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T wi I £ entific formula. reward for long years of study and many hours of daily toil. re s the Company—Cal should be rejected because they are injurious to the system. they find does not he is atte nd dec where, exi any imitation which may be sold to them. HicH CLASS DRUGGISTS AND — OTHERS. 1e better class of druggists, everywhere, are men of scientific attainments and high integrity, » devote their lives to the welfare of their fellow men in supplying the best of remedies and nedicinal agents of known value, in accordance with physicians’ prescriptions and Druggists of the better class manufacture many excellent remedies, but ys under original or officinal names and they never sell false brands, or imitation medicines. 7 are the men to deal with when in need of anything in their line, which usually includes tandard remedies and corresponding adjuncts of a first-class pbarmacy and the finest and of toilet articles and preparations and many usefal accessories and remedial appliances. he earning of a fair living, with the satisfaction which arises from a knowledge of the benefits mferred upon their patrons and assistance to the medical profession, is usually their greatest They all know that Syrup of Figs is an excellent laxative remedy and that it gives universal satisfaction, and therefore they lling many millions of bottles annually to the well informed purchasers of the choicest remedies, and they always take pleasure in handing out the genuine article bearing the full name of the Company—California Fig Syrup Co.—printed on the front of every package. They know that in cases of colds and headaches attended by biliousness and constipation and of weakness or torpidity of the liver and bowels, arising from irregular habits, indigestion, or over-eating, that there is no other remedy so pleasant, prompt and beneficial in its effects as Syrup of Figs, and they are glad to sell it because it gives universal satisfaction. 3 Owing to the excellence of Syrup of Figs, the universal satisfaction which it gives and the immense demand for it, imitations have been made, tried and condemned, but there are individual druggists to be found, here and there, who do not maintain the dignity and principles of the profession and whose greed gets the better of their judgment, and who do not hesitate to recommend and try to sell the imitations in order to make a larger profit. sometimes have the name—* Syrup of Figs”—or “Fig Syrup” and of some piratical concern, or fictitious fig syrup company, printed on the package, but they never have the full name of ifornia Fig Syrup Co.—printed on the front of the package. necessary to resort to misrepresentation or deception, and whenever a dealer passes off on a customer a preparation under the name of “Syrup of Figs” or “Fig Syrup,” which ar the full name of the California Fig Syrup Co. printed on the front of the package, mpting to deceive and mislead the patron who has been so unfortunate as to enter his ishment, whether it be large or emall, for if the dealer resorts to misrepresentation and tion in one case he will do so with other medicinal agents, and in the filling of ians’ prescriptions, and should be avoided by every one who values health and happiness. owing that the great majority of druggists are reliable, we supply the immense demand for our excellent remedy entirely through the druggists, of whom it may be purchased every- original packages only, at the regular price of fifty cents per bottle, but as exceptions necessary to inform the public of the facts, in order that all may decline or return If it does not bear the full name of the Company— a Fig Syrup Co.—printed on the front of every package, do not hesitate to return the article and to demand the return of your money, and in future go to one of the better class ot druggists who will sell you what you wish and the best of everything in his line at reasonable prices. THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY,“OCTOBER 15, 1903 PERKINS BACK - DROWNS IN DARK FROM EUROPE, WATERS OF BAY @Gives Opinion on Vari- ous Oid World Matters. Says He Thinks Chamberlain Is Destined to Meet Defeat. ——— “While I agree with Mr. Chamberlain in the stand he has taken in the fight now on in England, I think he will be defeated,” said Senator.George C. Perkins last night on his return from an extended tour throughout the western countries of Eu- rope. Senator Perkins has just returned from a three months’ vacation spent in travel- ing through Belgium, Germany, Switzer- land, Ireland, Scotland and England. This was the Senator’s first trip to Europe | since, as a'boy of 14, he ran away from a | ship on which he was serving as an ap- prentice and swam the moat surrounding the King’s palace at Christiania, Sweden, in order to see a real live King. When seen last night in-his home in d the Senator said: I have had a spiendid opportunity to study the varlous governments of Europe and am more than ever inclined to belleve that we have the finest governed institution in ghe world. No one can go abroad without coming back and thanking God that we have such @ land and such a government. Stlll we have some things to lear Such preparations The imitations In Germany 1 was particularly improssed I 3 ith the ¢ its. Ve ul W T In order to sell the imitations i il B 7 e L which are fast being destroyed. In tkat coun. try no one is allowed to fell a tree without first having obtained the permission of a forest official, Germany also has an abundance of fine roads, all constructed and maintained by the Government. CHAMBERLAIN’S FIGHT. The free trade and bprotection contest now being waged in England has come at a most inopportune time for Chamberlain. The litical fight fs very active and very much like the ones we have here. r has been a hard one for the work: crops_en facturing fabrics have been shut down, owing to the difficulty with which the raw products have been secured from the United States. The poorer classes have been visibly affected and will vote against Chamberlain, who rep- resents the aristocracy, and defeat him; stili I think he is in the right. Manchester and all of the large manufactur- ing cities in Ireland and Scotland are prac- tically dead, and many peopte are out of em- ployment. Belfast and Glasgow were the only cities that presented any marked state of ac- tivity. l{Ilr.k that the judiclary system of England is superior to ours. The judges are appointed 5 NOTED PIONEER 0IL MEN AT WAR DIES AT POMONA' N KERN COUNTY 2§ a Josiah Gregg, a Cousin|One Accuses the Other of Jefferson Davis, of Theft of Some Passes Away. Well Casing. The Call. Disp siah Gregg, one of uthern California, na to-day, aged 3overnm of War. it who els for use on and Arizona 1861 ke out in RTISEMENTS. Pears’ soap brings health and the color of health to many a _sallow skin: | ) ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢ - e S o e visit DR. JORDAN’S crear HUSEUW OF ARATOM IOSLMLZEITCT. e GrhaTIR, 5.7.0aL auy concracted discase ponit iely cared ny the oldest Specalist on the Cotst. Est. 30years. DR. JORDAN—DISEASES OF MEN Consultation free and Treacment personally er Powitive Cure it every cace un Len | valuable book for men) DE JORDAN & ©O.. 1051 Market st 8. F. Anti-Pain Pills (Dr Miles') prevent as well as cure headache. the commonest affliction of mankind ~ Carry i your pocket. No oplates Non luxutive. There are no substitules Soid und gusranteed by all grusgists 25 Coses 25 cents Never sold in wlk f'r Mires Meoicar Co Elkbart, Jod White pepper is black wit’ its coat off; different flavor, ¢ course. There is little deman for it; costs too much. Ther: is only one mill in the world Schilling’s Best is its fines product. [There’sanother was of getting the coatoff; rottino it off. That's cheaper. Need we mention it 7] Moo yhack everyshing iwes and everrabors, | | \ | | BAKERSFIELD, Oct. 14.—A warrant has been issued by Justice Millard for the arrest of W. P. Cunningham, a prom- ent ofl man, on & charge of grand lar- ceny. Cunningham is now in Los Angeles and Deputy Sheriff Tower left for that city last night to serve the warrant on him. The complaint is sworn to by J. M. Holloway, a well known ofl man, who charges Cunningham with the alleged theft of 80 feet of oil well casing. A large quantity of ofl well drilling’ ma- chinery was stolen at Kern River last year and traced to the property of a com- pany at Sunset, of which Cunningham was the general manager, and there found and recovered. Charles S. Vezie, an em- ploye of the compan was arrested for the alleged theft and at his trial a few weeks ago he offered the defense that he was acting under the orders of Cunning- . and supposed that his employer had a right to the machinery. The trial re- sulted in a disagreement by the jury. Cunningham was one of the principal witnesses for the State at this trial. Before coming to California Cunning- ham was Sheriff of Santa Fe, N. M, ere he gained a wide reputation in con- nection with the famous Borrego murder trial, a case which went to the Supreme Court of the United States. It was after- ward taken before Presidents Cleveland and McKinley. FIGHT FOR POSSESSION OF YOUNG JAPANESE GIRL Consul Takagi Claims That She Is Being Illegally Detained by a Humane Society. PORTLAND, Or., Oct. 14—S. Takagl, Japanese Consul in Portland, Is trying to gain possession of a Japanese girl now in the hands of the Humane Society of Den- ver, Colo. Seven months ago Masat Shin- agawa, an 18-year-old girl, came to the United States in company with her uncle and aunt. They landed at Seattle and ter went to Denver. In September the was taken by the Humane Society of ver and placed in the hands of a Jap- P tamily. The Japanese Consul here investigated 1 tter and decided that the girl was ere through a mistake on the part iety. He says he desires to send the girl back to her father, who is sald to be a merchant in Shikoku, Japan, but the Humar clety of Denver refuses to w her to icave, Consul Takagl states that he will bring the matter to the at- tention of the authorities at Washington. ———————— Believes His Neck Is Dislocated. NAPA, Oct. 14.—Charles Maxwell, who bas been serfously ill in Napa for several weeks past, has gone to Altruria to re- ceive treatment. His case is a remarkable one. He had severe pains in his head, which finally settled in the back of his neck. It was supposed to be neuralgia at first, but the trouble refused to yield to | treatment. The physiclans now say Max- | well is suffering from a dislocated neck. Some ten years ago Maxwell was thrown |from a horse and his neck was badly twisted. His present illness is the first intimation that'his neck was dislocated at the time of the accident. —_—— Strike Gold Bearing Ground. GRASS VALLEY, Oct. 14.—A scene that recalls early days is attracting much at- tention in Boston ravine, in the southern part of this city. Several local men are hard at work with primitive rockers on the banks of the creek washing out gold. They have struck a plece of ground not touched by the early-day miners and are hard at work digging it out, wheeling it to rockers and extracting the yellow metal. Out of two barrowloads $5 worth of gold was washed, and indications point to the men making a nice little pile be- fore the ground is worked out. ————— Hill Now Pleads Self Defense. LOS ANGELES, Oct. 14.—Archie Hill, the Slayer of Wilbur Carlton, a street car conductor, is on trial here on a of that he for life, on their good behavior. Any one who breaks the law is fully punished. ~Here, where the jurists are constantly changing and the matter of politics figures 5o keenly in their lection, we are less likely to have the laws as rigidly enforced as they ought to be. Seeing the different governments of Europe, |1 am more than ever deeply impressed with | the privileges and adyantages that our form of government gives. WWhat we ould fight against is the formation of classes. It is the | classes who are responsible for the contest now going on in England, AMERICA’S ADVANTAGES. Our climate, our resources, give us a great advantage bver other: countries. We do not realize what a blessed country we have here. FREIGHT STAND ON THE WHARVES Steamers Are Unable to Get It Through to Dawson. Epecial Dispatch to The Call. TACOMA, Oct. 14.—Transportation com- panies and shippers are making the ef-| fort of their lives to land at Dawson | It only takes a trip abroad to make one more in_love with his home country. Why, in France, the famed place for the raising of grapes. I'll venture to say that their vines do not bear by one-tenth the amount of | truit that the vineyards of Fresno in this State produce, and I think that our wines are as good as any made there. ‘While in London I visited the commissio ers who were fixing the boundary dispute be- tween Canada and the United States. All of the documentary evidence shows that the pres- ent existing lines are the same as those held thousands of tons of frelght which now stands In danger of indefinite delay by the freezing of the Yukon River. The wa- ter is lowering dally and a freezeup is expected within ten days. Steamers be- tween White Horse and Dawson had to Jjettison part of their .cargoes to enable them to get down the river. Ten days ago the steamer Mary Graff threw over- board 150 head of cattle in order that an- other steamer might be able to haul her | off a newly discovered sandbar. The cat- tle swam In the wrong direction and the members of the crew became cowboys In boats in an effort to make them swim to- ward the nearest shore. The White Pass Railway has notified shippers that it cannot transport all of the freight now on hand at White Horse and offers to release any portion of it that can get transportation to Dawson on barges or independent steamers. Sev- eral shippers have chartered the Tyrrell and Light, which are making two round trips to White Horse, and other shippers are offering them four and five times the regular freight rates to get their ship- ments through. The Northern Commerclal Company has not succeeded in getting a supply of oil to its reservoirs on the Upper Yukon. Its steamer Sarah was compelled to substi- tute wood for the oil burners. The wood supply has been found insufficlent and her crew has to get off and chop fuel as she goes up the river. B — Still Squabbling Over Library Site. WOODLAND, Oct. 14—Three members{ of the Board of City Trustees have fixed things so that the proposed Carnegle library will be erected on their site or not at all. At a speclal meeting held last night they repealed an ordinance passed before the controversy arose in which | provision was made for a tax levy for ths | library and passed a substitute ordinance much the same in effect except that the library must b€ located on their site and construction commenced by July 1, 1904. The terms of office of two library trus- tees expire April next and it is supposed that the City Trustees will flll the va- cancies with men favorable to their site. ———— Goes to Join Her Promised Husband. TACOMA, Oct. 14.—Another California girl will be married on the Yukon River before October ends. When Miss Mag- dalene Haushalter of San Francisco ar- rives at Rampart she will become the bride of John 8. Nelanny, who is connected with the postoffice at Rampart. Miss Hau- shalter passed through Dawson two weeks ago on her way to Rampart by the last steamer down the river. She was hand- somely entertained by friends in Dawson. For six years she lived with her sister, who is the wife of Dr. J. B. Clifford of San Francisco. e — Trying to Locate Missing Man. TACOMA, Oct. 14.—An effort is being made to locate on the Upper Yukon A. Brooks of Hornitos, Mariposa County Cal., who has not been heard from for several years. Brooks went north during the Klondike rush, becoming a packer on the Skagway trail, and subsequently going to | Dawson. His sister, Mrs. Olive E. Carr, of Hornitos has requested the Dawson po- by Russia prior to the purchase of Alaska by us. I do mot believe, were it not for the dis- covery of.&old in the Klondike, that any dis- pute would have ever arisen. 'Our only hope is in Lord Alverstone, England’s Chief Justice, who 1s on the commission, and who, 1 belfeve, is an able jurist and an honorable man. With- out him the commissioners would merely come to a tie vote. I think that he will look at it from a purely legal standpoint and his decision will be just. Senator Perkins was accompanied on his trip by his daughter Pansy, whom he left visiting relatives in Maine when he re- turned to California. He will remain here | about two weeks and then depart for the | East to attend the next session of Con- gress on November 9. L o o e e e e Y RUSSELL'S PAST FULL OF EIL Negro Murder Suspect Was Bad in Los Angeles. Captain of Detectives Martin received word from the Los Angeles police last night that Hilliard Russell, who killed his wife in this city on Tuesday morning, is the most notorious negro thief who ever operated in Los Angeles. It is sald he served a term in an Eastern peniten- tiary for manslaughter before coming West, and while living in Los Angeles his first wife died under suspicious cir- cumstances. It 1s believed she expired from the effects of a beating by Russell, but as this could not be proved he was never arrestad. The Los Angeles police say they think he deliberately murdered the woman in San Francisco and they will make a full report of his doings in Los Angeles. A year affer his first wife died he induced a colored woman to leave her husband and live with him, and as she left with him it is .supposed she is the one he killed on Tuesday. ‘while in the Southern city and spent his nights stealing. He thus got considerable cash and property. He was often arrest- ed, and though proof of tlefts seemed clear, escaped by having jury trials. case was set for trial before Justice Austin. Pending this trial an attempt was made one night to assassinate Aus- tin, and Russell was suspected. The thief was finally given a suspended sentence on condition that he leave town, which he did. He announced that he was going South, but went the other way and was never heard of again unti! the killing of his wife. His relatives live in Los Angeles and his brothers have beeh in police courts there several times for petty offenses.. { Russell appeared before Police Judge Ca- lice to locate him if possible. Brooks is 55 years of age and was a mining promo- ter and newsplper man for many years. ———— Carries a Cargo of Water. PORTLAND, Or., Oct. 14—The oil steamer Whittier salled to-day for Los Angeles with a cargo of 420,000 gallons o Columbia River water.. The cargo is des- tined for the refineries of Oleum, where | water is said to be scarce. . This is the first time in the history of the port that water has been made a commodity. baniss yesterday and was instructed as to his rights. He was not arraigned, be- cause no complaint had been sworn to.. The case was continued for a week to await the result of the Corc ’s inquest. The belief is growing ti Russell did not mistake his wife for a burglar, but deliberately shot her. It is not denied 'hat Russell and his wife quarreled often and that they had a quarrel on Monday night. Yesterday morning Lacy Russell, daughter of the defendant by a.former marriage, made a statement in detail to Captain Martin, in which she said that she heard her step- would not work and she heard the shots. X Russell worked hard during the day ' Finally he was caught thieving and his Fifteen-Year-Old Wal- ter McKay Is Victim of Tragedy. Dives From an Old Barge at Arctic Oil Dock to . His Death. A distressing tragedy, which evoked an outburst of sympathy throughout the Potrero district, occurred. yesterday af- ternoon at 3 o'clock, when Walter Mec- Kay, a I5-year-old schoolboy, met his I death in the bay at the dock of the Arc- tic Ofl Works. The dead boy, who was the son of Mrs. { Charles C. McKay of 616 Eighteenth ! street, in company with three other lads— { E. Lewis of 1188 .Kentucky street, Harry Timby of 705 Tennessee street and T. Balley of 1060 Kentucky street—decided to go swimming in the bay and accordingly repaired to the Arctic Oil Works, where they divested themselves of their wearing apparel preparatory to plunging into the water. All of the boys except young McKay were able to swim and they lost no time in jumping off the dock. With boyish glee they disported themselves in the wa- ter. Near the dock a barge that has lost its usefulness ltes firmly imbedded in the mud. This offered an ideal place from which to dive and the lads clambered up on the old hulk. All of them dove Into the water with the exception of the un- fortunate boy. He waited a moment and ‘The boys went down together, but Lewis came to the surface in a moment and swam to the barge. Little Walter falled to come up and his horfor stricken com- panions swam to the dock and gave the alarm. Walter McKay, a cousin of the deceased, was notified and made several ineffectual attempts to locate the body. In the meantime Mrs. McKay had been notifled and in company with her daugh- ter, Miss Mary McKay, hastened to the scene of the accident. The heartbroken mother and her daughter with tear- dimmed eyes watched the search for the body of their loved one until 7 o'clock last night, when Waiter McKay, with the ald of a pole, located the body and diving into the water brought it to the surface: upon the direction of Dr. Leland the body was not removed to the Morgue. Mrs. McKay is prostrated with grief and has the sympathy of the entire district in her sad bereavement. | @ i SISTERS MOURN THEIR SUPERIOR Rev. Mother Augustine Dies at St. Mary’s Hospital. Rev. Mother Augustine, provincial su- perior of the order of the Sisters of the Holy Name and directress of the Com- vent of Our Lady of the Sacred Heart, died at St. Mary's Hospital at 3 o'clock ! yesterday afternoon after a short {llness. Her death was the result of an operation | "performed last Monday. | During the years that she had been at | the head of the convent Mother Augus- |'tine had made a multitude of friends and since she was Il many of her former pu- | pils called to see her. Althougli she knew | that death was not far off the mother | superior greeted them with the same ten- derness and love that they knew when they were under her care at the convent. A number of the graduates of the school whom the mother superior had not seen for more than twenty years called at the hospital yesterday to see their for- mer teacher and for each one she had some word of love. During the afternoon was conscious to the last and recognized the sisters of the convent who were gath- ered at her bedside. As the end ap- proached she asked if there was no way that she could be taken to the convent, that she might die among the Sisters of the order. o'clock this morning and directly to the convent, where it will lie in state until the funeral, which will take place Saturday morning at 9 o'clock. ‘When the body arrives at the convent it will be received by the sisters and pu- pils, who will be dressed in deep maurn- ing. A telegram has been received from {Mother Baptist, who for eighteen years was connected with the convent, saying that she would arrive in Oaklapd to-mor- row evening to attend the funeral of Mother Augustine. Mother Baptist was mother superifor of the convent when Mother Augustine first came to the coast, and for many years they were coworkers at the institution. | Mother Baptist came to the coast in 1861 with Mother Augustine, and it was during that year that the Convent of Our Lady of the SBacred Heart was erected. Mother | Baptist was the first superior of the in- stitution. Rev. Mother Augustine was born in Montreal in 1843 and entered the order of the Sisters of the Holy Name when 14 years of age. She came to California in the fall of 1868 and entered the Convent of Our Lady of the Sacred Heart as a teacher. She was directress of the board- | ing-school for fourteen years, and for two years was local superior of the order of the Sisters of the Holy Name. A short time ago she was elected provinclal supe- rior of the order, and her term had not expired at the time of her death. Mother Augustine has been identified with the Convent of Our Lady for the past thirty- five years. \ N ————— BANK OLERKS GREET NATIONAL DELEGATES Cordial Wm ‘Tendered Those _Recently Returned From Convention. The regular monthly meeting of the San Francisco Chapter of the American In- stitute of Bank Clerks was held in the Y. M. C. A. building last evening. An enthusiastic membership greeted the dele- gates who d just returned from the National Convention of Bank Clerks held at Cleveland, Ohio, September 18 and 19. The delegates—Willlam A. Day of the Bank of California, J. W. McDermott of the Nevada National Bank and H. J. Ma- ginnity of the California Safe Deposit and Trust Company—addressed the meeting entertainingly and instructively regarding the convention and the organization of the bamk clerks in thé larger cities throughout the East. | It is expected that J. B. Finley of Pitts- | burg, president of the American Institute Franeisco of Bank Clerks, who visits San to attend the American Bankers’ Conven- then jumped off, landing on Lewls' back. | The Coroner’s office was notified, but | ADVERTISEMENTS. CA-I- ARR THE CAUSE OF MOST KIDNEY DISEASES e v a—" FRED R. PENNELL. R e B e e L s = e e % coseoe A Prominent Pianist Went to Hot Springs for Kidney Trouble, but Pe-ru-na Cured Him. Fred R. Pennell, Pianist, Grand Opera House, Hot Springs, Ark., writes: ““Two years ago | cime to Hot Springs to take the baths and be treated for bladder and kidney trouble. After spending two months here under the care of one of the most promnent physicians and receiving little or no benefit | was persuaded to try Peruna. | had little faith in it, but after using one bottle | noticed a marked im- provement. Three bottles entirely cured me. | can cheerfully recom- mend Peruna to any one afflicted as | was.””—Frad R. Pennell. e A Catarrh of the Kidneys a Common| Peruna cures kidney disease. The rea- Disease—Kidney Trouble Often Falls | 00 !t cures kidney disease is because it cures catarrh. Catarrh of the kidneys is to Be Regarded as Catarrh by Phy- | the cause of most kidney disease. Pe- siclans. runa cures catarrh wherever it happens Catarrh of the kidneys is very common to be located. It rarely fails. indeed. It is a pity this fact is not better | PTesident Louisiana Commercial Club. known to the physicians, as well as the y Hen. Willlam Watson Washburn, presi- people. dent of the Louisiana Commercial Club People have kidney disease. They take | &0d a very well known man of New Or- some diuretic, hoping to get better, They leans, Ld., writes from 637 Canal strec “1 am satisfled that there is not a finer never once think of catarrh. Kidney dis- ease and catarrh are seldom assoclated in the minds of the people, and alas, it is not very often associated in thle minds of the medicine placed before the public to-day than Peruna. I have been troubled for nearly twelve years with kidney and liver trouble, and at times I have been a pretty she grew rapidly weaker, although she | The body will be taken to Oakland at 9 | physicians. Too few physicians recognize catarrh of the kidneys. They doctor for something else. They try this remedy and that remedy. The trouble may be catarrh all the time. A few bottles of Peruna | ‘would cure them. Pe-ru-na Removes the Cause of the Kidney Trouble. Peruna strikes at the very center of the difficulty by eradicating the catarrh from the ki ys. Catarrh is the cause of kfd- ney di ity. Remove the cause and you remove the effect. With unerring accu- racy Peruna goes right to the spot. The kidneys are soon doing their work with perfect regularity. Thousands of testimonials from people who have had kidney disease which had gone beyond the control of the physiclan are received by Dr. Hartman every year, glving Peruna the whole praise for mar- ous cures. ROAR OF WAVES 15 HI3 REQUIEM | Old Colonel Dailey Slips sick man unable to attend to my dutles. “I had about made up my mind that no medicine could help me, when-oné of your booklets was brought to my office, which I read in a leisure hour. I then decided to give Peruna a trial and found that I had at last secured the right medicine for me. ‘“For two months I used it faithfully and then feit ro well that I was like a young man ofice more. This was over a ylenr ago and T have not had any trouble since. “Although I am in the seventies, I feel better and more active than I did thirty years ago.”"—W. W. Washburn. 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 pllle‘!'d to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of THe Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O. ADVERTISEMENTS. AN ARROW | Into Beyond Alone in His Cabin. CANTAB-“A" MADE IN QUARTER SIZES CTS.EACH OR TWOFOR25CTS, CLUETT, PEABODY & CO., Maxeng 014 Colonel Charles E. Dalley, the fath- er of what was once Carville, but is now known by' the more dignified title of | Oceanside, is dead. Yesterday his body was found lying in' the little bedroom of | his driftwood cabin out by the ocean | beach, just as death had stricken it. With | only the boom of the surf for his re- | auiem, the little old hermit with the snowy beard had passed into the great sea of mystery alone; there was no one te close the dim eyes or fold the wrinkled old hands across the breast. Ten years ago Colonel Dalley received from his boon companion, Adolph Sutro, a little patch of sand out on the beach below the Clff House. There he gathered | together enough of the flotsam of the set —brokzn bones of dead ships—to bulld himseif a tiny cabin. The rooftree, clap- boards and joists all came out of the sea; not a sliver of wood was there which had | , not been once a part of some vessel, long since lying broken backed at the bottom of the green depths. Here, housed in by the skeletons of ships, old Colonel Dailey spent the fading days of his life. For years his light was the only one which winked through the blur of the storms, his littie garden spot was the only color in the yellow waste of Then one by one the old street cars began to be wheeled out to the beach and grouped into a mongrel village about For Stomach Disorders Cout and Dvsvepsia YICHY CELESTINS Best NATURAL Alkaline Water. o 2L 1L . A. VIGNIER CO., San Francisco. CUTL SUMMER AND WINTER RESORTS. “Colonel Dafley’s camp.” His tiny cab- MINERAL in and flower patch became the nucleus TuggA ot ¢ Conaading: RHEUMATISM, GOUT AND The man who had lived so many years with the gulls and the sand rs had once been t in affairs of the na- tion. A native of Connecticut, he was made military agent of the State when the war of the rebellion flamed out. In | that capacity he was on the battleflelds | of Gettysburg and ricksburg in the midst of the fearful carnage. Later, when ! the war was over, he was appointed re- | ceiver of Government funds for the Ter- | ritory of Arizona and held that position for several years. | But ill heaith began to wear him down | and ten years ago Colonel Dailey the activities of the with the roar of the g