, PRUNE JUICE, ETC. 

Abbot's Angostura Bitters 23 

Ball & Chevne Co 7 

Culbert & Taylor 38 

Kolb & Denhard 32 

Rudkin, Wm. H 30 

Walter, M. & Co 6 

WINE FININGS, ETC. 
Schulze-Berge & Koechl 4 



WAREHOUSES, STORAGE, ETC. 

Bode & Haslett 4 

Louisville Public Warehouse Co 33 

Sherman, J. D. W 23 

BOTTLES, CASINGS, CORKS, ETC. 

Colgan, J. B. Corks 41 

MISCELLANEOUS. 

Bolton & Strong, Engravers 34 

Bonestell & Co., Paper Dealers 41 

Chickasaw Cooperage Co 28 

Cleveland Faucet Co 29 

Dunne, J. P & Co., Saloon 41 

Goodyear Rubber Co 5 

Hender.son, Wm. G 34 

Hobbs, Wall &Co.. I!o.\ Manufacturers 30 

Humboldt Mineral Water Co 28 

Jordan, Dr. & Co 41 

Loma Prieta Ijumber Co 30 

Louisville, St. Louis & Texas Railway 3.5 

New Home Sewing Machine Co 41 

O'Brien, James, Saloon 41 

Ro.senfeld's Sons, John, Clipper Ships 41 

Sanders & Co., Coppersmiths 41 

Sprague Correspondence School of Law 41 

Tid)bs' Cordage Co 47 

Waiidi'lt. Sanuii'l ;!4 



Siibseribe: for the 

pacific "l^ina and ^'pirit ^cvioiD 

THREE DOLLARS PER YEAR. 

ADVERTiaiNa RATES ON APPLICATION. 



f>^e\f\e Wlj^JE /r|iD Sflf^^T (REVIEW. 



C. BUNDSCHC. 



;^ J. GUjMDliACH & CO. 

'•v. .^ Vineyard Proprietors and Shippers of 




J. GUNDLACH 



California Wwm and Brandies. 



mm RHINE FARM, mm, cal 



And BACCHUS WINE VAULTS. 438-44-2 Bryant St., S. F. 



Sun Fran4'iMrn O/JirCf 

s. ic. con. M.iuiii.T <i- SECoxn sts. 



Xvtr YitfU' lirunrh 
S. E. Cor. WATTS & WASHINGTON STS. 



iOn^ v. 8IEBK. 



J. F. PLAGEMAXN. 



F. (.'. SIEBE. 




SlEBE Bt^OS. 8t pLiflCEmflJ^fl, 

WINE AND LIQUOR MERCHANTS. 



-SOLE AGENTS FOR- 



O.K. Romlale Bonrkn k Rfc Wliiiies 

AND THE 

Celebrated Belle of Bourbon. 

Southeast Cor. Sacramento and Sansome Sts.. - - - ^ - - . §3,, Francisco. Cti 

JPS.K.XISXIC " PRINTINO ~ CM:R.O]XrjPs.TIC 

R. M. WOOD CO. 

?,\C, B.VTTKRV STREKT, - - SAN FKANCISCO. ('Af,. 



Q^FINED SACCHARi/vg. 

500 Times Sweeter Than Sugar. 

Till': CIM-AT SWI'.K'l-KMMi Ali;ii|r.M IN Till-, I\l \ N T F U'TT K K (IK .\ 1:K ATi;i> WATl'.RS PlICTI AS 

GINGER ALE, LEMON SODA, ETC. 

Till'; i!Nsi'i;i'.\ssi':i) iMiincitii^NT I'ou i'I,i-..\sant tastI''. to 

SAaZEETEN AaZINE HMD TO BLEND Vs^HISKIES 

FOR rAKTU'Ur.ARS Al'I'l.Y TH 

SCHULZE-BERGE & KOEOHL, 

liOLE IMPORTERS AND LICENSEES, ..... 79 MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK. 

ABRAM<:;r)N-HEUNISCH CO., SAN FRANCISCO, SELLING AGENTS FOR THE PACIFIC COAST. 



BODE & HASLETT 

Warehousemen . 1201 Battery St., San Francisco 

GENERAL INTERNAL REVENUr'BO°NDED WAREHOUSE, No. ONE 

N. E Corner Third and King Streets "V For the Storage of Whisky and Spirits in Bond 

STORAGE AND INSURANCE AT LOWEST RATES. ADVANCES MADE ON GOODS IN WAREHOUSE. 



f/cGlfie WlJ^E /cJ^D Sflf^ir F^EVIEW. 



Henry H. Shufeldt -^ Coa/ipany, 

DISTILLERS, CHICAGO. 

mnvm itmi (jii ii m iit on 




DISTILLED BY THE HOLLAND PROCESS. 




Equal in flavor and surpassing in 
purity the nnost famous imported 
Gins. Put up in packages prepared 
to hold contents colorless, and con- 
tain, respectively 44, 24, 15 and 10 
gallons, all under double stamps. 

Tliese Gins are % odIjj oiies dlstilM in tl|e II. S. % % HOLLlip PVESS 

And are unquestionably the purest and most wholesome Gins today, used in the U. S. 

FOR SALE 3Y ALL WHOLESALE LIQUOR DEALERS AND DRUGGISTS. 

C. W. CRAIG & CO. California Agents, 205 BATTERY STREET. 

FLEISCHMANN & CO. 

CINCINNATI, OHIO. DISTILLERS OF 

SgLVA/N G-ROVE BOLl-RBO/S A/Nt) Ky E WHISKIES. 



HIGH GRADE HOLLAND PROCESS- 



PERFECTION AND ROYALTY GINS. 



^: 



— ♦ — t— ► — >■->■-♦■ 




LARGEST DISTILLERS OF PURE BRANDY IN THE WORLD. 
DISTILLERY AND VINEYARDS, GEYSERVILLE, CAL. 






■^ --5^ «-5-. ".^ w^Bi «* ••£>• •■^ •<^ ><S-. -^ •^. N^ -.^ s^ (^i .^> .^> i.^ 1^, H^s -tfta afn •^k •aOt _ 

- H — K-|"*"K'>--t- -h -*• ■*■ -t- ■*■ •*• -V • * - •*■ -K-*- •»- •*-■>—*■ -^ -h * •»-*- '^:^ 



WJlItDEH COGKflG 



rjnun-jry-xn'Jn-fryjnunufyjn'vyxr.AarJiy^'t'V./vr^^ 



• • • • 



<â– *â–  

Tins Brandy, made after the French formula, from selected fresh prapes, has Iteen siiceeflsfnlly intro 
dnced. and ift now reirnlarly sohl in the principal markets of Europe, in ecim|H*titlnn witli Frencli Coj;nac. 
Otiicial (ierman and Frencii iliemists have proncmnced it the jiurcsl lirandy wliicli ri)me?i to ihcir markets. 
It is esiH'cially suited for tlie dnii; trade and others, where purity is demanded. Wliile aluond these 
goods succeesfully compete. payiniL' same duties as tlie Freiudi, tlie American huyer lias the advantage in price between the Internal lievenue tax lu- 
«9saed here and tlie customs duties on foreit^n brandies. Samples will be sent on aitplieation. 



WALDEN, 



â– ^AT^^LIDEnsr cSs oo. 




Eaateinx Office 49 Broad Street, New York. 



UETSF.RVrLLE SONOifA CO., CAL.^ 



6 



f/reiFie WI^JE /cJMD SflF^IT f^EVIEW. 




l[iiii|Ei' â– ' 





323-325 Market St,. S, F. 



D. V. B. HENAIIIK. 



E. MARTIN & CO., 

IMPORTERS AND 'WHOLESALE 

liIQUOf^ mEl^CHflflTS, 

408 Front St., San Francisco, Cai. 

SOLE AGENTS FOK 

J. F. CUTTER AND ARGONAUT OLD BOURBONS. 



ESTABLISHED ISjT 



F. O. BOYD S^ CO, 

Commission Merchants, New York. 

CALIFORNIA WINES & BRANDIES. 



Barton's Celebrated Sweet Wines. Fresno. 

Cai't. .J. C. Mkkitmich-, TjinspEcT Vineyard. 

Advances Made on Consignments. 



William T. Minuse 

Commission Merchant. 

Agent for the Sale of Viticultural Products. 

Cunsi^ninenU of sound AVines and Brandies solicited. Advances made on 
same at lowest rates. 

Represeutini; Jons Tiiomann, St. Helena, Cal. 

EWKR it Atkinson, Hutiikkkokd, Cal. 

A. V. Adams Lini> Vineyard, Fresno, Cal. 

Eiskn Vineyard Co., Fresno, Cal. 



FOR FINE PRINTING 



00 TO 



Hey, Grauerholz & Co., 

l.MrUKTEKS AMI Wllol.KSM.K IlKM.KKS IN 

WINES & LIQUORS. 



SOLE AGENTS FOR - 



PAVY CROCK^ff WHISKY. 

BE SURE YOU ARE RIGHT, THEN GO AHEAD. 



NO. 215 SACRAMENTO STREET, - - SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 



OLIVINA VINEYARD. 

The OLIVINA Gonoprises 600 Acres of 
Side Vineyard, Located in ttie 
Liveriuore Valley. 




DRY, DELICATE, WELL MATURED TABLE 'WINES 

A SPECIALTY. 
SE\n roll S.lMl'LE ORDER. 



I'llKllKKI'MMiRNrE SOLICITED Bv TlIK CllowER, 



JULIUS P. SMITH, LIVERMORE, CAL. 



M. WALTER & CO., 

WHOLES.4LE LIQUOR VE.AEERS 

Distillers of Bitters ami lioiilials, 



811 MONTOOMERV ST., BeT. JACKSON & PACIFIC STS. 

Telephone Ao. 404. .5«n Prancl.irn. (iil 



Landsberger & Son, 

Commission jWerehants 

123 CALIFORNIA STREET, SAN FRANCISCO. 



Agents for the Purchase and Sale of Viticultural Products. 

Telephone No. eSO. 



I?.. 3vn_ "WooiD Co. 



314-316 Battery Street, 



SAN FRANCISCO 



.li'llN IlKRNARl'. 



SECONDO Gl'ASTl. 



: - (1 rowers end Di.-<tiUrr.i of - : 

GaliforQia WIIIES ami BPIES 



Winery at (lua.^ti A BemariVn Spur, Between West 
Glcndale and Tropico, Cal. 



b;9ff^GE PRODUSEf^S Of SWEET WINES. 

H<l(ii ajldr. (i>r. .1,1 ii ml Ihiiiii <l<l .S7.s.. /.o.s Iniirlls, < til. 



f;Oreifie WIJ^E yvJMD Sfll^lT f^EVIEW. 



S. GLKSER, 

123 California Street, San Francisco, Cal. 

FjOlCIFIC COjPs.ST jPlGEISTT FOP2. 



L. GIRAUD&CO.. Epkrnw, 
J. DUrOXT .v.- CO.. Cognac, 
AKJIAXn l!ItOSS.\cg, cognac, 
GMK. .MAI.IFAUI), St. Meme eres Cognac, 
HERMAN JAXSEX, Schieium, 
BLAXKENilFAM A NOLET, ItoTTEKnAM, 
THOS. LOWNDES & CO., London, - 
NIXON & CO., Oporto, 



CHAMTAGNES 

COGNACS 

- COGNACS 

COGNACS 

GOLDFINCH GIN 

CENTAUIt GIN 

OLD LONDON DOCK HUM 

PORT WINES 



OAMBOA HERMANOS, Jerez iie i.a Fuontera, 
liUIZ MATA ifc CO., Jerez de i,a Frontera, 
('Hit. HOT/ it CO., Bordeaux, 
CKliH. ECKEL, Deidesiieim, 



SHERRIES 

- SHERRIES 

CLARETS AND SArTERNES 

RHINE WINES 



VICTORIA MINERAL WATER CO., Obbklahnstein, VICTORIA WATER 

RIIEINSTROM BROS., Cincinnati, O., - BLACKBERRY BRANDIES 

D. 0. BEATSON, Kirkcaldy, Scotland, - SCOTCH WHISKIES 



jPlLSO I2X[F0P?.TEI^ OF- 



RAMSAY'S SCOTCH WHISKY. WISES IRISH WHISKY, E. i J. BURKE'S IRISH WHISKY, OPORTO AND 
TARRAGONA PORTS AND PRUNE AND CHERRY JUICE. 








STILLERs 



BiueGba^s 






IjAND jyiADE_> • • 

So urBash Whiskey. 

Je55an7ir>e Co. 
Kentucky. 




^^^^^^_.4^:^i>V5 



These Whiskies arc made in the Famous '• ItT.VK OlS.lfiS IlEainX" so 
JusiUj celebrated as the home of the finest Whiskies In the World, and 
n-hich hare been j'>r Ihe last Century, reeofinlzed as such, fiivinn Ihe char- 
acter and high standing to KKXTL'i^h 1' IVJUSli H:s which :heij now rnjiiy, 

THESE FAMOUS WHISKIES CAN BE HAD IN LOTS TO SUIT THE TRADE FROM 

HELLMA/NM BROS. 3c CO., 51:5 P-RO/NT ST-REET, SA/N p-RA/NeiSeO. 




THORNTON & PIPPY 



rKiii'icrEViins, .sum-; A(iENTS 

S-ix7<z.<z.t "Wines, Brandies and. Xabie \X/ines. 
204 MARKET STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 

DisTiuBUTixa AGKxrs RAUL MASSON CHAMPAGNE 



p/veifie WIJME /jND SflF^IT F^EVIEW. 



ESTAW.ISHKD 1«10. 




OYE* 



OVERHOLT 

Peisylvania Puie Rye WHisleii 

'The - Finest - in - the - World." 

JONES, MUNDY &. CO., Agents, San Francisco. 




I. DE TURK 

l^iriQS and '^randies 

BRANDY, CLARET, 

ANGELICA, SAUTERNE, 

HOCK, . V ._,. MUSCAT, 

ZINFANDEL, •'-'-"■ SHERRY, 

PORT RIESLING, 

TOKAY, GUTEDEL. 

"Vineys-rd-S and. Cellars: 



W i Santa Rosa, Sonoma County, Cal. 



^ra-neh: 
i.*i'0 Sacrameulo St., San I'rintcisco, Cal. 

C. M. MANN, Manager. 
New York Office, - - 91 Hudson St. 




TjHE JilGHEST AWARD fARIS EXPOSITIO;^ 




Established 

Ciuerfnore l/alley, ^al. 



ISSS. 



#) 



^1: 



--ro 



,\>(i^ 



^' 






A. G. CHAUGHE, Proprietor. 

Office and Dei-ot, Ca5 FKO^T St., San Fkancisco 



1889. 



GObD JVIEDAL. 



CHAUCHE &, BON, Successor to A. G. CHAUCHE 

Scik' Gi-neial Ai,'iMits for the Srou.NT-llofciE 'Vines. 



'WINE MERCHANTS 



NEW YORK HOUSE,>"^''*'*^'"<^ 

Y5EN ScTOTTEN 



[AUFORNIA. 



EUROPEAN HOUSE: 



24 DEY STREET. 



OfFict^^'^t Faults- 

230^240 BRAN NAN STREET, 
BET 1 57 fie 2"-° 



* Bremen^ Germany 







[INCORPORATEDJ 



VOL. XXXIV, No. 2. 



SAN FRANCISCO, FEBRUARY 2C, 1895. 



$3.00 PER YEAR 



â–  Issued Semi- Monthly. 

A'. .1/. WOOD CO.. - - I'UBLTSHERS. 

313 BATTERY STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 

TELEPHONE NO. 709. CABI.E ADDRESS "FIELDWIN," SAN FRANCISCO. 



Hie P.ICIFW WINE AND SPIRIT REVIEn te the only paper of 
Its rln-t-t M'rst nf (liiriign. It cii-ciiliites ainoiiii the M'linlc.tale tind 
Kelail ll'iiir and .Spirit Itraler.i nf the I'liriflc (oast, tlie lli'iir Mak- 
ers and ISraiidii Distillers nf California, the Wine and llrandji Itny- 
ers. and the Importers, lUtitillers and Jobbers of the United .Slate.s. 



.m CllKCIiS. DRAFTS. MONEY ORDERS, ETC.. .ihnuld be 
made paijable to the R. M. WOOD CO. 



Subscription per year— iu advance, postage paid; 

For the United States, Mexico and Canada f." 00 

For European countries 4 00 

Sinjjle copies 20 

Entered at tbe San Franci&co Post OfBce as second-class matter. 



\v 



EASTERN BRANCH OFFICE: 

A. GEFT, Manager, 1-3-5 Leonard St., New Yoik City. 



HELP WANTED, FOR SALE, ETC. 

WANTED— 20,000 gallons clean Riesling, viiit.ige 1891 or 
1802; must l)e cheap. 20,000 gallons Tort, gnaraiiti^ed 20 per 
cent., vintage 1802 or 18SI3; must be cheiij*. .")()()() gallons finest 
Sherry obtainable; will pay good price for this lot. Address W. 
T. MiNusE, 4() Beaver street, New York. 10-5-tf 

WANTED. 

Waiittil l\v New York llmisc lor C:isli, any ruiantitv of sweet anil dry 
wines. Aihlnss, giving all details, A. P. 42, eare Pacific Wink and 
SriRiT Kkvikw . 



FOREIGN MARKETS. 



.\ gentleman retinngafter many years serviii' in Kuioi>e in the t'nileil 
States Depirtnient i>f Aj;ririiltiue, desires to adil, among otiier rejiresenta- 
tions. a firm or syndiiate of Wine Healers or I imwers, who are |irep:ireil 
for lvini|M'an trade. Am also desirous to arraie^'e for t <• sale of ( ':ilifiirMia 
Fruit. While in Knr.ipc liave hei'n siieressfiil in introilniing ( 'alifurnia 
products, .ind woul'l like to enntiniie the same, .\ddress I'haki.ks .1. 
MiKi'HY, late Special .VgiMit in lOnrope, IHjpartnicnt of .\grieiiltiire, 3 Kast 
4l8t street, New York. 



MA-RKET -REVIEW. 



/©ALIFORNIA WINES.— Business is slowly getting in h.t- 
^^ ter condition, with respect both to dennmd and prices. 
Considering the severity of the weatiier in the Kast for many 
weeks, the situation of the markets is nuieh better than cdiild 
reasomibly be expected. I/<-ading houses report that orders for 
spring delivery are coming in in an encouraging way, and there 
is an improved feeling all around. As a result of the two com- 
binations, values have advanced materially, and it is earnestly 



hoped that the end of the era of ruinous price-cutting is not far 
distant. They say that the war of prices has been fought for 
years, to the (h^trimeiit of all concerned and particularly to the 
severe loss of the producer. What the industry now needs is a 
return to values which will bring reasonable prosperity to the 
entire interest. With the reduced production and increased con- 
sumption this can be a(^complished if the opposing jiarties will 
let their lighting blood cool otV and get down to wise business 
principles. Of course, the new^ conditions are novel, but we be- 
lieve they will work out the salvation of the business. 

Wine exports during January were of unusual large vol- 
ume, partly on account of shipments to avoid the iiuTcase of 
freight rates. The table elsewhere shows that the total in bulk 
by rail was 1,370,865 gallons. The sea shipments were also very 
lieav}'. Sweets are hardening in value, and iminiries for all 
qualities are rapidly growing more numerous, a fact which is 
to some extent due to the great shortage in production this 
season. The exasperating slowness of the Internal Revenue 
officers in getting in their official reports may be judged by the 
fact that at this writing we are only able to secure from the 
First District the lirst two months of the production — Septem- 
ber and October. The Fourth District report, however, includes 
November. These figures should be available ])romptly, in 
order that the producer and merchant might have the benefit of 
the knowledge of the (|uaiitily jiroduced. The government col- 
lects such informati(m for other classes of farmers, and and it is 
a hardship that the wine producers have to wait foi- this infor- 
mation until it is of no particular value. There is a big short- 
age, and the exact facts ought to be forthcoming even if a few 
gangers do have to exert tlieinselvcs to the extent of .s(>nding in 
in their reports promptly, 'i'he nuitter will probably have to be 
referred to the department at Washington for adjustment. The 
availabh^ figures ai)|iear elsewhere. 

The receipts of all kinds of witU! I'rom the iiiteiior during 
January were 344,000 gallons in excess of those of the same 
month last year, and for the first half of February 227,000 gal- 
lons more than for tht^ same half month in "!I4, all of which 
•hows that country stocks are being rapidly reduced. 

A dispatch frinn New York, dated the Itth, says : " ."^gobel & 
Day held their ninth auction sale of California wine and biandy 
yesterday, when they .sold 5(1 barrels of jmrt wine at .'{2 to 20 
cents, averaging 30 cents a gallon ; 50 barrels of /.infandcl at 21 
to 17^ cents, .averaging 1!)^ ctuts per gallon ; ten barrels of bran- 
dy at 50 to 47 cents, an average of 48 cents i)er gallon ; 40 half- 
barrels of brandy at 5() to 50 cents, averaging 51 cents [)er gal- 
lon. The jtort and /iiilaiidel wi-re similar to their previous 
ollerings from the Vohi Wiiieiy, and the port averaged 4 cents 
per gallon higher than Ihe pievioiis sale. The sale of brandy 
was unsatisfactory, anil the |)rices were not up to what was an- 
ticipated. The next sale will take plaei' in twt> weeks, and will 
be the heaviest up to the i)resent time, there being six car-loads 
of Madeira, white wines, port ami /.infandel, as well as another 
car of brandy." 



10 



f/rei[^ie WIJME /cIMD Sflf^lT F^EVIEW. 



*y *^II1SKIES. — Trade remains about the same, fluctuating 
^^/ in good and bad streaks. Still there is* not much coni- 
lilaiiiing. as dealers reeogni/.e that the general business condi- 
tions do not warrant any marked improvement in their lino. 
Thev know that they are getting their share of business, aud^ 
though not content, must accept the situation. The matter 
which is causing the most discussion and anxiety on the street 
is the feature of the new tarifV bill permitting the transfer of 
whiskies in bond. This particulaily alVects the rectiliers, who 
fear that the distillers may go into the distribution of straight 
goods to the retail trade, and carry stocks in this city from 
which to sell large or small lots. We hardly think this proba- 
ble, but there is a probability that the same end may be accom- 
plislifd by the establishment of agencies withliouses in this city. 
At the present time it looks as though a contest of this kind for 
trade will eventually be had. AVluit the outcome will be remains 
to be seen. 

Keceijits of goods have been of ordinary volume. 

A uumber- of distillers at Chicago are informally discussing 
the formation of a new distilling combination, to include all di.s- 
tilleries in the country. Woolner says a combination which 
would be satisfied with a profit of barely two cents on a sixty 
million gallons yearly output, §1,200, 000. would succeed. This 
profit would be small enough to discourage building new distil- 
leries, and if j)roperly managed the new combination could 
count on a steady income. The present Distillers' Company 
might go into such a deal on the basis of S-t, 000,000 present cash 
value for its securities, and outside distilleries could probably be 
secured for .S.S,000,000 — total, §7,000,000. The cash value 
might then be capitalized at §20,000,000 or §30,000,000, and hand- 
some dividends paid on the stock. 

The Peoria Transcript, in writing of the status of the re- 
bate vouchers of the Distilling and Cattle Feeding Co. now in 
the bauds of the trade, says : " As soon as the bill had been 
filed it was reviewed by a number of attorneys, who took ex- 
tended notes from it. Among them was H. C. Fuller, who rep- 
resents a number of the rebate voucher holders. He says the 
present action of the court will doubtless result in endless liti- 
gation. There is a large number of these rebate vouchers 
which come due within the next few days. Though there are 
bonds on deposit in New York to secure their payment, it is 
said there is no money in the treasury. It is the intention to 
immediately institute intervening suits, and ask the court to or. 
der the payment of these vouchers. Mr. Fuller thinks that all 
will receive their money in full, but that it will take some time 
to get it." 

/©ALIFORNIA BRANDY.— Owing to the better values of 
^^ wines, the strong holders of brandies are not auxio\is to 
sell at current prices, as they feel confident that a fair advance 
will be realized ere long. The situation seems to warrant such 
an opinion, notwithstanding there were 9;5,.547 gallons more in 
bond on Dec. .'^Ist, 1894, than on the same date last year. Else- 
where in this issue will be found the tables of brandy produc- 
tion from September to December, 1S',)-1, inclusive. The figures 
are from the record of the First District, and show a peculiai' 
situation in that two-thirds of the brandy product for the first 
five nuinths was produced in December. The total for that pe- 
rioil was l.")t,9;i(l gallons. 

Kxports of brandy by I'ail during Jauuaiy aggregated 
42,964 gallons, and sea shipments for the first half of February 
to domestic ports were of good volume. 

/MPORTATIONS. — Business is Jogging along at about the 
same pace, but is doing as well as coultl be expected under 
the circumstances. The demand is still <-online(l to spot needs, 
and these are not of a pressing nature at this i)articular season. 
In other words, the importers are traveling in the same boat 
with (jther lines of trad(\ 

Imports were of moderate volume during the fortnight. 



J^oios and "^QTsonals. 



A patient man with pleasing voice. 
Whose gladdening soun<ls make men rejoice; 
Who works all day. be it rain or shine; 
Who sells line whisky every time ; 
Who travels the city from ten till four — 

John Skelly — "Jesse Moore.' 

He tells of its virtues, known to .ill 
Who have ever had it always on call ; 
He tells of its blending, worth and age; 
He assures you, then, it's all the rage; 
And, next, of orders he writes a page — 

JouN Skeli.y — " Jesse Mooke.' 



The distilling firm of Strauss, Pi-itz & Co., of Ijouisville, has 
dissolved. Mrs. Sophie Strauss retires, and the partners are now 
S. W. Benjamin and S. E. Fritz. 



William Wolff & Co. are in receipt of another car-load of 
"Canadian Club" over the Canadian Pacific. This whisky is 
having a good, steady sale on the Coast, and is in competent 
hands. 

The business of McDougal, Saugster & Co., of Stockton, 
(whose embarrassment, flnanciallj', has already been reported.) 
has been bought in by Wilmerding & Co. The Stockton house 
will be operated under the firm name of The Kellogg Co. 



Messrs. Eschenaur & Co., of Bordeaux, announce that Mr. 
Alexander Wachtcr has retired from their firm, and that Mr. 
Frederic Eschenaur will continue the business with the assistance 
of his nephew, Mr. Louis Lung, who for"some time past has held 
the procuration of the house, and his son Mr. Louis E.schenauer, 
who will also sign in similar manner. 



Articles of incorporation of the Kentucky Distillers' Associ- 
ation have been filed with the county clerk of Louisville. The 
object of the association is to establish uniform rules relating to 
the distilling trade, and to protect aiul advauce the whisky in- 
terest of Keutuck}^ The constitution, by-laws and regulations 
adopted by the unincorporated association, organized in October, 
are to govern. There is no capital stock, but a niember.ship fee 
of 810 is charged. There are now fifty-seven members. The 
officers, who will serve until the second Wednesday in Septem- 
ber, when the annual election occurs, are R. N. Wathen, presi- 
dent; R. Monarch, vice-president; Thomas S. Jones, secretary, 
and F. W. Adams, treasurer. These gentlemen form, with the 
following, the Board of IMaiiagers ; .]. M. Athei-ton, M. V. JIou- 
arch, (J. W. Harris, T. II. Slierlev. Max Selliger, J. W. Frei- 
berg. (}. H. Watson, G. C. Wiiili", William Patterson, Jr., K. F. 
Halke and G. D. Boldrick. 



A N(>w Zealand paper says that the prohibition movement 
is assuming awful proportions in New /.ealand. It is no longer 
a (â– anii)aign against drink, but against the individual drinker. 
In tlu^ smalh'r towns the movement has an (>ye on everybody, 
and if it considers that any person's iu)se is too vividly illus- 
trated, or his breath is too near up to .sam|)le. some pi'ohibition 
advocate calls U|)on him. Then having leaned his black umbrella 
against the door-post, he extracts with his black-gloved hand a 
iu)te book from the tail of his black coat and asks him what he 
di-inks. Wiiile he is waiting for an answer he fishes out a pen- 
cil from his black waistcoat and staiuls ready to enter the name 
of the drink in his book. If the information is not satisfactory 
he most likely calls on the woman next door and asks if the 
suspected |>ei'.son is ever seen intoxicated ; if any one has no- 
ticed his breath; if he looks wilil on Satunlay nights ; if he 
conu's home late and has a dillieulty with his key-hole ; if he 
swears or make a disturbance ; if he is ever seen bringing honui 
drink, and various olhei- (|uestioiis. lie notes down all the an- 
sweis, and demands whether the inteirogaleil female's own hus- 
baiul is strictly sober, and whether she has any suspii'ions con- 
cerning any one else in the neifihborbood. Then he gees round 
to the bai'k yard and looks over the fence to see it there are any 
bottles lying about. — Juxliainje, 



f/ceifie wi|\iE AJ^D sfiF^iT preview. 



11 



THE FINEST WHISKIES MADE 

In the State of l^entucky. 



ANDERSON 



BUCHANAN 





§ HAND MADE^^ o 
S SDUR MASH 2 

LOUISVILLE 
KENTUCKY. 






PRODUCTION JAN. 1, 1874, TO JUNE 30, 1894, 
121,718 BARRELS. 



PRODUCTION JAN. 1, 1880 TO JUNE 30, 1894 
28,086 BARRELS. 



NELSON BOURBON NELSON PURE RYE NELSON PURE MALT 




ft^j^ 






e 



Jfi^^ RYE W^ 
ffjaje WHISKEY ^'^ 

JHENEWCOMB-BUCHANANi 
COMPANY A-, 



MALT ^ 

WHISKEY 

JHENEWCOMB-BUCHANANi 



ftfji^ 



COMPANY 



PRODUCTION JANUARY 1, 1872, TO JUNE 30, 1894, 218,146I8BARRELS. 



U. S. CLUB 

/~ '♦'"^ ^ 

/ IJ.S.CMIlt \ 

Xnis ' rii.i . KUY co.\ 

fmM 






vj';/ 'jilijnM.h^ 



PRODUCTION MARCH I, 1889, TO JUNE 30, 1894, 69,697 BARRELS. 



JLIDIDI?/ESS 



The Anderson & Nelson Distilleries Co, 



L-OUIS:iZIL-LE, KY. 



12 



f/reifie WIjME /vJ^D Sflf^lT F^EVIEW. 



SEgMOa-R'S LIQUO-R BILL. 

Two iiiii><iilaiit liills were introduced in the Slate Senate on 
tlie 14tli. 1>_V Senator Seymour, iclatiuf; to tlie liiiuor-lieense 
(|uestion. One of tlieni jiroposes a eliaufje in Senator Herl's hill 
(S. 15. -4t'«). and the otiier of Senator Mahoney's l)ill, reeently 
introdueeil as a substitute for liis uniform license l)ili. Both of 
these bills have been referred to the Judiciary Conimittee. 

Senator Bert's bill undertook by an amendment to seetiou 25 
of the County riovernnient Act, Arti("le '_'7, relating to tiie power 
of Supervisors to license for pur|>o.se of regulation and revenue 
all kinds of business, the new feature being that " Such license 
tax shall l)e based on a fair and eijuitable distribution of the 
public burdens upon all classes of busiues, and with due regard 
for the volume of business transacted, without nneiiual or arbi- 
trary discrimination against any kind or class." 

Senator Seymour's bill is identical with Senator lierfs, with 
the following exceptions: After the words "license tax," in 
the above proviso, he inserts the words, '' excepting in the case 
of saloons and other places where sj)iritu()us, vinous, malt, or 
other intoxicating beverages are disposed of for consumption on 
the premises where the same are sold or disposed of to consum- 
ers." .Vnd at the end of the article relating to license taxes he 
adds the following ; 

" The .sale of pure wine and malt li<iuors by any hotel, res- 
taurant or boardiug-liou.se keeper, to be consumed otdy by guests 
seated at table at regular meals, where no such lirjuors are 
sold or disposed of except together with and as a part of such 
regular meals, shall not l)e sullicient cause to enforce againstanj- 
such party or parties a saloon-license tax, in addition to the reg- 
ular license tax on hotels, restaurants and boaiding-ho\i.ses ; and 
the Board of .Supervisors shall clearly deline by ordinance the 
distinction between such places of business, as aforesaid, and 
saloons or other places subject to special discriminating license 
tax for the sale or disposal of such liquor for consumption on the 
premises. It is, however, provided further, that Boards of Su- 
pervisors may, in their discretion, levy special license taxes upon 
all persons dealing in and selling rectilied and compounded spirits 
which have not been distilled in the State of California, which 
special licenses may be fixed in amount equal to the license tax 
imposed for saloons or other |)laces where liquors are sold at re- 
tailfor consumption on the premises, such license tax to be in 
addition to the regular license tax for such liquor business." 

Senator Manoney's original bill for uniform licenses for the 
sale of licpiors was objected to on the ground that it was uncon- 
stitutional in some of its provisions, and it was therefore with- 
drawn, lie has since, however, introduced another bill, which 
was referred to the Judiciary Committee, which, in lieu of a 
uniform license provided for a maximum of 8.'{(>0 per year, and 
also against double taxation through county and municipal licen- 
ses. This limitation to S3l»() per annum would cause a reduction 
in the license tax irapo.sed in many places, as, for instance, in 
Oakland, where the tax is now S400 per year, but would permit 
the raising of licenses in San Francisco, where the tax is only 
$10(1 a year. 

Senator Seymour's bill copies all that was contained in Sen- 
ator Mahoney's bill excepting that the niaximum is fixed at 8000 
p«'r year, and there are added several new sections, one of which 
exempts from tht^ saloon license, hotels, restaurants and board- 
ing houses, which furnish with regular meals otdy wines and 
mall lii|Uors, and do not conduct any saloons, and also the fol- 
lowing: 

''Th(^ Boards of .Supervisors, city and county, city and town 
governments, shall provide for a limitation of the number of 
licenses that may be granted for the sali' of wines and li(|Uors in 
saloons, or (»tber places lor consumption on the premises in each 
ele<'tion jtrticinct, in ac('ordanco with an established ratio per 
c<ipita of population, based on votes cast at general elections or- 
dered by the State, which siiid limitation shall be determined and 
declared from time to time as tlie public iiit<'ri!st may re(|uire ; 
said Boards of .Supervi.sors and other governing liodii^s shall 
liavi- the power to vary this limitation in difVerent precincts in 
accordance with tin- public interests. Where the licenses now 
granted shall exi-eed the number perniitteil by such liinitatioii 
jier capita, no new liciMises shall be granted for such retail liciuor 
business, until the number of those licenses to engage in such 
business shall become less than the number authori/.ed by such 
limitation, excepting, however, that all old licenses may be re- 
newed. 



" Section ft. No person who shall be licensed to sell, or dis- 
pose of spirituous licjuors at retail to be consumed on the prem- 
ises, as aforesaid, shall be a rectilier of distilled sjiirits. or deal 
in, or have in his possession on the said premises, or in connec- 
tion with the business of said jiremiscs, any of the products of 
any rectilier, or cumpouiuler recognized as such by the ollicers 
of the Unitt'd .States Internal Bevenue ; all spirituous liijuors, 
whether domestic or foreign, .sold or disposed of by such person 
ill such place of business, .shall be brought upon the premises 
where such nitail business is condui'tcd, in original packages, 
and in the castf of domestic products, shall be only what are 
known as double stamp, ' straight ' goods, not less than three 
years old ; and Boards of Sn|)ervisors, city and county, city and 
town governments, shall provide by suitable measures for the 
enforcement of these |irovisioiis. .so as to |)rotect the public 
against compounded and adulterated sitirits, and especially so as 
to prevent the sah; of adulterated beverages of foreign origin, 
providing also for the ellicieiit insjiection, discovery and destruc- 
tion of all prohibited beverages. 

" Sec. (i. Boards of Supervisors, city and county, city and 
town governments, shall have the power to provide for special 
licenses for all persons dealing in and selling rectified and com- 
ixiundcd s|>irits, which have not been distilled in the .State of 
California, which licen.ses may be fixed in amount eciual to the 
license tax imposed for saloons or other places where liquors are 
sold at retail for consumption on the premises, such license tax to 
be in addition to the regular license tax for such liciuor business; 
also to provide that signs, with letters at least six inches high, 
shall be prominently displayed over the main business entrances 
of such j)laees, containing the words, ' Licensed to sell rectified 
liquors; ' also to provide that all bottles and packages contain- 
ing rectified or compounded spirits, sold or disposed of by such 
per.son so licensed, shall bear a stamp or insciiptiou plainly .set- 
ting forth that such liijuors are compounded and rectified, and 
are not original distillates." 



•RECEMT T-REASU-Rg DECISIO/N. 

( 15516.) 

Importation of Wliiski/ in Packages contahiiiKj /<'*-.â–  than our Dozen 

Bottlei Prohibited. 

Treasury Depart.ment, December 31, 1894. 

Sir : The Department is in recept of your letter of the 
22d instant, submitting the application of Mr. (rcorge Dickson 
for relief from the payment of duty, under paragraph 244, act 
of August 28, 1894, on .'50 gallons of whisky, instead of 6 gal- 
lons, the amount imported by him. 

You state that Mr. Dickson imported into your port three 
cases, each containing two Dutch botlU's, with a capacity of one 
gallon each, which were filled with Irish whisky ; that these 
bottles of whisky were stated on his invoice to b(^ free of charge 
to the importer (the correct value having been entered for cus- 
toms puriioses), and were intended to be distributed among the 
importer's customers as advertisements, to be placed in shop 
windows. 

Paragraph 244. to w hieli you rcfi'r, prescribes that " wines, 
brandy and other spirituous li(|uors imported in bottles or .jugs 
shall be packed in |)ackages containing not less than one dozen 
bottles or jugs in each package, or duty shall lie jiaid as if such 
package contained at least one dozen bottles or jugs," and uiuh'r 
this provision duly has been asses.se<l niion .'ili gallons, at 81.80 
per gallon, making 8(14.80 as duty. 

Vou call attention to the fact that it has been held by the 
Department that demijohns are n.it bottles within the contem- 
phidon of the section requiring that iinportations of wines and 
lii|Uors ln' paeki'd in |)ackages containing not less than oiii' dozen 
bottles, and state that " while this case does not come within the 
terms of such decision, it seems to be equally t'lititled to the ben- 
efit of as liberal an iiiter|)ietalioii of the law." 

As the vessels in which the spirits were iin|iorted in this 
case were bottles, and are specially mentioned in the paragraph 
quoted, without reference to their capacity, there does not ap- 
pear to be any escape from its plain provisions, which reipiire 
upon entry and ilelivery of the goods th;it duty shall be paid 
upon ea<'li packagi' the .same as if it coiitaiiu^d twelve bottles. 

The only relief which can be atVorded the applicant is to 
permit him to export the three cases of whisky. 

Kespectfnily yours, Cuari.i-m S. IIami.in, 

("545(/. ) Acliiiij Strrclary. 

CoLUiccroK oi- Customs, New Vurh. 



f/ceifie WIJSIE f^l^G Sflf^lT f^EVIEW. 



13 



SWEET WI/ME P-RODUCTIO/N. 



Official Figures for the First District of California. 

Notliiiij; ilonc in August. 

SEPTEMHER, 1S!)4. 

I'kfjs. Tax CiiilH. 
Urundy witlulrawn from distilk'rv lor Ibi- 

tiiicati.)n " 342 56,72o..'J 

Hraudv witlulrawn from special bonded 

warehouse for fortilieatiou 'iiiS 28,.5.57.4 

Brandy used lor tort ilieat ion 3()2 51,882.3 

Wine, (ials. 

Port produced I!»3,C.0.5.'_".) 

Sherry produced 1,2.'")8.44 

Muscat produced 1,091.99 

Angelica produced 23,718.89 

ocTonivR, 1894. 
15raudy withdrawn from distillery for for- 
tification " 1,719 238,-330.2 

Brandy withdrawn from special bonded 

warehouse for fortification 651 31,912.4 

Brandy u.sed for fortification 1,921 229,155.9 

Wine, Gals. 

Port produced (U9,99r..38 

Sherry produced 201,217.45 

Muscat ])roduced 18,771.97 

Angelica produced 104,2(12.99 

No reports received for November, December or, January. 



Official Figures for the Fourth District of California, 

Nothinj; done in .\ugust. 

SKl'Ti:. BEH, 1891. 

I'kgs. 'ra\ (!als. 
Brandy withilrawn IVdui dislilliiv foi- for- 
tification .' 445 37,584.90 

Brandy witlidra\vn from special bonded 

warehouse for fortification 117 S,93r. fjO 

Brandy u.sed for fortification 453 38,334.70 

Wine (ials. 

Port produced 141,(i72.91 

Mu.scat produced 518.44 

Angelica produced 4,652.55 

oc'i'iiUKU, 1.S9I. 

rkgs. Tax Gals. 
Brandy witlulrawn fVoni distillery for foi'- 

titicalion 714 113,920.40 

Brandy withdrawn from special bonded 

warehouse for fortification 198 14,7.S3..50 

Brandy used for fortification 1,016 130,5(54.30 

Wine Gals. 

Port produced 324.420.80 

Sherry produced 143,749.73 

^luscat produced 4.581.47 

Angelica produced 44,194.1() 

Malaga produited 2,795.89 

Frontiguan produced 6,133.27 

Lenoir produced 949.87 

NOX'KMHEK, 1894. 

Pkgs. Tax Gals. 

Brandy withdrawn from distillery for for- 
tification ". 556 89,882.20 

Brandy \vithdrawn from special bonded 

warehouse for fortilication 27 1,823.50 

Brandy used for fortification 583 91,792.60 



From the National Retail Liquor Dealers' Association. 



De.\r Sir : A few weeks ago I wrote you in reference to 
the bill before Cougre.ss to increase the Beer tax, and a.sked you 
to send a remonstrance to your Congressman. 

I am pleased to report to j-on that our work in this direction 
has been eminently successful, for, while at the time the above- 
mentioned letter was sent to you there were some who consid- 
ered that there wa.s really no danger, yet the agitation at Wash- 
ington in favor of the measure was so great that even the skeptical 
ones became much alarmed, and I am fully convinced that, had 
it not been for the fusillade of protests sent in by our members, 
some action ere this would have been taken, either on incieasing 
the tax on Beer or increasing the Retail Li(|Uor Dealers' tax 
from 825 to ¥50, both of which are now ijuietly sleeping in tin- 
Ways and Means committee room. 

We had decided to send a delegation to Washington to enter 
an earnest protest, but before doing so enlisted the services of a 
true friend of the cause who hapiiencd to be within the inner 
circle at the Capital, who has failhfully kept us posted of every 
burden being placed upon the Retail IJ(iuoi- Dealer by this ('on- 
gress ; yet, as eternal vigilance is the piice of safety, w(^ shall 
stdl keep our watchmen u|)on the outer \\allloguai-d against 
any emergency. 

This and other matters in the past should more than con- 
vince you and your friends of the necessity of the liipior trade 
being thoroughly united, and I sincerely hope that you will 
leave no stone unturned fo have your State thoroughly (u-gan- 
ized, and to enroll yourselves umler the banner of the >fational 
Association. 

1 would be pleased to hear from you on this subject, and. if 
1 can render you any assistance, kindly let me know. I hope 
to hear from you on this subject before long. 

Very trulj yours, Robert J. IIai.i-e, 

Secretary Liquor Dealers' Aisocialinii. 



The Pepsin Whisky Co., of Jjouisville, is opening up quite 
a large trade with the druggists of the Coast 'Hie Company is 
an oflshoot of the iii'm of Applegate & Sons, whose '' 15eech- 
wood â– ' and " Rosebud " are well kown in the liquor trade. 
George Henderson, whose head(|uarters are with Jos, Melczer & 
Co., is the Coast representative. 



arln r»WrJT»liJnir»lriia[»lfllllil»iitiJT»]nJnlI»]iiln/l»ln]Bitoi(UWiiiiu»iiUriiW^ 



! 



^c,^^BLlSHEO /;v,^ 




E.REMY MARTIN &C? 

COGNAC 

(TRANCE) 



AGENTS IN SAN FRANCISCD.Cal. 

f\E.<i<if^f\HH 31^05. 9 QO., 

s . ^ III,. I 525 FRONT STREET. 

aiiiiift»lFiinlt»liui>il»;iii|''ISWl>{»Ji«y»Wiii i«inHa»j^^iuniirtiaiaM 



14 f/ceifie WIJslE /rJ^JD Spif^IT f^EVlEW. 



BRANDY PRODUCTION. 

FIRST DISTRICT. 

AUGUST, 1894. 

Produced ;ind hoiidt'd 5,006 tax gallons 

Kec'i'ivcd from distilK'rii'S in Fourth District, California 4,SS7 " 

" ■• special l)()iidt'd wareliimses P\mrth District, California 32'2 " 

Transferred from distilleries to special bonded warehouse. Eastern Districts " 

" " special bonded warehouse to special bonded warehouse, Eastern Districts .5,806 " 

Tax-paid 15(1,8:59 " 

Exported 4,262 " 

Remaining in bond September 1, 1894 727,567 " 

SEPTEMBER, 1894. 

Produced and bonded ."i.OOO tax gallons. 

Received from distilleries in Fourth District, California 1,817 " 

" " special bonded warehouses Fourth District, California 2,562 " 

Transferred from distilleries to special bonded wareliou.se. Eastern Districts " 

" •• special l)onded warehouse to special bonded warehouse, Eastern Di.-tricts 1,9.39 " 

Tax-paid 1,998 " 

Exported 294 " 

Remaining in bond October 1, 1894 704,119 " 

OCTOBER, 1894. 

Produced and bonded 488 tax gallons. 

Received from distilleries in Fourth District, California 849 " 

" " special bonded warehouses Fourtli District, California " 

Transferred from distilleries to spc(!ial bonded warehouse, Eastern Districts " 

" " from special bonded warehouse to 8j)ecial bonded warehouse. Eastern District 5.647 " 

Tax-paid '. 4,608 " 

Exported 295 " 

Remaining in bond November 1, 1894 657,006 " 

NOVEMBER, 1894. 

Produced and bonded 43,378 tax gallons. 

Received from distillei-ies in Fourth District. Californi;i 80,157 •' 

'• " special bonded warehouses Fourth District, California " 

Transferred from distilleries to special bonded wareliouse. Eastern Districts 13,509 " 

" " special bondedwarehou.se to special bonded warehouse. Eastern Districts 9,933 " 

Tax-paid 6,321 " 

Exported 385 " 

Remaining in bond December 1, 1894 762,692 " 

DECEMBER, 1894. 

Produced and bonded 103,064 tax gallons. 

Received from distilleries in Fourth District, California 34,382 

" " special bonded warehou.ses Fourth District, California 1,8()(! 

Transferred from distilleries to special bonded warehouse. Eastern Districts 19,314 " 

" " special bonded warehouse to special bonded warehouse, Eastern Districts 27,715 " 

Tax-paid 7,099 " 

Exported 76 " 

Remaining in bond Januarj' 1, 1895 866.570 " 



A new retailers' paper has appeared at Los Angeles. It is This is analogous to the stupor produced bj' carbonic acid gasi 

called " The Phoenix," and ir, published weekly. It is well cd- but it is assisted and intensified bj- the excess of sugar derang- 

ited — far better than the average retail Journal — and in its ing the stomach. The undigested sugar turns into acid, and 

announcement says, among other things : " The I'lioenix will be thus it is that too much champagne is apt to produce dyspepsia, 

as strong against the dive as it will ujihold the legitimate Herein we find both the blessing and the bane of this popular 

trade." That has the true ring about it. licjuor. 

Sweetness is often confused with richness in wine. liut. as a 

matter of fact, sweetness is often produced by the addition of 

'• Ma ; you pay Miss Leech fifteen dollars a month for taking sugar, especially in champagne. It has been compared to char- 
care of me, don't you ? " (Ma): " Sixteen dollars, Willie. You ity, in that it covers a multitude of sins. The richness proeeed- 
see Miss ].,eech sticks very close to us and makes you be good ; ing from natural saccharine is produced by a natural arreist of 
and I gue.ss it's worth that much." ( Willii^, after thinking): the process of fermentation, leaving an excess of saccharine in 
" Because, if you let iiie have a little ' Laeryma Chiisti ' at din- the lii|Uor. It occurs mostly in the hot climates, but in port- 
ner sonietiines, liki' .Johnny Mar/.et has, I could be real good all making a richness is produced bj' the artilicial arrest of fermen- 
by myself, and you could save most of that." tation. As a medicine, however, champagne is best " dry," and 

is tciidencv then is to thin the blood. — Niw York Commercltil. 



Lirri.K Aixxjnoi, I.N- Champaonk. — There are two peculiar!- (7 U/ «kk 44 J P 

ties about champagne drinking which ai-e ca|)able of explana- f rOI? B. W. Aobott a tO. 

tion. The one is the rajiidity with which the wine exhilarat<'S 

notwithstanding the small jiroportion of alcohol it c(mtains. ItAi.TiMOHi;, Md., February 4, 1.S95. 

This is due to the carlionie acid gas evolved, which is inhaled Dkak SiK : Abbott's .\ngo.stura is the best bitters for a 
while drinking, for it is the property of this gas to expedite the cock-tail ; 

action of anything with which it is associated. Tlie best to prevent and cui-e indigestion; 

It is estimated tiiat one gla-ss of champagne is e(|ual in efl'ect ''''"' l"'><t to allay all stomach disorders, 

to two glasses of still wine of the same strength, and is more If your dealer has not got it, send to us. 
rapid in action. The other jieculiarity is the sort of lethargy C. W. Ahmott & Co., 

or di-:iibii"i« which fiillow^ after cxce.ssivc chamj>agnc drinking. oO^SOO South Charles Utrecl, Baltimore. 



fyveifie wi|^e yvfjD sfii^iT f^eview. 



15 



Imports and Exports 

DURING THE PAST FORTNIGHT, 



EXPORTS OF WINE. 



TO NEW YORK— Pee Str. Satukn, Feb. 0, 1895. 





DESTINATION 




SHIPPERS. 


PACKAGES. 


OALLONS 


VALUE. 


\ 


e\v Wtrk 

Total am 


ount 




50 barrels 

3 barrels 

20(1 barrels 

2 barrels 


2.430 

155 

10,200 

103 


? 1,215 




P Salmtie A Co 

Cupertino Wine Co 

Lenonnand Bros 

Pacitii' Express Co 

Panama b S Line 

Coburu, Tevis & Co 

Cal W Association 

Lachman it Jaeobi 

39 cases and 


02 

0,000 

7'* 




39 coses 


100 




0bbls2 1if-bbls... 
5 lif-bbls 1 keg . . . 

1 barrel 

1000 barrels 

1000 barrels 


354 

108 

34 

50,000 

51,349 

114,793 


142 

08 

40 

20,000 

12,509 

«40,328 











TO PANAMA— Per Str. Saturn, Feb. 6, 1895. 


Panama iDempster tt Sou 25 barrels 

IJolin T Doyle '133 cases 


1.275 




$220 
450 








Total amount 133 eases and 


1,275 


$670 


TO HAMBURG VIA NEW YORK- Per Str. Saturn, Feb. 6, 1895. 


Hambur" .. .. H (r Sieliert - . 120 barrels . 


0,000 

75 
10 

6,085 


_ 


*360 
45 
15 


Wm HoelscherifeCo 3 hf-barrcls 

1 keg 




$620 








TO CENTRAL AMERICA— Per Str. San Juan, Feb. 7, 1895. 



Puntas Arenar. 



Ocos 

Champerico . 
La Li bertad . 

.\eajutla 

La Liberlad. 
Cbamperico . 



.\rai>nIco . 
-Viajntla . 



La Libertad 

Cbamperico 

S.an J de Guatemala. 
Ocos 



Cal W Association . 



C W A, CCarpy & Co. 



Cal W Growers' Union. 

iM Ellis 

J Gundlaeli & Co 



CWA,CCarpy&Co.. 
CC Mclvers 



KoUler & Frohling 

Total amount 150 cases and. . 



20 barrels 

3 pkgs bbls 

70 cases 

5 pkgs 10 lil-bbls.. 

3 hf-barrels 

30 cases 

12 cases 

1 keg 

3 cases 

barrels 

30 kegs 

20 cases 

1 barrel 

5 hf-barrels 

3 kegs 

2 bf- casks 

8 cases 

1 case 

2keg8 



1,056 
395 



270 
82 



109 
.300 



52 
129 
45 
09 



- 



20 
2,.537 



* 721 

270 

395 

174 

78 

213 

68 

10 

30 

84 

187 

.56 

39 

52 

:is 

50 
34 
4 
15 

*2,.i30 



TO HONOLULU— Per Str. Australia, Feb. 5, 1895. 



Honolulu J Qumllach &Co 

Lacliman & Jaeobi.. 

Total amount 10 cases and 


..110 cases 

..1130 kegs. 


'.'.'. 700 

700 


$.50 
SCO 

?410 



TO .lAPAN— Pun Str. Ockanh-, Feb. 8, 1895. 



lliogo 

VokoUama . 



J Gundlaeli tt Co 5 barrels . 

Cal W Aesoclation 18 barrels. 

Maeondray Bros it L ..|8 <a«:'... 
Berlnger Bros 1 8 barrels . 



Total amount 8 cases and. 



202 
408 



411 
1,041 



t 87 

200 
SO 
108 

(425 



TO HONOLULU— Per Ship C. D. Bryant, Feb. 10, 1895. 



Honolulu 


Cal Wine Association.. . 

CWA, CCarpy it Co. .. 

Eiscn Vineyard Co 

Laebman 'it Jaeobi 

CWA, Koblerit F 

15 cases and 


8 Ill-casks 

15 barrels 

201 hf-barrels 

5 cases 


97 

713 

1.0.S8 


( 30 

302 

U.33 

13 




(, 


lObblsSoct 


574 
500 
1,475 
270 
18U 
175 

5,682 


362 
263 


tt 


230 kegs. .. . 


723 


i* 


8 hf-casks 

3 casks 


10(1 
75 


tt 


30 kegs 


00 


Total amount 


10 eases 


35 
$2,536 



TO NEW YORK— Per Ship St. Paul, Feb. 14, 1810. 



New York 

To.al amount 



Cal W Association 12000 barrels . 

Laebman it Jaeobi 500 barrels... 



99,333 
24,987 



124,320 



$39,734 
7,500 

$47,234 



TO CENTRAL AMERICA— Per Schr. Hayes, Feb. 15, 1895. 



Acajutla 




.Lacboian iNc Jacohi.. 

1 

. F Korbcl & Bro 

t 50 cases aiul 


.. lUkeKS 


300 


$125 




50 capes 


154 


La Libertad. 


30 barrels 

i8 kejjB 


1,567 
128 
103 

2,104 


601 






48 






47 


Total 


amoui 




$975 



IMPORTS OF WINES AND LIQUORS BY SEA. 



FROM OVERLAND VIA VANCOUVER, Per Str. City of Puebi.a, Feb. 5th— 

450 cases whisky (Wm. Woltf it Co.) 

FROM OVERLAND BY RAIL IN BOND, From February 1st to February 15th— 
100 cases rye whisky ; 5U cases wine ; 30 cases ccgnae. 



EXPORTS OF WHISKY BY SEA. 



From February 1st to February 15, 1895. 



vessel. 


destination. 


shippers. 


PACKAGES. 


oallons 


VALUE. 


San Jnan 


SitH, P Arenas.. 

MOitCo, " 

AFK, 

IISG, Cham'erico 

SVV, Ocos 

SitCo, S J de G . . 
SLitCo, P Arenas 

MBrositL, Vok'a 

EHitCo, Himo'ln 

CWC, 

P in dia, " 

FitG, 

PitA. La Lib'tad 

ELAD, Acajutla. 

PJC, 


Cal W Association. 

Crown Dist Co 

Wm Wolff it Co. .. 

L S Ha.a8 

A P Hotaling Co. . . 
CWA, Kohler it F . 
Wilmerding it Co. . 

Wm Wolff it Co.... 


1 barrel 

Ikeg 

6 eases 


42 
10 


$ 126 

3U 
56 








241 


,, 






00 


,. 






95 


,, 


1 barrel 


44 


66 
56 


Oceanic 

C D Bryant... 


1 barrel .... 


43 


3.5 
200 






15 


11 






18 


Hayes 


2 barrels.. . . 
50 cases. . . . 


84 


245 

400 


10 cases 

10 eases 




80 
80 


Total 


imonnt I'JO cases 


and 


223 


$1,803 



WIVI. WOLFF & CO., 

Importers and General Agents, 

327-329 Market Street, ----- San Francisco, Cal 



1=^-^011^10 OO^^ST .A-O-EIlsTTS FOK, 



POMMERT SEC CHAMPAGNE 

J. il v. MARTELL CuGNAU 

MINERAL WATERS of tlie APOLLtNARIS CO., Limited, 

HU:;jiRIAN APERIE.iT WATER 

FRIESUXIiSHAa APERIENT WATER 

MORGAN BRO., PORT ST. MARYS' SHERRIES 

DIXON'S DOUBLE DIAMOND PORT 

R1YAL W:NE ex. OPORTO, Port Wines 

OUBOS FRERES, BORDEAUX, Chrsts and Saulsnies 

i:e-ltni>ortrd Atnrrlcan MhlskiCR.— 
Staple brands. 



HOCK WINES, fmm Messrs. Henkell & Cx, Mayeuce 
BURGUNDY WINES from F. CHAUVENET, NUITS 
London JOHN de KUYPER & SONS, Rotterdam. GIN 

BARTHOLOMAY BRKWKKY CO.. R.-he.ster, N. Y. 
EXTRA KINE STANDARD, BOHEMIAN and the 
"KNICKERBOCKER" 
"DOGS-HEAD " BRAND of Goinness' Stool and Bass' Ale 
CANTRELL & COCIIRANES Belfast Ginger Ale 
LONDON Dock Jamaica Rum 
-'SC Excelsior; Spr. 'S'U Belle of Nelson; Spr. 'S9 Blue Gra«.; 
Lowest market quotations furnished on application, to the 



CANAlilAN CIXB WHISKY from Messrs. HIRAM 

WAl.KKR & SONS Ltd., Walkerville, Canada. 
ANDREW USHER & GO'S Scotch Whiskies 
JAMESON & CO., IRISH WHISKY 
THEO. LAPPES GENUINE AROMATIQUB 
GILKA KUMHEL 

SUrrON, GARDEN & CO., London, Old Tom Gin 
UDOLPHO WOLFE'S SON & CO., Scliedam, SHNAPPS 

Hume, Mayfield; O. F. C; Chlckencock and otlier 
wholesale trade only 



16 



f/reifie WIJSIE jk^Q SflF^IT (REVIEW. 



EXPORTS OF BRANDY TO FOREIGN PORTS BY SEA. 



From February Isl to Februarj 


• 15, 1895, 






VBSkIL. i DI&TIHATIOH. 

i 


SHIPPERS. 


PACRA0E8. 


OALLOMH 


VALDB. 


CD Bryant .jHouolulu Wilmerdiug & Co.. 

Total amount 'â–  cases and 


5 cases 




t4S 






*4S 



EXPORTS OF BRANDY TO DOMESTIC PORTS BY SEA. 



From February Ist to February 15, 18'J5. 



VE«&BL. 


OBSTINATION. 


BHlpPKeS. 


PACKAGES. 


GALLONS 


VALUE. 




New York 


H B .MayUew & Co. 

Cal W Association.. 

J T Doyle 

G De La Tour 

J P Smilli 


S barrels 

.so hf-bbls . . 
140 hf-bbls . 
1 1 cases ... . 


40S 
2,19a 
3,500 


«: 204 




1,0% 

2,1UU 

55 


St Paul 


a'Spkps... 
65 pki;s 


9,433 
2,543 


4,710 

l,27;i 


Total amount 11 cases a 


nd 


l.S.I)S4 


?'j.447 



EXPORTS OF MISCELLANEOUS LIQUORS BY SEA. 



From February 1st to February 15, 1895. 



.â– Vustralia.. 



City of Puebla. 

San Juan 

Umatilla 

C I) Bryant 



DESTINATION. 



Honolulu. 



Victoria 

Hazatlan.. . 
Wellington . 
Honolulu. . 



SHIPPERS. 



Crown Dist Co. 



L Juri & Co 

Chas Memecke &Co. 

Louis Haaet 

Wilinenlinj; & Co . . . 



PKGS 4 COST. 



10 cs Bum 

5 C8 Gin 

1 hf-bbl Wine... 

2 <ir-csks Wine, . 
2 pkt^s .Spirits .. 
5 cs Gill 



Tut.il amount 20 cases, etc. 



41 

11 
lU 
35 
45 
II 

â– JIT):; 



BEER IMPORTS BY RAIL. 



From February 1st to February 15, 1895. 






1 


BOTTLED. 1 


BULK. 


CON8IONBE8. 


Cases 


Barrels 


Casks 


Barrels 
35 


Kbbl 

133 
5 


Kbbl 


Kegs 


Rovfll Faple Dist Co 






172 


30 




S F liri^weried Ltd 








\V HoL'en A Co 








45 




50 




111^:11 


80 


















Total 


80 


172' 80 


173 


30 


50 



ALCOHOL, GIN, LIQUORS AND RUM IMPORTS BY RAIL. 
From February 1st to February 15, 1895. 



COMSiaNRES. 


ALCOHOI,. 


GIN. 


LlljUOKS. 


HUM. 


< ';i---s 


IJarrelj^ 
65 


Ca9es 


Barrels 


Cases. 


Barrels 


Barrels 


Crown Distilleries Cu. . 














5 
















11 


















10 












10 




















Total 


B.5 




5 


21 




10 



WHISKY AND SPIRIT IMPORTS BY RAIL. 



F 


^om Fi-tiruary Ist 


to FebruarylS, 1895. 








.SI'IKIT.S. 


WHIhKY. 


CONSIGNEES. 


Barrels 


Cases 


Cases 


Barrels 


Hbbls 


KCKS 


Misc. 




S80 










C W Crai" & Co . . .. 






201 








Wm Wiiltf A Co 


180 
280 












Jones. Miiiidy A Co . . 
U S Int Itcv Store-k'p'r 
I. niiis Taussig; ttCo. . 


















200 








60 












Meverfeld M it Co 




40 

1IK> 


.M 


30 






Sherwood A Sherwood 








Carroll & Carroll .... 


2 
50 








F Chevalier ,. 


;::::::: .;;:... 












64 












H Scbtienfelder A Co 








2 

240 

60 

54 

5 

1 

1 

1 

1 

2 

2 

2 

2 

1 








Cbas Meinecke & Co . 










































OTimnell Bros 


I 










It Daliliirff 


1 










L Fitzgerald 




























J F Hallinan 








J L Nickel it Co 














G E Kiiipe 




























D Ferguson Oakland.. 














Garibaldi Bros 




























Total 


S04 


' 14(1 


881 


3U 





Georgp M. Woodhurn, son of James M'oodljiini, tlu! Sacra- 
mento wholesaler, died of paralysis on tlie 4tli iiist. Mr. Wood- 
burn was born in California, and was but 34 years of age at the 
time of his death. The stroke which eventually ended liis life 
came but a few days before the end. The deceased left a widow 
and two small sons. He had been associated with hs father in 
business for many j'ears, and was widely known in the trade. 



Gardner S. Chapin. of Chicago, of the liquor firm of Chapin 
& Gore, died at Santa Barbara, recently, from the etfeetsof a sur- 
gical operation for a abscess in the left arm-pit. Blood-poisoning 
resulted from the operation, and after huH'ering much agony for 
several days Mr. Chapin succumbed. He was sixty-two years 
old, and was the surviving member of the lii'in of Chapin & 
Gore, James Gore having died in September, 1S!)1. They had 
been in business in Monroe street, between Dearborn and State, 
for a quarter of a centurj'. Their first enterprise in Chicago was 
a grocery on the West Side, but in 1864 they moved to a site at 
the northwest corner of Monroe and Stale. This was kept up 
for a few years, and then the firm went into the liquor business. 
Their place in Monroe street was a great resort for hoi-.semen 
and .sporting men of the well-to-ilo class, as well as for theatri- 
cal people. Chapin iS; Gore had branch houses in Indiauaiiolis 
and one or two other cities. It is estimated tliat Mr. Chapin 
left a fortune of .S;iO().()0(). Deeea.sed was a member of many 
well-known societies, having lieen a thirly-thiid degree Mason, 
a member of Apollo Coniniandcrv, Knights Templar, and a 
Knighl of I'ytliias. lie leaves a daughter and one son. 



SHERWOOD 




SHERWOOD, ' 



—IMPORTERS AND EXPORTERS— 



212-214 MARKET STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 



24 N. FRONT STREET, PORTLAND, OR. 



"Keustone SUonoarain Koe" and "(Old Sarnloga" — The Finest Eastern Ryes. 



MOKT ifc CHANDON CUAMPAGNB ESCHENAUER & GO'S CLARETS .and SAUTERNES, 

HUNT ROOPE TEAGE & CO. Cased Porte, A. HOUTMAN .V COS HOLLAND GIN, 

g. .V ;. BURKE'S Irish and Scotch Whiskies, LAW.SONS LIQUEUR SCOTCH WHISKEY, 

BA.SS RATCLIFP A OREnON, Limited— Bass Ale in Wood, GUINNESS' DUFllN STOUT in Wood, 

i. k ). BURKES Bass' Ale and Dnblin Porter (GUINNESS JOULE'S STONE ALE in Hhds. and Hf-Hhds. 

EXTRA FOREIGN STOUT, the finest brew). MEINHOLDS ANCHOR BRAND NEW YORK CIDER, 

fLBlSCHMANNS ROYALTY GIN. HENK WAUKESHA Mineral Water, 



MACKENZIE & CO'S Spanish Sherries and Pnrts 

E. & J. BURKES NONPAREIL OLD TOM GIN. 

BURKE'S HENNESSY BRANDY and DRY GIN 

SCHLITZ MILWAUKEE BEER the "Pilsener" and Ught Spirkling 

aLw SCHLITZ in Wood, 
ROSS' BELFAST GINGER ALE. CLUB SODA, ETC. 
"CLUB COCKTAIUS, " EVANS HUDSON ALE 



lioSKKAM. (iKIlKTI.KY A; Co., rilll.AHKI.I'll I A, I'l Ul: Wll IKKlKl-: — "M AHIOT," "I'.OIllN Ilooll, " "O. P. S." AMI "TlllVATK SToiK. " 

KK-IMI'OttTEIt AVi:itH:tS WmShllCS CavllHlr Ilniirhnn. Sprliia 'SI. 'Stl. 'Sft. 'ffO; llornry Ityr: O. I". C: SprlnnlilU: T. II. Mrltra>irr 
ih'rtiittiliif: M. I'. Mtnia nli : hrtitui-hii t'ltih: Mrlhi ttint: Mitttttmly: <'hlfh-4'nrork: /â– ,'. < '. lirrrt/ iitul ittlifr sin nthi rtl hrmttls. 

Alio AgenU For NAPA VALLEY WINE CO'S WINES AND BRANDIES IN CASES. California Wines and Brandies in Wood. 



f/eifie WipJE /tJSID Sflf^lT F^EVIEW. 



17 



WINE AND BRANDY OVERLAND, 

During January, 1895, Showing Destination and Points of Shipment. 

[OFFICIAL FIGURES.] 



lO 


JiRAXDY. 


IFJJVJS 


Cases 

I 


Oalluiis 


CaeuB 


Gallons 


Boston, Mass 

New Eui;lnnil \>o.. ts 


3Ui 

'34',iio 


5 

9 

274 

o 

ii 

6 
21 
1 
8 
6 
5 
71 
4 


7,735 

7.078 

793 'Uy 








PhilaiKlpliia 


I 




0,315 












316 














86 


5,441 


Virginia antl Marvlaiiil points 








437 
42 

8a 


2 628 






41 1 105 






2 546 


Mobile 




2 017 






12 


14 


2 478 


Dallas 




2,4711 








isi 

o 

35 

2 

21 


7,5U4 






234 
16 


3 091 


Other Texas points 


1 


3 220 


Other Ark , Oklahoma and Indian Ty. . 


38 






116 


2,570 






54 








51 








8,527 
10 247 


Cleveland 






2 

lii 

fi 

4 

11 

3 

7 

4 

f> 

3 

58 


Other Ohio points 




10 


53 






52 






10 
2,U27 


12 




a 


31,162 
126 




Other Michic'an points 






98 


Milwankee . . 




907 

lie 

44 
.377 


o *>7y 




o 


50 




3,012 






2 398 






50 


Other Misfonri points 






2 

T 
u 


10 


Sioux Cilj' 












:« 


203 






49 






24 

38 

15 

705 


3 

8 

8 

121 




Other Kansas and Nebraska points 

Dakota^ 


3 


49 

133 


Denver 




10,890 


Pueblo 




99 


Other Colorado points and Wyorainj?.. . 


1 

11 
6 


607 
682 
451 
495 

28 


10 
92 
24 
17 
6 


7,258 
5,260 


Utah 


519 

696 


Mexico 




6,306 


England 




14,895 






















Buffalo, New York 











Plaqucmine . 




















Columbus 






























Austin . . ... 










Fort Worth 










Houston 










Hot Sprini^s 










St Paul 






























Total 


31 


42,904 


942 


1.370,865 



FKOJir 


BR 


AyDY. 


H'TNE, 


Cases 


Gallons 


Cases 


Gallons 




35 


ia,9io 


726 

2 




Oaklaiul 












CoiK'ord 








55 
I7fi 


Pleasantiiu 






I 
12 

18 




2 

1 


1G7 


23.563 

39.283 

lo,3:« 

208 




Irviimton 


Waini Sprini^B 


















Hollihter 








81 


Santa Cruz 








40 

77 

2,824 

3.132 

274 

23.952 

28,322 


















Vina 




5,2»J 


2 


St<n*kton 




West's Spur 




2,42(1 

2,85.') 

7,U5.'J 

40 

:jo 

86 


Fresno 




Fowler 








2 
2 

3 


18,017 

135.924 

73,925 


Napa 




Oakville 














1 0,1 a-) 


St Helena 




14(1 




Kruj; 




2 5.">0 


Cordelia 








6 310 












Wttodland 








15 "'SN 


El Verano 








100 


Santa Itosa 








'>7 5K4 










fi.lSO 
'» 770 


Asti 
















3.020 


Healdsburf; 








San Rafael 








96 


Elk Grove 








123 


lone 








28 
147 


Plaeerville 




90 
2.02(1 


172 


44 






9.993 








2,470 

2:t 




7 275 




5,020 
47 


Santa Barbara 








70 






Downev 




set 










'*7 












Ukiah 




















Folsom 










Latrobe 






























Palo Alto 































Cncainonfi^a 































Colton 










Antiocli 




















G nasti 




















Total 


31 


42,iM2 


942 


1,370,865 



KICHAKD HELI.MAN.N. 



H. Q. HELLMANN 



HELLMANN BROS. & CO. 

•^-^-^■^■^IMPORTERb AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS-^^-^^ 
525 Front Street _ - - San Francisco, Cal. 



► > • > < ■ < « 



PACIFIC COAST AGENTS FOR 



i. PERRIER FILS & CO., Chalons s Manie, Champagne 

ADRIEN & FILS, Epernay - - Champagne 

FORRESTER & CO., Xerez de la Frontera, Shemes 

GARVEY & Ctl.. - - - Shemes 

OFFLEY, CRAMP & FORRESTER. Oporto, Port Wines 

BLANKENHEYM & NOLET, Rnttfrdara, Union Gin 
CH. LECHAT, R. PHILIPPE & CHESSE, Nantes, Sardijies 



DUBLIN DISTILLERS' CO., Lfd, Dublin, 
E. REMY MARTIN & CO., Rfluillac, 
P. FRAPIN & CO., .Segtinzao, 
ENGRAND FRERES, Angouleme, 

PAHERSON & HIBBERT, London, 



Irish Whiskey 
Cognacs 



I Bass' and Oninness' 
I SlonL 



L DURLACHER, Bingen - - Roine Wine 

H. UNDERBERO-ALBRECHT, Rheinberg a Niederrhein, 

Boonekamp Bitters 

CHAS. DAY & CO., Undon, \Zllll 

I Scotch Whisky 
\ Jamaica Rami 



J. B. HERRIFK & CO., Glasgow, 



ALL QOODS IN UNITED STATES BONDED WAREHOUSES. 

AMERICAN WHISKIES "Blue Grass" and " Boone's Knoll" 



18 



f/eifie WIJSIE /rJSID SflF^lT f^EVIEW. 



EXHIBITO'RS AT BQ-RDEAUX. 

Oil the !>th iiislnnt the steamer Saturn sailed for I'auama, 
taking witli her the wines that have been eollectcd by the Yiti- 
cultural Connnission, with tlie assistance of M. dc I^ahuule, tlie 
Kroneii consul. P. (i. Sabatie and otiiers, for cxliibition at tlie 
Societc lMiiloiiiatlii<iiie, of Bordeaux. The lot included ]().'! ca.ses 
of wine, .s of clianii)a<j;iie and 11 of brandy. At J'anania tlie 
wines will be trans-slii])|)cd and put aboard tlie Krciich steamers 
sailinj; from Colon to Havre : thence to lioideaux in iileuty of 
season for the exposition, which o]iens Jlay 1st and closes No- 
vember 1st. 

It will be seen from the followiiij; list that there will be a 
thoron-ilily representative list of our wines ami brandies at the 
exhibition : 

EXHIBITOK.S. 

P. (i. Habatie, San Fancisco — cases, containing Burgun- 
dy, white wine, Zinfandel, Claret, Sherry, Port, Angelica, Mal- 
aga, I5randy, and white spirits. 

Cupertino Wine Co., Cupertino — 12 cases Claret. 

Julius P. Smith. Livermore — 5 cases, containing Cabernet, 
Claret, Malbec. Zinfandel, Hiesling and white wines. 

Arjiad Ilaraszthy & Co., San Prancisco — .3 cases, contain- 
ing Cliami>ague. 

11. \V. Crabb, Oakville — 10 cases, containg Cabernet, To- 
Kalou, Muscatel, Port, Iticsling, Itoyal Red, I'ort ami Brandy. 

Ruby Hill Vineyard Co., Livermore— 7 cases, containing 
Sauterni', i iesling, llock, (,'abernet, Zinfandel. 

(ieorgeM'est & Son, Stockton —4 cases, containing white 
wine, Brandy, ("laret. Port, Frontignan. 

Beringer Bros., St. Helena — S cases, containing Riesling, 
Zinfandel, Carignan, Sherry, Tokaj', Brandy, Angelica, Burger. 

F. Albert/., Cloverdale — 11 cases, containing Angelica, 
Brandy, Chateau Moulton, Sherry, Port, Zinfandel, Grape Syrup, 
Sauviguon Vert. 

Eisen Vineyard Co., Fresno — 1 case as.sorted wines. 

Inglenook Vineyard Co., Rutherford — 5 ca.ses, containing 
Santeriie. Burgundy, Claret, Brandy. 

.Jos. ^ladky, Mountain View — 2 cases, containing Burgun- 
dy' and Claret. 

C. Schilling & Co., San Francisco — 9 cases, containing An- 
lica. Port, Semillon, Gros Mancin, Riesling and Beclan. 



ing 
Francisco — .'! 



cases, containing 

5 ca.ses, containing Sauterne 

1 ca.'^e, containing Cabernet 

-5 cases, containing Sherry 



geli 

A. Rejisold & (jO., San 
Brandy and Claret. 

John Swett & Son, Martinez — 
and Medoc. 

Pierre Klein, Mountain \iew- 
bleiid and Claret. 

L. J. Rose & Co., San (iabriel - 
and Port. 

I talijin-Swiss Colony, ,\sti — 12 cases, containing Riesling, 
Sauvignon, Pinot Blanc. Barbara, Harola, Pinot Gris, Zinfandel, 
Brandy. Monte Christo, Sparkling Muscat, Claret, Burger, Ma- 
taro, Vi'rniontli. 

{!rau & Werner, Irvington — 4 cases, containing Petit Pinot 
and (Jabernet. 

Ben Lomond Wine Co.. Ben Tjomond — 7 cases, containing 
Savigiion Vert, Grey Hiesling (Chablis type), Claret. 
California Wine Association : 

C. Carpy & Co.— 3 ca.ses, containing Matera, Sauterne, La 
Lonio Claret. 

Napa \alley Wine Co. — 3 cases, containing Zinfandel, \'inc 
ClitV Burgundy. 

B. Dreyfus vS; Co.— 2 cases, containing Claret and Sherry. 
Kohler tS: \'aii Bergen — 3 ca.ses, contiiining Malaga, Tokay. 

Madeira. 

S. Lachiiian & Co. — 3 cases, containing Muscatel, Angeliciv 
and Port. 

Kohler & Frohliiig — ."! cases, containing Blackberry Bran- 
dy, Traininer and Brandj'. 

C. J. Wetmore, Livermore — 5 cases, coiitaining while wine 
and Claret. 



Tnic Dii-KicKKNcK. — One man buys a <lollar's worth of wine 
for use on his table ; when it is consumed. California still has 
the money for trade, business or tlie general good. Another 
pays a dollar for tea, but when it is used China has the money, 
and you couldn't get it back with a steam derrick. 



The Crown Distilleries C'ompany lias set up a splendid ex- 
hibit of '-Cyrus Noble " whiskies in the main waiting room on 
the Oakland mole. The whiskies are shown in all the dill'erent 
kinds of bottles in which they are sold, the bottles being arranged 
ill an octagonal pyramid, with a glass ca.se surrounding it. The 
wood-work of this case is finely finished, and the advertisement 
is certainly unique. It brings the brand iiromineutly before 
every iierson who crosses the bay from ( >Mk!;iiid, and is attracting 
mueli deserved attention. 



Brandy. 



280 
600 



WI/NE A/ND BRA/NDg -RECEIPTS. 

Wine. 

February 1 48,370 

" 3 5,920 

" 4 2(!,3.-)0 

" 5 1.50,900 

11,170 

7 45,330 

" S 66,000 

" 9 

" 11 98,710 

12 71,;500 

" 13 03,(;,S0 

" 14 42,.V20 

" 15 28,800 



80 



Total, P'eb. 1 to Feb. 15 659,050 

Total, same dates last year... 421,950 



960 
32,445 



The following is a comparative st;iiement of the receipts of 
wine and brandy at this point for January 1S94 and 1895: 

, 1894 , , 1895 , 

Wine. Brandy. Wine. Brandy- 
January 553,110 142.705 897,.534 60,590 






Any party having 75,000 or 100,000 Gallons 
of Dry Wine of good quality to exchange 

Fo[ MM San Francisco Pronertij 

j8fe'd"May send particulars to this Onice.-^a 



UNION i25 STERLINQ 

BICYCLES 



<)l!R I.INE OF 

MKOIUM 

(IKADE 

WHEELS 

II AVE NO 

KUl'AL,. 

ALL SIZES. 
AlA. I'KICES. 

K«K IIOVS. 
<ilRI.S, MEN 
ANI> WOMEN. 




BICTCLE SCN- 
DIUES OP AM. 
KINDS. CI,OTII- 
I N <: , C A l-S , 
STOCK IN <i S. 
SHOES. SWEAT- 
EKS.nEI.I>. CE- 
MENT. l-lMfS, 
KEI'AIK <>l T- 
KITS. I..\Mrs, 

i,i<;<;a<;ecak- 

KI EKS. Ol I.- 

EKs. Kirvcii; 

STANDS.WKEN- 
CIIES. Etc., El.-. 



AGENTS 
WANTED. 
SCND 4 CENTS 
FOR CATALOG. 



Stolt*3» JVIfc Co. 

393 Wabash Ave., CMICACiO. 



branches: 

DENVER 

AND 

MILWAUKEE 



PjO-eiFie WI|^E Jk^Q SflF^IT {REVIEW 



19 



^S^ Dlf^E(5T f F^0J\/1 bOUlSVIbbE, KY. ^^^-^i/^ 



PEEI^CESS U/t^ISKIES. 







»> < ■ > / * 



J/ie^^e WMskies have a reputation second tojnond on the Pacitio Coast. Thei/ have been given years of trm 

â–  the iest class of trade and consumers and are pronounced without a peer. When given a trial the\j speak for 
.^.mselves. For sale in quantities to suit in Louisville or San Francisco hj/ 

IMIOOIS^Ei, laiTJn^T &c' CO, 



SOLE AOr.yTS FOR THE I'lfTTlC COAST. 



404 IFI^OISTT STI5.E1ET, 



G-old. ]yie;d.a.l, Lorxdon, 1SS4. 



s^AJsr 'B'Ti.j^Jsrcxsco, cj^l. 



Gold. IXte;d.al, San Franeiseo, 1S84. 



COMTES Sl GO'S 

ORIGlHflli 

PLYMOUTH GIN 

in^ CAUSES oistXj-^. 

An English Double Distilled Unsweetened Gin, a 
delicious compromise between Holland 

and Old Tom Gins. 

DISTRIBUTING AGEXT FOR TIIK I'ACIFIO COAST: 

W. B. CHAPMAN, 123 California Street, San Francisco. 



20 



f/rSlfie WIJ^JE /^J^ll^ Sfll^lT I^EVIEW. 




ORICINATdfl OF 

OLD GRAND DAD 



■t^li« 



BARBER, FERRIELL & CO 

AS R. B. HAYDEN & CO. 
REGISTBREO DISTlLLCRv. 
V NO. 420, SiH DIST. 



Barber. Ferriell 2^(0. 

proprietors. 




B.H.HURT, 

PRESIDENT, 



J. H. BEAM . 

VICE PRESIDENT. 




BISTILLERIES: NELSON CO, KY. 
OFFICE: LOUISVILLE. KV. 



*', 



f/ceifie WI|«JE /cJMD Sfll^lT I^EVIEW, 



21 



S. LACHMAN CO. 
California mines and Brandies. 



453 to 465 BRANNAN STREET, 



SAN FRANCISCO 



ISr. 'YT. OZFIFTCE, 2S TO S6 ELIMI STI^EET. 



V> piofl^^i^ u/if(^ piJ5E. E5T/^BIJ5|^^D 1854. ^ ^ VJ^ 

(California l^inos and "^randios. 

VINEYARDS IN SONOMA CO., MERCED CO, AND FRESNO CO. 



COR. SECOND i FOLSOM STS.. SAN FRANCISCO 



41-45 BROADWAY, NEW YOrK. 



Kohler & Van Bergen, 

CALIFORNIA 

WIHES m 

Winerv and Distillery: 
Sacramento, Cal. 



(.s^ 






CQ 



r 



-'^ 



.Main Ofliccand VauUs, 

661 to 671 Third St. 
San Francisco. 







8. 



^■^• 






Nuw Vorl< Ollice, 
N. W. Corner 

LAKillT .t VmiIiK Sts 

New York 



C. CARRY & CO. 




Proprletom 

Undo Sam Winerv and Dislillerv. 

CALIFORKIA. 



-OFPUK AND SALESROOM - 



515-517 Sacramento St., - San Francisco. 

WINERIES AND DISTILLERIES, 

â– NAI'A AM. SAN' JOSE, CAIj. 



CARRY & MAUBEC, 

CKIiAi; STltEET, - - NEW VOUK, .V. Y. 




bLEY 



^ 



SPECIALTIES: 



PRIVATE STOCK HOCK, 

PRIVATE STOCK EL GERRITO, 
PRIVATE STOCK SAUTERNE, 

PRIVATE STOCK CLARET. 
PRIVATE STOCK BURGUNDY, 

PRIVATE STOCK VINE GLIFF, 






MR' /» ^f " *"— ^ A L I F O R N 1 A. 

PURE CALIFORNlA.>;^^J^fcVINE:S'^'^'' 



BRANDIES ^ I 



WINERIES ANO DISTILLERIES: 

JM/rf/r eiTY, YOU^JTVIbbE /rJMD 
ST. JHEIdEJM/t. 

OFFICES : 

11-13 FIRST ST., SAN FRANCISCO. 

200-202 S. FOURTH ST., ST. LOUIS. 

29 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. 



22 



f/eifie Wl/^E /rj^D Sflf<.IT PREVIEW. 




"BELLE OF A/NDE-RSG/N COU/NTg." 

Seventy years ajjo, in old Ireland, J'^d. Murphy, Sr., madi) 
wliiskj' ; a few years later his sou, the father of Anderson Coun- 
ty's own Kd. Murphy, became a distiller, and thus for nearly a 
eeuti'ry past ohl Bourbon whisky has been made by the Murphy 
family. Ed. Murphy, tlH> third of the name, built a distillery in 
Anderson county, on the lii^h l)anks of the Kentucky river in 
the year ISSl. and has there established and ever since made 
but one brand, the now famous " Helle of Anderson County." 
Although made under the name of Ed. Murphy & Co., Mi-. 
Murphy is the sole owner and manufacturer of the noted brand 

and distillery. ]I(; is about 
forty-live years of age, a cour- 
teous, fair-dealing, clever gi'u- 
Icnian, whost! popularitj' is 
unbounded, and is one of the 
very few men in tiie State en- 
gaged in the business wlio is a 
practical distiller. The entin^ 
work at his plant is under his 
jiersiinal suj)ervision. The dis- 
tiller^' and warehouses are 
located on a high, dry ridge, 
near the Kentucky river, 
twelve miles south of Frank- 
fort and seven and one-half 
miles from Lawrenceburg. 
The warehouses being on high 
ground, the whisky improves 
l)y natural process — no heat- 
ing — and comes out of bond 
\_// ^^\ /jf "^^ <^ high proof. 

\ /..^^l Jf' ^^' -^'"''l'''J' l'-'^ never hail 

S^^^ / f the slightest comiihiint made 

C^ by a single customei' during 

El.. .Mii-.iuv, TiiK i.i.-ni.LRit. his lifc-tiuie career. His 

" Belle of Anderson County " whisky is distilled under the old- 
fashioni'd, haiid-miule. sour-masii foiniula and process, in use for 
more than a hundred years, lleguarauteesthat every gallon of his 
whisky is mashed in small tubs by hand, and not by a machine, 
one bushel at a time, and that it is doubled in (topper over lire, and 
not over steam. He believes he can safely say there are but few 
houses making hand-made sour-mash pure copper whiskies in 
the State of Kentucky. Only the best selected grain is used, 
and the water is from a pure limestone spring, situated fifty feet 
above the distilleiy, doing away with the use of pumps, the wa- 
ter being carried into the distillery by underground i)ipes. It 
flows continually into the llake-stand. 

The distillery i)laut is of the latest eipiipment, and has a 
capacity of seventeen barrels per day. The ana comprised in Mr. 
Murphy's properly embraces about eighty acres, and every es- 
.seiitial for developing, bottling and marketing products is at com- 
mand on the premises. The one brand that is made ellieiently 
represents all that is perfect and pure in the spirit of true ex- 
cellence. 

Messrs. Mui|)hy & Co. 
have a wholesale house at 
Lexington, at 1.5 Cheapsidc 
and 14 Mill streets, where 
thej' claim to be first and 
foremost in bottling novel- 
ties to suit the trade, such 
as half-pints, ])ints and 
quarts with screw tops, 
wicker covering; also, 
white gla/.ed Dutch Jugs, 
with swinging handles, in 
quarts, half-gallons and 
gallons. They ca.se the 
aliove goods as follows : 
Jlalf-jiint, IS bottles to 
case; pints, 4.S bottles to 
case; quarts, 12 bottles to 
the ca.se ; demijohns, jiiiits, 
24 bottles to the case; demijohns, ipiarts, VI bottles to theca.se: 
jugs, any way thetradi- may call for them. 

Arrayed in all the magnilicence of mirror etlects and elec- 
tric light, the" lielle of .\nilerson County "now stands at the 
lifxington Ivxpo.-ilion without a rival. She has captured all 
hearts, and by the witeheiy of her presenci' liolds spell-bi)unil in 
admiration all who behold her inimitable charms. But she is 




not shv of the male sex, and does not even frown upon her si*'- 
ter claimants for high honors. She reigus a perfect queen, and 
all bow down in homage before her. 

Who is this " Belle of Anderson County? " A lovely spirit 
in a setting of crystal, her badge of sovereignty being a female 
crowned with nature's rarest gifts of attractive form and feature. 
In other words the " I'.elle of .Vnderson County " is the prime 
old, super-excellent sour-mash and rye whisky. It is standard 
in all markets, and holds it own against any competition. 

This exhibition surpasses all others in the splendid arrange- 
ment of the products of Messrs. VA. .Muriihy i^ Co.. and demon- 
strates their enteri)rise and ability to cope with competition, and 
excel it, in any markets of the world. All visitors should see 
this splendid exhibit. 

.\ddrcss Ed. Murphj' & Co., Lawrenceburg, Ky., or Lex- 
ington, Ky. 

WINE MARKET_i^NJ_SWITZERLAND. 

Eugene (Jermain, the United States (Consul at Zuricii, has 
forwarded the State Department a very interesting report on the 
possible development of a market for California and American 
productions. llim.self an old time Californiau, he has tlie fol- 
lowing to say in relation to the wine trade: 

" Winesi and Brandies. — The.-se can be sold, and at prices now ' 
ruling in California I am convinced we could compete with other 
nations. The Swiss people di'iuk more wine, population consid- 
ered, than any other luiropean nation. The tariff war with 
France killed the wine trade of the latter country which for- 
merly supi)lied this Kepul)l:c with most of the wines consumed, 
and Ital}', Germany, Spain and Hungary at pi'csent supply theii' 
wants. The iini)ortations into Switzerland of wines were, in 
]S!I2: In barrels, :!(t,43.5,47.5 gallons; in bottles, 4:{!1 tons, of 
which only 1.(111 gallons were received from the I'nited .States. 
This is an opportune time for our California wine men to strike 
for this trade. Cur wines are not wi^ll known here. A few ship- 
ments have been made, it is true, but the product was not put 
into the hands of the right parties. If we want our goods put 
prominently before the jiublic and establish .a permanent trade, 
we must do as other nations have done for years — that is, mer- 
chants or growers must send their sons, nepiiews or cousins to 
the market intended to be canvassed, establish them, give them X 
a good stock of goods, let them go before the respective mercau- I 
tile communities in which they are established, and work up a 
trade bj' incessant work, which is not obtainable in any other 
manner. 

" Consignments of goods sent out to disinterested jiarties 
will not bring about the desii-ed results. See what English, Ger- 
man, Italian, French and Swiss houses have accomplished by 
establishing branches in the I'nited States, Mexico. Central and 
South Aineiiea, East and West Indies, China, .lapau, .\uslralia, 
(tc. We have ])lenty of young nuMi who, if oppoi lunity is 
offered them, will develop business tad and ability, and who, 
otherwise, will remain ilormant at home, (iive our glowing 
young generation an opportunity, and they will no doubt be a 
credit to their country. This, of course, app ies not only to the 
wine industry, but to our entire .\merican ])riiduction." 

In the tables showing the total volume of imports into Swit- 
zerland, Consul (Jermain shows that in l.Stli the country im- 
ported 1,1.52,1 17 hectoliters (20.4 American gallons^l hectoli- 
ter) of wine, of which this country supplied (il hectoliters. The 
imports of brandy into Switzerland that year were .S(),!)t)2 hec- 
toliters, this conntrj' supplying 2!1 hectoliters. The duty on 
wine is IH francs per 10(1 kilograms (22 gallons): on brandy it is 
20 centimes (.S.lHl cents) for every degree of alcohol conaiiied. 
The wine now comes from France. .Vustria, Germany, Italy. 
Spain, Greece, Algiers, and the Danube provinces. 



SPRIT A/ND ALCOHOL PRICES. 

S.\N Fii.v.Misio, February !•, l,s".)5. 
T(i till- Trade — We beg to advise you that our prices for 
spirits anil alcohol are now as follows : 

Lois. Spirits. New -Vleohol. ( »lil .\leohol. 

1 bbl. §l.;!2 $1.32 $1..S0 

r, '• l.:iO 1.2!)A 1.28 

10 '• 1.29 1.28*" 1.27 

20 " 1.28 1.27| 1.20 

Sid)ject to usual conditions D. & C. F. Co. 
Terms of ]>ayment, cash in 5 days. 
Prices subject to change without notice. 

N'ery truly yours, JoNEs, JIuNDV & Co. 



f/ceifie WIJME /rJSID fiPif^lT f^EVIEW. 



23 



0. F. C. AND CARLISLE 



^WmSIKIIES: 



Bourbon 



Rye 



Distilleries: FRANKFORT, KY, 

Address; THE GEO. T. STAGG CO,, Frankfort, Ky. 



Diploma and Medal, Paris, l^SD. 



GoLi> Mehal, International Food and Wise Exhirition, 
ReKMN, jfNE, l-iyj. 



First Award and Medal, 

MeLHoI-HSK, AfsTKAl.IA, ISSU. 




THE INGLENOOK TABLE WINES 



â– jPs.]srD- 



OLD PRIVATE STOCK BRANDIES, 

GROWN and BOTTLED at the Celebrated 



iisrc3-LEisrooic AriztTE^^^^iRnD 



SOLD ONLY IN GLASS. 



OF RUTHERFORD, NAPA CO. CAL. 

None Gennme Unless Bearmg LEGAL PORE WINE STAMP and TRADE MARK on Cork Cap or Seal. Only Matured and fflGHEST GRADE WINES Placed on the Market 

On Sale by Leading Grocers and Wine Merchants in Every City in the Union. 

Office and Depot, 101 Front Street, Cor. Pine Street, San Francisco. 



ABBOTT'S 

AHGOSTURA. 







(THEOKtGI^IAl] 



BALTIMORE, MD.U.S.A. 



BITTERS 



THE JOHN T. CUTTING GO., SAN FRANCISCO, HAS A STOCK OF THESE GOODS. 



Special Bonded Warehouse lMo.1. 

2d DISTRICT, NEW YORK. 

FIRE PROOF BUILDINGS. ELECTRIC ELEVATORS. 

Storage Capacity 18,000 Barrels. 

Papers and Withdrawals Executed Free of Charge. J- D. W. SHERMAN, PrOphetOr. 



24 



f/rSipie Wir^E AJ^D SpiF^IT F^EVIEW. 



[special. COKRESPONDENCIO.J 

Xkw Oki.ka.ns. Jan. 28, IS!)'). 

Business in all its hranches is languishinfj. not only in New 
Orleans, but throughout the entire South. Tlu' low prices of 
cotton, together witli last year's immense erop. a good portion o( 
which is i^till unsold, the complete piostration of the sugar in- 
dustry, owing to the repeal of the hountj', together with tlu; 
general hard times existing everywhere, liave at last had full 
effect here, and tlie transactions of trade are closely confined to 
immediate consumptive demand. 

The California wine market during the jiast month has 
been active, large amounts being bought on account of the com- 
petition between the rival concerns controlling that trade. 
Prices have been forced to a figure far below the cost of produc- 
tion, which, with the announcement of an intended raise of .3^ 
cents i)er gallon on February 1st, and tlie raise of 5 cents (from 
70 to 75) in the transportation rates between here and California 
points bj- the Southern Pacific Co., have caused an increased ac- 
tivity among buyers. This will, in all probability, result in New 
Orleans being a rather <lull market for some time for the sale of 
California wines alter the 1st of the month. 

Mr. Maubec, of the California Wine Association, reports 
large sales, and predicts a detnded improvement soon, owing to 
the light crop of last year, and the intluences now at work 
among the dealers and growers in C'alifornia toward the settle- 
ment of the condition of the wine trade. It is to be hoped that 
such will be the case, for the great bulk of the transactions in 
wine here certainly bring no profit to tlie handlers. 

H. Flotte, representative of C. Schilling & Co. in this mar- 
ket, reports his trade as several carloads a month, and slowly 
increasing. As this firm sells only on the 25 cents a gallon 
basis for its cheapest wines, it speaks well for their trade in this, 
a cheap wine niai-ket. It is to be regretted that, for the benefit 
of the California wine industry, there are not more houses in 
California endowed with a similar quality of back bone. 

I met F. A. JIaber on the street the other daj', and he re- 
marked that California was, after all, the only State, and 
avowed his intention of an early return thereto. 

Chas. E. Shillaber was in the city several days last month, 
looking after To-Kalon and Vina interests. He returned to 
Chicago on the 24th. 

II. A. Bradford has bought of Paul Verneuille the entire 
stock of the To-Kalon Wine Depot at Toulou.se and Koyal 
streets, and has leaseil for a term of five years the commodious 
store situated at 303-305 (new numbers) St. Charles Street- 
This is one of the best locations in the city, and Mr. Bradford 
has spared no expense in fitting the same up, making it the n<^at- 
est liquor store in the city. In the rear he has fitted up a first- 
class sideboard for sampling .and retail trade, and has ali'cady 
created a run on " Crabb's Imperial Champagne." While con- 
ducting a genei'al wholesale business in wines and liciuors, the in- 
troduction and sale of To-Kalon wines and Vina brandies to the 
families and fine wine trade will be his especial aim, and, as 
Mr. Bradfin-d is a pleasant, unassuming gentlemen who thor- 
oughly understands his business, he will UMiliiuliledly attaiji that 
result. 

Proliably the largest buyers of California win(!s in New 
Orleans and the South is the wholesale grocery and importing 
house of Schmidt iSl /eigler, established in ISJ,"), their recei|)ls 
of California winr- in ".14 lieing 5201) barrels. This house <loes an 
iinmt^nse business in foreign goods, being direct imjiort(M-s and 
New Orleans agents for such well-known Kurop(!an houses as (i. 
JI. Mumm, Uheims; Seignouret Freres, (wines) Bordi^aux ; Marie 
Bri/.ard & Roger, Bonhsiux ; J. and .1. A. Nolel, Schiedam; 
ApoUinaris Limited ('o., as well as direct imporlei's of all the 
po])nlar European brands of fine wines, chanipagneH, cognacs, 
etc. Tlir-y are also largely idi'ntified with llie sugar interest, 






being owners of the famous Willswood plantation, one of the â–  

largest in I^ouisiana. Their wine and liipior departmiMit is uii- 
dei' the managi'inent of .Mr. Arthur Landi-odic, a gentleman well 
fitliil lor so responsible a position. 

Ni'W Orleans is the home of the celebrated Peychaud bitters, 
known to the mixologist of every (irst-elass bar in tin; United 
States, and Jj. V,. .Jung iS: Co., the sole jiroprictors. are gentlemen 
who n-ake it their business to see that the Peychaud bitters losr 
none of their well-deserved popularity. This firm are also largi 
handlers of California wines, besides doing a general wholesale 
business in imported liiiuors and donu'stic whiskit's. This is 
one of the oldest houses here, being established in 1S45. 

A comparatively new firm in the wine trade is that of A. 
and F. Martin, under tlu' liiiii name of Martin Bros., establisheil 
last May. The senior niemlpci of the firm is known to many of 
the California wine men as th<! cellar-man of Chateau Belle\ ue. 
A. Duval's Livermore vineyard, having been connected there- 
with since 1885. Marlin brothers are the New Orleans agents 
of Mr. Duval's excellent wines, and are building up a splendid 
family trade among those who appreciate gooil wines. They ani 
also agents for the Spanish house of " Sanchez Homate y linos, 
of Jerez de la Frontera, Spain, growers of fine sherries, ports, 
etc. They also handle Fi'cnch clarets, cognacs, and other im- 
ported goods. 

F. Duifour, tiie residc^at agent of J. Gundlach & Co., reports 
a good demand for llhinc Farm wines, and man.ages to hold his 
own despite the fierce comiietiiion. 

J. M. Vernogh's, representing A. Brun & Co., pursues the 
"even teuor of his way" and continues to place several hundred 
carloads yearly, at an advance over the prices o')taineil foi- the 
bulk of the California wines sold. 

We .are experiencing a delightful (?) sloppy' period here at 
present, as it rains every week day, and tliiMi [lours on Sunday 
for a change. W. A. Gi:it. 



â–  



SUCCESS OF CO-OPE'RATIO/N. 



Not for many months have the wine makers and graji.' 
growers felt as hopeful over the future as they do now. The 
California Wine Makers' Association has made its first sale ol 
1,000,00(1 gallons of wine to Laehman <Sc .lacobi. The accepted 
price, according to report, was 12A cents a gallon. Further than 
this, it is expected that 15 cents a gallon will be the price placed 
on the next million gallons olfered, and that the era of low i^riees 
is over. Tne wine makers confidently look fbi-ward to a time 
when they can at least make a decent living, and win n it will 
not be possible foi- shippers to engage in a veritable ileath strug- 
gle, with dirt-cheap wines as a basis for fighting material. 

The problem of the wine-shippers generally is rapidly be- 
coming, " Where shall we get cheap wine ? " There ai'c cellars 
of wine in the State that they cannot touch for less than 2n to 
25 cents. These are held by the financially strong. The Wiiii' 
Makers' Coriporation will stand in good stead to extend aid to 
and bolster up the financially weak, so that absurdly cheap wine 
will become a thing that was. 

Think of it ! Win<' sold in this State for 7 {'cnts a gallon ! 
That is cheaper than milk : eheaiier than beer, and almost as 
cheap as water. That situation is a thing of last year. I. el 
the year '95 show prices of IS to 20 cents a gallon at first bancN 
for the poorest grades. At such a price the grower can at h^ast 
live in comparative decencj', and not be compelled to plasti r 
his po.ssessions with mortgages without end. 

Wt- think Messrs. Ijaehman & Jacobi made a good pur- 
chase when they secured this lot of wines, and we believe llial 
the next |)urehaser of a millicm gallons will do well to jiay llie 
grower what is eiiuilalih' and right, and by so dding recognizi' 
the grower's right to existence. 

TIk^ Ivislern buyer can stand this raise, and to California 
vilicnlturists it nn-ans financial life. The lCasterm<rs can pay 
25 cents a gallon f'.o.b. Sau Francisco just svs well as II cents. 



W. S. ilnme \ Co.. of Silver Creek, Ky., producers of the 
favorably known " Hume," are operating on a very conservafixc 
basis (his season. 'I'hey are mashing but 400 bushels daily, 
whili' ill past seasons lliey Iimm' run as high as 100(1 bushels. 



f/v-eifie wi;gE /r|^D sfif^iT [review. 



25 



THAT /NEW WHISKg WA-REHOUSE 

Not a few lii|U(>r iniTcliants are endeavorinfi: to foresee tlie 
cll'cct of till' estiiblisliiniMit of the now bondcil warcliouso for 
whisky liy Mcssr.s. Hodo iSc llaslott, iimlor the jn'ovisioiis of the 
111 w tariir and revenue hiw. 

It is of eoiirse known to all the iiu'nil)ei's of the trade, that, 
uiuiei' tlie i)ro\ isions of this law. as many as ten special bonded 
warcliou.ses for the storage of whisky ean be established in any 
eolleetion distriet ; that is to say, the States of California and 
Nevada are entitled to at least twenty of these warehonses, be- 
ini: two eolleetion distriets, thonj;h of course no one expects 
that such a nund)er will l)i> established. Whisky can now be 
moved onee in bond, the same as California brandy has lu'reto- 
fore been moved, and the ([uestion now uppermost is : 

•• Where will we get olV? " 

This lias always been a great market for blended and com- 
pounded whiskies. " Straights," for bar use, have never had 
much of a call ; but what the distributors of the blends and 
compounds fear is that Ka.stern distillers, through agents here, 
or indejiendeut agents, will begin to distribute to the retail trade 
direct, and that eventually a big business in straights will be 
done, stimulated by the ability now possessed of selling <lirect 
from the bonded warehouse. 

Of course there is this to saj- : The old-time, conservative 
distillers are loth to do the business of distribution, prefei'ring 
to sell to responsible wholesale houses rather than mix with the 
retail element. Nevertheless the existence of houses like the 
Ain-ora Distilling Co. and ,J. L. Nickel & Co., even nnder the 
old law, shows what can be done by offering retailers their goods 
direct from the distillery. Still more will the temptation be 
great to sell from a bonded warehouse in San Francisco. 

The effect of this uew warehouse on the course of trade is 
bound to be elo.sely watched, and still more will the rectifiers 
and spirit people narrowly scan every movement that is made. 



VEUVE CLieQUOT. 

Much romantic interest surrounds the planting and growth 
of the celebrated champagne house of Messrs. Clicquot & Co., of 
Rlieims. 'I'oward the end of the last century Baron I'onsardin 
carri>»d on a si)inning factory in the city ; in 1777 his wife pre- 
sented to him a little daughter, who was subse([uently named 
" Barbe-Nicole." She was a puny, sickly babe, and gave little 
promise of becoming the creatress of one ot the chief cham- 
pagne houses of the world. 

As tinie progressed, however, .she gained strength, and was 
able to belie the promise of her childhood. When seventeen 
years of age she married JI. Francois-Marie Clicquot, who was 
her senior by four years. His father was a bankei- in Rheims, 
and a manufacturer of woolens and tissues of various kinds. He 
was also a votary to viticulture, and po.ssessed vineyai-ds in 
Bonzyand in N'erzenay ; he favored his immediate fi'iends by 
sielling to them the surplus choice wiues his vineyards supplied 
beyond his own requirements. 

After marriage the young couple determined to give the 
fullest attention to develo|)ing the viuevards. so as to make the 
trade in champagne an important part of their father's house. 
They bought the best vineyards in and greatly improved the 
viticulture of the district ; but they never anticipated tlie entent 
to which their business would grow. 

All '• went merry as a marriage bell "' down to 180.5. Pros- 
perity crowned their eflbrts, for, before the end of the century, 
the wine trade had become a lucrative branch of the busiuess 
of the hou.se. and it had also assisted in extending its banking 
transactions. Rut, on Oct. <S, 1S0.5, M. Francois Clic(|UOt dieil 
suddeid}-. leaving his young wife in terrible aflliction, with the 
whole weight of the business on her shoulders. And now this 
hitherto delicate woman " found her vocation." 

Resolutely taking her position at the head of the liouse, she 
direetiul all its operations, and with a business cai)acity wholly 
unlooked-for. Her first aim was to improve ami extend the 
wine branch, and to make her champagnes the finest that could 
be produced. It was she who discovered the value of the rotary 
luovenient of the bottles for depositing the sediment of wim- 
upon the corks. 

Daily, for hours together, and year after year, confiding in 
'no one, but studying with admirable perseverance and great sa- 
gacity, she remained in the cellars, carrying on her experiments 
iind carefully watching their elFeets : and when, at last, she was 



certain that her discovery was of vast benefit to wine, she for- 
mally set up the rotatory movement of the bottles as a most im- 
portant branch of the work to be (Mrried on throughout her cel- 
lars. .Vs soon as this method was made known it was adopted by 
every grower of champagne, and to-day â– ' a good sliakor " com- 
mands a high salary. 

Mme. Clic(inot established a bank and made it an institu- 
tion of power. South of the Marne, near the vineyards of Fper- 
nay, sln^ built for herself the fine Chateau dt! Hotirsault, and 
during the latter years of her life she lived hero, and here she 
died in IStili, aged Sll years. The great estate then beiiamo the 
property of her granddaughter, the present Duchesse d'Uzes. 



•RESPO/NDED LIBEKALLg. 

The wine and li(pior trade and wine-growers responded 
liberally to the call for subscriptions to the San Joaquin Rail- 
road. Among the sub.scribers to the first S2,0()(l,()ii0 were the 
following : 

E. F. Preston 810,000 

JohuT. Doyle 10,000 

L. P. Drexler 5,000 

Estate of E. L. Goldstein 5,000 

Estate of S. Lachman 5,000 

Sherwood & Sherwood 5,000 

(justav Niebaum 5.000 

E. J. Baldwin 5,000 

Siebe Bros. & Plageniann 3,000 

Lilienthal & Co 2.500 

Naber, Alfs & Brune 2,000 

Roth & Co 1,000 

Cartan, McCarthy & Co 1.000 

A. P. Williams 1.000 

Win. Wolff & Co 1,000 

John Spruauce 1,000 

Louis Taus.sig&Co 1,000 

C. Jost & Son 1,000 

Wolters Bros. & Co 1,000 

Eouis Feusier 1,000 



Col. J. E. Pepper, the Kentucky distiller, has fathered what 
will evidently be one of the great racing events of the year, at 
the Hawthorne track, Chicago. Secretary Kuhl of tlie Chicago 
Racing Association has issued the entries for the Pepper stakes, 
a handicap at one mile lor all ages, to be run at the summer 
meeting at Hawthorne. The stake is a guaranteed affair of 
85000 contributed by James E. Pepper & Co., of Lexington. 
That Colonel Pe|iper has designs on his own stake is evident by 
the fact that he has named nine of the cracks in his stable. E. 
(jorrigan names six, Marcus Dailey four and Col, Rnppert four. 
All the cracks in the aged division have been nominated, and 
the race promises to be one of tiie most attractive on the Haw- 
thorne card. 




Julias Mbroojiez, 



VESEY ST., NEW YORK. 



SOLE .\OENT IN THE V. S, AND CANADA FOS 

HARTWIG KANTOROWICZ, 

POSEN, GERMANY, 

FRUIT JUICES and CORDIALS. 

ELrad 

l/ietoria [Natural (r\i t^i^ra I U/ati^r SpriQ*^ Qo. 

OBERLAHNSTEIN, GERMANY. 



26 



f/rGlfie WIJME /vJsID SPIF^IT [REVIEW. 



iyv\p-ROVE/v\E/NT OF WI/NES 

By the Use of Pure Gultivated Yeasts. 

(Continnaiion) 

As said before, the yeast cells foiiiul on the vine and its 
{jrapes are not all of the same kind, but dilVer as much in shape 
and si/.e as in their inllueuce upon the must duiin^ fermentation. 
and by that upon the wine. M'liile some of them are rather 
small and lijiht. and for this rea.son settle down w ith dillicully, 
keepinjj the proiluct turbid for a lon<f time after fei'mentation, 
other yeasts, consistin<; of heavy, large cells, have the peculiar- 
ity of forming themselves into lumps, which sink to tiie bottom 
very readily, thus leaving the must almost clear during fermen- 
tation and giving a perfectly clear product ; a yeast of a charac- 
ter like this, is, therefore, of special importance in tlie maufact- 
ure of champagne after the French i)r()cess. as it greatly facili- 
tates the '• disgorgement." 

Again, there are varieties of yeast wliich dilfer in the more 
or less rapidity witii wiiich they develoj) a vigorous fermenta- 
tion, and others which ditVer in their [lower to reduce sugar and 
form alcohol. Asa rule, yeasts which cause a vigor'^ns ferment- 
ation to set in rapidly will be the most advantageous ones for 
fermenting must, as they will at once suppress any injurious 
forms of micro-organisms which may be present; l)ut.onthe 
other hand, in very warm countries a too rapid fermentation 
may raise the heat to such a degree that any further fermenta- 
tion is â– ' killed." The germinating power of the yeast is decid- 
edly a matter of prime importance, as it will always be the aim 
not only to get as much alcohol as possible, but also to have very 
little or no sugar at all left after fermentation is over, wherebj- 
the keeping capacity of the wine is improved and it is brought 
to earlier maturity. Experiments made in this regard have 
shown, for instance, that a small, peculiar egg-shaped yeast (Sac- 
eharomi/ce-* apiculatii.*) which is ahnost tin' onlj' j'east form found 
on apples, pears and cherries, but which also appears to a larger 
extern on grapes — oidy formed L'-3 per cent, of alcohol in a certain 
must — leaving a lai-ge proportion of the sugar contained uufer- 
mented, while the sanie must fermented with other kinds of 
yeast such as ;S. panloriniius or S. fUi]>.'«j!(liu.< showed 10 to 12 per 
cent, of alcohol, with nearly none or no sugar left. According 
to Pasteur and other French authorities the above nanu'd <S'. 
apiciilaliif is the one mostly found at the beginning of fermenta- 
tion, and the spontaneous fermentation during the first 48 hours 
is therefore mostly due to tliat yeast; by and by, however, it 
gives way to the iV. rllij>.-<oideti^, without disappearing entirely. 
Taking this for granted, the S. ell!psi>i(li'ii.-< must be the most ener- 
getic one, the one that ciirries the fermentation through, and 
therefore the one which is to be mostly favored as the true 
wine-yeast. 

Furthermore, there is a noted difference amongst the j'easts 
according to the products being formed by tliem during lerment- 
ation. This difference not only refers to the quality but also to 
the quantity of these products, and thus can give an eutirel}- 
different character to the wine. It is an established fact in this 
regard, that different kinds of yeasts not only change the quan- 
tity of alcohol and (-arbonie acid being formed, but also have a 
deci<led influence upon the amount of glycerin formed out 
of the same amount of sugar, upon the amount of differ- 
ent volatile acids, the amount of yeast itself, etc. There 
can be no doubt, according to this, that if the (|uantity of 
all these different products changes in a wine, the wine 
itself must also be changed to a certain degree in its taste 
and character, and as we have it in our hand to more or less 
favor the development of these din'ereut essential products, by 
the addition of such kinds of yeasts as we know are adajjted to 
give the desired result, it is but logii'al to say that we have it 
i)y this process in our power to change the character and taste of 
a wiru; to a certain degree. 

This, however, has nothing to do with the assertions made 
from different sides, that by the use of yeast from renowned, 
excellent wines it is possible to confer the lino flavor of these 
wine« ujion others, and thus make the same product out of an 
inferior, poor wine. Tin; oharacteriKtic flavor (bou(|uet) of a 
wine is in the first instance due to the grape from which it is 
made, ivnd the inlluenee of the yeast in this reHi)ect can only be 
a secondary one, as described above. Nevertheless, the action 
of a certain yeast may chang<' the character of a wine, making it 
similar to the one from which the yeast was taken, when the wine 
loses its original flavor in the <'ourse of time, or when it does 
not have an outspoken flavor of itself. Two remarkable instan- 
ces, which 1 had the ()|iporfunify to observe myself, verify these 



statements : A gentleman in the foremost dry-wine district in 
this State had, 2-3 years ago, a small quantity of his Zin- 
fandel fermented with a Uoi'deaux, for an experiment, and to- 
day this wine reminds on(? much more of liordeax wine than a 
/infaudel, in spite of the pronounced flavor which Zinfandels 
always possess. Another instance I experienced myself, when 1 
fermented a Burger must with a Riesling yeast, which changed 
the common Burger entirely, and bi'ougbt it much nearer to tlie 
character of a Kiesliug. Similar and in many cases more strik- 
ing results have been obtained by otheis in different parts of the 
woild I France, (iermauy, Austria, Australia), where i)ure cnlti- 
vaicd yeasts had already been made use of for a fcw years, and 
where they were followed by success — a success which was 
marked not only by an improvement in the taste of the wine but 
also by the much more appreciated improvement in the "' cash " 
realized. 

So acknowledged is the importance of the yeast for wine- 
making and so established the fact of the improvement of wines 
by the use of pure, cultivated yeasts, that in Germany, for in- 
stance, where a profitable but at the same time discriminating 
trade in " pure yeasts '" had sprung up, the (Jovernment found 
it advisable to take the matter in its own hand, and erected cx- 
jierinient stations where pure cultures of yeast will be made, 
and from which the increasing demand for pure yeast is supplied 
to the wine-growers at reasonable charges. Other countries 
(juickly followed this example, and in Fi'ance. where the process 
of using pure yeast cultures for wine-making origiTiated on a 
large scale about three years ago, thousands of wine-makers, 
that doubtfully shook their heads once wlien they heaid about 
this new method of making wine, apply it as a matter of cour.se 
to-day, and are jjrepared to tell of the advantages gained by it. 

With the clieap general remark, '' I do not believe in it," 
whicli nearly always comes from men who have never given the 
subject a single thought, and are therefore far from being famil- 
iar with its principles — this great result — which was only 
attained after years of tedious and patience-trying work by most 
scientific men, who spend their lives in the study of micro- 
organisms — is neither stamped out of existence nor is its value 
lessened by any means. In spite of prejudice and narrowness, 
which great inventions nearlj' all had to contend with at first, it 
will also work its way through all ditlicutties and give satisfac- 
tion to its persistent promoters. Wii.helm A. \'eith. 

San Francisco, December, 1895. 



PATE/NTS, T-RADE-MA-RKS, ETC. 

Tlie foUowinp; list of recent patents and trade-marks of interest to our patrons 
id reported by Wm. G. Henderson, Solieitor of .\meriean and foreign patents and 
Inule-marks, Norris Bnildin!;, 501 F street, Wasliin^'ton, D. C A copy of any of the 
United Slates patents will be furnished by bim for 25 eeata, 

Issi.E OF jAHr.\RY 29, 1895. 

.'):i:i.364— Barrel elevator, M. Lollin, Metc-alf, Illinois. 

j:K, 2112— Barrel handling device, G. H. Spencer, Chicaf;o. 

.WH.lOj— Apparatns for treatini; beer, .M. Warren, New York Citv. 

.'):«,310— Bottle-Hlopper,.!. C. Mitchell, Baltimore, JId. 

.Wli.OSi— liotllc-slopper. .1. Itoscnfeld and S. \V. Mackey, Baltimore, Md. 

.'):):!, ISl—Bunj;, C. Schopf. Mniiicli, (lermanv. 

.'):i:i.412— Cork cap, G. C. Coon, Elizabeth, X. J. 

.'>:;:>, IM—Corkin;; machine, G. F. Meyer, New York City. 

,5Si,i:iS— Measuring taiicct, (i. T. McCrea, lirusli Valley, I'a. 

.5:i:>,l:W— Water tiller, W. T. Miller, McKeesporl, I'a. 

5;i:i,17.i— Flnid tester, X. W. Krouse, Allejtheny, Fa. 

,5'l;i, 121)— Liquid cooler, F. G. Hodjjes, Itaeine, Wis. 

,5;i:!,225, 5:«,22C. 5:i:{,227, ,533,22S, ,'i:i:i,'229— Liquid raisiiii; apparatus, F, H. Merrill, 

Bomul Brook, New Jereey. 
5:i:i,070— Antoniatic liquid measure, F. E. Lovejoy, Portland. Me. 
.'):i:i,ll.'i— BottlH sealini; machine, E. V. Clemens, New York City 

TIIAI'E-MAIIKS. 

25,U»4— Natural mineral water, O. S. I'ropliitl. ltd Sprini;s, Ark. Esscnlj.il feature 
— The word "Blankoe.** 

PKINTS. 

S— "Bock liecr," F. .t M. Sclincfer BrewiuK Co., New York City. 
7-"52ud Greeting," F. A: M. SchacferBrewiug Co., New York City. 

ISSUK OF FKimi'ARV 5, 1S95. 

,'il«..')ll."i— Barrel support, II. F. Slaginan. Baglcy, Wis. 

•i:i:i,(W7— Adjustable barrel 6U]qiort, K. Walker. Oakland, Cal. 

,'i.'i:t.747— lleer-eooling device, <). liitler, SI. Louis, .Mo. 

5:13,519— Method of and ajiparalus lor earbonation of beer, 0. Zwiclusch Milwaukee, 

Wiseonsin 
B;'.:t,r,2S, ,5:)H,l)29-Anli-ielillinf,' device for boltles, V. Bclnnger, Boston. 

TI1AI1E-MAKK8. 

25,997— Wttlermcloii cider, IfculMii H. Kennedy, Center Point, Ark. Esfenlial feat 
ure The lepiesenlation ol a watermelon with a slice cut out of II, and 
the sllc- Iviug down near the melon. 

2n,IXHI— Wlilhky, Meilwood Dislillery Co., Louisville, Ky. Essential feature— The 
word " Normaudv." 

•JO.lHtl— Whisky, .Mellwooa UistlUcry Co, Essonllal feature— The word -'McUwood 



f/reifie WIJ^E /JMD Sfll^iT f^EVIEW. 



27 



HOW ABOUT THAT OUTAGE? 



Two (k'|iaitiiu'nls of the Goveninieiit at \Vasliiii};ton are at 
lofjj^erlieads over llii' iiit('r|iiH'tatiou of tlic Wilson taiilV hill in so 
far as it ri'latcs to tlio duty on excess evaiioratioii and leakaj^e of 
liquor in casks. In conseiiuence of this Colleclor Wise liiids 
iiimself in a rather unconifoi'tahU' predicament. 

It a]>]iears that several weeks ai;o Stevi'ns iSi Co., of this 
cily. e.\|ii>rled a ([uantity of lienor, and in seltlinf; ti|i willi the 
Collector for the duties asked for the usual |icrcenla^e allowance 
for ullage. The latter rehate is "governed entirely hy the length 
of time the li(|Uor has been in liond. But in this |>articular case 
the ullage exee<'ded the allowance authorized hy the federal 
laws, and the Collector asses.sed this excess at the rate of S'.'.SO 
a gallon. The latter rate was the one estahlished hy the McKin- 
ley bill, but under the Wilson bill, which went into effect on 
Aug. 24th of last year, the rate was reduceil to §1.8(1 per gallon. 
Stevens & Co. set up the claim that their excess could only be 
levied upon under tlie new rate, and when Wise refuse<i to ad- 
mit this they appealed the matter to the ITnited States JJoard of 
Appraisers. The decision of the latter body was against the 
Collector. 

'• We think," said the Board, ■' that inasmuch as the mer- 
chandise, if withdrawn for consumption, would have been duti- 
able under the act of Aug. '2"_', 1S94, the deficiency was subject 
to duty under the same act, as it is impo.ssible for any one to de- 
termine when the evaporation or leakage took place. Assuming 
that the ijuantity of liiiuor had been deposited in the warehouse 
one daj- before the act of 1804 became operative, and withdrawn 
two j-ears afterward, then, under the interpretation placed on 
the statute by the Collector, we would have to assume that all 
of the evaporation occurred on the one day in which it was in 
the warehouse prior to the act of 1894 becoming operative." 

In the same mail which brought this decision came another 
from the .Secretary of the Treasury ou the very same subject, but 
diametrically opposed to that of the Board of Appraisers. S. 
Glaser, of this city, had been assesbcd for excess ullage just as 
Steveus & Co. were, but instead of appealing to the appraisers he 
filed his protest with the Secretary of the Treasury. The latter 
finds that the ullage took place under the act of 1890, and that 
the goods were not drawn for consumption, as prescribed in the 
Wilson bill, but for exportation. He decides that the Collector 
was correct in assessing the excess under the old law. 

The question is an importaut one to liquor dealers, and they^ 
are anxious to have it settled, as it involves many thousands of 
dollars which they may have pay the Government, or may save, 
as the case may be. The difficulty will have to go to the courts 
for final determination. I'nless the Board of Appraisers' decis- 
ion is appealed from within thirty days, it will stand as the law 
hereafter. The indications are that an appeal will be taken, 
and in that case it may be many mouths before the question is 
settled. In the meantime all duties paid for excess ullage will 
have a protest attache<l. 

THE QUESTIO/N OF LICE/NSE. 

The license question has been rather promiuently before 
the Legislature at this session. Public attention has been con- 
centrated largely on the Mahoney Senate Bill, which provides 
for a maximum license of 82"). $')0 and S7.5 per quarter, in coun- 
ties of the first, second and third class, respectively. Meetings 
held in Oakland, Fresno and other places were decidedly op- 
posed to the measure, and w hen it reached the Senate Judiciary 
Committee for a hearing, the author withdrew the bill. 

The Linder bill conies ne\t for consideration. It provides 
for a minimum license of ST.') per quarter in any county what- 
ever, and is a bill that we think will rouse the sleepy San Fran- 
cisco retail trade from its apathy. San F^ranciscans have always 
contended that they had nothing to fear; that the license of S21 
a quarter was all that they would ever be expected to pay. 
What do they thing of the Linder bill? Are they to rest in 
fancied security forever? 

Charles .V. Wetmore has been spending some time lately in 
.Sacramento. Not being engaged in the wine business, and being 
naturally an active man. he has gone to Sacramento with some 
ideas which he want.s to have engrafted on the license system. 

His plan is to establish a maximum of license ; to restrict 
the number of saloons in each election precinct, and to prevent 
the s<ile of single stamp goods. What Mr. Wetmore will accom- 
plish remains to be seen, but it is understood that he wished, if 
possible, to put in his measure as a rider to the Mahoney bill, 
had that measure ever reached the floor of the Senate. 



AM OBJECT LESSO/N. 

The sweetest flower 

of all sweet lnve's einlcariiu'iits. 
What is a kiss? 
•Tis this! — and this! ! —and this!!! 

A rare exotic. 

Love's fonil seal iipnii (lie lips. 
The ecstasy of bliss; 
'Tis this! — and this!!— and this!!! 

— [Kalf Ficld'B ■' WabliiiiKtcin ' 

[ As Billy Torrest, an nlil-time actor, would say, " <)n-n ! Lonnv ! " ] 



Kivei-side county is no longer a prohibition county under 
the provisions of a license ordinance re(;ently jiassed by the Su- 
pervisors. I'ive licenses were granted by the Supervisors on the 
,5th. The temperance element of the several towns protested 
against the issuance of the licenses, but the board fully decided 
to experiment with licenses to control the liquor trafVie, which 
has been carried on in violation of the law for two years jiast. 




^-'rtX 



MERCMmL£EXaiAN0E VAULTS. 

87. 89,3inaDsgn ST. 







SH^ Pi^^ 




^iS^a^ 



It cures Colds, Neuralgia, 
Headache and all Malaria 
Troubles. 

It stands on its Merits. 



The most successful compound. 

The most reliable and the best 
Family remedy in the World. 

Try it and be convinced. 



jfPREVENTS^ 

j ©RES 



ACOLQ/* 



DISTILLED ONLY BY 

QUININE-WHISKY « 

^ I . L0UI5VILLE,KY.- 



It is Pleasant to take, the Bitter Taste of the Quinine is Disguised 

h'i a i>ii(rej<ii Wherever liiimihn-nl. 

Sol.I) BY Mam Vli TlKKIi AM) 

Liquor Dcaltrs, Druggists BiKl (".nioers. QUININE W 

Slteciiil Trrms Id H7i:>fc.s((/c Ilcalern. 



I lioTTIKIi OSI.Y BT 

HISKY CO. 



28 



f/ceifie WI|^E /rJMD Sflf^lT f^EVIEW. 



KOLB & DENH ARD 



OLD NONPAREIL 

BOURBON AND RYE WHISKIES. 



CALIFORNIA 

WINES and BRANDIES. 

OFFICE AND VAULTS 

iS0-42G 3lO\TaO.UERr ST., S.l.V FKANCISCO. 

Telephone No. 509C. 




SPECIAL BOTTLING 

Wk AfAKK A Sl'KCIAI.TV OF 

Clarifying & Bottling Wines 

I'm; iiiK 

TRADE AND CONSUMER 

IJKsr FACILITIES — FIRST-CLASS WORK 

Prices Reasonable. 



CHICKASAW COOPERAGE CO. 



MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE. 



-lXljPi.N;UFjPs.CXtJK.E:- 



Circled Headina and Jointed Staves; aiso Shooks of an 
Kinds for Brandy, Wine, Whisky and other Barrels. 

We solicit orders from rcsi)oiii^il)le jiaitics who want goods in our line, of superior nunlity and workniansliif). 



/l/\TOA\A CALIF0RN1/\ 





f\^-'> D'STILLE-D fROrV 
>^_ ,5)OUND W'NI 



Jffi\^t pJC.lT/C^W^TCED 



â– fif flMAV j Ward- t,mi.n.naj.r 

, ."^ . ^''^^ 50a(ALirOI2NIA5T. 

tjwttr UiHti)— cbaivf'raRciscc 



Nature's Remedy for Stomach and Kidney Troubles. 



â– MKZ. 



HUlVlBOliDT IfllHERAli WATER. 



It relieves DyKpcpsia at once and acts s|.liiiili.lly in 
aws of either Kidney or Liver troubles. 

The I.<'n)onade made from this water is nnsiirin>>^>j«-d. 
As a fal)l<' water it has no fi|nal. 



"Iliiiiil>nl(ll Water (lill'cis from niaiiv natural mineral 
watiMM in the I'aet that it does not eontjiin a single nijnriipus 
ingri'(li<'nt." \V. I>. .lonNsroN, M. Ii., 

Profes-sor of Chemistry, Toxieohiny, etc., 
("oiiiKT Medical ColleKe. 



Mxr/' 



^â– X-M 



OfRcc and Depot; No, 40 THIRD STREET, SAN FRANCISCO. 

Tei.hi'Iio.sk '.tSTl. 



P/ceifi.e \N\^E /cJSlD Sfll^lT f^EVIF.W 



29 



Prices Current. 



TlH'M'ftit' Ilif hini; piifi's. Tlu- r:iti' <>( 
ilisfount oil puiTliasfn oi n fonsiiUTubU' 
quantily, fiin in* U'linu-ii l>y apinlin^ to 
tlie aijt'iits or dfaU-rs. Wf urgently it- 
qiK'St lU'alei!!^, am*nti> and iirodm-crs t<t 
notify us when a chau^t' ofi'urs in tlii- 
prktb current of the (joode tboy baudlu. 

California Wines & Brandies 

[Tlif riici's uivi'H an- ft.)r»iu!irts and I'ints. 
imt up in c«t>e3 o£ twelve and twenty- 
four bottles. 1 

J. GUiN'DLACH & CO., 
Cor. SeounilA Jlarkel Sts. San Frani'isoci. 
I'KU'Es Per ca.'^e. 

QUARTS. PINTS. 

Traiiiiner, S2 J .'i.OO J 6.00 

Gutedel. « 6.00 7.00 

Bursrniidv, S4 6.00 7.00 

Zinfandoi S3 5.00 6.00 

KOLB & DENHARD, 

420-421) Moutijomcry St., San Francisco. 

Per Case. 

Hook fS.OO 

liiesling o.W 

Gutedil 4.00 

Sautene 4.00 

Sauterne, 18S5 5.00 

Claret 2..i0 

Ziufandel ."{.00 

Cabernet 3 50 

Burfcundy 4.00 

Port, 1SS4 7.00 

Port, 1S87 5.50 

Sherry 5,00 

Cognac, 18S5 10.00 



KOHLER & FROHLING. 
601 Folsom Street, San Francisco. 

