The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, October 11, 1901, Page 14

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14 LIQUOR MEN WILL FIGUAE IN CAMPAIGN Executive Committee c;f the Association Meets. Makes Ready to Indorse Nominees for Mayor and Supervisors. Colonel E. F. Preston on the List of *Republican Aspirants for Gov- ernship—Political Lead- ers Are Kept Busy. i The executive committee of the Califor- nia Ligquor Dealers’ Association held an important conference on the local political situation yesterday afternoon. The mem- bers of the committee discussed the usual custom of indorsing candidates who would be fair to the liquor dealers, and after due deliberation it was decided to suggest to the general association, which meets at B'nal B'rith Hall on Thursday evening, October 24, the advisability of only indors- ing candidates for Mayor and Supervis- ors. This proposition was unanimously agreed upon by the executive committee, &nd if its report is adopted all other fights on the ticket will be left open, as far as | the liguor interests are concerned. . Between now and the time the general body will take up the matter of indorse- ments a committee from the liquor deal- ers will wait upon Messrs. Wells, Tobin and Schmitz, the three candidates for Mayor, and get from them an expression of what thelr policy toward the liquor dealers and other businesses in general will be in the event of thelir election. It is understood that the candidates will be asked flat-footed Y{uestions on this point. all probability the executive commit- tee will then select one of the candidates for the liquor dealers’ indorsement and report the selection to the association when it meets on the 24th inst.- There is every indication that it will be a hot ses- sion. The election of officers for the ensuing term took place yesterday, with the fol- lowing resuits: President, E. L. Wagner; vice president, A. Cousins; recording secretary, William secretary, treasurer, conductor, Shinkwin; sergeant-at-arme, Charles Kaufman. Directors—Twenty-eighth District, J. W. Lar- District, J Coghlin; | Mangels; Thirty-first | Thirty-second District, ct, ¥. N, Bent: Muller; Thirty- L.’ Ward; Thirty-sixth v District, Charles L. Adams; District, M. ¥. O'Connor; Th rict, Frank Dunn; Ti h r: Fortieth District District, Max Ludwig; Forty- | Lunstedt; Forty-third Di y-fourth District, Charle rict, Thomae H. Lind- Directors King, Jesse Marks, Cheetham. large—James Cairnes, D. R. Dunbar, James Joseph F. Forty-eight new members were initiated o-night t Asa R. Wells and other nominees on the Republican municipal ticket. There will be music and speeches. The Democratic managers have engaged the_entire upper floor of a large building on Market street for campaign uses. Next ednesday night ere will be a mass | meeting to ratify thHe ticket. Eugene E. Schmitz, the Union Labor party’s nominee for Mayor, has addressed several audiences this week, and his cam- peign managers are arranging for a big meeting. Anoth. ernor of Califo! Preston of S nounced to his rant for the Mr. Preston the State as a Republican candidate €or GO;’ is in the field. Mateo County has a: riends that he is an aspi- gubernatorial nomination. is well known throughout lawyer and public speaker. He has taken an active part in the lead- ing political campaigns since 1880. In the State campaign of 1598 he was one of the foremost Republican orators in the field and addressed vast audiences in the San Joaquin Valley and other portions of Call- fornia. Recent changes in the clerical force of the State Mineralogist and the rumor of impending_removals create the suspicion in mining circles that Governor Gage has resolved to convert the State Mining Bu- reau into a political machine. H. S. Dur- den, 2 Republican who has had charge of the museum for twenty years, has been notified that he will be dropped from the payroll. H. L. Barker, Republican and | Grand Army man, who has been connect- ed with the institution a long time, is » longer acceptable to the an W. Jacobs, a Democrat, is one of the clerks recently let out. State Mineralogist Aubury tells the people that be has had nothing to do with the changes. Seekers for information get the Impression that Governor Gage is respon. eible for them. Mr. Durden’s notice that he was no longer wanted came to him night before last. He will be succeeded by a man named Hyde. ere is some talk of resolute action on the part of lead- ing miners of the State to prevent if pos- sfble the execution of a scheme to convert the bureau into a political club. - AND HIS THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1901. MEXICAN YOUTH IS FATALLY SHOT COMPANIONS ARE IN JAIL Frank Rodriguez Is Found Unconscious in Room With Bullet Hole in His Head and Clement Aragon, Who Was With Him When Injury Was Inflicted, Declares That the Shooting Was Accidental He admitted placing