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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1898. REVISION OF | THE DREYFUS CASE ORDERED Court of Cassation’s Verdict. NO PUBLIC DEMONSTRATION o PARISIAN CROWD LISTENS IN SILENCE. Judges Decline to Grant the Applica- tion'for the Prisoner’s Release Pending the Supptemen- tal Inquiry. Spectal Dispatch to The Call. PARIS, Oct. 29.—The Court of Cassa- tion has decided to grant a revision of the Dreyfus case, and will institute a supplementary inquiry. The: court, | however, has declined to order ‘the re- | us. | ning of the court to-day sumed his argumient in | )f the Dreyfus family, insisting | bordereau was not in the | the writing of Major Ester- latter hypoth: counsel ysolutely improbable. If it was an the author of it must be a third party. If it was no im- | ithor of the bordereau, ald only be Major Ester- Continuing, M. Mornaud out that the honor of the army ot involved in the doings of court- other co! contin had, closed his argu- ired to deliberate. . in_ Siecle to-day, as- rét ‘documents in_the burned some days court-martial nt of Paris st Alfred Drey- ; attached of all the of arti- the Code of Criminal d by the law of June ive to the -admissibility _of on in proper form for rede- as been brought ublic prosecutor s order of Min- int le roduced 444; , The documents produced do e the court in a position to decide merits of ‘the case and there is for making a supplemental in- o reasons the' court declares on to be in proper form and ssible, and states that it will supplemental iry, and de- > ground present ing on the lic pros- plicatien” for a suspension of of the court were occu- hours and a half in con- Judgment. whose admission to the court was regulated with the greatest care, awaited the decision with marked calmn During the' suspension of ness the public crowded into the s and there w evident anxiety r the verdict. There was no dem- onstration when the court arose. The :cision created ' no public ex- citement and complete tranquillity pre- | vails on the stree NEW CABINET MAY BE COMPCSED TO-DAY PARIS, Oct. 29. Dupuy hopes to complete the Cabinet to-morrow. It is announced that M..de Freycinet has accepted the War Office portfolio, sub- | ject to the proviso that the selections | for the remaining Cabinet officers meet with his approval. M. Paul Peyerals, Minister of Finance in the late Cabinet of M. Brisson, has declined to.accept the colonial portfolio on the ground of ill health. The anti-Semite members of the Chamber of Deputies have issued a manifesto to the country declaring ‘that the Government of the republic | must be vorced from Jewish in- fluences, . “which are ruining it and | ;ubjeflmg France to the yoke of the ews.” BRECKINRIDGE THINKS ’* HE HAS BEEN ILL USED Says He Was Mustered Out Because | of His Charges of Mismanage- ment at Santiago. | NEW YORK, Oct, 20.—The Herald’s | Washington correspondent telegraphs: Major General Jos-nh C. Breckinridge has | returned to his office, after having been | ordered mustered out as corps commander at Chickamauga. Under this order Gen- | eral Breckinridge expected to be granted leave of absence until November 30. In | the meantime he was directed to report | to Washington. I am informed that one | of the first things General Breckinridge | did after arriving here was to call on the | President, who did not receive him. It| is confidently stated that there is an un- pleasant friction between the office of in- | spector general and that of the Secretary | of War. It is urged with much feeiing | by the friends of General Breckinridge | that the oraer ‘mustering him out of zfia‘ service was'an afterthought and in some degree a sort of punishment for his re- port from Santiago setting forth in vig- orous fashion the causes of the misman- agement there. While at Santiago it ap- ‘pears he tncurred tne ill will of General | hafter because he sent a dispatch ask- ing for more troops. I am Informed that on_ this account the commanding general | refused to speak to him for several days. Although the utterances of General Breckinridge have been entirely official in their character tioy seem to have been unsatisfactory to the administration. General Breckinridge does not seem understand his present status. He simply waiting for orders with seemingly | nothing before him to engage his atten- tion. He did say. however, that from | Gertain causes there had been no cohe- rency possible In the department of the inspector general and that connection be- | tween the inspector general and his sub- | ordinates during the progress of the war | had been severed by unseen hands. iy Chinese to Be Deported. LOS ANGELES,, Oct. 20.