The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, April 19, 1897, Page 2

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2 WANTS A NAVAL RESERVE FLEET Secretary Long Deems It an Economical Necessity Many Vessels Now in Com- mission Will Soon Be Tled Up. The Monterey Among Them-—| #re Needed for the New Battleships. WASHINGTON, D. C., April 18, —Secre- tary Long has decided upon a general plan to organize anaval reserve fleet. Hedeems it necessary, for economical reasons, to put a number of ships out of commission nd lay them up in reserve. He also stated that it is proposed to select some fresh-water basin in which to keep these vessels. It is not his intention to materi- ally deplete the squadrons in commission, but he proposes putting out of service several ships which experience shows are rarticularly expensive to maintain and which are not absolutely required. The Secretary says that the ordering of the Katahdin out of commission was a vreliminary step in executing his plan. The Katahdin bas been tested and found satisfactory for & vessel of her typs. She is of no value as a cruiser, and to maintain her in commission is not thought | advisaole by the Secretary. The Katah- | din will, therefore, be the first ship of the | reserve fleet. The next vessel to be ordered out ot commission will be the Columbia. Shortly siter the conclusion of the Grant monu- ment exercises at New York on the : the flag of the crusier will be hauled down and she will be prepared for service with the reserve. Next will follow the Minne- epolis. She will be directed to return to the United States shortly after the Colum- bia goes out of commission, and upon her arrival here will be prepared for laying up. According to the programme of the Sec- retary of the Navy these ships and all others which will be added to the reserve fleet will have constantly on board a | small crew, sufficient to keep the vessel in good condition with respect to engines, boilers, battery, decks, etc. The crew will virtually be care-takers. It is propable that two line officers and one engiaeer officer will be attached to the reserve ves- sels. The ships will be kept in condition fora call. Secretary Long’s idea is that they shall be so taken care of as to be available for prompt service in the event of an exigency. Ithough the Secretary has not defi- nitely decided upon this point it is likely that the reserve vessels will periodically be fully manned and sent on short cruises for the purpose of testing their engines and trying their batteries. In all probability two monitors on the Atlantic coast and one on the Pacific will shortly be placed out of commission and be added to the reserve fleet. On the Atlantic side the Amphitrite will first be laid up. She | has been quite thoroughly tested and Sec- | retary Long is of the opinion that further | cri ng on her part is not essential. The Terror he will keep in commission for 2 longer period. In time, however, it 1s practically settled that she will join the reserve fleet. The Pauritan is likely to be kept in commission. She will be em- | ployed in theway of a schoolship upon which to instruct officers ana men in duties on board a monitof. In all likeli- hood before the summer is over the Mon- terey, on the Pacific coast, will be ordered to the Mare Island yard and put in re- serve. The Monadnock may join her in the winter. Secretary Long is now considering which is {he best station to which to order the reserve ships on the Atiantic coast. He is considering the facilities of New- port News, New London, League Island and a site on the Hudson River. At present he tavors the League Island sta- tion. An appropriation will be availabie in July with which to do considerable dredging at tbat station, which will in- crease the depth of the entrance of the channel. The question as to the selection of a station will probably be consicered by a board of officers to be appointed by the Secretary. On the Pacific there is no stion that Mare Island will be chosen, One important point to which Secretary Long has given attention is the question of men. He does not intend to ask Con- gress for an increase in the enlisted force. Therefore he says that a number of cruis- ing vessels will have to be placed out of service to make it possible to commission the Towa and other vessels neariug com- pletion. WORK BEFORE THE SENATE. Buch Important Business Is Overshad- owed by the Question of Organ- izing the Committees. WASHINGTON, D. C., April 18.