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ADVERTISEMENTS. EMBROIDERY SALE BEGINS TO-MORROW, JANUARY 22. Over 50,000 Yards Just Arrived Direct From St. Gall, Switzerland. rchased before the recent advance, which enables us to per cent less than the present cost. ideries on sale represent an unrivaled collection of the patterns in Edgings, Insertions and All Overs, in the finest grades & bric, Swiss and Nainsook. The limited space permits the men- £ f only a few items of the GREAT VARIETY on sale. Here are me detalls: ON SALE TO-MORROW AND DURING THE WEEK. THE SEVI-ANNUAL | They were offer them for he choicest 3(: Y 000 yards Embroid- 8!0 Yard—2000 yards Embroid- Edgings, 1 to 2 inches| ~#“ ery Edging, 4 inches wide, gf| at patterns. in the latest patterns. 4 i—3000 yards Embroid- Yard—2000 yards Embroid- 123c ery Edging, 2 to 3 inches ery Edging, 4 inches wide, wide, choice designs. in entirely new patterns. Yard—3000 yards Embroid- Yard—3000 yards Embroid- I5¢ ery Edging, 4 to 6 inches 20C ery Edging, 7 inches wide, ie, all new nd very choice pat- new and open effects. ey 35¢ Yard—2000 yards Embroid- 25¢ Yard—2000 yards Embroid- ery ing, o inches wide, ery 1. 9 inches wide, beautiful open designs on fine cam- e prettiest ;‘)aucrns ever displayed.' bric. Exquisite styles in Cambric and Nainsook Edgings and Insertion; in sets, including the very latest effects in All Overs for yokings, etc.,, will be offered at proportionately low prices. SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT. i Our New Foulard Silks Have Arrived. A most gorgeous array of New Foulard Silks is gathered here for your pectiol All the spring favorite and most fashionable designs and color combinations are represented in this magnificent collection. As Recognized Headquarters for Foulard S“ks the manufacturers accorded us the privilege of first choice and ® confined our selections exclusively to us. Most of these pat- terns come in only one or two dress lengths, thus assuring ladies of ex- clusive gowns. RORCYCY 0 ORORORRON FORROL0N | ful campaign now going on in Luszon is THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, JANUARY 21, 1800, PACK TRAIN - AMBUSHED BY TAGALOS Filipinos Entrap Americans, Killing Two, Wound- ing Five. NINE MEN MISSING Disaster to a Force Escorting a Transport of Rations in Laguna Province. gt WASHINGTON, Jan, 20.—The first un- toward happening in the highly success- announced in the following cablegram:. “MANILA, Jan. 20.—A pack train of twenty ponies transporting rations be- tween Santo Tomas and San Pablo, La- guna province, escorted by fifty men un- der Lieutenant Ralston of the Thirtieth Infantry, was ambushed yesterday. Two men were killed and flve wounded, and nine are missing. The pack train was lost. The lieutenant and thirty-four men St R, [ el ng inves- £ FOR A SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER ‘ 2 We place on sale, commencing to-morrow, mo(f ces 24-inch All-Silk g. illed Foulards, the most exquisite designs and colorings, at the extra- O or low e of SO 85c A YARD ¢ 2_- M s ons now while the assortment is complete and these bar- g b " Our January Clearance Sale Is Drawing to a Close. Every Odd Lot and Broken Line wi regard to cost or val n Dress GoodsGloves., 150 &rade for...Q5¢ ut at once. be closed out abso- 1 1€ closed o H for $1.98 Of these we have about 30 dozen Sui l‘IgS that will be discontinued. They are , worth $4.50 the best French kid and hes wide, dfor $1.50 a pair; come cks and with 3-clasp fasteners; sizes 534 to 7. | bargain . | Some 2000 vyards, «it, T€NNIS broken lines. in y Flannels. fl':tty styles of pink, . blue OROROARCCRORORCY 1 0 RO EROTRORROON and lavender stripes; regular value 12%c a = Yol T elose at.s5Nard| O E H Size 45x36, made of a Flannel out [Pillow Jizc 4538, made s e lose at ........ Waists \_\;Cases S e BF not w y o hemmed, a e<—$3.95, grade: size , formerly $3 wJ:zxofl To clo 0. ; 423¢ DR and who was arrested by Officers Walsh WALSH TAKES UP THE WHITE MAN'S BURDEN LIVELY FIGHT PUT UP BY A LEGLESS MENDICANT. &an Leonard for vagrancy. 3 lar coon has been many | The times he has ap- he local xon(‘t‘t courts for vari ey particul; How the Pride of the Califor- nia-Street Station Picked Up More Than He Could Handle. limbs have been amputated at | i he uses the resultant de- | means with which to_excite of the passer-by. When- spoken to by a policeman he | ith a flow of obscenity and pro- | hat generally resuits in his arxo.\l,w’ is invariably followed by his | £ by some sym- ually because of his gently handled by the | standing the \lleness" terday when put under arrest he w commenced his usual tactics. He called K the two officers every name in the cata- 3 logue and a whole lot that showed him to s > bt o Tl Moo n inventive genius of more than or- | tal He cursed them person- | 2l T ndivi severally and collec- s one strip of courtplaster He ed their eyes, lungs, liv- | . t covers a wound fully i held forth eloguently on thel p- while on acters, moral, physical and intellec- | . s He ‘damned them in their private t and official capacity and then he began to ant on their families. ked on and smiled, the char- infirmity of the negro placing rda ce. Walsh tried to emulate = & s sncern of his more phlegmatic s to be as. | brother officer, but the negro's dlatribe 2 . =" | and his own Irish blood proved too much ® & in the shape of | of a combination for him to buck against. | a He stepped in to give his dusky prisoner )0k the shape of a legless |4 gentle reminder, and the next minute e rgAlgeciod & do e d fallen foul of a Montg afternoon jumped him like a fiend. He | Vs de the shoulders and tered him with one of the lcg rd that the d gether. d to dis negro. Noth oun guish betwezn iing could be Irishman and Winter Remedies 1 but a piebald mass revolving in a f The black man worked s well as with his arms, | jabs he sent in could be they landed on the nally the wagon drove up, and Leonard, thinking the begear had about enough fun for one afterno haule him off the nearly morib . Walsh and sent him to the station. A short list of useful reme- Policeman Walsh will not be allowed to ~ > di ¥ to-day, or until his face resumes i for winter months. of its naiural form, as it is feared s periors that with his present di Something you probably § | ficurcment he would be sure to break ti need. We want you to know ————————— we have it—and our price. MONIAL lOWDR. RADER. Dr. Cod Liver Oil | A testimonial will be tendered to Rev. Em zins more pure | William Rader prior to his departure for Baker’s ulsion co: . Europe by his many friends at the Y. M. than any other C. A. auditorium, Mason and Ellis streets, Bocile on Tue: evening, January 30. simliar preparation. 75¢ Baker’s Tar and Wild Cherry [ am has cured 2 cold and cough. Cold and Grippe lly useful in all ippe, coughs and There will be an excellent programme rendered and, as the price of admission | is but 50 cents, it is expected that a large | crowd will be present to testify to their | esteem for the eloquent divine. Seats can be obtained at Byron Mauzy 308 Post street, and at Sherman & Clay’s, on the corner of Rutter and Kearny streets. ————— Threatened to Kill His Wife. 25¢ 2 | Dan Condon, a man 67 years of age, re- 5C R | siding in Ocean View, was arrested last ap, 15 cents. | night and locked up in the Seventeenth- = g0 200 | street poiice station. Condon, who is a | 2 Soap, 15 cents. | shoemaker by trade, has been drinking | g 20¢, 4oc, Bse | / of late, and last night he made e o L ’ < preparation to make a corpse of his bet- Pinkham’s Compound, 75 ceats. | ter half. The timely arrival of the police | frustrated his plans and he was taken to Castoria, 25 cents. Carter’s Free de 10 ® the station as a precautionary measure. et ki i Grateful Musicians. | Madame Ellen Coursen-Roeckel was presented last Friday with a gold medal by the members of the Music Teacherq'i Association of California. The lady so honored is the president of the organiza- tion. The kindly sentiments expressed in the letter which accompanied the ft were highly appreclated by Mrs. Roeckel. , 15 cents. €1y 1o raiiroad points within es on orders of §5 or up. —_————— Eome time ago Nat Goodwin had an op- portunity to witness Alf Hampton's imi- tations of himself in his favorite roles. Hampton, knowing Goodwin was present, outdid himself, but at the close of the se- ance Goodwin had never a word to say. At last an intimate friend ventured to ask how he liked it. ““Well reru-a Good- win, “all 1 can say is, one of us is d—n 1128 MARKET ST. SAN FRANCISCO BROADWAY, oaxians | CONFESSED THAT SHE | woman's hus | to the last protesting his innocence. | who have become numerous and very ac- | ernment is a blessing, “‘Doret of the Fifth Infantry found the insurgents in the Batangas Mouniains, pgpared in ambush to meet him Hs| {lled eight, wounded three and captured | seventeen; also one Spaniard and six | rifles. His casualties were two men | slightly wounded. OTI8.” TEMPORARY TARIFF PREPARED FOR GUAM WASHINGTON, Jan. 20.—The Navy De- | partment has prepared a tariff for the | island of Guam based on the schedules now in use for the islands of Cuba and | Porto Rico. It was the intention to adopt | the Philippine schedules for the little | island, but it was found they were uan | slight’ modifications of the tariff which | existed before the archipel came into the possession of the United States and s0 were unsuitable because of the heavy discrimination in favor of Spain. It is | thought that the tariff as prepared for | Guam will be adopted for the island of | Tutulla. It {s understood that these | measures are only temporary and will pre- | vail only In the absence of some direction | by Congress. [ o | HOSPITAL CORPS MEN | FOR THE PHILIPPINES | WASHINGTON, Jan. 20.—The War De- | partment has arranged to send 150 hos- | pital corps men to the Philippines on the hospital Mi. ouri, which is to sail | some time next month. re this number of men it will be ary to withdraw recruits from in- struction at either the Washington bar- racks or el Island. Acting Hospl Steward and Hitson Jr. and forty- one privates ¢ pital corps now at the Washington barracks will start for | San Francisco in a few days. MORE AMMUNITION | FOR THE MARINE CORPS WASHINGTON, Jan. 20.—The Bureau | of Ordnance of the navy has made a | requisition to the ordnance department of the army for 1200 army magazine rifles and 2,400,000 rounds of ammunition for the use of the marine corps in the Philippines. A requisition will be soon made for 2000 army magazines for the nav: DEWEY MAY SIS I SEPTEMBER Invited to Admission Day Celebration. Mayor Phelan has just received the fol- lowing letter from Admiral Dewey in re- sponse to an invitation requesting his presence In this city at the fiftleth anni- versary of the admission of Californla to the Unlon. The letter is self-explanatory and gives fair promise of the hero being here next September: WASHINGTON, Jan. 12, 1900, My Dear Sir: I have the horor to acknowl- edge the recelpt this day, through Hon. Jullus Kahn, of an invitation 1 resentatives of the West”" to be present at the fiftieth anniversary of the admission of Cali- fornia to the sisterhood of States, at San Fran- | cisco, on September 9 next. I am not yet able | , state whether or not I will be bresent at that time, but I re you it will give me | great pleasure to pt your invitation If it 1s possible for me to do 0. Very truly yours, | GEORGE T Hon. James D. Phelan, cisco, Cal BY. n Fran- Mayor, MURDERED HER MOTHER SIOUX FALLS, §. D., Jan. 20.—Informa- tion has here that Mrs, Hcrne, who recently died in the State of | Washington, confessed on her deathbed that she murdered her mother, Mrs. Thomas Egan, near this city September 12, 18%0. For this crime Thomas Egan, the | band, was hanged, although | Mrs. | Van Horne was his stepdaughter. Egan’s | clothes were found in the barn covered | with blood, and this caused his convic- | tion The physicians at the hospital | where Mrs. Van Horne died_took down | her confession and sent it to Egan’s rela- tives here. WILL OPPOSE MORMONS. CLEVELAND, Jan. 20.—The Utah Gos- pel Mission has been incorporated for the purpose of fighting Mormonism all over the country by Rev. George H. McGraw, Allen K. Ford, Captain Thomas Wilson, W. M. Rayne, Rev. Dr. R. Moffatt, Rev. J. D. Williamson, John Ralph Owens, Rev. John D. Nutting and Rev. Dr. Charles F. Thwing. Rev. Mr. Nutting is in New York in- teresting gentlemen of that city in the project. nti-Mormon literature will be circulated in _abundance and the plan is to send out 2000 missionaries to counter. act the efforts of Mormon missionaries, tive. ——— SUFFOCATED BY SMOKE. NEW ORLEANS, Jan. 20.—A fire which started in a barroom in the old St. Mary market neighborhood soon after midnight obtained considerable headway before the firemen reached the scene and half a dozen persons in the ndiolnlng building were overcome by smoke before help reached them. They ians. Four were taken out dead and the others will hardly live. The family is named Gioradano. The building is an im- mdse brick structure honeycombed with PoOr tenants. | feel no bitterness toward Mrs, Russell, | in local soclety. | of blood to rush to the skin. Those arte- | ditions caused by it. —_———— Common whisky is a cursethe Old Goy- . a taste for Jamal around the reservatio ACCUSED OF THE WANTON SHOOTING OF A FILIPINO Serious Charge Against Captain McGowan of the "United States Monmitor Momadmock. 8 g BOSTON, Jan. 20.—A letter ‘recelved from a naval officer at Manila, dated December 12, says that two scandals in the United States squadron are causing general talk. One is the shooting of & Filipino on board the Mon- adnock by Captain McGowan because the man climbed the side of the vessel forward instead of aft, &s demanded by naval usage. It is maintained that the captain intended to fire over the man and scare him but that he was hit in the hip and died soon afterward. The other subject of comment i the fact that Commander 8. W. Very of the Castine, up to the present time, has had every officer on the vessel with ; one exception under suspension and one of them has objected. Although the authorities desire to quiet the proceedings, the officer will have to be heard RSO SICRICI VOGN HFOLONOLO Indians have discovered that it is as flery & beverage as cheap whisky. A teaspoon- ful will cause cho! ing and coughing for geveral minutes In a throat unaccustomed to swallowing the powerful stuff. %od ink is another favorite beverage of the Indians since the Federal authorities have begun to exercise stricter supervision over their copper-skinned wards. It is the or- dinary red ink which a bookkeeper uses and the matter will be carried to the department at Washington. in his balance sheets and which book- SAYS THAT LENT JILTED HER AND contents with relish. Essences which white K‘eopls use for guadlnn are swal- Miss Wood Lays Claim to the Attorney. lowed e Indians and 9::! been un& in that w-{.v!:r years. l}c?‘gol. mc!ountod po! °ldn|mon M' of the country, B consumed in - able quantities ted with m.‘:-dfl.—g:fi— ‘waukée Sentinel. OF THE DAY. RVINGTON, Jan. 20. — The oldest na- tive daughter of California, who was born before the discovery of gold, dled during the past week. She was Mrs. Elizabeth Davis, wife of Hiram Da- vis of this place, and was well known throughout Northern California. The deceased was born at Bodega In June, 1847. She resided there until four- teen years ago, when she married Mr. Da- vis and moved to his home in Irvington. She leaves a husband and one child. The funeral was attended by a large number of people, many of whom came from dif- ferent parts of the Btate. Lo s Customs Collector Smith’s Death at Gibara Reported by Colonel Bliss. WASHINGTON, Jan. 20. — Assistant Becretary Meiklejohn of the War Depart- ment recelved to-day from Colonel T. H. SAYS HE WAS HER FIANCE Miss Nellle Wood, who claims that for the past six years she has been the af- flanced bride of Eugene Lent, is anxious to see the man who two days ago an- nounced his engagement to Mrs. Bertha ‘Welch-Russell ornamenting one of the slabs at the Morgue. According to Miss Wood, Eugene Lent 1s “a villain and ought to be shot.” The woman does not propose to do the shoot. ing herself or to seek redress in a court of justice for the humiliation she claims to have suffered. All she wants is to see her story published broadcast, so the ‘world may know Eugene Lent just as he 1s. Miss Wood sent for reporters from all the papers yesterday and told the follow- ing story of her woes: “Until I read the announcement of Mr. Lent’s engagement to Mrs. Russell in the papers,” sald she, “I had no Intimation that all was over with us. I have been engaged to Mr, Lent six years. He vis- ited me ten days ago. He saide nothing then about breaking off the engagement. f the commissary department, in He at that time reproached himself and | Bliss o 8 said that he Was nat worthy of me, and | charge of the custom service in Cuba, a I rebuked him for making such a state- report on the case of Collector James W. Smith at Gibara, who was shot on the th inst. by a Cuban named Cannidaty, editor of the Las Clarides, a newspaper published at Gibara, and who died last night. Colonel Bliss says that on the 10th inst. he received a telegram from Collec- tor Smith, giving an account of his trou- ble with the Cuban editor in the follow- ing words: 1 know of no reason why Mr. Lent Mrs. Russell, except and 1 have nome. I ment. has jilted me for that she has money but I think that Mr. Lent has acted like a villaln, Had he been man enough to | come and tell me that he desired to break the engagement that would have been | somewhat different. But he has chosen | to humiliate me, and I will not allow the | matter to go by without having all the facts known. I have determined the pub- lic shall know how 1 have been treated what sort of a man Mr. Eugene Lent is. “I have known Mr. Lent almost from childhood. 1 have been warned against him, but I could not distrust him, for be gcemed entirely devoted. There were cir- cumstances that, as I now recall them ought to have told me the truth, but i blindly trusted. The first 1 ever saw of Mrs. Russell was when he gave a dinner to her in the University Club. He invited me to be present. 1 told him he was do- | ing a foollsh thing, and he answered that t was a matter of business. He was not making much money as a lawyer, he ex- plained; the Welches were rich, and if he Could get their law business it would be a good thing, worth fully $5000 per annum, and, of course, what helped him, he said, would be good for us both. I’ went to the dinner. “Not long ago Mr. Lent told me that he was without money; that his mother was il and all allowances of money from her had been stopped. He said he was anxious to raise money. I offered him my engage- ment ring to ralse money on tel;forlu’l Y. He afterward told me that he had carried it back to Hammersmith & Field and that they had given him one-half what it orig- inally cost. I was surprised and grieved | afternoon by the editor of a local paper in an encounter resulting from personal | insults and lles published by him in re- | gard to the management of the custom- | house. I was unarmed at the time an disarmed him after being shot. 1 wa operated on, and the doctor thinks I will be able to return to my duties in about three weeks. In the meanwhile, the In< terpreter is managing the affairs of the Custom-house.” In his telesram to the War Depart. ment announcing the death of Smith, which is dated Havana, January 20, Col- onel Bliss said that Smith's leg was am- utated January 18 and he died the fol- owing evening. Smith served In the Spanish war as sec- ond lieutenant of the Second Volunteer Infantry. He resided in New Orleans. Slosiis’ Qs KILLED BY MORPHINE. Cause of the Death of a Well-Known Temperance Lecturer. PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 20.—Excessive use of morphine, to which he had been ad- dicted for the past four years, was the cause of the death in & hospital here last night of Will J. McConnell of Cleveland, Ohlo, well known in the West as a tem- erance lecturer. He came to this city that he could do that. He sald that he | Wednesday. That night he was found un- would not ask me to give him back other | consclous on the stréets and removed to articles of value, because they had my | a hospital. -— Fell to Her Death. Mrs. Mary Ryan, an aged woman, who lived at SI2 Jessie street, died at the Re- ceiving Hospital last night from injuries | probably recetved in falling out of the name upon them. I would have given him_back everything that ever he gave me if he had asked it. “We had no quarrels.” Mr. Lent, the gentleman Miss Wood claims won her affections only later to throw them aside, would say nothing re- garding the sensational statements Miss | window. About 8 o’clock in the morning Wood %md seen fit to make. he 18 a | Christopher Moe found Mrs. Ryan lying lady,” was all he would say, “and I will | i an unconsclous condition in an ailey- ot say anything against her. Miss Wood i{s the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Jay Lagsden and the niece of R. G. Dun of the Dun Commercial Agenay of New York. She llves at the Palace Hotel with her parents and is well known way next to her home. Mrs. Ryan and | her daughter, Annie Ryan, had been drinking quite freely all day, and both | were intoxicated. Mrs. Ryan'did not re- | cover consciousness, so she could give no information as to the manner in which she received her fall. Her daughter was therefore taken into custody pending an investigation. Sty QRN Popular Young Woman Dies. Special Dispatch to The Call. SANTA CRUZ, Jan. 20.—Miss Adeline Becker, one of the most promising young ladies of this city, died at her home this | morning. She was born in this city and juated in the class of '83 from the a Cruz_ High School and later from State Normal School. The funeral will be held Monday from the Congrega- | tional church, of which ghe was an activ member. BLUSHING A DISEASE. French Savant Says It Is, Due to Ereuthophobia or Erythro- phobia. The general idea that blushing is due to fullness of blood in the brain Is incor- rect, according to the new theory of a | French expert, It arises from the Trelaxa- tion of the arteries of the face, neck and | breast, thus allowing an extra quantity ries have In their walls a layer of rings of muscular fiber, which contract or re- lax eccording to the condition of the pa- | tient, and so permit the arteries to be- | come more or less full of blood. When they are extra full, which occurs in weak- ness, the patient blushes. . Blushers are more liable to redden in mp or stormy weather than in the cold vs of winter or the hot days of sum- mer. If this glowing of the face were the result of emotion, why this difference? If it be due to weakness the fact assumes the appearance of probability. There are two clesely allled causes of blushing. One is named ‘“‘ereuthophobia’; that is the ordinary cause—weakness and | the extreme sensitiveness and other con- The other is desig: e Death of Mrs. Tobriner. OAKLAND, Jan. 20.—Mrs. Ida Tobriner, widow of the late Jacob Tobriner, died last night after a lingering illness at her | home in this city. Besides a large circle of "friends she leaves six children—Mrs. | Mel 8. Bodt and Alice, Isaac, [ Hattie'and Flora Tobriner—to mourn her | toss. James Pyle Called by Death. NEW YORK, Jan. 20.—James Pyle, the well-known soap manufacturer, died at his home in this city to-day, aged 77 years. 1 was shot in the left thigh yesterday | Melville, | TAQUT BAND ANNIRILATED BY MEXICANS Bloody Battle ai Mazababa Lasting From Daybreak to Sundown. WILL EXD REBELLION Nothing Left of the Once Powerful Tribe but & Few Scattered Parties. ey S Special Dispatch to The Call NOGALES, Ariz., Jan. 20.—A telegram was received in Nogales from Torin, Rio Yaqui, Sonora, Mexico, this morning an- nouncing a big battle between General Lorenzo Torres’ forces and the Yaqui In- dians last Thursday, Jan , which lasted from daybreak untfl §:80 o'clock in the evening. The Indians had gathered In force near the villags of on the Yaqui River, at which place ‘were sur- rounded and almost wllgd.l’ annibi- lated. e tol . hd”u lost over fllldmm prisoners. No men- tion is made of the number of wounded. Among a large number of prisoners res- cued from the rebels wers Father Beltram and three Josephine nuns, who have been held about seven mont! The loss to the Mexicans has not been | reported, but on account of the long and | bersistent fight it is feared the victory | cost many killed and wounded. The battle | of Thursday will beyond a doubt end the | rebellion and result in the complete ex- termination of the Yaqui tribe of Indians. General Torres will follow up his great victory of Thursday, and the last stand of the once powerfu uis will date from the battle near Mazababa. —————————— VESSEL ASHORE. LEWES, Del, Jan. 20.—The Fenwick life-saving station reports a vessel throw- ing up rockets about eight miles off shore. It is thought to be a steamer ashore on Fenwick Island shoals. The tug North 80 to her assistance. Fenwick Island is pen. Baggara Ferocity. | English general from Calro was inspect- | ing the frontier force at Wadi Halfa. The | troops were engaged in a fleld-day when | news came that & party of Dervishes had | attacked and put to the sword the village | of Addendan, some twenty miles north of Halfa. The Camel Corps at once started to 1r¥1 and cut off the raldeg in the desert on their return journey, but with little chance of success, as the news was more | than twenty-four hours old. After going some fifty miles a patrol got on to their tracks and found there the body of a | black girl some ten years of age, her feet cut to ribbons by the rocks and stones over which she had been driven, her back | flayed by_the stripes of her merciless captors. She had been beaten alo; until she could move no more and then left to | die in the desert. Within a few weeks of this a Dervish | patrol came down to within a | ras one evening. Two little wers going out from the village to their father, who was tending his saki ‘They met this patrol and greeted the leader. He replied with a spear-thrust and his com- R_flnh}nn finished the work he h: begun. he poor wee bodies were found by the troops a short time afterward beheaded and disemboweled. tamable ferocity of the B.gouu Soon | after the occupation of the Dongola pro- vince a Camel Corps patrol went out from Debba to the wells of Kofriat. These eath - wells are very deep and a long rope is | requisite in order to obtain water, lose | to the wells the patrol discovered the dead body of a rBe? ara warrior along- | side his slaughte: orse. The man, a | fugitive from Dongola and tort thirst, had arrived at the wells. no means of obtaining water and oceeg!t; ing his fate, he had deliberately killed | horse, broken his saddle, cut his bridle to leces, buried his weapons and then 'm- v laid himself down to dio, satistied that golk:iln‘ of his would fall into his enemy’'s ands. | rincipal leader {n most of the fron- | tier ralds was one Osman Azrak by | who_afterward met a well-merited at Omdurman. He was the ogre of the frontier and enjoyed an almost supernat- ural reputation, combined with an un | canny habit of being killed and co;ng‘ K life again. The inhabitants o eris, which_oasis he raided, described him to the officer eomm:mdlni the Camel Corps as a giant eight feet high and with one eye in the middle of his forehead.—Corn- | bill Magazine. —_———————. Wedding Superstitions. | wedding dress nV\ onsider herself | blessed. w America has left Delaware breakwater to | | about twenty miles south of Cape Henlo- ' e | | | In the beginning of the year 189 the | le of Bar- | The following incident shows the un-| | The bride who finds a spider on her | DOCTOR | MEYERS & CD. AVE BUILT UP THE LARGEST AND MOST SUCCESSFUL PRACTICE IN AMERICA BY CURING THEIR PATIENTS. DR. MEYERS & CO. do not ask for momey until their pa- tients are cured. They never ad- minister dangerous or injurious medicines—they avoid the use of electric belts. They make no charge for consultation and ad- vice at office or by Iletten All their prescriptions are care- fully compounded in their own private laboratory, free to their 4 BANK DEPOSIT | | . deposit the Seriitulesny DR. MEYERS & CO. are the specialists on the Pacific Coast wi cure diseases and weakness of MEN EXCLUSIVELY. Ne Incurable Cuses Taken at Any Price. | MEYERS & CO. GIVE MEN Lasting Vigor And Cure the Following Allments: Privats Diseases |Lost Manhood Bladder Diseases|Sleeplessness Liver Diseases | Despondency Nervous Debtl Heart Diseases | 00 Det:lll,lyw Spine Diseases |Loss of Memory Stomach Diseases|Bjood Polson Kldney Diseases |Rectal Diseases ydrocels Lung Diseases aricocele tarrhal Rheumatism DR. MEYERS & CO. conduct the largest and best equipped medical in- and have the mest extemsive practice in the world. HOME CURES. FREE BOOK. Thousands of men are cured at o T R e = question 1.}“'21“ All confidential. o printin Lopes packages to indicate unn‘ -d.n-hve e CURES SENT SAFELY BY MAIL, DR. MEYERS & C0., A Staff of Skilled Speetalists, Ed The bride who dreams of fairies the !E{ghr J)efore her marriage will be thrice essed. If the bride m carries a ture [ horseshoe in is pocket he g - | have good luck Ship marriages are consid but lucky. Get married on lui. or don’ | get married at all. No bride or groom should be given a | telegram while on the way to church. It | 1s_positively a sign of evil, | | IF the wedding ring is dropped during | | the ceremony the bride m: as wis! ! }}ersel‘(( unborn, for she will alwa: have | | 11 Tuck. Kiss a_bride after the ceremony, and before the newly made husband has a | chance to do so, and you will have ex- | cellent Tuck throughout the Jear. Maldens eager to wed shouid give digh- | | water heated to the boiling point a wide | berth. It means that they will not marry | for a long time if they attempt to cleanse ' dlg};‘es l‘é‘ wa{)n{dw hot.h ou! a Dbride perchance see a cof | while being driven to th railway station rior to departing upon her honey: { Bhe should: order Th Tn back and start over again, surely meet with bad luck.—Kansas City Journal. SR R A At Tceland pontes are fed in winter | fsh heads. © o nated “erythophobia,” and is the fear that one will blush unconsciously at awkward moments. The latter is a peculiar form of the dis- | ease. The individual In question, although not given to blushing, becomes gradual possessed with a fear that he will dg s at some inopportune time, and this fear grows upon him until it completely mas- ters him and makes him grow red in the face when there is not the slightest rea- son for it. At the most simple question the color rises and he {s placed in the most absurd situation. He {s looked upon with sus- picion, because other people accept his confusion as consciousness of gullt; he recognizes the fact, and of course his con- dition grows worse. Weakness is respon- sible in this case also for the deplorable state of things, for when the sufferer is taken in hand and gets “braced up” he smiles at his former fears. It must be a very strong emotion that causes a flush to come to the face of a really healthy man or woman. Whatever they may feel, they will not show it any more than they will show fear when con- fronted by great danger. In the latter case there is no doubt about the danger; | it is fully understood that there may be a | feeling of fear within, but it is not shown by the face. A similar remark applies to the sense of shame under reproach. That feeling will not be betrayed by a blush, | the merit of CASCARETS. friends how good they are. $ : 5 b £ individual f: t affiicted by Now that soundslike a liberal offer, but e vt Eoarsons Weckiy: o don't count for success. ' 11s you sure and SOUE ood word Jox —————— that will make them famons in) ths frooce Fire Ink for the Red Man. b o in as in the The Indian policeman who came with the witnesses ?oo the Grand Jury Monday said that it would be a long fall and a late freeze-up. He declined to say how hg knew this, but seemed positive. A clvilized Indian who came down said that the reservation Indians are acquiring 9 Einfer. fhe stores ns, t ¥ : ¢ ¢ ¢ : dle ginger as a legal price to anyone who fails to get satisfaction from the use of CANDY CATHARTIC past. Start with a box today. sample and booklet. Address Ster! Best for the Bowels dup, a5 (he | @nEmEnERERERERERERERERERER SRR EREREN SR Weekly Call, §1 per Year : 5 5 5 5 5 Millions use them and tell their ‘We want to give back the purchase Free 10¢, 25¢, 50¢, all Wmmufl.l | ; : g 5 § e driver to turn back | or else she will | Established 19 Years. 731 MARKET ST., 8. p. TAKE ELEVATOR TO THIRD FLOOR. 7. § to HOURS: |Evenings, 1.\. Sundays, 9 te 5. $60.00 FOR 3 ROOMS 0AK FURNITURE. BEDROOM SET, 3 PIECES 1 ROCKER, | B ENT KITCHEN TABLE ARD 2 ke AT™ ESTIMATES CHEERFULLY GIVEN, Also full line of CARPETS from 40e Upe T. BRILLIANT, '338-340 POST ST., Opp. Union Square, cor. Powell. evenings. Free delivery | meda”and” Hesheley. " SOHVeTY Onkiand, Ala- BAJQ CALIFO.RNIA ‘Damiana Bitters | | |8 A GREAT RESTORATIV [ I%A Sxpar E. INVIGORA- DR.HALL’S REINYIGORA Five hundred reward for case we cannot cure. This remedy stops all losses hours,” cures Emission ency, Varicocele, Gonor Gleet, Fits. Strictures, Menhood and all was 4::“ self-abuse or excesses. led, §2 Dottle: 3 . bottles, STIT T., @EL.D Lost § ting effacts | s : aranteed ‘o . ¥, d, C: Also for sale at 1073% Market st 8 ‘; .\lr‘or‘"'t" diseases quickly cured. Sena for free book PILES Combpletely eradicated with out cutting or tying. \'l. cure, no pay. For iaform tion address S. F. RECTAL INSTITUTE, 170 Marke: