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4 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1897 TEXAS MURDERER CAUGHT AT NAPA Charles Kugadt Arrested for the Killing of a Woman. Accused of Having Slain His Half-Sister and Burned Her Body. The Prisoner Claims She Lost Her | Life Under the Wheels of a Wagon, PA, CaL., Feb. 21.—Charles Kugadt, alias John Frey, was arrested last night by Sheriff Georze McKenzie at the in- stance of the Sheriff of Washington Coun- ty, Texas, charged with the murder of | his half-sister in that county on October 19, The crime was an unusually atrocious one. Kugadt's half-sister was about to return to Germany and had sev- eral dollars on her person when he started | with her to a railwey station. She was| not seen alive after that, but later her charred body was found in the ruins of her trunk and valise, which had served as | drawings and payments are made in the & funeral pile when the murderer cre- | same manner. nsey, after his arrest, mated her body. gave the information that the lottery was Kugadt was stopping at a boarding. | C8Pitalized to the extent of §5000 by four [ £ DpIngrAY 2| white men, wno, he claims, are well e at_the corner of Main and Pearl | ynown in Los Angeles business circles. He had retired, and when there | The lottery has been in existence only a knock on his door he called | four days,” but the organization very “Who is there?” The owner |complete, the people hay their own of the place, John Smith, responded, and the man, apprehending no danger, opened | the door. Sheriff McKenzie immediately d him and pinioned his arms so t resistance was useless if it had been at- tempted. When shown a photograph taken in | Texas Kugadt acknowledged it at his own. He knew what he was arrested for but said he would prove his innocence. Kugadt resided in Napa nine years ago, | at which time he worked as a cobbler for George Head, a shoe-dealer. His wife and little child were with him and they occu- pied rooms in Smi lodging-ho )'s | sufficient evidence to ms | tickets and Hensey unfolded the w eyes became brizht and glassy and soon sbe was dead. This was about 10 or 11 o'clock. over her. I soon met a negro named Meredith and meant to tell nim, but'dared At Crickendal I met some friends I said nothing not. and drank some coffee. for fear the people would say I had killed her for her money. person. ‘““Lthen decided to bury the body, but had no tools. I tried to bury her at Jack- son Creck, but the sand was too hard. I took a little road leading up the creek, sixty or seventy yards, but could find no place there. I turned off from the creek, but found no place. I burned a trunk and a box and while this was burning I burned the body. “I then returned home, but remained there but two or three days when I started for San Francisco, arriving there October | 2. 1then came up to Naps, where I have been since employed.” LOS ANGELES LOTTERY SWINDLE. | White Men Conducing o Game of Chance on the Mongolian Pian. LOS ANGELES, Car., Feb. 21.—The first instance, S0 far es known, where white men have attempted o conduct a Chinese lottery swindle was brought to the attention of the posice authorities last night through the arrest of Charles Hen- sey, a ticket vender for the layout. The name of the concern is “The Los Angeles Company” and it is in nearly all ects conducied as the Chinese lot- The tickets are printed in the same style, the numbers being in English instead of Chinese and running from No. 1to 80 inclusive. They are markea with a brush, as in the Chinese style, and the lawyer and a board of direct Officer Sparks went into H on Los Angeles street and hop t a clear case against the man. Sparks bou scheme of the lotterv to the policeman. Bebind Hensey's harness-shop there i regular Chinese lottery office, but this is not in connection with the white **Chi nese” lottery. The ticket procured i marked No. 48, that being the number o the agent who sold 1t, show.ng that the company already has a goodly numoer of men selling the tickets. Hensey is held in $200 bonds and §50 cash bail, which was later furnished by men evidently in- terested in the lottery swindle. The headquarters of the company are CHARLES KUGADT, Arrested at Napa for the Murder of His Half-Sister in Texas. self as a gentleman and gave him no cause for complaint. Later he went back to Texas. About three months ago Kugadt, unac- | companied by his wife or child, returned | to Napa and began working for D. Keig, a | shoedealer. He was faithful, industrious, | courteous and gentlemanly and won the respect of hisemployer. Keig could hardly believe that Kugadt conld be guilty of the crime charged against him. When he be- | gan working for Keig he went by the name of John Frey, telling Mr. Keig that only a German could pronounce his true name. When placed in jail Kugadtappeared al- | most prostrate. This morning his appe- | tite was gone and he desired no food. | This afternoon the prisoner was visited | by & CALL representative, to whom he told hisstory. His face showed that he had been weeping, and as he referred to his | wife or to his dead sister he burstinto tears. I lived with my wife and child in the county of Washington, Texas,” he began. | +On the morning of October 19, 189, about | 50'clock, 1 started with my half-sister, | Miss Johanna Kugadt, to Branham, nine- | teen miles distant, where she was going to board a train. She was intendlng to goto Germany. There were two roads leading to Branham, and at the request of my sister we took the longer road, which was much smoother. We passed Whit- man about 6 o'clock in the morning. I| met several friends there. When we | reached New Year's Creek we stopped for lunch which we had brought with us. I unhitched and fed the horses. “After eating I hitched the horses, pre- paratory to continuing the journey. My sister went to the left side of the ‘wagon to | get in and I stood by the horses, which | were strong and fiery. As she was on the wheel of the wagon the horses started and she was thrown to the ground between the | front and the rear wheel. She was lying on her right side. Before I could stop the horses the rear wheel, which was very heavy, passed over her neck and head. I stopped the horses and went to her assist- ance. As I attempted to raise her she said, ‘I can’t travel.’ These were the last words she uttered, although some time passed before she died. I placed her ten- derly in the wagon and bolstered her up with a blanket and pillow. By her eyes— her power of speech was gone—she signi- fled that she was all right. “I turned the horses and started for home. After driving about a mile she made a slight noise, and as I looked blood oozed from her nose and mouth down onto the pillow. lstopped under a tree. Her temporarily located above the Olympic saloon on First street, according to Hen- soy’s statement. e says it is the com- pany’s 1ntention to establish a regular office later. — Death of George F. Best. SAN JOSE, Car., Feb. 2L.—George F. Best, a prominent resident of Santa Clara, died at an early hour yesterday morning from a stroke of paralysis. He had been an invalid for the past two years. deceased was a native of West Brook, Me., and aged 57 years. He came to California in 1862, and “thres years later located in Santa Clara. Mr. Best was engaged in the butcher business for a great many years, but retired three.years ago. He was a prominent Odd Fellow and a member of the Chosen Friends. A widow and three grown children survive him. He was buried from the family residence on Jack- son street this afternoon. T e Jewels Taken by Burglars. SAN JOSE, CAL, Feb. 21.—The resi- dence of Mrs. M. B. Braly at 875 East William street was entered by burglars during the absence ot the family last even- ing. Every room in the house was ran- sacked, but the work was evidently hur- riedly done, as a great many things were overlooked. A gold watch, a silver watch, a gold ring and several other pieces of jewelry were taken. The thieves gained an entrance to the house by prying open a rear window. A Placentia Oil Well, ANAHEIM, CAr., Feb. 21,—Three new oil wells are being sunk in the neighbor- hood of Placentia to supply fuel for the sugar-beet factory at Los Alamitos. The wells in operation at Puente are being taxed to their utmost in furnishing fuel for the Chino factory, which consumes 1000 barrels a day during the working season. ——-——— CHESS-PLAYER STEINITZ DEAD. Suwccumbs to the Mental Styain After His Defeat by, Lasker. LONDON, Exo., Feb. 21.—The Daily Mail has a dispatch from Paris stating that Steinitz, the chess-player, has died at Dr. Morosoff's institute, in Moscow, to which he was recently taken after losing his mental balance. William Steinitz was born at Prague, Bohemia, May 17, 1836. He was a noted chess-player and chess anelyst. He re- sided in London some years, when he came to New York. He was never beaten in 2 maich until he succumbed to Lasker in 1894, losing then the position of chess champion of the world, which. he had been regarded as holding from the time he defeated ‘Anderssen by eight games to six in 1866, I took my overcoat and piaced it She had $401 on her ) | MRS. ADINA MITCHELL of Los Angeles, Trustee of the | Whittier State School. Sbtained | GUIDING ARIGHT UNWILLING YOUTH Mrs. Adina Mitchell Tells of Reform Work at [ Whittier. Favors the Removal of the Girls’ Department to Santa Clara. . Special Education and a Separate Home Should Be Given Young Women LOS ANGELES, Can, Feb. 21.—The removal of the girls' depertment of the Whittier tate School from W hittier and the establishment of a separate institution at Santa Clara for the girls is a subject which is being considered with great in- terest in those circles interested in philan- thropic work and particularly that branch of sociolozy involving the reform of juve- nile delinquents. The suggestion of this removal from Whittier is meeting with general favor in this section much more than would be supposed, which isin a great measure due to the fact that the girls’ department of Whittier State School has been prominent in the public eye be- cause of the reforms and changes in the department which have been urged by Mrs. Adina Mitchell, one of the trustees of the institution. Mrs. Mitchell, who is the wife of the promiuent atforney John W. Mitchell, was appointed by Governor Budd on the Whittier board nearly two years ago, and she has entered into the work of the office with an industry and understanding which have been almost phenomenal. On account of her official position, her | prominence in this community and her familiarity with the subject Mrs. Mitchell isnow considered the leading authority | on the subjects involved in the removal of the Whitties girls and the establishment of the new iustitutions at Santa Clara, and it is for these reasons that a CALL re- vorter visited Mrs. Mitchell to obtain her views. In response to a query Mrs. Mitchell said: “Too much cannot be said in favor of the removal of the girls’ department ot Whittier to Santa Clara. I have for econ- nomical reasons favored the consolidation of the boys' departmeuts of Whitier and Preston schools at Glen Ellen and the es- tablishment of a separate_institution for girls at Ione or elsewhere, but this change and consolidation does not now seem prob- able, “The important point in question with me is an independ-nt institution for girls and young women. I have never seen the proposed site at Santa Clara, but all the reports I have heard are exceedingly favorable toward the establishment there of a successinl school of this class. And certainly the citizens of Santa Clara have been most liberal in their proposals to ob- tain this institution, and if the Legis- lature makes it possible to carry out the Governor’s recommendation in” this par- ticular branch of reformatory training it will place California in advance of many other States in the same line of pro- £Toss. ““What are your ideas of the scope of this work ?” “That is almost limitless. Perhaps many of the evils complained of by re- formers will never be remedied. But the solution of the problems of sociology that are agitating civilization will be helped if men and women become more interested in humankind and assist the work. Per- haps it colleges and universities gave less time to the study of dead languages and physical science and spent more time upon the more complex and important subject of the science of mackind and the many questions affecting common hu- many, there would be more helpful sym- pathy, and particuiarly a better under- standing of the woman’s side of it. “But as to the scope applied to the reformation of young girl delinguents there are many diversified features and a number of extensions that might be added to the present system of training and education. Employment and studies couid be given that would not only help 10 prove the practical side and be of great benefit as a recreation and pleasure, but would also be a stimulus to lead these girls and young women to nobler lives, ‘Utis a great mistake to imagine that the only line of instruction to be pursued in their education is that which will make of them domestic servants. For many of these girls are in their natures just as those whose environments have been more healthful and happy. Many of them have noble impulses and hunger for education and refinea occupations. And you know girls who have this tendency to be bad are not always found alone among the ignorant and lower classes. “In this work there are three great e: | sentiats. rne firat ia to secure as officers and attendants for this critical and deli- cate task those who_have experience and | bave studied the principles and methods of charitable reform—specialists in this line. Sach & rule would secure men and | women whose hearts are in_ their labors, | those who have a true regard for human- | kind and are willing and capable of mak- | ing self-sacrifices for the betterment of | those less fortunate. “The second is to keep the girls and | young women employed and interested.” *'Are