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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1899, MUST RECONSIDER BRITISH CLAIMS Washington’s Instruc- tions to Hawaii. NOTIFIED TO TAKE ACTION R T DEMANDS FOR DAMAGES FOR IMPRISONMENT. PR | United States Government Disap- |, proves of Damon’s Mission to Italy With Inducements for Colonization. 1.—The treasure noke, which reached here sixteen days from St. Michael and eleven days from Cape Nome ihis morning, brings the first sto of the death of several New York- . members of an_Alaskan prospecting y. The dead are: AND MRS. EMIL KUHNER. OSCAR BECKER, and a man whose name is unknown. Special HONOL Harold M Haw £ Attorney natter. anc be In other | iims is cases are commended ke settle- to the na | f som Haw lly will ernment SIR THOMAS LIPTON i SAILS FOR HOME | Is Tendered an Ovation by the Peo-‘; ple of New York | tribute of gland the s for ¥ The im ht leparture »mpanied acc the down the bay g ©d between the liner gnals w and the after which the vachts e- turned anchored off Tompkinsviile, | i it STUDENTS CELEBRATE. “Plug Ugly” Night a Success at Stanford. STANFORD UNIVERSITY, Nov. 1.— The junior class to-night gave its annual celebration and ceremony atténdant upon The affair i1s called the “Plug consists of a programme of s upon the other classes given an- 2 lurid pyrotechnic display. A large audience wit; sed the ceremony, which was creditably performed. - Pears’ What is wanted of soap for the skin is to wash it clean and not hurt it. Pure soap does that. This is why we want pure soap; and when we say pure, we mean without alkali. Pears’ is pure; no free alkali. sand virtues of soap; this one is enough. You can There are a thou- trust a soap that has no biting alkali in it. All sorts of stores sell it, especially fruggists; all sorts of people use it. adoption of the class hat, upon the | Becker's body was washed on the beach at St. Michael Island,and later were found |an overturned steamer and a scow loaded | with machinery, which represented the assets of the company. Two_ survivors John Becker and Theo Diederick. T news was brought to St. Michael by natives who claim to have seen t steamer overturn during a severe wind about September rm which led 5. The G etailed to the scene of the ac turned two days later with the s Oscar Becker's body. Owing to the surf, crew of the Nordica c make an examination of the overturned mer, which no doubt conta d the of Mr. and Mrs. Kuhner and the wn man Upon Becker's body were found papers, but owing to their water-soaked condition they were not legible. The party was made up in New York City in the spring SIH CRUISERS T0 BE CONSTRUCTEL Bids Opened at the Navy Department. prev ernment launch Nordica was den She were the Bids for nd Nov. 1 i to be not ships will rews and a battery com- inch Zuns, eight 6-pol two 1 poun and four ma longre 41,50 each, T more than 1 be built in one follow bids one vessel . Va., one vessel for Two ves- one vessel for for $1,027,000 ngine Ci same typ all River speed of 18 one ‘vessel same type, displacement sel for §1,100,- ach $1,060,800. Port Richmond Two vessels, lee Drydock n island, N for $1,105,000. c Levy Y h : 5 hip and Engine Bullding hia, department’s plans, oné w York, one vessel, Two for 31, one vessel, X% each one vessel, Columbia_Iron Works, B artment’s plans, $1,116,000. E nion Iron Works, San Francisco, one ves- department’s plans, $1,041,500. ath Iron Works, Bath, Me., one vessel, de- 5 $1,041, 6 zabethport, plans, 31,03 COLONEL KERRIGAN HAS PASSED AWAY J., one ves- 455, ce Landed a Cargo of Arms and Ammunition on the Irish Coast. YEW YORK, Nov. 1.—Colonel James E. Kerrigan ‘died in Brooklyn to-day, aged 72 years. He served in the Mexican war. » was a Repre A and when the Civil On ork Volunteer Hork eecel Erin's Hope, which landed irms and munitions of war on the Irish next adventure was with the xpedition in Nicaragua. He be- e of one of the towns, and as surrounded He drove all the prominent ans in the town into a cathe- 1 the cellar with gunpowder and then exacted his own liberty by threaten- ing to blow up the building and every one He went to_the Klondike Tast sprin and was taken i1l at Dawson and obliged to return. He succumbed to a surglcal operation. CHARTER FOR CALIFORNIA NAVAL COMMANDERY | National Body Admits the Branch Recently Formed in the Golden State. NEW YORK, Nov. 1.