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FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, MAY 26, 190 / THE TIRED PURSE Ask your purse if it is not tired paying swell prices to swell tailors for clothes we’ll half the money. fit you with for We're educating 'smart dressers every day. If you care for looks and money—see our smart togs. $14 t0 %30 They’ll show youw. 2 | e ———ip | ALCOHOL STOVES. FREE TO CLASSIFTED AD- VERTISERS IN SUNDAY EDITION. i ‘ l ‘ | { | ‘ Idke Our Circulation, These | Premiums Are High-Class. | The SUNDAY CALL has over $5.000 circulation, principally in the homes: a QUANTITY ! and QUALITY that ASSURES ACTUAL RESULTS. | Gift= given to-day for Sunday | ! WANT ADS. +| (UNHAPPY WIFE | SEEKS DIVORCE Sallie Merx Tires of Matri- mony Though She Is Married Less Than a Year — Sallle Merx has been a matron since last July, yet she is already pining for a return to single blessedness. She has filed & suit for divorce on the ground | of cruelty, alleging that she does not Mrs. Fmms Col Collins Dies. | 15, the woman who the bridge across lied at the City Tuesday. or 1. She sta she wished to dfe e rine Eve Remedy Cures Eyes Makes Weak strong. Doesn't fart , . Ladies’ Aid to Entertain. e s Ald Society, auxiliary ap of the Sons of Vet- will give a dramatic Gate Hall Golden xception ADVERTISEMENTS. OnlyWords of Praise For the Great Electro-Chemic Treaiment. three Electro- Chemic Treatments said: “Doctor, if the suffering women of Californ rent your patients. 4 maxn said: “Doctor, I feel like stand- | ing on the street corners and shomting | the praise of Electro-Chemistry. After | years of suffering, after years of drug- | §ing, after years of robbery by gquacks, here I find myself, in a few Veoks, at rifiing expense, thoroughly | fhe Electro-Chemic Treazment.” gk MRE. A. MacKENZIE, an old resids of San Francisco, praises the mul-il‘ Bew treatment. Mr. MacKenzie says: { E « untary testimony to | stitute, 118 Grant ave., | ards my cure of chronic | first treatment benefited | ement continued till the | 1 do also certify that the | Spray is equally effective in catarrh and stomach »-Chemic treatment sur- I have used in twenty | very reasonable. who always at- catest considera- and skill, and I from one doctor to A MacKENZIE, 3 1 st San Francisco. Mr. MacKenzie is a vdl—hm. mc:a- ploye of the Union Iron & gentleman of mum(-u'mua m: rity, well known in the city. His ‘word | can be implicitly relied upon | ELECTRO-CHEWIC SPECIALTIES: StEosmis S puty and trial treatmgnt. HOME TREATMENT, The Electro-Chemic Home Treatment cures quickly. thoroughly and cheaply. Outside pa. terits are louned an expensive Electro-Chemic apparatus free of charge. It is always best to come for & personel examination when possible Most patients can return home the same day. taking the necessary home treatment along. Those who cannot come should write for in- structions regarding bome examinstion and treatment ELECTRO-CHEMIC INSTITUTE 118 GRANT AVE., Cor. Post St., EAN FRANCISCO. Office hours—5 & m_to 5 p. m. and 7 to 8 p m. dally. Sundays—10 & m. to1p m. Separaie apartments for ladies and gentlemen. .. find it conducive to happiness to live with a man who has a habit of tick- ling her throat with a large claspknife threatening to Kkill her. Neither does she think it right for her hus- band, Charles C. Merx, of the tug Amelia, to meet her on the street and compel her to walk with him by ex- hibiting a pocketknife and threatening to jab her with it unless she accom- panies him. She charges Merx with doing these things and asks that she be given a decree, sufficient monthly alimony to keep her and for permis- sion to resume her malden name of Whittingham. Helen March Bertz is seeking a di- vorce from loyd Carleton Bertz for desertion. Her maiden name was Hen- derson and though she has two chil- dren she wants permission to resume it. Neglect is charged in the suit for divorce brought by Tillie Henrietta Clarke against Joseph F. Clarke. She also asks permission to resume her maiden name. Nathan Andrew Rowe, a business man of Marysville, from whom Agnes Je Rowe secured a divorce four vears ago, has been cited to appear before Judge Sloss on Jume 5 to ex- plain his failure to pay the $20 a month alimony provided for in the decree obtained by his wife. In her petition for the citation Mrs. Rowe says that he has not paid it since the divorce was granted Divorces were granted to Norah Nickells from Alfred Nickells for neglect, Joseph N. Appleton from Hel- en M. Appleton for desertion, and Sarah J. Berlin from A. J. Berlin for cruelty Judge Troutt granted Grace Hexter a divorce from Aaron Hexter for cruelty. She was allowed to her maiden name, Feder. —_————————— TWO MINING COUNTIES SHOW ORES AND ORANGES and Tuolumme and Calaveras Prepare to Astonish Visiting Knights With Variety of ° Resources. The two mountain counties of Cala- | veras and Tuolumne are sending for- ward large quantities of exhibits to this city to be displayed during the Knights Templar conclave. After that the show will probably be transferred to the exhibition hall of the California State Board of Trade. This is settled in the case of Tuolumne. The ex- hibits, which are calculated to attract the attention of the visiting Sir Knights, cover a wide range. Minerals | are included, of course, as both coun- ties are in the heart of the mining country. With these are about every possible variety of deciduous fruits, also oranges, olives, etc., which will undoubtedly astonish the people from the East. In behalf of the Knights Templar of Tuolumne County Dr. E. T. Gould is taking a prominent part in collecting exhibits. —_——— Postoffice Clerks’ Outing. The picnic committee of Branch No. 8, United National Association of Postoffice Clerks, has decided to hold its next annual outing and excursion on Sunday, June 12, at Fernbrook Park, Niles Canyon. The committee of arrangements consists of Dan B. Dwyer, chairman; David F. Supple, secretary; Robert L. Apple, treasurer; Warren King, James H. Donohoe, Alexander Imbrie, Willilam E. Mur- phy. George J. Asmussen, John T. Morris, A. S. J. Woods, Joseph V. Col- lins, William J. Murphy, M. E. Cash- man, Joseph Rudee, W. E. Paynter, James Cunningham, R. E. Saxe and F. B. McStocker. ————— ‘Will Appoint Temporary Clerks. Mayor Schmitz has recommend- ed to the Board of Supervisors that Auditor Baehr be authorized to appoint thirty clerks for temporary duty in his office during the next sixty days. The clerks will be taken from the: civil service eligible list and will be employed in connection with the assessment roll. resume | LOSE TEMPERS Nearly Come to Blows Dur- ing Trial of Damage Suit EXCHANGE WARM WORDS Is Made by One Lawyer LeSb e e Ralilroads, and W. T. Baggett, two of the oldest and most prominent attor- neys practicing in the State, things lively in Judge Kerrigan's court yesterday during the trial before a jury of the suit of Willlam Whittington for $10#K5 damages for the death of Guy S. Whittington, son of the plain- . Baggett, who is the attorney for the plaintiff, objected to the way Moore was cross-examining Walter O'Connor, & witness for the plaintiff. Moore dis- Iltked the remarks made by Baggett in velcing his objections, and turning to him sald: “You are playing to the jury. You {are trying to make a gallery play.” “I am not,” said Baggett, jumpiug to his feet. “You are the one who is making the grand-stand plays, and I will not stand for it.” “Oh," retorted Moore, “I guess you .| wiiL “Well, I will not,” exclaimed Bag- gett, looking daggers at Moore and getting very white. “I'll slap your face. I'll throw this pitcher of water at you.” “I would like to see you try it,” came tack Moore as he got out of his chair. His son Stanley also arose from | his chair near Baggett and for a min- | ute or macre it looked as if a Donny- | brook would follow the exchange of | warm words. But Judge Kerrigan took 2 hand in the row at this juncture and called the attention of the lawyers to | the fact that they should recall that | they were in court and that by their | actions they were exposing theiuselves to adverse comment and punisaiment. | “This sort of thing must not hap- | pen again, gentlemen,” said Judge Kerrigan. “I am surprised that two attorn: cf your vears should partic- ipate in such an unseemly row. A re- currence of the affair will cause me to punish ooth of you.” And in order to give the belligerent lawyers time to cool off h2 adjourned court until this morning. The order City and Count San Francisco to The suit was instituted by Dr. Law to determine the valid- ity of the proposed municipal bond issue of $18,000,000. —— ADVIRTISEMENTS. GOLE RASH Attorneys Moore and Baggett | Judge Kerrigan Interrupts When Threat of Violence A. A. Moore, attorney for the United | made | against the United Rallroads, an action | { Rossi. had given him a copy of an an- ' had worked seven years in an Italian, LEGAL LIGHTS - {AMEDEO WOULD |FILES REPORT PREPARE BOMBS Italian Man-of-War’s-Man, Expert in Explosives, Is Found With Anarchists - ! |18 DENIED ADMISSION | His New Associates Hire | an Attorney to Prevent His Deportation Home g =g An expert who will cheerfully make bombs at the bidding of his employer | for lawful or unlawful purposes is an unsafe person to be admitted into the | United States. Such was the decmoni made yesterday by United States Im- | migrant Commissioner North and a special board of inquiry in the matter , of Storace Amedeo, a deserter from | the Italian cruiser Liguria, which ar-| rived at this port on April 23. | After Amedeo had come ashore' from the cruiser he was met, he said, | by another sailor who had deserted from the Italian navy about six | months ago, and was taken to the machine shop of Arturo Rossi on San- | some street. Rossi is reputed among | United States secret service men to be an anarchist, or something of that kind. | He is an associate of Caesar Crespi, editor of an Italian newspaper in this ,city. This newspaper advocates Red | Republicanism, and Crespi announces ! himself as an opponent of monarchies | and an upholder of a republican form | of government. | Storace was found at work in Rossi’'s shop by Federal officers, on May 20, | armed with a warrant of arrest, issued | at the request of the Italian Consul. ! Judge de Haven ordered Storace to be surrendered into the custody of the Consul, and to be detained in the City Prison at the Consul's expense, such imprisonment not to exceed three ! months, as provided by the treaty be- tween Italy and the United States. Rossi and Crespi thereupon engaged an attorney, who applied to Judge de Haven for a writ of habeas corpus on the ground that the sailor was being | illegally deprived of his liberty. Judge de. Haven refused to issue the writ, sufficient cause not having been shown, and the attorney then id he would ask the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for a writ of habeas corpus. AMEDEO EXAMINED. | United States Immigrant Commis- sioner North yesterday convened a | special board of inquiry and examin- | ed Amedeo as to his opinions, whether anarchistic or otherwise. The sailor was asked by Deputy Immigrant Com- | { missioner Schell whether he would | manufacture dynamite bombs if his employer, Rossi, should request him| to do so, and the deserter replied that | he would perform any job of work of | that kind to which he might be as- | signed, no matter whether the bombs | were intended for a legal purpose or not. He strenuously denied that he was ! an adherent of anarchistic principles, | and asserted that he was a republican. | | When asked to define a republic, he | | said that it was a nation governed by a president instead of a monarch. Be- yond this statement he did not appear to Have ject. any knowledge of the sub- | AN EXPERT HANDLER. l Amedeo is an expert handler of tor- | | pedoes, and for that reason the Italian Government is desirous of having him | returned to the cruiser. Commissioner North ordered that the sailor should be sent back to his ship and requested the Italian Consul to ship him on the | steamship Sonoma to-day. The vessel - | will touch at Honolulu and the desert- er will be placed on board the Liguria, which will wait at that port for him. Amedeo admitted that he knew Rost of s reputation as an anarchist, that archistic sheet printed in Paterson, . J., and that Rossi had informed him | | that he and his associates were anar- | chists. | | Amedeo also told the board that he arsenal manufacturing explosives for ! the Government, that.he had no love’ for that Government because he had been forced to do military duty and | | new extension of Nineteenth avenue to g | and macadamizing the new boulevard | the abandonment of Ocean avenue un- | i of the offer of the Spring Valley Com- | pany. ious rock repair plant. 0N BOULEVARD City Engineer Says Charter| ‘Will Not Permit Abandon-{ ment of Two Avenues DOES NOT AWARD BIDS| Board of Works Postpones| Action on Proposals for Street Cleaping Contracts e e City Engineer Woodward filed a re- | port yesterday with the Board of Pub- | lic Works on the proposition of the | Spring Valley Water Company to deed | land to thé city for a boulevard through Laguna Merced rancho in re- turn for the abandonment by the city of Ocean avenue from Corbett road to the Great. Highway and also of the | Ocean avenue. The expense of gradin is figured at $10,350, which is consider- ably in excess of the lowest bid of $1903 55 to improve Nineteenth avenue. | Woodward says the boulevard 100 ] feet wide is desirable in the locality amed and it could easily be connected \ with any extension of MarNet street. | However, as no provision is made for | its improvement he adgfises against | til such provision is made. The exten- sion of Sixteenth avenue and all paral- | lel avenues should be considered and | provision made for the outlet to the | Ocean View district of the new sewer- age system. The charter dees not pro- | vide any mode of procedure for the | closing of streets more than 44 feet in | width, as are Ocean and Nineteenth | avenues, and this Woodward considers | as being in the way of the acceptance | Woodward also filed with tite Board of Supervisors a report regarding the construction of a municipal bituniin- | The cost of | the plapt is estimated at $18,500, and it will permit of repairs at the rate of 4000 square feet per day. The report refers to a portable repair plant put up | by an Eastern company, costing $10,000, together with $3000 additional for inci- | dental expenses. The cost of operation | will be $125 per day, against $190 for the | first described. | The board postponed action on bids | for street sweeplng nuntil June 7 -in ccmpliance with the request of the Su- | pervisors, who will make an appropria- | tion for a municipal street cleaning | plant. | Varney & Green refused to remove | advertising fences at Fillmore an;]l California streets and a test of the validity of the ordinance limiting the height of fences to ten feet will be made. H The board recommended the pur- | chase of land from S. Ducas for the | opening of Bessie avenue. City Engineer Woodward reported that the cost of grading and filling in | the foot of Third street to the Santa | ¥e bridge now bullding across Channel street will be $15,000 and for putting | down fender piles and dolphins to pro- | | tect the bridge $3500, and urges that | the Supervisors appropriate the neces- | sary funds for the putpose. | ———— | The center of the country’s manu- factories is now in Ohio. MAREKS BROS. 31,50 WRAPPERS | ALL SIZES. | | mands of Elmore C. Lefingwell, A Pure-Linen Tabling, 42c That's to-day’s bugle What a rally there’ll be round housewives know Hale's linens so well When you feel this they know it isn't put on. | and heavy it is, note its width, not is the lowest, you'll be convinced. ¢ for bleached roller toweling. A S wide, with a red border. A towel call from the linen forces.» the linen counter! Sam Francisco that when we do something damask, see how narrow (64 in.), and that the price Cream color. plendid, heavy grade. All linen. ing that is so much to be used. 17 o Take a Hammock With You It will give you as much pleasure out of an outing trip as a fishing rod or a gun. You will want to take one worse than ever when you see the ones we are selling and what we are asking. 95c; Regular Price $1.50. Full size, closely woven, with fringed sides, pillow and concealed spreader. $1.40; Regular Price $1.75. Cotton hammocks, close canvas weave, deep valance pillow and con- cealed spreader. $1.70; Regular Price $2.25. Splendid closely woven hammocks, with extra large tufted pillow, deep valance, concealed spreader, even ex- tra foot spreader. Regular Price $2.75. Extra heavy hammocks in the close mesh, pretty golf plaids, with deep valance, large pillow, spreader and foot bar. $3.00: Regular Price $3.75. Beautiful hammock in jacquard ef- fect, with large throw-back pillow, deep valance, two spreaders. 1000 Curtain Rods, 8/3c We are selling many of them just now for summer draping. There is nothing like them to- give the curtain .a neat appearance. They run from 2% to 4 feet; complete with brackets. Paper Napkins, 8c a Hundred Not plain, common ones, either— fancy. Restaurait men and picnick- ers will want them. Yiale: The Art Section Will Give Stock Collar Pat- terns Free To-Day. The designs are new. We know you will want them. Right beside them are vthe braids with which to make them Cream, bla and Arabian silk up. draw bra Near every new pattern. 3¢, 5¢, 6%4¢ and 10€ yd. Jewels with which to trim them (lowest prices yet). 8t 1% doz, Size 2. 2¢c dox. Size 3% 4¢ doz. Ob ones. ..4c doz Downstairs Greatest Values of the Month. Troning boards 79¢c, that always sell for $1.25. 