The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, December 22, 1899, Page 2

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FOUR HUNDRED FARMERS . ON HISTORIC WAR VESSELS Landlubbers Enlisted by the Navy and Assigned to the Hartford and _ Dixie. | saw a warship | 21.—Four hundred farmers EW YORK, Dec salt water for the first time only a 1 rrived at the T 1 on the converted crulser Dixie y. Uncle Sam is going to ¢ for his navy of men who know all about g about a ship. The farmers came from the Missis- 5 nto the employ of the Government on nins ¢ of the Bureau of Naviga- good sallors can be made out were garbed In & when they arrived to-day and at » might have been m for real sallors, It is ention to have 1 me il the mysteries of a ship. mar Belknay ' ficers on the Dixle will be the instruc- 8 rd, wt A =0 have a number of farmer recru D v cumnaviga n to manage t number of ifficlen able sea- @eivivisisisieisitrebebebebe @ rt. effecting a ment, in the hope of ‘et FOREFATHERS' DAY IS DULY CELEBRATED Various Societies Hold Appropriate Exercises and Meet at the Ban- quet Table. DETROIT, D e Soc of Detroit ¢ glanc thers quet at the H a Hoyt VICTORIA DOES NOT WEEP. LONDON TRAFFIC DELA.YEDr BY HEAVY SNOWSTORMS Weather Is Very Cold and Snowfalls | Are the Most Severe Known in Many Years. SAN ANTONIO, Texas, De —News from ¥ Davis is to the effect that a nt Stafl seve snowstorm prevalled there Mon- ANDRIA ord Kitchen esday and it was SnOW- ed . » and sent The board the -class hes d;:x\ on crutser Isls, which sailed for Maita oaome Dlaccs bankbd o has visited that place If the storm con- ne. Heavy traf- d trains on e weather SOME NOTED VOLUNTEERS. e Duke of Marl- lieutenant in the Ox- has volun- snowstorms against the Boers. | alr Says the Syndicate as Yet Has No SITUATION AT LADYSMITH. Option to Bring Off the Jeffries- Corbett Fight. The Daily Mafl NEW YORK, Dec ~Willlam A that news has ar- | Brady, manager of James J. Jefries, said to a Call correspondent to-night: 1 supplied with food ‘The San Francisco syndicate has no | and can hold out much ¢ as yet been .extifoated. The was first arranged Tobin 4 Id offer a big purse, but s in good spirits 4 from him until now. will deposit $50,000 in cash the fight s - will be brought off at any place he may DISTRESS IN FREE STATE. gt ng the money we will give r CAPE TOWN, Dec. 16 (delayed in trans- ey o atch 1y = APE eI e atrans- hold the contest, i o the sc ¥ | one or two weeks afterward. Many families are reported to o slaluci ; = | Oceanic Reaches Port. | LIVERPOOL, Dec. 22.—The White Star |line's steamer Oceanle, from New York. December 13, arrived here at 2 o'clock this morning 3 The ( FURNITURE GOES UP, Eastern Dealers Agree to Raise Their Prices Ten Per Cent. eanic, which was reported over- PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 2l—The East. | 3U€, Was only about sixteen houre benin ¥ PULEHIA, D0, The East- ). hest record Bor Sron ern ¥ e ufacturers’ Association, | oy Prod r f Ably arose from the big liner not havime composed of many m urers east of | called at Queenstown, as usual The Pittst met here to-day and advanced | Occanic did not stop &t Queenstown re certain Unes of furniture 10 per |Kccount of a dense fog which prevailel advance will go into effect on | When Daunts Rock was reached. The association,held a meet P P ng nd S s Sharkey at Hot Springs. HOT SPRINGS, Ark., Dec. 21.—Pugilist Tom Sharkey and his sparring partner, | Bob Armstrong, arrived here this after- | noon and wiil remain several weeks. The | management of Phe Hot Springs &theiie | Willlamsport, Pa., a short time ago put up prices 10 per cent, but it was £ quently found that another advance Was necessary because of the increass of the price of lumber and other materials. - Colliery Men Strike. | Association will endeavor to make a | by match between Sharkey and some [ SCRANTON, Pa., Dec. 2L—A strike be- | of note some tme 1 Jemcaro ¢ Rusllist . Shy has agreed to referee the sxefzner-l':-rn'r‘xi’-i horst contest, which takes place to-mor- row night. —_—— Spike Sullivan Wins gan to-day at the Hyde Park and Oxford colleries of the D. L. and W. Co. The drivers went out after making & demand for an increase of 10 cents per day, mak- ing & wage scale of §147 per day. There 3= & possibility of the strike spreading to | TROY, N. Y., Dec. 2L.—Spike Sullivan the lleries operated by that com othe: knocked out Martin Flaherty in the twen. tieth round of their fight here to-night. | Up to the fifteenth round matters were | very even, both men recelving much pun { 4 ishment Sulliva lande repeatedly o g F ‘l’l)‘:l ribs and stc h telling bl)fl\\'l" 9 e Jatter gradually weakened in the rounds. Flaherty went out in the | ast round. Time, 2 minutes and 40 sec- | onds [ | EESRE Choynski to Meet McCormick. MILWAUKEE, Wis., Dec. 21.—Joe| Choyngki and Jack McCormick - have | signed a contract to meet in a six-round bout before the Milwaukee Athl > on January 19, i sl | LT Clothing Dealers Assign. TORONTO, Dec. 21.—The R. Greene Manufacturing Company of London, On- tario, wholesale dealers in clothing, has assigned. Direct liabilities $110.000. A rect liabilitles $100, o000 " | \ ! Pretty boxes and odors are used to sell such soaps as no one would touch if he saw them un- disguised. Beware of a depends on something outside of it. Evans Knocked Out. PORTLAND, Dec. 21.—Dudley Evans of Portland was knocked out in the seven- teenth round by Charles Jost of this city | to-night at the Pastime Athletic Club. . | T R Pears', the finest soap Wins in Second Round. TACOMA, Dec. 2L—Tom Costello beat | George Reed to-night in the second round | of what was to have been a fifteen-round soap that in the world is scented or not, as you wish; and the Fought a Draw. BRADFORD, Pa., Dec. 21.—At the Cen- | | tral Athletic Club 'to-night Eugene Bes. | senah of Cincinnati and Eddie Burns of | | Detrot fought a twenty-round draw. ————— X money is in the merchan- dise, not in the box. All sorts of stores sell it, especially druoggists; all sorts of people are using it. — To Cure a Cold in One Day | Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All| druggists refund the money if 1t falls to eure. LB W. Grove's signature is on each box. Zic, | the rarks of the r | Gloucestershire | wrench a post from its foundations, | death had THE SAN FRAN HORRORS TSCO 1899. JALL, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 22 OF THE W ARFARE WAGED IN SOUTH AFRICA and Bravery Among the British Troops at Nicholsens Nek and Elangslaagte. . & . COMMANDANT ALBRECHT... IN CHARGE OF %o-l. ARTILLERY PPOSING GEN. LORD METHUEN.. INDON, Dec. British office 13.—Letters from rs and soldiers fight- ing in the Transvaal and lengthy descriptions from war correspond- ents that filter into print throug mails teem with thrilling and ps thetic incidents, . young ofticer of the Manchesters, wounded in one of the first en that while he lay at n hillside expecting to dle, bleeding from a the company named Rogers mmy"” quickly whipped off his own at, placed it around the boy officer ying down put his arms around and for the rest of that long night kKept him “beautifully warm. 0y The Times correspondent gives o phic account and explanation of the ritish _disaster at Nicholsen's Nel column, consisting ¢ Royal Irish Fusi- four and a half companies of the Carleton’'s w six companies of the re ucestershire Regiment and No. 10 untain Battery, endere “Two hours before daybreak,” says this correspondent, “while the column was in an enclosed country, either a shot was fired or a bowlder rolled into the battery. The mules stampeded and easily broke way from their half-asleep drivers. They back on the Gloucestershire Regi ment, the adv rty of whom flred into the mass, believing in the darkness that it was an attack. This added to the chaos, ghe ranks were broken by the frenzied animals and they dashed through \d second reserve ammunition a with them. It panic. The animals, wild with the ing and the turmoil, tore down the D into the darkness and the last that heard of them was the munition boxes and paniers as they splintered against the bowlders. T was sound of am- were hub- bub of these few moments was sufficient to have alarmed the enemy. By & strenu- ous effort the officers succeeded in getting the men again under control, and when daylight came they selzed the first posi- n which presented itself and which was about two miles short of the original goal fca, will are . & through parts of Arizona and were forced to take advantage of el sy Mexico. Y st kopje, as Boer scouts Were ail eh i "““‘.” BRAD SRR | them and the day was ushered in these men e | With desultory firing. It was a sorry po- Earl of Dudley, the Earl ADY SPEAKS OF THE sition_which " they had < and the Viscount Galway were in @ Sorry plight. their ce sttt A g PLAN OF D. J. TOBIN » ‘ammunition was gone and though | ter r — wved pleces of the screw guns iteared for service ith these pieces to ounting. ot @ ingle me scouts were 8 o'clock mounted Boers galloping