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o THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, AUGUST 10 1897 Macomber, Rev. M. C. Harris, Rev. E. ). Henderson, Rav. L. C. Libby, Rev. F. D, Bovard, Rev. F. K. Bakerand J. J. Gosper. More Threats of Death. It is significant that on the very day of the starting of the petition the walls of Chinatlown bore a new placard breathing threats of death against the members of the society which has been instrumental in baving certain slaves imported irom China sent back by the Coliector. This placard was noticed by some of the members of the Society for Euglish Edu- cation on Saturday, and yesterday morn- ing Dr. Gardner, interpreter for the Col- lector, accompanied the sergeant of the Chinatown squad and pointed out to him the offending circulars, They were taken | down and are now in possession of the volice and will be held for usein the | future shoula there be any murd in Chinatown following the recent act of the society. The circular is very guarded in its lan- guage, but is unusually strong for a circu- lar threatening deat The Chinese do not tell a man that they will kill him, but they give hints that an just as much. The placard in quesiion recites that a cer- tain society has been interesting itself in the preventiou of siavery in the City, and s attention to the fact that about six o there was another society which ame thing and that several mem- t violent deaths. gnificance of this is left to the of the society, but the circular, liy impress the matter upon the members, says further that *if any- thing bappens to the men who are taking ro much interest in having girls deported the members owners’ society must not be held responsible.’” E to the ¢ authorities will law is upheld, a their power to suance of this e av tion to the Chief of Police reciting va: s facts and asking him to give them rotection. Chief Lees Called on to Act, While the statements of interested par- | ties that the Chinese Society for English | Education is composed of biackmailers bave not been borne out by the facts, and while the threats to bring about an an- | nulment of the charter have not material- | ad into action, the society itself has not | Ueen content to rest under the imputa- i tion, and s and bad circulated throughout Chinatown a circu- ! nouncing one Yee Ah Fay, who was & the name of the society in efforts to Ia addition to this they ar d to Chiet of Pol SAN FR I. W. Le 2 Lees: 0,.Auz. 7, 1897, 1 that A mem- Aot ) \‘\3\\5“\ J h« AR of the society s an tucati 1 to ap- harges, | Ah Fay | v publish, | the said d 10 cause ted and prose- you the services to aid yon | We take th 1ty 1o ourseives and 1o th ail th y parties tc nake an exa y or any for the purp Yee Ah kFay Denounced. Following is a translation of the circular which was posted in the Chinese language | on the walls in Chinatown and general distributed by the society: hment of our so rrect and prope t come to our knowledge toata disteputs son, whose nameis Yee Fay, alias Yee Fon Hong, claimed to be an | officer of our societ ed mes of | some prominent members of ov and e the estebli- the and also 10 another disrepu by one Lew Wong, mail and to extort n by the use of abie house kept pted 10 black- om the inmates id forged documents, tion of our just by-laws d.ately upon receiving i e acts, we at once Yee Ab Fay from | Yee Ah y has done our society is not 1f any person here- ' names and attempts th person blackmailed | 1 officer and arrest him, or | y and we will +0n is prosecuted by the proper 5028 to warn and prevent others the same step. e “THE CALL” INDORSED. The Chi e Soclety of English Education Thanks Those Who Have Given It Aid. At a meeting of the Chinese Society ot English Education, held last night, the | jollowing resolutions were passed and steps were taken to have a petition sent to the Chinese Minister at Washington, tell- ing him of the petition which is now being circulated in this City, and asking him to use his influence with President McKinley and the Treasury Department to have ac- tion taken on the petition in order that <lavery in this City may be abolished. The resolutions are as follows: WHEREAS, In