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TEAMISTERS GNE KLIVELY DACNE Benefit for Ironworkers at Pavilion Proves Big Success. ! | Conditions Surrounding the Strikers Are Still Un- | changed. the dance chanics’ Pa- Teamste s it of the Iron Trades Coun- The affair was in a most an oppor- of people n enjoyable evening march was started at 10 p. X rticipated in by 4% couple The dancers remained on the floor revel- ing in the delights of the waltz, lancers, two-step and schottische until the s 1 hours of the morning The music was furnished free by the Musicians’ Union, an enty-five mem- bers of the Brewers' Union volunteered lb;l,' services to e the refreshments. t is expec dance netted 25000 for Those who asey developments kers and fe to the effcet would eapiiu- t the ironworkers rumors could not, a reliable source f the Labor Coun- t the rumor, still maintain 3 ing one. The r, however, that the re- £ e meat 1o g them e of in refe: rietors ¢ f e retail butch- nothing ng to be C e NCIERS aUED FOR DEAT Prominent Men Fail to Pay an Assessment Levied. Buit n filed by the creditors of s c San Mateo Agri- | r money due them ection with the | ssociation at se show the asso- | the Horse Show cific Coast. The re e 17,000 in debt. share was lev. ng of the men f it was not 1 go through all the tending the levying of It w thought that would pay up, but only members responded, gned their claims to ained Attorney Sid- The attorney has taken steps and seeks to re- e from the stockhold- ments. ROYAL ARCANUM DAY IS OBSERVED BY COUNCILS of the United ars old yester- s of the order, Buena Vista and the event last ent and ball in hall was profusely rican flags” and tri- he midst of which ame and emblems of amme of entertain- cal selections, vocal recitations by Miss Parsons Ockenden, Madden and W. J. Hynes. t G. Gunzendorfer oc- West during the time of its 1 from a small mem- 1l to 221,884, and, as growing.” | Oakland Office San Francisco Call, | advertising bills | the associa- | DENTH SUMMONS | RS DURSHUIR Passes' Away at Her Country Home Near San Leandro. | Widow of Coal Magnate and Mother of Edna Wallace Hopper. — 1118 Broadway, June 22. | Mrs. Josephine Wallace Dunsmilr, | widow of Dunsmuir and | motker of Edna ace Hopper, the actress, passed away afternoon at 1 o'cle after an of two weeks, from typhoid fever. Death occurred at Mrs. Dunsmuir's beautiful country resi- | dence, formerly the Souther farm, near | San Leandro. : Mrs. Dunsmuir had been critically iil | for a week. When the sickness took a | serious turn, her daughter, who was play- | ing an engagement in New York, was | summoned by telegraph, and is expected | to arrive here Monday. Telegrams an- | nouncing Mrs. Dunsmuir's death have been sent to Miss Hopper en route. The attendants at the Dunsmuir home had mace a strong effort to keep the news of | Mrs. Dunsmuir's death qulet, in order | that the daughter who is hastening home | might not receive too great a shock from the sudden intelligence which would reach | her through the newspapers. | Dr. W. §. Thorne, who was Mrs. Duns- | muir's | physician called_to the San Mrs. Dunsmuir was corps of trained nurses was also sum- moned and for days there has been a hard fight to save the life of the patient, | but in vain. During the last week Mrs. { Dunsmuir failed rapidly, until her_ con- dition became so critical that the attend- ing physician was compelled to give up hope for her recovery, although for sev- eral days Dr. Thorne remained constant- Iy_at the bedside of his patient. for many years, was Leandro home when first taken sick. A Nothing will be done concerning the funeral arrangements until after Miss Hopper's arrival Mrs. Dunsm went East some time ago to visit with her daughter. She re- turned here two months and a half ago, and had been in ill health ever since. Mrs. Dunsmuir had resided at the Souther farm for several s. The place had een purchased dur the lifetime of Alexander Dunsmuir. The farm, noted for its natural attractions, wi rendered doubly beautiful by the expenditure of a | fortune in improvements. A palatial colonial residence was erected for Mrs. | Dunsm and her , and all of the luxumes that money sh upon the grounds were installed for their com- | fort and pleasure. The secret of Mrs nsmuir's wifehood was kept_until afte al baron’s | death in New York about two vears ago. | Then it _developed he had left widow who was the mother of daint Edna Wallace Hopper. Mrs. Dunsmuir first husband was Waller Wal | was head usher at the old | Theater when John McCullough and Law- | rence Barrett starred there. Wallace and | his dainty T beauty did not agree. After it LW | took charge of a time mother and d s Oakland, where the young girl student at Miss Bisbee's school in Eas Oakland. Dunsmuir met and wedded the | mother, anu h ided most liberally for her, as well as given all of the adv i."""""‘ (R e e daughter. who ges of educatio; il @ CMLLES WEARY OF THE STRIFE |Says He Is Satisfied of| “ Liberal Intentions of Americans. L SANTA CRUZ, Province of Laguna. Lu- zon, June 22.—In the course of an inter- view to-day General Cailles, the insurgent } commander, whose surrender is promised | for Monday, and who is now established | |in the former American headquarters at | | Pagsanjan, said he was convinced of the | wisdom of surrender and was satisfied of | the liberal intentions of the American au- thorities. The town full of armed and uniformed insurgents. Colonel Caballes, with 120 of Cailles command, fled to the morning, being frightened by a that Geronimo and others ‘were to be| hanged. Cailles sent a detachment in pur- | suit of them and avers that they will re- | turn to-morrow. He asserts that he will bring more than 600 rifiles to Santa Cruz on Monday, with | ten men for every rifie, and declares that | the thirty dollars received for each rifle | will be given to the widows and orphans. | General Cailles declines to be a candi- date for Governgr, and will return to Ca- vite, where he is a land-owner. Frank Mekin of the Thirty-seventh In- fantry, who deserted and has since been with the insurgents acting as lieutenant, and Earl Guenther, formerly a canteen keeper at Paote, are with General Callles’ command. | F. JULES LABOI i PRO! RDE, DISCOVERER OF “CALTHOS."” For years the cry bas gone up from bundreds and thousands of men, young and old, for & remedy that would rid them of the terrible result of ee-iy follies * excesses, or of the overwork and worry thot sap the ph: 1 vitality. Tre mmedical proféssion of thls country seamed powerless to cope with the appalling and disastrous {iseases and annoying weaknesses of men resulting from violation of Nature's lsws. € PROF. LABORDE'S WONDERFUL DISCOVERY. It remsived for the eminent French suthority, Prof. Jules Laborde, to conduct scientific inquiry into the cause and cure of Lost Vitality, Sexual Weakness, Spermatorrheea, Epilepsy, Impotency, Small Parts, and the world toddy acknowledges the eupremacy of the wonderful remedy “CALTHOS.” The Von Mobl Company, of Cincinnati, Obio, recognizing the commercial value of Prof. ’s discovery. secured the sole American rights for T CALTHOS.” and through its agency thonssnds en. who euffers i g mervous mal Liealth and the virile powers of perfect mauhood. THE VOK MOHL C0’S. REMARKABLE OFFER, We are now suthorized, by The Von Mohl Com- pans. to announce that every man who sends simply Eis inie and sddrees will b supplied absolutely foee by sealed mail, with five-days fnll treatment CALTHOS.” 'This is no C. 0. D. or Deposit , and there is positively mo condition at- tached to the ofler. You beed not give humiliating Gotuile regaraing your trouble. You sed not en: ©ve cent of mobey—not even a postage stamp. All The Von Mohl Co., 278 B, rrattions rde’s | of STRONG! You Can Be Cured of NERVOUS DEBILITY and LOST MANHOOD Full 5 Days Treatment ABSOLUTELY FREE By Sealed Mail. C. 0.D. OR DEPOSIT SCHEME. The Von Mokl Company desires is that you give the remedy a fair and thorough trial, and they-are wille 1ng 10 stand ail the expense connected with the trial to prove the fai its merits, . e :nwdu OF “CALTHOS” PROVED, e first day you take the treatment yon will be benefited. The sccond day you will feel an improve. ment. The third day you will note an increuse strength. . The fourth day will show a gain both mentally and physically. The fifth day you will feel like & new man. 1f you suffer from any form of Nervous Decline and Sexual Weakness, Sperma- torrhas, Varicocele, Impotency, Small Patts, Night Sweats, Paipitation of the Hear!, Nervousness, Con- ion of Ideas, and Loss of Memory, you can’ posi- tively be cured by ** CALT) > Dacit the has progressed to the stage marked by the symptoms pilepey, Consumption or Insanity, we cannot promise complete recovery. PROMPT ACTION IMPORTANT, As you value your health, your happiness, your yery life, do mot delay beginning trentonont. The Von Moh! Company hae thousands of testimo- mials on file from persons who have taken the treat. ment, showing its marvelous restorative power. e Company does not publish testimonials, and your correspondence is racredly confidential. Many who take only the five-duys free treatment "E"e l!;lt !h:y ;‘m vnlh;U flllndAd For the sake of your family and friends, v as for your own best intereste, writs to Too Vee Mohl Com; for the free treatment by mail, in plain sealed package, at once. ’ l FRANCISCO CALL, POPULAR OAKLAND BELLE IS ENGAGED TO MARRY Miss Hazel Lillian Curtiss Will Become the Bride of Lawson F. Adams Jr., and the Wedding Will Be a Church Function AKLAND, June 22.—An announce- ment that will be received with a great deal of interest by the cial circles not on of Oakland but of San Francisco and Sacra- mento, is that of the engagement of Miss Hazel Lillian Curtiss and Lawson F. Ad- ams Jr. Miss Curtiss 1s the only daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Giltert L. Curti well-known capitalist, who has extel ve wheat-growing interests in Madera Coun- ty. Mrs. Curtiss is prominent in soclal and women's club circles, being an active member of the Ebell Society The bride-to-be is a girl of striking per- sonality. She is tall, with a wealth of fair hair and dark eyves, forming a rather un- usual type of beauty. Miss Curtiss is very popular, both here and in Sacramento, where she was entertained quite exten- sively last winter. Her artistic work with both pen and brush has attracted a great deal of attention, particularly her sketches 1 ter color of dancing girl Lawrie” Adams, as he is known to his familiars, is a son of Lawson F. Adams Sr. of the old-established wholesale mer- cantile firm of Adams, Booth & Co. of San Francisco, and is_himself connected with the same firm. He is a prominent clubman, being a member of the Bohe- mian and Olympic clubs and the Presidlo Golf Club and is a director of the Mira Monte Gun Club, which is sometimes called the ‘millionaires’ " club. Mr. Ad- ams is a brother of Fred and Burt Ad- ams, managers of the Sacramento branch HOUSE OF LORDS T0 TRY RUSGELL Nevada Official Gives Testimony Against the Earl. LONDON, June 22.—Earl Russell reap- peared in the Bow-street Police Court to- day on the charge of bigamy and was committed for trial. The court was crowded. Among those present was the woman (Mrs. Somerville) who, the Earl claims, is his wife and to whom he was married in Reno, Nev., in 1900, after he had obtained a divorce from his first wife. The register of his first marriage was produced. Mr. Brown, Assistant Director of Public Prosecutions, then testified that the present proceedings were taken by the blic Prosecutor independently of any other person, confirming the first Count- ess’ statement that she is not a party to the suit. Mr. Brown gave detalls of his investiga- tion at Reno, and B. F. Curler, County Judge of Washoe County, Nevada, testi- fied to having married Earl Russell and Mrs. Somerville at the Riverside Hotel in Reno. The defendant called himself Mr. 'Russell, and the witness was not aware of his rai After detailing the Nevada law on di- vorce Mr. Curler sald that in Earl Rus- sell’s divorce the law was not complied with in two respects, and therefore the decree annulling the Earl's marriage was not valid even in Nevada. After counsel had protested that Earl Russell had not been given adequate time to prepare his defense the Earl was com- mitted for trial at the next session of the Central Criminal Court, the same ball (£2000) being allowed. It appears that the Earl must be tried as a Peer in the House of rds. The usual course is that, after the committal, an ;gpllcauon is made to remove the case to the House of Lords by writ of cer- tlorari. - Such trials have been very rare. The last was the case of Lord Cardigan. There have been four trials of Peers in the House of Lords since the end of the relgn of George I1. —_———— WANTS TERMINUS OF GEARY STREET LINE NEAR FERRY E. P. E. Troy Calls Supervisors’ At- tention to Provisions of Charter. communication from E. P. E. Troy will be presented to the Board o. Super- visors to-morrow calling the attention of that body to the section of the city char- ter regulating the number of blocks on which street railway companies can use the same tracks. Mr. Troy asks the board, in view of the action to be taken soon toward the ac- quirement of the Geary street franchise by the city, to immediately order the Geary-street Railway Company to use the Market street company’s track on Mar- ket street, thus making it possible to have Saa i e U Cincinnati, 0. in the United States. the terminus of the Geary stree within a few blocks of the ;eyrry. e - TWO WELL-KNOWN YOUNG PEOPLE WHOSE ENGAGE- MENT IS ANNOUNCED. e oo of the firm and whose familles are quite prominent socially in the capital city. Already events are being planned, both here and across the bay, in honor of the young couple that promise to be elab- orate affairs. No date has been fixed for the wedding, but it will be a chureh fune- tion with a large home reception, and probably will take place late in the fall. L e e e e e e e e ], ) READY T0 START FOR THE ARCTIC Herbert L. Bridgeman to Command , Peary Expedition. NEW YORK, June 22.