Rieslins; $ 4.00 $ 4 

Hock..' 3.50 4 

Gutedel 4..50 5 

Sauterne 4.50 5 

Zinfandel 3.73 4, 

Zinfandel, tiUl 4.50 5, 

Burjinndv 4.00 4. 

Superior Port 10.00 

Sherrv 7.50 

Angelica 6.00 

Muscatel 6.00 

Madciia 6.00 

Malaga 6.00 

Brandv 10.00 



.... I 



INOLENOOK WINES. 
Agency, 101 I'ront street, San Francisco. 
Table Claict blended froni 

choice foreign grapes, 

viiilagc isud |;150 

Zinfandel 4.50 

Extra Table Plaret, Medoe 

tyoe red label, ISS'J h.M 

Hnrgniulv, 1888, Reserve 

Sloci; 7.00 S.OO 

Sauterne drv,Sauvig'nVert'8G 5.50 

Gntedel.ChassclasVcrt, ISS'J 4..10 

Hock, Rhenish type " 6.00 

Burger, C'hablis type *' 5.50 

Riesling, Johainiisberg type 

ISSs 6.,50 

Pints of two do/,en?l per ease additional. 
None genuine excejit bearing seal ur cork 
brand of the piopnelor. 

CAL. WINE GROWERS' UNION. 
Cor. Sutter and Grant ave. San Francisco. 

KL QUITO VlNEVARll. 

Riesling * 3.00 $ 4.00 

Claret." 3.00 4.00 

FREKNO VINEYAKD CO. 

Burger * 3.50 i 4.50 

Claret 3.50 4.50 

Port 5..50 6.50 

Angelica 5.50 6.50 

Sherry .5.50 G.,50 

Cognac Brandy 10.00 11.00 

8T. HUBERT VINEYARD. 

Claret, Cabernet * S.OO $ 9.00 

Sauterne S.OO 3.00 

Cognac 12.00 13.00 

I. De TURK. 

220 Sacramento st. and 221 Commercial 

St., .Sail Francisco. 

Quarts. 

Cognac Brandv, XXXX ?10.00 

•• ■ XX 9.00 

lenturier Port 5.50 

Trousseau Port, No. 1 4 00 

Dry Sherry, Private Stock 5 50 

" Superior 4.00 

Angelica, Old Selected Stock 4.00 

Muscatelle 'â–  " " 4.00 

Malaga " " " 4 00 

Madeira â– ' " 4.U0 

Tok-iy, beet. Old Selected Stock.... 6.00 

Tokay, " " '• 4..50 

Haut Sauterne " " .... 5.00 

Riesling, " " " .... 3 50 

Gutedel, •' '■ " .... 3.50 

Hock " " 3.00 

Cabernet, "Grand Vin" •' 5.00 

Burgundv " 4.50 

Zinfandel Claret, Selected Claret 3.,")0 

XXC'laict, " •'.... 3.30 

Clarcl, â– â–  "... 2.T5 



NAPA VAIJ.KY WINE COMPANY. 
U and 13 First Street. San Francisco. 

SiiKuwoon ,\: .SnKUWoon, Agents. 
212-214 Market street, San Francisco. 

Hock, green label t 3.00 » 4.00 

Hock, black label 3..50 4. .50 

Gutedel 4.00 5.00 

Riesling 4..50 5. .50 

Cal)ernel 4.,50 S.SO 

Burgundy 4.00 5.00 

Zinfandel 3.50 4. .50 

Claret, black label 3.00 4.00 

Claret, red label 2.75 3.75 

Private Stock Hock 5.00 0.(H) 

ElCerrilo.,.. 9 00 10.00 

Sauterne 8.00 9.00 

•• Claret .5. 6.00 

Burgunilv.... 7.00 S.OO 

Vine Cliff.... 12.00 13.00 

Sherry 4..50 

Port, 4..50 

Angelica 4. .50 

Tokav 4. .50 

Muscatel 4.50 .... 

Madei-a 4.,50 

Brandy Crown * 10.00 

' ■• 12.00 

« » * 15 00 

■' ' » » • » 18.00 

C. CARPY & CO. 
511-517 Sacramento street, San Francisco 

La Loma, Grand Medoe. . . .« 7.00 $ s.ou 

Burgundy .5.00 6.00 

Zinfandel 3..50 4..50 

Sauterne .5.00 6.00 

Riesling 4.00 5.00 

Sweet Muscatel, 1882 9.00 10.00 

Sherry, 1S83 9.00 10.00 

Port, 1SS2 8.00 9.00 

Cal. Rochelle Brandy 12.00 13.00 

SAN GABRIEL WINE CO., 
Ramona, Los Angeles county, Cal. 

Riesling t 4.75 »5.75 

Gutedel 4.75 5.75 

Port 5..50 

Angelica 5. .50 

Muscatel 5..50 

Sherry 6.00 

Brandy, 1882 12.00 

LOS GATOS &, SARATOGA WINE CO. 
1227 Broadway, Oakland. Cal. 

Zinfandel * 3..50 I4..50 

Sauterne 4.00 5.00 

Brandy 9.00 

Port .5.00 6.00 

Sweet Muscatel 5.00 6.00 

GrapeCorditil 6.50 7.50 

GEORGE WEST & SON, Stockton, Cal. 
Brandy, 1S79 *20.00 



lirandv, l"'S3 15.00 

Drandv, 1S.S5 15.00 

Fronlfgnan 9.00 

Sheirv 9.00 

Port (old) 12.00 

Poll 6.00 

8. LACHMAN & CO., 
4.53 Brannan street, San Francisco. 

Old Port 17.00 *K.0O 

Zinfandel 3..50 4.00 

Riesling 4..50 5.00 

.Madeiras 8.(H) 

Malaga S.OO 

Cognac 14.00 

JOSEPH MELCZER & CO., 
,504 and .506 Market Btreet, San Francisco. 

Claret, IS-Sli f:i 00 

Zinfandel. 1885 3. .50 

Burgundy, 1885 4.00 

Hock, 1885 3..50 

Riesling. 1S85 4.00 

liicsling..JohanniBberger,1884 5.00 

Guiedci, 1S,S4 5.00 

Somlai llnngaiianType,1885 3..50 

Szatniari " '* '• 3. .50 

Szegszardi Feherllun'Type " 4.00 

1885 5.00 

Port, 1884 6.00 

Sherry, 1885 5.00 

" 1S84 6.00 

Angelica and Sweet Mout'n,84 4. .50 

Mad'a,Malaga.tSw'tTo'y'85 5.00 

Brandy, 1S.S3 12.00 

1885 10.00 

MONT ROUGE WINES. 

A. G. Chauche Livermoie. 

OtHce and Depot, 61.5-C17 Front St., S. P 

(Quarts 

Burgundy * 9.00 

Chablis 9.0O 

Claret, Retourd'Europe 9.00 

Jurangon, Favorite wine of 

Henri IV, King of France 8.00 

Haut Sauternes 7.00 

Sauternes 6.00 

Light Sauternes 5.00 

Claret Grand Vin 6.00 

Table Claret 4.00 

Zinfandel 3.00 

Jl.OO additional for pints. Red and 
white wines in bulk at all prices. 

L J. ROSE it CO., LTD. San Gabriel, Cal 

Port, 1S73, 1 do/., cjts. ill case fl5.00 

" l-^Tli, '• " •• 12.00 

■' 1«.S2, ■' ■' " 9.00 

" 18S6, " " " 7.,50 

Sherry, 1S.S2, 1 doz (|ls. in case 9.00 

1886. •' " 7.50 

.\ngelica. 1S82. 1 doz. ii<s. in ease... U.IIO 




Tte MM Gtiampion GlevelaoH 

BEEH Pump 



M """"^vfcENU'N^' « "BEWARE Of 




^ 429-437 JACKSON ST O 

San Francisco 




0^0 S"'^''«o» 11^ o>-0 ©""""o.,,. 



A i'.MOrAlINO ACO. 

(AM »aA*.ci)co 



BOTTilO 6' 

A.PHOTAL 



EQUALLED BY NONE 








Beer Supplies, Pumps, 
Etc., Etc. 



20s ELLIS STREET, CITY. 

Tei.ki'Hone 30S6. 

Y Paeijic Coast Branch, HARRY WEXDT, Mgr. 



H. L. REA & CO. 

INTERNAL REVENUE BROKERS, 

.Ml kinds of business appertaining to the Internal Revenue DepartmenI 
attended to wRIi promptness. 



423 WASHINGTON STREET, 

Ti-iri-iinvr l7."-.7. <.\N I'l; .\ N( l.^cu. 



30 



f/fSIfie WIJME /rJSID Spif^lT f^EVIEW. 



STILL 5L\KL\T, BOXES AT THE OLD SUM), 

314 SPEAR ST., SAN FRANCISCO. 



Hobbs, Wall -^ Co., 

JIuiiuj'actunig of Eviry Variettj of 

BOXES. 

All kinds of Boxes on hand and made to order with 
promptness. Wine and Liquor Cases a Specialty. 



Redwood Cargoes Sawed To Order. 



Geo. Kammkiikm. 



OtTU IJ SciIMIKI'Klt. 



.fJm 



TQ'^RLDN. 



U^ 



WINE COMPANY. 



wii"i.h> \i.K AM- i;i:t \ii, 



j\\<^\)-Qr2d(^ \iJ\T)((s of j^b$olut(^ purity 

PIRECT FROM 

H. W. CRABB'S Famous Vineyard "TO-KALON." 

Located at Oakville, Napa Co., California, 
Supply Fitmllij TablfK. our specialty. 

I^tvate Cellars Furnished. 

Goods shipped to any part of the United States or the American 
Continent fjenerally. 

Export to Europe. Correspondence ReFpeclfully Solicilcil. 

Officrnnd Ihpof: /.>7~' MAliKET ST., San Francm-o. 



Lachman & Jacobi 



â– DEALERS IN- 



GalifoiQia Wioes and BiaQdies, 

BKYANT AND SECOND STREETS, SAN FRANCISCO. 



Eastern Agents'^ 



EDINGER BROS. & JACOBI, 

Cor. Dover & Pearl StH., Brooklyn ]{ri<%fi Ston* No 2, N. Y 



LOf/lA Ppl^TA miVlp^p CO- 

— HUCCESSOltS TO— 

"VsT^Tsonsr^iLLEi :m:. &c l. co.; 

Have CoiiHlanlly iin Ilanil a Full Sii|i|i|y 
of the Following Sizes of 

2x2- -4 Feet Long, 2x2- -5 Feet Long, 

2x2--6 Feet Long. 
.H7i/*-/i ii-tll hf Hitltl lit rrtiHttntiblc vateH. 



A MALr.v.--, .M.Tii 



JI. \. .Mi;);l;: AM, Sii|.ir;rj|illdc.ll. 



Los (ialos & Saratoga Wiiie Go. 

PliODVCERS OF CHOICE 

WINES and BRANDIES 



MUSCAT, 
ANGELICA, 
ROYAL NCCTAR, 

ZINFANDEL, 

SHERRY, 



HOCK, 

SAUTERNE, 

OLD POR"" 
GUTEDEL. 
RIESLING, 



FROM FOOTHILL VINEYARDS. 

VrXEYATSDS AND CELLAKS: 

Los Gatos and Saratoga, Santa Clara Co., Cai. 

Branch Office! 1227 Broadway, Oakland, California. 



P. O. Box 224S. 



Telephone fJo. 310. 



nOHNS & KALTENBACH 







CALIFORNIA WINES and BRANDIES. 



FIXE 
TAlShE ^\INES 
A SI'ECIAETV 



OFFICE AXD CELLAltS 

-^ 2B ]X[jPlP2.K:ET ST. 

SAX FliWCISCO. 



ESTABLISHED 



A. Finke's 



Producers oj 

CALIFOIINIA 

ABSOLUTELY PURE 



809 MONTGOMERY ST.. '"'^'^' \^>5"^« 



San Francisco. 

Telephone B024.; 




1 864 



Widow 



First Premium 

CIIAMIMGNES. 



Gold Seal, 

Carte Blanche, 

nonpabeil. 



|:^"First Premiums for Best 
California Cham pannes awarded 
by the Stale Fails, 1ST0-'J2 and 
wherever exhibited. 



LOMA PRIETA LUMBER CO. 

Loma Priota, - - Santa Crux Co., Cal. 



Liquor Flavors 

WllililAIW H. RUDKIH^ 



74 WILLIAM STREET, NEW YORK, 



GENUINE XX BEADING OIL XX 

J{<<Ii«-rci To $7..'tO lYr Calton. 

Cnoils For Sale In CuUforiila onlfi by 

REDINGTON 4. CO. 23-27-29 second st., san francisco 



f/ceifie WIJME /cJMD SfiF^IT f^EVIEW. 



31 



(L. J. Hose it Co., Snii Gabriel, Continued) 

Ans;elit-n, ISNi, 1 iloz. nls. inensc. .. JT.iiU 

Musialel, l!<>-2, 1 lioz. qlB. in ease. 

is.sc,, •• " " . 

Toknv, iss',', 1 iloz. qts. in case . . 

•• " ISSCi, " •• "... 

Madeira, 1.SS2, 1 doz. qls. in ease.. 

ISSCi, •• •• '• . . 

Brandy, ISSl, •■ " " ., 

•• ■ l.s.sf,, " " •• .. 

Zinfandel, ISUO, 1 doz. qls. in case 

" a •• pts. 
Buri;er, IS'JO, I doz. c|tf. in ease. . . 
■• ■• - •• pts. •■ ... 
.\ll tlie tore;;oini; vintai;es are true to 
name anil ai^e. as indieated on laln-l. We 
L'uaranlee tlieabsolute imritv of every bot- 
tle t)f wiue and brandy put up by us. 



U.dO 

y IIU 
7.. 50 
U.IH) 
7. VI 
l.-i.llO 
lll.dll 
4.(IU 
5.0U 
4.01) 
.â– i.OO 



Bitters. 



C. W. ABBOTT A CO. 

.\NOOSTllR.\ BITTERS, 

Tlie John T. Cutting; Co., Af;ents, 
San Kraneiseo. 

One ease 2 doz. pints $1.S.00 

One-half ease 1 doz. pints . . 7.5U 

Imported Wines. 

HELLMANN BROS. & CO., 
525 Front street, San Franeiseo. 

81IEKRtE.S, 

Forrester & Co., Jerez, in 

wood, per -.'allon * 1.30 J5.00 

Forrester it Co., Jerez, per 

ease 12.U0 16.00 

Garvey it Co., Jerez, in 

wood, per gallon 1.75 5.00 

PORTS. 

Offley il.75 to $5.00 

OtBey, per case $12 00 

W. B. CHAPMAN, 

123 California street, San Francisco. 

RED WINES. 

(Barton it Guestier, Bordeaux.) 

Quarts. Pints. 

Floirac * 7.50 I .S..50 

Pauillac 9.50 

Chateau Lacroi.f S.OO y.OO 



St. Julien 18S1 9.00 

SI. Julien 1S.S7 ll..')0 

St. Estejihe 1S.S1 9.00 

Chateau du (iallan, 1881.... 10.50 
1878. 



10 00 
10.00 

12150 
12. .50 
14.. 50 
Hi. 00 
17.00 
2:!.oo 
2;i.oo 

2.V.66 

22.00 
25.. 50 

80.00 
80.00 
32.00 
) 

10.00 

12.,')0 
1.S.50 
21.50 

;Vl'.t)0 

25.66 
25.00 



" le Pain, 1878, 11.50 

Pontct Caiiet, 1887 13.50 

18S1 15.00 

Chat. Bevchevelle, 18.81 lli.OO 

Chateau Laiirange, 1878 22.00 

lUiat Brown Cantenac, 1S74. 22.00 

Cliateau Lanjjoa 18.00 

1874 24.00 

" " 1S7S 21.00 

Leoville, 1878 24.50 

Larose, 1874 24.,50 

I.ahte, 1874 29.00 

Mar^'aux, 1.S74 29.00 

Latour, 1870 31.00 

(H. Cuvillier A fiere, Bordeaux 

Pauillae, 1889 9.00 

1881 11. ,50 

Cliateau Bataillcy, 1881 17..50 

Chat. Kirwan, 187S 20.00 

Chat. Cos d'Eftonriiel, 1878. 28.00 

Chateau Latour, 1808 30.00 

Chat. Larcise, 1870 24.00 

" Bevcheville, 1874 

Chateau "Talbot d'Aux, 1875 24.00 

Chateau Leoville, 1S89 16..50 

Latour, 1868 30.00 

Chat. Pontet Canet, 1874... 23.00 
Chat. Piehon Lon,!;ueville 

1870 '. ... 23.00 

Chat. Cheval Blaiie, 1889 ... 14 Oil 

St. Emilion Superieur 10.00 

(Du Vivier it Co., Bordeaux.) 

SI. Marc ? 7 00 

Pontet Canet U 00 

(H. it C. Balaresfpie, Bordeaux 
Chateau de Frauds 9 00 10.00 

WHITE WINES. 

(Barton & Guestier, Bordeaux.) 

Sauterues 1878 9.25 10.25 

Vin de Graves, 1878 10.50 11.50 

Barsae, 1.S78 11.00 12.00 

Haut Sauteines, 1874 17.50 18..50 

La Tour Blanche, 1874 22.00 23.00 

Ch&teau Yi|uem, 1884 30 50 31.50 

Chateau V.iuern, 1874 36.00 

(H. Cuvillier it frere, Bordeaux.) 

Sauterues 12.00 13.00 

Chateau Giraud, 1.8.84 28.00 29.00 

LaTourBlaiiehe'84 28.00 29.00 
(Du Vivier it Co., Bordeaux.) 
Graves premieres *9.00 SIO.OO 



24.00 



$ soo 

12.0U 

) 



6.00 
6.110 



5.. 50 

r..iio 

6.00 



'..50 8.50 



21.00 
22.50 



CALIFORNIAN— RED WINES. 

(A. Duval). 

Bur);nndv. 1889 5.00 

Cabernet Sauvif;n(Mi, 1890... 5.00 

C'AI.iroKNIA — WHITE WINKS. 

(A. Duval). 

Uiesling, 1889 4. .50 

Clialilis, 18.88 5.00 

Sautcrne, 18.89 5.tH) 

Creole de Sauteriie, 1889, 
(private stocli) 

pl'K(iITNl>IES— RED WINES. 

(lioucliard peie it Kls, Beaune Cote D'Or.) 

.Macon, 1884 10..50 11.50 

Pominard, 1.884 12..50 13..50 

1.881 13.75 

Closde Voiigeot, 1887 (Mono- 
pole) 20.00 

Chaml)erlin 1884 21. .50 

(Bouchard pere it fils, Beaune, Cole D'Or) 

Chablis, 18.84 11. .50 12.50 

Chablis, '84 (H. C. it K., bot- 
tled here) 10.50 U..50 



(S. Friedboriji. Mayence.) 

Laubenheimer, 18.89 * 9.50 ?10,50 

Niersleiner. 18.89 10..50 11. .50 

nochbeimer, 1N86 14.00 15 00 

Liebfraumilch, 1889 14 .50 15.50 

Geisenbeimer, 1886 14.50 15.50 

lUldcsheimer. 1884 17.00 18.00 

Liebeufraumilch. 1889, " Se- 
lected Grapes " 17.00 IS (10 

Rauenthaler. 18,84 21.0li 2.'. 00 

Hoehheimer Dom Dechaney, 

1,884 22.50 23 50 

Liebfraumilch, 1876, "Extra 

Quality" 30.00 

Steinberuer Cabinet, 187().... 32.00 

(Prince Melteinich's Estate.) 
Schloss Johaunisberger, ^GS .$45.00 



31.00 
33.00 



$46.00 



SPARKLING HOCK. 

(S. Friedljorii;, Mayence.) 
Liebfraumilch Brut, 1889 .. $28.00 $30.00 

SHERRIES. 

(Sandeman, Buck it Co., Jerez. 

Pemartin Brut 20.00 

Umbrella 21.00 

Amontillado 22.00 



PORT.S. 



E. D. dry, 1887.... 
L. O. fiuity, 1887.. 



18.00 
18.00 



WM. WOLFF it CO., 

329 Market street, San Francisco. 

(Dubos Freres, Bordeaux.) 

Chateau de I'lsle, in casks.. $95.00 

(Jtuiriiu Freres, Bordeaux.) 
Clarets and Sauterues, per 

case from $7..50 to $30.00 

(F. Chauvenet, Nuits, Cole d'Or.) 

Burt;undy wines $10.00 to $52.00 

(ileiikell it Co., Mayence.) 

Hock wines from ."$8.00 to $60.00 

(I)c-iiihard it Co., Cobleiiz.) 
Hoek and .Moselle wines, . . .$8.00 to $28.00 

(.Mnri;an Bros., Port HI. Mary.) 
Ports and Sherries in wood, 

per /gallon $1.75 to $4.50 

Port and Slierries in eases, 

per ease $8.00 to $15.00 

(Mackenzie it Co., Jerez.) 
Ports and Sherries in wood 

from $1.75 to 14.50 



ACHILLE STAUACE. 
76 Pearl street. New York. 

ITALIAN WINKS. 
RED WINKS. 

(Giuse]>pe Seala, Naples.) 

Lacrvma Cliristi, 12 qts $ 6. .50 per case 

Falerno, " 7.50 

Capri, " 6.50 " 

Capri, 24 pts.... 7..50 

Moscato di Siracusa, 12 c|tB. 9.00 " 
Vesuvius wine in liarrels of 

about 00 gallons 1.05 per gal 

WHITE WINES. 

Laeryma Christ i, 12'(ts. ...$ 7.50 i>er ease 

Falerno " 7.50 " 

Capri, " 6..50 

Capri, 24pt8.... 7.50 

SPARKLING WINES. 

Laeryma Christi, 12 cits $19.00 per case 

24 pts... 20.50 
(L Laborel Melini. Florence) 
Chianti Wine ill tlasks without oil 

Cases of 2 doz. qts $12,50 per case 

4 •• pts 14 50 

SHERWOOD it SHERWOOD, 
212-214 Market street, San Francisco. 

E6CHENAUER 4 CO., BORDEAUX. 

Quarts. 

Medoc $ 7 00 

Merin d'or 7.50 

Bouillai- 8.00 

Red Seal 8.00 

St. Julien superior 9 .50 




P. C. ROSSI 

President 



\T 



p.U^^ 



-SWISS 



ASTI, SONOHA CO., CAL. 

-PRODUCERS OF FINE 



COLo,V 



A. SBARBORO. 

SCCnCTARV 



CALIFORNIA WINES and BRANDIES 



AND 



MONTECRISTO CHAMPAGNES 

(NATURALLY FERMENTED IN HOTTLES) 
Grand Diploma of Honor Gold Medal Dublin, Ireland, 1892 

Highest Award Genoa, Italy, 1892 Gold Medal Columbian Elxp'n, 1893 

Gold Medal California Midwinter Fair, 1894 



MAIN OFFICE, 524 MONTGOMERY STREET 



SAN FRANCISCO 



Gold Medal Turin, 1884 ^1& Highest Award Chicago, 1894 

L. GANDOLFI &, CO., Eastern Agents itauan wines and produce 

113-123 SO-UXH FIFTKC jPlVE., NElAx/ YOR.K1 



^iFORe^ 



GO TO 



iJiae I?)oofe ©Y^oriC ar^^ caKrti^tic ^^06 printing 

-^K. n. WOOD CO. ^ii^^^i<>.M^J 'i^R^^ ^^- ^ ^'- 

WHERE NOTHING BUT FIRST-CLASS WORK IS EXECUTED ^ -. ....„.^^m. 



32 



P^eifie WIJME /rJMD SflF^IT f^EVIEW, 



W. A. TAYLOR & CO. 

39 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. 



GONZALEZ, BYASS & CO., 
SUVA & COSENS - 
BLANDY BROS. &l CO., 
ACKERMAN-LAURANCE, 
WILHELM PANIZZA, 
MARTINI & ROSSI, 
I. & V, FLORIO, - - 
PETER F, HEERING, - 
REiN & CO,, - - - 



I?.EI=I^ESE]1S^TI:N"C3- 

SHERRIES 

PORTS 

MADEIRAS 

SPARKLING SAUMUR 

RHINE WINES 



VERMOUTH 

- MARSALAS 

CHERRY CORDIAL 

MALAGAS 



JOSE BOULE, 
A. BRONDUM & SON, 
ROUYER, GUILLET &. CO,, 
JOHN JAMESON & SON, Ltd., 
THE ARDBEG DISTILLERY CO, 
CHAS, TANQUERAY & CO,, 
MAGNUM BRAND, 
MAGNUM BRAND, 
MAGNUM BRAND, 



TARRAGONAS 

ACQUAVIT 

. BRANDIES 

IRISH WHISKY 

SCOTCH WHISKY 
OLD TOM GIN 
JAMAICA RUM 

ST. CROIX RUMS 
HOLLAND GIN 



ORDERS SOLICITED FOR DIRECT SHIPMENTS. 



SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS IN TERMS, PRICES, ETC. 

Dry- Royal 



$21 Per Case, 

QUARTS 

Dnn'l III Ihl- I'lhf I'rlnlitril lull. 
The OVALITY Is lliirc. 



/ 




$23 Per Case, 



PINTS 



I'seil Tit-Itmj hi/ Sttntr of //**• Vtucst ^^'tne 

ItrinUvrs in I\tir I*'*/., Iiiist(nt 

n ml i*fn'lailrl ithia. 



Universally recognized as one of the choicest 
DRY SPARKLING WINES OF FRANCE, 



FOR SALE BY 



WINE MERCHANTS & GROCERS. 
TRY IT. 

Th Wine has been known since 1811. Very largely used both in Europe and England, 
claimed by best Authorities in the World as an Absolutely Pure French 
Sparkling Wine of Remarkable Value. 



Pro- 



TRY !T ONCE. YOU WILL USE NO OTHER. 



SOLE AGENTS W. A. TAYLOR 8t CO., 39 BROADWAY, N. Y. 



PAeifie WIJSIE /cpjD Sflf^lT F^EVIEW. 



33 



(Shi'iwood it Slicrwooil, Coiitiiiue'l.) 

White Scnl 10.00 

Pontel Ciiiiut 11.50 

Ln Itosc 12.50 

Gold Sunl 13.50 

Graves 8.50 

Satiternes O.JiO 

Mai'ki'iizif's Ports ami Slicr- 

rii'S in wooil yvv i^allon l.T.'i to 4..')0 
Markt'iizif's i'orts ami Sla-r- 

rii's in rasos UI.OO to l-l.OO 

Hunt, UooiH', 'IVastue A Go's 

Ports in cases lo.OO to 19.00 

CH.VltLKS iMEINF.rKK &, CO. 
:114 Sacrarnentt) strt't't. San Francisco. 
A. lie l.uze A Fils, liorilcaux 

riarets, per case J-S.OO to $28.00 

A. lie l.uze A Fils, lionleaux 

Sautenies, per case 12.00 to 2C.00 

C.Marey it I,ii;crBelair,Nuil6 

Buri^umlies. white anil 

reil, per case 15. CO to 2.1.00 

D. M. Feuerheeril,.Ir.,.tCo., 

Oporto, Port wines 

I.er case 15.00 to 20.00 

1). M. Feuerheeril, Jr.,vtCo., 

Oporto, Port Wines, 

in wood jter -^al 2.00 to 5..50 

Duff Goriion it Co.. Sherries 

in wood per ^al 2 00 to 5.50 

Lacave it Co..Slien iesCrown 

Brand in >^ 1.40 to 1.75 

South Side Madeira 2.00 to 2..50 

St. Croi.v Hum, L. B 5..50 

Arrack ■•Itoyal" Batavia 5.00 to 6.00 

Boord it Son, London Dock 

Sherry, per case 12.00 to 15.00 

G. M. PahstmannSohn, Mainz 

Itliine Wines per ease.. 8.50 to 28 00 
Schulz it Wai^ner, Fraidifurt 

o M Ithine Wines per 

case 11.00 to 14.00 

W. A. T.W'LOU it CO. 
Jerez de la Frontera. 

SHERKIE^^. 

Per Gal. 
So. 1 P Tahle, full bodied ( », .„ 

1 VP Table, very pale \ ' ''â– â– '" 

2 P Full «nl round I , .„ 

2 VP Very Pale, lii;hf, tine S " 

3 P Full body, soft, rich i , „. 

3 VP Verv pal."', liiiht, full S • '^^ 

4 P Full body, old, mellow [ ., ,. 
4 VP Verv pale, delicate, dry \ ' -â– " 
'' P Full bodv, rich, fruitv ; ,, .„ 
.■. VP P^le. old, fine " \ ■ — '" 



6 P Extra full and fruity ) ., „r 
fi VP Verv fine and mellmv ( '• -''' 

7 Ami) AMONTILLADO, old ami 

nutty 2.85 

8 CLO CLOllOSA, mellow soft . . 3 25 
a Ilex Superb idd Desert Wine. . . 3.!>5 

10 AMONTILLADO S.dera, very 

.dd audnuttv 4.40 

11 (.irKF.N VICtOUIA Grand old 

w i ne 5 ()j 

SfKlMAI, WINKS. 

Velvet A Clean, souiul wim^ 1.25 

1! Full bodv and rich l.,')0 

Speciul N S(df, full and Hue l.liO 

W Dark, full body 1.75 

" B Clean and sound — Fiuo. . . l.st) 

Scoo Fine, old and dry *1.85 

O S Flue, rich and fruity 3.45 

C N Suiierb table 3.111 

Conma Delicious aud delicate. .. . 3.25 

Special S Grand old wine 4.00 

Nectar— Fino, N. P. U 4.05 

RIIINK .\ND MOSEI.I.E WINES. 

Wilhclm Panizza, Mayence. 

I'er Case. 

Laubenheimer $8'00 

Diedisheimer 8.50 

.N'iesteiuer 10.25 

Hockheimer 11 50 

Liebfraumilch 13.25 

Foster .fesuitf^arten 13.75 

Hudesheimer 14.00 

F.bacher 14.75 

Geseuheimer 17.25 

Marcobi-uun'M- 17.50 

Rauut baler lO.lnJ 

Geisenheim Kothberg 21.00 

Neisteimer Uehbach 21.50 

Iludesheimer Bern « 23.110 

Bulk wines at f. o. b. i)rices. 

PORT.S. 

Silva it Coseurt. 

Per Gal. 

T— Tawuev $1.90 

71 -Extra full body and rich . 2.05 

V T— Verv lawuey 2.25 

V O T— Very oid tawuey 2.35 

T P — ICxtra tawuev, delicate 2.50 

T P O— Tawnev, extra old 3.10 

BKANCO— White— Fine While Port, 3.25 
JEWEL— A Specialty, old and mel- 
low 3..5I1 

S O— Superiorold 3.85 

EMPEltoit— 30 years in wood, grand 

old wine 4.75 

.M C 1! -1S27— Choicest royal O.3.-) 



Direct shippini; orders solicited un tlio 
most favorable terms. 

TAHItMiONA WINKS. 

Jose Boide, Tarrafcoiiia. 

ip's. it octs. per Gal. 

* Flue, clear and smooth $1.15 

UOYAf, PUKE JUICE— Full body 

and rich 1.25 

TAWNEV PORT -Light color, soft 

and old 1.25 

These wines have none of the object- 
ionable astringency so common in wities 
of this class, and are ab-jnlulely pure. 

American Whiskies. 

HELLMANN BltOS. it CO., 
525 Front street, San Francisco. 

Blue Grass, per gallon $2.00 to $:i..50 

Boone's Knoll. " 2.40 to 4.50 

SPRUANCE, STANLEY it Co., 
410 Froid street, San Fi-ancisco. 

Kentucky Favorite $ 3.00 

Extra Kentucky favorite... 3. .50 

O. P. T . 2..50 

O. K. Old Stock 5.00 

Harries' Old Bourbon 2.00 

Kentucky Favorite, in cases 8.50 

H. O. B.'jugs 9.00 

O. F. C jugs I0..50 

Africai: Stomach Bitters, cs. 7. .50 

SIEBE BROS, it PLAUEMAN. 
322 Sansome street, San Francisco. 

O K E.xtra $:i,50 to $0.00 

OK Rosedale 2.50 to 3.0i) 

Ilvain 2.75 

Golden Pearl 2.25 

Marshall 2.25 

Old Family Bourbon 1.75 

Old Bourbon 1.50 

SHERWOOD & SHERWOOD. 
212-214 Market street, San Francisco. 
Carlisle in bbis. Re-imported 

Spring '89 per gal $2.50 

Carlisle in bbls. Re-imported 

Spring 'SB. per gal 3.25 

Keystone Monogram Rye in 

cases, per case 14,25 

Old Saratoga, in cases, per 

case 15.25 

Mascot Bourbon 'U bbls per 

gal 2.25 

Robin Hood Bourbon in bbls 

per gal 2.50 



Hherwood Private Stock In 

bbls, per gal S.Oo 

O. P. S. Sherwood m bbls, 

per gal 3.25 

Old Saratoga, in bbls per gal 4.011 

JOSEPH MELC/.ER .t CO. 
.504 and .500 Market slrecl, San Francisco. 
Native Pride. Old Ilourbiui, 

(per bl)I) per gallon .... $2.50 

Old Rip Van Winkle 2..50 

Nevilles Old Bourbon 1.50 

KOLB it DENHAIiD, 
420-420 Montgomery St., San Francisco. 
Per gal Per cs. 

Noiipareil $;i..50 $7..50 

Nonpareil A 4.(K) 9.00 

Nonpareil AA 5.00 12.00 

Canteen 3.50 SOI) 

Canteen O P S 5.00 11.00 

NABER.'aLFS it BRUNE. 

323 and 325 Market street, San Francisco. 

Phienix Old Bourbon, Al.. $2.75 

" Old St'k 3.00 

" Al. 90 pf 2..50 

" " " OK.lOllpf 3..50 

" " Ponv, Priv St'k 4.110 

Club House Bourbon, Old. . . 4.50 B.IIO 

Gold Meda! Bourbon, 100 pf 2..50 

Union Club " •• 2.25 

Superioi Whisky 1.75 

BB Whisky ' 1.50 

Lihuous— In cases. 

Per Case 

Phirnix Bourbon OK, in 5b j 10.50 

Al, •• 7..50 

•' ' Al,24 ptB S.OO 

" Al,4Si,ipt 9.00 

Rock and Rye Whisky in .5a V..50 

Rum Punch Extract, "in 5s. 8.00 

Blackberry Biandy, in 58. 7.50 

HENCKEN it SCHRODER, 
210 Front street, San Francisco. 

Per Gallon. 

Our Favorite OK $2.75 to $;i..50 

OurChoice 2..50 •' 3.00 

Paul Jones 2.25 " 2.50 

Star of '70 2.00 

Old Crown 1.75 " 2 00 

Old Bourbon 1.50 

CHARLES MEINECKE A CO., 

314 Sacramento street, Sau Francisco. 

(Charles Meiuecke it Co., Continued) 

John Gibson Son it Co S2.0() to $1,011 



Ms HoBHerei Cliaiiipagne 

flighest Grade in the World! 

Used by All the Leading Clubs 
Hotels and Restaurants . . . 

For sale liy .Ml Kir.st-Cl.i.ss 
(jjrofors ami AX'inc Mi-rriiaiits. 




TIIRKE KINDS, ALT. OF EQUAL EXCELLENCE. 

.r CA-RTE BLA/NCHE 

A Rich Wine! 

GHA/ND Vl/N SEC 

The Perfertion of a Dri/ Wine! 

B-RUT 

An EKceedingJj/ Dr\; Wine! 



Macondray Bros. & Lockard, 



124 SANSOME STREET 

Solo -Vgeiits for the Pacific Coa8t. 



FOR FINE PRINTING, ^?. R. M. WOOD CO., 



314-16Battery St., 
San Francisco, Cal. 





W. G. COLDEWEY, President. 






'^% 



r 1? _ ' ^|t%<-' ^;.; 



? r r f i ' .1 






i 




m«f. 



LOUISVILLE 

PUBLIC WAREHOUSE GO. 



LOUISVILLE KY. 



(11 1 II Ti: hi: I) is.s.s 



( A I'l T. 1 L .$:ioti. oint. oo. 



STORAGE OF KENTUCKY WHISKIES. 



I-K' 'l-lill I'M:; 



â–  SPECIAL BONDED WAREHOUSE No. 1. 



FOR FUUIT lUiANDIl'X 
NoTB — Positively no Whisky received unless direct from the Distillery. White for Rates. 



34 



f/reifie wi;^E /^^q sfif^iT preview. 



jP FINE PRINTING 



GO TO 



R. M. Wood Co, 

31^-316 BATTE-Rg STREET 

SAN FRANCISCO 



CHAS. W. FOHK. 



JOHN SPltrANCE. 



Spruance, Stanley & Co. 

IMPOliTEIiS ANB JOBBERS OF FIXE 

wpes, Wiiies aii^ Lipois. 

Sole agents for the Celebrated African Stomach Bitters 

41C Ki:oNT Street, - - San FnANrisro, Tal. 



GalKorDia Wine firowers' lliiioii 

Wines and Brandies, 

Cor. Sutter & Grant Ave, San Franeisco, Cal. 



ESTABLISHED 1853. 



SAMUEL WANDELT, 



STEAM AN]l HAM) - 



«/, o:s, or, XORTll TIintD ST., jirooklyx, n. y. 

Wine aD0 Liquor BaiielsanilTanKs 

A. Spe.eia.lty. 

I am now prepared to make and furnieli the laiecfit, as well as the smallest, 
artifle in my line of Coopera|;;e. Estimates j^iven with promiitncBB. All work war- 
ranted to be tiniehed in workmanlike manner and ecjual to any in the market. 



TRADE MARKS. 

WM. G. HENDERSON. Patent Attorney and Solicitor. 

NorrlM ttldo., rith A- r .Sin., .\riir V. S. Pnlvtil ojllrr. Ilooins ifO to V.'i 
P. O. Box 12'.'. t\,tSIII.\<;TIK\, IK C. 

BeTenteen years' experience, Including service In Examining Coriw. U. H. r'aluiit 
Omce. American and Forcl);!! Pttlciil 9 proeiirud. CavcalB filed. Rejected nppllea- 
tions revived. Oplnimm given an to Hen |k' and vnildlly of pnlentn. Infringement 
Buitn profcculed and defended. TRADE-MAlIKH, LABELS AND COPVIIIGHTS 
rcgiBtcred. 

|3r Copy of any printed patent, trade-mark or lalicl furnlslied for 25 cents. 
Carreapondencc Invited. Uaud-book on Patenta furnished FREE on ap|>Ileatlon. 



INTIiRNAL lllilENlE AND mm BROKERS, 

THE EXPORTATION OF GRAPE BRANDY, WHISKY AND SPIRITS FROM 
BOND OR WITH PRIVILEGE OF DRAWBACK, SPECIALTIES 

Dealers in U. S. Standard Hydromehis :lii,1 I'.xtra Stems, Prime's Wantage 

Rods, Die Wiieels and Gauging ruds. Also Distillers', Rectifiers, 

Wholesale Liquor Dealers and Brewers' Books. 



OFFICE, 413 WASHINGTON STREET. 



SAN FRANGISGO. 



F". O. ]Bo3c 240B. 



TeiepHone ©4©. 




JOSJELGZElt&CO: 

GroMcrs and Dealers In 
Caltfonila 

WINES AND BRANDIES 



Proprietors Glen Ellen Wine Yaul'.';. 



Fine Table Wines a Specialty 

B04-506 Market St., 

S:ui Francisco, Cal. 






430 PINE STREET, 



SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 



See Specimen or oim Work in this Paper. 




Pure California Wines & Grape Brandies, 
THE 




iel 




OF SAN GARRIEL, 

Los Angeles County, Cal. 

Are now prepaietl with a large stock of wines and 
brandies of their own growth to sujtply the trade 
and the market generally. This Ctmipany owns 
the Inriiest vineyard in the world, covering over 2,.MKIacieB. They have lielii their 
u ineti and brandies for several years In their own cellars, and do not offer any of 
(heir i)rodnft until it has I)ecome properly matured. Their large stock of ma- 
tured wines and brandies tlius accumulated is now open to the purchaser. All 
goods under their trademark are warranted pure and unndulteraled. Being tlie 
successors to B. D. Wil.'.on A Co., and to J. De Baktm Siiohh. they have become 
possessers of the "SHORB" Bkanu ok Brandy and ■•MOUNT VINEYARD" 
Wine. Correspondence solicited. 

MA KSllA LL. SPEh LMAN di CO., J. DE BAR Til SHORB, 

No. 5 New York and Brooklyn Bridge Vault. President San Gabriel Wine Co. 

FiiANKPORT St.. New York. San Gabriel. Cal. 



GEO. 0. BUCHANAN 



WHISKY BROKER, 



122 EAST MAIN STREET 



LOUISVILLE, KY. 



f/reifie WIJSIE /fJMD Sfif^jT f^EVIEW. 



35 



QUIMME-WHISKY CO.. Louipvillc. K.v. 

IN KIVK CASK liOTS. 

I,nis;i' size, lilozcii to case. .. . JIlOU 

Mwiium •■ 2 " •• IIM 

SiiK.ll "5 •• •• lO.UU 

rOMUINATlOS CASE. 

One dozen laiye $20.1)0 

" nuHliuin 2(1.(1(1 

Two " sinnll 20.0(1 

MOORE, HUNT & CO., 
404 Front street, San Frnndseo. 

I'er (JalUm. 
Extra Pony in Ijbls or .'--lilils fC.OO to fs.do 
A A •■ •• \>i 4.110 

li " ■• •■ -.i.M] 

C " ■• • :i.(IO 

Rve in bbls and >i-bbls from S.50 to .'i.OO 

A'A in eases 11.00 

C in eases S..50 

Imported Champagnes. 

CH.VIU.ES MEIXEC'KE >V: CO. 

.U4 Saeraniento street, San Francisco. 

PKl'TZ * lULUEKMANN, AV.. CHAMPAGNE. 

t'tokl Lack See. per case ?:)2,00 $o4.00 

Gold Lack Sec. 6 Magnums 

per ease SI. 00 

Cabinet Green Seal, per bskt 2.i..W 27.00 

DTPANLorP A CO., REIMS. 

Carte Branche, per case 21.00 22.00 

HELLM.\NN BROS. & CO., 
.W.i Front street, San Francisco. 

Krni; A Co. "Private Cuvee" 

"per ease *S4.00 $30.00 

Josepli Perrier tils & Co 

per basket 19.00 20.(MI 

Adrien it tils, per basket.. . . 17.00 IS.OO 

W. B. CHAPMAN, 

123 California street, San Francisco. 
Perrier JouetiV: Co. "Special"$:>!.. 50 $3.").. 50 

Reserve Dry 34.00 30.00 

Peirier Jonet it Co. Brut 34.00 3i;.00 

Half pts "Siiecial" f42 in cs of +S bottles. 

SHERWOOD & SHERWOOD. 
212-214 Market street, San Francisco. 
Moet A Cbandon, White Seal 3-1.00 Sfi.OO 
Brut Iraper'l 36.5C 38.50 

WM. WOLFF .t CO. 
329 Market street, San Francisco 

QUARTS. PINTS 

Pommery Sec $:j4.00 $;i6.00 

MACONDRAY BROS. A: LOCKARD, 
Agents 

124 Sansome street, San Francisco. 
Louis Roeilerer, Carte 

Blanche $34.00 §:ifl.00 

Louis Roederer, Grand Viu 

Sec 34.00 30.00 

Louis Roederer, Brut :>».00 3(i.00 

W. A TAYLOR iV: CO., 
39 Broaihvay, New York. 

SPARKLING SAtr.Mru. 

Ackerman-Lausence, Saumur, France. 

Dry Royal $21.00 $2:100 

Brut •■ 'Jl 110 23.00 

Imported Brandies. 

WM. WOLFF A- CO., 
329 Market street, San Francisco. 
Marten's Brandy, • per case $1.5.00 

** " 17.00 

*** " 20.00 

VO " 24.00 

VSO •• 32.00 

•• WSOP " 50..50 

" in octaves .5.7.5 to 12.00 
CHARLES MEINECKE >t CO., 
314 Sacramento street, San Francisco. 
Champ Vineyard Proprs. Co., 
Boutelleau tt Co. man- 
agers Cognac in Octaves 

per gal $.5.25 to|8.50 

The Vineyard Proprs. Co. 
Boutelleau it Co. mana- 
gers Reserve Vintages. 11.00 to 14.00 

E. REMY MARTIN & CO., Cognac. 

HELLMANN BROS, i CO., AGENTS. 

525 Front Street, San Francisco. 

Eau-de-Vie vieille $15. (XI 

17!oo 

" 19.0(1 

Fine champagne 20.00 

Grande champagne vieille 22.00 

" extra. 25.00 

" V O. P. ltS58 30.00 

" 8. O. P. 1847 35.00 

V.S. 6. p!,Vs:i4 50.00 

Inoetaves $ 4.70 to 6.25 

W. B. CHAPMAN. 

123 California street, San Francisco. 

(H. Cuvillier & frerc Cognac.) 

y,. „. Quarts. 

*me Champagne, "Beaerre," 

„ l^'^U *=*2«" 

Grande Fine Champagne, 1860 36 00 



HELLMANN BROS, it CO., 

525 Front street. San Fj-nncisco. 

E. Remy Martin it Co., Cognac. 

Cognac in octaves per gal. . 5.50 ()..50 

In cases, see special advertisement. 

P. Frapin it Co., Cognac. 

Cognac in tu-tavcs, per gal. . 5.(15 0.50 

rlaiiat it (jo.. Cognac. 
Cognac in octaves, per gal. 5.25 

W. A. TAYLOR & CO., 
.39 Broadway, New Y'ork. 

COGNAC IIKANIIIES. 
ROUYER, GlILLETit CO., COGNAC. 

Vintage. Qr. Casks, per gal. 

LSSCi $4.H5 

1S.S4 5.40 

1875 fi.55 

1869 7.40 

1840 12.25 

V SO 1750 

Octaves, 5 cents per gallon extra. 

CASES. 

Cases ♦ 14.50 

n * # 10.25 

" *** .'.'.'...'.'.'.....'...".. .'17.85 

" »»»» 19. .50 



Imported Whiskies. 

BOWEN it SCHRAM, 

204 California street, San Francisco. 

Bernard & Co., Leith Scotland. 

Encore Scotch $12.00 



SHERWOOD it SHERWOOD 




212-214 Market street, San F 


ranci 


^co. 


Burke's * » » Irish, cases 




12.00 


11 * # * * " t* 




14.00 


" Garnkirk Scotch " 




12.25 


" Viceregal Scotch " 




13.50 


Lawson's Liiiueur ** *' 




13.50 


Uam Var, " 




12.00 


McKenzie's Gleiilivet ♦ * » 






Scotch, per case 




12.50 


Bushell's Club Irish, in wood 










4.,50 







HELLMANN BROS. A CO. 

525 Front street, San Francisco 
J. B. Sherriff it Co., Locliin- 

dae Islay, Scotch whisky 

in wood, per gallon. . . . 
J. B. Sherriff it Co., Lochiu- 

dae Islay, Scotch whisky 

])er case 

Dublin Distillers Co., Ltd., 

Dublin, Irish whisky, 

in wood, per gallon. . . . 
Dublin Distillers Co., Ltd , 

Dublin, Irish whisky, 

per case 



3.80 

12.00 
4..50 

ri.oo 



WM. WOLFF it CO., 
329 Market street, San Francisco. 

Canadian Club per case $15.00 

Wm. .lameson it Co.. " 10.50 

A. Uslier's Scotch.... " 11.00 and 12.00 



CHARLES MEINECKE it CO., 
314 Sacramento street. San Francisco. 
Boord it Son. London Finest 

Irish Malt Wl.iskev. . . . $12.50 

Royal Hghld Scotch Whisky. 12..50 

Jolin Ramsay, Islay Mali 

Scotch Whisky i:'-50 



W. A.TAYLOR it CO.. 

39 Broadway, New York. 

The Aidbeg Distillery Co., Islay. 

Qrs. Gets. 

New *:iS3 *^* 'J" 

One Year 4.20 4.25 

Two Years 4.55 4.60 

Three Years 4.95 .j.uu 

CASKS. 

« one doz. hot. $11.00 

. « . 1.100 

. * »'i.' ; ■ ' 20.00 

JOHN JAMESON & SONS, DUBLIN. 

Ijrs. Gets 

New $4.00 $4.05 

One Year 4.40 4.45 

Two Years 4.70 4.75 

Three Years 5 05 5.10 

Four Years 5.45 5.50 

CADES. 

• 1 dozbot. $12.00 

• •• 14.50 

. . • » 24.00 



W. B. CHAPMAN 

123 California street. San Francisco. 

SCOTCH WIIISKV. 

(John Dewnr it Sons.) 

Old Highland "Extra Spec- 
ial " $13.00 . . 

Old Highland "Special Liij- 

ueuer" 16.00 



Domestic Champagnes. 

A. WERNER it Co., 

52 Warren street. New York. 

Extra Dry $ 7.00 $ 8 00 



A. FINKE'S WIDOW, 

809 Montgomery street. San Francisco. 

Prices on application. 

Liberal discount to the trade. 



PAUL MASSON, 

San .lose, California. 

Less than 5 cases. 

Premiere Cuvee, Dry $10.00 $18.00 

Special.... 10.00 18.00 
Special discount for (luantities of 5 
cases or more. 



Imported Goods. 

(MISCELLANEOUS.) 

WM. WOLFF it CO.. 
329 Market street, San Francisco. 
J. de Kuyper it Sons Gin, large bot $20.50 
med. " .... 16.00 
" " small 9.50 



15.00 
9.50 



Cantrell it Cochrane Belfast Ginger 
Ale per barrel of 10 dozen. 

Wolfe's Schiedam Schnapps per case 
((uarts 

Wolfe's Schiedam Schnapps per case 

pints 10.50 

Benedictine, per case, quarts 20.00 

pints 21.50 

Apollinaris Minei;il Water 

Hungarian Aperient Water 

Friedrichshall 

Barlholomav Brewery Co., Roches- 
ter, N. Y 

Dog's Head brand of Guinness' 

Stout an Bass' Ale 

Theo. Lappe s Genuine Aiomatique 

per case 12.00 

Gilka Kummel per case 12. .50 



W. B CHAPMAN, 

123 California street, San Francisco. 

Plymouth Gin (unsweetened) $10.50 



HELLMANN BROS, it CO., 

525 Front street, San Francisco. 

Blankenlieym it Nolet. 

Union Gin, 2. 

Vaughan Jones 

Old Tom Gin, in cases 11. 

Orange Bitters " 11. 

Patterson it Hibbert. 
Bass' Stout, per double doz 3. 

Guinness' Stout, " " 3. 

H. Underberg-Albrecht. 
Boonekamj) of Maag Bitters, 12.75 to 13, 

J. B. Sherriff it Co. 
Jamaica Rum in }^s and 3^s 

per gallon 4.30 to 5 

Tarragona Port in 3^ casks 

per gallon 1 

Adrien M. Warde's Italia de 

Pisco, ]»er case 30 

Sardines, brand " Philippe & Canaud. 



50 



10 



00 



W. A. TAYLOR it CO. 
39 Broadway, New York. 

MAGNUM BRAND, JAMAICA RUM. 

Qrs. 

A— Full body $:f.90 

B— Rich, fat and i>ld 4.30 

C — Superline, extra 5.05 

MAGNUM 3.10 

GINS. 
CHAS. TANQUBRAY it CO., LONDO: 

Bulk. 
Old Tom Gin, quarter casks. . 

Old Tom Gin, octaves 

Cases, one dozen each 



Gets. 

$;j.95 
4.35 
5.05 
3,50 



.$3 25 
. 3.30 



CHARLES MEINECKE * CO., 

314 S,icramento street, San Francisco. 

(BOORD A son's, LONDON.) 

Old Tom Gin, per case $1 1.00 

Pale Orange Bitters, per case 11.50 

Ginger Brandy. Liiiucur " 12.00 

Jamaica Rum, Old " 12.00 to 14.00 

IAIN Royal Balavia Gin in 

cases of 15 large black 

t)ottleB per case 23.50 

in cases of 15 large 

white bottles per case 24.50 

Kirschwasser, Macholl Freres 

Itavarian Highland, per 



20.00 
3.75 
S.60 



Swan (tin in }^ casks 

Double Eagle Gin in % casks. 

John liamsay Islay Scotch 

Whisky in i-jj casks 4 75 

Biiorii's i'ineapple brnnd Ja- 
maica Rums in ^ casks. 5. 25 to 6.50 

SHERWOOD it SHERWOOD. 
212-214 Market street San Francisco. 

Per Case 
A. Houtman & Co.'s Gin, 

large black bottles $21.50 

A. Houtman it Co.'s Gin, 

medium lilack Ijottles. 18.50 

A. Houtman it Co.'s Gin, 

small black bottles 9.u0 

A. Houtman it Co.'s Gin 

large white bottles 22.50 

A. Houtman it Co.'s Gin, me- 
dium white bottles 19.50 

A. Houtman it Co 's Gin 

small white bottles 9.50 

A. Houtman it Co.'s Gin, 

octaves per gallon 3.55 

Bass' Ale in wood, hhds $50.00 

Joules Stone Ale in wood, 

hhds 50.00 

Ross Ginger Ale, per barrel.. 15.00 

' Soda Water, per case 7.00 

" Tonic Water, " 7.00 

' Potash Water, " 7.00 

" Raspberry Vinegar 6 to 

gal, per case 7.00 

" Raspberry Vinegar 8 to 

gal, per case 6.00 

" Lime Juice Cordial 6 to 

gal, per case 6.0C 

" Lime Juice;Cordial 8 to 

gal, jier case 4.5C 

" Lime Fruit Juice 6 to 

gal, per case i,GO 

" Lime Fruit Juice 8 to 

gal, per case 

" Orange Bitters, per case. 
Burke's Bass' .\le, pints, per 

bblofNdoz 

Burke's Guinness' Stout, pts 

per bbl of 8 doz 

Burke's Jamaica Rum per cs. 
" Old Tom Gin " 
Dry Gin " 

" Hennessy Brandy, (wr 

case 

Port Wine, Gato br'd 

per case 

Fleischman's Royalty Gin, 10 

gal packages, jier gal.... 

Fleischman's Royalty Gin, 15 

gal packages, per gal 

Fleischman's Royalty Gin, 20 

gal j>ackages, i>er gal 

Fleischman's Royalty Gin, 50 

gal packages, per gal 

Meinhold's Anchor Brand 

Cider, per case, quarts... . 

Meinhold's Anchor Brand 

Cider, per case, pints 



8.50 

8.00 

16.00 

16.00 
12.50 
10.75 
10.75 

16.00 

10.00 

O OK 

2.22K 
2.20 
2.15 
3.25 
4.00 



Syrups, Cordials, Etc. 

KOI.B it DENHARD. 
422 Montgomery street, San Francisco. 

Bock Candy Syrup 75c. per gal 

Raspberry Syrup 7.5c. 

Orgeat Syrup 75c. " 



Louisville, St. Louis & Texas Railway 

" BEECHWOOD ROUTE." 

Consign your shipments from Louisville and interior 
Kentucky points, care of the Louisville, St. Louis &, Texas 
Railway, which is a ciirect line to Pacific Coast points and 
same will receive prompt attention. 

Tor rates and other information address the undersigned 

L. S. Parsons, J. K. McCracken, H. C. Mordue, 
Traffic Man'g, Gen. Man'g, Asst. Gen. Frt. Agt 

Louisville, Ky. Louisville, Ky. Louisville, Ky. 



PAeiflCi WIJMt /rJMI? SflRIT [REVIEW 



LEJLiDiiNra- i:)isTiXj3i.Eits. 



ADDRESS, INSURANCE. j BRAND. 


ADDRESS. INSURANCE. 


BRAND. 


BO"Cri?.BOiTS. 


G. G. AVIIITK ('<.., 

Add: Paris, Bourbon Co., Ky., 

Nos. 1,4, 6, 7, 85c: No. 5,1.0(1. 


Chickencock. 


HPXLEof ANI)i:i;-<>N D'GCO. 


Belle of Anderson, 
Glcnarnie, 
Jessamine, 
Arlington. 




Add; S. J. Grecnbauin, Louisvillo. 
Rate, 1.25. 


GREENBRIER DIST'Y CO. Greenbrier, 
Greenbrier. I). No. 239 ' 
Add: Wm. Collins & Co., Louisville. -n jj Havden 
Rate 1.35. ■ • y • 


MELLWOOD DIST'Y CO. 


Mellwood, 

and 
Dundee. 


Louisville, Kj-. 
Rate, 85c. 


ANDERSON & NELSON DIST'S CO.,1 Anderson, 

^^""'•'''■"'•'- ' Nelson 
Add: A ndcnson & Nelson Distilleries Co -weison. 

Rate S5c. Louisville. j Buchanan. 


EARLY TIMES DIST'Y CO. | Eaily Timeg, 
Early Times, Ky. D. No 7 . ", „ ,, 
5 HL E. of Bardstoun. Rates 1.25 ^- ^- ^^"' 
Add : B. H. Hurt, Louisville. Jack Beam. 


R. F. BALKE & CO. 

Louisville, Ky. 
Rate 85c. 


"G. W. S." 

and 


O F DISTILLERY D No ll.S 


0. F. C, 
Carlisle. 


Ruun3-mede, 


Frankfort. 
Add: Geo. T. Stajrg Co., Frankfort. 


I5.YES. 


Kate Sac. 


SUSQUEHANNA DIST'G CO., 

Milton. 
Add; Jas. Levy & Bro., Cincinnati. 
Rates, 85c & 1.25. 




SUNNY BROOK and 

WILLOW CREEK DIST'G CO'S 

Distillery, Lmiisvillc, Kv. 
Contracting Offices, 128-130 Franklin St. 


AVillow Creek, 
Sunny Brook. 


Susquehanna. 


ChiiaKO, in. 
ROSENFIKLD BROS & CO., Proprietors. 


NORMANDY DIST'G CO., 

Louisville, Ky. 
V. 0. Box 2354, 

Rate 85 c. 


Normandy, 


J. B. WATHEN & CO. 1 J. B. Wathen & Bro. 
Louisville, 
Rate 85c. Kentucky Criterion. 


and 
Montpelier. 


A. OVERHOLT & CO., 
Add; A. Overholt & Co., Pittsburg, Pa. Overholt. 
Rat«, 80c. 1 


OLD TIMES DIST'Y CO., 

Ivouisville. 
Rates, S1.00&S1.2.5. 


Old Times. 


BARBER, FERRIELL & CO. 
Hobbs. D. No. 240 
Rate 1.50 




OLD KENTUCKf DIST'Y CO., 
Louisville, Ky. 


Kentucky Comfort 

and 

Gladstone. 


Old Grand-Dad, 
R. B. Hayden & Co. 


Rates, 81 and .S1.25. 


J. B. WATHEN & CO. 

Louisville, 
Rate 85c. 




E. J. CURLEY & CO. D. No. 3 & 15 
Camp Nelson 


Blue Grass, 
Boone's Knoll. 


Lackawanna Rye. 


Rates: "B," "D," "E" 1.25. "F," 3.50 


ANDERSON & NELSON DIS'G CO. 


W. S. HUME, 

Silver Creek. Hume. 
Rale 85c. 


Louisville. 

Add: Ander.son & Nelson Distiller's Co 

Rate 85c. Louisville. 


Nelson. 



T. W. STEMMLER & CO. 

UNION SQUJPS.K.E., NE^AX/ YOK-PC, N. Y. 



SOLE /rSEjMTS fOR UNITED STATES AJMD CANADA- 

THKOPHILB ROEDERER & CO., MAISON lONDEE tN ISCi BOSIIAMKR LEON & CO., CLARETS .aud SAUTERNES, BORDEAUX A. & L. BEAUDET FRERES, BURGUNDIES, BEAUNE 

The Celebrated RED LABEL CHAKBAGNE, REIMS BELIX I'OTIN & CIE, CHOCfiLAT uud CONSERVES, PARIS GUIGINIS FRERES. OLIVE (ilL, NICE 

OADBURY BROS, CHOCOLATE and COCOA, BOURNVILLE Deo. BELLARDl .t CO., VERMOUTH, Established 1740, TURIN BRAND & CO., ESSENCE OF BEEF, LONDON 

.KALE MAUK _^ XD I ^R> O IN" ID -A. O ISL liKOISTEIlED. 

PURE RYE WHISKY. Purity and Quality Unexcelled. 

Thf "AllTnoyUAfli" In n hiriiil of rijif liiuli rhiss iihishlrs lhor(,ii(,l,l u matured iiinJ run he hliihlij rccommcnilcd for 

VDdlrliKil inul iiniivul usv. 
Sittir l^fttuhir wltlnntt our stfitiiiturr on urrk tttttrl tnitl forh\ 

NEW York: Union Square. PARIS! Boulevard des Italiens. 

cordial makers of the world. 

IMahllshril 17.;',. T. 11. .S/ /, 1/,M/-i;/{, llirrrloi. 

CELEBRATED C.fCMc OE MENTHE AND OTHER CORDIALS. WELL KNOWN FLEUR-DE-LIS COQNACS. FOR SALE EVERYWHERE. 



IF YOU are in need of PRINTING give us a call. We nnake a specialty 
of fine Printing, Engraving, Lithographing, Photo-Engraving and, also 
origi nal designs for labels of every description. 



P/ceifie Wij^E /tJMD SJ^lf^lT F^EVIEW. 



CLASSIFIED INDEX OF ADVERTISEMENTS. 



CALIFORNIA WINES AND BRANDIES. 

Piige. 

Boyd, F. O. & Co C 

California Wiuo Growers I'uiou 9 

Carpy, C. & Co 21 

Chaiu'lio & Bon 8 

De Turk, 1 8 

Gundlacli. J. & Co 31 

Guasti & Bernard 6 

Hedj^eside Vineyard 22 

luglenook Vineyard Agencj' 23 

Italian-Swiss Colony 31 

Kohler & Van Bergen 21 

Kohler & Frohling 21 

Kolb & Denhard 28 

Kuhls, Schwarkc & Co 

Lacliniau & Jacobi 30 

Lachman Co., S 21 

Laudsberger & Sou 6 

Los (Jatos & Saratoga Wine Co 30 

Masson, Paul 2 

Melczer, Joseph & Co 34 

Minuse. William T 6 

Mohns & Kaltenbaeli 30 

Napa Valley Wine Co 21 

L J Rose & Co., Ltd 2 

San Gabriel Wine Co 34 

Schilling, C. & Co 8 

Smith, Julius P 6 

StaggCo., The Geo. T 23 

Starace, Achille 2 

Thornton & Pippy ^ 

To-Kalon Wine Co 30 



DISTILLERS AND BROKERS. 

Anderson & Nelson Distilleries Co The 11 

Barber, Ferriell & Co 24 

Buchanan. George C 34 

Curlev, E. J. & Co 7 

Early Times Distillery Co 24 

Fleischman & Co 5 

Leading Distillers' Cards 40 

Levy, Jas. & Bro 42 

Mayhew, H. B. & Co. 34 

Meihvood Distillery Co 1 

Monarch. R 24 

Moore & Selliger -3 

Overholt, A.&Co 33 

Quinine-Whisky Co 27 

Rea, H. R. & Co 29 

Shufeldt, H. H. &Co., C. W. Craig & Co., Agents 5 

Youngberg & Borland 2 

FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC CHAMPAGNES. 

Chapman, W. B 23 

Finke's Widow, A 30 

Fra8h& Co 27 

Hellmann Bros & Co 17 

Lachman, S. & Co 2 

Maeondray Bros. & Lockard 33 

Masson, Paul 2 

Sherwood & Sherwood 16 

\Volff, Wm. &Co 20 

IMPORTERS. 

Chapman, W. B 19 

Glaser, S 7 

Hellmann Bros. & Co 17 

Librowicz, Julius 29 

Maeondray Bros. & Lockard 8 

Meinecke, Chas. & Co 18 

Sherwood & Sherwood 17 

arace, Achille 2 

mmler, T. W. & Co 40 



Vignier, A 34 

Wolff, Wm. & Co 15 

FRUIT BRANDY DISTILLERS. 

Taylor, W. A. & Co 32 

Natoma Vineyard Co 28 

Walden & Co 5 

West, Geo. & Son 33 

SAN FRANCISCO WHOLESALE LIQUOR DEALERS. 

Hey, Grauerholz & Co 6 

Hotaling, A. P. & Co 29 

Kolb & Denhard 32 

Kuhls, Schwarke & Co 6 

Moore, Hunt & Co 6 

Martin, E. & Co 6 

Naber, Alfs & Brune 6 

Siebe Bros. & Plagemanu 4 

Spruance, Stanley & Co 34 

Walter, M. & Co 6 

IMPORTED BRANDY. 
E. Remy Martin & Co., Hellman Bros. & Co., Agents 13 

SYRUPS, CORDIALS, BITTERS, PRUNE JUICE, ETC. 

Abbot's Angostura Bitters 23 

Ball & Cheyne Co 7 

Culbert & Taylor 38 

Kolb & Denhard 32 

Rudkin, Wm. II 30 

Walter, M. & Co 6 

WINE FININGS, ETC. 
Schulze-Berge & Koechl 4 

WAREHOUSES, STORAGE, ETC. 

Bode&Haslett 4 

Louisvil le Publ ic Warehouse Co 33 

Sherman, J. D. W 23 

BOTTLES, CASINGS, CORKS, ETC. 

Colgan, J. B. Corks 4! 

Korbel, F. & Bros., Tanks 34 

MISCELLANEOUS. 

Bolton & Strong, Engravers 34 

Bonestell & Co., Paper Dealers 41 

Celery Beef & Iron Co 25 

Chickasaw Cooperage Co 28 

Cleveland Faucet Co 29 

Dunne, J. P & Co., Saloon 41 

Goodyear Rubber Co.... 5 

Henderson, Wm. G 34 

Hobbs, Wall & Co., Bo.x Manufacturers 30 

Humboldt Mineral Water Co 28 

Jordan. Dr. & Co 41 

Loma Prieta Lumber Co 30 

Louisville, St. Louis & Te.xas Railway 35 

New Home Sewing Machine Co 41 

O'Brien, James, Saloon 41 

Rosenfeld's Sons, John, Clipper Ships 41 

Sanders & Co., Coppersmiths 41 

Spragtie Correspondence School of Law 41 

Tubbs' Cordage Co 47 

Wandelt, Samuel 34 

WoltT. William & Co 17 

St-ibscribe for the 

pacific ^mc and ST^^^^ ^qviqiO 

THREE DOLLARS PER YEAR. 

AovmnTfiNO hatks on a^fuoatiom. 



j^Aeifie WlhJE /rJMD SflF^'T f^EVIEW. 







C". EUKDSCIlt. 



J. GUNDLACR. 






SAN^RANCISCO- -yNEWYoRK? 



d. GUl^DLiACH & CO. 

Vineyard Proprietors and Shippers of 

t^ifoniia Wiiios 1111(1 Braiifa,* 

mmm RHINE FARM, mm, ql. 





DIW 



And BACCHUS WINE VAULTS, 438-4^2 Bryant St., S. F. 



s. i:. ran. .u i;:.\7;r <o sr.roxi) sts. 



\rir Vitrh lira in-li 
S. E. Cor. WATTS & WASHINGTON STS. 



JOnX D. SIEBB. 



J. F. I'l.Ar.EMAX.N. 



1'. C. SIKIiK. 




SlEBE Bf?OS. 8t PliflGEmflflfl, j 



"»'■■'• WINE AND LIQUOR MERCHANTS. 



-SOLE AGENTS FOR- 



i 



If. : 



O.K. Rortlo Boiirkii & Rfc Wlife 

AND THE 

Celebrated Belle of Bourbon. 

Southeast Cor. Sacramento and Sansome Sts.. - ~ - ^ - - - gan Francisco, Ca' 



I 



JPS.P5.XISXIC "â–  PRINTING ~ cm:i^oi^a.xic 

R. M. WOOD CO. 

:!i(i BATTEm' srRi:i';r. - - sw irancisco. cai,. 



oeF\NED SACCHAR//VP 

500 Times Sweeter Than Sugar. 

THE ■ GREAT SWEKTKNING ^h•;DlUM IN THE MANUFACTURE OF AERATED WATERS SUCH AS 

GINGER ALE, LEMON SODA, ETC. 

THE UNSURPASSED INGRpJDlENT FOR PLEASANT TASTE— TO 

Sy\ZEETEN AaZINE AND TO BLEND Vx^HISKIES 

1-'()R i-AlCTU I I.Al:- AI'I'I.Y I'd 

SCHULZE-BERGE &, KOECHL, 

.'iOLE JMi'')irn:i;s AMI i.K i:.\si:i:s. . . . _ . :;) mi i;i:Ay sTiii':h:T. new YORK. 

abram?;on-he:unisch co., san francisco, selling agents for the pacific coast. 



I 



1 

i 



BODE & HASLETT 

Warehousemen 1201 Battery St., San Francisco 



PROPRIETORS OF 



GENERAL INTERNAL REVENUE BONDED WAREHOUSE, No. ONE 

N. E Corner Third and King Streets "%â–  For the Storage of Whisky and Spirits in Bond 

STORAGE AND INSURANCE AT LOWEST RATES. ADVANCES MADE ON GOODS IN WAREHOUSE. 



fyVGIfie WiJME /tjND SflF^ir F^EVIEW. 



Henry H. Shufeldt •$ Coa/ipany, 

DISTILLERS, CHICAGO. 




DISTILLED BY THE HOLLAND PROCESS. 



Equal in flavor and surpassing in 
\ purity the most famous imported 
Gins. Put up in packages prepared 
to hold contents colorless, and con- 
tain, respectively 44, 24, 15 and 10 
gallons, all under double stamps. 



TtieseGiDS are llie only ones HisiilM in lf[e U.S. 




And are unquestionably the purest and most wholesome Gins today, used in the U. S. 

FOR SALE BY ALL WHOLESALE LIQUOR DEALERS AND DFUGGICTS. 

C. W. CRAIG & CO. California Agents, 205 BATTERY STREET. 



FLEISCHMANN & CO. 

CINCINNATI, OHIO. DISTILLERS OF 

SgLVA/N GKOVE BOUHBO/N A/ND Kg E WHISKIES. 



HIGH GRADE HOLLAND PROCESS- 



PERFECTIO 



D ROYALTY GINS. 




LARGEST DISTILLERS 
DISTILLERY 



BRANDY 
AND VINEYARDS, GEYSERVILLE, 



WORLD. 
CAL. 



OF PURE BRANDY IN THE 

T T J .//-, VA vx. VA VA >y, VA VA /A VA VA â– //. V. â– '/. VA XA VA Z/. VA VA ^A VA y/. "JZ. V/. VA VA VA '/A VA VA VA VA VA VA 'A VA V/> ZT. '..A VA /A VA VA VA >/. /A /A /A XT. asJ. 



WAItDEH COGl^flC 

-f I I I I ' I I I I r n â–  H -- H - H 111(1 1 11 11 1 1 111111 H" H ' I I I I I I I I I I i-t-n I I I I I I n- 

Tins Brandy, made after tlie Freiuli formula, from selected fresh Ki^Pi". '""' ''^cn siicceasfiilly Intro 
diiced, and is now regularly sold in the priiuipal markets of Europe, in eompelilion with Freneli Co^nar. 
Olllcial German and French chemists liave pronounced it the purest Brandy wliidi comes to ilieir markets. 
It is especially suited for tlie dm;; trade and others, where purity is dcmaiulcd. While aluoad these 
poods successfully (ouipete. paying same dnties as the French, the American huyer has the advanlafc in price lietween the Inlurnal Keveuue tax as- 
C88ed here and the cuBloms diiiics on foreign brandies. Sampler will be sent on application. 



WALDEN. 



"VsT^^LIDEn^ & OO., 




Eastern Office 4f> liroad Street, Xew Yorlc. 



OErSEnnLLE SOXOStA CO., CAL.* 



f;OfeiFie WIJME /cJND Sflf^lT f^EVIEW. 





[fiUoMRG " 




323-325 Market St.. S, F, 



Hey, Grauerholz & Co., 

iMpfHtTKUS AMI WhdI.KSAI.K DEALEKS IN 

\A/INES& LIQUORS. 



SOLE AGENTS FOR • 



DAVY CROCK^rr WHISKY. 

BE SURE YOU ARE RIGHT, THEN GO AHEAD. 



NO. 21S SACRAMENTO STREET. 



SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 



D. V. B. HEXAIUE. 



E. MARTIN &, CO., 

IMI'OKTEnS A\D â– \TH0LE8.ALK 

IiIQDOf^ mEt^CHflflTS, 

408 Front St., San Francisco, Ca!. 

SOLE ACEXT.S FOR 

J. F. CUTTER AND ARGONAUT OLD BOURBCNS. 



KMMU.lsllEII 1S.">T. 

F. O. BOYD St CO. 

CoMMi.ssioN Mekcmant.s. New York. 

CALIFORNIA WINES & BRANDIES. 



Barton's Celebrated Sweet Wines, Fresno. 

CaPT. J. C. MEIiiTllEW, I'UOSPECT ViNEVARD. 

Advances Made on Consignments^ 



William T. Minuse 

Commission Mercliant. 

.'/; JIKA VFJ: ST.. AA'ir YORK. 
Agent for the Sale of Viticultural Products. 

Coimif;nrnciil« of sound Wines and Brandies solicited. Advances mad.' ini 
same at lowest rates. 

Bepresenting John Tiio.mann, St. Helena, Cal. 

Ewer A Atkinson, IluTiiEiiKOun, Cal. 

A. I*. Adams Lind Vineyard. Fresno, Cal. 
EiKEN Vineyard Co , Fresno, Cal. 



FOR FINE PRINTING 



(io ro — 



I?.. 3yn_ AA7"ooiD c:::io 



314-316 Battery Street, 



SAN FRANCISCO 




OLIVINA VINEYARD. 

The OLIVINA Gon^prises 600 Acres of Hill 
Side Vineyard, Located in tt)e 
, , ^ Livermore Valley. 



a 



•>^^t 




l«*^V^*»«tM^ DRT, DELICATE, WELL MATURED TABLE WKSS 
'â– fiiSfft> W^ A SPECliLTT. 



tfi SEKIt ron SAMPLE ORDER. 

I'ljuiiKM'.iNHENiE Solicited By The Grower. 

JULIUS P. SMITH, LIVERMORE, CAL. 



M. WALTER & CO., 

WHOLESALE LIQUOR DEALERS 

Distillers ol Bilteis aon Gomiais, 



811 Montgomery St., Bet. Jackson A Pacific Sts. 
Telephone .Vo. 4?4 San Fraytclsrn, (nl 



Landsberger & Son, 

Commission JWei^ehants 

123 CALIFORNIA STREET, SAN FRANCISCO. 



Agents for the Purchase and Sale of Viticultural Products. 

Telejpl-ione; No. eSO. 



JmUN Ueknakii. 



Secondo Guasti. 



: - Orou'cr.t and Diifillcrs of - Z • 

Galilomia WIHES aonWDIES 



Winery at Guasti & Bernard's Spur, Between West 
Olendale and Tropica, Cal. 



b;«rF^GE PRODUSEF^S Of SWEET WINES. 

W.Wm tillhr. tin: -Ul mill llinniila .s/.s.. I.iis .Iniirlrs, till. 



j^eifie WIJME /rjMB Sflf^lT J^EVIEW. 



S. GLASER. 

123 California Street, San Francisco, Cal. 

FA-CIFIC COjPi.ST jPs-GHHSTT FOF2. 



L. GIRARD&CO.. Epeknw, 
J. DUPON'T * CO., Cognac, 
ARMANI) liliOSSACQ, CousAC, 
GME MAI.IFAUD, St. Meme fues Counac, 
HER.MAX JANSEN, Sc-iiiEnAM, 
BLA.VKENirEYM >t XOLET, Rotteriiam, 
THOS. LOWNDES & CO., London. - 
NIXON & CO., Oporto, 



CHAMPAONES 

COGNACS 

- COGNACS 

COGNACS 

GOLDFINCH GIN 

CENTAUR GIN 

OLD LONDON DOCK RUM 

PORT WINES 



GAMBOA IlERMANOS, Jerez de la Fhontera, 
RUIZ MATA it CO., Jerez de la Fronteua, 
CIIR. MOTZ .t CO., BoicPEAUX, 
GEliR. ECKEL, Deidesiieim, 



SHERRIES 

- SHERRIES 

CLARETS AND SAUTEKNES 

RHINE WINES 



VICTORIA MINERAL WATER CO., Ohkrlaiin.stein, VICTORIA WATER 

RHKINSTRO.M BROS., Cincinnati, 0., - BLACKBERRY BRANDIES 

D. O. BEATSON, Kirkcaldy, Scotland, - SCOTCH WHISKIES 



jPs-LSO Il^P^OK-TER. OF 

RAMSAYS SCOTCH WHISKY. WISE'S IRISH WHISKY, E. A. J. BURKE'S IRISH WHISKY, OPORTO AND 
TARRAGONA PORTS AND PRUNE AND CHERRY JUICE. 




<^ 



Tliese iriiisklcti arc made (n tho Famous '•IIT.VE Gli.lSS JfKG'/O.V" So 
Justly celebraieu n« the home of the finest Whish-les In the M'orhl, and 
tfhich have been j'>r the last Century, recngnl^ed as such, giving the char- 
acter and high standing to KKSTVCKV Wni.SKIi:S wlilch :hey now enjoy. 



T.HESE FAMOUS WHISKIES CAN BE HAD IN LOTS TO SUIT THE TRADE FROM 

HELLMAM/N B-ROS. 3c CO., 51:5 p-ROMT ST-REET. SA/N p-RA/SeiSeO. 



THORNTON & PIPPY 



rROl'RIETORS, SOLE AOENT8 

SCE:i?.^lS^SBEI?>a- A7-I1TEY^I?>ID," "^IHSTO DEL I?.Eir 

S-«7-eet "Wines, IBrandies ancl Xable "Wines. 
204 MARKET STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 

DISTRIBUTING AGESTs RAUL MASSON CHAMPAGNE 



8 



pA^lfie WljME /tJNiD oflF^IT t^EVlEW. 



liOiils HoBileiei GHampagne ^M 

Highest Urade m the World! ^ 

Used by All the Leading Clubs ^^ 

Hotels and Restaurants . . . 

I'or sale l>y All Fiist-Class 
(iroi'ors and Wine M<'rciinnt«. 



1/, -<i ' 



TIIKKE KINDS, AM, OK KCJTAl, KXCKLLENCE. 

CARTE BLAMeHE 

A Rich Wine! 

G-RA/ND Vl/S SEC 

Til 6 ler lent ion of a dry Wil:. 

B-RUT 

An Exceedingly Bry WiU' : 



Macondray Bros. & Lockard, 



124 SANSOME STREET 

Snic A.'ciits f.ir the racilii- Coast. 



F0RFINEPRINTING,V:;R. M. WOODCO. 



314.-16Battery St., 
^ San Francisco, Cal. 




I. DE TURK 

1J[)incs and ^randies 



BRANDY 
ANGELICA, 
? HOCK, 
J ZINFANDEL, 

'il?iSS»;r=i- I PORT, 



CLARET, 
SAUTERNE, 
, , , , MUSCAT, 

v-i-^-r SHERRY, 

RiESLING, 



jffl^iijj TOKAY, GUTEDEL. 

ill i-SSS^^^ Virxeyards and. Cellars: 

Santa Rosa, Sonoma County, Cal. 

-^,'^â– 1?^ Branch: 

ijfefesf'j^ i»i>0 Sacra meiilo SI., Sun Francisco. Cal. 
T^lictSt-i C. M. MANN, Manager. 

New York Office, - - 91 Hudson St. 




: 31m£l ^'-^cSa <rd/| 




TjHE jilQHEST AWARD f ARIS EXPOSITIOJ^ 




Establistiejd. 

Ciuer/'Hore l/alley, <$dU 



18SS. 



'"^O 



6^1: 






^^ 



A. G. GHAUCHE'. Proprietor. 

Office and Depot, (I'jj FiiuM St., S.vn rii.^Mifio 



1889. 



GOIsD JV1EI3AL. 



CHAUCHE & BON, Successor to A. G. CHAUCHE 

Smc (iiiKT.ii .Vi^i-iils for the MiirNT-UmcE 'Vinks. 



'WINE MERCHANTS 



NEW YORK HOUSE 



jANfRANGiSCO. 



[ALIFORNIA. 



"YSEN &TOTTEN 

24 DEY STREET. 



230^240 BRAN NAN STREET, 



EUROPEAN HOUSE:. 



â–  Bremen. Germany 




[INCORPORATEDJ 

VOL. XXXIV, No. 3. SAN FRANCISCO, MARCH 7, 1895. . 'â– â–  $3.00 PER. YEAR 

Issued Semi- Monthly. SPECIAL /NOTICE. 

R. ^f. WOOD CO.. - - PrBLISHERS. ^^ . ,,,,.,„, 7" , ., ,. , ,,1 I 

Owing to the fact that a certain retailers journal publishecl 

316 BATTERY STREET. SAN FRANCISCO. CAL. ;,^ j,,;^ ^. .^ ^^^. ^^,^ spccinUy prepared Statistics of overland 

TELEPHONE NO. 709. C»S1.E ADDRESS FIELDWIN," SAN FRANCISCO. ". , , , • ■ . , , ,. „ 

impdrts ol alcohol, spirits, etc., witliout giving due credit lor 

The VACiyir ni\E .4\i> sriiiiT kki/kii /.« f;,p o.,/„ ,m,,r,' .,/ tlie same, we have been eonipclli'd to (■oi)V-riglit this iiiforma- 

Ilrtail Wine anil Si>irlt ncnlri:-i nf Ihc I'aii/ir (ntist. thr nine Milk- tiOD, which WO have pillilislu'd without tills protection for a 

ersand Ueandi/ IH.sliller.*i n/' Cali/'ornia, the il'inr and llrtindii lnt\t~ • i r 

ers. and the Imitorters, IH.-itillrrx and Jobbers of the Vnited Stalex. periOCl Ol years. , 

Puldishers are warned that any iiilVingcincnts on this table 
.ilt VHFAKfi. ItR.lFTS. HOSF.Y OHDEllS, ETC., should l,r .,, ^ ■ ■ ,■, ■„ , '.,,., c m ^ .- ,■ ^i 

made pai/abie to the li. M. noou CO. witliout giving credit Will be prosecuted to the lull extent ol the 

: law. R. M. Wood Co. 

Subsciiption per year— m advance, postage paid: 

For the United States, Mexico and Canada .13 00 ' 

For European countries 4 00 ..-_.,-,.,_—, ,__^,,___, 

Sinttlecopies 20 MARKET REVIEW. 

Entered at tue San Francitco Post Oflice as second-class matter. 

A r>Ti1"Krr-!^^ ■ /^ALIFORNI.V wines.— The long-looked-lor turn of the 

EASTERN BRANCH OFFICE: ^^ tide has coine at last, and the California wine industry 

W. A. GEFT, Manager, 1-3-5 Leonard St., New York City. is at the present time in a better and more promising condition 

^^==^^^===^=^^^==^^^^^^^=^^=^=^=^==r thau it has been for several years,. . Thig, t^o, at a time when gen- 

p^esident '"' ^' vfcep'resident era! business is greatly depressed, and there is no life in trade. 

r\ I'r • li/' rt ' II ' X'p to the advent of tlie new era, notwithstanding the demand 

USllTOrmS WiriG brOWGrS Union increased and the product decrea.sed, prices steadHy decHned tm 

PU RE good, sound wine was far cheaper than spoiled wine, which had, 

CALIFORNIA WINES AND BRANDIES Kv>-turalproeess become vinegar. M^^^^^^^ 

vailing, the dowiilall could not continue indelinitely without a 

CORNER SUTTER AND GRANT AVENUE crash tiiat would rcsuU in ruin to both producer and merchant. 

SAX FRANCISCO, CAL. Knowing this, the trade effected a conibiuation. and the leading 

uri D \A/AMTCn rnD QK\ C C^rn producers adopted a similar course. Considering the times, the 

iiLLr WAIN I LU, r Un oALt, 1 1 Li change that has followed within a few week.s has been surprising. 

WANTED— 20,000 gallons clean Riesling, vintage 1891 or P''<"<^s f"'"'" "''^t '"^"''■'* ''■'^'^ advanced one-half at one jump, and 

189-Ji must be cheap. 20,000 gallons Port, guaranteed 20 per contidenee is so much restored that values are still on the 

cent., vintage 1S'J2 or 1S9.3; must be cheap. .5000 gallons finest upward move. What is of more importance to the welfare of 

Sherry obtainable; will pay good price for this lot. Address W. the industry is the fact that the two combinations of merchant 

T. Mi.NusE, 40 Beaver street, New Y ork. lo^tf ;,iid produ(-er have decided upon co-operation instead of aiitago- 

WANTKD bv New York House for Cash, any quantity of sweet and dry iiiziug each other's interests. The eonsiMiui'iice has been an ad- 

SrmiT R^vliT^' ^'"'"^ *" ''***"''' '^' ^' '*^' '^'^ ^'"'"'"' ^^'"'^ '''"' vauce of prices and contracts between the two corporations that 

â–  assure stabililj' to the business for some years to come, at least. 

FOREIGN MARKETS. The details of these contracts will bo found iu another column 

A pMitlemanrctirm-aiii-i imumv y,-ai> >rv^|r,■ in Kinupc in tlic t^nile.l „,• (|,i„ j^^„p Xaturallv there are those who rebel against these 
MiiU's l>i'p irtini'iit ci[ A'.:nc-iiltiuo, <lcsircs tu ailil, aniunj; utiicr rcpK sciitii- " i • i i .. • i i • i t 

tions, a firm or syndicate ..f Wine Dealers or( irowcrs, win. are prepare.! arr.uigemeiits, but wc think they are not Wisely advised. In 

f.>r Kiir..peaii tia.le. Am also (leHiioiis to arraiiKo for t e sale of Calilornia other words, if the trade proceeded on the basis of straight cem- 
rrmt. \\ lule in Europe have been sueeessful in introiliielnir California . . , , , , , . i -i-i i i-. r i â–  . ' i 

pr...lu.t9, an.l w.)nlil like to (■•■ntiinie the same. Ail.lress Chahi.ks ,1. petition backed by bu.-^mess ability and (|uallty of goods, instead 

.Ml Ri'iiY, late Special .\gent in Kur.ipe, I)ei>artment of .Vgriculture, 3 Kast of the ruinous policy of cutting prices to the lowest possible 

4l8t street, Xew York. j._^^.| ^j^^ ^^.jj^^. industry of California would soon be .sound and 

TQ THF TRADF p;-osperous. The situation warrants this statement. To the 

WARNING. - The pnbli<> is hereby' notified that U ware- croaker who talks about the possibility of a large vintage reduc- 

house receipts, covering the following <lcseribed 70 barrels W. II. ing prices this year, we would suggest first, that despite the 

McBrayer's "Cedar Brook " whisky, have been lost in the mail, hard times, the demand for California wines is rapidly increas- 

Application has been made to the (Jistillcr for duplit-ate receipts, i„j, . second, that the '94 crop was verv short ; third, that stocks 

has be'' ''^""'''''T "'^ "■'»''*Kv "»'''•'■ original warehouse receipts ;., i„,erior cellars are being rapidly depleted, and that exports 

^ 10 'nov!''93, serials 1189.5—904. ""' '" excess of receipts. Wine is going to Eastern and foreign 

10 Dec ''J:}' " 1''009 18 ' markets at the rate of over a million gallons per month on the 

50 Dec. '94, " 17469—518. average, and this draft is on merchautalile wines. The qiics- 

Cinriniiati. James Lf.vv & l!i!o. tion which naturally arises for these croakers to answer, is : 

Mar 5 — June 5. With such i-oiiditions prevailing, where will be the surplus of 



10 



f/ceifie WI^^E /I^D SflF^IT I^EVIEW. 



wines of tliis kind when the '95 vintage is ready for tiie market ? 
A correct an.swer to this query will be gratefully accepted. 

Shi|(nient.s during tiie fortnight have been of good volume- 
and exports to Central America and Mexico very numeron.-?. 
At present orders are not active, and are not expected to be un- 
til Eiistern stocks, forwarded to save the advance on freight, 
have been reduced. At the siime time, leading houses are refus- 
ing orders for Spring delivery at prices considerably in advance 
of those now prevailing. 

Sweets are enjoying the new conditions and advancing in 
value. We hear of the sale of three hundred thousand gallons 
of standard goods at prices that would have been regarded un- 
reasonably high about three months ago. 

A dispatch from New York, dated the 19th instant, says: 
" Messrs. Sgobel & Day to-day held their tenth sale of California 
wine and brandy, and sold as follows : Fifty barrels port wine, 
30 to 29 cents per gallon, average 29^ cents ; 50 barrels Zinfan- 
del, 23 to 20 cents per gallon, average 21 cents; 2 barrels Ma- 
deira, 60 cents per gallon ; 20 barrels Riesling, 27 to 26 cents 
per gallon, averaging 26A cents ; 14 barrels Chasselas, 26 to 24 
cents per gallon, averaging 25 cents , 14 barrels Sauvignon, at 
25 cents per gallon ; 20 barrels brandy in bond, 59 to 51 cents 
per gallon, averaging 53 cents. It must be remembered that 
the tax of 81.10 has to be paid by the buyers of this brandy, in 
addition to the above figures. The attendance at this sale was 
a full one, larger than at previous sales, partly owing to very 
satisfactory weather. Zinfandel sold 1^ cents per gallon higher 
than at the last sale, while port sold J cent per gallon lower. 
Messrs. Sgobel & Day announced the next auction sale for the 
26th, when they expect to offer six car-loads of assorted wine 
and one car-load of brandy." 

Late advices from New York are as follows : " The prices 
now asked for dry wines are from three to four cents higher 
than they were a month ago. The demand, however, has not 
improved to any extent, but there is every probabilitj' that the 
prices asked will be paid, it being the unanimous desire of the 
trade for some time past to have California wines on a sounder 
basis. The sweet-wine prices remain unchanged, as also the 
brandies." 

The exports of California wines by sea and rail in January, 
1895, were as follows : 



By sea. 
To New York , 


Cases. 


Gallons. 

127,965 

16,988 

6,781 

11,770 

481 

1,672 

696 

288 

9,945 
325 


Value. 

$31,796 

11,686 

2,992 

5,687 


Central America 

Mexico 

Hawaii 


... 707 
... 65 
... 56 


British Columbia. . . . 
Japan and China ... 
Great Britain 


6 


188 
621 
228 


Germany 

Other European .. 

Tahiti 

All other foreign .. 


... 36 

... 48 

4 

2 


325 

280 

2,850 

185 



Total by sea 923 

By rail overland 942 



176,910 
1,370,866 



856,838 
552,114 



Grand total 1,865 

The total exports of California 
were as follows : 

By sea. Cases. 

To New York .39 

Central America 1,042 

Mexico 67 

Hawaii 25 

British Columbia 

Japan and China 8 

Great liritain 

Germany 

Other European 133 

Tahiti 

Other Foreign 

Total by aea 1,314 



1,547,775 


8608,962 


wines by sea 


in Fe!)ruary 


Gallons. 


Value. 


2.39,113 


887,562 


12.949 


12,233 


4,370 


2.116 


7,690 


3,462 


301 


126 


1,081 


425 



6,085 
1,502 



3,660 
450 
509 



/^ALIFORNIA BRANDIES. — With respect to brandies 
^J there is little to bo said save that they are feeling the 
effect of the advance in wine values, and are naturally regarded 
as much more desirable as speculative property than they were 
three months ago. Holders are in no hurr^' to sell at prevailing 
prices, and there is little prospect of any particular movement 
in the near future. 

The total exports of California brandy by sea and rail in 
January, 1895, were as follows : 

By sea. Cases. Gallons. Value. 

To Domestic Eastern Ports 266 8 385 

Germany 

All other foreign 41 986 1,067 

Total by sea 41 1,242 81,452 

Total by rail 31 42,942 64,723 

Grand total, January 72 44,184 866,175 

The total exports of brandy by sea in February were as follows : 
By sea. Cases. Gallons. Value. 

To Domestic Eastern Ports 18,084 89,422 

Germany 

Great Britain 

All other foreign 26 94 224 

Total by sea 26 18,178 89,646 



272,991 



8110,543 



*y '^HISKIES. — There is nothing special to report in the way 
^^ of trade. The general interest is centered in the new 
deal with reference to the D. & C. F. Co. It is announced from 
Chicago that the receiver of this corporation has entered into a 
contract with the independent spirit distillers to materially ad- 
vance prices, and maintain them. As under such conditions 
there would be no competition, buyers would have to submit. 
Some of the stockholders of the D. & C. F. Co. are strongly op- 
posed to the scheme on the ground that it is not business, as it 
would tend to drive out spirits and replace them by cheap whis- 
kies. At any rate, they have sued for an injunction to restrain 
the receiver from carrying out his plan. What the result will 
be remains to be seen. The imports of whiskies for the half 
month were small. 

The receipts of American whiskies by sea and rail at San 
Francisco in Januarj* were as follows : 

Cases. Barrels. Hf-brls. 

By sea from Atlantic ports 331 80 

" re-imported 

" rail overland 232 1,046 72 

Total 663 1,126 72 

The receipts of alcohol, spirits, etc., by rail in January were 
104 cases and 1480 barrels. 

The receipts of foreign whiskies by sea iu January were 
42 octaves. 

The exports of American whiskies by sea to foreign ports 
in January were 437 cases and 983 gallons, valued at 85,698. 

The receipts of American whisky at San Francisco in Feb- 
ruarj' by sea and rail were :is follows: 

Cases. Barrels. Hf-brls. 

By sea from Atlantic ports 274 40 

" reiiuported 

" rail overland 146 1,129 31 

Total 419 1,169 31 

The receipts of alcohol, spirits etc., l)y rail in February 
were 26 cases and 2164 barrels. 

The receipts of foreign whiskies in February were 550 cases. 

The exports of American whiskies by rail in February were 
224 cases and .â– ;7'.l gallons, valued at 8-, 420. 

/MPORTATIONS. — The principal importations in January 
were as follows : 
("liampagne— 2264 cases. 
Still Wine— 547 cases, 151 casks, 237 octaves, 10 packages 

and !) k«^gs. 



PASIfie WIJNE /rj^D Sflf^lT F^EVIEW. 



11 



THE FINEST WHISKIES MADE 

In the State of I^entueky. 



ANDERSON 



BUCHANAN 





§ HAND MADE^^^ 
DC SOUR MASH 2 

LOUISVILLE' 
KENTUCKY. 






PRODUCTION JAN. 1, 1874, TO JUNE 30, 1894, 
121,718 BARRELS. 



PRODUCTION JAN. 1, 1880 TO JUNE 30, 1894 
28,086 BARRELS. 



NELSON BOURBON NELSON PURE RYE NELSON PURE MALT 



^?^tR %>:< 



'^ 



% 



c^ 



ss 



BDUREDi- 
WHISKEY 

TENEWCOMB-BUGHANANi 



COMPANY 



:a 



i^so\^^ 



V; 





PRODUCTION JANUARY 1, 1872, TO JUNE 30, 1894, 218,146 BARRELS. 



U. S. CLUB 

/ i;.s.(;liih \ 

production march 1, 1889, to june 30, 1894, 69,697 barrels. 



The Anderson & Nelson Distilleries Co. 



L-OUISVIL-L-&. KY. 



12 



p/reifie WIJME /rJMD SflF^IT PREVIEW. 



Brand}' — SO rases and 35 octaves ; also from overland 50 
eases. 

Uin ami Geneva — 325 cases; also from overland. 180 cases, 
5 barrels, 30 kegs and 10 octaves. 

Vernioutli — 1200 ea.ses. 

Mineral Water— 1 KJK ea.ses. 5 barrels. 

Hilter.s — I4(i eases. 

I.iiiuenis (from overland) — 3r> cases and 1 bari-el. 

I'nilesigiialed S[)irits — (>(!() cases. 

(iinger Ale — 175 barrels. 

Kiini (from overland and via Cape Horn) — 100 barrels. 

Bulk r.i'er (from ovtrland) — 177 barrels, 230 lialf-barrels, 
308 quarter-barrels and SO kegs. 

Bottled Beer (from overland) —l!)5 cases, 568 barrels a thI 
221 casks; also via Cape Horn, 1 barrel. 

Foreign Beer (by sea) — 185 cases. 

Foreign 8tout (by sea) — 5 liogsheads. 

Foreign Ale (by sea) — 20 hogsheads. 

Fruit Juice — 10 puncheons. 

The priueipal importations at San Francisco in February 
were : 

Still wine — 50 «ises. 

Brandy — 30 cases. 

(_Jin (from overland) — 5 barrels. 

Liqueurs (from overland) — 21 cases. 

Rum (from overland) — 10 barrels. 

Bulk Beer ( from overland) — 230 barrels, 4CS half-baricls, 
290 quarter barrels and 50 kegs. 

Bottled ]5eer (from oveiland) — SO cases, 135 barrels and 
293 casks. 



THE SITU ATIO/N AT SACRAME/NTO. 



It being inadvisable at present to critically review the situ- 
ation at Sacramento, we shall defer doing the same until our is- 
sue March 20th, by which time the Legislature will have ad- 
journed and the doings of the session on the licjuor license ques- 
tion can be fairly and impartially discussed. Sulliee it to say that 
the members of the board of trustees of the California State 
Protective A8.so(Mation — Messrs. Edotf Ijilienthal, Alfs, Muudy, 
Staude, Campe, Benjamin, Loewe, Kirkpatriek and Wolff — have 
been attending to the interests of the trade to the best advantage, 
and that Attorney (i. W. Baker has been doing everything pos- 
sible for the trade. It is far better at this time to present what 
the enemy has to say at this juncture, and we herewith repro- 
duce the latest editorial effort of the (Jalijornia ProMbit'mmd : 

•'THK LUil'OR BILLS. 

" Mrs. B. Slurtevaut I'eet, the \V. C. T. V. State president 
who is leading the anti-.saloon and suffrage forces at Sacramento, 
writes encouragingly in regard to the light against the for- 
mer measure. The withdrawal of the original bill, followed by 
the measure introduced by Senator Jjindt^r of Southern Califor- 
nia, was a confession of weakness on the part of the liquor in- 
terests, as it showed very plainly that they saw no hope for 
their success in an o))en field, and must perforce be carried, if 
at all, undercover of .some othi^r mattei-. 

" The Linder bill, however, is also too transparent, even 
though clothed to sutfoeat ion almost, in extraneous rubbish, and 
the measure upon which the saloonists b isc their final hopes will 
not bei-ome patent until the closing hours of the session, in the 
hope that its design will not bci'ome known until too late to be 
circumvented. The (jnly possible chance for its failure to ap- 
pear in the most stringent spirit at that time will be the fear 
of its proujoters that it will ireale an adver.-e sentiment, that 
might jirove fatal later to the iiolitical ambitious ofllii' ni.uibers 
upon whom it relied to make the measure a law. 

The liquor lobby is wasting no opportunity to make every 
jioinl tell, and interesting devel()|iineMUs may be expected later 
in the session. The bitter opposition lueeling all attempts to 
investigate corruption of any kind, ])articularly the San Francis- 
co monumental election frauds, show very plainly that the pr'cs- 
ent Legislature hius no <lis|position to agitate any nnitter that 
wuuld ventilate the methods )iursued by the saloon candidates, 
anil leave little to ex])eet in the way of any Icgislaliim in fiv(ir 
of good government along the.se lines. 

" Both iJemocratie and Republican members are alike in 
this respect, and the; few isolated members who stand out from 
the mas.4 for good government ami ih ncy are indeed eonspicu- 

OUM. 



'•With the pas.sage of the anti-cigarette law, the efforts of the 
body in the direction of moralitj' has apparently ceased, leaving 
that tender plant, liki' its predecessors, to fall a victim to the 
mildew of n(»n-enf )reeinent, that always attends the enactment 
of like measures at tlu^ hands of an executive force not frii'iully 
to its spirit. 

" The SulIVagists have iiractieally given \ip their light for 
e(|ual re])resenlation at the polls, despite the supremacy of the 
l>arty in power who stood openly coinmitle<l to tlieii- cause, and 
will come away fiom tlu; scone of action rejoiced if under the 
present order of things, they are conceded the ri^ht of school 
suffrage, or the questionable [privilege of getting their request 
rel'erriKl to the popular male vote upon its alleged constitutional 
bearings. 

" However, if nothing else has been accomplished, the anti- 
saloon and sull'rage workei's can return to their homes with 
the a.ssurance that they have made a brave light for the cause 
of good government, and through their agitation and efforts 
have succeeded in making more soon and certain the day of 
triumph that is bound to come." 

THE COMMISSION AND THE LEGISLATURE. 



At this date of writing, March 4th. the relations which the 
State Yiticultural Commi.ssion will sustain to the State in the 
near future appears very uncertain. The University politicians, 
headed by I'lofessor Hilgard, whose opinions on matters viticul- 
tnral no one resj)ects, and aided in so far as they are able by 
those unclever hands, Messrs. Shinn and A. P. Hayne, are mak- 
ing a determined elfort to wind up the affairs of the Board and 
turn over its effects to the Uuiversity's Agricultural Department. 
Their i<leas are embodied in a House bill ostensibly introduced 
by the Committee on Retrenchment, but really by Mr. Phelps. 

The Commission's ideas are embodied in a bill introduced 
by Senator T>angford, winding up its affairs on December 31st 
next, and going out of business honorably. 

The Senate Finance Committee has inserted $2500 for the 
maintenance of the Board, without further recommendations. 

What will eventually be the outcome will a|)|)ear in the next 
issue of the Rkvikw, which will be i)ablished after the proceed- 
ings of the Legislature of 1895 have passed into history. 

Considerable amusement has been created by two interviews 
with A. P. Haj'ne and Charles A. Wetmore, on the future of the 
Commission. Whoever put Mr. Hayne forward into that dis- 
cussion must have known that he would be fairly swallowed 
alive. It takes a hard fighter to e(jual Wetmore when he is at 
his best, and cerlaiidy the College of Agriculture has no one to 
ecpial him in this direi'tiou, saying nothing of Mr. Hayne"s 
" 'prentice hand " efforts. 

Turner Hall at Sacramento was the scene of jollity and 
festivity on the evening of the 2Sth ult., when, in response to 
the following invitation, over 5(W people assembled : 

" ANTK-MOKriCM. 

" The Governor, State Oflicials, Members of the Legislature, 
OITicers and Attaehees, State Commissioners, Members of the 
I'ress and Parliamentary Attorneys, are respectfully invited to 
attend, with their ladies and friends, the Ante-JIortem Ceremo- 
nies of the State N'iticultural Conimission Thursday evening, 
February 2Sth, at Turner Hall, K Street, between Ninth and 
Tenth, at 0:30 p. m. 

" The Bar'l will be decorated appropriately with the ('(imilia 
S(tcru)Hciit<t. 

"The lion, .lohn I'. Irish has proniiseil to deliver the ad- 
<lress of consolation and hope, and Dr. Beverly Cole is expected 
to hold the public |inlse. Regents of the I'liiversity will sup]>ly 
the iiiuii(iiifll('.<, and soothingly promise to keep our grave green. 

" CiiAs. A. Wi;rMin;i:, 
'• lv\-President of the Commission. 

" iS'/em' lliis riiril at llif iliiiir In adiiilf hrttrrr, htdii!< <iiiil fni'iiil--<." 

Down the center of the large hall was a long table, at which 
a light Iniieheon was served, while the " bar'l " in question was 
a 50-gall(m barrel of " Cresta lilanca " Sauterne, nicely cooled. 

The festivities were up to date in every particular. There 
were plenty of funeral songs, such as the " Old Sexton," and 
.John I'. Irish made one of the finest speeches of his life in pro- 
nonneing the eulogy. Among those who spoke were Senators 
Siinpsim, (iesford, jiai't liurke. Heard, Mr, Wetmore and others. 
About eighty members of both Houses took in the event. 



Pf)iQ\f\Q WIJME /tJMB SJ^IJ^IT {REVIEW. 



13 



PROMI/NE/NT "RETAILEKS /NO. 3. 



:/^ 




Gtiarles F. Kapp. 

Among the retailers who have achieved remarkable success 
in this city during the past few years is Charles F. Kapp, of 
Kapp & Street, whose portrait appears above, and who is one of 
tlie most popular purvej'ors of good tilings to eat and driuk iu 
the State. 

Mr. Kapj) came to California from Pennsylvania iu 1886. 
He at once assumed the management of the Chih House at Del 
Monte, and retained it until ready to come to thiscitj-, in 188!). 
For a little over two years he was located at 200 Market 
street, but hegau business for himself, in his present location at 
1200 Market street, on l^Iay 28, 181)2. 

Althtnigh from thegrcat (Quaker State, there is nothing sul)- 
diird about Mr. Kapp. Indeed, wer(^ it not for the i[uiet native 
dignity of him, and his winning smile, one- might doubt if he 
bad ever seen a Quaker, such an embodinuMit of active force is 
he. Quick, fearless, keen, a thinker and a doer — that is Chas. 
F. Kap|> in business. All this he had to be to record a success 
under tlii' ditliculties he encountered in opening at 1200 Market. 
The place had been losing money for some time. It has a front- 
age on Market street of only forty-two inches ; the room itself 
is hardly i)ig enough to get a bar into, being only nine feet by 
eleven, and most nwn would have considered that there was no 
way to take care of a rush of patrons, even if a trade were built 
up Not so Mr. Kapp. He saw that the hx^ation at the corner 
of Taylor and (ioldi-n Gate .\v(Miue was favorabh-, and that 
tiiere was room to spread — down one short lliglit nf stairs, if 
not on tli(^ ground floor. Hi- believed in himsell', and in his 
knowledge of how to treat |)eo|)le. Tin- result is that in less 
than tliri'c years he has established the biggest little saloon in 
the world, and a regular young mint at that. Needless to say, 
he has been and is tireless in hisetl'urts to please, an<l as tasteful 
as tireless. Kntering from Market street, you ari" at once ini- 
pressi-d with an air of cosiness and comfoi-t. l-Acry available 
inch of space is utilized and decorated. The details of the bar 
are perfect, as is also the service. Ca.se goods on the wall, a 
dainty lunch in the corner, mirrors, pictures, all .sorts of catchy 
souvenirs — how in the world does '• Charlie " find room for it 
all? Have a little ■• Golden Wedding "' rye out of that dainty 
golden tea-pot, and come down stairs. A wide, richly carpeted 
stairway sweeps down from (Joldcn (iate Avenue. As above. 



everything has its jilaee, and is iu it. Palms, pictures, more case 
goods, mirroi's and music! Here are i^ighteeu elegantly fur- 
nished rooms. They are inviting; no wonder the imblic fre- 
(pieuls them. Follow the sign, "To the Grotto." A spacious 
hall it is now, though once it was but an airy basement. Here 
is a secoiul bar, but enclosed so that lady patrons need not object 
to its presence .At the tables in this hall, and in the private 
rooms, are many pleasant people eating the already famous Kapp 
& Street tanniles, and drinking whatever best pleases them. 
Truly, this is a great place grown out of a tiny one, a Haltering 
evidence of what a man can produce in a short lime by the ex- 
ercise of good Judgment. 

WI/NE A/ND B-RA/NDg -RECEIPTS. 



Febrimry 



Wine. 

48,.'57() 

3 5,!)20 

4 2G,350 

5 150,900 

(i 11,170 

7 45,.3;i0 

8 G(j,000 

9 

11 98,710 

12 71.300 

13 (i3,6S0 

14 42,.520 

15 28,S00 

K! 

18 

I!) 

20 

21 

23 



Brandv. 



280 
600 



80 



.â– ;7,9SO 

58,.500 

.52,370 

«0.820 

92.020 

9."),(;(;o 

25 103,000 

26 92,980 

27 .35,900 

28 35,900 



80 
.500 



Total for February 1,.344,7S0 



1,540 



The following is a comparative statement of the receipts of 
wine and brandy at this point for two months, 1894 and 1895 : 

, 1894 , , 189.5 , 

Wine. Brandy. Wine. Brandy. 



January ,5.53,110 142.705 897,534 

February 741,410 190,650 1,344,780 



60,590 
1,540 



Kxiieiicnced traveler f<ir Mexico and Cen'ral America desires position 
to travel in tliose couiitrios or United States; speaks Spanish, French and 
English ; be.st of references olfereil. Address A. B., Kevikw olHce. 



ofBUD iMOfiMoninifOiiuiuonjijonuiiionimo monmuoranLonuaoMiuou'Dio 



^c,^^BUSHEO 1^^^ 




E.REMYMART1N&C? 



COGNAC 

(FRANCE) 



AGENTS IN SAN FRANCISCD.Cal. 



525 FRONT STREET. 



iIiiiwli»iniiui»iiurul»;iUniraiUi«T»Twnit»Wiiit»]l»iwJl«]iiW[wniniwiMiiiwiMii««ii 



14 



f/cSlfie Wi;^E f^^Q SflF^lT f^EVIEW. 



The wiiuTV bfliiniiin;; t) the estate of V. \V. Kinu, of Aziisa, Cal., has 
l«.-i'n 8.>|il t'l Max I.okwkntiiai.. 



Tlu' Koiitiuky Liquor Co., of Salt Lake, were daniageil liy fire and 
water at a recent blaze in Salt Lake. 



Gkokoe HoiiEWKi A Co., have moved from their old Montgomery street 
quarters to new and large rooms at 110 (ieary street. 



Messrs. Hi'NT, Koopk, Tbaoue & Co., Oporto, announce that liy mu- 
tual agrement Mr. Dixon W. A. Teagce has retired from their firm. 

K. R. Lii.iEXTHAi., of the Crown Distdleries Co., has heen east during 
ti.e past fortnight on business connected with the s()irit and hop trade. 



E. Gabxier A Co. have engaged Sam M. Rheixstkom, formerly of the 
S. LvcHMAX Co., to represent them in the New York and New England 
markets. 

F. .\i,nKRT/,, the Cloverdale wine-make, intends going to Kurope 
shortly. He will visit his ol<l home in Denmark, and will return in time 
for the n xt vintage. 

The Italian-Swiss Colony are fitting up a new store and sales-rooms 
on Battery street, near Market, for the better accommodation of their 
city and oiilsiile patrons. 

The firm of Steixike & BRfXixG, of Los .\ngeles, has been chantied, 
the Bruning interest having been acquired by Mr. Stkixike, who will 
hereafter conduct the business. 



At the auction sale of Johx AV. Bashfobd. of 11 Hart street, Mark 
Lane, London, held on the 7th of February, 12 half barrels of California 
brandy were sold os. Ud. to 3s. 9d (84 to 1!0 cents) per gallon, in bond. 

Joseph Melczeb & Co. are making a telling efTort to secure a goodly 
share of the Central American and Mexican trade. They now have an 
active representative in the field, and are reaping a fair share of orders. 

The California Wine Co., of St. Louis, Mo., has been incorporated by 
J. C. W. :Meyer, J. C. W. Schnell, .Jacob Frank, Jr., and John A. Stick- 
fort; capital stock, ^15,000. Mr. Meyer was formerly C(mnected with the 
Napa Valley Wine Co. 

F. S. KoRDT, the well-known Oregon street wine dealer, is steadily 
extending his business, and is now regularly shipping to Central Ameri- 
can points. He has a well-established and profitable trade, which he 
knows how to take care of. 



Bode & Haslett announce that their whisky bonded warehouse is 
now in active operation. Up to February 25th they had received twenty 
car-loads of whisky and spirits in bond, and are naturally feeling quit* 
well satisfied with the manner in which their enterprise is progressing. " 



Spirits exploded in the " Pilgrimage" distillery of James Lew & 
Bro., at Lancaster, Ky., on the 18th ult., the storekeeper's lantern being 
responsible. A lire followed, causing a loss of about $10,000. The linn 
will rebuild at once, and expect to have everything in order in sixty days. 



HiLBEBT Bros, have just received 100 barrels of "K. B. Hayden " sour 
mash wliisky, in twmd. This house has met with flattering success, and 
notwithstanding the dull times are rapidly extending their business. This 
is the result of enterprise, first-class goods and proper treatment of cus- 
tomers. 

C. M. Mann, manager for I. DETuRK,ha8 just shipped three car-loads 
of wine to New Orleans. These goods were sold at prices ranging from 
3!> U) 50 cents, in spite of the idea held by some that New Orleans is only 
a cheap market. Mr. Maxx has also recently made some heavy sliiji- 
nients for the Texas market. 

Ooi,n>iAS Lew & Co., the Sansome street wholesalers, failed recently. 
Their liabilifieH are about »I6,000, and their assets are $12,000. The firm 
formerly had a store room <m Balt<'ry street, but abandone<l it about six 
or eight months ago, moving their stock into warehouse and transact- 
ing an office business since that lime. 

Two unknown footpads assaulted Ciiari.kh \V. Mai<k, manager of \. 
Ovebiioi.t & Co., I'iltsbiirg, on the niglitof the IMth ult. He was knocked 
down while near his home liy a blow over tin- heail from a sluiig-shnt, and 
a iM-cond blow i-iit o|H'n his cheek. While the injuries are serioiiH, we 
trust that lie will have a speedy recovery. 



CiiAS. Meixec'KE & Co. have received 240 barrels of fine whiskies, and 
have the same now in bond in this city. They arr prepared to furnish 
" l'"ini'irs (,iolde:i Weilding " and " (iihson " ryes, " K 15. llaydeii " sour 
mash ami " Chickeiicock " whiskies in lots to 6uit. Their tiade in these 
standard liiaiids is good, and deservedly so. 



B. K. KriTRiDOK, of the Sonoma Wine and Brandy Co., New York, 
has been on the Coast during the past fortnight. Report has it that he has 
purchased about .'lOO.OtlO gallons of sweet wine He has cleared up all of 
tlie wine in Southern California that was for sale in the open market, and 
has also maile entensive purchases of Geo. West & Son. 

R. E. Sevekxs, for a long time chief accountant of Zki.i.eubach & 
ooxs, is now idenlilicd with the Italian-Swiss Aokici'i.turai. Colony, now 
eslablished at Wd Battery street. Mh. Skvekxs is an active, energetic and 
thorough business man, and we predict for him good .success in his new 
field. The company are to be congratulated upon securing his services. 



George West & Sox, of Stockton, have just made a contract with 
Saxdeks & Co. for the immediate delivery of anotiier of the largest stills 
made by the firm. The still is to be somewhat larger than the twie now 
owned by West & Sox (which is the largest brandy still in operation in 
the world), and will be capable of handling about 2-3,000 gallons of wine 
daily. The still is to be manufactured and .set up as soon as possible. 



.Vttention is directed to the trade circular of (ioodeeham & Worts, 
Ltd., who announce that they have appointed Sherwood & Sherwood 
their Pacific Coast, Mexican and Central American agents for "Canadian 
Rye Whisky." This whisky is matured in wood, and bottled in bond 
under the supervision of the Canadian Excise authorities, and the firm of 
Sherwood ct Sherwood is admirably situated to give the goods a wide 
and ready sale. 

The "Breeder and Sportsman " says : 11. W. Crmiii, the vineyard- 
ist of t)akville, Napa county, has traded to F. W. Loebeb, of Vlnelaiul 
Stock Farm, his interest in the stallion "(Jrandissimo," (2:231.^). .-\s a 
result of the trade, Mr. Cbabii becomes the owner of "Topsy" (2:2G'i) by 
"Giandissimo," and "Alco," a very promising three-year-old pacer by 
"Alconeer." Topsy and Alco will be campaigned in Mr. Crabb's stable 
this year by James Bekryman. 



E. Martix & Co., one of the pioneer houses in the liquor trade, who 
have been located on Front street for a great many years, have removed 
to the Lachman Block, No. 411 Market street, where better facilities can 
be had for handling business- The premises are large and well lighted, 
and the offices are elegantly fitted up. The firm now has one of the hand- 
somest and best equipped establishments in the country, where the many 
friends of "Argonaut" and "J. F. Cutter " whisky will receive a hearty 
welcome. 

The Cai.iforxia Wine Growers' Union has been lately re-organizeii. 
Mr. Wertiieimeb has retired, and bis interest in the business is now 
owned by P. C. Descalso. We are informed that the purchase involved 
the transfer of valuable income property in this city, and Mb. Descalso 
says that he has a long line of such real estate to t^ade for good, sound 
wine. The oHicers of the new company are J. Cii. De St. Hubert, Presi- 
dent, and P. C. Descalso, Vice-President. The business is growing, and 
will be largely extended. 

Si'ssKiND CoHN, of the firm of H. Conx & Co., of Eureka, died re- 
cently, very suddenly, of heart disease. Mr. Conx was but twenty-six 
years of age, and on the evening l)efore his death he attended a ball in 
Eureka, given by the Native Sons of the (iolden West, appearing to be in 
the best of health and spirit.s. The remains were brought to San I'raucisi-o 
for burial, the funeral taking i>lace from the residence of his parents at 
1221 '.^ Eddy street. Mr- Coiix was a very popular young business man in 
the Humboldt Buy country, and was identified with Humboldt Parlor, 
N. S. G. W. 

LiiDwio Waoxeb, of the I'acilir Coppir Works, b6!i Mission street, 
has just finished a Distillery for the special purpose of distilling dill"eient 
kinds of fruits only. The still is made by order of Messrs. I.Eoroi.i) l.oirE 
and IsiDoK Orel: NiiEiMKH, and will lie erected at the Loupe fruit ranch, 
called I'air Oak \'illa Kanch, at San .lose. The Fruit Brandy made there 
will go into the bonded warehouses at San Jose and San Francisco, and 
will be sold at a reasonable price to the trade in order to make it pojiular. 
As the distillery is in chargeof an experienced distiller, and the K'st mate- 
rial is used, there is no doubt that the goods will he uneiiualed, and the 
enteprise will, we hope, be a success for tho proprietors and a benefit for 
the fruit pr diicers. 

Mil, N. AiiBKNs has Ix^en doing a large business at the conuTof Mar- 
ket and Steimrt strec'ts for years. Not content with this, however, he now 
provis himself in touch with the spirit of progress, and confident of the 
future by securing a location at the junction of Market and Sacramento 
streets, where he is fitting up what he jiredicts will be "The finest .•^aloiui 



f/fSlfie WI|^E /rJ^D SflF^IT (REVIEW. 



15 



in America." lie will miiiiitain the oid jilaie also, but intends takiu}; off 
the wholesale license. An inspection of the new premises shows that Mh. 
Ahkixs w ill have one of the retail palaces of the city. An o]ien lobby 
with a frontage of twelve feet on Market, is finisheil in nnirblc for wain- 
scoting, and is arranjjeil for the display of case-f;oo(ls above the marble on 
both sides. The swin^'in;; doors are in rich art glas.i. Inside a crowil of 
experts are now eiideavorinj; to excel their former efforts in decorati<in. 
The same elegant ell'ect of marble and costly wood is kept nj), and there 
are already admirable results of good taste everywhere. Mil. .â– VniiENs is 
to be coiifiratiilaled on his judgment and his energy. He is sure to become 
a leader in his line of business. 



IMPCRTA/NT eHAMGE. 



The fnited States (lovernment instituted proceedings at St. Louis, 
some time ago, to forfeit certain p.ackages of li(iuor, on the ground that 
while labeled with the name of a well-known London maker, the contents 
were an inferior imitation, .hulge 1'kiest, of the Federal Court, decided 
against the tioveniment's contention, saying that tlu' (luestion was, when 
a compounder i>r rectifier lal)els his product as that of a well-known dis- 
distiller or rectifier, and attempts to plai'e them uniler such brands on the 
market, does he subject such brands to forfeiture and himself to line? So 
section 344'.t, he said, seemed to delare. But did Congress in this internal 
revenue legislation, which dealt solely with the taxation of liquor, intend 
to legislate on the question of trade-marks, or to protect the public from 
a base (]uality of nierchanilise ? He thought not; and he found a reason 
for so thinking, because the interna! revenue act expressly recognizes 
" coinpoundeis," and legalizes such a manii>ulatioii of liquors as that 
Bhown in the case. It was not claimed, he said, that the government had 
lost any of the taxes that ought to have been paid on these goods, and the 
only reason for asking the forfeiture was because they were counterfeits of 
brands of other manufacturers, and were consequently a fraud on other 
makers when the government had in no wise undertaken to protect them, 
nor could it legitimately undertake to protect them. 



John Spruance, the wholesale liquor dealer, is building a handsome 
residence on the north side of Jackson street, 75 feet west of Steiner. The 
house will be in the Colonial style, from the plans of J H. Littlefiei.d, 
the architect, and will make a very attractive addition to the select quar- 
ter in which it will be erected. SIr. Spriaxce bought the site about two 
months ago, and at once commenced preparing for the erection of a fine 
residence. That now under way will cost ^l:i,000. The lot is 40x127 8, 
and the house will have a frontage of 24;j feet on Jackson street. This 
will leiive cimsiderable space on the side, which will he utilized as an en- 
trance-way, for the main entrance will be at the siile, and not at tlie front 
of the building. The depth of the house will he 7114. Gaining the en- 
trance porch by either of two flights of stairs, one comes upon a vestibule 
9.\15. with tiling in mosaic. The steps will be of artificial stone in terra 
cotta tints. Handsome plasters will flank the main door, which will be 
surrounded by side lights. Passing through the main door, one will come 
upon the main hall, l.i.o x ISt.ti. This may also be used as a reception room. 
The parlor, 17 tix 2:3, will front on Jack.son street. .Next to the stair-hall, 
opposite the parlor, will be the dining-room, 15. (> x 11'. t> Adjoining this 
favorite room will be the breakfast-room, 10xl2.fi. These three rooms 
may be thrown into one large hall by opening the folding doors which 
will separate them. The kitchen, 12 x Ki, with an annex 10 x 12, and the 
butler's pantry, will connect with both the dining-room and the breakfast- 
room. The stair hall will be made very elaborate. The stairs will have 
three broad landings, exclusive of the final one at the top. On the second 
floor w ill be four chambers, two dressing-rooms, a bath-room and a linen- 
room. The attic floor will be divided into three finished rooms and one 
large partially finished room about 27 feet square. The residence will have 
a high basement, floored with concrete. The billiard room will be in 
front! of the basement, and the remaining space will be utilized by the 
laundry, store-room, wine-room and servants' room. A concrete coping 
in terra cotta, twenty inches high, will border the front ami the two long 
sides of the lot to a <lei)th of 16 feet. The concrete walks and all the steps 
will also be in the soft terra cotta hue. Mr. Sprua.sce will have a very 
handsome home, and the house, l)ecause of the style of its architecture 
— examples of the Colonial not being very numerous in the city — will 
attract considerable attention. — Chronicle. 



The Italian-SwisH AgricuUtiral Colony lias made a cliange 
in it.** Sail Francisco licachiuartcrs. On March 1st a (Icpot and 
collars for the Asti wines wei'o established at l()!l I5att(;ij- street. 
President P. 0. Ko.ssi will act as manager at the new place, but 
Messrs. S. Ko lerspiel and I!. K. Severns, two experienced and 
genial gentlemen, will be generally in evidence. President Rossi 
informs us that the agiMiey for .\sti wines, heretofore at ()24 
Montgomery street, is discontinued, and that hereafter all l)U8i- 
ne.ss, both California and Eastern, will be concentrated at the 
new hjadqu inters. In this coanection the following circular has 
been issued to the trade : 

Peak Sir: AVo take pleasure to inform you that on the 1st 
of March next we will discontinue the agency for the sale of the 
wines of the Italian-Swiss Agricultural Colony on the Pacific 
Coast, heretofore held by F. Cavagnaro, and remove our sales- 
rooms, vaults and business office to the spacious stores and cel- 
lars at No. 109 Battery street, between Pine and California 
streets, where we will personally and directly attend to the sale 
of our own wines and brandies, and the general business of the 
Corporation. 

Our new premises will facilitate the storing and handling of 
the increased product of our Asti vineyard and winery, so that 
we will always be ready to fill with dispatch j'our esteemed 
orders which we doubt not you will continue to favor us with 
in the future as you have done in the past. Hoping to hear 
from you soon, we remain, Respectfully, 

Italian-Swiss Agricultural Colony, 
A. Sbarboro, Secretary. 



Fron; Actiille litarace. 



7G Pearl Street, New York, Feb. 12, 1895. 
Dear Sir : Please take notice that I have just received per 
Steamship " Bolivia '' an invoice 1985 boxes macaroni, A. (Jaro- 
falo brand, of which kindlj' make mention in your next edition. 

I also beg to inform you that, wishing to render more popu- 
lar my celebrated Lucca Olive Oil — " Aquila & Co.'" brand — 
I have decided to offer it to the trade at the following reduced 
prices : 

Cases coulaining 10 1-gallon tins, at 81.30 per gallon. 
'• " 20 A-gallon tins, at 1.35 per gallon. 

" " 40 ^--gallon tins, at 1.40 per gallon. 

" " 1 doz. bottles, qts. 5.50 per case. 

" '' 2 doz. bottles, pts. 6.25 per case. 

" " 2 doz. bottles, i-pts. 3.75 per case. 

I am confident that, in view of the above exceptional low 
quotations, together with the excellent quality of .said oil, you 
will find it to your advantage to pass me your orders. 

Will be pleased to furnish you with samples on application. 
Hoping that you will avail yourselves of this opportunity, 
I remain, yours very truly, .Vciih.i.k Stahack. 



WM. WOLFF & CO., 

Importers and General Agents, 

327-329 Market Street, ..... Sg^ Francisco, Cal. 



FJ^CX:H'XCD OO.i^ST j^o-eistts fok. 



POMMERT SEC CHAMPAGNB 

J. & ¥. MiRTELL COONAO 

MINERAL "WATERS of the APOLLINARIS CO, Limited, London 

HUS jABJAN APERIENT WATER 

FRIEDRXIISHALL APERIENT WATER 

MORG \N BRO.. PORT ST. MARYS' SHERRIES 

DIXON'S DU'BLE DUMOND PORT 

ROYAL "ftlNE C\. OPCRTO, Purt Wiaes 

DUBOS FRERES, BORDEAUX, Chtets and Santames 

-- re-tmportcd American Ilhtefctcs.- 
Staple brauds. 



HOCK WINES, from Messrs. Henkell & Co., Mavecre 
BURGUNDY WINES from F. CHAUVENET, NUITS 
JOHN de KUYPER & SONS, RotoMam. GIN 
BARTHOLOMAY BREWERY CO., Rochester. N. Y. 
EXTRl KINB STANDARD, BOHEMIAN and the 
"K.NICKERB3CKER- 
"DOG'S-HEAD" BRAND of Guinness' Stout and Bass' Ale 
CiNTRELL & COCnRANE'S Belfast Ginger Ale 
LONDON Dock Jamaica Rum 
'SC EiccUior; Spr. 'tO Kclle of Nelson; Sjir. 'tS Blue Gruft. 
Lowest market (juotationsfuniUbed oa application, tu the 



CANADIAN CLUB WHISKY from Messrs. HIRAM 

WALKER & SONS Ltd., Walkerville, Canada. 
ANDREW USHER & CO'S S»lf h Whiskies 
JAMESON & CO., IRISH WHISKY 
THEO. LAPPE S GENUINE AROMATIQUE 
GILKA KUMMEL 

SUnON, GARDEN & CO, London, Old Tom Gin 
UDOLPHO WOLFES SON & CO., Schiedam, SHNAPPS 

nume, Mayfitld; O. F. C; Cblckencock and other 
wbolesale trade only 



16 



f/reifie WIJME /J^D SflF^IT f^EViEV/ 



Imports and Exports 

DURING THE PAST FORTNIGHT. 



EXPORTS OF \WINE. 



TO TAHITI— Per Brig Galilee, Feb. 25, 1895. 



DESTINATION. 



SHIPPERS. 



Tabili P G Sabatie & Co 

C W A, C Carpy & Co. 



4 barrels . . . 

5 kegs 

4 bf-barieU 
i5 barrels . . 



Total amount. 



GALLONS VALUE. 



20fi 

so 

110 
1,316 

1.502 



$ 50 

20 

44 

395 

$509 



TO HONOLULU— Per Ship W. H. Dimond, Feb. 16. 1895. 



HonolalQ C W A, Kobler<6 Van B lu barrels 

'. 1 " gokegs 


50S 

700 


*190 
3:35 








1.20S 


$525 







TO BRITISH COLUMBIA— Per Sth. Tmatjlla, Feb. 19, 1895. 



Nanaimo iCal W Growers' Union.. 1 barrel.. 

" Berlin i.t Lepori 1 barrel .. 

Vancouver IOWA, Kohler & Van B. . i3 barrels . 



Total amount. 



51 
50 
150 

2.-1 1 



$ 51 
15 
50 

$116 



TO MEXICO— Pee Ste. St. 


Padl, Feb 23, 1895. 






H Levi <fc Co 


1 barrel 


53 

100 
103 
492 
150 
112 


$ 24 


*• 


W Loaiza it Co 

Joseph MeU-zer & Co . . 


