Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, AUGUST 25, 1901. EAPLOICN DG Kills Islander Victims as They Struggle in the Water. Bruises Cover the Bodies of Passengers Recovered From the Sea. Dispat o The Call 24.—The ap- of the Islander B. C.. Aug. the bodies have bee ed Every one of the rs bruises about en the infant vic- it is not un- ion to which has been made e and super- A s of having be reckage which throat, -while instead where who not rise has been Angeles, who had nker, were occurred both e was RUNG AWAY WiTH IN DEATH'S WORK | | 1 brought to Vie- | t gives risc! regarding the cause of | 13 YOUNG NIEGE “Swiftwater Bill” Comes Forward in a New Marital Role. Warrant Is Iaéued for His Arrest on a Charge of Abduction. Spectal Dispatch to The Call. TACOMA, Aug. 24—“Swiftwater Bill" Gates has capped the climax of his gay career during the past four by loping and marrying Lydia Boyle, his 14- vear-old niece. The mother of the girl, who is Gates' sister, has sworn out a | warrant charging Gates with kidnaping. \ | The warrant has been telegraphed to San | i | Francisco and it is expected that the | couple will be arrested on their arrival | | she | there. Gates is believed to have attracted | | the girl aw: from her home by prom- | | ises of fine clotk and high living. { This is the third time Gates has been j married since he lucky enough to small fortune from his Klondike make a claim: His first wife was Grace La- moore, a San Francisco girl who posed as actress in Dawson. variety cisco the 'ollcm ing year. His second wife, | other of the Lamoore sisters, is report- to be dangerously ill in either New | York or Washington. cared for by her mother in Dawson and s said to pay something toward its £ a gay time in Seat- ce then. On reaching veeks ago he found that | his_ niece, dia, and her parents had | moved to'this city. He visited them fre- guently and soon showed much fondness for the girl. Her mother, who is Gates’ own sister, Sought to discourage any inti- | macy between them, but Bill” doled out so many alluring tales that the child was quickly won to his | way of thinking. | As near as can be learned they went to | Chehalis about a week ago and were | narried. They kept this fact secret and only diligent watching made it plain as ate as Thursday that they were prepar- ing to leave together. The girl's mother | y to_detain her after he depot. A police- ght and requested to impossible at the | moment, because the officer was called upon to arrest another man who turned | t to be 2 horse Learning that they were being watched, | tes and his child-wife left the train, | hack and were driven to South where the Northern Pacific lim- in was he! and has been hav tle and Tacoma s Tacoma several r,..,,“ asked lice headquart Mrs. Boyle i She ob- | { tained a divorce from him in San Fran- | Her child is being | “Swiftwater \ STEAMER DAUNTLESS IS STRUCK AND SUNK BY THE MARY GARRATT e s | Collision Occurs on San Joaquin River Between Bradford’s and Kentucky Slough, All of the Passengers Being Rescued With- out Accident as a Result of the Splendid Order That Prevails TOCKTON, crash the Aug. 24.—With a great steamer Mary Garratt of the California Navigation and | Improvement Company ran her | bow squarely into the steamer Dauntle of the 1 n Transportation | at 1:30 o'clock this between Brad: ough, but nearer the former lo- ine miles this side of The Garratt immediate- Compan: point ky Sl d's and Ken- r and water poured into in an immense volume. She began to and seeing | that she w: the officer charge bac up to a mud- . as the ¢ feet deep in iver at tl he tt re- of <|m Dauntless, 1 the lifesaving w no time to lose w to the | accident. “There wasn't a foot wet.” said Cap- tain Goodell, in narrating the incidents collision. ““The utmost coolness 3%n the part of the passenger morning, at | I was not on watch at the time the col- lision occurred, and Sperry Dye had the | wheel. There were seventy-five passen- gers aboard. As soon as the Mary struck us_the mate, the pufrser and the stew- ard went the round of the staterooms and knocked at every door, telling the passengers to dress immediately and get cut on deck. We opened up the rack containing the life preservers .on exas deck and the officers were sta- | tioned there to put them on as soon as the passengers came forward. “The Garratt came head-on with full am and struck us about amidships on the ))ml side. her prow going in as far |as it could and making a hole:as large enough to drive a horse and éart into. The Garratt was only slightly damaged, some of the planks being s hed, but she was not stove in. Our boats were zot_ready to lower immediately. We backed up on the mud-flat, but the Gar- ratt in maneuvering around to save the passengers. got us.part way off and the boat is now on the outer edge of the flat. The freight loss will be consider- able. Captain Goodell refused to discuss the question of blame and Strother of the wsarratt continued on t. San Francisco with his beat. It is ex: the | Captain Horace | RIVER STEAMER DAUNTLESS AND THE MARY GARRETT, WHICH STRUCK AND SANK HER IN THE SAN JOAQUIN RIVER. THE DAUNTLESS IS ALMOST ENTIRELY SUBMERGED, THE WATER REACHING UP TO THE BASE OF THE PILOT-HOUSE. SHE CARRIES A LARGE CARGO. {Aected that a suit will be brought against he Navigation Company by the Union Company. The Dauntless is almost entirely sub- me{ged only the Texas deck being above water. The Dauntless was built in 1892 for the Union Transportation Company. About that time there was dissatisfaction on the tion Company and some of the farmers and business men got together and built the Captain Weber and the Dauntless. Both vessels_were of 613 tons 8ross bu den, 174 feet 5 inches long, 36 feet 5 inch beam and § feet deep. Captaln G. F Goodell has' been commander of the { Dauntless since she went into commis- sion, and this is his first accident. f the Dauntless was Everybody called him the and there certainly never was a saflorman who could load a band of sheep aboard a river steamer as quick- ly ae “Billy.” Although on the ship's articles as one of the crew, “Billy” is a sheep. He saved his life by his own pres- ence of mind. When all hands on the Dauntless were looking after their own affairs “Billy” was looking after his. Wet and miserable he stood on the Texas San Joaquin with the California Naviga- | TAKES A LIFE WITHOUT GAUSE Saloon Frequenter Fires Fatal Shot in San Diego. Temporarily Bereft of His Reason by the Effects of a Spree. S Bpecial Dispatch to The Call. SAN DIEGO, Aug. 24.—Rels Pollerano was shot and killed to-night in the Tele- };fne saloon by Willlam G. Hesser, ere was no provocation and the mur- derer_claims_he did not know what he was doing. Hesser has been living on a ranch in the New River country, but has been in San Diego on a spree for several weeks. This evening he was sitting at the rear end of the saloon when Pollerano and two companions, both Mexicans, came in to get a drink. They were at the front of the saloon when Hesser sud- denly got up from his chair, drew his re- volver and fired. One witness asserts that Hesser said something about seeing what he could hit, while others assert that not a word was uttered when the shot was fired. The bullet struck Pollerano in the side of the head, about two inches above the left eye, and while one portion of it cir- cled about the skull the second portion penetrated the brain and was not located. Hesser was disarmed by bystanders and turned over to Officer Chandler, who rushed in as soon as the shot was fired. He was taken to jail, where later he de- clared that he did not know a single thing that had happened from the time he was talking to the proprietor of the saloon until he was landed in jail. Pollerano was carried to a physiclan’s office, where he remained in a comatose condition until near midnight, when he passed away. —— WASHINGTON’S GOVERNOR PARDONS “KID” WEST Freedom for the Burglar Who Was Loaned to Canada as a Witness. OLYMPIA, Wash., Aug. 24.