The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, February 23, 1905, Page 2

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1905. WEBER IS IN THE S OF THE Continued From Page 1; Column 6. ty. Tt then locked clock this was cast, | harged, four sonment and one the fourth bal- nd five for life lot eight | e _night ng no recommenda- jurors. who o the first balgnes of - the | The verdiet | »f every one | s sect WITLL CONTINT for ihe defense | as pos- | . ana M} Prewett, | "E FIGHT. Iy | attorne, CALM HADOW ———— we will promptly appeal to the Su- preme Cou At the new trial we will have additicnal evidence to show the falsity of Pawnbroker Carr’s testi- mony, and to utterly ‘demolish other points relied upon by the prosecution. The boy was not really convicted upon evidence, but upon public suspicion. The defepse feels very much en- | result of the trial, for son that on the first ballot there were nine for guilty and three for not guilty.” E Adoiph Weber, deep 'down, was greatly surprised at_ the verdict. All ! along, in corsuitation with his guar- dian, John Adams, he has felt assured tbat the verdict at the extreme limit would be imprisonment for life. He never dreamed for an instant that the naity was awaiting him. He ly disappointed, but not 1 _suppose it will be, six ths before the case will come up fore the Supreme Court. In “the -antime I shall be compelled to’stay here in this jail. This confinement “is very - detrimental-to my health. - My have presented my case y. 1 am surprised tha the placed any- credulity upon’ the mony of Henry Carr.” splend Jury testl; FALLING ROOF One Man Killed and Two Are| Seriously Injured in an| Have Set Up a Form- of 3 \ccident in Marysvilie - i b. 22.—A defective | collapse of the roof ing reconstructed for o'clock this morn- | e_several workmen and | the building at the | , the proprietor of the led and two men were Guy Putman, a car- © floor had been to this fact is ral other work- between the joists | cted. They were Y nd policemen y W g in the center of the crash came. The his body to a pulp ¢ was born near Placer- The remains for inter- County this eity —_—————— ORGANIZED BUNKO GANG BROKEN UP IN RENO Police Unearth Band of Sharpers 1 to Fleece the Unwary. Chief of Police Lee- afternoon un- d of bunko have already follow. The assumed be from stern await ers this i b iz will given to have thought as well ne to o to rush this spring and for have been engaged in g the unwary. Short change, keéd s and brace games have vds used. urters of the gang was officers there discovered or a swindling game of any or two convicts are| wd arrested. NEVADA TO COUNTY FRUITMEN FORM ORGANIZATION a Canmery Are Part of the Plans. Feb. 22—A call| fias been iss for a mass meeting | next Wednesday evening in this | o formulate plans for organizing | packing and shipping company | county with a capital of $20,- | to build a cannery will considered. The fruit men in county ‘are very anxious to or-| a_packing company and | ssured. Many are ready orchards and vine- are carried out. P s~ auiviicaneroi Niedringhaus Loses a Vote. RSON CITY, Feb. 22.—There more defection from Thomas the Republican cau- 7, when the roll was minth ballot for Reépresentative W. M. Mone- d the ranks of the bolters by is vote for Lieutenant Gov- Packing and Shipping Company nnd‘ GRASS VALLEY and EMULSION. GROWING UP There’s something the mat- ter with the child that fails A child that orows up too much, however, | to grow up. without proper filling out of flesh, is almost as badly off. Nothing will help these pale, thin “weedy” children like Scott’s Emulsion. It supplies the rounding out ‘of flesh and the rich inward nourishment of blpod “and vital organs which insures rapid growth a healthy and uniform develop- | | cut for s | tempted to run trains into 3 Armenians Are Said " to Provisional Government 0 ST. PETERSBURG, Feb. 23.—Ac- cording to mail reports received from Batoum, racial disorders in the Cau- casus have developed into actual revo- lution in the cities of Batoum, Pati and Kutais, at the eastern end of the Black Sea, under the lead of the Armenians, who have set up a forth of provisional government. Telegraphic communication has been veral days, and it is impos- sible to secure direct confirmation of these reports, but according to one let- ter the Armenian faction a few days ago succeeded in making prisoners of most of the officials and shutting up the officers and-some of the troops in the barracks and, aided to some extent servists, in taking the reins of government into Its own hands. The authorities here and others familiar with conditions in.Caucasus do not attach great importance to by these reports, however, as this region is in a continual state of turmoil, and if it is true that Armenians have suc- ceeded in temporarily establishing themselves in the towns named, it is no indication of a general revolutionary movement, festation of racial feeling between Armenians and Tartars. — STRIKE TIES UP RAILROAD: Not a Single Train Leaves Warsaw Over the Vienna Line. WARSAW, Feb. 22.—Traffic on t Vienna railway has been suspendéd since early this afternoon, the force of employes, including the telegraphers, | ving joined the strike. Not a single train is leaving Warsaw’'s terminus, which is guarded by a strong force of gendarmes keeping back the crowds clamoring for opportunity to leave the city. Two regiments of in- fantry are guarding the interior of the station, the yards and buildings. | Chiefs of the engineering department, acting as firemen and engineers, Warsaw from outside points, but none suc ceeded reaching the city, all hav- ing been held up somewhere along the line. The police vesterday arrested at- the prominent Polish publicist and poet, | Andrew Niemojews -~ R SERGIUS. FIGHT OV Man May Die as Result of Encounter in Salinas. SALINAS, Feb. 22.—As the result of a dispute over troubles in Russia, Robert Boynes, who has been employed as a painter at Pacific Grove by Davia Jacks, has been arrested and may have to answer to a charge of murder. With eeveral others, among whom was Peter Villa, a Southern Pacific section hand, he became involved on Sunday in an argument over the assassinativa .f Grard Duke Sergius,- Boynes s‘ruck a on the nose, causing a fracture id 2 nasal hemorrhage. Last night the physicians attending Villa tified the officers that Villa was low from the loss of blood and was sink- ing. Boynes was thereupon ariested. He takes his arrest as a joke, LI an Many Bodies Lying in Streets. BAKU, Caucasia, Feb. 22.—The military authorities to-day authorized energetic measures to suppress dis- turbances here. This was not accom- plished without bloodshed. All of the official and private offices are closed. Many bodies are lying in the streets, ——— . Workmen’s Demands to Be Granted. BERLIN, Feb. 22.—A dispatch to the Lokal Anzeiger from Warsaw says the Russian Minister of Railroads has telegraphed that by command of the Emperor all the demands of the workmen on the state railroad are to be immediately granted. REPORTS FAVORABLY ON THE CURTIS BILL House Committee Indorses Measure for Reduction of Duty on Philip- pine Sugar and WASHINGTON, Feb. :22.—With but one negative vote the Houge Com- mittee on Ways and Means to-day au. thorized a favorable report ‘on the Curtis bill reducing the duty on to- baeco and sugar from the Philippine Islands to 25 per cent of the Dingley tariff. The bill was amended by in- serting the word “wholly” in the pro- vision requiris such products to be wholly the product and growth of the islands. H COMMERCIAL TREATIES PASSED BY REICHSTAG Agrarian Member Denounces Favored Nation Agreement With the United States. BERLIN, Feb. 22.—The Reichstag to-day passed‘ all- the cemmercial treaties on the third reading. The vote on the Russian treaty was 228 to 81, and on the Austrian treaty 226 to 79. Herr von Oldenberg of the Agrarian League deimanded denunci- ation 'of the mast favored nation pgreement with the Upnlied States, but simply another mani- | :Kansas Producers’ ' Charges Contihued From Page 1, Column 4. bell at Washington charges against the Mis#ouri, Kansas and Texas Railroad Company, . identical with the charges filed against the Atchison, Topeka-and Santa Fe some.days,ago, alleging col- lusion between the Standard Oil Com- pany ang the.railroad’ company in the matter of rates and also alleging the controlling ownership of the raiflroad H by the Standard Oil Company. , {+ + SPRIKES AT ROCKEFELLER. ' Resolutipn Introduced in Legislature of Nebraska. 4B INCOIN, - Neb., Feb. -23.—In the lower house of the Legislature to- , day Revresentative Hunter of Cum- ming County introduced a resolution commending in a preamble the fight in. Kansas .against the Standard Oil Company, and continuing: | _We bid Theodore Roosevelt. President of the United States godspeed in his determined ef- | forts to protect the public interest against en- | éroachments..of -monopoly. i In view of the fact that John D. Rockefeller ! has contrbuted certain sums: toward the erec- { tion ‘ot a building in «connection with Nebras-— Ma's Stite University, we -desire that it shall i be known that the acceptance by Nebraska of a_contribution. which John D. Rockefeller has made {o the university temple fund shall in no benso: be regarded as an apology on the. part of: the Nebraska people for the disrepu- table methods. which the Rockefeller monopoly bas employed. A vote on the resolution will aken to-morrow. B bbb S L I ‘GUTLTY OF CONSPIRACY. be Illinois Supreme Court Affirms Judg- b ment Against Coal Trust. SPRINGFIELD, 1lls,, Feb. 22.—The Supreme Court to-day, in the case of | the Wilmington Ceal Company vs. the { People, sustained: the judgments of the i Cook -County Circuit Court ‘and the 'BOMBARDMENT OF OIL . TRUST IS PRO GALLOWS Association Files Against the Missouri, | Kansas and Texas Railroad. b ‘Wilmington Coal Company.and sixteen other coal companies were found guilty of a conspiracy to control the price of ‘coal. The Supreme Court says that actual agreement necessary in order to constitute the of- fense charged, but that a tacit under- standing between companies would it- lselt be a violation of the antl-trust aw. —a FOR STATE OIL REFINERY. Wilder Bill Is Favorably Reported to Colorado Leglslature, DENVER, Feb. 22.—Representa- tive Wilder's bill appropriating $125,- 000 for the establishment of a State oil refinery was favorably reported to the House by the Finance Committee to-day. The bill also contains pro- visions to regulate the price of oil. Independent oil producers who are supporting the measure have offered to lease and operate the refilnery when constructed and to advance the money for its construction at a low rate of interest. A e DR Oil Refinery Biil Favored, GUTHRIE, Okla., Fed. 23.—The House committee to-day recommended for passage Walker's bill, providing for the appropriation of $200,000 to erect and maintgin a Territorial oil refinery at Stillwater. el Pipe Lines as Common Carriers. WASHINGTON, Feb. 22.—Repre- sentative Scott of Kansas introduced a bill to-day placing pipe lines in the category of common carriers and sub- [ ject to interstate commerce laws. gL ATy Bill to Regulate Rallroads. TOPEKA, Kans., Feb. 22.—The Kansas Senate to-night, after hours of discussion, passed a bill for the regu- lation of railroads. FYHUMED HEAD SAVES HIS NECK Montana Lawyer Digs Up Body and Proves Client Did —— Special Dispatch to The Call. | i | LEWISTON, Mont, Feb. 22.— Friends of Milton O. Howell, who was sentenced in 1898 to be hanged for the murder of Thomas Rozling, which sentence was afterward commuted to | life imprisonment, are circulating a | petition asking Governor Toole to pardon him, and scores of signatures are being ~obtained. This was a “cause ‘celebre’” in Montana. The principals in the tragedy were neighboring stockmen and the killing was the result of a quarrel, during which blows were struck. After the murder Howell fled to Canada, but was captured and brought back. | . The prosecution contended he ! killed h's man in cold blood by shoot- ing him from behind. This point was bitterly contested by the defense and an effort made to have the body of Rozling exhumed in order to deter- mine it, but the court would not or- der it to be done. After the convic- tion and while Howell was under sen- ! tence of death W. E. Court, his at- “ torney, himself dug up Rozling’s body without any authority, secured the head and hurried off to Helena with | it. According to the statement of certain medical men it showed posi- | tively that Rozling was not shot from | behind, as claimed. The startling | exhibit was shown to Governor Toole jand the death sentence was coms | muted. | The attorney’s conduct caused in- | tense indignation among Rozling's friends, and threats of having him in- | dicted_were made, but never carried | out. It is upon the evidence supplied | by the head that the petition for ex- ecutive clemency is now based, and | general belief is that Howell will se- | cure his liberty. COMPLAINS TO POLICE | AND IS RECOGNIZED [ Man Who Says He Was Robbed Said i to Be a Hold-Up Artist. PORTLAND, Feb. 22.—With un- paralieled effrontery, C. R. Marshand, accompanied by his wife, appeared at ithe police statfon to-day and com- | plained to a detective of an alleged robbery of his house. The detective in- | stantly spotted the complainant as the principal in a daring hold-up of the night before. 2 Last night an unmasked man walked into a Hood street saloon and forced the men present to give up their valu- ables. The victims had a good look at the bold bandit and gave the police an accurate description. When Mar- | shand walked into the police station, he was recognized at once and two of the men robbed the night before soon appeared and gwore positively to the identity of the night marauder. YOOKING FOR THE DIAMONDS MRS. CHADW!(F SMUGGLED Government Officers Are in New York on Trail of Contraband Gems ‘Worth $1,500,000¢ NEW YORK, Feb. 22—C. F. Leach, Collector of Customs at Cleveland, and F. H. Oldham, chief of the division of insolvent banks of the Comptroller's office in Washington, are in this city for the purpose of making a search for diamonds and other dutiable prop- erty that Mrs. Cassie Chadwick is sup- posed to have brought into this coun- try without having paid the customs charges. Leach recently declared that he had discovered evidence of the $1,000,000 or $1,500,000 in diamonds “supposed to have been sequestered by Mrs. Chad- wick. If any diamonds are found Old- them placed to the credit of the de- positors of the Oberlin National Bank. " SAN DIEGO, Feb, 22.—A mild rain fell “here this morning. - - a Cold in One Bromo Qui To Pay Not Shoot From Behind, ham intends to do all he can to have |- Take ive inine | Au drugglsts refund the money if nim il B, W, Grove's signature is on m-fl‘- 5 BABY THROWN INTO' FURNACE Rochester Engineer, at Point | of Pistol, Forced to Witness Cremation of Small Child —_— ROCHESTER, N. Y., Feb. 22.—G. ‘W. McCaffery, engineer in charge of an eighteen-horsepower boiler in a | building on Furnace street used to heat several business places, has in- formed the police that about 2 o’clock last Tuesday morning two men and a | woman entered the boiler-room and while one man covered him with a brace of reyolvers the.other. threw a package intd the firepot on the redhot ! coals. J _The woman uttered a shriek as he did so, and one of the men threat- | ened her life also. McCaffery says he | heard the scream of a baby as the package struck the fire. The men | waited -several minutes and then | opened the furnace door again and raked the bundle about on the coals. | Before leaving the men threatened | to kill McCaffery if he ever revealed | a word of the matter. McCaffery kept | silent until it preyed on his conscience to such an extent he could keep quiet | no longer. He says he has been un- | able to eat or sleep and he is appar- ently in a very nervous state. All| three of the party weré so dlsguisedl that he could not give a good descrip- tion of them. —_——————— DIAMONDS HIDDEN UNDER THE HIDE OF A STALLION Smmugglers Adopt Brutal Method of | Outwitting Custom-House OfEcials. BURTON, Minn, Feb. 22.—Con- cealing $5000 worth of diamonds be- neath the hide of a Clydesdale stallion, a party of immigrants who recently passed through this city smuggled the gems through the Unit- ed States Custom-house at New York. The fraud was discovered by F. K. Reely, a farmer near here, with whom the horse had been left because of its inability to travel on account of lameness. The immigrants took the stallion to the woods and put a bullet through its head. They took off the hide in a fashion which interested Reely, who was quietly watching.” He saw them pick over the inner side of the skin, and after they had left he examined it. He noticed scars, and the inner side of these seemed to have been carefully scraped. 3 Reely finally found a half-carat diamond in one scar. He cut the hide into small strips and boiled it and finally got two more good stones. ————————— BIG STRIKE EXPECTED AT THE PORTLAND FAIR PORTLAND, Feb. 22—The labor situation at the Lewis and Clark Fair grounds has again assumed a threat- ening aspect. To-day only a miscar- riage of plans, it is said, prevented a walkout, and to-morrow the question is exvected to come to a head. The cause of the trouble is trace- able to the same discontent, broken out anew, which precipitated the strike two weeks ago. Tge principal source of disagreement, it is said, is the question of wages. —_————— ‘Would Stop Racing. SACRAMENTO, Feb. 22.—Houser to-day presented a petition from 4000 citizens of Los Angeles in favor of the Espy anti-racetrack bill, and Espey presented an Alameda County petition containing 3200 signatures. . —————— Good Printing. If you want good, attractive printing, thé Kkind that brirgs business, call and . see us. We print business card he:d envalngeln and_all kinds e mercial CEEDING; is not ° © ®© | | 1 © [ L) accept it. the California Fig Syrup Co. as with joyous hearts and smiling faces they romp and play—when in health —and how conducive to health the games in which they indulge, the outdoor life they enjoy, the cleanly, regular habits they should be taught to form and the wholesome diet of which they should partake.. How tenderly their health should be preserved, not by constant medication, but by careful avoidance of every medicine of an injurious or objectionable nature and if at any time a " remedial agent is required, to assist nature, only those of known excellence should be used; remedies which are pure and wholesome and truly beneficial in effect, like the pleasant laxative remedy, Syrup of Figs, manufactured by Syrup of Figs has come into general favor in many millions of well informed