The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 26, 1902, Page 2

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 26, 190z JUST THIRTEEN IRE THE WS Contractor Is Alleged to Have Married Many Times, ¥ Former Spouses in Several { Cities Tell of Old £ | Ceremonies, ————— ST. JOSEPH, Mo, March 25.—Christian | C. Nelson, Talfoad contrdcfdr and horse- | man, alleged to have thirteen wives, is in juil here on. the:ehange 'of bigamy, having | Just been brought from - San Antonio, | cxas, where he:was.arrésted a jew days will_be_tried in St Joseph be- | e Woman most active in his pros- | was married_to him in this cily | stembér. “This bilde Was Mary A. | Parker of Platisburg, Mo. Nelson admics | having three wives; put says tue other ten | rths. He is said to beswanted for | 1 Chicago, San_ ¥Franc.sco, Des | ew York -St. Paul, Sumter, S.‘ Conway, Ark. . His prelmipary ¢ heid here befgre the Jusuce Peace who solemnized his mar- nage with Mre. Mary A&. Parker in Sep- tember, 7 & > ¥ORT SCOTT, Kan.-Masch 25.—Mrs. A, Melburnthe most receng wire.of"C. C. Nelson, the aliéged bigamist, wuo was ar- rested in San Antonio recently, while on bis wedding trip “With' her,- has just re- | turned from San Antorig and is prostrat- cd. Her family has given out a siatement declaring that she would prose.ute Ne:- sgn if the authorities release hm. DES MOINES, Iowa, March Mrs. | Dorothy Harvey, residing in Lake Park, this city, claims to be one of the allegei | thirjeen ' wives of Christian C. Nelson, now under arrest at St. Joseph, Mo., on a cherge of bigamy. Nelson, accoraing | to her story, woocd and won her just.a year-ago. She was a widow 45 years old, | . Neison, she says, represented to her thai | he was a wealthy horseman and desired | 10 take her to his big stock farm in the | East. - To accommodate him she sold her | home.. worth $300), for half this sum, and | entrusted the money to him. He depart- ed, ostensibly to buy a sepan of horses, and was never again heard from. Continued From Page One. PN TO APPEAL TO BRITISH QUEEN AN DOWAGER EMPRESS AND RUSS| Opponents of the Sale of the Danish West Indies to the United States Will Seek in Vain the Aid of Visiting Daughters of King Christian IX notified the Board of Supervisors of his | actiyn in the following communication: : “MARCH 25, 1902. | “To the Honorable the Board of Su-| pervisors—Gentlemen: 1 have the honor | o notify you that under section 1S, article | XVLof the charter of the city and county | of San Francisco, I have this day for| cause removed from their offices as mem- | bers of the -Board of Health of the city | and eounty of San Francisco, Drs. J. M. | Wiiliamson, R. W. Baum, W. B. Lewitt | and V. P. Buckley, and in their places | have this day appointed as such members | of .said Board of Heaith Drs. J. Cuplin | Stinson, A. 8. Adler, T. A. Rotianzi and M. E. Van Meter. ‘A statement of the cause for such removal is contained in the annexed document, which,-together with all 1ts Contents, is hereby made expressly & part of this notification to you. A copy of said document was this day served on of the members of the Board of Health so removed. Respectfully, “E. E. SCHMITZ, “Mayor of the City and Coumty of San Francisco.” INDUCTED INTO OFFICE. At 5 o'¢lock in the afternoon the Mayor left his office, accompanied by Dr. James 3. AVard, whom he appointed on the }Health Board last January, and Drs. Stin- ®on, Van Meter, Rottanzi gnd Adiler, the hewly appointed meémbers, ‘who had filed their oaths of office” with “the County Clerk, and firoceeded forthwith to the of- fice of the Health Board. Arriving there, Schmitz addressed James _A. secretary of the Health Board, as | Enger M. 3 I'have removed the four old members; of the Board of Health and haxe appoinfed these gentlemen, Drs. Stinson, Van ngqxl . T wish to notify yousthat Adler and Rottangi in their places, have servi@ notices of thefr removaign | Drs. Willlkmson. Baum,Buckley sgnd I#witt. The Chief of Police has also been | notified of ‘my course in the matter,” "~ Dr. Ward, as the: senior member of;the board. .then called a specfal meeting in the assémbly room gnd.also ook the:ghsmir temporarily. ® “As the new appointees have come to- gether for the first time,” said Dr. Ward, “i wish to know the pleasure. of -the bo Dr. Rottanzi then proposed the name of Dr. Stinson for temporary, president and the Jatter was elected. - Rottansi ‘ alss moved that all the appointees of the Health Board be retained in their posi- tions for the present, which motion was carried. The board then, adjourned, to meet to-day at 12 A conference of the new board wag held immediatély after- ward in the Mayor's office and ‘it wi agreed that Dr, Ward will be elected per- maneént president at to-day’s meeting. The old board will not give up without @ struggle. The four deposed members have rétained Gavin McNab and Stephen V. Costello to take the matter to the courts. Dr. Stinson takes the place vacated by Dr. Williamson, whose term would have efpired Januarr 8, 1903. thus giving the former but nine months to serve. Dr. | Adler succeeds to Dr. Lewitt's term, which expires January 8, 1905. Dr. Rot- tanzi -replaces Dr.. Baum, whose - term would have éxpired on January B, 1904, and Dr. Van Meter supersedes Dr. Buck- Iey. whose term would have ended on January 8, 1904. All the appointments are fur the unexpired terms, ——t RECORDS OF APPOINTEES. Graduates of Leading Institutions of This Country and Europe. Of the members of the new Heaith Board Dr, J. Coplin, Stingon is a graduate of the University of. Trinity, Toronto, later of Trinity Medical College, and af- terward of the College of Physicians and | Surgeons, Ontarlo. He also graduated from the University of the State of New York. He was an honor graduate of the University of Trinity, and was the first | siiver medalist of Trinity Medical Co - ege. He was later house surgeon - and physician of the New York Post Gradu- £te Medical School and Hospital. . He is & member of the 8an’ Franciséo Ceunty Medical Society. San' Francisco Clinical and State of Callfornia Medical socicties, and a member of the T R merican Medica 3 ottanzi is a son of the Jat Dr. A. Rottanzi. He is a native of ’x?flg OPENHAGEN, March 25. — The opponents to the sale of the Dan- ish West Indies to the United States intend to make a desper- ate effort to induce Queen Alex- andra and the Dowager Empress of Rus- sia, daughters of the King of Denmark, to intervene and prevent the ratification of the treaty by the Lardthing. The_Dowager Empress and the Queen, both of whom are reported to be opposed or rcles t be ineflective. set in motion, would prove Confidence is felt that the Landthing will ultimately ratify the treaty, though it may possibly insert a plebiscite lause. The Landthing at a secret meeting to- day arrived at no-conclus.on and post- poned discussion of the treaty until April 3. LONDON, March 2.—Very heavy seas are running in the English Channel and the Irish Sea. ‘A number of vessels are in distress. ' Queén Alcxandra’s intended departure this morning for Copenhagen was postponed in consequence of the gale. The torpedo bozt Gestroyers Zephyr, Fer- vent and Zebra put into Portsmouth con- {city and was educated in_the puH!:J: schools of San Francisco. He graa from Cogper Medical College in Novem- ber, 1857, and was a member of the Boar of Supervisors and chairman of the Fi- nance Committee in 1897-98. He gained fame.ds tie framer of the anti-high hat ordinance. He was a surgeon of the Sixth California Regiment, U. S. V., dur- ing the Spanjsh war. He recently re- turned from a tour - of one and a half years in Eurene. : Dr. Van Meter is a native of Illinois. | He was born in Lasel e and when quite young moved with his parents to Linn County,:Missouri. At the age of 22 he toos up the sm? of medicine and grad- uated from-St. Joseph's Medical Coll of St. Joseph, Mo, Four years later took a post graduate course in the Louis Medical College. He came to Call fornia in 1885 and _established at Red Bluff, For two vedrs he : was’ railroad surgeon. In 1889 he took a full course at the California Medical College and grad- uated in 18%0. He moved to San Fran- cisco and was appointed to the chair of clinical and erthopedic surgery in the California Medical Co lege, which position he held for eight terms. He is manager and ch'l:fi yriter for the California Medi- ¢al Jourhal. Dr. Albert S. Adler is a mative.of San Francisco. He lgr?uated from the Uni- vereity of the Paeffic and also from the Gymnasium of Frankfort-on-the-Main, Germany. He also graduated from the Friederich-Wilhelm University, =~ Ber in, Germany, In 1579 He took a special course at the universities of Leipsic and Vierna. In 1881 he was assistant- army surgeon, U. 8. A., and participated in the Indian campaigns in Arizona against the Apaches. He was present at the-capture | of Geronimo. Subsequently he practiced his profession in Tucson. Ariz. In 1882 he removed to this city. He is examining c}tyl physiclan of the Mount Zion Hos- pital. G RHEA OF KENTUCKY LOSES SEAT IN HOUSE Moss, Who Is Considered a Republi- can, Is Accorded the Place. WASHINGTON, March 25.—The House to-day, by a majority. of ten, unseated Rhea of Kentucky, a Democrat, and seat- ed in his place J. McKenzie Moss, who was formerly a Democrat, but who; ac- cording to his brief, is in accord with the Republican party on the dominant issues. The Republican majority in the House i§ forty-three. While only two Republi- cans—Hanbury and Vreeland of New York—voted with the Democrats, enough Repubiicans declined to vote to reduce | the majority to ten. The conclusion. of the debate on the case was rather spirit- ed, Rhea making an eloquent defense of his right to the seat. After the vote the House began con- sideration of the army ‘appropriation bill, with the understanding that general d bate should continue for ten hours. Scar- borough of South Carolina discussed the Southern election laws, and . Gaines of Tennessee the Philippine situation. ADVERTISEMENTS. within their reach. - Their instruments stand idle for fack of a performer. With the Chasc @ Baker Piano player all this is member of the household becomes at once = an and plays Chopin and Sousa as he or she sces fit, Play it at first trial acceptably, better with practice. TheW¥iley B, Allen Co. OPLOMATETS - STENTBTLE France and Russia May Precipitate a Great War. Alliances Appear to Be Fruit- ful of Ominous Con - jectur BERLIN, March 2.—Dispatches re- celved from New York and Washington | and published here describe France and Russia - as meditating war upon Great Britain and Japan over China and as 1 | | | | | i i | i ’ | - s & DAUGHTER., OF THE KING OF DENMARK, WHO WILL VISIT COPENHAGEN, L) L siderably damaged by the gale. The lat- ter’s steering gear was carried away. The seams of the other boats were torn open and they were leaking so badly that tney had to be docked for repairs. CITIZENS LYNCH A RUFFIAN, Continued From Page One. the erowd, counseling them to let.the law take its course. e was, listened to, but s soon-as hé finisned the crowd moved | jdown the street, dragging the negro by & reoe. A boy was with the rope, sent up a telegraph pole 1t was thrown over the crossbar_and the end dropped into the | crowd. - Many hands_grasped it, and in an inStant the negrdo was in the air. Hardly had thé boy climbed down out of dan- ger when scores of pistols were drawn, | and before the negro's body reached the | {{op of the pole it ‘was riddled with bul- ets, At a late hour to-night the body had not been taken down. The Coroner lives at. Rockyford. Wallace lived with his wife at 2157 Law- rence street, Denver. He is said to have come here from Sedalla, Mo., and had been employed by the railroad company for several years. Mrs. Miller is siowly improving. z % LOS ANGELES, March 2.—The identity of’ Mrs. Henrietta' Miller, who was as- sauited at La Junta, Colo., tablished. Secretary Stewart of the As. sociated Charities said to-day that Mrs, Miller had become stranded here and ap- plied to the assoclation for a loan to en- able her to return to her old home at | Denver. The loan was made and the | | assoclation purchased the ticket for her. | The address she gave was the Arlington | Hotel, on South Flower street, and he | sald she had been here since’ October, | | | i k 1601, She did housework und told the of- ficers of the assoclation that if she could get back to Denver she could find em- ployment despite her advanced age and | physical infirmities. The woman was very deaf and also had an impédiment in her | speech. Mrs. Miller came to Los Angeles from San Francisco, but had lived in Denver and also in Pueblo, She is a native of | Canada. She had no relatives in Los An- geles or Southern California. DANGLING FROM A TREE. WASHINGTON, N. C., March 2%.—The body of James Walker, the 19-year-old | negro who _Fols(med the whole family of | Dr. David T. Taylor of the.State Board | of Medical Examiners, was found dang- ling from a limb of a gum tree on the Greenville road, just outside of the town limits here, early this morning. A man | coming to town ran into the body. which hung out over the walking path. The Coroner’s jury brought in a verdict that the negro came to his death by lynching at the hands of unknown persons. |SAYS THAT HE HAD BULLETS FOR McKINLEZ ‘Wisconsin Sheriff Tells the Details of Admissions Made by Burglar. MILWAUKEE, Wis., March 2.