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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, JANUARY 12, 1896 ( of Australian life have i ceased to be curiosities. The peo- | | ! ple of that far land have won y into the field of litera- e so diligently cultivat- ing it that Australian books are no longer es. Among the authors who have us pictures of bush life on the b tureand them more Campbe in the kind “black fellow by the settlers. The count s not depicted as a para- In describing the arrival of ss at a new town at the ena sations expre spoken by natives are ¢ on of st an. unting its red t ip a bough buildings W All the houses of had traveled u g inus, and as the line e termin ould be prek -drivers, herds ¢ ff that cc township. Anodd bac no somehow gave the ide she and brought up among all the n old-world civilization. vond the railway,in tho di ; ent to live on he: » up and ca next township, ~There was & store, a up, & few dwelling huts, and a b n blic-hous W r ar Hill end,of course, there was n »nship in it' {for a woman of refin 2 of the land and of ber lon he said and surround me. And th —nothing, but_coarse, cruel flesh and Llood, beef and mutton, parched barren ground. Eartb-—earth! fit only to bury a corpse in. Nothing but everlasting gum tree, everlasting gibia scrub, everlasting dry plain.’ She stretcied out her hauds to the forest and the distant level vhich touched the sky. “It's awful, isn't it? It is horrible—so big, s0 lonely and 0 aead!” SR The dialect of the black fellows is fairly well expressed in this example: Ning was playing with a doll, acting the tragedy of “debil-debil.” The chila’s imagina. tion, fed by the legends of the blacks’ camp, hea of late been exercising itself upon this mythical personage. “Kai! Here, you picka- Dinns. you stop inside there,” rehcarsed Ning, putting her doll in the center of a circle de- e, was even more desolate i1 sympathy. Twish soul, spirit, intellect | ¢ s | 3 | Ceesar monsicur. | fined by tiny heaps of twigs, which she callea 1 seen Claribel light fires ound 1o keep debil-debil make plen ook aiter ) ire and_picl old, that like it, » aninny kaninny quite Jebibdebil | ors might arrive at a proper understand- | wg of she natives of that country, as they | were found by the first whites to arrive. | Much of the work is a compilation of his- Ba’al ry firé—my pickaninny. f the story inciude a de- it in the cattle country, shepherds, a forest fire, picpic and the usual remote from civilization. The inciden cription of adro of the who like fres was not the ri before she es- ed, however, after many in Australia by v of £20,000 and allowing i her hus- a novel of Anglo- ampbell-Praed. D. Anppleton & Co., New York. Price 50 cents. For sale by William Doxey. THE JOURNAL OF A SPY IN PARIS. published by Harper & rent, both commencing and endingabru v. The name or the title page, Raoul H 1, affords no clew to the tity of the writer of the original, it lated from the French. t during the Reign of tin was permitted to work the haste and carelessness in its composition. he writing is apparently that of an edu- cated man too pressed for time to pay much attention to such matters of detail as literary style or elegance of diction. [New York: Harper & Bros. For sale by Payot, Upham & Co.) INDIAN LEGENDS. “The Siwash; Life, Tales, and Legends of Puget Sound and the Pacific North- west,” is the titie of a volume just issued by the Calvert Publishing Company, Seat- tle, Wash. Itisin paper covers, 170 pages, and is fully illustrated. The editor, J. A. Costello, is a Seattle journalict, and his excuse for the book is that “'it is the first attempt to depict the life or ethnology of the maze of Indian tribes on Puget Sound.” Mr. Costello’s aim, he declares, | was o attain as nearly as possible the | facts in every instance, in order that read- | torical and other matter. The material was largely drawn from old pioneers and | the more intelligent natives, and as oppor- | tunities for obtaining such matter will not | last many years longer, the editor and compiler hopes that his volume will find a | welcome place in the homes of the