3-fold clothes bars 38¢c; instead of wringers reg Guaranteed clothes $1.39, that we cannot give you ularly under $2.2 50 clothespins 4c; the best kind; those old-fashioned, wooden ones Lap boards 49¢ Tolding sewing tables o8c. Window screens 19c. How they have been going! Wash boards 17¢c; worth 25c. Still curtain stretchers $1.15. Any one can do up their own curtains now. Cemetery Vases gc. of two sizes; 4) We don't know of 3 Choice x8 slax1o. in the city selling them fc 9c. as Dow't Forget Her Lady Corset. When you think of a new think it. The most and least disappointing of set we know of. No cor knowledge, has had San Francisco reception corset. sat ny of hea as The Hale Stores Will Close Next Monday, Memorial Day. LEFFINGWELL GETS SALARY Judge Hunt Decides That He Cannot Tie Up Pay of the Election Commissioner B B “It is a masked assault upon his right to the office and as such cannot be entertained.” Such is the opinion of Judge Hunt of the suit of L. W. Lindgren, Social- ist, former member of the Board of Election Commissioners, for an in- junction restraining Auditor Harry Baehr from auditing the salary de- Lind- gren’'s successor on the board. “There- | fore,” says Judge Hunt, “the demur- rer to the suit should be sustained.” The decision of Judge Hunt, which was handed *down yesterday, Commissioner Leffingwell $417, for he has not been able to draw a cent.from the city treasury since his appoint- ment to office, ive months ago. A few days after he received his ap- pointment Lindgren, the expiration of whose term of office made possible the appointment of Leffingwell, filed the injunction proceedings. He claim- ed that his successor should have been, like himself, a member of the Socialist party, and that, ‘as Leffing- well is a member of the Union Labor | party, his appointment was invalid | and a violation of the charter provi- sion governing the naming of mem- | bers of the Election Commission. He | alleged that because of this infraction of the charter Leffingwell was a usur- per and should not be allowed to draw a salary. £ COURT’S OPINION. gives | | that he had deserted from the Liguria | for that reason. | Two unknown Italilans ecalled upon | Commissioner North yesterday after- jnoon with an attorney to ascertain { whether it would be possible to obtain | {an appeal from the decision of the | board of inquiry. Commissioner North | informed the lawyer thht the time for | an appeal to the Secretary of the De- | partment of Commerce and Labor had | gome by, and that no appeal could be taken after noon of the day preceding that on which the deporting vessel is advertised to sail. ’ The' attorney said that he had been employed at' the request of a Mrs. | Fritz, who resides on Seventeenth s}reet. Soothed by Bahsnwilh utiCury TYS0AP+ ——————— To Visit San Francisco ‘Without seeing the Diamond Palace would be like visiting Europe without seeing Par- is. It is a leading feature of San Francis- co, and is the most beautiful jewelry store in the world. Visitors or purchas: ‘ers are equally welcom=. 221 Montgom: ery street, between Bush and Pine. * —————— And gentle applications of CUTICURA Ointment, the great skin cure. For preserving, puritying, and beautitying the skin, for cleansing Annual Gatherlug' snd Games. the scalp of crusts, scales, and The San Francisco Thistle Club is dandruff, and the stopping of fall- | making elaborate preparations for its ingluir for softcning whmg twenty-third annual gathering and o 'hin % ? | games, which are to be held this year and soothing red, rough,and sore | gn July 4 at Shell Mound Park. The hands, for lame, sore, and -bruised | exercises will commence at 10 a. m. m hm‘l to outdoor and continue throughout the day. In the evening there will be a display of fireworks and dancing in both pa- sports, for baby rashes and cha- J - . | vilions of the park. The prizes to be imz," h,th,“o,tm of baths for an offered in the games, for which there | noying irritations and inflamma- | is already assurance of a large entry, | tions of women, and for many | Will be the most valuable ever pre- sented by the club. —_———————— Nellie Burrell Scott, exhibit of paint- ings, fish in action, Schuller's Art Gal- lery, for one week. * —_————————— May Fix Bond for Blasting. City Attorney Long advised the Board of Works yesterday that the portion of an existing ordinance re- quiring the applicant for a permit to blast to accompany the same by ‘a i sanative, antiseptic purposes i which readily suggest them- selves, as well as for all the pur- e s B s 14 Bain Bovioe 15 Columbas | bond in an amount mot less than $2500 A Dones Drigk Chem, Comp. S e Fropietor ity | @Nd NOt more than $50,000, to be fixed the' Scalp, Halr, and Hands."' by the Board of Works, is valid. Leffingwell demurred and in sus- taining the demurrer Judge 'Hunt says: It is & well-settled principle of law that common law remedy by a proceeding in t nature of quo warranto. In Powers vs. Hitcl cock the Supreme Court says that there are