Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
30 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1897. “THE BLACK CAT " UP TO DATE - He Is a Marvelously Successful Hunter| and His Exploits A Pride of an Extensive Region ERE is a black cat with an actual ¢ hunting record which is unequaled ¥AN by any hunterin Rockland County, Vermont. Minks, woodchucks, rabbits and part- ridges are the game which he prefers. He scorns with lofty disdain to hide bebind a brush or tree and pounce out upon some | tiny chipmunk or small bird. Heis a true | hunter, with all the instincts of a sports- | man and for versatility is a modern *puss in boots.” | Nimrod is the very appropriate name of this bunting cat, and he is owned by Miss } Nina Cook of Poultney, which is situated | on the shores of ke St. Catherine, in the Green Mountain State. This remarkable feline is also addicted to the more gentle art of angling as well as the excitement of wood sports and the chase. And it is no uncommon thing for him to land a perch, pickerel or an occasional bass weighing three or four pounds. In addition to prowess in the chase this wonderful cat has social qualities that | make him an & on to any bouse- bold. Heaccompanies the families to the | neighbors' houses and behaves prettily as a visitor, never scratching the t'hllx!n’n‘ nor quarreling with the dogs. He has his special chair at the dinner table and waits to be helped as the other guests, | asking a blessing with a contented purr thankfulness and then lapping his ilk or nibb his chicken as daintily { a ball supper. | hissanguinary achieve- as a young lady & Notwithstand ments in the field bis fur is| always spotlessiy clean and his nails | deitly manicured, and no one would ever imagine that they had ever been buried in a rat's vitals or bad scratched the slimy skin of a snake. His whiskers especially are trained like those of a Parisian gentieman of fashion, and while they can bristle fiercely in a | fight, -can also curl coquettishly when greeting friends or welcoming good-look- ing stranvers whose appearance may chance to please his fickle fancy. His peculiar “miaow” is multiphonic and would almost persuade the hearer that the cat has a language of his own, articuiar aud vuonetic. In fact, the fam- ily has arrived at the understanding of 1ts varied inflections so as to comprehend perfectly what the enimal wants aud | Wwishes, and the cat in return comprehends | every word that is spoken in his pres- | ence, be it English or French, both of | which tongues are of common use in the household. Nimrod apparently hunts and fishes for two reasons. In the first place, he seems | to enjoy the exitement of the chase and | the battle to tne death which invariably | follows, with the cai a victor. In the sec- | ond place, he apparently feels that for tome reason he is expected to make fre- | quent additions to the family larder, and so far as is known he never attempts to | eat the game which he catches, but in- | variably brings it home to his mistress | and lays it at her feet. When the game is prepared for the | table, he enjoys his portion of it with the rest of the family. Hisshunting record for the present season has been one of which & human hunter armed with the most complete and modern sporting arms might be more than proud. He has caught, killed and brought| bome, one woodchuck, one American marten, one muskrat, five minks, several weasels, eighteen gray squirrels and ground squirrels, 173 rabbits, fifteen par- tridges and a big black snake. With all those to his credit as a sport- 1ng feline, Nimrod has found time to fre- quently go fishing, catch a big owl and keeps the promises of the family froe from rats. Upon an unlucky occasion, Nimrod himseli got caught and came limping home with his fore foot fast in the cruel jaws of a small steel trap. The sharp steel Lad cut through the fur and flesh to the bone, but the cat went at once to his mistress and seemed to under- stand that release and the dressing of the wound would be painful, for all through the operation of washing, dressing and binding up of the hurt he lay on a lounge | triumph. re the Wonder and | | and made no move until the uncomforta. | ble process was completed. | In appearance he is a big black animal | with long silkeu fur, with only one tiny | white spot o his body, that being on the | right side of his neck. He generally pre- | ferajito’ hunt alone, but ibstween Nimrod | and Sport, the family dog, there is a strong