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2 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1903. MARIN BELLE WEDS IN THE N[W BRISIS OO DRTTUMNY THREATENS VENEZUELR | |Castro Must Pay Many f Millions of Dollars in Claims. Findings of Umpires Will Soon Ee Made Known | in Caracas | Dictator Invites Further Trouble | by Continuing to Imprison Subjects of Foreign Nations. Special Cable Herald. Copyri Herald Publishin "all and New York by the New York pany. CARACAS; Venezuela, Sept. 2 zuela is threatened once more wi ous e French, German, Italian and other merchants have been tmprisoned President Castro’s orders becauze th have refused to pay taxes already to the rebel government. The troeps swarm all around. A reign of terror prevails all through the Orinoco district which teems with produce accumulated for want of pping faeilities. All Amer- ican interests are at a standstill owing to President tro's determination to de- stroy the t ortation trad. Light *is just being throwa on the acts | | of the mixed tribunals which have been sitting in Cara ce June 1 to pass on the numerous claims brought by vari- ous nations for indemnity for damage suf- fered by citizens and subjects during the revolutions which for so long agitated These are the amounts of the de by the several governments: 00 England, $2.500.- Ttaly, $8,300.007; Germany, ain. $600,600; Mex $500,000; ; total, $43,499,813. These claims will not be allowed in their entirety. The American umpires, repre- g England and Italy, will consid- ¢ diminish them, but it i< not too much to affirm that the amount of the ms which must be allowed will ex- | The protocol signed in Caracas be- tween Government and alres, stipulating i ing ocut of the has been carried into Holland, THE CAPTIVES OF 3 Interesting Marriage Is Solemnized in This City. ———— 1 in gdestion a nd has just closed its ndard of revolt, to June amed was Dutch Umpire Filz Venezuelan tribuna slowly its noves on until American ot close i Murra as best as perfor at ing Brott Irich s Church officiated. A large vited guesis were present. T a wedding breakfast Mr. and Mrs. ier departed on an extended wed- tour. ardner is the daughter of Mr. and man 10 er 1 LABORERS ATTACK PLANT AT SO0, Continued From Page 1, Column 7. at the time this trial was on the stre - Fiori of Olema. She is a Native made no disorder occurred. paushter and an accomplished young| COMPANY POSTS NOTICE. fael's promimetwr Is one of. 8an Ra-| G the doors of the offices of the Con- T RN SR, ted Lake Superior Company the fol- 1o otice was posted during the day: RIOTOUS SCENES OCCUR e et Bt i iha palhikind = e - "Ihe. presideat. and IN BROOKLYN CONVENTION | jirsciors an New York have been unable to piise the to pay to-day the wages and the men and officers of the ed from New York at our president and aise the money nec- pay the men but to start works, that seems to promise success. an has the indorsement and promised support of Sir Wilfrid Laurier, Premier of Canada, and the Hon. G. W. Ross, Premier licancounty slate made by former Lieu- | o Ontaric, and it is expected to produce the salaries now du company. Advice Policemen Are Called In and Charge the Quarreling Delegates With Clubs. NE YORK most riotous political mec After one of the ever enacted in a rooklyn the Repub- scenes Bear y Decessary money inside of thirty days. tenant- Governor Woodruff was smashed | “White we resvet very much the inabllity of to-night and Henry Belden Ketchum was | the company to pay to-day. the fact remaina a8l AN ha no money to pay with. tiominated for District Attorney of Kings | hat 1bere is no merey (0 Poatt for the mes County in place of George F. Elliott, who and that is to accept offers to work el was Woodruff's canaidate. and leave their checks with friends, "hi & | ble attorneys or business men, While the convention was in an uproar | for them when the mmp‘:y p?yli* and fighting had be in mind that your wages will have to be pai Ket hn‘ e gun in the hall | 1% CUOC ‘and . constitute a just obligation cichum attempted to withdraw his | against the company, which all the property name and had his clothing literally torn | and other assets will be liable for. from his body by his parl‘lsan!. who ar.| This notice, instead of allaying the ex- tempted to drag him from the room o Citement of the crowd, made it furious. prevent his withdrawal. In the .street | MASS-MEETING ORDERLY. Ketchum fainted | The mass meeting of the men to-night The noise of the riot drew the police m} in the White House was unexpectedly the hall and they charged down the center | quiet and orderly. An attempt was made aisle, clubbing right and left, forcing the | 1o allay the passions of the men by an delegates into their seats and separating | offer made by the Brotherhod of Woods- those who were fighting. men, an organization maintained among Woodrufft was drawn into the personal | the Jumbermen, to supply an attorney free encounters and was roughly handled. Sev- | of charge to collect all pay checks left in eral men were badly bruised. At a con- | his hands. The meeting broke up without ference held earlier in the evening Elliott | any particular confusion or disorder. bad been agreed upon for _istrict At-{ About 10:30 o'clock an alarm of fire was torney. This conference was between the | turned in from the pulp mills and the de- Republicans and the fusionists. The row partment responded, but no blaze could started soon after the convention as-|pe discovered. The turning in of the sembled. alarm was evidently the work of some of the rough element which has gathered in BERLIN, Sept. 25.—A museum in memq large numbers' to help along the work of disorder. An effort was made late to-day to get a body of the rioters to cross the river to the American side and put the power- of Frederich Ludwig Jahn, popularly k.nazl"n as “Tumvater Jahn,” the founder of the tur- ner socleties, has been opened at Freiburg on the Unstrut, Prussia, by the National Turner Soclety. ADVERTISEMENTS. WE TRUST YOU And We Have(}g::gdeuce in Our $ O Puts an Elegant I New IANO In Your Home on Thirty Days' Trial. If you do not think it worth much more money than we will refund the amount paid and take the piano back. If you think the price is right. you can pay the balance in easy payments of $5 per month or more. 1f you will call at our warerooms we will give you prices on pianos that will surprise you. High-grade, up-to-date planos at wholesale prices from FACTORY TO HOME. are asking we Some special bargains: Uprights—Collard, ; Sherman & Hyds 1 i Fllsher, almost new, $163; 2 Et’gz:yu good mflu%n.' h!'rZe' and s ; Chickering, $85, 8159; 3 Heine, second hand, 8193, $395; 1 Heine, baby grand, 8725; Krell, slightly used, derk e New blrnlnl.—lh;?n & H;unlln \m;'“h:i H Behr Bros., mahogany, Conover, X ano players, sligh from up. Pianos rented ;2 up, npp?y on purchase; installments, up; cash discount If paid in two years uul:EleEP ‘O CO., 236-237 Geary Street. Largest Exclusive Piano House GIRL PROMINENT IN WEST mpmfi[fl TO WED YRS MW v S BULGARIANS - 10 BE SH0T Abdul Hamid Is ‘Said| to Have ' Issued This Order. Great Britain Makes Futile Protests inst Mussul- s man LXcesses. P G Sofia Government Regards the Out- look for Peace as Brighter, but - Populace Clamors for War, ——— LONDON, Sept. 2.—The Times learns | Miss Marion Jones, Daughter of Nevada Senator and Known as a Leader of Society and a Tennis Champion, Will Become Wife of Robert D. Farquhar in Metropolis o | from a trustworthy source that the pal- ace committee at Yildiz Klosk has recom- | mended that all Bulgarians captured in | the future shall be shot. It is sald that| the Sultan holds the same view and that | the necessary orders have been issued. | The Constantinoplé correspondent of | the Times telegraphs that Great Britain, | through her Embassador, has made vig- | orous and constant protests againd the excesses committed by the Turkish troops, but that she apparently does not feel herself strong enough to break down the opposition’ of Germany, Russia and Austria and insist upon real instead of paper reforms in Macedonia. SOFIA, Bulgaria, Sept. 29.—The situa- tion here 1s much brighter to-day and the war clouds appear to have lifted. ‘The | Porte’s assurance that the thirty-two bat- talions recently ordered to proceed from Monastir to Adrianople will not be moved has lessened the apprehension of the Bul- wife had stomach trouble for years. ADVERTISEMENTS. NECESSARY TO THE PE-RU-N HOME A Letter From Congressman Whitz of North Caroli T > % H. White ERUNA is a great family medicine. | Congressman George "hite boro, N. C., writes the following n’!;l:: women praise it as well as the‘ ety e b e “ It s just the thing for the many umo‘ | am more than satisfied with Fo- catarrhal ailments of childhood. runa, and find it to bs an excellont i eeeey remedy for the grip and catarrh, rooo 1 have used it in my family and they all join me in recommend;ng it as an excallent remedy.” Very respectfully, George H. White d in the family Per ways sta It is an internal tific, systemie re and ail catarrhal diseases. .soons Once u tooesocecscccece The following testimonialé from thank- ful men and women tell in direct, sincere language what their success has been in the use of Peruna in their families: Louis J. Scherrinsky, 103 Locust st., At- lantic, Iowa, writes: “I will tell you briefly what Peruna has done for me. I took a severe cold