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ADVERTISEMENTS. | Price are simply to give ues we are offering. They ket-street Store only: illes patter Fine heavy 75¢ sheet that has on sale while they last.... Closing Out Pillow Cases— his is the pillow case losing them out at s was very popul: Closing at 7 Out Table Damask — s of lace curt 1 full length—the regu Closing Out Double Bzd Sheets - Fine ¥ i d muslin—81xgo inches—hemmed and ready towels and general use, e e e e A S at Last. iis is the first time since our great closing out sale that we have had time to quote prices, These quo- you an idea of the tremendous ; are but a few of hundreds just as good. It is the most phenomenal bargain carnival San sco shoppers have ever attended. to-morrow. The following items are for sale at Mar- Doors open at 9 12 Oat Sale of White Bedspreads > bedspread we have been selling for years at 8sc—in neat , well hemmed and ready to use. Closing them out at % De Each to ie our bedding department fa- 49¢ Each T fine niu lin, size 45x36 rancisco at _2oc ..11e Each ing Out Bleached Crash— saft, yard—closing it out undressed and very absorbent— i 4e Yard ing for hotels and restaurantsd-in fact, this is our popular -half bleached, good w Closing Out the Lace Curtains— in 20 different patterns, both ar $1. ng for bedrooms idth, 58 inches wide .21e Yard in white and marked particularly nd small cottages—one of 55¢ Pair = 25 quality is White Blankets for Hotel Keepers— SOME OF Albatross Waistings— des as Our $1.50 Scot s closing out sale Big Bargains e and the 40c Our Famous $1.00 Sic nd does not muss pure white wool size for double beds, to THE PRICES WE QUOTE IN DRESS er and oyster grays— blanket of .$3.35 Pair 600DS: blankets— seda, new blue, old rose, garnet, tan and cadet. ed fabric for shirt waists and kimonos that we had on re the sale at 25c and 35c a yard—very neat and very —and plenty left for everybody—<closing out price 1274¢ Yd ch Tweed Suitings— nd castor effects—in small, neat, invisible checks and s is an all-wool cloth, full 36 inches wide—it requires no just the thing for short skirts, Eton suits, etc.—this cloths at our dress goods counter—tremendous re- is 49¢ Yard in German Cashmeres— g shades—however, a few nice street colors. e reseda, ox-blood, golf red, baby blue, pink, green, dresses, tea gowns and Among children’s dancing cos- grade—a big bargain; while it lasts 19¢ Yard biggest sellers in our dress goods department—silver gray veling dresses, bathing costumes, underskirts, etc.— or wrinkle—light, dark and medium nches w , an iron frame weave, GADETS SHDLY BURY "JoLLm” Amusing Ceremony abt the League of the Cross Camp. Epecial Dispatch to The Call. BANTA CRUZ, July 12.—The League of the Cross Cadets put Jollity under the daisies to-night with solemn ceremonial. He bad lived 2 mad, glad, but not a bad week, and his time was up. ARGREGOR WINS | ~ T0UNG HANDICAP The Boots Horse Defeats Strongest Field of the Year. California-bred horse Argregor dissipated | the idea that a horse cannot come from | | the Bast a few days before a long dis- | tance race and win, by capturing the | Young handicap, a mile and three-six- CHICAGO, July 12.—Charles T. Boots' | at Washington Park The funeral at the camp was attended gL y every member of the regiment and hundreds of mourning visitors. An ora- | tion was delivered by osh” Catania and | Frank Cresalia was master of the merri- | " Cresalia, Doling, Fitzsimmons, ] and Plercey sang a few dismal he chief mourners were Surgeon | rrissey and Hospital Steward three days, hardly long enough to 1avorite, teenths, to-day, | beating the best field of horses of all ages | that has started in any race at the pres- | ing fish from t ent meeting. Argregor has been here but | become | acclimated, according to all tradition. Six Bhooter, winner of the Great West- ern and as in that event, the top-heavy loaded with 120 pounds, was the several companies holding receptions. ng many prominent citizens of ith Colonel Power and regiment. in charge of the pro- The committee gramme _to-night included Lieutenant Colonel Haggerty, Major Kennedy, Major Morrissey, Captai O’Brien, Lieutenant McCar and Lieutenant McCormick. thy The companies vied with each other in the street decorations and bunting and lanterns were used abundantly. Grocer Sues for Damages. Michael McHugh, a grocer, who while driving a delivery wagon on Eighteenth street, between Valencia and Church, wes run into by an Eighteenth street electric car, filed a suit for $2657 damages against the San Francisco and San Mateo Electric R: ; Company yesterday. He alleges tha s permanently injured as the result of the collision. ADVERTISEMENTS. SENT FREE TO MEN! A Host Remarkable Remedy That Guickly Restores Lost Vigor 1o Men. A Free Trial Package Sent by Mail to All Who Write, Free trial packages of a most remarka- ble remedy are being mailed to all who will write to the State Medical Institute. They cured so many men who had bat- tled for years against the mental and physical sufferings of lost manhood that ihe institute has decided to distribute free trial packages to all who write. It is & home treatment, and all men who suf- fer from any form of sexual weakness resulting from youthful folly, premature loss of strength and memory, weak back, Varicocele or emaciation of parts, can now cure themselves at home. The remedy has a rcuuu-ly grateful effect of warmth, and seems to act di- rect to the desired location, giving strength and development just where it is needed. It cures all the 1lls and trou- bles that come from years of misuse of natural functions, and has been an lute success in all cases. A request he State Medical Institute, 828 Elek- building, Fort Wayne, Ind., stat- £ that you desire one of their frée trial ackages, will be complied with prompt- The institute is desirous of reaching great class of men who are un- to leave home to be treated, and free samples will enable them to see w easy it is to be cured of sexual cakness when the proper remedies are employed. The institute makes no restric- t Any man who writes will be sent e sample, carefully sealed in a plain package, so that its reciplent need have no fear of embarrassment of publicity. ‘P".elader- are recuested to write without elay. prominent twice during the journey. | Bcarlet Lily, the rank outsider, went to | the front immediately the barrier rose | 2nd reached the stand a length and a | half to the good, with Six Shooter, Jim- inez, Hunter Raine and Wild Pirate chas- | ing her, heads apart as named. Scarlet | Lily added another length of daylight ie- | tween herself and the struggling neld be- | hind her. Rounding the club house, | Ransch spurred Argregor from seventh | to second .position and never relinquished | that much coveted place thereafter. | . The leader began to falter a bit round- ing the turn and at the head of the | half a length. Swinging for home Scarlet | Lily still showed a margin of a half- length over Argregor and by dint of hard | work on the part orf Helgerson main- | tained the lead until within twenty yards of the wire, where Argregor caught her and in the final strides moved away from her easily, winning b~ a length. Hunter Raine hung a bit at the last turn, but came again and raced Scarlet Lily to a nose. The race was truly run and the best horse won. Summary: First race, two-year-olds, five and a half fur- longs—Au l.evolr won, Topsoil second, Ahola third. Time, 1:00 2-5. Second race, six furlongs, all ages—Jack Rat- lin won, Tenden second, Colonial Girl third. Time, 1:15 1-5. Third race, the Young handicap, one mile and three-sixteenths, gross value $6520, net to the winner $5435—Argregor won, Scariet Lily second, Hunter Raine third. Time, 2:02 3-6. Fourth race, one mile and a sixteenth—Ar- tena won, Cougar second, Ben Chance third. Time, 1:50 3-5. Fifth race, one mile—Alard won, ond, Major Dixon third. ~Time, 1:45, Sixth race, six furiongs—Bronze Wing won, Rose Tree second, Geyser third. Time, 1:14 8-5, £T. LOUIS, July 12.—Delmar summary: First race, seven furiongs, selling—Dutch Carter won, John Morton second, Ladas third. Wime, 1:20%. Second race, five furlongs, olds—Helen Hay won, Pear] Mendal second, Jack Young third. Time, 1:08%. Third race, six furlongs, purse—Model Mon- arch won, Mondora second, Sallor's Dream third. Time, 1:16%. Fourth ra the Gasconade gelling sweep- stakes, one mile—Jordan won, Sambo second, Buccleuth third. Time, 1;41%. Helen Print finished first and Father Wentker third, both were disqualified for fouling. Fifth race, six furlongs, purse—Kalos won, Bengal second, Amigari third. Time, 1:16. Sixth race, one and an eighth miles, selling— El Caney won, Omella second, Little Lols third. Time, 1:57. Seventh race, seven furlongs, selling—Branch won, Clonsilla second, Eisle Bramble third. Time, 1:28%. BUTTE, Mont., July 12.—Summary: First race, one mile and a furl Lizella won, Rio Bl on second, Kenova third. Time, 1:54 :B4%. Second race, four and a half furlongs—The Fog won, Mimo second, Lizzie Rice third. T Rird race, six furlongs—Nanon won, Kitty Kelly second, Hagerdon third. Time, 1:1414. Fourth race, one and a quarter miles—Roy- alty won, Tufts second, Annie Max third. Time, 2:10%. Peat sec- 1ling, two-year- but Fifth race, one mile—Sylvan Lass won. July Gyp second, La Calma third. Time, 1:43. Sixth race, seven furlongs—Homage won, Alaria second, Flamero third. Time, 1:29, Seventh race, mile and three furlongs, over | stretch she could boast of a lead of only | DANGER POINT 5 NT PSSED éKansas River Is Slowly | Rising and Flood Is Threatened. Fear Expressed That Water May Break Through the Embankments. TOPEKA, Kans., July 12—The Kansas lf(!\'et is higher than it has ever been be- fore and is slowly rising. Parts of North Tcpeka are threatened with a flood. A washout at Lakeview caused a suspen- sion of through train business on the Santa Fe to-day. All the regular train', | were run from Kansas City to Emporia over the Argentine branch. The Union Pacific has been using the Rock Island tracks between Topeka and Manhattan. Considerable track has been washed out nust elapse before trains can be run on schedule time. An immense quantity ot driftwood has coliected in the river at Silver Lake, near | here, and much apprenension is felt over the consequence if the jam gets loose. The Santa e reports iate to-night that its trains between Lawrence and Topeka will probabiy be able to get through some time to-morrow. It is feared that the embankment will Lreak at other points, however, so great is the force of the water. Near Lakeview some farms are com- { pletely inundated. Several houses were ( undermined and the occupants forced to leuve in boats. Wagon bridges through- & g x 2 out the country have either been ruined or washed out tirel Wheat in large | vuantities been washed Into the river | and many acres of corn have been ruined. | THCUSANDS STRICKEN DOWN! Absolutely No Excuse for It. If a little ordinary precaution was exer- cised during hot weather, the death rate would not bound up as it does. The pa- pers are daily filled with accounts of strorg men and women cut off in the vigor of youth and the number of little ones carried to early graves Is simply ap- palling. As far as adults are concerned, the | | trouble is usually gulping down ice water | | and numberless 'so called ‘“‘cooling” | drinks. The terrific shock is more than the stomach and heart can stand. The | wonder is that the number of deaths is not greater. One of New York's leading specialists | said: “Over 9% per cent of cases of diar- rhoea and bowel complaint, especially in hot weather, could be averted if every one | would pour a small quantity of Duffy’s | Pure Malt Whiskey in each glass of wa- ter before drinking, as it kills the germs.” ‘Where diarrhoea is already developed Duffy’'s Pure Malt Whiskey should be fter each movement of the bowels, to directions. 1t is an absolute- and tonic, prescribed by clans and used in hos-‘ everywhere and can be had at any | drug store or grocer’s - Favors Tuolumne Water Supply. City Engineer Grunsky returned yester- day from his vacation, which he spent in the Tuolumne River district. Grunsky visited Lake Eleanor, the Hetch Hetchy Valley and the Tuolumne meadow. He took comprehensive notes and the con- | dition of the district as a source of water | supply for a municipal system which ths | Board of Works has recommended for acquisition by the city. The data col- lected by Grunsky will be incorporated by him in an auxillary report showins | that the Tuolumne River supply is the best for this city’s needs. —_—— The Bee Hive Shoe Company, 717 | Market Street, | Where the manufacturers’ shoe sale is | | now going on, you can choose from. kid or patent leather in either ladies’ or men's | shoes, worth $350, for $18 a pair, all | sizes ‘and all widths, hand sewed and turned, low and French heels, Columbia or Newport toe; all styles. Shoes that | cannot be bought for less than $3 50, yet $1 85 will buy a pair of them at the Bee | Hive Shoe Co., 717 Market street, near Third. . —_——— Blue Lakes Yield Many Bass. James W. Coffroth returned from Blue Lakes yesterday with a well established reputation as an angler. For years men equipped with the most approved rods and gear have fished the lake without suc- cess. It remained for Mr. Coffroth to try the effect of bait on the fish. The effect was | electrical. He caught forty black bass | and twenty other fish, including several | | varieties of trout at the first attempt. | His success showed the way for others | and all the peogle in the vicinity are tak- e well stocked lake. Mr. Coffroth used raw beef, which proved a tempting lure. @ iviiiviviiiriieleiefuinieielninisiiel @ five hurdles—Sam Green won, ond, Archibald third. Time, 'W YORK, July 12.—Brighton Beach sum- Poorlands sec- 3434, First race, selling, mile and a sixteenth— Prince Richard won, Golden Cottage second, 48, Gibson Light third. Time, Second race, six furlongs—Goid Money won, Prediction second, Decoration third. Time, Third race, for three-year-olds and upward, handicap, mile and a quarter—Tom Kenny won, His Eminence second, Nones third. Time, 04 4-5. Fourth race, the Nertune stakes, six fur- longs—Injunction won, Sailmaker second, Afri. | kander third. Time, 1:13 3-5, Fifth race, the Punchestown stakes, stee- plechase, full course, about two miles and & half—Miss Mitchell won, Rising Sun second, Fophone third. Time, 5:03, Sixth_race, mile and a sixteenth—Reformer second, Bessie McCarthy third. o} 8 » & BUFFALO, July 12.—Fort Erle summary: First race, six furlongs—Fessie F. won, Clo- rita second, Oceanic third. Time, 1:15. Second race, owners' handicap, five and a half furlongs—F. G. Good won, Speclal Tax seor ond, All Souls third. ~Time, 1:08, Third race, one mile—Obstinate Stmon won, Chopin second, Rotterdam third. Time, 1:418. Fourth race, handicap, mile and an eighth— Hinsdale won, Ducassa second, Taxman third, Time, 1:54%5. Fifth race, four and a half furlongs—Lonae won, Lai F. M. second, Night Owl third. Time, :55%. Sixth race, steeplechase, short course—Terry Ranger won, King Along second, Sauber third. Time, 3:07%. CO CALL, SUNDAY, JULY 13, 1902. WILL SPEND THEIR HONEYMOON IN ALASKA AND THE OLD WORLD Miss Freda Ohlandt and Frank H. Ames, President of a Northern Mercantile Com- pany, Are to Be Married To-Morrow Evening JGORES OF DEAD Cambria’s Kaown Vic- tims Numbzr a Hun- dred and Twelve. - Later Explorations in Mine Will Add but Few to This Number. JOHNSTOWN, Pa., July 12—The exact extent of the catastophe in the rolling mill mine of the Cambria Steel Company, is becoming known. Early to-night, in spite of conflicting reports as to the num- ber of dead, a careful and complete com- pilation shows that 112 is the number of bodies taken from the mine. Up to € o'clock this evening 108 had been recov- ered, and at 8 o’clock four more were brought to the surface. To this list future explorations of the mine corridors may add a few, but it cannot be many. Almost all the employes who could have been in the mine at the time of the life- wrecking explosion of Thursday are ac- counted for. Very few inquirles for miss- ing have been made to the authorities or tu the mine officials, and this better than anythlnf else demonstrates the impossi- bility of many bodlies still remaining in the death tomb. The mine officials say it is useless to attempt to estimate the number of dead. They say they simply do not know. Gen- eral Superintendent Robinson came out at 4 o'clock this afternon after an ardu- ous day’'s exploration. He expressed his conviction that not more than five bodies viould be added to the 112 alfeady known. BURYING THE VICTIMS. Johnstown will devote the Sabbath to mourning and obsequies. The inaugural of this grim programme was given to- day, when more than a score of inter- ments took place. As late as 7 o'clock this evening funeral processions, with | |bands playing dirges and uniformed es- | | corts at their heads, passed through the streets of the city. After the taking of the fifteen bodies to the morgue at an early hour to-day it was commonly rumored that the mine of- ficials were endeavoring to hide the truth as to the extent of the disaster. The de- velopments of the day showed that these suspicions were unwarranted. At 9 o’clock in the morning there was a consultation in the offices at the foot of the runway at the Westmont entrance, in by Mine Superintendent Robinson, Chief Mine Inspector Roderick, State Mine Inspector Evans, Mine Engineer Moore and Assistant Mine Engineer Pros- ser. A large map of the mine was ex- plained to Roderick. Many of the em- ployes of the mine were called in and questioned. Inspector Evans sald later as to future investigations: “Those of the company officials who were in the mine at the time of the ex- plosion and have survived will be called upon to testify. Until these men are able to be present at the inquiry it will be useless to try to do anything.” Asked as to whose duty it was to take mine, Mr. Evans said: ‘“The fire boss, of course, but two or three of the fire bosses were killed by the explosion, and in the presence death we must be altogether charitable and suspend judgment.” EXAMINING THE MINE. After