The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, February 3, 1896, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

VOLUME LXXIX.—NO. 65. PRICE FIVE CENTS MASSACRED BY THE SPANIARDS, Women and Children Shot on the Streets of Sabanilla. REVENGE FOR A DEFEAT. Wholesale Murder Follows a Fight Ending in a Rout of Regulars. TAKE A LIFE FOR A LIFE Defenseless Cubans Slain to Avenge the Spaniards Who Fell in a Skirmish. HAVANA, Cupa, Jan. 29 (via Tampa, Fla.) Feb. 2.,—The true story of what oc- curred when the insurgents entered Saba- nilla has never been told in print. The authorities prevented the Havana papers from publishing anything but a garblea account of the affair, and even that was not allowed to be cabled to the United States. The official account which I was per- mitted to transmit stated that the insur- gents entered Sabanilla on the 22d, burnea the ‘railroad station and two or taree houses and looted several stores. The gar- rison of fifty men made a strong defense and drove away the insurgents, killng seventeen. The Spanish losses were given as three volunteers killed and ten civil guards wounded. A later official account says that eleven people of color who were unarmed, but who were followers of the insurgents, were killed, and that unfortunately three wo- men were killed. The true story is as fol- lows: Sabanilla, an important railroad town in Matanzas province, was entered by about 400 insurgents under Eduardo Gar- cia at 8:30 A. M. January 22. The main body of insurgents, numbering over 1000, camped on the outskirts of the town. Gar- cia, the leader, belongs to one of the best families of Matanzas, and many of his fol- towers had Iriends and relatives in Sa- ‘vanilla. 3 Fifty regulars, under Captain Juan Galan, and ten guardias civiles shut them- selves up in the barracks, and after being warned by Garcia’s men they refrained from firing upon the invaders. A number of Spanish volunteers fired upon the rebels from the church, which had been' transformed into a fort. The rebels returned the fire, killing three vol- unteers and wounding two civil guards. One insurgent was wounded by a shot from thechurch tower. He was taken out of town on horseback, and is said to be mortally hurt. The townspeople received the insurgents with cheers. Shouts of “Viva Cuba Libre"” were heard on all sides and the in- vaders were surrounded by men, and women as well, who wished them success and told of their woes under Spanish rule. The poor people of the town told Garcia that they were without food, and had eaten nothing but cane from near-by plan- tations for days, as there was no work and no money. The rebel leader then ordered the store- keepers to open their doors and told the people to help themselves. One shop- keeper who resisted was shot. About twenty stores were looted of provisions, sboes and clothing. The railroad station was burned and the invaders then left town. As soon as they had gone the Spanish volunteers issued from the church and fired into the defenseless crowd of people in the streets, killing twenty-four, includ- ing several women and children. It is claimed that these people were among those who looted the stores, but even the Bpanish papers say some were innocent of the crime of taking food to prevent starva- tion. Not satisfied with shooting these people in the streets, the Spanish soldiers took ten Cubans who had been with the in- surgents for a time, but had presented themselves to the Alcalde a day or two before the fight and had been set at liberty under the proclamation of amnesty to all rebels who surrendered their arms. These ten men were shot in cold blood by the volunteers in revenge for the losses sustained in the fight around the church. These are the facts. The Alcalde or Mayor of Sabanilla, Don Juan Galves, is now in Havana and de- clines to go back until a strong force of regulars is sent to Sabanilla as a perma- nent guara. He says the rebels have been informed of the shooting of the townspeople by the Spanish volunteers . and Garcia has threatened to return and kill the volunteers and burn the town. Fifteen hundred refugees from Sabanilla reacned Matanzas Monday. They were men, women and children, and most of them said they fled for fear of further out- rages by Spanish volunteers. Others said they expected the town would be burned by the insurgents. There are daily reports of arrests of sus- Pects in all the provinces. They are thrown into prisons without a trial, and in many cases without any evidence cf having aided the Cuban cause in any way. Their gravest crime may be that they sym- Patnize with the patriotic rebels in the tield. Many of them aold American citi- 2enship papers and speak good English. The American Consul interposes in all these cases ang prevents a court-martial, Tihese people are mot taken:in arms. m‘;:“ :’&""‘nmenl after much delay in- ¢ Consul that civil trial bas been granted, but_ the time drags along and the People remain in jajy, . Rodriguez, who was taken off the Amer- ican utcnn:er Olivette ten days ago, is still 10 jail. Cepero, the ' American, who wad insurgent leader and who was arrested on a south coast passenger steamer, and who claims that he was on his way to Havana to surrender and claim amnesty, is still in Moro Castle. Honore Lane, a Frenchman who claimed to have been kept prisoner by Gomez for several weeks, but who is said to have remained with the insurgents of his own accord, and came to Havana, where he was arrested on a charge of carrying messages, is in the Moro Castle and the French Consul has asked for a civil trial. Sanguilly, whose case is the only one in which a trial has been held, was convicted without legal evidence, and doomed to life imprisonment. el e, STRENGTHENING THE TROCHA. Armies of the Insurgeuts Prevented ¥rom Joining Each Other. Cusa, Feb. General Sabas Marin, the acting Captain-General, who has taken the field in person againstthe rebels, is directing active operations with a view to forcing Antonio Maceo, who is said to be on the eastern boundary of Pinar del Rio, to a decisive engagement. Yesterday General Marin was at Guira de Melena and to-day he was at Quivican, province of Havan A strong force is proceeding against Gomez, the rebel commander-in-chief, who was last reported to be east of Quivi- can, near the center of the province of Ha- vana. Several engagements between the troops and rebel bands have taken place recently, but no details are obtainable. A freight train consisting of thirty cars was stopped by insurgents yesterday at Pozo Rekendo, a few miles south of San Felipe, on the Havana and Batabano Rail- way. Troops have been sent in pursuit of the rebels. who stopped the train by re- moving rails. The engine was badly dam- aged. It is not known whether the rebels made away with any freight or not, but it is supposed that they did. The trocha, or military line, that has been established across the island with a view to preventing Maceo from going eastward across the province of Havana has been greatly strengthened, and the authorities here believe that Gomez is to the east of the line and Maceo to the west, and that General Marin will be able to pre- vent a junction of their forces and defeat each of the rebel commanders separately. J. FRANK ULARK. SECURING 4 GEEMAN LOAN. The Turkish Porte Will Borrow Thirty Million Francs. LONDON, Ex6., Feb. 2.—The Times will to-morrow publish a dispatch from Con- stantinople saying the Porte is stated to be negotiating with the German banking house of Bleichroder, for a loan of 30,000,000 francs, to be secured by the Government’s share of the lighthouse receipts. This share was raised to 25 per cent in October, 1894. Great Britain protested against this action, alleging that the efficiency of the lighthouse service would be impaired or excessive dues would be charged. The Porte made no reply to this protest, and- the palace has now instructed the Government not to make any reply, but to basten the loan. Sir Pnilip Currie, the British Embassa- dor to Turkey, has written a letter to the Daily News, which that paper will publish to-morrow, denying that Mr. Fontance, the British Consul at Angora, had been transterred to Harpoot, and that Mr. Richards, British Consul at Jeddah, would succeed Mr. Fontance at Angora. PERISH WHILE AT MASS, Eight Persons Killed and Sixty Injured by the Collapse of a Church. Walls of the Structure Give Way and the Roof Crashes Down Upon the Worshipers. PARIS, Fraxce, Feb. 2.—A terrible acci- dent, resulting in the killing of eight per- sons and ng of sixty, occurred to-day at Ma ier, a village near Angers, in the Department of Maine-et- Loire. The disaster was the coliapse of the village church, in which mass was be- ing celebrated. The structure was comfortably filled, most of the worshipers being women and children. Suddenly and with very little warning the walls began to sway, and be- fore all the congregation could get out fell. The roof crashed down upon the struggling throng beneath, and it is sur- prising that not more than eight persons were killed. The work of removing the dead and res- culng the injured was promptly commenced by the villagers, who were aided by peas- ants and others from the country round about. The condition of wome of the in- jured is so serious that itis feared they will die. A larger congregation than usual attended the mass to-day, it being the feast of the purification of the Blessed Virgin. e REITURN FROM CHENG TVL Americans Complete Their Investigation of the Szechuen Outrages. SHANGHAT, Cuiva, FKeb. 2—The American commission, consisting of Sher- idan R. Read, United States Consul at Tientsin; Commander Merrill of the United States navy and Mr. Cheshire, in- terpreter, appointed to investigate the outrages perpetrated on missionaries in the province of Szechuen in June last, ar- rived here yesterday from Cheng Tui. ——- Duchess of Oldenburg Dead. BERLIN, GErMANY, Feb. 2.—Elizabeth, Grand Duchess of Oldenburg, died to-day. She was a daughter of Prince Joseph of Saxe-Altenburg, and was born March 26, 1826. She was married to the Grand Duke of Oldenburg February 10, 1852. R MR. HUNTINGTON 2 W IS DISMAYED. STILL CAPTIVE IN [TS BED OF SAND, Low Tides Prevent a Renewal of Efforts to Free the St. Paul, THOUSANDS LINE THE BEACH, Experts Express the Opinion That the Magnificent Ocean Liner Is Doomed. LONG BRANCH, N. J., Feb. 2.—This famous seaside resort never saw larger crowds than those which have visitea the “‘Branch” since the American line steamer St. Paul has been aground opposite the Grand View Hotel. A conservative esti- mate of to-day’s visitors is 25,000. The Pennsylvania Railroad ran eightexcursion trains from Philadelphia: Among the sight-seers were hundreds of the employes of Cramp’s shipyards, where the St. Paul was built. The chief engineer of the yards was one of the number. Two special trains were run from New York, and the trolley cars from Asbury Pork brought thou- sands of visitors. Farmers drove in from the country, liverymen had all their rigs hired out and bicycle riders were outin large numbers. Long Branch did not expect such a gath- ering and restaurants were compelled to turn thousands away. Bakeries and grocery stores did a land office business. The wind was strong from the north- west all day, causing an extremely low tide, lower in fact than at any other time since the liner stranded. At 3 o’clock this afternoon there was not over five feet of | water on the bar. Sixteen feet of the red water line of the St. Paul showed, indi- cating that the steamer was in the sand | and clay to the depth of atleast six feet. Captain Merritt, one of those in charge of the floating of the ship, says that she will be pulled off with two or three more high tides. The opinion of many experts is, however, that the ship is doomed. Y SR . FAST IN THE MUD, The Cunarder Umbria a Prisoner for Several Hours. NEW YORK, N. Y., Feb. 2—For an hour and a halt to-night, the Cunard steam- ship Umbria was a prisoner in the mud of North river. The vessel had reached her pier and was being warped into the slip. The tide was lower than usual, owing to the strong westerly wind, and for that reason when the Umbria had been headed in she was caught in the soft mud. The vessel’s engines were reversed, but she refused to budge. Tugs were sent for, and after four of them had hauled away for an hour the Umbria slipped into her berth. In the strong box of the Umbria there was a gold consignment of $1,901,775. S. Fleming, the purser, said he did not know where the gold was going. FENEZUELA RETALIATES. English Railway Fined for Suspending Its Passenger Service. NEW YORK, N. Y., Feb. 2.—The Her- ald’s Caracas cable says: The manager of the English railway between Barcelona and Gunta refuses to obey the order of the Government as to the resumption of pas-’ senger train service, which was stopped under the excuse tnat the business did not warrant such service. The refusal of the manager is tempered by the statement that he cannot act without direct orders from the London office. The company will be fined $500 for each day’s failure to run trains, as ordered. The officials say the company has violated the terms of its coniract and grant in many respects. f SEOEEET S CLAIM AGAINST CANADA. Dominion Timber Thieves Stripping the XNorthern Montana Forests. BUTTE, Moxt., Feb.2.—It is likely a huge claim will be made against Uanada for timber depredations in the northern part of the State, Colonel T. A. Root, Government inspeetor for Montana and Idaho, has received many complaints lately from settlers in Northern Montana that the Canadians have for some time been coming across the, border and cutting trees until the forests in two counties are nearly stripped of timber. It is believed tbat two or three million dollars’ worth of timber has been taken in this way, as the thieving has been going on for some time. WEST JOINS THE LOBBY. Utah's Ex-Governor Will Lead Huntington’s Fight at Frankfort. Senator Goebel's Bill Will Be Re- ported From the Committee Early in the Week. FRANKFORT, K., Feb, 2.—The bill to repeal the Southern Pacific charter will be reported from the comimittee the first of the week. An open session’ of tke com- mittee to hear arguments pro and con has been announced. It seems. a foregone conclusion that the' committee will report the bill favorably, but after argument the sentiment may be changed. Ex-Governor West of Utah is here, pre- sumably to visit his friends, but it is said he will lead the lobby against the bill. Both tho Hunter and Blackburn people are afraid of the bill and are noncommit- tal in the matter, though it is' known the friends of repeal will expect their support. ¢ Murdered in Her Home. BOSTON, Mass., Feb.. 2.—Mrs. Sophia Grant of the Charlestown district was mur- dered by some unknown person last night in her home on: Brighton street. Mrs. Grant received two heavy blows on the back of the head, crushing her skuli. Every drawer in the rooms on the floor on ‘which the murder was committed was turned topsy-tury R Declares for Free Silver, NASHVILLE, Texx., Feb, 2.—Congress- man Benton McMillan announces that he will not make the‘race for the Guberna- torial nomination, but would stand for re- election as representative from the Fourth Tennessee district. He declares that he isfor the free and unlimited coinage of silver at the ratio cf 16 to 1. A Nation of Connoisscurs, The immense consumption of cham- pagne in this country is an evidence of our taste, and the importation of 1895 of 79,049 cases of G. H. Mumm'’s Extra Dry a proof of refinement, the reason being that its singular purity and superior quality com- mend it to physicians as well as laymen. SCHEMING TO 0UST THE CHANCELLOR, Von Hohenlohe’s Position to Be Assailed by a Strong Coalition. HIS POLICY IN DISFAVOR. Oppquigm toEmperor William’s Naval Plans Will Be Utilized by His Enemies. LONDON, Ex6., Feb. 2.—The Berlin cor- respondent of the Times telegraphsthat the Agrarian, Conservative and Bismarck par- ties have entered into a scheme to over- throw Chancellor von Hohenlohe, who does not favor the Emperor’s proposals for increasing the naval strength of the empire. Thereisno sign that the Chan- cellor’s position-has been shaken, but the coalition’s hope to overthrow him is based on the Emperor's energetic temper and his insistence on the fulfillment of his desires. Count von Waldersee and Count Wart- ernsleben are mentioned as Chancellor Hohenlohe’s successors, but their names are mentioned merely because a prema- ture disclosure of : the real candidate’s name would jeonardize the scheme. It is believed in some quarters that the real candidate of the coalition is Count Herbert Bismarck, but, the correspondent adds, perhaps the suggestion of this name is made by friends of the Chancellor in or- der to defeat the scheme by connecting with ita name which is distasteful to the Emperor. e g REJECTED BY RUSSIA. Germany’s Overtures for an Alliance Said to Have Been Refused. LONDON, ExG., Feb. 2.—The Observer claims to have authority for the statement that Germany recently invited Russia and other powers to co-operate with her in a plan hostile to the British occupation of Egyot. Russia refused to accept the pro- - posal. GERMANS _ AND BRITONS FIGHT. Crews of Two Steamers Quarre/ Over the Transvaal Dispute, and. One Man Will Die. LONDON, ExG., Feb. 2.—The Daily Graphic will to-morrow publish a :dis- patch from Brussels saying that the crews of the German steamer Preussen and the British - steamer Hathmore became in- volved in a dispute Saturday over the message recently sent by Emperor William to President Kruger of the South African republic.. Words soon led to blows, and the fight was progressing fiercely when the police intervened and arrested several of the combatants. One of tne German sailors was so badly injured by the pounding he received tuat heis likely to die. ———— JUSTIN McCARTHY'S SUCCESSOR. Parnellites Will Canvass the Candidates at a Dublin Mesting. LONDON, Exg., Feb. 2.—The meeting of the anti-Parnellite section of the Irish Parliamentary party to discuss the selec- tion of a leader in place of Justin MecCar- thy, who, it is said, will retire from the leadership this week, wiil be held in Dub- lin on March 8. Mr. McCarthy’s retire- ment is attributed solely.to his declining health and arrears of work. The Dublin meeting will merely discuss the question of who shall succeed Mr. Mc- Carthy. The final selection will be made in London. It is the opinion now that Thomes Sexton, who represents North Kerry in the House of Commons, will be selected to lead the party. All the morning papers will to-morrow discuss the approaching retirement of Mr. McCarthy. The Daily News praises his tact, temper and dignity, and adds that if political capacity is the sole guide in selecting hissuccessor Mr. Sexton ought to be chosen for the place. The Standard pays atribute to Mr. McCarthy’s amiabil- ity, and says it does not see a successor to bim who would be capable of holding the anti-Parnellite party together. il FRIENDLY TO BAYARD. A London Editor Hopes the Embassador Will Not Resign. LONDON, Exa., Feb. 2.—In its issue to- morrow the Daily News will say it regrets the action of the Committee on Foreign Relations of the American House of Rep- resentatives in adopting a resolution cen- suring American Embassador Bayard for the statements uttered py him in his re- cent speeches at Edinburgh and Boston, England. It will add that Mr. Bayard is exceedingly popular here, yet he is a per- sistent defender of American interests. The paper admits that his speeches con- tained unusual attacks upon the commer- cial system of his own Government, but says it hopes he will not retire, seeing that the resolution of censure was adopted by a purely party vote. By gt o) STRIKERS APPLY THE TORCH. Destruction of Chicngo and Southeastern Railway Property Charged to the Ex-Employes. LEBANON, Ixp., Feb. 2.—Regardless of the protestations of the striking Chicago and Southeastern Railway shopmen of their intention to obey the law, fire broke out in the caboose yards adjoining the shops early this morning. The depart- ment answered the alarm promptly, but before the conflagration could be brought under control every caboose in the yard was destroyed. The shop was saved with difficulty. Advices from Westfield, twenty miles east of this city, are that the depot at that point, together with a large amount of freight, went up in smoke. It is alleged that both fires are the result of the work of the strikers or their sympathizers. It is rumored that the trainmen will quit work unless an adjustment of the trouble is effected to-morrow. Not a train passed over the line to-day. s Al 4 CORPSE FOUND 1IN BED. Myasterious Death of an Unkuown Man in a Boarding-House. ST. LOUIS, Mo., Feb. 2.—The corpse of an unknown man was found in bed at o boarding-house at 2650 Pine street late to- night. Ten days ago he siopped at the place with a woian of his own age, 40, and registered as Mr. and Mrs. J. Norris. The man was ill last night and the woman got some laudanum for him. To-day she was not to be found. On the.man’s arm is tattooed a pair of hearts piercea by an arrow and the letters “D. M. His linen was marked “Lon- don.” Ina trunk was found a card of H. E. Williams, M.D., Cooksville, Pa. On the back of the card was written in pencil, *‘Brandywine Post No. 34, G. A. R.” The mysterious couple seemed to be in good circumstances financially. MACKAY'S SAD RETURNING Arrives at New York From Paris With the Body of His Son. Funeral Services at Greenwood Ceme- tery Veiled by an Air of Mystery. NEW YORK, N. Y. Feb, The French line steamer La Touraine, which arrived this morning, had among its pas- sengers Mr. John W. Mackay, the well- krown Pacitic Coast millionaire, Mrs. Mackay and their son, Clarence Mackay. They brought with them the body of their eldest son, the late John W. Mackay Jr., who was killed near Paris several months ago. Mr. and Mrs. Mackay were met atthe pier by the Rev. Father Ducey of St. Leo’s Catholic Church. 'Almost as soon as the passengers had left the ship the casket containing the body was brought ashore, placed in a funeral car and taken to Green- wood Cemetery. Before being' placed in the magnificent mausoleum recently erected in Greenwood by Mr. Mackay, it is said, private funeral services conducted by Father Ducey were held. Father Ducey declined to see any re- porters at his residence to-day. Clarence Mackay said the family had no statements to make to the press and that the inter- ment would be conducted privately. An- other authority, however, states thatno services were held to-day, but that they will take place in Greenwood to-morrow. il Sullivan’ s Recovering. SPRINGFIELD, IrL., Feb. 2.—John L. Suilivan is recovering from the injuries received when he walked from a moving train several days ago. The inflammation in his wounds is subsiding and he eats and sleeps well. If no unfavorable symp- toms develop, Sullivan will be able to leave here Tuesday. PANORAMIC VIEW OF CONSTANTINOPLE, THE TURKISH METROPOLIS, UPON WHICH THE EYES OF THE DIPLOMATIC {Reproduced from the New York Herald.] WORLD ARE NOW TURNED. OVER A MILLION LOST BY FIRE, Two Large Business Blocks in Philadelphia Are Destroyed, OTHERS BADLY DAMAGED Lafayette Hotel Guests Forced to Make a . Precipitate Exit. FLAMES ‘' IN AN ART GALLERY, The Hazeltine Stock of Pictures Reduced to Ashes—Baptist Literature Consumed, PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Feb. 2.