The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, August 3, 1897, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, AUGUST 3, 1897. - RELEE g Forces. of the - British General Reach the Fort. SOME FIERCE FIGHTING ON THE WAY. During a- Brilliant Attack of the: ‘[English Many Tribes- men Are Killed. ONSLAUGHTS OF THE NATIVES ARE. REPULSED. But the Warrlors of the Mollah Are Rallylng .and There Is Yet Danger Ahead. BOMBAY, : Ixpra; Aug. 2.—The relief column under Genersl Blood brilliantly attaoked at dawn to-day and routed the tribesmen surronnding Fort Chakdara, in | the -Chitral “district. The lost heavily. - The British loss was slight. Gangadhar Tilak’s newspaper Kesari natives priats to-day a highly inflammatory arsicle | attacking the Indian Government for “the | proseéution’ of obscure people,”. and for | “making an obsolete police regulation do duty as & secret assassin,”’ Professor Gokhles of Decean .College, the - agitator who recently made charges against the conduct of the British soldiers in trying to eradicate the -plague, has apologized abjectly’ and’ formally to the Government. SIMLA, IxpiA, Aug. 2—The tribesmen are sending forward fresh relays continu- ously. A reconnoitering column yester- day found the enemy in great force block- ing the road $o Chakdara. During the fighting 100 of the enemy were - killed and the - British haad fourteen wounded, among them - Cap- tain- - Baldwin, who severely wounded, and- Lieutenant Keyes, who received a slight wound. The enemy fol- lowed ‘up the retreating column and at- tacked' the camp, but wers easily repalsed by the garrison. HOW ALICE BARRETT DIED. was Report of ‘a Medical Examiner Who Kade an Autopsy in the Myste- rigus Case. BOSTON, Mass., Aug. 2-—The report of thé autopsy in itie ‘vase of Alice M. Bar- rétt, ‘made by -Medical Examiner Sted- nian;: was filed to-day.: It declares:that Aeath résulted from a pistol wound in the hearf. No. siiggestion "is ‘made whether -the death was suicide or murder. ‘It is proba- ble that'an inquest will. be ordered by the Distrfct:Attorney. - The report says: “There'was a smill - circular wound in the “left -chest.’ The ‘wound . was about a-quarter -of —an inch in diameter, witli ‘blackeéned edees. There were other slighit: “bruises, . No ~other © marks of | violence - were :.observed - “upon -the | body. . In probing.che wound of the chest the ‘probe teok a direction from above downward, nward. and - toward tie back. The ‘'wound .. penetrated - the chest just above the.edge of thé third rib on the left side, the- upper edge of the rib hav- ing ‘been splintered;. thence. through the | | | | | | | | | | CHAKDARA FOliT, Relieved Yesterday by General Bindon Blood’s Column After a Siege of a Week by an Overwhelming Force of Swat Tribesmen, Fanatical Followers of the Mollah. elt lung, into the bheart, through the posterior wall of the pericardium toward the spine, passing behind the spine into the deep muscies of the back, at the right side of the spinal column. From the bot- tom of this wound was extracted a bullet of 32 caliber.” An inquest will be held later to deter- mine whether it was suicide or murder, as the examiner does not decide this point. Percy J. Collins is 8 much wanted man at the present time. It Is said that a member of the Barrett family, the Camp- bell family and the Fire Marshal would like to learn of his present whereabouts. Alfred Campbell, whom Collins said was a personal friend of Miss Barrett, and that he invested her money, elc., re- turned to Boston to-day. He was drugged, he says, and kept on a yacht a week. He denies any connection with Miss Barrett. s s DRUMMER PUBLICLY WHIPPED. Mrs. Kichols Resents the Manner in Which Her Board Bill Was Collected. CHEYE E, Wyo., Aug. 2—W. O. Stanley, a traveler for the Schilling Tea Comipany, with a route between San Francisco and Cheyenne, and residing at Ogden, was publicly horsewhipped to-day by ‘Mrs. M.-J. Nichols, wife of the City Treasurer of Cheyenne. The families of the two principals in the affair have been very friendly and often exchanged visits. The last time Mrs. Nichols visited the Stanleys in Ogden she remained over a month, and Stanley sent her husband a bill of $54 for her board. Nichols refused .to. pay, but last month, while he was passing through Ogden as a delegate to the Trans-Mississippi Congress Stanley had him served with a warrant and col- lécted - the -bill. Stanley reached here yesterday and had a controversy with Mr. Nichols over the matter. To-day Mrs. Nichols met Stanley, and after a few words she drew a whip from the folds of her dress and lashed bim vigorously on the face. Stanley did not resent the at- tack beyond grasping Mrs. Nichols’ hands and she then desisted from punishing him further. Map ‘of the Northwestern Frontier ..+ Valley and Chakdara, Where > rounded by the Mollah’s Men, of India, Show/ing the Swat River the British Forces Were Sur- With Malakand Pass and the "~ Route by Which the Relief Expedition Is Advancing, THESSALY 1§ GIVEN T0 GREECE But There Are Yet Many Points That Remain to Be Decided. | Premier Salisbury Makes a Disappointing Statement to the Lords. Nomcommlittal Assertlons in Which He Hopes for a Happy Solution of the Problem. LONDON, Ex6., Auz. 2—In the House of Lords to-day Lord Salisbury said that Thessaly had been assigned to Greece. The international agresment which gave the other European powers a voice in the disposal of that territory, he said, had chiefly caused the aelay in the negoti- ations of the powers. At present, the Premier added, the general policy of the powers was that Thessaly should not re- vert to Turkey, but security against further incursions or provocation was cer- tainly due to the Sultan, and upon this ground a rectification of tbe Graco-Turk- ish frontier was a reasonable certainty. The negotiations, Salisbury said, bad now reached a point at which the Porte had accepted the strategic line laid down by the powers, and subject to tnat under- standing Turkey had agreed to relinquish Thessaly. The question of indemnity was a difficult one. Turkey had a right to de- maud and receive indemnity, and if the money must be found for Greece some conirol over the Greek revenues was in- evitable. As regarded Crete it would be difficult to reconcile Christians and Mussulmans, and he only hoped for a happy solution of the problem. 5 The statement made by Salisbury disap- points the hope that an 1mmediate settle- ment of the Graco-Turkish question was impending. It aiso shows that reports from Constantinople, even when coming from most trustworthy sources, must be accepted guardedly. The Prime Minister punctiliously avoided committing himself to a single definite statement. He even qualified the statement regarding the Turkish adoption of a strategic frontier, his exact words being that he believed negotiations had now reached a point at which the Porte had accepted the strategic line laid down by the powers. He confessed he shared some of the skepticism previously exvressed by Earl Kimberley, who had said he should not believe that the Turks intended to evac- uate Thessaly until he knew positively that the Moslem troops were moving out of the country. Respecting the payment of indemnity, Lord Salisbury said Turkey was inclined to insist upon holding certain points in Thessally until the money was paid, but he could not say as yet what the decision of the powers on this point would be. The question was still a matter of contro- versy, and markea the precise point to which territorial negotiations had ad- vanced. Turkey was entitled to indem- nity, but there was the cifficult question of German holders of Greek bonds in whose behalf Germany demanded con‘rol of the Greek finances. He did not think it was Europe’s duty to provide for the payment of German bondholders, but it could not be denied that while they wero unpaid Greece’s credit in Europe would be exceedingly small. If, however, the money must be raised there would have to be established some sort of-control over Grecian revenues. This matter had not advanced very far and there might be con- siderable delay. He would not say any- thing more definite than that he thought a possible arrangement was in sight. Touching upon the Cretan question Sal- isbury declared that there was little use even in negotiating on that matter until the main controversy between Greece and Turkey bad been adjusted. The island was certainly in a dangerous position on account of the territle division among the people owing to their antagonistic creeds. The powers could only promise not to abandon Crete until they had done their utmost to secure peace and equal rights for the inhabitants. CONSTANTINOPLE, TurkEY, Aug, 2.— Amendments to articles of the pact that were presented/to the Embassadors on Sat- urday by Tewfik Pasha, Foreign Minister, have opened further discussion, the end of which cannot be foreseen. (ONPARES KLONDYKERS AND“49ERS Continued from First Page. pany, as stated in circulars issued by the Pacific Coast Steamship Company, endsat the anchorage, although they use their boats and crew to help passengers and their outfits and freight ashore. Horses and cattle have to swim ashore. Thus it will be easily seen that Skagway Bay is the best port for the landing .of freights. From the reporjs received from there it also seems to be the best point to start in on the overland journey to the mining regions. The White Pass trail, which bas just been completed, begins from Skagway Bay, and by this route travel is much easier than by the other passes. The White Pass is much lower and the grades, therefore, are not so severe. Great difficulty is being experienced in getting the freight now up there over the passes to the lakes. There are not enough packers and horses to handle it. With this state of affairs existing it will easily be seen that when the seven steam- ers now on their way up arrive the great portion of freight will have to remain at Skagway or Dyea for the winter., Some of those going up are taking their own horses and will do their own packing, but the greater number are dependent upon the lndians and others who are packing goods over the passes. The treas- ure seekers will, therefore camp there for the winter. The price charged by the packers for the thirty odd miles from Dyea or Skag- way tothe lakes is 12cents a pound, but there is every probability of that price being raised owing to the great demand for their services. The seven other steamers now on their way to Dyea were sighted by the Queen on her way down. The Klondyke fever seems to have struck the crew of the Queen, for it was with' difficulty that the most of them were able to stay away from jthe land of gold. Three succumbea and de- serted, the second engineer being one of these, —_— FOR A MILITARY POST. Captain Ray and Lieutenant Rich- ardson on the Way to Make Preparations in Alaska. WASHINGTON, D. C., Aug. 2. -A tele- gram was received at the War Department from Fort D. A. Russell, Woming, saying that Captain P. H. Ray and Lieutenant Richardson, Eighth Infantry, left thie morning for Seattle, whence they will sail for Alaska to make breparaiions for es- tablishing a United States military post near Circle City, adjacent to the Kion- dyke. The trip will be made under tk. direction of the Secretary of War. The officers will winter at Circle City, make reconnaissances to determine the best site for the proposed post and investigate the character of the crowds in the Klondyke to ascertain whether there is any danger of lawleasness. Captain Ray was selected to command the company of infantry which the War Department intends to send to Alaska. Golng to the Kiondyka. SHASTA RETREAT, CAL., Aug. 2—A company was formed at Dunsmuir to send J. J. Molone, a well-known citizen of that place, to the Klondyke. He left for Seaitle yesterday and will sail for Alaska on the 8th inst. He was accompanied by David McClellan, a railroad employe, but the other goes on his own responsibility. Others will foliow later. ———— Off for the North, AUBURN, CaL, Aug. 2.—John Hol- brook and E. L. Heiser of Newcastie and George C. Wood of Applegate left this week for the Klondyke country. All are young men, the two former being mar- ried and Wood single. Hanna and Family Go on a Cruise. DETROIT, MicH., Aug. . 2.—Senator Hauna and family, who arrived last night aboard Mr. Hanna’s steam yacht, pro- ceeded to-day for a three weeks’ cruise in the Georgian Bay region. FATAL DOEL AT DENVER Three “Crooks” Engage in a Battle in a Room. One Is Shot Dead and the Other Is Mortally Wounded. It Would Seem That They Quar- reled Over a Division of Plunder. DENVER, Coro., Aug. 2.—A sensational duel between two San Francisco *“crooks,” resulting in the instant death of one man and the fatal injuring of another,occurred late this afternoon in room 28 of the Carleton block, a swell rooming-house at the corner of Fifteenth and Curtis streets. An air of mystery surrounds the affair, and as yet the identity of the dead man has not been established. The one who is dying at the hospital goes under the name of 8. H. Edgar, while a third member ot the party, who is now in jail, gives his name as John Sheldon. On Saturday of last week Edgar and Sheldon appeared at the Carleton and rented one of the finest rooms in the house, Both displayed considerable money, being possessed of big rolls of bills. Several times since they arrived the pair had been visited by another man, the one now lying dead at the morgue. On one of these occasions neighboring ten- ants heard loud quarreling in room 28. This again occurred this forenoon. This afternoon the third man returned and stepping suddenly into the room be- gan firing at Edgar, the firstshot entering Edgar's abdomen, inflicting a fatal wound. Before the mtruder could shoot again Ed- gar had drawn a gun and fired. At the same instant the other man snapped kis pistol again. Edgar’s aim was the better, his bullet speeding its way through his antagonist’s body just below the heart, death resulting instantly. Edgar himself was struck in the wrist by the second bul- let. Sheldon, who was in the room at the time of the shooting, made his escape into the street and fled, but was latercap- tured by the police. Edgar crawled into the hallway scream- ing for help. He was removed to the County Hospital, where at 1 A. M. he was said to be rapialy sinking. He knows that death is about to claim him, but, like Sheldon, refused to divulge anything re- garding the history of himself or his com- panions or of their history or the cause of the quarrel. The Chief of Police has learned that the dead man was commonly called *Billy,” and Sheldon dropped a remark that Flossie O'Brien of the Hotel Whitney, San Francisco, could tell something about him. Hesays she can tell considerable about him. At first it was thought that the woman was the dead man’s wife, but this idea has now been given up. One thing seems to be fairly well established, and that 1s that the trio are all-around ‘‘crooks,’”” and the supposition that they quarreled over a division ot the swag seems to be well founded. A search of the cflminu} records reveals the fact that Edgar served a term at Folsom in 1892 A partly | written letter found in the room where the tragedy occurred is addressed to a man supposed to be a conviet in the Utah pen- itentiary. It says that the writer has gotten the worst of it from a former part- ner in a *'divvy”; that he had only made $15 since he came here, and that he would have sent the watch only it would spoil a good meney trick. Another letter was addressed to a man in San Diego. All the letters found were unsigned. Arrest of Counterfeiters. WASHINGTON, D. C., Aug. 2.—The secret service division of the Treasury Department is_informed by telegraph of the arrest of William J. Griffith, a coun- terfeiter, at Chico, Cal., yesterday; also of the arrest of Carl Bweeney at Sacramento for passing counterfeit dollars. LTS IV STTE. OF SEEE Insurgents Operé.te as They Please Around the Capital. ATTEMPTS TO DISLODGE THEM FAIL. In Several Engagements -in the Suburbs the Spaniards Are Defeated. : wou‘lvu be running after her. witen they. - ‘| learned she had benefited nnder nis will;," | and ‘he did not want -her'to.have any man-- MILITARY TRAIN. WITH SUP- PLIES IS SEIZED. Failing to Prevent the Daring Ralds Weyler Is Busy In Sending Out False Reports. HAVANA, CuBa (via Key West, Fla.), Aug. 2.—Havana is practically in 3 state of siege. - An attempt made by the Span: ish battalion of S8an Quentin to disjodge the Cubans from camps- among the hills in Managua, three miles from Havana it the suburb La Vivora, ended yesterday in the defeat of the Spaniards. The insurgents, commanded by Juan del Gade, occupied an advantageous posi- tion and the Spanish could not dislodge them., The Cubans had -only two kilted and very few wounded, .while the .San Quentin battalion had seventy killed and wounded. When the Spanish:saw. they could not attain their end - they retreated to the capital. A military train coming to. Havana with cattle to provide meat for the capital and with horses for the Spanish army was seized by the insurgents between the sta- halp her spend.her money. . _Iyison; rather than pay :an exira cent’ for a morning vaper. at “the Hoffman House .stand, wotld walk out and gét & . puper elsewhere. He kept ‘his fortune in gilt-edged securities, over which Le used to-gloat. He would hug and kiss his bonds and sometimes cry over them, say- ing he- was. sorry’ he had-to leave them when he died. He used to say he would leave nothing to charitable institutions, as he believed they fostered idleness. . The opinion of the Surrogale states that the ‘eifort to show Nephew David and Miss | Sheridan exertéd -undue influence is 1ot -~ supported by tbe évidenge,” nor- was it shown that either David or Miss.Sheridan in any manner suggestéd or participated in theé execution of -the' will. 'Fiie pro- vision.for Miss Sheridan is not large, con- sidering the size of Ivison’s fortune. Finally the Surrogat: says:. “He evi- dently had reasons which to his own mind were sufficient "to *justify him in making ° no.provisions for-contestants, and consid- ered that he was under no obligation to make them objects of his bounty.” e 2 Jou in_the House of Bradley Martin: NEW YORK, N. Y., Aug. 2.