Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, JULY 11, 1897. S "HIRAM . C. TRUESDALE C.J. : " Y SO ) THE Court of Arizona, is University of Iowa of the ciass 0! 1 rence, Truesdaie & Corriston. g the construction olis contractor, L. d becomsa interested. stood to have «w to He was in Arizona idential nat request of none other than the Presi e of a jurist of high ability, but is especially well known as a politi P NEWLY dent himself. n. GEORGE R.DAVIS, J.B'D, APPOINTED UNITED Hiram C. Truesdale, lately nominated by President McKiniey to be Chief Justice of the Sunreme native of Rock Isiand, 111, and is oniy 37 years of age. and two years thereaftor took a law degres from the same school. several years he read in the law office of Hon. Thomas Lowrey, Minneapolis, after which, till 1895, he ced his profession in the same city, for the greater part of the time beinz a member of the firm of His advent in Arizona sevaral vears ago wa= due to complications attend- a large canal in which his deceased father-in-law, R. B. Langdon, the noted Minne- Judge Truesdale’s brother is general manager of the Chicago, k Island and Pacific railway system, and the influence of President Capie of the same road is under- g a nalf dozen prominent Senators into linedn his bahal <sess the personal friendship of the President. In his ex-officio capacity as a Territorial District Jus- Judge Truesdale will have charge of the Third District, comprising the counties of Maricopa and court mainly being held in Pheenix. The appointee to the First District, embracing Tucson and Tombstone, is George R. Davis of Warpakoneta, Ohio. His selection is not strictly in accordance with the home-rule plank in the last Re- publican National platform, but has, owing to domestic differences, been well receiwved in the Territory. a few weeks this past soring on business for the Interior Department. affecting territorial appointments, and his mission was said to have been undertaken Judge Duvis be=ars the reputation in his home He has for years been a promi- He 13 a graduate of the State The appointee is understood \ ISR S P Ko RICHARD E:SLOAN, J.7™D. the towns of Florence, Giobe and Solomouviile. Nim\m‘“ R, STATES JUDGES IN ARIZONA. nent member of the State Republican Central Committee, and was the first delegate elected to 8t. Lonis. He is about 35 years old. Judge Richara E. Sloan, appointed to tbe Fourth District, which embraces the northern half of the Territory, is also an Ohio man, though long a resident of Arizona. graduate of Monmouth College ana of the Cincinnati Law Collcge. was elected District Attorney of Pinal County, has been a member of October of 1839 was appointed by President Harrison to be Judge of the First Arizona District. served till June, 1894, when he moved to Prescott, where he has since practiced his profession. plication for office was unique in Arizona politics, in that it was supported almost unanimously by the members of the bar of the district over which he has bsen chosen to preside. Judge Fletcher M. Doan has been appointed to the Sscond District, wherein he will hold court in He 13 an Ohioan, born in Pickaway County in 1846. » FLETCHER M.DOAN', J. He is 40 years of age. He is a In 1884 he came to Arizona. He the Territorial Council and in He His ap- He graduated from the Cincinnati High School in 1864 and from the Ohio Wesleyan University in 1867. nois and Hoo. 8. R. His work was of Peters of Kansas. He graduated from the in 1868 and was admitted to the bar of the S:ate Supreme Court. he practiced law in Bowling Green and St. Louis, Mo. the Methodist church, practicing attorney and District Attorney of Pinal County. Templar and Shriner and one of the Territory’s most prominent Good Templars. Duaring his college career he was associated with young men who are now known as Senator J. B. Foraker, General D. K. Watson, Governor I. M. Hamilton, Juage L. C. Collins of lllinois, Senator Fairbanks of Illi- old Albany Law School of Albany, N. Y,, Till 1888, when he came to Arizona, In Arizona he has been farmer, local vreacher in H3 is a Knight SOLEMN BITES Funeral Services Over the Late Isham G. Harris. Many Floral Tributes Are Blended With Emblems of Mourning. President and Cablnet Attend—The Galleries Filled With Spectators. WASHINGTON, D.C., July 10.--The | mpressive funeral service over the late G. Harris occurred in the Senate r at noon to-day in the presence <ident McKinley and the members presentatives, members of s and officials from all es of public life. mber had been elaborately for the occasion, From the wall the Vice-President’s chair hung were palms and poited plants. of the late Senator was heavily crape, with a crape scarf thrown over the vacant seat. In the semi-circular ares, immediately in iront of the pres'ding officer, stood the casker, resting on heavy, black-draped redestals and literally buried in floral of- feriugs. The casket was covered with . broadcloth, with beavy oxidized and on tne plate was in- mings, Died, July 7, 1897. ISHAM G HARRIS, Aged 79 Years. the head of the casket, in part on the desk of the and renosing Senate officers, s of bay leaves, and all about the | | would crown their efforts. 1 floor of the chamber the galleries were | tilled to their full capacity, many ladie including a number of wives of Senators, | being present. The services were brief | I:\ml simple, consisting only of prayers of | Rev. Mr. Johnson, Rev. Dr. Duffy of the | Metbodist Epscopal Church South and | Chaplain Couden of the House of Repre- | | sentatives, the latter prorouncing the | | kenediction. At the conclusion of the p v and i rayers the ST e-President arose said: tuneral service is closed and the body our late brother w ow he committed to the charge of the (flicers of the Senate | and to the committee of the two houses to be conveyed to his native State, { icd amid his family and friends.” | P. M.,0n motion of Senator Tennessee, the Senate adjourned. formal President McKinley ther officials retirea frum the| to be bu e of | Without | and the ) casket remained in the chamber | with an honcrary guard about it, the doors to the floor and gallery being closed | ter Lo’clock until, it was taken to the| funeral train. | At 9 to-night thef coffian was borne to! the funeral-train to be taken to Ten- | nessee. COWED BY A ARUISER. The San Franc sco’s Appearance at Tan- gier Creates Consternation Among the Moorish Cutthroats. | WASHINGTON, D. C., July 10.—The | appearance of the cruiser San Francisco in the harbor of Tangier has had a salutary effect upon the Moorish anthorities in the | matter of securing the observance of American rights. Rear-Admiral teliridge, whois on board the San Francisco, has cabled to the Navy Department that when the Morocco authorities learned that an American warship had been ordered to ‘Tangier they displayed considerable tivity and had arrested one of the assail- ants of the American who had been knocked down ana robbed. There were | two men involved in the assauit. Upon the repeated demand of Consul-General Burke, which was enforced by the pres- ence of the San Francisco, the Moorish authorities were making every effort to capture the second fugitive, and Admirat Selfridge adced that he believed success Itis expected that'the State Department will direct Con- sul-General Burke to see that the men are adequately punished for the offense which they committed. INTEREST 10 THE COAST. or Sergeant Delaney red—Postmasters was the floral trinute of the Senators. It was of sm:lax ieaves and sago palms ana bride roses made as & wreath, out of | 1 three white doves with outstretched | ascended. 12 o'clock Rev. Hugh Johnson, act- g cbavlain, dehvered the invocation, | hich referred to the longz and valuable | services of Senator Ha is steadiness | of purpose and unfailing r ide. | | | Following the praver the Senate officials ed the arrival of the various offi- rst came the Senators. Follow- 2 them were the members of the House | lepresentatives. in front of them sat embers of the diplomatic corps, includ- g the Chinese Minister and suite, the yrean Minister and his secretary, Minis- ters Hatch of Hawaii, Romero of Mexico | and Andrade of Venezaela accompanied by Chief Clerk Michaels of the State Department. The President and Ceb‘net were an- b ed at 12:15 o’clock. Kinley came first accompanied by Secre- serman, with Secretaries Gage, Alger, Wilson, Attorney-General McKen- na ana . Secretary Poiter followin.. Across the aisle was the escort of Sena- each wearing a8 broad white silk of meurning from shounlder to hip. e these were assembling on the Whil XEW TO-DAT. THE OWL DRUG CO., 1128 HARKET ST., SAN FRANCISCO, LOS ANGELES —NDae OAKLAND, AREBE TEER CUT-RATE ( DRUGSTORES President Mc- | Appointed and Pruvion Awar WASHINGTON, D. C., July 10.—Orl- nance-Sergeant William Delaney, on duty | | at Benicia barracks, California, is placed on the retired list on his own application. James Wells was to-day commissioned Postmaster at Plateaun, Cal., and Alex- ander C. Sangster Postmaster at Trinidad, Cal, 3 The special postal service between Stofel and Gold Creek, Elko County, Nev., will be discontinued. The tollow.nyg pensions were granted : California: Original — John T. Torrence, n Jose; Charles Star, San Francisco; Aaron H jpm_G. Piits, Oak- Justice H. Henderson, Cisinore. Renewal — Franeis T. Armstrong, San Francisco. Reissue and_increase—John Whelau, Veterans' Home, Napa. Original widow, 'ete—Cla issa A. Fuller (mother), Los Ange Mexican war widow—Henriuuna n Francisco, n: Original—Thomas J. Gill, Eugene. Additional—James C. Butler, Portiand. Orig- inal wicow, etc,—Annie S, Barton, Portland. Washingion: Additional—William H. Low- | el\, Tumwater. Increase—R pert L. McKen- | zie, Everett; Henry C. Thompson, Pomeroy. | . Puaet Sound Fortifications. WASHINGTON, D. C,, July 10.—Secre- tary Alger to-day awarded the contract for §163,453 for beginning work on the coustruction of fortifieations at Puget Sound. The contract was awarded to the Pacific Bridge Company of Portland, Or. It was the lowest bidder of fourteen con- cerns, some of them as far east as Chicago. Chiefs of engineers and ordnance expect to have guns mounted at this fortification within a year. —_——— The Elder Bakcr Is Dead. WASHINGTON, D. C., Juiy 10.—Owing to the fact that thera were two United States Consuls in South America named Baker some confusion arose as to the identity of the American Consul whose death was reported to the State Depart- ment yesterday. It isthe United Siates Consul to Buenos Ayres, Edward L. Baker, and not his son, Conzul to Rio Janeiro, whose death notice was received. —_————— Litivokalani Goer to New Tork. WASHINGTON, D. C., July 10.—Ex- Queen Lilinokalani of Hawaii, who has been stopping in Washington during the past winter and spring, left this morning with her secretary for New York. No in- 0f the PACIFIC COAST. Write for 100 Page Price List. formation was vouchsafed to the people at the hotel where she stopped, and they know nothing about her future move- ments. REDSKINS DANCE UNTIL THEY DROP «| Weird Religious Rites of | Indian Territory Tribes. Fat Dog Soup the Greatest Delicacy of the Final Feasting. The Various Dances Watched by Thousands of Visiting Whites. WICHITA, Kaxs,, July 10.—The whole of the present week is being spent by the Looha Poka Town Inliags, near Tulsa, Indisn Territory, in dan®ng, medicine: drinking and mysterious religious rites. It is their annual busk or green-corn med- icine dance, and the interesting cere. monies are daiy witnessed by a large concourse of people. It is more a festiv- 1y than anything else, but these rites have been followed for a number of years and are a part of their religious faith. No pen can adequately describe the many and varying scenes which go to make up the picturesqueness of the medicine dance. | The stomp dance at night is the most popular, and in this performance all join with abandon and zest. The feasting usually occupies the entire forenoon. Fat dog soup is considered the gréatest delicacy on the bill of fare. Various games are indulged in during the afternoon, the iavorite one bsing a peculiar ball game. It is a very exciting spoit, and when rival bands play for the cham- pionship it is played with a zeal ana skill that surpasses any game of other races or nations. Itissomething likelawn tennis, each player having a bat modeied some- thing like a tennis racquet, wiile the ball is small and hard and covered with buck- skin, Each band strives to send the ball to a certain goal, and so skiliful are the players that they keep the ball in the air for an incredibly long time. Medicine cay is observed with many peculiar ceremonies. The medicine is mixed in large vessels by the medicine- compounders of the tribe, and is very nauseouy, causing excessive vomiting, Men, women and children participate in the medicine drinking and are supposed to drink all they can, as the medicine is | said to be an antidote for malaria and other forms of summer tickness. The medicine drinking commences very early in the morning and is continued until 3 o'clock in the afternoon. It is followed by the feather dance, a very gorgeous and v'sweil” affair from the Indian standpoint. Then comes the buffalo dance—the favor- ite of the old braves—while the stomp dance, immediately after, continues throughout the night. The feather and buffalo dances are more like the moceasin dances, and partake of the wild nature of aboriginal festivities, The climax ot interesting performances was not reached, however, until the pa- chofa—an ancient service—was intro- duced. All the neceasarv preparations were made, and at nightfall the old and young of all the trib-s and of both sexes ‘| were arrayed in_ the ancient costume to engage in what is said to have been ac- cepted for centuries past as a medium for restoring the sick to nealth and driving away the evil spirits that might infest any of the tribe. On this last occasion there was no contingency to warrant such a celebration, and not a few were strongly ooposed to it. They were, however, un- KEW TO-DATY] Don’t waste stamps. Save up your Schilling’s Best yellow tea-tickets,and send several guesses for that missing word in one envelope. Schilling’s Best money- back tea, at your grocer’s. Rules of contest published in large advertisement about the first and middle of each month. A16 able to resist the pressure brought to bear by the younger ones in favor of the unique proceeding. They cho<e the most beautitul Indian maiden as queen, and she it was who led the dance. They formed a circie around a block upon which was seated a musician, whose instrament was a stone bottle with a rawhide stretched tightly over it. | " 'As the procession went wn'rling eround | the bang, bang, bang was kept upon the drum. All joined in a weird chant which blended harmoniously with the jangie of | the twenty-four tortoise shelis loaded with | peb'les and strung about the person of | their queen. | Sometim | then a | the musi s the dancers moved swiftly, Tue people crowded and | surged to get closer and watched the pro- | with o intentest interest. The most unaccountable phase of this dance is | the part nts, one by one, drop out un- | noticed, uutil finally but two or three re- | main to continue the dance. Thisthey do | until they succumb from sheer exhaus- | tion. | ceedings GOLD 814 DiKD DEMOCEATS, | | | They Wilt Make a Fight Wherever Free | Nitrer Shows Its Head. NEW YORK. N. ¥, July 10.—The | Herald says: William D. Bynum, Chair- man of the National Democratic Execu- tive Commitfee, has called the com- mittee to meet on July 21 in the National headquarters, this city. Mr. Bynum is well pleased with the action of the gold standard Democrats in Iowa, Kentucky and Ohio, where they will have State ticket«. ’i **We ought not to shirk the issue,” said he. “We are making a fight on princi- ples, and if the people don’t support us the quicker it is demonstrated the better. The tight will be very ot in the Middle Western Stutes, Our organizations there arein excelient condflion and bave not changed since last 1all. They nominated an excellent ticket in Iowa on Wednesday and they will nominate another in Ken- tucky on July 14 “Quite & number of New Jersey sound money men have been in to see me, They will nominate for local offices in that State. Wherever the issue of last year is made we favor making a figh We must teach these men that we ca not compromise our principles for the sake of local offices.” Tne National Executive Committee will make places for the coming campaign and settle some matters of detail. The Gold Standard will neminate a ticket of | their own or indorse Seth Low, if Tam- many does not repudiate the Chicago platform. - — COLONY GN THE DEBS PLAN. One His Started in Pennsy/vania With Twenty Charter Memb>rs, and 0 hers May Be Organized. READING, Pa, July 10.—A Ilabor colony on the lines of Debs’ plan has been estabiished on a small scale at Kepner station. A farm of 300 acres has been chartered. Those in charge say they are negotiating for two manufactories. About twentiy people are already in the colony. Each man gets pay in the shape of labor checks. These checks are redeemed in produce on hand in the warehouse. No money is paid for labor. Recruits must pay $100, either in cash or in labor checks, b efore 1901 to the colony in payment for the farm. All members are governed by a constitution and by-laws. Members wishing to build wiil get a lot 50 by 100 fect. Each member is subject to the orders of the superintendent as to what special labor hesnall do. Adult workers are credited with 15 cents per hour for work and are to be employed all the year round ten hours a day. Women, for dairy and field work, will get 15 cents per hour. Indoor industrial operations will s00n be started. A general invitation to join is extended to all sober, able-bodied, heaithy men and women of good character who can come well recommended. No intoxicants are allowed on the farm. C. A. Burrows, the colony’s manager, says similarco:o- nies will be started soon 1n the East, so it will not be necessary for Bastern labor to g0 so far west as Debs suzgests. LRSS 3 it DEATH FLAsHES FEOM TRE SKS. Lightning Fol'ows a Barbed- Wire Fence With Fatal £ff-c'. BLOOMINGTON, ItL., July 10.—Light- ning irom a clear sky at 5 o'clock yester- day afternoon instantly killed August Waitz, a German farmhand, on a farm near Hndson. At the time two brothers, named Raveraft, prominent farmers, were about to hitch a team to a barbed-wire fence. Both horses were knocked down and both the Raycrafts siunned. The ligntning siruck the fencea m.le away and followed it to where the men and horses were. The Raycrafts were so azed they did not know what bacame of Waltz. His body was burued to a crisp. —_———— Man and Wif: Burned to Death, PITTSBURG, Pa, July 10.—Samuel Brown, a miner, and his wife, Mary, were burned to death in bed this morn- ing. The fire was caused by a lamp ex- plosion. slowly, keeping perfect time to | SO0 TRAINS WILL ENTER RANDSBURG Railway to Be Built by the Atlantic and Pacific. Material for Its Construction Is Already at Hand at Kramer. The Proposed Line Destined to Eecome a Fesder for the Santa Fe System. LOS ANGELES, CaL., July 10.—TIt looks as though a railroad will be built to Randsbnrg from an Atlantic and Pacific connection before the enterprise of the Southern Pacific gets started. James Campbell, a veteran railroad builder, who in the past years has been giving his at tention to the promotion of a line to Salt Lake City, is instrumental in starting the financial work on a railroad to Randsburg from the station of Kram Campbell returned to the city to-day from San Bernardinn, where he filed yesterday a mortgage for $300,000 on the railway in favorof the Rocaester Trust and Safe De- posit Company of New York. The next move in the enterprise was made this morning when President A. A. Dongherty and Secretary Charles Wier of | the company left on the Santa Fe train | for Chicago, where they will receive the money, and on returning will at once commence active work. It is said that everything is ready for track-laying. The raiis are in piles at Kramer, the ties nave been secured and by November 1 the twenty-eight miles will have been completed and truins. run- ning from this city into camp. The enterprise is not cornected with cither one of the transcontinental roads, but will be in connection with the Atlan- tic and Pacific, and will naturally become a Santa Fe feeder. 1f found to be feasible, the line may be extended further to the north and east—even to Salt Lake City. SRS iy “Oles” Barr d in California. LOS ANGELES, Car., July 10.—At the annual meeting of the Dairymen’s As- sociation of Southern California, beld in the city to-day, President Sessions said in his report that it was directly through the influence of the dairymen of Southern California that the State laws which have resulted in the total exclusion of oleomargarine from the markets of the State and a difference of at least 15 per cent in the price of uairy products have been breught about. He referred to Illinois as the last State to fall into line and prevent the imitation from going into the markets under some name which would deceive consumers into believing 1t to be butter. When the association was formed there was imported into this State 400,000 pounds of this product and sold as butter annually. Now it is not believed that there is any whatever. el No Town Hall for Mill Valley. SAN RAFAEL, CaL, July 10.— The Mill Valley Town Hall Association, organ- ized some months ago to build a town nall in Mill Valley, became a thing of the past to-day when Suverior Judge Angel- lotti granted the order for dissolution. Among the stociholders were most of the prominent citiz ns of Mill Vailey. Making the Deaf Hear. Physicians now admit that it is impossible to cure chronic deafnesy by medical means alone. Many have invented fnstruments which are placed in the ear to concentrate the sound waves upon the auditory nerves. In the whole number —which is 50 arge that a room in the Patent Office Is prcked with models—there is but one wnlch successfully mee.s al the requirements. It is a patent tubular ear dram, made by the F. Hiscox Company of No. ¥53 Broaiway, New York. It is out of sight when used; is placed In the ear by means of small tubulac haodle, and not, as are oter artifi ‘lal ear drums, with forceps; itcan be removed to be cleansed as_easily as you take off your glasses, and Is, indeed, as simple a con- trivance as spectucles XNot only 1s it impossible for this ear drum to in- jure or Irritate the ear, but its use is curative. Hearng is resto-ed by Its Introduction into the ear just as the puitinz on of glasses enables de. fective evestosce The Hiscox ear drums have cured many cases which aurists have absndoned as hope es, ihouch many are now prescribing them. A descriptive book will be sent to any ap- plicant. Mr. Hiscox will have an cffice auring Christian Endeavor weeks at Emporium bullding, room 429, Office hours, 2 t0 6 P. M. preaches. and light, gospel of Sent free. SEBER Sweetness and Light. Put a pill in the pulpit if you want practical preaching for the physical man ; then put the pill in the pillory if it does not practise what it There's a whole gospel in Ayer's Sugar Coated Pills; a “gospel of sweetness People used to value their physic, as they did their religion,—by its bitterness. The more bitter the dose the better the doctor. ‘We've got over that. We take “sugar in ours”— gospel or physic—now-a-days. please and to purge at the same time. may be power in a pleasant pill. That is the It's possible to There Ayer’s Cathartic Pills. © More pill particulars in Ayer’s Curebook, 100 pages. @ J. €. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass. p ©@ BOERE0 ZEGLEN'S ARMOR A SUCCESS. Inventor Poses as a Tcryet fcr Revoiver Bullets at Ten Poces cnd Escapes Unscathed. NEW YORK, N. Y., July 10.—A dis- patch to the Journal from Chicago says: Inventor Cassimir Zaglen,wearing nothing underneath his new bullet-proof armor but a thin neg izee shirt, made a target of | himself to-day to prove the practicability of the armor. Five pistol shots were fired at his breast from r:volvers ranging in caliber from 32 to 44. Lieutenant Sarnecki of the Aus- trian army fired the shots at ten paces. Medical men were present with long knives and probing instruments, expect- ing a catastrophe. Soconvinced were they of the invalner- ability of the armor, nowever, after three shots had been fired at Zevlen that Dr. Westerscaulte allowed the Austrian offi- cer to make a tarret of him. After the tests Zeglen was stripped and examined, but not a mark could be tound on his body. He declared ihat the only sensation he felt was similar to that that would be produced by prodding the body with a cane. i e IRISH-AHERICAN P.LGR.HAGE. Proposed Excursicn to Dublin brate the Anniversary of the Insur- rcton of 1798, NEW YORK, N. Y., July 10.—A num- ber of prominent Irish- Americans of this city have taken steps for the organization of a monster pilgrimage of Irish-Ameri- cans to lIreland in July next year to co- operate in the public demonstration to be held in Dublin to commemorate the in- surrection of 1798. The projectors are sanguine it will prove the greatest of Irish national demonstrations. The ar- rangements here are in charge of an asso- ciation of lavmen and clergymen known as the Ninety-eizht Centennial Associa- tion of America. The executive committee met last Fri- day nigit (o arrange the preliminaries. Correspondence with societies in various parts of the country indicates that about 5000 Irish- Amer cans will take part. 10 Cele- | | 000. Tvie | roposed 1o charter two ocean steamers for their accommodation. The itinerary of the voyage has already been mapped outand the booking of passages begun. Two weeks will be given up to visits to ancient battle-fields and other famous places connected with the uprising, after the main celebration in Dublin is ended. The Dublin demonstration will include parades and a oreat mase-meeting in honor of the 50,000 Irish soldiers who lost their lives in the struggle of the men of '98. DRAGGED TG DEATH. F£wful Fate of an 0/d Mexican Weman Accused of Witchcraft by Her Neighbors. LAS VEGAS, New Mexico, July 10.— Near Lacinto, Mexico, a woman 80 years old named Teodora Salas, considered by | ignorant natives to be a witch, and sup- posed to have had an evil influence on the health of Miss Tafoya, a belle of the neigh- borhood, was tuken to the mountains yes- terday by the girl’s brother, Teodor Ta- foya, and his chum, Antonio Lucero. A | lasso was attached to hor head, and her heels fastened to the pummels of their saddles. Then she was dragged to death. Not a vestige of clothing was on the wo- man’s body when found. It is said the girl's mother advised the young fellowa to make away with the witch in this man- ner in order that Mis«s Tafoya might im- mediately recover her health. Mrs Ta- foya is under arrest, but the boys have es- caped. Deape giiane Sent Af'er the Gold-Brick Men. LOS ANGELES, Can, July 10.—De« tective Bradish of the Los Angeles force departed this evening for Portland, Or., to bring hither George Knolton, who, with | another man named Kelly, is charged with work'ng & gold-nugget swindle upbn George Bowen, a wealthy Englishman liv- ing at Cucamonga, and I W. Lord, a Su- pervisor of San Bernardino County, profit- ing by the operation to the extent of $10,- The complaint was sworn out by Bowen, his fellow-victim showing no de« sire to bring back the confidence men. S ADVANCES made on furniture and pianos, with orwithout removal. J. Noonan. 1017-1023 Misston, Uqcertair:n ?ai/\\\;/fi“ ;}«fl_)\mf\\‘w. f—;\‘)\‘ Ny noises o the head— @ 2 73> @ @; 0 ringing W= 8 FE (1 TR = lings, roarings, buzzings, ac- companied by pe- @ culiar debilitated feelings, weakness, prematurity, are the symptoms of a sys- tem completely run = down; no need to tell oy you that you need treat- @ ment, because you know N =0 you do. Sometimes you will have pains in the back, @ pains in the side, and will be unable to sleep. When you get up in the morning you feel % as weary and as tired as when you went to bed. (== =N — @ S, &« Why Don’t You Try to Get Well? Yes, you can get well; you can be cured, young man. You can be as big a man as ever you were; you can be once more the sterling, vigorous man which was your boast and the pride of your friends. How? By using the treatment created by the doctors of Hudson Medi- cal fame—HUDYAN is the treatment. It cures—it never fails to cure; it is harmless, but acts like magic; manhood is again yours—you feel the vim, the joy, the pleas- ing satisfaction of good bodily health. vanish; bubbling, inspiring youth is yours again. bounce, the lasting sense of strength returns. for you. All your old melancholy days The brace, the HUDYAN does this No one else can give you HUDYAN but the Hudson Medical doc- tors of the Hudson Medical Institute. In all your weaknesses consult the doctors free. write for them. all your despondency consult the Hudson doctors free. Circulars and testimonials free; In If your blood is tainted—if your blood is diseased—consult the Hudson doctors free. Their institution is the largest and the best equipped. Honorable methods are used, because it pays the best. HUDSON MEDICAL INSTITU CORNER MARKET AND STOCKTON STREETS, San Francisco, California. Vitality, matorrhea, Consult them Free. Drains, The Hudson Doctors Treat Catarrh, Rheu- matism, Gout, Neuralgia, Nervous Debility, Lost Varicocele, Blood Disorders, Hydrocele, Sp:r- Tainted Blood.