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2 THE fAN IFANCISCO CALL, WIDNESDAY, DECEMBER 24, 190 DEATH HOLD3 A CARNIVAL IN AGHKABAD Between Four and Five Thousand Persons Perish. First Reports of Disaster Greatly Underestimate Loss of Life. Russian Government Officials Rush- | ing Work of Relief to Provide Shelter for Sur- wvivors. - ASHKABAD, Russian Turkestan, Dec. | ~Even the worst of the earlier reports of the recent earthquake disaster at An- dijan quite underestimated the appalling loss of life. A telegram to-day from the scene of the | catastrophe puts the number of victims in the native quarter of the town at 4000. Already 800 corpses have peen disinterred from the ruins. The progresses slowly. The State Treasury, containing 5,000,000 rubles, is in the ruins, and exca- vations to get the money are car- ried on under “the supervision of a strong cordon of police. The water in the wells has disappeared and a general subsidence of the site of the town is feared. Large numbers of laborers are being sent to excavate. Sappers have ar- rived and are expected to make more rapid progress. The shocks continue with increasing vio- lence. The area of seismic disturbances comprises 500 square versts. The Russian population is camping at the railroad sta- tion, where 500 cars are placed at the dis- posal of the people. The local Gov- ernment officials are quartered in cars. Sheds for the destitute are being built as rapidly as possjble. Free soup kiichens have been started and officials are aiding the departure of the inhabitants by tributing food, money and free railroa tickets. At St. Petersburg it is estimated that nearly 5000 have been killed by the earth- quake at Andijan. The engineer officers at Andijan who are superintending the excavations being made with the view of recovering the buried treasure at the sites of the Army Department, State Treasury, postoffice, etc., and the erection of sheds to shelter the officials and other homeless people, report that although the work is progressing as rapidly as possible, a month must elapse before the officers will be housed. The railroads are aiding in the work by all possible means, furnish- ing free transportation for provisions and materiais and conveying the inhabit- ants free of charge to towns in the Gov ernment of Ferghana. The cash remit- tances in aid of the destitute people have thus far been very small. ] CITY COUNCIL RESUMES | TRIAL OF FIVE OFFICIALS Witnesses Are Examined Relative to Alleged Dictatorial Manner of Chief Brown. ‘ o work of excavation | PRETENDER TO THKONE MOROCCO’S WINS A BATTLE Decapitates Forty Imperial Soldiers and Adorns His Tent With Their Heads and the Sultan Order s Terrible Vengeance THE SUZzary OF Moporao- 7 POTENTATE DEFEND- NORTH AFRICAN WHO 1S KEPT BUSY ING HIS THRONE. ® =5 ANGIER, Morocco, Dec. 23.—The imperial troops have been de- feated after a sangulnary battle with the rebels -headed by the pretender to the throne. The lat- ter decapitated forty of the Sultan’s sol- diers. Thelr heads are now ornamenting his tent. Imperial reinforcements have been sent SAN JOSE, Dec. 23.—The investigation | to attempt the capture of Taza, the head- of the charges of malfeasance and con- made against Fire Commissioners Hart, McKiernan and Carmichael and Chief Brown of the Fire Department | by Fireman Tennant was resumed before the Council this evening. A number of witnesses were examined and the city closed its case. J. Galt and Thomas Car- | roll told of Chief Brown ordering Ten- | nant back into the engine-house on elec- tion day and stated that his manner was dictatorial. J. F. Moore, who had been a fireman for thirty-four years, and George | E. Hinds testified that they had regarded | Tenrant as an exceptionally good fire-l man. | The details of the fight between Ten- | rant and Farthing, which resulted in the dismissal of Tennant from the department, were then related by Hinds, Borando and ‘Whitesides. seen but part of the fight, but their testimony showed that Farthing, who ws pended for sixty di d been the aggressor. The fur- ther hearing of the charges went over till next Tuesday evening. TEACHERS' ASSOCIATION TO MEET IN LOS ANGELES Booker T. Washington, the Noted Colered Educator, Will Attend the Convention. LOS ANGELES, Dec. 23.