in small groups Lo the ne hill west. g parties of mo . on the tar #ide of the two hiils, com ¢ the Kopje from them. About k these two parties had crowned the s and opened a heavy fire at short range right down upon the plateau. Our men made a plucky attempt to return this fire, but it was impossible. They were under a cross fire irom two direc- tions, flank and rear. The two companies of Gloucestershires, holding the self-con- , were driven from their shel- \d s they crossed the open on the low plateau were terribly mauled, the men 1 The Boers on the west red themselves, but rksmen climbed to the posi- the two companies of the had just vacated. These men absolutely raked the plateau and it then that the men were order to take r on the steep reverse of the kop) yon'ag the enemy realized this mov tion El the men on the western hill teemed onto the summit and opened upon our men as they on the s They were abso- lutely d in, and what had col m kirmish seemed about to The grim order was faugh-a-ballaghs, fix There was the clatter of steel, the moment of | suspense, and then the ‘cease fire’ sound- come a butchery passed around, ‘Oh, A your bayonets and die like men. Again and again it sounded, but the ‘usillers were loath to accept the call and continued firing for many min- utes. Then it was unconditional surr der and the men laid down their arms. The correspondent at Ladysmith of the same paper, describing the battlefield of Elandslaagte realistically detalls the horrors of war. He writes: “The battlefleld, as it stood on Sun- day, conveyed sufficient proof of the se- verity of the fire. The wounded had been removed by daylight, but the burial par- ties had not arrived to perform the last duties to the dead. The men lay there as they had fallen, a sad, pathetic tribute to the courage of the British soldler. We followed this tragic trall—Highlanders, Manchesters and mounted volunteers lay Indiscrminately grouped Then solitary figures under the stones showed how lit- le the cover had availed them. There were places where wire fences had imped- ed the advance. Here the carnage had been great and one brave fellow, stooped in death, was cut off as he strove to n the skyline of the tableland the dead lay thickest, there being the main spot where the attack had been checked, but the white flag was already there and strings of coolles were digging the trench which often is the soldler's resting place. We rode back to the Boer position—the ed. Irish little kopje upon which Schiel and his twenty-thre» men had made thelr last stand, The bodies of the fifteen that had fallen of ihis little band were grouped as taken them. Some lay with heads sunken on thelr rifle stocks, fight- ing to the end. Another had placed his hat upon a prominent stone *five yards away and died with his fingers pressing a charge into his magazine. What re. mained of the laager was the litter of shell fire. Tents were torn and burned wagons splintered and overturned, foo stuffs, dead horses and explosives lay in wrecked profusion. There remained no doubt that our shell fire had played upon the position with full efrect, and ‘ne could only marvel that the Boers had stood to their guns so long. But, as one of the wounded prisoners told me later in the day, there was no room to retreat, | the extended files of the Manchester regi- ment, orllfnlng the reverse of kopje, ng the northern footpath. while’ the rain of shrapnel destroyed every living thing on the western slopes. And the scene at the farm house, nest- ling at the foot of the ridge, on the far sjde, bore out this statement. It was here that the Boers had brought their horses for cover aid carcasses lay piled on every side. The slaughter among the horses must of the men. Beunett Burleigh, the Dally Telegraph’ TEIT IO IeIIIEDT 020000400000 000000 0000 ebebedeieie Lk ok ol e e e e Writing to his mother | cold | - guard, carrying the | became a hopeless | have been almost as heavy as that | |t ‘5 $hat the proposition will Correspondence of the Associated Press. +oe00000@ - O >@ ; | l | * | * * * ® é fif . 3 : W.S SHES ? ‘ W.S, SToNE * NAT, 3 ¢ ® ND OF sANATRL CARERS) D D TRAIN IN (WHO RAL + BORYIES FRO INT {4 6 WMBERLEY. . P | * . | + Living and Dead Officers Mentioned in the Dispatches « | : From the Seat of War. f | Groeiesieie B R e S e e 5 Benator Perkins had a conference with war correspondent, supplies a full acesunt | n of the hilation of the armored train | Commissioner of Internal Revenue Wil- contingeni at Chieveley, whea Winstun Son to-day and was informed that the Churchill The train, it ap- [department had received reports from n of the engine clal agents relative to both revenue offices in California and was convinced that they were In as good If not better condition than any other offices in the United States. Mary E. MacCauley was pointed postmistress at Walker, Siskiyou County, vice Joseph Bender, resigned. Thomas P. Deering of San Francisco has been pointed assistant inspector of I‘.I{,’lllls at San Francisco at a salary of Dr. M. R. Peck has been appointed pen- on examining surgeon at Coiville, Wash. enty-two and the g Dublin Fusilecrs men of the Durban v nothing of iive *ts from the Tartar, were thrown iptain Haldane of the Gordon Highlanders, who commanded the rarty, rallled his bruised and shaken men znd, amid a hail of bullets from the Boers. be- | Ean to clear the line, while others were pouring deadly volleys into the alriost | unseen Boers, hidden behind the rocks | & | to-day ap- | ijhuull }mr yards 11, The blu-]uck:g. - [ kol emmandpd ity therr peity, o | LIVESTOCK ASSOCIATION | got their seven-pounder into action. They | sent in two, if not three, well-aimed sh=ils at the Boe: several hundred of whom | But just then a shot from | three-pounder or fleld &un | naval seven-pounder, | knocked gun and carriage on to the veidt | and w d several of the seamen. But SOON TO CONVENE May Petition Céngmu to Reopen the Forest Reserves to the Sheepmen for Grazing. the men were not a whit beaten. FORT WORTH, Tex., I The Pall Mall Ga correspondent | days of warm debate is pru'mmeal .a.f,?“': describes Winston Churchill's conduct on | the annual convention of the \‘m--nr:; this occasion as follows: | Livestock _Association, which convenes A p;;r(l ; \lun.m...r‘s co]m:lisélnfi\);rlm'l- | here nnr:‘he 16th of next month. The sub- ally of plate layers, etc., led by Winston | jects which will cay .«‘nurclhllll Who' behaved {hroughout With | ape: 8 Faste dionmsions | most heroic courage, succeeded in placing | The reopening of forest v the rails. - Mr. Churchill had previously | sheep men; terminal charges ‘at the CHL |a isted In cartying in no leas than twenty | ¢ men under a terrible fire. Some idea of | livestock shipments, and the the accuracy of the enemy's fire and of | public lands. It s ‘said that :‘;2’.‘35‘ % Mr. Churchill's courage may be obtained | of so great Importance to heep mer o by narrating the fact that a Boer shell | the leaders of this Industry In the noro burst in front of Mr. Churchill, killing | and northwest are sendin . two men on cach side of him. Our wound- | to every assoctation In that country oo ¢d were dotting the veldt on each side. | questing them to join the National Asse. The continued rifle fire and the weird | clation at once and send fun delegations sound of the quick-firers added to the hor- | to the Fort Worth meeting. The supos rors of the situation. At last the line was | eition is that they will ask the convention | clear and the engine, with one carriage | to memorifalize Congress to reopen these of the armored train, was enabled to re- | reservations. | turn to Frere, leaving Captain Haldane | cago market: feeding in transit rates on DT -D-D- g out circulars | DEATH OF A MAN ONCE GUILTY OF TREASON was arrested on the charge of tre; < of age, and his name is f Indianapolis. A military commission found him g tenced to be hanged on May 19, 1565 ‘Correspondents Tell of the Terrible Slaughter|L. P, Milligan. Who, During the Civil War, Was Sentenced to be Hanged but Reprieved, Passes Awau. W. Va., Dee. 21.—Hon. L. He was In 1564 he prison at was sen- P amillar in nation ason and placed Milligan died to-day history militar; and he ailty The gallows were erected, but before the execution the sente was com- muted to life imprisonment. Later the case was presented to the me Court, and Jame arfield made one of the arguments In Colonel Mill'gan’s behalf and the prisoner released. He returned to Huntington and resimed the of law, in whi h he continued until 1547 se of defective hearing and other infirmities. when he withdrew from the bar PROTEST OF ~ THE DEMOCRATS the| Dissatisfied With — Special Dispatch to The Call | FRANKFORT, Ky., Dec. 21.—The ad- dress to the Democracy of the St in- dorsing the contest instituted by Goebel and other ndidates of the defeated Democ ket, and giving the reasons therefor, was issued to-night. It is signed by former Senator Blackburn, chairma of the State Campaign Committee; Chair- | man Y g of the State Centr.! and Ex- ccutive committees and all of the members of these committees. It says in part The State Board of Election at its recent session, issued tion to all of the Republ tfices, but the board »pinion that It render a canvassing board spinion ty to g0 behind matters n a th the au determine the In ¢ £ el » light of the act faw for which this ¢ protest against ntest is L the us spor, of and open and the use is in utter t v, but spirit of the law. on of th allots furnishes not ¥ ordered out f both law tro parading of the guns, retended inspectors i highest court of the State lawful right to be p )t the certificates « ls, pi the ha State Judge, without warrant deflance of every prompting of fair dealing and decency, interfered with the ng_ of the State electjon; the one by menucl arges to Grand_Jury end by the em| deputy United States Marehais, by lssuing every mandamus and asked for by the Republican pa ter judicial acts have been deciared by the | supreme judiclal tribunal of the State to have | een_unlawful | ‘hAnmhrr ground {s the us the {nterest | of the Republican party of an tmmense cor- | | ruption fund, contributed by the most power- | ful railroad corporation of the commonwealth, | | whereby many thousands of votes were bought | sgainst the Democratic party and its candi- because that party, in the platform | in its State convention, dared to ad- vocate measures of T demanded by the people of the commonwealth. | a fnjunction which lat- | | AUTOMOBILE CLUB. } CHICAGO, Dec. 2.—The Automoblle | Club of Chicago has been organized and | articles of incorporation filed at Spring- field. The incorporators are J. Ogden Ar- | mour, E. Walter Herrick, Samuel Insull, | F. K. Pulsifer and Andrew R. Sheriff. The new club has for its objects the pro- | | motion of the automobile and social rela- tions among users of the horseless vehicle | and from the large and rapldly Increasing number of automobiles in use here th Club s expected to be a great success. Among other things it s proposed by the club to arrange races and tours by means | of automoblles. | Sentenced for Colonizing. NEW YORK, Dec. 21.—Samuel Goldber- ger, the saloon-keeper and Tammany ele | and party fiercely engaged. The Boers | \x;‘ufi it 2 passing salvo of shells, hittng | the ender and nearly derailing the train | ond time. Daily Graphic's correspondent, de- the hulk of the Penel- where the Boer pris- confined, undertaken 1In ~ the pany of Colonel Stowe, the United :s Consul General, writes: | he majority of 'the prisoners are | sleek, contented and Indifferent. They told me they thought the war would be a | pienic; that they would rush Natal before | | the imperial troops would arrive; that “ngland would be involved in foreign complications, and that they would be | able to dictate terms from Pietermaritz- burg and Durban. They thought to view the Cape peninsula as conquerors, not from a prison ship. Colonel Schiel steps with difficulty. His wound in the thigh is nearly healed, but he still requires the use of a stick. Schiel is a typical soldier of fortune—grizziy-grey hair, cropped close, anressl\'e military mustache, shrew blue eyes, a thick neck, a figure still un- mistakably active, but tending to stout- ness. As to bearing, he is a genial man of the world. He introduced us to some of hig brother officers, including Captain | Van Leggelo, a benevolent, good-lookin cosmopolitan of klndlf expression an modest mein, who told us that he was born in Holland, educated in Germany and had a sister in St. Louls.” INTERESTS THE PEOPLE OF THE PACIFIC COAST| President States That He Will Be | Present at the Launching of the Ohio Here. WASHINGTON, Dec. 21.—Senator Per- kins to-day introduced A. T. Vogelsang and wife of San Francisco to President McKinley. In the course of the conver- sation the President remarked that the weather was very fine, and both Senator Perkins and Mr. Vogelsang replied that it was typical California weather. The President laughingly replied: “That is the usual reply | fans."” Mr. Vogelsang then asked the President why he did not accept the invitation of Callfornia to visit the State and verify these statements. The President replied that he would have a chance to make comment on_their statements when the battleship Ohio was launched at San Francisco, as he would be one of the party present at that time. The members of the Committee on Ter- ritorfes of both houses of Congress leave to-night for an extended trip through Arizona, New Mexico and