The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, February 4, 1903, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

. THE SAN FIANCISCO, CALL, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1903. FSTENS ALL OF THE GUILT UPON DOBLIN Findings of Committee | in Lessler Bribery Investigation. 15 MADE PUBLIC Senate Gives Out Full Text of Proposed [ Pact. Agreement Provides for Com- | puted Points. WASHINGTON, Feb. 3.—There was Majority Vindicates Congress- some discussion to-day In the executive | map and Exonerates session of the Senate with reference to | % making public the treaty recently nego- Lemuel E. Quigg. tiated by Secretary Hay and Sit Michael | b, Herbert for a settlement of the Alaskan boundary disputes. Owing to the fact that a number of articles are in French, it was await a translation before mak- g the treatly public. The secretary of the nate was directed to prepare a transla- | | Article 1 of the treaty provides that the | Report Is Submitted by the Minority, Declaring That the Charges Were Without Founda- \ tion. decided The House dary line tribunal shall be imme- « ee Navz irs to-day T tely appointed and shall consist of * six 1mpumx jurists, three to be named .'President of the United States and v his Britannic Majesty. All ques- | st ceive a majority vote of the Provisglon is made for the ap- aent of other jurists to fill vacancies r officers of the tribunal, including | ientific experts and agents. | Artic provides that a written or | printed case of the two parties and | other documents, correspondence and evi- | dence shall be submitted to the two par- ties within two months of the exchange of ratifications of this treaty. Two nths afterward the counter case may Jbe submitied, but the tribunal may ex- tena the e if it so desires. | Article 3 provides that the tribunal shall consider in the settlement of the questions submitted to its decision the treaty be- Britain Russia_of 1825 ty betw ‘nited States ssia of March 30, 186 The tribunal shall answer and decide the | following questio among others: 1. What is intended as the point of com- ine is the Portland channel? | » should the line take from rencement to the entrance to y-sixth parallel o head of the hould it It is pru\ldfld that the first meeting of the don. nal shall be in Lon- sion is to be made as soor after the arguments are con T t br cites the alleged at- within three months unless m g sty tuence dent or the British King, by t tic f the common ord, extend the time. Pro- made as to how the decision to the vision also shall be prepared and handed agents of the respegtive governments. | As soon as a decision has been sent to | the contracting parties each shall send one or more scientific experts to lay down the boundary line in accordance with the decision. of the iving of SENATE UNANIMOUSLY PASSES ELKINS' BILL Measure Provides for the Regulation | of Railroad Transporta- | tion. [ Fe 3.—The Senate to- | Elkins | WASHI day pas GTON n the Lill to further regulate railroad transport- ation. f1t is one of a number of measures | presented in this Cong concerning corporations and has particular reference | te railre The text of the bill, with | ndments made in committee, have 1 published heretofore. army appropriation bill, which went | over yesterday request of Pettus, passed. The provision establishi * BEPUBLIC OF HONDURAS IN THROES | e S LB Contmued From Pnge 1 Column 4. i | £ erence to the protection of American in- | terests in Honduras. “The department desires that you shall | keep the 1s of your squadron togeth- of the dep: ble, to have the in quadron cruise After sailing from San F shouia you find that the Ranger is un: to keep up with the other vessels of the squadron you will direct her to follow the com- squadron to Amapala, making the speed that it is practicable for her to make. EW ORLBANS, ¥Feb. 3.—Passengers arriving on the United fruit steamer w Breakwater, direct from Puerto Cortez, port that Americans are fleeing from an. h Honduras because of the revolu- ACTIVITY AT NAVY YARDS. ‘Work Rushed on the Cruiser Marble- | head at Mare Island. In other re- 1dentical concluded its re- | , .m.q \‘mnu ion of the VALLEJO, Feb. 3.—The fact that orders | 1 bili v w wers ived at Mare Isla . st Lanrue Xhe | 1y ternoon to work a force of : affirgative and nine in the ™MeN overtime on the crulser Marbiehead in order to get the ship in readiness for | sea as soon as possible has created some | etir here and given rise to various con- | jectures. The coast defense ship Wyoming, which ther motion to authorize the t vy in his discretion to B u.hmdnn( boats was lost by a te of eight to seven, BEEAN SENTENCED FOR is here, and the cruisers New York and FORGERY IN PHILIPPINES Boston, which are in the lower bay, could oceed to sea on a few hours' notice. Dishursing Officer for The cruisers Concord and Bennington and Board of mission to Settle All Dis- | | A | man Drew, wt { Drew has the a general staff was eliminated. Later the lependent measure, in its pro- ns wi section of Arm; after he ng reconsidered to permit the incorpo- | ration of an amendment b plac- | ing the chief of staff exc! under | ¢ the direction of the President. The biil { row goes to conference. | @ irivimimimimiimiieleleii i @ | flavor of a { his family X gunboat Petrel are at this yard and a Health Is Found Delinquent report has it that they are to be pre- in Funds. ! pared for service as rapidly as possible. WASHINGTON, Feb. 3—In closing up | The battleship Wisconsin is at the Brem- nts of the past ccor Philippine Gov- ernment for the fiscal year it was overed that the accounts of James B. disbursing officer for the Board for the Philppines, w in I3 fusion and upon demand of Aud- itor Lawshe he was arrested and tried on charges of forgery and duplication of puh- lic documents and sentenced to tweive vears imprisonment. Beehan, who is from Massachusetts, was appointed in 10 | ADVERTISEMENTS. {Dhat are Humors? They are vitiate@ or morbid fluids cours. ing the veins and affecting the tissues. They are commonly due to defective di- gestion, but are sometimes inherited. How do they manifest themselves? in many forms of cutaneous eruption, | salt rheum or eczema, pimples and boils, and in weakness, languor, general debility. | How are they expelled? By Hood’s Sarsaparilla Which also buflds up the system that has | suffered from them. It is the best medicine for all humors. erton yard and day and night shifts of mechanics are hurrying her repairg with all possible dispatch. Naval meh here expect to see a powerful American fleet on the west shore of the isthmus of Panama at an early date. SRS P SQUADRON WILL DRILL. Honduras Trouble Affords Oppor- tunity for Maneuvers. The warships New York, Boston, Mar- | blehead and Ranger of the Pacific squad- ron will leave this port for Amapaga, Honduras, under Glass on February 7 | te | commlnd of Admiral 7 or 8. Admiral Casey’s rm of two years as commander of the Pacific squadron exvired on the 28th of ‘Jnnunr\ and he was authorized to turn | over the command to Admiral Glass on the 10th of this month. Owing to the | fact that the scuadron has been ordered ‘ln Honduras it was decided, for con- ’\-’nion(P sake, that Admiral Casey yield the command to Admiral Glass immedi- ately, so that the latter may be prepared to leave San Francisco with the squadron at once on the receipt of detall orders t(rom the Navy Department. The Navy Department has been making | preparations for a naval drill of the Pa- | cific squadron d the vessels were gathered at this port for that purpose. Orders for a coast drill have been ex- pected daily. It is said that only one of the ships would be needed at Amapala, ASSEMBLYMAN PURPOSES MASKAN TH[MY f OUTRIVALING PARKHURST Introduces Bill Prohibiting Selling of Liquor With- in Two Blocks of a Public School. o o 28 1 | | i 1 { | | ] | | i | | | | 1 | i | { | | i i { | J + ! | | AUTHOR OF BILL NOW BEFORE ‘ LEGISLATURE TO BAR SALOONS | | FROM VICINITY OF SCHOOLS. | over by wily \[nngohan is the | xy LMOST invariably at each _ses- of the State Legislature conscientious Senator or is struck with sion some Assemblyman the d re to reform the morals of the te in general and of this wicked city in particular. This year the manifested itself ringent suppression of the liquor as introduced b 10 hails from of Parkhurst, Assemblyman local Police Comm! off the board, desire ha a disciple for his bill he declares war not only against ers backed clear saloons which have boxes and back rooms in which liquor is served, but against all stores within two blocks of a schoolhou where, “directly or in- | @irectly, any malt, spirituous or other alcoholic liquors™ are sold. The provi- blishing’ the “two-block” limit only to the city. In the country distance which must separate the . where liquor is sold from the schoolhouse is one mile. If the bill should be passed and become the saloon or pl | a law it will practicalls out all the saloons in this city. Public schoolhouses are scattered about the city so thorough- {1y that there ; spot that is more than two blc vay from one of them. Whole execution among loons would be caused by the Lincoln w0l by its location on Fifth 2 arket A CLEAN SWEEP. Every saloon or wholesale liquor {house on Market and Mission streets | from Seventh down to Third would be swept clear off the map at one blow. | Saloons on the first block of Turk, Eddy, Mason and Powell streets would also have to close their doors. In fact, there are y few oons in the city that more than two blocks from a schoolhous ple who enjoy the am” might travel all the n and still not have their for out by the CIliff n House Primary itown would be deprived of nd then the highbinders would go on the warpath. Right in the heart of that portion of the city ruied but as the present necessity affords a good opportunity for drill all four vessels will make t tri Admiral Casey and his aid, Lieutenant Commander Tappan, will be the only of- ficers to 1 fer their commands. They will be given a leave of absence for an indefinite period. Admiral Casey will visit in Santa Barbara and Lieu- tenant Commander Tappan will go to his | home in Arkansas. SR e REPUBLICS IN TURMOIL. Salvador and Nicaragua Aid Guate- malan Revolutionists. PANAMA, Feb. 3.—The situation in Sal- vador is growing worse. Troops are con- | stantly leaving the capital for the Guate- malan frontier. Nicaragua 1is actively helping President Regaiado of Salvador. The Nicaraguan cruiser Montombo last week landed at Acajutla, a seaport of Salvador on the Pacific Ocean, a number of rifles and 30,000 rounds of ammunition, which the President of Nicaragua, Gen- eral Zelaya, sent for the Guatemalan revolutionists. It seems that the move- ment is aimed against Guatemala and Costa Rica. Central American union will be the ostensible object of the war, which | is really due to the wish of the Presi- dents of Salvador, Nicaragua and Hon- duras to imitate Mexico's President. By Daylight. The Southern Paclfic Valley Special runs through the San Joaquin by daylight, both ways. San Francisco 8 a. m., reach Bakers- field 5:40 . leave Bakersfield 8 a. m., reach San Francisco 5:25 p. m. Ask for copy ot new Southern Pacific Valley Folder. . —————— Popular Vote for Senators. DENVER, Feb. 3.—A bill introduced in the Legislature to-day by Senator Rush provides that at the general election and preceding the time for election of a United States Senator each political party may place on the ballot the names of five or less candidates for the Senatorship and binds the members of the Leglislature, un- der penalty of expuision, to vote for the candidate of their respective parties re- ceiving the greatest mumber of the pop- ular vote. Ahe Chinese I’rHry School. The Police Commissioners mlght work overtime from now until the last trump is sounded and not devise a more effica- | clous way of-suppressing the liquor | traffic. As a temperance advocate, ’\s-‘ semblyman Drew certainly deserves the | palm. It the bill should pass what a | fight the Prohibitionists would make to | control the Board of Education. If they got centrol of the board they could play a game of checkers with the liquor deal- ers with the odds all on their side. If a | galoon was in a certain neighborhood | where they did not w it they could move a schoolhouse within two blocks of it and the saloon would have to go. | They might even invent a schoolhouse | on wheels and literally chase every sa- loon out of the city. ANOTHER EFFECT. But then the passage of the bill might | have another effect—an effect not quite | intended by Assemblyman Drew. A similar bill was introduced at a recent | session of the Legislature in the State | of Kentucky. This bill provided that no ! liquor should be sold within 500 yards of | any schoolhouse. When a well-known | “colona” of the Blue Grass State was asked his apinion of the bill he swelled up with indignation and made the fol-| lowing response; “What do I think of the bill? What do I think of the bill? ‘Why, I think it is the most destructive blow that was ever struck at education in the South. Why, sah, if that bill passes there won't be a schoolhouse left in any city in all Kentucky. They will have to be moved into the country, sah It ig to be hoped that the passage of the Drew bill will not have this effect on the schools in this city, After semblyman Drew introduced | his bill it wds referred to the Commit- tec on Public Morals. Assemblyman rber, chairman of the committee, is said to be in favor of it. In the mean- time liquor men in all parts of the State | arc watching the biu with keen interest. It is. however, not the only measure in which they are interestea. Prescott of San Bernardino introduced a bill yesterday which, while it may not be popular with many saloon-keepers, will | save many a houséwife the personal be- | longings of the family. It makes it a| misdemeanor for any dealer in intox- icating liquers to barter or sell such liquors in quantities‘ess than five gal- lons in exchange for anything except legal tender. Prescott says the bill is not an anti-saloon measure, but its pur- pose is to prevent any man who can- not control his appetite for drink and | who has not the means of gratifying his taste from going home and taking, say the family clock. or his wife's clothing and pledging them for drink. RIDTERS AU IN THE TOWN Mob Attacks Officials and a Judge Is Threatened. — Special Dispatch to The Call. SEATTLE, Feb. 3.—The little coal min- ing town of Issaquah is in the throes of a riot, which will repire the strong arm of the law to quell. Deputy Sheriff Cook arrived in Seattle late yesterday after- roon, bringing with him the startling in- telligence that Town Marshal J. H. Case and two of his deputies are lying in thelr fncmes in a critical condition, in conse- quence of assauits made upon them by an iufuriated mob. of miners, The jail has been broken into and its occupants liberated, while Police Judge W. H. Heaton is in fear of a coat of tar and feathers at the hands of infurlated men whose demands for the release of the Marshal's assailants on bonds he de- nied. Warrants have been issued for the ar- rest of the ringleaders in the riot, and this morning a force of Deputy Sheriffs will proceed to Issaquah to take them into custody. The trouble it is said had | its origin in a drunken brawl in the | Bellevue saloon and has already assumed proportions beyond the power of the town authorities to regulate. Warrants will be served upon Patrick Curtis, Ed Cope and John Cope charging them with assault with intent to do murder and other processes will issue for the appre- hension of the participants in the jail de- livery if their identify can be discovercl. Eaaa———————— Engine Jumps the Track. REDDING, Feb. 3.—An engine of the south-bound freight train jumped the track near Coles, Siskiyou County, -this morning, plowed into a ditch and rested on its side. The engineer and fireman received only a few slight bruises. | | | | while refusing to give the details line of procedure against | | been heard from since ye: DEGIDES 1T HOLDS ND JURISDICTION District Court of Ap-. peals on California Oil Case. Interior Department’s Ruling Will Be Permitted to Stand. WASHINGTON, Feb. 3.—The District i Court -of Appeals to-day announced an | | opinion in the se of the Riverside Oil Company- against Secretary of the Inte- rior Hitchcock, District Supreme Court, which refused to issue a writ of mandamus to compel the | | Secretary | lands. to issue patents on certain Southern California said to be | worth $20,000,000, and now controlled by the Kern Oil Company. The court says that it is apparent that the action against the Secretary of the Interior is in reality a continuation of a fight of rival claim- | ates that has juris- land ants for the land. The court s the Department of the Interior diction over matters pertaining to | grants and is authorized:to make inves- tigations neci ary to determine the right | | of warring claimants. The court declares that' the case falls clearly within the jurisdiction of the De- partment of the Interior, and announces that the District Supreme Court took the | proper position, when it refused to issue !'a writ to compel the Secretary of the In- terior and the Land Commission to issue patents to a company contrary to th interpretation of the laws. The court’ decision is based solely the qu upon tion of jurisdiction, and ‘the court says | that it does not feel callél upon to make | an investigation of the action of the In- terior Department. @ el LLOYD'S SHOOTING STILL A MYSTERY Reports Credit It to At- tempted Efforts at Blackmail. SAN BERNARDINO, Feb, 3.—The mys- tery surrounding the shootlng of C. R. Lloyd, the wealthy capitalist of Berkeley, has not been cleared up to the satisfac- tion of the public. There are many stories going the rounds here, however, claims of alleged blackmail, and extortion are made. The story that is attracting the most | attention is that a demand was made upon Lioyd through an attorney of this city, acting for the alleged conspirators, for $25,000. The attorney’'s rees, it is said, were to be $5000 in the event of success. 1t is not stated who the leader of the so- | was, but William Boxall | called conspirac: is acquitted of complicity in the matter. It is further reported that the threats to produce certain letters of Lloyd's and make use of them in a man- ner embarrassing to the writer. e decline to be quoted. It is said that no connection with the alleged blackmaii ing scheme, but that it was due to real or imaginary wrongs inflicted upon some attorney fer Lloyd, th case or define the alleged conspirators, an interview: “The charge tempt to bl said to-night in will be based upon an at- kmail. An attempt was | made to extort money from Mr. Lloyd and It is whol- Attorney the shooting was the outcome. Iy upon the advice of District Sprecher that Mr. Lloyd refu particulars, but we want_it understood that we are ready to help prosecute the ase and have all the evidence to show it upin its true light. The case will certain- Iy be prosecuted and vigorously, too.” It is stated to-night that upon the ad- vice of the District Attorney the officials have decided to arrest Fred Lloyd, son of the wounded man, and Horace Little as soon as they can be located. erday morning. TAKERS OF INFANT LIFE ARE HANGED IN LONDON English Scandal of Child Killers Ended by Death of Two ‘Women. LONDO! nie Walters at Holloway jail to-day recommended to mer on account their sex, but the Home Secretary was unable to grant the reprieve usually ac- ccrded. The women walked to the scaf- fold unaided and displayed remarkable nerve. No woman had previously been hanged in England since March, 1900. ."" were hanged The women were the court sustaining the | This case involves the title of oil | i lands in | eeforforiemirifeofrefrofroieiel @ | in which | conspiracy | | alleged | | demand for $25,000 was accompanied by Persons | claiming to know all the details of the | Boxall's attempt on his uncle's life has | es to go into | Neither has | ach and An- of MORE WARGHIPS - FOR THE NAYY House Committee Fa- | vors an Extensive Increase. Asks for Three Battleships and One First-Class | Craiser. 1 | ———— i Spectal Dispatch to The Call | CALL BUREAU, 146 G STREET, N. | W, WASHINGTON, Feb. 3.—Yielding to a popular demand for a pronounced in- crease in the navy's strength, the House Committee on Naval Affairs to-day com- pleted the annual naval appropriation bill, | which will add four fighting ships of the largest size to the navy and will provide | for a commensurate increase in the num- | | ber of officers and men. To-day's action | is a long step toward a coherent policy of naval increase, so much desired by the | public and so warranted by complications | i \ | \ which threaten the Monroe doctrine. The | bill provides for these new vessels: | | “Three first-class battleships, to carry | the heaviest armor and the most powerful ordnance, of not more than 16,000 tons dis- | | placement, of highest practical speed and | the er'u!és! radius of action, costing, ex- | | elusive of armor and armament, not to exceed $4,212,000 each. i One first-class cruiser of 16,000 tons dis- | placement, to cost, exclusive of armor and armament, not more than $4,659,000. Two steel training ships, each costing | | $370,000. One wooden brig at a cost of $50,000 for training purposes. The bill provides for doubling the num- | | ber of naval cadets by giving the Presi- | | dent ten appointments and each member of Congress one appointment every l"oi a | An appropriation of $60,000 is made for ; temporary quarters for additional cadets. | Provision is made for increasing the num- , ber of officers up to the rank of captain. | There will be-thirty additional lieutenant commanders, fifty lieutenants and as many lieutenants of the second class and ensigns as occasion warrants. An appropriation of $400,000 is made to stablish a post graduate school at An- napolis for emgineers for experimental work with bollers. The school is to be modeled after the school at Carlotten- berg, Germany. Three thousand addi- | tional seamen are authorized. The ma- | rine corps is given an increase of 300 men, with necessary officers, | Additional paymasters, surgeons constructors in proportion to the creases authorized are provided for. For gunnery practice $120000 is appro- priated—$108,000 more than last year. For construction of a hospital in Washington to serve as a training school for surgeons | $125,000 is appropriated. The amount au- \(hnrlzu! for the improvement of the Na- | val Academy is increased from $8,000,000 to $10,000,000. | | | | and | in- :.'!-l-l—n—rl'—rl'l—i-l-l-l—!—l'l—l-!—l—l-l-.‘ DOLE IS GAANTED DNORCE DECREE | Ex-Attorney General of | Hawaii EscapesMar- | ital Yoke. | | HONOLULU, Feb. 3.—Attorney General Dole has been granted a divorce from his the ground of extreme cruelty. Mrs. Dole made no defense, as she is on the steamer China, which sailed several days ago for San Francisco. | Dole testified that his wife had refused | to associate with him and only wanted his money. He said that he had been warned that his life was in danger. | | The domestic troubles of Dole and his wife have agitated Homolulu society for some time. They were married in San Francisco about two years ago and only a fow months later there were rumors | that their married life was not happy. Finally Mrs. Dole brought sui her and for maintenan this | suit was pending at the time the ex-At- | torney General brought suit for divorce. | Then_Mrs. Dole withdrew her suit and the dTvorce proceedings were hurried to a e on | finish. It is understood here th: Dole made a settlement in cash with Mrs. Dole. Dole has been prominent in island politics for some time. He is a relative of Governor Dole and was appointed At- torney General at the inauguration of the territorial government. Recently he re- signed his office and it has been an- nounced that he would soon leave for Washington to look after a number of Haw: fore the States, Supreme Court of the United ST. LOUIS, Feb. 3.—Charles Curley, the regro slayer of Rosle Higgins, a colored woman, was hanged In the jailyard to-day in the presence of several hundred persons. | Two Territories | Arizond and | Glasgow January jan law cases that will come up be- | WILL MERGE NEW MEXICO AND ARIZONA Compromx ePlan toEnd the Statehood Deadlock. to Com» Into the Union Under One Star. aetilans Senator Quay, Who Has Led the Fight for Admission, Agrees to the Proposed Arrange- ment. 4 SRR Special Dispatch to Tha Call CALL BUREAU, 406 G STREET, N. W., WASHINGTON, Feb. 3.—Two new | States instead of three. On this com- promise the S ate deadloc which has been kept up so long by ator Quay, bids fair to be broken. Oklahoma wii be one State; Arizona and New Mexico, together, will be the other. What amounts almost to a treaty peace was made to-day by Senator Quay and the Senators opposed the state- hood bill. Senator Quay’s threat to make the statehcod bill an amendment to the army appropriation bill had a great ten- dency to bring the warring factions te gether. The Democrats of the Senate, ac- cording to the assurances from some of their earnest statehood advocates, will not_filibuster against the programme. Although 3 al understanding ex- ists, some of the details are not yet set tled. Probably the new State made from New Mexico will be Arizona, as that is regarded as : euphonious name, whereas there been consf .°rflhh> objection to hd\l!lk. other State having as its first part “New The arrangements contemplate put lhv capital at Santa which would amed © ion to New Me: It is said lh.hl bill embodying t has ready been drawn and that it m ) provide for a division of the new State when it has a population of 30,000, of the present Territorfes becomir States, It is understood that some plan is | foot as to Oklahomay whereby Indian ritory will eventually be added t parleys about the compromise it | that the idea of adding In to the new State of Oklahoma in | been earnestly pressed. | OBJECT TO AMERICAN INSURANCE COMPANIES German Foreign Office Favors Them, but Ministry of Interior Op- poses Their Advent. BERLIN, Feb. 3.—The Foreign Offic ‘K favor of allowing American insfira wmpanieu to do business in Germany, bu he Ministry of the Interior raises di cu]ties. taking the ground that the mission of these companies cannot be act of grace, but depends upon the Ameri- cans complymg to the the emplre’s insurance laws. try of the Interfor is acting upon vice of the German insurance co: n and is ralsing all sorts of technical position to admitting Americ Secretary von Richthofen, it is stood, recognizes that the exclusic the American companies h: long b source of irritation and believes th: feelink toward the United States sugg the liberal treatment. This view is accepted by the Ministry of the Interior. UNENOWN SHIP WRECKED ON DURABORG'S CRAGS Only the Body of a Boy Tells the Tale of Those Aboard. LONDON. Feb. 3.—Advices from Ma head say that a large ship has wrecked off Duraborg reef, that only foremast of the vessel is standing and that her sails are tattered. The terrific gale which is prevailing prevents assist- ance being sent to the endangered craft From the wreckage washed ashore she thought to be the French bark Vanstable ©aptain Quimpur, which sailed from for San Franeisc The body of a boy has been found, but t! fate of the remainder of the crew is not known. the - New Minister to Colombia. WASHINGTON, Feb. | Hart, Minister to Colombia that office, and A. H the ent secretary of the legation at Bog has been appointed Minister to _suc him. Alban G. : iyder of V formerly United St Vic Porfirfo Diaz, Mexico, has bee secretary of legation to succe | The latter was appointed from | Hart has contemplated resignin | than a year, as he desire: | newspaper work in We Beaupre, pr DOAN’S KIDNEY PILLS. an F rancisco Workmen know tories—the lifting and straining, the heat, the draughts, with cure. _ of th cured emplo; Doan’s now and then sudden chill, are all bad for the kidneys. filters of the blood can’t stand such strains. result. Backache, lame back and urinary troubles. But there’s a Doan’s Kidney Pills San Francisco workmen know about it. the opportunity. Could you ask better proof? Willlam Ellis, stevedore, of 731 Fol: up with backache, but many Shthoagne b ‘would force me to leave’work, secretions, the time I went to a drugstore for a box. ment absolutely cured the last attack."” what bad, backs are. The hard work in the mills and fac- Little Backache is the Hundreds em have'bes. cured—Hundreds more are being every day. And they are telling about it—glad of “1 was never laid a time T thou'm lha p-ln acro: my lflln. drticularly if 1 was engaged in any vy Long before backache existed I had trouble with (hn ndnay which were of a dark and sometimes sandy color. I noticed Kidney Pills advertised and as my back was.lame and aching at A continuation of the treat- ‘ment. Doan’s Kidney Pills are for sale at all drug stores. 50c a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.

Other pages from this issue: