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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, NOVEMBER LOVE'S ROMANGE PREGEDES THEM Bridal Couple’s Presence at Palace Recalls an Elopement. RSN Events in Which Society of the East Showed Deep Interest. nned the register of ring the last three e ognized in the signature of | Mabie Crouse Klock of Syracuse, boldly | ne of the pages, the name of & young man who is widely known Kr rbocker State, and few months ago, figured in an hat was given considerabie s P - ng having be weeks ag Ne K w .' a des w afte wedding young . rt their AGAINST POLL TAX George H. Bahrs Speaks His Mind on Subject. il tax SiRes Tor George H Assessor, referen Bahrs, Rep to th e Do Not Support Lane. is the honor of being erators’ Union there are no of our es are genu- them must be MURPH * Unf HANNA'S RE-ELECTION SURE. Ohio State Executive Committee Pre- dicts Sweeping Republican Victory. | 2 Nov. 1.—Chairman can State Executive issued the following JUMBUS, Ohie Repub »-night rts recelved o Republi- | Justified Tuesday Death Calls Southern Resident. SANTA BARBARA, Nov. 1—James H. oud of St. Louis died in this eity 1is morning at t John Louderman. The direct cause of his death wes Bright's disease mans have resided in several years The Louder- a Barbara for Salt Rheum, R‘mfiworm, T Acne or other skin troubtl:: promptly relieved and cured by ydrozon This scientific germicide, which is harmless, cures mng disease the storehouse MEETS - DEATH UNDER WHEELS William York Killed by Car Near Waldo Point. Relatives Demand a Rigid Investigation by the Coroner. g William York, 61 years of age, and who resided with his wife at 322 Turk street. was killed late Saturday night by being run over by an eiectric train of the North | Shore Raflroad near Waldo Point. i York worked for a number of years in at the Mare Island Navy recently retired on a pension. to whom he had been married Yard and His wife for thirty years, was possessed of a small ' | income and each other. On Saturday morning last York left his £0 to Sausal He had been in he habit of visiting the pool rooms, but he was not known to gamble to any the couple were devoted to wife t ex- His relatives and friends state that he was not d to drinking. ! hether York's death was due to acel- | ent or suicide is still in doubt. On Sat- night the train le 4 but few ng 8. an Rafael passengers on | 1 not connect with a ferry- | Francisco. York boarded t San Rafael and he stated to rew that he intended remaining > over night cording te the statements of the train k tried to leave the train sev- while it was in motion, but he prevented from doing so by the train men, as they claim he was intoxicated Brakeman Charles Axtell said yesterday that he prevented York from leaving the | it was in motion near Corte | t after station Axtell, who was in the rear saw York go out by the front door to the platform. Axtell ran toward York, but before he could reach him York had jumped from the train | York was dragged by the rear car for some distance before the train could be stopped. When the cars came to a stand- still the train men found that York's body had been fearfully mangled, and he was dead when taken from beneath the wheels. Coroner Sawyer was notified and the remains were removed to the Morgue. | "he only clew to the identification of as a Masonic badge fourd near f his death many hours after- The badge bore the i t Moriah, F. and A. M., andery, Vallejo,” with the name am York An officer of the North Railroad visited this city last e nd located | . rles Stroth, 1005 the com- | mander of Mount Moriah Lodge. Mre. York was In ignorance of her hus band's death 1 her relatives av allow 1 friends dread news to be Mrs. E. Cha =, landlady of the house where York and his wife night that York bade his s iay morning and return at 4:3) p. m. to take i When York failed to return his wife sent | for some of her relatives and she was in a state bordering on hysteria all day ves-{ ) the unexplained absence The re of Mrs. York scout the York committed suicide or xicated when he met his that t s some- the death of York er of San Ra- rigid investigatior f York's death will be given morning by her relatives NOPLNS IRE 0PPOSED Kern County Oil Men Fight Against the Santa Fe. al Dispatch to The Call. | | ! BAK ELD, Nov. 1.