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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, ;I‘HUBSDAY DECEMBER 18, 1902 LAME BACK? IT°S KIDNEY TROUBLE Vice - Commodore Adam Freudenstein, G. A.R,, Custer Post, Says He Was Permanently Cured of Lame Back, Kidney and Bladder Trouble by WARNER’S SAFE CURE OF THIS THE WORLD'S GREAT- A TRIAL BOTTLE ERY DNETY, LIVER, EST KIDNEY CURE SENT ABSOLUTELY i READER OF THE CALL WHO SUFFERS FROM BLADDER OR BLOOD DISEASE. The following letter from Commodore Freudenstein is a sample of thousands of unsolicited letters received from grateful men and women WARNER'S REMEDIES. FREE TO ) who have been cured by Warner's Safe Cure. 1 am pleased to say that I have the greatest confidence in Warner's Safe Cure. as 1 suffered for years with lame back, kidney and biadder troubles contracted in the army, which nothing seemed to help until T A few bottles did more for me than all the doctors tried Safe Cure. and medicines previously tried: it has permanently cured me. strong and well, and though at an advanced age can enjoy life, thanks oo oo oo, Senior Vie-Com., G. A. R., Cusler Post. 1o this medicing. Thousandis of Disease and Do Not Bright's disease. bowels ed tongue, tired, are all caused by weal Let some ine Warner ure Co.. dence strictly confidential Cures Al Kidney Diseases. The free trial bottle has cured many light cases which were discovered in the early stages by the simple test. Sa® Cure purifies and strengthens the kidneys and enables it will gure rheumatism, uric acid poison. gall stone, In- f organs and female weakness, and restore the patient’s health and vigor. vegetable andfcontains no narcotic or harmful drugs: it is free from sediment and is t valuable and effective tonic: it kills the disease germs. move the bowels gently and aid a_speedy cure. ire at any drug store. Two regular sizes, #c.and $1.00 a bottle. 1t is preseribed and used by doctors and.in the tor all forms of diseases of the kidneys, liver, bladder and blood. them to do their work: gout, diabetes, Bright's disease flammation of the bladder and urina Safe Cure is purely take: it does t constipate: it is a my SAFE P! st as good e cure Men and Women Have Kidney Know it Until It Has Ceveloped Into Bladder Trouble, Rheu- matism Diabetes or Bright’s Disease. diabetes. rheumatism, . jaundice. gravel, catarrh of the bi: a frequent desire to urinate, especially bing ache in the small of your back. pains in Your groing and the low- sore joints and muscles, digziness, neck, torpid liver, eczema and scrofula, yellow. sallow complexion; coa i n-out, nervous feeling, lack of energy and ambition, , unhealthy kidneys. neglected, and they indicate the disease has been of long standing, as these outward symptoms sel- dom make themselves known for many months. THIS SIMPLE HOME TEST WILL TELL. stand for twenty-four hours in a glass or bottle. s a reddish sediment in the bottom of the glass, or if the urine is f yvou see particles or germs floating about in it, your kidneys You should take Safe Cure to arrest all these unnatural ons and prevent serious complications. v doubt in your mind as to the devel:)zmem of the send a_sample of your urine to Med. Rochester. 3 tors will analyze it and send You a report Women may write with perfect freedom. as all letters from women are read and answered by a woman doctor. as Warner's Safe Cure. TACOMA, Wash. 1 now feel rheumatic gout. uric acid . painful passage of the in the night:-a dull, drub- pains in the back of your id If, after you have made . Y.. and our doc- th advice free. AN corre- rheumatic pleasant to REFUSE SUBSTITU . There Teading hospitals as the Beware of so-call:d kidney cures full of s:diment and of bad odor—they not only do not cure, tut are positivel§ harmful. SAMPLE BOTTLE ‘“SAFE CURE” sufferer from disease of the kidneys, liver. biadder and blood that e will be sent absolutel e diseases of the kidneys. T — sem a sampie bot eived daily = fully guaranteed by the publisher. ving read this I'beral offer in the 8an Francisco Cal). free. postpald. Contests Result of Election. WOODLAND, Dec. 17.—A contest for office of District Attorney was filed yesterday. O face of the returns W A. Anderson, Republican, defeated H. L Huston by cight votes. The complaint &£'leges various irregularities and miscon- duct on the part of election officers. ————— Fight Against Peon Labor. S ANG Dec. 17.—After January i1l be d nor will union men be permitted to work on any build- ing Los where the foundations were const on men. The movement to what 1= known as peo ADVERTISEMENTS. ..CHRISTMAS NUMBZR S. F. News Letter READY DECEMBER 18. The Handeomest A Souvemtr for Partial Contents. ivate Schools........ By Ira G. Holt :By Wendell Easion SPECIALLY PHO- | TOGRAPHED FOR THIS 1SSUE. Thy Advantage of P Rea) Estate Beepes in Park Eeven Hills of ¥ine Residences The Artists of Monterey n. By “The Quest of the Local Color” m). .. i 1. By Wallace Irwin “Odor; A Phase of Energy” [ ia Christmas in 3 land (Foem) “Justice by Moonitght ez : T, By Wallace Trwin BY lle E. Dasson @ Trescott” t Wae the (Story) By *Art in Bookbinding™ o Tratning r W Margaret Cameron i By Morzan Snepard By Lorenzo Soseo By Eliloti Flower Gentie s .1 npees of Old Mexico'” sou ..Photos by b oreosreres it by ranklin J“The Comic Side of Tragedy .By Henry Miller “The Tragic Side of Comed secenienan i By Ferris Hartman PROFUSELY ILLUSTRATED, ORDER COPFIES NOW Mail It to Your Friends. 120 Pages Price 25¢c A CHRISTMAS DILEMMA ‘Will present itself if your linen is not n perfect condition for the holiday occa- sions. Get wise in time and intrust it to us and no dilemma will present itself, No saw edges. UNITED STATES LAUNDRY Office 1004 Market Street, Near Powell ~ i | One Mexican laborer aboard the | was killed outright, according to the re- TRAINS GOLLIDE ON SHARP CURVE Reported That One Man I5 K lled and Seven Injured. Special Dispatch to The Call TUCSON, Ariz., Dec. 17.—Two Souhern Pacific trains came together at 11 o'clock this morning at Cochise, Ariz., with a fearful crash. -Both engines and a num- ber of cars were derailed. A work train‘on the Tucson-Lordsburg Givision was traveling on the time of a local freight and the two trains met head- on 2t a sharp curve near Cochise; while rurning at a good speed. Several of the trainmen jumped and escaped . injury. train port received here to-night, and seven { were serfously injured. They were in- side and on top of the box cars at the front of the train and did not have an op- portunity to jump. The wreck occurred on the main line of the road and traffic has been entirely blocked. The Sunset Limited, the Rock Island Flyer and a local passenger train arc tied up behind the wreck. A wreck irg train and hospital crew were sent aut from Benson to clear up the wreck and care for the Injured. A shoo-fly Is being bullt around the wreck and traffic will be resumed to-morrow morning. This is the third serious freight wreck that has oc- curred on the same division of the South- ern Pacific this month. Two men were killed and an entire train wrecked in th- last accident, which occurred about a week ago at Pantano. The engines in the Cochise wreck this morning are standing on end with pliots in the air and the cars on the front end of both trains were badly wrecked. A fire which started in the debris was soon extinguished by the crews. An investi- gation will be held to determine where the responsibility for the wreck lles. —_— CALIFORNIA SHORT LINE RAILWAY INCORPORATED Proposed Route Will Connect Rock Island System With Southern Pacific and Santa Fe. BANTA FE, N. M., Dec. 17.—New York, Virginia and New Mexico capitalists to- day incorporated the California Short Line Rallway Compdny, capitalized at $1,- 20,000. A line 126 miles long has been sur- veyed from Alamogordo to Deming, c: - ing the Rio Grande at Las Cruces. It will connect the Rock Island system mogordo with the Southern Pacific a! Deming and with the Santa Fe at Las Cruces and Deming. It still further re- duces the Rock Island’'s mileage from Chicago and Kansas City to Los Angeles and San Francisco seventy-five miles, making it by far the shortest transconti- nental line in connection with the South. cinPu:mc. —_—————— PLANNING TO AID BANKS IN CASE OF STRINGENCY Senator Depew Introduces a Bill ‘Au- thorizing Issuance of an Emer- gency Currency. : WASHINGTON, Dec. 17.—Senator De- Pew to-day introduced a bill authorizing the issvance of emergency currency b; the Treasury Department. It 4 e{ that such currency shall be supplied to any national bank with a capital of not lese tham $50,00 to the extent of 50 per cent of the bank's capital. The extra capital is, however, to be supplied oply in case of a stringency in the money mar. ket sufficlently to jeopardize values and imperil the commercial and business in- terests of the country. FREE. Warner's Safe Cure will cure Also a symptom blank and a valuable medical booklet which r and bladder., with a prescription for each disecase, and many of the thou- from grateful patients who have been cured by Safe Cure. All you have to do is to write Warner's Safe The genuineness of this Cure Company, Rochester, N. Y., NEW CURRENCY Banks May Take Out Notes to One-Quarter of Capital. That any national bank may, with the ap- proval of the Comptroller of the Currency, tak. out for lssue and clrculation an amount of national bask notes not exceeding 25 per cent of its pail up and unimpatred capital, without depositing United States bonds with the Unit- ed States treasury In the manner provided by existing law. That sald national bank notes shall be fur- nished by the United States at the expense of the respective banks issuing them, and shall be in the denominations of $10 and multiple thereof, That before any national bank shall receiv. any of the bank notes referred to in this act, it shall first deposit In the treasury of the United s, as a guarant: thereof, an amount of United States bonds or #0ld coin, or both, equal to 5 per cent of the amount of the notes so taken and such d({val!(l shall be counted as & pa of the law- ful reserve of sald bank against 4 notes. The interest upon said bonds shall be paid to the bank so depositing them, and If said bank all retire said circulation or any por tion thereof, an amount of bonds or gold coin, or both, equal t0 5 per cent of the notes so retired ‘shall be returned to sald baiik; pro however, that i{ it shouid be necessary 1 said bouds v the purposes defined in this t the Secretary of the Treasury is hereby authorized to dispose of the same and use the proceeds In accordance with the pro- visions of law herein contained. A tax of one-quarter of one per cent fe to be pald on the first days of January and July of each year, in goid, on the average amount of such notes in circulation. dur- ing the preceding six months, which tax, together with the 5 per cent deposited, snall constitute a guarantee fund, The biil provides that these notes shall be a Hen on the banks issuing them. Provision is made for the redemption of the notes and for the protection of the United States In case a bank fails. Interesting News. N That Banborn, Vail & Cb, are showing splendid lines of dolls, toilet cases, tripli- cate mirrors, leather goods, framed pic tures. 741 Market street. Open evening: ———————— SALT LAKE RAILROAD TO BUILD SPUR TRACK Plans to Extend Its Line to the Big Borax Beds Located Near . Borate. SAN BERNARDINO, Dec. 17.—Reliable news reached this city to-day to the ef- fect that the Salt Lake road has dumped 4500 rails near Daggett, a desert town on the Eanta Fe, about seventy miles east of this place. The ralls are of the best steel and of extremely heavy weight. ‘The company's surveys show that the line will pass within six miles of the big borax beds, located near Borate. The rails that have arrived will be used in the buflding of & spur to the valuable borax and mineral claims. By doing this it is expected that much freight will be se- cured for the smelters of Salt Lake City and Denver. o —— BAN JOSE, Dec. election cases of Murphy (Auditor) and Chipman vs. Bateman (Su- perintendent of Schools) Judge Rhodes tc-day denied a motion for dismissal In the first named and refused to vacate an order calling for a speclal session of the court in the second. ——— el . To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo QuiNIne Tablets, All refund the 1t 7 W, Groves sisnature s ogesch box. e [ WASHINGTON, Dec. | Georgla Democrat, during the considera- | { tee, except for the amendment. | punishment for perjury committ, | avallable. !'ing to the annual-report of the Interstate | The report pavs: f the payment| these injunctions took effect, this is not 2, ¢l DUSE GIVES KNOX SINEWS | FOR THE FRAY Provides $500,000 for Enforcing the Sher-, man Act. Amsndment to Appropriation Bill Receives United Support. Bartlett of Georgia Proposes Measure and Hepburn Secures the Sub- | stitution of an Earlier Form. pud a5 Ny 17.—Bartlett, a tion of the legislative, executive and judi- clal a]lprcprl?llon bill in the House to- day, unexpectedly and without warning sprang an amendment to appropriate $250,- 000 to enforce the Sherman antktrust law and to direct the Attorney General to! proceed to the prosecution of all violators of ihe law. Although such a provision wag plainly amenable to a point of or- der, not a.member on either side of the House raised objection. Both sides ‘wheeled into line and all agreed that some such action was advisable. Some of the Republicans raised objection to the loose- ness of the language of the amendment and Hepburn of Towa offéred as a substi- tute for it the language of the bill he in- troduced on the opening day of the ses sion 10 appropriate $500,000 for.the enforce- ment of the“law. This was further strenghtened to make the apprapriatton immediately avajlable and as amended the substitute was agreed to without di- vision. The legisiative blll was passed | practicaily. as it came from the commit- The language of the Hepburn amend- ment as adopted to-day Is as follows: That for the enforcement of the provisions of the mct of Jaly 2. 1890, the sum of :000 is | hereby_appropriated cut of any money In the | treasury not heretofore appropriated to be ex- pended umder the direction of the Attorney | Genergl in the employment of special counsel | and agents of the Liepartment of Justice to | | | | | conduct proceedings, suits and prosecutions un- der gatd wet In the courts of the United States; provided, that no person shall be prosecuted be. subjected (veany penalty or forfelture ¢ on accont of any transaction. matter or concerning which he may testify or pro- documentary “or otherwise, in rovecution under xald t Do person s tes- ution or In 5o testify- This approptiation shall be immediately or fo evidence, any proceeding, muit or al provided ‘further, t tifying shall be cxempt from ing. R ADMITS HELPLESSNESS. Interstate Commerce Commission Asks for New Powers. | WASHINGTON, Dec. 17.—The tendency to combine continues the most significant | feature of raliway development, accord- | Commerce Commission, ~Issued to-day. it <the compe- “ which for. ely, suppressed L opén 5 prevall been' lat t least he,to the eondition of effee. because “the control of most | 'y will be mérged in a few in- | ; 2 | - tive restralat. nibmma of consolidation | ch In one form or another will at no distant day | confine thix competition ‘within narrow and un- nporta se common intcrests fmpel them While this will insure, as | elre can, In equal degree tho blished tarift and so meas- me of the evils which the ohservance urably remove | act was designed to provent, the resultig situ- involves consequencés to the' public which claim the most serlous attention. A law | ich might have answered the purpose wh ompetition was relled Upon to secure reason- | able rates is demonstrably inadequate when | that competition is Jicplaced by the most fa reaching and powerful combinations. So great a chauge in conditions calls for corresponding change in the regulating statute, The report says that the fact that no | convictions have yet been obtained nor | ndictments found in the cases of the | oads which were shown by investigation | WASHJNGTON, Dec.” 17.—Representa- tive Fowler, chairman of the House Com- inittee on Banking and Currency, intro- duced a biil to-day which was drawn by Iim in accopdance with the views of the Republican members expressed at recent coaferences, and which will be urged stcad of the currency bill reported to th House at the last sessfon. The bill pro- vides as follows: last winter to be glviug secret rates to | | grain shippers emphasizes the fact that | | the criminal provisions of the present in- | terstate law are practically a dead letter. | | The commiseion says that the effect of | issuing njunctions to compel roads to ob- | serve published tariffs has been to ad- vance materiaily the rate actually re- | ceived by the carrier and actually pald by | the shipper. While the producer of grain will undoubtedly pay from now on from 5 to 7 cents, in some instances 10 cents per 100 pounds, more to transport that grain from the field to the destination than he had paid for some time before to be regarded as an argument against | the Injunctions. There ought to be some 1 power which cannot only compel these carriers to maintain the published rate, but which can compel them to publish a falr and reasonable rate. To promote more general compliance with the spirit of the safety appliance law In the use of airbrakes, the commission ! recommends the passage of an act forbld- ding the running of trains in which less | than one-half of tfic cars are equipped | | with power brakes and empowering the | | commission to i{ssue general orders re- quiring the use of power brakes on more than 50 per cent of the cars in a train | whenever it shall find such increased use | to be practicable. e LIQUOR IS SEIZED ON LIGHTHOUSE TENDER Reported That Army and Navy Of- cers Are Implicated in the Smuggling. SAN JUAN, Porto Rico, Dec. 17.—Col- lector Cruzon to-day selsed several hun- dred casas of liquors which had been brought from St. Thomas on board the United States lighthouse tender Laurel. Tt is reported that certain army and navy officers, as well as gome prominent citi- zens of San Juan, are implicated in the | matter. The case will go before the Fed- jeral Court and the Bureau of Insular | Revenue will also take action. | It 4s sald that this method of smuggling has been in operation for the last eightéen months and that goods amounting to several thousand dollars have beeh landed here, pldfimel i Japanese Are Illegally Arrested. VANCOUVER, B. C,, D.Z. 17.—The pro- | vinclal immigration authorities are in the | peculiar position of having arrested nine- | teen Japanese under an act not now in K,cxlu'.am:ts. The Japanese were arrested | as Cloverdale charged with unlawfully | entering the coun The crown attor- ' ney argued that while notice of the dls- allowance of the act under which the Jap- anese were arrested had’ been published ‘no official notification had been recdelved by the court. The case was continued pending instructions from Ottawa. e Pensioners in the Possessions. ‘WASHINGTON, Dec. 17.—The President has issued an order directing that, be- ginning January 1, all pénsioners of the United States residing in ‘Hawall, the Philippine: Islands, Guam, Samoa and other {slands In the Pacific Ocean be! Dald a ing to the United States, shall be from the United States pension agency at Ban Franciseo, uflmt»m residing in rto Rico shall be pald from the United New York. tes pension W at it} | American methods at all times and the |MANAGER OF LATE CECIL RHODES’ ESTATES IS HERE H. E. V. Pickstone Tells How Deceased Financier ‘Admired Americans and Their Methods. ¢ B LR R W, T R CIL. RHODES, WHO 18 VISITING H. E. V. PICKSTONE, MANAGER OF OUTSIDE ESTATES OF LATE CE- FRUIT INDUSTRY IN BEHALF OF SOUTH AFRICAN ASSOCIATION. | | | CALIFORNIA TO ANVESTIGATE i e .- _— ——— —je | | ROBABLY no one knew the late | the political settlement of the country. | Cecll Rhodes of South Africa bet- | At present both the British and the ter than H. K. V. Pickstone| Dutch wish to dominate in the affairs of | & 2 ¥ the government. If both sides can equal- of Cape Town. who was forl, g and errange a Legalature which fourteen years business man-; wij pe received with confidence by each, ager of his outside estates. H'j then the country will go right ahead. Just is registered at the Paluce and Is vis- Iting Callfornia to investigate the fruit Industry in behalf of the Fruit Growers' | Assoclation of South Africa. “Mr. Rhodes was very fond of Ameri- ne,” sald Mr. Pickstone yesterday, “and could never understand why the people of this country took the side of the Boers in the late war. He watched reason I came to secure the position ot | manager of his farms in South Africa was chiefly because I had lived In the Santa Clara Valley for three years and had learned how you Amerieans grow fruit. “When 1 look back I can ses now what wonderful foresight Mr. Rhodes had. His policy was to get the Britishers who came to South Africa to take up land and cultivate it and In this way mix| more freely with the Dutch. This policy Is now beginning to develop. You see the average Britisher who goes to’South Africa lives In the towrs, while the | Dutch do the farming, and the two na- tionalitles never met. Rhodes felt as- sured that If the Britishers would only take up land and put money into farm ing the 'Dutch would gain more con-| fidence In them and the relations between | the two would be more friendly. “Mr. Rhodes left nearly his entire for- tune to the endowment of Oxford Uni- versity. He felt assured that if young men of difterent nations would only meet | ond get to understand each other thoroughly it would be only a question of _time when there would be no more wars. That !s why he wanted Amerl- cans, Germans and British to all have an opportunity of studying together. “All the people in South Africa are glad that Joseph Chamberlain 18 visiting there, as he will then have a botter idea of the country and what the people need. “The future of South Africa rests on | great fruit distributing six weeks ago [ was traveling through | General de la Ray's country in South | Africa, and that is where the stiffest | fighting took place. 1 found the Dutch there reconciled. The Dutch are growing day by day more agreeable to the form- of | Rovernment and I can say emphatically that there will never be another war. “It was eleven yvears ago that I first struch South Africa and 1 shortly after- ward met Mr. Rhodes. Under his orders 1 planted in the western province of Cape Colony the biggest orchard in the coun- | try, just five acres of fruit trees. After the Jamieson rald he decided to enter largely into the fruit-growing industry and he authofized me to expend a mil- lion and a Half of dollars in the purchase of land. Through political reasons I was unable to buy more than half the land I desired, but in about five years the pur- chase was complete. Trat land in all amounted to 150 acres. You must under- stand that only in a certain portion of the western province is it possible to grow fruit, and being near to Cape Town by rail, we are now in a position to export fruit to London and New York, the two | centers of the world. ““The expertation of fruit from Australia and New Zealand to Eurape or this coun. try is out of the question. Before arriv- ing In Europe would spoil and upon arriving on the Pacific Coast the shipper would at once be confronted with enor- mous freight bills before the fruit could be delivered to Eastern points. J think that tke prospects for Califol fruit- growing are unlimited. We have only a few thousand acres that are suitable for the raising of fruit and on this account our supply must be necessarily limited.” Mr. Pickstone left yesterday afternoon for San Jose to spend a couple of weeks with his brother, W. F. Pickstone, the well-known fruit packer. KITCHEN And And “ Sunny Jim Dumps had breakfast just at seven, He'd feel so sort of e and weak, G As if he should a bracer seck. ‘To work he then took ‘‘ Force ™ with him REQUISITES. every day, about eleven, braced on fhat. Wise Jim.* | Root and { Ingredients, | lining of the throat, nasal passa IT IS IMPORTANT To EKnow What You Are Taking Wken Using Catarrh Medicines. Catarrh is the short route to consump- i tion, and the importance of early and judi. clous treatment of catarrh, whether lo- cated in the head, threat or bronehial tubes, cannot be tqo strongly emphasized. The list of catarrh cures is as long as the moral law and the forms in which they are administered, numerous and con- fusing, from sprays, Inhalers. washes, | ointments and salves to powders, liquids and tablets. The tablet form is undoubtedly the most convenient and most effecfive, but with nearly all advertised catarrh remedies it is almost entirely a matter of guess work as to what you are taking into your sys- tem, as the proprietors, while making all sorts of claims-as to what their medi- | cines will do, always keep it a close se- cret. as to what they are. Tha success and popularity of the new catarzh cure, Stuart’s Catarrh Tablets, is largely decause it not only cures catarrh but because catarrh sufferers who used these tablets know what they are taking into their system. Stuart’s Catarrh Tab- | lets, being composed of Red Gum, Blood stmilar valuable and antiseptic are pleasant to the taste and being diswolved in the mouth they take immediate effect upon Lhe pucous s and 1 iratory tract. T he cuten that Stuart’s Catarrh Tablets have accomplished in old chronic cases of catarrh are little short of remarkable, and the advantage of knowing what you are putting into your stomach is of para- mount importance when it is remembered | that the cocaine or morphine habit has heen frequently contracted as the result of using et catarrh remedies. Stuart's Catarrh Tabiets meet with cor- dial appro from pkysicians, because thefr antiseptic character render them perfectly safe for the genéral public to use and their composition makes them a common sense cure for all forms of ca- tarrhal troubles. ? All druggists sell them at 50 cents for full sized packages. BICYCLES | ..for Christmas... Clearing Sale of all 1902 Models. .00 models, 24-inch frames..$16.00 13500 models! 22 inch frames..$17.00 &.llfl Ju'-'fl’lll|e! b:-') b .00 .00 models, e .$22.90 $40.00 mod h frames -l $50.00 model 20 and 22 inch frames . Coaster brakes on any of above, $5.00 2 additional. % Al Guarantesd. Spietog-covds A1 int. shipment guaranteed on country orders. EDWIN MOHRIG Tmmedt: TTLED - £ ALL BO' KING OF T e ppse _ SOLD EVERYWHERE. THE UNITED STATES WRECKINGand SALVAGE COMPANY On WEDNESDAY, December 17. will place on sale one hundred and fifty thousand (150,000) shares of stock (and mo moge), par value ome dollar ($1.00). This Stock Will Pay Liberal Dividends. For particulars call at junc- tion of Market St. and Van Ness Ave. and Oak St. and sce the ex< hibit of Diving Apparatus un~ der water,. Or at the office of the company, 838 Markes treet, second floor. A3 visir DR. JORDAN'S caear MUSEUM OF A DR. HALL’S REINVIGORAT! Stops all n 24 hours. Five, hundred re for any case we| This secret rem- DIRECTORY OF RESPONSIBLE HOUSES. Catalogues and Price Lists Malsl on Applieation. COAL., COKE AND PI1G IRON. J.C.WILSON & C0:, ~%io;hcne Main 1304, FRESH AND SALT MEATS. s IS EGH At igma ¢ oILs. e O PRINTING. I. (. ILGHES. " e ;THEQWEEKLY CALL per Year. LY