The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, December 11, 1898, Page 14

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THE SAN. FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 11 1898. native of ~Nauenburg, Ger- nces are respect- uneral to-morrow om the parlors of fission street, near r Hill Cemetery. December 9, 1898, Albert aine, aged 73 years. quaintances are respect- ad the funeral to-morrow e_residence in Hay- and a to atten this Percival Masonic pie rH—In e M., in er EMI December 10, 1888, Clar- 8 £ Carlos D. Smit aged 10 mont cnes Bergman, & na- aged S years. are respect- funeral_to-morrow f the Third Con- Fifteenth street, near 9, 1898, Rob- e Matilda v A. and Maggie J. Antrim, Ireland, 1§ days, es are respect- ineral this day his late resi- e and from t. between } Lawn Cemetery. ict, Oakland, Decem- b i James L. Tyson, . £ W aged 41 years 7 months s rles Ratto, Sharp_and fe V. Wig- and, aged b are respect- this day First Baptist ween Stanton ber 10, 1898, late Jennie teent Interment Catherine 1 the McCune to iths T- Hunting- enue, 144 N is Noonan to J. Noonan lot on E line poration), f Rallroad ave block 39, Mission mestead; also E of Or Rallrcad Homi lot_on = Cudworth to f James W, nment eda Count; A J being a subdi- d D. Peralta, Hammond to The Cali- rence of M. Church (a lew street, W 50, being lot 4, on Harmon Tract, Diggs to Mary J. Gal- Stone Tract, being a sub- to 5 of Stone Subdivision, ip; $10. Baker, meda_ Tract, d: $10. — e HOTEL ARRIVALS. PALACE HOTEL. F Blempchle, Zurich L Friedrich, Bas J H McGo Mrs J H McGowan, O 1. Bernheim, Butte B D Colvin, Seattle A N Fessenden, Cal B Herbst, N R M Lamm, N Mrs M H Dodd, lot 13, block 18, Brooklyn ~Township, m d E M Hecht, D M Harlal W _J O'Meara, 1 W Farwell, ¥ DC on & vich, O Prest D Farnum, F Andrew |D Jonnson, N ¥ 3 'C Roberts J Mrs B Smith, Los Gat J Duncan, S tle J L Thomas, N Y A Brock, Mich | HOTEL. € H Clark (Mrs D J Healey & c, W Jordan, Petaluma E Sherard 7 B Sanford, Ukiah J D McGil Denver|J H Sivel; St Louis A denver |M Long, St Louis w . Denve {J H Payne, El Paso W G Witter, Sn ¢ E L Alderson a F H Green, H Rogers rlos A W Meloling, N Y ervl GG F Taylor, Los Ang afael H C Belding, Stockton H E Weaver, Stockton G H Morris, Winters \o M Erickson, Martinz & W Ogden, Sacto \} Peterson, Martinez A Joullin, Mexico 1 S Minor, San Rafael Mexico Berkeley Vallejo A B Hughes, w,LsAng E St M Brown, Seattle Miss A Hughes, LsAng H W Patton, Ls Ang G M Willlams, Chicago T Booth, St Louis T M King, Melrose E L Webber, Napa |W R Johnson, Stocktn A T F W McMullen, Boston (J A Miller & w, Seattl Mrs N Coateés, Peta H S Johnson, Omaha Mies Coates, Petaluma Miss W Kaseburg, Sac Cruz J W Kaseburg, Sacto ose F J Stevens w, Cal H M Levinsky, Stcktn 5 Stein, Tllinois Tinnin, Fresno DENVER LIV OCK MARKET. DENVER, Dee. 10.—CATTLE—Receipts, 200. Market dull but steady. Beef steers, $3 60@ 410; cows, $2 T5@3 25; feeders, freight paid to river, 83 ockers do, $3 76@4 10; bulls, eceipts, ' 500. Market active and Light ‘packers. $3 35@3 40; mixed, $3 30 vy, 53 253 30. naone. LATE SHIPP! NG INTELLIGENCE. ARRIVED, Saturday, December 10 Schr Barbara Hernster, Jensen, 56 hours from Coquille River. SAILED. Saturday, December 10, Stmr Aleatraz, Fagerlund. Stmr Coquille River, Johnson, Fort Bragg. TELEGRAPHIC. LOBOS, Dec 10, 10 p m—Weather wind. south; velocity 3 miles. DOMESTIC PORTS. ASTORIA—Sailed Dec 10—Stmr Fulton, for San Franclsco; Br stmr Stronsa, for Queens- town: Br ship Star of Russla, for Tacoma. PORT BLAKELEY—Arrived Dec 10—Ger bark Artimes, from Port Ludlow. 0 Salled’ Dec 10—Schr Chas E Falk, for San Franeisco. SAN DIEGO—Sailed Dec 10—Ger bark Thal- assa, for Oregon. SEATTLE—Arrived Dec 10—Haw bark Mauna Ala, from Port Townsend. Sajled Dec 9—Stmir Leelanaw, for San Fran- cisco. EUREKA—Arrived Dec 9—Stmr Westport, hence Dec 7; stmr Sunol, hence Dec 5: schr Jennie Wand, from Ventura; bktn Eureka, hence Dee 1. Salled Dec 9—Stmr Samoa, for San Francisco; schr J G Wall, for San Francisco; schr Lottie Carson, for San Pedro. Dec 10—Stmrs North Fork, Chilkat and Scotfa, for San Francisco; schr Mary Dodge, for San’ Francisco. POINT haz: FRISCOS G0 DOWN AGAIN 10 DEFEAT Ran Up Aga:inst It in the First. SOME VERY YELLOW ERRORS AFTERWARD THEY RALLIED, BUT IT WAS TOO LATE. Oaklands Played a Flawless Game. To-Day’s Contest With Watson- ville Should Be Great. By Joe Corbett. The “Friscos,” poor things, as usual, presented an unrecognizable collection of ball tossers yesterday at Recreation Park, and during the course of the afternoon proceedings met with the same sort of defeat that has graced their efforts in the past on occasions innumerable.. I had been told the night previous by the “Frontable” Colonel T. P. Robinson that the Friscos were going to play their full team and that they intended giving the best Saturday exhibition ever witnessed in or near Recreation Park. For the ben- efit of those not acquainted with the fact, I wish to state that the reason the Colonel mentioned Saturday games was because it has become the fad among the differ- ent teams to-take things rather easy on Saturday and to put their best work in order on the ensuing Sunday. This all becomes a reality, owing to the scarcity of the populace in and about the stands and bleachers. Despite the Colonel's statement, however, things were not as represented. The team contained new E: and the new faces, combined with the old ones, gave another one of those exhibitions which generally land a team on the wrong end of the score. In justice to the new and old, however, I will say that after the first inning they played good baseball. Nothing came their way that was not dallied with to an advantage, except the ins and outs of Mr. Moskiman. He was a huge stumbling block; the kind that appears quite easy at times, yet turns out, for some reason or other, to be a very perplexing proposi- tion when base hits are needed badly. But in the ve: st inning the boys went to pieces, as it were, and their yellow er- rors, intermingled with the opportune base hits made by their opponents, put the game out of their reach entirely. 3ig “Truck’” Egan, the pride of Manager Coffroth, and E. Smith, the clever third base man, were the principal offenders in the opening inning. “Truck’s” error alone let in two runs, and the other three that occurred in the inning, while they did not admit of runs in the manner of Egan's, yet put men on the bases, and these men were batted in by the opportune hit spoken of a mo- ment ago. Not a misplay was visible in their work after this bad opening. Shea pitched superbly and cleverly, while the team did all that could be expected of them with the new faces and small crowd. None of the players will be laid up from overwork, I am certain, but hard labor is not supposeu to be on the programme in these Saturday games. Occasionall; some -layer will let out an extra lin when hard pushed, but it is only when the situation is close that any of the men are expected to move faster than the cold weather allows. Those few who sat through the contest did not leave dissat- isfied. The game was a good one after an inning had been played, and as the lead secured by the Oaklands at the out- set not such a large one, interest in the outcome prevailed to the end. The Oaklands played an errorless game and a superb one. It is supposed by them and others that they have a chance for the pennant, and, of course, it is but natural that they manifest more interest than the “Friscos,” who from the latest accounts will fini: in fifth or sixth place despite the ingenuity of *‘Fairest” James. I entertain the belief, however, that the Gilt Edges are beyond the reach of any team. The protested games will make many changes and half of them have yet to be distributed, but the Oak- lands cannot catch the leaders unless I am sadly mistaken. They played yester- day.one of those easy-going, sure kind of games, and if they can do as well to- day in_their contest with the Watson- villes the programme should be a glori- ous one. The features of the game were the si- Jence manifested by both teams and the pointing out -of Mr. Dugdall of Seattle as the “Pride of Peoria.” The score is as follow: SAN FRANCISCO. AB. R. BH. SB. PO. A. E. T Gy R e T Y 4710501810 U SiE A8 455000 00E0 80 R 3 0 0 [ 1 0 0 Hammond, c. 45090 AT Croll, 1. f. 3 0 0 0 4 1 0 Dunleavy, 1 b. 32 0 0 0omu 0 1 Goldsworthy, 1. 3. 0 000 50 Shea, p. - PRt B T T ) Totals ... 31 2 4 1 U 1 4 OAKLAND. AB. R. BH. SB. PO. A. E. Donovan, B W P PR T Billings, ' s 47 P AEi0 00 1 S0 Hardle, r. 2 160" 0 e 0 ag it b O'Neill, 2 4500 L0 0 Lange, 3 b s pehe et Sullivan, 40203 0TS 0.5 Beaton, 1. 360 Bt e e ko Ta Bliss, 1 b, 4 [ 1 0 12 1 o Moskiman, A20:00 550 4.0 8 50 Totals I e e T RUNS BY INNINGS. San Francisco 10001000 0-2 Base hits 20002010 05 Oakland .. 40001000 *5 Base hits ..... 21111002°%38 SUMMARY. Runs responsible for—Shea 3, Moskiman 2. Two-base hits—Billings, Shea, E. Smith. Base on errors—San Francisco 0, 'Oakland 4. Base on balls—San Francisco 2,’ Oakland 2. Left on bases—San Francisco S, Oakland 4. Struck out—By Shea 2, by Moskiman 1. Hit by pitcher—Donovan. Double plays—E. Smith to Hammond to Dunleavy: Croll to Hammond; Lange to Smith to Sullivan. Time of game —1:15. ——-— WATSONVILLE VS. ATHLETICS. They Will Play T;DTy at Recreation Park. The Watsonvilles, with the same line- up of players as marked their passage through the Gilt Edges on Sunday last, will glsy the Athletics to-day. The game will be a good one. The line-up follows: Watsonville. Positions. Athletics. Baltz. Pitcher . & Chance Catcher . Lang. ht fleld ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. TO POINT ARENA—W. F. §., Angels Camp. The steamers than run to Point Arena are the Aloha and the Point Arena. MAURICE C. BLAKE—Subscriber, City. Maurice C. Blake was Mayor of San Francisco from December 5, 1881, until January 8, 3 INTEREST IN SACRAMENTO-J. W. L., City. The rate charged by the banks of Sacramento for loans on real estate is from 6 to 7 per cent, net. RELICS—A. B. C., City.—For informa- tion about relics and the like call on or communicate with C. P. Whitcomb, cur- ator of the Museum, Golden Gate Park. SAMOA DISASTER—A Subscriber, City. The United States ships Vandalla and Trenton were wrecked at Samoa March 16 and 16, 1889—that is, in the storm during those dates. l ROANING and tossing on a cot in the female ward of the Receiving Hospital is a gray- haired woman, whose life was almost crushed out yesterday afternoon by being knocked down by a wagon at Golden Gate and Van Ness avenues. TUnconscious from the effects of the shock, the unfortunate woman is unable to give her name or tell where she re- + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + 4 sides. From her appearance Police with to notice his aged victim crossing the street. unfortunate woman, who had a loaf of bread under her arm, did not see the 4 the dog and as he ‘was fatally injured. sion of the brain. woman. on his way. take the horse to the stable. hang him. how his victim was progressing. THe++ B S e S S S S S S e s aa s St o reached Van Ness avenue wagon approaching until she was knocked down. find out whether or not she was injured, the lad whipped up the horse, 4 which dashed madly along the avenue. ascertained, realizing that the old woman was seriously after Ervin. He saw him enter a livery stable on Gough street, and meet- 4 ing Police Officers Collins and Carr, he told them what had happened. 4 The policemen followed Ervin into the stable, and placed him under arrest. In the meantime his aged victim, who up and carried into a private house. As she seemed to be in a dying con- 4 dition, it was deemed advisable to remove her to the Receiving Hospital, 4 to which place she was subsequently taken. + Police Surgeon Well, after an examination, gave as his opinion that she + There was an ugly cut on her forehead and her face 4 ‘was considerably bruised. Dr. Well fears that she is suffering from concus- 4 “T know they will hang me if she dies,” he despairingly “The poor lady knows that I did not mean to hurt her.” When assured that he would not be executed for his carelessness he 4 grew calm and left the hospital, after promising to return to-day and see - R R R R R R R R ST e R E R HER LIFE ALMOST CRUSHED OUT. An Unknown Woman Knocked Down bu a3 Wagon Driven by a + + + + + + Bou. Surgeon Weil is convinced that she is 4 over 70 years of age. + Richard Ervin, a lad of 11 years, is 4 accused of being responsible for the 4 woman’s condition. + Shortly after 5 o’clock young Ervin 4 was driving a light wagon, the prop- 4 erty of Joe Meyer, a poultry dealer, 4 along Golden Gate avenue. On the 4 seat with him was a pet dog, 4 belongin, to the poultry dealer. 4 Ervin's ~ attention was occupied 4 he failed 4 Being near-sighted the # Instead of stopping to + A young man, whose name was not 4 injured, started 4 2¢ s unconscious, was picked 4 To the arresting officers young Ervin sald he was driving slowly along 1 Golden Gate avenue, when suddenly he was He quickly checked the horse and as he did so he saw his victim 4 lying in the street in dangerous proximity to the animal’s hoofs. citizens picked her up, and not thinking she was seriously hurt he continued 4 He said that Meyer, the poultry dealer, had instructed him to 4 startled by the cry of a 4 Several 4 Late last night the boy Wwas released on his own recognizance by or- : der of Judge Low. He at once repaired to the Receiving Hospital and in- 4 quired about the condition of his victim. When told that she would prob- 4 ably die he burst into tears and innocently asked if the authorities would 4 remarked. 4 + T P PP P P PPNV O PP The meeting of the executive commit- tee of the California Miners’ Association the other evening afforded considerable of interest to mining men which could not be fully set forth in the brief reports in the daily papers. The thirty members present discussed some of the important things the convention placed in their hands and ways and means to_ increase for the ends the potentiality of the as- sociation in money and membership. President Neff concisely urged . that some plan was necessary to raise money to carry out the purposes of the conven- t he serious question before this asso- ciation in the near future,” he said, “will be the securing of further Congressional appropriations for restraining dams and river dredging. An active committee has been appointed which will probably call for money before long. There is much else to do besides.” b One result of the discussion of ways and means was the adoption of a practi- cally new plan for getting members and money through the county associations. A general effort is to be made to get min- ing operators and companies in sympathy with the association to require each em- gloye to enroll his name as a member of lnlx§ county association and pay the regu- %& a year dues. This, it was suggest- ed, might be collected by the employer at the rate of 50 cents each six months. Several approved this idea. A. H. Ten Broeck of El Dorado said that it would be done at the mine he was interested in and Attorney J. M. Wright promised $25 for his company and $1 a year for each of the thirty miners that worked for it. It was the idea that mine-owners be brought in and enthused and be induced to require this small- degree of co-opera- tion. from the men who are wholly de- pendent on the industry. % Heretofore and at. present a_consider- able proportion of the membership of the county associations has been made “K volutarily of working miners along wit mine-owners, merchants and citizens gen- erally interested in their chief industry; but this plan would vastly increase the membership and money if generally ac- cepted by mine-owners who have indus- trial patriotism. There are nearly 20,000 working miners in the State; they are helped by every- thing that helps the industry from the chances of employment to the values of their lots, if they have them, the chances of xettlng money for any claims they may hold, and all the indirect blessings that flow to a community through general prosperity. The plan is a good and fair one, The matter of stirring up county organ- izations, organizing new counties and re- organizing assoclations that are dozing, was a tople. One said tfat with proper efforts the biggest organization in the State could be formed in Tuolumne, and by the remarkable gold mining develop- ment which that old county is now en- joying, it is not to be doubted. Mr. ammond of Butte reflected the enter- prising mining spirit that has been awak- ‘ened in that counta and cisplayed a de- sire to see things stirred up. He reported a proposition on foot to establish a per- manent county mining bureau and exhibit in that coun! for which -he said $1000 could be raised in Oroville, and he was rot disturbed when Charles G. Yale recalled that Shasta did that and the exhibit soon petered out. It is to be ho that Butte will carry out this plan at this auspicious time. A county mining bureau, some other things, Will flourish while there is NEWS OF THE MINES. healthy life in it and ma; iy 1 y be unlovely Ex-Secretary Sonntag said that at the recent convention the only counties thor- oughly organized and which paid their full dues in proportion to membership were Nevada; Placer, Shasta, Tuolumne, El Dorado, Santa Clara and San Francis- co. He and other members of the ~~mmit- tee would gladly go to any county to help orgnnlze or stir up associations. resident Neff observed pertinently t.at in the past the assoclation had been rath- er regarded as the California Hydraulic Miners” Assoclation.and this was why some mining. counties had not been ready to take an active part. They now saw that the association was working in the interest of the whole industry and now, thank God, they are willing to come in and help us out.” The meeting gave an encouraging prom- ise that the assoclation would be greatly built up this year. Though the needs of the prostrated hydraulic industry called it into being seven years ago it has broad- ened far beyond those limits, represents the general welfare of the whole industry, is the only agency which unites the min- ing interests "of the State and if its owth is sustained it may develop new ‘eatures in the future. That matter of supreme and immediate importance, the Paris Exposition, devel- oped much discussion and divergent views as to the amount of money required, es- timates ranging from $25,000 to $100,000, the chairman = of - the committee on this matter, B. N. Shoecraft of Nevada, main- taining that it was useless to attempt a mining exhibit with less than flm.o& There will be much to say and much will be said as to how much of whatever ap- Eropr(auon the Legislature makes should e allowed for the mining portion of the California exhibit at Paris, and strong in- fluences will seek to keep the proportion small. The mining interests will most probably .insist that it be large and ade- uate, and also that the expenditure of the money be in the hands of practical mining men, and not in the hands of a commission prejudiced in favor of other interests. The matter was left in the hands of the committee after a resolution of W. W. Montague that one-third of the appro- priation be asked was adopted. On the next evening the special committee met in the office of Secretary Benjamin and decided to ask for $100,000, and that a vig- orous campaign to get it should be in- augurnted by having petitions to that end signed by wholesale throughout the gtlntlng regions and generally through the ate. The Mountain Copper Company, which has done so much for quartz mining in the region of its smelters at Keswick, causing the working of many new prop- erties, is not getting enough quartz ores for flux, and is advertising for more low grade ores, offering 7 per cent of the old value of ores running over $3 a ton. t is also buying concentrates and tail- ings. These big copper operations. are thus greatly stimulating gold mining in that region. On the Feather River, south of Oro- ville, one of the big new river dredgers has worked .its way 150 yards away from the river through the auriferotis gravel, and, according to the Oroville Reflster, the roar of the rocks falling from its ele- vator could be heard a long distance.” Another big dredfer nearly ready for ope- ration has a half dozen big *‘staterooms’ e Bridgeport Chronicle-TUni repo: e gepo! ronicle-Union Tts a rich strike In a claim in Little Antelope Valley, Mono County, in which editor A. B, mon of Santa Rosa Is interested. The old McCutchan hydraulic mine at Canada Hill, which is being opened by Gray & Bullard, will probably be running by Christmas. At present men are busily emploé'ed in building the dam in Little Deer Creek, which is over half compieted. —Grass Valley Union. t’I;Iul'nerousd s;lef f\r dné}nh\g property are eing recorded at heading. Mchonald Bros. & Co., who have pur- chased the Bloss & McClary placer mine at Trinity Center are rapidly getting that roperty into shape for the season's work. 'hey have enlarged the upper ditch, doub- ling” its capacity, and have built new flumes and laid new pipe. They are now g_rheparln;; to put in an electric light piant. e mine will be thoroughly equipped for the season’s work in about four weeks.— Trinity Journal. The California Exploration Company is extending its electric power line to the Ford mine, Calaveras County. where the new mill will be operated by electricity. The recent rains have staried many to, dropping again alonz the her Lode. M%:'l.. shaft in the recently bonded Seiby minre infl‘:l Dorado Coun:y is tc be sunk to 1000 feet. According to correspondence of the Min- ing and Scientific Press the Golden Crown Mining l,‘umfm.ny. composed of San Jose men, is developing a fine mine in the Big Betsy in Mariposa County, which has been under development for a year. A 14-foot ledge shows good ore to the at- tained depth of 300 feet, with high assay values. here are plenty of such mines awaiting development in Mariposa. The Yreka Journal says that about $200,- 000 has been invested In Scott Valley this season for mining property. The Oro Fino mines of Eastlick Bros. and Wright & Co. were sold to a San Francisco company for $57,000; Brokaw & Co. bought mining round in Quartz Valley for $35.000 e Sheba Company bought the Fry & Macau- lay quartz mine on Patterson Creek for $35,000; the Gray Eagle Company recently bonded a _property for $0,000 in Quartz Valley; a New York Company bought the Golden Eagle mine at Indian Creek for $25,000. This is typical of the activity in mining development throughout that northern region. To get ahead of the war stamp tax a Utah mining company has made the face values of its shares one cent. In Montana the Legislature, to repress ex- cessive capitalization, required the pa: ment of 50 cents for each 1000 shares when articles of incorporation of a new com- pany are filed. That is easy, too. Now a wildcat company can incorporate for 1000 shares, pay 50 cents, and in a week call a stockholders’ meeting, increase the capi- tal stock to millions of shares, and then pay $2 50, which is all that is required for a mere amendment. The Anaconda Minin~ Company expend- ed $15,266,611 during its last fiscal year in the course of its great copper mining op- erations at Butte and at Anaconda, Mont., and its receipts were $18,817,951, leaving a profit of $3 o The operation of its mines cost $5,74: of which $3,376,502 was pald out for labor. Machinery and repairs cost $461,612. The timber bill was $429.886, representing perhans 5,000,00) feet. Freigghfit on ore cost $452,wl; powder cost $147,296, ar;d’m{ha little item of candles represents ALL CANDIDATES -~ T0 BE PLEDGED Importance of the Com- ing Dublin Election. BY J. J. CLANCY. Speclal Correspondence of The Call. DUBLIN, Nov. 26.—As yet the elec- tions under the new local government act in Ireland have not, as a general rule, led to any decided action on the part of the electors, except in the city of Dublin. Here a regular campaign has already been begun. There are practically as yet only two bodies in the field—the Labor Electoral Asso- ciation and the Independent, or Par- nellite, League. The former body was first in the field and nominated several candidates on a purely labor ticket. To most of those candidates, if not to all of them, no objection might probably | be taken if they had declared them- selves on the great political question of the hour—namely, whether a Union- ist Lord Mayor should be elected for Dublin or not. A pledge on this sub- ject not having been extracted from the candidates of the Labor Electoral Association, and they themselves not having given such a pledge except in| one or two instances, the Independent League has intervened and insisted on every man comin~ forward for a seat in the corporation fulfilling the required condition. The result in most wards so far, is that the candidates of the Independent League have been adopted by public meetings of the congresses, and it is probable, if not absolutely certain, that during the next few weeks selections of candidates in the In%ependem League’s interest will be made for every one of the fifteen wards in the city. Hitherto these ward elections have been, as a matter of fact, merely local affairs, but the ques- tion of the Mayoralty which is now in- volved has for the first time raised the whole matter into a higher plane, and the consequence is that all the ward elections have become the common concern of the whole city. The most notable man in the North of Ireland has died within the last week. I mean the Rev. Dr. Kane of Belfast. Dr. Kane was the successor of an equally famous man, the Rev. Dr. Hanna, or “Roaring Hanna,” as he used to be called, and was for many years the leader of the Orange Democ- racy in Ulster. As such he constantly appeared on Orange platforms as the mouthpiece of the most extreme Orange views, and as such habitually made use of arguments and language most hurtful to Catholics and Nationalists. During the whole Home Rule campaign especially, he was prominent in threat- ening physical and armed opposition to the establishment of an Irish Parlia- ment and an Irish Government. The published reports of his speeches gave the impression that he was a rough, uncultivated and uncouth fanatic. Fanatic, no_doubt, he was—that is to say, he held the most extreme views, but held them sincerely. “The difference between Dr. Kane and most of the other Orange leaders in Ulster,” said a friend of mine .to me the other day, “is that when Dr. Kane said ‘to hell with the Pope’ he meant it, whereas the others did not or did not care whether the Pope went there or not.” But, though Dr. Kane was an anti-Catholic fanatic in religion, he e¢annot have been at bottom an anti-Irish Irishman, and herein lies the difference between him and the rest of the Orange leaders of Ulster. For example, he was a strong supporter of the movement for the redress of the financial grievance of Ireland, and in that respect stood almost alone among the Orange leaders in Belfast, who seem to take a delight in being over- taxed by England, and who would ap- parently rather be overtaxed by an English Parliament than be fairly taxed by an Irish one. 1In his capacity of financial reformer he-made, as far as I can recollect, but one appearance on an Irish national platform. It was twelve months ago at a great meet- ing in the Mansion House Dublin, composed of persons of political parties. ‘When it was announced that he was to be among the speakers great curiosity was excited, and hundreds went to see and hear him who had never thought of seeing or hearing him before. I ‘was present on the occasion myself and I well recollect the pleasant disappoint- ment his manner and his speech occa- sioned. Instead of the rough, uncouth and bigoted Orange fanatic there was presented to the gaze of an audience mainly Nationalist a polished speaker | DR. PIERCE’S REMEDIES THE NEW WOMAN, The Secret of Strength and Beauty. The athletic woman is everywhere in evidence. - You can see her on the wheel, swirzing a golf club, rowing, riding, running, her every movement so graceful that you instinctively pause to look at her. The day of tight-laced, wasp-waisted women'is over and gone. The age has given us a new woman who thinks more of her lungs than she does of her waist, and who is proud of her muscle. But have you noticed that these girl goddesses are almost without exception unmarried? As soon as a woman marries she begins to lose the swinging stride, the easy carriage, the steady hand, the quick eye. Her back club. She is nervous and the old sports and recreations are impossible to her. The reason for this condition is obvious. | Few women are prepared for marriag either. intellectually or physica They have no intelligent understanding of their own physiology, and no appre- which marriage inaugurates. The re- sult is that debilitating drains are set up and allowed to continue unchecked. The delicate female organs become ulcerated and inflamed, and prob- ably there is female weakness, or displacement of internal organs, with bearing-down pains. The consequence is nervousness, physical languor, weak back, headache, and a score of other ills. Even then it probably doesn’t dawn on the afflicted woman's mind that the pain in her head, in her back or at her heart is in any way connected with the diseased conditions of the delicate womanly organs. Yet that is the exact condition of affairs. Thou- sands of women have proven this, who have used Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Pre- scription to cure debilitating catarrhal drains, and an ulcerated and inflamed condition of the internal organs, and have found to their glad surprise that when the local health of the womanly organs was established, strength came back to the whole body. REMOVE THE CAUSE. It's of no use to treat the head or the back or the heart. The center of the diseased condition lies in those delicate womanly organs, and through them the whole body becomes sympathetically af- fected. But, one practical example is worth a volume of theory. Here is the actual experience of one woman: “After a silence of a few months I again write you in regard to my health, which has been very much improved by the use of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, ‘Favorite Prescription,’ and ‘Pleasant Pellets,’” writes Mrs. Mollie E. Carpenter of Linaria, Cumberland County, Tenn. “I have used thirty bot- tles of ‘Favorite Prescription’ and ‘Golden Medical Discovery’ and many vials of the ‘Pellets.” When I first wrote to Dr. Pierce concerning my health I was so weak I could only write a few words until I would have to rest. I was so weak I could hardly walk. Words cannot express my sufferings. Dimness of sight, palpitation, shortness of breath, black spots or else shining lights before my eyes, terrible head- ache, numbness in my arms and hands and tongue, also my jaws would get numb; constipation, falling of the womb, leucorrhea, soreness through my bowels; in fact, I was diseased from head to foot. Now I can do my own washing and cooking. I can take a ten-quart pail in one hand and a six- quart pail in the other (full of water) and carry both one-fourth of a mile and never stop to rest. I am as heavy as I was at 19 years (125 pounds). I also had dimness of sight and impaired memory. I had spells that when I would try to speak I couldn’t think of the words I wanted to say, but would say something else. I have improved, oh, so much, and Dr. Plerce’s medicines have done the good work. It has been about a year since I commenced the use of the medicines. My health has been improving slowly, but surely. We cannot expect a disease that has been coming on for years to be cured in a few days. If any lady suffering as I have been will write to Dr. Pierce and | get his advice and use his medicines according to directions, a cure will surely result.” “DISEASED FROM HEAD TO FOOT.” That experience is worth thinking over. Look at the gravity of the case. “I was diseased from head to foot.” Contrast the former weakness when she wrote her first letter to Dr. Pierce, and “could only write a few words un- til I would have to rest,” with the pres- ent strength, which enables her to “take a ten-quart pail in one hand and a six-quart pail in the other, both full of water, and carry them a quarter of a mile without stopping to rest.” That’s only the case of one woman in thousands who have been similarly cured by “Favorite Prescription.” But it's an extraordinary case. It proves that the most hopeless conditions yield to the persistent use of ‘“Favorite Prescription.” . In ordinary cases the cure is much quicker, and a muych smaller quantity of medicine is needed to effect it. That woman blesses the day when of gentlemanly demeanor and instinct, with Irish feeling, at least, on the par- ticular subject under discussion. His speech took his audience captive and he sat down amidst rounds and rounds of cheers, she wrote her first letter to Dr. Pierce. This free consultation by correspond- ence, which Dr. Pierce offers, is a privi- lege women eagerly avail themselves of when they once understand that there 18 really no charge, and that every let- hurts and she can't row, or swing a golf | ciation of the radical, physical changes | | DR. PIERCE'S REMEDIES | ter is read in private, answered in pri- vate, and the answer mailed in a per- fectly plain envelope without any ad- vertising upon it. Many women let these diseases fasten on them because their modesty shrinks from the questionings, indelicate ex- aminations and local treatments their friends have had to submit to. offensive features are entirely away with in Dr. Pierce’s method treatment. Write a plain letter. You are not writing to a woman for sym- pathy, but to a man for help. And it's in the very law of our beings that man should feel A HELPFUL SYMPATHY for woman, such as is rar by one woman to another. but it is true, that women in g make light of the sufferings of members of their own s oth . and are apt to'be critical and over their pains. And perhaps r that reason women prefer to confide in a physician, who, like Dr. Pierce, can give the p tical sympathy of help. n a”;n-T | of over thirty years as chief consul g physician for the Invalids’ Hotel and :Slzlrgl('a] Institute at Buffalo, N. Y., Dr. Pler_(‘e has treated more than half a million women, and cured perfectly and permanently ninety-eight out of every | hundred. This vast experience, which covered every form and variation of | feminine disease, puts Dr. Plerce at the Bead of specialists in the treatment of race tice | diseases of women. | . Don’t you want to get back that ath- | letic girlhood again? Write to Dr. | Pierce and take the first step to health, Remember there is no charge for this consultation by letter, and that ever letter is held as tly private and !(‘r(-dly confidential. This offer will b | thorough investigs Investigation is something that be borne by those offers of free ¢ > which co: from people who no medical knowledge, and not qualified to practice. Such offers are deliberately misleading. The: no claim made to giving a ph ric iInside the la signed to create the impression that if you write you will receive the advice of a physician. The most insidious of these offers of advice are artfull framed to appeal to woman's sympa- thy. Some man plays the part of “THE BEARDED LADY” And invites “women to write to women and get woman’'s sympathy, etc.” Even if these letters are genuinel swered by a woman and sympathy is expressed, this is not what invalid women want; they want medical ad- vice. No woman can give this who is not a trained-physician, and so far as known there is no qualified woman physician associated with any proprie- tary medicine. It is certain that there is no one connected with any institution who has, like Dr. Pierce, a record of success extending over thirty 3 and covering the treatment of than half a million women. There is no alcohol, whi or other intoxicant in “Favorite Prescription,” neither does it contain opium or any other narcotic drug. It does not create & craving for stimulants and cotics. Of no other medicine especially de- signed for women cah this be truthfully said. Here and there is found a dealer who seeks to make a little extra profit at a customer's expense by trying to sell one of these ‘‘just as good” substi- tutes when “Favorite Prescription” is called for. That’s hardly fair for you. ‘When you buy a “just as good” baking po\\'der‘ which of course pay the deal- ers a bigger profit, you get something for yourself, a spoon or a pitcher or something as a premium. But in this case the dealer gets all the extra profit and you get a bottle of medicine Kha:‘ you didn’t ask for, and don’t know an thing about, except one thing which you may know for certain, that it won’t cure as does “Favorite Prescrip- tion.” It isn’t the right remedy and it hasn’t the right record. Don’t let the dealer do it. Go for Dr. Pierce’s and get Dr. Plerce's. DICTIONARY OF HEALTH. You don’t want to use a dictionary very often, but when you do want it nothing will take its place. That fact is equally true of Dr. Pierce’s diction- ary of health—“The People’s Common Sense Medical Adviser.” You may not want to consult it every day, but when you do, it is the one book for your need. In its 1008 pages can be found the an- swer to almost any question relating to human health and physical well being. This great book is given away. It will be sent free to any one on receipt of stamps to pay the cost of mailing only. Send twenty-one 1-cent stamps for the edition in paper or thirty-one stamps for the same book in cloth. Address, Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. more Dr. Wong Him, Nos. 1156 and 117 Mason street, San Francisco, Cal.—This 18 to certify that 1 have been for several years & great _sufferer from Bright's Disease of the Kidneys, a tumor in the left side and other dis- eases incidental to fe- males; that I have for 'weeks and months at a time been totally unable to attend to my domestic affairs, and much of the time confined to the bed. Nothing could be done for me that afforded More than tempo- Tary relief. About three months ago I was ad. vised to place myself under your treatment. On my first interview, agter feeling my pulse, you described my condition more accurately than I could have done myself. After using your medicine and following your advice since that time I am very happy to say I have en- tirely recovered my health; am fully abie to fulfill all my duties as the mother of a largs family of children; indeed, for the past 15 or 20 years I have not enjoyed as robust health. MRS. HETTIE E. LOW: 3871 24th street, San Francisco, Cal. October 15, 1538 S ° The pec.liae - men must de o n kept vigorous THE HOME REMEDY o il Nothing is right for FEMALE COMPLAINTS it they o 'nllg. Fer l‘; these pains, i“ullsf;flll and dificulties no remedy on eartl % sily applied by lady her- equa’s 5> famows Dan0-Rio =7 Relieves all pain inVomb or Ovaries in 10 minutes, Prvmr.l relieves Headache, Nausea, Biood and Bladc er‘mvfl)lu, Paintness, Nervousness, Pear and Despondency. Cures Leucorrhaea, Womb Complaints, Displacements, Dackache, Bearing Pains and all Female Disorders. \Banishes Soreness and Uleerations, ‘hl:gekl"l‘ l?l !p‘nk;l;d ;’n-“m \holo frame. Rafe, Sure and Absolutely Harmiess. One 5O ¢iat bos wil complete a cure in ordinary cases. STfiPS ALL PAIN 5050 BY ALt DRUGGISTS, ot mailed 10 plain wrapper on receipt IN 10 MINITER of price by s ~ Bldg. Chieago e . C: Sold by Owl Drug Co., B. F., and Oakland. a0d Gold metallio sealed with biuo ribboa. e Pl rivbon. Take articulars, testimonials Yadiea” in istier by et Testimontals. Neae R oal O et and Morphine Habits cured at home. Write for full particulars and book free INDIAN OPIUM CURE, B. D. K MMiS8, 201 Turk 8t., 8an Francisco.

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