—The fiercest, most stubborn and most destruc< tive fire that has ted Phiiaaelphia in years originated a 0 o’clock this morne ing in the cellar of the Hazeltine buil ding, 1416 and 1418 Chestnut street, and before it had been subdued the Hazeltine build« ing and the American Baptist Publication Society’s building at 1420 and 1422 Chest- nut street were destroyed. The dry-goods store of Homer Le Boutellier & Co., 1412 and 1414 Chestnut street, was badly dam- aged, and the rear of the Hotel Lafayette, which faces on Broad street, was damaged to the extent of $75,000. The approximate total loss by the fire is $1,075,000, the greater part of which is covered by insure ‘ ance. The cause of the fire is not definitely known. When the firemen arrived, the Hazeltine building was already a mass of flames. The building was several stories in height, with an ornate front of brick and terra-cotta. The flames spread with great rapidity and the fire was soon bes yond the control of the department. Several alarms brought nearly every fire company in' the city to the scene. The flames leaped up high into the air and burst out of the rear of the building on Sansom street and threatened the hand- some clubhouse of the Union League with destruction. Fortunately the wind blew the flamés and sparks in another diroction. The rear stories of the Lafayette Hotel towered high above the Hazeltine build- ing, and the flames poured over the wall toward the hotel. By this time most of the guests in the hotel had been awakened, and, as the building seemed in imminent danger, they -were warned to leave. Scantily clothed men and women poured into Broad street, dragging with them their trunks and baggage. All the nighg cabmen in the neighborhood had been ate tracted to the scene, and they garnered a harvest of dollars in conveying the guests to other hotels. Police patrol wagons wera also pressed into ‘service for this duty, and among those who availed themselves of this sort of vehicle was Mayor Porter King of Atlanta and the other Atlantans who came on here with the Liberty bell. They passed the remainder of the night in the Continental Hotel. There is a story going around that one of the Atlantans slept all through the ex- citement and descended for breakfast this morning in blissful unconsciousness that he had been in peril of cremation. The story, however, lacks confirmation. The fire in the meanwhile had spread from the Hazeltine building to the fur- story marble building of the Baptist Pub- lication Society, and this, too, was soon a mass of flames. Like the Hazeltine build- ing it extends 230 reet back from Chestnut to Sansom street. The Lafayette Hotel had reopened only recently, after having been altered and refurnished at a cost of $500,000. The firemen ‘directed most of their attention toward saving this build- ing. It wason fire at least a half-hundred times, but the department did splendid work and confined the flames to the rooms The dream of! Ponce de Leon was that he might dis- cover the fountain of perpetual yquth. He died searching for it. The fountain he was looking for was an impossibile ity, unnatural and czimericll. The nearest thing to the fountain of perpet- al youth is a foun« tain of perpetual, perfect health, Health keeps people young. Sickness makes them old. Health means first lof all, strength and regularity in the di- estive functions, gut indigestible mat. ter into the stomach, and it is likely to find lodgment in the bowels. It will sto; their action. Poie sonous, refuse mate ter, which should have been thrown off, is retained in the body, and as it cannot go any place else, more or less of it gets into the bl That’s constipation. It is such a wonder- fully simple thing that people do not regard it seriously. They let it run on, let it grow ‘worse, become chronic, and show itself all over the body in fifty ways before they con« sider it important. Constipation causes nine-tenths of all human ailments, Itsfirst symptoms do not seem very serious, but cven they are very disagreeable. A few of them are sour stomach, flatulence, hearte burn, distress after eating, foul breath, coated tongue, dizziness, palpitation of the heart, sick and bilious headaches, general lassitude and debility. When any of these symptoms show themselves, you should immediately take Dr. Pieree’s Pleasant Pel- lets, according to directions. Theyare tiny, sugar-coated granules, made on purpose to cure constipation. They do this perfectly and quickly, and they are the only prepara- tion in the world that will do it. There are lenty of medicines that will give relief as | Emz as you keep on taking them, but you | can’t stop. They d;m'ft checi they give merely temporary relief. octor Plerce’s Pleasaym Pellets give immediate relief and ' produce a germancnié cure,

Other pages from this issue: