Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, MARCH 12, 1901. REAPPORTIONMENT BILL 4 PASSES THE ASSEMBLY Goes Through by a Strict Party Vote, Sher- idan Denouncing It as an Uncon- stitutional Measure. Special Dispatch to The Call. I S, SACRA-|funds of the Senate and Assembly as a e bill 447, the contribution to the fund for the Stephen t measure, was | M. White monument, was adopted this morninggy the Assembly by a vote of 45 to 19. Johnson spoke against the resolu. tion, contending that the Assembly could | not vote money from the contingent fund | for such a purpose. Savage, Schiesinger {and others gpoke in favor of the resolu- tion. e only opposition in the t He said the trict, the | a series of torial and view to restor- to its_pre- v defeat- s arose o express Votes Away State’s Coin. Not satisfled with a ronage list far in excess of the offices provided for in the | Belshaw act, the Assembly to-day voted | 3180 to a committee sergeant-at-arms who had received mo appointment, however. | Fisk, chairman of the Way nd Means | Committee, and Ralston, a member of the commi:tee, made a vigorous fight against the irregular proceeding. but the *‘push forced the resolution through and doubt- less will be ready to adopt similar reso- lutions in behalf of other hangers-on who have e n the Assembly in bill, claim- »t constitu- e Alameda that it was the increase ey e ° | various Were Gociared | . The resolt stroduced by Hourlgan, erers. . Con. | directed that a warrant be drawn In favor 8 that politics | Of Leo Salomon for $180. Merritt, Me- oinat, Dolitics | Wade, Brown Francisco' and . tramed —'® | Henry, “chair of the committee fo. Salomon had acted as sergeant-at- approved the claim. Fights for Appropriations. appropriation_ bill reading in the Senate. of two fights on the floor, * said Sheridan, | ™ n_ignored to the the courts no al- | law-unconstitu- | f it. The consti- | Tem: { ra > School bill at San Jose the allows, from $1500 to $2700. increase had not Finance Committee under consideration, n, chairman of the com- re increase on the floor, enough and the llowed. er, with Laird and asked for the ralise d that the district had given and was. therefore, en- Oowances for both years, was not listened to and his amend- was voted down. Poll Tax Amendment Loses. 3 constitutional amendment g the levying of politax was the Senate to-day by a vote Burnett, Devlin, Selvage and d for if, Devlin afterward aye for the purpose of mov- consider. There was a hot de- e question, Devlin and Selvage amendment and ' Davis, Curtin and Shortridge op- denounced as a meas- 1t only in increasing s and relleving pay nothing government. extra A ice’s bill to establish a branch State Southern California. age was misdemeanor to falsely brand kages containing fruit. ade’s bill providing for the ap- pointment. of matrons of jalls in cities 8 | of the first, second, third, fourth and fifth classes also carried. Robert 1l _appropriating $20,00 for linking the highway system of Humboldt County with that of Shasta passed. rt's (of Amador) bill compelling parents or guardians of incorrigibles com- mitted or ler State school » to their support also passed Wants Certain Laws Codified. Benito 1 and he is the Assemblyman for More Le: ase Bills Pass. £ g to the China nate, this to contribu! aising of the allowance for -night refused passage | [ | | | | | granted Broughton's bill | T r Selvage this afterpoon intro- £ a concurrent resolution calling upe mn to codify the laws - tions, revenues, | v tions, the com- | at the next bill appropri- to the Stale passed.the 2 Devlin s Clerks to_supply officers w avits for election: gsed, as did Belshaw’'s making the cer- ation of the County Clerk sufficient in matter of warrants of tter of urgenc unty requiring s served within the - Other bills were b Sutro, protecting me \ McWade, creating office of matron of jails or prisons in cities of over 20,000 in- | ha Browr. of San Mateo, au- thorizing and direct: ate Board of Health t for pa regulations. ly Certain to Ratify. Bills Signed or Vetoed. has signed Smith's (of 50.000 for the es- school In San nd has app d the for Devlin's bill ting Code of Civil Governor ( which_amends the Procedure. svernor vetoed the claim of John 7. Powers, stenographer to the Commis- »r the Revi and Reform of the for services ren- of porter and stenographe points oui that no statutory p made for a porter to the commission in the act of ox dered in t hools. The s to limit 1595 creating it a 1s attention to the fact that Powers was serving the Com- mission orter at all times de from the legal ves one to infer of the ryth- > well.” s, e RCE. Frcm Page One. ter in person—to feel that words are inade- theart @ear, let me know right the land lies. I want to see you sc then au revoir. Your ROBERT. Wife Secures Telltale Letters. r |~ Mrs. Hancock recit n her complaint : | how Mr. Donaldson, a brother-in-law | of Mrs. Westcott, called upon her with a wh bundle of her husband’s letters to the church s Ing his rea to Break the pair. | The alleged adulter; of her husband i|averred as the cause of much men anguish and suffering to Mrs. Hancocx, and the fact of his having left his home some months agg forms the basis of as ing for_an allowance of $500 per mont: and a division of the property, togethar with counsel’'s fees. Mrs. Hancock y terday praved for a restraining order in prevent her husband 71om selling or dis- osing of any of his holdings, and Judge Dunne jssued a temporary order, and on March 15 Hancock will have to show cause why the order should not be made per- ranent. Hancock ¥ allowed .his wife to draw $40 per month since he left his home. 4 month ago he sked ber not to draw the full amount, s he had $375 to pay for painting and decorating the -home ~ at 28 Eroderick treet. Mrs. Hancock insisted on draw ing the $400, and her husband then or- dered his agent not 10 pay her anything uniess she presented an order from him (Hancock), The wife since then zas re- fused to see her husband or communicate with him in any manner. Mrs, Westeott has been staying at 1093 Pine street with her little son. She left the house vesterday afternoon, but did not take any of her belongings with her, it er and turrned them.over, stat- for doing so that he wished up the illiclt relations between | emories of past oc- | Titer dropn‘ ! £ dream of days mes we have spent in know yor irself with love s read Shakespeare's ROBERT. £ | night. Hancock claimed that Mrs. West- fo Mre, VWest- | Cott had left town for a few day - e Captures a Horsethief. s n afte: or SUISUN. March 11.—A team of horses and a spring wagon belonging to John F. Ca a farmer living near town, were stolen here yesterday afternoon. Casey drove to town and left the team hitched | on the main street. When he returned in a short time the rig was gone. Casey re- rted his loss to the officers, but they ab first thought some one was plari,'lnfi a practical joke on him. When the rig had rot been returned this morning, Consta- ble Downing took the track of the thief and captured him and recovered the team and wagon at Good Year station, near Penicla. to-day to take'the third w it makes me 1 the world for the real- the most impressing, the and sensitive sweet- 4 commands every en y impulse for her and of all he finds so much ng himself in aid for her pleasure in giving than she ng. lsn’t that you experience, I had_received your letter before the e been on the train even if was there also. Can you un- 2a0] 1n0f JuUANDOId MOY PUBISISD letter? I can only er that pot | BNG erday stated that he had | | cent in case of exchanging bad for lawful | | | | | on marauding expeditions, an: | le: | WIFE COMES WEST TO FACE ERRING HUSBAND AND NIECE Alleged Elopement of Pennsylvania Clergyman Will Culminate in a Lodi Divorce Suit. L Bpecial Dispatch to The Call. ODI, March 11.