the matter of the attéempted Janding on these shores of Kan Kam Oy, a young Chinese woman, for improper purposes, ine Collector of the Port of “an Fr J. P. Jackson, exkibited great wisdom 1 in sifting and gathering the test mony; and whereas, in bisaction in said mar- ter the honorable Collector has shown him- £0li 10 be a frfend of good government ana a oter of gcod morals, and opposed to the ngzing of siaves into this country, pow, there o-e, be it _ Resoived, That the Chinese Society of English Eiucation do hereby express their profound thankiuiness to the said Collector for his ac- 1 conduct in said case. Be it further , That the San Francisco CALL has thown itself tobe an advocate of good morals #nd a vigorous foe to the imporiation of slaves into this country, and this scciety hereby pub- the ‘seid journal for the reason above stated. Be it further Resolved, That we fully appreciste the good work done by the Hon. Barciay Henley in his conduct of the sald case, and we hersby tepder i [ i we | I i | real live ci A WELL-LAID SCHEME. | \ How the Chlnese Coach Those Who Attempt to Get In by Fraud. There is a letter in possession of the Federal officials of this City* which shows how the Chinese ot this City area g and abetting trymen across the water to evade the exclusion act | and ¢ W epted by the offi- and is being beld | an to whom it was sent makes | nd attempis to lana, when | to keep him out and 10 man who s s letier r >t the departmen ntil the m it t familiarity with id gives a regu tions and answers ed to learn which the ymmig | by rote. The questions ure tbose which will be asked the immizran: when he ar- d the answers are those which are ieve that the trav- ‘ th, with house number | L other particulars which are to be u, as well as dutes and other matter cted with the hife of ti pposed native son, are given in detail, and it is expected that when the newcomer arrives he will walk right ashore and become a wich no one to say him nay. The letter sho regular trade in on between tnis Ci also shows a wonderful he inner workings of the Cu t is expected that Collector Jackson will make use of the letter when the man arrives to go deep! to the workings of this importation society, and some rich developments may be expected in this line before lomn e i HOSPITALS DOOMED. s plainiy that there is a | ng Chinese going v and Ching, and it familiarity with tom-house. Miss Alexander Takes the Initlative In Estab'lshing a New In- stitute. | i Itis an axiom in the annals of the world that “‘there is always a man for the hour of need,” but sometimes the ‘‘man’’ that | arises in the time of need is™ woman, and | this has been verified in the instance of a | most crying need in Chinatown. The hor- | rors of the Chinese hospitals and their ad- | juncts, the chambers of tranquillity and undertskers’ estublishwments, have been | dwelt upon in articles in TuE CALL several | times, but it has been impossible to ade- | quately picture the scenes in thosa vile dens, where men, women and children are left alone to die of starvation and fright. These hospitals, which should have been rooted out by the Board of Health long ago, h\ve held untold atrocities, which have been hidden from all eyes except those of the man who was in charge. The mission workers of all the churches | have known of these terrible places, but they have been unable to do anything to put & stop to them, as there has been no place to take the unfortunates who were rescued from a living deatn. Spasmodic efforts have been made to get better treat- ment for these poor people, but the ex- clusion act of the Chinese undertaker seems to work much better than that of Uncle Sam, and by the time the rescue party got word and reached the place the patient was ready for the coffin. “One lady who has teen engaged in mis- sion work in Chinatown for the past three vears has watched these dens cf infamy | until with her forbearance cecsed tobea | virtue, and she has finally made up her mind to take up the matter personally | and see what can be done to give better | care tv those who are so beartlessly hur- | ried to the grave. While she has been in | the mission work in San Francisco