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[ 5] THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 5, 1902. CHIEFS OF POLICE OF THE PACIFIC CCAST BAND a2 CONVENTION: UPPER ROW STANFORD, J. D. MORGAN, ¥, J. M. REYNOLDS. FROM LEFT TO RIGHT—J. D. GALL, W: F. D. BRIARE, C. A. ELTON, HR e Visiting Officials Will Be Properly Enter- tained by Blue-Coated Guardians of the Peace During Their Stay in This City RELIMINARY steps were taken, Chief of Police Wittman of San Francisco vesterday for the formation of a pped for order. These were J. D. Gall, Police Association which should | ex-Chief of Stockton; W. F. Stanford of strike terror to the hearts of evil-| Vallejo, J. D. Morgan of Fresno, F. D. doers throughout the State. The Briare of Stockton, C. A. Eiton of Los members of the assoclation in process of formation are all chiefs of police and ail have won renown as criminal catchers. It was to simplify their work angi render their operations more successful thatsthe idea of organizing the association was broached several manths ago. Reynolds-of Butte, Mont.; an of Sacrameto, J. A. Kid- { San Jose, 8. C. Hodgkins of Oak- nd Matt Rawle of Santa Cruz. man Wittman announced that he had letters from Charles H. Holmes, H. B. Hitehings of Eureka, E. W. Bushyhead of There were eleven chiefs and one former head of department present in the chamber of the Police Commission at the | Hail of Justice yesterday afternoon when | FLOURING ILLS MAY BE MERGED All Big Plants on This Coast to Enter a Combine, Special Dispatch to The Cail. PORTLAND, Or., Mar. 4—The largest | industrial consolidation ever undertaken | in the Pacific Northwest is being quietly | worked into shape in this city and San Francisco. The enterprise is an amalga- mation of the interests of the great ex- port flour milling firms of the Pacific Coast. No hint has been given as to the capitalization of the proposed combina- tion, but it probably will be somewhere in the neighborhood of $10,000,000. As now outlined, the combination will embrace mills having an annual capacity of more than 5,000,000 barreis of flour and consum- ing more than one-third of the exportable ‘plus of wheat grown in Oregon, Wash- San Diego and John Conrad of Alameda nouncing the intention of the writers to attend the convention to-day. A letter was received from Chief D. M. McLaugh- INCIENT GITIES BURIED 1N SAND Dr. Hedin Makes Inter- esting Discoveries in Thibet. Special Dispatch to The Call, VANCOUVER, B. C., March 4.-Dr. Sven Hedin, the famous Russian ex- plorer, arrived at Hongkong en route Lo Calcutta a few days before the sailing of the Empress of India, which reached port to-night. From the northern part of In- dia he crossed a section of Thibet, mak- ing a 600-mile journey through districts hitherto unexplored. Dr. Hedin, who has been throdgh Tur- kestan and other remote countries in Asi declares that Thibet is by far the mos wenderful. His most interesting discov eries were of native cities which have | been buried in sand for two or three cen- turies. He found wonderful specimens of | | | TOGETHER FOR THE SUPPRESSION OF CRIME ! POLICE C}IIE#S OF COAST CITIES AT FROM LEFT TO RIGHT—J. E. SULLIVAN, J. A. KIDWARD, GEORGE W. WITTMAN, S. C. HODGKINS, MATT Y THE CONVENTION: LOWER ROW, RAWLE. i lin of Portland, Or., stating that it would be impossible for him to attend, notwith- ENGLIGH STIR MARCOAT'S IRt Inventor Is Not Pleased With Treatment He Received. Special Dispatch to The Call. NEW YORK, March 4.—"England is not the best place In the world for an in- ventor to conduet experiments,” said William Marconi at the Hoffman House to-night, “and they must remember that there are other countries whose shores are washed by the Atlantic Ocean and where better treatment is accorded one who has new ideas to demonstrate. “It can be better explained,” he contin- ued, “if the words of the British Post- master General are quoted correctly, by stating that an act_incorporating tele- graph lines in Great Britain, I think, was passed by Parliament in 1870, with a arckitecture, from high pillared bulldings, that would correspond to the present Chi- nese joss house, to structures of rare workmanship and smaller examples of art of peculiar and wonderful handiwork. While no extended excavations were possible with Dr. Hedin’s little band of travelers, he found enough to make him certain that the Thibetans of a thousand years ago had reached a much higher scale of civilization than the race in its present generation. Stone and wood carvings and anclent manuscripts from | the temples, some of them bearing in- scriptions of highest Confucian priests, shcwed the superior knowledge and at- tainments of the ancient tribes. Dr. Hedin brought examples of both the sculptures and the manuscripts with him. During his journey he fell in with warlike natives, who gave his party much trouble. ingion and California. « The corporations interested in the pro- posed combine are the Portland Fiouring | Mills Company of-this ci the Pugel Sound Flouring Mills Company of Ta- cvoma, which is owned by members of the Portland Flouring Mills Company: the Centennial Mills of Seattle and Spokane, and the Bperry Flour Mills of Stockton and San Francisco. These concerns practically conirol the flour trade of the Orient, their operations extending from Vladivostok and Port Arthur as far south as Singapore. Each of the big firms has for a number of years | had men in all parts of the Orient pushing | ibe products of their mills far into the | interior of China, Japan, Korea, Siam and Siberia, and through thelr efforts the busi- ness has grown into vast proportions. e Portland mills have been enlarged until they now have a capacity of 2500 barrels a day. Other mills owned or con- led by the Portland concern are } in Salem, Oregon City and Alban Oregon d Tacoma, Prescott, Dayton, Harrington and Spokane, Washington. in Oregon City, Dayton and Spokane the swmpany operates two mills at each piace Golden Tooth in Steer’s Mouth. SEATTLE, March 4—The town of Everett reports the discovery of a steer with a golden tooth. This Interesting find was made by an executioner in the em- i | | 1 3 b de P With # capacity of 1800 barrels a day, is | molar was covered by flakes of gold, the largest of the system, and the com- | Which had become tightly fixed to the tooth. The steer came from a Snohomish County ranch, Search is now to be made along the streams where the cattle feed, as it is believed the steer, in quenching his thirst, drank in the gol bined capacity of all the mills is nearly W00 barrels a day. President Wilcox of the Portland Flour- ine Mills Company and the Puget Sound Flouring Mills Company returned from a irip to California yesterday. He declined discuss the project further than to say st for the present negotiations were at @ standstill, He admitted that consider- able headway had been made toward ef- fecting a sale,of milling properties on the coast to a company which was to be formed, and intimated that the deal had heen blocked for the present by inability 10 agree on the valuation of certain prop- crties which had to be considered in ef- fecting the combination Result of Vallejo’s Election. VALLEJO, March 4—The city election yesterday resulted as follows: Mayor, P. | B. Lynch; City Clerk, T. J. O'Hara; As- | sessor, W. J. Tormey; Treasurer, P. J. MurpEy; City Attorney, James A. La- mont; ‘Commissioner of 'Public Works, J. H. Fitzgerald; City Trustees—M. R. Al- den, SBamuel Lyttle, J. F. Deiningen; Li- brary Trustees—C. E. Walsh, J. F. Ward, 1 [ | [ 1 | [ - Ll - J. H. Cooper; 8chool Directors—, - cGsoree B. Bperry of the Sperry Flout | Vidson, W 3 Cartin. Prass Goria: 2o all knvm"l'edl- of any deal to Hma’lgal‘nuu‘ @ new school house 673, against 223, Heavy Loss From Flood. PASSAIC, N. J., March 4.—The flood is slowly receding. A conservative estimate of the damage in Passale City alone is piaced at $600,000. the flour interests of the coast. Mr, SBper- ry said that his firm knew nothing of such a plan. He sald that he ‘had heard. un- founded rumors on the subject for the last few months. March 4.—Sheriff H. E. Hunting- a, Wash., arrived here to-day and will stert back to-morrow with H. Powell, who VALLEJO, March 4.