The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 17, 1901, Page 15

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\ THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 1901. ADVERTISEMENTS. We are now showing all the spring styles il "_0'];‘»[' "\ "‘.‘ With the arrival of spring weather we announce the zarrival of our spring styles in suits and overcoats. We have kept in touch with the mills and se- cured the latest weaves, The clothes have been made in our own light, airy workshops by union labor. We employ union help because it is the best and we do insist upon good workmanship in all our clothing. With good material and good workmanship s,lothes are bound to wear. The goods bear the union label and our “Yeargood™ label—you are doubly protected. At $7.50 and $10.00 we have a line of single and double breasted square cut and single breasted round corner sack suits, made from cheviots and tweeds in light weights and patterns; can fit anybody from 34 to 46 chest meas- ure; suits are farmer satin lined, silk sewed, will hold their shape and wear well. Also spring overcoats at these prices are to be had in coverts and oxford gray cheviots. The colors are black, blue, All the Ours are exceptional at the e so popular. See the upper right-hand picture, gray, brown, olive and white, with green, red, blue or white stripes swell dressers.are indulging in these patterns now. price. sack suits with the small parallel stripes, and the new round corner cut, which a Vestee Suits for Boys Qur children’s clothing department has been receiv- ing its share of spring styles, too. This is a big depart- ment and we have the room to display all that is new in boys’ and youths’ clothes—we have improved the op- portunity. Inlooking over the stock we were impressed with this value: Vestee suits for boys, from 3 to g years, made of Scotch mixtures in spring patterns; some have fancy vests; others vests to match, some with plain lapels, others silk faced; they are nobby, manly looking suits for dress, price only $2.75 Knee pants in blue and mixed patterns, ages 3 to 15 years, 50c a pair. | i At $15.00 and $17.50 we are showing a swell line of solid color flannel 3 Children’s silk front shirts, ages 5 to 12 years; col- ors, heliotrope, pink, blue, lavender, purple, etc.; regular price goc, now 35¢C. Plaid golf caps, swell patterns, 25¢. _— s8 8sMe-————— Out-of-town orders filled---write for anything desired in men’s or boys’ cm furnishings or hats. SNWOOD§(0- 718 Market Street CASTELLANE'S BULLET HITS EDITOR DE RODAYS Special Cable to The Call and New York Her- ald. Copyright, 1901, by the Herald Pub- lishing Company. | ARIS, March 16.—The De Rodays- | P Castellane duel is over, M. de Rodays has recelved a ball in the thigh and the Count and the jou:- nalist have shaken hands. porter of\The:Call and -New York Herald followed the cab of the seconds and wit- nessed- the duel. The Parc des Princes was the rendezvous. M. de Rodays and his seconds arrived a few minutes before Count de Castellane and his friends. Each perty formed a compact little group. Count de Dion was the first to break the ice. Going up to M. Perivier he said: *I thick, sir, we have to toss for places.” .M. de Rodays’ rep- resentative won. The toss then took place | for the pistols to be used and the lot fell to those chosen by Count de Castellane's seconds. Count de Dion had by universal request been appointed “dirccieur du combat.” He measured the distance—twenty-five paces— and stuck a stick at one end cf the ground and an umbrella at the other. De Rodays Fires First. The combatants were then placed face to face. Both were dressed in tightly buttoned black frock ccats, with collars raised, 80 as not to show any shirt or col- lar, and each wore a silk hat. Count de Dion, when the men were In position, standing on the further side, opened a box containing two loaded pistols and with his silk hat in hand went to M. de Rodays_first, leaving a weapon in his hand. tHe then crossed the ground and handed Count de Castellane the other. Count de Dion then from the center ad- dressed both combatants. At this point the words were almost inaudible to the inter- lopers, but when he cried ‘Messieurs, veuillez armer vos pistoles,” and ‘“‘Mes- sleurs, etes-vous pretes’’ his stentorian Voice rang out through the chilly air. It was noticed that M. de Rodays fired immediately. after the word “feu,” with- out waiting for the regulation words, “un, deux, trois.” M. de RoGays was in his right, but De Castellane, on the other hand, took matters more calmly. M. da B ADVERTISEMENTS. WHY SO MANY FAIL. The Reason So Many Catarrh Rem- edies Are Unsuccessful. | There are few troubles for which there are so many remedies and so-called “cures” as for catarrh, and it may be added there are few diseases so di to really and permanently cure. Inhalers, sprays, powders and douches are all applied locally and give temporary relief, often for only a few hours, and. it is doubtful if anything like a real cure of catarrh was ever accomplished by the use of local applications. Catarrh is a constitutional disease; it is in the blood like rheumatism, and to cure it requires an internal medicine to act upon the blood to drive out the catarrhal poison from the system entirely, and any one can readily see that a salve or pow- der or inhaler which simply clears off the mucous membrane of the nose and throat can have no effect on the real cause of catarrhal disease. The remarkable success of the new ca- tarrh remedy, Stuart's Catarrh Tablets, is because it drives out of the system through the natural channels the ca- tarrhal poison, the germs of grip, bron- chitis and consumption that cause the | hawking, spitting and gagging because the excessive secretion is no longer sup- lied when the blood is made health the regular use of Stuart’s Catarrl] "The remedy is In the form of large 20- lozenges, pleasant and palatable, ned only of wholeu\me antiseptics ‘e to use that little children use safety and benefit if the I one is suffering from colds, ero “cough from any cause. Stuart’s Catarrh Tablets have been on he ‘market scarcely one year, vet they ‘| have met with such popularity and suc- ?n that druggists “everywhere in the United States and Canada now have them in stock and report a constantly increas- ing demand for them. lcult [~ C ‘machinery acted faultlessly. There was Cause | W. Bayard Cutting Jr., private secretary Anna Gould’s Husband Victorious in Duel With the Paris Journalist. 1 COUNT BONI DE CASTELLANE, VICTOR IN DUEL WITH DE RODAYS. . =3 Rodays had not “pinked” him. Between the words “two” and ‘“‘three” Castellanc raised his pistol, took aim and fired, M. de Rodays did not fall, but his hand fell to his rlghl thigh. Immediately Count de Dion and Castellane rushed toward him. The ball had lodged about fifteen centi- meters below the groin. A few inches higher the wound would have been fatal. M. de Rodays was carried by De Dion and Perivier and two doctors to the Velo- drome stand, where the bleeding was stopped by bandages, the bullet still re- maining in the thigh. M. de Rodays hav- ing only his brougham. Castellane offered him his landau, and De Rodays and his friends traveled homeward in it. Shake Hands After Combat. The Figaro to-morrow morning will pub- lish the following account of the wound- ing of De Rodays: As soon as he felt the bullet he pflaced his hand on his thigh and called out with absolute calmness, “I am struck.” He Xept up very well at this moment, the wound not at first making him suffer the severe pain it afterward did. Every one rushed toward him ana he was carried to a bench in the Velo- drome, where ghe wound was dressed by Dr, Blum, assisted by Dr. Memere. Count Boni, de Castellane then ap- proached the wounded man, whose wound was bleeding profusely, and said to him: “Are you suffering, M. de Rodays?” “Not too much,” replied the editor of the Figaro. ount de Castellane then held out his hand, which M. de Rodays took. The complete absence of fever justifies the hope that in eight or ten days M. de Rodays will be completely recovered. BENNETT'S NEW YACHT MARVEL OF WORKMANSHIP Steam Pleasure Boat Completes Her Trials and Proves to Be an Admirable Craft. LONDON, March 16.—James Gordon Bennett's new steam yacht Lysistrata, de- signed by George L. Watson and built by W. Denny & Bros., has just completed her trials and is said to have given the greatest satisfaction to her owner, design- er and builders. Over an elghty-five knot course on the Clyde the Lysistrata showed a mean speed of nine and a half knots and without forced draught sixteen and a half knots. The yacht handles ad- mirably, has twin screws and horse- power. ' During her high speed trial the no heating or complications of any kind and so cool were the bearings at the end of the trial that the chief engineer said he was prepared to drive her another 300 miles at the same speed without fear of the results. The yacht is of 2800 tons, has a perfectly straight stem, has a storm deck fore and aft, a single huge funnel, with one mast abaft it and one square yard for signal- ing purposes. The hull has the appear- ance of being cut out of a solid plece of metal, so highly is it polished and beauti- fully finished. et L RIOTERS TERRORIZE > MOSCOW OFFICIALS Russian City Is in a State of Siege and in Danger of Greater Dis- turbances. ST. PETERSBURG, March 16. — The riots in Moscow were more serious than was at first supposed. Several thousand workmen joined the students in erecting barricades and the workers were encour- by a hundred female stutlents. 'he princl) scene of the rioting was in th‘a pnelsl‘lwrhmd of the yfl.ungf the o us, Governor fi state of slege been eral. established In oscow, where great excitement prevails, Similar disturbances are refinod to have broken out at Odessa. Kharkoff, Kieff and other university cities. ———— Secretary Cutting’s Wedding. LONDON, March 16.—The marriage of to Mr. Choate, the United States Embas- sty o oy, s oo By il take place April 30. 2 oo o o e S L S ‘With new leaves one good turn deserv: another, b .| Queen Alexandra 15 DR. KILMER'S SWAMP-ROOT. WOMAN'S KIDNEYS. Women as Well as Men Suifer and Are Made Miserable ~ by Kidney and Bladder Troubles. To Prove What Swamp-Root, the Great Kidney Remedy, Will Do for YOU, Every Read:r of The* Call May Have a Sample Bottle Sent Free by Mail, the many famous cures of Swamp-Root investigated by The Call, none seem to speak higher of the won- derful curative properties of this great kidney remedy than the one we publish this week for the benefit of our readers. Mrs. H. N. Wheeler of 117 High Rock St., Lynn, Mass writes on Nov. 2, 1900: “‘About 18 months 0 I had a very severe spell of sickness. I was extremely sick for three weeks, and when I finally was able to leave my bed I was left with excrutiating pains in my back. My water at times looked very like coffee. I could npass but little at a time. and then only after suffering great pain. My physical condition' was such that 1 had no strenfth and was all run down. The doctors sald my kidneys were not affected, and while I Did Not Know | Had Kidney Trouble, 1 somehow felt certain that my kidneys were the cause of my trouble. My sister, Mrs. C. E. Littlefleld, of Lynn, advised me to give Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root a trial. I procured a bottle and inside of three days commenced to get relief. 1 followed up that bottle with an- other, and at the completion of this one found was completely cured. My stremgth re- turned, and to-day T am as well as ever. My business is that of canvasser, I am on my feet a great deal of the time, and have to use much energy in getting around. My cure is therefore all the more remarkable, and is ex- ceedingly gratifying to me.” MRS. H. N. WHEELER. Swamp-Root will do just as much for any housewife whose back is too weak to How to Find Out If You Need Swamp-Root. that quickly your entire body is affected, and duty. . MRS. H. N. WHEELER. perform her necessary work, who is al- ays tired and overwrought, who feels that the cares of life are more than she | can stand. It is a boon to the weak and | atling. It used to be considered that only urinary and bladder troubles were to be traced to the kidneys. but now modern science proves nearly all diseasés have their beginning In the disorder of these most important organs. The kidneys filter and purify that is their work. So when your kidneys are that the blood— or out of order you can understand how how every organ seems to fail to do its If you 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 c Many women suffer untold misery bec rectly undersioed; in most cases they are onvince any one. ause the nature of their disease is not cor- led to believe that womb trouble or fe- male weakness of some sort is responsible for their many ills. wien, in fact, dis- ordered kidneys are the chief cause of their distressing troubles. Neuralgia, nervousness, headache, puffy or dark circles under the eyes, rheu- matism. a dragging pain or dull ache in the sensation, profuse or scanty supply of uri pass it night ¢r day. with scalding or bur Yack, weakness or bearing down ine, with strong odor, frequent desire to ning sensation,—these are all unmistak- able signs of kidney and bladder trouble. If there is any doubt in your mind as on rising about four ounces. place it in a glass or bottle and let it stand twent 1f on examination it is milky or cloudy, if there is a brick-dust se tling, or if small particles float about in it, your kidneys are in need of immea four, hours. ate attention. to your condition, take from your urine Other symptoms showing that you need'Swamp-Root are sleeplessness, dizzi- ness, irregular heart. breathlessness, sallow, unhealthy complexion, plenty of am- bition but no strength. Swamp-Root is pleasant to take and is used in the leading hospitals, recom- mended by physicians in their private pr: actice, and !s taken by doctors them- selves, because they recognize in it the greatest and most successful remedy that science has ever been able to compound. If you are aiready convinced that Swamp-Root is what you need, you can pur- chase the regular fifty-cent and dne-dollar " DITOZIAL NOTIC Bladder remedy, is so remarkably su E.—Swamp-Root, the great Kidne: ottles at the drug stores everywhere. , Liver and’ sful that a special arrangement has been made by which all of our readers who have not already tried it may have a sam- gle bottle sent absolutely free by mail. Also a book telling all about kidney and ladder troubles and containing many of monial letters received from men and women cured by Swamp-R. be sure and mention reading this generous offer in the San Fran when sending your address to Dr. Kilmer the thousands upon thousands of testi- t. In writing, (‘; Sunday Call Binghamton TOUR OF KIkG EOWARL'S SON Departure of the Duke and Duchess of Coruwall and York From Portsmouth. e PORTSMOUTH, England, March 16— Amid the firing of a royal salute by the assembled fleet and hearty cheers from the ccncourse of people gathered at all points of vantage the steamer Ophir, with the Duke and Duchess of Cornwall and York on board, started at about 4 o'clock this afternoon on the voyage which is not to terminate until thelr royal | Highnesses have m‘a!:le a tour of the ‘Worl mciudin; e British empire. Troops and bands playing the nationai | anthem lined the quays and all the fillps.‘ were manned and dressed, brillfant ! groups of naval and civil officials in full | uniform, with masses of the public form- ing a combination showing both the state and popular character of the send-off. King Edward and Queen Alexandra on board the royal vacht Victoria and Albert, with eight torpedo-boat destroyers, ac- companied the Ophir a few miles out. 1 In spite of the cold and wet weather large crowds journeyed to this place to- |- day from the ‘surrounding towns to view the ceremonies connected with the de- parture. The harbor was gay with bunt- ing and all the ships were dressed. Luncheon on the Ophir. Before noon the Duke and Duchess left the Ophir and joined King Edward and on boagd the royal yacht Victoria and Albert,” where their Majesties passed the night. The royal party soon afterward landed at the jetty, where K|n§ Edward conferred the Vie- toria medal on the bluejackets of his Royal Majesty’s ship Excellent, who dragged the funeral gun carriage o Queen Victoria after the horses became unmanageable at the Windsor railroad station. The members of the royal party had luncheon on the 3 After luncheon the King toasted _the Duke and Duchess of Cornwall and York and wished them a prosperous voyage. His Majesty said that one of the ob- jects of the tour was to express apprecia- tion of the royal help rendered by the British colonies in the South African | campaign. The Duke of Cornwall and York pro- posed the King's health. . he guests at the luncheon, who num- bered about seventy, included Joseph Chamberlain. Farewell Signals Exchanged. After thelr Majesties returned to the ‘Victoria and Albert the preparations for the departure of ‘the Ophir were com- pleted. The royal yacht left the harbor shortly in advance of the Ophir, and as they passed the historic flagship Victory the crews of the warships in port manned sides and gave the travelers a parting cheer. Simuitaneously the naval guns fired a royal salute. is was taken up bg the shore batteries and repeated by the cruisers in the roadstead. The sky was overcast, but otherwise the weather was fine when the Ophir cast off her moorings and started on her long voyage. Eight torpedo-boat destroyers steamed astern and remained in close at- tendance until the hir and royal yacht ed company at Spithead, whence the cruisers Diadem and Niobe ‘escorted the Ophir to sea, while the destroyers accom- led the royal yacht back to sort. Their jesties then returned to London. e last f: 11 s were ex- changed bétween their jesties and the Duke and Duchess of Cornwall and York near the Nab lightship, though their ves- sels remained in sight of each other until the Ophir rounded the end of the. lIsle of Wight and entered the channel, bound for Gibraltar. — Catalonia Disturbances Ended. MADRID, March 16.—Quiet has been re- established in Catalonia through arbitrs- tion on the of the Prefect. Man: %h' gtm h(.'., .,‘Zf in the gnhtry. and it :n be?i‘qu all be rep! except Senor Leon y Castlllo, the Embassador in ¢ | Charge of Venality in High Places,” COMMDNS LOOK FOR THE LEAK London “Times” Reporters May Be Excluded From the House. ——— LONDON, March 16.—The members of the House of Commons are greatly stirred up by the London Times' alleged breach of secrecy in regard to publishing in ad- vance the Government's civil list propo- sals. A curious feature which has not leaked out in the papers is the implication of the Birmingham Post in the same charges and there is a half humorous and half se- rious attempt upon the part of the Irish members to connect Josepn Chamberiain with the affair. The Birmingham Post is one of Mr. Chamberlain’s warmest sup- porters and if the Liberals can get this organization punished they will take it as a personal score off the much disliked Co- lonial Secretary. A Conservative member of Parliament informed a correspondent that the majority of his party would be delighted to see the London Times sus- ended for. say. a week, not with the dea of seriously affecting its news serv- ice, but with giving it a ‘much-needed lesson.” Mr. Balfour, the Government leader in the House of Commons; Sir Henry Camp- bell-Bannerman, the Liberal leader, and Mr. Gully, the Speaker, have been con- sulting together during the week. Among the suggestions which they will consider is one to examine all the members of the civil list committee separately, under oath, and so run down the culprit. The Daily Mail prints an editorial in this connection. headed *Unusually Direct n which it says: “Should the Speaker, as he certainly won't decide to have the Times reporters thrown out of the House, our contempo- rary would have no difficulty In employ- ing further honorable members or officials to supply it with such news as it may desire to publish. If the committee cannot find powers to act as the guardian of its own honor and to prevent the disclosure of Information which is solely In its pos- session, there is no remedy.” ADVERTISEMENTS. ‘677 9 ) . It's Tonicity. A Cold is usually cansed by checked cireulation, recognized by a chill or shiver. The use of “77" starts the blood coursing through the veins un®: it 1eaches the ex- tremitles, when the feet warm up and tne Cold or Grip is broken. while its tonieitr sustains the system during and after the attack. Many persons write: “Your 0 has proved such a blessing, [ want to try Dr. Humphrey's Specifics for other dis- eases.” In response we send free a Pocket Manual, known as “The Dainty Laly. from the picture on the cover, for which a beautiful model was induced to pose, Humphreys' Homeopathic Medicine Co., Cor. Wijlliam and John Sts., New York. = | GRIP

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