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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1899 REALESTATE | DEALERS WILL CLOSE MONDAY Have Agreed to Ob- serve “Dewey Day.” SALUTES WILL BE FIRED THE WAR DEPARTMENT ORDERS | THAT POWDER BE BURNED. e 2. | | Native Sons of Vermont Couclude3 ements for Their Grand [ bration—Yachtsmen to Cruise. hood that or w0 G C S MAYOR PHELAN ISSUES A DEWEY-DAY PROCLAMATION ( 0. H given ing the on May 1 ROBBED A GROCERY. Ozais Danis, a Notorious Thief, Booked on a Charge of Grand Larceny. — e e——— Death of Vicar General Elena. ha in the vicinity of Powell seeking fc victims, with whom he laid odds again: the to go from place to DO00C000000200000000 men wh to man) were driven from S simply moved aw and took | their dens c but a little way off Market street, and W his august pre that wanted POOLS STILL ING SOLD I THE CITY Law Openly Violated by the Gamblers. ARCADE SALOON IN BUSINESS MONEY HEAVILY WAGERED ON | THE RACES DAILY. | Broyer & Glynn, the Proprietors, Said to Be Banking J. Roche, Who Receives the Money and Records Bets. MERCHANTS ARE MAKING READY ' FOR A RATE WAR Local Jobbers Fear Railroads Have Played Them False. The Great Northern Said to Have Made a New Tariff for the Benefit of tastern Competition. ther battle on their hands. It is to | 8ot it back on the Short haul to custom- B the o T o mscontinental | €75 at intermediate and local points, and ¢ with which the racehorse | continue to violate the | e of the Supervisors for- | of hand books and bols in the city on the result s argues little for the efficiency Lees and his officers, who are | to represent law and order:in | fter The Call’s expose caused f an ordinance whereby the | of money at Ingleside on the made an offense, the tou 1 sought to evade the limitations heir That this was a fact and | it was done with flaunting publicity | the ordinance p: ed prohibiting | \e Call proved a few days ago, when clearly showed that a notorious tout 1 Fred Jackson was makin, t of hunting up and down Elli a daily | street | horses. It was further shown that violators of the I made it a habit | ce plying their N CO000000000000000000000000000000000 (] ¢ by Mayor Phelan: To day of la Bay, and in victory of amed “Dewey day ason only last year the people of sed to the hostile ) apprehensive for remoy Dewey's heroic farthest Pacific to the commerce of heritage to us and to generations vet erywhere 1 unfurl the flag. Lere will be bands play- 1urs of 2 and 4:30 and § will be a special pr mme of 1 > requested to ap- ‘he shippin LAN, Mayor. JAMES D. PH S0D00C000000QC000 b amon CO0DO00O00O0O00COO0000000 n nd that according eves they limit stricts. That is to say ach on the territory of sing of the poolrooms has 1p the business of robbing th ble wretches who were daily K their mites in vain hopes of mpossible. Those that prey insatia the ignorant | r high-ha r s of th lhave brought hunger of the homes of the poc Stevenson st to other quarters are to keep secret One of th r Aditional o it ther » the pittances of e to whom the small sums mean food and clothing T - Arcade sa- r of Fourth prietor: receives the mon vs out—that is w ¢ seldom. Thi th e it records the the bettor den is morning hours The money is y the man . but th s a pri- o that if any sus- | e unknown to the ing goes on un- | r room is also a the results of the Roche is careful to ind for the money The patrons of s that cannot se protection against poolrooms was hese men and boys openly be . and the scenes t W in the dens on St on | et simply been_transferred to another is is but one of the | dives of the kind that are running n defiance of the law. lay there was the same crowd, During the tood for a loon, but earl; v received himself Ro. enactes ¢ went t their money and | {ireet. As a_precautionary measure, he around to await the result of | hus instructed his men to visit the plac It is said that Roche is not the | where gambling has heretofore been car- of the man that takes the |ried on every hour, and to arrest any and that he js in the employ of Broyer & Glynn. However, he claims to BERLIN Sa lona. | be Tunning the pool on his own account. SRy Rev. T. Elena, |y may be, but it is not improbable v General of t iocese of Mamilton, CE. 75 hours from Eu- | irs from Caspar. PORTS. rrived April 27—Chil Stmr Queen, Mackinaw Stmr Newsboy, for ir Laurada, FOREIGN POR’ Sailed April 11 “co; Haw b stmr ( tic, for Fra rived April hama. April 1 Br stmr r stmr Coptic, r Australia, h or: from Sydney; ce March 26, via Hilo. I rrimoo, from Viectoria: sck efl- P from Newcastle, NSW. April 16—Ship M Phelps, hence April 1; bark Albert March 31. April 17—Bktn § N Castle, March 3i. April 19—Ship Iroquols, from ork 3 this port April 18—Bark Wilna, hence April 1, for Viadivostok TRANSATLANTIC ST NEW YORK—Arrived April 26— from Bremen. MER tmr Trave, place is | such a thriving busine GAMES SOUTH The Proprietors Fear that the proprietors get the customary “rake-down” for permittting the pool to be run in their sal | |1 ly sold at the Arcade | st not only throughout long and north of Mar- That pools are =k one of the reasons that it does | MARKET ARt CLOSED DOWN Another Raid. The proprietors of the various gambling | joints along Market street have decided to el ent the Police Courts. | Yesterday afternoon Hornlein & Krumb, | proprietors of the Cafe Royal, visited the Southern police station, and informed Captain Spillane that they had concluded to whether or not poker as playved in their resort is a percentage game. Shortly afterward the proprietors of other games along Market street also announced their | intention of not further \'lol:uinfl the law until the present cases are decided. their games until after the pres- ases against them are disposed of in ‘close up” pending a decision as to The news that the conductors of the | | demoralizing rights by making | | portion of the retail trade from the home | tured that of in | pear before the Transcontinental Traftic | acceding to the demands of the pol | the d | nouncing the police for interfering with | dispe | operations until a decision in the pres- games £ | law relating to percentage, the Commis- The convenient locality of the | P! | rather than suffer the police to make an- | cipally during the | the AN FRANCISCO'S jobbers have an-|the San Francisco jobber and then they traffic and a fight to prevent the big | the” hig lines figure for their bigge alers of the encroaching upon | money. territory of the merchants of the|when the st | termediate ) ved against the local dealers are | one haul. gnt was picked up a Ar L 4 S | St.” Louis or 2o and dropped apparently the Great Northern and|ih; jine wherever a customer was loc Northern Pacific railroads, the s | but under the prohibitive rate eve Hardware Company of St. Louis had to be brought first to the San F Hibbard-Spencer-Bartlett Company of ] i L ‘ Chicago, the two higgest hardware job- N SRl bers of .the Middle East, and sticking out | 53 4 ing ‘chance to. eventu all over the situation can be seen the old- | al] that was due he time feud waged for so long against this | A few months later, however, it city by the smaller jobbers of Seattle that the Simimons people had acoma. A combination of greed and | POt Upsthefient nor playedial thei > that the San Franecisco merchan- cards. heir representatives app: ) 1 2 S ancis e i on the coast and to offset the in- d e just now getting into their | creased freight rate approached old fighting harness to run a_joust or so with. | customers and guara The whole situation hinges upon the | clent discount or reba transcontinental rate on less than car-| bills to warrant thein in agaln tr load lots of freight. Up to a T A80 | time the merchants here noticed that t the San Francisco retailer could bring a | Simmons people stopped routing their keg of nails or a crate of shelf hardware | freight over their old 'ines and were ship into this city from the East for only | ping nearly everything by the Santa F about 10 cents more on the hundred |° the Santa T pounds than the big jobber could bring in S aarsement carload lots of the same article. The big firms of the East took advantage of this condition, threw their traveling men into this territory and by reason of their larger volume of business were enabled to offer inducements that won a great whol th We was under the old schedule, rn man controlled the i aroused and a close watch some furiher indication that was being made to break up : and open the gates stern competitio ation came three wee tip came to the old ra cific was st - | throw the Eastern firms into the Western | territory. alers. s in a serious predice it existed then at all times to ¢ nt. abled the 3 B pete with the local m: | and Metal Association at once called upon tically equal footing and at no more ex-| the local agents of the Great Northern pense in business operation. As a result| and demanded to know if the road had of it the two s mentioned builded up | inaugurated the old tariff. hey an enormous trade on the coast and cap- | replied that if it had they had mediate points. | not been so advised. Telegrams to in Tacoma and | attle _ elicited nothing more definite. but each day the a ts of other roads represented on the cc were being Driven to desperation, the local mer- | corresponden ts last March sent a delegation o : sound business men to Monterey to ap- at that point, to | on less than car- | Northern rc n down the bar- ; prayed for a | rier between though their new st, al- from the retail and small job- | jssued. th also | Since that time there have been two share | or three secret meetings of the inter- poin sted jobbers each week, and ways A to combat the latest dang de have been much distuss suggested that the eattle and others of the trade Those who represented the home ers at the conference were Frank Brown, W. R. Wheeler of the Hardware | and Metal Association, Charles T C. Rulofson. The two big dware rms got wind S them | ern ‘roads to restore the sch. : that proposition was spoile spot, 1 pre- | e ion to cut them | ypon pressu storn sphere of profit. | Seattle and T three days of much palaver | had gone s came home I¥5er toiprovent o won. of the northern fi : It was also hinted that certain lo | tailers were interested in the restor: of the old rates, | the Great Northern was but the begin- r by the brought to to | , in or- to give the Western business the roa practically everything they had a: for. | freight. Th: T bureau ~ div people emphatically deny. They up into fiv and on less | the northern roads have not so wide n carload lots raf rate on class | sphere of influence south of Portiand, from $2 15 to | their action will force like action on tha on class | part of the southern and Ogden lines, and s 5 from | that the present rate is more to be de- :dule that effectually | sired by them from every standpoint than the old one. The Santa Fe people » thing. however, other d carrying transcontinent s rumor the Southern Pacific shut out E Then lo antdom settled down e humdrum prosperity of the tim 1d raflroad men shook hands are di is themselves that never before hi ey may, just what they have been in such good -ondition. The new | When they find the enemy schedule was a good thing for the South- | they be ready for the mix-up, and | s ern Pacific and another for the Santa Fe; ( the few of them who were willing to talk | and, in fact, for all the southern and Og- | of the matter vesterday were willing to den lines. They got .he long haul on all | guarantee they would put the quietus on freight west from the Eastern market to | the Eastern firms before it was all over. i "“’f?fi?hfi’fifi;h s i cmeia|A MASONIC EVENT S e umblors. Shory arcer| OF A GENERATION ames closed down the disreputable horde gathered about the Cafe Royal and vigorously denounced the propri AT THE MISSION. “I thought th get cold feet.” re- marked a well-dressed gambler, who has | fat on the money he has'won from | azed youths. willin “h““ First Time in Forty-Two Years s o O That Such a Ceremony Has stuff for them . down be papers make & vl. | 4 If I were ested in the game yer Kin | Taken Place Here. bet ver dough that I would give 'em a run IO it me. See? Masonic Temple last night, and that was o these blokes try Royai Arch Mason be somethin’ doim. Are YyoOu | jnstituted in this city in a period of fort ars. The new bod his city, is known as Mission Chapter . 79. The officiating officer was. M. E. His sentiments s proval of the gang and t ipprobation. Just a 'med to meet the a v loudly voiced v were de- them, a-broad-shouldered officer from the Southern station appeared on the scene and compelled the disgruntled gang to Captain Spillane is determined that gambling shall cease south of Market all persons caught playing percentage poker. Y The visit of the Police Commissioners to the gambling dens Wednesday night no doubt impelled the proprietors to cease reached. Satisfied that the ent L ome within the purview of the sfoners agreed that they should be sup- d. Evidently learning of their de- of the joints, ressed, cision, the proprietors other raid on them, concluded to shut down until the ordinance is tested. GETTING READY TO KILL. Deputies Looking Over the Ground at the Sea Lion Rookeries. A preliminary step toward thinning out the scal herds will be taken to-day. Al Wilson and Mr. Nelson, connected with the California Fish and Game Commis- sion, will go to Point Reyes to look over the ground and see if the herds have as- sembled at the rookery. The majority of the herds do not stay at the rookeries all of the year, but prin- - season when the young come forth. This perfod is between the first of May and the last of June. After the latter date the female sea lions take their pups away and the rookeries of the point are comparatively descrted, except »y a few old femaies, until the next sea- around again. In the interim and their young scatter along the coast. only congregating at the en- trances of the bays and rivers when the spring and fall runs of salmon are on. Then is when they do their deadly work and reduce the number of fish going to the spawning grounds by the thousands of pounds. From what can be learned, the breed- son of the sea lions not be- r uties have gone to the to get the lay of the ground, in order that no time may be lost when the real work of thinning out the herds begins. The reason that the first move is to be made on Point Reyes js that the rookeries there are not on Government ground, as is the caseavith the Farallon Tslands and the Ano devo Islands. SR S T A A beautifal Decker Plano for §200 at Mauvals’, 769. Market street. -3 on come L e THE EMPORIUM. | THE EMPORIUM. TH: EMPORIUM. Toy depariment, second floor. s on the short haul and local business the roads had but the along | ame D L TSP IR ARSI S PR €ed them a suffi- ht style—regular sta- ple all the year $10 suits (10 of that has sold all along at $12.50 : regular sizes every suit splen- didly tailored and a perfect fit fur- ed—evary suit positively guaran- Chairman Wheeler of the Hardware | bargain we son—at to-day warned by their head offices that the | i d E sheets had not | al for Friday only......... .2 cakes for 5¢ ularly Se—speci ually well authenticated tip that it was | x Curtains. wide, white or ecru, small handsom: bor- @Esprit center, our per pair—special to- regu ar price $2.50 2 action of | ning of a movement on the part of all | Past Grand High Priest Thomas H. C: sted by Past Grand High Pri ber of companior the following named compani | i Charles Follen Ha- t Gibson, Charles A ay, James Woo officers of the new chapter, who were in- | he current term, | Andrew Christen- | nklin_Dallon, scribe; Al & Bunke: William Brady Jr. Dick hris treasurer; John Ruben Hillman Jdward Gilberts, guard. and congratula- tions there was an adjournment to the banquet hall, where was served an ex- Jllation, followed by songs and a retary. and ut-,r A NEW CHAPTER INSTITUTED | being Grand H °1 M. Shortridg ttended the liop, Martin Musil, J." A. Emerson, R. | =4 H. J. Burns the institution of a new chapter of the | T . the first that has been | § TSedn: (Georrpabhilae: ol er, C. Plummer, D. M . R. D. Brand, Henry C. Connelly, J. Tonning: E. v, Henry Ascroft, Florin L. | the third in | A e e e e S R o o e = PHILIP D, CODE, THE HIGH PRIEST. All kinds of Flags, Flag and Bunting for Dewey Day GCele- bration, af specially low Special Friday Only | Cyclometers, 23c¢. Handkerchiefs!” " For one day only we offer regular §1 Cyclometers like picture at.. Made by the fa- | 3¢ mous Seth Thomas Slock Co.—accu- rate, durable and finished like a watch — Cyclome- ters that register 1000 and 10,000 miles and repeat—none better, few equal to them. They require no lubricant, are dust proof and can be easily read when you are in the saddle. Fridav’s Big Bargain in Seasonable Wash Goods. r.:i. Leno woven cloths, daintily colored— broken lots of fine and medium qualities re 10c and 12ic yard—your choice to-day at. 5 Bargain Friday Offering Men’s i = 16 Switss it in this lot—single- Printed Sum- mer Wash 6c $6.45 Bargain Fridav Offering in s Har ! cellent Bath Soap, ater Soap, cakes, worth reg- Special Bargamn Friday Sale. 50 pairs only of fine Lace Curtai yards long, 4 inches ..$1.68 was rendered with all that degree of resence of a large num- . who were received b Charle re: Philip ain of the | . principal sd Hodgdon, ro, n Clark, v Coftin, | n Hel the " principal h Priest F]m‘ln‘ stitu- “ Famt Is. Johnson, P. | F Grey, C. H.