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‘SUNDAY THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MARCH 12, 1899. e — - PAUL KAY MUST STAND TRIAL FOR GRAND LARCENY Writ of Habeas Cor- pus Is Denied. A HUMAN HAND FOUND IN THE GARBAGE WORKS Rudely Chopped With a Dull Ax. i | PROSPECTS OF A TEST CASE‘FROM A MEDICAL STUDENT| STOLEN POOL TICKETS THAT | CORONER HILL DETERMINED FAILED TO WIN. TO STOP THE PRACTICE. t as to Whether There Is a Ticket Where the Horse Does Not | Show Up. ‘ ) | 1 ‘Detective Egan Detailed to Ascertain the Identity of the Miscreant Who Is Perpetrating These Outrages. Francisco Call, Anoth mutilat: b hete = nother mutilated portfon of a human body was found erday on the garbage pile of the Sanitary Reduction Works. It was the left hand of a laboring man had been chopped off at the wrist lower joint of the thumb dull hatchet or similar in- strument. It had been in a pickling vat for some s as hard as a plece of wood, and this fact leads to the belief secting-room. iliarity of the thing is that the d not been dissected. It was s ed off, whether before or after ad been pickled it is impossible to say. he fragment was taken to the Morgue from which place it will be buried by th ity Undertaker at an expense to the 8 50. r Hi declares that he will put annoying practice of hair- an fragments in garbage feature of th of @ ibject obtained in a legitim oner yesterday addressed the ng note to th Officer P. O'B h Officer—Dear I suppose you have seen by the pa. numerou portions of bodies . been found at the garbage cremat st few weel Tam e out where they come R . —— 3 " COUNCIL IS JUSTIF1ED. : B e view have detailed Detective Egan BERKELEY TO HAVE A JUSTICE COURT | Which Gives the Town Its Own Legal Machinery. BERKELEY, March 11.—For over a e ¥ town has been with- & that time mu cen a dead let > of things are na Berke n of seeing own cor ’ P and of knowing that the measures o e ssed by the Board of Trustees can be 1 ed bythe effective means of legal s is inefy. egram was received from Sacra- ~day saying t L had approved a bill granting to towns of e e 000 to 15,000 abitants the right to Court. It is the Gov- SMALLPOX PRECAUTIONS. Health Board Directs School Children to Be Vacinnated. to the bill which giv - of the new order of thing: having received executi quite an ex ement here been the topic of @ jon to- t the city. » secure this much-needed undertaken by the Hoard > opening of the present A previous attempt to bring the desired end by voting upon a a special municipal failed. As the need a court grew di more pressing, the way out of the difficulty lay in an appeal to Sacramento. The appeal was accordingly made, and not without result. or E. K. Taylor of Alameda intro- ced the measure into the Senate. It received with favor both there and in lower hot d to-day became la cley watch progress not with- able anxiety, and interested e been at the capital for the nths endeavoring to further that their work is over the wuniv town deems that it has T flictent c: -ongratulate itself. When seen Town Attorney sure, said that it - of time before would be set u cpected that after some prelimina had been looked after the County W appoint a Justice of Peace and thus bring the ecity once e to the position where it could en- force law within its limits. ————————————— — ANOTHER SECRET MARRIAGE. Supervisors An Oakland Couple Who Also Sought Seclusion in San Rafael Last February. OAKLAND, M h 11.—The facts of an- other secret wec g leaked out to-day, and the contracting parties are both pop- r young people in local society circles. Melville Tobriner and Miss Catherine Louise McIntosh have been husband and wife since February 13 last. On that date they went unostentatiously to San Rafaei, | where the nuptial knot was tled, and not until to-day was the happy news broken a Voting Machine. | ch 11.—The mechanical | ADVERTISEMENTS. SENT FREE TOME = SRR . summer, but when she learned The State Medical ‘Tnstitute Discovers a | Coming SUWET, 3"aire dy taken place, fonarks = trary to her wish e forgave Bemarkable Remedy for Lost | §onghter and a happy reconciliation was Vigor. effected. s £ | | to_their friends. | "The bride is a niece of District Attor- Alle: and the groom Is employed brother in the vocation of drug- Seventh and Market streets. The mother of the bride had requested that the marriage be postponed until the ARE SENDING FREE A TRIAL PACKAGE TO ALL WHO WRITE les of a_ most remarkabie 1g distributed by the State | Fort Wayne, Ind. It| battled for the and physical manhood that the insti- a to aistribute free trial who write. It is a howe | OAKLAND. March 11.—What promises to be an interesting debate, particularly at this time, has been arranged between Rev. Dr. Coyle and Colonel John P. Irisk on the nation’s policy of expansion. This event will take place in the lecture room he First Congregational Church next sday night, and will be speclally for Men's League of some of the churches. proposed. further to arrange another te on the same subject with Dr. Coyic H. L. Barnes on one slde | i | | i | S j To Discuss Expansion. | | | | | 4 all men who suffer with | General W. n of se weakness, resulting | and Colonel Irish and President Jordan o gul foll I on the other. The date for of Stanford h this latter event is yet undecided. ——e——————— has a peculiarly grateful | Father Against Son. h and seems to act direct | ALAMEDA, March 11.—Clarence Patton location. £IVing Stremgth | yq; arrested to-day for disturbing the 0 that o . | peace. The complaint was sworn to by - ills and troubles that come | POMC tner, William Patton, who was one misuse of the natural func- : z leen an absolute success | of the architects of San Francisco's new MLthtul folly, premature loss o memory, weak back, varico- fon of parts can now cure | ome. cquest to the State Med- | City Hall. The prisoner 18 about 25 years ! A TeUEi et National Bank | gld. and somewhat eccentric. His father, *¢ Wayne, Ind.. stating that | who is 2 very old man and seriously ill, y e bne of their free trial pack- | claims that his son has been doing every- I be complied with. The institute | thing possible to torment him. » of reaching that great class | young Patton asserts that his arrest ho are unable to leave home to nstigated by his father's house- 1} and the free sample will en- s i5 to be|* -per. to see how easy it “1?}\;.& woman wants to get me out of oxual weakness when the | n. way,” sald Patton. “She wants to s are employed. The In- |yt 0oy father to get his money, and no restrictions. Any man | it we that she cannot carry out her be sent a free sample, in a plain package SG | A nt need have no fear of embarrassment or publicity. Readers are requested to writa without delay. scheme if I am around.” ly s its recipies on furniture and pianos, with » ade Advances an, 1017-1023 Mission. or without removal. J. Noon no-brained medical students | ¢ | Captain Edgar Becomes Opportunely Governor Gage Approves a Measure | "I ne expected to disprove the allegations DIES IN A PRISON, | THOUGH INNOCENT Sad Story of .a Rir)coh Indian Incarcerated in San Quentin. SAN QUENTIN, March 11.—*“Pete Bill” ‘was an Indian, and a convict at that. For over a year he has been an inmate of the penitentiary. Last Thursday a fellow prisoner confessed that “‘Pete” was innocent of the crime of murder, and in a few days, perhaps, the Indian would have been set at lib- erty, but death stepped in and liberated the prisoner before justice could be done by any human agency. In Frank de Pue's barn two grief-stricken parents knelt to-day and in their native tongue wailed their sorrow over the loss of their only son. They were “‘Captain BEill,”” chief of the Rincons, and his squaw. Their first visit to the prison was when their boy was consigned to serve twelve years inside its walls for the killing of a Napa Indian named Bill Nando: their second was when they came and took their boy home a corpse. Visitors heard the walling and moaning to-day and were attracted to the |8 barn. It was only an Indian and his wife they saw, but they all removed IQ their hats and moved softly about. “Pete Bill" lay in the ugly black coffin $% made at the priso: Under it was a piece of carpeting and at each end a | & candle in a jar. “Captain Bill” and his squaw knelt near the remains. he tell me,” the aged chief, “that he no kill Bill CISILISTOIBI 10N 83 0% 83 O 83 101 23 0¥ S3egCrgties ol | no done it. ‘Papa, some day everybody know it the | g2 Now they know it, but my boy no can come back to me.” o “Pete Bill,” together with the Mariano mentioned, was sentenced to twelve &8 vears for the murder of Nando. Mariano now admits that he struck the blow. % But ‘“Pete” is dead. This evening he was taken to the rancheria near Clo- verdale. By tribal custom there will be mourning over his grave for eight days. His vindication came too late. e =i RORARONT | i hard fate. Cooper had some of the in- | mates so enthusiastic over his fake Ma- | sonry that they made squares and com- | passes out of babbitt metal and -wore | them around with pride. At the morning session of the board plans were adopted for an incorrigible ward to be built on the second story of the old factory building. The plan in- cludes thirty cells, which probably will be built of steel at a cost of $170. ~Another | SR e estimate is for cells of wood and iron at & | cost of $800. The work will not begin until | - . 2 < the directors so order at their April ses- |A Vindication Meaning |sion. o = Nothing. L0S MAKES A FUTILE PLEA It has been feared for some time that the jute mill would have to be closed on account of drought and the consequent small supply demanded by farmers, but the board decided that action at this time would be premature. If better conditions THE GUARD’S PITEOUS APPEAL prevall at the time of the next session it may not be necessary to close the mill. Prisoners who had broken rules of dis- cipline were brought before the board and d_by being deprived of credits as Joseph Baker, serving three years or grand larceny, sixty days’ credits assaulting an inmate with a Knife; dore Boldivia, twenty ve six months’ credits” for running away from a guard; Willlam Phelan, five vears | for burglary, three months’ credits for resisting a guard; James Anderson, seven credits for WHY WARDEN HALE IS IN AN AWXKWARD POSITION. y preparations for esca 111, While ‘“‘Stool Pigeon” Cooper J. B. Sparks, doing five ye: 1 Is Sent to the Dungeon burglary committed in San” Bernardino ( County, had three months' credits re- | as a Schemer. stored for good behavior. The man is | blind in one eye and fast becoming blind : bos: 5 in the other. He will leave the prison on May 1. William P. Mardon, serving three vears for stealing a calf in Butte County, was paroled. The case of Baker stirred Director Dev- | 1in to frame a rule that after April 1 no hall have any knife in his pos- a tool. The Warden cts could not be kept from | Speclal Dispatch to The Call. SAN QUENTIN PRISON, March 11.— | Guard J. F. Shields asked for a morsel of | food and received a stone. The man who arged from San Quentin prison | : s putting points on knives, and received the k blot upon his escutcheon be- | reply that that was what a Warden L cause a crafty felon had accused him of | for.” If he could not maintain discipline sinning had the courage to violate prece- | somebody else should be permitted to try | dent by appearing before the Board of |it, The rule was unanimously adopted. thte Prison Directors yesterday and ask- | The Teport of the Warden on grain bags and r s follow: W ju | ing for an invesitgation. He made no re- instatement; he uttered mno 0,000; held His simple request was :‘””g o | that he be accorded esitgation. nncdae With him came seve ute on hand, 2223 bales, will run_u 31, 1899; contracted for to . 3500 on board the British ut from Calcutta 86 day tish ship Agnes Os- arrive, ship Dunstaffna 3500 on board the 'stool pigeon.” In a he told the made by a convict straightforward, manly way board that all he desired was to vindicate . out from Caleutta ot d B that he had been = ! a party to the carrying of arms and | SACRAMENTO WILL ammunition to prisoners and to smug- FETE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR Forty-First Annual Conclave of the California Grand Com- mandery. SACRAMENTO, March 11.—The grand comandery of Knights Templar of Califor- nia, of which the right eminent grand commander is Robert M. Powers of Sap | Diego, will assemble in Sacramento on the 20th of April, and already extensive preparations are being made to give them | gling opium into the penitentiary. | entlemen,” he said, “1 am a married { man and have little children who prattle about my knee and call me father. I do not wish these little ones to grow up and | have it hurled into their faces that their | father connived at a terrible crime. If this black stair ashed off my name that i . Besides, it is hard for a di | work, and in order to provide food, cloth- | ing and the common comforts of lite for my family, work I must have. ~Bring this man Cooper forward; hear his story, . > 8 . proof I have to back 3 | ’h; r},’._mq‘»‘,‘k.u‘j\‘.‘ufi%‘ O i a right royal welcome, fraternally and so- FPi five” minutes were required for | clally. Sacramento Commandery No. 2 (Eminent _Sir W. Hale, commander) has already appointed the following com- mittees to prepare for this the first op- | Shields to understand that he should have Tiad an attorney present, that he was to be vindicated in a manner that left s 4 e 52 as before. Director Wilk- 3 r ase e Eike the work that was done, | POTtunity at which the most eminent but he had to stand it. grand master, Reuben Hedley Lloyd, Gentiemen,” said Warden Hale, “I|grand master Knight Templar of the Shields has United States, can receive the fitting fra- | ternal recognition on the noble position to which he has raised Knights Templar- ism in the State of California: that what Mr. asserted is unqualifiedly false. I have not charged him with smuggling arms into the prison, and told him I would not take wish to ct's word. 1 discharged him be- . ‘after this occurrence 1 found that| Finance Committee—A. Van Voorhies he was not a good man to keep.” T. J. Scott, C Luhrs, H. E. Director Devlin took up the written re- f. Morrison, W. ¥. Knox, gation and read it to . C. Hopkins, L. F. Breuner, quest for an inves L T the board. Then he informed Shields that as the Warden denied the making of such G. H. Clark, F Invitation (chaigman), W. Redington . Alexander, J. a charge and refused to make one the | Wy O e e i petition for an investigation was unneces- Yo diey:'D, Farr, R. Vaughn, L. C. Schindler, ary. Director Wilkins said the Warden | g, P, Burr. : had a perfect right to employ and dis- Entertainment Committee—J. E. T. Pike charge men as he saw fit, and that in | (chairman), T. W. Heintsleman, T. B. Reid, Suen o matters the board bad no jurisdic- | L. F. Breuner, G. Dunn, C. T, Barton, E. B tion; but in his opinion the desire of the | Willis, W. E. Kicinsorge, J. W. Wilsor, K. C. a for a chance to clear his name was | Irvine. o Tear pa retorted Shields, | man), J. W. Rock, I. B. Cooledge, A “but the W aid I smuggled | ington, W. M. Petrie, E. B. Willis, C. 3 o thet prison: Thwantsthanins [\ D GIo¥er AT vt SRV, SWECE (DRY opium into the prison. @ T. Pike, R. P. Burr, F. Drescher, W. Raulton, T. W. Heintzl R. J. Van Voorhies. kinson, G. vestigated. 1 was up before him a month h WA ago on that charge.” & rhat is true,” velled Hale, “and if ary I can prove it by Captain Bir- Juard Alden and by convicts.” prove it,’ hotly demanded Shields. You say that I smuggled oplum into this prison a month ago and that you Knew it. If you knew it why did you Keep me employed for thirty days after you had proof I was concerned in a crime?” "Fhis was a body blow for which the Warden had no guard. He hesitated, and finally intimated that he might give his reasons later. Devlin here came to the Tescue and said no request was made for an investigation of the oplum story in the Davies, mitt with Eminent Sir B. W. mander, as chairman. Formerly the meetings have been held in the Masonic Temple of San Francisco, and this year Sacramento will undoubt- edly make this great conclave a State | event, lasting for three days, well worthy | of the city and the State. There will be a grand review by the grand commander, a reception tendered by the Sir Knights and their ladles at Masonic Temple on Thursday evening, April 20; conferring of the order of the temple on’ Friday, April 21st, after which a banquet will be given Hale, com- Written petition and it could not be con- | in Honor of the visiting Sir Knights; Sat- sidered. As for the other charge, the |urday evening, Apri 22, an_ exhibition Warden declined to accuse Shields of | drill will be given the drill corps of California, Golden Gate, Los Angeles and San Jose commanderies, followed by an entertainment and dancing. The South- ern Pacific Railroad has allowed a round- trip ticket fare of one and a third tne single fare rate to all Knights Templar in attendance. CONTESTS THE WILL OF HER LATE HUSBAND Mary Bollinger Declares the Decedent Was Unduly Influenced by His Son. SAN JOSE, March 11.—The contest of the will of Christian Bollinger, begun by his young widow, Mary A. L. Bollinger, was given additional interest to-day by the filing of a suit against George Y. Bol- linger, individually and as administrator of the estate of Christian Bollinger, to prevent his transferring or in_any_way disposing of any property. R Christian Bollinger died a year ago atan advanced age. In his will, made a coupie of years before his demise, he estimated his_ wealth at $91,000, but an inventory made after his death revealed only $3060 worth of property. Mary A. Bollinger, his second wife, at once began a contest. She alleged that Christian Bollinger was of unsound mind and weak and his son George had obtained nearly all his prop- having smuggled arms Into the institu- tion, and therefore it was ‘ridiculous’” to ask for an investigation on that score. At this Hale again grew excited, declaring that when Cooper said he had twice given Shields money he connected it with the opium charge, and thought it time to discharge the guard—this after a-severat- ing that he put no faith in what the con- vict had related to him. The incident was then closed by Direct- ors Fitzgerald, Hayes and Ray arranging themselves on Devlin's side. Shields had to take his bitter pill in silence, and left the room. After the session was con- cluded Fitzgerald admitted that Shields came the most highly recommended of any guard in the prison and that there was no doubt he had the sympathy of all the prison attaches. He also was willing to admit that nearly all the proof against him rests on the word of a convict. There were other peculiar happenings at the meeting of the board. The case of the eight convicts charged with a con- gpiracy to escape was laid over until the April meeting on account of the alleged opportune sickness of Captain Edgar. aken in (‘on{unc(lon with the fact that the board will appoint a new Warden at the same meeting, this is considered sig- pificant. 1t is well known that Hale and Edgar _are intensely jealous of each oth- er, and have been since the strike of two ears ago, and there are not a few at gan Quentin, and, for that matter, else- where, who scoff at the tale of conspiracy Snd express thelr belief that for campaign material the tale of Cooper is a “good e ves to be ‘‘shoved along.” | erty by undue influence. thing” and deseryes 1o b 8 A ittod yes- | In the suit filed to-day Miss Bollinger, Zven the W. e hat Cunning Cooper had handed sized gold brick by affirming lace Cooper in the dun- geon and leave Rim there until the nex: meeting of the Prison Board. For a man who is no Mason and yet confers thirt; third degrees of that order on his fellow- .prlaoncrs for §150 a head this will be a through her attorney, alleges that her husband transferred property to George Bollinger in trust for his heirs. She claims it is all community property and that she is entitled to one-half. She asks for this amount and says the defendant refuses to return it to the heirs. Judge Kittredge issued an injunction restraining terday that him a large-: his intention to 7 Genéral Commitiee—Members of the four com- | DR. PIERCE’S REMEDIES. WoIRan vs. Whiskey. It was the snake that ruined the earlier Eden. It.is the snake—alcohol—(which is the Arabic El Cohol, meaning the Devil) which ruins the later Eden—the home. there is nothing to show that Woman and whiskey are natural antagonists. She has been the greatest sufferer from its influ- ence. It has ruined her home, destroyed her children, blighted Dier life. Women organized the first effectual movement against intemperance. Women have prayed and paid and stayed through all successive temperance movements. It is woman who must meet this new aggression of alcohol against the peace and pu- rity of the home. THE SNAHE INTEMPERANCE is a subtle beast. Drive him out of the door, he comes in at the window. Driven from the cellar, from the sideboard, from the kitchen, he now returns wearin phosphorus. promoting office. work and it does. required elements. phates. its sever ! salts all_duly proportios ] Derangement of the stomach, therefore, strikes at the very root of the tree of health. It does not provide sufficient nourishment for the several organs of the body. It fails to properly prepare even what it provides. Sometimes it almost entirely fails to separate some of the The nerves for example go without their phos- Or the blood is deprived of some necessary salt. nerves cry out in their starvation and their cry is pain. head pain, heart pain, lung pain, liver pain, but if you follow that pain back to its cause yowll find the stomach is not doing its work properly. Yow'll mever cure the pain until you cure the stomach where the cause of the trouble lies, and the first step to that cure is The poor stomach is not strengthened but spurred into action. TIMOTHY'S STOMACH. ‘The advice given to Timothy to “take a little wine for thy stom- ach’s sake” has been a favorite excuse of those who felt the need of offering an apology for the use of intoxicants. As a matter of fact the wine advised for Timothy’s stomach was alcoholic, or anything else than the pure unfermented grape juice, the common ** wine”” of every day use. ave been, it remains true that it has been established by the most eminent physiologists that there is nothing that alcohol can do for the body which cannot be better done by something else, and that even alcoholic medicines are as unsanitary as they are unsafe. from the danger of establishing the alcohol habit, the use of alcoholic medicines is a positive injury to the stomach in every case where tke digestive and nutritive system is enfeebled. « STOMACH TROUBLE.” What is popularly called ‘“stomach trouble” or ‘‘weak stomach" is a condition in which the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition are performing their work partially and imperfectly. The stomach is the power house of the body. is created which becomes the vital force in man. ach and its allied organs that the food which is eaten is converted into nutriment, and the special form of nourishment required by the several organs is thence distributed to the various parts of the body. The brain, th- nerves, the spinal cord, must have their supply of Th= bones must have their lime. But however that may Apart It is there that the energy It is by the stom- The blood must have ned with relation to their health ““Weak ** stomach must do weak Then the It may be look at the effect of whiskey medicine;. t A WHISKEY WHIP. the “Ii of heaven,” the first dose of Dr. lierce’s Golden Medical Discover: ed as Now in view of these facts a medicine, and recom- needs to be fed but it is flogged with mended as a ;emedy _for uxntn?s ll'li'e It goes on a little faster for a time, opinion of eminent phy- sicians that alcohol has done its deadliest work in this disguise. Sick people are weak, and alcohol finds them an easy prey. They warm in their bosoms the serpent which wakes to sting them. The dan- ger of intemperance is in the first use L) Of alcohol, A knowledge of this dan. | )‘ ger aroused women to banish from their table wine jellies and brandy sauces. J’. at the fact in this light. nail and begins to limp an lame him for life. horse’s foot and remove the treat the stomach. « - o Th:(f’ saw the 5 shadow of the G c snake fall on 5/ their children. How much more perilous is alcohol disguis- ed as medicine ! : Sick people mis- take its stimu- lating effects for real benefit. They allow the appetite for alcohol to grow on them while they are lulled into a false confidence by the label *medicine’ borne by what is in reality a whiskey bottle. “‘Hard” cider has been called « The Devil’s Kndiing Wood.” ‘What then are pure alcohol, whiskey and Tum, covered with & flavoring of some herb or root? Medical men of large experience have said that alcohol in the guise of va- rious patent medicines is one of the most poison which infects in any vital organ. ““weak lungs. the bloodies emulsions. u: it. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical there was neither hope nor prolific causes of intemper- ical Discovery.” ance. It sows ir the alcohol :Y: habit, creates the alcohol and organs of digestion and craving, and it does this in the very }lliomes where every door is su posed to be closed to liqlian If b alcohol is to be used in patent medi- cines, Let the Mask be Torn off, blood supply. nRASVS S can be As “Vorcz,” the leading tempa;flnce jourmal says: « Compel every patent medicine manufacturer to on the wrapper of his le the qu:nfity of alcohol it contains.” There is no desire to be unjust to patent medicines. ‘Temperance people only ask that alcohol shall not be introduced into the home under a false .gine, that whiskey shall net mask as medicine. It is ‘ile to contend that alcohol necessary to the preservation of the virtues of medicines. This claim is disproved by the fact that Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Pre- scription and Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery are absolutely free from alcohol in any form and yet serve their healing qualities and pleasant flayors in any climate and under all conditions. The safet and sanctity of the home demand that women shail once more rally for the new crusade against whiskey medicines could not feed myself. My her up to die. of a large amount being Discovery ’ is the bes' medi I have ever tried.” without fee or charge. mailing only. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y, an exhausted horse goaded toward the goal by Suppose your horse “‘ picks up ”’ a stone or a whiskey medicines, which may ruin it for life. trouble must be removed and then the stomach will take care of itself. COliriON SENSE TREATMENT. It is in perfectly removing the cause of disease that the great tem- perance medicine, Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, stands superior to all other medicines designed to restore the stomach and organs of digestion and nutrition to their normal action, and the blood and increase it both in quantity and quality. Medical Discovery *’ cures diseases of heart, lungs, blood, liver, nerves and other organs many times when nothing else will reach the case, and whon the best doctors have entirely failed. by curing the stomach and organs of digestion and nutrition. Clean bread can’'t be made by dirty hands. nourishment it distributes must be foul also, and that foulness isa the blood and through it attacks the weak spot Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery actually gurifies the blood by removing the cause of impurity. It increases the lood supply by inCreasing the activity of the blood-making glands. «“« WEAK LUNGS.” There are thousands of people who have what is popularly termed From these thousands are drawn the recruits for that doomed army of consumptives whose slaughter, year after year, makes battle field seem tame and trivial. What * weak lungs need is strength, and strength comes to the parts of the body as it comes to the whole body, by food and nourishment. For its food value people drink the nauseous cod liver oil or the modified nastiness of its This may be good so far as it goes, but it never seems to §o far enough to reach the diseased lungs. ngs is a rich stream of pure blood. The blood is the builder. If loss of blood weakens the body, gain of blood should surely strengthen Every requirement of blood-making and body-building is filled by but stumbling and staggering like ip and spur. Look o slowly. Will'you get the whip out 8 3 i g and lash him till he runs? You know that would ruin him, probably ‘What you will do is to get down and examine the cause of lameness. That’s the way to It’s no use to spur it with alcohol, or whip it with The cause of the to purify 45 G%Iden It effects these cures If the stomach is foul the The necessity for the Discovery. The use of this remedy hag produced the most wonderful results, even when the doctors had said help. Men and women suffering with bronchitis, bleeding of the lungs, obstinate, lingering cough, diseases which if neglected or unskilfully treated lead on to consumpti been perfectly and permsnent;.}y No one su so long as this medicine is within easy reach. It cures many forms of disease, because these various forms of disease have one common root in a diseased condition of the stomach fuon have v the use of ‘‘Golden Med- “weak lungs” should de« 1t is not a cure- cured bg fering wit nutrition, with the natural consequence of a body imsufficiently nourished and a deteriorated and tainted The record of ‘‘Golden Medical Discovery’ warrants the state- ment that there is nothing *“ just as good.” which follow the use of the ‘ Discovery’’ you can’t have them unless you use that medicine. Therefore refuse all substitutes. THE TESTIMONY OF THOUSANDS roduced to prove the marvelous efficiency of the “Discovery. The (ol?owing are only specimens of the thousards of letters on file : “Words fail to expr..s what I suffered for three years, with cold chills, palpitation of the heart, shortness of breath, and low spirits,”” writes Mrs. A. C. Jones, of Walterboro, Colleton Co., S. C. not sleep and really thought I would soon die. Hada ing through my head all the time. If you want the’results “Icould uliar roar- Was so emaciated and weak I aunt induced me to try Doctor Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, which I did, only to please her, and siz bottles cured me. To-day am sound and well. During the three years 1 was sick I had five different physicians.” Abram Freer, of Rockbridge, Green Co., Ills., writes : had a severe attack of pleurisy and lung trouble; the doctors gave She commenced taking Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery and she began to improve from the first dose. By the time she had taken eight or ten bottles she was cured, and it was the cause d here. ne in the world for lung trouble.” Mrs. L. Hedgecoke, of Dozier, Collingsworth Co., Texas, writes: “I was troubled for seven or eight years with indigestion and liver complaint, and received more benefit from the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and ¢ Pleasant Pellets’ than any medicines YOU CAN WRITE to Doctor Pierce if you are sick and consult him by letter, absolutel: Every letter is held as strictly private an sacredly confidential, and all” answers are sent in plain envelopes, bearing on them no printing of any kind. Address as below. Free. Dr. Pierce’'s Common Sense Medical Adviser, 1008 pages, 700 illustrations, is sent free on receipt of stamps to cover expense of Send 21 one-cent stamps for the book in paper cover, or 3T stamps for the same edition cloth bound. Address Dr, “My wife I think the ‘Golden Medical Wright, then president of the institution. | There evidently will be a long legal battle over the collection of the $226,000. How- ard’s creditors will meet on Monday to se- | lect a receiver. EFFECTS A COMPROMISE | WITH HOBSON’S HEIRS | SAN JOSE, March 1l.—Abram King, the banker, who, as guardian, was ac- | cused of having stolen $22,000 from the es- tate of Stephen Hobson, an incompe- tent, has effected a compromise with the heirs of the estate. For twenty years’ King was Hobson's guardian and handled property valued at | $40,000. Mrs. Loulse Kruse, Hobson's only daughter, finally ousted King from co: trol. It was theén charged that King had been systematically robbing his ward for the defendant from disposing of any {7ro‘peny until the settlement of the con- est. LOS ANGELES’ WELCOME TO SENATOR WHITE | The Statesman to Be Tendered a Re- ception on His Return ¥rom Washington. LOS ANGELES, March 11.—In response to the inquiry by the Chamber of Com- merce Senator Stephen M. White wired to Vice President Newmark that he would arrive in Los Angeles on Monday from New York with his family. A public reception will be given the Senator at 8 o'clock on Monday evening by the Chambet of Commerce in its par- lors. There will be music and light re- rears. Bills had been raised and fraudu- freshments. Everything will be done to |lent (‘har%es made and money misappro- make this a brilliant affair. The reception | priated. The peculations were alleged to have amounted to $22,000. The matter was taken into court and a civil suit for S Is now pending against King. This will be dismissed. It is said the compromise was secured by King paying $10,00 to the estate. The” Grand Jury returned six indict- ments for forgery and one for embezzle- ment against King. These come up for trial on Monday morning before Judge Lorigan. SR St High School Athletes. ALAMEDA, March 11—The try-out the Alameda High School athlétes was held this morning at the track of the Ala- meda Driving Association. The object was to select a team to compete in the field day of the Amateur Athletic League. The results follow Fifty yard dash—Gnislain first, Brown second. Time, 6 3-8 seconds. Hundred yard dash—Brown first, Alex- ander and Gnislain, tie for second.” Time, 11 seconds. will be strictly non-political. It is ar- ranged in honor of Senator White as a dls(?n uished citizen of Los Angeles, who has done much for Southern California. The arrangements committee is com- posed as follows: John F. Francis, Coun- cilman C. H. Toll, T. E. Gibbon, M. J. Newmark, Will A. Harris. CLAIMS AGAINST‘KOWARD. Union Savings Bank Brings Suit to Recover. SAN JOSE, March 11.—The Union Sav- ings Bank this afternoon, by Attorney Nicholas Bowden, filed a bill of claims aggregating $290,000 with Commissioner of Bankruptey W. A. Coulter in the E. A, Howard bankruptcy estate. The amount covers twenty-eight claims, with interest, which the bank held against Howard, in- cluding the $26,00 which had been wiped out by the agreement with H. Ward Two hundred and twenty yard dash— Brown first, McKean second. Time, 24 sec~ onds. Mile run—Gnislain first, White second. Time, 6:40. Broad jump—Alexander first, 15 feet 10 inches; Shattuck second, 15 feet 1 inch. High jump—Alexander first, 5 feet 1 inch: Musgrove second, 4 feet 10 inches. The 440 yard dash, half-mile run, shot put, hammer throw and mile relay race will be held next Tuesday afternoon. e —— Ornithologists Meet. ALAMEDA, March 11.—The Cooper Or- nithological Club met this evening at the home of Harold C. Ward, 723 Paru street. The following papers were read: ‘““The Capture of a California Condo “The Coming of W. Otto Emerson, of Hayward: 0. W. Howard of Los Angeles; ‘‘Nesting of Anderson’s Hermit Thrush in the Si- erras,”” Lyman Belding of Stockton. ———— German Professors to Lecture. ALAMEDA, March 11.—The German protessors of the University of California and the Stanford University will give a series of lectures in German at Harmonie Hall, commencing March 14. The subjects follow: ‘‘Johanna Ambrosius,” Professor Albin Putzker of the University of Call fornia; ‘“Early History of California. Professor H lenger of the Univrsity California: ‘“East European Germandom, H. E. J. Ongerth; “German Folk Song, Professor Julius Goebel of Stanford. Alameda News Notes. ALAMEDA, March 11.—Captain John E. Burns died this-morning at his home, &3 Santa Clara avenue. He was a native of Nova Scotia, aged 65 years. The Young Ladies’” Whist Club met yes- terday at the home of Miss Mary Owen, 2909 Santa Clara avenue. The favors were gon by Miss Lulu Sevening and Miss Lulu ox.