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n ARE AIMED AT PLAGUE ALARMISTS ThreeBillsThat Have Governor Gage's | Sanction. i e One Makes the Circulation of False Reports a Felonu. § tch to The Call. | HBADQUARTERS, SACRA- | NTO, Three important emanatin, e office, person who Wi poses, handles, | be , is guilty ‘thereof shall a y officer or member of any provides that State Board wlera its n 1 of such each | of ¥ tion by the expenditures d of Examin-' inion, of the ises which de- | tmmediate u m | | SOME OF THE / HE SA PROMINENT PERSONAGES WHO FIGURE FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, JANUARY 31, 1901 fLiviNG WAS VERY HIGH IN PA SA [GASKILL! IN THE PARIS COMMISSION INQUIRY. RLS' \ 1D SECY VARNEY ¥ SERGEANT-AT-ARMS TAKES CHARGE OF ATTORNEY FOOTE STANFORD'S FRIENDS IN MAJORITY Assembly Passes the Exemption Bill iy Third Reading. Decisively Votes Down Amendment Proposed bu Guilfoyle. Speclal Dispatch to The Call, ALL HEADQUARTE MENTO, Jan. reading of Asseml empting portiens of Stanford T ation, precipitated a It sembly. After a heated d ment offered by Guilfoyle, the lines providing taxation of bonds hel was defeated by a v noes, and by a vote of 47 t passed to the third reac Guilfoyle offered the cordance with the wisl ated Mission Improve Francisco. Wright ¢ trtroduced the bill, oppc ment. He said the people had Stanford University constitutic ment by a much larger v given any other amendment; versity authorities were asi than they were warranted der that amendment, and SACRA- RS, Th second R ALL HEADQUARTERS, SACRA- MENTO, Jan. 30.—But for a row with Foote, and his subsequent ar- rest by @ sergeant at arms, the investigation of the Paris Com- ission to-day would have been unleav- figures. It is true Varney Gaskill was " He IS" Released When Peace Has Been Rest Bt R St M LEGISLATIVE LEXOW COMMITTEE ORDERS THE ARREST OF THE BELLICOSE PARIS EXPOSITION COMMISSIONER! ored and the Inquisitorial Body Proceeds With the Questioning of Secretary Varney Gaskill. know just what to do. He hesitated a moment and Foote eved him a moment. | Then the humor of the thing burst upon | the prisoner and he laughea long and loud, as did everybody in’ the room but the committeemen. Before the laughtor ened by interest and dry as a column of | had subsided Foote and the sergeant at arms were shaking hands. “I'm in custody, am 1?7’ demanded Foota Special Dispatch to The Call. Regarding the official price list which Melick showed yesterday, Gaskill said he had never seen anything like it before. He knew of no such list in Paris and the first one he ever saw was that which Melick showed. The receipt given for wine to the South- ern California Wine Association, Melick showed yesterday, was cited by Gaskill as the only receipt of its kind he which | where {t all went to, but Gaskill was hazy on the subject, ‘“Then gou don’t know if it was drank up?* said Melick, with a reckless disre- F“d of grammar; and not to be outdone n grammatical license Gaskill positively replied: “Yes; I do know for a certainty that it was not drank up.” The case of the ga damaged, Gaskill passed on to Emlay to explajn. He explained that he sold the exhibits, not at public auction, but after he had ob- talned offers from three or four firms. The offer of $46) was the largest and he accepted that. It was all he could get for an_exhibit that, in one way or an-| other, had cost the State $116,000. sembly would only be carrying will of the people respecting a gre cational institution if it should v Guilfoyle’s amendment. Sutro said the object of the bill w enable ‘the university to make profit investments in local bonds. The of the amen nt would simply the investment of some millions of dollars in foreign bonds, the State dvan- that »sing the here of tages- of much capi Cowan favored the amendment, assert- ing that the State had been liberal in its treatment of Stanford University and the treatment had not been returned in kind. He favored the exemption of the university's real estate now, with a delay employme: of two years before its bonds should be exempted also. “The Universi ornia,” sald Brown of San Mateo, supported by the people of the Staté for the same pur- poses for which Stanford is supported by private munificence. We are asked to ap- proximate sums aggregating ne: 000 in addition to the regular ine: the State Universi The people, de- manding treatment of the one, have also expressed their wish for liber- ality toward the other in the manner ex- pressed in this By votigg down this amendment you will be acting for the best interests of the cause of education and at the sgme time carrying out the will of_the pedple.” Bauer, Walker and Wright spoke in op- position to the amendment. Schlesinger added his voice to the opposition to the exemption of bonds. o vote indicates jbat_the. bill will pasé’ by & laTee ma- ority. ADVERTISEMENTS. AT FIRST GLANCE. | on the stand, but beyond being quick and < cramento River Pack-| Attorney General Tirey L. Ford was : | Dlacatbly 1o is caplaaation it teoit: |'of s captor, and the' ‘crowd Taughed | JyA8 compelled to pive. Buriit this wine: | k- sCUMpETs Yend: e Aieins Caie s brought into the case at this point, to tel: | It Would Appear That Local Reme- oamsrgr o ity P Ay e > St 2 he sald, was exhibited and the remainder | Association, the one that caused Foote | what advice he had given the commis- | dies Would Be Best for Cure had only the effect of passing on | T N hiy i Mehck, | %28 glven to the judges. That portion | to be thrown into custody, was peculiar. | sioners about the limits of the phrase | to Emlay what had been passed on to | £ his H-“r“};m ‘h P()lmlgr"’r"t?‘ ‘..‘""i‘ which was exhibited was sold and the | The River Company had written to Sen- | “traveling expenses.” Gaskill had said | of Catarrh. him, and when the committee adjourned | Who moved that shoul f‘Or{? a'm"qldlflfl M | company, Gaskill said, would be_paid [ ator Belshaw, who turned the letter over | upon the stand that Ford haa given it as for the pight Emlay was still attempting | (¢ SeTgeant at arms should forthwith re- | when the accounts were made up. There | to the committee, that It had heard from | bl oircior Toa traveling expenses In-| It would seem at first glance th to pass into thin alr the charges and | inas Bt nod oiercs Movn the MEAN- | is now in the commissioners’ safe sm—i¥;ris that it had been given a gold medal. | cluded hotel bills, and Ford parf catarrh, being a ¢ of the muc Enon 4 ntits KhnCTNGE oins faf enongh | the miorien SEh il aba. carrieh he o receipts for the sale of fittings and ex- | Then it heard it was on.y a medal of sil- | roborated this by saying that! he and|membrane, salve sprays, ete.,, belng ue exists | e city, f which a 11 r has been affiicted may direct | m expe- uch dis- pe- | to each | ith Pendie- recom OW morn- to center in | State B of hem out of Health | iy case of emergency or to make them no more than s must it leaving the State board in | ght between the Fede arantine services has been going | some years. Takjng advantage of | laxity in the State'service, the Fed- | Government tock charge under the which allows the Federal Government ish & quara: State ce: It 1 and the | - efficient service. the Federal authorities took charge, b ever since they have held their place in defiance of all efforts to dislodge them. some vears sini e effect of the bill will be to put the State service once more into operation. Dr. Kinvoun, Federal Quarantine Offi- cer for the port of San Francisco, ap- eared in Sacramento this evening. Ho eclares, that his presence here is due to & desire to visit a relative, mnd that with legislation and the Legislature he has no | concern. He says he .s not interested in | bills introduced to-day until he read them in the papers. As the measures so vital affect the status of the Federal quarai. tine service on this coast, however, it is bardly possible that his visit here will end without some effort on bel Federal Government, or, at le port upon the situation. - JOSEPH LYNCH TO TESTIFY, 1LO8 ANGELES, Jan. 30.—Hon. Joseph Lynch has been subpoenaed by the legis.- lative investigating commiftee and will leave for Sacramento at onée to give tes mony in the Paris Commissioners’ in. estigation. Lynch carries with him some very caustic letters from Commissioner Truman, criticizing the actions of the other Commissioners while in Paris, and their g‘dhlicnflon is expected to add con- siderably to the interest in the proceed- ngs. SRR Fresno Forwards a Demand. FRESNO, Jan. 30.—The Fresno Bar As- soctation, the Chamber of Commerce and the Merchants’ Assoclation have joined in the demand for sessions of the proposed Appeliate Courts in Fresno and have sent James Gallagher, the secrétary of the Bar Association, to Sacramento to present the demand of this city to the a- ‘ure. Mr. Gallagher will arrive in Sacra- mento to-morrow and there will co- yperate with the members of the Legisla- :ure of this valley in the demand. ————— To Cure the Grip in Two Days Laxative Bromo-Quinine removes the cause.® | ciation. my | asked that the sergeant at down the line to reach him. His efforts | met but'indifferent success. The row with Foote came up over a on propounded by Melick regarding award to the Alaska Packers' Asso- The assoclation had been given silver me and, apropos, of an at- tempt on the part of the commission to raise this to a gold medal, Melick asked | Gaskill, who was on the stand, If either he or Mr. Foote had any stock in the company. Foote was sitting in the cen- ter of the hall, and he spoke up at once: Yes, I have fifty shares, and I am | going to keep them,” he said, and then, | despite the pounding of the chairman’s gavel, he went on: “I know that clipping you are reading from and I say the state- ments made in it are lies.” But the committee had its experience the day before, and was not to be talked at. “I move that the sergeant at arms take | charge of Mr. Foote,” said Melick. “I second the motlon,” said Treadwell, and Bliss, with evident reluctance, put the motiol Melick end Treadwell voted “aye,” and there were no noes. Then there was a pause, “I want o know what has become of motion,” demanded Melick. “I called for votes and no one voted,” said Bliss. *“Call the roll, then,” suggested Melick, and the roll was called, with the result that Bliss alone voted “no.” There was another pause, and the pro- cedure being 2 new one, nobody seemed willing to suggest anything until Melick arms be in- structed to inform Mr. Foote of the order of the committee. The sergeant at arms stepped gingerly forward and did not TURNS DOWN BELSHAW’'S ANTI-POOLROOM BILL Senate Gorporfiti:n; Committee De- cides to Recommend That It Do Not Pass. CALL HEADQUARTERS, SACRA- MENTO, Jan. 30.—-Belshaw's measure, known as the anti-poolroom bill, was passed upon unfavorably by the Senate Committee on Corporations to-night. After a long consideration of the bill, with ar- guments by its advocates, the committee went into executive session and very promptly decided to report the bill with the recommendation that it do not pass. The vote stood 7 to 1, Senator Selvage alone voting in the affirmative. Simpson Flint, Muenter, Oneal, Leavitt, Cutter and Ashe voted against a_favora ble récommendation. Lukens, Bettman, Welch and Nutt were absent. L. 8. Beedy and W. G. Morrow were present, representing the Sausalito Mu- nicipal Improvement Club. They pry sented arguments in favor of Belshaw’ bill. Their complaint was that the pool- room men were able to colonize a suffi- clent number of men in the community to be able to defeat the will of the bona fide residents. In consequence the Statc would he justified in interfering by means ln)lfulhe legislation embodied In the Belshaw Senator Belshaw, the author of the Sen- ate bill, and Atherton, who introduced tha bill in the Assembly, were hoth present and defended the measure. Senators Leavitt and Ashe took promi- nent parts in opposition to the bill. They contended that, however desirable anti- poolroom legisiation might be, it ought to emanate only from the local I “fiatlve body. Leavitt sald' that while undoubt- r of admirable people edly a large numbe in Sausaiito were op) to the pool- rooms, evidently a majority of the people were not. If they were they coulf shut marked that it was better to flee tempta- | tion, so he invited the sergeant at arms | out for a drink. This did not end matters, | however, for when the adjournment was | taken Porter Ashe advised the sergeant at arms to learn just where he stood, and | under Ashe's suggestion he addressed the committee ng that he was responsibl> for Foote: ard and lodging and hi | tions, and he wished the committee to sume_ responsibility. The committee s: the force of the situation and ordered Foote discharged from custody. rney Gaskill, secretary of the com- mission, was called to the stand at 2 o'clock. He told of his appointment and of his original salary and then of the aise to 3300, which, he showeu by his | minutes. was made on motion of Truman, seconded by Foote. Yesterday Foote sald he did not know of the raise until after the other commissioners had agreed upon | it Gaskill admitted having worked to gét the position of secretary, but denied | that he had lobbied for the bill. rie said. when reminded that he was a constant at- tendant at the Legislature by which the aris Commission act was passed, that ho was lobbying for the ciection o. Burns to the Senate. Then Treadwell questioned the witness about the medals Gaskill said that when_ he - medals he did not know what the F | Government was charging for them and he made no price. He wrote 135 or 150 of and then, having been given the of medals by Emlay he included th in a second ies of letters. He did not know where Emlay got the price, because he thought the matter was in Emlay's charge. The prices quoted were For a grand prix, $; a gold medal, a silyer medal, 320, and a bronze meda! $15. When they were made double $5 was added to each. Gaskill received In responsé to these letters about sixty checks and these he indorsed and turned over to Emlay. He knew that Emlay rurchased the medals, but he had no official knowledge of the fact. The letters quoting the prices were shown to the commissionets. - | | | out the poolrooms. Since they were not, he did not believe it the province of the Legislature to pass laws which would de- prive the municipality of the right to de- cide such questions for itself. After the discussion had lasted soma time it was agreed to amend the bill by the insertion of a clause specifying that nothing in the act should be construed to deny to the munlclfullty the right to pass ordinances pro.ibiting the selling of pools. In executive session the deci- sion was, by the vote heretofore an- nourced, to report the bill as amended, with the recommendation that it do not pass. LOBBY OF PHYSICIANS INVADE THE CAPITAL Seek to ‘Amend Bills Establishing a State Board of Medical Examiners. CALL HEADQUARTERS, SACRA- MENTO, Jan. 30.—A delegation of San Francisco physicians is in town. They | will attempt to have the bills estab- | lishing a State Board of Medical Ex- aminers amended. The bills as drawn vest the appointment of the nine examin- ers in the State medical societies of the allopathic, homeopatktic and eclectic schools. The physiclans who arrived to- night seek to have the ‘appointments made either by the Governor or the State Board of Heaith. The visiting physiclans are Dr. Winslow Andenonn’)r. Charles Boxton, Dr. D. A. Hodghead, Dr. W. J. Jackson and Dr. W. ¥ Southard. J. P. Dockery is here in from San Efimcum in the interests of the pure food | e To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All drugglsts refund the money If it fails to cure, E. W. Grove's signature 15 on each box. %c. ¢ hibits, which, will be paid to exhibitors. When he was questioned about his trips out of Paris Gaskiil said: “When I went to Paris first I arranged for the furnishing and fitting of the rooms. The man who had the work in charge sald it would take three weeks, and 1 thought it would be a good oppor- tunity to-see the south of France, 5o with my wife and Mr. Dargle 1 took a trip from February 26 to March 10. This was at the advice of and with the consent of Mr. Truman, whko was the only com- missioner in Paris at the time. He said he would look out for my work while I was away, aud, as the rooms were closed, there was no work for Mr. Dargie. The expense of the trip 1 bore out of my own pocket.” Melick then asked how Gaskill got his appointment and Gasklll answered that he supposed it was by the favor of the commissioners. “I tried to get the position through friends,” Gaskill admitted. “What Fowt-rs did they give you?" asked Melick. “They gave me power to collect this ex- hibit, and see it properly installed.” “Was there any resolution on the sub- Ject?” “No, «sir.” . “When did they give you a chance to get hold of this money? -Gaskill objected to ‘“chance to get hold of this money,” an went on to explain that he never harndled any money except in Paris, when he was given 5000 francs at a time, and these he deposited at once. All his business, he sald, was transacted by checks. His own expenses before he went to Paris, he ex- plained, were pald by himself and at the end of the month his bills were approvéd the expression, by the commission and he was reim- bursed. In reference to the seliing of the ex- hibit, Gaskill said he told b, one of the attaches, to do the best he cduld with it, and he finally found a man who would take the whole thing for $460. There was much Inquiry about the wine exhibit and LIMITS MEANING OF WORD “CONSPIRACY” Assemblyman Evatt Offers a Bill in tge Interest of Organized Labor. CALL HEADQUARTERS, SACRA- MENTO, Jan. 30.—Myers introduced in the Assembly this morning a bill amending the act establishing county boards of horticulture by providing that it shall be the duty. of the professor of entomology of the College: of Agriculture of the Uni- versity of California to examine all appli- cants for a license as Hortlcultural Com- missioner or Horticultural Inspector, for which service the examiner shall receive * Suitoyie bill_ compelly oyle introduced a compelling th!“uee of the label of the Allled Printin, %adeu CfillnncilLor of the lnfiernnlklt:ln.‘ pographical Union upon all printin, done (orplhe State or t’ogowhwh the State is_chargeable. Evatt offered a bill to limit the meantng of the word “conspiracy” and the use of “‘rg¢straining orders” and “‘Injunctions,” as applied to disputes between employers and employes. e bill provides that “no ar- rangement, combination or contract by or between two or more persons to do or to procure to be done, or not to do or. m)curo not to be done, any act in contempl: or furtherance of any trade dispute between employers and employes in the State of California shall be deemed criminal, nor shall those engaged therein be indictable or otherwise punishable for the crime of conspiracy, if such act committed by one person wo not be punishable as a erime; nor ‘shall such agreement, com- bination or contract be cosidered as in restraint of trade or commerce, nor shall any restraining order or injunction be is- Ther fntroduced a. pil riat T introduced a approp; $10.000 for the purchase of 160 acres of 1‘.3! adjoining the lands now owned by the | f | ¥er and then it