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E SAN FRANCISCO CALL., SUNDAY, AUGUST 27, 1899 i ADVERTISEMENTS. b TRANSVAAL EMISSARIES | ARRESTED BY PORTUGUESE 49404 SO0 TAKENINTD CUSTODY AT DELAGOABAY e Lisbon Government Keeping Troops in Readiness for Emergency. EVGLAND'S W AR PLAN London l#o:'egr;l;x;;t- Methodically Preparing for the Clash That Seems Inevitable. Copyrigt T :7-7\« iated Press, O MARQUES Delagoa Bay, Aug. 26— Several persons suspected of B e 4404090005 being enussaries of the Transvaal Government have been arrested Excitement prevails, and in | of a contemplated Transvaal | raid the Portuguese troops are kept in reac s for an em Yl LONDON, Aug. A dispatch from esburg says word has been re- ved there 1 Pretoria that Presi- ent Krug: 1 neral Joubert favor sending a special peace commission to E land composed of members of the Volksraad, headed by E. W. Reitz, ctua velopments have a taken in the Trans- \ m, as p: usly reviewed ir dispatches interest in s has been lly quick- dawning real- izatior jritain is making the most methodical preparations for The utter lack of official news the serfous outlook have made the tension. Contradictory re- me and abroad have flour- strength of these the n the Pre b iew such deta e not im- as compared with fact that iger has refused—some ed—th ible minimum® Alfred Miln the Governor of has been Kruger's nt Chamb the Colc whether or not wready on the f the aal, The most Boers will jecture opinion is that the FOUR SOLDIERS - AMBUSHED a- ulti- Three Fourth Escaped. e Special Dispatch to The Call. of the at Ce- 26.—Four men 1t, stationed bu, were ed by natives in the hills | and threc of the 1 The fourth man | succeeded in making his escape. Detalls | are lacking. WASHINGTON, Aug. 26.—Orders were | issued to-day directing the Thirtieth Vol unteers, commanded by Colonel Gardiner, to move from Fort Sheridan to San Fran- clsco on September 10. Orders were also issued moving the Thirty-second Infantr; commanded by Colonel Craig, from Fort Leavenworth to San Francisco on Sep- tember 20. The four regiments which were previously ordered active preparatior first is leaving day Thirty- Logan, Colo., the 25th; the Twent seventh will leave Camp ‘Mende on the 20th, and the Twenty-sixth will leave Plattsburg on September 5. These regi- ments will sail from San Francisco as soon as transimrm can be prov! KANSAS C Aug. 25.—A (ahle{rnm to the Star from Manila to-day say “The Twentieth Kansas Regiment and Colonel Funston have been assigned to sail on the United States transport Tar- tar about September The Tartar will The T hlrl ort fourth will leav OEUTZ & CELDERMANN, AY, | ning at a speed of fully thirty miles an hour, collided this evening at ‘\lun\le Station, ten miles west of as City. | Both locomotives were d nmh hed and | one of them telescoped a mail car, but| not a_person was The engines | came together with whistles blowing. The | | enginec1® _and firemen jumped after | FRANCE. | { DEUTZ & CELDERMANN’S COLD LACK i ls without doubt the finest Dry Champagne Imported from France. No connoisseur should fall to try It CHARLES MEINECKE & CO., Bole Agents Plclflc Co-n. Bacramento street, 8. F. 'HUNDRED MILLIONS SPENT | & | Not a House Has Been Left Standing | [ e B s s s S o o g AR ROUND-UP OF NEGRO BANDS N CEORIK Murderer Delagell Surren- ders to the Troop of Sa- vannah Soldiers. snuumflmows Nevertheless Addltxona.l Reziments Have Been Ordered Out and the Danger Is Not Yet Over. Sl o-+Q Spectal Dispatch to The Call. DARIEN, Ga., Aug. 26.—The round- up of riotous negroes in Mclntosh | County by the military to-day result- ed in the surrender of Henry Delagell, the murderer of Deputy Sheriff Towns- end, and the location for of Delagell's brother and the woman directly implicated in the killing. Dela- | gell’s surrender was made to Lieuten- ant Wood, in charge of thirty innah soldiers stationed fifteen miles in the country to back up the Sheriff's posse, who were scouring | the swamps. Delagell to-night stated that he sur- | rendered to the troops for protection, as | he saw the Sheriff's posse was closing in on him and his capture was only a matter of a few hours or minutes. The | Q—OM4&o«w«e*@w@+@m+@%«“@o@%@ D R future arrest | of a detachment | NEW G00DS A the fall season’s latest productions of Europ speclal attention to our ‘magnificent collect Goods and Silks, whieh are unsurpassed in i SEE WINDO | | | -z-+-z-z—x—|—e—z—l—z4—|—x+. AUTUMN SILKS. ERRRMR WWW%"H The beayty and excellence of every department Is THE FOLLOWING ARE TO-MORROW'S " AUTUMN DRESS G0ODS. RRIVING DAILY, being enhanced by the arrival of American manufacture. We cail Ities in Black and Colored Dresa fabric and correctness of design. ean and fon of Nove richness of W DISPLAY. GREAT LEADERS: isite styles of BLACK CREPON re- % 21-inch ILLUMINATED STRIPED Exqu CK C] s f'n‘n’l':f:h TAFFETA—A beautiful line ot reh»dwd:;.xljfm:h" |»n~1§“:\’fi<pe‘ On sale to- alor clal per | morro ;:Irl'l “Mmgs T e SU.O | Fine NOV TY BLACK (REEO} ‘fl { J1-inch SATIN STRIPED POMPADOUR! brilllant Mohair and l«;:\ljx:l srounds in TAFFETA in the most beau- new ratsed effects; ac .00 ; tiful effects; special per yard . wor - 2 | 22-inch CORDED TAFFETA, solid color| Highest TY Gl! Iitla“!{l‘f;fi-*dlg | ground, in the new fall shades of Violet, CREPON, lustrous, in R =Pl | Cyrano, Bluet, Gray and Brown; a charm- '(I&:n\‘( (ynf [ugl\‘\“uu"‘r(hflnt?' $l2 OO 1 | ing sHK for Shirt Waists; sp effec ctually 3 X T {4 cial per yard...... s BT e s | R & E: TOAL 1 e | COLORED NOVELTIES, % | FETA SIiK, NGS in the new fall shadlnxl of BLAGK TAFFETA SIi '$6.00 1500 yards of BLACK SWISS TAF ETA, 21 inches wide; the ideal Silk dress costumes, tticoats and ekirts; that service Tustling srade; regular price §125; sale per yard... G [ | | | | | | | DOMESTIC DEPARTMENT. Here are offerings of special in- e on sale to-morrow GHAM LAC 31 vards long, from the very latest d i §1.45 regular $175; your choice; pair. {ED TABLE DAMA 35 pieces BLE. 66 Inches wide, in several new patterns; the cannot be duplicated for less than vard; on sale at... bR G 50c¢ i 1 iarrest of Delagell and the arrival of e [ o e e S S S o D4 DO+ DD DIOeDOEOEOS O OO+ 004040040+ 0¢® inrorcements for the military seem to | o 175 dn1pn‘ 5‘\51»1‘ N im"vr:]}:;; have broken the backbone of the denfl & 1ol BOER BURGHERS READY TO TAKE THE FIELD. 13,@ of the taw by “the negroes 12ic : | whole regiment of troops is now On- G mately back down, but there are no|franchise insisted upon by Mr. Cham-|in my power. As you know, for three| quty in and about Darien, under com- | 15 pleces GERMAN EIDERDOW signs, judging from the military activ- | berlain, but no eager He says the | months we have been going. President | mand of Colonel Lawton, but it is lmtl CANNE in all the new fall ‘xum ity at the British war office and the | anders’ grie are genuine, | Kruger has made, perhaps, some little | believed there will be further blood- | well forJadies” wrap- | Q1 i QT g s 4 but I cannot truly say that|shed. There are still several ringlead- pers; on sale per yard.... 2 same activity in the South African Re- | but greatly exaggerated and not keenly | | 1o, g / Pl ean Aot is p ers of the blacks wanted by the officers public Sthabisuchiis] licely fto he thellicall cxaepS bRt st DL “President Kruger procrastinates in|of the law. Unless they come in and | NEW QOL case, though both sides may be using | cians. his reply. He dribbles each reply like | surrender or are brought in by their the movements of troops as a bluff. | JOHANNESBURG, Aug. 26—Com- | water from a squeezed sponge. His of- | friends and turned over to the duthon_. tractions at our store to-morrow, dounly « That Mr. Chamberlain is not in a pa- | mandant General Joubert, addressing a | fers are accompanied with -unduiu!ns ties, the troops will go after them to- of style, quality, perfection of workmanshi cific mood, is evidenced by the publica- | meeting of Burghers to-day, said they | which he knows to be impossible, or he | morrow. o on subseque o e reception o « hever s strive for peace, |refuses to allow us to make a satisfac- | The courthouse here has been turned | .. ‘!l‘( """‘-\L r-ml‘ ot ”m 0 S ‘n) “E ! 1“ Ullfl 'tm :’l‘ nce’;;:nio 1?1 if ;.m}:,l to | tory investigation of their nature. | into a barracks for the soldiers. ‘\lan)" e T O e D 1ts indemend.| *I do not think it will be denied that | of them to-night are completely ex-| between the Boers and Sir Alfred Mil- | take up arms to maintain its independ- | Uit Livire e on auty for three ner. According to the Speaker this ac- tion has immeasurably increased the difficulty of keeping the peace. Com- menting upon this fact, the Speaker | says | ‘Unfortunately, neither in ]m\\-ningg street nor at Pretoria is the value of moderation and good temper sufficient- | ly appreciated. The consequence is that every day the situation becomes | and may vet see the | ed in a sanguinary struggle, simply because the leading men on both sides failed to keep sufficient command over their own those of their immediate All that can be said is that in a very short period, probably less than a week, the world will know definitely whether President acknowledges British s potentiality or intends to resort | to tion to def It is palpable arms in order nd his conten- that the British will now refuse to accept any evasion of their whatever other conc Kruger might make. 1 ransvaal correspondent of the Manchester Guardian well-kncwn writer on economics, says that he finds widespread willingness among the Jo- | hannesb Outland to take the| | ence, would fight to the death. PLAIN WORDS ON THE TRANSVAAL SITUATION Secretary Chamberlain Declares Eng- land Will No Longer Tem- porize With Boers. BIRMINGHAM, Eng., Aug. 2.—In | throwing open his own gardens here | this afternoon to the members of the Bartholomew Ward Liberal Union- Joseph Chamberlain, Secretary of State for the Colonfes, w drawn into the important speech on the Tran: al situation he s made since the adjournment of Parliament. “But what am I to talk about?” ask- ed the Se ATY. Cries of “the Transvaal,” were made. | “Yes he replied. “I know there " one subject which is very deep in all| vour hearts and about which I cannot | talk or say much, lest I do harm. That is the relation of our race with the T svaal Government. 1 wish that I that the difficul- years between 1d tell you to-day nt and the | in Pretoria, which has a ned such an acute form during the past few years, were hap settled. “But, unfortunately, that BY AMERICANS IN LONDON — | Kilied and the ‘Flood of Gold Poured Into the Coffers of the Brmsh‘ Metropolis by Wealthy Tourists From the United States. Special Cable to The Call and The New York Herald. James Gordon Bennett. LONDON, a record. States seventy thousand visitors, and I a head upon their European holiday.” Aug. 8 dred and five million dollars, amount of American money prietors of the English—principally K o move are making | @uugoniOerOnOnG NONORGR O 8 G5 0 8 0% GONORONONG K IROROROROROO 0 to San Francisco by way of Hongkong. “Nine officers and 680 men of ‘the regi- ment have been discharged to date and 150 are sick. None of the invalids are in | danger.” FAST MAIL TRAINS COME IN COLLISION An Engineer Disregards His Orders, ‘With the Result That an Acci- dent Occurs. KANSAS CITY, Mo., Aug. 26. | mail trains on the Rock Island r sounding the warning, which reached the mail clerks and baggage men in time, and they also jumped. ne of the coaches were derailed. The train men on the eastbound Denver train had ignored | orders which gave the westbound train | the right of way. ARKANSAS TOWN WIPED OUT BY A STORM| in the Village of New- port. LITTLE ROCK, Aug. 25.—A special to the Gazette from Newport, Ark., says: News reached here to-day that the little vil- lage of Pleasant Plain, sltuated in the | hills of the southern part of Indepen, | dence Coun about twenty-five miles | west of Newport, was struck by a storm fast night and. literally wiped out of ex- | at istence. Not a house was left standing. | As the town has neither telegraph nor telephone connection with the outside | world the detalls of the storm are vague | and cannot be learned at this hour. Cogi il Ore Underneath the Streets. ST. PAUL, Minn,, Aug. 26.—A. Butte, Mont., speclal to the Ploneer-Press says: | | 26.—"1 Pillm;ur\ that American travel this year will make From January to December we shall have So says Charles Alvin Gillig, and Mr. of the Great Eastern Railway Company's the best authority of tourist movement from the West. of course, which finds its way Into the pockets of the pro- London stores. | by | the WASP'S special number contains | day at the Presidi Copyright, 1899, by had from the United recken they will have spent about $1500 Gillig in his capacity of director American rend€zvous Is about But that one hun- has nothing to do with the vast A sensation was created in Butte to-day the disclosure of a copper vein of marvelous richness while excavating for a new block to be occupied at the corner of Broadway and Wyoming streets, less than half a block from the City Hall. P e PLAGUE IN RUSSIA. Many Deaths Have Occurred in As- trakhan. ST, PETERSBURG, Aug. 2%.—Many evi- dences point to the fact that the out- break at Astrakhan is really bubonic plague. Many cases have resulted fatally. The Duke of Oldenburg, who is president | of a committee for combating the plague, has been sent to Astrakhan, accompanied by some distinguished doctors. —_— | Mrs. Townsend’s Generosity. The WASP'S souvenir number, illus-: trative of the arrival of the First Cali- | fornia Volunteers, has attracted so | much favorable attention that Mrs. A. | S. Townsend has subscribed for twelve | | hundred copies so as to present em‘h1 of the returning heroes with one, The gift cannot fail to be appreciated, as one of the most complete collections of | war pictures of general interest that | | has been issued by any publication in the country. The WASP deserves spe- cial credit as being the only local week- | ly which issued a special number illustrative of the arrival of the volun- teers. Mrs. Townsend will present the volunteers with the souvenirs on Tues- 0. Plague Is Spreading. ‘\IADRID Aug. 26.—The Spanish Consul | at hon telegraphs to this city that two | fr l\ cases of the plague were to-day dis- | covered between Lisbon and Oporto. He | adds that one new case has occurred in Oporto City. | — e See Keith's announcement, page twelve,* —_———— Changes in Railway World. MINNEAPOLIS, Aug. 26—t Is an-| n we tience in the relations between a para- mount and a subordinate state. The| At noon to-day a courier from the | situation is too fraught with danger; |swamp, eighteen miles out, arrived and it is too strained for indefinite proposi- | reported that the negroes had congre- tion. The knot must be loosened, to|gated in and around thé house of xhe, use Mr. Balfour's words, or else we [ Delagells’, six miles from the swamp, | shall have to find other ways of unty-|and would not surrender or permit the ing it. Delagells to be taken. The Sheriff, have exhibited unparalleled pa- days and two nights. “If we are forced to do that, then I | with a posse of 100 men, went to the | would repeat now words used by Lord | Delagells’ house, but returned without Salisbury in the House of Lords. I say | making an attack. He gave out the in- that, if forced to make further prepara- | formation that he would need more tion, If this delay continues much long- | men to enforce a demand for the much er, all not hold « lves limited | wanted negro and set about enlarg we have alr v offered, but | ing his posse. Colonel Lawton, after v s matter will not let go until we ha d | ordered the Liberty Independent Troop | conditions which, once for all, will es- | of Light Cavalry here and they left tablish us as the paramount power in | Jones station almost immediately, and South Africa and secure for us our ob- | came through the county over the jects there, equal rights and privileges | wagon roads, a distance of twenty-five promised by President Kruger when | miles, arriving about 4 o'clock this the Transvaal's 'independence Was | gfternoon. granted. Colonel Lawton also ordered the| “If it comes to this, if the rupture | First Regiment of Georgia Volunteers, wh s not yet | empire. nounced that James N, Hill, vice presi-| cross and other towns in this section, dent of t stern Minnesota, is to be- | to be prepared to move at a moment's come gene manager of the Great| notice. The soldiers at Brunswick and | Northern, a position newly created. | Waycross are in their armories await- Lewis M. Hill, who has been assistant | ing orders to proceed to Darien. The to his father, will succeed his brother, [ White people were aroused for miles | with headquarters at Duluth. around and came in during the day in in hand, we | communicating with Governor Candler, ing taken t ich we have done everything in our at once to er to avoid is forced upon us, I am at Savannah, to proceed They reached here this after- Colonel Lawton, late in the afternoon, ordered the Fourth Regiment, with camps at Brunswick, Valdosta, Way POINTS OF WEAKNESS HUDYAN RELIEVES (Fig. 1)—Headaches, Dizzy Spells, Vertigo. These symptoms are due to weak nerves, to liver trouble, to stom- ach disorder, or to female weakness. It matters not the cause, HUDYAN affords immediate rellef. HUDYAN cures. (Fig. 2)—Hollow Eyes, Pale or Sal- low Complexion, are the result of thin, watery blood. HUDYAN makes rich, red blood, which in turn gives a glow of health. HUDYAN establishes per- fect nutrition. (Fig. 38)—Coated Tongue or Offensive Breath. HUDYAN at once relieves such conditions, for HUDYAN assists digestion, acts gently yet effectively upon the liver, and establishes a cor- rect action of kidneys. (Figs 4-5)—Pains in Joints are due to rheumatism, liver trouble or kidney "unyfllll.'%ggco&hfs—so::. disease. HUDYAN reaches all these conditions, purifies the blood and thoroughly expels all poisonous ele- ments from the system. (Fig. 6)—Palpitation or Irregular Fluttering of Heart. HUDYAN cures, because HUDYAN strengthens the heart muscle and rebuilds the broken-down heart structure. HUDYAN is the best remedy known for heart disease. (Fig. 7)—Pains or Soreness in Stomach, Bloating, a feeling of ‘Weight, Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Catarrh of Stomach—HUDYAN is an infallible remedy. HUDYAN relieves all distress, for HUDYAN strengthems and stimulates to perfect activity the glands that secrete the digestive fluids. HUDYAN cures permanently. (Fig. 8)—Costiveness, Pain in Right Sile, Sallow Complexion, coated Tongue, Headache and many other disagreeable symptoms arise when liver is torpid or inactive. HUDYAN stimulates the liver to per- fect activity. HUDYAN relieves at once the disagreeable symptoms of liver trouble; it cures permanently. HUDYAN is for 4eeeeeeesesessessees and is a remedy permanent cures. ness, emaciation, are promptly over- HUDYAN. HUD- builder, for it as- the foc 1 into those men and women, calculated to effect Weakness, pale- nervousness, pains, come by the great YAN s a tissue sists in converting elements that give health and strength. HUDYAN has cured thousands. It will cure you, HUDYAN is for sale by druggists—50 cents a package, or six pack- MEN AND WOMEN ADVISED FREE. CALL OR WRITE. ages for $2.50. If your druggist does not keep HUDYAN, send direct to the HUDYAN REMEDY CO., Corner Stockton, Ellis and Market 8ts., San Francisco, Cal. CONSULT THE HUDYAN DOCTORS. THEY WILL ADVISE YOU FREE OF CHARGE. CALL OR WRITE. E large numbes and white man in McIntosh County is depu- tized by Sheriff Blount, but still he could not muster a very large posse. The negroes number five to each white man. Business is suspended in Darien for the time being, and it is reported ‘that farms in the county have been !e‘n\p(\lfllflv abandoned. JOSEPH HAYES every Evades His Nurse and Disappears. —_— er, who lives at 20 John street, is among the missing, and his family and friends are greatly perturbed. He disappeared on | Sunday last, and since then no trace has been found of him. When last seen he was staying at Paraiso Springs, where he had | gone on the 16th inst, to recuperate. | Searching parties have scoured the hills in the vicinity of the resort, and a re- ward has been offered in the hope of find- ing him, but up to the present without success. Mr. Hayes had been drinking heavily, and was prevailed on by friends to go to | the springs and recover his natural con- dition. He took_their advice, and in com- he left on August 16. Shortly after his arrival the alcohol he had imbibed be- gan to show its effects, and an attendant { was placed over him. On Saturday he developed symptoms of delirflum {remens and the watch on him was drawn closer. The next morn- | ing the nurse, seeing Mr, Hayes appar- | ently asleep, withdrew for a few minutes, | and on his return found his patient gone. | He immediately instituted a search, but | could not find him. Appreciating his | conditicn and fearing that he might be- | come violent and do himself or others an | | injury, the now affrighted nurse notified the dactors. The last trace they got of him was that he was headed up theé mountains hatiess and wild eyed. A resident of Salinas | who was encamped in the vicinity vouched for this fact. A searching party was immediately set out in the hope of finding him, but the ‘missing man had disappeared as if he had been swallowed up by the earth. Old hunters who know every path and trail in the hills scoured them, but without avall. The Sheriff of the county was also notified, and he sent telephone messages and deputies in all directions, but was unable to locate Haves’ whereabouts. It is feared he crawled into the brush and perished. This theory is based on the | Tesort the mountains, and if he did come to his senses it would be a difficult thing for him to find his way out. The only w to be had in the hills is said to be alkali and unfit for drinking purposes. Another theory advanced by the hotel people is that Hayes, objecting to close surveillance his opportunity and slipped out, and in- stead of heading up the mountains went in the opposite direction and boarded a | freight train at Soledad. Mrs. Hayes was immediately notified of her husband's disappearance, and she took | the first train for the springs. Seeing that | she could not improve on the efforts made | to find him she came home. | Mrs. Hayes called at police headquarters | last night and gave a detailed description | of her husband, and asked that every ef- fort be made to find him. INGLORIOUS END OF A FAMOUS HORSE The Hide of the Speedy Holocauste to Be Made Into Boots. NEW_ YORK, Aug. 26.