—Armed with depo- sitions, allegations and a variety of evidence, Mrs. Sarah F. Spring- field arrived here from Chicago on Saturday, and at once sought the services of attorneys. At a local hotel she % farm and gave her $50 as her share of the proceeds, pocketing the balance. Niece Makes Her Appearance. ‘When he entered the ministry their niece, Miss Mary F. Kershow. came to live with them, as Mrs. Springfield was her guardian. The wife claims an inti- macy sprang up between her husband and ] | oy bt 5 b Regnsy BEERARSE, 5 PRINCIPALS IN A SENSATIONAL DO LEGED ELOPEMENT FROM PENNS SOON MAY FIGURE IN DIVORCE PROCEEDINGS. MESTIC SCANDAL AND AN AL- YLVANIA TO CALIFORNIA, WHO i niece. She attempted to break up the in- | fatuation, and then it was, she alleges, | that her husband and Miss Kershow | spread the statement that she was insane | ana attempted to have her placed in an sylum. This was while Springfleld was | pastor of the Baptist churches at Spar: | tansburg and Centerville, Pa., more than | a year ago. | | Soon afterward the family left Pennsy vania for the West | they began an cverland journey in a prai out on the rolling the conduct of her ndalous than ever. would sit on the | | only wagon, leaving the wife to sit behind, with her feet hanging over the end of the wagon. When she remon- | strated and asked to be permitted to ride lon the seat for a change, her husband would advise her to get off and walk. This | rie schooner. Once prairie, she declares husband grew more | He and Miss Kers 3 | SERINGFIEL £, | /rz: REAKN h | E2 4 | she was compelled to do oyer many Weary | miles of Tough countr l’roflsl:gplly funds registered under an assumed name, but for the journey Mrs. Springfield had sold i & her piano for $15). This money went by her identity soon became known, and she dfign‘jfly oatll wWhenjahp decided she could made no secret of the object of her com- | 1 ®|ohzer remain ‘with Ner husband and | ing. She is the wife of the Rev. W. H. | Miss Kershow, she had but $50 left. Sick, Springfield, the eloping parson of Spar- worn out and seeing that the pair were tansburg, ¢ who recently located attempting to rid themselves of her in every way possible, she says, she left at Woodbridge, in this count; is living with his niece. Mrs. for Chicago. Since then she has been on will at once bring suit for divorce. the lookout for Springfield. and finally lo- | makes sensati allegations against her | cated him, through her Eastern attorney, husband, in addition to the charge of in-Judge Scott of Chicago, at Woodbridge, fidelity, accusing him and thelr niece of | DY means of a decoy letter, sent to her g firo. o o an insane | Biece: attempting to railroad her into an insane | Aided by Lodge Women. sylum. - Mrs. Springfield was assisted in ferret- ve. Bptingfield 1s a woman'of B i).‘,:“:»u[ her husband and coming to Cali- appearance and manner, and evidently a | fornia by the Order of Rebekah. She has person of education and refinement. She voluminous papers bearing out her state- says hen she married Springfield he | ments. O e minietrs and had lttle | Readers of The Call will remember that money. She gave him $1700, with which | some time ago a man was arrested by the he purchased a farm. Later he sold the | police of Ogden on the strength of a letter BALS 1O REAC BEDWOOD TRACTS Network of Transportation Lines for Humboldt County. where he them at Raw! There she took p: age ant ~ . F LOINERS CONES T0 G Six Members of an Arizona Band Are Captured at Clifton. —_—— i Speclal D! fpecial Dispatch to The Call. spatch to The Call. — | PHOENIX, March 11.—A gang of coun- £ e e ) WUREKA, March 11.—Filed' with the | > from Mrs. Springfield, who said she be- lieved her husband had murdered her niece, Miss Mary Kershow, for her money. It was soon found that the man arrested was not Springfield, who was later lo- cated on a little fruit farm near Wood- bridge, two- miles from here. He was king his home with Miss Kershow ho owned the property, he managing It. Springfield at that time told a tale differ- ng altogether from that of his wife's. He claimed she was an adventuress, of unsound mind, had tr to kill niece and at various times had attempted W w the | to rob her of several thousand dollars’ worth of Gov t bonds. So greatly was he claimed, that he ign from tne ministry. *‘I married the wom at Denton, Long Island ago,” said he. *“She is I know now, though I thought her a good woman at’ the time. She told me shortly after our marriage that she thought I was wealthy or she never would have married me.” Says Charges Are Ridiculous. It was throur: a marriage bureau friend. claimed the ex-minister. that he first met Mrs. Springfield, then a widow named McGregor. “‘She proved to be profane, vulgar and coarse,” continued Springfield “‘Before we finally parted she said she would drive me out of the pulpit if she could. That is what she is trying to do now. I believe it is partly blackmailing scheme, but I have done no wrong, attempted to conceal nothing and am dy to face charges and prove how utterly false and ridiculous they are.” Rev. Mr. Springfield was in Lodi to- and transacted some business in a next door to the quarters of an where his vengeful wife w ttorney at the time ranging her plan of action. Neither was aware of the presence of the other and they did not meet. ) DEATH RIDES Sixteen Persons Lose Life in a Blivzrd Sweeping Arkansas. Sl ln LITTLE ROCK, Ark., March ports from over the State s| 11.—Re- ¢ Clerk this morning were the ar- of incorporation of an immense . telegraph and telephone scheme, when carried into effect, will cover Humboldt with a network of rails terfeiters and moonshiners has been | Coun routed in Clifton, near the New Mexico | ticle lire, and six men have been captured | railw and Imprisoned. The rest of the gang, | which, whese leader is unknown, has left camp for the San Francisco Mountain fast-| and wires. nesses of Northern Arizona. The new company, which will be known United States District Attorney Robert | as the Humboldt Railrcad Company, was . Morrison left Phoenix this morning, | incorporated by A. B. Hammond, G. W. after the receipt of a telegram from Ciif- | Fenwick, William G. Gosslin, H. L. Wal- ton announcing the important capture, | going to Jlifton to prosecute the captives and look into the counterfeiting situation | of Graham County. The counterfeiters of | Arizona have been flooding that section With bogus dollars, until quite a percent- age of the money in circulation is bogu They have made no attempt to use cheap metal, but adhere rigidly to silver of the usual coin composition, being satisfied | with a profit of something like 100 per coin. | The gang routed in Clifton are simply agents for a much ,arger combination, which has a rendezvous in the Luna Val- | ley, in the San Francisco Mountains. In | this almost inaccessible spot, cattle rus- tiers, bandits and mucderers have fourd a safe retreat for years, successfully hoid ing off the advance guard of civilization Robert McClutcheon, a cowboy of G- | renci, recently made 4 bold trip intd tie outlaw country and joined the gang for purpose of learnins of its retreats. and | was fortunate enough to return with his | ife. He says that the Mexicans and ren- | egades are busy counterfeiting when aot | that there is_considerable illicit distilling. It is not believed much of the moon- shine whisky finds its way out of the val- | but there is reason .to. believe that | den and M. J. Ward, all of the Eureka and Klamath River Rallroad Company and the Vance Redwood Lumber Com- pany. The capital stock is $2,000,000, di- vided into 20,000 shares, of which 2497 shares, valued at $249,700, have been sub- scribed for, A, B. Hammond owning 2493 shares. It is the intention of the company to lay ralls from the junction of the Eel River with the south fork of Eel River,’ near Dyerville, in a northwesterly direction, assing through Eureka, rinidad to Crescent City. Branches will be run into different bodies of redwood timber and will tap the heart of the dairy district. The estimated length of the main line is 135 miles and of the branches 92 miles, | while the telegraph and telephone lines will make a total of 227 miles, 1 BIG RAILROAD DEAL SAID TO BE ARRANGED | Illinois Central Reported in New York to Be Securing Control of ‘Wisconsin Central. CHICAGO, March 11.—The Tribune to- morrow will say: The air was thick yes- Arcata and | Eastern agents have contracted for moro | terday with rumors of gigantic railway or less of the counterieit money struck deais and combinations. Of these was a by the outlaws. | report that the Illinois Central had se- cured, or was about to secure, control of the Wisconsin Central. It was claimed that certain large stockholders of the Illinois Central had bought privately a majority of Wisconsin Central preferred stock and were assured of a cntrolling interest in the common. These purchases, it was claimed, would be turned into Iili- nofs Central as a corporation and thus {l\'e the latter a line from St. Paul to New Orleans. { Artesian Wells Spouting. SAN JOSE, March 11.—For the first time in five vears the artesian wells of the valley commenced spouting to-day. Experts say that should the rainfall for the next four years be below the average, the farmers and -orchardists could still obtain enough from their wells for irri- gating purposes, % k storm of Saturday and Sunday was far greater than yesterday's reports indicat- ed. Thus far there are sixteen deaths reported, as follows: Miss Gus Rufe, Hammett; John Turner, boy, Pine Prairie; J. A. Wooley, Newcastle; Pinkey Wat- on, colored, and infant, Becks; Mrs Moliie Davis, Rock Hill; Osmer Robert | aged 13, Rock Hill; Charles Dowling, near Paragould. John Fitzgerald, Beoneville, was drowned in a swollen creek. At Greenway a dozen done at Osceola and Paragould. CHICAGO, March noon the Northwest was still cut off from telegraph and telephone communication with the rest of the world. The sleet storm, which was the worst ever experi- cneed in this section, accompanied by a northeast gals leveled practically wires between Chicago and St. Paul. The telegraph companies without exception reported absolute inability to handle the briefest message for that section, and news service to papers throughout Wis- consin and portions of Towa and Minne- sota was limited 1o a report transmitted by mail and express. All railroads suffered almost complete paralysis of,telegraph service. The Chi- cago and Northwestern lost about thir- teen miles of poles and wires, chiefly in Wisconsin. and the Chicago. Milwaukee ning of trains. PRESTON, Kan.. March 11.—Daniel Jones, & farmer, was frozen to death last night on the prairie during the blizzard. ~" Training Ship Floated. WASHINGTON, March 11.—Word has reached the Névy Department that the tn(nlnsl ship Dixic. which has been aground for over a week past at Mary- jand Point In the lower Potomac, was successfully floated yesterday morning. & Fears for an Ocean Liner. ST. JOHNS, N. F., March 11.—The Fur- ness liner Ulunda, which left Liverpool, February 23, for 8t. Johns, has not yet ar- rived and it is fearcd that some accident has befalien her. these | * WITH THE STORM Seven miners at Huntington are report- | DAWSON MEN STAMPEDE TO NEW tions of the Klondike to staking and en- stampede on February 26. the most important epochs of the camp. The time when the bars that so long bad restricted miners from touching the ground were let down came exactly at midnight. On the numerous creeks, hill- sides and benches there were hundreds of men who had waited in long night vigil. Many had toiled to the place of staking through deep snow. A strong wind intensified the cold. As the clock hands reached 12 the stam- peders began setting their stakes. A notices up, and then they were off on fice. All Sorts of Conveyances. They raced with all manner of Klon- dtkke conveyances. horses hitched to light sleighs, some rode bicycles, some came with fast dog teams and others by special stage or on foot. One man came eighteen miles on Norwe- | glan skis, aided by a dog running before and drawing him by a rope he held. He covered the distance in two and three- quarter hours and beat a horse which drew a sleigh. Could the eve have swept all the creeks of the Klondike at midnight, dramati~ scenes would have beeu seen on nearly all at the same time. Often several men struggled to stake the same claim. In some instances troubie occurred, it is re- ported, and a revolver Is said to have becn drawn by one disputant. At times men staked knowing some one else was stak- ing the same claim, and then hurried away with the others. The race was not alone to the strong. Many women were participants. One woman weighing less than 100 pounds | hurried in by dog team from Bonanza. | Other women came on stages or in private rigs. Bicycles Prove Us>ful. The wheelmen were perhaps the swift- eést of all. on the whole. The tralls and roads of the creeks are packed as hard | as the finest cinder path, and the cyclists | find them superior highw Many were | those who came on wieels, and notwit | standing the low temperature they ped. daled_like circuit riders. A man from Gold Run is said to Lave nearly killed a team of horses. On arrival at_the C: all the stampeders had to stand in line until 9 o'clock, the regular opening hour | Perhaps a hundred were in by that time. | Some from near-by creeks had been wait | ing to hold places in_the line since lonz before daylight. The first man came from | a crown reserve on Bonanza, eight miles away, and got in at 2:30 a. m., with a dog team. Shortly afterward came a man from Hunker with a norse panting from the run. Next came a wheelman from Hunker, and soon delegates were in line from other creeks DEATHS ON NOME TRAILS. Gold-Seekers Perish During Terrific Winter Storms. VICTORIA, B. C., March 11.—News of some of the expected tragedies of winter | nmissioner’s office HARRISON'S CONDITION ' REMAINS UNCHANGED Strength of the Patient Is Keeping Up and His Pulse Is Strong. INDIANAPOLIS, Mar: this mor T mi H the bedsid o out tl The condition of General Harrison re- | mains_practically unchanged. There has been no perceptible Increase of the in- flammation. At midnight Dr. Jamieson gave out this statemen ““Gener: 11.—At 2 o’clock | 1 [ | had just left Harrison’s condition is wn- changed. His strength is keeping up and his pulse is strong. The Infiammation of his left lung has not spread any and there ! is no danger to be apprehended unless the inflammation spreads. The talk about a crisis_in General Harrison's condition is absurd. There will be no crisis. He will | elther gradually grow better or he will | grow worse gradually, and will in the | same way grow weaker. He is perfectly at this hour, and resting eas- consclon: il G B Placing Railroad Securities. of the United States and Mexican Tru: Company, is geing to Europe at once, it is sald. to place several million dollars of | the securities of the Orfent Railroad. try by miners was the cause of a mad It marked one of the most exciting and perhaps one of minute or two more and they had thelr | the race to the Gold Commissioner's of- | Some had teams of >resident Harrison. He | CROWN CLAIMS Wild Race in Which Sleighs, Dog Teams and Snowshoes Are Utilized by the Eager Gold-Seekers. Special Dispatch to The Call. SEATTLE, March 11.—The opening of the long-reserved crown claims and frac- at Cape Nome was received by the steam= er Danube, which reached port this after- noon from Skaguay. A Dawson dispatch of March 1 to the Skaguay Alaskan says: ““Most horrible detalis of deaths by freezing reached here to-night in the third mail Nome this winter, bringing ad- vices up to December 10. Several deaths have occurred in the immediate vicinity of Nome City and on the various trails. The wind has been blowing and the tempera- ture has registered the lowest ever known. Tents have been torn to ribbons and the inmates forced to seek sheiter elsewhere. “One man ieft Nome December 2 at about 8 o'clock in the evening, and at 10 o'clock a party coming in found him and his two dogs irozen stiff. The wind had covered them with a snow blanket and their bodies were discovered only by be- ing stumbled upon. Other deaths were re- ported, but the names are not obtalnable to-night. | “Never before has travel been so dan- gerous. What is one day a perfect trail | is the next day totally obliterated by the drifting snow. The suffering of those who | were not suffictently provided for is ter- | rible. Business is reported very dull, and | Fothing 1s doing I the commercial world, | During the last of November several | stampedes took place, and in nearly every | Instance good strikes have been made. Old experienced miners predict many big finds for next season.” o B WOOING WEALTH AT RAMPART. Season’s Clean-up in the Northern Camp Will Be Large. SEATTLE, March 11.—The Rampart Forum of January 24 says that the year's clean-up will confirm the assertion that the half has never been told of the wealth of the camp. Some obstacles that have been heretofore looked upon as Insur- mountable have been overcome and water on some of the best crecks has rendered | | | | | | | | easy the work which formerly was im- | possible. | _Peck and Durfey, on Nos. 13 and 14 | Hoosler, have taken the initiatlve in the use of steam pumps and sipHons for clean- ing the bedrock of water, with the result that they are now sinking shafts and otherwise opening extensive works pre- | paratory to putting on a large force of men. It is belle d this enterprise will meet reward, because of a good quantity of gold having been taken from various places on the creek the last two years while working on_only such parts of the bedrock as wore dry, thereby forcing the miner to work reefs and rims. Even the less valuable parts of the ground have shown some of the finest gold of which Alaska can boast. It ex- cels not only In large nuggets, but also has an assay value of $19.66 to the ounce. Large pickups are so common that the miner who In this way gets a day’s wages is not an exception, and no surprise is at- | tendant upon a pickup of $200 a shift, or nuggets from $20 to $250. [ Vocal Chords Paralyzed. | WOODLAND, March 11.—D. H. Wyckofr, ex-Sheriff of Yolo, was affifcted with a | stroke of partial paralysis at an early |‘hour this morning. So far only the vocal organs are affected, and the physician be | llevas that unless thers ts further lesion | and hemorrhage he will recover. ‘SAN FRANCISCO GIRL WEDDED IN TEE EAST Miss Edna Lewis Becomes the Wife of Jonas Haslacher, a Former Theater Treasurer. SYRACUSE, N. Y., March I1L-—Miss Edna Lewis of San Francisco met Jonas L. Haslacher of Oswego in this city re- | cently, and, with him went to Rochester, | where they were married. The Rev. Dr | Landsberg performed the ceremony at home in Rochester. The groom was for- | merly connected with the Bastable Th ater here in the capacity of treasurer. T! | bride_was accompanied on her re here by her mother, who came from S Francisco. The newly married coupl after a short wedding trip, will resid Oswego, N. Y. Miss Lewis is well known here. She is a daughter of William Lewis. a cigar mer- ehant, and the granddaughter of S. W. Levy, president of the Assoclated Chari- ties. "She is 18 years of age. Her sister Gertrude, went on _the vith the Froh a vear ago. She returned faw months ago ani took h her. Her mother wa proaching wedding and tage an Company in New York about a here KANSAS CITY, Mo., March 11. 5 71 Stewell: president. of ihe Drofectad dca. | (TS 10 Be FEeMGE 56 The' couin sas City, Mexico and Orient Raflway and i His Gift. Carnegie Increa: TACOMA, March 11 has increased his gift for a pu at ma from $50,000 to $55. Andrew Carnegle bife library 100 ci Ge PLLASMON is the most diges to medical science. | A NUTRITIOUS FOOD The most conecentrated form of nourishment for the strong, weak, healthy, sick, old and young Discovered by the eminent Chemist, DR. SIEBOLD Endorsed by the great Medical Authority, PROF. VIRCHOW, rmany tible and nutritious food known PLASMON is a light powder made from fresh milk, and is ed to have been caught in a flooded mine. | buildings were razed. Great damage was | 11.—Late this after- | all | and St. Paul suffered greatly, although | there was no serious delay to the runs | albumen in its purest and most natural form. PLASMON is a muscle building, nerve sustaining food, easily digested and immediately assimilated by the most delicate system. PLASMON in wasting diseases, chronic affections of the stomach, intestines and liver, diabetes, brings rapid and permanent recovery. PILASMON is perfectly soluble and may be mixed with any other food or beverage. It is tasteless, but makes every dish palatable. PLASMON has a higher food value than any other food; added to other foods it greatly enriches their nour- ishment. PLASMON may be used as a substitute for fresh meat and eggs. It is the cheapest form of pure nourishment known. One teaspoonful contains all the nourishment of one-quarter pound of the best beef. PLASMON is recommended by the world’s greatest physi- cians for invalids and convalescents. PLASMON is hot a substitute. It is itself Nature’s nutriment. For Sale at Leading ‘Druggists and Grocers AMERICAN PLASMON SYNDICATE, Ltd., New York Information cheerfully given at offices of Syndicate 204 Crocker Building, San Francisco Y A A T e S el SO R i I R T R W | t 1 | | |