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\ for the sick, convalescent or invalid is ANHEUSERE.US CH's HE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1900. Be Impossible. Yutiene It is assimilable by the weakest stomach, invigorates the entire system, refreshes, restores health and strength. ' Made only by | ANHEUSER-BUSCH BREWING ASS’N, ST. LOUIS, U.S. Brewers of the celebraied Brands: The Famous Original Budweiser, Faust, Michelob, Anheuser Standard, Pale Lager, Black and Tan and Anheuser-Busch Dark. AMUSEMENTS. COLUMBIA.Z: MOROSCO’S GRAND OPRPERA HOLIS MATINEES SATURDAY AND SUNDAY. AMUSEMENTS. LAST ¢ NIGHTE, MATINEE SATL'RDAY.‘ | EDD[E FOY szRAW!—: com- In the Latest Comedy Buccess, | NEW PANY ONLY THIS WEEK ¢A NIGHT IN TOWN.” | Great Eagilsh Raciog Drama, imPoRTANT! The Sporting Duchess. The |¥. C. WHITNEY and EDWIN | NEXT WEEK {...“IN PARADISE.” THIS |=vowuss(riginal s Au- | EVENING PRICES 10e. 15e. 2Se, suc > S A Few Front Tows 1h Orchestra 7ic. Thursday) ’!mw-tnc N. Y. Production of | \ATINEE PRI 10e, 15e, 25e, 50e. ——No Higher. Morning Quo Branch Ticket OfficeEmporium. AT 9 =oe | VADIS. HAM : THE BALE | A L ? A i B R A > SEATS Dramatized by 3 ielaus Stange. Max Freeman. an_Bawards ALF ELLINGHOUS! Prop. and X AND BOXPE - Acknowledged to be the funniest show In town 100 PEOPLE —— 100 MATINEE SATURDAY_TO-NIGHT. GRBAT ACTS! A. M. Paimer's SENSATIONAL FARCE- Prices COMEDY 8, £1.50, 81, 75¢, 5Oc, 25¢. NEXT MONDAY. “THAT MAN.” WALTER WALKER. The Dainty Comedienne, MISS MILDRED ST. PIERRI, And a Streng Company. Next Sunday Afterncon—The Record-breaker, . Hovt's Very Best, “A TEXAS STEER.” From Madison-square Theater, New York. Popular Prices—Evening. lic. 25c, 35c, 50c and c; Matinee, 15c, 2%c, 3c and 50c. Phone South 0. OF HIGH CAMILLE ASS VAUDEVILLE. D'ARVILLE ! TERS, CHUTES a» Z0O EVERY AFTERNOON AND EVENING. SPECIAL TO-NIGHT : THE AMATEURS : ——IN— *TIVOLI* sPeECiALTIES - — ~—— AND — REPERTOIRE WEEK. LADIES’ OBSTACLE RACE. ’ i aes sarvr- | THE CONGO FAMILY, “HUGUENOTS” FRIDAY NIGHT “FAUST.” D COMPANY, D PICKANIN: KOLB Opera Saturday and Sunday. SUNDA Telephone for Seats—Park 23. SUTRO BATHS. OPEN NIGHTS. Open Daily From 7 a. m. to 11 p. m. Bathing From '7 a. m. to 10 p. m. ADMIESION 10c. CHILDREN 5 Bathing, including admission. 25c: Children. 20c. e Y AY NIGHT, “CARMEN" $040404 04040 4040404040404 VICHY CELESTINS iS A Natural Mineral Water ¢ 25¢ and BOe IGHT— The Azalli ltalian Grand Cpera Co. ol known fer centuries and ¢ “TRAVIATA.” S 3 1A . ONLY IN BOTTLES, N w pk. of the on. e sy ra re ounced To-mogrow So.called Vichy in Sy. phons IS NOT VICHY. Get the Genuine. Your physician will recommend it. A VIGNIER, Distriduting Agest Q*Q*0+0* 0940+ 04040 +09+0+04 PRI , S0c, 2e. Mat- BRLGAZAR TIYOU UNS | 3 § § § § EVERY IGHT i i it weex | g Specialists WE UNS OF TENNESSEE ORIGINAL ECENERY. SPECIAL CAST. MATINEES SATURDAY AND SUNDAY. | OLYMPIA &82%8%on | {E ONLY FREE VAUDEVILLE SHOW IN THE CITY. HT OF PROF. CONRADI'S LIVING PICTURES! AND OUR CELEBRATED STOCK COMPANY. TO-MORROW, MONDAY, Feappearance of the California Favorite, QUERITA VINCENT. AMATEUR NIGHT EVERY FRIDAY. MATINEE EVERY SUNDAY. | ADMISSION FREE: * TANFORAN FAIR TWO GOOD FOR TO-DAY. | umote cumomcie Bunome. CATALOGUE FREE. s Sl Tsin Lenves s 106k |0 et Eletic Bolt with HO;\FAIJNE. LOTTIE, AL- YCHE, OSITO, EL MORO and 2 et o ot ol s G ot ey il ccce X FREDERICKS: | Meh and women stronger.. Hooms © and 6 ¢ ABLITA, CLEON, HERMIA and | Post st., San Francisco, Cal. with TAGS, “earters. i DR. CROSSMAN'S SPECIFIC MIXTURE Th ‘:‘i and Townsend sts., 10:40, | For the cure of GONORRHOEA, GLEETS, | EFRICTURES and analagous compiaints of ths NRY J. CROCKER, President. | O of Generation. NCERT HOUSE. | For sale by druggists. CEEE oyt SL00 prYom STRICTLY RELIABLE DR. TALCOTT & CO. 997 Market St., Cor. 6th St. LAST X Pretty Eye-Glasses As we make them are perfectly comfortable. | Den't nip, tip or slip, all with the new clip, | attached to any old pair for 5oc. Oculists’ prescriptions filled. Factbry premises: quick repairing. Phone Main 10, A, PHICAPPARAT s OPTICIANS “py0r06™”' s pwmiric on LA, P a FISCHER’S ©° e and_Molton, sir ‘arroll, Robert EI De b e, Antonio Vargas, Mae Iunison Moving Pictures, Seats, Zic; Matinee Sunday. JEANIE LIES ENTRAPPED IN ROCKY CUP ON OCEAN’'S EDGE ‘Waves Force the Schooner 'Over a Reef and She Is ; in a Most Peculiar Position—Salvage May HAULED BACK OVER THE R! CIFIC OCEAN. EEF AGAIN, HOWEV. shed clear { now lies in w is how to She is not in such damaged t a position t The st { Tuesday her sister wil e \ the twc {s expectet e will be saved 0ld timers 5 BOWAVEE: and h markable 1n Aps of the 10thing but g no water ad of steam. s wiih e a tly en washed bars the way some clever engineering work water agatn B DECORATING THE ZEALANDIA. | Mystic Shriners’ Emblem Will Ap- pear in Flaming Colors. | The <ing a float- | ing pal nic Steamship Com- pany's Zeala stem to stern | the vessel is belng overhauled and put in- to the very best of order. On the bow the of the order has been painted in flam ors. It will be reproduced j on and also_on the port and s quarters. An elaborate painting W to have been put on the Stern, but Captain Howard, superinten dent of the steamship company, would not allow the vessel's name to be painted | out, and the Shriners will have to be con- tent with the decorations that are no on_the Zealandia The steamer M night on - s nefse her last dsco 1o e and the Association of not allow him to of their regard e Mararoa nearly ago and was then for years In the latter vessel he t New Zealand contin- ca and for his services edal from the Govern- ing him with a hand- icker on behalf of tha yester- in the Monowa went with the gent to South A recetved a gold ment. In presen some ring, E. W ¥ engineers of San Francisco sal da | 1 ¢ pleasant duty delegated T can perform with a e had a ve | to me a1.d one which it great deal of pleasure, and with but one regrct, and that is tbat stual friend Harry | Tabrett is not with You have been ne to our city for the ast fourteen which ~time Pave had th to judge of your qualifications ve found you t a man and a orough xtend the asions. bu_are malking We are sorry ur last visit, and in view of ihat fact we | have assersblct here to present you with a | token of our regard and esteem, mot for its but as an expression of our You, 'and ae the years roll unning to other ports you n this occasion with pleasant his signet «f friendship ver forget your engineer co. | " Chief Engineer McCaig made a suitable | reply and then there was a general cele- | bration. The chief expects to ~o into the | intercolonial trade and the only occasion | on which he will see his old friends will | be when the Moana is lying at either Syd- | ney or Melbourne. The following important notice to sea- faring men has been issued by the Light- | house Tnspector: Notice 1s hereby given that the steam chime whistle on San Francisco light vessel No. 170, | 5 entrasce to San Francisco harbor, Califor: | nia, is disabied and durng thick or foggy | Weather a bell will be struck by hand. Repairs | will be comuleted in two or three days, when due notice will be given. The