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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1900. BY CABLETO The Call, 77 = 7 LONDON LOSING CONFIDENCE IN THE CABIET Policy of Lord Salisbury Is Con- demned. . —EmE—— na Continues Difficult | People in a State of Discontent and CERMANY HAS CIVEN RUSSIA MAHY BEASONS Declares the Withdrawal OI%Irresolute Troops From Peking Would Prolong War. 1 in Ch n Diplomatic Sense Rather There Is Much Grumbling Than From Military Over Public Af- Standpoint. fairs. B | i RLIN, Sept. 8.—The us cable- | pt. 8.—Pending Lord Salis- grams g seriatim g to Ger- s return next week Great Britain is x prope 1 answer | apparently pursuing a policy of Inactivity v n appear ich possibly w hereafter appear to e been masterly even tnough it p . reality is only another instance « “flabby, weak-kneed irresolute- ten attributed to the Cabinet a eat years. By the time Lord Salis- arrives the situation will probably & E: bry, d, reports will have been sup; ten- | received from the Peking Ministers and 2 given t views will have been communicated Office offi ) the powers. Diplomatists appear to be ¥ E her pleased that Lord Salisbur; ha . ‘lying perdue in the mounta as g ¥ . £ the diplomatic corps re- to a representative of the Assoei- That continental statesmen o situation had been ameliorated d has thus been sar to a hasty conclu- r he, “the Premie touch with the Foreign Of- P cnabled to take a ca ide of his summer refug z ibly have reached under s o e more excitable mem- RIS abinet 2 Salisbury Is Blamed. reflec wi inion of the British ce in Lord sausbury 1 tnat he does tue weighuer most every {inister of the powers concerned his post during this acute of the most important dip- ons of recent years. Most 100, have been in th a'affaires, and now bassador Choate nas and for the long holiday. with the exception of the L already cabled that the For- the powers, discour- liate evacuation of ck of reliabie infor- as to how the dilemma of Peking solved. Most * statements ely with the object of indirect- facts. There i no doubt that fairly palatable prescription lowed by the British Cabinet, es d from a (-informed 1 as the Chinese Gov- tolerable ommission- tructions will find n ready to respond and aid in Willlam R. Rockhill, spe- of the T Investigate in China, nd report recently All Eyes Toward Washington. Washington, it is now eded, is for yment the center of diplomatic ae- i news from t is eagerly nd the latest exposition of the e United States in the matter d as likely to be acceptable and 8 disposing of the unfounded sus- m that the Russian scheme was - gated with th of the tes admir $ 1t Britain’s alleged pusillanimity o ack of tiative, however, furnished r opp ity to grumble, and now T practically the whole nation i= “on the weelk growl The newspapers contain col trans amns of editorials and letters vindica- « tively attacking the collective Cabinet | nd th idividual departments of the srmany the Cat m- | for the affairs of the railroad companies and of the church, to say nothing minor cause for disputation. The fact is ntry is suffering from an overplus »xic both military and political, now reached what Augustine Bir- Hlle, member of Parifament, has aptly 2 | termed the ‘‘sodawater” stage. The trades unfonists annual congress at Huddersfield to-a lon and a2 quarter of skilied wor men were represented in the deliberations, which hav usual because of the sensitive | the public feeling caused by str and rumors of strikes Pre<ident Pickles' address, deallng with the | industrialism, was socialistic. The approval of collectivism by the congress has been rather a shock o the editorial i writers, A resolution condemning the | South African war and the annexatlon of read- | and state of ABLE TO TELEPHONE the two republic: t the dictates of cos- | mopolitan capitalists.” WITHOUT USE OF adopted, 1s regarded as significant in WIRES | {2155t the coming general clection. - 'he widespread growth of American é ! mercial competition with Great Bri r¥_Preece, Engineer to the was never more apparent than Postoffice, Makes az In- present and never were the friends of | & bty Makes an In | British home {ndustries more alive to eres cement. the dangers that are threatening their BRAT S—At to-day's | commercial welfare. Papers in every po- £ science section of | 11on of the United Kingdom publish dal. p for tx on of | garnings against the insidious foes anil e on for the Advance- | (here are signs that the British manufac- et innual session | tyrers and workmen are awakening to - the the importance of attending more close! e requirements of customers. The London Times, which has recently devoi- t per 'ts with wire- | <3 much space to carefully prepared arti- ess 1d found it quite pos- | cles on American industrial methods ani sit - speeches gix their advantages over the policy followed g ea without w by British firms. prints to-day a two- £ was : ctical commer- | column_ review of American competition :. system might ‘L» extended to | in small articles of hardware, in which |t ps and between ving at last succeeded in beating thel I extend an invitation fo all vis- itors during the grand celebration to visit my ftailoring establishments, where will be found a complete line of the newest and best of fine, all-woo! materials for suits and overcoats at very ing styles whether you order or not. Fine Business Sults 15.50 to 3 to JOE POHEIM, The Tailor, moderate price: 1 will be pleased to show you the prevail- Elegant Dressy Sults. Nobby Overcoats 1130-1112 Market §t. and 201 r] ‘-n )o:‘::.uut‘mo_ry st., t Sa; are | ited States | ezutiful occasion ® settle | ime the status of foreigners in | overnment for thelr conduct of the war, | of | concluded thefr | attracted more interest than | the recent | scientific and philosophical phases of | ongratulates the home manufacturers In | 7 American competitors on the price of sev- lines of goods. In conclusion the ““The British manufacturer ened from his lethargy and has g Te has awak- '\"t‘]‘ at American ingenuity whi pro- & scores of useful novelties scarcely | known here E them under the eves of the local manufacturers in the same line. This ground is being some- | what recovered l t ITALY'S NEW KING IS NOW THREATENED BY ANARCHISTS Would-Be Murderer Is Said to Have Gone From Camden, N. J., | to Do the Deed. | Dispateh to The Call. | ’ YORK, Sept. 8.—A World cable vs: Gre . ess is felt alian pelice circles to recent nist reports from New York. It is undoubted conspiracy is on | to mu & and that the m Paterson, 3 1 been notified New York that twenty dangerous ists would land at Napies on | or 26, but in spite of most vig- | arr s have Yyet ala now iples police he st surveillaice no been effected. It appears that anarchists coming over to Europe have adopted a complete sy tem of transformation of passports, with | documents to match, so that the ‘police are nonplused Victor anuel is perfectly aware o1 | the danger elting him, but he bravely | defies his foes and says thqt a king is not worthy of his crown who cannot risk | his life to defend it. His only regret as | expre: 1o his former tutor, General Osle, is that there is no direct heir to the throne, which would eventuaily revert to the Duke of Aosta. BOERS SPLIT UP AND RETREATING NORTHWARD Lord Roberts Sends a Report of Suc- cess of the British Forces. LONDON, Sepnt. 8. following dis- patch has been received at the War Of- fice from Lord Roberts: BELFAST, Friday, Sept. 7.—Ian Hamil- | ton succeeded in turning the Boers' right | 1 caring the way for Buller's aa-| var & Dundonald_and Brocklchurst occupied denburg Thursday. The Boers are split up and going north- | ward and east. Most of the guns and | stores have been sent to Krugerspoort. Hart, who Is operaling southeast of Krugersdorp, reports that among the| dead Boers left on the field it is belleved | that the body of Theron has been found.” | Krugerspoort is a small town about twenty miles north by east of Lydenburg. | Commandant Theron of the Boer army was Known as a great scout. It was he | who commanded the Boer flying patr that derailed and b jed, early In Au gust, near Honigspruit, the train carry ing United Sta Consul Stowe and fi ing the stars and stripes. 'CRUISER BALTIMORE , REA(&E_S NEW YORK | Flagship of Rear Admiral Watson,? Who Returns From the Philippines. NEW YORK, Sept. &—The United States crulser Baltimore, in command of Rear Admiral Watson, arrived here early | to-day. The Baltimore has been making | a slow trip from Yokohama, from ‘which port she sailed on May 1. On her voyage | | she made stops at Shanghai, Hongkong, | Singapore. Colombo, Suez, Malta, Gibral- tar, Havre, Gravesend, Beifast and Green- | | ock, leaving the latter port on Augus 19.‘ | Owing to the existence of bubonic plague at Glasgow at the time of the vessel's | | stay at Greenock; which is only twenty- | | five miles from Glasgow, quarantine will be maintained over her at her anchorage | for a time. No person will be allowed on | board, nor will any of the ship's com- pany be permitted to g0 on shore with- out permission of the health officer of the port. The temperature of all on board will be taken before any disposition is made of the vessel. The Baltimore will go to the Brooklyn navy yard for extensive repairs. As she | | has been in service for about ten years, it wiH be impossible to know the fuil extent of repairs needed until after she has been surveved. She will probably be out of | commission a year or mor: CHURCH MEMBERS AMONG A BAND OF “REGULATORS” ! Sensation Caused by the Indictment of Prominent People in a Missouri City. HARTVILLE, Mo., Sept. §.—Great ex- citement exists here owing to the action of the Grand Jury in returning indict- ments against twenty prominent citizens of this (Wright) county for the alleged | | murder of Jonn Mitchell and Jack Kauff- | man and the wounding of Dayid Mitcheil, in_April, 1897, by “‘regulators.” | Four years ago a band of thieves began | wholesale operations in nearly every part of the county. Many arrests were mafle, | but alibis were ways forthcoming. | Finally the citizens organized for their | own protection. Susplcion pointed to the | home of Mitchell as the pendezvous for e thieves, and in an attempt of the egulators” to apply the hickory switen a fight ensued, which resulted in the kill- ing. A deathbed confession of one of the Llarlles engaged in the fight came to the nowledge of Prosecuting Attorney H. | H. Ball_ who secured the indictments. | Chiurch members, ex-officials and political | candidates are elther directly or indirectly | implicated. MELBOURNE MACDOWELL IS SUE_D‘FOR DIVORCE | Well-Enown Actor Is Arrested and | Placed in Jail Upon the | Charge of Cruelty. 4 NEW YORK, Sept. §.—Melbourne Mac- | Dowell, the actor, who was the husband | and leading support for Fanny Davenport | until her death, was arrested to-day on | an order which ‘charges him with having | cruelly treated his wife, who was Mrs, | Wilhelmina Maria Brafman, the divorced | wife of a wealthy Baltimore broker, and who alleges that since she married ‘the | actor in Jun t e "fi“ef) paune last he has constantly I} { acDowell was taken to Ludlow- | Jai} and his bond fixed at $2000. g His wife has filed a suit for divorce charging cruelty. She left him in this city last week and it is sald returned to her parents in Baltimore. They were married last June in Norfolk, Va. Mac- Dowell refused to make any statement. | ¥ AND HARRISON ACCEPTS | Replies Received by the President Relative to Appointments to the Hague Board. WASHINGTON, Sept. 8.—Ex-President (;‘;z:::li has decllne% the fre;ldent'a ap- polntment as a member of the Interna- has accepted the appointment. | hatred | of hundreds | which was not agreeable to them. | apparent that there is no accord among | | would compel the evacuation of the Eng- | sattled and Chile still occupies the prov- CLEVELAND DECLINES k: FRANCE ON THE HORKS OF VERY GRAVE DILENAN Knows Not What Action to Take Relative to Trocps in Peking. G Would Like to Hold Them at the Capital of the Flowery Kingdom but Is Influenced by Russia. SR PARIS, Sept. 8.— Russia's proposition Peking has resolved it: for her which French tackling very The complete withdrawal from after careful consideration, is now dcemed to be alto- ance is in a dilemma. withdraw from 1f into a problem atesmen are now gether in line with France's views, and as | born, In an article the Outlook for July, 1899, by George Kenr.a. ing than when I the most effective method of deallng | Quesada speak in the Esteban Theater, Matinzas, Cuba. aid Y sl duks Vi > Empress Dowager and her clique | mMmany audiences under the spell of eloquent speech and in the #rip ¢ - e, Fitethe Bigoyess Dowadar &f F cllauo | fona) excitement; but I have rarely withessed such a scene de At backache and was) . - witloon f advisers. France is now forced 1y | Honal exeltement i 3 3 2 i K ry nervous, In at : oA R B e gy upon the dead patriot, Marti.”" In a lettef to The fact, the eatarrh choose ‘between the course she would | gine Company, written from Washington, D, rather adopt and the policy dictated to | her by the Russian alliance and | French statecraft has been devoted for the past week in an enfleavor to splice these two conflicting poiicies into a com- promise which will not jeopardize her| friendship with Russia and at the same‘ time wAl not prejudice her own position in China. The suggestion, therefore, | ca that while the bulk of troops be with- tarrh.”’ | Peruna does not operate upon the sys- drawn from Peking a small international | tem " as the usual remedy does. It is not force be still retained in the city comes | g local treatment, It uperates as a sys- as a peculiarly acceptabie idea to France. | temic remedy. It gives tone to the Russia and Gern appear to be the | Weakened nerve centers and thus gives { tone to the mucous membranes that line the various organs of the boay. Catarrh is always located in some only serious stumbli blocks in the way of a general acceptance of this compro- mise, the first named desiring the totai withdrawal of the allied forces and the | latter wishing a continued occupation, | Should the prpposition fall through and | Russia and America withdraw all their troops France would undoubtedly follow | suit. Too Great a Shock. mu- Peruna, The Greatest Remedy of The Age [Gonzmo De Quesada, Seeratary of the Cuban Legation in Washington. Senor Quesada, secretary of the Cuban Legation in Washington, is an orator “Peruna | can recommend as a very good medicine. It is an excellent strengthening tonic and it is also an efficacious cure for the almost universal complaint of : m ve Peruna is the best remedy in the warld for summer catarrh- cholera morbus, cholera infantum, diarrh@a, and dysentery of adults. \remedy for these diseases i1s necessary when Peruna is taken. ADVERTISEMENTS. > appear. It is useless to doctor | cause is removed. caus It is the o | remedy yet devised. Howard Harry Marshall symo- once the Peruna removes the ystemic catarr “I have been troubled ot ears. All_remec - o cure. 1 heard -y rough a friend and be | In less than four months 1 aw | man »w weigh mor in_n b His wife writes: “T want to give m | experience with Peruna It is the medicine that American peop! buy if they want to be cured of catarr ! have had catarrh for twenty years, and it had extended throughout my entirs system. 1, hund dollars trying to get re pegt to be cured. ds "As I was seeing so ers ahout Peruna, [ + but had no faith | tle, but did [ A b othe I kept on arrh will leave. ““/ will do all | can to get your madicine into the homes of the | American people, as it is the only sure cure for catarrh in any form or any part of the human bocy.” Mrs. Hannah Marsha Martha Wittkopp writes from lle, Mich., - had catarrh of and pelvie organs. | I was troubled with hawking and spitting | cold ver) rad almost stant headache. My stomach was all out of order, I daid not sleep well and was more tired in the morn- Senor Quaeada says had permeated my ystem and I almost despaired of well. wrote you for ad ce ard you ad- Peruna. I began to gain right am now well. My parents ina very much. As for my- peak W enough of it I T my lifeas I - Gonzalo De Quesada. Vell 41 do us membrane. Catarrh is a _fi ine _Co.. ondition of the blood vessels of these £ “gum- embranes. Peruna gives tone to these ats ex- ssels and restores them r naturai to hot feity ated and Thus' It is ot of th CTUNa 1se of catarrh and the sy strikes the | shou suffl It every person of summer ca- at the L i. e., dyspepsia, No other It would be too rude a shock to the Russo-French alliance for France to abandon her ally and remain in Peking, with a3 her assoclates her heredit enemies, England and Germany. | AU MND CHILE MAKING READY T0 60 TO WeR Conflict Imminent Over the Possession of Ter- | French Government appreciates the great in the Muscovite pro- | a continuance of | upation would pre- | element of wisdom | posal, reccgnizing tha the present form of o vent early and direct negotiations with | the Empress Dowager, who fears to re- | turn to the capital, and that, moreover, the administration ‘of the affairs of the | city would throw fmmense responsibility | and labor upon the European command- ers. This would necessitate the proper policing of Peking, with its millions of in- habitants, all of whom are now filled with for the “forelgn devils,' the ar- rangement of sanitary and fife precau- tions and an endless list of other muni- cipal-deta his would be a well nigh | impossible in view of the diverse | | | | | | task nationalities and' languages of the army | . of oCcupation. The provisiontng and keep- ritory. ing open of communication with the sea- | | coast for a large force in Peking during | ——— the winter, when the country is snow cov- ered und frozen, also presents a problem of extreme difficulty. Other Influences. | United States Involved to ExtentThat | Chile Makes Conditional Attend- ance at Pan-American Another move which would impel | France to follow Russia if the latter with- Congress. draws her troops is the fact that the | French forces would thereby avoid re-| o R maining under the command of Fieldl correspondence of the Assoctated Press. von Waldersee. This feel-' ing against French soidiers taking orders | - - e ] 2 Trom a German commander, while not| VALPARAISO, Chie, Aug. 1—A three | discussed, is nevertheless very |Sided conflict is in prospect on account of | ¥ nourished among the people here, | the Tacna-Arica question, which re- An eye-opener as to the lacs of accord | malned in abeyance since the treaty of amons the various military command- | Ancon, which terminated in 1584, the vic- ers in China is furnished by the report|torious war of Chile against Peru and of Captain Marolles, who commanded the | gojjvia. It was agreed then that the v Marshal Cour lates each day's events In the form of a | of Tacna and Arica for ten years, after diary, in which appear statements which | which a plebescitum was to declare a Paris journal describes as tantamount | whether those provinces wanted to be in- | to a masked indictment of the Russian |corporated with Chile or returned to Peru. Osoers] Hiessl With the obstnacy | The date passed off, however, without any of a soldier executing an order, it says, | &5 The Chil wished to Win or even to be beaten aione; | Plebescitam being faken, —EHe Bhleans The result of this ambitlon was the loss | put it off under this or that pr . | of lives. Marolles, under , cause, it is claimed, they wanted to col- 7, writes: onize the provinces with théir own people cked the east arsenal at| and thus secure a majority in thelr favor t notifying any ome, but| . the holding of the plebescitum. It is cothen the | sserted that they sent their soldiers and operate, | all kinds of people from the slums of the | Chilean seaports. But Peru held that only | the military chiefs.” | logitimate natives of the two provinces | Two days later Marolles writes: *“The should be entitled to vote at the ple- | Russians made a reconnoissance on the | pescitum and that the method of voting | left bank, without mnotifying any one, | gng the ghalifications of the voters should | when a fusillade began and the town suf- | j,¢" determined by a special protocol, as fered an hour’s bombardment. | provided for in the Ancon treaty. After recounting other instances of the | “Chije at last consented to this in 159, | tsolated actions of the Russians Captain! .« ' Gime when she anticipated a war | Marolles says that June 30 General Stezel | 35 fhe Argentine Republic and feared advised him that he would withdraw the | oYl mignt side with the latter. The Bil- next day the outpost at the vallroad de- | jinghursi-La ‘lorro protocol was then ¥ which was indispensable to the | signed at Santiago and approved by the rench concession. | Clitlean” Senate. But Chile peacefully ar- 3 | ranged her dispute with Argentina an Tk wt Heowes | her® Chamber of Deputies did not even The next entry is dated July 4, and | giscyss the question of the protocol, reads: “The Russlans evacuated the rall- | wyion “peing approved only by the Senate, road denot at 7:50 this morning. As the | cmained a dead letter. post is absolutely indispensable to protect | "“Tho question of the final ownership of the French concession, whose evacuation | Tacna and Arica has thus remalned un- Russli: Tientsin eventually English contingent withou the Germans and had to lish concession, French and Marolles a force of Japanese, |inces,with the deltberate intention,accord- nglish occunied it | ing to many Chilean papers and political eport thus shows that there | spoakers, of keeping them forever. Still, rd, even between the French | many Chileans admit that the ‘“‘Chilean- | slans, ization’ of the two provinces has pro- _The letter of Admiral Seymour to the | quced no effect and that they are as | French commander eulogizing the splen- | strongly attached to their mother country | did conduct of the French of his Peking | as on the day when they were taken {rom relief force has created a most pleasant | her, and that the two provinces are eager- impression here and has proved of much | |y waiting for the day when they will be has dispatehed fo n a similar General ( rmer President, o l‘ DOMESTIC POSTAL RATE the Argentine Republic is drilling L f tional guards. Tn addition. there | TO THE PHILIPPINES to be instituted in Chile | tary service, and the re | of armed peace may be i the | Mail May Now Be Sent to the Islands republics of South America as a result | the fact that Chile now holds over |a st | the Guif of Aden, August | from Sourat water, have been found to have landed on the Arabian coast near Makulla The German bark Kiandra, Captain Bunje, from Philadelphia for Stockho! From Canada Cheaper Than to Great Britain. sword of Damocles through her unwiil- | ingness to settle finally the old question | CHICAGO, Sept. S.—A special to th of Tacna and Arica [ DHpans, . tah % - 7 e S SES feation was DISASTERS AT SEA. | | Shipwrecked Sailors of British Ship 4 Land on Arabian Coast. i 3 LONDON, Sept. 8.—The missing mem- reply was | bers of the crew of the cked British . adian post ashore below fication to while bound Break- eamer Indra, which wen 1 Delaware ya for before reported ashcrecn the east c »f the Island of Oeland, after having partly discharged was floated and towed to + Karlskrona, Sweden. She is not leaking. | P'n¢ -y 11 GLASGOW, Sept. 8 Agditional Plague Cases. An official bulletin eral McClernand Sinking. Gen: PRINGFIELD, Ill., Sept. S.—General jesued to-day says two additional bubonte SPRINGFIEL Dlague cases bave been sdmitted to the | John: Mce nd sufiered &_shook Mie hospital and that nine additional persons | Friday night sud €OF & e WE 0 WA have been plm-j under observation. during the eemed some brighter, l'mli i ¥ ¥ v his death is expecte: Train Robber Convicted. Be:Swver - nable to retain DENVER, Sept. 8.—A special to the | nouri e News from Clayto ays: Tom Ketchum, bette lack Jack," Walla Walla Out of Quarant the leader of that ter- VICTORIA, B. C., Sept. §.—T the outhw B ral year Walla Walla w: was to-day convicted of train robbery, the | tine this afternogn. penalty for which in New Mexico is deat are still held. O OO0 CACR0H 0RO OROR0 (ORCHOROSCRCACSOROROO0R0HOACRCH 0R0R0: 0FORCH QHCHCS CRCRCHOROSCROICROROROIN: g'eawlr \'ztll\la in t;‘mpr(}\'\' ng tlr:’e An‘ggf-‘ freed from Chilean dummmlon.l }:sru‘ rench relations than he could possi bitration in order have anticipated. 1t relindled Frendly | Lo cortol posbetully the ques | sentiments, which bore their first fruit this week on the occasion of the visit of 500 re}wrflsenlnflves of the Britsh Cham- ber of Commerce to Paris. The warmth of thelr reception was noteworthy. There were a number of prominent men among the delegates and at a banquet given by the British Chamber of Commerce at aris, at which M. Millerand, Minister of Commerce, was the guest of honor. an | to settle peacefully the question of the | | final ownership of these provinces. And | | here comes the point where the United | | States and the Argentine Republic are | | dragged into_the dispute. | | The United States Government, having | | invited all the Spanish-American coun- | tries to participate in the second pan-| American congress to be held at Mexico | | in Octaber, 1501, must have been surprised to receive'from the Chilean Government a conditional acceptance. Chile, being | aware that the congress was to proclaim | arbitration as the only method to settle international differences on this conti- | nent, answered that it would send repre- sentatives to the congress only on con- Anglo-French demonstration took piace, M. Millerand proposing the Queen's health and the diners responding by singing the ‘‘Marselllaise. The press comments are most sympathetic. What was known as the Muscat Inci- dent between France and England, aris- | dition that arbitration should apply ex- | ing from the French claim, which the | clusively to future disputes. The accept. | British disputed. to a coaling station on | ance o{ such a condition, it is pointed | the coast- of Muscat, Arabia, is now finally settled, France having made good er claim, and a telegram from Muscat, recelved on Friday afternoon, announced that the first shipment had been landed out, would leave Chile freé to act as she pledsed with reference to the annexation of Tacna and Arica. Meanwhile the people of Argentina he- gan to fear that the Chileans would not at the French concession. accept the decision about thie Chilo-Ar- entina f;ovinev“iumit q:enuor;’. which had | & een submitted to the arbitration of | Cotton Mills Closed. Queen V|ctorltn. and as if to suppart an® MANCHESTER, Sept. 8.—Thirty Lan- | Justify their fears it is reported that the | Chilean Government has trespassed upon the absolute rl{,hll of the arbitrator in imposing the obligation of limiting the award to such and such points. No wonder, then, that amid this mess of conflicts the governments are making cashire cotton mills have already eiosed. Many more mills are expected to close next week. The opinion of leading spin- ners is that the normal conditio trade will not return until Novell:l'heorf ‘when the new crop comes in. The idle pre| tions for war. hile CI 0] rhluvu will have to be maintained out | sent to Germany her favorite %;ohr:l‘ of the union’s funds. 1 Korner, to buy guns and cannons, Peru ! fi% g : : § ! : g § 8 % | | g Disorders of Men STRICTLY RELIABLE. 3 g i : 3 JALISTS. \ We make a specialty of contracted disorders of = chronic and complicated from neglect or improper trea We are the only specialists in San Francisco with a t hospital for the accommodation of out-of-town patients and o to remain_during treatment. Our offices are the most elaborate and private in the every modtrn appliance and instrument known for the t these disor- dersA' We have the largest practice on the Pa: ating every form of Weakness and Contracted Diseases of Men, and absolutely nothing else. h have become rent sroughly equipped s wishing and contain Varicocele fs an enlargement of the most | By far the greater sumber of patients, vital blood vessels in man. It is commonly | seeking reiief f led weakness, are known as varicose veins. In their normal | strong. rct X n every other respect. condition thelr function is to carry off waste | Our theory of Vitality, Prema- material, thus enabling the organs to re- | tureness. etc.. are not weaknesses, but ceive fresh nutrition. OWINg te the breaking | symptoms of inflammatory proc in the down of the valves, caused by the paralysis | Prostate Giand (so-called neek dde of the muscular coat of the veins, they | caused by contracted disorders and early dissipation, Is now being adopted by the legling specialists of the world, and that bigbear, ‘Weakness of Men, Erom the list of fncurable diso the layman can understand thas not cure inflami ses, un- ielz_administration, go from bad to der our local plan of treatment, ard reducing the eniarged an T Prostate, Immediate resulte as ine become dilated and local stagnation of the blood follows. The vital nerves, being de- prived of their proper quality and quantity of mourishment, weakness is the resuit Statistics prove that 25 per cent of the male population are afflicted with varico- cele in some stage of the diseage. We guar- antee to cure varicocele in one week at our office. or four weeks of home treatment. Without the use of kaife, caustic or liga- ture. We have cured over 2000 cases with- ‘ dicated by increased circulation and re- out a single faflure or unpleasant result. | newed strength, is observed. Our colored We invite corresnondence and the fullest | chart the organs, whi we send free on investigation of our methods, and can refer | application. is Interesting to any ome wish. 1o cured patients if Gesired. | in& to study the anatomy of the mal Gifices and Fo-pital, entire upper floos. 997 Market Street, Cor. Sixth. g 3 i g i 4 g