Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
(3 THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1903. ADVERTISEMENTS. To sweeten, To refresh, To cleanse the ! There is only one Genuine Syrup of Figs; to get its bene- ficial effects Dispels colds and: headaches when bilious or con- stipated; For men, women and children; Acts best, on the kidneys and liver stomach and bowels; Always buy the genuine — Manufactured by the A Lofiisvifle, Ky. CAurorNIA Fic SYRUP San Francisco, Cal. ¢ HewYork,AY. The genuine Syrup of Figs is for sale by all firstclass druggists, The fulll name of the company — California Fig Syrup Co.—is always printed on the front of every package. Price Fifty Cents per bottle. S DECREES bENERAL STHIKE Buchanan Says There Wiil Be Nothing of the Sort. n League has HO MM That general workers In the da is to be called to-day by Frank ident of the Workers" t from s lined up mpathy local. phaticall g Workers S CHICAGO TYPOTHETAE YIELDS. | Bues for Peace and Effects Settle- | Press Feeders. Chicago Ty- to-night, t With e rs t printers. mar ADVERTISEMENTS. | Jo~y CHOOSE BETWEEN THEM— Inferior, or indifferent leundry work the first-class kind. The latter finds the former we prefer to know nothing. t's not only soap and water and starcn i bluing and muscle—it's the *know We claim, justly, to possess all erfals and qualifications for out Jaundry work of the first w " e UNITED STATES LAUNDRY | OrFICE 1004 MARKET STREET, Near Powell. Not Hungry =n you <hould be means disorderca srves, which, will lead to nervous prosiration Dr Miles Nervine s iteed to benefit you or money Book on nerves sent free. T~ MEDICAL CO., Eikbart, lad. No man will be poorer at istmas for buying Schil- Iing’s Best instead of the usual stuff. moneyback. exemplification under our sign—of | one railroad yard to anoiher. ointed to open negotiations with | n Union of Press Feeders for . and an agreement was in a few minutes whereby the in feeders will return to work to- orrow in all the Typothetae offices ex- cepting where girls are employed | to feed pres After this hi committee of seven memb pothetae was named to { complete settlem Members of the Ty- | “]u-lh“[.’l'— acknowledged themselves routed, | d laid the blame for the failure of the | out on the pressmen. | was ay Izr:e 3 | o bring about | CALLS OUT HIS FATHER'S MEN. | Manufacturer’s Son Says Union Has | First Claim Upon Him. Oct. 7.—Five hundred glove | oved in four factories went the because ployers nd to renew an agreement that ptember 21. It is said the em- their plants until the to return to work Among the manufacturers whose em- s were called out is Samuel R. Clex- | her of president of the | ' Union am R. Clex- | ton. “I called the men in my father's shop out union has first claim on my the latter declared | Non-Union Mem Employed. COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo., Oct The Telluride reduction mill at Colorado | City, which was forced to cease opera- ago by a strike of its union employes and a subsequent short sioned by the Cripple C resume * operations next with non-unfon men. This an- | was made this afternoon by | dent Groves. The mill is re- aily and has dy a large o e Declares War on Union Tailors. CHICAGO, Oct. 7.—The Merchant Tail- | ors’ Protective Association, composed of manufacturing taflors of the country, to- day declared war on ° the Journeymen Taflors’ Union of America, and will here- | after refuse with union tailors as | such. The union has a member- ship of about 20,00. for in- reased s and free workshops have been made by the tailors in several cities, Al | United Mine Workers Punished. | #NOXVILLE, Tepn., Oct. 7.—For vio- | lating an injunction restraining United | Mine Workers from trespassing on the property of the Tennessee Coal Company | at Priceville, Tenn., Chancelior Kyle, at | Clinton, Tenn., to-day fined and sentenced | the following officials: F. L. Rice, na- | tional organizer, who came from Iowa, | $40 and eighty days in Jjall; Robert | Vaughan, $350 and thirty days; J. H. Say- lor, $100 and twenty days; G. L. Rice, $50 and ten days; Andrews, $50 and ten days. The Gefendants appealed to the Su- preme Court and zave bond. | —_——— Nordica Hurled From Pullman Berth. CHICAGO, Oct. 7.—Mme. Nordica was thrown from her berth and badly shaken last night in the transfer of her car from The noted | singer was passing through the city en route from the West. While the speclal car was being switched the trainmen, not being aware that the car had an occu- pant, allowed it to crash into a bumper. The jolt sent the singer tumbling to the floor, but except for the shock she was not injured. —_—— Dynamite Damages Railroad. | SAULT STE. MARIE, Mich., Oct. | Several feet of the Algoma Railrond track, near the Consolidated Lake Su- | perior Company’s brick plant, were blown | {"'up with dynamite last night. The dyna- | | miters were evidently in too great a hurry | to do a complete Job. The track was re. | paired to-day with little trouble and | | trains are running as usual. In some ! quarters the attempt is charged to dis- | gruntled employes of the Consclidated Company. ———— Charles F. Kohl Weds Miss Godey. | WASHINGTON, Oct. Elizzebeth Gode; erine Smith Godey of Germantown, was | married to-day at noon to Charles Fred- erick Kohl of San Francisco. The cere- mony was performed by Rev. Dr. Staf- ford, rector of St. Patrick’s Church, .at “Rotheay,” ‘the country home of the family, in the presence of 100 guests. it N it MANILA, Oct. 7.—The Supreme Court, in confirming the conviction of a number of la- drones sentenced to imprisonment for life, gives as its opinion that the late San Miguel band of brigands were not insurrectos. ! |lyn and E | we | the | to-day agninst the Geary-street bond FUSION TICKET 15 REMODELED Grout and Fornes Nom- inations Are Re- scinded. NEW YORK, Oct. 7.—All uncertainty regarding the action of the Citizens' Union and Republican organizations on the question of ousting Messrs. Grout and Fornes from the fusion ticket was re-! moved to-night, when both conventions reconvened and voted unanimously to re- scind the nominations for Comptroller and Aldermanic President made at the original convention and to nominate in- stead Frederick W. Heinrichs of Brook- J. McGuire of Manhattan. At the Citizens’ Union convention in Cooper Union, presided over by Francis C. Hunt- ington, little interest was shown in the yminations. At the close of the conven- on the delegates from the Bronx met named Coroner Joseph 1. Berry, who been nominated by the recom- s borough president. ican convention in Carnegie | was presided over by former Lieu- tenant Governor Woodruff. The nomina- tions of Messrs, Heinrichs and McGuire accepted unanimously. Helnrichs a candidate for Lieutenant Governor been ked to take the nomination for President of n borough. While Roosevelt has an active politician, he has been ' the President, an ardent Tammany man, and a few 0 was a sachem In the Society of Tam- ny. | The ch condition of the Democratic | organization in Brooklyn was made evi-| dent to-night, when Martin W. Lyttleton, Democratic candidate for borough president, made his first campaign speech | at the Seymour Club, Lyttleton was in- troduced just after resolutions indorsinz | all the candidates on the city ticket were read and unanimously carried amid cheers. He immediately launched into a speech condemning the course of Leader Murphy and the delegates from Tam- many Hall at the convention, and made it plain that the Brooklyn leaders would not support either Grout or Fornes. ————————— | You can help to save the city $700,000 and an eternal source of loss by voting proposition. ————————— OF INTEREST TO PEOFPLE OF THE PACIFIC COAST Several Changes Made in Postal Ser- | vice and Army and Navy Orders Issued. WASHINGTON, Oct. 7.—Postoffices es- tablished: California — Port Kenyon, Humboldt County, re-established, Herma | butlding stock; IRGINIZERS SOON QT THE TRUST Revelation as to the Shipyard Combine’s Formation. DR aidly Morgan and Schwab First 10 Dispose of Their Stock. SRR R TP NEW YORK, Oct. 7.—One of the most Interesting revelations in connection with the formation of the ili-fated United States Shipbullding Company was made by D. Leroy Dresser in legal proceedings to-day. He said that after a pool of 209,- 000 preferred and 20,000 common stock had been placed in the hands of Harris, Gates & Co. It was agreed that none of this stock should be marketed until 25,000 preferred and 25,000 common, owned by J. P. Morgan & Co. and 75,000 of each kind owned by C. M. Schwab had first been sold. Dresser also told of his original agree- ment as president of the Trust Company of the Republic to obtain the underwrit- Ing of $3,000,000 of United States Ship- how this was increased to $4.750,000 by the failure of the French subscribers to pay up; how Schwab came to offer the Bethlehem works to the ship- buliding company, and how J. P. Morgan & Co. then came into the transaction. Dresser, who took the stand at the opening of the hearing, testified that he was president of the Trust Company of the Republic from its organization, March 81, 1902, until March 4, 1%3. He told of the visit to him in April, 1902, of John J. McCook, who told him he came from John W. Young and the Mercantile Trust Company and asked The Trust Company of the Republic to underwrite $3,000,000 of the stock of the United States Shipbufld- ing Company, showing Dresser the un- derwriting agreement, which said that $3,000,000 had been taken in London and $3,000,00 in France. The trust company authorized him to get the underwriting, which he did. Later he increased the un- derwriting to $4,70,000, at the request of the promoters, because they said London > had failed to take the $3,000,000 it promised | to take, NO WRITTEN STATEMENT. Dresser said he had no written state- | ment as to the value of the companies in the corporation when he undertook the underwriting, but Lewls Nixon and John W. Young had made oral representations. The Mercantile Trust Company, he was told by Colonel McCook, secured the rest of the underwriting, principally France. The Trust Company of the Re- public, Dresser sald, had framed the prospectus of June, 1%02, offering the bonds to the public, the trust company taking the information contained in it from the firm of Alexander & Green, counsel, and Rigdell & Common, account- ants, without investigating any state- ments made by them. Dresser 1dentified a copy of the pros- pectus and it was admitted in evidence. He said all the underwriting secured by the Trust Company of the Republic was obtained for the Mercantile Trust Com- any. The response to the advertisement for subscriptions was poor, he sald, not more than $600,000 of the bonds being ap- plied for in America. | on the Gold Democratic ticket in 189; for President of the boroug.. of Brooklyn on | the Low ticket in 18¢7, and for State At- torney General on t Citizen: Union tick McGuire 1s an assistant | corporation counsel. Not much credence is given to the ru- mor that Robert V. Roosevelt, uncle of The purchase of the Bethlehem Steel Works for the shipbuilding company was | then discussed, Dresser stating that the overtures for the sale of the steel com- pany had been made by Charles M. chwab, who sald he owned nearly all the stock of the Bethlehem Steel Com- pany and that, because of its armor mak- ing capacity, he believed the company would do better with the shipbuilding company than with the United States Steel Corporation. Schwab, according to Dresser, said he wanted $9,000,00 cash for this stock, and submitted reports which showed that it cost more than $7,000,000 and was earning $1,450,000 a year, “We to!d him we could not trade on any such basis,” sald Dresser, “because we had no cash, and he sald he would take $10,000000 in bonds at 9 for the $9,000,000.” This was agreed to, the arrangement also providing that he receive with the bonds a stock bonus of 39,000,000 of the common and preferred stock of the ship- building company, Schwab stating that $2.000,000 of the stock to go to J. P. Morgan & Co. | When the contract was presented for signature it was fo'.d to call for the purchase by Dresser and Nixon person- ally of 99,80 shares of the Bethlehem Company’s stock from J. P. Morgan & Neuhaus, postmaster; Washington—Bo- nita, Douglas County, Bernam G. Hines, postmaster. Navy orders—Surgeon E. J. Grow or- dered from duty at the naval hospital, Mare Island, to the Mohican; Assistant Surgeon C. N. Fiske detached from the Mohican and ordered home to awalt or- ders; Acting Surgeon G. T. Miller ordered from the Mare Island navy-yard to the | naval hospital, Mare Island. Army order—Contract Surgeon William H. Lukey ordered to duty as surgeon of the transport Dix. ————————— Negro Kills Member of Mob. HENDERSON, Texas, Oct. 7.—Late last night a party of young white men went to the home of Bob*Willis, a negro, for the purpose of flogging him for some alleged offense, .ot clearly stated. The negro warned them not to approach, but they continued advancing and tne neggo fired, killing vaoarles Brown, a young man re- cently from Georgia, and wounding a young man named Gossett. The negro iIs in the hands of the Sheriff. ———— NASHVILLE, Tenn., Jury of Moore County dictment ageinst twenty-two members mob charged with Iynching the negro, Allen Small, on the night of September 24 Co. for $7,246,781 cash, $2.500.000 in common stock of the United States Shipbullding Company and an equal amount of the pre- ferred. Dresser said he objagted to ob- ligating himself versonally, but Schwab explained that the deal would be carried | out that way and that payment he would provide the cash to make the payment. Then Dresser and Nixon were to hand the cash to Morgan & Co., who would hand over the Bethle- hem stock mentioned in the contrect. The deal was consummated on August 11, 1%2, Schwab giving his personal check, which was indorsed over to J. P. Morgan & Co. For the stock of the Bethlehem Company, Dresser said, there was really given $10,000,000 in bonds, $9,000,000 in com- mon stock and $9.000000 in preferred. There was some talk of pooling the stock of the shipbuilding company, he said, Schwab Insisting that all stock be held until his and Mr. Morgan's had been put on the market, A paragraph was read from the agree- ment referring to the authority to sell 15,000 shares of the common and a like amount of the preferred stock, and Dres- ser said he understood 250,000 shares of the common and 200000 shares of the pre- ferred stock of the shipbuilding company were pooled with Harris, Gates & Co. HOW SCHWAB GOT CONTROL. After recess, Dresser said that Schwab had told him he believed the Ship Build- ing Company had a great future and that he would be willing to put $2,000,000 more cash into the business, If necessary. When the French underwriting money did not materialize, Dresser appealed to Pam, .ccunsel for Schwab, mentioning Schwab's promise and stating that unless $2,500,0000 was forthcoming to make good the French underwriting, the Bethlehem Company could not get through. Pam suggested they call on Perkins of Morgan & Co., who agreed to deposit the necessary on the day for .amount in varlous Institutions, though not as a loan to the promoters. They thus obtained $2,100,000. They pledged the | security of the French underwriters and | Lewis Nixon and he gave the notes. “Dresser sald only $27,000 was ever received from the French underwriters out of the $4,250,000 he had heen assured would be forthcoming. If the French underwriters had fulfilled their obligations there would have been no trouble. Schwab, he said, obtained control of the Ship Building 'Company by getting men on the board friendly to the Schwab in- terests and getting rid of those opposed to his interests. Dresser said he had heard that an im- portant envelone containing matter needed in this suit had been missed from the files of the Trust Company of the to do with the abstraction of the papers. Ak N B in | RELATIES BEGIN FIGHT FOR ESTATE Contest of Will of Late Ferdinand Knauer Instituted. Charge Is Made That Young Wife Used Undue Irfli- | ence Over Him SR AL In a will made by Ferdinand ‘Knauer, a wealthy German who died in this city last January, he bequeathed his $60,000 estate to Marfe Knauer, his young widow. ‘ | The old man's disposition of his wealth ' is not pleasing to his relatives and they | have come forward to contest the will. | In two petitions for a revocation of the | order admitting the will to probate, filed | by them' yesterday, they allege that the ! young widow is an adventuress, and that | her marriage to their aged relative and | subsequent procurement of a will giving | her his wealth was but one of many acts | that have made her notorious on two | continents. They say that she is the per- | sonification of craftiness, skilled in her | alleged trade of enriching herself at the expense of those who fall within her | clutches, and a woman who has in her | pursuit of riches and a life of ease paused | at nothing to attain her ends. In fact,| they try to make of her a woman who | has ruined homes, broken hearts a-plenty | and more than once shared in the wealth | of those who found themselves in her | power and who were unable to withstand | her blandishments and persuasive elo- | quence. \ TALE A STRANGE ONE. | Strange, Indeed, is the tale of the last| few months of the life of the aged Ger-| man. It appears from the petition of | | those who clalm to be entitled to the | wealth now in the possession of his widow | that he first met_her in July, 1%2. He| went to her for massage treatment, being | led thither by an advertisement in a She gave him treatment, and | During | i | newspaper. | he returned again and again. these visits she learned of his wealth | and, his relatives claim, planned to se- | cure it. This was an easy task appar-| | ently, for the old man was in his dotage. She told him she was from the father- | 1and, that she had lived a life beset with | trials and troubles and had never for one | brief instant known what it was to be | free from care. She had never known | what it was to be happy, she told him, | | ana she gave him bits of her history tha so worked upon the old man's feelings| | that he readily gave her his pity. She I told him that only the vear before she | | had lost a dearly beloved husband and | that within a few months after his death | | the idol of her heart, an adopted son, | | had passed away. Thef came the deata | of her brother, she said. All this hap- | pered in Chicago. She told him that she’ could not remain longer there because of her sad thoughts and came to the fa: West to forget and to commence avew her struggle for a livelihood. AROUSES SYMPATHY. Such a tale of woe naturally affected her patient, his relatives say. His lot had not always been cast in pleasant; places. He also thought he needed sym- pathy and the loving care of such a| woman and readily agreed that "“’"i should finish their days together, as she| suggested. “I do not want to marry vou," she is| | alleged to have sald. “I just want to be with you and care for vou and love | 1 love | you. Your money I do not want. you for your grandeur of character | This was in July and August of last year and in September they went to liva in a flat at 1059 Page street. They were married there, though she insisted tha she cared not for his name. Then the cld man was taken ill, and she cared for | him. On the 18th of December he mude his will, leaving her half of his estate, the other half being bequeathed to his [ brothers and sisters and several nephews | and nleces. A few days after making the will Knauer became very sick. An operation was suggested by his wife and he con- sented. It was performed on December 129, but before submitting himself to the | | alone.” | | |knife he added a codicil to his will cutting out the bequest to his relatives and giving \his en< tire estate to his wife. He was 73 years | of age when operated upon and the shock was more than his enfeebled condition would permit. His relatives heard of his | condition and sought to approach him, | but could not get past his wife, they sa | and in consequence, when he died, Janu- ary 11, they had not been able to make it known to him that they still cared for him. FILES Three days ENAUER'S WILL. later the will was filed for | probate, was admitted and Mrs. Knauer | was appointed administratrix of the estate. It was then that the relatives | sought the advice of attorneys. They re- tained Bishop, Wheeler & Hoeffler and this firm started a long search for Mrs. Knauer's antecedents. They had little difficulty, for she was known in Chicago as Mrs. Hentner. They learned, they state in their petition, that the woman has had a variety of names and a career that would put to shame an adventuress created by Laura Jean Libby. They found, they aver, that she was married years ago in Germany; that her husband | took his own life rather than face the disgrace that followed her elopement with a German army officer; that she came to Chicago with the lleutenant and after a few months was jolned there by her brother and an adopted son; that the four were inseparable until death claimed the brother and adopted son, who both died suddenly, and when the lleutenant | learned that they had both insured their ltves in favor of his consort he fled. WINS THE UNDERTAKER. A few weeks after the flight of the lieu- tenant his consort disappeared, and with her went the undertaker who had pre- pared the bodies of her brother and adopted son for burial, so the contestants say. Incidentally, she took with her the undertaker's silverware; it is further al- leged—at least the latter's wife stated so in her report to the police—that Mrs. Hentner had robbed her of her husband. The couple went to Germany, where it was learned the umndertaker died sudden- ly. Then Mrs. Hentner came to this city and opened massage parlors. The lawyers claim to have learned that after her arrival here she collected mbout her a number of men and prevailed upon | them to insure their lives in her favor. Whatever were her plans concerning | thel the lawyers say they were nipped in the bud by her meeting with Knauer and the events that followed. Mrs. Knauer has been cited to appear before Judge Troutt on October 20 to ex- plain away, if she can, the charges made by the attorneys on behalf of Emilie ‘Wilms and Marie Dorbritz, sisters of the deceased, and Julius Knauer, a brother. nicipality that it may be torm up and another substituted? !huh-ol.nb-l surd. Vote sgainst it to-day. ADVERTISEMENTS. EER MED]CAL EXAMINER U. S. PENSION OFFICE Says: “I Have Often in My Practice. Prescribed Pe-ru-na I Cheerfully Recommend It.” | | | | D R e DR. JAMES CROZIER. POV DN eeescsseseseses POSUDOSODIE —eee eeececccccceses James Crozler. M. D., formerly U. 8. Pension Office Medical Examiner, : formerly Medical Poard of Referee U. S. Pensfon Office, m a letter from Washington, D. C., says: M ““I have often prescribed Peruna in my practice for catarrhal | troubles, and after giving 1t a fair test | can cheerfully recommend H your valuable remedy for cough, colds and catarrh in its worst | stages. It 1s also one of the best tonics | have ever prescribed.”— } : James Crozier, M. D. . 2 sl ST LSRR s R. LELAND WILLIAMSON, town, Ark., writes: “Having used Peruna both person- ally and having prescribed it for my pa- tlents for many years, I thought it would not be out of place to write you a few lines of my experience with same. I have taken Peruna as a tonic and catarth remedy, and have used it in my practice with aiways the same result—benefit to the patient. the varfous organs of the body, heals the catarrhal mucous membranes, and is a boon to suffering humanity. It is a fine spring tonic. and a splendid_remedy to ward off those distressing effects of la grippe, a good tonic after pneumcnia York- It tones up and strengthens | or malarial fever—in fact, an all round tonic and builder. It is a splendid rem- edy for weakly, broken down women, and a remedy that should be used by any one needing a good strengthening tonlc and blood purifier. I could say much more, but any one needing such a remedy, a trial will convince of it8 true merits.*—Leland Willlamson, M. D. If you do not derive prompt and satis- | factory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a | full statement of your case, and he will | be pleased to give you Lis valuable ad- vice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of ;r:f Hartman Sanitarium. Columbus, Yhio. CANTONS DRILL - IN COMPETIION Excursion Trains Will Carry Thousands to Paso Robles. Special Dispatch to The Call. PASO ROBLES, Oct. 7.—There was lit- | tle spare time to-day in the proceedings of the @rand Encampment Fellows In session in this city. While the delegates struggled with knotty ques- | tions in the government of the order, the | uniformed patriarchs paraded the streels to the martial strains of Todd’s band. The Watsonville delegation entertained all comers rfght royally in their tents to- day. Strawberries were served without stint with sweet cider and varietles of fruit. At 35 p. m. the cantons were again paraded and were reviewed by General Brower and staff. The competitive prize drill Friday is arousing the keenest enthusiasm and each canton is perfecting itself to the minutest detail in anticipation of a brisk contest. The routine work of the Grand Encamp- ment commenced agaln this morning at 10 o'clock. After the report of the com- mittee on honored dead the election of officers was taken up, with the following result: W. F. Woodbridge, grand patri- arch; Stanley A. Smith, grand high priest; George Bessen, grand senicr war- den: Willlam H. Barnes, grand scribe; Charles E. Benedict, grand treasurer; C. H. Burden, grand junior warden; J. A. Foster, representative to Sovereign Lodge: F. A. Weck, H. F. G. Wolff and E. Flanders, grand trustees. The discussion of the next meeting place of the order aroused great interest. The assembly is divided upon the question. The encampment adjourned until Friday without disposing of the question, but there is little doubt that the next Grand Encampment of California will meet in San Francisco. To-morrow will be a general holiday not only with the Grand Encampment but the city and county. Excursion trains will be run from Santa Cruz and way points on the north and from San Luis Obispo on the south. In the morning a parade will take place, with David Waite as grand marshal and J. B. Ward ss chief aid. General Brower and staff wii command the division of Patriarchs. Cap- tain Allie Parker will lead her division of the Rebekah Drill Corps and there will be numerous floats and divisions of civic bodies in line. After the parade in the morning a barbecue will be served, at which preparations are made to feed $000 people. To-night a band concert to be fol- lowed by a dance is in progress. —_— e May Return to Their Homes. SAN DIEGO, Oct. 7.—Mexican Consul A. V. Lomeli has caused to be printed the announcemen: that the conscription for the Mexican army. which a month ago al- most depopulated the northern district of Lower California of able-bodied men. has been called off. The order goes into ef- fect immediately, so that any Mexicans who are now In San Diego can return to their homes below the line = of the Odd | ADVERTISEMENTS. A New Management Red Blood for An 0id Magazine SEE THE Ocitober Overland Monthly Western in_flavor, but not an emigration document. Several strong short stories. Readable descriptive matter. Interesting from cover to cover. AN ARROW MADE IN QUARTER SIZES 15CTS.EACH OR TWO FOR 25CTS, CLU , PEABODY & CO., Maxzns For Stothach Disorders Cout and Dvsoepsia VICHY CELESTINS Best NATURAL Alkaline Water. A. VIGNIER CO., San Francisco. Weak Men and Women HOULD USE DAMIANA BITTERS, THE I Great Mexican Remedy; gives health and strength to sexual organs. ‘Depot. 323 Market DIRECTORY OF RESPONSIBLE HOUSES. atalogue and Priee Lists Malled on Applieation. FRESE AND SALT MEATS. JAS. BOYES & C0. 5P "f. St oILs. LU Fron: st 5. F. Phone Matn 1 PRINTING. E. C. HUGHES, reome il Sensome e &