but | four years she has been engaged in it in | other cities all her life, and now as she comes here, working entirely on her own means and asking for no one’s ass stance to belp her do her work, she feels that it | is time that others were asked 1o help the poor, sick Chinese who are thrust into these dungeons.and left to die. Miss I. Alexander, who lives near the Presbyterian Mission-house on Sacra- mento street, was 2 well-known Christian worker in Toronto, Canada, where she is looked npon with love and respect by hundreds whiom she was the means of helping. Her object now is 1o get all churches interested in a non-sectarian bospital for indigent Chinese, and when this is established there will be no excuse for the continuance of the present dens which are called hospitals, that are a dis- | grace to the City. Miss Alexander will visit the various Christian societies in the City and en- deavor to get them to take aciion, and hopes to have the hospital started and | maintained by the churches. She will give her time {0 it, and as she is seeking no place of profit, cannot be said to be working lgri_liiu the matier, Scenes at the Washington-Street Wharf, Where the Steamer Humboldt, Bound for St. Michaels, Was Yesterday Being Loaded With Steamboats and Tons of Klondike Supplies. 1 == = FNE STEAM LAUNCH " NEREIDA' 18 TAREN ABOARD (N SECTIONS , NI BT 54“1 ‘“l if il il | ) { ‘ | WENIL | | il ln li b Jil g NP OF [HE TURON EMIGRATION ' The Schooner South Coast | Sails and Two Steam- ers Go To-Day.’ FORTY-ONE MORE ADVENTURERS. N The Humboldt Rushes North in a Mighty Effort to Beat the Ice to Dawson, T0-DAY THE FARALLON WILL SAIL Stranded Miners Reaching St. Michaels Will Be Saved by the Alaska Commercial Company. Hundreds cheerad the steam schooner South Coast when she swung away from Mission-street pier 2 at3 p. M. yesterday, and with her decks in rough and pic- turesque confusion and peopled by forty- one gold-bunters and her crew began steaming for St. Michaels. The old lumber schooner never carried such a beterogeneous and queerly stowed cargo. On her forward deck the old tug Governor Stoneman and the steam launch Esperanza were shored up with braces and lashed down with sieel cables, as were the boilers cf the tug, by the foremast. The rest of the low deck was piled high with sacks of coal, and great bins of coal rose on each side of the deckhouse. Bags, boxes, bales of rope and supplies of all sorts were piled on deck and in the hold were great piles of all that make np out- fits and supplies for the Yukon country. The forty-one passengers expact to get up the river to Dawson with the aid of the steam craft and a barge that is to be built at the mouth of the river. The proprietor of the enterprise is Captain Roberts, who sails the vessel, and who chartered her for the trip. The crowd was not aslarge as that which saw the National City sail two days before, for Alaskan expeditions are not the novelty they were ten days ago. A partial list of those who sailed is as fol- lows: J. J. McKinnon; J. M. Mehan, for twenty years foreman of the Sutro tunnel; T. M. Mc- Cabe, Johu Crowley, P. Suilivan, Virginia, Nev.; A. K. Varney, Jemes Hastings, G. Scho- field, Mr. Kimbail, Sacramenio; E. Sharer, L. | H. Petersos, G. Van Gordon, A. C. Scow, F. Bamaborg, Frank Joaquin, San Luis Obispo; 0. Weissman, Mat Brannigan, A. F. Treuschel, H. Reischrath, E. J. Hills, F. P. Holt, Dr. C.J. McGovers, John Mayne, C. A. F. Grim, George forris, G. Rosella, R. E. Norion, F. C. Linn, J. Alexander, D. Holden of Modesto; John Blieden, Marcus Blanchard, L. W. McKee, M. H. Davis, A. Johnson, P. 8. Thomss. _, To-day two first-class passenger steam- ers, with large parties, will sail ior Alaska. The big new coast passenger steamer Humboldt isannounced to ieave for 8t Michaels at 2 p. M. and the Farallon will sail for Dyea wilth alarge passenger list later in the day. The loading of the Humboldt at Wash- ington-street wharf was one of the chief attractions of the water front yesterday. The Humboldt expedition is on a big scale and there is spced and style to it all. The Yukon and Aliska Company, which Mayor Wood of Seattle has organized, has plenty of capital and it is being shoveled out., Itisunderstood that$25,000 was paic for the steamer for this trip as & starter. A new river steamer, 120 feet long and 2 feet wide, drewing three feet when loaded, 4 Las been hastily built at a shipyard across ’lhe bay and powerful new engines and | additional passengers for Dyea yester- other machinery have been quickly se- | day. | cured. A barge, 120 by 24 feet, has been | It had been expected that the steam- I built, and both steamer and barge are now | schooner Scotia would go north with a | | aboard in pieces. Eighteen ship carpen- | party, but yesterday her charter was | tersand alarge gang of machinists and | abandoned and she returned to the coast | other workmen are going along to St. [lumber trade. | Michaels to help hustle the steamer and barge together. The steam launch Ne- | reida has been brought down from Stock- | ton and will also be taken along. | The company is going into the mer- | chandise as well as the transportation business on the Yukon, and a large stock | of goods was being rushed aboard yester- | day with the machinery and the | for the ship and the passengers. Bt cooking utensils, miner’s tools and sup- plies of all kinds make up the stock taken. An electric lighting plant is to be taken | along for the steam barge. Itwill furnish | | an electric beadlight for rver travel at | night and itis provosed to tie the barge to | the bank at Dawson aud to proceed (o : SR ers do, but thi stipoly electrio lights to the town this | *HU(d0as they nes others do, 4 o practical advice will be valuable to some The company charges $300 for the trip | 1< luteresting to "‘“’»‘h o i ! ) i S g The great majority ol the men rushing to | |to Dawson with excess baggage carried | o "kondike are “tenderieet.” They have | for 10 cents a pound. The company ex- | never seen a gold mine, and their comprehen- | pects to succeed in getting through, but | sion of what is a goid mine is derived from a | protects itself against too sreat disaster if | Perusalof theflotsam and jeisam of the daily | the expedition gets stuck in the river by | press. Few of them go prepared to buy claims already opened, and must iocate and prospect reguiring each passenger to sign & con- | tract of which the following is a part: laims for themselves. Brain-iaden with ab- . g HOW TO PROSPECT. First in Yukon Gold Hunting for the Benefit of the Tenderfeet. The Mining and Scientific Press tells editorially how a tenderfoot who doesn’t know dolomite from a mule track shouid hunt for gola when he gets up therein a | d-bearing region, hundreds of | ¢ and is ready to get rich. Of| ost tenderfeet will rush to where | ce others rushiny, or follow rumors | Lessons | surd ideas as to the origin of the gold, and ig- norant of the natura! laws of its distribution, confronted in the country with the severest physical conditions under which gold mining 1s followed anywhere, it is impossible but that there shonid be many diseppointments belore & sufficient number of successess shall have come 10 accumuiate the needed expe- Tience. The first thing that a “tenderfoot” miner going to the Yukon from this City should do is to visit the State Mining Bureau museum | and acquire as far as possible au acquaintance with the appearance of the commoner varieiies of the rocks. He should 8o famiiier,ze himself as to be able to recognize granite, sandstone, | limestone, slate, serpentine, schist, diorite; | diubase, tale, trap, dolerite, dolomite aud | porphyry. Itisnotanticipated that he could | become infallible in recognizing these rocks, | but he should be able to successtully recognize them in the majority of instances.” The abil- | 1ty to recogn z2 gold, mica, pyrite, chalcopy- nite and galens is also advaniageous. On_the ground, and presuming sll of the possible ground of the Klondike placers already appropriated, the attention of the | bject to limitation that after en- ascent of Yukon River | ceding thirty days’ subsistence is to be o furnished, said passenger to furnish his | wn bedding for entire trip. For any excess | of time over thirty days consumed upon the | Yukon, not arising from negligence of the | company, aid passenger is 10 pay the com- | pany at rate of $2 per day for subsistence, or the passenger may alone, or jointly with oth- | ers, board himself from his own supplies, using the cooking and other implements of | the company to such extent as may be fairly | consistent with the joint use thercofby the | company for its crew and passengers, or by | other passengers. Itis agreed that after leaving the Humboldt the passenger will at any time, upon demand of the company or its agent, assist to the best of his ability in any skilled or unskiiled labor in handling cargo, putting together barges or | X machinery, securing fuel, providing iacilities | miner should be first’ given to unproven pos- aiiie litics | sible ground in the valleys of streams adja- for comfort or subsistence of the expedition | (.1 F i oce in which gold has already been onland or in the barges, and in auy other | jound aud to the vaileys of Streams which | manner necessery for the quickest advance of | head in the same hills or mountains as do | the expedition or the safety or comfortof its | these known gold-bearing streams. It is pos- | equipment, supplies or members. IO Ios Sysiem il Dae snrlichefl & 4 one stream to have been cut by the drainage The officers of the company believe that the | PrET AN Tner, so that it has enriched them above trip can be made safely, and completed | 0 ss well. In the Yukon, as elsewhere, the this summer fliteen to twenty days before tbe | mountain uplifts have resulted in forming ciose of navigation on the Yukon; but pass- | ] is justifled to look for gold on the other side as | well, ! As an additionsl guide the gravel rock fragments in the gold-dearing stream should be compared with that being prospected. If | the two contain identical rocks, and particu- | larly if they both coutain quar.z, diorice, dia- | base or porphyry pebbles, it 15 worth the | chance to exiend the prospecting, even if the | first efforts cisclose no gold. When gold is found in several claims in the same valley the | direction of the line of deposit should be | noted and the first prospecting should be done in that line &s being the most probabie one for the placer. The gold produced by th several claims going up stream shou.d I compared both in total quantity and size of grains. With the data oi this comparison it is possible to reason ouf the locus of the rich- est ground and aiso to know when the lode | source of the gold is being approached. i Coarse gold, gold with atiached quartz frag- ments and rough gold all indicate that tne source is comparatively close at hand—that & point is being reached bayond whfch there will be no placer. The Russians, in rheir min- ing of the Siterian placers, failed generally to recognize the lode sources of the goid, and in | many instances carried their prospecting for | piacers miles up stream beyond the lodes from which the gold came. There i8 no reason for | American miners making the same mistake. Another indication of nearness to lodes is the | presence of rcugh {ragments of pyrite, chalco- | pyrite orgalena. Even if these last’ do not | lead to gold-bearing lodes, they may lead to valuable lodes of copper or lead. Generaily anything heavy that is found in the mining should te determined. Silver, quicksilver, tin and nicxel ores and platinum are all worth considering, even in Alaska. The possibility of ‘their occurrence shou!d not | be lost sight of, the more particularly as tneir discovery is only to be made by foliowing up the stream indic Th2 covering of snow over the surface seven months of the year, the covering of moss for the other five months precludes the possibility of prospecting by the ordinary surface methods. | Where it is necessary to prospect without | the guide of discoveries already made adja- cent, almost total dependence must be placed on the characier of the pebbles in the graveis uncovered in prospecting. 1f much quartz be | found, even though no gold at first, 1t is ad- visable to cover the possible ground for a p.acer pretty thoroughly before abandoning it finally As & general proposition it will prove very advantageous lor a dozen or more miners to co-operate in making a systematic cxploration of unknown ground. Work can be done cheaper, faster and surer than by thesame men acting independently, Cc-operation ad milts of incrersing the tool outfit by a biack- hop and drill outfit. Powder can be and the prospect holes sunk tarough the frozen ground much faster than by fire. | Prospecting can be spread over a much larger area by co-operation than by the same | men aciing each for himsell. Co-operaling, | once the gold lead is found, the whole com- pany areina position to intelligently secure a valuable ciaim for each member and to get the claims so connected that they can be | economically exploited as one property. It must be rrmembered that the present cumber- some method of exploitation will soon be re- placed by quicker and better ones, admitting of the profitable working of the ground now left unworked, and distinctly advantageous to | large clalms, compared with small gnes. s YUKON CHARITY. The Alaska Commercial Company will temper the Yukon blasts to the shorn prospcctor tnis winter. Yesterday it shinped a barrel of charity along with the big supply of additional stores which left for its crowded storehousesat St. Michaels in the schooner Novelty and the barken- tine James A. Garfield. Word was sentto the comvpany’s agents at St. Michaels and | to captains in the company’s employ to bring home any stranded miners that may reach St. Michaels this winter. ‘Che chances are ten to one in favor of there being a number of half-starved and disheartened men reaching St. Michaels during the winter, and there charity in pretty large quantity will be their only show for life. It has alwags beeu the cu tom of thetwo big trading companies to pbring dowr® to civilization the strandec miners who have got down the riverevery winter and spring, but this year the an- nouncement was early mwade that the policy would be discontinued. KEW TO-DAY. GREAT —OF— SCHOOL BOOKS! New and Second Hand. NOTE.—Having extensively canvassed the City for OLD TEXTBOOKS, we now have on band a large supply about AS GOOD AS NEW, which we will sell FAR BELOW COST. SPECIAL NOTICE. Bring your 2ld books, as we take them in part payment for new ones. o g 600-page Tablet. .. Brass-edge Maple Raler. Dixon’s Lead Pencils.. Dixon’s Wooden Slate Pencils.5¢c per dozen | 100 Flag Slate Pencils, in box. 10c 150-page Composition Book.. 5c Reporters’ Notebooks. Best Double Strap ever offered. VANNESS BAZARR 1808 MARKET ST. [ 8.—Open till 10 F. . i | given up hope. SALE H H How much there is expressed in one lit- tle word, and that one that we are accus- tomed to use every day. Do you ever re= alize what isexpressed by MAN ? It means the noblest creation. It means perfections [ et Unlessyou are a perfect man you cannot claim to be considered & man at ail. Does that ever occar to you? If you havein | your younger days made a fool of vourself it is likely that you are not a man now. _—D—_ Don’t try to persuade yourself that you will “‘get better’” as the years go on. You will get worse! 1f you don’t do some- thing 10 stop those terrible drains on an already weak frame. Heed the warning now. You can save yourself and make a new | man out of yoursslf if you go about it the right way. Just drop aline to-day to the address which follows and ask for circu- lars and testimonials about “Hudyan.” A=—A A two-cent stamp will bring you infor- mation showing how it has cured thou- sands of poor erring mortals who had It actnally makes manli- too, it you will but give it the chance. N N Now, which is the more sensible thing— to go on with those shaking limbs, those spots before the eyes, and that perpetual fear of death, or to get cured? ‘Why, you will be surprised at yourself in a week ! ness. It will cureyou, Blood taint, which is shown by loose teeth, 108 of eyebrows, copper-colored spots, etc., is unfailingly cured by the «30-day blood cure,’ no inatter | whether it be in its primary, secondary Circulars about It tertinry form or froe, too, and so is the bedt medical advice that can be had. State your casc to-day, Hudson Nedical nstitute Stoekton, Market and Ellis Sts, RR ARG Ely’sfi Cream Balm 8 Cleanses the Nasal Passages, Allays Pain and Inflammation, Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell. Heals the Sores. fl;&ly Balm 1nto each nostril BROS,56 Warren st.N.Y QUEDS AND BURROS, READY FOR SHIF O pine. 22 feet long will carry 2 “ons of GOLD and 4 men: the St ana strongest thad can be made; fasteaed with screws, v NEAS DETAIL AP GF KLONDIKE ROUTE. T MAP OF THE Kiood a lurge scai from the Chiie and gives full 718 Third St. ROUTE ot P dings and po 10 proceed. all the rapids, 1 instru b te, by CAPTALY N, who has bad experi-nce in that country as pilot an B kvery one inte in Alas<a should have one. Publish. K 718 'KLONDYKE BOATS! READY TO SHIP. Ready to put together In three bours. Size 34 feet long, 515 feet beam, 2 feec deep; will carry twoions: weight 200 pounds: no piece over six feet long. Large ones built 1o order. ALASKA SLEDS FUR SALE. SAN FRANCISCO LAUNCH CO., North Point and Stockton Sts. Baja California Damijana Bitters POWERFUL APHRODISIAC AND ecific ton:c for the sexual and urinary organg ©of both sexes, and greas remedy for diseases ot the kidneys and bladder. A great Resiorative, Anvigorator and Nervine. Sells on its owa Merive: o long-winded tesimonials necossary. * DNABEK, ALES & BRUNE, Agents 828 Market St., 5, F.—(Send 1o Cucalar.) BLOOD POISON vE.uu Sore Turoat, Punpi Colored §i Write COO! leers in Mouth, Hair-Falling! EMEDY €O., 307 kasonic Temole, Capt Chicago, Il for proofs of cures. = ,000. Worst cases cured In o 35 days. 100-page book free. ] b fissured and iraciured zones in the rocks engers are hereby notified that they assume | Which have filled wita the go.d ores. These, the risks of delays, the distances, uncertain conditions and climate of the journey being the reasons for the various provisions herein set forth. Experienced river pilots will be along, and Captain Bonifield, the master of the ship, has made seven tripsto St. Michaels. Between sixty and seventy-five passengers will leave from here, and a much larger number and a great deal of freight will be taken on at Beattle. It is expected to reach St. Michaels by August 20 and Dawson by about October 1. The Farallon registered a number of | ifon one side of & mounta.n, are apt to be | duplicated on the other, and, though neither can be seen, both can be inferred from the dis- | covery of gold on one side of the drainsge. It | ¥ Arouse to Action i A dormant liver or you will suffer all the INLII'I ncident to a prolonged biilous aitack. Constipa- tion, heaaache, dyspepsis, furred tongus, sour | breath, pain Inthe right side, will admonish you | of neglect. Discipline the recalcitrant organ at once with Hostetter's Stomach Biiters, and ex- | Ject prompt relief. Malaria, rhenmatism, kianey complaint, nervousness and debility are thorough- |1y removed by the Eitcers. life. free, sealed, by mail. NEW TO-DAY. It fills your system with Electricity, which is natural strength, and builds up your vitality so that you are as strong as ever in your Get it to-day, or send for the book ‘“Three Classes of Men,” SANDEN ELECTRIC CO,, Office Hours—8 A, M. t0 8:30 P. M.; fundays, 10 10 1. Los Angeles office 204 South Broad- way; Portland, Or., 253 Washington sireet; Denver, Colo., 935 Sixteenth street. NOTL.—Make no misiake in {he numver—S 3 & MARKET STREET, Make noweofin | T10=— | THE TOILER! | How do you feel when your work | is done? Is ybur back weak? Are| you weary? Do your nerves| tremble ? Do you feel as if all your strength | was gone—that you are not able to stand the work you used to? Does old age seem to be coming on, while you are still youngin years? Does your back give out? Then get Dr. Sanden's Electric Bell. 632 Market Street, Opposit: Palace Hotel, San Fun?fi’a: A salesman who travels for 1 Bridgeport, Conn., factory reporte that he has always b j i 0s i ys been subject to colds caught from exposure ig drafty places. “I used to mufile myself up no end,” he says, “and ye§ iy head and throat were continually stuffed up and I was hoarse as a crow. I was waiting-at Plainfidd Junction for a train one day and met a2 man who gave me a Ripans Tabule and said he guessed that wsuid cure my cold, and it did. Since then,® he says, “I always keep tte TABULES by me and take one at the fist sneeze, If I do thisthe cold seldems get any farther,”