Cn.llfornfa. Senator Perkins was invited to accom- pany them, but on account of pressing | business was unable to go. | Senator Perkins and Representative Waters to-day called on the Agrleullum | Dequnm«-m and on behalf of the citizens of Los Angeles asked the Government to | accept Griffith Park In that city and to {establish an agricultural expérimental station there. hey both have received letters from the Mayor of Los Angeles asking them to urge the department to a vuf)\ the park. This will require a sL\rc al act of Congress and they desired the department to recommend it. The | Secretary will talk the matter over with hem in the morning. Both are confiden be accepted. give ings; every article is Smoking Jackets; elegant Silk Webbed Suspenders; Silk Suspenders, with ster! Silk Reefers, wort! hy gifts. Night Robes and l;ajam Hosiery of all kinds.. Gloves; big assortment. Suit Cases; sole leather . leather lined..... Silk Umbrellas, good m. of Californ- | puffs, tecks, i perials, and bows.... /. t Here’s the question answered in a few words— mere references to what we carry, in furnish- changed after Christmas if desired, Silk and Satin Embroidered Suspenders; ve Silk Mufflers, plain shades, fancy brocades nel, flannelette, various styles Dress Shirts; all styles and sizes. . 88z . Neckwear; elegant, fashionable line: all colors and combinations: English Out-of-town orders filled—wri’e us for our new illustrated Catalogue No. 2. men reliable and will be ex- line........$s, $6, $7.50, $10 plain, but neat. $1.00 ry pretty.$2 2, 2.50 $1to 33 . .- -$1.50, $2.00, $3.00 in muslin, sateen, flan- ing silver buckles $1. $.50; steel linen or , $6, $7.50, $8.50 up to $10.00 | -oe.-..$3, 84, $5, $6 assortment of squares, club ties four-in-hands, | Kentuc:y Results. | tion district cap! istrict Jf the ADVERTISEMENTS. TOYS! You will be surprised at the prics and value of our offerings in 3 line—many things cut in price to se- cure immense sale for two days. Come and see what you can save on Books, Tree Ornaments, Games, Dolls, Stationery, Wagons, School Supplies, Buggies, Doll Furniture, Purses, Tool Chests, Animals, Blackboards, Blocks, Mechanical Toys, Trunks, Musical Instruments, Arks, Pocket Cutlery. Everything to amuse, instruct or gladden the heart of the young. Special prices to those who buy to use along helpful lines for others. TURKEYS Will be ready for delivery early on F) day. All things else now ir for the CHRISTMAS DINNER Our home-made mince meat has a utation wherever a cultivated Ar taste exists. WE MAKE CUTS In drygoods, notions, wearing apparel— everything from cellar to sixth floor to clear up stock and get ready for the closs store of the year. Come ly It you canm, it not come anyhow. Open evenings fthis week SMITHS The original reliable and largest mail of- der house. Ask for Catalogues, free. 25-71 MARKET ST., near the Ferry. Dr. Meyers & Co. Men only. Pay when well. No In- curable cases taken. @Advice and pri- vate book free, officz or mall Home cures. Letters confidential. 731 Market St., S. F. Take elevator to third floor. EUGENE FIELD'S POEMS, A $7.00 BOOK. The Book of the Century. Handsomely Tllustrated by thirty-two of the World's Greatest Artists. GIVEN FREE to each person interested In subs to the Eugene Field Monument & ¥und. Subscribe any amount Bubscriptions as low as §1 wi this daintily artistic FIELD FLOWLR »th bound, 8x11), as a certificat seription to fund. Book contains a = tion of Fleld's best and most represes tive works and is ready for delivery But for the noble contribution of world's greatest artists this book could have been manufactured for less tha The Fund created is div tween the family of the late and the Fund for the bullding ¢ n ment to the memory of the beloved poet of childhood. Address EUGENE FIELD MONUMENT S0UVE IR FUND, 180 Monros St., Chicago. (Also at Book Stores.) 1t you also wish tp send postage, e: 10 cents. Mention this Journal, as Adv. is inserted as our Contribution. b KIDNEY & LIVER s BITTERS A PLF ANT LAXATIVE N NOT INTOXICATING IERCE'S FAVORITE RESCRIPTION FOR WEAK WOMEN. Few persons need Go“ I be confined by Goutor Rheumatism, ifon the first a; proach of the paroxysm they ::“ recourse to this rem- edy ; then, a single dose is often sufficient. ¥ FOUGERA & CO., 2630 N. William 5t. Ac Specific W. T. HESS, NOTARY PUSLIC AND ATTURNEY-AT-LAW, Tenth Floor, Room 1015, Cl reckeis Bldg Telephone Brown. St Residence. 821 California st below Powell

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