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“MOORE WOTLD *Commander of the Union e Met With a Signal Defeat His Connection With God’s Regular A. W. Moore, the self-styled com- : mander of the Union Mission Army, |€d fame and fortune from his novel, | with headquarters at 114 Hayes street, | the “Prisoner of Zenda,” has given the got a setback in Judge Low’s court | New York World a sharp and quick e rning. As was stated in | “calldown” for the malicious attack reste M to pared to make a fight. the Subsequently the Judge had occasion | to ask him denied THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, MARCH 27, 1898 ANTHONY THOPE - DENIES IT He Declares, “I Never Said Anything Bad of America.” ONLY AFFIRM Mission Army Re- fused to Swear. The New York World Is Given a Sharp ‘“Call Down” by the Novelist. in the Police Court Yesterday. He Demands That the Head of the Army in Portland Was of a Paragrapher Be Sent Shady Nature. to Him. Anthony Hope Hawkins, who achiev- | that it recently made upon him in at- tributing to him splenetic sneers at the expense of the American people. Major | Pond, who managed Mr. Hope's tour | in this country, and who now has Ma- | rion Crawford, the novelist, here, was in receipt of a recent letter from lhe‘ famous author containing the editorial | from the World and his denial of the | same. The uncalled-for roast of Mr. Hope | under the caption of *“Anthony Hope | Speaks His Mind,” is as follows: | “It's the same old story. Tony Haw- | kins—not an Eas p costermonger, but a London literary chap who calls | himself Anthony Hope—has returned to r s Call, he had Mrs. Sissie Da- and her husband, W. J. Davis, ar- r disturbing the peace. oore had engaged Attorney Gesford 1 him and was evidently pre- When put on stand he was ordered to be sworn, | he ed every cne in court by | stating that he would only 1 | hy he would not be sworn Bible te not to dala leading to the complaint, | id h permitted to testify | pngiand with his pockets full of Amer- ed him out of the ho ican dollars and his mouth full of sple- 1d flag out into |petic sneers at the vulgar Yankees who e admitted that | fyrpished them. After a triumphal tour Davis was not present at the time | ot these State: reading with doubt- » the complaint, in- | fy] elocution a chapter or two from > of the defendants, | gne of his books and charging his audi- | tors much therefor as ten books by better men than he, might be had for, | the Cockney returns to the 'ome of the | of the obtain p: on tion he was asked if |*Awkinses and enlightens all England | the fundamental | ypon the ‘conceit’ of the American peo- tion that no |ple. It may be suggested that the per- f or her-|son who thinks that a little easily won r, and in re- rary notoriety has made the sight of Davis n and the sound of his voice cheap The orig- | at $150 and isn't wholly devoid of self- the Judge tten out by shown that in serted the let- the original -m himself. Authors who are ar- | with modesty don't take to the | ‘author’s readings’ method of making money. He who does so, proclaims | that he holds himself well worth look- | ing at, for, as for the reading, a third- | rtified copi which it | | [ [ { ore next | | rate elocutionist usually can do it bet- | was called | ter. | . but she It is a pity the cabled reports of Mr. ANy isturbance and | Hawkins’ fluent expressions of opinion Mrs. Davis xcellent | concerning the Americans he so re- peace a cently exploited are but meager. But | calli the de- | American experience is mature enough nissed the case, | to supply the gaps. Anthony Hope | was received with especial hospitality. Private houses and clubs were open to him everywhere. He had as ro | reception as though he were the ¥ Moore’: ats to k. ant > of for g for the AT | intentian of | | | chare iny that | Rupert whose adventures he chroni- would have s d light. | cles. Of course, under these circum- They had a ¢ . Regular,” the | stances he would be particular - official or Regular Army, | tirical. Courtesy is the poorest way to of .Decem- | win a Briton's good will. i icle signed | and perhaps he wiil be reasonably A New Picture on Exhibition at the irdey, commander- | courteous himself. army, warning the pub- “We regret, however, that the dis- Moore was no longer connected | tinguished litterateur should have | and would not be again | found that American women ‘had many proved himself worthy by | ways of expressing that they were | st manual work. It |frankly disappointed in their expecta- | s mixed up in | tions concerning his personality.’ | Probably h expected to have to enact the role of a St. Anthony throughout | his tour.” In denial of this unjust stab the nov- | elist writes Major Pond as follow 5. Buckin 1895.—Oh, 2 t of thing November of to Portland. A CELEBRATED CANVAS. Emporium Art Rooms. ment of the Emporium and | The Critic vie ng—look for | < e is entitled to the | MY letter. I never vthing bad of | : et America, but on like this I art-loving public for having S ) s -d a second masterplece of Mr. De st knc how good. my which will be pl on free how bad my Combine your njecture my si this matter. nough! How are you and Mrs. P And when are you coming over? F have b rive here and thers nformation and ate of mind upon it it is the equal celebrated p: on Adow hi th, \d sh mi A 3 o promi so that I look forward T».h‘aan..f.fi.'l"{‘h.. « | to the dpportunity of paying a little of | my_debts. I am working intermittently ture of the painting |and spending all day quietly he 2 master. it is the | change from our old days together. Clark rvelou ‘ht out in the | was delighted when I gave him your mes- A t entering the | Sage—he ha permanent place here the lurid glow | and_seem with 1t. I never get the hearth which | & permanent but I jog along pretty saw Do of you as well a! wondering admir- | ¥ ire e 1 speak of you. Good luck, and if you have your cavalry | sword about you kill a paragrapher and | d me his head per steamship Umbria. | Yours, ANTHONY skil the light effects, one himself that no sun- Cany fore he can the re reached of the | s t result manipulation the HOPE HAWKINS, Sent to Jail for Five Years. Henry Angel, an old offender, who | pleaded guilty to a charge of breaking | | into the store of Leopold Greenberg on | | Geary street last January, was ‘sentenced ¢ to five years' | rowds which visited the Emporium “The Blacksmith” will no doubt | e who will visit again production of the GQ000! Q00! 000000 COoCCCC00000C0C00C00d000000000000000C0000000 ADVERTISEMENTS. DO0000C000000CCC0C0ColN I GRAND OPENING SRR IR R SPRING SILKS HIGH-GRADE PARIS NOVELTIES, in Plaids, Bayadere and Striped Taffeta Effects. Superb White Silks, Satins and Brocades. EXCLUSIVE DESIGNS IN FOULARDS. AT $1.50 PER YARD—50 pieces FRENCH SILK POP- LINS, all the latest shades. 100 pieces HEAVY TWILLED WASH SILKS. BLACK SILKS. Our stock is complete in every detail, showing novelties in Duchesse, Brocades, Stripes Moire Velour, Peau de Soie, Taffetas, Poplins, Crepes and ancyieaves SPECIAL. TAFFETA LINING slLKS—Manufnctured_expresst for the City of Paris Dry Goods Company, at 75c and 85c per yard. 500 pieces in Stripes, Plaid, Changeable and Plain Shades, at $1.00 per yard. séO piegcs ZyB-inch wide Black and High-Colored Taffeta Silks. ESS-MAKING AND TAILOR;MADE SUITS A SPECIALTY. g VISIT OUR NEW AND ELEGANT MILLINERY DEPARTMENT. COUNTRY ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. CITY OF PARIS DRY G0ODS COMPANY, SE. Corner Geary and Stockton Streets, S. UNION SQUARE. ® O] | required will be caught in Bering Sea, | and cigars have beén shipped in plenty | along the face of the ledges pieces of | threads of gold. He made as good an | | on his return to the sealing schooner | | took the latitude and lcngitude of the | | After two months of waiting he gave | arrived there on a Tuesday. made all | Trad JUDGE SLACK RESIGNS. He Will Leave the Bench Practice of the Law. Slack forwarded his resignation yesterday The resignation is to take effect on and after the Superior Judge Charles W. to Governor Budd. 4th of April. Judge Slack has for a long time been About seven or eight months ago he w lecturer on law at the Affiliated Colleges, at a s was $1000 more than he enjoyed while on the bench. e it was made he wa He then announced that when that litigation by him. At the ti n-Fair suit. fer conditionally. trial of the Crav: was closed and other important cases pending before him so settled that the litigants would not suffer any inconvenience tried or by his those mentioned for the position. Attorne; were beaten. was defeated. retirement he would leave the there are a host of candidates in the field for the place. Sanderson, Frank Murasky, Rhodes Borden and Alex Vogelsang are among Borden, who is in the City and County office, and Murasky, who is a law partner Smith, were candidates for the Superior bench at the last election, and Ex-Judge Sanderson was also a candidate for re-election, but to Engage in the General conte ating the step taken fered the position of alary of $5000 a year, which He accepted the of- actively engaged in the were either Now that he has resigned Ex-Judge A. A. bench. of Colonel James Judge Slackhasabandoned the idea of accepting the position offered him in the Affiliated Colleges. He will form a law partnership with Arthur Rodgers and ex-Supreme Justice Van R. Paterson. T0 LOOK FOR AN [SLAND OF GOLD | The Schooner Free Trade Fitted Out for the Expedition. Two English Capitalists and a Mining Expert Are Going Along. Untold Millions Are to Be Found in | In talking about the matter yesterday Japtain Moore said: “Everything is almost ready and we will get for the Aleutian Islands next Tuesday or Wednesday. 1 don’t ex- P that we will be gone more than SiX wee I know exactly where we are going, and we will only remain long enough at the islands to secure samples of t we return to sure that the n Francisco. 1 am so venture will prove a suc- in it, but except to have it returned to me ten thousand fold. I am taking my wife with me, so you see I expect the voyage to be more of a pleasure trip than anything else. I discovered the island when I was master of a scaling schooner, but the name of the hooner or the whereabouts of the sland I am not going to tell you. The name of the schooner would probably s of othet ore for_assaying when | that I have risked all my capital | | | [ | | vessels that were north at that time the vicinity of the island and that | knowledge T want to keep to myself for | the present. The Free Trade will carry two mates, four sailors, a cook and a steward, besides Me Wat- the Quartz Ledges of the New EI Dorado. An expedition backed by British cap- ital starts north in a few days in search of an “I and of Gold.” No money has ared in putting everything shape-and the promoters are confident ¢ s. The quartz ledges to be found cropping out all over the island are said to be fabulously rich | son and Page’s valets, so ou see that the vessel will e well manned. I think that on oul return the tales of the | fabulous wealth of the Kiondike il not be in it with the stories we will have to tell.” Captain Moore began his 1i sea as a middy in the En He got tired of *é on boa and went into the Years ago, when in Van- B. C., the American ship John ta wanted a navigator to take her to Valparaiso and Captain Moore was engaged. After that voyage he served on the North American, Ster- | and large pieces of rock can be broken | off with a hammer in which the gold can be seen in streaks all through it. When the rock is broken by a hammer | the various fragments are said to hold together by threads of gold. The isl- and was discovered by the captain of a sealing schooner two years ago and it is he who will lead the fortune hunters to the new El Dorado. The schooner Free Trade, purchased | from John H. Prien a few weeks ago, has been thoroughly fitted out for the expedition. She was put on the ways, and every one of her planks bored to | test their soundness. She has been | braced thoroughly throughout, a house has been buiit on deck, new sails have been bent and no expense spared in | putting the schooner intc first-class | shape to carry the expedition to Alas- kan waters. The cabin has been fitted | up luxuriously. A bathroom has beea | built especially for the accommodation | of the two English capitalists who will | go up on her, and patent washstands | have been put in each stateroom. | The schocner will be commanded by Captain Charles A. Moore, and he will | be accompanied by the Hon. H. Talbot | Watson, Hon. George Page and an| English mining expert. The capitalists will be accompanied by their valets, and as the cruise is expected to last about two months everything in the way of greater comforts is being taken along. Among the cargo will be two live sheep, several young pigs, turkeys, chickens, ducks and geese. All the fis as the schooner is bound for one of the islands in the Aleutian group. Tobacco | and the lockers will not be destitute of champagne and other liquors. Captain Moore knows the exact loca- tion of the “Island of Gold” and has | a very good idea as‘to its wealth. While cruising in Alaskan waters he one day | landed on the island and while clamber- ing over it saw the croppings, with the | gold planly visible to the naked eye. | The quartz seemed to be rotten and all | the rock could be seen suspended by investigation as time would permit, and | spot. On his return to San Francisco | he tried to interest capitalists in his | discovery, but in a measure failed. Those who were ready to go into the venture wanted to have everything | their way, and so far as the captain | could see he was to get all the glory ! and they were to get all the profits. up in disgust and went to England. He his arrangements with