10 kegs 


30 


,, 




23 


" 


10 barrels 

15 kegs 

2 barrels 

'.iS cases 


14U 
CI 
25 




Paul Masson 

C Schillinf.' & Co 

Almadin Vinevard 

FSKordt 

Gal W .Association 

CWA, C Carpy & Co. .. 
J Gundlacb&Co 

C Carpy ,t Co 


207 


tl 


1 barrel 


52 

51 
30 
50 
210 
210 
40 

ii 

128 
122 
52 


21 


•'• 


1 barrel 

6 kegs 

5 kegs 

13 kegs 

4 barrels 


11; 
2< 

43 
91 

110 


** 


2 kegs 

5 cases 

2 octaves 


30 
30 
35 






48 


La Paz 


C Sibiilint; & Co 

3:5 cases and 


2 casks 


43 


Ensenada 




24 






Total amount 


1,996 


$1,029 



TO MEXICO— Per Str. City op Sydney, Feb. 28. 1895. 



Acapulco . 
San Bias . 



Acapulco... 
Manzauillo. 



FSKordt 

C Schilling & Co... 

A Duvall 

GStaacke 

Cal Vi' Association . 



1 hf-bbl 1 keg 1 b. 
10 kegs 

2 barrels 

6 kegs 

20 cases 

2 barrels 



T.ital amount 20 ca.ses and . 



100 
100 

10(1 
90 



103 



? 50 

45 
40 

i;s 

120 
40 

$;iC3 



TO CENTRAL AMERICA— PER Str. City of Sydney, Feb. 28, 1895. 







100 

52 

270 

523 


$ 80 




J Gundlacli & Co 

C Schilling .t Co 


2 hf-barrcis 

15 kegs 


29 
212 


:: 


10 barrels 

2 cases 


37j 
12 


.. 


1 bf-barrel 

2 kegs 


28 
20 


17 


1, 


J E Burg 

Cal W Association 

CWA, C Carpy ifc Co.... 

Italiaii'.Swiss Colony 

C Schilling* Co 

CWA, C Carpy & Co . . . 


10 


,, 




2,976 


Cbamperico 


37 barrels 

62 hf-barrels 

15 kegs 


1,790 

l,ftH2 

450 


1,24C 
1,110 

luo 

(Ml 


Acajutla 


8 kegs 

26 cases 

5 kegs 

2 barrels 


80 

50 

103 


78 
130 
4:{ 

78 




36 cases 




188 


(. 


C Schilling & Co 

CWA, C Carpy * Co ... 

C Scliilling & Co 

(I 


30 cases 




143 


t, 


6 cases 




43 








150 








166 




34 barrels 

3 hf-barrels 

10 kegs 


1,404 

81 

400 

T,n:« 


813 

71 

364 


Tot.al .-imoiint ^K o.ifos and 




$S,.')OS 



EXPORTS OF MISCELLANEOUS LIQUORS BY SEA. 





From February 15th to February 28, 


1895. 




VESSEL. 


destination. 


SHIPPERS. 


PKGS A COST. 


value. 


City of Sydney. 


La Libertad 


Crown Dist Co 

Louis Haas 

Paul MasSdU 

.Jos llelczer it Co 


4 cas.<s G Ale... 
3 bbis Anisado.. 
3UcsChainpagne 
1 bbl Spirits 


$32 


St Paul Guaymas 

Total amount :iO casi's. c 


210 
25 

, $4.89 



EXPORTS OF WHISKY BY SEA. 



From February 15th to February 28, 1895. 



vessel. 



DESTIKATION. 



SHIPPERS. 



Cityof Sydney PO. La Libertad. J Gundlacb & Co. 

GLitCc, Acajutla L S Haas 

FLAD, •• Wm Wolff & Co... 

I .. 

iLB.tCo, La Lib. C Schilling & Co . 

" JS. .\cajutl.i P Koppen 

" LMH, Corinto. .. CM W Association 

MF, 



Total aTn(>ur\t 34 caries and , 



P;^CEAGES. 


gallons 


10 cases 




2 barrels.. . . 
2 barrels. . . 
10 cases . . . 


78 
68 


6 cases 




2 cases 




4 cases 

Ikeg 


ib 

i.v; 



$1.VS 
94 
135 
80 
60 
20 
40 
30 

SO 1 7 



EXPORTS OF BRANDY TO FOREIGN PORTS BY SEA. 

From February 15tli to February 28, 1895. 



DESTINATION. 



St Paul jGuaymas . 

" .Mazallan. 



Jos Melczer it Co.. 
A Vignier 



packages, gallons value. 



4bf-bbls.. 
10 cases... 



94 



Total amount 10 cases and . 



$47 

74 

?12l 



SHERWOOD an? SHERWOOD, 



IMPORTERS AND EXPORTERS— 



212-2IA MARKET STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 



24 N. FRONT STREET, PORTLAND, OR. 



•*Kegstoue inonograin lliic" and "(Oli Snrntogn" — The Finest Eastern Ryes. 



ESCHENAUER & GO'S CLARETS and SAUTERNES, 
A. HOUTMAN .fc CD'S HOLLAND GIN, 
LAWSON'S LIQUEUR SCOTCH WHISKEY, 
GUINNESS' DUPUN STOUT in Wood, 
JOULE'S STONE ALE in Hbds. Hud Hf-Hhds. 
MEINHOLD'S ANCHOR BRAND NEW YORK CIDER, 
HENK WAUKESHA Hiaeral Water, 



MOBT & CHANDON CHAMPAGNE 

HUNT ROOPE TEAGE k 00. Cased Porto, 

g. .V i. BURKE'S lri»h and Soolch Whiskies, 

BASS RATCLiy? 4 GRETTON, Limited- Bass Ale ia Wood, 

i. & i. BURKE'S Bas3' Ale and Dablin Porter (GUINNESS 

EXTRA FOREIGN STOUT, the finest brew). 
rLBISCHMANNS ROYALTY GIN. 

HoKSKAM, CfKnKTI.P.V .<: Co . I'im.ADKl.PllIA, I'l'UK WmINKIKS: — ".M AS< l>T, " "liOlIlN Hoop," "O. p. S." ANO "PlilVATK Stiuk." 

FtneHl Catiiitllan H\if WhiMkrii Ulinlrrham <f WiirlH. L'I'd, Torinilo, Canmlii), llnlllrtl I'uder Gureriimrnt Siiiirrilsion. 

KE-/.Wi'0/{7l.7» I V^;;{/f (.V »IIIShli:s InrllHlr Itiiurbiin, .S;,r/>if; '.SI. 'SO. •.Ml, •»«; Ilorsrn ]{ii>': O. F. f.: Si>rliiiililll : M. II. Mcltraticr 
lliriiilliiiir: M. y. Mititori h: hrntiirki) Chih: Mill iiatnl: Miilllti[il\i; <'lil(hiii(<i)k: I',. « '. llvrry iiiitl allitr sla iiilaiil hrtiiitlH. 

Alto AgenU For NAPA VALLEY WINE COS WINES AND BRANDIES IN CASES. California Wines and Brandies in Wood. 



MACKENZIE & GO'S Sp,inish Sherries and Ports 

E. & J. BURKE'S NONPAREIL OLD TOM GIN. 

BURKE'S HENNESSY BRANDY and DRY GIN 

SCHLITZ MILWAUKEE BEER ihe "Pilsener" and Ligbl Sptrkline 

also SCHLITZ in Wood, 
ROSS' BELFAST GINGER ALE. CLUB SODA, ETC. 
"CLUB COCKTAILS," EVANS HUDSON ALE 



P/fSlfie WIJME /fJMD Sflf^lT PREVIEW. 



17 



IMPORTS OF WINES AND LIQUORS BY SEA. 



FKOM NKW YiiIlK, Pkr Ship Akyan, Feb. Ifitli— 274 cases, 40 IminN winsky. 



MISCELLANEOUS FOREIGN WINE SHIPMENTS. 



From February 15th to February 28, 1895 



VESSEL. 


DESTIN.XTION. 


8HIPrER.S. 


r.^rK.\0E.s. 


(lALLON.S 


VAI.llI. 


Walla Walla.. 
Die.ijo 


VaiK'Ouver 

Mazatlan 

La I'a/ 


Western Ti-ausCo . 
W Loaiza ^Sz Co 


1 l>aiTel 

40 kei;s 

2 casks 

4 l>arrels . . . 

14 eases 

65 kegs. . . . 
4 barrels 


50 
800 
127 
204 

ffiO 
100 


* 10 

160 

58 

43 

72 

351 


" 




40 


Total 


imouut 14 cases ft 


ul 


1,931 


$7:i4 



WHISKY AND SPIRIT IMPORTS BY RAIL. 



COPYBIGHTED. 



From February I5th to February 28, 1895. 





SPIRITS. 






IVHINKY. 






CONSIGNEES. 


Barrels 


Cases 


Cases 


Barrels 


Kbbis 


Kegs 


Misc. 


Wm Wolff A Co . . * 


170 
210 
420 

75 
140 

fio 








C W Crai" A Co ... . 






130 








Crown Distilleries Co.f 
























.loues. Mundy & Co J 
Sullivan, Kelly & Co .. 
































40 
80 








Overlan 1 F T Co . . . 















Kedins;ton & Co 




26 










Sberwood A Sherwood 






2 

5 
5 

1 








F F Obermever 














J L Nickel A Co 














,1 K A Co, Order 










B A H 






5 








C G Meyer 






1 

1 
1 

1 
1 








J H Levy 














T liizzolo, Oakland 














J Erly 














J B Etchart 




























Total 


1,075 


26 


5 


248 


1 







• 10 barrels Alcohol. 
J 65 barrels Alcohol. 
^65 barrels Alcohol. 



BEER IMPORTS BY RAIL. 



From February 15th to February 28, 1S95. 







COPYBTGHTED. 












BOTTLED. 


BULK. 


CONSIGNEES. 


Cases 


Barrels 


Casks 


Barrels 

105 

45 


Kbbl 

90 
60 
145 


3^bbl 


Kegs 










120 
lOO 
40 




Sherwood A Sherwood 
W Bo"en A Go 










M Sherpel A Co 






121 




H E Schultz 


80 


55 






















Total 


HO 


55 


121 


1.50 


295 


260 





NATIONAL IMPORTS AND EXPORTS 

FOR THE YEAR 1894 COMPARED WITH 1893. 



IMPORTS. 



Ile-importcd spirits, proof gallons 1,303,856 

Mineral water, gallons 1,791,535 

Malt liiinors, bottles, gallons I 911,011 



Year 18W. 



Quantity Value 



Malt liquors, bulk, gallons . 

Bi'andy, proof gallons 

All otlV'i- spirits, proof gallons. 

Champagne, dozen 

SI ill wines, casks, gallons 

Still wines, bottles, dozen 



1.962,2Si 
248,411 
964,761 
265,703 

2,.573,551 
298,308 



1,102,629 

391,1. Ml 

H73,.')0'J 

607,286 

6.52,282' 

1,0.53,91 1 

3,929 505 

1,821.730 

1.423,.545 



Year 1893. 



Quantityj Value 



804,74 

'.',320,208 

l,H5,',i.s.-| 

2,183,.',41 

261,705 

993,804 

287,443 

3,131, .381 

380.0a5 



* 811,951 

510,797 
1,098.681 
715,528 
730,263 
1.028,478 
4,254,446 
2.206,122 
1,911,326 



EXPORTS. 



Malt litjuors, bottled, dozen 

Malt liiiuors, bulk, gallnns 

Alcohol, etc., prodt g:illons. . . . 

Brandy, proof gallons 

Rum, proof gallons 

Bourbon whisky, proof gallons. 

Rye whisky, proof gallons 

All other spirits, proof gallons. 

Wine in bottles, dozen 

Wine in bulk, gallons 



Year 1894. 



Quantity Value 



358,( 
278,! 
404,1 
317 



,810 

954 

140 

.'4 

87-., 099 
3,2.55,302 
',54 
654 
9S0 
925 



206.' 

329, t 

12,1 

896,! 



Year 1893. 
Quantity Value 



457,274 
69,618 
133,4,53 
251,121 
996,707 
,140,298 
220,431 
129,.538 
56,726 
424.416 



414 

307, 
136, 
125, 
803, 
3,405, 
109, 
(â– )49, 
13, 
787, 



* 579, 

82. 

46 

123, 

945, 

3,067 

119, 

319, 

64, 

390. 



727 
564 
.555 
226 
976 
.541 
433 
731 
529 



18 



EXPORTS OF FOREIGN LIQUOR.S. 



Year 1894. 



Re-imported spirits, proof gallons. 

Mineral Water, gallons. 

Malt liquors, bottled, gallons 

Malt li(iuors, bulk, gallons 

Brandy, proof gallons 

All other spirits, proof gallons 

Champagne, dozen â–  

Still wines, casks, gallone 

Still wines, bottles^ doz 



Quantity Value 



1,109 

1,378 

7,049 

7M 

13,864 

SI, .504 

4,602 

19,395 

4,358 



Year 1893. 



Quantity Value 



525 
,6311 
243 
,058 
,397 
,209 
.448 
,699 



1,1.58 
495 

7,163 

7,184 
18,801 
26,191 

2,671 
17,474 

3,913 



t 1,372 

311 

6,581 

2,457 

19,852 

26,063 

37,146 

9,82f> 

11:648 




THE City of Rochester, with its nbtindant snj.ply of magnificent water and its close 
proximity to the ttest barley and hop iiriMlncing districts of the country, affords 
uusurpHsscd facilities for the prndnetioii of siicii health-piving atid palatable beer as 
brewed by llie 'â–  11 A HI lldl.c IM ,\ V IIUEWKKV CO," Kcchcsler, N . V. Harthnloniay's 
"Fine Standard" uriMUfstii.nalily is tie- purest and l)est beer in the market, aiid 
the "Knickerbocker," brew.-. I of tlic choicest niHtcrinl will, we feeleoulidcnt, on 
account of its exiiuivite i.ropertie.s, soon Itecome a fa\ nrite willt lovers of a high grade 
and delicate beer. Kok Sale iiy ai.i, l>KAl,Kits ani> Guiukks. 

WILLIAM WOLFF A CO., 

Pacific Coast Agents, 327-329 Market St.. San Francisco. Cal. 



:iriIARIi IIEF.LMANN 



II (i lll'.I.l,.MAN\ 



HELLMANN BROS. & CO. 

IMPORTERS AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS 
525 Front Street - - - - San Francisco, Cal. 



.r.VCIFK' COAST .AGENTS FOR. 



KRUG & CO., REIMS, PRIVATE CUVEE CHAMPAGNE 



J, PER.RIER FILS & CO.. Chalons s Mame, fhampagne 

ADRIEN & FILS, Epernay - - Champagne 

FORRESTER & C)., Xerez de la ProDtera, Sherries 

G4RVEY&C0., _ - - Sherries 

OFFLEY, CRAMP & FORRESTER, Oporto, Port Wines 

BLANKE.SHEYM & NOLET, Rotterdam, Union Gm 

Ca. LECHAT, R. PHILIPPE & CHESSE, Nantes, Sardines 



lri.sh Whusky 
Cognacs 



DUBLIN DISTILLERS' CO., L'fd, Dublin, 
E. REMY MARTIN & CO,, Rouillac, 
P. FR.IPIN .t CO., Segonzac, 
ENGRAND FRERES, Angouleme, 

PATTERSON & UIB3ERT, London, -{ ^" ^^^J"'"'^ 



L. DURLACHER, Biiicen - Rhine Win 

H, UNDERBERG— ALBRECHT, Rheinberg a Niederrhein, 

Boonekamp Bitters 

CHAS. DAY & CO,, London. -' n^'"" *''â„¢..p"' 

( Orange Bitters 

J. B. HERRIFF & CO., Glassgow, \ ^^^. ^l^^ 

' ^ ' ( Jamiica Rums 

l/,f, <;<K)ltS I\ IMTKIf STATES ItOMtEIt W.tltEIfOVSE. 



AMEKICAX AVIllSKIES— •liLUE UKASS" AND "BOONE'S KNOEE" 



18 



f/eifie WIJME /cJMD SflF^IT F^EVIEW. 



CHflS. MEINECKE & CO. 



314 Sacramento Street, 



San Francisco, Cal. 



Sole Agents on the Pacific Coast for 








Deutz & Geldermann, 
Dupanloup & Co., 
Duff Gordon & Co., 
Lacave &. Co., 
D. M. Feuerheerd Jr. &Co. 



Gold Lack Champagne, 
Champagne, J 
Fine Sherries, 
Sherries and Olives, 
Ports, 





The Vineyard Propr's Co., Brandies, 

I. A. I, Nolet, 

J. J. Meder &. Zoon, 

Boord & Son, 

A. de Luz & Fils, 

C. Marey & Liger Belair, 

G. M. Pabstmann Sohn, 

Haussmann Junr., 

Gebr. Macholl, 

L Funke Jr, 

Dr. Teod, Meinhard, 

Genoveva Brunnen, 

Royal Prussian Amd., 

Societe Generale, 

A. Chevallier-Appert, 

A, Boake, Roberts &. Co 

Moore & Sinnott, 

Greenbrier Dist. Co,, 



Gins, - _ - 

Swan Gin, 

Old Tom Gin, Jamaica Rum, Etc., 

Clarets and Sauternes, 

Burgundies, 

Rhine Wines, 

Mosel Wines, 

Kirschwasser, 

Boker's Bitters, 

Venezuela Bitters, 

Sparkling Mineral Water, 

Selters Waters, 

Vichy Water, - 

Oenotannin, Etc., 

Wine Finings, Etc., 

Rye Whiskies, 



- - Ay 

Reims 

Port St. Marys 

Cadiz and Sevilla 

Oporto 

Cognac 

Schiedam 

Schiedam 

London 

Bordeaux 

Nuits 

Mainz 

Traben 

Munich 

New York 

Ciudad-Bolivar 

Niedermendig 

N. Selters 

St. Yorre 

Paris 

London 

Philadelphia 




"R. B. Haydeu" Sour Mash Whisky, Greenbrier, Ky. 



Prune Juice, Arrack, S. Croix Rum, 
Vermouth, Spanish Clay, Etc. 




^ ^ ^SOUR MAShU,- 




PAOIFie WIJVJE /rJMD SflF^IT I^EVIEW 



19 



T.I08. KIRKPATRIOK, — ^^ ^^ -^^^ ^ U. H. MoOBK, 

San Francisco, Cai,. ^ /A # 1 I J I ^ T J A. -w I...1 i.svii.i.ii. Kv. 

^T^ Dlf^ECT ff^OJVl bOUISVIbbE, KY. ^*^<^ y 



PEEI^CESS U/I^ISI^IES. 







Cil/^I^/^I^SEED 



->< - >< * 



TTiese IVMsJdes have a TGpiiMion second t o none on the PaoiSo Coast. They have been given years of tria,i 
ly the best class of trade Md consumers and are pronounced without a peer. When given a trial they speak for 
themselves. For sale in quantities to suit in Louisville or San Francisco ly 



SOLE AGEXTS FOR THE rACTPTC COAST. 



404 ZPIS/OITT STI^EET, 



S^^IN" :FT^jL.l<TaX3(JO, C.A.L 



SIX GOLD MEDALS. 

A First Award; Gold Medal and Diploma, was awarded by 
the California Midwinter Exposition, 1894, to the following firms: 

PERRIER-JOUEiT & CO., Epernay, Champagnes. 

COATES & CO., Plymouth, - Plymouth Gin. 

BARTON & GUESTIER, Bordeaux, Red and White French Wines. 

H. CUVILLIER & FRERE, " Red and White French Wines. 

BOUCHARD PERE & FILS, Beaune, Red and White Burgundies. 

W. B. CFHAPMAN, San Francisco, Special importations under his 

own label of Vintage Wines 
and Old Cognacs. 

w. P. cMvr\(\[i 

AGENT AND IMPORTER, 



123 CALIFORNIA STRKKT, 



X. I!. — Sit I'ricc l.i><t» on Pilot's .'il nnil ;!.'). 



SAN FRANCISCO, OAl, 



20 



P/fGIfie WIJME /tfj0 Sflf^lT (REVIEW. 




A ~~/I M^, 



ORIGINAT 

OLD GRAND 



BARBER. FERRIELL & CO 

»s R. B. HAYOEN 41 CO. 
_^n6GisTeBeo distillery, 
NO. 420, 5t» OI8T. 



Barber. Ferriell 2^ (o 

proprietors. 



B.M.HURT, 

PRESIDENT, 



J. H. BEAM . 

VIC£ PRESIDENT. 




DISTILLERIES: NELSON CO, KY. 
OFFICE: LOUISVILLE, KV. 



^ 



f/cSlfie WIJME /rJMD Sflf^lT I^EVIEW. 



21 



S. LACHMAN CO. 
California (ilines and Brandies. 



453 to 465 BRANNAN STREET, 



SAN FRANCISCO 



ISr. IT. OFIPIOE, 2S TO 26 lELIMI STK.EET. 

v\ piofi^^r^ u/if^^ |iOd5E. E5J/^B^J3}^^D 1854. ^^» 

(California l^inos and "^randios. 

! VINEYARDS IN SONOMA CO., MERCED CO., AND FRESNO CO. 



COR. SECOND & FOLSOM iiTS.. SAN FRANCISCO 



41-45 BROADWAY, NEW YOn'K. 



Kohler & Van Bergen, 

CALIFORNIA 

WDES AND 









WilKTV :ui.l llislili 
Sacramento, Ca 



.Main OMu'c and Vaillls, 

661 to 671 Third St. 
San Francisco. 










s. 



New Yoilv Oilice, 

N. W. COKNEK 

Laioiit it Vauic'K Stk 
New York. 



C. CARRY & CO. 

Proprietorit 

IJDclfi Sam Winery and Dislillery, 




CALITOKXIA. 



OFFICE AND SALESROOM^ — 

515-517 Sacramento St., - San Francisco. 

WINERIES AND DISTILLERIES, 
NAPA AND SAN JOSE, CAL. 



CARRY & MAUBEC, 

1> C^ED.Vlt STREET, - - NEW YORK. .\. Y. 




bLEY 



^ 



PURE CALIFORNIA 



or c A L I r o p nT 



SPECIALTIES: 



PRIVATE STOCK HOCK, 

PRIVATE STOCK EL GERRITO. 
PRIVATE STOCK SAUTERNE, 

PRIVATE STOCK CLARET, 
PRIVATE STOCK BURGUNDY, 

PRIVATE STOCK VINE CLIFF. 






.Dt:Amjr\s 



BRANDIES ^ I 



WINERIES ANO DISTILLeRIESt 

J^/cf/c eiTY, YOUJSITVIbloE jk^O 
ST. JHEbEJM/r. 

OFFICES : 

11-13 FIRST ST., SAN FRANCISCO. 

200-202 S. FOURTH ST , ST. LOUIS. 

29 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. 



22 



f/rSlfie WIJME /rJMD Sflf^lT [REVIEW. 



eOAJSULA-R KEPO'RTS. 



California Wines Judged by French Experts. 

On the 2d of June, 1894, at the AjiriouUiirul Institute of 
Paris, a committee of wine experts, composed of ^I. Gurnier, 
president of tlie Cliamher of Wines and Si)irits of the Depart- 
ment of the Seine ; M. Gervais, secretary- of Af;ricultnre of Jle- 
rault : M. Droin, ex-president of tlie Ti-il)unal of Commerce of 
the Seine : M. I'inson, ex-commission merchant ; MM. Michy, 
Bonvalet and Houdart, wine merchants : M. I )fsmoulin. attached 
to the staff of tlie Maniliiir Vi n iciili\ nnd MM. Muntz, Ilerisson, 
Schribeaux, Girard, Kayser, Wery, \'iahi, Convci-t. I-amarieand 
>[azadc. wine experts, met to give tiicir oi)inion on about one 
liundrcd sampU\s of California wines selected by Mr. F. Gos iu 
the wine cellars of California and l>rouj;ht by him to I'aris. In 
his i-eport to the National Society of Af^riculture, M. Gos. who 
has devoted liis labors, time and energy to all (juestions con- 
nected with the cultivation of the vine and the making of wine, 
and who is himself a vine grower, states, as the result of the 
investigations of tliis committee, tliat the vine growers of Cali- 
fornia have made, in a short time, rapid progress in the art of 
preparing wine, but that, however much they have accomplished, 
they have yet a good deal to do, and it it is probable that they 
will never surmount certain obstacles engeudei-ed by the climate 
and .some other causes which will ]ikel3' always prevent tliem 
from obtaining line table wines. 

As a general rule, the ordinary wines, which are most com- 
monly used, have been declared the best, and some of them have 
even compared favorably with the lions onlliiairtv. They do not, 
however, imi)rove with age, but, when two years old, seem to 
lose their (piality. In the category of vins ordinaire.-i tlie red 
wines liave been found sii|)erior to the white wines, by reason 
of the fact that most of the latter are made exactly like 
the red wines, the white grapes iu this case being allowed to 
ferment in l)unclies. The Ziufaudel wine ha.s attracted the fa- 
vorable attention of the ('ommittee on account of certain quali- 
ties it contains which are not found in the i)roducts of the other 
common vines. 

The wines of the better grade, made with the grapes grown 
on the vines imported from Burgundy and the Bordeaux districts, 
have been pronounced gcnei-ally good and not lacking in aroma 
and clearness ; however, they have been declare<l not to possess 
the •' bou(|uet " to he found in the products of the famous wine 
regions of France, and, although they are at lirst fragrant, they 
do not leave a durable taste in the mouth after they have been 
absorbed. The opinion of the committee is that they are harsh, 
and, as they express it, " rasp the throat," which, unlike the 
Americans, the French connoi.s.scurs do not coiisi<ier as(|ualities. 
Hence they declare that no great reliance can be placed in the 
future development of the cultivation of the vine in California 
— that the natural conilitions surrounding tlu^ local jiroduclion 
are better adapted to the making of ordinary wines, but that 
unfortunately, no outlet exists for these wines in the I'nitcd 
States, where the population uses iec-water, t(!a, coHee, milk and 
alcohol, but very seldom drink wine. Wliih^ in the I'nited 
States the consumption of distilled liciuors reaches (i liters ((i.34 
(juarts) per year per head, that of wine is scarcely 1.4 liter 
(1.48 quarts;, and the day is far i-einote, if it ever comes, when 
the extra (lualities of ('alifornia wines, the aim toward which 
all the efforts of the vine growers of the country have been 
directed, can be placed side by side with the best wines of 
France. 

Twelve samples of brandy, made by the beat firms of Cali- 
fornia, have been pronounced good, but very inferior to the pro- 
ducts of the Fn-nch Cliarentes. 

The committee adds that, by reason of the dilliculties foiind 
in wine making, the growers of Southern California have lurncd 
their attention to the manufacture of vinous licpiors, and hav(> 
fully sncceed(!d in this line. Their Port, Xcres, Malaga, and 
even their .Muscat, exeee<l those of Spain and Portugal. 

In conclusion, this committee is of the oiiinion that the 
country lying north of San l'"raiicisco is tlic best adapted foi- line 
wini-s, while the middle region can produi'c but common ordi- 
nary wines, and Southern California is destined to secure big 
proiits to the manufacture of vinous li(|uors, brandies, and to 
those engaged in tin- raisin business. 

The eoiiimittec (inds in the exainph^ of California the evi- 
dence of the fact that if perfection cannot be obtained without 
many trials and sacriliceH, wine ju-oduction presents very great 
difficulties. The California pioneers, they say, liave exhibited 



more energy than prudence, and they realize to-day that fine 
wines cannot be made extempore ; that it is not suflicient to pos- 
sess tine vines and general notions of making wine in order to 
constitute that peculiar and unaccountable thing which is called 
cni* And, by way of consolation, the French experts are will- 
ing to concede that the Californians have done considerable 
work, that their cellars are admirably fitted up, that their 
plants are perfectly constructed and operated, that they have 
neglected nothing to make their goods attractive and to intro- 
duce them, and that they are progressing continually and every 
year obtaining better results. The acknowledgment is made 
that the wines of the two last vintages are already superior to 
tlio.se of tins )>rcceding years, and that their linal success would 
be certain if they could overcome the repugnance of the Amer- 
ican population to the use of wine. 

That French wine experts, always so conservative and slow 
in acknowledging even a reseinblance of foreign-made wines with 
theirs, should concede tliat California is making a class of goods 
which can be compared to some of France's products, ouglitcer- 
tainlj- to be great encouragement to the vine growers of Califor- 
nia to persevere in their so far successful etl'orts. Our farmer 
has not only the tenacity of the French peasant, but surpasses 
liim in education and general intelligence; he is better prepared 
for the struggles of life ; his spirit of boundless initiative and 
enterprise helps him to overthrow obstacles which most gener- 
ally discourage and stop his timid Kuropean brother, accus- 
tomed to look and wait for the impulse or suggestion emanating 
from the ofliciallj' constituted authorities. American eneigy is 
known to increase iu direct ratio to the difficulties confronting 
it, and while it makes the envy of the old world it will lead our 
people to graduallj' master the secrets of wine making until rrun 
shall lie found in the United States to equal those of France ; 
and, should the supply in the United States exceed the demand, 
new markets might be found in Europe itself, where wine-drink- 
ing, being considered a necessity even among the poorest classes 
of society, a pure American ordinary wine would inevitably, all 
tariff prohibition once removed, replace on the table the adul- 
terated article sold by him under the name of wine. 

Owing to the rupture of commercial relations with France, 
Switzerland, whose importation of French wines in 1893 has 
fallen off !».'{ per cent, of what it was iu 1891, has become a de- 
sirable market for our California wine. Other countries may 
likewise, in the course of time, be opened to the enterprise of 
our wine merchants. 

HENRY P. Dr BELLET, Coik^kI. 

Rheims, November !'>, lS9i. 

Threatened Revolution in Wine Production. 



The " pure yeast mania " has extended to the wine industry, 
and threatens to revolutionize it. To call it a mania is perhaps 
scarcely fair, iu view of the solid work which has been accom- 
plished by some of those who are aflected by it. Still, if not 
actually a craze, there is danger of it becoming so. and we are 
glad to see that some of our contemporaries are raising a mild 
protest against the importance attacbcd to it. With regard to 
wine, it must be detei mined or found out to what extent the 
grape juice can be made to yield an improved wine by employing 
selected j'ca.st in its fermentation. Here, fortunately, we get 
into a province beyoiKl the reach of mere argnmciit, and ali-eady 
some of the wine experts are invcsligatiug it, Mous. C. Fabre 
has found, after making a long series of expei-iments. that must 
from the same kind of grajie behaves very diHerently with dif- 
fei'ent kinds of yeast. He is not inclined to as.sent to the state- 
ment that upon the nature of the yeast depends the nature of 
the bou(|uet and flavor of the wine ; these are factors which are 
inlliieuced as much as anything by the nature of the gi'apes from 
which the wine is made — a conclusion which corresponds with 
the generally accepted views of the non-.scientilic wine experts 
if they may with fairness be so termed. Mons. Fabre has been 
communicating the results of his cxiierimcnts to the Paris 
Academy of Science. Amongst the.se the following has a certain 
significance which cannot be misunderstood : A selected yeast 
will not yield a fine wine with every class of must. The must 
used to lu'oduce a fine wine should be obtain(>d from grapes 
grown in and wi'll ncclimatized to the district from which the 
selected yca.sfs are obtaiiii-d. So the threatened revolution may 
yet be a long way olf. — Wine Trade lieriew. 

• Cim In till' imnic (riven In Franci' lo n Kcncrttlly viT.v mnnU area of connlry, 
I'Verj Incb u{ wliicli pruduces IdenticaUy tlic aamc quality uf grapes and wines, 
wlilcb cannot be found clsewbere. 



f/^eifie WIJSIE /JSIE) fiPlf^lT F^EVIEW. 



23 



0. F. C. AND CARLISLE 



"W^HIISIKIIES: 



Bourbon 



Rye 



Distilleries: FRANKFORT, KY. 



Address: THE GEO, T. STAGG CO., Frankfort, Ky. 



DiPLOsiA AND Medal, Paris, 1SS9. 



GoLU Medai>, International Food and Wine Exhibition, 
Berlin, June, ISy,'. 



FiRHT Award and Medal, 

Melhoi'rne, Australia, 1889. 




THE INGLENOOK TABLE WINES 



â– jPlND- 



OLD PRIVATE STOCK BRANDIES, 

GROWN and BOTTLED at the Celebrated 



iisra-XjEn^ooi^ -v^xj<T:Hiizrj^iEiiD 



SOLD ONLY IN GLASS. 



OF RUTHERFORD, NAPA CO. CAL. 

None Gennme Dnless Bearmg LEGAL PURE WINE STAMP and TRADE MARK on Cork Cap or Seal Only Matured and HIGHEST GRADE WINES Placed on the Market 

On Sale by Leading Grocers and Wine Merchants in Every City m the Union. 

Office and Depot, 101 Front Street, Cor. Pine Street, San Francisco. 




Mm 



1^^ 



ABBOTT'S 

ahgostUra 



(THE OR!G[hlAl) 



BALTIMORE.MD.U.SA- 



BITTERS 



THE JOHN T. GUTTING GO., SAN FRANGISGO, HAS A ST06K OF THESE GOODS. 



Special Bonded Warehouse No.1 



I 



2d DISTRICT, NEW YORK. 



FIRE PROOF BUILDINGS. ELECTRIC ELEVATORS. 

Storage Capacity 18,000 Barrels. 

Papers and Withdrawals Executed Tree of Charge. J. D. W. SHERMAN, PrOprietOP. 



2-4 



f/reifie wij^E /r;gE) sfif^ii preview. 



J^clO Orleans J)[otQS. 

New Ohlhans, February 24tli, ISii"). 

Tbe miserable weatber New Orleans has experienced tlie 
past nioiitb, whicb culminated in a real old New England snow- 
storm, depositint; 14 iiicbesof tbe •'beautiful" on Febriiry 14tli, 
wliicb remained tlirce days witb us, tlioroiij;lily demoralized 
business in all branelies for tbe time bein;;, and tbe rest of the 
month everybody devoted most unselfishlj' to carnival matters; 
and as I write tbe Crescent City lias put on a clean suit and a 
holiday ajipcaranec, and for tbe next week business will be rele- 
gated to tb(! back ground, and everybody, from boss to oilice- 
boy, will celebrate tbe arrival of King Rex and bis satellites. 
The city is overflowing with visitors from all over the Union, 
and Canal street looks like Kearney street during tbe prome- 
nade hour. 

The increase of prices in California wines is hailed with 
much satisfaction by those engaged in their handling here, as it 
betokens a release from tbe ruinous conditions whicb have ex- 
iste(l here so long. Wines heretofore have been handled at an 
inlinitesimal prolit to dealers, who now bail witb delight the 
dawning of a better era. Tbe California Wine Association, 
through Mr. Maubec, its bustling agent, is doing very well, and 
reports the jilaeing of nearly 400(1 barrels last week. 

Mr. H. A. Bradford, who controls the To-Kalon Vineyard 
products in this market, has now got his store in good shape, 
and reports an excellent trade. " Crabb's Imperial Champagne 
on draught" is now a familiar iinotation in the first-class cafes 
of the city. 

Messrs. Hermann & Lanata, whose store and contents wei'e 
destroyed by lire ast month, have reopened oilices at the corner 
of Gravier and South Peters streets, aud are now actively push- 
ing toward comijclit ion their new factory at (ienois and Cleve- 
land avenue for tlie nianufacluri' of liquor.-i, cordials, s\riips, it'. 



The building will I)e 175 x ."^OO feet, two stories in height. All tbe 
stills and other ajiparatus have been ordered from Europe, 
and the only factory in the United States devoted entirely to 
tbe distillery of syrups, liijuors, etc., from roots and herbs on 
exactly the same formula that has made the European products 
famous, will be iu operation in al)out 00 days. This firm is com- 
posed of young men who hav^^ built up an enormous trade 
throughout tbe Union, and they will guarantee the products of 
their factory to be in every way e(iual to the imported article. 

The business formerly conducted by Paul N. Verneuille 
has been reconstructed by his brother, W. H. Verneuille, with 
Paul N. Verneuille as manager. Tbe store, corner of Koyal 
and Toulouse streets, has been thoroughly refitted, and restocked 
with a complete assortment of wines and liquors, Mr. Ver- 
neuille will continue to handle To-Kalon wines, at both whole- 
sale and retail, and will niak<! family trade bis specialty. 

The well-known bouse of Vatter & (irevenig has been re- 
organized, and after March 1st will be known as Vatter, Gre- 
venigi^ Co., Mr. W. J. Rand being admitted as junior partner. 
This is one of the oldest houses in New Orleans, being estab- 
lished iu 1S()8. They handle both domestic and imjiorted goods, 
and are one of the largest dealers in California wiues in this 
market. They are also agents for Private Stock Rye (their 
specialty), and Melcher's gins and Hardy's cognacs. 

W. A. Geft. 



A clis|);itih li.is been received byMonNS & Kai.tenb.icii, the wine lical- 
era at 2ii Market street, 8an Francisco, concerning the bark California, 
which was recently wrecked off the South American coa.'st, not far from 
I'acasmayo. The dispatch was sent from Lima, and informs Messrs. 
MoiiNs A Kai.teshacii, wlio ha<l chartered the California, that tlie vessel 
and cargo had been sold at public auction, and that the crew had been 
paid oir. The California, it will be remembered, was tlie first steamer 
that crossed the (iolden (late and disturbed the waters of the San Fran- 
cisco bay, bringing to this State many pioneers who subsequently became 
prominently identitied with the* history of the State, among them being 
.Judge Crosby, of this city. 




^Hand Made cP 
SOUR MASH 

PURE COPPER 






'piIl'', above celebrated brands of Whi.sky are still leaders, care willumt re.uard to expense having always been 
taken to keep the goods to the highest standard in (inality, their popularity now being nnequalled. 

The distilleries that make the above brands never made private brands. 
Notice the feathered sticks in the Imperial brand. They are correct cuts of the 
celebrated hand mash sticks with which all these whiskies are made. 



R. MONARCH 



OWENSBORO, KY. 



f/eifie WljSlE /rJvJD Sflf^lT (REVIEW 



25 



THE BIG WIME DEAL. 

Jiifit lifter tlio last ('(iilioii of llie l\i;\ ii:\v luid fjoiic to pross, 
aunounci'iiifiit was inaili- of the (â– onsiiniiiiatioii of the larj^cst wiiir 
deal ever etVcctcd in Califoniia or in tlit^ lhiite<l States. I!y the 
terms of the a^'reeineiit lietwecn the California Wine Association 
— the seven nirrchant.s — and tlu' Calilornia Wiiu^ Makei's' (.U r- 
ponition, 4,0(1(1, 00(( jjallons of wine has l)eeii houj^ht hy th(( .Vsso- 
eiation for V2k eents jx'r jjallon, naked, delivere<l in San Fran- 
cisco, and a I'lirther contract is entered upon by which the 
Association is to get .5,000,0()() gallon,s of wine annually at a 
price to be agreed upon each year. 

What is of .still more importance, the AVine Association is 
practically going out of business as a wine-making concern. 
Th" wineries l)clonging to the Association, including the (!arpy 
wineries at Napa. Si. Helena and San Jose, the Koliler vSc Froh- 
liiig winery at Glen l-'llen, the Ilaraszthy winery at I-^sparto, 
and the .Vguillou & Bustelli winery at IJvermore, are now leased 
for a term of years to the Wine Afakers" Corporation, and the 
merchants will go out of business as dry wine makers, and at- 
tend strictly to the business of wine selling. 

This seems to us of much more importance to the wine 
makers of the State than the actual sale of 4,0(X),(t00 gallons. 
Tliis (iiiuntity of wine is but a four mouths' shipping supply for 
the entire State, while the abandonment of the policj- of wine 
making by merchants means much to the wine makers, pure and 
simple. There will no longer be a temptation on the part of 
merchants engaged in the battle for the control of the cheap 
markets to take advantage of cheap grapes to enable them to 
hold their own. Wine making will now be in the hands of those 
to whom it belongs. Conditions have arisen in the State in past 
years by which a wine merchant of necessity was compelled to 
become a wine maker, grape grower and merchant at one and 
the same time; similarly the grape grower and wine maker be- 
came a merchant and shipper because he could not .sell his prod- 
ucts at fairly lucrative prices to merchants. 

The California Wine Association has certainly improved its 
standing among the wine makers by making this step, and we 
trust that the time will never come again when wine makers 
will be placed between the lower millstone of cheap grapes, and 
the upper millstone of competition from merchants in the wine 
making business. 

P. C. Rossi, who has been an exceedinglj' active promoter 
of the organization of the California Wine Makers' Corporation, 
has made the following statement : 

" We have won our fight, and the backbone of the opposition 
is now broken. The sale, which is virtually for 19,000,000 gal- 
lons, assures of success. The increase of 5 cents a gallon in the 
price, will show those connected with the syndicate that it pays 
to organize. In fact, we have done just what we promised we 
would do. We now see our way clear to add at least 1(500,000 
to the old income of the producers of dry wine, and S200,000 to 
the sweet wine makers. None of the wine that we now have 
left will be sold for V2\ cents a gallon, but will be held until 
there is a demand for it, and the price can be increased. It will 
be the same with the contract made with the Wine Association. 
If the price is increa.sed, the Association must pay it for its 
5,000,0(JO gallons delivered each year. The advantages of the 
Corporation to the producers are numerous, and they will real- 
ize it more as it grows older. Those who declined to join with 
us (;ertainly will .see what the}- have lost. During the last 
month several cellars of wine have been sold out by men who 
believed our organization would go to pieces, at 7A and S cents 
a gallon. Under our system, the profits, which have in the past 
gone to the middlemen, will be saved, and go to the producers. 
Our plan will give the producers a living price, and in time a 
fair profit. The merchants will still receive a reasonable com- 
pensation upon their investments, and the consumer will not be 
injured. The ])roducers will bo able to pay better wages, and 
can put their idle land into vineyards. We know our i)(;wer, 
and so do the wholesale men. We can understaml and respect 
each other, and, as a result, we can do business on an ecpiitable 
basis. It is no longer a fight, each trying to get the better of 
the other. In the past, certain of the buyers hav(^ taken advan- 
tage of the rinancial condition of some of the producers. When 
they knew that the producer was in debt or mortgaged, and 
was compelled to have money, they forced him to take a low 
price. Such a condition no longer exists. The Corporation acts 
as a merchant as well as producer. The wine industry is now on 
its feet, and it will not bo long until dry wine is selling at 15 
cents a gallon, and we hope to see it reach L'O cents. The i)riee 
of sweet wine will also be increased, and instead of selling for 17 
cents a gallon, it will command 25 cents." 



VICTO'Ry l/N LAKE COU/NTg. 

Word comes from Lake county that a petition containing 
more than S((() signatures has been presenteil to the Hoard of 
Supervisors, pr.iying Ilie repeal of Ordinance No. 57 — tln^ anli- 
liiiuor ordinance. Little doubt exists but that tln^ i)rayer will 
be graiite<l. 

And this will end tlu^ famous struggle in Lake county, that 
has lasted for about two years. We iire not averse to giving 
credit where it should be giv(ui, and it is to the brewers an<l hoj) 
men, led by Mr. i:. IL Lilienthal, that this victory is due. With- 
out that active, [icrsistcnt, and just embargo on Lak(^ county 
hops, in retaliation for the Lake county ordinance forbidding 
the sale of li(|uor, there would have b.'en one nior(( county i)cr- 
niiniMitly added to tlu' list of ''dry" couuliiw in this State. 

Once Taken Never Forsaken 

IS THE VERDICT OF THE riIOl.'.S.\Nl).-l WHO II.VVIC ISEl) 
DR. HEINl-EIY'S 

CELERY BEEF & IRON 




IT IS 



A Blood Purifier and Food Medicine 

FOR SALE BY ALL DEALERS. PRICE. $1.00 PER BOTTLE 

Celery Beef &, Iron Co. 

No. 150 New Montgomery St., S. F. 



§ 



Jalias Mbromicz, 

4^ VESEY ST., NEW YORK. 



SOLE AGENT IN THE U. S. AND CANADA FOIl 

HARTWIG KANTOROWICZ, 

POSEN, GELRMANY, 

FRUIT JUICES and CORDIALS. 

- arad. 

l/ietoria |»latural/T\i9(^ralU/at<^r Spri9(^ C^o. 

OBERLAHNSTEIN, GERMANY. 



26 



f/ceifie Wip^E /rjslE) Sflt^lT f^EVIEW. 




VISTAS OF SUNNY 8L0PK. 



Siiiiiiy Slope, Uic iii:i},'"'liwiit (loniiiin of T>. J. Rose & Co., T-til., of San (iiOniol, is one of the .show 
places of Southern California. The vimiyard eonsist-s of about TOO acres out of a total of nearly -',<I00 acres 
in the ranch. The wiiicK of the Compauy are known to every maikcl in ihc ruitcd States. The vineyard 
was set out many years ago hy the lion. L. J. Ro.se, and the i)roi.crty pas.scd to the Company, an JCnj^lish 
syndicate, about 1887. The manajcer of the rancli. Mr. K. C. Jiichowsky, is at present Viee-rresident of 
the State Viticultural Commissioners. 

Sweet wines and brandies are the specialty of the Comjjany, and the vintages now in cellar date back 
21 years. Though visited by the Anaheim dise;ise, the wines are rapidly assuming their wonted origin and 
the Company's afl'airs are becoming more satisfactory with each year. 



f/teifie WIJME /cJ^D Sflf^lT [REVIEW. 



27 



-RECE/NT LEGAL DECISIO/N, 



Anilerson ami Nelson Ilistilleiios Co.; Amlcr! 
Nflsiiu Kistillory Co., 
W'l'siis 
Anderson liistilling t'o. ; Nelson Distilling; Co 
tillerv Co. 



on nistillerv Co. ; 



iHil Tillies I>is- 



The Ji'tt'tM'son ("irciiit Court of Kentucky, Law and l^iuity 
Division, on Monday I'Vbruary 11th, rendered an opinion intiie 
cases of the Nelson Distillery Company vs. Nelson Distillinf? 
Company, etc., and the Anderson Distillery Company vs. Ander- 
son Distilling Company, etc., which is very important to the 
whisky trade. 

Uy its judgment court enjoins defen(hiiits, Charles E. Lem- 
mon, D. Mcschendorf and the " Old TiuK's Distillery Company," 
of Louisville, from branding whisky with (lie name of the " Nel- 
son Distilling Company " or the Anderson Distilling Companj." 
The plaintifl's, the Nelson J)istillery Company and the Anderson 
Distillery Company, are distillers in Louisville, Kentucky, being 
subordinate companies under the Anderson & Nelson Distiller- 
ies Company. They have for many years been making whisky 
in the Fifth District of Kentuck)-, at Louisville, and branding it 
the " Nelson Distillery Company, Distillers, Fifth District, Ken- 
tucky," and the Anderson Distillery Company, Distillers, Fifth 
District, Kentucky."' 

With the design of pirating upon the brands, the defend- 
ants, Lemmou and Mesehendorf and the Old Times Distillery 
Company, have been making whisky for certain parties in Si. 
Louis named George G. Meuke, F^red .J. Cornet and II. H. 
Brueggeman and branding it " Nelson Distilling Company, Dis- 
tillers, F'ifth District, Kentucky," and " Anderson Distilling 
Company, Distillers. F'ifth District, Kentucky," — almost an ex- 
act copy of the plaintitls' brands. 

These St. Louis parties had previously handled the whisky 
of the plaintifls, and therebj' had become acquainted with their 
trade, and were thus enabled bj' this piracy to pass off the 
inferior goods at a cheaper price to the customers and persons 
wanting the genuine " Anderson " and " Nelson " whisky. 

The court, in an elaborate opinion, held that the plaintiffs, 
the Anderson & Nelson Distilleries Company, are entitled to the 
exclusive use of these brands ; that whisky branded in that way, 
and known as " Nelson " whisky and " Anderson " whisky, is 
everywhere in the trade known as the product of the plaintiffs' 
Louisville distilleries ; that the use of these brands by the de- 
fendants was a double fraud — being, first, a Iraud upon the 
public ; and, second, a frau<l upon the plaintifls. The court, in 
its opinion, says : 

" It will be observed that the words adopted by the defend- 
ants are false and misleading in several respects. They do not 
speak the truth in stating that the defendant companies of St. 
Louis are ' distilling ' companies. They do not speak the truth 
in saying or rather designating them as ' distillers.' They do 
not speak the truth in stating that they are distillers in the 
' Fifth District of Kentucky.' By such misrepresentations em- 
bodied in their trademarks these two defendant corporations of 
St. Louis, aided and abetted by their coadjutors, the Old Times 
Distillery Company and Mesehendorf and Lemmon herein Ken- 
tucky, an? enabled to palm off on the public the whisky so pro- 
duced as and for the genuine whisky produced bj' the plaintitls. 
Now, no one has a right to sell his goods as the goods of another. 
To do so is to perpetrate a double fraud ; to cheat and impose 
upon the public, and to deprive the owner or manufacturer, 
whose goods are simulated, of the legitimate profits which arc 
thus cut off", by the fraudulent supply of counterfeit an<l spuri- 
ous goods. There can be no doubt, from the evidence in this 
case, that the object of the defendants (who are not distillers) in 
naming their two corporations in St. J>ouis • Distilling' CoTupa- 
nics was to deceive the public. * * * What other pur- 
pose could they have had in so branding their liarnls of whisky? 
And when it is considered that these d<'fen<lants ado|itcd the 
very names — • Nelson ' and ' .Vnderson." as a prefix to the words 
' Distilling Company, Fifth District of Kentucky. — thus so imi- 
tating the names and trademarks of plaintiff's as to make them 
barely distinguishable fiom their own, tin? illegal i)urpose to 
pirate the plaintiff's' trailemarks is too palpabl(> for contraclietion. 
The words • Nelson ' and ' Anderson." taken in connection with 
the other words appearing in the jjlaintitTs" trademarks, are the 
distinguishing words to show that the whisky, made in the F'ifth 
District of Kentucky, under and by that name or names, was 
solely manufactured by the plaintitTs; and such the proof shows 
is the opinion of the public ou the subject. 



" The plaintiffs have long used the label fir trademarks they 
are now seeking to protect, and their whisky is known to the 
tra<le and markets of the country under and by said trademarks, 
as goods manufactured by plaintiffs. * * * The proof 
shows that the Old 'i'imes Distiller^' Company is as deep in the 
mud, in these illegal transactions, as the St. Louis non-iesident 
defendants nn- ii\ the mire. The}' are all guilty of piracj' ; Hy- 
ing the black Hag of Iraud ou the sea of trade. 

" The proof shows that this is net their lirsloffense. 'Ihey 
have persistentlyraidedtlierightsofthe.se jilaiiitill's, and pirated 
and counterfeited their trademarks of diff'criMit kinds. The 
plaintiff's are entitled to tlie relief tlu^y seek ; and let a judgment 
be prejiared accordingly." 

The judgment of tin? court is, to enjoin tlu? defendants, 
Lemmon, Mesehendorf and the Old Times Distiller}', etc., from 
using the "Ander.son" and ''Nelson'' brands, and to compel 
them to account for all the profits they have made by the use of 
those brands. 

Mm.K Ki.sEK, a well-known farmer residing near Sonoma, has been 
arrested near Sonoma by a Deputy United States Marshal and taken to 
San I'raneisco and lodged in jail. He has been indicted by the Federal 
grand jury for defrauding the (iovernment by means of an illicit distil- 
lery wliieh he is accused of maintaining in tbe [ootliillsa few miles west of 
Sonoma for several years. His ease be tried before I'liited States District 
Judge Morrow. 




It cures Colds, Neuralgia, 
Headache and all Malaria 
Troubles. 

It stands on its Merits. 



The most successful compound. 

The most reliable and the best 
Family remedy in the World. 

Try it and be convinced. 




It is Pleasant to take, the Bitter Taste of the Quinine is Disguised. 
It's a Success Wherever Introduced. 

SoI.I) HY MANIKAf Tri'.Kl, \NI> I1<'TTI,KI, ,,M,V By 

; Liquor Dealers, Druggists anil Grocers. QUININE WHISKY CO. 

Special Terms to IVIiolesalc Vealers. 



28 



f/tSlfie WIfJE /cjMD Sflf^lT (REVIEW. 



KOLB & DENH ARD 



OLD NONPAREIL 

BOURBON AND RYE WHISKIES. 
CALIFORNIA 

WINES and BRANDIES. 

OFFICE AND VAULTS 

iSO-iOG MOSTOOMKHr ST., S.t.V FJtA\ClSCO. 

Telkpiione No. 50%. 




SPECIAL BOTTLING 

Wk M.\kk a Specialty ok 

Clarifying & Bottling Wines 

FOH THE 

TRADE AND CONSUMER 
BEST FACILITIES — ITRST-CLASS W'OHK 

{te^r Priceg Beasoiiahlr. -^31 



CHICKASAW COOPERAGE CO. 



MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE. 



-3XIjPl]SIXJF"jP!lCXUP2.E- 



Circled Headina and Jointed Stavesj aiso Shocks of an 
Kinds for Brandy, Wine, Whisky and other Barrels. 

We solicit orders from responsible parties who wiun goods iu our Hue, of superior quality aud workiuausliip. 








^ . „ JSTILLtD riiOA\^^ 

-â– ^w (5)0 UNO Win Ers 3" 



P-nr/lMvy-WARD-Geai.na 






50a (ALirOBNIASr. 



Nature's Remedy for Stomach and Kidney Troubles. 




).-.. 



flUlWBObOT MINERAh WATER. 



-y. 




It relieves Dy8i)ei)8ia at once and luts s|ilon(liclly in 
rascH of fitlier Kidney or Liver troiililc.«. 

The I/cmonade made from tins water l.f nnsiiiiii'"K'.(l. 
Ah a table water it has no equal. 



"Iltindxildt W;ilir dill'i IS fiom many natural mineral 
waters in the fart that it iloes not lontnin a sinjile nijurioiiit 
ingreilient." W. I>. .lonNsioN, JI. ])., 

I'rofessor of t'hcmistry, Toxiiolopy, etc., 
Cooper Medical College. 



Office and Depot: No. 40 THIRD STREET, SAN FRANCISCO. 



Ti 1 icniiiNK 6822. 



f/rSIfie WIJME /cJMD SflF^IT J^EVIEW 



29 



Prices Current. 



The&e are the lonp prices. The rate of 
discount on purchases oi a coiitiiderabU- 
quantity, can Ite Ifarneil by appylin^ to 
the agents or dealers. We urj;ent!y re- 
quest dealeri*, ai;ents and producers to 
notify us when a cban;;e occurs in the 
prices current of the j;'u>ds they Iiandle. 

California Wines & Brandies 

[Thf riict'8 fxivcn are for quarts and pints, 
put up in cases of twelve and twenty- 
four bottles.] 

J. OUNDLACH & CO., 
Cor. Second & Market Sts. San Francisco. 
Prices Per c.*se. 
qit.\rts. pints. 

Traminer, S2 J 5.00 * 6.00 

Gutedel. Sa 6.00 7.00 

Bur^'undy, 84 6.00 7.00 

Zinfandel 83 5.00 6.00 

KOLB & DENH.4RD. 
420-456 Montgomery st., San Francisco. 

Per Case. 

HocV ta.oo 

Riesling 3. .50 

Gutert;l 4.00 

Sauter le 4.00 

Sauterne, 1885 5.00 

Claret 2.50 

Zinfaudel 3.00 

Cabernet S.50 

Burgundy 4.00 

Port, 1884 7.00 

Port, 1887 5.50 

Sherry 5 00 

Cognac, 1885 10.00 

KOHLER A FROHLING. 
601 Folsom Street, San Francisco. 

Riesling I 4.00 I 4.50 

Hock 3.50 4.00 

Gutedel 4.50 5.00 

Sauterne 4.50 5.00 

Zinfandel 3.75 4.25 

Zinfandel, old 4.50 5.00,' 

Burgundy 4.00 4.50 

Superior Port 10.00 

Sherry 7.50 ' 

Angelica 6.00 ! 

-Muscatel 6.00 I 

Madeira 6.00 

Malaga 6.00 I 

Brandv 10.00 



INOLENOOK WINES. 

Agency. 101 Front street, San Francisco. 
Table Claiet blended from 

choice foreign grapes, 

vintage l.S'JO Vi.SO 

Zinfandel 4.50 

Extra Table f'laret, Medoc 

type red label, ISS'J 5..50 

Burgundy, 1888, Reserve 

Stock 7.00 s.no 

Santernedry,Sauvig'nVert'86 5..'>0 

Gutedel. Chasselas Vert, 18S9 4..'i0 

Hock, Rhenish type " 6.00 

Burger, Chablis type •' 5.50 

Riesling, Johannisberg tvpe 

18SS ,'. .. a.M 

Pints of two dozen II per case additional. 
None genuine except bearing seal or cork 
brand of the pioprietor. 

CAL. WINE GROWERS' UNION. 
Cor. Sutter and Grant ave. San Francisco. 

KL QUITO VINEYARD. 

Riesling f 3.00 t 4.00 

Claret 3.00 4.00 

FREkNO VINEYARD CO. 

Burger * 3.50 t 4.50 

Claret 3.50 4.50 

Port 5.50 6.50 

Angelica 5..50 6.50 

Sherry 5.50 6.50 

Cognac Brandy 10.00 11.00 

ST. HUBERT VINEYARD. 

Claret, Cabernet I 8.00 t 9.00 

Sauterne 8.00 9.00 

Cognac 12.00 13.00 

I. De TURK. 

220 Sacramento st. and 221 Commerci.-il 

St., San Francisco. 

Quarts. 

Cognac Brandv, XXXX *10.00 

" ' XX 9.00 

lentuiier Port 5.50 

Trousseau Port, No. 1 4 00 

Dry Sherry, Private Stock 5 50 

" Superior 4.00 

Angelica, Old Selected Stock 4.00 

Muscatelle •• ■■ " 4.00 

Malaga " " " .. 4.00 

Madeira •' " 4,00 

Tokay, best, Old Selected Stock. . . . 6.00 

TokaV, " " '• 4.50 

Haut Sauterne V " 5.00 

Riesling, " " " 3.50 

Gutedel, •• " " 3..50 

Hock " " .... 3.00 

Cabernet, "Grand Vin" " 5.00 

Burgundy " " " 4 .W 

Zinfandel Claret, Selected Claret 3.50 

XX Claiet, " " 3.50 

Claret, 'â–  " .... 2.75 



NAPA VALLEY WINE COMPANY. 
11 and 13 First Street, San Francisco. 

SiiKKWOon i\: Shekwood, Agents. 
212-214 Market street, San Francisco. 

Hock, green label t 3.00 » 4.00 

Hock, black label 3..50 4.50 

Gutedel 4.00 5.00 

Riesling 4.50 5..5I1 

Cabernet 4.50 5..50 

Burgundy 4.00 5.00 

Zinfandel 3.50 4..')0 

Claret, black label 3.00 4.00 

Claret, red label 2.75 3.75 

Private Stock Hock 5.00 6.00 

ElCerrito.,.. 9.00 10.00 

Sauterne 8.00 9.00 

'• Claret 5. 6.00 

Burgundy.... 7.00 8.00 

" Vine Cliff.... 12.00 13.00 

Sherry 4.,50 

Port 4. .50 

Angelica 4.50 

Tokay 4. .50 

Muscatel 4. .50 . . . . 

Madeira 4.50 

Brandy Crown * 10.00 

• •* 12.00 

" ♦ ' • 15 00 

*••*.... 18.00 



C. CARPY & CO. 
511-517 Sacramento street, San Fiani 

La Loma, Grand Medoc I 7.00 $ 

Burgundy 5.00 

Zinfandel 3.50 

Sauterne 5.00 

Riesling 4.00 

Sweet Muscatel, 1882 9.00 

Sherry. 1882 9.00 

Port.'l8S2 8.0O 

Cal. Rochelle Brandy 12.00 



ISCO 

8.IW 
6.00 
4. .50 
6.00 
5.00 
10. CX) 
10.(KI 
9.00 
lo.OO 



SAN GABRIEL WINE CO., 
Ramona, Los Angeles county, Cal. 

Riesling $ 4.75 *5.75 

Gutedel 4.75 5.75 

Port 5.50 

I Angelica 5.50 

Muscatel 5.50 

Sherry 6.00 

Brandy, 1882 12.00 



LOS GATOS A SARATOGA WINE CO. 
1227 Broadway, Oakland. Cal. 

Zinfandel i 3.,50 14.50 

Sauterne 4.00 5.00 

Brandy 9.00 

Port 5.00 6.00 

Sweet Muscatel 5.00 6 00 

Grape Cordial 6.50 7.50 

GEORGE WEST & SON, Stockton, Cal. 
Brandy, 1879 *20.00 



Brandy, 1883 15.00 

Brandy, 1885 15.00 

Front igiian 9.00 

Shciry 9.00 ...'. 

Port (old) 12.00 

Poll 6.00 

S. LACHMAN A CO., 
453 Brannan street, San Francisco. 

Old Port |;7.00 $8.00 

Zinfandel 3.,50 4.00 

Riesling 4..50 5.(W 

Madeiras 8.00 

Malaga 8.00 

Cognac 14.00 

JOSEPH MELCZER & CO., 
504 and 506 Market street, San Francisco. 

Claret, 1886 ISt 00 

Zinfandel. 1885 3.50 

Burgundy, 1885 4.00 

Hock, 1885 3.50 

Riesling. 1885 4.00 

Riesling, .lobannisberger, 1884 5.00 

Guiedel, 1S.S4 5.00 

Somlai Hungarian Type,1885 3.50 

Szatmari " " ■• 3.50 

Szegszardi FeheiHun'Type " 4,00 

1885 5.00 

Port, 1884 6.00 

Sherry, 1885 5.00 

" 1''84 6.00 

Angelica and SweetMout'n, 84 4.50 

Mad'a,Malaga&Sw'tTo'y'85 5.00 

Brandy, 18& 12.00 

1385 10.00 

MONT ROUGE WINES. 

A. G. Chaucbe Livermore, 

Office and Depot, 615-617 Front St., S. F 

Quarts 

Burgundy 19.00 

Chablis 9,00 

Claiet, Betourd'Eiirope 9.00 

Jurangon, Favorite wine of 

Henri IV, King of France 8.00 

Haut Sauternes 7.00 

Sauternes 6.00 

Light Sauternes 5.00 

Claret Grand Vin 6.00 

Table Claret 4.00 

Zinfandel 3,00 

$1.00 additional for pints. Red and 
white wines in bulk at all prices. 

L, J. ROSEA CO., LTD. San Gabriel, Cal 

Port, 1873, 1 doz. qts. in case $15.00 

'• 1876, 12.00 

" 1882, •' " " 9.00 

" 1886, " " " 7.50 

Sherry, 1882, 1 doz qts. in case 9.00 

1886, â– ' " 7.50 

Angelica, 1882, 1 doz. qts. in case. . . 9.00 





? 



^ 429-437 JACKSON ST O 

San Francisco 

(2r>-- — -, 1'^' - — --^^^ 

THEONLV^'i^ .^'^ITATIONS 




M>M VKAHClSCO 



EQUALLED BY NONE. 






BEEf^ PUmP 



Beer Supplies, Pumps, 
Etc., Etc. 



20b ellis street, city, 

Telephone oOSO. 

Pacifc Comt Branch, HARRY WENDT, Mgr. 



H. L. REA & CO. 

INTERNAL REVENUE BROKERS, 

All kinds of business ap|>ertaining to the Internal Revenue Department 
attended to with promptness. 



423 WASHINGTON STREET, 



TKI.KI'IInSK IT.*)". 



.'JAN FKANCIPCO. 



30 



f/eifie wi;^E /;^d sfii^iT f^eview. 



STILL M.lKIXr, BOXES AT THE OLD m\\\ 

314 SPEAR ST., SAN FRANCISCO. 

Hobbs, Wall i^ Co., 

^ffiiiiifiichirii.t (if Kvrril Vnriilii of 

BOXES. 

All kinds of Boxes on hand and made to order with 
promptness. Wine and Liquor Cases a Specialty. 



Redwood Cargoes Sawed To Order. 



Geo. Kammeker. 



Otto B Schmikder. 



:TQ=KnLDN. 



WINE COMPANY. 

WHc»LKfi:AI,F, .\NIi KETAIL 

|^i(^t7-(i^ad(^ \}J\T)(^s of pb5oIut(^ purity 

DIRECT FROM 

H. W. CRABB'S Famous Vineyard "TO-KALON." 

Located at Oakville, Napa Co., Cai.ieornia, 
Supply Family Tnble». OUR specialty. 

P)-iiate Cellars Furnished. 

Goods shipped to any part of the United States or tlie American 
Continent generally. 

Export to Europe. Correspondence Eefpectfully Solicited. 

Office and Dejwt: 1S72 MAKKET ST., San Francisco. 



.\ .Mai.i-a.-, .M, 



II. \. .Mkj.kia.m, .SuporintciuU-nt. 



Los Katos & Saratoga Wliie Co. 

i'i;()iini:i!s of {iiohe 

WINES and BRANDIES 



MUSCAT, 
ANGELICA, 
ROYAL NECTAR, 

ZINFANDEL, 



HOCK, 

SAUTERNE, 

OLD FORI 
GUTEDEL. 



SHERRY, RIESLING, 

FROM FOOTHILL VINEYARDS. 

VI\KYAI;liS .Wli cia.LAKS: 

Los Gatos and Saratoga, Santa Clara Co., Ca<. 

Branch Office: 1227 Broadway, Oakland, California. 



Lachman & Jacobi 



DEALERS IN- 



ifoiQia Wines aail 

BRYANT ANO SECOND STREETS, SAN FRANCISCO. 





Eastern Agents'* 

EDINGER BROS. & JACOBI, 

Cor. Dovf-r & P.^arl 8tH., Brooklyn Bri<ig<i Store No 2, N. Y 



p. O. Box 2245. 



Telephone r*o. 310. 



nOHNS & KALTENBACH 




CALIFORNIA WINES and BRANDIES. 

OFFK E .iM> CFLL.tllS 

-^ 23 KEjPlI^PCEX ST. 

SAX FliiNCISCO. 



Fl.XK 
TABLE WnfES 
.4 SPECI.4LTY 



ESTABLISHED 



A. Finke's 



Producer.i oj 

CALIFORNIA imn 



ABSOLUTELY PURE 



LOf/lA Ppl^TA UUlVlp^p CO- 

- HlTCKSSOliS TO 
Hare Constantly on Hand a Full Sujiply 

of tllf FiillnwillL' Siz<*H <tf 

2x2--4 Feet Long, 2x2--5 Feet Long, 

2x2--6 Feet Long. 
,H7i(r/i will be Hold at reuMonable rateti. 



OFFICE: 

809 MONTGOMERY ST., 

San Francisco. 

Telephone 5024.^ 




1 864 



Widow 



First Premium 

CHAMPAGNES. 



< ioLD Seal, 

Carte Blanche, 

Nonpareil. 



IT^First Premiums for Best 

( 'ittifornia rhnnipni;m'8 awarded 
liy the Stale Fails, ISTO-ICJ and 
w Ill'll-VIT cxIiil>iU'd. 



LOMA PRIETA LUMBER CO. 

Loma Priata, - - Santa Cruz Co., Cal 



Liquor Flavors 

WlLLIAiyi H. HUDKIH, 



74 WILLIAM STREET, NEW YORK. 



GENUINE XX BEADING OIL XX 

Heduiril In $7..'>0 I'er (iailon. 

GoodM For .Sale In iail/'ornin only liy 

REDINGTON &. CO. 23-27-29 second st., san francisco 



f/cSlfie WIJME /cJMD SflF^IT f^EVIEW. 



31 



(L. J. Kiwi' A Cii., Sun Oatiriel, Continued) 

Aiiui'liiii, ISsc. 1 ilu/.. i|ts. ill I'lise. .. $7. .id 

Musiati'l, l^''^, 1 ilii/. Mis- '" ''n^e- • • 'J-'"' 

IS-si'i. •• •• "... 7.50 

Tokav, 1S.S:.'. 1 iloz. .ils. in i-nsc 9 00 

•■ " issii, " •• " 7.50 

Mnili'ira, issj. 1 doz. nts. in case U.(K) 

is,sr,, •' •' '■ .... 7.50 

liiandv, issi, •• •• •• .... 15.00 

•• " isso, " " •'.... 10.00 

Zinfa-iilil, IS'JO, 1 diiz. iits. in lase.. 4.00 
'■ 2 •• i<ls. •• . . 5.1H) 

BuriiiT, 1S90, 1 doz. qte. in case 4.00 

•' 2 •• pis. " 5.00 

All llie foii'coinj; vinlai;i's are true to 
name and ai;e, a.*; iiulieatetl on label. We 
guarantee tlieabsuliite purity of every bot- 
tle of wine and brandy put up by U6. 



Bitters. 



C. W, AliliOTT A CO. 

.\Ni;OSTl'K.\ HITTKK.S. 

The John T. Cuttiiii; Co., Agents, 
San Franciseo. 

One case 2 doz. pints $15.00 

One-balf ease 1 do/., pints . . 7.50 



Imported Wines. 

HELLMANN BliOS. A CO., 
5'-'5 Front street, San Franeisoo. 

SHERRIES. 

Forrester & Co., Jerez, in 

wood, per fjallon * 1.50 $5.00 

Forrester v^: Co., Jerez, per 

ease 12.00 16.00 

Garvey & Co., Jerez, in 

wood, per gallon 1.75 5.00 

PORTS. 

Offley Jl.75 to ?5.00 

Oftiey, per ease f 12 UO 

W. B. CHAPMAN, 

12o California street, San Francisco. 

RED WISE.S. 

(Barton & Guestier, Bordeaux.) 

Quarts. Pints. 

Floirac $ 7.50 f 8..50 

Pauillac 9.50 

Chateau Lacrois S.no 9.00 



St. Jullen ISSl 9.00 ... 

St. .Inlicn 1S.S7 11.50 10, 

St. Ustephc 1881 9.00 10 

Chateau du Oallan, 1881.... 10.50 ... 

1ST8 12 

le Pain, 1878 11.50 12 

Pontet Canet, 1887 i:i..5n 14 

•> 1S81 15.00 115. 

Chat. Bevehevelle, 18.81 10.00 17, 

Chateau I,a;;ranue, 1878 22.00 '£i. 

I'hal Brown Cantenac, 1874. 22.00 'Si. 

Chateau Lanijoa 18.00 

1874 24.00 25. 

•' " 1878 21.00 22 

" I.eoville, 1878 24.50 25, 

" Larosc, 1874 24.50 ... 

Latile, 1874 29.00 30. 

" Mai-fiaux, 1S74 29.00 :iO, 

Latour, 1870 :il.OU ;i2, 

(H. Cuvillier »fe frere, Bordeaux.) 

Pauillae, 1889 9.00 10, 

1881 11. .50 12 

Chateau Bataillev, 1881 17..50 IS 

Clial. Kirwan, 1878 20.00 21 

Chal. Cos d'EHlouniel, 1878. 28.00 ... 

Chateau I.at.iur, 1808 30.00 SI 

Chat. Larose, 1870 24.00 ... 

•' Bevchcvillc, 1874 25, 

ChaleauTalbot d'Aux, 1875 24.00 25, 

Chateau Leoville, 1.S89 16.50 ... 

I.atour, 1868 30.00 31 

Chat. Pontet Canet, 1874.... 23.00 ... 
Chat. Pillion Lonyueville 

1S70 23.00 24, 

Chat. Cheval Blanc, 1889... 14 00 ... 

St. Emilion Supeiieur 10.00 

(Du Vivier & Co., Bordeau.\-.) 

St. Maic * 7.00 $ 8 

Pontet Canet 11.00 12, 

(H. it C. Balaresque, Bordeaux) 

Chateau de Frauds 9 00 10 

WHITE WINES. 

(Barton & Guestier, Bordeaux.) 

Sauternes 1878 9.25 

Vin de Graves, 1878 10.50 

Barsac, 1878 11.00 

Haut Sauternes, 1874 17.50 

La Tour Blanche, 1874 22.00 

Chsleau Yiiuem, 1884 30.50 

Chateau Yquem, 1874 36.00 

(H. Cuvillier & frere, Bordeaux 

Sauternes 12.00 

Chateau Giraud, 1884 28.00 

LaTourBlanehe'84 28.00 
(Du Vivier & Co., Bordeaux.) 
Graves premieres .... ?U.0() 



OO 



00 



00 



00 



10.25 
11.50 
12.00 
1S..50 
23.00 
31.50 



13,00 
29,00 
29.00 



CALirORNIAN— RED WINES. 

(A. Duval). 

Burgundy. 18.89 5.00 

Cabernet Sauvignon, ISUO... 5.00 

CALIFOllNH— HIIITK WINKS. 

(A. Duval). 

Itiesliug, 1.8.S9 4. .50 

Chahlis, 1888 5.00 

Sauteinc. ISSU 5.00 

Creme de Sauterne, 1889, 

(private stock) 7. .50 

entlJl'NDIKS — RED WINES. 

(Bouchard pere it His, Beaniie Cote 

Macon, 18,84 10..50 

Pomraard, 1884 12. .50 

1881 13.75 

ClosdeVougeot, 1887 (Mono- 
pole) 20.00 

Chambertin 1.S.S4 21. .50 

(Bouchard pere & fils, Beaune, Cote 

Chablis, 1884 11.50 

Chablis, '84 (H. C. & F., bot- 
tled here) 10..50 



(S. Friedborig, Mayence.) 

r;aubenheimer, 1889 * 9.,50 

Niersleiner. 18.89 10.50 

Hochheimer, 1886 14.00 

Liebfraumihh, 1889 14 .50 

Geisenbeimer, 1886 14. .50 

Eudesheimcr, 1884 17.00 

Liebenfraumilch, 1889, "Se- 
lected Grapes" 17.00 

Rauentbaler, 18.84 21.00 

Hochbeinier Dom Dechaney, 

1.8S4 22..50 

Liebfraumileh, 1876, "Extra 

Qualitv" 30.00 

Steinberger Cabinet, 1876.... 32.00 

(Prince Metteinich's Estate. 

Sehloss .Tohannisberger, '68 .$45.00 



6.00 
0.00 



5. .50 
6.IHI 
6.110 

8,.50 

D'Or.) 

1 1.. 50 
13.. 51 1 



21.00 

22.50 

D'Or) 

12.50 

11., 50 



$10. ,50 
11.. 50 
15 00 
I5..50 
15..50 
18.00 

18.00 
22.00 

23 50 

31.00 
33.00 

$46.00 



SPARKLING HOCK. 

(S. Friedborig, Mayence.) 
Liebfraumileh Brut, 1889 . ..$2S.IX) $30.00 

SHERRIES. 

(Sandernan, Buck & Co., Jerez. 



Pemartin Brut. 

" Umbrella 

" Amontillado.. 



20.00 
21.00 
22.00 



PORTS. 

E.D. dry, 1887 18.00 



WM. WOLFF A CO., 

S29 Market street, San Francisco. 

(Dubos Freres, Bordeaux.) 

Chateau de I'lslc, in casks.. $95.00 

(Journii Krcres, Bordeaux.) 
Clarets and Sauternes, per 

case from $7.,50 to $.'10.00 

(F. Chauvenct, Nuits, Cote d'Or.) 

Burgundy wines $10.00 to $52.00 

(Henkell it Co., Mayence.) 

Hock wines from ."$8.00 to $60.00 

(Deinhard it Co., Coblenz,) 
Hock and Moselle wines. . . .$8.00 to $28.00 

(Morgan Bros., Port St. Mary.) 
Ports and Sherries In wood, 

per gallon $1.75 to $4.50 

Port and Sherries In eases, 

per ease $8.00 to $15.00 

(Mackenzie & Co., Jerez.) 
Ports and Sherries in wood 

from $1.75 to $4.50 



10.00 L, O. fiuitv, 1887. 



18.00 



ACHILLE STAKACE. 
70 Pearl street. New York. | 

ITALIAN WINES. 
RED WINES. 

(Giuseppe Scala, Naples.) 

Lacryma Christi, 12 qt» $ 6.50 per case 

Falerno, " 7.50 

Capri, " .... 6.50 " 

Capri, 24 pts. . . . 7..50 " 

Moseato di Siracusa, 12 i|ts. 9.00 " 
Vesuvius wine in barrels of 

about OU gallons 1 .05 per gal 

WHITE WINES. 

Lacryma Christi, 12 qts $ 7.50 per case 

Falerno " 7.50 

Capri, " .... 6.50 
Capri, 24 pts 7.50 " 

SPARKLING WINES. 

Lacryma Christi, 12 qts $19.00 per case 

" " 24 pts.... •20,50 

(L. Laborel Melini, Florence) 
Chianti Wine in llasks without oil 

Cases of 2 doz. qts $12. .50 per case 

4 " pts 1450 

SHERWOOD A SHERWOOD, 

21'2-214 Market street, San Francisco. 

E6CHENAUER 4 CO., BORDEAUX. 

Quarts. 

Medoc $ 7 00 

Meiind'or 7.50 

Bouillac 8.00 

Red Seal 8.00 

St. Julien superior 9 50 




P. C. ROSSI, 



President m 



-SWISS 

ASTI, SONOHA CO., CAL. 



COCO 



A. SBARBORO, 

Secretary 



Ny 



PRODUCERS OF FINE; 



CALIFORNIA WINES and BRANDIES 



-AND- 



MONTECRISTO CHAMPAGNES 

(NATrU.M.l.Y KERMKNTED IN BUTri.ES) 

Grand Diploma of Honor Gold Medal Dublin, Ireland, 1892 

Highest Award Genoa, Italy, 1892 Gold Medal Columbian Elxp'n, 189; 

Gold Medal California Midwinter Fair, 1894 



MAIN OFFICE, 524 MONTGOMERY STREET 



SAN FRANCISCO 



i=. o. i?.ossi AT'EK^nyrouTH: 



Gold Medal Turin, 1884 



Highest Award Chicago, 1894 



L. GANDOLFI & CO., Eastern Agents 



IMrn|;TKl:s (IF 

ITALIAN WINES AND PRODUCE 

llB-123 south: FIFXti jPl\7E., ISIE\X/ ^irOK.K: 



^1 



GO TO 



FOR& ©Jine J3)oofe &\f/or^ ar^cj oKrtii^tic ^06 printing 

«r^ j^ f^ WOOD QO. 31^ '^^^ PJATTERY ST., S. F. 



WHERE NOTHING BUT FIRST-CLASS WORK IS EXECUTED- 



32 



f/rGIfie WIJME /vJ^D Sflf^lT F^EVIEW. 



W. A. TAYLOR & CO. 

39 BROADWAY, NEW YORK 



I^^EIPI^ESEHSTTIITO: 



GONZALEZ, BYASS & CO,, 
SUVA & COSENS - 
BLANDY BROS, & CO,, 
ACKERMAN-LAURANCE, 
WILHELM PANIZZA, 
MARTINI & ROSSI, 
I. & V, FLORIO, 
PETER F, HEERING, - 
REiN & CO., - - 



SHERRIES 

PORTS 

MADEIRAS 

SPARKLING SAUMUR 

RHINE WINES 

VERMOUTH 

- MARSALAS 

CHERRY CORDIAL 

MALAGAS 



JOSE BOULE, 
A, BRONDUM & SON, 
ROUYER, GUILLET & CO,, 
JOHN JAMESON & SON, Ltd,, 
THE ARDBEG DISTILLERY CO., 
CHAS, TANQUERAY & CO., 
MAGNUM BRAND, 
MAGNUM BRAND, 
MAGNUM BRAND, 



TARRAGONAS 

AGQUAVIT 

. BRANDIES 

IRISH WHISKY 

SCOTCH WHISKY 
OLD TOM GIN 
JAMAICA RUM 

ST. CROIX RUMS 
HOLLAND GIN 



i 



ORDERS SOLICITED FOR DIRECT SHIPMENTS. 



SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS IN TERMS, PRICES, ETC. 

Dr^^-Roval 



$21 Per Case, 



QUARTS 




$23 Per Case, 



PINTS 



Ih>n'l let the I'rlie Prtghten Toil. 
The QUALITY <» there. 



I'^lmrxllm'"''"' 




I'seil I'li-lltiii III/ Some n/' the Finest H7>ie 

Drill Ker/i in \ew York, Boston 
and I'hilmlelithlti. 



Th Wine has been 
claimed by 



Universally recognized as one of the choicest 
DRY SPARKLING WINES OF FRANCE. 

FOR SALE BY 

WINE MERCHANTS & GROCERS. 
TRY IT. 

known since 1811. Very largely used both in Europe and England, 
best Authorities in the World as an Absolutely Pure French 
Sparkling Wine of Remarkable Value. 



Pro- 



TRY IT ONCE. YOU WILL USE NO OTHER. 



SOLE AGENTS W. A. TflYbOR & CO., 39 BROADWAY, N. Y. 



f/fGlfie WIJME /rjMB SflF^IT F^EVIEW. 



33 



(Slierwood .fe Sherwooil, Continue'1.) 

White Seal 10.00 

Pontet Canet 11.50 

La Rose I'.'.riO 

Gold Seal l.t.50 

Graves S.5(l 

Saulernes a. 50 

Mackenzie's Ports anil Sher- 
ries in wood per i;allon 1.75 to 4.50 
Mackenzie's Ports and Sher- 
ries in eases 10.00 to 14.00 

Uuut, Uoope, Teaj;ue & Co's 

Ports in cases l.S.OOto 19.00 

CHARLES MEINECKE A CO. 
314 Sacramento street. San Fraueisco. 
A. de Luze A Fils. IJi>rdcanx 

Clarets, per ca.se t.S.00 to 138.00 

A. de Lnze it Fils, Bordeaux 

Sauternes, per case 12.00 to 20.00 

C.Marey A LiKcrBclair.Nuits 

Burijundics, white and 

red, per case l.i.tN) to liS.OO 

D. M. Feuerlieerd,Jr.,&Co., 

Oporto, Port wines 

per case 15.00 to 20.00 

D. M. Feuerheerd, Jr., A Co., 

Oporto, Port Wines, 

in w ood per gal 2.00 to 5.50 

Duff Gordon A Co.. Sherries 

in wood per ,i;al 2 00 to 5.50 

Lacave A Co.,Shert ies Crown 

Branding 1.40 to 1.75 

South Side Madeira 2.00 to 2..50 

St. Croix Rum, L. B 5.50 

Arrack ■• Royal " Batavia 5.00 to 6.00 

Boord A Son, London Dock 

Sherry, per case 12.00 to 15.00 

G. M. PabstmannSohn, Mainz 

Rhine Wines per case.. S.50 to 2S 00 
Sehulz A \Va;;ner, Frankfurt 

o M Rliine Wines per 

case 11.00 to 14.00 

W. A. TAYLOR A CO. 
Jerez de la Fronteia, 

SHERRIES. 

Per Gal, 
No. 1 P Tahle. full bodied ( -.. ^, 

1 VP Table, very pale t ' * ' 

2 P Full «nJ round ) , -„ 

2 VP Very Pale, li!;ht, fine J • ''" 

3 p Full body, sott, rich i , „. 

3 VP Verv pak-, li-ht, full \ • ' ''■' 

4 P Full iHulv, old, mell.iw ( , ,. 

4 VP Verv pale, delicate, dry \ • •• 

5 P Full body, rich, fruitv i g .„ 
5 VP Paie, old, fine " i " " 



6 P Extra full and fruity ) 

(i VP Verv tine and mellow ( " 

7 Amo A.MO.NTILLADO, old and 

nuttv. 

S CLO CLOROSA, mellow sof I . . 
•J Rex Superl) old Desert Wine.. . 

10 A.MONTILI.ADO Solera, very 

old and nuttv 

11 QUEEN VICTORIA Grand old 

wine 



2.r> 



2K.') 

3 25 
3.35 



440 
5.65 



8PBCHI. WINES. 

Velvet A Clean, soutul wine 1.25 

B Full l.oilv and rich 1.50 

Special N Soft, lull and tine 1.00 

W Dark, full body 1.7.) 

" B Clean and sound — Fino, . . l.HO 

Seco Fine, old and dry fl.H.'i 

O S Fine, rich and fruity 3.45 

C N Sutierb table 3.10 

Corona Dclicion?' and delicate. .. . 3.25 

Special S Grand old wine 4.011 

Neclar— Fino, N. P. U 4.05 



RHtNE .\ND MOSELLE WINES. 

Wilhclni Panizza, Mayence. 

Per Case. 

Laubenteimer $S"00 

Dledisheimer H.hO 

Niesteiner 10.25 

Hockheimer 11 50 

Liebfraumilch 13.2.'j 

Foster Jesuitgartcn 13.7.") 

Rudesheimer 14.00 

Ebacher 14.7.) 

Geseaheimer 17.25 

Marcobrunner 17.50 

Raunt baler lO.UO 

Geisenheim Rothberg 21.00 

Neisteimer Rehbach 21.50 

Rudesheimer Berj; J 23.00 

Bulk wines at f. o. b. prices. 

PORTS. 

Silva ct Cosens. 

Per Gal. 

T— Tawnev $1.90 

R— Extra full body and rich, . 2.03 

V T— Verv tawney 2.25 

V O T— Very old tawney 2.:i5 

T P— Extra tawnev, delicate 2.50 

T P 0— Tawney, extra old 3.10 

BRANCO— White— Fine While Port, 3.25 
JEWEL— A Specialtv, old and mel- 
low ". 3.50 

S 0— Superior old 3.85 

EMPEROR— 30 years in wood, grand 

old wine 4.75 

M C R— 1827— Choicest royal, 6.35 



Direct shipping orders solicited on the 
tnost fav()rable terinfe. 

TAUUAUONA WINES. 

Jose Boule, Tarragonia. 

i)rs. A octs. per Gal. 

* Fine, clear and smooth , $1.15 

ROYAL PlllE JUICE- Full body 

and rich 1.25 

TAWNEY I'OHT -Light color, soft 

and old 1.25 

These wines have none of the objecl- 
icHiable astringency so common in wines 
of this class, and are abtiolutely pure. 

American Whiskies. 

HELL. MANN llliOS. A CO, 
.525 Front streel, San Frant:isi-o. 

Blue Grass, per gallon ?2.IKI to »:i..W 

Boone's Knoll, " 2.40 to 4.50 

8PRUANCE, STANLEY A Co., 
410 Front street, San Francisco. 

Kentucky Favorite $ 3.00 

Extra Kentucky favorite... 3.50 

O. P. T 2.50 

O. K. Old Stock 5.00 

Harries' Old Bourbon 2.00 

Kentucky Favorite, in cases 8. .50 

H. O. B. jugs 9.00 

O. F. C jugs 10..^ 

African Stomach Bitters, cs. 7.50 



SIEBE BROS. A PLAGEMAN, 
322 Sansome street, San Francisc 

O K Extra $S.bU to 

K Rosedale 2.50 to 

llvain 

Golden Pearl 

Marshall 

Old Family Bourbon 

Old Bourbou 



$6.00 
3.00 
2.75 
2.25 
3! 25 
1.75 
1.50 



SHERWOOD A SHERWOOD. 
212-214 Market street, San Francisco 
Carlisle in bbls. Re-imported 

Spring '89 per gal 

Carlisle in bbls. Re-imported 

Spring '86, per gal 

Keystone Monogram Rye in 

cases, per case 

Old Saratoga, in cases, per 

case 

Mascot Bourbon 'n bbls per 

gal 

Robin Hood Bourbou iu bbls 
per gal 



$2.50 
3.25 
14.25 
15.25 
2.25 
2.50 



Sherwood Private Stock In 

bbls, i>er gal S.OO 

O. P. 8. Sherwood in bbls, 

per gal 3.25 

Old Saratoga, in bbls per gal 4.00 

JOSEPH MELCZER A CO. 
.504 and 506 Market street, San Francieco. 
Native Pride, Old Bourbon, 

(per bbl) per gallon $2.50 

Old Rip Van Winkle 2.50 

Nevilles Old Bourbon 1.50 

KOLB A DENHARD, 
420-426 Montgomery St., San Francisco. 
Per gal Per cs. 

Nonpareil $3..50 $7.50 

Nonpareil A 4.00 9.00 

Nonpareil AA 5.00 12.00 

Canteen S..50 8,00 

Canteen OPS 5.00 U.CiO 

NABERrALFS^ BRUNE, 

323 and 325 Market street, San Francisco. 

Phojuix Old Bourbon, A 1 . . $2.75 

" OldSt'k S.OO 

" Al, 90 pf 2.50 

•' OK.lOOpf 3.50 

" Pony, PriT 81'k 4.00 

Club House Bourbon, Old.. . 4.50 6.00 

Gold Meda! Bourliou, lull pf 2..')U 

Union Club " •' 2.25 

Superior Whisky 1.75 

•• BB Whisky 1.50 

LigooRS — In cases. 

Per Case. 

Phoenix Bourbon OK, in 56 $10.50 

Al, " 7.50 

Al,24 pts 8.00 

Al,48J^pt 9.00 

Rock and Rye Whisky in 5a 7.50 

Rum Punch'Extract.'in .58. 8.00 

Blackberry Brandy, in 5s. 7.50 

HENCKEN A SCHRODER, 
210 Front street, San Francisco. 

Per Gallon. 

Our Favorite OK $2.75 to $;j.50 

Our Choice 2.50 •• 3.00 

Paul Jones 2.25 " 2.50 

Star of '76 2.00 

Old Crown 1.75 " 2 00 

Old Bourbon 1.50 

CHARLES MEINECKE A CO., 

314 Sacramento street, San Francisco. 

(Charles Meiiiecke A Co., Conlinued) 

John Gibson Son A Co $2.00 to $4.00 




ESTABLISHED 1810. 



OVEB^^ 



OVERHOLT 

PenDsylvania Pure Rye WMsKey 

•The - Finest - in - the - World." 

JONES, MUNDY 4, CO., Agents, San Francisco. 




W. G. COLDEWEY, President. 



LOUISVILLE 

PUBLIC WAREHOUSE CO. 

LOUISVILLE KY. 

CIl.iRTEJiED ISSS. CAPITAL $300,000.00. 

FOK Till-: 

STORAGE OF KENTUCKY WHISKIES. 



I"Kii1'Hii:tiik.s - 



SPECIAL BONDED WAREHOUSE No. 1. 

FOR FRUIT BR.\NDIES. 
NoTX — PoeltlTely do Wblsk; received unlesi direct from the Distillery. Wbitx roB Ratu. 



34 



f/ceifie WIJME /rJ^E) SflF^IT PREVIEW. 




HEDWOOD TBPS. 



F. KORBEL &L BROS. 



723 Bryant Street San Francisco 



Or at NORTH FORK MILL, 

Humboldt County - California 



CHAS. \y. FORE, 



Ji'lIN M'la'ANi K. 



Spruance, Stanley & Co. 

IMPOIiTKItS ANT) JOBBERS OF FI\E 

Wpes, Wliies aiid Lipis. 

Sole agents for the Celebrated African Stomach Bitters 

41G FitANT StRFET, - - S\N Fl!A>rimo. f'Ar,. 



ESTABLISHED I8S3. 



SAMUEL WANDELT, 



STEAM AND HAM) 



' at, 03, 05 Nonrii third st., brookltx, \. r. 

Wine aoH Lip Barrels alio TanKs 

jPl Speeialty. 

I am now prepared to make and furniBh llie lari,'est, as well as llie smallest, 
article in my line of Cooperate. Estimates given wilh promiitness. All work war- 
ranted to be tinished in workmanlike manner and ecjnal to any tn the market. 



TRADE MARKS. 

WM. G. HENDERSON, Patent Attorney and Solicitor. 

Xorrlti Uldy., ."tth * 1' Sts., Sear U. S. Patent iiJJIce. Koomx '-JO to i'.i 
P. O. Box 12a. WASllIXOTOX, 1>. C. 

SeTenteen years' experience, including service in Examining Corps, U. S. Patent 
Olllee. American and Foreign Patents procured. Caveats filed. Rejected ajiplica- 
tlons revived. Opinions given as to scope and validity of patents. Infringement 
suits proseculcd and defended. TRADE-MARKS, LABELS AND COPYRIGHTS 
registered. 

1^" Copy of any printed patent, trade-mark or label furnished for 25 cents. 
CorreBpoDdeace ioTited. Hand-book on Patents furnished FREE on application. 



jCr FIXK !> HINTING 

— CO TO — 

R. M. \A/ooD Co 



INTI<liNAL REVENl'E AND mm BROKERS. 

THE EXPORTATION OF QRAPE BRANDY, WHISKY AND SPIRITS FROM 
BOND OR WITH PRIVILEGE OF DRAWBACK, SPECIALTIES 



Dealers in U. S. Stamlard Hydrometers and Extra Stems, Prime's Wantage 

Rods, Die Wheels and Gauging rods. Also Distillers', Ileclifiers, 

Wholesale IJ'iunr Dealers and Brewers' Books. 



0FF16E, 413 WASHINGTON STREET, 



SAN FRANGISGO. 



F. O. Bo3c S240B. 



XelephLone; S4e. 




JOSJELGZEIl&GO: 

Gruwers anil Dealers in 
Califoruta 

WINES AND BRANDIES 



Proprietors Glen Ellen V/ine Vaul's. 



Fine Table Wines a Specialty 



504-506 Marltet St., 

San ]-'i:u]cisr.i, CA. 






A30 PINE STREET, 



SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 



See Specimen of odh Work in this Paper. 



Pure California Wines & Grape Brandies. 
THE 

Sail Mel Wliie Go. 

OV SAX a Ainu EL, 
Los Angeles County, Cat. 

Arenowpreimred with a large stock of wines and 
l)randies of tlieir own growth to supply the trade 
and the market generally. This Company owns 
the largest vinevard in the world, covering over 2,500 acres. They have held their 
wines and brandies for several years in their own cellars, and do not offer any of 
their product until it has become properly matured. Their large stock of ma- 
tured wines and brandies thus accumulated is now open to the purchaser. All 
goods under their trademark are warranted pure and unadulterated. Being the 
successors to B. D. WiL.soN * Co., and to J. Dk Barth Shokb. they have liecome 
|.,>sBcssers of the "SHORE" Brand of Brandy and -'MOCNT VINEYARD" 
Wink. Correspondence solicited. 

MAUSUALL, SI'KLLMAXA CO., J. VE liAIiTH SlfORB, 

No. 5 New York and Brooklvu Bridge Vault, President San Gabriel Wine Co. 

Fi:\NKroKT St., Nkw Vohk. San Gabriki,, Cal. 




31A-316 BATTE-Rg STREET 



GEO. C. BUCHANAN 



WHISKY BROKER, 



8AM FRANCISCO 



122 EAST MAIN STREET 



LOUISVILLE, KY. 



f/reifie WIJME /rJMD SfiRIT f^EVIEW. 



35 



QUININE-WHIHKY CO., Louipville, Ky. 

IN FIVK CASK LOTS. 

Larire size. 1 dnzi'n to case. ,. . $1100 

Mwjiiim " -Z ■• '• 11. M 

Small " i " •• 10.00 

COMIIINATION CASK. 

One dozen luriif $3). (10 

" " iiu'iliiim 20. 0() 

Two " small ao.OO 

MOOUE, HUNT >t CO., 
404 Front strt't't. Sail Franilsfo. 

Per Gallon. 
Extra Pony in bbU or '/i-\ib\s *6.00 to J.S.OU 
A A •■ •• pf 4.00 

B " " " S..')0 

C ..... ;J00 

Kye in bbls and }i-bbls from S.50 to 5.00 

A A in cases 11.00 

C in eases S.."}*) 

Imported Champagnes. 

CHARLES MEINECKE & CO. 
314 Saeramento street, Sau Franciseo. 

D«UTZ « OILDKKMANN, AY.. CHAMPAONE. 

Gold Lacl< See. per ease t32.00 $:i4.00 

Gold Lack See. 6 Ma^mims 

per ease 31.00 

Cabinet Green Seal, per bskt 2.5.50 27.00 

DIIPANLOUP 4 CO., REIMS. 

Carte Branebe, per case 21.00 22.00 

HELLMANN BROS, cfe CO., 
525 Front street, San Fraueisco. 

KrngACo. "Private Ciivee" 

per ease.. t34.00 J.3G.00 

Josepb Perrier fits & Co 

per basket 19.00 20.00 

Adrien ife tils, per basket.. . . 17.00 IS.OO 

W. B. CHAPMAN, 

12.) California street, San Francisco. 
Perrier Jouet A Co."Sptoial"*:B.50 tSri.M 

Reserve Dry 34.00 Sfi.OO 

Perrier Jouet & Co. Brut.... 34.00 36.00 
Half pts "Speci al" i42 in c s of 48 bottles. 

SHERWOOD * SHERWOOD. 
212-214 Market street, San Francisco. 
Moet ct Cbandon, Wbite Seal 34.00 36.00 
Brut Imjier'! 36.5C 3S.50 

WM. WOLFF cfe CO. 
329 Market street, San Francisco 

QUARTS. PINTS 

Pommery Sec *.S4.00 *;>6.00 

MACONDRAY BROS. & LOCKARD, 

Ao ENTS 

124 Sansome street, San Francisco. 
Louis Roederer, Carte 

Blancbe $»t.00 J;?6.00 

Louis Roederer, Grand Tin 

^ Sec 34,nn 30,00 

Louis Roederer, Brut S4.00 36 00 

W. A TAYLOR cfe CO., 
39 Broadway, New Y'ork. 

SPARKLINCi SAUMUR. 

Ackerman-Lausence, Saumur, France 

Dry Royal $21.00 *23 00 

Brut " Ml 00 23.00 

Imported Brandies. 

WM WOLFF & CO., 

32'J Market street, San Francisco. 

Martcll'9 Brandy, « per case 115 00 

rn -"-00 

VO " 041,0 

: •■ JSO " su'.OO 

;; •• wsop •' 50.50 

" in octaves 5.75 to 12 00 
CHARLES MEINECKE & CO. 
314 Sacramento street, San Francisco 
Champ Vineyard Pro(>i-s. Co., 
Boutelleau A Co. man- 
agers Cognac in Octaves 

Th. ?^'"^*'- ;••;>• »5.a5to»8.5o 

The \ine3ard Proprs. Co. 
Boutelleau A Co. mana- 
gers Reserve Vintages. 11.00 to 14.00 

E. REMY MARTTrr& CO., Cognac 

HELLMANN BROS. A CO., AGENTS 

525 Front Street, San Franciscc) 

Eau-dc-Vie vieille H5 oo 

U.OO 

â– c.. , 19.00 

rine champagne 20 00 

Grande champagne vieille 22!oo 

!.' ." ,T « J!^'™ • Ssitxi 

y 0. P. 1858 :«).,M) 

;; 8. O. p. 1847 .-(5.00 

V.sVo.lX.'Vs-ii ,-,o.(K) 

In octaves $4.70 to 0.25 

W. B. CHAPMAN. 

123 California street, San Francisco 
(H. Cuvillier A frere Cognac.) 

Fine Champagne, "Reserve," " ^' 

l^'O $82 0(1 

GrandeFine Champagne, 1860 SG.M 



HELLMANN BROS. & CO., 

525 Front street. San Francisco. 

E. Remy Martin A (lo., Cognac. 

Cognac in octaves per gal. . 5.50 6..50 

In cases, see special advertisement. 

P. Frapiii .\: Co., Cognac. 

Cognac in octaves, per gal.. 5.65 6.50 

Planat A Co., Cognac. 
Cognac in octaves, (ler gal. 5.25 

W. A. TAYLOR A CO., 
39 Broadway. New York. 

COGNAC- liHANlllKK. 
KOIIYER, CillM.LET iV CO., COGNAC. 

Vintage. IJr. Casks, [jer gal. 

IS86 *4.S5 

1884 540 

1875 6.55 

1S69 7.40 

1840 12.25 

V SO 1750 

Octaves, 5 cents per gallon extra. 

CASES. 

Cases » 14.50 

» • 16.25 

" •«« 17.85 

" »»•» 19.50 



Imported Whiskies. 

BOWEN & SCHUAM, 

204 California street, San Francisco. 

Bernard & Co., Leith Scotland. 

Encore Scotch $12.00 



SHERWOOD & SHERWOOD. 
212-214 Market street, San Francisco. 
Burke's » • * Irish, cases 12.00 

"•»•*" ■' 14.00 

" Garnkirk Scotch " 12.25 

" Viceregal Scotch " 13.50 

Lawson's Liqueur " " 13.50 

UamVar, " '• 12.00 

McKenzie's Glenlivet • » » 

Scotch, per case 12.50 

Bushell's Club Irish, in wood 

per gallon 4.50 



HELLMANN BROS. & CO. 

525 Front street, San Francisco. 
J. B. Sherritr .feCo., Lochin- 

dae Islay, Scotch whisky 

in wood, per gallon. . . . 3.80 

J. B. Sherriff.tCo., Lochin- 

dae Islay, Scotch whisky 

per case 12.00 

Dublin Distillers Co., Ltd., 

Dublin, Irish whisky, 

in wood, per gallon. . . . 4.50 

Dublin Distillers Co.; Ltd , 

Dublin, Irish whisky, 

per case 12.00 



WM. WOLFF .fc CO., 
329 Market street, San Francisco. 

Canadian Club per case $15.00 

Wm. Jameson ct Co.. " 10.50 

A. Usher's Scotch. . . . " 11.00 and 12.00 



CHARLES MEINECKE & CO., 
314 Sacramento street, San Francisco. 
Boord & Son, London Finest 

Irish Malt Whiskey. . . . $12..50 

Royal Hgbld Scotch Whisky. 12..50 

John Ramsay. Islay Mall 

Scotch Whisky 13.50 



W. A. TAYLOR .t CO., 

.39 Broadwav. New York. 

The Aidbeg Distillery Co., Islay. 

Qrs. Octs. 

New |;<.85 t;i90 

One Year 4.20 4.25 

Two Years 4.55 4.60 

Tbiee Years 4.85 5.00 

CASKS. 

» one doz. hot. $11.00 

• • • l.t.OO 

• » • » 20.00 

JOHN JAMESON & SONS, DUBLIN. 

Qrs Octs 

New $4.00 fl.05 

One Year 4.40 4.45 

Two Years 4.70 4 75 

Three Years 5.05 5.10 

Four Years 5.45 5.50 

CASKS. 

• 1 doz bot. $12.00 

• •• 14.,50 

• • 'i 24.00 



W. B. CHAPMAN 

123 California street, San Francisco. 

SCOTCH WHISKY. 

(John J)ewar A: Sons.) 

Old Highland "Extra Spec- 
ial" $13.00 . . 

Old Highland "Special Lii)- 

ueuer" 16.00 



Domestic Champagnes. 

A. WEKNER & Co., 

52 Warren street, New York. 

Extra Dry $ 7.00 $ 8.0O 



A. FINKE'S WIDOW, 

809 Montgomery street, San Francisco. 

Prices on ftppUcation. 

Litieral discount to the trade. 

PAUL MASSON, 

San Jose, California. 

Less than 5 cases. 

Premiere Ciivee, Dry $16.00 $18.00 

Siiecial.... 16.00 IS.OO 
Sjiecial discount for iitiaiitities of 5 
cases or more. 



Imported Goods. 

(MISCELLANEOUS.) 

WM. WOLFF 1% CO., 

329 Market street, San Francisco. 

J. de Kuyjier A Sons Gin, large hot $20.50 

med. " 16.00 

" •' small 9.50 

Cantrell & Cochrane Belfast Ginger 

Ale per barrel of 10 dozen 15.00 

Wolfe's Schiedam Schnapps per case 

quarts 9.50 

Wolfe's Schiedam Schnapps per ease 

pints 10.50 

Benedictine, per case, quarts 20.00 

" " i>int8 21.50 

Apollioaris Mineral Water 

Hungarian Aperient Water 

Frieclrichsball 

Bartboloraay Brewery Co., Roches- 
ter, N. y 

Dog's Head brand of Guinness' 

Stout an Ba^s' Ale 

Theo. Lappe s Genuine Aromatique 

per case 12.00 

Gilka Kummel per case 12.50 



W. B CHAPMAN, 

123 California street, San Francisco. 
Plymouth Gin (unsweetened) $10.50 



HELLMANN BROS. & CO., 

525 Front street, San Francisco. 

Blankenhevm A Nolet. 

Union Gin ' 2.50 

Vaugban Jones 

Old Tom Gin, in cases 11.00 

Orange Bitters " 11.50 

Patterson .fe Hibbert. 
Bass' Stout, per double doz 3.00 

Guinness' Stout, " " 3.50 

H. Underberg-Albrecht. 
Boonekamp of Maag Bitters, 12.75 to 13.75 

J. B. SheiTiff & Co. 
Jamaica Rum in 3^s and i^s 

per gallon 4..30 to 5.10 

Tarragona Port in "^ casks 

per gallon 1.25 

Adrien M. Warde's Italia de 

Pisco, |ier cise .30.00 

Sardines, brand "Philippe & Canaud." 



W. A. TAYLOR & CO. 
39 Broadway, New York. 

MAGNITM URANO, JAMAICA RUM. 

Qrs. Octs. 

A— Full body $;190 $:i.95 

B— Rich, fat and old 4.30 4.35 

C— Superfine, extra .5.05 5 05 

MAGNUM 3.10 3.50 

GINS. 
CHAS. TANQUKRAY ife CO., LONDON. 

Bulk. 

Old Tom Gin, quarter casks $3.25 

Old Tom Gin, octaves 3. .30 

Cases, one dozen each S.T5 



CHARLES MEINECKE & CO., 
814 Sacramento street, San Francisco. 

(BOORn * son's, LONDON.) 

Old Tom Gin, per case $11.00 

Pale Orange Bitters, per case 11.50 

Ginger Brandy. Liqueur " 12.00 

Jamaica Rum, Old " 12.00 to 14.00 

IAIN Royal Batavia Gin in 

cases of 15 large black 

bottles jjcr case 23.50 

in cases of 15 large 

white bottles jier case 24.50 

Kirschwasser, Macholl Freres 

Bavarian Highland, per 

case 20.00 

Swan.GIn in % casks 3.75 

Double Eagle Gin in ^ casks. 3.60 

John Ramsay Islay Scotch 

Whisky in }^ casks. ... 4 75 

Boord's Pineapple brand Ja- 
maica Rums in >^ casks. 5. 25 to fi.50 

SHERWOOD & SHERWOOD. 
212-214 Market street San Francisco. 

Per Case 
A. Houtman & Co.'s Gin, 

large black bottles $21.50 

A. Houtman A Co.'s Gin, 

medium black bottles. 18.50 

A. Houtman cfe Co.'s Gin, 

small black liottles 9.00 

A. Houtman A Co.'s Gin 

large white bottles 22.50 

A. Houtman A Co.'s Gin, me- 
dium white bottles 19.50 

A. Houtman & Co.'s Gin 

small white bottles 9.50 

A. Houtman A Co.'s Gin, 

octaves per gallon 3,.55 

Bass' Ale in wood, hbds $50.00 

Joules Stone Ale in wood, 

hhds 50.00 

Ross Ginger Ale, i)er barrel.. 15.00 

' Soda Water, per case 7.00 

" Tonic Water, " '7.00 

' Potash Water, " 7.00 

'* Raspberry Vinegar 6 to 

gal, per case 7.OO 

" Raspberry Vinegar 8 to 

gal, per case 6.00 

" Lime Juice Cordial 6 to 

gal, per case 6.0C 

" Lime JuiceJCordial 8 to 

gal, per case 4.5c 

" Lime Fruit Juice 6 to 

gal, per case 4.60 

" Lime Fruit Juice 8 to 

gal, per case 8.50 

" Orange Bitters, per case. 8.00 

Burke's Bass' Ale, pints, per 

bblof8doz 16.00 

Burke's Guinness' Stout, pts 

jier bbl of 8 doz 16.00 

Burke's Jamaica Rum per cs. 12. .50 

Old Tom Gin " 10.75 

Dry Gin " 10.75 

" Hennessy Brandy, per 

ease 16.00 

" Port Wine, Gato br'd 

per case 10.00 

Fleischman's Royalty Gin, 10 

gal jiackages, ])cr gal.... 2.25 

Fleischman's Royalty Gin, 15 

gal packages, |ier gal 3.22Ji 

Fleischman's Royally Gin, 20 

gal packages, jier gal 2.20 

Fleischman's Royalty Gin, 50 

gal packages, jicr gal 2.15 

Meinhold's Anchor Brand 

Cider, per case, ciuarts.... ,S,25 

Meinhold's .\nchor Brand 

Cider, per case, pints 4.00 



Syrups, Cordials, Etc. 

KOLB A DENHARD, 
422 Montgomery street, San Francisco. ' 

Rock Candy Syrup 75c. per gal 

Rasjibcrry Syrup 75c. 

Orgeat Syru|i 75c. " 



Louisville, St. Louis & Texas Railway 

" BEECHWOOD ROUTE." 
Consign your shipments from Louisville and interior 
Kentucky points, care of the Louisville, St. Louis 4. Texas 
Railway, which is a direct line to Pacific Coast points and 
same will receive prompt attention. 

For rates and other information address the undersigned 
L. S. Parsons, J. K. McCracken, H. C. Mordue, 
Traffic Man'g, Gen. Man'g, Asst. Gen. Frt. Agt 

Louisville, Ky. Louisville, Ky. Louisville, Ky. 



36 



f/reifie WIJMt /vpJD Sflf^lT [REVIEW 



LIE^LIDin^CS- I3ISTIXjLEI?,S. 



ADDRESS, INSURANCE. j BRAND. 


ADDRESS, INSURANCE. 


BRAND. 




IsTS. 


G. G. WHITE Co., 

Add: Paris, Bourbon Co., Ky., 

Nos. 1,4, 6, 7, 85c: No. 5,1.00. 




BOTJI2.BO 


Chickencock. 


BELLE of ANDERSON D'G CO. 


Belle of Anderson, 
Glenarme, 

Jessamine, 
Arlington. 




Add; S. J. Grecubaum, Louisville. 
Rate, 1.25. 


GREENBRIER DIST'Y CO. 

Greenbrier. D. No. 239 

Add: Wm. Collins & Co., Louisville. 

Rate 1.35. 


Greenbrier, 
R. B. Hayden. 


MELLWOOD DIST'Y CO. 


Mellwood, 

and 
Dundee. 


Louisville, Ky. 
Rate, 85c. 


ANDERSON & NELSON DIST'S CO. 

Louisville. 
Add: Anderson & Nelson Distilleries Cc 
Rate 85c. Louisville. 


Anderson, 
Nelson , 


EARLY TIMES DIST'Y CO. ) Early Times, 
Early Times, Ky. D. No 7 . ^^ „ ,, 
5 M. E. of Bardstown. Rates 1.25 ^ ^- ^•^"' 
Add : B. II. Hurt, Louisville. Jack Beam. 


Buchanan. 


R. F. BALKE & CO. 

Louisville, Kv. 
Rate 85c. 


"G. W. S." 
and 


F C DISTILLERY D. No. 113 


0. F. C, 
Carlisle. 


Runnymede, 


Frankfort. 
Add: Geo. T. Stagg Co., Frankfort. 


I?.~2"F1S. 


Rate 85c. 


SUSQUEHANNA DIST'G CO., 

Milton. 
Add; Jas. Levy & Bro., Cincinnati. 
Rates, 85c & 1.25. 




SUNNY BROOK and 

WILLOW CREEK DIST'G GO'S 
Distillery, Louisville, Ky. 
Contracting Offiiea, 128-130 Franklin St. 


Willow Creek, 
Sunny Brook. 


Susquehanna. 


Chiiago, 111. 
ROSENFIELD BROS & CO. , Proprietors. 


NORMANDY DIST'G CO., 

Louisville, Ky. 
P. 0. Box 2354, 

Rate 85 c. 


Normandj', 


J. B. WATHEN & CO. ] J. B. Wathen & Bro. 
Louisville, 
Rate 85c. Kentucky Criterion. 


and 
Montpelier. 


A. OVERHOLT & CO., 1 
Add; A. Overholt & Co., Pittsburg, Pa.' Overholt. 
Rate, 80c. 1 


OLD TIMES DIST'Y CO., 

Louisville. 
Rates, $1.00 & 81.25. 


Old Times. 


BARBER, FERRIELL & CO. 
Hobbs. D. No. 240 
Rate 1.50 




OLD KENTUCKY DIST'Y CO., 
Louisville, Ky. 


Kentucky Comfort 
and 

Gladstone. 


Old Grand-Dad, 
R. B. Hayden & Co. 


Rates, $1 and 81.25. 


J. B. WATHEN & CO. 

Louisville, 
Rate 85c. 




E. J. CURLEY & CO. D. No. 3 & 15 Blue Grass, 
Camp Nelson 


Lackawanna Rye. 


Rates: "B," "D," 'E" 1.25. "F," 3.50 Boone's Knoll. 


ANDERSON & NELSON DIS'G CO. 


\V. S. HUME, 

Silver Creek. Hume. 
Rate 85c. 


Louisville. 

Add: Anderson & Nelson Distiller's Co 

Rate S5c. Louisville. 


Nelson. 



< 



T. W. STEMMLER & CO. 



SOLE /VGEJMTS fOR UNITED STATES AJ^D CANt^DA- 



THEOPHILE ROEDERER & CO., MAISON FONDEE fcN 18C4. 

The Olebrated RED LABEL CHAMPAGNE, REIMS 
CADBURY BROS, CHOCOLATE and COCOA, BOURNVILLE 



BOSHAMER LEON & CO., CLARETS and SAUTERNES, BORDEAUX 
FELIX POTIN & CIE, CHOCOLAT and CONSERVES, PARIS 
Deo. BELLARDI A- CO., VERMOUTH, Established 1740, TURIN 



A. & L. BEAUDET FRERES, BURGUNDIES, BEAUHE 
OUIGONIS FRERES, OUVE OIL, NICE 
BRAND & CO., ESSENCE OF BEEF, LONDON 



lltAPK MARK _^ 3D I ^Eij O HSr T~) _A. C KI UEGISTEUKD. 

PURE RYE WHISKY. Purity and Quality Unexcelled. 

Th» "AVIIIOXDACK" ia a blend of rliir high ilass uhlskhs thniDiiiihl ii tnalurfd <iiul ean be highly reeommcttded for 

mt-iltctnat ittui yvnvval unv. 
None Oeiiulne without tntr Mtytittturt' on ncrk label ami rork-. 

NEW YORK: Union Square. PARIS! Boulevard das Italiana. 



CORDIAL MAKERS OF THE WORLD. 
EHlabllnhrd nr.rt. T 11. STf.MMI.LH. Director. 

CCLCBRATED C./EUii DC MENTHE AND OTHER CORDIALS. WELL KNOWN FLEUR-DE-LIS COGNACS. FOR SALE EVERYWHERE. 



IF YOU are in need of PRINTING give us a call. We make a specialty 
of fine Printing, Engraving, Lithographing, Photo-Engraving and, also 
original designs for labels of every description. 



P/ceifie WiJJE /tf^D Splf^lT [REVIEW. 



CLASSIFIED INDEX OF ADVERTISEMENTS. 



CALIFORNIA WINES AND BRANDIES. 

Page. 

Boyd, F. 0. & Co 6 

California Wine Growers Union 9 

Carpy, C. & Co 21 

Cliauche & Bon 8 

De Turk, 1 8 

Gundlach, J. & Co 31 

Gurtnti & Bernard 6 

Hedgesido Vineyard 22 

luglenook Vineyard Agency 23 

Italian-Swiss Colony 31 

Kohler (Si Van Bergen 21 

Kohler & Frolding 21 

Kolb & Denliard 28 

Kiihls, Schwarke & Co 

Lachmau & Jacobi 30 

Lachman Co., S 21 

Laudsberger & Son 6 

Los Gatos & Saratoga Wine Co 30 

Masson, Paul 2 

Melczer, Joseph & Co 34 

Minnse. William T 6 

Mohns & Kaltenbaeh 30 

Napa Vallev Wine Co 21 

L J Rose & Co., Ltd 2 

San Gabriel Wiue Co 34 

Schilling, C. & Co 8 

Smith, Julius P 6 

StaggCo., The Geo. T 23 

Starace, Aehille 2 

Thornton & Pippy 7 

To-Kalou Wine Co 30 



DISTILLERS AND BROKERS. 

Anderson & Nelson Distilleries Co The 11 

Barber, Ferriell & Co 24 

Buchanan, George C 34 

Curley, E. J. & Co 7 

Early Times Distillery Co 24 

Fleischman & Co 5 

Leading Distillers' Cards 40 

Le\'y, Jas. & Bro 42 

Mayhew, H. B. & Co 34 

Mellwood Distillery Co 1 

Monarch, R 24 

Moore & Selliger 23 

Overholt, A, & Co 33 

Quinine- Whisky Co 27 

Rea, H. R. & Co 29 

Shufeldt, H. H. &Co., C. W. Craig & Co., Agents 5 

Youngberg & Borland 2 



FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC CHAMPAGNES. 

Chapman, W. B 23 

Finke's Widow, A 30 

Frash & Co 27 

Hellmann Bros & Co 17 

Lachman, S. & Co 2 

Macondray Bros. & I^ockard 33 

Masson. Paul 2 

Sherwood & Sherwood IG 

Wolff, Wm. & Co 20 



IMPORTERS. 

Chapman, W. B li) 

Glaser, S 7 

Hellmann Bros. & Co 17 

Librowicz, Julius 29 

Macondray Bros. & Lockard 8 

Sherwood & Sherwood 17 

Starace, Aehille 2 

Stemmler, T. W. & Co 40 



Vignier , A 34 

Wolflf, Wm. &Co 15 

FRUIT BRANDY DISTILLERS. 

Taylor, W. A. & Co 32 

Natoma Vineyard Co 28 

Walden & Co 5 

West, Geo. & Son 33 

SAN FRANCISCO WHOLESALE LIQUOR DEALERS. 

Hey, Grauerholz & Co 6 

Hotaling, A. P. & Co 29 

Kolb & Denhard 32 

Kuhls, Schwarke & Co 6 

Moore, Hunt & Co 5 

Martin, E. & Co (! 

Naber, Alfs & Brune 6 

Siebe Bros. & Plagemann 4 

Spruance, Stanley c& Co 34 

Walter, M. & Co 6 

IMPORTED BRANDY. 
E. Remy Martin & Co., Hellman Bros. & Co., Agents 13 

SYRUPS, CORDIALS, BITTERS, PRUNE JUICE, ETC. 

Abbot's Angostura Bitters 23 

Ball & Cheyne Co 7 

Culbert & Taylor 38 

Kolb & Denhard 32 

Rudkin, Wm. H 30 

Walter, M. & Co 6 

WINE FININGS, ETC. 
Schulze-Berge & Koechl 4 

WAREHOUSES, STORAGE, ETC. 

Bode&Haslett 4 

Louisville Public Warehouse Co 33 

Sherman, J. D. W 23 

BOTTLES, CASINGS, CORKS, ETC. 

Colgan, J. B, Corks 41 

Korbel, F. & Bros., Tanks 34 

MISCELLANEOUS. 

Bolton & Strong, Engravers 34 

Bonest«ll & Co., Paper Dealers 41 

Celery Beef & Iron Co 25 

Chickasaw Cooperage Co 28 

Cleveland Faucet Co 29 

Dunne, J. P «& Co., Saloon 41 

Goodyear Rubber Co 5 

Henderson, Wm. G 34 

Hobbs, Wall & Co., Box Manufacturers 30 

Humboldt Mineral Water Co 28 

Jordan, Dr. & Co 41 

Loma Prieta Lumber Co 30 

Louisville, St. Louis & Texas Railway 35 

New Home Sewing Machine Co 41 

O'Brien, James, Saloon 41 

Rosenfeld's Sous, John, Clipper Ships 41 

Sanders & Co., Coppersmiths 41 

Sprague Correspondence School of Law 41 

Tiibbs' Cordage Co 47 

Wandelt, Samuel 34 

WoliT, William & Co 18 

Subscrribiz for ttie; 

pacific "l^ina and ^-^irit ^qviqxO 

THREE DOLLARS PER YEAR. 

AOVEHTISINa ftATES ON APFLICATIOH. 



4 



fASlfie V/lf^E AJ^JD Sflf^'T PREVIEW. 



C. Bdsdscho. 




J. GUKDLACH. 



J. GU]MDbACH & CO. 

Vineyard Proprietors and Sliippers of 

1.1 ••" 



SAN pRANCISCO- -/JEWYoRI^ 




iiiii WiiieN and Mdm, 



nmmm RHINE FARM, soMni.i a. 



And BACCHUS WINE VAULTS, 438-44-2 Bryant St., S. F. 



S. Ji. cult. M.iuiii.r.t- si:<()\i> STS. 



\l'tv I'or/*' Itrfliirh 
S. E. Cor. WATTS 8. WASHINGTON STS. 



JOnX D. SIEBE. 



J. P. l'L.\fiEM.W.N. 



F. c. .sii;i;i:. 




SlEBE BHOS. 8t PliRGECnRfifi, 

WINE AND LIQUOR MERCHANTS. 

SOLE AGENTS FOR 

01. Imkk Itoiirhoii & Rje Wliift 

AND THE 

Celebrated Belle of Bourbon. 



•'S 



Southeast Cor. Sacramento and Sansome Sts.. 



San Francisco, Ca 



JPS.K.XISTIC " PRINTING ~ ch:r.om;jPlxic 

R. M. WOOD CO. 

:!1C. IJATTKKY STREET. - - SAX I'U A N( ISCO. CAL. 



I 



q£F\NED SACCHAR;/y,p. 

500 Times Sweeter Than Sugar. 

THE GRKAT SWEETENING MEDIUM IN THE MANUEACTUUE OF AERATED WATERS SUCH AS 

GINGER ALE, LEMON SODA, ETC. 

THE I'NSURI'ASSEI) IN(iREDlENT FOR I'LKASANT TASTE— To 

svn^eeten aazine and to blend ^a^HISKIES 

Fol; r.VRTlLLI.AKS AI'l'lY To 

SCHULZE-BERGE & KOECHL, 

SOLE Lvi'oirrKH.s A.\i> ijri:.\si:i:s. . . . . . ;:i Mrinrw sri;i-:FT. XKuvonK. 

ABRAMSON-HEUNISCH CO., SAN FRANCISCO, SELLING AGENTS FOR THE PACIFIC COAST. 



BODE & HASLETT 

Warehousemen 1201 Battery St., San Francisco 



PROPRIETORS OF 



GENERAL INTERNAL REVENUE BONDED WAREHOUSE, No. ONE 

N. E Corner Third and King Streets V For the Storage of Whisky and Spirits in Bond 

STORAGE AND INSURANCE AT LOWEST RATES. ADVANCES MADE ON GOODS IN WAREHOUSE' 



f/ceifie wijME jk^\^ sfif^ir [review. 



Henry H. Shufeldt ^ Coivipany, 

DISTILLERS, CHICAGO. 

CELEBRiro ItERllL di 11 RYE ILT (M 




DISTILLED BY THE HOLLAND PROCESS. 



Equal in flavor and surpassing in 
purity the most famous imported 
Gins. Put up in packages prepared 
to hold contents colorless, and con- 
tain, respectively 44, 24, 15 and 10 
gallons, all under double stamps. 





And are unquestionably the purest and most wholesome Gins today, used in the U. S. 

FOR SALE 3Y ALL WHOLESALE LIQUOR DEALERS AND DRUGGISTS. 

C. W. CRAIG & CO. California Agents, 205 BATTERY STREET. 



FLEISCHMANN & CO. 

CINCINNATI, OHIO. DISTILLERS OF 

SgLVA/N G-ROVE BOU-RBOM A/ND "Ry E WHISKIES. 



HIGH GRADE HOLLAND PROCESS- 



PERFECTION AND ROYALTY GINS. 



[ y:",",".'",",^".'4'V.".",".".' p:gyyt 
t ^'^ 

I 




LARGEST DISTILLERS OF PURE BRANDY IN THE WORLD. 
DISTILLERY AND VINEYARDS/ GEYSERVILLE, CAL. 



.<5.-».-C-'<5<-! 



>.-S>>-^>-^—f^-S^'C>"'S-"'C^'-C^'< 



\ nmm coGi^flG 

.TO*********'******************************* •«*«•'*•« * C ^ 

; ;tt-^+ -H-t ^--^ -H-f ■(— ^ •*— ^ -(-f -t-f •^-^ -t-H- -(--H -t-H- ■♦-»■ -t-H- -f-f -t^ 

:'t This Brandy, made aUvr the Frt'iu-h fdrmiila, from selected fresh j;rapc-a, has been Biiccessfiilly intro 

diiced, and is n<)W retrularly sold in the prin(ii>ai markets of Europe, in ettmpetilioii with French Cot;nnc. 
OUUial German and French chemists liave pronounced it (lie purest Brandy which comes lo their marlsctf. 
It is epjK'cially puitcd for the dru^; trade and others, where pnriiy is demanded. While ahioad these 
roods successfully compete, paying pnmi duties as the French, the American huyer has the advantage in j^icc between the Internal Kevcuue tax as- 
:ssed here and the cuelomB duties on foreign brandies. Samples will be sent on application. 



I 



WALDEN. 



â– ^w^j^LiDEnsr & oo. 




Eaatern Office 4f> Broad Street, \ew York. 



GETSJERnZLE SOXOSIA CO., CAL.' 



6 



f/reifie WIJME /cJMD Sflf^iT f^EVlEW. 




323-325 Market St,, S, F, 



D. V. B. JiEXAIUE. 



E. MARTIN & CO., 

IMTOETEES AND WHOLESALE 

iiiQUOH met^cHflHTS, 

408 Front St., San Francisco, Cai. 

SOr.F. ACKNTS FOK 

J. F. CUTTER AND ARGONAUT OLD BOURBONS. 



KSTABI.ISHED 1SS7. 

F. O. BOYD 5^ CO, 

Commission Merchants, New York. 

CALIFORNIA WINES & BRANDIES. 



Babton's Celebrated Swert Wines, Fresno. 

Capt. J. C. Mekitiiew, Tro-spect Vinevaed. 

Advances Made on Consignments. 



Williain T. Minuse 

Commission Merchant. 

.',>; i:i:.\vi:ii st.. m:w youk. 

Agent for the Sale of Viticultural Products. 

CoiiBiKmnenl« of Round Wines and lirandics sDlicitcd. Adv.incus made on 
same at lowest rates. 

Representing John Thomann, St. Helena, Cal. 

Ewer it Atkinson, Rutherkohi>, Cal. 

A. I'. Adams Linu Vineyard, Fresno, Cal. 
EisEN Vineyard Co., Fresno, Cal. 



FOR FINE PRINTING 



GO TO 



I^. Is/L. AATOOHD OO 



314-316 Battery Street, 



SAN FRANCISCO 



Hey, Grauerholz & Co., 

iMPORTEIL'i AM) WHOLESALE DEALEKS IN 

WINES & LIQUORS. 



SOLE AGENTS FOI! - 



DAVY CROCK^tt WHISKY. 

BE SURE YOU ARE RIGHT, THEN GO AHEAD. 



NO. 215 SACRAMENTO STREET. 



SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 



OLIVINA VINEYARD. 

The OLIVINA Comprises 600 Acres of Hil 

Side Vineyard, Located ip the 

Livermore Valley. 



ff 






'^^'^'V^^Jt'^^J^ DRT, DELICATE, WELL MATURED TABLE WINES 



A SPECIALTY. 

SE\I) FOn S.IMVLE OliDBR. 

Correspondence Solicited By The Grower. 

JULIUS P. SMITH, LIVERMORE, CAL. 



M. WALTER &, CO., 

WHOLESALE LIQVOIl DEALERS 

Distillers of Biiters aim Gorfliais, 



811 Montgomery St., Bet. Jackson & Pacific Sts. 
Telephone No. 4^4. San Francisco, Cal. 



Landsberger & Son, 

Commission JVIerehants 

123 CALIFORNIA STREET, SAN FRANCISCO. 



Agents for the Purchase and Sale of Viticultural Products. 

Telephone; ISTo. SSO. 



John liEUNARII. 



Skcosdo Gta.'^ti. 



Quasti (S. "^ornardf 



frrnnrr.'i and Diilillera of - : - 



Gaiiforiiia WiHES m mfM 



Winery at (hiaKli <t Bcrnard\s Spur, Between Wed 
Glcndale and Tropica, Cal. 



b/>cF(GE PRODUeEF^S Of SWEET WINES. 

W(m'(i i'l}uf. ttir. .'til It ml thinutlii .sts.. I.iis inf/tlts, < iil. 



f/eifie WIJME /rJND Sflf^IT (REVIEW. 



S. GLHSER, 

123 California Street, San Francisco, Cal. 



,. GII!Ar!DA:CO.. Eperkw, 

. rri'oxT i\i CO., cognac. 

BMAXD ]!1!0SSACQ, Cognac, 
iME MAI.IFAUD, St. Meme fkes Cogsac, 
lEKMAN' JAN'SEN, StiUEiviM, 
ILANKEXIIEY.M .V: NOLET, ISottekdam, 
HOS. LOWNDES A CO., Loniion. - 
IIXOX vV CO., OroRTO, 



F^Ps-CIFIC COjPi-SX jPlG-ENX FOK.- 



CHAJirAGXES 

COGN.\CS 

- COGNACS 

COGNACS 

GOLDFINCH GIN 

CEXTAUIi GIN 

OLD LONDON DOCK RDM 

I'OliT WINES 



GAMliOA HEUMANOS, .Iekez de la Fronteka, - - SHERRIES 

RUIZ MATA & CO., Jerez de la Fkonteba, - - - SHERRIES 

CHR. MOTZ & CO., BouDEArx, - - CLARETS and SAUTERNES 

GEBR. ECKEL, DEinE.siiEiM, - . - . RHINE WINES 

VICTORIA MINERAL WATER CO., Oberlmisstein, VICTORIA WATER 

RHEINSTROM P.ROS., Cincinnati, O., - BLACKBERRY BRANDIES 

D. 0. BEATSON, Kihkcaldy, Scotland, - SCOTCH WHISKIES 



jPlLSO IIXTFOPS-XEK. OF 

RAMSAYS SCOTCH WHISKY. WISES IRISH WHISKY, E. i J. BURKE'S IRISH WHISKY, OPORTO AND 
TARRAGONA PORTS AND PRUNE AND CHERRY JUICE. 




Tltese Whishics arc. made in the Famous "ULTE GRASS ItEGIoy" So 
Jus'Iij celebrated as the home of the finest Whiskies in the Wnrhl, and 
ichich liave been ) or the last Century, recognized as such, giving the char- 
acter and high slnntling to KESTITKY WHISKIES u-hirh '.hey now enjoy. 



THESE FAMOUS WHISKIES CAN BE HAD IN LOTS TO SUIT THE TRADE FROM 

HELLMA/N/N BPxOS. 3c CO.. 51:5 p-RO/NT ST-REET, SA/N FKA/NeiSeO. 



THORNTON & PIPPY 



I'ltMlMCILTiikS, SOLK AGENTS 

S-«re;et "Wines, Bra.nd.ie;s and. Xabie "Wines. 
204 MARKET STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 

DISTRIBUTING AGENTS PAUL IVIASSON CHAMPAGNE 



8 



f/c(Blfie WIJME /cJ\D SflF^IT f^EVIEW. 



Ms Hoeneiei Ctiampape 

Highest Grade in the World! 

Used by All the Leading Clubs 
Hotels and Restaurants . . . 

Knr Piili' liy All Kirst-Class 
Grocers mid Wine ^lenliants. 




TilKKE KINDS, ALL OF EQUAL EXrELLENCE. 

CA-RTE BLA/NCHE 

£ Rich Wine! 

GRA/ND Vl/N SEC 

The Perfention of a. Dri/ Wine! 

B-RCIT 

An Exceeding]!/ Dry Wine! 



Macondray Bros. & Lockard, 



124 SANSOME STREET 

Sole Agents for the Pacific Coast. 



FORFINEPRINTING.roR. M.WOOD CO., 



314.-16Battery St., 
San Francisco, CaL 



:c-oMn^^^ia|r* f? 



!?'*?•**,„ 



I. DE TURK 

â–  ^<lJQinQs and ^-randies 




\ BRANDY, 

ii ANGELICA, 

fl HOCK, ^ 

ZINFANDEL, 
PORT, 

TOKAY, 



CLARET. 
SAUTERNE, 
, , MUSCAT, 

~' SHERRY, 

RIESLING, 
GUTEDEL. 



â– \/ine;ya-rd.s and. Cellaurs: 

Santa Rosa, Sonoma County, Cal. 

^Branch: 
.:.iO Sacramento St., San J'rniiclsco, Cal. 

C. M. MANN, Manager. 
New York Office, - - 91 Hudson St. 




TJHE jiKaHEST AWARD f ARIS EXPOSITIOJM 




Established. 

Ciuer/r\ore l/alley, <$al. 



188S. 



'-%o 






J9P. 



,\30^ 



I 



^i 






A. G. CHAUGHE, Proprietor. 

Office akd Depot, 695 Front St., Sas Francisco 



1889. 



GObD JVIE9AL. 



CHAUCHE &. BON, Successor to A. G. CHAUCHE 

Sdk- Cu-ni'ial Afjunls for tin- Mm-NT-IiOfiiE 'Vinks, 




'WINE MERCHANTS 



NEW YORK HOUSE 



5an Francisco. 



rALIFORNIA. 



"YSEN &TOTTEN 

24 DEY STREET. 



EUROPEAN HOUSE: 



OfnCi^^"^^^AULTS. 
230 -» 240 BRANNAN STREET, 
BET. |ir&2"-° 



* Bremen, Germany 



A 




[INCOR PORATED] 



VOL. XXXIV, No. 4. 



SAN FRANCISCO, MARCH 21, 1895. 



$3.00 PER YEAR 



Issued Semi- Monthly. 

R. M. WOOD CO.. - - PUBLISHERS. 

316 BATTERY STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 

TELEPHONE NO. 709. CABLE ADDRESS " FIELDVIIN/' SAN FRANCISCO. 

The I'.iriFir WryE .ixn SPnilT KKI'/KTI i.« the o»lii paper of 
fl.s c/ff.v.s JIV's? <»/' i'hivaffo. Jt (■h'<-ittali:'< atnnntt the WItitiesnIe and 
Ileliiil lli'iK' (iiitl Spirit Dealers iijtiir l'a<ifli- f'on.sf, the ^^ille Mak- 
ers anil liraiulii Hislillers of Calij'oriiia, the Wine and Itrandii Iniy- 
ers. and tlie Importers, Distillers and Jobbers of the United States. 

.Ill r//f;r/i<?, DR.iFTS, MOXEV ORUEUS. etc., .shoaUl be 
made paipihle to the li. M. WOOD CO. 

Siibseiiption ptr year— in advance, postage paid; 

For llie United States, Mexico and Canada $;! 00 

For European countries 4 OO 

Single copies 20 

Entered at tbe San Francitco Post OtBce as second-class matter. 

EASTERN BRANCH OFFICE: 
AV. A. GEFT, Manager, 1-3-5 Leonard St., New York City. 

J. Cm. r>E St. IlrnKKT p. c. Descalso 

President Vice-President 

California Wine Growers' Union 

pure: 

CALIFORNIA WINES AND BRANDIES 

CORNER SUTTER AND (iKANT AVKNl'K 

8AN FRANCISCO, CAL. 

HELP WANTEDrFOR^ArE,~EfC. 

"WANTED— 20,000 gallons clean Riesling, vintage 1891 or 
1892; uui.st be cheap. 20,000 gallons Port, gnarauteed 20 per 
cent., vintage 1892 or 1S9.'3; must be cheap. oOOO gaUoiis finest 
Sherry obtainable; will pay good price for this lot. Address W. 
T. Mi.NisK, 4(i P.eaver street, New York. lo.j k 

W.VNTKD by New York House for Cash, any quantity of sweet and dry 
wines. Address, giving all dctail.s, A. P. 42, care I'.mikic Wi.nk .\ni) 
Spirit Review. 

FOREIGN MARKETS. 

.\ gentleman retiring alter many yeais Mr\irc in Kiiroiu' in tin' I'nited 
States Di'pirtiuent of Agricnlturf. desires to add, among other representa- 
tions, a firm or syndicate of Wine iiealers ortirowcrs, who are prepared 
for Kuropean tiaile. .\ni also desiious to arrange' for t e sale of California 
Fruit. W'hili' in Europe have been successful in introilucing California 

Sroducts, anil would like to continue tlie .siine. Address Cii.\ki.ks ,I. 
ItRruv, late Special Agent in Euroi)e, i)ci)artinent of .Vgriculliiie, 3 lOast 
41st street, New York. 

TO THE TRADE. 

WARXIKG.— The pnl)li<^ is liend.y notilied that 14 ware- 
house receipts, covering tiie tbllowiiig described 7(1 barrels \V. II. 
McHrayer"s "Cedar Prook '" whisky, have been lost in tlic mail. 
Application has been made to the (listiller for thiplicate recei|)ts, 
and the delivery of whisky under original warehouse receipts 
has been slopped : 

10 Nov. '93, serials 11895—904. 

10 Dec. '93, " 12009—18. 

50 Dec. '94, " 17469- 5 IS. 

Cincinnati. Jamics Lew & Pro. 

Mar 5 — June 5. 



"WANTED — A position as wine maker and vineyardist; 
thoroughly competent and capabh; of managing a large i)lant; 
14 years as Manager and Superintendent with last ein])loyer. 
Address E. J. Pabek, Pox 1313, Madera, Cal. 



MA-RKET -REVIEW. 

/J^ALIFORNIA "WINES.— Business continues in about the 
^^ same condition, as to demand, although there is a firmer 
feeling in the matter of values. The hardening process contin- 
ues, and it is predicted by those who are in a position to speak 
with judgment that another advance in prices is certain in the 
not far distant future. Notwithstanding the dullness in all 
lines of trade, the e.xports of California wines continue in as 
large a volume as for many months past. This is evidenced by 
tbe fact that in the short month of Februarj' the shipments 
from this State were over 1,300,000 gallons, with a total of 3,222 
cases. This is certainl3' a fine showing, aud a glance at our 
tables of monthly shipments by rail to the East will show that 
these goods are going out for consumption. It is certain that 
they are not going forward for storage, or to avoid a prospective 
raise in freights, as there is no advance in the tariff known to 
be contemplated. The figures, which are otlicial. show that 
shipments by rail were more than 1,300,000 gallons, and that 
over one half million gallons were distributed throughout the 
LTnited States, exclusive of the city of New York. In view of 
the advance in prices, this is certainly a healthy showing. Or- 
ders are of fair volume, aud holders of sound, merchantable 
wines with an established reputation are holding up their prices 
and refuse to fill orders at reduced figures. This is the right po- 
sition to occupy, and if the entire trade will stand to that policj' 
the prosperity of both merchant and pioduceris assured. AVith 
the existing conditions, there is no reason why the business 
should not be put on a good sound footing within a compara- 
tively short time. Exports during the half month to foreign 
countries have been of unusually large volume, and plainly indi- 
cate a growing demand for California wines in those markets. 
Receipts fiom interior cellars have been very heavy, and for the 
two months and a half past have been nearlj' double the quan- 
tity received during the same jteriod of 1S91. 

Recent advices from New York are as follows : " Tiie re- 
cent iiicicMse in the price of dry wines is generally felt on the 
Eastern markets, aiul in many instances the buyers cheerfully 
submit to the advance ; tlie demand, however, is not large, and 
the holders will have to bo patient if they want to reap tlie ben- 
efit of the movement. Sweet wines and bi'andies remain un- 
changed iu prices owing to the general dullness and scarcity of 
demand." 

The shipments of California wines by sea and rail in Febru- 
ary were as follows: 

Ca.ses. Gallons. Value. 

Bv sea 1,314 272.991 81Ii).543 

I'.y rail overland 1,908 1,067,838 437,767 

Total 3,222 1,-340,829 8548,310 



10 



f/ceifie WI|J£ fi^Q Sflf^lT f^EVIEW. 



/California brandies.— The market is in sympathy 
^^ with tli(> movomcnt in California winos, and, wliile there 
is no active tlemand, exports to lionieslic and foreign ports are 
of good volume. We note one large shipment to (Jermany of a 
brand well established, which goes to show tliat California bran- 
dies arc still in demand among the trade of (icrniany who desire 
to sell a liigli grade of pure brandies. The statistics of tlie 
product during the last ninety days are not obtainable, but it is 
probable that the total is of moderate volume. Receipts from 
interior distilleries have been very small during the half month. 
Up to the 15th instant only 880 gallons have been received, as 
against ;5'2,-l45 gallons for the same period last year. For the 
two months and a half of this year the re(!eipts have been but 
63,010 gallons, as against 365,800 gallons during the same 
period of 189-1. 

The total shipments of brandy by sea and rail in February 
were as follows : 

Cases. Gallons. Value. 

By sea 26 18,178 89,646 

By rail overland 295 27,689 44,483 



THE LEGISLATURE AND THE LIQUOR PROBLEM. 



Total 321 



45,867 



854,129 



*y ^?^HISKIES. — Business is quiet generally, and the expected 
^y^ movement has not materialized. However, the spring 
trade has considerable time to develop, and while no particular 
activity is looked for, it is confidently believed that the next sixty 
daj's will bring an improved condition. The particularly un- 
pleasant feature of the situation is the slowness of collections. 
This applies especially to the country, where money has been 
tied up. How long it will take the loosening process to adjust 
things remains to be seen. Exports to foreign countries during 
the fortnight have been of average volume, while receipts were 
something over the average. The special whisky bonded ware- 
house proposition is still the subject of a great deal of discus- 
sion, jjro and eon. One branch of the trade regards the new law 
as highly beneficial, while others consider it the opposite. In 
another column will be found a communication from one of the 
leading distillers of Kentucky, which points out what he re- 
gards as a serious defect in the application of the law. His 
arguments in this respect are well worthy of perusal. Time 
and trial will decide which side is right. 

/MPORTATIONS. — Business is moving along in a quiet way, 
being neither very good nor very bad. Standard brands 
are doing as well as could be expected under the conditions, but 
as a general rule orders are for immediate needs. Importers 
look for no particular change for the better until there shall 
have been a new movement and better feeling in general lines 
of trade. Importations during the half month were unusually 
large. Details will be found elsewhere in our tables. 

The spirit situation is growing interesting. Following up 
the recent advance in price comes the following telegram from 
Chicago, dated the 17th inst. : " It is almost certain now that 
substantially all the distilling interests of the country will soon 
be united in the Si)irit Distilling .Association, wliicli was organ- 
ized by the receivers of the Distilling and Cattle-feeding Com- 
pany. The receivers had a conference here to-day with Frank 
Curtis, of New York, j)rcHident of the American Distributing 
Company, and George W. Kidd, one of its directors and a rep- 
resentative of the Indiana Distilling Company. Should tiiese 
gentlemen decide to co-operate with the receivers of the Trust, 
as now seems probable, it will unite, sustantially, all of the spir- 
it interests of the country in this association." 

On the other hand, the wholesalers and distillers' agents of 
New York met on the 16th, and pledged themselves to build two 
distilleries, of a combined capacity of 14,000 bushels, if the re- 
organization of the D. & C. F. Co. is effected. Dissatisfaction is 
also reported from Cincinnati. 



The Legislature has adjourned. With the Sacramento Bee's 
added exclamation of two years ago, "Thank God,'" we are 
heartily in accord. A majority of the members were elected 
under verbal promises to be fair and just with the li(iuor trade. 
Nothing definite was done against the trade, but the session was 
a disappointment. When some of the present members of the 
Assembly come up for re election or for the Senate, two years 
hence, thej' will find what it means to be snowed under. 

The California State Protective Association desired the pas- 
sage of two laws: One making it mandatory on Hoards of Su- 
pervisors to license; and another jiroviding that such licen.ses 
should be fair and adjusted to an ecjuitable distrilnition of the 
public burdens. 

The.se were not passed, but at the same time no adverse 
legislation of <auy consequence to the trade was passed. An idea 
got abroad that the State Association had a " sack " at Sacra- 
mento, and the boodle hunting members of each house held ofl', 
and yet hovered around, like buzzards surrounding a dying 
steer. They got nothing — that is one satisfaction, and at the 
end of the session Senator Biggy's exposure of the notorious 
Senator Dunn sent the boodlers to cover. 

Senator Linder, a brilliant specimen of the average legisla- 
tor, got in a bill providing for a State license of S600 before any 
county or city license was collected. This he hoped to effect bj' 
a constitutional amendment. It was not passed upon. Senator 
Seymour, another able man in his line, got in a '' single stamp 
bill," providing for the prohibition of single stamp goods. This, 
too, never came to anything. In all, twenty-one bills were in- 
troduced against the liquor trade, and we suppose about eighteen 
were introduced as cinches. 

The members of the trade owe a debt of gratitude to Presi- 
dent Edofl' and the Board of Trustees of the California State 
Protective Association, as well as to Attornej- George W. Baker, 
for the ability with which they headed off these adverse measures. 

One of the amusing breaks made at this session was peri)e- 
trated by Senator E. C. Voorheis, of Amador county, who, we 
understand, has aspirations to be Governor. On the 22d of Jan- 
uary he introduced a bill (Senate Bill No. 369) entitled — 

AN ACT To amend an act entitled an act to provide for the for- 
mation, government, operation and dissolution of sanitary 
districts in any part of the State, for the construction of 
sewers, and other sanitary purpo.ses ; the acquisition of 
property thereby; the calling and conducting of collections in 
such districts ; the assessment, levy, collection, custody and 
disbursement of taxes therein ; the i.ssuance and disposal of 
the bonds thereof, and the determination of their validity, 
and making provision for the payment of such bonds and 
the disposal of their proceeds. 

The act goes on to provide for the handling of the sewerage 
and garbage questions, and in section 5 occurs this pa.ssage : 

'' To make and enforce all necessary and proj)er regulations 
for suppressing disorderly and disreputable resorts and hou.ses of 
ill-fame within the district, and to determine the (lualification of 
persons authoi'ized to sell liquors at retail ; and from and after 
the passage of this act no licen.se to keep a saloon or sell li(|uors 
at retail shall take efl'ect or be operative within any sanitary 
district unless the same be approved l)v the Sanitary Hoard of 
the district ; to impose fines, penalties and forfeitures for anj' 
and all violations of its regulations or orders, and to fix the pen- 
alty thereof by fine, or imprisonment, or both ; but no fine shall 
exceed the sum of one hundred dollars, and no imprisonment 
shall exceed one month." 

This act was passed by both houses of the Legislature, but 
it was sent back to them to have the word " collections," in the 
title, changed to '' elections," which was done. 

Mr. \"(>()rheis"s ''joker" is clearly imconstitutional. The 
com])lete imrjiosesof the act are not stated in the title, and it is 
sought to tak(> from the County Hoaids of Suix'rvisors jiolice 
regulating |iower specifically granted by Section 11, .\rticli' II, 
of the Constitution. Mr. Voorheis"s bill troubles no one. 

.\nother act, which was aimed at the baking-powder coni]>a- 
nies but which is being considered by the liquor men, has been 
passed, and the (Jovernor ha.s signed it. It is an act (Senate 
l)ill 201 ) entitle<l " An Act to provide against the adulteration 
of food and drugs," and is very stringent in its provisions. 



p.Aeifie WIJME /rJMD SflF<^IT [REVIEW. 



11 



THE FINEST WHISKIES MADE 

In the State of Kentucky. 



ANDERSON 



BUCHANAN 





^ HAND MADE^^ o 
0= SDUR MASH 2 

LOUISVILLE 
KENTUCKY. 






PRODUCTION JAN. 1, 1874-, TO JUNE 30, 1894, 
121,718 BARRELS. 



PRODUCTION JAN. 1, 1880 TO JUNE 30, 1894 
28,086 BARRELS. 



NELSON BOURBON NELSON PURE RYE NELSON PURE MALT 




f RYE <<^l 
WHISKEY 

iTHENEWCOMB-BUCHANANi 
COMPANY 






JEI 



^ PURE 
MALT 

WHISKEY 



'C 



COMPANY 



-BUCHANANi 



PRODUCTION JANUARY 1, 1872, TO JUNE 30, 1894, 218,146 BARRELS. 



U. S. CLUB 

r- ^*^ .-s 

/ IJ.K.CLlJIi \ 

PRODUCTION MARCH 1, 1889, TO JUNE 30, 1894, 69,697 BARRELS. 



The Anderson & Nelson Distilleries Co, 



L-OUI SiZI L-L-E, KY. 



12 



f/reifie WIJME /rpJD SflF(IT F^EVIEW. 



PAgME/NT OF eOU/NTg LICE/NSE. 

Till' Su|ii'iine Court has dLcidid thai John 11. Maii^^liclil, of 
Cliico, will have to go to, jail for selliiif; licjuor without a liceuso. 
The easo was got up to test the law on the (loiut. It was ad- 
mitted on the trial that Manslield lia<l eonrorine<l to all the re- 
(luirenients of the law in the town ol' Cliieo. lie was aiTCsted 
lor not getting out the IJutte county license, and lined 6150, 
with an alternative of going to jail one day for each dollar of 
the fine that was not paid. ManslieUl appealed from a refusal 
to grant a writ of haheas corpus. In [jussing on the points 
raised in the appeal the Supreme C'ourt said : 

"The ordinance under consideration uu<lertakes to license, 
not only for the purpose of regulation, hut as well for the pur- 
pose of revmue. If there is any coiillict in terms hctwecn the 
i>rdinance ot the town of Chico and the ordinanc(! of the county 
of lintte in the regulations prescrihcd for the eai'rying on of the 
husiness. in the exercise of this polic<' power tiie ordinance of 
Cliieo has superior force within the munici|)al limits. 'J'liat such 
a coutlict e.\ists is not made to appear. 

"That it i.s within the power of the county of l!utt<' to 
license for revenue the business of liquor dealing is ohvions and 
uncpiestioned. That the county has power to collect sucli a 
license from those doing business within the territorial limits of 
towns and cities inside its boundaries has already been decided." 

This settles the disputed (piestion, and the Chico saloon- 
keepers will have to pay the count}- license or take the conse- 
([uences. 

The decision in full is as follows: 

In the matter of the (implication of John H. Mannfelil on hubea.'i-corpii.i. 

PetitiuiKT wai* c-ouvictt'd in liiitte t-ounly uiKlfr a coinptniiit t-hariiinii him witli 
caiTvin;; on tljc business of selliii;; ilistilU-d, lt*rnieeili*d, niuH. vinous and Dtln-j- 6\nr- 
ituu'us liciuor:? witliout Lavihij tir&l jirocuiutl a license S4) to do, <'onIi-ai'\ t<» tlie pro- 
visions of Ordinance No. 124. Butic Conuly Oitiinanccs, enlitk-d " .-Vn Ordinance to 
rejrnlale tbe busine.-s of sellinjr liquor!^ in Butte county, California, to provide for 
the licensing the same, and tor the revt)cation of such licenses in certain cases, and 
piescribinti penalties for the violation thereof.'' 1'he ordinance is pleaded in tnll in 
tbe complaint. Defendant was sentenced to pay a line t»f ^l.MI. and in default of 
pavineiit to be impiisoned in tbe county jail of liutle county in the jn-oportion of 
one ilay's imprisonment for every dollar of tbe Hue. 
Ordinance 1'24 provides as folUiws : 

"Section 1. Every person who in any saloon, bar, inn, tavern, hotel, tippling 
\>tace or other public place sells or gives away any distilled, fermented, malt, vinous 
or other spirituous liquors oi- wines in less ipiantilies than one (juart must obtain a 
license from the Tax Collector, as prescribed in this ordinance, and make th<:refor 
tbe following payments." Saloons, bars, inns, taverns, hotels, tippling places or 
other public places located .in cities, towns, villages or liatnle'iS constitute the first 
class, and are required to pay J-'jU per month license ; others constitute therecond 
class, and are required to pay the sum of $25 per month. 

Section 4 of said ordinance provides for certain restrictions upon the issuance 
of these licenses, requiring as a prerequisite a wiitten recommendation signed by at 
least ten out of Iweuty responsible freeholders residing or doing business of a per- 
manent or respectable character nearest the place where the said applicant or appli- 
cants propose to carry ou said business, together with a bond in the penal sum of 
?2,IIIHI, conditioned, etc. Section .'j is as follows : 

" Sec. 5. It shall be unlawful for any person or persons to engage in or carry 
on within the corporate limits of the county of Unite the business of selling or 
giving away any distilled, fermented, malt, vinous or othei spirituous lit|noi-s or 
wines, either in their own names and for their own profit aud benefit or as agents or 
employes, for any other j>cison or persons, unless such person or persons, their prin- 
cipals or employers, shall first procure from the Tax Collector a license so to do. 
Aud if such person or persons, either for themselves or as agents or employes or 
otherwise, shall engage in or carry on said business without having liist procured 
sueli license, he, she or they, for each violation of this ordinance, shall be deemed 
guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction by any court having jurisiliction 
thereof shall be punished by a fine not less than $150 and not exceeding f.'iUO, or 
by imprisonment in the county jail not exceeding six months, or by both such fine 
and imprisonment." 

By subdivision 27 of Section 25 of the County Government Act (Stats, of 1S91, 
p, :ilHj'). power is given to the Board of Supervisors "to license for the purposes of 
regulation and revenue all and every kind of business not prithibitcd by law and 
transacted and carried on in tbe county; to fix the rates of license tax upon the 
same, and to provide lor the coUeclionof the same by suit or otherwise." 

The defendant, it is conceded, was carrying on his business in the incorporated 
town <if Chico. This town by its own ordinance has fixed rates of license aiiQ pre- 
Itreseribed rcgnlali(»ns for the conduct of tbe business in which delciutanl was en- 
g«ged, and it is averred and not denied that defendant had com]>lied with all the 
terms and requirements of such t<iwn oi'dinance, and was doing his business in con- 
f«)rinity with tbe town ordiur-nce. ami under a license issued to liim by !:aid town, 

Tlie ordinance under consideration undertakes to license, not only for the i>nr- 
pose of regulation, but as well lor the purpose of revenue. 

If there be a coutlict in terms between the urdinance of the town <>f Chieu and 
the ordinance of the county of Butte iii the regulations i)rescribed for the carrying 
ou of the business, in the exeiclse of this police power the ordinance of Ihe town of 
Chico has superior force within the municipal limits. (Ex I'arle Hoeli, ;t7 Pac. 
Itep., 11)44. ) That such a coutlict exists, however, is not made to appear, and, in any 
event, it would not affect the ii>n«idcration of the remaining question. I'orthe 
ordinance ol iiutte county, while containing provisions in their nature the exercise 
of police powers, at the same lime is a license ordinance f«tr purp<ises of levenue, 
and It is with the ordinance In that aspect that we are called npon to deal. 

That it is within the power of the conuly ol Butte to license for revenue the 
biisinekh of liquor dealing is obvioiir. and nnqueslioneil. ^People vs. Martin, ('ill (^'al., 
15:1.) That the county has the power to collect such a license from those doing 
biisinsK wllhin the leriilorial limits ol the towns and cllluii Inside of its boundaries 
was decided In the .Matter of Lawience, fi'J Cat, IKIN, 

Against the ordinance here under conslderalion, however, It Is iiiged that it pre- 
scribes the procurcinent of a license by any one who sells or gives away liquor ; 
that under the rule laid down in Merced County vs. Helm (1(12 Cal., ll'ill) the county 
has the power to fix llcenrcs not for the selling orglvlng away of liquor, hut lor the 
engau'lng In the bur Incrs of doing Ihesc or any of these lliiugs ; that there is a broad 
anil well-detined dii'tincti'in between a slimle act ol selling and giving, itr acts which 
do not constitute the bueiness, and are merely liicidenis to II, and Ihe actual bona 
tide business of dealing In llquum, cilhcr U8 a wliuleonlc vender or as a retail dealer 
or saloon-keeiwr." 



But Merced County vs. Helm Is not a parallel case with the one at bar. There 
the county sought to collect its license lax from Helm by civil action ; here (as will 
be discussed later) Ihe defendant is charged criminally with a misdemeanor under 
Sec. 4;i5 of the Penal Code, There the tax was a charge imposed npon Ihe sale, and 
not for carr\ iiig on or engaging in the business of selling ; here, w liilc Sec. 1 does 
jirovide that every person who i;ells or gives away any liquor-s or wines must obli in 
a license. See. .'1 further provides that it shall be unlawful fur any person to engage 
in or carry on within the limits of the county of IJuIte the business of sellini; cr 
giving away liqiiois or wines witliout first procuring trom the tax collector a license 
so to do. That the license required to be i)rocnred by one engaging in the business 
is the license called tor by the ordinance is |)lain. Moreover, Ihe language in Sec. 1 
of this ordinance is not obnoxious to the objections successfully urged against the 
Merced County Ordinance in this : In the latter ordinance the language was, " all 
persons v^ ho sell eiiher siiirilnons, mall orfermented liquors, wines or ciders in said 
iMerced county shall pay quarterly, in advance, a licen-e lax of $:KHK) for each quarter 
of llie year." Noihing in that language went to i^how that it w»s designed to 
limif its scope and applicability to those who gave or sold a^ a business, and the 
language was found to l»e olijeclionable for two reasons — first, because it was tje- 
yond tile power of Boards of Supervisors to require a license for the mere single act 
of giving away or selling liquor ; second, that tlie powers of Boards of Supervisois 
were limited io exacting licenses from tliose engaged in a particular business, and 
thai the act of selling or giving away might lie but an incident It) some other I usi- 
iii'ss (e. g., the selling of beer bv a brewer being an incident to llie butiness of n au- 
ufacluriilg ) Ex Parte Mason ; 'lO.' Cal.. 171. 

Bui in the oidiuance under consideration the language is : " Every jierson who 

I.N ANY SAI.OO.N. IIAK, IKN, TAVEKS, IIOTF.I,, TIPri.lNG PLACE OR OTHER PUBUC PI.AIK. 

sells or gives awa\." By lair inteiulmcnt this language should be accorded a diffei- 
ent construction trcjm that applied to the language ol the .Merced ordinance. Tlieie 
no restriclion was made, " .\ll pci^ons " who sell t)r uive were subject to tbe 
license tax ; here it is only those jicrsons who sell 01 give in the enumerated kinds 
and i-lasses of jjlaces, and those places it is ot common knowledge are places where 
liquors are vended as a business. 

But, even if it is conceded that it was beyond the power of the supervisors to 
exact licenses from tho.se selling or giving away, they tinciuestionably have Ihe 
power to require licenses of those engaged in the business as provitlcd in Sec. 5. 

.Sec. 5, however. It is urged, must be eliminated as void. 'Jhe contention is 
based upon the fact that the latter portion of tbe section provides a penalty, which 
lienalty comes in coutlict with tlie jn'ovisions of See. 435 of the Penal Code. (In le 
Sic, 7:i Cal., 142.) 'i'hc coutlict exists, aud because of it, the penal clause of the or- 
dinance is voitl, but that does not of necessity destroy the whole of Sec. 5. The 
rule is well settled that, if the void portion is severable, the rest will rtand. (Ex 
parte Christensen, .15 Cal., 2ciS ; Endl. on Statutes, Sees. :io-MI et seq.) The first poi- 
lion ol tbe section is complete without any reference to tbe latteri'ortion. Indeed, 
the two porticHis might easily and well have been cast, as is usual, in different see- 
lions. It is only necessary to eliminate that ijoition of the section beginning with 
the words " ami if such person," and ending with the words " or I y both such hue 
aiul imprisiniment." So treated, there still remains a valid ordinance re<iuiriug the 
procurement if a s]ie;iHed license by those who in the county of Butte engage in or 
carry on the business of selling or giving away lic|Uors. 

11 is finally contended that the detendant was tried and convicted, not under 
the State law (Penal Code, See. 4o5), but under the penal clause of the ordinance; 
and in sui'porl of ibis contention, it is pointed out that defendant was fined the 
minimum amount prescribed in the ordinance, and that the complaint on which he 
was tiied refeircd only to the ordinance, and did not conclude with the declaration 
that bis acts were contrary to the form, force and effect of tlic statute. 

Where no ciiange has been made by the constitution or by statute, the ciuidu- 
sioii of an indictment contra formara statuti, is always rciiuircd wbcrea statute 
creates an olfense, or declares a common law offense, when comm.tted under paiiic- 
nlar eircumstances not necessarily in the original offense punishable in a ditfeient 
manner from what it would have been without such circumstances; or where 
the statute changes the nature of a common law offense to one of a higher degree, 
or under a statute levising the common law. (Wharton's Crim. Pi. iV Pr., Utli Ed., 
Sec. 2S0.) In general, where the common law is unmodified by statutes, every in- 
dictment on tlie statute must c(.>ncliide with tbe words, " against the form of the 
statute in such case made and provided," or their equivalent. One which does not 
will not sustain a conviction. (I liishopCrim. Proced , Sec. 002.) Even a complaint 
for the violation ot a to\Mi or city by-law, though it concludes against the form of 
the bv-law, must also conclude against the form of a statute. (Com. v. Oiay, 5 
Pick. ,44; Stevens v. Diniond. (i N. H., 330 ; Com. v. Worcester, 3 Pick., 41)2). 

In Ibis State, therefore, the rule obtains, except as it may have been modified by 
the constitution or by the statutes. The constitution docs not speak upon the mat- 
ter. The Penal Code in Sec. U.')2 declares that the indictment or information must 
be direct and certain as regards: 1. The party charged ; 2. The offense charged ; 
and 3. The particular ciicuinstances of the offense charged, when they are necessary 
to constitute a coin|dete offense. Sec. y.iS declares that the words used in a statute 
to dehnea public offense, need not be strictly juirsned in the indictment orinforma- 
ticin, but other words conveying the same meaning may be used. Sec. 'J5U enumer- 
ates those things which, if "t bey can be understood from the ideadini;. render the 
indiitmcnt or information sutlicient. Sec. 950 declares that the indictment or in- 
formation must contain the title of the action, specifying the name of Ihe court to 
w hicli the same Is presented, and the names of the parties ; second, a statement of 
the acts eont'tituling the offense ill ordinary ana concise language, and in such man- 
ner as to enable a person of c(minion understanding to know what is iutcndeii. Sec. 
051 states that tbe indictment or information may be substantially in the form given, 
wbicli form concludes with the customary phrase, " contrary to the form, force and 
effect of the statute in such case made and luovided, and against tlic peace and dig- 
nity of the people of the Stale of California." These provisions are made applica- 
bletolhe indictments and informations. This complaint was a comiilaint charg- 
ing misdemeanor, lie; jurisdiction of the offense being in Ihe Justices' and Police 
Courts. As to the form of such a complaint, the Penal Code elsewhere speaks, and 
in the following terms : (Penal Code, s"ee. 142ri.) "All proceedings and actions liefore 
a .Justice's or Police Court for public offenseof which such courts have jurisdiction, 
must be comniouced by comiilaint under oath, setting forth the offense cbaiged, 
Willi such particulars <if time, place, persons and property as to enable the defend- 
ant to nudersiand diftinclly the chai.aclerof the offense complained of. and to .111- 
swer the complaint." Greater lil>erality is now allowed in criminal ideadings tlinii 
was formerly permissiiile. As was said 111 People v. Kini:, 27 Cal., ,'iU7 : " Our 
criminal code is designed to wiirk the same change in jileading and practice in 
criminal actions which is wrought by tbe Civil Code in civil actions. Both arc 
fruits of Ihe same progressive spirit which in modern times has endeavored, at least . 
to doawav with mere forms and technicalities of Ihe common law, whlch|were jiio- 
duetive of no good, and frequently brougbl tbe administration of justice into con- 
tempt by defeating its ends." Sec. UCiU of the Penal Code itself declares that no in- 
dictment or Informalion is insnlllcicnt, nor can the trial, judgment or ivthcr pro- 
ceeding thereon be affected by reason of any defect or imperfection in inaltcr of 
loi in which ibies not lend to the prejudice of a substantial right of the defendant 
up<ui its luerits. 

The defendant In this case was plainly informed of Ihe nature of his offense. 
It consisted. In the lalignagc of the complaint, in the carrying on the buhincss of 
selling dlslilled, lermcuted, malt, vinous aud other siiirituous lii|uors and wines, 
H illiout having iirocurcd a license so to do, contrary to the in-ovlsions ol Ordinance 
No. 12t, Butte Conuly, Cal., which ordinance is fully set forth. This was his alleged 
offense. If g lilty of' it, he became amenable to Sec. 4:!5 of the Penal Code, which 
provides Ihat every jierson who idmmcnces or carries on any business, trade, pro- 
fession in- calling for tbe transaction or the carrying on of which a licens> is le- 
qulrcd by any law of this Slate, without taking out or iirocuriug the license pre- 
scribed by Biich law, Is guilty of a misdemeanor. Tbe essentials to a criminal com- 



f/ceifie WIJME /cjSlD Sflf^IT f^EVIEW. 



13 



plaint in a Jusliec's or rolicc Court as set foitli in Sec. 1420 of tlie Pennl Code, do 
not include a i-ont'lupiiin ut tlu- titulutt'. Exprfss^io uiiius est exclut^io nltei'ius. 
As Ici till' I'lilnplainls for inisilcmcauors in .Tuslice's and Police Courts, at least, llie 
eonimou law rule has been ehaut;e(l. Tlie comi'laiut in this ease complies \MIli the 
reiiuirenienis of Ihe law, ami states a cause of jictioii a^iiitist the defetidatit. 

Wlierefore it is ordered tliat the writ lie dischari;ed, utid Ihe petiliotler re- 
matided. llKNtiiiAW, .Uuljn-. 

We eoneiir : Chief-Jiistiee Beattv, Justices Haiusison, Van Flkkt, Gauoutte 
and iMcFaki.axu. 



K-RUG'S WI/NE "REPCRT. 

Tlio Viticulttiral Comiiiis.sidn will soon take up I lie (iticKtioii 
of llu' recent analyses of t'alil'urnia wines hy tiie ( iovernnient 
chemists at Washinoton iiiuler Dr. Wiley, 'ri'ouhle i.s l)i-ewin<; 
over the work of Mr. Wiley's man, Mr. Kriio, who characterized 
a certain wine of this State as an " artistic mi.vtiire." The mat- 
ter was hrougiit up hy the Clinuiirlf on the 15tii, and on tlie piih- 
licatiou of its article we received the following : 

Hkukki.ky, Cal., March l.'^i, 18!t.'). 

I'jiiTOK Pacific Wine and Si'irit Rkvikw: .\lthoti);Ii there lia.s been 
iiitich ilisetissii>n, prci ami coll, as to the relative value of work, seieiitifii' 
atiil semi seiiMitilic, done hy the Cotninission.s and the State I'niversity fi>r 
the lieiielit o( various industrii'S of tliis State, I ilo not wish to express any 
opiuioti on tlie subject, while 1 think, however, that all reports of a si'icu- 
lilic luitiire should be ojien to criticism and insist that work for the State 
should be reliable, ititpartial. atid without sp<'clal friendship for favorites 
and free from |iolitical bias. Nothiiiir slmulil be covi're<l up that the law 
rei] ti ires to be e.x posed ; .vet it seems thai the laws rei]uirinji exposure of 
bad practices are sometimes i!j;nored. 

1 am led to this eiuielusion aft r reading the report mentioned in the 
Chroniele, and the .lout nal of the Anieriean ('h.-mical Society, September, 
18i14, on "Some of the Chaiacteristies of California Wine's," by W. H. 
Krujr, assistant chemist in the t'hemical Laboratory of the llepartment of 
Agriculture, Washington, I). ('., sent to the society by I'rof. II. W. Wiley, 
the Chief Chemist ol the Department. It appears that this pajier was 
the result of analyses procured at the rerpiest of Mr. C. A. Wetinoie, who 
represented the State \'iticuitural Commission at the Chicago K.vposition, 
samples being cUiplicates of the California wines on exhibit there. 

1 finit in the re|iort published by the American Chemical Society the 
following paragraph : 

•' No. rj,71i-, a dry white w ine, proved an interesting sample. It fur- 
nished the following figures: Alcohol, by weight, ll.iJS per cent. ; extract, 
l.I i^er cent. ; glycerol, 0..321 per cent. ; ash extract ratio, 17.o(i per cent. ; 
ex'traet rest, 0.5ti per cent. There is !!â–  doubt in my mind that this is 
merely an artistic mixture that neversaw a vineyard, but has had its birth 
in the cellar of some wine mixer." 

In another place 1 find, viz. : " Cane sugar is undoubtedly used by 
many to sweeten their wines, as is shown by the increased laevo rotation 
after inversion." 

This report was published by the State Vitieultnial Commission, re- 
cently, as a part of the report from Mr. C. A. Wetmore, but upon careful 
examination I tind that the statements above referred to have been for 
some reason supiiresseil. There may be some good reason for such sup- 
pression, but it is very plain to me that Mr. Wetmore should be called 
upon for an explanation. .Iustick. 

The charges made by our Berkeley eorrespoudcut against 
Mr. Wetmore have been submitted to him. He said that he 
was sorry that the question liad been raised, because it com- 
pelled him to touch upou the much-vexed question of the incom- 
peteuey of agricultural chemists when expressing opinions out- 
side the line of tlieir legitimate work. 

" The report, which I was the means of procuring," said 
he, " contains much valuable information. The analyses are 
the most complete that have ever been made for Californi.i wines, 
and the tables are published in my report, where the Berkeley 
critic may find No. rj,7'J2 witliout dit1icultj% giving the figures 
as quoted. If he had taken the trouble to turn to the catalogue 
of the list of exhibits submitted for analysis, page 80 of my re- 
port, he would have found opposite the number : ' (ioldcn 
Chasselas, J. I... Beard. Warm Springs,' and could have .satisfied 
his curiosity as to the individual whom he imagines I liave pi'o- 
tected by concealment. 

" I did not think it was my duty to publish the unscientific 
comments of the cliemist without verification of his work. I 
have called upon Mr. Beard for a fresh sample of the .same 
wine to have it analyzed at the Slate University, but he has 
failed to produce it. I think I should have been guilty of great 
discourtesy if I had published such damaging statements con- 
corning an ex-Regent of the State I'niversity, also a State Sena- 
tor aiui a geutleiuan who receives advice in his wine making 
from Professor llilgard. Furthermore, Senator Beard was a 
cla.ssmate of mine, and I plead guilty to the ordinary demands 
of friendship, and could see no jtuhlic good in publishing a crit- 
icism which I am (luite sure is founded upon some mistake. 

" As to the cane-sugar proposition, the original rejiort made 
the charge that we were using glucose, which I suppressed be- 
cause I knew it to be a false conclusion. Mr. Krug saw fit to 
change his charge to the use ' by many ' of cane-sugar, which 
to all wine makers here would be a reason to ridicule the whole 



report — a report valuable enough so far as it is restricted to 
results, but unreliable, as most reports from agricultural chemists 
are, when loaded with s|ieculative oiiinions founded on inex- 
perience." 

END OF THE VITICULTURAL BOARD, 



(Intlie lolh inst. tht! AKseuibly at Saeiiiiiieiito passed the 
Langford bill, by which the aflairs of the VilicuKtiial Commis- 
sion are to be wound u]) on the 31st day of December, ISib"), and 
the property then transferred to the Regents of the University. 
The Stuiate has already passed the bill, and the Governor will 
of (!ourse sign it. 

It is of no use crying over spilled milk ; no use arguing 
with tho.se vitictilturists who have always been jirone to criticise 
the Board no matter what it did. These people will now know 
what it is to dive down into their own jiockets to influence legis- 
lation in Washington when(;ver the necessity arises; they (;an 
do their own investigating work ; they can make their own mar- 
kets; create their own exhibits. The fact of the matter is that 
the viticulturists of the State, as a body, did not support the 
Board, and it is b(>st that it passes out of existence. We know 
that these people will see its nei'd later, but at that time wc 
shall simply say. Let lliem suffer. 

The Viticulturists of the State have had free of charge Ihe 
services of men like De Turk, Crabb, West, Shorb, Doyle, 
Bichowsky and Bundschu. They thought fhe.se services were of 
no particular value — so let it go. 

It is neither meet uor proper that the Board should [lass 
without recognition of its services. 

It has published the standard literature in the Knglish lan- 
guage on Viticulture ; on planting, pruning, grafting, cellar man- 
agement, distillization, and the utilization of wine residues. 

It created a market in California and the East for California 
wiues true to label. 

It pas.sed the sweet wine law in Congress, a means of saving 
$1,200,000 annually to the sweet wine makers. 

It saved the industry at the last session of Congress by 
arranging the present schedule of the Wilson law. 

It has made exhibits of our wiues too uumerotis to mention. 

It held viticultural conventions for the good of all. 

It had a watchful eye on the welfare of the industry from 
every point of view. 

Animosities it certainly aroused. Viticultural frauds, like 
Hilgard, it antagonized iu plenty ; but its work is done and its 
good record will live after it. 

It is best that it should die thus. Finding that the Gov- 
ernor, whose record as a reformer will not be as pronounced two 
years hence as it now is, was bent on making the Board a polit- 
ical machine, the act which ended its esistenc^e was drawn up 
by the members themselves. 

Let it rest ; but lot its innuence go on. 



)r7!^0'mOKmOwao^isaQ'UiiO\iraomJOtJWOM 



^c,â– ^^BUSHED /;v,^ 



TRADE MARK^ 



E.REMY MARTIN aC? 

COGNAC 

(FRANCE) 



AGENTS IN SAN FRANCISCD.Ca 

See Quotations on p 4.;. 525 FRONT STREET. 

liWlluiwiPi|inBmiflT81lUnn»Jwii«»WtuiWT mwiturnwniniWn 




f/cSlfie WlJsiE /cJ^D Sflt^lT F^EVIEW. 



OAKLA/ND WO/N OUT. 



Oakland's luunicipal election lias come and gone, and iln- 
li(|i)ur men are safe. Faii'-niinded eouneilnicii liave hecn I'lcctcd 
— men not likely to be inlliieneed liy any agiji'egalion of I'ldlii- 
bition cranks who may come to llieni with unreasonable " <U'- 
mands." Oakland is a hot-bed of all sorts and conditions of 
luiman crankiness, and (lie conncilmen are sure to be beset by 
the theorists and faddists of the cold water armj'. 

It was the (luietest election ever held in Oakland. About 
ten days prior flic election notilication was sent to all the inem- 
bers of the California State rrotcctivo Association that they 
must refrain from selling liiiuor on the sly on election day ; tliat 
the Association would assist in tlie prosecution of cverj' person 
who violated the law. The result is that but one person — Henry 
Fitzsimmous. at l-;ightli and Webster streets — was arrested, and 
he is not a member of the Association. A letter has been writ- 
ten from the lieadiiuarters of the Association to the City Coun- 
cil of Oakland, asking that Fitzsimmons's lic(^nse be taken 
away if lie is found guilty of having violated the law. 

And yet the Prohibitionists contend that the liquor trade is 
not law-abiding. 

.Just jti-ior to the receut election the following appeared in 
all the Oakland papers: 
"Altention, 3Iembers of the California Slate Protective Association : 

" Your attention is called to the following statute : 
" It shall not be lawful for any persnn or iici>ons kcojiing a puliiic 
bouse, saloon or ilrinking place, eitlicr lici'iisecl or iiiilircnsi'd, t ) sell, fzive 
away or lurnisli spirituous or malt liipiors, wine or any other iiitoxicatiuj; 
beverages, on any part of any ilay set ai)arl or to be set apart lor any gen- 
eral or sperial election by tliecitizens in any election liistrict or precinct in 
anv of the counties within the State, where an election is in progress, din- 
ing the hours when by law in sai<l ilistrict or precinct the election polls 
are required to be kept open. Any jierson violating the provisions of this 
act shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor. 

"Tliis act shall take ell'cct from and after its passage. 

" Aud j'OU are hereby warned that the California State Pro- 
tictive Association will assist in the prosecution of any of its 
members charged with the violation of the above statute.'' 

In regard to the policy of the California State Protective 
Association, President J. P. ImIoII' bad the following to say, in a 
recent interview in Oakland : 

"We have made a complete change in the jioliry tliat lias 
heretofore been followed by the li(juor men, and the younger 
members among the wholesale liquor trade have recognized for 
some time past that for two causes the business of selling li(|Uor 
has been rendered olmoxious to the better sense of the commu- 
nity. First, because li(|Uor men engaged in politics; and. sec- 
ondly, because the better class of dealers wen; gauged in public 
estimation by the grog-seller and dive-keeper. 

'• It was to rid the business of this odium that the Califor- 
nia State Protective A.ssociation was formed. ]'\)rty-five of the 
wholesale firms of San Francisco are members of it, and they 
represent a combined capital of .?'2.'5,O(iO,O0O. While I am talk- 
ing abotit figures, let me tell you that the litpior interests of this 
State represent S100,000,00(», and employ 70,000 people — that 
i.«, the wholesale and retail trade. When the organization was 
formed we sought to take the liquor busine.ss out of polities on the 
lines which were suggested to ine by United States Senator Slier- 
man, and which have proved eflicacious in Ohio, where the liquor 
interests are not warred upon and do not war ; that is, by a uni- 
form State licen.se, with a maximum of .S'J.'jO a year. You know, 
of course, we failed in our efforts before the Legislature, yet thi^ 
facts are not generally understood. 

" Under the present system it has been bIiowii how an olli- 
cial can vent his petty spite against saloon-k(;epers who refused 
to sujiport liim for ollice, as was recently shown in two cases in 
this city. 

'• Put never mind about side issues. The Slate Association 
immediately took hold and pa.s.scd upon the ajiiilication of ev- 
ery Haloon-kee])er who desired to become a member. In Oak- 
land there are '-'0.5 dealiM's, but out of tiiein we admitted only 
LS.S, who were unquestionably lit to come into the organization. 

"Wc re<|uiro that nota single charge (^an be brought against 
those who are members of tlie organization. AVe only take 
those wlio conduct orderly and respc<'table places, and who com- 
jily with the law in every particular. Now we have issued strin- 
gent instructioiiH to comply with every city ordinance, and we 
will our.selvcH have the Association attorneys iirose('ute any 
member of the organization who does not comply with the strict 
letter of tlie law. 



" The directors of the Association can only be selected from 
among the members engaged in the wliolesale trade, and it is 
their esjiccial object to rid the business of the odium that has 
been cast upon it in the past by the grog-dealer and dive-keeper. 
Of ilsell' the business is legitimate, and in this city alone we 
contribute one-fiflh towards maintaining the muiiieipal govern- 
ment, and the records show but few crimes that can be attributed 
to liquor, directly or indirectly. As a result of our elVorts. the 
annexation election was the first one to be held in the liistory of 
this city when there was not a saloon door open either back or 
front. If our ell'orts are rightfully recognized we will soon have 
the saloon business on a jilane where its legitimate right to exist 
will be recognized, and every groggery and jiitfall driven from 
under its shelter. As regards Sunday closing, I have this to 
say : Close the saloons entirely, or let them operate, as they 
have a right to under their license.'" 

•DEATH OF HE/N-Rg SeHHODEH. 

Henry Schroder, formerly of the firm of Mencken & Schro- 
der aud one of the best known men in the trade, died at his 
home in this city on the ITtli instant, after a long and distress- 
ing illness. The cause of his death was cancer ot' the stomach, 
and he bad been complaining, otf and on, for about four years, 
though his retirement from the firm on account of his illness 
dates liaek only a few months. 

Mr. Schroder was born in Hanover, (iermany, in 18.3.3, and 
came to this Coast direct from his birth-jilace, by sailing vessel 
around the Horn, arriving in 18.50. For some years after his ar- 
rival he was in the grocery and general merchandise business, 
afterward entering the ohl house of Henry Brickwedel & Co. as 
an employe. At the time of Mr. Brickwedel's death the firm of 
Hencken & Schroder succeeded to the business, and the partner- 
ship continued until a short time ago. 

Mr. Schroder was a prominent man among the German res- 
idents of the cit}'. He was a member of the Schuetzen Verein, 
and was a noted marksman. He also served as one of the Board 
of Directors of the German Hospital from 1882 to 18'JO, and 
was Yice President of the (ierman Benevolent Society. Other 
German societies also bad him as a member. 

He leaves a widow, three sons — Henrj', John and William 
— and four daughters — Mrs. John Thode, Mrs. M. Joost, Mrs. 
.\ndrew A[ocker and Mrs. Fred. Maas. The funeral took place 
on the 20tli inst. 

Fron; Elias Block & Sons. 

Cincinnati, March, 1895. 

Imi'okt\nt. — It behooves all prudent and conservative mer- 
chants (particularly under the I'iglit years bonded period, for 
"goodness" onlj- knows what may happen during this long 
time), to buy "bonded goods," either Kentucky bourbons or 
Eastern rj'es, of reliable and responsible houses. Kefcreuce is 
had to such firms who are v.illing and have demonstrated their 
capability of helping the trade in time of need, and whose goods 
at all times must be reliable and of undoubted quality. 

" Time alone will prove the truth of these remarks." 

" A word to the wise is sufficient." 

Old Darling (Kentucky bourbon). Mercantile Club Rye (Ken- 
tucky rye ), The Pen wick (Pennsylvania rye), are always reliable. 

Prevailing prices of to-day iu bond or free, for reliable brands 
and honest goods are a purcha.se : mark this prediction. 

Respectfully, Fi.ias Block & Sons. 



Fronj W. A. Taylor & Go. 

Old Tawney Ports a Specialtj'. Silva & Co.sens, Oporto. In 
both (lualily and quantity, the leading brands of Ojiorto Ports. 
The invariable clearness and brilliancy of these wines is re- 
nowned tli<' world over, and this very rare characteristic in Ports, 
coupled with wonderful values and styles, has placed them 
ahead of all others. They reijuire no fining to render tlicii- con- 
dition superb. Send for samples. They te'l the story without 
words. W. A. Tavi.oh & Co., 

Jf> Broadimy, New York. Sole AgenlK. 

Froni C. W. Abbott & Co. 

Bai.timork, Md., March, 1895. 

Seldom equaled ; never excelled. You give your customer 
as good as money will buy. You encourage home industry. 

'I'll rco good reasons why } on should buy and use -IWio^/'.f 
Augo.'<liira Bitlcrs. 



f/eifie WIJME /cJMD Spif^lT f^EVIEW. 



J^otos and ^erconals. 



C. W. KkM.OIHI, of Wir.MKIiDINO it ('(I. 

of pneumonia, broiifilit on by the grip. 



is laid vip witli a scvfre attack 



T). V. Ji. IIknakip;, of K. Martin & Co., lias been rlcctod as cliieclor 
of tlie Sunset Telephone & Telegraph ('onijiaiiy for tin- ensuing year. 

K. DiDiKKi.E has opened a new wholesale liquor house in Sai'ramentou. 
His plaee of business is at K street, above Fifth, and his quarters arC 
nicely fitted up. We wish Mr. DrwERLE success in his new enterprise. '|' 



At the auction sale of Me.ssi-s. Soutiiarh & Co., of 2 St. Dunstan's 
Hill, E. C, London, held on the 28th of l'"clirtiary, 12 hogsheads and 8 
quarters of brandy weresobl at auction, which have a )ieciiliar interest to 
California grape growers. The brandy was distilled in Kngland by the 
(irape Urandy Co., Ltd., with conceiilrate<l niiist as a basis, and was 
bonded in 18113. It brought 5 shillings per gallon. 

Paii. JoNKs, president of the Paul .Jonks Vn. and the .1. (I. Mat- 
Ti.vQi.v Co., of Louisville, died suddenly at his honi- in Louisville, Ky., 
recently. .\n abscess formed on his brain the day before his death, and 
his passing was rather unexpected to his business associates, lie was a 
native of Lynchburg, Va., and was lifty-four years of age. Deceased was 
never married, and left a large fortune to his immediate relatives. 



CitARi.ES BiiNDSCHU, of J. GuNDLACH &Co.,hasbeen laiil up at his 
home during the last fortnight. He sprained his ankle in the Market 
street cellar, and the injury kept him in bed about two weeks. He ap- 
peared on the street again on the 18th inst. 



.*^HKKi.KV Moore, of Louisville, a son of (ieorge II. Mooke, of "Jesse 
Moore " fame, is making a pleasure trip over the Coast, in company with 
his wife. They spent some days in Southern California, and are now tak- 
ing in the sights in and about San Francisco. 



David Kicii & Co., the wholesale wine merchants of New York, are 
'I about to winil up their business, and the individual members of tlie firm 
'i- will return to their old home, San Francisco. They have been in Iiusiness 
■'"•in New York about twelve years, and have done well, but the San Fran- 
'â–  Cisco interests of the members of the (inn reijuired attention, and it was 
" with reluctance that this step was decided upon. San Francisco will wel- 
come the Kirn's back again. 



E. R. Lii.iENTiiAi. and J. II. Mundv have returned from their Eastern 
trips. They met in Chicago and went to Peoria together, .\fter attend- 
ing to their business aflairs there, Mr. Lilienthai, went to New Y'ork on 
business, while Mr. Mundv spent some time visiting in Massachusetts. 



Solomon Haas, the father of Louis S. Haas, of the Crown Distilleries 
Co., died at his home in this city on the 11th inst., at the advanced age of 
78 years. The deceased was born in Bavaria, and had not been actively 
engaged in business for some years. He left a widow, a daughter and 
two sons. 

An important arrival that we overlooked in our table of whiskies im- 
ported by rail, last issue, was that of a car-load of 500 cases of the cele- 
brated " Keystone Monogram "Whisky," from Rosskam, Geksti.ev & Co. , 
Philadelphia, to Sherwood & Sherwood. This high-class whisky has ob- 
tained a verv large sale on the Pacific Coast. 



The Cai.ii'oknia Wine A.s.sociation has petitioned the Board of Super- 
visors for jiermission to lay pipes in the stri'ets between the Koiiler & 
Fiioin,iNG cellar, at Second and Folsoni streets, and the S. Lachmax Co.'s 
cellar, on Brannan street near Fourth. Tlie pipes will be used for trans- 
ferring wine from one cellar to the other, and this is the first privilege of 
the kind ever a.sked in San Francisco. The pipes will be laid under the 
supervision of the street department, an<l their use will save a large sum 
annually in drayage. 

The cases brought against Daniel McSherrv and .V. Sciarosi, of Han- 
ford, in the Superior Court of Kings county, for violation of the county 
prohibitory law, were tried on thellth, .hnige Gray, of Tulare countv, on 
the bench. Horace L. Smith represented the defendants, and made an 
elaborate argument. The Court decided for the defemlants, holding that 
the ordinance was inoperative within the city of Hanfonl. The case of 
C. Dahnken, a saloon-keeper at Leenioore, an unincorporated town, was 
also tried and taken under advisement by the Court. 



Ciiari.es E. Bowen, manager of The Bowen Co., is developing into a 
genius as a show-window advertiser. His old, re-imported whisky, nicely 
placarded, acted as a magnet for a time, and now he is showing a water- 
color bird's-eye view of the proposed new .San Joaquin Yalley Railroad, 
w hich generally keeps a dozen people about his store all the time. 



The San Jose Prohibitionists and the Home Protective Association of 
San Jose have put a straight "dry " ticket in the field. They evidentlv 
want another beating. F. R. Shakter, of San Jose, has .served notice on 
Sherifl' Lyndon that the law regarding the sale of licpior has been violated, 
and also informing him who will act as witnesses. Sherilf Iandon has re- 
fused to prosecute these men, and notice was served to give him warning. 
It is understood that the Home Protective Association will take stejis to 
impeach the official if he d(jes not prosecute the offenders. 



Rheinstrom, Bettman, Johnson &Co., the Cincinnati cordial and 
blended goods firm, have just issued something unique in the way of a 
circular, in the shape of an interview with Mr. Sam. J. Johnson, of the 
firm. Mr. Johnson is shown in six half-tone engravings, introducing, ex- 
patiating on, and selling his specialties. Send for one. It is worth reading 
and preserving. 

The first shipment of fine Canadian Rye Whisky recently arrived in 
bond to Sherwood & Sheewood, the agents, from Gooderham & Worts, 
Lt'd., Toronto. This whisky has always been recognized in Canada as 
the high ty[)e of Canadian whisky, and, while the manufacturers are very 
conservative, the Excise statistics of Canada show that their output i^ 
verv nearlv the largest in the Dominion. 



.\ new Sunday-clo.sing movement has been started in Oakland. The 
proposed measure closes the saloons from 6 o'clock Saturday night to 6 
o'clock Monday morning. The saloon men are watcliiii>; the course of 
events very closely. President EdofF, of the (California State Protective 
Association, and their attorney, George W. Baker, are keeping close eyes 
upon the City Council, and as soon as the measure is introduced they will 
make a strong tight against it. There are on hand a number of plans for 
anti-saloon work in Oakland just now. A call signed by a number of cit- 
izens has been made for a meeting, to be held on the 2lM, to consider a 
movement which has received the indorsement of the Men's I^eague of the 
First Congregational Church. Rev. \V. IL McDougall, of San Mateo, is 
' at the bead of the movement. 



WIVI. WOLFF & CO., 

Importers and General Agents, 



327-329 Market Street, 



San Francisco, Cal 



FJ^CX-B'XCD OO-i^ST .i^CS-EISTTS :B'CDTi, 



POIOIERT SEC CHAMPAGNE 

J. & F. MARTEa COUNAO 

MINERAL WATERS of the APOLLINARIS CO., Umitod, 

HUN'}ARUN APERIENT WATER 

FRIEDRXnSHALL APERIENT WATER 

MORG.\N BRO.. PORT ST. MARTS' SHERRIES 

DIXON'S D)UBLE DIAMOND PORT 

R1TAL WINE 00., OPORTO, Port Wines 

OUBOS FRERES, BORDEAUX, Clirsta and Saule.Tie3 

"- r.e-tmportcd American Whlnktcs.— 
Staple brauda. 



HOCK WINEvS, from Messrs. Henkell & Co., Mayence 
BURGUNDT WINES fi-om F. CHAUVEiNET, NUITS 
London JOHN do KUYPER & SONS, Ritlordam. GIN 

BARTaOLOMAY BREWERY CO., RrK-hester, N. Y. 
EXTRi FINE STANDARD, BOHEMIAN and the 
"KNICKERBOCKER- 
"DOG'S-UEAD" BRAND of Guinness' Stout and Bass' Ale 
CANTRELL & COCHRANES Belfast Ginger Ale 
LONDON Dock Jamaica Rum 
-'SC Excelsior; Bpr. 'S9 Belle of Nelson; Spr. '89 Blue Graff. 
Lowest market quotatioDS furniblied on application, to the 



CANADUN CLUB WHISKY {torn Messrs. HIRAM 

WALKER & SONS Ltd., Walkerville, Canada. 
ANDREW USHER & COS Si-nch Whiskies 
JAMESON & CO., IRISH WHISKY 
THEO. LAPPE S GENUINE AROMATIQUE 
GILKA KL'MMEL 

SUfTON, GARDEN & CO., London, Old Tom Gin 
UDOLPHO WOLFE'S SON & CO., Scliiedam, SHNAPPS 

Hume, Mayfield; O. F. C; C!iickencock anJ oILer 
wlK.leeale trade only 



15 



f/fGlfie WIJSIE /JMD SflF(IT f^EVIEW, 



Imports and Exports 

DURING THE PAST FORTNIGHT. 



EXPORTS OF WINE. 



TO OERHANY— Prr Babk Hillwall, Mareli 9, 1S9S. 



DESTINATION. 


6HtPPBB8. 


PALKA0E8. 


CfALLOKE 

5,CX)0 

3,7,')0 

5.222 

.SO 

S58 


VALUE. 




Cal \S'ine .\s9ociatioii.. . 
J Giindlach & Co 

Natoma Vineyard Co. . . 


100 barrels 

75 barrels 

UK) barrels 

3 keijs 

13hi-barrel8 


*1,500 




1,.5(« 




2,850 
120 


M 


50 barrels 


2,474 


COO 
55 


" 


Samuel Bros &Co 


G kej^s 

1 hf-barrel 

2 barrels 


45 
34 
99 
20 
30 


60 
19 
50 


•• 


A Uepsold »& Co 


Icask 

3 kecs 


15 
20 


». 




40 


,. 


2 hf-barrels 

99 barrels 


M 

4,970 


45 


:: 


55 cases and 


2,6.30 
93 


,, 




40 
22,122 


40 


Total amoiinl 




$9,886 



TO NEW YORK— Pku Ship Floernck, MBrch 4, 1894. 



New York | Cal VV Association . . . { 2500 barrels. 

Total amount 



la'i.oooi 

12^ 



a'i.oooi 

2'^,OoJ 



$60,000 
$60,000 



TO SHANGHAI— Per Str. Gaelic, March 2, 1895. 



Bbanghai iLaebinan it Jacob! 

CWA, Kohler& Van B. 



30 bbl 20 bf-b 20 cs 

6 barrels 

10 cases 



Total amount 30 cases and. 



2,132 
301 



2433 



*(i54 
90 
30 

$774 



TO CENTRAL AMERICA— Peu Stu. Acapui.co, March C, 1SU5. 



Acajntla 


Crown Dist Co 


1 hf-barrel 

4 barrels 


29 
185 


$ 15 
100 


La Libeitad 


Castle liros 




Cal W Association 

Iniflenook Vineyard. . . . 
Italian-Swiss Colony.... 


31 cases 


156 


Puntas Arenar 


32 cases 




189 






2(B 
127 


112 


ti 


3 casks 


90 






200 


Ocos 


8 cases 




50 






60 
258 


.30 






5 barrels 


75 






Total amount 


121 cases and .. 


S62 


$1,017 



TO MEXICO— Pee Stb. Acapulco, March C, 1895. 



Acapuico iCal W Association j3 casks 

Mazatlan Inglenook Vineyard j20 eases 

Acapulco J Gundlaeh & Co 2 barrels... 

' " Is b(-barrels 



Total amount 20 cases and. 



191 



378 



$115 

125 

53 

55 

$.348 



TO NEW YORK VIA PANAMA— Per Ste. Pbogeeso, 


March 6, 


1895. 


New York 




200 

25,780 

20,029 

50 

l,4.'-)2 

15,500 

10,167 

49,907 

104 

210 

205 


$ 500 


li 


E Gamier & Co 

Marshall, Spcllman tS: Co 
W A Vaiiderc-ook . ..... 

J lUi'hr 


500 barrels 

400 barrels ... 

1 barrel 

31 barrele 

310 l)arrels 

200 barrels 

1010 barrels 

2 barrels 

4 barrels 


4,422 

6,000 

30 

.581 


n 


W Sesiiions 


3,01)0 


u 
it 


J Gundlaeh & Co 

Lftchman (t Jacobi 

BL'rinm'r IJro.s 


2,412 

1 1,52.8 

104 


tl 


C CaiiL-Ili 


70 


l( 


Lenorinand Bros 

Kolb<S: Dfiihard 




82 


tt 




30 


14 






95 


M 


\V E von Johannsen 

Leon Allenberg 

PMSSCo 




40 


30 


n 


20 cases 


2;w 




.50 casks 


3,182 
376 
2;J0 

1.409 
50.(X)(I 

179,441 


900 




11 hf-bairels 


190 

80 


., 




517 


New York 1 

Total amount 48 caBes and 


1000 barrels 


15,000 
$45,804 



TO liUlTISlI COLUMBIA— Pkk Str. Walla Walla, March 15, 1895. 





Italian-Swiss Colony 

Lachman vfc Jacobi .... 
Cal W Growers' Union.. 

2 cases and 


1 barrel 


52 


$ 32 






7 


Victoria 


3 barreU 

1 barrel 


157 
52 
.'» 
25 

341 


48 
32 

:i4 




1 hf-barrel 


26 
$179 



TO CHINA AND JAPAN— Per Stb. City of Peking, March 13, 1895, 



Sandakan . . 

Hiogo 

Yokohama . 



Najaeaki 

Vladitvostoik via H'j; 



(iillHTt Clcraente 

J Gundlaeh tt Co 

BeriuiitT Bros 

CWA. KohlerA Van B. 

Int^lenook Vine\anl 



5 barrels . . , 
7 barrels... 
9 barrels . . , 

barrels . . 

6 cases 

1 hf-barrel . 



2 kegs 4 pkj^s 



::i 



Total amount 6 cases and. 



305 
4.56 
101 



3o; 



1,498 



$ 87 

130 
120 
40 
25 
30 

394 



$726 



IMPORTS OF WINES AND LIQUORS BY SEA. 

FROM CANADA VIA VANCOUVElt AND CANADIAN I'ACIFIC KAILUOAI), 
Per Str. City ok I'teula, March 7th — 450 cases whisky (Win. Wolff *V Co.) 

FROM EUROPE VI,\ NEW YORK— Per Str Progreso. March 7th— 670 cases 
vermouth; 6 eighth-pipes, 2 quarter-casks wine; 1 case liquors; 15 eij;htli-bar- 
rels, 510 cases bi-audy; 2 cases whisky; 5 cases absinthe: 5 cases fernet. 

FROM EUROPE, Per Sim- Macdiarmid, March 12th— 1G5 cases, 1 hogshead 
whisky ; 85 cases, 210 barrels stout ; 70 cases gin ; 415 cases, 95 barrels beer ; 60 
barrels mineral water ; 18 hogsheads. 46 cases, 10 octaves wine : 122 cases, 5 
hogsheads brandy ; 30 barrels ginger ale. 

FROM EUROPE, Per Bkitisii Ship Thistle, March 13th— 2400 cases vermouth ; 
700 cases absinthe ; I'JU case, IS casks wine ; 2.55 cases brandy ; 300 cases liquors ; 
5 cases beer ; 25 t|uarter-casks prune juice ; 700 cases mineial water. 

FROM EUROPE OVERLAND BY RAIL IN BOND— 670 cises champagne, 5 
casks, 10 cases wiiiu; 5J cases braudy ; 31 cases cordials; 2i cases beer. 

EXPORTS OF MISCELLANEOUS LIQUORS BY SEA. 



From March 1st to March 15, 1895. 



vessel. 



Australia . 



destination. 



Honolulu. 



. A Vignicr 

I " 

Burnell ACo.... 

City of Pucbla. Nan.iimo Berlin it Lcpori. 

Total amount 17 cases, etc 



PEGS 4 CONT. 



IOCS Bitters.... 

5 cs Vermouth.. 
25 kegs Porter.. 

6 keus Ale 

2 cs Bitters 



$ 49 

16 

200 

58 

10 

$;«3 



SHERWOOD aid 




WOOD, 



--IMPORTERS AND EXPORTERS- 



212-214 MARKET STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 



24. N. FRONT STREET, PORTLAND, OR. 



"Kcijstonc Snonogrnin Kyc" and "(f)lii Snrnlogn" — The Finest Eastern Ryes. 



MOET k CHANDON CHAMPAGNE 

HUNT ROOPE TEAGE k CO. Cased Ports, 

6. k I. BURKE'S Irish and Scotch Whiskies, 

BASS RATCUFK & GRBnON, Limited— Basi Ale in Wood 

E. k i. BURKE'S Ba.Hs' Ale and Dublin Porter (GUINNESS 

EXTRA FOREIGN STOUT, the finest brew). 
yiELSCHMANN'S ROYALTY GIN. 

RoSHKAM, OkiISTI.KV .V Co., PHlI.AnKI.I'lllA, I'URK WO ]SK1 KS: — "M AKl'OT," "RolllN lliloll," "(). P, S." ANP "PuiVATK STiii'K." 

I'ltii'Hl iniiiiilinn llyr Hhlnkiii Uliiilrrhnm Ac tVorlH, t.'I'il, Toronto, Ctinotln). ISolllrtl I'nilrr (loirriimrnl Siiprrrlslnu. 

Ul.-mi'Oin i:i> .t}li:illl.l\ WIIISH li:s imllslr lUiurhmi. Spvlun 'SI. -SH, '.SH, •»<>,• noisr\i Itiir: O. /■•. «'.: Siirliiiihill: ir. II. MvlSrayrr 
llrrinthifti-: M. W Mtnuii-rh: hfniurhf/ Huh; Mt'll u-ooti : Maltltiffly; <7i/*'/i"*'ii*'o*-^-.' K i\ Itrrrtt tnid othvr slit luhi nl hraiuls. 

AlBO AgenU For NAPA VALLEY WINE GO'S WINES AND BRANDIES IN CASES. California Winei and Brandies in Wood 



ESCllENAUER & CO'S CLARETS and SAUTERNES, 
A. HOUTMAN .V CO'S llDLLANI) GIN. 
LAW.SONS LigUEUR SCOTCH WHISKEY, 
GUINNESS' DUHUN STOUT m Wwd, 
JOULE'S STONE ALE m Hhds. and Hf-Hhds. 
MEINHOLD'S ANCHOR BRAND NEW YORK CIDER, 
llENK WAUKESHA M.owal Water, 



MACKENZIE & CO'S Sp,-inisli Slicrncs and PorU 

E. & J. BURKES NONPAREIL OLD TOM GIN. 

BURKE'S IIENNESSY HRANDY iind DRY GIN 

SCULIT2 MILWAUKEE BEER the "Pilscner" aad Light SpirklinR 

also SCHLITZ in Wiwd, 
ROSS' BELFAST GINGER ALE. CLUB SODA, ETC. 
"CLUB COCKTAILS," EVANS HUDSON ALE 



f/teifie WIJME /^IMD Sflf^lT PREVIEW. 



17 



EXPORTS OF WHISKY BY SEA. 



From March Ist to March 15, 1S95. 



TB8SBL. 


DESTINATION. 


SHIPPEIW. 


FACKAOBS. 


GALLONS 


VALUE. 


Gaelic 


LCo, Vokolmma. 


AP HotalinsCo... 


1 barrel.... 


49' f: 1(>0 


Acapiili'ii .... 


.rV, F AriMlas 


Carroll iV Carroll .. 


2 barrels.. . . 


82! :i7() 




AW, " 


" 


1 barrel 


4:; 150 




JK, 


" 


i barrels. . . 


V, 


133 


•• 


AS&Co, La Lib'il 


" 


24 ease» . . . 




24.> 




VV, Afajutla. . . . 


Crown Dist Co 


2ti eases 




280 


" 


EL, •• 




32 cases 




307 




.\L, .\capiiU'0 


J Guncllaeh & Co.. 


Ikc},' 


5 


10 


.\ustralia 


M.\:Co, Honolulu 


Crown Di^t Co 


23 eases. . . . 




107 




L.V:Co, 


Spruanee, S ^S; Co. . 


2 barrels 


9-. 


187 




LHD, 


Thos Tavlor it Co . 


10 cases. . . . 




90 


S NCaslle ... 


M*C'o, 


Spruance, 8 tt Co.. 


40 cases 




322 


** 


" " 


Crown Dist Co 


50 eases 




333 


Total 


amount 187 cases 


ami 




3(!0 


S2,s20 



EXPORTS OF BRANDY TO FOREIGN PORTS BY SEA. 



From March 1st to Uarcb 15, 1895. 



VESSEL. 


DESTINATION. 


SHIPPERS. PACKAGES. 


CALLONS 


YAH' is. 






P M S S Co .."i cases 




$ 245 


Millwall 

Citv of I'uebla 


Hamburg 

Victoria' 


Edward Walden,. Jr. 17jb 100 h-h 
Samuel Bros .t Co. 1 hf-bbl ... 
A Kepsold A Co . . hf-bl>ls.. . . 
Am Con Must Co . . 25 bf-bbls. . 
"Rertin .V- I.eoori . . ! ease. . . _ _ 


il,3.-)5 
25 

\m 

GOl 


5,(V88 

19 

100 

330 

9 


Totals 


mount 20 eases anj 


12.201 


?B,:*<i 



MISCELLANEOUS FOREIGN WINE SHIPMENTS. 



From March 1st to March 15, 1895. 



VKSbKL. 


DESTINATION. 


_ 


SHIPPERS. 


PACKAGES. 


GALLONS 


VALUE. 


Acapuleo .... 


Panama 


PMSSCo 

A Vignier 

Cal W Association. 
CWA, CCarpy&Co 
Lachman I't Jaeobi. 

L Juri it Co 

J Gundlach A Co.. 
Cal W G Union 


20 cases 

4 eases 




* 250 

7-' 


Australia . . , 


Honolulu 


SG Wilder... 

Aloha 

Cir V of Puebla 
I'matilla 


Victoria . . 

New Westminster 
Victoria 


5 barrels . . . 
13 bbis 5 lig 
15 bbls 13.) k 

1 barrel 

1 barrel 


2.'>9 

714 
l,aS7 
48 
50 
51 

2,809 


105 
309 
791 

1* 
60 

18 


Total 


amount 24 cases 


a 


nd 




.?1.G21 



ALCOHOL, BRANDY, LIQUORS AND RUM IMPORTS BY RAIL. 

From March 1st to March 15, 1S95. 

COPYBIGHTKD. 



CONSIGNEES. 


ALCOHOL. 


BRANDY. 


LltJUOKS. 


BUM. 


Cases 


Drums 

2 


Cases 


y.. bbls 


Cases. 


Barrels 


Barrels 


Cal Powder Works 








10 
4 




















C KlinL'el 










1 




J Gundlach & Co 










20 




H Sheuson 








1 










z 










Total 




1 


4(1 


1 





















WHISKY AND SPIRIT IMPORTS BY RAIL. 



From Maich 1st to March 15, 1895. 



COPyKIGIlTBD. 





SPIRITS. 


Cases 


WHIbKY. 


CONSIGNEES. 


Barrels Cases 


Barrels 

284 

':J24 
M 
60 
BO 
10 

66 


\i hbla 


Kegs 

65 




Misc. 


L Cahen & >^on 

C WCraii;&Co 

Wm Wolff .V: Co 

Crown Dislilleries Co.. 

.lones. .Mundy it Co 

Siebe Bros iV Plaii;eni'n 
Braunsi-liweii;er iV Co.. 
Lonis Taussig it Co. . 
Sherwood ,te ilierwood 

G R Hendrii-kson 

Bode it Ilaslett 


128 
210 
120 
470 
340 












500 

120 




.T<ts Melezer it Co 


05 
20 

1 

1 

3 








Christy it Wise.. 














S n Hall 










Lick House 














Davis it Wennnt 




























C .1 iMongalez, Oakland 








1 
1 








.1 H Mitchell, 















C Harrison, " 








1 

10 








C Meinecke it Co 




















CO 








.IWHart ♦ 






















1 
1 
1 








F Mecclii 














S Bacigalui i 














Katbjens Bios 








2 

1 
1 
2 
















Bear it Bucklev 














E .1 Baldwin 










1,208 




680 









Total 

»1 liogshead Whisky. 


967 


70 


65 





BEER IMPORTS BY RAIL. 



From March 1st to Mai eh 15, 1895. 



COPY'EIGHTKD. 





BOTTLED 

Boxes 1 Barrels 




BULK. 




Casks 


Barrels 


K bbl j >i- bbl 

551 Kio 


Kegs 


HovtI EaMe Dist Co 




90 


^ 




1 


60 


I(JO 




W Bo"en it Co 


. 




45 


10 




40 


Hilt>ert Bros . , . . 


I 


120 

166 


I! E Schnltz 

Wm Wollf it Co 


210 40 


1 






C W Craig it Oo. . * 




1 
















' * â–  ' 


Total 


210' 40 


220 


135 


125 


200 


40 



• 120 casks Ale. 



•DESPEiSSIS' WO-RK O/N WI/NE. 



The Govei'ument of New Soutli Wales lias pulilisliecl in full 
Despeissis" work entitled "The Vineyai-d aud tlic Cellar." 
which has been ninniug in the Aijricultiiml Gazette of Xew South 
Wale for some months back. Mr. Despeissis is one of the best 
informed men in the Colonies on \iticiilture and \'iuieulture, 
and his work shows a great breadth of information and research. 



KICHARD HELI.MANX 



H. G. HELLMAXN" 



HELLMANN BROS. & CO. 

IMPORTERS AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS 
525 Front Street - - - - San Francisco, Cal. 



.P.AOIFir CO.APT .AGENTS FOR 



KRUG & CO., REIMS, PRIVATE CUVEE CHAMPAGNE 



J. PERKIER FILS & CO., Chalons s Marae. Champagne 

ADRIEN & FILS, Epemay - - Champagne 

FORRESTER & Ci)., Xerez de la Frontera, Sherries 

GARVEY & CO., - - - Sherries 

OFFLSY, CRAMP & FORRESTER. Oporto, Port Wloes 

BUNKENHEYM & .SOLET, RiMlerJam, Union Gin 

CH. LECHAT, R. PHILIPPE & CHESSE, Nantes, Sardines 



DUBLIN DISTILLERS' CO., L'l'd, Dublin, Irish Whisky 

E. REMY MARTIN & CO.. RouUlac, - Cognacs 

P. FRAPIN it CO.. Segonzac - - •• 

ENGRAND FRERES, Angouieme, 

PATTERSON & HIB3ERT, London, J ^^' s°?„,'^°'°'^ 



L. DURLACHER, Bingen - Rhine Wine 

H. UNDERBERG— ALBRECHT, Rheinherg a Niedcrrhein, 

Boonekamp Bitters 

CHAS. DAT & CO., I.nd,n, J oTge Bit'.!? 

) Scotch Whisky 
( Jamaica Rums 



J. B. HE.^RIFF & CO.. Glasssnw. 



ALL (:<}OltS IX VXITEn STATES ISOSItKI) U MtlllOVSE. 

AMERICAN WHISKIES— -BLUE GRASS" AND 'BOONE'S KNOLL 



18 



f/eifie WIJSIE /fJ^D SflF^IT F^EVIEW. 



CiiAS. Meinecke & Co. recently lost a car-load of whisky rn route 
from the East in bond, the loss occurring in a railway acciilont. 

liEORUK E. tiHAVKs, the San Jose wholesaler, has become financially 
embarrassed, and has made an assignment. Wilmerdinu & Co. are the 
heaviest creditors. 

The dis illery of J. B. Watuen & Biios. Co., at I,oui.svilIe, was burned 
out on the 5th inst. The loss is ifSO.OtX), and the insurance .1:34,800. The 
Company will at once rebuild. 

Among the members of the Trade who have recently subscribed for 
the stock of the New Sau Joaquin Valley railroad are HuArN.scuwKiciEK & 
Co., 12000, and E. Garsier & Co., iflOcHt. 



The American Concentrated Must Company shipped 500 barrels of 
Concentrated Must to liermany on the British hark Milhvall, which cleared 
on the i>th instant. The lot was valued at ^10,000. 



The firm of MEVERFEi-n, Mitcheli, & Co. has again undergone a 
change in its personnel, Solomon Dannenuaim retiring and Jacob Wkr- 
theimek being admitted. The style of the firm remains unchanged. 



Messrs. Arthur Gri'Enbero & Co. shipped to China, per steamer 
Gaelic, on her last trip, twenty cases Bohemian Club champagne. They 
hope to open up an e.vtensive trade in that country, and have already 
received considerable encouragement. 



Jesse MEVERFEi.n, formerly of the firm of Meyerfeld, Mitcuei.i. & 
Co., intends to start for Europe about the 2lMt mstant. He will take his 
family with him, and will remain a year, at least, in Germany and possibly 
may locate permanently in the old country. 

The City Council of San Luis Obispo has taken the initial step look- 
ing to a raise in the town liquor license from $100 to .f600 per annum. The 
Tribune says there are now thirty licensed saloons, and that high license 
will reduce their number fully 50 per cent., thus raising their revenues 
from $3,000 to $9,000 per annum. 

C.M.Manx, manager for I. DeTcrk, reports business steadily im- 
proving, and orders coming in in a very gratifying manner. He has just 
shipped a seleited car-load of wine to Louisville and another to St. Louis 
and Cincinnati. Mr. Mann considers the outlook for the wine business 
better than it has been for many years. 

Messrs. E. Remy Martin & Co., of Cognai-, France shipped to the 
t'nited States during 1894 18,001 gallons in bulk and 11.30 cases, making a 
total of l!l,8(il gallons. We are sorry that the data ilid not reach us in 
time to he included in our brandy table of Jan. 10, 1895. Had it appeared 
in the table it would have placed Messrs. K. Kemv Martin & Co. fifth in 
the list. — Bonfort's. 

1'etkr Darby, J. I'. Ivndkrt, E. Yates and Wm. H. Mc.Vdams, Iii|uor 
dealers, refused to pay the city liquor license of Crescent City for iMarcli, 
on the grounds that such could not be collected on account of some defect 
in the ordinance. The City Attorney was instructed by the City Trus- 
tees to take steps toward enforcing said ordinance. Three of the above 
men were formerly memlxjrs of the Board of Trustees, and paid the tax 
up to the 1st instant. 

Messrs. .Southard & Co., of 2 St Dunstan's Hill, E. C, London, say 
in a recent circular: "The wines of California are now beginning to reach 
our market, and we will be able to show you shortly, in one of our next 
sales, some of the best specimens we have seen on our market. It is a 
serious attempt on the part of the growers of these winea to introduce 
them to the trade, and we hope this first trial will be followed by many 
more hereafter." 

A " Fooling " Conqress. — During the closing hours of the last Con- 
gress, while the House was in session Sunday night (which by legislative 
fiction was called part of Saturday), Mr. liroderick, of Kansas, strolled 
over to the seat of Mr. Bailey, of Texas. " Bailey," querii'd the Kausan, 
" Do you suppose that the Fifty-third Congress, by calling this Saturday, 
will be able to fool the Lord?" " I don't know," replied Mr. Bailey, 
doublfully; " j)erhap8 it will. It has fooled everybody else." 

The Nicholson bill has passed the Indiana Senate, and is before the 
Governor for his signature. There were only ten votes against it in the 
House, and the report of the last conference committee was passed viva 
voce in the Senate. The act is recognized as a ]iiobihition measure, pure 
and siin]>le, that has licen forced on the He]iublican majority in a clever 
manner. The most prominent feature of the bill is a local-option clause, 
but in addition to this are many restrictions designed to harass and aggra- 
vate the saloon business. The (ierman population is largely stirred up 
over the measure. In ad<Iition to the loral-oplion feature of the bill, it 
restriclfl any one manor firm to a single license, thus knocking out the 
brewer system of taking out licenses by the score. It provides that none 
but males may take out a license, and throws the revoking power in the 
Iianils of the Justice of the Peace. Drugstores can dispense in ijiiaiitities 
of a i|U.irt or more, but no less e.vcept on a reputable physician's pre- 
Hcrijition. 



Qorrcs'pondQncc, 

OwENSiiOKo, Ky., March, 1895. 

Editor Pacific Wine and Spirit Review — Sir: My attention 
lias been oalled to the article in your paper of the 20tli ultimo 
ill relation to the effect of tlie eslablisluaent of tlie new bonded 
vvarelioiise under the jirovisions of the new tariff' and revenue 
laws. 

I'nder the provisions of the law whiskj- can be moved 
twice, instead of onee, yet the greatest obstruction to the system 
is the fact that the distiller and his bondsmen, who originally 
bond the whisky, are held responsible for the tax until it is paid, 
regardless of the number of times it lias been remove<l in bond. 
Siieh responsibility, reaching through eight years, of wliieii the 
distiller cannot be relieved undtr lliis act by the substitution of 
other bonds, renders the new proposed system of warehouse in- 
operative. 

Therefore, so far as Kentucky distillers are concerned, the 
utility of such warehouses will not be largely a practical question, 
and the distribution of straight goods will remain to a great ex- 
tent as heretofore, for there is scarcely a responsible distiller who 
would assume to pay the tax on whisky of which he has not had 
the control during its entire bonded time. However, responsible 
distillers might ship whisky to remain iu bond six or twelve 
mouths. I think distillers could take bonds for this time. 

I wish, in this connection, to call the trade's attention to 
the manj- irresponsible warehouse companies that are fast spring- 
ing up. I now have cases where persons have, for fraudulent 
purposes, bought nij' goods, tax-paid and thereby got possession 
of them, deliberately and systematically robbed the barrels of 
the entire contents, and replaced it with vile and worthless 
stuff", and then manage to get it into so-called private warehouse 
and sell it through brokers as the genuine article. 

This is about the latest scheme (that J am aware of. at 
least,) to practice frauds. So I wish to say — The trade has no 
guarantee unless it buj's direct from the distillery warehouses. 
And I hope the handlers of my goods — ( the " K. Monarch," 
" Kentucky Club," " T. J. Monarch." " (ilenmore," " Kentucky 
Standard," " Imperial,'' " Doherty Short Horn Kye '' and " Ken- 
tucky Midland " ) — will not buy from other warehouses. If 
they do, I cannot be responsible for the purity of the goods. 
Yours respectfully, K. ^Ionakch. 



"Times have changed," said an old-time Eastern druggist, as beset 
down his demijohn in a straight-goods house and ordered it filled, "and 
I'm not sure it's changed for the better. Now when I kept store the soila- 
fountain gave out soda-water only, and did a very light business. Next 
("line the period of ' winks ' and facial contortions, which the ' soila man 
iiiterj)reted to iiieaii 'hrainly,' 'whisky,' 'wine,' or other .added stimulant. 
Now, the soda-fountain that don't have a long list of ' flavoring extracts,' 
and ' tonics,' and the like, simply docs no business. From the drugstore to 
the department store it's all the same," contUiued the old-style druggist, 
warmiMg up on the subject. " And the wouicu are the best jiatrons of 
the soda-fountain of to-day — except the I^rohibitionisls ami extremists on 
the temperance iiuesliou. ' Calisaya,' 'coca,' and other nerve-wrecking 
stimulants have the most general call ; but i>erliaps it looks belter to have 
a case of ilnigstoie 'nervousness' than a saloon 'too-much straight.' 
It's the old thirst of mankind for a stimulant," he went on, "and the 
' Tonics ' and other fancy names lanuot hiile or change it." Can this be 
possible? Perish the tliought! 



aj^iifjlijjiia 




|IreWerv(s 





E\TER. 



JIIIIK City of KocliustiT. w itii il.s iil>iin<lniit Mipjdy of iiKiRiiltkooni water ftinl its close 
1 itroxiitiily to ilif lu-st Imrlcy tiiiit ho|> iiroifnclriK ilistrlfts of llu' cnnnlry. Hffonls 
ini'-nriiii-.sril fiirllltti's f<»r the i>nnliiclloii of such IiciiltliKivinK iiiul tmlHtiililt- hvvv iis 
».ri-\vr.| l.v till- 'ItAKTllol.oMAY MKKWKKY CO.," Ko.-hfstcr, N. Y. HartlioIomuyH 
" Fine Standard " iiti<|iU'slioimtily Is tlu' iitircst itiid Ws\ licer tn tlio niHrkct, niid 
the "Knickerbocker," l>ri'wi'ii of tlu- choicest imUtTiftl will, wc fet'lfunlittent, on 
Hccoiinl of li.s rx«|iiTf*lic proiHTlii's, soon hi coiiir a fiiv orltr u ith lovers of ii liigh grade 
Hiid (IvlU'nlv boiT. Koii Sai.k iiy am. I»K\i,i:it>- am. (iuo* kio. 

WILLIAM WOLFF & CO., 
Pacific CoatI Agenti, 327-329 Market St.. San Francisco. Cal. 



f/eifie WIJME /JMD SflF^IT F^EVIEW. 



18 A 



WINE AND BRANDY OVERLAND, 

During February, 1895, Showing Destination and Points of Shipment. 









[OFFICI.VL 


FIGURES.] 










TO 


BRAMn'-. 


IFZA'JE. 


FROM 


BRANVT. 


WINE. 




Cases. 


Gallons. 


Caaes. i Gall>ns. 


CaBes. Qallons. 


Cases. 


OallouB. 


Bostiin, Mass 




219 


3 

22 

1C9 

5 

8 

25 

25 


2,680 

912 

477,527 

6,003 

2,743 

5,708 

198 








New Eni;'aml points 




Oakland 


1 




01 '^in 


New York Cit}- 


156 


4,037 
, 2,567 


Mai tiuez 







49 

1,225 

9.i 


Philadflpliia 




Concord 

Danville 


1,186 


2 


Piltsburs; 

Other Pennsvlvaiila points 


i 





Livennore 


i 


241 
2,475 


7 


15,709 

32,136 

68 

9,533 

297 

2,775 

10 

95 


Baltimore. 




5,139 
82 


Nile'- 


Wasbintiton, DC 


1 














Viriiinia and Maryland points 




2 

7 

137 

3 


Snnfn nini-n 




48 




Carolina and Georgia points 










Xen- Orleans 


1 


367 


371,254 

4,890 
8,836 
2,516 
2,.3S0 
5,047 
10,l>63 
1,321 
7,260 
5,603 
3,891 
869 

49 
2,547 

20 
24,3(M| 

*7, 

224 

2,500 


Gilrov 






2 
2 
6 

2 


Baton Uonge 

Otiii-r Louisiana points 


Los Gatos 






Moliile 

liirminijliara 




43 

10 

108 

332 

282 

26 


2 

is 

25 
181 

48 
144 
323 

32 
5 

,1 


Marysville 

Vina 




63 
2,494 

51 
2,425 


20 

6,082 

5,825 

35,053 

2,435 


Otlier Gnlf points s 


Stockton 




Dallas 




West's Snnr 




Fort Wortli 








Galveston 


s 






2,400 

668 

190 

43 




Houston 






Q: 1 not; 










3 
3 


147,794 

56,777 

35 

10,080 

7,849 

5,:i53 

30,952 

49 

10,053 

40,152 

28 

16,980 

2 460 


Ottier Texas points 


2 


124 


Oakville 




Otlier Art;., Oakla. and Indian Ty point 
Louisville 


' 






1 


Zinfandel 








Other Tennessee and Kentucky points 






10 




Cincinnati 




316 


Kfue 






Cordeiia 




308 




Cleveland i 


2 
11 
5 
9 

101 
7 
5 
4 
8 
30 

105 


Snisun 




Other Ohio points 






Woodland 


1 












91 


















11,514 


42,017 

372 

2.827 

3,509, 


Asti 


50 


3 


Other Illinois points 






Sehastopol 




Other Michisan points ' 


Chiqnita 








2 400 








2,622 




140 
10 
29 


Other Wisconsin points 1 24 


Ukiab * 






843 
572 


26,283' 

3,814 

10 

69 

4,166 

10 

2,230 

152 

102 

5,133 

1,375 

3,680 

3,364 


Natoma 


■•• :*':"::':;::"i 




Kansas City , 60 


Placeiville ' 


lOl 






Other Missouri points 




Elk Grove 


1 

175 


8,287 
4,0.54 








11 

23 
1 

23 
8 

83 

42 

160 

8 

65 


Los Angeles..'. ...*.'.".'.*'.*.!!]!!'..'*."! j 5 26'i 






892 


Other Minnesota points 




West Glendale 






Omaha- 




616 
22 
20 
256 
278 
567 
812 
442 


San Gabriel ' " * ' i i 


9,014 
42 


Other Kansas and Nebraska points 


4 


Cucaraonsa !. 




Dakotas 


Sunnv Slope ' ' 


5 


o 575 




13 
22 
25 

a 

4 






10 
147 


Other Colorado points 








Montana and Idaho points 








113 










33 


Allui>[Uer<|ne, etc 


1,309 
3,275 
5,550 
3,572 


lone 1 






England 




2,400 




Albambra 1 


i 


Germany 










France 










' 


















Plaqnemine 




























Detroit 




























Houston 
























Mem]tlii3 






Ontario ! 




St Jo:>eph 






fnUnn 




Sioax City , 


Antioch 






Total 1 295 27,689 


1,9081 l,067,838!l Total 1 295 27.689 


1.908 


1 067,838 



WI/NE A/N-D BKA/NDg "RECEIPTS. 



March 1 

1. 9 



"Wine. 

54,.310 

70..3.">0 

4 (iS.l.-JO 

5 04,.550 

(i .'57, TOO 

7 41,040 

5 il7..S70 

9 112.7(10 

11 (it;,7.S0 

V2 97.300 

13 2.S.790 

U 31^890 

1.^) 68.120 



Braudy. 
5fiO 



January 

Februaiy 

To Mar. 15... 



Wine. 
553,110 
741,410 
421,950 



-1894- 



Braudj'. 

142,705 

190,650 

32,445 



Wine. 


Brandy. 


897,534 


60,590 


1,344,780 


1,540 


872,590 


880 



Total to March 15 872,590 

Total, saiiie dates last year... 421,950 



320 



880 
2,445 



Total 2imo's 1,716,470 365,800 



3,114,904 



63,010 



The following is a comparative statement of the receipts of 
wine and brandy at this point for 2i months, 1S!)4 and 1895: 



An interesting case, involving the validity of the Santa Rosa oify or- 
dinance regarding the revocation of saloon licenses, is on trial. M. Po/.zi, 
proprietor of tlie Champion saloon, liad liis license revolted by the City 
Council upon representation by the City Marshal that lie was not a fit 
person to conduct a retail liquor business. Pozzi closed the saloon, and 
then opened it again. He was arrested for selling liipior without a license, 
and his defense is that the Council did not revoke the license regularly. 
He has engaged a formidable array of lawyers to defend him. 

Where a social club is clearly a bona fide organization witli a limited 
membership, and admission into which cannot be obtained by any person 
at his pleasure, and its property is actually owned in common by its mem- 
t)ers, a distribution of wine or other liiiuors iHdonging to such club among 
its several members is not a sale of liquor by retail or in original packages 
within the meaning and [lurview of the dramshop act, although, techni- 
cally, the act does amount to a sale for some purposes. The bona-fides of 
the organization is in each case a question for the court or the jury under 
proper instruction of the court. — (State vs. St. I»uiB Club, Supreme Court 
of Missouri, Division No. 2, 28 S. W. Kep., tKM.) 



18 B 



f/fGlfie WIJME f^fiQ SflF^lT F^EVIEW. 



U/NFE-RME/NTED WI/NE. 

We are indebtpd to the Australian Vlgneron for the fullow- 
ing report ou the manufacture of unferinented wine read at the 
proceedings of the Board of Viticulture of ^"ictoria : 

" The Secretary said that in connection with the letter re- 
ceived from Messrs. Barlow and Arniit;ige. the proprietors of the 
Vigiieroii. regarding unfermented wine. Signor Bragati had for- 
warded the following report : To jirepare unfermented wine the 
grapes should be gathered when jiroperly ripe, crushed, pressed 
and strained as quickly as jMissible : then it should be put through 
a concentrator, which machine concentrates the must in the 
empty space — vacuum — at a low temperature and low press- 
ure. * The machine is very simple, easily worked and relatively 
cheap to the advantages ol)tained l)y it in comparison with other 
methods adopted. By this method KM) gallons of must will be 
reduced in one hour into 10 gallons of .syrup or concentrated 
unfermented wine. The coucentrated must when diluted with 
water constitutes a wholesome summer drink, and is the true 
unfermented wine. I shall be pleased to show samples of it to 
any member of the Board who wishes to see it. 

" In a report to the Secretary for .Vgriculture I mentioned the 
advantages obtained by this concentrator in comparison with 
other methods. 

" 1 . The coneeiitrafed grape must in the shape of syrup may 
be easily fermented when re(iuired l)y adding the water which 
has been taken by concentration, as the grape jxast — Saccharom- 
yce-i eUipfoideiis — are in their natural state and are not damaged 
by the concentration. 

•' 2. Thegrape sugar is also intact and not burnt, as happens 
with other coucentrators worked with too high temperature. 

•' li. The other components of the must are also to be found 
in their natural state. 

" 4. The must thvis concentrated is reduced to a small par- 
cel and therefore great saving is aflbrded to growers in packing, 
storage, shipping and freight ; besides, in exporting it may be 
considered as syrup, and thus avoid heavy duty. 

" 5. The concentrated must as obtained from the concen- 
trator cannot ferment, and is easily ju-eservedin sound condition 
for months and years, and by adding water to it is easily convert- 
ed into wine similar to that which would have been obtained 
before concentration."" 



A correspondent of the New York World furnished recently 
the following description of the P^ountaingrove Viueyard and its 
products. This well-known establishment is just outside the 
city limits of Santa Rosa : 

" A recent visit to California by the writer was a revelation 
in this respect. The renown, in the East, of the Fountaingrove 
\"ineyards, at Santa Rosa, naturally attracted attention to that 
enormous establishment. The surroundings of the winery are 
beautiful beyond description. Located on a lovely, fertile pla- 
teau, among low hills, with rolling vineyards on three sides and 
an opening to the west through which a panoramic view of the 
wide valley, extending to the Coast Range, may be seen, it is one 
of the garden spots of the continent. The buildings stand on a 
hillside near the base, with the front to the slope, facing north. 
From the north foundations to the south there is arise of thirty 
feet, thus bringing much of the cellar room underground Tlic 
cajjacity of the big crusher is seventy tons a daj', and in the ini- 
l)osing, lofty cellars there is storage room for 1,000,000 gallons 
of wine, held in oak casks and tanks, varying from 1,000 to 
'25,000 gallons. The latter are used for blending wines. Not 
the least interesting feature of the plant is the distillery. The 
boiler furnishes the steam, for sherry and other purposes. The 
brandy is made by the new continuous automatic still. Kxten- 
sive as this plant is, it is scarcely large enough for the Fountain- 
grove Vineyard — 700 acres — producing all varieties of grapes 
used in the manufacture of the best wines, including for red 
wines, Zinfandel, Mataro, Petit Pinot, Gros Manciu, Lenoir, Mon- 
deuse. Seireue, Pinaut Pernaud, Cabernet, Sauvignou, Malbec. 
Chauche Noir, St. Macaire, Gaimai Tienturier ; for white wines, 
five varieties of Riesling, Semillon, Chauche Gris, Colombar, Pa- 
lomino, Gutedel, Burger and Traminer ; for table grapes. Empe- 
ror. Cornichon and Black Morocco. With these enormous vine- 
yards to draw from, it is unnecessary to handle grapes grown else- 
where, and uniformitj' is assured. Theqnantitj- of wine shipped 
East and to Europe is astonishing. The blended Zinfandel of 
the Company is one of the standard clarets of America : the To- 
kaj' is the equal of the Hungarian ; the Sherry and Port have 
been brought up to a high point of excellence, and, generally 
speaking, the Fountaingrove Vineyard stands close to the head 
of the wine-making industry of the Western Hemisphere." 



IWOOHE & SElililGER, 

B^C/HOflJ ar/d f\S'60\\ are distilled 
from finest of (^rair; ai^d pure$t of u/ater 
upoi} tl^e jiar)d /l)ade Sour /T\a8t/ pro- 
cess. ^ael7 ar^d euery barrel ^uara9t(^(^d 
to be 5tri(;t:Iy pure apd free from a^y /ru5t. 





^TlBE COPPER^ 



Tlie NUTWOOD is a sfrictlj/ old fasMoned "Fire Copper" Sweet Mash Wliiski/, iu 
the disiillaiion of whicii we guarantee the use of 40 psr ceiii small grain, giving tc 
the Whiskj a heaoy hody and excellent flavor, which, for compounding purposes, k i 
unexcelled in Kentucky. 






The BELMONT, ASTOR and NUTWOOD Whiskies are stored in the lates; 
improved bonded warehouses, with patent racl<s, metal roof, iron shutters and doors, 
Giving our p-^rsona! attention to the safe handling and care of these goods, with 
every advantage and facility for shipping the same, we c.-n guarantee full satisfac- 
tion in every particular to the trade. Soliciting your favors, we remain, 

V.^rv rnsnftctfullv. MOORE &. SELLiGER^ 



P^eiFie WIJME /rJMD SflF^IT [REVIEW. 19 



C^ ^ Dlf^ECT f I^OjVI bOUISVIbbE, KY. ^"^^Ti ^ 



♦ > ■ ; c^ *- 







* >< - â– > ' < * 



These Whiskies have a reputation s_eoondtojme on the Home Coast. Thej/ have been given years of tviai 
\)\/ the hest class of trade and consumers aid are pronounced without a peer. When given a fi--i^ fhey speal: for 
themselves. For sale in quantities to suit in Louisville or San Francisco bj/ 

IMZOOI^E, HITJISTT &c OO, 

SOLE AGEXTS FOR THE TICIFTC r0 4<>T. 




Gold IXledal, London, 1SS4. r^r^ir^ ts^^^„i q tt- 

' i-^old JXledal, San Fransiseo, 1894 

St COS 

Of^IGlHAL 

i PLYMOUTH GIN 

, An English Double Distilled Unsweetened Gin, a 
i delicious compromise between Holland 

and Old Tom Gins. 

DISTRinUTING AGENT FOR THE PACIP'IC COAST: 

W. B. CHAPMAN, 123 California Street, San Francisco. 



20 



f/ceifie WIJME /tj\0 Sfll^lT F^EVIEW. 




ORICINATCTH OF 

OLD GRAND DAD. 



Barber, Ferriell 2;, (o. ySX 

Proprieltrs. 



BARBER. FERRIELL A. CO 

• s R. B. HAYOEN A CO. 

REGISTERED OlSTILLERV. 

5t» OlSTi 




mm. 



pyi-. 



B.M.HURT. 

PRESIDENT, 



J. H. BEAM. 

VICE PRESIDENT. 




DISTILLERIES: NELSON CO, KY. 
OFFICE: LOUISVILLE, KV. 



f/reifie WIJ^E /rJSID Sflf^IT I^EVIEW. 



21 



S. LACHMAN CO. 
California ttlines and Brandies. 

453 to 465 BRANNAN STREET, SAN FRANCISCO 

V> piofi^^i^ u/if^^ j^oiJ5E. E5T/^B^J5}^^D 1854. ^^« 



» 



(California l^inos and "^randios. 

VINEYARDS IN SONOMA CO., MERCED CO., AND FRESNO CO. 



COR. SECOND 6. FOLSOM STS.. SAN FRANCISCO 



41-45 BROADWAY, NEW YOnK. 



Kohler & Van Bergen, 



CALIFORNIA 

WIHES m 

Wiuerv and Distillerj: 
Sacramento, Cal. 




Main Otllctr and Vaults. 

661 to 671 Third St. 
San Francisco. 



"^^M^ 



(â– Mk^. 







New Yoil< Ollice, 

N. W. COHNEK 

Laiuht ,fe Vauick Sts. 
New York. 




CARRY & CO. 

I^oprietom 

Uiiclfi Sam Winery and Distillery, 



CALIFORNIA. 



- OFFICE AND SALESROOM - 



515-517 Sacramento St., - San Francisco. 



WINERIES AND DISTILLERIES, 

NAPA AND SAN JOSE, CAL. 



CARRY & MAUBEC, 

IS CED.VIl STIIEET, - - NEW YORK, N. V. 




IrLEY 



^ 



'^PURE CALIFORNIA 




SPECIALTIES: 



PRIVATE STOCK HOGK. 

PRIVATE STOCK EL CERRITO, 
PRIVATE STOCK SAUTERNE, 

PRIVATE STOCK CLARET. 
PRIVATE STOCK BURGUNOy, 

PRIVATE STOCK VINE CLIFF. 




D^AI^Bjr^S 

^\WINESahoBRANDIES 



WINERIES ANO DISTILLMRICSt 

J^/rf/r eiTY, YOUJMTVIbloE Jk^ia 
ST. JHEloEJ^/r. 

OFFICES : 

11-13 FIRST ST., SAN FRANCISCO. 

200-202 S. FOURTH ST., ST. LOUIS. 

29 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. 



22 



f/fSlfie WljME /rfJD Sflf^lT f^EVIEW. 



EDITOR DA/MA O/N THE COMBI/NE. 

Kilitoi- Cliarles A. D.liui, of tlie New York 5»)i, lias editori- 
ally taken violent exeeption to the formation of the ("alifoi-nia 
AVine Assoeiatioii (merchants), and the California Winemakers' 
Corjioration (wine- makers). He warns these two c()nil)inati()ns 
that if prices are raised, or the present standard is maintaineil, 
dire resnlts may be e,\])eeted in the loss of trade in New York. 

Mr. I>ana, whose clearness of expression and general .jixlg- 
ment of alVairs is second to no man's in this country, is evidentlj', 
this time at least, writing of matters of whii'h he understands 
nothing. .Mr. l>aua wi>uld not loi'k with disfavor on a cond)iua- 
tion of wheat-farmers, for instance, calculated to rai.se the price 
of wheat to a' level that would enable the wheat-growers to 
make a fair living, and at least pay the interest on their mort- 
gages. ]low, then, can he object to a combination or combina- 
tions of wine-producers and wine-merchants, whose sole aim it 
is to permit the growers and handlers to make a fair living? 
Certainly no one expected that the first price of wine, from produ- 
cers' hands, would lie long maintained at 7 cents a gallon. And 
yet, when this is increased to a beggarly V2h or l.'j cents, Mr. 
Dana is the first to protest. Is the producer of this country not 
woi-tli his kee()? 

The situatioir was so plainly stated recently by Ferdinand 
Frohman, of Ihe^Califoinia Wine Association, that it is a pleas- 
ure to vcp'miluce his ri'marks here: 

'â–  Editor |)ana will probably soon be able to write some 
editorials on th(; rise in the price of California wines. If he had 
taken the trouble to inform himself of the conditions of this 
industry in the past and present he would know that the ad- 
vance recently made was based upon natural causes, and was 
not the work of a ' combine ' nor the result of a corner. 

" Up to last summer, owing to the bitter competition waged 
between the San Iranciseo dealers for the control of the New" 
Orleans market, everybody in the wine iudustrj', from the grape- 
grower to the wine-dealer, had been losing money for at least 
three years. This will be readily seen when the fact is stated 
that the price for <Iry wines — that is, hock and charet — have 
steadily declined during the past ten years from 4.5 cents a gal- 
lon to IL'A cents. 

â–  'â–  Wliena nuniber of grape growers began tearing up their 
vines tJie -wine -Hiakers- and w ine dealers began to realize that 
the'induslry in which they had their capital invested was in 
danger of being annihilated l)y reason of war beng waged among 
tlien)selves, and which, among other things, forced the price of 
grapes down to where there was absolutely no chance foi" the 
viticultuiist to realize even the cost of pioduction of his crop. 
""This led to the organization of the \\'ine Makers' Corj)0- 
tion, com])()sed of gra]>e growers and wine makers throughout 
the State, and also to the creation of the Califdrnia Wine Asso- 
ciation, comprising seven of the leading San Francisco wine 
dealers. The object of each organization was the same — to 
hold out encouragement to the grape grower by enhancing the 
value of iiis crop. After the AViiie >Iakers' Corporation was well 
under way. overtures were made to it by ihedealei-s, who agreed 
to work in harmony with them if they succeeded in securing the 
control of 10.()0t).000 gallons of wine annually. On this basis a 
combination was effected and the result has been that the deal- 
ers are now paying from five to ten cents more a gallon for wine 
than they did last year, and the grape growers are receiving a 
pro[iorlionate increa.se for their crops. It is these circMmstanci s 
that liav(^ led to the increase in the price of California wines, 
for Yfe are now paying to the wine makers the price for whicli 
we fermerly sold. 

" Another potent factor is the curtailed prudnit ihiiing the 
past KC4.son._. So yon see the advance that Mr. Dana takes excep- 
tion to is both natural and fully justified, 'i'here is not a wine- 
lionse in this city that has not Inst niuncy, and In iivily. during 
the past three j-ears.'' 



ABOUT -RESISTAMT VI/NES. 

The consideration of the subject of resistant vines is now 
of vital importance to the grape growers of northern Sonoma. 
Already the vim^yards of Napa valley and tliose of Sonoma 
county iiH high up as lienuet valley have hccn ravageil li> this 
pest. 

Judging i(s ))rogress northward by the experience of lli(> 
past five years, it is unnatural tci suppose that the Cloverdaht 
district will escajX! its onward march of dcstrnclion. The only 



recognized remedy is to prepare for its coming by planting' re- 
sistant stock. In France and the infected districts of California 
i-esistant vines have ])roved the only remedy. Fortunes have 
been spent in applying various poisons or gases to the soil, but 
all of little or no avail, the soil neutralizing all poisoning agents. 

'I'he proved and recognized resistant vines are all native to 
the Inited States. Tlu! ripana, the stock which is most gene- 
rally used, grows wild in the Missouri valley — hence its name. 
Vilis nparhi, which means the grape of the river side. This vine 
succeeds best in deep soil, and will not grow vigorously on poor 
and shallow hillsides. The n/jMnlria, another recognized resist- 
ant vine, unlike the rlparia, is by nature a liill grape, being 
known as the 'â–  bush grape " of the Southwestern States ; it suc- 
ceeds very well on poor and shallow hillsides, but on deep soil it 
is not as good as tlie rijxtria. The vines of the aivliralii' class, 
such as the Lenoir, Cynthiana and Herbemont, are the " summer 
grape '' of the Southern States. The resistant (inalilies of the 
vines is a matter of disinite ; they are hardy growers, the Her- 
bemont especially so. They are also advocated by some as di- 
rect pioducei's, the Lenoir and (Cynthiana bi'ing what are known 
as coloring grapes — grajics with red juice. Fight years' expe- 
rence with tliem on hillsides has demonstrated their failure as 
bearers, howH'ver valuable they may be as grafting stock. The 
Californica, the native grape of our creek and river sides, is also 
a gra])e whose resistant (jualities are disputed. With us, on 
ordinary deep soil, they almost ((]ual the llei-bemont in the 
vigor of tlieii' growth. 

All resistant stocks are very hard to grow from cuttings 
those cut from cultivated .'â– tocks growing much more readily than 
those from the wild vines. It has ahvays been our practice to 
root our resistant vines on rich garden land, planting them on 
the hillsides when one year old. In ordinary good soil the vines 
will be large enough to graft the second yeai-. With us all the 
various kinds grilt e(|ually well. Our experience has also proved 
that the ]'hiijtra do better on resistant roots than on their own, 
the growth and bearing (lualities beng greater. We are con- 
vinced that, even apart from their resistant (|ualities. it pays to 
j>lant the wild stock, the increased vigor and bearing capacity 
more than paying for the loss of time and cost of grafting. Some 
])arties are now planting the re-istant vines in the rows of their 
bearing vineyards, so as to be ready when the jiest comes. 

The phylloxera, as perhaps all know, is an insect which at- 
tacks the roots of the vine. The resistant (jualities of the wild 
vines is owing to the fact that their roots are tough and wiry, 
and also that, when punctured by the insect, the wounds heal 
up. — G. W., in Cloverdale licoeille. 



TWO CHAMPAG/NE STORIES. 



The opening of the theatrical season floated several good 
stories, which are hereby given a wider circulation : 

.\ well-known member of the Columbia Club, of Washing- 
ton, I). C, took a lady to Albaugh's. She had just returned 
from I5ar Harbor, and was round, browned and full of life. 
.\fter that they dropped into a restaurant lor hnieh. The gen- 
tleman rashly oi<lered a small bottle ol champagne with the 
eatables. When it came in, the young lady seized it and drew 
it beside her plate, asking as she did so : " What are you going 
to drink'.' Beer'.'" 

And the second is like unto the first: 

A certain State Department clerk, whose income by no 
nu'ans accords with his social standing or his desires, had been 
improving his summer lutnrs by extensive horse-back riding. 
One day a fair daughter ol' the ujijier ten accompanied him by 
invitation. They broke the monotony of the ride by lunching 
at an exclusive suburlian resort. He, too, in a spirit of ambitious 
bravado, ordered a small botile of champagne. 

His I'air ri.i-(i-vis inspected the label in silence, and lookecl 
up in(|uiringly, ns she asked : '• You order it in pints so it will 
not gel stale, don't you '? " 

The room .seemed to swim aroun<l, but th<^ gentleman was ,i 
blood, and came to the scratch like a heio. 

" I couldn't hel|) admiring her deninition innocence don't- 
cherknow," In; remarked at the club that evening. 



\V.\NTf'.l>— At the ofTire <if iiik Pacu-ic Wink .vnd Simiut Uicvikw, 
.•!ll-:!ill liatlery Htioet, two rdjMeH of the KKvn:\v i.f .lan'y 20tli, ISHf). 



f/eifie WIJ^E /rjMD ^Plf^lT PREVIEW. 



23 



0. F. C. AND CARLISLE 



^sA7"I3:i SKIIES: 



Bourbon 



Hye 



Distilleries: FRANKFORT, KY. 

Address: THE GEO. T. STAGG CO., Frankfort, Ky. 



Diploma and Medal, Pabis, ] 



GoLi. Medal, International Food and Wine Exhibition, 
Berlin, Jtne, 1892. 



First Award and Medal, 

MelH..I-H.\E. Ar.sTKALIA, 1S89. 




THE INGLENOOK TABLE WINES 



jPs-NE) 



OLD PRIVATE STOCK BRANDIES, 

GROWN and BOTTLED at the Celebrated 

SOLD ONLY IN GLASS. OF RUTHERFORD, NAPA CO. CAL. 

None Genuine Unless Bearag LEGAL PDRE WIKE STAMP and TRADE MARK on Cork Cap or Seal. Only Matured and HIGHEST GRADE WINES Placed on the Market 

On Sale by Leading Grocers and Wiiie Merchants in Erery City in the Union. 

Office and Depot, 101 Front Street, Cor. Pine Street, San Francisco. 




ABBOTT'S 

ahgostUra 



(THE:OR!G[^IAl) 



BALTIMORE, MD.U.S.A. 



BITTERS 



THE JOHN T. eUTTINS GO., SAN FRANGISGO. HAS A STOGK Of THESE GOODS. 



Special Bonded Warehouse No.1. 



2d DISTRICT, NEW YORK. 



FIRE PROOF BUILDINGS. ELECTRIC ELEVATORS. 

Storage Capacity 18,000 Barrels. 

Papers and Withdrawals Executed Free of Charge. J. D. W. SHERMAN, PrOpTietOr. 



24 



f;^eifie WIJME /rJ^E) SfiF^IT f^EVIEW. 



OUH WI/NES I/M EU-ROPE. 

Cliarles J. Murphj-, formerly representative iu Europe of tlie 
United States Agricultural Department, lias written to the New 
York Sun as follows : 

•' I was iiistructod by Mr. Moiton, Secretary of the Agricul- 
tural Di'paifiueut. as an olVuial represeiitiVtive of his department 
in iMirope, to use my best eiuloavors to introduce the use of Cali- 
fornia wines, fruit and otiicr products of that Slate into North- 
ein luirope, and my enilcavors have met with considerable suc- 
cess. I succeeded in securing a gold medal for California 
wines at the late exhibition at Antwerp, tliough samples of the 
same were not received until two weeks after the jury of awards 
had adjourned ; but, as a compliment, the jury — which was com- 
posed of the most noted wine experts in Europe — reconvened, 
and, after thoroughly testing the wines, they unanimously 
agreed that they were"fully entitled to this high award. 

"The result of this has been the ordering of several carloads 
of these wines direct from California, and agencies have been 
opened in Brussels and Antwerp. At the present low price of 
California wines they can be sold lower than the same grade of 
European wines, and 1 feel assured that it is only a question of 
time when a very large trade will be developed for these goods 
in Europe. 

â– ' In the cities of Hamburg and Bremen agencies have been 
established for the sale of California wines, and one of the pro- 
j)rietorsofa Bremen house informed me that they had already 
over 500 customers in ttcrniany alone. 

"In Scandinavia and in Holland I met with considerable 
success in making known their merits, and in the city of Copen- 
hagen and at t'liristiana, .Norway, agencies have been established, 
and the demand is constantly increasing, and they ai'e much 
preferred by many in those cold climates on account of their 
containing more alcjholic strength than the French or German 
wines. 

" In the United Kingdom a large trade is being developed, 
and in nearly all the best hotels and restaurants, California 
wines can be found on the bills of fare. One large tirm in Lon- 
don, whose senior partner is a baronet, has succeeded in creating 
a large demand for these excellent wines. 

'• When in Russia two years ago I was surprised to find at 
all the priiici|)al hotels and restaurants wines made in the Crimea, 
which have almost entirely taken the place of the ordinary 
French and (Jerman wines. I could not help contrasting the 
diirereiice in this respect between the Russian and American 
people, as we .'seldom or ever see California wines on the menu 
of any of our first-class hotels or restaurants, which is unac- 
countable, as California is now producing fully as fine a quality 
of wines as is produced in tlie world, except probably some 
higher grades." 

The San comments editorially on the above as follows: 
" The great drawback which we find here in California wines is 
their want of modoratioa. They are either too alcoholic or too 
heavy or too .sour. Now, the French clarets and white wines, 
like the Sauterne or Chablis, are distinguished by their pleasant 
flavor and agreeable taste, combined with a very low percentage 
of alcohol. They contain a very small (piantity of tartrates. 
Therefore they are agrcealile beverages, not heavy, and not pro- 
vocative of gout and allied di.seases. Yet the great mass of peo- 
|)le in the East are every day drinking more and more Califor- 
nia wine, and lesn and less Fretich wine. If the restaurants 
which serve dinner ' with wine' show the general tendency, the 
bi'st thing for the California viticullurists to do, if they wish to 
compete in quality and price ('ombiiied against Frencli wines, is 
to cullivate a lightness. There ought to be a big fortune for the 
California grower who is prepareil to put a natural wine, e^- 
Iiecjally if it be a white one, on this market or the markets of 
I'.urope, which is marked by its low percentage of alcohol in 
addition to the presence of all other (|italities which a sound 
wine should have." 

The City Tru.steeH of Willows have pasHeJ mi orJiiiniii'e placing a 
license of ^fiOrt a year, payahl- in advance, upon thoHe hoiiwH that retail 
h.|iiorH hy llie i;lasH, ami $2.50 a year upon those that sell in quantities of a 
quart or more. 

Till- Butte county saloon-keepers held a meeting; at Oroville, recently, 
and decided to refuse to jiay any more h'^U license. .AlUjrneys Oai.k aiiil 
.JosKjt were enifaneij to defend any pioHeculion that may )h- com luonccd, 
ami carry the cas«-H to the Supreme Court if necessary. The Chico saloon 
men have a case in court to U-st the validity of tlie liigh-licensi' ordinance 
passeil hy the finite Coimty SiiiMTvisr)rM. 



CALIFOR/NIA WI/SES IM MEXICO. 

Some mouths ago we published an interview with W. J. 
Parker, then connected with the Mexican Central Railway, on 
the possibility of developing a market for California wines in 
the Central and I^astern portions of the Republic of Mexico. 
All of the conditions of trade were then set forth; the adapta- 
bility of the City of Mexico as a central distributing depot : the 
habits of the millions who live on the Central Mexican plateau : 
the conditions of trade ; the methods of doing business and other 
particulars. Since then there has been a steady and gratifying 
increa.se ui the shipments of wine to that portion of Mexico, and 
now California wine and brandy makers arc to have a remark- 
ably good opportunity to show their wares to the Mexican 
buyers. 

Governor Budd has appointed a State Commission to take 
charge of collecting a suitable exhibit, and the Commissioners 
met on the lltli and organized for work. Colonel Andrews was 
chosen President, and the other oflicers were Captain H. Wein- 
Btock, Vice-President : E. J. Molera, Secretary, and C. A. Wet- 
more, Assistant Secretary. The others present were D. M. Mur- 
phy, Jr., John Mulvanskey, and the Mexican Consul, A. K. 
Coney, who is Commissioner-General for the United States. It 
was decided not to ask the State for an ajipropriation to arrange 
the exhibit, but to secure, if possible, a reconiinendation from the 
Senate and the Assembly to the ellect that all State, public and 
private institutions make an exhibit. Colonel .\ndre\vs, H. 
Weinstock and C. A. Wetniore were appointed a committee to 
urge upon the Senators and Assemblymen the necessity of mak- 
ing such a recommendation. 

The Commissioners believe that a good exhibit of the State's 
products will be made, and that if a proper display is made, it 
will open up an almost undeveloped market for California's 
wines, canned goods, dried fruits, nuts, luniber, mining machin- 
erj% and, in fact, all the products and industries of the State. 

SIMI IS^-RIGHT. 

" G. Simi, one of the laigest wine-makers in Russian River 
Valley, California, has been arrested for violating an ordinance 
recently passed by the Supervisors, which providi'S that no \wr- 
sons or firm shall sell lifjuors or wine in quantities of less than 
one quart without obtaining a retailer's license. Simi claims 
that, as a manufacturer, he has the right to .sell the produce of 
the vine as he sees fit, and to back up his claim has a strong legal 
array employed to test the validity of the ordinance." — Exclumge. 

Mr. Simi is right. He is sustained by the Supreme Court, 

in the decision in the case of Merced Count}- vs. Helm <*i Xolan, 

in which the court held as follows: 

" A sale by a \vine-f;rower of the jiroduct of his vineyard, or hy a dis- 
tiller of the spirits produced at his distillery, does not constitute a 'busi- 
ness ' of sellint; wines and spirits any more tlian tlie selliii}; by a miller of 
the flour ground at liis mill, or by the iiiaiiufaitiircr nl the "cloth woven 
at his factory constitutes the business nf selliuf; tlnur or doth ; and the 
power to impose a license on a bnsines.s docs not aulhori/e a ta\. cither by 
way of license or excise, upon the sale which the w iiic-);rower or the dis- 
tiller may make. Cuder the power cuufi'rreil hy the aliove secti n of the 
County (iovernmeiit .\ct it would )>e coiiipctciii lor the county to impose 
a license tax upon the hiisincss of niaiiulacturiiiK' cloth nmf raising sheep, 
hut it would not lie coinpetcut for it, under this authority, to re(iuire the 
payment of a license ta.\ from cverv person who shouid sell a piece of 
dotli he iiianufactiiied, or tlie wciol fn>ui the sheep which he liail raised. 
The business of distilling; sjiirits, or biewiii'.; beer, or nianufactiiriiij: wool 
into cloth, or (;raiii into Hour, or grajies or currants into wine, or apples 
into cider is a lawful occiiption, and while the business is such, iimter the 
authority thus nivcn to the county may be mad.^ subject t.i a license lax, 
the county cannot, iiinlcr this authority, inipusca ta\ upon the individual 
sales of the product of such business, or upon all the sales niailc within 
each quarter of the year, or within any otiicr limited period of lime, for 
the reason that such a tax is not upon the business, but upon the dillerent 
acts in the traiisaitioii of tlie husiuess. With thi' same propriety mii;lit 
a tax be imposed upon the priiniiij; of the vines, the pickiiij; of tlie\'rapcs, 
the j;atheriii(.' of tin' apples, the pressinj; into the vats, the harichns; of the 
juice, or its sale before fi'rmentatioii into wine or cidi'r. I'roni tliese 
views it follows - as the county hail no authority to .h'liiand a liieiise tax 
exce|it from those who were ein.'a;red iu carrying on siuiie business, and as 
the ordinance in iiiiestion does not iniposi' a tax on the luisini'ss of saloon- 
keepinc, and as the complaint docs not cliar^-e the dclciidaiit with having 
i-oiidiKtcd any Imsiiicss upon w Inch the oi'diiiancc imposes a license tax — 
there was no authority to comuunce or maintain this action." 

It is about time that the Boards of Supervisors of the vari- 
ous counties of this State recognize that the viticultural iiiduslry 
and those engaged in it (and parliculai-ly in such a county as 
Sonoma, which has '_'ll,oi)() acres <if vineyards and many millions 
of capital invested in the viticultural industry) have some rights 
which they are bound hy the laws to respect. They have some 
very hnzy ideas about the right fo license, in tiny evenl. 



f/fGlfie WIJNE /cJSID Sflf^lT f^EVlEW 



25 



Prohibitionists and the Liquor Question. 

riuTo is no iiu'asui'c proposed bj' any member of the Logis- 
l.iluiv that is civatiiij; siicli jjciicral interest aiiumg llie people of 
till' State as the proposition snhniitted by Senator Malionoy and 
Ass inblynian Davitt to enact a uniform licensii law. It is a 
selienie of tlie li(inor organization known as the California State 
I'lutective Association, and has for its object, not a more general 
spread of the saloon, but a stultilication of the constitutional 
provision granting local option. In almost every city, town and 
lianilrt tlie people are arou.sed, and are denouncing the ])roposi- 
tion in the most violent manner. Resolutions are being passed 
and petitions sent np to the Legislature by the W. C. T. l'. soci- 
eties, the (Jood Templars, the ('hristian Kndeavors, and from 
many church organizations, denouncing it as a bold, sjitanic and 
infamous attempt to take from people of localities the right ot 
local police regulation. There is not an iutelligeut idea extant 
in relation to the object-s of this bill. It is not one that will in- 
crease the number of saloons in the State, but will rather have 
a tendency to lessen the number in many localities. But the 
main object is to put a stop to the agitation that has been so an- 
noying and so expensive both to the liquor dealers and the tax- 
payers in counties where litigation has been resorted to by the 
dealers to protect their vested rights. The bill, as it was iutro- 
dneed, lakes from the pc-ople the right of local option by fixing 
a maximum license tax beyond which Boards of Supervisors and 
municipal authorities cannot go, and provides for a classification 
of localities as first, second and third. The rate lixed by the bill 
for the first class is SloO per annum, that for the second $200, 
and for the third S.'iOO. It also settles the question of Sunday 
closing, so that there will be no more agitation on that question 
such as has marked the crusades of the temperance elements 
during the past twenty years. Thissubjtet is one which requires 
considerable thought, and has occupied the attention of some of 
the most eminent men. There have been conflicting views held 
by divines as well as other classes of professional men. The 
violence with which the professed Prohibitionists have made their 
attacks, admitting of no compromise or middle ground in oppo- 
sition to an industry that has grown so powerful in the United 
States, and which to a large extent affects one of the principal 
industries of California, has operated to defeat them in their 
efforts to become a factor in politics. It has undoubtedly caused 
an increase in the number of .saloons all over the State, and the 
increasing agitation and assault against the liquor traffic have led 
these men to seek protection through organization and legisla- 
tive enactments. — News Letter. 



PATE/NTS, TRADE-/V\A-RKS, ETC. 

The following list of recent patents and trade-marks of interest to our patrong 
ii reported by Wm. G. Henderson, Solicitor of American and foreign patents and 
trade-marks, Norris Building, 501 F street, Washington. D. C A copy of any of the 
United Slates patents will be furnished by him for 25 cents. 

I.SSI. E OF FEBBIAKY 12, 1895. 

.^Xi.H'ja— Device for aeratini; beer or ale, M. H. Hart, New York City. 
5:U.UUl— Uoltlc cap, W. H. Northell. EvansTille, Ind. 
534.1SS— Bottle stopper. G F .\lwood, Wobnrn, Mass. 
534,031— Bottle stopper, G, S. Chamlperlin, New York City. 
5:54.174— Bottle stopper, B. Hamsay, New York City. 
534,154 — Measuring vessel. .1. \. Hooper, Boston, Maes. 
5:i4,i:iO— Barrel skid, H. E. Williams, Hartford, Conn. 

TRAllE-MARKS. 

26, OiS— Carbonated beverages and flavoring extracts, The Victor Barolhy Bottlers' 
Supply Co.. Chicago, 111. Essential feature— The word '■ Tangerette." 

215.047 — Whiskv, Wm, Greer & Co., Glasgow, Scotland. Essential fcature-The 
letters " O V. H." 

26,046— Vermouth. SeraHno Plana, New York City. Essential feature— The words 
" Mareiavero E Co." 

ISSUE OF FEBRIARV 19, 1895. 

5:i4,479— Beer rack, F. A. Loeble, Philadeliihia, Pa. 

534,56'j— Bung or tapping device. C. McDougall. New York City. 

534,400— Production of alcoholic ii.iuors,0. Lugo and H. T. Jackson. New Y'ork City. 

53t,.5.'i2— Siphon or vessel for aeraled lii|uids, S. Davis. New York City. 

.534, 2Sfl— Manufacture of Syrups, I. A. Shanton, Carson City, Mich. 

No TRADE-MARKS. 

Issue of February 26, ISBj. 

5.'}4,914— .\le-drawing device, C. O. Uecis, Jersey City. 

,534,658-5.34,659— (2)— Bol lie-cap, W. H. >Jorlhall, Evansvillc. Ind. 

534,873 — Botlle-neck and threading and linishing implement, K. Good, Poughkee[>- 

sie. New York. 
534,708 — Faucet bung. D. Beebe, Newark, New .Tersey. 

X<3, 848— Process of and apparatus for carbonating lii|Uids. E. Adams, Philadelphia. 
534,719 — Distillation apparatus, P, A. Mallet and T. A. Pagniez, Paris. 
5*J,864— Bottle cover and fastener, J. L. and E. A. DeSteigcr. La Salle, Illinois. 
534.961— Electrically operated keg register, J. Kuff, New York City. 
534,98.5— Liquid raising apparatus, F. H. .Merrill. Bound Brook, New Jersey. 
534,984 — Liquid raising apparatus and process, F. H Merrill. 



TRADE-MARKS. 

26,111— Whisky, V. Franz, Philadelphia Pa. Esscntiiil feature -The words " Ken- 

singit>n Club." 
26,112— Whisky, B. McS. Jobe, Baltimore, Md. Kfsential feature— The woids 

" Jobc's Comforter." 

Issue of March 5, 18U.5. 
535 367— Electrolytic conduit for licer. etc., I,. Wagner and J. Marr, B:iltim.pre, .Md 
.535,125 -Saltmonth bottle scoop, W. Vincent, Lo- Angeles, Cal. 
,535.229— Bottle-stopper, W, li. Sleveiis. New York ('ity. 
525,167 — Discharge pipe for i-hip-casks. It. Kul/„ Brooklyn, New York. 
535,2a5-Filter, T. D. Peasley, Blooniington, III. 
525,.W8— Filter, J. G. and S, A. Sutton, West Newton, Pa, 

NO TUAI1K-.MARK8. 



Wii.i.iA.M W'oi.KF & Co. are having a remarkably gund sale for "Caiia- 
adian Club." Their last lot of whisky, a lar-loail of 450 oases, came by 
the steamer City of I'nebla on the "tli instant. 

Once Taken Never Forsaken 

IS THE VERDICT OF THE THOUSANDS Wild HAVE ISEIl 

DR. he:ni_e:y'S 

CELERY BEEF & IRON 




IT IS 



A Blood Purifier and Food Medicine 

FOR SALE BY ALL DEALERS. PRICE, $1.00 PER BOTTLE 

Celery Beef & Iron Co. 

No. 150 New Montgomery St., S. F. 



Jalias MbrodiiGz, 

43 VESEY ST., NEW YORK. 



SOLE AGENT IN THE U. 8. AND CANADA F03 

HARTWIG KANTOROWICZ, 

POSEN, ge:rmany, 

FRUIT JUICES and CORDIALS. 

a.n.d. 

l/ietoria ^atural/T\i9(^ralU/at(^r Spri^c^ Qo. 

OBERLAHNSTEIN, GERMANY. 



26 



f/reifie WIJSIE /^J^D Sflf^lT t^EVIEW, 



T-RADE eiRCClLA-RS. 



Pron? Gooilerbant & Worts (Limited), 



From J. Cundlact) & Co. 



San Francisco, January. 1895. 

I'ndcr the admitted fact that tlic viutages of Califoniia are 
iittraeting more attention fi'om year to year among consumer.sas 
well as among tlie wine trade in general, we take the lii)erty of 
submitting the following : 

After an abundant vintage in 189.3, last year'syield fell con- 
siderably l)elow a fair average. The vines evidently needed a 
rest, and took it. The progress of the ravages of pliylloxera in 
nortiiern counties, unprecedented frosts during the niouth of 
May in Sonoma and Xapa counties, neglected vineyards, aban- 
doned for lack of prolitalde returns, are paramount reasons for 
the shortage of the vintage of ]S!)4. 

Tiie product, however, presents itself under very favorable 
conditions, as the grapes developed nicely and wert^ fully nui- 
tured. The wines are full in body, low in acid, and show 
already after the first racking, a tendency to mellowness and a 
delicate charac;ter, which generally develops good, and iu some 
sections high-grade wines. 

The Dry Wine product of 1894 may be put down at 12,000,- 
000 gallons, against 17.000,000 gallons iu IS!).'? ; the estimates of 
the .Sweet Wine product, based on internal revenue retui'ns to 
date, show about 2,.")00,000 gallons, against 4,.'}00,000 in 1893. 
The Brandy product of 1894-.") may probably be equal to that of 
1893 — namely, about 2,000.000 gallons. Owing to the desire 
on the part of the producers to reduce the output of wines as 
much as possiljle, all inferior varieties and other surplus mate- 
rial were turned into Brandy. Our home consumption of wines 
in 1894 being estimated at about S.OOO.OOO, and the total ship- 
ments by sea and rail being over 14,000,001) gallons, clearly indi- 
cates a considerable increase in trade in both directions. The 
stock of old wines in first hands is limited. The surplus having 
been ellectively diminished, a better feeling prevails and indi- 
cates that prices may bo advanced by natural causes of supply 
and demand. Nothing definite can be predicted, however, in 
this direction as long as unreasonable competition will continue 
to rule and to ruin a once prosperous industry. The position 
may be still further strengthened by combinations recently 
etTected by a majority of wine merchants of this city, on one 
side, and by a large numlxu-of the most important wine growers 
and producers of this State on the other. The tcndencj' toward 
suicidal competition could thus be restrained to a great extent, 
and the growers, once more oV)taining adecjuate returns for their 
investments in vineyard estates, will naturally be encouraged to 
aspire to ([uality instead of (|uantity. If, in consequence there- 
of, prices will rule reasonably higher, the improved conditions 
will insure increased po|)ularity and a higher estimatiou of our 
California product. We trust this will be the ultimate result of 
present combinations. 

Our own position will continue to remain an independent 
one ; we have joined no trust or combinations, and will endeavor 
to maintain our own freedom in all business relations, as hereto- 
fore. As vineyard proprietors iind wine shippers it has been our 
aim, for over thirty years, to establish public recognition for the 
merits of California Wines an<l we have ever been ready to join 
hands with all interested parties having the welfare of our in- 
du.stry at lu-art. At an early date we led the way toward pre- 
serving the industry from the ravages af its natural ((uemy, the 
phylloxera, by experimentally planting resistant vines on an ex- 
tensive scale ; w(^ have taken our share in all generous and un- 
profitable sacrifices to advance the industry, and. wo will 
continue our efforts to promote the common interests as well as 
our own. 

We are carrying a large stock of all the liner varieties of 
Rhine Wine, Sauternes, Medoc, Bordeaux and liurgundy types, 
also a choice selection of sweet wines and well-matured Bran- 
die*. We shall pursue the same conservative policy we have 
followed in the past — namely, to suj^plj' the trad(! with care- 
fully-.selected, well-matured, liigh-grado wines of guaranteed 
purity, and w(' trust to be favored with a share of your valued 
jiatronagc. 

KespectfuUy, 

.1. filNDLACIl & Co, 



DISTILLERS, MAIT.S1I;KS AM) MtLLEKS 



KSTAIiLISHED 1832. 



Dear Sir ; It allords us much pleasure to advise you and 
tin- trade in general that wt' have just comi)leted arrangements 
with Jlessrs. Sherwood «S: Sherwoocl, San Francisco, l'. S. A., for 
the sole handling of our Canadian Kye whisky in the I'nited 
States, States of California, Washington. Oregon, Idaho, Neva- 
da and Arizona, and the Western or Pacific Coast territory of 
Mexico and Central America. They will deliver in bond or 
duty paid, or will ship direct if preferred. 

These gentlemen are well known throughout the territory 
named as a large and most reliable firm, and we have every con- 
fidence, therefore, that dealers in our j)roduct will be enabled to 
do an extensive and profitable business under the most pleasant 
and favorable circumstances. 

Canadian Kye Whisky is highly appreciated the world over, 
and is reputed to be the j)eer of the best brands of Irish. Scotch 
and American whiskies. All our whiskies for bottling being ma- 
tured and ripened in wood, and bottled in bond under the direct 
supervision of the Canadian Excise Department, is an un(iues- 
tionable guarantee of their age, purity aud general excellence, 
and wo consequently have no hesitation in recommending them 
not only to the general i)ublic but to the most fi^stidious of eon- 
noi.sseurs. Yours, truly, 

Toronto, Canada. GoODERHAM & WoRTS, L'td. 

Fron? W. A. Taylor & Go. 

39 Broadway, New York, February 24, 1895. 

Dear Sik : AYe take pleasure in calling attention to the en- 
closed circular referring to " Sparkling Saumur." This is a most 
delicious sparkling wine made in Saumur, France. It has long 
been used in homes and clubs throughout England, and stood 
the severest tests and criticisms, coming in competition with the 
best brands of champagne. We have placed it here so far with 
only fine wine drinkers, and take pride in saying some of the 
best entertainers in New York are using either •' Drv Royal '' or 
" Brut Royal " on their tables. 

For those who enjoy drinking sparkling wines of France, 
we strongly recommend their either calling for this brand, at 
their wine merchant's, or communuicating with us. The price, 
S21 per case of one dozen (piarts. is bound to make this delicious 
wine popular. Purity and (iuality are what we claim, and we 
sincerely trust you will examine and see what merit it possesses. 

Believing this wine will stand fair comparison with any of 
the popular champagnes in this market, and calling your atten- 
tion to the enclosed order, extending compliments, we remain. 
Yours truly, W. .\. Taylor & Co. 

Fron? M. Candolfi & Go. 



i 



New York, Feb. 2t)th, 1895. 
Pacific Wine & Spirit Bevicw. 316 Battery Street, San Franeieco, CaL, 
R. 31. Wood Co., Pnbli^her^ : 
Gentlemen: — Fnclcsed find a list of importations during 
the fortnight ending Feb. 21st, which we woiihl like you to pub- 
lish iu your esteemed pai)er : 

I'er Str. La Gascogne, (I bbls eoi'ks, (Xatart brand). Pjr Bo- 
livia, 25 ca.ses preserves, 1 case cheese, (I). Agniiio.) Per Nor- 
mannia, 15 baskets cheese (Kigat) and SI cases Chianti wine 
(Kuflino). Per Sunset Koute, 30 bbls and 40 hf-bbls wine (Ital- 
ian-Swiss Colony). Per La IJouTgogne. 8 bales corks (Xatart). 
Per Kaiser Wm. II, 5 bdls fish (Pretto & Co.): 175 boxes maca- 
roni, (H. Profumo); 100 cases Fernet (Fratelli Branca). Per 
Baumwall. 904 boxes macaroni, (Afeltra). Per Kaiser Wm. II, 
50 bags rice and 20 cases oil (G. B. Profumo). 

Thanking yon in advance, we remain, dear sirs, 

\ery lespeelfully yours, L. Gandolfi & Co. 

From Actiillc Staracc. 



"(> Peakl STREirr, New York March 1, 1895. 
Dear Sir: Please take notice that I have just received per 
Steamship " (California " 2330 boxes macaroni, " A. (iarofalo " 
brand, of which kindly make mention iu your next edition. 

Also, i)er steamship Burgundia (Mar. 4th) 24S() boxes mac- 
aroni (A. Garofahi bran<l).anl 9 hampers Chili peppers. 

I'er steamship Powhatan (March 5th), 20 barrels olive oil. 
Yours trulv, Achille Starace. 



f/eifie WIJ^E /cjsID Sfll^lT f^EVIEW. 



27 



From Wn!. Wolff 81 Go. 



3'J7-.'5'_'!) Mahkkt St., S.\n FRANri.<co. 

Di;.\i! Si I! : Wo hc^ (o annouiu'e that owing to our increased 
trade in Southern California we hav<^ oi)ene(l an otliee in Los 
.Vngeh's, at '2\'2 C'oinmereial street. 

We a.ssun' you tliat your kind orders placed with our repre- 
sentatives. Messrs. Flint and Wise, will receive most carel'nl 
attention. 

'riianking you I'or past f.ivors, and soliciting a conliMuanco 
of the same, we remain, dear sir, 

Yours very truly, Wm. Woikk & Co. 

ANOTHER SOLUTION OF THE LIQUOR PROBLEM, 

Dr. .\ustin Alibott, of New Yoi-k, is the proponent of 
anoilier method of dealing with the liquor problem. Heretofore 
we have h.id an abundance of ideas, including the South Caro- 
lina dispensary system, the (iothenberg system, tlie inell'ectual 
Maine law and its olVspiing, the theory against single-stamp 
goods, and high and low license, but now comes a preposition to 
imt the llciuor traffic under control of the medical profession. Dr. 
AI)bott"s theory was sprung at a meeting of the New York Soci- 
ety of Medical .lurisprudenue, and, starling with the hypothesis 
that inebriely is either a disease or a habit (and it is undoubt- 
edly a disease), he advanced four propositions: 

First — The entire administration of the law regulating the 
sale of intoxicants should be committed directly to medical care. 
A man arrested for drunkenness instead of being punished at 
once should lirst be turned over to medical care to determine 
whether his case was one calling for treatment as a disease or not. 

Second — The whole tratlic in intoxicants ought to be sub- 
mitted to medical supervisiou, that adulteration and falsiiicatiou 
might be prevented. 

Third — The education of the people in the proper use of in- 
toxicants should be submitted to medical guidance. 

F"ourth — The method of sale ought to be aided by whatever 
information medical .science could give on the subject. 

Dr. Abbott said he did not propose to go into the ([uestion 
from a temjierauce or moral stand-point, but he believed that the 
consideration of the matter on the lines just submitted opened 
up a new tiehl for medical attention. Moral and legal suasion 
had been tried often and repeatedly, and their ettcct was fully 
understood. It was admitted that much treatment to be done 
to remedy the evil of inebriety was necessary, and it was but 
fair to give medical suasion a chance. 

The first step which might be taken is the Ktop|)ing of all 
adulterations and the prevention of the sale of patent medicines, 
that are but adulterated intoxicants. It was in the interest of 
labor organizations to promote moderation in the use of liquor, 
but their greatest difliculty was the tendency of the working 
classes, like others, to over-indulgence. 

The causes which made man a drunkard, he said, called for 
scientilic investigation, and it was his opinion that both crime 
and inebriety should lirst be submitted to science to determine if 
they, in individual cases at least, were not really disease. 

Medical science, he added, ought to determine which of the 
four principal methods of regulating the ti'alVic of li(|uor was 
preferable — licensing, a tax without I'urther restrictions, [irohi- 
bition ()r government monopoly. He thought, however, that 
medical supervision wr.nld not lead to prohiliilion, as phvsicians, 
like other sensible men, liked a little of a good thing. 

l!y consenting to the regulation of the sale of liipior on these 
lines, lu' said, the traffic would be taken out of polities and a 
more wholesome method sul)stituted, and it was the const'iisus of 
medical opinion that the traffic would be conducted iu such a 
way as woidd be to the best interests of the public. 

Considering the wide i)ublicity which his plans have ob- 
tained throughout the I'nited States, by means of the co opera- 
tion of the secular pre.ss, it is to be expected that in some local- 
ity an eflbrt will be made to put his theory into operation. In 
such an event the practicability of his plan will receive a fair 
trial, but we doubt its success in any considerable <legree. There 
is a decided proneness on the part of the medical profession, 
and especially on the part of druggists, not to be bound bj' any 
restrictive or proliibitory measures, no matter how stringent 
such restrictions may be. 



The lioard of Town Trustees of .'Jiinta Monira will soon take np the 
matter of licenses for the year l)e);lnnin)| May 1. The (|iiestion of licens(! 
i.^ an iniiiortant one, ami should he (jiven careful attention. 'At present 
we have fourteen saloons, paying a lietnse of -f.iOO ]i<t yoftr each. The 
trustees, at a recent meeting, by re.«ohition deelaieil that the nnmlier 
(if saloons should lie limiteil to thirteen, liut at the very ne.vt meeting 
^'ranted the application for license of the fourteenT.h. Xi a matter of fact, 
six or eight saloons would he amply sudicient for the neoils of the thirsty 
ones iu a town the size of 8anta Monica, and the luense should he made 
!f)00 per year, strictly payable in advance. This would have a tendency 
to crowd out the ''dives," and would be a protection to the'well-conihic- 
ted saloons. In many towns in Southern California the system of high- 
license has been tried and found to work to perfection. In fact many 
temperance advocates strongly support high license, as against prohibition 
wliich does not prohibit, but results in a never-ending squabVile o^'er the 
illegitimate selling of licpior. If the saloon license was placed at $500 or 
$ij(i0 per year, and the number cut down to say ten, the result would he 
gratifying in every way. The revenue would be increased, and the sa- 
loons would be conducted in <'onformaiice with the law. The penalty of 
losing a license worth $500 would tend to make the saloon men more care- 
ful in the conduct of their business. — Santa Monica Gazette. 



Coi.. R. r. Pkim'KK, an old lime Kentucky distiller, died at riaukfort 
last month. He retired from distilling twenty years ago, and ilevutcii bis 
tune to farming and iHivse-raising. 




It cures Colds, Neuralgia, 
Headache and all Malaria 
Troubles. 

It stands on its Merits. 



The most successful compound. 

The most reliable and the best 
Family remedy in the World. 

Try it and be convinced. 



WANTED — At the Office of the Pacific Wine and Spirit Review, 314- 
316 Battery Street, one Copy of the REVIEW of January 20th, 1895. 



/PREVENTS^i/* 

I AND \ 

URES 



\€OLQ/ 



Distilled ONLY bY 

QUININE-WHISKY C? 

â–  1 . LOUISVILLE,KY. ^ ' 



it is Pleasant to take, the Bitter Taste of the Quinine is Disguised. 
It's a SuccesH Wherever Introduced. 

Sold BY M\siFArTCHEn and nomFn "M.y iiy 

Liquor Dealers, Druggists anil Griicors. QUININE WHISKY CO. 

Special Terms to }yholetialv Iteulcrn. 



i 



28 



f/cSlfie WIJ^E /cJ^D SflF^IT f^EVIEW. 



KOLB & DENH ARD 



4 



OLD NONPAREIL 

BOURBON AND RYE WHISKIES. 



CALIFORNIA 

WINES and BRANDIES, 

OFFICE AND VAULTS 

4JS0-42e MOSTGOHERY ST., SA\ FRANCISCO. 

Tklkpiionk No. 5096. 




SPECIAL BOTTLING 

We Make a Specialty of 

Clarifying & Bottling Wines 

Kill; iiii: 
TRADE AND CONSUMER 

BEST FACILITIES — FIRST-CLASS WORK 
Prices Reasonable. 




MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE. 



-l^jPs-]SrUFjPs.CXUK.E 



Circled Headina and Jointed Stavesj aiso Shocks of an 
Kinds for Brandy, Wine, Whisky and other Barrels. 

We solicit orders from responsible iiarties \\\at \\aiU goods in our line, of superior (luality and workmanship. 




,.,„.,-^^,Dfi;/i^liAV<WARD- U,\A,,ier 

^ ,. '^^^ 5O8(ALIP0I3NIaSt. 

©Weet VViNEI>~ (^ai\.Prai\ci6Co 



Nature's Remedy for Stomach and Kidney Troubles. 




HUjVIBOliDT |«lflERAli WATER. 



It relieves llyKjicp.xia at once ami aits splcinliillv in 
rases of either Kiilnov or Liver troiihlcs. 

The Lemonade made from lliis water is iiiL-^iirpo'^'ivd. 
Ah a table water it lias no ciinal. 



"Hiunlidldt Water ilitrcrs froiii nuiiiv natural nnneral 
waters in the fait that it does not contain a sinj.dc injnrions 
ingredient." W. I>. .Iohnkton, M. D., 

Professor of Chemistry, Toxicology, etc., 
Cooper Medical ('ollpj:e. 



Office and Depot: No. 40 THIRD STREET, SAN FRANCISCO. 



..ii»pi»i—3B^; 



Tki.kpiionk 5822. 



P^eifie WIJslE /fJ^D SflF^lT I^EVIEW 



29 



Prices Current. 



These are tlie Urn;; priees. The rate of 
ilit^eount <tn purehases ol ft eonsideralth- 
i|uautity. eau be leanieil hy appvlin;; lo 
the «!;eiit6 or deaU'is. We iir;;enlly le- 
ipiest dealers, ajients and prudiieers to 
notify us when a ehaii.i;e oeeiirs in llie 
priees eurrent of the ^oods they liaiiUle. 

California Wines & Brandies 

(Tlie Priees u'iveii are for iinai Is and pints, 
pnt np in eases of twelve and twenty- 
four IJttUles. 1 

J. GUNDLACU A CO., 
Cor. Second it Marliet Sts. San Francisco. 
Prices Per cask. 
quart.1. imnts. 

Traminer, 82 » 5.00 J 6.00 

Gutedei. S2 6.00 7.00 

Burirundy, 84 COO 7.00 

Zinfandel S3 5.00 G.OO 

KOLB & DENH.\RD. 
420-426 Montgomery St., San Francisco. 
Per Case. 

nocl< J3.00 

Riesling o.50 

Guted^l 4.0U 

Santene 4.00 

Sauterne, 1885 5.00 

Claret 2.50 

Zinfandel 3.00 

Cabernet 8.50 

Burgundy 4.00 

Port, 1S« 7.00 

Port, 1887 5.50 

Sherry 5.00 

Cognac, 1885 10.00 

KOHLER & FROHLINQ. 
601 Folsom Street, San Francisco. 

Riesling $ 4.00 * 4.50 

Hocls 3.50 4.00 

Gutedei 4.50 5.00 

Santerne 4.50 5.00 

Zinfandel 3.75 4.25 

Ziufandel, old 4.50 5.00 

Bnrgnndy 4.00 4.50 

SuperiorPort 10.00 

Sherry 7.50 

Angelica 6.00 

Muscatel 6.00 

Madeiia 6.00 

Malaga 6.00 

Brandv 10.00 



INGLENOOK WINES. 
Agency. 101 Front street, San Francisco, 
Table "Claiet blended from 

ehoii-c foreign grapes, 

vintage 18'j(j 

Zinfandel 

Extra Table Claret, Medoc 

type red label, ISS'J 

Burgundy, 1888, Reserve 

Slock 

Santerne drv,Sauvig'nVert'S6 
Gutedei. Chasselas Vert, 1889 
Hock, Rhenish type " 

linrger, Chablis type " 

Riesling, Johannisberg type 

LSSN 

Pints of two dozenfl per case additional. 
Xone genuine except bearing seal or cork 
brand of the pioprietor. 



r.oo 



tS.50 
4.50 

5.50 

8.00 
5..50 
4..')0 
6.00 
5.50 

0.50 



CAL. WINE GROWERS' UNION. 
Cor. Sutter and Grant ave. San Francisco. 

EL QUITO VINEYAUn. 

Riesling * 3.00 

Claret S.OO 

FREbNO VINEYARD CO. 



* 4.00 
4.00 



Burger 1 3.50 


$ 4.50 


Claret 3.,50 


4.,'>0 


Port 5..50 


6. .50 


Angelica 5..50 


&.M 


Sherry 5.50 


a.bO 


Cognac Brandy 10.00 


11.00 


ST. HUBERT VINEYARD. 




Claret, Cabernet $ 8.00 


1 9.00 


Sauterne S.OO 


9.00 


Cognac 12.00 


13.00 


I. De TURK. 




220 Sacramento st. and 221 Commercial 


St., San Francisco. 






Quarts. 


Cognac Brandy, XXXX 


.$10.00 


" •• XX 


. 9.00 


1 enturier Port 


. 5.50 




. 4 00 


Dry Sherry, Private Stock 


. 5 50 


" Superior 


. 4.00 


Angelica, Old Selected Slock 


. 4.00 


Miiscatelle " " " 


. 4.00 


Malaga â–  .... 


. 4.00 


Madeira " " 


. 4.00 


Tokay, best. Old Selected Stock.. 


. 6.00 


Tokav, " ■• •• .. 


. 4.50 


Haul Sauterne *' " .. 


. 5.00 


Riesling, " " " .. 


. 3 50 


Gutedei, ■' '• ■' .. 


. 3 50 


Hock " '• .. 


. 3.00 


Cabernet. "Grand Vin â– ' '* .. 


. 5.00 


Burgundy " " " .. 


. 4.50 


Zinfandel Claret, Selected Claret... 


. 3.50 


XXClaiet, " " .. 


. 3.50 


Claret, '• " .. 


. 2,75 



NAPA VALLEY WINE COMPANY. 
11 and 13 First Street, San Francisci>. 

SiiKKWooi> ^V SnKuwooi). Agents. 
212-214 Market street, San Francisco. 

Hock, green label $ 3.00 * 4.00 

Hock, black label 3..'j0 4..50 

Gutedei 4.00 .5.00 

Riesling 4.50 5.50 

Cabernet 4. .50 5.51 

Burgundy 4.00 5.00 

Zinfandel 3.,50 4..'i0 

Claret, black label 3.00 4.00 

Claret, red label 2.75 3.75 

Private Stock Hock 5.00 fi.OO 

ElCerrito.,.. 9(10 10.00 

•• Sauterne 8.00 9.00 

'â–  Claret 5. 0.00 

Burgundy.... 7.00 S.OO 

" Vine Cliff.... 12.00 13.00 

Sherry 4..50 

Port 4..50 

Angelica 4.50 .... 

Tokav 4.50 

Muscatel 4 .50 

Madei-a 4..50 

Brandy Crown • 10.00 

* ■• 12.00 

" ♦ » • 15 00 

•' • » • • » 18.00 

C. CARPY it CO. 
511-517 Sacramento street, San Francisco 

La Loma, Grand Medoc * 7.00 * S.OO 

Burgundy .5.00 6.00 

Zinfandel 3..50 4..50 

Sauterne 5.00 6.00 

Riesling 4.00 .5.00 

I Sweet Muscatel, 18S2 9.00 10.00 

Sherry, 1882 9.00 10.00 

Port,"l8S2 S.OO y.OO 

CaL Eochelle Brandy 12.00 13.00 

j SAN GABRIEL WINE CO., 

1 Ramona, Los Angeles county. Cal. 

Riesling f 4.75 $5.75 

Gutede! 4.75 5.75 

Port 5..50 

Angelica 5.50 .... 

Muscatel 5.50 .... 

Sherry 6.00 

Brandy, 1882 12.00 

LOS GATOS & SARATOGA WINE CO. 
1227 Broadway, Oakland. Cal. 

Zinfandel « 3.50 t4.50 

Sauterne 4.00 5.00 

Brandy 9.00 

Port 5.00 6.00 

Sweet Muscatel 5.00 6.00 

GrapeCoidial 6..50 7.50 

GEORGE WEST A SON. Sti.ckton, Cal. 
Brandy, 1879 ?20.00 



Brandv, 1883 15.00 

llrandy, 1885 15.00 

Front ignan 9.00 

Sheiry. 9.00 

Port (old) 12.00 

Port 6.00 

8. LACHMAN it CO., 
4.53 Brannan street, San Francisco. 

Old Port »7.IX) JN.IIII 

Zinfandel 3..50 4.00 

Riesling 4..')0 5.00 

Madeiras 8.00 .... 

Malaga 8.00 

Cognac 14.00 

JOSEPH MELCZER & CO., 
504 and 506 Market street, San Fraueisco. 

Claret. 1886 iH OO 

Zinfandel. 1885 3.50 

Burgundy, 1885 4.00 

Hock, 1885 3.50 

Riesling. 1885 4.00 

Riesling, .Johanni6berger,1884 5.00 

Ouiedel. 1884 5.00 

Somlai Hungarian Type,1885 3..50 

Szatmari " " '• 3. .50 

SzegszardiFeherHuu'Type " 4.00 

1885 5.(X) 

Port, 1884 6.00 

Sherry, 1885 5.00 

" 1S84 6.00 

Angelica and SweetMout'n, 84 4..50 

Mad'a,Malagait8w'tTo'y'85 5.00 

Brandy, 1.883 12.00 

1885 10.00 

MONT ROUGE WINES. 

A. G. Chauche Livermoie. 

Office and Depot, 615-617 Front St., S. F 

Quarts 

Burgundy * 9.00 

Chablis 9.00 

Claret, Retourd'Europe 9.00 

Jurangon. Favorite wine of 

Henri IV, King of France 8.00 

Haul Sauternes 7.00 

.Sauteines 6.00 

Light Sauternes 5,00 

Claret Grand Vin 6.00 

Table Claret 4.00 

Zinfandel 3.00 

Jl.OO additional for pints. Red and 
white wines in bulk at ail prices. 

L.J. ROSE it CO., LTD. San Gabriel, Cal 

Port, 1873, 1 doz. qts. in case $15.00 

•• 1876, •• " •• 12.00 

■' 1882, •' " " 9.00 

" 1SS6, " '• " 7.50 

Sherry, 1882, 1 doz ijts. in case 9.00 

" ■ 188C, •• •' 7.50 

.\ngelica, 1882, 1 doz. i|ls. in case. . . 9.00 




Tie GeleDrateil GHaiDpioD Glevelanil 

BEEF} pump 




?â–  



y^-^ 429-437 JACKSON ST O 

San Francisco 

"-â– ^^-.ENUINt ^ BEWARE OF |M,>.' 
THE ONL^ ^%. -. ."CITATION 

r^" I "^-^ ii ''3' 




_, A t> MOIAIIMOACO. 



3 ^ ^^^E/? 
a.photaling»co. 

SAW faahCisco 



EQUALLED BY NONE. 





Beer Supplies, Pumps, 
Etc., Etc. 



S08 ELLIS STKEET, CITY. 

TeI.KI'IIONE 30M'>. 



^ Pacljic Cvtt.-<t Biaiuh, HARRY W'ESDT, .M<jr 



H. L. REA & CO. 

INTERNAL REVENUE BROKERS, 

All kinds of liusincss npperlaining lo llie Inernal Revenue licparlinent 
Btlcnded lo willi promptness. 

423 WASHINGTON STREET, 

TiiKi-iToNE 17."i7. ^^.\N I K.\N< I~-<i> 



30 



f/cSlfie WIJ^E /cJ^D Spif^lT REVIEW. 



STILL M.IKIXC BO\i:S .\T Till': OLD STA^D, 

314 SPEAR ST., SAN FRANCISCO. 



Hobbs, Wall 'd Co., 

Man.ufartureis of Evci'y Variett/ of 

BOXES. 

All kinds of Boxes on hand and made to order with 
promptness. Wine and Liquor Cases a Specialty. 



Redwood Cargoes Sawed To Order. 



Geo. K.\.m.mli;ek. 



OTT'I IJ t^llIMIKl'KU. 



TQ'KILDN. 



Wk( 



WINE COMPANY. 



nilOI.E.SALE AND RETAIL 



|^i(^f7-C|rad(^ U/ir^f^s of J^bjoluti^ purity 

IMKKrT FKOM 

H. W. CRABB'S Famous Vineyard "TO-KALON." 

Located .it Oakvillk, Napa Co., California, 

Supply F<imily Tables. our specialty. 

Private Cellars Furnished. 

Goods shipped to any part of the United Stales or llie American 
Continent generally. 

Export to Europe. Correspondence Kefpeetfully Solicited. 

Office and Dqynl: 1.^2 MAHKET ST., Sim Fmndsco. 



Lachman & Jacobi 



DEALERS IN- 



GallMa Wines aqU BranHles, 

BRYANT ANO SECOND STREETS, SAN FRANCISCO. 



Eastern Agents'^ 

EDINGER BROS. & JACOBI, 

Cor. Dover & Pearl Rts., Brooklyn Bridge Stoie No 2, N. Y 



LOf/lA Ppl^TA UUlVlp^p CO- 

— SDCCESSOHS TO— 

^A7"^ Tson^^TiLXjE :m:. & l. oo. 

Hare Conelautly on Iland a Full Sui>i>ly 
of the Followinc; Sizf'ft of 

2x2--4 Feet Long, 2x2--5 Feet Long, 

2x2--6 Feet Long. 

U/id/i nil I hr snlil ill rianiinitble rates. 



.\ .^I.\I.iâ– A>, ."^'.auam-r. 



JI. A. -Mkkiuam, Suiieriiilende.il. 



IDS Gates & Saiatega Wliie Ge. 

rnoDVCEns or choice 

NES and BRANDIES 



MUSCAT, 
ANGELICA, 
ROYAL NECTAR, 

ZINFANDEL, 



HOCK, 

SAUTERNE, 

OLD POR"' 
GUTEDEL. 



SHERRY, RIESLING, 

FROM FOOTHILL VINEYARDS. 

VIXI'VAlMiS AMi ( i:i.T.AI;S: 

Los Gatos and Saratoga, Santa Clara Co., Cat. 

Brar.ch Office! 1227 Broadway, Oakland, California. 



P. O. Box 2245. 



Telephone fio. 310. 



nOHNS & KALTENBACH 




CALIFORNIA WINES and BRANDIES. 

(>l I I< i: AMf CLLL.tltS 

SAX Fl;\X('IS(n. 



fim: 

T.lllLi: WINKS 
.1 SrECI I LTY 



ESTABLISHED 



A. Finke's 




1 864 



i 



ii'll 



Widow, 



I'roihiccr.f oj 

CALlFORM.l 

ABSOLUTELY PURE 



First Premium 

niA^ll'AGNES. 



office: ^-^ ., , ,v 

809 MONTGOMERY ST., ''"'*"^''^^' ^"^'^ 



Gold Seal, 

Carte Blanche, 

NoNPAKKlL. 



San Francisco. 

Telephone 6024. 



A,,., . ..tpv I t^^F'rfl rremiums for Best 
' â– 'â–  â– "-'^ " ] California Clinni|inj;nef.nwardcd 
jA'.iRv.ciSCO^, j by ,i,e Stale Fans, ISTO-irj and 
wlierever exhibited. 



Liquor Flavors 

WlIiLIAiyi H. RUDKIH, 



74 WILLIAM STREET, NEW YORK. 



LOMA PRIETA LUMBER CO. 

Loma Prieta, - - Santa Cruz Co., Cal. 



GENUINE XX BEADING OIL XX 

Iteduced To $7.50 Per (.nllon. 

Comls For Sale In California only by 

RED1NGTON A. CO. 23-27-29 second st., san francisco 



f/rSlfie WifJE TOrJMD Sfil^IT f^EVIEW. 



31 



(L. J. Hoi<e&Co., San Gabriel, Continued) 

Ani;i'lii'a, IS'''"!'. 1 I'oz. qts. in ease... $7. .'ill 

Musi'niol, 1S^2, 1 doz. tits, in ease. . . 'J.OO 

ISSC, •' " "... 7.50 

Tokay, ISf^a, 1 doz. (its. in ease U 00 

1S.SI>, " •• " 7..')0 

Madeira, 1SS2. I doz. qts. in ease.... "J.OU 

1SS6, ■• •• " .... 7.M I 

Bi-andy, IS^l, " " " ... l.i.O;i 

•' ■ 1SS6, " •• •'.... 10.001 

Zlnfa'idel, 1S90, 1 doz i|ts. in ensi-.. 4.00 

" 2 •• i>ts. " .. .-Liioj 

BurL'er, 1S90, 1 doz. iits. in ease 4.00 , 

â– â–  â– â–  2 'â–  pt.-i. " .\00 

All tlie tore.u'oini; vintnjie.s are true to j 
name and ai;e. as iruiicated on label. AVe 
tfuanmlee thealtsolnti- purity of every bot- 
tle of wine and brandy put up by ns. 

Bitters. 

0. W. AliltOM'T >it CO. 

ANOOSTl!H.\ lilTTKEiS. 

The John T. Cnltini; Co., Afjenis, 
San Franeiseo. 

One ease 2 doz. pints $1.1.00 

One-lialf ease 1 doz. pints . . 7.50 

Imported Wines. 

HEI.LMAXN BUGS, .t CO., 
525 Front street, San Franeiseo. 

SHEKniKS. 

Forrester ife Co., Jerez, in 

wood, per gallon ? 1..50 J5.00 

Forrester it Co., Jerez, per 

case 12.00 115.00 

Garvey >t Co., Jerez, in 

wood, per galUin 1.75 5.00 

PORTS. 

Otllev 151.75 to S5.n0 

Ottiey, per ease ?12 00 

W. B. CHAPMAN. 

123 California street, San Franeiseo. 

RED WINES. 

(Barton & Guestier, Borduanx.) 

Quarts. Pints. 

Floirac $ 7.50 * .S.50 

Pauillae 9.50 

Chateau Laeroix S.OO 0.00 



St. Julion 18S1 9.00 

St. Julien issr 11..50 10 00 

St. EsU-idie IS.'^l a.OO 10.00 

Chateau duGallan, 1S8I.... 10..50 

1S78 12.50 

le Pain, 1S7S 11.50 12.50 

Pontet Canet, IS87 1K.50 U.iiO 

IS-SI 1.5.00 Ki.OO 

Chat. Bevehevelle, 1S,S1 10.00 17.00 

Cliateau Lauranije, 1.S78 22.00 2:5.00 

I'hal Urown Cantenae, 1S74. 22.00 2:i.OO 

Chateau l.au;,'oa IS.OO 

1.S74 24.00 25.011 

1S7S 21.00 22.00 

Leovilie, 1878 24. .50 25.50 

I,arose, 1874 24..50 

Lahte, 1874 2U.00 30.00 

Marf;aux. 1.S74 29.00 30.00 

Latour, 1870 31.00 32.00 

(11. Ciivillier it frere, Bordeaux.) 

Pauillae, t.SSO 9.00 10.00 

is,si 11. .50 12. .50 

Cliateau Bataillev, 1881 17.50 1S..50 

Chat Kirwan, 1S7S 20.ri0 21.50 

Chat. Cob d'Esloiirnel, 1878. 2S,00 

Chateau Latour. ISOS 30.00 31.00 

Chat. J.ai-ose, 1,S70 24.00 

" Bevelieville, 1874 -. 25.00 

Chateau "Talbot d'Aux, 1875 24.00 25.00 

Chateau Leoville, 1.8,S0 Il)..50 

Latour, 1868 30.00 31.00 

Oli.it. Pontet Canet, 1874... 23.00 

Cliat. Pielion Loiifjueville 

1S70 23.00 24,00 

Ch.at. Clieval Blane, 1889 ... 14.00 

St. Emilicin Supeiieur lO.OO 

(l)u Vivii;r & Ci)., Bordeaux.) 

St. Mare « 7 00 § 8.0» 

Pontet Canet 1100 12.0« 

(II. A C. lialaresque, Bordeaux) 

Chateau de Frauds 9 00 10.00 

WHITE WINES. 

(Barton it Guestier, Bordeaux.) 

Sauternes 1878 9.25 10.25 

Viu de Graves, 1878 10.50 U..50 

Barsae, 1.878 11.00 12.00 

Haut Sauternes. 1874 17..50 18.50 

La Tour Blanelie, 1871 22.00 23.00 

Chr-leau Yiinem. 1884 SO .50 31. .50 

Cliateau V.|inni. 1S74 36.00 

(H. Cuvillier it frere, Bordeaux.) 

Sauternes 12.00 13.00 

Chateau Giraud, 1884 28.00 29 00 

LaTourBlanche'84 28.00 29.00 
(Du Vivier it Co., Bordeaux.) 

Graves premieres ?9.00 SIO.OO 



r.M.iloijM.w i;i;it u 1 \|.:s. 
(A. Duval). 

BiirKundv. 1S,S9 5.00 6.00 

Cabernet SauviKiion, 1890... 5.00 6.00 

CAI.IKOUNIA — WHITE WINKS. 

{A. Duval). 

Itie.slin^', 1889 4. .50 5..50 

Chablis, 1.S.SS 5.00 6.00 

.Sauterne, 1.889 5.00 6.00 

('reme de Sauterne. 18S9, 

(private stoek) 7.50 8.50 

erKOUNniES — RED WINES. 

(Bouehard pere it tils, BeauneCote D'Or.) 

Maeoii, 1884 10.,50 11.50 

Poinmard, 1884 12.50 13.50 

1881 13.75 

Clos de V()ui,'eot, 1887 (Mono- 
pole) 20.00 21.00 

Chambertin 1.884 21.50 22. ,50 

(Bouehard pere it tils, Beaune, Cote D'Oi) 

Chablis, 18.84 Jl.SO 12.50 

Chablis, '84 (H. C. it F., bot- 
tled here) 10.50 U..50 

IlOCKS. 

(S. Friedborij;. Mayenee.) 

r.aubciiheimer, 18,89 * 9..50 $10.50 

Nii-rsleiiier. bssy 10.50 11.50 

lloehheimer. 1.^S6 14.00 15 00 

Liebfraumikh, I.S.S9 14.50 15. .50 

C.eisenheuiier, I.-'M; 14.50 15 50 

lindesbi-inier. 1.S.S4 17.00 I.S 00 

Liebeilfrauniileh, 1.8,89, " Sc- 

leeted Grapes " 17.00 18.00 

Itauent baler, 1884 21,00 2J.00 

Hoehheimer Doin Dethaney, 

1,SS4 22.50 23 50 

Liebdaiiniileh. 1876, "Extra 

(jiuiliiv" 30.00 31.00 

SteinbiMseV Cabinet, 1870.... 32.00 33.00 

(Prinee I\Iettei nieirs Estate.) 

Sehloss Johannisberger, '08 .Â¥4,5.00 Slli.Oil 

SPARKLING HOOK. 

(.S. Friedboii!;-, Mayenci- ) 
Liebfraumikh Brut, 1889 ...«;28.00 $30.00 

SHERRIES. 

(Sandeman, Buek it Co., .lerez. 

Pemartin Brut 20.00 

Unibiella 21.00 

Araoiilillado 22.00 

PORT.S. 

E. D. drv, 1887 18.00 

L O. fiuity, 1.887 18.00 



\VM. WOLFF & CO., 

329 Market streel, San Franeiseo. 

(DuboB Freres, Bordeaux.) 

Chateau de i'lsle, in eaeks.. ¥95.00 

(Journii Krcres, Bordeaux.) 
Clarets and Sauternes, jier 

ease from »7..50to |;30.()0 

(F. Chauvenet, Nuits, Cole d'Or.) 

Burgundy wines 110.00 to f)2.00 

(iienkell it Co., Mavenee.) 

Hoek wines from ."»8.00 to $60.00 

(Deinhard it Co., Coblenz.) 

Hock and Moselle wines $8.00 lo $28.00 

(Morgan Bros., Port St. Mary.) 
Ports and Sherries in wood, 

per gallon $1.75 to $4. .50 

Port and Sherries in eases, 

pi-r ease $.S.OO to $15.00 

(Mackenzie it Co.. Jerez.) 
Ports and Sherries in wood 

from $1.75 to $4. .50 

ACHILLE STAUACE. 
7I> Pearl street. New York, 

ITALIAN WINKS. 
RED WINES. 

(Giuseppe Seala, Naples.) 

I.acrvma Christi, 12 qts t 6.50 per ease 

Falcrno, " 7..50 

Capri. " .... 6.50 

Capri, 24 pis 7.50 

Moseato di Siracusa, 12 qts, 9.00 
Vesuvius wine in barrels of 

about 60 gallons 1.05 per gal 

WHITE WINES. 

Laeryraa Christi, 12 qts j 7.50 per ease 

Falerno " 7 .50 " 

Capri, " 0..50 " 

Capri, 24 pis.... 7.50 

SPARKLING WINES. 

Laeryma Christi, 12 qts $19.00 per ease 

. " 24 pts... 20.50 

(Ti. Laborel Melini, Florence) 

Chianti Wine in llasks without oil 

Ca<es of 2 doz. qts $12. .50 per case 

4 •• pts 14.50 

SHERWOOD it SHERWOOD, 
212-214 Market street, San Fiancisco. 

ESCIIENAUER 4 CO., IIORDEADX. 

Quarts. 

Medoc $ 7 00 

Merind'or 7.,5U 

Bonillai' 8.00 

Red Seal 8.00 

St. .lulien superior 9 50 




P. C. ROSSI, 



President — 



-SWISS 



A. SBARBORO, 



ASTI. SONOHA CO., CAL 



PRODUCERS OF FINE 



COCO/Vv 

• 



Secretarv 



CALIFORNIA WINES and BRANDIES 

MONTECRISTO CHAMPAGNES 

i.NATlK.M.l.Y FEHMK-NTlOl) IN BOTTLKS) 
Grand Diplorvia of Honor Gold Medal Dublin, Ireland, 1 S92 

Highest Award Genoa, Italy, 1892 Gold Medal Colunntolan Elxp'n, 1893 

Gold Medal California Mid\A/lnter Fair, 1894- 

MAIN OFFICE, 524 MONTGOMERY STREET - - SAN FRANCISCO 
DEPOT AND CELLARS, 109 BATTERY STREET - BETWEEN CALIFORNIA AND PINE STREETS 



Gold Medal Turin, 1884 



-^j^. Highest Award Chicago, 1894 

IMl'UKTKRS Oh' 



_ IMl'HUTKKS Oh 

L. GANDOLFI & CO., Eastern Agents Italian wines and produce 

119-123 SOUXM: fifth: jPlVE., ISIEAj/ YORK 



^FOR& 



iJine J2)ooft ©Y^orlC aqS^ eJXrti^tic ^06 printing go to 

^ ^ f^ WOOD CO. =il^ -^16 BATTERY ST\, S. F. 

where nothing but first-class work is executed i^«^ii^^». 



32 



I^Aeifie WIJvlE /f>IE) Sflf^lT F^EVIEW. 



W. A. TAYLOR & CO. 



39 BROADWAY, NEW YORK 



I^.E^^K.ESEnSTTXn^Ca-: 



GONZALEZ. BYASS & CO., 
SUVA & COSENS - 
BLANDY BROS. & CO., 
ACKERMAN-LAURANCE, 
WILHELM PANIZZA, 
MARTINI & ROSSI, 
I. & V. ELORIO, - - 
PETER F. HEERING, - 
REiN & CO,, - - - 



SHERRIES 

PORTS 

MADEIRAS 

SPARKLING SAUMUR 

RHINE WINES 

VERMOUTH 

- MARSALAS 

CHERRY CORDIAL 

MALAGAS 



JOSE BOULE, 
A. BRONDUM & SON, 
ROUYER, GUILLET &. CO., 
JOHN JAMESON & SON, Ltd., 
THE ARDBEG DISTILLERY CO,, 
CHAS, TANQUERAY &. CO., 
MAGNUM BRAND, 
MAGNUM BRAND, 
MAGNUM BRAND, 



TARRAGONAS 

ACQUAVIT 

_ BRANDIES 

IRISH WHISKY 

SCOTCH WHISKY 
OLD TOM GIN 
JAMAICA RUM 

ST. CROIX RUMS 
HOLLAND GIN 



ORDERS SOLICITED FOR DIRECT SHIPMENTS. 



SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS IN TERMS, PRICES, ETC. 

Dr\^- Royal 



$21 Per Case, 



QUARTS 



llDii'l III llif I'lhr I'rijihivii 1 (iii. 
The OUALITY Is re. 




$23 Per Case, 



PINTS 



Used io-lhni Inj Some »/' ""' I'iiirsl lliiii 
/>i'()i/><i'.s in Arir lor/.', Itoston 
oiiil I'liilinlelphiii. 



Th 



Universally recognized as one of the choices! 
DRY SPARKLING WINES OF FRANCE. 

FOR SALE BY 

WINE MERCHANTS & GROCERS. 
TRY IT. 

Wine has been known since 181L Very largely used both in Europe and England. 

claimed by best Authorities in the World as an Absolutely Pure French 

Sparkling Wine of Remarkable Value. 



Pro- 



TRY !T ONCE. YOU WILL USE NO OTHER. 



SOLE AGENTS W. fl. TAYbOR & CO., 39 BROADWAY. N. Y. 



f/eifie WI|^E /I^D Sflf^lT [REVIEW. 



33 



(SliirwiHul 1% Sherwood, Continufd.) 





111.1)0 


*oiUt't Canet 


11. M 


>a Hose 


ia.r)0 


)oUl Seal 


13.50 


iravfs 


8.511 


fnulirnee 


a.5o 


tfmkfiizie's Ports and Sher- 




ries in wood per i^atlon 1.75 


o 4.50 


Uaelien/.ie's Ports and Sher- 




ries in eases lO.UO to U.OO 


tuiil, Hoope, Teague & Co's 




Ports in eases 13.00 to 19.00 



C1I.\I!LES MEINECKE A CO. 
314 Saernmenlo street. San Franeisco. 
I. de I.nze it Fils, Bordeaux 

Clarets, per ease fS.OO to $28.00 

I, de Luze A Fils, Bordeaux 

Sauternes, per ease 12.00 to 20.00 

J.Marey >* Li!;erBelair,NuiIs 

Burgundies, wliite and 

red, per ease 15.00 to 'S.OO 

0. M. Keuerlieerd, Jr.,itCo., 

Oporto, Port wines 

per case 1.5.00 to 20.00 

D. M. Feuerheerd, Jr., A Co., 

Oporto, Port Wiues, 

in wood per ^al 2.00 to 

Duff Gordon & Co.. Sherries 

in wood per gal 2 00 to 

Laeave A Co. .Shenies Crown 

Brand in K l-*0 '" 

South Side Maileira 2.00 to 

St. Croix Uum, L. B 5.,50 

irraik ■•Uoyal" Batavia 5.00 to 

Boord A Son, London Dock 

Sherry, per ease 12.00 to 15.00 

[}. M. Pal)Stmann Sohn, Mainz 

Hhine Wines per case.. S.50 to 28 00 
Scbulz A Wagner, Frankfurt 

o M Rhine Wines per 

case U.OO to U.OO 



5.50 
.5. .50 



1.75 
a. .50 



G.OO 



W. A. T.iYLOR A CO. 
Jerez de la Fronlera. 

SIIERUIES. 



Per Gal. 



So 



1 P Table, full bodied 

1 VI* Table, very pale 

2 P Full «nl round 

2 VP Very Pale, light, fine 

3 P Full bodv, soft, rich 

3 VP Verv pale, ligllt, full 

4 P Fuli body, old, mellow | 

4 VP Verv pale, delicate, dry \ 

5 P Full body, rich, fruitv 
5 VP Pale, old, tine 



f . .*1.40 
I .. 1.70 
I .. 1 85 



. 2.15 



fi P Extra full and fruity ) ., -• 

li VP Verv tine and mellow \ 

7 Anio A.VlONTILLAUU, cdd and 

nutty 2,85 

.s (n.,0 CLOUOSA, mellow soft. . 3 25 
'J Hex Superb old Desert Wine... 3.:i5 
10 AMONT1I,I,ADO Solera, very 

old audnuttv 4,40 

UyUEEN VICtOKIA Grand old 

wine ■>>''•'> 



Velvet 

Special 



.SPECIAI, WINKS. 

A Clean, souiul w ine 1 .25 

I! Full bodv and rich l..')0 

N Sott, full and Hue l.l''il 

W Dark, full body 1.75 

B Clean and s.Moid-Fiilo. . . l.Stl 

Seco Fine, old and dry J1.85 

O S Fine, rich and fruity 3.45 

C N Superb table 3.111 

Corona Dcliciou!!' and delicate. .. . 3.25 

Special S Grand old wine 4.011 

Neclar-Fino, N. P. U 4. 65 

RHINE .\ND MOSELLE yV[NES. 

Wilhelm Panizza, Mayence. 

Per Case. 

LaubenLeimer $81)0 

Dicdisheimer 8.50 

Niesleiner 10 

Hockheimer U .50 

Lieblraumilch 13.25 

Foster Je.suilgarten 13.75 

Kudesheimer 14.00 

Ebacher 14.7.5 

Gcscnheimer 17.25 

Mareobrunner 17.50 



Uaunthaler 
Geisenheim Rothberg. 
Neisteimer Rehbach.. . 

Rudesheimer Berg 

Bulk wiues at f. 



. lU.OO 
.21.00 
.21.50 
.23.00 



|..2. 



50 



J. I), prices. 

PORTS. 

Silva A Cosens. 

Per Gal. 

T— Tawney Sl-OO 

R— Extra full body and rich, 2.05 

V T— Very tawney 2.25 

V O T— Very old tawney 2.35 

T P— Extra tawney, delicate 2..50 

T P O— Tawney, extra old 3.10 

BRANCO— Whiti:--rine While Port, 3.25 
JEWEL— A Specialty, old and mel- 
low 3..50 

S O— Superior old 3 !S5 

EMPEROR— 30 years in wood, grand 

old wine 4.75 

M C R—1S27— Choicest royal 0.35 



Direct ship]iing orders solicited on the 
most favm-able lerins. 

TAUK.MiONA WINES. 

Jose Boule, Tairngotiia. 

qrs. A oels. per Gal. 

• Fine, clear and smooth ?1.15 

ROYAL PCRE JUICE— Full body 

and rich 1.25 

TAW.NKV PORT -Light color, soft 

and old 1.25 

These wines have none of the objeet- 
ionaltle astringency so common in wines 
of this class, and are abaolutely pure. 

American Whiskies. 

HELLMANN BKOS. .V CO., 
525 Front street, San Fi-ancisco. 

Blue Grass, per gallon *2.00 to *:i..50 

Boone's Knoll. •' 2.40 to 4.,50 



SPRUANCE, STANLEY A Co., 
410 Front street, San Francisco. 

Kentucky Favorite 

Extra Kentucky favorite... 

O. P. T 

0. K. Old Stock 

Harries' Old Bourbon 

Kentucky Favorite, in cases 

H. 0. B. jugs 

0. F. C jugs 

African Stomach Biltcrs, cs. 



; 3.00 
3., 50 

2.. 50 
5.00 
2.00 
8..50 

a.oo 

10..50 
7..50 



SIEBE BKOS. A PLAGEMAN. 

322 Sansome street, San Fj-juicisco. 

O K Extra *3.:)li to p\A)U 

K Rosedale 2. .50 lo :i.W 

Ilvain 2.75 

Golden Pearl 2.25 

Marshall 2.25 

Old Family Bourbon 1.75 

Old Bourbon 1.50 



SHERWOOD A SHERWOOD. 
212-214 Market street, San Francisco. 
Carlisle in bbls. Re-imported 

Spring '89 per gal $2.50 

Carlisle in bbls. Re-imported 

Spring '86, per gal 3.25 

Keystone Monogram Rye in 

cases, per case 14,25 

Old Saratoga, in cases, per 

case 15.25 

Mascot Bourbon in bbls jier 

gal 2.25 

Robin Hood Bourbon in bbls 

per gal 2.50 



Sherwood Privale Stock in 

bbls, per gal 3.00 

O. P. S. Sherwood in bbls, 

per gal 3.25 

Old Saratoga, in bbls per gal 4.00 

JOSEPH MEL<;/,EU A CO. 
504 and 506 iMarkel sliect, San Francisco. 
Native Pride. Old Bourbon, 

(per bbl) per gallon t2..50 

Old Rip Van Winkle 2.50 

Nevilles Old Bourbon. . . .^ . 1.50 

KOI. I) i\: iTbiNiiARD, 
420-426 Montgomery St., San Franciflco. 
Per gal Per es. 

Nonpareil $:i..50 $7.,50 

Nonpareil A 4.00 0.00 

Non]iarell A A 5.00 12.00 

Canteen 3..5C 8.00 

Canteen P 8 5.00 U.OO 

NABER, ALFS A BRUNE. 
323 and 325 Market street, San Francisco. 

Pha-uix Old Bourbon, Al.. $2.75 

Old St'k 3.00 

A I, 01) pf 2..50 

" OK.lOOpf 3.50 

" P..nv, Priv St'k 4.00 

Club House lioiiflion. Old.. . 4.50 6.00 

Gidd Medal lioui bon, 100 pi 2..50 

Union Club 'â–  " 2.25 

Suiierioi Wbi.-ky 1.75 

BB Whisky 1..50 

LiiiUoiiH — In cases. 

Pel- Case. 

Pluenix Bourbon OK, in 5s »i0.50 

Al, " 7.50 

Al,24 pts 8.00 

A1.48i4pt 0.00 

Rock and Rye Whisky in 5s V.50 

Rum Piinch'Extract.'in ,56. 8.00 

Blackberry Biandy, in 5s. 7.50 

HENCKEN A SCHRODER, 
I 210 Front stieet, San Francisco. 

1 Per Gallon. 

Our Favoiite K $2.75 to $3.50 

OurChoice 2..50 " 3.00 

Paul Jones 2.25 " 2..50 

Star of '76 2.00 

Old Crown 1.75 " 2 00 

Old Bourbon 1..50 

CHARLES MEINECKE A CO., 

314 Sacrament(j sti'eet, San Francisco. 

(Charles Meinecke A Co., Conliuued) 

John Gibson Son A Co S2.0 I to ?4.0U 




ESTABLISHED ISIO. 



^^ ir,^^^' 



OVERHOLT 

Peiinsulvaiiia Pure Rye Whisleii 

"The - Finest - in - the - World." 

JONES, MUNDY i CO., Agents, San Francisco. 




W. G. COLDEWEY, President. 



LOUISVILLE 

PUBliIG WAREHOUSE GO. 

LOUISVILLE KY. 

ClIAKTEllKD ISSS CAPITAL $:S00,000.00. 

ri>i! Tin: 

STORAGE OF KENTUCKY WHISKIES. 



I'ROl'llIETORS- 



m SPECIAL BONDED WAREHOUSE No. 1. 



-'tif^ 



I'oK IKiri' IIHANIH !•:.-. 
Note — Positively no Whisky received unless direct fiom the Distillery. White Fou Rates. 



34 



f/rSipie WIJME /rJMD Sflf^lT F^EVIEW. 




HEDWOOD TPPS. 



F. KORBEL & BROS. 



723 Bryant Street San Francisco 



Or at NORTH FORK MILL, 

Humboldt County - California 



CllAS. W. Fl'Klv 



.t'ljiN ,vi-i:r,\N< I.. 



Spruance, Stanley & Co. 

IMrOIITEIiS ANT) .I0BT1FJ;S OF FIXE 

Wpes, WiiiBS Liprs. 

Sole agents for the Celebrated African Stomach Bitters 

•lin Fii'iNT Sti.'Ket, - - S\\ Fk\m-t»<'). Cm.. 



ESTABLISHED 1853. 



SAMUEL WANDELT, 



STEAM AND HAND - 



«/. (>:{, O.J yonrn Tiiiitv ST.. bkooklyx, \. r. 

Wine and Lip BaffelsanHTanKs 

Jpi. Speeialty. 

I am now prepared to make and funiislj the larscst, as well as the smallest, 
arfiele in my line of Cooperage. Estimates given with promptness. All work war- 
ranted to be finished in workmaidikc manner and eijual to any in the market. 



TRADE MARKS. 

WM. C. HENDERSON, Paleot Attorney and Solicitor. 

\orrlti Uldg., 3th & F Sin., year V. S. Patent ojflce. Rooms i'O to L';{ 
P. 0. Box 122. WA.SUIXGTOy, I}. C. 

Seventeen years' experience, including service in E.'samlning Corps, U. S. Patent 
Offlcc. American and Foreign Patents procured. Caveats filed. liejecled applica- 
tions revived. Opinions given as to scope and validity of patents. Infringement 
suits prosecuted and defended. TRADE-MAHK.S, EAIiEI.S AND COPYKIGHTS 
registered. 

|;:ff" Copy of any printed patent, trade-mark or lahel furnished for 2.5 cents. 
Correspondence invited. Hand-book on Patents furnished FKEE on ajiplKation. 



I^M- FIXK FRINTIXG 

(JO TO — 

R. M. \A/ooD Co, 

314-316 BATTERy SJ-REET 

SAN FRAN Cisco 



IMIiilNAL RiiVI<NlE .Wi) CISTO^IS ilROKI^ilS. 

THE EXPORTATION OF GRAPE BRANDY, WHISKY AND SPIRITS FROM 
BONO OR WITH PRIVILEGE OF DRAWBACK, SPECIALTIES 

Dealers in U. .S. Standard llydrumcters and Extra Stems, Prime's Wantage 

Rods, Die Wheels and (Jauging rods. Also Distillers', Uectihers, 

Wholesale I-iquor Dealers and Brewers' Books. 



OFFICE, 413 WASHINGTON STREET, 



SAN FRANGISGO. 



F=. O. Box 2400. 



T^Lizpinon.'Z. ©46. 





Growers and Dealers i:i 
i'al ift>t*iita 

WINES AND DR AN'DJES 

Proprietors Glen Ellen V/ine Vaul's. 



Fine Table Wines a Specialty 



504-506 Market St., 






A30 PINE STREET, 



SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 



See Specimen of our Woek in this Paper. 



Pure California Wines & Grape Brandies, 




or s.i\ a.iiiiiiLL. 

Los Angeles County, Cal. 

Are now prepared with a large stock of wines and 
bi-andies td their own growth to supply the trade 
and the market generally. This Company owns 
the largest vineyard in the world, covei'ing over 2,.'»Ut> acres. They have held their 
wines and lirandies for several years in their own cellars, and tlo not offer any .d 
their product until it has become |iroiierly matured. Their large stock of ma- 
tured wines and l.>randics thus accumulated is now open to the purchaser. .\1I 
goods under thcii trademark are warranteii pure and unadnUernted. Being the 
successors to B. D. Wilson i\: Co., and to J. De Baktii Shorb. they have becomi' 
possessers of the "SHOUB" Brand of Brandy and 'MOUNT VINEYAliD 
Wink. Correspondence solicited. 

MAitsiiALL, si't:i.T.MA\<t CO., J. in: itAitTir siroitn. 

No. .'â– > New York and ISiouklvn Bridge Vault, President San flatuicl Wine Co. 
Fk^nkfiikt St.. .New York. San OAiiKiET.. Cai.. 



GEO. C. BUCHANAN 



WHISKY BROKER, 



122 EAST MAIN STREET 



LOUISVILLE, KY. 



PAeifie WIJSIE AN 13 SfiRIT f^EVIEW. 



35 



QUININE-WHISKY CO., Louifville, Ky. 

IN KIVK CASK LOTS. 

LniL'e bize, 1 dozen to case... . $1100 

Meilium •• 2 " " 11. .W 

Small "5 " •• 10.00 

rOMIlINATION CASK. 

Oiii' dozen liiriie »20.00 

iiu'dium ao.Oo 



T«. 



snuill 20.00 



MOORE, HUNT A CO.. 

4iM Front street, San Fi-anilsin. 

I'eitialloli. 
Exlia Ponv in lil>ls or J.j-libls $(i.00 to *,S.OO 
A .\ " •■ •• pf 4.00 

B " " " â– â– IM 

C .. .. , ;;|,|| 

Rje in lildsand 'a-blds from :;..')0 to .5.00 

A A incases 11.00 

C in cases S..W 



Imported Champagnes. 

OlIAKLES JIEI.NECKK >\i CO. 
314 Sacramento street, San Francisco. 

DKl'TZ * OILDEKM.VNN, AY.. I'll AMPAIJNE. 

Inild Lack Sec. per ease *:i2.l)0 ?:«.od 

Gold Eaek See. 6 Ma^'inims 

per ease HI. 00 

Cabinet Green Seal, per bskt i5..5ll 27.00 

DCI'ASLOITP A CO., REIMS. 

Carte Brancbe, per case 21.00 



i.OO 



Hi;i.I,MANN BROS. A CO., 
.W.") Front street, San Francisco. 

Krii!;ACo. "Private Ciivee" 

per case t:U.0O $30.00 

Josepli Terrier fils ife Co 

per basket 19.00 20.00 

Adrien A- fils, per l)asket 17.00 is.do 

W. B. CHAl'.MAN, 

12.'! California street, San Francisco. 
Perrier Jouet .\:Co."Siitcial"#;i;>.50 ?;j5.50 

lieseive Dry :j4.1XI 30.00 

Peiner Jonet it Co. Brnt.... 34.00 36.00 
Hall ])ts "Speeiar' *42 in cs of 4.S botlles. 

SHEI;WO0D .t SHERWOOD. 
212-214 Market street, San Francisco. 
Mnet ,V; Chandon, While Seal 34.00 36.00 
Brnt Iraper'l 36.5C 38.50 

WM. WOLFF & CO. 
329 Market street, San Fiancisco 

PINTS 

*36.00 
BROS. A LOCKARD, 
Agknts 
124 Saiisome street, San Francisco 
Louis Roederer, Carte 

Blanche *.«.00 

[joois Roederer, Grand Tin 

, i^ei^ 34.00 

Louis Roederer, Brut 34.111) 

W. A TAYLOR A CO., 
39 Broadway, New York. 

SPAKKLI.NO .SAn.MlR. 

Ackerman-Lausence, Sauinnr, France 



QUARTS. 

Pommery Sec $34.00 

MACONDRAY 



?:i6.00 



36.00 
30. 00 



»'y«".val .?21.oV 

Sf' " 21.(K) 



$23,00 
23.00 



Imported Brandies. 

WM. WOLFF & CO., 

329 Market street, San Francisco, 

«»rlell s Biandy, • per ease ?l.-).00 

'■ ■' ** •' 17.ni) 

" •" •• 20.U0 

,*0 " 24.00 

;; • \ysop " ijo..->o 

in octaves 5.7.5 to 12 00 
CHARLES MEINECKE A CO., ' 
S14 Sacramento street, San Francisco. 
,ti«mp Vineyard I'ropre. Co., 
Boutellean A Co. man- 
agers Co;;nac in Octaves 

per »;aL J.5.25 (o»8.50 

me \ineyard Propi-s. Co. 
BontelleauA Co. man.i- 
gers Reserve Vintages. 11.00 to 14.00 

E. REMY MARTIfT* CO., CoL'nac 

HEI.LMAN.N RKOS. « CO., AOKNTS 

52.1 Front Street, -San Francisco 



iau-de-Vie Tieillc.. 



inecliamjiaRne 

ramie cUampagne vieille 

" extra. 

" V O. ]'. l,s.',.S 
■; •• S. O. p. 1S47 



fb'j.OO 
17.011 
PJ.OO 
20.00 
22.00 
25.IHI 
30.00 
35.00 



V.S. O. P., is:« 
In octaves ^ 4 70 

i^.n c,^'- ^- CHAPMAN, 
'â– ^California street, San Francisco 
(H. CuTillicr ..t frcre Cognac.) 



50.00 
6.25 



ine Cli 



ampagnc, "Reserve," 



1S7U. 
randeFine Chkmpagne,' 1860 



Quarts, 

*;i2 0i) 
:i6,li0 



HELLMANN BROS. & CO., 

525 Front street, San Francisco, 

E. Reniy Marlin A Co., Co;;nac. 

Cognac HI Octaves |H'r f;al. . 5.50 6.,50 

In cases, see special advert iseinent, 

P. Frapin iV Co., Cognac. 

Cognac in octaves, per gal.. 5 (i.5 6. .511 

Plnnat A Co., l^ognac, 
Cognac in octaves, per gal. 5.25 

W. A. TAYLOR A CO.. 
39 Broadway, New York. 

COliNAC IIUANDIKS. 
KOtlYEK, tUIIl.l.KT A CO., COONAC, 

Vintage. (Jr. Casks, per gal. 

ISSfi $4.85 

18S+ 5 40 

1875 6.,55 

1.SC9 7.40 

1840 12.25 

V S O 1750 

Octaves, 5 cents per galUni extra. 

CASES. 

Cases • 14.50 

•* U5.25 

" » * * 17 .S5 

" «*•» p.). .511 



Imported Whiskies. 

BOW'EN & SCHRAM, 
204 California street, San Francisco. 
Bernard A Co., Leitli Scotland. 
Encore Scotch $12.00 



SHERWOOD & SHERWOOD. 
212-214 Market street, San Francisco. 



Burke's 



Irish 



" Garnkirk Scotch " 
" Viceregal Scotch " 
Lavvson's Liijiicnr " " 
Uam Var, " 

McKenzie's Glenlivet * * * 

Scotch, per case 

Biishell's Club Irish, in wood 
per gallon 



12.00 
14 00 
12.25 
13.50 
13.50 
12.00 

12.50 

4.50 



HELLMANN BROS. & CO. 

525 Front street, San Francisco. 
J. B. Sherriff A Co., Locliin- 

dae Islay, Scotch Avhisky 

in wood, [ler gallon. . . . 
J. B. Sherriff A Co., Locliin- 

dae IsKay, Scotch whisky 

per ease 

Dublin Distillers Co., Ltd., 

Dublin, Irish whisky, 

in wood, iicr gallon, . . . 
Dublin Distillers Co., Ltd , 

Dublin, Irish whisky, 

per ease 



3.80 



12.00 



4.,50 



12.00 



WM. WOLFF A CO., 
329 Market street, S.an Fiancisco. 

Canadian Club per case $15.00 

Wm. Jameson & Co.. " 10.50 

A. Usher's Scotch " 11.00 and 12.00 



CHARLES MEINECKE .t CO., 
314 Sacramento street, San Fi-ancisco 
Boord & Son, London Finest 
Irish Malt Wl.isUey.... 
Royal Ilghld Scotch Whisky. 



•Tobn Ramsay, Isla 
Scotch Whisky. 



Malt 



$12.50 
12..50 



13. .'.0 



W. A. TAYLOR A CO., 

39 Broadwav, New York. 

The Ardbeg Distillery Co., Islav 

Qrs, â–  Octs. 

New *:i.S5 $:190 

One Y'ear 4.20 4.25 

Two Yeai*s 4.55 4.ti0 

Thi ee Years 4.95 5.00 

CA.SES. 

» onedoz. bot. $11.1» 

• * • 1.100 

» * * • 20 00 

JOHN JAMESON & SONS, DUULIN. 

ijrs. Ocis 

New $4.00 $4,115 

One Year 4.40 4.45 

Two Y'ears 4.70 4 75 

Three Years 5 05 5.10 

Foul Y'ears 5.45 5.50 

CASES. 

» 1 doz l)ot. $12.00 

• • • 14.,50 

• • • » 24.00 



W. B. CHAPMAN 

123 California street, San Frunciseo. 

SCOTCH WHISKY. 

(.lohn Dewar iV: Sons.) 

Old Higlilaiid "Extra Spec- 
ial " $13.00 . . 

Old Highland "Special Liq- 

ueuer" 16.00 



Domestic Champagnes. 

A. WERNER & Co., 

.52 Warren street, New i'ork. 

Extra Dry $ 7.00 $ 8.00 



A. FINKE'S WIDOW, 

S09 Montgomery street, San Francisco, 

Prices on applii-ation. 

Liberal di.'.coiint to the trade. 



PAUL MASSON, 

San Jose, California. 

Less than 5 cases. 

Premiere Cnvee, Drv $16.00 $18.00 

Special.... 16.00 18.00 
Special discount for quantities of 5 
cases or more. 



Imported Goods. 

(MISCELLANEOUS.) 



WM. WOLFF & CO.. 
329 Market street, San Francisco. 
.J. de Kuypcr A Sons Gin, large t)Ot $20 
" " med. " .... 16, 

" " small 9 

(.'antrcll <k Cochrane Belfast (iinger 

Ale per barrel of 10 dozen 

Wolfe's Schiedam Schnapps per ease 

quarts 9. 

Wolfe's Schiedam Schnapps per case 

pints 10. 

Benedictine, per case, quarts 20. 

" i)iiits 21. 

Apollinaris Mineral Water 

Hungarian .\iicrient W'ater 

Friedrichshall , 

Bartholomay Brewery Co., Roches- 
ter, N. Y 

Dog's Head brand of Guinness' 

Stout an Bass' Ale 

Theo. Lappe s Genuine Aromatique 

per case 12. 

Gilka Kiinimel per case 12. 



15.00 
50 



W. B CHAPMAN, 

123 California street, San Francisco. 
Plymouth Gin (unsweetened) $10.5(1 



HELLMANN BROS. & CO., 

525 Front street, San Francisco. 

Blankenheym A Ncdet. 

Union Gin 

Vaugban Jones 

Old Tom Gin. in cases 

Orange Bitters " 

Patterson it Hibbert. 
Bass' Stout, per double doz 
Guinness' Stout, " " 

H. Uuderberg-AIbrecht. 
Boonekamp of Maag Bitters, 12.75 to 13.75 

J. B. Sherriff it Co. 
Jamaica Rum in }^s and J-jJs 

per gallon 4.30 to 5.10 

Tarragona Port in j^ casks 

per gallon 

Adrien M. Warde's Italia de 

Pisco, per case 

Sardines, brand "Philippe & Canaud." 



11.00 
11.50 



3.00 
3.50 



1,25 

30,00 



W. A. TAYLOR it CO. 
39 Broadway, New Y'ork. 

MAGNOM BKANU, JAMAICA RUM. 

Qrs. ( 

A—Full bodv $:j.90 ! 

B— Hub, fat and old 4.30 

C- -Superfine, extra 5.05 

MAGNUM 3.10 

GINS. 
ClIAS. TAXlJUERAY it CO., LONDON, 

Bulk, 

Old Tom Gin, quarter casks : 

Old Tom (Jin, octaves 

Cases, one dozen each 



CHARLES Mi:iM:rKi: ,\ I'O., 

S14 Sacramento slieet, San Fiancisco. 

(nooun ,t son's, London.) 

Old Tom Clin, jier case $11.00 

Pale Orange liiltcrs, per case 11.50 

Ginger Biandy. Lii|uenr " 12.00 

Jamaica Itum, Old " 12.00 to 11.00 

IAIN Roval Batavia Gin in 

casi's of 15 large black 

bottles iier case 23.50 

in cases of 1,5 large 

while bottles per case 24.50 

Kirscliwasscr, Macholl Frcrcs 

Bavarian Highland, per 

case 20.00 

Swan Gin in }4 casks 3.75 

Double Eagle Giii in % casks. 3.60 

John Ramsay Islay Scotch 

Whisky ill ^.jj casks 4 75 

Boord's Pineapple brand Ja- 
maica Rums in >^ cask8.5.25 to 6.50 

SHERWOOD it SHERWOOD. 

212-214 Market street San Fiancisco. 

Per Case 
.\. Hoiitman it Co.'s Gin, 

large black botlles $21.50 

A. Hontman it Co.'s Gin, 

medium black bottles. 18.50 

\. Hontman it Co.'s Giii, 

small black botlles y.uO 

.\. Iloutman it t'o.'s Gin 

huge white hollies 22.50 

A. Hoiitnian it Co.'s Gin, me- 
dium white bottles 19.,50 

A. Honlinan it Co 's Gin 

small white bottles 9..51) 

A. Houtmaii it Co.'s Gin, 

octaves per gallon 3.5.5 

Bass' .Vic in wnod, lihds $50.00 

Joules Stunc Ale in wood, 

bhds 511 IK) 

Ross Ginger Ale. per barrel.. 15.00 

' Soda Water, per case 7.00 

" Tonic Water, " 7. 00 

' Potash Water, " 7,00 

" Ras|iberry Vinegar 6 to 

gal, per case 7.111) 

" Raspberry Vinegar 8 to 

gal, per case 6.00 

" Lime Juice Cordial 6 to 

gal, per case 6.0C 

" Lime Jnice^Cordial 8 to 

gal, per case'. 4.5c 

" Lime Fruit Juice 6 to 

gal, per case 4.60 

" Lime Fruit Juice 8 to 

gal, per case s.50 

" Orange Bitters, per case. 8.U0 

Burke's Bass' .\le, pints, per 

bbl of H doz 16.00 

Burke's Guinness' Stout, pts 

per bbl of 8 doz 16.00 

Burke's Jamaica Rum per cs. 12.50 

" Old Tom Gin " 10.75 

Dry Gin " 10.75 

" Heunessy Brandy, per 

case 16.00 

Port Wine, Gato br'd 

per case 10.00 

Fleischman's Royalty Gin, 10 

gal jiackages, per gal 2,2f 

Fleischman's Royalty Gin, 15 

gal packages" per gal 2.22^ 

Fleischman's Royalty Gin, 20 

gal Jiackages, per gal 2.20 

Fleischman's Royally Gin, 50 

gal pack.iges, per gal 2.15 

Meinhold's Anchor Brand 

Cider, per case, quarts.... 3.25 

Meinhold's Anchor Brand 

Cider, per case, pints 4.00 



Syrups, Cordials, Etc. 



KOLB it DEXHARD, 
422 Montgomery street, San Francisco. 

Rock Candy Syrup 7,5c, per gal 

Raspberry Syrup 75e, 

Orgeat Syrup 75c. 



Louisville, St. Louis &, Texas Railway 

"beechwood route." 

Consign your shipments from Louisville and interior 
Kentucky points, care of the Louisville, St. Louis <St Texas 
Railway, which is a direct line to Pacific Coast points and 
same will receive prompt attention. 

For rates and other information address the undersigned 
L. S. Parsons, J. K. McCracken, H. C. Mordue, 
Traffic Man'g, Gen. Man'g, Asst. Gen. Frt. Agt 

Louisville, Ky. Louisville, Ky. Louisville, Ky. 



36 



f/reifie WIJNt /cjME) Sflf^lT [REVIEW, 



I_,EJ^XDIlsrC3- IDISTII_.I_.E]I^S. 



ADDRESS, INSURANCE. 



BRAND. 



BOTJI^BOHSrS. 



BELLE of ANDERSON D'G CO. 

Add; S. J. Greenbaum, Louisville. 

Rate, 1.25. 



Belle of Anderson, 
Glenarme, 
Jessamine, 
Arlington. 



MELLAVOOD DIST'Y CO. 

Louisville, Ky. 
Rate, 85c. 


Mel) wood, 

and 
Dundee. 


EARLY TIMES DIST'Y CO. 

Karlv Tillies, Ky. D. No 7 
6 M. E. of r5ai(lsto\vn. ' Rates 1.25 
Add : B. H. Hurt, Louisville. 


Early Times, 
A. G. Nail, 
Jack Beam. 


0. F. C. DISTILLERY D. No. 113 

Frankfort. 
Add: Geo. T. Stagg Co., Frankfort. 
Rate 85c. 


0. F. C, 
Carlisle. 



SUNNY BROOK and 

WILLOW CREEK DIST'G GO'S 

DistilliTv, I,c)uisvilU>. Kv. 
Contracting Olliies, 128-130 Franklin St. 

riiicago, 111. 
ROSENFIELD BROS & CO., Proprietors. 



Willow Creek, 
Suunj' Brook. 



J. B. WATHEN & CO. l J. B. Wathen & Bro. 
Louisville, 
Rate 85c. Kentucky Criterion. 


OLD TIMES DIST'Y CO., 

Louisville. 
Rates, SI. 00 &$1. -25. 


01(1 a^iiiies. 


OLD KENTUCKY DIST'Y CO., 
Louisville, Ky. 
Rates, SI and S1.25. 


Kentucky Comfort 

and 

Gladstone. 



E. J. CURLEY & CO. D. No. 3 & 15 

Camp Nel.son 
Rates: "B," "D," -'E" 1.25. "F," 3.50 



Blue Grass, 
Boone's Knoll. 



W. S. HUME, 

Silver Creek. 
Rate 85c. 



Hume. 



ADDRESS, INSURANCE. 



G. G. WHITE Co.. 

Add: Paris, Bourbon Co., Kj'., 

Nos. 1,4, 6, 7, 85c: No. 5,1.00. 



BRAND. 



Chickencock. 



GREENBRIER DIST'Y CO. i 
Greenbrier. D. No. 239 

Add: Wm. Collins & Co., Louisville. 
Rate 1..35. 



Greenbrier, 
R. B. Hayden. 



ANDERSON & NELSON LIST'S CO., 

Louisville. 
Add: Anderson & Nelson Distilleries Co 
Rate 85c. Louisville. 


Anderson, 

Nelson, 
Buchanan. 


R. F. BALKE & CO. "G. W. S." 

Louisville, Ky. and 
Rate 85c. Ruunymede, 



I?/"yE]S. 



SUSQUEHANNA DIST'G CO., 

Milton 
Add; Jas. Levy & Bro., Cincinnati. 
Rates, 85c & 1.25. 



Susquehanna. 



NORMANDY DIST'G CO., 

Louisville, Ky. 
P. 0. Box 2354, 

Rate 85 c. 


Normandy, 

and 
Montpelier. 


A. OVERHOLT & CO., 
Add; A. Overholt & Co., Pittsburg, Pa. Overholt. 
Rate, 80c. 1 


BARBER, FERRIELL & CO. 
Hobbs. D. No. 240 
Rate 1.50 


OldGrand-Dad, 
R. B. Hayden & Co. 


J. B. WATHEN & CO. 

Louisville, 
Rate 85c. 


Lackawanna Rye. 



ANDERSON & NELSON DIS'G CO. j 

Louisville. 

Add: Anderson & Nelson Distiller's Co 

Kate S5e. I^ouisville. 



Nelson. 



T. W. STEMMLER & CO. 

UNION SQUjPs.K.E, NE;AX/ -YOI^Pi, N. liT. 



SOLE /cSEJMTS fOR UNITED STATES AJND CANADA- 



THEOPHILE ROEDERER & CO, MAISON FONDEE tN 18(4. 

The Celebrated RED LAUIL ClIAMPAGNK, KKIMS 
CADBURY BROS, CHOCOLATE and COCOA, BOUrtNVlLLE 



BOSHAYER LEON & CO, CLARETS and SAUTERNES, BORDEAUX A. & L. BEAUDET FRtRES, BURGUNDIES, BEADNK 

i'ELlX I'OTIN & CIE, CHOCOLAT cM CONSERVES, PARIS GUIOONIS FRERES OLIVE UlL, NICE 

Deo. BELLARDl \- CO, VERMOUTH. Established 1740, TURIN BRAND & CO, ESSENCE OF BEEF, LONDON 



.IIAI.K MAKK _A. 32) I I^ O ISr D -A. C KI "^'â– â– â– â– 'TKKKl.. 

PURE RYE WHISKY. Purity and Quality Unexcelled. 

The "AVTJtOyDAC'K" In it hlintl <»/ )■/(><• liiiili this.i iihisklis IlioroiitOitij tnahirid (iik/ r«n he hifihlfi recommended for 

tnrtlii-huil anil ifrnrrtil usr. 
.NoMf tifini htf H-lttmnl iiiti- stffiull u ri- tut »*■*■/,' tiilitl ami rnrh\ 

NEW YORK: Union Square. PARIS) Boulevard des ItalienS. 

CORDIAL MAKERS OF THE WORLD. 
i:sliihllxhi;l nr,.-.. T 11. SII:MMI.I:II. lUrrclm. 

CELEBRATED C,<£Mi- DE MENTHE AND OTHER CORDIALS. WELL KNOWN FLEUR-DE-LIS COSNACS. FOR SALE EVERYWHERE. 

IF YOU are in need of PRINTING give us a call. We make a specialty 
of fine Printing, Engraving, Lithographing, Photo-Engraving and, also 
original designs for labels of every description. 



f/fSlfie WifJE /cJMD SJ«>IF^IT PREVIEW. 



CLASSIFIED INDEX OF ADVERTISEMENTS. 



CALIFORNIA WINES AND BRANDIES. 



Boyd, F. O. & Co 

California AViiio Growers I'liion. 

Carpy , V. &. Co 

Cliauclip & Bon 

DeTurk, I 

Guudladi, J. & Co 

Guasti & Bernard 

Hedgoside \'inoyard 

liiglenook \'ineyard Agency 

Italian-Swiss Colony 

Koliler iSc Van Bergen 

Kohler & Frolding 

Kolb & Denhard 

Kuhls, Seliwarke & Co 

Lai'liuian & Jacobi 

Laehman Co., S 

Laudsberger & Son 

Los Gatos & Saratoga AVine Co.. 

Masson, Paul 

Melczer, Joseph & Co 

Minnse, William T 

Mohns & Kalteubacii 

Napa Valley Wine Co 

L J Rose &Co.. Ltd 

San Gabriel Wiue Co 

Schilling, C. & Co 

Smith , Julius P 

StaggCo., The Geo. T 

Starace. Achille 

Thornton & Pippj' 

To-Kalon Wine Co 



â– age. 
. (> 
. i» 
. 21 
. S 
. S 
. .31 
. 

22 
. 23 
. 31 

21 
. 21 
. 2S 



30 
21 

6 
30 

2 

34 

6 

30 

21 

O 

34 
8 
6 

23 
2 

7 
30 



DISTILLERS AND BROKERS. 

Anderson & Nelson Distilleries Co The 11 

Barber, Ferriell & Co 24 

Buchanan. George C 34 

Curlev, E. J. & Co 7 

Early Times Distillery Co 24 

Fleischraau & Co .5 

Leading Distillers' Cards 40 

"Levy, Jas. & Bro 42 

Mayhcw, H. B. & Co , 34 

Meilwood Distillery Co 1 

Monarch, R 24 

Moore & Selliger 23 

Overholt, A. & Co 33 

(Quinine-Whisky Co 27 

Rea, H. R. & Co 2i) 

Shufeldt, H. H. &Co., C. W. Craig & Co., Agents 5 



FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC CHAMPAGNES. 

Chapman, W. B 23 

Fluke's Widow, A.. 30 

Fra.sh & Co 27 

Hellmann Bros & Co 17 

Laehman, S. & Co 2 

Macondray Bros. & Lockard 33 

Masson, Paul 2 

Sherwood & Sherwood l(j 

Woltr, Wni. & Co 20 



IMPORTERS. 



B 



U> 



Chapman. W 

Glaser, S 7 

Hellmann Bros. & Co 17 

Librowicz, Julius 29 

Macondray Bros. & Lockard S 

Meinecke. Chas. & Co 14 

Sherwood & Sherwood 17 

Starace, Achille 2 

Stemmler, T. W. & Co 40 



Vignier , A 34 

Wolft; Wm. &Co 15 

FRUIT BRANDY DISTILLERS. 

Taylor, W. A. & Co 32 

Natoma Vineyard Co 28 

Walden & Co C 

West, Geo. & Son 33 

SAN FRANCISCO WHOLESALE LIQUOR ^DEALERS. 

Hey, Grauerholz & Co 6 

Hotaling, A. P. & Co 29 

Kolb & Denhard 32 

Kuhls, Schwarke & Co 6 

Moore, Hunt & Co 5 

Martin, E. & Co (i 

Naber, Alfs & Brune 6 

Siebe Bros. & Plagemanu 4 

Spruance, Stanley & Co 34 

Walter, M. & Co 6 

IMPORTED BRANDY. 
E. Remy Martin & Co., Hellman Bros. & Co., Agents 13 

SYRUPS, CORDIALS, BITTERS, PRUNE JUICE, ETC. 

Abbot's Angostura Bitters 23 

Ball & Cheyne Co 7 

Culbert & Taylor 38 

Kolb& Denhard 32 

Rudkin, W"m. H 30 

Walter, M. & Co G 

WINE FININGS, ETC. 
Schulze-Berge & Koechl 4 

WAREHOUSES, STORAGE, ETC. 

Bode & Haslett 4 

Louisville Public Warehouse Co 33 

Sherman, J. D. W 23 

BOTTLES, CASINGS, CORKS, ETC. 

Colgan, J. B. Corks 4^ 

Korbel. F. c& Bros., Tanks 34 

MISCELLANEOUS. 

B. &0. S.-W. Ry 18 

Bolton & Strong, Engravers 34 

Bonestell & Co., Paper Dealers 41 

Celery Beef & Iron Co 25 

Chickasaw Cooperage Co 28 

Cleveland Faucet Co 29 

Dunne, J. P & Co., Saloon 41 

Goodyear Rubber Co 5 

Henderson, Wm. (i -34 

Hobbs, Wall & Co., Box Manufacturers 30 

Humboldt Mineral Water Co 28 

Jordan, Dr. & Co 41 

Loma Prieta Lumber Co 30 

Louisville, St. Louis & Texas Railway 35 

New Home Sewing Machine Co 41 

O'Brien, James, Saloon 41 

Rosenfeld's Sons, John, Clipper Ships 41 

Sanders & Co., Coppersmiths 41 

Sprag\ie Correspondence School of Law 41 

Tubbs' Cordage Co 47 

Wandelt, Samuel 34 

Wolir, William & Co 18 

Su-bscribe; for tire; 

'pacific 'IX)^'^<^ <^^^ ^"tirit ^evieiO 

THREE DOLLARS PER YEAR. 

AOVERTISINa RATES ON APPLICATION. 



fAeifie Wil^JE AJ^ll^ Spil^'T F^EVIEW. 



BUKDSCHO. 




J. GUNDLACH. 



S/^nTraNCISCO- -AlEwYoRi? 



J. GU]MDbACH Sl CO. 

Vineyard Proprietors and Shippers of 

^ Calitbriiia Wines and Itraiiilies, 

I'llllPHIETOHS RHINE FARM, Mm, CAL 

And BACCHUS WINE VAULTS, 438-44-2 Bryant St., S. F. 




Sdtt Fro nrisro Ojjirr, 

s. /;. ton. M Ai!hi:r ,{ .s/.r o.vy> sts. 



\rtr Yot'li Urn itch 

S. E. Cor. WATTS & WASHINGTON STS. 



JOHN D. 8IEBB, 



J. F. PLAGE.MAXN. 



1'. f. SIF.BE. 



SlESE Bt^OS. 8t PliflGEmAl^fl, 

WINE AND LIQUOR MERCHANTS. 

SOLE AGENTS FOR 

O.K. Rosedate Boiirkii k Rje Wliisfe 

AND THE 

Celebrated Belle of Bourbon. 

Southeast Cor. Sacramento and Sansome Sts., ------. s-,n Francisco. C«! 

jPs-K-TISXIC "* PRIISnriNO " C]H:R.O]XEjOs.TIC 

R. M. WOOD CO. 

."Jlfi BATTERY STREET, - - SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 




4 

I 



otflNElD SACCHAR//VC. 

500 Times Sweeter Than Sugar. 

TTIK ORKAT SWKi;Ti;M.N(i MKIMI'.M IN TIM'; M A NT FA( TT K I'. OK AKKAri:i> WATKK? prCII AS 

GINGER ALE, LEMON SODA, ETC. 

riii: iN>ri;rAssh;i) ixiii;kiiif.nt F(ir I'I.kasant tastk- to 

SV\^EETEN AaZINE KND TO BLEND iA£HISKIES 

roi; I'AUTicir.AKs aimm.y to 

SCHULZE-BERGE & KOECHL, 

SOLE IMPORTERS AM) LKKNfiEKS. ..... ::i MIHRAY STREET, NEW YORK. 

ABRAMSON-HEUNISCH CO., SAN FRANCISCO, SELLING AGENTS FOR THE PACIFIC COAST. 

BODE & HASLETT 



Warehousemen 



1201 Battery St., San Francisco 



PROPRIETORS OF 



GENERAL INTERNAL REVENUE BONDED WAREHOUSE, No. ONE 



N. E Corner Third and King Streets '^ 

STORAGE AND INSURANCE AT LOWEST RATES. 



For the Storage of Whisky and Spirits in Bond 

ADVANCES MADE ON GOODS IN WAREHOUSE' 



f/cGlfie WIJME /cJ^E) SflF^ir (REVIEW, 



Henry H. Shufeldt ai^ Company, 



DISTILLERS, 



CHICAGO. 



CElEBRlTi IBRUL fill Ml) RYE 




DISTILLED BY THE HOLLAND PROCESS. 



Equal in flavor and surpassing in 
purity the most famous imported 
Gins. Put up in packages prepared 
to hold contents colorless, and con- 
tain, respectively 44, 24, 15 and 10 
gallons, all under double stamps. 




.8. 




And are unquestionably the purest and most wholesome Gins today, used in the U. S. 

FOR SALE 3Y ALL WHOLESALE LIQUOR DEALERS AND DRUGGISTS. 

C. W. CRAIG & CO. California Agents, 205 BATTERY STREET. 

FLEISCHMANN & CO. 

CINCINNATI, OHIO. DISTILLERS OF 

SgLVA/N GKOVE BOQ^RBOM A/ND Kg & WHISKIES. 



HIGH GRADE HOLLAND PROCESS- 



PERFECTION AND ROYALTY GINS. 



**-*44*>»4 fc>W W»*WW**-»- > i-»t H 







tit 



LARGEST DISTILLERS or PURE BRANDY IN THE WORLD. 
DISTILLERY AND VINEYARDS * GEYSERVILLE, CAL. 



- ■'C- -C" -5- ■■*-. -S-. •■^- "!>■ "C- •^. -5>. vS- -s^-*. '^••^. , 

-\ — y — \ — t- -K-k-H -K-K-K-K-KH — t—^ -»--^ -V*- 



-^">"t- -K -K -t — K - K -l — I — K -K-K-K->— 



WflltDEN COGl^flG 






i<-^ 



This Braiuly, made after tlie Frcncli formula, from selctled fresli j^rapta, lia.s been eiuoessfully intni 
iliK'ud. and is now ret;iilarly wld in the ]>rincipal markets of Europe, in eompetition with French Cognac 
OIli<!ial German and French chemiiitrt have pronounced it tlie purest Hrandy wliieh comets to Iheir marluM^. 
It is egpeeially yulled for the drnir trade and others, where |>nrily is demanded. While alxoad these 
poods successfully compete, paying pani* duties as the Fren<-Ii, the American huyer has the a<Ivantage In price between the Internal Revenue tax as- 
ussed hereand the customs duties on foreii^n tuaudlt's. S:implcf- will lie sent on application. 



WALDEN, 



"SATJ^LnDEItT & OO. 




Eastern Office 49 Broad Street, Sew Turk. 



(JEYSERriLLE SOXOMA CO., CAL.' 



f/^eiFie WIfJE /^pvIQ Sflf^lT f^EVIEW. 





[^irQlRMERCI " 




323-325 Market St., S, F 



Hey, Grauerholz & Co., 

IMPORTEKH AM) WHOLESALK DEALEKS IN 

WINES & LIQUORS. 



SOLE AGENTS FOR - 



DAW cBocK^ft Whisky. 

BE SURE YOU ARE RIGHT, THEN GO AHEAD. 



NO. 21G SACRAMENTO STREET, - - SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 



D. Y. B. Jir.XAKlF.. 



E. MARTIN & CO., 

IMriH'.TKKS AND WHOLESALE 

LtlQUOH mEt^CHflflTS, 

4-08 Front St., San Francisco, Cal. 

SOLE AGENTS FOR 

J. F. CUTTER AND ARGONAUT OLD BOURBONS, 



OLIVINA VINEYARD. 

The OLIVINA Comprises 600 Acres of Hil 



NA' 



f 



a 




Side Vineyard, Located in the 
.^^j Liverinore Valley. 

'*^'^'\^< A^^^^ DRT, DELICATE, WELL MATURED TABLE TSTNES 
^!^^X^> J^ A SPECULTT 



SEM> FOll SAMPLE OlUtER. 

Correspondence Solicited By The Grower, 

JULIUS P. SMITH, LIVERMORE, CAL. 



ESTABLISHED IS.")?. 

F. O. BOYD 5^ CO, 

CoMMIS.^I'iN MkIUHANTS. NkW VoKK. 

CALIFORNIA WINES & BRANDIES. 



Eartoh's Celebrated Sweet Wines, Fresno. 

Capt. J. C. Merithew, Prospect Vineyard. 

Advances Made on Consignments^ 



M. WALTER &, CO., 

WHOLESALE LIQUOR DEALERS 

Distillers of Bilters aDH Gordials, 



811 Montgomery St., Bet. Jack.son & Pacific Sts. 
Telephone No. 434. San Francisco, Cal 



William T. Minuse 

Commission Merchant. 

4<? BEAVER ST., NEW YORK. 
Agent for the Sale of Viticultural Products. 

Consifjnmuiils of soiiiul WiiifS ami Brandies soliiileil. Adv.Tiui's ni.-uh 

6ame at lowc-Bt rates, 

Reprcsentiiii; John Thomaxn, St. Helena, Cal. 

EWKR & Atkinson, Ruthereori), Cal. 

A. P. Adams Lind Vineyard, Fresno, Cal. 

Kisi:n Vineyard Co., Fresno, Cal. 



Landsberger & Son, 

Commission JWerchants 

123 CALIFORNIA STREET, SAN FRANCISCO. 



Agents for the Purchase and Sale of Viticultural Products. 

Telephone No. ©eo. 



FOR FINE PRINTING 



GO m 



T^. 1^. "VT'OOID OO. 



314-316 Battery Street, 



SAN FRANCISCO 



John Ijernakd. 



Skcondo Guasti. 



Quasti (S. "^ornardf 



Growers and DMHerg of 




ifomia winEs m nnm 



Winery at GuanH & Bernard's Spur, Between West 
Olendah and Tropico, Cal. 



bTOff^GE PRODUeEf^S Of SWEET WINES. 

yinlii (lljiii-. ('<i>: 'III (iikI l/diiKi/ii Sis.. I.ox .Iniiclcn, (al. 



f/ceifie WIJSIE jy^Q Sflf^lT (REVIEW. 



S. GLMSER, 

123 California Street, San Francisco, Cal. 

r=jPs.CIFIC COjPs-ST jPlGENT fok. 



L. GIRARD >tCO., Eperkxy, 
J. DUrONT .V; CO., Cognac, 
ARMAND BUOSSACQ, Cognac, 
GMK. MALIFAUD, St, Meme fres Cognac, 
HERMAN' JAXSEX, Schiepam, 
BLANKENHEYM & XOLET. Rottekpam, 
THOS. LOWNDES & CO., London. - 
NIXON & CO., Oporto, 



CHAMPAGNES 

COGNACS 

- COGNACS 

COGNACS 

GOLDFINCH GIN 

CENTAUR GIN 

OLD LONDON DOCK RUM 

PORT WINES 



OAMBOA HERMANOS, Jkrez de i,a Frontera, 
RUIZ MATA I'i; CO., .Ieuez de la Frontera, 
CHR. MOTZ & CO., BoKDEAU.X, 
GEBR. ECKEL, Deihe.^mki.m, 



SHERRIES 

- SHERRIES 

CLARETS AND SAUTERNE.S 

RHINE WINES 



VICTORIA MINERAL W.VTER CO., Oberlahnstein, VICTORIA WATER 

RHEINSTROM BROS., Cincinnati, O., - BLACKBERRY BRANDIES 

D. O. BEATSON, Kirkcaldy, Scotland, - SCOTCH WHISKIES 



jPlLSO Il^F-OPS-TEPS. OF- 



RAMSAYS SCOTCH WHISKY, WISE'S IRISH WHISKY, E. 4. J. BURKE'S IRISH WHISKY, OPORTO AND 
TARRAGONA PORTS AND PRUNE AND CHERRY JUICE. 




77if.se mil.slxiPii arc made in the Famous " r.T.VE Cli.lSS JtEOIOX" so 
Ju-i'lil celrhfateil as the lininr of the Jliirst Wliishirs In the M'nrld. and 
vhich have been jov tlie last Cenliirij, recognized as such, i/lvlng the cliar- 
acter and hlr/h standing to KEXTVCKY WIIISKIKS irhtch ;heij now enjoij. 



THESE FAMOUS WHISKIES CAN BE HAD IN LOTS TO SUIT THE TRADE FROM 

HELL/v\A/N/N BROS. & CO., 5^5 p-RO/NT STREET, SA/N FRA/NeiSeO. 



THORNTON & PIPPY 



PKOrRlETOKS, SOLE AUENTS 

S-wT-eet "Wines, Brandies and. Table "Wines. 
204 MARKET STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 

DJSTBiBuriXG AGEXTs RAUL MASSON CHAMPAGNE 



8 



f/cSIfie WIJME /rj\ID Sfll^lT I^EVIEW. 



Iiouls Hoeneier GMagne 

Highest Grade m the World! 

Used by All the Leading Clubs 
Hotels and Restaurants . . . 

l''or sale liy All l''ii'.st-C'liii:S 
Cinxers anil Wine Mcri-iiants. 




THRKE KINPP, ALL OF IXiUAL EXCKLLENCE. 

eA-RTE BLA/NCHE 

A Rich Wine! 

GHA/ND Vl/M SEC 

2he Perfection of a Dry Wiae! 

B-RUT 

An Exceedingly/ Dr\j Wine! 



Macondray Bros. & Lockard, 



124 SANSOME STREET 

Sole Agents for tlic Pacific Coast. 



F0RFINEPRINTING,V::R. M. WOODCO., 



3ia.-16Battery St., 
San Francisco, CaL 



qcma^^^ffl 



S^^?*, 




I. DE TURK 



BRANDY, 
ANGELICA, 
HOCK, , 

ZINFANDEL, ^ 

PORT, 

TOKAY, 



CLARET, 
SAUTERNE, 
. , MUSCAT, 

"" SHERRY, 

RIESLING, 
GUTEDEL. 



\7irT.e;ya-rd.s and. CellarB: 

Santa Rosa, Sonoma County, Cal. 

"BTS-ind-L: 
â– J'JO Sacriiniriilo St., San J'rii lulsco, (iil. 

C. M. MANN, Manager. 
New York Office, - - 91 Hudson St. 




TJHE JilGHEST AWARE) fARIS EXPOSITIOJM 




Establistieid. 

Z\\]er(T\ore l/alley, ^al. 

ISSS. 



^ ^0 






-^O 



.\3G^^ 



A. (. eHAUCHE. Prophetor. 

Offke ani> Depot, fi'J.') Front Bt., Sak Frakcisio 



1889. 



G0b9 JVIEDAL. 



CHAUCHE &, BON, Successor to A. G. CHAUCHE 

Soil' ficiuT.il Al'ciiI'; for Ihi' .MoiNT-ronoi; 'VlNjs. 




^CWLLINC^j 

'WINE MERCHANTS 



/ 



nâ„¢yorkhouse,>''"'"'^'"0- 

YSEN&TOTTEN 



[ALIFORNIA. 



24 DEY STREET. 



230^240 BRAN NAN STREET, 
BET.Iiraz--" 



EUROPEAN HOUSE: 



Bremen. Germany 







[INCORPORATEDJ 

VOL. XXXIV, No. 5. SAN FRANISCO, APRIL 6, 1895. $3.00 PER YEAR 

IsSUSd Semi - MonthlV. WAIsTED — Tc f^ontmct for the piirch.ise of large quantity 

H. }f. WOOD CO., - - PUBLISHERS, "f Port, Sherry and Slierry stock high iu alcoholic streugth. 

316 BATTERY STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. Address W. T. MiNisE, 41 Beaver Street, New York. 

TELEPHONE NO. 709. CABLE ADDRESS "fIELDWIN,'' SAN FRANCISCO, 

The P.ICIFIC niXE AXV SPIRIT K£ITEII is the onht paper of .--,--.,>■■ r- ^-Ni-,-#ir-.-r, 

i/.-i c/rt«s West of Chicago. It circulates amonn the IMiole.'iale and r'\/\t\r\C.\ T\C,VIC,N^. 
Itrliiil IViiie and .Siiirlt Dealers of the I'ariflr Coa.it. the Wine Mak- 
ers and Itrandji IHstillers of California, the Wine and ISrandii bay- 

ers, and the Importers, Vistiliers and Jobbers of the United States. 

.ill CHECKS, BR.iFTS, MOXET ORUERS, ETC., should be /CALIFORNIA WINES. — The feeling of confidence iu the 

made pai/able to the R. 3L WOOD CO. L^ ... ■■ ■ ^ t, j m ■ i • i i j 

^^ situation increases steadilj-, and it is certainly warranted 

Subsciiption per year -in advance, postage paid: 'jy the volume of trade, which is holding up surprisingly well, 

For tue United Slates, Mexico and Canada f:3 00 considering the condition of general business throughout the 

Kiir Euroiwan countries 4 00 j t-' ii i i- i i i in 

Single copies 20 countiy. Furthermore, values continue to harden, and another 

Entered at tbe San Francisco Post Office as second-class matter. advance is among the probabilities in the not far distant future. 

In short, the industry gives every indication of having s(iuared 

_A.G-IHjIISrO"2" : away with a fair wind toward the long-sought port of general 

EASTERN BRANCH OFFICE! prosperity. May the breeze hold good and the voyage be quick. 

„r . r^Tpr^TT nr iQ-T 1 ct xr V 1 r<-t Orders are coming in nicel}'. and shipments both by sea and rail 
A\ . A. GEFT, Manager, l-3-o Leonard St., New York Citv. , ", , , ■ , „, ,,.,.• ^ i • 
' ° ' [ '__ are more than could be expected. The Central American trade is 

I. CH. DE ST. HiTBEBT P. c. descai.so particularly gratifying, as can be seen by watching the tables of 

^'"•-^'^'•"'' Vice President g^-poj-tg to that market. During the half month exportations to 

PallfArniO \A/ino HrAli/nrc' llninn the Central American countries and Mexico have been numerous 

UdlMUIMld VVIIIU UlUWeib UIIIUII and of good volume, and it is evident by the large number of 

•^ '-^ ^ ^ cases included that this class of trade is improving — that wines 

CALIFORNIA WINES AND BRANDIES in glass are fast growing more popular. This is a desirable 

CORNER Sl'TTER AND GRANT AVENUE feature of the busiuess, and goes far to show that it is only a 

SiN FRANCISCO, CAL. question of time when these countries will comprise one of the 

' great markets for our wines. Receipts of stocks from interior 

HFI P WANlTFn FOR QAI F FTP cellars during the month were very heavy, the total aggregating 

nLLr WAIN I LU, rUn OALL, LIU. 1,.5S8,430 gallons, as against 972,900 gallons in the same month 

WANTED — A position as wine maker and viueyardist; of last year. It will be seen by the comparative figures, here- 

thorouglily competent and capable of managing a large plant ; with, that the receipts for the lirst (luarter of the year exceed 

14 years as Manager and Superintendent with last employer, those of the similar period of 1894 by more than a million and 

Address E. J. Barer, Box 1.31.3. Madera. Cal. .^ half gallon;--, aud in connection with this fact, the exports have 

â– ~ ^ irrown iu about the same proportion. 

FOREIGN MARKETS. The following is a comparative staiemeut of the receipts of 

A nciitK-inaii rctinntraitir iiiaiiy ycais scrvuc in KiiroiPi- in tlie I'niteil wine and brandy at this point for 3 months, 1894 and 1895 : 

Stat(?s i)(;pirtnieiit iif Acriciiltiire, (U'wircs to add, ainunn other reiirtsenta- i c(U 1S<)i 

tions, a tiriu or svmlirati' of Wine I»ealer.-i or tirowerg, wlio are j>rei)ared laJi ' t> 

for Kur.ipean trade. Am also desirous to arrange for t'e sale of California Wine. Brandy. Wine. Brandy. 

Fruit. Wlule in Knrope have fieen sueeessful' in introduring California January 5.53,110 142,705 897,534 60.590 

pr.Hluets, and would like t.> mntinue the same. .\<Mress Charles J. pu^uarv â– â– ' 741,410 190,6.50 1.344,780 1.540 

.MiKi'iiY, late Special Ageut in l-.uroi>e, Department of Agrieulture, 3 Kast reuiu<ii> ,.-o',„„, .t ,.or isooi-jm c «ja 

4Ut street, New York March 9<2,y00 2.3,(,95 ^ ,.388,4.30 6,630 

jr. juc TRAnr l^otal 3 mo's.. 2,267,420 359,050 3,830,744 68,760 

-..-., .vi v.. ., , ,, , , ' .-,• 1*1 .1. Recent advices from New York are as follows: '• The de- 

A\AKMNG.— The pubic is hereby notilied that 14 ware- , ,. ^ , n i *. ti • ■ ♦„ • *„ fi.„ ,^ 

1 • » • .1 <• 11 ■ 1 I 1 -,,1 . 1 w IT niand continues to be small, but this is not owing to the ad- 
house receipts, covering the following described (0 harifis \\ . H. iiiauu L.UUI-1UUCO .v/ m , t, 

McBraver's ■• C.^.lar Brook • wliiskv, have been lost in the mail, vanced prices - it is simply owing to the general condition of 

Application has been made to the liistillcr foi duplicate rccei|.ts. the trade; there are some indications of improvement, but they 

ami the delivery of whisky under original warehouse receipts ^jy jj^t as yet extend to the cla.ss of trade handling California 

has been stopped : ^^^.^ ^ines. In the meanwhile, prices are held linn." 

Ill Nov. '93, serials 1189.5 — 904. ' ,„„.,, o /~, r. o^ t. ^ i tt-h 

10 Dec 93 •• I'XWJ— 18 At the recent sali' of Southard & Co.. 2 St. Dunstan's Hill, 

50 Dec "94 •• 17469-518 1-- ^- London, on the 28th of February, one lot of 92 Califor- 

Cincinnati. ' " Jame.-^ Lew & Bko. nia /.infandel was sold at 2s. 2d. (52 cents) per gallon, and a lot 

Mar 5 — June 5. of '91 Zinfandel was sold at 2s. 4d. per gallon (56 cents). 



10 



f/reifie WIJME jOtfJiD SflF^IT {REVIEW, 



The shipinente of California wiues by sea ia March were as 

follows : 

Cases. Gallons. \'alue. 

To New York 54 4(!3,764 Sl-14,757 

Central America 1,748 l.o,086 14,;i70 

Mfxico 28 6,778 .•i.:il4 

Hawaii 23 6,068 3,1)03 

Hritiiih Columbia 4 957 481 

Japan and China 44 3,937 1,253 

Great Britain • 

Germany 55 22,122 9,886 

Other European 

Tahiti 

All other foreign 307 394 



Total by sea 1,956 519,019 §178,358 

/©ALIFORXIA BRANDIES.— The market remains slow. A 
^^ scarcity of orders and light shipments have been the rule 
during the last half month. In view of the season and the tax- 
paid stocks on hand, no general movement is expected for some 
time, \alues are sound, in sympathy with tlie upward tend- 
ency of wines. Receipts from the interior duiing JIarch were 
the smallest of any month in the past ten years. During the 
first three months of "95 the recei])ts were ()8,7GO gallous, com- 
pared with 359,050 gallons in the same i)eriod of '94. 

The total exports of California brandy by sea in March 
were as follows : 

Cases. Gallons. Value. 
To Domestic Eastern Ports 

Germany T2,'_'01 6,127 

Great Britain 

All other foreign 31 



.'00 



551 



Total by sea 31 12,401 (),()78 

*t ^^IIISKIES. — ^ Trade with most Jobbers continues to move 
^/^ slowly, and it is only in the ca.se of old-established and 
widely-i>opular brands that business holds up to the point where 
" there is no particular cause for cumphiiut." At the same 
time, things might be much worse, and it is certain that the 
wine and liquor trade is as well ofl' as any other line. Tlie gen- 
eral public are still economizing on good things to drink, aud 
not till the new movement of enterprise gets under good liead- 
way. aud the thousands of idle men on the Coast are allbrded 
employment, need any marked change for the better be looked 
for. Recent experience has proved this to be true. The reac- 
tion is not with us yet. but it is coming along, and will be here in 
a short time, unless all signs faU. Kxjwrts to Pacific ports have 
been fair during the fortnight, while receipts of whiskies and 
spirits by rail were of ordinary volume. 

The receipts of American whiskies by sea and rail at San 
Francisco in March were as follows : 

Cases. Barrels. Hf-brls. 

By sea from Atlantic ports 5 

" re-imported 



rail overland 6S0 



1,390 



Total 680 1,395 227 

The recepts of spirits in March by rail were 2130 barrels ; 
of alcohol 90 barrels and 2 drums. 

The receipts of fon-ign whiskies in March were 1700 cases, 
41 octaves, 53 cii.sks and .'i liogsheads. 

The exports of American whiskies by sea to foreign jjorts 
were 360 ca.ses and 1641 gallous, valued at 86474. 

/MPORTATIONS.— There is a better feeling, an.l some evi- 
dences that business is slowly but steadily growing l)clter. 
JJou.ses carrying standard lines with an established demand find 
orders more freijuent and sales less difficult to make. It is to 
be hoped this change is not temporary. 

As will be seen by the annexed figures, the receipts of for- 
eign goods during the past montii iiavc been remarkablv large 
in nearly every important line except champagne, and'exceed 
those of any one montli for several years. 

The principal importations at San Francisco for Maich wcie 
as follows : 

Champagne — 25 caaes. 



Still Wines — 3M ( aM-.~, .".I hogsheads, 24 casks, 70 quarters, 
3.50 octaves and S hall-barrels. 

Brandy — 1242 cases, 5 hogsheads, 1 cask, 50 octaves : also, 
from overland, I half-barrel. 

(iin and Geneva — 390 cases; from New York via Cape 
Horn, 5 barrels. 

Vermouth — 3070 cases. 

Mineral water — 1210 cases and lii) barrels. 

Bitter.s — 55 cases. 

Absinthe — 705 ca.ses. 

Cordials — 34 cases. 

Aquavit — 75 cases. 

Undesignated Licpiors — 381 cases ; also, from ovei-land. 40 
cases and 1 barrel. 

(iingcr Ale — 305 l)arrels. 

Kuni — 25 octaves ; also, via Cape Horn, 10 barrels. 

Bulk Beer (from overland) — 257 barrels, 205 half-barrels. 
460 quarter-barrels, 120 kegs. 

IJottled Beer (from overland) — 135 barrels, 51 1 casks, 281 
boxes. 

Foreign Beer (by sea) — 1222 ca.ses, 575 barrels, 135 casks. 

Foreign Stout (by sea) — 140 cases and 1015 barrels. 

Foreign Ale (by sea) — 10 cases and .30 barrels: also, by 
rail, 120 casks. 

Fruit Juices — 25 quarter casks. 



A CASE OF PROHIBITION REJOICING. 



Governor Budd's action in signing the bill winding up the 
all'airs of the A'itieultural Commisi-ion appears to have caused 
measureless rejoicing among the Prohibitionists. For a gentle- 
man who is as reputedly free a user of alcoholic stimulants as is 
the worthy Governor Budd this is asuprising statement, doul)t- 
less. Hear what one of the faithful — a woman, of course — 
has to say. Her name we believe is Peet, or .something akin to 
it, and her utterances in the J'nihibitionist are as follows: 

" The abolition of the ^â– iticuItural Commission and the 
cliniination of State aid from district fairs are both measures 
that arc matters for congratulation." 

Aud tlie J'rohihilionlsl backs this up with tiiis rot : 

" Governor Budd has .settled the doom of the Viticultural 
Commission by signing the bill calling for its abolition. Thus 
conies to an end one of the most notoriously unjust and .shame- 
ful institutions ever fastened by law upon any Commonwealth. 
To sanction the practice of making drunkards is l)arbarons 
enough in itself, but to make Prohibitionists pay a tax to per- 
petuate an institution wlio.se sole bus-ine.s.s lies in making drunk- 
ards .scientifically as well as legally, was adding shaiueliil insult 
to gross injury." 

What does (iovernor Budd think of hiiiiscif".' Has he had 
enough of his advocacj' of measures to juit tlit; I uiversity into 
polities? Does lie want the wine men of this State to know 
liow he betrayed tliciu ? Docs he want the truth about the 
lobby that was arranged in the IJoard of Regents, told ? We 
have it all? 

He must be pleased with this cold-water approval. 

And now, just a word to journals of the St. Helena iSV-u- 
calibre : Their prejudices against the Commission aided the 
fight against it. How does the St. Helena Slur relish the .situa- 
tion which places the vine growers of the Napa A'alley as 
hclplesslj' in the hands of Boards of Supervisors as are the 
saloon men? How does it like the proposition of having the 
leading iuduslry of the Napa N'alley placed in the same categorj' 
as the saloon l)usine.ss, which, the truth being told, exists in 
this State only on the sutlerancc of the County Supervisoi's? 

As long as the Hoard existed, appi-opi-iation or no appropri- 
ation, the iHiIiey of the State was declared. The .Supreme Court 
iias decided that the County Supervisors could not jjiohibit wine 
selling from a winery. The business was ]ilaced on a legitimate 
plane, and only the existence of the Board saved A. 11. Hrowii 
of Riverside, for instance, from the ruin of his business. Docs 
the aiar want the wine business on the same uncertain standard 
as is the saloon business? 

Tub Treasury Deiuirtnu'iit liaf ilociilocl tlint when liramly ia imimrteil 
in glass, anil it is found that some of the bottles have been " lost in tran- 
sit," a rebate of tlie ilnty on such loss is allowable. 

Hon. .1. I'K liAHTii .^^noHii. Vitiinllnral Commissioner ami formerly of 
the .*^an Gabriel Wine C'oin|iany, has been spending gome time in the city 
(luring the past fortnight, 



L 



/ 



PASIfie WljME -/k^ld SpiF^^IT PREVIEW. 



11 



THE FINEST WHISKIES IVIADE 

In the State of Kentucky. 



ANDERSON 



BUCHANAN 





^ HAND MADE^^^ 
5 SOUR MASH 2 

O %FIRE^ ^ 

LOUISVILLE' 
KENTUCKY. 



PRODUCTION JAN. 1, 1874, TO JUNE 30, 1894, 
121,718 BARRELS. 






PRODUCTION JAN. 1, 1880 TO JUNE 30, 1894 
28,086 BARRELS. 



NELSON BOURBON NELSON PURE RYE NELSON PURE MALT 




PURE ^ 



Ji^^ RYE W 

f|?9C WHISKEY^ 

JHENEWCOMB-BUCHANi 
COMPANY 



^ 



k<?«Ra!s_ 



% 



PURE 
^ MALT 

WHISKEY 



c 



JHENEWCOMB-BUCHANANi 



COMPANY 



.^, 



PRODUCTION JANUARY 1, 1872, TO JUNE 30, 1894, 218,146 BARRELS. 



U. S. CLUB 



> 



/ IJ.S.OIJJl) \ 
/IHSTIM . KHY coy 

V'HEIMIl'I'EH^Vv 

PRODUCTION MARCH 1, 1889, TO JUNE 30, 1894, 69,697 BARRELS. 



.A-IDi:)i?.E!SS 



The Anderson & Nelson Distilleries Co, 



L-OUI S:iZI LLE, KY. 



12 



f/eifie WIJsiE /rJ^D SflF^IT I^EVIEW. 



SAZE-RAC. 

A History of An Ancient Brandy House. 

The iiuuu' of "Siizerac" in coniu'ctioii witli iini)orU'(l l"'reiicli 
Brandies on this market lias been as familiar as household words 
siuee "the days of old, the days of fjold, the days of â– 49." 

The firm of Sazerac de Forge & Kits, I'^rauce. dates its origin 
baek to the aueient times. 

Having been foun<led over 250 years, it may be of interest 
to the many patrons of a brandy which has maintained such a high 
loputatioufor nearly three centuries, to give a short history of 
this ancient house. 

The origin of this firm is traceable back to the seventeenth 
century, when Charles I was King— in England. Louis Sazerac. 
Sei<Tueur des Roches and lord of other estates near Cognac, of 
the^oun-'er branch of the noble family of that name, establislied 
the business in the year KilO. and under the management of the 
sons of the lirst Ijonis Sa/.erac it became of great importance, and 
obtained from the king special pi'ivileges for the exportation of 
their brandies. In the year 1770 one of the descendants of Louis 
Sazerac was joined by M. Bernard Sazerac de Forge, Seigneui- 
de Forge, de la Fois, etc., a nobleman wlio held several high 
offices, ai'id >L Sazerac de Forge succeeded to the entire business 
in 1782, when the firm took its present name of Sazerac de Forge, 
subsequently becoming Sazerac de Forge et Fils, which desig- 
nation it at present bears, and as consequence— witii the exact- 
ness observed by French statements — the date of its establishment 
is named as 17S2, although as we have already explained, the 
actual business commenced in 1(540, or 2.")4 years ago at this 
present writing. Since then the progress of the business of the 
firm has been one continuous record of pro.sperity; the brandy of 
Sa/.erac de Forge has always been noted for its perfect purity and 
genuine character— a tirst class champagne Cognac. As such it 
is appreciated throughout Fr.uice, and agencies for its sale have 
been extended to .Vustralia, India, Cape Colony, California, etc., 
etc.. whilst on the continent of Europe, specially in Russia, Ger- 
man V and Sweden, it is regarded as one of the few choicest .spirits. 

It is worth recording that members of this old and uoble 
house have attained to high places in the State. Among its 
members were Chevaliers of St. Louis, five Chevaliers of the Legion 
of Honor, one an officer of the Academy, two officers of Public 
Instruction, two Deputies to Parliament, six General Councilors 
to the Department of the Chareiite, two \'ice-Presideuts of the 
Assembly, nine Consular Judges, eight Presidents of the Com- 
mercial Tribunal, six Vice-Mayors, three Mayors of Angoulcme, 
twelve Municipal Councilors of Angouleme, and a large number 
of other public offices have been filled by this illustrious family. 
At present the partners of the firm of Sazerac de Forge et Fils are 
M Albert Sazerac de Forge, Municipal Councilor of Mouthiers- 
For'ge, member of the Agricultural, Scieutilic, Artistic ami 
Commercial Society of Charente, and M. Fernand Kolb- Bernard, 
formerlv Sous-Pn'fet, now Judge of the Tribunal of Commerce in 
Angouli^me, son-in-law to one of the deceased partners, and for 
the last fifteen years a member of the firm. 

We may add tliat the Cliateau de T'orge. whose splendid vine- 
yards are situated in one of the best districts of the vine-growing 
part of the Charente, belongs to the firm of Sazerac de Forge et 
Fils; this estate has been in the family over 2t)U years. Surely 
such a history give nobility to trade. 

Tlie Sazerac Brandies of dillerent vintages and prices are to 
be had of the leading jobbing houses of San Francisco, and the 
excellent quality and liigh grade of these Cognacs are so ex- 
tensively and favorably known as to require no further eulogies at 
our hands. 

LIQUO-R T-RADE LEGISLATIO/N. 

Governor Build lias signed the M)-called Sanitary -Vcl, with 
the li(iuor-license joker in it. Tiiero is no trouble to be antici- 
pated on this measure. The joker is clearly unconstitutional, 
it-s purpose not being expressed in the title of the act ; it is un- 
conslilutional. also, because it seeks to remove the powrr to 
license from County Boards, which jiower is specifically given 
in Section II of Article 11 of the Constitution. 

On the request of a numlier of members of the Trade we 
pulilish the full text of the Withinglini Pure Drug and Food 
Bill, which was al.so approved by the (Jovernoi-. The Act is as 

(Senair Kill No. JOI, hUioduced by Mr. M'itlniigtun. .fan. l.'i, ISO.'i.) 
AN .VCT To provide iigainst lln- adulteration of lood and 
drugs: 



The People of the State of California, reprenented in the Senate ami 

A.i!<-;mblii, do enact «.< foUons : 

Section 1. No person shall, within this State, manufactiin 
for sale, offer for sale or sell any drug or article of food which i> 
adulterated within the meaning of this act. 

Sec. 2. The term '• drug," as used in this act, shall iii.luilr 
all medicines for internal or external use, antiseptics, disinfect- 
ants and cosmetics. Tiie term " food," as used herein, shall in- 
clude all articles used for food or drink by man, whether simple. 
mi,Ked or compound. 

Sec. .3. .Vny article shall be deemed to be adulterated, 
within the meaning of this act — 

1(1) In the case of drugs : (1) If when sold under or by a 
name recognized in the United States Pharmacopa-ia. it diffi'r> 
from the standard of strength, (piality or purity laid down there- 
in. (2) If when .sold under or by a name not recognized in the 
fnited States Piiarinacopieia but which is found in some other 
pharinacopieia or other standard work on materia inedica, it dif- 
fers materially fiom the standard of strength, quality or purity 
laid down in such work. (3) If its strength, iiuality or purity 
falls below the professed standard under which it is sold. 

(ft) In case of food : (1) If any substance or sub.stances 
have been mixed with it. so as to lower, or depreciate or injuri- 
ou.slv atlect its quality, strength or purity. (2) If any inferior 
orcheapei' substance or substances have been substituted wholly 
or in i>art for it. (3) If any valuable or necessary constituent 
or ingredient has been wholly or in part abstracted from it. (4 i 
If it is an imitation of or is .sold under the name of another ar- 
ticle. (•")) If it consists wholly or in part of a di.seased, decom- 
posed, putrid, infected, tainted or rotten animal or vegetable 
substance or article, whether manufactured or not : oi-, in the 
case of milk, if it is the produce of a diseased animal. («) If it 
is colored, coated, polished or powdered, whereby damage or iid'c- 
riority is concealed, or if by any means it is made to appear bet- 
ter or of greater value than it really is. (7) If it contains any 
added substance or ingredient which is poisonous or injurious to 
health. Provided. That the provisions of this act shall not apjily 
to mixtures or compounds recognized as ordinary articles or in- 
gredients of articles of food, if each and every package .sold or 
oU'ered for sale be distinctly labeled as mixtures or compounds, 
with the name and per cent, of each ingredient therein, and are 
not injurious to health. 

Sec. 4. Every person niauufacturing, exposing or offering 
for sale or delivering to a purchaser any drug or article of food 
included in the provisions of this act shall furnish to any person 
interested, or demanding the same, who shall ajqily to him for 
the purpose and shall tender to him the value of the same, a 
sam[.le sufficient for the analysis of any such drug or article of 
food which is in his jio.s.session. 

Sec. .5. Wiioever refuses to comply, upon demand, with tlie 
requirements of section four, and whoever violates any of tlie 
pi'ovisions of this act, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and shall i 
be lined not exceeding one hundred nor less than twenty-live 
dollars, or imprisoned in the county jail not exceeding one hun- 
dred nor less than thirty days, or both. And any person fipiiud 
guilty of manufacturing", ottering for sale, or selling, an adulter- 
ated article of food or drug under the provisions of this act shall 
be adjudged to jiay, in addition to the penalties hereinbefore pro- 
vided fiir, all the necessary costs and expenses incurred in insiiect- 
ing and analyzing such adulterated articles of which .said person 
may have been found guilty of niauufacturing. selling or offi-r- 
ing for sale. 

Sec. 6. This act sliall be in force and take elVect from and 
after its passage. 

Here is the way that Mrs. Peet, of Sau Jose, a •' temper- 
ance " worker who Vjient some tim<> at the recent session of tin- 
Legislature, sizes up the situation: 

" The outcome, as far as the li(|Uor question is concerned, is 
fully satisfactory. The liquor dealers made an extremely earn- I 
est "struggle to compass their ends. They were represented by 
their best attorneys, the lobby was full of their advocates, and 
day and night they worked incessantly to bring about the sue- ' I 
cess of their plai'is. Colonel Baker, their attorney, made the 
best elVorls of his life, evidently, both before the individual mem- 
bers and befiire the Judiciary "committee, to which the bill was 
referred, but all to no avail." and after disappearing in one form 
anil then reappearing in another — I'laying a sort of hide-and- 
seek game, as it were, with the fond hojie that its pa.ssage might ' i 
be eneeted in .some roundabout manner at llie last moment — it 
finally met an ignominious defeat." 



f/eifie WIJME /cpJE) Sflf^lT {REVIEW. 



13 



^otes and "personals. 



1!. K. lii.iHii & Co., of Salt Lake City, will sliortly upiMi a hiaiuh 
house in Sjunuiu'iito. 

SiMi Hko>.. of Ih'alilslHirg, aro thinkiiig of t'ri'itiii>; an aililitinii l.i 
their wiiieiy. \\ liieli will double their present eapaeity. 

(i. Mioi.iAVAi-i'A, the Napa wine merchant, has let the i-niitraet fur the 
eonstruetion of a new residenee to Frank Wilms for .tll.tXtli. 

TuK Koanl of Tuwm Trustees at Willows has raised the tarill'nn saloon 
lieense from if-10 per year to ifodO, payable in advance, ami placed a license 
on liottle shops of ^fiud a year. 

.1. K. I'l'.prKi! A Co., of Lexington, Ky., have secured a contract with 
the I'ullman Co. by which " J. E. PEPrEK '' whisky will be the only luand 
sold on the cars of the Company all over the United States. 

Young Freeman (helplessly) — '"Bondman, is there any cure for the 
ii.iuor liabit?" Old 1!oni)Man (thoui;htful!y) "Y-e-s — one." "What is 
if.'" "Marry a Woman bigger than you are!" 

It is announced that the Great White Spirit Company, of New York, 
tiie concern wliioh was heralded as an opponent of the Distilling and Cat- 
tle Feeding Company, has gone out of business. 

Acting Secretaky Ctrtis, of the Treasury, has directed that .t<i40,794 
of taxes due on 71l,tl94 gallons of whisky destroyed by fire in 1S9.'!, the 
property of the Allen-Ilradley Company, of Louisville, Ky., be abated, as 
the origin of the fire has been satisfactorily shown to luive been accidental. 



('iiari.es ilKiNECKE, of Charles Meinecke & Co., will leave for Eu- 
1 ope on the evening of the 7th, to be gone for an indefinite period. He 
will rejoin his family, which is now at Munich. We wish Mr. Mkinecke 
•■ boll voyage." 

The .Uliis Kessleh Company, of Covington, ICy., has been incor- 
I>orated by .lulius Kessler, of Chicago; Daniel K. Brown and .Jonas B. 
Iriiikee, of Cincinnati, for the purpose of distilling and selling whisky. 
I apital stock, :flO(i,{WO. 

.John Bitler. the |)Opular Market-street retailer has ordoreil twenty- 
live barrels of " R. I!. Hayden ' whisky. These goods are of higii ipial- 
ity, and are making rajiid headway in this market under the management 
of ('has. jNTeinecke a Co. 

The r.oDEGA Wine Co.mpanv, Cleveland, Ohio, has been incorp.irated 
by Theoilore Boehmke, Carl E. Schroedter, .August .1. Liederinann, Henry 
Boehmke and .lohn A. Zangerle. for tli« purpose of dealing in, pun basing 
and selling of wines, liquors, etc. Capital stock, :i>in,OO0. 

The Daviess County Distillery, of Owensboro, will bewouml up next 
montli and the property sold. This action is due to disagreements be- 
tween Mr. K. MoNAHCH and the executorof the late John Callaghan. Tlie 
property is a vi'ry valuable one, anil the company owns a large amount 
of fine whisky. 



The saloon business at South Riverside is being greatly interfered 
with l>y the series of revival meetings in progress in that town. It is 
thought the County Supervisors will have to make the license for oonduct- 
ing saloons still lower, or those engaged in the business at South Riverside 
will have to close their doors. 

They had been drinking — more than they sliould. .\t last one — the 
literary man of the party, gave vent to the concluding words of " A'anitv 
Fair:" ".\h! Vanitas Vanitatuni ! Which of us is hai)i)y in this world"? 
Which of us has his desire? or, having it, is satisfied?" To which he 
gravely added, after a long pause — " let's have another ! " 

Pali Massox, the well known wine merchant and chainpapne maker 
of San, .lose, is rapidly estal)ligliing a fine trade in Jlexico. His goods 
meet with much favor, as they ilcserve to. During the half month he has 
made numerous shipments of wine, l>randy and cliampagiu! to the Pacidc 
ports of the Southern Republic. Mr. Masson's trade in the Coast market 
and to tlie East is growing in a very healthy manner. 

There has been a reorganization of the California Wine .\ssociation, 
by whicli the number of directors is reduced to seven, namely, Charles 
Carpy. Henry Epstein, A. L. Tliihs, Percy Morgan, J. .1. Wecjlein 
H vNs H. KoHi.Eit and Henry Kohlek. The new ollicers are : President 
and (ieneral Manager. Charles Carpv ; Vice President, .J. .1. Weoi.ein; 
Treasurer, .1. Van BER(iEN; Secretary, ILvns Kohler; Assistant Manager 
and Cellar Inspector, Henry Lachmanx. 



Announcement is made that in the future the Champagne business of 
.\UPAD Haras/.tiiy & Co. will be conducted entirely iii(le]ieii(lently of the 
California Wine Association. .Ml the trade-marks of the firm are Mi-. 
Haras/.tiiv's property, and they were never transferred ti> the Association. 
By the terms of the agreement between the parties Messrs. IIaras/.thv 
buy back from the Association all stock not sold, and the As.sociation 
agrees to purchase cliampague of the house for a certain jieriod. 

Koi.i! it Denharii are establishing au important line of trade, in con- 
nection with their wholesale wim'ile)iartnient, in the matter of clarifying 
and bottling w ine for the trade and consumers. They have the very'best 
facilities, and Mr. Kolb's many yeais' experience in the art enable the 
house to render lirst-class service and guarantee satisfaction. Whole 
salers, retailers, clubs, restaurants, and the general public lind this a great 
convenience. Messrs. KoluA Denharo are, however, prepare^l to (ill all 
orders with dispatch. Those who are interested in this line of work would 
<lo well to ask them for prices. 

The Luthkr-Sciihoeokh (;oMPANv,of San Jose.oneof the largest li(|Uor 
liouses in the State outside of San Francisco, went into voluntary insolv- 
ency on the bSth inst. The reasons assigned are increasing indelitedness, 
loss of trade and slow collections. The liabilities foot ui> if2H,HA8.:u;, i,i' 
whiih it;l3,7(12.8'.l is due the Crown Distilleries Company, of this city, and 
.t2,fi04.,S.'5 is due the Commercial and Savings Bank of San .Jose. Tlie bal- 
ance of the liabilities is due to various houses in smaller amounts. The 
assets consLst of stock, i|!S,0O0; fixtures, ^.'JOO, and accounts to the amount 
of $27,000, which are estimated as worth ^T.riOO. 

Owing to tlie supply of pomace having become exhausteil the Cream 
of Tartar Factory in Healdsburg has closed for the season. The (uitjiut of 
cream of tartar from this concern was not so large as it will bo during the 
next run, and henceforth, because the plant was not at the outset equal to 
what it is now, and the facility of securing the material was not so well 
compassed. Jlr. De L.^toik will this year contract for enough pomace to 
manufacture double the amount of cream of tartar which was made be- 
tween last autumn and the time when the works were dosed down. The 
force of men which will be employed will likely be doubled, and a steady 
run, night and day, is anticipated for at least eight months. 

There is not in the AVest a firm which has a stronger hold upon Iheir 
line of trade than Siehe Bros. & I'laoemann. Since 187il they have been 
established at the corner of Sacramento and Sansome streets, and during 
that time they have built up a business which extends throughout the en- 
tire Pacific Coast. Wines and lic|Uors of a supeib quality are their spe- 
lialties, and their Bourbon and Rye are .so well known for their excellence 
that retail merchants are seldom called upon with samples of the bramls 
kept by the house. They simply send in their orders and the big firm fills 
them forthwith. .\ll dealers know the pi pular " (). K. Rosedale ' whisky 
which is blended Kentucky juice, and which is brought by sailing vessel 
around the Horn. SiebeBros.A Plagemann have been the agents for this 
fine brand for numy years. They have also been sole agents for the cele- 
brated "Belle of Bourbon," and they have control of many of the 
very best brands of whiskies known in the trade. They aiso liandic 
" Zwitcher Schapps," and carry an immense stock of the leading chani- 
panes. brandies. L'ius and importeil wiiii-;. — I'o-^t. 



iiiw »iNnff»]iui«»]iiipjMiiin][«pnftWiinrtMiiwt«JnirJWiJiJMri 



^c,l^BLlSHED /;v,^ 




E,REMYMART1N&C? 



COGNAC 

(FRANCE:) 

AGENTS IN SAN FRANCISCaCAL. 

See Qiiolations on p 4.3. 525 FRONT STREET. :(5 

il8iniiwtwiuii <[»iJ»iiM rif.)r«iigBi8iiingr«iri!J toii0rit«TWi8T^^ 



WimutWfmwIniiUMiiiiUiailllini 



14 



f/reifie WIJME /fJMD Sflf^lT F^EVIEW 



CHflS. ]V[Eir4ECKE & CO. 

314 Sacramento Street, - San Francisco, Cal. 

Sole Agents on the Pacific Coast for 










Deutz & Geldermann, 
Diipanloup & Co., 
Duff Gordon &. Co., 
Lacave &. Co., 



Gold Lack Champagne, 
Champagne., 
Fine Sherries, 
Sherries and Olives, 



D, M, FeuerheerdJr.&Co. Ports, 

The Vineyard Propr's Co., Brandies, 

I, A. I. Nolet, 

J. J. Meder & Zoon, 

Boord &L Son, 

A, de Luz &. Fils, 

C. Marey & Liger Belair, 

G. M. Pabstmann Sohn, 

Haussmann Junr., 

Gebr. Macholl, 

L Funke Jr. 

Dr. Teod. Meinhard, 

Genoveva Brunnen, 

Royal Prussian Amd., 

Societe Generale, 

A, Chevallier-Appert, 

A, Boake, Roberts & Co. 

Moore &. Sinnott, 

Greenbrier Dist. Co., 



Gins, 

Swan Gin, 

Old Tom Gin, Jamaica Rum, Etc, 

Clarets and Sauternes, 

Burgundies, 

Rhine Wines, 

Mosel Wines, 

Kirschwasser, 

Boker's Bitters, 

Venezuela Bitters, 

Sparkling Mineral Water, 

Selters Waters, 

Vichy Water, - 

Oenotannin. Etc., 

Wine Finings. Etc., 

Rye Whiskies, 



- - Ay 

Reims 

Port St. Marys 

Cadiz and Sevilla 

Oporto 

Cognac 

Schiedam 

Schiedam 

London 

Bordeaux 

Nuits 

Mainz 

Traben 

Munich 

New York 

Ciudad-Bolivar 

Niedermendig 

N. Selters 

St. Yorre 

Paris 

London 

Philadelphia 




R. B. Hayden" Sour Mash Whisky, Greenbrier, Ky. 



r)iK,EOT i:m:foi?/Tek.s 



-OK- 



Prune Juice, Arrack, S. Croix Rum, 
Vermouth, Spanish Clay, Etc. 







'•^ \ ^SOUR MA5M 



vl^ON c5; 




f/reifie WIJ^E /f^D Sflf^lT [REVIEW. 



15 



â–  Qorres'pondence, 

Front ti)e National Wine & Spirit Association. 



LoiisviLLE, Ky., Mardi 20tli, ISOo. 

Editor Piidlir M'iiir ajiil Spirit I{ry!i'}f — Sir: Wo lieg to ad- 
vise you that the Annual Convention of the National Wine ami 
Spirit Association will he held at the St. Nieholas Hotel, in St. 
i.ous. Mo., on .Vinil Kith and ITtli, l.sy.'i. 

Our President. .Mr. 1. W. Heinheiin. was in St. T^ouis yps^ter- 
day. and had a i>ersonal inler\ iew witli innny of the leading 
nienihers of the trade. lie received assurances from them which 
make it an ahsolute certainty that our annual nu'cting will he 
a hrilliant success from a husiness and from a social stand-])oint. 

.•secretary of tiic Treasury Hon. J. G. Carlisle has heen in- 
vited to attend, as also the Commissioner of Internal Kevenue, 
Hon. J. S. Miller, and we may reasonahly hope that one, or per- 
ha])s hotli, may honor us with their presence. 

Excursion lates have heen secured already. Particulars 
will he made known shortly. To make the meeting more inter- 
esting and more profitahle from a business stand-point, we should 
like to have adilresses from some of our members during the 
Convention, hearing on subjects relating to our trade, either 
political, scieutitie or economic. 

Louisville, Ky., March 30, 1895. 
Editor Pacific Wine and Sjnrif Review — Sir : The President 
of this Association has just returned from St. Louis, and (iuds 
that the trade of that city has made ample and liberal provision 
for the entertainment of the visiting members on April ICthaud 
17th at our annual convention. The headquarters will be at the 
St. Nicholas Hotel, where a splendid hall has been secured foi- 
the meeting, and a superb banquet will be a feature of the occa- 
sion. Altogether, this convention promises to be a notable one 
in the history of our trade, and we feel safe in saying that no 
one who attends will ever have cause to regret it. Remember, 
that onl\- members of the National Wine and Spirit Association 
will be admitted to the proceedings ; so urge all your friends 
who are not members to send in their applications at once, and 
then meet us in St. Louis. All the railroads will make a rate 
for round trip of one and a third fares. Please advise us by re- 
turn mail if j-ou can attend, so that the St. Louis committee 
may know how manj- they w'ill be expected to entertain. 

Yours truly, W^. W. Bvi.litt, Secretary. 



TiiK high-license ordinance wa.< pass-eil by the San huis Obis|ii) City 
Council, and now a fight to a finish is on between the Council and the 
liquor dealers. The saloon license was li.\e<l at s^flOO a year, which it is 
ctiujated will freeze out about one-half of the number in the business. 

Once More. — One man buys a dollar's worth of wine for use on his 
table ; when it is consumed, California still ha.« the money for trade, busi- 
oi- ilie general good. Another pays a dollar for tea, but when it is used 
china has the money, and you couldn't get is back with a steam derrick. 
If the tea-drinkers could only invent a super-dynamic magnet! Well ! 



Froin L. Sandoin & 60. 



New York, March \'}, 1895. 

Dear Sir : The following goods have been received to which 
we ask the kind attention of the trad(! : Per '' Hurgundia," 
Mar. 4, (13t( b.\s. macaroni ; per " Herman AVinter," 50 drums 
codfish ; per " Werra," March G, 25 cases h'f-moon olive oil, 40 
bills. Piednuint wines, '2(! [tackages anchovies, 2 cases of cheese ; 
pel- " lierlin." 50 ea.ses French cognac. 

W(^ also take pleasure in announcing that we have accepted 
the general agency for the United States of the old-established 
and \\ ell-known house of L 1i. RufVmo. of Florence ( Italy), grower 
and exjiorter of high grade Cliianti wines. Of all Tuscan wines, 
the Kullino's Cliianti is reputedly the finest, being grown in the 
best vineyards of the Cliianti hills, and expressly put up for the 
American market. W(( will Ik; pleased to submit samples and 
prices. Yours truly, 

L. Gandolfi & Co. 



Fron? Acbille Starace. 



70 Pe.\rl Street, New York March 22, 1895. 
Editor Pacific Wine and Sj)irit Pevicw — Sir: Please take no- 
tice that I have just received per Steamship •' Normannia '" an 
invoice of 50 cases Lucca Olive Oil, of which kindly make men- 
tion in your next edition. 

Per Italia. (Mar. SO) 5053 bx's macaroni, A. Garofalo brand. 
Yours truly, Achille Starace. 



Ch.\uley Kotii, of Roth & Hai-i.e, TiOuisville, is in San I'lancisco 
once more, looking after his trade. 

Henry Ei.fers, of the Kelly's Island Wine Ccimpany, Lake Erie, and 
Mr. Moise, of the Sweet Valley Wine Co., are making a month's tour 
through the ViticuUural districts of the State. 

J. P. Edoff, President of the (California State Protective Association, 
intends taking a four weeks' business and pleasure trip through Southern 
California in the near future. He will start about April l-'ith. 

.1. GuNPL.^cn & Co. are getting a fine share of the cream of the Cen- 
tral American trade. The steamer San Bias carried out during the month 
some healthy shipments, among which were 592 cases of wine of the well- 
known " Rhine Farm " brand. This fact sjieaks well for the popularity of 
these goods in the markets named. 

The members of the Italian-Swiss Agricultural Colony held their 
fourteenth annual meeting on the evening of the 2d instant. Secretary A. 
SiiARiioKO read his annunl re])ort, which shows the Colony to liave been 
organized in 1881, and that a tract of land consisting of 1 -'lOO acres was 
purchased at Asli, Sonoma county, near Cloverdale, one-half of which hag 
been set out in fine varieties of wine grapes and a portion in fruit trees. 
The Association has erected one of the largest wineries in the State. The 
selection of directors has resulted in the re-election by unanimous vote of 
the following gentlemen: P. C. Rossi, Dr. G. Oi.lino, A. Merle, C. A. 
Malm, 1. Cuenin, M. .T. Fontana, D. Paroni, P. Canei-a and A. Sbarboko. 
The board subsequently met and elected the following ollicers : President, 
P. C. Rossi; Vice President, Dr. G. Oi.uno; Treasurer, London and San 
Francisco Bank, (limited) ; Secretary, A. Sbakhoho, and .\ttorney, D. 
Freidenrich. 



WWI. WOLFF & CO., 

Importers and General Agents, 



327-329 Market Street, 



San Francisco, Cal 



IP^A^GII^IC OO.A.ST .^G-EDSTTS FOR, 



POMMERT SEC CHAMPAGNE 

J. & i\ MARTELL COGNAC 

MINERAL WATERS of the APOLLINARIS CO., Limiled, London 

HUN'iARUN APERIENT WATER 

FRIEDRICHSHALL APERIENT WATER 

MORGAN BRO., PORT ST, MARYS' SHERRIES 

DIXON'S DOUBLE DIAMOND PORT 

ROYAL WINE CO., OPORTO, Port Wines 

OUBOS FRERES, BORDEAUX, Clarsta ajid SantCTies 

" lle-lmpovted AmerU-an WhUtkies.- 
Staple branUs. 



HOCK WLNES, from Messrs. Hen',tell & Ci., Mayeme 
BURGUNDY WINES from F. CHAUVENET, NUITS 
JOHN de KUYPER & SONS, Roticrdam. GIN 
BARTHOLOMAY BREWERY CO.. Rochester, N. Y. 
EXTRA FINE STANDARD, BOHEMIAN and the 
"KNICKERBOCKER' 
"DOGS-HEAD " BRAND of Guinness' Stout and Bass' Ale 
CANTRELL & COCHRANE'S Belfast Ginger Ale 
LONDON Dock Jamaica Rum 
so Eicdtiur; Spr. 'SO Belle of XiIm.ii; Spr. 'SO Blue Graft; Huine, Maj field; O. F. C; Chlckencock and otber 
Lowest market quotations furnisbed on application, to tbe wholesale trade only 



CANADIAN CLUB WHISKY frvm Messrs. HIRAM 

WALKER & SONS Ltd., WalkerviUe, Canada. 
ANDREW USHER & CO'S Scotch Whiskies 
JAMESON & CO., IRISH WHISKY 
THEO. LAPPES GENUINE AROMATIQDE 
GILKA KUMMEL 

SUFTJN. GARDEN & CO,, London, Old Tom Gin 
UDOLPHO WOLFE'S SON i CO., Sdiiedam, SHNAPPS 



16 



f/rSlfie WIJME /cJSID SflF^IT f^EVIE\A, 



Imports and Exports 

DURING THE PAST FORTNIGHT. 



EXPORTS OF WINE. 



TO CENTRAL AMKlUfA— Pkr Stk. Colima, March Id, 1895. 



nitSTINATION. 



Ai-ajiitla . 
La rnlon 



San J Ue Guatemala. . 

Cliamperii-o 

Ainapala 

La Union 



Amapala. 



riintas Arenar 
Cliamperifo. . 



AcajiUla. 



La Union . 
Acajutla. . 



La Liberlad 

La Union 

San J de (Inatemala 

ChamperifO 

Ocos 



Cal Wine Assucialioii. 



C Schilling it Co. 



FSKordt 

JGundla<li A Co., 



CWA,C Carpy ife Co, 



Lachman & Jacobi — 
CWA, KohlentVanB. 



Amapala J Ivancoviclj. . 

Total amount 736 cases and. 



2kes6 

1 bbl 3 1if-bbls., 

',;()2 cafes 

(J barrels 

f) lif-baru'ls 

54 kegs 

100 cases 

SO cases 

36 cases 

2 hf-barrcls . . . . . 

2 barrelf 

Iht-barrel 

IkeK 

42 kegs 

4 cases 

2 barrels 

12 cases 

80 cases 

10 kegs 

40 cases 

19 bf-barrels 

6 octaves 

5 hf-bbls 2 kegs , 

3 octaves 

1 octave 3 kegs, , 

2 kegs 

20 cases 

1 barrel 

5 kegs 



20 
130 

161 
545 



54 

105' 
28, 
10 

472 



112 cases , 
1 barrel. . 



104 



100 



5i; 
120 
1.56 
60 
50 
20 



52 
3,143 



» 27 

60 

1,116 

213 

141 

369 

345 

70 

180 

8* 

73 

22 

~9 

510 

70 

36 

25 

175 

64 

193 

420 

100 

171 

52 

50 

22 

48 

15 

30 

365 

40 

$5,095 



TO BRITISH COLUMBIA— Peh Str, Walla Walla, Marcli 26, 1895. 



Victoria 






51 

157 

52 


$ 32 


Lachman .t Jacobi 

Italian-Swiss Colony 


1 hf-barrel 


26 






34 




3 barrels 


48 


Vancouver . . . 




1 barrel 


32 


Total 


amount 


2 cases and 




337 


*179 



TO 


HONOLULU— Per Sriin, Robert Lewebs, Marct 


16, 1895. 








3 barrels 

20 barrels 

175 kegs 

3 bf-barrels 

10 cases 

15 bf-barrels 

12 bbls 5 kegs.... 
9 cases 


156 

1,043 

1,043 

SI 

iii 

671 


• $ 110 




1 iimount 


Cal W Association 

Schilling & Co 

CWA, CCarpy it Co,... 


410 
467 
56 
32 
170 
308 
73 


T..l:i 


19 cases and 




3,4(kS 


?l,6-.'« 



TO MEXICO— Pes Stb. Willamette Valley, March 21, 1895. 



Gtiaymas 


Paul Masson. 


5 barrels. . 


269 


t 92 




Joseph Melrzer 4<: Co . . 
CSeliiUinji&Co 


5 ca^es 


52 


** 


2bbl8lbf.bbl.... 
34 keK8 


340 
267 
471 
600 
279 
222 


84 
247 


.M:i/at Ian 


Ii barrels 


61 




17 hf-barrel« 

(U) ko'^H 


34U 
3(H) 




11 bf-barrelH 


130 
lOS 


it 


2 cases. . . . 


26 


Kii>t'i)n(lu 


2 barrels 


ib,5 

259 
455 
105 
155 


48 






7S 


La Pa/, 


HiUU'Iirandl. I' it Co... 

ii Frapolli tV: Co 

W Loai;^a *\: Co 

FSKorilt 


50keKR 

2 barrels 

•i barrels 


214 
37 




41 

4 


(Jtiaynias 

MaziUlan 

Giiaymas 


7 barrels 

2 bbls 11 ke^s.... 

2 casks 

3 packaj^es 

2 hf-barrels 

7 kegs 


35ft 
214 
125 
376 
52 
35 
205 
102 


108 
85 
:js 

103 
21 
:« 
90 


Bnseiiada 


S Lacbmaii Co 


3 hRrr<»lA 


25 








Total amount S cases and 




5,128 


$2,375 



TO NEW YORK— Pee Str. Saturn, March 27, 1895. 



New York 


PM SS Co 

WmHoelscher&Co.... 

Lachman & Jacobi 

Cal Vv' Association 

Schilling .V Co 

MSherpcl\tCo 

E Gamier tt Co 

Overland F T Co 


2 barrels 


96 
40 

60 


* 2" 






s 




1 barrel 


48 




6 cases 


24 




701 barrels 

1650 barrels 

250 barrels 

Ihl-barrel 

300 barrels 

.57 barrels 

2 barrels 

1 bbl 2 hf-b Ik,., 


50,640 

82,500 

12,787 

28 

15,30C 

2,850 

103 

116 

164,520 


10.073 

24,780 

1,918 

14 

2,900 

1511 




Hvan\s. Pauson & Co . , 
J liichr 


60 
47 


Total amount 


6 cases and 


$«),642 



TO CENTRAL AMERICA-Per Str. San Blas, March 2S, 1895. 



Coriuto 

Champcrico. 
Acajutla 



Corinto. 



La Libertad 

Acajutla 

Cliamperico ..s 

San J de Guatemala. 

LaLibeitad 

Corinto 



Castle Bros. 



La Libertad . 
Cliamperico . 



.Vcajutla 

Cliamperico . 



Corinto 

SanJ de Guatemala. 
La Libertad 



FSKordt 

J Gundlach & Co. 



Goldtree Bros 

C Schilling it Co. 



CWA, CCarjiy &Co. 



I Dc Turk 

Italian-Swiss Colony. 
CWA, CCarpyitCo . 



3 hf-barrels . . . 

120 cases 

472 cases 

15 barrels 

13 hf-barrels. . 

6 kegs 

7 kegs 

3 barrels 

15 barrels 

21 barrels 

40 cases 

20 kegs 

100 cases 

82 cases 

3 barrels 

8 hf-barrels 

2 hf-barrels 

5 cases 

[9 kegs. 

4 cases 

1 keg 

6 cases 

6 barrels 

110 kegs 

28 hf-bbls I kc}; 

42 cases 

6 barrels 



Total amount S7l cases aiul. 



84i 



965 

355 

128 

8' 

159 
800 
938 



200 



158 
222 

'to 

"96 

"is 



304 

2ro 

799 



310 



$ 100 

270 
1,611 

415 

261 
92 
60 

107 

4:g 
375 

ISO 

120 

350 
444 

lo:i 

124 

67 

3C. 

.51 

13 

12 

35 

lt>6 

107 

496 

186 



5.SS4 J6,3210 



SHERWOOD ^ SHERWOOD, 



-IMPORTERS AND EXPORTERS- 



212-214 MARKET STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 



24 N. FRONT STREET, PORTLAND, OR. 



**Kcijslouc aUonogrnin Jliic" and "(Old Sarnloga" — The Finest Eastern Ryes. 



JJOET & CHANDON CHAMPAGNE 

HUNT ROOPE TEAGE A- CO. Ci.sed Ports, 

E .V J. BURKE'S Iri.sh and iwitch Whiskies, 

BASS RATCLIFF & GREnON, Liimtod- Baas Ale in Wood, 

g k i BURKE'S Bajs' Ale and Dublin Porter (GUINNESS 

EXTRA FOREIGN STOUT, the finest brew). 
FLEISCHMANN'S ROYALTY OIN. 



ESCHENAUER & CO'S CLARETS and SAUTERNES, 
A. HOUTMAN A- CO'S HOLLAND GIN, 
LAWSON'S LIQUEUR SCOTCH WHISKEY, 
GUINNESS' DUBLIN STOUT m Wood, 
JOULE'S STONE ALE in Hhds. and Hf-Hhds, 
MEINHOLD'S ANCHOR BRAND NEW YORK CIDER, 
HENK WAUKESHA Mineral Water, 



MACKENZIE & CO'S Spanish Sherries and Ports 

E, & J, BURKE'S NONPAREIL OLD TOM GIN. 

BURKE'S HENNESSY HRANDY and DRY GIN 

SCHLITZ MILWAUKEE BEER the "Pilsener" and Liebt Suirklmi; 

also SCHLITZ in Wixid, 
ROSS' BELFAST GINGER ALE, CLUB SODA, ETC. 
"CLUB COCKTAILS, " EVANS HUDSON ALE 



IloKKKAM, Gkhrtm-v & Co., riiir.Mii.i.iiciA, I'l 111; WnisKiKK:— ••Mas<<it," "RoniN Hooii," "O, I'. S," ANn "I'ltivATi: Stock," 

I'tlil-sl I'liiiiiilliiH Iti/i- ll'lilshtil K'liilirhtlni <l ll<i)/s, I. I'll. Tiirniiti), f Viiiiii/il ). liiillliil linlrr l.iircriiiiiiDl .Sii/xcri.s/oH. 

Iti:-I^ll'nitri:i> IMi:ill(:i\ »IIISIili:s lailUU- lUtuiUioi, Siirlnn \sl, 'Sil, \S!>. •.'*«; Ilorxi-\i Itiir: O. /■'. v.: Siirlniililll: If. 11. m'llrniirr 
IliriiiiUiiii-. .)/. r. iloitiiiiU: hri\lu>k\i t'liih: MtllirmnI: Miiltlniily: (lilrhfinmk: /.'. «'. Ilrrrii and tilhrr xltiiidaiil hriiiiilx. 

Alto Agents For NAPA VALLEY WINE CO'S WINES AND BRANDIESIIIN CASES. California Wines and Brandies in Wood. 



f/eeifie WIJ^E ;^|MD Sflf^lT F^EVIEW. 



17 



TO MEXICO— Per Str. Colima, Mnreli Hi, 1895. 



Benito . 



San Bias 

Acnpiih'o. .. 
San lienilo . 
Maiizanillo. 



W Fjonizn & Co 

\V A Si'hultz ifc Sons 
CWA, Koliler it Van B. . 
CWA, C Oarpv .t Co 



Cal W Assoriation... 
Laohnian I'c Jacobi . 



10 kegs 

SO keijs 

22 kesjs 

. r>lif-l'ibl8l kcj;. 

inkers 

"> lil'-barrt'Ip 

I barrel 



Total amount. 



100 
30;i 
43- 
145 
100 
135 
52 



S.VJ1 



IMPORTS OF WINES AND 

FliDM NEW Vii|;K, I'KU Sun- Ciias. K Mo,, 
barrels wliisky ; 5 barrels ::in. 



LIQUORS BY SEA. 

,v, .M;ir. h I'.Mh I" l,;ini-ls niin ; 



FliOM LOXDO^f, Peii Siiir Dkumiu-kton, March l'Jtli--l'.',"i barrels ^'inf;er ale : 25 
eases. 1 eask whisky : 2 hoijsheads, s hr.lt"-bai"rels wine ; 100 eases i;in ; 300 barrels 
'jotlled stout; 15 oetaves brandy ; SO eases, 70 easks beer 400 barrels bottled 
beer. 

FROM LIVERPOOL, Per British Sim> Washai.e, Marcli 22d— 35 octaves rum ; 
100 cases gin ; .500 cases mineral water ; 100 eases, 4 lioyslieads wine • 155 eases 
brandy ; 70 eases Iii[Uors; .50 eases bittei-s. 

FllOM LnCEHPOOL, Per British Sine .John Cook, Maieli 22d— 25 rases elipm- 
paicne ; '.5 oetaves, 452 eases wliisky ; 325 eases, SO barrels beer ; 115 case;-, 20 oc- 
taves bi-andy; 5 boi;slieads wine; 255 barrels, 15 eases stout. 

Fi;()M LIVERPOOL, Per British Ship Moreshy, March :50th— 30 barrels, 10 
cases ale: 1.50 bairels Kinder ale; 2.50 barrels, 40 cases stout; 20 cases fjin; 35 cases, 
I eask brandy; 25 hogsheads, '.i5 cases, 1 eask, :534 octaves, 6S iiuar'er-casks 
wine : 150 eases, 1 hoj;:shead, 52 casks, 16 octaves whisky; 375 eases, 65 casks 
beer ; 10 eases liquors; 10 cases mineral water; 75 cases atiuavit. 

FROM CANADA VIA VASCOl'VER, Per Str. Walla Wai-la, March 2Sth (via 
Canadian Pacific)— 450 cases whisky (\Vm. Wolff A Co.) 



FRO.M 


OVEHLAXD BY 


RAIL IX BOXD— 100 case 


s gin. 






EXPORTS 


OF 


MISCELLANEOUS LIQUORS 


BY 


SEA. 






F 


â– om March 15th to March 31, 


1895. 







destination. 



^:m Bias Acajntla. 



C'iima Tonala . . . 

A Weieh Honolulu. 

Willamette Guaymas. , 



shippers. 



Louis Haas 

J Gundlach & Co. 



Goldtree Bros 

Sherwood ife Sherwood 



Sprnance, S A Co . 
Jos Melczer & Co . 



PKQS & cont. 



2 bbls Anisado. . 

1 keg Gin 

15 cs G Ale 

2 bbls Anisado.. 
15 bblsG Ale... 
lOcsG Ale 

1 cs Cnracoa . . . 

2 es Benedictine 
1 cs Maraschino' 

. 2 cs Fernet 

1 Oct Gin 



$149 

39 

82 

150 

150 

50 

B 

11 

3 

12 

12 



Total amount 31 cases, etc. 



$661 



BEER IMPORTS BY RAIL. 



^ 



From March 15th to Maich 31, 1895. 



copyrighted. 





bottled. 


BULK. 




Boxes 1 Casks Barrels 


Barrels 


Kbbl 


XDbl 


Kegs 


Roval Ea»;Ie Dist Co. . . 




80 


160 




Collector of Port 


45 95 




W Bo<^'en i<: Co 




12 


20 
60 


ioo 


SO 


Sberwood tt Sherwood 








95 




Hililehrandt.'P iV Co .. 


96 











\v '-i.lu'rffl A Co 


26 1 00 


::::: 


















Total 


71 291 05 


122 


80 


260 


so 



EXPORTS OF WHISKY BY SEA. 



$ 66 

1.59 
125 
97 
68 
60 
16 



From March 15tli to March 31, 1895. 



VESSEL. 


DESTINATION. 


SHIPPERS. 


PACKAGES. 


QALLONS 


VALUK. 


San Bias 


LL, Champerico. 


Carroll * Carroll . . 






( 120 




3 barrels 


128 


275 


'• 


CA, Acajutla .... 
GLCo, •' 
CSCo, LaLib'd.. 
FYS, Acajutla . 


Crown Dlst Co 






242 


,t 


4 barrels 

10 cases. . . . 


1.50 


|s:i 


" 


C Schilling .V: Co.. 
.r Gundlach A Co.. 


9(1 


" 


12 cases. . .. 




i:;r, 


" 


n.IACo, " 




13 eases.... - 




151 


'» 


(;m, 

CA, 




20 cases . . . 




â– su 


" 


Ikeg 


15 


45 


" 


CB, La Liberlad. 


CasUe Bros 


12 cases 





12:; 


" 


GLCo, .\cajutla . 


Goldtree Bros 


4 barrels ... 


165 


ion 


Colima 


OBD, •• Wm Woltf ACo... 






45 


" 


.IB, San Benilo. . 


CWA, CCarpy ACo 


I bairel 


411 


S3 


" 


Victor. .'Vcajulla. 


Louis Haas 


1 bai-i-el. . . . 


41 


51 


" 


B.\C, Chani'erico 


Carroll A Carroll.. 


7 eases 




68 


Cilvof Puebla 


BACo, Vancouver 


Moore, Hunt A Co. 


10 cases 




- 80 


China 


liCo, Yokohama 


A P Ilolaling Co... 


5 i-ases 




40 


Willamette. .. 


WA(>o, Guaymas 


Wm Wolff A Co.... 


5 eases 




50 


Rbt Lewers . . 


WCCACo. Hon . . 


Louis Haas 


10 barrels. . 


2.35 


:i95 


** 


Est .JHG, Hon... 


Dalleniand A Cti.. . 


15 cases 




12S 


>. 


LCo, Honolulu. . 


Sprnance, S A Co. . 


2 barrels. . . 
10 cases 


93 


196 
7:5 


" 


HWC, Honolulu. 


Wilmerding A Co.. 


5 barrels . . 


226 


362 


Colima 


DA&Co, R .1 de G 


Crown Dist Co 


3 barrels . . . 


151 


171 




JM, Port Angel.. 


•' 


1 barrel 


27 


s7 


*• 


MG, La Union . 


C Schilling & Co .. 


I keg 


10 


31 




MWP, Guaymas. 
amount 17.^ cases : 


.Tos Melczer & Co. . 

nd 






5 

S:;,6S4 


Total 




1 281 



WHISKY AND SPIRIT IMPORTS BY RAIL. 



From March 15th to March 31, 1895. 



COPYRIOHTED. 





SPIRITS. 






WHISKY. 








Barrels 

135 
193 

380 
90 
64 


Cases 


Cases 


Barrels 


Kbbls 


Kegs 


Misc. 


C VV Craig & Co 


















::: â– â– ::: 




Wm Wolff & Co 




















70 


20 


10 




L Cahen & Son 








.Tos Melczer & Co . ... 






37 
S3 
60 
00 
70 
10 
12 
2 

7 
5 



52 


10 














T Taylor & Co 














Braunschweiger A Co 












S McCartney 












C Meinecke & Co ; 












J L Nickel A Co ] 












J K & Co 








































Hildebrandt, PA Co. . 














E Wilkinson 








I 
1 
















J Early 






2 
1 






C Bartlege 
























Total 


.862 






42:5 


72 


..0 





*90 barrels ,\lcohol 



Scene : A Siiudm/ School. — Johnnie — " I say Miss Jones ; I 
know now why you (litln't want nie to fob bird nests last sprinjr.'' 
Miss Jones (with an oriole in her hat) — " Wliy was it Johnnie?" 
Johnnie (gazing at the hat) — " "Cau.se j'oii wanted the birds to 
gfow liig enough to wear "em.'" — Kate FIchVs Wu.thliiijlim. 



l;irHAl;l) HKT.L.VAXX 



H. G. HELI.MAXX 



HELLMANN BROS. & CO. 

IMPORTERS AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS 
525 Front Street - - - _ San Francisco, Cal. 



r\( MIC ('ii\sT ai.i;n'i> 



Fon 



KRUG & CO., REIMS, PRIVATE CUVEE CHAMPAGNE 



I. PERRIER FILS & Cn., Chalons s Marne, 

ADRIEN & FlLa Epernay 

FORRESTER & CI, Xerez de la Froiil«ra, 

GARVEY & CO., - - - 

OFFLEY. CRAMP & FORRESTER. Oporto, 

BUNSENHEYM & NOLET, Rnllerdam, 

CH. LECHAT. R. PHILIPPE & CHESSE, Nantes. 



riianipague 

Champagne 

Sherries 

Sherries 

Port Wines 

Union Gin 

Sardines 



Irish Whiskv L. DURLACHER, BiiiKeu - Rhine Wine 

Cognacs H. UNDERBERG— ALBRECHT, Rheinberg a Niederrhein 
" Boonekanip Bi'.lers 

CHAS. DAY & Cti., London, * n"'"* ''7. *^''' 

( Orange Billers 

J. B. HERRIFF & CO., Olassgow, •' ^''''. ^^^^ 

" ( Jamaica Rnme 

ILL connst T\ V.MTElt STATES BO.V»B/> M.iUEIfOUSE. 



DUBLIN DISTILLERS' CO.. L'l'd, Dublin, 
E. REMY MARTIN & CO.. Rouillac, 
P. FRAPIN ,t CO., Segonzac, 
ENGRAND FRERES. Angouleme, 

PATTERSON & HIBBERT, London, 



( Bass' and Guiness' 
'( Stout 



AMi:i;i(.\N W IliSKlES— •liLUE GRASS" AND "BOONK'S KNuI.L 



18 



f^Veifie WljME /r|^D Sflf^lT f^EVIEW. 



MISCELLANEOUS FOREIGN WINE SHIPMENTS. 



From March 15tb to Uarch SI, 18'J.V 






VESSEL. DESTINATION. SlIIPPKKS. PAl'KAQES. 


GALLONK 


VALUE 


CitTOf I'uebla Victoria J (iumllaih ACn... •> barrels.... 

■' . •• FanisHorthAC... IciKhth-bbl 

China Nacasaki SiliiUini; A Co .. .'> barrels — 

Yokohama f\V.\, K .V Van B. . 1 barrel. . . . 

s casca 

Total anuilllit S cases and 


10» 
27 

a«2 

51 


*25 

» 

112 

30 

a.') 

?17.s 



EXPORTS OF BRANDY TO FOREIGN PORTS BY SEA. 





From M 


»reb 15lh to March 31, 189.5. 






VESkEL. 


DESTINATION. 


SHIPPER):. PACKAGES. 


GALLON!! 


VALUE. 


Colinia 

Kbt Lewers . 
Willamette. . . 


Acajutla .... . 

Honolulu 

Ouavmas 


Louis Haas 1 barrel 


4.') 


$ 39 


Jos Melezer & Co. . 3 octaves . . 
12 barrels... 

T>ttiil Mnuc/\n 4 OA«es . 


(il 
94 


123 

48 
80 


Tot.tl amonnt .") ^■a^e.« and 


2UU 


?J')7 



Wine. 

March 1 '>4,.310 

" 2 79.350 

" 4 62,130 

• ' .5 94,5.50 

" ti 37,700 

«■ 7 41,040 

" 8 97,870 

" 9 112,700 

■ • 11 (56,780 

• ■ 1-' 97,300 

" 13 28,790 

" 14 31,890 

'• 15 68,120 

" 16 .'33,530 

" 18 40,.520 

" 19 70,240 

" 20 63,920 

" 21 64.000 

" 22 103,050 

" 23 08,350 

.' 25 51,600 

a 26 49.200 

" 27 44,620 

" 28 40,.30O 

" 29 38,220 

•• .-{O 28.290 



Urandy. 
560 



.320 



1 ,00( I 

1,200 
280 

3,270 



Total for M:\i.h 



.1,, 588, 4.30 



6.6.30 



COLLEGE OF VlTieU LTURE. 

The proposition to establish a suitable and worthy successor 
to the VitifuUural Commission, wlicn its alTaiis are ended l)y 
tlie limitation of law, is bringinf^ about much discussion. The 
inability of the College of .Vgrictiltiire to deal with eommcieial 
problcniH as they arise — sueh as (Hiestioiis of tarilf, internal rev- 
enue laws and regulations, and the creation of markets — must 
be recognized as patent. It goes without the saying that the 
College of Agriculture is not e(|uip|)ed for this manner of work, 
let alone its series of failures in theoretical vilicultuial work. 
The viticulturisls must have some central working Itody in San 
Francisco, which shall neither be dominated by political consiil- 
erations nor be governed by the theorists and dreamers who hold 
supreme control in the College of .Agriculture. There must be 
a re|ires(Mitative central working body of iiraclical men at the 
liead of affairs, and when it is organized it will not be on the 
plan of, say, the Stale Hortienllural Society (not the Hoard of 
Hoiliculture) nor tin; State ]''loral Society. 

The details of what this working body will he will be settled 
deliuitely at the .Inne meeting of the State Vitieultural Commis- 
sion. At that time the plans will have been elaborated, and 
it is slated that it will probably lake on !h<' foi-ni of a College 
of \iticidture. The .June mei-ting of the Commissifui will be 
the last bill one of the body, and when the Heeember meeting 
comes around the Hoard will be in readim-ss to retire gracefully 
and with honor. 



The followingare the salient points of Ordinattce No. 69. licensing the 
retail li<iiior htisinesfi in Lake coun'y: The license ta.\ is fi.xcd at $50 per 
i|uarter, payable in ailvuiu-e, and mi license to be graiiteil for Ic^s than 
three months. No license to be granted e.\cei>t upon written application 
of tlie one desiring to carry on the business and ten freeholders of tbe 
same precinct who are lieads of families, wlio are not engaged in the same 
bnsine.ss, and who have not jietitioned for license fur any one else. .\ 
bond of ;f2.')(10 is reipiired, signed by at least live freeholdi^rs and beads of 
families of the same i^iipervisciral district, and who arc not engaged in tbi' 
same business, and wlio must (pialify in the amonnt of ^.'idO each, condi- 
tioned for the faithful compliance witli the provisions of the ordinance. 
Saloons must close at 11 o'clock e. M., and not open until 5 o'clock a. .m.. 
e.vccpt on Sun<lay, Mhen they must close at II o'clock v. .M. Saturday and 
remain clo.^ed until 5 o'clock a. m. Monday morning. .\ny violation of thi' 
ordinance forfeits the bond and license and disciualilicg the offender from 
ever ol)taining another license. The violation of any of the pnivisioiis oi 
this ordinance is a misdemeanor, pni\i«li;ilile bv a Cine .■! imt less than $100 
nor more tliau $."iOO. 

All Trains Run Via Washington 



WI/NE A/ND BKA/NDg -REeEIPTS. " 



COMING EVENTS- 

Cast Their Shadows Before." 

The follnwnig are amuiiL' Ihr ISP.'i events foresliadciwed bv the 

B. & O. S-W. RY. 

Which runs Tlnougli \estibuled Trains from St. l.ouis to Louisville, 
Cincinnati, Washington, Baltimore and New York. 

Southern Baptist Convention, Washington. D. C. May 10-14. 

Kates to be announced later. 



Baptist Anniversaries, Saratoga. N. Y.. May 28— June 4. 

Kates to lie anii'iunceil later. 

Baptist Young People's Union, Baltimore, Md., July 18-21. 

( ine I'are for Round Trip. 

Christian Endeavor Meeting, Boston, Mass., July 11-18. 

One I'are for Hound Trip. Ask fcir Conditinus. 



26th Triennial Conclave Knights Templar. Boston. Mass., 
August 26-30. 

One Fare for Koiind Trip. Ask for Conditions. 



G. A. R.. Louisville. Ky., September 1895 

Oue ci'iit ]ier mile each way. 



I'or full particulars regarding any of these nieetingp, address 

J. M. CHESBROUGH, 

(icneral I'as.scnger .\gent, 

Or ST. LOl'IS, MO. 

G. B. WARFEL. Asst. P. A.. 

( INCI.SNATI. O. 




ajtJiDiDiTim 



\ ^- â– -.. A. 





omE 



â– ^TEnMI 



7 It 11 K <'lly of IloohettltT. witli ils nbnixliitil .Miiiply of inngnillccnt wk!it hih! lis cldsr 
f |troxttntly to ihc lu'>t htirify ttml )i<>i> t>r<)tIiU'lnK illMtrlcItt of llio rountry. tifforils 
titi''iiriiii'<s»'i| filclMiif*! for till' iirodncMlon of Midi lu'Hlth KiviitR hmiI )>iilHtattU> ln-i-r ii- 
»>ri«(-.l t.\ tin ■ liAKTlhH,().\l.\V HKKWKItY CO.," Koclu'stcr. N Y. Hurtliolnniin ^ 
"Fine Standard" iiM.pnsUon«liIy is tliv purest nml hrsi Uwr iit ihi- nuirkot, niil 
lilt' "Knickerbocker," l»rt'\vi*(i of tlu' rhoiofst nmttrliil will, we foci coniidciit, on 
luTonni of li.H t'\«)iiUHf iiropiTtleH, trnvn biMMUne ii fn\ ortlc uilh lovers of n high grailf 

iiimI drilrtltf t)ft'r. Folt SaI.K HY AM. IHlAl.Klts aNI» tJlt'n Kits. 

WILLIAM WOLFF & CO.. 

Paclllc Coatt Agents, 327-329 Market St.. San Francisco. Cal. 



F^eine WIJ^E /c|^D Sflf^lT f^EVIEW. 



19 



San Francisco. OAL. _-• -«r /ik #1 I J I "^ T J A. 'w- LouisviLLii, Kv 

^^^^ Dlf^ECT ff^OjVl bOUISVIbloE, KY. ^^^^TA ^ 



PEEI^CESS U/I7ISKIES. 



* > - > o< * 




C^/lI^/^flSEED 



►>< • > ■ < * 



772656 Uhiskics have a. refutation second to none on the Pmfo Coast. Tlw\; have been given years of triai 
ly the best class of trade and consumers and are pronounced without a peer. When given a. trial they speak for 
-.hemselves. For sale in quantities to suit in Louisvilie or San Francisco by 



SOLE AGENTS FOR THE PACIFIC COAST. 



404 IFI^O^STT STI^yEET, 



S.AJN- IFI^y^ITOISOO, O^Xj 



SIX GOLiO IVLEDALiS. 

A First Award, Gold Medal and Diploma, was awarded by 
the California Midwinter Exposition, 1894, to the following firms: 

PERRIER-JOUET & CO., Epernay, Champagnes. 

COATES & CO., Plymouth, - Plymouth Gin. 

BARTON & GUESTIER, Bordeaux, Red and White French Wines. 

H. CUVILLIER <Sc FRERE, " Red and White French Wines. 

BOUCHARD PERE & FILS, Beaune, Red and White Burgundies. 

W. B. CHAPMAN, San Francisco, Special importations under his 

own label of Vintage Wines 
and Old Cognacs. 

AGENT AND IMPORTER, 



123 CALIFORNIA STREET, 



N. B.— See Price Lists on Pages 31 and 35. 



SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 



20 



f/rSlfie WIJSIE /vjMB Sfll^lT f^EVIEW. 




OLD GRAN 






BARBER, FERRIELL AGO 

AS R. B. HAYDEN A CO. 

nEGiaTSRID OISTILLCRV, 

5t« DI8T, 



Barber. Ferriell 26 (o. 

proprietors. ' 




,\ 



X 



fimm,, 



ML 



B.H.HURT, 
PRESIDENT. 



J. H. BEAM . 

VICE PRESIDENT, 




BISTILLERIES: NELSON CO, KY, 

OFFICE: Louisville. Kv. 



<Si^ 



f/fSlfie WIJME /rJMD Sfll^IT [REVIEW. 



21 



S. LACHMAN CO. 
GalifoFnia filines and Brandies. 



453 to 465 BRANNAN STREET, 



SAN FRANCISCO 



ISr. 1^. OZFIFTOEI, 22 TO 26 ELIKd: STI?/E1ET. 



v> piofi^^i^ u/if^^ |iOiJ5E. E3J/^B1J5}^^D 1854. ^ ^ VJ^ 

California l^inos and "^randios. 

VINEYARDS IN SONOMA CO., MERCED CO., AND FRESNO CO. 



COR. SECOND i. FOLSOM £,TS.. SAN FRANCISCO 



41-45 BROADWAY, NEW YOrK. 



Kohler & Van Bergen, 



CALIFORNIA 




Sacramento, Cal. Vf^-''' / -'>; Ji >' \C>* 
Main OlIU'c anil V:inlls. ',', ^Ji â– ''â– .â– i'^ â– - ) 




661 to 671 Third St. 
San Francisco. 



^^f5! 



â– ^<W^' 



New York Office, 

n. w. cohnek 

Laigiit & Variik Sts. 

New York. 




CARRY & CO. 



T'roprletors 

Uncle Sam Winerv and Dislillerv 

CAIjIFORNIA. 



OrnCK AND SALESROOM 

515-517 Sacramento St., - San Francisco. 

WINERIES AND DISTILLERIES, 
NAPA AND SAN JOSE, CAL. 



tmrm^^SEsm 



CARRY & MAUBEC, 

IS t'EDAi: STIiEET, - - NEW YOItK, X. Y. 




^ 



PURE CALIFORNIA 



SPECIALTIES: 



F PRIVATE STOCK HOCK. 

PRIVATE STOCK EL CERRITO, 
PRIVATE STOCK SAUTERNE, 

PRIVATE STOCK CLARET. 
PRIVATE STOCK BURCUNDY, 

PRIVATE STOCK VINE CLIFF. 





DE:AUEJXS in 
WINESanoBRAN 



niNE/tlES AND DISTILLeRIES: 

J^/cf/c eiTY, YOUJMTVIbbE /rJ^JD 
ST. )HEbEJM/r. 

OFFICES : 

11-13 FIRST ST., SAN FRANCISCO. 

200-202 S. FOURTH ST., ST. LOUIS. 

29 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. 



22 



js/veifie WIJ^E /rJ^D SflF^IT f^EVIEW. 



MANUFACTURERS' RESOLUTIONS AND PAPERS. 



Till' MamiriK-turi'r.s' ("oiiveution, whii'li was in session in 
this fity sevt-ral ilays (hirin<; tlir past (brtiiigiit. adopted two 
sets of resolutions of interest to the local liquor and wine trade. 
The first of these refers to " free alcohol in tlie arts,'' and its 
purport is so plain as need no further comment. It is as fol- 
lows : 

7»(>"/i(i/. That the use of spirits in the arts not connected 
with the production of beverages, and for purposes not intended 
to evade taxation on alcohol used in connection with beverages, 
should be free from internal reveinie taxation, and that present 
laws on this subject should be construed in harmony with these 
restrictive conditions, but literally, or to industries not connected 
with beverages. 

Hcnohvd, That this convention particularly requests the Sen- 
ators and Representatives of the I'acilic Coast to use all means 
within their power to have this law made operative and continu- 
ous, and that a copy of these resolutions be sent to each and 
everj' Senator and Kepresentative of the racilic Coast. 

The second set of resolutions was ottered by Arpad Harasz- 
tliy, and its purpose is two-fold. Some of the Prohibitionists 
objected to the consideration of such resolutions, but tlieir ol)- 
jections counted for nothing, and tiie following were adopted : 

/»*<■•<«/ ir</. Tiiat this {■onvention recommends to the favoral)le 
consideration of the Senators and Itcprescntatives of the State of 
California in Congress the demands of the distilleis of this Slate, 
especially those connected with the brandv industry, which call 
for an amendment to the revenue laws permitting distillers to 
blend, perfect and bottle their pure products in bonded ware- 
houses both for domestic and foreign trade, giving them the 
right to change the size of their packages to suit tlie demands of 
commerce, while retaining the evidences of the puritj- of their 
products through the internal revenue stamps, as now provided 
for original packages placed in bond. 

RiMilral. That we commend to the favorable consideration 
of ihe wholesale liquor ti-ade in this State, the proposition that 
they should patronize local distillers wherever it is established 
that they are able to supply neutral spirits and alcohol eciual in 
(juality, and as low in price as can be obtained from distillers 
outside of the State, and that in the event the local <listillers may 
not be able to supply all that is needed in this res))ect, then they 
should exert their influence with the spirit-producing combina- 
tion in the Eastern States to open and operate distilleries in 
this State for the supply of this Coast. 

The lirst portion is aimed to assist in carrying out a favor- 
ite proposition of the brand}- distillers and dealers ; i. e., the bot- 
tling 'and blending of l)randy in bond. The needful draft of 
this measure has already been drawn up, and is to be found on 
page 70 of Charles A. Wetmore's recent Treatise on Wine Pro- 
duction, published by the Viticultural Commi.ssioner.s, 

The .second portion of this resolution is calculated to increase 
the business of the California Distilling Co. (C. Jost & Son) and 
the Golden State Distilling Co. 

Another resolution, which was adopted, and referring to the 
continuation of the work of the A'iticultural Commissioners, will 
be found elsewhere, together with a full discussion of its feasi- 
bility and right. 

Among the papers read was one by Mr. Andrea Sbaiboro, 
on the wine industry of California, which was as follows : 

Genllemnn oj the Coiweiilion — The wine industry of this State 
lias been very much depressed for the past four years. Within 
the past year neither the producer of the grape, the wine maker 
nor the wine dealers have made any profit on their investment. 

The grape growers were so di.scouraged that some of them 
l>lowed up their vines, and many intended to do so. This was 
not owing so much to over-i)roduction as to the fact of excessive 
competition among the dealers. In view of this state of affairs, 
a few of tlie principal grajie growers and wine maker.s called a 
convention to meet in this city a few months ago, which was 
attended by a large number of interested parties. 

The result of the meeting was the formation of the Califor- 
nia Wine Makers' Corporation, the members of which agreed to 
transfer all their wines to the said .Association, to be sohl l.v i 
board of directors, and the proceeds of such sales to be divided 
prorata, in accordance with the quality and i|uantily of the 
wine fiirniHhed by each individual. 

This FJoard set to work in earnest, and succeeded in obtain- 
ing control of about nine-tenths of the win»! of ]S'.i:j-!)t in the 
State. With this power in their hands they succeeded in con- 



rolling the market, and in a few months have raised the price, 
of ordinary wine from (1 to TJi cents per gallon, at which latter 
figure (j,(JU(),()n() gallons of wine have already l)een sold, and, 
furthermore, an agreement has been entered into with the prin- 
cipal wine dealers in this city whereby future prices shall be 
regulated so as to give a fair living ])iice to the grape growers 
and wine makers alike. 

The co-operation of the wine dealers and wine makers has 
succeeded in saving the viticultural industry of the State from 
utter ruin, and this they have done alike to the advantage of the 
wine growers, dealers and consumers. 

The price obtained for wine bj' the producer and that paid 
bv the consumer has been unreasonablj' disproportionate. There 
have been instances where the producer has received 10 cents 
per gallon for his wine, which, after having been put up in so- 
called pint bottles, has been sold on the cars and in some hotels 
as high as §1 per bottle, thus making the consumer pay about 
SIO per gallon for an article for wliieh the jirodueer receives 
about 10 cents per gallon. 

It is the aim of this co-operative combination to do away 
with such unreasonalde charges, and at the same time to permit 
only sound and good wine to be furnished to the consumers, 
AH unsound wine will hereafter go to the distillery. 

There is room in this State for a very large increase of the 
wine industry. The 20,000 000 gallons of wine which is now 
])roduced as an average in this State would be consumed in 
Italy and France by a single city having the population of San 
Francisco. 

At the same time, the people of the State of California, 
knowing that wine here is onlymade from the pure juice of the 
grape, consume nearly as much wine as all the Eastern States 
put together. If some means could be found by which our East- 
ern brethren could be induced to use as much wine as we do in 
this State, the industry could be increased immen.sely. 

California is practically the only State in the Iniou that 
can produce tine wines and in large quantities. Millions of 
acres of hillside lands could be ])lanted in vines, thus giving 
employment to thousands of industrious laborers, who, in their 
turn, consuming the product and manufactured artich-s of the 
State, would soon increase our population and materially en- 
hance the prosperity of the country. 1 u former years there was a 
prejudice against the quality of our wines, but now that prejudice 
has liecn overcome, especially since it has been admitted iiy ex- 
perts and juries at the United States and foreign exhibits that 
our ordinary wine is far superior to that produced in Europe, 
and that, with the exception of a few extraordiiiarilj- line wines 
of France, we can produce here as fine a table wine as is made 
in France, Italy or Spain. 

A great deal to retard the general use of wine by the Kast- 
ern people is due to the temperance societies. The.se societies, 
which are undoubtedly composed of philanthropists who are 
striving to better the condition of their fellow man, have unfor- 
tunately not been able yet to distinguish the difference between 
the use of whisky, which intoxicates, and wine, which merely 
invigorates. (Great applause.) 

[f these temi>erance people would look at the statistics of the 
wine-using countries of Europe, where Italy and France alone, 
with a jiopulation only a little lai'ger than that of the I'nited 
States, each iiiak(^ and consume annually nearly l.OOO.Ooo.ooO 
gallons of wine, they would find that there drunkenness is al- 
most unknown. Look at the wine-producing counties of the 
State of California, where the people are comineneiiig to make 
general use of wine, and you will .see very few intoxicated per- 
sons among them. At the large vine\ard of the Italian-Swi.ss 
Agricultural Colony, organized at Asti, Sonoma county, in ISSl — 
which now supports a large number of prosj)erous families, and 
where an average of a liundred common laborers have been fur- 
nished with wine ad lihltnm in the morning, at noon, and at their 
evening meals, and where each s(|uad of ten men, whilst work- 
ing are fiii nislied with a demijohn of wine, which they use from 
time to time in the heat of tlie sun to quench their thirst with 
— the municipal anllioi'ities of the town of Cloverdale, a feu 
mih's from the colony, will bear me out when I say that during the 
past lifleeii years there has never been a iierson seen drunk in 
that Colony. This proves beyond a i)eradventure or doulit that 
the true r<Mnedy for the eradication of the curse of drunkenness 
in the rnite<l States is the general introduction of oui- pure 
wines in every family. 

When that happy day conies — which I lirmly lielieve il 
will, sooner or later — then the millions of dollars which are 
now .sent toChina, Japan, Costa Rica, Java and the other tea and 



fy^eifie WIJME /fJ^D SPIf^lT t^EVIEW 



23 



0. F. C. AND CARLISLE 



â– ^AmiSi^IES: 



Bourbon 



Rye 



Distilleries: FRANKFORT, KY. 

Address: THE GEO. T. STAGG CO., Frankfort, Ky. 



Diri."MA AM' .MkI'AI., I'Aia.S, INVJ. 



tioLU Mehal, Intkknationai, P'ood Axn Wise Exiuiuti'j.n 
Bkrlin, JtNE, 1892. 



FlK-ST AWAIMI AND .MeDAI,, 
MkLHOUKNK, AllSTBALIA, 188tf. 




THE INGLENOOK TABLE WINES 



jPlND 

OLD PRIVATE STOCK BRANDIES, 

GROWN and BOTTLED at the Celebrated 

SOLD ONLY IN GLASS. OF RUTHERFORD, NAPA CO. CAL. 

None Genuine Unless Bearmg LEGAL PURE WINS STAMP and TRADE MARK on Cork Cap or Seal Only Matured and HIGHEST GRADE WINES Placed on the Market 

On Sale by Leading Grocers and Wine Merchants in Every City in the Union. 

Office and Depot, 101 Front Street, Cor. Pine Street, San Francisco. 



XbBott's 

AHGOSTORil 




(THEORtGIhlAl) 



BALTIMORE, MD.U.S.A- 



BITTERS 



THE JOHN T. GUTTING GO.. SAN FRANGISCO. HAS A STOCK OF THESE GOODS. 



Special Bonded Warehouse IMo. 1. 



2d DISTRICT, NEW YORK. 



FIRE PROOF BUILDINGS. ELECTRIC ELEVATORS. 

Storage Capacity 18,000 Barrels. 

Papers and Withdrawals Executed Free of Charge. J. D. W. SFHERMAN, PrOprietOr. 



24 



f/eifie WIJME /pJD Sfif^lT [REVIEW. 



ooffee producing countries of the world will be saved to the in- 
dustrious pfoj)]!' of th(> I'liiti'd States. Then every hill of this 
State will he covered hy a beautiful vineyard, and every valley 
will have its village and winery, and our product, instead of be- 
ing 20,()()0,0((0 gallons, will "increase to from 100,000,000 to 
2110,000,000 gallons per year, thus increasing the prosperity and 
wealth of the State, and the general happiness of the people of 
the I'nited St<ites. 

Mr. Charles A. AVetniore read the following paper: 

Mr. Prt\-!i<{"itt (ui'l O'lill-iHi'ii of the C iiifciilioii — This occasion 
(•alls for concise statements beaiing directly upon the main pur- 
poses for which the convention has been called. I have been 
announced to address you on the subject of ''Wine." I shall 
take the liberty to vary the subject matter so as to relate more 
particularly to economic (juestions in which the vine grower is 
at present interested n)ost de<'ply, and will not attempt to cover 
the ground so well treated by Mi . Sliarboro yesterday. 

A few words will suftice to explain the nature and objects of 
the National X'iticultural Association, which, as its President, I 
represent here. It was organized in the city of AVashiiigton, 
I). C, in 18S6, under the direct auspices of, and within the halls 
of the National Department of Agriculture, by a convention of 
delegates from all the vine growing and wine making States. 
The permanent organization consists of a President, Secretiiry 
and a ^'iticultural Council of lifteen members, representing the 
followingStates: California. New York, Ohio, Missouri. Virginia, 
North Carolina, Florida, New Jersey, Kentucky, Tennessee and 
Texas. Its purposes are similar to those of the State Viticul- 
tural Commission of California, with whom it has worked 
iu perfect harmony. Its iulluence has been felt in promoting 
laws in several States to prevent adulteration of our products, 
and advancing our common commercial interests in the passage 
by Congress of the '' Sweet Wine Bill " and its amendments, in 
preventing the demoralization of the wine industry through 
threiitened attempts to secure free corn spirits for fortifying 
wines, and most notably during the last term of Congress, in 
harmonizing all demands relating to the tarifl'on wines, and in 
securing the extension of the bonding period for native spirits. 
It will continue to encourage local State organizations devoted 
to the promotion of viticulture, and the advancement of the wine 
maker towards the highest planes of honor and prosperity. Its 
importance will be recognized more hereafter, when the State 
Viticultural Commission ceases to act under the laws of this 
State. A local convention will soon be called iu this city for the 
permanent organization of a State as.ssouiation or college of practi- 
cal viticulturists and wine makers, which it is hoped will become 
associated with the alliliated colleges of the State University, and 
find a peaceful homo in the new buildings authorized for such col- 
leges by the recent Legislature. It is further hoped that the Board 
of Regents of the State University, which is to become administra- 
tor of the estate of the State ('ommi.ssion, will co-operate in such 
a movement, and preserve in this city the material collected by 
the Commission for the use and benelitof practical viticulturists. 
With such an institution in this city, intimately connected with 
the State Analyst and the College of Agricultureat Berkeley, and 
harmonious with the National Association, which may continue 
intimately conuect(!d with the work of the Department of Agri- 
culture in Washington, \'iticulture will expand as a nationalin- 
dustry, and become the i)ride of America. 

Statistics of viticultural pi-oducts in thc> I'nited States are 
not perfect. The extent of the industry is little understood. 
California li-ails in production, and per capita consumption of 
wines ; but I fiud much miscou<u'ption of our relatives importance 
as .^ wine market. It is safe to say that the present average an- 
nual production of sound, wholesome, reputable wines in the 
United states is between thirty and forty millions gallons, of which 
this State produces about one-half, aithough less than one-half 
during the last vintage. The consumi>tiou of wines in the 
United States, including foreign goods, which latter rejiresent 
about one-eighth of the market sui)ply, is about forty million 
gallons, of which California consumes about one-fifth. 

California produces nearly all the genuine pure brandies 
used in the markets of the whole country, and now sujjplies 
Eastern wine makers with the grape spirits to fortify sweet 
wines. KiVHtern wine makers and dealers in Ivistern products 
largely use California jiroduets for blending purposes, both for 
still wines and cliami)agneH. Our national industry, is. there- 
fore, closely interwoven on lines of ordinary commerce. Brands 
of individual jn-oducers are slowly making headway in {)opular 
favor, but are resiste<I by the conservatism of trade and the 
special iutereats of distributing merchants. 



Competition in price has been the rule of the trade, which 
has compelled the organization of syndicates to protect produc- 
ers. .Vs the individual producers' brands gain in favor, compe- 
tition iu qualitj' contests the lii'ld with competition in price, and 
encourages our growers with hopes of prolit with honor. A 
better feeling for the future now prevails. 

We must not, however, look to viticulture as an industry 
specially designed to enrich us through exportation. Even 
Fran<-e, with hundreds of years of effort and unquestioned rep- 
utation, has not exceeded in exportation an average of five per 
cent, of her wine product. Those i-egions which live almost ex- 
clusively on exportation of beverages and other food products, 
live under misei'ablc conditions, and are not to be envied liy 
California. It is because California has become so lai-gely de- 
pendent upon exportation of food products that our people sutler 
more from excessive competition with similar products of cheap 
and degi'aded labor, the excessive drains of tr-ansportation 
charges and middle men, and the tendency of oirr industries to 
seek the cover of trusts and combines. If our industries must 
oi-ganize trusts and combines to secure our people the plainest 
necessities of life, our farm life will rapidly degenerate under 
plantation methods and customs. 

Our great necessities now are the elevation and extension of 
private producers' brands, which are to some extent healthful, 
private monopolies outside the leveling influences of excessive 
competition in price, and the encour.agenrent and development of 
numerous and varied industries in California, whei'c our best and: 
most profitable markets now are and always will be. For this lat- 
ter result, our California vine growers will labor iu harmony with 
the purposesof this Convention, as our national viticultur.il indus- 
try will also for the general up-building of the manufacturing 
interests of the whole country. The pi-osperity of our fellow 
citizens is the reservoir upon which the hopes of vine gi'owers 
expect to draw life-i-enewing draughts for the maintenance oi 
their wives and children. Vine growers are instinctivelj' pro- 
tectionists and well-wishers for their neighbors. 

Incidently, while earnest in efforts to promote the industrieSj 
of all assembled here, we ask your co-opei-atiou with us tobreal 
down senseless prejudices and selfish conservatism, and to 
protect our rightful mai-kets against the invasion of the pir-atical| 
imitator and adulterator. 

We ask you specially to lend us your influence to secure jusi 
rulings from the Internal Revenue Bur-eau, which lays its heavy 
hand upon our brandies, forbidding us in exportation the rights 
which the Constitution intended to preserve, and which ar( 
freely granted to our competitoi-s of other countries, not only ii: 
foreign markets, where we meet them with our brands shackled 
by our ( Joverument, but iilso in our own land. Internal Reve- 
nue regulations, under tlie poor excuse of saving tr-ouble with 
extra employes and book-keeping, forbid us to expoi-t our br-an- 
dies, fr'ce of tax, except in original packages. We cannot export 
bottled brandies free fi'om tax from our special bonded ware 
houses, nor can we meet competition in our own hoirre markct,- 
with pure brandies bottled in bond. 

Our I'cvenue laws reijuire anrendment so that we may do ir 
this count I'v what is permitti'd in other countries. "Canadian 
Club Whisky," bottled iu bond in Canada, makes its way in thii- 
country, while our pi-oducts ai-e shut out of Canada and Mexici 
by our own unwise restrictions. Moi-eover. existing laws favoi 
and encour-age the compounding aird adulteration of spirits un- 
der i-cctifiei-s' licenses, while severely restricting the producer o' 
genuine sti-aight goods. 

I wish to call your special attention to the vast imi)ortatior 
into this State of what is known in trade as neutral spirits, and 
alcohol for blending and compounding licpiors. The average 
annual importation from Illinois. Ohio and other corn si)irif 
States of sucli high proof colorless spirits, is about LTj.OOO barreh 
for Centi-al California, or fiom .â– !0,000 to 40,00(1 barrels for th( 
Pacific Coast, or about 1,(>00,(100 gallons, which, reduced to 
proof, ecjuals probably not less than ."i.ltOO.OOO gallons of pr-ool ' 
spirits. If these spirits came from our own distilleries. tlic\ 
would I'cpresent about six or seven hundred thousand bushels ol 
grain purchased fi-om our farnrers, and a gain to the State of the 
costs of trausi)ortation, cooperage and other expenses. It is- 
jiracticable for our wholesale merchants to encourage our own 
distilleries, and to compel the so-called •• Whisky Trnist "' tc 
<)|)erate its distilleries in California. 

• I Mr,\ MinsT Ihct ;i man iz like whisky in \Mm wiiy eiiyliow — tli' 
liorcr he 17. tlie lialifer he iz [f> "ta.v in the jug."— Uncle lOiihraiin. 



iegj 

tol 
:a]l 

istl 



J^eifie WIJME /cJvJD SflF^IT f^EVlEW. 



25 



A VITieClLTUHAL COLLEGE. 

A proposition was raised at the recent Manufacturers' Con- 
vention in San Francisco to estahlisii in tliis city a " College of 
Practical Viticulture," in the event that the Viticultural Coni- 
uiissiou is to become a thinj; of the past. The main idea of the 
promoters is conveyed in the resolutions adopted, wiiich are as 
follows : 

" BeKohrd, That the permanent otlicers provided for hy this 
convention are hereby requested to confer with the Board of He- 
gents of the State University, and to urge the importance of 
preserving in the city of San Francisco, as a branch of its work 
for the benefit of practical producers, such portions of the prop- 
erty of the said commission as may be useful and necessary to 
vine growers, wine makers and the wine trade, such collection to 
â–  serve as a nucleus for further collections, bj- gift, endowment or 
betiuest. 

•• Re.<(ihv(l. That we do commend the proposition that has 

been made before this convention to found in this city a college 

for practical viliculturists and wine makers, as an independent 

body or in connection with the atiiliated colleges of the Uni- 

. vcrsity." 

It is useless at this time to discuss the relations of the Agri- 
cultural department of Berkeley with the main body of viticultu- 
rists of the State. As a matter of convenience, the viticulturists 
do not care to be going to Berkeley for information and guid- 
ance, independent of considerations of the value of such infor- 
mation as they might receive from Professor Hilgard, or from 
Mr. Hayne, who is a veritable tledgling in matters viticultural, 
and who.se only opportunit\' of inspecting and studying the 
vineyards of the State was alforded by the Viticultural Com- 
mission. 

What is wanted is some central and convenient place in 

• San Francisco where vineyardists and wine makers can meet 

and receive practical instruction and advice. The need of such 

a place will be emphasized when the Commission is gone and no 

substitute takes its place. 

By all means, then, let us have the â– ' College of Practical 
Viticulture."' and let it be atiiliated with the I'niversit}'. 

Since the foregoing was written Governor Budd has signed 
the bill which winds up the atfairs of the Commission, and the 
Board will make its exit gracefully and unregretfully on the 31st 
of December. He has also signed the general Appropriation 
bill, which gives the Board S'2.500 to work with from the 1st of 
July to the end of the year. 

Manj- of the members of the Commission are relieved at 
the turn of events. It is morallj' certain the viticulturists will 
reorganize on a better basis, on which politicians will have noth- 
ing to do with providing for support. The first steps for the 
organization have already been efiected. 

It is also a satisfiiction to know that the College of Agricul- 
ture will not get the S5,000 that was appropriated when the act 
winding up the Board was passed. The appropriation is illegal, 
and the State Controller will render himself pecuniarily liable 
if he signs the warrant for this sum of money. There is also 
serious question as to the legality of the transfer of the property 
of the Board. 



knows what he is 



THE STAFFORDSHIRE BEEROMETER, 

In a local collection of pottery there is a large mug, dating 
from the last century, called the " Staffordshire Beerometer," 
upon which is a representation of a tube of mercury, with the 
following degrees of intoxication and sobriety against it : 
.50. Drunk as a lord. 
45. Drunk. 

Disgui.sed in liquor. 

As sober as a man ought to be : 
about. 

Drunk without, but sober within. 

Fresh ; worse for liquor. 

Market fresh ; had had a drop. 

Consarned in liquor; had had a drink. 

Sober as a judge. 

Sober as I am now ; had had 5 quarts among 3 of us. 

Sober. 

Had nothing since breakfast. 

Had nothing to-day. 

â– ' Beerometer " does not exhaust the various states ; a 
teetotaler might continue the descending scale with advantage, 
while there are few policemen who could not supply higher de- 
grees than •• 50."— Brighton (England) Herald. 



40. 
36. 

30. 
25. 
20. 
15. 
10. 

5. 

0. 
— 5. 
—10. 
The 



Vivien and Pupont have expii inn nfid as to the manufacture of alco- 
hol from apples. One hundred quarts of apple juice, weiul'ingSX? pounds, 
loutained 89.7r) per cent, of water. 0..'?0 jier cent, of asli, 2.04 per cent, of 
pectine bodies and 2 per cent, of cane suj^ar, 2.U7 per cent of dextrose, 
S.,50 per cent, levulose, and 0.84 per cent, of other sugars; total sugars, 
14..31 per cent. On adding pbo.splioric acid, potash and ammonia (or sodi- 
um nitrate) the fermentation proceeds as (luickiy as with turnip juice, and 
by this means .5 per cent, of alcoliol is obtained from the apples. Tliis 
alcohol was considered to Ije of qetter quality than the ordinary alcohol 
obtained from cider. The grounds remaining compose 18 per cent, of the 
apples taken, and contain 2.5 per cent, of sugar. 



Owing to private dilliculties, a receiver has been api)oiiited for the 
property of CiiARtKS M AfBEC, of the Carpy-Maubec Co., of New York. 

DoYou Know a Good Thing 

When You Taste It? If so, Try 



DR. he:ni_e:y's 



Golery Beef & Iron 




CELERY for the Entire Nervous System 
BEEF the Greatest Sustenant Known 
IRON to Purify and Enrich the Blood 

For Sale by All Dealers. Price, $1.00 per Bottle 

Celery Beef &, Iron Co. 

No. 150 New Montgomery St., S. F. 



m 



Julias Mbrouiiez, 

i2 VESEY ST., NEW YORK. 



SOLE AGENT I\ THE U. S. AND CANADA FOa 

HARTWIG KANTOROWICZ, 

POSEN, GERMANY, 

FRUIT JUICES and CORDIALS. 

BLrxd. 



Uietoria ^atural/T\iFj^ralU/at(^r Sprii}*^ Qo. 

OBERLAHNSTEIN, GERMANY. 



26 



f/ceifie WIJME /rjNiD SPIF^IT F^EVIEW. 



t^Sl'Kl lAI CORRICSPONDENCE.) 

CiiiCA«:o, March 2.S, ISOf). 
There seems to he a general stilTeniiii; of vahies, and a sliglit 
iipwanl tendency in prices, giving a lirnier tone to tlie market, 
business to the wholesaler, however, is slill in a rather unsatis- 
factory condition, the demands of con.'^nmcrs hcing unusnally 
light and sales of any cousenueuce arc an unknown iiuantity to 
tlie majority of dealers engaged in tlic wine and liquor trade. 
All. however, join in the prediction thai the end is in sight, and 
that husincss has received the initiatory impulse toward regain- 
ing its wonted activity. The last year has been an exceedingly 
hard one on the whisky men, and the dawn of a brighter era is 
being hailed with much satisfaction by them. They hope to ic- 
ou]) themselves for losses entailed by lack of business by the 
volume done this summer and fall. The large stocks of free 
whisky, which have been a depressing factor in the market ever 
since the euforccmeut of the new tarilV law. have been gradu- 
ually decreased by consumption until at the present time they 
no longer cut much of a figure. There remains a large amount 
of the cheap whisky made two years ago still uiiconsumed, and 
a large portion of '93's and '94's are still on hand, and until 
these two factors have been removed but little real improvement 
in the whisky situation will take place. Opinions as to how- 
lout' this will take are divided, lint tlie majoi-ity ;;eem to think 
they will not last very much longer, and that trade will be in a 
satisfactor}' state once more by fall. 

The distillers have learned a costly lesson in the past three 
years, and all signs point toward there being a very small 
amount of cheap whiskies, and a conservative jiroduction of 
straight, legitimate goods from now on — a state of allairs that 
causes a good deal of satisfaction to those dealci's who have tiic 
good of the trade at heart. 

AVhisky circles have been much stirred up the past fort- 
night over the various phases of the Trust's affairs. Somewhat 
of a sensation was caused by the revelations in the report of the 
expert committee detailed by the receiver to examine the books, 
etc.. of the Trust. A partial report was made to-day, and shows 
a discrepancy' of nearly 82,000,000, and an effort to hide it by 
erasures on the books. It is stated that this is only one of many 
items that General McXulta, the receiver of the Trust, says lie 
shall endeavor to collect by law from the old oHleers and direct- 
ors. The discrepancy arises over 34,9.S4 shares of stock whicii 
the directors sold to themselves at Si5 per share. As the laws 
of Illinois prohibit the directors of a corporation from assigning 
stock to themselves at less than par value, it seems to place 
them in a hole, for they can hardly plead ignorance of law, as 
it is stated that while the stock book was made to show the 
value of 8.'5,4'.)8,400 (the price at par), the cash books were un- 
touched and show only the actual ca.sh paid, 81,574,380, being a 
(lifl'i-icnce of S"'o per share. This will jirobably result in a stub- 
lioruly contested lawsuit. News from New York says that the 
reorganization is complete — that 324,000 out of 3.'j0,000 shares 
have l)een deposited with the Manhattan Trust Comjjany. It is 
said that the committee having the reorganization in charge 
pr<>])Ose to forlhwith transfer the assets of the company to a 
Xew Jersey corporation, and thus oust the Ureenhul faction. As 
to whether they can legally do so remains to be seen. 

California wines and brandies are much stronger in this 
market, and prices are slightly advancing, with a better demand 
than has existed for some time past. J^siicciallj' is this the case 
in tlie belter grades of (.California wines, which have a large con- 
sumption in the " veijiliandhnH/n" where but a short time since 
they were unknown. 

This state of allairs has been brought about by (he iiiiliiiiig 
etforls of a very few {"alifornia growers who have had failli in 
the ]iroduclion of tlii-ir vineyards. Th<> leafier in this move- 



ment, the man who has done more for the California wine inter- 
ests than any other, is Mr. II. W. Crabb, whose To-Kalon wines 
have by sheer force of merit won their way from a modest little 
trial shipment up to the magnificent trade they now command. 
The idea originating with Mr. Crabb to introduce direct to the 
consumer the pure juice of the California grape has, by the suc- 
cess attained, proved that the consumer does know a good thing 
and can appreciate it accordingly. The Chicago business in To- 
Kalon wines has increased until it has outgrown its present lo- 
cati(ui. and has forced a removal to larger quarters. The large 
double stores at 284 and 2S(i Wabash avenue have been leased 
for a term of years, and are being fitted up iiandsoniely and in 
a way best fitted for the needs of the busiin-ss for a wholesale 
depot and general offices of Capt. C. E. Shilhibcr. Mr. Crabb's 
Eastern representative. The retail department has assumed 
such proportions that it has been found necessary to separate 
the two branches, and a lease has been made of the store, 194 
Jja Salle street. This is unquestionably one of the l)est locations 
in the city for a retail wine house, handling high grades of wines, 
as it is in the actual center of Chicago's vast linaucial interests, 
being surrounded by banks, nllicc buildings, and only a short 
distance from the Board of Trade and also the Stock Exchange 
— and more men having money to spend, and who enjoy spend- 
ing it for a good thing, pass by its doors than in any other loca- 
tion in the city. The success of Mr. Crabb's To-Kalon wines 
indisputably proves that good California wines meet the appre- 
ciation of the wine-consuming public when properly placed 1m- 
fore them. Mr. Crabb has an honest source of gratification in 
the success of the To-Kalou \vines, which have gone a long way 
toward clearing away the mist of prejudice that has existed 
(and, unfortunately for California, too often with cause.) against 
them, until the consumer was willing to believe '• no good could 
come out of Israel." 

Louis ZierngibI reports a Hat tering success as meeting the 
establishment of his retail department on Randolph .street, oji- 
posite the Schiller Theater, and it is now the fashion in that 
neighborhood to drop into /.ierngibl's to get a glass of the " Min- 
naberg Vineyard "' wines. 

C. W. Dakiu reports an excellent business the past month 
in California wines, he having placed some nine car-loads, and 
is finding many new customers for the sweet wines of the Ei.sen 
Vineyards. 

Charles W. Wright, formerly of the Meadville (Pa.) Distil- 
lery Compan}', has opened a general wholesale liquor business 
on Washington street. No one has more friends in the tradr 
than Mr. Wright, and his success is a.ssured. 

Morand Bros., the leading West-side wine dealers, arc doing 
a large business in California wines. They make a specialty of 
family trade, and report a most satisfactory increase in this line 
of business. W. A. Gkkt. 

WA-R/NI/NG. 



yVi ]\'hnm it Mill/ Concrni : The firm of M. T. Bruce & Co., 
of Dallas, Texas, wdio recently' executed a deed of trust, having 
through false representations obtained from us warehouse re- 
ceipts for 

50 barrels ".lack Beam '" .Ian. ''.H. serial iiiiiiili(>rs I7il.'i3 lo 
17(IS2; 

.")0 barrels "A. (i. Nail ' M<'li '!):!. serial luniibcrs 12350 to 
12:!il!) : 

50 barrels " Early Times " April "03. .serial iniinbcis I.'MiK) 
to 1.344!t, 

we hereby warn all parties not to )inrchase these warehouse re- 
eeijits, and we now give notice that none of the whisky repre- 
sented by these certificates will be delivered or ship])e(l to the 
holder (liereof. The Beam warelioii.si^ reeeipls were issiie<l in 
one-haricl lols. the others in live-barrel lots. 

IIaki.v Timks l>isTii.i.i'.in Cn. 

r. C. IlHscAi.sn, N'ice I'l-esident of the California Winegrowern' I'ni. n, 
will .«iioii (like a trip thionjjii tlip Rocky Jloinitain Slates ami Territories 
ami tlie lential porlioii of Mexico, in the interest of tlie hiisiiiiess of tlic 
I'liion. 



fyiteifie wijme /cj^d sfiF^ii f^eview. 



27 



/NEW gOKK AUeTIO/N. 

Nkw Yuhk, March lit, 1S95. 
Etiilor Pacljic IViw and Spirit ]ieriew — Sir : To-day our 
fourtoonth sale of wine and Inandy took [ilacc with the foUowinj; 
results : 

('has. Ki-njr AViniM-y, ."Jhbls Hock average :i\ cents. 

'2 •• Angelica " 3S 

1 " Tokay " 60 " 

" 2 " Madeira " (!5i " 

" 1 " Sherry " 53" '' 

" 14 " Sauvignon Vert... " 25 " 

27 " Chasselas ■' 23 •' 

■' 2 '• Johannisberg Riesling '' 54i " 

54 '• Riesling " 23" " 

Josejih Oberti 04 '• Port " 27 " 

71 " Port '• 27 

63 " Zinfandel " 20i '• 

Huliach ProdncgCo. 22 " Brandy •' 40^ " 

Sonic of these wines certainly bronjiht hi<jh prices, whil'* 
others did not come up to our expectations. The Krug wines 
generally were good. The Oberti Port was decidedlj' lacking in 
alcoholic strength, while the Zinfandel sold higher than at the 
last sale. The brandy also brought a little more money than it 
did previously. Had the brandy been in half barrels wc believe 
it would have sold ten cents per gallon above our average to-day 
on the barrels. Lines 1 to 5, and also line 8, were pronounced 
fine old wines, and we think such stock will always bring its 
full value. We always have bu3'ers looking round for this class 
of wine. 

There were over one hundred buyers in our auction room : 
in fact it was nearly full, and while, on the whole, prices were 
not quite up to what we had hoped for, they all brought regular 
market values according to the age and grade of the ofl'ering. 

Our next sale will take place in about two weeks, when we 
will of course report fully to you, and until then remain. 

Very truly yours, Sgobel & Day. 

THE BRITISH LIQUOR BILL FOR 1894. 

A certain interest attaches to the statistics of the cousump- 
tioa and cost of intoxicating liquors in the United Kingdom, the 
latest compilatiou of which, prepared by Dr. Dawson Burns, is 
given in a recent issue of the London Time.<. In the following 
table the figures for the year 1894 are compared with those for 
the preceding year: 

Quantities jipi-ji Cost of 
Liquor consumed, 1894. Consumed, p, , liquors con- 
Gallons. '-°'''- sunu-d ill 1893. 

British spirits (20s. per gallon) 29,S93,,'j76 i:2S,S93,576 £29,857,987 

leign and colonial spirits (248, per gallon) 7,(>42,(B9 9,170,447 9,443,803 

Total spirits 37,.5;r),(il5 £39,0(14,023 £:i9,3()l,79n 

Heer(.Ms, per barrel) 1,142,830,(132 8.5,712,747 S.'i, 304, 74.5 

Wine (18s. per gallon) 13,84,'i,fi20 12,401 038 12,748,294 

liritish wines, cider, etc, (estimated) 15,000,000 1,500,000 1,.500,000 

£138,737,828 £138,8.54,829 

It will be seen that the expenditure in 1894 was le.ss than in 
1^93 b3' £117,001. On spirits there was a decrease of f 237, 7(17, 
and on wine of .t287,236, an aggregate decrease of £o25,()()3, but 
nil beer the increased expenditure was i;4(is,002, making the net 
decrease t.'117,00l. The population of the I'nited Kingdom is 
estimated for the middle of 1S94 at 38,779,031 (England 30,()tiO.- 
7G3; Scotland, 4,124,(i9I : Ireland, 4,593,577), on wiiich basis the 
average expenditure per head of the whole population was 
JC3 lis. 6id., or for inich family of five persons Ci7 17s. Ski. In 
IS93 the figures were respectively .i'3 12s. 3d. and L18 Is. .'id. 
The decrease in expenditure in 1894 was much less than that in 
1893, which exceeded two millions sterling. The statistics for 
the several divisions of the United Kingdom are of less interest, 
and they need not be referred to in detail. It may, however, be 
pointed out that the cost per head is greatest in England, where 
it reaches the total of i;3 17s. 4d. Scotland comes next with £3 
Is., and Ireland last with U2 2s. 8d. In the eonsnmi)tion of 
si>irits, Scotland heads the list w-ith L'l 14s. per capita. Ireland 
coming .second with £1 lOs., and England last with 18s. per 
capita. In the consumption of beer, however, England heads 
the list with a per capita cost of £2 lis., Scotland coming second 
with CI Os. ()d., and Ireland la-st. 

Statistics of the cost of liquors for the ten years ending in 
1894, show that while there was a marked increase in the total 
cost for the years 18S9, 1890 and 1891, there has been a gradual 



decrease in the total cost of liquors consumed, and, of course, in 
the amount per hnu] of population since the latter year. This 
is shown in the following lal>le : 

Total cost. 

1883 £ 123,20:1,300 

1880 122,:»J.045 

18M7 124,347,:OTJ 

1888.... 124,011,4:19 

1889 i:i2,213,270 

1890 139,495,470 

1891 141,220,075 

1892 140,800,202 

189:; 138,854,829 

is;i4 . . i;W,737,828 



I'cr III 


ad of 


Population. 


£3 7b. 


10(1. 


3 


10 


3 7 


3 


3 


8 


.i 9 


a 


3 14 


4 


3 15 





3 13 


11 


3 12 


o 


3 11 


0.^ 



.CIS 



Total (1885-941 £1,:120,004,999 

The total given for the decade is, indeed, a vast one, amount- 
ing as it does to over 80,500,000,000 of American money. The 
statistics for the decade have two aspects. Those for the la.st 
few years, it is true, show a decline in the total cost, and the 
cost per capita of litiuors consumed, but on the other hand in 
neither respect have the figures reached the level of 1885, so 
that the conclusion remains that for the decade both the total 
cost and the cost jier Iu>a(l show an increase. Whether the rate 
of decrease in the drink bill per head of population will be con- 
tinued so as to bring it down to the level reached ten years ago, 
is a problem the solution of which must be looked for in future 
statistics. 



h^j^m"*-^^ ^ 




MERCAtaiLEL-^ : 

81 89. 31WDS0flST. 




-41 P 



It cures Colds, Neuralgia, 
Headache and all Malaria 
Troubles. 

It stands on its Merits. 



The most successful compound. 

The most reliable and the best 
Family remedy in the World. 

Try it and be convinced. 



PREVENTS^U* 



AND 



RES 



VCOLQ/* 



DI5TILLED0NLY 

QUININE-WHISKY C? 

â–  1 . LOUISVILLE,KY 



rj 



yjji 



It is Pleasant to take, the Bitter Taste of the Quinine is Disguised. 

y('.-' It .S'»'r<'.--.< U7i(',-.r/ /■ Jiili-ii(liii-ril. 

S4>I,I, nV .M XMf* v< TllIKJ' ANT) B"TTI.Kli ONLY BY 

Liquor Dealers, Druggists and Grocers. QUININE WHISKY CO. 

Special Terms to Wholesale Dealers. 



28 



f^eifie WIJME /rjMD Sflf^lT f^EVIEW. 



KOLB & DENH ARD 



OLD NONPAREIL 

BOURBON AND RYE WHISKIES. 
CALIFORNIA 

WINES and BRANDIES, 

OFFICE AND VAULTS 

i20-i26 MOSTGOMERY ST., S.t.\ FRANCISCO. 

TELKniosE No. 50'JC. 




SPECIAL BOTTLING 



We Make a SrEciAi.TV of 

Clarifying & Bottling Wines 

FOR THE 

TRADE AND CONSUMER 

P.KST FACILITIES — FIRST-CLASS WolJK 

(Par Prices Reasonable. "^^ 




MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE. 



-nv[jPLisruFjPLCTUK.E:- 



Circled Headina and Jointed Staves; aiso Shooks of aii 
Kinds for Brandy, Wine, Whisky and other Barrels. 

We solicit orders from responsible parties who â– want goods in our line, of superior (|ua]ity ami \vorkinan>liiii. 





\^^ ,5)0 UNO WlNtS 






MtMmtm' [.M,mr 



miiu' -i-fflnn gi prrTr i mfin rrr- â–  ' v ^r Ttiir r m ; 

^ 5oa California St. 

c^aivPrancisco 



Nature's Remedy for Stomach and Kidney Troubles. 






1 



I'i'cN***-' 



HUlWBOIiDT IWlNERAli WATER. 



li /T^ 



It relieves Dyspepsia at once and acts splemlidly in 
eases of either Kidney or Liver tronbles. 

Tlie lycmonnde made from this water is nnsurpf^sed. 
Ah a table water it has no equal. 



"Iliinibiildt Water differs fnini many natural mineral 
waters in tlie fact that it does not eontain a sinjile injurious 
ingredient." W. P. .Tomn.ston, JI. ])., 

Professor of C'liemistry, To.xirology, cte,, 
Coopci- iVli'dical ColleRe. 



Office and Depot: No. 40 THIRD STREET, SAN FRANCISCO. 



Tia.i:niiiNE 0821!. 



f;«reif!e WIJME A^Q Sflf^lT f^EVIEW 



29 



Prices Current. 



These arc the lun^ piiees. The rate of 
diseouiit oil purehiises oi n eonsideralik- 
(luantily. eati he U-arneil hy iM'P.>Ii"« '*' 
the ai;ents or dealer?. We urgently re- 
quest dealers, agents and produeers to 
notify US uhen a change oeeurs in the 
prices current of the jjoods they handle. 

California Wines & Brandies 

[Till* Pi ices i;i\ t'h aif iur qiuirls ami pints, 
put up in (.-ases of twelve ami twenty- 
tour tiottk's.l 

J. GUNDLACH & CO., 
Cor. Seconfl it Market Sts. San Francisco. 
Trices Pkr case. 

QUARTS. riNTS. 

Traminer, 82 t 5.00 * (5.00 

Gutedel. S2 G.OO 7.00 

Burirundv, 84 COO T.OO 

Zinfamlci 8:$ .'i.OO 0.00 

KOLB <fe DENH.\IiD, 
4i0-426 Montgomery St., San Francisco. 

Per Case. 

IIocl, 5;.S.00 

Riesling H.'jO 

Qutert ;1 4.00 

Sauterie 4.00 

Sauterne, 1885 5.00 

Claret 2.50 

Ziiifandel H.OO 

CabL-rnet 3 50 

Burgundy 4.00 

Port, 18.84 7.00 

Port, 1887 5.50 

Sherry 5.00 

Cognac, 1885 10.00 

KOHLER & FROHLING. 
601 Folsom Street, San Francisco. 

Riesling f 4.00 * 4..50 

Hock..' 3.50 4.00 

Gutedel 4.50 5.00 

Sauterne 4.50 5.00 

Zinfandel 3.75 4.25 

Ziufandcl, old 4.50 5.00 

Burgundy 4.00 4.50 

Superior Port 10.00 

Sherry 7.50 

Angelica 6.00 

Muscatel 6.00 

Madeiia 6.00 

Malaga 6.00 

Prandv 10.00 



INOLENOOK WINES. 
.\gency. 101 Front street. Sail Franc 
Table Clutet blended troni 

choii-e foreign grapes, 

vintage IS'JO 

Zinfandel ".. 

Extra Table Claret, Medoc 

type red label, ISS'J 

Burgundy, 1888, Reserve 

Stock 

SauIcriicdrv,Sauvig'nVert'86 
Hutcdc'l. Clmsselas Vert, 188'J 
Hock, ltluMiit*li type " 

Burger, Cbablis type •' 

lliessling, Johannisberg type 

18SS 

Pints of two dozenll per case addili 
None genuine e.veept bearing seal or 
brand of the pioprietor. 



1.00 



tS.50 
4.50 

5.50 

8.00 
5..50 
4.:>0 
fi.OO 
5.50 

6. .50 
lual. 
-â– ork 



CAL. WINE GROWERS' UNION. 
Cor. Sutter and Grant ave. San Francisco 

KL QUITO VINEY.\KI>. 

Riesling $ S.OO 

Claret S.OO 

i FRESNO VINEYARD CO. 

Burger * 3.50 

Claret 3..'>0 

Port 5..50 

Angelica 5..'jO 

Sherry !>.!>() 

Cognac Brandy 10.00 

ST. HUBERT VINEYARD. 

Claret, Cabernet * S.OO 

Sauterne 8.00 

Cognac 12.00 



t 4,00 
4.00 

$ 4.50 
4..')0 
fi..50 
fi.50 
0.50 
11.00 

I 9.00 
9.00 
13.00 



I. De TURK. 
220 Sacramento st. and 221 Coniiiu*r<i;il 
el., San Francisci 



Cognac Brandy, XXXX 

" " XX 

lenturier Port 

Trous*eaii Port, No. 1 

Dry Sherry, Private Stock . . 

" Superior 

Angelica. Old Selected Stock 

.Muscatelle â– ' " " 

Malaga " " " .... 

Madeira " " .. .. 

Tokay, best, Old Selected Slock. 

Tokay, " " •• . 

Haul Sauterne " " . 

Riesling, " " " . 

Gutedel, " " " . 

Hock " " . 

Cabernet, "Grand Vin " " . 

Burgundy " " •* . 

' Zinfandel Claret, Selected Claret. 
IXXClaiet, " " . 

Claret, " •• . 



Quarts. 
...$10.00 

, . . y.oo 

. . . 5.50 

. . . 4 00 

, . . 5 .'JO 

, . . 4.00 

. . 4.00 

. . 4.00 

. . 4.00 

. . 4.O0 

. . G.OO 

. . 4., 50 

. . 5.00 

. . 3 50 

. . 3.50 

. . 3.00 

.. 5.00 

.. 4,50 

. . 3.50 

.. 3.. 50 




y^ 429-437 JACKSON ST O 

San Francisco 

@^-^- — ^3 -;:; - ^' --^^ 

THE ONLV^^X^ ^__^_^_ -.?"^'^TI0NS 




EQUALLED BY NONE. 




NAPA VALLEY WINE COMPANY. 
11 and 13 First Street, San Francisco. 

SiiEKWoon ,\: SiiKiiwoon. Agents. 
212-214 Market street, San Francisco. 

Hock, green label « 3.00 * 4.03 

Hock, black label 3..50 4..50 

Gutedel 4.00 5.00 

Riesling 4.,50 5.50 

Cabernet 4. .50 5.5 1 

Burgundy 4.00 5.00 

Zinfandel 3..50 4..50 

Claret, black label 3.00 4.00 

Claret, red label 2.75 3.75 

Private Stock Hock 5.00 6.00 

El Cerrito.,.. 9,00 10.00 

Sauterne 8.00 9.00 

Claret .5. 6.00 

" •• Burguiidv. . . . 7.00 8.00 

VineClilf. ... 12.00 13.00 

Sherry 4.,50 

Port, 4. .50 

Angelica 4.50 .... 

Tokay 4,50 

Muscatel 4 .5o 

Madeii-a 4.50 .... 

Brandy Crown • 10.00 

• •• 12.00 

" " ■• • * 15 00 

' *•*•.... 18.00 

C. CARPY & CO. 
511-517 Sacramento street, San Francisco 

La Loma, Grand Medoc I 7.00 $ S.OO 

Burgundy .5.00 6.00 

Zinfandci 3..50 4..50 

Sauterne .5.00 6.00 

Riesling 4.00 5.0(1 

Sweet Muscatel, 1882 9.00 10.00 

Sherry, 1882 9.00 10.00 

Port,"lSS2 8.00 9.00 

Cal. Rochelle Brandy 12.00 13.00 

SAN GABRIEL WINE CO., 
Kamona, Los Angeles county, Cal. 

Riesling | 4.75 $5.75 

Gutedel 4.75 5.75 

Port 5.50 

Angelica 5. .50 

Muscatel 5.50 

Sherry 6.(X) 

Brandy, 1882 12.00 

LOS GATOS & SARATOGA WINE CO. 
1227 Broadway, Oakland. Cal. 

Zinfandel ? 3.50 f;l..50 

Sauterne 4.00 5.00 

Brandy 9.00 

Port 5.00 6.00 

Sweet Muscatel 5.00 6.00 

Grape Cordial 6.50 7..50 

GEORGE WEST & SON, Stockton, Cal. 
Brandy, 1879 ?20.00 



Brandy, 1883 1.5.00 

Brandy, 1885 15.00 

Frontignan 9.00 

Sheiry 9.00 

Port (old) 12.00 

Poll 6.00 

S. LACHMAN & CO., 
4.53 Biannan street, Ban Francisco. 

Old Port J7.00 tS.OO 

Zinfandel 3.,50 4.00 

Riesling 4.50 5.00 

Madeiras 8.00 

Malaga 8.00 

Cognac 14.00 

JOSEPH MELCZEIJ & CO., 
504 and .506 Market street, San Fraucisco. 

Claret, 1886 Jsj uo 

Zinfandel. 18S5 3.50 

Burgundy, 1885 4.00 

Hock, 1885 3.50 

Riesling. 1885 4.00 

Riesling,.Tohanui8berger,lS84 5.00 

Guiedel, 1884 5.00 

Somkii Hungaiian Type, 1885 3.,50 

Szattnari " *' '• 3. .50 

Szegszardi FeherHun'Type " 4.00 

1885 5.IH) 

Port, 1884 6.0O 

Sherry, 1885 5.00 

" 1884 6.00 

Angclieaand SweetMout'n,84 4. .50 

M.ad'a,Malaga&8w'tTo'y'85 5.00 

Brandy, 1.8,83 12.00 

1885 10.00 

MONT ROUGE WINES. 

A. G. Chauche Livermoie, 

Office and Depot, 61,5-617 Front St., S. P 

Quarts 

Burgundy f u.OO 

Chablis y.oo 

Claret, Retour d'Europe 9.00 

Jurangon, Favorite wine of 

Henri IV, King of France 8.00 

Haul Sauteriies 7.00 

Sauternes 6.00 

Light Sauternes .5.00 

Claret Grand Vin 6 00 

Table Claret 4.00 

Zinfandel 3 00 

$1.00 additional for pints. Red and 
white wines in bulk at all prices. 

L .T.ROSE .t CO., LTD. San Gabriel, Cal 

Port, 1873, 1 doz. qls. in case $15.00 

" 1876, UMI 

■' 1882, ■• " " u.iio 

" 1886, 7..50 

Sherry, 1882, 1 doz ([Is. in case 9 00 

1886, •' •' 7.50 

.\ngelica, 1.SS2, 1 doz. i|ts. in case... 9.00 



W Geietta GnanipioD Glevelann 

Beer Supplies, Pumps, 
Etc., Etc. 




20b ellis street, city. 
Tklepiionk .3086. 

V Pacific Coa^l Bmm-h, HARRY WKXDT. M,jr. 



H. L. REA & CO. 

INTERNAL REVENUE BROKERS, 

.\11 kinds of bll.-sincss appertaining to the Inlenial Kevcnuc Dcpurtnieul 
attended to with promptness. 



423 WASHINGTON STREET, 
TKi.Krii..M; 17.".r. .^AX FRAXriiSC'O. 



30 



f/feifie WIJME /rJ^D Spif^lT r^EVIEW. 



Smi M.\KI\T, \\m AT Tllli OLD STAVl), 

314 SPEAR ST., SAN FRANCISCO. 



Hobbs, Wall a|^ Co., 

Maiiiijactiireis of Kvcry Yar'uitj of 

BOXES. 

All kinds of Boxes on hand and made to order with 
promptness. Wine and Liquor Cases a Specialty. 



Redwood Cargoes Sawed To Order. 



Geo. K \mmkhkk. 



Otto B SfiiMiKOEu. 



^JU 



^15 



Ta=^HLDN. 



r?>" 



WINE COMPANY. 



\\ lii'I.KS \I.K AM' KKTMl 



]{\<^\)-(^r^d<i U/i9(^s of flb5olut(^ purity 

niRECT FROM 

H. W. CRABB'S Famous Vineyard "TO-KALON." 

Located at Oakvii.lk, Napa Co., California, 

Supply Familij Ttibles. OUR specialty. 

I'l-lvale Cellars Fitrnlshed. 

Goods shipped to any jiart of the United States or the American 
Continent generally. 

KxpoRT TO Europe. Correspondence Respectfully Solicited. 

Office and Depot: }.i72 MAUKKT ST., San. Francm-o. 



Lachman & Jacobi 



DEALERS IN- 



\\m WiDes It 

BRYANT AND SECOND STREETS, SAN FRANCISCO. 





Eastern Agents* 

EDINGER BROS. & JACOBI, 

Cor. Dover & Pearl Sts., Brooklyn Bridge Sto, e No '-', N. Y 



LOlViA Ppl^TA l^UlVIp^p CO. 

— SUCCESSORS TO— 

^ArATSo:N"A7T:iL.rjE i^. &c l. oo. 

Ilavi' f'liiiHtniitly un llfunl a Full Supply 
of Die Followiiif; Hi/x-B of 

2x2--4 Feet Long, 2x2--5 Feet Long, 

2x2--6 Feet Long. 
\M'hlrh trill hr sttlil iit veaHonahlv rttlfH. 



A MaM'AS, .V.ail.'i:;cr. 



JI. .V. Merkiam, Sn|icriiitcnde:it. 



Los Gatos & Saratoga Wiiie Go. 

]'j!Oi>rci:i;s of choice 

WINES and BRANDIES 



MUSCAT, 
ANGELICA, 
ROYAL NECTAR, 

ZINFANDEL, 



HOCK, 

SAUTERNE, 

OLD POR'^ 
GUTEDEL. 



SHERRY, RIESLING, 

FROM FOOTHILL VINEYARDS. 

VIXEVARDS .\XD f'ELLARS: 

Los Gatos and Saratoga, Santa Clara Co., Cat. 

Branch Office^ 1227 Broadway, Oakland, California 



P. O. Box 2245. 



Telephone t*o- 310. 



nOHNS & KALTENBACH 




CALIFORNIA WINES and BRANDIES. 

OFFICE AXD CELLAHS 

4f 2B ii<rjPs.P2.K:E:T sx. 



FiyE 

TABLE WINES 
A SPECIALTY 



S.VX FlUXCISCO. 



ESTABLISHED 



A. Finke's 



Producers oj 

CALIFORNIA 

ABSOLUTELY PURE 



809 



MONTGOMERY ST., I"''"'!^. 




1 864 



Widow, 



First Premium 

i'llA^^IFACNES. 



< ioi.D Seal, 

Carte Blanche, 

'f NONPARKIL. 



San Francisco. 

Telepliooe 5024, 



•flNKESWIOQ 

iMANFRANCISCg 



{^â– JfFirst rrcniinms for licst 
California Cham pairncs a warded 
Ijy the State Fails, 1S70-IG and 
wherever exhibited. 



Liquor Flavors 

WlliliIAIfl H. RUDKIN, 



7a WILLIAM STREET. NEW YORK. 



LOMA PRIETA LUMBER CO. 

Loma Prieta, Santa Cruz Co., Cal. 



GENUINE XX BEADING OIL XX 

itnJiiectl To $7..;u lYr Gallon. 

f.'ooi/x For Suir In Callforiilit only by 

REDINGTON 4. CO. 23-27-29 second st., san francisco 



f/reifie WiJME /rJMB SfiF^IT I^EVIEW. 



31 



(L. J. IJose & Co., San Gabriel, Continued) 
Anijeliea, ISSli, 1 ilciz. qts. incase... ?7.5U 
Muscatel, 1S.S2, 1 do/., qls. in case. . 
ISiSf), •• •• " .. 

Tokav, l****-. 1 iloz. i|ts. in case 

" " ISSli, " •■ " .... 

Madeira, 1SS2. 1 iloz. i|ts. in case.. 

ISSti, •• " '• .. 

Brandy, 18S1, '• " " .. 

WSB, 

Zinfa'i^lel, IS'JI), 1 doz. iits. in case.. i.OO 
•_' •• pts. " .. 5.0(1 

UuriCer, l^JO, 1 doz. iits. in case 4.00 

•• •,> •• pis. •■ .MH) 

All the forej^oinic vintai^es are true lo 
name anil a;re, as indicated on label. We 
•guarantee tiieabsolute purity of every bttt- 
tle of wine and brandy put up by ns. 



a. 00 

UIH) 

-..lo 
y.oo 

7..W 
15.00 
10.00 



Bitters. 



C. \V. ABBOTT & CO. 

.\N(iOSTI'R.\ BITTKRS. 

The .lohn T. Cutting Co., Agents, 
San Fi-aueisco. 

One case 2 doz. pints f 15,00 

One-lialf ca.se 1 doz. pints .. 7..')l) 

Imported Wines. 

HELLMAXN BROS. & CO., 
525 Front street, San Francisco. 

SHERRIES. 

Forrester & Co., Jerez, in 

wood, per gallon f 1..50 ?5.00 

Forrester & Co., Jerez, per 

ease 12.00 Iti.OO 

Garvey A Co., Jerez, in 

wood, per gallon 1.75 5.00 

I'ORTS. 

Offlev sl.75 to ?5.00 

Offley, per case S12(I0 

W. B. CHAPMAN, 

12:^ California street, San Francisco. 

RED WINES. 

(Barton it Guestier, Bordeaus.) 

Quarts. Pints. 

Floirac I 7.50 $ 8.50 

Pauillac 9.:,0 

Chateau Lacroix S.OO 'J. (JO 



St. JulienlSSl 9.00 

St. Julicn 1SS7 IL.'jO 

St. Estephe ISSl 9.00 

Chateau du C.allan, 1881.... W.-W 

1878 

le Pain, 1878 11.50 

Pontet Caiiet, 1887 1.S..50 

1881 l!i.00 

Chat. Bevchevelle, ISSl 16.00 

Chateau Lagrange, 1878.... 22.00 
Chat Brown Cantenai' 

Chateau I.angoa 

1874. 



1874. 22.00 
18.00 
24.00 
187S 21.00 



10.00 
10.00 

12. .50 
12..')(l 
U..'iO 
10.00 
17.00 
2:i.0O 
2S.O0 

25.00 
22.00 
25.50 



Leoville, 1878 24.,50 

•• Larose, 1874 24.,50 

r.atite, 1874 29.00 SO.OO 

Margaus, 1874 29.00 30.00 

Latour, 1870 31.00 33.00 

(H. Cuvillier A frere, Bordeaui.) 

Pauillac, 1889 9.00 10.00 

1S.S1 11.50 12.50 

Chateau BataiUcv, 1881 17.50 1>^.M 

Chat. Kinvan, 1878 20.60 21. .50 

Chat. Cos d'Estuuruel, 1878. 28.00 

Chateau I.atour, 18(k8 30.00 31.00 

Chat. Larose, 1870 24.00 

" Beyclieville, 1874 25.00 

Chateau Talbot d'Aux, 1875 24.00 2,5.00 

Chateau Leoville, 1889 16..'j0 

Latour, 1868 30.00 31.00 

Chat. Pontet Cauet, 1874.... 23.00 

Chat. I'ichou LongueviUe 

1870 â–  23.00 24.110 

Chat. Cheval Blanc, 1889 .. . 14 1)0 

St. Emilion Superieur 10.00 

(Du Vivier it Co., Bordeaux.) 

St . Marc $7.00 ? 8.00 

Pontet Canet. 11.00 12.00 

(H. AC. Balaresque, Bordeaux) 

Chateau de Fiands 9.00 10.00 



WHITE WINES. 

(Barton it Guestier, Bordeaux.) 

Santernes 1878 9. 25 

Vin de Graves, 1878 10.50 

Barsac, 1878 11.00 

Haul Sauternes, 1874 17.50 

La Tour Blanche, 1874 22.00 

Chateau Yiinem, 1884 30 50 

Chateau Yqiiem, 1874 36.00 

(H. Cuvillier & frere, Bordeaux, 

Sauternes 12.00 

Chateau Giraud, 1884 28.00 

La Tour Blanche'84 28.00 



10.25 
11.50 
12.00 
18.50 
23.00 
31.,')0 



) 

13.00 
29.00 
29.00 

(Du Vivier it Co., Bordeaux.) 
Graves premieres ifU.OO ?10,00 



CAI.IKORNIAN — BED WINES. 

(A. Duval). 

Burgundv. 1889 5.00 6.00 

Calieriuit Sauvignon, 1890... 5.00 0.00 

CAUIOKNIA — WHITE WINES. 

(A. Duval). 

Riesling, 1889 4. .50 5..W 

Chablis, 1888 5.00 6.00 

Sauterne, 1889 5.00 fi.OO 

Creine de Sauterne, 1889, 

(private Btocli) 7..50 8.50 

ITIlOUNniKS— RED WINES. 

(Bouchard pere it tils, Beaune Cote D'Or.) 

Macon, 1SS4 10..50 11.50 

Pommard, 1884 12..50 13..50 

1881 1.3.75 

Clos de Vougeot, 1887 (Mono- 
pole) 20.00 21.00 

Chambertiu 1884 21. .50 22..50 

(Bouchard pere it file, Beaune, Cote D'Or) 

Chablis, 1884 11. .50 12..50 

Cliablis, '84 (H. C. it F., bot- 
tled here) 10..50 11. .Ml 

HOCKS. 

(S. Friedborig, Mayence. ) 

Laubenheimer, 18,89 ? 9..50 ?10..50 

Niersleiner. 1889 10..50 IL.W 

Hochheimer, 1886 14.00 15 00 

Liebfraumilch, 1889 14 .'jO l,i..50 

aciscnheimer, 1886 14.,'i0 15..50 

Rudcslleimer, 1884 17.00 18.00 

Liel.tenfraumileh, 1889, " Se- 
lected Grapes " 17.00 18.00 

Rauenthaler, 1884 21.00 22.00 

Hochheimer Dom Dechaney, 

1884 22.50 -23 50 

Liebfraumilch, 1876, "Extra 

Qualitv" 30.00 31.00 

Steinberger Cabinet, 1876.... 32.00 33.00 

(Prince Metteinich's Estate.) 
Schloss Johanuisberger, '68 .$4.5.00 $46.00 

SPARKI.INll HOCK. 

(S. Friedborig, Mayence.) 
Liebfraumilch Brut, 1889 . ..?28.00 $30.00 

SHERRIES. 

(Sandeman, Buck <t Co., Jerez. 

Pemaitin Brut 20.00 

Umbrella 21.00 

Amontillado 22.00 

PORTS. 

E. D. drv, 1887 18.00 

L. O. fiuity, 1887 18.00 



WM. WOLFF it CO.. 

329 Market streel, San Francisco. 

(DnboB Freres, Bordeaux.) 

Chateau de I'lsle, in casks.. $9.5.00 

(Journu Freres, Bordeaux.) 
Clarets and Sauternes, per 

case from $7.,50 to $;i0.00 

(F. Chauvenet, Nulls, Cote d'Or.) 

Burgundv wines $10.00 to $52.00 

(ilenkell it Co., Mayence.) 

Hock wines from ."$8.00 to $fio.(HI 

(Deinhard it Co., Coblciiz.) 

Hock and Moselle wines $1.00 to $28.00 

(Morgan Bros., Port St. Mary.) 
Ports and Sherries in wood, 

per gallon $1.75 to $4..50 

Port and Sherries in cases, 

per case $8.00 lo $15.00 

(Mackenzie it Co., Jerez.) 
Ports and Sherries in wood 

from $1.75 to $4. .50 



ACHILLE STARACE. 
76 Pearl street. New York. 

ITALIAN WINES. 
RED WINES. 

(Giuseppe Scala, Naples.) 

Lacryma Christi, 12 (|t9 $ 6..')0 per case 

Falerno, " 7.,50 • 

Capri, " .... 6..50 " 

Capri, 24 pts 7..50 

Moscato di Siracusa, 12 qts. 9.00 " 
Vesuvius wine in barrels of 

about 60 gallons 1.05 per gal 

WHITE WINES. 

Lacryma Christi, 12 qts $ 7.50 per ease 

Falerno " 7.50 " 

Capri, " .... 6..50 
Capri, 24 pts 7..50 

SPARKLISO WINES. 

Lacryma Christi, 12 qts $19.00 per case 

" 24 pts.... 2O50 
(L. Laborel Melini, Florence) 
Cbianti Wine in flasks without oil 

Cases of 2 doz. qts $12.50 per case 

" 4 •• pts 14 50 

SHERWOOD & SHERWOOD, 
212-214 Market street, San Francisco. 

ESCHENADER * CO., BORDEAUX. 

Quarts. 

Medoc $ 7 00 

Merin d'or 7.50 

Bouillac 8.00 

Red Seal S.OO 

St. Julien superior 9 50 




P. C. ROSSI 

President 



,^f.O^^^ 



-SWISS 



CO£.o 



A. SBARBORO, 

Secrctarv 



ASTI. SONOHA CO., CAL. 



PRODUCERS OF FINE 



Ny 



CALIFORNIA WLNES and BRANDIES 

MONTECRISTO CHAMPAGNES 

(NATTKALLY FERMENTED IN BOTTLES) 

Grand Diploma, of Honor Gold Medal Dublin, Ireland, 1892 

Highest Award Genoa, Italy, 1892 Gold Medal Columbian Exp'n, 1893 

Gold Medal California Midv^inter Fair, 1894 

MAIN OFFICE, 524 MONTGOMERY STREET - - SAN FRANCISCO 
DEPOT AND CELLARS, 109 BATTERY STREET - BETWEEN CALIFORNIA AND PINE STREETS 

Gold Medal Turin, 1884 ~e- Highest Award Chicago, 1894 

L. GANDOLFI &. CO., Eastern Agents Italian wines and produce 

119-123 SOUXH: fifth: jPlVE., ISIEIAXT" 'sroi^i^ 



^FOR& 3lrie i^ooft ©Y^oriC arjcj (Artistic ^^06 printing go to 

rv(L (^ p\ V^OOD CO. 'l^A-^^^^ JrJ^TTERY ST., S. F. 



WHERE NOTHING BUT FIRST-CLASS WORK IS EXECUTED- 



32 



l^^Aeffie wij^E yv^D sfif^iT f^EviEw. 



W. A. TAYLOR & CO. 

39 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. 



I^ElM?.BSE]3SrTIITC3-: 



GONZALEZ, BYASS & CO., 
SUVA & COSENS - 
BLANDY BROS, & CO., 
ACKERMAN-LAURANCE, 
WILHELM PANIZZA, 
MARTINI & ROSSI. 
I. & V. FLORIO, - - 
PETER F, HEERING, - 
REiN & CO,, - - - 



SHERRIES 

PORTS 

MADEIRAS 

SPARKLING SAUMUR 

RHINE WINES 

VERMOUTH 

- MARSALAS 

CHERRY CORDIAL 

MALAGAS 



JOSE BOULE, 
A. BRONDUM & SON, 
ROUYER, GUILLET & CO,, 
JOHN JAMESON & SON, Ltd,, 
THE ARDBEG DISTILLERY CO., 
CHAS, TANQUERAY & CO., 
MAGNUM BRAND, 
MAGNUM BRAND, 
MAGNUM BRAND, 



TARRAGONAS 

ACQUAVIT 

. BRANDIES 

IRISH WHISKY 

SCOTCH WHISKY 
OLD TOM GIN 
JAMAICA RUM 

ST. CROIX RUMS 
HOLLAND GIN 



ORDERS SOLICITED FOR DIRECT SHIPMENTS. 



SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS IN TERMS, PRICES, ETC. 

Dr\^- Royal 



$21 Per Case, 



QUARTS 



Don't Iff thf Prtvp Friffhtrn Von. 
The OUALITY is ,r. 




$23 Per Case, 



PINTS 



Used T(>-I>nii h>i Soiiif itf tlif Fiiicxt M'liir 

Itrinh-rrs in \cn- Vtn-h-, Itnstoti 

tinti I*fiiliulrl iihlii. 



Universally recognized as one of the choicest 
DRY SPARKLING WINES OF FRANCE. 



FOR SALE BY 



WINE MERCHANTS & GROCERS. 

TRY IT. 

Th Wine has been known since 1811. Very largely used both in Europe and England, 
claimed by best Authorities in the World as an Absolutely Pure French 
Sparkling Wine of Remarkable Value. 

TRY iT ONCE. YOU WILL USE NO OTHER. 



Pro- 



SOLE AGENTS W. A. TAYLiOR & CO., 39 BROADWAY, N. Y. 



f/reifie WljME /rJMD Sflf^lT PREVIEW. 



33 



(Sherwood ifc Hheiwooil, Continued.) 

White Seal 10.00 

I'ontet Canot 11.50 

La Kose 12.50 

Ookl Seal 13.50 

Graves S.50 

Sauternes 9.50 

Mackenzie's Ports and Sher- 
ries in wood per ixallon I.T.'j Io4..'j0 
Mackenzie's Ports and Sher- 
ries in eases 10.00 to 14.00 

Hunt, Roope, Teatfue it Go's 

Ports in eases 13.00 to 19.00 

CH.MiLES MEIXEOKE .fe CO. 
:>14 Sacramento street. San Francisco. 
A. de Luze it Kils, liordeanx 

Clarets, per c.H,«e f\00 to liS.OO 

A. de Luze it Fils. ]ii>rdeaux 

Sautenies, per cat^c I'J.IHI to L'ti.OO 

C.Marevit LitrerBelair.Nuits 

liarirundic!?, white anil 

reil, per case 15.00 to '.i:>.00 

D. M. Feuerheerd,Jr.,&Co., 

Oporto, Port wines 

per case l.VOO to 'JO.CKI 

D. M. Feuerheerd, Jr.,ifcCo., 

Oporto. Port Wines, 

in wood per fjal 2.00 to 5.50 

Dutf Gordon it Co.. Sherries 

in wood per iral 2 00 to 5.50 

Lacave it Co. .Shcri ies Crown 

Branding 1.40 to 1.75 

South Side M3<leira 2.00 to 2.50 

St. Croix Knm. L. B 5.50 

Arrack -'Ko.v.il" Batavia 5.00 to 6.00 

Boord it Son. London Dock 

Sherry, per case I'.'.OO to 1.5.00 

Ct, M. Pai)stmannSohn, Mainz 

Rhine Wines per case.. S.50 to 2S 00 
Schnlz it Wa;;ner, Frankfurt 

o M Rhine Wines per 

case 11.00 to 14.00 

W. A. TAYLOR A: CO. 
Jerez de la Frontera. 

SHERRIES. 

Per Gal. 
Xo. 1 P Tahlc. full bodied ( ,, ^r. 

1 VP Table, very pale \ .â– %i.w 

2 P Full anl round ) , -„ 

2 VP Very Pale, lisht, fine ( â–  ''" 

3 P Full boily, soft, rich ) . ^- 

3 VP Very pale, liiiht, full ( • ' "' 

4 P Fuli body, old, mellow j , ,- 

4 VP Very pale, delicate, dry ( ■-•'■' 

5 P Fufl body, rich, fruitv i ., .„ 
5 VP Pale, old", fine " T ' ' 



fl P Extra full and fruity ) 
VP Vcrv fine and mellow ( "â–  
7 Aiuo A.Vl{).NTILI,ADO, old and 

nutlv 2.N5 

XC\A) (T.OUdSA, nicHiiw soft.. 
U Rc\ Superb i.lil Desert Wine... 
10 A.MONTll.l. ADO Solera, yery 

<dd and nutt\' 

U (M'EEN VICTORIA Grand old 

wine 



2.75 



3 25 
3,;55 



4.40 
5 05 



SI'KCIM, WINES. 

Velvet A Clean, sound wine 

li Full bodv anil rich 

Spccnil N Snlr. full anil fine 

W Dark, full body 

•* B l^lean and sound — Fino. , 

Fine, old and dry 

Fine, rich anil fruity 

Superb table 

Deliciou!-' and delicate. . 
S Grand idd wine 



Seco 
O S 
C N 
Corona 
Special 
Nectar— Fi 



X. P. U... 



. 1.25 

. l..')!) 
. 1.00 
. 1.75 
. l.SO 
.*1.S5 
. 3.45 
. 3.10 
. 3. -25 
. 4.011 
. 4.65 



rUlINK .INO MOSKLLE WINES. 

Williclm Pauizza, Mayenee. 

Per Case. 

I.auhcnl.cimer $.S'00 

Pieilisheimer >^.M 

Xiestciuer 10.25 

Hockheimer II 51) 

Liciifraumilch i3,2.i 

Foster .lesuitjjarten 13.75 

liudesheimer 14.00 

Ebacher 14.75 

Gesenheimer 17.25 

MarcobruiiU'.T 17.50 



Raunthalei- 

Geisenhcim Rothberg. 
Xeisteimer Itehbach... 

Rudesheimer Berg 

Bulk wines at f. 



. 19.00 
.21,00 
.21.50 
.23.00 



Direct Bhipping oi'ders solicited on the 
moat favorable terms. 

TARUAllONA WINKS. 

Jose Bonle, Tairngonia. 

i|r«. it oets. per Gal. 

* Fine, clear and smooth ?1.15 

ROYAL PURE JUICE— Full Imdy 

and rich 1.25 

TAWNEY PORT -Light color, soft 

and old 1.25 

These wines have none of the object- 
ionable astringency so common in wines 
of this class, anil :uc alt-oluldy I'ure. 

American Whiskies. 

IIELLMAXX liltOS. it CO.. 
525 Fi-ont street, San Francisco. 

Blue Grass, per gallon »2.0(l to it;i..50 

Boone's Knoll, " 2.40 to 4.50 

SPRUANCE, STANLEY & Co., 
410 Front street, San Fi-anciseo. 

Kentucky Favorite * 3.00 

Extra Kentucky favorite... 3. .50 

O. P. T 2..50 

O. K. 01(1 Slock 5.00 

Harries' Old Bourbon 2.00 

Kentucky Favorite, in cases H.50 

H. O. B.'jugs 9.00 

O. F. C jugs I0..50 

African Stomach Bitters, cs. 7.50 



I. b. in'ices. 

PORTS. 

Silva it Cosens. 

Per Gal. 

T— Tawncv ?1.90 

B— Extra full body and rich 2.05 

V T— Very tawncv 2.25 

V O T— Very old tawney 2.35 

T P— Extra tawney, delicate 2..50 

T P 0— Tawncv, extra old 3.10 

BRAXCO— White— Fine While Port, 3.25 
JEWEL— A Specialty, old and mel- 
low 3..50 

S O — Superiorold 3 85 

EMPEROR— 30 years in wood, grand 

old wine 4.75 

M C R— 1827— Choicest royal, fi.3.) 



SIEBE BROS. & PLACEMAN. 

322 Sansome street, San Fi-ancisco. 

K Extra *3..50 to ?0.llO 

O K RoBedale 2.50 lo 3.00 

1 1 vain 2.75 

Golden Pearl 2.35 

Marshall 2.25 

Old Family Bourbon 1.75 

Old Bourbon 1.50 

SHERWOOD it SHERWOOD. 
212-214 Market street, San Francisco. 
Carlisle in bbls. lie-imported 

Spring '89 per gal $2.50 

Carlisle in bbls. Re-imported 

Sjiring 'SO, per gal 3.25 

Keystone Monogram Rye in 

cases, per case. ... ... 14.25 

Old Saratoga, in cases, per 

case 15.25 

Mascot Bourbon in bbls per 

gal 2.25 

Robin Hood Bourbon in bbls 

per gal 2 .^O 



Sherwood Private Stock In 

bbls, per gal s.oo 

0. P. S. Sherwood m bbls, 

per gal 3 a5 

Old Saratoga, in bbls per gal 4.00 

JOSEPH MELC/ER it CO. 
.504 and 500 Market street, San Francisco. 
Native Pride. Old Bourbon, 

(per bhl) per gallon $2..50 

Old Rip Van Winkle 2.50 

Nevilles Old Bourbon 1.50 

KOLB"* tiE^HARD, 
420-426 Montgomery St., San Francisco. 
Per gal Per cs. 

Noi.pari'il i:i.M |;7..50 

Nonpared A 4.00 9.00 

Nonpareil AA 5.00 12.00 

Canteen 3.,5(.' 8.00 

Canteen OP 8 5.00 11.00 

NABER, ALFS it BRUNE. 
323 and 325 Mar-kel street, San Francisco. 

Phicnlx Old Bouillon. Al.. J2.75 

Old St'k 3.00 

A I, 90 pf 2..50 

" OK.lOiipf 3..'iO 

" " I'.uiv, I'riv St'U 4.00 

Club House Bourbon, Old. . 4..',0 6.00 

Gold Medal Bourbon, 10(1 pf 2.50 

Union Club " •■ 2.25 

Supci'ioi Whisky 1.75 

llli Whisky 1.50 

Lnii'0Ks_In cafes. 

Per Case 

PhoMiix Bourbon OK, in 5s 110.50 

AI, •• 7.50 

AI,24pls 8.00 

M.-m'Apl 9.00 

Rock and Rye Whisky in 5s V.50 

Rum Punch Extract, in 5s. 8.00 

Blackbciiy Biandy, in 5s. 7,50 

HENCKEN & SCHRODER, . 
210 Front stieet, San Francisco. 

Per Gallon. 

Our Favoiite OK J2.75 to f;j..50 

OurChoiee 2.50 " 3.00 

Paul Jones 2.25 " 2.50 

Star of '76 2.00 

Old Crown 1.75 " 2 00 

Old Bourbon 1..50 

CHARLES MEINECKE .t CO., 

314 Sacramento street, San Fiancisco. 

('Chnilcs Mcinecke it Co., rdoliuuefl) 

John Gibson Son it Co .?2.0I lo .*4.00 



ESTABLISHED 1810. 




^^ iZ^^' 



OVERHOLT 

Pepylvania Pure Rp WHisley 

'The - Finest - in - the - World." 

JONES, MUNDY 4. CO., Agents, San Francisco. 




W. G. COLDEWEY, President. 






LOUISVILLE 

PUBLIC WAREHOUSE GO. 

LOUISVILLE KY. 
VHAKTEllElt ISSS. ( il'lltt. $:iOO.(il>o.tHI. 
KOK riiK 

: STORAGE OF KENTUCKY WHISKIES. 

2 

I SPECIAL BONDED WAREHOUSE No. 1. 

KOK FRUIT BRANDIKS. 

Note — Positively no Whisky received unless direct from the Distillery. White for Rates. 



34 



f/reifie WI|^E /rJ^D Sflf^lT PREVIEW. 




DEDWOOD TPUKS. 



F. KORBEL & BROS, 



723 Bryant Street San Francisco 



Or at NORTH FORK MILL. 

Humboldt County - California 



CHAS. W, KoKt:. 



Ji'llN M'KTAN*- K. 



Spruance, Stanley & Co. 

IMPOIiTEIiS AXD JOBBF.ItS OF FIXE 

WtisEies, Wiiies aiid Lipis. 

Sole agents for the Celebrated African Stomach Bitters 

4IC J-*f!'>NT StKFFT. - S\N Ft: WM-^' o. Cm,. 



ESTABLISHED 18S3. 

SAMUEL WANDELT, 

STEAM AND HAM> 



til. ti.{. or, \oinii Tiiiiii) ST.. liiiooKLYX, y. y. 

Wine and Lip BarrelsaijUTaoKs 

.Pi. Specialty. 

I am now prei»ared to make and fui'iiish the larjiest, as uell as tlie snialk-st, 
arliiic in my line of Coo]ieraf;e. Estimates (jiven witb i>iomi>tneKs. .Ml work wai- 
lanted to l)c finished in workmanlike manner and eiinal to any in tlie market. 



TRADE MARKS. 

WM. C. HENDERSON, Patent Attorney and Solicitor. 

Stivrls ISldO; 'ith * i' Hln., Xear U. S. I'ttlent oJlict: itooHis V« (« i.*.i 

I'. 0. Box 122. n.i.siiixaTo.\, i>. <: 

Hevcniccn years' e.«iierienic, inclnUin;; serviee in Esaminiji;; Corps, U. S. I'atunt 
Olllec. American and Foreiirn Patents pnnured. Caveats filed. Rejected applica- 
tions revived. Opinions niven as to scope and validity of i)atents. Infrint'ement 
suits proieciiled and defended. TRADE-MAHKS, LABELS AND COPYItlOHTS 
rcelslered. 

j^^ Copy ,»f any printed patent, trade-mark or label fnrnislied for 2b cents. 
Correspondence invited. Hand-book on Patents furnished FREE on application. 



Y,'v KINK PKIXTI.NC; 



.J- 



R. M. \A/ooD Co, 

31A-316 BATTE-Rg STREET 

SAN FllA.N CISCO 



IMEIIN.IL IIEVI^INOE Al CUSTO I'.H()I\E11S. 

THE EXPORTATION OF GRAPE BRANDY, WHISKY AND SPIRITS FROM 
BOND OR WITH PRIVILEGE OF DRAWBACK, SPECIALTIES 

Dcalcis in L'. S. Standard Hydrometers and Extra Stems, Prime's Wantaj;e 

Rods. Die Wheels and Gaujrin^ rods. Also Distillers', Rectifiers, 

Wholesale Liquor Dealers and Brewers' Books. 



OFFICE, 413 WASHINGTON STREET, 



SAN FRANCISCO. 



P=. O. Bo:!c 2403. 



TeiepJnone; ©43. 



I 




kihelczeiiscd; 

('ah'fftriiia 

WINES AND BRANDIES 



Pruprieiors Glen Ellen Wine Vaul'.'!. 

Fine Table Wines a Specialty 

,=504-506 Market St., 

San ]-|aliri^r,i, Cal. 






430 PINE STREET, 



SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 



Sek Specimen of oi'R Wokk in this Papek. 



Pure California Wines & Grape Brandies. 
THE 

San Ml Wiiie Go. 



Of SAy a All HI EL, 
Los Angeles Count t/f Vat. 

Arc now prepared wiib a largeetock of wines and 
brandies of their owu growth to supply tbe tradt- 
and the market generally. This Company ownt; 
the lar^fst viiu'vard in I hi- world, eoverinj; over 1^,500 acres. They have held their 
wines and brandies for several years in their own cellars, and do not offer any i>f 
their prodnct until it lias beeome properly matured. Their lar;;e stock of ma- 
tured wines and brandies thus accumulated is now open t() the purchaser. All 
y:oodB under their trademark are warranted i)ure and unadulterated. Bein^ the 
successors to li. D. Wilmin tV Co., and to J. Dk Barth Snouit. they have become 
possessers of the "SHOUB" Brand of Bkanov and "MOUNT VINEYAIil) ' 
Wink. Correspondence solicited. 

MARSHALL. SrELLMA\ ^- CO., J. UK ISAHTH SllOUii, 

No. 5 Ne\\ York and Brooklyn Bridi^e Vault. I*resident San Gabriel Wine Co. 

Fkxnkfort St., Nkw Yohk. San (Iaukiki,. Cai.. 




GEO. C. BUCHANAN 



WHISKY BROKER, 



122 EAST MAIN STREET 



LOUISVILLE, KY. 



P/reifie WIJME yVJND SfiRjT f^EVIEW. 



35 



QUININE-WHIsKY CO., Louisville, Ky. 

IN KIVK CASK LOTS. 

Lfirire size, I dozen to fase... . $1100 

.Medium " 2 " " H-'iO 

Small "5 " •■ 10.00 

I'OMHINATION I'AFK. 

One dozen lar};e $31.00 

" " medium 20. do 

Two '• small ^^^ -'0.00 

MOOHE, HUNT A CO., 
404 Front street, San Franelseo. 

Per Gallon. 
E.ttra Tony in bbls or i4-bb\s #6.00 to IS.OO 
.\ .\ '• " pf 4.00 

B " " " S.SO 

C •• •• • :t.00 

live in bbls aud J^-bbls from S.50 to .5.00 

A A in eases 11.00 

C in eases S.50 

Imported Champagnes. 

CHARLES iMEINECKE .V: CO. 
.U4 Saeramento street. San Franciseo. 

IIKI'TZ * liU.DERMANS, AY.. CllAMPACSE. 

Gold Laek See. per ease *32.00 *34.00 

Gold Laek See. 6 Magnums 

per ease ol.OO 

Cabinet Green Seal, per liskt 2.J.50 27.00 

Dl'PANLOl'P ,t CO., KKIM8. 

Carte Brauelie, per ease 21.00 22.00 

HELLMANN liliOS. i.V: CO., 
52.5 Front street, San Franeiseo. 
Krng A: Co. "Private Cuvee" 

perea^e *:J4.00 *:J6.00 

Io,,.eph Perrier fils & Co 

per basket 19.00 20.00 

. Adrien A tils, per basket.... 17.00 IS.OO 

' W. B. CHAPMAN, 

P23 California street, San Franeiseo. 
Perrier .Jouet & Co."Spteial"f;«..W *:«..50 

Reserve Dry :!4.IX) :ifi.00 

Pel rier Jouet & Co. Brut.. . . 34.00 36.00 
Half pts "Special" *42 in es of 4>S bottles. 

SHERWOOD ^t SHERWOOD. 
212-214 Market street, San Franeiseo. 
AMoet it Cbandon, White Seal 34.00 36.00 
» " Brut Imper'l 36.5C 3S.50 



WM. WOLFF & CO. 
320 Market street, San Franeiseo 

QUARTS. PINTS 

Pommery Sec #34.00 #36.00 

MACONDRAY BROS. & LOCKARD, 
Agents 
124 Sansome street, San Franeiseo. 
Louis Roederer, Carte 

Blanche #:M.OO SiO.OO 

Louis Roederer, Grand Yin 

See .34.00 36.00 

Louis Roederer, Brut :>4.00 30 00 

W. A TAYLOR iV: CO., 
3a Broadway, New Y'ork. 

SPARKLISi; SAr.Mll!. 

.\ekerman-Lausenee, Sauinur, France. 

Dry Royal #21. Oo #2:j.00 

Brut " ai.OO 23.00 

Imported Brandies. 

WM. WOLFF & CO., 
32U Market street, San Francisco. 
Martell's Brandy, " per ease #1.5.00 

** â– ' 17.00 

"* " 20.00 

VO " 24.00 

VSO •• 32.00 

- WSOP " M.M 

in octaves .5.7.5 10 12 00 
CHARLES MEINECKE A CO., 
314 Saeramento street, San Franeiseo. 
I'ljamp Yineyard Proprs. Co., 
Boutelleau i Co. man- 
ayers Cognac in Octaves 

Th S-"" '-'*'■.; • -i,- X- ^-^'^ '»*'-5<' 

Ine vineyard Proprs. Co. 
Boutelleau it Co. mana- 
gers Reserve Yintaijes. U. 00 to 14.00 

E. REMY MARTIN & CO., Cognac. 

HELLMANN BROS. A CO., AGENTS 

525 Front Street, Ran Franeiseo 

Ean-de-Yie vieille 115 qh 

ROO 

„. , 19.00 

t me champagne 20 00 

Grande champagne vieille 32!(K) 

'' " ,. „ extra. iJs'lH) 

" \ O. P. luryt :j„ im 

;; ;; S. O. p. 1S47 :i5.oo 

Y.S.0."p:;Vx':i4 .^0.00 

In octaves f 4.To to 6.25 

W. B. CHAPMAN. 

12:i California street, San Francisco 
(H. Cuvillier & frere Cognac.) 

Fine Champagne, "Reserve," ''"*'"*â–  

iHiO #;{*' 00 

GrandeFine Champagne, ISOi) %00 



HELLMANN BROS. & CO.. 

525 Front street, San Francisco. 

E. Remy Mnrliii it Co., Cognac. 

Cognac in Octaves pergiil.. 5.50 0.50 

In eases, see special advertisement. 

P. Frapiii it Co., Cognac. 

Cognac in octaves, per gal. . 5.05 6.50 

Flanat it Co., Cognac. 
Cognac in octaves, per gal. 5.25 

W. A. TAYLOR it CO.. 
3'J Broadway, New York. 

COCINAC lIRANniES. 
KOUYER, OUILLETlt CO., COGNAC. 

Yiutage. l)r. Casks, per gal. 

l.S.S(> #4.85 

1.SS4 540 

1,S75 6.55 

isoy 7.40 

1S40 12.25 

Y S O 17 50 

Octaves. 5 cents per gallon extra. 

CASES. 

Cases * 14.50 

♦« 10.25 

" *•» 17.85 

" •«»» l'j.50 



Imported Whiskies. 

BOWEN it SCHRAM, 

204 California street, San Franeiseo. 

Bernard it Co., Leith Scotland. 

Eucore Scotch #12.00 



SHERWOOD & SHERWOOD. 
212-214 Market street, San Francii 
Burke's * * * Irisli, cases 
t, I* « « « I, ,» 

" Garnkirk Scotch •' 
" Yieeregal Scotch " 
Lawson's Litiueur " '* 
Uam Var, " 

McKenzie's Glenlivet • * * 

Scotch, per case 

Bushell's Club Irish, in wood 
per gallon 



eco. 
12.00 
14.00 
12.25 
13.50 
13.50 
12.00 

12.50 

4.50 



HELLMANN BROS, it CO. 

525 Front street, San Francisco 
J. B. Sberriff it Co., Lochiii- 

dae Islay, Scotch whisky 

in wood, per gallon. . . . 
J. B. SherriffitCo., Lochin- 

dae Islay, ScolcU whisky 

per case 

Dublin Distillers Co., Ltd., 

Dublin, Irish whisky, 

in wood, pel' gallon. . . . 
Dubliu Distillers Co., Ltd , 

Dublin, Irish whisky, 

per ease 



3. SO 
12.00 

4..50 
12.00 



WM. WOLFF it CO., 
32U Market street, San Franeiseo. 

Canadian Club per case #15.00 

Wm. .lamesonit Co.. " 10.50 

A. Usher's Scotch. . . . " 11.00 and 12.00 

CHARLES MEINECKE it CO., 
314 Sacramento street, San Francisco. 
Boord it Son. London Finest 

Irish Malt Whiskev. . . . #12..50 

Royal Hghld Scotch Whisky. 12.50 

John Ramsay, Islay Mall 

Scotch Whisky 13.50 



W. A. TAYLOR it CO., 

3'J Broadway, New York. 

The Aidbeg Distillery Co., Islay. 

Qi-s. Octs. 

New $3.8.5 #3.90 

One Year 4.20 4.25 

Two Years 4.55 4.60 

Three Years 4.95 5.00 

CASES. 

« one doz. bot. #11.00 

• * • 13.00 

• • • • 20.00 

JOHN JAMESON & SONS, DUBLIN. 

tjrs. Octs 

New #4.00 #4.05 

One Year 4.40 4.45 

Two Years 4.70 4.75 

Three Years 5 05 5.10 

Four Years 5.45 5.50 

CASES. 

• 1 doz bot. #12.00 

• • » 14.50 

• • • • 24.00 



W. B. CHAPMAN 
123 California street, San Francisco. 

SCOTCH WHISKY. 

(.lohn Dewar it Sons.) 

Old Highland "Extra Spec- 
ial " $13.00 . . 

Old Highland "Special Liq- 

ueuer " 16.00 



Domestic Champagnes. 

A. WERNER & Co., 

52 Warren street. New York. 

Extra Dry $ 7.00 # 8.00 



A. FINKE'S WIDOW, 

soy Montgomery street, San Francisco. 

Prices on application. 

Liberal discount to the trade. 



PAUL MASSON, 

San Jose, California. 

Less than 5 eases. 

Premiere Cuvee, Drv #16.00 #18.00 , 

Special.... 16.00 18.00 
Special discount for iiuantilies of 5 
eases or more. 



Imported Goods. 

(MISCELLANEOUS.) 

WM. WOLFF it CO.. 
329 Market street, San Francisco. 
J. de Kuyper A Sons Gin, large bot #20. 
" " med. " .... 16. 

" " small 9, 

Cantrell it Cochrane Belfast Ginger 

Ale per barrel of 10 dozen 15, 

Wolfe's Schiedam Schnapps per case 

(luarts 9. 

Wolfe's Schiedam Schnapps per ease 

pints 10. 

Benedictine, per case, quarts 20. 

" " pints 21 

ApoUinaris Mineral Water 

Hungarian Aperient Water 

Friedrichsliail 

Barlholomay Brewery Co., Roches- 
ter, N. Y 

Dog's Head brand of Guinness* 

Stout an Bass' Ale 

Theo. Lappe s Genuine Aromatique 

per case 12, 

Gilka Kummcl per case 1'2, 



W. B CHAPMAN, 

123 California street, San Francisco. 

Plymouth Gin (unsweetened) $10.50 

HELLMANN BROS. & CO., 

525 Front street, San Francisco. 

Blankenheym it Nolet. 

Union Gin 2.65 

Vanghan Jones 

Old Tom Gin. in cases 11,00 

Orange Bitters " 11.50 

Patterson it Hibburt. 
Bass' Stout, per double doz .'5.00 

Guinness' Stout, " " 3..50 

H. Underberg-AIbrecht. 
Boouekamp of Maag Bitters. 12.75 to 13.75 

J. B. Sberriff it Co. 
Jamaica Rum in 3^s and }^h 

per gallon 4.30 to 5.10 

Tarragona Port in j^ casks 

per gallon 1.25 

Adrien M. Warde's Italia de 

Pisco, j.ier case '. 30.00 

Sardines, brand "Philippe it Canaud." 



W. A. TAYLOR it CO. 
39 Broadway, New York. 

MAONUM BRAND, JAMAICA RIH. 

Qrs. Octs, 

A— Full body #;j.90 #3.95 

B— Rich, fat and old 4.30 4.35 

C — Superfine, extra 5.05 5.05 

MAGNUM 3.10 8.50 

GINB. 
C1IA.S. TANQtIERAY it CO., LONDON. 

Bulk. 

Old Tom Gin, quarter casks #;J.25 

Old Tom Gin. octaves 3.30 

Cases, one dozen each S.75 



CHARLES MEINECKE it CO., 
314 Sacramento street, San Francisco. 

(BOORD A son's, LONDON.) 

Old Tom Gin, per ease #11. (X) 

Pale Orange Bit Icrs, per case 11. .50 

Ginger Braudv, I.iiiueur " 12.00 

Jamaica Rum, Old " 12.00 to 14.00 

IAIN Royal Balavia Gin in 

cases of 15 large black 

bott les per case 2.3.50 

in cases of 15 large 

white bottles per case 24.50 

Kirschwasser, Macholl Freres 

Bavarian Higtiland, per 

case 20.00 

Swan Gin in >< casks 3.75 

Double Eagle Gin in }i casks. 3.60 

John Ramsay Islay Scotch 

Whisky in j-j! casks 4 75 

Boord's Pineapple brand Ja- 
maica Rums in j^ ca&ks.5.25 to 6.50 

SHERWOOD it SHERWOOD. 
212-214 Market street San Francisco. 

Per Case 
A. Houtman it Co.'s Gin, 

large black bottles $21.50 

A. Houtman it Co.'s Gin. 

medium black bottles. 18.50 

A. Houtman & Co.'s Gin, 

small black bottles y.uo 

A. Houtman it Co.'s Gin 

large white bottles 22.50 

A. Houtman it Co.'s Gin, me- 
dium white bottles 19,.50 

A. Houtman it Co 's Gin 

small while bolties 9.50 

A. Houtman it Co.'s Gin, 

octaves per gallon 3.55 

Bass' .\le in wood, hhds $50.00 

Joules Stone Ale in wood, 

hhds 50.00 

Ross Ginger . Ale, jier barrel.. 15.00 

Soda Water, per ease 7.00 

" Tonic Water, " 7,00 

* Potash Water, " 7.00 

•' Raspberry Vinegar 6 to 

gal, per case 7.00 

" Raspberry Vinegar 8 to 

gal, per case 6.00 

" Lime Juice Cordial 6 to 

gal, per ease 6.0C 

" Lime Juice;Cordial 8 to 

gal, per case'. 4.5C 

" Lime Fruit Juice 6 to 

gal, per case 4.60 

" Lime Fruit Juice 8 to 

gal, per case 3.50 

" Orange Bitters, per case. 8.00 

Burke's Bass' Ale, pints, per 

bblofsdoz 16.00 

Burke's Guinness' Stout, pts 

per bbl of 8 doz 16.00 

Burke's Jamaica Rum per cs. 12.50 

" Old Tom Gin " 10 75 

Dry Gin " 10.75 

" Hennessy Brandy, per 

case 16.00 

Port Wine, Gato br'd 

per case 10.00 

Fleisi'hmau's Royally Gin, 10 

gal packages, per gal,... 2.2f 

Fleischman's Royalty Gin, 15 

gal packages, per gal 2.22J4 

Fleischman's Royalty Gin, 20 

gal packages, per gal 2.20 

Fleischman's Royalty Gin, 50 

gal packages, per gal 2.15 

Meinhold's Anchor Brand 

Cider, per case, quarts... . 3.25 

Meinhold's .\nchor Brand 

Cider, per case, pints 4.00 



Syrups, Cordials, Etc. 

KOLB it DENHARD. 
422 Montgomery street, San Francisco. 

Rock Candy Syrup 75e. per gal 

Raspberry Syrup 7,5c. 

Orgeat Syrup 75c, " 



Louisville, St. Louis & Texas Railway 

"beechwood route." 

Consign your shipments from Louisville and interior 
Kentucky points, care of the Louisville, St. Louis i Texas 
Railway, which is a direct line to Pacific Coast points and 
same will receive prompt attention. 

For rates and other information address the undersigned 
L. S. Parsons, J. K. McCracken, H. C. Mordue, 
Traffic Man'g, Gen. Man'g, Asst. Gen. Frt. Agt 

Louisville, Ky. Louisville, Ky. Louisville, Ky. 



36 



J-ASIfie WlJ^b /vp^D SflF^IT PREVIEW 



LE^IDin^C3- IDISTI3LiI1>:EI?.S. 



I 



ADDRESS, INSURANCE. { BRAND. 


ADDRESS, INSURANCE. 


BRAND. 


BOTJI?/BOISrS. 


G. G. "WHITE Co., 

Add: Paris, Bourbon Co., Ky., 

Nos. 1,4, 6, 7, 85c: No. 5,1.00. 


Cl'icke.icoek. 


BELLE of ANDERSON D'G CO. Bf He of Anilereon, 

Add: S. J. Greeubivmn, Louisville. ^ ' ' 

Jessainino, 

Kato, 1.2.x Arlington. 


GREENBRIER DIST'Y CO. i r, , • 

(ireenbrier. D. No. 23!) 1 Greenbrier, 


MELLWOOD DIST'Y CO. 

Louisville, Ky. 
Hato, 8oc. 


Mellwood, 

and 
Dundee. 


Rate 1.35. ' ^ ' ^'- ^- "^'J-''^'"- 

ANDERSON & NELSON DIST'S CO.. Anderson, 

Louisville. 
Add: A ndei'.son & Nelson Distilleries Co '^ ''''"'" • 
Rate 85c. Louisville. Buchanan. 


EARLY TIMES DIST'Y CO. | Early Times, 
Eailv Time.':, Kv. D. No 7 a f m ii 


5 M. E. of Banistown. Rate.s 1.25 A. U. JNall, 
Add : B. H. Hurt, Louisville. Jack Beaui. 


R. F. BALKE & CO. "G. W. S." 
Louisville, K\'. and 
Rate 85c.- ' | Runnymede, 


0. F. C. DISTILLERY D. No. ILH 
Krankfoi't. 
Add: Geo. T. SUi^g Co., Frankfort. 
Hate Sof. 


0. F. C, 

Carlisle. 


I?. YES. 






SUNNY BROOK and 

WILLOW CREEK DIST'G CO'S 

Distillery, Louisville, Ky. 
t'outraitiiig Ollices, I28-1:J0 Fiaiiklin St. 
Cliieapto, HI. 


Willow Creek, 
Sunny Hrook. 


SUSQUEHANNA DIST'G CO., 

Milton. 
Add; Jas. Levy & Bro., Cincinnati. 
Rates, 85c & 1.25. 


Sus(iuelianua. 


KOSKXFIKLI) RKOS & CO., Proprietors. 
Kates, 85c. and 81. 


NORMANDY DIST'G CO.. 

Louisville, Ky. ><.rniandy, 
P. 0. Box 2.354, ,, =^'"1. 

Rate 85 c. Montpclier. 


J. B. WATHEN & CO. i J. B. Wathen & Bro. 
Loui-sville, 
Rate 85c. Kentucky Criterion. 


A. OVERHOLT & CO., 

Add; A. Overholt & Co., Pittsburg, Pa. Ovcrbolt. 
Rate, 80c. 


OLD TIMES DIST'Y CO., 

Loui.sville. 
Rates, 81.00 & $1.25. 


Old 'JL^iiries. 






OLD KENTUCKY DIST'Y CO., 
Louisvillo. Ky. 
Rates, §1 and 81.25. 


Kentucky Comfort 
and 


BARBER, FERRIELL & CO. 
Hobbs. D. No. 240 
Rate 1 50 


Old Grand-Dad, 
R. B. Hayden & Co. 


Gladstone. 


J. B. WATHEN & CO. 

Louisville, 
Rate S5c. 




E. J. CURLEY & CO. D. No. 3 & 15 

Camp Nelson 
Rates: "B," "D," "E" 1.25. "F," 3.50 


Blue Grass, 
Boone's Knoll. 


Lackawanna Rye. 


ANDERSON & NELSON DIS'G CO ' 


W. 8. HUME, 

Silver Creek. Hume. 
Rale 85c. 


Louisville. 

Add: Andei'son & Nelson Distiller's Co 

Rate S5c. Louisville. 


NeLsoii. 



T. W. STEMMLER & CO. 

"union: sq"UjPs.k.e:, T<zBi\xr "yop2.pc, n. ^t. 



SOLE tOcSEJ^TS fOR UNITED STATES A|^D CANADA- 

THEOPHIIJE ROEDERER & CO, MAISON FONDEE bN 1864. BOSHAMER LEON & CO., CLARETS and SAUTERNES, BORDEAUX A. & I. BEAUDET FRERES, BURGUNDIES, BEAUNE 
n ,>J^^,'^il^/?""'„'^'-^ ^^^^'^ CHAMPAGNE, RLIMS FELIX PCTIN & CjE! CHOCOLAT aDd CONSERVES. PARIS GU1G1N1S FRERES, OLIVE OIL. NICE 

CADBURY BROS, CHOCOLATE and COCOA, BOURNVILLE Deo. BELLARDI \- CO., VERMOUTH, Established 1740, TURIN BRAND & CO., ESSENCE OF BEEF, LONDON 

.BADE MAItK J^ JJ X IE?/ O IN" ID ^ G IK "K'-I'^TKKKn. 

PURE RYE WHISKY. Purity and Quality Unexcelled. 
'Ihe "AUlUOh'DACK" is a bleml <>/ rl/if hluh ./ri.s.s tihishlcs ll,<innujlil ij iiKihiicil iiinl ran br hlyhly rccomnvetuled for 

tnt'iiU-i nil I inttl yvnfral itsr. 
Mom- liitiiiiiiv irllliDiit our slfiiiiitiirc ini link lahrl ami torh: 

NEW YORK: Union Square. PARIS! Boulevard des Italieni. 



IMI-A-IRZIEIl B IE?. I Z .A. IE?/ ID Sc IE?/ O C3- IE IE?/ 

CORDIAL MAKERS OF THE WORLD. 
l.sliihllMliiil 17.-,.',. r 1) STi:MMI.i:it. IHrrrt,». 

CCLEBRATEO C.iEU,^ DC HENTHE AND OTHER CORDIALS. WELL KNOWN FLEUR-DE-LIS COGNACS. FOR SALE EVERYWHERE, 



IF YOU are in need of PRINTING give us a call. We make a specialty 
of fine Printing, Engraving, Lithographing, Photo-Engraving and, also 
original designs for labels of every description. 



PAeipie WiHE TCtl^D SPIRIT REVIEW. 



CLASSIFIED INDEX OF ADVERTISEMENTS. 



CALIFORNIA WINES AND BRANDIES. 



Rovd, F. O. & Co 

Califoniia AVine Growprs Union. 

Ciirpy. C. &. Co 

('liauclit' (S; Bon 

IV 'I'urk, I 

(Juniilacli. J. & Co 

(iiiasli vSc Bi-rnard 

llcdiU'sidc N'ineyanl 

Ini^li'nook X'ineyard Agencj' 

Italian-Swiss Colony 

KoliU'i- & Van Bergen 

Koliler \ Frohling 

Koll) I've Deiiliard 

Kuids, Scliwarke & Co 

l.achnian iv Jacobi 

Laeiinian Co., S 

Landsberger & Son 

Los Gatos & Saratoga Wine Co.. 

Masson, Paul , 

Melczer, Joscpb & Co 

Minuse. William T 

Mohns & Kaltenbacli 

Napa Valley Wine Co 

L J Ro.'ie &"Co., Ltd 

San (iabriel Wine Co 

Schilling. C. & Co 

â– ^mitli, Julius P 

MaggCo., Tlw (Jeo. T 

Starace, Achille 

Thornton & Pippy 

To-Ki'.Ion Wine Co 

\'ina Distillery 

Wetmore, C. J 



'age. 
. (5 
. !) 

. •-•! 
. S 
. 8 

. ;{i 
. (J 

22 
. 19 
. 31 

21 
. 21 
. 28 



30 
21 

6 
30 

2 

34 

(J 

30 

21 

o 

34 
S 
6 

HI 



30 
12 
12 



DISTILLERS AND BROKERS. 

Anderson & Nelson Distilleries Co The 11 

Barber, Ferriell & Co 24 

Buchanan, (ieorge C 34 

Curlev, E. J. & Co 7 

Early Times Distillery Co 24 

Fleiscliman «& Co 6 

Leading Distillers' Cards 40 

Lew, Jas. & Bro 42 

Mayhew, H. B. & Co 34 

Meilwood Distillery Co 1 

Monarch, R Ki 

-Moore & ScUiger Ii3 

Overholt, A. & Co 33 

(Quinine- Whisky Co 27 

Rca, H. R. & Co 2!) 

Shuteldt, U. K. &Co., C. W. Craig & Co., Agents 5 



FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC CHAMPAGNES. 



23 
30 



Chapman, W. B 

Finke's Widow, A 

Frash & Co 27 

Ilellnumn Bros & Co 17 

Laclimau. S. & Co 2 

Macoudray Bros. & Loekard ''.'-l 

Masson, Paul 2 

.Sherwood & Sherwood Ki 

Wolir, Wm. & Co 20 



IMPORTERS. 



B 



1!) 



Chapman. W 

Glaser, S 7 

Hellmanu Bros. & Co 17 

Librowie7,,,Jidius -'•• 

Maeondray Bros. & Loekard 8 

Meineeke. Chas. & Co 14 

Sherwood & Sher\vood 17 

Starace, Achille 2 

Stemmler, T. W. & Co 40 



Vignier, A 34 

WoUr, Wm. & Co 15 

FRUIT BRANDY DISTILLERS. 

Taylor, W. A. & Co 32 

Natoma Vineyard Co 28 

Walden & Co 5 

West, Geo. & Son 33 

SAN FRANCISCO WHOLESALE LIQUOR DEALERS. 

Hey, Grauerholz & Co 6 

Hotaliug, A. P. & Co 29 

Kolb & Denhard 32 

Kuhls, Schwarke & Co 6 

Moore, Hunt & Co 5 

Martin, E. «& Co 6 

Naber, Alfs & Brune 6 

Siebe TJros. & Plagemann 4 

Spruauce, Stanley & Co 34 

Walter, M. & Co 6 

IMPORTED BRANDY. 
E. Remy Martin & Co., Hellmau Bros. & Co., Agents 13 

SYRUPS, CORDIALS, BITTERS, PRUNE JUICE, ETC. 

Abbot's Angostura Bitters 23 

Ball & Cheyno Co 7 

Culbert & Taylor 38 

Kolb & Denhard 32 

Rudkin, Wm. H 30 

Walter, M. & Co 6 

WINE FININGS, ETC. 
Schulze-Berge & Koechl 4 



WAREHOUSES, STORAGE, ETC. 

Bode & Haslett 4 

Louisville Public Warehouse Co 33 

Sherman. J. D. W 23 

BOTTLES, CASINGS, CORKS, ETC. 

Colgan, J. B. Corks 4T 

Korbel, F. & Bros., Tanks 34 

MISCELLANEOUS. 

B. & O. S.-W. Ry 18 

Bolton & Strong. Engravers 34 

Bonestell & Co., Paper Dealers 41 

Celery Beef & Iron Co 25 

Chickasaw Cooperage Co 28 

Cleveland Faucet Co 29 

Dunne, J. P & Co., Saloon 41 

Goodyear Rubber Co 5 

Henderson, Wm. G 34 

Hobbs, Wall & Co., Box Manufacturers 30 

Humboldt Mineral Water Co 28 

Jordan, Dr. & Co 41 

Loma I'rieta Ijundier Co 30 

L'iv:i ville, St. Louis & Texas Railway 35 

New Home Sewing Machine Co 41 

O'Brien, James, Saloon 41 

Rosenfeld's Sons, John, Clipper Ships 41 

Sanders & Co., Coppersmiths 41 

Spragne Correspondence School of Law 41 

Tubbs" Cordage Co 47 

Wandelt, Samuel 34 

Wolir. William vS; Co 16 



Stj-bseritie: for the 

'pacific ^inc and Sp'^^^ ^cvie'U) 

THREE DOLLARS PER YEAR. 

ADVERTISINQ RATES ON APPLICATION, 



PAGIpIR Wi^JE AMD Sflf^'T f^EVIEW. 





J. GUNBLACII. 



J. GUNDbACH & CO. 



" â– â– y Vineyard Proprietors and Siiippers of 












. _ » 1 « • 




S/\N pRANCISCO- -yNEWYoRK^ 




Califoriiii) Wiiios iiiid liraiidk 

I'HOPRIETIIliS RHINE FARM, SliNIHIA, CAL. 

And BACCHUS WINE VAULTS. 438-442 Bryant St., S. F. 



Sfin J'ra nrisfo Ofjiff, 

s. i:. coi:. .M.tuur.r .â– : srrov;* \;s. 



.Vrir Ynrh' lirniirh 

S. E. Cor. WATTS & WASHINGTON STS. 



JOHN D. SIEBK, 



S. V. PLAGEMANI^. 



i\ C. SIEBE. 




SlEBE Bf?OS. 8t PliACEmAHfl, 

WINE AND LIQUOR MERCHANTS. 



I 



-SOLE A(JENTS FOR- 



01. Roscdale Boiirkii k Rje Whiskies 



AND THE 

Celebrated Belle of Bourbon. 

Southeast Cor. Sacramento and Sansome Sts.. ------- San Francisco. Ca 

AP2.XISXIC " PRIISXINO ~ ch:r.om:jPlTic 

R. M. WOOD CO. 

:?1() BATTERY STREET. - - SAN FKANCISCO. CAL. 



Qg^FlNED SACCHAR;/vf 

500 Times Sweeter Than Sugar. 

Tin: (iKi.AT s\vi;r/i'i;MM; .Mi:iiir:\i i\ -iiii; m \m i \( ii i;h: ni \ i;i; \i'i:ii watkks srci! A'^ 

GINGER ALE, LEMON SODA, ETC. 

I'lih; I NSC i;i' \>si:ii iN(n;i;iii i;ni' mm; imi: \~- ant tas'I'i; I'o 

saa^eeten aazine mmd to blend Vx^HISKIES 

roll lAUTKM'T.AKS AI'IM-Y Td 

SCHULZE-BERGE & KOECHL, 

fiOl.K IMPOHTFRS AMI LKKS'SKKS. .... - ::> MURRAY STREET. XKW YORK. 

ABRAMCiON-HEUNISCH CO., SAN FRANCISCO, SELLING AGENTS FOR THE PACIFIC COAST. 



BODE & HASLETT 

Warehousemen 1201 Battery St., San Francisco 



PROPRltTORS or 



GENERAL INTERNAL REVENUE BONDED WAREHOUSE, No. ONE 

N. E Corner Third and King Streets "V For the Storage of Whisky and Spirits in Bond 

STORAGE AND INSURANCE AT LOWEST RATES. ADVANCES MADE ON GOODS IN WAREHOUSE. 



fyvGifie wij^jE /tjMD sfiF^ir f^eview. 



Henry H. Shufeldt S Coa/ipaimy, 



DISTILLERS, 



CHICAGO. 



mEBRlTED IBRIIL fill 11 ME ILT fill 




DISTILLED BY THE HOLLAND PROCESS. 




Equal in flavor and surpassing in 
purity the most famous imported 
Gins. Put up in packages prepared 
to hold contents colorless, and con- 
tain, respectively 44, 24, 15 and 10 
gallons, all under double stamps. 

These IriDS are ttie ODly ones msiillea in llie I). S. % % fiOLLOp PItOGESS 

And are unquestionably the purest and most wholesome Gins today, used in the U. S. 

FOR SALE BY ALL WHOLESALE LIQUOR DEALERS AND D-^-UCGlSTS. 

C. W. CRAIG & CO. California Agents, 205 BATTERY STREET. 

FLEISCHMANN & CO. 

CINCINNATI, OHIO. DISTILLERS OF 

SgLVA/N G'ROVE BOU'R'BO/N A/ND Hg E WHISKIES. 



HIGH GRADE HOLLAND PROCESS' 



PERFECTION AND ROYALTY GINS. 



i+4-4-HH-M-H«-W-W-W-**-W-**HH-++++H-M-M-M-M-M-+ 
J, , , , ,^,^^t-^<^- , t â–º I 1 > I > I. (â–  V-i^I 

|:: - --|t' 

p.- it: 




LARGEST DISTILLERS OF PURE BRANDY IN THE WORLD. 
DISTILLERY AND VINEYARDS, GEYSERVILLE, GAL. 



ur^-jr.-Jr.,uf.:^rfirj-eryir.-x/jur,-Jr,:f/j-iTj-^ri--ir.JriUrfM 






•-*— I — h •*■•>■ -K '^ 



WJlIiDEI^ COGI^flC 



.<- 



This Rraiulv, ma<k> .ifter (lit- Frciu-Ii foi-mula, from selected fresh grapes, lias been sui-ccssfully intro 
duceil. ami is now riciilarly sold in the |irinci|)al markels of Europe, in c-ompelitloil with French Cocnai-. 
Otlleial German and Freneli ehemisis have pron<uinced it the purest Brandy which comes to their markets. 
It is e8|K'cially suited for the druL' trade and others, where purity ia demanded. While abioad tliesc 
ponds successfully compete, paying eami duties as the French, the .\merican luiyer has the advantage in price between the Internal Ifevenue tax as- 
esscd here and the customs duties on foreijrn brandies. Samides will !«• -.Mif '.n application. 



WALDEN. 



AAT^^LIDEIsr & 00-, 




haaterii <tfflce 4!> llroad Street, \ew I'ork. 



I.ElfirHVILLK SO\OilA < t»., CAL.' 



PAeipie wihJE /f[^Q spiF^iT f^eview. 





\^fP0RTtR3&WH0L£S/q/.f ^ 

IRC"' 





323-325 Market St., S, F, 



Hey, Grauerholz & Co., 

Impokters and Wholehalk Dealers in 

W1NES& LIQUORS. 



SOLE AGENTS FOR - 



DAVY CBOCK^tf WHISKY. 

BE SURE TOU ARE RIGHT, THEN GO AHEAD, 



NO. 215 SACRAMENTO STUEET. 



SAN FRANCISCO, C*L. 



D. V. B. ]!E.\Ai:ii:. 



E. MARTIN & CO., 

IJirOKTEIiS AND -WHOLESALE 

MQUOt{ mEl^CHfll^TS, 

408 Front St., San Francisco, Cai. 

SOLE AGENTS FOE 

J. F. CUTTER AND ARGONAUT OLD BOURBONS. 



ESTABLISHED 1S5T. 

F. O. BOYD 5^ CO, 

CuMMlfSIMN Mekima.nts. Nf.w Vokk. 

CALIFORNIA WINES & BRANDIES, 



Barton's Celebbated Swekt Wines, Fkesso. 

Capt. J. C. Merithew. Peospect Vineyard. 

Advances Made on Consignments. 



William T. Minuse 

Commission Merchant. 

46- BEAVER ST., NEW YORK. 
Agent for the Sale of Viticultural Products. 

Conr^it'iiintiils of sound Wines auil Brandies solicited. Advanies made •.! 
game at loweet rates. 

Keiireticiiting John Thomasn, St. Helena, Cal. 

Ewer & Atkin.son, KuTiiEBFOitn, Cal. 

A. P. Adams Lind Vineyard, Fre.<no, Cal. 
KisEN Vineyard Co., Fre.'^no, Cai. 



FOR FINE PRINTING 



CO to 



314-316 Battery Street, 

SAN FRANCISCO 




OLIVINA VINEYARD. 

^ ^^ The OLIVINA Comprises 600 Acres of Hill 

^^^^^ Side Vineyard, Located in the 

Livermore Valley. 






'^^'^'^X--^' ^'^^'^'^ ^^^' DELICATE, WELL MATURED TABLE WINES 
■^^^^^•""^ A SPECIALTT. 

^ SEXV FOR SAMPLE ORDER. 

Cokkespondence Solicited By The Groweh. 

JULIUS P. SMITH, LIVERMORE, CAL. 



M. WALTER & CO., 

MHOLES-il-E LIQUOR DEALERS 

Distillers of Bitlers and Gordials, 



811 Montgomery St.. Bet. Jackson & Pacific Sts. 
Telephone Xo. 4^4. San Francisco, <til. 



Landsberger & Son, 

Commission JVIerehants 

123 CALIFORNIA STREET, SAN FRANCISCO. 



Agents for the Purchase and Sale of Viticultural Products. 

Xeleptione; ISTo. 690. 



John Bekxakd. 



Secondo Gl'ASTI. 



Quaoti El "^ovnaTd, 



iirowers and DiMillers of 



California WiHES M BHPIES 



Winery at Guauli & Bernard's Spur, Between We«l 
Glendale and Tropica, Cal. 

b/Vf^GE PRODUSEF^S Of SWEET WINES. 

>/iiiii lliliir. til)-. .Ill mill tliDindii Sis., I.<is .Ini/rlrs, Cnl. 



f/rSlfie WIJ^JE /JMD Sflf^lT f^EVlEW. 



S. GLKSER, 

123 California Street, San Francisco, Cal. 

FjPs-CIFIC COjPs.ST jPlGEISUX FOR. ^ 



L. (iIIiAI!n.V;CO.. Epkrn^y, 
J. DUPONT \ CO., COONAC, 
ARMAXD liUOSSACQ. CotiNAC. 
GME. IIAI.IFAUD, St. Meme fkes CociNAc. 
HEHMAN JANSEN, Schiedam, 
BLANKENHEViM A XOLET, Rottehdam, 
THOS. LOWNDES >t CO., London. - 
NIXOX \- CO., Oporto, 



CHAMPAGNES 

COGNACS 

- COGXACS 

COGNACS 

GOLDFINCH GIN 

CENTAUR GIN 

OLD LONDON DOCK RUM 

POR'I' WINES 



GAMBOA HERMANOS, Jerez de i,a Fronteba, 
RUIZ MATA <t CO., .Teuez he la Frontkra, 
CHR. MOTZ <t CO., liouiiEAti.x, 
GEBR. ECKEL, Deihesiieim, 



-, - SHERRIES 

- SHERRIES 

CLARETS AND 8AUTERNES 

RHINE WINES 



VICTORIA MINERAL WATER CO., OnERLAHNSTEiN, VICTORIA WATER 

RHEINSTROM EROS., Cincinnati, O., - BLACKBERRY BRANDIES 

D. O. BEATSON, KiRKrAi.DY, Scotland, - SCOTCH WHISKIES 



jPs-LSO I1^F0P2.XEK. OF 

RAMSAY'S SCOTCH WHISKY. WISES IRISH WHISKY, E. & J. BURKE'S IRISH WHISKY, OPORTO AND 
TARRAGONA PORTS AND PRUNE AND CHERRY JUICE. 




T.HZSE FAMOUS WHISKIES CAN HE HAD IN LOTS TO SUIT THE TRADE FROM 

HELL/V\A/N/N B-ROS. 3c CO.. BllB F-ROr>iT ST-REET. SA/^I p-RA/NeiSeO. 



THORNTON & PIPPY 



i'i!<iri:ii.ToKS soli: a(;i;nis 



S-«7e;e.t "Wirxes, ^BrancLies and. Xabie "Wines. 

204 MARKET STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 

DISTRIBUTING AGENTS RAUL MASSON CHAMPAGNE 



8 



f/cSIfie WIJSIE /rj\l3 SflF^IT PREVIEW. 



Itouis HoeDerei GHamiiaone 



Highest Grade m the World! 

Used by All the Leading Clubs 

Hotels and Restaurants . . . 

For sale by All Kiist-C'lass 
*fr*M-ors aii'l Wiitc Morriiants 




THKEE KFNPS, ATT, OK i:QTAT. l=:XrKI,LENCE. 

CA-RTE BLA/MCHE 

A Rich Wine! 

G-RA/N-D VI/N SEC 

The Tor feet ion of a, Dri/ Wine! 

B-RUT 

An Exceedinglj/ Drt/ Wine! 



i 



Macondray Bros. & Lockard, 



124 SANSOME STREET 

i^oie Agents for the I'acific Coast. 



FOR FINE PRINTING, V:: R. M. WOOD CO., s^v 



SBattery St., 
rancisco. Cal. 



S'Jnna 



I. DE TURK 

^'l^incs and ^randias 




BRANDY, 
ANGELICA, 
fl HOCK, 
J ZINFANDEL 
PORT 



CLARET, 
SAUTERNE, 
, ^ , , MUSCAT, 

i-^-^-^ SHERRY, 

RIESLING, 



TOKAY, GUTEDEL. 

\/iin.izya.T(d3 and. Cellars: 

Santa Rosa, Sonoma County, Cal. 

^Braneti: 
t'SO Sacrametito St., San Francttteo. (at. 

C. M. MANN, Manager. 
New York Office, - - 91 Hudson St. 








TJHE jilCBHEST AWARD f ARIS EXPOSITIOJ^ 




Established. 

Ciuer;T\ore l/alley, ^^^. 



IBSS. 



-Uo 






-W 



^<^ 






A. G. GHAUGHE. Proprietor. 

Office .\ki> Dei-ot, i'i'J."> Fi;i)NT St,, San I'nAXri.sco 



1889. 



GObE) JVIEDAL. 



CHAUCHE & BON, Successor to A. G. CHAUCHE 

S.ilr CrIliT.'li A-.-nt^ fill- til,- M.ir>T-i;i'r<^E n'lNKS. 




'WINEMERCHANTS 



NEW YORK HOUSE 



5 AN Francisco. 



[ALIFORNIA. 



"ysen hWiW 

24 DEY STREET. 



230-240 BRAN NAN STREET, 
BET. ma 2"-" 



EUROPEAN HOUSE: 



Bremen. Germany 




I 



[INCORPORATED] 

VOL XXXIV, No. 6. SAN FRANCISCO, APRIL 20, 1895. $3.00 PER YEAR 

Issued Semi - Monthly, wanted — Tc fioutract for the purchase of huge (luantitj' 

A'. .1/. WOOD CO.. - - PUBLISHERS, of Port, Sherry and Slierry stock liigli in alcoliolic strcngtli. 

316 BATTERY STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. Address W. T. MiKusE, 41 Beaver street, New York. 

TELEPHONE NO. 709. CABLE AODRESS "fIELOWIN," SAN FRANCISCO. 

;/.<• r in lie u/.vk a\j> si'inir uevieu is the nuiii paper of MTVR KPT "R PVI f-\K/ 

it.t cinxs lies/ o/' Chiciiijn. It rirriiliile.s iimnnq the H'liole.-iale and ' •'^ iN • * •— • r\ l_ V I I — vv. 

Urtail Mine and .Siiiril Jtealeni of the l'<ici/ir foaxt. the }\'ine Mah- 

er.iand llrandii IHxlillers of Calij'ornia, the Wine and lieandii butl- 
ers, and the Importers. IH.stiHers and Jobbers of the United States. /^ALIFOKNIA WINES.— The OUtlook in the wine market 

All f HECKS. liKAFT.^. MOXF.V OltDEHS, ETC., should be ^^ brightens steadily, and there is generally a better feeling 

made payable to the It. .M. t\OOH CO. among those closcly identified with the trade. Orders continue 

_ . ... . , . , to come in quite freely, and shii)ments are of remarkably large 

Subscription per year— in advance, pontaj^e paid: i .; i i j a 

Foriiie Cnited States, Mexico and uanada 1^5 00 volume, the exports for March having been over one million gal- 

Fnr European countries 4 00 Ions by rail, and over a half million by sea. Tliis brings the 

Sinijle copies iO •' ' •' = 

Entered at the San Franeitco Post Office as second-class matter. aggregate up to probably the greatest month's shipments in the 

history of the industry. Of this quantity New York gets .300,- 

J^Cj-^HUSrCDlC : 000 gallons, New Orleans .300,000 gallons, and Chicago 81,000 

^P„l^ BRANCH OFFICE" gallons. The remainder is scattered throughout the States and 

Territories, and .shows a wide distribution of our wines. The 

W. A. GEFT, Manager, 1-3-5 Leonard St., New York City. extent of these exports is a surprise even to those who are sup- 

; „ „ " posed to know the general volume of trade. Values remain 

1. Ch. de St. HiHEKT p. C. Drscalso '^ ^ 

President Vice-President firm, and we still lielieve an advance in prices will be the feature 

Psilifnrnipj \A/inP RmU/Prc' llninn in the market ere long. P:.xports to Central American points 

OdIMUIMId VVIIIC UlUWClO UMIUII have been for the bust half-month quite generally distributed, 

pure: l,ut not of large volume. Receijits of wines from interior cellars 

CALIFORNIA WINES AND BRANDIES ^^6^ larger in tbe haW-month of April than in the same 

COHNKR SUTTER AND (il'VNT A\'FNrF period of 1894. .\ glance at comparative figures shows that for 

the first three months and a half of 180."), the receipt.s were 
S.\X FRANCISCO, CAL. 4,420,044 gallons as against 2.739jr,0 gallons for 1894. In 

uri p WAMTFn rnR QAI F F FP °^^®'' ^°"''''' ^'"'"^ '^'" ''^"''"S '"^o the city in veiy large (luan- 

rlLLr WAIN I LU, rUn OnLu, LILii tities, and are being .shipped out again fully as rapidly .as they 

WANTED -A position as wine maker and vinevardist; ^''^ received, all of which would indicate that the comlition of 

Ihoroughlv competent and capable of man:iging a large plant ; stocks at the tunc of tiie ne.\t vintage will hv more gratifying 

14 years as Manager and Superintendent with last employer, than has e.\isted in many years. 

Address E. J. Bauer, Bo.x 1313, Madera, Cal. The following is a comparative statement of the receipts of 

wine and brandy at this point for 3i months, 1894 and 189.5 : 

FOREIGN MARKETS. — 1894 " .— 1895 , 

A nontlomanretiiinKaftor man Weill s service in Kluope ill the ITiiited ' "o"fi,> '^'/'."-I^k ^Y-To. I^'"''""ly- 

States Department i>f Aurioultuie, desires to add, amongotlier lepresonta- January o;).J,110 142./0.'i 89/,o.i4 b()..j90 

tions, a firm or syndicate of Wine Dealers or (irowcrs, wliii are prepared February 741,410 190,6.50 1,344,780 1,540 

lor European trade. .\m also desirous to arranj^te fortlie .sale of California March..". 972,900 25(195 ] ,588 43t) G 630 

Kruit. While in Kurope have been sn.ressful ill iiitrodiicinn California \n'l rto 1 5tli\ 471730 l"5 590 '589 300 1 I '(!'>n 

|.r.«lncts, and would like to continue the same. A.ldrcs.s Ciiari.ks ,T. -^P '(.t" '-^tn ) iH,I.W ^^.O'" ^"■''■^"" I I .('-"> 

MiRi'MY, late SiK'cial .Vgent in Kiirope, Department of .Agriculture, .3 Kast ~- 

list street. New York. Total 3k mo's 2,739,150 374,640 4,420,044 80,380 

" A dispatch from New York, dated on the 5th says : •' .Sgobel 

TO THE TRAOEi & Day held their fifteenth auction .sale of California wine and 

WARNING.- The public is hereby notified that 14 ware- '""""'>' yesterday, when they offered si.x carloads — 287 barrels 

house receipts, covering the following described 70 barrels W. H. — with the Ibllowing results : Sherry, 42 cents; Claret, 30 

McBrayer's "Cedar Hrook " whisky, have been lost in the mail, cents; Cha.sselas, 2Hto24i cents ; Sauvignon Verte, 23i cents; 

Application has been made to the distiller for duplicate receipts, Johannisberg Riesling, 37 to 42A cents : Madeira, 65 to 43 cents ; 

and the delivery of whisky under original warehouse receipts Riesling, 26 (o24A cents ; Tokay, 40 cents; Port, 32 to 30 cents; 

has been stopped : Zinfandel, 23A to 20i cents; Angelica, 33 cents : brandy, 77 to 

10 Dec ' '93" **^"^^'** i-VonqZ^S*' ■*■* ^'^"*'*" ^" "" **^'e'''»ge the wines at this sale brought nearly 3 

50 Dec' "94' " l"4r9— 51S cents a gallon more than at the last auction, showing both a 

CiiiciitiHili. James Lew & Bro. strong market and more attendance on the part of interested 

Mar 5 — June 5. parties at these auction sales, which have now become quite a 



10 



f/ceifie WIJME /cJMD SflF^IT {REVIEW 



featuie in (lie market licre fur Calilornia wines. 'I'lic luwt salt- 
will take place on the 17tli instant, wlion ton carloads, (h- nearly 
si.v luuulieil barrels, will be offered." 

The shipments of California wines by sea and rail in Manli 

were as follows : 

Cases. Gallons. \'alue. 

By sea 1,95(5 519.019 S17<S,:55S 

By rail overland 2,784 1,047,090 429,972 

Total 4.74(1 1.5(i7,l()0 S608,3.'5O 

/{^.M.IFORNIA BRANDIES.— The market is without .special 
^^ features : however, the exports during the month of March 
were of fair volume in bulk, and surprisingly large in case goods, 
the total of the latter being nearly 1200 cases. Tiie bi-andy in 
bulk aggregated more than 53.000 gallons, of which, about one- 
third went to Chicago. We have secured from the Collector of 
the I'irst Distric-t reports of the piodnction for January and 
February, showing that in the first month there were produced 
59,459 tax gallons, and there remained in bond on January ."Jlst 
920,265 tax gallons. In February the production was very 
light, only aggregating 5,933 tax gallons. There remained in 
boud on February 2Sth 880,442 tax gallons. The details of the 
production, etc., will be found elsewhere in this issue. 

The total exports of California brandy by sea and rail in 
March were as follows : 

Cases. Gallons. Value. 

By sea 31 12,401 S 6,678 

By rail overland 1,199 53,499 92,238 

Total 1,230 65,900 §98,916 

*y '^IIISKIES. — There is nothing particularly new to relate, 
^^^ business moving along iu the same deliberate way as 
has characterized trade for a long time. Some leading houses 
report more satisfactorj' conditions than have existed for a long 
time past. (Collections continue slow, but they are not as bad as 
they have been, and taking it altogether, the situation is as good 
as can be expected. Receipts of whisky and spirits by rail and 
sea during the half-mouth were of average volume. Advices 
from the East are encouraging as to the fall and winter 
trade, it being the opinion of the leading men in the busi- 
ness that the loug-looked-for revival will be then experienced. 
They predict that it will be a substantial advance movement, 
baseil on, lirst, the fact of a small production, and the further 
fact that the free whiskies that were tax-paid under the old 
ninety cent rate will then have almo.st entirely gone into con- 
sumption. With two such conditions, there .seems to be no rea- 
son why the predicted good time should not come in due season. 
One thing is certain, and that is that old whiskies are not only 
good property now, but must materially a<lvance iu value 
during the next six months. 

A dispatch from Chicago dated the 5th inst. says : " What 
is said to be one of the most important transactions yet under- 
taken in connection with the re-organization of the ^\'llisky 
Trust was consummated to-day. This was the agreement with 
the American Distributing Company. Its terms were settled on 
Thursday, and Ibis afternoon signatures were aflixed to the con- 
tract drawn nj) in New York. Under the agreement the former 
selling agent of the Trust, alienated by the Greenhut regime, 
lias been brought into close connection once more, and further- 
more, the onlj' influential factor in the spirit trade remaining 
outside is brought into the Spirit Distillers" Association. .\ call 
for a meeting of the Distillers' Association in this city next Fri- 
day was issued for the pnrpo.se of ratifying the agreement." 

A dispatch from Chicago dated the .' th inst. says : " The 
repreKentatives of the four big distilleries to-day, after a long 
conference with Heceiver McNulla and representatives of the 
reorganization committee, deuianded concessions which were re- 
fused. They gave formal notice that they would not ratify the 
agreement made with the American Distributing Company. 
Their action is equivalent to a withdrawal from the Spirit Distil- 



Ici-s' Association. Samuel Woolnor of the .\tlas Distillery, 
Henry Kahn of the Hanover distillery, !•'. W. Wilson of the 
American distillery, and George Herget of the Globe distillery, 
all of Peoria, were the men who visited General McNulta." 

/MI'DRTATIONS— There is nothing to be said new with re- 
spect to trade in imported goods. The average volume of 
busiuess is being transacted, and on some special lines sale 
have been unusually active. The receipts during the half-month 
have been about normal. 



•RESULTS OF APRIL ELEeTIO/NS. 

Municiiial elections in which tlw li(iu()r iiuestion was the 
chief issue were held in Tomona, Santa Ana, San lieiiiardino 
and other places on the 8tli instant. 

Pomona voted to abolish the two saloon.s- withi;; itsbounda- 
i-ies. Out of three city trustees to be elected they captured one. 
and they will have a bare majority in the Board of Trustee for 
two years after May 1st. For the past two years Pomona has 
been on a high-license basis. Two saloons, under strict police 
regulations, have each paid §1000 license annually. They have 
not been allowed to keep open after 10 p. m. nor on Sundays. 
They have been permitted to use no screens at the doors or win- 
dows, to have no back doors, no chairs, benches or seats, and no 
games of chance or reading unitter were allowed in them. 

Santa Ana voted by a large majority to raise the li()uor 
license from S600 to 8800 per year, and to subject saloons to the 
same regulations as have existed in Pomona. 

In San Jose three Republican councilnien out of four were 
elected on a platform to restrict the saloons to the business por- 
tion ol' the city. 

In San Bernardino the Sunday-closing law was defeated by 
a vote of two to one. 

In Alameda the retailers are safe for two years nu)re. With- 
out exception, they obeyed the law as to closing. 

THE DOUBLE MURDER. 



It is a matter of congratulation for the liquor trade that the 
murder of Miss Blanche Lamont and Miss Minnie Williams, in 
the Emanuel Hajitist Chunrli, cannot be connected, directly or 
indirectly, with the li(|uor traffic. Theodore Durrant. whose 
name has been associated in the daily piess as the uu\n who 
must account for his whereabouts at the times the murders are 
supposed to have been committed, was not a user of li(|Uor or 
tobacco; he did notfre(iucnt the much-vilified ''side entrance ; " 
he nuiy even have been in the habit of returning thanks that he 
was not like unto other men, and he had the usual Chi-istian 
and godly denunciation of both the li<|Uor and toba<co habits 
at his command. In short, nothing has transpired that can con- 
nect the murders with the liquor business, directly or indirectly. 

If the murder of Miss Lamont or of Mi.ss Williams had 
been committed in a saloon, or in a saloon which had a side en- 
trance, or iu a restaurant with the up-stairs attachment of (|ues- 
tionable character, there would at once have been a howl of 
Christian-like jirotest against the liijuor business, with all its 
features. There would have been petitions without number ad- 
dressed to the 15oard of Sui)ervisors, and to the Legislature 
were it unfortunately in se.ssion, asking for the abolition of the 
saloon, the grocery and bar. and the liiiuor business, good, bad 
and inditferent. 

How .\H01T TUK SIDK-nOOH 1:NTK.\aNCE O THK ClirKCUKS? 

Is is not a menace to the youth of the Slate Have not two 
virtuous and noble young women passed through these side en- 
trances to their deaths? 

Candidly, is there not a good deal of hypocritical buncombe 
iu all this ex<'ited reference to the evils of (he liquor li-ade a< a 
means of seducing the minds of the young? Shouhl not the 
churches first clear their own door-ways, and " let him that is 
without sin cast the first stone " ? 

Incidentally, a petition has been iilcd with the !^an Francisco 
Board of Supi.'rvisors asking for the abolition of the church 
side-door entrance. We know that this petition did not ema- 
nate from any one connected with the liquor trade. But, as a 
matter of fact, is't this p(>litioii assiMisibleas the one with which 
the church people have been alllieting the Supervisors? 

Will thi- J'/'ohibilioiii"! answer these questions and satisfy a 
waiting liquor trade? 



J^T^eifie WIJME /rJSID Sflf^lT f^EVlEW. 



11 



THE FINEST WHISKIES MADE 

In the State of Kentucky. 



ANDERSON 



BUCHANAN 





oc SQUR MASH 2 

LOUISVILLE 
KENTUCKY. 






PRODUCTION JAN. 1, 1874., TO JUNE 30, 1894, 
121,718 BARRELS. 



PRODUCTION JAN. 1, 1880 TO JUNE 30, 1894. 
28,086 BARRELS. 



NELSON BOURBON NELSON PURE RYE NELSON PURE MALT 






PRODUCTION JANUARY 1, 1872, TO JUNE 30, 1894, 218,146 BARRELS 



U. S. CLUB 

/ IJ.S.OMIH V 

Xnis ' iii.i .ruY (:o.^ > 

PRODUCTION MARCH 1, 1889, TO JUNE 30, 1894, 69,697 BARRELS. 



The Anderson & Nelson Distilleries Co. 



LOUISVILLE:, KY. 



12 



f/eifie WlJ^E /rJND SflF^IT [REVIEW. 



THAT SAMITARg LAW. 



Journal.-s like llii- >aii .lusi' Umilil arc ciulravoriiif^ to ssi'eurc 
the forniiUion of Sanitary Districts uiuUt the provisions of the 
Voorlicis law. witli its saloon joker, not I'or the purpose ol'secur- 
in-; better ilraina<;e and the removal of garl)a<;e. l)iit to worry 
the liquor dealers with the Joker. Hero is the form ))resented 
hy the llemld to go abont tliis business : 
"To the Hniioriihh- Jiotinl of Stipcrri^iirs nf Smihi ('l<ini Coinil;/ : 

" We the undersigned residents and fieeholders of M'illow 
(ilen Distriel. bounded ea-t by the western limits of the city of 
San Jose and the center line of the AIniaden road to Curlner av- 
enue : south by the center line of ('urtner avenue prolonged to 
the San Jose and Los Gatos road; west by the Center line of 
the San Jose and Los Gates road to the Stevens Creek road ; 
north by the center line of the Stevens Creek road to the Merid- 
ian roaii ; thence along the center line of the Meridian road to 
Park avenue; theuce along the center line of I'ark avenue to 
Race street; thence along the center line of Race street to the 
Alameda road, and thence along the center of the Alameda road 
to the limits of the city of Sau Jose, the place of beginning — 
hereby petition your honorable body to call an election for the 
purpose of forming that part of Santa Clara county enclosed 
within the said boundaries into a Sanitary District and to choose 
sanitary officers, as provided by the law creating the Districts." 

The Sacramento Record- Union says of the N'oorheis joker: 

•• It is a pertini ut (juestion. Better far that the laws referred 
to had never been placed upon the statute books than become 
dead letters and decaying law. If the laws are ill advised, the 
(piiekest way to tind out is to enforce them. Nothing brings 
al)out such .speedy repeal of a [bad] law as its enforcement, and 
nothing better develeps the virtues of a good law than enforce- 
ment. All communities have it now in their power to say, de- 
spite Boards of Trustees and S\ii)ervi.sors, whether they will 
have ten. or twenty, or two saloons to a block. They have it 
now wholly in their own hands to determine whether there .shall 
be a saloon beneath a school-house window or a mile away — 
whether one mu.st suffer a doggery besides his children's play- 
loom or direct its removal to a distance. In this city we have 
instance afl;'r iiistanci of the protests of citizens of residence 



di.-.tiicts lieing pushed aside, and di-inking places set up where 
the piMiple did not want them. This can no longer be so if the 

I eopli- chDiisc lo e\frci-e the piiwiT gi\ei) to them." 



Cresta Blanea 

SOUVE/NI-R Vl/NTAGES. 

GOLD MEDAL, PARIS EXPOSITION. 1889. 

Location of Vineyard: Livermore, Alameda Co., Cal. 
rar-siinife nf Label ok i^enuiiir < vesta lilatira Miars. 



Cresta Blanca Souvenir Vintages 

SAUTERNE-SOUVENIR 



â–  . P'e!.s E-^osi^ 




CRESTA BLANCA. 

_J t '• r t, . . f> f r . ^' --f fiJ .. r J I fry 

SAN FRANCISCO DEPOT 325 PINE ST., BASEMENT 



These Wines are served to the guests of all t!ie leadiiii; HnteU and 
Ilestaurants on the Pacific Coast. 
For priee-liat apply to 

^. j. U/EjfTlOI^E, 

325 PINE STREET (Hasiniem), SAIM FR A NCISCO. CA L. 



Senator Leland Stanford's Vina 

Its pure! 

Jhatis^ure!! 



Brandy 



_^ 




SOLD BY ALL 

First CiASS Dealers, 

Druggists i"" Grocers. 

Distillery Office: Room 3, 819 Market St„ San Francisco, Cal. 



f/reifie WIJNE ;<VJND SflF^IT F^EVIEW, 



13 



J^otos and "^orccnalc. 



p. A .1. ,1. 

â– tO.lWC millions 



liniuii, (if llualilsburg, liiivi^ 
I wine, mostly claret. 



;i!il tu UaiUMAN i\: .1 \' 



Man |>ri)|)iises, Hiitithi'i' powor disposes. A stoiu' thrown .-â– triiit,'lit at 
the ili'vil will ill iniu' cases out of ten lilt some one retiiniiiiK llianUs thai 
lie is "not like iint'i nther men." 

TiiK Los Aiij;eles " I'lioenix " has eonsoliilateil with the " I'oniipine," 
ami a first-rlass eiiviilation is thus as.^nreil. The eoiisorulateil jiniinal 
will he |iiilili-he.l in the interest of the licpior traile. 

The town trustees of Selma, by a vote of o to 2, reeeiitly doeideil to 
lieeiise the retail liquor trade. A petition against license containing ill) 
namps of voters was presented to the Trustees, but did no good. 

Ciiari.es Meinecke, of Chari.es Meinec;ke& Co., has gone an on ex- 
tended trip to Europe, lie will stop for some weeks in Bremen and then 
go to FreiiM?rg. Mr. Mkixecke's son is a student at the Tniversity of 
lleidelburg. 

-V I'RoposiTio.N is on foot for the organization of a Country Club at Los 
.\ngeles, which is to lease the ranch of L. .1. Rose & (^o., at San (iahriel, 
(or a term of years. The intention is to build a half-mile track, lay out 
polo grounds, build a Club House, etc. The negotiations are still jiendiiig. 

r>. If. CiiiAM, cif the Glorieta Vineyard, at .Martinez, has issued a 
twenty-four page |ianiphlet descriV)ing the wine anil winery at his place. 
Mr. I'pham writes as a wine producer, and he refers the reader to patrons 
ill St. Louis, Milwaukee, Martinez, San Franci.sco, New York and Chicago. 

Low License, or $2."> per quarter, received more votes than any other 
saloon proposition before the people of Petaluma at their recent city elec- 
tion. Us vote was ."OO to 20!) in favor of high license, or .i;lOO per quarter. 
The I^ohibition vote was only 25, while 82 declared in favor of .$50 per 
quarter. 

Wai.oen it Co., the distillers at (ieyserviUe, are prepared to put up 
biaiidied fruits at their institution this year. The product of such goods 
in California is not large, and Walden & Co. will not only find a ready 
sale for their brandied fruits, hut they will have couiparatively little com- 
petition to meet. 

Fergi-son & CuRLEY, the Market street dealers, are making a hit on 
the Coast with T. II. Smkhi.ey & Co.'s bottled " New Hope " whisky, 
liver since embarking in business in their present location, some time 
;i-'o, Messrs. Ferui'son & Cirley have made a good business record, and 
linir circle of friends and patrons is steadily increasing. 

Marscmai.i. Si'Ei.i.MAN i& Co , of New York, have been buying wine 
very freely during the past fortnight, and are reported to have secured 
nearly (iOO,(M)0 gallons. Most of the Dowdell cellar, which was bought by 
F. CuEVAi.i lEi! it Co., goes to the New York firm, and they have secureil 
a large lot from the Pebbleside Vineyard (the Scon-Coi.i.rNS place), of 
Santa Clara Valley. 

Kei.ix (^obi.entz, who has been in the firm of Coiu.entz, Pike A Co. 
lor some time, has opened a wholesale liquor house on IJattery street, be- 
tween Clay and Washington, the firm name being Felix Cohlentz & Co. 
The firm will make a specialty of the best grades of goods, and are nego- 
tiating to handle the bottled whiskies of one of the oldest and best know n 
of Kentucky's brands. 

The Retail Liquor Dealers' Mutual Protective Association has re-or- 
ganized as P.ranch No. 1, of the California .'^tate Protective As.sociation, 
and has elected the following otliceis; President, .1. F. Kenny; Vice Pres- 
ident, .Iohn L. IIekoet (.Mitchell); Secretary, F. \V. Reynolds; Treasu- 
rer, .James Gii lekax. P. .1. Dinne, of J. P. Dinne & Co., is cliairiuan of 
the Kxecutive Committee. 

In the Paris Figaro of February l"2th is the following elaborate descrip- 
tion of the establishment of Veuve Pommerv, Fii.s & Cie : "Theliou.se 
was founded in l.S.'!6 by >I. Gkeno, who sold out in 1806 to M. Pommekv. 
On the deaih of the latter, in 18.'>S, Madame Veuve Pommery took control 
of the house, aided by M. Henry Vasnier, who bad come from London 
two years before at the instance of M. Pommery. Under the energetic 
guidance of the new administration, the business increased rapidly. The 
mark is now a prime favorite in Holland, England, Russia, Germany. 
Austria, Sweden, Norway and Denmark, as well as in this country. In 
18."i6tlie shipments of the house were 46,000 bottles; at present they vary 
from 2,000,000 to 2,.'JOO,000 bottles per annum. This success is to be attrib- 
uted to the great care exercised by the management in ahva\ s choosing 
wines of good quality from the liest vintages for the.r shipments. They 
claim to be the pioneers in shipping brut wines to England and to this 
country. The cellars of the house are over six miles in length, and are 
noted for the bas-reliefs sculptured on their walls. These represent the 
feast of Bacchus, Champagne in the eighteenth century, Silenus and the 



Infancy of nacchiis. The death, i Mvowii: i'oMMERv.on the 18th day of 
March, 18!10, was considered a public calamity. Her benevolence had 
made her widely known. Her magnilicent gift of Millet s " Gleaners " 
to the Museum of the Louvre will be remeinbereil for all time. The pict- 
ure had cost her IIOO.OOO francs. Since her death the business of the house 
has been continued under the firm name of Veivk Pommery, Fils & Cie, 
the partners at present being M. Loi is Pom.merv, her son, the Countess of 
PoLioNAC, her daii'.;liter, and .M IIenuv Vasxikh." 

Edward BiiAuxscinvKiciER, Secretary of 15k mnscuweioer A Co., was 
married on the liith instant to Miss Louisa Kac, daughter of Frederu k 
Rau. The cercm ny was performed by Kev. Dr. Fi'endling, at St. >Iai- 
cus' Church, after which a reception was held at the Braunsuiiweic.er 
home, at Mc.Vllister and Dovisadero streets. iVIr. and Mrs. Uraunsciiwei- 
UKK are now away on their wedding tour. 

The Sutter Supervisors have laid the li(|iior-licenae matter over for 
one month to allow the i)rotests to come in. The advocates of a restitu- 
tion of the license have had \V. H. Carlin as s|iokesmaii, while those in 
opposition to the )ietition arc represented by .1. L. Wiliihk and .Ioseph 
GiRDNER. The pro license people arc confident that they have three Super- 
visors who will vote for about a $liOO a year license. 

A. J,alHl^bol•ge^. tlio wini' iiinki r of .\iinlieiiii, died recenlly. 

M. Keating, tlic vj'liole.salcr oC I'orliaiHJ. Orciion, is going to 
retire from business. 

Wm. Driver i!t Son, tlie wliolcsalc li(|ii()r dealers and drug- 
gists of Ogdeii, have made an a.ssignmenl for tlie benefit of their 
(•reditors. 

The firm of Josepli Melczer & Co. has dissolved, Jlr. William 
Melczer retiring. Mr. Joseph Mele/i'r and Mr. Jesse M. I>evy 
have formed a new partnership under the same style, and will 
continue the business as lieretofori\ 

Duncan Bankhardt, formerly with C. Carpy & Co., will leave 
for the City of Mexico on the 22d inst. For tiic present he will 
represent a large Cycle manufacturing house, but he expects to 
work into the wine trade in the course of a few months. Besides 
having his line of bicycles, Mr Bankhardt will have the agency 
of the Ingleuook and Cresta Blanca cased wines and of the 
sweet wines of the Eisen Vineyard Co. With these wines ho 
should open up a good-sized trade from the outset. 

C. Carpy & Co. have sued ^. Dowell & Son, of St. Helena, 
to enjoin the sale and delivery of about 400,000 gallons of wine 
to F. Chevalier & Co. The suit is brought in the courts of Napa 
county, and it will attract no little attention on account of the 
magnitude of the transaction. It will be remembered that the 
sale of this wine was made about ten days ago, and some of it 
was ready for delivery on the cars at St. Helena when the 
jirocess of the Court stopped the delivery. .Messrs. Carpy & Co. 
claim to have the first call on the wine, in virtue of advances 
made .J. Dowdell & Son for the purchase of the grapes. 



il iiiifiigiHiiBufaMiuyjuruwiiiiilwiHnnBn^ 



^c,â– ^^BUSHEO 1^^^ 




EREMYMARTIN&C? 

COGNAC 

1 FRANCE) 

AGENTS IN SAN FRANCISCD.Cal. 

Sec QuutalioiiB un p -io. 



525 FRONT STREET 



OBiDmsammcmzi nrcjao nra Qiniao 




14 



f/rSlfie WIJNE Jk^Q SflF(IT F(EVIEW 



CHAS. ]VIEIf4ECKE & CO 



314 Sacramento Street, 



San Francisco, Cal, 



Sole Agents on the Pacific Coast for 







Deutz &. Geldermann, 
DupanloLip & Co., 
Duff Gordon &. Co., 
Lacave & Co,, 
D. M, Feuerheerd Jr. &Co. 



Gold Lack Champagne, 
Champagne, I 
Fine Sherries, 
Sherries and Olives, 
Ports, 



The Vineyard Propr's Co., Brandies, 





I, A. I, Nolet, 

J. J, Meder &. Zoon, 

Boord & Son, 

A, de Luz & Fils, 

C. Marey & Liger Belair, 

G. M. Pabstmann Sohn, 

Haussmann Junr., 

Gebr. Macholl, 

L. Funke Jr. 

Dr, Teod. Meinhard, 

Genoveva Brunnen, 

Royal Prussian Amd , 

Societe Generale, 

A. Chevallier-Appert, 

A. Boake, Roberts & Co 

Moore &. Sinnott, 

Greenbrier Dist, Co., 



Gins, _ _ - 

Swan Gin, 

Old Tom Gin, Jamaica Rum, Etc. 

Clarets and Sauternes, 

Burgundies, 

Rhine Wines, 

Mosel Wines, 

Kirschwasser, 

Boker's Bitters, 

Venezuela Bitters, 

Sparkling Mineral Water, 

Selters Waters, 

Vichy Water, - 

Oenotannin, Etc., 

Wine Finings, Etc., 

Rye Whiskies, 



- - Ay 

Reims 

Port St. Marys 

Cadiz and Sevilla 

Oporto 

Cognac 

Schiedam 

Schiedam 

London 

Bordeaux 

Nuits 

Mainz 

Traben 

Munich 

New York 

Ciudad-Bolivar 

Niedermendig 

N. Selters 

St. Yorre 

Paris 

London 

Philadelphia 



"R. B. Haydea" Sour Mash Whisky, Greenbrier, Kj. 

Prune Juice, Arrack, S. Croix Rum, 
Vermouth, Spanish Clay, Etc. 






Qmand made" \ n^ 

^ \ ^SOUR MASfU.-/^' 



ii 



r,\eSONs^ 




f^eifie WIJME /rIMD SflF^IT F^EVIEW, 



15 



BONDED WAREHOUSES FOR WHISKY. 



The ost;il)lishiiu'iit of a sjiocial hoiiiled wari'liouso for tlio 
storage of whisky in this city, the jn'oiiositioii ol' sflliiig liDiidod 
nooils hy the single l)ari'el to retaiU'rs, and the repdi-l lliat liioro 
is a l>are possibility of the establishment of anotlier bonded 
warehouse, still continue the topics of discussion among the 
trade. The views on the ([uestion are as widely dill'erent as can 
he. Opinions are also widely divergent as to whether the Ken- 
tucky distillers will stand by their resolution not to .ship in bond. 

" No use talking ; they must come to the new order of 
a Hairs, sooner or later," said an active broker and agent for one 
<if Kentucky's principal distillers one day last week. " My 
people do not want to ship in bond : but you mark me, history 
will repeat itself. Let me show you : Several years ago there 
was a petition out for the establislunent of a special bonded 
warehouse for the storage of braiuly in New York. Kvery wine 
nu'rchant in San Francisco and New Voi-k fought it, but never- 
theless it was established, and every mother's sou (tf them sells 
straight brandy from special bonded warehouses, not onl\- in 
New York, but Chicago. Louisville, St. Louis and other places. 
They swore by all tliat was holy thut they wouldn't use the 
bonded warehouses, and that they and the distiller of the 
brandy thus sold would not receive proper protection were the 
system inaugurated. 

'â–  Well, we all know the end; and I will venture the pre- 
diction that the whisky distillers will take their medicine in the 
same way. 'I'hey must if they will keep up with the times. 
Wholesalers, whose business and profits both depend on rectify- 
ing, don't like it. but thej' must soon see that times have 
changed." 

•' That argument sounds very well," says another represen- 



tative of Eastern distillers, " but it won't woik in practice. There 
is this talk of rei|uiriug iudeniuifving bonds for whisky so 
shipped in bond. Well, how many houses are there in this city 
doing a largi^ trade that would want to give indemnifying bonds 
for SI. 10 pi^r gallon on goods worth .say .'50 cents a gallon in 
bond'? No, sir ; it won't do. The trade here is against the sys- 
tem, and I am sure- that it will cost more to carry whisky in 
bond here than it will in Kentucky. I haven't used the ware- 
house, and I will not if I can help myself." 

Take tin; opinion of a wholesale licjuor dealer- : ' 1 don't 
look for much futui'e for the whisky business if it is conducted 
on the old plan. Take a house like ours. We (tarry a big lloor 
stock, and are under he, ivy expense in rents and interest. Now, 
how are we to (rompete, on ordinary goods at least, with some 
chap around the corner who has a 810-a-month ollice rent and a 
side-pocket full of war(!liouse certificates that he will peddle 
around, a barrel at a time, with the additional brag of 'two- 
stamp goods and full proof? ' Luckily for us, we have a 
brand that is known very well indeed, and will sell the whisky 
in competition with the warehouse-certificate fellows. I think 
you will S3e some warm times over this matter in the next two 
or three years. If not, I am no prophet." 



The will of Calvin W. Kellogg has been filed for probate. 
It disposes of an estate valued at over 8100,000. Half of the 
estate goes to his widow, Mary K. Kellogg, and the rest to his 
daughter, Mrs. Ella F. Gilroy, who lives in Hastings, England. 
The deceased recommended that the legatees under the will fur- 
nish his son aud son's family with the common necessaries of life, 
as he made no provision for him oi- fur his adopted sons, Ben B. 
and Frederick Sutton. Thomas Cole, Joseph M. Loewe and 
Mrs. Mary E. Kellogg were named as executors. 




ERWOOD 




SHER 




-IMPORTERS AND EXPORTERS-- 



212-214. MARKET STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 



24 N. FRONT STREET, PORTLAND, OR. 



**Kc3stone Ittouogram Bgc" and ''(Olfi Saratoga" — The Finest Eastern Ryes. 



MACKENZIE & GO'S Spanish Sherries and Ports 

E. & J. BURKE'S NONPAREn. OLD TOM GIN. 

BURKE'S HENNESSY BRANDY and DRY GIN 

SCHUTZ MIL'WAUKEE BEER the "Pilsener" and Liirhl Spirkline 

also SCHUTZ in Wood, 
ROSS' BELFAST GINGER ALE. CLUB SODA, ETC. 
"CLUB COCKTAILS,-' EVANS HUDSON ALE 



MOET .t CHANDON CHAMPAGNE ESCHENAUER & CD'S aARETS and SAUTERNES, 

HUNT ROOPE TEAGE .t CO. Cased Ports, A. HOUTMAN .V CO'S HOLLAND GIN, 

IJ. \- J. BURKE'S Irish and Scotch 'Whiskies, LA^WSON'S LIQUEUR SCOTCH WHISKEY, 

BASS RATCLIFF & GRETTON, Limited— Bass Ale in Wood, GUINNESS' DUPLIN STOUT in Wood, 

E. i- J. BURKE'S Bass' Ale and Dublin Porter (GUINNESS JOULES STnNE ALE in Hhds. and Hf-Hhds. 

EXTRA FOREIGN STOUT, the Bnest brewj. MEINHOLD'S ANCHOR BRAND NEW YORK CIDER, 

FLEISCHMANN'S ROYALTY GIN. HENK WAUKESHA Mineral Water, 

ItoSSKAM, GEK.STLEY it CO., rillLADELrHIA, I'CKi; WiUSKlE.^: — "MA.«C0T," "KolilN HocjU," "O. P. S." AMI 'TlUVATE .STOCK." 

t'iiirsl Caiiinlian Rijc Wliinkry (Goclerhani £ JVorls, I.'t'd. Toronto, Canada), Jlol tied I'litirr Government Siiiierrixion. 

liK-lMVOUlKIt AMKltK.iy UJlISIilf.S-KirlisIr Hoinhon. Sjirhiji '.SI, 'SO. '«.'>, 'OO; Horsey Hue: O. F. C: Siirhiuliill : II /;. Mi lira ye 
llerinitaqe: M. V. Mona rcli: hentueh'tj I'luh; Melt irood: Mallingty; Cfilcl^encoch: E. C. Jierry and oftier Kltnulard Itrattds. 

Also Agents For NAPA VALLEY WINE COS WINES AND BRANDIES IN CASES. California Wires ard Brandies n VAood 



i!ini.vi;i> iii;i.LMAN\ 



IlEr.L.'MA.NN 



HELLMANN BROS. & CO. 

IMPORTERS AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS 
525 Front Street - - - San Francisco, Cal. 



.P.\CIF1C COAST AGENTS FOR 



KRUG & CO., REIMS, PRIVATE CUVEE CHAMPAGNE 



{â–  PERRIER FILS & CO., Chalons s Mame 

*DRIEN & FILS, Epemay 

fORRESTER & CO., Xerez de la Frontera, 

''ARVEY&CO., - - . 

OFFLEY, CRAMP & FORRESTER. Opirlo, 

BLANKENHEYM & NOLET, Rniordmn, 

CH. LECHAT, R. PHILIPPE & CHESSE, Nantes, 



Champagne 

Sherries 

Sherries 

Port Wines 

Union GiD 

Sardines 



Irish Whisky 
Cognacs 



DUBLIN DISTILLERS' CO.. L't'd, Dublin, 
E. REMY MARTIN & CO., Rouillac, 
P. FRAPIN A- CO.. Segonzac, 
ENGRAND FRERES, Angouleme, 

PATTERSON & HIB3ERT, London, •) ^^' s°jj^„,''"""^' 



L. DURLACHER, Bingen - Rhine Wine 

H. UNDERBERG— ALBRECHT, Rheinberg a Niederrhein 

Boonekamp Bitters 

CHAS. DAY & CO., London, \ „"'<' % '^"' 

/ Orange Bitters 

J. B. HERRIFF & CO., Glassgow, -1 Y'^. "^I'^^y 

" ' ( Jamaica Rums 

ALL GOODS Ilf VMTED STATES BONDED WAUEIIOUSE. 

VMEKIC.W WHISKIES— -'BLUE GRASS" AND "BOONE'S KNOLL" 



( 



16 



P/rSlfie WIJ^E A^IS SflF^IT F^EVIEW. 



TROUBLES OF THE TRUST. 

••Oil the r.'lli iiist., ai Chicago, the properties of the D. & 0. 
V. Co. were ortlereil sold liy .liulgc Sliowultcr. l". K. Court. The 
attorneys lor the Greeiihut (action and the slockhohk-rs consented 
to the action of the Court. The hill ii|)on whicli the order was 
hased was lirought l)etbrc Judj;e Showalter at ."? o'cU)ek. It was 
an application for a receiver hy Stephen 1). Hohrer. of New 
York, owner of 500 shares: D. C. licnnett. of .Vlhany, N. Y., 
owner of 5ttO shares of the stock of the Distilliu}; and Cattle 
Feedinf; Company. Tiie divergence of the bill from the original 
hill hegins with a recital that the last meeting of the hoard of 
directors was held on February 1st. Since then the directors 
have abandoned their trust and paid no attention to its affairs, 
it claims, and the sole management has been in the hands of 
John McXulla, the receiver. The resignation of Nelson Morris 
left the Board consisting of Messrs. Greenhut, Ilobart, Greene, 
Freiberg. Ilcnnessy and Begus. On April Sth, the complainants 
aver, Ilobart. Greene and Freiberg resigned. There ai-e but 
three directors left, and the bill alleges they do not constitute 
a quorum and that they cannot fill vacancies. The bill then re- 
cites that the .\ttorney General of the State, by (pio warranto 
proceedings, attacked the charter of the Trust, and that the 
lower court held that it was forfeited, and the issue is now pend- 
ing before the Supreme Court of the State. The [irayei^ of the 
bill, to which the order granted by Judge Sliowalter adheres, is 
as follows : ' That by an order entered heriMu the said John Mc- 
Nulta may be appointed receiver of all the propeity and the ef- 
fects of the said defendant company, anil invested with full 
title thereto as receiver, and that all of the officers, mauagci^s, 
snperinteniU'nt, agents and employes of said defendant company 
shall be reijuired forthwith to deliver up to such receiver the 
possession of each and every part of said property, wherever 
situated, and also all books and accounts, vonciiers and pa|)ers 
in any way relating to its business, or the operation thereof, or 
an injunction to restrain each and every officer, director super- 
intendent, manager, agent and employes of said defendant from 
iu any way interfering with the possession and control of sai<l 
receiver over .said property, and that, at such time as may be 
found Ju.st and ])roi)er. the i)roperfy may be ordered to be sold 
and the proceeds distributed among those entitled thereto." "' 



WI/NE 


A/ND 


B-RAMDg REeEIPTS. 

Wine. l!i'an(l\. 


April 1 

'• :{ .... 

•' 4 ... 
" 5 . .. 




:!:j,7l>i) 

.•53,500 L'.40li 

:{2,2'20 1,00(1 

14,.5.50 

(It.C.OO 


" () 72.".)50 


" ,S 5!).4.")() 1.540 


" 9 . 




44,400 1,4.S0 


" 10 

•■ 11 

â– ' 1'-' .... 
" 14 




4.'!. 100 

.-lo.iWO 

.•55.100 

s,s,(i(i() :5.ooo 


•• 15 




;il 7()0 '_'.'_'oo 




c) April 1 "i 




Tiital 


5s:).:!oo ii.f;'20 




i^ 



^^ilFtJIUilJiil^i! 




i 



â– 0- 



jrtllK City of Rochester, with its abundant supply of niugnificent water and its clo^- 
1 proximity to the best barley and liop produciuE distrifts of the conntry. affords 
unsurpassed fuciiitit's for the production of such liealthgivins and palatable beer as 
brewed by tlie '* BaRTHOLOMAY ItKKWKRY CO ," Rochester. N Y. Bartholoniays 
â– ' Fine Standard " unquestionably is the purest ami best beer in the nuirkei, and 
Ibe "Knickerbocker," brewed of the <-hoit'est material will, we feel contideni, on 
account nf it^ e\.juisite ]»roperties, soon heroine a fa\orite with lovers of a high grade 
and delicate beer. Fok Sale iiy ai.i. Dkm.kks .\s\> (Ir.x fhs. 

WILLIAM WOLFF 4, CO., 
Pacific Coast Agents. 327-329 Market St.. San Francisco. Cal. 





^%s^' 






'T'HE above celebrated brands of WliLsky are still leaders, care without regard to expense havinj; always been 
taken to keep the goods to the highest standard in qii:ility, their jjopnlarily now being uncc[nallcd. 

The distilleries that make the above brands never made private brands. 
Notice the feathered sticks in the Imperial brand. They are correct cuts of the 
celebrated hand mash sticks with which all these whiskies are made. 



R. MONARCH 



OWENSBORO, KY. 



fASIfie WIJME Af^'S SflF^IT f^EVIEW 



17 



WINE AND BRANDY OVERLAND, 

During March, 1895, Showing Destination and Points of Shipment. 



TO 


ItH 


.1. >/>!'. 

(iallons. 


1 


)FFICIAI. FKirilKS.I 
1 riioM 

Gallons. 


ItUAMty. 

Cases. Gallons. 


II'IAJB. 


Cases. 
& 


Cases. 


Cases. 

2.378 
14 

1 


1 


Gallons. 


I'M.^tun, Mass 

New Ei]>;^nU(i jtohits 




16 

43 

262 

m 

22 

To 

(ill 

4 


3.410 San FranciMo 

l,".il Oakland 


150 29,649 


592.816 
129 


New Yiiik City 

Itoclu'sti'i 


S.4(;2 
2.4(JU 
4,80U 


302,412 Majtinez 

Concord 




201 

2811 


Other New York and New Jei*sev pis.. 


2 

1 


3i(4 Pleasanton 




70 




112 Livcrmore 




2.795 


I'idslmri; 




214 San Jose 


2 706 


11 


41 367 












236 















150 


Washing! on. DC 











107 








5 

25 
16 
46 


4»U Palo .VI, 




S 


7 399 


Allania 






28 .Mountain View 


1 


350 


Oilier Carolina and Geori;ia points 


i 


427 


Moi-an Hill 






6 088 


321.729 Giliov 






15 




2,560 Los Uatos 




2 


• 410 


Other Louieiana points 




42 


69 


2,T04 Wrisibls 




100 


Mobile 





26 Santa (^riiz _ 




10 


I 

5. 


125 






56 


:i(l 2,220 Marvsville 

83i 4.4S2 Lincoln 


1 

1 Ois 9,880 


:i.l77 


Oilier Gulf points 




•'6 


A us* in 






3 


Vina 


78 


Dallas 


8 
15 




3,315 Stockton 




Fort Worth 


252 


312 


3,886 West's Spur 

5,017 Oakdnle 


4,800 

33 


13,42.5 
27 








26 


5,025 Buhacb Switch 




2.850 




o 

2 


320 
45 


98 


2.552 Fresno _ _ _ 


2,270 

10 263 
33 
72 


35' 

27 

ii 

6 

i 

1 

30 


21 722 


Other Texas points 


29 3.235 Sacramento 


2 978 






149 Napa 


12s 454 


T.iltif Itoek 


23 

43 
B64 

24 

1,422 

341 

383 

10 




5i.929 
12. '93 

7,978 


Louisville 


25 50 .St Helena 

lU 17.4:iu Itutlierford 


Cincinnati 


5 

51 

32 

1 

13 


501 Vincland 

40.6,i(; Zinfandel 


3.024 
12 228 








1 370 


Toledo 


4,477 Calistoga 

6.467 Cordelia 




116 

15.785 






2.794 Elmira 


194 


Chieajro 


'l.U29 


10 
16,205 


;; 5.52? Woodland 

44 Si. 131 Santa Bosa, 

5.29.; Shellville .Junction . 


12,S94 

7,8.52 

198 


Otber Illinois points 




485 


14 


28.31.9 San Rafael 


240 


Detroit 




50 Vineyard 

2.519 Asti '. 


S2 

570 


2 
.57 

"io? 


5 64(1 


Other MichiKan points 




•J 


3I626 

156 

2. 14a 

914 

242 


7 
84 
26 
l:if. 
.â– )1 
211 

U 


13.830 
129 




20,ti28 Sebastopol 

2.6.i7 Healdsburj^: 


2 58i' 


Other Wisconsin points 


5 507 


St Louis 








28 


Kansas City 


14 


i3,;«2 Ukiah 




134 




2,286 lone 

459 Natoma 




80 


Other Missouri points 




2 520 


Sioux City 






13 Folsom 




520 


Other Iowa points 


1 


27 

28 

5 

9 

149 

14 

1 

107 

49 

409 

102 

190 

Ki 

16 






163 


St I'aul 




1,914 

274 

736 

42 

92 

396 

43 

1.273 

1.763 

2,352 

192 


13.223 Placeiville 


10 


10 


Minneapolis 


SO 


12,074 Los Anjieles 

2,808 West Glendale 


y 429 


15,101 
(i,635 




S,4S3 Albambra 


1 22 


1 

7 


9<i 


Otber Kancas and Nebraslva points . . . 


2.990 San Gaf>riel 


6,513 


Dakotas 


2 


316 Shorb 




7,800 










6,500 


Pueblo 




2 304 Siinnv Slope 

8.7.50 Colton 


16 








20 
25 
:>4 




5,226 


Utah 


5,913 Santa Barbara 






57 


Montana and Idaho points 


15.079 Wintlirop 


i 




20 


Albu<iner(|ue, etc 


1.495 D.wuey 






40 






4,.52,' Tustin ; 






26 


Canada 






55 .\liabeim . 






110 








' 




132 




1 199 




. 










53,499 


2,784 


1,047,090, Total 1 


1. 199 .53,499 


2,784 


1,047,090 







WIVI. WOLFF & CO., 

Importers and General Agents, 



327-329 Market Street, 



San Francisco, Cal. 



X^-i^OIIT'XO OO-i^ST J^OEH^TS 'F'OTt 



POMMERY SEC CHA'iPAGNB 

J. & V. MiRTELL COGNAC 

MINERAL WATERS of tlie APOLLINARIS C3., Umiled, London 

HUN'jiRUN APERIENT WATER 

FRIEDRICaSHALL APERIENT WATER 

MORGAN BRO.. PORT ST. MARYS' SHERRI33 

DIXONS DOUBLE DIAMOND PORT 

ROYAL WINE CO.. OPORTO, Port Wines 

DUBOS FRERES, BORDEAUX, Clarots and Siaternes 

"> r.e-inipoiled .Imcvlcan Mhlxkies.- 
Staple tirands. 



HOCK WINES, bom Messrs. Henkell & Co., Maycnce 
BURGUNDT WINES from F. CHAUVENET, NUITS 
JOHN do KUYPER & SONS. Rittsrdara. GIN 
BARTHOLOMAY BREWERY CO.. Rochester, N. Y. 
EXTRA FINE STANDARD, BOHEMIAN and the 
"KNICKERBOCKER" 
"DOGS-UEAD" BRAND of Guinness' Stout and Bass' Ale 
CANTRELL & COCIIRANE'S Belfast Ginger Ale 
LONDON Dock Jamaica Rum 
'86 Excelsior; Si)r. >-'J Belle of Nelson; Rjir. '89 Blue Ora*b; 



Lowest market quotattons fnniLihed on application, to the whulesiilc trade only 



CANADUN CLUB WHISKY from Messrs. HIRAM 

WALKER & SONS Ltd., Wallierville, Canada. 
ANDREW USHER & COS Swtch Whiskies 
JAMESON & CO., IRISH WHISKY 
THEO. LAPPE S GENUINE AROMATIQUE 
GILKA KUMMEL 

SUITON, CARDEN k CO., London, Old Tom Gin 
UDOLPHO WOLFE'S SON & CO., Scliiedam, SHNAPPS 

Hume, Ma\ field; O. F. C; Criickencock and other 



8 



f/cGlfie WIJSIE /rJME) Sflf^lT f^EVIEW. 



Imports and Exports 

DURING THE PAST FORTNIGHT. 



EXPORTS OF WINE. 



TO TAHITI— PBR Bkt. Tboi-ic Biuu, Apr. 2, 18a5. 



llBliTlNATION. 



TaLlti . 



olllPPEKS. 



CWA, CCarpj-ACo... 



Hirsclilcr A Co . . . 
I> G Sabatie & Co 
I E Thayer 



5.1 barrels . . . 
4 bf-barrels. 

4 barrels. . 
10 barrels. . , 

5 barrels... 



To al amount . 



2.766 t 830 

101 45 

I'JC) 4'J 

514 liO 

20U| 104 

3.843- tl.US 



TO HONOLULU— Pkk Bauk Alubrt, Apr. 3. 1895. 



Honolulu 

Total amount 



. . . CWAj C Carpy & Co ... 12 bbls 15 Ivegs. 
Liehman .V: Jacobi 100 ke^s 



7241 
800 



l,.i21i 



*3:K 
Hi 

f:745 



TO HONOLULU— Pkk Str. Austr.m.ia, Apr 2, 1893. 



Hunjlulu 



. C J Wctmore 12 cas -s 

IChas JIjiueekB ,V: Oo . . u ctiiv.- 



3-J. 

Total am >unt 12 eas .'S and 881 

TO .JAPAN AND CHINA -Pkk Sth. Betaiic-, Apr. 3, 1895. 
Vokobama 



«!>4 

205 
$289 



Sbangbai . .. 
Hon^'kong . . 



Maeondray Bros & L .. 

Beriniier Bros 

Lani;feUlt .Vs Co 

Pac Transfer Co 

.'C .1 Welmore 

|G Clements Sons. 



Amoy C Tookey. . 

Total amount 20 cases and 



i cases 

i barrels.. 
â– i barrels . . 
10 barrels . 
10 cases. .. 
o barrels. . 



. . 2 cases.. . 



? 30 
153 41 

157 4fi 

5111) 300 

73 
142 36 

10 



952 



I53G 



TO CENTRAL AMERICA— Per Str. San Juan, Apr. 9, 1895 



Ocos . 



L-.i I.ibertad... 
Puutas Arenas 
Ocos 



Haas Bros 

Koblcr it FroliUnK. 
Lacbman & Jacobi. 
Cal Vi' Association . . 



F Korbel * Bro 

Italian-Su iss Colony.. . 
Total amount 205 cases and 



10 kegs 

2kegs 

35 cases 

30 cases 

43 barrels. . 

7 bf-barrels. 
74 cases 

8 bf-baricls 

14 cases 

5 casks 

10 cases 

I bf-barrel . . 
42 cases 



100 
20 



1,999 
189 



216 

' ' 'si'j 
""â– is 

2,871 



? 40 

12 

87 

190 

1,220 

165 

472 

78 

118 

191 

30 

13 

225 

$2,841 



TO JAPAN— Per Stb. Pebo, Apr. 18, 1895. 



Hiogo I J Gundlatli & Co 

[Mobns it Kaltcniiacb 

Yokobama |Cbaix .t Bernard. ., . 

" Maeondray Bros it L. 



" 'Bcriuger Bros. 

'I'l.tal amount 6 cases and.... 



5 barrels . . 
I barrel . . . 
20 barrels . 

fi cases 

1 barrel. .. 
3 barrels . . 



2S5i 

60 
1. 000 1 



53 
156, 



1,524 



$ 85 

40 
400 
43 
14 
42 

$624 



TO MEXICO-Pee Schr. Czar, Apr. 11, ;S'J5. 





112 cases 

2 kegs 

6 lif-barrels 

I case 


:m 

139 


I^IOO 


Sau Bias 


b Frapolli itCo 


14 




61 


Total amount 


113 cases and 




173 


?;i78 



TO BRITISH COLUMBIA— Per Str. Wai.i.a Wai.i.a, Apr. 1.5,189.) 







6 cawes 

5 barrels 

I Ill-barrel 


260 

28 

288 


* -'4 

91 

6 




I L)c Turk 


.. 


J Julllcn it Co 


Tol 


^1 amount 6 cases and 




$121 







IMPORTS OF WINES AND LIQUORS BY SEA. 

KltO.M NEW \()ItK, Pkk Hnir Bki.i,k OHrikn, Apr. Ililb- 04 barrels, 182 cases 
whisky 

FROM HONOLULU. Pkk Kiiip \V. II. ItiMoNn, A|ir. Hili— 17 cases Ipiuors. 

FROM EUHOI'E OVKRLANO BY HAIL IN BOND— 177 cases, 10 casks wine; 54 
cauet lli{Uorn ; 37 cases cordials : 4 cases bitters ; 20 casus, 8 casks brandy ; 990 
coM's chani|>agne ; 2U casks ((In. 



BEER IMPORTS BY RAIL. 



From April 1st to April 15. IS95 







COPYRIGIITKII. 










BOTTLED 




BULK. 


CONKIGMEES. 


Boxes 


Casks 

20 
80 
'JO 


Barrels 


Barrels! 
65 


20 


K bbl 1 Kegs 


Royal Eagle Disl Co.. . 




140 


Hilbert Bros 






Sbei-wood it Sherwood 
W lidgen it Co 


10 


. 


60^ 
4.". 


io 


100 

40 


li E Scbulz 


220 
25 

255 








Cal Wine Co 


lilil 


















Total 


2-Jo' 


17(1 


3i' 


2811 



EXPORTS OF WHISKY BY SEA. 



From April l-sl to April 15, IS9j. 



VESSEL. 



DESTINATION. 



Tropic Bird .l.\CP, Tahiti. 



Santiago i JCS, Hilo 

.\iistraliii .-,. .ME, Honolulu.. . 
,HH. Honolulu . 
Belgic .M Bros it L, Vol. 



Czar 

Sailor Hoy. 
S:l;l Juan. . 



Illi. San Bias... 

li. .\ni;ipala 

Eltd, San J de (i 
liA.tCo. S JdeG 

W.tCo, Ocos 

AV, P .\renas. . . . 
.MMS, San JdeO 
SLi^cCo, P. Arenas 



Louis Haaa 

I E Thayer 

Spi-nance. S it Co. 

P M S S Co 

A P Hotaling, Jr. . 
.\ P Hotaling it Co. 
U FranoUi it Co... 
Wilnierding A t'o. 
Crown Dist Co. . . . 

Wm W..lff it Co . . 

Castle Bro.s 

Carroll * Carroll. 
Louis Haas 



PACKAGES. 



I bairel.. 
1 barrel.. 
12 cases . 
3 barrels . 
40 cases. . 
1 barrel. . 
1 barrel.. 

1 case ... . 
'2 barrels.. 
40 cases. . 
12 cases. . 
20 cases. . . 

2 hf-bbls. 
20 cases.. 
2 barrels.. 



Total amount 145 cases and. 



GALLONSi VALl'I. 



40 

39 



161 



41 
41 



85 



86 



546 



60 

.59 

117 

.â– (54 

400 

62 

62 

6 

100 

450 

165 

202 

2'2_' 

200 

131 



f2..'iU» 



MISCELLANEOUS FOREIGN WINE SHIPMENTS. 

From April 1st to April 15, 1895. 



VESSEL. 


DESTINATION. 


SHIPPEKe. 


PACKAOES. 


G A LLON^: 


VALUE. 




Apia 


CWA, C Carpy it Co 

Paulo Gavello 

VVLoaiza.t Co.... 

Cal W Association. 


I cask 

1 ban el .. . 

2 kegs 

12 cases 


62 
50 
40 


* 22 


Umatilla 

Volante 


Wellington 

Gnaymas 

Mazatlan 

Buenaventura • 

amount 12 cases n 


S 
30 
53 


San Juan . . . . 


2 hf-bbls... 
20 kegs .... 


53 
320 


3(' 
22.5 


Total 


nd 




.525 


$36^ 



WHISKY AND SPIRIT IMPORTS BY RAIL. 



From April 1st to April 15, 1895. 



COPYRIGHTED. 





SPIRITS. 1 


VHIhKY. 


CONSIGNEEE. 


Barrels 
!2C 


Cases 


Cases 


Barrels 


J4 b or k 


Kegs 


Misc. 


Louis Taussig it Co.. . . 









Crown Distilleries Co.. 
C \V Craig it Co 


325 
140 
340 
























Bode it Haslctt 






1.10 
63 






Dallcmand it Co 










Christy it Wise 




460 






Kiel)e Br it Plagemann 
Overland F T Co 




60 
58 

m 

58 
1 

6 
4 
I 
1 

1 
1 
1 
2 
1 












16 






Win Wolff it Co 






Moore HnnlitCo 




20 






C Kccnan 











G Wilkins 








.1 K it Co 


1 










J 1, Nirkcl it Co 








1 






P Mazzie it Co 


.. . 






J H .Mitchell, Oakland. 


\ 









L Gcndotti 


1 










J Deelv 


1 










Osgood Bros, Oakland. 
.1 W Miller 


1 










1. , . 




1 








1 












10 

5 

60 

116 

IKl 








Ililhcrt Bios 














Goldberg, Bowen it L. 
Langley it Uicbacls... . 


























Total 


y,'5 





450 


11 







Wc t-egi-ft to aiiiiotiiici' tin- (Ifct'ji.si-, on tin- Idlli iilt., at liis 
residence in Norwood, l'',ii};liiiid, of Captain ThoiDas Trapi), in 
flic iiincty-liftli year of iiis age. The decea.sod, wiio was liighly 
respected, managed and owned several sailing vessels in the liiir- 
deaiix and Cadiz routes, long hefoi-e steamers took the running: 
an<l he started the luij-iiicss some liCty years ago wliich is now 
carried on liv his .son. at -17 Mark-lane, E. C. 



P/\:eiFI(3 WINE AI^O SflF^IT PREVIEW 19 

0. F. C. AND CARLISLE 



Bourbon # # l^ye 

Distilleries; FRANKFORT, KY. 

Address: THE GEO, T. STAGG CO., Frankfort, Ky. 

THE INGLENOOK TABLE WINES 




â–  2Pi.]MD- 



OLD PRIVATE STOCK BRANDIES, 

GROWN and BOTTLED at the Celebrated 

SOLD ONLY IN GLASS. OF RUTHERFORD, NAPA CO. CAL. 

Null* Genume Unless Bearing LEGAL PURE WINE STAMP and TRADE MARK on Cork Cap or Seal, Only Matured and HIGHEST GRADE WINES Placed on the Markei 

On Sale by Leading Grocers and Wine Merchants in Every City in the Union. 

Office and Depot, 101 Front Street, Cor. Pine Street, San Francisco. 



Gold. Kteda-i, Lond-Ora, 18S4. Gold. l¥ledai, San Francisco, 1894. 

COHTES S: GO'S 

Ol^IGlHflli 

PLYMOUTH GIN 

An English Double Distilled Unsweetened Gin, a 
delicious compromise between Holland 

and Old Tom Gins. 

DISTIUIUTINK \<;i:\r Ini; iiii: |>\(I||( <(»\-;'r- 

W. B. CHAPMAN. 123 California Steret. San Francisco. 



?0 



f>^e\f\e WIJ^E /^JWI3 Sflf^lT f^EVIEW 







ay. 

ORlGlNATOfJ OF 

OLD GRAN 



Barber, Perriell 25(0 

proprietors. 




BARBER. FERRIELL & CO 

«S R. B. HAYDEN 0. CO 
.> NO. 420. 5t« DIST, 



B.M.HURT, 

PRESIDENT. 




DISTILLERIES: NELSON CO, KY 
OFFICE: LOUISVILLE, KV. 



c) 



i 



f/reifie WIJME y^j^D Sflf^lT f^EVIEW. 



21 



S. LACHMAN CO. 
California Klines and Brandies. 



453 to 465 BRANNAN STREET, 



SAN FRANCISCO 



3Sr. T. OIFZFXOE, 22 TO 26 ELIMI STI^EET. 






& 



P^OWli/yV 



U/lfl^pd5E. E5J/^B1J5|1^D 1854. 



G. 



(California 1^)inos and "^randioo. 

VINEYARDS IN SONOMA CO., MFRCED CO., AND FRESNO CO. 



COR. SECOND i FOLSOM STS.. SAN FRANCISCO 



41-45 BROADWAY, NEW YOrK. 



Kohler & Van Bergen, 



CALIFORNIA 




Sacramento, Cat. 

Main IHIirr and V:^llll^. 

661 to 671 Third St. 
San Francisco. 



1^ 










,.^<^" 



New York Otlicc, 

.N. W. CORNKK 
I.AIIillT A VaHIC-K STS, 

New York. 



C. CARRY & CO. 




I'raprietorii 

Uncle Sam Winerv an 

CALIFORMA. 



I'V. 



OPFK'B AND SALESROOM 

515-517 Sacramento St., - San Francisco. 

WINERIES AND DISTILLERIES, 

NAPA AND SAN JOSE, CAL. 



CARRY & MAUBEC, 

l> CEDAi: STKKKT. - â–  NEW V(i|:K, .N. V 




ItLEY«NE 



^ 



. Lov/fei\s 
PURE CALIFORNIA 



or CA LIFORNIA 




KQJ 



^e:^ 



Dt:AUE[ 

WI 



SPECIALTIES: 



PRIVATE STOCK HOCK, 

PRIVATG STOCK EL CERRITO, 
PRIVATE STOCK SAUTERNE, 

PRIVATE STOCK CLARET. 
PRIVATE STOCK BURGUNDY, 

PRIVATE STOCK VINE CLIFF, 




NES'^'^^BRANDIES ^ t 



WINERIES AND DISTILLERIES: 



pj/cf/e eiTY, YOUpvlTVlbbE >>rJ^D 
ST. jHEbEpj/f. 

OFFICES : 

11-13 FIRST ST., SAN FRANCISCO. 

200-202 S. FOURTH ST., ST. LOUIS. 

29 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. 



22 



f/<eifie WIJME /cJ^D SflF<_IT PREVIEW. 



JT/cic '2^''^^'''^ 



gorr 



cstonacnce. 



( SPECIAI. CWKKKSrOXDENC-E.) 

Nkw Yokk, April 10, 18'J5. 
There lias been no peireptible iiuprovement in general lines 
of trade over that of last month, althongh money seems easier 
and more plentifiil. In the li(iuor trade bnsiness is very quiet 
— almost at a standstill, except the movement of small lots to 
meet the demands of the retail trade. Whiskies, although not 
meeting a demand, are still holding up quite well in price, hold- 
ers evidently believing that it is only a (juestiou of time, and 
that in the near future, v.hen stocks will he in good demand, 
and so are not throwing any goods on the market at reduced 
prices. Especially is this the case with Eastern Ryes, which 
rule rather lirmer than Kentucky Bourbons. In the latter there 
is nothing doing save in the cheap grades of '03 and '94. As 
these goods have practically had the call on the market for sev- 
eral months past, it is evident that there cannot be very much 
more of them in stock, and to a " man up a tree " it looks as 
though the end of their reign is in sight. There certainly cannot 
be snllicient of them now left to be a factor more than a few 
weeks, when there must be an incrsased demand for legitimate 
goods and a consequent revival in the trade. From the best in- 
formation that can be gathered, the stock of tax-paid and old 
whiskies has been very heavily reduced, and that there is only a 
very small percentage of them left in dealers' hands. Though 
tbe demand for this class of goods is very light, prices remain 
jjriii — a rather good indication that stocks are running low. 
There seems, however, to be nothing in the present situation to 
encourage the belief that there will be any reaction in the whis- 
ky market before the fall trade sets in. 

lu California wines and brandies the trade is dull and small 
deals the rule. There is much speculation among buyers over 
the California situation, and as to how long the present condi- 
tions now inlluenciug prices may continue. As a cousecjuence, 
purchases are mostly in small lots, for immediate consumption. 
Trices have advanced slightly, and remain firm, and are pretty 
well adhered to anujng dealers. It is said that the competition 
of the cheaper grades of imported brandies is in a measure re- 
sponsible for the low price and slow demand for California bran- 
dies in this market. It would seem that the average small 
dealer prefers to sell brandy bearing the name of some French 
concern and the importation seal, regardless of the quality, 
somewhat on the principle that " a prophet is without honor in 
his own country." Although a few brands of California bran- 
dies command a regular trade at fair prices, the bulk of the 
goods move slowly at weak prices at present. 

A sale of California wines at auction took place here on 
April 4th where 187 barrels of wine and brandy were sold. 

Another sale is announced for the 17th, when the auction- 
eers expect about ten car-loads to dispose of. 

Frank Ayers, of Frash & Co., is rather ill at Aslieville, N. 
C, where he was sent by physicians' order to recover from a se- 
vere attack of la grippe and pneumonia last winter. 

Mr. Geo. Clark has been appointed the New York agent of 
the Vandegrift Distilling Co., with offices at 77 Hudson street. 
The Vandegrift people are pushing their bottled goods in this 
market, and their bottled rye is making many friends on account 
of its purity and quality. 

News has just reached here of another si)lit in the arrange- 
ments of the Trust's afiairs. The independent distillers have 
withdrawn from the combination, and prices of spirits have been 
reduced 'J cents per gallon to-daj' as a consequence. More ru- 
mors are flying around a.s to more sensational discoveries being 
madi^ by tiie experts who are still wrestling with the books of 
the Greenhul management, and that important suits would be 
instituted by Receiver McNulta agaiust the old management. 

There is to be another " Trust " in the field shortly. Ac- 
cording to Tieasurer John K. Searles, the American Sugar Re- 



lining Co. will shortly begin the distillation of spirits. Owing 
to lack of demand and low prices, the Trust cannot dispose of 
its low-grade sj'rups, and is preparing to convert one of its old 
relineries into a distillery to utilize the j)roduct, and expect to 
be in working order by this fall. W. A. (iEi-r. 

LETTER P-ROM "R. MOMAHCH. 



OwE.NSBOKo, Ky., March '_''_>, l,S!l,"). 
Kililiir I'lirlfic llVfic tniil Spirit Hcrieir : After sending you luy 
communication on the subject of transjjorting whisky in bond 
to other warehouses than <listillery warehouses. I being a mem- 
ber of the Kentucky Distillers' Association, studied further on 
the sul)ject, and the thought struck me while it was against the 
present rules of the Kentucky Distillers' Association to transj)ort 
whisky in bond to other warehouses than distillery warehouses, I 
I had better go to Louisville and talk with some of the other 
members on the subject. So I did, and suggested to them, in 
view of the facts that there are now other persons, who don't 
belong to the A.ssociatiou, transporting whi.sky in bond, we had 
better call a meeting of the managers of the Association and 
have that rule modified, allowing us to transport in bond but I" 
remain in the foreign warehouses to the extent of either six or 
twelve months. By this means 1 think it will be beneficial both 
to the Kentucky distiller and to the distributor, and that re- 
sponsible distillers can all'ord to run the risk of taking, as they 
may think, good bonds for the payment of the tax for the time 
meutiuncd — six or twelve months. 

Yours truly, K. Monarch. 

LOSSES OM SPIRITS IM BO/ND. 



Tabic !<lwu'liiij the iiUoiraiice of los-'i on distilled sjiirit.-' i)i Imiid mult r tin 

new late. 

Not to exceed 1 proof gallon lor two luontlis or part thereof. 

Do II2 gallons for more than 2 months and not more than 4 

IJo 2 do do 4 do do 6 

Do 2% do do () do do 8 

Do 3 do do 8 do do 10 

Do S}4 do do 10 do .do 12 

Do 4 do do 12 do do l."< 

Do 41,, do do 15 do do IS 

Do 5 " do do 18 do do 21 

Do 5\4 do do 21 do do 2-1 

Do 6 do do 24 do do 27 

Do ny, do do 27 do do 30 

Do 7 do do 30 do do 33 

Do 7}4 do do 33 do do .36 

Do 8 .do do 3(i do do 40 

Do 8}4 do do 40 do do -11 

Do !l do do 44 do do 48 

XO OUTAGE AI.I.OWKD OX THK Sl'HSKlil'EXT FOUR VKAKS. 

The niaxiimini allowance for loss on casks or packixjies of less capacity 
than forty wine gallons, and not less than twenty wine gallons, is liniileil 
to one-half the amounts stated in the ahove tal)le. No loss will licallowivl 
on casks or packages of less capacity than twenty wine gallons. 

It will he seen that where the loss of spirits while in warehouse does 
not exceed the statute limit, the tax is to lie collected nii the proof gallons 
contents as shown by the regauge. 

Where the loss exceeds the statute limit, the tax will be collected on 
nuniber nf proof gallons contents, as shown bythe original gauge, less only 
the loss allowed by law- 

HAWAIIAN TRADE. 



Consul- General Ellis G. Mills, at llonolulu, has subniitleil 
a report to the State Deiiartineut, at Washington, on the imports 
of wine, beer and spirits into the Hawaiian islands. It has 
been rejiortcd that the imports into those islands of Califurnia 
wines had been falling oil', and their jilaces taken by .itikr. made 
in Jajian from rice grain and grapes. Mr. Mills linds this un- 
true. The quantity imported has been enormous, over !<;!,00(l 
gallons being brought in ISilL'. as against only .'5400 gallons in 
1S!).'5. For the same years, however, the importations of Cali- 
fornia wines have increased frm ]tl,'J,000 to 12."),000 gallons. Beer 
shows an increase of nearly 14,000 gallons, or about .'!.'> per 
cent., and spirits a general decrease of 5000 gallons. 

Barber, Ferriell & Co., at Ilobbs, are running light, and will 
nuike a very snnill crop of whisky this year. The^' say the 
yield is very satisfactory. This concern owns about nine hun- 
dred barrels of vei'y fine sour-mash whi.sky of the spring of "ill 
inspection, which they have been holding back, but whicli they 
will now disi)ose of. Their price at present on thc.sc goods is 
exceedingly close. — -JSinifoit'.^. 



f/eifie WIJ^E /JMD fiPII^IT PREVIEW. 



?3 



TlIOS. KiRKPATRtCK, ^-^ ^^ .^^^^ -^M^^ ^_ . <^- "• -^'"J'-Im 

San Francisco, Cal. ^ -^ ^^ #" A f 1 I \ â–  J A. -^^ Loi.isville, Kv 

^^^^ Dlf^EST f f^OjVI bOUISVIbbE, KY. ^^-^T^> 



pEEI^eESS U/t^ISI^IES. 



* > • >< • < -- 







■ >>< - >< ♦ 



These '.. :..iue a, rGpiitafion second to none on ihe PacWo Coast The}/ have been given years of trial 

i7 the iest class of trade and consumers and are pronounced witliont a peer. Wiien given a trial they speak for 
ihemselves. For sale in quantities to suit in Louisville or San Francisco by 



SOLE AGEy'TS FOR THK P.HIIIC (OAST. 



4z04 Tn:E^oi^T STK.EET, 



s^^nsr :pi?/^^nsrcisoo, cjl.il, 




I. - 



mm 



\iU 



ABBOTT'S 

ANGOSTURil 



(THEOR!GI^lAL) 



BALTIMORE, MD.U.S.A. 



BITTERS 



THE JOHN T. GUTTING GO., SAN FRANGISGO, HAS A STOCK OF THESE GOODS. 



Special Bonded Warehouse IMo. 1. 



2d DISTRICT, NEW YORK. 



FIRE PROOF BUILDINGS. ELECTRIC ELEVATORS. 

Storage Capacity 18,000 Barrels. 

Papers and Withdrawals Executed Free of Charge. J. D. W, SHERMAN, PrOprietOP. 



24 



f/reifie WIJ^E AP^D Sfif^lT [REVIEW. 



I/NTEMPE-RA/NCE VS. p-ROHIBITIO/N 



A late mnnlun- of the Sacramento Record-Union reviews at 
some leiigtli tlu' legislative record on the liquor ([iiestion: applaiuis 
our law-makers for indicting punishment upon that inteiest, and 
is inclined to he sarcastic at the expense of the political man- 
agement of the liquor dealers. In closing, the editor says : " To 
sum up, if there is, in the history of legislation anywhere, any 
record at all eomparaMe with this, wo have never heard of it 
and are unahle to find it in the liliraries." All this may he very 
amusing and very comforting to the misguided friends of Pi'ohi- 
bition who consider every inlliction on the li(iuor dealers a cure 
for drunkenness; hut it does not solve the question. The 
liquor problem remains a problem still. It must be met and 
solved in some way, and no State has more at stake, no commu- 
nity and people are more deej)ly involved in a propei- and fair 
solution of this perplexing rjuestion than we of California. We 
cauuol; applaud the miserable juggling and trilling which the 
Kecord-Vnion approves. 

It would be folly to deny the evils of intemperance or at- 
tempt to palliate the wrongs for which the inordinate appetite 
for liquor is resposible. But it is Just as stupid, just as irra- 
tional, at this day, to maintain that that exploded piece of 
sentimental frumpery called Prohibition will cure or even alle- 
viate its evils. History has demonstrated that prohibition is not 
the remedy for intemperance ; that it does not even abate, but, 
on the contrary, increases drunkenness and leads to crime. The 
Sacramento paper declares that the California liquor dealers 
make the mistake of " holding their business to be exceptional, 
one to be specially pi-iviledged and entitled to more considei ation 
than any other." Of course this is a plain, palpable distortion 
of the truth. It is notorious that all they sought was a statu- 
tory safeguard against the assaults of fanatical local legislation. 
It asked for protection from the destructive policy of a class of 
people who have refused to learn by experience that their theo- 
ries are not only worse than useless, but are distinctly harmful. 
If the Prohibitionists did not show such an utter disregard for 
the undisputed testimony which demonstrates the fallacy of their 
contentions, one might have more patience with them, and the 
liquor problem might be removed from our politics to the ever- 
lasting benefit of our Commonwealth. But, as was well said by 
that eminent writer, Goldwin Smith, " They tell you that with 
them it is a matter, not of expediency, but of principle ; that 
their cause is the cause of Heaven ; yours, if yon are an oppo- 
nent, that of the darker power : and they intimate — with more 
or less of gentleness and courtesy — what, if you persist in get- 
ting in heaven's way, will be your doom." To tell a Prohibi- 
tionist that the Scott Act, in Canada, had been a deplorable fail- 
ure, and had been disastrous to the morals and welfare of the 
community, would convince him of nothing. Yet such is the 
truth. The Scott act was a good deal like our own State laws 
— it gave the counties and cities the right of local self-govern- 
ment, i. e., prohibition. Its eiTect was to substitute an unli- 
censed, unregidated trade, for one that had been hitherto licensed 
and regulated. It did not decrease the demand — simply 
changed the ways of supply to an illicit trade. Tell a Prohibi- 
tionist that down in Maine — where his pet theory has been in 
force for forty years, and where its strongest adherent is the illi- 
cit dealor who pays no license — that Bangor practically enjoys 
free liquor, and that Bath, and Lewi.ston, and Augusta, and 
Portland are similarly situated, and he will not " bat an eye," but 
will thank Heaven that they have a Prohil)ition law in Maine. 
Though Archdeacon Farrar was informed that the whisky trade 
had been completely driven out of Maine, " it appears that >ip- 
wardsof 1000 people in the State paid Cnited States retail liquor 
tax." Even the jirison oflicials in that State recognize the true 
conditions there existing, and the Prison Report for the year 
1884 declares that '• intoxication is on the increase." The num- 
ber of committals for drunkenness for one year in Portland, 
with a population of .'M, 000, was 'J.-JIS. E.xperience with the 
Prohibition experiini iit in Vermont is very similar. Massachu- 
w-tts tried the Prohibition <ure, but found it ineffective lor good, 
and promptly condemned it as a means for suppressing inteni- 
[lerance. 

It is deliveranre from such intermeddling that the licpior- 
dealer seeks ; deliverance from the intemperance of Prohibition ; 
and yet tlie Record-Vnion declares that they sought exemjitions 
and special i)rivileges. 

Some very good jx-ople abhor tlie use of meat as a food. In- 
deed, it is within the realm of imagination that a community of 
non-meal-eaters might settle in one of our smaller counties, ob- 



tain control of the Board of Supervisors, and place prohibitory 
resti'ictidus upon the sale of meat or the conduct of b\itchering 
establishments. Would our Sacramento contemporary declare 
the butcheis who sought lelief fiom such stupid legislation to 
be asking for " s))eeial exemptions and privileges?" There is 
abundant amliority for (hi' ])assage of a law prohibiting the sale 
of meats on strictly moral grounds, which niigiit bring such leg- 
islation within the protection of that very ela.stic and uncertain 
thing known as the '' j)olice power." As an examjile of the evil 
effects of the consumption of meat as a food, we refer the reader 
to a very remarkable article written by .Sir Henry Thompson, 
and published iu 1895, wher(!in he declares that not only the 
bodily but the moral evil arising from intemperance in eating 
meat is as great as that arising from intemperance in drink. 
There is literature enough upon this subject to overwhelm the 
butcher, and fill him with cfiufusion that he has so long iimo- 
ceutly engaged in such an infamous calling. 

Good government demands that the liquor i>roblem be fairly 
discussed and settled. It is a matter of vital importance to 
every county in the State ; indee<l, so widely does its ramifica- 
tions extend, so woven with our revenues and industries is this 
trade, that citizens who imagines it is a question of no interest to 
themselves will discover, unless the subject receives sane treat- 
ment, that their incomes, their comfort and their property have 
been injuriously affected by their own neglect. To close out the 
doggeries and pitfalls, and settle upon some general and uniform 
legislation should be the aim of every citizen interested in good 
government. — J. P. Brown, in Wave. 



•D-R. WILEg EXPLAI/NS. 

We have received a long communication from f>r. II. AV. 
Wiley, Chemist of the United States I)e]iartment of Agricul- 
ture, in regard to the rejjort of W. II. Krug that the wine of 
Senator .John I.,. Beard, of Warm Springs, " had never seen a 
vineyard." Without saying so directU', Dr. Wiley would seem 
to stand by Mr. Krug's opinion, though Senator Beard has 
already, in a strongly worded letter, indignantly denied the con- 
clusions of Mr. Krug. 

Dr. Wiley's communication, in part, is as follows : 
''Sir: It does not seem advisable at the present time to 
enter into any extended discussion of the matters therein con- 
tained. We are perfectly willing to be criticised, either from 
the stand-point of the agricultural chemist or [iractieal wine 
maker. We do not share ^Fr. A\eluiore"s ojiinion of agricultural 
chemists in general, and claim that they have a jicrfect right to 
draw whatevei- conclusions seem justilied fiom the data whii-h 
they obtain. We recognize their liability to error, and that 
they are often mistaken. We were extremely gratified at the 
good showing made by the California wines when subjected to 
the severest chemical tests. It is not at all strange that among 
so many samples a few were found which varied from the stand- 
ards of excellence! univcn-sally recognized. In the case of the 
])articular wine named, namely. No. 12.7!>'-', exhibited as Golden 
Chasselas by ,T. L. Beard, of Warm S|iiings, Cal.. the analytical 
data obtained were as follows : 

.Meohol '.>..53 percent. 

Kxtraet 1.10 

Glycerol 0.321 

Ash O.Ull 

Total acidity, calculated as tartaric acid 0.54 " 

Ash-extract ratio 17.36-100 " 

Glycerol alcohol, ratio 3.3-100 

Extract rest 0.5(5 " 

'â–  The wine was not judged by any individual figure, but by 
the extraordinary deviation from the \iniversal standards which 
have been estaiilished for while wines by tlu- analytical expe- 
rieiiee of many years. This experience has been considered of 
sulficient value to form the basis for the legislative conlr-ol of 
the composition of wines in (iermauy, France, Austria and 
Switzerland. Let us compare the ligures obtained in the analy- 
sis of this wine with thostt prescribed l)y Euro))ean laws, and 
also with other California wines analyzed at the same time : 

Km-opean Standanl for Wliitc Wines. .\nal\si8 of No. 12,792. 

Kxtraet, not over 1.4 jkt cent. \ l-IO per cent. 

.\!<h extract ratio, not()ver l-ll), iinle.«8 I i7,3,j.ioo. with very low ext'ct. 

extinct IS ]in)i)i>nioiiately lugli. I 

I llvciTol-alcoliol ratio, between 7-10(1 \ ^ v jou ni.r .eiit 

14-100. I â– â– â–  ^ 

lOxtract rest, after deilnction of the to- I q -g ,,|.r',.,.„t. 

fal aciil not les.s tlian 1.0 per cent. I ' ' ' 



f/cSlfie WipJE ;OrIME) SflF^IT PREVIEW. 



25 



" A careful examination of the analyses of llic oilier Califor- 
nia samples of white wiiit's will show isolated cases where sam- 
ples fell helow the stanihird estal)lisluHl for a certain constituent, 
but no wine will be found which deviiited so generally and so 
extraordinaril}'. Thus, in Sauterne No. 12,(!.S(), the {jlycerol- 
alcohol ratio is only '-'-100, and the ash extract is low. The lat- 
ter, however, is due to the hifjh extract caused by the presence 
of nnferniented sugar, as a glance at the polarization will show. 
The same is true of Sauterne No. I'J, (!:{!. Sauterne No, l'_*,t;s,S 
attracts attention by its high ash-extract ratio, but this wine can 
never be condemned solely on the strength of this variation, as 
it agrees with other wines in other respects. Some of the wine.s 
have a high extract. b\it this has always been found ilue to the 
presence of nnfermented sugar. The lowest extract ftuind. with 
the exception of No. 112.792 was l.tHi per cent., which is well 
within the limit. 

•'It is the practica of oeno-chemists never to condemn a 
wine on account of any single variation, but rather give the 
dealer or grower the bencllt of the doubt, and for this reason no 
comments were made in the cases just cited. It is evident, how- 
ever, that the above wine, No. 12,792, could never pass examina- 
tion, and that any chemist svonld be justilied in branding it adul- 
terated. 

" In reference to the use of glucose, the original report, as 
published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society, 
\'ol. XVI, No. 9, page 607, contained the following statements: 

â– â–  111 every other instance, as will be seen from the tables, tiiere was a 
ilextro-rotatinn, sliowiiifi possibly 'liat commercial j;hicose had been used 
lor purposes of fortification. It is well known, however, tliat this sub- 
stance is not used in California, and therefore this dextio-rotatioii is not 
positive proof of the use of glucose. 

'• The value of the analytical experience which has been 
accumulating for many years in this country and Europe should 
not be under-estimated. Such work has been a powerful factor 
in the improvement of many industries, notably those based on 
processes of fermentation. The idea so prevalent among man}-, 
that the chemist has for his sole aim the injury of their inter- 
ests, should be vanished. His W'ork is devoted to an impartial 
and fair consideration of the subject submitted to him, and it is 
his purpose, as much as that of any others, to work for the com- 
mon good. The chemist, however, would not be true to his 
principles if, in the examination of auj- subject of agricultural 
importance, he should report only the good qualities found and 
suppress any mention of those of an inferior nature. We do 
not profess to be wine makers or wine experts, but we have the 
highest respect for those who are, and we are glad to have Mr. 
AVetmore criticise our scientific work wherever it comes in con- 
flict with the well-established principles developed bj- practice. 

•' If we should have auj- criticism to make of Mr. Wetmore's 
position, it would be of a very complimentary nature, for it is 
very difficult for him to see an}' good which could result from 
the publication of any data aftecting injuriously the character of 
even a few samples of California wines, a very small part of the 
industr}' to which he has so enthusiastically devoted his life and 
talents." 

CLEA-RLg STATED. 

To my mind the only solution of the license ([uestion is to 
find out what is constitutional — what is best for the state — what 
makes character. I maintain that all sumiituaiy laws are un- 
constitutional — that personal libeity is the foundation of our 
Government — that prohibition is impossible, and makes liars, 
sneaks and thieves ; that it would injure the populace bj' encour- 
aging the use of liquors that can be stowed away in small bulk 
and discouraging the use of light wines and beers. Moreover it 
introduces adulterated compounds that create drunkenness and 
disease. High license reduces the number of saloons, raises 
their standard, kills oil' low dives and adds to the school revenue 
whereby civilization is advanced. Sobriety follows intelligence. 
The saloon will remain in jiolitics as long as fanatics attempt to 
destroy a legitimate industry. Stop legislating against alcohol, 
and the saloon will regulate itself. Make voters honest, and, 
though every shop sold liquor, there would be no political power 
outside of individual conscience. — Kate Field. 



PATE/NTS, TRADE-MA-RKS, ETe. 

TIh' tDllowiii;; list lit reifiit imtfiils and traclu-inuiks iif intua'st to our patrons 
is leporti'd by Wni. 0. Henderson, Solicitor of Ainurican and foreign patents and 
tnule-m»rli.s, Norria Hnildinc .Wl I'" street, VVaBhinfjton, U. C, A copy of any nf the 
United States patents will he fnrnislied hy liim for L'.') eents. 

I.SSIIE OK Makch I'J, 1SU5. 
5M..5()t'i— Mt'tallie barrel or pnekaj;e, G. Walerson, Koehester, jMich. 
Sli'i.'ltl'J — Bottle-eiosiiit^ deviee, L. N. Thomas. Cineilinatt. 
53.'i,5.'i4-Non-lillahle bottle, .1. H. Iteeland, New York City. 
.51J.'),.'J.50 — Uottle-8topj)ir V. '['. Itobinson, UIiieaj;o. 

.5;i5,y.')0— Autoinatie self ineasuriiii; apparatus lor lir|uids, A. Bowser, Fort Wayne, 
Indiana. 

TRADK-MAnKS. 

20,217— Whisky, William Endemauu, New York Cily. Essential feature— The word 
'• Dictator." 

IssuK OF March IS, IS'J.'i. 
."jolj, lljl — Covered fasteninir device, C. E, Van Norman, Springfield Mass, 

TKAUK-MAHK.S. 

2G,24.>— Whisky, W. H. Jones A Co., Boston, Maes. Essential feature-The word 
" Hanover." 

2G,24fi— Whisky, Will. Endemann, New Y'ork City. Essential feature— The represen- 
tation of an iniiierial crown pai-tially enclosed by two palm bi-ancbes tied 
at, the bottom hv a sti-earner bearing the motto, " Palman Qui Meruit 
Ferat." 

Issue of March 2(S, 1.S95. 

,')36,:jSS— Bottle-cap. W. H. Nortlmll, F.vansville. Ind. 

.586,573— Bottle stand. F. W. I, Knuschke, Providence, H. I. 

.5,)6,214— Valve lo prevent re-Hlliiu; of Bottles, A. C. Kuster and W. Hupohen, Can- 
arsie and lirooklvu. New Y'ork. 

536.,'jf)7— Attachment for faucet bunss. .J. W. Griffin. Red House, N. Y. 

SSii.aae— Filter, W. B. Lind-,ay, W. E. Toniier and .\. LowmiUer, .Steub;nville, Ohio. 

536,.'>03—Beer-filteriii!; apparatus, W. Albaeh, Hoclist-on-Main. Germany. 

33B,34(5 — IVIanufaeture of crypto-malt, C. L. Hart, Shelbyville, 111. 

TRADE-MAKKS. 

26,276 — Ale, True W. Jones, Brewini; Company, Manchester, N. H. Essential feat- 
ure—The representation of a mountain goal and the words "Bock Ale." 

26,277 — Malt liquors, Bartels Brewing Company, Syracuse, N. \'. Essential feature 
A diamond-shaped frame or border inclosing a crown and a letter ** B," 
both of which are surrounded by a hop-vine. 

26,278 — Wines and spirituous li(|uors. California Wine ami Fruit Co., Richmond, Va., 
and Washington, 1). C. Essential feature — The Word *' Winola." 

ISSCE OF Ai'KIL 2, 189.i. 
.536,989— Bottle-tilling machine, W. E. Gallagher, South Framingham, Mass, 
.536.928 — Bottle hand protector, J, Hegeboeck. Davenport, Iowa. 
.■)36. 700 — Bottle-stopper and mount. W. Pearce, Birminghani, England. 
,536.888 — Compound for making eider, P. Nichols, .\lbany. New York. 
536,903- Cover or stopper for milk cans, G. M. Weeks, Newark, N. J. 
536,606— Measuring liiiuids, S. E. Crawford and T. B. Wylie, Allegheny, Pa. 

DoYou Know a Good Thing 

When You Taste It? If so, Try 

DR. HENLEY'S 

Celery Beef & Iron 




H. W. Helms & Co., the California wine dealers and viue- 
yardists, have been succeeded bj- KoTHscnii.n& Hklms, and their 
place of business has been removed from Clay street, to 201 
Powell street, in a location well suited for family trade. 



CELERY for the Entire Nervous System 
BEEF the Greatest Sustenant Known 
IRON to Purify and Enrich the Blood 

For Sale by All Dealers. Price, $1.00 per Bottle 

Celery Beef & Iron Co. 

No. 150 New Montgomery St., S. F. 



26 



fyveifie wijme /jmd spii^iT preview. 



OBITUA-Rg, 



CALVIN W. KELLOGG. 



C. \V. Ki'llogfj, who was one of tlie most familiar lifiurcs in 
the litiuor traih^ uf the Coast. iHoil im tlio I'Jtli inst. aftfi- a sliort 
illuess. Ho was taken down with pnounionia about two months 
a-jo. and as tlic malady progressed, aeute Hriglit's disease set in. 
wliieh ended iu his death. Mr. Kellogg was born in Michigan, 
and was seventy-three years of age. He came to California in 
1854, and after a few yeai's experience in mining lie became con- 
nected with the honse of Fargo & Co. \Vhen Mr. Kargo retired 
from this house the (irm dianged to Wilmerding. Kellogg iS: Co., 
and after a disastrous speculation of Air. Kellogg, it was changed 
to AVilmerding & Co. Mr. Kellogg was connected witli the 
house from that time until liis death, and after the death of J. 
Clute M'ilinerding he succeeded in efl'ecting an arrangement 
with Loewe Uros. l)y which the business continued. Aside from 
liis interest in the li<iuor trade, lie was well known in insurance, 
banking and mining circles, and had had his share of the ups 
and downs of life. He left a widow and three children by a 
former man-iage. The funeral took place from his late resi- 
dence, I20(li> O'Farrell street, on the 14th inst.. and was largely 
attended by the mercantile and banking community. 

P. G. SABATIE. 



Phillippe (;. Sabatie, head of the liouse of P. G. Sabatie & 
Co., and the oldest importer of wines iu this city, died very sud- 
denly of rheumatism of the heart, on the 7th inst. He had suf- 
fered for some years from gout and rheumatism, but tlie last 
attack came almost unawares. 

jMr. Sabatie was born in Libourne. France, sixty-tliiee yeai's 
ago. He ha<l been engaged in the importing business for thirty- 
three years, but of late years he has not paid so much attention 
to im|)orting as to the California wine trade. His ill health also 
prevented his giving much attention to business. 

On tlie loth inst. the funeral services were held at the 
French Church on Hush street, Notre Dame des Victoires, where 
a requiem mass was celebrated for the reiiose of his soul. De- 
cea.sed left one son. who was associated with him in business. 

W. M. GOLLINS. 

W. M. ("ollins. President of the (Jreenbricr Distillery Co., of 
Jjonisville, and head of W. M. Collins & Co., died on the JSth 
ult. at the age of lilty years. Mr. Collins was born in Ireland, 
and came to Kentucky when young, being educated at liai'ds- 
town. He was a soldi(>r in (he Cnion army during the war, and 
after the clo.se of the war he went into distilling. 



T-RA-DE ei-RCULA-RS. 



Fronj J. W. Biles & Go. 



Cincinnati, Ai)ril 1. is'.i.'). 
Paktnkrshii' Xotick. — We beg to advise you that on this 
day the firms of J. W. Biles & Co. and H. Van Nes have been 
consolidated. The linn of H. Van Xe« cea.ses to exist, and a 
new partnership will be carried on under the old firm name of 
J. W. liiles & Co. Mr. A. Wittekind remains with the new firm, 
and has been given an interest in the business. 

Thanking you for favors extended in the jiast, we solicit 
your furlher jialronage, and remain. 

Kesjiectfully. .1. W. Hiiks, 

^ II. Na.n Nios. 

from L. Gandolfi & Go. 



New Youk, JIarch .30, 1895. 
SiK : Please note in your next issue the following imjiorla- 
lions by ns during the fortnight ending this date : 

Per " Nenstria,'' Mar. '2.'!d, XG!) boxes macaroni. Per "Kai- 
ser Wilhelm II.'' Mar. 27, 00 ca.ses Lucca oil, l.":. baskets " Pra " 
checHC. 50 tubs " (iorgonzola " cheese, l.'4 cases " Chianti " wine. 
25 en.se» cognac " Croix Uouge," and .'{50 boxes (ieiioa paste. 
Respectfully, L. Cvnoolki & Co. 



From the Louisville Public Warehouse Gompany. 

Lurisvii.LE, Ky., March !i, |sil.">. 
Tu the W liulofulc \y Itifkij Trade: 

For many yeai's this Company has advocated and pressed 
upon Congress the necessity for some relief from the coni])ulsory 
system of storage in bond uixm the distillery piemises. believing 
it a commercial necessity to the trade — both to the dealer and 
distiller, .\fter a long fight and at great expense we have par- 
tially succeedi'd in so far that transportation iu bond anil storage 
in general bondeil warehouses ai'c now permitted, although un- 
der regulations and conditions greatly detrimental to the com- 
plet<' and |iiactical operation of tin' measure — we refer to the 
unfortunate |)rovision n(|niring the distiller's signature to the 
li'ansportatioii and warehousing bontl.and his continued respon- 
sibility re(|iiired — and wc beg to explain that in this particular 
the bill was originally properly drafted, [iroviding that the own- 
er or the distiller was to sign, and that at the last iiKuiient, while 
the bill was in the hands of the conference committee, and loo 
late for the fact to become known to us, the word " owner " was 
unfairly and surreptitiously stricken out. 

As the matter now stands we have bonded our largest and 
best house, fronting on Main street, immediatelj' east of the Gait 
House, in the very center of the city, accessible to every whole- 
sale whisky hou.se within a radius of two blocks, yet with com- 
plete railroad connection to warehouse doors, and having a 
capacity of 22,000 barrels. 

The house is built upon the rack iilaii liut slightly dift'ereut 
from the average distillery warehouse, being much stronger and 
the racks wider apart, thus allbrding a better ventilation. Our 
location being convenient to visitors, an inspection is invited. 
We are prepared to e(|ualize all the advantages of storage on the 
distillery premises by making a storage rate of five eent.s per 
barrel per month or fraction thereof, to guarantee the outage on 
first-class cooperage, and can quote an insurance rate of So cents 
per §100, and furthermore, a majority of the local baukenj 
being interested with us, liberal advances can be readilj- 
negotiated. 

In addition to this we offer the advantage of better and 
quicker shipping facilities, a receipt of a third iinlependent party 
not interested in similar whisky of same age and brand iu com- 
petition, as the distiller often is, and a receipt that is recognized 
and accepted at all monej' centers, generally a lower rate of in- 
surance, and the further advantage of frequent and actual in- 
spection liy interested parties. INlany of the dealers now con- 
tracting for goods stipulate the i)rivilege of transportion in bond 
should they .see fit. 

To the distillei', as he is compelled to sign the bonds, we are 
prepared to oiler our iiidemuifyiug bond in any amount, to fur- 
nish all sureties, and in fa(^t, to protect him as far as is in our 
l>ower. For his own use we oH'er extra space when his own 
warehouse capacity is exhausted, either by a regular arrangement 
for storage or hy lease of .so much of any of our warehouses as 
he may need. 

At the next session of Congress an earnest elTort will be 
made to relieve the distiller of the responsibility of signing the 
bonds, and we solicit your co-op<'ration and aid in this regard. 
Correspondence solicited. Kespcct fully. 

W. G' Coi.nKWKV. President. 



Fron? Nicholas Rath & Co. 



New Yohk, April ('.. 1S05. 

Dkae SiK: Referring to the line blends of Cragganmore 
Glenlivet whiskies shipped iu cases by Messrs. .James Watson \ 
Co., Dundee, and the celebrated .John l^mith Glenlivet whisky iu 
casks, we beg to remind you that we are sole I'nited States 
agents. 

The Messrs. Watson are the largest holders of whisky in 
(Jreat Britain, and that they stand unrivalled as blenders and 
bottlers is shown by the fact of their lirauds being for sale in all 
the most prominent establishments in the trade in J^ondmi. 
and throughout the Hi-itish provinces. To those who wish to 
obtain Scotch whisky in perfection, we can guarantee that when 
they order " Watson " tliei-e will be no disappointment. 

^â–  ours sincerely, Nk-uolas Kaim vSl Co. 

â– Always meet trouble square in the face. The bird that goes 
with the wind is always rullled, within and without, while the 
bird that faces the wind always has smooth feathers. 



f/eifie WIJ^JE /:|vJD Sflf^lT f^EVIEW. 



27 



Fron) E. H. Taylor, Jr., & Sons (Incorporated.') 

Frank I'OKT, Ky.. March .">, 1S9.5. 

This corporation lias on storage witli tin- Isxport Storage 
Company, Cincinnati, a limitcil anionnt of •■ OhI Tayh)r " wliis- 
kies — six, seven and eigiit yeai's ohl. 

None of tiiese whiskies iiave ever been exported. 

The tax on the same was paid at the expiration of the 
honded period of each, respectively, and tiie whiskies shipped to 
tiiesaid export company direct by the distiller. 

Tiie whiskies are ranking wiiiskies in ([uality, are splendidly 
matured, being seven, eight and ten degrees above Drool", and 
ali'ord the tirst-class trade of the country an opportunity of se- 
curing the best of all whisky at reasonable prices. 

1^. IT. T.wi.oR, Jr., & So.vs (Inc'd). 

K. H. T.WI.OR, Jr., Pi-emlent. 

P. S. — These whiskies are far superior to any that have 
been exported and returned. 

WELL KNOWN NAPA~VmEYARDS. 



The C'dl. of recent date, contained the following description 
of the vineyards of Ueringcr. Scliram. I'arrott and Nicbauin, in 
the Napa Valley : 

" Log Jltriiianon, the winery and distillei'y of the Hcringer 
Bros., with the 200 acres of viuej^ard and the Reringers" beauti- 
ful homes, touches the corporate limits of l^t. Helena. The Be- 
ringers spent their boyhood on the Rhine, and brought a practi- 
cal knowledge of wine-makiiig with them to this State, where 
they manufacture wines and brandies that are acknowledged 
among the best the world over. The correspondent visited the 
spacious cool grotto under the big hillside, a mammoth wine 
cellar with tunnels branching from it. It has a storage caj)acity 
of half a million gallons. There were casks upon casks of the 
products of Xapa"s sun-kissed vineyards, labeled for shipment 
to Eugland, Mexico and .Japan. All of the hogsheads and bar- 
rels at Los Hermnuos are of long, oval shape. l\Ir. Beringer 
explained that the wine was improved in tlavor bj' thus having 
the contact of more wood surface. The residence of Fritz Be- 
ringer, the senior member of the firm, is the most artistic home 
in the valley, not excepting the home of the late Tiburcio Par- 
rot, near by. Both places are beautiful. Beringer's home is filled 
with curios picked up in foreign travel and souvenirs of celebri- 
ties in art, music and literature the world over. 

" Immediately adjoining the Beringer estate is the celebrated 
(iiey!<lone H'iiie Cellar, built by \V. B. Bourn, whic^h is the larg- 
est cellar under one roof in the world. This place, with a capa- 
city of 3.000.000 gallons, with its five immense grape pres.ses, 
each one of which presses 100 tons per day during the vintage 
season, is now controlled by the Wine Association. 

'• Tlie Mountain Vini'ijanl and wine cellar of Jacob Schram is 
just a few miles up the road toward Calistoga. The beautiful 
place and the kindly master and mistress are ! uown far and 
wide. 

" Inf/lenool-, Captain C. Niebaum's place, is at Rutherford, 
the pretty little station four miles down the Xapa City highway. 
Captain S'iebaum, late Russian Vice-Consul to San Francisco, is 
a member of a large seal and fur company, so to him wine mak- 
ing is a pleasant diversion. Ilis wine cellar at Inglenook is one 
of the finest in interior furnishings in tiiis country. Everj' cask 
and utensil is clean and polished. Captain Niebaum does not 
permit his wines to go upon the market until they are three 
years old. and the demand for the Inglenook braiids exceeds the 
supply. The country home that was Tiburcio Parrotfs, with its 
great madrono trees standing like sentinels to jircitect the wealth 
of flowers and vines, is a titling monument to the artistic, beau- 
ty-loving soul that has passed away. Here 300 varieties of roses 
scatter their petals over a carpet of the fragrant violets which 
should have borne the name of their cultivator. It is a charm- 
ing place, with its many orange ti"ees, and outlying vineyards, 
and olive orchards, tiic wine cellars containing thousands of 
gallons of the best vintage, and the well-eiiuipped olive plant, 
which is supplied with the latest Freni-h inventions. Only the 
product of the home ranch, three and a half tons was pressed 
into oil this season, which yield resulted in 175 gallons first- 
grade olive oil. 

" Childhood's happy hour " is balanced by many an hour of 
real distress. an<l the five-year-old who announced in a moment 
of gloom that '' this world isn't much better than an old shanty, 
anyhow," is not without occasional sympathy from very many. 



NATIONAL WINE AND SPIRIT ASSOCIATION. 



order 01 business at the annual meet- 
aiid ,'>|)irit Association, held at St. 



The following was the 
ing of the X.itional Wim 
Nicholas Hotel, St. I.ouis. on .Vpril liltli and l"tli : 

Tuesday, .\pril Kith, Morning — The meeting was called 
to order on Tuesday morning. April Kith, in the Banquet Hall 
of the St. Nicholas Hotel, St. Louis, at 10 o'clock A. m.; address 
of the President, Mr. 1. W. Hernheim, of Louisville, Ky.; routine 
business : address. " The Relation of Manufacturers and Ven- 
dors of Alcoholic Stimulants to Society," (ieo. (i. I5rowu, of 
liouisville. Ky.; address, "The Relations of the Trade to Poli- 
tics and the Community," Cliarles McK. Leoser, Jr., of New- 
York. 

Tuesday Afternoon, 3 v. m. — Executive session. 

Wednesday Morning, April 17th, 10 o'clock. Unfinished 
business : election of ofiicors ; selection of place of meeting for 
next year. Wednesday Evening. — Banquet. 



The Board of Supervisors of SLskiyou county have passed 
a new- ordinance raising the li(iuor liceii.se to 8100 a yi^ar, paya- 
ble in advance. The people voted at the last election to have 
the license raised, and the Supervisors complied with their wish 
by raising it §40, it being 8i;o heretofore. This will make an 
income to the countv of about 8G000 from the saloons. 



MERCANTIL 
81 < 

t^ERlGAN 




MERCANTILE aCMANGe VAULTS. 
81 89. amUDSOHST. 




It cures Colds, Neuralgia, 
Headache and all Malaria 
Troubles. 

It stands on its Merits. 



The most successful compound. 

The most reliable and the best 
Family remedy in the World 

Try it and be convinced. 



/PREVENTsl'W' 

^ AND \ 

URES 



V£OLD/ 



DI5TILLED0NLY BY 

QUININE-WHISKY C? 

' 1 . L0U1SVILLE,KY. ^ ' 



It is Pleasant to take, the Bitter Taste of the Quinine is Disguised. 

1V» a Sticcesi Wlwrencr Introduced. 

Sold BY MANiFArriREn and Bottled only by 

l.iiiuor Dealers, Druggists and Grocers. QUININC WHISKY CO. 

Special Terms to mioleattle Dealers. 



28 



f/ceifie WIJSIE /rJMD SflF^IT f^EVlEW. 



KOLB & DENH ARD 



OLD NONPAREIL 

BOURBON AND RYE WHISKIES. 
CALIFORNIA 

WINES and BRANDIES, 

OFFICE AND VAULTS 

4S0-4S6 Mo\Ti;oMKny ST.. s.i\ Fn.tycjsco. 

TELEriiOXE No. 5U'JC. 




SPECIAL BOTTLING 

We Makk a SrwiAi.Tv of 

Clarifying & Bottling Wines 

I'OU THE 

TRADE AND CONSUMER 

BEST lACILlTlES — Fl KST-(JLASS WOIIK 

f/yif- Prloen ReaKimahlc. "ittiH 



CHICKASAW COOPERAGE CO. 



MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE. 



-3>IjPs.ISrXJFjPs-CXUK.E:- 



Circled Headina and Jointed Staves; aiso Shocks of aii 
Kinds for Brandy, Wine, Whisky and other Barrels. 



We solicit oi-cUts from responsible parties who want goods in our line, of tiiiiicrior (lualitv and w()rknianslii|) 










T"' If- "I ' i r r 






MM^-^m-Uhm^r 



'/-C.-l^ — ' « r mi> _mL-Jt;miti i inn — inr 



50a(ALirO[2NIA6T. 
£)aivF'ratici6Co 



Nature's Remedy for Stomach and Kidney Troubles. 



HUlVIBOliDT HIHERAli WATER. 



It ri'licvcH Dyspepsia at oncp and acts Hiilcnili.lly in 
cnsrs of i-illuT Kidiioy or Liver troiililos. 

Tlic I,ciiioiiaiU' made from tliis water is inisiiri)assci1. 
Ah a tat>le water it lias no oqnal. 



"Hnnilioldt Water dilTers from many natural mineral 
waters in tlie fait that it does not (•.)ntain a single nijnrioiis 
inpredient." W. D. Johnston, M. I>., 

I'mfessor of Chemistry, Toxieohiny, etc., 
Cooper Medical Collejte. 




Office and Depot: No. 40 THIRD STREET, SAN FRANCISCO. 



Tki.ki-iiume 5822. 



PAeipie WIJME /c^Q SflF^IT J^EVIEW 



29 



Prices Current. 



Those are the hm^ piioos. The rate of 
discount on pnrelmBes of a eonsiderabUr 
quantity, can be learneil by appylinj; to 
the agents or dealertn. We urgently re- 
quest dealers, ftixents and produi'errt to 
notify UB when a change neenrs in tht- 
Iiri(H'> cniTtMit of the i;oods they handU\ 

California Wines &. Brandies 

[The Prices ijiveii are for quartBaiul pints, 
put up in eases of twelve and twenly- 
iour t)ottles.| 

J. GUNDLACH & CO., 
Cor. Second & Market Sts. San Francisco. 
Pricks Per case, 
quarts. pints. 

Traminer, 82 t ii.OO }; fi.OO 

(iutedel. Sa COO 7.00 

Buririindy, S4 6.00 7.00 

Zinfandel 83 5.00 6.00 

KOLB & DENH.\RD, 
420-4 26 Montgomery st.. San Francisco. 
Per Case. 

Hock };?.00 

Kiesliin; 3.50 

Guledel 4.00 

Sauterne 4.00 

Saulerne, 1885 5.00 

Claret 2.50 

Zinfandel 3.00 

Calieruet 3.50 

Burgundy 4.00 

Port.lSW 7.00 

Port, 1SS7 5.50 

Sherry 5.00 

Cognac, 1SS5 10.00 

KOHLER & FROHLING. 

601 Folsom Street, San Francisco. 

Riesling t 4.00 * 4.50 

Hock.." 3.50 4.00 

Gutedel 4.50 5.00 

Sauterne 4.50 5.00 

Zinfandel 3.75 4.25 

Zinfandel. old 4.50 5.00 

Burgundy 4.00 4.50 

SuperiorPort 10.00 

Sherry 7.50 

Angelica 6.00 

Muscatel 6.00 

Itfadeiia 6.00 

Malaga 6.00 

U^andy 10.00 



INOLENOOK WINES. 

Agency. 101 Front street. San Fran 
Talile'ciaicl hlciuled tron, 

choice foreign grapes, 

vintage 1800.. 

Zinfandel 

Extra Tahle Claret, Medoc 

type red label, l.S.sy 

Burgundy, LSSS. Reserve 

Stock 

San t erne dry,Sanyig'n Vert '86 
Guledel, Chaeselas Vert, 18,S'J 
Hock. Klienish type *' 

Burger, Chablis tyjte 
Hiesling, Johannisherg type 

18XH 

Pints of two do^^enfl per ease addit 

None genuine except bearing seal o 

brand of the proprietor. 



â– ,00 



4..W 

5..'>0 

.S.OO 
5..'>0 
4..')0 
6.00 
5..')ll 

6..'>0 
ional. 
r cork 



CAL. WINE GliOWEIiS' UNION. 
Cor. Sutter and Grant ave. San Francisco. 

KI. QUITO VINEYAHP. 

Riesling » 3.00 

Claret 3.00 

FREteNO VINKYAKD CO. 

Burger t 3.50 

Claret 3.50 

Port 5.50 

Angelica 5.50 

Sherry .5..50 

Cognac Brandy 10.00 

ST. HUBERT VINEYARD. 

Claret, Cabernet t 8.00 

Sauterne 8.00 

Cognac 12.00 



* 4.00 
4.00 

« 4.50 
4.50 
6.50 

6. .50 
11.00 

t 9.00 
9.00 
13.00 



NAPA VALLEY WINE COMPANY. 

11 and 13 First Street, San Francisco. 

SiiKKWooi) iS: SiiEuwoon. Agents. 
212-il4 Market strcel, San Francisco, 

Hock, green label t 3.00 * 4. 

Hock, black label 3,.')0 4, 

Gutedel 4.00 5 

Riesling 4..W ."i 

Cabernet 4.M 5 

Burgundy 4.t)t) .'», 

Zinfandel 3..'iO 

Claret, Idaek label 3.IW 

Claret, red label 2.75 

Private Stock Hock 5.00 

ElCcrrito.,.. 9 00 

Sauterne 8.00 

Claret 5. (I 

" " Burgundy 7.00 

Vine Cliff.... 12.00 

Sherry 4..50 

Port 4..50 

Angelica 4. .50 

Tokay 4,50 

Muscatel 4 .50 

Madei'-a 4..50 

Brandy Crown* 10.00 

• ■• 12.00 

•• • * 15 00 

•• ' • • » » 18.00 



C. CARPY & CO. 

511-517 Sacramento street, San Francisco 



I. De TURK. 

220 Sacramento st. and 221 Commercial 

St., San Francisco. 

Quarts. 

Cognac Brandy, XXXX $10.00 

XX 9.00 

Tentuiier Port 5.50 

Trousseau Port, No. 1 4 00 

Dry Sherry, Private Stock. 5 50 

" Superior 4.00 

Angelica, Old Selected Stock 4.00 



La Loma, Grand Medoc. . . .$ 7.00 

Burgundy 5.00 

Zinfandel 3..50 

Sauterne 5.00 

Riesling 4.00 

Sweet Muscatel, 1882 9.00 

Sherry, 1882 9.00 

Port, 1882 8.00 

Cal. Rochelle Brandy 12.00 



? .S.OO 
6.00 
4.. 50 
6.00 
5.00 
10.00 
10.00 
9.00 
13.00 



Muscatelle " 




. 4.00 


Malaga 




. 4.00 


Madeira 




. 4.00 


Tokay, best, Old Selected 


Stock... 


. 6.00 


Tokay, 


" 


. 4.50 


Haut Sauterne 


" 


. 5.00 


Riesling. " 


'» 


. 3 50 


Gutedel, 


** 


. 3.50 


Hock 


• ' 


. 3.00 


Cabernet, "Grand Vin" 


'* 


. 5.0O 


Burgundy " " 


• * 


. 4.50 


Zinfandel Claret, Selected Claret. . . 


. 3.50 


XX Claret, 


" .. . 


. 3.50 


Claret, 




. 2.75 



SAN GABRIEL WINE CO., 
Ramona, Los Angeles county. Cal. 

Riesling $ 4.75 J5.75 

Gutedel 4.75 5.75 

Port 5.50 

'Angelica 5.50 

Muscatel 5.50 

Sherry 6.00 

Brandy, 1882 12.00 

LOS GATOS & SARATOGA WINE CO. 
1227 Broadway, Oakland. Cal. 

Zinfandel $ 3..50 $1.50 

Sauterne 4.00 5.00 

Brandy 9.00 

Port 5.00 6.00 

Sweet Muscatel 5.00 6.00 

Grape Cordial 6.50 7.50 

GEORGE WEST & SON, Stockton, Cal. 
Brandy, 1879 $20.00 



Brandy, 1883 15.00 

Drandy, 1885 1,5.00 

Frontignan 9.00 

Sheirv 9.00 

Port "(old) 12.00 

Poll 8.00 .... 

S. LACHMAN & CO., 
4.53 Brannan street, San Francisco. 

Old Port $7.00 $8.00 

Zinfandel 3..50 4.0(1 

Riesling 4. .50 5.00 

Madelr.i8 8.00 

Malaga 8.00 

Cognac 14.00 

JOSEPH MELCZER A CO.. 
.504 and 506 Market street, San Francisco. 

Claret, 1886 $:i 00 

Zinfandel. 1885 3..50 

Burgnndv, 1885 4.00 

Hock, 1885 3.,5U 

Riesling. 1.8.85 4.00 

Riesling, Johannisberger, 1884 5.00 

Guiedel, 1.8-S4 5.00 

Somlai Hungarian Type,1885 3.50 

Szatmari " ** '• 3.50 

SzegszaidiFeherllun'Type" 4.00 

1885 5.00 

Port, 1884 6.00 

Sherry, 18.85 5.00 

" 1^84 6.00 

Angclicaand SweetMout'n,84 4.50 

Mad'a. Malaga A Sw't To'y'85 5.00 

Brandy, 1883 12.00 

1885 10.00 

MONT ROUGE WINES. 

A. G. Cbauche Livcrmoie, 

Office and Depot, 01.5-617 Front St., S. F 

Quarts 

Burgundy $ 9.00 

Chablis 9.00 

Claret, Retourd'Europe 9.00 

Jurangon, Favorite wine of 

Henri IV, King of France 8.00 

Haut Sauternes 7.00 

Sauternes 6.00 

Light Sauternes ,5.00 

Claret Grand Vin 6.00 

Table Claret 4.00 

Zinfandel 3.00 

$1.00 additional for pints. Red and 
white wines in bulk at all prices. 

L,J.ROSE& CO., LTD. San Gabriel, Cal 

Port, 1873, 1 doz. qts. in case $15.00 

'• 1876. 12.00 

â– ' 1882, â– ' " " 9.00 

" 1886, 7.50 

Sherry, 1882, 1 doz i|ts. in case 9.00 

1886, " 'â–  7,.50 

.\ngelica, 1882, 1 doz. c)ts. in case. . . 9.00 




Tie Gelettil Gtiampion Glevelaon 

BEEl^ pump 



Beer Supplies, Pumps, 
Etc., Etc. 



20a ELLIS STREET, CITY. 
Tei.ephonk 30.86. 

') Pacific ComI Branch, HARRY WENDT, Mgr 



H. L. REA & CO. 

INTERNAL REVENUE BROKERS, 

All kinds of huhine^s ap|>frlaininf; to the Internal Jvcveiuie Department 
attended to with promptness. 

423 WASHINGTON STREET, 
Tki.kimioni: 17.57. SAN FRANCISCO. 



30 



f/eifie WipJE /JSIE) Sflf^lT F^EVIEW. 



I 



^111 mW, BOXES AT THE m ST.l\"D, 

314 SPEAR ST., SAN FRANCISCO. 

Hobbs, Wall an^ Co., 

Manufaciiireis of Eveni Tarlely of 

BOXES. 

All kinds of Boxes on hand and made to order with 
promptness. Wine and Liquor Cases a Specialty. 



Redwood Cargoes Sawed To Order. 



A M.M.rAf, J'.an;ii;iT. 



Jt. .\. Mi:i;i:iAM, Suporlnlumlrat. 



Los Gatos & Saratoia Wiiie Go. 

PRODVCERS OF CHOICE 

WINES and BRANDIES 

MUSCAT, HOCK, 

ANGELICA, SAUTERNE, 

ROYAL NECTAR, OLDPOR"^. 

ZINFANDEL, GUTEDEL. 

SHERRY, RIESLING, 

FROM FOOTHILL VINEYARDS. 

TIXFYMII'S AMI (1:1.1, AI;S: 

Los Gatos and Saratoga, Santa Clara Co., Cai. 

Branch Office: 1233 Broadway, Oakland, California. 



Geo. Kammkkkk. 



Otto B Schmikdeu. 



TQ'KHLQN. 



WINE COMPANY. 



W11'>1.KSAI,E AM) KETAir, 



|^i(^t7-(irad(^ U/ir^i^s of pb5olut(^ purity 

I'iKKlT FKOM 

H. W. CRABB'S Famous Vineyard "TO-KALON." 

Loc.aU'd .'it Oakvii.i.e, Napa Co., California, 

Siipiilii F<iiiiil!i Tables. OUR specialty. 

I'rivate Cellars Furnished. 

Goods sliippcd to any part of the United Stales oi- the American 
Continent j^enerally. 

Export to Europe. Coriespondeuce Respeetfully Solicited. 

Office and Depot: 1372 MARKET ST., San Francisco. 



p. O. Box 2245. 



Telephone No. 310. 



nOHNS & KALTENBACH 




CALIFORNIA WINES and BRANDIES. 



FIXE 
TABLE WINES 
A SFECIAITl 



OFFICE AND CELLAliS 

SAN FJtVNClSCO. 



Lachman & Jacobi 



â– DEALERS IN- 



Galifornla Wines anil Bianilies, 

BRYANT AND SECOND STREETS, SAN FRANCISCO. 



Eastern Agents' 

EDINGER BROS. & JACOBI, 

Cor. Dover & Pearl Sts., Brooklyn Bridge Store No 2, N. Y 



ESTABLISHED 



LOf/lA Ppl^TA uUlVlp^p CO. 

-SUCCESSORS TO- 

aat^tsoitat^ilXjE! ivn. &c L. CO. 

Have CoiiHtuiitly <>ii HaiuI a Full Siipi'ly 
of the Followlnj:; Sizes of 

2x2--4 Feet Long, 2x2--5 Feet Long, 

2x2--6 Feet Long. 

Mhlih II III he sold <il riiistniiihle rules. 



A. Finke's 



J'rotlucer.i of 

CALIFORNIA 

ABSOLUTELY PURE 




1 864 



Widow 



First Premium 

niAIIl'AGNES. 



809 



OFFirE: 

MONTGOMERY ST., l^''"iS!>"^1 



(ioi.D Seal, 

Carte Bi-anche, 

Nonpareil. 



San Francisco. 

Telephooe 5024. 



FINKr<-winoW.S IliT''"'" rreminms for Rest 
MMKtjWIUUWfl c^hfoniia Cham pafrnes awarded 



â– MNfRAHCISCO. 



I'V tlie State Fairs, lS70-y.' and 
wherever exhlhitcd. 



LOMA PRIETA LUMBER CO. 



Liquor Flavors 

WlIiiiiflM H. RUDKIN, 



74 WILLIAM STREET. NEW YORK. 



Loma Prieta, 



Santa Crux Co., Cal. 



GENUINE XX BEADING OIL XX 

Jteduced To $7. HO I'rr Gallon. 

Conds For Sale In California only by 

REDINGTON & CO. 23-27-29 second st., %an francisco 



f/reifie WiJVJE /VJMD Sfif^lT f^EVIEW. 



31 



I L. J. lUwc A Co., Sail Oabiiel, Continued) 
Antfi'lica, ISSIi. 1 tloz. qls. in unso. .. fT.M) 
Jliisi'ali'l, lS.v.>, 1 iloz. qls. in case. . . 'J.IIO 
l*si>. •• •' •• ... 7.5U 

Tokav, l>vS2. I lioz. ((ta. in case .... i) 00 

■' ' issd. " ■■ '• '.:>(.) 

.Miutelra, lSS'.i. I tloz. qts. in catiU.... U.IH) 

l.>lSli, •■ •• '• .... ".Ml 

liianclv. issi, '• " " .... l.i.ili) 

" ■ l^SO. " •• " .... 10.00 

/infanilel, ISOO, I cloz >ils. in casu. . 4.ra) 

" 2 •• pis. " .. ."i.OO 

niirKor, IMOO, 1 <l,.z. ijls. in i-asu 4.00 

■• i " Ills. •' .S.OO 

.\il llie tore^iiiinj; vinlaiit's ure truu t«i 
n;une aiul »;;t'. as inilicniect on labi-l. Wc 
uiiaranlt'f IlieabsolnU' purity of i-vory bi>l- 
tU- of wiiiL- anil bi-aiuly put up by us. 



St. Julien 18SI 9.00 

St. Julicu 1SS7 U..')0 

St. KsU'phc 1S,S1 y.oo 

Clmlcau ilu (iallan, 1881.... 1().,')0 

1ST8 

le Pain, ISTC U.M 

rontct Caiift, 18S? ViM) 

1881 1,'i.OO 

CbnI. lleyihtvellf, 1.S81 Ki.OO 

Clialenu Lajiranfje, 1878 'JiOO 

dial Brown Canteiiae, l'S74. M'^.M 

CliaU'nu Lauyoa IS. ml 

1874 ^4.00 

187.S 21.00 

Luovillu, 1878 -U.W 

L«i<i8e, 1.S74 24.50 

Lafitc, 1874 20.00 

Mai-fiaux, 1874 20.00 

Latour, 1870 oi.OU 



Bitters. 



(H. Cuvillier .<: fiere, Bordeaux.) 



C. \V. ABBOTT >4 t'O. 

.^XOOSTIK.V lllTTKH.'i. 

Tbe.Jolin T. Cnllini;Co., A.ucnts, 
San FraiK'isco. 

I ine ease 2 doz. pints fl.i.UO 

•iiie-lialf ease I doz. pinis . . 7. .511 

Imported Wines. 

IIELL.MAXN BROS. i»; CO., 
525 Front street, San Franciseo. 

SHERRIE.':. 

Forrester & Co., Jerez, in 

wood, per gallon $ l..iO $5.00 

lorrester * Co., Jerez, per 

case 12.00 lli.OO 

Ciarvey & Co., Jerez, in 

wood, per gallon 1.75 5.00 

PORTS. 

Olllev Sl.75 to la.OO 

(iilley, per case ?12 00 

W. B. CHAPMAN. 
12:1 California street, San Francisco. 

RED WINES. 

iBartou it Guestier, Bordeaux.) 

Quarts. Pints. 

Floirac $ 7.50 ? 8.50 

I'auillac 9.50 

Chateau Lacroix 8.00 9.00 



Panillac, IS89 0.00 10, 

18S1 ll..')0 12 

Cliateau Bataillev, 1881 17..5fl 18. 

Clial. Kirwau, 1.8'78 20.00 21 

Chat. Cos d'Esloiiniel, 1878. 28.l)(l 

Clialeau I.atour, 18(W SO.OO ol.OO 

Chat. I.arose, 1870 24.00 

" Beychcville. 1874 25.00 

Chateau Talbot d'Aux, 1875 24.00 25.00 

Cliateau Leoville, 1.889 Ifi..'i0 

Latour, 186,8 30.00 SI. 00 

dial. Poutet Cauet, 1874.... 23.00 

Chat. Piclion Longneville 

1870 ' 2S.0O 24.00 

Chat. Clieval Blanc, 1889 ... 14.00 

St. Elnilion Supcrieur 10.00 

(Du Vivier A Co., Bordeaux.) 

St. Alarc ? 7 00 * SO 

Poutet Canet 11.00 12.00 

( IT. A C. Balaresque, Bordeaux) 

Chateau de Frauds 9 00 10.00 

WHITE WINES. 

(Barton & Guestier, Bordeaux.) 

Sauterne8l87S 9.25 10.25 

Vin de Graves, 1878. 10.50 IL.TO 

Barsac, 1878 11.00 12.00 

Haul Sauternes, 1874 17.50 18.50 

La Tour Blauebe, 1874 22.00 23,00 

Chateau Yquem, 1884 30 50 31.50 

Chateau Y<|uem, 1874 36.00 

(H. Cuvillier & frere, Bordeaux.) 

Sauternes 12.00 13.00 

Chateau Giraud, 1884 28.00 29.00 

LaTourBlanche'84 28.00 29.00 
(Du Vivier A Co., Bordeaux.) 

Graves premieres ?9.00 ?10.00 



CAUirOUNIAN — REU WINES. 

I A. Duval). 

liurguiidv. 1889 5,00 0.00 

Cabernet Sauvignon, 1890... 5,00 0.00 

CALIKOKNIA— WlllTK WINKS 

(A. Duval;, 

liiesliug, 1889 4,.'jO 5,, Ml 

Chablis, 18.88 5.00 11.00 

Saulerne, 1.8.89 5.1111 (l.iio 

Creme de Sauterne, 1889. 

(private stock) 7.50 8.50 

ITIiOUNDIKS — ItEl) WINES. 

(Bouchard pere it tils, Beaune Cole D'Or.) 

Macon, 1884 10.50 11.50 

Pnmmard, 1S,S4 12.50 VltM 

1881 13.75 

Closde Voufreol, 1887 (Mono- 
pole) 20.00 21.00 

Cham bertiu 1884 21.50 22.50 

(Bouchard pere it tils, Beaune, Cote D'Or) 

Chablis, 1884 \l.M 12..50 

Chablis, '84(H.C. it F., bot- 
tled here) 10..')0 U..50 

HOCKS. 

(S. Friedborig, Mayencc.) 

Laulwnheimer, 1889 .? 9..50 *10..50 

Nieisleiner. 1889 IO..'iO W.M 

Hochheimer, 1NS6 14.01) 15 00 

Liebfraumilch, 1889 14 .W 15..'iO 

Geiscuheiincr, 1S86 14..W 15..')0 

Rudesheinier, 1884 17.00 18 00 

Liebenfraumilch, 1889, " Se- 
lected Grapes " 17.00 18.00 

liauenthaler, 1884 21.00 22.00 

Hochheimer Dom Deehaney, 

1884 22.50 23 M 

Liebfraumilch, 1876, "Extra 

Quality" 30.00 31.00 

SteiuberseV Cabinet, 1870.... 32.00 .33.00 

(Prince Metteinich's Estate.) 

Schloss Johannisberger, '08 .?45,00 ?4().00 

SPARKLING HOCK. 

(S. Fried borii;, Mayence.) 
Liebfraumilch Brut, 1889 ...$28.00 $30.00 

SIIEKKIES. 

(Sandeman, Buck & Co., .lerez. 

Pemartin Brut 20.00 

Umbrella 21.00 

Amontillado 22.1)0 

PORT.S. 

E. D. dry, 1887 18.00 

L O. fuiitv, 1887 18.011 



WM. WOLFF & CO., 

S29 Market street, San Francisco. 

(DuboB Fieres, Bordeaux.) 

Chateau de risle, in casks.. $95.00 

(Journii Krcres, Bordeaux.) 
Clarets aiitl Saiiterties, per 

case from $7.50 to $30.00 

(F. Chauvenet, Nulls, Cote d'Or.) 

Buifruudy wines $10.00 to $,')2.00 

(Henkell it Co., Mayence.) 

Hock w ines from $8,00 lo $00.00 

(Deinliard it Co., Coblciiz.) 

Hock and Moselle wines $8.01) lo $28,00 

(Morgan Bros., Port .St. Mary.) 
Ports and Sherries in wood, 

per gallon $1.75 to $4.50 

Port and Sherries in cases, 

per case $8.00 to $1.5.00 

(Mackenzie it Co., Jerez.) 
Ports and Sherries in wood 

from $1.75 to $4. .50 



ACHILLE STAUACE. 
70 Pearl street. New York 

ITALIAN WISES. 
UI!I) WINES. 

(Giuseppe Scala. Naples.) 
Lacryma Christi. 12(ils....$ fi..")!) per case 
Falerno, " .... 7.50 * 

Capri. â– ' .... C.'iO 

Capri. 24 pis 7..50 

Moscato di SiracuRa, 12 (|ts 9.00 " 
Vesuvius wine in barrels of 

about 00 gallons 1.05 per gal 

WHITE WINES. 

Tiacryma Cliristi, 12 <|ls $ 7,.50 per case 

Falerno " .... 7.50 
Capri, " .... CW 
Capri, 24 pis 7. ,50 " 

SPARKLING WINES. 

Lacryma Christi, 12 qls $19.00 per case 

24 pis.... 20.50 
(L, Laborel Melini. Florence) 
Cliianii Wine in tlasks with(nit oil 

Cases of 2 doz. qts $12,50 per case 

4 •• pts 14,50 

SHERWOOD & SHERWOOD, 
212-214 Market street, San Francisco. 

ESCHENAUER A CO., BORHEAUX. 

Quarts, 

Medoe $ 7 00 

Merin d'or 7.50 

Bonillae 8.00 

Red Seal 8.00 

SI, Julien superior 9 50 




P. C. ROSSI, 



President — 



-SWISS 



A. SBARBORO, 



A5TI. SONOHA CO., CAL 



PRODUCERS OF FINE 



COLO/Vv 



SCCRETARV 



CALIFORNIA WINES and BRANDIES 

MONTECRISTO CHAMPAGNES 

.NATl U.M.I.Y FF.HMKNTF.I) l.N liOTTLKS) 

Grand Diploma of Honor- Gold Medal Dublin, Ireland, 1892 

Highest Award Genoa, Italy, 1892 Gold Medal Columbian Exp'n, 1 S93 

Gold Medal California Midwinter Fair, 1894 

MAIN OFFICE, 524 MONTGOMERY STREET - - SAN FRANCISCO 
DEPOT AND CELLARS, 109 BATTERY STREET - BETWEEN CALIFORNIA AND PINE STREETS 

Gold Medal Turin, 1 S84 ~K- Highest Award Chicago, 1894 

_ IMl'ORTKR.S OK 

L. GANDOLFI &. CO., Eastern Agents italian wines and produce 

1X9-123 south: fifth; jOs.\/E., NE\x7 ^rOFi-PC 



^iFORS;- 



GO TO 



iJiae 5^oofe ©Y^oriC ar^cj (JXrti^tic ^o% printing 

,-.(3 I^ 1^ WOOD CO. 3i4 '1** B^VTTERY ST., S,^F. 

WHERE NOTHING BUT FIRST-CLASS WORK IS EXECUTED ^-^^-i^-i^_«i^»^ 



32 



l^'ASifie WIJ\'E /rJ^D SflF^lT F^EVIEW. 



W. A. TAYLOR & CO. 

39 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. 



GONZALEZ. BYASS & CO., 
SUVA & COSENS - 
BLANDY BROS, & CO, 
ACKERMAN-LAURANCE, 
WILHELM PANIZZA, 
MARTINI &L ROSSI, 
I. & V, FLORIO, - - 
PETER F, HEERING, - 
REIN & CO, - - - 



SHERRIES 

PORTS 

MADEIRAS 

SPARKLING SAUMUR 

RHINE WINES 



VERMOUTH 

- MARSALAS 

CHERRY CORDIAL 

MALAGAS 



JOSE BOULE, 
A, BRONDUM & SON, 
ROUYER, GUILLET & CO,, 
JOHN JAMESON & SON. Ltd,, 
THE ARDBEG DISTILLERY CO,, 
CHAS, TANQUERAY & CO,, 
MAGNUM BRAND, 
MAGNUM BRAND, 
MAGNUM BRAND, 



TARRAGONAS 

ACQUAVIT 

- BRANDIES 

IRISH WHISKY 

SCOTCH WHISKY 
OLD TOM GIN 
JAMAICA RUM 

ST. CROIX RUMS 
HOLLAND GIN 



ORDERS SOLICITED FOR DIRECT SHIPMENTS. 



SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS IN TERMS, PRICES, ETC. 

Dr\^-Ro\^al 



$21 Per Case, 



QUARTS 



IHni'l In thr I'rirr ri-iiihlrit I'oii. 
The QVAI.irV Is Ihiir. 




$23 Per Case, 



PINTS 



./K lh-vl!,,y.i 




\ I'sed To-lhiif htt Sowc of thv Fittest Winr 

l>i'inhi-rs in Setr Yorh', linstmt 



Th 



a ml l*}tilitt}ri\i}tin. 

Universally recognized as one of the choicest 
DRY SPARKLING WINES OF FRANCE, 

FOR SALE BY 

WINE MERCHANTS & GROCERS. 
TRY IT. 

Wine has been known since 1811, Very largely used both in Europe and England. 

claimed by best Authorities in the World as an Absolutely Pure French 

Sparkling Wine of Remarkable Value. 

TRY IT ONCE. YOU WILL USE NO OTHER. 



Pro- 



SOLE AGENTS W. A. TAYbOR & CO., 39 BROADWAY, N. Y. 



P/eifie WIJME /vjND Sflf^l.T f^EVIEW. 



33 



(Sherwood >% Sherwood, Continuert.) 

White Seal 10.00 

Pontet Canet 11.50 

La Hose 12.50 

Ookl Seal 18.50 

Graves 8.50 

Snuternes 8.50 

Mackenzie's Ports and Sher- 
ries in wood per jjallon 1.75 lo 4.50 
Mackenzie's Ports and Sher- 
ries in cases 10.00 to 14.00 

Hunt. Uoope, Teairne *.^ Go's 

Ports in cases IS.OOto 19.00 

CH.\I!I-ES MEIXECKK & CO. 
314 Sacramento street. San Francisco. 
A. de Luze A Kils, ISordeaux 

Clarets, per ca.*e tS.OO to $28.00 

A. dc Luze A Fils. Bordeaux 

Saulerncs, per case 12.00 to 20.00 

C. Marey it Lii^crBclair.Nuits 

liuri;nndif^. white and 

red, per ca^e l.'i.CO to 'ii.OO 

D. .'*I. Feuerhcerd, Jr.,itCo., 

Oporto, Port wines 

per case Li. 00 to 20,00 

D. .M. Fenerheerd, Jr., A Co., 

Oporto, Port Wines, I 

in wood per cal 2.00 to 5.50 

Dutf Gordon A Co.! Sherries | 

in wood per i:al 2 00 to 5.50 ] 

Laiave A Co. ,Sheri ies Crown 

Brand in W 1.40 to 1.75 

South Side Madeira 2.00 to 2.50 

St. Croix Bum. L. B 5.a0 

Arrack â– lioyal" Batavia 5.00 to 6.00 

Bot)rd A Son, London Dock 

Sherry, per case 12.00 to 15.00 

G. M. Paljstmann Sohn, Main/ 

Ehine Wines per case.. S.50 to 2S 00 
Schulz A Wa;:ner, Frankfurt 

o M Hhine Wines per 

case 11. 00 to 14,00 

\V. A. TAVLOK A CO. 
Jerez de la Fronlera. 

SIIERKIES. 

I'erGal. 
,\-o, 1 r Taldo. full liodied ( s, m 

1 VP Table, very pale \ ' •*^*" 

2 r Full an I round ) , -r. 
â– J VP Very Pale, liiihl, tine ( â–  

:: P Full hodv, soft, rich ) . „- 

:> VP Verv pale, lii;ht. full ( •' '■""' 

4 P Full bodv, old, mellow ) „ ,, 

4 VP Very pale, delicate, dry ? ' -• 

5 P Full body, rich, fruitv ( ., -(, 
5 VP Pale, old, fine ' S" ~ 



6 P Extra full and fruity ) „ -^ 
fi VP Verv fine and mellow ( ' 

7 Anio A.'ClON'TILLAUO, old and 

nut IV 2..s.'> 

s (ILO CLOltOSA, mellow soft. . 3 25 
Bex Superb old Desert Wine.. . 3.35 
10 AMONTILLADO Solera, very 

old andnuttv 4,40 

U QULEN VK'i'OlUA lirand old 

wine 5 65 

SPECHI. WINES. 

Velvet A Clean, sound wine 1.25 

" B Full bodv and rich 1,50 

Special N Sott. full and fine 100 

W Dark, full boily 1.75 

" B ("lean and sound— Flno. . . 1.80 

Seeo Fine, old and dry $1.85 

O S Fine, rich and fruity 3.45 

C N Superb table 3.10 

Corona Delicious and delicate 3,25 

Special S Grand old wine 4,0ii 

Nectar— Fino, N. P. U 4,05 

KHI.NE ,\ND MOSELLE WINES, 

^Vilhelm Panizza, Mayence. 

Per Case, 

Lanbenheimer f8 00 

Diedisheimer 8.50 

Niesteiner 10.25 

Hockheimer 11 50 

Licbfraumilch 13. 'J5 

Foster Jesnitfjarten 13,75 

Kudcsheimer 14,00 

Ebacher 14 75 

Ge.'ienheimer 17.25 

Marcobruiiiier . . 17. .50 

Baunt baler I'J.dO 

Geisenhcim Bothber;; 21 00 

Neisteiiner Behbach 21.50 

Budesheinner Beri; 23,00 

Bulk \\'ines at f. o. b, jirices. 

I'OltTS. 

Silva A Coseus. 

Per Gal. 

T— Tawney SI, 90 

U — Extra full b()dy and rich 2.05 

V T— Very tawney 2.25 

V O T— Very old tawney 2,35 

T P— Extra taw ntv, delicate :;,50 

T P O— Tawnev, Jxlra old 3.10 

BliAXCO— White— Fine While Port, 3,25 
JEWEL— A Specialty, old and mel- 
low 3,5(1 

S O — Superior old 3 85 

EMPEBOR— 30 years in wood, jjraud 

old wine 4.75 

M C E— 1827— Choicest royal 6.35 



Direct shipping orders solicited on the 
most favorable terms. 

TARIIAOONA WINKS. 

Jose Bonle, Tarragonia. 

qrs. A oelB, per Gal. 

* Fine, Clear and smooth $1.15 

BOVAL PUBE JUICE— Full body 

and rich .... 1.25 

TAWNEV POBT-Lifjht color, soft 

and old 1,25 

These wines have luine of the object- 
ionable astrinKency so common in wines 
of this class, and are ab>^olutely pure. 

American Whiskies. 

IIKI.L.MA.NX IIKII.S, ,V: Cd.. 
525 Fi'ont street, San Francisco. 

Blue Grass, per gallon *2,00 to ?;!,.)0 

Boone's Knoll, " 2.40 to 4.50 

SPRUANCE, STANLEY & Co.. 

410 Front street, San Francisco. 

Kentucky Favorite * 3.00 

Extra Kentucky favorite... 3.50 

O. P. T 2.50 

O. K. Old Stock 5.00 

Harries' Old Bourbon 2.00 

Kentucky Favorite, in cases 8..50 

H, O. B. jugs 9.00 

O. F. C jugs 10..50 

African Stomach Bitters, cs. 7.50 

SIEBE BKOS, A PLAGEMAN. 
322 Sansome street, San Franeisi'o. 

K Extra $3..50 to $6.00 

O K Rosedale 2.50 to 3.00 

ilvain 2.75 

Golden Pearl 2.'25 

Marshall 2.25 

Old Family Bourbon 1.75 

Old Bourbon 1.50 

SHEEWOOD A SHERWOOD. 
212-214 Market street, San Francisco. 
Carlisle in bbls. He-imported 

Sprini; '89 per gal $2.50 

Carlisle in bbls. Be-imported 

Spring '86, per gal 3.25 

Keystone Monogram Bye in 

cases, per case 14,25 

Old Saratoga, in cases, per 

case 15.25 

Miiscot Bourbon in bbls per 

gal 2.25 

Robin Hood Bourbon in bbls 

per gal 2.50 



Sherwood Private Stock In 

bbls, per gal 

0. P. S. Sherwood in bbls, 

per gal 

Old Saratoga, in bbls per gal 



3.00 



3,25 
4,00 



JOSEPH MELCZEB A CO. 
.504 and .500 Market street, San Francisco. 
Native Pride, Old Bourbon, 



(per bbl) |ier gallon . 
Old Hip Van Winkle 



$2.50 
2.50 
1.50 



Nevilles Old Bourbon 

kolb^s^ITenhard. 

420-420 Montgomery St., San Franciaco. 

Per gal Per cs. 

Nonpareil |:J.50 $7.50 

Nonpareil A 4.00 9.00 

Noniiareil AA 5.00 12.00 

Canteen 3.5C 8.00 

Canteen O P S 5.00 11.00 

NABER, ALFS A BBUNE. 
323 and 325 Market street, .San Francisco. 



Phipuix Old Bourbon, Al. 

'• OldSt'k 

" Al, 90 pf 

■• OK.UKipf 

" " Pony, Priv Sl'U 

Club House lioni-bon, ()ld. , , 

<!(p|d .'Mcda! Boinbon, lUd pf 

Union Club " â– ' 

Superioi Whisky 

Bli Whisky 

LUit'OKS- In eases, 

Phcenix Bourbon OK, in 56 
Al, •• 
Al,24pts 
A1.48><ipt 

Bock ami Bye W'hisky in 5a 

Bum Punch Extract, in .5s. 

Blackberry Biandy, in 56. 



4,50 6 



$2.75 
3.00 
2.50 
3.50 
4.00 
00 
2.50 
2.25 
1.75 
1.50 

Per Case 
410.50 
7.50 
S.OO 
9.00 
V.50 
8.00 
7.50 



HENCKEN A SCHRODER, 
210 Front stieet, San Francisco. 

Per Gallon, 

Our Favoiilc K ;...$2.75 to $;i..50 

Our Choice a..50 " 3.00 

Paul Jones 2.25 " 2.50 

Star of '76 2.00 

I Old Crown 1,75 " 2 00 

Old Bourbon 1..50 

CHARLES MEl.NECKE A CO., 
I 314 S.icramentii street, San Francisco. 
((^harlcs Meiiiecke A Co., Continued) 
John Gibson Son A Co $2,00 to $4,00 



ESTABLISHED isio. 




^^ 6vEBii^^' 



OVERHOLT 

Pennsylvaiiia Pure Rye WHisKey 

•The - Finest - in - the - World." 

JONES, MUNDY &. CO., Agents, San Francisco. 




>• III! ! Ill 

tr \iv__ lu ►■ 



\ lit '^t' ^1 i ^* 






:f?f- 



~-C^^*~. --*" 



dii' 



W. G. COLDEWEY, President. 

LOUISVILLE 

PUBIiIC WAREHOUSE GO. 

LOUISVILLE KY. 

CHAltTEItED ISSS. CAPITAL $.{00,000.00. 

KOR Tin: 

STORAGE OF KENTUCKY WHISKIES. 

rmn'mETOBs 

SPECIAL BONDED WAREHOUSE No. 1. 

I'OU FRUIT BRANDIKS. 
Note — Positively no Wbisky received unless direct from the Distillery. Wiiitk for Rates. 




f>/reipie WIJ^E /rJND Sflf^lT PREVIEW. 



QEDWOOD TPPS. 

F. KORBEL & BROS, 

723 Bryant Street San Francisco 

Or at NORTH FORK MILL, 

Humboldt County - California 



CllAS. W. Kt'HK. 



JoJl^ M'iCl'AN*- J.. 



Spruance, Stanley & Co. 

WlisKles, Wip aiid Lipis. 

Sole agents for the Celebrated African Stomach Bitters 

41C Fr:nNT Street, - - Sax FiiAxrisio, <"V\i., 



ESTABLISHED t8B3. 



SAMUEL WANDELT, 



STEAM AM) HAMi — 



01. o:i, (i.i NORTH Tlllltn ST.. liROOKLYX. X. Y. 

Wine and Lip Barrels and Tanks 

jpa. Specialty. 

I am now prepared to make .iiiJ furnish the largest, as well as the smallest, 
article in my line of Cooper.ige. Estimates f;iven with promptness. All work war- 
ranted to be finished in workmanlike manner and equal to any in the market. 



TRADE MARKS. 

WM. G. HENDERSON, Patent Attorney and Solicitor. 

Xorrls ISldg., 5th «£• F Sts., Xear U. S. Patent office. Ilomiis 'JO lit •^:i 
P. O. Bo.x 122. W.tSniXGTOX, V. C. 

Seventeen years' experience, including; service in K.icamlninK Corps, U. S. Patent 
Olllce. American and Forcij;!! Patents procured. Caveats filed. Rejected a]i|ilica- 
lions revived. Opinions yiven as to scope and validity of patents. Infrin;;ement 
suits proeeculed and defended. TRADE-MAliKS, LABELS AND COPYRIGHTS 
re(;i»lered. 

1^" Copy of any printed patent, trade-mark or label fLirnished for 25 cents. 
Correspondence invited. Hand-book on Patents fnrnislied FREE on apjilication. 



.r 



<» 



I- FIXE PRINTIXG 



— t;o TO — 



R. M. \A/ooD Co, 

31A-316 BATTE-Rg STREET 

SAN FRANCISCO 






THE EXPORTATION OF GRAPE BRANDY, WHISKY AND SPIRITS FROM 
BONO OR WITH PRIVILEGE OF DRAWBACK, SPECIALTIES 

Dealers in U. S. Standard llydrometer.s and P^xtra Stems, Prime's Wantage 

Rods, Die Wheels and Gauginj; rods. Also Distillers', Reclihers, 

Wholesale Liipinr Dealers and Brewers' Books. 

OFFICE, 413 WASHINGTON STREET, SAN FRANCISCO. 

P=. O. Bo3c !240B. XelepJnone 64e. 





Growers and Dealers in 
CaliJ'nrnifl- 

WINES AND BRANDJES 

Proprietors Glen Eilen yiini Vaui's. 



Fine Table Wines a Specialty 



R04-506 Market St., 

SalL Fuuifib,-.), Cal. 






aSO PINE STREET, 



SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 



See Specimen oe our Work in this Paper. 



Pure California Wines & Grape Brandies, 
THE 





OF S.4N a.iuniEi.. 

Los Angeles County , Cut. 

Are now prcpaied with a larue stock of wines and 
brandies of their own jjrowt^i to supply the trade 
and the market iicnerally. This Company owns 
the largest vineyard in the world, coverini; over 2,.')00 acres. They have held Ihcii 
wines and brandies for several years in tlicir own cellars, and do m)t offer any of 
their product until it has become pro]icrly matured. Their larfie stock of "ma- 
tured wines and brandies thus accumulated is now open to the purchaser. .MI 
goods under their trademark are warranted pure and unadulterated. Being t lie 
successors to B. D. Wilson & Co., and to J. Dk Barth Shorb. thev have become 
possessors of tlie "SHORB" Brand ok Brandy and -MOUNT" VINEYARD" 
Wine. Correspondence solicited. 

MARSHALL. SI'ELLMAX A CO.. J. DE BARTU SHOUII. 

No. 5 New York ami Brooklyn Bridge Vault, Pn-sident San Gabriel Wine C, 

Fi;\NKKoiiT St., New York, Sax Oarriei., Cal. 



GEO. C. BUCHANAN 



WHISKY BROKER, 



122 EAST MAIN STREET 



LOUISVILLE, KY. 



P/reifie WIJME j^JND SpiRIT REVIEW. 



35 



QUININE-WHISKY CO.. Louisville, Ky- 

IN KIVK TASK l.OTN, 

I.itri:e si/o, 1 dozi'ii ti» onsc. .. . $llui) 

Meclium •• 2 •• " U.ftU 

Small ■■ 'j •' •• 10.00 

I'OMUINATIUN TASK. 

One iliizcii laim: $20.00 

•• mwliuin UO.OO 

Two ■• small 20.00 

MOORE, HUNT * CO., 
401 Front street, San FrancUco. 

Per Gallon. 
Extra Tonv in bbUor >i-bl)ls fO.OO to $8.00 
A A •• " pf 4.00 

B " " " :i..^o 

C •• " ' 3.00 

Kye in bbis and )i-bblb from :i.rM to .5.00 

A"A in cases 11.00 

iu eases S..'jO 

Imported Champagnes. 

CHARLE.S MEINECKE A CO. 
.514 Sacramento street, San Francisco. 

DKCTZ * llII.nEKMANN, AY.. CHAMPACiNE. 

Gold I,ack Sec. jier case 132.00 *:i4.00 

Gold Lack Sec. 6 Magnums 

jier case 31.00 

Cabinet Green Seal, per bskt 2.x,W 27.00 

Dl'PASLOUP * CO., REIMS. 

Carte Brancbe, per case 21.00 22.00 

HELLMANN lilJOS A CO., 
32."i Front street, .San Francisco. 

Krnj; A Co. "Private Ciivee" 

per case $34.00 $36.00 

Joseph Perrier fils & Co 

per basket 19.00 20.00 

Adrien * tils, per basket 17.00 18.00 

W. B. CH.iPMAN, 

123 California street. San Francisco. 
PerrierJoiietACo.".Sptcial"$;Si.50 $35.50 

Reserve Dry 34.00 36.00 

Perner Jouet & Co. Brut.... 34.00 36.00 
Half pts "Special" $42 in cs of 48 bottles. 

SHERWOOD ifc SHERWOOD 
212-214 Market street, San Francisco. 
Moet & Chandon, White Seal 3+.00 36.00 
Brut Imper'l 36.50 38.50 

WM. WOLFF A CO. 
329 Market street, San Francisco 

QUARTS. PINTS 

Pommery Sec $34.00 $36.00 

MACONDRAY BROS. A LOCKARD, 
Agents 

124 Sansome street, San Francisco. 
Louis Roederer, Carte 

Blanche J.^.00 $;J6.00 

Louis Roederer, Grand Vin 

^ ^e";; 34.00 36.00 

Louis Roederer, Brnt 34.00 30 00 

W. A TAYLOR * CO., 
39 Broadway, Xew York. 

SPARKLIXli .SAUMIU. 

.\ckerman-Lausencc, Saumnr, France 

^^y "".val jai.Oii $2;J OU 

"'â– '" " 21. UO 23.00 

Imported Brandies. 

WM. WOLFF A CO 

V ?-,')."?'■'"" ""■''■'• **»" Francisco. 
.Marlell 6 Biandy, « per case $15 00 

. .yo ai.ofl 

,y^^ •• 32.00 

" :; ^ysor â– ' 50.50 

in octaves 5.75 lo 12 00 
CHARLES MEINECKE .t CO 
314 Sacramento street, .San Francisco 
Chamj) \ ineyard Proprs. Co., 
Boutelleau & Co. man- 
ayers Cof,'nac in Octaves 

The \iueyard Proprs. Co. 
Boutelleau A Co. mana- 
Kcrs Reserve Vintages. 11.00 to 14.00 

E. KEMY MARTIN A CO., CoL-nac 

HELLMAN.N BROS. A CO., A(iFNTS ' 

525 Front Street, San Francisco. 
Lau-de-\ le vieille f 1-, (k, 

17M) 

p., , 19.00 

r ine chamjiaffue 20 00 

Grande champajjne vieille 22!oO 

." ,r « '^'"™ ■ ^sioo 

" V O. P. 1858 .-iO.OO 

;; S. O. p. 1847 35.00 

V.sVo.p:;V«i4 50.00 

In octaves $4.70 (q g 05 

W. B. CHAPMAN. 

123 California street, Sau Francisco. 
(H. Cuvillier A frere Cognac.) 
!•■ ^i Quarts, 

rine tliampagne, "Reserve," 

1^70 ^jo ^J^f 

GrandeFlne Champagne, 1860 MM 



HELLMANN BROS, A CO., 

.')25 Front street. Snn Francisco. 

E. Remy Martin A Ccj., Cognac. 

Cognac m octaves pcrgiil.. 5.50 6.50 

In cases, sec sjiecial advertisement. 

P. Frapin A Co., Cognac. 

Cognac in octaves, per gal. . 5.65 6.50 

Plauat & Co., Cognac. 
Cognac in octaves, per gal. 5.25 

W. A. TAYLOR & CO., 
39 Broadway, New York. 

i'OliNAC KKANPIKS. 
liOlVEK, UUlLLETit CO., COllNAO. 

Vintage. Qr. Casks, per gal. 

1886 $4.85 

1SS4 5 40 

1S75 6.55 

1,S69 7.40 

1S40 12.25 

V SO 1750 

t)ctave8, 5 cents per gallon extra. 

CASES. 

Cases * 14.50 

*« 16.25 

*«« 17.85 

" ••«» 19..'j0 



Imported Whiskies. 

liOWEN A SCHHAM, 

204 California street, S.tn Francisco. 

Bernard & Co., Leith Scotland. 

Encore Scotch $12.00 



SHERWOOD & SHERWOOD. 

212-214 Mai-ket street, San Francisco. 

Bnrke's * » * Irish, cases 12.00 

"•••♦•■ " 1400 

" Garnkirk Scotch " 12.25 

" Viceregal Scotch " 13.50 

Lawson's Li(|ueur " *' 13.50 

Uam Var, " â–  12.00 

McKenzie's Glenlivet » * * 

Scotch, per case 12.50 

Busbell's Club Irish, in wood 

per gallon 4.50 



HELLMANN BROS. A CO. 

525 Front street, San Francisco. 
J. B. Sherriff A Co., Lochin- 

dae Islay, Scotch whisky 

in wood, per gallon. . . . 3.80 

J. B. Sherriff & Co., Lochin- 

dae Islay, Scotch whisky 

per case 12.00 

Dublin Distillers Co., Ltd., 

Dublin, Irish whisky, 

in wood, per gallon. . . . 4.50 

Dublin Distillers Co., Ltd , 

Dublin, Irish whisky. 



per case. 



12.00 



WM. WOLFF & CO., 
329 Market street, San Francisco. 

Canadian Clnb per case $15.00 

Wm. Jameson .t Co. . " 10.50 

A. Usher's Scotch " 11.00 and 12.00 



CHARLES -MEINECKE & CO., 
314 Sacramento street. San Francisco. 
Boord A Son, London Finest 

Irish Malt Wl.iskev.... $12. .W 

Royal llglild Scolc-h Whisky. 12.50 

John Itamsay, Islav Malt 

Scotch Whisky 13.50 



W. A. TAYLOR A CO., 

39 Broadway. New York. 

The Ardiieg Distillery Co., Islay. 

Qi-s. Ocls. 

New «3.&5 $3.90 

One Year 4.20 4.25 

Two Years 4.55 4.60 

Thice Years .. 4.95 5.00 

CASES. 

• one doz. hot. $11.00 

• « • 13.00 

• « • • 20.00 

JOHN JAMESON & SONS, DUBLIN. 

Qrs. Octs 

New $4.00 $4.05 

One Year 4.40 4.45 

Two Y'ears 4.70 4.75 

Three Yeare 5.05 5.10 

Four Years 5.45 5.50 

CASES. 

• 1 doz bot. $12.00 

• • * 14. .'iO 

• • » • 24.00 



W. B. CHAPMAN 

123 California street, San Francisco. 

SCOTCH WHISKY. 

(John Dewar iV Sons.) 

Old Highland " E.Ktra Spec- 
ial " $13.00 . . 

Old Highland "Special Lii|- 

ueuer " IO.OO 



Domestic Champagnes. 

A. VVEHNER A Co.. 

,52 Warren street. New York. 

E.\tra Dry $ 7.00 $ 8 On 



A. FINKE'S WIDOW, 

809 Montgomery street, San Francisco. 

Prices on application. 

Liberal discount totlic liudc. 



PAUL MASSON, 

San Jose, California. 

IjCss than 5 cases. 

Premiere Cuvee, Dry $16.00 $18.00 

Special.... 10.00 18.00 
Special discount for i|ii:iiiliiics of 5 
cases or more. 



Imported Goods. 

(MISCELLANEOUS.) 



WM. WOLFF A CO.. 

329 Market street, San Francisco. 

J. de Knyper A Sons Gin, large bot $20.50 

med. " 16.00 

" " small 9..50 

Cantrell A Cochrane Belfast Ginger 

Ale per barrel of 10 dozen 15.0(j 

Wolfe's Schiedam Schnapps per case 

quarts 9.50 

Wolfe's Schiedam Schnapps per case 

pints 10.50 

Benedictine, per case, ((uarts 20.00 

pints 21.50 

Apollinaris Mineral Water 

Hungari.Tn Aperient Water .... 

Friedricbshall 

Bartholomay Brewery Co., Roches- 
ter, N. Y 

Dog's Head brand of Guinness' 

Stout an Bass' Ale 

Theo. Lajipe s Genuine Aromatiiiue 

per case 12.00 

Gilka Kummel per case 12.50 



W. B CHAPMAN, 

123 California street, San Francisco. 

Plymouth Gin (unsweetened) $10..50 



HELLMANN BROS. & CO., 

525 Front street, San Francisco. 

Blankenheym tt Nolet. 

Union Gin, 2 

Vaughaii Joues 

Old Tom Gin. iu cases 11. 

Orange Bitters " n. 

Patterson & Hibbert. 
Bass' Stout, per double doz 3. 

Guinness' Stout, " " 3. 

H. Underberg-Albrecht. 
Boonekami> of Maag Hitlers, 12.75 to 13. 

J. B. Slicrrilf A Co. 
Jamaica Hum in ^-^s and .i^s 

per gallon...; 4.30 to 5. 

Tarragona Port in }^ casks 

per gallon 1. 

Adrien M. Warde's Italia de 

Pisco, per case 30. 

Sardines, brand "Philippe A Canaud. 



05 



W. A. TAYLOR A CO. 
39 Broadway, New York. 

MAdNUM HKANII, .lAMAll'A Rl'M 

Qrs. ' Oc 

A— Full body $.3.90 $3 

B— Rich, fat and old 4.30 4, 

C—SuperHne, extra 5 05 5 

M.\ONUM 3.10 3: 

GIN.S. 
ClIAS. TAXCilERAV & CO., I.O.NDON. 

Bulk. 

Old Tom Gin, i|uartcr casks $3 

Old Tom Gin, octaves 3 

Cases, one dozen each '. s. 



CHARLES MEINECKE * CO., 
314 Sacrame;ilo street, San Francisco. 

I (BOORD .t son's, I.OSJIION.) 

I Old Tom Gin, per case $11.00 

j Pale Orange Bitters, per case 11. .50 

I Ginger Brandy. Liiiuenr " 12.00 
I Jami.ica Rum, Old " 12.00 to 14.00 
I IAIN Royal Batavia Gin in 
cases of 15 large black 

I bott les per case 23..50 

I in cases of 1.5 large 

I while bottles per case 24.50 

I Kirscliwasser, Macholl Frercs 

I Bavarian Highland, per 

: ease iu.oo 

Swan Gin in i< casks 3.75 

Double Eagle Gin in >^ casks. 3.00 

John Ramsay Isl.iy Scotch 

Whisky in j.j; casks 4 75 

Bt)ord's Pineapple brand Ja- 
maica Rums in )4 ca6ks.5.25 to 6..50 

SHERWOOD A SHERWOOD. 
212-214 Market street Sau Francisco. 

Per Case 
X. lIoMtman A Co.'s Gin, 

large black botlles $21.50 

A. Houtman A Co.'s Gin, 

medium black hollies. 18.50 

A. Hontman & Co.'s Gin, 

small black bottles 9.u0 

.'V. Houtman tV: Co.'s Gin 

huge white bottles 22.50 

A. Houtman A Co.'s Gin, me- 
dium white bottles 19.50 

A. Houtman A Co 's Gin 

small white bottles 9.50 

A. Houtman A Co.'s Gin, 

octaves per gallon 3.55 

Bass' Ale in woi)d. hhds $50.00 

Joules Stone Ale in wood, 

hhds 50,00 

Ross Ginger Ale. per barrel.. 1.5.00 

' Soda Water, per case 7.00 

" Tonic Water, " 7.00 

' Potash Water, " 7.00 

•' Raspberry Vinegar 6 to 

gal, per case 7.00 

" Raspberry Vinegar 8 lo 

gal, per case Boo 

" Lime Juice Cordial 6 to 

gal, per case 6.00 

" Lime Juice Cordial 8 to 

gal. per case 4.50 

" Lime Fruit Juice 6 lo 

gal, per case 4.60 

" Lime Fruit Juice 8 to 

gal, per case 3.50 

" Orange Bitters, per case. 8.00 

Burke's Bass' Ale, pints, per 

bbl of 8 doz 16.00 

Burke's Guinness Stout, pts 

per bbl of 8 doz 16.00 

Burke's Jamaica Rum per cs. 12 50 

Old Tom Gin " 10.75 

Dry Gin " 10.75 

" Henuessy Brandy, per 

case 16.00 

Port Wine, Gato br'd 

jiercase 10.00 

Fleisihman's Royalty Gin, 10 

gal packages, per gal 2.25 

Fleischinan's Royally Gin, 15 

gal packages, per gal 2.22>i 

Fleiscliinan's Royally Gin, 20 

gal packages, jier gal 2.20 

Fleischinan's Roj ally Gin, 50 

gal i)ackages, per gal., . . 2.15 

Meinbold's .\nclior Brand 

Cider, per case, iinarts... . 3.25 

Meinbold's Anchor Biand 

Cider, per case, pints 4.00 



Syrups, Cordials, Etc. 

KOLB * DENHARD, 

422 Montgomery street, San Francisco. 

Rock Candy Syrup 75c. per gal 

Raspberry Syrup 75c. 

Orgeat Syru]! 7.5c. 



Louisville, St. Louis & Texas Railway 

"beechwood route." 

Consign your shipments from Louisville and interior 
Kentucky points, care of the Louisville, St. Louis &. Texas 
Railway, which is a direct line to Pacific Coast points and 
same will receive prompt attention. 

For rates and other information address the undersigned 
L. S. Parsons, J. K. McCracken, H. C. Mordue, 
Traffic Man'g, Gen. Man'g, Asst. Gen. Frt. Agt 

Louisville, Ky. Louisville, Ky. iLouisville, Ky. 



36 



fAeiflCi WipJt /rJMD SflF^lT F^EVIEW 



LZEJ^HDIl^O i:)ISTILI_>EK,S. 



ADDRESS, INSURANCE. 



BRAND. 



BOTJI5/BOITS. 


BKLLE ol ANDEKSOX D'G CO. j Belle uf AinU-rriuii, 

^ , ^ . .., Gleuarme, 
Add: S. J. GreenbaiuM, Loiusvdle. 1 . 

Jessamine, 

Riite, 1.25. Arlington. 


MELLWOOD DIST'Y CO. 

Louisville, Ky. 
Rate, 85c. 


Mellwood, 

and 
Dundee. 


EARLY TIMES DIST'Y CO. | Early Times, 
Karlv Times, Ky. D. No 7 . .. ^ ,, 
5 M. E. of Baidstown. Rates 1.25 ' " 
Add: 15. H. Hnrt, Loui.sville. Jack Beam. 


0. F. C. DISTILLERY D. No. 113 
Frankfort. 
Add: Geo. T. Stagg Co., Frankfort. 
Rate 85c. 


0. F. C, 

Carlisle. 



SUNNY BROOK and 

WILLOW CREEK DIST'G CO'S 

Distillerv, Louisville, Kv. 
Contracting Offices, 128-130 I'lankliii St. 

Cliiiajjo, 111. 
ROSENFIKM) BROS & CO., Proprietors. 
Rates, 85r. and 81. 



M'illow Creek, 
Sunny Brook. 



J. B. WATUEN & CO. 

Louisville, 
Rate 85c. 



J. B. Wathcn & Bro. 
Kentucky Criterion. 



OLD TIMES DIST'Y CO., 

Louisville. 
Rates, 81.00 & $1.25. 

OLD KENTUCKY DIST'Y CO., 
Louisville, Ky. 
Rates, SI and .<51.'2."). 



Old iL^iiiit'S. 

Kentucky Comfort 

and 

Gladstone. 



E. J. CURLEY & CO. D. N... :; .Sclo 

Camp NeLson 
Rates: "B," "D," "E" 1.25. "F," 3.50 



Blue Grass, 
Boone's Knoll. 



W. S. HUME, 

Silver Creek. 
Rate S5c. 



Hume. 



ADDRESS, INSURANCE. 



G. G. WHITE Co., 

Add: Paris, Bourbon Co., Ky., 

Nos. 1,4, 6, 7, 85c: No. 5,1.00. 



BRAND. 



Chicfceucock. 



GREENBRIER DIST'Y CO. 

Greenbrier. D. No. 23!) 

Add: Will. Collins & Co., Louisville. 

Kate 1.35. 

ANDERSON & NELSON DIST'S CO., 

Louisville. 
Add: Anderson & Nelson Distilleries Co 
Rate 85c. Louisville. , 



Greenbrier, 
R. B. Hayden. 



Anderson, 

Nelson. 
Buchanan. 



R. F. BALKE & CO. 

Louisville, Ky. 
Rate 85c. 



"G. W. S." 

and 
Runnymede, 



I?."yE!S. 



SUSQUEHANNA DIST'G CO., 

Milton. 
Add: Jas. Levy & Bro., Cincinnati. 
Rates, 85c & 1.25. 



Susquehauua. 



I 



NORMANDY DIST'G CO., 

Louisville, Ky. 
P. 0. Box 2354, 

Rate 85 c. 


Normandj', 

and 
Montpelier. 


A. OVERHOLT & CO., i 
Add: A. Overliolt &Co., Pittsburg, Pa. Overholt. 
Rate, 80c. i 


BARBER, FERRIELL & CO. 

Hobbs. D. No. 240 
Rate 1.50 


Old Grand-Dad, 
R. B. Hayden & Co. 


J. B. WATHEN & CO. I 

Louisville, Lackawanna Rye. 
Rate 85c. | 



ANDERSON & NELSON DIS'G CO. | 

Louisville. 

Add: Anderson & Nelson Distiller's Co 

Rate 85c. Louisville. 



Nelson. 



I 



T. W. STEMMLER & CO. 



union: SQUjft.R.E, isTE^'w ^iToi^k:, n. it. 



SOLE ;6c©EJMTS fOR UNITED STATES AjMD CANADA. 

7HE0PHILR ROEDERER & CO., MAISON FONDEE t,N ISU. BOSHAMER LEON & CO., CURETS and SAUTERNES, BORDEAUX A, & L. BEAUDET KRERES, BURGUNDIES, BEAUNE 

The Cclebraled RED LABEL CHAMPAGNE, REIMS JELIX PGTIN & CIE, CHOCfiLAT and CONSERVES. PARIS GUIG1NIS FRERES, OLIVE OIL, NICE 

CADBURY BROS, CHOCOLATE and COCOA, BOURNVILLE Deo. BELLARDl \- CO., VERMOUTH, Establisb(»d 1740, TURIN BRAND & CO., ESSENCE OF BEEF, LONDON 

.EADK .M.MIK _^ J^ J ^g^ Q ^Sf ID .A- C IC RE.il.sTF.REB. 

PURE RYE WHISKY. Purity and Quality Unexcelled. 

The "AVIUONDACK" is u blend «/ rijn- hlylt <ltiss uhiskirs tlioroiitililii iiuilurrd iiuil can be highly recommended for 

inrdlctitat tind fffiirral usr. 
youe Ocmthut without our slfptdturr on nci-k label and eitrk^ 

NEW YORK: Union Square. PARIS: Boulevard des Italicnt. 

CORDIAL MAKERS OF THE WORLD. 
ICMtublMied nr,.',. T It M I.MMl.l.ll. IHrerloi. 

CELEBRATED C.rEMt DE MENTHE AND OTHER CORDIALS. WELL KNOWN FLEUR-DE-LIS COGNACS. FOR SALE EVERYWHERE. 

IF YOU are in need of PRINTING give us a call. We make a specialty 
of fine Printing, Engraving, Lithographing, Photo-Engraving and, also 
original designs for labels of every description. 



f/ceifie WiJME /cJSlE) SflF^IT PREVIEW. 



CLASSIFIED INDEX OF ADVERTISEMENTS. 



CALIFORNIA WINES AND BRANDIES. 

Page. 

Boyd, F. 0. & Co C^ 

Calilbrnia Wiue Growers Uuion !l 

Carpy. V. &. Co 21 

Chauche & Bon 8 

De Turk, 1 8 

Gundlach, J. & Co 4 

Guasti & Bernard 6 

Hedgeside Vineyard 22 

luglenook Vineyard Agency 19 

Italian-S\vit:s Colony 31 

Kohler & Van Bergen 21 

Kohler & Frohling 21 

Kolb & Denliard 7 

Kiihls, Sehwarke & Co 

Lachnian «Sl Jacob! 30 

Laclunan Co., S 21 

Laudsberger & Son (i 

Leland Stanfords' \'ina Brandy 

Los Gatos & Saratoga Wine Co 30 

Masson, Paul 2 

Melczer, Joseph & Co 34 

Minuse, William T (1 

Mohns & Kaltenbach .30 

Napa Valley Wine Co 2 

L J RosetSt Co., Ltd 2 

Schilling. C. & Co S 

Smith, Julius P 

Stagg Co., The Geo. T 33 

Starace, Aehille 2 

Thornton & P'PPy 7 

To-Kalon Wine Co 30 

Vina Distillery 12 

Wetmore, C. J 12 



DISTILLERS AND BROKERS. 



Vignier. A 34 

Wolff, Wm. &Co 15 

FRUIT BRANDY DISTILLERS. 

Taylor, W. A. & Co 32 

Walden & Co T) 

West, Geo. & Son 33 

SAN FRANCISCO WHOLESALE LIQUOR DEALERS. 

Hey, (irauerholz & Co 6 

Ilotaling, A. P. & Co 29 

Kolb & Denhard 32 

Kuhls, Scliwarke & Co 6 

Moore, Hunt & Co 5 

Martin, E. & Co 

Naber, Alfs & Prune 6 

Siebe Bros. & Plagemann 4 

Hpruance, Stanley & Co 34 

Walter, M. & Co 6 

IMPORTED BRANDY. 

K. Remy Martin «St Co., Hell man Bros. & Co., Agents 13 

o'l' SYRUPS, CORDIALS, BITTERS, PRUNE JUICE, ETC. 

Abbot's Angostura Bitters 23 

Ball & Cheyne Co 7 

Culbert & Taylor 38 

Kolb & Denhard 32 

Rutlkiu, Wm. H 30 

Walter, M. & Co 6 

WINE FININGS, ETC. 
Sehulze-Berge & Koechl 4 



Anderson & Nelson Distilleries Co The 11 

Barber, Ferriell & Co 24 

Curley, E. J. & Co 7 

Early Times Distillery Co 24 

Fleischman & Co ."J 

Leading Distillers' Cards 40 

Levy, Jas. & Bro 38 

Mavhew, H. B. & Co 34 

Meihvood Distillery Co 1 

Monarch , R 10 

Moore & Selliger 23 

Overholt, A.&Co .33 

Rea, H. R. & Co 2'.) 

Shufeldt, H. H. &Co., C. W. Craig & Co., Agents ;. 5 

I FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC CHAMPAGNES. 

Chapman, W. B 23 

Finke's Widow, A 30 

Fra.sh & Co , 26 

Hellraann Bros & Co 27 

Lachman, S. & Co 2 

Macoudray Bros. & Lockard 33 

Ma.sson, Paul 2 

Sherwood & Sherwood 16 

Wolff, Wm. & Co 20 

IMPORTERS. 

Chapman, W. B 19 

Glaser, S 19 

Hellmann Bros. & Co 17 

Librowicz, Julius 29 

Macondrav Bros. & Lockard 8 

Meiuecke.'Chas. & Co 14 

Sherwood & Sherwood 17 

Starace, Aehille 2 

Stemmler, T. W. & Co 40 



WAREHOUSES, STORAGE, ETC. 

Bode & Haslett 4 

Ijouisvi 1 le Publ ic Warehou.se Co 33 

Sherman. J. D. W 23 

BOTTLES, CASINGS, CORKS, ETC. 

Colgan, J. B. Corks 4^ 

Korbel, F. & Bros., Tanks 34 

MISCELLANEOUS. 

B. &0. S.-W. Ry 18 

Bolton & Strong, Engravers 34 

Bonestell & Co., Paper Dealers 41 

Celery Beef & Iron Co 25 

Chickasaw Cooperage Co 4 

Cleveland Faucet Co 29 

Dunne, J. P & Co., Saloon 37 

Goodyear Rubber Co.... 5 

Henderson, Wm. G 34 

Hoblis, Wall & Co., Bo.x Manufacturers 30 

Humboldt Mineral Water Co 28 

Jordan. Dr. & Co 37 

Loma Pricta LumberCo.. 30 

Ijouisville, St. Louis & Texas Railway 35 

New Home Sewing Machine Co 37 

O'Brien, James, Saloon 37 

Rosenfeld's Sons, John, Clipper Ships 37 

Sanders & Co., Coppersmitlis 37 

.Spragne Correspondence School of Law 37 

Tubl)s" Cordage Co 37 

Wandelt. Samuel 34 

Wolff, William & Co IG 

Su-bscribe; for tine 

pacific l^inc and ^tJrit ^qviqiD 

THREE DOLLARS PER YEAR. 

ADVERTISINO RATES ON APPLICATlOH. 



fAeifie vyi;;E A^'t) spif^'T f^EviEw. 



C. BnKDscHO. 




J. Gdndlach. 



J. GU]MDliACH & CO. ( 



Vineyard Proprietors and Shippers of 



(jiilifoiniii Wiiios and Mwim, 

rii«i'i!ii;T(His RHINE FARM, mm, cal 

And BACCHUS WINE VAULTS, 438-442 Bryant St., S. F. 



SAN pRANCisco- -/JEW York- 



San lYnucisra O^JirCr 

s. jc. con. M.iiiKr.T ,': secoxd sts. 



AV'ii* Vnrk Itratifh 
S. E. Cor. WATTS «, WASHINGTON STS. 



JOHX D. SIEBE. 



J. F. I'LAGE.M.\NN. 



F. C. SIEBE. 




SlESE BHOS. 8t pLiACEmA]^fl, 

WINE AND LIQUOR MERCHANTS. 

SOLE AGENTS FOR 

O.K. Imkk Bourkii & Rfc Wliisfe 



AND TnE- 



Celebrated Belle of Bourbon. 

Southeast Cop. Sacramento and Sansome Sts., - - - ^ _ - . san Francisco, C* 

jPs-R-XISXIC ^ PRINTING " CH:K.OK[jPlTIC 

R. M. WOOD CO. 



!ir. B.^T■n•;l;^■ street. 



BAN FRANtTSf'O, CAE 



CHICKASAW COOPERAGE CO. 



MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE. 



- KT jPi.NXJF'jPlCXU R.E- 



Circled Headina and Jointed Staves! aiso Shooks of an 
Kinds for Brandy, Wine, Whisky and other Barrels. 

W !â–  sciltcil (ii-(li-rs frtrin n sjidiisililc piitics wlm \\;iiit gnods in <iiir liiir, iil' .'-u]i(ii(ir (|UMli(y ami \v(>rkin:iiislii|). 

BODE & HASLETT 



Warehousemen 



1201 Battery St., San Francisco 



PROPRIETORS or 



GENERAL INTERNAL REVENUE BONDED WAREHOUSE, No. ONE 



N. E Corner Third and King Streets '*• 

STORAGE AND INSURANCE AT LOWEST RATES. 



For the Storage of Whisky and Spirits in Bond 

ADVANCES MADE ON GOODS IN WAREHOUSE. 



f/rGlfie VVIJME /sjNiO Sf IF^I I" F^EVIEW. 



Henry H. Shufeldt g Coivipany, 



DISTILLERS, 



CHICAGO. 



mil^m IIPERUL fill ill RYE HIT fill 




DISTILLED BY THE HOLLAND PROCESS. 




Equal in flavor and surpassing in 
purity the most famous imported 
Gins. Put up in packages prepared 
to hold contents colorless, and con- 
tain, respectively 44, 24, 15 and 10 
gallons, all under double stamps. 

Iliese irins are tlie ODly ones disiilM in % l s. % \% HOLLW PVESS 

And are unquestionably the purest and most wholesome Gins today, used in the U. S. 

FOR SALE 3Y ALL WHOLESALE LIQUOR DEALERS AND DRUGGISTS. 

C. W. CRAIG & CO. California Agents, 205 BATTERY STREET. 

FLEISCHMANN & CO. 

CINCINNATI, OHIO. DISTILLERS OF 

SgLVA/N G-ROVE BOUHBO/N A/ND "Rg E WHISKIES. 



HIGH GRADE HOLLAND PROCESS- 



PERFECTION AND ROYALTY GINS. 



LARGEST DISTILLERS OF PURE BRANDY IN THE WORLD. 
DISTILLERY AND VINEYARDS, GEYSERVILLE, CAL. 

>. -5~ ^5- ~Cr. -5 — i" -i^ -^^ -i" -^- -^ -s^ -^ ■<:>. ~i>. -5- --S" -i-- -i~ -5" -S" -i.. -i„ *+-:>, -s^ .<5~ -ii. ■<:-. -c^ -=.. •jz--<^-^z^ ■<>■ '-^ -£>. -5- ys- -.5-. ■«>. •«*. -^. - 
•»--»--»— I — ( — K-»— I — K-»- -»- -K •*■ -h -t"t— I — K-f--t— >—»—»"►- -K-K-*— >--K -K - H -H-t — K - > -->- > -h -K-K->">- - h ■>■ -h «- -l--^ •^♦• 

WJlIiDEN COGHIIG.I 

s 

. ttf Tins Rranilv, made after llie Ficncli formula, from seloeteil fresh (jraius, has been fluceessfiilly inlro 

duc-e<I. ami is now regularly soid in tlie princijial marl^els of Europe, in competition with French Cognac. 
Ollieial (ierman and Fren<-fi cliemists tiave jtrononnced it the purest Brandy wliieli eomes to tlieir markets. 
It is esiiceially suited for tlie (irui; trade anil otliers, where jiuriiy is demanded. While aliio-ad these 
goods snccessfnily compete, payini; Pam< duties as the French, the American huyer li.is the advantage in price bclweeu tlie Internal Revenue tar as- 
C86eU here and the customs duties <jn fnreiLMi tMandics. Samples u ill lie sent on application. 




WALDEN. 



aa7^j^i_.ide:n" & 00., 



Eastern Office 49 Broad Street, Sew York. 



UKTSXRVILLE SONOMA CO., CAlj.^ 



fT^^eiFie WIJME /fJMD SflF^lT [REVIEW. 








D. V. B. UE.NAKIE. 



E. MARTIN &, CO., 

IMTOliTERS AND WHOLESALE 

MQlJOH mEtjcHflfiTS, 

411 Market £t , San Francisco, Cai. 

SOLE AOEXTS FOR 

J. F. CUTTER AND ARGONAUT OLD BOURBCNS, 



KST \HI.1SHE1> 1S57. 

F. O. BOYD Sa CO, 

Commission Mekiiiants, New York. 

CALIFORNIA WINES & BRANDIES. 



Barton's Celebrated Swekt Wines, Fresno. 

C\PT. .T. C. .Mkrithewv Trospect Vinf,y\ri>. 

Advances Made on Consignments. 



William T. Minuse 

Commission Merchant. 

.'/; I'.KA VKi; ST., NEW YOh'K. 

Agent for the Sale of Viticultural Products. 

Cuiisinnineiils of sound Wines and Brandies solicited. Advances made mi 
eamu at lowest rates. 

Heprcsenting John Tiiomasn, St. Helena, Cal. 

Ewer .t Atkinson, Hutiierford, Cal. 

A 1' Apam..- EiMi Vineyard, Fresno, Cal. 

EisicN Vineyard Co., Fresno, Cal. 



FOR FINE PRINTING 



(io ro 



:E^. J^. ^SATOOID Oo. 



314-316 Battery Street, 



SAN FRANCISCO 



Hey, Grauerholz & Co., 

Impiirtehs and Wholesale Dealers in 

WINES & LIQUORS. 



SOLE AGENTS FOR 



DAW CROCK^tf WHISKY. 

BE SURE TOU ARE RIGHT, THEN GO AHEAD. 



NO. 2ie SACRAMENTO STREET, - - SAN FRANCISCO. CAL. 




OLIVINA VINEYARD. 

^^-^ The OLIVINA Gomprises 600 Acres of Hil 

Svit;5'^ Sifle Vineyard. Located in the 

Livermorc Valley. 






°^'^K\Z^4^^^-^ ^^^' DELICATE, WELL MATURED TABLE WINES 
'^\£-^^M« "s^ A SPECIALTY. 



SllMt roil S.XMVl.E OllItER. 

Correspondence Solic'Ted By The Grower. 

JULIUS P. SMITH, LIVERMORE, CAL. 



M. WALTER & CO., 

WHOLESALE LIQUOR DEALERS 

Distillers of Biiters ann Gomiais, 



811 Montgomery St., Bkt. Jackson & Pacific Sts. 
Telephone No, 424. San Francl.'icn, (al 



Landsberger & Son, 

Commission JVIerchants 

123 CALIFORNIA STREET, SAN FRANCISCO. 



Agents for the Purchase and Sale of Viticultural Products. 
Telephone ISTo. QSO. 



-I'lIN JlKRNAUI 



SrcONDO GrA.'vTL 



Quasti (S. ^ornardf 



Growers and Distillers of - 



California WIHES anO BHPIES 



Winery at Gu<uti & BernanVs Spur, Between West 
Glendale and Tropica, Cal. 



b;OcF^GE PRODUeEF^S Of SWEET WINES. 

l/di'ji < //''*'â–  ' *"â– . .{tl ntnl tlainrtln .sts.. l.iis tntffhs, <ftl. 



f/ceifie WljME /JMD Sflf^lT f^EVIEW, 



KOLB & DENH ARD 



OLD NONPAREIL 

BOURBON AND RYE WHISKIES. 



CALIFORNIA 

WINES and BRANDIES, 

OFFICE ANO VAULTS 

4X!0-±S6 MO\TaOMEnr ST.. SAX FRAXCISCO. 

Telefiione No. 5(I'J0. 




SPECIAL BOTTLING 

Wk Makk a Si'kciai.ty of 

Clarifying & Bottling Wines 

von Tiiii 
TRADE AND CONSUMER 

BEST FACILITIES — FIRST-CLASS WOHK 
Fviees Reasonable. 





TTiese Whiskies are made in the Famous " BT.VE OTtASS ItEGJOy" So 
Justly eetcbrateC as the linme of the flnest Whiskies In the World, and 
which have been ] or the last Centitnj. recognized as such, glrtng the char- 
ttCter and high standing to KEXTUCKY WHISKIES which they now enjotj. 



THESE FAMOUS WHISKIES CAN CE HAD IN LOTS TO SUIT THE TRADE FROM 

HELL/V\A/N/N BHOS. 3c CO., 525 p-RG/NT STHEET. SA/N p-RA/NCISeO. 



THORNTON & PIPPY 



PROrWETORS, 80I,B AGENTS 

S-utreet "Wines, IBrandies and. Xabie AxTines. 
204 MARKET STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 

DisTRiBUTixG AGENTS RAUL MASSON CHAMPAGNE 



8 



f;^eifie WI]\!E /rp;D SpiT^IT f^EVIIW 



Ms Hoeilerer CMape 

Highest Grade in the World! 

Used by All the Leading Clubs 
Hotels and Restaurants . . . 

For sale by All Fiist-Class 
Grocers aud Wine Mcri-iiants. 



THKEE KINDS, ALL OF EQUAL EXCKLLENCE. 
B-RUT ((7oMSea/) 

An Extra Dry Wine ! 

GRA/ND Vl/N SEC (Brown Seal) 

The Perfection of a Dry Wine ! 
e AHT E B L A/N CH E ( Il7n/e Seal) 

A Rich W^inc! 

Macondray Bros. & Lockard, '" "ririJTr.rrL. c... 




FOR FINE PRINTING, ^^ R. M. WOOD CO., 



3M-16Battery St., 
San Francisco, Cal. 




I. DE TURK 

' Ij^fncjs and ^vandics 

BRANDY, CLARET, 

ANGELICA, SAUTERNE, 

HOCK, - v_ - - MUSCAT, 

ZINFANDEL, "' '' '^ SHERRY, 

PORT, RIESLING, 

TOKAY, GUTEDEL. 

\rine;yard.s a^nd Celleurs: 

Santa Rosa, Sonoma County, Cal. 

^Branch.; 
JSO Sacrtnnriitn St., San rrancisco, Cal. 

C. M. MANN, Manager. 
New York Office, - - 91 Hudson St. 




TjHE jiKSHEST AWARD fARIS EXPOSITIOJN Established 

Ciuer/nore l/alley, ^dl. 




1SS5. 



I 



t-'- 



'^o 



^i 



â– w 



,0^^ , ' 



A. G. 6HAUGHE, Proprietor. 

Offick and Depot, fiys Front Kt., San Francisco 



1889. 



GObD JVIEDAL. 



CHAUCHE & BON, Successor to A. G. CHAUCHe' 

Sole (u'lHT.il Ai;(.-nls fni- tliu MoiNT-l!iirc;K Winks. 




'WINE MERCHANTS 



NEW YORK HOUSE V*" "'""^'5'^'^ 

YSEN&TOTTEN 



[AUFORNIA. 



24 DEY STREET. 



230 -'Z^O BRAN NAN STREET, 
BET. I IT & 2"-° 



EUROPEAN HOUSE: 



Bremen. Germany 



[INCORPORATED] 

VOL XXXIV, No. 7. SAN FRANCISCO, MAY 7, 1895. $3.00 PER YEAR 

I — — 

' Issued Semi -Monthly. TO THE TRADE. 

R. M. WOOD CO.. - - PUBLISHERS. , , 

WARNING.- Tlu' nu1)lic is liorehy notiluHl tliat U waro- 

316 BATTERY STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. , . ^ • .1 ,• ii • 1 1 1 -,. 1 1 a»' tt 

reLEPHo^E /vo. 709. CABLE AooRESs - F.ELOv^.N.- s/i/v F«/,/vc,sco. ''^^'"e receii.t., covering tl.c foUowiug descnbe.l ,0 l.anx-ls A\ . II. 

, McBraj'er's "Cedar Brook " whisk}', have been lost in the mail. 

T7ie r.ACrPIC MTXE A\lt SI'IRIT llEllEn is the nnh/ jmper of \ „„! ;,,.,*:,,„ Ivis K.-ph iivkIp hi tlip distiller for diii)l!cite reepints 

its ,7«.« iiV'sr of ihirngo. It ri rr„i„ir.'< amoiu, the Mhoies,,!,- and Application luis bucn made to me uihiuici lor uupucaic ILceipiS, 

iietaii ir/iK- iiini sitirit Dealers i,j' the r<iri/ie iixisi. the Mine ^t<lh•- .^^^^^\ (j^g delivery of whisky undcr original warehouse receipts 

PI'S Mini Iteaiuhi IfL-itiller.s iifCalij'iirniu. tlie Wine and Ilrundij bull- -1 

ers, and the Importers, Vist liters and Jobbers of the United States. has been stopped : 

.in CHECKS. DR.iFTS. MOSEY ORUEliS, ETC.. should be ^^ N«^- '^^^ aerials 1189.3-904. 

made i>a liable to the K. M. liOOlt CO. 10 Dec. '93, " 12009 — 18. 

50 Dec. '94,- " 17469-518. 

Subscription per year-in advance, postage paid: Cinciimati. Jamks Lew & Bro. 

Pur t lie United States, Mexico and Canada $0 00 

For European countries 4 GO Mar 5 — June 5. 

Single copies 20 ^.^^^^^^ g— ^^^ m^i^^^^^m^ ^^^^^^ ^— ^^^m ^^^^^^^^^^^^^—— ^w^m^ 

Entered at tbe San Francitco Post Otflce as second-class matter. , . 

MA-RKET -REVIEW. 

EASTERN BRANCH OFFICE! /{)ALIF( )KNIA WINES.— The hopeful tone that has charac- 

, , . ^ „ ,, ^ , ^T ^> , ^,. Lj terized the market for some time past still coutiuues, and 

\\ . A. Glit r, Manager, l-3-o Leonard bt., New \orkCity. , . • t x- ii ^ ^i * c 1 • 1 , 1 „ 

' ^' ' '_ •'__ there is every indication that t!ie present confulence is based on 

a good foundation. The activity in the movement of wines is 

, J. CH. DE .St. HrBEBT p. C. DeSC.VI..<0 *', ... ,,, '11 il rni • • <• 

I President Vice-President much greater than could be reasonably expected, lliis ispartieu- 

PcillfArniQ \A/inD HrnVA/Drc' llnmn larly so with respect to the receipts of wines from interior eellar.s, 

V.;aill UN lid VV M IC \J\ UW CI 5 U I MUl I ^^ fo,. instance, during the month of April moie than 2,000,000 

P^FiEL .rsillons were withdrawn from the cellars in the various wine 

CALIFORNIA WINES AND BRANDIES districts, and shipped to this city. Ou the 27th of last month 

CORNER SUTTER AND GRANT AVENUE the record for heavy receipts was beaten by the arrival of over 

.siN Fit\NClsco CAL 560,000 gallons of wine. On the 22d over 100,000 gallons were 

received. A comparative statement of the receipts for the first 

four months to May 1st, 1894, and the same period this year is of 

HELP WANTED, FOR SALE, ETC. interest, it shows that during the same period of last year there 

were received 3,2.52,470 gallons, as against 5,840,956 gallons to 

11' » -KTrT.T-.T-v A "x" • 1 1 • T X l\I:i v 1 st o f 1 li Is V ca r . Ill o til cr words, (1 11 r 1 iig t li a t period about 

U ANTED — A position as wine maker and vineyardist ; ^"'^J jsi oi uu^ .>l.ii . xi. v^i. ^ , o i 

., 1, XXI 1 T 1- • 1 IX " "00 OOlJ callous more were received than in the same time last 

thoroughly competent and capable of managing a large plant ; --'"',""^0""""^ ,..,.,. 

14 vears as Manager and Superintendent with last employer, ye'"'- On the other han.l, the movement of wiiie.s from his 

V.Idress E. J. Baber, Box 1313, Madera, Cal. '"'"-ket has been particularly strong he record of rail ship- 

ments during .Vpril is not yet available, but we iinderstanil that 

WANTED— Tc contract for the purchase of large quantity H"' total was large, jlxports by sea for the last half-montli iiave 

r T> X 01 I c'» X 1 1 ■ 1 • 111- i .1 been of excellent volume, aggregating 379,000 gallons. Orders 

of Port, Sherry and Sherry stock high in alcoholic strength. o<-i-n "' ca^-liilul iw... m 00 » c> , ? . , 

.,, ,,r rr\r ,, ",, , X XT A.' 1 are coming in in quite a satisfactory way, and there is less com- 

Addre.ss W. r. MisisK. 41 Beaver street, New \ork. . . , , • xi xi 1 1 „„ c... ., i,..,™ c.,„^ 

'_ plaint in the business than there has been for a long tune. 

~~ ~~"~~ Our New York correspondent states in another column that the 

FOR SALE. market has not responded to the advance here as rapidly as 

— ' would naturally bo expected, but it is evident that inasinucli as 

REDWOOD TANKS— 5.000 to 8,000 and 1. 000 to 2, ) this is the source of supply, those who are holding the market 

gallons: also lot of small oak Ovals, from 400 to 1,000 gallons, down will be forced by necessity to adjust themselves to the new 

About 2,000 Puncheons, re-coopered and in first-cla.ss shipping conditions. The probable (piantity and the quality of the next 

order. All above described cooi)erage sweet and sound. vintage are coining up for discussion, and we hear of contracts 

M.VCHINERY — Wine Presses, Crushers, Hand-I'uinps, being made in the Napa Valley at Qfteeu and sixteen dollars per 

Corking Machine. ton for grapes. However, should there be a big crop, these 

DISTILLERY — Tools and Utensils, Oak Buckets, Tubs and prices would doubtless be .shaded considerably. Thus far the 

Oak Funnels ; besides a lot of Brass Cocks, Uose Couplings, -^^p.^ther has been very favorable for the development of the 

Faucets, etc. vines, and should there be no damage on account of the weather, 

Address California Wine Association, 453 Brannan Street, ^^,^, j^j'^jj. j-^,. j^ good average crop. 
San I-rancisco. ,^^^^ following is a comparative statement of the receipts of 



f/reifie WIJME y\JNi3 Sflf^lT f^EVlEW 



wine and brandj* at (his point for four months — Jannnrj- to 
April, inchisive — 18!)4 ami ISDo: 

. 1891 , , 1895 



Wine. 

Januurv hit'.i.] ID 

Kebinaiy 741.41(» 

March..". itTli.itno 

April 985,0.10. 



Brantlv. 

14'_',765 

r.M 1,0.50 

•_'5,(i95 
1G,G90 

375,740 



Wine. 

S97.5.'?4 
1, -344, 780 
1 .5SS,4:{0 
:2,Oi;{,'21l2 



Totals... 3,252,470 375,740 5,843,950 

The shipments of California wines by sea in April 
follows : 

Cases. 
To New York 110 

Central America 1,213 

Mexico ,'!10 

Hawaii 139 

British C()liinil)ia 6 

Japan and China 26 

(ireat Britain 

(ierniany 

Other European 

Tahiti 

All other foreign 



Brandy. 

(;(».5'.")0 

1,540 

O.ti.iO 

14,440 

83,200 
were as 



Gallons. 

351,021 
12,925 
7,108 
8,214 
1,054 
2,476 



9,613 
382 



SI 



Value. 

16.3(;0 

13,610 

3,843 

4,528 

368 

1,160 



1,873 
247 



Total by sea 1,804 392,793 S142,989 

/©ALIFORXIA BKANDIES.— The brandy market has no 
^^ feature of special interest, the demand at present being 
light, and hohlers not anxious to sell at ruling prices. lOxports 
by sea during the fortnight have been small. There is no doubt, 
however, that the change which has taken place iu the condi- 
tions of the wine market will eventually infuse more activity 
into (his l)ranch of the business. Rail shipments are not yet at 
hand for April. 

The total exports of California brandy by sea in Api-il 
were as follows : 

Cases. Gallons. Value. 

To Domestic Eastern Ports 9,209 110,609 

Germany 

Great Britain 

All other foreign 39 80 520 



Total by sea 39 9,289 111,029 

*t ^^IIISKIES. — The market is jogging along. Some fair 
^^ sales iu round lots are reported. While business might 
1m- inuL-h lu'{ter, we realize also that it might be a great deal 
worse: for instance, as it was a year ago. Advices from the 
East indicate that the free goods are going slowly into consump- 
tion, and that it is only a matter of a few months when the mar- 
ket will be free from these stocks, and buyers will be eouipellcd 
to purchase bonded goods under the new tax rate. When this 
time comes and '92*8 are the old whi.skies, it is confidently 
prophesied a lively shake-up will occur in the whi.sky market. 
'I'he prediction seems to be based on a good theory, and it need 
only be said that some such change as that would be welcomed 
by all concerned. Business during the fortuight has been about 
the same, and collections are still slow. 

The imports of American whiskies by sea and rail at San 
Francisco in >rarch were as follows : 

Cases. Barrels. Hf-brls. 

By sea from Atlantic ports 182 64 

" re-imported 

" rail overland 1,368 



1 ,0.39 
1,103 



Total 1,560 

The total imjwrts of spirits by rail in .Vjiril were 2080 bar 
rels ; of alcohol 65 barrels. 

The imports of foreign whiskies were 878 cases 



97 
97 



were 



Th(' exports of American whiskies by si'a to foreign ports 
s 934 cases and 2065 gallons, valued at 89644. 



/M PORT ATI0N8.— The business still runs in spots, and ow- 
ing to fiuietuesH in all lines of trade, it does not seem to be 
able (o adjust itself to any steady biisis. It livened up some 
during the fortnight, but is taking another turn for the quiet. 



However, the standard and popular goods are receiving about 
the usual attention at this season of the year. Importations for 
the past fortnight have l)ecn light. 

The i>iineipal importations iu April were as follows: 

Chanipague — 1010 cases. 

Still Wines — 457 eases, 10 casks, 10 octaves. 

Brandy— 58 cases, 8 casks. 

(iin and (ieneva — 20 casks. 

Vermouth — 20 cases. 

Bitters — 4 cases. 

Cordials — 37 cases. 

rn(lesi;;iiated Li(|ueurs — 125 cases. 

I'ndesignated S|iirits — 37 cases. 

Bulk Beer ( IVoni overland) — 372 barrets, 378 half-barrels, no 
(juarter-barrels, and 40 kegs. 

Bottled Beer (I'roin overland) — 85 barrels, 430 casks, and 
405 boxes. 

ORANGE COUNTY AGAINST WINERIES. 



The Board of Supervisors of Orange County has organized 
it.self into a committee of the whole and formulated a report 
that will form the basis of a new liquor ordinance, to govern the 
sale of all vinous, malt and intoxicating liquors throughout the 
county, outside of incorporated cities and towns. 

The report, as yet, is not given to the public, but it is claimed 
when the ordinance is framed which will be the outgrowth 
of the report, that a license of S300 per year, or 875 per ([uar- 
ter, in advance, will be imposed upon all liquor dealers outside 
of the incorporated cities and towns, and that wine and other 
intoxicating drinks will not be permitted to be sold from any of 
the wineries in the county in (juantities of less than one gallon. 

It is claimed that the Supervi.sors propose that the ordi- 
nance shall not prove a hardship to the better class of liquor 
houses, but that they desire to bear down on the "dives," if any 
there be in Orange (jounty. — Los Angeles Times. 

The Orange County Supervisors evidently need some in- 
struction on the question of wine-selling from wineries. The 
Supreme Court held, in the case of Merced County vs. Helm & 
Nolan, that the policy of the State is to encourage wine and 
brandy making ; that counties have no right to interfere with 
the sale of w ine from wineries ; that such sales do not consti- 
tute the business of wine-.selling. 

If the Orange County Supervisors do not understand this 
they should read the law covering such cases, a law that has 
been fully sustained bj' the courts. 

They had best let the wineries alone. No ordinance that 
they can pass will affect the right of wineries to dispose of their 
products. 

ARPAD HARASZTHY'S NEW POSITION. 

Attention is directed to the circular ofArpad Haraszthy. 
which appears elsewhere. It is the formal announcement of his 
withdrawal IVom tlu! California Wine Association, mention of 
which was made in a recent nunihei- of the Reviicw. 

Mr. Haraszthy, from this time out, will devote liis attention 
exclusively to the champagne business, the trade-marks and 
brands of which remained in his control and ownership when 
the A.ssociation was formed. He also retains the right to con- 
tinue as a manufacturer of dry and sweet wines — as a vignerou 
— but will not place them on the market. It is his wish and 
desire to devote all his time and energy to perfecting the cham- 
pagnes which have already made his name familiar throughout 
the United States and luigland. 

He will not only continue to put out the '• Eclip.se " brand, 
but has nearly ready foi- the market wines which will imi)re.ss 
and delight connoisseurs, and which will be placed under a new 
brand, tlu^ excelleui'c of which will commend it to all wine- 
di'inkers. 

W(i are sincerely glad that Jlr. Haraszthy will lu>reaftcr 
give his entire tinu- and attention to the jirodMctiou of cham- 
pagnes. He understands tin? business (o perfeelion, and he can 
be depended u|)on, nnhani])ei-e(l by other interests, to raise the 
8tan<hinl ol' his products to a very enviable position. 



Chirles .Meinecke & Co. are making making many improve- 
ments to their ollices in the Sacramento sti-eet store. Tlu^ walls 
are being whitened, and new carpets and furniture will soon add 
to the bi'ightne.ss of their quarters. 



PJASIfie WIJ^E /fJ\JD Sflf^lT F^EVIEW. 



11 



THE FINEST WHISKIES IVIAOE 

In the State of Kentucky. 



ANDERSON 



BUCHANAN 





^ HAND MADE^^^ 
^ SOUR MASH 3: 

LOUISVILLE' 
KENTUCKY. 






PRODUCTION JAN. 1, 1874, TO JUNE 30, 1894, 
121,718 BARRELS. 



PRODUCTION JAN. 1, 1880 TO JUNE 30, 1894, 
28,086 BARRELS. 



NELSON BOURBON 



NELSON PURE RYE NELSON PURE MALT 






PRODUCTION JANUARY 1, 1872, TO JUNE 30, 1894, 218,146 BARRELS. 



U. S. CLUB 

/^ ^^^ .-\ 

/ U.K.CMIli \ 
/niS ' riM . KHY <-o.\ 

PRODUCTION MARCH 1, 1889, TO JUNE 30, 1894, 69,697 BARRELS. 



The Anderson & Nelson Distilleries Co. 



L-OUI S^I L-L-E:. KY. 



12 



f/ceifie WIJSIE /JSID Sflf^lT f^EVIEW. 



A-RISI/NG l/N /NEW FOKM. 



/NATIOASAL W. & S. ASSOCIATION. 



Followiuu fast upon (lio news that tlic Viticiiltuial Commis- 
sion must go out of existi-nci' next Dt'ccmliiT comes the news 
tiiat tlie Commissioners and their friemlsare perfeetin}; a scheme 
whereby all that was of value in the old institution may he re- 
tained in a new organization, only the general plan of which has 
so far been si)oken of. It is meeting with very general favor, 
however, and it is hoped by the time the present Commission 
will disl)and the new organizition will be in running order and 
(juite ready to take up tlie work ncces.sary. 

The plan is to form a College of riactical Viticulture, which 
will acipiire as good a library as the old Commission, will gather 
what infornuition is obtainable regarding the viticnltural inter- 
est, and will disseminate tiie .same, just as the present institu- 
tion has been doing all along. The one particular wherein it 
will dilVer from the old Commission will be in this: The new- 
organization will ine<>r|iorate, and its Directors will be elected 
by the members of the organiz;ition. They will have no aflilia- 
tion with political parties and the institution will be run entirely 
independent of the State Government. 

When the affairs of the Commission have been woiukI u|i 
all the eflects of the ollice will be turned over to the Kcgents of 
the University, and will presumably be handed over by them to 
the Agricultural Department of the College, which is expected 
to continue the work of the ('omraission. Tliere is now at the 
Commission rooms, on the coruer of Sansome and Bush streets, 
the linest viticidtural library in America, and it will be rather 
hard for the new organization to give it up, but the present Vit- 
icnltural (Commissioners exix'Ct to bo able to duplicate it when 
they go out of ofliee next December. 

" There arc already enlisted in the scheme some of the most 
prominent vineyardisis in the State, including representatives 
from every important wine district in California. All the pres- 
ent Comniissioners ate also interested in it, aiul with such sup- 
port it is hoped to make a strong and lasting institution. Its 
oulv political element will be to attend to legislation in both 
I>egislature and (\)ngrcss whenever any bill in the interests of 
its clients is introduced, or when any obnoxious measure is in 
danger of being adopted. 

The Viticultural Commission is in this resi)ect in a little 
better condition than the Board of Horticulture. The Viticul- 
tural Commission was killed in the Legislature, but the Board of 
Horticulture, while not killed, had its appropriation cut ofl" by 
the Governor's veto. 

It was originally intended that it should share the fate 
of the Viticultural Commission, but by a neat little political 
play this was averted. It seems that at the same time the Legis- 
lative Committee from the Board of Kegents of the University 
was actively pressing the legislators to place the work of the 
Board in the hands of the Agricultural I)e|par(ment of the Uni- 
versity they were also sui>portiiig ]\Ir. riicljis' bill to appropri- 
ate S'iViOjOOO to erect a buildiTig in this city to contain tlie alllli- 
ated <'ollegcs. By soun; means Frank Ihirk, of Napa, who was 
working in the iiiteresls of the Board, gathered strength enough 
in the Senate to defeat the Afliliated Colh'ges bill in that House, 
and then he went to Mr. Phelps and made a compromise with 

him. 

The Kegents were to let the Board of Ilorticnilurt! alone, 
or their Afliliated Colleges bill would not go through the Senate, 
and as this latter was of more importiinc(! to them they agree<l, 
and the Hoard of Horticulture was let alone. But when it came 
befoH! the (iovernor ho vetoed the approi)riation and the Board 
now has its life, but after .Inly 1st will have to support itself. 

In the meantime the Viticultural Commission was ordt^red 
di.sbanded on December .'JI, ]S'.).5, and an appropriation to last 
that long was allowed. By that tinu- the viticultiirists will bo 
in a position to continue the w^ork of the Commission without 
any trouble by the new organization which will succeed it. 



LA-RGE SALE OF B'RAMDg. 



On the 4th and nth inst. John W. B;v.shford, of 11 Hart 
street, Mark liane, London, sold the largest lot of C'alifornia 
brandy yet dis|iosed of at auction in lOiigland. The lot consist- 
ed of 150 barrels of IX'.IO brandy marked T. H. K., undoubtedly 
Vina Urandy shi|)i)<'<l by T. II. I'roelich. It sold for L's. 7d. to 
2b. lid. per gallon in Ixjiid, an ei|uivalent of Ci'j to 70 cents. 



The second annual Coiweiition of the National Wine and 
Spirit Association, held in St. Louis Ajiril 10, ISO"), was a <!e- 
eided sucer.ss in every particular. The Convention was iield at 
the St. Nicholas Hotel ami was largely attended, ovei- 100 dele- 
gates being in attendance from all parts of the country. 

President T. W. Bertdieim, of Louisville, Ky., called the 
Convention to order at 10 o'clock on the morning of the Kllh. 
In opening the meeting he said, in |)art : 

" ({exti>i;mI';n : It is a source of great pleasure in greeting 
so large an attendance upon this the second annual meeting of 
the National Wine and Spirit .Association. 

" The National Wiiu' and Spirit Association has, thanks to 
the eflicient services of the Secretary and the devotion to duly 
of the Board of Control, instituted aouw measures which have 
proven benelieial, it attempted some reforms which, I regret to 
say, have not fully materializ-d, and set in motion others which 
may prove of great value. 

" The Proliil>ltionists, of the old school, have changed the 
' theater of war ' from the East and West to the Soutli. The 
East and West have been taught by bitter experience that total 
|irohibition by statutory enactments invarialply rcsidts in the 
transfer of the trade fiom the well-regulated, lawfully licensed 
saloon managed and operated by the law-abiding, responsible 
citizen, to that of the bootlegger and moonshiner, who is ever 
ready for the sake of gain to disregard alike the laws of Stale 
and United Slates. 

" Th(! National Wine and Spirit Association is neither the 
friend iu)r advocate of intemperance ; it favors a fair license law 
which will place the retail trade in the hands of law-abiding 
citizens, and make the saloon, not an evil as many consider it, or 
an institution to be apologized for, as a large portion of our 
trade conceive it to be, but rather a most important factor in the 
development of our complex and surging civilization. In a 
word, the saloon should become the workingman's did) in the 
full sense, and it should be so conducted as to make him hap- 
pier, better and more prosperous and patriotic because of its ex- 
istence and of his contact with it. 

"The necessity of co-operation in warding off hostile legis- 
lation, the devising of means to les.sen losses in the conduct of 
our business, the simplifying of the internal revenue laws, with- 
out in the slightest degree decreasing their etlieienc}-, are meas- 
ures which might be discussed during our ineeiing with jirolit." 

Following the President's address, a committee of live was 
appointed, to whom all resolutions aiul suggestions should be 
submitti^d ; also a committee to examine the books of the .Secre- 
tary and Treasurer. 

George G. Brown, of I.iOuisville, Ky., then read a paper on 
'• The Relation of Manufacturers and Venders of Alcoholic Stim- 
ulants to Society," which is as follows: 

Tlif Hrst refuiciiff to an .'Llculiolic si imul.int in either sacred or urofane history 
is when that ilUi&trions pei'sonuf^e, from whom inoiit of ns claim descent, and wtio 
was sch'clcd by tlie Creator of Heaven and earth and all that is in them as tile only 
man then living rl;<htcousenon{;li to escape destrncliini by the Hood, planted a vine- 
yard, made wine and drank thereof. Several hnndrcd ^'eHls later, it is recorded that 
Melcliisedeck, the ]>riest of the most hi^h God. eoint,»rted .\hraham. to whom the 
Lord, as an expression of liiat it nde for mercies received, and promised in ahnnd- 
aiice art a re wan! for obedience, and -as a matter of coinenicnce — instructions i;ivcn 
about the sale of wine and sti-oni; drink, .\pinoachin;; a little nearer lo our own 
l>eriod, but slill very remote from the present i^eneralion, we find a very exalteil 
man, in fact the most illustrious of his generation, if not of all preceding; and sub- 
scijuent ones, paying his debts w itii wine, for the records show that Kin;; Solonu»n 
sent Hiram, KiiiL' of 'ryre, about one hundred and Hfty thousand gallons of u iiu- in 
paymeni of an obli;;ation due Hiram. 

.\ftcr the lapse of sonic hundred years more sacred history shows thai He, 
whom nian>' of ns accept as (iotl niid all as the most perleet type of man. converted 
water into wine to be used sohdy as a beverage on the festive occasion of a marriage 
feast, and w ho said of himself : " The .Son of Man is come eating and drinking " — 
referring to bread and wine. 

Thus we (ind that many eminent men in ancient history, whose characters ami 
memoi-y we revere, did not think it unworthy <if IhemselveB to maimffteture, sell 
and use as an into.xicant; and coming down to the history of our own e.tiintry, the 
great Wasliiiigttni, truly said to be " first in war. Hrst in peace and first in the hearts 
of his coinitrymcn," did not feel that he retlected discrcilit cither on himself or his 
counliynicn liy manufaci uriiii; whisky; but times havi' changed, and what Ihe emi- 
nent men ln'fore referred to coidd do in their general iiuis with pt'rfcct freciloin ot 
conscience and pcrlect consistency with jnildic selitinieiit is now condemned in the 
minds iti a great many of tiur people as l>eimr a great sin, if not a great crime, and 
logically such public sentiment now convicts these eminent men of patt generations 
of having l)een sinners, if not criminals, in pursuint: the life bef<M'e inentionetl. 

Americans, as a rule, are restless people, and during perioils of political inac- 
tivity are prone, for want of something belter, to turn to isms, ()ld or new, fi>r that 
excitement which seems essential to their happiness. 'I'aking advantage of Ihese 
(leriods iif (luiel, certain classes of restless persons who teed tm agitation and deem 
themselves divinely appointed to pr«iviile a nostrum for every ill humanity is heir 
111. from time to lime organize tinreiisoning crusades of misrc]>rcsentalion against 
the lienor business anl all engageil tliciein. Such crusades, bascil loi grounils 
c'luallv fallaciour in theory and i in possible in prael ii-e, spend themselves in ^â– l< deuce. 
and while they inisleiul the pulilic for a lime, gradually sulmide as tlieii character is 
exposed, to give place in turn to fresh ones, varying ill form, but ideiUical in prin- 
ciple. 



f/eifie WIJME Jk[^Q SflJ^IT f^EVIEW. 



13 



The fttiuse (if Intoxk-ants t^hows itself more plainly antl probably nmre (listrefiR- 
ingly than that !>f any i;ift God has given to us, m» that an orj^ani/ation for mip- 
prei^t^mi: the manufacture anil sale of iutoxli-ants to those restle^t* spirits that must 
eon.slantly hi- lodkinj: outside oi tlieuisi-lves tor sonu'thinj; to reform, wns a nat- 
ural seiiuenee ; tliercfore. the (triirin <tf the riohibitmn party ami its natural ally, 
llie \V»nnen"s so-ealled Totiiperan/e Union, 

Tlie I'rohibitionists are not onlv a discontented, but a veVy jn-otfreesive ami in- 
veulive elast* of people In their fanatieism, and having beeome dissatisfied with the 
many, to them, petty sins mentioned iu the Holy Bible, particularly in (he Deea- 
logne. they have evidently concluded to repeal, as far as they can, all the (dd-fash- 
ioned eins recognized liy out- forefathers, antt to invent and patent for use iu Amer- 
h'a only, one great bii: sin to take the placf of all oilu-rson the I'rnicijile of 
'• Compoundini: foi sins they arc inclined to 
By damning those they have no miud to," 
And none of these eelf-saerlficini; patriots having any pecuniary in alcoholic stimu- 
lants by unanimous consent the manufacture and sale of such stimalants haft lie-:n 
accepted as the lUU' great sin to serve as the scapegoat for all uthers. This is a sjie- 
cially attractive system of morality, as it renniree nothing more than a vigorous 
aliuse of one's neighbor and voting the Prohibition ticket to occupy a chief seat iu 
the synagogue. 

The Prohibitionist ami the W. C. T. V. have for years been maligning ami persj- 
cuting all those who have the courage to engage iu a liusincss which such organiza- 
tiiuie condcntu. until now candor forces us to admit thai we are. in a measure, un- 
der the t>an of jiulilic oiuuion. For this unfortunate state of affairs we and our 
l>redeces['ois are largely responsible, because until recent years we have thought the 
position taken by those who would destroy our business were so contrary \o the 
principles of oui Government and to the inalienable rights of every free citizen and 
so illogical generally that we did nut make any effort to combat the error that has 
lieen so pei>.istently tostered by many of our ttllow-citizens. We remained inactive 
so long that the average citizenseems to have concluded that we liavc no riglits 
whatever. States have vote«i in favor of prohibitimi ; inanufu' tories have practi- 
cally been <-onHscated without compensation by dcn3ini: Ihcm the privilege td oper- 
ation ; special taxes and licenses have been imposed on us, it seems, for permitting 
Hs to engage in our chosen viiealion We are lined in advance for crimes rather 
ttwn licensed to conduct a legitimate business, and paid for such privileges ae is 
paid by those engaged in other lines. If our business is a criminal one, I say em- 
phatiiaily, it onglit to be suppressed altogether. If it is a legitimate one. then 1 
protest in paying a penalty iu engaging in it. 

I sincerely l>elieve that no class of people in any civilized country is to-day so 
maligned and persecuted by fellow-countrymen as that engaged in the manufacture 
and sale of alcoholic stimulants in the I'nited Stales. Our enemies endeavor (o 
make uf resp()nsible for almost all the murders, the suicides, and, in fact, ail the 
crimes that are committed in the country. But is there any foundation tor these 
accusations ? 

The Chicago " Tribune" has for several years past kept what It calls a •* crimi- 
nal record." For 181M this record shows that there were y,8W) murders reported in 
the United States ; of this number 77G are attributed to li'|Uor, Nl:* to jealousy and 
the remainder to various other causes This shows luit about >> [ter cent, of the to- 
tal being charged to !i"iuor, instead of 50 per cent to 90 per cent., a-* would usually 
lie chargetl by our enemies. A larger percentage is charged to ji-alousy than 1o 
liipior; jealousy is the result of unwise love. Now. according to tlic I'rohtlpit ion- 
ist's logic, if jealousy is responsible for more murders than Iii|uor, then that which 
is eupp<»scd to be the foundation of jealous}', namely, U-ve, slionld be supjireesed. 
and if the rrohibltionists are willing to take the vote of the country '>ii the sup- 
pression of Inve and liquor j<iintly we are willing to ac cpt the coiise<|uences. 

This report shows that while ilieie were U, 8110 murders reported in 18'J4, there 
were only V-i2 legal executions. ;c) that a mnrtlerer had abinit <ine chance iu seventy- 
four ol being legally executed. The numlicr of murders in 1^<'J4 seems to have ex- 
ceeded those of 18y;i by about 50 per cent., and yet the consumption of alcohol in 
IS'ji was considerably less than in isUo ; therefore, to assume the character "f logic 
used l>y our rrohihiiion friends, the excess of murders of \>>\)i over those of is'j;^ 
must have been attributatile to the reduction in the ijuanlity t»f alcohol consumed. 
The "Tribune.'.' also keeps a record of the number of suicides in the country, 
which show there were in IsiH, 4.912. 

Of this number 281 are attributed to liquor and 2.12 to disappointed love, the 
remainder to various other causes. Now, it it were possible to prevent all thoe 
suicides by legal enaclmcnt, I should like to see it done, but I am not old emmgh 
yet to be willing to destroy love liy law or prevent any young person trom falling 
in love tor fear that it might not b- reiiuited and he would be tempted to commit 
Buicide. 

This whide iiuestion resolves itself into the impossibility of making an individ- 
ual or a pertplc morel t)y legal enactment. The Lord has created us as free agents, 
and all that we have was given us for our enjoyment, houcvcr, with prnper re- 
straint against abuse. Because some abuse, is no rcasmi why idbers shfoild l)e dc- 
nieti the proper use of alcohol or any other art icie. I believe that the nianiifactur- 
ers and venders of alcoiiolic stimulants are Iheniseives most intercstetl in the tem- 
perate lise of f.uch stimulants, and that they arc willing to further any reasonable 
suggestions looking toward the suppression of drnnkcnncss. I say this, not as a 
mere speculation, but from a firm conviction that with the universal jtractice of 
true temperance the consiimptir)n of alcoholic spirits would be increased iu this 
country. The drunkard is the great enemy to our business, but, according to the 
prevailing ojiinion, we are made the scapegoat for the drunkard s sin, if not his 
crime. There is no more reason for this than that the manufacturers and venders 
<(f the various implements used by the 9.800 murderers last year in committing 
their heinous crimes should be responsible for those murders. 

If our people w