two methods provided in the Code of Civil Procedure to test the title to office; the first is by proceedings In the nature of Quo war- ranto against any pgrson who usurps or in- trudes into a public office; the second is contesting the election of the claimant as provided in the Code of Civil Procedure. In this case plaintiff virtually concedes that the title to a public office cannot be deter- mined In an action of this character; but he claims that Leffingwell is not even a 'de facto officer; that the purpose of the action is sim- ply to ‘prevent the squandering of public funds: g that the complaint does not allege that Leffing- well is in possession of the office in question; but 1t charges that no one was appointed to the office of Election Commissiol ', the sal | whereof Leffingwell is claiming. NOT PARTY TO SUIT. It will be observed that Letfingwell is not & party therein. hence if the court were to !award the reilef prayed for the result would | me that Leffingwell's right to the office, in so far as the collection of the salary thereof was concerned, would be, in effect, determined and that, too, In a_proceeding wherein he had not been heard and to which he was not a party. To hold in this proceeding that an injunction should be granted is to adjudge that Leffing- well is not entitled to collect the salary which it seems he demands But if he is legally acting as Election Commissioner he 18 unques- tionably entitled to the salary of the office, | and the court therefore cannot determine that he sl be deprived of such salary without adjudicating his right to the office to which the salary is attached. Though counsel for plaintiff disclaims any intent by the bill herein to question 4 well's title to the office, yet in challenging his right to collect the saldry thereof he in effect | impeaches such right. But taking the bill as M,.dny' bei.g n‘e‘fllfiflfl hy. | a whole: I think its main and essential purpose Claced AlL Bay. e T T WA TCH Judge Hunt's decision, which de- FOR OUR BIG SATURDAY cides that an office from which a per- SPECIALS. MARKS BROS. galged by an appeal to the injunction The Home of Honest Values, law, will affect a large number of 1220-1222-1224 Market Street THIS WRAPPER is handsomely styled. You need to look no fur- ther than the picture to realize that. As to the price, well, it speaks for itself. WRAPPER as pictured, made from a good, heavy, durable quality of per- cale that will stand the wear and tear of the laundry. Neat waist ef- fect. Ruffies and bretelles trimmed in braid. Comfortable Bishop || sleeves. Soft, turnover collar. Cut extra full and wide. Very deep hent. Neatly fnished at waist line with a tailor-stitoched strap. Colors —Navy, light blue, red, pink aund | ‘black and white striped designs. cases pending in his court. They were instituted shortly after Mayor Schmitz commenced his second term of office by persons whose political heads were removed. S e INSPECT SCHOOL SITES—Mayor_Schmitz accompanied the members of the Board of tion yesterday on a tour of Inspection The proposed constr sited. of some of the school | ADVERTISEMENTS. | | i | i 39 STOCKTON STREET. Telephone Main 55 the fact that s .Iways the owest We pride ourselves on the quality of our goods best and our prices are always the Tharsday, Friday and Saturday Specials. || CREAMERY BUTTER per sq. 32 “resh every day. Reg. {| FANCY RANCH EGGS . . . .per doz. 22 The very best. Reg. KONA COFFEE < ....per Ib 26¢ Hawaif's best product Reg 2 CORN STARCH 4 phgs for 25¢ Archer's Liberty brand. Reg. 3 for FRENCH SARDINES (N OIL. 2 cans 25¢ QUEEN OLIVES per gt. 50c Stuffed with red peppers. Reg. 60c SANTA CLARA PRUNES ... perlb5c Large, select fruit Reg. = ISLAND RICE . _per Large white kernels. Reg. 72 LOWNEY'S Ground CHOCOLATE, can25¢ Reg. 30c. BIDWELL'S CIDER VINEGAR— Per qt. bottle, 10e. R Per gal, 30e. Absolutely pure. gar; it will ruin y t SANTA BARBARA LEMONS . per doz 15¢ None better. Reg. 2 PARADISE SODA CRACKERS in 3-1b cortons 20c Standard Biscuit Fresh_fre Reg. 25¢. CHICKEN COCK BOURBON.bot 7. A brand that always § H KA Re WILSON RYE [| ~ From the renownea Wil Reg. $1.00. ANGELICA and MUSCATEL Try It as a tor it bills. PURE FRUIT SYRUPS, gt bot 35 Reg. S0c, All flavors, We -~ f Give \i MoreGood Tea . More Good Coffee More Good Spices More Coupons More Pretty Premiums @ WatchOur ¢ Stores. Prices Talk. It Pays to Trade American importiag Tea Co's Stores 210 Grant ave. visadero Great 2068 Third 1419 Polk complete without EPPS’ The Cream of Cocoas. COCOA Most Nutritious and Ecohomical, |