The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, August 21, 1900, Page 9

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1 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL., TUESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1900, WILL ENLARGE POST HOSPITAL AT PRESIDID Large Number of Patients| Necessitates Additional Accommodations. Tents to Be Erected to House the Sick Soldiers—More Troops Arrive From the East. — been m hospital arge ve o du ith a capacity ing the near comy Nagasaki. To the medical Yy, comprisi of the guns an Presidio e m {ES ANOTHER CARVING-KNIFE Swears Out a War- est of Mrs. S A Judge Cook Is Not Engaged. r Judge ¢ Al C GRAPE-NUTS. BREAD DYSPEPSIA. ‘ The Digesting Element Left Out. Bread dyspepsia is common. It af - bowels because white bread is rch, and starch is digested tines, not in the stomach Up under the shell of the berry, Nature has provided s deposit which is turned into stase when it is subjected to the a and to the pancreatic juices in the intestines. stase is absolutely necessary st starch and turn it into grape sich is the next form; but that 1e wheat berry makes dark the modern miller cannot 1 dark flour, so Nature’s valu- thrown out and the hu- must handle the starch as without the help that Na- nder that appendicitis, perit- ion and all sorts of when we go so contrary aw. The food experts that e-Nuts Food, knowing use, in their experi- tire wheat and barley, e parts, and subjected and long continued ows time and the ns for developing the of the human body. chy part is trans- gar in a perfectly without side ingredients. crystals of grape - pieces of Grape therefore is naturally use in place of bread the troubles that about by the too free food. and that is e an race to-day. ing Grape Nuts ten t stor correct brought h i days or two weeks, and the discontinu- ance of ordinary wt bread. is very marked. The user will gain rapidly in de upon the aty as convales- soldiers who are in| ¢ 1g the post hospi- i iave been received at headquar- | etion of meet the depart- y as many g | 4 the use of| i | | | TRANSPORT SHERMAN DELAYED [WANT TRAVELINC BY NON-ARRIVAL OF TROOPS B e N A N e S e e e PASSENGER MEN 10 MEET HERE Special Efforts Being Made to Secure Next Year’s Convention. Their Visit to San Francisco Would Certainly Result in Great B R R R R R Y . PS + & . L 4 - L 4 Benefit to the City and State. All the raflroad men in the city are in- terested in the plan to induce the Associa- | tion of Traveling Passenger Agents of the United States to hold their convention next year in San Francisco. The organi- zation is the greatest aggregation of trav- eling advertisers in the world, and it is extremely desirous that they should come to this city and State and acquaint them- selves with the varied charms and re- sources of the golden commonwealth and its great metropolis. It is the business of these’ agents to in- struct the thousands of ticket agents of the various lines how and where to ad- vise people to go and what sections to ad- vocate in particular. This is why thelr presence in this State Is so much desired. he Traveling Passenger Agents’ As- soclation is a social organization wholly,” said Passenger Traffic Manager McCor- | mick of the Southern Pacific. “They are intelligent, capable and energetic, and all the railroad men of the coast want them to come out here. If we can get them to come to God’s land we will send back to the populous East so many hundred walking, talking delegates for California, & | its climate, resources, beauty of scenery and other attractions, which are difficuit g!m describe to Eastern men and not ap- | pear to be telling an untruth. As matter *| of fact, he fully believes that you are ly- ing, and the cioser you get to the truth the’ more he is convinced that you are a Munchausen. ‘How can you describe the Yosemite? When vou tell an Easterner who knows hat Niagara has a fall of 153 feet that B A S R S S S ] B8 [TAKING ON THE CARGO] R R R s B R R A A . D00 000900660 00006060600tIt0tPe0t00006060600-00 G gh : ext aboard 2 on the trai 1 and two ot here until early board the Sher- 1 w H me: chie ( s s Y. dical corps goes of the NEWS FROM THE OCEAN AND THE WATER FRONT Miniature Ship Portsmouth Beats the Full Rigged Ship Hyderabad Model of the Historic Warship Will Be Seen in the Big Street Parade on Admission Day. aaie. o The British sl Hyderabad arrived from Antwerp yesterday after a good pas- of 146 As she sailed up the y the little ship Portsmouth, rigged as Marion by Boatswains’ Mate Fole e her a brush. The minature craft ran rings around her rival and proved herself the fastest little thing ever seen in the bay. | The Portsmouth was the United States man-of-war that was in port on Admis- sion day, 1550, and the Naval Battalion in- tends having this model of her in the parade on September 10. The Hyderabad had some heavy weather during_her run to port. Captain Scott that on June 12 it was blowing a avy gale and the next day it had in- by creased to a hurricane. Everything move- able on deck was washed away and many of the sails were split. The storm wal accompanied by rain and snow and the men suffered a great deal. On July 2 LOADING MUNITIONS OF WAR ON TRANSPORT SHERMAN. i | Santa Rosalia for Port Townsend, Bridal Veil 1s 1360 feet, sheer plunge; that the falls of Yosemite take a leap of 2800 feet and touch but one projecting rock in that distance, you need not be astonished at his look of fine scorn. “Or when you stand him in the vicinity of one of the big trees, whether Cala- veras, Wawona or others, and pointing | out one like the Grizzly Giant, tell him that that tree was more than 6000 years old when our Savior was born, and that it and its companions are the oldest living things on this broad earth, can you blame him for being incredulous? He would not believe that the first limb on one of the monsters is 125 feet from the ground and that its girth is so great that a coach and four could be accommodated upon it. Yet, seeing is believing, and that is why we | want these bright talkers and boomers to come to the coast. “‘As an experiment we have been, dur- ing the terrible heated spell of the East, wiring Eastern newspapers figures on temperature here in San Francisco. As a result the remarkable comparison of heat and comfort has blockaded the side- walks of the Eastern cities with interest- ed and suffering people watching the bui- OVER THE FENSE o rknoe . a ,4, A 23 0 A SVAS SR e <X B e e i e o o s e esebeoeQ N agasaki to take charge of the hos- | they were allowed down on the whart to | | x. (Concluded.) Tt seemed best now for the explorers to remain where they were for the rest of | the winter. So a fortified inclosure was | made, within which lodgings were built | for the party. This was the first civilized | settlement in the State of Illinois. It was called Fort Crevecoeur, and was not far from Peoria, on the other side of the river. The white men repeated their prayers | | daily, chanted vespers on Sunday and tried to convert the Indians. For worldly occupation they set to building a ship about the size of the {ll ted Griffin, in- tending to use it in going down the Mi sippl. As spring approached La Salle d cided to go himself with a few men to Canada to get the rigging needed for th ship. While he was absent Hennepin was to explore the lcwer course of the Il s and perhaps go up thesM! i. Tont and most of the men w stay complete the hull of the ship, which was now half-finished. Let us first follow the fortunes of Hen- nepin. Brave and adventurous though he undoubtedly was, he shrank from un- dertaking this trip when it was first pro- posed to him. But after it was all over in writing about it he said: “Anybody but me would have been very much frightened at the dangers of such a journey.” On the last day of Februa 1680, he and two companions bade good-by to their comrades, entered their canoe and started down the river. Without mishap they reached its point of junction with the Mi sissippi, then turning northward they p: dled up over the previous course of Joliet and Marquette as far as the mouth of tie Wisconsin River, above which they tered an unexplored region. One d lith or 12th of April—while on land cook- ing a turkey for dinner they were sud- denly surrounded by a war party of 120 Sioux Indians. Theéy were at orfce cay tured and carried up the river by the s ages. For some time they were in doubt as to the fate in store for them. Earnest discussions on this subject were held by the savages, some wishing to sacrifice them, others speaking in their favor. They passed through Lake Pepin, and nineteen days after their capture landed n the present site of St. Paul. Hennepin was now adopted a son by an Indian chief and taken off to his village on the shor of a small lake, which is believed to have been Mille Lac, from which the short Rum River flows into the Mississippi. This was the most northern point which he reached Early in the summer the Indians starte | off on'a grand buffalo hunt, and Henn ! pin went with them down the Rum River to the Mississippl. Here, through the’in- tervention of a friendly chief, he and one of his companions secured their liberty. In a small canoe they went down the and soon reached the falls which F pin_named after his patron, St. Anthor of Padua. He described the falls be- Ti to < s pit Chief ¥ George L. and many of them seized the op- | 1etins. To them the facts seem almost DS then forty or fifty feet high, but great i : . be and make 2 rush up | terous. ' They cannot belleve that CNanges have occurred in recent years, as morning they will be | n a few hours' ride east or norta IS Well known. After several months, dur- v a corporal's guard, and |Of this point we can find_eternal snows, xnzdumm they had many adventures, but and Machinists | when put aboard will get five days in the | While here it Is never too hot or too coid; ade mo further discoveries. they mad J ‘annon and Charles | brig on L and wate that a few hours south are places where | U o A Green Bay. The owing N a to relieve the | At the oment 100,000 rounds of am- | One can bathe in_the surf with comfort SPHiNg—Ifl—Hennepin went by the lak : o ik the T ORo : Elghth Infantry arrived | from the 1st of January till the 3lst of | TOUte to Montreal, where he was well re- Chief Officer wharf and was put | December. A e 13 Sovergr Frontenac. He ap- has been Instru 1en it was found that the| ~These are the things it is particularly ' Bears 1o, have had no further dealings command of the' transport would probably desirable that the traveling passenger With La Salle but after the death of the rding_will come home. | through to China, with only agents should see and experience. The latter published a revised account of his re re ‘been a change all |stop at Nagasaki, a quantity of additionai | Santa Fe and the Southern Pacific com- | OWn adventures, which was calculated to und in ti al ship, meat and vegetables was put aboard. It |Panies have extended a cordial invitation | IoDh the grcat explorer of some of the thi went ¢ nd th e battalion of the Fifth Infan- | ard the transport early ye here were some Iively times 'm aboard. During the day | is expected that the men who go to the Orient on the Sherman will be landed at | Taku, and will be on their way to the front by September 19. try terday ful vales, over the hlg magnificent lakes an our hospitality impress them with the e 2ping wonderful State. to these hustling gentlemen to come here | and let us take them through the beauti- h mountains, by our rivers, and through istence of the exceptional wonders of this credit due him. We now return to La Salle. after Hennepin started dow: River—that is, on Marc 1, La Salle and five companions set out from Fort Crevecoeur on the long and dreary jour- ney of about 1000 miles to Fort Fronte- On the ds ports that on August 18, at 11 a. m., in | harbor police station. They were too| “If we can convince the men of the | Nac, in Canada. They proceeded up the fatity = minutes north drunk to tell their names and were booked | East that these things are not dreams and | TiVeT for some distance with great diffi- tude 124 degrees 50 minutes west, th as John Doe and John Roe. that their beautieg and comforts can he | CUlty on account of the ice. When a few H ilan Isle \\'l‘xs”spnkrn. Cap mgi(rg v;'e will acComplish mighty things rplfls”llwl-»w the prew?l site of Joliet they reported that his wife was very for California. 1 know of no class of men 1¢f eir canoes and struck across the sick. The H. an Isles is bound from | ATTEMPTED MURDER OF who can do so much good for this State COURtry on foot, wading through marshes Water Front Notes. Ludwig Lankenau of 95 St art street is locked up in the harbor police station on a charge of grand larceny. Sunday night | Japanese name Mathama took a | MRS. LULU ROYLANCE Al for San Francisco. Preliminary Examination of SONSHE DL B pusoesstul” Moody, the Jockey, Commenced a oom_in enau's boa -house. He | entertainment for the passenger agents e e s e e Before Judge Cabaniss. while the convention is in this city and der to make sure of it went to bed with | . 10® preliminary examination of Al|State. The prospect of securing the gov- | his trousers on. Next morning he found , M00ody, the jockey, on the charge of | eted prize is very promising. The fight that his trou: 1 been cut away from Aassault to murder for shooting M:s. Lulu \ac‘v ':;‘lnx the clomex‘neiganheret vg‘ll be max\l: his le nd both pantaloons and money Roylance in front of the Winchester e aunual corcw n of the assocla- were gone. He accuses Lankenau of rob- | House on the morning of July 4, was com- | $10%» Which will be held at Old Point Com- another storm was run into and from that | on the ship had fair weather. abad was three da: The Hyder- off the Golden Gata | and couid not get in owing to light winds | and calms. The China Basin Lease. There was no consideration of the China Basin lease at the meeting of the Harbor Commission yesterday because the term of J. H. Neff as Acting Governor has ex- pired by reason of the return of Governor | Gage, and the Governor cannot take up the matier before to-morrow. Acting | Mayor Tobin was attending a meeting of | the Supervisors and so could not come 1o the commission meeting. Tirey L. Ford, the Attorney General; k. 5. Pillsbury and A. H. Payson, represen m&th# San Fran- cisco and San Joaquin Valley Railway Company, were at the meeting ready for business,’ but nothing was done beyond reading the minutes of the last meeting when the matter had been discussed and approving them. The board will meet again to-morrow to take up the question o the lease. Changes of Captains. Captain A. N. Walton, formerly chief | officer of the Sherman, has been appointed | captain of the Egbert. Acting Captain Hawes of the Egbert goes out as chief officer of the Bherman. Chief Officer Croskey of the Grant, now at Manila, takes command of the hospital ship Re- | lief, succeeding Captain Harding, who comes home. Captain Reld of the Arcata has bought an Interest in the laqua and will command that vessel. Captain Mc- | Guin succeeds Captain Nelson on the Em- | pire and Captain Nelson takes the Arcata. | Captain Guthrie goes ouy as master of the | Alex. Duncan, Captain Shay goes back to | the Pomona and Captain Clem Randall wilt—take the Orizaba to Nome. Chief Engineer Nieman of the steamer Australia remains ashore this trip. He | will go Bast to bring out the Oceanic Steamship Company’s new steamer Sono- ma. Chief Engineer Kellar of the Zea- landia will go out as chief of the Aus- | ia. ralla. o aptain Kains’ Wife Sick. The steamer Umatilla, which arrived | strength and physical and mental health. | trom Puget Sound ports yesterday, re-| him. fort, Va., In September. The Robert Adamson has been taken to the Risdon shipyard at the Potrero. The big collier is to have a new crank shaft put in and other repairs made, which will eep her tied up for three weeks. menced before Judge Cabaniss yesterday. Assistant District Attorney Hanley con- ducted the prosecution and the defendant was represented by Police Judge Graham. Six witnesses were examined for the prosecution. They were: George H. Mar- U. S. MAIL-CARRIERS MUST PAY ROAD TOLLS A large coal lighter, 130 feet long, 34 feet o, = gigeL iEnter Al est Jons, tin, H. S. Adams, R. C. Pearson, A. Mor- beam d 1 2fcet deep. is being built at S.'J. Simpson and Davia Martin. The‘”y the Potrero for )(}'w, !'“Wi l;][t;n-(‘vf]»fllell all’ testified to having seen Moody fire the | Neither the State Laws Nor Congress ompany. She e rigged with a dump- « £ g thuc similar o the Carbon and Wil | 10t at Mre, Rovlance, " Adams was shot | Has Exempted Them by Special e mod. every E 3 - o | by Moody a e same time, as he was § ing for her husband to join her. The cas United States Circult Judge Morrow handed down a decision yesterday dis- ges are badly needed. he Alaska Commercial Compan e was continued till this morn- S e il G g ing, when the charge of assault to murder | missing the action of J. C. Harper against Sotonythe Syan "’g”x N .- in connection with the shooting of Adams |y p, %nd"t and Fred Fran:?eto enjoin Keever, wife of Captain McKeever, 8. | win “'L\'h"" "T‘,"dh Mrs. Roylance will | {he defendants from collecting tolls from A., who is in charge of the militdry post | [[0L h¢ able to glve her testimony, as she | {he plaintiff as carrler of United States at 'St. Michae s still confined to her bed. malls from Crescent City, Del Norte Lorentz rd vesterday purchased the | A it County, to Grants Pass, Or. Judge Mor- wreck of the schooner Neptune for $57 50. An Outing and Reunion. row decided that section 2814, Political The Neptune went ashore on the ocean Code of Califorria, enumerates those per- beach about ten days ago. sons exempt from the payment of tolls, The twenty-seventh annual {invitation Shipmasters bound to points on Puget | Picnic and reunion of St. Patrick’s Mutual [ and among those the carriers of United Sound will _their arrival reported to Alllance Association of Californla was | States mails are not specifically men- the Merchants’ xchange 1f they will put | held at San Lorenzo grove on Sunday. | tioned. Neither has Congress exempted up their s al flags when passing Baadah Point, Neah Bay. Hector Brody set his son up in the deliv- ery business. “While the young man was in a house delivering a package three men stole the wagon. Hector saw them driv- ing along East street and at once cap- | The affair was largely attended by friends | and members of the organization, and a | delightful day was spent among the trees. | An_excellent orchestra discoursed music |and the dancing pavilion was crowded | throughout the day. M. A. Callahan act- ed as floor manager and F. McCarrick, T. them, and the case was therefore dis- missed. Similar action was taken with regard to the suit of the Eureka and Klamath River Railroad Company against the California and Northern Rallway Company to en- join the defendant from prosecuting cer- tured the team. One of the men escaped, | Alford, T. Searey and J. McGinney com- | tain condemnation suits in the State but the other two were locked up In the | posed the reception committee. courts. .' R O e e e S e Sk S SRS S SO Sy e i PORTSMOUTH (MODEL SHIP) AND HYDERABAD RACING UP THE BAY. ‘*M*flmwwwflw*» : i $ % i : | 1 i as can these passenger agents, and that s why the raliroad men of all the lines are eager to secyre the next convention 1 sincerely hope their It is intended to provide free transpor- | tation to and from the coast and general and inundated meadows, floundering o the prairie deep in mud, until they reac ed the mouth of the St. Joseph. The: = they tramped across Southern Michigan, enduring great hardships from exposure to wet and cold, and some danger from the Indians. Reaching Lake Erie, they made a canoe in which they paddled to Niagara, and thence made their wa. to Fort Frontenac, where they arrived on the 6th of May, after “‘the most arduous journey,” says the chronicler, “ever made by Frenchmen in America.” On August 10 La Salle left Fort Front nac on his return with twenty-four men, and followed the northern route by way of the Humber, Lake Simcoe. the Severn and Georgian Bay, to_Michillimackinac. Thence he went down Lake Michigan, up the St. Joseph, across to the Kankakee and down that to the Illinois, thus re- | tracing_his route of the previous year. While he was on this journey a great Iroquois invasion occurred, and the r | sult of it was manifest when the Illinoi village was reached. Where the 450 lodge: had stood the year before none were now left. The whole was a scene of savage destruction and desolation. Anxious | about Tonty, La Salle went on down the { river to its junction with the Mississippi. | He now for the first time beheld the great river which had played such an impor- tant part in his hopes and plans. But he had no time to explore it. Retracing his course, he continued his search for Tonty and finally reached the St. Joseph again but had no word of the fate of his friend nor was it until the following March that he heard of his escape and safe arrival at Green Bay. La Salle spent the winter of 1680-81 at Fort Miami, on the St. Joseph, and here | the project took shape in his mind of forming a new Indian confederacy in the Tllinois region, with himself at its head. With white man's arms and leadership they would interpose a barrier to the rav- ages of the Iroquois. would check the di- version of trade to the English, and with | ! EXPLORERS OF THE MISSISSIPPL Copyright, 1900, by Seymour Eaton. -— DISCOVERERS AND EXPLORERS OF NORTH AMERICA. B N the opening of the Miss sippi would turn secur to France a trade which was capabls of indefinite expansion. It was a far-seeing plan, and to the realization of it he henceforth bent It now be: all his energies. me necessary for him to re- turn to Canada and prepare once more r the exp n of the Mississippi to its mouth. n M to Mict y he wen y, and wit of a thou- lakes to Fort found that his suffered & agents and jeai- He put them in shape could, collected a band ¢ hmen and the and early in th for the thir he Mis: illimackinac him_repeat sand miles by Fronte: a essness of dian atten 1681 he h _the mouth by way of I Bay to Michill t Miami, where I tion, ng it ants, o! set out nois "ebruary 6, > delay lorers ceeded dowr the rive of March, they s amons the Ark s Iné them h great kind The d now reached the lowest point vi t and Mar They kept the river until, on the ith ided into three broad chann had reached the head of the de S expedition was now divi into three portions, so that the channels were traversed to e gulf, where the c s me together again. The party and ami leys of musketry and La Salle named after Louis XIV arms of Fran 5 1 ssippl had now been traced from Minnesota to Guif of le river, with all its st reglons w he realms La Sal'e abova Returning to the Illinois River t St. Lou on the Rock,” a short distance mouth of the Vermillion River the plain below he gathered 4000 Indian war riors with their families and a few whi ttlers. Thi: nning of a ess dep upon of commui cation with F of the Missis sippi, for the Ca horities wera bitterly opposed to the enterprise. La Salle accordingly determined to go to France to lead an_expedition by sea 1o the mouth of the Mississippl, to bufld a fort there and garrison it, then go up river to his colon The first part of this plan he carried out Gging to France he secured the appr of the King, and on July 24, 1684, set sail from Rochelle with an e After some sai struck the gulf a north- terly direction and reached the coa the continent near the mouth of th ng that they hey t canned t d found Mata t ship now re rned to France and the others were los* unknown remained for two year th antly dwindling unt none were left. During this time La Salle made several efforts to find the river, but without success, and was finally killed ! one of his men on the 19th of March, 1% Thus perished the great explorer at t age of & As we read of his ma journeys, mostly by canoe and over many thousand miles of wild of his utter indifference to extreme pr vation and discomfort, and of the her Here they r number cons v enemies and the reverses of fortun ing superior to them all, we are im- sed with the conviction that his w f the most intrepid spirits of whom we have any record he historian Park. man says: ‘“‘America ocwes hi n endv ing memory, for In his mascu fig she sees the pioneer who guided her to the possession of her richest heritage." C. H. SMITH Yale University. INDIAN GIRL STOLEN FROM.HER GUARDIAN Pretty Ada Baldwin, Fifteen Years 0ld, Taken From Eureka to San Jose. William B. Freer, Indian agent for the Hoopa Valley reservation, has asked United States Attorney Coombs for legal advice with reference to the kidnaping of one of his wards recntly. Mr. Freer stated that on August 3 of this year a half-breed Indian girl of his reservation, named Ada Baldwin, about 15 years old and very pretty, was kidnaped from Eureka and taken ‘on the steamer_to San Franeisco, thence to San Jose. Mr. Freer has alss requested Mrs. Mary Orr, a reservation teacher, now on vacation at Paciflc Grove Monterey, to g0 to San Jose and try to recover the girl, or at least ascertain her whereabouts and that of the kidnaper. It is Mr. Freer’'s intentlon to prosecute the kidnaper, whose name he neglects to mention in his letter to Mr. Coombs. ————— Taken to the County Jail. Fred Hansted, alias “Young Dutehy was taken from the City Prison to the County Jail yesterday after being there for about ten days. He was waiting mn the expectation of being released eon bonds, but they were not forthcoming. destroy. It would be easy for some loan, but ’tis easier for us to get it prices below. BLANKETS. Five hundred pairs on sale at prices 3 per cent lower than jobbers will ask In bale lots. Good gray bed biankets, full size. 8l pair Larger and heavier blankets, Eray. Eleven quarter size. soft, pretty Camp or saddle blankets, $1 50 kind. Other styles gray blankets...51 75, 2 00, California wool blankets, 35 kind California white wool biankets. Marysville white blankets, not extra stze .. Heavy gray wool, 38 kind See the window for other blankets. | | Marysville wool flannel, 75¢ line. $2 50 wool dress patterns, closing. | $3 50 and §3 75 dress lengths, wool. $6 00 values and higher, extra goods Cotton dress fabrics, 10-yard lengths..50, Save half on dry goods—remnants on OTHER GOOD BARGAINS. Sewing machines, used but few months....$15 m’ Show cases in good order. 800 to 9 00 Hammocks, some get $2, now. 110 Overcoats, 40 or 50 to close, half price. Lace curtains, large and handsome k] White bedspreads, extra size, now s Girls' brald hats, last year’ 5 10 Girls' fine sailors, worth Toe. % | Cut glass salts, regular 15c kind. 0| Milk-white glass sets, 6 pleces. 5 | Decorated lamp shades, also white. 25, 50 me AlE We are offering volumes of tin. ware, hardware, canned good: woodenware, stoves and even groceries and deli- cacles at prices that will save the buyers lots of money. ONLY $12, Required to plant us on a solid rock where no opposition can annoy or | old_reltable house | age will | free as heretotore. 000 NOW people to obtain this amount on a from the sale of goods at half their real value. This can be done in a few days if the public notices the cut FIRST FLOOR. Ple peaches, 2%-Ib tins, best o8 String beans, Eastern packs g White table cherrfes, fancy brands.. 15 Table apricots, 20c kind nOW................ 10 Scouring seap. large bars, warranted 03 White borax soap, our price now. o2y Marmalade, home pack, closing. 0 ‘Table sauce, warranted to please. [ Tomato catsup, not e or 15e [ Mince- meat in tins, small... < ] Rotary 3-arm lawn sprinkiers § ko lLawn mowers, warrarted, not §5 00.. 235 Bieycle, ladies’ approved $50 kind % 00 Blue, imported, 12% cent boxes. [ No goods exchanged during this sale. For. elgn and faraway business carefully handled. Free delivery across the bay. Everything is cash. No goods charged. SMITHS CASH STORE Our friends will be glad to know that this is now running full blast under the management of the SMITHS. Our long list of articles malled free of post- Interest Save you money. The 20-page price iist “Home Cirele,” sent Aldress as above at 25-27 Market St., San Franeiseo. P A

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