The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, July 14, 1901, Page 14

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

pany and Amer subsidiary companies of the Unitéd States Stesi Corporat g tive board of the Amalgamated Associa- | tion & Iron, Steel and Tin Workers, 14 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, JULY 14, 1901 REPRESENTATIVES OF THE BILLION-DOLLAR TRUST AND THE AMALGAMATED ASSOCIATION FAIL TO AGREE Three Days’ Conference Ends Without Concessions and President Schaffer Orders a Strike in Steel Mills That May at Once Bring Out Seventy-Five Thousand Men. haffer says that for the ¢e companies named will be affected, but that later all the union men in the employ of the Federal Steel National Steel Company and National Tube Company may be called out if it is found necessary to resort to ITTSBURG, July 13.—After three days’ session the conference representatives of American Sheet Steel Com- American Steel Hoop Com- an Tin Plate Company, and the general execu- | strike and will ad- | July 15. a | journed finally at 6 o'clock this evening | without reaching an agreement. | than an hour later President Schaffer of | the Amalgamated Association had wired the following order to all the Amalgamat- | ed lodges in the tin plate, steel hoop and sheet steel mills of the country. Notify your men that the mill is on | ! not ‘'work on Monday, | many thousands more will be affected. l After the adjournment of the conference President In less | Present the t Company, extreme measures to win the fight. rs, 30,000 unskilled men and the start, it is claimed, 45,000 skilled work- indirectly the regular use of Stuart’s Dyspepsia ‘Tablets A LAW UNTO HIMSELF. Every Man Must Be TI|‘at to Retain His Health and Digestion. Thers are-thousands of people In this world who eat nomeat from one year's end to another, and certain savage tribes in Af- rica and Polynasia are almost exclusively meat eaters; but hile there are thousands of these, theie are millions who live upon a mixed diet of meat, vegetables and grains and if num- bers is a eriterion it would seem that a mixed diet is the best for the human family. The fact that you will find many vegetarians who appear healthy and vigorous and many meat eaters equally so, and any pumber of robust gpecimens who eat both meat and vegetables and anything else that comes thelr way 21l goes to show that the old saw is the true one, that every man must be a law to himself as to what he shall eat and drink. To repair the waste of tissue in brain workers as well as to replace the muscie :und sinew of the laborer, can only be done through the process of digestion. Every nerve, muscle, sinew, every dropof blood is extracted from the food we eat and digest. 1In these days of hustle and worry, and artificial habits of 1ife, scarcely ope person in a thousand can lay claim to a per- fect digestion; dyspepsia is a national affliction and Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets a national blessing. Most eases of poor digestion are caused by failure of the stomach to secrete sufficient gastric juice, or too little Hydro- chloricacid and lack of pevtones and allof these important es- sentials to perfect digestion are found ih Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets in convenient palatable form. One or two of these tablets taken after meals insure perfect @igestion and assimilation of the food. Cathazrtic pills and laxative medicines have no effect what- ever in digesting food and to call such remedies a cure for ayspepsia is far fetched and absurd. Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets contaln pepsin free from animal matter, diastase and other digestives, and not only digest all wholesome food but tend to increase the flow of gastric julces and by giving the weak stomach a much needed rest bring sbout = healthy condition of the digestive organs and a normal ap- te. pmlr. R. W. Wincherdon, a commercial traveler from Birm- ingham, whose business keeps him almost constantly on the r0ad, relates in the Sunday News the dangers to health result- ing from constant change of residence and the way he over- came the usnal injurious effects. He says: “One thing people traveling cannot very well avoid 1s the constant change in water and food; the stomach mever ‘has an opportunity to become aceustomed to anything and ina few years or much sooner the average travellng man becomes 2 hopeless dyspeptic. “For several years I suffered more or less from indigestion, sour stomach, headaches, distaste for food, often no appetite, gas on the stomach and the usual unpleasant effects of imper- bej;mmmmnmmmhu favorite remedy for dif- ferent troubles and I tried all of them with indifferent results, Finally on the train between Pittsburg and Philadelphia one aay, T overheard & conversation between two ladies, one of whom had suffered severely from indigestion and stated she had been completely cured by & remedy which she called Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets; I remembered the conversation and alfl who are ohliged to eat irregu= larly and put up with all sorts of food, cooked in all sorts of ways, can keep perfect digestion by A because 1t directly Interested me; and at the next town I in_ quired at the first drug store and bought a package for fifty cents, and from that day to this I have nover been without them. They are pleasant tasting tablets, not a secret patent medicine but composed of vegetable essences, pure pepsin, fruit salts and Golden Seal; being in tabiet form they never lose their good qualities like a liquid medicine would, but arealways fresh and ready for use. “I carry a box in my pocket continually, and whenever I see any symptoms of indigestion I take one, also one after each meal, and for a year and a half I have not lost a day by reason of poor health and can eat anything and relish what I eat; my digestion is absolutely perfect as far as I can judge from my feelings and although there may be other stomach medicines just as good as Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets, I do not know what they are. Certalnly for people who travel they are far ahead of any liquid medicine, as they are so convenient, they can be carried in the pocket and used whenever needed.” _The Rev. F. I Bell, a highly esteemgd minister residing in ‘Weedsport, Cayuga Co., N. Y., in 2 recent letter writes as fol- lows: “There has never been anything that I have taken that has relieved the dyspepsia from which I have suffered for ten years except the new remedy called Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets, Since taking them I have had no distress at all after eating and again after long years CAN SLEEP WELL. Rev. F. I Bell, Weedsport, N. Y., formeriy Idalia, Colo.” 5 Mr. Judson A. Stanion, the great Church and Sunday Bchool worker and president Christian Endeavor Union, St. Louls, Mo., says: “I have had to be extremely careful what I ate. Many things were indigestible. and after a hearty dinner I could scarcely keep awake. I never have been sick in bed, but have had a great deal of inconvenience from indigestion. Since I learned of the merits of Stuart’s Tablets I keep them in my desk or carry them in my pocket, and find that I can eat anything at all without discomfort. They were recommended to me by 2 friend who is enthusiastic In thelr praise. I cannot afford to be drowsy after lunch, and find these tablets just the thing to assist digestion and keep all my faculties wide awake." Mr. N. J. Booher, Chicago, Ill., writes: ‘“‘Catarrh is a local condition resulting from a neglected cold in the head, whereby the lining membrane of the nose becomes ini and the polsonous discharge therefrom passing backward into the throat reaches the stomach, thus producing catarrh of the stom- ach. Medical authorifies prescribed for me for three years for catarrh of stomash without cure, but to-day I am the happlest of men after using only one box of Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets. I cannot find appropriate words to express my good feeling. T have found flesh, appetite and sound rest from their use,” Nervous, thin-blooded, run-down people should bear in mind that drugs and stimulants cannot furnish good blood, strong muscles and steady nerves; these come only from whole- some food, thoroughly digested; a fifty cent box of Stuart's Tablets taken after meals for a few weeks will do you more real good than drugs, stimulants and dieting combined.” . Btuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets Is probably the safest, most pop- lar and successtul digestive on the marketand sold by druggists everywhere in the United States, Canada and Great Britain, the following statement was given out by the officials of the three companies inter- ested: The conference between the Amalgamated Assoclation and the sheet, hoop and tin plate companies failed to come to an agreement be- cause the Amalgamated Association did not Tecede from its original position, which was that the three companies intefested should sign for all their mills without regard as to Whether these mills had in the past belonged 0 the Amalgamated Association or not. The manufacturers did not refuse their rights to organize, but having many men in the mills not in the Amalgamated Association who do Dot Wish to become association men claimed they must respect these men in thelr wishes as Well as those who are members of the as- soclation. 1In order to affect a compromise the manufacturers offered to sign for several mills Which have always in the past been out of the association. No' compromise was offered by the Amalgamated Association. The Ameri- can Tin Plate Company has only ohe non- union mill. They requested the privilege to make a special scale for this mill -and sign the same. This was refused and the company was given to understand that the men in ail the tin mills would be called out, even though the scale has been signed for all other tin mills. The privilege requested above would settle all differences between the tin plate com= pany and the Amalgamated Association. It was after 6 o'clock to-night when the members of the executive committee of the Amalgamated Association filed down- stairs from the conference room in the Hotel Lincoln. The members looked un- concerned, and when questioned as to the result of the day’s work declined to say anything. . They each referred the in- quirers to President Schaffer, who, they said, was still in the conference room. *A wait for nearly an hour developed the fact that President Schaffer had eluded the newspaper men and had taken a pri- vate exit in departing from the hotel. ‘Warner Ames, vice president of the American Tin Plate Company, and Voyl Preston, on behalf of the Steel Hoop Com- pany, shortly afterward announced that they had but one statement to make re- | garding the conference. This was em- bodied in the foregoing communication. None of the officials of the manufactur- ing companies would consent to an inter- view as to the probable result of the strike. They would not estimate the num- ber of men who will go out on the order of President Schaffer and said the facts in the statements submitted embraced all that they had to say. As soon as the workers ~ reached the quarters of the Amalgamated Association a statement was prepared for the association side of the case. SR SN MANY MILLS ARE AFFECTED. Schaffer Will Try to Make the Strike General as Possible. PITTSBURG, July 13.—In giving gen- eral details of the effect.of the strike that is now ordered, President Schaffer sald that the first order only went to the mills of tMe three companies that have been carrying on negotiations. It was thought best that this should be the case. The orders for the others to be called out is to follow in a circular letter sent to every lodge of the Amalgamated Associa- tion in the country where there are mills of the United States Steel Corporation in operation. It would include the mills of the Federal Steel Company, the mills of the National Steel Company, the National Tube Company and wherever there were organized men employed in non-union L e e e B B T i e 2] ) WITH RED FIRE AND MUSIC THIRD t R, Continued From Page Thirtesn. /@ ~ ¢ plants of the first-mentioned companies. He could not give the total number of men that would be thus rendered idle, but estimated them at 150,000 directly. It was his intention to have the strike as general as possible at the earliest pos- sible moment, so as to force a settlement of the dispute the quickest way. The plants affected by the strike are: American Sheet Steel Company, Aetna Stand- ard Iron and Steel Company, Bridgeport, Ohio; Cambridge Iron and Steel Company, Cambridge, Ohio; Canton Rolling Mill Company, & ow: Dresden Iron and Steel Company, Dres- defy Ohio; Hyde Park Iron and Steel Company, Hyde Park, Pa.; Kirkpatrick & .Co., Leech- burg, Pa.; Midland Steel Company, Muncle, Ind.! New Philadelphia Iron and Steel Com- any, New Philadelphia, Ohlo; Pittsburg Sheet teel Manufacturing Company, Spouseville, Pa.; Piqua Rolling Mill * (corrugation 'company), Piqua, Ohio; Republic Iron and Steel Com- pany Sheet Mills, outside of Alabama; W. wees-Wood Company, McKeesport, Pa.: Well ville Plate and Sheet Iron Company, Wellsvill Ohio; Sharon Iron Company, Sharon, Pa. The mills not yet affected are: Apollo Iron and Steel Company, Vandergrift, Pa.; Chester Rolling Mill Company, East Liv- erpool, O.; Corning Steel Company, Corming, Ind.; Falcon Iron and Nail Company, Niles, O.; P. H. Laufman & Co., ulton, Pa.; Old Meadow Rolling Mill Company, Scottsdale, Pa.; Revere Ircn Company, Canal Dover, O.; Salts- burg Rolling Mill Company, Saltsburg, Pa.; Struthers Iron and Steel Company, Struthers, O.; West Pennsylvania Sheet Steel Company, Leechburg, Pa. American Steel Hoop Company mills imme- diately affected by strike order: J. Painter & Son, Pittsburs; Lindsay & McCutcheon. Pitts- burg; Union Iron and Steel Company, Youngs- town, O., which embraces the upper and lower mills' at 'Youngstown and mills at Warren and Girard, O.: Monessen Steel Company. Mone: sen, Pa.; Kimberley & Co., Sharon and Gree ville, Pa.; Portage Iron Company, Duncans- i ville, Pa.; Aetna-Standard Works at Bridge. port and Mingo Junction, O. Mills not affected vet: Isabella Furnace Company, Pittsburg; Willlam Clark Sons pany, Piftsburg; Pomeroy Iron and Steel Com- pany, Pomeroy, O. The following American Tin Plate Com~ pany mills are imfnediately affected: American Tin Plate Company, Ellwood, Ind.; American Tin Plate_ Company, , Montpelier, Ind.; Beaver Tin Plate Company, Lisbon, Ohio; Crescent Sheet and Tin Plate Company, Cleveland; Falcon Tin Plate and Sheet Com- pany, Niles, Ohio; Humbert ‘Tin Plate Com- pany, Connellsville, Pa.; Irondale Sheet and Iron Company, Richmond, Ind.; Labelle Iron Waorks, Wheeling, W. Va.; Monongahela Tin Plate Company, Pittsburg; National Tin Plate Company, Anderson, Ind.; Newcastle Steel and Tin Plate Company, Newcastle, Pa.; Pennsyl- vania_Tin Plate Company, New Kensingto Pa.; Pittsburg Tin Plate Company, Kensing- Shenago Steel Company, Newecastl .; Star Tin Plate Company, Pittsburg, P United States Iron and Tin Plate Manufactur: ing Company, Demmler, Pa.; Wallace, Ban field & Co., Irondale, Ohlo; Washington Steel and Tin Plate Mills, Neison Pa.; Atlanta | Steel and Tin Plate Mills, Atlanta, Ind.; Blairs- ille Rolling Mill _and 'Tin _Plate Company, Biairsville, Pa.; Cincinnat{ Rolling Mill and Steel Plate Company, Cincinnati; Cumberland Steel and Tin Plate’ Company, Cumberland, Ellwood_Tin Plate Company, Ellwood, Great Western Tin Plate ' Compan 11l.; Hamilton & Co., West Newton, Johnstown Tin Plate Company, Johns- town, Pa.: Laughlin Nall Company, Martins Ferry, Ohlo; Marshall Bros. & Co., Phila- delphia; Elmore Wood Company, Gas City, Pa.; Morton Tin Plate Company, Cambridge, Ghio; Nesshanock Shegt and Tin Plate Com- pany, Newcastle, Pa.;¥Ohio River Sheet and Tin Plate Company. Agnew, Ohio; Reeves Iron Company, Canaldover, Ohio; Aétna-Standard Tron and ‘Steel Company, Bridgeport, Ohlo. Ie} S NATIONAL BUNDES-FEST IS OPENED, forward, introducing Mayor Phelan in tbe following brief address: Schuetzenbrueder!—(Pardon me, Mr. Mayor, for using a term not in our American vocabu- lary; but to us sharpshooters it is a word so full of meaning and import, so pregnant with fraternal feeling and affection, that it would be hard to find its equivalent in any other modern tongue.) Again, Schuetzenbrueder: Impelled by an ardent desire to convey to you an expression of how deeply we here in San Francisco ap- preciate the honor and pleasure of your visit, to grace this memorable event, the Bundesfest, to give you full assurance that your coming and your stay is hailed with delight by all the people of this city; that all, without ex- ception or distinction, are anxious to welcome you in our midst, and wili endeavor and vie with each other to extend to you the hospitality of our city, we shall present to you the Mayor, the chief executive of this great metropols, the golden gateway of the Pacific, standing as the threshold between the Orlent and the Oc- cident, who will bid you welcome in the name of all our people who dwell within those gates. He, more than any other man, is competent and most eminently qualified to speak to you the loving, affectionate sentiments of all the people whose faith and confidence repose in him to a most remarkable degree. The people of this great city have evidenced their lovalty, respect, yea almost veneration for him In elect- ing him repeatedly to the highest position within their gift, to the post of honor in this great commonwealth. On this most auspicious occasion it is meet and proper that none other | than the Mayor of this ecity, scholar, orator, eloquent. and_brilllant cosmopolite, the most public-spirited and unselfish of all men, broad of mind and generous, shall convey to you, who have traveled far, in his happy, eloquent manner, on behalf of all the people, how gladly we welcome you, how greatly honored we feel by your presence. The Mayor, again greeted with a roar of applause, ‘bowed his thanks and thus extended the courtesies of the city to the visitors: Speech of Welcome. Mr. President and distinguished guests, and fellow citizens: San Francisco is so remote from the great centers of population in this country that we feel a special obligation upon ourselves to greet and welcome the stranger and the wayfarer. That obligation is increased when they come by reason of our Invitation, an invitation which they graclously accepted many years ago when the citizens of San Fran- cisco, through the shooting bundes belonging here, extended the city's Invitation to the Na- tional Bund. After the long, and we may, notwithstanding the luxurlous character of travel, say, after an irksome trip across the continent, it must be pleasing to their eyes to behold the fertile plains of California, and when they arrive at the great Bay City, the metropolis of the Pa- clfic, to behold the ‘waters of the largest ocean on this globe stretching away to the far-off east. And wherein has California acquired a reputation for hospitality? I can see two rea- gons why our fame, with little effort of our own, has established itself: because, in the first’ place, nature has been kind beyond the expression of words in conferring upon this State, in mountain and in valley which gladden the eyes and please all the senses, and the sky above, always benignant, looks down upon the inhabitants ‘of this favored country, not with the severity of winter's cold nor with the tor- rid heat of middle summer in the East. We read in the East to-day that the people, with- olt any fault of their own, those Who must labor in shops and in the fleld, are stricken by ihe deadly heat, and never In this favored land are our people exposed to such hardships. In fact the only hardships which they da feel are those which they impose upon themselves, though they do not so regard it. They are the labors which they are constantly engaged In in preparing & welcome for their Eastern neighbots; but “‘the labor we delight In physics pain,” and if the heart is in the work it adds its grace unto every part. Californians seem to me to be always happy when they are mak- ing welcome their friends. Hospitality of Californians. The Californian who enters largely into our estimation of the hospitality of our people is really the Eastern man, men like yourselves, gentiemen. He came here in the earlier immi- gration of 1849, soon after the discovery of gold, and he has been coming ever since. So our city and State are peopled with men from Colo- rado, New York, Maine, Alabama and all other States, aye, of 'all thé nations of the globe, because upon our great reglster there are no less than sixty-three nationalities represented in the voting population of San Francisco, and every State in the Union has its representa- tive. Hence we are not a people like those of Maine, if K ) please, who have been Ameri- cans and Maine men for two hundred years. We are a new people. and our component parts, Wwhen you come to analyze them,ireveal the fact that we are men from Germany, from France, from Ireland, and from New York and Colorado and Alabama, and in fact, from every State in the Union. Therefore whén we speak for the hospltality of San Francisco we are not vainglorious nor egotistical; we simply speak far the great throbbing and cordial heart of the American people, which is glad to meet an American citizen' anywhere in this great, free and prosperous land. Good Shooting Success in War. When the Spanish war broke out the people of San Francisco at once hearing the call for troops, organized the First California (renewed applause), and in this very hall, I believe, the contpanies were mustered In, and our Garman-American citizens. who comnosed 50 largely the membership of your bunds, were the first to enlist, and the hero of that Cali- fornia regiment, one of the few who went down to glorious death on the battlefields of Manila, was Captain Richter. (Cheers.) War 'is a terrible thing. It has been sald, *“Who preaches war is the devil's chaplain’’; and old Sherman said more forcibly than ele- gantly that war was hell. Terrible as war is there are occasions on which every drop of blood in our being and every fiber dictates a warlike policy for a natlon, lest it be humili- ated, and lest all the terrors of war be nothing as compared to the humiliating condition in which it would be put if it did not pick up the gage of battle when it was cast down. We do not wish to go to war, but when we are entered upon so serious a business we wish it to be done expeditiously, well and conclusively, Therefore, in the success of American arms in Manila, just as in the success of American arms before Santiago, for us 1t Is a conspicuous and glorious fact that it was due primarily to the skill of the marksmen on 4oard our men- of-war that the war was decisive, and what- ever horrors there were of the war, they are abridged and limited by reason of the perfec- tion which our men have attained In the use of weapons of precision. (Applause.) It was a most remarkable thing In the history of war- fare that battles should be waged in which the bloodshed was all upon one side, and that great armaments were engaged in flerce conflict, and an enemy older and more seasoned in the usages of war should be beaten to silence by a foe unused, you might say, to war, but who was accustomed to the ure ur firearms in the | gentle pursuits of life, simply at target prac- tice. The United States never engaged in a warfare within our recollection in which they were called upon to use weapons of high pre- cision, such as have been invented and per- fected since the civil war, great guns—those Sreat guns “‘which make ambition virtue,” says the poet we were unaccustomed to, and yet that new learning, the making of the steel ship | and the making of the perfected rifie, we went into, and engaged with one of the oldest coun- tries of the world, and signally achieved a vic- tory. This /Is due to the fact that the men behind the guns knew how to use these modern weapons—more than to the guns themselves— and that they attained their skill by practice at targets, both on land and on sea, and when they engaged in war they knew exactly what they were about. Skill in Use of Arms, The perfection of arms and skill in the use of them will give the best assurance of peace. And that is what I desire to say, that no sane man will go into a war which medns the slaughter of =0 many human beings. It is a terrible thing, but with the perfection of arms and their use there is very little likelihood, ex- cept for the gravest of causes, of nation going | to war against nation. The highest efficiency | In the use of arms, then, is the best guarantee | of: peace throughout the world, better than universal disarmament, which {s proposed by the Czar of Russia and which is a practical impossibility. But the fighting nations must keep their men in the highest state of organization and skill, and then will they be respected; then will one nation hesitate to go to war with another, What comes through the instrumentality of your shooting societies as much else is the skill of men and boys everywhere in the use of firearms. The nation by reason of these facts Is strong and powerful, and be- cause that is known throughout the world she is respected and no nation dare challenge her to battle, because it is now unliversally known, | by reason of our exploits on land and sea, that we are able to take care of ourselves. We have an instance of this in the great struggle in South Africa, which no doubt has yéur close attention, where a handful of Boers are stand- ing off an English army composed, we are told, of 250,000 fighting men transported to that country to down a little’ nation, which holds {ts own because every man and boy is skilled in the use of weapons—such skill as you are inculcating in the American youth. And their little army is capable by reason of that skill and their devotion to their native land ofwwithstanding one of the most powerful nations on the globe. (Great applause.) American Examples. Americans did the same thing in 1876. An- drew Jackson did the same thing at New Or- leans in 1812. They did not.have long range guns in those days, but he sald “Boys, hold your fire until you see the white of the enemy’s eves,” and from behind the cotton as anything Continued en Page Fifteen. Rheumatism ‘What is the use of telling the rheumatic that he feels as if" his joints were being dis~ located ? He knows that his sufferings are very much like the tortures of the rack. hat he want to know is what will per~ manently cure his disease. That, according to thousan grateful testimonials, is d - 3 H%‘d’s Sarsaparilla PR By R depen: - pletely eliminates it, and strengthens the system against its return, Try Hood's. ' ney ADVERTISEMENTS. A WISCONSIN PIONEER Recommends Pe-ru-na as Being Worth Its Weight in Gold. i esteem by the residents of that place. He is one of the oldest citizens. In a recent letter he s: ays: “i1 have used Peruna with good re- sults for coughs angd colds. It has also cured my catarrh which always be- came worse when affected with but a slight cold. | am recommsnding Pe- runa because it is worth its weight in gold.”’—dJohn Paulin, Sr. J. R. Prince, East Leon, N. Y., writes: “Peruna has saved my life, and made a strong, healthy, jolly old man of me. Perunais just what every family should not be without. I have taken very few colds since I have.used Peruna, but when I do catch cold, Peruna is my medicine. “A minister came to me last summer and said that he had seen my testi- monial in the pa per, and began tak- F. ing Peruna. He said that it straightened him right up—(he was troubled with kid- trouble) and Peruna cured him. | ON. JOHN PAULIN, Sr., a ploneer of | I cannot express my thanks for the ben- Port Washington, Wis., is held in high | efit your medicine has been to me.”—J. R. | P rince. Mr. A. Howell, Marfetta, Ga.," writes: “I have been troubled with catarrh in head, throat and stomach for: several years, and the accounts that I have read in several newspapers of the good effects that many had received from Pe- runa, and whose veracity could not be doubted, caused me to give it a tral, and I bless the day that I did make a trial. * It has made a new man of me. “I was all my life up to about five years ago a very healthy man, and apout that time I was troubled with catarr! I tried a number of prescriptions from different doctors but none seemed to_relleve me until I commenced the use of Peruna, and from its use I can truly say that I have been greatly benefited. “l am now in my eighty-seventh year and can walk and get abour as well as many much younger than i myself and atiribute it greatly to the use of Peruna. 1 keep some on hand all the time, and consider it the cheapest medicine in the world.”—Mr. A. Howeil. 1If you do not derive prompt and satise factory results from the use of Peruna, | write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a | full statement of vour case, and he will be pleased to give you his valuable ad- vice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. Pinaud’s- Extracts 65¢ Pinaud’s French Perfumes—Quad- ruple Extracts: Iris Blanc, Helio- trope Blanc, Lilas Blanc, Violette Blanc, White Rose Blanc. Regular price of these odors $1. Munyon’s Soap Some stores charge 25c—a few I5c. Renner’s Mait Extract German (Munich) Malt generally sells for 25c or $2.25 2 dozen— this week only $1.75 a dozea. . Cloths Brushes 35¢ Your choice of any soc brush in the store. Alpha Fountain Syringe No. 3 $L.25 Two quarts—regdar puice §1.60, 10c 15¢ his is the Weelk to Save 4 See this list of drugs, medicines, etc., prices—from 20 to 50 per cent lower than drug store in this city. These Saturday night, July aoth: at special T any other prices good until One cake each Cuticura and Churchill’s Soap 25¢ Regular price 25c cach., Valdiers Violet Ammonia 20¢ A pleasant and delightful lnxary the bath—regular :rig: 35¢. - Belladonna Plasters 4 for 25¢ Regular price 1oc each, Gasoline or Lucine Pint bottle—sells regularly at 150, Lenox Hair Tonic 55¢ Gives strength, vigor and luster to the hair—regular price 75c. Duffy’s Malt Whiskey Regular price §i

Other pages from this issue: