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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY CCERT LISTENS CLARK AFTER 10 UNION MAN' ~ THE BENDERS Captain of the Stablemen’s Pickets Gives Evidence in Advanced to Lumbermen Senator Wants B.lck Money | Golden State’s Exhibit of Wines, VALUE OF CALIFORNIA GOODS Raisins, Prunes and Oil Shows)| Public That in Purchasing “Impor(ed” Articles It Simply Pays FAIR MAKES PLAIN TO WORLD |(R(P REPORTS SHOW INCREASE Department of Agrlculture‘ S Receives Cheering New From the Various Centers LARGE YIELD ASSURED ‘Present Average Condition of Cereals Better Than the Growth of Last Year suit for an Injunection by Construction Company | S . W oz : ’ pos - ok for Label on Package Containing P;oducts of the West YL B o | s —_— N A | o1 N | S SAYS ACTS ARE LEGAL'SUES IN H;I)]‘ RAL COURT|* ' P At T LR B |1 : | {1 Monroe Reproved by Judge Defendants Say L. H. Harri- | | % for an Attempt to Argue, man Is Really the Insti-| N With Examining Lawyer gator of the Civil Aetion | H —_— H I M ihe Construction Company } . of Utah filed a complaint in the United @i States Circuit Court yesterday against | suit brought | William A. Bender, George L. Bender, | | | i pre of the Ne- ! First National Bank of San Francisco , | | vade tion against s to recover $37,571 50 and the . 1 ¢ certain lands in Mendocin» | | . noma counti Judge Erskine i = BT ted a temporary restrain- A d appointed Charles Wier ST with bonds at $§0,000. - jon will be watched with con- interest by local raliroad it has been hinted an | le by the defense to ‘ . progress of the trial, | n, head of the big | | ific system and Is sup- | { have a st in the | 1 . o, Los and Salt Lake i road, is behind the ~Vl|l The Empire | ; Construction Company has as its presi- { < Clark, a brother of Sena- | it of the Salt | nized by the 7 | : constructing 7 i . sisted | the Lake and Los (/ 1‘ r entative form WANTS RETURN OF MONE /4 " ge Hunt! pp. complaint filed yesterday al- 4 ’ t e that on December 1, 1802, the /4 |1 » 4 inant advanced $35.400 for thz | f [ . s of lands on which to cut \.7 1 and agreed to advance s H nth for six months for the 75 ) . making the ties. The -title I . the name of the com- fia ; x he latter gave a deed to Kl snt of and placed it in es- | | - t National Bank to s———— o = ¥ ___4,.1 & nant for the money ad- SRR e S | Ellery. | . 1 to be paid for in railroad ties. | BY PAUL EDWARDS. | ! i‘“" i & ier 0D, i W . was agreed further that out of the| (AL, BUREAU, PRESS BUILD- | } \:”?fil,' _Ra "_ e })lur;ln W o { every cargo of ties delivered | - ) 4 > s, VE.§ it 5 NG, WORLD'S IR, ST. LOUIS,| { e BEE, SERY r{the ‘putpbae | P91 11— There, ate Toany ;: | ] | “rritt, George Inglesole, Agnes | b paving the amount advanced for | this exposition who will learn for the v oy v n g purchase of the lands and per | first time that often when they buy | | ; i e B, Barle. b Shaw, Vil . th nt for the purpose of repaying the | supposed foreign articles of a sort pro- | | | Deering. | T} = said, con- | | Allen, M. T. Moore, H. G. 12 said, con’ amounts advanced for supplies and la- | Guced in California, they are simply L | : S ganle jope buying California goods, sometimes of — . 5 | W. F. Oelbjie, agie 5 (O is e 3 e Bender: re T | | ONE OF THE CALIFORNIA DIs- | orhees, A. V. Cole, s 8 ) It is alleged nmlxrzwr::: S jave | en inferior quality and usually at a | “¥iave tak CHRENARE | | Evima’ Bageien » balance of 133,249, | ETeater price, with a foreign label. | VISITORS. BT wh It is furt that the Benior That California wines and prunes are | ¥ | acraments: | » R e e e 0! « Vo o A - ' Stanford; J 3 e i e s ,.,ammndd fr . ”;*‘l "?ah“h"’im'd “::' He decorated the back wall of the | Wamop an . Chicn” Mra B Worn, | a under foreign els at | o § = B. Blundell, Coronado; Mrs. iTbrool Eratiy idn value by cutting quantities of Southern cotton seed | C2llfornia political headquarters Bve L. Philbrook, Oxnard; B . ark a nd redwood timber thereon | o . and that McGarvey, yme back here as the Jefferson Hotel with raisins in & “pure imported ’ permitted to con- | iice 551" to compete with the Cali- ' tractive boxes and thousands of peo- | pe ;!x‘w‘ ) c ecurity will | g0 10 oil are facts unknown to (hr.lxrh*‘s.n\' the vlay there, Fresno : ¢ oms ‘“‘:l . i f“"”‘]"" great majority of Easterners, notwith- ;"1‘”\5 have fought their way succes: X a charged that the in viola- Sat pEbRELy" I ully against the foreign article until W. Hembaugh, - - \ding the constant publicity given | 5! c 4 2 ‘ e have sold large o ot e harge of the Cali- | DOW a few from Spaln are about all »f:"""‘ Lome Beschi M . gbeln. Pedgepsct: ’ ties to other par- 4, i0 exhibit here have noted the im- | that fln.d their way across the Atlantic. | ‘A Micholn, Bridgepart: R, YT\:I‘I“; :hsn- er a large num- portance of disseminating this sort of | FTesno’s only concern now As'(n teach ifi”.:"ln o ,M‘m,\ Me nd: Mabel the ground information and visitors to the booths the people to eat raisins. She’ll do her | Aith v g edale; ““L. ctiol s designec 0 pre t = a 5 N yart @ : CH | R P. - - fon is designed to prevent |y tpe agricultural building are in-|PATt and raise them if the consumers R eg rom di ng of any of if they want a genuine | Will only do their duty. In England W. V. Regan, & personal property. article they would best buy California | @nd other foreign countries the 9. e ‘HRM = BENDERS WILL FIGHT. products and not worship before the | &mount of rdltms';onsflmedhner u’rl'}m H, Lawson Wathail 1 - . > b s much greater an it is here. he | Waggoner, Livermore J. Fairleigh, Hu Jones, representing foreign label. Labels can be bought = = r- | Arthur McFaul, Fort Bragg; Mrs. A. W. stated yesterday after. more cheaply directly from the factory ;‘ "r{ that fruit in Amerlca is grow- | Arthur Keraul PO CooeE: B ilanas; : would be bitterly than they can on the bottles and pack- | IPE: but not fast enough to keep the | partie b Dora Garner, ¥ho he claims @8es prepared by the cunning foreign- | PTices of Fresno raisins where they | Rosa; Kate Co Ll ohenuiss pgecay < who he s ages RRTEe 0 should be. Other counties make raisin to prove that they have €r Who has 19{"“‘““ SRt ahly “‘Tfl‘“"“x‘s | displays here and show some fine ones, | SENATOR BURTON’S APPEAL . 2 b e ¥ re supe ¢ s California 5 3 . y - NTE! ¢ y L f ”:”' lnrlm“},and 2“d:<up 5 e o i but none can vie with the original IS GRANTED BY BREWER it was actually brought to 8£00ds. home of that product in Californi < In contracts betwe 51 Ba »f the County Commissioners | . °™M€ I8 DFD i 3 i e cerfaln contracts between the! | :S’;rg'f of exhibits at the Agrieult. | S°i and climate give Fresno the lead | Kansas Politician, Convicted of Tak- v, ead I;)ir':n‘;: ;‘rrr‘! ‘:n‘tr‘dl: ural building are of the opinien that | that particular product and she will ing Money From Trust, Makes eed on in the contracts. The mate. | MONEy spent in a direct campai-n |21Ways be fhe rall oniees ; Point in High Court. ¢ = contracted for at a time when throughout the East against the wor- | PALACE OF EDUCATION. ABILENE, Kans., July 11.