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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27 DR. KILMER’S SWAMP-ROOT. D0 YOU GET UP WITH A LA \ : — - —-— { ME BACK? 1 Have You Rheumatism, Liver or Bladder Trouble? To Prove What SWAMP-ROOT, the Great Kidney, Liver . - | and Bladder Remedy, Will Do for YOU, All Our Readers | Petails to Committee Method of Col- May Have a Sample Bottle Sent Free by Mail. | s R be £ i g ediment the dizzir sleeplessness og rt- rheumatism, bloating, irritability, worn- out feeling, lack of ambition, loss of flesh, sallow complexion. | If your water when allowed to remain undisturbed in a glass or bottle for twenty-four hours, forms a sediment or setfling, or has a cloudy appearance, it evidence that your kidneys and blad- need immediate_attention. | taking S p-Root you afford natu- help to Nature, for Swamp-Root is ot perfect healer and gentle aid to eys that is known to medical ral -Root mer is the great discovery of the eminent kidney and blad- Hospitals use it with won- success in both slight and severe | Doct recommend it to their | in their own families, ognize in Swamp-Root t and most successful remedy. ave the slightest symptoms of | bladder if there ie story, send r. Kilmer *0 . Bingham- who will gladly send you free | immediately, without cost to ample bottle of Swamp-Root and of wonderful Swamp-Root testi- Be sure to say that you read | erous offer in the San Fran':l.!r'o‘ are already convinted that ot is what you need, 'you can re ar fi -cent and one- tles at drugstores every- where. Don’t make any mistake, but remember the n Swamp-Root, Dr. | Kiln Swan toot, and the address, on every bottle NAVY BEQUIRES b5 WARSHIPS arm cr £ ruising scouts » ecessary auxiliaries, 1 rs, supply and repair ships As to the rate of increase, the General Board recommends that Congr appropriations for the avy at the rate ¢ vear, with w vpes ) rtion until the gth of the tion has reached , cight battleships rs, forty-eight cr eight torpedo-boat ¢ lestroye Norfolk's population widewers and 19,612 includes widowe. ADVERTISEMENTS. Buh Chas. Keilus & Co. B x A8 84 Viiel High-Grade Clothiers| NO BRANCH FETORES. Shape, Hang and Chic Are Essential Points Clothes Must Possess The Latest Models For Spring and Summer| Contain These Effects| Ready to Try On Now *13Z o Kearny Street shape was disclosed to-day by Mayor Low, when he announced that J. P. Mor- | Bun had subscribed $25.000; William E. Thurlow Block 00T CHARGED - WITH POLYGHY WASHING Feb rows, chairm the 3 to the ON nator Bur- Committee and Elections, to-day pre- | Senate a protest signed by the Rev. J. L. Leilitch in the case of Sen- r-elect Reed Smoot of Utah, urging moot shall not be permitted to take his seat in the Senate. Rev. Mr., Lei- h is in charge of Methodist missions in | and resides in It Lake City He | Washington as the representative of Ministers’ Association of Salt Lake Mr eilitch declares that Smoot is gam nd now has a plural wife, | hough deems it inexpedient to give | her maiden name at this time. His| charge on this point is as follows | Reed Smoot 1s a polygamist sion_of Ttah into the and there a plural wife in m of the laws and rib and narriage the said abited with ural wife in the | occasion offer record of such plural | record made and kept only ret orities of the Church of Jesus & tter Day Saints, which secret e exclusive custody and control of | y and the quorum of the the said church_of which | i Reed Smoot is one_ and is bevond the | 1" or power of the protestants . Your | eetant re ally asks that the Eenate of | Cnited s its” committee, compel . ency and the quorum of the | e apostles and the said Reed Smoot to ce such secret record for the consideration ? the Senate Rev Mr Leilitch also asserts that President Joseph F. Smith, the president of the Mormon church, is living in open polygamy and has had a child born to him l by his plural wife as late as 1598.” And | » that “President Lorenzo Snow 1 1} 1d died in the practice of polygamy and polygamous cohabitation, and that his plural wife, Minnie Jensen Snow, bore him | child as late as the winter of 18% 2 ALT LAKE, b, 26.—*“The Ministerial Alliance is not back of the charges of po- Iygamy brought against Mr. Smoot by Dr. Leilitch,” said Rev. W. M. Paden of | the First Presbyterian Church to-day. | “The charges .are brought independently | by Dr. Leilitch. 1 was informed last | ght that such charges would be brought against Mr. Smoot. Although this accu- | sation does not form part of the formal | protest against Mr. Smoot brought by the Ministerial Alliance, yet that body wiil | stand back of Dr. Leflitch."” The polygamy charge against Senator- elect Smoot was received with the utmost | surprise in Salt Lake, among Mormons and gentiles allke. Hewitt Endowment Fund. NEW YORK, Feb. —That the ambi- | tion of many wealthy friends of Abrum‘ 8. Hewitt to honor his memory has taken Dodge, $25.000, and Andrew Carnegie, $30,- 00, to a fund of $500,000, to be known as the “Abram 8. Hewitt endowment of the Cooper Union.” Debs Will Lecture in Vallejo. VALL O, Feb, 26.—Eugene V. Debs, the labor leader, will deliver a lecture in | ples. | forencon i | over the pilots | had | many Vallejo March 20 under the auspices of the local Socialist party. PILOT COMMISSIONER ALEXANDER RESIGNS Continued From Page 1, Column 7. panies to be paid back to the ship owners might not have found its way into the hands of those for whom it was intended. Though it was but an infer- ence, it will be met by the tow- boat companies by flat and indis- putable proof that every “dollar and every cent paid by the pilots into the hands of the towboat companies to be paid back to the | ship owners was paid back to the ship owners and record of the fact kept in regular form. Contrary to the methods pur- fued by the Pilot Commission, the towboat companies of this Iport and the ship owners and shipping firms of San Francisco keep books upon business princi- These books show in detail the sums received from the pilots to be returned to the ship owners and contain full memoranda as to the day and date upon which these sums - were returned to those entitled to them. These books, in obedience to subpena, roduced before the Sen- ittee next Monday morn- will be | te con |ing, and, in addition, the officials | lof the towboat companie tand ready to give the Senate commit- tee any further facts that may be in their possession which will throw a tions that have made the present | scandal possible. BARBER TESTIFIES. lecting Fees. When the Senate merce and Navig Sacramento Captain Barber was called to testify as to the manner of conducting the business, the collection of fees commit In reply to Senator Emmons the witness sald that on the day when the committee was holding its investiga- tion in this city three pilot boats with crews of six men each were at sea and oge was lald up. When asked as to whether the remaining pilots were at e Committee on any light upon the condi- | Com- | tion convened yesterday | and other matters of interest to the | | also the captain confessed that he was | at sea on that point and in fact he did not know where they were. Why not was asked. “I don’t know,” replied the captai frankly. *“I have no means of knowing." He added that whatever authority he had came through the Pilot Commissioners The examination then proceeded as to the pilot charges and arrangements with the tugboats doing business outside the harbor of San Francisco. The witness explained that the i | | | \ | | charges for pilotage | were $ per foot of draught and 4 cents | per ton for all vessels more than 500 feet long, while for vessels less than 500 feet long the tonnage tax was dispensed with He chiefly relied upon the statements of the skip captains and the pilots for the draught and tonnage of the ships, but f he had doubted their word he could have gone to the Custom-house and asce tained the true state of the facts, but he never had any reason to doubt the word of any of his men yet, he said, with a glow of pride. With reference pilots the witness last four years sald that during the they each had averaged $461 15 per month. The captain explained, however, that during that period there had been a boom in the shipping business in California and that the receipts were dwindling down. The sun: mentioned was exclusive of the § per cent deducted for the Commissioners’ fees. to the earnings of the, Since the beginning of the Spanish- American war,” continued Captain Bar- ber, “there has been a boom in shipping and everybody connected with shipping has made money. Of course the bubble | has busted now—and why shouldn't the pilots have a little of that monev now” During the last four years 452 transports were handled, Then, when the Sandwicn annexed and became a part of the United States, we lost that business, too, they being now a coastwise port. the pilots averaged $405, and this month we won't make much over $275. There is 230,000 tons less shipping coming this year than there was last vear.” TELLS ABOUT REBATE. Explains Origin of Agreement to Return Money. The next subject to which the attention the witness w. called was the 50 per rebate pald to the ships that employed tugs “This rebate, cent continued the witness, “is paid to the owner of the ship. We hand the mouey to the tugboat people and they it to the ship. A good Englis =hips have an Interest the Red Stack line of tugs and some of the local ships. Fifty per cent of the gross tonnage is given to the tugboats. I don’t know how much they pay to the captains of the ships.” “Under what law do thority to pay this rebate Emmons Under no law at all.”” replied the wit- ness. Then he proceeded to explain the origin of the rebate as follows: ‘Fifteen vears ago the tugboats and the pilots were fighting each other. When the weather was fine and there was but little wind for the pilot-boats the tugboats used to go out and get the ships before we could get there, and so as to make things a little easy on everybody we made an arrangement with the merchants that we would knock off fighting, and ‘we then made this arrangement about the rebate.” The witness explained that the rebate was for outward pilotage only. d Emmons, 1 get the au- sked Senator it is not hush money,"” replied Cap- | tain Barber. “You made this arrangement because the tugboats were interfering with the business of the pilots.” “Yes, sir.” In response to the question that the law provided that the proceeds of these charges should go to the pilots the wit- ness replied that the pilots could keep all the money if they chose. Senator Shortridge asked: “You say you ——— The Call selected the most costly art supplements ever used free with a newspaper, viz., the Sarony art series (although the others now be- ing used were submitted) in the belief that the people wanted the best; this belief is justified in the sales of last Sunday’s Call, as the entire edition was sold out early. but trade has failen off. | Islands were | Last month | in | 1808, REVOLUTION DAUGHTERS HONOR MRS. FAIRBANKS Wife of the Senior Senator From Indiana Is Re- tained in the Position of President General of the .Order at the Election in Washington ASHINGTON, Feb. election of officers was the feature of to-day's session of the Daughters of the Ameri- can Revolution, and Mrs, Cornelia Cole Fairbanks of Indiana was re-elected president general. There was less excitement than usual over the re- sult, in view of the unequivocal declara- tion of Mrs. Donald MclLean of w York that she would not permit her name to be presented as a candidate for president general, leaving the field clear for Mrs. Fairbanks. The congress formally ac- cepted the invitation of President F velt to a reception at afternoon at the White House Mrs. Charles Masury of Massachusetts presented the name of Mrs. Fairbanks the wife of the senior Senator diana. from Ir The nomination was made unani- mous. The following were elected to of- fice: Vice president in charge of organ ization, Mrs. M. V, Tulloch of this city vice presidents—Mesdames F. E. Brooks of Colorado, Mary 8. Lockwood of Dis- trict of Columbia, Jennie E. Egan of Florida, M. T. Scott of Florida, Julian Richardson and Sallie M. Hard of Miss- issippi, R. H. Fif of Michigan, W. H Jamette of Minnesota, John R. Walker @ i would keep all the money if you could? That is a declaration that you are forced to give these private parties the money | which the Btate levies upon shipp! it | is to prevent competition between the State and private parties “Yes, sir.’ replied the witness. 'here will always be trouble in the pilot business until yvou have a compul- sory law the same as they have in New York and Boston. That is, that every ship must take a pilot. In New York and Boston the pilots receive fe added the captain When the witness was asked as to how much would be a fair compensation for pilots he replied that 3500 per month would be about right. He spoke of the risks that pilots are required to take of life, limb and property, and pointed out that seven pilots had been drowned in thirty four years, not to mention a large num- ber of wrecks and other accidents by which many pilot-boats, costing $20,000 | each, had been lost “Now tell us approximatel asked Senator Emmons, “how much you pay the Spreckels Assoclation—how much you paid them last month for towing boats | out.” “There was about $1500 last month about evenly divided between the two compa- nies,” replied Captain Barber. MURPHY RETAINS INTEREST. Receives Share Each Month of Pilot| € Boat Earnings. In answer to further questions by Em- mons the witness stated that Captain Murphy was receiving about $60 per month for his interest in the pilot-boats. He did not think that the earnings of the pilots had averaged more than $300 per month duwing the last fifteen years. At the afternoon session Captain Bar- ber was recalled and when asked why he did not pay the rebate to the captains in- stead of to the tughoat companies he re- lie P When we went into that arrangement it was fifteen years ago, and Balfour- Guthrie and other merchants said that they were tired of #feamships and tugs fighting them too, and if we would go out with thesships and return one-half of the pilotage to the steam tugs and the tugs returned it to the owners, they would see that the opposition of the steamers to us on the outside would be stopped, and we agreed to it. It is gratis with the tugboat people. Really they do not care to be bothered with the money, but we entered into that agreement, and we have no other place to place the money, only through them. They act as the owners' agent.” Senator Knowland said that the tug- boat people get paid for taking the ships in. Senator Shortridge said: ‘‘They get paid or they would not do it. No money would go into their hands if they wanted to do this towing business. In other words, they are\ not willing for these pilots to go out and bring these shivs in unless they decide on their going out. 1s not that the proposition?' Senator Knowland replied: “The propo- sition is this: We pay the tugboat for taking us in, and as an accommodation they accept part of the pilotage back and turn it over to the ship owner, but we pay for the towing just the same.” Senator Ward then inquired: “Ts not this the proposition: The tug belongs to the Spreckels people and brings in Spreck- els boats; the other belongs to the Bal- four people and they puh the Balfour boats.”" Mr. Emmons asked the witness to bring before the committee his books as port I e e ) % | | 4l | | | | MRS. C. FAIRBANKS, WHO WAS RE-ELECTED PRESI- DENT GENERAL. [ | e of Missouri, Walter H. Weed of Minne- sota nnie F. Norman of Nebraska, Mrs. John A. Murphy of Ohio, A. G. Foster of Oregon, J. R. Melon of Pennsylvania, J. J. Estey of Vermont, Mrs. Frank Wheat- on, California g $1500 had been paid to the two tugboats was sufficient. They could go before the Senate and make a report on that WANTS INFOESIATION. Emmons Demands That Facts of Re- bate Be Explained. Emmdns said: “I want to find out from the tugboats whether that is true or not. 1 do not believe that the tugboats will do that for nothing, nd I do not believe that they paid it back to the ships. 1 want to know exactly where that mone goes. 1do not like the remark that was made by the Se r from Alameda. for this reason: That as long as the investi- gation proceeded along the lines The Call suggested it was all very well, but now that we are getting own to some things that might hit John D. Spreckels it may end in a farce. Isay that as long as Iam member of the S8enate if money goes to John D. Spreckels or anybody else thg should go to the State, and they paid th money over to keep competition down, 1 want to know it. The State then can take the remedy in its own hands, when it knows the situation.” Senator Ward said that the explanation was very simple. “As I said before, the tugboats and the ships belong to exactly the same own Senator French asked whether there was anything in the lJaw that allows tu; boats to make forced collections from ves- sels in distress. Captain Barber answered that there was nothing in the law on the subject at all. Shortridge said he wanted a sworn statement of the money the tug- hoats received from the Pilot Association during the last fourteen years and also the books of the tugboat people. It was then ordered that subpenas issue for the two secretaries of the tugboat companies to appear with their books be- fore the committee on Monday morning at 10 o'cleck.® Governor Pardee was handed a copy of Pilot Commissioner Alexander's resigna- tion last night, and regarding it said: “I do not know what I will do until I shall have received the resignation. I will do as circumstances warrant.” Merriam Is Major General. WASHINCGTON, Feb. 26.—Confirmatlons by the Senale: Brigadier General Henry C. Merriam, U. 8. A, retired, to be major general; Matthew Kyle to be Surveyor General of Nevada. Postmasters: California—George = §. Hirsch, LongéBeach; E. R. Huggins, Fort Bragg: George D. Cunningham, River- side; Warren A. Woods, Suisun City. Nevada—J. C. Doughty, Tuscarora. ¢ i3 Bowen Signs a Protocol. WASHINGTON, Feb. 2.—Mr. Bowen to-night signed the protocol for the set tlement of the claims of Mexico against Venezuela. Continued From Page 1, Column 3. States, but it has played a peculiar and prom- | inent part in the pionser growth of our country | and has in consequence assumed a position of | immense jmportance throughout the vast re gion west of the Alleghenies, which has been added to our nation since the days when the Continental Congress first met For a century after the Declargtion of Inde pendence the greatest work of our people. With | the exception only of the work of seif- preserva | tion under Lincoln. was the work of the pio- neers as they took possession of tnis continent During thet century we pushed westward from the Alleghenies to the Pacific, southward to the guif and the Rio Grande, and also took possession of Alaska. The work of advancing our boundary, of pusiing the frontier across forest and desert and mountain chain, was the great typteal work of our nation; and the men who did it—the frontiersmen, the ploneers, th backwoodsmen, _plainsmen, mountain _men formed m class by themselves. It was an iron task, which nome but men of iron soul and iron body could do The men who carried it to & successful con clusion bad characters strong alike for good and for evil. Their rugged natures made them powers who served light or darkness with ferce intensity: and together with herole traits | they had those evil and dreadful tendencies which are but tco apt to be found in charac ters of heroic possibllities. Such men make the most efficient servants of the Lord if their abounding vitality and energy are directed Aright: and if meisdirected their influence _ is | equ: potent again: the cause of Christian ity true civ lon. In the hard and cruel life of the bore it fts grim StrugRls against the forbidding - ¢ wild nature | and wilder men, there was much to pull the | frontier 1 down. If left elf, with out moral ng and moral guidance, wi out an \nffuences that tend t | uplistin man and the subduing of the | brute within him, sad would have been his | and therefore our fate. From this fate we have | D ly rescued by the fact that together | est of the pioneers went the pionee | ers: and ail honer be given to the Meth K T the great propo o these plonee preachers whom they furnished |~ These preachcrs were of the stamp of old Pe men who suffered and overcama n commou w their flock d the wild and flerce | task that could have been accomplished by { men desirous to live in the soft places of the | earth and to walk easily on life's journes They had to possess the spirit of the martyrs but riyrs who could merely suffer rance wrong Ploneer preachers warred again evil witn the same fie that they and their fellows showed in the conquest of the rugged continent. They had in them the he roic spirit, the spirit that se be purchased by rns case fallure to do_duty that courts risk and a life of hard the goal to be reached is really we ing. DEEDS OF METHODISTS. Great is our debt to these men an patience we need show toward their times they seemed hard and narrow whose training and surroundings them from similar temptations been criticized, as all men, whether mission aries, soldlers explorere. frontier settl are criticized when they to do go forth | rough work that must inevitably be done b those who act as the first harbingers of civilization in It is easy for those who stay in comfort, who never have to see in the raw, or to strive against the naked forces which appear clothed, hi subdued in civilized life—it is ea: such to criticize the men who, In rough fashion and | amid_grim surroundings, make ready the way | for the higher Iife that is to come afterward but let us all remember that the untempted and the effortless should be cautious in passing | too heavy judgment upon their b who | may show hardness. who may & shortcomings, but Who. nevert great deeds by which mankind advan These pioneers of Methodism had the strong militant virtues which go to the accomplish ment of such great deeds. Now and th | batrayed the shorticomings natural | their type; but their shortcomings indeed when we place beaide them the magni tude of the work they achieved. the the world's at hum dreadful dden an heralds, places And now, friends, in celebrating the wonder ful growth' of Methodism, in rejoicing at the good it has done to the country and to man Kind, I need hardly ask a body like this to remember that the greatness of the fathers be | comes to the children a shameful thing if they | use it only as an excuse for inaction instead of as a spur to effort for noble aims. I speak to ¥ou not only as Methodists—I speak to you as American citizens. The pioneer days are over. We now all of us form parts of a great civilized nation, with a complex indus. \ trial and social life and Infinite possibilities ably from what they were in the days when the rough backwoods preachers ministered to the moral and spiritual needs of their rough backwoods congregations. But if we are to must be the same as the spirit in which they did theirs. These men drove forward, and fought their way upward. to success, because adjunct to their th tanding sepa and apart from their life. They had it with them week da. as well as § ys. The did not div e the = itual from the secula | AIM MUST BE HIGH. facts as they are The ploneer preachers of Methodism could not have held their own f a fort if they had not shown an int pra irit they had not sense needed by each of us in life, we mus have a lift toward lofty things or we shall b lost individually, and collectively as a natios Life is not easy, and least of all is it eas efthior the mar or the nation that aspire do great deeds. In the century opening the | ¥ of the infinitely far-reaching forces and tendencies which go to make up our socia system bids fair to be even fiercer im its actiy ity than in the ccntury which has just el If during this century the men of high and fine moral sense show themselves weakll it they possess only that cloistered virtue which™ shrinks ,shuddering from contact with the raw facts of actual life: if they dare not g0 down inte the hurly-burly 5¢ might contend for the mastery: If the stand aside from the pressure and conflict then as surely as the sun rises and sats all of our great material progress, all the multipli- cation of the physical agencies which tend for our comfort and enjoyment will go for naught and ‘our civilization will become a brutal Sham and mockerv. If we are to do as 1 he- lieve we shall do and will do, If we are to advance in broad humanity, in kindliness, in the spirit of brotherhood, exactly as we ad- vance in our conquest over the hidden forces of nature, it must be by developing strength in Virtoa and virtue in strensth. by breeding and | training men who shall be both good and strong, both gentle and vallant—men who orn wrongdoing and who at the same time have both the courage and the strength to strive mightily for the right Wesley said he did not intend to leave ail the good tunes to the service of the devil. He accomplished so much for mankind because he also refused o leave the stronger, manlier qualities to be availed of only in the interest | of evil. The church he founded has throughout {ts career Deen @ church for the poor as well s for the rich and has known no distinction of persons. It has been a church whose mem- bers, if true to the teachings of its founder, have sought for no greater privilege than to spend and be spent in the inter of the higher life, who have prided themselves, not S ehirKing rough duty. but on undertaking it aNhd carrying it to a successtul conclusion. I come here to-night to greet you and to | pay my tribute to your past because vou have | deserved well of mankind, because you have striven with strength and courage to bring hearer the day when peace and justice shail | Sbtain among the pecples of the earth. | At the conclusion of his address the President was heartily applauded. The hymn “See How Great a Flame As- pires” was then sung. During the sing- ing President Roosevelt retired from the | hall. where the men —_— | Yor clearness of articulation there is no | United States Senator who can success- | fully compete with Mr. Burton of Kan- Ssas. agent for the last fourteen years. Sen- ator French suggested that the secre- taries and the books of the two tug com- panies be subpenaed and brought before the committee. Senator Ward suggested ~j+ | that the statement of Captain Barber that coy L. Established (823, | WILSON WHISKEY. That’s All! COUNTAY'S PRESIDENT | LADDS AGHIEVEMENTS == | tellows | they | Restore smail ADVERTISEMENTS. THINK IT OVER. g You Cm See in Any Res- taurant or Cafe. A physician puts the query: Have you never noticed in any large restaurant at lunch or dinner time the large number o hearty, vigorous old men at the table men whose ages run from 60 to % years, many of them bald and all perhaps gr but none of them feeble or senile™ Perhaps the spectacle is so common &8 1o have escaped yvour cbservation or com« ment, but nevertheless it i3 an object les- son which means something. If you will notice what these hearty old are eating you will observe that are not munching bran crackers no gingerly picking their way through nienu card of new-fangled health foods: on the contrary, they seem to prefer juicy roast of beef, a properly turned loin of mutton, and even the deadly broiled lotster fs not altogether ignored. The point of all fhis is that a vigorous 1¢ age depends upon good digestion and enty of wholesome food, and not upon g and an endeavor to live upon bran rackers. Thers is a certain class of food cranks who seem believe t meat, coffee and many other good things are rank polsons. but these cadaverous, sickly looking in dividuals are a walking condemnation of their own theoy is that if the iral digestive any whole- digested; 1 and certain two of Stu- ch mea The matte stom shell at the stomach acid, dlastase Dyspepsia Tablets do net act and in fact are mot as they act almost eutirely the food eaten, digesting it theroughly, and thus give a much needed rest and giving an appetite for the next meal Of people who travel nine out of t Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets, knowingg them to be p tly safe to use at an time and al ving found out by ex- perience t hey are a safeguard against indigestion In any form. and eat iLg. as they have to, at all hours and & kinds of food. the traveling public for years have pinned their faith to Stuart's Tablets. All druggists sell them at 50 cents for sized packages, and any druggist from Maine to California, if his opinion € ] say that Stuart's Dys s the ma popular and for any stomach trou- and other disagreeable aches yield to Sloans Liniment The old reliable 2553 Bottle $t. Louis oy The Highest Priced but - the Best Quality. SOLD EVERYWHERE. VIM,VIGOR, VITALITY for MEN. MOR: BISHOP'S PILLS stipation Eyelids scts ar i ¢ 1 part vigor and poteCEBNTS oy ¢ ery tun tion. Don’t get de: ent, a cure s at hand devei the brain and nerve x: 6 $250 by mail. A v to cure or money refunded wi ulars free. Address BISHOP R Ellls st., San Francisco, Cal. GRANT DRUG CO. 3% and 40 Thi visir DR. JORDAN'S gazat () MUSEUK OF ANATOMYO 1081 MABZET CT. tet. G:247, 3. The Aracom.c. Worid. Weaknesses or any conteacted () W#omase peattively curad by the ide Speciaiist on the Const. Fae. 36 years. 08, m:-.l:l‘u 0F MEN / Comeul:ation s et \ Trowrmens persomity or by leher & Pasioes mderianen a1 Museum y e for Bows. Eamva ar ) e . PmILon ARRIAGE, wAlaD Frem (4 () vaiusbie book for me) LA JORDAN & C6.. 1051 Markot st 8. 7. () > kS oS n FAVORITE ! | Ammunition, Hunting and Sporting _Goods. Largest stoek. prices. Send B & BARBER CO.. 739 Market st and 5I1 Kearny st, §1 per_Year.