The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 26, 1899, Page 15

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HE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, MARCH 26, 1899 15 ) ;5 - ALAMEDA COUNTY NEWS. IAY DECLARE LIKE MERRITT CONTRACT VOID Dredging Work . May Be Stopped Soon. CONTRACTOR WANTS HIS PAY | MANAGED CITY CHARTER DOES NOT AL-| MISS LEMOINE CHAMPLIN THE LOW PARTIAL PAYMENTS. fudge Greene Intimates That There Frank Gowell Braved Parental Wrath Have ular cen Many Grave Irreg- ities to Impair the Contract. 3 pin jal payment for the eene for been Contractor e the demur- 2 s eedings that le d that v no partial at ever in the contract d; and tb st disregs {f the city £ such p: r whose pock AN EBELL AFTERNOON. Brilliant Assemblagei at the Rooms in Oakland. M the rnoon, w n a literary s. Victor Met- ted by the Pren ton, Mrs. Ralston, Mrs. Bowl Mrs. rt Knigh Scl Mr: W EMENTS. ADVERTIS » COMPANY rocersS | New prices Wednesday| No Liquors—just Good Groceries g A, ScxpaY, Mar. 28. 9 Ours are saving stores— saving on the necessaries of life. Real economy in good quality and cash prices. § g For instance: -¢Fancy Oregon Flour....73¢ ? ¢ Silver Spray brand—so-1b sack. Makes good bread. Regular price 8sc. . Y. Cream Cheese....124c Genuine Martins—that name is only on the best. Never sold below 20¢. Ibe -.. Three best Brand Kingan's—Rex—Libby's Tncolored Japan Tea....35¢ Fancy Spider Leg. T s0¢. grade. * Straight Java & Mocha 30c The best coffee we know of—and we know good coffee. 'We'll buy it back if it doesn't suit. SAVING STORES: th & Washington,Oak. 7th & Wood, Oak. ofo Washington, Oak. E.12th&isth Ave tuck Ave. & Alston Wi Berkeley | | | | ordingly | f 1 Club | | of & capitalist who is generally credited | of the restrictions contained in the deed | date of the notification is March 13, 1899. MORE YOUNG PEOPLE ARE SECRETLY WED Millionaire’s Son is a Benedict. MURDERED BY THE INSURGENTS NEAR MANILA Young Huber Dies a Hero’s Death. HIS BODY CUT TO PIECES AN ELOPEMENT A RED CROSS NURSE WHO PRETTY BRIDE. ACTED AS A SPY. No Official Advice of His Death Has Yet Been Given Out by the War Department Officials. and a Fairfield Minister Did the Rest — A Social Fever. Oakland, Office San Franeisco Call, 905 Broadway, March 2. young people ill sur-| Harry Huber, a member of the hospital prising their parents. Within the past two | corps at Manila, has suffered a fearful weeks six young couples, thought to be |*death at the hands of the insurgents, ac- unced that they are hus- | cording to private advices received in this ct Oakland Office San Francisco Call, To-day M Fred Gatter of lower Broadway re- @ Lemoine Champlin and @ > & * 1 @ ¢ + % ® ? : i + ° * ¢ 3 | f ® é L )¢ o 4 1 ¢ . )¢ ; . 3 4. ® ? * 1 r + )i L4 \?') 4 + + be t * PS & ‘) . t & . 1 % ¢ @ * + B4 ® & b ‘ 7 PS 3 1 ¥ L S S o e e - @ “HARRY’”’ HUBER, Who Was Butchered as a Spy. cetved a letter to-day from his brother, in which he says: - “You remember the young fellow who hung advertisements in the cars at Eighth and Broadway. name was Harry Huber. early the level of a mil- | with us, you know. Two weeks ago he | went to the insurgent lines as an Eng- taken prisoner. A re- Frank B. Gowelt added their c the .tale of elopements. Mi is the daughter of one of the merchants, and Frank Gowell is the son with being very lionaire. Two months have elapsed si the marriage, but it has only just been |lishman and w L made known. It was very care port came in that his body was found planned.. Miss Champlin has a married | cut to pleces. 1 wish you would let his sister - ltving. near Healdsburg and she | father know. This report is no doubt Mr. € true, and especially so because of this fighting. I wish you wauld do this for me, as the boy was a friend of mine and a member of the hospital corps in the National Guard at the same time I was.” Huber is the son of C. O. Huber, the advertising agent who lives in this city. went on a visit to that town. who cavalierly says that he suggested the | elopement, met there 4 one after- | )n they went to Fairfleld, Solano Cou and a Methodist minister wedded | them. | Shortly afterward Gowell teil‘z{nph:‘d an his mother of the elopement Mrs. Gowell told Mr. Champlin, the br! fa- | The boy was 20 vears old and lived in ther, but_has not yet told young s | Ozkland all his life. When war broke father. Upon theé return of the out he enlisted and was amang the first everybody was sworn to s o ey O WA O Satharls | 10,80 to Manila. He acted as a Red Cross nurse and eral times went within the His | He came out! too often and suffered the consequence of being suspected of being a spy. UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA NEWS Arrangement Made to Hold the Next Intercollegiate Field Day on the Berkeley Campus. BERKELEY, March 2.—Track Mana- gers P. J. Franklin of Californfa and Richard Culver of Stanford have ,con- cluded to hold the next intercollegiate track meet here. They reached this de- cision to-day. That Berkeley should be the scene of the next contest between the track teams of the twe universities marks an innova- tion in intercollegiate athletics. It is without doubt the first time in the annual events between the blue and gold and the cardinal that one team has had to meet another on its home field. The point is an important one, as some advantage of necessity lies with men who race in thelr own training quarters. As far as possi- ble, though, a tem will be arranged whereby this advantage may be made to alternate between the two colleges. By holding the event one year at Berkelcy‘ and the year followfi% at Stanford the‘ difficulty can be avoided. It is understood that the two managers intend to make this agreement. The innovation became necessary when the track officials found that no place could be had in San Francisco suitable for the occasion. The old Olympic track, on which previous fleld da; have been held, is not available this year. Stanford immediately made overtures to have the mest on the Stanford camp but Berke- ley seemed the more convenient, and a conference between the two managers settled that it should be here. - ‘A recent decision of the executive com- mittee of the Athletic Association appro- priated a sum of $175 for fencing in the track on the campus. This will be the first step toward preparing the grounds | for the next field day, which is to be held April 22. Arrangements will be made at once for the erection of bleachers in or- der to provide seating capacity sufficient for the immense crowds which always | attend. | BIG ASSESSMENT LEVIED ON STOCK THE REALTY SYNDICATE WILL STRENGTHEN ITSELF. The New Law Places It Under the Supervision of the State Bank Commission. Oakland Office San Francisco Call, 908 Broadway, March 25, The Realty Syndicate has created some surprise by assessing its stock $20 a share, which is really fully pald up to the ex- tent of its issue. The syndicate held a meeting to-day and decided on the assess- ‘Although capitalized for $5,000,000 ment. only 1700 shares at $100 apiece have been issued. The as ent will produce $340,000. The Realty Syndicate is in the nature | of a banking business. It controls the street railroads of this city and has enor- mous holdings of land. For the past two years it has been taking small invest- ments and guaranteeing payment of per cent to the investors. A little circu- lar printed on the blocks of tickets sold | by the street railroad companies outlines the benefits to be derived from this sys- tem. Hundreds of small investors took advantage of the opportunity to obtain the high rate of interest offered. The late Legislature passed a law which has for its object the placing of inves: ment companies such as the Realty Syn- dicate under the supervision of the Bank Commission. This will necessitats the periodical supervision of the condition of the syndicate’'s funds by the Bank Com- missioners and the directors to-day stated that they welcomed the change. The directors declare that the $340,000 is to be used for paying off floating in- and to otherwise improve the anding of the big corporation. This assessment will not affect the hold- ers of certificates of investment, which have been issued to small investors to the extent of about $1,000,000, but will have the effect of improving the security. The holders of investment certificates live all over the world, as they have been sold in the Hawaiian Islands and the East for the purpose of bringing money here to in- vest in Oakland. The syndicate is anxious to establish its proposed ferry from Emeryville to San Francisco, but at to-day's meeting it was stated that there is nothing new in the proposition, although all the schemes of the corporalion are being gradually devel- oped. NO DANGER NOW ! OF A BIG FLOOD| | | |A CEMETERY OFFICIAL SAYS| DAMS ARE STRONG. While the Storm Was at Its Height He Was Not so Self- ~ Assured. Oakland Office San Francisco Call, %8 Broadway, March 2. Superintendent A. D. Smith says that | the alarm in regard to the Mountain View Cemetery reservoirs was simply a | cry of “Wolf.” He now says that the alarm and anxlety Were unnecessary, | and that now there is no possibility of | danger. vhile young Gowell returned to his urgent camps under disguise. Some | time ago he sent his father two swords which he had taken from a Filipino camp. Huber gained considerable information aren P Recently” the news of the wedding came to Oakland from Fairfield and the parties were forced to admit the truth. X I call it an elope: | it 1s not known whether he was commis- ment,” said Gowell. who is a 1 foned as an American spy. in Oakland soclety. one of us | I hope this information fs not true” about it until it was all over. They { cald Bubors! tather thiatattarnbon: bt just silly young people and we decided not | my boy was of an adventurous disposi- to make the ter public. Mr. Gowell | tion, and this report seems to fit-his case objected strongly to the match, but 1 do | exactly. I have not heard from him for {not feel called upon ‘to go into 7amily | some Weeks and think It strange that no | S wars 1 (oHethelcs Intehs ey oF | L aoen he | Frank marrying her it he so desired, but | piete 1sts’ of Killed e S | I did not approve of the manner in which | nothing more than is contained in the let | they were married. They, have been com- | ter to Mr. Gatter.” SEere | panio: or three vears.” In a recent letter to hi: h | 3 $ S | e s mother Harry ermission first they could have obtained | ooy the story. of the Iotter reectreq tor . Mrs. Gowell St evidently dges nog he- | ot the Aty o e e ieve in early marriages, for th “silly | “Hy v 1 hese | Huber says that on the date mentioned young people are” are both 24 years old. | he borrowed a golf cap-and a civilian's | ccat, ‘and with'a. comrade in citizen's OAKLAND'S WALL 1S Clothes, passed himself off as an Fnglish- AT LAST REMOVED man. Together the two young men drove to Fort Malate, looked around, took pho- | NO MORE RESTRICTIONS IN DEEDS. | tographs, got some rack specimens from | the hole where Dewey’s shells | Ferry Landings Can Now Be Estab- ierced a | wall and killed a score of Spaniards, | lished Anywhere Along the Front. passed the American guards, passed the | | insurgent lines and then returned. Oakland Office San Francisco Call, Huber, emboldened by the sficcess of | about the insurgents’ movements, though | “Some {ll-advised individual who could | have known nothing whatever of the con- | | structions of our dams reported to the | Chief of Police that the dams were about | to burst,” he said to-day. “The Chief sent | warning to all the people to move out | once, and in doing so fulfilled his du We had arranged In case of any possibil- |ity of flood to give ample warning to | everybody living along the line of the | stream. Had the storm continued durin | Thursday night, we should have been ex | tremely anxious, but a large gang of | skillful workmen was constantly on the dams during the entire night, and every- | thing was able to stand any possible strain. The dams were constructed to meet just such an emergency, and have withstood a_most crucfal test.’” The superintendent gave his interview while the sun was shining and whe nine siphons were running the surplus water out of the reservoir. On Thursday night, when the greatest danger threatened, and when the rain was falling heavily. Super- !nt(indent Smith did not talk so reassur- ingly. e A Plumber’s Narrow Escape. OAKLAND, March 25.—Willlam John- son, a plumber residing at 1528 Grove street, came within less than half an inch of losing his life to-day. As it is, he may lose the sight of his right eye. Johnson was at work in a trench when a co-labor- er accidentally struck him in the eve with the point of a pick, resulting in an abra- sion of the.cornea and a lacerated con- junction” (inner portion). Drs. Stratton and Rowe, at the Receiving Hospital, ai- tended the injured man and united the conjunction with two stitches. The doc- srs have hopes that the eye may yet be saved. Cn the way back they were stopped by an insurgent captain and accused of be- | 908 Broadway, March 25, The Oakland Water Front . Compan which he wrote, attempted the task once | ing Americans. The driver of the kalisc | has withdrawn all restrictions which it | swore that they were Englishmen and | imposed upon purchasers in regard to | they were allowed to pass. Young Huber also sent his parents an making railroad depots on the water front. | old Spanish dagger in a primitive hilt and A notification was recorded this mor:- a cavaller's sword of the fifteenth cen- tury. It seems reasonable to suppose that | ing wherein the Water Front Company notified the Pacific Mail Company that all £ JOINT WILL D OF VALU AKLAND,. March 2.—The olograj in Alameda last Sunday, was flle Bruntsch, widew of deceased. Th unique, yet very simple, in that also contains the ‘will of the widow, bof reads: “This is my last will and testament. of the Oakland Water Front Company to the Pacific Improvement Company, and dated August 15, 1882, are revoked. The +D40+0404 040+ 0 + 0404040404+ In the deed of conveyance by which the ‘Water Front Company acquired title to the property it is agrecd that the property shall never be used by lhedpurchaser for the purpose of a ferry landing or wharf for the transportation of passengers, cars or freight, or for shipping goods or land- ing the same, except such as may be re- quired in the business of the purchaser. 1t was this restriction enforced by the Water Front Company to keép out com- petifors that was known as_‘“the wall around Oakland.” When the Pacific Mail Company was about to transfer its prop- erty to a San Francisco corporation, the | attorneys for the latter objected positive- ly to the restrictions, and they were re- moved. As the Water Front Company is | trying to sell Its property in lots, It is| safe to assume that the restrictions will not appear on any future decd that may unimpaired and she thus be enabled to etta, Ernst, Herbert, Carl, Tosca and lar, except the substitution of the prop to her husband. of administration be granted to her. be given to purchasers. | 3 | BAOHO+0+ 040+ 0+ 0404040404+ 0404040340+ 0+ O+ D +OHTHO4D+ my dear wife, Clementina Bruntsch, in order that her income may remain Beneath this appears the will of Mrs. Bruntsch, similar in every particu- The estate is estimated valued about $20,000, consisting of cash, bonds and “ real estate in Alameda and San ¥Francisco. EHO+040+ 0 $0+ 0+ 010404040+ 0404040+ 0+ 0+ 0+ 040404040+ ISPOSES ABLE ESTATE phic will of Carl Bruntsch, who. died d for probate to-day by Clementina e will, a ‘joint instrument, is most the little sheet on which it is written th dated Alameda, January 3, 189S. It 1 give everything I own or posdess to better care for our children—Margar- Harold. Witness my hand: “CARL BRUNTSCH.” er names, she bequeathing every/thlng The widow petitions that letters H+O404040 40404040404+ O+ O+ 0 4040404 BOTKIN MUST BATTLE FOR HIS FREEDOM His Notorious Wife Makes Answer. CONTESTS HIS DIVORCE SUIT DENIES THAT SHE HAS BEEN CONVICTED OF A CRIME. Ccnten&s That No Cause of Action Lies Until the Supreme Court Has Passed on Her Case. Mrs. Cordelia Botkin . abhors grass widowhood, it seems. In any event she | will not permit the severance of the bonds of matrimony that bind her to her hus- band, Welcome A. Botkin, unless a legal process ‘in which 'she appears as plain- tiff causes such severance. Her husband has confronted a merry. legal battle in his efforts to rid himself of the burden of a “family,” for. Mrs. Botkin would still be his wife, and with that end in view has prepared her defenge. Yesterday afternoon she filed her an- swer in the office of the County Clerk to t her in the Superior i never has been a final judgment, and in consequence the defend- ant, at the time of the commencement of this action, was not and had not been convicted of a felony. Defendant is further advised and believes that the appeal from the judgment suspended and set aside its operation and effect, and, therefore, the plaintiff acquired no right of action by son of the entry of the judgment ap- ed. from. quence defendant alleges that the ht not to maintain this action and entered agains! i centl: on record the complaint re y placed O by Mr. Botkin, and in this answer she sets up what is said to be a valid defense to the action for divorce directed against her. A few weeks ago Mr. Botkif brought suit against the condemned murderess for a divorce on the ground that the de- fendant had been convicted of a felony. He alleged that she had been tried and convicted of the murder of Mrs. John P. Dunning, and under such conviction had been sentenced to State’s Prison for the term of her natural life. As to these allegations Mrs. Botkin en- ters a general denial, and to support her contention that she has a valld defense she asks the court to grant her alimony n co inti because of all the matters set forth in this ) I complaint. of mot ® y companying a s “the plaintiff has not to defray the expenses of defending the suit against her, nor has he paid anything since the commencement of the suit, nor for a long time prior thereto, for her support and Further- defendant without n for her any mon and counsel fees sufficient to cnable her AR to prosecute her interests to the end. In T T Sdiracted addition to the general denial Mrs,. Bot- kin makes a defense as follo s en: tockton large, the e unable to state. the month of December, 1538 so the defendant is informed and nd Jury against ¥ ich indictment the Grand Jury accused the defendant of the crime of murder, committed. as was and is 31 Cordelia Botkin, by whi bell 5 Mr. man of business and at the time of his marriage he was and an of means and able to alleged in the indictment, in Dover, Dela- ware, and therein was alleged that Cordelia at present is a ma Botkin had administered poison to one Mary make money through his industry and abil- Elizabeth Dunning, otherwise known as | ity. The pi ; nc to' pay Mrs. John P. Dunning. the defen pendente lite, ditional sum_ of The' defendant was _thereafter tried for ed crime in the Superfor Court of and upon the conclusion of - the trial the jury rendered a verdict upon the ind{ctment mentioned, finding the defendant guilty of murder in the first degree and fixed_her punishment at imprisonment for ife. Within the time allo e is advised that considering the intiff and .the ed in’the ices to be perfor] work and s 3 proper defense of this action. Such is the defense and collateral issue Botkin to defeat the brought up by Mrs. band to secure a divorce. effort of her h ed by law the de- tendant moved for a new trial and also | Jt ‘ll-informed mem- S et i ndewent {0 bers of the r defense is good T e Y erlict, The ot the untll such the Supreme Court upon. made and entered an order do Rl S el s i g 4 Jgment pronounced against her: but if thereupon sentenced the d the Supreme Court should hold that the of imprisonment in the State's prison in |Jjudgment is valid then her 1“xcn‘.~;§uwll’l: San Quentin for the term of her natural ll]j her nothing and Bot allowed for law by such purpose: endant served and flled hen notice: of appeal from the judgment. The court thereafter, and on application by the defendant, made order staying the execut and the execution of time of tjfe commencement ¢ Welcome A. B Vetoed by the Mayor. Phelan returned vetoes to the erday of two recent reso- granted Myrtiie cigar stand on erchants’ E. a str ‘while nstituted by m Btk sed the vorce was and now is stayed. The appeal 4 0 tak o Supteme | width of the on_ Eighteenth 0 taken is now pending in the Supreme R Ly A Ty Court. The defendant in this action is a and believes that the judgment rei ht all the present Advanced Medical Science knows of no more powerful alterative medicine than Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. Alterative medicines, so-called because they alter or change the condition of the system, have ranked among the most valued of medicines prescribed by physicians. skillful and scientific combination of several such alteratives that Dr. Pierce has produced an altera- tive remedy, having the specific value of each in- gredient and the combined and concentrated power of all these alteratives in union, blended and so balanced, that they est delicacy of operation with the wer. of alteratives a genuine claim to ‘¢ Discovery.”’ The action of ‘‘Golden Medical primarily directed to the stomach and the nutritive Here is a common starting or digestive system. place of disease. ‘There never was a strong man stomach.”” lungs. Why? from the stomach it is distributed. in a sour trough will take on the tain Food mixed and prepared in a taint tal:~ the taint and poison of that stomach all over the system, to finally lodge at the weakest point of some weak organ. Hence it is that in curing the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutri- tion, and in increasing the activity of the blood- making glands, ‘‘ Golden Medical once begins to send throughout the body an- in- creased supply of pure blood, because the blood is made from the food taken into the stomach, and with the ‘‘weak stomach’’ made strong and foul blood made pure, comes a change to other organs which gather strength to throw off disease. “ Golden Medical Discovery’’ works with Nature ; it puts into Nature’s hand the only weapon with which she can fight disease. SIXTEEN YEARS OF SUFFERING. The power of the ‘‘ Discovery is best exempli- fied in its cures of chronic cases, where after years of suffering, and when doctors had help, Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery has made a perfect and permanent cure. that of Mrs. Suggs. ‘' For the past sixteen years I have had torpid liver and indi- gestion and tried many doctors and patent m Dot get a Pori and today I am cured sound and well. ing of fear or dread, headache, yellow skin, toms did not all appear at once.” There are thousands of people struggling along day after day, handicapped by disease who could be made healthy and happy by the use of ‘‘ Golden It has cured ninety-eight Medical Discovery.”” people in every hundred who have FOR THE BLOOD, LIVER,LUNGS. It is these facts which give this greatest And a so-called wedk stomach may and often does mean weak heart, weak liver or weak Because in the stomach the mour- ishment for each organ of the body is prepared, and cure,” writes Mrs. Simeon Suggs, of Clyde, Sabine rish, “Three montbs ago I thought I weuld try Dr. R. V. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery and his ‘ Pleasant Peilets.” I got six bottles of each and I received a good result in a week, The symptoms were coated tonoue, specks before the eyes, disposed to irritable, foul stomach, bad taste in mouth, tired feeling, a feel- and faithful trial. ‘The trouble is that so many of these people have become hopeless. They have dribbled away the savings of years in doctors’ fees, and without any improvement. They are fixed in the belief that their cases are a little different from anybody’s else. And those are the very people that ‘‘ Discovery ’’ cures. It’s the people whose diseases are just a little different, and who are given up by doctors, ‘the people whose diseases are chronic, and who try ‘‘Golden Medical Discovery” as a last resort, that form the bulk of that great army of the cured which numbers over half-a-million persons. It is absolutely impossible to have a strong body where there is a ‘‘ weak stomach’’ or good health where there is bad blood. The use of the ‘ Dis- covery ’’ may be an experiment with you, but the experience of others surely warrants the experiment. “Y can say honestly that Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis- covery is the greatest medicine ever compounded for purifying the blood,” writes Miss Annie Wells, of Fergusson’s Wharf, Isle of Wight Co., Va. ‘‘I suffered terribly with rheumatism, and ?imples on the skin and swelling in my knees and feet so that I could not walk. I spent about twenty dollars paying doc- tors’ bills but received no benefit. About a year ago I decided to try Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery and ‘Favorite Prescription,’ and am entirely cured.” But the most remarkable feature of the cures produced by the use of ‘‘ Golden Medical Discov= ery’’ is where the lungs are ‘‘ weak.” Prooi Positive. Here is found fullest demongtration of the theory that if you can supply Nature with the needed nourishment she will build up the waste places of the body into health and wholeness. And here again it is proved that the ‘‘ Discovery " does sup- ply in the most perfect form that nourishment which Nature uses to effectually renew the broken down organs of the body. Those who have suffered with obstinate coughs, hemorrhages, bronchial affections, emaciation, night sweats, weakness, and like condi- tions which when neglected or improperly treated end in consumption, have found in Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery perfect health. “Last spring I was taken with severe pains in my chest, and wes so weak I could hardly walk about the house.” says Mrs. G. E. Kerr, of Fort Dodge, Webster Co., Iowa. ‘‘I tried several ysicians and they told me I had comsumption. I heard of _ Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery and I thought I would try some of it. Before I had taken the first bottle I was very much better ; I took five bottles of it and have not yet had any return of the trouble.” ““After using about five bottles of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery my boy seems to be all right,” writes Mr. J. W. Price, of Ozark, Monroe Co., Ohio. “‘ He was very bad when I com- menced to give him the ‘Golden Medical Discovery.” The doc- tors claimed he had consumption and we doctored with them until he was past walking. It has been ten mouths since he stopped taking your medicine and he is still in good health. ‘We are very thankful to you for saving our son.” “Last spring I wrote you in regard to my health which at that time was, very poor,” writes Mrs. Mettie M. Barnes, of Garfield, Pawnee Co., Kansas. ‘“‘My trouble was bronchial affection. Symptoms, spitting of blood almost every morming for five years, shortness of breath, raw and sore throat, loss of strength, at times almost loss of voice, irregular periods—in fact I thought I was surely going into consumption. We lived in Ohio when I consulted you. You advised me to give Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery & trial, which I did, and with happy results. I got two bottles just before we started for Kansas. I did not feel as if I ever would get there, but we arrived and I used the two bottles of ‘Golden Medical Discovery’ and health returned as I used the medicine. I have only raised blood three times since 1 using it. My periods are regular, strength re- turned, and I am almost a new person. I have all faith in Dr. Pierce’s medicine. Iknow ofa lady that was cured of consump- tion by this same * Golden Medical Discovery,’ and she always sings its praise,” It is by the which are so unite the great- utmost healing the title of a Discovery ”’ is with a ‘“‘weak Bread kneaded t of the trough. ed stomach will Discovery ’’ at utterly failed to Such a case is licines but I could cross and , etc. These symp- given it a fair SNOT A WHISKY MEDICINE. % GOLDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERY ” CONTAINS NEITHER ALCOHOL NOR NARCOTICS.

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