- Whitmore Bros & Co
- Two dogs
- Two dogs
- Two dogs
- St Jacobs Oil
- Sitting dog
- Sandford's Inks
- Running Dog
- Kondon's Catarrhal Jelly
- Golden Remedy
- Floral Heading Border
- Eying the basket
- El Perfecto Veda Rose Rouge
- Dr. Lindley's Golden Remedy
- Dr Graves' Tooth Powder
- Dog strutting
- Dog sleeping
- Dog on the sofa
- Dog on its pillow
- Dog looking out
- Dog lifting its head up
- Dog eating a bone
- Dog choosing a good pillow
- Dog chasing a rabbit
- Dog backing up
- Dog and sleeping cat
- Dog
- Dog
- Dog
- Consumers Company
- Cat with its shadow
- Cat stalking a bird
- Cat slinking along
- Cat sleeping on the wall
- Cat sleeping in its bed
- Cat Sitting up
- Cat sitting pretty
- Cat sitting on a fence
- Cat lying on its back
- Cat looking over a wall
- Cat looking back
- Cat looking at the moon
- Cat licking its paw
- Cat having a stretch
- Cat having a good yawn
- Cat going down stairs
- Cat Eating
- Cat climbing into basket
- Cat cleaning itself
- Cat and Shadow
- Cat and dogs standoff
- Cat
- Angora Goat
The next importation of practical importance, although it was claimed that nine head were received about 1861, by one Stiles, was made by Israel S. Diehl, a former U.S. consul and C. S. Brown, of Newark, New Jersey, about 1868. Mr. Diehl was commissioned by the United States government to investigate the industry in Turkey, and he secured a lot of Angoras, variously estimated at from one hundred to one hundred and sixty head. Mr. C. P. Bailey furnished the money for the transportation of these goats to California. He says, "Some were fairly good and some were only ordinary. They were of medium size, and with the exception of the neck, tolerably well covered with fleece, which however had a scattering of kemp throughout. They were conceded to be the best brought to California up to that time." Some of these bucks had been tampered with and were sterile. - Angora Buck
Early Importation - Allen's Lung Balsam