—-A World cable from London says: Holocauste, the French crack on which Tod Sloan rode his first fatal Derby, has met with an inglo- rious fate. ‘His partly dressed skin has been hanging outside of a boot store in Queen Victoria street for the past few days, with the announcement that it will be made into boots at $6 a palr, The interest excited by this sad memo- | Our_advance showing of the in of ¥ Dress Fabrics, so popular this seas Il skirt, is complimented by ev dy that visits our store. DY e isplayed in our spacious show-windows are pronounced the prettiest Plaids produced e LAUIES’ QII.I( WAISTS A repeti of last Monday’s enormous SILK WAIST SALE, with added lots, just received 9 BLACK AT s season’s styles, { made of an extra good quality; Swiss, Taf- feta and Satin Duchesse, tucked front and Ladies' and Children's Golf Capes of the highest order will be one of the greatest at- doubly so by virtue of a most unusual combination available | Joseph Hayes, a well-known liquor deal- | | pany vmh Dr. Perrault, proprietor of the | fact that the brush i{s extremely thick in | the | kept on him, watched | h Novelties of Plaid SPEGIAL [N HANDKERCHIEFS. e than to-morrow has been ers to buy HANDKER- 1 values should not go unno- Co better ti et e EN UNUSUAL OFFERING IN HUSIEBY RIB LADL DYE L8 F CAPES. p and remarkably low prices. L -(-l-+-i+-l-H-i-—i-l~H-:-x-l—~x—1—~1—:«x—t-—x remains of the Derby favor- Hia has S0 great that policemen were ¢ engaged to keep the crowd moving. Sloan is to have a pair of the boots him- f, though this is considered rather un- by the sporting fraternity. Sloan Holocauste was the best horse he ever bestrode. CYCLONE FORMING IN MARTINIQUE ISLAND DoAY hall h th Do, k. Colonel Lawton h TR confident we sha have the support | noon at 6 o'clock. Colonel Lawton has DL BT not only of the vast majority of Britons | ordered tents and camp equipments for . KINGSTON, Jamaica, Aug. 26.—The but of the whole >. In_all|the men in case they are needed. {isiand of Mtiniade sepores & Erdling this bad business the! one thing | 1t had been reported here that 1000 | forming south and moving toward Do- up: which we can congratulate our- | negroes were in the vicinity of Dela- minica and Guadalupe. E s, and that is the unity of the em- | gell's house, having come from all parts PONCE, Porto Rico, Aug. 26.—All pos- pire. No British subject can suffer in- | o¢ I.fberty and Melntosh counties. Re- ; | sible preparations are heing made against justice anywhere without awakening a i done by courier, but | fhomedicied & Mexmup o the sl responsive chord fn our most distant | g the negroes were scattered for sev- ‘!:“D‘v}e,“‘,‘,‘. anL K Ay e | colonies, which stand together in main- | era] miles through the swamp their | followed the one. There is a | taining the honor and integrity of the | pumber was not definitely ascertained. Iy distribut beans and cod- s sent to other dis- tr rapidly as the transportation fa- cilities will permit. Official wages have been fixed at five centavos an hour. Many men have refused to work on these terms, but some assistance is obtained from boys. The water is foul. Four thousand cubia meters of mud and debris are piled in the streets, the hospitals are overcrowded and the temporary hospitals are filled; there is a good deal of fever and malaria and some typhoid; sueh houses as are stand- ing are overcrowded and there are thou= sands who are altogether homeless. 1 and suppli s Dependable Drugs Traveling Trinkets Useful sundries handy to have on a trip— whether by rail, steamer or staj (%ne often needs more than they can afford at traveling time—more so if on an outing. Need not fear spending too much if we supply you. Traveling Flasks 25¢ Wicker-cover bottles. Half int size and up to a quart. atent rubber and wire stop- pers. Impossible to leak. Pocket Ink Wells Small glass ink well—patent stopper. Glass is heavily covered with leather. Money Belts $1.00 Made of best chamois skin and wire buckle. Carry gold or currency. Cork Screws The 15 cent cork screw is a very small one. Larger and stronger cork screws, 2oc, 25¢ and 5o cents. Tweezers Small, delicate tweezers and nail cleaner combined. Playing Cards Bicycle playing cards are the most popular playing cards. Court Plaster A small case for the vest pocket containing court plast- er in assorted colors, Pocket Toilet Paper A convenient book of good toilet paper. l 25¢ 15¢ 15¢C 15¢ sc AMYJSY.AK hen '&"Ra"n Yo ot