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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY., OCTOBER 20, 1902. IRELAND'S FOES HAE DENOUNCED Irish Envoys Eloquently Predict Success of Their Cause. John Redmond Says the End of the Contest Is Near at Hand: —_— BOSTON, Oct. 18.—Ireland’s foes were | wced by speakers at two monster eetings in Symphony Hall and the Hol- eater. The reception by the League to John E. Red- irman of the Irish Par- ; Michael Davitt, John d Edward Blake, M. P., to the national conven- ton in Faneuil Hall to-morrow, took the | form of public meetings at Symphony | Hall. Redmond said that words could not | / the importance of these meetings | ention to Ireland's cause. I that all the power and wealth of | tion is being used in a| attempt to crush the spirit of | he end of the contest,” | “The viclence of the at- | e British Government on the | d League portends this end, and | istance should be given to those ! water who are fighting ths | eland with such magnificent | if-sacrifice and generosity.” | then went on to say that the were here to secure the generous support of the many millions of the Irish | race in this country. He said that never in the history of the Irish party was it 8 ted as it is to-day in the House of Commons, and that if all the leaders were to be imprisoned Naticnalists in every city, town, hamlet and district would epring up and fill their places. Dillon said he was confident of success in this country because they were the del- egates of a united people. He was confi- dent of the success of the league because the league and Irish Natfonalist party in the House Commons were the only people who are at the present time giving the British Government any trouble. He said they have convinced the world that Ireland was distinct from England by the ac that the league had taken during the Boer war; that they would continue agitaiton until they got what they anted John F. Finnerty, national president of | the Irish League, aroused the enthusiasm of the audience in a spirited speech in which he indorsed the actions of the | Irish liamentary party. | Michael Davitt was greeted with the | band playing *“The Wearing of the | Green.” Davitt concurred in wll ‘that | the other speakers had said. Blake denounced the burden of taxation | which England had referring e: imposed on for the carr laced upon Ireland, he Irish people to raise funds | ing on of the South African | war, a cause. he said, in which the peo- | ple of Ireland had no sympathy. sefies of resolutions expressing con- fidence in Redmond’s policy and the se- tions of his party and denouncing Eng- | land’s policy of coercion were unanimous- ly adopted. @ oot ‘@ FIREGUG TRIES | 10 GURN CHURCH Catholic Edifice Rafael Again periled. in San Im- AN RAFAEL, Oct covered under ‘the Catholic Church this &fternoon, but -was- extinguished before much dzamage resuited. Rags saturated with coal ol gave every indication of the work of an incendiary. ;The Rev. Father Fhillips discovered the Plaze and belleves the place ‘Wes sét on fire. J The church was set' on. fire several months -ago’ and, great damage resulted. This_time the blaze was started exactly in the same place—under the edifice, but | on the south side’of ‘the building instead | of the north. An alarm was turned in at 2:30 o'clock and the fire department re- sponded quickly. ' The blaze was yet in ! its incipiency and ‘could. be extinguished by the chemical engines. A thorough search was made for some clew to the one guilty of the act, but there was no direct evidence to fasten the blame on any one.. Some balf-burned rags saturated with coal ofl were ‘found | under the steps of the building. It is | presumed that the firebug' soaked the | rags in the oil and then threw them un- der the sanctuary. It could not have | been done very long before the fire was @iscovered, however. The citizens of San Rafael are once more thrown into a state of perturbation over the latest fire, and.the conclusion s | that all the firebugs have mnot yet been caught. Antone Morris and Eugene Case, | the juveniles Who were arrested some | time ago and confessed to having started | nine fires, including the Catholic Church, | 19.—Fire was dis- ere still in jail gwalting trial. Maggie | Morris, the girl ‘who was also inoar. | cerated for alleged complicity in the crime, was released several days ago and fe living with relatives near Schuetgen | Park. { —_— Exploding Still Hurts Workman. BANTA ROSA, Oct. 19.—An explosion of « still at Fulton yesterday wrecked the | building of the California Wine Associa- | tion at that place, destroyed valuable ma- | chinery and severely burned -and scald- ed one of the employes. The escape of the workman from sudden death is considered remarkable, as he was standing close to | the still at the moment the explosion oc- curred. The physiclans belleve he will re- cover. S R Algeria-Morocco Dispute Is Settled. LONDON, Oct. 20.—In a dispatch from | Fez, Morocco, a correspondent of the Times says the Algeria-Morocco frontier dispute has been satisfactorily settled. ¥rance obtains possession of the disputed districts she already has occupied, but the Sultan has refused to entertain the ¥rench proposal for preferential trade. Negroes Kill a City Marshal. LOSSOM, Tex., Oct. 19.—City Marshal Benjamin Hill was killed at a negro fes- | tival here last night while trying to quell | 2 negro riot. Three negroes were also shot by the negroes who xilled the Mar- ehal. The shooting was done by brothers, who are still at large. Big Demonstratibn in Hyde Park. LONDON, Oct, 19.—There was a.demon- stration In Hyde Park to-day by several thousand reservists from South Africa, who demanded prompt payment of their @rrears in pay and assistance to obtain work. —_—— Livingston Jenks is worth the support of all voters for Buperior Judge. L | of point lace. TOILING Season Never Opened More Auspiciously Than the Present One, and Comfort of the Poor and Needy Is First Considered SOCIETY FOLK .BEGIN FOR CHARITY SOCIAL season never opened more auspiciously than the present one, nor have our smart folk ever began earlier to toil in the interest of sweet charity. These busy philanthropists mean well, for the most part, and often,work within an inch of their lives to make a big success of a public benefit. The past week saw the successful end- ing of three benefits. The entertainment for the California Eye and Ear Hospital, which will be given at Fischer's Theater on Wednesday next, promises to be an- other society event. Members of the ex- clusive set are taking an active interest, and this insures a financial success, The bright girls of the Heartsease Auxiliary are selling scores of tickets. One of the niost charming and enthusiastic workers is- Miss Irene Sabin, president of the aux- iliary. Her active and sympathetic in- terest is quite infectious. Miss Sabin in- tended -to leave on.the 15th inst. with her mother, Mrs. John 1. Sabin, for Chicago | to join her sisters, Mrs. Redmond Payne | and Miss Pearl Sabin, but postponed the time of her departure. White gowns ere certalply very smart. A popular young matron has just return- | ed from New York, and relates her dis- | astrous experience in the Waldorf-As- toria dining-room. She dressed very elab- | orately, she sald, in a pale blue crepe de chine' gown and bat, and felt quite au fait; but upon entering the dining-room she looked about her and was distressed to see that the only flve ladies in. tho room were in white gowns and large white hats. She felt quiie out of place. This is only one instance, however, for I observed at the Feast of Lanterns the best-gowned women were in white. Mrs. Gus Taylor and Mrs. Fred McNear wore white gowns with.garniture of pale blue, not alike, but similar. Thelr hats :were {dentical creations of pale blue with large blue. ostrich feathers. Mrs.' Robert Ox- nard never wore anything more becoming than her gown of richly embroidered white muslin} and.a stylish white hat with a touch of light blue underneath the brim. Mrs. I N. Walter wore a hand- some white gown on the opening night. it was a Gibsonesque affair, with a Lroad bertha of rich lace extending near- Iy to the elbows. Mrs. Harry Nathaniel Gray was pretty in a clinging gown of white cloth, the bodice ¢f which was of heavy - cream lace. The costume was completed with & small-white hat with a ponpon of pale green. Mrs. H. B. Mon- tague wore white broadecloth, close fit- ting, which suited her form to perfection, A vine of pale green velvet leaves out- lined the yoke of plain broadcloth, which wes finished at the neck with a collar Follage for trimming is certainly very new, as the Duchess of Marlborough, on her recent visit, was much admired in a white dinner gown cmbroidered and trimmed with velvet leaves. It was interesting to see people gather about Mrs. Montague's doll table, | and wornderful to see how things disap- peared. She is fascinating to talk to, with her piquant beauty and charming manners. Mrs. Montague is a Bostonian, | L believe, and thoroughly aristocratic, bé- longing to one of the oldest and best fam- ilies on Beacon street. .Wfifi?mfim. WORK TRAINS COLLIDE AND TWO MEN ARE HURT Failure to Show Flag Causes Smash- Up on the North Shore Line. SAN RAFAEL, Oct. 19.—A wreck oc- curred on the North Shore Rallroad this afternoon near Howards, two!men being injured, neither fatally. The accident was occasioned by a head-on collision be- tween two work trains on the Cazadero branch. The trains with engine No. 3 was sent out from Bausalito loaded with bridge . timbers. After discharging the lumber at a trestle one mile south of | Howards they started on the return trip south, with the engine backing the flat cars. When a mile further down and at the bottom of a grade they again stopped, but failed to put out a flag. Engine No. 11 had started from Cazadero en route south, The engineer having received no: orders to the contrary, believed the track to be clear and presumed ‘the work train had gcne on south. There was no danger flag at the top .of ,the grade and he started down. He did not see the train until too late to stop his own locomotive and ran into engine No. 8. The engineers and fire- men of both locomotives escaped injury. Walter Proctor, bridge foreman, however, had his leg fractured, and M. Hennessy, 2 brekeman, was seriously cut about the bands and feet. " o PRESIDENT OF HEARTSEASE AUXILIARY, WHO' IS WORK- ING HARD FOR CHARITY. e ap Miss Ethel Keeney is en 'route from New York to this city with Mrs. Irving Bcott and will arrive In a day or two. Miss Keeney went East some months ago to be maid of honor at the wedding of her flance’s sister, Miss Tomlinson. She will spend the winter in this city and will be much feted. Misé Keeney's wedding is several months in the future. o8 ok Mrs. Linda H. Bryan and 'Miss' May Reiss are paying-a visit to friends in Den- ver and are being delightfully entertajned. Mrs., Bryan means to return about the middle of next month, but I fancy we will see ‘her ‘ere’ then, ‘for she .is a de- voted mother and her three lovely chii- dren. are too much happiness for so ap- preciative a mother to stay away from. They have never been separated so long a time. Miss Edna Lewis, daughter, of :Mr. and Mrs. William Lewls, ‘will leave Wednes- day for New York, and a week later she will sail for Liverpool on the Majestic. She will join her sister, Miss Gertrude Lewis, in London, and together they will tour the Continent. Miss Lewis expects to be away from San Francisco for at least a year. . o . . Miss Polhemus has good reason to be. proud of her bdrilliant fiance, Dr. Albert Baker Spalding, who . is a graduate of Stanford '96 and Coqlumbja ’'00. For the last two years he has had offices in the Emerson building in this city. He is now prominently identified with the Affiliated Colieges, having been zppointed: at: a re- cent meeting of the faculty to take charge of ‘an important department. It f{s.un- usual to find so young a physiclan ad- vancing so rapidly. 'SALLY SHARP. GIVE MORAL SUPPORT 5 TO THE MACEDONIANS Bulgarians Approve the Revolution- ary Movement and Denounce Turkey. SOFIA, Oct. 19.—An open-air meeting convened here to-day by the Macedonian committee was attended by 10,000 persons. M. Michaelowsky, president of the local committee, described Turkish misrule in PLEADS CAUSE * F TENPERMNGE set to Delegates of National Union. Arraiéns Bishop Potter for| Justifying Occasional | | Drunkenness, » B g | PORTLAND, Me., Oct. 19.