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4 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL. SUNDAY, AUGUST 1, 1897. GOMEL CHEERS THE COBANS Warns Them Againstthe Trickery of Spanish Agents. Autonomy Cannot Be Ac- cepted by the Men Battling for Freedom. Home Rule Proposals Must Be Re- Jected, as the War WIii Soon End In Independence. | HA A, Cusa, July 31.—Cuban secret agents in all the principal towns of the island held by the Spanish have received letters from Gomez encouraging them to continue their work in behaif of the army of liberation. Similar encouragement has been sent to Cubans abroad. *This is the time,”’ says Gomez in one of these addresses, ‘‘when the faith of Cubans in the coming triumph should be stronger than ever. I hav.: positive in- formation that the Spaniards themselves, or at least the honest elements among them, realize their war is hopeless, and | that the best thing to do is to give Cuba up. 1 have confidence in the patriotism of Cubans, but wish to warn them against the wily diplomacy of the Spanish Gov- ernment. “I wish them to know in the island and abroad thatany reports that we will accept home rule isabsolutely false, and I belicve Canovas’ scheme of reforms and the au- tonomist declarations of Sagasta are only iast desperate efforts of Spanish rulers to win by base trickery now they know they can't win by force.” The general has also declared in official letters to Cuban delegatesin the United Btates that any home-ruie proposals must be rejected without a moment's attention. Itis generally believea in Havana since the failure of the Spaniards to indunce Go- mez to accept home rule that secret agents | have been sent to New York to ascertain | the sentiments of the Cuban Junta and try | to induce them to accept autonomy. An expedition from Jamaica under com- mand of Colonel Dupotec landed safely a | week ago in the province of Santiago de Cuba. NEW YORK, N. Y., July 3lL.—Estrada Palma, the Cuban delegate here, confirms the foregoing news. The treasurer of the Junta has received a letter from General Gomez, in which he says: o brace you heartily, ana all other friends there. Work as you have been doing and as we have been doing here. | The ena is approaching. Have faith and | hope.” | —_— Insurgents Raid a Suburb. NEW YORK, N. Y., July 31.—The Her- ald’s Havana special says: The detsils of the attack on Havana's suburbs, which were suppressed by Spanish officials on | Thursday after the attack, have now be- | come public. A band of 300 insurgents under- Colonels Delgado ani Acosta en- tered Marianao, & suburb oi Havana, | Wednesday night. They killed one Spanish officer and five soldiers,wounded several others, macheted the Mayor of the town, pillaged and burned six stores and carried away goods to the vaiue of $15,u | hours they were in t wn they lost not | asingle man. The Spanish officers who should have been on duty were spending the evening in Havana. They will be court-martialed. | — Canovas Is Confident. HAVANA, Cusa, July 3L—Canovas, | according to dispatches from Madrid, has declared that important negotiations will soon be established with the American | Minister in favor of Spain. The Spanish Prime Minister declares also that the Cu- bun war will end in March, 1898, in a tri- umph for the Spanish army. During the four | TILEIABLE, LONDON-PEKING Liverian Railroad Directors Ave Figur- ing for Years Ah-ad. LONDON, Exa., July 3L.—The directors of ihe Biberian Raiiroad are already fig- uring on a timetable from London to Pekin, which is to go into effect 1n July, 1901. - The journey will occupy less than fifteen days. Russian trains are much slower than the west European systems. | The present time is thirty-eight days by Suez canal and twenty-eight days by Can- adian Pacific Railroad. If an eighty-kilometer speed on the Os- tend-Warsaw section could be maintained | throughout, the journey might be accom- plished in sreven and a half days. Making every allowance for the difficuities of high speed across the Siberian steppes, there is 2 large margin for improvement on the estimated forty-iwo kilometers, or twenty- six miles an hour, from Chelybinsk to Vladivostok. From the latter city Peking will be reached by the Manchurian road. i e T0 INTERVIEW SALISBURY. The American Bimetallic Commission “ Hopeful” of Kesults. LONDON, £x6., July 81.—The Ameri- can etallic Commission has about fin- ished its London efforts. The members will have an interview with Salisbury at the end of next week, when some definite announcement will be made of what Great Britain is willing to do for bimetallism. The Commissioners ihen go to Berlin and St. Petersburg. Wolcott and ex- Vice-President Sievenson express them- selves ‘‘hopeful” of the result of their arguments on the British Foreign Secre- tary, but they are absolutely ignorant as to the real intentions of Salisbury. o elist Moody Abowtto Retire. [0, O~T., July 3L—It is re- ported that Evangelist Dwight L. Moody will soon retire irom active work and that his successor will be Rev. William Patter- son, pastor of Cook’s Presbyterian Church, Toronto. -Patterson 100k a very active part in the meetings conducted in Toronto by Moody a couple of yearsago. After that he assisted Moody in a series of meet- ings at Chicago. @9 Fosler Leaves Englana for Home. LONDON, Exe., July 3L—John W. Foster left for New York by the St. Louis from Southampton this morning. Embassador Hay and the members of the United States Embassy were at Waiter- loo station to bid him farewell. Prince Chang Yen Hoon, the special Envoy of China to the jubilee festivities, is also a passenger by the St. Louis. o Lenham Still Has a Fighting Chanoce. BATAVIA, N. Y., July 81.—Benbam, who was yesterday convicted of murder in the first degree on the charge of poison- ing nis wife, will b: sentenced August 23. ! last it is growing simpler. | altogether. The case was one of the most stubbornly fought in the history of New York, and it is net likely that the prisoner will be ex- eguited without another lega! fight, Interior View of Codman & Codman’s Officce When Miss Barrett’s Body Was Discovered. ALICE LED A DUAL LIFE Miss Barrett’s Strange Death Is Nearing a Solution. Now the Mother Admits the Girl Must Have Commit- ted Suicide. But There Remaln Pecullar Cir- cumstancss That Back Up the Murder Theory. BOSTON, Mass,, July 31.—The mystery of the death of Alice Barrett, the type- writer and bookkeeper, seems to be near- ing a solution. The flash of lightning, the smoke and the ensuing confusion which followed the the case one of remarkable complications, | | have hidden the truth for a week, but at The mother of the girl, who has proclaimed murder, at last practically admits that the hand of her daughter must have puiled the trigger that fired the bullet. Miss Barrett misled and deceived Mrs. Barrett. .She told at home how Miss Anita Wheelwright gave her fine garments. It was not so. She narrated the fairy tale of hiring the | suite for that same woman at the Thorn- | cike. It was false. Shedeclared that she took $800 from the bank and loanel it to Captain John €odman; that was untrue. These lies were nailed to-day. Alice was in moderate c.rcumstances. She loved to dress. She undoubtealy aspired to be admired by young men o considerable means, who would be doubly attracted by fashionable - clothing and a dash of style. condition in life, and all this on a salary of $8 per week. Ever sitce the tragedy it has been supposed that when the girl's mother would divulge the secrat of the identity of the man to whom her daughter loaned that fatal $80C which disappeared the mystery would be solved. The mother obstinately refused to do so; finally she admitted it was Captain John Codman, the well-known author. But Captain Codman denies the story She did not lend him a cent. The poor girl spent the money and de- ceived her mother with this yarn. This afternoon Marshal Whitcomb stated that, owing to the fact that $200 in cash and a check for $35 are missing, he is not yet sat- isfied that Miss Barrett really committed suicide. If there was murder done the murderer was the incendiary, and the Marshal wishes to satisfy himself whether or not the incendiary is at large, The other news evidence of murder is the blood-stained ribbon on her key ring, which was found inside her pocket-book to-day. She could not have put it there after she shot herself dead. Did a mur- derer’s hand place it there? It has also become known that Miss Barrett quite often remained away from home nights. Mrs, Barrett alwars supposed she was at Miss Wheelwright’s house, but for three nights she stayed at the Thorndike. She was not with Miss Wheelwright at all, the latter says, Deputy Superintendent of Police Hans- pistol-shot, making | Her tastes were above her | comb said to-night: *There is a mystery here, to be sure, but no conceivable good can come from solving it. It isa family secret.”” KING GEORGE MAY ABIICATE. Promises to Make a Grave Statement if the Powers Take Control of Greece’s Finances. BERLIN, Germaxy, July 31.—The Post, known as the Embassadors’ organ, says | Russia and Germany have pressed Greece to submit to the scheme of international control of her finances, and that the Grecian Premier replied that Greece would never accept the control proposed, but would help hersels. PARIS, Fraxce, July 8L.—An Athens dispatch says iu the event of the powers establishing & controi of the Greek | finances, King George will make a state- ment of exceptional gravity. This is con- strued to mean his abdication. —— TO CUT OFF RE-ENFORCEMENTS, Tactios of the Iribesmen Besieging Camp Malokand. SIMLA, Ixp1a, July 31.—The latest ad- vices from Camp Malakand indicate that the enemy is endeavoring to cut off the re-enforcements now en route. The loss of | the enemy in fighting Thursday night is | believed to have been heavier than on any previous occas'on. The fact that the Mol- lah was wounded and his chief disciple killed will dishearten the fanatics. he Mollah posed as divinely inspired and as able to capture Malakand. [t is reported that the leading headmen of the uprising have absconded. - APPALLING FLOODS IN EUROPE. | ! Hundveds of Persons Drowned and Im- ‘ mense Tracts Devastated., | LONDON, Exc. July 31.—Dispatches | from various Continental news centers | confirm’ the reports of theappalling ex- | tent of the floods in Prussian Silesia and | consequent large Ioss of lifeand almost i incalculable destruction of property. Hun- dreds of persons have been drowned and immense tracts of country submerged. Dispatches from Vienna report the drown- ing of alarge number of persons in adja- | cent .provinces. A dispatch from St. Potersburg says that 150 versons have | perished in the floods of Southern Russia. 5 | Might Be Andree’s Balloon. STOCKHOLM, SwepEN, July 31.—Eleven steamers which shortly leave for the Yenisei River will make a thorough search of the White Sea for an object seen float- ing by the captaln of the Dutch steamer Dordrecht, which it is surmised might be the balloon in which Andree started for the north ypole. Rebel Matives of Gasiland Defeated, ' LISBON, PorruGAr, July 31L.—An of- ficial dispatch from Lorenzo Marquez says the Government troops have deieated the rebellious natives in an engagement in Gazaiand. The natives lost 300, Nl Aelsh Fusileers Start for Crete. - LONDON, Exa., July 3L—A dispatch from Malta says that 400 Welsh fusileers started for Crete this morning. PANIC AMONG STUDENTS, De Pauw University Set on Fire and Dastroyed by Lightning. NEW ALBANY, Ixp., July 31.—During a heavy thundersterm that passed over this placs this morning one of the build- ings of De Pauw University was struck by lightning and set on fire. For a wiile there wasa great panic among the stu- dents, but fortunately there was no loss of life, although several of the inmates of the building were considerably injured. The building (hat was struck was en- tirely destroyed by the fire resulting, The loss is estimated at $30,000, but it is doubtful if that amount will replace the building and its contents. = Boston. simultaneously with the firing of the fatal of. 3 GG o° MISS BARRETT was the bookkeeper for Codman & Codman, 40 Kilby street, 1 n When she was found dead in the office of the firm on Saturday, the 24th inst., it was supposed she had committed suicide. Lightning struck the building sho!, and is supposed to have set the place on fire.. Later it was claimed the young woman had been murdered and the building fired by the assassin, but the developments yesterday wouid make it appear that the bullet which penetrated her heart was fired by her own hand, ROBBERY OF OCEAN MAILLS Registered Letters Are Stolen En Route for Sweden. Inspectors Are as Yet Unable to Definitely Fix the Responsibility. Governments Wil Have to Co- opsrate to Prevent the Looting of Sea Postoffices. NEW YORK, N. Y., July 3L.—For two months Postoffice D2partment inspectors have been trying to solve the mystery of the robbery of European mails in the lat- ter part of May. The rejort reached the Postoffice Department at Washington Friday that two men are under suspicion. The manner in which the robbery was committed shows great carelessnass in handling sea mails, and may lead to =a conference between the United States postoffice authorities and those of Euro- pean governments, particularly Germany, to devise means for better safe-gnarding the mails. Among the mail received at the New York Postoffice on May 18, was a package of ninety-two. regi-tered letters from St Louis, consigned to a town in the south- western parc of Sweden. The packuges was salely delivered on th= North German Liloyd liner Saale, but when the msil was unloaded at Bremerhaven several letters in this package were missing. Lhe sort- ing of the mail on shipooard 1s in charge of a representative of the German Post- office Department named Ranftand a rep- resentative of our Postoffice D:partment named McCann. The pouch containing the registered letters from St. Louis was put in the post- office-room on board the ship, the key to which was kept by a German chief mail clerk named Bruggerman. - When the Saale arrived at Bremerhaven the malis were taken off in a tug and loaded on a train. Bruggerman rode in the mail car as far as Bremen. The train reach d there May 27. There it was discovered that two pouches, one containing newspapers for a town in Germany and the other contain- ing registered letters for Sweden, were missing. They were found on- the tug. ! The registered mail pouch was empty. The bag haa been cut, the letters removed and the cut sewed up. The inspectors were unable, from the statements of Bruggerman, Ranft or McCann, to fix the responsibility. Bruzgerman and Ranft refused to answer questions, saying they could only do so when directed by the German Gov- ernment. - The American cleck, McCann, according to Brugg erman and Ranft, did only what he was told to do. He had made only two trips on the vessel and was not thoroughly familiar with the WOrK. Asyet the value of the letters stolen can only be guessed. The authorities say it is several thousand dollars. A similar robbery occurred on the Saale two years ago. The thieves were never detecied. The authorities are convinced there is a gang organized for the purpose of robbing international sea po-<toffices. They will request the German Pcsoffice to co-op- erate to catch the thieves. BURNED BY sOENIGEN RATYS. Siiss MoDonald Seelce Damages for Her Terridls Injuries. NEW YORK, N. Y., July 3L—Miss Josie' McDonald, who was badly burned by Roentgen rays, has placed her cace in the hands of lawyers and will seek dam- ages for injuries. Her condition is still serious. Dr. Griswold, the family physician, says that never in his experience has he seen such terrible burns. From the top of Miss McDonald’s head to the wrist on the left side, which was exposed to the X rays, tiie skin is gone completely, and the flesh looks as though it had been roasted. The victim endures terrible agony con- stantly. She is deaf in the left ear, and whether she will regain her hearing is a matter of conjecture. Drs, Shields and Jernigzan, dentists, tnok her to Dr. M. J. O’Connell to bave X ray photograph made of her left jaw to locate the cause of a my-teri- m“d pain. Two lengthy exposures were made. e Ito Will Again Fisit This Country, NEW YORK, N. Y., July 3L—Consul- General Uchida of Japan was informed to-day by cablegram that Marquis Ito would visit this country next month. Ito attended the jubilee ceremonies as one of the suite of Prince Takehito, Special Em- bassador from Japan. After the jubilee Ito started on a tour of Europe. He will not stop over while here, but proceed straight to Vagcouver. Colonel Fred Grant’s Successor. NEW YORK, N. Y., July 3L.—Mayor Strong has announced the appointment of Colonel George Moore Smith of the Sixty- ninth Resiment -to succeea Colonel Fred Grant as Police Commissioner. The new Commissioner will be sworn in Monday. DARK WYSTERY OF YEARS A60. Resurrected by a Story of a Woman’s Con- fession. Murder of. Dr. Burdell, a New York Dentist, in January, 18! Publlcity Given an Allezed Secret Which Is Dissected by Ex- Mayor Ha.l. NEW YORK, N. Y., July 3L—Dis- patches from Chicago say that William Wood, after jealously gunarding the secret for ten years, has made public the confes- sion of Mrs. Emma Cunningbam, that she murdered Dr. Harvey Burdell, a New York dentist, on January 30, 1857. The alleged confession is said to have been made to Wood’s mother years ago. Mrs. Cunningham was Burdell’s housekeeper. According to her confession she and her lover, John Eckel, a wealthy leather man- ufacturer, killed him as he lay sleeping in his operating chair. Mrs. Cunningham was tried for the crime, but exonerated, and it has since remained one of the greatest murder mysteries of the metropo- lis. Regarding the alleged confession, ex- Mayor Qakey Hall, who was prosecuting attorney at the time, said to-night he was sure that Mrs. Cunningham had never confessed. He said: *‘Aside from that, there are other flaws in the story. Itsays that Mrs. Cunningham died in 1887 in this city. Ex-Police Inspector Dilgs, who worked up the case against Mrs, Cunning- ham, told me not over two weeks ago that he had recently met Mrs. Cunningham in San Francisco. She told Dilks that she had married a wealthy copper-mine owner in Lower California and was living in luxury, Eckel established a complete alibi. “He was a lodger in Dr. Burdell's house, on Bond street. He showed be- yond a shadow of a doubt that he was not in Burdell’s house or near it on the night of the murder. ““This story says Burdell was choked, There was not a mark on his body to indi- cate that he had been. Everybody who knew the inside history of the case be- lieved that Mrs. Cunningham had com- mitted the murder, assisted by Dr. Uhl, |'also a lodger in the house, who commit- ted suicide in the Andes shortly after. Eckel died several years ago.” The attempts of Mrs. Cunningham to claim the estate of Dr. Burdell by alleging marriage to him and her efforts to palm off a bogus heir to the estate caused a great sensation, which was intensified later by her confession of the fraud. ATTACKED BY A MOB. An Unpopular New York Folicoman Loses His Prisoner, but Kills an Assailant. NEW YORK, N. Y., July 3L—Police- man Thomas Devine was attacked by a mob to-night while taking a prisoner to the station-house, and in defending him- self shot one of the mob dead. Devine uas been very unpopular on his beat, and on several occasions, when he has made arresis, he has been attacked by a crowd. He arrested James Lynch to-night for being drunk and disorderly. Before he got far with his prisoner a crowd sur- rounded him and some one stoned him. Cornelius O'Keefe thrice knockea De- vine's helmet off, the crowd finally wrest- ing the prisoner away. Pestered beyond endurance, Devine finally whirled around face to face with O'Keefe and shot him throngh the heart. O’Keefe died instantly. Lynch bad been hustled out of the way and escaped. When O’Keefe fell the crowa cleared out and in a very few moments the street was deserted save for tf.e police- man and the corpse. Devine has been sus- pended from duty and put under arrest on a charge of homicide. Cmh il il e MAY BE GIVEN HIS PASSPORT. Minister Fodriguez’s Interference With 7his Country’s Affairs Makes kim Very Unpopular. NEW YORK, N. Y, July 3L—The ‘World’s Washington special savs: Senor Rodriguez, Minister of the Greater Re- public of Central America, may be given his passports as a result of alleged undue interference in the affairs of the United States. Thre protest of Nicaragua against the reception of Captain Merry as the representative of th.s Government has again broucht to the surface the dissatis- faction heretofore felt at the action of Rodriguez. His letter to the State Department while the Nicaragua canat bill was under discussion in the Senate, coupled with several unguarded interviewsat that {ime, irritated a number of Senators and brought forward the suggestion that the Minister in his antagonism to the canal had cxceeded the bounds of diplomacy. Friends of the Nicaragua canal now be- lieve that Rodriguez, who is at home on three months’ leave, is responsible for the objections filed against Merry, and they are convincea that the Minister prefers to have the canal constructed by English capital. In such an event an understanc- ing has been reached that the Senate will consider the advisability of requesting the President to ceas» recognizing Rodri- guez as Minister, and it is believed the President would promptly respect an inti- mation of this kind. e BOATING ON THi& MONONGAHELA. Exeursion of Young People’s Alléance Delagates at Fittsbury. PITTSBURG, Pa., July 3L.—A boat ride on the Monongahela River took up the time of the delegates to _the biennial convention of the Young People’s Alli- ance of the Evangelist Association this morning, and no business session was held. At the afternoon session Rav. Theodore Gaeher of Cleveland read a vaper on “The Mission of the Young Peo- ple’s Alliance in Large Cities.” 3 The rest of the session was taken up with a discussion led by - Rev. C. A. Thomas of Cleveland and Rev. L. H, Saeger of Akron, 0o, on ‘* The Best Methods of Work in Order to Carry Out the Aims of the Organization.” L Friohiful Hailstarm in South Dakota. SIOUX FALLS, 8. D., July 3L—A de- stroctive hailstorm passed near here last night. The storm started six miles west of Dell Rapids and went in a southeasterly direction, destroying everything in its path around Garretson, One branch of the storm passed over Snermantown and Luverne, Minn., ana it went in two paths, one north and the other south, across Rock and Noble counties. It is-estimated that fully 5,000,000 acres of crops were destroyed. HAS VANISHED Missing Grace’s Father: Also Mysteriously Dis- appears. Citations and Warrants Fail to g Establish the Place of His Hiding. Possesslon of the Property to Be Taken by the Sheriff Until an Assignee Is Chosen. BOSTON, Mass., July 3L.