the Hons. Wat- son and Page and was on his way back to Ameriea on the steamer Paris the following Saturday. He was followed soon after by the two capitalists, and they are now at the Palace Hctel awaiting the departure of the Free rade. ling, Morning Star and the Robert I.. Belknap. From the sailing vessels he went into the employ of the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, but getting tired of steam he went East and camo back to San Francisco as mate of the Olympic. After that he made the cruise to Alaska in the sealing schooner before mentioned, and is now getting ready to go back to the Aleutian I lands to relocate his “Island of Gold. There will be taken along on the deck of the Free Trade a most remarkable little steam launch. Tt is 30 feet long, 6 feet broad, and with eight men in it. only draws six inches of water. was designed and built by a at Berkeley named Jarvis and sidered to be a wonder in its w- its trial trip it ran fifty miles on a consumption of sixty gailons of water and 200 pounds of coal. It can carry 500 pounds of coal and two men and a boy to handle it. In Oakland Creek the other day the little launch carried eight n;en ax;d towed a sloop with six of shell in it six miles the tide in an hour. g lnat The most remarkable thing about the | craft is the fact that the engines and steering gear are worked by the same wheel. The screw is movable and can be shifted from side to side the same as a rudder without diminishing the speed of the boat. When the wheel is put hard over the engines go full speed astern and the boat comes round as though she was on a pivot. She was fixed up for the trip to Alaska by James Garret of Newark, and he says that she can easily make ten knots an hour. According to him she is the only boat afloat that can go anywhere her handlers want under a five-pound pressure of steam. The gear that works the screw and the steering apparatus has the same ball bearings as the chainless bicycle, and everything in the little boat runs like clock work. The Free Trade went into the stream yesterday to be cleaned up and painted. To-morrow she will be docked again. a crew shipped and then Tuesday op Wednesday a start will be made, —_————— No Hope for Kate. Kate Williams. a wayward miss of 15 years, was brought to this city vesterday by Secretary Healey of the Sacramento Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children and turned over to Secretary Kane of the Anti-Vice Society. For the past few months this girl has done more | harm than a dozen of her clas have ordinarily conceived. el with two others she started out on the road as a tramp, and the trio landed in Reno, Nev. Tiring of this life, they wen: to Sacramento, where they were arregted and placed In a home for females. Trom that place she escaped, and finally the sceretary took ber in charge in the hope that he could reform her. She broke up half of the good man’s furniture. and ha was obliged to bring her back: to {his city, from which she started, and have her ‘placed where she will do the least harm. i s Free—One month's treatment ‘‘Our New Method Cure.”” Weak Men cured to stay cured. Dr. Gordin, 614 Pine street, San Francisco. In company | ADVERTISEMENTS. HOCKETT BROTHERS & CO. PIANOS 218 POST. The Wonderful PIANO. | To make room for our “CROWN" stock we have decided to place on sale ALL THE “SINGLE TONE” PIANOS we have in stock, both new and- second-hand, at prices that leave profit out of the question. following list, among which are the CHICKERINGS, A. B. CHASE, KNABE, Etc. were taken in exchange on “CROWN" Pianos, and they are almost as good as new. CROWN | PIANOS Many in the as we advertise. of music all day long for your If you want a piano don't fail to investigate our offer. COME AND HEAR THE “CROWN" WITH ORCHESTRAL ATTACHMENT. Plenty | | NEW CHICKERING upright, walnut case, largest size this factory makes. Regular price $650. Our sale price..... 8388 K NABE upright, full size, walnut case; In first-class condi- tion e 8247 A. B. CHASE upright, ebonized case, full size, nearly new and a bargain at Seceeaiassensanes R SR 220 DECKER BROTHERS® upright,ebonized case in good order and a specially 800d VAIUE.... ...cceer coennensnnennn.n SIS @ CONOVER Circassian walnut, full size and a handsome in- strument. NEW.. . $270 SHERMAN, CLAY & CO. upright, in good order, only €142 GILBERT upright, ebonized case—a rare bargain at........ $98 DUNIIAM & CO. Cabinet Grand; largest size; Hungarian | ash; full swing front. NEW. Regular retail price $450. A | regUlar SNAD fOT SOME ONE Al nvrre eenevnes wennarneneesnnns s210 LIGH'T & CO. Solid oak case, full size. Warranted for 5 FERTE asosaeiass R TS S198 WILLARD & CO.—New, full size, handsome case. SIN2 WILLARD & €O. full size; NEW. A very handsome pIANo ....... R e e [ TWO KENSINGTONS, both new: light and dark cases. Fully warranted. One for 8277, and the other for. fIST CHICKERING —Rosewood case, good condition and tone.. S97 CHICKERING —Rosewood, full size, splendid tone S140 DUNHAM & CO.—Walnut case; full size. Big value at... 889 LESTER Light Mahogany; almost new. Yours for...... ... 8162 T entertainment. To buyers living within 100 miles of San Francisco we will allow HOCKETT BROS. & COMPANY. Everything just as represented. We do just railroad fare both ways. If you can't come write us. 2c stamp may save you $150. 218 POST. A I I HOCKETT BROS. & COMPANY MORE SCIENCE, LESS MYTHOLOGY Instructor Heaton Pro- tests Against Classic Myths. Nature Study Urged as a Sub- stitute for Ancient Su- perstition. Professor Brown Says We Are Ap- proaching a Unified National Eduecational System. Instructor T. L. Heaton of the depart- ment of pedagogy 4t the State Univer- sity, in a lecture to a teachers’ class yes- terday morning, vigorously condemned the tendency in the schools of the State to spend much time on classical myth- ology at the expense of modern science. He sai Three-fourths of the pupils in our public chools attend school for only six years. The problem for the educator is to determine what few of the many important things should be taught. At present the study of mythology is carried to @ great extreme. I visited recently & receiving class and found the children being taught mythology, in the fifth grade it was 5 hology, in the eighth grade it was still :x';l)]{h‘(xllli:iy flllg“l in the high school still more ythology. T ¢ that some knowledge of mythology {s necessary to an understanding of art and )iterature. But is it not quife as true that a Khowledge of Bible stories is necessary also to fully understand Iiterature and art. Yet the latter is totally excluded from the curricula of {ne “Sehools and_ the chlidren are lamentably 51 nt of the Bible. E0Nat do puplls get from the study of myth- ology? If it is only the stories, the time spent On fthe subject is wasted. Mythology is valu- e that it expresses In @ crude and bar- Parous manner the philosophy of the ancients. Pt in two thousand years have we not ad- Yanced wondertully? 1s it rational to raise a | thild's body according to nineteenth century s and his mind by methods of the fourth :’?i‘;‘:fiys B. C.? How much better it would to teach the children some of the wonderful scientific facts that have been discovered since the epoch of classic mythology. How many people, for instance, know the wonders that have been accomnplished by the United States signal service? Last vear it pre- dicted two weeks in advance the great floods of the Mississippi, and warnings were sent out, but the warnings were unheeded. ple had been educated in a knowledge of Lfence instead of a knowledge of mythology thousands of dollars’ worth of property and hundreds of lives might have been saved. Let us have less mythology and more science; less ancient superstition and more knowledge; for Zeus was great, but God is infinite. By nature study the facts of sclence can be made as fascinating to the minds of children ax the stories of mythology. Nature study Inight well be taught in connection with the Study of drawing, which is at present very poorly taught In our public schools. Nature Study, however, should consist rather in train- ing the perception than in arrangement of facts, which constitutes sclence proper. Still ihe feacher should have the science in his or her mind, and the mistake should not be made of teaching a mass of miscellaneous and dis- connected facts. Professor Elmer E. Brown continued his_historical review of the development of Education in the United States. He said: Little by little our American educational sys- tem has been approaching a great unified sys- tem; it has gradually come to realize the ideal national system of education which Huxley de- clared must be a ladder reaching from the gut- ter to the university. it seems that this State furnishes a com- plete and independent educational system. The influence of academies, which in many States is very powerful, does mot amount to so much in this State. although we have a few very good academies and a number of good, strong private schools. ‘Among the important steps that must be taken in our educational progress are the es- tablishment of more reform schools—schools between grammar school and the reform- If the peo- | atory—and the extension of vocational training | schools. T am convinced that the extension of | a system of vocational training schools is a | matter of particularly great importance to our educators. —_———————————— A FATAL MISSTEP. Death of William Henry Savage ‘While Working on a Ship at the Union Iron Worxks. Henry Savage, a boy 16 years old, residing at 497 Fourth street, was killed yesterday while at work on a ship being constructed at the yards of the Union Iron Works, 3 He was working on a staging on the Willia attempted to jump from the staging to a platform a little lower down. His foot slipped and he missed the platform and fell to the dock. striking on his head and stunning him. He was taken to the City and County Hospital, where he died in a short time from the effects of his in- Juries. The body was taken to the Morgue. e RICE WILL REFORM. Rapped Over ‘the Knuckles for Di- verting Trade From San Fran- cisco to Victoria. United States Immigration Commission- er North yesterday received a letter from United States Commissioner Rice at Vie- toria, British Columbia, announcnig that he had been furnished by the department with a copy of Commissioner North’s re- port of the examination and finding of the Special Board of Inquiry comnected with the Immigration Bureau in this city in the matter of the twenty-four Japanese contract laborers recently refused a land- Painl Amalgam Filli ok +- n Cement Fillinge 35¢ up Full Set of Tceth, with Free Extract: fice Hours—9 a. m. to 6 outside of the framework of the ship and | of American passenger v ing_at this port, and which report and findings were approved by the Secretary of the Treasury on the appeal of the Jap- anese. Mr. Rice stated in his letter that the department had requested him to make his rulings in similar cases in conformity with the rulings of the special board at the port of San Francisco. He added that he had asked the department for a leave of absence for the purpose of visit- ing this city in order to familiarize him- self with ‘the methods and procedure adopted by the board here. Mr, Rice's action in giving certificates of admission to sixty Japanese contract laborers who s(ogped at Victoria en route to this city, has been severely commented upon, as his lenie: in the matter would have the effect of turning the tide of Japanese travel to Victoria to the Injury sels. e s SEVERE SENTENC! ‘W. A. Shepard, Emplbyment Agent, Gets Six Months in Jail. ‘W. A. Shepard, proprietor of the Clerks” Exchange, appeared in Judge Campbell's court yesterday for sentence on the charge of petty larceny. He was convict- ed by a jury on Wednesday of “securing $5 from Miss J. Conklin on the promise of securing for her a position in the Oak- land branch of the business. Instead of “| doing so he kept her cash and refused to give her any satisfaction. At the trial a number of ‘others testified to having been swindled in the same way. . The Judge. after scoring Shepard se- verely for stealing a poor girl's money, sentenced him to pay a fine of $250, with the alternative of six months in the Coun- ty Jail, and intimate that in the next case of the kind that came before him the sentence would be imprisonment without the option of a fine. The defendant's attorney filed a notice of appeal, and Shepard was released on $1000 bonds. ADVERTISEMENTS. Good Work At a Fair Price, and Guaranteed _ to Stand. ess Extraction Qur Leader. Cleaning Teeth. .. Bridgework, per tooth . | Gold Crown, 22-K ion ... UZANE DENTAL CO. -Of New York, CORNER %ARKET, O'FARRELL AND GRANT AVE. ENTRANCE 6 O'FARRELL. p. m.; 7p. p. m. to § p. m.; Sundays, all day. fedodog=g=2=3cF=F-3-3-3-3-3-3-3-3-3--3-3-3-F-3-3-3-3-3-3-3-§-F-3-3-3-3-1 -4 SPEAKING, Rupture Cared in Two Mouths. Occidental, Calif., Feb. 25th, 1898, DR. PIERCE & SON—Gentle- men: I wish to inform you that the Truss which I purchased at your office the 6th of last December CURED me of Rupture in TWO MONTHS. I am o::r sixty years of age. There is no mistake about the fact that your celebrated Magnetic Elastic Truss Will_positively CURE RUPTURE, and 1 heartily recommend it to all ruptured per- sons. C. S. COLLINS. ours sincerely, our New Book on Rupture. Trusses fitted at office without extra charge. Address MAGNETIC ELASTIC TRUSS CO., 62 MARKET STREET, Opposite Palace Hotel, San Francisco, Or 35 and 36 Sullivan Block, 712 First ave., SEATTLE. 6001 30 10 1 608 0 k6 106 10 11 2 0 6 10 0 8 0 2 8 If ruptured, call or send 2 in stamps for| 2% L . OF CURES! He Feels Like a Boy of Fifteen. WM. H. 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