The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 24, 1903, Page 19

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, MAY 24, 1903. NATION'S CHIEF RECEIVES WELCOME EXPLAIN AWAY THROUGHOUT PUGET SOUND COUNTRY| TLLOGH COUNTS Seattle, Tacoma and Other Cities of the Northwest Extend an Enthusi-|Treasury Officials Deny astic Greeting and Roosevelt -Speaks Vigorously on the Progress| Charges of Irregular ADVERTISEMENTS. “HALF A LIFETIME I WAS SICK.” “| Will Never Be Without Pe-ru-na” f Perfecti f Citi hi Procedure. of the Government and the Need of Perfec p : Writes Mrs. Sarah Frye of New Jersey. - Postmaster General Gives B by G dataact : i b ik e ? e iyt matin ot ] T e e R a Pue HapliBe of Auditor Mary Gray, Walkerville, Ontario, Canada, writes: : in the Pacific Ocean. Washington to gain some well-earned re- | and Comptroller. “‘Pen and ink can never tell of the good Peruna has done for me | untry that [ Poac Al onc o Cia TR or e S ot ) after severe suffering from congestiva catarrhal troubles in my + i o appreciate the | Whole itinerary. ! ¥ worthy of the head of a na- | b ok tuy ake who - e WASHINGTON, May 2.—Postmaster stomach andb_aynh. 1 realized the cause had to be removed, as I: that has two oceans for its bounda- | will ot be old men| CHEERING AT TACOMA. General Payne to-day made public the had your medicine recommended to me by a friend who had used it. } es, As the s , gayly dec- e one of the greatest and | G answers of Henry A. Castle, the auditor I concluded to try it, and found it to fill all the raquirements in and flags, emerged o U e heire X [ P“"dmtTfi;‘t:mnrur:r";‘;" (1o creusiy Lo he i ontmis iaoass my case, for a {.’ bottles of it restored me to good health.”"— } rere the President LASKA J 3 ment, and Comptroller Tracewell of the vard, a hundred FRDMIDH DR Sun SR ! TACOMA, Wash., May A miM-{ o, ir0 rogapaliy tie Tolloch dinapes Mary Gray. A ! e waiting ships. | |1 am glad to notice that our oo s | cent day, with a clear sky and delighttul | "1 PO BER B O et s *eee . tlll, at the | for the needs of that great Territory. I pre- | i, favored the President's trip on Puget | "'y "o 1iuvers specifically deny alle- she ap-|dict that Alaska will within the next century | Sound. The Presidential party left the | 00 e 2TRRers SPOCTOHY o ibe 159 RO et eapie | Tacoma Hotel shortly betore 8 o'clock for | S0 08 & PFO Bl SOCSHEe o revenue »ch and the flag- Bl Drains and encegy, have jeft | @ drive to the whart, accompanied by an | Growes ‘goronerty expert of his office, o fleet, followed in Shelr mark on the TR0s OF Burope. 1 predict | escort of police and cavalry and a band | with abstracting, but subsequently re- forty steamers, | [hat you and us will kee Alasks with her enor- | of music. Cheers greeted the President | turning upon demand, the letter authoriz- ed out in thelr | 5 ot e et s roguck s | s he emerged from the hotel, and he ac- | Ing Mr. Gilmer to cxamine the accounts of any postoffice except Washington and New York. Tracewell allegedsthat this letter was written by Gilmer himself, without any suggestion from the Compt- | roller. Castle says that the sum of the tentative allowances by Expert Gilmer | and the Comptroller aggregated $332, and | that the credits finally disallowed out of | a total of a quarter of a million were knowledged the enthusiastic salute by raising his hat. Crowds lined Pacific ave- nue and joined in a hearty chorus of greet- ings and farewell. All the shipping in the harbor was gay with flags and streamers, The revenue cutter McCulloch was in at- tendarce and was handsomely dressed. The steamer Spokane, which con\c)fllw had flags floating | vigorous a race as any part of wd now I wish to say a word of special | greeting to the men of the G. A. R. who are | Lere before me. Wherever I have been in this Pacific Northwest 1 have been greeted by | men whose little copper button shows that they ht for the preservation of the nation in es that tried souls. 1 also n comrades of panish War, a - | the Presidential party, . t they were not wh o - "”a 2y e fadiea | from every mast. The Presidentis flag |$!65, of which he claims only §7 was in- il it the great eivil « f | was raised by a special detail from the | correctly audited. This, Castle says, is e e o WA R e DIGACER. the 3 h“f““”‘,“ McCulloch . as the President stepped | the basis of Tulloch's charge of disallow- ~ . at Northwest whal s. | ances of $30,000 or $40,000. The General's aboard the steamer at 9:04. The McCul- | e and of Washington have that —stretches | loch left just ahead of the Spokane. | Postmaster statement % ”n'xu(s\;]:g BREMERTON, Wash, May 2.—The | says that the letters are made public at : Sheri- | Steamer Spokane tied up at the navy vard | the request of the two officials, and that - times, | Wharf at 11:%5 this morning. President | it will appear from them how much foun- : g I the | Roosevelt stood at the head of the 8ang . gation there was for the Tulloch state. : 4 and the pa- | plank as the boat made fast, came down | ponto pé ¢ that the need never come, | A1 Was greeted by Commandant Bleek- | "pogarqing the settlement and subse- The latter than introduced the Presi- | dent to other officers and ladies present. | The President recognized Secretary of the | vy Moody and greeted him with a | iearty handshake. The foreman of the ! rd in the name of the workmen of the | avy yard then presented the President | | with a plate made from the steel keel of th Oregon and inclosed in a case made | | from rosewood from the captain’s cabin of | ¢ foreibly struei | the Oregon. t the men of the G. A. R.| The President walked up the whart to | trial. the dry dock, and made a short inspec- | tinct items, had been settled T. W. Gil- good American in | tion of the work then in progress, hun- | mer, representing the Comptroller of the dreds of workmen being buslly engaged. | Treasury, withdrew the same for revision, does cos I know ¥ with that 1 it level the whole the standard and his gen- In peace ame quali quent revision of an account of the late | Postmaster Willett of Washington which involved alleged Irregularities in Porto Rico during the military administration there, Auditor Castle replies that every item belleved to be illegal was disallowed v the Auditor's office. Castle continues: “Some months after one of the quar- terly accounts of the Washington Post-| | office reporting $235,9% in expenditures for all purposes, with several thousand dis- Tired Women, Run Down, Wearyand Weak,Morn= ing, Noon and Night. If one Wwere to ask all the nervous, fret- ted, jaded, fagged-out women who work day after day, hardly able to keep on their feet—if a’ person were to ask them what their trouble was, one would say dyspepsia, another nervous prostration, another female weakness, and so on. The fact is, however, that they nearly all have the same dlsea\e and that dis- sai SPEECH OF ROOSEVELT. Citizens, After the applause had subsided the | President re-entered his carriage and was | driven back to the wharf, accompanied, as before, by the plaudits of the people. | He then embarked once more on the Spo- kane and started for Everett. | After his return from Everett the Presi- | dent was driven to the Grand Opera- | A Grateful Woman’s Let- ter to Dr. Hartman. I belleve in you and r He then returned to the ship, “h{ch-fls authorized by law. He was new to 1 am confident of the future of the entire spired, filled and backed up as it is s, ettt ot . .. ! *expla s" (which Mr. Tulloch erro- bR R @ | SXPlanations” (w : ldiers and good citizens. Good-by | hd a5 & ° neously cites as ‘a letter from the Comp- doned by Expert Gllmer or overruled by (lhe Comptroller (who had secured from continued) until the amount ultimately | disapproved was reduced to $322 96." t of your future and the future | ulled out at 11:40 for Seattle, amid loud | postal work and raised many entirely ir- spirit of youth and endowed with the | troller disallowing’ certain amounts). One | the officials pledges that the irregular | Auditor~ Castle gives details to show tate and your city. Not only that, cheering and booming of cannon. relevant questions in a letter asking for h of manhood. It is the spirit that | after another the objections were aban- | UF -I-HE SEUU-I-S ; practices exposed by Tulloch would be dis- | makes any m proud to be be a citizen | short address on Alaska, a committee of | The house, which was crowded with Alaskans awaiting to hear him. After delivering a the Arctic Brotherhood—an exclusively | Alaskan order—came forward and pre- | | political riwr - : | :hey do n}t'n suspect their disease is chron- 8 A 113 | attempted to secure the suppression of | ic_catarr! sented him with a miniature placer | on the Killing of et S e If ‘they have catarrh of the stomach, || MY gratitude for the wonderful miner’s pan of solid gold, on which was inscribed an invitation to the President | to visit Alaska as the guest of the order. an was handsomely chased with the | emblems of the order. As a pendant to this offering he was also presented, on | San Miguel WASHINGTON, May Colonel Scott’s Report | 23.—A report by | that this sum was legitimately expended. ease is chronic catarrh, Thousands of people have chronic ca- The answer of Comptroller Tracewell to the Postmaster General deneis that any | ure was brought to bear or | | counts, and that the examination had | been completed. He says the Attorney | General and the First Assistant Postmas- | ter General charged Gilmer with being tmpolite and with being offensive and shington ac- | tarrh and do not know it. They realize that they are sick, but | they call It dyspepsia; if they have gen- | eral catarrhal debility, they call it nerv- | ous prostratien; if they have catarrh of the liver or kidneys, they say they are bilious or have kidney disease, and if they | bave catarrh of the pelvic organs they R >ooe Mrs. Sarah Frye, 204 Sylvan Ave., z ‘West Ashbury Park, N. J., writes: “| have not words to express o cure that Psruna has aone for m3. It is a God-send to all suf- fering women. Peruna has done wonderful work for me. | was Cafonit .- 8- Bogt et ; ¢ | that such complaints caused his detail | Baiaiig. ?' cott, ?r;! l“{"‘*‘“‘ chiel{ (110t removal) to another office. The let- ® Philippine constabulary, of the en- | tor says Gilmer was “competent, pains- | lines, in case the chief executive should | $38¢ment between a detachment of the | taking and industrious.” ever wisit :the northern After | Philippine scouts and a band of ladrones | — et | under the command of San Miguel, which | MURDERED GIRL'S BODY occurred March 27, has just been recehed{ IS FOUND IN A CB.EEK at the War Department. Colonel Scott, e Negro Who Took the Life of Rosa after describing the stronghold of the la. | dtones, which was 1 | ch was an old fort located in Kalpei Fras Wot Yot Besni name it female weakness. The truth is, all these organs are sub- Ject to catarrh and the land is fuil of toiling women, half invalids, who have chronic catarrh in some stage or form of some of these organs. Women from all parts of the United States bear testimony to the fact that Peruna cures catarrhal diseases. A Letter From Mrs. Colonel behalf of eleven transportation companies | doing business In Alaska, with a gold pocketbook containing passes for all those sick over half of my life with sys- temic catarrh. | want this let- }eeeeeeosssssssssssesssnss ter published far and wide as | was a great sufferer, but to-day 1 fael as well as anybody can feel. Nearly all my life | have spent nearly all | could make and scrape for doctors, but none of them did me any good, but since I started on your Peruna one year ago | have at /ast found relief in your wonderfui Peruna. | had begun to think / country. i We have them at a price within )’OUI' means. scouts will not at all times prove loyal. | He continues: ("I desire to call attention to the gallant| | way in which this band, estimated at 150, | was rushed by the scouts, led by Lieu- | | tenants Finleyson and Lees, by scaling a double stone wall in the face of a terrific | fire. | entitled to the highest commendation for The officers and men concerned are | | and gashed. It is supposed she was at- | tacked on Thursday evening, when her | father, who was close behind her, return- | ing home from church, was knocked down and left unconsclous. He is still in a critical condition. The negro suspected of | the crime has not been found. e o L S SR { to its wonderful merits. Herndon, Va. The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, O.: ““I cannot speak too highly of the value of Peruna. I believe that I owe my life I suffered with catarrh of the head and lungs In its worst form, until the doctors fairly gave me up and I despaired of ever getting well again. “I noticed your advertisement and the splendid testimonials given by people who they were worth a king’s ransom to me. I talk of Peruna to all my friends and am a true believer in its worth.” Mrs. Sallle H. Newsom, Decatur, Ala., writes: “For nearly eight years I suffered with catarrh of the stomach and at various times it was all I could do to live from the excessive accumulation of sour water and gas on my stomach. I finally got past going, and got to be a confirmed in- | difficult country, says that the death of Gresham that / was not going to get well, bat thank God I am all wsll to-day. I\a,n Miguel, commander in chief of mei Captured. hope and pray you may live long to help others as you havs helped | lJadrones, who was killed in the fight, will GUILFORD, Ind., May 23.—The body of | _Mrs. Colonel E. J. Gresham, Treasurer | “probably have the effect of crippling the | Mies Rosa Kalser of Winchester wes | Daughters of the Confederacy and Pres- | ¢ Mo Instead of being a walking drug-store | am growing fat and O O O es | :'nl‘l’(;)it:m':‘f st:;]nlwcrfa:.lrzsgo% and breaking | found in Tanners Creek to-day. Her skul e I‘L;liye«lonl hzll}gfifmlg‘lgt?ev&r:rentr So-| $ doing well. 1 will never be without Peruna.” 'rs. Sarah Frye. feel any inconvenience. Peruna is a spe- cific in my case. I certainly recommend it to everybody suffering with catarrh. A good many call it dyspepsia, but catarrh is right. My husband says Peruna is the best medicine on earth. He reegmmends it to all sufferers from catarrh wherever located.” 1t xQu do not derivé prompt and satis- factory* results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a the gallantry displayed and inteiligent Colored Lad the Incendiary. had been cured by Peruna and determined | valid. Affer trying several physiclans | full statement of your case and. he sefil control by officers and obedience of men HELENA, Mont.,, May 23.—The police | to try a bottle. I felt but little better, | with no good at all, my husband put me | be pleased to give you his valuable ad- ? | In this fight last night arrested Harry Anderson, fi‘ but used a second and a third bottle and | on Peruna. I have taken six bottles and | vice gratis. HERE are many good reasons why you should buy your clothes here. We mention a few: First: The clothes are made by us in our own workshops—you get them at first cost plus a fair profit. In buying from a dealer who in turn buys from a jobber or manufacturer you pay for two or three profits. know how good they are and can guarantee them. No —————— Los Angeles Schuetzen Park. LOS ANGELES, May 2.—Members of | the Turnverein Germanta have incorpo- | rated the Schuetzen Park Association with a_capitalization of $50,000 for the purpose of building and maintaining in this ecity a completely equipped park to be used for sports and athletics. Of the capital stock $10,000 is to be spent upon improve- will cost the association $15,000. The new park will be located in the hills to the northeast of the city on the Alhambra electric line. ments to be placed on the grounds which | colored boy aged 14 years, on the charge | | that he set fire to the Montana Club bulld- ing, which was burned April 28. The boy confessed that he set fire to the build- | ing in order to see the fire department | run. —_—— Jail Opens to Solciety Man. DES MOINES, Iowa, May 23.—Edgar | | Demueles, a student in the law depart- ment of the University of Michigan and i a soclety man of some prominence, who was convicted of larceny at Dubuque ! | while home on a vacation, has been sen- kept on improving slowly. “It took six bottles to cure me, but now I feel perfectly well. I do all my house duties with ease and never do I N Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarfum, Columbus, Ohio. TURNS OUT FOR:Y BIBLES EACH MINUTE Oxford University Press Publishes the Book in 156 Languages and Dialects. The Bible publications of the Oxford Tniversity Press have been issued for 300 years and can be published in 150 languages and dialects. Orders for 10,- The World’s Output of Minerals. Professor C. Le N. Foster's statistics re- specting the world’s output of minerals for 191 have just been issued. It ap- pears that the toal amount of coal pro- duced in the Worl(l in 1901 was 789,000,000 tons, of which®the United States yielded rather more and the whole British em- pire rather less than a third. Germany's output was almost one-fifth. The United The Czar’s Home Life. The Emperor of Russia has evidently Inherited the strong domestic instincts of his mother, and for which the house of Denmark is well renowned. His love for the Empress and his adora- tion of his little daughters have become proverbial, and appeal to the hearts of the entire Russian people. A happler couple than the Emperor and Empress in their domestic life and In their combined love for their children do tenced to six months' imprisonment in the 000 Bibles are quite common. An order | States, the British empire and Germany, not exist T e penitentiary, for half a milllon copies can be readily | taken together, produced six-sevenths of | “Both were brought up in the simplest Second: As we make the clothes ourselves we Montreal Strike Is Reénewed. ———————— ‘|filled. On an average from thirty to|the world's supply. Of the total output | of wavs, and love to lead a life as fres MONTREAL, May 23.—The employes of the Montreal street rallway went out on Californians in New York. NEW Yom{ May 23.—From San Fran- forty Bibles are furnisned every minute. There are 110 different editions of the Oxford Bibles in Englisn, varying from of minerals the British empire yielded | about one-third of the coal, one-ninth of from ostentation as their positions permit. Their devotion to one another and their adoration for their children have become ¢ a strike again at an early hour to-day | cisco—J. C. Field, N. A. Campbell, at the | the magnificent follg edition “of puipit | the copper, one-half of the gold, one- tradition in the imperial family. If tne man can consxstently guarantee another man’s work. and the road is completely tied up. A | astor; A B. Hill, at the Hoffman; J. | use fo the -brilliant” Bible, the smal.. | elghth of the iron, one-Afth of the lead, ;:m"gms"';m ey Cive 8¢ LIt e 0h the number of members of the Montreal Mullen, at the Marlborough. est edition of the Scriptures in the | one-seventieth of the petroleum, one- imagination at times that her husband Third: The volume of our b“sines’ is immense. Amateur Athletic Assoclation have of- | From Los Angeles—D. McFarland, at | world. quarter of the salt, one-ninth of the sil- | works too hard. This tends to reduce manufacturing and running fered their services as conductors until after Monday, Victorla day, and a num- ber of students of McGill University, now on vacation, have offered thelr services the Gilsey; M. Lamarter, at the Grand Union. e e . Development of an Alphabet. Of the revised version fourteen edi- tions are published. More than a million copies of the revised New Testament had been ordered before publication in 1881, and it Is claimed that the work- ver, five-eighths of the tin and one-fif- tieth of the zinc. More than 4,500,000 per- sons were engaged In mines and quarries the world over. One-fifth of them are em- And, as much as she can, her Imperial Majesty strives to draw_ the Emperor away from a natural tendency to become t00 absorbed in the many important ques- tions which come up before him and upon expenses. We can manufacture at a2 minimum cost as motormen. The electrical workers h n of the establishment refused a | Ploved in the United Kingdom and one- | UonS which come up before Biim Sad FRoR P have also voted to go out on strike. Py Lo P;ge,;;g,,‘.’,;"‘°::{;:§,";'§g the | pribe of some $20,000 to furnish a copy third in the British empire—Exchange. | yourg of the morning.—Washington Star. ity 1 —_——— of the book before the day of issue. iy B b o and yet put quality in the goods. The customer gets development of our English alphapet | Of the bool betare the day of fesue. | B S e g s L Anarchists in Butte. are taken: Language growth, e will utter sounds and the muscles move dredth celebration of the beglnnlng of Miss Walinwright and Miss Schroeder, the latter a daughter of the Governor of Eliot; Alexander Agassiz and the Crown- he benefit. BUTTE, Mont., May 23.—The B " | the art of printing in kngland by Cax- has bee [ lice have discovered the presence in tats | Deatar®ber i” 100 ™ or 1hnC, SoRort | I g L e 0 et b the i W - H 3 e W . -grand- - ’ Fourth: Our guarantec is your protection. city of a band of anarchists, with whom m'feras‘g;fln‘g;gggo},?:gfi?‘;}d:':fi"'{;"; | entirely since midnight of the preced- | daughters of Benjamin Franklin. Watson. The boat was built in 1857. A dissatisfied customer can always have his money back. All garments are sponged, repaired and pressed free of charge. pay. This alone will save you $5. or $10. Fifth: Our stock of men’s ready-to-wear clothes ranges from $8.50 upwards to as much as you care to Eyerybody’s price and choice is represented. Our stock of boys’ and youths suits comprises all styles and prices. . Out-of-lown customers should write for our new sixty-four page illustrated catalogue— i's free. SNWooD 740 Market Street Rosslo Is alleged to have been affiliated. They believe the dynamite found on the | wharf intended to be placed on the Um- | bria was manufactured here. The officials | are hard at work on the case and still believe Rosslo is in the city. The an- archists in question number five, it is said, and have been here for three years. —_———— Raisin Growers Sign Contracts. WOODLAND, May 23.—At a meeting of the Woodland Sultana Ralsin Growers’ Association to-day the members signed contracts pledging thelr crops to the as- sociation to be pooled. Several new mem- bers signed. About 80 per cent of the en- tire acreage of Yolo County is now rep- resented in the assoclation and prospects are good to Increase the percentau to at least 90. —_—— d Red Men at Gilroy. GILROY, May 23.—Gilroy is in the hands of the Red Men to-night. Three hundred members from the tribes of Hollister, Santa Cruz, Watsonville and Salinas are here to enter into a competitive drill. The town is brilliantly illuminated With Chi- nese lanterns and a big banquet ended the festivities at Music Hall, Mayor Chesbro acting as toastmaster. ——— Southern Real Estate Selling. SAN DIEGO, May 2.—The unusual ac- tivity in real estate transactions in South- ern California during the last few months has led to an inquiry at the Recorder’s office in this county which shows that for the first five months of this year there | has been an increase of 52 per cent in the number of deeds recorded during the om-.l responding period of l,t year, while the writing of the word remain- ing unchanged. So that any letter may | come to stand for any sound, and any | sound may be represented by many dif- | ferent letters. This is the normal con- dition of a growing language, and man should use his reason to ‘sh(:pe such a language to serve convenient use. The Roman alphabet was dgsigned largely to be cut, in straight lines, upo stone. Its cursive forms were establishe in the fifteenth century. It brought tw. forms of I into use—i and j, that were not_differentiated until the seventeenth century. V also had two cursive forms, u and v, differentiated at the same pe- riod. The philologists have also devel- oped six continuant lingual consonant dia- graphs, with a diacritic h_ viz.: dh, th, sh, zh, dzh-j, tsh-c: and alfo a new type L for sonant’s, and a nasal ng. But the vowels present the most tan- ed fleld. Between A and E has been blished the sound in al, fare; between nd O that in not, nor; between A and B i an, burn. . Fhree méw tpes are needed to express these sounds.—Ne York Sun. e Arong its many cuflous products South Africa includes the ‘‘sneezewood” tree, which takes its name from the fact that one cannot cut it with a saw without sneezing, as the fine dust has exactly the effect of snuff. Even in planing the wood it will sometimes cause sneezing. 1L is very bitter tojthe taste, and when placed in water it will sink. The color is light brown, and the grain very close and hard. For dock work, piers or jet- ties it is a useful timber, lasting a long while under water. & 2 —_————————— Francis Asbury McCormick, the nm baby. born in the incorporated muni ing dg.y. The preparation of the “India paper‘ used by the Oxford University Press is a business secret of - great value. The largest folio Bible pfinted in Oxford measures 19 by 12 inches, and no erratum has as yet been found in it. The “Brilliant Text Bible” measures 3% by 2% inches, and is three-fourths of an inch thick.—Caxton Magazine. ————— “Send by Inclosed Girl.” An East Side druggist is preparing ‘a unique scrap-book. It contains the writ- ten orders of some customers of foreign birth, and these orders are both curious and amusing. Here are some that are copied from the originals: “I have a cut pain in my child’s dla- gram. Pleue glve my son something to release it."” “Dear Dochter, ples gif bearer five sense worse of Auntie Toxyn for garle baby's throat and obleage.” “This little baby has eat up its father's parish plaster. Send an anecdote quick as possible by the enclosed girl.” “This child is my little girl. I send you five cent to buy two sitless powders for a up adult who is sike.” “You will please give the leetle boi five cents worth of epecac for to throw up In a five months old babe. N. B.—The babe has a sore stummick.” “I, haf a hot time In my insides and wiggtl wood like it to be extinguished. is good for to extinguish it? The enclosed money is the price of the extin- xumm- Hurry New York Press. m Bw. J. J. Addms of Rochester, N. Y., has issued an appeal that denomina- ity of Colnmbul. Ohio, has just celebra O RO XBOA0RCRORCE CAOSCRCHORORCE CROROROBON AR RORRCE KROMORCAOHON CRRORIIOAONS CRORIRITH THE PEOPLE WE TRUST This Week’s Special Double, % or Stngle Tron - Spring, Wool Top Mattress. Entire Outfit $6.25 Regular Price $9.50. - 335 Rolls Best Japanese § | § | | 2| i e oy, Pesisns. . 20c Per. Yard Camp Stools 20c each Have you ever been in our store? It will pay you to visit our mammoth ¢stablishment. | You are welcome whether EASTERN OUTFIT 1320-1328 Stockton Strect / ‘We furnish Houses complete. Country orders Solicited. All Cars Lead to Our Store. 50X XHOHCHOR0E X HCHOIA0EOHOHOF OROHCHCHORC! ORORCHOMCHORORORCHOORN RO CHORROIOA. QOO0 G Sold only in rells of 20 or 4 yards. u purchase or not. G COMPANY

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