—United | very high, a fact over which Ship of the foreign label and in edu-} Everything but the relief map of the | States Senator Joseph R. Burton to- | the defendants had no could now be bought in the market at a control, and much lower rate. As to the money | BTéat cating the people to the fact that they are being imposed upon would be of University of California display is in place and visitors are already wander- ing through the vestibule of the Palace day received a telegram from his at- torneys at Washington saying that Justice David Brewer had allowed the benefit to the State. There is no | advanced by the construction company, | T6450n Why any appreciable quantities | of Fducation, where it is located. The | appeal of Burton's case to the United shop™ it claimed by Attorney Jones that “? certai- x-rvvd\{cls grown l‘n Califor- | Lick Observatory negatives show in a | States Supreme Court. b his clients would have long ago wiped Ni&, Such as wine, olive oil, prunes, | thoroughly successful manner, forming | Senator Burton was convicted at % out the indebtedness had the Clark Yaisins and, after a while, Smyrna|a side wall of {lluminated plctures.ist Louis of having received money as 4 that 1 concern kept its part of the agreement, f1€%, should be brought from the old } Astrononiical savants are already mak- | an attorney to work in the interests of e It is claimed that the storms along the WOrld for consumption in America. | ing this display a center and are dis- |, grain company whose case for il- T S coast for a time prevented the loading Callfornia can always supply this coun- | cussing the views shown. These will |legal use of the mails was being in- Van Man siked & of schooners with the tles, and the re- ‘¥ With these goods. Of course there | become one cf the famous educational | vestigated by the Postoffice Depart- s o oliie \wfi cent engineers’ strike also materially | 27 a‘l'fr;\\_ urnnd§ of wines, chnmpag{les | e)_(hlb((s of the fair, and by being in | ment. cards, or if Monroe knew of any legal | G¢javed the deliverance of the ties, but ' eSpecia ‘énsnd olls produi‘edin foreign | direct connection with the university | . fon to dictate to an em. | these obstacles were amply providea COUALries that will always be Sought, | will bring that Institution added glory. | BROOD OF CHICKENS D et il dani for in the contracts between the two | P the Use of these will not material- | The Lick Observatory is one of the HATCHED BY A CAT ness declared that as long as | Parties iy e e h‘,h” use of | best known Institutions of the world. ver had up'an open shop card HARRIMAN TAKES A HAND. B e L :::; ‘b}::’;? Fresh frults, coming in now in quan- | peline Takes the Place of Hen no union men working for| An interesting fact In connection that strange virtue of having, In some :5»"1(;?}, ity ad(:d':‘g 74 llhhe b;iami ghsug and Plays Mother to i nion §id not care how many ' ywith the suit developed yesterday, when S atns AR LR (e o el i cases it objected tc ostengibly only, come from a| puilding, Little Fowl. ©M- it was learned that one of the auditors country other than America, that shg‘- se Fhese frulls ‘mt Jesier than NEW YORK, July 11.—A dispatch non-union men and put- | of the Southern Pacific Company, act- | need fear. { Lh0ge shown bycanyoiier. Shkie. Ay vith, lifics > them in with union men. fog in 4 sinlat SAGAEIS Tor m’( Ak 7 % | A matter of fact, few other States at- | from Berlin asserts without qua = ARGUMENT FOR LAWYERS, o S gt gt it i MUST EDUCATE PUBLIC. | tempt any important display of fresh | tion that a brood of chickens has been | In response to further questions Mon- | with Bender Bros. with regard to an . TO CTéte a market for olive ofl is | :;uu;, ,-;rhe»good ;Ontdmnn ”m “I};m‘ g.',:;'lfgn:}y ;’;'h‘:“a:i‘mq?u:l;:l:“;unf}‘:E = arghed that a» employer bad no | amicable settigment of the existing dif-| 1'° 8Teat task béfore the growers or | the CAlfornia product ususlly. arrives| TPSSEOTE ) © /0 L R0 o 0 oot | right Yo agree with his emplo ficulties between them and the that commodity ‘in ‘Catifornla, '’ Thioue 188150 .an advertisement of beneflt to 0 S R hen i aes atitig) obt the' the hours of work or amount of | struction company, which wi _jesnibiiing ofl “hepe #ud::the \Bastein | e Bthte. It 10jes Hiohe of dts exgel- | IEOREREGSLANA BRI 1N S [ o S B "xpw::m; pr:: lhaxl Hx'.r_::‘;n i:x;:k(x;rg!u:l mos:e public must be educated as to the dif- i lence in its long trip across the gon- | €888 until _thc ‘(hlgkens were \h‘!t‘ched | " . . . . 9 v i |in the ordinary course. The chickens s belief that a laborer had a right | active interest in the affairs of the Sait | o cnCe between the pure article and | tinent. | now s the cat about wherever it ) demand certain hours and certain Lake road than he has been willing to | tNe cottonseed mixtures sold generally | Sgn Franciscans are finding that | nOW follow the cat abou h 2id that he had work it - Beaddr, Brok:iste Inalined fo iy s o o st et olNEsIe gridhe | Ve bullding in theonedel stiest el SO0 v L S i b » & Ha’lr{r.h)' before the time of view the suit somewhat in the light of ;‘;Sllz:,‘:‘nfl""(";"lg x;"'ih!;u';:";,;m;:g;:‘; i lx‘:‘!r‘:tf:(;zmis ana:;F:rl \\cr:?:;da:n‘-;lx i Californians in'New York. ronth for werking f.-.,xfi 3 :‘fx.,‘s? i: lK)(.‘.,,i‘;mflig‘m:;‘rf:rd;e:,}nf:; cage, | Price that must be charged for the |the Pacific Coast metropolis. San | NEW ynm\. soly U'*T_ho follo‘?-v e m g to 9 at night. He asked when the :.'lax'k neum; first alu;mp(e.i pure California product. Having been | Franciscans are beginning to make L‘nisi‘.ng Californians have registered in if the attorney thought that was legal, | to get Ehoade clRnte or b tor Ahals] used to procuring what they thought ‘ building their first stopping p!nf‘e when | New York: [ whereupon Judge Hunt Interrupted | road they were confronted on sl siqes | V25 Olive oil for very little money, | they reach the falr. Tt is within a| From San Francisco—H. M. Avery him and told him that he need not ar- | by opposition from the Harriman inter. | 21 Peopie cannot easily bring them- | few hundred feet of what has become |ana M. B. Blanding. at the Hollan e e e el ests, and later when Semator Clark | ClVeS 10 pay the higher prices for |the main entrance to the fair, and the | W. H. Budaker, at the Hoffman; A. J. Golng deeper into the proposition of | and his brother went inty the markes | L1¢ Superior California product, gen- |San Franciscans catch thelr breath | Frank and J. F. Hall, at the Ba rights, Van Ness asked if Monroe un- | in search of ties they were again made | ¢ ALY, Pronounced superior to the if- | there, get their bearings and map out | tholdi; Mrs. J. MacKenzie, at the St. derstood ft to be' the right of unions|to feel the Harriman influence. The| P re® .o /ol 2 | their plan of campaign before getting | Denis; Mrs. E. C. McCaliough, at the by pickets and boycotts to interfere | only firm that would conseat to et | The California wine display is pro- | to work sightseeing. Californians in|York; K. McGough and G. E. Middle- with & mar’s business because he did | (hem fies was that of Bender Bugs | QUCIAE even better results than hoped | general are finding the_building a pop- | ton, at the Imperial; H. C. Mills, at ot B ns Che iiloub ~‘_ ot 'n - ; = - .3 £ - ® | for. Commissienor Haber has sent| ular headquarters and deem them- |the Albert; C. C. Otto, at the Imperial; o S e amemire, ¢ Bome time sgp it geveloped that Har-| out thonsandsof Fardy thviting Maal- ] aklved Tortinitd in Davioe 5 aeiil s [ B oAt ot the Aehiind: tad I the attorney for the uhion, objected to | riman had gained control of the Salt|ers ang men who would possigly ber| e il P i i 4 e i the guestion as requiring an expres- | Lake road, and from that time on, it is| come purchasers of wine for their i R ol e SV i sion of the witn # opinion and an claimed, the lumbermen began to meet union interpretat of w186 which | oppoattion from FEarHaN tables to visit the wine temple and | feel at home, the State bullding being | the Herald Square; O. C. Hoff, at the Bl 5ot been wstiopsd tn e pload- |- Rt Wex igitost St B sample the vintages there. The wine | the other. Visitors are given pleasant ' Cosmopolitan; J. J. Morgan, at the ; D hat | discommon ot 1o yesterdey that the|exhibit s drawing as many visitors as| rceptions at both these structures and | Grand Union: Mrs. Pillsbury, at’ the irgs. Monroe was of the opinion that | dissolution of the Empire Construction |any other. exhibit in the Agricultural | o ¢ 2> ? ¢ a union had a right to dictate to an empioyer as to what kind of work an employe should do and cited that a hostler under union rules would not C ympany has been planned for some time, and that hereafter the San Pedro, Los Angeles and Salt Lake road will | do its own building and contracting for builai great | dustry from it. hibit section of the fair where they can From Los Angeles—L. Bradford, at both the buildings will be popular cen- ters during the life of the fair. e | Herald Square, and L. E. Russell, | the Albert. e e e Californians in Washington. at ing and there is no doubt that benefit will accrue to the in- Notes and addresses CALIFORNI —TUnity, WASHINGTON, July 11.—Primary returns to the chief of the bureau of | the Department of Agriculture show the acreage of corn planted to be about 91,930,000 acres, an increase of about | 2,130,000 acres, or 2.4 per cent on the | area planted last year, as revised in December. The average condition the growing crop on July 1 was 86.5, as compared with 79.4 on July 1, 1903. { The average condition of winter wheat on July 1 was 87.7, as compared with 77.7 last month and 78.8 on July 1, 1903, and a ten-year average of 783 It should be borne in mind that this re- port relates to conditions on July 1 and takes no note of the effects of the storms that have occurred In certain States since that date. The existing condition of spring wheat on July 1 was 93.7, as compared with 93.4 last month, 825 in July 1, 1903, and a ten-year average of 86.8. The average condition on July 1 of spring and winter wheat combined was 84.5, as compared with 80 on July 1, 1903, and $2.9 at the coresponding date in 1902. The amount of wheat remain- ing in the hands of farmers on July 1 | ir estimated at about 36,630,000 bushels, equivalent to about 5.7 per cent of the crop of last year. The average condition of the oat erop on July 1 was 89.8, as compared with 89.2 last month, 943 on July 1, 1903, and a ten-year average of 87.3. The average condition of barley on | July 1 was 885, against 90.5 one month ago, 86.8 on July 1, 1903, and a ten-year average of 87.1. The average condition of winter rye on July 1 was 88, as compared with | 90.2 on July 1, 1903; 91.2 at correspond- ing date in 1902 and a ten-year average | ot “s9.7. The average condition of spring rys on July 1 was 90.8, as compared with | 88.3 on Juiy 1, average