Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
T \ HE SAN FRANCISCO CALIL, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1900. RUSSIA REFUSES TO CHANGE PLANS Has Not Modified Its Intention to| Withdraw Forces From Peking. Special Dispatch to The Call. 1l begi Governm ¥ give Le reaches Peking. er Rockhill's arrival reported to the n )epartment RUSSIAN COMMANDER ORDERS REPAIR MATERIAL " CHAFFEE EARLY MEETING OF THE CABINET PROBABLE can 17.—President Mc- Secretary Cor- for Washington to-mor- 1 to-day assigned at the s of state attention in d to them isfon was reac reason ted on authority, however, it w ) cons with 1t with t ie that a Cabinet for Wednesday e action within a few uays. who is in Another t for decision is in re- ring of troops in China. ations of Chaffee missioner Rockhill will have a here. This was A committee, y- Mayor Robertson, called on not, ¥ 1o get his consent to recelve on Wednesday nigh s he consented to do. and he EMENT MADE WITH CHINESE AT FUHKIEN WASHING artmen The State ed a dispatch from au, China, transmitting greement entered into & ¥ general of forelgn Con- in sub- thing e live and merchants the Rus- British_and Hsu Ying ited States, Jap; nch Consuls anc y and General POWERS ACCEPT LI AS NEGOTIATOR LONDON, Sept. 15, raphic asserts that ccepted Li Hung C m.—The Dally > powers have will prob- accept Prince Ching as otiator, It says also that the powers have agreed 10 insist that a central government, satis- to the powers, sk 1 1 a and that full re 1l for the attacks o communicatio the B Schwarzenstein, will purposely Marshal v del Walderse FULL AUTHORITY IS GIVEN PRINCE CHING WASHINGTON, Sept The Chinese Minfster has received a dizpatch from Prince ( g. ds -ptemt §. stating that he has b lothed with tog with otfate peace, 1 Wu to ‘ask the to inst M >tiations at once. 1 the dispatch to the State De- partment. GERMANS CAPTURE AND BURN TOWN OF LIANG . Sept ghai accompan captured and & September 15. kifled, The 17 official dispatch A German naval bat- forty Bengal Lan- burned the town of A hundred Boxers inese regular tro ace had previously was one man ki Sha e wounded. MANY KILLED AND LONDON, Sept. 17.—The Bri mander at Taku cables that a party en- aged in destroying gunpowder at '} ung- chow, has been blown up. Sixteen were killed and twenty-two Iinjured by the ex- plosion. - LI HUNG CHAN ARRIVES AT TIENTSIN LONDON, Sept from Si arrived at Tientsin. 17.—A special dispatch Li Hung Chang has DISKPPOINTED MOCRATS ARE SEEKING COIN Light Contributions Made by Wealthy Members of the Party. Spe Dispatch to The Call, BUREAU, WELLINGTON HO- GTON, Sept. 17 demo- . are mourning over the of their gigantic campalgn fund nagers ming, and those in close about campaign finances conditions are little, if any ere four years ago, 1 Committee had scarce. v 1o pay its postage bills. Senator Clark of Montana has :ted them. Oliver Hazard Perry - Iy s dtsappo end as for Cocgan, the mere mention of his name is obnoxious to Senator Jones and former Governor Stone. When the XKansas City convention seated Clark’s delegas from Montana the party man- agers de no secret of the dreams they entertained that the multi-millionaire would eontribute at least a half-million ¥ormer Governor Stone of Mis- eouri was deputized to have a talk with Clark, and when he came back from that talk his sanctimonious face was longer than ever. The $600,00, of which the members of the committee had @reamed, had dwindled far down has beel | has been another disappointment | national committee and. ie mare. or lov | cognizant of trials and | 4 i | | would be the below the $100,000—that, they felt sure, minimum limit—and had become a paltry $25,000. When Mr. Stone remonstraied with him and mildly hinted that he ought to give more the lines about Clark's mouth became firm, he began talking about *“heavy expenses in the Montana conte and Stone hurriedly told him it was all right in fear that there mf,ghl vet develop a string to the $25,000 Bift O. H. P. Belmont was looked upon as certain to give at least $109,000. All he would give was $10,00 and the committee's agent who secured that subscription held out 10 per cent for himself. This 10 per cent commission business has caused a good deal of dissatisfaction amoeng members of the Democratic parly who are disposed to criticise what they call Chai ones’ “amateurish” meth- ods his promise of 10 per cent commission on ' all subscriptions, Chairman Jones turned “Buck” Henrich- sen of Illinois a lot of lesser lights, vassers. There was not much ob- raised to this so long as small coitributions come under the 10 per cent | provision, for it was Lelieved that these } local canvassers were able to reach a lot of little fellow: that it would not pay campaign managers to deal with, hut when it came to blg subscriptions like that of Belmont with its §1000 commis- sion, there was a howl. Other _members committee ! thought Jones or Stone ought to have got that subscription 80 the party might have had the benefit of the whole amount. The committee expected to get $25,000 from John R. McLean. but McLean is In Europe and it fs understood that they ave nothing from the Ohio leader as yet except a promise and that promise calls for not much over one-fifth of the amount expected. Jemocrats in touch with the Congres- sional campaign committee, which working in complete harmony with the tribulations of the more important organizations, say that another source of disappointment has been the lack of substantial returns from prominent Gold Democrats who have signified thelr friendship for Bryan, Almost “without excertion overtures of managers for financial assistance have been met by polite refusals. But despite these disappointments Democratic man- agers seem to have recefved much com- (’l?t? from the lmpeauve’mhentt in local con- ons as compared with four years ago. If the Tammany leaders do not contribute heavily to the hational fund, they will, it is expected. put up a fund to be used in the effort to secure New York's elec- toral votes for Bryan. e question has assumed | be necessary for | | the State Cabinet members. s it will be more con- | for himself and | directly concerned | meeting | r Thurs- | t of such members as can | White House talk here that answers | re expected and that ! s nce at hand that the United s must be ready to take decided and | Of this position to know will | juestion supposed to be 1l also prob- e that he could not re- The President has he must not fn.'%tl the dig- e and he will not be a at least until he has satis- rsed of the Chinese question. com- | {8} “DRYDOLLAR’S” BIG PICNIC A VERY SATURNALIA OF CRIME VANGUARD OF SULLIVAN'S PICNIC. BEGINNING ON THE LEFT, THE FIRST FIGURE IS THE SENATOR HIMSE THE THIRD IS “KID” McCOY, THE FOURTH “TERRY” McGOVERN AND THE SIXTH SHARKEY. } | o Ty R A LN . =t o e @ ENATOR TIMOTHY “DRYDOL-|and did it under the protection of several | than one. Behind a brass band the white =, LAR" SULLIVAN is one of the in- police captains and sergeants, detectives | capped members of the association left ,\, . s of New ¥ hose fame 1 h of uniformed policemen. | Sullivan’s headquarters, the Metamora = f 1d Republic carrfed | Club, No. 207 Bowery 9 o'clock yes- St s friends to Donnelly’s morning, and marched through newsp ad | grounds er's place was trans- | istrict to the foot of Rutgers abfoal tha and | fc 0 a paradise for sporting men | street, where the steamboat Grand Re- | ey Ao aliber. At least 100 gambling | public was in walting. piohic s a in full play in the College [ “Sulllvan in the first line of march- The New York | one of | Point grounds. 1 saw three full-fledged | ers, with ‘Kid' McCoy, “Tom’ Sharkey its young men to the fu ghts pulled off, and pickpockets re- | “Terry’ McGovern and Civil Justi Jamblers with privi wrote d those onlookers of thelr watches | Roesch and Finn. oller Bird S. Col- i no tav }and money that othe Imost as crafty | er and Deputy Co Michael F. Day n v defied almost every STATEMENTS § -~ BRYAN REFUT Y FOOSEVELT Cites 2 Few Instances Wherin the “idle” Soldiers Are Very Active. A W A | | { | HELENA, Mort., € velt To-MuITow 1Orag for Bulte, masing Boulaer Crees ana | meeting is 2 | row g speak The Roo - arriv w sho Clar ai Butte y the vern there to ; Ogden and He will { Dillon, Lima, Poca.ello, Salt Lake. proce wo meetings were held here this even- ing—one at the A cnd meeting at the opera-house—so as to s possible to hear. Even arrangement did not permit all to wanted to get in. »r Roosevelt, at the Auditorium in rart as follows: nt speec Chicago, Mr. Bryan is ented to have, svoken as follows: *'Can arge and cha e the form of government? Jut the fact that a people like ours per- { mit this bodes no good to | tions. 1f 100,060 are permitted tc in idleness where one soidier would do, are we coming to? | el walk about what s extract contains such an extraordinary | variety of misconceptions that it seems dif- | ficult to believe it can be a correct renort. If | correct, lowever, it is interesting in_the ‘first Plice to we that Mr. Hryan has abandoned the Kaneas City platform and his own message of | acceptancé In so far as they define the kind | of danger arising from our militarism. The absurdity of = king of an army of 100,000 {men as a threat to the when one- | third of them are volunteers and the rest resu- lars provided for only two years by Congress, is so palpable that the mere statement of the sufficient for the refutation. But it surd than the extraordinary posi- tions taken in the foregoing quotation. What is it that bodes no good to | tions? Is it t { for the most | Bryan_ought_to | asmuch s Thom | his euccessor an uutil it re thousand of population, and as no damage (o our institutions followed, , there is scant room for app hension on the part of even the most m!d soul from the existéence now of an army | of elght-tenths for ‘every thousand of popu- {lation. Under President McKinley, while there | is war in the Philippines, our reguiar army has | shrunk to little more than half the size it had | sixty-odd thousand regulars the b Philippines? this time that art in know = Jel in- handed over to | attained at the end of President Jefferson's | aaministration during & period of = profound | Ppeace. | "Even more extraordinary is the statement | | that the 100,000 eoldiers are permitted to walk about in ldleness where one soldier would do. | 1¢'5% were not for Mr. Bryan's other utterances |on the subject | possible that this statement could have been correctly reported. One hundred thousand soldiers in idleness! | Think of these words being spoken by a candi- date for the highest office in the gift of the American people, of the men who have passed | |a vear of such grinding toll and desperate fighting in the Philippines that we here can form no conception of all that they have dared and risked and endured. They have worn down month in and month out, march- ing from dawn until darkness through the mud | of the tropical swamps, sleeping when and how | they could, eating what they could get or | Boing without, facing death by bullet at every £tep from a foe ten times as numerous as | themselves, and, if wounded and left behind, facing what was infinitely worse than death— | the most dreadful torture. With what patient, runrnmplnlnlng‘, unflinching, never-wearying | courage they have done all this, and have made | not only America but all mankind their .debt- | ors: and their reward is that the chosen rep- | resentative of one of the two great parties eneers at them as walking about in idienes | Some of them no longer walk about in fdl | ness. Lawton no longer walks about in idle- | mess. Liscum no lonzer walks about in idle- ness. Reilly no longer walks about in fdle- ness. Many an officer, many a soidier rests and effort for his country has come to the kind of end which should at least secure freedom from slight or slander both.for the valiant dead and for the no less valiant living. One soldier do the work of these men! Are our memor- fes so short as already to forget the hurry | with which we drew.troops both from America and the Philippines when the blood of our people called from China and the awful dan- ger of the women and children in Peking stirred | to its utmost soul the manhood of Christendom. Small, indeed, is the chance for idleness for | our soldiers in the Philippines so long as the | fnsurgents are aided and abetted by one of the great parties in this country. Every American who holds high honor of his country should graven on his heart the solemn prophecy of Lawton. Let him beware above all else of the words that speed the bullets of our coun- try's enemles. During the day short st were _made at Bozeman, Manhattan, Town- send and Winston, at most of which five. minute talks were made by Governor L Roosevelt or some of the party. f the State, | <! Shooting. ditorium and the sec- | American_institus | American Institu- | Mr. | rmy which he had increased | ented 1.4 of a soldier for every | it would seem absolutely im- | been | forever in peace—peace ‘because his life of toll | 1 fafled to gathe: And still were i Sulllvan's friends ht “in expri uting had been una ing the ¢ day’s a An was, in more ways | were 3500 in the parade. were s ated on the clu to bid the assaciati ant trip and safe return. was cheered and doffed house fire escz 's members a plea The « h There SENSATIONAL TESTIMONY 1N -~ HOWARD S , Boasted That He Killed | Goebel. | Witness Identifies Him as the Man Who Left the State House Imme- diately After the et | FRANKFOR? | 1eally nsational testimony in the trial | | of James Howard, charged with having fired the shot that killed Willlam ebel, was given to-da; y Bowman Galnes, a {local liveryman, and James Stubblefield, | a former deputy Sheriff of Clay County. The former identifled Howard as the ma: who ran out of the rear of the State house grounds and jumped over the fenca immediately after the shooting. Gaines w positive in his identification of the prisoner as the man and said the latter then wore a mustache and was followed a man who was tall and slender. A who was near-by at the time, will also be introduced as a witness to cor- roborate Gafnes. The most sensational and at the same time the most important witness from the prosecution standpoint was James Stub- | time tc | blefield, a one-legged and one-armed ex- | %aermy Sheriff of Clay County. Stubble- | field testified that Howard exultingly told him that he fired the shot that took Goebel's life FINE RACING AT STOCKTON. | Janice Takes the Two-Thirty Trot, and Steps a Mile in 2:13 3-4. STOCKTON, Sept. 17.—An exceptionaliy | fine racing card was pregented this after- noon when the fair here opened, under the auspices of the Stockton Driving Club. There was a large attendance and |b(‘ttl|\g was heavy for the first day. It required five heats to decide the 2:30 trot, | and Janice reduced her record from 2:19 to 2:18%. The track is as fast as a bui- let, and several new marks will be hung | out this week. |~ After Zarina had taken two heats, Ja- | nice went on and took the race, but not without a contest. Zarina broke in the fourth heat and got the flag. Galena, a 19-to-1 shot. won the five-fur- deng sprint from the favorite, Fine Shot, and Amasa, a_hot favorite, ‘came home first in the six-furlong scramble. Result: Trotting, 2:20 class, stake $500. Janice (Millard Sanders). Charlle W (W. G. Durfee). Algoneta (J. M. Nelson). Zarina (C. Jeffries) Time, 2:15%, 2 Running, five furlongs—Galena 110 (Fearry) won: Fine Shot (Frawley;, second; Beau Monde (Slocum), third. Time, 1:02%. Warra, Slip- pery Elm, Isabelle and Romulus also ran. Running, six furlongs—Amasa 118 (Frawley) won; San Augustine 107 (Fearry). second; Lim- ber Jim 110 (Flynn), third. Time, 1:144. Miss Dividend and Twinkle Twink also ran. —_———— Fall Meet at Columbus. COLUMBUS, Ohlo, Sept. 17.—The fall meeting of the Columbus Driving Asso- clation opened to-day. Weather cold; track fast. Summaries: 2:12 trot, purse $800—Archle W won the third, | fourth and fifth heats in 2:14, 2:144, 2:15%. | Edwin B won the first and second heats, eac | In 2:13%. Georgiana, Maggie Anderson, Nancy | King and Edna Cook also started. |, 2:% class trotting, purse $800—Ozenam won | ! in three straight heats. Time, 2:18! 18, 2:18. Annie Trevilllan, Mamie A, William Long, Maggic V. Mika and Sibley also started. 2:23 class pace, purse $$00—Hal Stalkings won three stralght heats in 2:15%, 2:16%, 2:154. Nellie Storm, Lady Hinsley, El Dorado, George Hoon. Sardine, Dr. Penny and Norchet also started. —_————— Dress-Suit Cases. In our trunk, valise and leather goods department you will find the best values and all the new styles in dress suit cases, traveling sets, ladles’ pocketbooks, ete. Your name siamped in gold letters free of charge when purchased from San- born, Vall & Co., 741 Market street. ¢ —_— If the naked truth ever appears in the vyellow papers it's because it's naked and ::i. because 1t's the truth.—Detroit Jour- . i la Ky., Sept. 17.—The first | tions and the unopposed returns will o ! Tele, PROCLAMATION DR DISSOLUTION Writ Will Be Issued Sum- moning the New Bedy for November. ABERDEEN, Sept. 17.—At the meeting of the council at Balmoral to-day it was decided that the dissolution of Parliament < to take place September 25. The Queen fterward signed the proclamation of dis- olution. A writ will be issued Septem- ber , Summoning the new Parliament to mble November 1. The first nomina- cur September 19. The first pollings will take piace October LONDON, Sept. I s evening Gil- bert Parker, the novelist, was chosen t the Conservatives at Gi end as the candi¢ the coming general election. Owing the relative position of parties at Grave: end this choice is equivalent to a return. For the moment dissoluti attractive thing than China. servative organs are cc t “that khaki issue’ will give them an increased ority and they are naturally jubilant. Liberal and Radical organs, on the hand. consclous t they are fight- erly denounce the the present “Lord Salis- dissolv The Daily Chronicle say bury, as he alw does, has yielded to the” Strong man. He has stified science, thrown scruples and_justice to the winds a succuncbed to Mr. Cham- berlain, who is now the ruler of the Pre- mier and the country. The Standard annoinces that after the elections there will certainly be a recon- struction of the Cabinet. This probably means that Lord Lansdowne, Secretary of State for War, and one or two others, will be sacrificed. The Pictermarlizburg correspondent of the Daily Mail announces that Lord Rob- erts will start for England about Octeber 3. This time there is little doubt of the genuineness of the report of his early re- turn. Some troops wiil also be coming back, and the elections will thus be ex (ellflntl‘\' timed by the Government (o take advantage of the national fervor over a successful war. The proposed visit of the Duke and Duchess of York to Australia also arouses much enthusiasm. INDIANS IN COLORADO AGAIN TROUBLESOME Are Stealing Cattle and Threaten to Make War on the Women and Children. DENVER, Sept. 17.—An Indian outbreak is threatened in San Miguel County, Colo. according to advices received by Governor Thomas to-day. The information was contained in a letter from the postmaster at Cedar, Colo., which was as folllow “CEDAR, Colo., Sept. 12—To Governor Thomas, Denver—Dear Sir: The Ute In- dians from the Navajo Springs Agency, Ute Mountains, are here catching and tak. ing away our range horses and they in- sist on doing so contrary to our protesta- tions. The stockmen have threatened to shoot If they don't desist, whereupon ihe Indan chiefs say they will make war upon the women and children and murder them. Please do what you can to have them ordered away from here. Respect- tully, J. W. WESTCOTP, “Postmaster.” The Governor sent a telegram_ to the Secretary of the Interior demanding that steps be taken to protect the settlers. rams to Indian agents and game wardens, asking them to Investigate af- fairs at Cedar, were also sent by the Gov- ernor. The nearest troops are located at Fort Duchesne, Utah, about 10 miles from Ceder. A R Poor Sport at Fort Wayne. FORT WAYNE, Ind., Sept. 17.—The cold ‘wave spoiled the first day of the red rib- bon meeting and only two races of the three scheduled were pulled off. The 2:3) trot and the 2:11 pace were both won by favorites: Summary: 2:30 trot, purse $500—Major Greer won three straight heats In 2:14%, 2:17%, 2:16. Newton A V. Dorothy Redmond, Porto Rico, Noline, Boodler, Springdale, Berthie and Roxalen also started. 2:11 pace, purse $800—Pussy Willow won the second, third and fourth heats in 2:13%, - e tm Ravey wor the first heat in Mannor Marshall Frellmont and yntroller PARLIAMENT te for the House of Commons at the | con- | 1 ATAL FIRE IA A DAY NURSERY AT CINCINNATI {8ix Lives Are Lost in the Burning of a Salvation Arm NO'S RELAY TEAM DEFEATS THE OLYMPICS Californians a Mile and a Half to the Bad at the Finish. e i Beaten at Almost Every Stage of the Contest, but Russ Carries Off Honors for the Fastest | Ride. e I 1 | Five Were Chi Was a Father in to Rescue 1 Dispatel caL CINCINNATI Bpecial Dispatch to The | Spren e RENO, Sept. 17.—The Reno Wheelmen | several others w coast champion relay team this afternoon | fire at 45 East decisively defeated the Olymplc team of | The fire was San Francisco at Agricultural Park, In|iepement building this city, by more than a mile and a half | Apmy was using as a in the relay bicycle race. The line-up of | t}¢ children, and five o the two teams was as follows: | 1ittle children that had Olympies—E. O. Kragness, J. Balge, P.|be cared for while their g Havna, M. Davis, J. Ephraim, W, McKinney, | gaining a livelil An W. Demara, R. Emery, C. Long, E. F. Russ. |a man who perished in an Reno—W. Thompson, . ikeddie, J. Hart, A. | the life of h little f Peckham, B. Frazer, Mers| . W. Everett, | The dead ar E. Shaver, E. Stanley, J. Peckham. | MES HARKINS, pai © A little before 2 o'clock the two clubs | yeal CINS 11 ’srenl lhels ridérs out for the warm up. :H}iRBERT HARKINS, aged son he grand stand was crowsed, the space | of James. P in Zront of the Dullding wae a mass of | RHODA HARKINS, aged five n humanity, while the track was so crowded | HAGGIE WILLIAMS, aged s that it was with difficulty space could be | months A made for the riders. Fully 3500 people| EDWARD MULLEN, aged four es¢ed the dow: the Olympics. | MYRTLE FARRELL, aged six y The first relay w Kragness | The following are fatally Thompson. It wa: race and [ not expected to survive: Post ( | won Kragnes: 13:25 2-5. The | Elizabeth Erickson of New York, a s | $econd relay was contested by Baige and | of Swoder Staff Captai a z | Andersor o, aged 3, a “There was no contest in this relay, the | tjve of Swe Olymplc man refusing to take the pace | he followini are seriously injured and |as was understood and agreed upon by |are in great agony. but expected 3 [ iheloter man. 4 e five | Cover: 'Bessle Atkins, aged five: < gt [ B with Kenam the | Frank Hill, aged two months: Alber: P. Hanna for the Olympics and J. Hart | $8°0 three years; Joseph on, &g jIi Bane wery e Nl try for honors, | "o, " hodles of the dead were burned to Rt e g ¥as ihe result | 4 crisp and the charred remains of James Next came the relay between A. Peck- | Harkins were clasping what was left o | his little son Herbert. ham of R and Davis of the Olympics. All of the victims and those injured be- After riding with his opponent a_couple | of miles Peckham drew away. He fin- | longed to or were in the nursery, excep | ished almost a quarter of a mile to the | James E k! who came to the rescue good and his time was marked up as 13:10. | ¢f_his child Mershon, Everett, Shaver and Stanley in-| The property loss was only $1500. creased the gap to over ome and five- | On account of the cold weather to-day hs miles, but Russ, in a masterly | & fire had been started in the stove for reduced the distance to sqmething | the little t who are cared for thers nd a half miles, making the | during the day while their mothers are stest five miles the race—12:46 3-5. | engaged at work elsewhere. It is thought e next best time was made by Stanley | that this caused the fire through some eno. The individual time was as fol- | defect in the flue. lows | _Olympies—Kragness, 13 Bali:u‘ 1513;1 Manchester Mills Closing. b s 7 B 57 e, | SMTANCHESTER, Sept. mors | ¥ * | mills closed ay. The operators agres 15:03: Hart. | that they cannot work profitably with Mershon, | cotton at the present prices. Gr. 4 Fm"'l(r—rb‘s! is felt in the result of the em now being taken by . eration with refere closir for twelve days In October. The oute | will be announced at Friday's meet effort is being made to stop al uding those stocked with cotto Races at Buffalo. BUFFALO, N. Y., Sept. 17.—Springstetn, at 60 to 1, was the surprise at the c of the fall meet at the Fort Eri Weather cold; track fast W. Demara of the Olym: plcs fell in the oss of twenty- | fifth mile and sus: ards. ALBERT OF SAXONY ACCIDENTALLY KILLED | Fifth Son of Prince Frederick George Is Thrown From a Carriage at | Wolkau. DRESDEN, Sept. 17.—Prince Albert of | was killed in a carriage accident ned a "R Six _furlongs—Springstein second, Benkart third. T! Five furlongs, Plerre J secor tw Malte sterday at Wolkau, a short distance | 1-ggig | from Dresden. He was the fifth son of | One mile—Orontas won, Chor | Prince Frederick orge of Saxony, | 8YAY third, Time 1. rother of the King. He was born In | woot merohg Swiieon e O dresden February 2, 1559, was a captain | < Five furiongs—Aleer won, Tasker se. in the First Regiment of Uhlans and a | servant third® Time. 1:03 Chevalier of the Order of the Blm'k[ Seven furlongs—Our Lizzte won, Cherry sec- Eagle. He was unmarried ond, Left Bower third. Time, 1:39% DOCTOR DE FORD | FRIEND OF THE SICK. He stands for the people against the | harmless yet Ffatally incompetent sugar pills and the health and life E destroying strong drugs and poisons. [ FREE distribution of his advanced Homoeopathic remedies (either Cough Cure, Dyspepsia Cure or Rheumatism Cure), now going on from the Examiner office until Wednesday at 5 P. M. With Dr. De Ford’s 45 remedies, tried and proven by thousands of | cases cured, every one can be his own doctor. Each cure is plainly labeled, | with all directions clear and simple—no guessing, no delay, no experiment, | no poisonous, naussous doses. The relief is instant, the cure certain, quick E and permanent. | Dr. De Ford’s Remedies Relieve With the First Dose. D Dr. De Ford's Cough Cure Promiptly cures all inflammation of the pulmonary air passages. . others fail, this remedy is a cure in the best sense of the word. cents. De Ford's Dyspepsia and Indigestion Cure Will cure acute or chronic, stomach or iIntestinal indigestion or dyspepsia. The first dose relieves. Price, 25 cents. They Aet at Once! Wh P all = Dr. De Ford’s Rheumatism Cure | Will relieve1n a few hours and cure in a day or two all rheu joint and muscular affections, sprains, lame joints, hips and back. Price, 25 cents. | Dr. De Ford’s Skin Remedies +'$600.00 for every case of true eczema my Skin Remedies fail to cure.” says Dr. De Ford. If you have itched and scratched, even ten years. Dr. De Ford's Skin Ointment will sfop it in three minutes. i Skin Cure will promptly and forever rid the blood dies are 25 cents each. i De Ford’s Kidney Cure 1 “My remedy will arrest and cure any form of Bright' there is rot advanced destruction of the kidney struc g No matter in what condition your kidneys, take t have 9 chances out of 100 for a complete cure. Se urine to Dr. De Ford; he will examine | without charge, and advise you. De Ford’s Nerve Cure | Thousands have found a cure in this remedy when all hope had gone it chemically Kidney Cure, price, and microse 1 Wi cure nerve exhaustion, nerve starvation, nerve bankruptey. fnability L} concentrate the mind, despondent, morbid fears, cannot sleep. Price, 2 cents. ’ De Ford’s Regenerator Why not be young again? Are you prematurely old? degeneration of the vital nerve cells (vital powers), mak again. Price, 50 cents. Dr. De Ford says: “I prepare no cures for incurabls diseases, no im- | possible remedies; my remedies are not ‘cure-alls,” but a Separate cure for | each disease.” Forty-five different remedies for 45 different diseases, mostly 25 cents a bottle. For sale at all drugstores. Trade supplied by Redington & Co. This remedy stops €8s weak men str AUTION TO THE PUBLIC—Due to_the larze sale and iner b for%r. De Ford's Remedies unscrupulous dealers are offering “‘y:‘::’l"n‘f’,‘“ Saand as good.” Be sure to get De Ford's and refuse all others, SOSENY SRl No matter what your disease may be— No matter how many doctors have treated you— No matter how much medicine you have taken— No matter how hopeless your condition may seem— WRITETO. . . DR, PAUL DE FORD, The Fminent S FOR FREE MEDICAL ADVICE, European Graduats, No. 175 North Spring Street, Los Angeles, Cal. Personal letters to Dr. De Ford receive his co Remedies mailed to any address, postpald, on ;flzf;':‘:]: 4 attention. price.