The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, September 11, 1898, Page 26

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26 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11 go‘oooooooooooooooooooooooooooocooooe (4] © © © © (4] (] [l 000000000000000000000000000000000000! HE out of town season is over. City homes are once again open, | and preparations are being made | cial circles as manager of Railway and Navigs After the for winter pleasures and enter- | 3, SHPDET tainments. e then on the 4 A number of weddings and receptions | nado Tinont Hels made the past week—the fi clal calendar—pass agreeably. At St. Luke’s Episcopal Church on Wed- nesday afternoon Sarah Elmer Black aud | pudlo Thursd B0 Edward C. Ward were joined in mar- SEATEY LA, riage by the rector of the church, the Rev. Dr. Shaw. relatives of the ceremony, it being the desire of the prin- st on the so- the south Mr. their residenc William Ke and Mrs. Ward w at the Hotel h, r i result that from were filled almo: throng of apprecid Only a few friends and couple witnessed the and interested | cipals that the affair be celebrated quiet- o [ominent slog axHedE | ly and without eclat. - 5 es of the g ended invita. | The bride is the sister of Dr. James A. tion. Among the m 01 Black of this city, and has been a prom- | Lemmon, Mrs. Im kle | tnent figure In soclal events for several | }Mme. Guldo Spltzy, Mrs, Tlo | years past. The groom is well known | Miro Fare. Mre. Shya 1o e | along the coast, lished an enviable reputation in commer- Sara E. Re | & | where he has estb- , Mr Churchill and M E-E-0-E-0-E-E-8-0-B V508 E-E-0-E-a-EE8 RN e = = = BB B R B R B | o S S ADVERTISEMENTS. CITY O 5 CLOAK and SUIT DEPARTMENT. - Its popularity is dally increasing, which is a positive proof of our keeping the correct styles at the right prices. We are showing the handsomest assortment of high-grade Ladies’ Tailor Suits, Capes and Jackets, Imported Costumes and Golf Capes. | . . ! Our NAVY and BLACK ENGLISH CHEVIOT : SUIT, latest cut Jacket at $25.00, deserves special mention. COUNTRY ORDERS CAREFULLY AND PROMPTLY FILLED. CITY OF PARIS DRY GOODS COMPANY, SE. Corner Geary and Stockton Streets, S. F. UNION SQUARE. | —fi—~E-A-E-i-E-0-E-E-0-0-0-0-E-A-0-u—-a-u | E | and Blanche Penberthy ;{({ate A. Friis, Miss Grace LAST RALLY OF THE TRIBESMEN AROUND THE CRESCENT. M Yreka, Mrs. 1cCy Mr. McCom McComas and Miss J. Torrey Connor of \a Woods of Sacra- Rumsey and Miss nore Amid ferns, palms and other atiornment the Woman's Professional and University Club g the first of its fortnightly entertainments Thursday evening. Home Qatherings. Mme. Florence Montague was tendered ay surprise party at her home In day last by her littie Montague entered the » sweet visitors were as- sembled h arose in turn to offer their congratulations and tokens of their love. A pleasant afternoon w which stories were by the children and refreshmen Those present were Effie B , Alice Miller, Gertrude Mc e, Etha Lulu and B. Lamoureux and Leon and given served. Lillian | Violet Gove. Mrs. C. M. Moss gave a very Frclly din- ner at the Hotel Marguerite last even- ing in honor of Mrs. Norris of Fresno and M. A. Tucker of Tacoma. The table ily decorated and the menu ex- W cellent. Eleven couples enjoyed a very pleasant evening. The eighteenth birthday of Miss Emelie Faus: s celebrated recently at the residence of her mother, 3421 Nineteenth street. The dining-room was decorated with flags, ferns and lanterns. The even- ing was pleasantly spent in singing and dancing. A surprise party was given by _Miss Lena Jonas to her brother, Louis Jona: at the residence. 1310% street, last Sunday evening. The pariors were taste- fully decorated with smilax and ferns. Dancing was In order until midnight, when the company, to the number of fifty, sat down to a bountiful -supper, after which dancing was resumed. very pleasant surprise party was tendered Mae Parmenter at her residence, 309 Jones street, last Monday evening by her many friends. Vocal and Instrumental music and dancing were the amusements of the evening, after which an eiegant re- artaken of. Among those pres- e Mr. and Mrs. Muller, Mr. and r, Mr. and Mrs. Hart, Miss Pearl Boyan, W. Sale, Charles Baker, Baker, Mrs, Ring,’ Mr. Mackay, M Heggani, Misses . Willle Ould, Mr. Platt, Mr. Blatt, A. Windt, H. Windt, Dr. Blondin, Mamié Holean, Miss McLeod, Charles Parmenter, Miss Smith, Miss Robles and Lou Parmenter. A surprise party was given to Miss Til- lle Wake at the residence of her friend, Miss B. J. Cerf, 109 Eleventh street. The evening was gr yed. Reid wil am Club Parties. Friday evening a banquet was given by the California Gamma Chapter of the Pi Delta Kappa Fraternity at a downtown restaurant in honor of C. Willlard Evans, who will leave next week for the East to attend Cornell College. Among those resent were F. E. Van Douzer, G. M. rommel, A. W. Splivalo, E. W. Prentice, Sheldon Potter, B. Cregg, A. Levensaler, Carl Cook, O. P. Plagemann, Frederick Sewitt, W. B. Bundschu, E. W. Evans, Willam H. Mayhew, W. E. Janke, J. S Finley Jr., H. H. Weihe, M. H. Schwartz and C. G. 'Wiison. Outing Parties. A delightful yachting party was given last Sunday on Lewis Q. Haven's beauti- ful yacht Sapnho. Those who participat- ed in the day's enjoyment were: Miss E. Fernbach, Misses Stephenson, Mrs. A. J. Hayes, Miss Ella Fernbach, Messrs. §. Q. Haven, G. Edgar, O. A. Harker, B. Hayden, W, Morton and P. Edgar. In the Future. . The San Francisco Frauen Verein will floral | hold its nineteenth anniversary ball at | Saratoga Hall this evening. | Bartlett Springs. | Following are the arrivals at Bartlett | Springs during the week: Colonel F. S. | Chadbourne, Thomas H. Nicholls, G. W. Root, wife and child, Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Whittle, Rev. P. Casey, I R. Dickey, W. B. Short, L. Miller, Isaac Upham, H. H. Kalish, A. W. Johnson, R. L. Cock- W. D. Littleton, E. N. Short, San cisco; J. W. Wright and wife, H. E. . Dr. E. M. Dixon, E. Nye, Sacra- R, Engstrom, Denver; C. A. Johnson, Mrs. A. Johnson, A. M. Rule, Mes. A L. ; Mrs. E. M. Ober- wards; Louls B. Hawkins and wife, e May, Auburn; Dr. J. H. ville; B. T. Barrett and fam- tier; L. P. Smith and wife, Berke- W. Bullock, Chicago; Mrs. F. M. . Watsonville; George W. Sween- re W. Sweeney, Oakland; am Trevitthan and _son, Pleasant Grove; 8. W. McCaw, Walnut Creek; Nora Andrews, Woodland; George Ritter- ath, Colusa; E. R. V. Mc- Cormick, Alameda; Hancock Los Angele: . . Payne, ey; Louis Provost, Willows; J. H. Balsdon and wife, Grand Island; L Thompson, John C. Thompson, Stockton. Personals. Miss Margaret Carroll and Miss Agnes Connolly are sojourning at Margaretta Vineyard, Napa Valley, the guests of Mrs. J. C. Sullivan. Dr. Stanley Stillman will return to San Francisco from Europe about the 18th of this month. Miss Lulu J. Landis has gone to' San Jose to be sbsent several weeks. P. J. Donohue, the well-known Califor- nian, has been made an honorary member of the Marlborough Club, which is also the Prince of Wales' club, in London. Mr. Donohue has for some time looked after the interests of the United. States at the Vatican and is persona grata at the Papal court. Mme. B. Biber left for New York Fri- day evening, to be gone three weeks. William Kelth and C. F. O'Callaghan are guests of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Jew- ett at Wildwood, their beautiful country home in the Sonoma Valley. Mr. and Mrs. J. Gunzendorffer, 1636 Bu- chanan street, will be at home to their friends Sunday evening, September 18, the occasion of their fifth annlversar{. Mrs. M. G. Tonini and family have re- turned to town after a three-months’ so- Journ in Ross Valley. Miss Lucy Coleman and Miss Emma Gill have returned from Monterey after spend- ing a week with the family of James R. Fraiser at their ranch near the Carmelo. Miss Frances Butz of Visalla, who_ has been visiting Dr. J. T. Wells and Miss Alys S. Wells, relatives, in Portland, has returned to the city after a three weeks’ sojourn in Oregon's metropolis. Mr. and Mrs. Isdor Oppenheimer have returned from their summer home, Bell's Cottage, Alameda, and are stopping at Hotel Miramar. At home second and fourth Mondays. Roger Sherman Phelps, a graduate of the class of '97 and a post-graduate of '9§ of the University of California, left here September 1st for New York, where he will spend a few weeks with relatives. At e beginning of the next term of Harvard Tniversity he will enter there for a post- graduate course. Mrs. E. K. Ash of 1624 Sutter street would be pleased to see her friends the second Tuesday of each month. Miss Lorretta Valentine has gone to the Santa Cruz Mountains on a visit to friends. Mr. and Mrs. John D. Richards have re- t‘urir‘\ed from their summer home at Mill valley. Mlsg Elsie Cohn and Miss Bessie Borren are visiting Miss Birdie Appleton of San Jose. # George Elliott Hunt, manager city de- 1898. LAST STAND OF THE TRIBESMEN IN THE SUN-BAKED SOUDAN! Africa, Routed From Her Last Defense, Gives Way to the European.: One need not be an Englishman to appreciate the situation in Egypt. own troubles with the bloodthirsty, dan. Egypt in the north. open to trade and its consequences. BOYVYZ, a scorching blue sky, emitting tongues of fire; be- neath, scorching brown sand, reflecting tongues of fire; around, a scorching atmos- phere, parching the skin and blinding the eyes; every man’s, mule’s, aye,even camel’s tongue dry with thirst and | water a precious boon that has to be husbanded carefully. This is the ro- mance of the desert as known to Brit- ish troops, the romance through which British warriors, black and white, Egyptian and Tommy Atkins, Moham- medan and Highlander, hurled them- selves against the power of the Mahdi and gained two of the most brilliant and far-reaching victories of modern days. Twelve thousand men, following the Union Jack, marshaled against sixty thousand Dervishes! Truly it might have looked to outsiders as though General Hunter were deliberately sac- rificing a “forlorn hope” to the dignity of the British empire. ‘“What were these among s» many?”’ Moreover the Mahdi's Dervishes were reputed the best fighters in all torrid Africa; men who fought with frenzied fanaticism, who died on the battlefield with visions of Paradise and beckoning houris; men who took precautionary measures for not dying superfluously; who planned zaribas carefully stockaded with im- penetrable hedge of prickly mimosa, | its stems inside, its thorns massed | against the limbs of the enemy; men | who, believing in heaven-born substi- | tutes, made unto themselves a living | fence of miserable slaves, chained to- | gether in the trenches and ready to | fight with maniacal energy in the hope | of deliverance by death. And against this fevered, determined, well discip- lined host Hunter could only pit his mixed regiments, one-fifth of the enemy in number, and mainly recruited from the despised Egyptian who had proved his worthlessness some sixteen years | ago. ‘When Arabi Pasha rose in 1882, when Alexandria was bombarded and Wolse- ley by his brilliant and decisive flank movement won permanent laurels at Tel-el-Kebir, the knell of the black sol- | dier was supposed to be rung. He had | proved himself hopelessly incompetent; whatever his muscular value might be his head and heart were in the wrong | place; as a fighting machine he was | utterly worthless and for all available purposes he might as well be buried. | This was what Mahmoud Pasha re- | membered when, in 1898, he made grim | preparations to receive the British | forces at Atbara. He had numbers, | but he did not rely on numbers alone | as he carefully planned his zariba, pre- | paring every trap that could trip un- | wary limb or break active back. Cun- ning shelter pits, unsuspected holes, “surprise” trenches, ambush hillocks, | all hidden in nature's tangle of palm | stem, sharp thorn and prickly grass. Around, the impenetrable stockade and the triple trench with its slave gangs, desperate between their two fires. What | white man could come out of this devil's | device unscathed? And the white man | must be already weakened by his | desert miseries. by heat and its attend- | treacherous : f “CHinese”” Gordon at Khartoum and the blot on England's e leadership of General Kitchener is one of the The results of the victory will be momentous, to uninterrupted European trade from Cape Town in the south to ‘Who does not remember the fate o was a consequence of his abandonment? The present campalgn under th most picturesque and most thrilling in the annals of modern warfare. for it practically throws the Dark Continent open Cecil Rhodes’ dream of a ri reality now, and it may run all the way Egyptian and British forces was practically the | vish heart | to take it. | the over British territory. ant sickness, by lack of water and above all by lack of sleep; for night in the desert meant eternal watchfulness, lying under canvas with the fear of murder, or lying in the open with one eye for the enemy. Yet white men are notoriously long- suffering and unflinching, and if Queen Victoria’s white men had been coming along 2000 strong even Mahmoud Pasha might have had his doubts. But the real Britishers were a handful, net half a dozen regiments; all the rest were trumpery Soudanese and Egypt- fans, cravens who stood in awe of the Dervishes and were bound to give in at the first scare. If the Mahdl's fa- vorite general could ignore his dignity it is probable that Mahmoud Pasha snapped his fingers in triumph. Mahmoud Pasha had forgotten Tommy Atkins. The British non-commissioned officer of Kiplingnesque repute is not noted for polished behavior, neither-is his yoke easy to bear. The recruit who falls unto his drilling mercies does not light on pleasant places nor is his ear accustomed to sweet language; he wishes many times a day that he had never been born—so does his drill ser- geant. Yet the day comes when each is proud of the other and their coun- try of both; and Tommy Atkins had decreed that that day should dawn for the black Egyptian. Undoubtedly he was the most unpromising product that had ever been swept into the ranks, but since he was eiected to fight for The Widow he should become worthy of his high calling if British oaths and British energy could accomplish the feat. And so Tommy Atkins drilled and swore and execrated and “licked into shape” till at last he foresaw the day when he should weep with pride over the doings of his graceless black re- cruits. The day dawned on that morning when the romance of war in its trail- ing horror, its untamed ferocity, its sublime self-abnegation, swept on to- ward the mimosa-circled zariba of At- bara. There were white-skinned heroes, with time-honored battle-cries in the van that day; Warwickshires and men of Lincoln, Seaforths and Camerons in their vivid tartans, surged up and onm, their ranks thinning before the deadly Dervish fire; surged on irresistibly to the sound of bugle and pipe and the crash of artillery, till at length the mimosa hedge was wrenched asunder and the pitiless hand-to-hand fight be- gan. But that which blanched the Der- was the unforeseen on- of the blacks, the de- spised blacks, who thirsted madly for revenge and who had learned from Tommy Atkins how Their brains afire, their eyes blood red with rage, reckless of death, their men dropping at the rate of one to seven, yet blindly faithful to thelr white leaders, they swarmed up ridge and swooped down bank, carrying everything before them. It was their maddened, vengeful. black faces that Dervishes first saw bursting through the mimosa hedge; the black faces that they last saw as they sank in heaps adown the river’s bed; the black faces that they fled from across the inflamed sand. And when the hour of battle was over, that awful hour, forty minutes in duration, which reck- oned its dead by thousands, it was the despised, heroic black who was the hero of the hour, who looked into his officer’s face with radiant, adoring fealty, while Tommy Atkins wept tears of joy to think that his drill-swearing should have produced such results. Yet was that fateful hour but the initiatory triumph of Tommy and his slaught partment of the Union Mutual Life Insur- ance Company of Portland, Maine, Is away on an extended Eastern trip and is at present a visitor at his daughter's home in Tacoma, Wash. Mrs. Meyer Siegel and daughter Marfon have returned to their home in Los An- geles after a five weeks' visit to her par- Tents, Mr, and Mrs. 1. Magnin. Mr. and Mrs. I. Magnin and daughter Luciile left last Saturday for an extended trip to Los Angeles, Coronado, Catalina Island and all southern points of interest. Mrs. L. Jacobson has removed from 1707 Post street to 1431 Webster street, and will be at home the second Friday of each month. Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. McGibben re- turned last week from the East, after a visit of three months. Mrs. Max M. Brown will be at home to her friends at 910 Devisadero street on the second Friday of each month. Mrs. Ed H. Coleman of 1635 Oak street has just returned to San Francisco after an absence of five months, during which she visited all the large Eastern citles and some of the principal summer resorts. Mrs. G. Alexander, Mrs. I. Hoffman and Miss Helen Alexander left for the East Sunday evening. Mrs. C. Kalbmann and her oldest son visiting friends in Stockton for a few day: Miss Clara Kalbmann has returned from Los Angeles after a_four months’ visit with her sister, Mrs. M. Glass. Continued From Page 17. cations have been received, it is esti- mated at the War Department that there are already from three thousand to four thousand cases which form the basis of pension claims. In speaking to-day of the pensions growing out of the present war, Commissioner of Pen- sions Evans said to me: “No additional legislation will be necessary for adjudicating these pen- sion claims. They come under the general pension law of 1862. I do not anticipate any great rush of applica- tions. We will create a new division, in order to keep these records to them- selves, but we Will not increase the office force. We are now waiting for the completion of the War Department records. The disabilities from this war will not be nearly so great as from our last war. Wounded soldiers who would have died in the former war now get well. This is owing to more hu- mane implements of warfare and extra skill in surgery. Formerly a doctor went along with a broadax and a butcher knife, and cut off a leg where a foot was injured. Surgeons now make few amputations. “By the way, they have been jump- ing on me lately about dropping from the pension rolls soldiers of the last war who have re-enlisted in this. There are about fifty of these cases. But they have no right to say that I dropped them. The law dropped them. The law distinctly provides that a sol- dler or sailor who Is on duty and draw- ing a salary for services cannot draw a pension at the same time. If they prefer the salary to the pension that is all right, but they should not ex- pect both when the law distinctly states that they should have but one.” The existing pension laws, without any necessity for passing more, make ample provision for pensioning sol- diers of the present war and their de- scendants. They come under the law of July 4, 1862, and the law of March 38, 1873, avhich was amendatory of the former law. This law, as amended, provides that any person of the several classes in the military service of the United States after March 4, 1861, and ‘who has been or is disabled subsequent to that date, shall, upon making new proof of the fact according. to such forms and regulations as are or may be provided, be placed on the list of in- valid pensioners of the United States, and be entitled to receive for a total disability or a permanent specific dis- ability certain amounts according to his rating. The cases of widows and dependent parents are provided for by section 1 of the dependent pension act of June , 1890, “Under the conditions and lim- itations of existing laws.” The Pension Office ratings under the old law have long been established. The loss of both hands or legs entitles one to a pension of $100 a month. A total disability in both hands or legs entitles the soldier to $72 a month. The list is graduated down to $6 a month for the loss of the big toe and $2 a month for the loss of any other toe. The loss of sight in one eye brings a pension of $12 a month, while the loss of the eye itself increases the bounty to $17 a month. The several successive steps through which a pension application passes when it reaches the Pension Office are as follows: First: It is recelved in the mailing division and the date of its receipt stamped upon it. Second: It is forwarded to the record division, re- corded, given a number, and the official character and identity of the officer be- fore whom it was executed is verified. The verification is generally made through court certificates. The third step is. to send the appli- cation to an examiner in one of the five sdjudicating divisions, where it is put on file. Its fourth experience comes when it is reached in order and charged out to the examiner who is to handle it. He calls on the War De- partment for the record of the service of the soldier named in the application, his discharge, his hospital treatment, e te. As a fifth step the claimant, if a sol- dier, is ordered before a local examin- ing board, given a physical examination and required to furnish such evidence as may be necessary to complete his claim. (Claims as they come in are generally incomplete.) The completion of the claim may take weeks, or months or years, depending upon the prompt- ness and the accuracy with which the evidence is supplied. A widow must file evidence showing the legality of her widowhood, that she has not remarried and establishing the fact that the death of her husband was g:::ee to disabilities incurred in the ser- On the completion of a claim the ex- aminer refers the case with proper rec- ommendations to the board of review. It is placed in the hands of some special reviewer, who indorses his recommend- ation on the face of the brief of the case, and the case Is again charged up to a re-reviewer. After this it is either referred back to the first examiner for correction of informalities or further evidence or it comes for approval to the chief of the board of review. If approved it is sent to the medical di- vision in order that the rates to which the claimant is entitled may be written in. The papers finally go to the cer- tificate division, where the certificates are written, and the claimant or his attorney or his member of Congress is notified of the admission of the claim. The certificates must be signed by the Secretary of the Interior and the Com- misefoner of Pensicns. The States from which applications have so far conlie In for volunteer scr- vice are Wisconsin, Illinofs, Pennsyl- vania, Indlana, Connecticut, Massachu- setts, Maryland, Tennessee, Alabama, Michigan, Maine, New York, Kansas, Nebraska and South