friendship. They eat out of the | same dish ana sometimes go on hunting | trips together. From one of these trips | they came home late at night, Nimrod with a black snake and a plump young partr. in his mouth, while Sport car- ried an old partridge. They deposited their spoils at the feet of Miss Cook, and Nimrod seemed quite put | out when the snake was not put into the pot and boiled with the partridge. He seemed, however, to reaiize that snakes | are not popular as an article vither of com- | merce or diet, and sincz then has never | brought any more home. | Another peculiar feature of Nimrod’s | hunting is that the game he brings to his | mistress is of the very best. No mangy mink whose fur would not have a market value does he ever bring in to lay at his | mistress’ feet; no unfeathered fowl will he soll his jaws with. A st wholesome and plump or puss will have | none of it, and in that proiific part of the | country, the “‘ferm naturw' being plentiful as yet, Puss can afford to be particular and difficult to please. It is no matter of surprise to Miss Cook | orany of her household to find & dead | /NS NN COOK NiMROO NIMROD FICHTS “anD- ke W00 o Al uck & rabbit or b ngabout the house. In| fact, she w 't wonder if puss should one day bring in a fox thrice as big as | himsel, slung over his back. But minks, squirrels and other game, whose fur is of value, ed about thus care- lessly, but are always caref aid down at the fect of hisowner, and the customary | word of approval waited for and received | with a soft purr of satisfaction. Living as he does on the shores of Lake | St. Catherine, Nimrod has ample oppor- tunity to practice the piscatorial art, his favorite fishing ground being the trunk of | a fallen tree, whish overbangs a deep pool | in the lake. Here, when there is no ice to interfere | with his work, Nimrod lies like a black | panther, extended at full length along the tree-trunk. When a tish which suits him comes near the suriace beneath tne tree, down goes a sleek black paw and the sharp claws are burted in the side of,the | fish. There is no escape for the “finny one,” and cat takes his catch home in The hardest battle which Nimrod has yet had was with a woodchuck, which refused to be killed without a tough fight, rod was game, however, and after | Teceving some severe bites and scratches he managed to get a good “‘backhold” on the woodchuck and by a quick turn to break his neck. The skins of the animals which Nimrod has brought fiome have when gold added not a little to the *‘pin money” of his mistress, while as a provider of “‘game in season” for the table Nimrod has no equal in all the country. Of course puss is one of the lions of the countryside. Every traveler is told of his exploits and if possible brought to see the hero of them. Ali such visits are received calmly and with dignity. Puss evidently realizes his position as the champion hunter of the county and looks npon the homage paid as merely public recognition of a seli-evident fact needing no com- ment. 1t is now proposed by the hunters of the county to present puss with asilver cham- pion’s belt or rather collar, which will no doubt be worn with pride and repaid with double exertion on'the part of the grate- ful recipient, for Nimrod 18 no churl and would scorn to acyept undeserved favors. That the cat manages to catch such shy birds as partridees and such fleet-footed animals as rabbits is a matter of much comment among those who are personally familiar with its prowess in the field. As a “stalker’” Nimrod is a brilliant success, but he has been seen in the early morning hours scurrying across | their sacred calendar, and its mummy is | edge,” | for energy and dash that the feline race | and regarded as nothing short of sacri- | detail, and the following conclusions are | of condensed milk plainly show that the the | modern machinery. Mysell-Roilins, 22 Clay.