—The Peary Arc- tic Club, of which President Morris K. Jessup of the Chamber of Commerce is president and President Henry W. Can non of the Chase National Bank treas- urer, has intrusted Its secretary, Herbert L. Bridgeman, with the command of its expedition in 1901, the fourth of the series since Mr. Peary departed on his attempt to_attain the pole.— Dr. Frederick A. Cook of Brooklyn, sur- geon of the first Peary expedition in 1891, and of the Belgium Antarctic expedition, has accepted the position of surgeon. The club’s chartered steamer, Eric, is now on her way from London to St. Johns, N. F., where the captain and crew will be UNDAY, JUNE 23, 1901 RARE PAINTINGS STIR TROUBLE| MADE BY COURT| Forgery Is Now Charged in San Diego Case. ‘Woman Says the Bill of Sale for Vandykes Is Not ' Genuine. SAN DIEGO, June 22.—There were sen- sational developments to-day at the pre- liminary examination of John E. Thomas, charged with embezzling Vandykes and other costly paintings, alleged to be the property of Mrs. Edith A. de Lambert. The first witness put on the stand by the prosecution was Mrs. de Lambert and early in the examination the defense of- fered in evidence what purported to be a bill of sale of the pictures from her to Thomas for $250 each. The paper was shown to Mrs. de Lambert and after read- ing its contents she involuntarily raised her right hand and said: “I swear this is the first time I have seen this paper. and my signature to the document is a torgerg." At the suggestion of Lawyer Daney, for the defense, Mrs. de Lambert wrote her name t was compared with the sig- nature on the alleged bill of sale. Attor- ney J. 8. Callen was called as an expert on handwriting and he pronounced the signature on the alleged bill of sale to be that of Mrs. de Lambert. But this state- ment had no effect upon the witness, as she insisted that the paper pupporting to be a bill of sale was a forgery. Then the defense presented another bill of sale to Thomas of all of Mrs. de Lam- bert’s property. Mrs. de Lambert admit- ted that she had signed this document, but explained that she had done so to pro- tect herself during a recent financial trouble and that the bill of sale had since boen “canceled. . The case’ Was' not con- cluded. ENRAGED BULLS ATTACK . Young Herder Is Horribly Gored and Does Not Recover Conscious- ness for Hours. Oakland Office San Francisco Call, 1118 Broadway, June 22. ‘While herding cattle on his father's place near Livermore last evening George A. Bistourious, 14 years old, was attacked by maddened bulls and so terribly gored that his recovery is doubtful. The boy was trampled upon after being knocked down and left unconscious in the fleld, where he lay until this morning, when his senseless body, horribly mangled, was found by the searching party that had started out after the boy had been missed for several hours. The evidence of a desperate fight with the enraged beasts was manifest to the boy’s rescuers, who found him half cov- ered with dirt, his clothing torn into shreds and his head and body a mass of ugly gashes and lacerations where the horns and hoofs of the attacking bulls had left their cruel marks. The injured lad was hastily removed to his _home, where Dr. Warner of Liver- more was called to attend him. For | hours the surgeon worked in the effort to save the boy’s life. The danger is from the shock and the exposure the youthful patient suffered during the twelve hours he lay unconscious in the field. — e LATE SHIPPING INTELLIGENCE. ARRIVED. » Saturday, June Scbr Alvena, Johnson, 17 days from Mahu- kona. r Newark, Crangle, ermans Bay. SAILED. Saturday, June 22. Stmr Mandalay, Reed, Coquille River. OCEAN STEAMERS. NEW YORK—Salled June 22—Stmr Mesaba, for London; stmr Bulgaria, for Hamburg; stmr Umbria, for Liverpool: stmr Rotterdam, for Rotterdem, via Boulogne: ‘stmr Hohenzol- 11 hours from Fish- | lern, for Naples, etc; stmr Ethiopia, for Glas- sow. BRISBANE—Arrived June 21—Stmr Moana, from Vancouver, via Honolulu, for Sydney, NSW. LIVERPOOL—Arrived June 21—Stmr Cam- pania and stmr Cevic, from New York. Sailed June 22—Stmr Etruria, for New York. YOKOHAMA—Arrived prior to June 22— Stmr_America Maru, from San Fyancisco, via Honolulu, for Hongkong; stmr Idzumi Maru, from Seattle, for Hongkong. Sailed June 20—Stmr Braemer, kong, for Tacoma. LONDON—Sailed June 22—Stmr ean, for Montreal. QUEENSTOWN—Sailed June 2—Stmr No- madic, from Liverpool, for New York. ANTWERP—Sailed June 22—Stmr Zeeland, for New York, via Southampton. Arrived June 22—Stmr Friesland, from New York. HAVRE—Sailed_ June 2—Stmr La Cham- pagne, for New York. HONGKONG—Arrived prior to June 22—Stmr Coptic, from San Francisco, via Honolulu and Yokohama; stmr Queen Adelaide, from Ta- coma, via Yokohama. e Honesty is undoubtedly the best policy, but it keeps many a man poor. from Hong- Montevid- 25 SWEEPING ORDER An- Injunction Directed Against the Striking Machinists. It Applies to Every Member of the International Association. MILWAUKEE; June 22.—A sweeping in- junction of widespread scope and import- ance relative to the strike of machinists was issued to-day to the Vitter Manufac- | turing Company. The order prevents the strikers from in any way interfering with the workmen that are employed at the Vitter works, from, gathering about the works in any way, from posting pickets, from combining for the purpose of pre- venting tradesmen selling to workmen who have refused to quit and from do- ing anything that will in any way operats to result in damage to the Vitter Com- any. P%Fhe injunction equals in its effect the combined strike order issued by Judge Jenkins in the Northern Pacific case with- | out embracing any of the defects of that order, which led to its revocation in the Court of Appeals. There is not a single reference to the strike in the injunction— the men are not restrained from striking, as they were in the Northern Pacific or- der, but they are simply restrained from taking any action or doing anything which will in any way tend to cause damage to the Vitter Company. ‘While the action is brought in the name of the Vitter Company, it is really the National Metal Trades Association that is the plaintiff, the Vitter Company having been selected to serve as plaintiff becaus it is said, the equities existing were grea er in its favor and Milwaukee was con- sidered the best place in the country in which to fight the battle in the courts. The injunction is directed against each and every member or the International Association of Machinists and all persons in any way connected therewith. The injunction is returnable in the Cir- cuit Court of Milwaukee, over which Judge Eugene S. Elliott presides. MYSTERY VEILS S0LDIER'S DEATH Kdward Slattery’s Life Ends in a Queer Manner. OAKLAND, June 22.—The body of Ed- ward Slattery, a discharged soldler of Company G, Fourth United States In- fantry, lies at the Morgue with a bullet- hole in his head and John C: Daley, a dis- charged private of the same command, iIs held at the City Prison until the detectives have comy.cted their investigation of the manner in which Slattery came to his death to-night at 7:30 o'clock in a room at the Avenue House, 129 San Pablo ave- nue. Daley’s story is that his companion shot himself in the head with a pistol while sitting in a chafr, in the apartment the two men had rented for the night an hour before the shooting. Daley declares he | was lying In a semi-stupor on a sofa - posite Slattery and knew nothing of the suicidal shooting until he was aroused by the shot, and awoke half dazed to find the room full of smoke, his friend with a bullet hole in his forehead, and a pistol lying on the floor by the chair. Slattery and Daley came from Malden, Mass. Slattery’s_ discharge, under the name of Edwin Kelley, shows he is 30 years old, a native of Boston. He had $277 when he left camp. The Coroner found $3 or and some papers on his person. These were addresses of William C. Morss, 741 Howard street, San Francisco; ‘William Connors, Vallejo, and_Joseph Shaughnessy, driver Winchester Hotel. The detectives say that it looks like sui- cide. The attempt of Daley to leave the house and his explanation of the presence of the pistol on a table six or eight feet from the suicide are the principal points under investigation. No surface motive for murder appears. —_— Indiana Sails for Home. ‘WASHINGTON, June 22.—The War De- partment to-day recelved the followmng cablegram from General MacArthur at Manila: ““Transport Indiana sailed June 20 with Twenty-ninth, Thirtieth and Thirty-sec- ond companies coast artillery, First and Eighth field batteries, and 145" general prisoners.” ARREL WILL END IN DEATH Joseph Naughton Fa- tally Injured in Drunken Row. Thrown Down by Joseph Burke He Receives: Frac- tured Skull Joseph Naughton, residing at 17% Fif- teenth street, was thrown down on the sidewalk by Joseph Burke of 332 Devis- | adero street last night on Sixth street | and received an injury that will cause his death. His head struck the pavement with great force. The injured man was taken to the Emergency Hospital, where it was found that his skull had been fractured. Burke and Naughtoif were intimats friends. They had been drinking to- gether all night. After leaving a saloon on Sixth street they commenced an argu- ment which led to a struggle and ended only when Naugaton was thrown down. Burke is a laundryman and Naughtem works as a plumber's helper. They are each about 24 years of age. @ ettt el il @ RANCHERS FEAR L WILD THIEF Man of Weird Aspect Terrorizes Monterey People. Special Dispatch to The Call MONTEREY, June 22.—Ranchers of the Sdr district of this county, about forty miles south of Monterey, have been great- 1y disturbed of late over the frequent ap- pearance of a wild man, who frightens the women and children and steals food from the very pantries of the farmhouses. During the past few weeks a number of sheep have been killed and skinned by him, and portions of meat from the hind quarters cut away. Poultry has been stolen and even provisions from the houses. Up to the present time the strange indi- vidual has not attempted to harm any ohe, but his appearance is so frightful and | his methods so peculiar that the ranchmen | tear some trouble will resuit unless he is captured. He goes about unclad, ex for a very scant tunic of sheepskin his unkempt hair and beard fly wildly | about as he runs. He appears at ail hours of the day and night, but never takes anything except food. He never speaks, and if spoken to or approached he disappears with marvelous fleetness into the brush. He was seen last week by Mrs. Barondo, the wife of one of the Sur ranchers, stand- ing near her chicken house. Mrs. Barondo saw him before he discovered he was be- ing watched and she was able to observe his appearance more in detail than had been done heretofore. She states that she noticed a broad plain gold ring on a inger of the skinny, dirty hand of the recluse, but that otherwise there were no traces of civilization about him. Nothing Is_known of this mysterious man except that he has appeared at in- tervals in the Sur country and sometimes as far north as the Carmel for the past two years. He is seen less often during the winter than in the summer months. Officers have made repeated efforts to capture him, but his fleetness of foot and extreme cun- ning in putting his pursuers off his trail have always saved him. Attempts have even been made to take him with a lariat, but these also have failed. The residents of the district where he roams believe him to be a lunatic and great anxiety is | felt over what may occur unless he is | soon captured and placed in confinement. —_—e—————— PERSONAL. M. J. Moloney, a business man of St. Joseph, Mo., is at the Palace. Dr. W. A. Hendricks of Los Angeles | registered at the Palace yesterday. J. H. Andresen, District Attorney of Monterey County, is at the Grand. Miss Mary Van Buren, leading lady of the Frawley company, is staying at the Palace. ‘Willlam H. Bumpas, agent of the Louls- ville and Nashville Railroad at Nashville, | Tenn., after attending the National Asso. clation of Local Freight Agents in Den- ver, June 1l to 14, has been traveling through the coast country. He reached San Francisco from Portland yesterday and is much pleased with this city. Ha will visit other coast cities before return~ ‘Who does not like to be shipped and whence she will proceed to Sydney, C. B., for coal and supplies, tak- ing her departure from that port direct for the north about the middle of next month, R The Eric will take stores for one year, to guard against any possible detention and will, with authority from the Royal Greenland Trading Company to land, call at the most northern station for any’ pos- sible information of Peary. The summer of 1901 is likely to mark the cuimination of the work of the Peary Club, though its members, confident as they' have been from the outset in Mr. Peary’'s success, are pledged to stand by him unfaiteringly to,_the end. Three years have elapsed since Mr. Peary left America, and iwo full sea- sons’ work s to be learned upon the re- turn of the Eric. More interesting in a personal and dramatic way than the geo- graphical work of Mr. Peary is the fate of his wife and d-ughtar and the steamer Windward, from which nothing has been heard since her departure from God- haven, Greehland, August 20, 1900. Ex- pectations and instructions then were that the Windward, with Mrs. Peary and Miss Peary, would return in the autumn, and the hope now is that their detention was due to Mr. Peary’s orders and rea- sons which were satisfactory to him. Saling to Be Extradited. Irving . Moulton, cashier of the Bank of California, swore to a complaint in Judge Fritz's court yesterday morning, as mentioned in yesterday's Call, for the ar- rest of Walfer Saling, the absconding clerk of W. M. Du Val Co., commission merchants, Front street, on the charge of forgery. Saling while In Chicago forged a check for $500 on the firm, which was paid by the bank. ,He will be arrested in Chi- cago and steps will be taken to have him extradited. Chaffee Military Governor. ‘WASHINGTON, June 22.—Following the order issued yesterday making Judge Taft Civil Governor of the Phiumu, an or- has_been iss: i d ued naming ral Chat- f:: as Military Governor of the archipe- You take no chances on the ten a book which should be in I who does not feel himself equal any man who wishes to know of his formation and price list. Address DR. M: C. Mc 11 ] | ] EEEEE i m ] Weak Men, Arouse Yourselves, Feel the Exhilarating Spark of Vigor in Your Nerves. Recover the Power You Have Lost. Would you not like to have your friends point to you as they used to do and say, “There goes a strong man?’ you not wish your eye to be so bright, your step so firm and your form so erect that men and women will admire you and remark at your manly bearing? These are the thoughts uppermost in the minds of modern men—physical mental perfection, strength and manly power. 2 rong, to feel that he is equal in strength to any man of his age? You can be if you will obey the appeal here made to you. Despond no more. from this appliance and you wili soon feel the grateful nerve force jumping thrcugh your veins: then be erect and your glance a sparkle of gladsome friendship. all the world will seem to you agaln what it is a pleasure to know, a pleasure to live in. DR. McLAUGHLIN'S ELECTRIC BELT Has made thousands of lives happy during the past You have heard your neighbor speak In every locality some one speaks well of Dr. McLaughlin's Electric Belt, because every town has one or more cures by it. the matter prevents the public mention of its ef- fects by those who have benefited by were not for this fact there would not be space in this paper to print the gladsome tidings which would be produced. and Is the only natural means of regaining vital therefore it Is the only sure means of re- Drugs hayve been tried and have failed. You know that: but Dr. McLaughlin’ cannot fail; it is Electricity, v 1t gives you the oi! with which to set the machinery of your body months” use of it will assure you health and hap- piness for the rest of your life. ‘welght in gold to me,” says a recent would not sell it for all the gold in this State,”™ writes another grateful patient. Nervous and Be up and acting. Infuse six months. of it. force; gaining it. Life.” Lame Back, gestion, Dyspepsia and all ailments following the effects of dissipation. to any man LATB now and am Cal.,_June 8, “*I was an old man of 70 before I after wearing it three The years as at thirty-five, and I feel just as vigorous.”’—A. CRAW- FORD, Pokegama, Or., June 13, 190L NO PAY UNLESS CURED. McLaughlin Belt, as a cure is guaranteed In every case. Dr. McLaughlin has writ- he hands of every young, middle aged and old man. to his fellow man in strength. thirty-five. LAUGHLIN, 702 Markst Strest, Gorner Geary, San Francisco. Office Houre: 8 A. M. to 8:30 P. M. Sundays, 10 to AGA Your brain will become clear and your heart light, and CURES— ‘gained 15 pounds since I began wearing it. It will be sent free, closely sealed from observation, to own weakness and the test means of cur.h_u it. Send for it to-day. It has full in- IN D3 and into your body the life-giving power your carriage will The delicate nature of it. 1If it It is a remedy born in nature, and in motion, and a few “It is worth fts letter. “T It will cure all Organic ‘Weakness, Rheumatism, Kidney and Bladder Troubles, Indi- It will prove of great value who suffers from these allments. “Your belt is the only cure I have ever found. I have 1_can work full of energy.”—C. H. DREWRY, Korbel, 1801, ot your Belt. Now onths I feel a young man of ‘e there but my step 13 as Arm It should be read by every man