The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, January 6, 1901, Page 15

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THE SAN FRANCI ISMAR. [SMAR'S TRUE PROPHECY Brings Back Joy and Happiness to a Heart | Where Desolation and Sorrow Reigned. ¥ a modest, L about 30 mar, the celebrated Her life in the s had been one of ivation. A vear r ht nd, then an en- or a certain railroad com- ie 1ly disappeared. amcng nar told her of de- north, but IR PIFRMPS = DL T1GAUE © £ 5 e strengthtoail who use it Speedily cures without druge and i as good for women a& for men. Prices res sonable. No “Free' or Half Price” offers made to_ well BELT have *"Dr. Plerce's.” 1¢ Broadway (above 2tk o ork. Pucific Coast offico, €20 Mar- ket st. (opposite Palace Hotel), Sen Fran- writing. kindly mention this paper. TO THE PUBLIC! SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. %—To whom It may This is to certify G HIM of et, San cured me and I am make this state- as I find the Doctor ¥ bonest in every sense of the word and an b rable ma: 1 1 ealings. DR. C. A. GAY, Dentist. 502 Beveoy &ve., Seattle, Wash 5 3 PINOLE, June 23, 18951 take t means of € my thanke Dr. Wong Him, 115 ason street, San Francisco, for havi cured me of kidney, womb trouble and cancer of the stomach. 1 was & great sufferer for 15 found no permane; ef until I Wong Him and in six months' time he hae cured me. Any person wishing me to certify this can find me MRE. GEORGE BETZ Pinole, Contra Costa County, Cal 18%.—Dr. Wong Him, 115 Cal.—Dear Sir: For the 0 make & statement of trouble. After treat- clans my case was caring of Dr. Wong ful cures, I decided to try He did all he claimed. and ASHS pronounce Him, and b his herb i (= KIDNEY & LIVER BITTERS A PLEASANT . LAXATIVE NOT INTOXICATINC DR, HALL’S REINVIGORATO] Five hundred reward for any cese we cannot cure. This secret remedy stops ali Josses in 24 hours, cures Emiesions, Impotency, Vari- cocele, Gonorrhoea, Gileet, Fits, Etrictures, Lost Manhood and all wasting effects of self-abuse or excesses. Sent sealed, 352 bottle; 3 Lottles, $5; guaranteed to cure any case. Ad- dress "HALL'S MEDICAL INSTITUTE, 55 Broadway, Oakland, Cal. Also for sale at 10735 Market st’, . F. All private diseases quickly cured. Send for free book. NEW WESTERN HOTEL, EAENY AND WASHINGTON STS.—RE- modeled and renovated. KING, WARD & European plan. Rooms, S0c to $1 80 S every E OO, sleeion wuns sl R | 1 ALL BUREAU, 1406 G s-rmcET.l | N. W. WASHINGTON, Jan. 65— | | The Call correspondent has ob- | tafned s o tant decrees | | fssued by the C of Ru | which go to show that th: St. Petersburg { Government mplates no departuré | from the policy of evacuating Manchuria | as F circumsianc gt These decree re in the f n of instruc- tior and naval commanders, | further v t the Czar has beea orders to avoid looting or { the inhabitants of the ter- ed by his troops. | am sent by the Minister of | ral Grodckoff, commanding D troops in Manchuria, reads: erial Majesty orders me u following: Hi. that not only thel exation of territory ot Rus published in the st i Wa s been cation of Seplember 1, tnat our 5 uld later ve recalled from Man- , if there be no hinarance thereto course pursued by other powei cordance with do all that operation: present tnis imperal accs to bring huria Uddaig. X ¢ Girected to_heln this wors | worsmen. Russian admin- auced in the You will their time of pea s commit no viole SCO CALL, SUNDAY, RUSSIAN DECREES INDICATE | THE POLICY OF THE CZAR IN DEALING WITH THE CHINESE Regular Troops and Cossacks Operating in Manchuria In- structed to Be Most Careful With Inhabitants and Avoid ‘ Looting and Destruction of Property of Non-Combatants % JANUARY 6, just after | | crossed into Man- having obliged our trontier it that necessary ts of Manchuria s and cre: the aking war upon the is that therefore directs = fortifica the must sold 1 residents property valorous r home- not be y y the InDecessary Crue.- ‘ i be allowed. De- villages and burn- | restorted to only in | hment for heavy | 1 measures in- pinst us. Any | o e or Cossac i jtmost sever-| | FIELD MARSHAL COUNT ALFRED HEINRICH CARL LUDWIG VON i B WALDE 3, COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF OF THE ALLIED FOREIGN | | | FORCES NOW OPERATI IN CHINA | - % 5 rived here from St. Petersburg. M. Ko- | dition which started Christmas - mura was formerly Minister at Washing- | chenghsu, under command othl(.:ull‘c'y;:l »atile you must ex ton, from whi h city he was transferred | Greuder, returned Thursday. Colonel a friendly foo to St. Petersburg in 1900. Greuder reports the capture of forty- e —ar — | three Krupp field guns and the destruction of 2000 ri munition. —— TO CEASE HOSTILITIES. es and in the Cau in giving you th arge quantities of am- s ',l,!r‘v”i““a,’. Majesty is con- | Count von Waldersee Issues Such In- g )t dim their glory by | structions to His Staff. | EXECUTION OF A GOVERNOR. to peaceful, unarmed | SIHANGHAI, Jan. 5—A dispatch re- | Brutal Ruler of Shansi Punished for o that every | celved here from Tientsin says Field Mar- ) his best to maintain g0od or- | gna) Count von Waldersee has notified his | His Barbarity. Tmation received in an official quar- | Staff to cease hostilities, but that some | dP'ARIS. Jan. 5.—The Foreign Office is ter here is to the effect that the instruc. | of the commanders have not been In- | advised from Shanghai, under date of tio as given above nave been carefuily | formed of these instructions. It is ex- | January 3, that advices from Sinfu con- observed. Reports are current here that | plained that they are in the field after | firm reports of the execution of Yu Hain, - of the recenc - jssued by | Boxers. Prince Ching and Li Hung Chang | former Governor of Shansl, guilty of ma: » officials Marchuria, seemiak | have again urged Count von Waldersee | qairing atout fifty misslonacies. whon ho ¥ & protectorate over that Chinese | {0 ask the commanders to desist from |{1C0TS 8 & 3 ited S hostilities. 0 accept s protection, Decem- RUSSIA’S SLY DIPLOMACY. ber 19, by order of the Dowager Em| | Prince Tuan is still at Ninghi. hecs | ation o | iation A( | are thirty thousand Chinese regulars at ertain nave no su Other reports as- | Arranges to Make a Treaty With | 5infy, The court has made preparations SRS faar t et Sl e | China at St. Petersburg. | LI HUNG CHANG WORSE. refer: Russia’s conduct in Northern LONDON, Jan. A special dispatch China stated emphatically here | from Peking under yesterday's date says: — that mo negotiations are in progress re- | According o an official Chinese source, | Illness May Cause a Delay in the specting nina except those in Peking. Russia has arranged to make a treaty Pea tia A P with China at St. Petersburg. The Chi- | piccs2 NGKQ tions. PEKING, Jan. 5.—Li Hung Chang has | suffered a relapse and because of the seri- ous effects of thls and his great age, it is feared that he will be unable to act as plenipotentiary in arranging a settle- nese Minister there has been appointed to act for China SR SRR CAPTURED MANY GUNS. MAY SEIZE CHURAN. Britain Expectedito Take Territory i Assassins Are Not Punished. | impossible to accomplish this wi | SHANGHAL Jan. 5.—The French intend to send a force overland from Tonkin to | Chentu should the Chinese court go there. “It is rumored on the best authority | says the Chinese newspaper Chung Wei Jeh Pao, “that a foreign power, probabiy the British, will resort to force, first seiz- ing Churan, unl the persons guilty of the massacre of Christians at Chuenow are beheaded.” It is considered possible that Sir Ernest Mason-Satow, British Minister to China, n the Chuenow affair. Among the bank notes which the Chi- nese paid to the foreign Consuls as_in- demnity for the missions destroyed at Sheklin vere five-pound notes that had to fifty-pound notes and ten- that had been raised to 100- 1c 3 pound notes pound notes. e o PROTEST OF MISSIONARIES. Joint Note of Powers Declared Not Comprehensive Enough. PEKING, Jan —A meeting of protes- tant missionar as held to-day to con- sider the terms of the joint note of the | powers to China. Among a majority of | nissionaries the consensus of opinion the note was not comprehensive enough inally two representatives o each mission were appointed a commit- | tee to formulate the views of those who| took part in the meeting. | | Baron Nissl, the Japanese Minister, | {leaves here to-morrow. the new Japanese | Minister, N. Jularo Komura, having a ADVERTISEMENTS. l HAVE HAD THEIR DAY. | Local Treatments for Catarrh Rele- gated to the Rear. The surest and safest treatment for any form of Catarrb is an internal remedy | which ac.s specifically upon the blood and mucous membranes. Such a remedy is the new preparation sold everywhere by | druggists as Stuart’s Catarrh Tablets, a | medicine in pleasant tablet form. These tablets contain in highly concen- | trated form well known germ antiseptics like sanguinaria, gualacol, Red Gum and similar curative elements, and no one who | | suffers from any form of catarrh and has experienced the inefficiency and iu- | convenience of powders, sprays and inhal- | ers will ever go back to such antiquated | remedies after once trying o0 pleasant a | treatment_as Stuart’s Catarrh Tabiets, | and one which gives so much relief in 3¢ | short a time. | Druggists sell Stuart’s Catarrh Tablets | at fifty cents for full sized package, and their daily use will effectually cure this troublesome and dangerous disease. The danger from catarrh is that it is a short road to consumption, to chronic stomach catarrh and to catarrh of liver and kidneys. Most cases of deafness are caused from e eustachian tube as a re- | German Expediti})n Also Destroyed Chinese War Material. TIENTSIN, Jan. 5—The German expe- | a time of negotiations. @ siviriviiivisiiieiiieiisieee el el @ TAKEN PRISONER BY INSURGENTS Filipinos Capture Privates Ray and Lyons and Two Scouts. MANILA, Jan. Private George H. Ray of the engineer corps; his assistant, Private Lyons, Company K, Fifth Infan- try, five native policemen and two scouts ave been captured while on the way to Balaca by insurgents. On receipt of the news an American column was dispatched against the Filipinos, but failed to over- take the rty. The decision of the Philippine Commis- sion in the San Jose Medical College case unanimously refers the settlement of the questions Invoived to the courts and pro- vides trus who, with the assistance of the Attorney General of the Philip- pines, will inaugurate and prosecute the litigation. Many listened to the reading of Judge Taft's opinion in English and Spanish. A bill has been passed carrying out the terms of the decision. It appoints five physiclahs as trustees, including Dr. Tavera, who is complainant throughout, and Colonel Greenleaf, chief surgeon in the Philippines. The trustees are re- quired to begin suit within a month in the Supreme Court of the Philippines to de- termine whether the ownership of the col- lege is in_the church or in the Govern- ment. . The Dominican rector of 8t. Thomas University and Archbishop Cha- pelle are required to defend the suit on the part of the church. The act provides that the decision of the Philippine court is not to be so final as to make it impos- sible for Congress to provide for an ap- peal to the United States Supreme Court. The opinion states that ‘‘a case involv- ing construction of the treaty of Paris and the effect upon public trusts of a transfer of sovereignty from a klgjdom in which church and state are united and inseparable to one in which church and state are entirely separated is of such im- rt that it ought to be submitted to the ighest tribunal.” I'he commission recommends that Gen- eral MacArthur rescind General Otis’ or- der suspending_the conduct of the medical w« n‘l}der the rector of the St. Thomay ersity, ment of the troubles in China and that the difficuity and delay in securing a suc- cessor may cause the postponement for MENICE'S MONEY BOLOLY STOLEN Shortage of Three Hundred Thousand in Finance Departmont_. e Special Dispatch to The Call, CITY OF MEXICO, Jan. 5.—A shortage of $300,000 has besn discovered at the | national treasury. The discovery was | made after the death of Salvador Zapata, paymaster of the Department of Finance. The peculations had been begun twelve | vears ago. { Anotio Vidal, first clerk in the second section of the treasury, made out the war- | rants for the payment of bills in the De- | partment of Finance and Zapata pald out | the money. The two, it is charged, formed a°conspiracy, which was easily | successful. i Vldul# under arvest. Zapata and he | were okl and trusted employes. Gold in the WASHINGTO! Jan. 5.