—Antone Cotchelene and Nicholas G. Agaleke, Greek fishermen, were cused of felonious assault upon 13-year- | drowned north of town on Saturday ' night. old Dors West, of Kalame. i Their bodies have not been recovered. e e————————————————————— A Superior Piano for |VISIT OUR PIANO $192 Qur Special WAREROOMS. § | And you will see for yourself in plain We have contracted for & large supply | View more costly, high-grade, artistic of Upright Pianos—a special make, select. | Pianos than you can find anywhere else ed with great care, an instrument perfect- | 17 this city. Scores of Parlor and Con- Iy rellable and fully guaranteed and { cert Grands, including the .celebrated which as a special drive we are offering | Steck, Everett and Hardman, are on dis- for §ii2. NO MORE! NO LESS! We will| Play. It is our intention bk indeh, supply po dealers with this particular | SUre the very best planos that money will plano. We want o istribiite them among | 117 204 19 SRS foem, Tor sdle of most our own retail trade. Any time within| planos at popular prices is our stock in three years we will allow $192 for the| trade always. We are also agents for the piano toward the purchase price of a | “Chase and Baker Piano Player,” most Sieck, Bverett, Hardman, Packard orlcen:druy the best player on the market Ludwig. to-day. THE WILEY B. ALLEN CO, 981-988 Market 8t., San Francisco. 28~ All Market-sireet cars stop in front of our door. Eranch—a51 Broadway, Oaklend. clause that no person or persons may maintain telegraph stations from any peint in Great Britain to . another | point in the United Kingdom, but a sta- tion may be maintained if the end of the line is in another country. ““This was evidently designed to meet the requirements of several cable compa- nies and it is now applied to us. , We have | contracts with Lloyds, running fifteen | vears, to supply instruments for_ every | one of their signal stations in the British Isles. As they talkk with ships more than | three miles from land, the limit of British | jurisdiction, no act of Parliament can cut them off. The great stations at Poldhu | or elsewhere, which are to cummunicate | across the ocean, are also obviously within the la “Some time ago I told the Postmaster General that if one of the ships we had now equipped with wireless telegraph in- struments, the Lucania, Campania or | Philadelphia, for instance, should strand in a fog and storm within the three-mile limit and signal for help, we could not answer without breaking the law and ren- dering ourselv liable to imprigonment. He answered: “‘Well, 1 hardly think we would prose- cute you.’ “Three years ago I did ask for a license for a short inland line, but was refused. It is very difficult to get any concessions from them which they need not give. “In Canada it is quite different. We ex- pect to close a contract with the Cana- dian Government and it will erect a sta- tion costing $80,000.” Preliminary plans for the installation of the Marconi system of wireless telegraphy on vessels in the United States navy are being pushed forward. An inspection of the battleship Illinots, now at the Brook- lyn navy yard, has been made by Wil- liam Bradfield,’ representing the Marconi company, and by-a board of experts of the navy. It has been found that it will be necessary to raise the masts of the ves- sels in the battleship class from 120 to 137 feet, MEMORY OF McKINLEY I8 HONORED IN ALBANY TYormer Postmaster General Delivers an Eloquent Eulogy on the i Late President. ALBANY, N. Y., March 4—The memory of the late President Willlam McKinley was honored by the Legislature of the State to-day. The exercises were held in the Assembly chamber and were presidéd over by Governor Odell. Seated on the latform were United States Senator homas C. Platt and members of the legislative committee which arranged for the exercises. The chamber was appro- priately decorated. Governor Odell introduced the speaker of the evening, Charles Emory Smith, for- merly Postmaster General. The address | was a review of the life of the late Presi- | dent, dwelling upon his career as a sgl- dier, lawyer and statesman, with more than a passing reference to his home life and an eloguent tribute to his noble quali- ties as son and husband. ———————— Seattle Election in Doubt. SEATTLE, March 4.—An unusuaily heavy vote was polled in the city election to-day. Returns show that Mayor Humes was slashed in the residence districts and will run far behind his ticket. Indica- tions favor the election of the other Re- publican nominees by big majorities. At midnight the Humes managers claimed a_majority of 1000. The Goodwin faction disputed this, asserting that their count showed Goodwin to be in the lead by 300. The indications are that Humes wiil be | elected by a small plurality. —_—————— SAN JOSE,. March 4.—J. S. Denton, prini- cipal of the Gilroy High School, was to-day elected a member of the County Board of Edu. cation, to fill the vacancy cauded by the death af W.'H Coleman. Prominent Thief-Catchers of the Far West Take Steps to Form Association That Will Strike Terror standing his heart was in the work. He sent his best wishes for the success of the organization to be formed. Chief Wittman briefiy addressed the gathering upon the purposes for which it was called. He said it was desirable for the chiefs of police, not only in Califor- nia, but on the Pacific Coast, to band to- gether for the purpose of facilitating their operations. It was intended to form a sort of co-operative society, through which the chiefs might concentrate their efforts to stamp out lawlessness. Heretofere, ow- ing to the lack of just such an organiza- tion as was proposed, the police along the coast have been unable to accomplish the bestfresults. Wittman expressed the con- viction that the association would accom- i ILE INVOLUES A BIG FORTUNE [Utah Sugar Company Concludes a Deal of Magnitude. SALT LAKE, March 4.—The Evening Telegram to-day says that negotiations for the sale of an undivided half interest in the Utah Sugar Company have practi- cally been concluded and that the deal will be closed upon the arrival of Manager R. Cutler in New York to-day. The amount involved is $1,500,000, the sale being made.on a basis of §16 per share, It was stated by persons inter- ested that the American Sugar Refining Company was interested in.the purchase. It was also stated that the Colorado Beet Sugar Refining Company was the real purchaser and that the deal was one of several contemplated looking toward the consolidation of the beet-sugar interests of the country as opposed to the cane- sugar interests, BiG DIAMOND FIRMS ON VERGE OF FAILURE Rumors Current That Some Prom- inent Factories in Antwerp ‘Will Close Doors. BRUSSELS, March 4.—Numerous and contradictory reports are current here as to the crisis in the diamond trade. The newspapers refer to the impending fail- ures of several firms in the diamond busi- ness at Aftwerp, Amsterdam and Lon- don. They allege that some diamond mer- chants have been guilty of extensive de- falcations and have fled to London and New York. The crisis is said to be due to the ldrge quantity of goods on war- {&nt. which can only be disposed of at a oss. A ‘telegram received here to-night from Antwerp says the diamond market is calmer as a_result of the proposals of three diamond merchants to effect an ar- rangement with their creditors. LONDON, March 5.—The Amsterdam correspondent of the Daily Mail says that men in the diamond trade there are idle. It is declared, says the correspond- ent, that unless the dlamond cleavers abandon their strike soon every Antwerp and Amsterdam factory will be closed. i . BANKERS OF NEW YORK WANT TO DEPOSET GOLD Secretary Shaw Will Permit Transfer of Treasure From This City to-the East. WASHINGTON, March 4.—Secretary Shaw has recelved a number of applica- tions from New York bankers asking for permission to deposit gold in the New York sub-treasury and withdraw an equal amount from the sub-treasury at San Francisco. Although these applications aggregate in amount from $50,000,000 to $60,000,000 the Treasury officials feel no uncasiness in consequence as it is understood that the actual amount of gold ‘needed in San Francisco will hardly exceed a total of 20,000,000 and that the applications in ex. cess of this amount were made with a view to ascertaining what the Treasury would do in case the aggregate should reach the larger sum, Secretary Shaw will grant the requests for transfer so far ag actual business needs require. y School Children on Strike. TERRE HAUTE, March 4.—Eighty-five school children of Seleyville, Ind., on the Terre Haute and Brazil Interurban Elec- tric Railroad, gathered about the Seley- ville school, marched into the rooms in a body and carried out their books. They announced that they were quitting the school because two of the teachers of the school ride on interurban cars on which non-union trainmen are employed. Nearly all the children belong to families of union coal miners, who are in sympathy with the Terre Haute street car strikers. : Loses a Propeller. LONDON, March 4.—The British stea er Ottawa, from Philadelphia for Londo, has arrived at Gayal, Azore Islands, and reports having sighted the Cunard line | steamer IKtrurla in tow of the British steamer Willlam CIiff, 400 miles west of | Gayal. The Etruria had lost her propel- ler. NEW YORK, March 4—The Etruria was towed into port this afternoon. et To Cure Grip in Two Days. Laxative Bromo-Quinire removes the causi. E. W, Grove's signature on every box. — i to All Evil Doers plish much good for the members as well as for the public in general. Sergeant Gleason was chosen secretary of the gathering. On motion of Chiet | Stanford, Chiefs Wittman, Reynolds and Elton were appointed a committee to for- mulate a plan of organization and to re- port the result of their labors at the meet- ing to-day. After temporary organization was per- fected an informal discussion took place, during which it was announced that the San I'rancisco police would entertain the | visiting chiefs during their stay in the ! city. It is intended to make a visit to! Chinatown and give a theater party, the entertainment to wind up with a banquet. The work of organization will be resumed at 10 o’clock this morning. i COLLEGTOR WAAY RESIGNS OFFIGE Joshua Hqcking Is Now in Charge of Los An- geles Revenues. John Wray, for some time deputy col- lector of internal revenue, stationed at Los Angeles, is no longer drawing sal- ary from the Government, Collector of Internal Revenue John Lynch having ac- cepted Wray's resignation and appointed Joshua Hocking to succeed him. Considerable secrecy has marked th stepping out of office of John Wray and | the appointment of his successor. It wa. learned early in the year that things | were not as harmonious between Wray and Lynch as they should be and ail kinds of rumors filled the air. Lynch went down to Los Angeles to make an | investigation of Wray’s affairs and Spe- | clal Agent. Bert Thomas probed into his | accounts and sought for information in| the southland. | At the internal revenue office in this | city no definite information was given | out as to Wray's resignation from office, | but positive news was received in San Francisco last night to the effect that | Joshua Hocking was in charge of the Los Angeles internal revenue office. Special Agent Bert Thomas is now in | Honolulu, and his chief deputy, Frank | Driscoll, left for Los Angeles yesterday | afternoon. Collector of Internal Revenue John | Lynch was seen at his Berkeley resi- dence last night and when asked for a | statement as to Wray's resignation from | office said: Wray had been derelict in Snding in his re- ports and on investigating I found that he had | been drinking. His dutles had been somewhat neglected and when I saw him and told him that his work was not what it should be and that it had been reported to me that he had Deen drinking, he acknowledged that he was at fault and said he would resign. I toid him that T would accept his resignation, which I | did when it was handed to me. Wray resigned | some time near the first of last month and Hocking took up his position on the 16th. These are all the circumstances of the case. Hocking, the new deputy clerk at Los | Angeles, has been employed as war rev- | enue deputy and later as war revenue | agent. Prior to his appointment in Los ! Angeles he was assistant bookkeeper | with Lynch. His home is in S8an Bernar- dino. PRESIDENT’S DAUGHTER WILL JOURNEY TO CUBA Miss Alice Roosevelt Is to Visit Gov- ernor-General Wood and His Wife. WASHINGTON, March 4.