| ub) d, n, - E. Peabod; il @O P96 400000060 000606006060600000e000 | tralia arrived |in the stream. She is six days twenty- | could not be completed without him. s | southeast w | Henri Windell’'s Will Dewey Day. E EMPORITR GoldenRule Bazaar. CALIFORNIA'S JARGEST—IMERICA'S GRanoEsT sTore. PTANO, will be the solo- e ALL-DAY Speciar SALES —- Friday Bargains for Ladies’ Initial . Ladies a"d T’es- Extra Fne Quality | Homstitched Initial Hand-Embroidered Handkerchiefs, exceptional vaiue at 25¢ each—spacial to-day at. 19¢ 65 duzen Ladies’ All-silk String Ties, good assortment of co'orings, 10c value —special to-day ..6c Bargain Friday Special in Combination Combina- Pocket-Books. ok et-Books, well made of Grain Leather, with patented slot frame, warranted not to pull out, a great value 25¢ Pock-t- Book—special to-day. .15¢ For Birgain Friday Only. “@em Poco’’ ™ ‘Gen Poco” Cameras $2.75: c.n era makes a picturs 3ixdig, is fitted with rapid achro- matic lens and one double plate ho'der, the man- ufacturer’s list on this C mera - is $5—to-day only w* will sell thi- Cam- era at the very special price of $2.75 A few standard articles tiat every laker” needs at special prices to-day 41,x; Wood Fiber Trays, regularly 18k, for. ... 15¢ Eureka 8-0z Toning Solution, regularly 25c, for.. % ... i8¢ Eiko Hvdro Deve'oper, 80z b ttle, | regularly 805, for.: 23¢ Hardwood Printing Frames, sizes 2-.x 21, Syyxdy;, 3ux3ig, 4i4x414, 4x5, regu- larly 20c each, for. ....15¢ Bargains Fridav and Saturday. Groceries— Py aticle 5 Guarant ee d— Liguors: moey back it you wane it. Direct Grocery Telephone— South 5. Best 15 Badon, special at. 6c Santa Clara Prunes, 8 Ib: Highland Sugar Corn, 2 cans 4c bar Sand Soap, 8 for. 1-1b packages Imported Macaroni, Vermi- celli or Spaghetti for.... 18c D & G Sardines (imported). 10¢ Jams an : Jellies (in glass), 15¢ Jams and Jellies (in gla: tulldoy fmported Stout, dozen for. S ARG $1.75 $1 Champion Bourbon, qtsfor.80¢ 5 full gt bottles Port or Sherry.. i $i.00 i @ ) am J. B. Warren, A. Schu- B. Holland, T. F. Maguire, George ilbert L. Burroughs. C. Some J. B, B Robe Humphre M. Peel, F Furm Bliss . Hosmer, obert’ Pragg, M. B. Diette: T H 11, Bloom, Henry Shortridge, er, L icolaysen, W. H m, Robert § . Kel J. D Hammitt, J. W. H. Tho o F. A. Hornblower Hendry, D. J an, J. A. Moller, T. thorn, J. H. Purdy, C. 5 . P. Overton, Edw M. S. Bornstein, Gec J. Simon, A. Michael Thomas Lockw ant, J. Fraser, Batkin and J. M. feldt, Ralph Sulijva Lok muel Adel- T ¥ George ‘Wilkins. ENGINEERING CORPS HOME FROM HONOLULU CAME IN LAST NIGHT ON THE | AUSTRALIA. The Oceanic Steamship Compar st night and anchored three hours and forty minutes from Ho- nolulu, and carries 104 cabin and 303 steer- age passenger: The passengers were chiefly enlisted men of the battalion of engineers from Houolulu, with fourteen officers. The of- ficers were: General 1. C. Compton, Lieutenants Brittain} Coolidge, Cooney, Schmeiden, Mills, Turner, Kern and Tice, and Captains Draper, Rickon, Springett and Sweas The arrival of General Compton has been anxiously awaited at the Presidio, as the Neall court-martial ‘Among the an United States Senator C. ._Clark and wite, Robert S. Moore of the Risdon Iron ‘Works and C. L. Wight of the Wilder Steamship Company. The soldiers aboard were very much dis- gusted when they found that they would be obliged to lie in sight of the city all night without being allowed a. 9:3C a party went out on a tug to wave the boys a welcome, but as the quarantine officers had not yet boarded the vessel they had to content themselves by carry- ing on a long-distance conversation. The Australia had a very rough passage. On the 2th she experienced strong e ds, with a squally and rough sea. On the north-northwest, cominulng strong, and the sea was very rough. She camé into port with a light wind and smooth sea. e e MISS TORRES DEFEATED. Construed Against Her by Judg: Coffey. When Henri Windell ran his pen | through the clause in his will, bequeath- | ing his household furniture located at his late home, 4 Burrell street, and $10,000 to Marion Torres, daughter of the late Gen- eral Torres, and substituted the name of Constanze Hohle, he defeated one of his own plans. The hearing to determine the construc- tion of the will terminated yesterday be- fore Judge Coffey, and the court held that the effort of the testator to disin- herit Miss Torres was successful, it be- | ing_apparent that he did not wish her to receive the legacies first incorporated in the will. The attempt of the testator to substitute Miss Hohle, however, the court found was ineffectual, the legal ex- ecution being deficient. Consequently un- der Judge Coffey’s ruling the bequests revert to the estate. The court also held that the attempt of the deceased to re- duce a bequest of $4000 to his sister, Maria Dorothea Geerdts, to $3000 could not hold, as the testator simply ran his pen through the_ figures $4000 and substituted the figures $3000 in pencil, instead of re- voking the words which govern the fig- ures—four thousand dollars—and rew! ing the request. he loss of the bequest is a great hard- ship to dead man many months prior to his death, and it was owing to her kindness to him that the deceased made the origi- Athletic ] Tights. suit when you take sey Tights, two and swimming— black, navy or white—shirts or trunks that are regularly 75¢ and 50c per garment— o1 sale to-day only, each.. Sporting Goods Dep't. Second Flo Ladies’ Oneita ' Union Suits. xivvedcotion Oneita Union Suit. neck, no sleeves, ecru color, regular value 50c each, our every-1 —on sale to-day only Babhies’ chocolate Vici Kid Butto~ Shoes—faney silk cloth v i tops —new coin toes, kid tips, turned sewed soles, sizes 2 to 6, sold reg- ularly $1.10 pair—for to-day only..73e€ snee"al Sale Closed out from 07 B:bies. nos: their sample line of Bibles, and we place on sale 150 Oxford Workers divinity cireuit, round corners, red under gold edges, with 17 full-page plates, si Tiix inches, made to sell at $2—for to- day only. Svo, published at $125—on sale to-day at.. | fon, as Mis M. | to Miss Hohl B. Church, James E. | the doorstep s in her arms. | sample bottle 25c. Pegamoid, §3 Chronicle bldg. é"“i‘i",'!’i!!O’i‘"”.')’.’lf’!"’. .”i?”Dii!.'i’?’fi’b”)i")i’”’% The Big Store will be closed all day Monday, May 1— Miss Paraskova Sandelin, n:770- so- ist at the Con- cert Saturday evening, April 29th. ‘Bargain Friday Offering in You'll want a cation. Jer- suitable for jum work 23¢ For Bargain Friday Only. iss- closed in front, low v selling price 35¢ Bargain Friday Offering ing On Bareain Friday Only. a leading Bible Bibl French Morocco, 28 ..95¢ (Postage 20¢ ex'7a). Bill Nye’s Remarks, Royal .438¢c (Postag: 15¢ éxtran. Library of Wit and Humor, v Mark Twam and others, Royal 8vo, sale to-day at..... SHERRBEREAAEEEEEEEREEE SEREEEEEARAEAAEEEIRAREEEEEEEERUEEEEEEEERAEREEGEEEE NS EEE A A S EAE RN R G SR AN GRS E T (Postage 17¢ exira). ACBEESSEBEREOEEAESAEHSE SEAEAAEREARERINEAEAISEEASEEASSEAE SSSES0AS ‘52 nal bequests, and many are of the opin- rres contends, that Windell a5 not of sound mind when he revoked the_legacies and attempted to give them e A Woman’s Sudden Death. An elderly woman, whose name is be- lieved to be Mrs. Mary Donnelly, w t | found lying on the doorstep of the house Sllis street in an unconscious ci last night. The ambulance w; 1led, but before e woman could be en to the Receiving Hospital she ex- When the woman was found on he h a milkean and a pie The doctors believe that she cked with heart failure. dr! pire *“Pegamoid’ gold, test, best, perfect paint: hore, but | | they made the best of matters. At about | th at noon the wind hauled to | 'FASCINATING ss Torres. She cared for the | COPYRIGNT ey A MAN WHO IS NOT FASTIDIOUS about his laundry work will take it to “any old place,”” but those who are well-bred and want their linen to be faultless in its color and finish will seek out the United States Laundry in time, Jjust as water finds its level. Our laun- dry work is incomparable, and is the perfection of the laundryman’s art. Try us! “No saw-edges.” The United States Laundry, Office 1004 Market Street. Telephone South 420. COMPLEXIONS That soft, smooth, rose-tinted complexion ‘'so much’ desired can be obtained by the use of WOODBURY'S Facial Boap and Facial Cream. They possess marvels vus” power for brightening the color, givin pew life and tone to the skin; beautifying ang preserving the complexion. A Is4Day. Gadf THE NEW tquickly & surely removes Nervousness, Impotency, Fowe: and Puling Memory. - Wards off Insanity and. Coneaorzs er package of six for $5.00 with a guarantee to Cure or - saltby Oowl Pru‘ Co., 8. F. and Oakland. h 'v TRIC BELT get “Dr. Call or address PIERCE 5w VITALIS Ta0uuirn. e 22 S 4o FRENGH., s Day. SUALS, G %o e, REMEDY., ot B T Vialttys d the M. e Ci ar Fr CXI:(’EI'E'[B' C(',‘ieé cé'"n"fu l"e"l'rb‘odrdn St., Chicage v Require an ELC- Z_ Plerce’s” and you will not be disappointed, ELECTRIC C0., 620 Market st (opp. Palace Hata), S. e