families, whose estimate of its quality and excellence is based upon personal knewledge and use. Syrup of Figs has also met with the approval of physicians generally, be- cause they know it is wholesome, simple and gentle in its action. We inform all reputable physicians as to the medicinal principles of Syrup of Figs, obtained, by an original method, from certain plants known to them to act most benefici- ally and presented in an agreeable syrup in which the wholesome Californian blue figs are used to promote the pleasant taste; therefore it is not a secret rem- edy and hence we are free to refer to all well informed physicians, who do not approve of patent medicines and never favor indiscriminate self-medication. Please to remember and teach your children also that the genuine Syrup of Figs always has the full name of the Company—California —plainly printed on the front of every bottles of one size only. ckage and that it is for sale in If any dealer offers any other than the regular Fifty cent size, or having printed thereon the name of any other company, do not If you fail to get the genuine you will not get its beneficial effects. Every family should always have a bottle on hand, as it is equally beneficial for the parents and the children, whenever a laxative remedy is required. el LU s ° @ k) ig Syrup Co. DIRT IS FLYING ON THE ISTHMUS Substantial Progress Is Be- ing Made in Work of Dig- ging the Panama Canal NEW YORK, Feb. 22.—Reports of substantial progress in the actual work of digging thé great isthmian canal were brought to this ¢ity to-day by Canal Commissioners Willlam Barclay Parsons and W. H. Burr, who arrived on the steamer Allianca from Colon. Professor Burr made the subjoined statement: The committes on engineering of _the Isthmian Canal Commission report that they found the work generally in much better and more advanced condition than they anticipated. In the great Culebra cut the detall of con- struction that will take the most time and most _money, the chief engineer has installed and has at work three large American steam shovels and is erecting five more. Four thou- sand laborers are now at work on different portions of the work and 1000 more have aiready been engaged in the West Indies and Central America. Substantial progress Is therefore being made. ‘While on the isthmus the commission was fn daily conference with the chief engineer with the view of formulating certain plans, contracts for which can be let at an early day. These plans and the accompanying data will be submitted to the commission at Wash- ington. At Panama and Colon the laying of sewers and water pipes is progressing steadily, so that in the near futuresboth of these cities will for the first time be furnished with a system of sewers and water supply with abund- duce of wholescme water. The presence of yellow fever is to be regretted, but was to be expected, as this disease is always present in_tropical ‘countries in America, unless con- tinued sanitary precautions have been taken. Prior to the tary work of the commis- ston no precautionlj or selentific measures have been taken on the Isthmus to guard against this disegse. The same medical officers who succeeded in eliminating the fever from Havana are now repeating the crusade in Panamna. Beyond any question equally suc- cesstul results will be attained. At the pres- ent time there is nothing approaching an epidemic and the conditions are greatly im- Proved over those of previous years. Some of the newspaper accoynts that have reached the isthmus from the North were much ex- The commission returned more than satis- fled with the general conditions of the enter- prise and belleves that completion can be attained In less time than is popularly sup- P Some time has of necessity been de- voted by the engineering staff to the study and investigation of certain detalls not fully deterruned by the French. This preliminary work 18 now really ended and the actual work of construction on a large scale can soon begin. Mr. Parsons’ attention was called to the investigation of the affairs of the Panama Railroad and in the mat- ter of fees said: “These fees are all right; we all got them. Corporations pass them. Ten dollars is handed each director after each meeting. They amount to $150 to $200 a year.” 3 Judge G. F. Little, who will defend & lottery company’s right to seil lot- tery tickets in the canal zone, also arrived on the Alllanca. The case is on appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States. WOULD REORGANIZE ¢ KANSAS DEMOCRACY ‘W. J. Bryan Takes “Back to the Peo- ple” as Subject for Washington's Birthday Address. TOPEKA, Kans., Feb. 22.—W. J. Bryan addressed a meeting of Kansas Democrats to-night on “Back to the People.” The occasion was a Wash- ington’s birthday banquet given by the younger element in the Kansas Dem- ocracy. Advantage was taken of the occasion to begin a reorganization of the Democratic party in the State. It was decided that a vigorous campaign of stati , i - { would be waged until the next elec-' born, Vail &aflum( 2 g tion in the hope of electing a State Democratic ticket. State headquartersl JFREE ' FREE ‘will be maintained here permanently. | SUNDAY OCALL POOLROOM IN_ COAL YARD _Five men | SMALL ADS. one Woman Were arrested yesterday in Sullivan's. coal violu “fi;’;‘ybemuu;:;:' i ! and ating H A NEAR ;| nance. According to the police, they were CUT GLASS making bets there. - DESSERT DISH. R T B e s 2 frmsicisibe . Sikn: oEaing st - Free With "y i1l cass of ‘a student who n, o . that her daughter will be such a per- LED T0 ALTAR I SAN JOSE Two Society Belles of the: Garden City Become Brides | on Washington’s Birthday | Bpecial Dispatch to The Call. SAN JOSE, Feb. 22.—Two San Jose | soclety belles were married to-day./ Miss Alice Gussefeld became the bride of Dr. Frank B. Cross of Brookiyn, N.| Y., and Miss Luella Burrel was wedded | to Richard Ernest Hyde. Both cere- | monies were celebrated in TFrinity Epis-| copal Church by Rev. J. W. Gresham. | Miss Gussefeld, who is the daughter | of Mr. and Mrs. William Gussefeld, Is | a beautiful girl and a talentea mu cian. Miss Irene Moule acted as bridesmaid for her and Charles| O’'Brien was best man. Mr. and Mrs. | Cross will make their home in Brook-i lyn. "M iss Burrel is the daughter of Mrs. | A. H. Burrel. She is an attractive and | accomplished voung lady and hu; many friends among the younger set.| After the ceremony a wedding feast| and reception were held at her moth-| er's home. Mr. and Mrs. Hyde will spend their honeymoon at Del Monte and Coronado. ——————————— MAY BE ON WAY WEST TO WED SAN JOSE MAN Rumor Couples the Name of Judge Rosenthal With Wealthy Canadian Girl. NEW YORK, Feb. 23.—A romance that began a year ago at the break- fast table of a Southwestern limited and which lasted from Syracuse to Buffalo is believed to be the cause of the sudden departure of Miss Blanche Fields, the strikingly beautiful daugh- ter of Joseph Fields, a rich Canadian, who left New York hastily to-day with a through ticket for San Fran- cisco. The friends of the young Canadian woman believe that the trip is the sequel to a proposal of marriage that was made to her on the Syracuse-Buf- falo trip and that her departure pre- sages her speedy marriage to Judge Eugene Rosenthal of San Jose. Miss Fields is 23, with golden halir, blue eyes and a falr complexion. Her beauty and her wealth, for she is said | to be one Of the richest girls of To- ronto, enabled her to command a good social position. SUNSET LIMITED 1S D! IN TEXAS Tramp Killed, Mail Clerk Hurt, but Passengers on Southern Pacific Train Escape Injury. SAN ANTONIO, Tex., Feb. 22.— Southern Pacific passenger train No. 9, known as the Sunset limited, from New Orleans for San Francisco, was derailed to-day near Sandy Fork, Tex. TFive cars are reported to be in the ditch. A tramp was killed. None of the passengers was seriously injured. E. B. Randolph of Houston, mail clerk, sustained painful bruises. ———————— SANTIAGO DE CHILE, Feb. 22.—Bubonic plague has appeared -t!& port of Pisagua, forty-four miles north of Iquique. The dis- E.. has caused a panic among the inhab- ADVERTISEMENTS. Pears’ soap in stick form; con- venience and economy in shaving. It is the best and cheap- Sold all over-the world, Anyway, one-half of the world knows that the other half is looking for the best of it. The filler is in the pen and the pen is filled by pressing down_on the metal _bar. after first unlock- ing it. Does not drip nor smear ink and insures clean fingers. THE ATV PEN. Prices...... £3.00 to 85.00 XODAK D D at eut prices. Ansco Cameras. Cyko Developing Paper and Daylight Loading Films. Send for particulars. Mail orders promptly filled. THAT MAN PITTS F. W. PITTS, The Stationer, 1008 MARKET STREET, Opp. Fifth, SAN FRANCISCO. No Breakfast Table complete without EPPS'S The Cream of Cocoas. COCOA The Most Nutritious and Hconomical. SHERWOOD & SHERWOOD, Pacific Coast Agte Shiloh’s Consumptio Cure b cured them of chronic coughs» ‘cannot all be mistaken. must be some truth in it. Try & bottie for that cough of yours. Prices: S.C. Weits &Co. 10 25c. S0c. §1. LeRoy, N.Y., Teroato, Can. Dr. Gibbow’s Dispensary, 629 KEARNY ST. Esubisned in 1834 for the treatment of Private Dinensés, W Debilley or L e nlind mind god e Doctor cureswhen G CTO DIRECTORY OF RESPONSIBLE HOUSES.

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