—Judge Well- born, in the Federal Court to-day, ordered that Hong Yet Suey’and Fong Ming, a Chinese man and woman respectively, be deported to China, they.being unlawfully in thiszeountry. They are part of the band of Chinese that was smuggled across the Mexican berder; The case has been hard-fought by Tocal Chinese. Chow Gun Ying was allowed to remain on a showing that she s married to a local merchant, | to is | | lieved here | his | Major | titude. SIGNIFICANCE OF THE RETURN OF MARCHAND Tends to Clear Away War Clouds. HAS FRANCE BACKED DOWN? BRITONS STILL BELIEVE HE ‘WAS RECALLED. Paris Papers Profess to Have Little Faith in Russia’s Aid in the Event of a Conflict. Copyrighted, 189, by the Assoclated Press. LONDON, Oct. 29.—The arrival of Major Marchand at Khartoum, on his way to Cairo, with the portion of his report which was not finished when Captdin Baratier left Fashoda, is re- | garded as a rift in the clouds overhang- ing Anglo-French relations, for, in spite of the semi-official denial issued in Paris that orders were sent to the major to go to Cairo, it is fully be that the French officer would not be on his way to Cairo un- less he had received a hint to that ef-| fect from the French Government, which considers that his leaving Fashoda will take the sting out of the situation, and e same time prepare France for the eventual withdrawal of the whole | expedition, which now consists of seven | ofi ers and 120 men. The British view of the latest move is that the Marquis of Salisbury and Minist are delighted to afford Marchand the facilities for reaching Cairo. But théy would hardly care to send him back except in the capacity of a guest or scientific xplorer. That is to say, France will first have to renounce h principal claims based on his mission. In the meantime in the voluntary re- turn of Major Marchand, the French Minister of Foreign Affairs, M. del Casse, and the Government of France have got over a great difficulty from a diplomatic amour propre point of view. M. del Ca had declared that the French Government could not do the impossible—that is to say, recall Major Marchand. Therefore the latter's re- turn has enabled the French Govern- ment to “save its face’ as the saying goes. It is recognized, however, that even if the tri-color of France is hauled down at hoda, the main subject «f dispute remains and may cause anx- ious mom: in both countries before the Bahr-el-Ghazel question is settled, although there has been a confident feeling for the last few days that war will be averted. The French Minis- terial crisis at first increased the feel- ing of anxiety which prevailed as to the prospects of a peaceful solution; but in the list of probable Ministers the British newspapershsée & body pf experienced and capable'men who are able to lead French opinion. The retention of M. del Casse at the head of the Ministry of Foreign Af- fairs, however, is not regarded favor- ably, as he is the father of the March- and adventure. An instructive account of the origin of the whole enterprise appears in. an important Paris paper, Le Journal, which says the Marquis de Mores, the Anglophobe, French explorer, who was as inated in the hinterland of Al- geria, really conceived grandiose plans, which he submitted to M. del Casse, who fell in with his views and dis- patched Major Marchand to the Upper Nile, while De Mores started for the Sahara with the avowed hope to con- | quer, with the co-operation of March- and, the province of Bahr-el-Ghazel. | The plan of campaign included the or- ganization of all the armed peoples op- posed to Great Britain, and included even the co-operation of the Khalifa, | whose forces, led by Frenchmen, would attack the British, and the Khalifa, backed by the French explorers, would thus interpose a buffer between Egypt and Central Africa, thereby thwarting British alms. De Mores and his party were massacred at the outset of their journey, but Marchand succeeded in carrying out his part of the plan, and there is reason to belleve the French Government now wishes he had not done so. As the Eclair says to-day: “Major Marchand returning? Why then did we go to Fashoda? In order to play the game we played against the English we ought to have had a navy capable of making a brave show against the English, instead of which the fossils of our Navy Department have left us incapable of fighting with honor.” Frenck newspapers seem to have lit- tle faith in Russia helping her ally in the present crisis, while Russian dis- patches to the British papers affirm positively that the Czar is decidedly | opposed to war, and has counseled the French to abandon their untenable at- It is even said that the Czar has characterized the French attitude as reckless. The rumor from Paris of the inten- | tion of the British Government to de- clare Egypt under the protectorate of Great Britain has attracted little at- tention, as the general feeling is that the moment is clearly inopportune for such a step. It would be only playing into the hands of France. There is talk, however, of Great Britain adopt- ing extreme measures toward the Khe- dive of Ervnt unless he modifies his at- titude. - It is well known that he re- turns from each of his visits to Euro- pean courts filled with sinister* ideas against British tutelage. 3ut every act of petulancy has been met with an iron hand. It is asserted that the Khedive Abbislimi has shown no capacity for government and is a mere puppet in the hands of Frenchmen. Consequently it has been mooted that he is soon to be deposed in fayor of his brother, Mo- hammed Ali, who was born in 1875, and who is a. brighter and more -amiable youth. General Wesley Merritt and Mrs. Merritt are still in London. ~Mrs. Mer- ritt is suffering from typhoid fever. Al- though her condition is not serious, her sickness will necessitate her remaining here for some time. 3 e NOT A DEATH IN THE NEVADA CAMP Battalion of Volunteers Mustered Out in Splendid Condition Physicaily. CARSON, Oct. 29.—The*Nevada Infantry Battalion, United States Volunteers, was mustered out to-day. The official report of the health officers have not been made public, but the fact is known that of the 416 men. in. camp. during.four months not one death occurréd; and nearly ail the men leave the servite in perfect physical condition. = Their robust appearance is in marked contrast to the emaciated ap- gearlnce of the Nevada troopers, who ave returned from camps in other States. SICK SENT HOME WITHOUT SURGEONS Some of the Abuses at Camp Thomas. WHAT TWO CIVILIANS SAW | LOCAL PHYSICIANS TESTIFY AS TO AN INJURED SOLDIER. | An Army Officer Tells the War Board | That the Sanitary Conditions Were Exceedingly Bad. Epecial Dispatch to The Call. CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., Oct. 29.— Major Edward T. Comegys was the first witness before the War Investigating Commission to-day. He was medical purveyor here during the existence of | Camp Thomas. He stated that there | had never been any delay in the filling | of his requisitions on the surgeon gen- | eral, and that he had always been able | to meet all requisitions upon himself. Major Comegys admitted that he had refused to fill some requisitions from the hospital of the Second Division of | the Third Corps because satisfled the |articles demanded were not 1 eded. He | accounted for the sickness in Camp | Thomas by saying the men did not know how to take care of themselves. | “They seemed to think,” said he, “that when they had put on their uni- | forms there was nothing else to do; that they could simply enjoy them- | selves and their officers .ould do the | rest.” He thought the colonels and regi- mental surgeons were to blame. Lieutenant James M. Arrasmith, who acted as chief commissary of subsist- ence for Camp Thomas, said that, ywhile in the beginning there had been some congestion on the transportation lines, there had never been any short- age’of supplies. There was constantly on hand an average of 1,600,000 pounds of rations. The rations were the best | he had ever seen issued in many years’ experience. He thought the principal trouble was in the matter of cooking. Lieutenant Arrasmith said the sinks | were very badly cared for, and that the stench around the