—Sena- tor Davis will _meke anotber attempt on Monday in executive session to get & day fixed for taking a vote on the arbitration treaty. It is not believed tnat a great deal of time will be given to the treaty during the week. The bankruptey bill will continue to boid its place on the calendar as unfin- ished business, but probably it will not be pressed seriously. Morgan has an- nounced his intention to insist daily upon the consideration of his Cuban resolution during the morning hour, but will not block other business with it. Much of the Senate’s time will be given to the question of the organization of committees. The Republican Senators will have a caucus on Monday to consider the subject. Consideration of the appropriation bills will be concluded this week. It is ex- pected that the Indian bill will pass early to-morrow, and the sundry civil and agri- culiural bills will follow in their order. There is no expectation that there will be any prolonged debate upon any of the bills. There will be an effort to amend the sundry civil bill by the addition of a provision for the regulation of forest res- ervations. This may lead to some discus- gion, but the friends of the amendment do not anticipate much trouble. megahes Representative Milliken Dead. WASHINGTON, D. C., April 18.—Rep- resentative Seth Milliken of Maine died to-night of congestion of the lungs and kidneys. He served continuously in Con- gress since March 4, 1883, Fallejo’. Dead Interre VALLEJO, CAL., April 18.—The funeral of the late Edward Longan took place this afternoon and was largely attended by friends and relatives of the deceased. Rey. W. L. Gaston officiated, ih, N e RN il e Lensigoyet Kourtsiora): %, ‘/;%sm,l,,hnl/// ! gy Y s W) \\\\\ W M oeen o 2 h Names of Movntains are n CRPITALS Highways { e~ Roucls ; : ¢+ + + + FrontierLine /0. . 15 cale of Mcles MAPS SHOWING THE EASTERN FRONTIER LINE AND MOUNT OLYMPUS. It was on the sides and about the base of Olympus that most of the fighting took place Saturday and yesterday. The village of Nezeros is at the foot of Mount Analipsis, about twenty miles north by east of Larissa. Kourtsiovall is a small place just within the Greek side of the frontier, about eight miles north of Turnayo. The points are east ana west of the main road from Larissa to Elassona, which passes through Liga: and Kokkino Petra Pass. The continual rise of the hills north of the plains of Larissa enables the flashes of the guns at Nezeros and Kourtsiovali to be easily seen from the city. Should the Greeks push on from Nez:ros to Kanalia and beyond they will endanger Edhem Pasha’s communications with Balonika by way of Katerina, which is itself exposed to attack by sea. With the exception of those from Larissa to Tsagesi on the tea, and by way of Turnavo to the frontier at Vide Melonas on Kokkino Petra Pass, both of which are paved, all the roads north of Larissa are very poor, especially on the Turkish side of the frontier, and few of them passable for artillery ex- cept with the greatest difficulty. The road from Elassona to Katerina by way of Petra Pass is a fairly good road, but full of steep hills. BATTLES RAGE FROM REVENT TO KELERQS Continued from First Page. diplomatic relations. The Minister took the dispaich to Secretary Sherman. The Secretary and Minister discussed the critical aspect of affairs. | | \ | | [ | | | | The only likelihood of bringing this | Government into the imbroglio is pre- | sented by questions relating to the right | of asylum of Turkish and Greek subjects in American legations and consulates. If any case arises where a Turk takes refuge in the residence of a consular officer of the United States in Turkey the State De- partment will be given an opportunity of declaring itself for the first timeduring the present administration. Under the Cleveland administration the right of asylum was a very uncertain thing. The stand of this Government was never | clearly defined, One case during the war between China and Japan indicated that the United States did not care to go very far in set- tling & question which has always been the cause of diplomatic controversy. Two Japanese who claimed to be students, but were accused by the Chinese of being spies, {00k refuge in the United States Consulate-General at Shanghai. The Chi- nese Government demanded that they be turned over to its authorities. Jernigan, the Consul - General, appealed to the State Department for advice, and the up- shot of the matter was the Japanese were turned out. They were caught by the Chinese and put to death. The Senate adopted, a reso- lation calling for the correspondence. This was sent in, and after some indigna- tion had been expressed over the sction of this Government the Senators and everybody else forgot about the matter. The war between Turkey and Greece has recalled the fact that this grave question was left hanging in the air. If any natur- alized Americans of Grecian birtn who re- turned to their native land to fight gets captured by the Turkish troops the Gov- ernment may also be brought into connec- tion with the war. Oune important consid- erution in the event of such happening is the United States claims the right to have one of its citizens accused of crime in Tur- key tried by the international courts. This country has representatives among the judges of each of these tribunals. Only last Friday Turkey made an important concession concerning the rights of Amer- ican citizens brought to trial before these extra-territorial courts. A man of Turkish birth, who had returned to Turkey after becoming naturalized in the United States, was arrested on 2 cbarge of homicide. Minister Terrell wanted him turned over to the international tribunal. Turkey refused on the ground the man has been vaturalized since 1869, and the Porte de- clined to recognize the rightof mixed courts to try formers Turkish subjects, who had become alienated subsequent to that date. Terrell kept insisting, and on Fri- day cabled that the alleged marderer had been delivered to the international tri- bunal. This important concession may have considerable bearing if any Greek- Americans are captured in Turkey. Prominent men here schooled in in- ternational law agree that the United States will observe the strictest neutrality. Senator Davis of Minnesota, chairman of the Committee on Foreign Relations, thinks the hostilities will surely involye the rest of Europe. The United States is well represented in European waters, promising _adequate protection to therights of Americans. The cruiser Minneapolis will remain in Turk- ish waters for tiie present. She will have with her the smaller cruisers San Fran- cisco and Admiral Seifridge’s flagships Raleigh and Marblebead. —_———— Asks Powers to Intervene PARIS, France, April 18.—~The 1 calls upon the powers' to intervene by force of arms to stop Turkey and Greece from further fighting. BERLIN, GEerMANy, April 18.—It is stated here that the German Minister to Greece will protect the Turks in that country. E ot gt ok HOME OF THE GODS. In the Shadow of Olympus Greek and Turk Are Now Battling for the Mastery. It is in the shadow of the fabled home of the gods that the Turk and the Greek now confront each other in battle array and on down its slopes the thunders of war have begun to roll. days when the mignty Jove hurled at the | presuming Titans his terrible thunder- bolts and shook Ossa piled upon Pelion into separate mountain masses has Olym- pus witnessed such scenes and heard such sounds as have now already begun to dis- turb his long repose. Whether restrained by the fear of the wrath of the gods or that his forbidding sides frowned upon the maneuvers of armies, contending leaders have sought other fields for a trial of might. The barbarian Xerxes profaned the sa- cred precincts by leading his mighty host across the soatheastern slope to find at Marathon and Salamis the price of his temerity. It was along this very road across ““Low Olympus,”’ through Nezeros, where the Greeks and Turgs are battling, that he found his way down to Larissa and =0 on to Athens. The ancient Greeks bestowed the name of Olympus upon many other mountains both in their own country and in Asia Minor, but this triple-peaked mass, with its precipitous sides and cloud-veiled sum- mits, forbidding the intrusion of mortals, ‘was chosen befors all as the most suitable seat for the rulers of the heavens and the earth. Olympus is, as it were, the forepost of the Balkan peninsula. The highest sum- mit attains an elevation of 9750 feet, or nearly as high as pointed Ossa and long- stretched Pelion together, whose heights are respectively 5250 ana 5130 feet. The lower slopes are covered with beautiful forests of oak, chestnut, beech and plane trees, with pine farther up, while naked rocks complets the way to the summits, snow-capped nine months in the year. From the sea on the east 1s seen a long array of vast precipices, cleft here and there by ravines, whose sides are covered with forest trees, and in whose depths numerous torrents dash down to the sea. It really seems to form a world apart from the one below. Forty-two peaks form the battlements of the upper moun- tain citadel, deterring alike the bold ban- dit and the zealous monks from attempt- ing to find loagment there, as they have done lower down. Fifty-two spriugs feed the various streams that flow from its sides to the river Peneus, ordirectly to the sea. Wildcats abound on the lower slopes and the chamois finds security on the rugge dpinnacles above. Olympus, as well as alt the valley of the Xeragi River to the west, was included within the ancient limits of Thessaly, but the frontier boundary line, as fixed by the powers at the Berlin con’erence in 1878, runs from the sea westward across its lower slopes nearly to Elassona, and then turns to the south along the Melonas "Mountains, across the Xeragi and up the Ardham Mountains, leaving the sacred mountain and a large part of Thessaly, with its Hellenic population, to the Turk. HACKED DOWN “A CRIPPLE. Murder Committed by an Aged Man, Who Atterward Cuts His Own Throat. EXETER, R. L, April 18.—Joseph Phillips, 80 years of age, assaulted Aibert F. Wilcox, a cripple, at his home yester- day with an ax, and then cut bis throat, asa result of which Wilcox died this morning and Phillips is not expected to live through the night. The cause of the Not since the | trouble is not known. Hannzh Wilcox, a niece of the dead man, states that there had been apparently no differences be- tween the two. When they met Wilcox addressed Phillips, who seized an ax, knocking him down and inflicting three wounds. Miss Wilcox screamed, and Warren F. Wilcox ran to the spot. When he saw this mean approaching Phillips drew a jackknife from his pocket and vplunged 1t into his own throat on the right side, making a deep wound, from which he soon fell exhausted. AR THOSE VERASCOPIC PICTURES. | Manoger Brady Ciosely Scans the Nega- tive of the Round in Which His Idol Is Shattered. ass, April 18.—A New York The pictures of the Corbett- Fitzeimmons fight are ready for printing. | Some are remarkably good, but the best | are those of the least interesting rounds. There is one excellent picture, however, which will cause an ulmost endless amount of discussion. Itisa moment in the fourteenth round following the knock- out blow, as described by one who has seen the negatives. 1t shows Corbett col- | lapsing, with one knee on the floor, his | hands down, Fitzsimmons bending over nim and his right glove in conjunction | with the point of Corbet’s chin. This blow mey or may not have been a foul and will be the bone of much contention. This negaiive is said to be one of the clearest in the series and has been exam- ined with great interest by William A. Brady, manager for the defeated com- batant, He is said to have spent two hours carefully examining with a high- power glass the series following the knock- out blow. The taking of pictures began with the camera at the extreme right of the arena. The space in front was ket clear of spec- tators, as but a few favored persons got in among them. Stuartand his hat for seven minutes obstructed the field of the camera, 50 tbat the first thousand feet of film bear only pictures of that hat with a peoumbra of ringside incidents. The sixth round is obscured in important parts by a fog of smoke from the cizars of the favored few. The following rounds are fair down to the fourteenth and last, while the spacing of the pictures1s very uneaven. The camera which took the final kinetographs did notinciude the space near the ropes, into which Corbett crawled before he was counted out. The pictures show him painfully crawling out of the camera’s field, and at the end his head, arms and shoulders are out of the picture. R SOUTHERN SUPERSTITION. Alabama Cotion-Planters Blame the Tele- phone for the Siump in Prices and Destroy the Wires. HUNTSVILLE, Ara., April 18.