The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, August 22, 1903, Page 5

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, AUGUST 22, 1903. BRAVE STRUGGLE OF SALISBURY Death From His Iliness Is Considered In- evitable. Telegrams From All Over the World Received at Hatfield House. m.—Lord Aug. 228 a bulletin LANGLEY EXPOSES MRSHIP 7O VIEW [ Press Representatives Have First Sight of Devices. iF‘lying Machine Is Placed on Houseboat Roof for | Adjustment. SRR WIDEWATER, Va., Aug. 21 —Langley's big aerodrome was placed In position on he superstructure of the houseboat late this afternoon. The whoie airship force that | was crit- includ- v Lord Arthur Ce the Rev. Lord and the grave of Lord Salisbu 2 ing ground. th not in- ral will r request at Hatfield at correspondents representing the United Kingdom iatfield anxiously await- ws ed Press correspondent is e best source at that statement g from Brigt s chair. INTERURBAN RAILWAY FILES A TRUST DEED Jose-Los Gatos Road Secures Bond Isspe of Five Hundred Thousand Dollars. SE ug. 21 k s fnterurban E! zed Jeffries Willing to Meet Monroe. -y - % - Los Angeles asked city, cer? WE DO IT line of washing, starching, md generally laundering seems to have caught the y of our male patrons. No reason son and bachelo: n of “dcing up” their ble belongings. Your patronage s solicited. No saw edges. UNITED STATES LAUNDRY OrPFICE 10«' IAP.OI‘::T STREET, Ol!m #m:CURES McBURNEY'S BLADDER " KIDNEY # cire For Bright's disease, brick dus’ bed.westing, gravel, dropey, disbese atism. Send 25 cents in 2¢. stamps & cBurney, 418 8. ng st., Los Angeles Ldaystreatm’t. Prepaid §1.50. Druggist m received the first .. work- ago, but it er has been suf- for years and dying since Whitsun- s aggravated by He has|Wwas for the past —A trust deed of | mpion | we cannot please | worked on the body, arranging machinery and adjusting the wings, until sundown. The flylng machine was then returned to the interfor. It was the first time that it has been exposed to the press repre- sentatives. Her machinery and dimen- slons were plainly visible. Amidships is a mass of wheels, rods, boilers, pis- and varfous other mechanical de- It is exceedingly complicated. The sists of several long steel bars located. With bowsprit and will measure sixty feet. the motor is the navigator's is built for a weight of 130 t probably will carry Professor who was In it repeatedly this The gasoline motor, which pou generates something excess of twenty-seven horsepower. It ected by bars to propellers about n diameter and capable of re- times per minute. The mo- is sufficlent to preduce a ve- rty miles per hour. Placed t the ship are five empty con- lies designed as floats to keep the up should she strike the water. airship Fore and aft are two strong platforms on each side to support the wings. These are of delicate but rigid construction, twenty by thirty feet, affording a sus- During g area of 800 square feet. ok repeated photographs of the ma- made. The wings were placed compartments on the superstructure and repeatedly adjusted. With good conditions a test is expected turday. - PLEASURE SEEKERS MEET WITH SERIOUS ACCIDENT Collision Throws Their Surrey Down an Embankment and Four Persons Are Hurt. SAN RAFAEL, Aug. 2.—For the rth time within the past year a seri- ous accident has occurred on the Escalle grade. A surrey party, consisting of Misses Eva Whitehead and Mary Sharpe and Attorney John A. Saunders of San Fran- cisco and A, W. Jones of San Rafael, col- lided last night with a tally-ho party, consisting of ten people from Larkspur, with Frank Mulhern as whip. The two vehicles met on a narrow portion of the road directly opposite the Escalle station. | Saunders and his party were en route to |San Rafael, while Mulhern and his friends were returning home. The two ! rigs came together with violent force and the lighter one with all four occupants was precipitated down an embankment, irty feet below against a wire ding the North Shore Railroad fence guar tracks. Miss Whitehead and Saunders were taken out {n an unconscious condition and Jones was hurt internally. sustained severe bruises. Their vehicle completely dem hed and both horses were badly injured. Neighbers | rendered valuable assistance or all four | people would have undoubtedly been ‘kllll—d by the fractious horses. None of the Mulhern party were injured. Miss Sharpe lost some valuable jewelry, in- cluding a diamond ring and a gold watch, M. F. Cochrane and brother, Drs, Hen- neker and Stoll and J. Mulcahy and party are some of those who have gone over the Escalle grade, —————— Miss Sharpe d terminals of | AMATEUR MAN HUNTER WINDS UP IN PRISON Gets Drunk Before Starting Out on the Trail and Terrorizes Sac- ramento Residents. SACRAMENTO, Aug. 21.—Walter Cas- tle, better known as “‘Arizona Bill,” came | down from Nevada to-day for the pur- :| pose of running down the escaped Fol- som convicts. Bill had become Impatient over the fallure of the man hunters to make a catch and he deemed it time hat something was doing. He felt him- | self fully equal’to the ‘task of rounding up at least three of the convicts and he visited Sacramento for the purpose of equipping himself with the proper arma- ment. Bill purchased a $50 rifie, £ belt filled with cartridges and two revolvers, i started forth, happened, however, that ‘“Arizona had a wide acquaintance in local sporting circles and it was not long be- fore he was in the condition described as | “four-thirds” full. ~Bill looked and felt | warlike when he finally headed for the | American River bridge district. He | paused at intervals,to sight his rifle at | an imaginary convict behind a tree and | struck terror to the housewives along his | route. Doors were double barred, chil- | dren ran for shelter and word was sent to the police that an escape conviet, fully armed, had just entered a eorner saloon. patrol wagon with four officers hur- ried to the scene. “Arizona BIill” was taken aboard and he is now in the hobo cell, fighting convicts in his sleep. " Bill protested that if he had been let alone he would have caught his men before mid- night. e ,——— RICH FARMER FALLS FROM WHARF TO DEATH ‘While Attempting to Catch His Hat a South Dakotan Is Drowned. LONG BEACH, Aug. 21.—Warren Cool- | idge, said to be a wealthy farmer from | Redfern, 8. D., fell off the whart here | 1ate last night and was drowned. The | body has not been recovered. | " According to witnesses of the accident Coolidge’s hat blew off and in his at- tempt to recover it he lost his balance and fell into the sea. Those who saw him fall endeavored to notify the authori- ties, but owing to the lateness of the hour were unable to find any one. When the story of the accldent was related this morning it was discredited, but subse- quently was confirmed by several eye- witnesses. s Forest Fires Do Great Damage. GRASS VALLEY, Aug. 21.—Fierce for- est fires are raging not far from town and all afternoon and this evening a pall of smoke has been hanging over the city. One big stretch of country is blazing be- tween here and Rough and Ready and the flames are being driven by a strong southwesterly wind. - It is feared that vast damage will result to pasture, fences and outiying farm buildings. REVOLUTIONISTS MARCH WITH SWORD AND TORCH, | STRIKING TERROR Bulgaria Fears an Early Clash With Turkish Soldiers-- sia Is Expected to Withdraw Her Warships. OFIA, Aug. 2L.—All the dis- patches received here to-night in- dicate that the revolution in Mac- edonia In spreading. The situa- tion is-causing intense anxiety in official circles. The most alarming news relates to an outbreak covering a considerable area in the eastern part of the Adrianople vil- ayet, where the insurgents have captured the town of Vasiliko. They took the chief Turkish officials prisoners ~and brought them to the Bulgarian frontier, where they liberated them. The Turkish officlals, fearing to return to Vasiliko, sought refuge with the Bulgarian author- ities, who sent them to a hotel in Burga: where they are at liberty to remain or de- part. The insurgenis burned the villages around Vasiilko and attacked a Turkish military post at the monastery of Elijah, south of Tirnovo. The eastern part of the Adrianople vflayet is a mountainous region and the villages are few and scat- tered. The strength of the insurgents is unknown. It is thought that the out- break is not an organized movement, but is intended as a diversion to draw the Turkish troops from the other districts. PERIL OF BULGARIA. The peculiar danger of the latest owts break lies in its proximity to the Bulga- rian frontier, thus creating a situation long foreseen and dreaded by the Sofia Government. The Turks are now certain to send a considerable force to this terri- tory to suppress the outbreak, which will necessitate the strengthening of the Bul- garian troops along the frontier. With the two armies close to each other under the present strained relations the situa- tion becomes extremely desperate. The Bulgarian Government is taking every possible step to psevent a calamity, but officials express the greatest concern. In addition to the danger of a collision between the military forces there is the smaller one of popular exaltement ge ting beyond control and forcing the Gov- ernment to adopt a belligerent attitude. Meanwhile the community remains qulet, even the Macedonian part of the popula- tion showing no popular anxiety and en- thusiasm. The insurgents completely burned Vasil- iko and also tweive villages in the neigh- borhood. The Bulgarian officials arrest- ed the insurgents who brought the Turk- ish officials at Vasiliko to the Bulgarian frontier. Severe fighting is reported to be proceeding near Gehgele, with heavy losses on both sides. REVOLT IS SPREADING. The Sofia Dneviik declares that ail the Turkish vilayets in Macedonia will be in full revolt August 28 and that the revo- lution is fspreading from Salonica into the districts toward Seres. Several new bands have appeared in the district of Voden, southeast from Monastir. A gen- eral panic prevails in the vilayet of Us- kub, where the inhabitants are hiding their property. The Turkish and Chris- tian inhabitants at Kumanovoe have agreed to mutually support each other in the event of an attack either by insurgent bands or Tvrkish soldiers. At Kratovo half of the Turkish garrison has deserted, the men saying that they had enough to do at home. The Turkish authorities have mobilized their whole forces in Macedonia, numbering 18,000 men. A large body of Asiatic troops is ready to move. Twenty-four regiments are only awaiting their marching orders. The Macedonian revolutionary organi- zations are levying heavy assessments on the rich Macedonians resident in Bul- garia. They“have drawn up a complete list of names, with the amounts to be demanded against each. Russia’s move in sending warships to Turkish waters has caused surprise in diplomatic circles and disapproval and regret in Government quarters. The feel- ing expressed here is that it can only do barm in inclining the insurgents, who are ignorant of the complications of Bu- ropean politics, to the belief that Russia is supporting their cause ugainst the Turks. It is also conjectured that, Rus- sla having apparently acted without first consulting Austria, some rifts have oc- curred in the concert of the powers. ‘Whatever may be the explanation the feeling here is that Russia’'s movement Vezr-Anrarea,; CWJJWYDZOFI BN ROS5I2,5 r, LR T, 7 5 =3 MEN CONSPICUOUS IN RE- CENT COMPLICATIONS IN THE BALKAN AFFAIR. ”» ot can only have the result of giving a great Impetus to the revolutionary movement. RUSSIANS TO DEPART. Warships Are Likely to Sail in a Few Days. PARIS, Aug. 21.—Official advices say the Russian squadron off Iniada is likely to days, as the Turkish Government has given adequate assurances that it will meet all the Russlan demands. The with- drawal of the warships will be chiefly due to Turkey's assurances, but also to Russia’s desire to avold a step which might appear antagonistic to Eulgarfa. b i, Slrs WOMEN ARE MASSACRED. Turks Destroy Many Towns and Slaughter the Inhabitants. LONDON, Aug. 2L.—According to a Bel- grade dispatch to the Daily Mall, the Turkish troops, under the pretext of pur- suing revolutionary bands, have destroyed the villages of Armenska, Strobenia, Let- tsonani, Peckopanje, Nelkazi, Zelinich, Patole and Banitza, massacreing the women and children. The male inhabi- tants fled to the mountains and joined the insurgents. Besides demanding the execution of re- forms In Macedonia, Russia also demands the concession of the Black Sea cable, now held by the Eastern Telegraph Com- pany, a British concern. c BRITAIN MAKES DENIAL. Ships of War Will Not Be Sent to Turkey. LONDON, Aug. 21.—The Turkish Em- bassador called at the Foreign Office to day to make inquiries regarding the re port that it was the intention of the pow- ers to make a joint naval demonstration in Turkish waters and to enter a protest if anything of the kind was contemplated. The Foreign Office officials made it clear to him that Great Britain has taken no action of this character and it appears as if Italy will also refrain from carrying out her decision to dispatch warships to Turkey, as the Italian embassy says no report of their departure has yet been received. This is taken by the embassy to indicate that there have been develop- leave Turkish waters within the next few ments making the step inadvisable or un- necessary at the present moment, per- haps due to the Turkish acceptance of the Russian _demands, which was confirmed at the Turkish embassy. The negotiations respecting Macedonia are conducted on the Continent, Foreign Secretary Lansdowne and most of the Embassadors being away, from London. The Turkish Embassador leaves London to-morrow for the country, where he will remain for some days. % The diplomats point out that the scheme for a, settlement of the Macedonian ques- tion outlined by, the Independence Belge vesterday could not be approved by the powers, as it is evident Turkey would never submit to a peaceful occupation of the Bosphorus and the Dardanelles. A Turkish official said this could only en- gender fighting. SHOTS AND SLAUGHTER. Correspondent Tells of Recent Ap- palling Scenes at Krushevo. SALONICA, European Turkey, Aug. 21 A correspondent at Monastir send the fol- lowing dispatch undereyesterday’s date: “When the Bulgarian bands entered Krushevo they occupled the Greek quar- ter, hoisting their flag over a Greek house. The Turkish troops arrived August 12. All the Komitajis had already gone, ex- cepting about 400 local men. Although no shot was fired from the town, the Turks commenced a bombardment, which was continued throughout August 13. The shells destroyed 360 houses, 215 shops and all the fine, large Greek and Vlach (Wal- lachian) houses. The Greek church was destroyed. The Bulgarian quarter escaped. The Turks entered the town August 14, pillaged all the houses, assaulted many of the women, stripped many persons naked and killed about 300 local Bulgar- ians and also some sixty innocent Greeks and Vlachs. About 8000 people are home- less and starving. The material damage done amounts to several million francs. The Turks on August 19 massacred 200 Bulgarians, who surrendered at a village near Monastir. B Coney Island, At Ocean Beach two blocks below the Cliff House, Sunday, August 23. Mlle. Anetl, the daring young lady aeronaut. will make a grand balloon ascension and thrilling parachute leap. fine vaude- ville programme will be given on the blg open alr stage, and Blum’s celebrate band will render an afternoon concert of popular music, cnmmencmf at 1 o'clock sharp. Many new attractions. Grounds perfectly sheltered in the new twenty- foot fence. e - e————— Big Mining Deal Is Consummated. GRASS VALLEY, Aug. 21/—The biggesgq mining deal consummated here in recent years has just been made, whereby the Empire West is deeded the entire prop- erties of the Menlo and Omaha compa- nied. Both these mines include a num- of claims and a large tract of min- g::l land. ,They will be worked now on extensive plans. The deal means much for the future of the mining industry here, Reserved Seat Excursion. On Sunday, August 23, the California North- western Railway will Tun an excursion to Uklah. Each ticket sold insures a seat, for the company will not sell a single ticket above the number of seats provided. Time of de- parture from Tiburon ferry will be a m., and from Ukiah on the return 5 p. m. Train will not stop in transit. Pare for the round D O et 17, ai toket offices: oS0 Marier ateast (Chronicle butlding) and terry. —————————— tary appointed Governor Brady of Sitka l?flnlflvm.l L. Willlams of Juneau, Alaska, executive commissioners for the Alaska ex- hibit at the St. Louis Exposition. INTO THE MACEDONIAN HOMES %o RAPID GROWTH +* IN POPULATION Rate Is Estimated to Be Double That of . Burope. Parts of Country Are Fast Approaching Equality in Increase. SRSERE S A ‘WASHINGTON, Aug. 21.—The Cens\‘lsi Bureau has published as a bulletin a dis- | cussion on the increase of population in the United States, as shown by the cen- | sus of 1600. | The principal results of a study of these | figures are summarized as follows: The Increase in the population of con- | tiffental United States, that is, the United States exclusive of Alaska and the recent insular accessions, was 13,046,861, or 20.7 | per cent. Only one country, Argentina, | has shown by the most recent figures a | more rapid rate of growth. The present | rate of growth in continental United States is estimated as double the average rate of Europe. It nearly doubles that of Canada and exceeds by one-sixth that of Mexico and by one-tenth that of Austra- lia. | The rates of increase on the two sides of the Northern Atlantic differ much less than they did a generation ago. Among the five main divisions of continental Uniged States the highest rate of increase is found {n the Western division and the lowest in the North Central. Among the eleven minor divisions the highest rate of growth is found in the Rocky Mountain group of States, closely followed by the Western South Central; the lowest in the Northern South Atlantic, closely fol- lowed by the Western North Central. In the deeade 1590 to 1900, for the first time in our national history, the Southern States increased faster than the North- er East of the Mississippl River, how- ever, the Northern States as a group have grown in the past ten years some- what more rapidly than the Southern, but west of that river the Southern States have Increased almost two aud one-half times as rapidly as the Northern, and it is this fact which makes the growth of the South as a whole exceed that of the North. In the North Atlantic division the rate cf increase has risen steadily | since the Civil War, a notabls contrast to the trend in the country as a whole. The reglon west of the Mississippl River is still increasing faster than east of it, but the difference between the rates of growth in the two regions, 18% to 1500, was little more than one-fitth cf what it was from 1880 to 18%. The region west of the Mississippi increased more rapidly from 1890 to 1900 than from 188 to 1390, while that west of the Mississippl River increased In the later decade not much more than half as rapidly as in the earlier. ; The conclusion is drawn that the in- creased growth of the East and tfie de- creased growth of the West may be con- nected with a probable decline In the cur- rent of westward migration. The rates of increase in the North and South during the last twenty years were practically the same. But in the character of this growth | the two regions differ widely, there be- ing a relatively uniform growth over the whole South, equalized by a balance in the North between a lower rategof rural growth and a higher rate of urban growth. - Extensive but sparsely settled areas in the western parts of Kansas, Nebraska and South Dakota show a decline of pop- ulation in the last ten years, a fact which it is said may be connected with the in- crease of population in many agricultural countes of Iowa, Illinois and adjoining States, 1890 to 1900. The most noteworthy result of the en- tire discussion, it is said, is the cumula- tive evidence of the rapid approach to equality in the rates of increase of vari- ouis parts of the United States. This ap- | pears whether North be compared with South, East with West, or city with coun- try. e e it STOCKMAN IS FATALLY STABBED WITH HATPIN Angry Woman Thinks Small Boy's Prank Was His Deed and Strikes Back. | KALAMAZOO, Mich.,, Aug. 21.—E. B.| McArthur, a stockman from Saco, Mont., was stabbed in the stomach with a hat pin by an unknown woman on the street here to-day. He was passing along on ' the sidewalk in a large crowd when a small boy brushed a little feather duster in a woman's face. The woman, thinking it was McArthur, grabbed her hat pin | and jabbed it into his stomach. MeAr-| thur cannot Nve. The identity of the woman is unknown. | —e———— | KING PETER THREATENS | TO LEAVE THE THRONE| Servia’s Ruler Is Not Content With | the Conditions in the | Capital. LONDON, Aug. 22.—From a Russian official source at Belgrade it is asserted that King Peter twice within ten days| has threatened to abdicate, not only per- sonally but on behalf of the Karageorge- vitch dynasty, if the present distracting situation in the Servian capital continues. —_———————— Actor Incurs Kaiser's Wrath. BERLIN, Aug. 21.—Konrad von Filitz, an actor, was to-day sentenced to nine | months' imprisonment on a charge of lese majeste in libeling the German Em- peror in his, jokes at the theater. The alleged offense was committed at the; German Theater at The Hague at the| time when the Emperor was honoring | Field Marshal Lord Roberts in Berlin. | Sails for the Antarectic. DUNDEE, S8cotlapd, Aug. 21.—Th auxiliary relief ship Terra Nova, former- ly a Newfoundland steam whaler, sailed | to-day for the Antarctic regions to relieve | the British exploring vessel Discovery. | The Terra Nova has been fitted out by | the British Government, acting indepen- dently of the scientific societies which fathered the Discovery expedition. —_——— Labor Leader Convicted. NEW YORK, Aug.2l.—Samuel J. Parks, the labor leader, charged with extortion | in demanding and receiving money from | varjous employers under threat that he | would call strikes, was found guilty to- day. Recorder Goff remanded him until Monday. —————————— ' Troops for the Philippines. ‘WASHINGTON, Aug. 2l.—Instructions have been given for the beginning of the movement of troops to and from the Philippines, which will continue during the autumn and winter. The Fourteenth Cavalry and the Second Battallon of the Seventh Infantry will sail on the Logan, September & | tration, 1SIWISS OPPOSE GIAR'3 SELECTION Minister Lardy Cannot Arbitrate in Vene- zuela Case. Settlement of the Preferential Treatment Claim Delayed. [ — PARIS, Aug. 21.