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2 FIFTY-ONE CAPTIVE AMERICANS RESCUED Captain Devereaux Shields and His Men Released From a Filipino Prison on Marinduque. Special Dispatch to The Call MANTILA, Oct. 14, 12:15 p.im.——Filty-one American soldiers be- longing to the Twenty-ninth Infantry, including Captain Devereaux Shields, recentiy captured by Filipinos on the island of Marinduque, were rescued yesterday by a force sent for that purpose. .1 come addi to General MacArthur's command. , 5 Tt having been found impossible to ‘com- plete the plans of the projected battles ships within the time specified, Secretary s directed the postponement of [ e for the opening of bids until De- | Bids for the projected armored ill be opened on the same day Y partment will, as a result of the | competition, award contracts for eleven | armorclads, ive battleships and six | sers. { ed that in accordance with | the laws authorizing the | will contract for ! on augment the archipelago as if more marines | d d reduction of i Ny the| BT oS ships the of department two battleships and two armored cruisers | t built the Pacific Coast, the re- | s maining seven ships to be constructed on | P red the Atlantic seaboard. Requests have [ juce the military , . received by Rear Admiral Hichborn DUSS & from many shipbuilders for sets of plans both types of ships, and this he regards indication of Prospective competis | tion. The bids for the projected protected | s will not be opened until Febru- | 2 ight y in Porto be s BRVAN AND ICE TRUST GRILLED BY ROOSEVELT Continued From First Page. | cellent shape when he reaches New York. | NEW YORK, Oct. 15.—Mr. Bryan is | t scheduled to_ arrive in this city via the | New York Central Road at 2:40 o'clock | Tuesday afternoon. A committee will meet him, inciunding Adlai E. Stevenson | and Webster Davis. He will be taken to | the Hoffman House, where suits have | | been r Dinner with Mr. Bryan | and Mr. as the guests of honor | e Moorish room at 5 iner there will be not more than twenty-five persons, intimate friends Bryan and Mr. Stevenson. will leave the hotel at 6:50 | % n open carriages, with a platoon lice for escort, and go to » Garden. John B. Stanch- d, candidate for Governor, and Sena- r Mackey will go first to Cooper Union, will speak. After his red, hat his | t th 1 oblivion, st look most nmed from haintained he Nebraska th e they r. Bryan will speak from a venue and Twenty-fourth THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1900 LEADING THE CONCERT. | «NOW,GENTLEMEN, ALL TOGETHER.” —Philadelphia Inquirer. HEAVY LSS 1 | | | | | street, then in Tammany Hall and then | in Cooper Union. Mr. Stevenson will fol- low- Mr. Bryan at each of the places named. The reception committee will remain in charge of the distinguished guests until after the mectings and will then turn them over to the State Committee. | HENRY C. PAY'NETS FIGURES. McKinley Certain of Two Hundred and Seventy Electoral Votes. "HICAGO, Oct. 14.—Henry C. Payne, vice chatrman of the Republican execu- tive committee, to-night gave out his first forecast of the election. Mr. Payne | made an estimate of the votes by States, and in doing so divided the States into —24 States, having 270 elec- certain for McKinley; 12 Democratic Leader Has Not Been Be- ged by Committees. Oct. 14.—Willi He was aside from which he 10-mc four cla: toral votes, r Bryan; ¢ States, having 3§ electoral tes, in which the chances of Republi- an or Democratic success are even, apd having 24 votes, in which the are 60 to 40 in favor of the Dem- Mr. Payne's forecast is based reports recefved from all and is as follows: California 9, Connecticut 6, 5, Iowa 13, Kansas 10, Michigan 14, Min- 4 New Jersey 10 Ohio 24, Orego juth Da- | West Vir- ng 3. Total, 210 . Arkansas 8, Florida siana 8. Mississippt 5, Mon- a 11, South Caroiina 9, . Virginia 12. Total, 115 Delaware 3, Kentucky 13, aska §, Nevada 3, Utah 3. = oc on rats. the last Sta M v in favor of Democrats—Colo- Missouri 17. Total, 24. MONEY PLENTIFUL IN THE LONDON MARKET ROBERT WALMSLEY HELD IN NEW YORK HOSPITAL San Franciscan Found Wandering on a Brooklyn Street Is Being Cared For. Week Closes With Easy Conditions and a Rise in Consols and the War Loan. t. 14.—The Stock Exchange - e ¢ week OWINg | mer, sitting in the Lee-avenue police . become dez o t Willilamsburg, declined to enter- : hat it is so plentitu ¢ v charge against Robert Walms. . a wealthy San Franeisco broker, who s found wandering about the streets of Brooklyn last night. Mr. Walmsley has | In his possession a draft for £450 on the ndon and San Francisco Bank at 71 mbard street, London, besides a gold watch and chain and some valuable se- curitles. When found on the street last night Mr. Walmsley acted so erratically that he was : n to the station house for safekeep- | | ing. Mr. Waltsley to- ally of his affairs and to-night was wait- ing for a friend to come after him. The old man had a saloon ticket for the mship Deutschland and says he is 2 to make an extended European trip. To-night Mr. Walmsley was removed by rn District Hospl- the police to the Easter Superintendent Wiegand of that in- ion says the surgeons thought the was suffering from dementla. He This appre- ation . dve (o the EXPSE were for s falling man will be kept there until word is received from San Francisco or some friends call for him. - STILL HAVE FAITH IN THE PANAMA CANAL | Officers of the Company Believe They Have a Better Route Than by Nicaragua. NEW YORK, Oct. 14.—M. Hutin, direct- or general and president of the board of directors of the Panama Canal Company; General Abbott, chief engineer, and W. N. Cromwell, counsel for the canal com- pany, were passengers on the steamer La Touraine from Havre. “The Panama Canal Company,” said | General Abbott, “is waiting for the rec- ommendation of the Walker Commission to Congress and for the action of that | body. T believe that the decision will be in favor of the Panama canal as being more feasible, economical and giving bet- ter results, If the decision is against the Panama canal the company will never- theless go on bullding it. I believe that if both the Panama and Nicaragua canals are built nine-tenths of the vessels will choose the Panama canal as being the better, What the Walker commission heard 'when in Paris was a revelation to them. Already between three and four million cubic yards have been taken out down there, and two-fifths of the work has been done.” NEED NEW MACHINERY. WASHINGTON, Oct. 14.—A letter re- celved at the United States Department of Agriculture from Penrith College, New South. Wales, Australia, calls attention to the great need of improved types of agricultural machines in that colony. The writer states that there are not haif o dozen machines for cutting and collecting maize in New South Wales, and a ma- chine for cutting sugar cane would be greatly appreciated by the cane grow. in the north of that b t some time mintage On call 1 to 1% 12 and on three REFUSES THE PRIZES. Belmont Evidently Does Not Believe Rainbow Should Have Been Dis- qualified. Oct. 14.—August Belmont seventy-footer Mineola, ond to Cornelius V: each » prizes lost disqualification by lantic clubs. When X his country home .. 1., Mr. Belmont, who | from the South, said: the Rainbow prizes ola under any circum-| to announce his determina- Mr. Belmont declined the Rainbow controversy. ———— NO TRACE OF SCHREIBER. NEW YORK, Oct. 14—No news has received of the hiding place of Wil- m Schreiber, the defaulting bookkeeper of the Elizabethport Bank. All the noted mbling resorts across the Atlantic are tched, as it is thought Schreiber’s vill naturally lead him 1o es if he is in Euro The be- however, that he is in or near N York. Detectives to-Say assured » Heidritter that they had clews which showed that Schreiber was in New Jer not far from his oid home. e oo Stops the Cough And works off the crna.u ullanuve Bromo-Qui- m“&"’,‘ of oltflturn.l machines who ne Tabl ol a cure, esirous ding their usiness iy T e e 3 b BT 0 A ?‘la!e!. having 115 electoral votes, certain | NEW YORK, Oct. 14.—Magistrate Kra- | ¢ talked ration- | 1S WAOUGHT BY ~ MUD MDA | Additional Shipping Disas- | ters Reported Along Coast of Nova Scotia. | HALIFA Oct. 14.—Additional | reported. The known list of v driven ashore now number thirty, mostly owned in this province and Newfoun land. The loss all over the country and in the neighboring provinces S., | age to orchards and bulldings by heavy | winds will be heav: | through | Lindley ! terrific rainfalls and washouts and dam- | through mistaking a party of forty Boers | BRITISH LED INTO A TRP BY BURCHERS Captain Willshire Killed in an Ambush Near Lindley. Elosarii s CAPE TOWN, Oct. 14—The Boers are | disasters to shipping on this coast ara| very active in the Kroonstadt djgtrict. | s | General Dewet has proclaimed™ that burghers who refused to fight would be made prisoners of war. § British mounted infantry scouting from | had Captain Willshire killed | in khaki uniform for friends. mandos Boer com- | continuously harass the British | The Canadian Pacific wires connecting | column while marching from Lindley to | Cape Breton with the rest of Nova Scotia Kroonstadt. The Boers captured a de- | are completely broken at the Straits oi | tachment of the Cheshire regiment, which | | Canso, where the cable was fouled by a schooner dragging her anchor in the re- | Frankfort. b escorting an empty wagon, near | They released the driver but | cent gale. | kept the wagon. Heavy rain is falling again to-day | LONDON, Oct, 14—The War Office has throughout Nova Scotia. Rivers and | received the following from Lord Roberts, lakes are everywhere overflowing and | dated Pretoria, Saturday, October 13: destroying property. There has been no| “A satisfactory little affair ocourred | Canadian Pacific train from Montreal In | near Frankfort on Thursday. Colonel | four days, and a serious wreck of thc | Grove with the West Kents surprised a | | Sydney ‘exy , caused by a washout, i ger at dawn, killed seven, wound- reported at Cape Breton. and captured eighteen.” | "Phe “Gloucester schooner Mystery, at | intercession of the Princess of | Canso, reports one man lost at sea. Wales, kays a_dispatch from Copenhagen | W YORK, Oct. 14—Incoming trans- | to the Daily Telegraph, has secured the | Atlantic steamers all report very heavy | weather and high se The Hamburg- | American liner Cap Frio had heavy gales | with high seas from October 3 10 1. | From that ‘time until the 1ith the wind { moderated but little. On the 12th it | increased and blew with hurricane force, and at 2 o'clock in the afternoon a_tre- | menaous sea broke over the bows, smasn | ing the bridge and severely injuring Cap- tain von Holten. \ The log of the French liner La Touraine shows that on every day since she left Havre with but one exception, last Thurs- | day, strong winds with heavy seas and sweils buffeted the vessel sel. Captain Corrigan, The Leyland liner, and the White Star liner Nomadic re- port heavy seas and strong winds | | throughout the passage. - DELAYED BY WASHOUTS. ! Passengers Storn:lb;und on the Cana- dian Pacific Railway. ST. JOHN, N. B., Oct. 14—Two hundred | passengers who left Boston and Montreal on Thursday arrived here by river boat | at 10 o'clock to-night, in consequence of the washouts which occurred on every | branch of the Canadian Pacific in New Brunswick on Thursday. The eastbound | express w caught at Green Point and | for three days could not move a mile. The | passengers were taken into Fredericton | Junction and cared for. To-day the twen- | ty-mile Fredericton branch had been par- | tially repaired and the passengers were taken into Fredericton with a transfer at Glaziers, where there is still a 200-foot gap. At Fredericton the passengers were put on a river boat ich made the eigh- ty-two-mile run to St. John in six hours. It will be at least a week before the damage on the forty miles of the main | line between St. John and Fredericton | Junction can be repaired sufficiently to | permit the resumption of traffic and the | river route will be used until then. | SUCCESS OF A NEW YORK ELECTRICIAN | Through an Underground Ca- ble Three Miles Long. ST. PAUL, Minn., Oct. 14.—A remarka- ble series of experiments was conducted here to-day by Henry Floyd of New York, who_successfully accomplished the feat of darrying 30200 volts of electricity through an underground cable three miles long. The highest voltage hitherto attain- ed with this class of conductor was 20,000 volts, which was secured at Niagara Falls, and electrical engineers have long been experimenting with a view to at- taining a maximum of 25,000 volts, The cable consists of three copper con- ductors, each about the size of an ordi- nary lead pencil, each being enclosed in a aper tube and the whole encased in a Fend sheet and drawn through vitirified clay conduits. The cable Is part of the system by which the St. Paul Gas, Light and Power Company will utilize the water power at Apple River, Wis., the other twenty-four miles of wire being overhead. As a result of this experiment they will i an average voltage of 25000 volts, furnishing 500 horse power for lighting and power purposes. s R Court Makes Slow Progress. SHANGHAI, Oct. 14.—The progress of the Chinese court toward Singan-Fu, the new upl'u:hhu been de%ayed in eog‘m ence of the presence of supposed g‘n‘.mmedm rebels in the gvvlnoa of Carries Over Thirty Thousand Volts | d of ‘llfl}cufg;_u a certainty wit! liberation of some Danes, who were com- pelled by the Boers to fight against the British, and had been imprisoned at Simonstown. BIG RAILWAY CONVENTION '1'9 MEET IN KANSAS CITY | American Association Is Assured That a Splendid Exhibit Will Be Made. KANSAS CITY, Oct. 14.—T. C. Penning- ton of Chicago, secretary and treasurer of the American Street Railway Associa- tion, is in the city to make the final ar- rangements for the nineteenth annual convention of that body, which will be- gin at Convention Hall next Tuesday. “The exhibits of electrical, manufactur- ing and supply companles,” said Mr. Pennington, “will be more varied than ever before. Twenty thousand feet of floor space will be used for this purpose, It will be one of the largest meetings of the association ever held. There will be about 400 active street railway men from all parts of the country, as well as about 1500 others. The exhibits are already in place. A Dig_Eastern contingent, headed by H. H. Vreeland of New York, will ar- rive on Monday night in a magnificently appointed special train. The Street Railway Accountants’ As- sociation of America, made up of the au- ditors and chief accountants of the com- panles whose managers attend the street rallway convention, will hold its annual meeting here at the same time. TRADE WITH PHILIPPINES IS GROWING VERY RICH During Past Nine Months the Im- ports Aggregated 815,102,879 and the Exports $12,028,464. WASHINGTON, Oct. 14.—The division of the War Department has made public a bulletin upon the trade of the Philip- pine Islands. The statement covers a pe- riod of nine months,sending March 31, 1900, and sets forth that during that time merchandise to the value of $15,102,879 was imported into the Philippines and goods to the value of $12,925,464 went out of the islands to foreign ports. During the pe- riod named 54,137 tons of Manila hemp, valued at $8,106,340, were exported, of which the United States took 15183 tons, valued at $2,476,926; the United Kingdom took $3,964.347 worth, and 4808 tons, valued at $708,808 went to China. The commerce in gold and silver coins brings the total importation to $16.751,800 gnd the total value of all exportation to $14,634,236. The trade with the United States alone amounted to an exportation of $2,650,450 glfoi?cfilgs and importations of the value of —————— STRIKE SETTLEMENT NEAR. Senator Hanna Says a Compromise Soon Will Be Effected CHICAGO, Oct. 14.—Senator .Hanna, when asked about his statement made last night during a political meeting at Forty-second and Sherman streets that the Pennsylvania miners’ strike would g6 ot profess prophetic Insight n ns| the strike situation in g’en !vngm, '&'.‘Z the last news received from the center of the disturbance is to the effect that a settlement is near. A dispatch received by business men coincides with this state- ment I am told a compromise of the a few days it least.”™ TRAIN WRECKEL BY PURPOSELY BROKEN SWITCH Two Men Killed and An- other So Badly Injured He May Die. CHICAGO, Oct. 14.—An open switch at Eighty-fifth street, South Clicago, be- lieved to have been purposely “wwolaced, caused the death of two men, seriously | injured another and made wreckage of the engine and forward part of the New York and Boston express train on the Lake Shore Railroad to-night. gine was demolished and two mail and 1wo express cars were piled up in a heap, but the five passenger coaches directly behind the baggage cars did not leave the track and their occupants escaped Injury. The dead are: H. J. JEROCH, fireman of the train, 28 years old; lived at Elkhart, Ind.; caught under the wreckage of the engine and body cut in half. VIDENTIFIED MAN, a tramp who a ride on the first mall ) ground to pleces. The injured: Lewis*Reynolds, engineer of the express; lives at Elkhart, Ind.: skull fractured and internally injured: probably fatal. It is believed that the wreck was caused by some one who had deliberately broken the switch. The locks which are used to hold the switch in place had been broken and could not be found. The train was running forty-five miles an hour when it struck the switch, BOURSE OF BERLIN HAS VERY SEVERE SETBACK Money Market Grows Apprehensive That German Gold Will Go to America. BERLIN, Oct.14.—Last week the Bourse had a severe setback, which wiped out the advance made the week before. There were numerous factors exerting an unfa- vorable influence upon speculation. The Chinese situation is now considered unfa- vorable. The rise in New York exchange and the unsatisfactory condition of the iron and coal trades depressed values generally. Coal shares had the worst week perhaps of the last six months. Westphalian newspapers have asserted that the sup- plies are likely to outrun the demand after next April. Many standard coal shares fell more than ten points. The money market has grown apprehensive that German gold will go to New York, exchange having reached a point at which the demand cannot be satisfied. Never- theless, ‘nothing is known here of exports of gold to confirm the report cabled from the United States, although it is admitted that New York bankers were making in- quirfes here during the early part of the week. There i{s high authority for the statement _that no gold has been taken from the Reichsbank for export. Private discount rose to 4% on Friday, in sympathy with London, but call money remains abundant_at from 3 to 3% per cent. While the Reichsbank statement showed a more unfavorable movement than in 1899, the status remains much stronger than then. The bank does not contemplate advancing the rate. Government funds showed little change, ‘Three-and-a-halfs improved slightly and threes remained about stationary. The loan is at 100 6-10, but no sales are report- ed at that figure. Bank stock fell from two to four points during the week. Do- mestic raflways declined heavily during the early part of the week, but regained somewhat yesterday. Northern' Pacific shares rose sharply yesterday, more than regaining the ground lost earlier in the week. Other Americans attracted but little interest. The Dresden and Deutsche banks pro- pose to list on the Berlin Bourse scrip of the Anatolian Railway to the value of 60,000,000 francs. FREDERICK IMPROVES. Condition of Dowager Empress Is Reported Satisfactory KRONBERG, Oct. 4.—The condition of the Dowager Empress Frederick to-day is satisfactory. LONDON, Oct. 14.—The following an- nouncement appears to-day in th Srewart. “Th Queen has been ln e anxiety for a week owing to the unsatis- factory accounts of the health of Empress Frederick. Be\:ans now, however, are fa- vorable.” e Papeete the Beautiful. Those who are fond of traveling (and who is not) will hail with delight the news of a dfrect steamship route to Tahitl. This charming land has until mow been accessible only by slow salling ve ., but on November 1st the popu- lar steamship Australia will sail direct, mak- ing the trip In 1033 days. A reduced round- trip rate has been made for the first trip. Call ot 643 Market street for sailing lst. . | The en- | | for supplies to their tre | | that | Mc DISPOSED TO REJECT DEMAND OF STRIKERS) Pennsylvania Coal Operators Not in Favor of Granting Further Conces- sions to the Unions. WILKESBARRE, Pa., Oct. 14.—A can- vass of the operators of the Wyoming Valley to-day shows that there is consid- erable opposition to granting the miners any more concessions than those outlined in the original offer—namely, 10 per cent increase without any condltions. dividual operators especially are opposed to tying themselves up' to any agreement. One operator said the only way the strike could be settled was for the strikers to accept the 10 per cent without any pro- vistons. Superintendent Chase of the Lehigh Coal Company sald: “Not much de- pendence can be placed on the men when it comes to arbitration. This was shown in the case of Mr. Markle. He favored arbitration, but at the behest of Mr. Mitchell his miners repudiated the agree- ment they made with their employer. The demand of the strikers that the operators should agree to pay the increased for a fixed period is too arbitrar; operators will hardly agree to it.’ Despite the views of impression here is that the strike will be ended this week. HAZLETON, Oct. coal operators who could be seen here to- day declined to discuss the action taken by the anthracite miners’ convention a Scranton yesterday. Neither would they say what steps the employers would prob- ably take. It is evident from their reti. cence that the individual mine-owners are awaiting to know what the mine carriers | will do. It is reported in the coal region to-night that the presidents of the com- panies will hold a conference in New York to-morrow for a discussion of the action of the convention. - There was a story afloat to-gay that the operators would accept the ®onvention's decision, but nothing has come to the sur- face in this region on which to base the report. The United Mine Workers' officlals say they are now again waiting on the oper- ators and that they will continue to close the colllerfes that have been in operation since the strike began, several weeks ago. | There are many reports in circulation that if the strike continues much longer a break in the ranks of the idle men will occur. President Mitchell his asso- ciate officials, however, re: fidence that the men, both union and non- union, will remain away from the mines until after the strike is declared off. ] here is a fear prevalent in this region | that if some of the men do return to work trouble probably would arise through the efforts of the strikers to persuade the men to remain on strike. All the collieries are working still retain guards. SHAMOKIN, Pa., Oct. 14.—The terms of | the Scranton convention are not accept- able to operators and representatives of coal-carrying companies in this place unt Carmel. The Reading officials do The in- | , and the the operators, the | 14.—The individual | ert their con- | heavy | nd | h_»\rn‘ ?]rrleirw have been om headquarters of an nies inet arters of & rintendents to morre The miners » work until advis sume w e Sr e | OPERATORS WILL NOT YIELD. | President of the Temple Iron Com- Pany Issues a Statement. SCRANTON Oect. res ] to a request views on | Workers to H. Walk out in which § he said in part ut, We will give Mitchell trol of the mi | hanas of one or | cite tonnage nies and indivi nter | the total tonnag % a trol or have ence o = | action. | There are some individual operators and | compantes who will lose their last dolla they will enter any arrans " operator or will foin In an a f ognize the union by agreein | ment Mr. Mitchell's organiza | settlement of the strike. Our company will be glad to ter with our employes when without | may do. | deal of money and the men m as loss of trade which we may meantime soft eo and day filling | B g the statement Mr. Wa:. it to the various among them _Superintendent Lat | the Lehigh Valley Coal Co . | Wilkesbarre, and it received unanimo i The fact that J. P. Morx: allled with the Temple I @ that Mr. Watk 1 M Lathrop are chairmen of the opera | committees in their respective terr! | gives added importance to the sta A conference of operator: place to-morrow the office of t afternoon_at mple Iro FEAR SERIOUS not think the sliding scale will be abol- pose 1s not declare ished by the company, while operators are | averse to slgning ~ contract binding them | tain that the coun to pay the 10 per cent increase until April. | the miners is to be consider Italian cruiser Vesuvie. says, has left Taku e powers are con arships in view of pos REBEL RISIG Continued From First Page. Yat Sen, the reformer, has raised his Lag, | and have scattered the rebels. The Standard publishes mail advices from Tientsin giving a list of fifty-four documents that were seized in the Yamen of the Viceroy after the capture of the city and fell into the hands of the corre- spondents before the military authorities had seized the Yamen. These include re- ceipts for money paid to Boxer generals s of ‘very kind, reports of action and s of casualties and rewards paid to generals and the families of the killed, all clearly proving that the authorities maintained the Boxer movement by lavish expenditures. e EARL LI THANKS AMERICANS. Expresses Regret for Recent Occur- rences in China. LONDON, Oct. 15—A special dispatch from Peking, dated October 12, says: “At the American legation Li Hung Chang ex- pressed regret for the recent occurrences and thanked the Americans for their good treatment of the Chinese. He promised to request that negotiations be begun at | the Tsung li Yamen two days hence and to exclude Yung Lu from them.” “It 18 asserted,” says the Shanghai cor-| respondent of the Times, writing yester- day, “that the Russians have seized the Niuchwang Railway at the terminus of the Shanhai-Kwan line. This is the first step the Russians have taken on the right bank of the Amur. The Russian south- ern _and northern armies have joined hands at ucmiling, north of Mukden, | thereby placing all of Manchuria east of the river Liao and a portion west of the | stream in_the hands of Russia.” | Dr. Morrison in to-day’'s Times con- | cludes his dramatic description of the siege of Peking. He expresses the deep obligation of all those confined in the British legation to the “splendid services of Rev. Dr. Frederick D. Gamewell, head of the Methodist mission board, to ‘whom was due the designing and construction | of all our defenses, and who carried out in the most admirable manner Sir Claude DR. MEYERS & C0. SPECIALISTS. Diseases and Weakness of Men HED 1881 i st Manhood and weak- ness which accompanies it. also Private Diseases, Varicocele, Stric- ture, Blood Poison, Diseases of the Kidneys, Bladder, ete. Patients may pay when well or tn monthly _installments. Home cures a specialty. Private book, question list, etc., free at office or by mail. Correspondence confidential. HOUES—Daily, § to 5. Evenings, 7 to 8. Sundays. 9 to 1L ELE’V‘A- TOR ENTRANCE. MARKET STREET, 731 San FPnnciseo.T MUNYON'S GUARANTEE, | Strong Assertions ns to Just Whag i the Remedies Will De. e —— e will eall cases G ehenmar Macdonald’'s ideas and suggestions.” | tism In a few houms; He also refers to the valuable services | that his “rendered by Mr. Squiers, secretary of | Will cure indigestion and the United States legation.” | all stomach troubles: The Times, commenting editorially upon | that his Kidney Cure Dr. Morrison’s narrative, says: “The | will cure 90 per cent. whole story justifies in the fullest manner of all cases of kidney Emperor William's mttitude toward the "._“"m" ‘“'_‘fi‘l' Ca- authors of the atrocities. It prove: Cure sure eatarrh 5o matter how long standing; that his Headache Cure will cure yond a reasonable doubt the responsibii- ity of the high officials and the Tsung li Yamen."" any kind of beadache in that re will & few minutes; bis Cold quickly breal GERMANY'S POLICY UNPOPULAR | of cold and o on through the ent: foem Berlin Press Criticizes the Kaiser's | remedies. At ol drugs Saalberg Speech. | BERLIN, Oct. 15.—Germany’s China pol- icy is growing unpopular among the great | manufacturers in West Germany, owing to the severe reaction in business, the ab- | sence of orders and the heavy fall in in- dustrial shares. Most of the papers to-day discuss the expression “‘world empire” used by Em- peror Willilam in his speech at the laying of the corner-stone of the imperial mu- seum at Saalberg, all denying that Ger- many has any such intention as might seem to have been lmgl!ed. The Vossische | Zeitung says that the time has passed when mankind generaily would tolerate the hegemony of single power. The Co- logne Gazette, the National Zeitun Nord Deutsche Allegemeine z.-uungz 3’.: Berliner Tageblatt and the Berliner Post glve utterance to similar sentences Referring to the action of the envoys in Peking, the Natfonal Zeitung say ‘“The €nvoys have Spoken. The | e next step is to enforce their decisions.” » ——e READ OF THEIR OWN DEATHS. Peking Ministers See Accounts of Imaginary Massacres. Correspondence of the Assoclated Press PEKING, Sept. 11.—English and Ameri- can papers have jist been received which make interesting reading for the Minis- ters and their families, telling as they do all about their supposed death ani fiYing tragic details as to how the men illed their women folk, how members of certain legations were bolled in oil | and other harrowing pictures of the last days of the !lefe. lere is a certain gen- | tleman living in Shanghai_better known to the warld as “the Shanghal liar,” who, | If he were here, would probably meet a | visrs DR JORDAN’S caear lusegmr ANATOMY SF. bt G227, 5.7 Cal, The Largest Anatomical Museum in the World. Weaknes:op cr any contracted disease pesitively Specislistcn tic Coase. Est. 36 yoars OR. JORDAM—PRIVATE QISEASES § Coasultation free and strictly private. Pt s Gerdin every cavt ufermbes. e o B B G e G T o man R TS SIEYY “alavic beok o ) DR JORDAN & U0O,, 105 Market $¢. 8. §. A oreign LOST VI RESTORED | Call o write for book, frse. DR. COJPER & €10, 318 Rearny Straas, San Franciseb, Cal, adway’s Pill warm reception from s i- | Purely vegetable, mfld an tated victims. . e Of M8 rosunct. | Tt - St coaicte e Clgns H h.,‘llhhhll regularity. A | 'or the cure of all disorders of the S omach Powers Concentrating Warships. | 1/ver, Bowels Kidneys, Bladder, ra...‘... T ROME, Oct. 14.—According to a dispatch regularities, Sick Headache, Biliousness, ¢ from Taku to the Tribune the. expedition | Joyator yisiere i Ll Jorangements of the to Paoting-Fu aims to assure, In addition ' by matl o RADWAL & Co., Mossists. ox RADWAY & CO., New Yogig