—Miss Allce | Roosevelt, whose experiences of travel and soclety are far beyond the ordinary, | even for the daughter of a President of | the Upited States, has accepted an inyita- tion to_visit for several weeks the Gov- ernor General of Cuba and Mrs. Leonard Wood at the Governor's palace in Ha- | vana. Miss Roosevélt will leave for Cuba next Sunday, nccom&unled by a maid and chaperoned by Mrs. Harriet Blaine Beale, who is also to be a guest of General and Mrs. Wood. As in the case .of her pro- posed trip to London the Cuban visit s of an unofficlal character, but will neces- sarily lead to much entertaining in honor of the daughter of the President. - ASKS IOR_D.I SOLUTION OF A MERGING COMPANY Senator Introduces a Bill Aimed at a Great Railroad Corporation’s Charter. TRENTON, N. J,, March 4.—Senator “Gebhardt, Democrat, introduced a bill in the Senate to-day to repeal and dissolve the charter and corporate existence of the Northern Securities Company. The bill has a long preamble in which it Is stated among other things that the company was organized to enable the Northern Pacific Railroad Company ana the Great Northern Railroad Company to violate the laws of several States and in- terfere with their revenues and also to destroy the competition in passenger ana freight rates that existed between these railroads. The bill was referred to the Committee on Corporations. sl Morley Signs Pitcher McPartlin. LOS ANGELES, March 4. — Manager Morley of the Los Angeles baseball team has signed Pitcher Frank McPartiin for the coming season. SANTA . CRUZ, March 4—Joseph Teshara was this afternoon found gullty of murder i the sccond degree. Teshara Manuel Ama- ya murdered C. D. Loucks two years ago. This was his second trial, | i / | Prussia for six hours this afternoon and | | long run to Niagara and New England. | handsome, sweet and pretty faces belonging FAIR FAGES WIN PRAISE FROM PRINCE Henry Visits Milwaukee | and Lauds the Pretty ‘Women. | | Dazzling Reception Is Given to the Emperor's Brother. | After An Elaborate Banquet the | Royal Personage Starts on His \ Journey to Niagara and New England. MILWAUKEE, Wis.,, March 4—Mil- waukee was host to Prince Henry of gave him a reception that was highly en- thusiastic and an entertainment that was unique. ! The Prince’'s special train came at 4 o’'clock and at 10 was away again on the The intervening time was all given over to the reception and entertainment of the royal visitor. It began with a drive through the business and residential dis~ | tricts in review before a crowd that num- bered 200,000. Then there was a publie reception, at which Governor Robert La Follette and Mayor David Rose, voiced their welcome and the united singing so- cleties rgised their voices in ghty chorus. ere was also a splendid Nium- ination and a thrilling night run of the Milwaukee Fire Department. . Later there was a banquet, at which the Prince met the leading citizens of the city and State The special train bearing the Prince ana his party ran up from Chicago over the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul ana there was an enormous crowd at the sta tlon awaiting its. coming. There was a cheer when the. Prince appeared and an- other when. he reached his carriage. Mayor Rose and Admiral Evans enterea his carriage and, flanked by police ana guarded by troopers of the First Wiscon- zln Cavalry, the drive through the city | egan. Cheers From Thousands. Just outside the station 1000 veterans ot the German wars were drawn up. They had come here from all parts of the State and they gave the Prince a vnller of | cheers as he passed them. The business | streets were blocked with people and the police had to fight to keep a driveway clear. Prince Henry was given