The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, February 18, 1900, Page 20

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20 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, NDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1900. The Men Demanded the Release of Two Companions Who Were Under Arrest, and on Being Refused They Opened Fire. After the Joke Was Two Years Old the Couple Applied to the rts to Have It SPRING 1900 We Are Opening Daily New SUitS .;.. C Judg tion with the object of releasing two of thelr comrades who had been arrested yesterday. During the fight Police Officer | Newt Stewart and one negro soldier were killed, and it is believed that another of the soldiers is wounded. Yesterday afternoon the polics locked Called Of. el ey R LN [ EL PASO, Tex., Feb. 1.—At 5 o'clock p ekl Digalieh &5 T this morning a mob of negro soldiers from L) 9 e Hughes Fort Bliss attacked the city police sta- [\ eW lr S ae . The Latest PARISIAN and wvon” New Jackets COUNTRY ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED. SEND MEASURES. MIRRGEWNS 7 AL - RGN NLY A JOKE W SOLDIERS £ 1Ty OF ——===| s | CLOAK AND SUIT DEP'T. & | up a corporal from the fort for being | drunk and threatening to chase the police force out of the city, and last night an- other drunken soldier was arrested. Com- took the news to rades of the prisoner + : t 7 : % ONE SOLDIER AND ONE POLICE- : ? b4 1 bé ® g jrefeefe el eeiroferfofenfonferfoelunfocfooocrfontrfrmfonfosfeafenfenfocfole focfofonfonforfinfreforforfeafenforierfufule cfocferferforfrfocfofocrloriood rgensons, was orsanised. and st | = CITY OF PARIS DRY GOODS COMPANY, 3 daylight & descent was made on | SE. Corner Goary and Stocklon Strests, Ssn Francisco. ¥ minutes before 5 o'clock two of UNION SQUARE. - i rifles in hand, entered the | icn and demanded of Officer on duty, the sur- i DAME DEMOCRACY—“WeZell, Here’s Your Lesson.” ount —New York World. el L . S S A e s = she replied that | 2 s 0! nts sl tion and they opened fire on him. Jailer | [jbrary, where you will ind any amount E e e e S e S o e S Richard Blacker, who sleeps in a reom | of ljterature on that subject. | be for & perlod not to exceed ninety adjoining the station office, aroused by et i e | after which appointments shall be & NEVADA—A. C. C.; Bacra- | cordance with civil service rules. 1. Miss Mignon Nevada, daugh- | likely that when the Board of Pu @ ¢ - et ® . ® + & ® the shots, sprang out of bed, grabbed his | MIGNO Sared him o pistol and started into the office. As 500n | ponio Cal. likel T abit GOVERNOR PENNOYER HOLDS BRYAN RESPONSIBLE. | 23 he appeated in the doorway one of the | 10" o} Emme Nevada, is & very gifted | Works ook office it had cerialn work to g Iy e, e —_———— Blacker dropped to his knees and, at his | Child, under 13 vears of a€5 JNE 05| the first obtainable to perform the worl. ke him take a dare and first shot, one of the negroes staggered 10 Sl L PORTLAND, Feb. 17.—Ex-Governor Sylvester Pennoyer to-day gave out the following statement re- garding the financial bill which hes been passed by Congress: “I hold Colonel Bryan really responsible for the law. If he had not artfully captured the nomination four years ago with his carefully prepared speech either Bland, Teller or Stevenson would probably have been nominated and elected. Bryan defeated himself and his party by his volubility, and the party’s defeat then was - permits e gold standard law now. In all time only one man has been endowed with sufficient power to de- | i’)‘r‘fjgfl"""v“:‘;‘s“’ioflun':ll‘f"‘,’!:":hf;‘eg‘;";“gf‘h = T na feat the enemy with a jawbone.” | clutched his gun in his_hands. X;\ .;eum:il States and Aguinaldo.” | partments in which oo Bhana st g A | rifle and traces of blood were also found, r SR - If & man | ployed demand. The applicant should ——— | Which indicated that another of the ne-| PASTURAGE—H., Frank, Cal R e | system of State highways extending from s wounded. places animals on a pasturage farm and | Bi% S T8 BCRRTIECEn o8 GF Ve re app Redding, in Shasta County, at the head of h amento Valley, “fo Bakersflold, Sern County, at the head of the San Joa' Blacker and Scott pursued the | fails to pay for the pasturage, the owner | ., 'yi. ., which will give him all ¢ n Valley, which, the report stated, and ran out, closely followed by his com- | the catalogues go, none of them has been | cry(r, SERVICE FOR MINORS—A. B, panion, and the entire squad left on a | Published In bock form. | 8., City. The only position that comes About twenty shots were fired in all. | ppwpy's DENIAL-M. W., Lowney, | under the United States civil servics rules wart was shot tw and died at 7 o'clock. A trail of blood | followed and ce through the lungs | . "" \ 4 ira) Dewey did make a denial | applicable to applicants under 13 years hat he and United States Consul Pratt | age is that of messenger boy. An app g T e et on | had promised independence to Aguinaldo. | cant 14 y i - o e s published what purport. | nation, h between the United | years. i Fun. i 1 nd and wife Sacramen once it Jldlers, but were unable to make | of the pasture cannot sell the animals | GRG0 P sts pastured by simply advertising a proposed | desired ir uld have to mence an a s stationed at Fort Bliss be- |sale. He w ABOUT A PATENT_D. A. P., Canyon, ¥ s P | d be constructed easiest and cheapes[{ | long I’Q Company P‘[ lTwi(elnt‘)'-‘f‘ljghm‘en;a‘:- tion against the owner. | cal. If you desire to obtain a patent for gr £ d | and which, for the least expendituré o | try. Posses are.out lookin, A q N DUS' 0, Newv! valuable t the ¢ | money, cotild furnish an object lesson in rauders, though at the post it is claimed | ANIMAL INDUSTRY—C. B.. Newville, | 3 valuable invention and do mot know w good roads to the greatest number of pec- | that the only missing soldiers are the |Cal. For information in regard to the an- | anything about the mod ple. dead man and the two prisoners In the | ymal industry in Australia address the the safest thing to do i T &e g The committee also recommended that police station. Under Secretary of Agriculture, Depart- relia L t who will £ | the subject of good roads be made a po- et The police have learned from the two | mant of Mines and Agriculture, Sydney | litical {ssue. The bonding system was pri the name of one of the soldiers | N"'S .. Australia; also the Under S and preserve your 1t jeopardize if you secure a patent on There are a number who did the shooting in the station office, | riiary of Agriculture, Brisbane, Austra- | i uin | recommended as the most economical | G _ Meeting ofiSan dgaq ! method. and in a special clause the inac, ood Work of Inspec O ot sy oites it iati | tion_of ‘the Legislature in the matter o 3 Lochart have demanded the surrender o - - £ SEVERE SNOWSTORM Association. good roads v\ufn-grened. Tt was recom- tors at Man”a' the man from the commandant of the| MARRIAGE OF COUSINS-J. P. !\.‘ mended that a copy of the resolutions be | post. The latter has given assurance that | Stanford, Mont. In a number of the| RAGES IN NEW YORK ymmended to the SBacramentq Valley he will lend all possible assistance in|giatee Montana included, the marriage of Steame Graf Waldersee Goes elopment sclation, with the re-| MANILA, Feb. 17.—Out of a total of nging. the guilty men to justice, and it | F20eh (ORHIT Tt o by Aground and Traffic Generally Is - | quest that it crate with the San Joa- , : 4 lieved that there will be no further 1 ¥ | Guin Valley Assoclation by the appoint- | ift¥-one cases of suspected bubon "The entire police force, however, | mutely declares that marr ! two proved genui first e is wrong and Almost at a Standstill. STOCKTON, Feb. 17.— f the San s | t of a committee of five to work in | Plague reported fort; 3 cen mounted and armed with W s give in courtroom | conjunction with a like committee from |and thirty-two deaths resulted, half of %, to be In readiness for any emer- | Of Its d i g oot g courthouse. 1 the latter assoclation. to report o2t cthe |them being Chinamen. There were twelve | gency. The feeling here agalnst the sol- | Snion with imbecility, want of speech or | The child edited delegates—six | Bext quarterly m 3 s cases within the last week, mostly w diers is very bltter, and many citizens | pooi o 3 { | cal . | that the report will be adopted. 3 . mostly within | FRE8 B NeH their services to the civil | hearing, or both and th called cou o'clock ~ train real les in the | “Tha report of President Buell was a |the walled city, and a hundred inspect . e | ‘. . Besides the regular | review of the work of organizing the |under the superintendency of a health of- | 2uthorith FREEZE-OUT POKER—P. Citv. In \ce yesterday | association and the subsequent work of | ficer, Major Edle, are enforcing the 2 the game of freeze-out poker for the the executive committee. It contained no | tary regulations. Thirty of the Inspecto £ drinks side bets do not have anything to | : % oo 6o oe0e0o@|T ndations. are Chinamen. who have been furnished | ANSWERS TO Etalks e L1t man, ning sesslon was taken up with | by the Chinese merchants. The local | rumber of be n s gt mo > child's cousin twice removed is one's fi ¢ on of the proposition to bond | health department census shows the pop- & et the ses. mot fate for the improvement of roads. | ulation of Manila is about 190.000, including CORRESPONDENTS | Pot, the B e e A resolution was passed urging the Cali- } 31,000 Chinese. | . so, does not affect his right In the - fornia representatives in Congress to sup- WASHINGTON, Feb. 17.—General Otis | ‘fyltd?..:x"'n(}- Feitiis e arred. out of the |Temo P _the chi ;‘n b gy e B t “ o 4 or e 2 > et > It - Lo/ b A first cous T ved the Hepburn-Morgan bill for the { to-day reported the following casualties main game because he refused to take up | COUSIn A first cousin once removed, ction, fortification and control of | among the troops: MRS. JULIAN—A. 8., City. Mrs. Mar-| rgua canal. ] There was further | Killedi—Thirty-ninth Infantry, January | tin Julian, befors she became such by | side bet. jowed by a th fourth, ete. Th ion on the methods to be pursued |13, Lipa, Luzon. Company B, James ¢.| marriage, was Mrs. Robert Fitzsimmons,| THIE SUPREME JUSTICES—H. J. C.,|tion of an individual to his father's ters of ilx:f,r:fn(h;n\x‘r':”fr);nqfigr:ame{tmv?a: s Tobpiae - 7 = = 2 Virginia City, Nev. The Justices of the rst cousin. once Fe- decided to hold the next meeting of the REPUBLICAN PARTYJ. 8., City. On|gypreme Court of the United States are: e Ty association in Bakersfield on May 2. An | the 27th of August, 135, there was orza- | pelyille W. Fuller of Illinois, Chief Jus cousin, twice removed, or third elaborate banquet was spread in the Yo- nized in Ban Francisco the Union Repub- | tice; John M. Harlan of Kentucky, Hor- | oonc @ it TS o e faure out the eemite Hotel and several toasts were elo- lican party, which had on _its banner | ace Gray of Massachusetts, David J.| raiationship of cousins down to the forty- hranch ‘Freedom, Fremont and the Rallroad.” | Brewer of Kansas, Henry B. Brown of | Thiu®] Michigan, George Shiras Jr. of Penas that 15, &£ 30u Rave e a responded to. pany time and patience. nett, A. left hand, severe; Horace N. 6 p. m. & 4 e “ompany C, thorax, severe. Thiit | MMy HOPE-B. M., C i - i | s ve-| 4 Blabth T e e JIM) E—B. M., y | ward D. White of Louisiana, S — et [ GERMAN EDITCR LEARNS yavas. Luzon Renben O Hierorymuy, | Hope, the burglar, not br Peckham of New York and Jo-| payp WALLS C. L, Clay. The fol Nevada Bank of California i o Calligrmn: | lowing cement is used on walls that ars of Montgomery and Comm: RAILWAY PAPERS—J. M. K., Stock-| affected by dampness, and 1t is said that, i 2 ton, Cal. In the city of New York there | while it keeps out dampness, it possesses Deutsche Xolonial Zeitung Tardily | try, January 24, Doninglay, Luzon, Se HERRN ; —S. . City. Alloxandnr is not a periodical published under the | the advantage for m:l painAL withou‘t tim | geant Major Robert E. Welson, rig Herrmann, the magician, was born in | jtje of The Rallway Times. The railroad advantage of smell: “A coat of ox- | Announces a Seizure by gltiteal ‘reglon, slight. Paris, France, February 10, 1844, and died | publications are: Engineering News and of zinc, mixed with size mads up the liner Through- | , in Long | sout New Jersey, everything partial blockade by the snow. WALKED INTO TOWN the Sather Bank, at the Company L., right thigh, savere. irty- WE HOLD WAKE ISLAND |scond it ahmaary s, Dinapiian Luzon, Claude I.. Pearson, ompany right hand, moderate. Thirty-third Infa R PO rPeOeded-o Uncle Sam. _— | on_a raiiroad train near Great. Vail | Railway Journal, Raiflroad Gazeite, Amer. ! 1. is first laid on the plastered Special Cable to The Call and New York Her- : ot o | the State of New York, December 17, i55. | jcan Car Bullder and Railroad Journal. | wall or ceiling, and after that a_coat o WITH A MANGLED ARM a. “Co nted, 1300, by the New York | ,B° 8ure to seo the water color exhibl = Tocomative Engineering. Rallway and | chloride of ginc applied; prepared in ths tion at Wm. Morris’ art rooms, 248 Sutter. CIDADEL—A. O. S.. City. This depart- | Equipment Reporter, Railroad Car Jour- | same manner as the first wash. The ox- ny. BERLIN, Feb. 17.— <olo- T ment has not been able to find the word | nal and Street Railway Journal. Address | ide and c¥ oy T, 1. The Depiaehackel Petition for a New School. “Cida etk | Ay ‘of these and you wiil secure a sample | bination nial Zeitung reports that the United States 5 Cidadel.” The correspondent is of the |ans | smooth and polished as glass.” | has seized Wake Island, which les to the | The Supervisors’ Judiciary Committee | opinfon that the word Is of Indlan origin, | COPY- — " Another method as a protection against | north of the Marshall Islands. vesterday considered the petition of Im- | Does any reader of this department| yA\NDLORD AND ROOMER-T. and | damp wall is the following: “Take & WASHINGTON, Feb. 17.—Commander |Provement Club No. 1 of South San Fran- | know? - L., City. If an individual rents a room in | pounds of motiled soap and dissolve | B D. Taussig, commanding the Benning- | §i°50, &sking the co-operation of the board | NOT CLEAR ENOUGH-D. P., City. | jodging or rooming house by the month | one gallon of water. This compound is 3 s . 5 E 001- | i e e s e hba : o £ 4| to be laid on the wall steadily and care- ton, took possession of Wake Island In | house in that district. The petition was | | ¢ Quer. TeE © over money in a | and the landlord desires the room occupi fully with a large flat brush, so as not to he name of the United States on January | referred to the Board of Education for | Eame of draw poker is not clearly stated | by that individual. he must give notice of | 5, a froth or lather on the surface; the 1599, A brass plate was screwed (e the | examination and report. and the amounts ed are so badly | not less than fifteen davs, so as to EIVe | wagh to remain twenty-four hours in or- ot e T e S ren uhe. fing | _ The joint meeting of the Hospital and | mixed that it is impossible to furnish an | the tenant an opportunity to secure other | §0™1 qre™ rh Y TniX halt @ pound of ¢ wheels. From the place P S S R S S S A . R 7 o answer. uarters. A 'andlord has no right on a ith all a [ ] ® ¢ ® é ® hoisted bearing this inscription: Judiciary committees for the conslder ar e, alum with four gallons of water, and ap- p 3 e | day's or three days’ notice to a tenant to Siy in the same manner over the conting occurred Ferraril ’ < % 4 3 n 2 “The United States of America, Willlam | tion of the petition to' prevent further | J SPECTIN "OUR— o] . loon & quarter of a mile | oeternoon has been bringing in prominent | ;e Kinley, President: John D. Long, burials within the city and county was (v“§ i'; ERASEFIOTING . TOUR O 3., | yakcats: tor Josk "‘; room {‘"""F";‘"dfhe of soap. This must be done in dry weath- g PhioiR® | merchants and other business men from | retary of the Navy; Commander Edwar postpened until next Saturday at 8 o'clock | City: vou desire to take a trip thiz side | tenant’s effects on the street. P dots | er.” In a particular case the dampness e m. of the Rockies with a view to prospecting | that he does it at his own risk and would | ;2 arise from a very slight leak in one N e fo) h ey. D. Taussig. United’ States Navy, com-o P. where the arm | all over the v . . e oo (P L= IR TR for gold call at or communicate with the | be liable in damages should the tenant | o¢ihe water pipes. In that case you would The great majority of the delegates ar- | manding the United States steamsh) He Feb. 17— »orer in one of the bri BUEL', President of the San Joaquin Valley Com- mercial Association o his stc i a ride on the train and by the brakeman. He r car, but could not en- B S e R R R SICS SR Y | | e | Fived this morning on the 9:27 train and | Bennington, this 17th day of January, 159, | The friends of the Old Government | State Mining Bureau. in the ferry build- | desire to commence an a tion against him. | have to call in the services of a plumber, Dredger Attached. | :::e met at the rallway station by mem- | "{",“‘fw"';;\‘m'::lmnro:( tl)t‘: l!:xrl‘{‘ed ks?