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THE SAN FRANCISCO © LL, WEDN ESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1901. CONGRESS MAY SOON ENACT RIGID LAWS TO DRIVE REDS FROM THE COUNTRY' ANARCHY’S DOWNFALL IS NOW PREDICTED BY THE LAWMAKERS Feeling Aroused by the dent McKinley's Life gress to Suppressth Vicious Attempt on Presi- Must Cause Action by Con- e Horde of Murderous Reds Vice-President Roosevelt Is Being Guarded by the Secret Service Detec tives to Render Impossible the Act of Another Assassin at the Exposition Special Dispat —All the mem- dent’s official well as such members by the attempt upon at the nation shouid this city E action in the e anarchy. Be- f n be made a law must passed providing a penalty for the nd a method of procedure against nd women who profess the dange trines which bore fruit in Czol- is predicted that Congre action. the feeling that it js prob- United States, shduid the willingly with Continued From Page One. another until the police she had derided ) m ad taken the matter into their She was Capt Id on a warrant Colleran, charging 10 murder the Presi- expected that the city wiil ask for f the case, pending ad- 1 an immediate hear- peaking of the prob- stponement being ed prosecutor. *‘They want b York without requisi- but T will not go; 1 know the and T'll make them fight And I am not afraid to go legal every rope: step. Admits Meeting Czolgosz. Goldman’s manner was defiant as taken to the office of the Chief but she disclaimed all knowl- lgosz and his crime, save that met him here Do you know what Czolgosz elaims to shoot the President? 1 do not; I nev ocated violence. 1 scarcely knew the man. 1 was leaving for Rochester via Buffalo when Czolgosz had a few words with me. He said he d heard me lecture at some memorial 1 in Cleveland last May and that he d to know me. He said he knew I Chicago and how do you this is the one who tried to kill the Presi- replied, with a shrug of the 1¢ ed that from what the newspapers Thought He Was a Fool. t did you think when you heard L an attempt to the President had been made?” the woman was asked. With a wave of her h: and another g of her shoulders she replied “I thought—I thought, soner’s manner th growing more and more e: she made an e nt e self. In this launched into a discourse on the teach- i v. She declared that zn- h men to do the act lgosz despised and “We work against the cation is our watchword was early last-Junc wh. - ago to visit the Isaak y,” she con- ued in answer to interrogations con- cerning her whereabouts r “On the night of July 12 Mr. Isaaks was out of the house. The bell rang and went to the door. The man who, I learn em, and edu- she ‘said. “It ough the newspapers, was Czolgosz, stood there. He said he wanted to secc me. was about to catch the Nickel Plate train, as I and Mr. Isaaks’' daugh- ter were at to go to Rochester. He went to the Rock Island depot with us, but I was so busy taking leave of my friends that I scarcely noticed him. It was not to make new friends. At the depot I had the few words with him of which I have | told. That was all there ever was tween us A Student of Sociology. “I am an anarchist—a student of sociol- y—but nothing in anything 1 evey said 1o Czolgosz knowingly could have led him he act which startied everybody ve- vour lectures?" ys your she was ntable because some crack- brained person puts a wrong construction on my words? Leon Czolgosz, 1 am con- vinced, planned the deed unaided and en- tirely alone. There is no anarchist ring which would help him. There may be anarchists who murder. but there are aiso men in every walk of life who some- times feel the impulse to kill. I don't know surely, but I think Czolgosz was one of those down-trodden men who sees ail the misery which the rich inflict upon ihe poor, whé think of it, who brood over it, and then in despair resolve to strike a great blow, as they think, for the good of their fellowmen. But that is not an- * and the woman pronounced the name with the greatest ease, “‘may have been inspired by me, but he took wrong way of showing it.” Denies Her Identity. When Captain Schuetler and Detective Hertz discovered her at the home of one s as have been drawn | - 2 time when one would want | words set his tch to The Call. | European countries in a world-wide move- | ment against these enemies of constituted authority and the theories upon which modern society is based. While none of the members of the Cabi- net will talk of the plan which has been under discussion they are unanimous in entertaining strong views upon the sub- ject companied by detectives of the secret ser- | vice since his arrival. been a source of annovance to the Vi President, who feels that he is perfectiy safe. Nevertheless, as he stands next in line of succession in the case of the Presi- dent’s death, it ry to have two detectives accomvany m at a discreet distance wherever he Norris at her identi “Hello, tain as he entered the