—A spe- cifl to the Sentinel from Baraboo, Wis., says: Sherift Slackhaus told to-night the detalls of the confession made by J. Steinman, a convicted burglar, that he was implicated in the McKinl = sination. The Sheriff said that Stelnimas the man he took to Waupun Saturday to serve a sentence for burglary, was one of the worst looking criminais h to_deal with. Srovn g While on the train bound for Waupun | Steinman pointed to his red necktie and said to the Sheriff that it stood for blood and then told that he was the accom- plice of Czolgosz, the assassin of Presi- dent McKinley and’ bound the handker- chief around ‘the murderer's hand in. his preparation for the terrible crime,. Ha further said that hé was near Czolgosz when he fired the shot and was ready with two revolvers loaded with poisoned bullets to do_ the work had sololgol: failed. Sheriff Slackhaus believes what Steinman has told him. His home is in New Jersey, but for over a year he has been living in Philadelphia. He cama west about six months ago. 4 | tation on.the part of a great power un- | Far East rival forces, .but a-co-operation| | churia. | less inclined to act prejudically to Rus- | these meats show a ‘general use of borax, seeking assurances from Germany of that country’s neutrality. The Foreign Office repudiates this story and avers that Rus-| sia and France have not made any such inquiries here. | PARIS, March 25.—In the Chamber of | Deputies to-day Cochin (Rightist) ques- | tioned the Government regarding the! scope of the Franco-Russian agreement in | the I'ar Kast, asking how far france was | | bound thereby, and whether her obliga- | uons extended elsewhere in Asia and Africa. The Koreign Minister, Deicasse, | replied: [ “in order that France shall take action | in the way foreseen in the last paragraph ! of the agreement, the integrity of China ! must be impaired and her development | hindered in such a manner as to create ' danger to France's own interests. Hesi-| der such circumstances would be equiva- | lent to abdication. i *‘M. Cochin sees, particularly, peril in the | north of China, but the storm might pos-| sibly burst in the south. The truth is! that all the powers are equally Intérested | in China remaining independent and open | to the free competition of the capital of the whole world. - We do not find in the of ferces toward . the common, alm—the maintenance of the status quo and gen- eral peace.” ST, PETERSBURG, Satyrday, March 22.—According to advices - received here from Port Arthur, it .is believed there that the real intent of the Anglo-Japanese treaty s to compel Russia to evacuate | Manchuria. The Japanese have already | established a Japanese-Chinese bank to compete_ with the Russian-Chinese Bank and a Japanese institution has secured concessions to explore for gold in Man-l The consensus of opinion here is that the effect of the Franco-Russian declara- tion in reply to the announcement of the Anglo-Japanese alliance will be to lessen | the resistance which has lately developed in China against the settlement of the Manchurian question on'the lines required by Russian interests, and that China, whose attitude of resistance became more pronounced after the publication of the Anglo-Japanese agreement, will now be | sia’s interests. PEKING, March 25.—As a result of the rebellion "in the southern part of Honan province and the murder there of four- teen converts, an edict has been issued or- dering the magistrate of Pi-Yang to be degraded and the magistrate of Tuugpo to be punished. The rebels are ordered to be beheaded. One priest is reported missing. The Governor of Honan province says that the collections for the indemnity caused the trouble. CERMAN PAPER INSULTS i PRESIDENT'S DAUGHTER Miss Roosevelt Is Represented as Ac- | companying Hogs to the | Kaiser’s Empire. BERLIN, March 2.—The Department of Agriculture has gathered through Ger- man conspls and, speclal agents samples of a variety of Buropean meat products. From analysis it has been learned that| and that some sausages contain. borax in | large quantities. i A correspondent of the Frankfurter, Zeitung affirms that chemicals are much ! more largely used in the preparation of | meats In Germany than in the United States because the system of cold storage | used in the latter country is little in vogue here. | Simplicissimus, an illustrated journal ; noted for the brutality of its cartoons, and which has ofteff been.confiscated by the police because of its irreverence | toward high personages, appears to-day with a drawing representing Miss Alice ! Roosevelt at sea in an open boat, an im- mense fat hog in one end of the boat and Miss Roosevelt standing in thé other holding a_pig wrapped in the Stars and | Stripes. This drawing is inscribed: “We recelved your Prince; you must admit our hogs.” PRESIDENT PREPARES FOR HIS VACATION Wher: Congress Adjourns He Will Go to Oyster Bay for Recrea- tion. WASHINGTON, March 2.—President Roosevelt will spend the larger part of summer at his home at Oyster Bay. If the state of public business will allow he will leave Washington immediately after the adjouynment of Congress in June and remain away during the warm months. It is barely possible that some time In the fall he may go to the Adirondacks for a brief huntihg trip, but no plans looking beyond his summer vacation at Oyster Bay have been made and he has not rent- | ed the cottage of H. McK. Twombley al Paul Smiths. Mrs. Roosevelt and the children will grobnbly start for Oyster Bay some time efcre the adjournment of Congress and establish the household. Thecodore Roose- velt Jr. is slowly but steadily recovering from his recent serious illness. He is abla to be about the White House and ‘when the weather permits takes a short drive with his mother. He will not return to school again this season. After President and Mrs. Roosevelt return from their trip to Charleston Mrs. Roosevelt and young Theodore may go down to the seashors for a short stay. L President Roosevelt yesterday received an invitation to' visit the little town of Waterloo, in South Carolina, where re- sides the Rev. James Bullock Dunwoodey, a venerable minister who performed the marriage ceremony of the President's father and mother. -— Shoot a Man and Kill Him. OKLAHOMA CITY, O. T., March 25.— At Keokuk Falls, ' in Pottawattamie County, two men shot and killed a man named Martin, proprietor of a distiilery, at his home, robbed him, and then, after saturating his body with oil, fired it and escaped. The flames were extinguished, but the body: was badly burned. e men had ordered Martin "to throw up his hands. Tnstead he reached for his re- volver, when they shot him. wroute. IRISH LANDS T0 BE BOUGHT Chief Secretary Wynd- ham Proposes a New i Measure. Object Is Now to Make Amendments in the Pur- 7 ~chase Law. LONDON, March 2.—The Chlef Sécre- tary for Ireland, George Wyndham, intro- | ducdd the Irish land bill in the House of Commons to-day. Wyndham said the ob- ject of the bill was to amend the land purchase law. - The Government could not ignore the problem, owing to the acute crisis fn-agriculture, which was now at a standstill, and in view of the fact that | there was an alarming Increase in the ad- vances for the purchase of land, owing to the unwillingness.of the land owners to sell. The malnngrovlslon of ‘the bill author- izes the Land Committee to take over the: whole .or. part of any estate which the| owner ig willing to seil. The commission will then resell it to the tenants, but the consent of three-quarters of the zenanm; W is necessary' before the commissic i undertake to tramsfer any paptaof an estate. The landlord -himself (gepur-: chase part of his estate, not eding one-fifthi.of the total area, from the com- | mission, thus becoming a - tenant pur- chaser in case he desires to continue to reside on the.estate. The bill does not provide for'compulsory pufchase. All the transfer arrangements are in the hands of the commission and are simpliied as much as possible. The bill provides-that ‘cash, not exceed- | ing $3,000;000. to be outstanding at any one time, may becgd,vf.mced to. the commis- sion by the exchequér, thus epablt chases to-be made on a vastly larger sca e than ever_before. : TOCKSPENG = NBOUT STOCK Brewer Testifles in the St. Louis Bribery Case. ST. LOUIS, March 2.—When the trial of Emil A. Meysenberg, a member of the House of Delegates, on the charge of bribery, was resumed in Judge Douglass’ eourt today Philip Stock, a brewer, was called as a witness for the State. In reply to questions Stock sald that he | was employed by the Suburban Rallway Company to get its franchise bill through ! the municipal assembly. Stock said that February 2, 1901, he and Charles Kratz, a member of the municipal assembly, called together on Meysenberg. Kratz tolk Stock that Meysenberg was *‘sore” | because the Kinloch Telephone Company had frozen him out of the St. Louis Elec- tric Construction Company. Meysenberg, the witness said, had 200 shares of the stock of the latter company. The wit- ness testified that hé sald he would give | for this' stock, although it was of no value, ‘and he did. remarked- that he did not take the money to bind him in werking for’the Suburban franchise bill. The witness said the moncy | was paid to Meysenberg in the presence of former Councilman Charles Kratz. Stock testified that Kratz said the money was to “earn Meysenberg’s good will.” Asked what led up- to this transaction, Stock said that he saw Kratz about the Suburban bill that was being held up in the railroad committee, of which Mey- senberg was a member. Circuit Attorney Folk, in answering an objection of At- torney Lehmann of the defense to the question asked, said: ‘1 propose to show that Kratz, who was the go-between with Stock and Meysen- | berg, went to Stock and demanded $75,000 to pass the Suburban bill. Stock declared | that this was too much and the amount was reduced to $60,000. This money was for Kratz, to' be used among his associ- ates to pass the franchise measure. The | money was paid out by Cashier Hospes of the German Savings Institution. Sub- | sequently it was taken to the Mississippi | Valley Trust Company and.there depos- ited in a security box. To this box one key was handed to Phil Stock and an- other to Brinkmeyer, who afterward de- livered it to Kratz."” Richard Hospes, cashier of the German Savhlfi{e Bank, the next witness, testified | that Meysenberg received about $3000 on | a check made out in favor of Stock and Meysenberg. This amount was provided for by a note signed by Henry Nicolaus and Charles H. Turner, president of the Suburban Railway Company. Turner, the witness said, brought the note to the | bank with instructions to turn the pro-| ceeds over to Phillp Stock. The check | was shown in _court and identified. ! Charles H. Turner, president of the Suburban ~ Railway Company, testified that Philip Stock was the legisiative agent | of the Suburban when bill No. 44 to secure a certain franchise was in the Municipal Assembly. CLAY BANK TOPPLES AND KILLS SIX MEN Disaster Suddenly Comes Upon La- borers Working at a Gas- light Plant. CLEVELAND, Ohio, March 2.—As the resuit of a cave-in of a bank of earth at | the Main street plant of the Cleveland Gaslight and Coke Company this after- noon six men are dead: Thelr names, are; 'OLG! AMATI, aged 27 years. g GISIPPI BERGAZZI, aged 7. VINCENT LUGASSO, aged 48. ANDREW HAHN, aged 25. PETER PREST, aged 28. s An Italian whoge name nas not yet been learned is also dead. Edward Leych, an- other laborer, was injured, but not seri- ously. ‘The men were working close to a bank of clay when it suddenly gave way without the slightest warning, bury- ing them beneath the mass of earth. Fel- low workmen began the work of. rescue and in a short time six of the men had been taken out. Some of them were alive, others were llreldx dead, their lives hav- ing been smothered out. The living were taken to nearby hospitals. but died .en Workmen employed at the sceune of the disaster gave as a cause of the fall of the clay the thawing of the ground by the sun. ATTENTION, VOTERS! Register at. Once. All citizens must register to vote at any Election of 1902. Office open from 8:30 a. m. to 5 p. m, and WEDNESDAY| EVENING from 8 to 9. ! sory inaustrial 'asbitration et nesTmul | . cetabitshed here, “The -membership ez | DY Order of the Board of Elec- rojresentatives of the, employers and employes, | tjon Commissioners. s To Cure Grip in Two Days. THOMAS J. WALSH, - Laxative Bromo-Quinice removes. the cauge. T E. W. Grove's signature on every Registrar« of Vo‘texfs. 100 Doses For One Dollar Economy in medicine must be measured by two "things—cost and effect. It cannot be measured by either alone. It is greatest in that medicine that does the most for the money—that radically and permanently cures af the'least ex- pense. That medicine is Hood’s Sarsaparilla It purifies and enriches the blood, cures | L‘:;pl s, eczema and all eruptions, tired, guid feelings, loss of ~appetite and general debility, Hood’s Sarsaparilla promises to cure and keens the promise. Meysenberg, he said, | | Hill,”" where the colored man was buried. | man to definitely announce that he hn.d' \ Rheumatism, Rheumatic Gout “Eigh kidney, ner’s Safe MOSES Station 16, TEST Hver, tive ‘state meys. It and heals druggists, or: direct,-at . 50 CENTS AND Refuse substitutes. It has cured all forms of:kidney’ disease To convince every sufferer from disea that Warner’s Safe Cure will cure them vincing testimonials, free, { Cure ought t Years ago 1 “of diabetes and rheumatis strong hold 6n me. The Doctors had almost given me up. -that time, of the Boston police force who had suffered bladder trouble and rheuma: entirely cured and are well and rob 1z in‘fatt, every ome that I have advised to use W [>A urife in a glass or bottle, let it stand 24 hours; is eddish see particles or germs floating about kidneys are diseased and you should get a bottle of Warner’s Safe Cure ¥t once. WARNER'S SAFE CURE ble and contains no harmful drugs; it does not con- stipate; it is a most valuable and effective tonic; it is.a stimulant, to digestion and awakens the torpid putting the patient into the very best recep- tion and irritatic to any one who will write thé Warper Safe Cure Co., Rm:hes(!l:. N. tion }i’lving seen this liberal offer' in the San Francisco Daily Call. ness of this offer is fully guarahteed by the publisher. ical booklet, containing symptoms and treatment of each disease, and many come to any one w! RHEUMATISM CURED By Driving Out Uric Acid Poison From the System. Permanent Cure Can Be Effected, But First the KIDNEYS MUST BE HEALTHY. and All Forms of Uric Acid Poison Are Results of Kidney Disease, and Can Only Be Cured by Getting Direct at the Seat of the Trouble, the Kidneys. ,WARNER S SAFE CURE IS ‘THE ONLY POSITIVE! CURE FOR ALL DISEASES OF KIDNEY, LIVER, BLO OD AND BLADDER. Mr. Moses C. Thompsen, one of the best-known police officers of Boston, says Warner's Safe Cure cured him of dia- betes and rheumatism eighteen years ago and has kept him in good health ever since. “Boston, Mass. _ teen years' experience with Warner's Safe atisfy any ome. About eighteen completely cured in four months , which had a. pretty everything. My faith I had suffered in Warner’s Sate Cure has grown.stronger since members from bee: I know a number of the m have t men to- vl Cure has been greatly benefited by it. THOMPSON, Lodge No. 3. K. August 17th, 1901." YS.—Put some Boylston St YOUR KID: mornin, sediment. in the bottom of the in it, your is purely vegeta- for the work of the restorer of the kid- prepares the tissues, soothes inflamma- icn, stimulates the enfeebled organs me time. It builds up the body, at the.s gives it strength and restores the entrgy that is or has been wasting under the baneful suffering of kidney disease. WARNER'S SAFE CURE {8 now put up in two regular sizes and sold by all $1.00 A BOTTLE. LESS THAN ONE CENT A DOSE. There is pone “just as good as” WARNER'S SAFE CUREL during the last thirty years,. It is pre= scribed by all doctors and used.in the leading hospitals as the only absolute cure for all forms of disease of the kidney, liv TRIAL BOTTLE FREE. er and bladder. s of the liver, kidney, bladder and blood a trial bottle will be sent absolutely free Y., and men- The genuine- Our doctor will send med= will writ Ride through the most interesting territories in the world on theI:uxu ious CAu IA IMITED Three Days to Chicasio WAATTHS ALARM TIMID SETTLERS of two departed residents of Calispell Valley l are creating no end of fear and troubie SPOKANE, March 25.—The ghosts among the settlers. After the killing of a negro named Hart seven years ago mys- | terfous noises and lghts heard -and seen | among the hills were attributed to the | negro's . ghost. Especially ~unwelcome weére these in the vicinity of “Nigger A few weeks ago Charles Stowell, a pio- neer of Calispell, committed suicide In Spokane. Stowell owned a fine farm and one of the best residences in the valley. It 1s located about three miles from where the ‘negro Is buried, and it is the settlers on the road between these two places that are in dread of ghosts. Seldom do the men go to the postoffice after. dark. John Baker, an old hunter, was the first seen evidence of something mysterious operating. in the foothills mgommi--ms. ger HilL” In corroboration of aker's suspicions, Louis Leonard relates that the patent fastening on his corral gate wa: opened and .his cattle stampeded out of the corral. Postmaster John Sizelone's family report having seen a brilllant light | fiitting around on a dark night., accompa- nied by a faint noise as of some animal being choked. Percy Duffyshas decided to move away from his place, o'm,f to unpleasant ghostly visitations, and William Collins has declared that he will take his cattle to another range several miles away from where the ghosts are now operating. It is proposed to call a meeting of resi- dents on the route of the ghosts to pre- pare a’ petition to the County.Commis- sioners to have the body of the negro re- moved. FOR FALSE ‘IMPRISONMENT Tormer San Franciscan: Released From the:County Jail in Redding. REDDING, March 25.—R. J. Graham, neatly attired and polished of manner, stepped. from. the County Jail to-day a free man after nine ‘weeks spent in the tanks awaiting trial for felony embezzle- ment. The charge against him was pres ferred by a'San Francisco firm. It was dismissed because there was insufficlent evidence to convict. Now Gi Pro- | ses to place his case in the hands of a Bi Francisco attorney and sue tne firm for damages for false imprisonment. Attacks Oleomargaring, ' WASHINGTON, March 2.—A sharp at- tack on the pending oleomargarine bili was made In the Serate to-day by Money of Mississippi. He denounced ‘the meas- ure as unconstitutional, dishonest, im- moral and unjust. - He said it was a prop- osition to tax out of existence one indus- try for the benefit of another, and was “%;olecuon gone mad.” ansbrough of North Dakota began an argument in support of the measure, but vielded ‘the floor until to-morrow. WOMAN KIONAS HER OWN CHILD REDDING, March 25,—While the pupils at the Copper City School were enjoying their recess’ yesterday afterncon, a veiled woman drove up in a buggy, sprang out and seized the elght-year-old son of Jay Smith. Tossing the screaming and kick- ing boy into the vehicle, she put the whip to'the horse and disappeared. The strange woman was recognized by several whe saw her. She was the boy’s own mother, though not his father’s present wife. The boy had been living with his father and grandmother in Copper City. A messenger overtook the father on the way to Redding. He t led back to De Ja Mar and summoned Constable “H. F. Williams and the two took up the chase of the kidnaper. Four years ago Jay Smith, the' well- known stage fan, was divorced from his wife. The coyrt awarded him the cus- tody of the ofily child, a boy of 4 years. Mrs. Smith has resided in-various places since that time and three-months ago she married Ed Smith, a painter of De la. Mar. The mother’s love, even. after years of separation, . apparently promp wlo\'m loeslll;all bbeeack Iher §h“fd o trac n for woman or the stolen boy. ney“fmm;nm n the hills. The father swears his boy back again. A —_—— ADVERTISEMENTS. CURES WEAK MEN FREE. Insures Love and a Happy 'xm . for All How any man may quickly cur years of suffering from sexual Vitality, night losses, varicocele, sto. py 1O largs small, weak organs to full ‘size ang wigs Simply send your name and .address ty Sor Knapp Medigal Co., 1373 Hull building, Deerors: Mich., and they Will gladly send the fpec ot celpt "with full directions 0 .any. may - as. casily cure himself at home. This ig sapunal a most generous offer, amd the followiag L tracts taken from their daily mail, show what men _think of their' generosity. . o “Dear Sirs: Please accept my thanke for yours of recent date. I Bave given oo treatment a thorough test and the Bemehc’ Lor been extraordinary. It has etely” braced 1 am just as as when a bo, and you canniot realize how happy T amm+> 0¥ & Sirs: Your method worked beaut fully. Resuits were exactly what I needey Strength and vigor have completely retuercy lnrgement s entirely satisfactory. > Dear Sirs: Yours was received and haa no troubie in making Use of the receipt as gi récted, and can truthfully say it is & boon o men. 1 am greatly improved: fnuiz strength snd.vigor.” P stu, All_correspandence fs strictly ~comfidentiay, mailed. in plain, sealed envelope, The Re‘!‘li:E i3 free tor the asking and they want every mun o have It. € Horonn, This signature is on every box of the genuine Laxative fle Tablets ‘:Mu-.-”“-— dam e hi ® Dimselt after me up.

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