of 87.4. The acreage of flaxseed is es. 1903, and a ten-year than | that of last year by about 826,000 acres, and the condition on | or 25.6 per cent, July 1 was 86.6. e INTEREST TO PEOPLE or THF PACIFIC COAST OF Ordt‘rfi Affecting Pmml Service of Coast Issued by the De- partment. of | ADVERTISEMENTS. SICK HEADAGHE Positively cured by these Little Pills. ‘They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A per- | fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsi- ness, Bad Tastein the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. 8mall Pili, Small Dose, Small Price. Something of a Sensation will come to you when you examine the exquisite finish of linen as we launder it—a pleasant sensation at that. Needless to say you will agpre- ciate our work the longer you employ it—needless to say we would like you to start trying it now. No saw edges. UNITED STATES LAUNDRY, 1004 MARXKET STREET. 'l'dnhuo mn m Dr. Lyon’s PERFECT Tooth Powder AN ELEGANT TOILET LUXURY Used by people of refinement for over a guarter of a century PREPARED BY I ¥ Ly DD S, WASHINGTON, July 11.—The fol- | | lowing changes in ‘the postal service | | have been made: . A postoffice has been established at Mount Wilson, Los Angeles County, Cal., with Howard E. Bassett as post- master. The postoffice at Crab Creek, Lincoln County, Wash., will be discontinued July 30, the mail to go to Harrington. Robert A. Sanders has been com- missioned postmaster at Garrison, Or. Rural free delivery will be extended | at Whittier, Los Angeles County, Cal., by one route. The following fourth-class post- masters have been appointed: Oregon Baker County, George C. Houk, vice Thomas J. Elms, resigned; Washington—Crystal, Big Horn Coun- ty, Robert L. McKinney, Black, resigned. —_————— GUATEMALAN ANT KILLS BOLL WEEVIL OF TEXAS Expert Reports That Experiment With Imported Insect Proves More Than Match for Southern Pest. WASHINGTON, July 11.—The ef- fectiveness of the Guatemalan ants in checking the ravages of the boll weevil in the cotton fields has been tested | and Mr. Cook, expert of the Agrlcul—‘ in a telegram to | tural Department, Secretary Wilson to-day announced that the ants promptly destroyed the weevil and the Texas ants as well. The telegram, great satisfaction Wilson and Dr. Galloway, chief of the { Bureau of Planting Industry, is dated Victory, Texas. uvn’rmxmmn Is there any soap but Pears’ which has been sold in two centuries and is’ selling in the third? Sold all over the world. A Man’s Drink Nothing makes you feel so fit for vour day’s work as vice Stella | which was the subject of | to both Secretary | t H. S. BRIDGE & CO.. § MERCHANT TAILORS. 622 Market Street. Up Stairs. Opp. Palace Hotel. SAN_FRANCISCO. %i Noveliies in Imported Wear. 2 bS JOVTR Prompt r n.’ I‘Auno '-mnvm& c a: cu RE nul ” ree. o ASTHHMA “52. L5k T P. HAROLD HAYES, Iuflzlo. N. Y. DV VDO DVVTUDDI visit DR. JORDAN’S ancar MUSEUM OF ANATOMY 1851 MABKET 5T bot. RATIS, 8.7.0l, The Asatomical Museum n the. World. Weaknesen or any contracied disease positivealy cmrad by the aidest Speciaiint en the Cowe Hat. 26 years, JORDAN—DISEASES OF MEN PRILOSOrRY o MAILED FREE. (A S 0 vl DR JORDAN & CO., 1051 Market ¥, 8. 7. ! | Ask your | Ithe | | gever. but etnds illustrated gives full particulars and directions in- valuable to ladies. MARVEL CO., 41 Park Rew, New York. 2 New Montgomery, San Franeisco, Cal. Willlam Hatteroth (Ladies’ Dept.), 224 Suttee. Union Drug Co., 400 Sutter and 100 Stocktom, Osgood Brothers...Tth and Broadway, Oakland. Baldwin Pharmacy. 119 Ellle BAJA CALIFORN 1A ‘Damiana Bitters )5 A GREAT RESTORATIVE, INVIGORA- tor and Nervine. | _ The most wonderful aphrodisiac and Spectal Tonic for the Sexual Organs, for both sexes. The Mexican Remedy for Diseases of the Kidneys and Bladder. Sells on its own merita. NABER, ALFS & BRUNE, Agents. 328 Market st., S. F.—(Send for Circulars.) MEN AND WOMEN. irritations or uicorationd -:-'- ':nnon‘mmn; Priva (osisgion inioss, and mot astrine EVANSCHEMIGALCD. gent or poisonous. Seld by Draggista or sent in plnln WrAppeR. by exi ‘i- fl.* or3 bonk- Circulas soct on Fequest. DIRECTORY OF RESPONSIBLE HOUSES. Catalogue and Price Lists Mailed of firms selling certain of the wines Ns AT FAIR. shown are jotted down by visitors. The labeling of the boftles has been well done and they appear to good advantage. A French artist who called be permitted to clean harness in the stable nor would a harness .man be permitted to clean horses—it would be one man doing two men’'s work, he said. material. ‘WASHINGTON, July 11.—Hotel { Many Westerners Visit the Exposition | registers show the following arrivals at St. Louls. !from California: At the Raleigh— ST.. LOUTS, July 11.—The following |'T. J. Randall and wife, from Los An- ————— Inquiry for John J. Hill. Douglas W. Montgomery at breakfast Sold on Merit. | | | Mrs. of | thig city brought to the Morgue yes- ; at the New Willard—Mr. and : Appli at the exhibit was so pleased with it | Californians have registered at the | 8eles; at AR _on Application. _The trial of the case will be resumed | terday a letter of inquiry from her | that he wrote a letter to Mr. Haber | Louisiana Purchase Exposition: R et J A F e this morning. |son. Rev. D. W. Montgomery, pastor |in which he said the display was one| san Francisco — 8. Hunn, Dr. W. Martin, National—Charles’ R. Fleming, from [ 1 Olgel'&co. ' S Shipping Butchers, 108 Rt B4 S <5 B S i of the Fifth Congregational Church at of the most artistic he had ever seen | C. Braiford, H. Simkin, . Chamley, 8. 4 i J‘. lB\ES ‘ Cfl. _Clay. Tel. Main 1204 Tern Thompson—I spent two months | Washington, D. C., inquiring for par- |at a fair. Saith, Mrs, B B Chamiey, A Wheeler, Mrs. | Los Angeles, o L Llma it i at Newport last seascn. | ticulars as to the death of Quarter- The raisins of Fresno County are ¥ Botors hpritay v 0.0 SADAFTREGINCO; Gt SHE BE Ja0es Frayed Foster—Dat s0? 1 s'pose yor | mester's Clerk J. J. Hill, who died in |a telling exhibit of the resources of g 5:},{1";’;‘, ST D AN UL [ BT et el Eille Wine DrgGlbbon’smspennry P e P s & waa, saw lots uv style 1" -re? {the Harbor Emergency Hospital on|State. Put up in fancy boxes, the |J Floyd and wife B, C. Halling and wite i | “heider, from Los Angeles. | ...’.‘...‘..,‘,",“‘m":.“"..i‘mfi TING. Torn Thompson—Nuttin' else. De July 1 of concussion of the brain. The | raisin arrests the attention as does | M. A o L ST A g L8 Diseases, Lost Manhood. Debiilt, PRINTER. head keeper uv de jail wore a white | writer stated that Hill's parents lived {a pretty show- of candy. Commis- '."'“',." De'w H. Waiker, C. "."‘IB‘:;: Wg'l‘“gcnkgfilgol:‘- ,3‘,‘.,“&.,5.‘;".«‘,";‘?.‘5"";‘! m&n on body and niind some £ yachtin’ suit an’ canves shoes all de |in that city and that Hill was a mem- " Knde: 1. Maye 3 = e sioner Wyer never loses an oppor- tunity to pul his county to the front. ry, Il with appendicitis. He is rest- ing easy and it is not certaia that an opera- tion will be mecessary. Charges time.—Judge. ) ber of his church, * rhi Angeies =V Eaton, H. West, J. D, Balley and famiiy, J. H. von Dersohe, F. E. thers fail. Try him. ures guaranteed. J. F. GIBBON, san Francisco, Cal. Weekly Call, $1 per Year