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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 18, 1899 SAMOAN BELLES SEEK FOREIGN HUSBANDS Here Is a Chance for Unattached and Unemployed Americans to Obtain Homes and Wives. f that Governor Poynter would appoint W BRYAN MAY GO 10 THE SENATE Would BaNamed Should Hayward Die. Special Dispatch to The Call. LINCOLN, Neb.,, Nov. 17.—Rumors started upon the announcement that Sen- ate lect M. L. Hayward could not re- cover from his present paralytic strok Bryan to fil the TYPES OF Beieioieioie: HALF-CASTE SAMOAN MAIDENS., R I S S 04‘~0-0-0‘0~0v0~0‘0-03»02’:.. or nths has been copra, a large hat land can forty years' s hé ‘e openings g to $4000 in ¢ 1 and fairly well ce the Collect 1s othe 1 sell goods ry ma progress is bei ¥ 6fthe men they g are ke ma ssatls with on et Tt PR ORIO 1 there e Al almost ¢ | = (whic » an order) in 1 nou same good Tamasese remained, unt unttl afte peated complaints of the. Mo, d his follov: th r afa LB Freely Issues Orders the Natives. LS position fr on m toe followers Ning to the were to b nsequently | toms pe | moan chie sisted of approa is house efther into o were compelled 16 dia: { mount and.-lead thelr hotses weil 1o | the.place before they mounted umbrellas_had . to by furled until | wretched house -was passed, ret h as passed, and s ADVERTISEMENTS. | sons: carry loads “were comp ~— ~ 1 lower them m the shoulder whi protests were made to-the Con- { A time to time tried to pre- | vent these things,.but were unwilling or unable to. use.force in the matter. Thin stood this -unsettled condition. .When Seems easy to a man, but there is o | ¥ SODRUIS saw fC to dsk the natives o great deal of lifting and reaching to do; | the Mata party still being \)nan“; u great many trips up and down staira to | carry out - the wishes of power: make in the course of day’s house work. | 4Eieed (0 pay their shar e It's hard where a woman is well. For | Twenty-two chiefs we ppointed to pro- a woman suffering with some form of » Apia liscuss the matter with S e nsuls. and arrange for a time and female troub) 1 place to pay fn the large sum that was is daily torment. d.--‘\“‘:“‘l«‘ ug them 3 Arriving . Here abot - the 10th the There are thousands | month, they proceeded to the prop < of of their high chiefs, Faamina mselves - and - ma such women | g along, day 4 with the Con for ¥ | Some of their attenda sery. There are town to get some brea and canned other thousands who meats, and with them went a prominent chief from -Savaii named. Pao. have found a com- : return from town with thelr e 5»1?\2 cure of \hfl; were hailed l‘rn; the Tamase lisease in the use of jower thelr lbads and salute ~ y B chief. This they declined 1o-do, and the Dr. Pierce’s Favorite were asspulted with stieks stones. Prescription. It stops debilitating drains, cures irregu- larity, heals inflam- Several, including Pao, were injured and all' they were carrying was .destroyed Immediately after this it .was reported that Tamasese had declared that the war should recommer: oth sides mustered mation and ulcera- n;llyl"r!':.' n;"}n;‘ \'l‘.'"lll‘x‘lu;xn ;':Il]e of : affairs existed some time, hundreds o tion, nourishes the people blocking the roads in_thelr vndonv! nerves, and gives ors to transport their household belons vitality and vigor. fnes into Apia. before the trouble began. It makes weak However, -calmer afled and m | the few Tanu c alled on women strong and Tamasese ‘to come into where he sick women well, It nyed quietly for sev i | On _the following da was_held contair before the native court and a number ¢ cocaine the Tamasese faction w sentenced to narcotic. thirty days’ imprisonment, This row such a serfous appea yposed nce for a time t to organize the wh ganization for the pro- it was p into a mil tection of the town. The. foolishness McGowne proceeding and its actual inutility of 1312 Bank St h S50 apparent to the residents he , . C no one volunteered and the whoie remedies, but « me any permanent The doctors said it was the worst case of it matter was dropped Mataafa and the principal chiefe were not concerned in this affalr -and did not nal trouble they ever had. I decided to write | know of it until some time afterward. to you fn-au(l» 1 received & very rnfouu[ln’ and commenced trestment st once. | not_used your °Favorite Prescription® s | KING BREAKS DOWN. week before 1 began to feel better, and, as 1 | o v continued, my bealth gradually improved. Itis | SAN JOSE, Nov. I7.—Abram King, the wing every day ® aged capitalist. on trial for for and the Jooting of the estate of Stephen Hob son. an incompetent, of whom he was th guardian, broke doWwn and cried th witness stand to-day while giving testi- monv in_his own behalf He denied he had forged L: C. W. Otto's name to a bill for §36, but said he might ave signed it_at.Otto’s request. King stated he years old and had lived e years. His family | n invalid wife and a_daugh- Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser is sent free on receipt of stamps 10 pay cost of mailing only. Send 21 one-cent stamps for a book in paper oovers, or 31 stamps in cloth, to Dr. R. V. Fierce, Buffalo, N, ¥, ~_ ELECTRIC BELTS, | ter reture he wept. He sald | Prices frox he had b president of the Security | s2 Larg Savings Bank, Associate Judge, Super- Ehctenre T8 visor, School Director and Councilman ted 8t An’ attsmpt was .made to show that King was being persecuted by ePrIaln‘) newspaper men, but the court would not let the matter be introduced. Many prom- | a sead 2o in | inent business men in the city have testi- | '\'f "‘Y'M"“'wxllu fied to King's good character. o et o Address Testimony in the case was completed €20 Marker St., O1 ite Palace Hotel, 8. this afternoan and the argument commence Moyday. will i term between now and the assembling of the next Legis- lature, one year hence, have grown. Mr. Bryan is In the mountains of Southern Missouri, but several erious importancy telegrams of mys- 1 have been exchan | between Mr. i 1 and Governor Poyn- ter in the last our hours. Another feature of the situation is the presence in Lincoln to-day of former Sen- | ator W. V Allen. He ‘called upon the Governor, but just what the purpose of his trip was is not r There is nc t that Mr. Allen would view the ap- ntment of Mr. Bryan to the position at this iime very picasantly. Many Fusion leaders here insist that | Bryan ought to be appointed at this time walt until next year, when If he defeated for the Presidency he might ind undoubte would sccept the posi- ticn. His friends argue that he could pt the position and it legitimately promote his interests as a Presidential to candidate No doubt is expressed by either side that Mr. Dryan will develop into an ac- tive Senatorial candi immediately a: ter the tions next 1, provided he is not elected to the Presidency. They a mit that this has been Mr. Bryan's plan right and it was to this end that given the nomina- surt and Senator Al- len aceorded an appointment to fill the unexpired term of District Judge in his home. This removed all possible . Still, talk of Bryan accepting the appointment in event of the death of Senator-elect Hayward arouses a storm sts from friends of Allen, and a strong following in Nebraska, nt of Bryan. Hayward cannot recover. He dte for several days and may Kk or =0, but that is the limit. MAS. GRIFFIN WAS UNSOUND MIND e Testimony of Dr. Steph- ens and Others. Special Dispatch to The Call SAN RAFAEL, Nov. 17.—"You can't bulldoze me, sir, and you might as well cease trying. 1 have been on the witness stand too many times not to know what 1 doing. The woman was crazy, and own relat knew it better than am These angry and emphatic words were spoken by Dr. J. 1. Steph to-day while testifying in the Griffin will contest, in r nse te an attempt of Attorney Mullany to browbeat him into an admission that certain statements the physiclan had' just » were not supported by facts he wer of Dr. Stephens, which provoked the scene, was given to a question inca tiously asked by the lawyer for the d fendant, Mrs, O'Connor, and was of such a | ‘nature that consternation pre- vailed among the cohorts for the defense. Attorney Mullany tried hard to rectify his error, but merely succeeded In arou the ire of the witness py his savage assaults Stephens s an assistant Police Sur- b of San Franeisco. a_member of the oma County Insanity Commission and ssistant in_the medical clinic of the ersity of alifornia On ac unt of high prc 1al standing the de- att vored to dis- endeavor th query of Mul- his fendant’s his disastrousiy. The was hypothetical, the lawyer wish- ing to know {f Mrs. Griffin’s delusion that he saw the visions of her deceased hus- nd tended to show that or end lany was the ready an- Griffin was a doubt,” rybody Knew Mrs swe mentally unbalanced, and her relatives best of all s Mull had asked the question 1d_there had be no the plaintiff's counsel the 1 to stand. There were other sprung during the lact day of niiff's inning and Dr. Winn of sgain made himself conspicu- is to appear in court was arrested last evening at iburon by Officer _Cottingham on a bench warrant issued by Judge Anvel- lotti and ing haled before his Honor promised ppear In court as a witness for the plaintiff at 9 o'clock this morn- ing, but failed to kecp his promise. ter a o tion betw plainuff's lawyers 1t was decided to carry on the ase without Winn's evidence Dr Simc » well-known insan- exp was placed on the stand, and reply io hypothetica tions gave his opinion that the sctions of Mrs iin proved she was mentally untal- anced. - Dr. C. C. Wadswortk of the San Francisco Lunacy Commission testified William Vanderbflt § Mrs. Grif- ect. his opinfon ‘ha sound mind homas testified that n feeble-minded and the bank tre nd looked out for her inter- ests the < if she had been a crild tart*d to mention the fact that thry s ago the relatives had petition a guardian be appointed for was stopped by an objection O’ Connor wi Mrs. clared that all she knew of the existence of a will had been told her by a female acquaintance. She had_taken no Interest the will whatever. The case was ac- rdingly ciosed for the plaintiff and the defendant will begin the introduction of evidence n rebuttal next Tuesday. The way the case looks now the general trend of opinfon is that the testament will be set aside, EMPEROR WILLIAM EN ROUTE TO ENGLAND woire g ) 1 BERLIN, Nov. 17.—Emperor William, the Empress and two of thelr sons, Auguste Willlam and Oscar, left Potsdam at 8§ o'clock this morning for Kiel on their way to England. KIEL, Prussia, Nov. 17.—Emperor Wil- liam, the Empress and the younger Princes_arrived here this afternoon and were rec at the railway station by the elder’ Princess. Empress Augusta Victorfa, with thi board the_imperial and the Emperor, younger son. went on acht Heclienzollern mpanied by the elder tw ns, attended a muster of naval recruits. The Kalser. in the course of an addross, alluding to the fact that Germany a de- cade. ag had lost many br: sallors nd excellent officers on the Samoan coast, sald: “This land, however, now ours and will remain ou long as there is a erman Emperor. The German eagle is gradually spreading itself and Increasing the fleet destined to protect our brothers abroad.” Admiral von Koester. replyin esty in the name of the Baltic aarn tation, declared that all were ready at ny time to do their duty for the honor ".: th|n> flag,- even to the last drop of their slood. M — - Monument to De Lesseps. PORT f]A‘:D. Nov. 17.—The Khedive to- a unvelled a monument h. e Count Ferdinand de Lesseps. the exsinice of the Suez Canal, in the P Mintsters, Lord Cromer, the Britis e lomatic agent, the other diplomats o representatives from vari eleven parts of Europe. CUr bodies ~of Sosiob National Hardwars Officers. PITTSBURG, Nov. 17.—At to-day's ses- sion of the National Hardware Associa- tion John Bindley of this city was eleoted president, R. W. Sharpleigh of St. Louls and B. Race Hayden of San Francisco Yice Jpiesident and T. J. Fernley of Philadel secretary-treasurer. The phia convention closed to-night. then sworn and de- | DS, the engineer | resence of the | | before the Interstate Commerce Commission this forenoon was very interesting and instructive, treating of ocean competition with rallroads on business between the Atlantic and Pa- cific coasts. It was shown that large quantitles of nearly all staple articles Were now being rried by water at rates ranging from to & cents per hundred pounds. R. L. Walker, the tratfic manager of the Pana- ma Rallroad and Steamship Company, testiffied that his company controlled the Panama Rallroad and the three steamers connecting with it from New York to Jlon and was entirely independent of ali other carriers by water or rall; that it connected with the Pacific Mail Company at Panama, but had the absolute power to fix rates on all goods going to the Pacific Coast and did so with an eye single to its own interests. Mr. Walker added that it carried at least 3000 tons a month of goods bound to San Francisco and some times more: that he made the rates so as to secure that amount of tonnage from the raflroads and reduced them at times s0 as to attract business if he needed it to fill his steamers; that he expected the number of steamers would be increased tonnage for them. He sald he had learned & good deal about the freight situation | while attending the sessions of the com- | misston and was already planning to get additional business from the Middle West. The witnesses for St. Louls have been trylng to make it appear that many of | the classes of goods which they dealt in are not subject to sea competition, such as bar and sheet fron, brass goods, earth- enware, cartridges, plumbing materials and the like. Mr. Walker said he had been carrying and was ready to take all the: commodities on his steamers in | large or small quantities and at any time | with the exception of a few things llknl gunpowder, which the law prohibited from being carried on passenger steam- ers. This completely exploded the theory of complainant and established an active and ing competition on all the goods generally carried by rall from this sec- tion. T'pon_cross-examination the complain- | ants tri any_was_tied up it Mr. Walker was emphatic and plicit that the only arrangement with that company was that of connecting carriers, | by which the Pacific Mall took their freight and carried it to San Francisco r a fixed percentage of the whole earn- ings, while his company took that going to New York on a similar basis. but he was absolutely free to make rates on 1 to show that the Pa ith the Pacific Mall, I SN FRANCISCO T be the ground on San Francisco will which the contest for the trade of the Pacific Coast will be fought out by the St. Louis jobbers and the business men [ of the soast. W. R. Wheeler, who has | closely watched the proceedings-at St. Louis before the Interstate Commerce Commissioners and who has a complete knowledge of all the points at issue, said vesterday that nothing new been brought »u: at St. Louis. The conditions are the =ame so far as the showing of facts and the equity of the ca are cen- cerned ey were before the St. Loais ated the pending All ‘he people fnsti suit facts now known were fully developed at St. Paul when the matter was threshed over before representatives of the norih- ern transcontinental railways last Ma: The Pacific Coast had not developed Iis se in evidenc Louis, ' ut would do that in A singular nd- mission * the head of one of the largest bu houses in St | Louis in his testimony, which was to che effect that his concern had been able to do business on the coast under the ex- isting conditions: also that while he had established a nch house on the coast the expense o enterprise was about the same as t nount of the differen- 1s would b 1 vear. The person who Mr. 1son Nel Manu w 0. made this admission president of the N turing Company. m, COMLBEERS O BRAZIL'S COAST The Brauner Party Com- pletes Investigation. s Er Spectal Dispatch to The Call. STANFORD UNIVERSITY, Nov. 17.— Dr. J. C. Brauner, vice president of Stanford University and head of the de- partment of geology, arrived here to-day on his return from Brazil, where he has been for the past six months studying the geological conditions of the country and s g the coast. The expedition, of which Dr. Brauner was the head. was sent out by Professor Agassiz of Harvard The party left Stanford on the 12th of last May, going immediat to Rio, Brazil. by way of New York. In the party there were seven undergraduat Stanford students, besides Dr. Brauner, who was chosen for this important work both on account of his high standing in the scientific world and his thc quaintance with the geological ¢ of Brazil, where he resided for eight years. Dr. Brauner has a report of his obser- vations almost ready for the }nrlmur. It will cover over #0 pages. Most of this work on this report was done before he left Rio. In commenting upon the ditions of the st, Dr. Brau logical con- r said tha while most of the reefs we formation, many of hardened and old sandstone were found. miles were traversed in Brazil, | which were along the coast and 1909 in the interior. Few specimens were collected, as the prime object of the trip was | make a study of the coast history Sixteen had_ elapsed si Dr. Brauner had been in Brazil, hence he was uch interested in the economlc and sc [ changes that had taken plac Brazii is a country of almost inexhaustible re sources and boundl domain, the chie industries being the gathering of rubl and the raising of sugar cane, tobac coffee, cocoa and cattle. Some gold and manganese mines are quite productive, but dia nds are very ree, except the black diamond, which is used in drilling. The competition of the Kimberley mines is the cause of the slackness of diamond mining in South America. = Dr. Brauner sald Brazil was a good place for am- bitious young Americans to keep away | from unless they went there under eon. | tract. | " The most notable change that has taken | place in social conditions in South Amer- | fca during the last sixteen vears is the | advancement which the women have made. Now they appear on the main streets of the ger citles unattended, while formerly they were never seen in public_ unless accompanied by chaperones. Rio Janelro. the largest city and capital of the Brazilian republic, is a city of over 600.000 inhabitants. with all the modern improvements, Dr. Brauner says that the Brazilia a people dislike walking, so thelr cities are well streetcar system: veral Stanford graduates have located in Brazil. H. E. Willlams '8 is head of the geological survey of State of Sao Paulo. Charles Dulley % is electrician for a lighting company’ In the city of Sao Paulo, while Fred Dulley ‘57 and Mise Adams '% are employed as teachers in the city schools there. | MAJOR GENERAL LAWTON 3 PRESENTS HIS REPORT Officers Mentioned for Bravery and a | Gallant Private Mentioned for | a Medal of Honor. | WASHINGTON, Nov. 17.—The War De- partment has made public the report of | Major General Lawton, giving the detalls | of his expedition In April last to Santa | Cruz, vrovince of La Laguna. The re- port is dated August 1 and recommends | for_conspicuous bravery Major Clarence R. Edwards and Major Charles G. Starr. Major Weisenberg is mentioned in appre- | ciation of valuable services rendered. Second Lieutenant Thomas Franklin, who commanded the gunboat Napidan, is highly praised also. General Lawton thus describes a gal- lant action: “With a view to securing a good place to re-embark troops for & movement against Calaba the North Dakota -battalion was sent from Longer shortly after noon on the 12th to reconnoiter the town of Pato, about four miles farther on the lakes shore, where it was reported a good landing place could be found. After aq. vancing about one mile the enemy discovered intrenched across the road and immediately opened fire from behind an almost impenetrable undergrowth on the supplied with ! 3 COMMERCE COMMISSION ADJOURNS T0 MEET ON THE PACIFIC COAST Delegation From West of the Rockies Pleased With the Result of the Showing Made Against the Claims of St. Louis Jobbers. T. LOUIS, Nov. 17.—The testimony @yl he would then make rates to secure ; goods shipped west, and did so with sol reference to the interests of his compan that it had no arrangements nor under- standing with any rallroad, and tock freight away from all of them when. ne could get it The Commissioners number of questions as to the general character of the business of his company, its independence of other steamship lines and railroads and its methods of doing | business, and elicited many facts entirely t variance with the theories advanced by the St. Louis witnesse At the close of the session Chairman Knapp announced that the commission considered this one of the most important cases which had ever come before it far-reaching, and for that reason commission would afford all parties inter- ested the fullest opportunity to be heard The hearing would be adjourned until after the holidays, when the commission would sit to hear further evidence at some point on the coast. probably at Franclaco, and due notice would be given of the time fixed. be in February. The coast delegation is well satisfied with the present situation.and the opinion is generally expressed that for complainants has been weaker than was expected, and that only the Middle West jobbing houses are interested in changing the present rates, in order to enlarge thelr business on the coast. 3 HE 1 BATTLE GROUND The significance in this admission was | the flat contradiction that it claim upon which the St. Louls jobbers’ suit was the present conditions Louls and the Middle West out of : f it t. The generally understood t has brought the stion L before the Interst ymmerce Com- mission for the first time. When substan- it at St. Paul the persons | » testimony were representatives of the Great Northern and the Northern Pacific Railways. Reading of the evigence telegraphically | reported,” said Mr. Wheeler, “‘shows that no. new contention has been ralsed To me seems a repetition of the hearing Paul so far as the Middle West s are concern The same people ailked for them and the testimony for them is just about the same. and justice and Jogic have no more . Louis than they ¢ ‘are simply tryin 1ty ace had to L3 f the d leave nothing for johper Pacific | Coast. As Appears now Middle West fobbe made of their ase. "They displayed amazing ig- | norance of 1 onditions governing the traffic of the coast. The merchants here are surprised that the Middle West joh bers have not been able to make a better showing before so august a body as the mountain side. Major Fraine promptly disposed his comm ute a flank w i movement on the were pour- g a heavy fire into the advance guard. of them were Kkilled and —three inded, one mortally. Of these the lat- | ter of five nillside. and_three killed b flankers who had been Their surviving comrade e Thomas Sletland, Company | North Dakota, remained with them and | by his cool. unerring aim successfully | held the enemy back until reinforcements | came. Then, after carrving his wounded | comrade to the rear, he assisted In re- | covering the bodies of the killed. He h been named for a medal of honor.” | WORKINGMEN GREET ! MAYOR-ELECT CLARK Rousing Rccept‘ion in Sacramento Followed by Pledges of Mutual Support and Friendship. i longed to a party | nt up the | Pri- irse | SACRAMENTO, Nov. 17.—A rousing re- ception was tendered Mayor-elect George H. Clark by the trades unions of this ety at the Old t evening, and sei- dom has been seen such a gathermg of toilers to honor a successful candidate. Forty pie of music comprised the band that made the walls of the old hall echo patriotic airs. Refreshments were | & 4nd: cheer upon cheer was siyen | or the popular young man who is to pre- | side over the destinies of this municipality for the next two years. J. M. Higgins presided at the reception and introduced the new Mayor, who in a neat ech t nked tho present for the hearty support they accorded him in the recent election, and also for the flat- tering compliment paid him by such a| gathering of honest, intelligent workmen Mr. Clark said he ized labo; always re as a pleasure and a duty to assist in the bet- | terment of the:condition of those who con- | stitute the “human hive of industry.’ He promised to give the citizens of Sacra- mento a good. clean and economic admin- istration, and by no act of his would ise the trades unfons of this ci sorry for having placed such trust in him. Three rousing cheers tiger were then given for Ge. Clark. A splendid m literary” pro- 1l departed ased with the evening's entertain- | | | | | ning of the year. place you might buy ? call. Our policy @ returned. Cor. Powel C THE JOBBERS, Interstate Commerce Commission. * They have aroused the antagonism of Denver, and the people of the Atlantie coast are united wilt b in San Francisco when the com- mission comes to sit here: “Among the admissions. made a‘® St Louis is one of much significance. That was that the 8t. Louis jobbers have al- lowed as much as 30 cents per 100 pounds to some houses on the coast where the differential is -not as much as 50 cents, plainly showing that the¥ are compellel to give some advantage to get the retall- ers to buy of them instead of buying at Mr. Nelson ¢f St. Louls says that he has e lished a branch house on .the st. We have alw asked them why they did not place branch- houses ners .if they wished to get the advantage of geo. BT hical trade They Mississippi have alrendy alley, an position Ap! 3 of t ir 1 trade territory. ‘They are *dy_and are trying to take away from the Pacific Coast. jobber the anly territory he has. The tendency i to nar- row the jobbing area in all sections of the country.” Nevertheless the Middle West jobbers are seeking to extend and get this terricory for their own.” The representatives of the Pacific C Jobbers' and Manufacturers’ Association who went to St. Louls may.not be back for some time. Wakefield Baker and H. D. Loveland, president and traffic mana- ger of sociation, will go -to New York before they return to the coast. CONTRACTS LET FOR SIX CRUISERS Union Iron Works Gets! One of ,;Them. EEags B Special Dispatch to The Call. WASHINGTON, } 17.—The board of naval construction to-day agreed upon a report recommending that the Navy De- partment award the contracts for con- structing the six new cruisers authorized by Congress to the following concerns: Union Iron Works of San Francls Lewis Nixon of the Crescent Shipbuilding Works, Elizabethport, N. J.; the Bath Iron Works of Bath, Me.; the Trigg Ship- building Company of Richmond, Va.; the “all River Company of Massachusetts; eafle & Levick of Philadelphia The recommendation will be made in a report to be submitted to Acting Secre- ry Allen by Admiral O'Nell, president of the construction board, and the awards re not final until the board's findings are approved by the Secretary. The low- t bidders did not receive the preference in all cases, and It is presumed that the board was influenced in its selections by considerations of meritorfous design and unquestionable ability of the concerns to perform the work they will be called upon » undertake. Very Long Mining Tunnel. DEADWOOD, 8. D., -Nov American Mining Company of. Newcastle, Wyo., has begun a tunnel at the base of Ragged Top Mountain which will be a mile long and will connect with a thou- sand-foot shaft from the top. the longest tunnel in the Black Hills and | will cost $3,000,000 before a pound of ore is mined. Immense reduction works are planned and a town named American City fias been latd out, to which the Burlington is building a branch line | The price of cloth isgoing up—it costs | more to get th: materials from the mills 1 across the continent— reight is high—labor is becoming more expensive, but with all this we are putting into these ten doilar cuits and overcoats just the same careful workman- ship, the same materials, the same qualities, in fact we are making the very same :uits as we did at the begin- You are surz of this here—are you sure of it any Make application for our samples—either write or Your money’s worth or your money S. N. Woob & CO., 718 Market Street and and Eddy. sked Mr. Walker a | The | questions involved were complicated and | the n | It Is thought it will | the showing | It will be | NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. is invaluable for over-worked men, delicate women, and sickly children. It stimu- lates, strengthens and sus tains the system and braces body and. brain. Is invalu- able as a stimulant. . Try it! Al druggists and grocers, A dangerous: Dully's has & pr borfe. I your deaier canpot supyl sent, prepald, on receipt of §1.00. b0 Valuabl ord 5 sent on applicatior ' FIT FOR A KING gainst them. The baitle: xruund | whén we have put the finishing touch cuff. Just variation in on your shirt, collar and |like ‘new, without any color or finish, .and no “saw edge” on your collars and cuffs. Our new “saw- edge” machine was the one thing we needed to make our work perfect. United States Laundry, Offics 1004 Market Streat. Telephone South 420. IOnkllnd Office, 514 Eleventh St F MEN CURED, | \DR. MEYERS & CO. bave the largest praoc- tice and best equipped medical Inetitution on the P-e%ocnn Established 17 years. PRIVATE K and advice free at office o mall All Jetters confidential. Market St., San Franecisco. 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