The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, December 4, 1905, Page 2

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THE:S. AN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, DECEMBER MORE KOREMS ' CAMPAIGN’S COST CHOOSE DEATH IS REV Officials Kill 'l'hemselves]Republican Fund in a Protest Against the! 1004 Reported at Protectorate of Japanese $1,000,000 »1,900, . as RELIANCE ON AMERICA 5 S SR Sum Less Than That Failure of United States ¥ . P to Interfere Causes the U Sed‘ in Previous ’atriots to Lose . Hope; Elections. Bpecial Dispatch to The Call. he Emperor | e highest post-| CALL BUREAU, POST BUILDING, b d Min Yung | WASHINGTON, Dec. 3.—The Washing- pro- anese protettorate. funeral found Minis- ton Post printed this morning, under a Tung Wh funds collected by Chairman Cortelyou nd Treasurer Blis§ of the Republican National Committee for use in the cam- paign of 1904, when President Roose- velt was elected. The Post says the story is authoritative. It is claimed 108 | g1.960,000. e . G1S8P° | hution was $75,000 or $100,000, from an | 2 gather, but | EBKROWR source. | s and po.| The fund of 51,900,000 is compared | with the $2,500,000 sald to have been raised for the election of McKinley In alert to prevent a .. |1900 and the $8,800,000 for his first neerned over their future work in | ChMpaign in 189, Xor $ Over thelr futire Work 18| gy fuud eipended by the Demo- fearing t airs the new some condition influence crafic National Committee for the elee tion of Cleveland in 1892 is placed at $4,100,000. T Republican National Committee is credited with having had a balance of $100,000 at the close of last year's campaign, thé remainder of the fund being accounted for as follows: Re- mittances to State cémmittees, $700,000; for literature, $550,000; maintaining speakers' bureaus, $175,000; for litho- graphs, advertising, etc., $150,000; sal- aries and expenses at headquarters, $100,000; miscellaneous expenditures, $50,000. Whtle more have rts ———— PERUVIAN JOURNAL DECLARE UNCLE SAM IS ALL RIGHT | Faper Says Commercial Sway United States Is to Be Desirea. vee. 3.—The the appointment Peruvian Minfst by the Comercio, of than 4000 contributions to the campalgn fund are known, they are said to constitute but 40 per cent of the total number supplying money, the identity of the other 60 per cent being disclosed. One contribution ,000 or $100,000 was turned into rér Bliss by one of the men so- pRMAC N applauds the Pres - ooy . "\’ h"""“‘“’ x;"{f liciting campaign funds and Bliss did B ol b - not know the identity of the person x v ke giving this large sum, he positive assertion Is made that | neither Chairman Cortelyou nor Treas- urer Bliss knew that James H. Hyde inexpli- t held by ommercial | made a contribution with the expecta- i tlon that | the Embassadorship to France. Tt is PAPET | caid that President Roosevelt spoke to : would | (ortalyou of Hyde's application for the € and developing of | sogition, but Cortélyou nor Pardo, the | po5eq the seleetion and did not indorse e these ideas | the views of those recommending Hyde. Funt Piuce be bulk of the Republican fund is BT e T | said to have been raised by committees Hritish Naval Estimates Reduced. | designated by Bliss for work in New LONDON, Dec memo- | York, Chicago, Philadlelphia, Boston and r s y the s states | other large citles. These committees t e result of recent reforms the | were subdivided, so that certain mem- n mates f he navy will show | bers would operate among mien inter- & reduction of $7.500,000 beyond the re- | ested in ceftain lines of business. It is duction of 6,000 made last spring. | dgclared that Cortelyou made ~ no Alfred Lilienfeld @ Co. 201 and 203 Kearny Street 200 and 202 Sutter Strect Have in Stock More Overcoats and ravenette ain Coats than any store on the Pacific Coast We carry them in sizes for a 16-year-oid boy to the largest size man. We have them in prices ranging from $15 to $40 Ate you in need of an Overcoat or a Cra- venette? If so, it behooves you to call on us be- fore purchasing else- where, Alfred Lilienfeld & Co 201 and 203 Kearny Street 200 and 202 Sutter Street New York date, a three-column article | that purports to give an account of the | % b that the figures given are the same | e that will be sworn to by Treasure: - )t the American |51isS and Chairman Cortelyou if they | = S bhad looked |0 on the stand In the insurance in- 5 st likely mna. | vestigation in New York. and when they real. | The total fund of the Republican Na- tionul Comuuttee in 1904 is placed at | The largest single contri- he would be rewarded with)| strongly op- | EALED. s R R S PR R | i | | | - | SECRETARY AND TREASURER OF 3 REPUBLICAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE. { pledges of any kind to any contributor, S0 tnere remakh.unpaid no political debts, Cortoiyou te-day positively 1efused to discuss the story. He aiso refused | to make any comment on the statement { that eleven corporations faving head- | auarters fn Néw York were assessed an aggregate of $225,000 for the pur- | Roosevelt i MAKES THREATS. ODELL Ex-Governor of New York Plans to Annoy the Prestdent. WASHINGTON, Dec. §-—New York Repubiicans who have arrived here for | the opening of Congress say all the leaders of tlie party recognze at the flurry over the chairmanship the New York County Committee Is only the skirmish befote the real battle and | that the fight between the administra- | tion and kx-Governof Odell is on to a finish, Friends of Odell brougit the news to-day that the head of tne State machine is so angry dt the President that he is talking of reprisals. | One of the threats Gdell has made | has been to have severai pro 1 men connected with the administra- | tion called before the Hughes insur- | ance cominittee. ‘The ex-Governor's friends say he is full of the iden that if he can induce the legislative com- ! mitiee to call as a wtiness Postmaster | General Corteivou, chairman of the | National Committee; Cornelius N. Bliss, | treasurer of thé committee, and Secré- | tdry of Stute Root, he could have ques- | tions asked whichi wouid drag the ad- ministration directly into the insur- ance muddle. g No intimation is givén as to what Odell would expect to have shown, should he be allowed to outline e | questions fo be put to Cortelyou, Bliss | and Root, but the proposal is mot ré- | garded as a friendly suggestion. President Roosevell is meéting the threats of the Odell men by becoming more active. Postmaster Willeox of New York was here yesterday to talk politics with the President; Timothy | L. Woodruff is coming on Wednésday | and other New York Renubllc‘ns have appointments. DOMESTIC TROUBLES . DRIVE WOMAN INSANE/ oses Her Mind After She! Is Deprived of Child. Special Du:v_!‘_lih_lu The Call. TACOMA, Dec. 3.—A few days ago Mrs. Agties Lester was divorced from her hus- band, thé provisions of the decree taking one of her children away from her. The woman was unable to sleep and became insane on account of Worry and grief over the separation. Yesterday she was com- mitted to Steilacoom asylum. Mrs. Les- tér admitted that she understood perfects Iy why £he had been brought inte court and offered no objection to being sant to the asylum. It is believed that proper care is all she requires, and the attend- ing physicians think she may be mble to leave the 1nnmu(23 in & few months, ON WAY TO ST. PETERSBURG. Party of Americans Passes Through the Gesman Capltal. BERLIN, Dec. 3.—A guard for the United Statés embassy at St. Petersburg passed through here to-day. The men, who were dressed in eivilian clething, are believed to be from the cruiser Minneapolis, which is at Gravesend, England. X v ‘WABHINGTON, Dec. 3.—The men re-: ferred to as passing through Berlin en route to the American embassy, accord- img to State Department officials here, probably household attendants | are ‘whom Mr. Meyer, the American Km| T ;- personal service in | WASHINGTON, D. tive that few Democratie votes will | when the final test comes. They are con- | by Congress at_ thls session. | Congress on Tuesuay, is understood to | deal more vigorously with theé gues- | tion or | sage of 1904, | an interstate | sitfon that he did in the speech dgliv- | This is another step in the President's | large financial interests back of the | | trusts took alarm. They fought the | President’'s radieal programme for | | therein. mi with a ¥ pose of aid in the election of President || SOLIBLY BACK OF PRESIDENT Democrats in Both Branches of Congress Will Suppert a Railroad Rate Bill PARTY LINES DROPPED Caucus May Result in Unan- imous Minority Voté for! Administration in Hous:e iy Specfal Dispatch to The Call CALL BUREAU, POST BUILDING, | C., Dec. 3.—Demo- | cratic Senators who are supporting the President’s railroad programme are w:; against a bill extending the powers jof the Interstate Commerce Commission, in accordance with the President’s idea, fident that such a bill will be passed The Democratic leaders of the House are equally’ positive. Even those with strong -leanings say they will support any bill approved by a party caucus, | which indicates that the Democratic | vote in the House in support of the Pres- ident's programme will be practically unanimous. = s A PRESIDENT DEAL® WITH TRUSTS. Message Will Contain Vigorous Demand- for Federal Supervisfon. WASHINGTON, Dec. 3.-—President Roosevelt's message, which will go to’ Government Supervision of great corporations than Afd the mes- The President desires that greater power be vested in the executive branch of the Federal Gov- ernmént to control trusts engaged in busincss, He takes in this message practically the same po- ¢red in Cincinnati on September 20, 1902, in which he urged the enactment of legislation for the supervision and cofitrol of great corporations, even if it required a constitutional aménd- ment. He desirés that national laws | take ple of the varfed State laws. policy of a centralization of power In Washington, This speech contained declarations of an intention to scrupulously protect the legal rights of corporations, but the anti<trust legislation. The administra- tion was forced to compromise upon legislation creating the Bureau of Cor- porations of theé Department of Com- merce and Labor. This bureau exer- cisés the furniction of examining the books of corporations. Its head, James R. Garfleld, Has urged a strengthening of thé laws. President Roosevelt's message in 1902 sald: e I beliéve that mionopolles, unjust discrimi- nations which prevent or eripple competition, fraudulent overcapitalization and other evils in trust organisations and practices wihich inju- Hotkis ESed liesmate (00 ¢4f be privenida un power of Congress to 't e com- meroe With forefgn nutions and s LR the see- ments operating directiy upon sucl the instrumentalities those mimend this to the ¢ of a law reasomable in It8 provisions and effective in its operations, which the questions can be finally adjudicated that now raise doubts- das to the nessssity of a constitutional amendment. | ently 1€ it pro 0 the pus- | poses abuve st furth by sush law. then as- | sheink from amend! suredly wo should » he conenitution e a¢ b secare bayond pefad- | ventare the pewer . W OHIO Ri €8x Gunss AT & 240D RATE Flood Is Feared Within 12/ Hours in Vielnity of { Pittsburg. | PITTSBURG, Dec. 3.—This section and | the valley below is threatened with a | small-slzed fiood within twelve hours. At i 10 o'clock te-night the Ohio River at | bavis Island dam was 211 feet and ris- | ing. At the Sixth-street bridge the Alle- gheny registered 226 and 18 rising at the | rate of three incwes an hour. The | Monongahela has about reached fits height, though it is still rising slowly. The rainfall auring the last twenty-four hours was 1.45 inches alomg the Alle- ghény Valley and 1.81 along the Mononga- heia Valléy.” A stage of twenty-five feet at this peint is predicted by ¢ome time | to-merrow morning and a téemperature of fifteen degrees above zero will prevail, | with prospeets of going lower. A report from Beaver, thirty mifles be- | low here, at 9 o'clock gives thé stage | of water at 3.7 and rising six {nches an | hour. At Pittsburg the Waters are creeping up into the lowlands and already a portion of the Pittsourg and Western Rafiroad | tracks are submerged. Timely warning, however, by the Government Weather | Bureau enabled &ll interested té prepare | for high water and as a result the losses will be comparativeiy small. | At Etna, a few miles above Pittsburg, much of the town is under water to- night. All the [ow-Iying ground between Iscbeélla Turnace and the business section is a big lake. 24 At McKeesport the Dewees wood mill and the National tube plant have water up to the first floor, but there seems no | danger of a shutdown. ——————————— Gillette Will Refurn to Ameriea. " LONDON, Dec. 3—Willlam Gillétte closed his fourth London season at thé Duke of York's Theater last night, after a most successful run of his play “Clarice.” He was given an ovation at thé fall of the curtain. Gillette, with his full company, will sail for New York on the steamship Majestic next Wednesday and will open at Bos- ton on Christmas day. Gillette has an- nounced that he Wwill never again ap- pear professionally in England. ————————————— OVER $1000 A MINUTE 18 lle FOR COLLHGE | Yoty Twenty-Thrée Thousand Delars Added 10 Esdlovwnient fn Less Than Half an Hour. LOS ANGELES, Dec. 3.—Almost $23,000 was raised in twenty minutes at Immanuel Presbyterian Church to- day toward the endowment fund_.for Occidental mn..e.“,"y)' thin am'vfifvn it is expected that $10, more will be subscribed bring the amount up X ‘| on the affair. | troeps of their participation A 4, 1905. EPIDEMIC , Continued from Page 1, Column 7. (. at any moment chgnge for the worse should the- ledders of the revolutionarfes and Soclalists, whic seem o hold the fate of the country in their hands, suddenly alter their plans. The Government version of the arrest of the soldiefs of the guard at Tsarskoe- Selo places afi entirely new complexion According to this version, the foldlers Were incensed at the mutiny in Sebastopol and at the public insults to which they were constantly subjected, even in the streets of Tsarskoe-Selo, and demanded to be led against the revolu- tionaries and intelligencia in the capital. When their officers tried to qulet them, tke men bécdme so obstrépérous that they had to be arrested, The reactionary influences at court and tHe imperial guard are making desperate efforts to unhorse Count de Witte, to pro- ciaim & diefatorship and to fight the rev- olution with bullets and bayonets. candldates for dictitor are Geperal Count Alexis lIgnatiett and General Skallon/ Governor General of Poland. pams b TWO REGIMENTS MUTINY. Autherities Suceced in Disarming Dis- gruntied Troons. VIENNA, Dec. §.—TlHe ‘lageblatt pub- lishes a communieation from Odessa, which was mailed to Podweloczyska, Galicia, from which point it was tele- | OF MUTINIES N THE (ZAR'S DOMAIN Regulars and Reservists at Many Points Join Revolutionists. Their | | text of a further revolutionary manifesto issued yesterday (Sunday) in reply to the expressed Intention of the Government to return to repressive measures. The mani- festo says: *“The Government confinues to defy a people now on the road to Hberty, where nothing can stop it. All police measures and the armed futervention of troops can only result in sangulnary conflicts, for| which the Government' will Be responsi- ble.” The correspondent says he is informed by a high funetfonary that animated dis- cussions aré proceeding at the palace of Tsarskoe-Selo, the Emperor favoring the granting of concessfons and the re-estab- Hshment of the public service at any price, with Count de Witte, the Premier, refusing (o grant the demands of the Government employes, on the ground that ! they. had no right to complain. | The St. Petersburg correspondent of the Petit Parislenne says that the reaction- | aries, encouraged by tHé result of the methods used by the authorities at Sebas- | topol, are doing their utmost to mduce | the Emiperor fo stand firm. Crews of Vessels of the Baltie neet‘ Camnot Be Trusted. R A WARSHIPS ARE DISARMED. PARIS, Dec. 3.—Undated dispatches | from St. Petersburg, arriving by way following information: There is great excitement among the | graphed. It is as follows: ““The Ismaeli and Donau regiments, stationed at Odessa, mutinled, but the authorities succeeded in disarming all | the men. “An order issued by the Minister of Education, Count John Tolstol, prohib- iting more than the legal percentage of | Jdews entering the university, was ig- nored by the faeulty, which had t streets placarded with a fiotice to the éffect that the university was open.” It 14 reported fromi Odessa that a general strike will be declared to-mor- row (Monday). Advices from Sebastopol declare that the paunic thére is Increasing. The members of the so-calléd military party are holding meetings fn all the bar- racks and this fact greatly increasds the anxfety for the futute. A dispatch from Craérow, Galicia, says that news has been received from Warsdw to the effect that many fam- ilfeg are hurriedly leaving that city. The banks doing German and Austrian business in Warsaw are meeting many calls for the immediate payment of con- siderable sums. A newspaper of Cracrow publishes a communication from St. Petersburg which says the Ledgue of Leagues has called a general meeting in the Rus- sian capital fof December 23 and that delegates will go fo the meeting from all points in Russia, including six dele- gates for Poland. i g MUTINY IN THE BALKANS. Reéucrvists at Reval Safd to Have De- serted the Colors. ST. PETERSBURG, Dee. 2, via Eydtkuhnien, HEast Prussia, Dec. 3.— Fhe banke here are having all ordinary fetters addressed fo them forwarded from the postotfice at Eydtkuhnen by their own messengers during the inter- ruption of communication. Reports have rédched several of the embassies of military outbreaks in the Baltic provinces, particularly at Reval, where the reservists are said to be In open mutiny. Confirmation of these re- ports cannot be obtained. Prince Eugene Troubetskoy, M. Guchkoff, Dmitrl Shipoff and other leaders of the recent Zemstvo Congress held at Moscow, have arrived here. Citizens from Niekoleiff, Ekatrineslay and Odessa arrived to-day, bringing overwhelming evidence of the con- nivance and even the participation of the military and the police in anti- Jewish excesses. The members of the unions are greatly incensed at this and speeches have been made at their meet- ings, calling on the prolétariat fo erect barricades. It is expected that a rail- way strike will be declared to-morrow or Monday. The latter f§ a boliday, which fact will enable the workmen to meet and décide on a common plafi of action. Loyl JEWS FEAR A MASSACHE. Their Exterm! lama ODESSA, undated, courier by way of Podwoloczyska, Galt- cia, Dec. J.—This dispatch is sent at the request of the Jewish commiunity, which fears a fresh massacre by tne local garrison. It is asserted that a proclamation is being cireulated in al- sent by special soldiors to exterminate the Jews and to destroy the newspaer offices in revenge for groundless accusations agalust tne in mas- sacres and pillage and in the proteéction of rowdies. This is exciting the popu- lation against the army. The Jews assert that tipe officers de- liver anti-Semitic speechés in the bar- | racks after r.moving the Jewish sol- diers, and Governor General Kaulbars himself has confessed that the officers are burning for revenge on the Jews and that he is unable to guarantee toe preservation 6f order. - . I view of the faet that this city is éntirely cut off from 8St. Petersburg and thus is altogéthér in the hands of the Iocal authorities; the Jewish com- munity implorad ali *elvilized nations and their Governments to take all pos- sible measures at St. Petersburg to prevent a citastrophe which may ex- ceed anything tuat haé yet occurred:. S gt FINNISH $TRIKERS STAND FIRMLY. Wil Not Return to Work Until Ordered by the Central Unlom. | HELSINGFORS, Finland, Dec. 2 (via Copenhagen, De¢. 8 .—The striking téléegraph operators of Finland to-day passed a resolution energe..cally pro- esting aguinst any attempt to restrict :leir unton or the liberty of the Finns and expressing their determination to prosécute the strilte until it is declared ended by the Central Union at Moseow. The new Séfiate has beent consticuted as follows! Presidenit (Governor Gem- eral), Baron Salza; viee president, Dr. Mechelin; secretary otmuu, M. N Dbergh; It , M. 5; finaiice, Colonel Antell; taxation, M. Ignatius; éducatfon, Professor Donner: o ture, M. Scheldt; publi¢ works, G- penberg; chfet of the Cabinet for trade 4nd fndu ltm. M. Stadhlberg; Senators without tfolio, M. St. Jernwall and All of the Senators except M. Kari, who is & i ‘beélonig to the Con- stitational ror has also appointed to the desired ,000, which, ed to the 364000 sirends subsertbed by O 5 Jolinson, a local m t and ‘of the church, Wil | the to up to the $100,000 mark, ing just one- half of the fimimfi 2 ment, the balance of n{ to rough- aised 4T subscription t tf Bov it Gt ) torila. 5 x*m' with the proposals made ordance with by the Constitutional party. ; | aeters. | order their men to fire if called on to | repress aisorders. { boxes. most every regiment calling on tie! Supreme Court in ae- sailors and the authorities have ordered the disarmament of the warships. The | officers, fearing a mutiny, acceded to | the demand of the saflors for the re- ! lease of a workman who was arrésted | while distributing revolutionary pro: | clamations. 1 Sailors and soldiers are driving about the streets, creating disturbanoes. Many quarters of the city are danger- | ous after nightfall, owing to an Im- erease in the number of unruly char- The military authorities are prepar- ing repressive measures. Heavy forces of artillery are arrfving at the capital, causing a panic among the population. Officers recently held a meeting at Tsarskoe-Selo and decided to refuse to e e QUIETER TONE ON BOURSE. Government's Assurances Help to Dis- pel Gloomy Feeling. ST. PETERSBURG, Dee. 2, 4:30 p. m., via Eydtkuhnen, Dee. 3. quieter tone prevailed on the Bourse to-day, | the brokers helping to stay the panic by taking all offerings of mperial fours &t 78, yesterday's closfiig price. The Governmerit sought to dispel the gloomy feeling on the Bourse by assur- ances that the removal of martial law in Poland would help the situation. At the War Department this after- noon it was declared that the outbreak of troops in the Baltic provinces was confined to reservists, who were insist- ing on their immediate discharge. The | officials refusé to supply details. Owing to similar troubles in the Far FEast the Government {s contracting to | sénd 50,008 of the troops now there home by sea from Vladivostok. —— VITRIOL IN LETTER BOXES. Warsaw Postal Strikers Preveat the Handling of Mail. WARSAW, Dec. 3.-—Seven hundred | postal and telegraph operators are on | strike here. About a hundred of the operators refused to join in the strike. The strikérs have vitrioled the letter Two hundred bags of foreign Tetters are lying here unopened. Governor General SKalloi. has issued a proclamation prohfbiting street pro- cessions or meetings and the carrying of arms or heavy sticks, and ordering shops and houses closed on demand by the police, under the penalty of a fine of $250 and thrée months’ imprison- ment for dlsobedience. The workmen - in the factories threéaten to strike on Monday in sup- port of the eight-hour-day movement. The local unfons have sent delegates to St. Petersburg to attend the congress of the Union Unions. REPORT OF PALACE TRAGEDY. British Correspondent Hears of Attack = Upen the Emperor. NEW YORK, Dec. 4—The Times this morning publishes the following copy- righted cablegram from London: “The Morning Post's St. Petersburg cor- respondent, 1n a telegram dated Saturday, fays: ‘The wildest rumors of a palace fragedy at Tsarkoe-Selo are eifculating in | $t. Petersbarg. The extreme reticence of | the oftielals 6f the imperial househeld | lends volor to the senatfonal reports. However, the latest information received | from Tsarkoe-Sélo declares that the Em- | peror is in his usual health this after- | tHoow.” | The rumors of an attack upon the Caar | are emphbatically denied in the Assoeclated | Press advices. SRS SR NO NAVAL CREWS LOYAL. Warshipe’ Men Completely Wom Over by the Revolntionaries. $T. PETERSBURG. Dec. 2. (via Byat- kulmen, Dec. 3.)—The most elaborate precautions have been taken against a | feared outbredk by the troops. as a result of the Sebastopol mutiny. The nuval battaliohs have beén completely | won over by the revolutionaries and sre almost beyond control. They have been deprived of their armis. The striking telegraphers declare tliey have ample funds and that they will not yleld, éven at the risk of dis- missal. Telegraph officials on the rail- roads refuse to forward Government or private dispatcnes, but are willing for the present to send and receive tefe- grams relating to the railroad service. | | “The motto “In God We Trust” was not | placed on American coing until 1865. Stomach Diseases CAN BE CURED CY USING X NS WANT PLACE CLEARED Director, of Mints Will Be Asked to Remove Clique in the Seattle Assay Office NEEDS PRACTICAL MEXN Adams Seandal Arouses the Northern Merchants to the Danger te Their Trade Special Dispatch to The Call. SEAYTLE, Dec. 3.—A demand has been made by Alaskans In this city and stil} fn northern camps that an en- tire reorganization of the Seattle as- say office be effected and that practical men be installed. Whes Director of the Mints Roberts arrfves here Friday a delegation of promiuent Alaskans will wait upon him and insist that he clean out the assay office and remove every semblance of the clique they belleve is partly responsible for the lax methods that have prevalled. On behalf of the Alaskans and busi- ness men here who are fighting to ac- complish something that will restors confence and save Seattle's trade. a demand is made that'John S. Van Horn, who was discharged because he would not take part in a political fight, be re- turned as assistant assayer. He is a practical man and removed from sus- iof Eydtkuhnen, East Prussia, give the |picion of complicity in any of the lax methods. Seattle business interests are alarmed lest & part of the Alaska trade be lost by the assay office scandal. —_———— Professor Ernest Haeckel in & reeent lecture in Berlin stated that in his opin- jlon it is absolutely certain that man Is descended from apes. bevel edge, nickel tips, brass lined, finest of steel blades and springs, plate for mon- ogram or initial. My holi- day special pric s| 50 1 0 I have hundreds of other designs and sizes to choose from at my own little prices. Razors honed and ground. Honing 25e€ THAT MAN PITTS F. W. PITTS, the Stationer, 1008 MARKET ST., San Franciseo. 0 =0 ==30" Renters’ Loan & Trust Co. 22 Montgomery St., San Francisco and Reserve ‘-gmuw Noiscs in Ears CATARRH, ® _—— DEARNESS, 55 PILES! PILES! MAC’S INFALLIBLE PILE CURE CURES ALL CASES OF BLIND, BLEEDING, ITCHING AND PROTRUD- ING PILES; cases of many years' s fug cured by a single box; pri cents. A, McBOYLE & CO., DRUGG. ONE WEEK FREP. Dr. Cottingham Expert on_Ear. Nose acd Throat. 9 POWELL sT. 50 1878, 504 Washington St. San Francisco. e N

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