Dakota. Very well distributed, surely. ailroad across the continent from north to south may This last battle of the tribesmen against the combined Jast stand of the native against invading civilization. For years England has been having her fanatics who infest the vague region of desolation known as the Sou- name which soon become a Africa is now dark-skinned pupil. The Dervish forca, with its inexhaustible elasticity, was routed, not subdued, and the final day of reckoning had yet to come. Tommy and his black chum knew it as they wrung each other’s ha.ds and looked into _each other’s vengeful eyes; over yonder, where the Khalifa's black flag waved above Khartoum, the black man longed to wipe out old scores, the white man had to avenge something worse, an insult to “‘the widow,” a be- trayal of the widow’s hero martyr. As the twain loosened their soldier grip, each knew that the Union Jack must float in the place of the black flag. The Dervishes knew it too. It wag the fanaticism of despair, not hope,that hurled them against General Kitchener and his Anglo-Egyptian forces at the battle of Omdurma... A generation has passed away since Europe was con- vulsed by the throes of such a struggle as raged from sunrise to sundown on September 2; a battle where Mussul- manic barbarism massed itself against Christian civilization, when the glit- tering banners of the Khalifa, his cop- per and brass drums, defied the sober British colors, the sound of fife and bagpipe; when thousands of white- robed Dervishes, their eyes aflame with visions of Paradise, swept down upon grenadiers and Irish fusiliers, on men of Lancashire and Northumberland, ‘Warwickshire and Lincoln, on High- land Camerons, Egyptians and Sou- danese, all fighting, not for dear life, but for the honor of the British Em- pire, the future of the African con- tinent. Such a battle has scarcely raged since barbaric days; in its mad fervor, its grim recklessness, its relentless cruelty, it recalls the hours of Moham- med's personal power. The wildest limits of courage and hate were reach- ed the British troops, thrilled with ad- miration for an enemy who carried flags to within a hundred feet of their lines and dropped with the Mohamme- dan’s war cry on his lins. But eventhat dying heroism had its fiendish side, as many a brave man found to his cost; the Dervish falls with murder in his heart, drops when wounded only to sham death; again and again as a white goldier or surgeon bent over a stricken form, the apparently dead quickened, . the wounded regained strength, and the Christian helper was struck down. And so it happened that British soldiers had to do that deed of horror which appals even Tommy At- kins, had to kill the dying in mercy to his own living, to kill with a wild thought throb remembering how his own wounded were being treated, while the Twenty-first Lancers were inspired to a feat of heroism unrivaled since the hour of the famous Six Hundered. ADVERTISEMENTS. 80000000000000000 DOMESTIC DEPARTMENT. UNUSUAL INDUCEMENTS To Purchasers of Housefirnishing Goods! During this week we wiil @ offer our entire stock ofg “Housefurnishing Goods at a ® remarkable reduction. © Below isa sample of theg many Bargains to be ob-® tained. $2.25 O] ® LOROJOJOROJOJOJOIOROJOJOROXOROXSROROXOXCJOYOXOJOYOJOI 1} (OJOXO] Pair—IRISH POINT @ LACE CURTAINS, ® regular size, worth $3; on sale at $2 25 a © pair. ® ® Pair—IRISH POINT ® LACE CURTAINS, = regular size, pretty ® patterns and very @ durable, worth $3 50; on sale at $2 75 a pair. $2.75 . ® $3 75 FPair—IRISH POINT ® 2 LACE CURTAINS, @ full siz a large range of new and pretty designs: good © value for $475; on ® sale at $3 75 a pair. @ TAILOR MADE @ DUCK SUITINGS, a © strong, durable mate- © rial; cloth effects and @ fast colors; worth [ [} ic 10c; on sale at 6 1-4c yard. TAILOR MADE e DUCK SUITINGS, a serviceable material; o cloth effects and good *styles; worth 12ic; @ on sale at T%c yard. ® CHECK GLASS © TOWELING, 18© inches wide, fast @ esdges; gom} value for ® c; on sale at 6 yard. B0 i 6ic Murphy Bullding, Market and Jones Streefs. @@@@@@Q@@@@@@@@@@ & & 4 4 Radway's Ready Rellef for Sprains, Brulses, [CJOROJOJOXOXOJOJOXO] (O] (O] {oloJoJoXoJoJoJoJoJoooJoJoRoNOJoJoyoJo Yoo oXoXoJoJoIoJo ROy O XoXoYoX oYo Y oY Oox oY YooY OJOROJO YO Y OROXOXOXOROROXOROJOXOROROJOXOROJOMOXOJOXOXOJOOJOJOJOJOJOXOXO KO Sore Muscles, Cramps, Burns, Sunburns, Back- ache, Headache, Toothache, Rheumatism, Neu- ralgla, Lumbago, Internally for all Bowel Pains, Colle, jarrhoea, Dysentery, Cholera drug- Morbus and Sickness, Nausea, etc. gists.

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