The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, February 19, 1899, Page 7

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THE SAN. FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1899. ADVERTISEMENTS. o@O@O@O@O\‘)O®O®0\‘)0@0@0\‘)O@OGO000000@00600000000@000000. @ 040 9080® 0406 DP0H0H0H0S0P0L0 $060506 [} 20406 ¢ 090?060 040 ¢ $040 o Q $0408090.& 0404080¢0 0090504 IT PAYS TO TRADE IN THE MISSION. PATTOSIEN'S. The Most Important Sale of the Year. 10 CARLOADS Of the Finest Furniture .y o.77irDS Made in Grand Rapids ,noiEss. A GRAND RAPIDS SUR- PLUS STOCK SACRIFICE. Spring Sale Carpets and Rugs. Parlor No larger, handsomer or better assorted stock in the than ours. years we led in carpet selling. ease that lead further than ever Here's Brussels, Wiltons, Axminsters, Moquettes. Beet Sanford & Roxbury Rr'usfls Carpets; I the new styles; per yard... ..75¢ Ils of Tapestry Brussels Carpet, ularly for to close at Boc ot Carpet, new de- 81,00 Fine W n Rugs—6x9, ilton Rugs. $7.00; 5:3x10 inches, ersible Rugs. m: any f ¢ -drawers under desk; regul al price.. w ar pric TR 5 | carefully sel e a record-breaking sale in de- and Japan Mattings, because al to these have never been Q b e at these prices ¢ of ‘Matting remainders of 4 that sold as high as 4 d; o sides; ; | ;Vuru . ssesee L S SRy 5 Blabon’s Linoleum. S o 4 yards wide. & qualities. t] . o ¢-Pattosien’s. BEDDING. Pattosien’s | A srade—resuiar s 10; now square ? sy, patc pure Live Goose Feather Pil e e : 1a. B = c.fi{v?ixe Reguiar ; 4 yal . . . . . 4 -$5| D e Regular quare e o yard ........ = =eseose ....B5¢ 4 NAPA, Cal., Feb. 13, '89. > ln-Iron and Brass Beds We| parrosiew co.: (<] | . . . The Linoleum you sent me was o Lead Them AllL | received all 0K, and 1 am more than 0 | pleased with it. Respectfully, 5.§2.90, $5.50, $0.50, Et ing Photoprap: ¢ 9, .ol LoV, Ce | Leading Photographer. 5 w e | Lace Curtains and Drapery o in eat | H H s=2t| Fabrics—Special Sale. 5 o e e i e 2 price was 33 $4 50, $5 00, 3 000 a pair, go = $2.50, 83, $3.50, 85 and $7.50 % a Pair, ° Brussels Lace Curtalns, with fast edges, o full width, and 3% y long; the regu- o | lar price was $6 00, 50, $1000 and > $15 00 a pair, go at a 84, 85, $6.50 and $10 a Pair. s Lace Curta. full ° . best make: the regular = price was $5 00, $7 50, $10 00, $15 320 00 o and $30 000 a palr, go at © | 83 50, $5.50, 87, $9, $12 and $I8 o | a Pair. & like o 2.90 | H ¢ as dike eauol Drapery Fabrics, > 2, $8 00 and $9 O led . + H o iz ant w5 0w UTRIEUTE Coverings, Fine Be H N 2 D0 for 350 00 Brass Beds. | flflflgm s, Efc o The most wonderful ba in Vi fre; @ “ATTRESSES i are in this ;nlré B e LR g | REVERSIBLE AND 50 INCHES WIDE. ive rake’ them ourselves and guarantee | BOec a yard for goods 50 inches wide that Q- ity | _have as high as $2 00 o yard o ”‘ms Mattresse pounds weight, | 7(?(‘ o rnrhz':\;»ds 0 inch fp'to your o ce of have sold as 2 50 a yard. “ %ing: in one or two part: $1.00 a v\nnm tor go 5" 1nches wide o tor. $20 00; C for that have sold as s 83 00 a yard. & Fxird ‘quality of long white 1.50 a yard for goods 50 inches wide that <} e 5 e % ve sold as high as $4 50 a yard. (‘ $12.50. for $18 00 Curled Halr Mattre < me of the $1 50 goods in this sale are & i A | heavy flxnril_i Vel S ;: }: = i‘;:fl © Repairing ad Re-Upholstering Dept. | doubic-aee St seau, fove 300 3 vars] O rwo of the building a | Tard, and ofhers, Sl LR b o ® ireat Remnant Sale of the above-men- P | tioned goods, cut up Into pieces 20x20 to P o 24x24 inche: will be sold at 20c, 25¢ o H for all repair | and snitable for pi , chalr oW Also- hair mattresses remade. Es-l seats, etc., etc. Some of the pleces are ..t s’ furnished: goods =old as higa $15 00 a yard. 2 All Roads Lead to Pattosien’s, 16th and Mission Sts. @ [ ek Zelciel ] 06060606060 GERMAN SOUTH POLE | 0008060 ©060860 6060 606060 to be behind other countries. o 0406060406040 HP0P0S0H0$ 00 $0H0$0H0P090P0H0H0P0$0H0H0H0H0900020& ® ®0$0606 0 ) $0P0H 09090 $0P0S0$09090P0S0P0H0E090P 0P 0 ®0POP0P0G0S0H0H0P0P0P0P 030 H0$04060H0H0H0d o $06060 @ H & sidered that the co-operation of }:figffé‘a hould be epted, the matter E N MATERIALIZING | ing"tergfors i 252,025 EXPEDITIO | robe. b ost of he expiaiion bt oot Emperor William Takes Great Inter- ing taken up th @ meeting in:the palace of Professors von cupy five” years. The professors d Thinks est in the Matter to be done will report. mated at 1,200,000 marks, and it would oc- all agreed, and after considering what is best Englanid Should Co-operate. ———— eb. 18.—It really locks as If Arrest of a Writer for Libel. south pole expedition was go-| LOS ANGELES, Feb. 18—Yda Addis z f1s Majesty has tter recently, and called | writer, was arrested here to-day bench warrant issued at 3 on January 24 last. She on Storke, a well-known Southern California a anta Barbara Bezold; . Von .Richthoften, Mobins, Suss- s charged with T oade il criminal libel, but the name o = fleid and others. . His Majesty had posted | tift could not be ascertained fthe Dz himsel . considerably on the subject and | in hiding in this city for some time be. made & gpeech. He sald Germany should | fore arrested. She has been taken to fihd means fér the expedition, so as not | Santa Barbara. [ + 43+ WHE R E R LML RN R AR R AR R ADVERTISEMENTS, ECTRIC BELT “QUACKS” Differ but lttle from the common, every-day sort ot quack. The latter fills you up with poisoncus drugs, while the former impose in- belts upon you at most out- A good electric belt is a good ferior. ald but bé sure t¥c Belts. “Call at Gur factory and salesrooms and-examinie the goods for yourself. There are nn quAcks conmected with our establishment. If you cannot .call, send 2c in stamps for our price 145t end- “‘Booklet No. 2" Address \ PIERCE ELECTRIC CO., 820 Market Street, Opposite Palace Hotel|San Franclsco. [ ] + LRy R B B B Ry by RE D o Bl BN | 09090509090 H09040406040 CLOVERDALE, Feb. 18.—Cloverdale was radiant to-night. The streets were thronged with visitors, the pavilion overflowed with well-dressed humanity, unstinted in praise of the magnificent citrus exhibit. Crowded trains came from all points. San Francisco was represented over 200 strong, and from all parts of Sonoma County parties came in vehicles of every description. This was Mendocino and Lake counties’ day, and gn excursion brought over 600 visitors from Ukiah and way points. They were so pleased with the display | that it is probable the railroad com- | pany will be induced to run a second | excursion next Wednesday (Sonoma day) from Ukiah, and thus on Wash- ington’s birthday Sonoma and Mendo- cino, at one time one county, will be reunited in a grand celebration over the splendid fulfillment of past hopes and prophecies. | This has been a summer day, the thermometer registering 90 degrees. To-night the gentle lady folk in their summer. attire, their beauty enhanced /by myriads of vari-colored electric lights overhead, vied with the golden | fruits surrounding them in making the interior of the pavilion “a dream of beauty and a joy forever,” while the silvery rays of the moon outside and | the balmy breeze laden with the per- fume of the almond, the acacia and the violet blooms reminded one of a mid- [winter night in sunny Italy. | " There was a promenade concert this | afternoon and evening by the Clover- dale band of sixteen pleces. The art exhibit occupies a_prominent space, in charge of Mrs. L. 1 Bird, | Mrs. C. E. Humbert and E. A. Cooley. All the exhibits are of menit. Mrs. D. M. Wambold shows a quilt made in 1838 and a pair of wedding slippers 120 vears old. Herman Doden shows fancy | shell work which took the prize at the Mechanic's Fair in San Francisco. Mrs. E. B. Thompson, 76 years old, recently {lams and Essie Marshall. | pret EXCURSIONISTS VISIT CLOVERDALE’S FAIR e . D B R e ko R e e Sl e e Sl o i ol 2 S e e SCENE IN THE CITRUS FAIR PAVILION AT CLOVERDALE. painted two excellent pictures for the exhibit. H. F. Snyder has a veritable curiosity shop of old relics and miner< alogical specimens. There are many scenes in water colors. Among the exhibitors of the Preston display are Madam Preston, W. Ap- pleton, Henry Meyers, Dr. Hubbard and T. J. Cottle. This is the most elab- orate exhibit of the fair. 2 The different booths are in line with the general decorations. Iach one is a gem unto itself. Miss Sallie Criglor, a dashing blonde, presides at the tamale booth, ably assisted by two of Clover- dale’s pretty buds—Misses Adah Wil- A charming nook in the pavilion is the candy booth in charge of Miss Maude Graham, whose assistants are Misses Clara Gra- ham and Elfle McKoon. Mrs. J. R. Vassar and Miss Mae Dobbins are in charge of the orange booth, where v baskets of lusclous Cloverdale oranges are sold to the visitor. The Ladies’ Guild of the Episcopal Church, famous for its excellent dinners at past fairs, has charge of the lunch booth, where all manner of delicacies are served. Frank Yordi is the dispenser of temperance liquids in another booth tastily decorated. Miss Carver, repre- senting Proctor & Reynolds of Santa Rosa, s selling the Sonoma County Atlas In great numbers as an advertise- ment of Sonoma County. The dainty booth where ice cream is served is un- der the direction of Mrs. F. W. Brush and Mrs. T. B. Wilson. Mrs. Glendore has a fish pond, where the susceptible vouth gets rid of his nickel to sport with hook and line. Mrs. T. J. de Hay has an excellent display In spiral form of jellles and nuts. C. B. Smith has some enormous vegetable produetions on exhibition. Postmaster Baer’s exhibit of apples, deciduous frults and canned fruits is quite an attraction. James Shaw of Sonoma has a large plate of limes. He has always taken the prize on limes. J. A. Kleiser's large exhibit of olive oil and pickled olives, made from his South [ S o S e O O S o Park olive grove near Cloverdale, is the admiration of every visitor. The large table filled to overflowing | with the prize oranges of all kinds in | competition for prizes for the best twelve is the leading attraction in lha} pavilion. Such mammoth specimens | have never before -been seen here. J. G. Caldwell has an interesting ex- hibit of samples of genuine coal taken from a vein on his Geyser Peak ranch. The list of prize winners was an- | nounced to-night. The judges were J. S. C. Thompson, editor of the California magazine and the West Los Angeles; Newton G. Finley, president of the So- noma County Horticulturist Society, and Thomas G. Longmore, superintend- ent of the A. W. Foster stock ranch at | Hopland. The awards were as follows: | Most artistic display of citrus fruits— First prize, San Jose electric tower, Presl- | dent Willlam Caldwell; second, Liberty Bell, F. Yordl; third, Russian River bridge. C. L. Domine. Most artistic display of oranges—H. F. Snyder. Most artistic display of lemons—A. C. Leger. Most_artisgc display of wines—Clover- dale Wine Company. Best twelve navel oranges—Dr. H. H. Hubbard of Preston. Best twelve Mediterranean sweets—Mrs. | | s ve Joppa oranges—M. M. Eni- han. Best twelve Japanese oranges—George B. Baer. Best twelve Malta blood oranges—Mrs. Willlam Caldwell. Best twelve Villa Francaise lemons— Dr. Hubbard of Preston. Best twelve Lisbon lemons—Mrs, H. L. Preston. Best twelve Sicily lemons—H. J. Crocker. Best display of limes—James Shaw of Kenwood. Best display of navel oranges—Preston joint _exhibit. Best display of pomelos—M. M. Enihan. Best display of lemons—J. C. Holloway. Best display of pickled olives—Dr. A. McCoomes. Best display of olive ofl—J. A. Kleiser. Best display of dried fruits—A. N. Clark of Dairy Creek. disposal of the deceased. change of method. © 0000600000 “WHAT SHALL WE DO WITH THE DEAD ?” Serious Question That Now Disturbs the London County Council—Cremation the Only Remedy. Special Cable to The Call and the New York Herald. Copyrighted, 1899, by James Gordon Bennett. LONDON, Feb. 18.—“What shall we do with our dead?” is a question now agitating the minds of the members of the London County Council and others interested in the health of the living as well as the proper Estimates show that each year about 150,000 human bodles are in- terred within the limits of the county of London. that within five years London will have no place for public burial, and the condition of the cemeteries suggests the imminent necessity of some There is no doubt that great injury to public health has been caused by the burial grounds of the county. It has been stated that one-eignth of the deaths in London are caused by direase which render their bodies highly dangerous and Infectious after death. This condition is maximum a few weeks after decease, and in crowded cemeteries, where bodies are frequently buried on top of or alongside of each other, the disturbance of the earth for new graves must be prejudicial to the health of the neighborhood. The general opinion is that the only remedy is an ex- pansion of the system carried on by tne Cremation Society of England. The authorities say 290 ©0-90-0-0 6000 LOUBET 15 PRESIDENT OF FRANCE Continued from First Page. lery by counter cries of “A bas les Jes- uites.” . Everybody seemed to be taking a hand in the scene that was neither creditable to their sense of their own dignity or that of the nation. The President looked up toward the press tribune, where a violent altercation ap- peared to be taking place. He rang his bell and motioned to the ushers to re- store order. As a matter of fact, it was enough to have tolerated disturbances on the floor of the house without being compelled to look after the spectators. At last things quieted down and the voting continued monotonously, for formal protests had been made by M. Loubet’s opponents. The letters of the alphabet ‘were gone through pretty rapidly, the members of the upper and lower chambers answering fairly regu- larly to the first calls of their names. +M+E+E+H+0 | At last the end is reached. The Presi- dent’s gong sounded. Then he an- nounced that the list would be gone through a second time, so that those who failed to answer the call in the first instance might vote. This does not take long, and at 3 o'clock the second scrutiny is finished. The urns are emptied into baskets pre- pared to receive their contents, which are carried off to be counted. The President descends from the tribune, not to ascend again to-day. The Dep- uties, press men and public pour out into the corridors to get a breath of fresh air. “Le Rol est mort; vive le Roi,” this reflection came uppermost as the pub- lic streamed out into the magnificent court yard and heard the waiting crowds crying “Vive Loubet.” The spectacle over, everybody hur- ries to get back to Paris. S e LOUBET’S ELECTION GREAT REPUBLICAN VICTORY Emily Crawford Describes the New President’s Qualities, Which Have Endeared Him to France. Copyrighted, 1599, by the Assoclated Press. PARIS, Feb. 18.—This election by a single ballot and by Republicans only is the greatest Republican victory since Grevy’'s walk over the course. The new President comes from a part of France where the Roman power lasted longest, namely, Marsanne, in the l?epartment of the Drome. He gives the impression of remote Latin origin and looks to be a solid, practical | who sees the facts of life just as | are. As President of the Senate | he has had official and other experi- ence that will be useful to him as| President of the repub! but he is es- | sentially a plain, middle-class man, | whose mind was sharpened by his prac- tice at the bar in the provincial town of Montelimar, in the south of France. is there most popular and every at Montelimar counts himself a o personal friend of Loubet, who, as Mayor, County uncilor, Deputy and Senator, alwa acted as the servant of the public. Obliging to his neighbors he was as accessible as General Grant or Lincoln was and not less unpretend- ing. His thick-set figure, massive and somewhtt Roman though homely head, indicate a steady, sturdy character who can nail his colors to the mast, but | only fight when there is good ocecasion. | He belonged, under the empire, to the Republican party, then calling itself Liberal. In 1870 he threw himself into the national defense current and stood | by Gambetta. He was elected County | Councilor in 1871, then Mayor, and in | 1876 was sent to the Chamber of Depu- ties, where he sat between MM. Henry and Martin, the historian. Accepting Thiers’ leadership but favoring the scheme to declare Grevy his political helr and to reconcile Gambetta with both, he seemed to bide his time and was in no hurry to push forward. M. Loubet, for having formerly, when Premier, sent jointly with the Forelgn Secretary, M. Ribot, Admiral Cervais to Cronstadt, is persona grata to Russia. For three years, as Speaker in the Sen- | ate, he lived in the Palace of the Petit | Luxembourg in much the same style as | the President lives in Washington. He returned to Paris from Versailles this | afterncon by train. He is the first | President who has done so. He or-| dered an open carriage and pair to await him at the station instead of a carriage and four. He was well re- ceived by tremendous crowds. He ar- rived by daylight and had an escort of | cuirassiers. = The entire absence of haughtiness in his demeanor was favor- ably remarked. M. Loubet paid a visit to Mme. Faure on his way home. M. Loubet is the right man in the right place. The importance of to-day’s Presidential election for the welfare of the French republic and the prestige of France cannot be overestimated. The issue taken was whether the law should be paramount or an irresponsible | league—the League of the French Fatherlend in the hands of clerical, | monarchical and military agitators. | Never was a more monstrous con- spiracy engineered to pervert a whole | nation’s sense of justice in order to per- petuate the greatest miscarriage of law of the century and shield a few felons | from the consequences of crime. The | more sensible part of France feels after M. Loubet's election that a great weight has been taken off their conscience and hopes that a new leaf will be turned over the worst page of modern French | history. M. Clemenceau wrote yesterday that it was necessary that the new Presi- dent should be a man not connected with the Dreyn]x\; affair. He would therefore support M. Loubet. Falrness, this, but the Nationalists do not want fairness. They want Dreyfus, guilty or innocent, to remain perpetually at Devil’s Island. It was enough that M. Clemenceau supported M. Loubet. The Nationalists declared that the latter should not be President or they would make Paris too hot for honest people to live in. But suppose Loubet were elected by a large majority, would they set their will above Con- gress? Yes, they were quite frank. It was to be expected that De Beaurepaire, that madman and story teller, would rake up some falsehood against Loubet. | didates. | ent yellow state of French opinion that | | the streets shouting “Confusion to Lou- Sure enough, he published this morning a Panama story against Loubet, if pos- sible, more empty than ‘- his charges against the Court of Cassation. He showed how little he himself believed in his own tittle-tattle by admitting that he doubted not Loubet's upright- ness, adding in a peculiar, dishonest way, insinuations against M. Loubet too fatuous for comtradiction. The Libre Parole branded Loubet this | morning as a “Panama-Dreyfusite can- didate,” having the effrontery to re- mark that he was supported as such by | Reinach, Zadac, Cahn, Chief Rabbi of France, and by Dreyfus himself. The Nationalist organs are forced to admit that not a word or deed of M. Loubet can be'connected with Drey: m. The fact is that the anti-Semites’ heads have been turned by victories due to the weakness of the Govern- ment, and they thought they could boss France. They won another victory this morning, when Premier Dupuy, ylelding to anti-Semitic clamor, gave Herr Frischaeur, the correspondent of the Neue Frele Presse, notice of expul- sion from France. Herr Frischauer, an Austrian, asked the reason, and was told that . it was on account of the| general tone of his letters on Dreyfus. Dupuy, however, was unable to point to | a single unwarrantable passage in the | letters. M. Meline, through his shuffling and double-dealing, caused the Dreyfus | drama to become a national crisis, and | derived the honor of being put forward as a candidate by the Nationalists and Monarchists, the enemies of law and order. Apparently he realized that it was a doubtful compliment; decilned, wavered, accepted and declined last | night, to the dismay of the National- | ists; reaccepted this morning and half declined in the afternoon M. Loubet on his appearance in the Congress house at Versailles was re- | ceived with rounds of applause, a good | omen., By counting the hands that| clapped it could be seen that he had a clear majority among the outside can- It is significent of the pres- | himself | Colonel Monteil should offer simply because he has slaughtered a few negroes in West Africa. Premier Dupuy replied to the Na- tionalist threats of street disturbances by ordering troops in the barracks to have their arms stacked in readiness for every emerge . The lunch at the Hotel Reservoirs | was as lively as usual at a Presidential election. Many ladies in handsome toilets were present. Champagne was freely served and there was no trace of mourning. Count Castellane was glad to squeeze himself in a corner of & table beside mine, and as other per- sons were drinking cheap wine he had the discretion to order a small bottle | of cheap wine, too. After lunch all ad- | Jjourned to the Congress. | During the voting the Nationalists | attempted disorders. That nefarious | mountebank, De Roulede, mounted the | tribune and addressing M. Loubet. in the chair, called him a Panamaist and | inquired what reply he would make to | M. de Beaurepaire’s charges. | Loubet replied: 'None. Your con-| duct is beneath my notice. Leavs at| once that tribune.” M. Baudry Deuxason, a wealthy roy- | alist landlord, noted for his eccentric freaks, while putting his paper in the box cried “Vive le Roi but two Re- | publican Deputies, who expected some scene, quickly shoved him alcng. | At a little past 3 o'clock the news was circulated in the lobby during a| brief adjournment that Loubet was elected by 483 vot against 279 for Meline and 45 for Cavaignac. | When the sitting was resumed, M. | Loubet having given up the chalr to| the Deputy Chairman, the result was| announced and received with cheers on the center and left, the right maintain- | ing a sulky Various cries were | heard, own with forgers!” “Viv " and “Down with the Jews!” but all these cries were drowned | by the cheers for M. Loubet. It was felt that France was returning to her better self. Mr. Loubet granted me an interview | to-night, in the course or which he | said: "I owe everything to the repub- lican majority. France and the repub- lic are inseparable. All the anti-re- publican opinions are free unless lead- ing to acts against the republic. The | allies must be judged by their acts, not | by their words. I shall govern in a re- | publican sense only. I have given proofs | in my long political career that I am neither a place-hunter, ambitious nor overriding. Brought up in the study of law, I will be its single-minded servant. The Elysee is a post of duty. I speak | the truth in declaring that I never was | ambitious to go there.” The Government shows its vigilance to-night. If the Nationalists give | trouble all the worse for them. The Central Brigade, 5000 strong, is on spe- cial duty and the troops are still under arms in the barracks, but bands of brawlers are, however, suffered to march through the city crying, “Down with Loubet,” singing Deroulede’s Chauvinist songs and breaking win- dows. The Duke of Orleans is hovering about the Franco-Italian frontier. I have seen Prince Henry of Orleans gathering impressions on the boule- vards. He is German-looking, with a round, sunburned face, is tall, with a short bedy, long legs and full, feminine hips and has an awkward gait. The city is fairly quiet and the diplomatic world is satisfled with the election. Russia approved it beforehand. The people say Loubet is a ‘southern Grevy.” The Nationalists have attempted to carry out their threats and scenes of disorder took place to-day. Windows | were broken on the boulevards and rioters were arrested in front of the Elysee. The whole thing was done by paid gangs. The rank and file of so- called patriots who marched through bet,” “Panama, Panama,” and burning his portraits, did not exceed 2000, with 2 dozen ringleaders. Premier Dupuy might have been more prompt in maintaining order, as he never failed to do while M. Faure was President. But about Il o’clock he at length took steps and order was restored without violence, and as if by enchantment. How? Simply by block- ing a few hundred yards of the boule- vard for an hour in front of the Libre Parole, which has been the hotbed of sedition for some months. If Dupuy loyally supports the new President, the predictions of the pessi- mists that Loubet will meet the fate of Casimir-Perier will be unfounded. The present agitation is entirely arti- ficial. An admirable passage in M. Loubet's speech returning thanks to the mem- bers of the Government has further ex- cited Nationalist rage. He says he is for pacification, but with respect for the law, implying that hitherto the law had been trampled down. The Nationalist papers this evening declare war to the knife on Loubet, vewing they will never rest until they have expelled him from the Elysee. Jules le Maitre, founder of the League of French Motherland, says he will try 10 get arrested for insulting M. Loubet, as he intends to do. EMILY CRAWFORD. WHERE WAS FAURE WHEN TAKEN SICK? NEW YORK, Feb. 18.—A World cable from Paris says: A remarkable story obtains credence here that Presi- dent Faure, though he died at the Elysee Palace, was taken ill at the house of actress Sorel, where he had spent the afternoon with his private secretary, M. Le Gall. The facts of that afternoon have not been accurately accounted for, and that Mme. Faure was not made aware of his iliness until 8 o'clock no doubt gave the basis for the rumor, coupled with the President's known admira- tion for Sorel. ADVEBTISEME}!TS. The Last Week of the Great SHOE SALE ‘Will be made the greatest week of all. All broken lines will be thrown on the Ba gain Counter for about cents on the dollar. We wi not carry a broken stock over—so we will clean it out by selling for almost any price. 1t will It will be money im your pocket to lay in pay to e shoes you will buy now. need the year. ably never come again. do not fit or next for These low prices will prob. If the shoes. it, you can exchange them or get your money back. We call special attention to about 400 pairs of Men’s Lace Shoes—Vici Kid—with coin toes and tips of lat- est vles, that we will Sfose out for. $2.00 NOLAN BROS. 812-814 Market St., Mail Orders Filled Promptly. 'NEW KODAKS, BULL’S EYE, PREMO AND POCO CAMERAS ¢ From $5.00 Up. Tilms, Plates, Papers, Material and the best developinz and’ printing. CATALOGUES AND TRUCTION FREE. 7 oHICAPPARAT s, OPTICIANS #pygro6tA™sc e nriric = 642 MARKET ST. INsTRUMENTS’ unoER crromicee BuiLome. CATALOGUE FREE. “PEGAMOID” TRADE MARK. ALUMINUM PAINT LOOKS LIKE FROSTED SILVER. A EUROPEAN SUCCESS. For the Past 7 Years FOR ALL USES AND USERS ON WOOD, G METAL, STONE, BRICK and FABRIC SURFACES; makes & perfest amalgamation; covers 2 to 1 over-any -cther ands 500 DEGREES OF HEAT with- aling. E SEAUTIFUL, _ ARTISTIC, DURABLE, WASHABLE. = Prevents BARNACLES and FOULING in SALT WATER, CORROSION and RUST from exposure. Send 2c for SAM- PLE bottle and pamphlet. “WHAT IS PEGA- Thk WESTERN AGENCIES CO. 61 and 62, Chronicle Bulldin; Use Uss . - Woodbury's Woodbury’s * - Facial Soap. Facial Cream: Strictly antiseptic and purifying. Unequalled for both bath and nursery. Makes the skin . Soft, smooth and white. ~Send 10 cents for ' Beauty Rook, and receive samples of each, free. JOHN H. WOODBURY, 2 W. 23d st., 5 - New York, and 163 State st., Chicago. I was afflicted with catarrh last autumn. During the month of October I could neither taste nor smell and could. hear but little. Ely's Cream Balm cured it.—Marcus Geo. Shautz, Rahway, N. J. Cream Balm is placed into nostrils, spreads over the membrane and is absorbed. Relief is jmmediate and a cure follows. It is not drying —does.not produce sneezing. Large size, 50c; at druggists or by mail;: trial size, 10c, by mall. ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warren st., New York. vist DR, JORDAN'S Great’ Museum of Anatomy 1061 AREET ST. bet. 6 & 7th, 5.1 Cale The Largestofits kind In the World. DR. JORDAN—Private Diseases. Consultation free. Write for Beok Philosophy of Marriage. RADWAYS'S READY RELIEF has stood unrivaled before the public for 50 years as & Tt instantly relieves and quickly cures all Colds, Sore Throats, Influenza, Bron- chitis, nfn’x“m“mb thfll:lnllllm. );:{lnl‘lb Headache, Toothache and all pains. “Interna for Malaria and all Bowel Pains. All druggists:

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