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14 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, AUGUST 21, 1897. A FRE(GHT LINE ROUND AP HORN New Ships and Steamers Between New York and This City. T0 START IN. A FEW WEEKS. Other Coast Ports Will Be Visited and Fast Pas- sages Made, THE COAST AGENCY T0 BZ HERE. Five Steamers Will Be Built and Named After California Counties. The new clipper line to New York is known as the Atlantic and Pacific Trans- portation Company. Henry D. Walls of Fifteenth and Market streets, Pniladelphia, will manage the Eastern business of the )mypany, and Johnson-Locke Mer- atile Company of 204 Front street will be thie General Pacific Coast agents. Within the next thirty or forty days lines will be laid for five steamers for this company. They will be completed in about fifteen months, when they will imme- d ately be placed in commission between New York and this City to supersede the ling vessels of the company. These will be named after counties of struction is claimed to be a di- rect result of the new tariff, which encour- American commerce more than ever y the ship Iroquois has been commissioned and will sail from New York on September 10 for this port. The fleet will shortly be supplemented by the addition of the large ips Inaiana and Reaper, to sail a few weeks later. In addition to these e's, which will run to San Francisco, others will be pu on y for trade wiih Portland, An-eles. Tae first ship for acoma. ntention is, when the steamers are to make the trip round the Horn v days, or only a little Iower time ow consumed by the isthmus route, its breaking of bulk and extra handling of cargo. Tiese vessels will load in the East under covered wharves and probably similar convenient arrangements will be secured The company has the contract to trans- port Cumberland coal from the East and as most of the cargo will be assurea prompt departures will be expected. “JANE” AT THE ALCAZAR. An Amused Audience Greets the Whimsical Farce, Which Will Run Till Further Notice. Francis Powers' Greco-Turkish play gave way to ‘“‘Jane” at the Alcazar last might. It was the first time that the side- splitting farce had been given in this City at popular prices and the audience that assembled to witness it was the largest by far that the Alcazar has seen for some time. An amusing and thoroughly spirited reriormance was given hy the company. George Trader played the role of Charley Shackleton, the youth who, having traded on his relations for two years with tales of his wife’s extravagance, is finally nearly ruined by not having a wife, as his rich uncle comes to town toremonstrate with the lady, and the nephew is at his wits’ end to borrow a wife for the occa- sion. Trader showed plenty of vim in the part, and Selena Johnson lookea and acted well as the servant who consented to act the role of wife for the time being. Mrs. Bates also added to the hilarity of tbe evening. Tha whole cast was good and the fun never flagged. “Jane’” will be continued till farther notice. S THE VETERAN FIREMEN, The Volunteers Receive Several Invita- tions for Future Festivities. There was a largely attended meeting of the Veteran Volunteer Firemen’s Asso- ciation held last evening. An invitation was received from the Watsonville Fire Department to participate in the celebra- tisn in that city on the 9th of September. Another was received from the Native dons of the Golden West asking the vet- erans to accompany them to Santa Rosa. The directors of the Mechanics' Insti- tute also sent a request that the asso tion be present at the Mechanics’ Fair on the evening of the 26th inst, which was accepted. The old vets will turn out with tueir old machine as in the days of yore. A commiftee was appointed to make ar- rangements for the usual September out- ing. It consisted of Gus Pohlmann, G. R. Pidgeon, Stephen Bunner, John Satch- well and G. Bayreutber. ————— John C. Lynch’s Bonds Approved. Acting Collector of Internal Revenue Thomas received instructions from Washington yester- day afternoon to turn over the office to John Lynch on the last day of tuis month, Mr. neh’s bonds having been approved SKIN-TORTURED ABIES And rest for tired mothers in a warm bath with CUTICURA S0AP;andasingleapplication of CuT«CURA (ointment), the great skin cure. CuticvrA REMEDIES afford instant relief, and point toa specdy cure of torturing, dis- figuring, humiliating, itching, burning, bleed- ing, crusted, scaly skin and scalp bumors, with loss of hair, when all else fails. 801d throughout the world. T'07TE DEUG AND CHEM, T i s ive Skin- Tortursd Babies,"res. SKIN s(mfp and_Hair Besutified by CUTICURA SOAP. .,,7//1 A SECTIONOF T — THE GALLERY NAFIR 3 Shortly After the Beginning of the Seventh Round Mr. Griffin Slumbered. SOLLY SMITH A | HANDY WINNER | Griffin Is Not the Stiff Little Puncher of Yore. The New Brunswick Lad Was Knocked Out in the Seventh Round. Patsy Corrigan Gets a Decision From Burns After Fifteen Very Tame Rounds. The 2000 lusty-lunged enthusiasts who went to Woodward’s Pavilion last even- ing will not find it necessary to huntupa | kinetoscope show in order to satisfy themselyes as to just how Solly Smith | knocked out his old-time rival, Johnny‘ Gritlin of New Brunswick. A blind man would have stood a fair chance of seeing how the trick was turned. The punch which blighted Griffin’s pros- | pects of fienting Dixon for the bantam | championsbip of the world came when the | seventh round wus but a half minute old. Both men were flddling for an opportunity tolead. Griffin saw that the Los Angeles lad was shaping himself for another of the hurricane rushes which had charac- térized his work all through the contest and sought to unbalanca him by feinting with his left. It was a most unlucky feint, for the moment heexecuted it he left his left side “‘wide open,” as the saying1s in ring parlance, and Smith was too old a hand at the business to let such a chance slipaway from him. Like a flash the Cali- fornian’s right whipped across and his glove landed with a thump squarely upon the point of his hapless opponent’s jaw. The climax was spectacular. Griffin’s hands dropped and he fell forward like a slain steer, his face bumping against the heartless floor. There was an exultant cheer for the victor, and the battie which has had the sporting fraternity from one end of the continent to the other a-gos- siping for weeks was a thing of the past. So rar as the management of last night’s physical-culture entertainment was con- cerned the spectators could not have wished for anything better. There was noue of that too-frequent squabbling for seats and no confusion at the doors. The Columbian Club happens to be one of the few boxing organizations that re- alizes that it is to its business interests | and popularity to accord the public de- centtreatment. The matches given offered every promise of being great attractions— $0 much =o that thousands of dollars were wagered on the results—and the fact that they were rather disappointing in this respect can ouly be attributed to the fighters themselves and not the club. Griffin was a disappointment in that he did not make the showing against Smith that was expected of him. The little fel- low has certainly “‘zone back,” as the pro- fessional trainer of pugilists would put it. He seems to have lost all of his old-time steam and aggressive dash, and last night probably saw the end of Lis career asa tip-topper of the prize ring. When these same two lads fought at Roby some three years ago Griffin, it is true, got the loser’s end of the purse, but before he was downed be gave the Californian a great mauling, and most of those who wituessed the mill went away positive that 1f the little fel- lows ever met within the ropes again the boxer from New Brunswick would enjoy a veritable walkover, That performance accounted for the heavy betiing that favored Griffin’s chances in last night’s encounter. Smith was the fayorite at the opening of the books, being as high at one time as 10 to 6}4. But the talk of the wiseacres as to G u's prowess kept changing the mark- mr%! until just before the men entered the Ting even money was being played. Both lads looked to b!: ’in ynood form when they doffed their bathrobes, al- though Griffin seemed to be a trifle drawn and wore an anxious look on his face, Both were said to weigh 126 pounds. Griffin's advantage seemed to be in his su- perior beight and his rangy reach. But even this stood but poorly in hand when | ing Smith napping. the gong sent the boxers togetier for bussness. Solly assumed his familiar rushing tactics right from the start and never de- sisted until his antagonist was lying senseless upon the floor. There were times when he was accused of being over vicious for bitting in the clinches, but Referee Phil Wand ruled that tbe blows were not intentiona!l fouls and, inasmuch as they did no damage, could not be taken into serious cons:deration. Gnffin did not succeed in ianding a blow in the first round, whereas Smith’s rushes were highly productive, as e landed several heavy | lefts and one right on the body. The second round passed off with noth- ing more sensational than a tumble by Griftin while essaying to zive his opponent the slip when he attempted one of his rushes. But in the third round the spec- | talors saw something that gave them an | idea as to the hitting powers of that strap- ping little fellow, Smith. The latter was | rushing, as usual, while Griffin was dodg- ing and skipping away with the double purpose of keeping out of harm and catch- He succeeded in | neither. In his fourth consecuiive dash | Smith landed a swinging left that straightened Griffin up and left his face an open target for the cruel right-hand hook that followed. The latter blow was so well aimed that it flattened Griffin out on the broad of his back, and caused many to believe that the end had been reached. The victim took advantage of eight of the ten seconds al- | lowed him on the floor before rising. It | was a jolt that for the moment dazea him, but once he regained his feet he was at it gamely and as determinedly as ever. After that it was but one story. It was rush, rush, rush, on 8mith’s part, and a losing defensive battle by Griffin. The crowd svmpathized now with the New Brunswick boy, and cheered him and urged him to go in and win. Griffin would have been only too glad to have done so, | but he didn’t have it left in him. The only effective blow he landed on the doughty little Californian was in the sixth round, and that was a ripping right | over the heart, which causea Smith to grimace with pain. Had he been able to | rep-at this the tide of battle might have | ciranged, but be was unequal to the task. Griffin was bleeding copiously from a gash over the right eve and knobs arose upon all of tne angles of his bony coun- tenance as the result of Smith’s visita- tions. Then came the finish in the seventn. ‘While the resultof the contest was plaiuly in view for several rounds, barring the possibility of a *‘lucky punch,” still the end was sudden and at that time unex- | pected. Grifin was strong enough to bave fought many mora rounds, but a blow on the “point”” will finish most any strong man. Griffin’s secoads were fully ten minutes reviving him. The management very thoughtfully pro- vided something funny for the beginning of the show. Nick Aronson of the Man- hattan Club was pitted against somebody they found called “Kid’”’ Burns, who says he bails from New Orleans. Evidently thev have stopped teaching boxing down in the Crescent City if the “Kid” is to be accepted as one of the latest graduates. Aronson is not famiiiar with all the chapters of tue book on the game himself, but he demonstrated during those four rounds that he had pickea up enough to muke the New Orleans lad look foolish. Burns boxea like an old woman and had reason to consider himself fortunate in escaping from the ring without a dislo- cated jaw. After this bit of exhilarating exhibition came something in the nature of a legiti- mate curtain-raiser. But asan 1mprove- ment on the first turn it was a failure. It was a fifteen-round bout between Jim Brown, a shiny-skinned, wiry and well- conaitioned but frighitened colored glad- iator from Oakland, und Patsy Corizan, the chunky, top-heavy, hard-hitting but somewhat ancient Australian. Phil Wand o1_the Olympic Club was referee. It was for the greater parta long-range battle. This was a disadvantage for Cor- rigan on account of his short reach and a decidedly favorable circumstance for the very black man. In the first round the Australian was the aggres:or and suc- ceeded in flooring his dusky opponent with a well-aimed left swing into the pit of the stomach. Brown fouzht shy after that and seemed to be afraid to mix with the dumpy man from the Antipodes. He did get in and land on Corrigan 1n the second round and sent him to his haunches, but the blow was not particularly damaging. The gallery did not fancy Brown's tactics and essayed to goad bhim into action by jeers and hisses. 3 They found it difficuit, though, toc make him do other than pose and run away. Corrigan kept pegging away with his short arms, and not doing a great deal of execution himself, but doing the best he could and wearing himseif out. 1t was not until the fourth round that the black man was coaxed into waking up and then he took every advantage of Cor- rigan’s wornout shape by putting in sev- eral sharp swings, which somewhat jarred the fat man. The last round finished with an imitation of a rusb, in which Corrigan landed some awkward but heavy blows, while the Oakland Hannibal coutd do little better than jab a time or two, and then run away. Corrigan was given the de- cision. THE LADY AND THE POLICY Close of the Testimony in the Ten Thousand In- surance Suit. Mrs,Abell’sAgreement Admitted in Evidence Against Her (HEARST EVEN EVADES RILEY The Millionaire’s Love for a Poor Man Is Strangely Shown. Another Suit, Out of Which the Slippery Journalist Would Sneak, “Billy the Slinker” Laughs in His Sleeve When His California Victims Seek Justice. Now comes John Riley lifting up his voice to swell the chorus, *“Willie, We Have Missed You.”” In other words, Mr. Riley is of the number who would like to see Mr. Hears!, and who would go about the streets mourning more or less because be is not where the process of ithe court can readily disturb him. Mr. Riley is a workingman, and as such belongs to the class for whom Mr. Hearst entertains so high a regard that he pub- lishes plans and specifications of it at regu- lar intervals. But Mr. Riley is practical. The elusive sentiment of affection, even when bruited to the world by the Yellow Twins of Journalism, does not, so tne mat- ter appears to him, create any fat that he | can notice adnering to his ribs. He does not care for flattery nor tingle with vride at being loved by Mr. Hearst. What he wants is §$678 in cash. This may seem sordid, it may affect the benign Hearst to tears as an instance of ingratitude, but it is business. 7 From an examination of documents duly filed by Mr. Riley in May it would seem that he had contracted tosupply the | people of a certain district with papers, or so-called papers—in fact with Examiners; that he also contracted with the paper to permit itself to be supplied, but that the contract with the public could not be car- ried out, because the contract with the paper was not carried out, a circumstance for which Riley blames the paper alone. He wants $678, estimated to be the profit | that he wculd have wrested from the | route had the route not been wrested from him, and he prays also that costs be sad- dled upon the Examiner, hoping probably that these shall not be small. There does not shine forth any particu- lar reason why Mr. Riley shoald have been surprised atan exhibition of bad faith, such as he cites as his ground for suit. Students of moral ethics might even discuss whether or not Mr. Riley in his | effort to disseminate pernicicus literature was no: prope:ly rebuked by Providence, | However, these questions are ciearly side issues and irreievant, possibly immate- rial, but not impertinent, only naturai. Mr. Riley, realizing too late that pro- fessional regard for workingmen did not always go to the exlent of keeping a bar- gain made with one of them, turned to the courts' for relief. He had no diffi- culty in finding a lawyer, in filing papers, | Counsel’s Objection. A Document That Unexplained Would Give the Money to the Estate of the Deceased. At yesterday afternoon’s session of the United States Circuit Court was ended the testimony in the suit of the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company against the Union Trust Company, to determine whether the estate of the late General Dimond or Mrs. Theresa Abell was en- titled to the proceeds of a life insurance policy on the general’s life for $10,000. Only three witnesses were examinec—Ed- win Dimond, Dr. Rosenthal and Georg: H. Pippey. They testified that the gene- ral was of sound mind. Mrs. Abell, a stately, good-looking woman of about 35 vears of age, was in court, attired in sober black, the dreari- ness of which was relieved by a pair of white kid gioves an1a smart little turban. Mr. Cannon drew from Mr. Dimoud the statement that the general complained of a pain in the back of his head, but the witness explained that the pain was caused by derangement of the stomach and rot of the brain. At this stage of the proceedings Lawyer Platt offered in evidence the following document: San Francisco, Feb. 15, 1896. General W. H. D mond, City- My Dear Sir: Pertaining Lo our business and personal matters, and which were by us mutually referred to Edwin Di- mond and Drury Melone for adj ment, I beg to say that a full settle- ment has been made and to my entire satistaction in every particular. With gratiiude to you and thanks to the gentlemen above numed, I remain very truly youts, THERESA ABELL, We certify to the correctness of the foregoing statement and that each and both of us witnessed the signature of Mrs, Abeli. DRURY MELONE, EDWIN R. DIMOND, The introduction of this document was objected to very strongly by Mr. Cannon, on the ground that he had been taken by surprise, and that;he could prove by Drury Melone that the policy had been excepted from the settlement and thal it was a separate matter. He asked for a continu- ance in order that he might have an op- vortunity of having Mr. Melone as a wit- ness. Lawyer Cannon was asked by Lawyer Piatt to examine young Mr. Dimond, who was in court and who with Mr. Melone witnessed Mrs. Abell’s signature to the document. He could tell, Mr. Piattex- plained, whetber the policy was or was not included in the agreement. Mr. Cannon took no notice of the sug- gestion, and Judge Morrow denied the motion for a continuance. Next Friday was fixed as the day for the argument. Pesos vs. Picayunes Is the title of a bright bit of dialogue over- heard by Amy L. Wells in a Market-street restaurant and retailed for Town Talk’s read- ers this week. This number of the popular weekly is full to overflowing of readable mat- ter—sound editorials, couched in faultiess English; impartial and interesting musical, literary and dramatic criticlsms; beautiiul stories, poems and portraits of prominent peop e. Town Talk’s midsummer special is i still seiling. . ————————— Charged With Misconduct. William Miller, an engiveer, and Mrs. Nellie | Coburn were arrested Thursday on a charge of misconduet. The complaining witness against Miller is his wife, Mrs. Harriet Miller, 1940 Market street, and Mrs. Roxannah Joyce of the same a.dress is the complaining witness against Mrs. Coburn, who has a husband, W, _ Coburn, living in the City. Secretary Kane of the Pacific Coast Soclety for the Suppression of Vice has charge of the case. but Hearst was away, chronically distant, evasive, flitting. The long arm of the courts could not at once reach him ina simple civil case where only a small amount was involved. Mr. Hearst’s habit | of being somewhere else has checked and annoyed Mr. Riley. The suit, like others brought by people who consider that they have peen in some manner damaged, hangs fire. Still it hasthe pieasing effect of helping in its modest fashion to keep Hearst out of California. Hence the Riley suit is a subject of common interest, and citizens perhaps wholly unacquainted with Mr. Riley cannot refrain from wish- ing it well. They would like to see Mr. Riley win bis suit, but if he can’t get a chance to | win it a moderate delight would be ex- cited and sustained by the spectacle of the case remaining in court, ready and alert, | prepared to welcome Willie at the State line it ever he wander back again. Mr. | Riley’s lawyer explains that in the con- | tinued absence of Hears:, after certain formalities, default may be entered re- wardless of the whereabouts of the de- fendant. Moreover, the suit brought by Mr, Riley, presumably a man of moderate cir- cumstances, against Mr. Hearst, presuma- bly a man of immoderate circumstances, possesses a peculiar significance. Itshows | how deop is this love for labor which Mr. Hearst's admiring co-workers and workers Iaud so feelingly as a passion aimost holy, | and one which Hearst is believed, by | them exclusively, to have cornered and copyrighted. Yet even they have been | known to doubl. As for Riley, he would | scoff at the proposition. He deposes that a route he had purchased was lost to him through the unjust and arbitiary action of the Examiner people, and if he has the slightest notion that the institution is permeated by a warm yearning to pro- mote the interests and cheer the heart of the toiler nothing in his allegations gives hint of it. VICTIMS OF HARD TIMES. A Pleasant Social for the Benefit of the Epworth League. The members of the California Metho- | dist Kpiscopal Church, on Broderick and | California streets, held a ‘‘hard times” ; social last evening in the parlors of the churen, and it was a most enjoyabls af- fuir. Every feature of the social clearly indicated the participants were the vic- tims of the Cleveland administration in dress and deportment. It was given for the benefit of the Epworth League, and was so conducted that a neat little sum was realized. The invitation stated that all who attended attired in inappropriate garments would be fined by the commit- tee. Fines of from 1 to 10 cenis were im- posed upon all who wore pointed shoes, ornamental hairpins, jewelry, boiled shirts, siik or woolen dresses, or who parted their hair in the middle. 'The col- lection of fines caused considerable mer- riment. Asiae from this there was a musical and literary entertainment, in which the following took part: Miss Bertha Creery, Miss Jacobs, Miss Oiie Spencer, Mics Baulsen, Miss Edna Currier, J. W. Wet- more, Cameron Owen and others. Miss Mabel Pfifer.a cute little girl, sang a peasine gong in the costume of a news- boy. The Combs quartet caused much merriment by their quaint songs while at- tired in the hard-times garments. After the entertainment hard-times refresh- ments iu the shape of pork and beans and bread were served. The committee of ar- rangements consisted of Mrs. H. E. Lin- coln, Mrs. Griffiths, H. Winn, Miss Loutie Phelps and Miss Bertha Eckmann. The bard-times committee was composed of Mrs. H. E. Lincoln, Miss S. E. Powell, H. The Above Cut Is a Picture of Streets, to Be Dedicated to Phelan. the New Fountain in Course of Erection at the Junction of Mason, Turk and Market the N. S. G. W. by Mayor There Is Only One More Wit- | ness Against Figel to Be | Heard. The Defense Will Begin Its Case | Monday—Will Not Finish Before | September 1. | The attorneys for the prosecution in the case against Theodore Xigel rested their | case yesterday morning, but reserved the | right to put one witness on the stand Monday morning before the defense be- gins its case. The evidence yesterday was along the line of forgery and embezzlement, and | the witnesses who testifie¢ in the cases | against Figel on those charges were merely placed on the stand and the testi- | mony they gave at the former trials was | read to them and they affirmed it. George | Otis Mitchell, J. M. Rothchi'd and Henry | Ach testified in this manner. | In connection with the evidence Mr. | Ach further testified that he saw Figel in | the offices of Hoffman, Rothchild & Co. on the morniug of June4. Figel told him | that be had returned to the store the night Hoffman was killed to get a sam- ple bottle of ink, but could not find any. He rem=ined at the store about ten min- | utes. He arrived tnere about 6:10 and | left after The defendant also told | Ach that that evening he wore the same | clothes he had on then, June 4. Atter finishing his testimony Mr. Ach offered all the exnibiis and evidence in | the forgery and embezzlement case as | evidence on the charge of murder, and by consent of the delense they were ac- cepted. The witness heid in reserve by the pros- ecution is Mr. Fiegus of Senta Cruz. He | was expected yesterday, but was delayed | by a railroad accident. The defense has | a large number of witnesses and will | probably not tinish its case before the last of the month. e EASTERN OYSTER GROWING, Professor Washbuin Finds the Yaquina Bay Experiment Succeeding. The Eastern oysters that the United States Fish Commission planted Jast year in Humboldt and Yaquina bays for ex- | perimental purposes are doing well. | Professor F. L. Washburn, head of the | department of biology in the University | of Oregon, recently appointed by United | States Fish Commissioner Brice 1o ex- amine and report upon the bays of Ore- gODn with a view to ascertaining their & e THE PROSECUTION RESTS. ness for oyster culture, is at the Grand Hotel on” his way to Humboldt Bay, where he will ascertain the conditivn of the twenty-two barrels of ovsters planted there. Thoseof Yaquina Bay he found fat and doing well. They bave recently spawned, but it is not known yet whether or not the young will mature to perfc tion. The Eastern oysters planted these northern bays appear to be doing much botter than those tried in San Francisco Bay. the waters of which have been found to be too warm for the Eastern oyster. Professor Washburn reports that Coos Bay is almost_as well adapted to oyster growth as is Yaquina Bay. s i STUFFING CIGAR-BOXES, | Arrest of a Man Charged With Sell- ing Chinese Refuse for Havan C. E. Frank was arrested by United States Marsha! Baldwin yesterday aft noon on a charge of illegally refilling cigar-boxes. Frank, who is a well-dressed man, says | that he makes *‘an honest living'’ by sell- ing Chinese cigars, jewelry and other wares on the street from place to place. He says that he got the cigars from a “‘grafter’” whose name he did not learn, and who sold them at a reduced rate be- cause the cigars were minus the gilded paper bands which distinguish the pare ticular brand of cigars represented by the box. Frank tcok them to Mr. Hawley, who keeps an oyster saloon in the Spreckels market, and sold him the 300 “stinkadores’’ at 8 cenis aviece, a reduc- tion in the regular price of the good cigars having been made because of the absence of the gilded bands which make cigars smoke so well. Mr. Hawley smoked one of theciga and the miasma arising made him s Then he knew that he had been made the victim of a “'‘grafter,” ————————— It Was Suicide. A Coroner’s jury yesterday rendered a ver- dict to the effect that Myrtle C. Richards, a 16-year-old girl who died from the effects of poisen the otner day, came to ner death from arsenic taken with suicidal intent. The girl's stepmother, Mrs. Menk, testified that she had scolded the girl fur wanting to go out at night | with another girl who the stepmother did not think was fit company for Myrtle. Sne told the jury that she jeared thatif Myrtle were allowed w0 run around in doubtiul company she might meet the iate of the two girls found in the oelfry of the Emmunuel Baptist Church, .. Misrepresented His Salary. Angele Lallement swore (o a complaint be- fore Judge Low yesterdsy afternoon chargin her former husband, Alphonse Lallemer with perjury. Angele obteined a irom Alphonse a few months ag feat her claim jor alimony he swi eiving but $10 a month. roceedings held in av aiternoon, evidence g to show that Alphon: amouth. Upon this testimony the per- ry compluint was founded. burn; they these symptoms above enumerated. It Rosewood St., Philadelphia, Pa., whose Winn, Harry Burk i Paeps. 'y e and Miss Lottie can truthfully say it has cured me.” NEW 950-DAY now there. They experience extr 4 that don't-care and want-to-be-left-alone feeling, excitability, irritability, ness and the blues, yet they will work until they can scarcely swollen feet, and do nothing to These are the positive Yore-runners of serious womb complications given immediate attention will result in untold misery, if not death. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will, bey: doubt, relieve all this trouble before it becomes serious, many after their troubles had become chronic. The Compound should be taken immediately upon the and stimulates the entire female organism, 523 ficial resultsin the case of any sick woman as it did with Mus. CHAS. Kixe, 1815 ‘I write these few lines, thanking you for restoring my health, 2 years I suffered with pains impossible to describe. 1had bearing-down feelings, backache, burning sensation in my stomach, chills, headache, and nlvf/ays had black specks before my eyes. I was afraid to stay alone, for 1 sometimes had four and five fainting spells a day. I had several doetors and tried many pat- ent medicines. Two years ago I was so bad that I had togo to bc,d sud e o trained nurse. Through her, I commenced to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and I never had anything give me the relief that it has. I have taken eight bottles, and am now A WOMAN'S BODY. ‘What Its Neglect Leads to. Mrs. Uhas. King’s Experience. A woman's body is the repository of the most delicate mechanism in realm of creation, and yet most wome will et it get out of order and keep ou' B order, justas if it were of no consequence. Their backs ache and heads throb and le n of the w have wandering pains, now here and eme lassitude, nervousness, sle¢ ;\'r's.s- go about their stand on their poor help themselves. d unless K ond the question of a and it has cured appearance of any of i which invigorates is a vegetable ton s the same bene- and will produce ve attach: letter we a I I epjoying the pest of health again, &