—"The gross gold in the treasury to-day,” sald Ellis H. Roberts, United States Treasurer, “is $180,709,005, breaking all records. At the end of March, 1899, the treasury held $328,- 293,901, which was the largest sum ac- | cumulated duri! any administration in recent years until within the last two or | three years. Our immense gold holdings are due, of course, to the f‘relt prosper- ity of the country, to the Increased pro- | duction of gold in all directions and in large part to the fact that the United States is now the creditor nation of tne world. ST Captain Blunt Dismissed. ‘WASHINGTON, Jan. 5.—Captain H. H. Blunt of the Louisiana Forty-ninth Vol- unteer Infantry was con\gctod by court- martial at egaras, an, P. I, of conduct n‘gcvmln: an officer and a ,enuemu: and sentenced to saulted a private soldier and drew his :'.. olver on another priv: and also ;e 'rmtnd,ly owzll!’:‘adu?nmw tthn.!u}!fi i B3 1901. POLICE ONLY NEED WATCHI Bishop Potter Speaks of Remedies for Existing Evils, — He Criticizes Members of the City Club for Not Doing What He Says Is Their Duty. L SR NEW YORK, Jan —Bishop Potter spoke on “The Causes of Our Present Municipal Degeneration’” at a meeting of the City Club last night. The Bishop be | gan his address by making a plea for tol- | erance. He said that conditions as they | existed were largely the result of the com- | plexities of human nature., He was not prepared to maintain, he said, that the police as a body were corrupt and sald he believed that there were among them as many men who had aspirations toward good and aims that were commendable as among any other body of men of the same s ‘But they are the creatures of a Sys- tem,” said the Bishop. *“I did not come here to say pleasant things and the sys- tem exfts largely because of your indif- ference and mine. The solution of the problem lies in indlvidual activity and vigilance. I am sorry for one thing, my friends, and that is that in spite of the approval with which my remarks made in | St. Paul's Chapel seemed to have met at the time, they really fell abso-| lutely dead. What have any of you done along the line of personal vigilance in | spite of your evident desire to bring about | cnanged conditions? You will never get | results until you get up the proper spirit | of personal sacritice and vigilance. “Nothing better was ever done by Mr. Roosevelt when he was Police Commis- sioner than the nightly tours he made through the city watching the police and seeing that they performed their duty. It brought the men to a sense of feeling that | they were being watched. Every man | charged with otricial duties ought to have | the same feeling. Now [ would like to| ask you men here how far any one of you has troubled himself to observe the | | Qischarge of duty by the members of the | police force. “A well-known Judge sald to me several | days ago that the men of the police force | are bound together by a kind of loyalty | that makes it incumbent on each one to see that his brother gets out of trouble, | no matter of what kind. “It is the duty, it seems, of every man | of the ‘brass buttons’ to help a ‘pal.’ Do | you recognize what a system like that in- | volves? It means that you must bring | wrong-doing home to the culprit in such | a way that it will be impossible for this | kind of loyalty to be of avail and it is| ithout per- | sonal vigilance and constant watchful- ness. | “I tell you, my brothers, that it does not make a copper’s difference whom you put in or whom ycu put out. No one man | can create a force loval to duty unless be- | hind that man or that Commissioner there | is_the pressing force of public opinion, which makes him feel that his position would be intolerable unless he did whac | was right. Organization, co-ordination of | forces, these are the things that are most needed and it is along these lines that the victory must lie. “The element of indifference, however, | is not the only one against which we have to contend. There is also that of | cupidity, that greed and passion to get out of every office every possible emolu- | ment and a powerful organization at the top that allows this to go on. 1 suppose that it will be no surprise to you to learn that before the letter in re- gard to Herlihy and Cross which I wrote was sent to the Mayor I was approached by a great many p-rsons, emissaries rep- resenting all sorts of interests, to know what sacrifice it would be necessary for them to make to satiate my desire for re- venge. 