there any suggestions you would make with reference to the law to be passed governing an independent school for girls?” “I'can think of but one at this time and that is this: Provision should be made for young girls and women to be com- mitted to this institution between the ages of 12 and 20 years, and to be kept there until they are 21 years of age. The boys are trained and cared for until they are this age, and I think the girls need the vrotection all the more between 18 and 21 vears. Many girls are but children after all at the age of 18. It is the most critical time in their lives.” “What effect will thischange have upon your official relation to the girls.” “I can not say at this time. | terminate an official relation with the | girls, but not my personal interest. I shall continue to do all I can in this work, whether as a private individual or as an of- ficial. But as to this, there are other women interested in this work just as sincere and competent as [ can hope to be. The need for such establishments has been proven, and the impetus already given will be sufficient to carry the work further and on prover lines.” COSTLIEST CLOTH EER WORN BY MAN Tailor Realizes $100,000 on the Sale of a Single Suit. | It may Paid in Mining Stock Which Afterward Increased in Value. Did Not Euow of His Good Fortune Until Informed by a Chance Remark. PORTLAND, Ore., Feb. 2L —M. M. Koreft, a well-known commercial traveler just back from a trip into Idaho, vouches for the truth of this story of phenomenally good lnck: About two weeks ago a miner offered Morris Yenzel, a Moscow (Idaho) tailor, a handful of mining siocks for a suit of clothes. Yenzel refused that sort of cur- rency in payment for his labor and goods, on the ground that he had no luck in stocks. He remarked that five years ago aminer gave him 5000 shares of stock, then supposed to be worth 1 cent a share, for a suit of clothes. He never realized a nickel on the stock. The miner jocosely said that had it been Le Roi stock it would have made him rich. The tailor was startled and replied he was quite certain that that was the name of the stock. He could not remember what he did with it, as he never expected it to amount to anything. A few dayslater Yenzel went to the sus- pended Moscow National Bank for an in- surance policy and some other papers de- posited ihere, among which he found the missing 5000 shares of Le Roi stock, now quoted at $3 per share, with accrued divi- dends. The story goes thatthe Le Roi mine-owners have been negotiating with an English syndicate for the of the property. The syndicate declined to ac- cept the mine without the transfer of every share of stock so far issued. This block of 5000 shares was long advertised for, but now there will be no further ob- stacle to the sale of the property if the owners coire to Yenzel’s terms. He de- mands $20 a share, or $100,000 for the whole, and is certain to get it. Prize-Fight Near Fresno. FRESNO, Caw, Feb. 21.—Smith of Los Angeles and Daly of San Francisco, who have been training here for some weeks, fought to a finish at the racetrack, two miles from town, this afternoon. About 100 persons assemblea, and the general opinion was that it was & poor cont Smith outclassed his opponent and had him goiog in the fourth round. In the next Daly was knocked out. The winner received $100. e — A Frw little doses of Dr. D. Jayne s Expectos rant, ‘promptiy administered, will ofien avert a dangerous attack of Laug or Throst disease, and frequently save alite; For the Liver, use Jayne's Painless Sanative Pills. (LEAR SKIES FOR | SHN DIEGO'S FETE Passing of the Storm Makes the Carnival’s Success Certain, Salute From the Philadelphia Will Open the Festivities This Morning. British and American Seamen to Mingle 1a the Parade on Shore. SAN DIEGO, Oar., Feb. 21.—The storm which has been playing sad bavoc with the water carnival festivities for the past two days has passed away, end, although | the atmosphere is cold to-night, the skies | are clear and all the Indications are favor- able for fair weather to-morrow. Reports from outlying districts are that the storm was more severe than was at first supposed. At Olivewood ranch, Na- tional City, fifty olive trees were uprooted and blown down in the gale of Friday night, some of them being thirty years of age, the oldest in this region. Two big cypress trees in the courthouse yard were | blown down. Throughout the county | orchards have been more or less damaged by high winds and washonts. The condition of the weather now, how- ever, portends a grand success for the carnival festivities, which open to-morrow morning. To-day has been spent by the 4000 strangers in the city visiting