four shells in the revolver Wednesday night, but could not account for the two empty shells nor the hole in the ceiling. Mendez Owned Revolver. Charles Aragon and Mendez had just returned from the docks, where they had been working as longshoremen, when they were notified of the shooting. Men- dez admitted that the revolver belonged to him and was taken from him by Charles Aragon some days ago and that Charles gave it to Clement. The Aragons came here from Las Vegas, . M., and Rodriguez from Albuquerque, N. M., two or three weeks ago and got . employment on the docks as longshore- men_ during the strike. The police are handicapped in their investigation, as no one was in the room except Aragon and Rodriguez, and they cannot find any one ‘who heard any shots. RANK RODRIGUEZ, 20 years of age, was shot in the head in room 11 of the lodging-house at 83 Montgomery street yesterday aft- ernoon, and three other youths— Clement Aragon, 16; Charles Aragon, 22, and John Mendez, 20—are being detained in the City Prison pending the result of the wound and an investigation by the police. The room in which the shooting took place was occupied by Clement Aragon. Rodriguez slept with him Wednesday night and about 1 o'clock yesterday aft- ernoon Policemen Nelson and Maloney were notified by the landlady of the house that Rodriguez had been shot. When they entered the room they found Clem- ent Aragon supporting the unconscious form of Rodriguez, who had been shot in the head. They summoned, the ambulance and Rodriguez was sent to the Recelving Hospital, where the opinion was expressed that he would die. The officers noticed that a pane of glass in the window of the room was broken and Aragon said he had thrown the re- volver, in his excitement, through the window to the roof of the adjoining builaing, where Policeman Nelson found it. There were loaded cartridges in it and two empty ones. The officers also noticed a hole in the ceiling, evidently made by a bullet, and part of the plaster was scattered on the floor, showing that the shot had been recently fired. Companions Are Questioned. Clement Aragon, his brother Charles | L and Mendez were taken before Captain Seymour, where they all made statements. Clement said he and Rodriguez had just shaved and were getting ready to go out. He thought they would better fix the re- volver, which Charles Aragon had a few days before taken from Mendez, before going out. He took the weapon and got the hammer half-cocked, when it stuck. Rodriguez said Aragon did not know how to fix it and grabbed hold of it (o pull it away, when it went off. Both dropped the revolver and Rodriguez fell to the floor. Clement picked up the re- volver and threw it out of the window, he says. He told the landlady and she advised him to telephone for the police. He and Rodriguez were friends and had no quarrel nor trouble, he declared. He stoutly denied that two shots were fired. S % VICTIM OF A FATAL SHOOT- ING AND HIS SUPPOSED AS- SAILANT. o< < L e e e e e e B S R Y ) POPE WITHDRAW FLSE CHARGES The promised investigation into the acts | of Attorney E. Myron Woif, trustee of | the estate of Mrs. Mary Brunnings, who | was declared insane and recently restored | to capacity, came to an abrupt close in Judge Cook’s court yesterday. In a peti- tion for a change of venue Attorney Fran- The great reductions we offer on Friday of every week have been the means of crowding our store. The public was detecting true values and taking advantage of them. This methed will be maintained and you may look store every Friday of the year. The following to-day: LADIES' XID LACE Siraight patent leather tips, full toe SHOES— medium air extensions, hand welted; d widths. LADIES ENAMEL OXFORDS-Full extended soles, handwelts; our regular Komfort $3 50 shoes. 43 Friday. only. LADIES' IDEAL (Patent Viel) LACE SHOES—Slightly extended, hand- welted soles. is soft as silk and will not draw the foot. Friday only -..$3.05 LATRD, SCHOEBER & CO.'S CHII DREN'S IDEAL (Patent Viel) BUT- TON SHOES, cloth top, very broad toes, Sizes—5 o §, regularly $1 50......$1.10 8% to 10%, regularly $2.... 1.5 LITTLE GIRLS' HAND TURNED LACE SHOES, patent leather tips, Sizes—8% to 11 only, regularly $1 5..81 AGENTS FOR THE KOMFORT $3.50 SHOES: absolutely the best and swi Just received—Ladies’ Patent Leather Colonial Ties (the latest fad out), KAUFMANNS 552 Market St The material of this shoe | | quick in for special offerings in our | , MEN'S SINGLE SOLE VICI KID LACE SHOES; neat and dressy as well as durable. Friday only. MEN'S ENAMEL OXFORDS, fiat last, double soles; gt a stylish fall § BOYS' AND YOUTHS' VICI B LACE SHOES, stout soles and runlgg Sizes—$ to 13, regularly $1 7. 13% to 2, regularly $2. 2% to 5%, regularly §2 TTLE BOYS' LACE SHOES, made of soft Viei Kid, medium heavy sol Sizes—9 to 13, regularly $1 50 $1.15 CHILDREN'S AND MISSES' BOX CALF LACE AND BUTTON SHOBS. excellent school &hoes. | Bizes—6 to 8.. | 8% to 11 I 1% to 2. ellest §3 50 shoes made, for men and Formerl Lucke’s cis Pope, for Mrs. Brunnings, made cer- tain allegations_that particularly reflected upon Attorney W. L. Pierce and the trus- tee, which were scathingly denounced in court by Attorney Pierce Tuesday. ‘When the matter was called yesterday for investigation Attorney Pope said he had been_instructed by Attorney L. B. Archer of San Jose, senior counsel for Mrs. Brunnings, to make a motion for the withdrawal of the petition. Ex-Judge Slack opposed the motion, as he wanted a thorough investigation to vindicate his clients, Attorneys Plerce and Wolf; but the Judge said there was no alternative— the motion would prevail. He then asked that the petition be stricken from the record, but the Judge said he did not have that power. All he could do was to state on the record that the petition had been withdrawn on motion of its author. The matter of the annual report of the trustee then came up for hearing. Pope begged leave to withdraw from the case. He had asked for no fee and would make no claim for compensation. Ex-Judge Slack sald he would also receive no fee for his services. . The court appointed At- torney L. deF. Barteltt to represent Mrs. Brunnings, and Wolf testified as to_the accounts, showing that each had been pald by order of court and duly certified. Bartlett had no protest to make, but said he might petition for the appointment of a new trustee. Judge Cook remarked that in view of what had transpired he had serious doubts as to the wisdom of restoring Mrs. Brunnings to capacity. It was inted that Attorneys Pierce and Wolf might in- stitute proceedings for the disbarment of Pope and Archer. Delights of Autumn Travel. The early rains have laid the dust; the heat of the summer months is no longer with us; the atmosphere is fresh and in- vigorating, so that there is no more de- lightful time of the year in which to visit the country. The various colors that na- ture puts on at this time give an added charm and the opportunity for a most de- lightful trip is offered by the California Northwestern Railway. On Sunday, Oc- tober 20, that road will run an excursion to Ukiah, through that most picturesque section of California—Marin, Santa Rosa and Russian River valleys—charging only $2 00 for the round trip. Each ticket sold insures a seat, for the comgnny will not sell a single ticket above the number of seats provided. They are now on sale at the ticket office, 650 Market street, Chron- icle building, and at Tiburon ferry. Time of departure from Tiburon ferry will be g:zo a. m.; from Ukiah on tha return ». m. Lecture on “Slavonic ;cs." Rev. Bebastian Dabovich delivered a lecture on *“The Slavonic Race” last night at Metropolitan Hall, which, though at- tended only by.-a small crowd, was de- cidedly interesting. The lecture was in- terspersed with Slavonic musical selec- tions by M. Radulovich and Plerre Ban- achavitch, a recitation by Miss Genevieve Stmrak and plano solos by Mrs. Fitz- simmons and Miss La Salle. - e S General Young Appoints Board. Major Willam Birkhimer and Captain Edward Millar of the Artillery Corps were appointed by General Young yesterday to serve as a board of examiners for the se- lection of enlisted men as gunners. When the men are chosen they will be given target practice with the neavy guns at the harber entrance. TIBBTTS THLS MBOUT GO J. H. Tibbitts, who has been examining into the copper deposits of Shasta County for the State Mining Bureau, predicts that in a few years Shasta will be mentioned in the list with Butte, Mont., and Cripple Creek, Colo. He estimates that by 1903 the annual mineral output of the county Wwill amount to $12,000,000. The figures show an increase from $623,443 in 1896 to 35,674,020 In 1900, and the present rate of production Mr. Tibbitts finds to be $8,139,- 026 per dnnum. The Mountain Copper Company’s output for 1300 is estimated at $4,149,872 in copper, and the gold and silver bring up the total to $4,772,085. This year the De la Mar smelters at De la Mar, treating the ores from the Bully Hill mine, are adding $250,00 per month to the output, and this will be increased to $450,- per month when the addition now making to the present plant is completed. Mr. Tibbitts says that the Bully Hill mine Will eventually add $5,000,000 per annum to_the output of Shasta County. 4 hen the smeiter of the Trinity Copper Company is operating, Mr. Tibbitts says, the Trinity property may be counted on to rival the other copper mines, and from that time the neral Froducuon of Shasta will be In excess of $1,000,000 per month. In five years Shasta County will employ 5000 to 6000 miners and produce from $20,000,000 to $25,000,000 worth of cop- per, gold and silver. Thers are great expectations entertained concerning the Balakala mine, the Backbone and After- thought districts and the region Balabain and Gron Mottt Redding is rapidly growing. Mr. Tib- bitts says that it will have a population of 20,000 before the end of the first decade of this century. There are two great power ‘plants under way in the county, one of which, that of the Keswick Light and Power Company, will be ready to de- liver light and power this year. Redding, which is expending $250,000 on buildings and is proposing an electric road to Kes- wick, may also have the advantage of a copper belt railway. % hasta County will send delegation to the California ‘vention. down a large Miners’ Con- Death Takes Pioneer. Mrs. Matilda Hess, a California pioneer, died yesterday at the home of her sons, 1312 California street. She will be buried to-morrow at Odd Fellows' Cemetery. Mrs. Hess came to California with her husband in 1852. They arrived here in a salling vessel by wng of Cape Horn. De- ceased survived her usbandp eleven years. She has been ailing for more than six months. Apoplexy was the Immediate gause of death. Four grown soms survive er. . e o Special Rates For side rides to points on the Santa Fe. Open to holders of Episcopal Church Con- vention _tickets, friends accompanying and holders of nine months’ excursion tickets. Dates of sale, Septeraber 23 to November 10 fnclusive. ~ Limit 30 days. For time tables, descriptive literature and full information call at Santa Fe offices, 641 Market st., and ferry depot. SEALS D00 UF FOUR NEW ENACTMENTS Supreme Court Nullifies the Code of Civil Procedure. Commissioners Fail to Act in Accordance With Constitution. SR, Chief Justice Beatty Thinks Civil Code, Penal Code and County Government Act Are Like- wise Affected. kS CHIEF JUSTICE BEATTY THINKS ALL CODES VOID HILE the Code of Civil Procedure is the only code directly involved in the decision of the court, the Penal Code, the Civil Code and the county government act would all seem affected by the same line of argument, as all were enacted in the same manner.—Chief Justice Beatty in interview. £l k The Supreme Court yesterday declared unanimously that the Code of Civil Pro- cedure as revised and amended during the last - session of the Legislature is uncon- stitutional. Chief Justice Beatty says that the fate of the Penal Code, the Civil Code and the county government act will probably be the same. The work of the Code Commission, covering a period of seven years and costing directly about $100,000, is rendered valueless. The fault seems, by the decision of the Supreme Court, to rest entirely on the carelessness of Governor Gage's appointees in present- ing the revisions and amendments for en- actment in an unconstitutional form. The statutes will remain as they were before the new codes were adopted. The outlook is not pleasant, for courts all over the State will now be beset with difficulties. Scores of cases will have to be tried all over again. Appeals and peti- tions for new trials will be presented in dismaying numbers. The Code of Civil Procedure is the only one directly in- volved in the decision, but a half-dozen cases in which the other codes mentloned are concerned are before the Supreme Court and must apparently be annulled for the same reasons. Article TV of the State constitution, re- ferring to provisions and amendments, says: No law shall be revised or amended by ref- erence to its title; but in each case the act revised or section amended shall be re-enacted and published at length as revised or amended. Every act shall embrace but one subject, which shall be expressed In its title. Construction Is Obvious. The form in which revisions and amend- ments were presented to the Legislature was a connotation of the numeral by which the statute is designated, followed by the text of whatever it was desired to be enacted, to repeal, add or correct in the original law. The court says: The said Code of Civil Procedure was not “re-enacted and published at length as revised.” It seems as though the mind of either layman or lawyer might acgept with safety the con- struction which is £6 obvious. The first part of the constitutional law was violated, and_there was little or no defense offered. The court does not even pause to argue the matter. In reference to the second question, that ‘“‘every act shall embrace but one sub- ject,” the points made by the respondents and the anxious amici curiae are deemed worthy of an answer. The title of the act in question is *‘An act to revise the Code of Civil Procedure by amending certain sections, repealing others and "adding cer- tain new sections.” The court on this point says: It is apparent that the language of the title of the act in question in and of itself ex- presses no_ subject whatever. No one could tell from the title alone what subject of legis- lation was dealt with in the body of the act; such subject, as far as the title of the act in- forms us, might have been entirely different from anything to be found in the act itself. All the Codes Affected. It is contended on the part of the re- spondents that although the title does not, as an independent instrument, ex- press any subject, yet it does so by ‘“ref- erence.” The court concedes that where the title still expresses a definite subject then the title of an amendatory act may be helped by raference to the title of the original act, which does express a subject, being incorporated into the title of the amendatory act. The casc at bar, however, refers merely to the Code of Civil Procedure. The court holds that the name Civil Procedure cov- ers the great body of the State's laws and is not confined to any particular line of subjects, but includes substantive law, criminal law and “legislation that might be classed under any category whatever.” The law recognizes four codes—the Civil Code, the Political Code, the Penal Code and the Code of Vivil Procedure. Justice McFarland in his decision states that legislation under any code is insep- arably interwoven with legislation under the others. He says further: How then can it be rightly sald that a mere reference to tha title of an act expresses any cubject? If so, what subject? It does not even refer to a single section which is to be amended or repealed, and as to the ‘‘new’ sections it does not give the slightest intima- tion as to what they are to contain. The various respondents maintain that the title in question is a device for insert- ing a subject “broad” enough to cover everything. Considering the matter in this light Justice McFarland says: Under that view the people who framed and adopted the constitution would be convicted of folly in elaborately construimg a grave con- stitutional limitation of legislative power upon a most important subject when the Legislature could at once circumvent it by a mere verbal trick. Labors of Commission Undone. Many ‘arguments are advanced by the respondents and one after the other they are summarily dismissed by the court. In fact the able legal lights who try to uphold the codes find apparently _little ground on which a stand may be taken. The wording of the constitution is such | Fritz yesterday that there can be little discussion as to | grandson, Joseph Murphy, a machinist in | its meaning, on the point in question at | the Risdon Iron Works, on the charge of least. The law was clearly violated, so the decision says, and the labors of the Code Commission and the Legislature, so | man had been a nuisance far as they are mutually concerned, is un- done. The court admits that the’ intent | Other quarters after he was 2l years of | of the commission was praiseworthy, but apfmrel;%ly not productive of desired re- sults. is said by the Justices that the | ungrateful conduct, the old man said. decislon Is to be deplored, but Justice Mc- Farland and his assoclates are, of course, firm in the opinion that. the law must be followed, even though the results seem to be_disastrous. pon this point, the court says in clos- ng: Complaint is made that the rule as above stated would put the Legislature to great in- convenience when it desired to make a great many amendments or indulge In a great deal of legislation at one session or at one time. That coneideration could not, under any cir- cumstances, destroy a. constitutional provision. But—without Impugning the wisdom of any provision of the act before us—it is quite ap- parent that the very purpose of the constitu- tional provision in question is to prevent the evils which might come from hasty, inconsid- erate or wholesale legislation. The statutes which cannot be enacted in the manner pre scribed by the constitution should not be af ‘tempted, The scarcity of statutory laws and want of facllity for passing them are fiot among the evils of the times. Our conclusion is that. for the reasons stated. | of the new tariff of the Philiooines. which ADVERTISEMENTS. A Ponnie Winter Coat The Seal of Approval KINGPINS FOR For ThatLad of Yours It's just choek-a-block with style, that -top coat you ses pictured opposite, with velvet ’J collar; that's the coat for winter. Notice how broad the shoulders are; that's the sweil idea: if you have a chap between the ages of § and 15 years, this is the coat for him to wear, and we're naming a price on this top coat that will make it go like wild- fire. In _two _shades, ] brown and Oxford, at. That pretty Winter Reefer you see, In & beau- tiful shade of blue cheviot, with velvet collar, emblem on the sleeve, for little chaps between the ages of d 8; it's a smart litth little coat th not hesitate paying it— | also A Pretty Souvenir for Our Boy Friends To-Day. hazel tax you $5 for it you would { Has been set upon_that ecoat which we pio- tyre opposite— The Stroller Yoke Overcoal It’s the swell- est long coab ever turned ouwt by a tailor. No- tice the grace- ful hang of it; notice the pret- ty shoulder ef- feot, and the the fabrie, the slate gray Ox- ford cheviot; notice the length of this eoat; notice the slash pocket: note the finish of the ouff. The sleeve linings are of the high- est grade satin. Did yow ever see anything sweller? Did you ever sece a coat with more fashion than this one? It’s one of the features in our Men'’s Overcoat , Room at i OVERCOATS. b - J —_—— Our smartest fashions are illustrated in our New Winter Catalogue. Send for it. W Awve. FOR MAN. BOY TRaIN coats AND CHILD. the said act is unconstitutional and void {or' all purposes and is inoperative to change or in any way affect the law of the State as it i stood immediately before the approval of saild | act. County Government Act Too. Justices Henshaw, Van Dyke, Temple, | Harrison and Garoutte_concur directly in | the opinion written by Justice McFarland. Chief Justice Beatty concurs on the point that the law is unconstitutional from the fact of its having been enacted in frag- | mentary form, but dissents from the view that the subject is inadequate. He con- tends that the Code of Civil Procedure is clearly defined. 3 < In an interview the Chief Justice stated: While_the Code of Civil Procedure is the only code directly involved in the decision of the court the Penal Code, the Civil Code and the county governments act would all seem | affected by the same line of argument, as all | Wwere enacted in the same manner. The other cases have mot as ‘yet come before the court and there may be a difference in them which will affect the decision of the court. The question as to the validity of the codes was brought up in the Supreme Court on August 5 in five different proceedings | in mandamus. The cases were instituted to make certain Judges perform dutles from which they were freed under the new codes. Incidentally the Attorney General brought up the question and the lawyers in the succeeding cases advanced the same arguments, so all were referred | to the court at the same time. Those yet | te be decided are Gillis vs. Judge Jones of San Joaquin County, Leventon vs. Judge Harrington of Modoc County, in connec- | tion with the Lookout lynchings, and | ‘Watt vs. Judge Cook of San Francisco. In the years subsequent to the adoption of the new constitution it was discovered that many laws should be revised or amended. In 1585 Governor Budd appoint- ed a commission to do this work. Gov- ernor Gage made reappointments and the recommendations of the Commissioners named by him were adopted at the recent | session of the Legislature with the pres- | ent discouraging result. Abused by His Grandson. Captain Patrick Murphy, 2612 California street, secured a warrant from Judge for the arrest of his | disturbing the peace. He said the young around the house for years and had agreed to find | age. He was past that age, but refuseq | to leave and persisted in his abusive and | —_———— Suit to Condemn Tide Land. A suit was filed by the Atchison, To- peka and Santa Fe Rallroad Company yesterday against Helen B. Blinn, through her guardian, W. J. Adams, to secure the condemning of a block of -land at the corner of Merriman and Michigan streets. The land in question is known as tide land block No. 454 and the complaint alleges the condemnation of the land is necessary before the company can proceed with the building of a terminal station. —_—— Jesse Moore Whiskeys are famous the world over for purity and flavor as well as for all the other qualities that make good.whiskey. * ——————— Duties in the Philippines. Deputy Collector of Customs Farley has received from the War Department a copy | In_circulation in the fslands | ceived at the rate of 5 cents. The duties | Rev. ~ goes into effect November 15, 191 Im- portations from the United States are dutiable the same as from a foreign coun- try, and duties are to be paid in United States coin. excepting that the peso now will be re- are specific, as in the past, and the metri- cal system of weights and measures will be continued in use as heretofore. —_——— Divine Services at the Presidio. { Services will be held in the library at the general hospital of the Presidio on Sunday next. The following programme has been arranged: Celebration of the Holy Communion, 7:30 & m.; morning prayer, 10:30: sermon by Right George W. Peterkin, Bishop of West Vir- ginla: Sunday-school. 3:00 p. m.; evening pray- er. sermon by t Rev. A. M. Rand, Bishop of South Virginia. 5 e, Require good glasses. They cannot be too good, but they must be just suited to the vision or they will prove to be bad. Come to our store and we will tell you precisely the kind of glasses you re- quire. St Opmicu G 217 Kearney St- S.E HAY FEVER ASTHMA™ =" Oppresson, Suflocaio, Newalga, . cued by ESPIC'S CIGARETTES, or mm\ Paris, J. ESPIC ; New York, E. FOUGERA SOLD BY ALL nxs'cou'n e P E R M ANENTLY PILES Sy 50 prominent business men ‘PHYSICIAN, box 1%0, Call office.

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