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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1903. 19 HE CURES N K i d D Perfort ADVERTISEMENTS. sia, could scarcely endure a sound. 1|in the Standard mine in January of last 1 new be The results of | year. He was 3 years old and a native e treatm ) my case have | of Sweden. He has resided in this coun- inly been wonderfu try three years. sick be sure to write Prof. Adkin —|STA TfiE SIGK-NobIe Statue llar Lame Walk and | ks P TELY McKINLEY MONUMENT UNVEILED WITH DUE CEREMONY lace Where the lartyred Presi= dent Stood to Address Great Throng. 1S il Astound and e ci ara County | s Modern Miracles |’ tervices Are ¥ rvices of My 20 Tee, cy Can Be Cured at Am Giving My Great to the World, That All y Be Well and Enjoy the T'he this monument put into e ing form & most effective lesson in virtue, A tiem that shall not only young day, but to and girls vet of San Jose uries who sees will not know ament | e to honor the name | n was lovin | citizen w | public trust. | | “The we are about It is a subst of ted to high and | mo! one O i i e 078 VICTIN, fILLS HIMSELF Special Dispatch to The Call. SPOKANE, Feb. 21.—Almost insane | with jealousy and rage, John P. Bjerkin, | lly blind, mortally wounded Mrs. | gh Smith of Blackbear by firing lv-'oi ts into her breast and then took his | own life by biowing his brains out with the third bullet. The tragedy occurred at 2 lodging-house in Wallace, Idaho, at 1 o'clock this afternoon. The woman, with | her husband at her bedside, lies at the point of death at Magee's Hospital. She is not expected to live until morning. Mrs. Smith went to Bjerkin's room ebout 11 o'clock and at the time the des- perate deed was enacted she was about to return to her home. Bjerkin walked to the door, locked it and turning around physical wreck, suffering|eatd: “Had you known what was in my n the chest and stomach, | mind you would not have come to see on and on the verge of | me” At that the blind man, apparently | crazed over the woman, grappled with her, forcing her back upon the bed. Dur- ing the struggle Bjerkin blindly under the bed covering \and at last Sl Prof pers Hu, i street, & es: “When 1 ap- | for treatment I was as I| about given up your treatment. My pains e, my nerves are strong and I new man. I wish'you success | brought & weapon from its hiding place. ble work .« < | The next instant the fatal shot was N. Purdy, Purdy’s, N. Y. |nreda. Bjerkin placed the gun close to her ve been suffering from.| ture and bladder trouble for 1 was given up by my | curabje. My urine had| n from me and the scalding My suffering v 1 took ad- ge of your offer, and to my great T I was relieved the second ures are certainly wonder- breast and the bullet entered mnear the heart, passing completely ‘through the body and plercing the lung. He moved the point of the revolver slightly and the eecond ball entered the right breast, glancing and coming out behind the arm, making only a skin wound. Bjerkin then released his bleeding vic- | tim, threw his hand to his head and the | muffied report was followed by & heavy fall on the floor. Bjerkin was dead at the feet of his mortally wounded victim. He shot himself in the right temple, the bul- let passing through his head. \ The husband hurried from the Standard mine, where he was working, and when he reached the bedside with tears in his eves he bent over and kissed his wife. Mrs. Smith is 30 years old and has a home at Blackbear, near here. Bjerkin became blinded by being injured by a faulty blast bearable. A. Lynch of 1522 Girard , write: “Two most prostrated general debility, from red sixteen years. I st only two or three | 1 suf dache and neu- sey Coeper Interests Change Hands. HONOLULU, Feb.” 14—The Kona-Kau Raiiroad Company has passed from the control of Jacob Coeper and his associates into the hands of President Wilson of the contracting firm of Wilson, Lyons & Co., of San Francisco. With the railroad con- cerns there went also all the afliated | interests, including the holdings of | Be sure to state iing symptoms of your disease, | o you have been sick. etc. Your | vill be treated with the strictest dence and receive immediate at- Address Prof. Thomas F. Ad- ce 282 J. Rochester, N. Y | | | Coeper in the Kona Sugar Company and | the lawsuits in which his name has been ( used. Of the stock of the Kona-Kau Railroad $2,720,000 passes into the name of the new owner. Of the original issue of 52,000,000, 3250,000 has been used in the pro- motion aud preliminary expenses. | tion of their dest — | i MONTU ERE CTED BY THE % LATE PRESIDENT WILLIAM McKINLEY, PEOPLE OF SAN JOSE, AND THE YOUNG WOMAN WHO UNVEILED IT AT THE CEREMONY YESTERDAY. IR purposes may accomplish in the Miss Grace Woodrow then had the honor of unvelling the statue s sh oulled the white ribbon, the large Amer- flag which draped the figure ro: revealed the statue. A burst of ap- use went up. The Signi: ca of the Monument™ was the subject of the remarks by Rev. ather R. E. Ke , president of Santa Clara Col! He paid a giowing tribute to Mck He said in part “This pile of granite and bronze will th no uncertain message; it will proclaim to the whole world for all time our sincere veneration for the great man and martyred President and- our con- iemnation of his enemies and abhorrence 3 hellish deeds. Tt/will be an eter- | protest against the principle, the s and the deeds of that spawn of the my of mankind; but when we are gone it will remain to voice our condemna- tive teaching and our rep ion of their doings. * * * This monument means yet more. Tt is not only an honor for the dead and protest of those who built it. It is a teacher for the young, a voice, a warn- ing for the future. * * * “It is a silent, powerful appeal to us all to strive to realize the dignity and re- sponsibility of an American citizen, the noblest and proudest earthly title—there | is but one greater—'I am a child of God.’ This one is greater than ‘I am an Amer- fcan citizen." He who can rightly appre- ciate and live up to what it demands will DR. PIERCE'S REMEDIES. - The diver dles without air to [{"breathe. The consumptive dies without lungs to breathe the air, or of lungs rendered incapable of breathing by disease. The blood as it flows in and out of ‘the lungs indicates the consumptive’s pro- freu. As the lungs grow weaker ess oxygen is inhaled and the | blood changes from scarlet to le. Oxy; is the life of the lood &s the blood is the life of the body. The effect of Dr. Pierce’s Gold- en Medical Discovery upon weak lungs is to strengthen them, to en- able the full oxygenation of the blood, arrest thvprofress of dis- ease, and heal the inflamed tis- was m: of my recovery. me to take Dr. Pierce's Golde’- Medicel Discov- ery, and after T had taken the contents of the second bott] be the undying foescf anarchy. And if We all live and act up to these noble senti- | ments, anarchists and such kindred spawn | of hell would melt away as the snow melts under the sun’'s rays. “Lead, Kindly Light.” was rendered by | the quartet of the University of the Pa- cific. = Dr. Ei McClish, president of the Uni- versity of the Pacific, followed in an ad- dress on “McKinley, the Man." | ot McKinley's struggie from his boyhood to the Presidency. “He administered with such wisdom and gentleness,” the speaker said, “and calm reliance on the aid of divine providence that his name will be forever associated in patrlotic devotion with the names of Washington and Lincoln. He was prob- ably the most popular and beloved ruler in the world on that September day when the cruel bullet of the assassin struck him. And when he passed into the un- seen holy, wearing the crown of martry- dom, his countrymen, without regard to religlous or political differences, spon- taneously arose with gold and silver to erect memorials of marble and granite and monumental bronze, whose mute elo- Guence might repeat to advancing genera- spiring story of his wondesful life.” ! The audience and quartet sang ‘“‘Amer- fea.” A benediction by Rev. H. M. Tenney, D.D., followed. The exercises closed with a band selectlon. ADVERTISEMENTS. DR. HOLSMAN The Master Spec alist. I “égsolfi_ly Cure Rupture, ey eases and every kind of Weakness peculiar to men. If you have any Disease in the above list you can come to me with the positive as- surance of a cure. To a man who 1s ailing this means everything; his future health, happiness ana possibly life depend on his being cured. I am here to do just that work—to do it well, and to effect a permanent cure. Any case that comes to me and takes my treat- ment can surely depend on being restored to a normal condition un- less the case is Incurable. Such cases I_do not accept for treat- ment. My phenomenal success in curing men's diseases has brought to me a bllslnesz that I am justly proud of and proven the cor- rectness and truthfulness of my motto that NOTHING SUCCEEDS LIKE H. NE T TREATMENT. If you cannot call write for question list and free d scribing my specialty. Corre- spondence confidential. CONSULTATION AND ADVICE FREE C. K. HOLSMAN, M. D., 720 MARKET STREET (Top Floor). Hours—9 to 8 daily; to 12 Sundays. | | good,” He spoke | tions, till time shall be no more, the in- | l Charles C. Roe, Assistant City Engineer, Louisville, Ky., writes: “Peruna has a large number of admirers in this part of Kentucky, but none more honest than myself tfor what it has cone ior me. “1 was troubled for some years with catarrh of the head and throat which was often a serious annoy- ance to me and must have teen to my friends. Nine bottles of Peruna cured me and built me up. It seemed to strengthen the narvous system, regulate digestion and crive away the headache, besides curing the catarrh. | *1 have never known of any med- icine which seemed to go through | the entire system and oo so much i - Z \\;( W\ N CHARLES C. ROE, ATARRH of the head, nose and throat are very frequent. These victims crowd the offices of catarrh | speclalists in vain. Mr. Chas. C. Roe once | belonged to this unhappy class. A course | | of Peruna entirely cured him. | There are two things that the whole med- ical profession agree about concerning ca- tarrh. The first is that calarrh is the most | prevalent and omnipresent disease fo which | the people in the United States are subjoct. | Al classes of people have it, Those who | stay indoors much and those who go outdoors | much. Working classes have it and seden- fary classes have it. | The doctor finds catarrh to be his con- | stant and ever-present foe. It compli- cates nearly every disease he is called | tpon to treat. | The gecond thing about catarrh on | which all doctors agree is that it is dif- Local remedies may giv | ficult to cure it. | rellef, but they fail to cure permanentiy. | Sprays or snuffs amount to little dr noth- | irg except to give temporary relief. | Catarrh is frequently located In internal | | organs, which cannct be reached by any | All this is known sort of local treatment. by every ph To devise s dy which would rea ) o | Accept no substitute for Peruna. ADVERTISEMENTS. source, to eradl- cate it perma- nently from the sys tem—this has been the lesire of the medical profession for a long time. Forty years ago Dr. Hart- man confronted this problem. He believed then that he had solved it. He still be- lieves that he has solved it. He cures thousands of people annually. During all these years Peruna has been the remedy | upon which he has relied. | It was at first a private prescription, afterward manufactured expre: tor | him in large quantities. This remed runa, is now to be found In every drug store and nearly every home in the land. It 18 the only reliable internal remedy | ever devised to cure any case of catarrh, however long the case may have been standing. | Mr. Camillus Senne, 257 West 129th street, New York, writes: | “I have fully recovered from my ca- tarrhal troubles. 1 suffered for three vears with catarrh of the head, nose and throat. I| SUFFERED | 525" 23" %inds of medi- | THREE cines without relief, but | at last 1 have been cured | YEARS. by the wonderful remedy | called Peruna. *“I read of Peruna in your almanac and wrote you for advice, which I followed. After faking one and one-half bottles of Peruna I am entirely cured and can rec- ommend Peruna to any one as the best and surest remedy for any catarrhal trou- bie Camillus Senne. Peruna cures catarrh wherever located Peruna cures catarrh in_whatever form. the only systemic remedy for catarrk yet devised ] Peruna | g ASSISTANT CITY ENGINEER OF LOUISVILLE, KY. SUFFERED FOR YEARS WITH CATARRH OF THE HEAD, SAVED BY PE-RU-NA ! Krow of No Better Catarrh Rem=dy than Pe-ru-na,” Says Congressman Ogden. Hon. Henry Hon. H. Louisiana, ington, D. Ogden, a letter wri Congressman Pert medicine to catarrh reme tc me by p remedy particul effective in the cure of catarrh nose who need a good | catarrk medicine I know of nothing bet- ter.”"—H. W. Ogden. Hon. Rudolph M. Patterson, a well known lawyer of C ago. 1ll.. writes the following letter to The Peruna Medicine Co., at Columb Ohio Gentlemen have been a sufferer from nasal catarrh for the“past five years at the earnest cigation of a frie tried Peruna and am g t fforded a complete eu easure 1 recommend it to others."zRu- dolph M. Patterson. Catarih Sixteen Years. iss Orelie Guimond, Guimond, N tes had catarrh of the head for sixteen e. is M B. w and could not ge too highly of Pe- runa as a medicine. T catarrh of the head and a After taking it bottles, d me. It also s as a special pr of throat ficulties. It keeps me in fine health, and 1 value its fine qualities very much. We all use Peruna in the family and thers are seven of us. I recommend it to my ghbors and they all take it."—Mathilda Koch. Many Havz Catarrh and Doa't ¥now . Catarrh s almost a national curse. Nearly everybody has had it more or less of people who have catarrh iplent stage don’t Enow it. Ca tarrh will produce so many different con- ditions that it is no wonder that it s not often recog 1 Catarrh will proc fect the eyesight will e deafness; will af- tonsils a h w s kidney = maladies that it is no wond ption, dyspep- di many_ other that doctors fail to recognize it If you do not derive prompt and sat! factory results m the use of Peruna te at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a | statement of your case, and he will be pleased to give you his valuable advics tis. ess Dr. Hartma an Sanitartum President of The bus, Ohlo. LIVELY FIGHT Special Dispatch to The Call. | | SAN DIEGO, Feb. 21.—It has been a| lively day at the County Surveyor's of- | fice. This noon Archis Crowell took all | of . L. Ward's belongings out of the of- | fice and placed them in the hall, locking both doors and placing C. E. Morey in | charge as a guard. Morey’'s strenuous method of guarding resulted in a com- plaint for assault being sworn agalnst him. ‘Whem~Ward learned how things, stood he went for hig attorney, Judge Sloane, and together they proceeded to the court- house. Morey was off his beat in the hall and with a rush Sloane and' Ward suc- | ceeded in getting Inside the office with | Morey. Morey attempted to put Sloane out and they went out together, Sloane’s hat being smashed in the mix-up. Sloane told Ward to shut the door. Ward did so, but while Sloane wasn’t looking Morey went in over the transom and attacked ‘Ward, throwing him to the floor and catching him by the throat. When re- leased Ward swore out a complaint for Morey’s arrest for assault. Crowell explains his action in putting a guard over the premises by stating that ‘Ward claimed the salary of'the office last month because he had possession. He says: “Now we will see whether he will have possession the next thirty days. I have hired this deputy to assist me and the only way Mr. Ward can now secure entrance is through the courts. Crowell was elected Surveyor last fall, but did not have a State license on the day of the election, and Ward, who has held the office for years, refused to give it up, claiming that the lack of a State 11~ cense disqualified Crowell. The case Is now In the court, with one decision In fa- vor of Ward. —_— ‘WILL BE PUNISHED FOR POISONING HUSBAND HONOLULU, Feb. 14.—Manslaughter in the first degree was the verdict against Mrs. Robert Andrews in the Fourth Cir- oult Court at Hilo for polsoning her hus- band, Captain Robert Andrews, last No- vember, After numerous domestic quar- reis she went after him with a revolver, but the weapon was taken from her. Then she put some strychnine in his coffee at breakfast. Captain Andrews noticed the peculiar taste and accused her of having poisoned him. He left the house, how- ever, to attend to business. Shortly after- ward he was taken ill with convulsions and died soon after reaching the hospital. Jealousy was alleged as the cause of the | erime Tt LOSES MILLION SIOUX CITY, Feb. 21.—With a million | dollars hanging in the balance the chil- | dren of John A. Boyer, a retired con-| tractor, are seeking feverishly the truth of the statement from San Francisco to- day that their father had married Miss Mary Hazard, his housekeeper. Mrs. Boyer dled ten years ago and when her | mother followed, her father, Levi Leight | of Harrisburg, Pa., made a will specily- ing that if Boyer did not remarry, his | whole fortune, rated worth a million, should revert to Boyer and his children. | Leight made this provision becauss his father did so when his own wife died many years ago. Two years after Mrs, Boyer's death Miss Mary Hazard came from Wisconsin to act as housekeeper for Boyer and his youngest children. Boyer and Miss Haz- ard left for the West three weeks ago, chaperoned by Mr. and Mrs. Frank Clark. Boyer refused to answer his son when asked if they were married. .~ The records of the County Clerks’ of- fices elther in San Francisco or in Ala- meda County fall to show that any mar- riage has taken place here. WASHINGTON, Feb, 21.—It is semi-offl- clally announced that Melville W, Miller of Tafayette, Ind., will be appointed Assistant Attorney General of the Interior Department, to succeed Willia Vandeventer, who has been names as Circuit Judge of the Eighth United States Circult, SHRINERS OWN FOR AN OFFIGE, IF HE MARRIES MOUNTAIN TOWN Special Dispatch to The Call. NEVADA CITY, Feb. 2L—The Shriners, a hundred and fifty strong, arrived at Nevada City this morning. They wers met at the depot by a large concourse of citizens and escorted to the hotels by a procession headed by the boys’ band. Henry Lane, the city's leading citizen, mounted on a diminutive mule gally at- tired, greeted the Shriners as they alight- ed from the train, presenting Illustrious | Potentate Murphy with an !mmense gild- ed key, a token from the people that the visitors now own the town and will be rylers for the next three days. The guests were taken to the mines surrounding the city this afternoon, and this evening the Initiating ceremonies were held in Armory Hall, twenty-five candidates golng over the sands. A ban- quet was held at the National Hotel. To- morrow the visitors will attend church, and the rest of the day will be given over 1o congratulating the new members. Mon- day evening a big drill will be given at Armory Hall by Islam Patrol, to which the public will be invited. The visitors will leave here Monday night at 11:30 o'clock for the journey home. ST, PAUL, Feb. 2L.—J. D, Farrell, former- 1y president of the Northern Pacific Steamship Company, has been selected by President Hill of the Great Northern to become assistant te the president, the appointment being effec- tive March 1. The St.andard Brand t.he World Over Gingerale and Sarsaparilla Cantrell & Cochrane Belfast,, Ireland For Sale By William Wolff & Co., Paciflc Coast Agents 216-218 Mission Street, All Dealers San Franecisco, Cal.