1 desire to Gisclaim here any feel- ing of that kind, or, in fact, any feeling arising out of the personal discourtesy shown to one of my clergymen. That was in itself a small matter. “The point lay in the spectacle of a person going to the men for protection who were supposed to be conservers of the laws and the peace of the community and being deliberately insulted. It was the spectable of the police ra.nsing them- selves on the side of crime and degrada- tion against the decent element of the community that was intolerable. ““Among those who came to me was a man who_ said that he represented Mr. Croker. He asked me if I would be satis- fied to drop the matter if Captain Herlihy and Inspector Cross were beheaded. I told him that this was not a question of men. These men did but the biddin those above them and those above them in their turn were the creatures of those still higher. “I told him that it was a system we were opposing, not a man or men, for he knew as well as you and I that the policeman does not hold his place through devotion to duty or honesty, but wholly and solely by the favor of ‘those above him, who are responsible for the system. lome time ago I stated—and there were many criticisms on my statement—that money was the root of all the evil. A condition of soclety where gain excuses all doings must naturally affect the mechanism ‘Which runs a city such as this. There must be some higher aim. ““There must be some loftier motives. We must recognize all who are worthy are striving for the right. The feeling must be fostered and nurtured. There must be personal sacrifice and vigilance, and when you can achieve that there comes the awakening of a great enthusi- asm. The rest will be an easy matter.” S ———— ADVERTISEMENTS. | the ones which we publish this week for DR. KILMER'S SWAMP-ROOT. ¢ WONDERFUL CURES -BY SWAMP-ROOT. To Prove What the World-Famous Discovery Swamp-Root Will Do for YOU. All OQur Readers May Have a Sample Bottle Free by Mail. / Weak and unhealthy kidneys are re- sponsible for more sickness and suffering than any other disease, and if permitted to continue fatal results are sure to fol- | low. The kidneys filter and purify the blood— | that is their work. So when your kidneys are weak or out of order you can understand how quickly your entire body is affected, and how every organ seems to fall to do its duty. Among the many cures of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder remedy, investigated by The Call, the benefit of our readers speak in the highest terms of the wonderful curative properties of this great remedy. DES MOINES, Ia., Oct. 20, 1300. ‘T have been out of health for a long time, and I was taking medicine from a doctor's prescription when I your sample ttle. I stopped taking the doctor's medi- cine and used the sample bottle of Swamp- Root. 1 afterwards took two of your large bottles, and it cured me entirely, and I have not felt so well for years. I thank you very much for sending me the sample bottie.” D. W. SMITH. 1521 Center St. What a Woman - 75 X Jhsgler of i fileh Ko Says of montiis ago I had a ve Swamp-Root. was looked very like coffee. I could pass but little at a time. and t only fering great pain. My physical (-%ndltlon was such that I had n}omn - thai[:trl :\‘:‘js all run down. The doctors sald my kidneys were not affected, 7 that they were the cause of my trouble. My sister. Mrs. . B Littlefield ot Lynn, advised me to give Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root a trial. I procured a bottle from my druggist, and found it a vex?' pleasant medicine to take, and inside of three days commenced to get relief. I followed up that bottle with another, and at the comple- tion of this one founc I was completely cured. My strength returned, and to-day I am as well as ever. My business is that of can ser. I am on my feet a great deal of the time and have to use much energy in getting around. My cure is theres fore all the more remarkable, and Is exceedingly gratifying to me.” MRS. H. N. WHEELER. greatest and most successful remedy that k street, Lynn, About eighteen y severe attack of grip. I extremely sick for three weeks. and when I % my bed T was left with ex- cruciating pains In my back. My water at times If vou are sick or ‘feel badly” begin | taking the famous new discovery, Dr. | Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, because as soon as your kidneys are well they will help all the other organs to health.' A trial will convince you—and you may have a sam- | ple bottle free for the asking. 4 ‘When your kidneys are not doing their | work some of the symptoms which prove it to you are pain or dull ache in the back, excess of uric acid, gravel, rheumatic pains, sediment in the urine, scanty sup- ply. 'scalding _irritation in passing _it, obliged to go often during the day and to get up many times during the night to empty the bladder; sleeplessness, nervous | irritability, dizziness, {rregular heart, breathlessness, sallow, unheaithy com- plexion, puffy or dark circles under the eyes, loss of ambition, general weakness and debilit: Swamp-Root is used in the leading hos- pitals, recommended by physicians in their private practice and is taken by doc- | tors themselves who have kidney all- | ments, because they recognize in it the science has ever been able to compound, 0 prove its wonderful Sample ..ol your name and address Bottle &5 Rime 965" nghamton, ) ERCC, o e i R free of all charge, a sample bottle of Swamp-Root and a valuable book by ma prepaid. This book contains many of the thousands upon thousands of testimonial letters recetved from men and women who owe their good health, In fact, their very lives, to the wonderful curative properties of this_world-famous kidney remedy Swamp-Root {s pleasant to take, and is so remarkably successful that those of our readers who have not already tried it are advised to write for a sample bottle, and to be sure and mention reading this gen- gx:fius offer in the San Francisco Sunday all, 3 Swamp-Root is pleasant to take, and if you are already convinced that this great remedy is what you need, you can pur- chase the regular 50-cent and $1 size hot- tles at the drugstores everywhere. AMERICA MAY L AND MARINES IN VENEZUELA Determined to Preven Ejected From Asp t Citizens From Being halt Concessions. Special Dispatch to The Call i CALL BURFAU, 1406 G STREET, N. W., WASHINGTON, Jan. 5.—Ameri- can marines will be landed to protect the property of the New York and Bermudas Asphalt Company in case the Venezuelan Government should attempt to dispossess the agents of that corporation. In fur- ther instructions given to Minister Loom!s | the State Department has made it plain | to him that he must spare no effort to urge the Venezuelan Government to re- frain from ukg‘ action against the New | York and Bermudez Company until th Supreme Court has announced its d cision on the pending suits. | Commander Hutchins, commanding the Buffalo, senior officer in command, has | been instructed to co-operate with Minis- | ter Loomis and he has been advised of | the character of the instructions forward- | ed to the diplomatic representatives. | General F. V. Greene of New York | called at the State Department to-day and | delivered an argument before the solicitor of the State Department, Penfleld, in sup- rt of the claim of the New York and | ermudez Company to the pitch lakes | embraced in what is known as the Felici- dad concession. General Greene was ac- | W. Bean of ford from La Guayra to Curacao two weeks ago. Mr. Bean was in Venezuela making an investigation of the situation, and desired to return quickly to the United States, and upon request the State Department placed thé Hartford at_ his disposal to convey him to Curacao. Gen- eral Greene attempted to show that the Venezuelan Government in endeavoring to dispossess the New York and Bermudez Compariy was acting in an fllegal and arbitrary manner, contrary, he said, to decisions already made by the Supreme Court of Venezuela. Regarding the allegation that the title of the New York and Bermudez Company was defectlve General Greene produced map of the territory in dispute, showing that the concession followed a meander- ing line along a footpath to the nearest town. The Venezuelan Government, he claims, has In a .ater map arbitrarily straightened the line, thus throwing the asphalt lakes, which are the bone of con- ;e’!nntlon. outside of the company’s conces- on. Judge Penfleld will submit a report to Secretary Hay, with a recommendation for such action as he may consider de- sirable. The department is anxious, ho ever, that the pending suits in Venezuela will be pushed to a in Sewing as a business is an exacting and exhausting occupation. Long hours, fine work, poor light, unhealthy atmosphere —these are only some of the things which fret the nerves and hurt the gen- eral health. Often there is a diseased condition of the womanly organism which causes backache or and the working of the sewing machine under such conditions is akin to torture. Thousands of women who worlk ifli have written grate- ful letters to Dr. R.V. Pierce, whose “ Favorite Prescrip. tion” has cured their womanly ills and established their genenl gulth. Favorite rescription” es- tablishes regular- ity, dries un- = ulceration, cures female weak- ness. It makes companied by Lawyer H. Bromp( decision, New York, who it appears was the mys- | which event there will be no reason for terious passenger conveyed by the Hart- | action by this Government. D S a2 S e S Y NURSES BEAT |Esersssas: - THE PATIENTS sion to-day in which he d: “1 do not know why I did it. I wanted to kill her. I have no excuses to offer for the crime, and If they want to kill me they can.” ADVERTISEMENTS. Dr. Alexander Traiman Tells of Abuses at F ree to the Bellevue. l_%_uptured Dr. W. S. Riee, the Well Known Au- thority, Sends a Trial of His Famous Method Free to All NEW YORK, Jan. 5.—Dr. Alexander Traiman, who was superintendent of the insane asylum on Wards Island when it was under the city’s control, speaking last night of the alleged abuses in Bellevue Hospital, said: “It was a common thing while I was at the insane pavilion to find patients with bruises on their faces and other marks of physical violence. While I was at Wards Island we used to get patients frequently from the insane pavilion at Bellevue who were badly marked. Sometimes they had broken ribs. It got so bad that Dr. Mc- Donald kept a book in which he entered the injuries on patients received, so that they could not be charged to his subor- dinates. “In the pavilion at Bellevue there was no safeguard for the patients against the nurses. In a place of that kind there should be a physician on duty all the time. ““The mechanical restraints still used at Bellevue are an open door to brutalities. They save a lot of trouble for the nurses, but they are out of date and often injure the ?n.tlonu “With the worst cases on Wards Island they have never used mechanical restraint of any kind since 1384.” Out of the chaos of old-time failure comes a new and startling cure for rupture. Dr. W. S. Rice, 413 N. Main St., Adams, N. Y., has in- vented a method that cures without pain, MR. CHAS. LANGE. danger, operation or an hour's loss of time trom the day’s work. To avoid all questions of doubt he sends free to every sufferer a frea trial of his method and there can be no earthly reason why any one. rich or poor. should not avail themselves of this generous offer. As an of this remarkable method, the curs of Charles Lange, Morrison, Iils., is a welcome MISS MORRIS MAY LIVE. At Her Request Weinstock Was Not MARTETTA, Ohio, Jan. 5.—Nellle Mor- ris, who was severely cut last night by Walter Weinstock at Hackney, is still living, with chances in favor of her re- covery. Excitement in the vicinity of Hackney nmlwhhh. and Im.thotor the girl's request that Weinstock uld not be lynched while she lives would have been meted out to The constable who took Welinstock to the jail at drove fifty miles In a similar cases reported by those use the Rice method. Send for this free Don't Be backward. It will surprise with its wonderful power to heal. And if of other ruptured people ask them for them. Do mot fall ta & oller suprert and ha curs bs cuiy ene of hundreds of

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