droj Rped to one of bronze. Then the company heard that the Alaska Association had been given first a_silver medal, then a re-examination, and then a gold medal. After Melick's question about stock, ard the Foote suppression, Gaskill denied that he ever had a share in the company and then explained how the medals were changed. It was a large com- pany, he said, and a California company, and he thought if it were possible to ob- tain a re-examination of its exhibit it would be given a gold medal. The re-ex- amination was obtained and the gold medal was forthcoming, much to the cha- grin of the River Company, which de- clares its bronze medal salmon is selling for $1 50 a case, where the Association sal- mon brings but $1 10. *“Was any such effort made in behalf of the S8acramento River Company?’ asked Melick, and it developed that there was none. Gaskill was then questioned on his ef- forts while in Paris to obtain the Amer- | ican agency of some French wines. He did negotiate with a French champagne firm until it got out a label with Gaskiil's name emblazoned upon it, but the nego- tiations fell through. Then Gaskill sought the agency of an ale, but unsuccessfully, and finally he obtained the agency of a Scotch whisky. L. A. Emiay followed Gaskill. He came to the stand loaded with the sins that had been passed on down from Run- yon to Foote, from Foote to Gaskill and from Gaskill to Emlay, and in his hour's examination he did not do much toward passing them further. Emlay was first questioned about his letter offering to ‘“‘care” for exhibits, and he admitted that he ha# overstepped his limits and had been ‘“called down'" for it. He explained that none of the agencies which he wished to establish for ex- hibitors was to come into effect until after the exposition, and the committee neglected to ask him why one of his con- tracts, which, he sald, was like all the others, stated that it should last only while the exposition was in progress. The Davidson specimen, which was WWMWWWWHWWHWW. State Hospital at Napa, the tract being known as the Kruse ranch; one appropri- ating $5000 for an elevator for the hospital; another, $25,000, for the construction of two cot‘!:&c for tuberculous patients; an- other, , for wiring the hospital for electric lights, and another for 000 for the reconstruction and repair of the sewer pipes and plumbing of the hospital. Ralston introduced a bill authorizing telephone companies to lay conduits or erect poles for wires in the streets of municipalities, under such general regu- lations as the municipality may prescribe for damages, upon the condition that the municipal government shall have the right to regulate the charges for tele- phone service. The author of the bill explains that {ts purpose is to make it possible for competing telephdne com- panies to establish themselves in munici- palities in the face of oppositien from existing companies. i BACK FROM ITS TRIP TO THE SOUTHLAND Assembly Committee on Public Build- ings Returns From Los Angeles. CALL HEADQUARTERS, SACRA- MENTO, Jan. 30.—But two bills were passed in the Assembly to-day. One was Higby's bill, 2§2, relating to the preserva- tion of fish, and the other was Gullfoyle's measure, Assembly bill 82, aménding the act to establish and support a bureau of labor and statistics. The Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds returned this morning from ern C'llll " its junketing trip into South nia. It visited the S8an Diego State Nor- mal School and the Los Angeles State Normal School, and the members are eased with both institutions. It 3‘ X h:blu, howave(l". ll)lallc the committee not - recommen e appropriations for which they ask. oo ! certificates. | Foate agreed practically upon this inter- pretation; but he safd he had given no | definite opinion. He was asked if he woud | advise the committee, and he said h= | would be giad to, but he asked that they | communicate with him in writing, and | allow him to file a written opinion, as th= | law directs. Then Emlay returned to the stand to | tell of the medals. He said he had writ- | ten to “exhibitors at his own suggestion, | and that he had taken sole charge of_the | medals. " He sald Gore's schedule of $3 6) | for a silver medal, 30 cents for a bronze one, and $12 for a gold one referred to the | medals to be issued by the Government. These, he said, would not be issued for a | long time. but in the meantime a man named Lathaun Alne of 30 Avenue Bos- quet, Parifs, had obtained from the French Government the right to issue imitations of the official medals, and it was\these he had purchased. He showed a printed prico | list which listed these medals as follows: Silver-plated, $15; bronze, $10; heavy giit, | ;20 Emlay was asked why he had charged | | $20 for bronze, $25 for silver and $30 for | | gold, and he said it was because he had | procured a medal of petter quality than | that scheduled. | which read: 7 grand prixs, at $15 2 dals, at $30 He showed a receipt - 8265 3 gold medals, | & silver medals, at $ 4 bronze medals, at $20. 1o one on the committee seemed tice the discrepancy last item— . making a | of the four bronze medals at $20 each total of $100. | There was a note at the bottom of the recelpt saying the medals had been deliv- ered on Emlay's signature and without Emlay was questioned close- ly about the whole transaction, but he would go no further than to say that he had paid the amount the recelpts showcd and that, while he knew nothing of the value of the medals themselves, he was sure they had cost him all he had asked for them. The investigation wiil continue to-mor- row. CAUCUS DISPOSES OF 3 PATRONAGE MUDDLE PioLa Together ;nough Scraps to Make Assembly Places for Five Men. | (CALL HEADQUA RS, ACRA- MENTO, Jan. N.Q—Thenlrggpuhllcsln As- semblymen in caucus this afteraoon found | @ way out of the patronage muddle. The {Datronnge committee succeeded in plck- | Ing Up enougn bits here and there to piecs | together and give employment to five ad- | Qitional men. ~ Those chosen were the porters, who have l'éen doing duty with- | out pay under the sergeant-at-arms. They will '‘be nominated oy resdlution for vari- ous duties, but will be assigned ultimately | to_the work they are doing now. Steppacher, Geary and Delehanty will get positlops without protest, outside of the regular patronage list, since the cau- cus originally agreed to the appointment of them. any of the members of the majority regret this former action, but will not break a caucus decision. |, Some one proposed at the caucus to-day | that one of the new attaches be assigned to the position of gallery doorkeeper. Melick objected that one attache had ai- ready been assigned to that place, and the answer was that fhe new man could be put on the other side of the door. It developed In caucus that the Assem- Bly postmistress wants another letter car- rler, because the one already employed has to make as many as eight ps to the postoffice. Hourigan of San Franclsco made a characteristic speech in the caucus. He = d: “You fellers hadn't ought to tell the re- porters what happens In these here cau- cuses. Let's us fellers stand to&ther. It we don’t we n':'lgln as well be Democrats and be done with it. These here news- rs find out too much and us San u‘nchco {el;;l:::an' ?Y:e 1 the roast. e as no of reporters are hidin’ up there behind the clock now.” | to the taste and sold by druggists applied directly to the membranes of the nose and throat would be the most ra- tional treatment, but this has been proven not to be true. The mucoug membrane is made and ve- paired from the blood and catarrh Is a blood disease and any remedy to make a permanent cure must act the bioo and when the blood is purified from ca- tarrhal poison, the secretions from tRe mucous membrane will become . natural and healthy. In this climate thousands of people seem scarcely ever free from some form of catarrh; it gets betger at times, but each winter becomes gradually deeper seated and after a time the sufferer resigns him- self to it as a necessary evil Catarrh cures are almost as numerous as catarrh sufferers, but are nearly all so inconvenient and ineffective as to render their use a nufsance nearly as annoying as catarrh itsel v one who has used ches, sprays powders will bear witness to their inconvenience and failure to really cure. There are & number of excellent internal remedies for catarrh. but probably the best and certainly the safest is a new remedy, composed of eucalyptol, hydras- tis, sanguinaria and other valuable ca- tarrh specific This remedy is in tablet form, pleas ¢ and use hat any the name of Stuart’'s Catarrh Tablet any one suffering from catarrh may these tablets with absolute assurance they contain no cocaine. oplate nor poisonous mineral whatever. A leading druggist in Albany of catarrh cures, says: “I ha sold va- rious_catarrh cures for years, but have never sold any which gave such general satistaction as Stuart's Catarrh Tablets. They contain in a pleasant, concentrated form all the best and latest catarrh reme- dles, and catarrh sufferers who have used ., sprays and salves have been ed at the quh-k{rlpu.-r and porme ent results obtained -after a week's uss 3(“3“.!“(':& Catarrh Tablets. All drug- gists sell full sized packages for 50 cents. speaking AUTOWEAR OR. MEYERS &L, Specialists, Disease and weakness of men. Established 1881 Consultation ‘lnfl Drlvalo boak Tee, at office or b; m‘i. 4 Cures guar- anteed. 1 Mar- ket street (elevator entrance), San Franeisco. 739 Market street. Weak Men and Women HOULD USE DAMIANA BITTERS, THE great Mexican remedy; gives strength to sexual orgams. Depot, Lafiin & Rand Wi R and loaded in l:"lk EVES