the honor i of riding in the first carriage to roll across the new Grand avenue-Wisconsin street bridge, and as this point was reachea Battery A, stationed on the lake front, fired a salute of twenty-one guns. { The reception of the Prince as he drove through the streets was wildly enthusias- | tic and there was an ovation when he en- tered the Exposition building for the pub- | lic reception. As he appeared on the | stage, escorted by his staff and the re- | ception committee, the Mannechor chor of 600 voices sang “Der Deutsch Lied.” There were 10,000 persons in the Exposi- tion building and it was long before they were sufficiently stilled for Chairman Johnson to briefly introduce Mayor Rose, who informally welcomed the Prince to the city. The Mayor gave way to former Congressman P. V. Deuster, who spoke in behalf of the German residents and In their tongue. Governor La Follette then welcomed the Prince to Milwaukee in be half of the State. The great chorus sang again and as the Prince arose to leave the hall the crowd broke into cheers. . He touched his cap in salute and smiled as he turned to leave the stage, Firemen Make a Hit. The fire run followed the public recep- jon and it made a spectacle that was both novel and exciting. Thirty-two pieces of apparatus, marshaled by Fire Chiet Foley, were raced for a mile at high speed. They ran two abreast and 200 feet apart. Darkness had come and the en- gine lights made the picture all the more inspiring. The Prince was then driven through illuminated streets to the Hotel Pfeister, where the banquet was served. The table at which the Prince sat was covered with Alabama smilax. Three toasts were proposed, those-to the Presi- dent of the United States and the Em- peror of Germany being drunk while the orchestra played the natlonal airs of the two countries. These were followed by the toast “Prince Henry of Prussia.” The Prince responded as follows: Gentlemen, I will occupy your attention for but a very 'few moments, as I am a trifle | hoarse, having lost something in this country, | namely, my voice, which I hope, however, to regain.’ It is a pleasure to me to thank you | for the hearty welcome you have offered to me | in this lovely, handsome and sympathetic city of yours, the'principal city of Wisconsin, and famous for its thrift and industry. I have | heard it acknowledged by you, as well as by | others, ‘that the development of Milwaukee 15 | due largely to the German element among your citizens, a statement which fills my heart with | pride and gladness, inasmuch as I look upon | this German element as one of the strongest | ties between Germany and the United States. | 1 doubt not that those of German descent In the future as In the past will be a credit to that | country which they proudiy call their home. The merits of the city of Milwaukee ' are known; its industrial products are recorded— ot so, however, at one point which I could not | help noticing In passing through the crowded | streets of the city—in brief, the charming, | | | il I | the ever fair sex (applause, cries of ‘“Well, well, well,”” and ‘“‘brave’), which are abund- ant in this city. Allow me drink to the health and prosperity of the lovely city of Milwaukee. At the conclusion of Prince Henry's re- | marks Mayor Rose presented to Prince | Henry an elegantly bound album contain- | iny hotographs of Milwaukee's publie | bulldings and some of the residences of | the city. | Prince Henry left for the East at 10 o’clock on a special train. A large crowd greeted him as he took his” farewell. Masonic Emblem for Henry, BOSTON, March 4—During his visit to this city Prince Henry will be given a Masonic emblem of much value. The souvenir will be presented during the banquet at the Hotel Somerset by Wor- shi l}ul Master Hanser of Germania L donor is. Mrs. P. C. Goodwin, who wishes, as a_“typical American woman,” | to present the gift as an expression of | American good will to Germany. The em- | blem is in the form of a square and com- | pass. The gold and the diamonds with | which it is studded are sald to be valued | at $10, The gold for the emblem came | from a nugget found by Mrs. Goodwin's | husband while a “forty-niner.” Goodwin was for fifty-one years a Mason and for | fifteen years the grand treasurer of Con- | necticut. 1 Scrofula It is commonly inherited. Few are entirely free from it. Pale, weak, puny children are afflicted with it in nine cases out of ten, and many adults suffer from it. Common indications are bunches in the neck, abscesses, cutaneous erup- tions, inflamed eyelids, sore ears, ric- kets, catarrh, wasting, and general de- bility. Hood’s Sarsaparilla and Pilis Eradicate. it, positively and absolutely. This statement is based on the thou. sands of permanent cures these medi- cines have wrought. Testimenfals of remarkable cures mailed on request. C. L. 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Then I would get numb all over, and { they would have to rub and work over me to keep me alive, and I would have sink. ing spells and palpitation of the heart, but thanks to Paine's Celery Compound, and I cannot praise it edough, I have not had a headache for six weeks, a thing I could rot say before in eight years. Your Com- pound has almost raised me from the grave, as I had given up all hopes of this life until my husband read one of your paphlets. After I had been using it T felt better than I had for three years.” are the simplest dyes made. Diamond Dyes &7.iheimetest 4y MUNYON'S DYSPEPSIA __GURE says bis will curs in. and all forms of stomach trouble he simply tells the trath. It will cure & Momach that bys been abused by overcatingad pver-drinking. cure & stomach that has been weakened by old-stye drugn, T¢ ‘making an ach act like a sound one. will do much v all ¥l cren nyeo, New Yok sod Phladetghie: " NUNYONS IVHALER CURES CATARRE, VIM, VIGOR, VITALITY for MEN MORMON BISHOP'S PILLS have been in use over fifty years by the leaders of the Mormon Church and their followers. Positively cure the worst cases in old and young rising from effects of seif- Bv! 7y, Loss of Semen, o Eretias Brecis 5 immediat elids, lects are mediate. p.’n vigor and pote CENTS 1.y 1;avery fun: tion. Don’t get despondent; a cure is at hand. Restore small, undeveloped organs. Stimulate the brain and nerve centers; S0c a box: 6 for $2 50 by mail. A written guarantee to cure or money refunded with 6 boxes. Circulars free. Address BISHOP REMEDY Gp.. 40 Eills st San Francisco, Cal. GRANT DRUG CO., 3§ and 40 Third ‘street. vous Twitching of visir DR. JORDAN'S crzar MUSEUK OF ANATOMY 1051 MARZET 5T. bet. 6:24743, 8.7.Cal, The Laggest Anatomical Muscu in the World. ~Weaknesses or any contracted discase pasitively cared hy the oldest Specialist on the Coast. Est. 36 years. DR. JORDAN—DISEASES OF MEN Consultation free and - strictly private. Trestment personally or by latter. A Positive Curs in every case undertaken. Write for Book, PHILOSOPMY of ARBRIAGE, MAILED FREE, (A b R valuable book for men) !nx JORDAN & CO.. 1051 Market St., 8. F. a DR. MEYERS & CO, SPECIALISTS FOR MEN. Established 133L Con~ sultation and private boos free at office or by mail Cures guaranteed. 731 MARKET SI. SAN FRANCISCO, CAla RESCRIPTION TURE RUP othing ike it. Comfort & security! A Perfect Retminar, 1t does the work! 89" Call or X;:dum/a for ‘‘sooxrmr No. 1." ross: E. [ 206 Fost Street, San n...JL"' c.l'f or 1143 Broadway, New York. Meoton this Pager vy This signatare is on every bnf o.l the genuine- tive Tablets v remody that cnres & coid in one dag A PERMANENT CURE +of the most obstinate cases of Gon and Gleet, gnaranteed in from 8 days ; nc nmlzr treatment required. § Sold by all druggists, NEW WESTERN HOTEL, EARNY AND W HINGTON STS.—RE- - modeled and ren: ted. KING, WARD & €O. European plan. Reoms, j0c to $1 50 day, §5 to §5 week; $8 to $20 month. Free baths. Very room; fire grates io every rcom; elevator runs all night. - b Corner Fourth ar. CAFE ROYAL === A our Sp Steam Be. W. T. HESS, NOTARY PUBLIC AND ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Tenth Floor, Kooni‘1015, Claus Spreckels Bids. T hone Majn 983. Residence, ‘821" California. st below Powslia dence Telephone, James 130k