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I?'? ....... i 43 mu KU s'h vv&itpua ': * Furniture, i| ru*S v?A/Wc "i f 801 Pi ; 5 You Can Pay a Deposit Here. if Bargaam ? ifjSpring&Stiiiii f E are all ready for [U [v 111 with the newest ai ? xgn^yVjr furniture. The sp< ing tomorrow will 4 buy without delav. 5 Lawn Swings. | $3.98. $4.98 and $9.90. ^ ^ ^ M^tti r . 4 Here is the opportunity to ? in the house at an extraordina in the house worth up to 50c 4 Special I :/ ? Porch Rockers. 4 9*e. *1.19. *1.4*. *1.75 up to *3.50. i." Bar Harbor and Russian Fiber Chair?. 4 *4.OS up to *15.00. : 4 Shirt Waist Boxes. T A big assoriroent of the newest and heat In Shirt Waist Boies at Tory reason C able prices. $ *1.98. *1.69 *2.50. up to *7.50. :i J Rattan Rockers. 4 bare one smalt lot of *8.50 Rattan Rakers; as lona as the lot * ' lasts you i an buy a rooker. C| aflQ .1-4 special at V* "o ||2 Hickory Chairs. IX 2 small lot of Hickory Chairs; as as iner ia?t .roil ran our ki nu i I" a rfiair at, special vltVo I # ' 1- r" ' jjj Distinctive Outergarments i I We offer a remai Ition of Ladies' Suits clay serges at $29.5C We don't hesitate to ues than anything you \v The styles are excelleni The colors include copen vana, bronze-green and g and lined to match with If - Strictly man-tailored. Tiff have a smartness rarely $ readv-to-wear garments. $ tomorrow at | White Serge Suits a iff In diagonal and plaii $ touches of black. Guar; % cygne. Exclusive styles. Quite the best suits you < Woodward Men's Pajamas a V rrfy AJAMAS of che ^ striped madras UUP' made with ve n< ^nprinl Value Self-striped Whit finished with militarj <1.50 suit. Soisette Pajamas white, finished with sil and military collar, $2, Light-weight Mus and trimmed, either v< 50c each. Muslin Nightshirt styles, with ve neck or 75c each. Muslin and Lij Nightshirts, made in V or with collar, plain an< The Men' WOODWARD Ground Flo * < Million Employe Vanishes. Report was to the police yesterday thtt Joaeph Peel, thirty-two years ' aid, had disappeared from the Centra); r-alen Mission. He wee employed in the dtnfttf room at i.?e mieslon, and W. A. MeCloeky, cashier, alleged th4t Peel negx Meted to turn over shout W he is said to have collected m th? dining room 9atur-' day evening. ]0 Window Shades, i Ave Upholsteries We Will Deliver Any Time. specials in nerFuirnitiure you. Our stock is complete id best in spring and summer ecial values that we are offerprove an incentive for you to Lawn Benches, $i.iq, $1.75, $1.98 up to $6.00. rSgerator Sale is no better Refrigerator made ? Monarch, and it doesn't cost ! in others. j Ice Capacity $10.00 Ice Capacity $1-2-75 i Ice Capacity $15.00 ' Ice Capacity $18.75 Ice Capacity $-21.5.) ^er sizes in proportion. ' ngs. j buy Mattings for every room 1 irilv low price. Anv matting ^ ^ 29c yd. k \ We carry a largo assortment of Old ; Hickory Garden Chair* and Tables; price* begin at ?2.5? for a largo armchair or rocker. Window Screens. \ Now is the time to let us hare your j order for Window Screens. Wo can Rive J you very nice screens a; a very reasonable i price. ^ < Slip Covers. j if you want to keep the furniture iu first-class condition you have got to have i it covered in summer. With the windows J up and the dust flying the delicate fur- J 11 itore will soon be ruined unless it is ' protected. We will snpply you with the : finest covering at a price that will suit ? TO "J. " r I |?ston Co. I 1113 G Street. I for Ladies .and Misses. | rkably pretty selec- | in homespuns and | ). I say that they are better val- | ill find in the city at $40.00. | t, and distinctly exclusive. ? hagen, navy, tan, black, ha- & rays. The coats are cut low | fine quality peau de cygne. | ?ese suits & 5.5 '29.50 | ! $25.00. I i serges, some finished with | anteed linings of peau de | Well cut and fit beautifully. ^ ever saw at this price. J & Lothrop ind Night Shirts eked nainsook, white and figured percale, ick or military collar. ,$1.00 Suit. e Madras Pajamas, / collar and frogs, plain colors and k frogs, pearl buttons oo suit. lin Nightshirts, plain s neck or with collar, ;s, plain and trimmed with military collar. rht'Weight Nainsook ao styles with ve neck i trimmed, $ i.oo each. s Store of & LOTHROP or, F Street Greek Is to Be Deported. Leonids s Mitrakas, who was arrest Friday afternoon by Wtlliam Feder, i immigration inspector, and charged wi being in the United States unlawfully, to be returned to Athens. Greece. Todi he was taken to Baltimore by one of t inspectors, to be held until he is deportt The Greek, it is charged, came here frr his native country after he shot and ki ed Jannis Dounis about two years ago. / f IMEMORYOF REDMEN $ 3? i Monuments as Tributes to I Chieftains and Warriors. S | RECORD OF THIRTY-EIGHT * V Boulder to Mark the Spot Where * Great Council Met. ff? _ J PTn-RT'.PTWft Aim STY WATThWR 9 fft ??? 9 | Treaty for Permanent Peace Signed 9. in 1794?Tendoy Constant (ft 9 Friend of Whites. db A* * BY tYILLlAM F.. CURTIS. 1? 'Writt?) for The Star and the Chicago Record f'-_ Herald. || I have .found thirty-eight monuments erected in honor of Indian chieftains and warriors in the United States and several more have been proposed. It is probable ? that several have been omitted from this list, and I would be glad to learn it " that is the case. ft j The following is a list of Indian monuJj j ments so far as I have been able to disft | cover them: f | Uncas, "the last of the Mohicans." hero (c of the Leatherstocking Tales, has two 9 statues, one of them upon the site of the b former home of Fenimore Cooper, the 9 author, in the village of Cooperstown, N. k Y., and the other at Norwich, Conn. ^ Miantonomoh, a noted Narragansett ^ chief, has a monument in Boston erected fh In 1841. ^ Tendoy, chief of the Bannock Indians, has a monument on the Lemhi reservam tion, erected by the citizens of Idaho. J: Sleepy Eye has a monument at the town j which is called in his honor in Minneso \ la. nt? was n i/mei ui inc oiuua liauuu. ^.' j Yellow Thunder, chief of the Winnebago 9 I Indians has a monument rear Baraboo, Wis. T Meeting Place of Great Council. y In the courthouse yard at Canandaigua. !(r X. Y., is a boulder bearing a bronze tab9 let and inscription to mark the spot where 0? the great council between representatives 9 of the Six Nations and Timothy Piekering, agent of the United States, was held. Catherine Te-kak-wi-tha, a Mohawk (7 woman known as "the savage saint," has 9 a statue and a monument erected in het f. honor near the tillage Of Auriesville, L Montgomery county. X. Y. J Sakajawea, the girl guide who led Lewis " and Clark through the mountains on theii - exploring expedition in 1804-3, has two ,1 monuments, one in City Park, Portland, ii Ore., the other over her grave in the | Shoshone cemetery at Washakie, Wyo.. and a third is about to be erected in front j of the state eapitol at Bismacki X. D. On the banks of the Wabash river near | Peru, Ind., is a marble shaft erected to j the memory of Pa-lonz-wa. chief of the I Miami Indians, better known as Francis I nnrlfrpv At Twin Lake Station on the Vandali? railroad, in Marshall county, Ind., is a statue seven feet high erected to the memory of Chief Menominee of the Pottawatomie Indians. In Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, is a monument to Tedyuskung, a famous chie: of the Delawares. On Blue hill, near Sunbury, is a monument to Shiekalimy, a chief of the Susquehannas. Erected by Colonial Dames. In 1800 the Colonial Dames of America erected a monument at Savannah to Tomochichi. a famous Creek chief, who j was actively identified with the early j history of Georgia. j At Morris, 111., is a monument to SShabomee, a Pottawatomie chief and grandnephew of Pontiac, to perpetuate the memory of his good deeds and friendj ship for the whites. j In the Congressional cemetery at WashI ington is a monument erected to the j memory of Pushmataha, a Choctaw chief 1 from Mississippi, whom Gen. Jackson de| clared to be the bravest and the greatest j Indian he had ever known, j Logan, the famous Iroquois chief, ha? I a monument in Failhail cemetery, Auburn, N. Y. Washakie, chief of the Shoshones, is | buried under a monument erected by the government of the United States in the military cemetery at Fort Washakie. I Wyo. j White Cloud, whose Indian name was ; Mahaska, has a monument in the public | park at Oskaloosa, Iowa, j Wapello, chief of the Sacs and Foxes, ; has a monument at Agency City, Iowa, i j Chief Keokuk's Grave. j The great chief Keokjik is buried in J the city park of Keokuk, Iowa, and a - monument has been erected over his grave by the citizens of that town. His bronze bust is in the Capitol at Washington. A fountain, surmounted by a statue of an Indian chieftain, has been erected to me memory or i-*aaucah, a Comanche chief, In the public square of the Kentucky city which bears his name. The Daughters of the American Revolution have placed a tablet to the memory of Pontiac, chief of the Ottawas, in the Southern Hotel, St. Louis. A monument at the foot of 18th street in Chicago commemorates the rescue of Mrs. Helm by Black Partridge, at the Fort Dearborn massacre, August 15, 181-'. In Lincoln Park, Chicago, Martin Ryerson has erected a monument bearing the inscription: 'To the Ottawa nation of Indians, my early friends." In Forest Lawn cemetery, Buffalo, is an imposing memorial to Red Jacket, the great Seneca chieftain, and under it lies the dust of several other Seneca warriors, whose bodies were gathered from neglected graves oy the Buffalo Historical Society. A statue to Joseph Brant, principal chief of the Six Nations, was erected at Branford, Ontario, in 1886. There is a monument to Osceola, the great chief of the Seminoles, near Charleston, S. C. There is a monument to Corn Planter, the famous Seneca chief, erected by the stite of Pennsylvania in 1880. A monument to Cornstalk, a celebrated Shawnee chief, was erected in the courthouse yard at Point Pleasant, at the mouth of the Great Kanawha river. West Virginia, in 18?J6. First Victim of Revolutionary War." Crispus Attucks, half Indian and half negro, the first person killed in the revolutionary war, has a monument on Boston Common. Leatherlips, a Huron chief, who was the rival of Tecumsen, lias a monumeni on the Scioto river near Columbus, Ohio, erected by the Wyandot Club of that city. There is a statue to Waban, an Iroquois chief, at Newton, Mass. Black Hawk, the great warrior, has a monument at Rock Island, 111., which was l near his headquarters. Ill the village of Canandaigua, N. Y., are two Interesting Indian monuments, botn immense boulders in a natural condition. bearing tablets inscribed with the reasons of their existence. One of them, in the courthouse square, is called "Council Rock." and marks the spot where what is known as the Pickering council was held in 17'J4. Red Jacket. Corn Planter, the famous Seneca chiefs, and other representatives of the Six Nations there signed a treaty for permanent peace with the whites. That meeting marked the end of Indian hostilities in the state of New York. ? A fascinating narrative of the council can be found in a volume published 1 shortly after, under the title "Journal of ed! William Savery." a Quaker from Pennan i aylvania who came with Corn Planter and thI attended the council to look after the ini8 tereets of the red men. The Inscriptions. ,d The inscription reads: 'JP The^lsst General Council "* Of the I'nlted States Government. with the Iroquois Confederation * Hn?niiiiini?miiiiniimmniinmMiimmt A FLOUI : JLatfffUr no better l! mthe bi I from PU |i: Flour made of PUR] .III and is demanded by 1 terially reduce our co: I with slightly cheaper I buy our flour. i a > v late i?re Bre | "Guaranteed s Pure Spti J: NOTE.?Under the pure food law every rep 11 true, or prosecution and heavy flue result. |: Toilet Paper, 2V??4?6 7%c t Bird Seed He e; Bird Sand 7e 1; White Lily Salt, pkg 5c ?; Bread Soda. A. & H., lb 8c J Sal Soda. 3 lbs. for So f Ground Alum Salt. 0 lbs. for 5c |: Elastic Starch 5c Dia D Package Starch 4c g Bulk Starch, per lb 4c ? Corn Starch 4c H Duryea's Corn Starch 7t?c ?: Gold Madal Syrup, can 1bc X* Gold Medal Syrup, 5-lb. can 20c tj Gold Medal Syrup. 10-lb. can 40c 5; Stag Table New Orleans Molasses. J; very best grade 10c and 1"?e fi Red River Baking Molasses fte | Gold Leaf Syrup ftc. 13c and 23c t; Good Catsup, large bottle 8c 8 Ben Hur Soap 4c X ; Babbitt's Soap 4c ? Brooke's Crystal 4c | Ivory Soap, small 4^o Ivory Soap, large 7V^c ?! P. G. Oleine Soap 4Ho x: Octagon Soap 4J?c P Sunshine Soap. 2 for 5c e Sunny Monday 4c Tiger Borax Soap 4V?c Lana Oil Soap. 3 cakes 10c Wild Rose Glycerine 10c f| Peanut Butter Or and 18c 3 Beechnut Peanut Butter 10c 1 Pickles. 3 Get our prices. See the size pack5 ages. Quality unsurpassed. and ? money saved on every purchase. * Large Cucumbers, each lc 3 Sweet, per doz 10c 3 10 oz. Mixed Gherkins Sour Oc 3 10 oz. Mixed Gherkins Sweet 10c 2 Mason Jar Sour 20c 5 Mason Jar Sweet . 25c {$ 32-oz. Octagon Jar Gherkins. 30c i Magic City Sour Mixed, 15-cent bottles, each 5c White Lily Syrup CORN AND SUGAR SYRUP COMPOUND; some2 thing new; very fine. Large can..12c j Olive Oil. I THE FINEST LUCCA OLIVE OIL None better, we care not who makes the claim. Bottles. 25-cent size 20c Cans. 1 pint 38c Quart cans Pile Remember our guarantee goes with each sale. Money back if not the ' finest Lucca Oil you can buy. Chocolates and Cocoas. Walter Baker's, %-lb tins 20c W. H. Baker's. 1-5-lb tins 8c T /-.n.nmr'n 1 T lk tin. Dr. ff 1^/WIICJ B, i-triu 11119 . . . i7U g Walter Baker's Prem. Chocolate, 8 lb 38e S Caracas Sweet Chocolate, lb 40c Jt Dunham's Cocoanut, pkg..5c and 10c ? Wag held in Canandaigua, and the Resultant treaty was signed S'iit. 11. 171V4. By I". 8. Agent Titn"tby Pickering, Sachems and Warriors? Farmer's Brother. Cornplanter. Red Jacket, Little Beard. Fish Carrier. Little Billy. Heap of Dogs. Handsome Lake, Halftown, and fifty others. Witnesses: Israel Cbapin. James Smedly. Augustus Porter,. William Kwing. and others. Interpreters: Horatio Jones. Joseph Smith, Jasper Parrish. 19*2. The other boulder stands in a field , within the village limits Just off the old Indian trail leading west from Canandai gua, and bears an oval tablet of bronze with this inscription: General John Sullivan and the Continental Arm; pasted near this spot September 11 and 12, 1779. 1902. Both of these monuments were erected by Dr. B. R. Burrell of Canandaigua. an tfflcer of the Ontario County Historical Society. On the Lemhi Indian reservation, Idaho, is a monument erected by the citizens of | that section to the memory of Tendoy, chief of a band of mixed Bannock. Shoshoni and Tukuarika Indians, making their headquarters in that valley. Tendoy was always a friend of the whites, and his influence on several occasions prevented troubles with the Indians. The "Hand Book of American Indians" recently published by the bureau of ethnology, in a sketch of Tendoy says: "About 18AH the attention of the government having been called to the miserable condition of these bands, they were found on investigation to be almost destitute, but Tendoy had been able to improve the condition of himself and a few of his followers by his sagacity in trade with settlers in the mining camps of Montana, which he frequently visited. Indians Promise Obedience. "On the establishment of an Indian agency in lyemhi valley the Indians promised obedience to the agent and friendliness toward the whites, and owing to the influence of Tendoy. these promises were kept inviolate. He rendered Invaluable service to the early settlers by protecting them from roving bands of un- i friendly Indians, and through his influence no white person in the Lemhi valley < was molested during the Nez Perce war. In 1878 the agent reported that some of < the Indians would doubtless join the hos- j tiles, hut were held in check by Tendoy, ( who appears to have proven himself mas- . ter of the situation. Some of the tribes { with whom he associated in the buffalo , country advised him to steal horses and slaughter a few whites, when the authorities at Washington would think more of him and grant him larger appropriations. "To this he is said to have replied: 'I have not the blood of a white man in my camp, nor do I Intend such." "Tendoy died on the Lemhi reservation May 9. 1907. The settlers, in appreciation of his services, subscribed funds toward the erection of a monument to his memory, and a tract of land containing a number of other Indiana' graves was set apart for his burial place." . AUTO DROPS INTO TREE. Plunges From Mountain Road and Occupant Is Killed. SAN JOSE. Cal., April 4.?John Anson Howard, said to be the son of an Ottawa millionaire, was killed yesterday when an automobile which he was driving plunged from a mountain road, sixteen miles from Delmonte, and lodged In the top of a tree. Howard was pinned in the branches and lived only long enough to bid good-bye to his companion, former Mayor Robert F. Johnson of Monterey, who escaped unhurt. The First National Bank of Hagers- , town, Md., has moved into Its handsome six-story marble-front building on West Washington street nearly opposite the i courthouse. It is one of the tallest and ; most costly structures in Hagerstown. The new building and site ara valued at $125,000. t uuiiiiimmiiii iiimiiiiiiiiimiimiiiiiiiiui R OF SU i an article is our "Sai flour made and many < 1ST they ever used. RE SPRING wheat, E SPRING YVHEA1 :he largest and most e: st by offering you this grades, but you are en Mflilr/mfl I idMllo III? il ing Wheat Patent Flour." iresentation made on the label must be strictly Spe< Until Saturd MARASCHINO CHERRIES, i ERIE BACON, large jars.... PRUNES, an exceptional barga CIDER VINEGAR, pure appl you pay you get no better goo JOHNSON S PRESERVES, 5* ALPHA EARLY JUNE PEA them cheap; you profit by th PURE LARD: No. 3 pails; pac tee of quality ASPARAGUS; California pro< same day; superior to markc other stores these retail for 3: of the finest asparagus that g each kind to any one purcha Tioga brand, No. 2l/2 (mediu Panther brand. No. 2/2 (long GARLAND BEETS, small and FLOUR, our Cereta brand, fir sack ......................1 VINELAND GRAPE JUICE, tised in all the standard maga Potatoes In 1-bu. lots 49e Potatoes, by the peek 14c Butter, finest goods made -17c Eggs, strictly fresh 23c Pure Lard, lb 17c Compound Lard, lb 12c Shoulders, fancy, lb 13c Tomatoes, finest standard goods. Don't confuse with seconds 7c Silver Peas, per can 9c Blue Ridge Corn, per can 8c Standard String Beans 5c Large Cucumber Pickles, each lo Gallon Tomatoes, per can 2>c Peerless Pears 10c ofa/ti imji/RiS IVILUUnUL. UIVL.U VI I LI1UL aiR. BLODGETT RESENTS MR. BELMONT'S IMPUTATION. Michigan Man Requested to Secure Introduction of Publicity Bill by Senator Burrows. Former Representative Perry Belmont, the head of an organization working for bl campaign publicity law, recently telegraphed John W. Blodgett, republican national committeeman from Michigan, urging him to induce Senator Burrows to offer a publicity bill in the Senate, and criticising the alleged backwardness of republicans in behalf of this legislation. Mr. Blodgett has replied to Mr. Belmont as follows: "Your telegram is a dishonest, unfair eflection on the republican party, and eads like a campaign speech, for which It will probably do duty in the next campaign. You know that, while Presiient Taft has approved the principle of publicity of campaign expenditures, he las not approved the bill now before the House committee. You also know that he republicans in the last House passed l publicity bill and the democrats opposed it. As a member of the executive committee of the publicity organization, 1 protest against your dragging party politics into a non-partisan organization. \ny fair measure will have my earnest support in every way possible. Please 'avor me with a copy of your bill. "JOHN W. BLODGETT." Not Seeking Partisan Advantage. To this telegram Mr. Belmont has replied: "Your telegram, while not explaining senator Burrows course, ts or such a rharacter that I would not reply to it at l11 but that my relation to a non-partisan >rganization requires the refutation of .he charge that I am seeking partisan idvantage. Your attention was called to :he action of the democratic congrestional and national committees in order hat you and other leading republicans should bring your party to take similar ictive interest in the passage of the bill ipproved by our organization and introiuced by one of the ablest republicans jf the House. Your party having controlled both houses of Congress during the years the passage of this bill has t>een urged, I might have taken the failure to pass it as evidence of the party's opposition, but I was careful to state that the President has repeatedly declared himself in favor of a measure of that character. "No fair-minded man could suppose that advantage for the democratic party was sought when I declared the republican President's position to be practically the same as that of the democratic committees. I did not say that the democratic committees or the President had commmeu niemiwives 10 any specinc measure. You cannot be familiar with the legislation attempted in Congress when you say the republicans in the last House passed a publicity bill and the democrats opposed it." Mr. Belmont adds that it is still within the power of the republican party, notwithstanding the attitude of some of its leaders, to obtain the advantage ef this publicity legislation. The municipal code commission appointed to prepare a uniform code for all cities of West Virginia has completed its work. A final draft has been placed in the hands of Capt. E. E. Hood, secretary of the commission, who is at work preparing the report for prasentatlon to the governor. 11 1 J ' PERIOR litary" Brand Flour, of our patrons have tolc Sanitary Brand Flour and every sack is so r is known to flour men xpert bakers in the tra flour made by blending titled to the best, and y letter Bread. r You will find this statement j every sack of Sanitary Brand Flo Look for it on any other bi L sale. ;ials lay's Closing." nedium size bottle 15c 20c in. 7 lbs. for 25c e goods: no matter what ds. Our regular 10c bottles 5c oc crocks 41c .S; ioc value; we bought is sale; 2 cans for 15c ker's name is your guaran 45c luct; cut and canned the >t goods in every way; in $c per can ; tall square cans ;rows; not over three cans ser. m white), per can 22c green), per can 22c I tender, per can yy2c lest for pastry goods, per 39C the kind you see adverzines: pint bottle, each.. 20c | Topaz Poaches 10c 1 *~\t I u o _ v^i i o<ii unitrsi. oc Mustard Sardines, each 3c Beechnut Bacon 2Sc Beechnut Beef 2Sc Potted Meats 5c Blue Label Catsup, large 16c Blue Label Catsup, small 10c Candles, size, 3 for 5c Candles, 1-1*5 size, each lc Clothes Lines 5c and 10c Clothes Lines, wire. 40 ft 13c Single Washboards 20c Double Wa?hboards 2.V Brass Washboards? 25c Crystal Glass Washboards 30e i&wu i I 1A Mill Liquid Hi Refreshc bottle of WiH "The World'j I In New REVENUE CUTTER SERVICE. Rescue Work and Derelict Destroy-* ing of Winter Cruise End. ! The winter cruise of the revenue cutter service on the Atlantic coast, which 'began November 1 last year, ended at midnight Thursday last. The vessels will now return to their headquarters for painting and overhauling in preparation for summer work. The season has been busy for the cutter fleet. Numerous heavy storms that swept the coast during December and January caused the abandonment of many coasting schooners, some becoming water-logged dereliet6, dangerous to navigation. These were hunted out and destroyed by revenue cutters, in addition to giving aid to vessels in distress from any cause. A feature of the work done by the revenue cutter fleet was the bringing into port of eight abandoned vessels which were restored to their owners to be repaired and returned to service. The value of the vessels, with their cargoes, thus saved amounted to nearly a third of a million dollars. The derelict destroyer Seneca brought the derelict Sadie A. Sumner into Norfolk and assisted the barge Republic, which had not been abandoned by its crew, into New York. The Androscoggin towed the derelicts Annie Bliss to Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, and the George E. Powell into Gloucester, Mass. The derelict schooner Theresa Wolfe was towed into Portland by the cutter Woodbury. The RChooner Asbury Fountain,' picked up off Hatteras, was towed into Norfolk by the cutters Onondaga and Mohawk after a hard fight to save her. In the past week the Gresham towed the abandoned barge Girard, which she ricked up at sea, into provincetown, Mass. In addition to these the cutters had hold of the schooner Henry Fisk off the New Jersey coast, the schooner S. M. Plummer off the coast of Washington state and several others. In storms these all broke their tow lines and went on the beach to destruction. "Fighting Bob" for More Ships. PAN ANTONIO, Tex., April 4.?Rear Admiral Robley D Evans, retired, in an interview last night deplored the fact that Congress had authorized only two battleships instead of four. By doing so the United States sank to third rank in the navies of the world, he said. MERIT. is made Pk^y branded. i as the best produced tde. We could ma- jj Pure Spring Wheat ji ou get it when you || !| i /R1 j TATT G7 r wis b? lire. I i i i printed as part of the label on ; >ur. rand of Flour you can find on ; Egg-O-See Wheat Flake? fie Kellogg s Corn Flakes 10c Post Toastles lOc ; Shredded Wheat 12c Postum, 15c and 25c Broken Rice, .1 lhs. for l?c | , Head Rice. He and 8c Fanciest Head Rice 1,0c Puffed Rice 1.1c Puffed Wheat ?c ; Korn Kinks, pkg .V H. O. Pancake T^e 111 H. O. Buckwheat 7^tc Hecker's Buckwheat 10c Hecker's Pancake 10c Hecker's Oats lOe j Hecker's Cream Farina 14c Pet Milk* 8 -cans for 25c Pet Milk, small cans 4c Challenge Milk 10c Ea*le Milk 15c Solarine Metal Polish lie ' B. M. Baked Beans. Oc and He Wagner's Baked Beans. 5c and. 12c Standard Cherries Oc Standard Blackberries 8c Shoe Peg Com 10e Maine Corn 12c Country Gentleman Corn 10c Big Four Canned Goods jj Special. || All Quality Goods sold regularly * j at much less than other stores. If J; you learn how good you will buy Z! more. 11 ALL THIS WEEK: ' } One can Keystone Pears 25c I; One can Golden Harv est Lima |; Beans 12c Z One can Trusty Friend Tomatoes. 12c 11 One Can Schriver's A-l String *> Beans 18c 5? Total value 67c s Special, These I Four Cans for | , Hecker's Cream Farina. | Every lady buying a package this 8 week will get an extra special that ?| is worth while. Ask the clerk. Per pkg 14c || a Granulated Wheat Breakfast H food. S Less Than Factory Cost | Fels-Naptha Soap. | By purchasing ~>0c worth of gro- 2 ceriea of us we will this week per-:., fx mlt you to buy one order of this 5 soap. +X 7 cakes for 25c || No sales to aealerB. i:iiiiiiiiii;iiimiin?n??;;;i;i;i:tiiii:i!im:. mmmmmmmmmmKmmm ion Bubbles of faithfulness and aent in every bUocK, r Best Table Water99 Sterilized Bottles PLEA FOE PROHIBITION. > ______ Gov. Haskell Says Put Anti-Liquor Men Only in Office. ATLANTA, Ga., April 4.?"As a soldier is compelled to swear allegiance to hia country before he is allowed to fight her battles, so should a candidate be made to swear allegiance to a position of authority," declares Gov. Charles N. Haskell of 1 Oklahoma in an address before the convention of the Southern Anti-Saloon League here yesterday afternoon. Gov. I Haskell was urging the election of only anti-liquor candidates to office. , Discussing the right of the government to prohibit the sale of intoxicants. Gov. Haskell said: "Anti-prohibitionists argue that prohibition hinders the nrivste riehts of citl. sens. This is undoubtedly true, but the government has a right to do this. The selling of poisons is prohibited by law4 A man who buys carbolic acid la buying it with his own money and if he wishes to drink it, it is purely a personal matter, but the law denies him the right." George T. Gelwicks of Emmltsburg, Md., died Sunday from the effects of poison taken in mistake last Tuesday from which he suffered until his death. DIABETES From late figures the hope of recovery under the new emollient treatment aeems to be about aa follows: In people of sixty and over reanlta are quit* nnlSrkrm nrohablr nlne-tenthi reroTerins. Willi* at fifty and over a lane* majority of all cum yield to the treatment, below fifty and approaching forty the disease g'-ts more atubborn, and between thirty and forty the percentage ia not high?probably not over half yielding. l:nder thirty there la great uncertainty. and la children recorerlee hare been very few, and moat of those were obtained with the aid of skilled physician* forcing nutrition, with alkaline treat* A ment to prevent formation of acetones. t, The new emollient treatment Is known as Fulton's Diabetic Compound. It can b# had ia Washington from Henry Kvans, lOOfi F st. n.w. We desire every patient to writ" us. who is not noting the nsual improvement by the third week. literature mailed free. Jao. 3. Fulton Co.. ft43 Battery St., San Francisco. Cul. We invite correspondence with physicians who hars obstinate oases. f r