The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, July 26, 1903, Page 22

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, Z ,"!’ o Fstablished entire Write for VON MEY 841 st Unéer the Dirertion of MME. ANNA VON MEYERINCK, The largest and best equipped school on the Pacific Coaet, offering ail the advant- ages of East and European Conserva- tories for a thorough musical education under guidance of a carefuily selected sta’t of prominent ‘teachers, sent on application Open catalogue Schoo! of ERINLK 5o Francisco, Cal vear (free) ne: only expert ac- and yeporters as teachers: Gregg shorthand easieal, fastest atd most readable. Day anf evening. Send for catalogue to Col- lege. 1236 Market st FOLYTECHNIC Business.Coliege and Fchool of Engineer- ing, Oakland. Cal Targest squipped business, shorthand #nd_engineering west of Chicago. Perfect climate. expense s Write for free 106-page catalogue MILLS COLLEGE AND SEMINARY (FOR YOUNG LADIES). Confers Degrees and Grants Diplomas. Seminary course accredited 1o the universi- Ges and lesding Eastern colleges: rare oppor- tepitles offered in music, art and elocution. Wfl& year. Fall term opens Au‘\nf Write for cataiogue to MRS C. T. Pres.. Mills College P. O.. Cal Ritchcock Military Academy, SAN RAFAEL, CAL. Separate bullding for littie boys. will begin on Aug. 17, Xmas term IRVING INSTITUTE. OARDING A DAY SCHOOL FOR ng ladies and little girls, 2126 California oL, will recpen August 3 Accredited to the _ Universities EDWARD & C A M. P MISSING DEEDS TO MINES . : ADD TO BERKELEY MYSTERY | St. Mary’s Coliege, sy T ST. JOSEPH'S ACADEMY, PERALTA PARK. B Auge ONIAN, Presi Boarding and boys under 13 years of age. Studies AY. August 1008, Send fc 0. Genebran A Thorough, ern School. 506 po- COLLECE OF SAN JOSE, Cal. Fifty-second year. Comfers degrees grants @iplomas. College preparatory cceradited. Com- servatory course. nedlate and primary @, younger chiloren. Studies re- 1908 EARXER AND MISS HEUGHES' IRLE SCEOOL FOR G AT PALO ALTO. CALIFORNIA. F THOBUEXN SCHOOL. Prepares for the lniversities and Ce est ard E studen st. Unive Semester begins ANDERSON, A Bigh-grade Mily A ACADEMY, N, CAL. &chool for ry a iimited mumber of boys of §0od character. Next term nc August 12, LLIAM WALKER ANDERSON Princiral HAMLIN SCHOOL AND VAN NESS SEMINARY, 1860 Jackson st., 8 F. Boarding end day wchool for s. Accredited by the leading eolieges and umiversities. Special attention given 1o music. Reopens August 10, 1902, BARAH D. HAMLIN, Principa THE LYCEUM An sccredited preparstory school for the unl- versity, lew and medical colleges, fis well kpown for its careful and thorough work. Come and be with us: Wwe prepare you weil; refer- ences, President Jordan or any Stanford pro- fessor. Phelen bullding. L. H. GRAU, Ph. D., Princips THE JENNE MORROW LONG COL~ LEGE OF VOICE AND ACTION. Stage and tform positions guarsnteed [ languages; diplomes. Catalogue. 2152 Sutter ot. Phone West 1160. Keopens Sevtember 2 SCHOOL OF ILLUSTRATION, PARTINGTON'SE, 424 PINE ST. Oldest School in America New Term Bemins MONDAY. Aug. 3. DAY AND EVENING CLA " HOITT’S SCHOOL Sllustreted catalogue. Principal ness. IRA G. HOITT, Ph.D, Fell term opens August 11. BELMONT SCHOODL, FOR BOYS, BELMONT, CA for new puplls Au August 12 Catalogue and book of views oc_application W.T. REID. A. M. Harvard), Head Master NMiss West's Scheol for firls, 2014 VAN NESS AVENUE. Opens August 18 Home and day school credited by leading colleges. Tor catalogue ad. @ress MARY B. WEST. Principal. BOONE'S UNIVERSITY SCHOOL, BERKELEY, CAL. _Reopens Monday, August 3. SAINT MARGARET'S SCHOOL SAN MATEO, Accredited to Stanford, reopems Auxust 28tk in mew buildings on Monte Diablo ave. Modern improvements. For further information or clr. culsrs address (MIES) I L. TEBBETTS. TRUNKS AND VALISES AT MANUFACTURER'S PRICES J. MARTY, 22 TURK ST. Factory 526 Howard St. BARBERS, BA tbiacks, bats- 5 illlard ‘tables, brewers, bookbinders, candy- . canners, dyers, flour mills, founcries, laundi paper. bengers printers. inters, shoo factories. stablemen, tas-roofers. lanners. tailors, eic. BUCHANAN Brush Manufacturers, 609 Sacramento St. BRUSHES &= boo houses, 10;" tor former pu- | e story of the deep conspiracy | lurks in the background of | mysterious death of Captain | Thomas Howard in West Berke- on Saturdey, the iSth, investi- ng facts. The deed to | the ey gation edds sta the 1600 acres of rich mining property in Kior aptain Howard | tr L esenting all his fortune, | When last seen by his 3 Howard had the docu- ment on_his person; when found with.his head riddled with bull s not a scrap of H save a franked ticket to As published exclusively in The Call | rday morning, Captain Howard had | been the victim of a scheme by New York financiers to oust him from the pos- session of the rich concession of mineral linds on Indian River, and he feared that ce from the Klondike| to the safety of his for- every day's abi was a menace tune. | to his| Though he had the clean title Ith tight in his hand, Captain How- had fought successfully against his iders for a On Saturday, July in a lonely suburb across two biillet holes In his hea wad dropped out of sight with | its owner. | PRECIOUS DEED MISSING. | 3. B. Treanor, an insurance adjuster, with offices at 1 Montgomery street, who | close friend and business associate | How ¥s that on Satur- Ho d came to his office, | o the Gov-| in safe keeping. At that time | 1d leave for red to take was a f Captain 1 Howard that night and n DR. PIERCE'S REMEDIES. ACCIDENTAL ? The jury returned a verdict of acci- dental death on the man who fell from the window ledge on which he had fallen asleep. But the death was really due to | carelessness the accident | possible. | There are a | {"eat many | . 1ves sud- denly termi- mated as a | result of | carelessness, although the medical cer- tificate may read “heart | failure.” When a man takes i chanceswith | his stomach | ¥ and neglects | the warning symptoms of disease, he is | carelessly inviting calamity. | Dr. Piérce’s Golden Medical Discovery | cures diseases of the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition. It | enables the perfect digestion and assimi- | lation of food, which makes strength: | It stimulates the liver, cures biliousness, and removes bilious impurities from the blood. *1 had been troubled with a pain in lower 1t of my stomach for three 50 severe 1 Tought 12 would Kill me in fime ¢ writcs. Mr. Aaron Van Dam. of (Kensington ) Cl‘l,iiupm‘ el could hardly work; it I 2 big w ng on me an § et o ke el Tl ters for & time, but it did no good so I wrote to Dr. | R. V. Pierce for advice, which he gave me im- mediately. 1 followed his directions; used two e “ties of his medicine and was cured. I hed a liver which was troubling me instead of cramps (as 1 !hon‘);a so Dr. told me, 1 have pleasure in living now: have gained in weight 15 pounds since then.” Dr. Pieme‘r; l’ls--nd° it P;l::cm con- stis ey not the pi e e adway’'s R*“ i Purely vegetable, mild and” reliable. Causes | pertect digestion, comwplete absosption and | healthtul regularity. | . For the cure of all disorders of the Stomacn, | Liver. wis, Kidneys, Bladder. Female Ir- regularities, Sick Headache, Billousness, Con- stipation, Plles and all déran, f the Interns! Viscera. 25c a box. At druggists or by mail. RADWAY & CO.. New York | paia / < | ! &\'// S | . £ - < I WIDOW AND DAUGHTERS OF ‘ THE LATE CAPTAIN | THOMAS HOWARD. : o + the deed. A week later his body was found in West Berkeley. Thorough search ¢f.the.dead man's pa-. pers reveals no frace of the deed. There is in his follo'a rough typewrittes draft of the original Government paper. which Captain Howard was wont to use merely as reference, but. which bears no - legal authority. HOWARD'S MOVEMENTS. Captain Howard's former associate, J. B. Treanor, sées suspicious circumstances in the violent end of Captain Howard nd the disappearance of the deed. He That Captain Howard has been foully mur- dered there 1s no doubt. - The ciroumstantial evidence of the motive s very grave. The captain had told me that he had had a fight for his title and felt that he must get back to Alaska at the carliest moment. He was especially -careful of his deed from the Ot- tawa land office, and kept it locked in my sate until July 11, On that day he sald he was going to leave for Victoria that night, whence he was going to Alaska immediately.” He always carried the deed when he traveled and %o in ‘the present instance he had it in his pocket when I sald | 800¢-by to him. Over the week intervening between that night when Captain Howard took leave of his friend and July 15, when his. body was found in West Berkeley, there hangs a veil of mystery as deep as that cloud- ing the truth of his terrible taking off. He was not at his hotel in this city, nor at the home of Treanor in Fruitvale, where he had formerly spent three months. Not a clew to his movements ean be discovered. It has become reasonably certaln that the presence of Captain Howard in West Berkeley on the day of his death was prompted by a desire to see Charles But- ters, the mining expert and capitalist. William G. Henshaw, who had met Cap- tain Howard through a letter of intro- duction from a friend in Canada, had in- troduced him to the capitalist some time in June. In ‘an effort to interést both Charles Butters and his brother Willlam in his project of developing his rich mineral holdings in Alaska Captaln Howard had several visits to thelr respective homes in Berkeley and Oakland. On. the fatal 17th of July, when Captailn Howard was seen at noontime by «C. E. Carman in West Berkeley, he inquired the way to East Berkeley. It is probable that he was on his way to Charles Butters’ home at 2646 Telegraph avenue, and had ar- | rived in West Berkeley through a mistake in trains. But Captain Howard's presence in West Berkeley a week after he was supposed to have departed for the north is ren- dered inexpiicable by the statement of T. 8. Cunningham of 1219 Jackson street. He said yesterday: 1 was an old friend of Captaln Howard, and. having met him in the Klondike In 1902, Erew to be so close to him In business affairs that he told me most of his plans. On July 10 T met him on- Montgomery street and he told mie then that he was expecting to meet & prominent mining engineer who was to ar- rive from the Fast that night. He said that in company with this engineer he was going to leave for Alaska on the following plht, stopping off in Victorla. That was ‘the Tast ever saw of him. 5 The theory that Captain Howard was utterly lacking in fynds and hence prompted to take his own life is refuted by the statement of Treanor that he fur- nished his friend with money and also by the fact that among Captain How- ard's effects were found Wells-Fargo re- celpts showing that on April 1l he for- warded $60 to a Captain Edward Palmer and on July 4 and 6 deposited $150 to his own_ credit. Dr. Hubert N. Rowell of Berkeley, the surgeon who assisted in the autopsy onm the dead mnan, scouts the suicide theory. He sald last night: Either of the wounds from ‘the pistol balls L o e i i e e ] Some people have the medal craze bad- 1y, as is the case in Tivoli, N. Y. Colo- nel J. L. de Peyster of that place raised the stars and stripes over Richmond after it fell, and the unkind Government would not give him a medal of honor for it, as it was claimed that there was no per- gonal risk or danger in the aét. The man’s friends had a nice ‘medal made for him, however.—Springfield (Mass.) Repub- lcan 'Remarkable Sequel Is Discovered to Story of Captaih Thomas Howard’s Fight for a Fortune in Alaska and His Bloody End in the Midnight Hours in Berkeley in Howard's head would have been fatal. The fracture iteeif would have caused death ulti- mer on the cap.” No man could have deliber- ately turned the cylinder around after firing a ball” Into his brain. BOTH RELIANCE AND COLUMBIA DAMAGED | jast night and they were both at work | They have been | One Cup Yacht “Loses Her Gaff and the Other Her -Club Topsail. NEWPORT, R. I, July 25.—In to-day's race betwen.the cup yachts over a tri- angular gourse of ten miles on a side, .the Rellance beat the Constitution six ‘min- utes eighteen seconds in elapsed time over the first course. On: the run to the sec- ond mark thé wind increaséd ‘consider- ably and the Réllance gained on the other two. All of the boats gibed just before turning, as it was a close fetch to the finish. Just as the Columbja. hauled in her sheet the strain on the big cub topsail snapped off the topmast. The boat was headed in to the wind until thé wreckage could be cleared. The Reliance crossed the finish line at 2:39:10, having covered the thirty miles in 2 hours 58 minutes 20 seconds. The Rellance in gibing to make for her moorings after to-day's race carried away her gaff. It buckled up about ten feet from the jaws. B CHICAGO WATCHMAN KILLS AN ASSAILANT Attacked by Three Men, He Uses His Revolver With Fatal Effect. CHICAGO, July 2%.—Shattering his lan. tern upon the head of one of threc men who attacked him last night, A. C. Rog- ers, a watchman for the Forbes Teaming Company, then fatally shot another of his assailants. The wounded man died at the County Hospital. From papers found in his possession he is supposed to have been Charles J. Allan, a sailor. B The shooting followed an alleged at- tempt at burglary and a struggle, in which the watchman was badly beaten. ‘When the police arrived at the scene the watchman was lying almost unconsclous upon the body of the dying man. The companions of the wounded man. had fled. ——————— . Negro Held in Peonage. MONTGOMERY, Ala.,July 25.—The jury in the case of the United States against R. N. Franklin, charged with causing Pat HIll, a negro, to be held in a condition of peonage, to-day brought in a verdict of guilty. Judge Thomas G. James assessed the minimum fine of $1000, which was im- mediately paid. Judge James thanked the jury for their verdict. SEATTLE, Wash., July 25.—Dr. Theodore Paulmore of the Department of Agriculture at Washington, arrived in the city-to-day on a tour of the coast and Alaska to look into the enforcement of the game laws. i ; SUNDAY, JULY 26, 1903. BOYS SUFFER FAON POISON Sudden Iilness mates of a Reform . Instituticn AERR G Memboars of Two Companies at Whittier Becom:z Sick i Officers Are Also Among the Unfor- tunates and the Cause Is Found to Be Ptomaines in the Food. 1‘ | S i Specifal Dispatch to The Call. WHITTIER, July The State Reform | School here was converted into a hospital | yesterday and to-day | fact that more than 100 of the officers and | by reason of the | inmates were poisoned in a manner which | | i | i until to-night remained a mystery. The trouble began yesterday morning, when : e number of the older boys became suddenly ill, and the hospital of the school being too small to accommo- date all of them the dormitories were con- verted- into hospitals and all the physi- clans available were sent for. Inasmuch es the poisoning was confined to two com- panies of the inmates and that the others escaped it was at first supposed that some poison had been piaced in the food, and in order to prevent a repetition of it the sup- ply of food was condemned and a new supply ordered, including everything which is kept in the larder. To-day it was positively established that the illness of the boys and officials of | the school was due to ptomaine poison- ing. An official statement, which was is- sued to-night after a thorough investiga- tion had been made by the board of trus- tees of the school, fully explained the matter. It is as foliows: “‘Wednesday four. or. five boys began to | complain to Dr. Coffin, the resident phy- headache and paln in the Tuursday eight more com- siclan, of stomach. | plained in the same way and two or three i | | vomited. Friday, during the forenoon, about thirty cases developed, a large pro- portion of these also purging. Friday af- ternoon about thirty more were taken down. With most of them the tempera- ture reached abcut 102 degrees, but with six of the boys the temperature was 104 degrees and the pain in the stomach was vere and paroxysmal. Where the vomiting and purging were must severe the pain was lightest. Dr. Coffin or Dr. Lawton have . one or the other been on duty all the time since the trouble began practically all night. assisted by Dr. Hadley. About fifteen cases developed to-day (Saturday) and they are.of much mildeg nature. “This evening there were ninety-eme in the sick wards, but only three are at all | serious. Three of the officers of the school-have been affected the same way, | but not. sufficiently to lay them up. The physicians were very much puzzled, but became. convinced that it was some form of ptomaine poisoning. Late this evening the chemist’s_repart showed that the poi- son. was ptomaines from meat.” * At miadnight to-night only three of the cases continue serfous and the physiclans in attendance say they do not fear fatal results from any of them. The boys most serfously 11l are expected to be able to be.out within three days. * L e e o e e e e o ENORMOUS LOSSES. Rl Continued From Page 21, Column 7. ish and excited throughout as an after effect of the failures of two importa Exchange firms yesterday and the dreas that those fallures would have a sequel in the suspension of other embarrassed firms. Throughout the wild fluctuaticns in prices of speclalties, the standard stocks showed evidence of the same kind of absorption and comparative stability which characterized them in the market of most of the week before yesterday’s faflures had excited and upset the mar- ket. The day passed without announce- ment of additional failures. Despite the fact that no deliveries on contract are required on Saturday and that loans: made on Friday carry over until Monday, thus giving a breathing | spell for hard-pressed firms, the absence of announcements of failures was not en- tirely reassuring as to the adjustment of the difficulties. That such difficulties cx- ist is now pretty well understood. But the general knowledge of the existing difficulties and of their location seems to deprive the situation of th: disturbing power which the previous mystery pos- sessed and did not check the absorption referred to. Part of this buying is by shorts taking their profits and it is highly probable that part of it is also by banking interests which are concerned in sustaining values. But it is reported that there is also some evidence of investment demand both from domestic and foreign sources, in the be- liet that the abnormal speculative situa- tion here has resulted in forcing prices to a decline as artificlal in its way as was the inflatlon which preceded it and large- ly bas caused it. The general market sold off again on the bank statement, as the report of an actual increase in the loan of -Ir- | | i of the week's | account, in view { liquidation, s considered nothing which could | might have been enormous, aithough it is | recognized that the situation of the baniks | must be strengthened by the additlonal | collateral and the improvement in its character which probably has been ex- ilo(rd. The bank statement was neverthe- { less sufficient to make the closing in stocks weak and there was late pressu’e | also upon bonds. The convulsive contrac- tion in prices of many speciaities was to closing out collateral for loans of the failed firms and some of the stocks af- fected confirm the plaint of the promine operator connected with yesterday's pri cipal failure, that even investment stocks are unsalable in the present market. The fear has grown that the shrinkage n securities values and the difficulties uf the money market will themselves react | on the general situation and prompt the abandonment of enterprises which are re- lted upon to keep up the demand for con: modities. Such a tendency is suggested by the intimations. that various railroal | companies are modifying plans for better- | ments, owing to the difficulty in obtaining money Meantime Wall street simply waits for | the liquidation to exhaust itself, with no very definite opinion as to when that will be. The following table shows the day's more notable declines in prices: Chicago and Eastern Illinois.... Des Moines and Fort Dodge. . Distilling of America preferred. . | United States Rubber preferred.. . 23% L2l North American........... 2% Evansville and Terre Haute. 1043 American Coal....... 10 Pittsburg, Cincinnati, Chicago Loui; 4 Minneapolis -and St. Louls. St. Louls and San Francisco Rubber Goods preferred Rubber Goods. ........ American Linseed preferred.... | Buffalo, Rochester and Pittsburg | Westinghouse Electric. ... i and Bt | Baltimore and Ohio preferred.... Union Rallway Investment preferred American Linseed 2 | Cleveland, Columbus, CI Delaware and Hudson. Hocking Valley Towa Central WEEKLY FINANCIAL REVIEW. Increase of Loans in Spite of the Heavy Liquidation. NEW YORK, July 25.—The this-weel-says: - - One notable featurs of the otfiefal statement of the | was the increase of $884,200 In loans, whereas | a decrease was quits coufidently expected as | the result of the gemeral liguidation in the | stock market during the.week, and as the re- | mult also of the repayment of the Pennsyivanis | loan, which was probably completed last week The increase was most likely caused by new corporation berrowings, either from the banks or from foreign bankers. Another striking feature was the increase of $7.429,100 in the cash reserve; this amount was $962,100 in excess of the sum which was osti- mated, based upon the traceable movements of money during the week. the cash gain shown by the bank statement was greater by $1,2458,400 than that indicat by the estimates. The excess for the weel | therefore, makes a total of $2.100,500 greate. for the fortnight than the estimates. "The deposits were increased $7,168,500: this fs smaller by $1,144,600 than the amount called for by the gain in cash, plus the increas loans, and, therefore, the statement doe: balance. The reserve requirements were _Incressed through the augmented deposits by $1,792,123, which sum, deducted from the gain in cas | leaves §5.638,625, as the increase in surpius reserve: this item standing at §18,915.400 Computed upon the basis of deposits, less those of $37,257.100 of public funds, the surplus is $28,228, 675. The excess of loans over deposits, which in the previous week was $11,807.400, is now 8, 522,900, the smallest since March 7. This minimum excees of loans will doubtless be fa- vorably regarded by those who have mistaken- ly viewed the preponderance of loans and de- posits with some degree of apprehension. —_————————— Labor Candidate Elected. | LONDON, July 2%5.—The election yester- day in the Brenard Castle division of Durham County of a successor to Sir Jo- seph W. Pease, Liberal, resulted as fol- lows: A. Henderson (Labor) 3370, W. L. Financier | eran) 2500, plete surprise, for since 188 the division had returned a Liberal. It is another of a succession of labor victories in recent bi- elections, and the result is significant be- cause Mayor Vane is a very strong sup- porter of Colonlal Secretary Chamber- lain’s fiscal policy. It is asserted that the contest was more sion being strongly non-conformist. i i< Kooy i Aid for Flood Sufferers. BERLIN, July %.—The Prusian Minis- try has declded to devote $2,500.000 to the rellef of the sufferers from the Stlestan flood. Typhus fever appeared at Glogau after the subsidence of the flood, owing to grain rotting in the field: ADVERTISEMENTS. A Pra . ctical and Scientific Treatment - for the Liquor Habit Arrang'ern,ents may be made for the treatment. of patients at home, at the club, or at an hotel. On special réqueSt we will send a doctor to administer treatment to patients at a distance. "THREE-DAY LIQUOR CURE INSTITUTE Suite, 301 Starr King Buliding, 121 Geary St. San Francisoo. - LOS ANGELES INSTITUTE, 4455 South Spring st. Los Angeles. : Telephone, Private Exchange 216. Importations for six months ending June TL170 Being greater, by far, than the importa any previous six months. | The Exira Cry of the superb i898 Vintage no arriviny ‘s “conceded to be Champagne produced this decadz. recognized as being due in many cases | ork- Associated Banks last waslk + Vane (Unionist) 3323, Mr. Beaumont (Ub—; The ,result of the election was a com- | { influenced by the education act, the: divi- | *| charge, and wanting to do, and you ean CASES. | l | the choicest ADVERTISEMENTS. N WONAN'S BREAST A LUNP IS CANCER A lump or sore on the lip, face or any~ where six months is nearly always cancer. it never pains until almost past cure. I WILL GIVE $1,000 1t I Fail to CURE any CANCER or Tumor. NO KNIFE OR PAIN. Not & Dollar Need Be Pald Until Cured. The nearest painle: and infallible cure ever discovered. Best free book on cancers ever printed sent with tes- timonials of thousands cured whom you can see. A small lump in the breast will poison the glands in the armpit where cure is often impossible. In 30 years I have cured more can- cers than any other doctor living. Why experiment with the swindling X-Ray or home treatment until past cure? Investigate my absolute guarantes. 120-page book sent free. The Dr. Chamley Cancer Cura Co., “Strictly Reliable.” Offices: 23-25 Third St, SAN FRANCISCO. Please send to some one with Cancer A Prediction MADAM DEVAS THE PALMIST VERIFIED A few months ago MADAM DEVAS p dicted for a wi that she w P- erty in less than > month In less tham | three weeks her home and all its contents, 1 vilued at $8000.00," Wire Qestroyed by fire, with | mo-—insurance. Name and address on-applica- “Mathods. " Has ‘Fone A copy sent free. tion: “DEVARS" booklet, into another edition at hee Liebes o. m. by appointment only spectalty. In the previous week | | | Body 80 inches long, 7 inches deep; 1j3+inch axles, long distance; wheels 1%4-inch: A-grade springs, ofl tempered; nicely trimmed and fin- | ished. 'PRICE THIS 'Allison, Neff & Co., 222 MISSION STREET, San Francisco, Cal. CUTLERY BLADE WARRANTED AUTOMOBILE AND DRIVING | | | | | VERY WOMAN is interested and should know about the wonderfut MARVEL S58R~e The new Vaginal Syringe. Injection and. Sucin t—Safest—Most (Con- venient. ItCleanses » Instantly abl ARVEL €O.. | Room 208, Times Bdg., New York. WEAK MEN DR. HALL'S REINVIGORATOR stops all losses and unnatural dis- charges in 24 hours. You feel an improvement from the first dose. YOU We have so much confidence in our treatment that we offer Five Hundred reward for any case we annot cure. This secret remed cures wsi power, nightly emisslens, wasted sans, varicocele, gleet, strictures, kidneys ng memory, drains in the urine, gomorrhosa disezse of the Dristate glands and all othe terrible effects of self-abuse or excesses. which QELA ror | 102 on to cunsumption and death. Fos cures the worst cases in old or youns mortitying e . quickness of the sent mled, 52 per bottle, three bottles, $o. Guas | anteed to cure.any case. o Call or address orders WALL'S MEDICAL INSTITUTE. S35 Bréadway, OsRland, Cal Also for sale at 107334 Market st., S for. free book. Weekly Call,$1.00 per Yfir

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