—The Federal Councit of Switzerland has advised Dr. Lardy, the Swiss Minister here and one of three ar- bitrators appointed by the Czar to de- cide the claim for preferentigl treatment made by the three allied powers (Ger- many, Great Britain and Italy) in the settlement with Venezuela, that it does not -desire him to act as arbitrator, as Switzerland Tias interests similar to those of the other powers, which have been committed to the German representative at The Hague court. Consequently Dr. Lardy has declined to serve as arbitrator. Wayne MacVeagh, senior counsel of the United States in the Venezuelan arbi- was not surprised at Switzer- land’s action in the case of Dr. Lardy, but he expressed regret lest it might put off the organization of the court so long that its assembling tember 1 would be impossible. However, all hope of a meeting of that date is not yet given up. ————— COMMISSIONERS MAIL THEIR MONETARY REPORT Results of the Conference Held in Europe Are Sent to Wash- ington. BERLIN, Aug. 21.—The members of the United States Monetary change Com- mission, after leaving St. Petersburg, went to Stockholm, where the Commis- sioners finished their report, which has been mailed to Was H. H. Hanna of Indianapolis we gland and Pro- fessor Jeremiah W. Jenks w York and Charles A. Conant of New York are here for a day or two, having unofficial conferences with bankers regarding the Chinese currency question. France has not given a definite re- ply to the propo she should make periodical purchases of silver and may agree to do so in creating the colonial . Which is now under considera- nch Goxernment. —_———— SOCIALISTS ARE DIVIDED OVER REICHSTAG OFFICE Fears That Acceptance of a Vice Presidency Will Limit Their Freedom. BERLIN, Aug. 21.—The Socialists are entitled to have appointed from their party one of the three vice presidents of the Reichstag, on account of their in- creased representation, and the other par- ties appear willing to concede this. The Socialist leaders, however, diffar as to whether they ought to accept the offer, because it would limit their com- plete freedom of obstruction and opposi- tion. Herr Bebel takes this view, bet Herr Bernstein favors accepting. The Socialists of Munich rejected the idea Wy a majority of eighteen yesterday, while Stuttgart voted for i —_———— MERCHANTS OF BRITAIN WANT BETTER LAWS Chambers of Commerce of the Em- pire Pass Resoltitions at Montreal. MONTREAL, Aug. 2L.—At to-day’s sion of the Chamber of Commerce of the empire resolutions were passed urging the British Government to order a full in- quiry into the unsatisfactory working of the trademark that all chambers should make recommendations for the assimilation of the various patent laws, and the reduction of expenses in connec- tion therewith; that the British Govern- ment be urged to hurry the codification of commercial laws and that the imperial Government be urged to remove the em- bargo on Canad cattle. AMERICAN EMBASSADOR VERY ILL IN MEXICO Powell Clayton Is Forced to Take to His Bed After Va- cation. MEXICO, Aug. 21.—Powell Clayton, United States Embassader, who has just returned from his vacation, is in very poor health and is now confined to his bed. — e Labor Discontent in Saxony. CRIMMITZCHAU, Saxony, Aug. 21— About 7500 textile workers of this district have struck for shorter hours of labor. The police broke up four meetings be- cause non-resident officials of the Textiie Workers' Union addressed them. A fifth mass meeting was allowed to continue. DR. PIERCE'S REMEDIES. Fodek The above will cheerfully be paid in lawful money of the United States, by the undersigned, ietors of Doctor Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, if they cannot show the original signature of the individual volunteering the testi- monial below, and also of every testimo- nial among the thousands which they are constantly publishing attesting the superior curative p: ties of their sev- eral medicines, and thus proving the uineness and reliability of all the multitude of testimonill;::l?fnteend by teful people, in their behalf. ‘r:Noan's DISPENSARY MEDICAL As- SOCIATION, Proprietors, Buffalo, N. Y. THE REASON.—There is no medi- ual tot Doctor Pierce’s Golden cine Medi Discovery, for purifying the blood. It carries off the poisons which contaminate the life fluid. It increases the activity of the blood-making glands and gives the body an xncnueg m}z of pure, body-building blood. It up the body with sound, healthy flesh instead of flabby fat, promotes the ap- petite, feeds the nerves, and so gives to weak nervous people vitality and vigor. i is tocertify that 1 have used Dr. Plerce's lden Medical wvery and think it's the - - dest medicine in the world” writes Mrs. B M Young, of Weir, West Va. °I took People’s Common Sense Medical Ad- viser. A book of 1008 pages. Send 31 cents in stamps for paper-covered, or, 31 for cloth - bound copy. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y.

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