—Governor Rogers has pardoned “Kid” West, who is serving a term in the pennemiary for burglary. “Kid"” West while under sentence was loaned by the authorities of Washington to Canadian officials that they might use him as a witness against George O'Brien, who was accused of the murder of Linn Relfe, Lineman Olsen and William Clay- son on the Yukon trail. There was no precedent by which the authorities of this State could legally turn their prisoner over to the: Canadians, but the problem was discussed by prosecuting attorneys, Judges and the Governor, with the final | outcome that they simply told the Cana- Dawson with him. West~testified that O'Brien had made a | proposition to him to rob people on the | Yukon trail. should have been executed yesterday Whether the mandate of the law was car- ried out-is not known. deck, and when the T. along he took a flyving him in the mi “Billy” is now making a temporary home on_the opposition boat. The Mary Garratt is a larger vessel than the Dauntless and was laden with nearly 500 tons of grain. She is of 728 tons gross burden, 172 feet long, 45 feet beam and $ feet 3 inches deep. The Garratt dis- ‘Walker came back to Stockton last night. dian officials to take West and go to O’Brien was convicted and | charged at Port Costa yesterday and went PRINGES FIGHT WITH PlaT0L Officer of the Czar's ‘Bodyguard Killed in a Duel Fatal Encounter Takes Place Secretly at St. Peters- burg. St hcireti Special Dispatch to The Call. ST. FETERSBURG, Aug. 24—It has just become known that Prince Alexan- der Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berlebargk, adju- tant of the Czar’s Circassian bodyguard, met his death in a pistol duel with Prince Anatole Vladimerovich Bariatiniky, an ald-de-camp of his Majesty, The encounter took place near Iever- skaya station, in the suburbs of St. Petersburg. Prince Alexander received a bullet in the abdcmen. He managed to drag himself to the station, on reaching the station building. Prince Bariatiniky has been dismissed from the service. The funeral of Prince Sayn-Wittgen- stein took place on Monday. A larse number of society people, including many officers of the Imperial Guards and func- tionaries of the court, assembled at the Cathedral of the Holy Trinity. A metallic casket containing the remains stood on a catafalque and was covered with a large number of wreaths_ one of which was frcm Empress Marie Feodorovna. OF INTEREST TO PEOPLE OF THE PACIFIC COAST Changes Made in the Postal Service and a Number of Pensions. Issued. WASHINGTON, Aug. 24—The Postof- fice Department to-day issued the fol- lowing: Postoffice established—Oregon— Bay View, Lincoln County, Daniel M Oakland, Postmaster. Discontinued, Se tember I5~California—Rodeo, Contra Cos- ta County, mail to Selby; Schmidtville, Contra Costa County, mail to Stege. Ore- gon—Vida, Lane County, mail to Lea- burgh. Postmasters commissioned—California— | Henry F. Ross, Riverbank. Washington —Alexander Mitchell, Dewalto. Appoint- | sd—California—E. _Pyle, Pylema, Kern County, vice M. R. Pyle, removed. The following pensions were granted: California—Originai—Willlam H. Dunn, | Veterans’ Home, Napa. $6: George W Penter, Latrobe, 36. Charles H. B San Francisco, $10: John Grady, Francisco, $10; Joseph Zanoli, Valley Springs, $12: Morton S. Eddy, Escondido, §8. Widows—Mary B. Youngman, Los | Amgeles, s Martha Doble, San Diego, | 815, | _ Oregon—Original—Joseph Huber, Ore- gon Soldiers’ Home, Roseburg, $6. ‘Washington—Original—Peter H. Grigss, Lynden, $6. Increase—Mason H. Charles H. h, Wood. Wilson, Tacoma, Woodiand, $12; , $6. Widows— Colfax, . Martha J. Spence, | —— ? Dr. Finley tq Take Charge. | SANTA ROSA, Ahg. 24.—The Pacific | Methodist Col will_begin its forty- i September 2, with ch: ince the . H. Wilkinson ees have been negotiat- In May ing with several persons in the East the tru: elsewhere. The arrangements dgreed cn fell through and Dr. Finley accepts the \posinon of president temporarily at the earnest solicitation of the trustees in or- der to prevent the doors of the institu- | tion being closed. ; { i { "mm" ufle"" : form of decey 234 fer- times o8 active es in soure, curdles, a beby’s stom- 20é bowels as quickly as in & pan. mest off the ice it “won't keep.” d erd infected with. vermin. ©ad eouts in the swilt bprrel in If your food remalns even & o gested in your stomsch and {bowele, during the summer heat, it sours, cre- |&tes geses. poisons the blood, which it also bave moticod wken a seting of dough s to lhn it ;eu warm and makes “spongs.” beczuse the © Sascs escape into the alr snd leeve | only Lhe B00d foods! l.l"l bebind, rudy for bak- of me body, er it is dough, meat, veg- ©Egs, or what pot, you ur stomech, a sick 2y liver, acid urine, obolers morbue, ruz'u fruit, E {in | 5 | teat much mer heat dosc it—just the same as you {set the mach vr mpouge in the heat of Xhe e to sour. Hicrobes and Tepeworms. Everybody koows thet summer hest favors world—malaris) mosquiioes, bugs. menting, deesylug enimal end vegetable mat- ter thut Blls the in Suring the hot spell. Nature hes crested il ¥ thie poiecnous stufl, Bame wey 12 the body. Heat helps microbes, becteria, ptamaines, sil dizsese germs to bree #2d Teod in the boweis of man, end wherever & | weeknoss appears there they swarm i | myriads. The terribis increase of the deatd rate among in the summer time fs osused by m curd of motker's milk souring in their Jittle insides and forming the breeding epor of Gosens of varieties of diseese germs, ausing colic, vomiting, cholers infantum, summer complain:, ecarist Tever and all th- otber summer borrors of childhood lite. Halt- &rown children are apt to have worms st thic season of the year; and it s bard to tell whether they Beve or Dot~ The -commobest m is & pervous picking at the moce. Grown-up peopls, too, have tapeworms without knowing ¥, sod meny a2 tapeworm bora in summer time bas lived and grown for years 228 starved the unfortunste, upwilliog ADd un. conscious individuel with whom it made its bome. Appendicitls, This Grea@iful disesse, which kilied ustold miilions before the medical profession discov- {ered its cause, is the direct vesult of the sour- {ing of foot in the bowels. 12 nins cases out of ten it 1s causod by & grape seed or borry saed oAging ia the “sppendis,” a certaln kink in e iptestinss, and there rtarting to “work.” sots in and the wholo abdomen sys the doctors cut open e grepe seed mnd nmnm out the with & knife, Not & pleasant process, | you mdly be sure. What Nature vges. The frst provision pature s msdd to r‘d of the pasty,: sour mess hflho body n-ud by summer hest is to drive it ‘out through the ipores. Toat's why-s person perspires so much in the summer time: and every eoe ksows: thet perspiratiop—sweat—is ~sour. removel after & bot day smells sour, and l“ sweet le sour and offensive, mvm that it removes acid fiith from the Then again, pature cuts Gown your appetite, Deoates whes yo ent « spears meal phits 9t ku sour before it can be digested, and m mes chine becks up until ‘the gour stuff can be ‘got~ 2 rid of. Nearly everybody. loses fleshk in the smmer time, becausepthe 200d is ‘ot properly. Of course, neture wants-everybody HOW TO BE SAFE FROM SUMMER SUFFERING. o get io a cool piece, taks it easy, bathe fre- quently, 50 2s to keep the tempersturs of the body low, and 20 ob. But most people are not 50 lucky a8 to be choosers, and they have to| and bustie for a iivelihood in the sum- merl Leat same &8s apy other time. 8o, 28 you csn't foilow the dictates of nature and lounge in the woods or loil In the sur? at the seashore and give the bot and @nd the colicky, prickly-heated babl mer vacation by the rippliag rills, you ought to be glad there’s & wey to assist nature-and avold all the dangers of symmer suffering. Keep Cican Inside. It's simple and essy, if you know how. Keep clean inside! Stop the undigested food from souring In your_stomach and bowels! Remove regularly sl sour m in your body, sweeten ths tem end keep It 1o sbaps to iake every pourishment out of your food and expel all unpecessary rubbish. Keep cool inside! You can’t keep ool outsfde if you have & blasing, bolling, souring mass of corruption inside of you. Isn’t that common sense? Most people think rrhez is the opposite of constipation. It is not . Diarrhea is & form of coustipation and is caused by re trving to get rid of the obstruction of acid-weskened bowels. The proper thing to.do, therefore, is to keep your boweis strong. healthy, nstural all mer; and gotten up for that particular purposs. physic, pilis, liquida, old-fashioned " rippery wauld kil you. Ard yet' YOU MUST keep. the chanpel clesn, purs and open. Toero is only one preparation that will do it, end you wiil find it in any drug store, 10c, ‘266 or E0c 3 boxr—Cascarsts Candy Cathgriic, purely vegetsble, sweet, eat like can mentation, make the mouth, breath Dun and sweet and keep tho insides clean and c One of Cescarcts” zmows wosderful qualitios 1n that mamma ests & tablet; baby gets the be Nursing mothers make thelr milk tive by eeiing Cascarets. .This is -the only sclentific, safs wey to protect. suckling snuug against summer suffer! Children like Cas- rets end should un & ll((ll plece of & tablet every day. Tho writer of this srticle has written the from most eareful tests heat the dtuuu usuelly sttributed to the effect of summer. In the south they ‘have been. used succesatully &8 & preventive of yeilow. fever, Asiatio cholera and elsewhers of plague Should any one desire to try them inE, the Writer has arranged with the TABULeS: turers to send a free cample and booklet to any person mentioning this article and addressing Sterling Ce., Chicago or New York. STRIKE! Hundreds of Fhousande Are (n- volvad. Trouble i an lmporient Part of the Organiza- tion Affocts All tho Rest—A Perfectly Hermonious System Easily Thrown Out of Gear. Organizea labor bes reached such o stage that snything effecting & particular branch of | it draws =il the rest into the difculty. orgens of the human body.. Work too bard, e too much, d-lzl 00 mul:h. exercise but it be a little irregular in 4ny. way. and.the live quits 'fl‘fi Then the bowsis become nnmpmq and_the stomach mnbn strike. eprt is: affected is dragged foto the e only way out ef it is tc lo of Al this—the liver. If with the llnr sod all will m huSk w rnxulu Datyral Cascarets cnnd_ficmmc meke mnu Tight with the liver. They peffume. the Rbwih pr‘. ot food from souring on the tone to the bowels, . strengthen :h' lnuldnll jes, while they aro cleaning, and stirring «wp the itver to renewed uctivity. " - 2 ke S AT I S et B b, e Euar: P ngs right %5 they -honlfl h. and “set -the whole maghinery a-goiug. And you can get them £t 4ny drug ‘stors or by.mail for price—10c, br'60c. Address Bterling -Remedy Co.. Chicago or NewYork. ADVERTISEMENTS. CARHEGIE’'S CRY. Would Give Up His Milllons for Health, When (0 Cents Would Buy it. “I am not really-tb be eavied, Carnegie, the great -milijonaire, interview at Skibo-castle. ‘“How can my wealth help me? I am 60, years old and I can- not digest my food. I would give’you all my :!H'lléz,nl if you could .give -me youtn' and eal Poor millionaire! S wise and yet'so blind! Youth he could not buy, but”a . bale lng bearty old age is his t.purchase, .and. it- wi not cost him his miilion Tt Will cost him just 1 cents, and bie plaint cannot digest my food™ nesdenever oross his lips egain. e21d Andrew I bave tried almost every remedy foP the cure of dyspepsia and its attendant -troubles, bave paid & large amount in doctors’ blils and bave ,even taken a hospital treatment, but I must confess that I have nevef had anything to.act upon me 8o well as your ideal Jaxative, Candy Cathartic Cascarets. [ am conv that it s the one perfect remedy for, sio~ sluggieh movements of the intestines quent_upon too cl; attention tb the -office or schoolroom, and I or. every brain-worker could test this " remarkable remedy.—P' 5r1nclnll Woodstock High . And these: 1 was troubled w' dyspepsia, 1 that acted so \ sults as your Durfor- Ph, Cascarets. a-u L5 hn not band. A1 am, 1 peptic and bave » chlld, and althoug llll':l drugs I be wAyS very cranl ky Re Jears, 4nd aiso sun 1 cen highly PROGRESS 1N MEDIGINE." Medioal Sclence Crows Apace with | ih. ‘Clylilzation And among the leading remedies—one that combines all the restilts of sclentific study up 3 the present time and Is put up in conven- fent and economical form, ‘easy to take, easy to carry—is the fagmous Cascaréts. Five years® 2go marked the time of the sale of the first box. ‘Last'year the sale reached the enormeus total of ] Over Six Million Boxes. “In this hustling every-day, busy Iife of ours people need. just this kind of a medicine - to stimulate théir owejs and keep them regular. Cascarpts act on ‘the liver just enough to help pature withéut causing shat awful sick, weak- 158 "teeling. that usually follows the taking of calomel* &nd violeni purges. ‘We ' bope our redders who baye never tested the merits of Cascarets- will give them & good trial. We 1ike ‘them because we belleve in them and be- cause-we know they are good in a redent.| Casc $100.00 REWARD, Get What You A.k For end Don't Let & Dealér Tdlk You Into Buying lbmnhlnc Else. The Stérling ‘Remedy Co., manufactuters of cts Candy Catbaric, have just succeeded 4n locating nnd légally - crushizg one of who are securing the results of Cascarets’ .fame by, .making imitatios and* substi- tutes. Justleé Wing of the U. S. Cirouit court, northern district df Ohid, at Cleveland, hes -entered & comprehensive decrea of injunc- tion agalnst oné Govey,.the persof In.quéstion, festfaining him.from using the word ‘Casca rets,- the words Caidy Cathdrtlo, any box, tablet, labél or. sdvertizement.1iké those .used by Cascarets or any way simllar thereto. .The Sterling Remedy Company are -determined ‘ to ‘défand these,. their. rights. s s -defined by the bonorable éo $100.00 rew(nl -will be prompti one furnishiig us eviden: g which we co- secure conviction ‘of sn of deale” who attempts. to »: K =hon Cascarets ¢ inter paid to anv A MOTHER'S MERCY. Lack of Propér. Care in.sChildhood Lays the Foundation for Hablit- ual consup-atlon. Caus- Ang Lifélong Butfering. Nothing so sweet and touching s & motaer’s care for her little-ones." wnuhm eye her anxiety mh“ .m nder, o Mfl s on young- hoj Ta the young ‘nearly al nuum mmqy ttaceable to stomach and bowel complainta, = Phyaic and purges ere the most’ common tost dadgerous of all medicines. Nearly all contain® qfi.m ‘or mercurial 884 other mineral permanently -affect the tender bones’ and tissues of the child. ‘ The ofly proper laxative for a cniid is & gentle, .positive’ vegetable liver stimulant, - Cabcarsté Candy Cathartic. Feor the ur ‘he’ bowels pértectl Oohwu.. ;’mw ot ’uuuy‘ . It's ’rhut v do, oot what we say they do, that pioves { Address Sterling Remiedy N\ real. Can., or New York.. assed | breath is been cunlfly .Cathartic, the ios pl spent . lr.vl-l all kinds mu ud got relief, :ut o 'G no | three weel -m -urm ln lhn “town 528 the lookout for-| ns-and counter- dunt you rever buy i “.:n made. and hlom’tlnu E scrupulous , whose irten-. ihi:n e, :::lklurufl: the Duyer asd intringe on ur trade-mark -ani -1 “Tho same reward will be. vutl for evidence ebebdling us- to, cenvlct apy one ‘of manufac- turipg and salo -any imlf n ferts o afiingemonts ot oF ‘NG-To-Bac. As.800n &s Some Gne tries to.sell you_something else, when you ask for Casca- 'nu or No-To-Bac, look out lnr bim! Qet all the fetails and confidentially write us on the blwl at once. Cascarats are -uu In taviat form.. e, - lnlfl In h!k but -I'ln COC) ket e w8 ong-tailed c on -the, cover. * Ad- drul lufllhl medy Co., Cbi- HEALTH FOR 10 CEN llm, pure lloed.. clean_skin, bright rfi health—Cascarets ly Catbar- e btain and secure them for you. Gene Ulne tablets stamped C. C. C..Never sold in | bulk. All drueglats. 10c., a Nve Bny and try the; i ‘{&" @ e 1105 Tverd: the @ blood pure. All ts, mafled for price. ple iress Sterling, le company; Chicago: Montreal, GREATEST IN THE WORLD. ‘Within Five Yun Cascarets Have Reach i’; THE DAYS OF MIRACLES Mulnlurytomlpmmthe and of course-was par~ hlbl down. The doctors could not move my bowels, saying that they would never move again, and one of the doctors—my Mother N-tun 's"belp, aré curing me. used one’ 10c box & week-for two and one-half years. But my case i3 one in 100,000 to recover at all; and I had the best of dm.ol‘l. too, all w-fihm'?.m:( thing 0 Nope. But we tooled ime.—Géo! . Herniman, 63 Boyd-st.,; Buffalo, N. Y. R BURNT BRAINS When the Brain Tiseue !s Over- ‘heated You Can’t Think. There's close th; D e h-mpl y between the braip A hot. lour mmch mears a hot, tired brain l(onm worry Sauses indigestion. and .sum. mer yspepsia causes Irritability. worriss, fores leties without any apparent cause: N Bnrn the stomach and you burn the brain. the bowels are constipatdd, and the liver ll.l'y, the stomach becames fiiled with sour food. the Blood 1 full of Bile. the commlesion becomes yeliow-greenish, full of spots, the , and there !s an offensive taste en it {s that the v):ole ‘world Beems gloomy, the brain is tortured with less anxieties, Jespondency follows, and it Gonditions continue may Toaaity and Biliousness, lrrlublllty, mu-u-mom sieep- lesaness, m ux n ln ymptoms. 1f & mnm it ke tc klel l crlpph or kfl hl;'duh: had better look ot w hl ccr. laxaf u..“"h?eh bonll make m liver lively, Please All dru l:‘ Afl "u'u:s'sn ling Remedy any, sample. r Chidago: ‘Montreal, Caz., %5 New York.” MURDEROUS MICROBES. Bred by Summer’s Heat In Human Inteatine: are seventy-five different kind of mi- ' that summer produces in your mouth alone. Any one of them under proper conditicps can develop into the cause of serious llln-:. Millions of microbes, bacteris, pt ot every ‘kind liv and , green com- 10, ng, sick M lassitude, 1033 of emergy and ‘Serious symptoms aro & conses has boen at wotk to flnd sclence -7 fiad & :tell you they are.just ‘;;In‘m.—lo ARE NOT PAST. Washington, Kan., June 1—(Special).—I had constipation of the worst nature for years. Medicine had no effect on my atomech, asd my stomechwasin such s. condition from purgatives that I could mot take food. I was taken to & boepital and my bowels were operated upon for constipation. I Qd not get any: better after going through that terridle operation. My baw- els were dead—no action at all—and -the doc- tors gave me up. I could not eat anything but stale bread* and water, lterally starving fo death. Lol!ommmllmmmn but a living skeleton. After trylng eizo I gave Cascarets a trial, not thinking thv would belp me. But they did right awsy. I commenced to eat and sleep, and from.that on T could ‘get out of bed and them got 3o I could €0 out riding—something I bad not done ‘for over three years. New I doall my work. My triends just marvel: they say they never saw | such a miracle. I teil Cascarets did RMERICA SAYS SO. The Entire Country k Cascarcts Candy Cathartic Did It asd Regore Phonomenal Victory—Six Miilion Bozes Soid Last Year. From every part of Americs comes the news that sufferers from constipation have found re- liet fn Cascarets Candy Cathartic, the wonder- ful modern scientific laxative and - intestinal tontc. | Cascarets-are, figuratively and liter- ally, fi wverybody's mouth. Thousaads bave tried Cascarets with the most pleasany and effective resyits and voluntarily testify to the experiences. Hers are a fay extracts from | some of the letters: I have been using Cascarets for headacho and emd!nuon and h-u receivad great ben- OE( from M: Gabler, 512 Larrebes- st 1 hn been - » month and find M Jjust the mu for M rdan.—“bln B. Burt, 70 Main-st., Andover, iug s etintaciory. e & W Darvens an: 3 57 "lmnmn-lt. Buffalo, N. Y. I have taken Cascarets and cheerfully recom- mend them to all nv friends.—Mrs. G. J. Grad- well, Frugality, Pa. Cascarsts are fine for biilousneas and mala- ria and are so pleasant to take.—Mrs. Mary Cummings, Maud, Oklahoma. lunCmumlnmyhnflblMMm s Mt ek Eaitvens. Meatvil T You can sefely add apperdicitis to the list of diseascs that Cascarcts will benefit or curo. —Bunice J. Smith, Rieh Valley, Ohto. I have used Cascarets. Thero is better for constipation. — Beay. Pascage, Kalghie town, Cascarets are all rlfht. They bave cured me of constipation. aad expectad anything would.—Charles H. Nye, lock box 208, Clacin- | nati, Obio. 3 I am 80 thankful for your Cescarsts. They are better than any medicine I evef used.—irs M. Rew, Lacelle, iowa. 1 do not hesitste to say that Cascarsts -is | the very best medicine over piaced hefors the people.—Andrew Woodruff, Daysville, N. Y. Cascarets. are the best catbartic I ever used. —Tom Hokt, Wellwood, Manitoba. I have tried- your Cascarets and ln--ac”: on the Move, mink, box 961, Allegan, % Wu could fill the whole paper with expres- like .the above. Thousands of similar nnonlmu of the merits of Cascarets bave been \voluntéered and prove that this delisht- tul laxative—so pleassnt of tasts, so mild and | yet effective—has” secured » frmly established Chicags or New York.