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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, MAY 2, 1900. AD’\TERTXSEMENTS AN OBJECT LESSON. In a Restaurant. PAINTER MUNKACSY DIES IN AN ASYLUM Famous Hungarian '~ Works Are Held Gone t he cele- asylum at Kkacsy, ed In an Il be buried ng physi- istened, or s bet he at Munka His parent but the pletor's | nd when hardly bscure, Day of a Man painted at Dussel- over the threshold of where his later works s of food eranks at, coffee and e rank poisons, ¥ looking Indi- tion of 1z he:‘was apprenticed for painting ore - mhanifest, that if the the. plane digestive an work - in There he digested; . which ‘sum t do 0, and certain v in-the art gallerfes n in those of Munich n the latter place. in nted the picture which. exhib- Paris Salon in 1570, éstablished n. . ‘Two _years later he took SE One or two of Stuart’'s after each meal will re- ulty, because they supply t e ,4'\'\\ '\}\St"m C a long time, | Artist, Whose Best in This Country, o Rest. | 'ln his abode in Paris and painted pictures ' life in that cosmopolitan capital,. His fame as it were, with each stroke o h. He obtained medals. at ive exhibition in Paris, and was awarded & grand prize. In 1599 promoted to be a commander of the Lagion of Honor. Munkacsy was famous for his daring originality, fine coloring and - surprising effects of light and air, but it has been objected that his canvases were too crowd- ed with figures. In 1886 he left Paris, where he had re- sided for fourteen years. and returned to his native country. From overstrain of work or some other cause not vet well known, he developed symptoms of insan- ity some three years ago, and after that remained in seclusion. Munkac work is quite well known in this country through his pictures of Mil- [ton dictating ‘*'Paradise .ILost” to his | daughters (exhibited at Paris in 1878 and now in-the Lenox lbrary. New York): ‘hrist Before Pilate’” and ‘‘Christ on Cal. vary.” these latter having been..exhibited inall the large cities of the United States, His most remuneritive = season. of -work was. in 1886;: when ‘he. visited New York | and painted the portraits of a number of wealthy persons, for which he received in some -instances very large sums. It is generally agreed among .the critics that the products ‘of his brush now- held in 'Amnrlca excel those in Europe. By Rudya SURGICAL AND MEDICAL. rd Kipling. St e Continued From First Page. in slings, and one loyally caps the lest yarn. A few: days back on what black fellows could boomerarng, r cut ‘16 pieces with “barbed could not twist and turn in that It ‘was .as absurd. as the word| STATEMENT | A”V““,Sm,““: = v snw arruns| PAIN CONDITION AND AFFAIRS lhe cenn | BACK! F RE ASSOGIATION ' l How can you Ar x\ THE STATE OF keep up your - work when you have a weak, ach- ing back? Get those relaxed muscles strength- ened and the kid neys in good con- dition, and you can snap your fin- ger at any pains in the k. I offer you a grand remedy in my DR. McLAUGHLIN’S BELT. Its electro-magnetism builds up the weakened nerves and muscles. There's not a man or woman who suffers from he, rheumatism or derangement the nervo-functions but whom my nt will completely cure. It will restore you so that you can do the hard- work, mentally or physi strong as ever of t $162,667 42 155,665 76 yon 1 and see me or send for my free DR. M. A. McLAUGHLIN, 702 Market Bt.. Cor. Kearny, B, F. And co:. Bpring and Fesond Bts., Los Angele: NO MORE DREAD OF THE - DENTM__ CHAIR. AND FILLE! PAIL our late o N , by gums. San 5 1 al pariors TED APPLI] table ral tes and warranted for ten rs, | WITHOUT THE LEAST PAIN. Full set of teeth $5, a perfect fit guaranteed or no pay 2 t0 20 years' epartment in charge of a s us & call, and you will find us to do exactl as we advertise. We will tell you in advanc exactly .what your work will cost by a FRE EXAMINATION. NO PLATES °“'Rtn unit gl M,Ah‘ New ank I]emal Parlors, 723 Market Street, S. F. SUNDAYS; 10 to 0 ...PORTLAND 1900 7. PROSSER. Notary Public T. C. SHANKLAND. iate Agent for Califcrnid, -Nevada, Arizona | and Hawaifan Jslands: ¥ JOHN D. RICHARDS, | forieger San F Maneger San £ Z Bllum-m-mm reisedy - for Gonorrhen, | Glest. Bpormatorrhea ités, munstzral le LECTROZONE "~ CURES - ‘flnl.lu: oF UscoTR Rh erx;n.‘; Rossns e eumatism, ay t Kidney and Bladder Anlments. Stomach Trovbles, Female Complaints, i Nervousness, All-Biood Dis=ases. Gures When All Other Remedies Fail, At Aruggi Send for pamy FAYORITE , §1 a bottle. 16t to ELECTROZONE fizaamwm PO WEAK WOMEN. ] STRICTLY RELIABLE BR. TALCOTT & CO. INJECTION. A FERMAKERT CURE of tha riost Diseases nnd Weak- nesses of MEN ONLY. Entire Upper Floor. Weekly Call,$1.00 per Year | a Ninth Lancer and a West York-| told the twins to draw it mild. | WooHoomooloo. Entered thén from .an- other tent convalescent ‘Rae of Manitoba, hit down at Slinger's or -Arundel. Rae said he ‘did not understand boom- erangs, bt - things . could be made to curye in the'air, for all the Ninth Lancer said. - For instance, there was a game called ‘baseball. - Rae illustrated with his sound - arm how a pitcher sends in a curved. ball,_and the twins, applauding, |'welcomed him as an ally. They had a file | of Australlan. papers with pictures of | boomerangs. Would the Ninth Lancer ase’ get- them out from the shelf and v -would explain? NEWS FROM HOME. So, under the pines planted in South Africa by men from the north, Welsh- man, tyke, cockney and Canadian bent their heads over while a Queenslander a Melbourne weekly, read the letter- son of a Highland regiment—he looked very ltke Alan Breck—had tried to stop a shell splinter with his stomach, and it cost him eight weeks' agony. The first time we met he walked crab fash- fon, his blue eyes alight with a pain. Hear, O heaven, and bear witness, O earth, that there was no more South Af- rica for Johnson and his stomach! A fortnight later we sat in the sun with a ‘\hl*l'“rlnz guardsman, half of whose larynx had been put out of commission . down dropping bullet. Hlu Joh on was a changed man. He had developed a scheme, and explained it as he grasping his ankles and rocking to and fro. They were going to send him to Green Point with other convalescents. The odds were they would send him home, d that did not suit Johnson’s revised “I'm a saddler by trade. They'll not when they’'re repair- I'll not be sent r—if I can help it. Then book miss the likes of me ing collars and harn home till the war Is o Surely they'll need a collarmaker. T'll be able to get back again. He went off to draw his kit, walking corkily, and the guardsman whispered husky co atulations. But there no spring in McConnell, ser- of nother Highland regiment— but sour disgust. He got it in the , around Paardeberg, a rending, shat- lr\rh‘n bullet, that has marked hlm for nd. And there what Is left of his company to consider, and there is his un- paid debt to the Boer, drawing interest every day, and there is his right hand throbbing and aching in the night watches. His chief interest is the dally paper and the list of the Boer dead. He uu his corner, smoking, brooding and ing how to escape England. But right hand, with the iron forearm—is uscless. He always s back to that. Not far down h and some fever. Then he got bed sores—two, he told me— from him lies Carter, “hn went by reason of a fractured thigh and then they got him an air mattress. Carter came near to losing his life, but the story in the ward Is that Neeld, a grace- less Cockney Highlander, bucked him up, precisely as Dinniss bucked up the man shot thr s spared, which is a ce, and they have taken him ut for a small walk in a wheeled chair. | “He kep’ askin’ us all the way up hill it he was too heavy.” said one of Carter's | steeds—a convalescent with a head wound. | “Well, ybu see, it's voluntary, not com- pulsory, takin' tonvalescents out,” says Carter, rather tremulous about the mnuth “You don’t weigh more'n a rat now," is the answer, and then, the voice touchod with beautiful tenderness, “Did ye like it, 'Arry?"’ CONVALESCENT’S JOY. Did he like 1t? After three months he he has seen trees and sunshine, and felt tue big sky above him." He picked up the good dirt of the earth:and let it run through his fingers. : Now he i going to sleep. s In a little: while Mylton will ‘be fit to wheel out. He halls from St. John, New Brunswick—the -0ld eity of many fires over against the racing Fundy tide. The scent of the Wynberg pine needles makes him one jelly of homesickness. Providence sends to his bedside one who knows his city, and street by street and suburb by suburb, “from Castor in the Forum to Mars without the wall"—from tne fragrant lumber mills to Loch Lo- mond—Mylton goes over it all rejolcing. Yes, he knows. moreover, Dalhousie, Gaspe and : 1l Baie Chaleur, and how he longs to see them. Two yards away a Yorkshire reservist points out to a man who is fashioning a canvas and wool belt that of all places under heaven there is none like to Brad- ford. He is married, with four children and a damaged shoulder, but all will be well when he returns to Bradford “in t' steamer.” Lascalles, Tasmania Mounted Infantry, holds quite other views. He has come through much rough and tumble work, ending with abscess of the liver. That | removed, they have put him to light duty i at Maitland Camp till he is fit to sit a horse. His eyes are sunk and heavy, but he sees far. He is the son of a Hobart fruit-grower. What about fruit-growing in this country? Is'himself.an apple man, but understands peaches and plums. Has noticed while in hospital that many ap- |pleu sent to convalescents were full of | codlin grub, which he considers far more serious than bocis. What about red scale and the other fruit pests? What about packing and [lralght rates? In Tasmania the wood for { an apple crate costs threepence half- { penny, and the completed article less than fivepence. On the other hand, South Af- rica s nearer London than Hobqn. Las- celles works out the sum in his head and ! emerges to say that he has dug up many | I | THE EMPORIUM. THE EMPORIUM. 1 THE EMPORIUM. THE EMPORIUM. 1 RRRRRRR R RRRRRE R R R R R R R R R R c"i’dre"’s : :;othars (‘:au k: :f "“3 '30. ord to ovarlook this item — never ‘miad kow we can afford to sell them at the price, be satisfied to get them. Children’s fast black 1x1 ribbed extra heavy Lisle thread Hose, double knae, splied hee', French woven toe, many inferior ltochnp are re- tailed every day at 25¢ a pair, these, in sizes 6 to 93, on Wednesday only...13¢c Second Section—Left of Entrance. €Ol Ladies’ Button Dot know 5"“3 S’.OS. when we ha 8o goo i a bar- gain in Ladies’ Shoes to offer. They are'made of good Don- fa kid, cloth tops, coin toe, patent leather tips, an excel- lent shoe for general wear and would be a bargain at $1.75 a pair. we have all sizes from 23 to 6, and the big store’s special price, " o!dnasdly anly, per pair. .. $1.0: in ali the .eading colleges. The T)Lctlonary sale continuas. All |gray suits that we sell regularly at $12.50 previous Dictionary or Encyclopedia offer- ::d]ns,};e(:o g closing “‘_ . “"";;‘3.‘3‘5 ings eclipsed. On'y about 490 left of our | Main Floor—Near Emtrance immense purchase of Dictionaris:, now ing at S E L SRR 2k about fa’'F @OSEe Thev are the genuine Standard l Lk Dictionary, published bv Funk & Wagnal's, bownd i Speclal Sale 11’2“0{3; best full shesp, with Dennison’s patent thumb index, 220 ) pazes, 5000 illustrations 4 ». ’ - a~d colored p ates, 301,865 vocabulary terms. The best Dictionzry of Crane’s § ape" @ large spe-: 8 the Engiish languave ever published—the aceoted autharic- | ¢ial purchase made & Publishars’ price $12.75. our usual 40 fow _weeks = B = Crane’s W . per, the genuin | sheet bearinz Crane’s | registerel water Genuine $1 Dress Goods on =" .. . - special sale to-day, Special Sale To-Day, 69¢c. gdn ssday, Bright, new, fashionable Summer Suitings, Illuminated Granites, | three sizes in the lot strictly all-wool, every piece of | —octav ’;“'fi _and A special purchase of a small lot (small for »‘;:j“::l;fl P Book - Department. Poplins, Beiges and Covert Cloths, foreign manufacture. g First Section—Right of Entrance Ladies’ and A special clearing cale while the quan- on counters. Gowns, Skirts, Babies’ D sses, Kilts. etc., together with a number of Trim- med Baskets, Buggy R)bzs, Aproas and.Cor- sets. Not many of any one kind, but every article a great bargain. Prizes like these: Ladies’ $3.50 Lace Trimmed Skirts $7 50 Laiies’ $1.25 Embroidery Trimmed Gowns . 76¢ -$1.66 .31.50 .$1.50 Tnfants’ $2.00 Wool Dresses, Infants’ $3.00 Buzgy Robes Babies’ $3.75 Kilts, 3-year siza. Second Floor—Near Elevator. prices. N \\ best .matarials. prices befora. Tnmmed Walking Hats that were $5.5°1 and $6.C0, now. : Trimmed Turba; bro\\n, hlark and navy, that were 46 00, now......83:00 Trimmed Hats — flowar: The Domestic Nevs Dress Y Department Glnyhams 6Cs makes an offer- ing in suylish Dress Ginghams long to be re- membered. Hundrads of new designs cnd colors, all freshly unpacked from their cises, 60c Bottles Perfume 23ec. Genuine Imported Cut-Glass Bottles, very pretty, worth ¥ regularly not filied 35¢ each, filled with two ounces of our true and lasting odor Violet Water, which seils regular’y at 25¢, making the actual va'ue § of each bottle €0c; 250 of | these bottles are offered for Wednesday nnlysac .R!RVMR’-R'M'ARIRn!!!.!l!!W'-V,'.'.RR'.R'.MR'M!!R'M!RRHERK!RPMM%““M‘WR’RW PERERRRERRRRRR RN An enormous lot of new Shirt neariy 10,000 —all this seaso tory,"bought all the shirt waists Perfumery Counters—Rotunda. than half regu‘ar value. New 752 Waists for.. B ’ 2.Pjace Oy bout 50 oys’ 2-Pi left of those 3("!8 $1.95. 1.V 2 Piece Suits, for boys 9 to 15 years, that were .75 Waists for Second Floor—Front. ial Sales To o Dayo cut: price $11.70, our extr:mrdiuary pric> for this lot........ us) of 500 yards on specia' sale to-diy, Wednesday, oniy. In view of the greatly advancsd prices on wool fabries during tha past few weeks thise handaome dress goods would be extraordinarily cheap at ths rerular price, $1.00 pér yard; but the big store offa ch‘i;dren’s mm’ last f"’,: ; quantity: lasts, at.. % B:::dalq)c; spefrlm t\\;dw - Under- saving ofha e s n Counter—Main Aisle f S e muslins. 25.mere | A Mlllmery Clearing Sale e Rk of Muslin Garments and -Undermuslins that 50 th s' 00, ofographs, ' o« ® have been &lightly sofled in show-windows:or C Oon e - A Half Price. ... wie A remarkable offering, you will say, for a firm to make in the middle of the season, but we are going to have a mid-season opening of en- tirely new models from Paris and New York on Monday, May: 14th, and: commeneing to-day, uwa‘il that tvne. wa- shall sell our high-clas s Trimmed Hats at Fifty cents on the dol'ar for Fa |50 T *dasent Coleron: Punale. 4353 nches, latest fanci 8 in Dress Hats, Carriage Hats. Picture Hats, | finished in best manner in Carbon Iton Walking Hats, Shade Hats, Turbans and Bomnet:: ~All hats | face mount, that are regularly $5 a dozen, for. $2.50 trimmai in this season’s co'ors, a!l hats this season’s shapes, all hats of the be<t workmanship, all hats mada of only very Suzh - miilinery *was never sald for - such Y " 4-gt. lce Cream - Trimmed Hats, elegmt miterials, for- | Frr@eZers $1.69. :: ... 00 mer pnc«s $16.0) and $18.00, now rlbbon:—!hm former prices $18.00 and $29.00. now medium, dark and light effects, ara cffered | ore $g 00 ‘oo S IGO0 | i ey as a cpecial drive for Wednesday| Trimmed Hats, al shapes and shades.| B-autiful Trimmed Hats, fine materia's. |heavy galvanize only, per yari....cons 68/ tint were $10.00, now... .$5.00 finely made, were $25, now.....802, 50 | hooks that Main Floor—Off Rotunda. Trimmed Hats, fine materials, hats that| Biegantly Trimmed Mode! Hats. that |not rust, gearing were $14.00 2nd £15.00, 1OW.... $7s@0 Were $3).00, 1AW evvvvv- crvneerr SIS, wotected by matar Milinery Department—Second Floor. Two-~-Day Shirt Waist Sale Wednesday and Thursda_y. ‘ materials, patterns and colorings. on spe- cial sale Wednesday and Thurs- day only. We have cleared out a fac- big reduction, and offer them to our omers for two days at a little moref $1.25 New $2.50 Waists for . % A special sale Men’s Oxford Gray . h's week of some of the most fasi- mnablo business snits made this spring. Sin- gle-breasted sack coat style, made of stri ly all-wool Oxford Vicemas, vests either s g e or double breastad. two pretty shades of RARALARAGANCRA AR ARaS 125 sheets Writ- ing Paper, regularly 75¢ and 9le, | te-day them to-day, as long as ssc ¥ special ..30e 125 Eavelopes, to m:uch abo»e. rezularlv tise our Jarge and strictly first-class Photo- graph Gallery on second floor we will make for one week only, Aoril 39th to May 5t in- clusi 1 dezen Celeron Panels, siz> 83x13% inches, | finished in the very best manner in cotton | on melton face mount, that are regularly $10 | per-dezam, for.. $5.00 bargai AAARAAAARAARE FAARRRAARAAAGAR AR A ARGV AT Rz aa nary; one .of the best known -makes of Ice Cream Freez- .$9.00 high novelties, hlagant Tnmm>d H 3 caps, making the freezer salt proof and easy to clean, freezas e: nd quickly, stead of the regular price, $2.49, special for Wednesdav only.. ..$1.69 House Furnishing Department Waists— n’s styles, This is a spe- Noftingham AR |Curtains 79c¢. .., imitation Arabian pattern, 3 yards icches wide, and a double bordered effect with open fish net center; also 3 yards by 40 inches, the colors ecru ; the specia! price for Wodnesday onfy i: | about a third less than real value. Per paic | .78¢ Floor. they had / Curtain Department—First ARAAAANR L AALAR AR R RANRAN R AL REAsRRgaw Seven seasonable Groceries e and L’q"a"s- able special bar- gains for this day only? described in la:t Sinday's paper. They have double-breasted ccats and knea pants, in new, nobby patterns of all-wool mixed cheviot, the seats and knees are made double to withstand hard wear, would be an ex- ceptionally good value at $2.95, the big store's sale price.... -..$1.85 $3.95 Blouse Saiflor Suits $2.95 These are pretty, new fashion suits, boys 3 to 10 years of ags, there are six styles of braid and embroidery trimming from which to select and each suit is worth at least §395, the big store’s sale price 2.85 Ali=-Overs, A'l short lengths and broken cols find among them taffetas, tucked yokings in a variety of mate: RERRRRRERRERRRRRRY !R!','MRRR!!HI’MMRR!RR!RRRM!'M&', One-~Third Off RegularPrices Drapery Nefs. yokings and drapery nets go on bhargain counter on main aisle at one-third off regular prices for Wedne: chiffons, Sugar—Best dry granulated, 21 Ibs +71.00 new, large 14c Almonds—B:st soft she meat, lb.. New Prunes— A special buy of 300 Ibs of fine new prunes, the kind that sells regularly 5c a lb, while this supply lasts 8 Ibs.. ...25¢c Queen Lily Soap 140 bars of th's excellent laundry soap, special to-day only, 4 bars 25¢ PortorShcn- An extra T-year- o'd quality, regularly ~1 50 a gailon, for .87¢ Yokings, or lines of all-over embroideries, s{ay onfy. You will roidered, corded and , most of them fine Jualitie:. rials RAAARRARAAR R AAARAR SRR A nRAd R R R Ran $7.50 Bicuse Sailor Suits| See the Msst komuoky bom-bon—Fuu quart $4.95 —These are for boys 3 to 12 years | Amusing &rands bottles, a special lot of 500 bottles only of of age, some handsoma Scotch mixtures, red, | Cocka= t EMNRI“ 12ic this excellent whisky, on sa'e Wednesday, blue und green serges, al! stylish sprintz ma- | {@GS. Cigars per bottle....... teria', entirely new. each suit a nove! Free r‘:_(hlbi-w io~ 10c. Liebig’s FEeef, “tron and regularly $7.00, §7.50 and $850, tha hig| tion daily Golden Rule Bazaar. Most 5¢ Wimg—Our regular price 43¢ a bottle, on store’s sale price...... $4 95| (70T 102 M oy 1FORNIA'S LARGEST--AMERICA'S GRANDEST STORE. & S0rS Wednesday. 