—The Santa Fe | is encountering uhexpected opposition in | making its extension through the Sunsl’l; ofl fields. As a result, F. E. Henderson, right of way agent for the company, is now in the city endeavoring to compro- mise matters with those who are opposing the railroad’s plans. When the line was proposed, nearly all | the operators in the field welcomed the extension and alded it in every way, but | trouble is said to have been encountered | with the Superior and Sunset Coast com- | panies, across whose properties it was | surveyed. These have refused to grant | the right of way asked for. The reason | for the opposition is sald to rest in cor- | porations that are buflding the opposition | pipe line to connect with the present ter- minus of the railroad with the various | properties of the Sunset and Midwa By extending its line the railroad | will interfere with their business. As the promoters have great influence and own and lease to their present operators many of the properties in the fleld, it is thought | that they are behind the mew opposition. About a year ago Messrs. Jewett & | fields. | Blodget organized the Consolidated Cali- | | fornia Oilf 1ds Company under the laws of Maine, with a capitalization of $4,000,000, backed by French and English capital, and the pipe line, to cover practically ali | the Sunset and Midway fields for a dis- | tance of about ten miles, was one of their | chief plans. Their enterprise was encour- aged in every possible w by the oper- | ators, who have long been handicapped by the almost total lack of transportation facilities existing in the district. Rights | of way were freely granted and - some months agoe the trench was dug, and now the pipe is beginning to arrive at Sunset. | oesannsr s, o iessiaduly Maryland Election in Doubt. BALTIMORE, Md., Nov. 1.—This was a day of absolute rest for the campaign | leaders on both sides and the various candidates. The campaign headquarters | were tightly closed and there was not a | conference of any sort by the managers. Such of the State candidates and leaders, | the Jatter including Senator Gorman, as | live near Baltimore, spent Sunday in the quietude of their country homes. There | were no campaign developments. The | feeling among voters generally throughout | Maryland and in Baltimore City continues | to be one of doubt as to the outcome ot next Tuesdav’s election. ———— Constable -Accuses a Supervisor.’ NAPA, Nov. 1.—Matthew Vandeleur, a’ Supervisor, was arrested a few days ago on & warrant sworn to by Constable Jack- son, charging him with battery. Vande- leur was taken before Justice Johnson, entered a plea of not guilty and demand- ed @ jury trial. Jackson contends that the attack on him was without provoca- tion and he will prosecute the case vig- orously. aving Waldo | | ! about 7 o’clock in the evening, found the | knife. | the guilt of the accused and seven detec- | broke the engagement and she was afraid | return, 2 WIDOW MURDERED AT HER RESIDENCE - AND DISMISSED FIANCE SUSPECTED Dead Body of Mrs. Annie Wilson Found Lying Where Frenzied Strangler Left It and Police Search for Charles Schmidt, Who, They Believe, Killed Her - 2 | | | | | | | | | 3 B2 RS. ANNIE WILSON, a widow | about 40 years of age, who re- led at 5 Capp street, was| | brutally murdered In her home vesterday afternoon. Her body, | in a nude condition, was found at the| head of a stairway, the marks of a strangler were on the throat and there| | were contusions, as from kicks, on the| | body be house was in a disordered | | condition, every drawer having been ran-| | sacked by the murderer, either before or after his horrible deed. The body was distovered by Ambrose Wilson, the 16-year-old son of the wom- an, who, returning from across the bay door locked and climbed through a win- dow. A three-year-old adopted daugh- ter was with Mrs. Wilson until early in the afternoon, and aiso being unable to enter the housge, wandered about for sev- eral hours. , The baby .is unable to throw any light on the affair. Suspicion points to . Charles George Schmidt, a laborer, whom the dead wom- an was to marry, but whom she renounc- ed when she learned of his evil past. Wedding garments he had presented her with were found ripped to pleces with a The ments she wore when at- tacked were found torn to shreds, giving evidence of a frightful struggle. SEARCHING FOR SCHMIDT. There seems little doubt as to to be tiv, He spent the night in searching for him. threatened his betrothed when she of him. Just before the crime is supposed to have been committed he appeared at a neighboring saloon in an excited condi- tion, took a drink and departed. Five hours later and after the tragedy had been discovered, he returned to the same drinking house and asked to see a man who roomed in the murdered woman's house. The two had a conversation which is very incriminating and the po- lice have locked the lodger up, belleving that he knows more than he is willing to tell. Schmidt is known as “Plstol Jack.” He was a non-union man during the team- sters’ strike and shot a man, though he did not kill him. He is also suspected of being a burglar. s Mrs. Wilson's husband died about a vear ago. She then rented two of ‘the Tooms in her house as a means of gaining a livellhood, and several months ago Schmidt took one of them. There was a courtship and the two agreed to be mar- ried. At the time of the engagement he presented her with an open face Waltham watch on which were Inscribed the letters “A. K.” The strange initials puzzled the lady, but her lover explained that the watch had been given to him by some one at the Pacific Mail dock, where he claimed all the time to be employed. Then he gave her the wedding garments. They were not costly, but, nevertheless, were acceptable. The wedding was set for Thanksgiving day Mrs. Wilson went to the Mall dock and ascertained that Schmidt had never been employed there. Then her suspicions be- came aroused. GROCERY STORE ROBBED. Scon after this a woman who resides on Mission street called and finquired for Schmidt. Mrs. Wilson, being cuwious, asked the woman's business. The latter replied that the man had borrowed $10 fram her and she was about to demand its When told that her debtor was absent from the house she sald she would return on the following day, and Mrs. Wilson, that night, demanded that Schmidt meet his alleged creditor. The meeting occurred, but Schmidt refused to pay the woman and a dispute ensued, which seems to have been the first open rupture between the betrothed couple. To quell all disturbance the lodger finally D e e S S SR R SR WA SPAAT I SRS ¥ RANCHER OPENS FIRE AND A BOY IS KILLED Stories of an Qregon Shooting Con- flict, but One Man Is Arrested. PORTLAND, Or., Nov. 1L.—Adolph Burk- hardt, a 16-year-old boy, was shot and killed by Samuel Baumann last night a few miles outside the city limits. Bau- mann says that he fired a ‘random shot into the darkness to scare away boys who fired at his house, and the boy's compan- jon says that Baumann, who 1s a rancher, fired deliberately at his victtm. It seems that bad feeling exists be- tween Baumann and the sons of A. Hay- wood, a neighboring rancher. Burkhardt and Harry Fuller, his companion, were walking along the road celebrating the occasion of Halloween by discharging a revolver, and from here the stories of Baumann and Fuller vary. Baumann says the boys were firing at his house and also at some cattle he had In a field, and that he fired a rifle into the air to frighten the unknown marauders away. Fuller says that it was only dusk and tbat Bau- mann mistook himself and Burkhardt for t As Result of Agitation Con- were herded barracks. The food sold them at the com- pany stores was sometimes bad, but, as they were paid by the month, it was al- | most impossible for them elsewhere. | | the Jesuits in Bilbao and | | the toreh, but the troops extinguished the | fire. | ceeded In | S8an Antonio bridge. ever, the bridge and in front of a junction of two streets. C SPANISH MINERS SGORE VICTORY Strike at Bilbao Ends With Advantage to Ironworkers. I 36 TR dition of Men Is —_— WOMAN'S PRANK CAUSES MURDER Chicago Police Officer Is Fatally Stabbed by a Negro. Citizens Try to Take Homicide From Jail at Mor- gan Park. Improved. i BILBAO, Nov. 1.—Never in the history | of Bilbao has there been a strike of such consequences to Spain as that which terminated The miners will no longer be compelled to live cooped up in the barracks provided by the mining companies, and they will no longer be forced to purchase food from the company stores, which has been often declared unfit to eat. paid by the month, be paid every week. They have been re- fused, however, and.it is believed this refusal will lead to trouble statements made by Assoclated Press and confirmed by their counsel, they have heretofore lived in de- | plorable conditions. the iron workers of to-day. Instead of being they will hereafter the right to organize, in the future. to the According the miners to In the mines outside of Bilbao the men into crowded and squalid to purchase The miners were attracted by he propaganda of Socialists and an- | archists, and they determined to strike unless their demands for better conditions were granted. The strike af- fected 35,000 men. ficlency of bread in Bilbao, and the min- ers who poured Into the stores and demanded food. On Wednes- day of last week Field Marshal nandez saw that strong rheasures necessary and he ordered the soldiers to disperse the strikers. ers poured petroleum on the Church living There was not a suf- town entered | Her- were of | Some of the strik- | then applied | Reinforced by cavalry, the troops suc- driving the strikers over the The strikers, how- erected barricades at the center of These barricades were com- c rendered untenable, treated them some of whom were some women. cially that twenty-one wounded during the fighting, but given out officially posed of pleces of iron work from the bridge, overturned carts and barrels filled with stones. The miners behind the first barricade were armed with picks, shovels and revolvers. The cavalry charged | across the bridge, but was unable to pass the barricade. Troops were then sent to | the right and the left of the bridge to flank the miners, and a second charge was made. The bridge barricade was held | for some moments, but the men there | were soon forced to fall back to the sec- | This the soldiers also and the miners re- | streets, carrving with their wounded, among | It js said offi- persons were killed and ond barricade up the four more people were wounded than is When driven from the city the miners |'endeavored to blow up the reservoir and | the electric light plant with dynamite. The troops were too quick for them, | however, and gained possession of tne o - > Sy a; mite factory before the strikers could ; arry o cir design. e there | MRS. ANNIE WILSON, WHO WAS STRANGLED, KICKED AND ||t 1‘,,‘}:,;'{xIxfilg,r;f"ca‘,’;’I,;.hfn,;":m‘,‘,’_:y | BBATEN IN HER HOME ON CAPP STREET AND WHOSE BODY men in the city, as well ds thres guns. | WAS DISCOVERED AT LANDING OF STAIRS BY HER SON. The arrival of Lieutenant General Zap- | | | pine, commander in chief of the Basque 3 = = s te e = < | provinees, followed by conferences agreed to liquidate the debt and sald he | Among a heap of clothes and boxes that | Ti o FooI e e e e o would have the money on tne morrow. had been dragged out of one closet was they pillaged nearby farmhouses and That night Meehan's ‘grocery store, | found the wedding garments. slashed to | poiq the countryside in consternation. | across the street, was rabbed and a gold | threads. Whether the woman did this | Tpe strike was in no sense against the watch and $30 in cofn taken. Schmidt was | that Schmidt could never make use of | Government. the last person seen loitering about the | them again. or whether it was the act of | place and his afffanced -wife's suspiclond | {6 Fiurqerer has not yet been ascer- | @ il @ | were Again aroused. She convinced her- self that he was a thief, when, on the fol- lowing day, he handed $10 to the Mission- street woman. Mrs. Wilson had made inquiry previous to this and claimed to have ascertained that the man she was about to marry did not work. Then she decided to call off the nuptials. After being bothered by the forsaken lover for the return of the wed ding garments, which she seemed deter- mined to keep, she notified the police and Detectives Graham and Fitzgerald were detafled on the case. After an investiga- tion they were also convinced that the watch given the woman had been stolen and also lald the crime in the grocery to Schmidt. REFUSED PROTECTION. The detectives agreed to wait until Bchmidt returned to the house again, as he had been residing elsewhere since th= grocery robbery. This was on Saturday. The woman was asked if she was afraid of the man and protection was offered her, but she replied that as long as he came In the day time she could handle him alone. She admitted that he had threatencd ner life, but made little of the matter. Nothing had been seen or heard of the former lodger for several days. Yester- day morning Mrs. Wilson's son left the house about 10 o'clock, and at that time both his mother and adopted sister were in good spirits. When he returned last night the place was locked and he was obliged to climb in through a second- story window. After lighting a match at the head of the stairway he made the ghastly discovery of the body, and rushed out to find the police. Soon afterward he found his adopted sister wandering about in front of the house. The little glirl sald she had left her foster-mother some time early in the afternoon, and that she had come back later and could not get in. Schmidt was not in the hquse when she left. Captain Anderson, Sergeant Blank and Officers Foley, Daly and Harrison were quickly on the scene. After them came Detectives Fitzgerald, Graham, Dinan, Wren, McMahon, Gibson and O'Dea. A search of the premises was made and the body was sent to the Morgue. Every trunk, bureau drawer and closet in the house had been ransacked and their con- tents scattered over the floor. the Haywood boys and took careful aim before he fired. Baumann has been ar- rested on a charge of murder. An inquest will be held to-morrow. o ong e Sy ‘WiLL OPPOSE KEARNS. Mormon Voters at Salt Lake Combine to Defeat Senator’s Ticket. SALT LAKE, Nov. 1.—Word was sent out through the regular channels this af- ternpon and evening to Mormon voters that Senator Thomas Kearns’ municipal ticket must be defeated next Tuesday in order to oust him from control of the Republican party machinery and encom- pass his defeat for re-election next year, if possible. As the Mormons will have the assistance of a large Gentile element opposed to Kearns, the outlook now is that the move will be successful. Sena- tor Kearns won his fight at the primaries and in convention and nominated his can- didate, Frank Knox, a banker. The object is to secure control of the city patronage to help carry the primaries next fall when | Legislative candidates will be chosen. by the murdered woman at the time’she was killed .were also found, torn and tat- | tered, as they were dragked from her | body. There were finger marks about the throat, a bruise on the chin that possibly came from a severe kick, and contusions of the body. It is probable that death was due to strangulation. ONE ARREST MADE. When the detectives had gathered all | the evidence that could be procured at the ! scene of the crime, they came to the con- | clusion that Schmidt had visited the house | and, out of revenge, became a murderer. Just what he was searching for is a mys- tery, but it may have been that he sought the watch Mrs. Wilson had turned over to the police. He may have also been in quest of money, as a nelghbor’'s child, on passing | Special Cable to The Call and New York the house last Wednesday, heard the two | Herald. _Copyright, 1903, by the New York quarreling and heard Schmidt insist on | Jerald Publishing Company. recetving money and say that M Mrs. | | oNDON, Nov., L—The magnetic Wilson would give it to him he would let | her alone. The woman pleaded poverty, but Schmidt would not accept her an- swer. About 9 o'clock last evening Caspar ‘Wolb, a cooper, who is also a roomer in | the Wilson house, appeared at the place | in an intoxicated condition and said that | he had left Schmidt in Opitz's saloon, at the corner of Eighteenth and Shotwell | streets, but an hour before. Wolb said Schmidt appeared in an excited condition and intimated that he was coming after his clothing and that he would do some- thing more than take them away. This statement was interpreted by Wolb as meaning harm to the woman and he says | he hastened home to warn her, though | he took an hour to travel but a few | blocks. Wolb's statement was considered | very unsatisfactory and he was sent to the Seventeenth-street station, where he | is detained. i At Qpitz's saloon the detectives learned | from Mrs. Opitz that Schmidt had been | c Great Eruptions Said storm which prevailed yesterday has now | vanished wholly. electriclan, who is president of the Uni- | versity of Birmingham, said in an inter- view that there are evident signs'of great eruptions going on in the sun. very large sun spots now and surround- ing each there is indication that masses vapors have been thrown up and have spread over the area. says that the phenomenon was predicted | ten years ago and that it would be no- ticed again for the next twelve years, probably disturbing the tems. IMMENSE SPOTS SPECK THE SUN to Be Disturbing Old Sol. Sir Oliver Lodge, the distinguished There are »f gas, calcium and hydrogen and other Sir Norman Lockyer, the astronomer, telegraph sys- ————— CASES OF DYNAMITE ARE MYSTERIOUSLY STOLEN SEATTLE, Nov. 1.—City Detective Lane The Democratic candidate is R. P. Mor- ris, a liberal Mormon. there about 3 o'clock in the afternoon | and that he appeared very excited. | thought that the crime was committed | just before or after this hour. a drink and went away. the evening he came again and inquired When the latter came | in the two had some conversation in an undertone and Schmidt went away. Now the clty is being searched for the suspect- for Caspar Wolb. ed murderer. WIFE SHOOTS HUSBAND AFTER FAMILY QUARREL Southern California Woman Claims to Have Used Weapon in Self-Defense. LOS ANGELES, Nov. 1.—A. F. Carter was brought to the County Hospital in thig city to-day from Monrovia, a small town eighteen miles east of here, suffering from a gunshot wound which nad mutilated his left leg. The shot was fired by his wife, who claims to have acted in seif- defense. She was brought to Los Angeles Carter's condition is and lodged In jail. serfous. The shooting followed a famil uar: and an all-night search of C’l.rt:rqby ;:: wife, who carrled a shotgun. who was employed on a new sanitarium now in course of erection, went to a dance | Saturday night. leaving his wife at home with her babe. Mrs. Carter waited until 10 o'clock Saturday night for her husband to return home, and then left her child ‘with a caller, took a shotgun and went in She went to Arcadia and | to several places near Monrovia, but search of him. It is | He took | At 8 o'clock in | Carter, finds that twenty-five cases of dynamite, which, owing to its age, had become so highly explosive that it could not be han- dled, were buried by the Government on the military reservation eleven months ago, is now missing. Wagon tracks, made only a few weeks ago, show the stuff was hauled away in the direction of Seattle. It is more than probable that some of this dynamite was placed in the basement of the interurban depot a few days ago with fuses attached. @ iimirivilisilisiii i @ failed to find him. Carter returned about | daylight this morning, and learning that his wife was out looking for aim with a gun, made light of the matter and went | to bed. Mrs. Carter arrived at their home at 10 o'clock this morning and the couple renewed their quarrel. Mrs. Carter or- dered her husband to take his clothes and | leave. He agreed, but first asked to kiss the baby good-by. The angered woman | stepped back, gun in hand, leaving the frightened little one standing alone in the shade of the oaks, that he might ap- proach it as he desired, while she kept him covered. ‘While this pathetic scene was being enacted, the mother asked John Liloyd, with whom she had left the child, to enter the tent and bring her the child’s clothes, | that she might finish dressing it. Lioyd says that as he entered the tent he heard Carter rush toward the woman, and heard her command him to stand back or she would open fire. Carter continuéd going toward her, evidently with the purpose of securing the weapon to carry out the threat, and when about ten feet distant she fired, bringing him to the ground with a serious wound. | $2 50 by mail. e CHICAGO, Nov. 1.—A woman's Hal- lowe'en prank early this morning started trouble which ended in the killing George A. Alrie, chief of police at Mor- gan Park, by Mack Wiley, a young ne gro. Mrs. Sayman, who is a sister .of Wiley, and three friends started out for a lark While they were overturning a lumber pile, it is said, the woman was struck by Chlef -~ Police Afrie. The ne- groes went for reinforcements and upon their return a second meeting with Airie resulted in a fight in which Airie was stabbed In the neca by Wiley. The news of the tragedy spread through the suburbs and soon a crowd of several hundred men and boys marched to the Morgan Park jail, where four of the ne groes had been locked ug was surrounded by a vengeance, sever dence in the crowd panions were placed between of police, who had been summoned from and a at Harvey and other nearby suburbs, dash was made for a carriage t been sent for. A severe fight which the negroes were sever: bruised with sticks and sto officers finally managed to get the negroes in the carrtage and drove off under shower of bricks, stones and siles. The prisoners were ta Englewood jail, where W1 having kilied Alrie. ——e——— DRUNKEN MAN SHOOTS DEPUTY AND BYSTANDER Oregon Miner Fatally Wounds Officer and Injures an Unoffending Citizen. JOSEPH, Or., Nov. L.—Early this morn- ing James McComb, a miner, shot Deput Marshal Walter Smith through the lu and also wounded L. C. Finn, a bysta er. McComb had been drinking and ‘was creating a disturbance on the street, wher Deputy Marshals Smith and Floyd him. They ordered him to go home, a McComb became abusive, but fina started to move away. After he walked a few paces he wheeled, drew his gun and began shooting. Smith is severely wounded and s not expected to live. Finn's wound is not se rious, being in the fleshy part of thigh. McComb is in jail here —_——— Fierce Fire in East Portland. PORTLAND, Or,, Nov. 1L.—A fire at East Portland to-night destroyed 1t plant of the Standard Box Comp gether with a large quantity of lum Fortunately firemen succeeded flagration within the Umits of the St dard Company’s property. Grattan 4 Woodbeck, the chlef owners of the plant, estimate their loss above $10,000, with in- surance of $11,000. ————— Miners Obey ‘Strike Order. TELLURIDE, ., Nov. 1.—One hun- dred miners employed at the Tomboy mines have struck, pursuant to an order issued by the Miners’ Unfon. The st was called for the purpose of preventing the resumption of operations at the Tom- boy mill with non-union men on a twelve. hour scale. Out of 50 stamps in San Mi- guel County only fifty—those at the Sflver Bell mill i here was little wind and the 0~ in confining the French is the language of more than a million of the three and a half million of Canadians. B — ADVERTISEMENTS. THE DISEASE OF CIVILIZATION IS CONSTIPATION. THE SAFEST AND QUICKEST CURE FOR THIS EVIL IS P Hunyadi Janos NATURE'S LAXATIVE WATER, NOT AN ARTIFICIAL PREPARATION, RELIEF COMES WITH THE FIRST GLASS. ALWAYS ASK FOR Hunyadi Janos (FULL NAME. IF YOU SIMPLY ASK FOR HUNYADI WATER YOU MAY BE IMPOSED UPON. Vim, Vigor, MORMON Vitality for Men. BISHOF'S PILLS in use over ffty the leaders of the Mormon Church and _their followers. Fositively cure tbe ‘worst cases in old and young arising from effects of self- buse, dissipation, excesses or cigarette smoki Manhood, Power, Night Losses nia, Pains in Back, Evil Desires, Lama Back, Nervous Debllity, Headache, Unfitness to Mar. ry, Loss of Semen, Varicocele or Con- stipation, Stop Eyelids. Effects are store smail, the brain and nerve centers: 50c a box: A _written guarantes to cure o money refunded with 6 boxes. Circulars Address BISHOP REMEDY CO., 40 Ellis San Francisco, Cal. GRANT DRUG CO., and 40 Third RADWAY’S READY RELIEF has stood instantly relleves and b s Ry ey e LT e atia und ol Bowel Patme: X1 Sreamists;