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\ THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, MAY 20, 1900 N \B:‘\V CITES e 25 NLWS OF THE DAY OITiks ALTON AT LAST SAYS HE WAATS THE NOMINATION slakes Formal Announce- ment of His Desire to Go to Congress. e Months to Be a Candidate cceed Metcalf, the Alameda ssessor Now Takes the H RT ON THE QUEEN'S BIRTHDAY FLESH OF HER ARM TO GROW UPON HER FACE 9.—One of the most operations ever performed Recelving the y Saving Special ies and Liquor Cut Oatmeal fashioned—y 1 1b sack 28c$ T .:ug"s BestjBaking ¢ . pound can 35¢8 Py 1 >owde Regulsr 15c. vy 1bus Tomatoes X2, : 9 BLinTa. 4cans 25¢¢ pound T'xt-a quality. paste, 54 ¢ ¢Strong Cheese . pound xsc‘ A Facter For grating and cooking ‘ eguiar 2c “eylon Tea pound 35c' ¢ ¢ o8 Jenves—very popuinr 4 - mong tez crinkers. - Regular 5lc. “Dr. Handy’s Prunes Exiralarge -5 to pound sc Dunbar’s Shrimp...can roc Packed dry —for piczics end lunches. Regular 2 for %o o] ¢ 1terne Wine _gallon 4oc, Heroheimer's—pright. smooth and palatablo. “R gular 80c. Yomestic Porter and Ale Good wa imported. doyen $1.00 Regnler $1.25. 0id Tom Gin . bottle 8ocd Thomaou's—English. Regular $1.99 5 Market St. . F. Shattuck Av, ierkeley ¥ ,Osk Central Ave, Alamedal s O T4l & Wood., Ok ¢ 54 1t Btreat. Sau Joss. '] 1997 Broadway. T e eV T VTSP DD VW™ OB DG WD & I e A S S o St 3 . P A e S . | @ es o0 May 19.—The 154 April kmott remarked_that Hic! the growers of State ch f ome time had do who produced the fruit aid the project and with what fi ity ards to- f meeting was_called to order roll was prepared, which was signed by he follow 3 aff, R Mis .7, Joseph Eyrues, the subject of the morning_sermon by Rev. R. L. Halsey of the First Baptist Church. In the evening he will speak iv upon *“Jacat - MORE EXPENSIVE OVERTAKEN BY DEATH WHILE WALKING HOME a rail- oorway on venth street, near Kuhn had been watching a game of ards in a saloon near by, and about 12 Justice Morris Originator| 3 o'clock he left the place to go home. A of Unique Method of |few minutes tater he was found by 3 Mich i John Hart nd H. A. Reasoning. v him lying prostrate i o ining sh o B Murph When_ the wagon Kisser Xelly Gets Six Months, While 2 s seen that Kuhn was dead A 2 the Coroner was sent for. An auto the Purloiner of a Precious Gem afternoon loped mer 1' : i 2. rt disease W the use of d th. Is Given but Fifty uhn had been in the employ of the Southern Pacific Company as a switch- s | man. He lived at 1558 Eighth street. | ALAMEDA, May 15. —In Alameda Hospital for Consumptives. gher diamonds. OAKLAND, May 19.—A, Jonas returned than e ou it to the East, where ate to the constitu- kiss in Jus last night from a of the bri . a g ing a kiss in Alameda t give the thief | t 1 convention of the Xnd(‘prndent Or- | six months in jail. St diamond and | Ger of B'nai B'rith. In discussing the con- he will discharge the tion with a |vention he sald: “The principal matter we attended to of fif da tite of the | N hment in Denver of a { Peace Morris is the originator of this pital for persons afflicted | unique m of reasoning. The Jus- h tube »sis. The local lodge of ® | tice is pa ses and therefore | Denver commenced this work, and it was ’ | pla 0 Thesh. mate 1 1 by the Grand Lodge of tutional Grand and Edgar Ry n i« abscrib $20,000 Strauss $1000 toward the balance needed. institution will be known as the 1 Jewish Hospital, and it will be open 11, without regard to creed or nation- en six months > >rning by _the purloining a kiss from M rock while she was looking the tiona y tough fer one smac iy_after he k produced by 1"t do no har —_————— Pastor Meserve Going to Nome. OAKLAND, May 19.—A farewell recep- and banquet was tendered to Rev. r W. N. Meserv: astor of the Free Church, in parlors of the pro- nsisted entirely of all the old s, selected in honor of Rev. Mr. serve, he having been at the front in battles and skirmishes during the Civil ar. He was ns)polnled chaplain, then captain and finally major of the First Massachusetts Regiment. He has been | pastor of the Free Baptist Church off and | on for the past eleven years. He is held in the highest esteem. ajor Meserve has resigned his pastorate to take up even- gelical work in Cape Nome. ————————— Mrs. Wilder Dislocates Her Shoulder. OAKLAND, May 13.—Mrs. F. A. Wilder, wife of the proprietor of the Albany Ho- the this evening. The musical arged with erio churc gramme C w Ong! batte jail ch. opinior t this osculatory Read a_few . You need pract on the subject. You'll have plenty | time now. SIx months; no less.” | Lillle Donnelly, arrested for stealing a | dtamond from her emplover, was inter- ested in the dialogue between the Judge and the kisser. She had pleaded guilty | to the reduced charge of larceny. | "I s'pose six months is about the right ting for me, too, Jedge. But I was goin’ to give the diamond back. How old am | I? 't al n. They say I'm sixteen, but that is wrong.” 8. But the Judge was lenlent with the girl end guessed that fifty days' imprison- - b tel, met with @ painful accident this after- Ment wonld Seve tho SuGE Sr Suntive. Soon while attending the lawn party Of the Woman's Alliance of the First Uni- tarfan Church at the residence of Mrs. Egbert B. Stone on the San Leandro road. While walking across the lawn she stumbled over a wire a few inches above the ground and fell heavily, dislocating her left ghoulder. e ,———— Berkeley School Bonds. BERKELEY, Ml{lw.—!’re!ldent W. H. Marston and Clerk Hanscom of the Board of Trustees were appointed a committee at last night's meeting of the Trustees to investigate the selling of bonds for the new school buildings. They will advise the board at the next meeting on the most feasible plan for the disposition of the bonds. An ordinance providing for the fs- suance of bonds was passed to print. —_————————— Mrs. L. Sands Gets a Divorce. OAKLAND, May 19.—Judge Hall grant- ed a divorce this afternoon to Lorenzo Sands from Ole T. Sands on the ground of desertion. In the divorce suit of Ora Briggs against George Briggs Judge Ellsworth has issued a commission to James E. Nor- ton of Wyoming County, N. Y., to take the deposition of Betsy Tours, who 18 an important witness. BERKELEY HIGH SCHOOL BERKELEY, May 19.—The Berkeley igh School held its annual interclass field day this afternoon on the cinder path of the University of California. There was quite a large crowd present to wit- | ness the events, the interest in which was | enlivened by the entering of several mem- | bers of the faculty. The senior class won | the day by a score of & points to 65 for | the middle class, 18 for the juniors and 2 | for the ninth grade grammar school. The results were as follows: 100-yard dash, ninth grade—J. Hartley, Nel- son and S. Hartley. Fat men—Dupt, McCoy. 220-yard dash—J. Hartiey, Benjamin Fenn. §0-yard dash, slow race (bicycle)—Dobbins, ¥ Hiace for all nations—8 ce for all nations—Spanish, Lathrop; Chi- nese, Wells; English, Ambrose. 2 One lap, juvenile—ifarper, Young, McDonald. Shotput—Volz, 46 feet 1% inches; Clark, Haw- ley. 26-yard sack race—Volz, Skinner, Bosttinger. 440-yard dash—Hartley, ‘Hawley, 'Harrison. Faculty shotput—Clarke, 23 feet 3 inches; Jumes, 2 feet 19 inches, © 40-yard dash—Clarke, Asphan ames. 2 Pole vault—Volz, § feet; Mundbn, Finn. Teachers’ Certificates Granted. OAKLAND, May 19.—The County The balf-mile relay between alumni and | Board of Education met last evening and high school was won by the former. granted primary grade certificates to An- ——————— mie 3, Newcome. Catbaryn’ T ‘Gwen, ary ‘oncannon; grammar ade certi- At ENEkelay: Stigrahsa. ficates to W. Stanley Clyma, Lillian Lib- BERKELEY, May 19.—At the First Presbyterian Church, Allston and Ells- | worth streets, Rev. H. Minton will | preach at 11 o'clock in the morning o; “Means and Methods in Church Wo At 7:30 o’clock his subject will be “The Destruction of the Old."” At Trinity Methodist Episcopal Church Rev. C. K. Jenness will speak upon “The General Conference” in the morning, and in_the evening upon “Lovest Thou Me? bey, Hannah Duffey: and special certifi- cates to Miss E. A. Woodsum, Miss Anna Warrer, Miss Fannie Ardley,’ Miss Angie usted. S Boole Company Incorporates. OAKLAND, May 19.—Articles of incor- poration, was fied foday by W. A oole & Son with a capital stock of $1,500,- 000. ‘ollowin, . The f scribe $500 each: irectors have sub- Rev. E. L. Hosmer of the First Uni- . A. Boole, Winfleld S. tarian Church will preach at 11 o’clock ; Davis, H. Z. Howard, J. D. McKee, W. upon *“The Gospel of Humility.” l A. Boole Jr. A general ship building busi- “The Sanctification of Christ” will be ness will be carried on. R g S o e e o e SR S S | | | | | | | | | i CTHARLES R” JONED anfe] McCarthy, J. N Cary, C. Frank, R. Jones, John B Devery. § R. Jones w and Dani an of the last arthy temporary dent, M. M. tr - committe K Strob: thy: tive 15 di A “cons adopted, which dec ciation to be the strict Fruit Gr e of the Attempting to price of fruit, s for the disposai to_the a fation are to oppese mbine which , a FRUIT GROWERS OF ALAMEDA COUNTY UNITE TO FIGHT CANNERY COMBINE. MOVING SPIRITS IN MOVEMENT TO THROW OFF YOKE OF CANNERY TRUST. g voke that bound them to He sald that cherries to throw off the their oppressors. could not be grown at a p for 2% | cents a pound, the price offered by combine. Ordinary black cherries could be grown for 4 cents, but for Roval Annes at least 7% cents should be received. J. H. Begier also denounced the efforts of the canners to combine to squeeze the | fruit men. He could not, he said, grow | cherries at the price offered by the can- | i and it was to the interest of the | growers to establish a cannery where th could preserve their product and dispose | tain of a market, as they had the world | s sessary to devise plans for disposal of the cherry crop of this decided to Appoint a commit- :¢ from each of the districts of h an Leandro, San Lorenzo | option on as and go with to any indi- t price obtain- | o option to the combin | vidual canner for the bes of it afterward to jobbers, who were cer- | so BRIE OF A DAY REFT OF HER YOUNG HUSBAND William F. Ballard Passes Beyond Aid of Medical Science. + L e S R A R e e ] o | Sad Sequel to the Pathetic Midnight Marriage of a Dying Man and His Faithful Young SweetLeart. sco Call, May 19. bride of a day, and, whom she for his life was at the Windsor nths he lay on e my youn, a bed away of pai m the of the ¥ friend of X will ch ¢ 1 be o @ the choir of the able. With 75 per cent of the total outpu of the county it would be possible to tate terms to th 1d-be oppressors. he following t after the simple Mr. Spencer. The 3 £ Bailard was an ill attend the Hayw Hickmott, E. K. Stro- | funeral. The be forwarded bridge, Wililam Meek. San Lorenzo—E. | to Los Angeles for interment. J. Holland, George Smith, John Funchon. Dr. F. R. Jordan signed the death c San Leandro—A. B. Cary, B. D. Gray, M. | tificate, which s forth that the cau M. Avellar. of death was valvular digease of the This delegation will confer with the | heart canners and see what rates can be had | _William F. Ballard was 28 years old. for cherries. They w! the best | He was a hative of ols. 8 ha s ble and report back to the as- | came to Cal acted as an xt Tuesday evening. | organizer fc s of the Macca- bees. He lea his wife and mother a sister Angeles. best plans for going ahe Trolley Car Ethies. ant matter that confronted the fruit “For two hours this afternocon I grieve growers of Al y. Among | that I was not a_ stenographer,” M those who sp ms_were ashmore remarked to me on the car to- €. gs. Dan Ge[nrs!fi Smit Hickmott, J er, 1. B. hy?” T asked. Parsons, Willlam ) B. Cary. se 1 had of to take the minutes v to H of the s He: FROM PLAYING WITH MATCHES Horrible Death of Little Marie Leabaum at San Leandro. Snlignas Three-Year-01d Child Sets Her Cloth- ing on Fire Trying to Pick Apart a Bunch of Lucifers. S S Oakland Office San Francisco Call, 1118 Broadway, May 19. Playing with matches has again caused the death of a child. Little Marie Lea- baum died at San Leandro this morning after suffering through the night from | burns which the parents and physician knew must prove fatal. The little one was the three-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jackson Lea- baum, who live on the outskirts of San Leandro, where they have a | fruit ranch. Mrs. Leabaum was watch- ing the little girl yesterday afternoon in the kitchen of their home while attend- ing to her housework. Mrs, Leabaum left itchen for a moment. In that brief space of time the little one toddled up to the table and took therefrom a bunch of matches, She began to pick them apart and the entire bunch caught fire. Frightened at what she had dome, the child dropped the matches into her lap. In an instant her clothing was ablaze. he began to scream, and her cries ought her mother back from the front of. the house. _Mrs. Leabaum acted promptly and with good judgment. She caught up a blanket and succeeded in smothering the flames, but not until the little one had been so badly burned that recovery was impossible. Dr. Mason of San Leandro was sent for, and applied soothing lotions, but was not able to save the life of the child, as she had inhaled the flames. Death came this morning. COMMENCEMENT WEEK AT CALIFORNIA COLLEGE OAKLAND, May 19.—Commencement week at California College begins this evening with a reunion of the alumni in the college chapel. During the week the following programme will be carried out: Baccalaureate sermon, Rev. A. M. Petty of Dixon, Cal., Sunday, May 20, at 7:30 p. m., First Baptist Church, Alameda; graduation of music class, Monda{, May 21, 8 p. m., college chapel; graduating ex- ercises of academy, Tuesday, May 22, at p. m., college chapel; commencement. Wednesday, May 23, at 10:30 a. m., college chapel; commencement address by Presi- dent Benjamin Ide Wheeler; college din- ner at 12:30 p. m DEATH MAY FOLLOW the FALL FROM CAR OAKLAND, May 19.—Andrew Chesney was thrown from a car this evening on the Eighth-street branch of the Oakland Transit Company’s system, and has been in an unconscious .condition all evening, with serious probability of a fracture o! the skull. He was taken to his home at 1440 Fifth stgeet, where he was attended by Dr. F. W. Hulme and J. K. Sanborn. The accident 1s sald to have béen due to the carelessness of the company. Knights Will Attend Church. OAKLAND, M-¥( 19. — Oakland Com- mandery No. 11, Knights Templar, will attend divine services to-morrow evening at the First Congregational Church. They at the invitation of the pastor, Rev. arles R. Brown. The Knights will meet at their hall at 7:16 o'clock and go in a body to the church. Forestalled Her Husband. OAKLAND, May 19.—Louisa R. Pereira has sued her husband, Jom}uln Pereira, otherwise known as Perry, for a divorce upon the ground of cruelity. Pereira caught his wife in company with Manuel Borge a few days ago and teined her out sperous | jof his San Leandro home. She brought suit before her husband could do so. —_———————— Address by Rev. L. J. Garver. OAKLAND, May 19.—Rev. Leonard J.! | Garver will address the meeting at Y. M. | Hall to-morrow afternoon on the | ness.” The meeting will be open to men | and wome! —_— e i ‘Will Address the Socialists. | OAKLAND, May 19.— “Steps From] Bondage to Freedom" is the subject on which Scott Andersoa of San Franc will address Oakland Section, Socialis Labor party, at Becker's Hall to-morrow evening. REAL VALUE OF HUMAN TEETH. Interesting Facts Relative to Dental Functions—Losses Taken Lightly Hard to Retrieve. In the great Malagawa temple 1s a tooth attracting pilgrims from far and near. A special mission was sent from Silam to try to purchase this, a supposed | tooth of Buddha. An amount equivalent to $260,000 was offered for it. It Is mnot strange that a portion of the human body should be thus worshiped. There are | many shrines where teeth are held as ob- | jects of worship, inclosed with golden cas- | kets, and rareiy exposed to the gaze of | | the imbeliever. | | The average individual values a tooth | | lightly, even as an object of utility, in its | natural setting, and its loss is considered | a trivial matter unless it happens to be a front tooth. Not until nearly all the teeth | | have been destroyed by decay or removed i | by the forceps does one realize what has | | happened. | When one tooth has been extracted you | have really lost two. Teeth cut and grind. | | The grinding teeth may be likened to mill- | stones—one acting upon the other. Re- move a tooth and the opposite organ is without a function. It has nothing to| | grind against. It will lengthen slightly, | as though in search of a mate, and in the | case of the gnawing animals 'the loss of | an incisor usually results in the death of | | the animal. The opposing tooth, elongat- | | ing, prevents the use of the remaining | teeth, or, as frequently happens to rab- bits, 'the’ tooth, having no work to do, | curves upward ' until it penetrates the { skull. Luckily, our teeth are limited as to_their growth. | The loss of a tooth adds a wrinkle to the | face. This is not so apparent, perhaps, in youth as in middle age, although even in ihe youthful the loss of a cuspid, or eye tooth, is plainly Indicated by a line ex- tending from the wing of the nose to the angle of the mouth. This is caused by the shrinking away of the prominence which outlined the root of the tooth. It {s a curlous fact that most people in chewing use one side of the mouth more than the other. This can be traced usu- ally to some defect on the unused side, but the habitual use of one side of the mouth {s detrimental to the opposite side and to the health generally. ““The strength of an organ depends upon its use’” applies to the teeth as it does to any other part of the body. The masti- cation of coarse food may wear the grind- ing surfaces, but this does not interfere with their functions, as is shown by the teeth of the Eskimos—ground down in many cases to the gum, yet showing no signs of decay. The same condition may be seen in the teeth of the California In- | dian. Nature has Hrovlded for the wear of ‘the tooth by building from the inside, when the pulp which occuples the center of the tooth is approached.—New York Herald. at Kandy | —_——————— CONSOLATION FOR SPINSTERS. More Unmarried Men Than Women, Say the Government Reports. Some one has proposed a husbands’ union for the protection of husbands; just what they are to be protected from is not et stated. Possibly the union is to be | Founded on the same lines as the School for Wives, established in England. Still better are the marriage schools ‘which are being develoged in Germany on very practical lines. They are for girls and women only, and the value of sich a training cannot be overestimated. Girls leave the marriage school competent to undertake the m;.nn{_emenl of a house— and of a husband. The girls who have been graduated from these schools have ‘b:e‘rh ixtm lucky in getting married, so it Another society which has been organ- ized in Denmark is the Celibacy Insur- ance Soclety. Its objects is to provide for those women who either cannot or will not provide themselves with husbands. The premiums begin at the age of 13 and end at 40, an age at which it is supposed most of the.members will have abandoned all thought of marriage. Such being the case, the woman receives an annuity for life. If she marries at any time she for- | feits all her rights. Old malids in the United States are out- numbered by the bachelors. although it is popularly supposed that the contrary is the case. - To come to ct fizures, there are 7,427.767 bachelors d 3,224,494 spin- sters.. This is upon the authority of a Government report. Even in Massachu- setts, where it was thought that old subject, *‘Romola, or the Sequel of Selfish- | 7 matds constitute a large proportion of the i;npul;\li'm, they could each find a hus- and and then not exhaust the stock of single men, for there are 226,055 men and nly 219,255 women who have not yet en- tered the bonds of rimonsy ed. “If the good work is pr the name.”” I repl “it mus: ous. charity di quired. Before she could reply her attention be- came absorbed in the enactment of a lit- tle drama opposite. A'yvear-old child, held at its mother's shoulder, had been alternately biting on and tapping the window with a bright, aber : new silver dollar, and now the dollar had ait of an equal number of pachelors | disappeared down the space between the age, thirty widowers remarry for every | Side of the car and the back of the seat. & thirteen bachelors who enter the bonds |y I JORGer 1f It can be got out?” sal of hymen for the first time. For every | "y o o led to the a spinster married between 30 and 65, two R conductor. s widows are remarried. Both facts are| .lLe conductor promptly decided that it Sequent s tavarof the comparative aq. | ould not. whereupon the woman. who vantages of matrimon: oo 5 o i ‘ SO s N Y “Here Is When to Stop Eggs and Milk. | ‘Heart of Heart Auxiliary’ “People over 5 would do well to give | 1 said to Mes. ilk_and s as_a _diet,”_s: the poor woman, enry Searborne. T “I¢ is also evident that structure forming foods of animals w cusably careless,” replled Mrs. Kashmore. mature in a short time, and when taken | “Besides,” she added, J it to know in quantities by human beings whose | that psychic charity has nothing to do structures have already formed they tend | with money." only to the hardening and aging of the | tissues.” Dr. Dearborne sald that he had seen people who were beginning to find stair climbing difficult and who were losing sticity much benefited by elim- s articles from their diet. more bachel- - one State in the female celibates than that is California, in which 5 of the former and 22,829 of . 'The State of washington has the - largest excess of forlorn | single men--$0,537 all told, the unmarried women numbering only 91S1. race,” evident tance to u he was inex- hady (who a week ago had 1 out to_me as the political Ward™), sitting near ollar from his pocket n's lap im- in an “ot “boss of the us, here took and dropping it | mediately walk embarracsed manner. " said a I, questionab tistics prove,” he said, “but beyond that erijod there has been no improvement.” | = ed to reply. n his opinion, the person over 50 should | real thing,” I sug- have as good a_chance to preserve life | gested, ““even if it does cover a multitude as the young child just beginning its | of sins.” struggle with existence.—~New York‘ The silence on Mrs. Kashmore's part Times. . | became oppressi 1 that T A | the car had reack “Let us get down to facts! In the first | e RS place, vou have only yourself to blame for this_indigestion,” “No, doctor Teacher—Now, y. see if you can remember what I read to you yesterds : 1 blame the city.” | i i c Lives of great men all re 1 he city? What has it do do with 1t > “It, put a homely policeman on our | Johnny jest remember the beat.” words, but I know what it means. 'And what has that to do with your In- | Teacher—W es it mean? o Johnny—Why, we couldn’t keep a cook.”—Chi- | seashore all _the time i cago News. | Philadelphia Press, Prof. Jules Laborde’s Marvelous French Preparation of “CALTHOS” For Lost Manhood. Full 5 Days’ Treatment SENT FREE By Sealed Mail. NO €. 0. D. OR DEPOSIT shrunken parts. This filc remedy will cure you at any stage befos a?nvp{‘mnh& with énsuing consumption and Insanity. “Oal- thos" zoes directly to tae seat of the trouble, no matter of how lonz standing, and the pa- tient feels the beneiit of the first day’s treat- ment. In five days tho medicines sent frea will make you feel like a new man. The Von Mohl Co. often receives the most 1s from who an play on the we want to.— digestion Ay Every person who{s a sufferer from nervous ilseuesg%ould write the Yon Mobl Co., Cin- ¢innati, Obio, at once, and accept their offer of a five days® trial treatment free of charge. This isno C. 0. D. or DEPOSIT scheme but a iiberal proposition made to unfortunate suf- terers by thislong-established concern, which is the largestimporter of specifics for nervous and sexual diseases in the world. The Von Mohl Co. has the sole American rights for Prof. Laborde’s French preparation of0althos.» the only remedy known - vanced medical science that will cure nervous debility. This remedy has for years been used as a specific in the French and Germau armies, and since its introduc- o e o the remarkabia ou: ot su snccess of the remedy in Europe has been re- peated in this country. TIn order to place this wonderful treatment in the hands ‘;’( every person whosuffers the mental and ph; anguish of sexual weak- ness, The Von Mohl Co., hasdecided tosend a free trial treatment to all who write at once. Theremedy is sent by mail in a plain pack- ,and thereisnoputlicity In recelving itor ey > % cam it. Accompanyini edicine there own sake to send o R T Sl S e L T T L L S read. Take tho medicine privately wi dress. Tiisnotn togive _‘"_. fect safety, and a sure cure is guaran ing detalls “{::’,“:%:z“ it uj men unawares. | com| t ve daj u{)‘m m;'«;te:&vycmel oF remain 1o lgno- | abio yoq to take the medicine rance while you are being dragged down ‘gy myoml successfuily this insidions disease. No matter what the %try this hethe buscs, excosses more to lat. M& ‘m R e %Am THEVON GINGINNATL OB a3 et vely 1 a; cause may or overworl are the same— 238 cures, the results loss of and % strength