37¢ Second Aisle—Right ol Entrance. Seconr{ Floor. Rotunda. Main Floor—Rear. RALARARALAARAL L LR ERRRRERAAR LR ANERRRAQA R AR RRL RN aa RAaRAARARTRTaas TR as A samples of soil arotind Kimherley; hafi on the Paardeberg laager. Being a youth also looked over many farms up country | | of cheerful and speculative temperament, as he rode through them. ‘lhc would be ghrewd enough to pronounce @ LAND OF PROMISE | on the chances of a new country if.any one brought him the facts and the fig-| Lascelles thinks that—Tasmania being a | Ures—and the fancles. small place—a young man might do worse e e here ana grow ap in a mew| DESIRABLE SETTLERS. country, eh? It is represented to Las-| As it is, he lies in bed with a bullet celles that he is the kind of man we need : through his leg and thinks about a- Van- | badly. Yes, Mr. Lascelles, this is the one | couver girl. = Collles, aiso: a Western land for the new man of colonial expe- | man, in real éstate, would ‘be -another rience—for open air men used to large | splendid recruit. He *shed -his. blood for spaces and plain living, thousands of | the country with a vengeancs, ‘the bullet | them. Here Is everything—horses, catlle, | merely missing an artery. . He would wool and fruit. Do you know any more (stay in the country If properly ap- young men of the same views—Manitoba | proached. He. is sinfully ~proud of :‘the ranchers, New Zealand sheep men, fruit | fact that of 850 Canadians engaged -in | growers of the South? Hh(s business not more ‘than.four hun- If so, bring them along, and we will | dred and sixty are at this dafe avallable. make such a country as the world has|And they were not cut down by sickness never seen. Lascelles-admits that he has | o cut off by patrols. talked to several friends about the wis-| We may fl=sume‘ then, l_hfl! &mo_fis_the dom of settliing here after the war: " They | | hospitals lie 30 Canadians of : t_hg very think well of “it. nstamp and ‘breed: we . requiré—young, In twenty minttes I have pledged thesound, clean, intelligent, well educated, of honor of the empire to the hilt on behalf | which 75 per cent hold ‘or have held land: | | presented a | carry the greetings to the Grand Army of | beadle: § Get HUDYAN a.nd Get Well! of Lascelles and company. If they mean business everything shall be made . easy for their first start. "I will lend them money on mortgage (at least you will, and we shall get 4 per cent). T will slap down railways along the valleys where the fruit grows, so that no farm need haul her dried prunes more than five miles to the rail. (This is not so mad as it sounds, for such valleys are few:) ; 1 will arrange low freights if I have to go on my knees to a German shipping firm. I will break the Covent Garden fruit ring into flinders. "I will erect cold stor- age warehouses by the acre, and chilled fruit cars at 40 degrees uniform shall be as common as cattle trucks on all our lines. 1 will develop under the care of a half dozen picked canal officers from In- dia such a scheme of irrigation (it will | not cost more than $3,000,000 to begin with) as shall beat the Bara Doab, Colorado and the Queensland colonies combined. Mr. Lascelles accepts everything calm- ly. He is young 2nd has the divine faith. “In twenty years' time!" he says, and his eye, with a budding sty on it, glows. ‘“Ah, but it's all a gamble.” 1 make haste to qualify. “One has to take one’s chances.” “I'll take ‘em,” says Mr. Lascelles, and, when you come to think of it, a man who has been risking his life for a few weeks is not going to be deterred by the prospect of one fruit farm, or half a dozen for that matter, failing on his hands. Meantime, will you please take notes of the few schemes I have committed you to? Because In five vears you will be lending money on them, and they will pay more than trappy gold reefs or South American tramways. The tents are full of boys who, with a little steering, would settle here. Nixon ot Vancouver, for instance, is in real es- tate and life insurance when he is at home. lle was also In the Canadian rush | Three hundred possible héads of sane and | | soaped families. ‘And not a-man.to show | | them -maps and photos -and plans, to de- velop schemes to lure them to..stay - South Africa.. We shall let all'these beau- tiful men, and hundreds and hundreds more, go ~back to their own place: and | Truly we are the most wasteful as “e‘ are the most.idle nation .uader heaven! Derby and Dinniss and Crich and Neeld | and Johnson, and the voung postman:at | Crief and my own-postman’ at Rotting- | dean (he is here in a bearer company),: and the man that drives the big brewery | wagon at Newhaven. (he Is here in the | tein), must go home when the war is end- | ed. Blessings and thanks go With them. They are all either reserve men, their places waiting for them, or men of the regular line without a trade. But we need Mylton when he gets better, and Nixon | and Collles and Lascelles and the twins and a few thousand more of their kidney | to stay and inherit. | | For the land is a good land. It has been | lwmruuvnna wickedly starved—starved by | policy and craft through many years lest an_Incompetent race should be found out 1 before the face of the nations. RUDYARD KIPLING, FORESTERS AND GRAND | ARMY MEN IN SESSION Elections of Officers for the Two Bodies Will Be Held by the Dele- gates To-Day. * Emclfl Dispatch to The Call. SAN LUIS OBISPO, May lL—At the meeting of the Grand Court, Foresters of America, to-day ';]‘;lelllvn:w;? ’e(t;::miueg G 1 ap ot i mluec on r.-redentmn reported a full rep- never lift a finger to stay them. '3 I Black Watch and was hit at Magersfon- | resentation. J. E. Barnes, the next grand | It is predicted that at the election of of- sub-chief ranger, in-an éloquent speech | ficers to-morrow J. k. Barnes will be chosen resolution: of greeting and | chief ranger; Frank Conklf 3 moved:that a cammittee of five. consisting | E. P. Figel. recording secretary: ( of T. H. Cone, I. G. Shaw, I..Levy. 'E.| Goldman, senior woodward; Max Grim, Gerson #nd . G. Johnson, be-appeintéd to | junior woodward; Warren M. Jonn, senior P: ‘Storni and €. Haab, trustees. The State encampment of the California the Reépublic-and departmént: organiza- tions: and Nevada Griand Army of the Repubiic A ‘movement has been started to estab- | wil elect officers to-morrow also. George 1ish a_California_home: for. sick and di M. Mot Is slated for department com- abled members. " ported bf able sem! he. home. fs'to be s a 5 cent per capita tax, pa anrually. | mander. Stephen D. | commander - 2nd | vice commander: Ballou for senior vice F. .Shuiler for funior Palpitation of the Heart OFreN COMES FROM NERVE WEAKNESS OR DIGEST]VE DISORDER. \ | ’Hudyan Cures. ALL DRUGGISTS, § : g 3 8 ak hearts are as numerous as weak stomachs—in fact. this dangerous condition In oftan directly. dup to somach trouble or nerve weakness, two very common ail- ments. Every heart that flutters, palpitates or aches, is weak or diseased. Hudyan cures positively. Warning symptoms are dizziness. loss of appetite, paleness. tired feeling, nausea, sediment in urine, sleeplessness, emaciation. ringing in cars. trem- blings, blues. lack of energy. pain in back or left side. Hudyan cures oge and all the above symptoms, thus preventing dangzerous complications. GET HUDYAN From your draguist—Wo o pdckage. sti sechages 2 1t keep it, send direct to Hudyan Remedy Co., cor. Stockton, Elils and l!lrln uts., &n Francisco, Cal. ————— ————————6 OF THE HUDYAN REMEDY CO. MAY BE [} DOCTORS | CONSULTED BY LETTER OR IN PERSON. WRITE YOUR SYMPTOMS. SEND FOR FREE CIRCULARS AND TESTIMONIALS OF THE GREAT HUDYAN. SRR BOROECOBOROA 030 BORORCHOROROBOACHORCRCHCY CHOROHOIOHORCH CECHCHCRCHQICHOICH ECEQICEQ: § : § : ] : § RCHCH OO ORI NN BOHOL OOV DO QOO GO0