—The superstitious feeling in this section is as- suming threatening proportions. Until within the last few months telephone lines have been unknown. Recentiy many towns have linked themselves together. The more ignorant element could not un- derstand how a man in Huntsville could speak to another a hundred miles away. About the time the long-distance tele- phone was run out of Huntsville the price of cotton depreciated. Farmers, unable to account for the slump, blamed the tele- phone. At first it was & mere suggestion, but later it became an actual belief along the entire line built by the Georgis and Alsbama Company. On many occasions poles have been chopped down and wires cut by farmers in their mad beliet that they were responsible for the low price of cotton. One line, extending from Gads- den to Walnut Grove, has been a victim of this superstition half a dozen fimes. One farmer pulled down seven miles of wire. The court may grant an injunc- tion, but so thoroughly aroused are the farmers that nothing short of armed gnards will prevent the tearing down of the entire system. JUDGE MAGUIRE WRITES T0 BLAND Makes a Sfiggestion Concerning His Rail- road Resolution. Agrees With the Missourian on Every Probposition but One. Would Have the Matter Referred tc the House Judiciary Committee. WASHINGTON, D. C., April 18.—Al- though the resolution sought to be intro- duced in the House yesterday by Bland of Missouri has no direct bearing on the Central Pacific Railroad, Judge Maguirs said to THE CALL correspondent to-night that, as it provides for its reference to the Pacific Railroads Committee of the House, it was a matter of some importance to the California people. . Judge Maguire to- night addressed the\ following letter to Mr. Bland: 1 entirely agree with you in all that you pro- POS2, except the appointment of the Commit- tee on Pucific Railroads 1o consider the matter, and, as I uncerstand yesterday, you agree with me that that course shouid uot be urged by us at present. The information requested In your resolu- tion should be promptly called for by the House, and when received from the Attorney- General shou!d be referred not to the Commit- tee on Pacific Railroads, but to the Committee on Judiciary. What we want is not a plan for the settle- ment of the Pacific railroad debts, such as the Commiston Pacific Railroads might formulate or deal with, but a legal opinion as 10 the ef- ficiency of existing laws for the enforcement of the rights of the Government against those companies and the suggestion of remedies for the defect, if any, that may be discovered in the procedure provided for. These matters belong, under the rules, to the Judiciary Com- mittee, and the cdvantage of having that committee consider them exclusively is that it would have no jurisdiction to report any scheme for the refunding or other settlement Dy special arrangement of the Pacific railroad debis, as the Committee on Pacific Railroads would be sure 10 do. When the information called for in your resolution has been returned to the House by the Attorney-General, and not until then, in my opinion, the proper resolution snould be introduced calling for the appointment of the Judiciary Committee to consider the metter. Itay be impossible, in the present parlia- mentary status of the House, to secure con- sideration for such a resolution, or even for your original resolution, but I agree with you that it 1s our duty to make the effort to secure such legislation as may be necessary, in view of suggested constructions adverss to the Government, to carry .out the plan and just purposes of the Thurman act, leaving the re- sponsibility for failure where it properly be- longs, upon those who are responsible for the present status of parliamentary impotence in the House. DELTA IS ALMOST DESERTED. Residents of the Submerged Town Com- pelled to Lecve Their Homes and Fles for Safety. VICKSBURG, Miss, April 18.—At 6 o'clock to-night the river is 51 feet 8 tenths, a fall of 3 tenths in 24 hours and a total of 6 tenths since the break in the Biges levee. Tke situation at Madison parish isgrow- ing worse. The Biggs break is fast cover- ing the lowlands, flooding the Bayou Vi- dal and a greater part of the lands in the southern portion of the parish. The water ias reached Tallulah, eizhteen miles west of D Ita, which is on the river bank. Delta is about depopulated, only enough persons remaining to look after the flooded bouses. ST. LOUIS, Mo., April 18.—There is much anxisty for the safetv of the levee line from Dolta to Henderson. It is now estimated that not less than 8000 persons will need relief in this county for the next thirty days at least. Lieutenant Crow- ley of the United States army arrived to- day to purchase rations and distribute re- lief. > : John Clinton, one of the leading plant- ers of Issaquena Coanty, Miss., said to- day: “There is little prospect of planting a crop this year.” Government statistics show that Issa- quena produces more cotton per acre than any other county in the cotton belt, but the percentage of its acreage not covered by water is now too insignificant to be noted. There is little prospect of any but the front lands north of Talluleh showing up sufficiently to be planted before June 15, which means no crop. e JOHN JOSEPH NCURI CROWNED. The Learned Oriental Known Here and at Washington Was Not an Impostor. WASHINGTON, D. C., April 18,—A strange-looking man came here several years ago, introducing himself as John Joseph Nouri, Archdescon of Babylon. He wore the garb of a monk, and this, with the Oriental features, made him a conspicuous object on the streets. Among other things, he said he had discovered the remains of Noah’s ark on Mount Ararat. This met with a denial from the Tarkish Minister, but Rev. Dr. E1ston, a ———————— Marvelous Effects System Broken Down and Hope Almost Abandoned—Health Re- stored by Hood’s Sarsapariila. “For fiitecen years I have suffered with oatarrh and indigestion and my whole system was broken down. Ihad almost abandoned any hope of recovery. I pur- chased six bottles of Hood’s Sarsaparilia, and its effects have been marvelous. [t bas made me feel like a new man. Iam able to sleep well, have a good appetite and I have eained several pounds in weigiit.”—Jamzs WiLpER, Oroville, Wash. *“I bad a scrofula swelling on one side of my neck and ulcerated sores in my nos- trils, caused by catarrh. I also had small, itehing sores on my limbs. I bought three bottles of Hood’s Sarsaparilla and began taking it, and the sores soon heaiea. My blood is purified and the scrofuld has disappeared.”—0. D. McMaxus, Mission, ‘Washington. Sarsa- HOOd ’s parilla Is the best—in fact the One True Blood Purifier. Hood’s Pills g nsuses. indigestion, Presbyterian clergyman, who had met the man in San Francisco, had faith in his claims and invited him to become his guest. The local presbytery undertook to find out whether the man was an impos- tor, but he showed he was well versed in the doctrines of the Greek church. An- other test imposed was a translation of bierogiyphic tablets in the Smitusonian Institution. He performed the task so weil that he proved himself (o be an able Oriental schoiar. People began to think him miidly in- sane and be was persuaded to start for Bagdad. He stopped in London, and figured prominently in the newspapers through an attempt to secure the protec- tion of the British Government on the ground that he was one of her Majesty's subjectsand heirto the patriarchal throne at Trichur, India. A letter just receivea by Dr. Easton from Rev. John H. Barrows of Chicago, who is traveling in India, shows that the claims of the lonely Oriental were true and have been recognized. Barrows says that John Joseph Nouri, Archdeacon of Baylon, was crowned Patriarch at the Chaldean Ponfical Cathedral at Trichur Malabar, and is living in splendor in a royal palace. The coronation occurred in February. Archdeacon Nouri's elevation to pontifical throne makes him ruler over Syrian Chaldeans of Trichur. — AT GRANI'S NEW TOMB, 4 Place That Should Be Sacred Invaded by @ Disorderly dob. NEW YORK, K. Y., April 18.—A mob of 1000 inspected Grant's new tomb to-day. A solitary policeman was wholly unable to command decorum. Once in- side the temb the crowd simply took pos- session without reserve, and for three hours had everything its own way. Men wandered about with hats on, smoking or chewing tobacco snd spitting indiscrim- inately. This last license Wwas made a reason for closing the tomb again. It was a surprise to those in charge to find the crowd paid such scant respect. It will probably permanently bar the public now. ————————————— You know right well that the losses in- crease rather than decrease, and why you go on suffering the tortures that you do mentally—to say nothing of what you do physically—is one of the things that pass all understanding. How dizzy you get when on the street, for instance! HUDYAN! HUDYAN will do the work in your case. Yes! It will give you new give you renewed and more useful en- ergy. The gloom »ill be gone; the twitchings of the mus- cles of the face will be a thing of the past, and you | will again love and be loved. Is it worth making one struggle for? If not, why are you read- ing this? You are evidently inter- ested in getting well. Why not clinch it ? Circulars and Testimonials as to the anquestioned efficacy of ths ¢ Great Hudyan,” as well as to the grand re- sults obtained by those who have used the 30-day cure for all classes of blood polsoning, are sent free to any one who will ask for them or write to the Institute for them. And the advice of the Doctors 1s free, too! Can you ask more ? Hndson Medical Institnte Eliis, Market and Stockton Sts. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. ~ 1o A\ A R for Sick Headache, Constipation, Imperfect Digestior and Inactive Liver. Its occasional use keeps the body in health and enables those of feeble digestion toassimilate and enjoy theit food. Sold by Druggists for so years. SPECTACLES £BYE GLASSES ACURATFLY, FITTED BY 5 EXPERT OPTICIANS. AT MODERATE PRICES. PTICIANS Zano = 706k 4 642 MARKET ST. NOZR CARONICLE BUILDING . DR. MCNULTY. 'HIS WELL-K NOWN AND RELIABLE QLD 1 Speviallst cures Private, N ervous, lood and Skin Diseuses of Men aniy. Manly Power restored. Over 20vears’experieuce. Send for Book, free. Patients curedat Home. Terms reasonable. H 5 daily16:30 108,20 ev'zs. Sunduvs, 10 o 12. tiontree and sacredly confidential. Call 0 P. ROSCOE McNULTY, M. D., 20X Hearny Street, San Francisco. Cal. NOTARY PUBLIC. 'HARLES ,H’. PHILLIPS, AMTI'(:&N;EY-AF AT B T Foll wiroet. Telephons * Pine ~ 3601 Weak Menand Women SHOULD USE DAMIANA :{_‘gr{.l:‘sfirs great Mexican Remedy: rength to the Sexual Organs. NEW TO-DAY, PROFE:! ‘With Munyon’s Impmged !_-Io:l)cegzél:{i)g Remedies in the house there is no 1o hunt or wait for when DELAYS ARE DANGEROUS. Munyon’s G\n\;lel (: Health will tell you what touse and how to SAVE DOLLARS IN DOCTORS FEES. Sickness often comes suddenly, and evory mother should be prepared by having MUNYON’S REMEDIES where she can get them quickly. They are abso- lutely harmless, and so labeled there CAN BE NO MISTAKE. Munyon's Cold Cure prevents pneumo- niz and breaks upa cold in a few hours. Price. 25c. Munyon's Cough Cure stops all coughs and speedily heals the Jung: Price. .'l5’:.. Munvon's Colicand Crying Baby Cure cures griping pains of every description, vromptly relieves pain from teething, and quiets crying babies. Price, 25¢. Munyon’s Sore Throat Cure prevents diphtheria_and cures all forms cf sore throat. Price, 25c. Munyon’s Fever Cure will break any form of fever. Price, A separate cure for each disease. At all druggists, mostly 25¢ a vial. Personal letters to Prof. Munyon, 1505 Arch street, rhiladelphia, Pa., answered with free medical advice for any disease. Signature is printed In BLUE diagonally across the ‘OUTSIDE! ‘wrapper. of every bottle of (the Original and Genuine) ‘Worcestershire \AS a further protection agaiust &1l imitations. t@gents for the United States, GAEAT PAIN COR A proventive and cure for Rheu- matism, Neuralgia, Pains in Gen- eral, Dyspepsia, Sore Tlroat, Pneumonia, Nervous, Liver and Kidney Complaints, Backache, Burns, Swellings, Colds, Coughs. Colic, Cramps, Sprains, Bruises, ‘Wounds, Indigestion, Skin Dis- eases, Excessive Itching and many other complaints. Dr. Martin’s Price: 25c¢, 50c, $I Per Bottle. L. _CALLISCH, Wholesale Agent for the Pacific Coast, San Jose, Cal. For sale by all druggists. The trade supplied by Redington & Co., Mack & C. d Langley & Michaels, San F: ) THE WEEKLY CALL it Publishes the Cream of the News of the Week and MANY ATTRACTIVE AND ORIGINAL FEATURES. ITIS THE BEST WEEKLY PAPER ON THE PACIFIC COAST Lo / Mining News That Is Accurate \{np to date Not a Line of it Sensational Bright, Clean, «< The Best Telegraphic Service on The Coast / 2o or Faky, and Not a Line of it Dry or Uninteresting. A Champion of Thoughtful. Truth. A CALIFORNIA NEWSPAPER ALL THE TIME. SENT BY MAIL, $1.50 A YEAR. T ADVOCATES HOME INDUSTRIES THE CALL SPEAKS FOR ALL Tig & is a uon-powsonous Gonor.} remedy ' for Gleet, 'S yeTmatorr him Whités, Unnatuzal gt charges, or any infamma. tion, irritation or aicerae s contagion, tion of MuCOuS meme ricEvans Cizuicat o, Dranes. Non-astringens Sold by or gent in plain wr~pper, by “express; prapatd, i 00, 0F 3 bottics, (%7 Gilar sent o st

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