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6 THE SA APRIL 6, 1900 FRIDAY fdcress All Communicatiohs to W. S. LEAKE, Maneger. SRR S S PUBLICATION OFFICE..Market and Third, 8. F. Telep Main 1865, JOHN D v EDITORIAL ROOMS....217 221 Stevensen St. Telephone Main 1874 Delivered by Oarriers. 156 Cents Per Week. Stmgle Coples, 5 Cemts. Terms by ¥ail, Including Fostage: DAILY CALL Oncluding Sunday), one year... DAILY CALL DAILY CALL DAILY CALL—By Siagie Month EUNDAY CALL One Year.. WEBKLY CALL One Year. All postmasters are sabseriptions. Sample copies will be forwarded When vequested. OAXLAND OFFICE... ...1118 Broadway C. GEORGE KROGNESS. Maneger Foreign Advertising, Marguette Buiding, Chicago. NEW YORE CORRESPONDENT: C C.OMRLTON._..... + seeeasessHorald Square NEW YORK REPRESENTWITVE: STEPNEN B. SMITH.... .30 Tribune Buflding CHICAGO NEWS STANDS: ] Shermes House: P. O. News Co; Grest Northers Fremont Hoese, Auditerium Hotel NEW YORK NEWS STANDS: Waidort-Astorie Hotel; A. Brentame, 51 Union Squarei Murray Eill Botel. WASHINGTON (D. C) OFFICE............. Wellington Hotel MORTON £ CRANE, Comespondeat. BRANCH OFFICES—! Montgomery, corner of Clay, open until 9:80 o'clock. 800 Hayes, open until 9:30 o'cl 638 McAliister, open until 9:30 o'clock. 615 Larkin, open until 9:80 o'clock. 1941 Mission, open until 10 o'clock. 2261 Market, corner , open until § o'clock. 1098 Valencie, cpen unti 9 o'clock. 16 Eleventh, open until ® oclock. NW. corner Twenty-second and Kentucky, oper 1 9 o'clock. house—"“The Begear Student.” - anee River.” t Sunday night MUNICIPAL MORALITY. R the impossibility of the complete ch generate in 1-sel ANTING G q and hon- votees, the one of the of right, erted above re the proper struction aware that .it h take a profit lect of our act that t out of crime and wot o it, injured in many ways e, also e the election of public officers and would defeat any candidate who is an ally of criminal vicious classes if they knew ; G e clean a i decent people who and indecent, ex- unclean v the and cease their the proposition that it is within ity government to besom from the es that offend morality any way the injurious un this as a purgation government can “wide open” The great law abiding are not consid- ices of the small or can compel jority of this comr are moral, their virtues and clean people. But ot on wi ) exist by ning on the vicious and d order go their Quiet way. he credulot Virtue a They are the normal state of the majority. Every day they do those things approved of public policy and good conscience, which are taken as a matter of course. But vice makes more st tho one manifestation than acts. It is not hard to It can be swept out of and the city government has the e work. Let it be used. B P — We had the kis early in the season 1e by qu control the vicious minor week ug bug last summer, and now this he Eastern States have been fiuttered by the appearance in Chicago of a creature known as the Mexican nose bug, warranted to give citizen a Cyrano de Bergerac proboscis at one touch. 55 S Bad as the situation in Kentucky appears to out- siders, the full horror of it can hardly be known, and, yreover, it must have been menacing for a long 1e back, for now comes Senator Blackburn and says he has not taken a’drink in eighteen months. 1f all the reports of Russian advance be true, Great | Britain will find that even if she annex the Transvaal she will have lost more in Asia than she gains in Africa. She seems to be up against a game in which it is heads she loses and tXls she don't win. A caterie of people in New York claim to have discovered a means of living a hundred years, and it is probable they are now indulging the hope of living to sec the end of the Philippine war. Fright of the plague is making Honolulu a port of fear to travelers, send a special commis along the horror. ioner to the island city to help e The local health official who.was dismissed for ac- cepting a bribe of a dollar must be sufiering from a painful realization that some men are cheap. The local yellow journal ought to | CONSTITUTIONAL VIGOR. | 1 | automatically under the | United States. De Armond of Missouri, who is regarded as the Yeading lawyer of the House, on the Democratic side, said “the constitution is in Hawaii of its own vigor.” | | This backs Senator Jones of Arkansas, who said “the treaty of Paris extended the constitutipn, with all its | immunities, privileges and blessings,“to Porto Rico | and the Philippines.” When Colonel Bryan spoke at Sacramento, on the N debating the Hawaiian bill the Democrats in | Congress have enlarged upon their contention that all of our newly acquired external possessions are full constitution of the 26th of last month, over his head was a shield in- scribed, “The constitution follows the flag.” In the speech made under that shield Bryan said: “I favored the ratification of the treaty of Paris not be- cause it was right, but because we could remedy its faults by legislation better than we could by diplo- | macy with a hostile nation.” As a solution he pro- posed to let the Filipinos set up an independent gov- ernment. Now let us look at all this for a moment. The treaty put the flag in the Philippines, and Bryan ad- mits that he favored the treaty. Jones and De Ar- mond and the Bryan leaders say that the constitution goes with the flag, and Bryan spoke with that declaration over his head and in sight of his audience. Will he or any member of his party tell us how ter- | ritory once under the constitution can be got from under it and alienated? Such territory has become a part of the Union, as Senator Jones declares. ‘There- fore to alienate it is a dissolution of the Union. Colonel Bryan says the faults of the treaty could be remedied by legislation. Does he contend that when the constitution, of its own vigor, or by any other means, has extended over territory such territory can secede by the act of its people or by legislative au- thority? When we are dealing with constitutional questions it is well to remember that we are considering fun- damental law, not a repealable statute The secession issue rose in this country over thi It was contended that territory that had been under the constitution could secede. Against this the Union party declared that the territory of the Union was indissoluble. Upon the issue thus joined the Civil War was fought, and by its result the de- cision was made, by a power higher than courts and Congresses, that Federal territory is inalienable. Now Mr. Bryan proposes by legislation to alienate what Jones,»De Armond and himself declare to be | Federal territory, “‘entitled to all the rights, immuni- ties and blessings of the constitution.” It is plain that from his own view of the constitu- After he has legislated part of the Union out, what is to hinder any part of it going? Tf the Philippines can go in peace from the flag and the constitution, what answer can be made if South Carolina and Mississippi claim the right to go also, as they and all the South claimed > very question. tion he proposes to dissolve the Union. it in 18612 It will be seen that the Bryan theory of the con- stitution is exactly that held and fought for by Jef- ferson Davis, and that under it there is no difference between anti-expansion and secession. It is expected by Colonel Bryan and his associates at the Supreme Court will decide the Porto Rico i to be unconstitutional, thus supporting their | If the court so decide, and hold that these | s are parts of the Federal Union, and Colonel | Bryan become President and his party legislate the ands out of the Union, do they expect the Supreme Court to decide such legislation constitutional? Tf so, we demand to know on what grounds. Such a decision settlement of the Civil War, and reopen the whole question again. This position of Colonel Bryan and his party lead- ers is of importance in view of his persistent bid for the votes of -those who oppose expansion. The anti- expansionists are people of high intelligence, and they see plainly that under the Bryan theory they have no possible standing. If that theory be affirmed at the polls, any reaction against expansion is a movement to dissolve the Union. isl would reverse the In his ambition to be President Admiral Dewey not inclined to declare his preference for any politi- cal party. A few of the recent events in his career suggest that perhaps the women suffragists might be willing to take him up Wlhe House on Saturday, General Grosvenor, of the Committee on Merchant | Marine and Fisheries, made an elaborate report on | the condition of the shipping industry of the United States as compared with that of other nations, which | in a striking manner illustrates how far we have | Jagged behind our competitors for the commerce of | the world, and how important it is that we should | at once adopt a wiser policy with respect to our ocean | interests. v Attention is directed to the rapidity with which steam is supplanting sail power on ocean vessels. The report says: “In sail Great Britain has declined 45 per cent since 1873-74; the United States has de- clined 40 per cent; Norway has remained station- ary; Italy has declined 59, Germany 40, France 64, and all other nations 26 per cent, the average for all being the same as that for the United States. In steam sea-going tonnage since 1873-74 there has | everywhere been an increase, the following percent- ages showing its magnitude: Great Britain, 311; United States, 68; France, 200; Germany, 693; Spain, 275; Italy, 305: Holland, 390; Russia, 430; Norway, 1410; and all others, excepting Japan, 504. Japan's statistics only go back one decade, during which her increase has been 382 per cent. There was an average increase in the sea-going steam tonnage of all nations of 336 per cent since 1873-74. It appears, then, that with our great population, industry, re- sources and enterprise, we stand at the very foot of the column.” Owing to the lack of building ships rapidly enough to keep pace with commerce, our share of our own fcreign carrying trade has diminished from a little | over 26 per cent of the whole to less than 9 per-cent | during the last quarter of a century. Our average annual construction of ocean steamships, most of which are for the coastwise trade, for ten years past has been only 21,000 tons, while the British annual construction has averaged 968,000 tons. The elements of cost of ocean transportation are three—the cost of construction, the cost of mainte- nance and the cost of operating ships. Evidence is given in the report showing that ship construction in Great Britain averages about 25 per cent lower than in the United States. As to the cost of operation the | report says “that the average wages paid to Ameri- can seamen on sailing vessels crossing the Atlantic is $20, and to British seamen $14 per month; on long | voyages from the Pacific Coast to Great Britain American wages were from $15 to $20, and British }sl.z 15 to $14 58 per month, on such voyages Ameri- - - [ THE SHIPPING INDUSTRY. | ITH the amended shipping bill submitted to | chairman | 840, the British average being just about one-half the | the various topics are brief, and, as the author says | in his preface, “the discussions are short sometimes | had a new work it wished to place on the market | nal, have parted company, and now we shall see | goods in that country, and has written valuable letters can boatswains receiving $22 to $25 and the British from $10 44 to $24 30. So that it appears on the whole the British wages on sailing vessels were somewhat less than three-fourths the American wages. On pas* senger steamships in the transatlantic trade seaman's wages in American vessels were only slightly larger, but for other portions of the crew, such as firemen, trimmers, coal passers, etc., the American wages were American pay.” In addition to the advantages of cheap construc- tion and cheap wages, the foreign ship-owners are aided by large subsidies from their Governments, In the aggregate these foreign subsidies amount an- nually to more than $26,000,000. Against such fa- vored competitors it is of course impossible for our shipping interests to maintain themselves, and as a result our trade is now dependent upon the vessels of our competitors. We cannot expect foreign ship- owners or foreign captains to extend our trade for us. To find a market for our increasing products we must provide ships of our own, and the sooner we do so’ the better will it be for us. e e s e Victoria’s visit to Ireland as a compliment to Rob- erts and the Irish soldiers who have distinguished themselves in the South African war is undoubtedly a well meaning act, but the Irish would like it better if she had decided to take her foot off Ireland alto- gether and keep her hands out of its business. e o s . e EDUCATIONAL QUESTIONS. C. DOUB, Superintendent of Schools for W Kern County, has contributed to the discus- sion of public school problems in this State a volume entitled “Educational Questions,” in which he reviews most of the issues now subjects of con- troversy among teachers. The chapters dealing with even to bluntness, the object being to call the atten- tion of the reader directly to the evil and to the remedy, and to avoid bewildering the mind with de- tails.” The subjects of the work are: “The Certification of Teachers,” “Relation of the University to the Coftrses of Study in the Elementary and Primary Schools,” “The Courses of Study Elementary Schools,” “Grammar by the Inductive Method,” and i “The State Textbook System.” ; Mr. Doub is one of those who are opposed to the | State textbook system. He says uniformity in the textbooks of the State is good, and cheapness of the texthook to the pupil is good, but a high quality of subject matter in the textbook is absolutely essential to good work; and he concludes that the State text- books are so deficient in quality that the defect more than counterbalances all the benefits derived from uni- formity and cheapness. By way of remedy he sug- | gests there should be a uniform series of textbooks | used in the elementary and secondary schools of the | State, but that all textbooks should be selected, not written by contract, by the State Board of Educa- | tion. There is a danger that this remedy would result in a change of schoolbooks every time the book ring It would be urged by the ring that the new work is up to date and the old textbook a back number There would be about as many objections to the books in | use under that system as to those in use now, and the frequency with which changes would be made would add a good deal to the expense of parents in supply- ing their children with textbooks. | President Wheeler of the State University, in { speaking of his objections to the State textbook in s tem, was careful to point out that in making any ! change it would be necessary to guard carefully | against the book ring. By way of providing a safe- guard Mr. Doub would have the State Board of Edu- cation composed of the State Superintendent of Pub- lic Instruction, the president of the University of Ca fornia, president of Stanford University, the profes- sor at the head of the department of education of each of these universities, and the presidents of the | State Normal Schools. Of a Board of Education so composed he says: “The majority will very likely consist of men who cannot be swayed in their selec- tion of textbooks by favoritism or by monetary con- | siderations.” Thus his plan of getting rid of State texthooks involves getting rid of the present form | of the State Board of Education. and to something like a revolution in our school system. N | Hoke Smith and his newspaper, the Atlanta Jour- | whether he made the paper or the paper made him. | P T A GOOD SUGGESTION of improving our consular service the Boston Globe makes a suggestion which has the double | merit of originality and business sense. It proposes that our representatives in the commercial centers of | the world be chosen from among the men who have distinguished#themselves in business as commercial travelers, and in favor of the proposition advances certain evidences of the usefulness of such men in building up and expanding our foreign commerce. Thus, it is said, “there is one American commer- cial traveler in South Africa who in the past six months has sold three ¢hiploads-of our manufactured | r; OR the solution of the much discussed problem ‘; | of advice to United States manufacturers, which will enable them to make special goods for that market and employ 1000 hands in making furniture, hard- ware, glass and brass for prosperous towns in the South African gold country, the war to the contrary notwithstanding. Another went to Japan, and after selling $150.000 worth of goods proceeded to India. He writes that the British Consuls are the best in- formed Consuls abroad, and that they keep on file nearly all the principal daily and trade papers of Great Britain it comfortable rooms, where native merchants resort every steamer day to get the latest news about British manufactures.” $ The suggestion is the more commendable because just at this time a considerable number of able and energetic commercial travelers have lost their posi- tions in domestic trade by reason. of the consolidation of various business houses into trusts or combines. These men. being now out of employment, are avail- able for the consular service. As they have been trained to the work of drumming up trade, and as they are, mgreover, fitted for it by natural inclination and talent, it is evident they would be far more valuable in the service than nine-tenths of the men who have entered it solely as a means of getting' re- wards for political work. The suggestion is worth the attention of Chambers of Commerce, Manufacturing Associations and other bodies interested in the export trade, and if earnest cfforts be made they may procure the appointment of many of these energetic commercial men to positions FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, | water, is at the Russ. Westley, is at the Russ. | Angeles, is at the Grand. abroad where they would work up a trade for Ameri- can goods of all kinds within a comparatively short time. APRIL 6, 1900 YOUNG MR. VANDERBILT FINDS OBSTAGLES IN THE PATHWAY OF LOVE FOR MISS FRENGH An-Ambitious Uncle of the Pretty Young Ladg‘ Wants Her to Marry a Prince and Not the American Heir to Millions. LFRED GWYNNE VANDERBILT | i in danger of losing Elsie French, | A the girl he has loved from child- | hood. Far from being a betrothed, | or almost betrothed pair, as society ln] New York and giewport has fondly be- lieved, they wer never so far from mar-| riage as now, when the young man Is the | head of his family. | It was an inkling of what was going on | in Paris that brought him in alarm across | the sea to claim his girlish sweetheart. The youthful master of the Vanderbilt| millions has many rivals. Elsie French's | suitors bear some of the proudest names | that appear in the Almanach de Gotha. | As her uncle's guest her life is a dream of | gayety and splendor. ‘) That rich and disdainful uncle of hers | ELSIE FRENCH B S S o o o i o o G S s L S e is the lion fn the path of Alfred Gwynne, Vanderbilt. His name is Edward Tuck. Parisians. His aym He is more Par He n than the the owner of Malmaison. are aristocr: . Having millions s ‘own he can_afford to scorn the millions of others. Edward Tuck dotes on his niece. He is ambitious for her futuré. | He thinks that she is too good to preside over the hous Vanderbilts. sphere lies in hold of the chief of all the From his point of view her some rician_home of Fu- rope. He thinks highly of Prince Henri d'Orleans does Mr. 1 late of New York, and Prin®e Henri often pleased to accept Mr. Tuck spitalit And just at present the Prince bad odor in England on accour complimenting a Fre: toon he published of Que has been expelled from s lish clubs and in a pet has sold his resi- | dences in England. Mr. Tuck has not coupled the name of ince Henri with that of his niece. M rench has not bestowed on the roy IN THE COSTUME D e e I : ~ 4 & D S | b4 e eie pretender any favor that her other titled Admirers do not enjoy. The Prince him- | self has behaved with no more than the gallantry that one would expect from an accomplished royal adventurer in the | presence of a charming girl with $2,000,000 of her own and expectations. When Miss French, under her*mamma’s | wing, went to Paris last autumn to enjoy | her uncle’s hospitality there was launched his home, 82 Avenue des Champs Ely- a carefully planned campaign to wean her from the Vanderbilt influence and 1ift her to the loftiest pinnacles of European socie Everything American was _excluded from the scope of this campalgn. alm was to make Eisie French a Pari All the factors were In favor of | Edward Tuck no longer con- i American. His_house is a meeting place of Europeans. He cs chews the American colony. His country- | men are not favored with invitations to | his house. Few of them know of the | splendor in which he lives. \ Besides his Paris mansion, Mr. Tuck ! g | and shrubs which Na IN WHICH SHE WAS THE CYNOSURE OF ALL EYES AT THE GREAT BRADLEY-MARTIN BALL Lto turn the mind o the ramous home t® would flee with Napo- es of state and court o0 heavily. It was here the Em- :g::s tIh'e\‘l after her divorce, and it was the home Napoleon loved best of all his palaces. % k purchased the place about six »-35\';91;'::0 nd has had it restored and beautified to such an »i‘(!ton_:_r::\nr(nrr:) "r:fis rivals it. e poleon brguxh( from other lands are still there. So are the statues he brought from Rome. Malmai- son's new owner has spent a fnr!lm'e n converting it into an enchanted palace. The grounds have been fitted with an electric system, which enables him with the touch of a button to transform the whole place into a fairyland of light and beauty. Tt is sad to record the jilting of an irre- proachable young man worth a hundred owns Malmaison, which Josephine leon when the car -9 R R R R R R R R e e R L S I o o o 2 & i millions. It would be almost inconcet ble if the jilt were any other than Elsie French, to whom millions are a bore and the homage of nobles a delight. She is encouraged In her revolt nst the old attachment by her sister, Hon. Mrs. Her- bert Eaton, one of the most beautiful and successful of American women in Eng- land. Mrs. Eaton is an ornament of the smartest society of London and a favored guest at Marlborough house. The bril- liancy of her position has helped greatly her younger sister in the direction of a foreign alliance. isle French has in past seasons been re. Eaton’'s guest in London, and a couple of vears ago was presented by her to the ueen. The Hon. Mrs. Eaton is alding Mr. Tuck's campaign with all her heart, and she will be one of the guests at Mal- maison in the summer. Elsie French is not a brunette, as one might imagine from the photograph. Her hair is red gold, her eyes are blue. She is one of the most beautiful girls that have one across the sea to dazzle the eyes of uropeans. PERSONAL MENTION. | | Dr. C. L. Gregory of Yreka is at the Grand. | H. J. Laughlin, a banker of Santa | Ynez, is at the Grand. | John Flemming, borax man of At-| A U. C. Creller, a mine owner of Grass | Valley, is at the Grand. | J. H. Batcher, an attorney of Sacra- mento, is at the Grand. E. G. McPike, a bonanza farmer of C. W. Pendleton, an attorney of Los Dr. Ernest Roberton and wife of Auck- land are at the Californma. Captain E. P, Newhall, a mining man of | Grayson, is staying at the Russ. | Rev. Joseph King and wife, returning | missionaries, are at the Occidental. Colonel W. Forsyth, an extensive raisin | grower of Fresno, is at the Occidental. A. P. Halfhill of the California Fish | Company of Los Angeles is at the Grand. Dr. White Wolf, a medical practitioner from the Choctaw reservation, Is at the | Russ. John W. Mitchell, an attorney and well- known politician of Los Angeles, is at the | Palace. | R, B. Marshall of Washington, member | of the Coast and Geodetic Survey, is at | the Occidental, John F. Carrere, a member of the State Lunacy Commlssion, from Sacramento, is at the California. Major H. E. Banatvala, an officer of the British army in India, is at the Occiden- tal, on his way to England. Rev. J. H. Taylor and wife. missionaries who have spent many vears in Shanghal, are at the Occidental. They are bqund for their old home in London. W. J. Arkell, president of the Judge | Publishing Company of New York, after | a trip through Mexico and a brief visit in this city, left for his home in New York last night. Guy A. Buell of Stockton arrived at the Grand yesterday to take charge of the | remains of his brother, P. A. Buell, who died suddenly on Wednesday night. Dean C. Worcester, the Philippine Com- | missioner from Ann Arbor, Mich., will ar- | rive here on the 1ith inst. He will be a companied by his family and secretary. They sail for Manila about the 16th, on | the transport Hancoclk. | Professor E. S. Meers, a noted scientist | of London, came upon the Moana from New Zealand, where he has been experi- menting with some, new instruments in | high altitudes. Mrs, Forbes, his aunt, ac- companied him on the trip. They are at the California. i Mrs. Snow Miller, a sister of the great British field marshal, Lord Roberts, ar- | rived from Australia yesterday on the steamer Moana. Because of.-quarantine regulations she will likely not be permit- ted to land before Saturday. Mrs. Miller is to be the guest of Rev. Charles M. Sheppard, pastor of the Franklin-street Presbyterian Church. B — D R R R SO S S ST TS S e o e g @W*}—O P-*Ded-eP CALIFORNIANS IN NEW YORK. NEW YORK, April 5—Alex J. Cook of San Francisco is at the Astor; J. L. Ga-| len of San Francisco is at the Waldorf; E. A. Phelps of San Francisco is at the Holland: L. Dewitt of San Francisco is at | the Empire. @5 0—04—0—0—0—4—0—’ FASHION HINT FROM PARIS, + o— O——0-0-0-0-0-0++0 " . 2 - s . * K * b . b4 * s . ® * ® * & i . ¢ i . ® L 3 Q\ 41 | ‘ * L4 * 4| [ +o+o+o+¢—o3 GREEN CLOTH DRESS. i The dress represented is of soft celery green cloth. The corsage has a front of white draped lace, with a bow on the chest. The waistband is of velvet to | match. The skirt is made of stitched pleais down the sides and trimmed with lace embroldery. L: e e ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. | RUSSIAN ARl.l'Y—J. 8., city. According to the latest published reports the war strength of the Russlan army is 5,209.564 | osl;lcers and men; on a peace footing M9,- | THIS "HAS A PREMIUM—C. H. H..‘\ city. A United States dollar of 1800 com- m.lt!db z_lr)?reml‘um ::rm?bw cents to fl)i cents. e_price charge deals 1 Shch R BE | PROPERTY IN TRUST—-M., Alameda, | Cal. If property was left in trust for certain heirs and the heirs have been | copies of the best edition of account to him his only remedy would be by bringing the matter Into court. Thia department knows of no way by which the clajmant could bring the matter int) court without the assistance of an at- torney. TO COPYRIGHT A PLAY—If you desire to copyright a play, you must inclose a fee of 50 cents (postal order) in an en- velope, together with the title of the play and name of the claimant of copyright, either printed or typewritten, on a sheet of paper of the size known as commercial note, and deposit the same within the mail in any part of the United States, prepaid and directed to_the Librarian of Congress, Washington, D. C. As soon as you have done that. you are at lberty to have the play produced and you will be flrhtec(ed provided, that on the day of the rst presentation of the play you mail to the Librarfan of Congress two complete the piay Without complying with this provise, the copyright 1s not complete An additional 5 cents will entitle the claimant for copy- right to a certificate of such copyright. | By writing to the Librarian of Congress he will furnish you a blank form of ap- plication, then there will not be any mis- take made if the printed instructions are followed. The same method must be fol- lowed in regard to anything that is sub- Ject of copyright 4 Cal. glace fruit S0c per Ib at Townsend's.* F Spectal information supplied daily to business houses and public men tha Press Clipping Bureau (Allen’s), lone- gomery street. Telephone Main 1042 s } A Title of Honor. Two workingmen were looking at an 11~ lustrated paper containing portraits of heroes of the war in South Africa. On coming to a picture of Lord Roberts one of them fenlr out: “Field Marshal Lord Roberts, V. C., >. B. What's G. C. B, mean, Jim?"* “Why, ‘generally ealled Bobs,’ of course. Didn’'t you know that?’ answered his G | friend scornfully.—Answers. ADVERTISEMENTS. 50lds + Chest 0108 e LGS are dangerous; they weaken the constitution, inflame the lungs, and often lead to Pneumonia. Cough syrups are useless. The system must be given strength and force to throw off the disease. will dc this. - It strengthens the lungs and builds up the entire system. It conquers the inflammation, cures the legally .entitled to the same for seven years one of the heirs who desires to ob- tain Lis just proportion should make a demand upon the trustees for the same and if the trustees decline or refuge. to cough, and prevents serious crouble. and druggists, SCOTTR BOWN 2'6“-1... New York.