—A meeting of the General Counell of the Naval Order of the | United States was held to-night at Del- | monicd's to grant a charter to the new, commandery of the order recently formed in the State of California, with headquar- ters at San Franclsco. The general com- | mander of the order, Rear Admiral John Walker, was unable to be present. and | Rear Admirai John W. Philip, U. S | presided. The charter was granted ufianimous vote. Following the meeting of the general council the annual mecting of the New York commandery for the election of of- ficers for the ensuing vear was held, and Admiral George Dewey was elected com- mander. - STEAMER FOUNDERS NEAR CHARLESTON Captain Believed to Be the Only One Saved Out of a Crew of Thirteen. PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 1.—A dispatch racelved by the Maritime Exchange here to-day from Charleston, 8. C., says the | steamer George L. Colwell, Captain Gas- kill, from Fernandina for New York, has foungered. The captain is the only one saved. The steamer George L. Colwell was built at Bay City, Mich., in 1 She registered 317 tons net and was 154.2 feet long, 30.7 feet beam and 10.9 feet deen. owned by the Yellow Pine Company of this city, and carricd lumber exclusively from southern ports to New York. The company has confirmed the loss of the steamer and states that the number of men lost was probably twelve. s il y Fatal Explosion. SHEFFIELD, Nov. 1.—A boiler explo- sion at the steel works of Southern & Richardson here to-day killed four and injured twenty persons. Evans’ Ale Two vears in wood—ten months in bottle* department’s plans, one | ntative in Congress in | War broke out | me @ colonel of the Twenty-fifth New | In 1867 he commanded She was | NEW YORK FPROSFECTORS | MEET WITH DISAST News Brought by the Roanoke,, W hich Arrived at Seattle With a Million Dollars From Cape Nome. ] of 1888, The Beckers and Kuhners lived, | it s said, at 110 East Seventy-first street. The Beckers, it is said, were people in comfortasle circumstances. Kuhner, who | was a jeweler, had married a Miss Becker. The family formed a party and purchased a small iron steamer and named it the Jennfe K. It was shipped to Seattle last June, and from here sent to St. Michael |on a steamer. From there the party | sailed for Hamilton station. { Severe storms were encountered, and | other difficulties caused considerable dis- sension. One day. it is said, Kuhner threatened to shoot Oscar Becker and Diederick. John Becker left the party on | January 1. Later Oscar Becker and Diederick deserted and took up new | quarter: Oscar Becker rejoined the | | original party later, but John Becker and Diederick secured other positions. Diede- | | vick said to an Associated Press repre- | sentative at St. Michael, who interviewed | him on October 5: | “The last T saw of the party was on September 3. Then the Steamer was an- chored in midstream between K\l(‘kllk{ and Hamilton on the Yukon. Théy were | probably on their way to Cape Nome. | Mrs. Becker, the mother, lives at the | part former home on Bast Seventy-first | | street, in New York City.” Owing to the lateness of the season it will be impossible to make further search | ER The Roanoke had on hoard, according to her owners, drafts and dust from Cape Nome amounting to $1,000,000. The prin- cipal portion of this is represented by drafts held by John Brynteson, Jafet Lindeberg, P. S. Anderson and C. W. A. Kiillman, four of the original locators of the camp. There were fully 200 others on board with dust valued at from $500 to $15,000 each, a large portion of the same being beach dust. The principal holdings are about as follows: Lindeberg and Brynteson, $400,000; J. R. Anderson, $100,000; C. W. A. Kijillman, $75,00; N. P. R. Hatch, $50,000; F. Schow, $30,000; H. C. Wilkinson, $30,000. Owing to the alleged impurity of the water at Nome typhoid Tever was quite general at the time the Roanoke left, and twelve deaths had occurred. Six of the patients who were sufficiently well to travel came down on the Roanoke in the big staterooms which were fixed up as a temporary hospi Jafet Lindeberg, one of Cape Nome's richest men, was among the unfortunates. James H. Girling, a well known Eng- lish mining expert, who went north last June for the Anglo-Alaskan _syndicate, died October 22 on hoard the Roanoke at Dutch Harbor. Typhoid fever caused his death. At Unalaska the body was pre- pared tor burial at the Bessie Lee Home and later interred. He has spent about iwenty vears in South Africa, but con- sidered London his home. TRING TOSETTLE *SHMOAN QUESTIOH | Three P owers Continue | 1 Negotiations. | S b Special Dispatch to The Call | | LONDON, Nov. L—While the Samoan | stiations continue it can be said defi- | itely that they are in such a condition | that there is small | f g an agreement in the United States has Oftice that it for the one power, but that been suggested whiCh appears sausfac- to e United States. tory \ tio ands are proceedi LINGLON, here. would not b agreement were reachea ture. 7lhe ¢ *USSION in London 1th the cc authorities he d in Ber out certamn 1l features on WILC all three powers—Great britaln, Germany and th United tates—appear to be agreed. At the outsel 1t is stated tf t determination wa reached that t tripartite government of the 1p should come to an end and th L more than one—shouid [t soon developed | was not likely to tire group to_one < seemed good for | powers divide the two powers govern the that_an agreeme reached giving the power, but the chanc an agreement that tw islands, thus giving be place of the present unwieldy ll‘lparli‘e‘ arrangement. It seemed fo be generally accepted by | the negotlators that tile United States | be one.of the two powers to be ented and that the island of Tu- 1 on_which the harbor of Pago Pago is located, would naturally fdll to the lot | of the United States. It is understood | that the British authorities quite fully | | coincided with this view, and while th Sern seemed to regard it f ably, | it was open for more mature appro | by the Berlin authorities. In conce i this island and harbor to the United | | count was taken of the fact that | if an agreement were reached on_that | | point it would still be for the United | States Senate to give its approval to the arrangement. One of the remaining isl- ands, Upola, is of much value, while the other, Savail, Is practically valueless. It is suggested that Great Britain cede | the Gilbert and Solomon islands to Ger- { many, the latter retiring from Samoa. | | The "Fiji Islands and some other points | | also have heen considered during the dis- cussion, but thus far Germany has not | acted favorably on the suggestion and | there have been evidences that she pre- | ferrea to retain her interests and make | compensation to Great Britain. This re- | mains open and appears to be the chief | point remaining in the way of a final ad- | | justment. | The foregoing outline was given to-day | in” quarters well Informed on. the general | lines of the negotiations, although it was { with_this reservation, that the under- | stanaings were merely’ formative and still | open to material change USTIES REiP ) RICH HARVEST §Hu'ndreds of Suits Filed in San Jose. e Spacial Dispatch to The Call SAN JOBE, Nov. 1.—The failure of the Union Savings Bank is proving a verita- ble gold mine to the Justices of the Peace | of this city and both courts are loaded | down with complaints in suits brought by | depositors against the . stockholders of that institution. | To-day 1115 suits were filed in Justice | Rosenthal's court. The attorneys in the | cases are Archer'& Archer. They repre- ;m‘m seventeen glfilnflf{s. as follows: Anne | Crist. 8. R. Johnston, Alexander Fili- ' pello, RetaJohnston, H. B. Fisher, Jennie | Johnston, Patrick and Kate Hanrahan, | | P. R. Wells, Lizzie E. Johnston, Mary | Laederich, Ida B, White, Mark Johnston, | Tillie_Bodell, S. C. Bean,'Hattie A. Timo- thy, Joseph A. Barker and H. F. Woenl. Separate suits are filed against some 150 { stockholders for their prorata liability to plaintiffs as depositors. Anne Criste and five others have each sued 128 sepa- | rate stockholders, and the other plaintiffs | have sued from that number down to a | dozen, The amounts demanded | suits range from 2.cents to $0. | A summons has been issued in each case, and already some of the small stock- holders have settled. | If Justice Rosenthal collects the regular | fees prescribed by law in each case over $5000 will jingle in his pocket, while tne Constables will rake in about $1200 for serving the summons, As this comes un- der the head of civil business the State gets none of the fees. The fees as prescribed by law are §2 when each case has been filed. $2 addi- tional if judgment by default is entered | and $1 more if a trial is had. This makes | a total of & for the Justice in each case. | In case an appeal Is taken from the Jus- | tice court another $1.50 must be paid. | Constables can collect 50 cents for each | summons served. % It is not likely these fees will be collect- ed, and it is more than likely that Justice Rosenthal has agreed to take a stipulated sum for the batch of complaints. Archer & Archer still represent some thirty additional plaintiffs, and in a few days will file nearly 3000 more suits, ustice Wallace’s court has been not |the less favored. and hundreds of suits 'have been filed there since the bank fail- ure, t The impression prevails now about town | that a Justice court is better than a Klondike claim, and there will be a grand rush for the places when the next elec- tion comes around. Besides all civil business, the Justices get a salary ot $2000 | { | | | in the dual government in | s | Bro: FALLING WALLS CAUSH 00T L Collapse of a Six-Story Building. RN Special Dispatch to The Call, CHICAGO, Noy. | 1.—Three men are known to have perished and three others reportéd missing as the result of the story building at 139 and street this evening. Con- iage was done to adjoining property, and during the excitement it | Wus reported that as many as forty lives had been lo; About $200,000 damage was done, The dead: | barn foreman for the nd Mills Company, caught in f building at time of explosion recovered by firemen. | _Frankiin 8. Hanson, proprietor New | ngland Mills Company, body removed emen, badly burned, liiton, Keeper for New Eng- r A body under tt wreckage that of his em- r was bl Charles Mullens, peddler, st scen struggling to reach an exit after the Leonard building had collapsed and buried in the ruins of the mill; unidenti- fled woman, sald to have been caught by the portion’of the Leonard building wail that fell into the street; C. Williams, ad- not known, employe of Leonard mpany., ause of the collapse is unknown, me claiming that there was an explo: on in the store of S. F. Leonard, dealer seeds, others saving that the walls fell hout apparent ‘cause. The generally ented theory is that there was an ex- slon of dust in the seed store. he crash came with less than one min- warning, and Mr. Leonard, who no- the walls of the buflding shift slight- alled to his employes to run for their | nd without a second's delay they rushed for the street, the last of them getting through the doorway just in time. After reaching the street the women | employes of Leonard rushed into the home of Mrs. Agnes Whelan, 13 Lake | street. Mrs. Whelan, however, noticed | that the house was in danger and refused to allow the women to remain. In less than half a minute the east wall fell and the house, together with the adjoining one, was buried beneath the ruins. Adjoining Mrs. Whelan's house and rext to the seed building stood a two- story frame structure occupied by Kelso in Pl | o dealers in paper. A number of young girls and two men were at work at the time and a panie followed in their ef- forts to escape. The two men smashed | the windo girl The following are_the sustained: Simeon F. Leonard, whol seeds, loss $100,000, fnsurance $80,000; C. Bowzl, owner of the building, $50,000, 1 surance full; New England Mill, E . Hanson, proprietor, $25,000; J. C. Meyer, pickles and vinegar, $1 MR. HOBART APPEARS SOMEWHAT STRONGER | s and in that way rescued the heaviest and Is Resting More Quietly. PATERSON, N. J., Nov. 1.—Vice Pres- | ident Hobart took some nourishment to- | night. Mrs. Hobart says he looks better | and stronger than he has appeared in two or three weeks. The prospects are | that he will pass a better night than he | did last night. He had the newspapers | read to him to-night, and took quite an | interest in current affairs. He also talked ;0; a time about his private business af- | airs. i i | 4 9 o’clock, and it Is not likely that he will return to-night. Vice President Hobart's wonderful vital- ity stands him In good stead. He wants to keep posted on current affairs, and when he awakens from a sleep he gener- ally asks those near him if there is any- thing new. All day long crowds of people gathered |In front of the newspaper offices where the bulletins were other gathering o osted. There was an- sympathizing friends about Carroll Hall, but none except rela- | tives were allowed to see the patient, Dr. W. K. Newton. spends most of his time in the Hobart house. and he is now the only physician in attendance. nent specialists are directing the treat- ment through Dr. Newton. Those who have passed on the case are Dr. W. W, Johnston of Washington, who was called when Mr. Hobart was first taken ill in Washington, and who visited him at Long Branch with Dr. Newton during the summer months; Mrs. Janeway and Bull of New York, Professor Osler of Balti- more and Dr. Delafield of Columbia Uni- versity. Telegrams and messages of sympathy have been received, as well as flow- ers, from all parts of the country. Through the trying ordeal Mrs. Hobart bears up surprisingly well. She remains with the nurses most of the time in the sickroom with her husband. —_———— YUKON CLOSAZD. Steamer W. 8. Stratton With Mail Aboard Sinks. SEATTLE, Nov. 1.—The steamer Hum- boldt from Skaguay reached port to-day Wwith a crowd of forty Klondikers who left Dawson October 13. They will probably be the last to arrive this season from the dis- trict by water. The Yukon and its head- waters closed for steamer navigation Oc- tober 20. On that date the river steamer W. 8. Stratton, owned by Alexander Mc- Donald, got caight in an icejam and sank in thirty feet of water. No lives were lost, but twenty-seven sacks of mail went down with the vessel. The Isthmus of Panama. Its engineers believe that they have solved the problem of the successful completion of this great enterprise. If so, it Will prove a great, benefi* to humanity, no more, truthtully speak- ing; than has Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, the remedy which never falls to cure afflictions of the stomach—for of what use is prosperity without health? The Bitters invarlably strengthens weak stomachs and torpld livers, per year. and 15 one of the blessings of the age. The doctor left the Hobart residence at | GROTE BRIGANDS MRE SUPPRESSEL Quiet Restored on the Island. S ROBBER BANDS SCATTERED g O PLANTATIONS NO LONGER IN IDLENESS. s Rapid Movements of American Cav- alry in Luzon Surprise the Soldiers of Agui- naldo. ot o Spectal Dispatch to The Call. Hughe: NE MANILA, Nov. l—General commanding in the Visayan district, has sent in an encouraging report. He the Islanu of Negros is now more peaceful and orderly than for twenty vears. The planters are pursuing their business un- disturbed by the bands of brigands who had long levied tribute on them. The Americans have scattered the brigands and propose to pursue them until they are effectually suppressed. General Young's column entered Caba- | nautuan, north of San Isidro, yesterday | morning. Colonel Parker, with two troops | of the Fourth Cavalry, took possession of the deserted town of Aliaza. Captain Batson captured & telegraph operator and his escort, finding a tele- gram to Aguinaldo from an insurgent colonel reporting that General Lawton was killed in a recent fight and that his body had been sent to Manila. The oper- ator sald that 600 insurgents were ap- | proaching Aliaza from Tarlac. Batson | placed his scouts in ambush awaiting | them. Colonel Hayes, with four troops | of the Fourth Cavalry, charged the tow of Talvarera and Cobal, dispersing 150 insurgents and pursuing them for three miles without any loss. The Americans | captured two brass cannon and a quan- tity of ammunition, Including many | Hotchkiss shells. Captain Batson took a storehouse and q -ntities of rice, sugar, corn and forty bull carts. [ The steamer Lebuan of Hongkong, 500 tons, with a prize crew from the United States gunboat Castine on board, has ar- rived here. She was captured while run- | ning the blockade off Zamboanga. She | had unloaded her cargo of merchandise. | All signs show that General Young's| rapid advance is demoralizing the insur- | gents northward. Prisoners report them to be fleeing to the hills. There are many | deserters and sick men and the former are taking their arms to the Americans. | The cavalry’s rapid movements are a puzzle to the insurgents, who think that the Americans in striking in so many places must have overwhelming forces. Aguinaldo is personally conducting the campaign. He is asking the people for rice and is trying to replenish the army with recruits, but without success. EARLY REPORT ON THE PHILIPPINE SITUATION WASHINGTON, Nov. 1.—The members | | | of the Philippine Commission—Admiral | Dewey, Professors Schurman and Wor- cester and Colonel Denby—will make a ! preliminary report to the President before the end of this week, and it is understood the royurz will be immediately given to the public. quest of the President a resuit of a conference between the President and the commission at the White House to-day. The President personally summoned the | Commissioners and an hour was spent in consultation, during which he explained the points he desired covered in the pre liminary report. It may be weeks, pos- | sibly months, before the complete report | is regdy. { Professor Schurman, who is president of the commission, sald after the mem- This report will be prepared at the re- | NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. When the kidneys are sound “they draw the uric acid from the blood. When they are un- sound the acid remains, to shatter the nerves, to weaken the heart and to dull the brain. There has never been but one way by which the kidneys could be kept in perfect con- dition and good working order, and that is, by the use of WARNER’S SAFE CURE. to-day commissioned Colonel Wilder Metcalf of the Twentieth Kansas Vol teers brigadier general by brevet for gz lant and meritorious services in action Guiguinto River, Luzon. — Stores for Manila. The paymaster of the Sclace came do from the Mare lIsland navy yard veste day and astonished some of the sale merchants by the purchases he ma bers left the White House that the report to be made this week would cover certain phases of the situation which the Presi- dent desired cleared at this time. When sked if the report would touch upon the so-called Sulu treaty (the arrangement made between General Bates and the Sul- tan of Sulu) Professor Schurman replied in the regative. ‘““That was purely a military arrange- ment.” sald he, “with which the commis- sion had nothing to do.” The Commissioners made a full verbal|far that Government vessel of stores report to the President, forecasting in|pe taken to Manila in a few days. & brief the formal report that is to be| pought ten tons of canned tomatoes, s prepared. Each of the members talked in turn not only upon the general features of the forthcoming report, but each treat- ing more in detail of a certain line of s jects upon which he formed than his colleagues; ears that the Commi : Philippines, took the course of dividing into sub-committees of one, each assum- ing a special branch of inquiry. tons of creamery butter in sealed cans, 6090 pounds of dried pea five tons of coffee, four tons of and 5000 pounds of prunes. The Unit States steamship Solace will tak board two of Lidgerwood’s drum h engines for the United States naval c ing station at Honolulu, as she will ma a stop at that point on he ® The significant feature of to-day’s con- = e feren s the revelation that the Com- Progressive Merchandising. mission s absolutely unanimous in its The store of Newman & Levinso; view respecting the proper line of treat- nmrent of the islands. LATEST CASUALTIES IN AMERICAN RANKS \IWASHINGTON, Nov. 1.—General Otis has cabled the foucwing casualties to the War Department: KILLED. ntry, at San Isidro, K, Corporal Ephraim been undergoi hav Not alone the original advantage, but been added, mized to better floors above have th ment. One of th of electrical elevato and customers ay D veyed to any departm The upper floor ha has been put stoc of outing hermetically n whole- ¢ y to Guam n, 129 Kearny street, has for several weeks ing extensive alterations premises been rearranged and the space econo- two doubling the capacity of the establish- most approved types in instantly con- t been reserved for goods S. th Infantry, at Lu- | their extens hoa, October 29, Company G, Winsor R.|and the ladies’ ekirt and waist depart- Stanley. s ment. WOUNDED. y-first Infantry, at Calamba, Oc- ; Company D, Edw:rd G. Hellen, devoted to the! ete.,, while The floor below is art goods, draperies, main floor carries ir the as formerly, the sta- foot, slight; « ourteenth Infantry, at Imus, a ds anc wveltie: Qctober 6, Company H, Corporal Henry | P15, 204 fancy goods and noveltles. =~ Overbay, foot, severe; Twenty-secon e ma partment ha at San Isidro, Octo . been moved to ampie quarters on the v F, Griggs Andrews, forearm, fourth floor. T o shment of Company 1 harles H. Pierce, thig] Newm Company K, pu presents to Thirty-sixth Infant at Lu 29,” Company O, Corporal Swank, arm, slight; James Pitt, back slight: D. L. Turrence, th sligni Third Arfillery, Company K, Dow, shoulder, slight; " Ho —— Jesse Rutledge, thigh, Arpointed Consul at Cairo. drg; Octobereli it 3TON, Nov. 1.—Judge John D, Eigh s e ey i National Committe Florida, was to-day appointed Metcalf Brevetted. tic Agent and Consul Gengral at WASHINGTON, Nov. 1L—The President DEBILITY, WEAKNESS Sleepless and Hudyan - - 50c¢ All Druggists. | + The numbers show the points of weakness that are due to a letting down of the nerves. Fig. 7, headaches and dizziness; Fig. 6, hollow eyes or dark rings under eyes; Fig. s, pale, thin face or sunken cheeks; Fig. 4, coated tongue and offensive breath; Fig. 3. palpitation of the heart; Fig. 2, dis- ordered digestion and bloating of stomach; Fig. 1, torpid liver and consti- pation. , Other symptoms of nerve weakness are clouded memory, lack of energy, despondency, tremblings, irritability, weakness, a fear of impending evil, loss of appetite, backache. Hudyan cures one and within your immediate reach | bowels, healthful sleep. Hud action. all weak nerve conditions. GET HUDYAN from YOU MAY CONSULT THE HUD 1 % 5 1 ness, Nervousness, Mental Physical Exhaustion For Men and Women. SERRREERK Ve POKLIXRIRE | O els } (KR + RS + Again, when the nerves are weak or exhausted you have twitching of the muscles, twitching of the eyelids, shooting pains in joints and muscles; your sleep is disturbed by horrid dreams, and you awake in the morning hollow-eyed and unrefreshed; you have a weak back, notice a sedi- ment in urine; you lack energy, vim and courage; you feel that life is hardly worth living. You cannot apply your- self to any task, and con- tinually have a fear of impending evil. all the above symptoms. Don’t wait a moment. Hudyan is . Don’t court premature decay nor serious mental trouble when it is so easy for you to obtain a permanent cure. Hudyan speedily makes its influ- ence felt in nerve quietude, improved a petite, gain in weight and strength, corrected o dy for building up and rejuvenating yan is nature’s own reme: the nervous system. Hudyanis a positive cure for all nervous troubles—it matters not the cause. Hudyan rapidly builds up the nerves and brings all the organs into harmonious Hudyan provides the needed nerve and tissue nourishmentthatis necessarytoa permanent building up of health. increases the blood supply, corrects all faults of digestion, gives healthful vitality to the nerves and nerve centers. Hudyan promotes healthful sleep. Hudyan corrects Hudyan quiets and soothes the irritated nerves, your druggist—50c a package, or 6 packages for $2.50. If your druggist does not keep Hudyan send direct to the HUDYAN REMEDY CO., Corner Stockton, Ellis and Market Streets, SAN FRANCIScO, CAL. YAN DOCTORS ABOUT YOUR CASE FREE OF CHARGE. CALL OR WRITE. GIEPIII PP 00 0000000000000 PRI PP 0I IRt 0Pttt ettt ettt sttt ittt ttttttttttttsttsssntstsetosessststssssssotoss Reaaacanaccaassas RS S S ORY