—Beginning on Tuesday, December 30, and continuing through the week the State Teachers’ As- sociation will hold its thirty-sixth an session in this city. Professor A. mate of San Jose, president of the assor ation, was in Los Angeles to-day making fina] arrangements for the convention. It is estimated that there will be in attend- ance during the convention about 2500 teachers, including those of Los Angeles County. The programme for the five days includes addresses on educational and other topics by many among them being Booker T. Washing. ton, president of the Tuskagee Institute in Alabama, who will deliver two ad- dresses before the convention. Family Hurt in a Runaway. noted educators, - | FRESNO, Dec. 2—Mrs. G. W. Dodge of Fowler lies at the point of death as the result of a runaway last evening. Her sons, Wesley, aged 17, and Louls, aged 8, were also hurt, but not seriously. Mrs. Dodge and her sons came to Fres- no yesterday to make Christmas chases and when they left for home it was quite late. Wesley was driving, but lust control of the animal, which became frightened by a passing engine. In the pur- | runaway which followed the buggy was | upset an the occupants were thrown into & barbed wire fence. Mrs. Dodge was badly cut about the throat and above the quarters of the pretender. Incensed by the successes of the rebels the Sultan has ordered his soldlers to spare no one e at Taza, in spite of the advice of the chiefs, who counseled him not to indulge in excesses. - LONDON, Dec. 24.—The correspondent cf the Times at Fez Morocco, says that the situation caused by the rebellion un- | doubtedly is serious. The pretender to the throne has had great success, but Mo- rocco appears to have a charmed exist- ence and this rebellion probably will prove as futile as have previous risings. It is a curious thing, writes the Times correspondent, that the mystery sur- rounding the personality of the pretender has not been solved. At the beginning of the rebellion he was supposed to be an educated man, a native of Zarahun, who gained a reputation for sanctity by con- ¢, under the same title o the pretender is an un. known person, whose identity has entire- ly bafiled discovery. LONDON, Dec. 24—In a dispatch from Tangier, dated yesterday, a cofrespond- ent of the Dally Mall says thé Sultan’s trcops have entered Taza and that the pretender has fledto the Ghiatta Hills. THO ME KILLED AND ONE IRJURED Boiler on Tug Explodes ‘While Towing Heavy Lumber Barge. NORFOLK, Va., Dec. 2.—Two men were killed and another fatally injured in an explosion of a boiler of the tow boat Lizzie Massey on the Southern branch of Elizabeth River this evening. The dead: GEORGE M. WILLIAMS, captain. WILLIAM BYMAN, fireman. Fatally injured: Samuel Dunn, engineer. | The tug was towing the lumber-laden | barge Maple from the Richmond cedar | works to Norfolk when the accident oc- | curred. Captain Williams, who, with | Dunn, owned the boat, was thrown fifty | feet into the air and horribly mangled. | Byman was blown into plec The boiler was thrown through the top| of the boat and landed some distanc away in the river. The tug immediately sank in fifteen feet of water. It is re- | ported that an unknown man employed in the barge was also killed, @ cirieieiimieieinim il il @ BABIES ABE STARVED, Continued From Page 1, Column 6. | chilly. Describing the initiation, Dr. An- | derson sa; that it consisted chiefly of Mrs. Tingley's telling of her dog Spot and what the dog had done, and then Mrs. Tingley ate some fruit which was supposed to be a very mysterious symbol and a part of the high initiation which was tak- ing place. was made a member of the Order of the Rising Sun—a son of the Rising Sun. The chief feature of this initiation was that each candidate held a sunflower. There was another order known as the Anclent The doctor then tells how he | MEXIGANS SELL THREE FACTORIES Anglo-American Buyers Invade the Southern Republic. CITY OF MEXICO, Dec. 23.