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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY. AUGUST 3, 1905 CREAT ROADS I TIED UP TUnion Operators on Great Northern and Northern Pa- cific Abandon Their Keys WAR TO THE FINISH Officials Say That in. Ten Days the Places of Strik- Will Be All Filled — ers With the telegraph- ofti- tain ots at carload refused : at’ §: til 1:83 p. m. All re refused their we of troubie induced come with one ex- work. S ky N Re locate gged in and time. Train present conditions T oo party of to visit a t arri ch; thou eduled trip at Ta. m. In ision superintendent tv to speak for the demons! a badly of traffic RIO GRANDE STRIKE IS BEGUN. Uuien Lender Relicves Order Will Be Generally Obeved. s, 2.—The - strike at Brotherhood »f £ . es_ on the ¢ t'5 o'clock to-pight. " It can- n definritely intil the regu- 1 for reporti ow morn- ng how:exte: kmen of % it Lot A YOU CAN'T BUY CONTENTMENT IN CAR-LOADS. Contentment i€ never wholesaled. If wise—<and fortunate—you may ough each day for that day's needs It is the Radium of Commodities. You can’t hoerd it, nor hide it away for fu-| ture use—for eyery. circumstance of daily life turns thief Ne financier will ever “corner the market,” however; so that your daily supply will always be available. Of couree you must know how to go a-marketing for Contentment. It's not sold under that name.. Most commonly it 15 in the guise of a “want advertise- ment.” : An@ of course ygu could contract for | a hundred want advertisements at one | time—but lhl.‘v would mean that you : The | little event or circumstance which:will | were sadly bankrupt of Content. make a want ad. necessary to your Con- tent to-day may come to pass within the hour—-and if.it does your antidote for worry is ready for you: And it to- | morrow brings anotlier wrinkle-making | episode in your daily life, a 1ittle want advertisement will again straighten out | the tangle. Min- | | vision. | COUNTY | l(wenty~eight counties of the State, is ND BIG CATCH, BUT A SHELL Captain Harry Graham, Who | Is Engaged to Wed Ethel Barrymore, TIs a Poor Man | WILL REMAIN ON STAGE | Her Sweetheart's l‘Izu'nin;;'5 Capacity Being Small, A\c-i tress - Will Be Provider| e | Epecial Dispateh to The CaiL mething of a2 mild | ed in social cir- has here cles by nouncement of the engagement bet ntain Harry Gra- thel ¥ymore much of a the first or re- es in the best cir a gt iy's man. As he is enuous life by 5 which and s fortune are achieved Iy expected that he wo blem of getting through t comfor And and wi might have wealthy bacl abo ur between the ¢ act to Iother nerica al one and she altogether 1 can commend a in it than the pres- was Gover- was in that has a $10 of Grahan House Lords, the perg suite of anart There Upper es his home uls of Northampton. | the second son by a host of ari d so far as influen he can count on a| has sum- on vears e habit and, wooed t was announced private apartments in Charles r, presumably that she may r fiance. The house is | wee from Lord Ro. -‘ residence in Barclay Square, aham goes ly to at Rie Grande have obe tise The offi road declare not er the situatior do pot believe that any of the foremen intend lo strike President Wilson of the brotherhood is here in charec of the strike firr iis belief that the 1800 who ned strike order witl out to a r e said to-day that he would conduct the strike in an orderly | manner and thal the public would | spected in the fdgnt | MONTANA. ! STAND FIRM IN —Fourth | HELENA, Mont. Aug.’ 2 Vice President I the Order of B Telegraphers Helgna | and opened headgquar for the )se of taking cha the strik- | the controversy in Mon- | t 4 He says that the members of the order in the State have re=ponded almost to a man to President Perham's ~all, and that the railroads are having | more difficulty in handling trains | an they admit. He takes issue with General Manager Horn's statement of | the points at issue between the com- | { pany and the men. | R ROAD ASKS ¥OR GUARDS. Northern Pacific Requests the Ald of | Deputy Sheriffs. | SEATTLE, Aug. 2.—Up to noon to- | day but one telegrapher had struck on | the Seattle dlvision -of the Nerthern | Pacific, But the division is affected by the tie-up of trains eastward. To guard agajnst the posfibility of trouble vandalism, the road has asked for Auburn, Lester and | sheriffs at all Tocated on, the Pacific di- | Three Great Northern opera- | tors Stationed here went out, and on | the Coast line repofts show that a | number of others have struck. All Great Northern commercial wires are silent. or v deputy Palmer ACT CASE WILL GO TO SUPREME COURT Appeal to Be Taken From the De- cision Which Called Statute Unconstitutiounl. NAPA, Aug. 2-—The case of Justice [ by cutting his throat with arpocketknife. | Church of Fakersfield. W. D. Johnson of Napa County vs. A. L. Gunn as auditor, involving the sal- aries of Justices and Constables in to be appeal to the Supreme Court of - California ithout delay. This is the case in which the Appellate Court in Sacramento recently decided that the county government act, as amended in 1901, was wumconstitutional, thus cut- ting off the salaries of Justices and Constables in Napa, Alameda, Contra Costa, Colusa, Glenn, Monterey, Lods Angeles, Shasta and a number of other | counties. [ w | [MINISTRY IS FOR PEACE [ Will SWEDEN'S NEW CABINET NAMED Christian Luhdeborg, a Pow- erful Conservative Leader, Is King Oscar’s Premier Strive for an Amicable Understanding With the Seceding Nowse People| STOCKHOLM, Aug. — A German squadron, cons'sting of seven battleships, | eight crulsers and eleven torpedo-boats, arrived here to-night. STOCKHOLM, Sweden, Aug. alition ministry was formed to-day, follows: Minister of State—Christian Lundeborg. —A co- as Foreign Affafrs—Count A. F. Wacht- | meisier. | Justice—Judge C. A. Ber; | War—Colonel L. H. Ti . Marine—8. A, Lindemai. Interior—J. Wi Finan Herr Blesert. Education and iccicsigstical Affairs— | Herr Hammerskjold. Agricuiture—A. D. Petersen. hout portrollo—Herr Pet- n and Staaif, Herr Lunaeberg, the new Premier, is ice speaker of the first chamber of the dag, d chairman of the special commitie pointed by the Rigsdag deal with the si3 arising from the di solution of the union, Count Wachtmeis- ter is a member of the first chamber & to '|mircetor of the land office. Judge Berg is also a member of the firs: chamber. | Minister of Marine Lindeman is director | of telegraphs. Herr Hammerskiold is president of the FATE NOWAESTS WITH THE JURY PORTLAND, Aug. The land fraud case Involving Congressman Willia son, Commissioner Briggs and Dr. Von 4 been in the hands ol > early this afternoon. o'clock to-night th had not reach- | ed a verdict and was locked up for the night. \rguments in cluded this mornin immediately upon the case wi con- this af‘crnoon, 1e convening of Lhe court, Ju de Haven dellverel hi | charge to * ~ jury. Seldom, if ever, in ‘Oregon, h.. u case been so bitterly | fought as the present one. Scathig |as was the investive of Judge Bennett in his closing argument for the defens: thirusts no ‘less Attorney Heancy vesterduy there were keen when District | ttok up the closing argui | Government to-duy. Under the law in e ment for the | ja conepi the jury may acqult | one of the defendants. —_ e e i fomax §L53) Guarauteed Shoes { Honest all through. Equal to any $5.00 Shoe in stvie. fit and wear. Lomax $2.50 and $3.50 Shoes for men. 16 Fourth st.* MEMORIAL WILL TAKE, | FORM OF CLUBHOUSE Responsibility for the murder of Gladys Cunningham, the young San Jose girl who died from the effects of a criminal opera- tion July 17, was fixed on Dr. Frank | homas yesterday by the Coroner's jury ith & recommendation that he be tried for the crime. No mention of Dr. Nims' name was made he verdict of the jury although he brought the girl here for | . and although he and Thomas | ted for the crime on her[Qay Pipoo People Enlarge mination of all the wit- nesses in the case, a visit was paid to Scope of Their Oviginal the room in which the girl died. This Plan | in the office of Dr. Thomas in_the 3 preme Court building. Miss Lena Roh- dan, who says is the housekeeper for | SAN DIEGO, Aug. 2.—As soon as the | | Dr. Thomas, present at the opera- | extent of the disaster on the gunboat tion performe it was co: ctory in | Bennington was known to the local pub- | her statements abdout it She said the | lic it was proposed that funds be raized | girl was to be operated uvon for “ner-| by popular subseription for the pur; | 3 The jury returned this ver- | of erecting a shaft in the little mill!:\ry‘\ cemetery to commemorate the event by find that Gladys Cunningham, | Which the Bennington boys. whose bodies | onsin, occupation | were buried there, lost.their lives. The J came to her death | announcement of the proposal. was fol- | 53 Huniaioe Lk My \‘"S"; lowed by the gift of many all sums | o0s, | of money, which now amount to a little 17th day of July, ulent perftonitis following a crim over a thousand dollars. It is now ation performed at the hands of Dr. Frank | stated by Captain F. J. Drake of the we believe the evidence is suffi- | Mare Island Navy Yard that there is for iri - e S HND RICH PLUNDER L IS Ao e practically no doubt that the Government will crect a fine shaft at the military cemetery, Point Loma. in memory of the | dead seamen. It will probably be a single | shaft of stone bearing bronze plates in- | seribed with the names of the dead <ail- ors. In view of this it has heen decided to enlarge the scope of the popular pro- posal and endeavor to secure sufficient funds to luild and equip a clubhouse which shall offer to sailors on shore a social. rendezvous without the kind of | allurements found in the resorts often frequented by mariners. An organization has been effected consisting of the fol- lowings officers: President, Colonel R. V. Dodge; vice president, Roscoe Howard; secretary, J. Clyde Hizar; treasurer, L. J. Wilde. It is hoped to raise $50,000 for the object in view. s, C S FUNERAL OF HALLETT. BAKHERSF(1LD, Aug. 2—Clothed in the blue of the navy, which he served faithfully for four years, and with flow- ers heaped in profusion upen the cas- ket, the body of Hurry Hallett, the young ‘marine who died in San Diego on Monday frow the effects of injurles Thieves entercd the home of J. Whit- man, at 6% Steiner street, some time yes- terday during the absence of the Whit- man family and after ransacking the house carried off $30) i coin and fewelry valued at $8%0. The family of Whitman attended a pienic yesterday,.and he did not return from his business until 9 o'clock last evening, when hé discovered that the thieves had gained.an entrance to his home with the aid of a skeleton key and stoden everything. they could find in their hurried. search._ The jewelry consisted of diamonds and | brooches and was the property-ef Mrs.: Whitman. The matter was reported to | the- police an hour after the Whitmans | St 2 ; received in the Bennington disaster, discovercd thelr loss and dgteCtives are| wus 1ala to rest this afternoon with L dediziad b7 military honors. Ie was buried as i TIRER OF LIFE WHEN IN SHADOW OF GRAVE Friendless Man Sevénty- Seven Years of Age 'T'ries Suicide. hero, for snch he was. Suffering un- told agony from the scaias that cov- ered his body, he Tought with almost superhuman strength for his life. Ho went to his death without complaint, and so with the salute given to those who die honorably for their country, and with the sad notes of taps sound- ing above his grave, the city's repre- sentatives of the Natlonai Guard paid the iast token of honor to the dead lad. The funeral services were most im- pressive, and were held at the home of Mrs. R. A. Edmonds, a sister of Hallett. The services were conducted by Rev. evening at Long Bridge, above Saratoga, | EAward Morsan, rector of St. Paul's The remains | were borne fromn the house between two I'lines of infantry: R -Special Dispatch to The Call. . SAN JOSE, Aug. 2.—Louis F. Marien, an aged Frenchman, attempted sulcide. last The blade was not sharp enough, how- ever, to cause death. Marien repented as soon as the blood started to flow, and did what he could to check it. The man Inventor of Many Machines Dead. walked all night,-a distance of about fif- BOSTON, Aug. 2.—Duane Herbert teen miles, to the receiving hospital in|Church, whose invention of about 150 this city, where he arrived early .this | machines has revolutionized the manu- morning. He will recover. .. |facture of watches in America during Marien has been employed on a stock | the last twenty years, died yesterday ranch at the head of Stevens Creek. He |from heart failure at his home in West was discharged yestérday morning- and | Newton. Since 1882 he has been em- walked' to Long Bridge, where he" ‘hi- [ ployed in the factory of a watch com- | vinced that th | of Norway. | whom he discussed Far Goeta high court. Herrs W. Widen, Bie- | sert, Petersen and Staaff are deputies | and Herr Pettersen is a lawyer. The new Premier is one of the pillars | of the Conservative majority in the upper house. He was largely responsible for the conditions framed by the Rigsdag (o1 the dissolution of hte union and King| Oscar selected him for the premiership, as he considered it desirable t the same influence which dominated the work | of the committee should prevail during | the negotiations for the carrying out of | | its programme. In the new Cabinet the Liberals are well represen.ed and the ministry can be depended upon to seek a peaceful solu- | tion of the difficulties between Sweden Norway. KAISER DACKS PRINCE CHARLES. Hopes to See ‘he Danish Prince on the ‘Thrope of Norway. COPENEAG Aug. 2 rce his | arrival at the Danish court Emperor | Willian: appears to have become con- | is no hope of a Prine of the house of DBernadotte hPLDn!h\:: | King of Norway. His Majesty now favors Prince Churies of Denmark, anl he is quoted as “1f Prince O King Norway course, | prefe fore shall her didacy of Prince Prince and Princess C paid a iong visit to Emperor William, wiien his Majesty in promised to | wt Prin Charles for the H.runu; The Empcror also met the | i ter, 51 Iswolsky, with | Eastern af- | fairs, on which M. Iswolsky is well in- | formed, having heen Minister at Tokio. | e HENRY WATTERSON ving: .rles does not become ill be a republic. Of : monarchy, and there- after support the car Charles.” | arles to-night | Russiarn ON THE ARINTOCRACY |} 1wvs Europe Supplies a Bet- ter Brand Than This | Country. | NEW YORK, Aug. 2—Comparing the American and European types of aristo- cracy, Colonel Henry Watterson of Louisville, Ky.. who returned to-day on | the steamship Oceanic from a trip to | Burope says: “I-observed the aristocracy pretty close- | Iy while I was over there, and I have reached the conclusion thai the foreign | aristocracy s of 'a much better grade than the American article. There, aristo- cracy means lineage and brains. Here— well it means auything, from bad whisky | to Standard Oil.” | Watterson said he read the accounts of the 'scandal in the Department of | Agricuiture and added: “I have often wondered how so many | seientific men connected with the Gov- ernment at comparatively small salaries | could live so well. Tt only g0es to show | that the college man is not a success in | polities.” SOLDIERS GUARD ALL - NIGHT IN VISALIA Two Men- Arrested Suspected | of Having Set the | Tires. VISALIA, Aug. 2—Three-quarters of a block of smoking embers in the eastern part of the city and one-quarter of a block of smoking embers in the central | part are mute reminders of last night's disastrous conflagrations. Figures on the losses are not materially changed from the night report. The men of Company E of the militia were on guard all night. They were sworn in as deputles by the City Marshal. BEvery unknown man found In the streets had to give an ac- count of himself or go- to jail. Two men are in jall on suspicion of having set the fires. Hundreds of dolars’ /worth of property were damaged by be- ing thrown into the streets. It is esti- mated that the total loss will aggregate $21,000. NO JAPANESE LABOR FOR PANAMA CANAL Emigration Companies De- cide Isthmus Is Too Unsanitary. TOKIO, Aug. 3.—The emigration com- panies object to sending laborers to Pan- ama to work on the canal, on the ground that the conditions there are unsatis- factory. They assert that there are no arrangements to care for the sick, no provision for returning home. the families of deceased laborers and no allowance i | | the mosquito ordinance and it was later | | | | fined to t one sporadic case. Only two | the United States Coast and Geodé afiroads, the Vicksburg, Shreveport ! Survey. the leader of and Cotton Belt, are taking passengers | party being J. F. Pratt, aiso of | out of Ythe city, and these are going ! United States ( t and Geodetic to the mountains of Tennessee and the who will coramand Carolinas or to points in Missouri. All give his associates the benefit trains from the south are stopped at the , his thirty years' experience in as rish iine, twenty miles distant, and nomical, geodetic. hydrographic | bring the man suffering with fever into DEATH'S HARVEST INCREASING. - Victims’ lgnorance =~ Complicates Yellow Fever Situation in New Orleans. Continued from Page 1, Columa 7. the city yesterday afterncon and last night, but quarantine linés are very | tightiy drawn to-day. The parish Board fof Health has-ordered all trains from the south to stop at the parish line. The city Board -of Health to-day: re- jceived word of a developed ease of yel- {low fever on beard a northbound Kanm- sas City Southern ‘train. The. authori- ties at Mansfield were ordered to stop the train. fentific fight and especially to study the s h now in progress based on the mosquiio theory. However, the Louisiana officials expect little modification of the quaran- tine regulations until the fever is entirely stamped out owing to the widespréad disinclination of the Mississippi public to accept the mosquito theory. FEDERAL CONTROL. Surgeon White of the Marine Hospital service has returned trom the Mississippi coast, from which point he talked over the iong distance telephone with Gov- erncr Vardaman. Dr. White said the Governor had given courteous consent to the establishment of a detention camp on the Mississippi side of the State line on the Loulsvilic and Nashviiie road and would arrange for the admission to Mis- i ies PATIENTS CONVALESCENT. Sufferers on Steamship Seguranca 1 at New York ire Recovering. NEW YORK, Aug. 2.—Four of- the five persons taken from the San Jacinto, from j Galveston, and sent to Hofman Island | yesterda, for observation as to fevew symptoms were discharged from quar- ppi points of persons from New Or- | ::;‘::m'o-d: The patients from: the who entered the camp and are dis- | S Maire S & to-day. i with certificates of the Federal 3 cons There. I3 no longer any ob-} State Soidiers on Guard. stacle to the movement of passengers | LITTLE ROCK, Ark., Aug, 2.—Details i of the State military are being made to- e question of whether Federal control | day to guard the gatew of the situation pught to be invited is still | Rigid shotgun quarantine discussed, but unless graver conditions | forced. The lines are tighte arice it is not resarded as unlikely that { hour., there will be any movement in that di- —_— ection. Mayor Herrman to-day signed Virginia NORFOLK, Va., anforces Quarantine. Aug iarag- reviewed in the official jowrnal. It Te- | gine” auningy all v ks ‘ te insi ¢rom quircs that cisterns shall be screened | 5ouine belng rigidly entorced within forty—<ight hours by property owWn- |y tpe 7 e Seeie authition ers cr their agents. the Virginia Capes in Ham Passenger and freight traffic on the - e & Hempton el raliroads in and out of New Orleans is > practicaliy paralyzed. All suburban serv- Quarantine in Alabama. ice to coast towns was discontinued a | HCT T ERY. Ala.. Au, —Among week ago and almost daily the railroads ‘“"« places which quarantine nst have been dropping one or mere trains | Montgomery to-day are Birm ym, Tuscaloosa, Decatur and New Decatur, unil the scrviee on most of the lines is at | a minimum. DETENTION The detecntion camps on outside of New Orleans are filled with refugees. The detention camp om the Louisvilie and Nashville Raiiroad, one of the main outlets from the gulf was locat- Ala.; and" Columt | Miss. West Point, Ga., s, CAMPS FILLED. —_——— the railroads GENERAL WOOD SAYS HE WILL RETURN TO ISLANDS Expects to Spend Two More Vears ds ed to-day, arrangements being finally Commander in the Philip- made to piace the station .on the line pines. between Loulsiana and Mis: . AU| BOSTON, A Major Genéral the tr: north as Cairo, | trains carry armed guards n in- " | Leonard wood, spections extending as far i U. S. A. who returped from his command in t e Philippines a ; few weeks ago for a slig Mobile has tightened its protective cor- | on his head taid fo darr = Crorouon don and has ordered, in addition to disin- | ] ynderst gy o d n 0 understand there have been fu- tion, detention of five days for all | ... ‘o r coming from Central and South |y, e G e L th | the Philippines. I want to say that'I - o sincerely w t s back intend Texarkana, on the Hne between Af- | o opr oy o Lyl oy gy Fomess 1 5 i |to do so in about a month. I expect kansas and Texas, has ordered a discon- | ¢0 °0 S0, 1% Soout & tinuance of al! trains between Shreveport, | & “Pe] SV IR B where a case :ppeared last nfght at Tex- arkana Atk as, as well as Mississippi, is using it militlamen as quarantiné officers apd has stationed them at various points to prevent the landing of peopie from in- fected . distriets. —_———— | SON OF LATE “BOSS™ TWEED OF NEW YORK A SUICTDE | Takes His Life by Jumping From anm Upper Verandah of a Shotsun quarantines prevail in many | . Sanitarium. parts of the far South, this emphatic | MIDDLESTOWN, Comm., Aug. 2 manner of stopping refugees having beeil | pprough a return filed by af ander in operation near Vicksburg for about & | ey c" ¢ The offiee o the ton iein week. WASHINGTON, Aus. 2—Surgeon wen- | 12 192%, e (4t became public. that on eral Wyman of the Public Health ‘"d.rhg laté Willlam M. Tweed of New Marine Hospital Service said to-day that he had not received any official netifica- tion of the conflict between the State au- therities of Louisiana and Mississippl over the question of quarantine. He added: “The small boats that went into | Lake Borgne and to the mouth of LaKe Burgne inlet were probably under the State and local authorities of Mississippl. Surgeon Wasdin of the Public Health and Morine Hospital Service is assisting in protecting the towns of the gulf coast of York, known as “Boss” Tweed, commit- ted suicide by jumping from an upper | verandah of the Comnecticut Hospital for the Insane —————— POURS INK INTO HER EAR’ AND MAY LOSE HEARING FINDLAY. Ohi | Stratton probably wil ing because' of hav Mississippi makes the requet of the au- | With ink to-day while attempting to thoritles of that State. He Is using the | answer a telephone call United Siates cutter Winona to notify | Miss Stratton, hearing the ‘phone ssengers from New Orleans that they | bell. reached for the receiver without cannot land at that place and that they | looking have the option of either going back or | ink bottle. proceeding to Ship Island quarantine, |ear. where they can be held under observation | —_— Slinee 10 taxe. aver the sman, vessets of | MAKING MAGNETIC SURVEY OF PACIFIC the State which are said to have gone ¢ it. Instead, she grasped an which she placed to her into the waters of Louisiana.” BRFIEE: SR TAKING TO THE MOUNTAINS, Fear of Yellow Fever Drives Louisian- ans Into Neighboring States. With a view to gatherirg valuable data concerning the distribution of magnetic forces over the Pacific Ocean SHREVEPORT, La, Aug. 2.—An offi- | an expeditioh, backed & the dep: clal report issued by the Board of ment of international research in ter- restrial ‘magnet of the Institution of Washington, will this port In a few days on the Galilee. 3 The work of research will be under the direction of Dr. L. A. Bauer, who is in charge of the masgnetic work of riegte Health on the e of yellow fever at the detention camp ot the outskirts of the city states at he is considered | convalescent ere are no new cases of yellow fever and no suspicious cases and the local health authorities are con fident that the iInfection will be con- magnetic work. - Other members of the party will Dr. J. Hobart Egbert, magnette server, sur n and naturalist; Ault, magnetic observer, and Whitney, magnetic observer and watcp officer. v The sum of $20.000 has beem allotted to cover the expenses of the cufrént year's work. It is estimated th years will be necessary to complete l the research. 5 e are not permitted to come into the par- ish. A northbound train on the Kansas b City Southern was halted at the parish line to-day and all passenezers were | left stranded on the two sleepers and! the coaches. The engine and mail cars! were fumigated and allowed to come | into the city. The city Board of Health resigned to-day because of criticisms in | permitting the Kansas City Southern to | he ab- the parish. piPer ity fukras £ EXODUS FROM SHREVEPORT. [ General Car Near Death. | INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. Aug. 2—Gen- ‘Wholesale Departures Now Stopped by | eral James R. Carnahan, major gen- Tighteninz of Quarantine Lines. eral of the uniform rank, Kmights of SHREVEPORT, La., Aug. 2.—There ! Pythias, is gradually sinking, and hts was a general exodus of people from |death is hourly expected. And for painful and sensitive parts of the abdomen, Allcock’s Plasters ‘should 'be applied as shown in illus- tration. - Insist Upon Having Allcock’s. for passage money. They also assert that the drinking water and sanitary condi- tions are bad. tended to end his life. He 1s 77 years 6f | pany at Waltham and was mechanical age, without friends or family, and has |superintendent at the time of his been a resident of Californta for 37 years. | death. ‘The Government has placed the ques- tion of sending the laborers and the con- ditions before the emigration companies. nmu.n—ms Plasters have been in use uniflm‘ They e nal and 2lled as a pain-curer. ;’rmlna poiao:t whatever. porous plasters and have never » |