The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, September 14, 1902, Page 24

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24 ADVERTISEMENTS. e A A A A A A A A A~ EEEEREEIEE N NN NN E RN E THE X-RAY CURE © eed, #nd be well. g d off by the surgeon. , permanently and painles W Write for details. Otfice Hours—9 a. m Separate apartments for ladies and . ulcers, displacements, ar watery blood and irregularities cured to stay cured. Come and try the life-giving electricity. Diseases of the Stomach and Bowels t is for a person to try to cure piles with ointments and It can’t be done—merely relieved in the mildest cases. h to go to the other extreme and have them cut out The electro-chemic treatment cures them We Cure Cancer, Consumption, Tumors, Deafness, Asthma, Catarrh, Rheumatism and Neuralgia, Piles and Fistula, Skin and Blood Discases and Diseas:s of Men and Women, e consultation and Electro-Chemic X-Ray demonstration during office hours. CURE YOURSELF AT HOME. of out-of-town patients the Electro-Chemic Institute will loan a Electrical outfit free of charge to those taking treatment tism, Deafness e Electro-Chemic Institute 118 Grant Avenue, San Francisco. to5p. m. and 7 to 8 p. t ’ THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1902. Consumption and Cancer Is now an admitted fact in both continents.. Stop drugging, stop the surgeon cutting you up. Take our Painless Cure. Not only is the cure painless, but the charges are small. Sufferiny Women Cure your weak backs, your continued headaches, that lack of strength to meet the burdens of household cares and worries. We- cure serious ‘diseases quickly and bearing down and other Gain the Fistula is also cured without sur- Neuralgia, and the Diseases of Men and m. daily; Sundays, 10 2. m. to 1 p. m. lemen. For the Olympian Games. CHICAGO, Sept. 13.—Major Gordon Strong, chairman of the Committee on_ Military Affairs of the Olympian Games 10 be held here in 1904, telegraphed from Montreal to-day that he had seen the Governor General of Canada, who had manifested great interest in the games, and offered every assistance. The mili- tary authorities of Canada, it was stated, were very'favorable to a large represen- tation. Annual Prison Congress. PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 13.—Penolo- gists from every section of the country attended the opening session to-night of the annual Congress of the National Pris- on Association. The feature was the an- nual address of the president, Professor Charles R. Henderson of the University of Chicago. ADVERTISEMENTS. The Leading Specialist. MEN ONLY I Have the Lgrgest Praciic: causc 1 Inv:riably Fullill My Promises. “Wezkness Permanently Cured.” cure *‘weakness’ prompt- the only treatment ¥ cure this disorder per- is a system of local original with me, y no physician other may seem a broad but it is just as substantial as it is broad. So-called ‘‘weakness” is but a symptom of local inflamma- tion or congestion. and a radical cure is merely a matter of restoring normal conditions throughout the organic sys- tem, and th plish thoroughly and’ with ar I not onl- 1y, but 1 emp VARICOCEI My treatment is ab- solutely painless, and cures completely in one week. Investigate my method. It i the only thoroughly scientific treatment for this disease being em- of a chror My patients have no felapses, cure in less time than the ordinary forms of treat- ment require. ¢ No cutting, no dflat- Painiess treatment and a positive STRICTUR! 10 cure. “LIVE ALL YOUR YEARS A MAN.” Write for this pamphlet. It tells of my methods of treating the above dis- eases, also Hydrocele, Specific Biood Poison Piles. Malled Free. Con- suitation free at office or by mail. DR. 0. C. JOSLEN 1049 Market St. nally Opposite Hibernia Bank. Tel. South 952. A ;wmr DR. JORDAN'S crear MUSEUN OF ARATORY 1051 MARZET T bet. GhaTY, 6.7.C:1, The Largest Aratomical Muscam in the World Weaknesses or any commacied aicisc pasitively cared by the oldest . Specialist on the Coast. Est. 36 years. UR. JORDAK—DISEASES OF MEN Consuization free and stictly private. mest porsowsily or by jetier. & Fombe Cure in every eave d Write for Book. LOSOPRY ~f MARRIAGE, MAILED FXEE. (A ‘ | valusbie book for men) JOR. e AN & CG.. 1051 Market St,, 8. F. () o WD DAD DT DO Tong Po Chy, Successor to DR. LI PO TAL CHINESE TEA AND HERB SANITARIUM. Brenham Ploze, San Francisco, Cal. 1 | timber, the remainder being controlled by DB VIVBVRVIL | to Wright. PRICE OF SPRUGE LOGS ADVANGES Fruit Growers of Cali- fornia Will Be the Losers. Special Dispatch to The Call ASTORIA, Or., Sept. 13.—The price of spruce logs has gone up to $6 50 per thou- sand feet and it is probable further in- creases will occur hereafter at frequent intervals. During the past two years spruce has been worth from $4 50 to $6 50, according to quality, but now ordinary logs are worth the latter figure, and even at that timber is very scarce, the millmen finding it difficult to procure enough to supply their orders. The advance is due to the large pur- chases of timbe- lands by syndicates of Eastern buyers. These big companies have had representatives in the spruce zone for the past four yedrs or more and thousands of acres of the very choicest lands have been acquired by them. In the three spruce counties of Clatsop, Co- lumbia and Tillamook, it is estimated, the corporations own fully 80 per cent of the smaller concerns. There are practically no more individual owners of small tracts. The big concerns have bought up the tim- ber for - speculative purposes and the amount of logs placed in the water is becoming smaller each month. In the Eastern States the supply of tim- ber is almost entirely exhausted and the speculators’ figure on a rich profit when the Eastern millmen come West to get the only avallable supply. The advance in price. will .seriously. affect the California fruit growers, who depend upon spruce for their boxes. Every time logs go up $1 lumber advances $2 and the fruit grower will be compelled to stand the rise in this instance. 2 The present scarcity of spruce is work- ing & hardship upon some of the milimen, who have orders for three or four months ahead. SMUGGLES A KEY TO HER LOVER IN JAIL San Jose Woman Arrested for At- tempting to Liberate a Prisoner. SAN JOSE, Sept. 13.—A daring attempt to aid her lover to escape from the city jail was made by Trixie Wright, a wom- af of shady reputation, this morning, and as a sequel she has been arrested on a charge of felony. Jesse Wright, whom she sought to free, was arrested a few days ago in connection with the stealing of a watch from Charles Morris. Jessie Doris and Frank Woods are accused of having stolen the watch, which was sold The latter is charged with having received stolen property. A bucket of coffee and some food were sent to the city prison this morning by the woman for Jesse Wright. The police were suspicious of the couple, and De- tective Haley examined the coffee. In the bottom of the pail he found a pack- age done up in tin foil, inside of which w: a large blank key and some opium. Wright evidently had intended to fashion the blank key into one that would have unplocked the door to the corridor about the cells, in which the prisoners are al- lowed their lberty. His escape would | have been easy. Trixie Wright was at once arrested on a charge of attempting to liberate pris- oners and arraigned before Justice Cobb. Her examination was set for next Wed- | nesday, with bail fixed at $1000. The wom- an was already out on bail awaiting trial on a charge of vagrancy. s Gt il GOVERNOR WILL OPPOSE PACKING-HOUSE MERGER Chief Executive of Nebraska Proposes to Make Thinks Lively for Lawbreakers. OMAHA, Nebr., Sept. 13.—The World- Herald to-day quotes Governor Savage as saying that any attempt to include the packing houses of Nebraska.in a merger will result in a strong fight in the courts. On account of the large Nebraska pack- ing interests an attempt of the State offi- clals to prevent the.combine from doing’ business in - this State would have a serious effect. on *the proposed- merger. Following is the Ggvernor's view: ““As soon as it comes to my knowledge that a merger of the packing interests has taken place, I shall instruct the legal de- partment of the State to investigate fully. If I find that apy law of the State of from 9 to 12 eng | Pose the full penalty of the law against © te 12, ' those responsible for the combination.” Nebraska is being violated I will direct that proceedings be immediately brought | ficer of the | Guarg. GURRD OFFIGERS GIVEN PROMOTION New Commissions Issue to Many Militiamen of the State. Places Aboard Torpedo Boat Destroyer Bogota Are Not Accepted. Commissions have been issued as fol- lows to officers of the National Guard; To Charles Leslie Hewes. to. be lieutenant colonel and sig: vice Bower, retired. Fred LeRo; rtin, Bri major and signal of- placed on the r First Infantry—Francis J. Driscoll, first lieutenant of Company H, vice Guedet; John Lionel Swift, second lieutenant of Company H, iscoll, promoted. Second In arles Willlam Thomas, Infantry—Frederick Willlam Henry first_lieutenant of Company A, vice pany I, vice Warner; Mike Schoenfeld, second first leutenant Company A, vice Doll; George Ralph Wagner, second lfeutenant Company A, vice Spence, promoted; John Alexander Devlin, captain Company C, vice Jones, promoted; William Stoddard Scott, first lieutenant of Company C, vice Devlin, promoted; Timothy Walton, second lieutenant of Company C, vice Scott, promoted. Seventh Infantry—Shirley Luther Holt, first lieutenant of Company A, vice Lockwood, pro- moted; Theodore Luther Krebs, second lieu- tenant of Company A, vice Holt, promoted; Charles Tweede Tichborne, first iteutenant of Company B, vice Holt, promoted; Phillip Na- | than Smith, second lieutenant of Company B, vice Tichborne, promoted; Rudolph Izer Turner, first lieutenant of Company H, vice Stewart, | resigned. A commission has been issued to Andrew Kirk, military instructor at the Mt. Tamalpals Military Academy, as major In the National aval Militia—John Joseph Foley, First Division; Fifth Division; Adams, ensign, ifth Division, vice McLaughlin. CRUISE OF THE MARION. Certificates of re-election have been is- sued to Frank K. Moore, Company C, First Infantry, and John Michael Smith, captain Company E, Seventh Infantry. An election has been ordered for cap- tain and first lieutenant in Company H of the Fifth, Infantry,-vice Gunn and Bush, terms expired. Major L. W. Juil- liard will preside at the election, which is to be held in the armory at Napa. Major George H. Wethern, commissary Second Brigade, has been ordered to pre- side at an election to be held in the ar- mory at Alameda for second lluetenant ensign, Hinds, resigned. Four enlisted men of Troop A, cavalry, have been discharged from the service of the State, three at expiration: of term and one for good of the service. Upon the recommendation of the commanding of- ficer and upon their own request, Corpo- rals L. Potter and P. H. Raine of Troop A, cavalry, have been reduced to the ranks, The cruise of the Marion with the naval militiamen on board was a very satisfac- tcry one and the expenses are under the eppropriation allowed. WEIGHING THE ANCHOR. automatic and one three-inch gun, all of board the Marion and they will be dis- tributed to the divisions at Los Angeles, San Diego, Santa Barbara and Santa Cruz. Captain L. H. Turner, retired, has been relleved from duty as a member of the examining board for naval militia, and Lieutenant Carl E. Lindsay has been de- tailed in his place. While the Marion was at anchor off Sausalito last week there was consider- able speculation as to how the anchor would be weighed, as' all the appliances that were worked by steam for that pur- pose had been removed. Captain Nerney set the men to weigh the anchor in the old-fashioned way with capstan and bars and the heavy iron welght came up in_good shape. Several officers of the naval militia have within a few days past been offered commissions on board the destroyer Bo- gota for active work in Colombian wa- ters, but as yet none has accepted. ASSASSINS ARE SEEKING THE LIFE OF MENELEK Made to Kill King of Abyssinia. LONDON, Sept. 13.—The martial Gover- nor General of the Italian colony at Erythrer says that there have been three recent attempts to assassinate King Men- elek of Abyssinia. He expects he will be killed sooner or later, and thereafter there will be a tremendous struggle for the suc- cession, which Ras Makennan, who was recently in London at the coronation, has the best chance of winning. There appears to be real danger that England, France and Italy will be at log- gerheads in the event of Menelek’'s sud- den death. Ry SR Murdered for His Money. MONROE, Wash., Sept. 13.—The body of a man named Martin, a farmer from Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, was found near here this morning. He evidently had been murdered by robbers last night. He was known to be carrying considerable money last evening, ail of which is missing. - Preserves Jams and Jellies Are the Finest on the Market. Geta Jar. They're Fine, All Varieties. Long Syrup Refining Co., €an Francisco. Phone 486. Ali Brocers. to declare the merger void, and will im- enal officer on the division staff, | gade, vice Douslass, | t, original under act of 1901; t Smith, second lieutenant of Com- | Diclesol Joseph Oscar McKown, captain of Com- | lieutenant Company I, vice McKown, pro-| moted Sixth Infantry—Frederick Arthur Spence, Edward McLaughlin, lieutenant, | of Company A of the Fifth Infantry, vice | Two Hotchkiss one-pounder, two Colt | the latest pattern, have been received on | Three Attempts ‘Have Already Been | BUANG HERSELF WHILE INGANE Old Woman Sets Fire to Her Clothing and ‘W iil Die. Advancing Age and Trouble Serve to Unsettle Her Mind. Mrs. Jacoba Antepni, a widow aged 65 vears, set fire to her clothing last even- ing after she had saturated it with coal (oil and then calmly stood in front of her residence at 6 Hartman place, while the i flames baked her withered body and face | to a crisp. No cry escaped her lips as the | leaping tongues of fire crackled over her | flesh, and she resisted with all her feeble | strength the efforts of the rescuers to | save her from her mad act. | Mrs. Anteppi had lived for more than | thirty years in Hartman place. After she | lost her husband she adopted a boy named Bekan, who is a painter by trade, and who has supported the old- woman with | his earnings. Her next door neighbor Is her sister, Mrs. Bargone, and the two | women have not been on friendly terms | of late. The sister says the trouble was 1 only a fancied grievance on the part of ! the burned woman, who, she says, has | not been in her right mind for some time. | Brooding over the rupture with her only | living relative, and beset with imaginary troubles, Mrs. Anteppi went to the kitchen and emptied the contents of a coal oil can over herself. ' She did not | stint its use and the floor around became soaked with the fluid. Then with a match to the front door. Her sister and some of the other neighbors saw her in the door- way with her cicthes blazing and ran to her assistance. A blanket was procured and the flames smothered, but not before fatal and shocking burns had been inflict- | ed. There was scarcely a square inch of her body or face that was not roasted by the flames. Mrs. Anteppi was removed to the Cen- tral Emergency Hospital and Dr. Murphy did all he could to alleviate her suffer- ings, but late last night he said she was likely to die at any moment. To him she confided that her troubles were too great to be borne and for that reason she had sought death. ————— DENIAL OF PURCHASE OF THE VICKERS COMPANY Report of Acquisition by the Steel | Trust Is Not Credited in | London. LONDON, Sept. 13.—The recurring re- |port of the purchase of the Vickers- | Maxim Company by the United States | | Steel Corporation is emphatically denied. | In this connection a gentleman closely | identified with big American purchasers of war munitions from the Vickers Com- pany prior to the Spanish war, said to- day: | “Not only has the Vickers Company | not been bought by Americans, but{ I do | not_think there is much inducement for such a deal. The fact is that the United | States in 1893-99 got over $1,000,000 of ma- terial from the English company, and I | think the American War Department, therefore, knows everything worth know- | ing about the Vickers' special products and that if another war came on it could duplicate anything wanted for American arsenals and navy yards without going to an English company to get it.” ————— Bear Rampant in Yosemite. TUOLUMNE, Sept. 13.—Travelers who'| desire to go into the Yosemite Valley or the Yosemite reservation from this direc- tlon declare that the. regulations of the Federal Government compel them to risk their lives. Without firearms it is posi- tively dangerous to enter the reservation, especially where ladies are along, as big bears are plentiful. In this part of the reservation, which is forty or fifty miles away from Yosemite Valley proper, bears stampede the pack animals and even at- tack camps at night. The opinion is that the State game laws are stringent enough to cover the case and the Federal regu- lations should be modified. ADVERTISEMENTS. The fire at San Jose on September 11 did not injure in any way, shape or manner the FREDERICKSBURG BREWERY, the conflagra- tion being confined exclu- || sively to the Malt House. || Consequently the FREDER- || ICKSBURG BREWERY is conducting business as usual, | and will continue, as it has done for the past thirty years, to supply its many customers with excellent its very LAGER BEER. THOMAS ALTON, General Manager. seeeoooe e ‘We are curing scores of cases in age from 2 to 82 years, including laborers, professional men, doctors and their families, clergymen, la- dies and children. They will all bear witness to the success of our treatment, but we offer a still more more. convincing test. Place your- self under our care. come once a week for a few weeks. You will be CURED. Then you pay, not be- tore. If we do not cure you we get on this plan. There is no operation, {m‘!pun. no danger. Consultation s free. Fidelity Ru_pture Gure, she ighited her soaked garments, and went | | 2635 Kearny Street, &an Fran cisco. nothing. All our cases are treated l e PRAGERS PRAGERS piece of Ribbon in stock is marke | 8sc, sale price 50c the yard. A splendid line of regular 35¢ white Taffeta Silk Neck Ribbon, 25c the yard. No. 40,"all silk Fancy Neck Rib values; sale price gc the yard. price 15¢ the bolt. Five thousand bolts of Narrow for making hair bows; Gauze Ribbon; all 5¢ values; yard. " We have never known of one before. Over a hundred different styles every kind and style, with the ridiculously low prices. STORE A Ribbon Sale! Monday morning starts a Ribbon event equal to the embroidery sale of last week. and thousands of yards for a week’s selling. Every Five-inch Novelty Ribbons, sold elsewhere Fine quality Taffeta Ribbon, No. 6o, all season- able shades and full 25¢ values; sale price 15¢. Black velvet, linen-back Ribbon, specially put up for us in five widths, and 634 yards to the bolt; sale also a large assortment of sale price 3 1-3c the - RIBEON BOW SALE Thirty-five styles of hair bows made of No. 3 Rib- bons, in all colors; worth 30c each; sale price 19¢c. A beautiful line of 50c colored Velvet Ribbon Bows, 9 yards to the bow; sale price 29c the bow. NEW DEPARTMENT B30 from Pragers. Blankets for Thousands d for this sale. offers them. Not cheap, t for and 4oc black and No. 8o; sale price of excellence. pair $3.39; 66 b bon, 12%c and 15¢ pair $9:50. $2.00, $3.00 and Silk. Ribbon, used beautiful all-ove fects; suitable or a dozen oth in San Francisco $1.35 the pair. covered, large 2% yards, 44¢; of Ribbon Bows; 40c; 2% by 24 newest ideas, at Pillow Cases, 4 @mm@fi Blankets! Blankets! | Another special price concession to the people baby, for everybody, at lower prices than anybody Blankets, known all over the world as the standard binding. White California Blankets, 56 by 78 inches, inches, pair $5.50; 76 by 84 inches, pair $6.50. “GOLD MEDAL” Blankets; money cannot buy better; 62 by 8 inches, pair $6.75; 72 by 84 inches, Crib Blankets for the baby; white wool, at $1.50, Colored Blankets, bright and pretty; figured with steamer rugs, gentleman’s dressing gown, bath robe them) going out at $1.69 each. 3 Another special offering is a big 11-4 white and gray heavy fleece Blanket, which we have priced at Heavy Comforts, extra weight, quilted, silkoline Invincible sheets—1% by 24 yards, 39¢; 134 by Pillow Cases—another lot of those extra value price, 8 1-3c¢ each. oo A 1250 MARKET §TREET. &8 !gy “Len Prancisca. cat the housewife, the hotel man, the rashy blankets, but CALIFORNIA Pink or blue borders, two-inch silk y 8o inches, pair $4.50; 72 by & $3.50. | r designs or with pretty ripple ef- for lounging or slumber robes, er purposes. All we have (150 of size, for only $1.45. 2 by 2% yards, 47¢; 2% by 2% yards, vards, 54c. 5 by 36 inches, offered at last week’s MARKET STREET AT JONES WIRE-TAPPERS ROB POOLROOM Withhold Result of a Race and Bet on Winner. Special Dispatch to The Call LOS ANGELES, Sept. 13.—A gang of race track followers supposed to be six in number tapped a wire leading from the ‘Western Union office across to Black & Fitzgerald’s poolroom this afternoon, and by withholding the result of a race fleeced the poolroom out of an amount varijously estimated at between $1500 and $4000. The wire passes down the rear of the building near a window in the sec- ond story, and near this window it was tapped. The race on which the job was worked was the fifth at the Harlem track. In this race Scarlet Lily was posted 6 to 1 to win, 2 to 1 for the place and even money to show. Pink Coat at 2 to 1 was favorite and Bon Mot at 3 to 1 second choice. The wire-tappers did not send in a false winner, as has so often beeh done in such jobs, but by cutting'the wire they withheld the result long enough to enable their confederates to place all the money they could on Scarlet Lily at 6 to 1. The amount suddenly bet on this horse and the further fact that between the re- ceipt of the post betting and the descrip- tion of the race the tappers allowed nearly a half hour to intervene, roused the suspicions of the poolroom operators and the betting was closed. ‘When the result finally came in there was no suspicion that the delay had been caused by wire-tapping, and most of the bets were paid. Some of the larger ones were not presented, however, and these are now being withheld. Should they be presentéd the holders of the tickets will be asked to explain their possession of them. The poolroom men presented a protest to Manager Beardsley of the Western | Union about the long delay in receiving | the returns on that particular race, and when he investigated and learned that there had been no .delay in sending it | through the Western Union office he made an examination of the line and found where it had been cut. The police were notifled and to-night six detectives have been working on the case. They say that six men were in the deal and three of them are known. ATTRIBUTES THE CURE TO WATERS OF LOURDES " Woman Who Had Been Seriously IIl Tells a Remarkable Story of Recovery. LONDON, Sept. 13.—The Daily Chron- icle this morning says that a Mrs. Notter- man has returned to her home in Lon- don from a pilgrimage to Lourdes, France, where, to all appearances, she was miraculously cured of an internal cancerous, tumor. Mrs. Notterman was unavailingly treated for cancer before going to France by experts in the Lon- don hospitals. On entering the waters at Lourdes she | experienced a fainting sensation, accom- panied . by pain. In a few minutes this passed away and with it the swelling of the tumor. Both at Lourdes and since her return to London Mrs. Notterman has been examined by doctors, who pro- nounced her absolutely cured. She at- tributes her cure to the agency of the Blessed Virgin. Her case created a great sensation among the English pilgrims. Pelee Region Must Be Evacuated. PARIS, Sept. 13.—The French scientific expedition which was sent to Martinique has drawn up a second report in which, speaking of the eruption of August 30, the commissioners say that the disquiet- ing eruption of that day renders contin- uous study of the phenomenon necessary. “There is no longer any doubt,” the com- missioners say, *“that the evacuation of the entire Mont Pelee region, which we did not consider indispensable a month ago, should now be carried out. TUntil the volcanic disturbances have ceased the southern limits of the mountain ought to be most actively watched, especially if it is demonstrated that the last erup- tion was due to a new crater in the lat- eral flssura’” o 3 ; RISKS DROWNING T0 ESCAPE. FIRE Woman With Clothing Ablaze Leaps Into a Zanja. Special Dispatch to The Call. LOS ANGELES, Sept. 13.—Mrs. Esther Childers lies in the County Hospital, burned from head to foot as a result of her clothing igniting while she was re- plenishing a fire in a wood stove in a tent in which she was living. She owes her life to her own presence of mind and to the bravery of Nellie Cook, a neigh- bor. When her clothing caught fire Mrs. Childers tried to extinguish the flames with her hands, but only increased their intensity. Near the place was a zanja, which sup- plies irrigating water to a large district. It is eight feet deep and the current is very swift. Without hesitation the woman plunged into the water. While this extinguished the fire, it came near causing her death by drowning, for she could not swin. She screamed for assist- ance and Nellle Cook jumped into the water after her, and, after a hard strug- gle, succeeded in dragging her to the edge of the ditch, from which both women were dragged by several men who had been at- tracted by their screams. Mrs. Childers’ burns may yet result fatally. Mangled Under Car Wheels. LOS ANGELES, Sept. 13.—The body of an unknown man, who Is supposed to have fallen off a freight train, was found frightfully mangled on the Southern Pa- cific track near La Puente to-day. e CANTON, Ohio, Sept. 13.—Mrs. Hobart, widow of the late Vice President Hobart, and her son, Garrett A. Jr., arrived here to-day for a brief visit with Mrs. Mc- Kinley. } EGYPTIAN GURIOG FOR THE MUSEUN Immense Collection Is Being Placed at Stanford. Special Dispatch to The Call STANFORD UNIVERSITY, Sept. 13— The immense collection of Egyptian cu- rios and historical relics procured by Mrs. Stanford during her visit to the Khedive’'s domain is being placed on ex-~ hibition In the university museum. An estimate of the value of this latest ad- dition to the museum may be drawn from the fact that more than 150 large cases will be required for their display. ‘There are Egyptian coins, pottery, valles and lamps of precious metals in profu- slon and also a large variety of paint- ings and reproductions of bas-reliefs of great historical value. Twenty-three vol- umes, three by four feet in dimenstons, relating the French exploration and occu- pation of Egypt by Napoleon I were pro- cured by Mrs. Stanford at a great ex- pense. They were published in 1812 by the Emperor’'s orders and are coplously {l- lustrated in colors. Reprints of the re- cent discoveries made at Kasnak and re- productions of bas-rellefs from the tombs of the Egyptian Kings form an interest- ing feature of the collection. Some of the pottery taken from the desert sands of thecsa.hara is of date as early as 3000 B. C. A large Pompeilan collection of coins, pottery and bronzes from the ancient ruins has been placed in Room C in the museum. Several volumes of reproduc- tions in color of the restored wall paint- ing of Pompeti form a part of the Pom- peiian exhibit. In a suit filed at Marquette, Mo., it a;lleged that one dog killed $800 worth sheep. on Patent any othzr Drug Phone S Peruna .. Pinkham’s Compound. Paine’s Celery Compound. Swamp Root, large. Swamp Root, small. Listerine, large Listerine, small. Lyon’s Tooth Powder. Calder’s Dentine ....... For One Cut Rates SPECIAL SALE OF LADIES' POCKET BOOKS 50°¢ Discount. This: means Prices cut in Hali—see them displayed on our counters. Medicines Our Prices as low if n-t lower than firm in this city. - e ™ Telephone Your Orders and They Will Be Delivered Promptly. outh 756. 65¢ 65e 65¢ 33¢ 65e 20¢ ... 15e . $3.00 Week Only | 5 WE GIVE TRADING STAMPS. The No Percentage Drug Co. 949-95] Market Street.

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