the war- ships in the harbor and the various points of interest in the city and bay region, be- sides attending two concerts given by Sousa’s band at the opera-house. All day the carnival committee has been at work on the decorations on the war- ships and wharvesand to-night it finds its labors nearly completed. The baree of the Goddess, which was nearly ruined by the storm, has been repaired and now presents a gorgeous and brilliant appear- ance as it floats on the bay just off the Sante Fe wharlL The vexing question as to whether or not the British sailors from the Qomus | would march in the parade was finally settled to-night by the receiving from Sir Julian Pauncefote at Washington and Admicsl Palliser, K. N., at Comox, B. C., of messages conveying official permission | to Captain Dyke to march his men as an armed force in the parade to-morrow morning. The day will open wWith a salute of | twenty-one guns from the Philadelphia at sunrise in honor of Washington. At noon the Comus will fire another salute of twenty-one guns and in the evening | before the carnival procession starts = general salute wil be fired by all the war- ships. e CLOVERDALE FRUIT IN DEMAND. Visitors to the Fair Temporarily Exhaust the Orange Stock Offered for Sale. CLOVERDALE, CaL, Feb. 2L — The citrus fair pavilion remained open to-day and a large number of visitors went to see the fruit exhibits. There was no pro- gramme, musical or otherwise. The visi- tors in town spent the day listening to excellent sermons at the churches and in walking and driving. The day was bright and beautiful. The Sunday treins from BSan Francisco and way towns and from Ukiah brought in a number of excursionists. Visitors have generally wanted to buy samples of Cloverdale oranges to take back with them to their homes. At present the supply does not equal the demand, but the pros- pects are that on the last day of the fair, which is to-morrow, there will be plenty of all kinds of truit for sale. 5 J. A. Filcner, secretary of the State Board of Trade, who was one of the judges of exhibits yesterday, is here on more than a mission of pleasure. He is collecting samples of Cloverdale citrus fruit and trees and soil to form part of the big California exhibit at the Hamburg (Ger- many) Horticuitural Exposition, which will ‘open next spring. Mr. Filcher was driven this mor to vineyards and orchards in the vicinity by Editor G. B. Baer of the Cloverdale Reveille, who is one of the most active of Cloverdale’s citizens in booming the fair, greeting visitors, taking them properly in tow and not leaving them until he has done the whole thing properlv. - The booths presided over by the 1adies are all handsomely decoraied. Mrs. Ludwig and Miss Emilie Hagmayer have some artistic sampies of wood-carving on useful and ornamental house furniture on ex- hibition. They are 2!so in charge of the bitors of pictures in Kate Armstrong, Mrs. Van Cooley, Miss Mrs. Waite, Mrs. Lud- wig, Mme. Preston, Mrs. W. Doty, Miss A. Keller, Mrs. Whitaker, Mias Ola Fen- ner, Mrs. K. Porterfield, Miss Lena Brush, Miss Mason, Mrs. Sarah Hall, Al Kleiser, Charles Miller and r. J. H. Kaffung. The icecream booth is in charge of Mrs. L. A. Dominie and Mrs. T. B. Wil-on, and the candy booth is looked after by Miss Wilson and Miss Dobbins. Mrs. O. Humbert and Mrs. Whitney have some hand-painted china on exhibition. The: have charge of the orange booth. Mrs Greenwell, 73 years old, has a crazy quilt at the fair and it is greatly admired. It should have read Judge F. P. Conner who presided at the fair last Lhursday night, instead of Comier as the types had it Another big crowd is expected from Santa Rosa, Petaluma and Healdsburg to- morrow, the last day of the fair. One of the features of this excursion will bo 400 school children from Santa Rosa. SND SHE WAS TIRED Mystery Enveloping the Suicide of Young Emma Krenz. The suicide of 17-year-old Emma Krenz is still a sad mystery to her relatives and friends, and the latter are numer- ous in the vicinity of the Five-mile House on the Mission road. It was at the home of her sister, Mrs. Uhiman, on Islais street, that the girl took the fatal dose of rough on rats which accomplished her demise. By the inmates of the house, her sister, her father and her brother, only one theory is deemed tenable. *'‘She was out of her right mind,” said her brother. “Bhe dian’t know what she was doing,” said her brother-in-law. Her sister, Mrs. Uhlman, expressed great indignation at the cruel rumor which had got abrosd, supported by pub- lication in & morning paper connecting a young man of the neighborhood with the girl’s act. Mrs. Uhlman claimed that the girl had no lover, and in this she was supported by the lady with whom the unfortunate girl had been at service. This lady declared that the girl was quiet and industrious, seldom going out of the house except to visither home or her mother’s grave. Dr. E. N, Terrello, who attended the | girl, questioned her as to the motive of her act. She had no explanatiou to give except to say, ‘I was tired.” The doctor considers it not unlikely that her act was Induced by a peculiar psycho- logical condition frequently met with in | tition isa | youths of both sexes. This con form of melancholy which is easily aggra- vated by siight misfortunes. Miss Krenz was described by her relatives as a rather seli-willed and independent girl. A short time ago she expressed a desire (o earn her own living and took service with a friend of the family. A few days later, finding it irksome to be at the beck and call of a mistress, she returned to ber sister’s home. Here it is said she was always welcome and her father and brother provided well for her, but the sense of her dependence galled her and she “‘was tired.” The Coroner will hold an inquest on the remains to-morrow, but it is not expected anything new will be developed. NEW TO:DAY. ”!"m[! ey strong vital force, which renews their vigor of power in two weeks, restores confidence basis of all manly vigor. LUMBAGO AND VARICOCELE, DR. A. T. SANDEN—Dear Sir: cocele for four year: the supporter. and shall recommend your Belt to all my friends. This s one of dozens of letters received during the past fow wee have tried every other known remedy for Nervous Debility and other similar troubles have been cured at last by Dr. Sanden’s Electric Belt. Are you weak ? in any respect in manly power? Read Dr. sent sealed free on application by mail or at office. SANDEN ELEOTRIC CO., 632 MARKET ST., OPPOSITE PALACE HOTEL, SAN FRANCISCO. Office hours—8 A. M. to 8 P.M.; Sundays, 10 tol. 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Prof. Munyon says that his Female Reme- dies will "positively cure the following symptoms: Leucorrbma or whites, pro- lapsus or falling of the womb and back- ache, bearing down pains, tired feeling, soreness and draggmng in the hips and loins, painful menses, scanty menses, sup- pressed mensesand regulate menstrual pe- riods that come too often. Price, 25 cents. If there is leucorrheea or whites do not fail to use Munyon’s Leucorrhcea Tablets. Price, 50 cents. These remedies provide a home treatment that cures speedily and completely ail forms of female complaints. Prof. Munyon puts up a separate cure for each disease, At all druggists, mostly 2 cents a v Personal Arch street, ith free med AT AUCTION —BY— tiers to Prof. Munyon, 1505 I Pa., answered for any disease. REFEREE'S SALE, By Order of Piobate Court, WITHOUT LIMIT OR RESERVE. WEDNESDAY, FEB. 24, 1897, At 12 0’ Clock, Noon, AT SALESROOM, 626 MARKET ST. Following Property Belonging to Es- tate of Mary B. Pease. 16and 17 SOUTH PARK AVE. NE. eor. ot 47:6x97:6 along Center place to y: 3 frontag 4-story brick houses, rented to one par:y at #65 per month; tenants pay water: street work compieted. NNAN ST, N, stde, ad- ng Third lot 85x80 to rear street: Z-story frame houses and $34: tenants pay water: accepted by city. No. 37 SOUTH PARK, adjoining SE. cor. of Third st.; lot 21:9x137:6 10 rear street; street ed by city; rents $27 50; tenant pays streets and sidewalks water. For abstract and terms of sale apply to MADISON & BURKE, 626 Market St., Opp. Palace Hotel. DR. MCNULTY, THIS WELL-KNOWN AND RELIABLE QL1 tcures Private,Nervous,Blood and Skin fe11 only. Manly Powerresiored. Over d for Book, free. Patients le. Hours, 9 to3 10t012. Consuita- . Call oraddress ULTY, M.D., t, San Francisco, Cal. THE WEEKLY CALL It Publishes tie Cream of the News of the Week and MANY ATTRACTIVE AND ORIGINAL FEATURES, ITIS THE BEST WEEKLY PAPER ON THE PACIFIC COAST Always Republican, but Always Fair and Impartial in Its Rendering of the Po- litical News. It’s the Paper to Send East if You Want to Advertise California, 26} Kearny Stre The Best Mining Telegraphic News That Service on Is Accurate The Coast / &up to date Not a Line of it Sensational or Faky, and Not a Line of it Dry or Uninteresting. A PAPER FOR THE COUNTRY FIRESIDE. e ———— Bright, Clean, Thoughtiul, | ‘A Champion of | | Truth. —_— A CALIFORNIA NEWSPAPER ALL THE TIME. T ADVOCATES HOME INDUSTRIES THE CALL SPEAKS FOR ALL SENT BY MAIL, $1.50 A YEAR. Big & is_a non- romedy “for" Gonorshany lect, S e rmatorr hos Whités, unnatural g charges, or &ny inflamma. tion, irritation or ulcera- ol of mucous mem. THEEVANS CiEwicat o, Dranes. Noo-astinmes Sold by Draggistc, or sent in plain wrppar. ress prepaid, f.t bobi 7 Seng e B2, TR