* stubble fields, in _close pursuit of a fright- ened rabbit which was fleeing for life. The success of the chase is, however, al- ways apparent when the feline bunter | comes proudly home and lays his long- cared prey before his mistress. The ancient Egyptians appreciated the cat as a nousehold genius so highly that they deified, or at least *‘beatified,” it in found entombed along with those of Pharaohs and high priests. The Aryan legend, ““The Cat of Knowl- which has come down to our times and climes as ““Puss in Boots,"’ is evidence of the estimation in which the animal was held on the Himalayan vplateau, | whence our race descended to cover the earth with knowledge, while in modern times the well-known tale of “Whitting- | ton and His Cat’ sustains the reputation | has obtained wherever it has dwelt. The good people of Rockland County | have much the same regard for Nimrod | that the ancient Egyptian had for his cat, | and any offer of sale would be dec'ined | lege. His exploits are looked upon as re- | flecting great credit upon the folk of the countryside, and any serious mishap to | this most remarkable cat would be re- garded as a most dire calamity. \ | | FOODS VERY IMPURE. Evaporated Cream, Milk, Honey and Syrup Badly Adulterated. Professor W. T. Wenzell, chemist of the | Board of Health, has submitted hi monthly report of the chemical depart- | ment concerning the analysis of food | products during the month of January. He makes the following interesting state- | menis: The so-called evaporated creams consist | of milk from which a notable quantity of | butter fa: had been abstracted and is then | condensed by the evaporation of more or less of its water. The so-called condensed milk may be defined as milk from whicha | | | | %%%\%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%fi%%% portion of the butter fat has been removed and thickened with cream sugar. The analyses of certain samples were given in drawn. *It will be seen that the above samples are not creams; that they are simply milks, very poor in butter fat, and con- densed, excepiing Nos. 29 and’ 40, which are made from 2 good quality of milk. | But, as they represent milk only in- | creased to represent two parts condensed | to one part their nutriment quality is be- low that of the others.” To show the great variability of the preparations, a table is given showing the analysis of certain samples as follows, in percentages: Butter Album- Mur tat. inoids. sugal | 34 575 10.65 11'a. 5.30 483 R 8k e 650 575 651 6.40 An analysis of a high quality of cow's milk shows the following: Butter fat, 4; albuminoids, 3.5; milk sugar, 4.8, From | a comparison the chemist finds that oniy one sample—No. 29—approximates the amounts of butter fat, albuminoids and milk sugar contained in normal milk. A similar tebulation concerning con- densed miik is also furnished,and from the figures he finds tnat “the above samples butter fat is greatly deficiant, ana that, inasmuch as the sugar of milk and the albuminoids are greatly in excess that skimmed milk is used in_the manufac- ture of these products. I think that a standard should be adopted which should compel the manufacturer to condense four parts of pure, unskimmed milk to one part weight, antl suck a product could be made which contains the stated constitu- ents of milk in equal parts by weight.”” | - Thirteen samples of honey were analyzed. Four of these were mixed with cane-sugar syrup, two of the four also being watered One, which purported to be pure, white clover honey, was nearly all giucose; an- other was honey mixed with glucose. One sample of catsup was found to be adulterated with salicylic acid and coal- tar color. One sample of raspberry syrup con- tained cane-sugar syrup, glucose and col- ored with aniline dye and contained no raspberries. The veterinary surgeon has found on dairies he has inspected 207 animals sus- pected of disease during the past month and 50 per cent of these were coughing. —————— CHECKED louisines, latest novelty, City of Paris, §1 25 per yard. . e An interesting piece of information brought out during the Brussels Confert ence is the fact that there are at presen- Do less than §100,000,000 of counterfeit sil- ver money in circulation in France, Bel. gium, Switzerland, Italy, Spain and Por- tugal. ————— FINE half-tone printing by skilled men and %%WW%WW HALE BROS. SPECIALS IN DOMESTICS. 3000 yards to go to-morrow a. CRASH TOWELING—Uure, una (:1C dulterated flax, 15 inches wide: & U4 great offer to-morrow a Yard FISHNET FOR CURTAINS — A ]4" choice lot, 45 luches wiae, in white Yard OF €CTU; (0-MOTTOW L. ....esnemens S—Pure wool. Oc grade to FRENCH FLANN 8light pattern on the counter at DRESS SATE chcloth we sold for 15c: stripesand figures onb lack ground; to-morrow SPECIALS IN NOTIONS. SARL BUTTONS 9 ime; were orizinall bummer to-morrow &t.. Dozen WHITE size of a doze: P! BEAMLESS me SHIE ( morro; Patr 200 dozen FINE HANDKER- CHIEF~—Swiss embroider E BUY JOBS SOMETIMES. AlotOf CHANG * ABLE MOIRE TAFF hased at on ayard when you pay The unusual cost to you Is 25c a Yard. (Every yard and color desirable). usual cost. MEET ME AT (NCORPORATED) SAN FRANCISCO. @%%%%WW%WWWM Hot Specials, every one. We | are lively merchants. APRON GINGHAMS—Checked, 27 Q10 inch: small blue and brownchecks: 2 10¢| loped edge: u bargain; & Leap on | the counterat st Eaon HAIRPIN he ordinary hair- c pins, but a superior article; 60 ina 4 DOX 10 €O LO-IOFTOW &L ... ..eves Box third usual | 937-945 Market St., | GOODS S ‘Wash Goods delicacy here galore. terns flit and sparkle in the sunlight of the counter and :n the shelves. show. Wash Goods the attraction. and scrolls and webs and cords and dots and stripes and circles all in a medley too dainty to prices, a surprise awaits you. OOCO0CCCIOCOOCOCOOOC000CCI00000000I00000000I000000CO0000000) |NEW WASH GOODS. | The event of the week. MADR. AS, daintily woven | {nterming; h an exquisitely 1c | colored ground of mottled patierns. 3 crisp, smart and in good taste. Price Yard CHATILLIAN STRIPES, as light as but of sterifng worth “and exqu ¥, & raised stripe over t is & striking fea 'HORN TISSUE . dust proof as cool and sum- cel, strong a5 delieate us @ lace huicline | £ §9rcs and pretty litrle floral splashes. 3} The price.. Yard 1897 ORGANDIES, big, bold flowers scattered oves i Hleh inotos d, & masterpiece of the French- man's wit. The price. : RE DEUX, a new v tabric, a pretty little tripe makes the openwork pai- thesprays of forget-me-nots and ELL name fo ® a ne C | iheiide’Dikches ‘o Geicny make 20 | description impossible. Price Yard | — | BATISTE o 14 ToILE, » faxen nov- hie purest of linen, fancy open- | firines seem to set off the duli QEC | | Dnon to ts utmost beauty. “Ihe price 20 cand. o \.m ACQUARD SWISS—a poet could per- | * baps o it parc *justice, but our words fall. The small raised figure woven | over the charming background of deli- | cate shudes mukes it acombivation ©OEC | of iudescrioable daintiness. The Lo | | o 2 e Yard | | FRENCH ORGANDIE, the mottled background in perfect unison with v floral efr et gnC for originality of de noity O is par excellence. ‘iie price Yard DRESDEN T1SSUES, more fit for another world it seems. as’ light as a spider's web, as delicate s a lace, stripes and Ince’ insertion seem to play with the little flowers that give the fabric the sunshine and life. The price is. MAIL ORDER DEPARTMENT. | Al 'goods advertised may be ordered by mail. A well-trained mail-order force here at your se: vice. We will seil you anything, get you any | thing or give you any information. FRISCO’S WASH _BALE BROS. ¢ FACTS N HOSIERY. Imported direct from the maker. | ' BLACK COTTON HOSE.bigh ] O1C d neels, double sole and toe, 1Zz good value. Special Pair | BLACK COT HO! y requirement of a two-bit stock L-spliced heels, double soles and toes. Special.. Thes 14°| Pair LADIES' BLACK COTTON HOSE, all white foot, pure Maco yarn, high splicga heels, etc. A special Lo- row at. : LADIES' BLACK COTTON extra heavy superior Maco y high-spliced heels and double soles and toes. The 3315c 10t Lo-mOrrow at. HOSE, an | LADIES® COTTON HOSE, tan or black. ihe finest selected and’combed Macs SOC yarn, every pair gusranteed, all welghts. The 50c line to-morrow at.. Pair | luster ' finish. sold to-morrow at { CHILDREN'S BLACK COTTON HOSE, | strong andserviceabie, ribbed and seamless. sizes b to 914. A special thing to-morrow : 12:1°| BOYS' BLACK COTTON HOSE, a lough, heavy achool stocking, marrow ] G20 ribbed, high-spliced heels and double 3 soles andtoes. The pric Fair BOYS' CORDUROY COTTON HOSE “Thie c kind we sold fo wbe 19 | on'special sale t -0 Par | MISSES' BLACK COTTON HOSE. The 3 for a dollar line to be on sale to- morrow at. Pair OUR WINDOW DISPLAYS. Wash Goods, of course, are the attractive feature, but the Wash Goods Dispiay finds a worthy rivai | in the Mechanical Hosiery Exnibit. A revolving | platform of negro dolls is sugzestive of our ceie- | brated “Fast Black Hosie WASH GOODS. How to Wash Th;n_;. | ponder over. HALE BROS ABOUT : x = Use warm water and plenty of s ap. Use the best of :; soap, free from aikali. Rinse thoroughly in ¢ wate: g dry quickly. Our celebrated Non-saninking Wool Soap will (o be found valuable. o P Where Manufactured. <5 The cheaper erades are made in America, patterned oo after the French designs. Almost our entir. P chased by us from the French manufacturer ai Heot tels land is also represented. 5 — e - o O . How Much Vill a Dress Cost ? oo = oo You will require from 10 to 15 yards of the g Hundreds of pat- abou rds of lining. We nave 1 % our windows, at Jconel made especially us s Wash Goods Lining £ The whole store a beauty e — otm Kinks and nubs Will New Patterns Be Presented Later ? paisy No. The fuctories have put forth their :Z describe. As to the introductory patterns. The time to sele % the choicest patterns are at hand. B S ® '0CCCOCYOOIO00] 0 ] o | L SPECIALS SPECIALS 5 P IN DRESS GOODS. A list for any bargain-seeke A lot of new wool s came Friduy; re. ou to-morrow; 32 inch; for price L-WOOL & CHEVIOT : the firse chance 40 Yara NEW CHECK=—The most brillia Very swell; price Yar FANCY CHECKS A firm, he = | all-wool f: a ed Fria tJ the price will he [ e mw mtans S e black satin figures inlarg- tesigns: §1.00 a rich. heavy m, ne ot out 12 speclalties; prici Yar FANCY PEAU DE SILK—A £ Qc big assortment of favorite colors; ¢ @ special price toclose. ... Y PLAIN CHANGEABLE TAFFETA fibirm. héavy, perieet; for waisis, (1 linings, etc. inch: the price 0O K will ba Yara 32 _— o - SHAWLS—a speciaL saLe. o 5 : ° Actual bona- fide reductions— oo everyone as represented. Bring oo this ad for comparison. 2 o , SHAWLS—In grays and double size B from $7.50 to $4.00 each BLACK WOOL SHAWIL reduced from $4.00 t $3. 00 each reducad from $8.00 to 85,00 each BLACK CASHM HAY reduced from $5.00 reduced from MEET MBI AT %{IVCOR}’O}C&TEDJ 1937-945 Market St., SAN FRANCISCO. 'BEAUTIFUL WOMEN OF SPAIN| A Picture of the Castilian Gharmers Who! | Are Famed in the Realm of Romance \PEAK of the women of Spain, aud v ard the region of romance. other nation in the world nas won such a reputation in poetry and song through its women. the temperament of the fair senoritais such as to inspire sentiment. The de- scendauts of many distinct races, they represent every type ol beauty imaginable. There is a much larger percentage of blondes and demi-blondes among them | than is commonly supposed; but the typi- cal Spanish beauty is of course a pro- | nounced brunette, with masses of dark bair, large lustrous eyes, small hands ang | feet, and the carriage of an empress. Hpr voice is exceedingly soft and sweet and ber compiexion ravishing. But, unhap- J your thoughts instantly turn tow- | No | Not undeservedly so, either, for | | | | pily, the beauty of the Spanish woman is | ephemeral. She is most attractive ibe- tween the ages of 15and 25, but after the latter age she is very apt to become ex- | ceedingly stout. With the lapse of time, too, her voice loses its melody and be- | comes coarse and masculine, and her skin no longer has a flower-like fairness, but grows dark. The young Spanish woman is much | given to stringed instruments, fanaangos and love affairs. Shenever thinks deeply, | because she is rareiy educated. Her love | | affairs are numerousand romantic. They must be conducted with great caution, owing to the extreme watchfulness of her parents or guardians. | On the busiest promenade of Barcelona (La Rambla de ias Flores) thers are a | | ONE OF SEVILLE’S BELLES. [From a photograph.] LTI !l|l.!,ll’ .ll l “ «l. i i Iy Wi | in every graceful motion and in the superb | | Maria Christiana and the maids of honor | great number of flower booths. -The | keepers ot them are avowedly the mderzi | of all love affairs. | It does not take long for a young Span- | rd to fall in love. He does not require a six months’ acquaintance with a young | lady to discover whether he loves her or not. | He may merely have caught a glimpse of | the fair one atmass; have followed her | home and, concealed near her latticed case- | ment, have heard her sing of love, etc., | to the accompaniment of & guiter. | He acts promptly, and, by the way, | there is but one affair in which a young | Spaniard does act promply, aud thatis | in an affair of the he He obtains an | impassioned epistle from an escritorio publico, or public writer, which is deftiy | concealed in a bunch of the fragrant mi- | sons in his private mosa, and with the connivance of a flower | booth keeper it is soon in the hands of the | | object of his devotion. The next time they meet he is rewarded by a flutter of her fan or a significant look. \ His troubles do not end here, however. The ancient custom of employing duennas or governesses to keep a watchiful eye upon the unmarried females of a family still practically prevails. Some mothers even go so far upon occasions as to lock their daughters in upper rooms. If the | attentions of the young man are not looked upon favorably, a ladder is the only way te his love, and a romantic flight | by night the last resource. The fondness of the Spanish women for dancing is proverbial, and an enthusiastic | writer says: “Who realizes so completely sweep of their matchless forms all the | ideal perfection of Hogarth’s famous line of beauty as the Spanish woman.” The lace mantillas of song and story are still largely worn by women of the lower and middle classes. The gente fina or| gentlefolks, now very generally take their l fashions from Paris, | The Spanish court, however, has al- ways been noted for its Oriental glitter, and the state toilettes of Queen Regem are gorgeous beyond description, being of | | every color in the rainbow, and literally | stuaded with precicus gems. Ordinarily, however, the Queen dresses in excellent taste. A great hero in the eyes of the fair Cas- | tillana is the bull-fighter. The fact that the matadors are recruited from the lower classes does not prevent them from hav- ing many fairadmirers, even among ladies of noble lineage. Not many years ago a famous matador was kilied in the fieid by an Andalusian bull. His trunks, when opened, were fognd to be filled with locks of hair, ribbons, faded bouquets and love letters—many ot the latter sealed with coronets and signed by the proudest beau- ties in the land. The tremendons excitement in the | higher circles of the court following this discovery culminated in the permanent disappearance from the latter of certain | ladies of high degree, and the enforced re- tirement of others to the cofiyent; roAE THE ORIGINAL OF SAM WELLER. An Actor Who May Have Suggested Sum Weller to Dickens. The great scarcity of the early numbers of “Pickwick Papers’’ is not difficult to understand when it is borne in mind that only 400 copies were printed of the first part, which was published on March 31, 1836. Before the appearance of the fourth number there was some idea of stopping the issue, as the expenses were found to be in excess of the receipts. Butin the fifth number Sam Weller was introduced, and the work at once sprang into un- | bounded popularity. While nothing posi- | Dav \ |in ive has ever been ¢ established on the point, it by some wnters | that * the , of Sam Weller s & MY Samuel Vale, who wstey tle part of Simon Spatterdash in a farce called “The Eoarding-house,” and made | this character a great popular favorite, | The odd whimsicality of Vale’s novel comparisons is be:t undersiood on refer- ence to the part set down to Spatterdasi the farce. Among his queer com- parisons are: ‘“‘I know the world,’ as lhe mounkey said when he cut off nis tai *'I am down upon you,’ as the ext tinguisher said to the rushlight.”” ** ‘Come on,’ as the man said to the tight boot.” *I am all over perspiration,’ as the mutton chop said to the gridiron.” * “Why, here we are all mustered,’ as the roast beel said to the Weish' rarebit.” Vale introduced these popular compari- 1fe as well asn the stage, and from 1830 to 1836 1his s?ox: of expression became w idely popular. is not unreasonable to suppose that Dick- ens became, in a sense, the abstract mir- ror of his time, in catching the popular fun and embalming it with his choice phraseology. Of course, it would be the height of “absurdity to charge Dickens with being a mere copyist, or for one mo- ment to think of Sam Weller as any other than an original character. Dick- ens may have borrowed an idea, but he certainly made no slavish use of it, for the prevailing Sam Valerism and “the | monkey that knew the world” was in no Way on a par with the Sam Weller com- perison. For example, in describiug the | elder Mr. Weller and the touter as **walk- | ing after him like a tame monkey after a { horgin.” —Toronto Week. - s 10000vnrds Kaiki silks, bright shades, 25 per yard, City of Paris. . . It is estimatea that there are 1,300,000 Irish people 1n Austral NEW TO-DAY. memrnm : BEDROOM SETS AT acmos* GOST T0 FORCE THEN 0UT QUICKLY g ks room \olt enough of these Patterns to tast long, 50 Don | i Richly Carved SOLID 0k set.... $14.50 Elegant OVAL GLASS Se French Bevel Plate. | Cheval Glass. . Country Orders Promptly Filled. M. FRIEDMAN & CO. ar Stockton ), 130-132-134 MORTON STREET. OPEN EVENINGS. Magnificent S 522 00 Superb (Occupying 7 immense floors), WHITE MAPLE Set QAK Set, with 18500 639 5() 233.235-237 POST STREET i R e E g = st RRR: he most certaln and safe Pain Remedy. Inst: relleves and soon cures all Colds, Hoarseness, 507 ‘Throat, Bronchitls, Congestions and Infamam# tions. BUC per boctie. Sold by, Druggists