country where toe Siwash once flourished. Many of the tales and legends remind one of bits of Greek mythology. The volume on the whole is interesting. The Indians are gradually disanyenring and it seems deplorable that so little is to- day known, in a literary sense, concerning the aboriginals of the great West. This book, undoubtedly, rescues many tales | from what would otherwise be certain ob- | livion. An age or two hence the Indian himself will be a story of other times. Mr. Costello is entitled to credit for his ser- | vices in assuring the preservation of these | tales and legends. | The legend of “The Thunder-bird” is one of the many that Mr. Costello has col- lected. That legend, which he briefly re- lates, has been put into experimental verse by the reviewer and the result is given below. It is substantially faithful to the original story whatever literary de- fects it may hav The Thunder-bird’’ may be set down as a fair example of the Siwash myth. And here it 18, with apolo- ! gies to the shade of Longfellow: nous Committee of Public Safety, of hich Robe on their deliberations. By this means he gained access to certain information, which is put forth in the pages of the k It is stated in the preface that such formation was neither very new nor nportant; that the name Hesdin is @ fictitious one, and finally that the frag- ment was perhaps intended for the private uses of the party to whom it was ad- any places throughout this “diary” are blanks or breaks which make it Ticult for the reader to peruse nected narrative. The many emnporary English essay- t 2 presumption thatthe, nglishman, or at least a and “well-read individual, bly appreciated the situation ring Robespierre’s adminis- ner- characteristically British. _ A flood ght 1s thrown on t on of Paris and Parisians in 1794 der date of March 7 the writer sa eled who thoro . Un- fal n made drama, to which I went 1. n | bave been hissed off the stage at the most | trumpery fair in England. * * * GCertain boxes are reserved for the Government, * * # | Motiere, Voltaire, Raci matists are susp when Greek or Roman subjec: | the heathen gods are made to s 1 age of the heroes of the Bastilie (Robespierre, And Brutus is forbidden to oadl It would | Danton, etc.). Two months later the author gives some account of the triai of the Princess (prob- ably Mme. Elizabeth, sister of Louis XVT). He describes the unfortunate woman as acting with Christian fortitude in facin, her enemies. Her judges are compnreg in intelligence and probity to ‘‘stable- boys,” though it is admitted that their audiences in the courtrooms clamored aloud for blood, and would permit no lenienc; The “diary” betrays evidence of both pierre was 2 member, carriec | he condi- | 9. U SIWASI LEGEND OF PUGET SOUND, List, degenerate Siwash children: Ve who blush when the traditions ers, men of power, onji In your weak To The man of tongue, the paleface— List the legend of the H. Sung of 0ld by great P hinooks the peeriess singer. Now all songs are of the white man, And all books are of his making. List. the whiie I tell the legend Sung when Siwash fame was golden, 50 sang Pultawund, ding toward the northland clept the south wind), his long excursion und of deathless flowers; T, baving traveled, ® o'er regions bar; . the Siwayh ogress, Quoots-Hool, Saying, will bring thee perfumes 1# my hunger thou eppeasest.”” &l (Too-lux, o Wearled Quoth the ogress, “Ply the fishnet, Purchasing thy ¥or the sea wo in be rid of Many fishes that disturb him,” Too-lux dragged the net and straightway ught “the little whale,” the grampus; ised his knife to cut it open— n the ogress cried, “Beware thee! “rce not with thy knife or rue thee! ‘With the sharp shell from the seashore Split the fish, but cut not crossways!” « 3 v ¥ Too-lux, heeding not the warning, Cut across its side the grampus; tooped 1o slice the tempting blubber— heart, grew faint within him, ned his Is at their sockets, he trem| the leaf does e hen he b breath upon it— ad scorned the i | th his blade had wrought t the grampus 'gan expanding— Changed, like magic, In o twinkling, To a bird of such proportions T ing to the