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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1901. 15 ISMAR. ISMAR THE GYPSY, KNOW YOUR FATE! “There is & tide in the affairs of men which, taken at the flood, leads on to for- tune and success; neglected, all your lives FARMER [NSISTS ON BEING ROBBED Breaks Into a Saloon in Which Masked Man Is Operating. Regards the Proceedings as a Huge Joke Until He Is Made to Give Up His Watch and are bound in shadows and in miseries.” This 18 true of every ever walk of life an or woman In and whether it be aft; culations, d a wrong path >ut the de- sired results, If you are cons and disappot ings there celebrated wvelous gif! Iy pursued by i1l luck in all your undertak- se for it. Ismar, the 1 seeress, whose mar- has made her the s eminently fitted to advice as to the se to pursue, Fou from ng out what the future Tolds in store for you. Forewarned is forearmed. What Ismar has done for he can do for you. Her readings ate and confidential. Ismar can be consulted daily from a m. to § p. m. at her office, 1148 Market street, two doors below Weinstock & Lu- PRESIDENT’S CALL FOR EXTRA ScSSION WASHINGTO the purpose of al nomina- ADVERTISEMENTS. Drunkards Easily _Cured Miss Eiith Williams Wants Every | Lady Reader of This Paper to Know How She Saved Her Father. Used an Odorless and Tasteless Remedy | In His Food Quickly Curing Him | Without His Knowledge, Tric! Package of the Remedy Malled Free | To Show How Easy It Is To Cure Drunkards. be more dramatic or devoted h Miss Bdith Willlams. father after years of m »'mcst unbearable suffering. S EDITH WILLIAMS. er is a reformed man’ she sald, iends think it a miracle that I cured ge or consent. I had of 329 Ellis st., San e, 50 1 kept it up. ning father got up and said he war is Was & g0od sign, as he rarsly ate He went & s I hadn't seen him sober .or cfore in over fourteen years. After sat down In the big easy chair and th, 1 don’t know what has come over I hate the sight and smell of liguor going to stop drinking forever.’ This » much for me, and I toid him then what Come. Well, we both had & good cry, sad have the happlest home and the kine- 'ather you can imagine. 1 am so glad you publish this experience, for it will reach y others and let them know sbout :hai wonderfu! Golden Epecific.” Dr. Finines, the discoverer, will send & sam- le of s grand remedy free to all who will write for it. Enough of the remedy is mafled free to show how it is used in tea, coffes or 504, und that it will cure the dreaded habit tetly and permanently. Send your name and rese to Dr. J. W. Haines, 576 Glenn Build- ti, Ohlo, and he will mall a free mple of the remedy to you, securely sealed in & plain wrapper, also full directions how to use it books ani testimoniais from hundreds who hive been cured, and everything to ail you in saving those near and dear to you frc:n & life of degradation and ultimate poverty asd ai It will brighten sgrace Send for @ free trial to-day. the rest of ycur life. marriage or di-| Chain. | ——— Specia! Dispatch to The Call | MADERA, Feb. Joseph Joyce, a farmer living near Berenda, a station seven miles north of admits that the it 2 masked man Thomas Costello, at judicious display of joke is on him. Las entered the saloon ¢ Berenda, and by the a revolver induced Costello to deliver up | the contents of the money till. Joyce from a distance viewed the proceedings through a window. He believed a joke was being played on Costello and he wanted to be in on the fun, so after watching through the window for a minute or two he kicked upon the door and insisted upon being ad- mitted. The robber, who wore a mask, had lock: the door on entering the sa- loon. When Farmer Joyce, laughing heartily at the supposed joke on the sa- loon e.*rong1 to gain access to the saloon the ing Costello of his wealth, opened the door and thrust the muzzle of his revolver under the nose of Joyc he commanded. 't got any,” answered Joyce, show signs of alarm. give me that watch and chain. to rubber at me.” g the thoroughly surprised s timapiece the fellow disap- larkness. obbery was taking place re In an ante-room of the ing cards. They, too, regarded ngs as a joke, and did not p their game until the masked d started for the door with the s of the money drawer. eriff was informed of the rob- i immediately dispatc! is, W. Pinnell and Ja: amer ja. Constable Crow of Berenda ed a posse and went after the rob- He arrested a side & buggy near the scene of This morning the stolen arti- ound a short distance from the Deputy Constable V. 0. d ol also were found. Pieces h exactly fitted the eye- ask, were discovered in the e vehicle in which the young lng is believed to have been s it answers the description of ken (rnngra ranck r Tulare on n of Willfam ween San Jose LEGISLATORS “INSPECT” THE CLOVERDALE FAIR “Colonel” Brady and Fellow Junket. | ers Swoop Down Upon the Sonoma Town. RDALE, Feb. 23.—Although the y came to a close to- tistic and otlier exhibits and wili remain until onday encfit of those coming from San Francisco and way stations to- morrow A feature of the fair yesterday was the visit of a legislative committee consisti f of D. Blis: W. Hasson of Or (chairman) of rived by special tr tour of inspection a depot pressed i_were met at the e legisiators ex- highly pieased with arled with three cheers programme consisted of selections by Professor picked band of twenty pieces and t panish and skirt dances by Miss Mabel Mitchell, a litde girl of ten years of age, from Santa Rosa, who is an artist in her line. Master Harry Mangle ap- peared in a cakewalk. The falr, notwithstanding the light rain yesterday afternoon and this morning. | has been a complete success financially and the assoclation will at once take up the work of making elaborate arrange- ments for the enlargement of the pavilion and for making nexi year's fair far su- rior to this, which 1s the best Cloverdale nas ever had. - ;TB»OL‘LEY LINE FROM SAN FRANCISCO TO SAN JOSE Railway Project Said to Have the Backing of an Eastern Syndicate. SAN JOSB, Feb. 23.—A scheme is on foot for big electric rallway developments ‘n Santa Clara County, and those who claim they have an inkling on the inside of affairs declare that Ban Jose and San Francisco are to be counected by a trolley line. Back of this project is said to be un- limited Bastern capital. The particulars are not obtainable, but it is said a line will be bullt to connect the electric rail- at South San Francisco with the end of the line of the San Jose and Santa Clara Railway at Banta Clara. An option on the Ban Jose road until the 1st of March has been obtained. | «n_attorney for the combine has been here for some tima examining into the franchise and going over the detalls of the plan. Rumors have been thick for the past month about the consolidation of all the electric rallways and the two electric light companies of the city, the power for the consolidation company to be supplied by the Standard Electric Company, whose v;1.vn5 have recently been strung to this city. —_——— Legal Strife for Water Rights. ROSSLAND, B. C., Feb. 23.—Chlef Jus- tice McColl, at a sitting of the Supreme Court here to-day, granted an order re- ferring back to the land commissioner at Nelson, for reconsideration, the award to the Trail smelter of certain valuable wa- ter rights on Murphy, Trall and Stony creeks. The order was sought by the War Eagle and Center Star mining com- ga.me!. which held that the Nelson award ad been made without their knowledza end at a time when their own ap-lica- tions for water rights were pending be- fore the gold commissioner at Rosslyn. The effect of the Chief Justice’s order will be to enable the land commissioner to cancel or amend his first award and to allow the interests of all the parties to be elosed. —_— Drive Into Open Sewer. PACIFIC GROVE, Feb. 22.—Dr. A. M. Ritchie and Earl Derby, son of Richard R. Derby, SScantity of the Pacific Im- provement Company, were Injured accident last night. They dgove l:xxt‘o.: newly dug sewer on Seventeenth street, over which the workmen had neglected to Place a signal light and both were thrown out. Dr. Ritchie was badly cut about the head and face and Mr. Derby sustained severe bruises and a bad wrench of his ankle. Their vehicle was smashed and the horse considerably injured. Richard Pahl Is Quitting. To-morrow (Monday) we will sell W. L. Douglas $4 and $5 shoes for $250 a pair: 500 pair my own make, worth from $ to $10 a palr, will close them out at $3; 1000 air ladies’ ties and shoes for 50c. 224 earny street, near Bush. . The Otto Gildermeister Safe. BAN DIBEGO, Feb. 2.—The steam schooner National City picked up the long overdue shilp Otto Glldermeister, dis- masted at sea, and came Into port with her in tow to-night. oo, e 2B LA L Dr. E. H. Mattner has returned from Eu- rope and resumed practice at 505 Van Nesse —_———— Man kills time, forgetting that time kills man. an, became too enthusiastic in his | er, who by this time had finished de- | ung man who was ' The | R, J. Hangford of 8an Francisco is pro- | | moting the project. | Pastern capitalists here a week ago look- | ing over the field, and He had a party of | SESSION OF THE LEGISLATURE TO LAST BUT TWO WEEKS MORE Five Important Bills Remain to Be Disposed of and Mem- bers Manifest an Inclination to Waste Little Time in Sending Them Up for the Governor's Signature o 4 o~ MR.DUNLAR, AUAS Special Dispatch to The Call. ALL HEADQUARTERS, SAC- RAMENTO, Feb. 23.—Two weeks from to-night the session of the Legislature will close. That s the general opinion and is a logi- cal one, tco, for when the five pleces of legislation now pending and of most im- portance have been passed up tc the Gov- ernor, there is nothing on the file of either | House that can keep the statesmen in | Sacramento. Even with an ending on | March 9, the legislators will have held over without a per dlem, and that Is enough to stretch the patriotism of more than a quorum this year. The five measures that must be put through are: Apportionment, code revi- slon, county salaries, a prlma.r¥ law and the general appropriation biil. It was be- lieved that code revision wouid fall by the wayside, but if the speed of the past week is kept up to the end, the revision bills will slip through wifh the ease of a cau- ASSEMBLYMAN MACBETH RUBBERED AROUND TO COUNT NOSES... LONESOME LEGISLATORS SEEKING A QUORUM. - County to join with San Bernardino In forming a Senatorial district. No one— not even San Bernardino—wants it: but the trouble is there is no one to make a | — fought so hard. These are announced as :,',‘fi,“g“ changes to the last bill as sub- ed. cus agreement or & Governors pro- |t E i c1 ght over such & union except Senator | B ays and Means Committee 1s far | Caldwell, and it really makes no differ- | 2SSEMBLY LACKS A QUORUM. ence to him. Davis on the north, Rowell on the West, and Smith of Kern on the southwest, each declares that Inyo shall not be of his district, and Caldwell on the south Joins in the cry: but Caldwell is from Riverside County, and in the new appor- | tionment Riverside is taken from San | Bernardino and made to form a Senatorial district with Orange, while a new district | is to be formed of San Bernardino ande Inyo. The same bill that puts those te gether will relleve Caldwell from respon- sibility over San Bernardino, so no one will be hurt by the new arrangement— | that i, no one is now in a position to| make complaint. | Alpine and Mono will be put in with | Amador and Calaveras to make the Elev- | enth Assembly District; Madera will be taken from Tuolumne and Mariposa and behind with the general appropriation bill and the excuse that it will be earlier than at the last session can hardly be made, for the last session ran seventeen days over time and this one will not. The biil has not been introduced in the Aasembl{ yet and it must fight its way throu that body before the Senate can touch it. As soon as it comes out a copy will be sent to the Senate Finance Committee, and that committee will commence work upon it so that when it does reach the Senate no time will be lost in putting in any amendments deemed necessary and not included in the changes made on the floor of the Assembly. The general appropriation bill {s prom- ised for early next week. Apportionment should be finished by Tuesday any , for the Senate caucus has practically agreed upon a course, ani as each Senator took no action without consulting his Assembiyman, it is fair to presume that there will be no material departures in the Assembly from the de- cision of the Senate. A primary law, a_composite of all the measures introduced upon that subject. has been adopted b e Committes on Elections from both houses, in joint meet- ing, and, while there probably will be a fight upon it, the bill will not take long in its consideration. And the county gov- ernment bill ought to go through with the rest in the two weeks coming. Monday next is the last day upon which bills may be Introduced without suspend- ing the rules. The bills have been falling off in number of late, and it is probabls that when time is called there will not be within 400 of the number introduced two years ago. BILLS THAT SHOULD BE CLOSELY SCRUTINIZED Ore Measure Places $11,000 in the Hands of Clerk of the Supreme Court Root. CALL HEADQUARTERS, SACRA- | MENTO, Feb. 23.—Members of the Legis- lature who are well posted are keeping a { watchful eye on Assembly bill No. 806. This measure proposes the allowance of | £11,000 to be expended by George W. Root, | clerk of the Supreme Court. It author- izes him to fit out the offices of the clerk | of the Supreme Court with modern metal- | lic filing and book cases and such other furniture and fixtures as may be neces- sary for the proper transaction of the business of his office. The Controller is | directed to issue warrants éayzbla out of | the general fund of the Stafe treasury for the sum of said appropriation in favor of said clerk of the Supreme Court. Itis provided that the act shall take effect and be in force from and after its pas- sage. -'fha State Board of Examiners is not directed to superintend the proposed dis- bursement of public money. The Justices of the Supreme Court are not required to approve the expenditure. The Supreme Court Commissioners are not mentioned as supervising agents. It is proposed by the bill to give Root free rein to spend the sum of $11,000. Lawmakers who are familiar with Root's official record will hesitate before giving countenance to a bill authorizing him to perform the work proposed with- out the assistance of an overseer. Those who are familiar with his non-official rec- ord, as well his officlal record, would not vote away the small sum of $11 to be ex- pended under his sole direction. The records of the Sacramento office of the Supreme Court are piled around in a disgraceful manner to convince the mem- | bers of the Legislature that more money should be expended to preserve the docu- ments in an orderly, methodical form. | Deligent inquiry may be ordered to ascer- tain if any money whatever Is needed. If it shall be found that metaliic furniture is required the blll can then be amended to make some officer, other than the pres- ent clerk of the Supreme Court, respon- sible for the disbursement of the money. There is another Supreme Court bill nding. It is Assembly bill 79, author- zing the clerk to employ a stenofrapher. whose salary shall be $300 annually. No addition to the clerical force of the court is needed. A trick was played on the Legislature of 1899. The clerk lobbied through a bill permitting him to place his deputies—four of them—in the San Fran- cisco office. At the same time a statu- tory provision compelled him to place two men in the Los Angeles office. INY0 WILL BE JOINED Absence of Members Forces Adjourn- ment Over Sunday. CALL HEADQUARTERS, SACRA- MENTO, Feb. 23.—The Assembly tried to meet to-day but failed, as every one ex- pected-it would. There was a call of the House to secure a quorum, but that helped matters but little. It was only to keep the per dlem going any way, so no one was disappointed. It was intended that if a bare quorum could be obtained the sec- ond reading file should be taken up, and scores of bills could be passed to third reading if there were no objection. So long as no rollcall is demanded or ayes and noes taken, the Speaker may remain technically ignorant o? rum, but it takes a quorum at least to put in with Stanislaus and Merced; Inyo | start a scheme of that kind and a_quorum will go in with Tulare to make the Twen- | was just what was lacking. The few who ty-seventh Assembly District, and Sac- | did attend finally adjourned over to Mon- ramento will get back the Assemblyman 'day. ' ADVERTISEMENTS. CURES WEAK MEN FREE. Send Name and Address To-Day---You Can Have It Free and Be Strong and Vigorous for Life. INSURES LOVE AND A HAPPY HOME. NN R NN NN L. W. ENAPP, M. D. How any man may quickly cure himseif after | been extraordinary. It has completely years of suffering from sexual weakness, lost | e up. x-mjmnvu-fiu'n-.':; vitality, night losses, varicocele, etc., and en- | 8R4 you cannot realize how happy I am.” lnrge small weak GrEans to full size and VIEO. | Raioies st Loenti i T i e rully. Eimply send your name and address to Dr. L. a4 v W. Knapp, 1378 Hull buliding, Detroit, Mich,, snd he wiil gladly serd the free receipt with {ull directions 50 ttat sny man may eas Ny cu 1t This s certal, and thful it is ‘boon ‘weak WITH SAN BERNARDINO Elpe cfl-nfl‘d the following -n}u-'m::i:-zn “.“!.-:‘ % apro i size, :n'!-nl CALL HEADQUARTERS, SACRA- | b ;m“t‘;? AR b g 13 strictly confidential, MENTO, Feb. 23.—The -néorflonmfl; l'u ym:rlfl:; i Sl L:‘.“" ymh 18 free o tbe saking and he waits every e fight will finally end in sending Inyo | feeyiment & thoroveh test and the Bemeht has | ia Bave de the lack of a quo- | | | | she was so near losing and for whom she | | ney remedy than the one we publish this { Isfied that I do not need any more medicine, DR. KILMER'S SWAMP-ROOT. TEST FOR YOURSELF The Wonderful Curative Propertiesof Swamp-Root To Prove what SWAMP- ROOT will do for YOU, Every Reader of Th: Call lay Have a Sample Bottle Sent Absolutely Frze by Mail. - Among the many famous cures of weck for the benefit of our readers. | ‘You have no idea how well I feel 1 I am sat- I am In as good heaith as I ever was in my life. So says Mrs. Mary Engelhardt of 2835 Madison street, St. Louis, Mo., to a reporter of the St. Louis Globe-Democrat “For more than ten years I had suffered with what the doctors termed female trouble: also | heart trouble, with swelling of the feet and | limbs. Last summer I felt so badly that I thought T had not long to live. I consulted doctor after doctor and took their medicines, but felt no better. The physicians told me my kidneys were not affected, and while I Did Not Know 1 Had Kidney Trouble, 1 somehow felt certain kidneys :.\uroo&, trouble. A‘gnami m;:‘m'f; must say I derived immense from the first week. I continued the medi- | cine, taking it regularly, and I am now In | splendid health. The pains and aches have all | gone. I have recommended Swamp-Root to all | my friends, and told them what it has done for me. I will gladly answer any one who de- | sires to write me regarding my case. I most | heartily Indorse Swamp-Root from every stand- | point. There is such a pleasant tasts'to| Swamp-Root, and it goes right to the weak spots and drives them out of the system.™ I RS. MARY ENGELHARDT. How to Find Out Swamp-Root will do just as much for | Swamp-Root investigated by The Cail | any housewife whose back is too weak to | none seem to speak hizher of the wonder- | ful curative properties of this great kid- | perform her necessary work, who is al- ways tired and overwrought, who feels that the cares of life are more than she can stand. It is a boon to the weak and ailing. MRS. MARY ENGELHARDT. It used to be considered that only urinary and bladder troubles were (0 be traced to the kidneys, If You Need but now modern sclence proves that nearly alf S e e ey T 1, (e 8 wamp-Root. The kidneys filter and purity the blood—that is thelr work. So when your kidne; ys are weak or out of order you can understand 0w quickly your entire body is affected and how every organ seems to fail to do its duty. KiaL, 708 are sick or “feel badly” begin taking the famous new discovery, Dr. mer’s Swamp-Root, because as soon as your kidneys are well they will heip all the other organs to health. A trial will convince any one. any women suffer untold misery because the nature of their disease is not correctly understood. They are led to believe that womb troubie or femals weak- ness of some sort is responsible for ths Neuraligia, nervous: many ills that beset womankind. ness, headache, puffy or dark circles under the eyes, rheu- matism, a dragging pain or duli ache In the back, weakness or bearing down sen- sation, profuse or scanty supply of urine, with strong odor, freauent desire to pass it night or day, with scalding or burning sensation—these are signs of kidney and bladder trouble. all unmistakable If there is any doubt in your mind as to your condition take from your urine on rising about four ounces, place it in a glass or bottle and let it stand twenty- four hours. If on examination it is milky or cloudy, if there is a brickdust settling, OF if small particles float about in it. your kidneys are in need of immediats atten- Other symptoms showin ness, {rregular heart. brea bition but no strength. Fn lessness, sa'l Swamp-Root is pleasant to take and Is used in the leading hospitals, that you need Swamp-Root are slecplessness, dizal- ow, unhealthy complexion, plenty of am- recom- mended by physicians in their private practice, and is taken by doctors themselves, has ever been able to compound. | because they recognize in it the greatest and most successful remedy that sclencs If you are alreadyv convinced that Swamp-Root {s what you need you can pur- chase the regular fifty-cent and one dollar bottles at the dru —Swamp-Root, the great Kidney, edy, {s so remarkably successful that a 3pecial arrangement has been EDITORIAL NOTICE stores everywhere. ver and Bladder rem- made by which all our readers who have not already tried it may have a sample bottle sent absolutely free by malil. Also a book telling all about kidney and bladder troubles and containing many of the thousands upon thousands of testimonial letters re- ceived from men and wcmen cured by S: wamp-Root. Be sure and mention reading this generous offer in the San Francisco Sunday Call when sending your address to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. STRANGE PHENOMENA IN PERU'S INTERIOR Peculiar Atmospher ic Disturbances Are Followed by Prolonged Subterra- nean Rumblings of a Seismic Nature Special Dispatch to The Call. LIMA, Peru, Feb. 22.—In view of the predictions in Bristol's Almanac general attention has been attracted to the In- terior of Peru and along the coast to a repetition of the atmospheric phenomena. There were atmospheric disturbances Thursday night, also prolonged subter- ranean rumblings of a selsmic nature in Lima, Ica and Pisco. In Canete several mornings ago there was heard an explo- sion at 4 o'clock. Then followed thunder, Lightning continued until twenty minutes L e DOTSOR'S DEATH STILL A MYSTERY Paper Found on His Person Exonerates Men Accused of Murder. HELENA, Mont., Feb. 23.—The mystery surrounding the death of Captain Oliver | Dotson, one of the men who laid out the | city of Denver and was a famous Black | Hills character, whose dead body was| found in his cabin in Washington Gulch, | thirty-five miles west of Helena, remains | unsolved, and the tragedy promises to de- velop one of the most remarkable storfes of crime ever heard of in this region. The officers, who returned to-day from ‘Washington Gulch, report the finding of an alleged confession signed by Captaln Dotson. in which he declares that his son, Clinton Dotson; his grandson, Oliver Hen- son, Elias Persinger, the latter from Missouri, are innocent of the murder of Eugene Cullinane, which occurred in Aug- ust, 1899, and for which the younger Dot- son 1S NOW serving a ninety-nine-year sen- tence and the otner two ten years' terms in_the penitentiary. Dotson, in the confession, states he was about to commit suicide and he made the confession in the hope of freeing innocent | men. The officers belleve the confession to be a clever forgery, but say they cannot rove this until persons familiar with otson’'s handwriting can be found. To 1 a) s Dotson had committed suicide. A rifle had been rigged up | against the wall and Dotson had :gur- ently stood In front of it and pulled the with strin; a g He was shot through the head. Some time ago the Warden of the penl- tentiary learned that a convict who was released in December last had declared that he would kill Dotson and that he ‘would leave on the body a confession pur- rting to exonerate the three men in jail. t is asserted that Clinton Dotson p ised to divide $15.000, which he claimed to have buried somewhere in W: . with the convict if he would kill his father and secure his pardon. This convict was seen near Washington Gulch last Sunday and The alleg: cannot now found. ed con- on Dotson impl Ed Cachellim in ‘the murder of Cullinane. Cachellim is now County Commissioner at rre, 8. D. He was a friend of the unger Dotson and spent money in de lending all three of the convicted men. FIVE LIVES LOST IN A BURNING DWELLING after 5 o’clock. The thermomaeter regis- tered 65 degrees and the barometer was very unsteady. Clouds moved from the north toward the south and the wind along the surface of the earth was variable and frequently was in the opposite direction from that in which the clouds were moving. The ther- mometer at 3 o'clock in the afternoom following the phenomena ross to $ de- grees. ince then there has been plenty g 5:;9. There are freshets in the river B Y ) four daughters were burned to death. g}:.’mu and a son were absent from At 5 o'clock Mr. James got up, built a fire and went back to bed. Later the stove tipped over and in a short time the whole house was in flames. The daugh- ters awoke and rushed into the room where their father was. A son 13 years old, who was sleeping with his father, escaped through a back dood He went to the window of the room In which the father and girls were and trled to get them out, but apparently they were all suffocated. The boy then rang the din- ner bell until the fiames forced him to retreat. Before the neighbors, alarmed by the bell, arrived the house had fallen in and the inmates could not be rescued. The mother of the family and one dau ter were away on a visit. All the bodies were taken out of the ruins. James was 2 soldier in the Civil War and was 6§ years old. it DEL MONTE, Feb. 23.—The Del Monts baths opened for the season vesterday. This is the first time in their history that they have been opened so early and guests at the hotel ly pleased. _— ADVERTISEMENTS. QUICK AND SURE. A Pile Remedy Which Really Cures. Mr. D. F. Collins of Garnett, says: “T commenced using the Pyramid Plle Cure at a time when my case was bad. [ thought nothing could cure it, but befora I had used a 30-cent package I began to feel much better, and now I can honestly say I am entirely cured. It is the quick- est and surest remedy I have ever tried or heard of.” From Thomas Wilison of Port Jarvis: | “Just one package of the Pyramid Pile Cure did wonders for me, and I lose no opportunity of recommending such a rem- edy.” Amos Crocker of Worcester: “After having gone through an unsuccesstul sur- gical operation for piles and after trying any number of salves and ointments ‘without success it is no wonder that I can | ind words of praise for the Pyramid Pile Cure. One package did me more good than all the remedies I had tried before. | It is so simple and painless to use that I felt no Inconvenience whatever while using it.” It has been thoroughly tested by physi- clans in every State in the Union, and the best authorities recognize !t as the safest, surest and cheapest pile cure known. ‘The Pyramid Pile Cure cures every form of plles, itching, protruding or bleeding. ‘without a particle of pain. It cures without detention from dally | oceupation, being in suppository form and uged at night Its effects | temporary T . | “More than all this, the Pyramid Pile re lasting and not merely George James, a Civil War Veteran, and Four Daughters Perish in Indiana. VERSAILLES, Ind., Feb. 2.—The home of George James, four miles from here, burned this morning and James and his Cure is entirely harmless, containing no oplate, narcotics or mineral poisons, and cannot harm the most delicate. iggists everywhers sell it and report universal satisfaction wherever used. A little book on cause and cure of piles malled free by addressing the B ot Dy Co Mt R