parior. glad to sec me?” “I'm not Miss Goldman, I'm a Swedis! woman and my name is Lena Larsen, answered the anarchist, imitate a Swedish dialect. “All right 203 Sheffield avenue she denied “Are you ons in the Norse tongue. Miss Goldman did not answer him, af- | fecting to misunderstand. Detective Hertz, meanwhile, had found a penholder with the name “Emma Goldman” en- graved on it. “What does this mean,” asked Captain Schuetler, holding the inscribed pen- holder. “‘It means that the game is up,” she said. She then admitted her identity fully and accompanied the officer. The woman was hurried to the police chief's office. Her appearance tallied exactly with the descriptions sent out yvesterday. Movements of the Woman. During the talk which followed Miss Goldman detailed, as best she could recollect, her movements since last July. he went from Chicago to Buffalo, ac- companied by Miss Isaaks, the daughter of the alleged anarchist editor, under ar- rest here. In Buffalo they stopped two days and then proceeded to Rochester, where they stopped at the home of Miss Goldman’s sister, Mrs. H. Hochstein, of 213 Joseph street.” Here they visited a lit- tle more than five weeks. The incident of it was a short visit to Niagara Falls and another to New York on business. the name of which she would not divulge. Business for them carried her to Pitts- | burg. She was in Cincinnati Labor day | and that night left for St. Louis. “1 saw the police there Sunday all right,” the prisoner said, with a sarcastic little laugh, “but they did not see me. heard of the arrest of Isaaks and his family and other anarchists in Chicago and determined to come here and see if I could-not help them. Isaaks had not been in the country long and I was afraid he would not know what to do when in legal difficulties “What_have vou done to help them?" Captain Schuetler asked. | ““Well,” she answered slowly, “I have | been looking for men to go on their bonds, | previding the courts would allow us to | furnish them.” Not Ready to Show Herself. “Why did you deny your identity?’ | captain pursued. 5 that, T My and 1 wanted the not quite ready nds were still_in to do something for . you've got me, but what They had me once in New York because I quoted Cardinal Manning, | who said, ‘Necessity knows no law, but | what good did that do them?”’ | During the interview Walter Nowak, | who says that he is the Buffalo man who identified Czolgosz, asked Miss Goldman | if she boarded with a family of the name of Mendel while in Cleveland. Miss Goldman answered in the negative. She declared that she had stayed at the Hollenden under an assumed name, S0 that the reporters would not bother her. Miss Goldman's arrest was in answer | to a request sent to the various police chiefs of the country from Buffalo. Chief | O'Neal telegraphed-Chief Bull of his cap- ture and will hold the prisoner until the Buffalo officer takes charge of er. Talks in Chief’s om:b The chief's office was crowded while Miss Goldman talked. Mayor Harrisen was an interested auditor. At a conference this afternoon the city authorities resolved to continue to hold Isaaks and other alleged anarchists under h, | to show myself. | jail them. Howeve: | is there to it? arrest here without bail. | “I'm afraid I cannot help them now,” | said Miss Goldman, when the news was ! brought to her. A message from Chief Bull of Buffalo to Chief of Detectives Colefan asserts | that Czolgosz was in Chicago on August {18 in company with Emma Goldman and Abraham Isaaks. Isaaks and Miss Goldman deny the as- | sertion. They claim that they saw him last on July 12. This discrepancy in the stories is now one of the chief points which the police are trying to solve. They adhere to the theory that the attack on the President was the result of a plot | and “that they believe the plot was hatched in the West. | _When the interview was over Captain Luke Coleran, chief of detectives, served a warrant on Miss Goldman, charging her with conspiracy to murder the President. The warrant was sworn to by Captain Coleran. It gives as her co-conspirators d LEY B. ALLEN €. THE Wi 9y Pianos Almost Given Away! Take elevator at 933 Market St. to our plano warerooms, where, beginning to- day, we commence a sale of all used ianos—squares, uprights and grands. hese second-hand pianos will be sold from $25.00 up. They are pianos we have taker in as part payment for Ludwig, Packard, Hardman, Everett, Steck, '!:-lfl.:;?nston and other pianos which we Our wareroom facilities at the present time are limited, and we cannot allow an accumulation of old instruments; hence this sale. All these instruments have been through our piano hospital and are in good trim for active use. | Wholesale and Retail Piano Dealers, 933 MAKRET STREET, SAN FRANCISCO. BRANCH, 951 BROADWAY, OAKLAND. Vice President Ropsevelt has been ac- | Their presence has - ® R OF ANARCHY, endeavoring to | I speak Swedish myself," | the police officer, as he poured a few | In the latter city Miss Goldman entered | temporarily into the employ of a firm, | | | | has been deemed neces- il | | | | | it % | Miss Goldman,” said the cap-| TTLE, Sept. 10. —Abraham saaks, arrested in Chicago for complicity in the alleged plot to assassinate President McKinley, is said to be a Pacific Coast an- archist. Jacob Blumer, a Seattle workingman, listened to Abra- ham Isasks and Emma Goldman plot an- archy.and revolution in San Francisco three years ago. Mr. Blumer this even- ing gave a history of the Isaaks group of anarchists during their stay on the Pa- cific Coast. The story is a startling one. According Abraham Isaaks, Maurice Isaaks, Clem- ent Pfeutzer, Hlpfolyte Havel, Henry Travaglio, Alfre Schneider, Julia Mechame, Marie Isaaks and Marle Isaaks Jr. They were arrested some days ago. The women were allowed to go, but the men were held without bail and are now in jail. ¢ C. J. Norris, at whose home Miss Gold- man ‘was captured, was arrested later. Miss Goldman was taken from the Chief’s office to the woman’s annex of the Harrison-street station, where she will spend the night. She will, according to present plans, have a hearing to-mor- TOW morning. Loses Self-Possession. was waiting to take her to the lockup Miss Goldman for the first time lost her self-possession. She broke down and cried, and for a moment was merely a weak woman in distress. She recovered quickly, and by the time her foot touched the carriage step she was again Emma Goldman, the high priestess of anarchy. It is the opinion of several lawyers that Miss Goldman cannot be extradited for trial in New York unless she and Czol- gosz_are charged with an offense under the Federal statutes. The suggestion that the would-be assassin must be tried un- der the State laws of New York for as- sault with intent to kill, would, it is said, preciude the possibility ‘of Miss Goldman eing extradited as an accessory before the fact, as her alleged incendiary state- ments were not made in New York and she is not a fugitive from justice from that State. It is sald, however, that she and Czolgosz might be charged with an offense under section 5508 of the Federal statutes, which fixes a ten-year term of imprisonment and a $5000 fine for two or more persons who conspire to injure any citizen in the exercise of any right se. cured to him by the constitution and laws of the United States. The enforcement of this statute against Miss Goldman and EMMA GOLDMAN AND ISAAKS PLOT DE | OF LIFE AND PROPERTY ON THE PACIFIC COAST | of hiding myself. ‘While being led to the carriage which | Special Dispatch to The Call. of property and life on this coast. At one time he lived in Portland, Or.; later he moved to San Francisco. There, Blumer claims, a son of Isaaks is now studying electricity, as his father says, to aid in the manufacture of infernal machines. One of Isaaks' Portland associates now resides in Honer, a little place near Ta- coma. Blumer says that he roomed in 1898 and 1899 at 13 Oak Grove avenue, in San Fran- cisco. There he became acquainted with the Isaaks family, and there, he claims, he heard Emma Goldman laugh as she . 'Oh, we will have a bloody revolution Czolgosz would, it is said, permit of the former’s extradition from any State. Denounces the Police. Later in the day Miss Goldman was in- terviewed in the woman's annex at the police station by an Associated Press re- porter and a stenographic report taken. Miss Goldman said: “I feel sure that the police are helping us more than I could do in ten years. They are making more anarchists than the most prominent people connected with the anarchist cause could make in ten years. If they will only continue I shall be very grateful; they will save me lots of work.” Asked if she had been on the down- town streets before her arrest she an- swered: “Certainly I have. I have been shop- ping—have been in restaurants; in fact, I passed the City Hall several times. The police knew positively that I was coming because 1 wrote on Friday from St. Louls .that I was coming both to Mr. }faveland and to M. Norrie, that I would come Sundlg ¥ got through with my business on Satur- Gay, and it 5o 1 woula telegraph the hour of my arrival. T also said that if I did not come on Sunday I would surely come on Monday or Tuesday. These letters they must have seen at 515 Carroll avenue.’ “What do. you think of your own ar- rest?” she was asked. “If T told you,” she replled, “it would look somewhat conceited, and I certainly would not like to be guiity of that. Not only my arrest but the others smack of the Haymarket. The police are very much in disrepute all over the country, and they wish to do something to clear them- selves. They are trying to make it an anarchist plot. If they wish to make up a case they may succeed.” Referring to the attempt on the life of the President Miss Goldman said: | UNCLE SAM’S VENGEANCE. The American People Are Determined to Crush Out the Life of Anarchy and Its Contemptible Ally. to its details, Abraham Isaaks was for | some time soon.” the vt}es(ructlon of the property of <the ngore than two years plotting destruction In this house, Blumer said, he | rich. K (5 JII] [ went back to Washington_ to-night. Ab-| ner McKinley, the President's ~ brother, | | will remain a’'few day but_his family have return~d home, and Mrs. | will remain a few days. rather as friends | POLICE ARE WEAVING A WIDESPREAD NET TO SNARE ANARCHISTS Authorities in Every City Busy With the Work of Investigation and Numerous Arrests of Persons Inclined to Murderous Acts Soon to Be Known Greatest Secrecy Is Observed in Inquiry Being Made by Officers, and Developments of a Sen- sational Character Are Awaited by the Public Special Dispatch to The Call ALL BUREAU, 1406 G STREET, | N. W., WASHINGTON, Sept. 1. Chief of the Secret Service “'il«\ kie, with the help of police offi- | cials throughout the United | States, is weaving a net which is | expected to catch within its | meshes every anarchist who is believed to have conspired with Czolgosz to bring abaut the attempted murder of President McKinley. In addition to the arrests made at Puf- falo two other arrests have been made kie's orders, those of An- tonio Maggio, at Santa Rita, N. M., yes- terday afternoon, and of Emma Goldman in Chicago to-day. Orders are already out for more arrests. Secret Service Is Active. Though it is not within the line of their duties as defined by Congress the secret service men have been able to keep in touch with many of the leading anarch- ists throughout the coun and wien any of them are wanted it is probable that Chief Wilkie will be able to locate them with the help of the police authori- ties_in_ the principal cities. Brass band methods are not being used in work that is now being done. Chief Wilkie always pursues a policy of complete silence un- til results have been accomplished, and he is more secretive than ever at this time. No confederate of Czolgosz will be warned to be on his guard by any- thing he can learn as to what the secret service is doing. There is reason to believe that PRABREIE SRR TR PATIENT OUT OF DANGER, —_— Chief Continued From Page Ome. Duncan and several other relatives of the | President have gome. Judge Day, long and closely associated with the President, returned fo Canton ths afternoon. The five members of the Cabinet still here | who have been intimately associated with | the President for several years than as | officials. | Vice President’s Joy. | Vice President Roosevelt read with | eagerness the dispatch from the Milburn mansion telling of the President’s im- provement. When he had finished he clapped his hands joyously, and with tears in his eyes said to Mr. Wilcox, his host: “There! Didn't I tell you God would | not let such a noble man die by an as- assin's bullet?” St Wilcox. announced that the Vica President had been urged, in view of the President’s improved condition, to utilize | his last day in seeing some of the Pan-| American Exposition, notably the Gov- ernment building. The Vice President de- | clined the invitaiion with some little ve- hemence. He said: | “T.do not believe, even though I am as- | sured of the President's convalescence, | that it would be entirely proper for me | to take part in any of the festivities. I have studiously refrained from going out heard Isaaks and others advocate mui- | der, destruction by dynamite and fire as | a means to gain liberty. He continued: ‘‘At 13 Oak Grove avenue this gang pub- lished the Free Soclety. By this paper and the propagation anarchistic pamphlets Isaaks lived. I roomed di- rectly above the Isaaks family and vi: ited them often. Their room was head- quarters for the anarchists. I met Emma Goldman in that room and heard her ad- vocate revelution and prophesy blood- shed. T heard Isaaks and Mrs. Isaaks say that freedom could result only from an- archy, that anarchy could only come by the assassination of prominent men and newspaper reports that it was the result of an anarchist. Mark Hanna has been the ruler of this country, not McKinley. McKinley has been the most insignificant ruler that this country has ever had. He has peither wit nor intelligence, but has been a tool in'the hands of Mark Hanna. Other Presidents have had a heart or something. but this poor fellow—God for- give him, since he knows nothing—is a tool in the hands of the wealthy, and it seems very remarkable for Mark Hauna to say that he was notified of a plot for his assassination. 1 think McKinley too insignificant for such a thing.” “What man in the United States is of sufficient prominence to warrant such a plot?” she was asked. “I am not in a position to say,” replied Miss Goldman, “who ought to be killed. The monopolists and the wealthy of this country are responsible for the existence of a.Czolgosz. If imperialism would no: grow in this country, if the liberties of the pecple were not trampled under foot, there.would have been no violence.” Referring to the would-be assassin, Miss Goldman said: “I- feel that the man is an unfor- tunate who has been driven by de- spair-and misery to commit the deed. I feel deeply with him as an individual, and I would feel with anybody who suffers. If I had means I would help him as much as I could; I would ses that he had counsel and that justice was done him.” Althcugh the whole world waited eager- ly Friday afterncon for the bulletins from the President’s bedside, Miss Goldman did not care enough about the report that he had been shot, which she heard news- boys:'shouting, to buy a paper. It was Saturday noon before her interest was sufficiently.aroused to cause her to buy a newspaper containing the story. She was more interested in the arrest of the Chi- cago anarchists than in the President’s cordition. ‘It is a dirty trick to charge in the| When asked why she did not dppear be- I e STRUCTION | or being entertained during my visit, and | 1 will continue that policy until I leave. | I came here absolutely as a matter of | duty, both to the President and to the people, and not for pleasure. Great Recuperative Powers. The President's physicians have been | impressed with his remarkable recupera- tive powers and the rapidity of his im- provement. Ordinarily an incision for such an operation as was performed upon the chief exscutive should heal _within | three weeks, but in the President’s case | fore the police when she learned that she was wanted, Miss Goldman said: “For reasons of my own I did not make myself known. I like to fool the police when I can. The very fact that I came s that I had no intention b e veelt. '3f I had wanted I would have been able to go from St. Lows right across to Canada, and then they would have looked for me a long time. I czme here especially to be on the spot When I saw the necessity of announcing myself to the police, and also to be able to help Mr. Isaaks and his family, they being among the anarchists arrested. If the police were able to connect me with the attack on the President I was ready to give myself up. “When I arrived in Chicago I went to a hotel and registered under an assumed name. Later I went to the home of C. P. Norris, whom I have kngwn in a business way for about a year. As far as I know, he is not an anarchist, but he saw no reason why one individual should not give shelter to another in this land of the free, and he did it.” 5 "Asked if she thought Czolgosz's act was praiseworthy from her view point, she answered: 5 “T.am not in a position to say whether it was good of bad. It is bad for the man who attempted to do it. I am not in. his boots, and know nothing about it. What I don’t see is why they should make more fuss about the President than any- body else. All men are born equal.” “But some men rise above the equality of birth,” a reporter suggested. We are all interested in the man whom we have made our chief.” “I don’t think that men put him in of- fice; I think money put him in office,” she replied. Denies There Are Accomplices. In reference to Czolgosz's alleged state- ment that he was inspired by a lecture of Miss Goldman in Cleveland, the pris- oner sald: “As I have repeatedly said, it is fool- ish to think that this man would clatm that he did that deed alone and unaided, and at the same time claim that I in- spired him. If he had accomplices and still elaims that he was acting alone, do you think he would have singled me out as the only friend he would not protect by assuming entire responsibility? He may have heard me in Cleveland, for I lectured there twice on May 6 -last. ““As to my arrest, if the police had waited a few minutes longer they would have saved themselves the trouble—and the glory. I was about to give myself up: I would have done so last night had 1 not had a severe headache. 1 decided that I would go this morning and give myself up. When Captain Schuetler came out to arrest me he found me dressing, and I had a little fun with him as I have told you before. “T was born in St. Petersburg, Russia, thirty-two vyears ago; I came to this country with my sister, who is now in Rochester, sixteen years ago. I k Russian, German, French and English. I came from the middle class in Russia, but my heart nas always been with the poor and dowa-trodden. The injustice of the Haymarket prosecution made an an- archist of‘me. I have taught the creed of anarchy ever since.” Wilkie expects to connect Emma Gold- man directly with the crime, especiaily in view of the fact that Czolgosz went alil the way to Chicago to see the woman whose utterances had inspired him to at- tempt to kill the President and taiked with her about his project. The Case Against Maggle. Much the same policy is being parsved in the discussion of the arrest of An- tonio' Maggio. All that Chief Wilkse will say is that Magglo was arrested beemuse of statements he had made that Presi- dent McKinley would be shot before Oec- tober 1 and that he wished that he had been selected to do the shooting. It is known, however, that Chief Wilkie has information connecting Magsio with the Paterson gang of anarchists and show- ing that he was in communication with other anarchists in different parts of the country. When questioned as to the reasons for Maggjo’'s arrest Wilkie replied that he thought it would be “a good thing to ar- rest him and see what he had to say for himself.” Attorney General Knox, who returned to Washington to-day from Buffalo, is devoting his attention to the legal as- pects of the attempt to kill the President. He and Solicitor General Richards had a long conference to-day. about the ques- tion of whether Czolgosz and hig conf>d- erate, if a conspiracy can be proved. should be tried in the United States District_Court at Buffalo or in a State court. No definite decision has yet been reached on this matter and none will be until the case has been more carefully developed. T e e he may be strong enough to be moved a little sooner. The President will be taken direct to Washington as soon as it is safe to move nim. Within the sickroom many evidences of the President’s improvement were ap- parent. The President himself began to show confidence in his ability to_care for elf, and from time to time ne wou'd carefully turn himself to get a more rest- ful position. Yesterday he took the pre caution to ask if he might be permitt to move, but to-day he changed his po- sition on his own volition without difli- culty. The nurses naturally observed with care these evidences of growing strength and courage and were ready to see ihat there was no undue tax on the President’s strength or the straining of -the wound. These slight movements from side to side were all that he has at- tempted thus far and it is too early yet to think of his Sitting up in Bed or of any other marked use of his muscles. An Important Development. A most important development of the day was the private determination reaci- ed among those in charge of the case that food should be administered to the ient to-morrow by the mouth. Noc since the shooting has a morsel of food been given to the President by natural means, but the drain on his systemr has been met by dissolved food administered by imjection. The importance of this feeding by the mouth is that it will re- store the normal action of the stomaci. Although the house was fairly em- bowered with flowers to-day none of ihe sweet-scented blossoms were taken to the President’s chamber. The most rigid system of simplicity prevails there, and sentiment is not allowed to qualify the stern requirements of the case. The only person admitted to the sickroom other than the doctors and attendants were Mrs. McKinley and Secretary Cor- telyou. Although the President has beem pro- nounced out of danger no member of the Cabinet has yet been within the sick- room, nor have the Vice President or those closest to the confidence of the President, such as Senator Hanna and Judge Day, seen the President. he dramatic phase of the situation here is rapidly disappearing. Plans over- thrown by the assassin’s bullets are being restored and riatters are rapidly assum- ing normal conditions. Indiana day at the exposition. set for Friday of this week, was indefinitely postponed when the President was shot, but the original programme was restored to-day at the suggestion of Senator Fairbanks, who says such a course would not have been thought of were there any doubt of the President’s recovery. The exposition has suffered severely in attendance since the tragedy, and the managers are now or- ganizing for a great thanksgiving celebra- tion, which they expect not only to prove a great card for the fair, but which they hope will be a day of national rejoiciug. pe Extend Sympathy to Mrs. McKinley. OAKLAND, Sept. 10.—The Alameda County Building Trades Council to-night sent a telegram to Mrs. McKinley. ex- tending the sympathy of the affillated un- ions over the attempt to assassinate the President and expressing hope for the :pee‘;]y recovery of her distiguished hus- and. D. A. Shannon, representing local Unton No. 36, Carpenters and Joiners of Amer- ica, was elected business agent in place of L. A. Miller, who resigned, private af- fairs compelling his absence .from the city. 2 No action was taken with relation to water front matters. ADVERTISEMENTS. Rheumatism What is the use of telling the rheumatic that he feels as if his joints were being dis- located ? He knows that his sufferings are very much like the tortures of the rack. What he wants to know is what will pere manent; ‘That, according to thousands of grateful testimonials, is Hood’s Sarsaparilla It promptly neutralizes the acid in the pletely eliminates it, and st: system against its return. m DR.MEYERS&CO. Specialist. Disease and weakness of men. Established 1881 Consultation and private book free, at office or by mall. Cures guar- anteed. 731 Mar- ket street (eleva- tor entrance), San Francisco. Weekly Call,$1.00 per Year — 4