—Delegations | to. the Natlonal Women's Christian Tem- | perance Union to-day attended services, arranged in nearly all the churches for! their benefit. At St. Luke's Episcopal | Church Rev. Henry §. Sanders, Vicar of Bromley, London, and warden of the Duxhurst Homes for Inebriates, preached. Mrs. Stevens, the national president, and | Miss Elizabeth Greenwood of New York, ! world’s and national superintendent of the evangelistic department, gave the sermon at Jefferson Theater. Lady Henry Somerset made an address to-night at the ! :1;;‘:’( Hall, speaking at some length. She I well remember my former visit to Port- land. when I stood. in’ this selt-same spot and addressed on audlence. Thers are many here to-night who were present then. There was a Bood gray' head present, now- lald to rest, the head of the founder of prohibition (Neal Dow), Who had laboved for the cause for many long years and has now gone to his well-earned Teward. Then, too, there was that womanly yoman who stood' for everything that was Bood, everything that was lovely and every- thing of good report, Frances Willard. - While these. two ars.not present in bodily form, yet they are undoubtedly present in spirit. ~The only difference is that their message comes fo the ‘learts of ‘those who bow before thelr God and pray to'him in secret. . The temperance question is becoming a great and burning question and nearer to the hearts of’all of us now than t ever was before. The time has come to put aside theories and prin- clples and erystallize them into action,” and wheH that time comes; it is a crucial time and it means war against the gowers that be. Why s it that so few p8ple are willing to go into this reform movement? (Because they fear ‘to lose ‘some little political or social ad- vantages. The community is so bound up-that it is 4 for men to come out strongly sgainst intemperance without offending some one, .and. they remain silent. At the ballot box ‘men should put their temperance prin- ciples ‘before their political . principles. When they do this they will settle a great many evils that now. prevail all over the world. Lady Somerset called on the church peo- ple to risé and band together and stand on the side of temperance. Lady Henry | arraigned Bishop- Pottér for published words;. a part of which she read from a newspaper, to’ the effect that the poor people. and labaring men ljve such con- tracted and monotonous lives that he does not much blame them for occasionally getting .drunk just to even things up. This was grected with a storm of hisses. She sald that it must first be assumed that Bishop Potter was correctly quoted, which she herself doubted. If he really said the words or even words that were of the same general purport it was a strange perversion of the Christian min- istry, she said. ‘A clergyman shpuld not ‘rail at ‘those who are striving to uplift the downtrodden and.who might go to the | multi-millicnaires of New Yqrk and ask them to give of their millions toward the establishment ‘of something that would go toward ameliorating this humdrum condition of monotony. @ bbb i @ ROBBERS THKE OLD W' LI mitted in a Hut at Los Angeles. Spectal Dispatch to The Call. LOS ANGELES, Oct. 19.—Andrew Brog, aged 60 years, was brutally ‘mur- dered between 2 o’'clock and daylight this morning in a little frame shack at 617 North -Alameda street, in which he re- sided and conducted a chophouse not larger than a tamale wagon. George Stephens, a customer ' of the place, went there this morning to get bréakfast, and finding the front door locked went through a corral to the rear. He saw that the rear door was partly open and that a kerosene lamp was burn- ing on‘the table. He called Brog, but getting no answer peered inside. f On the floor near the door he saw Brog's body, ¢lad only in a night shirt. The whole interior of the place was cov- ered with blood, chalrs were overturned, the bed disarranged and tables moved from their places. Stephens ran to a neighboring engine- house and told the firemen what he had discovered. They notified the police. ‘When the officers arrived they found that Brog's'body had: been almost-cut to pieces. There were five stab wounds in the right. forearm, inflicted. prabably: while the victim was trying to ward oft the blows of his assailant. In the body were tén stab wounds, all six inches or more in depth and any one sufficient” to,, have caused death. On the floor were two | empty purses turned inside out. The dead | man's clothes had also been rifled and the entire place searched for money. Tracks of two persons were found lead- ing from the place, but although the en- tire’ detective force has been at work on the case all day they admit that they. have not the slightest clew to the identity of the murderers. They advance.the the- ory that the crime was committed by Mexicans, of ,whom a number , usually sleep in the corral adjoining the restau- rant, because the weapon used was evi- dently a knife like that carried by most Mexican Iaborers. Brog was last seen alive about 1 o’clock this morning. About 2 o'clock persons in that vicinity heard a scream,. followed by the sounds of a scuffie, but they were unable to' locate ‘the source of the noise. It is now believed that the scream was Brog's 1 .ery for help while his mur- derer was plunging the knife into his body. But little is known of Brog. . He had conducted. the restaurant for two years, but where he came from or wheth- er he had any relatives is not known. * S Macedonia and was loudly cheered by the gathering.’ The meeting passed one reso- lution approving the revolutionary move- ment and another condemning Turkish atrocities. £ It is reported here that Turkish troops have occupled the Kresna Pass, thus be- coming masters of the Siruma Valley, and that all of the insurgent positions are now untenable. b PHILLIPOPOLIS, Bulgaria, Oct. 19.— There was a large meeting here to-day under the auspices of the' Macedonian committee. Resolutions' were passed re- questing Bulgaria to negotiate' with the powers to secure their mediation for the enforcement of the Berlin treaty in Mace- dcnia. oo ROME, Oct. 19.—The Tribuna to-day pub- lishes a communiéation from M. Michaelowski sddressed to the powers and inviting their in- tervention in behalf of the Macedonians against, Turkish . vengeance. M. Michaelowski : de- clared that In several districts Turkish troops 8re massacring women and children, Steer Nearly Kills a Stockman. MARYSVILLE, Oct. 19.~L. W. Lang, a stockman of Standish, had a narrow es- cape from being butted to death on the range Friday by an enraged steer. For- tunately the animal had been dehorned, but even as it was Lang's right arm w: broken and his ribs were smashed In, ISAN FRANCISCO WI ~ BE SHOWN ON SCREEN - Pictures Taken by RS California Camera Ciub -Arranges i to Give Stergopticon Views of the City From Members in Qne Day S PRESIDENT AND SECRETARY OF CAMERA CLUB, WHICH WILL SHOW CITY ON SCREEN. b ——— - HE California Camera Club has arranged to give a stereopticon exhibition at the Alhambra Theater on Friday evening, No- vember 14, of the principal views and subjects obtained by its members a vear ago when they performed the feat of “taking the city” in one day. The attention 6f the judges has been occupled for eleven months in making se- lections and arrangzing and prepafing the lantern slides'from the collection. At the time of photographing San Fran- cisco the city was systematically divided off Into 150 districts and to éach was dele- gated a member of the club. The ‘committee also held a reserve force of members, numbering twenty-five, with cameras ready for special details, such as fires, accidents or tragedes that might oc- DESPONDENT COOPER ASPHYXIATES - HIMSELF Edward Holemholz, an Employé of the California Barrel Works, 2 Commits Suicide. ‘Edward Holemholz, an aged man, who resided for the last two weeks at 456 Sixth street, committed suicide last night by asphyxiating himself in his room. He at- tached one end of a rubber tube to the gas jet and placed the other end In his mouth. “When he was found he was past of medical science. th;h:l?iecmed was a cooper in the Cali- fornia barrel works, where he had been employed for a number of years. His friends attribute his deed to despondency caused by his wife's death, which oceur- red recently, and to worrying over the whereabouts of his boy, who had left him. —_———————— Drill for Water and Strike Oil. BBEAUMONT, Tex. Oct. 19.—A water well that was being drilled on the prop- erty of the Penmann Steel and Iron Com- pany, in the north end or town, six miles from Spindie Top, began to-show oil to- day, and has been flowing a good stream all day. This is a most important dis- covery, as it practically “proves” all the territory north from Spindle Top. ‘ MARYSVILLE, Oct. 19.—Frank Peters, a Glf‘(rf: Sty Tauchte, counitiod sulohe i morning. Leaving his. family at the breakfast table, he entered a blacksmith shop, and, bid- ding 'a counle of faborers a cheery good iorn- ing, remarked thdt he had a little surprise for them. Thereupon he pulled a pistol from his pocket and sent a bullet- into his brain. The cause 18 unknown. e ; The details had been arranged in busi- ness-liké manner and the city was “taken’” from every point of interest from Ocean View to the ferry and from North Beach to the Potrero. Altogether the members succeeded in taking 150 photographs and out of that number 250 have been selected for the ex- hibition. J. W. Erwin, ex-president of the club, and through whose instrumentality the city was photographed, will. deliver the lecture and explanation on the evening of the exhibition. A The committee intrusted with the pre- Hminary arrangemeénts by the camera club_ is ‘preparing to present the pubiic with not only an interesting exhibition of city localities, but i3’ endeavoring to make the affair thoroughly worthy ‘from an artistic standpoint. ** The officers of the c¢fub who "have the arrangements in hand are: V/. B. Webster, president; H. B. Hosmer. first vice president; J. J. Lermen, second vice president; ‘W. E. Paimer, secretary; Dr. ‘E. G. Eisen, treasurer: I ;_librarias; 1 Bangs, H. F. Byrne; exhibition comnilttee— cur during the day's work. Dr. E. G. Eisen, F. C. Bangs, C. A. Goe. L I I I o i e e e NEW RACING TRACK FOR LONG ISLAND Whitney, Belmont and Other Million- * : aire Horse-Owners Are Back of the Project. NEW YORK, Qct. 19.—According to the American there {4 to be established ‘in Jamaica Plains, L. L, a racetrack that shall surpass anything of its kind in tho world. The ground, it is asserted, “has been purchased for a combination of mit lionaire horse owners, including August Belmont, Willlam Whitney . and Thomas F. Hitchcock Jr., and comprises a tract of 480 acres, the price paid being ‘about $500 an acre. It is-intended, the American further says, that the new track; with its buildings and equipments, shall be ready for racing by the - time Morris Park passes out of existenceas a racing course, S i ERo Perishes in the Flames. HAMLET, N. C., Oct. 19.—Fire ‘which started at the cotton- compress here to- day destroyed property valued at $2%,- 000 and caused the death of J. M. Wilson of Clarksville, Ga:, bookkeeper "for ' the compress company and“a nephew of George F. Wilson of Charlotte.’The cofmi- préss was owned by the Seaboard Air Line Company, and was leased by E. H, Jchnson of Raleigh. The Pee Dee ‘ice plant, one of the largest in the State, 2400 bales ‘of cotton and a quantity of burlaps and bagging “also were burned. Book- keeper Wilson was playing a stream of water on the fire, and did not nofice that Le was being surrounded by the flames until too late. When he attempted to escape he found all the avenues cut off, Biscuit Realizing that a continuance of such pun- ishment meant death, and being powerless to-resist the attack, he began to crawl for a fence on his hands and knees. Thig maneuver so surprised the steer that it desisted long enough for Lang to get within safe running distance. Then he rose and escaped, fainting as he fell over the fence. " 5 MARYSVILLE, Oct. 10.—The ‘postmaster at Anderson was caused mueh worry yesterday over the mysterious disappearance of a mail sack brought by the southbound train. - Inves. tigation disciosed that o dranken Indisn had appropriated it for the purpose of convenient- lty° ;Iurugs away 'ltxh‘ him wwma hills severa] es ‘of whisky. was pursued, captured and placed in jail, o Light Work ; KITCHEN REQUISITES. No more of the cake that is dough. g PRINCE LOVES A YANKEE GIRL Heir to the Throne of Siam F gures in Romance. Rumor Links His Name With That of General Wilson's Daughter, Spectal Dispatch to The Call. | PHILADELPHIA, Oct. - 1. —Is the Crown Prince of Siam in fove with Miss, Eleanor Wilson, daughter of General | James L. Wilson, with whom the Prince |and his brother, Prince Charkarbongse, | | stopped while in Washington? | Many residents of Wilmington says he 11s. According to rumor, Miss Wilson met the Prince at the coronation of King Ed- ! | ward, and it Is said that it was a case of “love at first sight.” ‘They were much to- | gether, and those who were asked to din- ners given in honor of the Crown Prince by her father say he paid marked atten- | tion to the charming daughter of his host. Miss Wilsqn is a pretty blonde, about 20 | years of age. It is known that she likes | the Crown Prince. In her autograph al- | bum Miss Wilson has a play written by |his Royal Highness and dedicated to ’hor!elt Prior to the visit of the Crown Prince, while telling a reporter about the D General Wilson requested his | daughter to get the album and allow the | reporter to see the work. Miss Wilson | blushed hotly and would not get the book. { The Crown Prince spent to-day qufetly. | Accompanied by Willlam Potter, his host, hs came to town this morning and rode | through the principal streets of the eity. | He returned to Chestnut Hill for dinner and rested during the remalnder of the | evening. | To-morrow the Prince will go to Inde- | pendence Hall, where he will be greeted | by the ‘Mayor. In the aftefnoon he will | make an inspection of the Commercial | luseums, and in the evening dine at the Button Club, Chestnut Hill. —_— DOAN’S KIDNEY PILLS. BROUGHT TO LIGHT. San Francisco People Recelving the Full Benefit. There have been many cases like the following in San Franecisco. Every one | relates the experience of people we know. | These plain, straightforward statements will do much toward relieving the suffer- | Ing_of thousands. Such testimony will be read with interest by many people. A. C. F. Berne , miner, of 742 How- ard street says: * “There came to my no- tice some time ago an undoubted cade of kidney and bladder trouble where the party was so annoyed from the kidney secretions, particularly at night, that it entailed loss of sleep, and as a conse- quence lack of energy ensued the fol- Jowing day The kidney secretions con- tained so much acid that they scalded; |in fact, sometimes were-particularly pain- ful. A course of the treatment of Doan's Kidney Pills was taken, and much to the surprise of the party and more to his | gratification the incontinence ceased.” For sale by all dealers. Price 30 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y., scle agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan’s and take ne | substitute. — ViM, ViGOR, VITALITY tor MEN MORMON BISHOP'S PILLS * Bave been in use over iy years by the -‘leaders of the Mormon Church _and their followers. Positively curs ths worst cases in old and youns arising from effects of seif- abuse, dfssipation, excesses or cigarette-smoking. Cure Lost Manhood. _Impotency, Lost Power. Night Losses, zot- Back. ;‘:fiv:-:‘mfielb“mty. Headache, Unfitness to Mar- ry, Loss of Semen, Varicocele or Con. stipation, Stop Ner Y;:l;;;:t.chlnnl ot are . Ime | Evehias, Effects a5 Cumyalney s cray fne Hion. Don't get despondent, a cure is at hand, Restore small, undeveloped organs. Stimulate | the brain and. perve centers; 50c a box; 6 for £2 50 by mall. A Written guarantee to cure oe money refunded with 6 boxes. Circulars tree. | Address BISHOP REMEDY CO., 40 Ellis st. Ban Francisco, Cal. GRANT DRUG CO., 3§ nd 40 Third | | VO DVODVDVDBR visit DR. JORDAN'S grzat SEUM OF ANATORY 1051 MARZET ST. bet. G:hah, 8.7.Cal, est Anatomical Museum in the ‘eaknesses or any contracted discase poaitively cured by e oldest Specialist on the Coast. Est. 36 years. OR. JORDAN—DISEASES OF MEW Consultation free and private, Treatment personaily or by letter. A Positive Cure in every case undertaken, Write for Book, PHILOSOPRY of MARBIAGE. MAILED FREE, (A vaiuabie book for men) ORDAN & C6., 1051 Market St., 8. F. | $ § Yal pcbch.o Bk R Al s N S POLITICAL. ——For— dJudge of the Superior Court R. B. McCLELLAN Republican Nominee. FOR SUPERIOR JUDGE, REGULAR REPUBLICAN NOMINEE, J.0.B.HEBBARD (INCUMBENTy FOR SEUPERIOR JUDGE JOHN HUNT REPUBLICAN NOMINEE INCUMBENT VOTE FOR LIVINGSTON JENKS JUDGE OF THE SUPERIOR GOURY. DEMOCRATIC NOMINES. BR. C. C. O’DONNELL, INDEPENDEN“')I'. CANDIDATE Railroad Commisstoner of the SECOND DISTRICT. San Mateo, Maria and San Francisco Counties. Name will be printed on the State ticket