—A Herald’s London special say Countess Craven, daughter of Bradley Martin of New York, has given birth to a son at Coombe Abbey, ‘where she has been staying for some time. There is, in. consequence, great. family jubilation. ¢ NEW TO-DAY. QUIT DRUGS. E POSITIVELY GUARANTEE TO CURE Wminms of Nervous Debility, Nervous- ness, Forgetfulness, Confusion of-Ideas; Languor, Dyspepsia, Lame Back, Rieumatism, Kidney and ‘other complaints and the many evilé resulting from habits in vouth. We ‘wish. to say that the marvelous invention of Dr. Sanden is an absolutély positive cura. It has cured ‘thousands.‘every year aiter. all ‘. known medi¢ines and’ other. freat- ments have falled. The faet i3 that MEDICINES NEVER HAVE NOR CURE THE TROUBLES, a8 you well know if. you are . a suiterer and have tried them. ELECTRICITY—which is. nerve jorce—is the element: which wais drained from the system, and to.curé IT MUST BE - REPLACED.. “In. short, we faith v promise ‘to give every buyer the crowning triumph in medico-electrical science, and have placed -the price within the mesus of every sufferer. The book ‘‘Three Classes of Men™ free by mail, closely sealed. Call and test.the tions of Agnacate and Banioa. The cars were burned, the horses were taken by the Cubans and the cattle were sent to Cuban stores. Within sight of Jaraco, & few miles from Havana, a Spanish column was.defeated by insurgents after several hours’ fight- ing. The Spaniards carried into: town sixty of their dead and ninety-two wound- ed, among whom were several officers. One can hardly realize that it is pessible for the Cubans to do what they are now doing near Havana. Theinsurgents have been able to inflict all this evil simply be- cause they recently received some expedis tions from the United States, whioh land- ed safely in Havana province. They are now well provided with arms and am- munition. But still their numbers are so inferior to those of the Spanish battalions in the capital, and Weyler’s resources are 80 vastly superior, that it is positively -a disgrace to the ~Spanish ™ army that the capital; the very stronghold of the Span- ish captain-general, is ‘kept in a constant state of alarm by the Cubans: The principal desire of the Spanish:au- thorities here is to prevent the publica- tion of this news in the United States. Nothing is happening except ‘‘raids 6f a few bandits,” according -to. the official declarations at the palace. The number of men in each insurgent band is said to be not more than ten, while the fact is the smallest Cuban force before Havana has not less than 200 men. vanced enormously since the raids began, and the poorer classes are starving. Pro- visions, clothes and shoes have been-sent to a few femilies of American citizens liy- ing at Jesus del Monte by the American Consul-General. : Many letters have been received from the leaders of different insurgent bands around the capital, saying that there is not the slightest prospect that the Cubans in arms will accept home rule or anything short of independence, Eduardo Garcia Nattes, who was ar- rested here some time ago while acting as’ correspondent for the New York Sun, was expelled from the island by Weyler. e e 5 BRINGING NEWS FROM CISNEROS. Arvival of a Cuban Official With Impor- tant Dispatches. NEW YORK, Aug. 2.—One of the pas- sengers who arrived here to-day by the steamer Antilla from Kingston, Jamaica, was Ramiro Mazorra, an official in the private office of President Cisneros of the Cuban republic, from whom he brings im- portant aispatches to Delegate Estrada Palma. He made his way from Cuba to Jamaica in an open boat. He says that on July 19, when he laft Cuba, delegates to the national assembly, which is to meet on September 2, were beginning to arrive in Camaigueys, and that the candidates for the Presidency of the republic who seemed to have the best chances of suc- cess were Generals Masso and Calixto Garoia. MILLIONAIRE IVISON'S WILL. Sustained by the Surrogate and Admitted to Probate After a Long Contest. NEW YORK, N. Y., Aug. 2.—The will of William Ivison, the millionaire pub- lisher, which has been subject to a long contest, was to-day sustained and ad- mitted to probate by the Surrogate, who says that the instrument was drawn to meet the matured intentions of the testator when he understood fully his conditions and surroundings. It was contested by his brother, Edward Ivison of California, a nephew of John C. Ivison and a niece of Jane I. Williams, who set up that the testator was mentally incompetent and under undue influence. = The will left most of his millions to a favorite nepbew, David B. Ivison of Rutherford, N. J., and gave Miss Mary Sheridan—who was for many years in the testator's employ and latterly lived in his apartments at the Hoffman House, acting as his confidential secretary—$10,000 and an income of about $3000 s year while she remains single. She is about 38 years old and still single. She went into Ivison’s publishing house as a press feeder when 13 years old. He used to say that men The fac-simil is on every wrapper .of CASTORIA. | The price of victuals at Havana hasad- . belt or send for the book. SANDEN. ELECTRIC CO., 832 Market street, opposite Palace Hotel, San Francisco. Office hours—8 A. M. to. i} Sunday! 0 to 1. Cousultation fre vited. - Los Angelss office, 204 South B Pordand, Or., 263 Washington street; Uenver, Colo,, 930 Sixteenth street. Are You Il ? Would You Be Well 2 Would You Keep Weil 2 ~———IF 80 USEwmmmer DR. MARTIN’'S OF THE AGE, Which is without an equal FOR EXTERNAL AND INTERNAL USE. A CERTAIN CURE FOR Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Pains in Gene eral, Dyspepsia, ' Dysentery, Cholera Morbus, Diphtheria, Sore Throat, Pneumonia, Diahetes, Nervous Com- plaints, Disemso of ‘the Stemach and Bowels Generally, Liver and Kidnoy Complaints, Sciatica, Lumbago, Oolds, Coughs, Local and General Debility, Headache, Earache, [Toothache, Sicke pessinStomach, Backache, Burns, Swele lings, Bolls, Sores, Ulcers, - Colfe, Cramps, - Sprains, - Bruises, . Scalds, Wounds, Indigestiom, Skin Diseases, Excessive - Itchings and . many othes complaints too numerous to name here. Price:. 25¢,:50¢, $1.00° per Botle, L CALLISCH, Wholesals Agent for thd Picific Cosst, 8an Jose, Cal. . o For sale wmi ggxflfifl. The trade suppilea . ; edington & Co., Mack & Co. an: ngley & iihesimten Franiasar REFEREE'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE. Y VIRTUK OF ‘TWO DECREES OF THE Superfor Court_1n and for the City-and-Couniy of San.Francisco, Stateof California (Department No. 10), the firsi-of which decrees.was made and is dated the 22d day of Novewbar; 1§95, and the. second of which decrees was made and ts-daced the 25th day 0f JuDe, 1897, and both of° which da- crees were mace and entered m'an actjon peuding ‘in eald Superior’ Court, wherein Adeth Grant-is plaintift and Daniel T. Murphy and others are de- fendants, being case No. 48,033 in thie said couzt, the undersigned, who was by said COuIT appoinied Teferee in said aciion, will sell :av public.suction, . at the auction-rooms of . 6. 1. Umbsex & Co., 14 Montzomery St. fn said City and County of Sau. Erancisc, Om Thursday, the 2d'day of September; A. D. 1897, at 12 o’clock noon of that day, o the. Kighast bidder for cash, In lwwful muney of the ‘United States, and subject to confiraration by said ‘conzr, certau lor, plece or parcel. of laud st ui and being in thé City" and County of cisco, State of Californis, and bounded and. pare ticulaily described as follows, 1o wic: = = - northerly 1 thirty-seven (137) feet an; st right angles northerly some street one hundred and. 1 fectand six (6) inches: thence - westerly and paralle! with Bush <ee.. dred and thirty-seven (137) fe sud to the eascerly side of Sa southerly along the saster! reet. d six (6) inches to the point, ot o ment: together with the bulidings -and, it pro: ‘ments thereon. A 5 = The purchaser shall tako the salil'Jot -snt the right of John F. McCauley and ifenry F ton Templeton, their heirs and - u3<lens, 15 s brick wail along the northeriy line of si in described as a party wall. . - money of the United States of Aineric kent of the purchase price (G bénald ‘o ree on the day of sale, when Lhié "ot is Ki lown t0 the purchaser, and the balau eqn firmation of safd sale by said court - B Dated San Francisco, Cal., July 1,189 GUSTAVE H. UM BS) 1f ruptared. you naturatly Fope to'obs from pain: secarity from Strangulired Heri permascat cureil possilic. Fleace ierce s Pat. Magzetic Elastic Truss. be surprised ac whas you will leara. positively does the work ruptured man or woman. cail or send 3 cts. fn stam; Tccontains full information. justment of trustes atour office 2= AGNETIC ELASTIC TRESS CO. cor. Sacramento & Kearny Sts. San. AY ‘and scalp diseats iy barmless. L Mack & Co., Langlev & Michaels. LADDING. McBEANRCU: SANFRANCISED! or FADED H youthful col AYS HAIR HE aoves dandruff AP

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