camp at night was simply stifling. He also said the disci- pline was very slack. The witness con- sidered Chiekamauga ‘a natural camp- ing site, but said there were more men in it than there should have been. Some | of the volunteer regiments never took down their tents during their entire stay, and there was general negligence | of cleanliness and sanitation. He did not accept the theory tha’ the forma- tion of the ground was such that the sinks could not be made deep enough. There was, he said, a general improve ment in the camp after General Breck: inridge took command. s Drs. Baxger and Boyd, local phys cians, were ‘called to testify in regard‘t: the case ofSergeant Frank, who died here during the summer as the result of a raiiroad accident. Dr. Baxter said that, notwithstanding the man was in a state of profoynd shock after the.ac- cident, Dr. Samuel D. Hubbard, sur- | geon of the regiment, insisted upon re- moving the wounded man to Chicka- mauga Park. The man died on the way | out, as he (Baxter) had predicted he would. Dr. Baxter told of one train of Wis- consin sick which he had seen on its way home without a medical officer or medical supplies. The commission closed its sittings here to-night by hearing the testimony of some residents, stating their obser- vation of the condition at Chicka- mauga Park while the troops were there, and giving their conclusions as to the causes of the sickness of the They defended the climate as us and healthful, and generally attributed the prevalence of disease to the habits of the volunteers. J. C. Howell, railroad station agent, told of an instance in which fifty-four | sick men, being part of the Wisconsin | command, had been placed on a train and started to their homes without medical supplies or physicians and without furloughs or transportation papers. They were taken off the train at Chattanooga and thelr wants ad- ministered to by members of the relief societies. Ira J. Hannes, a private, acting as a | member of the Hospital Corps, who said he had been a practieing physician | in Louisville, Ky., for eight years, was | examined on the lines of a communica- tion he had sent to the commission. In this communication he had charged that patients had been treated for ty- | phoid fever when they plainly had | pneumonia. He said there were several such patients, and he gave the name of Vincent Flora of the Third Illinois as one of them, this, he said, being as ! plain a case of pneumonia as he had |-ever seen. Upon being pressed he modi: | fied his statements, saying that he had | no consultations with the physicians as to their line of treatment. He sald, | however, that he considered some of the physicians incompetent. He also | charged that appointments were made | In the hospital upon political. influ- ence. . | Dr. F. B. Stapp, a local physician, detailed a visit to the hospital of ‘the Second Division of the Third-Corps in August, saying he had found it over- crowded and dirty and with no phy- | sicians in attendance at the time. Dr. Stapp sald he had seen a great deal of drunkenness among the soldiers in the city, but he had never h#ard of any special effort to close the saloons and other places of vice. _drunken soldiers lying in the streets, and he was sure much of the sickness at Camp Thomas was due to the habits of the men, MASSACRED BRITISH : SOLDIERS AVENGED Five More Mussulmans Who Partici- pated in the Crete Outbreak Put to Death. CANDIA, Island of Crete, Oct. 29.—Five more of the Mussulmans convicted of tak- ing part in the massacre of British sol- diers on September 6, were executed to- day on‘'the same spot where the seven earlier victims met their fate. In addition, four Bashi-Bazouks have been sentenced to twenty years’ imprisonment at hard labor. Since the departure of the Turkish troops & number of additional gullty Mus- sulmans have been d!scoveres in" Italy. | It appears that the Turkish officers appro- lrinted the valuables looted by their sol- ers. ——— Arrested for Forgery. SACRAMENTO, Oct. 29.—August Geiser, 50 years of age, who says he is a cook by profession, and that he came from Los Arigeles, was arrested to-dky for for- gery:. He is a.