following report from the whaling | fleet has been received by Madison, Bruce & Sellars: arwhal two, Be- | intrinsic v: | teelings by and yward ou _are August 22—N uga, Bowhead and Penelope clea u- gust’ 20—Fearless two, Willlam Baylles clean, Alexander and Jeannette one each; September 2/—Grampus ten and Beluga twenty-seven. Charles C. Moore & Co. were glven a contractyto build a new water tube boiler between ferry slips 3 and 4 by the Harbor Commissioners yesterday. he price is ¥ e foundation for the new engine will cost $1156 13. The contract for laying it | was let to the City Street Improvement Company. ‘An informal agreement has beem entered into with Chief Engineer H. C. Holmes. By it the Commissioners agree to pav Holmes no more than 10 per cent on any or all of his patents. The matter is going into the United States courts, but no matter what award !s mad> all Holmes | by the present agreement can get from | the State is 10 per cent | Captain Barneson, marine' superinten- dent of the transport service, wants the sheds on Folsom street overhauled and got ready for winter. The Commissioners Pears’ What a luxury Pears’ soap is! It is the cheapest and best toilet soap in all the world. All sorts of le use it, all sorts of stores oell it, especially druggists. et the Jeanie into deep | | mave orders to hav and th in thorowgh repair. P! house, fences rafls for the new fl section B were submitted glneer Holmes and placed o | board. NEWS OF THE OCEAN. 1 flle by the Matters of Interest to Mariners and Shipping Merchants. The Amelia ds lumber from Tacoma to Honolulu; the Alexander, railrcad tles from | Needle Rock to Salinas Cruz C. B. Ken- ney, merchandise to Melbourne, lump sum. Merchandise for Tahiti. The brig Galilee, which clearcd Tuesday for Papetee, carried a general cargo valued at 887, Including the following: 4 cs arms and am: fon, 4 cs pkas butter, sks beans, rolled bari bread. 115 chandler cordage & pkgs Chin bales 148 ctl canned es coal ofl , 54 goo cs truit, | 5 crs furniture teed, 33 pk | and provis ssware, 11 _grindstones, fruit, 1651 kegs nalls, = ofl, 3 bales oal & cs_pain bales paint, 17 711 Ths lard, 28 cs lamp goods, kegs sauerkraut, 6911 Ibe sugar, rewing machi 2 vegetab stationery, 8 cs shoes, 18§ cs soap, bbls salmon, 7 kegs horseshoes, 221 Ths § cs wagon m: 11 reels wire, wine. wber. feet Iu 23 bdls oars, crs oni n. 4 cs paste, potatoes, abacco, 2228 gais Mules and g Fbra-ée “for China. The German steamer Alesia, which cleared Tuesday for Taku, carried the following for the German Government: 535 mules, 6 horses, 365 tons hay, 150 tons oats, 15 tons carrots, ns bran and various el DAVID McCAIG, MOANA'S CHIEF, HONORED BY MA- RINE ENGINEERS. i dynamos, etc., valued at $19,000, which wiil be returned to the United States. The value of the cargo, exclusive~of the electrical m: chinery, was $75,057. The steamer also car- ried a large quantity of stores to the American troops in China for the United States Gov- ernment. Railroad Ties for Mexico. The schooner Winslow cleared yesterday for Salinas Cruz with 24,416 rallroad tles, valued at $8046. - PASL S S Shipping Intelligence. ARRIVED. Wednesday, October 8. Stmr Queen, Reflly, 65 hours from Seattle. Stmr Taqua, Bash, 33 hours from San Pedro. Stmr Pomona, ea, 1814 hours from Eureka. Stmr Tillamook, Hughes, 14 hours from Al- blon. Stmr Sequola, Winkle, 17 hours from Fort Bragg. 3 Nor stior Titania, Gulltksen, $1 hours from Nanatm Br_stmr Warfleld, Pattle, 4% days from Oys- ter Harbor. CLEARED. ‘Wednesday, October 3. Stmr Corona, Glelow, San Diego, etc; Good- all, Perkina & Co. Schr Winslow, Birkholm, Salinas Cruz; C A Hopper & Co. SATLED. Wednesday, October 3. Stmr Eureka, Jessen, Eureka. Stmr Geo Loomis, Bridgett. Terminal Island. Ger lt?r Alesia, Knuth, Taku. Schr Newark, Beck, Bowens Landing. Schr John A, Nilsson, Grays Harbor. Schr Newark, Beck, Bowens Landing. Schr Mizpan, Suthérland, Coquille Kiver. Barge Santa Paula, Nielsen, Ventura, in tow of tug Rescue. TELEGRAPHIC, POINT LOBOS, Oct 3, 10 p cloudy; wind SW, velocity 8 miles. MISCELLANEOUS. LONDON, Oct—Br stmr Emir, from Norfolk, for Manila, at Port Said Oct 1 is aground in Suez Canal. Her forehold full 'of water, main hold partly full; discharging cargo. ‘Steam pumps have been sent for and divers engaged. MEMORANDUM. Per stmr Jaqua—Oct 2, 10:30 p m, 10 miles jwest of Pigeon Point, passed a schooner with ‘mainmast gone, foresail and jib set. Wind fresh SE. Probably schr Daisy Rowe. DOMESTIC PORTS. FORT BRAGG—Arrived Oct 3-Stmr Noyo, hence Oct 2. MONTEREY—Arrived Oct 3—Stmr Newsboy, from Usal. PORT GAMBLE—Arrivéd Oct 3—Schr Wm Bowden, from Port Townsend. Sailed Oct 3—8chr Ida Schnauer, for San Francisco; schr R W Bartlett, for San Fran- cisco. NEWPORT—Arrived Oct 3—Stmr Homer, trom Eureka. EUREKA—Arrived Oct 2—Bktn Ruth, hence Sept 22; stmr Brunswiek, hence Oct 1; schr Ida McKay. hence Sept 25. Arrived Oct 3—Schr J B Leeds, hence Sept 22; 1:chr Laura Pike, hence Sept 26; schr Una, hnc m—~Weather trical machinery, | STEAM SCHOONBER JEANIE AS SHE LIES IN APPARENTLY SAFE POSITION. IR, IF SHE IS EVER TO SAIL OVER THE BLUE PA- the gutters cleared | SHE WILL HAVE TO BE @ d Oct 3—Stmr Fulton, for San ed Oct 3—Ger ship Sirtus, from Yoko- COOS BAY—Sailed Oct 3—Schr Emma Utter, San Dieco, Oct 3—Stmr Arcata, hence Oct 1 fved Oct 3 mr Cleone, hence 3—Stmr Luella, for San Francisco. D—Salled Oct 3—Stm ed Oct 3—Stmr John § Kim- 29 In port Sept 15—Stmr Stgn: Stmr Whiteshoro, hence Oct 2 Sailed Oct r Whitesboro, for Port Los Angeles EASTERN PORT. YORK—Sailed Oct 2—Stmr FOREIGN PORTS. YOKOHAMA—Sailed Sept Pekinz, for San Francisco ACAPULCO—Sailed Oct 1 NEW r Colon. Stmr City of Stmr San Jose, for Arrived O from V- rrived 3—Schr Honolpu, ort Sept 24—Br ship Com- ali Br ship Torris- for Tacoma SYDNEY—Arrived prior to Oct 3—Stmr Marl- posa, hence Sen PORT PIR Arrived prior to Oct 2— bark Fortuna. from Port Gamble LIVERPOOL—Arrived Oct 2-Fr bark Mar- the Rouk, hence May OCEAN STEAMERS. 3-Stmr CHERBOURG—Arrived Oct Grat Waldersee. from New York. Maria Theresa, from Bremen, for New York. < Safled Oct '3—Stmr Servia, Jew York: stmr Ultonla, for Boston; both from Livernool NEW YORK—Sailed Oct 3—Stmr St Louis, for Southampton: stmr Friesland. for Antwerp Arrived Oct 3—Stmr Lahn, Southampton and Cherbourg. LIZARD—Passed Oct 4—Stmr Kalser Fried- from New York, for Cherbourg and Ham- e Steamer Movements. From. |Crescent Cit: Steamer. | Crescent City. Bonita ... Point Are: Carlisle City Umatilla North For Santa Rosa Arcata. Fureka ewburg Rival . State Pomona Coos Bay San Jose.... America Mar Australia Rainler City of Mineola Coron: Portland |Humboldt B P LT L T TS Empire Del Norte City Syd ses Pt. Arena.|Point Arena. ..[Victoria. China &Japan|Oct. [Portland. .|0ect. |Newport Sun, Moon and Tide. United States Ccast and Geodetic Survey— Times and Helghts of High and Low Waters at _Fort Point. entrance to San Francisco ‘Bay. Published by officlal au- thority of the Superintendent. NOTE.—The high and low waters occur at the ~city front (Mission-street wharf) about twenty-five minutes later than at Fort Point; the helght of tide is the same at both places. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4. 07 43 m. [ ] . i P i 0.1 2 0.9! 3:40 1.2' 4l 1.5 . : 5:01] 1.9 11:23] 6.0l §:531—0.4] 0:48] 4.9] 5:42| 2.3 12:08 6.0] NOTE.—In the above exposition of the tides the early morning tides are given in the left hand column and the successive tides of tha day in the order of occurrence as to ‘ime of the day, the third time column the third tide and the last or right hand column gives the Tast tide of the day, except when there are but three tides, as sometimes occurs. The heights civen are in addition to the sounding on the Unitea States Coast Survey charts, except when a minus sign (=) precedes the height, and then the number given is subtracted from fhe depth given by the charts. The plane of reference is the mean af the lower low waters. Pears Gets the Grand Prize. At the Paris Exhibition, which naturally at- tracted the world's best tollet products, Pears has obtained the only grand prize awarded sole- 1y for toflet eoap. This is the highest award obtatnable for anything at that exhibition. This is the twenty-first occasion on which Pears' sonp has received the highest award at an International exhibition. Rival, for Advance, | from Bremen, | XVIL The golden age to w individuals look back h longing is the period of thelr youth; indeed, the very phrase owes its existance to a bellef in- herent in the race that in youth alone h natlons and hoped, somewhere ahead, but when speak of the golden age that is past we | have unrolled maturing youth—a youth that a country | may well be proud to remember. | The admirable novels of Cooper, the | graceful prose of Irving, the ‘fantastic| creations of Poe, even the poems of Bry- ant belong to an earlier youth; they are isolated productions, unrelated to each other, related in varying degrees to the | life of the country. Bryant alone of these writers survived to live side by side with the group who make up the literary period called the golden age, in which our lit ture became more compact and homc geneous, confined to one section of the country and having a certain unity of purpose and idea. To take the right | measure of this period it is not enough d the poems. romances and essays are its best iegacy to us. We must also dip into biography to see under what conditions these works were brought forth, and glance > lesser fragments literature, pages which have been 1y thrown ott, because what they say is better =aid elsewhere, but which testify to the fact that certain truths had sifted through the common thought. and were, | often in queer and distorted forms, actu- ES | | 11! [ { | | | il | i | | i . <1 T WALT WHITMAN. | | ally lived as well as written. For if the | age was golden it was not merely because there were a few great lights, but also be- cause there was a high ideal of life and conduct, a love of learning and an effort after the best. It was a time when the struggle for a national existence was over, but the re- sponsibility of establishing a national life remained; when puritanism had relaxed its hold as a dogma, but the conscience was still braced by its moral power; when the pioneer's ax no longer rang in the forest, but the chopping of firewood was still a daily chore for intellectual youth; | | when the ard_necessity to read and less imperative than | fon to labor, and the good housewife, after storing her pies In the cupboard, opened her Plato and re- freshed herself at the storehouse of | history. There was something of the | Scotch background of religious austerity | and simplicity of life; but the Scotch was steeped in traditions; the New Englanders | | had crossed the sea with no superfluous | baggage of this sort, and stood in a new | land, whose history was the history of | | individuals, not of the race. Even the re- | their one tradition. Dr. Channing's elo- | quence had commended freedom and brotherly love, and Unitarianism, spoken of somewhere by the good doctor as only | the vestibule of the religion to come, was | for the nonce the national church. The people were independent, but in one re- spect still colonial. English literature was still a mother country for the mind. as it always will be: they had no new language in which to clothe their new thought; they had not even, like Burns, a dialect to be raised to the dignity of a language. Their eye read of the lark and the nightingale. while their ear listened to the bobolink and the whip-poor-will. On the one hand culture, on the other freedom of thought. The. former made {its home in Cam- bridge; the latter took up its abode in Concord. | There was no battle between | them as between French classicism and romanticism; their relations were of the friendliest. Both were necessary to the % - + * development of the country. But to find the true American spirit and the national tang of character we turn to the village of Concord, with its farms and meadows, its slow winrding river and the wooded solitude of Walden close at hand. It was Emerson's ‘“own hearthstone,” his home r fifty years. mNo rx}\’lr?d could have been more fitted than Emerson’s to express the best hope | and genfus of his country. He carried his culture within; books were ar accident to Tim: he needed no esthetic or traditional surroundings. He established a weather bureau at Ccncord, in just relation with the stars and the eiements, and made his local report of a universal truth. It w: an utterance outside party and creed, an: it leavenea American thought in more ways than can be accurately computed. He urged to self-rellance and courage, bade h{s countrymen ‘‘leave authors’ eves and fetch your own.” No one was less bound by tradition, and yet he had the reverence of one to whom truth Is neither old nor new, but eternal. He valued free- dom of thought, but ‘it was not, to his mind, a law _to be established by act of Congress or by the subversal of all other acts; it was the simple, inallenable right of eyery man who had it in him to think at all. All New England came into some sort of touch with Emerson. His long, serene, upright life in Concord was an inspira- tion. His lectures stirred pecple to a be- lef in vast spiritual possibilities. They | were read from manuseripts in which it i1 A. BRONSON ALCOTT. happiness is possible and the creative power active. The highest achievement | of American lterature lies, It is to be | | with him™ | the ore us the years of Its |/ ve | and the Greek thought. i The conditions were almost unique in | | | liglous austerity had softened and become | | T e \GENERAL REVIEW OF AMERICAN LITERATURE. Copyright, 1900, by Seymour Eaton. LITERARY TALKS AND REMINISCENCES, —_ mattered lit he whether more e of his with To Thore: ther | of freedo proclamation “oncord an barks of Wa where he al eding which w Eive pcsterity t his ent and th however ! cholce soctety ; fendly Indian, pt Up reiat nson Al ression , and hew of the p with Thor for two year mehow contr pany her h ’t mitag: ness ‘an. danger of th A delight | our day thar outdoor books and firm, with Hawthorne b is neverthel ss among memorie of Concor ha three vears in his_early A the Old Manse and reiurned to take his long res He is th W graves ard Ho tive wri Americar very books. tie bet author when Hawthorne ter.” In a over the live not so very ome T Haw far removed f cts tha was part o f the east w n of tender fect: no truth of the work ent in the sity they less sust 1 is too obviousl spite of its ch. distillation of t maidenhood 1 | WASHINGTON IRVING AT 26. * | * dilettante; thé third treats of those con- temporary ideas which to the shrewd Yankee so oddly bound.up with the poet in Hawthorne's composition were sa futile and absurd. People were quick to recognize in the Zenobia of “The Blithedale hL.omance” a portrait of Margaret Fuller. That it was o Intended was denied by Hawthorne and there seems little occasion .to contradic him. But he could hardly have put an: woman's figure in the vanguard of the thinking world of New England without reminding his readers of a woman whose writings are now forgotten,. though they were not without vigor, but whose con- versation is an unwritten episode of our literary history. She was a frequent vis- itor in Concord and an intimate friend of its group of writers and talkers, to whor the name of the Transcendental schoo has often been given. She was one of the staff of the memorable little paper, the Dial. She taught, Wrote and lectured and was the embodiment of New England as- piration and intellectual energy. The story of her marriage in Italy to a young Italfan patriot, handsome, but with no in- tellectual gifts and scant education, was the first installment of a curious serfal, the only one written, for husband and wife perished In a shipwreck two years later while on thelr way to America. Note—This study, by Miss Sophia Kirk of Wellesley College, will be concluded on Saturday. ADVERTISEMENTS. PLAIN TALK. To Catarrh Sufferers. Every person suffering from catarrh in its ‘many forms knows that.the common lotions, salves and douches do not cure. It is needless to argue this point or to cite cases of failure, because every victim of catarrhal trouble knows it for himself if he has tried them. A local application, if it does anything at all, simy gives temporary rellef; a wash, lotion, salve or powder cannot reach the seat of the disease, which is the blood. The mucous membrane seeks to relleva the blood of catarrhal poison by secreting large quantities of mucus, the discharge sometimes closing up the nostrils descend- Infi to the throat and larrnz. causing an irritating cough, continual clearing of the throat, deafness. Indigestion and many other disagreeable and persistent symp- toms. A remedy to really cure catarrh must be an internal treatment; a remedy which will gradually cleanse the system from catarrhal poison and remove the fever anad congestion always present in the mucous membrane. The best remedies for this purpose are Fucalyptol. Sanguinaria and Hydrastin, but the dificulty has always been to get these valuable curatives combined in one palatable, convenient and efficient form Recently this has been accomplished and the preparation put on the market under the name of Stuart's Catarrh Tab- lets. They are large, pleasant tasting lozenges so that they may be slowly dts- solved in the mouth, thus reaching every part of the mucous membrane and finajly the stomach and intestines. An advantage to be considered also fs that Stuart's Catarrh Tablets contain no cocaine, morphine or pelsanous narcoties. . 8o often found In catarrh powders and the use of which oftef entalls a habit more dangerous than the dlsease. Stuart's Catarrh Tablets are sold by druggists at 50 cents for full-sized pack- age and are probably the safest and most effectual catarrh cure on the market.