The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 16, 1897, Page 5

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16 1897. - STSTE (F SIGNALY FOR THE COASTS Service Required by the Navy at Sea and Ashore. SEARCHLIGHTS AND CARRIER PIGEONS. Two Important Methods of Commun tion by Day d by Night. c SEMAPHORES MAY ALSO BE USED. An Interasting Report Made by a Which Makes ommendations. yaclal Board A Some Re tch to THE CALL mendingit as ming pigeon, ar scouting vessels ysem of ne which ca exist the inter- nals with which ail either supplied or m of distant T nt and semaphc shov an the te ch it is nec trans- ation phone s either already exist, nce of the nava talled and afford a smitting intelii- s in minc the board that the val stations ¢ 1omits charts opinion, d sema- nsialled and T T hem in the use te system may be imentaily unii can be made t appliances, that wrried on at re specifica for heir care and i board is fu aiutensnce. y of the opinion that system of defense signal- for e under the direc Depertment, each State ha such subsidi be established coas ing control of may exist or he naval militia charge of all the 1 within their di men and d connection of z-distance te the coun- such arrange- aph com- as different te will enable them n up to da s to the Department. sme G! this 1 will, of course, ure co-operation of the Treasury Depertment. It is believed as essentiai (o tie success of this scheme that some ex- on should be awarded to y be called upon to take of and manipulate the plant at ine th not deem it » into the details of s or other methods of s tof the system wili be ht, Pigeon cote: now exist T at Portsmouth, Newport, New Yo Norfolk, Key West and Mare Is 1t is proposed by the board ilize the following life-saving statior r signai purposes: Machias, White ad, Me.; the Highland Lights, Cape Cod, Chatbam. Shinnecoci L. L; Fire be Unite: Siatessteamer New dand t ¥ h uarters of the First 4 New York naval mititi t »{ Barnegat, Atlantic - BIEHC Hztteras, Wilmington, Augustine, Jupiter In- Pensacola, Port Eads. Diego, Fort Canby and pe nd, § pa Bay 8a GETS 1nE MARION. San Liego Can Have the Vessel ty Paying for the Tow. WASHINGTON, Nov. 15—THE CALL correspondens inquired at the Navy De- cating with | ket-boatat a | " | way of Wa mply protected | whether the Marion + be stationed at San Francisco or at San Diego for the use of the California Naval Reserve. The chief of the Bureau of Navigation said: “There is nothing indefinite about the matter. Orders were issned some time ago, and were printed in ine CALL, eiving the vessel to the Califor- niz Na Re-erve, with station at San Diego, but if they want her they must send after her, for Uncle Sam will not pay g for her transport or tow to n Diego. he Comvtroller of the Treasury has ided that when the order iso:ce issued nung over a Government vessel for the I g-tung her to the station. It t we Luve hercto.ore borne these expenses, but since the controversy over | the Yantic it has been decided that the | State must vear the expeuse. Therefore the San Diego peopie must communicate with the adjutant-general of Calitornia as to the ways ana means of getting the vessel down there for the use of the Naval Reserve.” pense o - FLEASING TOQ THE REGULARS. Orders for Transfers of Several Western Regiments Have Been Revoked. WASHINGTON, Nov. 15.—The Army and N Register, commenting on the recent War Devartment orders making in- fantry transfers, sa The orders changing the stations of the First Infantry (Presidio), the Seventh, the Sixth, the Twenty-third and Eight-| eenth Infantry have been revoked or in- definitely suspended. Thers has been coasidera backing ana filling about these moves, all of which resnlts in much neasiness, discomfort and final discon- ent for those who were affected by the orders. “Only those who have been at distant frontier posts can understand the excite- ment produced by even the mildest ru- of changes, but the scenes following ipt of ihe real orders are beyond | ary 1magination. To avoid this the | Department announced some years that 1n future ample notitication d be <iven to regiments about to | ge stations. Consider- ed at the s not followed. s been manif, nned, for some regiments e been many years longer on | ent stations than those i was | proposed to move were apparently never | considered. *We ar, correspc va e anges as pl unable toexpiain to our many dents what considerations pre- ed 1 the selection of the regiments., | These suspensions and the revocation of orders reiating to transfers of troops are riously explained he ¥ De- | partmeni. To some extent the Union i Pacif negotiations appear to have | interiered with the contemplated trans- | but the faiiure of transportatior 1id not altogether produce ihe . It will pe a serious tnin< for ce it political, personal or com- influence bereaiter stand in tbe Deparimen: administration.” v 1 1 It 1s rnals says the Re ‘ y 10 & communication irem an offi | n, who describes evidences of | The let- mistakable marks o ignorance r judice, not to say calumny and o igE NEEDS OF THE NAVY. Secretary Long Will Ask Congress for More Drydocks and Ad- ditional Battle-Ships. NEW YORK, Nov. 15.—A special to the Herald irom Washington says: Secretary of tie Navy Long expects t> complete all except tie personal feature of his annual within the next ten days: far as can be learned it wiil be his policy to ask Congress to bring all appur- tenances to make an eflicient navy up o date. He will point out that the present | force of is without adequate dry- | docks; that various repair plants are in need of new machinery; toat more guns and ammunition are required, and that here is not a sufficient number of men to | man the ships now built. retarv Long has been rather opposed to recommending any increase 1in tha navy until additional drydocks are e icted. He has determined, howev = Congress to author ze additional e-shi nd torpedo bo: It is not | believed ' e will ask for mo than two ol the former type and a half-dozen of the latter. repor fo | He wiil recommend the construction of | new drydocks at Boston, Mass.; Ports- moutb, N. H.; Algers, La., and Mare and the widening of the New York, Philadelphia and { to vurchase a stern-wheel gunboat for the | Y n and for ibe estabiishment of three 1OsLs on that river. o Purchasing Purtland Docks. PORTLAND, Nov. 15, w. r, a weil-known gr r of Franciseo, to-day purchased the I dock in this city. it is said that J. pinger, another wheat-buyer of San F cisco, is negotieting for a largs wharf in this city. Ii is siated that bu.h McNear and Epping-r intend 10 enter extensively into ine wheat business in the Northwest. S Condemned vy Leo X LLL OTTAWA, Oxt., Nov. 15. — A special cable from London received to-nightsays that the Pope has condemned the Mani- toba school settl Me. —George ¥ in-b Supreme Court’s Receas. WASHINGTON, Nov. 15.—The United States Supreme Court to-day touk a re- cess until Mondav, the 29:h inst. DROPPED DEAD AT HIS POST Feter Begg, the Sexton of the Westmin- ster Presbyterian Church, Found in the Belfry. Peter Begg, 70 vears of age, the sexton of the Westminster Presbyterian Church, was found dead last evening, by his wife and two lady friends, sitting on the steps of belfry in the church, with his watch in his hand, as though waiting to ring the bell for evening services. The first bell was rungat 7: | and the se:ond was to follow ut 7: | ices were called and finished, and then | aiarm was felt for the safely of the old | man. His wife went iuto the belfry and found him dead. The cause was said to be heart disease, and as a physician signed { the death certificate the body was not re- ruoved to the Morgne, P e I In the Divorce Courts. Frank P. Simmen has commenced suit for divorce aga Rosetta A. A. Simmen on the ground of desertion. Louise Messini has brought suit to secure a divorc m Pete r Messini on the ground of th the granted Adeline Bahrs yesterday the Nicoll adivorce “from Louis Nicoll on ground of infilelity. 3 Judze Beicher has granted Ernest L. Chute s divorce rrom Ella J. Chase on the ground of cruelt Marie Anderson has been granted a divorce from Harry Auderson on the ground of cruelty. Anderson was directed to pay $20 s month toward the support of a minor ciild. ————— Brown’s Burgluries. H. J. Brown, the suspected Mendocino stage robber, had another charge of burglary en- tered against him at the City Prison yester- day. Mrs. C. F. Richards, 301 Pennsylvania avenue, identified 1wo overcouls, a banjo and other articles siolen irom her house on Octo- ber 20 end which were found in Brown’s room. | b | tempts at amendment. { They Have Been Matched to HOCH WORK FOR GONGRESS It Is Predicted That the Session Will Not Be Short. Many Important Matters the Lawmakers Must Deal With. Bankruptcy Law, Civil Service and Carrency to Recelve Consld= erabie Attention. Speclal Dispstch to THE CALL. Cavrr OrrFice, Rices Housk,) Wasnixerox, D. C., Nov. 15. Three weeks from to-day Congress will assemble, and in anticipation of that event Senators and Representatives are eginning to wend their way toward the national capital. Some of those who have arrived have expres-ed the opinion that the session will be a short one. The preponderance of opinion, how- ever, is that the session wiil be quite the usual length, that is, untit July or August. They base this opinion upon the fact that there are many questions of importance to come before this Congress over which | there is every reason to expect long and | acrimonious debate. Soma le:islation which is proposed will certainly not get through the Senate with- out the most thorough discussion and at- An earnest effort will be made at this session to pass a bankruptcy Jaw. The demand for such a measure is streng in the West and South and among the representatives of states in those sections, but there is a wide difference of opinion as to the char- cter of the law to be enacted. Trere 1s also a division of sentiment as demon- | strated in past discussions between the &ind of a bankruptey law the leaders in the | House and those in the Senate think | _should be passed. | Civil serv.ce is coming in for a talk, | however unpieasant for the friends of civil vice to contemplate, and it is urely true thata very vicious onslaught o be made upon the civil service law at this session and in both housesof Con- gress The horde of hungry and now dis- sppointea office-seekers that swept into Washington at the beginning of the new | administration and dashed themselves | vainly against the iron gates of the civil | 3 e law .ave taken their grievances nome, and to such an eifect that some Senators and Representatives have become | imbued with the idea that they voice the sentiment of the people in their clamor ior the demolishing of the Jaw. | Of course, it is well understood that Hawaiian annexation and Cuban affuirs | take up a great deal of the time of The currency que-tion will | consune time, but will be productive of no tangib e resulits It will be u-ed s a basis for the manu- :ture of vast quantities of campai material for use in the succeeding Co gressional campaign and the Record will team agi with financial speeches. There wili be the usual fignt over river and barbor appropriations and over pub- irc buildings oills. CONNOLLY VS, HAWKINS, er | Fight Before the Knicker- bocker Club. Bob McArthur, the Oarsman, Will Referee the Goddard and Sharkey Slogging Match, Eddie Connolly, the tern pugilist whom Dan Lynch, the director-general of the Knickerbocker Club, took under his | wing ior safe keeping when Lynch was | touring through New York State, has been | matched by Lynch to fight Dal Hawkins | before the Knickerbecker Ciub in Decem- ber. The representatives of Goddard and arkey met last evening and selected | Joe Choynski to referee the Goddard and | Sharkey fight, and the Culifornia pugilist snowed exceilent judgment ip refusing to have atyibing 10 do With the match. He sa«d, however, that he would chalienge | the winner. Bob McArihur, the oarsman, wes then selected,and he accepted the position. There was some ¢alk recently of u match | between Lavigne and Hawkins at 130 pounds, but tbe Californian can now bless his stars tMut this provosed match is off. He will huve rosy sailing with Con- nolly, aithou_h it is conceded that Con- nolly is a pretty good man when ne is out 1o win. Young Dempsey and Monte McCue will | box ten rounds on the evening of the 30tn | inst., as a preliminary to the Jeffries and Choynski fight. Choynski will train at the Olympic Club and Jeffries will put on the fimishing touches in Oakland, under Billy Delaney’s instruction-. Danny Needham and Billy Gailagher wiil fight twenty rounds at Vallejo on the evening of December 2. Jimmy Anthony will box T. Prende:gast, the champion of Ocean View, four rounds. Billy Lewis and Billy Gifford and “"'Yank” Savage and Biily McGrath will also box four rounds. The Empire Club of Vallejo is managed by Biliy Burns, a popular sport of the town in quesiian, | B — LATES1 SHIFPING INTELLIGENCK. Arrived. MONDAY, November 15. Stmr Gipsy, 4 hours from Amespor.; produce, to Goodall, Ye kins & Co. Stmr ' Coluwuia, Conway, 51 hours from Port- laud, via Astoria 41 h Uregon Rallway and MONDAY. November 16. Stmr W bitelaw, Doliard, Pigeon Point. Uomestic Ports. EUREKA—Sailed Jov 15—tchr J B Leeds, for San Francisco; schr Jennie Wand, for Panama. IVERSENS LANDING—Salles Nov 15—-~chr Arthur I, for S I8co. SAN DIEGOU—Arrived Nov 15—~H B M stmr Wid swan. Movements of Trans-Atlantic Steamers. QUEENSTOWN—Arrivea Nov 16-Stmr Scy- thia, from Boston. Importation PORTLAN D—per Columbia—1857 ht sks 1000 qr sks 1265 gunuies 818sks flour, 578 hides, 737 pkgs paper, 280 s<s middlings, 2199 sks stoy 3950 sks L 5 % 8ks potatoes, 84 sks onlons, 15 sks wocl, 1458 sks oats. 295 sks barley, 5614 sks wheat, 85 buis cranverries, 1836 bdis shoox «, 316 sks oysters. AMesPORT—Per Glips) 4 ska bran, 44. sss veans, bar.ey, 2009 s<s cats. Consignee:. Per Gipsy—M T Freitas; Welf & Son; J F Fn, lish: W G Low i McNear: B Dutard; K I Hammer: Clayburgh & Co. Per Co.umbia—Georse Morrow & Co; Clatsop Mill Co: Wiliamette ¥ and P Co; »perry Flour Co: Del Monte Ml Co: Helstand W & Co: Otis, Mcaliisier & Co: Bissinger & Co: Herman Waldeck Co: the Morgan Oysier Uo; Darbee & Tmmell: M B Moraghan: Dodge, ~weeney & Co D M Boliman & Co; Daiton Bros: McDonough & L Ev. rding & Co; Allen Lewis: Moore, Fergu- sou & Co; Eppivger & Co; M P Dete.s. 3 hides. 25 sks corn, 3 sks wheat, 850 sk3 | quent aitempt of | Jonn Russell, to invoke all FATHER YORKE'S FIFTH LECTORE The Clergyman Talked of “The Ghost of a Name” to a Large Audience. Some 01d Superstitions Regard- ing the Catholic Church Exploded. The Last of the Ghost Lectures to Be Given Next Monday Night at Metropolitan Temple, Father Yorke delivered the fifth of his lectures on “‘Ghosts’’ last nignt in Metro- politan Temple before an avdience which filled the building. J. J. Lerman acted as chairman and made a few remarks concerning the Catholic Truth Society, under whose auspices the lectures are being given. Miss Fannie Ryan sang a soprano solo with such good effect that she received an encore. After a few songs by the glee club of Company A, Leacue of tha Cross, the chairman introduced Father Yorke, who was greeted with a preat deal of applause. After referring to the great Protestant tradition which prevented people from inquiring into the claims of the Catholic church and gave rise toall of the “‘ghosts’’ which, he said, had been haunting sev- eral generations. Father Yorke passed on to the time of the formation of the ! S st WS RS FTERAA Rev. S. B. Morse Dies Sud- denly at His Home in Oakland. WAS AILING BUT A FEW DAYS. Resigned From California Col- lege After a Life's Work. IXPECTED A TIME OF EASE. An Acute Attack of Pneumonia Un- expectedly Oaused His End. OARLAND OFFICE SAN Fraxcisco CALL.} 408 Broadway, Nov. 15. Rav. Samuel B. Morse, D.D., late presi- REV. SAMUEL B. MORSE, Late President of the California College. Oxford movement. One branch compos- own as the arians, and in speaking of them the rer said: The greatest of all the Tractarians was John Heury Newman, His plety, his Icarning, his power of expression made wim the soul of the prrty. Ho was sincere in the be ief thut the Angiican chure was the churci of Ch and for ten years, from 1833 to 18 bored as few men can laby cause. From the beginning Catholics who were watching the movement phesied where it would end. They saw with the in. stiuct of the faith that ouc he 1dea ofa teach- iLg church took possession of the muuds of those generous and devoted men logic wouid lead them to one fold. Newmeon however ve- lieved most firmiy in the civine character of Anglicanism until & rude shock showed him that she was Protestant (o the core. ‘1 he conversion of Newman and the sen- sation that followed wes toucheu upon The lecturer then told of the establish- ment of the hierarchy and of the subse- England’s Premier, Lord the ancient ghosts and array them against the Catho- lic church. The burniug of tue efligies of the Pope and his bishops was referred to to show the temyper of the time, and then the speaker said: The fanatics were not to have it all their own way. The days had passed when Cy - lics couid be abused and then hanged if they darcd answer beek. The Catholie ieaders were able to defend themselves in print, and the increass in the Catholic populition in the Iarge cities made it unpolitic for the pious mob 1o repeat the scenes of the Gordou riot. The Tractarians, t0o, were not afraid to speak out, and soon Lord John Russell was convinced he had made & mistuke. It was well knowa that he was very anxious to find & way out of the difficu.ty. But it was now 100 late 1o back down, and when Parl ment met in February, 1851, a bill was in- troduced making 1t illegal tor Catholic priests to assume ecclesiastical titles in the United Kingdom. It was called the ecclesiastical titles bill and became a law iu July. One of strongest speeches made against it came from Gladstone, who said Itis hostile toihe in- stitutions of the country, more especially to its established religion, because it would teach us 10 reiy on other support than that of tne spiritual strengith and vitality, which alone can give it vigor.” The act made it unlawful for any Catholic B snop o take a name of a place iu Great Britain as his title. Scarcely was it passed when John McHale wrote & public letter,to the Prime Minister, signing hiwself John, Arch- bishop of Tuam. The letter kiled the act. It was never put 1n force, and in 1871 was quietly repealed. Thus was laid the ghost of & name. Father Yorke then referred to the claims o ten made by those outside of the cuurch, that Catholics ure clannish, and had this to say of them: In this country we are accused of combin- ing, irrespective of party politics, in favor of tholic candidates. Ii this were true it would be a most_extraordinary phenomenon. Race prejudice and race hatred lie very deep in buman nature. The Catholic Frenchman nasno particular love for the Catholic Ger- man, and when both Ireland and E.giand were Catholic nations the struggle vetweon them ragel as fierceiy as to-day. When the Catho.jc Irish poured into England the Eng- lish Catholics did not regard them wiiha iriendly eye. They were on opposite sides in politics, and it is said that once, when some prominent Catholics of the old Tory families opposed some measure of O'Connell’s, the greet Liberator said with a sigh, “God forgive me for emancipating tnem.” ‘Such things must be, because such is human nature. But the Catholic church guards against their evil effecis by kecping polities and race hatred outof the sanctuary. She is true to the 1deal of the fatherhood oi God ana brotherhood of man. Instde the doors of her churches pariisan politics must never cuter; ner pulpits are sacred to te word ot God, and must not be defiled by the pety ambitions of men. Rich and poor, gentle aud simpie, Whig and Tory, Ropublican and Democrat, red man and bisck man, white man and yellow, kneel before heraliurs and all are equal—God 1s thelr father aud they are bretnren of Christ Jesus. ing that movement was kn 4y ! dent of California College, died to-night of pneumonia at his residence in High- tand Park, East Oskland. He had peen ailing but a few days, and the suiden gravity of his condition found his family and friends utterly unprepared for the shock which had come upon them. Dr. Morse was in the sixty-.ourth year of his age, having been born in Maine in October, 1834 President Morse spent bis boyhood on a farm, attending district schools in win- ters, until avout 18 years of age, when he founa employment in a boot and shoe estabiishment near Boston, where he re- mained two years, . Having saved his earnings he deter- mined to get an education, and in 1855 he ' entercd upon his studgies at Waiterville (now Colby)University, where he remained uniil 1858, wuen, being impaired in health and advised to seek a warmer climate, he accepted a call to the chair of ancient langunves in Urania College, Giasgow, Ky., wnere with renewed health he was permitted to continue his studies while acting as tutor, and from which Institu- tion he received his first Jegree. Re- maining at Urania as tutor and professor until 1861 at the breaking out of the Civil War, he left Keniucky and sailed from New York for San Francisco via Panama, arriving in California June 10. A few days afier his_arrival he was offered a position in the Paciic Methodist NEW TO-DATY. THE & CONSUMER IS BLOWING THE HORN FOR &t & Blatz Because he cannot help liking it, and we continue to maintain its high standard to keep him a-blowing. Call for Blatz. See that ¢Blatz’ is on the Cork. VAL.BLATZ BREWING CO. MILWAUKEE, WIS., U. S. A. Louis Cahen & Son, Wholesale Dealers, 418 Sacramento St., San Francjsco. Felcphone Main £16. o = NESS & HEAD NOISES CURED instantly. Our INVISIBLE TUBE Cushions Delp when all clse fails, as glasses help eyes. Self-adjusting. No Pain. Whispers heard. Sendto i! F. Hiseox Co., 858 B'wax. N.1., for Book and Proofs Rotail Agents—No Percentage Pharmacy, 953 teres and two da The elder d James Brougner, pastor of the First Bap- tist Church ot Paterson, N. J. A second dasughter (Maybelle) and a son (Paul) are living at_home. He has, also, a brother residing in San Diego. A TEEATER CORPORATION California, Baldwin and Colum= bia May Be Under the Same Management, College as professor of Latin and Greel Accepting the po-ition, he entered upon his duties July 10. 1861. This position was retained until 1866, an . during these years manry warm associations and friendships were formed. The schoolboys of those days are now prominent lawyers, ministers and busi- ness men of our State. From his earliest college days Dr. Morse had felt it his duty to enter the minisiry. At the close of his five years’ teaching in the Pasific College, however, he saw the way open 10 pursue his studies in that direction, ana taking to himseif a wife, they sailed, June 6, 1: for New York via Nicaragua. In Septembver following he entered Newton Theological Seminary, from which institution he was gradnated in 1869, Receiving a call from the First Bapu-t Church, Stockton, Cal., he entered on his pastorate of that'chureh, Eight yeurs of bappy union of pastor and people resulted in about 130 additions to the churcn and the entire liquidation oi a debt of about $6000. Dr. Morse spent the larger part of 1877 in Eurove and the Orient. On his return | to the United States he was called to the | pastorate of the Tenth-avenue Baptist Church, Oakland, This church at the time was worshiping in a small and dilapidated building and had but about forty resicent members. The salary was but $75 per month. Dr. Morse entered unon tie pastorate the last duy of the year 1877 and closed it April 1, | Hayman went East lost night and it is During tiese years there was a | tho t the business will b settled before constant and steady growth, and to these | many weeks. [t is no: the intention of President Morse refers as the happiest | the parties to run the three principa and most blessed years of his life. theaters oiher than as a corporation. The Over 200 united with the church, and | sScheme isthought to be a good one froma about $12,000 was raised toward a new edi- | financial and business standpoint. fice, wuich was in process of erection TR S R when Dr. Morse was cailed to the presi- Hurled Down an Embankment, dency of California Coilege, which posi-| Willlam Demsy, employed at the Pacifie tion he held for ten years. | Rolling-mills, was seriously injured while res Since his retirement from the presi- turning o his home after completing his Ia- : S e 4 | bors last evening. He was walking along an . Dr. Mor: a was hurled down a precipice. He was re engaged in teaching or in the ministry, | moved to the Receiving Hospital, where it but had been enjoying a rest which he eX- | was found that he had suffered a possible pected would continue for some time. fracture of the sku'l, a lacerated wound of the He was a man of the widest culture and =,‘f-<ll' and a L zt}:;no.righ]!nl:e% L(;z:t{:::;:'mde circle of friends on the Pa. bility, for some time. . AL-;on_;: the sturllentx and alumni of the Colone!l Robinson’s Suit. institution with which he has been so long Judge Seawell appointed Carl W. E'fing to connecied there will be genuine sorrow | " 3 C: ! over nis_sudden death, ful;‘:he Was aver in | Act 18 receiver in the suit of Colonel T. P. touch with them in sympathy and in- Representatives of Al Hayman Met Last Evening With That Ob- jeot in View. Representatives of Al Hayman met last evening to consider the proposition of | Friedlander & Gottlob to take the unex- pired lease of the Baldwin and California theaters in connection with the Columbia Theater. The iease on the Baldwin runs for three years and a half and that on the Calif rnia for a year and a half, Robiason vs. Daly, pending the hearing of the suit. NEW TO-DAY. B N C U —=IT CURES=— LAME BACK, RHEUMATISM, VARICOCELE, WEAK NERVES, WEAK KIDNEYS, NERVOUS DEBILITY MAKES MANHOOD COMPLETE. It is a perfect body battery, perfect as science It has an electric suspensory for weak men, and the current can_ be made strong or mild at will. It carries vital energy into the system and as and mechanical skill can make it. It is a nerve tonic, an inyigorant. builds up the nerves. 1i you wan: to be stiong, vigorous and energetic, your nerves shaky, if you neea the toning and inv: without 1ts evil after effec's, get DR. SANDEN’S ELECTRIC BELT. your system is depleted and gorating effects of a stimulant SITES, Colusa County. C:1 When T began wearing your Feit I was un d h ad, lcss of memory and cou d not sleep. to say that your Bel: both as to your Bel: ovember 2, 1897. forb siness. I was Genera'lv speaking, T his completely cured me. and 11 hank you for what vou have done ior me, and your kind atten' on to my ‘rse. Yours respectfully, D. M. MILLER. It is a,grand remedy for wesk peorle with weak nerves, weak backs and weak stomachs. 1t I¢s up vital energy #nd makes compleie manhood and womanhood. If you have anv deubt as to whether electricity wouls benefit vou co-su t Dr. Sanden. He will tell vou/candidly whether his Belt will help yon. He can be consulted tree, ¢ith-r bv mail or at the office. His booklet, *Three Ciasses of Men " is a valuabl treatise for weak men. Itis sent free to all who write. Rememb-r, Dr. Sanden charges for the Belt. His advice is free. Calor write h'm if vou are weak. Addre-s bR- A. T. SAN DEN' 632 Markst Street, Ooposits Palace Hotel, San Francisco. Office Hours—8 A. M. t0 8:30 P. undays. 10 to 1. Los Angeles, 232 West Second ! 253 Washington street. Poruand, Or.; 935 Sixteenth street. Denver, C NOTE.—Make Do mistake in the numover—E3 3= MARKED STRE Maks noteof ix DR. SAND CTRIC TRUSS CURES RUPTURE. DR. A. T. SANDEN—Dear &f nervous. had pains in my tack was o total wreck. Iaum glad - It is wonderful to noto the extent to which Ripans Tabules have sprung fnto the favor of Frée +fessional men during the past few years. Not alope has the average artisan, clerk and business man become cognizant of their merits, but that class which is more skeptical, the members of rofessions, have come to believe in them in a most thorough manner. The leader of one of | Philadelphia’s most famous theater orchestras, a gentieman who is numbered among the best musiclans of the city, in relating his experience a short time ago, sald: '* Whenever we used to hava & new opera to rehearse or a burl_us%ue to go cn the boards, or, In fact, any production where cxtras ordinary orchestzation was required, I would suffer with a certain nervousness, not because aaticipated any fallure, but rather owing to the unusual strain, and during this and similar periods 1 used to experience a great deal of trouble with my digestion. A friend recommended the use of Ripans Tabules not long ago, and I have been taking them ever since with beneficial offect, T have never seen anything to equal these magic tabules, one of which seems to afford immediate rolief, {1 no\vfn to my work, fo matter how exacting, copfideat that I will feel perfectly well after I any | through, and it Is all owing to the use of Ripans Tabules, which I singercly recommend.’t A now stylo packet containing Taw areaws Market street. Wholesele - MACK & CO., LANG- L«F‘\é,. & MICHAELS, COFFIN, REDINGTON [& ~jouIas{n s peper. thaat, 13 now forsaos stores — JOR FIVE OENTS. 18 low-priced so-t is inte: for. and the sognemical, Jof the five-cent cartous (120 tabules) !&1!4 ‘mall by .gln ~eight cents mhl HIPANS | ComrANY, B0, 10 4pFRge RiFcsh, How ¥ XK=l & ABEIS rton (VAN RABZLES) Wil o 0BAk (or TS, cenit ~

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