which gave me a hard cough. All doctors’ med- icines failed to cure it. I took one bottle of Peruna and was well. “Then two of my children had bad coughs, accompanied by gagging. My She : took Peruna and now she is well. “T cannot express my thanks In words, bat T recommend your remedy at every opportunity, for I can conseientiously say § that there is no medicine like Peruna.s Nearly everyone in this town knew about ¢ the sickness of myself dnd family, and? elgiom, $3.693,860: | signed in Paris on | and | No- | There | | WEDDING will occur in New | York to-day of much interest to ! Californians—the ceremony that | will make the dashing Miss | Marion Jones, daughter of Sen- |ator J. P. Jones, the wife of Robert D. | Farquhar. There are few daughters of the West better equipped for social distinction than tor from Nevada, n and well-bred > and is possessed personali | the daughter of the for besides being weil- she is clever angd athle! of a style that reflects her | travel, much of her time “having been t abroad. itiful home of the family Santa Monica has been for many years at a that the bride spent much of her ang girlnood. As an athlete Miss Jones has few equals—in tennis, none. It is her love for outdoor pastimes that has given her | | the mental and physical poise that so dis- tinguish her. The ceremony w 1 take place in Grace Church and promises to be a large affair. Many guests will attend from Washing: ton, where the Senator has long been a | strong figure. . a e | The garden fete to be given Saturday next at Mrs. Kent's beautiful home at Kentville, between Larkspur and Ross Valley, promises to be a radiant success. | Troops of pretty girls of the smart set jare working overtime—which is not op- posed by union rules when charity Is the winner—and nothing can daunt the cour- age of these fair maidens in their fine determination to provide for the helpless little ones who find shelter in the San Francisco Presbyterian Orphanage and Farm at San Anselmo. Who could see these healthy, happy, hopeful little types | who have been left parentless in this big, big world and not feel a burning desire | to go down In his jeans for a quarter or two to help keep up that healthfulness, | happiness and hopefulness? Twenty-five | cents is the whole price of admission, and | it will buy such commodities as are rare- Iy purchasable from such fair hands—and | never for worthier cause. From present indications the railroad people will have use for all their surplus rolling stock. There will certainly be a brave show- ing of dainty gowns, and the men—with- out whom a fete is a very stupid affair, even if it be In charity’s sweet name—have % | arranged to go over, and they are even | now setting aside their small change for | use “under the greenwood tree.” | o W Miss Ottilie Schucking’s friends in this city will be pleasantly surprised to learn | house and street rallway out of commi sion, but it was not successful. On ac- count of this rumor the local company of State troops was mobilized at the armory and some extra policemen were put on duty. A battalion of regulars from To- ronto is expected to arrive to-morrow morning and its coming is awalted with feverish impatience. Another company of militia from Sudbury is expected by mid- night. A telegram was received to-night by Edward Barry, secretary of the woods- men’s committee, from Premier Ross of Ontario, which has produced a reassuring effect. ‘The message reads: The Government will in every way possible protect the interests of the workingmen in the various industries, main and subsidiary, of the Consolidated Lake Superior Company, withhold subsidies, and in other ways, if neces. sary, insisting on the settlement of all claims for wages prior to everything else. — RECEIVER IS APPOINTED. Speyers Say This Will Not Stop the Foreclosure Sale. NEW HAVEN, Conn., Sept. 28.—John G. Carruth of Philadelphia, president of the Industrial Trust, Title and Savings Company, was to-day appointed receiver for the Consolidated Lake Superior Com- pany by Judge Plate in the United States District Court. His bond was placed at $10,000. Judge Lynde Harrison of this city, counsel for the company, said the company consented to the appointment of the receiver. The application for the receivership was presented by attorneys for certain stock- holders. It was sald in the application that the directors of the company had failed to take up the loan of $5,050,000 of Speyer & Co. of New York; that the ac- tual value of the plant, as expressed in the amount expended in buildings, ma- chinery and other properties, was far in excess of the amount of the loan; that the stockholders feared that if a forced sale were allowed they would lose the en- tire amount of their investment. A re- celver therefore was asked for; also a temporary injunction to prevent the sale of the property under foreclosure - pro- “NEW YORK, Sept. 25.—Concerning th D e appointment of John G. Carruth, center of summer gayety, and it was here | L o e e e e e e e e e R e . — % | T - | | DAUGHTER OF UNITED STATES { | SENATOR WHO BECOMES i BRIDE TO-DAY. i * | T > of her engagement to Willlam Graf of | Constanz, Germany. The wedding will| | take place the latter part of November. | | Miss Schucking is at present residing at 227 East Seventy-second street, New York City. P 3 e The Corona Club met on Thursday after- noon at its clujrooms in Masonic Temple, in the Mission,! Mrs. Denniston presiding. | An interesting talk was given by Mr. | ‘Weil on the subject of “Lace and Lace- | making,” and as a mere scrap of real lace | 1s very dear to femininity the ladles were delighted with the discussion of the va-| | | | tious kinds of thready finery. Specimens of each distinctive kind of lace were ex: hibited and a full description of the mode | of manufacture given, likewise of the| women who make it. After a short musi- cal programme the guests and members enjoyed a pleasant hour over the teacups. P i Mrs. M. Shea and Miss Regina Shea | left the city on the 9th inst. to visit rela- | tives and friends In New York and Wash- | ington. They will be absent about two months. 8 A E. Avery McCarthy has returned to San Francisco after a month's visit to South- ern California, where he was entertained by the rather large contingent of San Franciscans who still linger in the south. o, On Thursday the San Francisco Musical | Club will meet to celebrate founder's day. The programme will be presented by club | members solely. s Wi Mrs. Washington Irving Marion has sent out cards for a tea to be given Octo- ber 3 at her home, 1958 Bush street. dent of the Industrial Trust, Title and | Savings Company of Philadelphia, as re- ceiver for the Consolidated Lake Superior Somp:lgy. Charles H. Tweed of Speyer & 0. B : The action of the Connecticut court will not interfere with the sale of the securities of the Consolidated Company October 1. The ap- pointment of a receiver places the affairs of St 0 hanee of i ndiviatal, No e been made for tpon: the gale and T know nothing of the report that Mr, Cleurg had ‘raised the $5,050,000 cash needed to satisfy our claim. A S ez T Regulars Ordered to the Soo. TORONTO, Ont., Sept. 28.—The regulars { do anything to help i ribly destitute condition. | patch to the Lokal Anzeiger, prominent | from the fort here received orders shortly after midnight to proceed to Sault Ste. Marie. They will reach there to-morrow afternoon. London §; . One hardly looks for natural history les- sons In the streets of London, but the ob- server need never despalr of lighting upon something of interest, even though the subject be so common a being as the Lon- don sparrow. The other day one of these pert little birds was fluttering excitedly outside a grocer’s window, keeping him- self suspended just without the glass as Jong as he could. After a moment’s rest in the gutter he returned again, and this time there was no mistaking the object of his excitement. He was vainly striving to get at some bottled green peas in the fore- front of the window. In the country all sorts of devices are resorted to for the purpose of getting rid of sparrows, where they bear a very bad name for their de- structive proclivities, and many a Lon- don gardener would cheerfully heave half a brick at his visitors if there were the slightest chance of hitting them. Can it be that this sparrow’s wits, sharpened by the chase of his enemies, are ‘undergoing an educative process whereby he is quali- fying for that advanced stage of civiliza- tion marked by a preference for prepared f00ds over the raw products of the earth? —London Chronicle. NO CURE, NO PAY. Your druggist will refund your money 'AZO Wmuummn!l:n-. o T g 1 B Gl 00 ot garian Government. Further satisfaction is derived from the fact that M. Natoho- | vitch is going to Constantinople in the ca- | pacity of Bulgarian diplomatic agent. He | conducted the negotiations with the Porte last June and after their failure re- turned to Sofia. The committee appointed for the pur- pose, at the time of yesterday's demon- stration of 15,000 Macedonians in this ecity, waited on Premier Petrof to-day and | asked him if the Government intended to | the Macedonians. Petroff replied that the Ministry was ac! ing in what it conceived to be the best interests of Bulgaria, and would continue the same policy. The spokesman of the committee told the Premier that his ge- ply would not be satisfactory to the péb- ple and the committee thereupon with- drew. The Dnevnik, eommenting on the | situation, says: Althgugh the Bulgarians remain quiet, it is not"a true indication of the national feel- ings. but it is owing to the approaching elec- tions. The paper adds that it will “not be long before everyboedy will try to force the Government to take action.” MONASTIR, Macedonia, Thursday, Sept 24.—It is estimated that 50,000 villagers of | the vilayet of Monastir are now refugees in the mountains most of them in a ter-| They escaped from the 111 villages which have been ' wholly or partially burned by the Turks and which contained 10,302 houses, of which 9688 were burned. At Malkairnovo only a hundred Bulgarian familles remain | of 1500. | Two hundred familles fleeing toward | Bulgaria from villages in the Losengrad | district were surrounded by Turkish troops in the mountains and all of them are alleged to have been slaughtered. | SALONICA, European Turkey, Sept. 2. | —Bakhzar Pasha, who was responsihle for the massacres at Krushevo and Smi- | levo, has been decorated with the Order of the Medjidie of the first class. He has been sent to the district of Kastoria, where six villages have been burned al-| ready and many insurgents killed. | BERLIN, Sept. 28.—According to a dis- | | Macedonians are urging the revolutionary | leaders to discontinue the uprising. it e i COTTON PREVENTS MASSACRE. BEIRUT, Syria, Tuesday, Sept. 8—(Cor- respondence of the Associated Press).—As this dispatch is mailed the situation at | Beirut remains unchanged, there being a great feeling of uncertainty. The correspondent of the Associated Press called on board the United States cruisers Brooklyn and San Francisco yes- terday and found them armed camps. The bluejackets and marines were in readi- ness to land at a moment's notice, ammu- nition filled their belts and arms were stacked on deck. Rear Admiral Cotton informed the correspondent that he was prepared to give Americans and Euro- peans in general the fullest protection possible. Fortunately the fanaticism of the peo- ple has not yet gone so far beyond bounds | as to cause them to attack foreigners, but business is at a standstill, the streets are deserted and the shops are closed. Guards to watch the American property | here were furnished last night. FHad the Governor refused, Admiral Cotton stood | prepared to land 500 men if necessary. The American ships played their searchlights on the city, illuminating not alone the property of the'Syrian Protestant College, but also dark alleys andybyways frequent- ed as a rule by shady characters. The disturbances here began on the night of Friday, September 4. A murder was committed in Beirut, which was by no means an unusual thing, but in this instance a non-Christian killed a Moslem. The next morning the Christians in the eommunity became much wrought up over the affair and a genuine fight pre- vailed. “Now the Moslems will go out to-nignt,” they said, “and five Christians will die for the Moslem slain.” On Saturday night and the Sunday fol- lowing there was an uprising against the | Christians in different parts of the city. Thirty persons were massacred in one quarter, and a reign of terror was in- | augurated throughout the whole city. A visit to the scene of the greatest slaughter fourd one Turkish officer dead on the ground, another with blood stream- ing from a wound in his face, while in | the homes of the neighborhood victims lay dead or writhing in agony. On Sun- | day morning a church was attacked in the same neighborhood while service was in progress, but no one was killed. Panic-stricken, the Christians fled from the city or remained in their homes be- hind barricaded doors, hile Moslems, armed with clubs, revolvers and knives, | paraded the streets and fell on any chance victim that came their way. Monday found the situation no better. All day stores remained closed, the streets were deserted and business came to a | complete standstill. People remained at home, afraid to venture out, and one or two who did so were killed for their te- merity. The foreign residents had not at first felt any great personal danger, but the attempt to assassinate the American Viee Consul, an entrance into the home of an Ameri- can resident, were incidents not calculated to give any one too great a sense of se- | Marin Judge Hears Ex- they have seen with astonishment what § Peruna has done for us. Many followed our example, and the result was health. Thanking you heartily, I am,"—L. Scherrinsky. Peruna protects the family against colds, catarrh, bronchitis, catarrh § stomach, liver and kidneys. It is just as sure to cure a case of catarrh of the bowels as it is a case of catarrh of the head. If you do not derive prompt and satis- factory results from the use of Peruna, Mrs_Lours J Sherrinsh P e O e L +essesesosoes | write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving ¥¢ gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarfum, Columbus, O. HEIRS COMPLAIN OF A TRUSTEE planations in the Bucklew Case. Special Dispatch to The Call. SAN RAFAEL, Sept. 28.—The matter of the petition of the heirs of the Martha Bucklew estate to have tke trustee, Wil- liam A. Wilson, removed came up before Judge Lennon’'in the Superior Court this morning at 10 o'clock. In the petition Martha Allison and others claimed that Wilson had made no account of the estate since February, 1902, and that he was not competent to handle the business of the estate. To-day was the date set for Wilson to appear to show cause why he sholild not be re- moved. Attorney E. B. Martinelll ap- peared in his behalf. Martinelli showed to the court where his client had made an accounting in April, 13, and sald that up to that time the business was all setiled up and passed upon by Judge Angellotti. It was also claimed by the trustee that only recently | another full accounting had been made | out and sent to all the heirs. Martinelli declared that in order to re- | move Wilson as trustee,a suit must be brought against him and that in the pres- ent action Judge Lennon had no jurisdie- tion. Judge Lennon reserved his decision for one week. petition will be withdrawn in the mean- time. —_———— MUTILATED BODY OF BOY FOUND ON HARBOR FRONT — { New York Police Are Confronted | With Crime That Recalls “Jack | the Ripper’s” Deeds. NEW YORK, Sept. 28.—With the dis- covery of the body of a boy fourteen years old on the bulkheads at Catherine street and East River to-day the'police are confronted with evidence of a crime | that recalls the deeds of “Jack the Rip- | Marks on the boy's body show that he had been cruelly maltreated and both the | police arid Coroner are satisfied that he was murdered. There are evidences that a woman was connected with the crime. Scores of persons saw the body to-day, but no one could identify it. It is understood that the | HONOLULU ASTIR - OVER KIDNAPINC Young Son of Public Official Is Stolen by Three Men. P s Special Correspondence of The Call HONOLULU, Sept. 28.—Great excitement was caused here yesterday when threa men stole the 12-year-old son of Superin- tendent of Public Works Cooper from Pt nahou Preparatory School and forced him at the point of a pistol to Round Top, a hill back of Honolulu, declaring that h father would have to pay a handsome s before he saw his son Theodorg aga not observed, while the others broug 1D the rear, one with a club and the other with a drawn revolver which he he pointed at the frightened youth. As the queer procession neared the sum mit of Round Top the kidnapers, be ing thirsty with their exertions, looked around for water and ‘made for a tank in the neighborhood. Noticing that the re- volyer carrier lald his weapon down to slake his thirst, the boy, realizing his opportunity, made a break for liber: running as fast as his bruised and ble | ing bare feet could carry him in his hes long rush for freedom. He had almost reached a turn in the road when a rang out and a bullet went whizzing pas his ear. The next moment he was arounc the corner and flying for home, where he arrived in such a state of fright that he could barely relate his experiences. The boy described the three men white men, adding that one was of dark complexion. Two of them, he says, were _1he same men who held him up recentiy in his own house, while his parents were away, and bound and gagged him and locked him in a closet. That few weeks ago. pgie fucadie d n- as ——————— The latest child saying on record comes to us from a reader whose six-year-old son was the triumphant originator of it Writing just before Christmas to Santa Claus to tell him what would be appre- clated as gifts by himself and his smaller brother, he was puzsled as to how he should sign it. He turned to his mother and incuired, “Snall I say ‘from your loving little friend. Willle,” or shall T say ‘Amen,” as I do to God? - London Dally News. ..Moncy-Savin; _Sa—l; A dollar saved is a dollar made. The money we save you and the merit of our goods make a strong combination for you t CASH OR CR SANITARY MOTH-PROOF CARPET—Five different $14 CHIFFONIER. Solid oak, mirror 0! six-inch legs. Ppatterns; lined and laid. . ... .... 00 ... CARPET REMNANTS, 2 107 7 his week. EDIT YOU CAN BUY BY EITHER PLAN REVERSIBLE sewed, B7%e yd 35e yd yards... $15 HAIR MATTRESS, good value ....$9.50 $s50 BEDR! SET, solid 0ak.$32.50 $25 EXTENSION TABLE. 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