heavens, outspread, the sky was darkened mpletely, by the wing-flaps Shook the earth, decpawed and gloomy. Thus the Thunder-bird, called Hahness, Rose on earth 10 Iive forever. Never Too1ux to the northiand | Comes to meet the wintry ogress, But, from distant hills appearing, Swoops the Huhness o'er the valleys, Spreads his wings and earth is darkened, While the heaven, full of sorrow, onsolable in absence hi-eyed lover, 1 in her anguish; rd takes pity, and sinks to silence, en the earth smiles in reflection Of the smliling of the beaven. “THE ONE WHO LOOKED ON.” | After the ordinary novels of exaggerated | emotions told with the straining ior effect | that “tears passion to tatters,” it is pleas- ant to come upon some story of guiet life, having within it suggestions of deep and true feeling. Such is the story told in “The One Who Looked On.”” Nothing could be more simple than the structure of the tale. Itis merely the narrative of the unfolding of the character of an excep- tionally strong man, who beneath a man- ner of coid reserve conceals the emotions, but does not stifle the current, of a warm and noble disposition. The characters are few and the incidents are in no respect extraordinary. The whole interest of the work lies in the man- ne r in whichgthe real nature of the hero is developed and becomes clear to a young girl who tells the course of his love and is *‘The one who looked on.” The style, in harmony with the narrative, has the charm of a graceful simplicity and gives the book a literary value much "above the standard of the average novel of theday. [“The One Who Looked On,” F, F, Montresor, // 2 EMILY VANDERBILT SLOAN it 7 o New York: by William Doxey. D. Appleton & Co. For sale Price, cloth, §1 25.] FOND OF LITERATURE. It may be that oneday the house of Van- derbilt will rival that of the Astorsina | literary as well as social way. William Waldort has taken his family name out | of commerce and stocks and written it on the roll of authors. Emily Vanderbilt Sloane has compiled a volume of extracts, which is entitled “Ideals,” The young woman recently entered society, but did not permit routs and bails and such | affairs to keep her from the literary work | she had marked out, which is partly repre- | sented in “Ideals.” Miss Sl‘nane is the daughter of William Douglas Sloane and a granddaughter of the late William H. Vanderbilt. Her sister, Adele, was mar- ried to James Abercrombie Burden Jr. 10K In ‘“’Cension” Maude Mason Adams has given us a simple love tale and sketch of ranch life near Pasodel Norte. ’Cen- sion, the young daughter of a wealthy and easy-going rancher, is passionately in love with Eduardo Lerma, a boid, handsome man of 38. She is simple, pu re, trustful, beautiful, in direct contrast to the man on whom she bestows her love. He is a liar, thief and hypocrite, and cares for 'Cension only as he would for an exquisite wild flower, to be plucked, scented and trampled in the'dust. Eduardo is thought to have another love, and one night 'Cension goes, accompanied only by her dog, to a dance- hall in Del Norte to see herrival. Eduardo explains his falseness away very glibly; but his evil sugeestions glance from the girl as from shining armor, and in the end ber brother saves her from the villain’s wiles by proving him to be a robber, de- serter of wife and childre d would-be murderer. There are some striking scenes in the tale, which is weil illustrated. [Pub- lished by Harver & Brothers, New York. For sale by William Doxey.] LIT EARY NOTES. 1t is reported that Count Tolstoi’s “Anna Karenira’ has been dramatized in French and that in the last act the heroine is run over by a railw; train in full sight of the audience. Mrs, Humphry Ward lives, when in the country, at Aldbury, a sleepy English village of 800 people, under the Chiltern Ward’s ‘residence 1s called House.” George Augustus Sala has inti- mated that she proposes to write the story of her husband’s life. The announcement is made to prevent the publication of un- authorized biographies. Mr. Baring-Gould thinks out many fo his plots Iying in bed. The foundations of more than one story have been developed | in a single sleepless night. He makes no notes except a brief sketch of each chapter. Rhoda Broughton is still living at Ox- | ford, a stately, charming woman, just be- | ginning the autumn oflife. She rarely goes to London now, but is always pleased to welcome her literary friends to her home | in the classic old university town. | Robert Louis Stevenson’s history of his | family will apyear in the forthcomingg | ion of his works now being prepared | Edinburgh. It ends with the great | | before surrendering and has given a viv | cano of Kilauea at the tion of taking a long rest, and is at work on a new historical romance. Weyman is a very careful workman and frequently spends a week in constructing and writing a chapter. Richard Henry Stoddard is of the ovinion that the weli-bred persons in Wil- liam Black’s serial “Briseis,” now appear- ing in Harper’s Magazine, are a welcome addition to the characters of fiction. The tale 1f moves as blithely as a holiday pageant and is in pleasant contrast to the morbid literature that filis so many book | covers at the present day. | Helen Mathers wrote her novel, “Comin’ Thro’ the Rye,” in a bit of pique. Her | father, who was a strict disciplinarian, de- nied her some cherished wish, and she paid him off by depicting the family mar- tinet in her book. She was greatly sur- prised when her novel was accepted by the publishers, and went about in an agony of fear lest her father should discover the | author. A striking contribution to the literature of the new vear will be that of Slatin Pasha. Before the Mahdi's victories in | the Soudan he was Governor of Darfur | and in command of large military forces. He fought twenty-seven pitched but'.l_ef id | account of them. He was present during the siege of Khartoum, and to his feet Gordon’s head was brought within an hour of the city's fall. “Fire and Sword in the Soudan” will be illustrated with | maps and thirty-two engravings. | In his new ‘“‘Recollections of Napoleon | IIL” Sir William Fraser says that the | Emperor looked like a sick eagle—‘his eyes | small and not at all prominent, his bead held slightly at one side, an appearance | of abstraction about him.” His chief re- semblance to the Bonaparte family | was in his back. One good saying| of the Emperor iz recorded. When | Nicholas I of Russia congratulated him | on coming to the throne, he addressed him as “my friend” instead of “my brother,” the usual royal phrase. “This | list most of the modern schools and kinds of fiction are represented, in so far, at least, as foreign writers are concerned. In the course of the term Dr. Phelps will also lecture on Ibsen and his influence on the novel. FOR ARMENIA. Mass-Meeting to Protest Against the Atrocities to Be Held at Metro- politan Temple. A mass-meeting will be held in Metro- politan Temple to-morrow evening, Janu- ary 13, ai 8 o'clock, to protest against Turkish barbarities; to appeal to the powers of Europe and our Government to stop the slaughter cf Christians; to de- mand the protection of American life and | property. All citizens who love justice and the honor of the American name are invited to attend. His Honor Mayor Sutro will preside. S. M. Shortridge will make the principal ad- dress; John Bonner will make an histor- | ical statement: speeches bv Bishops Good- | sell and Nichols, Rabbi Voorsanger and Drs. Stebbins, Monton and others. The committee in charge consists of H. C. Minton, D.D., W. D. Williams, D.D., Thomas Filben, D.D., George E. Walk, D.D., Rabbi Voorsanger, Rev. H. Beyier. RE, MR, KNGS SCAENE, Will Establish a Great Co-oper- ative System in This City. N Business Houses of all Kinds Will Be Started in the Near Future. His Plans. Rey. Francis King, a minister who re- cently arrived in this City from the East, is making preparations to launch a co- operative scheme, the like of which has never before been established in the San Francisco community. Rev. Mr. King kas long been a student of social conditions as they exist, and be- lieves that the time isripe for a plan to unite the efforts of men for their common good. He believes that the co-operative plans of the past, many of which have been auspiciously lauuched only to be wrecked on the rocks of discord, bave failed because the projectors or those who embarked in the schemes did not stick to their original plans, but allowed them- selves to be drawn into side issues that eventually brought dissensions into the ranks and finally brought their efforts to naught. “To make a co-operative plan a success,” he said yesterday, ‘‘those who undertake it must first fix upon a feasible plan, allow those who are shown to hayve the most executive ability to direct their efforts and then follow the direction first taken to the last extent. “The plan we are now working on is different from any that has yet been tried in this City, but we—that is, those who have signified their intention of joining the association now forming—have no doubt of its ultimate success. We shall begin in a small way, say with 100 mem- bers, and gradually, as tlie machinery gets into working order, more will be taken in. The first hundred members wiil appoint a is_most flattering,” said the Emperor. ‘We choose our friends; we cannot choose | our relatives,” | Dean Hole's book giving his impressions | of this country, just out, contains some curious inaccuracies. He says, for in- stance, that in prohibition towns liquor is | generally dispensed in teapots, and tells about a guest in upon calling for something to drink, was told by the landlord: “You will find a little tap near your dressing- table in your room, 'which will put you in communication with the old rye, and you can take what you please for yourself and your friends, as there is a meter on the other side of the wall.’”’ It cannot be sup- posed that this wasa personal experience of the good dean, and it looks, therefore, as 1f some wag had been “‘stufling” him. It is not too much to say that ‘The Traveler” of San Francisco is one of the handsomest journals published in this country. The January number appears with a” photograph in colors asa frontis- piece, giving o graphic picture of the vol- {awalian Island Chief among the contents is an entertain- ing sketch on palmistry, with illustrations, by Jane Seymour Klink; Arthur Inkers ley contributes a bright sketch, giving an account of his experience at Oxford; W. . Bryan has a two-page article on’ the luxuries of mountain railways; Santa Bar- bara, by H. Edwards, is quite a unique sketch, and Mrs. E. 8. Marshall contrib- SN e RN i%af' }i:é}\\\\\\ Cosiih £ /A 7 B by / | | AT SUNSET, ALL ALONE, 'CENSION DEPARTED OVER THE FIELDS FOR DEL NORTE. [From * 'Cension,” by Maude Mason Adams.] achievement of his grandfather’s life in thke building of the Bell Rock lighthouse. Notwithstanding her many duties as eaitor of Harper's Bazar Mrs. Sangster finds time to do much outside work. She has a regular department in Harper's Round Table, and now it is announced that she has just written a serial story that will be published in that periodical. The Land of-Sunshine pronounces Rider Haggard's ‘‘lleart of the World” a “gor- geously readable book,” but before doing so remarks that “Mr. Hageard conscien- tiously misspells two-thirdsof the Spanish words he uses, and misuses a fair share of the rest, and this is his least blunder.” Stanley J. Weyman, whose “Red Cock- ade”” has been one of the most successful of recent novels, has given up his inten- utes an article on San Leandro Lake, giv- ing an account of the great water supply system through a large part of Alameda County. Dr. William L. Phelps of Yale announces that the novels which he will digeuss in his popular course on popular fiction dur- ing this year include the following books: “The Children of the World,” by Heyse; “Dame Care,” by Sudermann; ‘‘A House of Gentlefolk” (‘‘Liza”), by Turgenev; “Fathers and Sons,” by Turgenev; ““Anna Karenina,” by Tolstoy; “Where Love Is There God Is Also,”” by Tolstoy; ‘“Pan Michael,” by Sienkiewiez: “Synnove Sol- bakken,” by Bjornson; “In God's Way," by Bjornson; ‘‘Jack,” by Daudet; ‘“An Iceland Fisherman,” by Loti; “The Crime of Sylvester Bonnard,” by France. In this a hotel who, | | plaint. committee to formulate a constitution and by-laws which will provide for the election of a president and other officers. The plans of the association differ materially from those of the Labor Exchange in many particulars, chief among them being that” money will cut a very important | figure in the scheme. *‘Without funds we can do nothing, and our first efforts will be devoted to raising these funds. The first hundred members will pay for some time monthly dues into the treasury. “*Some have agreed to pay $1 per month, others $5 per month, and soon. When suf- ficient money has been collected to begin operations, one business house will be es- tablished. It may be a tailoring establish- ment, a shoe factory or any other business which the members elect. ‘It is acknowledged by all that by the co- | operative system cheaber and better re- sults can be obtained than by individuals, | so that all things being equal it should do as well as any other business of the kind. | *‘Here is where the membership of the | association will come in. Each member will be pledged to patronize the business | started by the association and to induce his friends and business associates to do | the same. As the membership of the as- sociation increases the patronage of the | business;will enlarge, and it is hope< to have it on a paying basis in a short time. “Then members who are expert in some other line will be selected to start some other business on the same lines, the | monthly dues aiding to push the new es- tablishment along until it can stand on its | own legs. fish a gigantic system by which all our members can live getting the maximum wage for the minimum of labor and pro- | ducing such goods as will be to tue great- | est benefit to all. By adhering strictly to | the plan as outlined we are sure of ulti- | mate success. “‘Of course it will take men of executive ability to direct the affairs of the concern, but we already have many men of good standing and business sense interested and | no difficulty will be experienced in this di- | rection. We will soon begin to hold meet- ings on the matter, and once crganized the | association will make rapid progress.” HEALTH LAWS. BILIOUSNESS. Too much bile is biliousness. i"l | Biliousness may come from your over- loading your stomach. * Biliousness may come from a chronic liver complaint; in any event use Joy's Vegetable Sarsaparilla. **a Sick headaches result from a bilious at- tack and are cured by the use of Joy’s Vegetable Sarsaparilla. * " A dark-yellow, muddy skin is unnatural —it 1s the sign of biliousness; clear it with Joy’s Vegetable Sarsaparilla. x ¥ Liver spots are dark-brown spots. They frequently covgr the different portions of the body—are/the result of a liver com- Drive them away by the use of Joy’s Vegetable Sarsapariila. * «*a Unrelieved biliousness leads to jaundice. * " Just before you get too yellow use Joy’s Vegetable Sarsaparilla. * % ‘When you are melancholy, irritable and should use Joy’s Vegetable Sarsaparilla. **t ought to use Joy’s Vegetable Sarsaparilla instead of the cocktail. *‘w to eat when you are bilious, but pe moder- ate, even in the use of Sarsaparilla. ** Moderation is longevity. % erate. We hope eventually to estab- | NEW TO-DAY. STARVED. STOMACH RUINED AND MEMORY GONE. Caused by Using 8421 Plugs of Tobacco, A. T. Budd, Druggist, of Arnprior, Ont., Reports This Wonder- ful Case. Man does a lot of foolish things, and when you come to look them all over, the continued use of tobacco is, without doubt, the most unaccountable of them all. Tobacco kills more people than all the contagious diseases together. We don’t know it, or don’t want to ad- mit it, but it’s so. Not one man in ten would get sick so easily and die from catarrh, consumption, pneumonia, heart disease, etc., if his otherwise strong con- stitution were not undermined by tobacco poson. It’s so easy to eet started and so impos- sible to stop tobacco use, unless No-To- Bac comes to the rescue. Millions are now seeking relief, and they are coming from all parts of the world. Read this let- ter: He Now Can Eat. Arnprior, Ont., Sept. 20, 1895, A. T. Budd Esq., Druggist, Arnprior, Ont.—Dear Sir: I have used No-' ac and found it a complete cure. 1 had smoked and chewed for 20 years. I had used a 10-cent plug of chewing tobacco every day, as_weil as three plugs of smok- ing a week. My doctor told me that toe bacco was killing me, and I tried to quit of my own accord, but could not exist without it. After using three boxes of No- To-Bac I am completely cured. My nerves were a complete wreck, but now my neryes never trouble me. For many years I could mnot eat any breakfast, my stomach was in such a bad condition. Now I can eat as well as any one, and have gained considerable in weight, and am better physically and mentally than ever before, and I can highly recommend No-To-Bac as & complete cure. JAMES HEADRICK, Clay Bank P. O., Ont. Now, No-To-Bac is a nerve-maker, aids digestion, and will help any one from weakness to health. It is the grandest medicine ever made; over 300,000 cures. You run no risk, for you can buy No-To- Bac under absolute guarantee from your own druggist. Do it to-day! Now is the time, and in a week or two be free and well. Get our booklet, “Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away.” Writ- ten guarantee and free sample mailed for the asking. Address The Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago or New York. FURNITURE ——BOE—— 4 ROOMS Parlor — Silk Brocatelle, trimme Bedroom—T7-Peice Elegant Suit, bed, burean, washstand, two chairs, rocker and table; pii- lows, woven wire and top matiress. Dining-Room—86-¥oor Extension Table, Solid Oak Chairs. Kitchen . 7 Range, Patent Kitchen Table and two Chairs. EASY PAYMENTS. Houses furnished complete, v or country, any- where on the Coast. Open evenings. M. FRIEDMAN & CO., 224 to 230 and 306 Stockton and 237 Post Street. BF~ Free packing and delivery across the bay. &-Peice Suit, plush four BREAKFAST-SUPPER. “RY A THOROUGH KNOWLEDGE OF natural laws which govern the operations digestion and nutrition, and_ by a careful applicas | tlor af the fine properties of well-selected Cocos. | DLr. Epps has provided for our breakfast and suppar i icately flavored beverage, which may save ug | many heevy doctors' bills. It is by the judicious i ‘use of such articles of diet that a constitution may | be gradually bullt up until strong enough to resigh every tendency to disease. Fundreds of subtl maladies are floating around us, ready to attack wherever there Is a weak point. We may escaps many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves tvell forils fied with pure blood and a properly nourished frame.”—Civil Service Gazette. Mide simply with boiling water or m Seld only in half-pound tins, by grocers, labeled t! AMES E Psfico..ud.,x-iumcqn o hemists, Lendon, England. @ Li Po Tai Jr., son of the famous L1 Po Tai, has taken his father’s business, and is, after eleven years' study in China, fully prepared to locate and treatall diseases. COAL! Wellington Southfield Genuine C Seattle. Bryan: Telephone—Black: KNICKERBOCKER COAL CO., 522 Howard Street, Near First. DR.WONG W00 . i\ Chinese Drugs and Tea and Herb Sanitarium, 776 CLAY STREET, Bet. Kearny and Dupont, San Francisco. 1 have been troubled for two years with in- flammation of the lun; and heart disease, was unable to find n lief by any physicia I was’ treated for thre weeks by Dr. Wong Woo i and perfectl health. JOHN R Six Mile Hous. LIPO TAL JR,, Chinese Tea and Herh Sanitorium, No. 727 Washington St San Francisco, Cal. Cor. Brenham Place, ahove the piaza. Office Hours: 9to 12, 1to4 and 5 to 7. Sun- day, 9 A. M. to 12 M. COAL'! 8 00—Half ton 400 .; 1108, 7109 P. X cranky your liver is disordered and you Early morning cocktails go straight to the liver and result in biliousness; you The Hotel ‘ Par Excellence’ Ofthe Natiomal Capital. First class in all appoiat wents. G, DEWITT. Trens. American plan, $3 per day and Fruits and vegetables are especially good .)‘oy's Vegetable An immoderate person may live lon y but would live longer had heybecn mo§~ upwird. s 1, DON'T PAY R\ $30 or $40 for an Electric Belt when we will sell_you A far bet'er one at from 35 to $20. until you e PIERC] # ts. Pamphlet : T or address DR. ® PIERCE & SQN, 704 Secramen(o sireet, Sau Francisco. Cak