—It is now practically assured that the American- English syndicate, with headquarters in London and ‘Chicago, will purchase three large cigarette factories in this city. A de- posit of $60,000 gold to guarantee the trade has been made. The companies to be taken over by the Americans are the Bueno Tuno, $,000,000 capital; La Cigarrera, with a capital of £1,750,000, and the third is a private con- cern. The total amount of the deal is about $11,000,000. The. payment will be partly in cash and partly in mortgage bonds. The purchasing company will be known u# the Mexican Tobacco Corporation and rumor ascribes to the syndicate the pur- pose of buying up all fmportant cigarette zciories in the country. Government action to prevent a total abrorption of this industry by foreigners 1% rumore L B e e e ] ;' MAN WITH SHOTGUN, ——— Continued From Page 1, Column 7. | He declared that if the men attempted to | g0 tarther with the fence he would shoot. They ceased operation at once. At this juncture Superintendent of | Btreets Reeber appeared and prevailed | upon the men to remove the obstructions. | They did so, but only to erect them far- ther along the alley, but past the Dingley property line, A Division Buperintendent Laws said this afternoon that he believed the Southern .| an interesting revival DIVNE SARAR | 3 NEW PLAY . Scores Success in Paul Hervieu’s “Theroigne de Mericourt.” RIS Typical Parisian First Night Audience Warmly Lauds Bernhardt. I A R PARIS, Dec. 23.—-Sarah Bernhardt, play- ing at her own theater to-night, added a fresh branch to‘her many laurels by the creation of ‘the title role in “Theroigne de Mericourt,” a new play by Paul Hervieu, which deals with the career of a now forgotten woman, who, beginning as a courtesan, became a prominent personage during the reign of terror and ended in a lunatic’s cell. The drama presents the outline of her own stofy, but the author has exercised the dramatist’s license to render her more sympathetic and interesting. The action shifts from Vienna to Paris and a num- ber of stirring scenes of the revolution are re-enacted with much realism. The play ends in the Saltpetriere Asylum, where the mad woman evokes the phan- toms of the celebrities whose heads she saw fall under the guillotine. It places many historical personages upon the stage, the distribution comprising sixty roles. Mme. Bernhardt's impersonation of the heroine was warmly applauded by a typ- fcal audience of Parisian first-nighters. | The piece is superbly staged and presents of revolutionary Paris, with the picturesque costumes of the epoch. YOUNG SOUTHERNER SHOT BY A WOMAN Tennessee Tragedy in Which All Par-- ties Are Said to Be Prom- inent. JACKSON, Tenn., Dec. 23.—To-day at Tocna Station, a village near here, Miss Lizzie Hillhouse, a prominent young woman, shot and fatally wounded a young man named Marsh. She called Marsh | from the breakfast table, seized him by | the arm with her disengaged hand and | fired six shots from a revolver into his body. Marsh, it is claimed, was to have been married at an early date. | BROKER. ON NEW YORK EXCHANGE IS EXPELLED | John L. McLean Accused of Actions Detrimental to the Welfare of Traders. NEW YORK, Dec. 22.—John L. McLean, i heac of the brokerage firm of J. L. Mec- | Lear & Co., was expelled from the Con- | sclidated Stock Exchange to-day. The | churge against him was that he had been guilty of actions detrimental to the wel- fare of the exchange. His partner, Charles W. Frost, was suspended for a year for an alleged similar offense. The firm was one of the most prominent on the ex- change. e L Gamma Eta Kappa Fraternity Meets. STOCKTON, Dec. 23.—The twenty-first annual convention of tWé national chap- ter of the Gamma Eta Kappa fraternity assembled in this eity this afternoon in | Pioneer Hall. About fifty visiting dele- gates are here from New York, Colorado, Oregon and Washington, including the delegates from the varfous chapters in | California. The sessions are secret. An claborate banquet wds given to-night at the Imperial Hotel. It is belleved that Sacramento will secure the next conven- tion. . SEECRRER Sy Police Crusade Against Tramps. LOS ANGELES, Dec. 23.—The police department has ordered a general round- ing up of tramps and as a result twenty- five men Bave been arrested for vagrancy. An undegirable class, which includes foot- Pads, thieves and other criminals of vary- ing shades of offensiveness, is coming to Los Angeles In greater numbers than ever before. The police crusade is opened with a determination to diminish, if pos- sible, the number of burglarles and hold- ups which are of frequent occurrence. Funeral of England’s Primate, LONDON, Dec. 23.—The funeral of the Archbishop of Canterbury will take placo on Saturday at noon in Canterbury Cath- edral. Mr. White, the United States Charge d'Affaires, was among the callers at the Archbishop’s palace to-day. Joy is yours when the pie is “Flap Jack "—lucky sinner— Has apple pie for dinner. made from the magical Presto PR P 55D (Better than flour) Presto does it—not the cook. The H-O {%:2%"} Company ESTO Apple-pie with mouth-melting crust (not even by chance can it be soggy) browned to a turn is sure to come right every time. H00TS BROTHER FOR A BURGLAR Unreasonable Timidity Causes Unfortunate Tragedy. BRADFORD, Ont., Dec. 2.—Wesley Watson of Detroit was shot and killed by his brother Samuel at Middleport, near this city, to-day. The brothers, Samuel and James, ran a farm near Middleport, and ‘the third brother, Wesley, lived in Detroit. Last night Wesley came home unexpectedly, it is supposed, to spend the Christmas holidays. The brothers at home, both men over 30 years of age, heard him approaching the house and be- came possessed of a fear that they were about to be attacked by thieves. They ran upstairs and, getting out of a win- dow, went to the house of a neighbor, where they spent the night. They 'returned -to-day; armed with a shotgun. Wesley had gone into the house and finding no one there went to bed. ‘When his brothers opened the door of the room in which he had been sleeping he raised himself in the bed. Failing to rec- ognize his brother, Samuel fired, killing him instantly. Recently the two men had been attacked by burglars. Governor Makes More Appointments. SACRAMENTO, Dec. 2.—Governor Gage to-day made the following appoint- ments: N. P. Peterson of Bakersfleld, to be Supervisor for the First District of Kern County, vice J. W. Kelly, resigned; P. J. Driver of Marysville, to be Super- visor for the Second District in' Yuba County, vice A. C. Irwin, resigned, and Rev. W. 8. Matthew of Berkeley, to be a trustee of the Preston School of In- dufl(ry, vice E. M. Preston, resigned. g ool e i NEW YORK, Dec. 23.—General Francis Vin- ton Greene was to-day appointed Police Com- missioner In succession to Colonel Partridge, whose. resignation. takes effect January 1. CHILD PERISHES IN BURNING HOME Mother Risks Her Life Trying to Save Her Offspring. Special Dispatch to The Call. REDDING, Dec. 23.—Samuel McKeever, the 3-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Wil- liam McKeever, colored, was burned to death this morning in his parents’ home. Another child, a boy aged 1 year, was badly burned and may die. The mother was severely burned while trying to save | her bables. Just how the fire started is not known but it is supposed that the’oldest child was playing with matches. Mrs. McKee- ver, after tidying up the kitchen this morning, went to the home.of a neighbor. As she expected to be-gome only a- short time, she left the two children playing on the floor. A few minutes later flames were seen issuing from the rear of the McKeever home and a cry of fire was raised. Mrs. McKeever heard the ery, and, looking out of a window, saw her home on fire. She ran to the rescue of | her children, but before she reached her home the entire rear portion of the house was enveloped in flames. Darting through the fire and smoke, the frantic mother made her way into the house, and, picking up the youngest child, escaped with it into the yard. Her hands and face were blistered and her hair singed, but in the excitement of the moment she felt no pain. Her mind was centered on the res- | cue of her first-born and, giving her bad- ly burned baby to a bystander, she ran toward the house to again brave the fire and smoke. The flames were roaring through the building by this time and 1t| meant death to any one who enfered. The neighbors, realizing that the grief-crazed mother would only sacrifice her life if she | again entered the building, restrained her. She vainly tried to free herself, and fail- e vg 195E3 FOOTING AND 13 KILLED Lime Point Lighthouse-~ Keeper Falls From Embankment. Special Dispatch to The Call. SAN RAFAEL, Dec. 2.—Captain John McKenna, keeper of Lime Point Light- house, fell from an embankment near his post of duty last night and was killed. McKenna went to San Francisco yester+ day to purchase Christmas presents. He returned to Sausalito last evening and his driver conveyed him to the city limits, where McKenna got out of the bus and started to walk to the lighthouse, about two miles distant. The pathway taken by McKenna leads along a cliff and is very narrow. In some manner which will never, be known McKenna missed his footing and fell about fifteen feet, strik- ing his head on the rocks, fracturing the skull. The body was not found unmtil this morning. Ccroner Eden was then notifled | and he brought the remains to this city | to-night. The deceased was 47 years of age and an old resident of California. He had been in the lighthouse service for many years, having tended the Point Bonita, Point Reyes and other lights. He was unmarried. Brings Nine-Ton Gun for Signal Hill VICTORIA, B. C., Dec. 22—The China Mutual liner Moyune Dune, from Liver- pool, via the Orient, is bringing consider~ able naval stores for the Esquimalt sta- tion, including a large nine-ton gun for the new battery being established at Sig- nal Hill. @ il @ ing fell back in an unconscious condition. The charred remains of the boy were found in the ruins of the bullding after the fire had been extinguished. JOHN J. FULTON CO. The stockholders of the Jno. J. Fulton Cor Francisco announce to the world the cent of recoveries. Fulton Compounds, nearly nine-tenths of covering. In attestation of the above we present of the discovery before investing in this viz.: Hon. Barclay Henley, of Congress; Thomas Kirkpatrick, capit: Burns, president Candelaria Mining Co.; tuck, attorney, Mills building; D. shmg:, capitalist; C. W. Clark, capitalist, W. C. Price, capitalist, Pasadena; E. O. Life Insurance Company; Southern Pacific Railroad Company; Bigelow, ex-Supreme Judge of State of Chronic Bright's Disease and Diabetes, based dreds of cures, scores of interviews, dozens of test cases and two years of demonstration, disclosing about $7 per | There are now between 500 and 1000 | cases of Chronic Bright's Disease and Diabetes on the attorney and ex-member president Pacific States Type Foundry; Edward | Mills, president Bullock & Jones Co.; Captain Roberts, president Sacramento Transportation Co.; G. E. Bates, | A. Bender, capitalist; Wm. , Sacrament ney, Visalia; Charles McLane, agency director New York R. D. Sessions, Colonel D. B. Fairbanks, cashler Petaluma Savings Bank; Judge R. R. mpany of San curability of on hun- of Chronic Bright'’s Disease told recovered. whom are re- the names of | (also recommended corporation, as he now kerows); alist; Charles A, D. M. Shat- who recovered); R. M. mended it to a number who ing Wm. Marti the donolulu rodte); C. A. cific Railroad com it to a Miller, attor- attorney for recovered); Newton Iay, Nevada, and mended ( to a relative and books and the physicians alike declar: recovered were so surprised and gratified everybody they could hear of who had either of those two heretofore fatal diseases and that they, too, Some of the Many Who Have Been Cured of ™ Chronie Bright’s Disease or Diabetes Are: N. W. Spalding, president Spaldin, some of the stockholders, business and professional men | (also recommended it to several an of this city, every one of whom had to have previous | Adolph Weske, founder of Californ opinions reversed and be satisfied as to the genuineness Francisco Journal (also recommended it to a num ‘Wood, editor Wine and Spi Review (also recommended it to several who recovarad) Edward Short of the San Francisco Call (also rec of Stockton and Captain Hubbard Newton of the Southern Pa- pany, Sacramento (also_recommended .umber who recovered): | Hotel Repelier (also recommended it to two cases that| Fruitvale, Cal. (also recom- and Diabetes, many who |street (tapped that they | Coast Biscult Saw Company| ter's they recoverad); chant, Engelke, editor The recovered, among .hem be- runs John A. Phelps of the cians. two neighbors who iecov- e the incurability | (tapped 12 times); physician, Alameda; agent Seth Thomas Clock Company, 205 E. B. Culler, attorney, eal estate, 215 Sansome street; Mrs. C. C. Mathewso: | proprietor Hotel Clifton; Thomas Haskins, merchant, | Petaluma; William Hawkins, United States Quartermas. Dlgfurtment. this city; Charles F. Wacker, mer- Sixth street; M. W. Sargent, Elmhurst, Cal.; ia Cracker Company! Mrs. Thomas Christal, 426 Twenty-seventh street, and it to two others who recovered); many others. Carl D. Zeile, ploneer druggist (also told of it to more| 13 than a half dozen others, all of whom recovered so far tI s TEE Giaris dads when put e hat were at death’s door when put on San but many such recovered. That they were in extremis ber may be learned from this: iriti been tapped dozens of times; others were already in the i| twitchings of uraemic poisoning; many had from four 'om-| to six physiclans confirm the fatal Brights Disease and Diabetes ---POSITIVELY CURABLE--- Mrs. P. Goyheneix, 928 Fillmors 38 times); R. C. Pell, manager Paciiic Compan; T, J. Howe, an old school F. J. Bachelder, Pacific Coast Kearny stree Willlam Hal Pine street; due to cases Compounds, Some recovered who had several diagnosis; |left standard hospitals in extremis; several had relatives of| called in for last interviews, and a few who recovered were in a state of absolute coma. The list of the cured into bundreds and includes druggists and phy For the absolute accuracy of this statement of the: momentous facts we pledge the integrity of this com- ipany and we invite you to ask Bradstreet's, Dun's of a . " eyes, in addition to having her knee bro- any commercial agency as to the standing of our stock- ken. The doctors fear that she has suf- d internal injuries. il Favors Municipal Ownership. many o;hers, 1?cluding a number of phtysl&la’ns, Wh“: greg‘)i: dn'll?ioh:e\Ermfmyin 130 stelnfi;I street lal;o reeom- names for professional reasons are al eir request mende veral who recovered, one of them leav- holders, so: reco 2 wn withheld, |ing_the German Hospital to go on the treatment); Mrs. familied ln?eleov‘er:lhog:h:rflud P g v :I:fl'h;‘errsgnal Special attention is called to the fact that as the text|S. E. Cline, 1737 Broadway; F. F. Amas, 704 Grove street| friends recover. Reports of our investigation mailed free. Patients wintering in California can, if so desired, sécure treatment in a sanftarium and obtain the benefit of ad- Pacific owned the ground and was author- zed to fence it in. 'The city officials are inclined to dispute this claim. — Order of Scribes, which was very high. The testimony of Dr. Henry Hugo Reuthling, a New York physician, was In- troduced by the defendant, aiso by depo- FANTA ANA, Dec. 28.—The report of the Grand Jury of Orange County was presented to the Superior Court to-day, Among the recommendations made was one for municipal ownership of the light- ing system in Santa Ana. Distigured Skin Wasted muscles and decaying bon What havoe! gl 527 Scrofula, let alone, is capable of all that, and more. It s commonly marked by bunches in | the neck, inflammations in the eyes, dys- pepsia, casarrh and general debility. Hood’s Sgrsaparilla Which expels all humors, cures all erup- tions and builds up the whole system, whether young or old. Hood's Pills cure lver flls; the non-irritating and only cathartic to take with Hood's Sarsa. b Bl s s Bt ' 2 Darilia 7 and permanently | sition. It relates to Mrs. Tingley's life in New York in 1833-4. The salient por- tions of the deposition admitted were that Mrs. Tingley was at the t.me Dr. Reuth- | ling knew her a magnetic healer or me- dium; that he had attended sittings at her rooms in the Princeton apart- | ments on Seventy-fifth street, New York, | and had seen her colisct 25 cents Admis. sions. Intervenes in an Election Contest. SAN DIEGO, Dec. 2.—A new interest has been added to the election contest of W. R. Guy for the office of Superior | Judge, to which Judge Conklin was elect-, ed in November." I Irwin has filed an action contesting the right of Guy to sit on the bench in case he wins the con- fest. Irwin's ground of action is the al- legation that Guy spent or had spent for himself or that was spent for his elec- tion expenses $20475 in excess of the amount he could legitimately expend in :lnd about promoting and aiding his elec- on. ¢ Investigating Death of a Prisoner. LOS ANGELES, Dec. 23\-An autopsy has been made upon the body of B. Sepulveda, who died in the city jail on Sunday. It was supposed that he had died from acute alcoholism, but the post- mortem established the fact that Sepul- veda had died of concussion of the brain. It is the opinion of the Coroner that the deceased must have been subjected to violence while inside of the city prison. He was probably assaulted by some one of the intoxicated prisoners locked up in the same cell. A AN Bids for Government Breakwater. LOS ANGELES, Dec. 23.—Proposald have been advertised for and will be opened January 21 by Captain Edgar Jad- win for continuing the construction of the Government breakwater at Port Harford. The contractors will be required to begin work under the contract within sixty days after the date of notification of ap- proval of the contract by the chief of engineers of the United States army. About $47,000 is available for the improve- ment at this time. recovered. Resfi‘n‘nulble houses wanted SL50. Jmo. J. Fulton Co., Mills Eastern cities. 'List sent on application. cies. Seénd to the nearest. CALIFORNIA. Alameda, McCarthy & Gould. Auburn, 'J. T. Gibson, ‘Angels ‘Camp, Woodloc & Burden. Bakersfleld, Baer Bros. Benicla, 0. G. Trauta. Borkeley, W. R. Pond. Beur Harbor, C. J. Swithenbank. Colusa, Oscar Robinson. Crockett, Crockett Drug Co. Chico, Pharmacy. Cloverdale, Dr. R. S. Markell. Calistoga, C. C. Armstrong. Eureka, R. W. Skinner Co. Emeryville, L. J. Westlake. Eagleville, H. E. Powers. Fresno, Patterson-Block Pharmacy. Grass Valley, W. Lontzenheiser & Son. Gliroy, Ed F. Johnson. Golden Gate, F. S. Kleinkner. Healdsburg, C. D, Evans. Hollister, Geo. Wapple. Honcut, F. W. Horton. Haywards, E. Spornbli, Hanford, Cousins & Howland. Livermore, McKown & Mess. Lompoc, J. B. Dea: Los Angeles, Owl n. Drug Co. vice from physicians who have either themselves recovered or havi Building, San to act as afients in foreign countries. Los Gatos, John§ & Johnson. Madera, G. M. Luttrell. Marysville, C. C. Rubel. Modesto, Husband & Turner. Merced, E. T. Dixan. Monterey, J. F. Moore. Morgan Hill, Morgan Hill Drug Co. Mountain View, Johnson's Pharmacy. Napa, J. H. Lovejoy. Ooklund, Owl Dfug Co. West Oakland, F. Sanderlin. Palo Alto, Eagle Drug Co. Pacific Grove, C. K. Tuttie. Paso Robles, Janny & Keller. Petaluma, Harry Maynard. Ranlett, H. D. Ranlett. . Redding, Redding Book and Drug Store. Red Biuff, R. H. Blmore. Redwood City, A. D. Walsh. Redlands, C. C. Abi Bacramento, Willis-Martin Co. Santa Ana, O. L. Halsell Santa Barbara, A. M. Ruiz. Santa Cruz, S. A. Palmer. Santa Rosa, H. Newman. Santa Clara, J. G. Robinson. San Rafael, John Wolf. Salinas, P.' P. Krough. SEND FOR FULL REPORT\ & e patients recovering. Price for cisco, sole compounders. Samples will be t Compounds and pamphlets at all first class drugpu(ores lnbe ’g:e Compounds are safe even for e San Mateo, Colby Drug Co. 5 ,San Diego, Strahlman-Meyer Drug Co. Sisson, Le Roy Lee. Sonora, Eddy Co. Sebastopol, Thos. R. Worth. San Jose, Fischer & Pellerano. Stockton, Holden Drug Co. gul Hel‘érm ‘W. 8. Brownlee. utter Creek, Morrish & Brignola. Truckee, Chas, Thomas: 00 J. J. Lasch. Ukiah, Hoffman's Emporium. Viealla, J. M. Boynton. Vallejo, Jas. Topley, Ventura, J. L. Cerf. tsonville, ¥. P. Krough. Wheatland, R. S8." Brown. Woodland, J. R. Shelto Winters, Day & Cooper. OREGON. Ashiand, T. K. Balton. Albany, Burkhart & Lee. Baker City, Grace & Bodison. guse‘ne.PLlnanmkl Co. rants Pass, Rackett Store (M. ns). Qregon Cily, Charman & Go = C1omen® Portland, Woedward Clark Co. OF OUR INVESTIGATION. Renal Compound for Bright's Disease, ested frée for patients. San Francisco and at the following California and Coast Agen- children, four under 10 years having $1; for the Diabetlc Compound. Agencies in nearly all the larger s T, on, Ston: . Salem, C. C. ::o-lmA WASHINGTON. Sivmmpia B, Hit e ympia, i1l Seattle, Quaker Dru‘.DCrl:‘ S Spokane, Scully Drug Co. Waitsburg, R. E. Jutler. ‘Whatcom, De Champlain & Grahas NEW MEXICO. Albuquerque, J. H. O'Reilly Co. East Las E. 0. Murphy. ARIZONA. Tucson, Edwd. Stapleton. UTAR. City Drug Co. Osden: Wi, Gradimgs 4 Sait Lake, T. 3. HII Drug Co. IDAHO. Bolse, W. S. Whitehead. Caldwen, H. D. Blatohley. MONTANA. Butte, Newbro Drug Co. Helena, Parchon Drug Cm