\lefed . to- have u{umfl a number of fraudulent checks in this city and in " Washington, Yolo Cpuflly, 0. Fhich he had forged thé name o Mohr & Yoerk, & local meat g firm. The checks called for small sums of money. | The police say Geiser is wanted in Peta- luma also for forgery. i Advances made on furniture and planos, with or without removal. J. Noonan, 1017-1033 Mission, He -had seen | PREPARING T0 OCCUPY CUBA President Confers With Alger and Corbin. | WILL NOT CHANGE THE DATE |AMERICAN DISPATCH BOATS ENTER HAVANA HALBOR. Military Commissioners Begin the Work of Taking an Inventory of the Spanish Ord- nance. Special Dispatch to The Call. WASHINGTON, Oct. 29.—The Presi- | dent, Secretary Alger and Adjutant | General Corbin had an extended con- | ference to-day, the principal topic un- | der consideration being the occupation of Cuba. There is no disposition to | change the date. January 1, fixed for | the assumption of control by the United States. The gquestions discussed to-day | related mainly to transportation, ships, | equipment, landings ana camps. The | reports of the Cuban Military Commis- | sion and the army board appointed to investigate and locate sites were considered. General Lawton, who has been for | some time Military Governor of San- | tiago province, was present during a | portion of the conference, and gave | the President some information con- | cerning conditions in Cuba. The re- | ports of the board to select sites in- |.cluded a list of articles which would be | immediately necessary, and the de- | partment has ordered the issuance of | advertisements for them. Colonel Hacker and Colonel Lee, the latter quartermaster with the board, have been ordered to Washington to report more in detail and to assist in the pre- parations for the émbarkation of troops | to_Cuba. During his conversation with General Lawton the President expressed his gratification at the victorious conclu- sion of the campaign in Santiago prov- ince and at the manner in which the | officers and men conducted themselves. HAVANA, Oct. 29.—The dispatch- boats Scorpion and .Mantero are in port, having arrived here yesterday. | The second eneineer of the Mantero died recently at sec of heart disease. The Marianio beach landing place has been definitely selected, and work on the landing stage began this morning | under the direction of Captain Craw- ford of the engineer corps. The Colonial Congress was dissolved vesterday by decree of Captain General Blanco. | Captain Brooks has been assigned by the United States Military Commission- ers to make a detailed inventory of ; gun mounted on the fortifications | of Havana, ' The captain began work |t morning, in company with two panish officers appointed by the Span- ish side. This is the first step taken by the commission to investigate on its |own account the ordmance existing here. 0 - The rellef suppliés of jhe Red Cross { steamer City of San Anfonio-have been, ]so far, distributed as follows: Sixty | tons at Cardenas, twenty tons at Colon, | twenty, tons at Jogellanas, twenty tons ’at Navagas, ten tons at Union de | Peyes, ten tons at Sabanilla, forty tons | at Santo Domingo, twenty at Sagua la lGl‘ande, sixty at Santa Clara and | twenty at Guanabacoa. All the hos- pitals and asylums at Matanzas have also received medical supplies and stores. | The Civil Governor of Havana re- | cently ordered thé removal of all the | beggars who are infesting the public thoroughfares. They will be taken to homes, hospitals and asylums desig- | nated for that purpose. The work of removing the beggars has commenced. They were placed in closed wagons, which, however, did not turn out' to be satisfactory convey- lances. The beggars proved to be most | unwilling passengers, opening the back | doors of the vehicles. and taking to | their Heels as soon as the drivers | turned their backs. Consequently the | first attempt to free the streets and public-places of hordes of professional mendicants was entirely unsuccessful. But to-day the Civil Governor will un- doubtedly enforce stringent regulations | which will accomplish the beneficial | result proposed. | POSTOFFICE ROBBED BY A LITTLE GIRL | A Btaten Island Child Proves to Have | Perpetrated a Daring | Crime. NEW YORK. Oct. 20.—Charged with a | erime that. only the boldest cracksmen attempt—robbing a United States post- old, is a in West | Brighton, Staten Island. After search- | ing for the bold cracksman John Smith, | a detective, to-day arrested Katle Boose. | Through a small window opening from a storm’ lobby at the rear the thief had | gained entrance, took the money from the drawer, which was forced, and tore | open letters. When Katie Boose was ar- rested she made a clean breast of her wickedness. “I didn’t think I was doing very wrong,” she said, as tears flowed down her cheeks and she sobbed hysterically. “I only wanted money, because you can blg so much with it."” ntil Uncle Sam decides what to do with this youthful burglar she will be cared for by the Society for the Preven- tion of Cruelty to Children. INVEIGHS AGAINST THE POLICY OF EXTENSION Governor Chandler of Georgia Op- poses the Acquiring of New Territory. ATLANTA, Ga., Oct. .).—Allan D. Chandler was inaugurated Governor of Georgia at noon to-day. In his address | ofice—Katie Boose, 12 years ]‘prléoner at the police station he said: “Not content with the extent of our magnificent national domain, we are reaching out thousands of miles for the islands of the sea, with their heterogen- ous population, and there are those in both political gartles who would reverse the policy of the country and enter upon an’ expansion scheme of colonization as have the countries of Europe, which wilt necessitate an immense standing army and a large and costly navv. It will not do for us to wander too far into the realms of experiment. Our safety is in conservatism and a rigid adherence to the precedents of the past. This is espe- cially true of the people of the South. We should resist all dangerous innovations. We should cling to the constitutional right of local self-government, the sure '.'ngcl‘t‘fi;:tte our s ehty. 'a.nd apFose in every wa. e ' increasing "of the Federal Govermment 16 on the rights’of Btates.”” ** Cleveland Well Shaken. CLEVELAND, Oct.” 20.—Three distinct earthquake shocks were felt in this city -earl; to—du{: each belng about ten sec- ond In length. The shocks were not severe :;‘e(:‘fhaft%h?wng“ced in glenerl-l.nh'l‘llla aves were in & norther! |-and southerly direotio o tendenc; encroacl n. AMERICAN LOSSES DURING THE WAR Disease More Deadly Than Bullets. GIVEN OFFICIAL FIGURES A TOTAL DEATH ROLL OF LESS THAN 3000. Statement of Commissioner of Pen- sions Evans of the Fatalities Among Soldiers and Sailors. Spectal Dispatch to The Call. CHICAGO, Oct. 29.—Commissioner of Pensions H. Clay Evans, who is in this city, states that up to September 30 the war with Spain had caused the loss of 2906 American soldiers and sail- ors. He further declares that the sta- tistics of his office show that the per- centage of deaths in camps from dis- ease during last summer was much less than it was during the Civil War. Commissioner Evans being asked for further particulars, spoke as follows: “During the Rebellion 40,000 men were killed in battle and 360,000 perished in camps and prisons. From official fig- ures which have recently been com- pleted, covering a period from May 1 to September 30, I find that the total number of deaths as a result of the war with Spain was 2906. Of this num- ber 107 were officers. At Santiago the loss of life was twenty-two officers and 222 men. This is an average of one officer for every ten men. At Cardenas one officer was killed. Since the bat- tles on Cuban soil sixty-one men have died of wounds received in service. “The total number of American sol- diers that have died in camps from dis- ease are eighty officers and 2520 priv- ates, or an aggregate of 2600. This is remarkable, in view of the terrible clil- matic disadvantages, but it fully verl- fles the soldiers’ adage that disease kills more men than bullets. There have been 600 claims for pensions filed to date as a result of the war. “In the Cuban campaign the loss of s0 many officers is accounted for by the fact that Spanish sharpshooters hid in the trees and dense foliage used smokeless powder and picked off the officers with ease. Some of the wounds received by officers were remarkable. 1 recall one case in particular—that of Captain Knox of the First Cavalry. The captain was shot in the back. The ball penetrated his kidney, liver ana lung and broke two of his ribs, but he is alive to-day, and the President has promoted him.” Commissioner Evans says the loss of life resulting from the destruction of the Maine in Havana harbor will be placed on the same basis as mortality in battle. ~He holds that the general law providing for Indemnity to sailors and soldlers in the Federal service wilt apply to the explosion at Havana. “Thus far only fifty-five claims have been presented from relatives of the boys who went down with the Maine,”™ said the Commissioner. “Every one of them will be pushed throush. It is no more than right that the dependents of the men who went to watery graves in Havana Bay should be provided for by the United States Government.” CALLS THE WAR A REVOLUTION Severe Strictures of Har- vard’s President. PROFESSOR NORTON’S TALK AEMRICANS WERE DEVOID OF SENSE. The Whole System of Government Must Be Reorganized to Meet +he Changed Condi- tions. Special Dispatch to The Call. CAMBRIDGE, Mass.,” Oct. 29.—Pro- fessor Charles’ Eliot Norton, in an ad- dress before the Graduates’ Club of Harvard College, expressed sentiments which are likely to arouse as much dis- cussion among Harvard men and oth- ers as has followed many of Professor Norton’s recent utterances. The speaker’s subject was “The New American.” In the course of his re- marks he reviewed the conditions which made this republic in many ways an experiment in the history of democra- cies. Continuing, he said: “No one would have thought the American Nation so devoid of sense as to go to war in the beginning of the hot season in a tropical country, and without any adequate preparation to carry that war to a succesful issue. “This war was a revolution. The old America came to an end with the dec- laration of war. The new America threw over many of the old ideals which have been maintained by this old Amer- jca and substituted for them those of the other nations of the world. We must make up our minds as to the new 'ADVERTISEMENTS. Danger In the Fall There is danger to the health in sud- den changes, warm days and chilly nights, decaying vegetation, low water and prevalence of malarial germs. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is needed. It puri- fles and enriches the blood, sending it through the veins in a warm, nourish- ing, health-giving stream. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is America’s Greatest Medicine. $1; six for $5. Hood’s Pills act easily, effectively. 25c. ADVERTISEMENTS. D e PP PSS St 000Q00000OQO@OOOOOOO@OOOODOOOOO@000@000009099@9@0@0@00 s BLANKETS! Beginning to-morrow, October 31, we place on sale 10 cases of large size White California All-Wool Blankets, made ot extra fine quality wool, silk bound in very pretty borders, at the unprecedented price of $3.65 a Pair. e e 1.8 Extra 0P PO0@0909090@0P00090P0PLVP0P0S0H09090909090 biat 3185 10 dozen extra large size Bed Comforters, silkoline covered in very pretty designs, filled with extra»quality fine white cotton, nicely tufted. Regular value $2.50. On special sale at $1.85 Each. Sheets and Pillow Cases. Made of good standard quality sheeting, torn by hand, dry laun- dered, ready for use. loc EACH—100 dozen Hemmed Pil-‘47lc 50 dozen Full-siza Hemmed low Cases, sizes 45x38}4. Regu- DY Sheets, size 81x90. Regular lar value 15c. value S5c. A\ lsc EACH—50 dozen Hemstilched}57l 50 dozen Full-size Hemstitched - Pillow Cases, 45x38%. Regular} B Sheets, size 81x30. Regular value 20c. value 65c. COUNTRY ORDERS SOLICITED. )l23-i25 PosT S e ©060909090H090409090H090H0HD00040H04060H040¢ 2090600040409 0€009020009040® 0000900906 0H0S0P0H0P090L0L0POP0L0L0$090H0P0P0P0P004000R0P0H0P090H00®090H0®0S0S 0 090909090 P0P0P0P0P0L0P09000P0P0H0P0P0P0P0P0POP0L0S0H0P0P0L0S0P0S0S0$0SO- o & o (3 o @ o ® of government needs to be revised and reorganized. The pension list is a list of corruption and has increased the na- tional indebtedness. “Is there nothing to be done? The situation is to be met with courage and a determinition to zit the best out ef a bad case. e*must dlvurce the gOv- ernment of these dependencies from politics or else they will- become dens of ecorruption.” Professor Norton advocated leaving the Philippines to the care of Spain. CURE conditions. We are to be a military nation. Moreover, all brutal tendencies will be encouraged by the recognition of force as the last appeal by the cen- tral Government itself. “And, too, entanglements with other nations must arise. 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