the consultation at the _office Evans went into the mine with Robin- son and Moore. They did not emerge until late in the afternoon. The work they did while in the mine was to direct their attention to the damage wrought and more critically examine into the pos- sible hiding places for more bodles. ing about in the fourth right _heading in ARE TAKEN OUT participated | care of the accumulation of gas in the of the Klondike, State Inspector Evans came across rooms 19 and 20, distributed be- tween which were the three bodies which were brought out at 2:30 o'clock. Evans was alone at the time. All day thousands of men, women and children, drawn thither out of morbid cu- riosity, lingered about the mine entrances. A quarter of a mile away the streets of Conemaugh City were clogged by funeral corteges. It is sald positively to-night by John 23 BAD AGCIDENT AT WEST POINT Captain Greble and Two Cadets Are Severely ‘ Injured. Fractious Horse Drags Men and Gun Oarriage Off an Embankment. | WEST POINT, N. Y., July 12—Captain Edwin St. John Greble, U. 8. A, In- structor in artillery tactics, and Cadets | Phillips and Moore were injured to-day in an accident during an artillery drill. Captain Greble and Captain Edmund M. Blake, also an instructor in artillery tac- tics, had the entire first class of cadets out for a drill. Cadet Collins of Illinois rode the lead horse of the four drawing the gun carriage, and Cadets Phillips of Ohio, Grier of Pennsylvania, Boughton of Michigan and R. C. Moore rode on the gun carriage. In passing along a road at the foot of Crow’s Nest Mountain, near the intersection of the road ieading to Newburg and below which there is an embankment of fifteen feet, the lead horse began acting badly, and Captain Greble ordered Cadet Collins to alight, and he himse!f mounted the animal. Cap- tain Greble had no sooner done so than the horse jumped off the embankment, drawing the other three horses with it. | The limber turned over, and the heavy gun being wrenched from it, fell down the bank and upon Captain Greble. Both | his legs were broken below the knee and he is said to be injured internally. Cadet Moore aiso was thrown down the bank and badly injured. Cadet Phillips sus- tained some slight brulses and scratches, but the other two cadets jumped and es- caped injury. Captain Greble and Cadet Moore were taken to the hospital in an ambulance. Captain Greble has seen ser- vice in the Philippines. His father, Cap- | tain John T. Greble, was killed in the Civil War. Yosemite Via the Santa Fe. The quickest and most convenient way in and out of the Yosemite Valley is by way of the Santa Fe. If you leave San Francisco to- | day at 9 a. m. on the California Limited you | are in Yosemite to-morrow at 5 p. m. Call at Santa Fe ticket office, 841 Market street, for illustrated pamphlet and par- ticulars. . —_———— Freight Cars Kill a Switchman. SACRAMENTO, July 11.—Thomas Fran- cis Carroll, a switchman, was crushed be- tween two freight cars in this city this afternoon and killed. He leaves a wife and two childen. @ e @ Retallick, who was the fire boss of the seventh district and who was in the Klon- dike mine at the time of the accident, that the disaster was caused bfl blasting setting off the firedamp. Rel ek, who is at Conemaugh In a hospital, I8 im- proving rapidly and hopes by the flest of | next week to be able to go back into the mine and prove that his statement is cor- rect. L4 THOSE LEFT DESTITUTE. Friends of the dead miners who lost their lives on Thursday have been going over the list of dead with a view of learn- ing the number of widows and fatherless children left behind and who will be made helpless by the catastrophe. According to the most reliable data, there are 64 widows and 138 children. Of this number there are five widows and eighteen children living in the old country. TFive of the widows were brides of a foew months and eight widows and twenty-four children are sur- vivors of American employes of the mines who are numbered among the dead. Thers are a number of the dead foreigners who are comparatively newcomers in _this country and who are believed to have wives and children in Europe, whom they were expecting to have come over here when sufficlent money had been earned to pay for their passage. Some of the young meén who were ‘were also known to have been the sole support of mothers and sisters who could well be numbered among the helpless ones to be looked after. | | | | | | | CALIFORNIA'S LARGEST- e VERY pretty weddin ill take | Miss Helen Gray and Master Louls place l;\exty Monday5 wevenm& Roesch will act as little maids and page when Miss Freda Ohlandt and Frank H. Ames are made one. Miss Ohlandt is the youngest daughter of Nicholas Ohlandt of the firm of N. Ohlandt & Co. of this city, and is a very beautiful and highly accomplishea young lady, possessing a charming per- sonality and musical talents of no mean degree. Frank H. Ames, the happy bridegroom- to-be, is the president of the Ames Mer- cantile Company, and is a‘ls;‘dnlnghanlndr‘ge department store and general merchandise bupalness at Dawson and Nome, being one of the “Blg Four” companies, as they are called in that country. Mr. Ames was Dresident of the Ames Mercantile Com- pany for many years prior to the gold excitement at Dawson in 1898, but in that year went to Dawson and established a business there and in 190 he went to ome and lald the foundation for the Nome plant .l;nd has been very success- ful at both places. Mr. Ohlandt is well known here, and the wedding will take place at his home at 601 Steiner street at 8:30 p. m. on July 14, Owing to the fact that there is iliness in the family the ceremony will be pri- vate, only the me‘mlziera of the respective ‘lies being invited. i Olga Lang, Miss Freda Roesch, WELL KNOWN BUSINESS MAN AND YOUNG WOMAN WHO WILL BECOME HIS BRIDE. of honor. The happy couple will sail for Alaska a few days after the wedding and will be gone for two months. On their return they will start immediately on a trip to Europe and will be gone all winter, ‘Wants His Papers Back. Attorney Osgood Putnam called upon Captain Martin yesterday morning and asked his assistance in locating his miss- ing stenographer, Edith Saunders, other- wise known as Mrs. London Wallick, who had stolen a lot of briefs and other papers from his office last Thursday. He said the papers were of considerable value to him. Captain Martin ascertained that Mr. and Mrs. Wallick had gone in the direction of Toledo, Ohio. ——— Coroner Holds Inquests. Coroner Leland held a number of in- quests yesterday, most of them belng in unlm?wtn.nt cages. In the case of Charles W. Parmeles, the young man who shot self in the Winchester Hotel Thurs- day, the jury returned a yverdict that he had’ taken his own life. In the case of the unknown man who was found near the conservatory in Golden Gats Park July 3, by Policeman Meyer, the verdict was death by strychnine poison. 5000 Standard and Popular Books Now to Be Sold at 25¢ on the Dollar. — We are making shelf room in Califor- f nia’s largest Book Store to accommodate flin a few days’ time thousands of school § books, and a few weeks later a great Fall and Christmas stock, now being shipped tous. To that end we have marked all N Books that are slightly shop worn or that | have in any measure been hurt in hand- some bindings com The works of such authors a 2 Webster's Unabridged Dictionarics, marked 5000 Volumes Among the many titles are: POWS 1w v ie o e w e e SO, 2 Funk & W: Standard Dictionaries, A RSN T L 1 Set of Charles Kingsley’s Works (the Eng- lish Edition), worth $15.00; now .00 1 Set of English Men of Letters, 13 volumes, worth $16.253n0w . . : . . . $5.00 2 Family Bibles, worth $8.00 each; now . . . . $5.00 of Handy Classics, prettily bound in stout cloth bindings; now selling, each. . .. Longfellow’s Poems, Twice Told Tales, Sartor Resartus, Snew ling at prices averaging about 25¢ on the dollar. o umes and 50 or 60 standard sets in hand- prise this extfaordinary offering. . Among the books are Fiction, Works of Travel, Biography, History, Poetry, Medicine, School Text Books, Illustrated Books, Dictionaries, Reference Books, Guide Books, Classics, ete. Balzac, Lytion, Dickens, Scott, Cooper, D. Howells, Amelia Barr, Willam Black, Kipling, and Ellen Olney Kirk. Among the many valuable and much under-priced books in this collection are: Nearly 5000 miscellaneous vol- , Thomas Hardy, W. 1 Set History of the Norman C: of Eng-. land, in six volumes, 'filh“% 3 Sets of Rawlinson’s Anclent Monarchies, s volumes, worth $5.00; now, per set ¥ P! 3 Sets Scott’s Waverly Novels, in 34 volumes, worth $18.00; 00w . . . . . . $8?B: 4 Gibson’s Drawings (slightly soiled), regularly’ $5005mow. L 4w e e . 10c Image, Treasure Island, Reveries of a Bachelor, Sketch Book, Acsop's Pables, etc. e T LU e S This is the longest train of merchandise, consigned to a single retail firm, ever brought across the Contit_\ent. The Photograph was taken al | Fresno, en route to this city. The 26 cars were all consigned to The Emporium, and were hauled West in one train on the Santa Fe route.