—The mystery of the disappearance of Grace Stevenson, the millionaire heiress, who has not been heard from for nearly four months, 1s now | complicated by the fact that her father bas vanished too. The court of insolvency to-day granted the petition for a warrant | in insoivency for James Btevenson. Sher- iff O’Brien will at once take possession of | all of Stevenson’s property which can be found until an assignee is chosen at the meeting of creditors, which is now set for Friday, September 3. | Louisa Wilson and Barah Kimball obtained judgment against Stevenson in the Municipal Court some time since for §619, but when they came to levy they were unable to find any provperty of his which was not incumbered by attachment or otherwise. { Their next step was to begin proceed- ings in the poor debtors’ court, wherea citation was issued, but when the time arrived the officer was obliged to make a return that he had been unable to obtain | service, | Stevenson, so far &s the officers of the law were concerned, had mysteriously disappeared. Another citation was issued, but he did not appear. Then a warrant was issued for bis arrest, but could not be found. Mrs. Stevenson, the mother of the giri, has not given up the search, nor have the Brookline police, but almost every source of information has been ex- hausted. SPALDING FINALLY CONVICTED. Found Guilty of Embezzling Univer- sity Funds—~Nearly Prostrated by the Verdict. CHICAGO, Irn, July = 31.—Charles Spalding, ex-president of the Giove Sav- ings Bank and ex-treasurer of the State University, was found guilty of the em- bezzlement of university endowment funds to-day. The prisoner was almost yrostrated when the verdict was read. He grasped a chair for support, and a few minutes later was led back to his cell in the County Jail. Judge Horton's charge was favcrable to the prosecution. The specific charge against the ex-banker was the hypothecation of $32,000 worth of bonds belonging to the university. Spald- | ing admitted having pledged them to the First National Bank, but claimed in his defense that he had used the money thus secured to pay warrantsdrawn to meet | current expenses. There are stiil twenty- five indictments against Spalding. —_—— Murderer Captured After a Struggle. | HAZELTON, Pa., July 3L—Alexander | Martini, who murdered Andrew Albertini | last Thursday, was captured at 3 o’clock this morning. Therc was u lively fizh: | beore he surrendered, and an onlooker | was shot and badly wounded. | MR, STRVENSON | e Q \gl, EVERY GROCER SELLS IT NEW TO-DAY. 33k e~ ACLEA KNOCKOUT They Are Guessing Hard, But it Is No Use. They moajmpete With Us. ©0000000000000000000000 Our honorable business methods have won for us the day. We Do Just What We Say. SPECIAL! Tuesduy and Wednesday Only, NONE BEFORE ~" NONE AFTER 1000 M FINE SILK SCARFS, in Tecks, four-in-hands,club ties, band and shield bows, new de- sirable patterns, 10c. ENOH BALBRIGGAN SILK - FINISHED UNDER- WEAR, all sizes, in Shirts and Drawers, 350 MEN’S FINE ALL- WOOL CLAY WORSTED DRESS SULTS, in Sacks and Frocks, $7.45. D&~ These goods will be on dis: play Monday and will be sold TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY. NONE BEFORE NONE AFTER THE BALDWIN CLOTHIERS 924-930 Market St. (BALDWIN ANNEX). Mail Orders Will Recelve Prompt and Careful Attention. EAT TWINBROTHERS MU S H BEST FOOD ONEARTH The Drains on Your System NOW! You ever stop to think how much your life is like the sand in this glass ? It is draining away. It is fast running out, and all because you take no pains to stop it Make sure of this—if youdon’t take heed in time, just as surely as the sand in this glass will eventually get into the lower bulb altogether, so certainly will your vitality be iost perma- nently if you don’t do something drains. , and that quickly, too, to S.top the You could stop that sand from running by simply turning the glass on its side, and you can stop the losses that are w eakening you in just as simple a way. now to-day will you TRY ? if you will but have them! And don’t you want them? Thousands upon thousands have done it— Glorious and perfect monhood are yours Why, if you only knew how much more every one on earth would think of you if you were no longer puny you would not stop to consider for a mo- ment. Write and ask the doctors of the great Hudson Medical Insti- tute what HUDYAN has done for those who have suffered in the way you do, They will send you free circulars, free testimonizls and the best medical advice in the world free, too. HUDYAN CURES! Make no error about that. Swiftly, surely and permanently. Will you give it itan opportunity to cure YOU? Write to-day and let your troubles cease. et forms of the disease. no matter what ails you relief a- assured. HUDSON M I you have blood taint you for'the 30-day blood cure wor s as efficacious in the tertiary as in the primary and secondary Testimonials about this are free, too, and the hands of the doct.rs of the Institute ig ALL CURABLE DISEASES AR EDICAL suld write with equal confidence, marvels. No after effects, and 1§ CURED PLOMPTLY. INSTITUTE, Stockton, Market and Ellis Streets, San Francises, Cal.