&vlens :? Whisky are never drunkards. o | omatongictoansting as it whese fa go- PUBLIC WORKS—P. B. G., City. 'n."ai —_——— Epecial Dispatch to The Call | bers of the two local organizations, the | Ay y e THE TARIFF—A. S, City. This de-|1s a provision of the charter which pro-; LATE SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE. not the space to devote to | vides that all heads of departments, in| SATLED. Pub. - 23— Contraic Me- | Chamber of Commerce and the Mer- Island was selected as a station | Proceeds from a street fair given by | partment } with which he intended | chants’ and Manufacture; Association | Pacific cable, but the navy has | the unions of Syracuse, N. Y., will go to-| ““a synoposis of the tariff question since | order not to interfere with the public ser« February % ariven to points of Interest in and | abandoned it, preferring the midway | ward building a temple of labor there. Would suggest that you visit the | vice, may employ subordinates irrespe Stmr Cleone, Madsen, — lete his Government contract for | an vement 1 has | adjacent to the cit | route. the hands of The convention was called to order hy . e i = = ____ __ — — i g s or gy The] Opposes Land Subsidy Bill. OO ORI OF O 0 OITHAOIOR OO O G OR ORI OO © O O CROHOCRIRACROTIC ORCROCHIACSIROMHCRNS D0 O DFOICRIRON DOROHORID © OO OO CROI0R0 O (O CHOROOROIORCROninl incipal busin < the presid s up for c L 8 nt’s report and ght in San Francisco by D, | advertising and good roads comm against Dennis Jordan and | Freight rates and other matters of award McCann for $117 due for lumber, | est to the valley counties will also be con- is probably the last of misfortunes | sidered. will overtake the ill-fated dredger,| The committee appointed by the associa- the contract will more than likely be | tion on January 16 to investigate and re- bandoned. MecCann is under a $i50% | port resolutions on the road question re bond to complete the contract by June 1, | ported that better roads were an absolut The State had incurred great | Bressman. SAN DIEGO, Feb. 17.—The Chamber of | Commerce, after consideration of the re- | port of a committee, has declined to ap- prove in present form the bill now pend- ing in the House of Representatives pro- viding for a land subsidy for the San Di- cgo and Phoenix Railway. Representative Needham declined to introduce the bill and it is fathered by a Michigan Con- BE A FREE MAN! Be a Man Among Men! Be Strong and Youthful! Free Yourself From the Chains That Hold You Down ! and over two months of his time has al: | necessity. gy PGt ready been lost expense in the creation of a Bureau of | Sl e Highways. which had submitted to (he Final Account Rendered Fell Down an Elevator Shaft. | Legislature a comprehensive report with | Special Dispatch to The Call. - | recommendations, which, the commiitee OODLAND, g R < LOS ANGELES, Feb. 11.—B. F. Talbot, | Foeorties" 1q heen ignored by the Lesies | coror o a axertors o e jhoal_se & colored elevator operator at the County | jature. The report went on to recommend s th estate has by filed, a t“ & Courthouse, fell headlong down the shaft | the system of State roads as the best that | INESworth, cetate has been fled. and the of the elevator this afternoon and was | could be devised, and recommended tlLat “'t “.“ ;!A““‘Ccume, OWm e weal te':l killed. He leaves a widow and seven chil- | such legislation be had as to render possi- | cstates In Yolo y soon take dren I ble the construction of that portion of the | P BRI Music Hall Burned. ] PARIS, Feb. 18.—Trianon Music Hall, on the Boulevard Rochechouart, was de- Nature intended you to be a strong man. You have the physique, the constitution, and yet you do not feel the vim, the sand, the ambition one would expect in a man of your age. What isit> Why £ 0 0 0 OI080B OHORORCHOCROINOAONE £ G 0¥ OIORCHOCAORO OO0 | are present in the tongues of to-day. The primeval language was a vowel language altogether; it had no consonants, or con- tracts, as we ought to call them, at all Its words consisted of vowel sounds fol- CANDY CATHARTIC 3 | lowing each other repeated or varied— § | of words llke aeaea, aoao, ala, auau, aeoin, laua, oioi, ouou, uaua, ueue, all of which 1 may SIY in passing are taken from a language in use to-day. The sen- tences were Intermittent streams of vowels, each stream held on so long as the speaker's breath allowed or whim dic- 5| tated. When all Jiterature was recited, the same consideration, the capacity of the lungs, determined the length of the bardic linés; so we have our shiokas, our hexameters, our Alexandrines anu so forth, each a lungful of verse; in the primeval tongue it was likewise, but the sentences were vowels only. There are about ten or a dozen ?nure vowels to go upon, and vowel words may run up to five syllables, so we have a very considerable fund to draw on for our vowel streams. And these streams of vow- el speech correspond to expressed streams of emotion or feeling rather than ou **feel like taking cold’ take a CASCARET— there is N = Men, why will you be weak? Why do you net listen to the echo of thousands of grateful voices raised in thanks to Dr. McLaughiin's Electric Beit?. Why do you go on from to day realizing that you are losing your nerve force, your manhood. when you see a cure within your grasp? Reach for it, take it to your heart, and feel the life-blood flowing, jumping. dancing through your veins; feel the ex- hilarating spark of manly power warm your frame, the bright flash come to your eye, and the firm grip to your hand—the grip which grasps your fellow man and tells him that you have found your Mecca—you have regained your manhood. Act now. Act to-day. Do not delay a matter which is the key to your future happiness; do not allow a disease to destroy all possibility of future pleasure for you. Whatever your condition to-day you will not improve as you grow older. Age calls for greater vital force, a the older you get the more pronounced and apparent will be your weakness, so cure it now—cure it while you are young. The time is ripe. While the vital spark is still warm it can be easily fanned to flame by Electricity, and Dr. McLaughlin's Electric Belt will make you strong if you try it now. Warrantei not to burn nor blister. My appliances are warranted the strongest in thej FREE BOOK-—I have published an S8o-page world, yet they give the current like a soothing. book, beautifully illustrated and full of truths for glowing warmth, flowing into the body without the;men and women who are low in_vitality, weak and stinging, burning sensation caused by old-style declining. It is worth reading. If you have tried Belts. My special inventions—the cushion electrode: everything else and believe in nothing, this book will and regulator—prevent this horror. My Belt |siconven you to the altar of truth. I send it. closely half price to those having the old-style burning sealed. free. Ask for it. Call, if possible, and con- stroyed by fire last night. The fire oc- e $ . : ~ 1 | curred after the conclusion of a variety a lack of vitality—the foundation of manhood. You have lost it. no matter how Get it back; feel § ‘ : ure COldS performance. o o0 © young, look young, act young. . Life is beautiful when you have health. I can help you. 3 bl ol o DR LAUGHLIN’S RIC BELT The nrl§£n31 speech, thl: true“:flmev.l . Mc A ELECT l L] § by kscplag your bowtie bpcs. CASCARI/S wrill flo i rithiont longuage we have evem heard: yet “we With Suspensory for weak men, has brought stre i d happiness to ten thousand men in grip or gripe and drive the cold right out of you. Just as soon E‘ b B Rl e r B e L e -yl:“ iy , has ght strength, ambition and happin e c n 3 5 WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP A sweet bit of candy medicine, purely vegetable, absolutely harmless, never grip nor gripe. sale of over 5,000,000 boxes a year—10c, 25¢, 50c —proves their great merit. Be sure you get CASCARETS, the only original, genuine Candy Cathartic, ds iptions of 't bjects. F 3 = 2 hi’rfx'n-"‘ré’fi?u‘-’ hr‘:?vntcer:flil; t’)t'%r‘l:ide:rwl‘t’fl belts. isult me personally. material trifles our life s to-day, pnd, 702 Market St., Corner Kearny, San Francisco, and thelretore, wl;nt great g:ma‘;nrgs _wfi 4 D c e 2 - heretars, Tint Ereal demands s ke R. M. A. McLAUG A ket St., Corner Kearry, San Franch fi‘nfln‘."’:n‘,'é.’c‘}: e %5 m‘;‘,‘.‘."n Vowel - » - 9 Office Hours—Datly 9 to §; Sundays 10 to 1. NEVER SOLD IN DRUG STORES. sounds even at the present day.—The Con- $at=3ad temporary, o L ICEQECRORCACHCAOUOCECR 101 108G CHORCROMOECAM MR HCHCIOND) 101 1 01 Q0 |

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